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                  <text>Bearcats rout East
Carolina, B6

Reds edge Brewers, B6

Tl'I:SJ) \\. SEI'TI ·: :\IBFK :! , :! oo : ~

.)o l I :\iTS • \ ol. :1-l · :\o.:!

Economy, foreign affairs much on Bushs mind this week

SPORTS
• Buckeyes focus on \\tho
is playing, not who isn't.
SeePageB1

0BITUARIFS
. Page AS
• Focie Hayman, 86
• Patricia Potter, 75
• Edward Hughes, 67
• Carl Fausnaugh, 84

WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush tends to foreign
affairs and to his re-election
bank account this week, but his
strongest focus is on the economy - a topic taking him to
three Midwestern states.
Bus)l marked Labor Day,
traditionally a starting gate for
presidential campaigns, with a
speech to Ohio union workers
in which he addressed the loss
of factory jobs, a glaring
weak spot in the economy.
The president announced he
was creating a high-l~vel government post within the
Commerce Department to nurture the manufacturing sector,

which has been bleeding jobs in
states crucial to his re-election.
On a rain-soaked trip to a
union training center in
Richfield, Bush said he had
directed Commerce Secretary
Don Evans to establish an
assistant position to focus "on
the needs of manufacturers."
Keeping factory jobs is critical
to a broader economic recovery, the president said, his outdoor venue ringed by. cranes,
backhoes and bulldozers.
Bush said the nation has lost
"thousands of jobs in manufacturing." In fact, the losses have
soared into the millions: Of the
2.7 million jobs the U.S. econ-

omy has lost
·since
the
recesston
began
in
early 2001,
2.4 million
were
m
manufacturmg.
The presiBush
dent spent
August at his
ranch in Crawford, Texas,
returning to Washington on
Saturday. Congress also returns
this week following its August
break, with members of both
political parties ready to
increase the pressure on Bush

to clearly state the expected
costs, in tenns of troops and
dollars, of occupying lmq.
Bush was to stay largely
out of sight Tuesday, handing off the first game ball of
the National Football League
season in the Oval Office in
the afternoon, but planning
no other public appearances.
Wednesday, he was to
breakfast with Prime Minister
Jan Peter Balkenende of the
Netherlands, a U.S. ally with
forces on the ground in Iraq.
Then Bush was participating in a si,gning ceremony
for bilateral trade pacts with
Chile and Singapore. Bush

argues that such deals will
boost the economy by
increasing American exports.
On Thursday, Bush was
returning to the road with a
speech touting tax cuts as the
tonic for the ailing economy. He
was scheduled to speak on the
economy in Kansas City. Mo.
Missouri , which Bush narrowly won in 2000, long has
been on White House political adviser Karl Rove's list
of "spec ial concern" states.
Friday. Bush was to visit
Indiana, a state he canied easily
in the la~t election, for another
speech on the economy.

Lions Club attacks community service with gusto
Bv J.

MILES LAYTON

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

lNSIDE
~ Sctm news.
·~

""" m~d . til'"' "l"''' l.n""

See Page A3
Community calendar. See

Page A3
.• Court news. See Page A6

WFATHER
Stonna, HI: 80s, Low: 801

Detail• on Pace A2

Lo'ITERIES
Ohio

POMEROY - From providing eye glasses to the disadvantaged to contributing to
· victims of floods, the
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club has been serving Meigs
Countians since 194 7.
As a combined fundraiser to
provide some of the money
needed to carry out such projects and as a service to merchants, every holiday or special occasion the club puts out
American flags in downtown
· areas. However, seeing that the ·
flags are in place on holidays,
llke they were yesterday for
Labor Day, is just a small part
of what the Lions do in the
community.
As for other projects, the
local club has put out benches
in front of the Meigs County
Courthouse and in several
other locations in the downtown area of Pomeroy. Lions
Club members wired the old
railroad station in Middleport.
They refurbished the gazebo at
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club President Kenny Utt, the Rev. William Middleswarth and First the Beech Grove Cemetery.
Vice President Bruce Teaford, lett to right, met at Crow's Steakhouse to put out the first of
Lions are recognized worldmany flags in downtown Pomeroy for the Labor Day holiday. Seeing that the flags are out on wide for their service to the
holidays is a service for merchants and a fund-raiser for the Lions Club. (J. Miles Layton)
blind and visually impaired.

This serv.ice began when Helen
Keller challenged the Lions to
become "knights of the blind in
the crusade against darkness"
during the association's 1925
international convention. Over
the years. the club has assisted
countless school• children in
need of eye glasses.
During the mid 1990's when
Meigs County sustained a lot of
flood damage, the Lions Club
was on the front lines helping
people out. Teaford said the
local chapter received two
$1 0,000 grants from the national Lions Club to assist with
flood recovery in the area.
"Helping people gives me a
lot of personal satisfaction,"
said Kenny Utt, president.
Bruce Teaford, first vice president, estimates that between
$6,000 to $8,000 is raised each
year
through
numerous
fundraisers by volunteers.
"We make our money here,
and we spend it here." he said.
"We take nothing for ourselves."
The
Rev.
William
Middleswarth. who is retired,
joined the Lions Club in 1960. "I
enjoy service to the community,"
he said. "I get a chance to see a lot
of people every day. The work we
do is important to the community."

Pick 3 day: 4-9-8
Pick 4 day: 8-2-6-4
Pick 3 night: 9·0·2
Pick 4 night: 4·7·2·8
Buckeye 5: 8-9·19-32·33

West VIrginia
. Dally 3: 7·2·5
Dally 4: Q-5-Q-0
Cash 25: 1-4-9-13-19·22

Local veterinarian known throughout community
Bv J.

MILES LAYToN

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGfS

Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
Youth •Education

A6

A3
82-4
Bs

A3
A4
As
As
81-2,6
A2

A3

. © 2003 Ohio Valley PubUshlng Co.

RACINE - Even when
the "closed" sign is put up
on the door at the Mei~s
Veterinary Clinic, Davtd
Krawsczyn who founded the
clinic about 24 years a~o . is
"on call" for emergencies.
He still does "house calls"
and prides himself on being
familiar with many cows on
dairies
around
Meigs
County.
"When I am on call, I
never know from one minute
to the next what I am going
to be doing next," he said.
For instance, one emergency involved a dog

impaled on a fence spike. large farm animals.
Krawsczyn said the dog had · The cows at many dairy
jumped in the air and got farms know Krawsczyn inticaught on the spike on the mately. For a flat fee of $3 a
cow, Krawsczyn checks
way down.
"That was a strange call," hundreds of cows each
he recalled. "The dog lived month to see if they are
though. One of the best parts pregnant.
The veterinarian made a
about this job is saving
house call to the Hamm farm
lives."
For
. many
ye11rs outside Racine on Thursday.
Krawsczyn Wl\S the only vet- He wasn't dressed in a suit
erinarian in Meigs County. and tie or one of those white
He said fewer veterinarians doctor coats, but a dark
. choose to do large animal . green set of dungarees. He
work or move to rural areas slipped on a long plastic
because the money is not as sleeve just before fourth
good. He said a lot of veteri- gerleration dairy farmer
narians consider it easier to Chris Hamm opened a door
work .with cats and dogs for a cow to enter the small
than to go out in the field
and barns and take care of
Please see Vet. AS

Veterinarian David Krawsczyn is about to find out if this cow at
the Hamm farm is pregnant. (J. Miles Layton)

The Pecliatric.polients and stuH at Holzer Medical Cenler
would lilce 1o thanlc the August sponsors of the
Earl NeH Pediatric Fund:

Shake Shoppe
Cliff's Aulo Repair
Tim Snedaker and Jeff Snedaker

Jason Brumfield and Bu

Graham

�..

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
Wednesday, Sept. 3
AccuWoather.com tore&lt;:ast lor davtimo conditions lowlhioh1omoeratures
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: 0 2003 Aoct,Weather, Inc.

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Sunny, Pt. 'CIOUdy

C~

SOOwers

..

T·storms

Rain

•

Flurries

•

Soow

v

•

Ice

Showers &amp;thunderstorms
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today... Showers and thunderstonms likely. Rain may be heavy
at times. Highs in the lower 80s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Tonight..Showers and thunderstorms likely... Mainly after
midnight. Rain may be heavy
at times. Lows in the upper
60s. Light and variable winds.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Wednesday... Showers and
thunderstorms likely. Rain may
be heavy at times. Highs near
80. Southwest winds 5'to 10
mph. Chance of rain 70 percent. ·
Wednesday night...Showers

and thunderstorms Jikely... MainJy
early. Lows in the mid 60s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy
with a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs
75 to 79. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Thursday
night.,. Partly
cloudy. Lows 55 to 58.
Friday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Saturday... Mostly clear.
Lows in the mid 50s and
highs near 80.
Sunday ... Mostly
clear.
Lows in the upper 50s and
highs in the lower 80s.

Ex-teacher writes ·
new chapters in
history of old weapon
OSTRANDER (AP) -With a razor-sharp drawknife,
Dean Torges trims the wood
stave, neatly stroking off shavings like so many potato peels.
Torges, a bowyer, or bow
maker, is on the frontline of
an ancient art's revival. His
book on making a modern
bow from osage orange wood
has sold 15,000 copies. A
German language version
appeared thi s spring.
In a time short by comparison to the known 25,000-year
history of the bow, archers are.
rediscovering the joys of making their own gear after
decades of being wowed by
more sophisticated and powerful mass-produced equipment.
Torges, 62, began his journey
as an American literature
teacher at Ohio State University
in the 1960s, a reader of
Thoreau, Melville and Twain.
But he found himself
steadily drawn to the more
practical arts, where brain and
skill apply in equal measure.
So he cashed in hi s state
teacher 's retirement account
to stock a woodshop he built,
its centerpiece a l930s-era
Delta Unisaw.
"My passiOn for working
wood and furniture just took
hold of me," he said. He found
his Thoreau-like paradise near

this central Ohio village -- 12
acres with a pond. ·
As a cabinetmaker, Torges
took commissions crafting
Masonic lodge and church furnishings and even the reptile
houses at the Columbus Zoo.
As his skills grew, so did a
lifelong bow-hunting passion.
Torges wrote a series of
articles
for
'rraditional
Bowhunter Magazine that
document his spiritual journey to build the perfect bow
for the perfect Alaska hunt.
The anicles came together
with the 1998 self-published
Hunting the Osage Bow, a
how-to illustrated by former
National Geographic artist
Jan Adkins, a childhood
friend. Invitations to lecture
have come from as far as
Australia and South Africa,
while phone calls and e-mails
arrive from bowyers around
the world.
"It was always my intention
to find a little hole in the
woods somewhere and live
out my life." Torges said. " I
never imagined I'd be traveling the world."
Torges sees the bowyer's art
in terms closely tied to the spirit of hunting he practices and a
commitment to not robbing animals of their natural advantages
with cash-bought equipment. j

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
CorreeUon Polley

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio valley Publishing Co.
Published every alternoon,

Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
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Our main number Ia
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to The Daily Senlinel, 111
Department extensions are:
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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter: J . Milos Laylon. Ext. 13

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Tuesday, September 2,

Bush touts new energy policy to help manufacturers
RICHFIELD (AP)
President Bush's announcement that he 's creating a
high-level government job to
help the manufacturing
industry was welcomed with
cautious optimism in Ohio,
an important state to Bush's
re-election and one hit hard
by t'he loss of jobs.
" I would like to hear more
details about his manufacturing policy," said crane operator Ken McGlashan, 40. " I
want to see some .action."
Dennis Stevenson of Lima
also wants to see results.
"I think the economy is better now than it was 6 months
ago." he said. "But I would
like to hear about more jobs
coming to America."
The men were among the
hundreds who braved chilly
temperatures and a constant
rain Monday to spend Labor
Day with the president in this
Republican-leaning
town
tucked
between
the
Democratic strongholds in
Akron and Cleveland.
At the International Union
of Operating Engineers facili ty, Bush said he had directed
Commerce Secretary Don
Evans to establish an assistant

position to focus "on the needs
of manufacturers ." Keeping
factory jobs is critical to a
broader economic recovery,
the president said, his outdoor
venue ringed by cranes, backhoes and bulldozers.
,.
The union represents
400,000 construction and
maintenance workers in the
United States and Canada.
"I want you to understand
that I understand that Ohio
manufacturers are hurting,
that there's a problem with
the manufacturin~ sector,"
Bush said. "I beheve there
are better days ahead for peapie who are working and
looking for work."
Of the 2.7 million johs the
U.S. economy has lost since
the recession .began in early
200 I. 2.4 million were in
manufacturing . The downturn has eliminated more
than one in I0 of the nation's
factory jobs.
Ohio has been especially
hard hit, losing 185,000jobs
during the rece ssion from
200 I through last March,
nearly two-thirds in manufacturing, according to a
study released Sunday by a
private economic think tank.

Community calendar

holding signs stood along the
motorcade route, while about
400 AFL-CIO members and
Democrats protested Bush's
visit, criticizing his economic policy.
.
"I hope his tour of the state
will include the empty factories and bankrupt corporations," said Ohio Rep.
Dennis Kucinich, one of nine
Democrats vying to challenge Bush.
Bush also used the Ohio
visit to call on Congress to
quickly get an energy bill to
his desk. The president has
said he wants reliability standards in the bill and incentives to companies that
improve their infrastructure.
As rain poured, Bush told
the Labor Day crowd that a
new national energy policy
would help protect its sagging manufacturing base.
Last m6nth 's blackout that
left 50 miilion Americans in
Ohio and seven other states
and Canada in the dark provides an op)lortunity to modernize the aging electricity
_grid, Bush said.

Ronald McComas, 52, of
Fremont, srud he disagreed
with the administration's
plan to do away with overtime in favor of ·time off for
some workers.
"We're going to tight to
keep that,'' said McComas, a
32-year member of the
union. "We'll be watchtng
the president on that."
Labor Day marks_the traditiona) start of campaign season
and electoral vote rich Ohio is
an important state. Thts. was
th~ . president'~ lith vrstt to
Oh1o smce taking office. Bush
received 50 percent of the vote
in .the state in 2000, only 3.5
percentage pomts more than
Democrat AI Gore.
" It really is a tossup,"_ said
Melanie Blumberg, a pahttcal
science professor at Cahfom.I.a
Universtty of Pennsylvama. I
don't think that etther s1de can
write it off."
Republicans are preparing
for another close race and used
the event to launch_a revamped
grass-roots campaign program
for 2004. Dem~f'dts say they
plan to work JUSt as hard.
blam\ng the_ job troubles on
Bush s (Xlhctes.
In Rtchfteld, supporters

Public meetings
Monday, Sept. 1
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township trustees will meet
at 7:30p.m. at the Syracuse
municipal building .
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Syracuse municipal building .
Tuesday, Sept. 2
RACINE -- Racine Village
Council will meet in recessed
session at 7 p.m. 1n council
chambers at the municipal
building.
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy ·
Merchants
Association will have a work
session at 5 p.m. to get downtown Pomeroy ready for
Morgan 's Raid festivities
Volunteers are needed to
ass ist with weeding flower
beds and helping with other
cleanup chores.
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m.
at the home of Clerk Osie
Foil rod .
RUTLAND -- The Rutland
Township trustees will meet
at 5 p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Station.
W~tdneaday, Sept. 3
PAGEVILLE
Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30 p.m .
Pageville townhall.
RACINE- A special meeting of the Southern Local
Board of Education will be
held at 5:30 p.m. at the high
s chool.
SALEM
CENTER
Columbia Township trustees
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
f1re station.
Thursday, Sept. 4
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township trustees, 6:30 p.m .
a t the Salisbury Township

SBC says it is making progress in improving service
Candisky said SBC invested
COLUMBUS (AP) -- time. she said.
to other companies.
Ohio 's largest telephone
"As a result of a system that
"The bottom line is they $1.5 billion in its Ohio network
company says II is · making requires no less than perfec- are paying the tines because from 2000 through 2002. The
progress as it tries to meet tion, if we miss some of these they're not treating competi- cost of the tines is not passed to
hundred s of service stan- measures by even a fraction of tors fairly and they're not consumers, she added.
dards set by the state.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel
a second, we wind up paying," trea,ting competitors' cusSBC has paid nearly $15 mil- Candisky said.
tomers fairly," said William Robert S. Tangren said the
lion in tines in Ohio and nearly
SBC is being penalized for Schuck, executive director of fines don't appear to be work$84 million to the federal gov- inadequale service to compa- Competition Ohio, whose ing and should be increased.
ernment for not providing the nies that lease its lines to pro- members include AT&amp;T.
"Unless someone says we
service it agreed lo when It vide local phone service. .
mean
business, and we have a
SBC counters that the combought Ameritech in 1999.
The problems include send- petitors' complaints are a last- remedy that has some teeth in it,
The company has paid ing inaccurate bills to com- ditch effort to keep it out of the we're going to continue to have
penalties for 36 consecutive
months in Ohio and federal petitors and failing to provide long distance business. The the same situation," he said.
PUCO spokesman Matt
Communications
tines for 32 straight months. It service to competitors' cus- Federal
Commission
is
expected
to
Butler
said a June order by
tomers
as
quickly
as
it
does
to
has paid tens of millions in the
rule in October on SBC's the commission requires
four other former Ameritech its own retail customers.
Competitors
say
people
application
to provide long- SBC to complete tests of its
states it operates in.
changing
local
phone
compadistance service in Ohio, operating systems by Oct. I
SBC has to meet more than
Indiana
and or face additional penalties.
I ,900 standards in Ohio nies wait too long to be switched lllinois,
and
for
repairs,
and
sometimes
Wisconsin.
"The fines have declined
alone, said company spokesThe
Public
Utilities significantly over the years,
woman Caryn Candisky. lose dial tones. In some cases,
SBC now meets more than they say, SBC continues to bill - Commission of Ohio has so there has been some real
customers who have switched endorsed SBC's bid.
improvement," Butler said~
95 percent of them, and the
fines have declined over , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - : . - - - : : : - - - - - - - - - - - ,

ATHENS -- The. following
students were named to the
dean's list at Ohio University in
Athens for the spring quarter,
having earned a grade point average of 3.3 or higher: Amos
Cottrill, Michele George, Tara
Ollom and Esther VanOon, all of
Coolville: Jeremiah Smith,
Langsville; Tam Humphreys,
Long Bottom; Stacey Brewer
;md Brooke Vau~han, both of
Middleport: He1di DeLong,
Holly DeLong:. Maureen Heines,
Andrea
Kmwsczyn, Sara
M;msliekl. Scott Needs, Ryan
Pr~t t. Jeffrey Shank, James
St;mley. Wesley Thoene. Joshua_
WiII. ;md JessiCa Wnght. all ot
Pomeroy.
Joseph Comell, Heather
Dailey. Macyn E1vin. Shannon
lhlc. Rachel Marshall, Jody
Nt~Tis. and Robe11 Taylor. all of
Rm:inc: Matthew Beldyk. Jessica
Brannon . Stephanie Evans,
Joshua Kehl. ;md Leah Sanders,
all nf Reedsville: Sara lhle.

Wendy'~

worker
killed by
would-be
robber

I
•

COLUMBUS (AP) -A fast-food worker shot
by a would-be robber
through a pickup window
has died of a chest wound.
Police said the shooting
occurred Saturday night
after the Wendy's dining
room had closed and the
drive-through window
remained open.
The gunman was unable
to climb into the restaurant through the pickup
window and shot Scott
Knauf, 27, a shift supervisor in training, police
said. He died on Sunday
at Riverside Methodi st
Hospitals.
The suspect tled without any money.
"Scott had his hands in
the air. He was not showing any signs of ill will
toward the suspect," said
Denny
Lynch,
a
spoke sman at Wendy 's
headquarters in suburban
Dublin.
Police said there were
three other employees in
the restaurant but none
saw the shootin g. One
was grazed on \he head by
a bullet and was treated at
the scene.
Detective
James
Gravett said the ;:rime
appears to be random.

