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                  <text>Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 18,2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Pomeroy

Eastern takes
down Fed Hock, Bt

Kent

Herd, Pm.ett prepare
for Roberson, B8

Boogie
• Kent Boogie, Phil
and the Thrill and the
Front Porch Republic
will play at the Court
Grill at 9 p.m. Saturday
night. There will be a $5
cover charge. For more
information call 9926524.

McArthur

-.t~ll'\1 "'· \~,l

Air

Reedsville
Golf
tournament
• The annual Oho
River Bear Open disc
golf tournament will be
held Saturday and
Sunday at the Forked
Run State Park.
Disc golf is played
over a course with players competing to put
their discs into baskets
' that serve as the "golf'
· holes. Participants are
expected from around
the region.
For more information
call the park office at
740-378-6206.

\.,,

mrussell@ mydaily1ribune.com

0BITUARIFS

CHESHIRE - Residents
living just outside the
Cheshire village limits have,
over the past few months,
watched their neighbors and
friends leave the small town
one-by-one, taking with
them badly needed tax revenue for programs within the
village.
Several residents in the
area have a pian they hope
will help keep the village
going - annexation.
"Right now we're operating on a severely-reduced
budget," Village Mayor Jim
Rife said. "Budget-wise
we 're OK for at least a year,

BY MIWSSIA RUSSELL

Festival
• A festival, sponsored by the Hill Billies
4-H Club, will take
place lit the White
Church
CommunitY
Building at 5 p.m.
Saturday.

A parade will be held at
HOEFLICH~MYDAILYSENTINEL . COM
noon Saturday following
POMEROY - Numerous the opening ceremonies to
displays and demonstra- begin at II :30 a.m. The
tions, contests galore, and
entertainment
song and dance entertain- afternoon
ment will be featured at the scheduled included the
United
Town and Country Expo to Rocksprings
be staged at the Rock Methodist Church and Bill .
Springs Fairgrounds Crane at I :30 p.m.; the
Saturday and Sunday.
Belles &amp; Beaus Square
The free event will get Dance Club at 2:30 p.m.;
underway at 10 a.m.
Saturday, wrap up for the Craig Harrison and Allison
day at 6 p.m., resume with a Rose at 3:30 and the Meigs
church service at I 0 a.m. on Senior Cloggers at 4:30
Sunday and close out at 5 p.m.
p.m. It's a program geared
Sunday's entertainment
to provide something for
schedule
includes a church
everyone in the family provided by local residents and service at 10 a.m. Big Bend
businesses.
Cloggers at I p.m. the River
The emphasis is on pro- Bend Community Band at
moting past and present I :30
p.m.
Dwight
achievements, while giving Icenhower, Elvis impersona perspective on the future
for local business including ator, at 2:15 p.m. and 3:05
agriculture, along with pro- p.m.
moting the activities and
Antique tractor games and
talents of local residents.
a kiddie pedal pull will take
All-day activities on both place at I :30 p.m. and the
days will include a classic
car drive in, antique car dis- auction of wood sculptures
plays, a petting zoo, local will be at 2 and 3 p.m.
commerc1al
exhibits, · Announcement of the
exhibits of crops, vegeta- people's choice awards in
bles and flowers, broom quilts, scarecrows, antique
making,
wagon
rides,
wildlife mount display, tractors, container plants
putt-putt golf and a craft and wildlife mounts will be
market.
held at 3:45 p.m.

By Charlene Hoeflich

Rio Grande
Open

Horse Show
·

• An open horse show
will be held at Bob
Evans
Farms, Rio
Grande beginning at 9
a.m., on Sept. 27-28.
Admission is free. This
event is sponsored by the
American Quarter Pony
Association.
For more information,
: please call (740)2868964 or (740)286-8035.

.Fun
for kids
• ·Christ Church is
offering tree soup, sandwiches, books, and fun
for kids age 2 to 18,
every Saturday from II
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
church located on Main
St.

Gallipolis

Band to perfonn locally
RODNEY Cherry
Ridge will perform · at
Rodney United Methodist
Church at 10 a.m. on
Sunday, Sept. 21.
The Cherry Ridge Band
evolved from a group of
friends getting together to
share
their
common
hobby and love of music .
The group would get
to¥ether and play on
Fnday nights. Friends
would stop by and soon
requests for the group to
play at various functions
started to roll in. The
group plays bluegrass and
older classic country
music, as well as much
requested gospel music
programs. Cherry Ridge
has appeared at many·
local churches as well as
the bean dinners , and
many Bob Evans Farms
functions, Senior Citizen
Center, andat many other
gatherings, reunions, etc,
through! the area.
The group consists of
Seaford Jordan on Guitar
and many of the lead and
harmony vocals . Seaford
is also an outstanding
pedal steel guitar player
and when the program
leans more toward a country music flavor he
switches to that instrument. Seaford is joined on
the vocals by his wife
Bonnie and Linda Turner,
who also sings many of
the lead and harmony
parts and plays several

instruments.
· Randy
Callihan plays banjo as
well as guitar and is
beginni,ng to learn the
steel guitar.
· The newest member of
the group is Orlen
Brumfield who is a very ,
accomplished -bass player
who played for many
years in the Columbus
area . Rounding out the
C
group is Stuart Me omas,
a very fine bluegrass mandolin player. Stuart also
performs with another
group , but rejoins Cherry
Ridge regularly schedule
permitting. Most of the
group started playing in
their teens, which means
collectively
there . is
between 150 to 200 years
of pickin' . and singing
experience within the
group
·
The glue that holds the
group together is the common love of music, and
the appreciation the community has shown by
allowing them to share
their hobby. Cherry Ridge
is frequently joined by
close friends, Donnie
Boggs and Rick Saunders
on some of the country
music programs.

