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                  <text>Students assemble
tion Cbrisbnas
gift shoeboxes, A2

Official calls recount
req.uest frivolous,
Insulting, A6

Pomeroy council tours new village water plant

SPORTS
• Trimble thumps Meigs.
SeePageB1

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Iron deposits and manganese (the
black !lakes that appear in toilet water) will be nuisances no more once the new Pomeroy water treatment plant goes online sometime next week. This
according to Village Administrator John Anderson
at Monday's Pomeroy Village Council meeting.
Anderson walked council through the plant and
informed them that he has tested the facility by
having it online and said "It does work." The delay
has been caused by a few last-minute electronic
controls that Anderson ordered, one of which was
guaranteed to arrive by Tuesday.
"Those controls basically tell me what's going
'

on in the plant," said Anderson.
When questioned by Coundlman George
Wright about preventing chemical overdoses at the
plant and other safeguards, Anderson replied that
"The main safeguard is that the dosing pumps for
the chemicals are sized such that running tlat out
you couldn't overdose."
The plant which is located in Syracuse, cost $ 2
million and was financed through various grants. A
more in-depth article on the plant will appear in
Wednesday's Sentinel.
In other Pomeroy village council news ,
Resolution 24.04 was unanimously passed transferring $5,000 from General to the Street Department
to cover wages of city employees. ·
Councilman George Wright was the only

.

abstaining vote for Resolution 25 .04 which is
council's support of Gallia-Meigs Community
Action building affordable housing for a low
income family in Pomeroy. Gallia-Meigs
Community Action owns the property on which
their building the home and hope to build more as
funds become available. Wright abstained because
he worried what kind of structure would be erected.
Clerk Kathy Hysell brought up the first of three
readings on the subject of Christmas bonuses for
village workers. Full-time workers receive $100,
while part-time workers receive $50.
Hysell informed council that she would know

Please see Council, AS

INSIDE
• Honor rolls.
See Page A2 .
• Antique business
lends hand to curious.
SeePageA2

• Court News.
See Page A3

Pomeroy • Middleport

Page 16 •

Meigs County Winter Sports Preview

..... _

No
Sentinel
on
Thursday
The Daily Sentinel
office will close at 2
p.m. Wednesday. The
Sentinel will not be
published Thursday to
allow its employees to
observe
the
Thanksgiving holiday.
Regular publication
and business hours
resume at 8 a.m.
Friday.

.

Both Sercont/photo

Julie Proctor, owner of the White Lilac Bed &amp; Breakfast Inn in
Middleport, scans her guest registry in the foyer. One of her
original paintings hangs in the background.

The White Lilac Inn offers
hospitality in Middleport
BY BETH SERGENT

.

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Julie
Proctor, owner of the White
Lilac Bed &amp; Breakfast Inn
claims there are three rules to
running a successful B&amp; B:
always have food out, make
sure the scales weigh lighter
than normal, and keep the
place spotless.
Born in Charleston, W.Va.,

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REED

J.

ment has gone back as far as - to avoid losing their
Council approved advenisfive years to find defendants license, but it ha;n' t done ing for a new refuse service
with old fines which have much good''
contract. to be awarded at
MIDDLEPORT - People gone . unpaid. and lannarelli
lannarelli said the village is council's first December
who have not paid old fines said defendants need miss owed some $150,000 in old meetin~. Bids are due on
in the Village of Middleport only two months in fine pay- fines.
Nov. 30. Rumpke of Wellston
are losing their driver's ments before the B.M.Y. is
Other business
now provides the tlat-fee serlicenses.
contacted. .
Village
Admini strator vice to all residential refuse
At Monday's regular meet"Once the B.M.V. suspends Bradford Anderson discussed customers in the village.
ing of Middleport Village the license, the only way the recent graffiti vandali;m on
lannarelli expressed appreCouncil,
Mayor Sandy drivers can get their licen se the Mill Street wa[er tank. ciation to the vi llage employIannarelli reported that over back is to pay their old fines According to Anderson, it is a ees who replaced bulbs.
$2,700 has been collected in in full, and a $15 reinstate- growing problem. with two installed Christmas decoraold fines since the village metit fee to the Ohio Bureau incidents in the past month tions and ere&lt;:~ed the vi II age
began seizing licenses in of
Motor
Vehicles," involving a paintball gun and Christmas tree. The . tree.
accordance with Ohio law. lannarelli said. "Once the spray paint.
which has been placed at the
Like all collected fines, old license is revoked, the village
Anderson said he plans to intersection of South Second
fines collected are paid into has no control over it."
invest igate the cost of Avenue and Mill Streel. on
the village's general fund,
"I have informed defen- install ing a chain-link fence the "T. " was donated by Joe
and ultimately pay police dams in mayor's court that around the tank. which was and Betty Boyles Leiving .
. wages and operations
they mu st pay a minimal painted last year at a cost of Mrs. Lciving is a Middleport
The village police depart- amount -even $5 a month $4,000.
native and d(mated the tree in
Bv BRtAN

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Systems/components inspected include:

J.

through the Rev. Franklin radio stations WYVK,
Graham 's Samaritan's Purse WBYG and WPCN/Joy FM
program has re sulted in teamed up to promote the
MASON - Trucks that 2.700 shoeboxes for boys gift drive and to coordinate
usually carry !lowers and and girls in war-torn and their collection and delivery
other produce for Bob's impoverished regions around · to the Graham mini;try. The
Market and Greenhouse·s in the world. The boxes were global ministry will deJiver
Mason transported more assembled by people from some II million shoeboxes
. than 2.000 gift-tilled shoe- Gallia. Meigs and Mason in 95 countries this season .
boxes to Huntington on counties including 4-H
The local effort to assemMonday. The boxes were clubs, churches. seoul troops ble and deliver the shoebox
tilled with Christmas gifts and schools and individuals. gifts began six years ago,
for needy children around according to Anna Barnitz. with the Barnitz family and
the world, donated by local chief financial officer for the'ir home church. Fairview
families.
Bob's
Market
and Bible Church in Letart. The
A local effort to coordinate Greenhouses. Inc.
Please see Shoebox. AS
Operation Christmas Chi ld ,, The greenhouse and local
Bv BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

Middleport cracks down on old fines with license suspensions
REED

'
BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

.95 Oil and

Please see Lilac. AS

Shoebox gifts on their way

'

Dotatta on Pace A&amp;

FREE Multi-point Inspection

Proctor lived in Point
Pleasant. W.Va. for a brief
time as a child and had
grandparents who lived in
Middleport. The majority of
her adult life has been spent
in Nashville, Tenn . where she
worked
for
American
Airlines which afforded her
an opportunity to travel
around the world.

Brlllll J. -/pboto

More than 3,000 shoeboxes filled with Christmas gifts for children in war-torn and•poor countries
around the world were delivered Monday by Bob's Ma~et and Greenhouses of Mason. Here,
Anna Barnitz, Sue Barnitz and Alan Bird of Bob's Ma~et and Mindy Morris and Brenda Merritt of
WYVK-FM are pictured with the boxes as they are loaded onto Bob's Market trucks for transport.

12 PAGES

Calendars

. A3

Classifieds

B3-4

•

. Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Community

A2

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

memory of Clarence and
Julia Leiving.
Jean Craig discussed
updates needed to the village
ordinance records . She has
been working with village
counci l member Laurie Reed
and lannarelli to review the
village's ordinance records,
eliminate
unnecessary
record; and organize the village's records,
Council approved appro.priations adjustments in the
general
fund,
postage,
income tax office and clerk
payroll lines, refuse.. mayor's
office. &gt;treet and water
department. in order to meet
department payrolls. retire-

Plene SH Fines, A5

'~-·• '-''A

The United Way of Gall Ia County would like to invite the community to Wai-Mart of Gallipolis the day after
Thanksgiving. Show support for the United Way's campaign fundraiser "Vote For a Miracle", and join us from
5 a.m. until 5 p.m. on Friday, November 26th .
Refreshments , gift-wrapping , and wonderful bargins wil l be provided .

•'

-·

~

"

�PageA2

COMMUNfl'Y

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

Southern Honor Roll Eastern Honor Roll
RACINE- The following students were named to the honor roll for the first nine weeks
at So11thern Local Schools grades S -12. Names spelled in capital/etters denote all A's.

Seni?rs: Ashton Brown, Holly Duffy, H~ather Duffy, Ashlee Hill , Brooke Kiser, Adam
McDamel, Jon McDaniel, Kyle Mees, Jordan Neigler, Brittany Philson, Craig Randolph,
Natali.e Slider. Bryan Smith, Nicki Tucker, Chris Tucker, Brandi Vance.
. ~uniors: John Bentz, Dustin Brinager, Brad Crouch, Shane Hayman, Amber Holsinger,
T1ffany McDamel. Canlm Nease, Andrew Parsons, Becky Rader, Chelsea Smith, Selena
Spencer. Dale Teaford. Jenny Warner. Kristina Williams.
.
Sophomores: Nikki Arnott, Lindsey Burrows, Chance Collins, Randy Collins, Mallory
Hin , Amber Hill , Jacob Hunter, Nathan McClure, Miranda McKelvey, Jesse McKnight, Adam
Phdhps, AdeUe R1ce, Bethany Vance.
· Freshma!": Bonnie Allen, Teddy Brown, Morgan Brown, Chris Burkhamer, Lindsey
Buzzard, Erm Chapman, Ryan Chapman, Tyler Circle, Stephanie Cundiff, Heather Cundiff,
Kasey Doucet, Sarah El-Dabaja, Courtney Ginther, Abigail Jenkins, Kreig Kleski, Krystle
Marler. Butch Marnhout, Amy Norville, Whitney Riffle, Wesley Riffle, Ashley Robie,
Am~ony Shamblin. Michael Shouldis, Kaylyn Spradling, Deidra Sprouse, Ashley Weddie.
E1ghth Grade: Rashell Boso, Merri Collins, Charles Cook, Brody Flint. Bryan Harris, Alex
Hawley. Gabe Hill. Chris Holter, Emma Hunter, Tosha Jones, Robert McCarty, Brittany
Meldau, Chelsea Pape. Samantha Patterson, Rachael Pickens, Weston Roberts, Jamie Warner
J.D. Whinington.
'
Seventh Grade: Patricia Cook, Micha~ Manuel , Nate McBane, John Powell, Scott
Ramsey. Dustm Salser. Breanna Taylor, Lynzee Tucker, Christy Wheeler, Katie Woods.
Sixth Grade: Katie Barr. Eric Buzzard. Wil Crow, Kim Deaver, Bobbi Harris, Trevor Flint,
Dakota Imboden. Zach Manuel, Melissa Myers, Katey Patterson. Adam Warden.
Fiflh Grade: Martina Arms, Emily Ash, Alison Brown , Blake Crow, Andrew Ginther
Robbie Goode, Katelyn Hill, Marcu;' Hill, Chelsea Holter, Kelsey Holsinger. Haley Linkous:
Emtly Manuel , Clayton Moore, Ohvta Murphy. Emma Powell, Elizabeth Sprouse, Timmy
Warner, Abbie Williams.
.
·

Meigs Elementary students assemble
Operation Christmas Child gift shoeboxes

TUPPERS PLAINS- The fo/lowillg st11de11ts wer~ n'!med to t~e honor ro.ll for the first
nine weeks in Eastem Local Schools, according to D1stnct Supenntendent R1ck Edwards:

Eastern Elementary School
Grade 2: Willow Adams, Breanna Bailey: Haley Bissell, Brad Buckley, Abigale Collins, Grace
Edwards, Erin Glaze, Lindsay Hupp, Lindsay Hupp, Tryston Huxley, Chnstopher Long. Morgan
Tackett, Meloney Victory, all A's.
.
.
AlB: Chantal Barnhart, Kiera Casto, Zachary Cunnmgham, Trysta.n J?owell, Daschle
Facemyer, Kaitlynn Hartenbach, Jenna Kehl, Kwesi Lane, Austin L1ttle, Kyhe Long, Mallory
Mcintyre, Asia Michael, Tyler Morris, Casey Ridenour, Allison Seers, Brock Smith, Makayla
Smith, Ethan Steger, Kathryn Townsend, Jacob Tuttle, Brent Welch, Greyson Wolfe,.
.
·Grade 3: Tyler Barber, Latham Bissell, Zachary Browning. Jenna Burdette, Casstdy Cleland,
Samantha Cline, Chase Cook, Aliyah Ganl!, Meredith Gaul. Kalle Seller, Sarah Lawrence.
Dakota O' Brien, Joshua Parker, Benjamin Sampson, Erin Swatzel, all A's.
.
· AlB: Garrett Caldwell, Paige Cline, Monique Dugan, Molly Dunlap. Kendra F1ck, DaviJ
Frank, Hannah Hawley, Jenna Hysell, Tanner Jenkins, Jordan Koblentz, Jonathon Kuhn, Keri
Lawrence, Whitley Leach, Emily Moore. Lindsey Putman, Cody Rayburn, Mad1s~m R1gsby,
Jessica Sampson, Eden Selbee. Jasmine Smith, Kolton Snell, Alex V1ctory, Dav1d Warner.
Phoenix Watts, Heather Wells, Wyatt Westfall, Lindsay Wolfe, Christopher Yeater.
Grade 4: Marshall Aanestad, Randall Annes, Maxwell Carnahan, Rebecca Chadwell.
Christopher Morris, Larissa Riddle, All A's.
.
AlB: Hannah Adams, Alex Amos, Samuel Collins. Victoria Goble, Bradley Goeglein, Breanna
Hayman, Zakkary Heaton, Alexandria Hendrix, Jason Kelley, Ibchael Markwonh, Krista Miller,
Timothy Minear. Mallory Nicodemus. Ethan Nottingham, Denck Powell, Thomas Pullins.
Garrett Ritchie, Shanda Welch, Kyle Young.
Grade 5: Christopher Bissell, Janae Boyles, Tyler Cline, Oanielle Cline, Baylee Collin s.
Cheyenne Doczi, Kristin Fick, Brenna Holter, Kayte Lawrence, Kelsey Myers, Marie Powell,
Jenah Sampson, Courtney Thomas, all A's.
AlB: Christian Amsbary, Jamiee Batkee, Cierra Carr, Emily Davis, Leslea Frank, Shannon
Goh, Arik Horner, Brooke Johnson, Luke Kimes. Amber Lawson, Savannah Moore, Paul
Morrison, Tess Oldaker. Jacob Parker, Ashley Putman, Cassie Randolph, Robert Reel Shalaina
Robinson, Shelby Smith, Aimee Watson.
Grade 6: Jonathan Barrett, Devon Baum, Brady Bissell, Megan arnahan, Jessica Cleland. Tia
Collier, Jenna Collins, Ashleigh Duffy, Scott Gilbride. Morgan a!_YDanielle Maxey, Allie
Rawson, Jennifer Reed, Zari Roush, Michael Scyoc, Robert Warner, nnie Westfall, all A's.
AlB: Hayley Aanestad, Ryan Amos, Eric Barber, Chantel Bauer. Miranda Bishop, Colin
Connolly. Nathan Gheen. Abbie Harris. Caleb Hensley. Rachel Kille, Joshua Loscar, Timothy
Mark worth, Beverly Maxson, Ashley Miller, Britney Morrison. Brayden Pratt, Ravenne Reed.
Hannah Ridgway, Dalton Riebel, Sheena Riffle, Brittany Rucker, Bradley Stone, John Tenoglia,
Matthew Whitlock.
Grade 7: Breea Buckley, Wade Collins. Matthew Friend, Hannah Hysell. Whitney Putman.
Amanda Roush, all A's.
AlB: Keith Aeiker, Matthew Barringer, Dwight Beaumont, Heather Brooks, Brittany Casto.
Hannah Cozart, Brandon Daugherty, Casey Hannum, Joshua Hupp. Randi King, Kay lee Milam .
Michael Moore, Alyssa Newland, Anthony Putman, Katlyn Sauvage , Amber White. Katie
Wilfong.
·
·

Eastern High School
Derek Baum, Chris Carroll, Cody Dill, Andy Francis , Jennifer Hayman, Jaime Reel, Morgan
Weber, Knsta Wh1te, Chelsea Young, Brandon Bartee, Taylor Russell, Brittany Bissell. Sarah
Boston, Alex McGrath, Holhe R1cnard, Cory Shaffer, Enn Weber. Andrew Bissell, Nathan
Carroll. Ryan Davis (9), KelseyHolter, Kyle Rawson, Morgan Werry. all A's.
.
AlB: Jesstca Howard, Jesstca Kehl, Bryan Mmear, Sara Pore. Darren Scarbro.ugh, Casey
Sm1th, Bnan Castor.. Chns Oav1s, Kayla Lee. Herbert Mcintyre. Shawn Reed, Derek Roush.
Matt White, Sara W1ggms, Sasha Wnston. Stephame Baker, Jill Brannon. Kim Castor, Ryan
Davts (10), Steve Hudson, Jenna Hupp, Tyler Lee, Shannon Loscar Sarah -Martindale Derek
Putman. Trista Simmons.
'
'
Derek ~eber, Amber Willbarger, Megan Broderick, Josh Collins, Sasha Collins, Amanda
Eason. Lmdsey Grate, Cass1e Hauber, Katie Hayman, Hannah Helgesen . Tyler Kearns, Alex
Kuhn, Aaron Martmdale, Samantha Persons, Hannah Pratt, Tnsta Putman Cortney Scyoc
Kenneth Vogelsong, Niki Young.
'
·

~ay

Brl1n J. Field/photo

These students at Meigs Elementary School helped classmates assemble 104 Operation
Christmas Child gift shoeboxes for distribution to needy children around the world: Travis
Mitchell, Suzy Cox, Valerie Wolfe, Michaela Davidson, Cody Robinson, Kalynn Seymour, Hannah
Kennedy, and T.J. Will iams. The boxes were packed for delivery to Middleport Church of Christ,
and will join thousands of others being collected for the Samaritan's Purse ministry. They contain toys, candy, personal hygiene Items and other small gifts for children lrr poor and war-torn
regions of the world. School principals Rusty Bookman and Kristin Acree are also pictured.

Named to
honor society

Antique business lends hand to curious

ASHLAND
- Andrea
Burdette of Pomeroy has
been named a member of the
Alpha Lambda Delta Honor
at
Ashland
Societv
University in Ashland. The
society honors first-year students who earn a scholastic
average of 3.5 or better at a
four-year college or Lmiveri ty.
Burdette is the daughter of
Robert and Ruth Burdette of
Pomeroy.

GALLIPOLIS What
may be ready for the trash
pile could fetch a price on th.e
antique market , the owners of
a local business believe.
"The fact is. ' Antique
Roadshow' happens in Gallia
County every week with auctions. yard sales and other
events," said Edna Whitelev,
who along with her husband
Dan operates Holmes &amp;
Watson Antiques.
Holme s &amp; Watson , named
for the immortal sleuthing
duo in Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle's stories, lives ~p to its
name by not only offering
antiques for sale but also
researching their price and
background. with restoration
an option offered by the· business.
The Whitelcys opened a
store at Antiques on the
Avenue, 2207 First Ave .,
Nitro, W.Va .. last March, but
also operate from a space at
the French City Craft Mall in
downtown Gallipolis.
"Dan is intere sted 1n
Sherlock Holmes, but it is
also significant that he and I
are a team in this effort,'' Mro;.
Whiteley said. "We're also
people who scrutinize. do
research and get information
on pricing . We do all of that
on t.he Internet.
·
"Even before we buy something. we know what we're
bidd~ing on and we know what
a price will bring." she.added.
Mrs. Whiteley said she and
her husband both grew up

Correction
POMEROY - In Sunday's
art1cle "Keep Your Fork SK
race for runners and walkers"
the contact phone numbers
for race organ izers were
omitted.
Contact
Mike
Kenned y at 992-7552 or 9923058.

PROUD TO BEA
PART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Dailv Sentinel
Suhscrihe toJc1v • 992-2155
www.myc(ai!yseminel.com ·

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

with antiques, and a shared
interest led them to collecting.
Items that' were commonplace
in their younger days, or even
considered out-of-date but ·
still serviceable, attained a
new luster as the years·passed.
''There's the thinking that
what is old is now new," Mrs.
Whiteley said. "Things have
changed because needs have
changed."
Items obtained by the
Whiteleys, especially in
woodwork. can be restored
by Dan Whiteley. The couple
also lends their expertise in
buying and collecting to the
business, and will conduct a
class on "Auction Savvy for
Beginners'' at the French Art
Colony on Feb. 13. 2005.
"Our main reason to locate
in Gallipolis was to help out,"
Mrs. Whiteley sai d. "The
move to Nitro was, at the
time, the right business decision. "

Among the . items Mrs.
Whiteley has an interest in.
and is willing to share her
knowledge of. are doll
clothes.
"I have accumulated items
from the 1940s that, to · me.
are desirable and comparable
to contemp,orary products,"
she said. ''I also have baby
shoes, some dating back to
the 1930s, and there are
things you can do to improve
the looks of them."
Holmes &amp; Watson Antiques
maintains its booth at the
French' City Craft Mall , &lt;)nd
more information is available
from the Whiteleys by calling
446-7711 ..

Merry Christmas
to ~omeone 6pecial ·with a
&amp;ntinel Christmas i\n8el
~ONLY~

~ooo

fer Picture
Prepaid

Adam Rodgers
"Merry Christmas"
Mommy !\- Daddy

* Actual Size 1x3
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* Deadline for entry December 17th at 5:00
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· The Daily Sentinel
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BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Sunday, Nov. 28
CARPENTER - Jim Eden
of Charleston, W. Va. will be
Friday, Nov. 26
in concert at 6:30 p.m. at the
Sutton
Township
Township trustees will meet Mt. Union Baptist Church
in special session at 6 p.m. at near Carpenter. Refreshments
will be served following the
Syracuse Village Hall.
service. For more information
Pastor
David
contact
Wiseman. 740-742-2568.