Mall Subscription
Meigs County
13 Weeks .. . ........ ..'30.15
26 Weeks .
. .... . .'60.00
52 Weeks ........ ... .'116.60
Ratee Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks ........ .. . .. •so.os
...._ 26 Weeks . . ....... ' 100.10
52 Weeks .. .. . . ...... '200.20

Clubs and
Organizations
Wednesday, Sept. 3 .
CHESTER Chester
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. open
meeting at the Chester
United Methodist Church .
Linda Blazer of Athens,
herbalist, will speak. Open to
everyone. Special invitation
to garden club members.
Chester. members to take
door prizes.
Thursday, Sept. 4
'
POMEROY - Hemlock
Grange will meet at the hall.
There will be a pizza party.
CHESTER -- A meeting of
the Cheter-Shade Historical
Association schedued for
Thursday has been canceled
due to Morgan's Raid
Reenactment and exhibits at
the Chester Courthouse. The
next meeting will be held on
Oct. 2.
Friday, Sept. 5
POM.EROY
Meigs
County Pomona Grange will
meet at 7.:30 p.m. at the
Hemlock Grange hall. All
women's activiites, art photography, and junior crafts will
be judged.

Other events
Wednesday, Sept. 3
POMEROY -- Oh-Kan
Coin Club Exhibition, 9 a.m to
3 p.m.at the Peoples Bank,
Pomeroy, for the enjoyment of
customers and the public.
Free coin to chldren six and
under. County currency and
tokens wil also be included in
the display.

Birthdays·
Sylvia Robenstine will observe
her 90th birthday, Sept. 2. She
resides at rose lane health
Center, 5425 High Mill Ave., NW,
Massillon, Oho 44646 and cards
may be sent to her there.

Dear
Abby

that you overlookeU a s~riou ~

pussibilil y: She may have
been l(iven a date-rape dru g.
The
, y mptom s
she·
described wuld he linked In
GH B or Rohypnol. Pc·opk
who drink a combination of
alcohol and 1hcsc dru g'
commo nl y lu1ve "blackouts"
lasting from one to 24 hou rs·
after (onsuming sul'll a

coc ktail. -- SARATOGA .
CALIF. READER
DEAR READER : You
win the bet . I have received
an avalanche of leucrs and
e-mails numberin u in the
thousand s. Read mi:
DEAR ABBY: You tn iJ
the young lady that drinkin g
and hlackin~ ou1 &lt;:&lt;J!Jid indi cate a drinkin g prnhlem . As
a phy sic ian. amlihe father of
two you ng 1vomcn . I feel
your advil:~ was incompk ie.
Abby. the "problem" is her
boylricnd. He may he _" sexual predator and subJect 10
prosecution . She ma y be the
victim or the date -hlpe drug
Roh ypnol. and THAT' S why
she

c a11 't

remember bci ng

videotaped.
Young women should be
warned aboul this possihiliiy
and .the need to watch their
beverages carefully . -PETERS. HACKER. M.D..
HOLLIS, N.H .

DEAR DOCTOR H .: I
didn't consider the possibili ty of a date -rape drug -- and
neither did my staff ··
because nf the length of time
( fi w years'! that &gt;he and her
hovfriend ha ve lived togelh~r. ·Read on :
DEAR ABBY: I had a
similar experience. also with
a !rusted boyfriend. I had ~
&lt;ouplc of drink s and felt
tipsy. He offered to take me
hom~: anc...l take can: of me .
The next morning I awoke
wilh a hrui se al the lop of
my head. blurred vision and
frighteningly awkward wordination . I remembered
noihing. My hoy friend said I
had simply passed out.
Later. severa l friend s told
me lhat he had bragged thai
he had laced my drink in
order to fulfill a "personal
fantasy ...
~
Please let your readers
know thi s happens not only
with stran gers. but somelime s with pcopk we lhink
we can trust. I hope this
helps someone. Thanks for
letting me get i1 olT my
chest. -- JEN NY IN N.D.
DEAR JENNY: Thank
YOU for writing. Your letter
will not only help thou sands

of women, but i1 has also
educated me .
DEAR ABBY: Regarding
the jerk who nol only had
sex with hi s girlfri end afler
she had passed out. but then
had the audacity to videPtape the acl: Sex with a
woman who is nut capable
of co nsent is RAPE . ··
ANOTHER MAN'S VIEW
IN WASHINGTON
DEAR MALE WASH INGTONIAN: I agree . And
to be safe. the young woman
should call her local rape
hnlline and run lhe entire
scenario by lhem. She may
al so need to be lestcd for
STDs -- becm1se a man who
would do this to her ..:ould
easily be sexually violating
mher women.
DEAR ABBY: UnJer no
circ umslalKt's shou ld that
video be deslroycd. II should
be taken Ill the police so it
can be used as ev idence in
her boyfriend's prosecution!
And as for you. i1 's lime to
drag nul ihc wet noodle. -HORRIFIED IN IIO USTON
DEAR HORRIFIED : No
need for the nmKIIe. I' ve
already
been
flo gged
enough.
Dear Abby is writlen hy
Abigail Van Buren. also
known as ]!;:anne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother. Pauline Phillips .
Wrile
Dear Ahhy ~t
www.DearAhl1y.com or P.O.
Box 69440. Los Angelcs.
C A 9006'.1.

Jennifer Lambert. James Parker,
and Amber Snowden, all of
Rutland; Edna Cox, Shade; and
Kimberly Marcinko, Thppers
Plains.

Graduates
announced

Subscribe today¥ 992-2156

On dean's list
PORTSMOUTH -- Kirk
Crow of Albany and Phillip
Cooke of Pomeroy were
named to the dean's list at
Shawnee State University in
Portsmouth for the spring
quarter, having earned a
grade point average of at
least 3.5.

ATHENS -- The following
local students were candidates for
graduation at the end of the spring
quarter at Ohio University: Trina
Hannan, Middleport; Kelli
Bailey, Wendy Halar, Heather
PARKERSBURG, W.Va .
Humphreys, Wesley Thoene,
--Judith
West of Reedsville
Holly DeLong, Debra Evans and
Krista Sinclair, all of Pomeroy; has been named to the presiJessica Radford, Racine; Bobby dent's list at Mountain State
Brogan, Reedsville; Anthony College in Parkersburg ,
W.Va .. for earning a grade
Beres, Rutland.
Sarah
Householder, point average of 3.5 or better.
Middleport; Michael Barr,
Chad Hanson, William Will,
Pomeroy: Jennifer Lambert
and Aaron Vaughan , all of
LANGSVILLE -- Bridget
Rutland: Teresa Combs, M. Vaughan of Langsville
Kelly Walker. Mary Grueser, re~.-ently graduated from Wrighi
Ambrosia Walker. and Joshua SLate University, with a bachelor
of sciem:e degree in business.
Logsdon, all of Shade.

AGRICULTURE

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Holzer Clinic

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Norris Northup Dodge

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

www.pvalley.org

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.turnpikeflm.com

BUSINESS TRAINING
Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

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V:OO a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Monday and Friday
V:OO a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
CLOSED SUNDAY

I

Sunday, Sept. 7
POMEROY - Descendants
of the late John L. Jeffers and
Viola Riggs Jeffers will hold
their annual reunion at 12:30
p.m. at the home of Wendell
Jeffers. For more information
call 992-7212.
Saturday, Sept. 13
CHESHIRE - The 36th
Samuel allen Eblin family
reunon wil be held at the
Cheshire Villag\) Park . There
will be a 4 p.m. social hour
with a covered dish dinner
following . Family members
are to take table service, a
covered dish and their own
beverage.

DEAR ABBY: I had 1o
write after readin g you r
response to "Nul Into Porn."
lhe young woman whn
blacked out after drinkin~
with her live- in boyfriend.
and later di scover~d that he
· had videotaped them ha v in~
sex. I'll bet you gel more
!han 1,000 letters suggcSiing

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Reunions

2003

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permitted in areas where home
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Inside

Saturday, Sept. 6
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet for a
potluck supper at 6:30 followed by a 7:30p.m. meeting .

building on Rocksprings
Road .
REEDSVILLE Olive
Township trustees will meet
at the township garage on
Joppa Road.
Monday, Sept. 8
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse Board of P.ublic
Affairs has changed its meeting date from Sept. I to Sept.
B. The meeting will be held at
7. p.m . in the water board
office of Syracuse Village
Hall.

Tuesday, September 2,

Woman's blackout could have
been result of date-rape drug

School news
Dean's list
announced

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

2003

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�Tuesday, September 2, 2003

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 02, 2oo:j1

A true doctor of education

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

The most destructive myth

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

in many American schools is

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

VIEW

NATIONAL

PageA4·

Alabama
Church and Smte
Tire Ironton Tribune, on Alabama's Court House:
Alabama's now famous Ten Commandments monument is
gaining serious attention from critics and fans alike.
While the latest focu s is on the statue itself, the much larger issue is how wi ll America grapple with the legal, ethical
and moral issues the hunk of ro(k now represents?
How ironic it is that we, as a country, distance ourselves
from any religious overtones in some avenues, such as the 2.6
ton .monument, but at the same time use the same religion as
a test of will and allegiance to our government.
Early in their public careers , ousted Alabama Chief Justice
Roy Moore and thousands of others chosen to lead our government once placed a hand on the Bible and swore to uphold
their office "so help me God.''
It seems like a quintessential case of talking out of both
sides of one's mouth. How on earth can we manage to uphold
the tenets of the separation of church and state and hold on to
our Christ ian heritagery

that certain students, because
of the mean streets where they
live, can only learn so much.lfl
August, for a glaring example,
The New York Times extensively documented · that thousands of the New York City's
low-income students are actually being pushed out of high
schools because their low test
scores would make their principals and superintendents
look bad. Yet, shoving youngsters into dead-end lives is not
limited to New York City.
In California, Dr. Glenn
Langer. former head of the
UCLA
Cardiovascular
Research Laboratory, ha~ left
the practice and teaching of
medicine to enrich and
advance the lives of youngsters
who have given up hope of
ever freeing themselves from
the quicksand of failure in their
schools.
Seven years ago, Dr. Langer
and his wife. Marianne. started
"The Partnership Scholars." a
nonprofit, al l-volunteer, precollege education progr.un that
now instructs 168 low-income
students in 18 middle and high
schools in the Los Angeles area
and northern California.
This freedom road - which
can be replicated anywhere in
the country by truly publicspirited citizens and generous
donors - begins in the seventh grade. Youngsters entering the seventh grade, whom
teachers have nominated, ore

the El Salvador countryside
when she was 9 years old. She
had never attended school. She
recently wrote to Langer:
"I am not will in~ to give up
my dream of makmg a differNat
ence in my family and the lives
Hentoff
of others. I want to take aavantage of the education inaccessible to me nine years ago. My
dream. is to become a highly
assigned voluntary mentors. educated professional who
From the seventh grade on, the empowers children to realize
mentors not only tutor the thetr full potential through eduemerging scholars and are kept cation."
informed of their classroom
Foundations and individual
work, they also introduce the donors tinance the program.
youngsters to the world of con- while Langer pays all adminiscerts, bookstores, plays, his- trative expenses. The total cost
toric sites and college campus- for the lirst II students to linish the program was $94,600.
es.
"Many seventh-graders had The four-year sc holarships
never been out of the I-mile they haye received amount to
square of their school district," more than $800,000.
Lan1;er notes. When I was
'T d call that a pretty good
observing in a high school in return on our investment," says
East Harlem, N.Y., I met stu- Langer. who created the prodents who had never been in gram because of his experiany other part of the city.
ences growing up on the wrong
William R. Fitzsimmons. side of the tmcks.
"I was a Depression (Era)
dean of admissions and tinancial aid at Harvard University, kid," he says, "who was able to
wrote to Langer after hearing attend college and go on to
about
The
Partnership medical school because those
Scholars: "You can be assured more economically fortunate
that any applicants from the than I volunteered to help.''
program will receive most
During his distinguished 40careful review."
year career as a practitioner.
The first II Partnership clinical researcher and profesScholars lo tinish the six-year sor of medicine ·and psycholoprogram are now freshmen. gy, Langer performed an·even
with full scholarships, in wider public service by writing
Southern California universi- a book that led to my tirst conties. One scholarship recipient tact with him. As a reporter of
came to the United States from medical issues, I had become

aware that this was &lt;Ul age of'
HMOs and some doctors who ·
run an assembly line of
patients to meet the bottom
line. Ailing people needed t\'
guide to become sufficiently':
infonned patients and judge'
the quality of their medical '
treatment.
I found such an understandable guide in Langer's book,
wl;lich is still available.
"Understanding Disease: How
Your Heart, Lungs, Blood. and ·
Blood Vessels Function &amp; :
Respond lo Treatment" (QED.
Press, I999). I wasn't surprised
to learn about The Partnership '
Scholars Program atier having·
interviewed him about the
book and his commitment to·
public service. I was struck by
his determination and practicality of his answer to Duke:
Ellington's song, "What Am 1·
Here For?"
'
I expect many mentors
around the country would be '
willing to join other initiators·
of such programs. After all. Dr..
Langer may be singular. bm .
surely not for long.
For more on the The·
Partnership Scholars Program,
write Dr. Langer at PO. Box
361. Little River, CA 95456. ol''
call (707)937-49 17. To contact
QED Press, write the wmpany .
at 55 Cypress St.. Fort Bragg;
CA 95437, or call (ROO) 773-'
7782.
(Nar Hemojf is a narirmall\&gt;
renowned authoritr on the··
First Amendmem aiul the Bill/
a{ Rights.)

• •• • • • •

Tire Cincinnati Post, on NASA Report:
The board investigating the loss of the shuttle Columbia has
issued a tough. highly critical reP!ilrt that NASA must meticulously heed if our limping space program is to go on. ·
The instant cause of the re-entry breakup, as has been welldocumented, was a fatal breach of the leading edge of the left
wing on launc h. But, the board found , it was not "an anomalous, random event" : in other words. due to institutional
management failings, the shuttle was an accident waiting to
happen, if not from this, from something else.
Management leading up to and during Columbia's final
flight "reflect missed opportunities, blocked or ineffective
communication channels, tlawed analysis and ineffective
leadership," said the board. Even so, the seven astronauts
might still have been saved had a NASA official not blocked
underlings' requests for satellite photos of the wing while the
shuttle was still in orbit.
With the board's 248-page report in hand, the question naturally arises: Where do we go from here? And the national
answer shou ld be: Back into space.

TODAY IN HISTORY
.

-

Today is Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2003 the 245th day of 2003 and
the 74th day of summer.
TODAY ' S HISTORY: On this day in 1666, the Great
London Fire began in the house of King Charles II's baker on
Pudding Lane. The blaze would eventually destroy most of
the city.
On this day in 1789. the U.S. Treasury was officially founded.
On this day in 1945, Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam's independence from France.
TODAY ' S BIRTHDAYS Christa McAuliffe (1948-JC36),
astronaut and teacher; Keanu Reeves , actor, is 39; Lennox
Lewis, boxer, world heavyweight champion, is 38; Salma
Hayek, actress, is 37.
TODAY'S SPORTS: On this day in 1964. Norman Manley
scored two consecutive holes-in-one at Del Valley, Calif.
TODAY 'S QUOTE: "The simple act of paying attention
can take you a long way.'' - Keanu Reeves
TODAY'S MOON: Between new moon (Aug. 27) and first
quarter (Sept. 3).

Moderately Contused

lAST·

MINUT'E
VACATIONS
NOW

AVAILABLE
IN CAPLETS

' fi

i

9f~.

1.

0 2003 by NEA, Inc.

Obituaries
Focle Hayman
RACINE _ Facie Leona
(Stover) Hay man, 86, was
called home by her Savior,
The Lord Je sus Christ, at
7:30p.m. on August 31,2003
from the Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant, ·
w. Ya. following a long illness at the Overbrook
m
Nursing
Home
Middleport, Ohio.
She accepted Jesus as her
Savior as a young girl of 12
years of age and has been a
devoted Christian her entire
life. She was a long time
member of the East Letart
. United Methodist Church and
the
United
Methodi st
Women. She was born March
2. 19 I 7 to the late Elisha and
Lillie Mae (Casio) Stover in

A~t~oni, :a·rr':ae.d

Gerald
Hayman of Apple Grove,
Ohio at the age of 15 on
November 2, 1932 at Ripley,
W.Va. They made their home
in Apple Grove and ,East
Letart area for 56 years
' before he passed away at the
age of 82, September 2, 1988,
She is survived by children,
Lillie Hart of Racine, Phyllis
Young of Shade, Linda
Jewell of New Haven, W.Ya ..
Don and Donna (Lewis)
Hayman of Laurel, Md. , Ted
and Sallie (Perry) Hayman of
Columbus, and Keith and
Leslie (Roberts) Hayman of
East Letart, and one sister,
Velva (Stover) Haught of
Walker, W. Ya. She is also
survived by sisters-in-law,
Elizabeth (Hoschar) Stover
of Racine, Ruby Wolfe of
Hebron, . Gladys Richardson
of Port Huron, Mich .• Doris
Rogers of Canal Winchester,
Marge (Hayman) and Bill
Pacman of Columbiana,
Ohio, Vern (Swan) Hayman
of Racine. brothers-in-law
Waid Hayman of Hartford,
W.Va., Dan and faith
(Carney)
Hayman
of
Syracuse, I 8 grandchildren,
36 great grandchildren, 2
great-great grandchildren .
four step grandchildren, I0
step-great grandchildren, and
one . step-great-great granchild, and many nieces and
nephews.
Preceding her in death,
besides her parents and husband were her father and
mother-in-law George and ,
Mae (Crawford) Hayman,
son- in-law Robert Hart, sisters Benha Robinson, Hazel
Mitchell, francis Coe, and
Rose
Stover,
brothers
William (Wally) Stover,
Cecil Stover, Salva Stover,
Yalta Stover, Orville Stover,
Otmer Stover, brothers-inlaw , Earl Robinson, Rufus
Coe, Bill Mitchell, Faude
Naught, Lee Stover, Harry
Hayman, Lewis Ours, Milo

Richardson, Sid Carpenter,
Buck Rogers, George (Dub)
Hayman who was killed in
World War II in Germany.
Darrell Sayre who was killed
in the beginning of the
Korean Conflict, sisters-inlaw Martha Stover, Francis
Stoyer, Dolly Stover,Focie
Stover, Betty Stover, Ruth
Ours, and Donna Hayman.
Services wi II be held
Thursday, September 4 at I
p.m. at the Cremeens Funeral
Home in Racine. Officiating
will be her nephew, Pastor
Larry Fisher, assisted by the
Rev. Pete Shaffer. Calling
hours are Wednesday from 6
to 9 p.m. Burial will be in the
Letart
fall s Cemetery.
Serving as pallbearers will be
her gmndsons Mark, Brian,
Eddie, and Shane Hayman ,
Bruce and Brice Hart, Steve
and Kenny Young, and
Robert Jewell .

Patricia
McElhinny
Potter
MIDDLEPORT- Patricia
Ann McElhinny Potter, 75,
Glendale, Calif. formerly of
Middleport, passed away on
Aug. 26, 2003. She was born
on April 15, 1928 in
Middleport. daughter of the
late Charles and Gertrude
Ann Wells McElhinny.
She is survived by her husband, Lynn Hannington, Eric
Potter, and Kyle Potter, all of
California. Graveside services
will be held at II a.m. on
Thursday, Sept. 4, 2003 at
Gravel
Hil
Cemetery.
Officiating will be Rod
Brower. Friends may call
from 6 to 8 p.m. on
Wednesday, Se~t. 3, at Fisher
Funeral Home m Miidleport.
Friends may send condolences and register on-line at
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com

Edward Eugene
Hughes
REEDSVILLE - Edward
Eugene Hughes, 67, of
Reedsville, died Aug. 31,
2003 at Ohio State University
Hospital, Columbus.
Born June 7, 1937 at Long
W.Va., he was the son of the
late Mildred Putnam Clem
and George Hughes. He was
formerly employed by the
Paul Peterson Co. and retired
from Walker Wire Mold after
32 years. He was a member
of White 's Chapel Church
and an avid fisherman and
hunter, a dedic.ated father and
grandfather.
He is survived by his wife
of 39 years, Esther ."Jeanie"
Watkins Hughes, two daughters. Ki!llberly (Dennis)
Durst, Mechele (Tony)

Roush, one granddaughter,
Katie Ann Durst, live grand. sons, Terry and Matthew
Durst, Tony Jr., Chad. and
Nakata Roush, three sisters
Diane (Donald) Barnhouse,
Carla (Jon) Bartlett, Kathy
(Bill) , Barnhouse, a brother
John (Carol) Clem, a motherin-law Thelma Watkins. a
Joseph
brother-in-law,
Runyon, a sister-in-law,
Paula (David) Brewer.
Besides his mother. he was
preceded in death by his stepfather, Carl Clem, two grand:
sons, Paul and Bradley Durst,
a ne~hew John Clem Jr.
Fnends may call at the
funeral home today 6 p.m. to
8 p.m. Services will be held
at I p.m. Sept. 3 at the WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home in
Coolville with Pastor Phil
Ridenhour officiating. Burial
will be in the Heiney
Cemetery in Reedsville. In
lieu of flowers , the family
requests tfiru"donations be
made to the funeral home.

Carl Allen
Fausnaugh
COLUMBUS
Carl
Allen Fausnaugh, 84, died
Aug. 30, 2003 at Echo Manor
Care Center. He was a veteran of the U.S . Army, World
War II , a longtime member of
Hoge Memorial Presbyterian
Church, past Master West
Gate Lodge #623 F&amp;AM. a
member of Moose Lodge
#I I. Swiss Club and
Columbus Maennerchor.
He was preceded in death
by his wife, Cecilia, his parents
Carl
and
Flora
Fausnaugh, his son Curtis
and a granddaughter Tamara
Mosca.
He is survived by a son
Kenneth (Ann) Fausnaugh of
Belpre, daughttr Sharon
(Oscar) Bickerdt, a daughterin-law: Sue Fausnaugh,
grandchildren Rhonda (Greg)
Cole,
Scott
Phillips,
Cassandra Warner, Kyle
(Kim) Fausnaugh, Chri stine
(Rick)
Braden,
Oscar
(Becky) Bickerdt, Jr.,Jeff
Fausnaugh, Kathy (Garr. J
Gollihue. 19 great-grandchildren, one great-great granddaughter,
sisters-in-law
Valeria "Teen"
Knapp,
Joanne Hush, many nieces
and nephews, friends and
family.
friends may call at Jerry
Spears Funeral Home, 2693
W. Broad St. Monday 2 p.m.
to 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
where services will be held at
I 0 a.m. Thesday. Pastor Mark
McCalla will officiate .
Internment will be at Forest
Lawn Cemetery. In lieu of
flowers , memorial contributions may be made to the
charity of choice.

Local Briefs

Keny'.s got that sinkingfeeling
He can give you the com petWith just four months to go
ing arguments on every be tore the Iowa caucuses and
. Though it's garnering little major issue and have you New Hampshire primary in
attention from the political walk away and say, 'Yeah, January, Kerry is shockingly
press corps, Massachusetts but where does he stand?'"
weak in just about every
Sen. John Kerry's presidenThe result: Kerry 's cam- region of the country, accordtial campaign has been plum- paign is in a slump and, at i11g to Zogby.
meting.
least for now, shows no signs
In the Eastern states,
Once the odds-on choice to recovering. By mid-Augu st, Lieberman and Dean were
win the Democratic nomina- Dean had jumped seven per- locked in first place with 13
tion and take on President centage points ahead of him percent each. Kerry, a Ne\v
Bush, Kerry 's emotionless, in New Hampshir~ (28 per- Englander who you'd think
message-less campaign has cent to Kerry's 21 percent). would do best in the East, is
stalled . All the momentum is The only other Democmt in 111 the backfield with
rolling with feisty former double digits at that point Gephardt and AI Sharpton Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, was Rep. Richard tiephardt barely drawing 4 percent.
whose combative, ultra-liber- ( 10 percent).
In the South, Kerry is tied
al, anti-war ca mpaign is surMeanwhile, Kerry is not with Sharpton at 9 percent,
Ge phardt
and
prising the pundits and rous- really in play in Iowa. which trailing
mg the Democratic Party once belonged to Gephardt Lieberman with 15 percent
establishment.
(who won there in 198&amp;). and II percent, respectively.
Kerry trails badlo/ in the
Arguably. Kerry has the Dean, however, has caught
sharpest campaign team in up with the fo rmer House Central/Great Lakes region
the business, and the heaviest Democratic leader and, in with 8 p~:rcent, well behind
hitters. But what Kerry may some polls, has passed him. Gephardt,
Dean
and
possess in senatorial gravitas, Kerry, at best, is running in Lieberman. His best regional
he lacks in personality, bite third or fourth place in that showing is in the West,
and soul.
state, depending on what poll whe~e he runs two points
Dean, however, is all bite, you look at.
behind frontru nner Dean ( 17
jabs and left hooks. His
Nationally,
most percent).
stump
speeches
leave Democrats either know little
Among
independents.
audiences about Kerry or dislike what reportedly the fastest-growDemocratic
pumped and ready to sign up. he's selling. For months he ing voting bloc in the coun"lt's message versus no was ambivalent on the War in try. which will be critical in
message," says independent Iraq, but is now trying to open pri maries. Kerry is runpollster John Zogby. "Dean reinvent himself as a staunch-· nmg behind hi s rop three
IS focused. His messages can critic of Bush's postwar rivals.
fit on a bumper sticker.. plans. Zogby has Kerry
.Dean 's surge in the tinal
They're clear. You know who doing no better than follllll· in months of the pre-primary
he is and where he stands. He his nationwide ran kings with races co mes from a combinareminds me of John McCain. 9 percent, running behind tion of factors : His skillful
"John (Kerry) just hasn't Dean, Gephardt and Sen. Joe use of the Internet to raise
found a focus yet," Zogby Lieberman, who are locked money, turn out party
says. "He is all nuances. He in a 'three-way tie with 12 activists for his appearances
comes across as an academic. percent each.
and build national support

BY DoNALD LAMBRO

•,.

. '

' '

.'

..

.•
for his candidacy. His strate-.
gic decision to run TV ads in
Iowa and New Hampshire in
August surprised Kerry' s'
advisers, who dec ided not to:
run ads until after Labor Day,
"when voters are paying ,
attention ...
Apparently, Democratic·
vo ters are pay ing attenti on
earlier than anyone thought,
which has Kerry 's adv isers
·worried. If he loses New
Hampshire after a dismal'
showing in Iowa, it wi ll dev- ·
astate hi s campaig n. say his
opponent s' camps.
"It 's ditficult for any candi date to do poorly in Iowa and
New Hampshire and be taken
seriously, m1d it becomes
even more di fficult if you are
a New En glander and uo
poorly in New Hampshire:·
says Jim Demers, Ge phardt's
strategist in the Granite State.
Kerry
adviser
Phil
Johnston, the Massachusetts·
Democratic chairman, GIU tiously told me last week that
"if Kerry loses Ne.w
Hampshire, I think he would.
have the resources, to go on.
but I don 't want to speculate.
because I think he will win .'~.
But right now. Dean has·
clearly got the top spot. while
Kerr-y is trying to jump-start
a campaign that may ha ve
peaked se veral months ago.
(Washington
investigative
reponer DoiUl/d 11Jmbro is the.
author of "Fat Citv: How,
Washing lOll 1\iute.s Yrnir Tco:es ·:
(Regemy)j
~·

,.

imum of three minutes before
bein!l used for drinking or
cookmg. After a sample is
taken and the results show it
to be safe .to drink the boil
TUPPERS PLAINS
advisory
will be lifted.
Water service will be off
Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. on SR 124 from the
mtersection of Eden Ridge
(CR 50) to the Athens County
WILKESVILLE
line to ~llow for. installation Orphans' Friend Lodge 275
of a tee m the mam hne, Don will host an "all you can eat
C. Poole, general manager of breakfast:" Saturday from 8
the Tuppers Plams-Chester _to I0 a.m. at the WilkesvilleWater D1 stnct
Community Center. The cost
After the water service is is $5. Funds will ~o toward
restored, there will be ·a boil the free Thanksgivmg dinner
advisory in effect. Water to which is open to the public.
be used for human consump- Last year the Wilkesville
tion must be boiled for a min- Masons and the Eastern Star

Water to be off
Wednesday

Breakfast set

vet

from Page A1
stall
where Krawsczy n
checked to see if the animal
was pregnant.
"It s a bit of' an art to do
this," he said . .
Cow after cow came
through one door, met
Krawsczyn, and then y;ent
out .another door. The work
was hot, smelly and dirty, and
it was apr.arent that the cows
didn ' t hke the procedure
much. While some of the
cows seemed startled and
moved around a lot. the veterinarian was unfazed as he
went about his business.
"One of the worst parts of
this job is how physically
demand in~ it is," Krawsczyn
admitted. 'You can get bust-

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

members served 240 free
Thanksgiving dinners.

Auxiliary to meet
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
VFW Auxiliary Post 9053
will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the hall. There
will be a potluck dinner at
6:30p.m.

Kerry dismisses polls, offers ·
himself as Democratic antidote to
Bush's wartime popularity
MOUNT PLEASANT,
S.C. (A P) - John Kerry,
maintaining ·the country
should reject Pres ident
Bush's "new vision of government," is officially
declaring his candida(y for
the Democratic presidential
nomination.
"In challenging times we
need leadership that knows
how to make America safer.
that knows how to put
America back to work ."
Kerry said Tuesday in
remarks prepared for his otlicial entry into the race. "The
president has mi sled America
and he has made our path
more diflicult as a result .''
Kerry was making his formal announcement after
months of campaign-style
appearances and debates with
fellow Democratic presidential aspirants. In the speech,
the senator planned to focu s
on an ".ovemrching vision."
"In challenging times we
need leadership that knows
how to make America safe~.
that knows how to put
America back to work.'' the
Massachusetts Democrat
said in a speech to be delivered in a setting designed to
highlight his war-hero background.
His
seaside
announcement was planned
with the mammoth aircraft
carrier USS Yorktown as a
backdrop.
"I reject George ·Bush's
new vision of a government
that comforts the comfortable at the expense of ordinary Americans," · Kerry
said. "George Bush 's vision
does not live up to the
America I en~isted in the
Navy to defend.''
He was to be joined by
crew members of a Navy
gunboat he commanded in
Vietnam, wl'\ere he won
medals for valor. It is all part
of Kerry's core argument that
his military experience gives
him unique credibility among
the Democratic contenders to
confront President Bush on
foreign policy issues.
"I am running so we can
keep America's promise to reward the hard work of
middle class Americans and
pull down the barriers that
stand in their way and in the
way of those struggling to
join them." Kerry said.
The
Massachusetts
Democrat also appeared on
several nationally broadcast
morning news shows, telling
NBC's ''Today" he believes
"our foreign policy is arrogant
and we are losing influence
and respect in the world."
While the bulk of hi s
speech was aimed at Bush.
Kerry also took aim at
Democratic rivals.
"Some in my party want
to get rid of all tax cuts including those for working
fam ilies," he said. "That's
wrong. We need to be on
the side of America's middle class and I've proposed
a tax cut for the1n because
it 's the ri ght way to
strengthen our economy. "
Former Vermont Gov.

De{rocratic r:residential hopeful. U.S. Sen.. .ldln l'erry ~ as he
I'TI&lt;YChes in the lltJor Day parroe in Milford, N.H. Morday. l'erry is can
paifYlirg for the New H&lt;rnpshire J;tinay less thm 5i r1011ths aNaf. (f&gt;f'
Photo)

Howard Dean has used an
aggressive anti-Washington
theme to gain momentum .
coupled with hi s staunc h
opposition to the war i11 Iraq .
Dean has vaulted to a significant lead over Kerry in
New Hampshire. and is
bunched with Missouri Rep.
Dick Gcphardt atop the fi eld
in Iowa. where leadoff caucuses will be held in
January.
Some in the Kerry camp
argue that he should begin
challenging Dean directly to
blunt his momentum, while
others see that as a sign of
panic and argue for patience.
Kerry dismissed the polls
showing him slipping.
''We always. knew there
were going to be two or
three candidates in the
race," said Kerry. While others haye scored early, Kerry
said he's cranking up his
campaign at a time when
voters are beginning to pay
attention.
"That's why I'm announcing my campaign now and
that 's why the polls don't
mean anything today," he
said Monday. "America is
only just beginning to listen .''
While Kerry has sought to
focus attention on his warhero background, some have
urged him to broaden his
appeal. With a di stinctly
martial theme for hi s
announcement , there was
little evidence he was taking
that step.
"Americans have always
had
the extraordinary
courage to do what's right

or the savlnqs?

Barbecue planned
SAVE $120

SAVE .&amp;170

. POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Fire Department will
have a chicken and ribs barbe- :
cue Sunday at the firehouse.
Serving will begin at II a.m.

Molo&lt;oi1Tf21

NMII36SO

afttr matHn

~"*'

r:t~

ATaTmute Lacal Plen

$391111/montll
wllh·~·'
....v.o.
... 11.

with- large animals.
As for him, Krawsczyn
says as long as he's able, he
will be right here taking care
of animals in Meigs County.
740·7 53· 3400

MOVIES

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON • FRI.
&amp; 12:30 PM SAT· SUN

FREDDY VS JASON (R)
7:00 &amp; 9 :30

1 0 ". ,· .

7:00

'. "'"

THE
· 7:00 . 9:00

MY
(PG13) 7:00 • 9:20
FRIDAY (PG)
7:10 &amp; 9 :10
MATINEES 1:10 &amp; 3:10

S.W.A.T. (PG13)
9:30

1'. 1

1 ll\/

\ It

C. • •

...o.t.

· U n - Nlti!IA--11-

• NaUoru*'idll LDne Diltllnce lf1 chJ died
' • tKJO ArrttJn• Mlnutee
1400 l4"d.oddld &amp; 200 ~ Anytitne Mlnulee)

1. .

ed up if you're not careful."
When these cows come
due, Krawsczyn said he will
be available to help with the
birth. He said a calf can take
as little as ten minutes or
much longer to be born. As
part of his job, he does castrations, C-sections and various other tasks.
Krawsczyn said the face of
veterinary medicine is changing. When he graduated from
Ohio State University in
I980, most of his classmates
were men. Today, many of
the students in veterinary
school are women.
Considering the sometimes
rough physical nature of his
job and the bigger salaries
coming out of suburban small
animal clinics, Krawsczy n
said he predicts fewer veterinarians will be coming into
rural communities to work

for the country," said Kerry.
"He (Bush) has turned it into
a game for the pri.vileged."
The choices Kerry faces
with a campaign that's faltered early are hardly new.
Former Vice President AI
Gore relocated his campaign
to Nashville, Tenn., and
pared back his staff when his
'
campaign faltered
early in
the 2000 presidential race.
After South Carolina,
where Democrats vote during the third week of the
nominating season, Kerry
was headed to Iowa where
precinct caucuses take place
Jan. 19. On t!te second day
of his announcement swing,
Kerry was heading to New
Hampshire; which has tentatively has set its primary for
Jan. 27 , before heading
home to Boston and a hometown rally.
There were mixed signals
about the direction Kerry
would take. While he has
maintained his focus on his
military background, he h~s
sharpened hi s attacks on
Dean on issues like Dean's
backing for the repeal of all
of Bush's -tax cuts, including
provisions that aid middleincome workers.
"Real Democrats don't
raise taxes on the middle
class.'' Kerry argues.
Kerry, 59, won a fourth tenn
in the Senate without majorparty opposition last year.

~ •

• ~

'

=
,...

Ah,f

�PageA6

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 2,

2003

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Browns' Stokes well traveled, Page 82
~ners still atop of AP poll, Page 86

Holzer presents academic
Sec~nd magnetic
assistance to staff members resonance imaging system

Tuesday, September 2, 2003

operational at O'Bieness
ATHENS - A second
Magnetic
Resonance
Imaging (M RI ) system is
now operational at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital 's radiolo~y department to help meet
mcreasing demand for tests
using this technology.
The new equipment means
that waiting time for an MRI
test will be reduced frmn the
current two weeks to 24 to 48
hours. The second system
will .smooth out scheduling
problems with both inpatient
and outpatient needs, according to Jeff Benseler, D.O., a
radiologist on O' Bieness'
medical staff.
MRI technology uses a
magnetic field to generate
computer images, which provides
physicians
with
extrenu!ly detailed and accurate views of bones, soft tissues and blood vessels. No

•

c:.- ••rr

GALLIPOLIS ~ Holzer
rlealth Systems recently pre.~ nted two staff LPNs with
\ cademic
Assistance
•\wards. The financial assistance will be used in their
endeavors to become registered nurses.
All LPNs employed
th roughout Holzer Health
Sy stems, and who planned to
ret urn to school full-time to
hccome a RN, were encouraged to apply for the award.
Nurses selected for the
awards were Robin Shriver,
l.PN, of the HMC Maternity
.md Family Center, and Suzy
Wray, LPN. of the Four-West
Unit at Holzer Medical
Ce nter in Gallipolis.
. Shriver, an employee of
Holzer Medical Center since
1998, is a graduate of the
Buckeye Hills Career Center
Practical School of Nursing.
Reginning as a unit secretary, she has worked as a

Robin Shriver, LPN, right, is
congratulated by Lennie
Davis, RN, MSN, director of
the education department at
Holzer Medical Center, as a
recipient of an academic '
assistance award provided
by Holzer Health Systems.

LPN since October. .In addition to her employment at
the Hospital, she also works
at Wyngate of Gallipolis.
Named "Student of the Year"
of her class at Buckeye Hills,
Shriver currently auends
Hocking College. She plans
to graduate with her associate's degree in Nursing next
summer.
Wray, an employee of
HMC for 20 years, is a 1982
graduate of the Buckeye
Hills Career Center LPN
Program.
Prior to her
employment at Holzer, she
worked at Robbins and
Myers and the Gallipolis
Developmental Center. She
plans to graduate from the
University of Rio Grande in
2004 with her associate's
degree in Nursing.
Bpth have been accepted
into professional nursing
education programs. The
assistance will be used for

the purchase of books, laboratory fees and tuition, as
well as a monthly stipend.
Upon completion of the
accredited program, ihe LPN
will have the total loan forgiven by sustainin~ her
employment as a registered
nurse within Holzer Health
Systems, which includes
Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis, Holzer Medical
Center.
Recipients of the award
were selected by a subcommittee of the Financial
Assistance Committee for .
Holzer Health Systems.

radiation or radioactive substances are used to generate
the images.
The new system complements the current three-yearold·system.
"Each system has definite
advantages," Bensler said.
"The new system has a number of extra features, including higher magnetic strength,
which will enable us to look
at certain areas of the body
- for example, joints, the
muscular-skeletal system and
the central nervous systemwith greater detail. The new
unit will also shorten the time
required for a test."
The current system is an
"open magnet," so there is
more physical space for a
larger individual, or someone
who is claustrophobic or for a
parent to accompany a small
child who may be fearful of

'

the procedure.
"Having a second system
will allow us to ·get things
done more quickly and more
efficiently, and to see things a
little differently," Bensler
said. "We'll also have the
option of deciding whether a
higher field strength will give
us more information about
certain patients' conditions."
John Murrey, D.O., chief of
radiology at O' Bleness, said
that in addition to shortening
the wait for a test, the department will offer additional
appointment
times
on
Saturdays - a service not
previ6usly available.
A modular
building,
designed specifically to
house the new syste·m, was
recently placed at 'the rear of
the radiology department.
·~
;

' '~

.I

·~-

Prep Football
TVC
Ohio Dlvlllon
Illm
IY.C
Vinton County
o-o
Alexander
o-o
Belpre
0-0
Meigs
0-0
Nelsonville-York
0-0
Wellston
0-0
. Hocking Division
Illm
IY.C
Eastern
0-0
Trimble
0-0
F~ral Hocking
0-0
Waterford
o-o
.Miller
0-0
Southern
0-0

.