Thesday, Nov. 23
TUPPERS . PLAINS
Eastern High School's
Nation al Honor Society
will hold its 40th annual
induction ceremony at 9
a.m. in the school gymnasium . A special invitation is
being given to all National
Honor Society alumni of
Eastern, in honor of the
40th anniversary of the
E.H.S. N.H.S.
.

Church services
Wednesday, Nov. 24
LONG BOTTOM -·
Faith Full Gospel Church
will
have a special
Thanksgiving service · at
7 p.m.

ture. Student section from
recent art classes taught by
Rhojean McClure . Exhibitors
are McClure, Julie Proctor,
Delores Long, Scott Needs,
Be
cky
Edwards,
Marianna McDonald.

DEAR ABBY: "Deb in
ed one a:- well . and I declined .
Knoxville" asked who should
Because of pre,ure from
buy the ring if the woman profamily and friends. he finally
poses. I think the groom
i nsistcd .
should buy the ring for the
Abby, there is so much old bride. and the bride should
fashioned peer pn!ssure on the
Dear
buy the ring for the groom, no
man. When we announced our
Abby
matter who proposes. It
engagement. I made the mis Sunday, Nov. 28
should be their gift to each
take of saying that I had been
POMEROY
-Chri st other.
JOYFUL IN
the une tu propose . People
Academy Bell 'choir perALPHARETTA, GA.
would gawk at him as thou£h
forms Christmas concert at 3
DEAR
JOYFUL:
My
ears
he had been the one holding
p.m .. Trinity Church, following Pomeroy Christmas are "ringi ng" from the many buys the man a watch . What a liP the wedding plans. and I
comments I've received great tradition! Have you had to somehow get the ball
Parade.
regarding that letter. Read on: heard of this') - BOB IN rolling by proposing to him . It
DEAR
ABBY:
Your CHICAGO
was like they thought le" of
Saturday, Nov. 27
MIDDLEPORT - A public answer to ''Deb in Knox ville"
DEAR BOB: No, so I him somehow. I think it
was
right
on.
You
advised
her
art show will be held at the
called Dawn Moore. the West embarra"ed him. which w'"
that
if
the
man
is
a
gentleman,
RiverbendArts Council. 239 N.
Coast regional director of stupid b&lt;:cause he was ready
Second Ave .. Middleport. ·I to 5 he should buy i!. And if he Chopard
Jewelers.
She to be married long before I
p.m. on Nov. 27 and 28. Local refuses, she should enter the informed me that a wristwatch was. I I was divorced and
artists and photographers will marriage with her eyes wide is the "traditional offering·• 4fraid of making anothe r misexhibit. Art students will also open and no illusions about from the woman to the man ·at take.)
participate in the show.
what her future will be.
When I felt readv. I decided
the time of the engagement or
Even though my husband the wedding. (What a clever to surprise him a1id propo;e.
popped the question to me, he way of ensuring he make s it to He was loving and patient
never bought me a ring. It was the church on time')
with me - and it's unfair that
an
indication
of
what
was
to
Thesday, Nov. 30
DEAR ABBY "Deb in people regard him a.&gt;someone
COOLVILLE - Dora M. come. He is the world's worst Knoxville" asked who should who had to be poked and
Calaway will observed her cheapskate.
buy the ring if the woman pro- prodded into makmg a c·omI can count on one hand the poses. You replied thai you're mitment.
89th birthday o.n Nov. 30.
Cards may be sent to her number of gifts he has given old-fashioned. and the man
I think that if a woman prohome at 42320 State Route 7, me over the years. He is should buy it if he's a ge ntle- poses. the same rul es should
Coolville. Ohio 45723 .
equally withholding emotion- man. I disagree! If the woman apply as if the situation were
ally. When I was single, I asks, she should buy the ring. reversed. It\ up to both" of
never thought that such things Not only that. but she should them to decide about the rings.
were important in a relation- pre sent that ring to him . The responsibility should be
ship. I was wrong. It's been a What's good for the goose i.&gt; shared 'because they are both
ing: Dennis M. McCarty. lonely life. - LONELY IN good for the gander. - . equals in the relationship. EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY SMILING IN CANADA
Clarksburg, W.Va. , $30 and DIXIE
LONELY:
In
your
Dear .4bby is writlen by
DEAR
EN
GAGER
costs, scat belt violation:
DEAR ENGAGER: Thank Abigail Van B11ren, also
Stan Morris, Pomeroy. $300, ~ase, the lack of gifts is less
60 days in jail, probation, important than the absence of you for stating the opposing known as Jeanne Phillif!s.
assualt; Paul R. Nienberg. what they stand for. You have point of view.
and was founded by her
Ottawa, $30 and · costs. my sympathy.
DEAR ABBY: I proposed mother, Pauli11e Phillips.
speeding: William J. Platt, .
DEAR ABBY My girl- to my longtime boyfriend and Write
Dear Abby
at
Athens, $30 and costs, friend tells me that it is tradi- bought him an engagement www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
speeding:
George
W tion that the man buys the ring. I didn't care if I received Box 69440, Los Angeles, C4
Reitmire. Pomeroy, $30 and woman a ring, and the woman one or not. He asked if I want- 90069.
costs, seat belt violation, $20
and
costs.
no
stop
lights/commercial
trac:
David A. Rhodes. Columbu s,
$30 and costs, seat belt violation; Stephen P. Shaffer.
Reedsville, 530 and costs.
Gallipolis Daily Tribune Subscribe today • 446-2342
seat belt violation.
www. mydailytribune. com
Thomas
M.
Sinclair,
Barberton,. $30 and costs,
speeding: Ralph R. Snider.
Middleport, suspended costs,
speeding; Roger D. Stevens,
Pedro. $30 and costs. speeding; Marcus A. Travers.
$350 and costs. I0 davs in
jail. probation, DUI: Adrian
W. Wade, Albany. $30 and
costs, seat belt violation,
$25. display plates/valid
sticker; James M. Walters,
Cheshire. $30 and costs,
Charles
B.
speeding:
Williamson, Rutland, $30
and costs, seat belt violation,
$20 and costs, stop sign.

Other events
TheSday, Nt&gt;V. 23
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct a Childhood
Immunization Clinic from 9
a.m. to II a.m. and I p.m. to 3
p.m. at the health department.
Please bring children's shot
records . Children must be
a&lt;:companied
by
a
parent/legal guardian. Please
bnng medical cards if applicable. A $5.00 donJtion is
requested but not required .

Birthdays

Saturday, Nnv. 28
MIDDLEPORT Art
exhibit at Riverbend Arts
Council, I to 5 p.m. Saturday
and Sunday. Local artists and
photographers. Acrylics, oils.
pastels , watercolors, sculp-

Court News
The following cases were
rece111ly heard by Judge
Steve11 L. Story i11 County
Co11rt.
Edward E. Adam s. Long
Bottom, $100 and costs. 30
days in jail, probation, disorderly conduct; Tammy L.
Boggs. Long Bottom , $100,
30 days in jail. probation.
reckless operation; Ronald
Campbell. Dexter, $495 . 10
days in jail. probation. criminal damaging/endangering ;
A.
Carpenter.
Anthony
Rutland. 541 and costs.
speeding: Kyle R. Ciak,
Columbus, $30 and costs.
speeding: Robert N. Conant.
Athens. $20 and costs.
assured clear distance ; Linda
Dominquez.
Middleport,
$100, 10 days in jail, probation, no o.l.; Jonathan A.
Enoch. Ravenswood. W. V..
$50 and costs. speeding;
Sarah M. Evans, Hillard, $30
and costs, seat belt violation:
James E. Fish, Middleport.
$30 and costs, seat belt violation: Kevin W. Glass,
Powhattan Point, $20 and
costs, no stop lights/commercial trac; Layne R . . Gray,
Long Bottom , $30 and costs.
seat belt violation.
Timothy R. Hawthorn.

Long Bottom. $100 and
costs, probation , illegally
taking deer, $25 and costs,
probation. hunting w/out
valid nr license. $25 and
costs, probation , hunting
w/out special permit. Saied
M. Hojat. Gallipolis. $20
and costs, divided roadwavs;
Mark A. Hunter. Charleston.
W.Va .. $30 and costs. speeding; Fuad J. Ismail. Hilliard,
$30 and costs. speeding:
Ronald
L.
Jackson,
Westlake. $3 I and costs,
speeding: Charles D. Jones.
Dover, $30 and 'Costs. seat
belt violation: Tammy L.
Jordan. Pt. Pleasant, W.Va ..
$30 and costs, speeding;
Gordon A. Josey. New
Rochelle. N.Y.. $30 and
costs, speeding; Bobby d.
Kuhn , Middleport, $22,
Hea~her A.
speeding:
Livingston. Mason W.Va.,
$30 and costs, speeding;
J.
Marnhout,
William
Racine, $1 SO and costs, 30
days in jail, probation, reckless operation. $100 and
costs, probation, left of cenW.O.
Marshall,
ter:
Sugarcreek. $30 and costs.
speeding;
Martha
J.
Maynard,
Pt.
Pleasant,
W.Va .. $30 and costs, speed-

Local Stocks

A DAY ON WALL
STREET
I
.

ACI- 37.39
AEP- 34.76
Akzo- 40.94
Ashland Inc. - 59.31
AT&amp;T_:_ 18.44
BLI-12.36
Bob Evans - 24.85
BorgWarner - 50.43
Champion - 3.60
Ch;trmlng Shops - 8.80
City Holding -.:. 36.70
Col- 39.50
DG-20.50
DuPont - 45.22
Federal Mogul - .40
USB- 29.76
Gannett- 82.50
General Electric36.09
GKNLY -4.45
.Harley Davidson 56.67
Kmart -.:. 97.72
Kroger - 16.02
Ltd.- 26.88
NSC -33.94
Oak Hill Financial 37.20
OVB- 32.88
BBT- 42.52
Peop(es- 30.26
Pepsico - 51.22

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

Nov. 22, 2004

Dow Jones
Industrials
:t32 ..11'

'

10,489.42
Pd.~

from pr

Ola:

+0. 31

On Friday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not

+14Je
2,085.19
Pd.=:t

fromP,

~:

+0.70

~

~

~

SEPT
low
10,508.04 10,432.01
AUG
Hl(#1

SEPT

,..

Pel cluolgo
from previous:

+0.59

2,200

2,000

May God's angels

1,800

. guide you and
protect you
· throughout time.

NOV

Hltr

low

Rocord high: 5,048.62

2.085 19

2,052.80

March 10, 2000

,./""'

.~~
....,..-"""""-r-AUG
H;tr

1,178 18

Premier - 11.24
Rockwell - 45.48
Rocky Boots - 21.44
RD Shell - 56.13
SBC -25.52
Sears- 51.74
Wai-Mart - 55.68
Wendy's- 35.07

SEPT
low
1,167.89

OCT

NOV

5. The days we shared were Sll'tCI. I long 10 sec sou agam mGod's
hea\'enl~ glor):
6. Your (Ourage and braver~ still mspire us all. and the memor) of :our
~m!l.c filb us ~ithjoy and laughter.
7. Thuugh out of s1ght. vou 'II f,Jre' er OC in ffi\ heart and mmd.
8. The days ma} i..'Dmc tind go. bw the times ~e ~harcd w1H a]y,a~~o remain
9_ Ma} the light of pt'are shine on ~our face for etemit~
10. May God·~ angels guide ~ou and pnnert ~ou thrnughl)Uttime.
II . You 'Al're a light in lJUT l1f~ that bum, lorC,cr in ('ur hcam
I~ - \1a) GnJ' ~ gr~.-~' ~nmr mer~ nu (or all lime.
I J You arc in 1.1Ur th~•u~ht~ and rrJ ~cr~ :r~1m morn1ng to night and from
~car to )Car
1-l. \I.e ,end th 1-. mc~~a~c '' 1th a Ill' 111~ ~~~' k1r ctem~l rc:-l Jnd hJppme~~ .

Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews and
family

1,200

1.150
1.100
1,050

15. i\1a~ the Lord hiN· ~ uu \\ !lh

H1~ gr~Ke~

and

11Jrrn.l11'&gt;~ng

heart.

1.000

Record h;gh; 1,527 .46

Martl124. 2000

.

.

TO RE'\1E,IBEH \OLR LO\ED 01\E 1\ THI:'i

----,

""

Worthington - 21.23
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Water and sewer improvement pmjects eamutrked for federal cash
WASHINGTON (API More than three dot.en Ohio cities
and countic' will get &lt;Ul estimated
$25 million to upgrade ennobling
water &lt;md sewer systems through
a long list of fcden~ budget earmarks. providing a patchw(1rk
solution to the nation's aging
infrastructure problem.
The fund.' were included &lt;L~ setasides in a massive spending bill
that Congress agl'eed 10 over the
weekend.
·
But they come as money tor the
Clean Water State Revolving

I. We hold you in our thoughts and memorie.• fore\W. ·
~-May God cradle )OU in H1s arrm. no" and forL'•er.
~ .' Forever mi!'.sed. E.e•er furgotten . Ma} GnJ h1&gt;ld you m !he palm of
Hi~ hand.
-+ . Thank you for the wonderful days we shared tugether. \1 ~ prayer~
will be with you umih\\c ml.'et agam

David C. Andrews
July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

1,800
OCT

. +6.10
1,177.24

wish, select one of the following FREE verses below Jo
lae&lt;:om(&gt;any your tribute.

9,750

9,250
NOV
Roeo&lt;d high: 11 .722.96
Jan, ,4 , 2000

~
AUG

10~150

ocr·

Nov. 22. 2004

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:

10,7150

Nov. 22, 2004

Nasdaq
composite

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

It's lord of the ring vs. lady of the ring

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

PageA3

Fund. whi~h provides low-inter- really an unfortunate trend ... ·
·est loans to communities to build
Ean11arks are request~ placed in ·
or improve wa,tewater htcilities. t)le budget at the behest of lawwa' sla,hed frum $1J billion to makers. Thev are cTitici7ed a'
$ 1.1 billion.
pork. but ge!ier.illy supported by
"As you sec the federal gov- members ot Congne~s who sav .
emment programs ckcrecc,ing. tlry know best which progr::mi.s
you:re gomg to lind that munic- sh&lt;iuld get funding;
~
1pal•lle' and other groups ·m·e
TI1C problem w1th e:mnarking
looking for sP~"i ric fund;~ . money for water 'md &gt;ewer pn'
tlmJUgh the C&lt;Ulll&lt;U k process. . er:m" " .that there IS no stu1dimJ
s;nd Adam Krantz. director of tnr. L.ktem1ining who ~&gt;ets 1hc
government . affairs for the money. lllewliilg thai the must ·
Assonallun ol Metropolitan nc'Cdy systems aren't always tl1C
Sewerage Agencies. "Thai \ ones whn get the funding .

~PEG..\L

\lAY.

SE\D S7.00 PER LISTII\G • S 12 IF PICTlRE Il\CI.lDED
Fill oul the form helo~&gt; all(l drn11 niT to

'1';

llw Oaih· Srnlinrl
Wilh Fondt·•l ''•·morit'•
III Conrl St .. Pomt•ru,, 011 .J;)76lJ

OEAOLII\E: FRILHY. DEOJIIlER Ii. 12 '\uon

Ir---~---------------------------------,
Plca~e pubJ,,h my trihut c In th\? ~ ll\?l" ial .\1\? i lllll"~ P;l~t' 1m Fn da~ . Dl\."l'111ht'r ~-t .
I
I
I

J Name of deccascd--,...---------------"-----"----1
I Relationship 10 me
Number ,,f selecled verse ____ I
I
I
I l1a1c nf h1rth _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I1 Pn~t
. your naml' h l ' r l ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , - - - - _ : __ _ _.....,._j I
-'----~

I
I

Addrc&lt;&gt;

Cil)
1
.

Ph c'l lc'

numl&gt;cr

Stale
. 1\lakc Chl'ck Pa) able to THE DAILY SE\TI\Et

Z1

I
I
1

L--------~---~------------------------~

�'OPINION:.

The Daily Sentinel
\

The Daily Sentip.et
lll Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Otlio'Valley
. Publishing
. Co. ·
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
•

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today IS Tuesday. Nov. 23. the 328th day of 2004. J:here are
38 days left in the year.
Today's Highhghl in H1stury.
Two hundred years ago. on. Nov. 23. I 804. the 14th president of the United Stale,, Franklin Pierce, was born in
Hillsboro, N.H.
On this date:
In 1765, Frederick County. Md.. repudiated the British
'
Stamp Act.
In 1903, smger Ennco Caruso made his Amen can debut at
the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. appearing in
"Rigoletto"
In 1943. dunng World War II. U.S. forces se1zed control of
Tarawa and Makin atolls from the Japanese.
In 1945, most U.S. wart1me ratmning of foods. including
meat and butter, ended.
In 1959, the musical "Fiorello'." with music by Jerry Bock
and lyrics by Sheldon Harnick, opened on Broadway.
In 1963, President Johnson proclaimed Nov. 25 a day of
national mourning following the assassination of Prestdent
Kennedy.
In 1971, the People's Republic of China was seated in the
U.N. Security Council.
In 1980, some 4,800 people were killed by a series of earthquakes that devastated southern Italy.
In 1996, a hijacked Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767 crashed
into the waves off Comoros Islands, killing 125 of the 175
people on board
Ten years ago: NATO warplanes blasted Serb missile batteries in two air raids while Bosman Serb lighters, for the first
time, broke into the U.N. designated safe haven of Bihac.
Five years ago: In a plea met with scant applause and silent
stares, President Clinton told ethnic Albanians il'l Kosovo that
"you must try" to forgive Serb neighbors and stop punishmg
them for the terror campaign of Slopodan Milosevic. Defen&amp;e
Secretary Wilham Cohen called for a miltlary-wide review of
conduct after a Pentagon study satd up to 75 percent of blacks
and other ethnic minorities reported experiencing racially
offensive behavior.
One year ago: Five U.S. soldiers were killed in a helicopter
crash in Afghanistan. Eduard Shevardnadze.resigned as president of Georgia in the face of protests.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Michael Gough is 87. Blues artist
R.L. Burnstde is 78. Broadway composer Jerry Bock is 76.
Former Labor Secretary William E. Brock is 74. Actor Franco
Nero is 63. Screenwriter Joe Eszterhas is 60. Actress Susan
Anspach is 59. Actor Steve Landesberg is 59. Singer Bruce
Hornsby is 50. Attar Maxwell Caulfield is 45. Actor John
Henton is 44. Rock singer-musician Ken Block (Sister Hazel)
is 38. Rock musicmn Charlie Grover is 38. Actress Salli
Richardson is 37. Actor Oded Fehr is 34. Rapper Kuru pi (Tha
Dogg Pound) is 32. Actress Kelly Brook IS 25. Actor Austin
MaJors (''NYPD Blue'') is 9.
Thought for Today· ''I'm a reali st and so I think regretting
is a useless occupation. You help no one with tt. But you can't
live without illusions even if you must tight for them. such as
'love conquers all. ' It isn' t true, bull would like It to be." Marlene Dietrich, German-born actress ( 190 1- 1992).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and mu.11 he signed and include address
and telephone numba No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our ma1n conce rn 1n all stor1es IS to be
accurate II you know of an error 1n a
story. call ttle newsroom at (740) 9922156

Our main number is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed , Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent Ext 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harr1s. E~~:t 15
Outside Sales: Brenda Dav1s, Ext 16
Class.ICirc.: Judy Clark. E~~:t 10

Circulation
District Mgr.: JaSO!! Patterson, Ext 17

General Manager
Charlene HoefiJch, Ext. 12

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PageA4

Us~

agenda again

John Kerry, D-Mass., by
contrast. proposed guaranteeing all · children health
.msurance .
So, what's to be done 10
get ch1ldren onto the nation ·
a! agenda? What likely won't
work is traditional exhorta·
tion (that "children represent
our nation's future," true as
·that ·is). Nor will ' making
appeals on a purely humanitarian basis or trying to guilt·
lnp adults.
There are plenty of stallstics to demonstrate need.
Almost one in five children
in America lives m poverty.
The United States ranks 23rd
in the world in mfanl mortalit y rates and 16th in low·
b;rth weight rates. Child
dbesity rates have tripled m
the past 20 years. National
re&lt;rdin)!. math and sctence
score' have been Jlat fur &lt;r
dccmk ami are still below
!herr llJ70 Jev~ls.
The nation has lived with
such numbers all too comfortahly. So, it's time Powell
and his allies made adults
take notice by showing how
thetr own future is caught up
in the future of children.
If the bctby boom and post·
boom generations are going
to have adequate retirement
benefits. for instance, that
will depend on the productivity of present chtldren.
If the Unlled States is to
mamtam lis swndard of hving tn the face of low-wage,
h1gher-tech
internalmnal
competition. then U.S children will have to do better
than to score 19th in math
and 18th in science in international tests.
If the U.S. health system 1s
gomg to be aflordablc. then
children's he&lt;rlth has to
improve. lest obesity lead to
an epidemic of drabetes and
heart disease.
The se lf-interest argument
is this : Practically everything connected to the longrun well-~ng of America is
tied up mthe welfare of children.
Even foreign pohcy is
affected ,
insofar
as
American chi ldren lack ian-

'

Morton
Kondarcke

becoming secretary of State
was a champion of children
and youths as a board member of the Boys and Girls
Clubs of America and
of
America's
founder
Promise - The Alhance for
Youth: a "broad coaliiion of
communities, agencies and
volunteer groups 'acound the
country.
Powell got America's
Promise (AP) launched in
1997 wilh a first-ever
domestic summ1t allended
by all the nation's living
for
presidents (except
Ronald Reagan, who in his
illness was represented by
·his wife, Nancy). The proJect attracted naiional attention for children's needs
until Powell took over at
State in 200 I. The board is
still chaired by Powell's
wife, Alma.
On his travels as secretary.
Powell often visited children's proJects overseas.
Associates say he will r~new
his activity domestically
when he leaves office.
There's lots of work to be
done. Issues involving children and youths came up
strikingly short during the
presidential campaign and
rank low on the next-term
agenda for both Bush and
Congress.
Bush talked '' frequently
about his No Child Left
Behind education program,
and he plans to propose
extendmg 11s standards-andaccountability requirements
to high schools. He has also
said he intends to make sure
that more children eligible
for SCHIP and Medicaid
receive it.
But beyond that. there isn't
much on h1s agenda for the
nation's 8.5 million children
who lack health insurance.

guage skills - especially i~
Arabic - and have a dim
understanding of other cui:
•
tures.
Before asking the federal
government for more money
fo r children, Powell &amp; Cu:
should II')' to , h~lp it figure
out bener ways to S)JI:nd the
$225 billion i1 currentlY:
spends, by breaking down
barriers between the several&gt;
departments that handle
children's i'Sues, evaluating.
what programs work and,
encourap; ng bureaucratic·
•
cooperali 11.
The san .- applies for iRter-,
action ht:twcen federal, stat~
and local governments an~
voluntary agencies such a~
United Way and Boys and
Girls Clubs.
Powell and Ameri ca's
Promise' might be ahle to
convince the White House
Office of Management and
Budget to judge program~
according to how well they
satisfy the five gmtls fur
every child set by AP: tht
attenllon of a canng adult,~
safe place to go after sehoul.
a healthy start in life, educatiorl,, and training to gi ve
them marketable skills, anll
an opportunity to serve others.
resemch.
Abundant
Including an exhaustrvc
2002 report by the Na11onal
Academy of Sciences.
demonstrates 1that children
who benef11 from the AP's
"five pronuses" are more
likely than others to frnish
school. avoid teen pt egnan,
cy, forgo drugs and crime
and anend college . .
Powell
deserves
1hc
nalton's thanks for his year~
of military and governmcnl
service. If there were a
Congrcsstonal Medal ut
Honor lor Interagency cumbat in Washington. he
deserves to receive it. Now
that he's out of government,
however. he may do even
more for the nation's future
than when he was in.
I Morton Krmdrack&lt;' is '
exec wive ed11ur of Roll ('a ll,
tlte nell'spaper oj 'taJ&gt;itol
Hili.)