'

'

2-Q
1-1
1-1
0-2
0-2
0-2

All
2-Q
2-0
1-1
1-1
0-2
0-2

Friday's Reaults

Athens 41, Meigs 0
Eastern 21 , Fort Frye 14
Symmes Valley 43, Southam 6
Trimble 61, Alexander 14
Minford 21, WellSton 6
Wahama 36, Federal Hocking 6
Millersport 25, Miller 6
Frontier 26, Waterford 0
· Vinton County 25, Rock Hill 14
·

;·&gt;:

All

Saturday's Results

Williamstown 58, Belpre 12

SEOAL
SEQ All
Tum
Athens
o-o '2-0
Gallia Academy
2-0
0-0
Jackson
o-o 2-0
logan
o-o 1-1
1-1
Marietta
0-0
Point Pleasant
o-o 0-1
Warren
0-0
0-2
Friday's Results
Gallia Academy 46, Coal Grove 14
Ripley 12, Point Pleasant 8
Athens 41 , Meigs 0
Jackson 35, Waverly 0
logan 9, Chillicothe 0
Saturday's ReauHs

Cambridge 35. Marietta 27
P~ilo 7, Warren 0

Non-league

rum

BlgK
5oft
Drinks

Kroger
CrafleA
Me,lllum
. EIIfiS' .
12 ct ..

AD

Ironton
Symmes Valley
Wahama
South Gallia
Hannan
Oak Hill

24 pk 12 oz Cans

2-0
2-0
1-0
1-1
0-1
0-2

Friday's Results

Sandy Troester, RN , MS, vice president of patient care services at Holzer Medical Center, left, congratulates Suzy Wray,
LPN, on be ing selected to receive an academic assistant
award provided by Holzer Health Systems.

South Gallia 42, Green 6
Wahama 36, Federal Hocking 6
Ironton 60, South Point 0
Unioto 27, Oak Hill 7
Symmes Valley 43, Southam 6
Hamlin 43, Hannan 0

~-··--.·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

~------------'"'\ ,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
FMV

Kroger
BuUer

Court News
Meigs County
Court
POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Meigs County
Court of Judge Steve Story
between Aug .. 18 and Aug. 24
are as follows:
Brenda J. Doerfer, Racine,
speeding, $13 and costs;
Derek A. Hill , Guysville,
;eatbelt, $30 and costs;
Steven R. Hoover, Pomeroy,
'~atbe lt , $30 and costs; John
P. Arseneau, Sarnia, Ontario,
Canada, speeding, $30 and
costs; Gloria D. Bradshaw.
Albany, seatbelt, $30 and
costs, use of unauthorized
plates, $20 and costs;
Billy C. Carroll, Gretna, Va,
' peeding, $30 and costs; Bruce
A. Chandler, New Lenox, 01.,
speeding, $30 and costs; Jerrod
A. Clay, Syrdcuse, seatbelt. $30
dnd costs; Jon R. Cox,
J&gt;arkersburg, W.Va., seatbelt,
~ 30 and costs; Samuel M.
Drury, Bradner, sea!belt, $30
and costs; Lori R. Engle,
Rutland, seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Elizabeth C. Fabian, Athens.

-

'

speeding, $30 and costs;
· Lynn
E.
Hoffman.
Middleport, seatbelt, $45 and
costs; Steven R. Hoover,
Pomeroy, failure to register, $20
and costs; David W. Hysell,
Rutland, speeding, $30 and
c-osts, display plates/valid sticker, $20 and costs; Carol E.
Leblanc, King of Prussia, Pa.,
speeding, $30 and costs; Jesse
McKee, New Marshfield,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Michael
A.
Norville,
Portland, . seatbelt, $20 and
costs; Joey L. Oiler, Pomeroy,
speeding, $30 and costs, seatbelt, $30 and costs; Elmer B.
!'arsons, Racine, seatbelt, $30
and costs; Stephen L. Randolph,
Racine, speeding, $45 and costs;
Becky L. Roberto, Cincinnan~
tinted glass, $20 and costs;
Herman
A.
Roberts,
Pomeroy, failure to yield 1/2
roadway, $20 and costs; Roger
Thompson, Rutland, seatbelt,
$45 and costs; John R.
Vanootegham, Barboursville,
W.Va., traffic cont dev/signs,
$20 and costs; Eric S. Yeager,
Cleveland Heights, speeding,
$45 and CQSts.

Sliced

Bacon

JO Giant Roll

CharmIn

Blltll

nssue

or 15 Roll

BOUn~

rowels

•

Selected varieties

Kroger

LUCk'S

Apple

Beans

Juice

Sreyeas
·YOIIUrt
Boz

. 992-2156
\

.

•'

Maple, Uno•Avnrlt

lllrglnla

-Ham

•

'

The Daily Sentir~el

'YDell c:onnectl"'

· teNafures 4 pk 10 01 water or

Geyser
water
Lltm'

Rio Grande

to host winter
softball league
RIO
GRANDE
University of Rio Grande Head
Softball Coach David Pyles has
announced the return of the
High School Winter Indoor
Softball League for 2004.
The league will run from Jan.
4-Feb. 29 and games will be
played at the Paul R. Lyne
Center on the campus of the
University of Rio Grande. All
games will be played on
Sunday afternoon.
The cost is $70 per player
and all OHSAA and WVSSAC
rules will apply. The league is
for all players m ~des 9-12.
All 11ames wtll be either
seven mnings or I hour, 15
minutes. All players will be in
the barring order unless a player chooses not to hit.
The teams will be coached
liy members of the URG softball team. Players will be
issued a T-shirt but must provide the remainder of their unifOml.
Deadline for registration is
Nov. 15 and is limited to the
fli'St I00 pl~ers .
For additional information
contact Coach Pyles at (740)
245-7490 or (304) 675-7942.
Make checks payable to the
Rio Gmnde softball team.

Buckeyes' focus on who
is playing, not who isn't

•

WinS

Southern
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP)
- Terry Labonte gai ned a
piece of history Sunday. winning the final Southern 500
run on Labor Day weekend
and endi ng a 156-race winless streak.
Labonte took control of the
367-lap event at Darlington
Raceway late in the race with
a lightnmg fast pit stop, and
went on to win the 54th running of NASCAR 's oldest
500-mile race.
"This is pretty exc iting,"
saio Labonte, who stopped at
the finish line to get the .
checkered !lag for victory lap
that brought the record
Darlington crowd of more
than 65 ,000 to it s feet.
"It's really special for me,"
added the two-time Winston
Cup champion Labonte,
whose first of 22 wins came
in the 1980 Southern 500. "I
was running with Bill lOIIiott
(late in the race) and thinking
to myse lf, ' I hope one of us
wins it because we appreciate
this place more than some of
the youog guys dp"
As Labonte's No. 5
Motorsports
Hendri ck
Chevrolet drove slowly
around the unique 1.366milc, egg-shapco oval, his
crew raced across the track to
climb the fence in the tradition started by open-wheel
racer Helio Castroneves.
"I'm glad they did that,''
Labonte said. "They won this
race for me."

BY RusTY MILLER
Associated Press
COLUMBUS - Even
with tailback Maurice
Claret! watching from the
sidelines,
defending
national champion Ohio
State believes it has
enough firepower to
repeat.
After beating No. 17
Washington 28-9 on
Saturday
night,
the
Buckeyes tried not to talk
about their suspended star.
Quarterback
Craig
Krenzel didn't mention
him by name when asked
if the Buckeyes were trying to send a message to
the rest of college football.
"More than anything, it
was a message to ourselves," Krenzel said. ''We
feel confident enough in
.the players we have and
the coaches we have and
the way we're going to
prepare week in and week
.out that we can go out and
beat anybody in the country."

Clarett was just another
of the more than I 05,000
spectators at Ohio Stadium
as the No. 2-ranked
Buckeyes won their 15th
consecutive game . It wasn't necessarily a perfect
performance, but it was
enough to easily overshadow the nation's No. 17
team.
Lacking some zip in
their running attack, the
Buckeyes relied on their
stout
defense
and
Krenzel's decision making
to .learn a lot about themselves.
"We were kind of anxious today to find out
where we are," coach Jim
Tressel said. "Washington
was a good team. We're
going to play some teams
that are better."
Claret! is suspended
from the team for misleading investigators looking
into alleged off-the-field
NCAA violations, Ohio
State athletic director
Andy Geiger said before
game. The suspension
could last for quite a while
- Geiger has described
the · open-ended action as
involving "a healthy number of games."
With Maurice Hall rushing for 58 yards on 15 car. ries and Lydell Ross
adding 43 on 12, the
Buckeyes totaled 142

PIHH ... Buckeyu, Bl

Labonte

Ladies
golf
league
wraps up

Ohio State tailback Maurice Claret! waves a towel celebrating the Buckeyes first touchdown
against Washington Saturday in Columbus. (AP)

POMEROY
The
Monday Evening Ladies Golf
League held its final outing of
. the year at Pine Hills.
The league winners were
Nell.ie Wright and Jane
Beattie (first place), Peg
Thomas and Opal Casto (second place) and Kim Phillips
and Jody Schultz (third place).
Other teams that participated in the league this year were
Julia Hysell and Debbie
Sayre, Carol Crow and Celia
McCoy. Joyce Cli ne and Opal
Grueser, Rita Slavin and
Bernie Anderson, Shannon
Slavin and Laura Sheets, and
Dianna Lawson and Joan
Wolfe

Difending 1\1AC champs may have a big job ahead
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - There
were a lot of eyes turned toward
Marshall Stadium Saturday as Stan
Hill took over the reigns of the
Thundering Herd offense against
.Hofstra, a 45-17 Herd win.
A lot more thoughts, though, were
on what happened two-days prior as
the biggest noise in the MidAmerican Conference was made in
DeKalb when Northern Illinois upset
then No. 15 Maryland.
Talk about making a statement.
Even more so when you come to
realize that the MAC Championship
game. will . be played at the West
DtvlSlon wmner.
.
Likely, that winner will be either

ever.
It was then that Toledo stur]ned

Marshall in what seemed more like
an ambush and perhaps a little getting
even.
After all, for the four years prior,
Marshall had won the MAC title
game i'n the game's first four years of
existence. All of those games played
at Marshall Stadium. ~
THE BUTCHMEISTER
In fact , the host school has never
lost the MAC title game as Marshall
regained the championship last year
the _Hu~kies or Toledo, and neither of at the friendly confines of ... you
which ts good news for Marshall.
guessed it .. . Marshall Stadium .
It was nearly two yearsago when
8ut, for Marshall to go to DeKalh
the West DIVISI?n champiOn got to or Toledo or wherever. the Herd has
host the MAC title for the first time _to win the East Division crown first ,

Butch
Cooper

and that won 't be so easy.
If Saturday's performance by Hill
is any indication. the MAC
Championship rnay be without
Marshall for the first time in the
game's short history.
Sure, Hill had over 300 yards passing, but it was against l-AA Hofstra.
His three interceptions and four
Jumbles (three of. which were lost)
would've likely resulted in losses to
just about anyone else on the Herd's
2003 schedu le, including Troy State.
Fortunately for Marshall , there was
enough foresight to open this season
against the Pride, but even Hofstra

Please su Cooper, Bl

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

~

•

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, September 2,

www.mydailysentinel.coin

2003

Tuesday,

Se~t.

2, 2003

Well traveled Stokes makes short trip for Browns
BEREA (AP) - On hts
mcredible Journey m pro football, Barry Stokes has had to
cross conferences, countnes and
a continent to stay employed.
His next move requtres shding only a few feet to the left.
Stokes, Cleveland's startmg
left guard l&lt;~St season, will open
the o;eason at .left tackle when
the
Browns
face
the
Indianapolis Colts m !herr opener on Sunday. Melvm Fowler
will replace Stokes at guard
Stokes has been thrust mto
hts new role - and the spotlight - because of an mJury
to tackle Ross Verba, out for
the season after teanng hts
right btceps 10 the Browns'
preseason finale last week
For the fun-lovmg Stokes,
the new asstgnment 1s a
chance to show he belongs 10

the NFL. Agam.
"Thts ts a very exc1ttng
moment." satd Stokes. who
started three games at left
tackle tor Green Bay 10 200 I.
"This ts proof that I can play
both left guard, left tackle or
wherever they put me on the
Ime, so I'm very exctted to
estabhsh myself "
Staymg m one place has
always been a challenge tor
the 29-year-old Stokes
Before stgmng with the
Browns as a tree agent before
last season, Stokes figures he
has etther been clatmed,
wm ved or stgned 27 ttmes
dunng a globe-trottmg career
that began m 1996 when the
Detrott L1ons stgned him as an
undrafted free agent out of
Eastern Mtchigan
Stokes can reette nearr~

every stop along the way
"Detroit to Jacksonv11le to
the Rhetn F1re (of NFL
Europe)," he said. "Got cut,
three weeks later they brought
me back and got cut agam.
Went to the St Louts Rams
and they cut me and they
brought me back and got cut
agam I went to Mtamt, over
to Scotland (NFL Europe),
come back to Mtamt and they
cut me They bnng me back.
'Then I come back to
Mtamt, then back to Scotland
and then back to Mtamt They
cut me I go to Green Bay for
two weeks I come back 1n
three weeks, I play for five
weeks They cut me And then
I went to Oakland for one
week In the offseason, they
cut me and they brought me
back to Green Bay.

Hill's full-time debut shaky
BY ANDRE TIRADO
at1rado@ myda1lyreg•ster com

HUNTINGTON, W. Ya. New starting quarterback
Stan H1ll was oftictally handed the keys ~­
to Marshall's
m
offense
their opener
at
home
aga1nst
Hofstra on
Saturday
However,
Hill 's debut
wasn't all
ghtz and glitHill
ter as the
Junior made
his share of mistakes in the
second and third quarters of
Marshall's 45-21 win.
Hill threw three mterceptions dunng the game and
fumbled twice. one of them at
the Hofstra one yard line that
rumed a clllmce for a touchdown Htll also threw two of
those mtercepltons on consecuuve dnves agamst a
Hofstra defense that had no
answer for a btgger, faster

and stronger Marshall offenstve line.
On the other hand, there
were also some very encouraging signs that Htll 1s ready
to replace the departed Byron
Leltwtch.
Htll was 25-lor-37 tor 344
yards and two touchdowns,
dtsplaymg a mce touch on the
ball and developmg a mce
rapport wtth star rece1ver
Darms Watts. Hill also displayed some sktlls m the
pocket, twice feelmg pressure
behmd htm and taking off to
avoid the sack
The most encouragmg sign
may have been that head
coach Bob Pruett never hesitated to put Hill back in. Even
With all of Hill's struggles,
both on and off the field,
Pruett continued to let Hill
run the offense and throw the
ball.
Pruett gave convmc10g evidence that Hill ts dehmtely
the number one starter and
does not have to look over hts
shoulder to see whether backup quarterback Graham
Gochneaur wtll take hts
place.

Pruett repeated this stance
off the field dunng the press
conference after the ~arne,
defendmg Htll and pomtmg
out many jlostt1ves from hts
perfonnance agamst Hofstra
"I thought Stan was pretty
sharp on the ball, and two of
those balls that were mtercepted Jut our recetvers right
m the hands " sa1d Pruett
"Stan proved that he can
throw the football and run the
offense, now we just have to
protect the football better and
reduce our penalties."
Unfortunately, Htll · won't
have another game against a 1AA \)pponent, as Marshall and
Hill face their real test this
Saturday at Tennessee in front
of close to I00,00 fans.
The
twelfth
ranked
Volunteers are corning off of
a big 24-6 win over Fresno
State that showcased an
aggressive, hungry defense
that Stan Htll wtll have to
face. With all of the thmgs
Htll has had to overcome to
secure hts JOb as the
Thundering Herd 's startmg
quarterback, th1s ~ay be the
btggest test yet
)

"I played there through the
year and then after Green Bay,
I came here, right?"
Stokes missed a stopover or
two. But he said the expen·
ence of bemg passed around
so often has gtven him a
stronger appreetatwn for
where he ts now
And U's the reason he didn't
get upset when he was briefly
benched thts summer behmd
Fowler, who started one preseason game at left guanJ and will
now be startmg alongstde Stokes
Stokes has endured through
perststence and a happy-golucky attuude that has made him
one of Cleveland's most popular
players. If the Browns could
vote for a team clown,
"Stokeste" would be handed the
red nose and giant, floppy shoes.
"He kind of keeps the spice

of life going," coach Butch
Davis satd "There's never a
dull moment. If you want
somebody to ptck up the sptrtls of practtce, he's the one to
call on because there's no
telling what he's gomg to do "
Take last season m New
Orleans for mstance During a
timeout in the fourth quarter,
the Superdome was shaking as
rock mustc blared through the
pubhc address system As the
Smuts crowd clapped 10 unison,
Stokes dectded he would, too.
"They ' re trying to get
pumped up," he sa1d. "Why
not JOID the party?"
There was also the ,It me
Stokes needed to use the men's
room dunng a game and couldn't get off the field So, while
standmg 10 the Browns' huddle.
Stolces found relief.

"I dtdn' t think it was a big
deal," Stokes said. "I couldn't
go anywhere else Everybody
got a btg kick out of it "
Stokes was more senous
than usual on Monday as the
Browns continued preparation
for the Colts In the opener,
he 'II be matched up with
Dwight Freeney. who had 13
sacks m JUSt eight starts as a
rookte last season.
Unflappable as ever, Stokes is
sure the Browns' offensive lme
wtll be ready for the challenge.
After bemg cut by the Rhein
Ftre and seven NFL teams,
Stokes can handle anythmg.
"This is just another test,"
he satd "It's been a great journey and the JOurney is defimtely not over It's just another bump m the road "

Cooper

that got blown away on some
bt~ pass plays against the
Pnde.
If it wasn't for a defenstve
line and hnebacker corps that
caused pressure for the
Hofstra quarterbacks all day,
and that the Pnde 's first two
QB's were 10JUred dunng the
game, then the Herd
would've definitely gave up
more than the 125 yards that
Hofstra had passed for
agamst Marshall.
• BOBCATS' HOPE Whtle' their 17-3 wm over
Southeast Mtss~ri State
mtght not have been the most
tmpressive a,ga10st the 1-AA
team, the Ohto Bobcats boost
of two strong points.
One, a defense that can get

the job done agamst just
about anyone on the schedule. espectally w1th their
backs aga mst the wall.
Junior hnebacker Dennis
Chukwuemeka ts a Ioree to
be reckoned .
So much so that the
Hunungton
nallve was
named the MAC East defenstve player of the week with
1.4 tackles ( II solo) against
the Indians.
And two, a runmn g game
that once agmn ts capable of
movmg the ball. as long as
they can hold on to it, namely the three fumbles lat~ 10
the second quarter agamst
SEMO.
Ohw travels to Iowa State
this weekend.

from Page 81
was only down by a touchdown m the third quarter.
Marshall JUst stmply wore
the Pride down
But, that won't be the case
against Miamt or Central
Florida or Toledo.
And it certainly won't be
the case at Tennessee thts
weekend or Kansas State 10
three weeks.
• WAKE UP CALL Marshall has always had that
one weakness and thts year it
isn't Hill.
It's a defensive secondary

Buckeyes
from Page 81
yards on the ground. Clarett averaged 113
yards by himself last year desplle battling
lllJuries most of the season And Ohm State
ptcked up 191 yards rushmg a game during
last year's 14-0 run to the Iitle.
Weanng a scarlet Ohto State wannup suit,
Clarett watched much of the game whtle
standmg on the team bench, wavmg a white
towel or promphng the crowd to cheer. He
came on field dunng warmups wearmg his
No 13 game Jersey
Ross and Hall had less fun, it appeared. The
runmng attack averaged JUSt 3.3 ' yards per
carry agamst a Washmgton team that had dtfficulty slowmg down any runners a year ago
On the other hand, Ohm State's defense

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Seated bids wilt be
received
by
the
Mayor at her ottlca
located at 237 Race
Street, Middleport,
Ohio
unlll
September- 8. 2003 et
12:00 P M local time
lor the "Combined
Sewer
Overflow
Repairs", Contract
No 2003-01 as set
fOrth In the plans and
specifications on flta
In the above ottlce. At
the time hereinbefore
mentioned and at the
above ·IndIcated
ottlce, seated bids
will
be
publicly
opened and read
aloud. Work to be performed Is. described
In the bid forms.
COMBINED SEWER
OVERFLOW REPAIRS
CONTRACT NO. 200301
The proposed work

Plans, speciflcetlons,
bid forms and contract documents may
be sacured at the
oHlce
of
Floyd
Browne Associates,
Inc , 107 North Main
Street, Marlon. Ohio
433022 A fifty dollar
($50.00) non·relund·
able deposit woll be
required lor each set
or Drawings and
Contract Documents,
checks made payable
to Floyd Browne
Associates, Inc
Plans, bid forms and
contract documents

wilt be available for
viewing at the VIllage
ottlce at 237 Race
Straet, Middleport,
Ohio 45760 and atao
In the plan room of
the
F. W.
Dodge
Corporation.
Each proposal must
be accompanied by 1
Includes the replace·
bid guaranty In lhl
manl of approximate- form of a bond with
ly 40 L.F. +1- of 24- approved
surety
tnch combined sewer company •• aurety
at Firat and Hamilton for the, execution of
Streets; the replace- tht contract. Th bid
ment of approximate- guarenty and con·
ly 24 L.F. of elliptical lrt!CI bond lhlll be
combined sewer at for thl lull amount of
Firat
and
Main 1111 bid propoul and
Streets. The contract In the form 11 conshall Include pave- tained In tho contract
ment replacement, documenta.
..adlng and other Alternately, a certified
appurtenances for a check,
caahtor's
complete system to chock or tatter of
restore the area to Ita credit pursuant to
original · condition Chapter 1305 or the
and auch other work ReviHd Code, In the
as may be neca11ary amount of tan per·
to
complete
the cent of the bid will be
Contract In accor· accepted aa a bid
dance
with . the guaranty. Each proposal must contain
Contract Documents.
The eotlmated con- the full nama and
struct
coal
for addraaa of evary perCombined
Sewer son or company
Overflow
Repair• lntoraotod In the
same.
project 11 $70,800.
All proposala shall be The
Village
of
hereby
sealed and endorlld Middleport
for "Combined Sewer nollllea all bidders
that It attlrmatlvely
Repair~"
Overflow
and mailed or dallv· lnaurea thai regard 10
ared to Mayor Sandy any contract entered
lannarelll, 237 Race Into pursuant to thla
Street, Middleport, advertisement,
Bualneaa
Ohio
45780. Minority
Propoaate are to be Enlarprtu (MBE) and
on blanks fumtahed Women•• Buetneaa
In
the
Contract Entarprlll (WBE) Will

to submit
1n reaponse to
thta Invitation and will
not be dlacrlmlnated
agalnll
on
the
grounds of race,
color, or naUonal origin In consideration
lor an award. The
VIllage of Middleport,
Is an equal opportu·
nlly employer and,
requires all persons
contracting with the
VIllage lo certify that
they are equal opportunity employers and
that they do not discriminate on the
grounds or race,
color, religion, aax or
national origin.
Bidders are required
to comply with the
MBEIWBE require·
manta set forth. In
part, this means that
any bidder, to the
extent that It aubcontrocta work, shall
award subcontracts
to certified Minority
Business
Enterprlaa/Women'o
Buolneu EnterprtH
In an aggregate dollar
value of no tell than
3.0% or the contract
lOr MBE and 3.7% of
tho contract for WBE.
Thla percent can
Include materials and
supplies. The bid
apaclflcatlone pro-·
vida further details
on these requirements
All contractors and
subcontractors
Involved with lha
project wilt, to the
extant
p~tlcabla
use Ohio
ducts,

materlale, ae vices,
and labor In the
Implementation
of
thlr
project.
Additionally, contractor compliance wllh
the equal employment
opportunity
requlramenta of Ohio
Admlnlalratlve Coda
Chapter t23, the
Governor's Eoo:ecutlve
Order of 1972, and
Governor•• Executive
Order 84-9 ahalt be
required.
Attention of blddera

contained In thla bid
packet, particularly to
the Federal Labor
Standards Provisions
and
Davis-Bacon
Wages, various Insurance requirements
arid various equal
opportunity
provl·
alone. Blddera must
comply with the provisions
or
the
Americans
with
Dlaabllltles Act of
t990.
No bidder may withdraw his bid whhln
sixty (60) days alter
the actual date of the
opening thereof.
The
VIllage
of
Middleport reserves
the right to relect any
and all bids, the right
to accept the lowest
and beat b1d, lhe right
to waiver minor Irregularities on any bid,
and the right to
accept the bid
proposal which pro·
motes the but Interell of the VIllage.
Carolyn French
Clerk·Treasurer
VIllage or Middleport,
Ohio.
8/25
912

Public Notice
SherlH'a Sate or Real
Eatate
Revised Coda, Sec.
2329.26
The State of Ohio,
Meigs County
BENEDICIAL OHIO
INC. d/b/a
PlaintItt
VI
CHRISTINE MARTIN,
at al
Defendant
Case No. 03-CV-008
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale Issued
by the clerk of Courts
of Common Pleaa of
County In the above
entitled action, I will
otter for aale at public
auction, at the qoor or
the court Hou11 In
tho above named
County,
on
September, tho 11

\!tr une- Sentinel - 1\egt!iter
CLASSIFIED

Callll Cou11ty OK

To

Place
Your

Offree llo"".f'

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

day of Thursday,
2003, at t0:30 a.m.,
the
following
described real estate,
situate In the County
Meigs of and State of
Ohio,
to ·WII:
Situated tn the
VIllage of Pomeroy,
County of Meigs and
Stale of Ohio;
Beginning at the top
ollhe lace of the clltt
of rock at the north·
west corner of the
property deeded by
J~hn A. Pomeroy, to
the Mardens and the
Vestry
of
Grace
Episcopal Church In
Pomeroy, Ohio, Vol.
28, Pg. 724 of
Records ot Deeds,
Melga County, Ohio;
thence West along
the top of the race or
the clltt of rocks a
dlatancs of 78 teet;
thence South parallel
with the west nne of
the Grace Episcopal
Parsonage Lot 20
deg. 10 Inches east a
distance of 162 feet,
more or lass, to a
stake; thence North
69 deg. 50 lncheo
east 85- 1/2 feet:
thence North 20 deg.
tO Inches weal 91
feet; thence East 12 t/2 feet to the wast
line of the Grace
Episcopal
Church
Parsonage
Lot;
thence North 20 deg.
tO Inches west along
the weal line of lha
Grace
Episcopal
Church Paraonage
Lot, 71 feat , more or
leas, to the placs of
beginning.
Atao a right to uaa
as means of lngraaa
and egraaa to aald
above
deacrlbed
property a right-ofway to ba used In
accordance
with
deed or John E. and
Annie Lyons, made to
Den Diehl over the
following daacrlbad
premlaea:
Beginning on Main
Street at a point 52
feel waaterly from the
aoutheaol corner of
Lot 1183 In Pomeroy,
Ohio; thence norther·
ly 331 feet to 1 point
on the weaterty line
of
the
Grace

Episcopal Parsonage
Lol, which point Is 71
feet southerly from
the lace or the cliff or
rocks: thence wealerly 12-t/2 feet: thence
southerly a distance

payment of said proceeda, It Is ordered
said deposit of 1/10
of the appraised
value shall be withhold by Plalntltt as

of 331 teet, more or
less, to Main Street;

ated with advertisement and resale of
aid real estate of

LOCATIONS.
"The date aet lor
completion of lhla
work shall be ea set
forth In lhe bidding
proposal." Plans and
Spe~lflcatlons are on
file In the Department
of Transportation.
GORDON PROCTOR
DIRECTOR
OF
TRANSPORTATION
(9) 2,8 2TC

thence easterly 12 •
t/2 feet to the place of
beginning, said right·
of-way to be used
only In conjunction
with the reel estate
first above mentioned
For further agreement, see deed or
John E. Lyons and
Annie Lyons to Dan
Diehl, March 25, 1920,
Deed Book 121. Pige
20, Meigs County
Deed Recorda.
II Ia herein agreed
that II Second Street
In Pomeroy, Ohio, Ia
hereafter extended to
the property of john
E~d Annie Lyons or
elth
or both that
Ilea
Immediately
s th of lhe property
hereinbefOre granted
and the northerly line
of Second Street ao
extandod does not
abut on tho aoutherly
line of the property
herein aold to the
grantees shall extend
to Second Street ao
extended.
Reference
Dead:
Voluma 7272, Page
231, Meigs County
Deed Recorda
• Said Premlaao
Located at 326 Eaat
Main Street, Pomaroy,
Ohlo,45769
• Said Premlaea
apprataed
at
$30,000.00 and cannot be sold for tee1
than two-thtrda or
that amount.
TERMSOFSALE :
Purchaoer of the
proporty other than
Ptalntltt or lien holder
shall be required to
depoall 1/t 0 of the
appralaad value at
the llmt of lhe aale In
the
form
of a
cashier's check and
the balance of the
proceeda to be paid
within ten (10) days
of the aata by 12:00
noon to the Shortt!.
Should the purchaser
fall to make timely

and for costs associ·

Interest charges.

Sherltt, County, Ohio
Attorney for Plalntltt
Robart K Hogan
(0024966)
Javltch, Block &amp;
Rathbone, LLP
602 Main Street, Suite
500
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45202
(513) 744-9600
(8) 26, (9) 2, 9

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

I \11'1

o'

C- 1 Beer Carry Ou t perm11
lor sale Chester Township,
Metgs County send letters
of mterest to The Darly
Sent nel PO Box 729·20,
Pomeroy Oh10 45769

The Mon tgomery Famrly
reun ron
wrll
be
held
September 14 2003, 0 0
Mcintyre Park ,Shelter Krll
Deer 10am dusk

·-------,J
$250 $500/week wtll tram to

wof't( at home helptng the

US Govt file HUD/FHA mort
gage refunds no experience
necessary cal l 1 800 778-

0353

Arbors at Galltpohs a sktll ed
nursm g facthty 13 seektng an
AN
Staff Developm ent
Coordtnator Must posses
suong orgamzallonal sk tll s
and abthty to fur\ctton as part
of an dtsctpltnary team We
oHer compettttve wages and
3 female cats 1 female dog beneftts
Quahfted candi1 female rabbrt 32565 Dark dates please contact Teresa
Hollow Ad Pomeroy
Woods DON at 1 740-446·
7 11 2 or apply tn person at
Gtve away- 1· black Lab 1·
170 Pmecrest Dr Galhpohs,
Shepard both good wrth chll
dren both good watch dogs

r

GIVEAWAY

OH 45631

{40 441 1222
to

Arbors

grve

at Galhpohs a

away

LOSTAN()
FnuNn

)310

1 2 mrl es out
Sept 1st 5th

Yard Sale 6 tamr ly Sept 1·
Sept 4 86 12 St Rt 7S

74

YARil S,\1

F-

P&lt;~~IFRUI'iMtUIJLF

Btg one day only sate Sept
5th at Lau rel Cliff FM
Church all clothii'\Q $1 per
bag mtsc tlems $1 or less
all proceeds go to mtsston
lund ra tn or shtne
Large yard sale· 3rd 4th &amp;
5th
108
Pearl St ,
Middleport Oh10 9am ?
Sep t 3rd &amp; 4th 3 family yard
sale 102 Mary St New
Haven c lothes lots of toys
tntant and up childs car
sears and booster fireplace
mantl e tull s 1ze truck topper
m1crowave restn patio set
and much more
Yard Sale

SFJptember 4th

CNA's
Restdent
&amp;
Ass tsta nts- Appltcattons Are
Now Betng Accepted For
CNA s
&amp;
Restdent
Asst stants Expenence A
Plus/Job Tratntng On S1te,
Compettttve
Wages,
Homehke
Atmo sphere,
Several Benefits ~v a1 lab le
Apphcaltons
May
Be
Obtatned Mon-Sun 9-4pm,
Ravenswood Care Center
St ,
1113
Washtngto n
Ravenswood
WV
References Reqwred

PART TIME CLINICAL
NURSING FACULTY POSI·
TIONS

I

Expenenced lead carpenters-must be fam1har wtlh all
phases of restdenltal remodeling vahd dnvers ltcense,
tools lranspo rtalton, and
references Local work, pay
On
expenence
based
Apphcattons available at
Chnsttans
Constructton1
1403
Eastern
Ave,
Gallipolis 446·4514
---'------Full Ttme poslttons mostly
days
Flexible schedules
apply between 10am-i1am,
Mon-Thur-Sat,
McC iures
Restaurant 820 Jackson
Prke GalltpOIIS Oh 10 45631

ery position
Immed iate
opentng lull time ApPly tn
person Life Style Furniture,
PLEASANT
3rd &amp; Olive Galltpolts, OH
9 30 5pm No phone calls
Mans Yard Sale Cabtnet please!
Maker supp lies repat r partslunk 2903 Parnsh Ave PI Help wanted cartng for the
Pleasant Frtday 9am-4pm elderly Darst Group Home,
now paying mtntmu n wage
Sat 9am-2nm
new sh tfts 7a m-3pm 7am~
WANTFJJ
5pm
3pm· 11pm
11pmTO 8U\'
7am call 740-992 5023
Pomeroy (Russells)

YAIIl&gt; SAU:1'1,

H o u sekee ptng / Lau ndry
Arbou rs 170 Pine Crest
Drive, Galllpolts, Oh 45831
Appear In person asM tor
Linda Oenms

Ho useke eptn gllau n dry
Supervisor
needed
for
Wa nted to buy snow plow for Gallipolis area If mterested
walk behmd Gravely call lax resume to 513 -677·

9948

'I· 1-

~
© 2003 by NEA, Inc

www comics com
WANTF.J&gt;

Jto

To Do

RN/lPN (HOME HEALTH)

Wtll babystl 1n my home
Part or Full t1me per vtstt or Come and enJOY a fun lovIng and educatiOna l envihourly 401 k cafetena pl an
mtleage untform
ronment I am a Mother otf
two and have over 5 years
allowances CEU retmprotes stonal expenence wtth
bursement Sam's club
chtldren
FleKtbl e hour s
Health &amp; Lila tns PTO
whtch accumulates fro m
Call or leave message 740·
first work day Top pay 1n Trt
State Stgn on bonus BQ0-

256 6338

759 5383
EOE

HoM~

Gallipolis Career College

AN

1 600·214 0452

'110

i\llSCfl..IANEOIN
25 Serious People Wanted

10

BUSINJ.X'ii

Who want to LOSE we tght
•-•Oiiliii'I'OiiiilflloiOl!NiiioiTVioio_.l
We Pay You Cash lor th e pounds you LOSE I
OHIO VALLEY PU BLI SH
Safe Natural No Drugs
lNG CO recommends th at
- - - - - - - - you do bust ness w1th people
you know and NOT to send
6x12 Ttl! down tratle r new
money through th e matt unt11
$1100
- - -- - - - - you have mvesttgated the
ollenng
8-ft pool tabl e wJ p1ng !DOng
top, good cond balls sever-

INOTICE I

740 446·2927

_A
_B
_S_O
_L_U
_T_E_G_O_L_D_M_IN
_E
_l

servtng rural southeastern - - - - - - - - -

SFRVI(."E:'i

Large horse saddle black '
OhiO
·------w1th St ive r tnm on edge and Darst Ad ult Group Home
ApplicatiOns wtll be received
chest pla te, $150 call 740· has a vacancy for a male or
until the position ts filled
Qualified applicants should tT44j:i6~.0;;7.;;98~af:;I•;.•.;;5:;.;Pm.;..

Ms Phyllss Mason, SPHR
Director of Human
Resou rces Untverslty of
Rio Grande
P:O Box 500 Alo Grande,

OH 45674

Fa;~~; 740.245·4909 e-ma tl

pmasom 0 ri o edu

EEO/AA Employer
Women and Mlnontles are
encouraged to apply
Re1plta Providers needed
1n the Pt Pleasan t area, 18+
wtth WV license Call REM
OPTIONS
(304)768-5575
Mon-Fn 9am to 5pm ask tor

Ma•k

APARTBUDGET

PRICES AT JACKSON

ESTATES 52 Westwood
Onve from $297 to $383
W a l~to shop &amp; mov1es Call
740-'lf46 2568
Equal
Houstng Opportunity

3 br hOuse for rent w/ lull
basement &amp; garage lg yard
$450 a mon + $250 dep
304-675-4469

(740)949-7004

6777

1'9_' _ _ __
$400/depostt $400/ month 0
__:_
P:_
P0_'1_"_"'_
740 446 0332
Honeysuckle H1lls Apts
Located on Colonral Dr
i\lolllt.E HOMt:'
beh1nd H1ghway Patrol Post
on Jackson P1ke 1 &amp; 2 br
rent starltng $255 low &amp;
14x70 Mobtle Home 2BA moderate tncome Equal
wt1h den Located be htnd Housing Opportu n1ty 740Fox s
P1zza
tn
Potnt 446-3344 TOO 1-800 750·
Plea sa nt
$435 00/MO 07 50
Referen ces
&amp;
Deposil - -- - - -- Reqwred Ca ll 304 675 Honeysuckle H1lls Apts
Located on Colomal Dr
ro om dtnmg room famtiY¥·;;O";:.'.:;M;;;o:;ne~y~s:.;W.:;o;;.'':;"-~
behtnd H1ghway Patrol Post
roo m game room 2 car
ga rage with 3 car unat
Lars &amp;
CIA &amp; WID, no pets rent on Ja~ so n Pike 1 &amp; 2 br
re nt starling $25f low &amp;
tached pool one acre L---AiiCiiil!fii.CAIIIi('iioE
$400/mo
sale $15 000
moderate tncome Equal
00
Houstng Opporlumty 740 Country Land
2 bedroom all electnc AJC
I
Coun try Ltvtng
tn Spnng Valley area
Country Fun
$32S,month $250/depos tt
Lg 3 br over HIJ!tons Car
01
Recreattonal Land &amp; Scentc
Wash
SSOO per man all
6954
Homestles available
ut1l 1nctuded eKcept alec
throug hout Soulhern Ohto
2 BR perfect au porch 304-675·7255 or 304 372All real estate advertising
very mce 740 446·2003 or 6094
In this newspaper Is
GALLIA COUNTY
subject to the Federal
740 446· 1409
FEATURES
Fair Housmg Act of 1968
Two Mobile Homes both New Haven 2 Apt 3br turn
whtch makes 1t 1Ue gal to
$400 Jmo 3br unfurntshed
Home
&amp;
Huntmq
2
wa Ier /1ras h' sewag •
advertise 'any
$300 lmo Adul ts only No
Land avat labl e m three pa1d
no pets
$400
preference, limitation or
r
e
n
$
4
d
e
P
s
1
areas 3 to 33 acres wtth on
0 11 Pets Call 304 675-4340 e111
dlacrimlnat1on based on
1
0 0
race, color religion, sex
1 1+acre
tract
tou chtng $285rent/$285dep
740· _ 6_3_ __ _ __ _
famtlial status or nat1onal
Wayne N at1onal Forest
Now Taktng Apphca tJOnsorigm or sny lntentton to
35
West
2
Bedroom
make any such
Owner Fmanctng Aliat lable
TownhOu se
Apartments
preference, limitation Of
muRE~~rr
Call ier FREE mapsl
Includes Water Sewage
di&amp;Cnmmahon '
800 - 2~3-8365
Trash $3501MO 740 446
www countrytyme com
1 and 2 bedroom apartThta newspaper will not
ments, turn1shecl and unfur
knowtngly accept
Lot for sale tn Rac1ne n1shed
secun ty depOSit Tara
advertisements lor reAl
Townhouse
requtred no pets 74 0 992 Apartments Very Spac1ous
estate which Ia tn
2 Bedrooms 2 Floors CA 1
violation of the law Our
New on market Bea ullful 5+ 22 t8
readers are hereby
1/2 Bath Newly Carpeted
lntormed that all
acres
Country setltng 5 1 BR CIA Out et Locatton
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Poo l
dwellings advertised In
m n from hospttal and all near Holzer WID Hookup
this newspaper are
ameOIItes Homestte ready $359 oo plus uttltttes tease Patto Start $385 'Mo N o
available on an equa.l
wtth stoned dr1veway and &amp; depostt requtred no pets Pets Lea se Plus Securtty
Oeposrt Req Uired Days
opportun ity buea
_ water
Timber seno us 740-446 2957
740-446 3481
Evenmgs
L....:::::::::.:::::;:.:.:::::::;.,.;;;~ mqutrtes only 7 40·446740·367-0502
1
br
All
ullltl
tes
1ncluded
0908 or 7 ~0-645·0244
H tstoncal 3 story home
$325 month (304 )675· 3654
Tw1n A1vers Tower 1s accept
ad101nt ng bus1ness building N1ce mobile home lots qutet
2 BA 2 bath l1vtng area 1ng appl1c at1ons for wa1t1ng
spa c1ous pa rk 1ng pnvate country setting $115 per
and k1tchen AJC and applt hsl for Hud-subs1zed 1· br
entrance frontage RT33 month
tncludes
water
ances $400 call 7 40 446 apartment call 675 -6679
c1ty water se pttc system sewer trash 740 332 2167

4BR hou se and 69 9-acles
Bn ck 3200 sq It new home No Problem Sate- Want a
Clark Chapel Rd $265k new sec lt onal home ? N o
Problem Need foundat1on
and sept1c? No Problem
8 Room Ranch on tull base Need ulthl1es run or drtve·
ment 3BR 2 1/2 baths 2 112 way? No Problem Want b1g
acres covered deck FR savn1gs on a 2003 model
$107 900 740-4 46 2 196
No Problem Coles Mob1l e
Homes , U S 50 Ea st
Bulavtlle P1ke two story 3 Athen s Oh to, 740-592· 1972
bedrooms 2 112 baths 1t v1ng S tnce 1967, Where You Get

740·256 1226

J

l.

j8Q

_ _, tamale. call (740)992·5023
WANtlD
TURNED DOWN ON
TO Do
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unl ess We Wtn'

Expertenced

Carpenter lnd ,Girdner
Has own tools &amp; Mowtng
eqUipment

NO JOBISTO
BIG OR SMALL.