More lawlessness at .Guantanamo Bay
While U.S. District Judge
James Robertson irritated
the Whtte House on Feb. 9
by stopping a military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay
because, he said, 11 was not a
competent tribunal to deCide
the legal protections due
those before it under the
Geneva Convention, there is
a separate set of proceedings
•
for detainees there. The lawfulness of those proceedings
is also under serious, continued question.
Recently, Jameel Jaffer, an
American Civil Liberties
Union lawyer. returned from
observing this other senes of
hearings - the Combat
Status Review Tribunals
(CSRT), which are set up to
determine whether the hundreds of detainees at
Guantanamo Bay are being
lawfully held in the first
place. Jaffer concluded, as
have even some of the military defense lawyers, have
previously submitted bnefs
to the Supreme Court, that
they are defyrng a June decision by the U S. Supreme
Court that these prisoners
must get due process - in
the simplest term s. basic
fairness.
In the 6-3 Supreme Court
ruling. the court wrote that
these alleged unlawful
enemy combatants are entitled- "no less than American
c111zens" - to challenge the
cvrdence against th'em .
among other rights.
· Yet , as The New York
Times' Neil Lewis noted on
Nov. I. a recent brief by the
Bu sh administration pretends there was no such
Supreme Court decr;iun .
The government stated that
"the notion that the U S.

Nat

Hentoff

Constitution affords due
process and other rights to
enemy
aliens captured
abroad and confined outside
the sovereign territory of the
Un11ed States is contrary to
law and history" - an argu·
ment the Supreme Court
smacked down.
With regard to sections of
the Patriot Act and a number
of subsequent executive
orders. the government has
previously been charged
· with making up the law as II
goes along. This now
appears to include bypassmg
the Supreme Court.
As Jaffer notes. these
Combat Status Review
Tribunals do not "provide
anything like due process.
Reversing the presumpllon
of innocence, the tribunal
starts by presuming that the
pnsoner is in fact an enemy
combmant, and it's up to the
prisoner to prove that he's
not." One Yemenr delcndant
smd that "the United States
should know thai a person r;
innocent until proven guilty.
. not the other way around."
Moreover. the pri soners
are denied access to most of
the
alleged
evidence
agaiml them because It "
cla ss ified Most crucrally.
the prisoners are denied a
lawyer In stead. they arc
given a "personal represc n·
!alive" : a mtlilary ollrcer

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

Powell can put kids atop
As much as Colin Powell's
departure is a loss to the
State Department, it may be
a gain for the nation's children, who need special assistance amid stingy budgets.
Realistically, Powell probably can't get much ·more
money spent on kids. But he
•.
'
can ooce agam
ptoneer
efforts to energize voluntary
activity and try to' get 'government money spent more
effictently at all levels.
And to m~ke childien a
national priority again, he
l)nd his allies can educate
adults and politicians about
how it's in their self-interest,
and not just a humanitarian
gesture.,
Riglit now, the federal
government spends a paltry
$2,500 per American child,
mainly for education and
health programs, while it
lays out more than $17,000
per capita on the nation 's
seniors, mainly for retirement support.
Funds for almost all discretio-nary domestic programs, which include most
programs for children and
youths, are likely to be cut in
the coming years as the Bush
administration puts its top
priority on defense, homeland security and deficit
reduction.
In fact, in the Republican
Congress, the slashing has
already begun. Recently. it
cut federal education spending for the current fiscal year
to a level below the presi &lt;,tent's own budget request.
Special education for handi capped children, to cite one
of many programs affected,
is likely to get less .than half
of the $1 b1llion iocrease that
Bush proposed.
In addition, as Congress
moved closer to leaving
town for the year, it was on
the verge of failing to restore
$1 billion in unspent funding
for the State Children's
Health Insurance Program
that could have provided
health coverage for some
200,000 low-income children m the next three years.
Enter Powell, who before

Tuesday, November 23,2004

without legal trarning.
As Human Rights Watch
reports from Guanlanamo
Bay. "two of the three members" of the tribunal before which, the prisoners.
tn shackles. sit - "have no
legal traimng or experience"
- although their JOb is "tp
rule on matters of law."
James Ro.ss, senior legal
adv1ser for Human Rights
Watch, says reasonably, "11's
astonishing that the Umted
States would try a case of
historic importance (a nd that
·can result in permanent
impnsonment) with officials
who are struggltng to grasp
bas~ legal concepts. Real
courts wrth real judges
should be trying these complex cases, not tribunals
started from scratch ··
I ex pect. or at least hope,
that the· Supreme Court v.ill
eventually require this
adminrstration to prov1de
real JLidges and real lawyers
al Guantanamo Bay.
But, as of thi s writing, the
rule of law there is so bizarre
that. as Jaffer points OLII ,
wh1lc "CSRT has reviewed
the cases of so me 200 prisoners, it has ordered the
re le,"e of only one . Many
prisoners are now refusmU. to
participate in the proces~ at
all."
Indeed. about a third of the
delamee s will not allend
these kangaroo courts. But
fear not. the y wil l be JUdged
anyway. rn ab,entra. by I~ese
nonlawycrs and nonjudges.
Obvtously. thi' counterfeit
proce" was CIHKCi ved 10
c·nn the Supreme Curt 11110
heiiCVIIl~' the cll()\CI"Illllt.:'lll
\\'.1'\ • .tdhering to lh .June
de cr;IIHl
But already. on Ou 2 1. in
~

Washington. D.C.. US.
Distnct Court Judge Colleen
Kollar-Kmclly ruled thai all
the pnsoners at Guantdnamo
Bay have the. right - as the
U.S Supreme Court dec14fd
in June - to Amencan
lawyers with whom they can
speak without the government listening in.
So far. lawyer-client confidentiality has been ahnosl
enltrcly forbidden there;
including with those nilll•
lawyer "personal representatives "
. This crude attempt by the
government to sktp the U.S.
Supreme Court is not sur·
prising in view of attitudes
of key administration officrals long before these fake
proceedings at Guantanamu
Bay started. Dick Cheney
calleu the detamecs "the
worst of a very btrd Jot ...
devoted to killing millions of
Amencans."
Mr. Cheney, whe1e is the
pre sumption of innocericc'l
And Donald Rumsfcld
sard they were "amon.g the
must dangerous. bcsHrarncd
'icioL" killers on the tw:v of
the earth." But the over•
whelming majority lias nul
been charged with any
crune . II they're so heinous,
then charging them should
have been a sw rtt. clear
pro(ess.

Instead, as Jameel J~llcr
says. "Guantanamo rem;uns
a legal black hole " ·
I Nm Hnuojf i.1 " national·
/r rf!nmvJu::d amhm·itr on lite
Fint A111endm&lt;' •11 ;mel rlre
Bill of' R1gh1.1 and awilor of
.\('\'e ra/ hoob, rn ,·f,ld!ll g
'The War n11 !he /!ill of
H1 glus and t!re G11tht•i i1111
Rc \l.,fllll( t" ( St'\'f!ll Strn ie.t

Pre1.1. 2003).

·

Colombian demonstrators burn a U.S. flag near of the Cartagena's old crty, Colombia.
U.S. Presrdent Bush, second from left, wrth first lady Laura Bush , left, is welcomed by Monday, Nov. 22, 2004. Bush arrived for a four-hour stay in the seasrde crty of Cartagena for
Columbian President Alvaro Uribe Velez. second from right and his wife, Una, for an offrcial visit. talk with Colombian President Alvaro Uribe. The visit marks the final stop of a three-day Latrn
!\;1onday. Nov. 22, 2004, in Cartagena, Colombia.
Amencan tnp.
AP Photo•

Bush under heavy protection in drug-infested Colombia, promises US aid
Bv TERENCE HUNT
AP WH ITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT

CARTAGENA, Colombia
- Under a· security web of
warplanes, battleships and
15,000 troops, President Bush
praised Colombta's battle
against drugs and Marxist
guerrillas
Monday
and
pledged to keep U.S. aid
llowing so "this courageous
nation can win Its war against
narcoterrorists "
In a country that is the
world's largest producer of
cocaine and a maJor supplier
uf heroin, Bush said President
Alvaro Uribe is achieving
results wtth a massive aerial
fumigation program agaiost
coca - the mam ingredient in
cocaine - and an aggressive
military buildup against insurgents. who fund themselves
through drug trafficking. kidnapping and extortion.
"The number of acres under
cultivation are down signifi·
cantly," Bush said. standing
with Uribe in shirt sleeves at
seaside lecterns. "The number
of arrests are up. The nvmber
1:\f murders is down . In other
words. th1 s man's plan is
working."
Uribe sard Columbia is wm~
ning the fight. but has not yet
won. "We have made pro~ress
but the serpent is sllll ahve,"
Uribe said.
Bush's pledge reaffirms
U.S. commitments to a $3.3
billion, five-year military aid
program known us Plan
Colombia. Bush said the plan
launched in August 2000
enjoys widespread support in
Congress and that he would
work with lawmakers lo keep
it funded. Without mentioning
n specific figure, Bush said he
would seek enough funds to

Lilac
from Page A1
These travels are evident
when entering the White
Lilac where each bed IS covered with a pi ush, European
down cotttforter. Proctor also
has her original paintings on·
display, some of which have
been inlluenced by impressionist and surrealist painters.
Besides a parlor and bath,
there are two bedrooms
inside the inn which have
Baker beds, huge closets and
brass reading lamps.
Behind the inn is a small
cottage that washed down the
Ohio River during the flood
of 1937 from whereabouts
unknown. Boarders can
spend th~ night 111 the cottage
complete wiih a full bath,
satellite televtsi on. a loft
upsta1rs and a queen-sized
bed downstairs.
Proctor has btg plans for
the backyard where she
hopes to host weddings. As
for now, there is a cozy back
porch with a large ceiling fan
and fairy lights climb1ng the
!all ice wor.,k.
G~ests are also treated to
home-cooked meals by
Proctor who used to cook for
large dinner parties in
Nashville where she also
helped to run a B&amp;B.
"I cook a huge Southern
breakfast mrm1s the grits" she
joked.
Proctor never saw herself
as the owner. of an inn.
However, during a trip visit-

make the plan effective.
Bush left Cartagena for his
Texas ranch where he was
spending the Thanksgiving
holiday. At Uribe's urging,
Bush stopped off in thts
Canbbean seaport city after
attending a summit in Chile of
21 Pacific Rim leaders.
Security was tight.
U.S. Navy commandoes,
toting assault rifles and peering
through
binoculars,
patrolled the Caribbean in
rubber boats where submarines
and battleships
already plied the waters.
Warplanes and helicopters
provided air cover while
15,000 Colombian security
forces were deployed around
the city for Bush's brief stay.
Bush was here to strengthen
relations in Latin America,
but he also responded to news
from Iran, which claimed it
had frozen all uranium enrichment activitjes. The United
States belie\~s Iran is developing nuclear weapons.
Sounding skeptical about
Iran 's claim, Bush said,
"Well. let's say I hope it's
true."
But unwillmg ~.q take Iran 's
word, Bush said Iran must
allow for verification of its
claims. "I think the definition
of truth is the willingness for
the Iranian regime to allow
for verification," the president
said.
Since Uribe came to power
two years aso, Plan Colombia
has helped Jail scores of traffickers and reduce lhe coca
crop by 20 percent for two
years in a row, according to
the White House.
And the battle against rebel
groups - the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia,
known by its Spanish

acronym FARC , and the
National Libera'tion Army,
known as the ELN- is being
expanded from the capital of
Bogota to more rural areas.
Still, the efforts have still
failed to visibly reduce
cocaine production or keep it
otT U.S. streets. And the 40·
year-old insurgency continues

to claim an estimated 3,500
lives every year.
.
Bush satd the outcome of
the battle was critical to security in both nations.
'The drug traffickers who
practice violence and intimidatiOn in this country send
their addictive and deadly
products to the United

States ... Bush sa1d. "Defeating
them is vital to the '&lt;Jfety of
our peoples and to the &gt;tabrlrty of thi s hemisphere."
While in Cartagenc~, Bush
met with Orlando Cabrera. a
Colombian native who plays
for the world champion
Boston Red Sox. and shook
hands with more than a dozen

elememary school-aged base·
ball player'
One of the youngsters pre·
sented Bush with Jersey
emblazoned with Crbre ic~·,
No. 4.:J
·'He just mi"ed it hy one
numbe1. .. Joked Bu,h. the
.:J3rd pres1den1 ol the Unncd
State,

Milk vending machines
,pay off at Eastern
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern Local School
District has received $2,000
for its lunchroom program
from the American Dairy
Association
and
Dairy
Council Mid East and their
m1lk vending machine grant
program.
The funds come from the
vending machine operations
wh1ch offer milk, yogurt and
other datry products as a
healthy lunch and snack
alternative in the Eastern
High School and Eastern
Elementary School cafeterias.
Along with local dairy
farmers, Roy Holter and
Stacie
Pullins.
Stacey
Stradley of the dairy association presented two $1 ,000
checks for each sc hool's
lunch program on Monday.

Council
from Page A1
more about whether or not
the village could afford the
bonuses during the second
reading at the next council
meeting.
All members voted in
favor of the first reading for
the one time wage increase
(Christmas bonuses) except
Councilman J1m Sisson.
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun asked Hysell if the village .workers had received a
cost of living raise last year
to which Hysell replied "no."
She explained the main reason for that was the jump in
lhe cost of health msurance.
In open discussion
Councilman Todd Norton

ing relatives in Mason
County earlier in the year she
saw a newspaper ad about an
old house for sale in
Middleport.
"When I saw it I thought
that house is too big for me"
said Proctor. "But I think I
was brought to it .for a re;Lson
because I believe in God's
providl!nce."
Proctor bought the home
in July of this year and
packed up her life in
Nashville and her mother
Mildred and made a new
home in Middleport. She and
her mother now live in the
family's quarters at the inn.
After going through tax
records for Meigs County, I·
Proctor estimates the house
to be around 140 years old.
from Page A1
The outside brick has a
Flemish bond and ts made to
first Christmas the church
last.
took
part in Operation
The exteriors are compliChristmas
Child, · the
mented by the hospitable
mteriors that include cloth Barnitzes co)lected 50 boxes
napkins. an extensive china from their church friends.
cabinet and a plate of cookies and delivered them to
anticipating those unexpect- Huntington in a family car.
"Then . . we realized v.e
ed travelers.
could
use the market's trucks
Proctor adds these touches
to
deliver
many more boxes,
because "Not haVing any
immedwte family left in the and we began to promote 11 as
area except Mom, I want · a community project," Anna
people to !eel like they are Barnitz said.
Samaritan's Purse operates
part of our family when they
a
regional collections center
come here."
The White Lilac Inn is in Huntington. Thin's where
located at 528 2nd Ave. in the Bob's Market trucks were
Middleport and ca11 be heading on Monday. From
there. they were to be
r~d at 992-4543.
shipped
to Charlotte. N.C.
Pl (Kior laughed 11 hen
asked wht)l ktnd of person last night. At that poult. the
would undertake a B&amp;B and boxes are inspected ftir any
sUid "I loved to play house as objectionable items - such
as war-related toys - and a
a lillie girl."

Shoebox

"Schools with milk vending machines were virtually
non-existent before ADADC
Mid East began offering
grants,"
Stradley
said.
"Today, there are several
hundred machmes in Ohio,
Pennsylvania and West
Virginia schools, helping to
increase the demand for dairy
products in schools."
That's good news for the
Holter and Pullins farms, and
others who operate local
dairy operations. They sell
their milk to Broughton's
Dairy in Marietta. which proHdes milk products to the
school system under an annual contract, and they participate in a dairy farmer checkoff program which funds the
dairy promotional organizations.
Lunchroom
Supervisor
Carol~n Ritchie said the milk
machtne does a brisk business, despite the soda and
expressed concerns about
filling in some of the ditches
along Union Avenue.
Councilman Sisson questioned why village workers
had not yet cleaned leaves
from city drains. Sisson also
felt something· needed to be
done to decrease the $1654
gasoline bill the v1llage patd
last month to run village
vehicles.
Councilworrmn
Mary
McAngus asked about the
progress of the · park at
Mechanic Street. Mayor Musser
said he was still waiting to hear
from the contrdctor about dt.rt
meant to Jill m the p,trk.
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun commended the village workers for the job they •
did cleaning up the Beech
Grove Cemetery. However,
she expressed concerns that
gospel tract rn the native language of the country of delivery will be placed In each
box.
"Many of the kids who
receive these shoebox gifts
ha'e never owned anything
in their lives." said Brenda
Merritt .
manager
of
Middleport's WYVK-FM.
"We've heard from those
who have seen the delivery of
the boxes th&lt;It they not only
touch the hearts of the chrldren who receive them. hut
the1r etitire family."
In cummunitres where
money is tight, the effort to
provide Christmas joy to
famihes even needier is signiticanl to those who coordinate the local effort.
"For some people here, it's
a struggle. but it\ somethmg
they really want to do."
Merrill said. "One lady who
made up a box dropped it otf
and tearfully thanked us for
the opportunity to help."

Brian J. Reed/ photo
Stacey Stradley of the American Dairy Associatron and Darry
Councrl Mrd-East presents two $1.000 grants to Carolyn
Rrtchie, Eastern lunchroom supervrsor. for funds generated
through the school's darry vendrng program. Also prctured are
Roy Holter and Stacre Pullins, local darry operators. and Laura
Pullrns, Kirk Pullrns and Brenna Hotter. Eastern Elementary
students and 4-H dairy club members
potato machine s wh1ch compete for students· "mtlk''
money. Ritchie said flavored
milkshake beverages, yogurt
drinks and cheese are all popular with students.
Stradley said the dairy
snacks are also a good choice
for students who stay after

schoo l for spom pracuces
and other actiHIIes
"They are a wholesome
snack choice and make good
nutritional sense, because
dairy products provtde the
protein that kids need to carry
them from after-school to
dinner lime."

there were failures to communicate on other mutter'
that related to cleaning up
certain areas of the village .
Spaun also asked Hysell if
"gallon-wise" they were
using the same amount of
gasoline as last year. Hysell
said it was :·similar'' and that
it cost them more when the
,village had their own gas
pump.
Councilman
George
Wright expressed hi~ concerns about selling the old
Pomeroy Junior High School
to a nonprofit group which
would nul generate revenue
for the village. ·
Village
AdminiStrator
John Anderson agreed s&lt;Iying
that commercial property was
at such a premium in
Pomeroy that it might be better used by &lt;Ill organtzauon
that would create jOb &gt;
Mussel hrnu ghi up the fact

that the roof to the Pomeroy
MuniCipal Budding rs 'till
leaking and is covered with
turps in places . He expects to
have an estimate Tuesdav and
may call council 11110 special
session to revtew the brd later
in the week
In other news. Musser and
council are planmng a crackdown of all tho'e who have
unpatd par king trck cts or
fine' throu gh M.I}nr·, Coun .
Fatlure to pay parking tickets
may result rn 'ehrcks being
towed. Thi s cra,·k -dow n is to
begm 1111111Cdratl'iy.
(IJunc·il aho \Oied to free
the parking meter' begrnnrng
on Fndc~\. ~"' 26 11 h1ch rs
ahn the J,l\ nf the deJic,Itrnn
to the lnunt.IIll on the
Pomero~ \\ al!..11tg rath
All memher' of cnunci l
were present \1 ith the excc pIIJJn of Cou ncilman Jackie
Welker.

hilh in the amount of
Sc.Hl77 2X
• Apprm ed Iht' third .rnJ
ltnal reading (lf an nrdt n,nlct•
from Page A1
alhn\ mg the \'JILt g.._· ~tdmint.., ­
trator to reside mihrJc ihc·
ment sy,tem cllld other cur- \Illage.
Pie...,cnt ''L'Je CoUJh.:ll
rent
ex pen,es.
total111 g
memhers Re,•J. Stephen
$7.89.:J.6.:J. Counc·Ii uJ,o
Scott.
• Appro1ed minutes ol Hou chin'. Katl11
Oct. II. Oct . 25 c~nd Nov. H Robert Rubin,un. Reed and
Jefl Pc•kh,llt1. and f;i,(·,d
regular meetmgs.
• Apprm ed paymem of Offrcer Su,an Baker.