740 446 8050

3423
1996 14,76

2BR 2BA

740 446·1062

(7401992 5656

$119000 (740)773 9151

Rl \ I I "' I \ II

Meadowbrook Dr ive 3br
2ba Hardwood floors large
fam ily room Pnvate lenced
back
yard
and
garage (304 )675-1 303

FOR SALt:

po..

a

Rl

'II"
HotJSI'S

fOR RFNT

2 Bedroom house lull basement free gas cenlral atr
btg
yard
ha ndiCapped
accesstble 2 mtles out of
Portla nd $400 00 month

740·843·5126

23 3 Second Ave 2 story
HUD home On ly $6 500
house
28R 11/2Bath fur·
For hstmg call 1·800· 719
Ranc h Style 3BA 2bath s mshed k1tchen WID hookGeorges Portable Sawmtll 3001 E xl F144
gara ge Brtck School Road up off slreet park1ng walk
don t haul your logs to the
mtll JUStcall304·675-1957
3 Acres m West Co lumtlla Gallipolis v1ew photoh nfor anywh ere downtown 12
on ltne at months mtn $545 month
- - - - - - - - - across from Ballf1eld Priced mat1 on
Trenamlssiont, all types, below appra 1sa1 $48 000 'NWVII orvb com code 8 1803 refldep no pets 740·446·
4926
Qr caw 740 367 7039

1304)773 5343

12_

0006

1-868 582·3345
HoMEll

(740)441

388·9325
I'HO Al'AK!l\IENlS

5pm

740.245-5877

mRRENr

BR

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
New Home 3BR 2baths 2
Call 304-57&amp;-3320 or
for immedtate possess1on an
ca r garage Deb b1e Dnve
cell304-583-1718
WJihm 15 min of downtown
Galltpolts v1ew photo/mfor11 no answer leave message GIIIH~ Rates as low as
mallon
on
line
all call•
be an.-ed 'D!I~~ Ut'tl ·
' • www orvb com code 1903
returned ae soon as
.J
•
or call 740-245·9266 attar
ble
• bo"
..,

woli

fl2lf

(304)675 2900

www galltpottsca.reercoMage com
~~Re~#~9~0~0~5~1~
27~4~B~~

al cue st1cks $250 attar 60 Vending machines wtth
exceUent locations all for
The Un tvers tly of A1o 5pm 74Q-446 0798
Grande combines a prtvate -------~four~year un1verslly with a
$10,995 800-234-6982
Chest-freezer, CB base sta
state-supported community tton 4 VW ures and wheels
PRol-h~IONAt
college tn a single tnst1tut1on 740 _256 9301

Interest and qualifications a
transcript as well as a
resume tncludmg the names
and adclresses of at leas!
three references to

AT

446 3344 TOO 800 750
0750

(CareBfs Close To Hom e)
Call Today' 740 446-4367

800 201 0832

Master of Sc1ence tn nurs1ng
requtred, however, mdlvtdu als with a BSN degree wtll
be considered Prefer prevt ·
ous teachmg expertence 1n
ADN program

2025

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS

&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down Small 3BR hOuse. 47 112 From $278 $348 Call 740
and &amp;295/ mo 1 800·691 Spruce Stree t Galttpohs 992 "5064 Equal Housmg

mRSAlt

$165 000
Aespons1bil1ttes of the pos 1·
ltons 1nclude chn 1cal lab
superv1ston 1n area hosp1tals
and clm1cal agenc1es

fUR Rt:NT

740·446·3644

l'!r

Must have current acttve
valid Oh10 R N L1cense (or
Ohto·Board elig1ble ) must
Domtno s Now Htnng all have completed approved
locattons
Pt
Pleasant prolesstonal nurstng educa·
Galltpo hs &amp; Pomeroy Safe tton program and have at
dnvers must be 18 Apply tn least two years expertence
person at locattons
tn pracltce of nurstng as an

8235

,

fHO APAlfll\IINIS

For Lease Beautiful 1600
Sq Ft restored second
320
Ho~ms
fl oor apartment tn Htstortc
F
Otstnct Ideal for professton
al couple all modern
1992 Redman 14K70 Mobtle 3BR 1-bath fu ll-basement, ament l tes 2 bedrooms
He1ghts
area, spaCIOUS IIVingl dintng lots
Home 38R 1 l)ath very Evans
good cond t1ton all electnc $500/mo
of storage 1112 baths rear
2-bath
very OIC9 deck HVAC $600/month
CA and othe r ex tras asktng 4BA
$12 500 neg 740·245-5122 home near nver on SA 7S pl us utthttes Securtty and
$7QOtmo 1-year lease 740 key depostt No pets
Cole s Mob1le Homes
367..0299 or 709-0299
Referencaa required. 740US 50 East Athens Oh iO
446 4425 or 446 3936
For
Rent
N1ce
4
SA
home
45701 740· 592-1972
near A1 o Grande $750 00 For Lease One bedroom
Depo stl and unlurntshed newly redeco
Land Home Packages avatl per month
Call rated second fl oor Apt at
able In your area (740)446 References requtred
W1seman Real E state at
3384
corner of Second and Ptne
A/C $300 00 pe r month
Must sell nt ce 2 bedroom
water tnclu ded Secunty ancl
For
sale
or
re
nt
3
bedroom
14x70 Vmyl std1ng and 2x6
key dep ostt Off street park
wa lls Call Karena 740-365 house tn Pomeroy depos I &amp;
references
requ red tng References Required
No pets 740 446 442 5 o r
446 3936
New I 4 wtde only $899
H ome from $ 199/month
down and only $167 98 per
forec losure
homes
4% Grac1ous ltvtng 1 and 2 bed·
month Call Ntkkt 740-385·
down 30 years at 8 5 % apr room apartments at Vtltage
7671
4li sllngs call ao0-319-3323 Manor
and
R1vers1de
Apartments m Mtddleport
New 2003 Doutllewtde 3 BR eKt 1709

Moon£
mRSAI

740 446·4423

9am-4pm Septembe r 51h
9am -Jpm
Wolf Pen Furniture Warehouseldeltv· send a letter detailing their

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Stlvef,
Gold
Cams,
Proolsets, Otamonds Gold
Amgs
US Currency,·
MT S Cotn Shop 151
Second Avenue Galltpolls,
740·446·2642

plus depostl &amp; utiltt1es &amp; ref
erences. (740 )992·6154

Othce Manager needed fo r a
fast paced offtce Must like
dealing with th e public and
have 9)(COIIence tel epho ne
manners Prefer someone
with expenenc e m secretarial work Good pay &amp; benefits
Drop olf resume at
lrvlns Glass Servtce 1273
eastern Ave. Galltpolts Ohto

YARI&gt; SAlE·

Yard Sal e
Route 218

0

---------

10~

HotJsEs
RENT

I'OR

Remodeled 3 bedroom 1 3
bedroom
house
1n
1/2 bath tn good netghbor Mmersv1lle $400 per month
(740)949·
hood 1n Mtddleport (740) $250 depoSII
99~- 7743
or vtew
at
www orvb co mNB1503
3
bed room
house
tn
Taktng appltc atton s for 1 Syracuse $400 per month
bedroom $300 per month $250 depoSit (740)949

•

WV25550

AVON' All Areas• To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429

G ,\IJ .ll'OUS

10

HoM~,.

2025

Local Insurance Agency htr·
mg Fu ll or Pari-ti me position
for P &amp; C L1censed
Insurance Agent
Send
Resum es to JA28 200
Mam Street Potnt Pleasant,

YARllSU~

mrsc cloth rng Roush Lane

FOR Yotl!!

• All real estate advertisements are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968

twnght~lc.net

LOCAL HOME HEALTH
AGENCEY
SEEKING
GOOD
DEPENDABLE
HOME HEALTH AIDES IN
MEIGS CO AREA PRE·
FER EXPERIENCE BUT
NOT NECESSARY WE
WILL TRAIN PLEASE
COME IN ANO FILL OUT
AN APPLICATION AT 859
THIRD AVE . GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO 45631

r

Sat Aug 30 Sept 1 2
hoUsehold
rtems
co l·
lecttblas go cart books

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING

• Currtnt rate card applies

I'OR SAU.

--------Overbrook Ce(lter ts takmg
apphcattons for a part ttme
housekeeptngll aundry atde
740 446·7112 or app ly tn must be able to work all
person at 170 Ptnecrest Dr shifts Come In and ftll out an
Galltpohs OH 45631
appltcatton at 333 Page
Street Mtddleport Oh

Huge Yard Sale, jewelry,
stuffed anrmals mrsc 568
Prne Hrll Road Sept 2,3 4

WHAT YOUR ,
STYlE. ..

are 1lwaya confidential

aCi:epts only help wanted ada meeting EOE atandards We will not knowingly accept any advertiSing tn violatiOn of the law

Need to earn Money? Lets
talk the NEW Avon Call
Ma nlyn 304-882-2645 to
learn all th e ways tt can work
sk tlled for you

nurstng lacthty 1s seektng
STNA~s to become part of a
(740)992 9425
cartng team With managers
~
who listen We believe tn
open
com mun icatton
coaching and encouragtng
Found black/while long ha1r advancement We are proud
mal e dog With 2 collars of ou r facthty and have htgh
bl ack leather flea collar standards If you do to we
Hazel Rtdge Road
740 would ltke to hear from you
You must truly enroy worktng
wilh th e elderly and want to
Lost Famt ly pet REWARD beCome a part of our 24female chocolate lab 8 hour tea m We offe r com
yea rs old (M och a) drsap petlttve wages and bene ftts
peared
8/15
Do It If Interested please contact
Genter/Holzer area 740 Teresa Woods, DON at 1_

Krtten

~

NO MATTER

any Iota or expense that rftulll from the pubtlc:al•on or om•aalon of an advertisement Comtcllon w1ll be made In the fnst available echt1on

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

\ II '\ I

1

vane ty of tlems

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus , Ohio
Office of Contracts
Legal Copy Number:
030466
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Matting
Date:
08/2212003
E038(196)
Sealed propoaala
will be accepted from
all pra-qualllted biddora at the Otttca of
Contracta of the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation,
Columbua, Ohio, until
10:00
a.m.
Wednesday,
September 24, 2003
FOR IMPROVING
SECTIONS ATH·t 24·
(0.24)(1.50);
MEG·
124-57.10; MEG-681·
15.90,
STAtE
ROUTES 124 AND
VARIOUS, TROY AND
MEIGS TOWNSHIPS,
ATHENS AND MEIGS
COUNTIES, OHIO, IN
ACCORDANCE WITH
PLANS AND SPEC IF~
CATIONS BY GRADING,
DRAINING,
PAVING
WITH
ASPHALT
CON·
CRETE ON A BITUMINOUS AGGREGATE
BASE AND BY CONSTRUCTING
PRE·
CAST REINFORCED
CONCRETE STRUC·
TURES AT VARIOUS

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing resetvea the r•ghtto ed•l reJect, or cancel any ad at any time Errors muat be reported on the
Tr lbun•S&amp;ntlnal Register wlll be retponalbte for no more than the cost of the apace occupied by the error and only the first •naert•on

' ' In H I ...,

70

Public Notice

1:00 p.m.

Sundays Paper

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
•lndude Phone Number And Address When Needed

446 4250

Shop
Clusslfledsl

i':!~~cl••v_:•~•n-Column:

V1sit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at. (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyreg lster.com

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days .
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Dally In ~ Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
Jn Next Day•s Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

256-1967

on
SAVINGS

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
AD

laegt1iter

Vis1t us at: 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
classlfled@mydailysentlnel.com

V1s1t us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallytrlbune.com

Ad •••

740 446·7910 atter 5pm

•

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

.~10 Ht:u' WANTEU

was up to anything and everything that
Wasqington's Hetsman-hyped quart&lt;;rback,
Cody Pickett, threw at it.
P1ckett completed 26 of 49 passes for 255
yards but spent most of the night running
away from the Buckeyes' brawny, mtimidatmg defenstve hne .
Ptckett wasn't helped by the fact that the
Huskies couldn't advance the ball on the
ground, managing JUSt 7 net yards on 24
attempts. That stat was buttressed by three
sacks for 34 yards in losses.
Krenzel picked up nght where he left off in
last January's 31-24 double-overtime vtctory
over Miamt in the Ftesta Bowl. He had run
for JUSt one touchdown in hts first 23 Ohio
State games, but rushed for two against the
Hurricanes and was selected as the game's top
offensive player.
He rushed for two more touchdowns against
Washington. He also completed 15-of-27 passes
for 203 yards and seldom made a bad decision.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

4859

EHO

\l iiH II \\111"11
Apphca!lons bemg accepted
for very n1ce clea n 2 bed·
room apartment 1n country
setltng, yet close to town
Large ltvmg room &amp; k1tchen
Washer dryer stove tr1g
and dtsh washer mcluded
Landlord pays water and
"garbage Tenan t pays elec·
trlc Total electriC wiAC No
pets non smokers on tv
$4 00 deposit
4450 per
month 446 2205 or 446
9585 AsK to r Vtrg1n1a

HOUSt:llOIJ)

Goons
Goocl Used Appliance s
Aecondtltoned
and
Guaranteed
Washers
Drye rs
Ranges
ancl
Asfngerators Some start al
$95 Skaggs Appliances 76

Vono Sl , (740)446·7398

Mollohan Carpet 202 bark
Chapel Road Porter Oh10

(7401446·7444 1877-830·

Beech Slreet Mtddleport I
bedroom turn1shed apart - 9 162 Free Esttmates Easy
ment ut1ftttes pa1d depos t &amp; f1nanctng 90 days same as
ref erences
no
pet s cash V1 sa/ Nlaster C ard
Dnve a- httle save alot

(740)992 0165

- -- - ~--------''-------

�www.mydallysenllnel.coin ·

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B4 e The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Senllnel • Pase B!

BRIDGE

L.rw__
HoolDioLD_G&lt;lool,_
. . . .,. ~l L.r_..
~.:::-BJ&amp;·Ri-' L.t'_a.....lllR.AIITOS·SALE--

NEA oCrolsword Puzzle

PHILLI P
ALDER

Refrlgeratdr $75 .. Whirlpool Canning Tomatoes. You pick 2000 Buick Century $3,995.
pick 1997 ~lv BrHze $2,395.
Washer $95 ., Kenmore $4.00/bushel.

·w,

ACROSS
I

dryer $125., G.E. refrigera· $5.00/buahel. Please call a 199-4 Saturn $2,195.

tor, like new, $ 195 .,
Kenmore Washer /dryer set
$300., 3-couchs· $50. each,
table 4-chalrs. $95., King·
size
box·springlma tlress
$100., cheslldress er w/mir·
ror $140
Skaggs 740·
44e-7398

day ahead to order. O"Brlan
Farms Letart Falls 74~
247·21 13
-------Countr; Produce Market
Potatoes.
Tomatoes,
Melons. Corn. etc. ln sea·
son. Troyers WoOdCraft 9

4
8
11

We Take Trades.
Cook MotoN
7&lt;4()..446·(HD3
-------2002 lincoln LS, V-6, 3.0L
24v, Autumn red. Orapl'llte
leatf'ler. 6700 mi. Asking
$25 ,500 (paid $38,000).

miles we st of Ga llipolis ;_(30&lt;
_,;.)6_7_
5·_1_556
_E_ve_. _ _
along St At 141
~Ford Mustang $6500.
98 Toyola Camry $4900.
F'otatoes
fo r
sale 98 PonUac Flreblrd $4800.
(Kennebec. Red F'ontiac), 95 Olds Cutlass 2dr. $2600.
Mon-Sat. , 65002 Stale 95 Ford Probe $1750
Route 124, Reedsville. Oh, 98 Ford Conture $2500.
50if $10
00 Ford Focus 5-speed
- - - - -- - - $2800.
Sweet corn tor sale, $1.50
92 Cavalier $1 200.
dozen. (740)949-1316
96 Ford Conture $I BOO.
Used Furniture Store, 130
I \ tn t ' ' 1'1'1 II ...,
87 Pontiac Grand Am $300.
Buleville Pike. Mattresses.
,\ I I\ I..., II It h.
dressers.
co uches. =;i;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ B &amp; 0 Auto Sales HWY 160
bunkbeds. bedroom suites. ralO
&lt;
FAR.\.I
N 740.:1l-46-6865
rec liners,
Grave
Monuments. 740-446·4782
fgtlPMENT
Gallipolis, Oh Hrs 10-4pm,
n&gt;R SALE
Stop By
Dynahoe Backhoe. good
co ndition . (304) 675-6734
1984 Chevrolet Silverado.
AlmQU!F.'&gt;
JO Choppe r, 2 wagon s. 125,000 miles. 4)(4 , $4,000.
75 196
(304)675-2443 a her 6pm.
(30416 •
1
Buy or se ll. Riverine
1 1988 Chevy Truck. E)(cellent
Antiques, 1124 East Main
l.JVI-1o.IOCK
Condition. 4)(4, $6,000 .
on SR 124 E Pome roy, 740· 1,~------_..l- (304 )593-1994
992-2526 . Ru ss Moore .
::..:.=.:_:;:__ _ __
3yr old Mare Appalossa 1994 S-10. EKtended Cab.
owner.
Pa sa miK. CliOcolate wfwhlte 89, 000 miles. 4,. 3 V-6. 5
spots, saddle/bridle broken. speed . Sharp, Excellent
Follows
co.mmands. condition . Must see to
(304)937·228 1
$4.500.
appreciate.
Coot Down !!
Centra l
(304)773-5840
Cooling Systems, New ' and Limousine show canle for
Used . Installed. (740)446· sale, 2-black, 2- red. rag. 2000 GMC Sonoma 32,obo
actual miles, loaded, B)(CBI·
6308
740-256-6089
lent condition. (740)446·

12

All types of Industrial
Sewing Machines for sale

-------Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7368. For sale,
re-co.,ditioned au tomatiC
washers &amp; dryers, retrigerators. gas and electriC
ranges, air conditioners, and
wring er washers . W1ll do
rep8irs on major brands 1n
•
1
...
s.. op or a you r .. orne.

I

i

~~

•

1-304-773-5739

Thu(]Cj

L\IPROVEMENTS

Tlmot~y

r

$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas.
chevys,
etc!
cars/trucks tram $500. For
listings 1-800-71 9-3001 e)(t
3901
Sports Card Collection, set s, - - -- - - - many
R C's Inse rts-all 1975 Ford Elite, 118,903
sports. All or any part of miles, 351 W, rUn s great.
(304) 675-2473 or {304)675- (740)949-01 24, $500, good
6991
tireS, fa ir condition.

M01URl."Y~

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Norris Nonhup

Dodge
Now InterVIewing In

Parson

The following Ia a complete braekdown of the projected revenue,
Percent
County
40.00%
Township
30.00%
Vlllogeo
30.00%
Total
100,00%
VILLAGES;
Middleport
38 ,74%
Pomeroy
30,17%
Racine
11A5%
Rutland
6,15%
SyracuH
13,49%
Total
100.00%
TOWNSHIPS:
Bodford
8.570%
Cheoler
12.390%
Columbia
7.508%
Lebanon
10.010%
Letart
5,028%
Oliva
10.440%
Orenge
7,550%
Rutland
8396%
Salem
8.591 %
Sallobui'y
6.648%
Scipio
8.301 %
Sullon
6.5§8•4
Total
100.0004

Revenue
$222,720,40
167,040,30
·167,040,30
$556,801 ,oo
$64,711 ,41
50,396.06
19,128,11
10,272,98

$1
$14,315.35
20,696.29
12,541 .39
16,720.73
8,398.79
17,439.01
12,811 ,54
14,02470
14,350.43
11 ,104.84
13,866.02
10,971,21
$167,040.30

(9) 21TC

,

I

Local Government
Revenue A..lllanca

$80,1146 .80
80,835.10
80.835,10
$202,117.00
$23,490.04
18,293.81
6,1142.72
3,729.06
8.179,87
$80,835.10
$5,196.43
7,512.69
4,552,48
a,06U8
3,048,73
6,330,31
4,577.85
5,090.82
5,208.16
4,031.02
5,033 .32

3.1112,51
$80,835.10
Nancy Parker Grueeer
Melgo County Audllor

'~ ~

~

II NT

l 'mu

32 Mop dol oil
33 Pair
34 DowJonto
fig .

Puss

P n!'l:&gt;~

1'11.,:-1

35 Prtaaure
36 Viper
37 Nolurolltl
John -

The number of
cards in the deck
lly l'hiiiiJ&gt; Ald•r

Bnck in .lune, while I wn ~ hnvin~
d mner wit h f.lO tn c fri end s n t their
npartment, Wheclnr Fnrlun c wns MO·
i n~ in the ha~kl(r n und . One round luul
thi s sulutiu n: Wlthuu t jokers. a deck
hali '!? curds. The fellow who Rolvctllt
could have wun anoth er s:I.OOO I[ he
hull known the

WHITTLIN'S A TOUGH HABIT TO
BREAK !! '
·

Bucket Truck

((

t:OITCd

nu mber. Snclly,

who ussumc nn oppomml !\lurtcd with
12 nr 14 l'IU'd s . Then th er e nrc tho se
whn co uld find out hut dn not
like
South on this tlcnl.
As sume ynu ure sitUnp; Sn uth . After
Eust open s three hea t·ts, you drive into
si x no -t r um p. Wes t l en d ~ th e hcnr t
4

-

two. llow would you plun the piny'!

1-800-822-0417

IMPORTS
Athens

a dect~nt se v-

··w .V's #I C hevy . Ponl la&lt;' . Httl&lt;'k , Old s
&amp; Cuslom Va n Dcait'r''

CELEBRITY CIPHER

011 t he :iecr mti i'Ound, but n s~umin~ . ns
Is th e Ut'CCl&gt;t ctl uppruuch . thnl hili
pm·tner· had ~ l x or seven polntH. Suulh
j urnpcrltrr shun . tNol c that ,o; ()( clui.Js

THE
P"

by Luis Campos
Celebrlly Cipher cryptograms Rre created fro m quotations bv lamoua'
peopl e. past Bncl presen1. Each teno' in the cipher stand s to r another.

Will S U C(.' (!I~ tl . l

BORN LOSEit

~l't:.&lt;.II\L m~N~

(:.000 11\Q~N lNG., C.U•S&gt;
t't&gt; ll Ke:TO WO.&lt;.OM(. _ ,
'1'0\J "U. 6/&gt;.C.K !'OR

TO EVE.R'&lt;OO(.I-Jf{O

eROUG.t\1 ~ J&gt;..N

mu: Toe&gt;~&gt;-'&lt; , ..

Tf\t 1'1€.14 50~001..

'&lt;O,R!

P"AAD TO

f-\U~I&lt;.r-.NE

f-\I&gt;.,T\1(. O'f-11\({J&gt;.. ,
I"'R If\(. ON\ON !

Taday's clue: F equals J

South wun the rir st tl'ick wit h lhe
heart IH~c . c:ushcd th e dub nee, unci
plu,vml" l'lu h tn dummy 's tJUec n. When

" R

Eu st di scHrd l'tl a h c ~~rl. th e co ntruct
WitS suddt.!nlv ll illll ll knble.
South ha'cltwo wny s lo piny th e E 0

HHIN I &gt; IN IIII S J\11
I ClH O NI Y c, I :1 11:1 f' f I~ 11 UN Dm l l

' ' '

I ~ INS~Jl"A- CA $JH[ ~I
1~

1$J1

Get Cash Today

1

I
I •Photo 1.0.
I
I

Bring your
'Uial checking statement
' Lao! pay chock olub

i

~
' ~

·:"•

~
··

Don ' tlcavrthc

\

burial and tlnul t.•xpt•nst.•s

,!"'""_(~.

...:J ~~
,.', •.;:3/
·
I •: ' .
..

'

t· ""'

his s ide -s uit t r ic ks first . Declnr cr N 0
would hn vt! lc11 r nc d that E Mi l hnd
l'llnrt c d wil h thr ee s pnd c:;~, se ven

·

N~t.

r'

1

,

•Phone Bill with nama and address

116Malnlt.
Pomeroy OH
740-112 CASH (2274)

I
I
I
I

I .JCI me show ynu how
oiTordohlc und cusy U 111 to
~et

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
Box 189 Middleport

~arket
8ept. lith i 6th

Help Wanted

Help wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital Home
Medical Equipment is currently
accepting resumes for a Full time,
Day shift, Respiratory Therapist or
Certified Respiratory Therapist.
Must he a graduate of an approved
Respiratory Therapist program.
Must be registered and licensed in
the states of West Virginia and
Ohio, One to two years of experience Is preferred.
E:,:cellent salary, holidays, health
Insurance single/family plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation, longterm disability and retirement.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive

Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
AA/EOE

e

NURSES AIDES,
PERSONAL CARE AIDES and
STATE TESTED NURSES AIDES
Pleasant Valley Hospital Privat~
Duty is accepting applications for
private duty home care cases to
provide hourly care to clients who
reside in Mason, Meigs, Gallia,
Athens Counties and Jackson
County, WV.
• Competitive Rate
• Flexible Scheduling
• Mileage Reimbursement
• Health Insurance
• Incentive Plan
Please call Vicki Pearson for more
Information or to arrange a
personal intervie.w at (304) 675-7400
or 1-800-746·0076.

Maplewood LAke
on St. Rt. 124
Between Racine
&amp; Syracuse.
Large spaces
$7.50
740-949-2734

HOWARD L.
WRITfSfl
*ROORIIG

*-E

dEAMLESS
• GOnER
•Free Elllllllth

949-1405

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Eurly hlrds starl

Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates

Fast Turnaround

WE REPAIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgera
Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

JIM'S SMALL

ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

740-992-2432

in this
space
for

$75
per
month

.. ;

£, . .. 5

..

Chan~e l are you coulll be more lncUnecJ
to desi re a buddy systan1 rathor !IHUl
doing things on your own In the yM r
ahead . All tAnces rnade lor noncornmercie.l purp o11e~ 11rt1 hne, but business ones
might provo te!ly.

VIR GO (Au ~ . 23-Sapt. .22) - TM re is
nothing wr ong wilh serving your own
Intere sts, ao long as It Isn't done ot Tho
owpense ol other s . Tod l!ly , toke e)( lfR
pains to tl~slgn your nctlomJ In wayA thot
don't olfend your ossoclntes.
LI BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Your grant~s l han dlc;np tod ay Is likely to he your
own ••11-do uhts . Do n't " ' " your • pt ondld
ImAgi na tion to envision ntt ga tlve resu lt!!
lnsteAd or posi tive one1. lhink vlr.tnry.

All pack $S.IMI
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

Honanza Gd

SFREE

• Room Addition s &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garage•
• Eleclrlcal &amp; Plumbing
'
• Rooting &amp; Gutter~
• VInyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
• Pallo and Porch Decks

TUE ~TOR

l!t!J

IS

BETfY

Nr-~------------~~

.,

WHAT Do I CARE IF
IW(BODV'S WATCH!~'?

ESPWAU..Y Sit-ICC
I CA!Il DO nilS!
~

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 5
Po m6roy. OhiO

V '

Advertise
in this
space for $15
permonlh.