Fines

! !ATIENTION!!
BE YOUR OWN Boss
BUSINESS SOLUTIONS FOR NEW
AND ExiSTING ENTREPRENEURS
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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
NASCAA pta chlllltlc tlnlah, Plat 82
Ron Tl.lrner tired by llllnola, Page A8

Official calls recount request frivolous, insulting
CINCINNATI (AP)
Third-pany candidates for
president said they would
sue
in
federal
court
Monday to force a recount
of Ohio ballots before
returns are certified next
week prompting one
election official to say he
might
mobilize
fellow
counties to resist a recount.
"Counties are very upset,"
said Keith Cunningham.
director of the Allen
County Board of Elections
and incoming president of
the Ohio Association of
Election Officials, who
called the lawsuit "frivolous."
"Commissioners
are
beginning to understand and if they don ' t, will
understand soon · what
kind of financial impact this
is going to have on them,
in a year when elections
already cost a great deal
more than expected... said
Cunningham, a Republican.
Libertarian
Michael
Badnarik and the Green
Party's David Cobb said
last week that they had
raised more than S150.000
to cover the state's fee for
a
recount.
Ohio
law
requires payment of $10
per precinct, or $113.600
statewide, but election officials say the true expense
would be far greater.
"It'·s going to crush county
governments,"
Cunningham said.
Carlo LoParo, spokesman
for Secretary of State
Kenneth Blackwell, has
estimated the actual cost at
$1.5 million.
Even though the two
third-party
candidates
received a combin!O(I 0.26
percent of the vote {n unofficial results, they contend a
recount is necessary to
ensure accuracy and that an
immediate recount shou ld
begin, even though the official canvass is not complete.
Dan Trevas, spokesman
for the. .. Ohio Democratic
Party, said the party would
join in the recount request
that would be filed as soon

Summary Box:

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

Democrats join 1
L'bertarians, Greens
in .recoUnt,.request,.. ..
~

River Valley at Gallia Academy

WHO WANTS A RECOUNT?, The Libertarian and Gretln party candidates for president, and thl) Ohio ·
Democratic Party.
_ 1

Friday's Games
Boys Basketball

OVC at Federal Hocking

Meigs at Galtia Academy
Eastern vs. Waverly (at SSU)
Southern vs. Nor1h Adams (at SSU)
Trimble at OVC
Girls Basketball

Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb
participates in a debate at Cornell University in
Ithaca, N.Y., Wednesday, Oct 6, 2004. Cobb and
Libertarian party candidate for president, Michael
Badnarik, said in a federal lawsuit expected to be
filed Monday that a rEH:ount of Ohio ballots can't
wait until returns are certified next week.

Nextel Cup finale
gets big ratings

as the secretary of state
certified the results, or
sooner if an early recount
is ordered by a court .
Bush
led
President
Democrat John Kerry by
136,000 votes in the unofficial count. and Kerry conceded that there weren 't
enough provisional ballots
to change the outcome. But
Kerry supporters have made
numerous claims of voting
irregularities in Ohio.
Counties have until Dec.
3 to report official vote
counts, and LoParo has
said results will be certified
by Dec . 6.
"There's no final count.
There 's no number from
which to begin a recount,"
LoParo said Monday.
The third-party candidates
contend that would not
allow enough time for a
.recount of Ohio's 55 million votes before the state's
presidential electors meet

$1.5 million, according to the Ohio Secretary of State.

Tuesday,
November23

f

, WHY
1

DOES IT MATTER?
President Bush led Democrat John
Kerry by 136,000 votes in Oh!o's
unofficial count. Kerry copcedell, .b.ut
supporters have made numerous
clllims of voting • irregularities.
'

'

.

Dec. 13.
"Nothing could be . more
important to our country
than ensuring the results of
the Ohio presidential election
are accurate and complete."
Cobb said. "Our faith and
trust in the democratic
process all hinge on a fair,
unbiased and transparent
counting of ballots in Ohio.''
That assertion offends
Cunningham.
"The inference is that
Ohio election officials will
not count every vote."
Cunningham said. ''That's
just insulting; it's frivolous
and simply harassment.''
Cunningham said he was
consulting with officials in
several counties
before
deciding whether to pursue
legal action to prevent a
recount.
"I need to see if this 1s
merely iny optnton or
reflects the opinion of the
association," he said.

..,

'l'

,

•·' ·.· . (11.o·p_ •
'

"If. indeed, we are all
forced to do the recount.
the
negative
economic
impact far outweighs any
.·
d h
ld
postttve _ goo l _ at cou
come from thts recount.
My intention would be to
attempt to argue in court
that it's time for the secretary of state to take a stand
and attest that every vote is
being counted by local
boards."
LoParo had no comment
about the intention by the
third-party candidates to file
the lawsuit in U.S. District
Court in Toledo . But he
said there is no provision
for a recount before the
'ecretary of state certifies
the final tallies from all 88
countie's.
He said the .\tate already
is operating under an accelerated timetable because of
the Dec. \3 meeting of
presidential electors.

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It should be a cloudy morning. Temperatures will rise to
52 with today's low of 44
around 6:00am.
· I be 5 MPH from the
southeast.
Afternoon ( l-6 p.m.)
It will continue to be cloudy.
Expect nothing more than a
passing shower. The rainfall
is expected to begin near
6:00pm. Temperatures · will
hold steady around 55 with
today's high of 57 occurring
around 2:00pm. Winds will be
5 MPH from the southeast
turning from the northeast as
the afternoon progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It will continue to be
cloudy. There could be
some drizzle and fog from
time to time . The rainfall is
expected .to end around
I O:OOpm with total accurnlflations for this event
near
0.05
inches.
Tel)lperatures will linger at
53.: Winds c~ill be 5 MPH
from the northeast turning

from the north as the
evening progresses.
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)It should remain cloudy.
There is a slight chance we
could see some rain.
Temperatures will hover at
53. Winds willbe5 MPH from
the northwest turning from
the south as the overnight pro.gresses.

Wednesday,
November24
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It should be a cloudy morning. We are predicting moderate rain. The rainfall should
begin around 9:00am. The
rain should reach 0.35 inches
by the end of this morning.
Temperatures will re.main
around 59. Winds will be 10
MPH from the south.
Afternoon (l-6 p.m.)
Light rain is forecasted . The
rain should reach 0.20 inches
by
this
afternoon.
Temperatures will stay near
64. Sk,ies will range from part] y cloudy to cloudy with I 0 to
15 MPH winds from the
south.

PERSPECTIVE: Ambition, hope for power, drives party switching politicians
BvANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
1\P STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - First his
future father-in-law switched
parties,
becoming
a
Republican before running
again for county commissioner. Then state Rep. Derrick
Seaver's fiancee defected
from the Democrats- to vote
for her father in a 2003 primary.
Then it was Seaver's tum to
leave the Democrats. the first
Ohio lawmaker in 22 years to
make the switch but one in a
long history of politicians
around the country parting
ways with their party.
Lawmakers who make the
switch do it for their -conscience, their short -term gain
or their long-term ambition,
say observers of the jump from
one side of the aisle to the other.
"There's always this tension
between, are voters electing a
person to represent them in
the Legislature, or are voters
electing a member of a party?"
said Antoine Yoshinaka, a
University of CaliforniaRiverside political scientist
who studies lawmakers who
switch parties.
"For a lot of these folks who
switch parties, they will
argue, 'My constituents elect·
ed me to represent them,
therefore I'm doing what's in
their best interests,"' he said.
. In
Georgia,
three
Democratic representatives
switched parties after the
GOP gained control of the
House Nov. 2 for the first time
in 130 years.
"As a minority member lobbyists find your company far
less enchantingthan they used
to," said Charles Bullock, a
University of Georgia politi·
cal scientist.
In Louisiana, U.S. Rep.
Rodney Alexander switched
his party affiliation from
Democrat to Republican in
August, drawing the ire of his
former state party boss.
Republicans control the U.S.

House and Senate.
The switch was an "underhanded move motivated
entirely by short-term political opportunism and personal
gain" said Mike Skinner,
chairman of the Louisiana
Democratic Party.
Alexander's chief of staff
brushed off such criticism,
saying Alexander had long
voted along conservative lines
and supported many of
President Bush's initiatives.
"The name-calling is unfor-

tunate,"
said
Royal ·
Alexander, who is not related
to the congressman.
People who switch parties
are often successful when running for re-election, said
Christian Grose. a political
professor
at
science
Wisconsin 's
Lawrence
University who studies the
phenomenon.
But not always. New York saw
an exception in 2000 when a 71year-old former librarian named
Regina Seltzer defeated the

.

Eastern vs. Northwest (at SSU)

ruE cosT:

incumbent congressman, Michael s.aid Seltzer, 75, nqw apracticForbes. who had switched from ing lawyer. "I ran because
the GOP to run as a Democrat
nobody else would do it"
Seltzer. who won by 35
Before Seaver, the only
votes in the primary before precedent in recent Ohio hislosing the general election, tory was the temporary defecsaid she didn't dislike Forbes tion to the GOP in 1982 by
but was disappointed the state Sen. Morris Jackson, a
Democratic Party was sup- Cleveland Democrat. Jackson
porting someone who didn't 'agreed to become the 17th
share its values.
Senate Republican- giving
"I was appalled that the the GOP control of the chamDemocratic party not only 'ber- in exchange for becomseduced him to switch but ing 5enate president. But the
supported him so wholly," deal fell through after about

two weeks and he returned to
the Democrats.
Such switches can be minor
political coups but with no
impact on most voters, worth
noting only for the bragging
rights.
In rare cases, the move
swings control of a chamber to
another party. That was the case
when U.S. Sen. Jim Jeffords, a
Vermont Republican, became
an independent and gave
Democrats 19-month control
of the Senate in 200 I.

Eastern places four on all-district first team
Meigs' Varian, Southern's
Nease also earn first team nods

Saturday's Games
Boye Basketball

- WHO DOESN'T?
Keith
Cunningham, director of the Allen •
County Board of Elections and
incoming president of the Ohio
Assoeia(jt)n of Election Officials,.
,.calls ·lh&lt;i reql,le~t "insulting ).. ftiVo· :
J,.. 0us· and simply.
. harassment."

AP Photo/Kevin Rlvoll, File

High School Football

Today's Games
Girls Basketball

-~

.

,.

Prep Schedule

NEW YORK (AP) NASCAR's Chase for the
Championship paid off in
high TV ratings for the season-ending race.
NBC's coverage of the
title-deciding Ford 400
earned a 5.6 overnight rating, the best in the race's
six-year history and the best
performance ever for a
NASCAR race against NFL
football on Sunday.
The rating was 4 7 percent
higher than last year's 3.8
and up 24 percent from the
previous high of 4.5 in
2002.

BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune.com
THE PLAINS - Four Eastern Eagles' also
earned their places on the Division IV first team,
joining Southern's Jake Nease and Meigs' Curtis
Varian as first teamers.
, On the Division IV offense, along with Nease,

NBA commissioner seeks
practical security solutions
. BY CHRIS SHERIDIIN

Associated Press

Southern California and
Oltlahoma held the top two spots ·
in the Bowl Championship Series
standings on Monday, leaving
little doubt that the Trojans and
Sooners are in control of their
national title hopes.
Games through Nov. 20

BCS
RK TEAM

BCSAYG

1. lcM llliliiic.l

. .9789

2 . Oklahoma

.9642

3. Aullun1

.9356

......

4. C.lllomll

&amp;.
6.

.8504

._._
Utah

.8301
.8172

7.
B. Georgia
8. llllmt (FL)

.8359

10. loulavllle

.6123

11. !owl

.5&gt;440

.6296

.5114

13. L8U

.5059

14. Vlrglnll Tech

15. 11M• I

I

.4902
.4774

18. Arizona 'Slate

.4484

17. Vllgllota

.3682 .

18. Florida State

.3001

19. 1lllcu AIM

.2958

20. Wlaeonoln

.2919

21.80111D11Cotlllle

.2369

22 . Oklahoma State

.1896

23. Will Vli!ll'ola

.1573

24 . UTEP

. 1162

25.llallttnliCirlol!n

.0392

SOURCE : The National Football
Foundation and College Hall of Fame Inc.

AP

RECORD PTS

r&gt;J

1. Wake FOI'8st (25) 2-0 1,658 2
1-o 1 ,637 1
3. Georjjia Teell (1 1) t-0 1,5115 3
4. Syracuse (4)
4-&lt;l 1,549 5
5. Illinois ( 1)
2-0 1,450 6
6. Oklahoma St. (2) ·1-o 1,386 7
7, COnnec1icu1
1.() 1,302 8
8. Kenlucky(1)
1-0 1,236 9
9. Duke
1-0 1,084 11
10. Michigan St
1-0 964 13
11 . North Carolina
0-1 934 4
12. Louisville
1-o 918 14
13, Marylan&lt;l
1-0 833 15
14. Missloslppi S1.
4-1 746 12
15. Toxas
Hl 707 16
16. Pitlsburph
1:0 687 17
17. N.C. Slate
3-0 576 19
18. Arizona
2·1 565 10
19. Alabama
2-0 556 18
20. Wisconsin
t-0 399 21
2 1. NOire Dame
1-0 386 20
22. Washington
1-0 337 22
23. Flor1&lt;1a
1-0 317 23
24. Gonzaga
2-0 218 25
25. Memphis
3-1 213 24
Othera recelvk'lg votn: Virginia
15t , S1anford 7G, Michigan 64 ,
Providence 40, Charlotte 35,
Oklahoma 25, S. Illinois 24, Cindnnati
22, Utah 17, Boston College 14, Now
Mexico 9, UTEP 7, ETSU 5, Santa

2. Kansas (26)

Phone:304-373-1ATV
Fax: 304·l73·1291
...._

Hours:

. Mon. ·• SilL, !la.m. • 7p.m.;

NEW YORK- David Stem would not want
to be in charge of a league that needs barriers to
separate fans from players. Nor would he follow the lead of European soccer and order
games to be played in empty arenas.
The NBA commissioner is searchin!1 for
more practical remedies to keep things civtl in a
sport where the intimate setting- the highestpaying customers
sit so close to the
action they can
The NBA issued suspensions to
smell
the players'
nine players for a combined 143
is part of
games tor the1r roles in the brawl sweat during the Indiana Pacers at
its appeal.
Detroit Pistons games on Friday.
"The reality is
that our society and
our arenas exist
based upon a social
contract."
Stern
NOTE· Artes1
said:
"Everyone
Ron
Stephen
suspood&amp;d
Arteat Jackson
knows
that
if
tor •ematnder
of the season .
72'
20.000 fans decided
30
to go on a rampage,
we'd have a serious
problem on our
· hands, no matter
what we did ...
Jennalne Anthony Reggie
Moving the NBA
0'-1 Johnson Miller
forward
after the
25
5
1
ugly brawl that
spilled into the
stands at Friday
night's
lndianaDetroi t
game,
Ben
Chauncey Stem's challenge in
Wallace Billups
the days and weeks
6
1
ahead wi II be to re.:C'::;; establish the invisitmmedtate ble barrier dividing
suspenston
players and fans.
(one game)
handed OOW!'I
He said the NBA
Oerrllc:k
Elden on Saturday wi IJ
re-examine
Coleman Campbell
policies
ranging
1
1
from arena security
SOURCE NBA
., to alcohol sales in
response to one of
the worst brawls in the league's history.
"No matter what .security procedures you
have in place. you run a risk that a player can
jump into the stands or that fans will behave in
an anti-so.:ial basis:· Stem said.
No other maJOr p!iofessional sport has customers sitting so close to it' athletes. providing
an atmosphere that's cozy on most nights but
combustible on others.
The close proximity of ,hecklers. whose comments often strike a nerve and 'ometimes cross
a line, add a measure of volatility.
"That's part of the game." said Pistons assistant coach Gar Heard. a former player. "They
had a guy here in Detroit when I was playing.
He was probably one of the worst guys in the
league. They had a guy in Washington who was
also one of the worst ..
But mtl&gt;l players in Heard\ day. and in subsequent years. knew there was a line never to be
crossed - no matter how vicious the heckling
became. Players didn't alway' agree with the
belief that a fan who paid his money was entitled to voice his opinion. but they lived with it
On the rare occasions when situa!ions spun
out of control and objects were thrown at players. cooler heads almost always prevailed and
kept events from spiraling dangerously out of
control as they did anhe now infamous PacersPi&gt;tons game.
"Nonnallv in those situatiom•. you have official' say. 'You and you are go ne . Get off the
tloor right now.' and the thing goes away,"
Piston' CEO Tom Wilson 'aid. "For whatever
reason. that 1.hdn 't happen, and the league will
look imo that. Then you had one guy do some-

I!

.8258

12. Michigan

TEAM

Ripley, WV 25271

NBA

ISC. Oklahema
held BCS lead

The top 25 teams in The Associated
Press' men's college basketball poll,
wHh. first-place votes in parentheses,
records through Nov. 21 , total points
based on 25 points for a first-place
vote through one point for a 25th·
place vote and last week's ranking:

2787 Route 21 South •

Please see District. Bl

Stern rules
out drastic
remedies

Brad Sherman/photo

Trimble's Jennifer Grandy {24) goes for the steal as Meigs' point guard Sam Pierce brings the ball up
the floor Monday.

Trimble thumps Meigs
BY BRYAN WALTERS

* Sales • Parts • Service • Acc~ssories *

on the offen,ive line.
Ken Amsbary was a solid player on defense and
offense. The senior quanerback recorded 95 tackles and picked off three passes, while throwing for
1,224 yards and 15 touchdowns. He also had seven
TDs on the ~round.
Junior defensive lineman had 68. tackles and 10
sack&gt; and a defensive touchdown and· had seven
more TDs on offense.
Also on the Division IV team from Meigs
County was Eastern 's Ross Holt.er and Southern's

High School Girls Basketball

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

p ey, L.L.C.

was Eastern's Phil Pierce as a all-around player.
Pierce. a former teammate of Nease at Southern,
had 33 receptions for 453 yards and six tou chdowns for the Eagles, while he ran for 494 yards
and three IDs. The senior also had 52 tackles, five
sacks and three interceptions on defense.
Nease, meanwhile, caught 18 passes for 204
yards as a tight end for the Tornadoes along with
being an excellent blocker.
On defense, three Eagles were honored.
Darren Scarbrough. this year's OVP Super 25
defensive player of the year, hat! 103 tackles and
five sacks while playing guard, tackle and center

Clara 5, UAB 5, Tennessee 4,
Marquene 3, Rice 3, UNLV 3,

Vermont 3, Air Force 2, George
Washington 2, Indiana 2, LSU 2,
Oregon 2, Davidson 1, DoPaul 1,
Iowa St. 1, Vanderl&gt;ih 1.
AP

ROCKSPRINGS Eleven
three-pointers, including seven
from junior guard Jennifer Grandy,
enabled the Trimble Tomcats to
claim a 77-43 girls basketball victory over Meigs Monday at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium.
Grandy, the defending TVC
Hocking and Southeast District
Division IV Player of the Year,
looked in mid-season form as her

37 points enabled the visitors to
win their season opener in quite the
impressive fashion.
Grandy may have been the star
of stars on the evening, but in the
opening minutes, it was another
junior guard that gave the
Marauders ( 1-1) fits.
Julie Trace, who finished with 24
points on the ni~ht, seemed to have
all the answers tor Meigs while the
hosts were trying to contain the allstate performer.
"She started out cold, our junk
defense was working on Grandy

early,'' commented MHS Darin
Logan. "The problem was that
Trace came out on tire. I thought
when Trace got in foul trouble that
we had a shot. but Grandy stepped
back and lit it up ...
After Grandy scored the tirst five
points for THS, she was held without a point for more than four minutes in the opening stanza. Trace
stepped up with a pair of baskets
that cut the Meigs· lead to I0-9
with I :22 remaining in the first.

Please see Meigs, Bl

College Cross Country

Rio Grande's Boyles _
earns AllAmerican honors at NAIA Meet
STAFF REPORT
sperts@mydailytribune.com
LOUISVILLE. Ky.- University
of Rio Grande. senior cross country
ninner Matt Boyles finally achieved
All-American status in the sport
after finishing 13th at the 49th
Annual Men's NAIA National
Cross Country Meet at the E.P. Tom
Sawyer State Park on Saturday.
The Thppers Plains native, covered the 5-mile course in 25 :15.50
in finishing 13th overall. The top 30
finishers claimed All-Amencan
honors.
'
·Soimo Kiplagat of Lindenwood

(Mo.) University
wa~ the individual
champion.
Kiplagat posted a
winning time of
24:17.20.
There were 259
runners in the
event.
Boyles was the
top finisher of all
Boyles
American Mideast
Conference representatives at the meet. He beat
Malone's Leo Kormanik. who
edged him for the individual championship at the AMC/Region IX

Meet two weeks prior.
This was the tirst time Boyles ha;,
reached All-American status in
cross country. a goal he set for himself heading into the weekend.
Boyles also was named NAIA
All-American Scholar Athlete as
well for his excellence in the classroom. Boyles is majoring in
Business Managemen( Teammate
Brad Gilders, a junior from
Glouster. was also presented with an
NAIA All-American Scholar
Athlete award .
Gilders is majoring in Busine"
Manage me nt / 1n form at ion .
Technology.

.

Pluse see Stem. ·B1
.•

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

tr ct

DIVISION I
Flr1t Team

Offense Aece ve s-B J Hughes Logan 6 foot 0 185
pounds JUI"I or Qua terback-Corey Spackey Logan 5 11
200 sr
Defense L nemen-Rob Rose Logan 6 1 300 s
l nebackers-Justm Pack Logan 5 10 185 sr
Special Mention
Kevm Call Logan Patr ck Howe Logan Just n Coakley

Logan

NOTE No playe s ol yea selected because of number
of teams n d st ct
DIVISION II
First Team
Offense Race ve rs-Ouenlon Upshaw ChI colhe 5
10 165 sr Scott Casto Mar ella 5 9 150 sr Randy
F1sher Jackson 6 0 185 sr Lmemen~A &amp;IC So e
Manetta 6 2 205 sr Walter Mtller Jackson 6 3 285 s
Ouarterbac~s-CI nt Aust n Ch II cothe 6 2 170 sr
Jason Schab Ma alta 6 1 185 sr Ja ed Humphreys
Jackson 6 1 175 s
Defense L nemen-Dan el Hudson Jackson 6 0 195
sr L nebackers-G ant G bson Ch II cothe 6 2 217 s
Derek Beverly Ch II cot he 6 1 174 r Brett Welch
Manella 59 190 sr Bren on Wayland Jackson 5 11
185 s
Offenalve player ot the year Jared Humpt1reys
Jackson
Defensive player of the year 8 anton Wayland
Jackson
Note No coach o1 the year was selected
Special Mention
Trav s HuH Jackson Tom W re Mar ena Ben Howlen
Mar etta
De ck Cranda I Mar etta Ch 1s G vens
Ch II cothe Kev n Bass Ch cothe
Honorable Mention
Stephen Hu!fman Mare ta Tyler Grubb Mar etta Just n
Estes Mar etta Adam Steele Ch I cothe Brenton
Dav1dson Ch II co the M chae Pe r Ch II cothe
DIVISION Ill
First Team
Offense Race ve s-Josh Oav)l Thornv e She 1dan 5
9 165 s Matthew Mart ng Wash ngton CH M am Trace
5 11 160 Jr Josh Ousley McA r hu V nton County 6 4
185 s Evan 8 aka C rc evlle Logan Em 6 3 164 Jr
T ghl end-Derek Bush C rc ev I e 6 4 240 sr
L nemen-M ke Carpenter Tho nv e 3herldan 6 3 255
Jacob Black Wash ngton CH M am Trace 6 6 265 Jr
Norm Fleagle G eenf eld McCia n 6 3 280 sr TraiJ s
Lester C rclev a 6 5 332 so Curtla Varian Pomeroy
Meigs 6 4 275 sr Ouartarbac~s-M les Schl chter
Wash ngton CH M am Trace 6 2 205 r Chr s Bethel
McArthu Vinton County 6 3 203 sr Backs-Aaron Aile
Wash ngron CH Washington 5 8 1 86 sr Dominique
Sm th Wash ngton CH M am Trace 6 0 180 Jr Jake
Greene Thornv lie She dan 5 10 165 sr Jeff Robinson
C clev I e 5 10 175 s AI purpose-Jaymea Haggerty
Galllpolla Galli a Academy 6 1 180 so K cker-M ke
Walser Thornv lie She dan 5 10 180 sr
Defense L nemen-Jushn Wh te Tho nv lie Sheridan
5 0 195 sr Scott Boyer MeA thur V nton Count)/ 6 2
191 J Bo H nson C rc ev lie Looan Elm 57 168 sr
l nabacke s-Cody Malon Wash ngton CH M ami Trace
6 0 195 sr Shawn Avery MeA thu V nton County 6 0
2 11 sr Jared Wen A hens 6 1 235 sr Ru ss
Brockma n G eenf ad McC an 5 11 235 sr Wayne
Congrove C rc ev lie 6 1 200 r Chad Cupp C rclev lie
Logan Elm 5 10 195 s Backs-Shawn Fo sylhe
Thornv lie She dan 5 1 185 sr Tyler Goode C rclev lie
Logan Elm 5 9 166 s Zack M Is V ncen Warren 5 0
165 sr Punter 8 ady Bryant Wash ngton CH M am
T ace 5 1 170 s
Ortenslve player of the year M les Sch l chter
Wash ng on CH Man Trace
Defensi ve player of the year Just n Wh te Thornv lie
Sher dan
Coaches ot the year Jeff Conroy Wash ngton CH
M am Trace Jeff Downs McArtt1U V nton County
Special Mention
Kev n Cu lve Tho nv He Sher dan Chuck Messer
Thor nvlle She dan Josh Coleman Thornvrlle Sher dan
Kyle Cu ve Thornv e She dan Ryan Bu ns H llsboro
Joey Snyder H llsbo o Jason Jones Wash ng on CH
Wash ng on B anen Wade Wash ngton CH M am T ace
Er c G ascock
ancaste Fa rf e d Un on Alex MIter
Lancas e Fa rf eld Un on Kay lem Cottr I Lancaster
Fa rt e d Un on Chase Burge Lancaster Fa rf e d Un on
Roger Stewart Lancaster Fa rl eld Un on Billy Stockum
Lancaster Fa rf e d Un on Greg Powell McArthur 1/ nton
County M chae Ba ney MeA thur V nton County M tch
Sp es Athens Josh Beebe V ncent War e n E 1c
Collman V ncent War en Tommy Saunders Gallipolis
Gall a Academy Kyle Burnett GallipoliS Gal !Ia
Aca demy Jared Casey Pomeroy Meigs Tyler McGu e
C c evllle Logan Em Kev n Sm th C rclev lie Logan Elm
Zach Swaggerty C rclev I e Logan Em Adam Turner
C clev tte A a on Turne r C rc le\1 lie Dav d Wa lter s
C clevlte
Honorable Menhon
Aa on Walser Tho nv lie Sher dan Andy Snyder
H sbo o Andrew Z nk H llsboro Jacob Mossbarger
Wash ngton CH M am T ace Lucus Burr Wash ngton CH
M am T ace Sam ng am Washmgton CH M am Trace
ROdney Tharp Lancaster Fa rf eld Un on Curt Moore
McArthu V nton County Adam Ha rls Athens Ph II p
Hew t Athens Ne De&lt;.ker Green! eld McClam Corey
Rose G eenfreld McC ia n Eric Cullums Pomeroy
Mergs Eddre F1fe Pomeroy Meigs Tyler Clagg
Galllpolrs Gall la Academy Jeff Golden Gallipolis
Gallla A c ademy Zach Shawver Gallipolis Gallla
Academy Chase Dye C rclev lie Logan Elm Br yan
Sm th C rc ev lie Logan Elm Tu han Jackson C•rclevl e
Logan Elm Luke Sc pone Crrcfev lie Jay Strawse
C rclev lie Bran1 Conley C rc ev e Kev n 0 Del
C rclevl e
DIVISION IV
First team
Offense
Rece vers-Bo bby Horney W II amsport
Westfal 5 10 180 s Justm Ne son Po tsmouth 5 9
150 sr Shane Kerns Ironton 5 10 155 sr Sam Hull
P octo v lie Fa rtand 5 10
55
T ght end-Pat ck
Kouns 1 anton 6 2 230 sr L nemen-Derek Weave
W II amspo t Westla
6 3 305 sr Chr s Chabo
Portsmou h 6 4 230 sr M chael H ckman Portsmouth
6 3 220 s Ja~on Bodey Wellston 6 5 175 sr Ryan
Walke
onion 6 0 200 sr Quarterbacks- Wade
Ba thol omew W1ll amsport Westfall 5 11 165 sr
M ch ae H
P octo vile Farland 6 0 160 sr BacksAnd ew Newm an Portsmouth 6 1 190 sr Jerrod
Pend e nn Po tsmouth West 6 1 195 Jf Dan us Lew s
I ant on 5 0 205 1r K C Ch stan Ironton Rock H II 5
t 75
Ko y Cook New Le)( ngton ~ 8 165 sr All
purpose - Kyle PI ug Ch I cothe Umoto 5 10 159 Jr
Defense L nemen-Dav d Jones W II amsport Westfall
6
90 s Randy Ph pps Port smouth 5 10 70 sr
M chael Wh tman Portsmouth West 6 2 235 Jr Semakl
Corf aa Cheshtre R1ver Valley 6 o 215 sr Josh Carly
I onto n 6 0 215 sr Justin Lavender I on ton Rock H1l 6
2 260 s L nebacke s-Donme Hadd 1t W II amspo t
Westfall 6 3 225 s De ek Wales Po tsmouth 6 4 210
sr Lance Ph 1ps Wellston 6 t 235 sr Adam Fe guson
I on on 6 0 215 sr Jon Huffman New lex ngton 58
80 s Backs-Ma cus W II ems re nton 5 10 195 s
Jacob Wa bun Wellston 58 140 so Tommy Hayner
Sou h Pont 5 10 155 sr
Offena~ve players of the year Dar us Lew s Ironton
Wade Bartha omew Will amspon Westlall
Detens ve player of the year Lance Ph 11 ps Wellston
Coaches of the year Bob Lutz Ironton Heath Hmton
Wellston
Special Mention
Matt A llle WI amspor Westfall 0 J Robe t s

District

Firat team
Offense Rece vers-Ben Haal Portsmouth Notr e
Dame 6 1 190 sr Jos h French Oak H 1 6 4 150 sr
Zach Shust Glouster Tr mble 5 9 155 sr T ght endJake Nease Racine Southern 6 2 260 sr Der ek
Cremeans Wll ow Wood Symmes Valley 5 10 170 Jr
L nemen-Jon 0 11 on W llow Wood Symme!j Valley 6 2
230 sr Kyle Ba le y Frankl n Furnace Green 6 0 260 sr
B andon W lhams Sc1otov e Commumly East 6 1 215
J Thomas Wa lace Portsmouth Not e Da me 6 5 205
s
M1ke Harper Glouster Trrmble 6 2 245 sr
Quarterbacks-Andy Elcess Oak H 6 3 200 sr Terry
Holbe rt Glouster Tr mble 6 0 175 sr Backs-Ro bby
Jenk ns Glouster Tr mble 5 11 160 sr Co ry Bu cham
Willow Wood Symmes Va ey 5 11 160 s
R cky
Henderson Sc1otov lie Commun ty East 59 180 sr
Jason Sampson Waterford 6 1 175 so All purposePh I Pierce Reedsville Eastern 6 0 180 srDetense L nemen-EI Bowl ng Willow Wood Symmes
Valley 59 190 sr E c Au ndqu st Sc1otov le Commumty
East 6 1 185 sr Terry Durst Reedsville Eastern 6 1
225 Jr De ek Li skey Glouster Trimble 5 11 225 sr
L nebackers-Just n Ho land W1ilow Wood Symmes
Valley 5 10 180 sr Arthur Henderson Sc otov li e
Commun ty East 5 9
180 J
Lou e Schoettle
Portsmou th Notre Dame
6 1 215
sr
Darren
Scarbrough Reedsville Eastern 6 1 245 sr Justrn
Achele Cornng M iler 511 215 s
Bruce Fo uts
Glouster Tr mb e 6 3 245 sr Backs-Crag Neat WI ow
Wood Symmes Va ey 59 155 s C J Blev ns Frankl n
Fu nace Green 5 8 160 sr Ja ed Sampson Wate fo d
5 10 194 1r Ken Amsbary Reedsville Eastern 5 11
195 sr
Offensive player of the year Robby Jenk ns Glouster
Tr mble
Defensive players of the year Just n Holland W 1ow
Wood Symmes Valley 8 uce Fouts Glouster Tr mble
Coaches of the year Rusty Webb W llow Wood
Symmes Val ey F'h I Fa res Glouster Tr mb e
Spec1al Mention
Ja rod Jenks Waterford Seth Smith Waterlo d Josh
Lyall Crown City South Gall Ia Ross Holter Reedsville
Eastern Butch Marnhout Racine Southern Derek
Carpen1e W I low Wood Symmes Valley Alex Bu nette
W llow Wood Symmes Valley Mark Cas t o Frankhn
Fu nace Green Trav sA ggs Sc1otov e Commun ty East
Bryan Adkrns Sc otovlle Commun ty East Brent Downmg
Sc otov I e Commun ty East Matt Mader Portsmoutl'1
Notre Dame Matt Tena o Portsmouth Not .e Dame Jared
Bowl ng Co n ng M e
HonNable Mention
Chr1s Myers Reedsville Eastern Bryan Minear
Reedsville Ea stern Paul Combs Crown City South
Gallla Curt Waugh Crown City South Gall•a John
W seman W llow Wood Symmes Valley M chael White
W llow Wood Symmes Valley Brad Hoover Po tsmoutl'1
Notre Dame Matt Boggs Oak H II Dust n Walters Oak
H1ll Dust n M tchell Corn ng M ler Jeremy Detty
A chmond Date Southeastern Stephah Wood A chmond
Dale Southeaste n

sk11l m the slash roll as a ru nmng back and
receJver

Haggerty fin1 shed the season w1th over
I 500 all purpose yards
As a quarterback he threw for 622 yards
wh1le
he ran for 478 more mcludmg SIX touch
Butch Marnhout on the spectal mention team
downs
In additiOn he caught 22 passes for
and Eastern s Chns Myers and Bryan Mmear
413
yards
and live more touchdowns
on the honorable ment1on team
Jommg
Haggeny on the DIVISion Ill team
For Me1~s on the DIVISion Ill first team
Cun1s Vanan helped establish Me1gs as a from Gallia Academy was Tommy Saunders
and Kyle Burnett on the spectal mention squad
strong runmng team as an offensive linemen
and
Tyler Clagg Jeff Golden and Zach
Additionally for the Marauders Jared Casey
Shawver
on the honorable mention team
was named specml mention, whtlc Enc
Corfias who earned all-Ohm honors last
Cullums and Edd1e F1te were honorable men·
year
was ugam a key player for the Ra1ders on
non honorees
both
the
o1Tens1ve and defens1ve hnes
Meanwhile Gallia Academy's Jaymes
The
semor
lineman helped the Rutders to
Haggeny was honored for h1s solid all-around
agam
be
un
aggressive
runnmg team, whtle
play while R1ver Valley's Semak1 Corf1as
recordmg 34 tackles on the defensive s1de
a11am was a first teamer
Alon11 w1th Corflus on the DIVISion IV list
The AssociUted Press Southeast Distnct
tram
R1ver Valley was Dernck Smith on the
football team was released on Monday, us
special
menuon team and Kyle Tipton and
selected by a panel ol area sportswnters
Justm
Hudnall
on the honorable mentton team
Haggerty exemplified the true essence of a
South Galha as represented on the DIVISion
solid all around offens1ve player The sopho
IV
team by Josh Lyall (special menuon) and
more was tabbed as the starting quarterback on
Paul
opemng day but later 1n the season proved hts non) Combs and Cun Waugh (honorable men

from Page 81

\

Sentinel - l\e ls'ter
CLASSIFIED

sponsor
OACHE/Project Champ
1s sponsormg today s
R1o Grande/Urbana
basketball games As
a result of the spon
sorsh1p all fans who
attend the game w111
be admitted free of
charge Pictured IS
OACHE/Project Champ
Director Jake Bapst
With RIO Grande
Athletic Director Jeff
Lanham The women s
game begms at 6 p m
w1th the men s 1mmed1
ately following

DIVISIONV

DIVISION VI

~rlbune -

game

Wlll amsport Westtall Chuck G1bson Chillicothe Un oto
Shane Selbee Ch lllcothe Un oto Just n Kr tzw ser
Waverly Derrick Smith Cheehlre River Valley Matt
McFann Ironton Rock Hilt Josh Moore Proctorville
Fa1rtand Ch IS Sm th South Po nt Josh Adk ns Ironton
Ja ed Murphy Ironton Tyler McDan els Ironton Tyler
C •lfo d Portsmouth J R Glockner Portsmouth Just n
Skaggs Po tsmouth Cody Penn McDermott Northwest
Lev Morgan
Portsmouth West Johnny Raw! ns
Portsmouth West Scott Summers Portsmouth west C J
W1tl ams Sltlwart Federal Hock ng Tyler Jarv s Stewart
Federa Hock ng Josh Ew ng Wellston Noah Waldron
Wellston Matt McCabe New Lexmgton
Honorable Mention
Dane Sm th W lhamsport Westfall Dylan Row and
Waverly Kyle Tipton Cheshire River Valley Justin
Hudnell Cheshire River Valley T J Blagg Ironton Rock
H II Deryk Neal Proctorv1l e Fa land Brandon Walker
Iron ton Michael Ph Ips Ironton Greg !go Ironto n Dave
Rammel Portsmouth M chael Purdy Po tsmouth Brad
H gg ns Portsmouth N ck Toppms Portsmouth Tyler
M tchell McDermott No thwest Matt Swords McDermott
No thwest Scott Scheckart McDermott Northwest Kyle
Ruggles
Portsmouth West
Brandon
Bradshaw
Portsmouth West Er c McCorm1ck Portsmouth West Luke
Br cke r Po tsm outh West Greg Justrce We lston Corey
D xon A.lbany AleKander S na James A bany Alexander
Trav s Cook New Lelo: ngton Keith Moore New LeK ngton
First team
Offense
Rece ve s-Colt Harr ngton
Ch II cothe
Hunt ngton 6 0 175 sr Dust n 0 Bnen Chesapeake 6
1 160 sr T ght end-Er c Farmer P keton 6 2 2t 5 sr
L nemen-Matt Brooks Ch lhcothe Zane Trace 5 7 195
sr Seth Ph II ps Whee e sburg 6 0 215 sr Terry Corp
Crooksv lie 5 11 277 sr Joe Mart n Nelsonville York 6
0 237 s Bryan Eldred Chesapeake 6 1 205 sr N1ck
Bazelt Coal Grove Dawson Bryant 6 0 240 1
Qua terbacks Was Clary Ch I cothe Hunt ngton 5 10
165 sr Tom Kaskey Wheelersburg 6 2 195 sr BacksCo ton Coy Frankfort Adena 57 190 tr An thony
H tchens Ch II cothe Zane Trace 59 145 fr Just n
McGrath Ba nbr dge Pant Valley 6 0 165 Jr Dav d
Jo ey Nelsonv lie Yo k 5 11 172 Jr Just n Hyland Coal
G ave Dawson Bryant 5 10 190 1r All purpose-Ma k
Shonkw er M nford 57 160 s
Defense L nemen-Shane W lhams Chesapeake 6 2
250 s Mall Wh !more Chesapeake 6 3 195 sr Ky e
A.rno d Lucasv lie Val ey 6 4 225 jr Brian Peach
Wheelersburg 5 11 177 sr Ernie Pe k ns Nelsonv lie
York 5 10 222 sr Linebackers-Clay Beeler Chill co the
Huntington 6 0 190 so Joe Jaskowiak Frankfort Adena
58 180 sr logan Crabtree Lucasv lie Valley 6 0 215
s
Ryan Souders M nlord 6 0 235 ar Tyler Suter
Whee lersbu rg 5 11 180 sr Kyle Patton Crook&amp;vllle f3
0 198 sr M les Wright Chillicothe Zane Trace 6 2 111
s Backs-Bran Stephenson Wheelersburg 5 11 161
s Brandon Jackson Wheelersburg 6 0 167 jr Nathan
Van Meter Crooksv e 6 0 178 jr Brandyn Street
Chtlllcothe Zane Trace 5 11 151 jr Patrick Roush Coal
Grove Dawson Bryant 6 1 185 sr Punter-Jeff
Thornburg Chesapeake 6 2 155 jr
Oflenslve player of the year Justin Hyland Coal
G ove Dawson Bryant
Defensive player of lhl yur Erne Perkins
Netsonv e York
Coach•• of the year Dwayne Hall Chillicothe Zane
Trace Ton y lewis Wheelersburg
Spacial Mention
Shane Colvin Belpre Dev n Cumpston Belpre Kody
Waterbury Ch lllcothe Hunt ngton Derek Oyer Ch I cothe
Huntrngton Joe Chabert P keton Bobby 01 ver P keton
Josh Ward Ch 11/cothe Zane Tr~ce Ben Hanes Ch licothe
Zane Trace Ke th Ma cum Chesapeake Jackson Caynor
Chesapeake Pau Dale Coal G ove Dawson Bryant
J mmy Lemon Coat Grove Dawson Bryant B andon
Wh te Wheelersbu g Jordan Clark Wheelersburg Ja mes
Conkey Whee ersbu g Cody Dod rdge M nfo d Hayden
Ze s M nlo d Jordan Swavel lucasv lie Va ley Corey
Gulley Lucas v le Valley Ja ed Hellinger Luc asv lie
Valley Ryan Tune
Lucasv le Valley Jay Edwards
Ne sonv I e York Jake Da-n son Crooksv lie Anthony
Redfern Crooksv lie Matt Lang C ooksv lie
Honorable Mention
Dust n Adams Belpre Rob Bronne F anktort Adena
Sleven Posey Frankfo t Adena
Corey W IIams
Ch II cothe Huntington Just n Bry ant P keton Just n
Grothe s P keton Josey Wells Ch lhcothe Zane T ace
Justm Sh flett Ch1il co the Zane T ace Caleb McComas
Chesapeake Kallyb Bu gess Whee e sburg Luke S one
M nford David Mye s Lucasv lie Valley Brock W1il ams
Lucasv lie Va ley Trav s Jones Lucasv le Valley Er c
Dav s Nelsonv lie York Bear Lew s Nelsonv le York
M chaei McCia 1 Ne son vlie York

www.mydailysent1nel com

Rio

Southeast AII-Distrid Football Team
COLUMBUS (AP) - The 200-4 Southeast All 0 s1r ct
footba I teams as selected by a med1a panel from the dis