MYERS PAVING
878-2417 or 441-2912
Cell

~~~
High 8l Dry
33795 Hiland Ad,
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
THE944
STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp; Cars
County R t;l. #35
Racine , Ohio

(740) 517-9138
or
(740) 949.0020

I

Henderson, WV
Ph one

GARf'IELD
AN (,I

674-3311 Fax 304-675·2457

5UGG-I&lt;STION5'?

_ __,...,t--.....-

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

0

THE GRIZZWELLS

97 Beech St
middleport, OH
(1D'x10' 6 10'x20')

(740) 992-3194
992-6635
Advertise
in th is
space for S1 5
per month.

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTBUCnON
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

J40-892·1m
Stop &amp; Compare

•

TGG

l'r\Al'? ~l\\1~ .. , C\1~CI'&lt; 0\JT
l'l\t lm'-BmY ~t5 ~~ 1-[Rt, 1•

JUS\ ~~~~\&lt;f.
'?M~\.\. l'A\.1&lt;.

WQJ H

0 H

N P H K K

T0 HKX

ND

A S

KXNTNK

..

CDEGOE

cou!d n ever si t nut fron t

And w atch me." -

John Barrymore

T:~~~~~~ s©~JllA-~t.~s·
l&lt;thO iy CLAY . , 'CILAN
Ofour
R1crronge itlltn of the
acrombltd word• be·
NA Y UE S

1

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•

.

.

•

[±TH .U A N
• 2.• J
•

II I
p

I II
•

I

•

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0 T AD

•

Jl

•

.

I,

"=,'.

1

After having my first garage
sale I learn ed a good lesson. 1dfscovered t hat any tte m is worth

~,• m1il~~oday.

,1-_,..;I...;V...::Er
C_O
;:....:D
:.,..--ll-·.
•

ymH
J'IIInler om'l up w&lt;:lfYtel1ng
ow ev er. by !he Urne you
flyure th~ngs out, It could be 100 late.
S AGITT R
A IUS (N ov . 23-0ec . 2 1) Oumd ngalmil any em oll onal outblHSI
l oday. bftc &amp;u se you r ImAge Is mo re
impo n an t thafl !feeling p11u1ons .
Behaving in wnys thAI nrtorrJ you tempo·
rory success hul dlsr.rodll you In th e
procoM ~ ~ wo costly.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jn" 10) - 11on'"''
" cllanr.A you r.ould be too M8tfy put upon
IOCh'ly And nwon To do somettolng you' ll
Ialor regrfl'lt c:ommlttlnQ lo. II won' I holp to
blame others A~ It il wAs lhotr l;~~utt
AO U A A IU S (Jon . ~0- F • b. I 9) Chllnces are you coutr.t be a bit more
ca reless todAy And hnndl e things In A
tM ughtless manner. Keep this In mind II
you are borrowtng Sortl&amp;lhlng from nnoth ·
er th&amp;t ehe or hiJ cher!shM.
PISCES (Fe b 20- MRrch 20) - Even
!I'0.1gh It might be n line ollaest reslstanc&amp;
Dncl an easy way out tor you at the moment,
you'll soon regret tenlng others meke decl·
slorls lor you tod8y. Be your own person
ARIES {March 21 -Apri l 1.9) - WltAiever
you do. don·r jump to r.onr.luslons ll)dlly ,
especiall y about anything ha ving to clo
with your co-work•rs. Malee cert&amp;l n you
get tne facta first helm• ynu sound off.
TAU RUS (April 20-MBy 20) - It's 11 mlstRk CI to lhlnk som eon ~ will come along
lind ball you out II you get your fll llln over
yow head with ' eomethlng thflll you kn ew
was chancv You could lt\ d youru ll All

IIIOit
IAMf

low to form fou r l lmplt words.

-:~-~=-====~-. W h a l someone ·IS willing to
,...

SOUl' TO NllTZ

WV Contractors Lie, #003506

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

N PTE

SCORPIO
24-Nov. 22)By not mnnro!lources
ayiny
your(Oct.
99 pwd&amp;ntly a!l you

w m r ,..pponocl

••

I

Tuesda~ . Sopt . 2. 200:3

ONE OF TJ.IE ~ARDEST
Tl-liNEiS TO DO 15 TO
CHANGE DOCTORS,.

Last Thursday of
every rnonlh

WDH

UOOV

PRE VIOUS SOLU TION - "My only regrelln lhe lhaalerla !hal

...... r'lllrlhday ;

.. 3 ... 2 .. . 1 " l

Let me do it for yout

6:311

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

Self-Storage
Advertise

10 /'\ORE
SECONDS
UNTIL WE WALl&lt;.
INTO MR.~ . GODFREY:S
ROOM I'IND LOO 1&lt;.
AT HER. UC.LY
lu'--,""" FACE .

the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

CARPENTER ;
SERVICE

HKTXDE

PJEGHKG

AstroGraph

BIG NATE

Ta~e

YOUNG'S

D N P' K H

FTOV

(740) 843-5264

ll 'i/1/lo/d / 'or 10 l&gt;otp

flea

the eovcru~ott' you need.

T

he cou ld huvc utm oHt onC d ub Sout h
would have. know n to cas h th e clu b ATIERWROKEN
ne e, t h£~n to piny o club to dttmmy' " 10,
ending wll ll un m·ct·trlck.

ddu uf

l'or your l'umlly ttnd
lovt•d ones.

BHR NK

d ubs, nut one lie shuuld have cnshctl

henri ~ uml nt h:ast two tlltulHllldH. So,

I
MOTOR Hollmi

These revenues are based on projectlono.lrom the Ohio Olllce
of Budgat and Managemanland are only estlmotao of the omount
of revenue lhal could be received by Malgl County.

4•

East

he gumnwrl !'\0. Mnybl! we should send
him a brltl\14c IJcglnncr btmk.
0( CUIIT ~ l', there nt"C S Uill C players

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used
475 South &lt;;burch St.
Ripley, WV 25271

CAMP!iMS &amp;

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenan ce- Painting, vinyl
Siding , carpentry, doors,
windows, batns, mobile
hom e repair and more. For
free estimate call Chat, 740992,6323

1'11:-i!l

A t hree·hid pro mises

2001 Honda Shadow Spirit,
VT 1100, 7,400 miles, ask·
ing $5,900. 740·440-7668

2002 Gulfstream innsbruck
camper, 27', like new, queen
bedroom, full bath, sleeps 6,

....,_

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
·

pm

r

llbl.

:t .

en-curd 1wit 1md some 6·10 hi Kh-r.nql
f! Oillts, C!'I.Jll'dnfl y wh en vuhwt·n hl c.
South might IHtve cue-hill four huurlli

1998 125 Yamaha Breeze.
like new. $l500.
(J04)882 _3339
-'---'------1998 Super Hawk 996, 600
miles. E)(cellent Condition,
sharp. $8,000.
I304 )675-31 00·8:00·5 :oo
(304)675· 5509 after 5:30

For Sale
1963 Harley
Davidson XLH motorcycle,
runs good/looks good,
$3500. 080 740·367·0399

IT'S NOT A :ZE~O-SlJM
~AM~, YOlJ jeNOW ··-.
~VE~YSOI&gt;Y CAN
~AVE A
~Ool&gt; l&gt;AY.
~

Tree Service

--

The Melga County Budget Commloolon hoa completed Ita
apportionment ol Undivided Local Government Revenue ond
Undivided Local Government Revenue Aoolotonce Fundofor 2003.

Local Government

JONES'

I

Location: 252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio
UNLIMITED INCOME
POTENTIAL
NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED
Must possess good people skills,
ambitiou s attitude,' and the desire
too succeed.

/

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

.r

'

~f(,

740-992-7599

1987 Honda 70 4-wheeler,
1989 Ford TaurUs, needs in needs put back together.
tank fuel pump, good cond,
$500. 080 740-388·9238
black , no ~ rust, 740-446·
0798 after 5pm
1992 50 RHonda Dirt Bike.
Excellent
Condition.
1990 Chevy Caprice S.W. , (304)675-6734
BUIIJ&gt;ING
mite
on - ' - - - ' - - - - -- 50,000
Sl1P1'LIE'&gt;
englne,$ 1000, Buck-stove- 1994 Yamaha Warrior.lots of
lire-ptace-inserV34" blower new parts. ready to ride call
Block. brick, sewer pipes. $250. 740·446·7911
(740)992-2309 or 74()..591 ·
windows, lintel s, etc . Claude - - - -- - - - 8567
Winters. Rio Grande. OH t990 Chevy truck bed 8ft ..
-------Call 740-245-512~ ,
5 H.P. Honda 2-man post 1996 Polaris E)(press 400,
digger. 1992 Ford Probe 4-whee1er, 2-wheel drive,
PitTS
$750.. Greenbrier riding auto, lool&lt;s good. runs 9)(C.
___
FOR SALE
lawn-mower 74 0·256-1102 $2,200 7 40-669·012 1

AKC Pomeranian pups, 2 1993 Chevy Lumina, exc.
months old, 3·male, 1-red, cond, 89,000 miles, call aner
1-whlte ,
1-wolf-sabl a, Spm, 740-379-2196
$300/each, 740-388-8642
1995 Saturn 4 door. has
Poodles, Tiny toy puppies, drawbar lor towing behind
white. also tiny white male motor home. 100,500 miles.
for stud se rvice, (740)667- EKcellent Condition. $2,495.
3404, elyn@oore.com
Phone. (304)675-3275

Nnrth

9 Outocoroa 39 TV networll
tO Crozy , ·
4t Certolo Padro
~~l.,':thar'l
14 Fabric
ourfaco
43 Norwagl.,
19 Polrlck'a
pleywrlght
domoln
.44 Not her
20 Mall brew 45 Unlucky
22 Conlforouo
lima
DOWN
1r. .1
48 NASA dacl·
23 Dlekana
alon (hyph,)
1 Mild
txplotlvo , 24 Big eholo
48 Almoet
25 Lolln I verb
ahul
2 Lhall 26 Ee11y
. 4t Wyo:'
3 On llo way
byline
neighbor
4 Slrlng
28 Clever ploy 50 Ad oplel
quartol
29 Commond 82 Nol on
member
5 B~ron work 30 Very aogor 83 Web oddr,
154 Baveroga
6 Shiny metol 31 Exec•
37 Hovatht
7 Congeal
8 Forowali
bluee

57 Up for
grebe
58 High
mounloln
59 Help ltllore
60 Cullord
61 Floh-lo·ba

me11.

FREE ESTIMATES

Wooden Dinette (table &amp; 4
chairs ) $100.00 Walke r
$35 .00 .. 4 leg cane $20.00.
All in good condition. Ca ll
(304)675·3423

r

West

f'RANK &amp; EARNES1

95 Nissen Pathfinder 4)( .. ,
5-spead, $2600.
97 Ford Ranger 4K4 $4600 .
96 Ford E)(plorer 4K4 $4200.
B &amp; 0 Auto Sales HWY 160
N. 740 . 446•6865
..,,....;-;..;.;.;.;._ _'"'!

r..,

South

lOlling

56 Port ol MHz

27 Doahloll'o
p..r
29 Clo on tho

O pen in ~ lc ud: • 2

Homes • Vinyl

RESIDENTIAL

V~&amp;

A I ll 4

I )euler : EaJolt
Vulnerable: ll oth

COMMERCIAL and

r

Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8am-4: 30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

•

Windows • Roofing

JET
'4385
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· Hay tor sate.
and
4-WJ&gt;s
800-537-9528.
Orchard grass . Round
1995 Ford E·350 Van, 14ft.
Bales. $t5.00, Square bales
high cube boK, excellent
$3.00. Good horse hay Call
cond. 740·446·9416
NEW AND USED STEEL 14)937-4811
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
I H \ \"1'1)I{ I \lit 1\
91 Dodge Caravan LE,
Angl e.
For
Concrete,
loaded, one owne r, 86K,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
to
AIITOS
$2,000, 740-949·2481 or
Grating
For
Drains,
740·992-6145 leave mes·
,
FORSAU;
Driveways &amp; WaJ..kway~. L&amp;L
sage.
Scrap Metals Op en Monday.

24 Swerve

1

.
o!o A K &lt;I .I

• Rcpluce m c nt

UnconctltiOnal lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

"' A l

ft

~ oulh

Siding • New Garugcs

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

t A K fl l

r,

• q ~'

BUILDERS IDC.

HOME

eventl

55 Happy

•

BISSELL
New

15 Worker 'siO

VK &lt;JJ!Iunr,

992-5479

Sherk
hobllol
Worm·ur.
LOUO In 0
Tummy
mutcloe
Ktnnel
tound
Folnftrecao
Soaohoro
Archeologlol'o lind
Baooblll

18 Lot borrow
17 Mochu
Plcchu
builder
18 "Grand -"
20 Fabio wrllor
21 Clold Medal
org,
23 Common
alimont

• _,I ll H

Jeff Warner Ins.

Independent Medicaid Pro•vid,erl&lt;
(LPN) available for
11P-7Ashilt in
Meigs, Gallia and Athens Co.

5 :l 2

WU:M.AJNS
4-0eT IN TIMr; ....

Cellular

13

t$. K&lt;~I II7H4

-•f!. ~;,vr;,

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-1148-2217 .

304-458-1667

r

r

A 7 I
• 7 ]

Sl~ l f

StUillQC

Blind Stitch, Single f!leedie ,
Upholstery, Surging &amp; Leather

1,------_.J

i"~------·I

Hill s

38
,
Htllum or
39
neon
40
Camp bado 41
Boring tool
Cockney'o 42
optlmlom?
Brickell
44
of pop
47
" The
51
Wonderer" •
olngor
52

I I I I
&gt;

J

-- - for

O Com~
let• the ch uckle Quoted
by filling In Ike miu lng wcrd1

ygv d11v11lop from 1tep No. 3 below.

&amp; fi~INTl-tf'I iFNUMilH~ED

I.E Tr EQ S IN

~(JIJA R ES

t\

~

U N 5C RM.~lllE

ABOV E LHTEilS

TO G[ l li.NSW( R
S CUM_.~ ETS

"NS,ERS

/ndtgO -Fe 1,, t . Limbo - u ngm . NOT DOIN.G
Granny always says tha t if yo u don 't have a good
reaSOn fo r doing SOmething ' YOU have th e beSt reaSOn
fo r NOT DO ING it

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

AIOflfl AntJ OUI 0 11 fl limb
GEMINI (May 2t -June 20)- There'&amp; a
ci1Rnr.e todny ttl ai your m ate could be
vahorn ent ly opposed to a 1, tSlWe IJhoul
wllitl1 you leo I s1ror1Qiy ·r o avoid A mttlor
clnstl . both ot you must be pre pared to
corn1 Jromise.
CANCER (,June 21·July 22)- Our ethiC·
tlvllnftst'l Is usuAlly compromised aubttan·
tlally Wilen we sproM our&amp;e ivfls tuo thin,
wh ich could be your cue toda y. Malee
qual ity your produc tion goat, no! qu&amp;nlily
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You llnow without b8tng told lhftt It Is much wiser 1o use
your tunc:ts to pay of1 old obligations before
Incurring any new on•s . Try to keep a
Ugl11er rein on your expenditu re~ today.

•
Classlfleds

Ciet

Fast
Results

,

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September a,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2003

Sooners remain Bearcats rout East Carolina;·4Q-3
on top, Nebraska
returns to Top 25
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI (AP) - Quarterback
Gino Guidugli spent most of his time
handing off and taking off as Cincinnati
rolled up 40 points.
A trend? He hopes not.
Guidugli tied the school record for
career touchdown passes, but was little
more than a middleman Monday as the
Bearcats ground out a 40-3 victory over
East Carolina.
Guidugli, a junior who holds many of
Cincinnati's passi ng records, had as many
runs as completions in the first half, when
the Bearcats (1-0) pulled ahead 21-0.
"I'd rather throw the ball, but if that's
what it calls for and what the game plan
is, I'm willing to do it," said, Guidugli,
who was 13-of-25 for 121 yards. ''We
didn't even open up. We didn't show anything in the ~assing game."
.
They didn t have to. The running game
was so good that there was no need to
throw.
Ri.chard Hall ran for 117 yards and the
Bearcats· first touchdown. setting the
tone. Derick Eddi ngton added 138 yards
and a touchdown after Cincinnati took
control.
''One time I came to the sideline and
said, ' I haven't seen holes this big since
high school,"' said Hall, who initially
enrolled at Ohio State but transferred to
Cincinnati . " It was a big shock to me that

The AP .Top 25

Nebraska moved back
into the Top' 25 for the first
time in nearly a year
Monday. earning the No.
23 ranking following a 177 seaso n-opening win
against No. 24 Oklahoma
State.
"I think it is important,"
Cornhuskers coach Frank
Solkh said. " It' s something that this program has
been all about, being in the
Top 25 and being a top
footba ll team in the country."
In the firs t regular season
Associated Press college
football poll. the biggest
movement was caused by
Southern California's . 23-0
wi n at Auburn. The
Trojans earned si~ firstplace votes from the sports
.writers and broadcasters
on the AP panel and moved
up four spots to No. 4.
Auburn plummeted II
places to No. 17.
The top three teams
remai ned the same, with
Oklahoma at No . I fol lowed
by
defending
national champion Ohio
State and Miam1. Michigan
dropped one spot to No. 5
aft er beating Central
Michigan 45-7.
The USA Today/ESPN
coaches poll had the same
top three as the AP poll.
Texas was fourth and USC
fifth in the coaches poll.
Nebraska's run of being
in 34R consecutive polls
ended· Sept. 29, 2002, fol lowi ng a 36- 14 loss to
Iowa
State.
The
Cornhuskers went on to
lose seven games last year.
-~· their worst season since
196 1.
1
Ne braska began this seaj son outside the Top 25 for

Rec
1. Oklahoma (30J 1-0
2. Ohio St. (25)
1.()
3. Miami (2)
1·0
4. Southern Cal (6) 1-0
5. Michigan (2)
1·0
6. T8)185
1-0
7. Kansas St.
2·0

·

P!s
1,566
1.538
1.482
1,389
1,351
1,302
1,241

Pvs
1
2
3
8
4
5
7

B. Georgia

t-O 1,135 n

9. Virginia Tech
10. Pittsburgh
11 . Florida St.
12. Tennessee
13, LSU
14. N.C. State
15. Virginia
16. Purdue
17. Auburn
18. Wisconsin
19. Notre Dame
20. Arizona St.
21 Florida
22. Washington
23. Nebraska
24. Colorado
25TCU

1-0
0·0
1-0
1-0
1·0
1·0
1·0
0-0
0.1
1-0
()..0
0-0
1·0
o- 1
1·0
1-0
0-0

1,094
996
930
883
828
815
641
533
524
512
507
309
268
222
204
188
131

9
10
13
12
14
16
18
19
6
21
20
22
17

25

Others receiving votes: Oregon 51.
78, Alabam ~ 77, Maryland 66,
Penn St. 62. N. lllinois 43. Missouri
36, Iowa 30, Minnesota 28, TeXas
A&amp;M 24, Arkansas 18. Oregon 18,
Mississippi 15, Bo i s~ St. 11 .
Arizona 7, Colorado St. 7, Air Force

team that went 7-7 last season, including
a 42:26 victory over the Pirates that
clinched a share of the Conference USA
title and a trip to the New Orleans Bowl.
The Bearcats went 59 yards - all on
the g_round - to set the tone on their second possession, with Hall scoring standing up on fourth-and-goal from the I. An
interception then set up Tedric Harwell's
!-yard touchdown run.
Cincinnati went 90 yards in 12 ~lays
late in the half, with Guidugli throwmg a
29-yard touchdown pass to tight end
Dennis Hart. Guidu~li faked a handolf to
Hall, and Hart got tree behind the coverage for an easy score with 23 seconds left.
Guidugli, who set most of Cincinnati's
single-season passing records last year.
tied the school record with his 39th career
touchdown pass. He also ran eight times
for 45 yards overal l, often surprising the
Pirates on draw plays.
The Pirates managed · only two first
downs in the first half, one of them on a
Ilea-flicker. Robinson was 7-of- 11 for 70
yards and an interception before l:l!ling
replaced by Paul Troth late in the third

'\

... , \

...

\,

grass field at Paul Brown
Stadium [\lid went only 29-of49 on field goal attempts in
his first two seasons.
The Bengals drafted Travis
Dorsch in the fourth round
last year to replace Rackers.
Instead,. Rackers had a better
training camp and Dorsch
was kept as insurance .in case
Rackers failed during the season.
He didn 't. Rackers made 15
of his 18 field goals. and
Dorsch got into on ly one
game - as a punter. Dorsch

Th11nk You
Commi!l!lionet

Monday.
Etherton (2-2) didn ' t allow
a hit until the fifth inning .
The Brewers loaded the
bases with one out and
scored on a sacrifice fly by
pinch-hitter Mark Smith.

fot buying roy Cornrnerciql
l=eedet ~teet qt
the

Put Your Special Greeting In Our

Co11nty !=air.

"Grandparents Are Special"

-Jarnes Will

Edition

zoog Meig~

1x3 With Photo

Furniture
Carpet
Wallpaper
Insurance

•
•
•
•

Appliances
Electrical
Plumbing
And More ...

.

at 992-2156

111., 111 11 \ol,,,,

INSIDE
• Family Medicine. See
Page A3
:. Hospice nurses help
~ilies through tough .
times. See Page A6

STAFF REPORT

news@mydaitysentinel.com
LE~ANON
TWP.
Three juv eniles riding a
four-wheeler had an accident
at 12:40 p.m. Sept. I on a
dirt road in the Portland
area . Accordin~; to State
Highw ay Patrol reports,

minor -injuries were sustained by all three persons .
Two of lhc lhree juve niles
were transported to Jal'kson
General Memorial Hospital
and were released soon after.
The third was flnwn to
Cahell -Hu111ington Hospital
and reported ly will be
released Wednesday.
.

Bicentennial baskets
•
Detello on POl• A2

ssoo

l..oTI'ERIES
•

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 4-8-4
Pick 4 day: 9-6-8-o
Pick 3 night: o-o-9
Pick 4 night: 1-3-Q-8
Buckeye 5:2-17-25-28-31

West Vuginia
Dally 3: 4-5-3
Dally 4: 6·2·3-Q
Cash 25: 1·7·2D-21·22-25

Evan Bryce Rodgers

m love you Grandma

Larger Ad Available
If Needed

&amp; Grandpa Rodgers L'

2x3 ¥~s2ooo

INDEX
SEcnoNs Calendars
2

DEADLINE: Thursday, September 5, 2002

Humane Society provides county with truck

12 PAGES

A3
82-4

~--------------------------------------~
Send or bring your photo to:

Classifieds
Comics

Bs

The Daily Sentinel

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Movies

As
As

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

Dave or Brenda

1\t, ,l

Juveniles injured .in
four-wheeler accident

"~~ ~

Evan Bryce

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ....

''""

Schatz said Meigs County
Dog Warden Bill Dyer found
a bruised, bleeding golden
retriever by the side of the
, mad a few years ago.
"M ikey's" bal·k leg was badly
injured and its pelvis wus broken. Dyer mude a phone cu ll.
" Dyer wi ll stund on his
head and walk backwards 1o
save a dog ," said Ambrose.
Mikey was rus hed to
surgery and aft er months of
rehabilitation is now a perfcctly happ y health y dog.
Ambrose and Schatz pay for
any fond or medical care out
of their own pocket. Schatz
estimates thm the dogs cat
more thun 75 pounds of dog
fond per week .· Schatz said
Wal-Mart donates bugs of dog
food when it can to help oul. Pamela Schatz feeds a group of dogs who were once abandoned, neglected or abused by their former owners. (J . Miles
Layton)
Please SH Dop, A5

flood w8tch tod1y, HI: 70., Low: 101

Rodgers

•
•
•
•

Page AS
• R. Gifford Beaver
• Patricia Potter ·
- ~ Stuart Matson

Ambrose and Sch&lt;liZ have
rescued &lt;md found homes for
almost 800 dogs in the past
five years. They have traveled hundreds ol m1les to
pick up u stray or drop off &lt;I
dog at a new home.
One golden retriever
Ambrose cared lor hut! never
had a family tn love. It was
chained up outsifle. The on ly
contact the dog had with people was when the owners
would wme out once a day to
. feed the dog table scraps. The
dog's chain was too small
and cut into it's neck. The
poor dog was terri lied of peopie. Ambrose took her time
putting the leash on the dog.
After 15 minutes, the dog
trusted Ambrose enough to
follow her into her van .
''Any dog I can save, I will
save," she said.

WEATHER

Grandpa &amp;
Grandma
Rodgers
I ® You!

Supplement to:
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel

'1\~l~

1x2 Without Photo

$1~

will be here Th~rsday, September 25

jtayton@ mydaitysentinet.com
TUPPERS PLAINS ,_ A
dog's life is not always tilled
with treats. naps and ball. .
Janet Ambrose and Pamela
Schatz r~scue dogs who· have
been neglected, abused or
abandoned.
When Morsy was discovered, she · was one huge
manure-encrusted matted up
dog" said Ambrose. The starving skinny pooch was in pain
because its thick white fur was
tangled up. Today, Mopsy 's fur
is white us snow and she hus put
on a few pounds.
" I love animals," said
Ambrose. "I love dogs. I feel
that by rescuin¥ them from
needless death ts my reason
for being on earth."

OBITUARIES

And De~erve Recognition!

JIM ~HUT~

\1\;]j~,

BY J. MILES LAYTON

SeePageB6

son when Kasay missed 14
games at Carolina because of
a hernia. He was 13-of-18
under Panthers special teams
coach Darrin Simmons, who
joined head coach Marvin
Lewis in Cincinnati this year.
The Bengals also signed
runn in~ back Ray Jackson,
defenstve tackle Langston
Moore, ce nter Thatcher
Szalay' and receiver Kevin
Walter to their practice squad,
leaving them with one opening. All four we re waived in
the team's cuts on Sunday.

'I!

• Marshall hopes to eliminate
turnovers against Tennessee.

East Carolina lost top runner An Brown
to a knee injury .last month, and didn't
have mv effective replacement. Marvin
Townes carried 15 times for 36 yards, but
had few holes to exploit.

was released Sunday after
losing a com~etition for the
punting job wtth Nick Harris.
Rackers made all three of
·his atte m~ in a preseason
game agamst Detroit, then
missed one in each of the last
two exhibitions. The Bengals
had major problems just getting kicks off - Harris fum·
bled four snaps in preseason
and Dorsch mishandled
another.
Graham went 6-of-8 on
field goal tries for Buffalo in
200 l. then 11lled in last sea-

.... )

Lucky dogs·cheat death to find good homes.

I

CINCINNATI (AP) ·Kicker Nei l Rackers was
released by the Bengals on
Monday, ending his career in
Cincinnati with another surprising twist.
The Bengals replaced him
with
Shayne
Graham,
claimed off waivers from
Carolina.•Graham lost a preseason competition with John
Kasay for the Panthers' kicking job.
The Bengals also waived
defensive end Greg Scott and
added linebacker Keyon
Whiteside, who was waived
by lndianapol is.
Rackers was a six th-round
draft pick in 2000, replacing
the popular Doug Pelfrey. He
struggled on the chewed-up

\ \ , :) '\ 1 ' \ ) \ \

SPORTS

Bengals ·cut kicker Neil Rackers

the firs t time since 1'!69.
"It 's great to get back
in," Solich said. "1 think it
was obvious to everyone.
including ourselves, that
we had to prove ourselves
to get bal·k in. Now we
have to show that we
deserve to be in there by
playing well."
Oklahoma has 30 of the
65 first-place votes and
1,566 points. The Sooners
are 28 points ahead of
Ohio State, which won its
15th
straight
game
Saturday, 28-9 over thenNo. 17 Washington and has
25 firsts .
Miami has two firstplace votes, USC has six
lind No. 5 Michigan has
the remaining two.
The rest of the Top 10 is
Texas,
Kansas State,
Georgia, Virginia Tech and
Pittsburgh.

- 2003 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION

• Hardware
• Paint
• Construction
• Banks

' \

qu;~ner.

Sunday, September 7, 2003
~

-

5, Hawaii 4, Washington St. 4,

Oklahoma St. 2. New Mexico 1.

Reds edge Brewers, 5-4
MILWAUKEE (AP) Tim Hummel, Ryan · Freel
and Wily Mo Pena hit solo
ho me runs to back · Seth
Ethenon's strong pitching as
the Cincinnati Reds beat the
M iI wa ukee ' Brewers 5-4

they were blocking that well . I didn't have
to make any of their defensive linemen
miss."
East Carolina (0-1) had a dreadful
debut under John Thompson, who signed
on as the Pirates· 18th head coach on Dec.
20. Junior quarterback Desmond
Robinson was erratic in his tirst career
start, and an offensive line that was supposed to be the Pirates' strength - live
senior starters - got manhandled.
"They dominated the line of scrimmage
the whole game," Robinson said. "It was
a rough day totally on offense."
Thompson. a defensive coordinator at
seven schools including LSU, Arkansas
and Florida, couldn't get his defense in
sync against · the Bearcats' no-huddle
approach.
The Pirates also were penalized twice
for roughing the passer on third-down
incompletions by Guidugli , sustaining
drives.
"There 's a lot of things we've got to get
so much better on." Thompson said. "We
got it stuck to us pretty good today. We
didn't do a~~thing all day to create any,
momentum.
East Carolina, which went 4-8 last season, lost its opener for the I Oth time in the
last 13 years. The Pirates' next two games
are agamst West Virginia and Miami .
Cincinnati returns 10 starters from a

Couch accepts new role
with Browns, Bt

Clarett may miss entire
season, Bt

Obituaries

Child Ds N a m e - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - Greeting--------------------

Sports
Weather

1 Must B.e Prepaid ¥' MC &amp; Visa Accepted

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

Bt-2, 6
A2

© aoos Ohio V• Uey Publlohl111 Co.

I

J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinal.com
BY BRIAN

POMEROY - A pickup
truck purchased by the
Meigs . Coun ty Humane
Society will be transferred t~&gt;
the county for use by the
Meigs County Dog Warden.
At their meeti ng on
Tuesday, county commissioners accepted title to the 2002
Chevrolet S- i0 pickup, on the
condition that the county con-

tinue to employ a dog warden. The S-1 0 truck will
replace a 1984 pickup now '
being used hy the dog warden
under the same terms.
The commi ssioners also
agreed to return the truck to
the humane society in the
event that the dog warden is
no longer funded through the
county.
Commissioners also discussed a request from Rohert
and Pam Price, asking thai

all but 1,240 feet of Price
Road in Oli ve Township be
vacated. The request was
referred to Engin!!Cr Eugene
Triplett. who will set the
mat.ter for a public viewing.
Commissioners met yesterday instead of Thu rsday
due to this week's Morgan's
Raid Re-enactment and Ohi o
Bicentennial celebration.
Present were Commissi01~ers
Jim Sheets. Jeff Thornton
and Mick Davcnpm1.

You can receive one of these beautiful bicentennia) baskets
simply by being one of the first 100 participants in the cos·
turned promenade from gazebo to gazebo at Saturday· s bicen·
tennial celebration 1n Pomeroy. The promenade wilt beg1n at
11:30 a.m. at the upper gazebo. Here Annie Chapman.
Pomeroy Merchant Association's observance chairman. works
on the baskets which wilt contain a variety of gift items. There
is no cha~e to participate . (Charlene Hoeflich)

Holzer Medical Center salutes the

Jacluon-Gallla Parent SuM111It
Saturday, September 20
9:00 am - 2:30 pm • University of Rio Grande · Wood Hall

Guest Speaker: Loyal Jones - Appalachian Humoris f

MEDICAL CENTER
Discove1· the Holzel' Di/.{CI'ence

Speciat programs and activities for teenage girls ages 12 · 17
Altend and gain skills for parenting in ioday'• world.
lnleractive workshops wilh-prolessionals • Free child core • Lunch will be provided
Pre·;.,gislraiion is required. Registralion deadline is 9/12/03
For more informo~on or lo
col/(740} 446-7866

www .holzer .org

••

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