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

G• I •

\ers by JUSt 45 pomts when the
playoff began
In other seasons, Johnson s
senes leadmg etght race wms
and 19 top-five fimshes rmght
have been the dtfference Or
perhaps Gordon s conststency
over the entire 36 race sched·
ule, mcludmll a senes·leading
24 top I0 fimshes would have
gtven htm a ftfth champt
onshtp
F1gunng the pomts under the
old system Gordon would
ha\e won the utle by 47 pomts
over Johnson with Dale
Earnhardt Jr th1rd and Busch
fourth, 247 behmd But that
does not take mto account that
the contenders all adopted dtf
ferent strategtes for testmg and
expenmentlng w1th parts and
p1eces to prepare for the
Chase
Busch who was se\enth m
the pomts when the Chase
staned won the tnle by over
commg nu stakes crashes and
mechanical fmlures throu~h
out the 10-race fimsh racmg
to mne top I0 fimshes and
leadmg the pomts from the
third playoff race to the fin
ISh
' Kun has done an awesome
JOb on these last 10 races,
sa1d crew ch1ef J1mmy Fenmg
who also won h1s first IItle
after helpmg Busch s Roush
Racmg teammate Mark Manm
to three runner up fim shes
He kept hts cool '
Johnson had h1s problems
too falhng behmd by 247
pmnts after the first four races
of the Chase He got back mto
11 by wmmng four of five races
headmg mto the finale
No regrets, though
It was an mcred1ble season
for our team Johnson sa1d
We won a lot of races and
that s somethmg I m very
proud of I set a personal goal
to try to wm five races th1s

year and then to have e1ght
overall and four m the Chase 1s
pretty amazm~
'We were etght pomts awax
from the champ1onsh1p But tf
we look back on the season
and try to p1ck apart
should ves, would'ves 1t
wouldn t be nght We showed
up and ~ave I00 percent and 1t
IS what It IS "
Johnson was openly cnllcal
about the new pomts system
that dtv1ded the season mto
two separate sections wtth the
first 26 races detenmnmg the
10 contenders and the last 10
for the champtonshtp But the
mtensny and drama of the last
few races had h1m smgmg a
different tune
I thmk 1t's gomg to add
some longev1ty to the dr1ver
careers, espeCially tf you don t
get off to a good stan m the
season Johnson satd 'The
top five guys at least don t
have to worry about pomts like
they d1d m the past That s
somethmg Jeff brought to my
attentiOn
You d1dn t ha\e that year
long stress to worry about I
look at that and I thmk that IS
gomg to be good for years to
come I thmk With all the
excitement we had bUilt
around this race there are
more poSitiVes than the nega
t1ves that I spoke about earlier
m the year In the end I thmk
n will be better for every
body
The biggest objection to the
new system was the fear that
one bad race dunng the Chase
would ehmmate a contender
Both Busch who had an
eng1ne failure and fm1shed
42nd last month m Atlanta
and Johnson who had conse~
ut1ve fimshes of 37th and 32nd
m October at Talladega and
Kansas City proved that one
wrong

mcludmg s1x three pomters at
the mtenmss10n Tnmble also
benefitted from I0 first half
Me1gs turnovers, wh1le surren
from Page 81
denng JUSt two g1veaways
MHS tra1led 56 30 at the
Then the Grand) show took end
of the th1rd quarter and
center stage
was
dearly out of contentiOn
She ued the game &lt;It I0 w1th on the
so Coach Logan
a free throw m the last mmute went tomght
h1
s
bench for the
then added long d1stance tn
tectas w1th 10 and two sec remamder ot the contest
Logan believes the extra
onds remammg m the frame to playmg
time w1ll pay d1v1
g1ve the Tomcats a 16 10
dends
later
and he was
advantage
pleased w1th the effon prov1d
From there the mght ed
from h1s squad
belonged to Tnmble
The g1rls played hard and
Grandy hll three tnples and
had a total of 13 pomts m the there was a pos1t1ve to come
second frame a surge that out of the evemng smd
helped the Red and Gray Logan I was able to get a lot
secure a comtonable 38 17 of the younger kids some mm
utes tomght that should help
halftime lead
down
the road
We staned out a little bn
Desp1te
early foul troubles
slow I always tell the g1rls to
Renee
Bmley
led the
be patient and stay w1thm the1r
game The spun w1ll eventual Marauders with 16 pomts and
ly come sa1d Tnmble coach I0 rebounds m the setback
T1m S1korsk1 The barrage Sam P1erce added 12 pomts
that Jen put on m the second and two steals for Me1gs
The Me1gs effon also left a
quarter was unbelievable
lasting
1mpress10n on the
Grandy had 25 pomts

Tnmble frontman
I thmk they are a prett)
good team They have mce
players m Pierce and Bruley
and a lot of people that com·
pliment them mcely" com
mented S1kocsk1 I really
thmk they are gmng to be
okay
Joey Hanmg and Justme
Dowler had four and three
pomts re spectively, m the
loss wh1le Amber Burton
Lesley Preece Meg Clelland
and Bnnany Hysell each had
two markers for MHS
Logan admllted that Tn mble
was JUSt the better team
Monday but knows hiS g1rls
w1ll be ready to get back to
busmess th1s hohday week
I thmk we can compete
w1th Waterford and 1know we
are gmng to work hard m
preparmg for them he sa1d
Hopefully we can get back to
good results
The Marauders wtll host the
Wtldcats Monday at Rock
Spnngs Tip off ts scheduled
for 6 p m

Assoc1ated Press
HOMESTEAD, Fla
There were plenty of doubters
when NASCAR announced 1ts
new playoff-style champ1
onshtp format before the start
of the 2004 season
The new 10 man 10 race
Chase for the Nextel Cup
champ10nsh1p was contnved.
they sa1d It wouldn t reflect
the real champton like the full
season pomts race had done
under the system m place smce
1975
On Sunday after a w1ld dra
mauc day of racmg m the sea
son-endmg Ford 400 at
Homestead-Mtaml Speedway
1t would hkely have been hard
to find anyone who doubted
that the Chase was- a success
Kun Busch a brash hard
nosed racer who has not
always endeared htmself to the
tans overcame a broken
wheel a messed up p1t stop
and strong challenges from
Jm1m1 e John son and Jeff
Gordon to wm the closest
champ10n sh1p tn NASCAR
hiStory and the cheers of the
sellout crowd
lt also drew a larger televt
s1on aud1ence than normal
The 1ace earned a 5 6
overnight raung tor NBC the
best m the race s s1x-year h1s
tory and the best performance
ever for a NASCAR race
agamst NFL football on
Sunday
Johnson lost the battle wtth
Busch by JUst e1ght pomts
w1th teammate Gordon anoth
er etght pomts back for the
closest three way fimsh m
NASCAR s 56 years Of
course, that's exact! y what the
Chase was set up to accom
plish reconfigunng the stand
mgs to separate the top I0 dn

Meigs

Stern
from Page 81
thmg stuptd, and he hit the absolute wrong play·
er 11nd all heck broke out
That somethtng stupid was a fan's dec1s1on to
throw a cup at Ron Artest the spark that set oft
the leagues most lgnluble personality
'Yes, I've had beer thrown on me cups
thrown at me But us far as someone throwing
somethmg m my face that has never hap
pened," Pacers president Larry B1rd sa1d
In announcmg the season long suspension of
Anest on Sunday mght, Stern sqld he wa; "not
yet prepared to speak to the specific Issues of
I

secunty at the Ptstons arena but he defended
the actions of the three referees while also
repeatedly pomtmg a finger of blame at the
behavwr of some fans
A journalist from Sweden asked Stem tf he'd
be open to employmg some of the remedies
otien used m Europe, where fan Violence ts a
more prevalent problem
Stern also was asked If he thought some son
of barrier could be constructed between the
stands and the court
"I would like It not to come to that," he
replied ' You know (basketball playef!l) are
called 'eager• because the games use to be
played behind cages It would not be my pl1111 to
be commissioner of a league that
required
players and fans to be separated That would be
an unacceptable result "
I

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NASCAR gets its dramatic finish
BY MIKE HARRIS

Co~.tnly

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Dept
Resident al
Champa gn
Auto Repair
DATA ENTRY
Autos for Sale
710
Serv cas Inc 1 50 Sc oto
Work I om home
Street Urbana Oh 43078
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Fex.be Hou s
Champa gn
Res1denhal
$$$Great Payt$$$
Building Supplies
550
s colebrallng 28
Personal
Compute Serves
Business and Buildings
340
years of se rv~ees to adult s
Business Opportunity
210
Requ ed
wrt h challenges and d sabi
1 BOO 913 2823 ext 11
Business Training
140
t
es EOE
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790

780
010
190
840
480
830
610
430
330
490
585
590
580
450
850
040
050
640
110
810
310
510
410
020
130
660
630
060
350
170
540
860
420
320
220
740
570
005
560
820
23D
160
360
150
650
120
460
520
720
715
870
730
090
620
180
470
072
074
076

3 bedroom 2 bath ut I ty
oom B dwe I area S66 000
Call (740)44 1528 aller

iO

4pm

110

Camping Equipment
Cards ol Thanks
Child/Elderly Care
Electrocai/Relrlgerallon
Equipment lor Rent
Excavating
Farm Equipment
Farms tor Rent
Farms for Sale
Forlease
For Sale
For Sale or Trade
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
Furnished Rooms
General Hauling
Giveaway
Happy Ads
Hay &amp; Grain
Help Wanted
Home Improvements
Homes lor sate
Household Goods
Houses lor Rent
In Memoriam
lnaurance
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
Llveatock
Loat and Found
Loll &amp; Acreage
Mlocellaneoua
Mlacellaneoua Merchandise
Mobile Home Repair
Mobile Homea tor Rent
Mobile Homea lor Sale
Money to ~oan
Motorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelero
Mualcallnatrumentt
Peraonala
Peta tor Sale
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Profe111onat Servlcea
Radio, TV &amp; CB Rapalr
Real Eatate Wanted
Schoolo lnotrucllon
Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer
Sltuatlono Wonted
Space lor Rent
Sporting Gooda
SUVa for Sale
Truckalor Sale
Upholstery
Vano For Sale
Wanted to Buy
Wanted to Buy Form Supplies
Wanted To Do
Wanted to Rent
Yard Sal• Galllpollo
Yard Sai•Pomaroy/Middle
Yard Sala·Pt Pleaoant

0°o Down Payment and
t nanc ng ava lable w th
approved credit
Average
c edt qualif as you If down
payment has kept you f om
buy ng th s s your chance
to own you own home I
you have a down paymen
but would Ike to conserve t
we otfe low clown payment
p ograms also Great n er
est rates Loca company
Mortgage
Loca o s

1-it&gt;AfZ.b TI-I~M CAL.u;b
AN'/f"+ft~C:l BUI

10 $50 (740)388 0011

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==::;I ~

us

1387

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net

\I I ._, I \II

and Gold Cmns
Proofsets Gold A ngs US
Cur ency M T S Con Shop
151
Second
Avenue
Gall po s 740-446 2842

r

old

I{ I

lwrlght(!!!lc

Attendant Hostess Must be
F endly &amp;
Dependable
Hones
Var ous
Sh1fls
Found Wh te Husky dog Ava1 able The Pont Cafe
Male blu e eyes n Kyger located bah nd Pt Pleasanl
Apply n
Creek M1dd e School v c1n ty V s tors Center
person
Wednesday
Call (740)367 0185
November 24th 1Oam 3pm
Several Pas 110ns Ava labia
Lost Golden Retriever Very
7 month old fema e B ack lr endly lost n Addav lie
George
C eek
area
(740)446-3208 or (740)446
em ale

POUCIES Oh o Valley Publilhlng reMrvea the right to .ctlt re~ct or cence any ad at any ttme Errors must be reported on the I rtt dey ol
Tr bune-Senllna l R~latlf will be rHponalbte tor no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and on y thellral nnrt on We
any to .. o npenee that ..-ault• from the publll:allon or oml ..lon of an advertMmenl Co rectlon w be mad• In the t rat eve table •drt on
are always conftdenU•I
Currant rate card apples • All rul ..bite advel11aementa are aubtect lo the Fltdaral Far Houaing Act of 1968
accepts on y help wanted ada meeting EOE atandardt We wIt not knowingly accept any advert•• ng In vlotallon of the liW

S lve

FOUND

5500 Reward offered for
mfo ma on lead ng to recov
ery of stolen tams from
A nold Sea s res dence n
Harnsonv11\e ca I (740)992
4129

Now you can have borders and graphics
.IL-ladded to your classtfied ads
(.~
,.,
Borders $3 00/per ad
C!ill
Graphtcs 50¢ for small
$1 00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

(740)379 2639

Home Decorat ng Open Pure bred S ber an Husky
male 2 yrs old (740)949
House Sat Nov 27 Bam
2698
5pm G or a 0 le 31645 St
At 3?5 Langsv l e On
lo.-r ANI)
(740)742 2076

All Dl•play 12 Noon 2
au•lneea Days Prior To
Publication
Sund•y Display 1 00 -.c :: ~~_
Thur•day for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

~~~

Pari Aust ala Shepard pa I Absolule Top Do lar

Br ttany
pupp es
Vary
Grave blankets $5 $25 ve fr endly Ca 1 (740)446 8318
wreaths $10 I ve rop ng or (740)446 1865
Sues G eenhouse County - ' - - - - - - - - 30
Rae ne
Oh Puppies to g veaway Ca ll
Ad

(740)949 2115

DisPlay Ads

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete
De.c:riptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevi•Uons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 Days

Items

GI\~\\A\

Oeatltirec

Dally In~Column 1 00 p m
Monday Friday for Inaertlon
Jn Next Day • P•per
Sundey In- Column 1 00 p m
Frlldoov For Sundaya Paper

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

992·2157

MRIOD Advocate
Protect ve serv cas rapre
sentat ve pos t10n Fu II me
n the Gal pols off ce
Bachelo s Degree In human
sa v cas or related I eld and
e)(per ence n mental retar
dat on requ red
Send fax resume to
Mary Helen Swan
Fax t 814-262-97!52
or Ma to
Mary Helen Swan
Advocacy &amp; Protective
Serv ces nc
4110 No th H gh St eet
st Floor
Co umbus OH 432 4
Now hrng Full and Pat
1me past ons ~cCiures
Restau ants n MeA thur
Ga pots and M ddlepo t
Apply between 10 and
10 15am
Monday
nu
Saturday
Param ed cs
&amp;
EMT s
needed Apply at 1354
Jackson Pike Gall pohs
Pari 1me babysitter needed
n Spr ng Va ey area Call
(740)446 7820

INsrntcnON
Prom nent
h•gh p of le Gallipol is Career College
Careers C ose To Home)
garage seek ng compe ent
Call Todayt 740 44 6 4367
techn can Must be am a
ATTENJION!
w th OTC Snapon o other
1 800 214 0452
GET YOUR LOAN TO
wwv. ga pol su; ee co ege com
scan too ls scopes Must
BUY OR REFINANCE
Ace ed ea Membe Ace ed ng
have own too ls Prete cert
Couro Ia ndaoe den Co ages
YOUR HOME
I cat on but not necessa y and SchoolS 2748
FREE APPROVED
Send esume complete w th
HOME LOANS
3 references
to He p
PO BoK 315
Wanted
NEW PURCHASES
v nton Oh o 45686
REFINANCES
H gh
School
Jun ors
$0 DOWN $0 DOWN
AN Unit Manager
Sen o s and Pro Serv ce
CASH OUT HO ME
Arbors of Gallipolis
you can Ill vacant pos t ons
IMPROVEMENTS
n the West V rg ma Army
n Search of a Un t Manager Nat onal Gua d II you a e
UNITED SECURITY
for Sk lied Nurs1ng Hall of 26 between tl'1e ages of 17 35
MORTGAGE
beds that has a work sched or have pr or m I tary serv
1-800 370-4965
ute ot Monday Fr day w th tee you won I want to pass
CALL TODAY
on cal esponsbltes Ths th s up For Opportun tres n
STAFFED BY US
s a salar ed pos 1 on w th you area call
304 675
VETERANS
Exce lent Hea th Care 583""
Denta and V son cove age
MB 5263
Long Term Ca e and
Management Expe ence s
(Oh o loans On ly)
P efe red a ong wrlh st ong
wr tten commun cat1on and Woods EKtra Care fo your
leadersh p sk lis Also N ght Loved one P vale oom
AN pos liOns ava Iable bath 3 hOI meals Phone
P ease apply n pe son at
170
Pnec es
D ve
Gallpol s Oho45631orcal
House 3 Bedroom 1 1 2
Judy Barcus at 740 446
Bat ll Heat Pump new
71 12 for fu ther nforna on
Ca pet W ndows &amp; Roof
EOE MFDV
Aver V ew 12 Sm In Sl No
VACANCY
Part t1me
Heavy
Equipment P.HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
(304 )675 2749
Operator
Instructor
NG CO recommends tha
M n mum 5 yea s expe
~ou Clo bus ness wrth pea
ence as Heavy Equ pment ~le you know and NOT 1
Operator canst uot on e~pe
end money througt th
r ence p efe ed Two pa 1 ~a I unt1l you have nvest
1me hour y cant acts Day
ated the otferina.
school (4 hours da)l) and
Adult school
(4 Opportunity to open CloAll ,-.al fttat• advart1s ng
Bakery
and
hou seven ng) to be he d Belt
n thfa newspepe •
Janua y 17 2005 though Rttteurant For appoint
aubj.ct to the Fede111l
March 18 2005 CONTACT mente call (304)525-8780
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
Gall a Jacksort V non JVSD or (740)894-3630 Ilk for
advert!.. any
(740)245 5334 ext 20t Mr George
prt~feren&lt;:e limitation or
EEO
dlacrimlmltlon based on
race ~or ritllglon 111
WE RE GROWING
familial status or n11tlonal
AGAIN
ortgln or any Intention to
malw any auc;h
We need
fill the poal
preferen&lt;:a limitation or
tfont of installara If you
dle&lt;:rlmlnallon
are an Individual looking
DIRECTV
to Improve youraelf &amp; you
Thl• newapaper will net
work well with othert with
knowing ly •cc:ept
Up o
adv-"l•ementa ror real
1 c111n driving record We
2 MonthS FI'M
11tate which le In
after theses following ben
Programm ng 130
vlol•tlon or the l•w Our
eflls to our empioyMs
Channels pus Free
rud• 1 are hereby
•Medlcallnaurtnct
Equ pment Fret
Informed that all
Aatlrament Fund
Profess onal lnsta lat on up
dw•lllnge advertised In
•Paid vscattona &amp;
to 4 Rooms Fru Call 1
thla n.w•~r .,..
Holldaya
800 523 75561or details
available on an equal
AnnuaiBonu•
OfiPDrlunlty
"Truck• &amp; Tools
Jewelry Aepa r Buy Se I
Fumlthed
Gold
0 amends
Application•
can
be Gemstones
Appraisals For tale
ptcked up at our office at Gem Test ng
Graduate Com I r..ldl 4 lots &amp; 1
Bennitt s
Haetlng
I Gemoiog st
Jewele hOuse below appra sed
Cooling
1381 Safford (740)645 6365 or (740)446 value at 141 0 Lews St PI
Pea 304 548 SB 18 atte 5
School Ad Gallipolis OH 3080

"'

•o

Sa espe son
L festyle (740144G 9416
Fwrn ture luI t me pos Uon
Apply n pe son 10 5 No
phOne calls please
856
Th rd Avenue Gall po s
TELEMARKETEAS NEED

EO No Expe ence OK $7
9 Per Hou Easy Wo ~ 1
888 974 JOBS

Pump
$300 depos 1
$400 mon h
No
Pets

"'

~~;:5!';~w~o~~ll ~~~ ~enn~

CJ

ba"'

1983 14x70 mob le home
V ny s d ng shutte s '"lew
w ndows s d ng glass back
door cent a a r heat ng
27ft above g ound pool w th
deck w th new ner wo
bu d ngs On Ia ge and p
vale rented lot on L ncoln
P ke one m11e rom G een
E em school Ve y well
ma nta ned Ready to move
n $ 15 500 (740)441 1560

4BR 2 bath house n
Ga po s
5650 man n
depos t equ ed (740 441
0 94 0 {740)441 1184

Condo 3 bd 'TI 2 baths w
basemen V ew o
ve
Cnt
A. C $700 mo
Gall pols Fer y (740)446

3481

1987 Schultz 2 bedroom 2
bath
4~t:70 $8 000 must
be move (740)696 0757
mob le homes start ng a
S270 pe month Ca 740
992 2167

Pome oy 3 bed oom nouse
a ge ya d &amp; oft streel park
ng $450 a rnon h o us
Make 2 payments move n 4 oepos t &amp; u I t es no pets
yea s on note (304)736 o appl cat on and appo nt
3409
ment cal 740 \992 5228
New Oakwood mega so e
teatlJr ng
Homes
by
Oakwood
F eetwood &amp;
G les One stop shopp ng
on y a Oakwood Homes o
Ba boiJrsv lie WV 304 736
3409

Super c ean JBR 2BA
a ge ya d Pleasant oca
ton 20 m nutes om R o
Gra me Gall pol s No pe s...
No smok. ng
5400 mo
(740)379-9465

~S=AV._E~S-AV-E-SA_V_E___ 1420 1\1~:::~1&gt;:'

Stock modes a old pr ces
2005 modes a v ng Now
Coles
Mob e
Homes
15266 U S 50 East Amens
Oh o 4570 (740)592 972
Whe e You Ge
Vou
Moneys Worth

r

2 oed oom t a e

Tuppe s
Pta ns $300 pe mo th plus
depost &amp; u ltes 740 667
3487

F~lt\IS

FOR SAlE

Fa m F ee gas &amp; monthly
royalty check 49 acres 3
b g ba ns tobacco base
fenc ng pond small 2 bed
room
1 bath
hOuse
S239 000
Bewe y 0
Rea ty
Co

month

ota l
e ectnc A c G aMe area
$375 month $375 depos I
No pets (740)245 5671
N ce 2 bee room moe le
home No pets
740 .a.a6
2003

H O\JSES
FOR REI\'T
0°io Down Payment and
fna nc ng ava abe wth
approved creel
Average
cred 1 qual 1es you 11 down
payment has kept you from
buy ng th s s your chance
to own your own home II
you have a down payment
but wo Jld like to conserve t
we otre lOW down payment
programs a so Grea nt~
est rales Loca company
Mo IQage
Locate s

1 a no 2 bed oom epa 1
men s u n shed and untu
n sned secu ty depos t
requ ed no pets 740 992
2218

1 bedroom apt n Ga po s
ground ftoo C A &amp; gas FP
$300 monrh plus dep ef
Wate pd (740)446 7130

(740)992 7321

1 bedroom tr eve Spr f'IQ
va ey area Oepos t 8 efe
Sy cuse 3 bedroom 1 t 2 1 becl oom Muse Gart elo en ce! req u ed (740)446
batrr on 1+ ac es CH&amp;A Ave $350 month Ca 29 57
basement garage $70 000 (7 40)441 01 94 0 (740\44 t
1 84
negoabe (740)992 Ot67
pm

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We w n
1 888 582 3345

(304)882 3652

I SHOP CLASSIFIEDS FOR BARGAINS I

leave
49 75

�Card ol Thanks

We the family of
Lora Mae Imboden
would like to thank
Birchfield Funeral
Home &amp; Pastor Rick
Bourne.
We would also like
to thank everyone

who came to

t~isit

and sent flowers and
food and those who
sent cards. A special
thanks to the
Middleport Bible
Holine.&lt;S Church for
the wonderful
dinner. A special
thanks to Holzer
Hospice Swff. Most
of all wt are
thankful for all the
wve &amp; prayers.
f'rank,
Melissa &amp; Glen,
nm&amp; Sarah
Debbie &amp; Tim,
Kim,
Teressa &amp; Dallm,
Tony &amp; Kathy,

Robin &amp; Mike
&amp; Grandchildren

1

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

***
**
*
**
**
**
*
*
*
!*
*

Holzer Senior Care Center, a 70 bed

Heal1h ln&lt;urancc
Dental Insurance
Short-term Di~ahility
Educational Assistan,:e
Jury Duly Pay
Paid In-services
Leaves of Ab~en~e

U niform Allowance
Perfect Auendance

Tinlc and a Half for Ovcnimc
If you are seriously considering a career In the tield of

Healthca~, and want to be ·a member of a caring. dedicated
learn, give us a call al 740-446-5001, or come see us in persoo
at 380 Colonial Dr., Bidwell,

Come join the caring people of...

"' HeLZER
SENIOR CARE CENTER

(An equal opponunity employer)

**
**
***
**
*
**
**
*
*
!*
*

North
•

Henderson, WV

•

"• A
QQ98
"' 7 3

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675-2457

(304) 576-3128

2-Day Sale
Nov. 26 &amp; 27 Only
SAVE$5.00
Buy $75.00 · $99.99

ofo K61

Roads t Streets

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: East-Wesl

South

Buy $100.00 More

""~-.0!.·~.~~

Middleport

Willa's Bible Bookstore
416 Main St. Pt. Pleasant, WV

675-5833

Mitsubishi Lancer, rebuilt ,
40,000 miles, auto, $5,200
080. (740)256-1618 or
Full·blooded Lab puppies. 6 (740)256-6200.
weeks, black. chocolate. yellow. Phone (740)446·2460.

yallcy Hospital. a non-profi1
heahhcare facility. has a position available for
a Radiologic Technologist.
Applicant mu st meet the registry
reijuirements by the ARRT. Applicant mu st
have a West Virginia license.
Excellent salary. holidays, health insurance
~ingle/family plan. dental. life in~urance.
vacation, lon g-term disability and retirement .
Joi n our family of profess ional s to be th e
resource for community health service needs .
Pleasant

Frigidaire refrigerator $95;
Kenmore electric range $95;
Kenmore dryer $95: Maytag
washer $95 ; GE washer/
dryer $300; T.V. $45; chair
$45 night stand $15.
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vrne Street
Clean fur nished Studio·
1740)446-7398
Apartment,
$325/month
incl udes ·
water/trash, Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
and Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
Security
Deposit
References required call (7 40)446-7 444 1-877-830after Spm {304)675-3042
9162. Free Estimates. Easy
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- financing, 90 days same as
cash . VisaJ Master Card.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments, Drive· a- little save alot
and/or small houses FOR Thomps ons Appliance &amp;
RENT Cali (740)44 1-1 I 11 Repa"-675- 7388. For sale,
lot application &amp; informatron.
re-conditioned automatiC
I
For rent: 2 bedroom garage was hers &amp; dryers, re Irgeraapt. Call (740)446 -1 652
tors, gas and elec tric·
ranges, air conditioners, and
Gracious livrng. 1 and 2 bed·
wringer washers . Will do
room apartments at Village
repairs on major brands In
Manor
and
Riverside
shop
or at your home.
Apartments in Middleport.
"Used Furniture Store, 130
From $295-$444 Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing 8 ulaville Pike. Appliances.
Opportunities.
dressers. !Win , lull. queen.
king hmattdr~sses, dresl sers,
couc es, rnelles, reciners,
grave monuments. much
more.
(740)4 46-4782
Gallipolis OH Hrs. ~ 1·3 (M·

5)

www.orvb.com

r

Ladies black leather motor·
cycle jacket. size M· worn
2x. Cost $400 asking $200

Pleasant Valley Hospital

I \101"1 1'1'111"
.'\. I I\ I "14 H 1\.

% Human Resources

2520 Valley Drive

r•o

wv 25550

(304) 675·4340

~;:;:;:::::::::;-;;;:;:;::::::::::

r

MIS(_'EI..LANEOUS

r

MISlF.LI..ANEOUS

$~·~
._, @

I

......
Gray Couch &amp; Love Seat Rare cast iron skillet #13
$150 (304)882·3129
Wagner $225. Also Case
~, es1e d X X
"t
k 1
...,.~~~~~~11!!1"'111
scou poe e
IF
k n1.,e. genume
.
b rown bone
handles, has 2 piece can
opener blade. very unique,
eKcellent 5250 . ( 740 )533 _
3670.

r

r

GRAIN
·
For sale,
orchard grass &amp;
alfalfa, square bales for cat·
tie.
$ 2.00 per bale .
(740)992-2143 or (740)992·
6373 eveni~s .

Ml!ftil,lfl
-··-••

FlO

A•nY'W::'
u•~

Jeep's,

Honda's,
Ect

01 Pontiac Montana Van,
$8,000, cash special; 01
Oodg~ Caravan Sport Van.
$7.995;.2002 Toyota Tacoma
PU 4x4, 4 cy l, 5-sp., factory
warr/37,000 miles (New),
$12.900; 2000 Ford F-150
XL 4 door, 2 WD, PU. V6,
automatic, mlles-077 .411 ,
S1D.OOO (Nice)
Southern Auto Sales
701 2nd Ave.
(740)446-8554
1988 Chevy Nova, body &amp;
interior rn lair condition, runs
great. good engine &amp; trans·
mission, needs ball joint ,
$17.5080
1995 Pont1ac Grand Prix lully
loaded. 4dr. rebuilt, V-6
engine. body &amp; interior,
excellent condrtlon. $1,500
OBO
.
1980 Van new engine &amp;
transmission , V-8 loaded,
cruiseiACICO player nice
body &amp; interior $1,300 OBO
(304)593-2117

BARNEY
MAW,
TATER

COMMERCIAL and

DON'T

RESIDENTIAL

LIKE

Hours

FREE ESTIMATES

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

740·992·7599

PICKLES
ON HIS

'COURSE HE DON'T !!
WHY DO I ALWAYS
.---:
FERGIT
THAT ?!

TRU(;KS

IURSALE

-.
1979 Chevy, 4wd, 6" lift kit,
327
300hp,
$800
lt'relwheels ,
$4 ,500.
(740)84"1168
..r
1989 Ford F-150, 4K4. runs
Qood, 302 engine. $1.500.
(740)388-8152
'---'--------1994 S-10 Blazer 4-WD. 4
door, leather, loaded, Vortex
V-6, auto, 138,000 miles, ·
.$3,000 080. Call (740)441·
0131 or (740)446·7807.
1997 Ford Lariat e:.:tended
cab, 3rd door, red , side step.
eKcellent condilion. $10 ,000.
(740)367-

7272
2000 Dodge Ram 1500,
4x4, Quad cab, short bed.
SLT. loaded. 80,000 miles .
$14,500. (740)441 ·0182

F30

VANS

2000 Ford Windstar Van ,
power windowSic:ruise, 7
passenger, 91.000 miles.
asking $6,900 (304)675·
4014
2003 Chevy Express Cargo
Van 314 ton, 2500 series
with side doors. 373 VorteK
engine, air. cruise. tilt .
44,000 miles
$16,500.
(740)446·9585 or (740)4467724
2004 Chevy Express Cargo
Van 3/4 ton 2500 series with
side doors. Air, cruise, till ,
9,200
mi te s.
$21,500
(740)446·9585 or (740)446·
7724.

'

~

••••
•

I

F'"\.J"-':&gt;T\i!.EL GRA\/E~I\E., I FIKD ~
YOVGUILT'i A.~c..AARGE.DOf
T\~1')

1997 CR 80. VerY good con·
1992 Mercury Cougar, 2 dr..
dition. Race ready. $1,000.
V·6. runs good/clean. S850, Gallipolis area. Cell phone
before 2pm (740)992·2191 ,
740·645-0873.
after 2pm 740·591·8936
1999
Harley
Heritage
1993 Bonneville, great car Springer FLSTS . 11 .200
$2,500.00
mites, red , eMcellent condr1983 Honda XL 185 and tion with eKtras. $16,000.
1974 YamBha 250 $200.00 (740)446-6253.
lor both . (740)949-9008 ·
1999
Polaris
500
2000 Buick LeSabre, VS. Sportsman, 4x4. One owner,
sedan,
4-aoor.
li mited , very good condition. Lots of
80,000 miles, garage ~e pt. elllras, Winch- etc . Never
$8,500.00. (740)949·2217 been abused . Call daytime
7AM · 10PM
740-446-9777 esk for Chuck
or 740·245·5096 after 6pm.
2003 Tracker, 4x4, 3,000 $3.500 .
miles. All electric. alum.
wheeL · $ 14,500.
OBO 88
Harley
Davidson.
(740)388-8432 .
Sporlster. $3,600.00 OBO
(740)992·6363
Aller
86 Ford Mustang, run $400
500PM
OBO, Shp Sup·pump, heavy
duty gas engine $250. Mig
AllfO P~RTS &amp;
Welder Hobart works good
~ ACCESSORIES
.
$200 (304)882-2196

I

p.io~~~~~~~~

MANLEY'S
SElf SJO RA GE

I"'(OU COt-:.fESSED!

~~~oc.ENHILLI~

MI'::&gt;D£· ·

l'ro&gt;JEN GUILT\'!'

§

Are you in the market
fora new car

See'-'

g7 Beech Street
Ml"ddleport, OH

A0c~ *f1lJ"

IOX10XIOX20

1..

d

,Hupp

992·3194
Or 992·6635

Ht'gh 8l Dry
elf• tor2ne
"'6

•

ss

3379S H'l dAd
I an
·
PomerOy1 Ohio

740 • 992 • 5232

Whaley's Auto
Parts
I Darwin , OH
7~0-992-70 13 or 740-992-5553
Rt6~

&amp;..lockirtg fall' .\Jodel &amp;nn,rrPI
n rrd 4nl·r I Ia rket ftJ rt...
See Brelll or Brian Whaley
M-Fn 8:30-5:00
Sat 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

PEANUTS
11 /Zl/0~

ALL RI61-1T. '(011 STUPID
BEAGLE, LET 60 OF TI-llS
BLANKET Rl61-1T NOW !

I NEVER KNOW IF'' RI61-1T
NOW'' MEANS ''RIGI-IT NOW~~"
OR "RI61-1T NOW::.
...-3;---~-

~

Deer Shop

4

&amp; ,ve dt~/'l'"e,)

TAXIDERMY
137 S. 5th Avenue
Middleport, OH

31645 SR 325
Lang,.illc. OH
45741

SUNSHINE CLUB

(740) 992· 7533

HI.GJRLS ..TI-IIS
IS LOOIE.

/ Ovrr I 7 •j•ar.\"

[l EXfU'Ti~ll('f'

Keith &amp; Gloria Oiler

l FCXJIVD HIM liT
A YARD SAU..

/

.{

740-742· 2076

DID 51-t£.

SPIT...

Skin, Cut, Wrap &amp;
1-'reeze. A It rhis ftJr o11l)'
$45.0tl
60

ii

AIJIU PARTS &amp;
AC&lt;."ES'iORit:S

of 2002 Chevy P/U paid
$790.00 . Brush Guard
$359.65. Fog lights $650 .00.
92 Jeep 4 cycle motor for
parts. Rod on lront cylinder
broke went thru oil pan .
$200.00.
68 GMC 20 ,000 lb GW.
Dump truck motor &amp; trans
$400.00.
Radiafor support, grill , hcod
&amp; bumper lor 89 GMC
Jimmy. Also fits 87 ad older
trucks $350 .00 (740)992·
.2143 or (740)992-6373
evenings.
'\I R\ U I S

HO~IE
(MPROVEMI:.\"1~

K

r

l----------=~==~c2~~·~-~·~;J!
GARFIELD
COMe AND Ge'T
ME, 80ZO!

f~ll'@ W®®@
Locust, Oak

:\&lt;laple $45 Delivered
Bill Slack

740·992-2269

BASEMENT
· WATERPROOFING
Unconditional li1etrme guar·
antes. Local rererences ·fur·
nishea Established 1975 .
Call 24 Hrs. (740! 446·
0870. Rogers {ja .,ement
Waterproofing

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIImUCTIIN

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

140·992·1611

·New Homes
• Ga;ages
• Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare

Do you know someone who loves solving
bridge and chess puzzles? If so, buy her
or him "Focus on Hocus-Pocus" by Erwin
Brecher and Danny Roth (Panacea
Press, 2004). The 100 right -hand pages
contain both a double·dummy b11dge
problem (the reader sees all 52 cards)
and a real·life chess position. The solu·
tions are on the next page .
Here Is one of the easier bridge problems.
(The bridge Is harder than the chess.) You
are South, the declarer in tour hearts.
Wesl leads the spade king . How would
you plan lhe play?
Soulh's two·spade cue-bid shows 12-plus
points; he upgrades for the known nine· or
10-card heart fit. (Despite the prevailing
vulnerability. East should have raised to
two spades. Note that four spades is only
one down, a good sacrifice It South
~nows how to play in four hearts correct·
ly.)
You have nine winners: one spade, six
hearts and two clubs. The hunt is on for
numbe r 10.
The right line- at single-dummy as well
as double-dummy - is to win Irick one.
draw trumps, cash the club king, play a
club to dummy's ace , and call tor the
spade jack , discarding your last club.
You know. from West's opening lead . that
he will win the trick and be endplaYed. If
he had a club to lead, you would be guaranteed a third trick in that suit. Here,
though , if West returns a spade, you ruff
. in the dummy and discard a diamond
from hand . And il West shifts to a diamond, your king must score.
The book is available from C&amp;T Bridge

·QRIZZWELLS
; V\9 I i\'t~ i'i(\. 'till
~ 1\l~i

I

A\~ \JAtl A

. ··~~\P~E"
. iA'Ml:)O
o·tH~

\ c::\1~'?'

AstroGraph
-...'Birthday:

By Bernice Bede O.ol

Oiler's
• ·)~,~ ~:u (/' .r·"J'I.

'"

~ne•da~Nov,24,2004

REC.YCLI~G BIN' YOU
'1£';AN , LIKE . FO~

IMPORTS
Athens

St.

Pass
All pass

G

,
BIG NATE

:::=======~
~ ~~

3 ofo

Supplies. Call (800) fi25 -47t8 to order.

AND . I'&lt;Nl&gt; ..

"'Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

"I

95
Jeep
Wrangler
Whrte truck bed topper, fits 7
$4,500.00
1!2 to 8 ft . bE!d. Very good
99 Chevy Lumina $;4,800 .00
condition $100. Call 740(740)992·2143 or ~740)992 645-0873
63n evemngs.

F'"'N.I&lt;.EADY TfflAT'~ ft.. W-:':lf\ TO "'I
JU~TIC.~! 1-lf\M f\N'I'tN~\)\0

ME:N-\o~ ~.::;,

1 Brush Guard &amp; PIA fog lights

1994 Honda CBR900AR
10,000 miles, starts &amp; runs,
sale for parts or trade tor
!ruck.
(740)441-9755 ,
(740)339·2856.

i

I

!

email- ronandtrix@msn.com

FOR SALE

r~4~=cuS

'CUZ YOU DON'T SIT
NEXT TO
HIM !!

I

740-992-1747

4x4

(740)367·7762,

Ii
J!

BURGER

Birthday parties- Family rPtinlon &lt;-'
Festivals - Business promotions etc
Comedy Magic· Skits - Gospel illusions
Balloons &amp; Face painting

2004 Chevy Silverado 4x4
Z71 Off Road 1500, V-8 .
Chevy's, automatic, less than 3,000
Police miles. (740)378·6349

Impounds' Cars l[om $500
for listings 800-391-5227
EXT 3901

'''1o 10'x30'

·•

THE BORN LOSER

FOR SAlcE •
$500 1

slzH s~11o·

1960 Willys Jeep Truck.
8,000 regular miles.
ood Condition, Au
ood. Call 740 446·36

i

Cr::---:JIA-:-Y-:&amp;~--,

740·949-2217

CJ

..

Let me do 1t for you'

~~~~~~IT?~~~
•

1999 Ford F-250, 7.3 Diesel.
Nbw Holland 367 Haybind
Ext Cab. 4WD, (30 4)675·
$1.200.00. (740)992·2143 6536
or 740 992-6373 avenin s ~ii'~-~~~--,

Pygmies. Billy, Nanny Bolh
excellent breeders $60
each. 2 does , buck &amp; welher
$30 each, $150 all. Call740·
645-0873

45771

BUilDERS IRC.

0

1997 3500 Chevy Carg
ruck. 16ft bed with 4ft ca
ver. 23.000 regular mile
all (7 40)446-3620

Iris

Angus
Bulls·
Top
Perlormanoe Lines 40Years
Artificial Insemination. Slate
Run Farm (740)286·5395.
www.slateruntarm .com

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemen1
Windows • Roofing

D

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

II

~-MEiiiii.RiiiCHANiiiilllilliiiiiSiiE_.I ~ MEHffiANDISE . ..,_ _L.IVI'X•
~-roc_K_,.J ~--FiiOIIRIISiiiAiliioLE.-,.1

JET
Jlt;1Ul1NG
AERATION MOTORS
L.~---SiiUii~--,-_.1
-Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In ...,
Stock. Call Ron Evans . 1. Bloc~. brick. sewer pipes.
Buy or sell. Riverine
800-537-9528
wWi·ndlowerss
n,
, IRin.,'els . reatcn.dCelauOdHe
Antiques, 1124 East Main
0 0
'
•
CaII 740·245·5121.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740·
992 -2526 Russ Moore.
NEW AND USED STEEL
PE;rs
owner
FOR SII.LE
Sieel Beams. Pipe Rebar ~
540 I\11S(.'I-J.L!INEOUS
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
MERCHANOL~E
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel 1 male AKC Miniature
Grating
For
Drains, Prnchers , 8 weeks old.
14 solid oak church pews. Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Black/rust, S250. (740)388·
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 8124 _
11 feet long. (7 40)256·6539
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
88 Full-size Bronco 4x4. Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed AKC Golden Retriever pup·
Saturday
&amp; pies Call (740)256-1686 or
$1 ,350; 20KB 5 Hallmark Thursday.
(740)645·2793.
enclosed trai ler, $4,500; Sunday. (740)446-7300
4000 Ford w/loader, $4,000.
Nordic Track, like new, $100; AKC Pekingese 2 male. First
(740)379-2544.
new computer desk , $40: shots &amp; wormed. $400 firm.
Better N Bens woodburner 1925 solid oak desk, $25: (740)446·1000 or leave
rnsert for f1replace . Good Modern oak and upholstery message.
shape. Call (740)446-0138, side chair, $15. Phone:
AKC Regis tered German
leave message
(740)446-9356.
Shepherd Pups, Excellent
Englander pellet stove and
Blood line (304)675·5724
PoIe 8 arn 30:.:50x10 FT
insapipe Used 3 seasons.
$6795. includes Painted Reg . German Rottweiler
$450 080. (740)388-8575
for
sale.
Metal. Plans. Instr uction puppies
Firewood 4 sale. Seasoned Book, Slider, Free Delivery. Mother/father on premises.
delivered. (740)446·6637.
(937)559·8385
CaU 1740)288-1592.

ANn~

FARM

BISSEll

Pass

Pas~;

A book for two
intellectual games

·$@~·­

View photosJinfo online.

EQu
..__ _iiiiiiiPMENTiiiiiiiil;.,...

AAIEOE www.pvallcy.org

ai

Car Listings.
L1st your car by calling
(740)446-3620

Pure tired Border Collie
pups. Imported bloodlines.
workrng parents, 1 shots &amp;
wormed. Call (740)3799110.

For more informaLion:

Point Pleasant,

96 Monte · Carlo Z34 ,
143,000 Miles $3,51')0 080
1304)675-8881

Hill's Self
Storage

Db I.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-843-5264
~ Auros
FOR SALE

East

North

t4

Opening lead: •

45760
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

Save $20.00

West
Pass

Box 189

SAVE $15.00

s3

ofoQ109 5

" A 98653
• K 54

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

SAVE $10.00

wu a

7 2

t Parking Lots t Playgrounds

DINNE~,

GARFIIOL.D?

NO 'THANKS.
I JU!&gt;'T A'TE. A
~MAU..

HOU5E

Your biggest enemy in the year Shead
will be your leek of fa1th rn yoursell, wh1ch
could cause you to have doubts about
your abilities and ideas. Believe in yourself and the seeds you plant will y1eld a
rich harvest
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) Conditions today are extremely uncer·
tarn and unpredictable, so be prepared to
face the Unexpected. If you don t overreact. you 'll be able to contend with what·
ever it is that occurs.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 ·Jan . 19) ~ ' You
may deny the facts at hand today and
permit your vivid 1magination to guide
you, such as viewing things as being
negative when poslfive conditions exist.
and lose out on something good
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19) -Today
you could believe that you have to
become involved in an e11pensive activity
in order to feel satisfied and have a good
time, when, m reality. the exact oppos1te
may be !rue .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Taking
short cuts in hopes of getting through
things in half !he time could lead to deadend streets today and restrict you from
accomplishing what it was you were
rushing to do.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)- II you 're
doing a tot of mental work today. yolt had
bette r double -check your eflorts.
because there·s a possrbility a mistake
could slip through that could cause you
lmuble at a later date.
TAURU S ~April 20-May 20) - Just
because you wouldn't take advantage of
Olhers today, don't th 1nk another wrth
selfiSh motives who thinks you're an
easy mark won't renege on an obligation
she or he owes you .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) -You'd be
wrse not to rely too heav1ly on someone
who has proven to be undependable 1n
the past. Leopards don 't change therr
spots and you could be let aown again
today.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Errors are
extremely likely today, So you'll have to
be e)(ceedtngly melhodtcal with your
work and that of co-workers Map out
your game plan and double-check it step
by step.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Optrmism rs
one thing , wishful th inkrng rs clearly
. another. II you allow lanct ful not 1ons !hat
you ~an beat the odds on a tong shot to
direct you r actions. you could lose a bundle.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) - Domestic
tranquility could be upsel loday rl you
spring unexpecled changes on the lamt·
ly wlthoul first d1scussrng your plans with
them. Take eVeryone's feel•':lgs into con sideration .
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct . 23) - It's extreme ly important today_that you are -aware or
both your phy•ical and mental llmlla·
tiona. Don't take on anything which Is
beyond your ee.pabllltle•. especially It lfa
dangeroua.
SCORP'IO (Oct . ~4 - Nov. 22) - It you 've
aatabllehad 1oma 1t1blllty In you r flnan·
alai anatra at thla time, don't blow It by
one giant eurga of extralllglnca today.
~ap your Will about you anCI ba l)rudant
In your tranaactlona.

SOUP TO NUTZ

42 RCA
producta
1 Sliced
44 Ravine
4 jocltll 47 Awkward
a-··~51Jeannle
11 So thl1 1 Nl
r.rtroyer
12 Ruler
52 ake apart
before
55 Nlnerary
Golba
word
13 Tlggor 'a pal 56 Oro aource
15 AdMslva
57 Nol make
16 Pro votH
lho grade
11
58 "Evil

passenger

• J 10 3

South ·
• 4

WV Contractors Lie. #0035_06

Buy $50.00-$74.99

"

· t Driveways t Tennis Courts
t

Buy $25.00 · $49.99

AKC
Registered
St.
Bernard.
4·month
old
female, full mask. sweet per·
sonality, up to date shot
record . $250. Call (7~0)~45·
2824 anytime.

AJ 8 2
East
K Q 10 9 1 2
• 8 6
•

Wetit

MONTY

871-2417

ll ·Z3-04

J

A

"KJ104
• 8 7 2

in Ohio and

RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST

r

MYERS PAVING

Bus Trip December 4 &amp; 5
Pigeon Forge, Tennessee
Christmas Show &amp; Shopping.
Boyds Bear Country
Limited seating available

IURRENI

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740·446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

APARTMENTS

~-10--H•ouiiiiiiSiiii'"iiiOiill.D-_.1
GooD&gt;

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

********************

'H-ol-'zec.
r_._17-40-)-44-1--01-94-or ~
(740)441
-1184

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for Hud·subsized, 1· br.
apartment. call 675-6679
EHO

Life Insurance
Long-term Disability
Bereav·ement Pay
Regular Rale Increases
Experience Pay

Time and a Half for Worked Ho lida ys

2BA, CIA. refrigerator/stove
incluQed,
washer/dryer
hook·up.
10 min from

Tara
TownhOuse
Apartments. Very Spacrous.
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA. 1
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio. Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lea se Plus Security
Deposit Requr rect, Days:
740·446·3481 ; Evenings:
740-367 ·0502.

long~term care nursing

401(k) Plan

"Star•· Program

Warm 2 bedroom upstairs
apt. Trashlwater, stove,
fridge included . $300 plus
deposit .. (740)446·7620 or
(740)441 ·9872.

Pleasant Vaitey Apartment
Are now taking Applicatrons
for 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR .
Applications are taken
Monday thru Friday, from
9:00 A.M .·4 P.M. OHice is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
PhOne No is {304)675-5806.
E.H.O

Help Wanted

facility has limited positions available for RN 's. LPN's and
STNA's. We offer a compclitive cmploymem package including:

2 bedroom apartment. $275
plus deposit &amp; utilities and
references, 3rd Street.
Racine. (740)247·4292

One bedroom garage apart·
ment, kitchen furnished,
$400, (740)992-3823

www.mydailysentinel.com

: CAREER OPPORTUNITIES :
:
IN HEALTHCARE
:

t

Nice 2 BA apl. Centenary
Ad water/trash paid, furnished
kitchen,
washer/d ryer hookup , no
pets.
deposit/references
month
required , $375
(740)446-9442.

Tuesday, November 23, 2004
ALLEYOOP

********************

~.,t__\.~.:n.REN.ENTSr

•. • ·_,.JI

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Woman"

18 Bundle
of grain

group
59 Sullivan

20 Put off

and Murrow
6Q Makes

21 Pleasure

23 Average
a decision
. grade
61 Home tel.
24 Entry
permit
DOWN
27 Up to snuff
29 Beard alta
1 GeartNih
2 " Nah!"
32 MIT grad
33 Cable car
3 Volume
34 Mex.
4 Muddle
neighbor
5 lslel
35 Ma Bell
· 6 Wralh
36 Sierra Club 701ocoumglng

founder
You said Ill 8
-Angeles
9
Encourage
Minor
10
dispute
41 Friar Tuck 14
quaff
19

ruby
45 Comics

23 Red wine

46 Tear apart

24 Young bee/
25 Vanished
- thin air
26 Mil . officers
28 Admiral ' s
jail
29 Flinch
30 On board
ship

48 Unceasing!)

pooch
49 Carpel
thickness
50 Southwest
art colony
52 Pilot's
sighting
53 Forty wlnko
54 Telegraph

31 Hunger for

words

37
38
39
40

way off
20 Consider
22 Character

signal

36 Draft animal
-&amp;the
37 Part of PGA
Gang
41 " The Eve
Skywalker 's
of St.-"
mentor
43 Cello
Wild time

cousins

"Psst!"

long

44 Garnet or

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebr1t;' Crp/h'lr cryptograms Blft created from quot11110ns by Mr&gt;1ou~ poople pur anc Pf!!~
Ead" ~Iter 1n ;he ~ipher slaMs!(){ anotn.&gt;!t
Today's due K equa ls W

DZKDMR

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AD

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "We will gellhe kind ol polit1calleadership. be tl
good or bad , that we demand and deserve.~ - John F Kennedy
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc 11-23

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letters of the ·
four K rombled words be ·
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"The troub le w•th adv1ce."
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moa~ed the teen, "is you don 'l
r--::-:-------, knaw ·,f 1t's good or bad unlil
T R A NU E
you ve · · · · · · •. 1"

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SCRAM-lfT5 ANSWfRS

Seplic- [)raw/- Occur. Packet- PARK their CARS
Noticed dun no holiday rush- those with a f1er:e hunting instincl and iho:;e who pay to PARK tneir CARS

ARLO &amp; JANIS

I
I

I

I HA.VW 'T HAD ftlhAI,E.JI..
.FOOD IU ACOIJG Tf,l\~'

l i))U'T KUOW WHY
l f~OU(JHT 01' THA'T.''

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Ron turn~r fired by Illinois

MAC Football

Bowl ·hopes on
line for Bowling
Green, Toledo
Bv JOHN SEEWER
Associated Press

'
'

.

'

series," sa\d Falcons coach
Gregg B'randon. "And there
is a lot at stake in the game ."
He credited Toledo coach
TOLEDO - Two game s
into the season, Toledo line- Tom Amstutz for improving
backer David Thomas wasn't the Rocket s' defense after
thinking about a bowl game their early trouble.
or
Mid-American
"They were giving up a lot
Conference title .
of points early and they had
He J·ust wanted a victory some injuries," Brandon
after giving up 63 points in said. "He has done a good
two straight games against job of keeping that defense
Minnesota and Kansas.
together and you can see
The turnaround began with them getting better week-toa win over Eastern Michigan, week."
Amstutz said it has been
and now the Rockets (7-3, 61 MAC) can secure a spot in one of his most enjoyable
the conference title game and seasons as a head coach
make a case for securing a be.cause his team never quit.
bowl bid with a win over
"Even
though
things
archrival Bowling Green on weren't working out perfectTuesday night.
ly, they still worked hard and
"A lot of people would've they still believed in the pro.
up, but we stuc k gram," he said_. -_
have g1ven
with it," Thomas said . ''We
Toledo wide receiver
knew the potential we had.'' • Lance Moore said the team
A Toledo loss, though. will may have been over confisend Northern Illinois to the dent before the season starttitle game against Miami of ed.
Ohio.
"We got a reality check,"
Like the Rockets. Bowling he said. "But we knew we
Green (8-2 , 6-1) stumbled were a lot better than the way
early, losing ro Northern we played."
Illinois in the conference
Both teams expect to put
opener. That loss cost them a up plenty of points. Bowling
shot at a MAC title. but Green is scoring 44 points
they'll stay in line for a bowl per game this season while
if they beat Toledo.
Toledo is averaging 34.
The MAC has secured
"We always go into a game
spots in three postseason thinking were going to score
games for the first time in its a lot of points," Moore said.
history, which means both "It will be high-scoring
teams have a lot to play for. game."
The Falcons have won
Amstutz said Bowling
seven straight - their only Green quarterback Omar
loss coming at No. 2 Jacobs - with 32 touchOklahoma. They jumped into . down passes and just three
the Top 25 for the first time a interceptions - is throwing
week ago, then dropped out the ball with great maturity
after not playing.
for a sophomore.
"No one has been able to
The schools. bitter rivals
separated by just 20 mile s, stop them," Amstutz said .
met a year ago with a MAC "The key to stopping them
West title on the line. The would be to get Oklahoma's
defense to come play for us.
Falrons won 31-23.
"It's a great rivalry because They ' re the hottest offense in
no one team dominates the our conference."

r

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

CHAMPAIGN, lll. (AP) - Ron Turner
was fired by Illinois on Monday after three
straight losmg seasons, a sharp turnaround
from early success that included the team's
first Bi~ Ten football title in a decade.
IllinOIS went 3-8 this season and has just
. one conference victory the past two years.
Half of the lllini's four wins overall the past
two seasons were against Division 1-AA
opponents.
Turner had two seasons left on his contract, which pays him $1 .1 million per year
in salary am;! defern:d compensation.
" I realize it's a bonom-lme business and
the last couple of years we didn't win
enough football games," Turner said at a
news conference. "I can leave this university knowing that I ran a program with great
integrity."
Turner went 35-57 record with two bowl

trips in ei~ht seasons at nlinois. But since a
Sugar Bowl appearance in January 2002,
Illinois is just 9-25, and attendance has been
falling.
Seven home games this season averaged
48,626 in the 69,249-seat Memorial
Stadium .
Thmer did enjoy the support o( his players, several of whom have said they hoped
he would return next season.
"We're talkin~ about the guy who gave us
all the opportumty to play football in the Big
Ten, the guy who recruited us, the guy who
carne into our homes when we were in high
school and it's the same way with the whole
staff," junior defensive tackle Ryan Matha
said last week.
After four seasons as offensive coordinator for the Chicago Bears, Thrner was hired
as Illihois' head coach in December 1996,

succeeding Lou Tepper.
His first team went 0-1 I. After a 3-8 season in 1998, the 1999 squad w~nt 8-4 and
defeated Virginia 63-21
ill
the
Micronpc.com Bowl. The Illini slipped to 56 the following season, but in 2001 they
went 10-2 before losing to LSU in the Sugar
BowL
That team was Thrner's bright spol Led
by quarterback Kurt Kittner, lllinois' ~­
time winningest quarterback and leader m
touchdown ~ses. the team went 7-1 to win
their first B1g Ten title since sharing one m
1990.
•
Fourteen starters returned in 2002, including All- Big Ten players Tony Pash~s and
Eugene Wilson on defense and b1g-play
receivers Walter Young and Brandon ~lord
on offense, but Illinois won only once m ns
first six games and wound up 5-7.

Lewis calm but stern a day after his tirade
Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press

CINCINNATI - This is a side of
Marvin Lewis that his players didn't know.
Angered by his team's inability to get it
right for an entire game, the Cincinnati
Bengals head coach erupted in the locker
room following a 19-14loss to Pittsburgh.
He screamed so loud that hi s voice carried through massive closed doors and
walls. He poured out his tiustrations for the
tirst time in a tirade that took some of his
players by surprise.
"I've never seen him like that," receiver
Chad Johnson said.
A day later, Lewis had toned down his
anger but not his impatience. The secondyear coach who prefers to accentuate the
positive was in no mood to look for silver
linings.
"They know my point," Lewis said
Monday. "We've got to do better. We' re
not going to settle for playing close. We
can do betler and we will do better."
Asked if his anger had subsided. Lewis
forced a broad.smile and a chuckle to mask
his feelings, then waited five full seconds
before answering.
"We' ll see." he said.
What brought his anger to a boil? A loss
that was vintage Bengals, one that effectively scuttled any hope of making the
playoffs. A victory over the Steelers would
have moved them back to .500; instead.
they f~ll by the wayside at 4-6.
The mood was grim Monday at Paul
Brown Stadium. where players tiled out of
meetings quietly and headed home . Lewis'
harangue had hit home.
"Marvin's absolutely right," said quarterback Carson Palmer. who hadn't shaved

AP

Cincinnati Bengals head coach Marvin
Lewis talks with rookie linebacker Landon
Johnson, right, during their 19-14 loss to
the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday in
Cincinnati.
his game-day stubble. "We' re a better team
than we showed. We' re a better team than
4-6."
Only in spurts. And that's what has
Lewis so steamed.
·The Bengals outplayed the Steelers (9-1 )

at the outset, taking a 14-10 lead into halftime. It could have been even better Pittsburgh's only touchdown came when
Palmer forced a pass into triple coverage.
Linebacker James Farrior saw Palmer lock
onto the receiver; slid in front and returned
the interception for a touchdown.
.
Even though Palmer is in his frrst season
as a starter, he's far enough along in his
development that he should have known
better.
"I've played I 0 games now and got the
rust off and seen a lot of different coverages and a number of ~ood defenses,"
Pal mer said. "I'm still gomg to grow and
learn, but there's no excuse for throwing an
interception for six points."
And there's no explanation for how the
entire team melted down in the second half
- seven penalties for 75 yards, only two
tirst downs and 42 total yards.
That's what set Lewi~ off. His players
once again lost their poise with a game on
the line and wound up frittering it away.
It's been their hallmark since 1991 ,
when they started their run as the league's
most forlorn franchise. They haven't had a
winning record or made the playoffs during a 14-year stretch of futility that spans
five head coaches (Sam Wyche, Dave
Shula, Bruce Coslet, Dick LeBeau and
Lewis) and !51 losses.
In the past, a close loss would have been
cause for optimism that things were turning around. Until Sunday, Lewis had
remained upbeat even in the toughest
times.
All of that has changed. Lewis ls no
longer in the mood to look on the bright
'side.
"We lost the football game," he said
Monday. "There is nothing that I'm satisfied about We lost."

Reaeh 3 Counties

i

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·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
1 11(

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BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BR EED@MY DAILYSENTIN EL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS - A
cookbook assembl ed by
Eastern Elementary School
kindergarten student s has
become an annual tradition at
the &gt;chool. but cooks who use
it for the Thursday holiday
should be wary.
The students enjoyed a traditional Thank sgiving feast
prepared by teachers and
mothers on Tuesday, the last.
day of school before the
Thanksgiving holiday. Nancy
Wachter. one of two kindergarten teachers at the school.
said the cookbook was
inspired by the late Cindy
Linton, a long-time Eastern
elementary teacher, who
began the kindergarten cookbook tradition years ago.
Students were asked to
choose a favorite holiday
dish, and to describe how the
dish is prepared.
Need an easy recipe for
cooking the Thanksgiving
turkey? Miranda Combs
gives these tips: "Wash off
the turkey. Put it in a pan. My
dad puts bacon bits on it Dad
puts it in the oven for seven

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• James H. Rickman

INSIDE
• Mason County sheriff's
deputy no longer in ICU. ·
See Page AS
• Judge OKs terms of C8
settlement. See Page A6

Students in Eastern Elementary
School's kindergarten classes,
taught by Nancy Wachter and
Mtldred Wilson. enjoyed a
Thanksgiving feast before heading home for the holiday vacation on Tuesday.

No Sentinel
on Thursday
The Drlilv Sentinel office
will dose al 2 p.m. today .
The Scnhnel will not be
published Thursday to allow
its emplovee..
the
- to ohsetve
.
Tbank~giving holiday.
, Regular publication and
business hours resume at
8 a.m. Friday.

minutes at 500 degrees. Mom
leave ~ it a little bit cold and I
don ' t like it. Take it out of the
oven. Take little pieces off of
it and eat it."
Tayl or Parker ' s turkey
recipe call; for more ingredients: Stuffing. a si~­
pound turkey, dough. salt
and pepper.
·Take the turkey and put
the dou gh on it. We put it in
the ove n at 92 degrees for
eight minutes . When it' s
done, my mom hollers. Take
it out of the oven, cut it and
eat it."
Travi s Warth shared a
recipe for a traditional
Thanksgiving side dish,
green beans , using seeds,
green beans, butter and salt
"Put it in the microwave in a
bowl. Cook it in there a long
time. Give them to the dogs if
they burn up."
' Katelyn Edwards ' mashed
potatoes recipe is equally
simple. 'Take your potatoes
and smash them. Put them
in a pan and get a smasher.
It only takes a couple of
hours. Bake them. Eat them
with a spoon."
For the culinary underachiever, Grace Adams offers
an easier solution - one any
bachelor can appreciate:
Froot Loops. "I take milk and
I take cereal and I take a
bowl. Then I take a spoon.
Put the cereal in your bowl ,
then the milk and put your
spoon in the bowl and eat it."

Inside Potneroy's new
water treattnent plant
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILY

WEATHER

•

•

:.!00~

SPORTS

•

.I

:.! . ~

• Rio still perfect: Redmen
knock off Urbana. See
Page 81

··-···-···-···-···-···--··-···-···-···--··-···-···-···-···--··-···-···-···--··--·1

•

Qhio State to f.lay in
Alamo Bow , Bt

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

SENTINELCOM

••
••

EHS National Honor Society inductees

Detatto on Pa&amp;o A12

INDEX
2 SECilONS- 24 PAGES

•

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B9-10

Comics

Bu

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

A5

Places to Go

Bs

Sports

B1

Weather

SYRACUSE -The
new Pomeroy water.
treatment plant located
in Syracuse will be
online sometime next
week according to
Village Administrator
John Anderson.
Anderson is waiting
on delivery of two
electronic controls, one
of which was supposed
These Eastern High School jvniors and seniors were inducted into the National
Beth Serpnt/plloto
Honor Society during 40th annual induction ceremonies held Tuesday: Brittni to be delivered yesterVillage
Administrator,
John
Anderson
recently gave
day.
These
controls
Hensley, Amanda Windon, Autumn Hauber, Nick Kuhn, Charles Wilson. Carrie
Village
Council
the
grand
·
tour
of
the village's
Pomeroy
basically tell him what
Elberfeld , Ross Holter, Brandon Bartee and Taylor Russell.
is going on at the plant. new water treatment plant in Syracuse. The plant cost $2
Monday night dur- million is due to go online sometime next week.
ing a tour of the plant
by Pomeroy Village Council. Anderson Ohio Public Works Community Grant
the special hunting everlt held said he had recently had the plant and a STAG Grant ' administered
STAFF REPORT
through the EPA .
statewide on Nov. 20 and 21. The online as a test and "it work s...
The new building has already passed
What the plant means to the average
POMEROY - Meig s County 's Division of Wildlife estimate s that
'person i&gt; a reduction in the minerals
youngest deer hunters harvested 168 15.000 young hunters took to the an inspection by building in,pectors.
"The plant is substantially com - manganese and iron. both of which
deer during last weekend's youth field during the season. Tuscarawas
deer hunt, according to figures County had the highest harvest this plete." Anderson added. ''It was basi- affect the taste of drinkin g water.
cally nn time and I was pleased with among other problems.
released Monday by the Ohio year, with 263 deer harvested .
When exposed to air. manganese
Department of Natural Resources,
In 2003. Meigs County youth har- the contractors .''
turn'
vested
137
deer
during
the
weekThe
plant
had
a
price
tag
of
$2
mil
into a solid form. namely the black
Division of Wildlife .
Across the state, young hunters 17
lion which . was paid for by a
and under took 6,673 deer during
Plene see Deer, AS
Community Development Block Grant.
Please see Plant. AS

A12

© 0004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Meigs youth bag 168 deer

•

~t
\

Thars how fast Credit Xpress delivers cashl

~alltpolis

L

11Bailp m;rtbune The o ·aily Sentinel Jloittt Jlleasant l\egtster
... _J~~.~:234~·-···-···-···--··~~2.~~.~?.·-···-···-···-·~3o4)..~.:~~~~-···-··

, The holidays are here. Money Is tight But yot.lr kids are expecting
Santa Claus to come through. What do you do? ca11 Credit Xpressl
•

•

_,

We're .here for you.
'

5 I 8 East Main Street
(Next ro the Dollar General

StoreJ .

Pomeroy, Ohio ·.

~

140.992.1771

•

•

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