Bark in
the
park

Page AS .

• The 140th annual
Emancipation
Celebration is scheduled
Friday through Sunday
in Gallipolis.
Friday's events include a
"Chautauqua Movement"
performance at 7 p.m. at
the Ariel Theatre. Actors
will portray abolitionist
Frederick Dougalss and
"Stage Coach" Mary
Fields.
Activities shift to the
Gallia County Fairgrounds
Saturday and Sunday.
Festivities include the
Emancipation
Queen
contest at II a.m.
Saturday. Events begin at
10:30 a.m Saturday and
10 a.m. Sunday.
The 5th Regiment,
United States Colored
Troops will conduct reenactments Saturday and
Sunday.

Come on over to Bob's

but we' re Hiking it one
month at a time."
--several houses just outside
the village limits, many
located just across the street
from homes that are in within the village, are being considered for annexation.
The annexation will also
include the Kyger Creek
Middle School.
If successful, the village
will end up with the same
number of resjdents as
before, approximately 150.
Several landowners are
passing around a petition,
hoping to receive signatures
from at least 51 percent of
residents.
• From there, the petition will
be presented to the Gallia

1 ,\, 1\ ll ,\d,nh...,tllllll l l \1•111

County f=om missioners for
approval.•
The benefits .are two-fold,
according to Cheshire resident Paul Stinson, who lives
on Roush Lane. He pointed
out that the new residenls
could help keep the village
going, and · in turn, reap the
benefits of what being part of
a village has to offer.
"There are several advantages to annexation," he said.
"If we can, in fact , gel
annexed, we will have police
protection, village road maintenance, and other services."
But, Stinson said, he is
mostly looking forward to
having a government "of the
people, by the people, and
for the people."

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

RUTLAND Award-winning
writer, Cathy Lentes of Rutland, is
helping Ohio celebrate 200 years of
literary heritage at a Literary ·
Homecoming in Columbus this weekend.
Lentes' poetry is part of a special
exl!ibit, "Ohio Connections," which
opened today at Thurber House and
will also be included in a bicentennial
publication of the same name.
On Saturday, Len1es will be one of
the featured poets reading d)lfing an
Open House at tire Ohioana Library.
Poets reading ha~e work incl!!ded in
two recent books, I Have My Own
Cathy Lentes ·
Song For II : Modern Poems of Ohio
(University of Akron Press) and 0 roots in Meigs County.
Taste And See: Food Poems (Bottom
• "Approaching Chester, Ohio,"
Dog Press Release date in October).
winner of the 2000 Appalachi an
Saturday evening, Lentes will be Poetry Award_ from Now And Then
honored along with other authors from Magazine and the Center for
Ohio, at an invitation only dinner host- Appalachian Studies and Services, and
ed by Governor and Mrs. Taft.
included in the book, I Have My Own
Three of Lentes' poems to be includ- Song For It, speaks of a November
ed in the Literary Homecoming have evening when "the old courthouse/

• Church calendar. See
Page A2

WEATHER
MomlnC aha~, HI: 70., Low: 5011

Detail• on Pace A&amp;

,.

This home, located on Roush Lane, would be part of the
annexation into the village of Cheshire if a group of local residents are successful. (Millissia Russell) ·

windows flamed, then flickered/ as if
lit by candle glow."
• "A Life In Ohio, " provides a
tongue-in-cheek look at life in the
buckeye state. "I never intended to live
my whole life in Ohio./ ... but here l
am in mid-life/- still writing of Ohio's
wooded hills,/ ... and perfectly happy
to watch each night/ as the curving serpent of the Ohio River/ swallows the
golden sun."
• "All The Little Schools, " marks
the recent closing of the Meigs Local
elementary schools in preparation for
the opening of the consolidated building. Rutland, in particular, is highlighted. "Parents, ,teachers, and children/ wander in and out from the
bright rooms/ of the last Open House./
Chimney swifts circle above."
In addition to Lentes reading and her
work being part of the Thurber House
exhibit and published in "Ohio
Connections," one of Lentes' poems
will be printed in the fall issue of The
Ohioana Quarterly as a sampling of
the Literary Homecoming weekend.
Lentes' poems, essays, and other
writings appear in many literary journals, books, and magazines.

sentenced
in fraud
case
BY BRIAN

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 8·8-9
Pick 4 day: Q-3-0-1
Pick 3 night: 5-8-4
Pick 4 night: 6-7-7-9
Buckeye 5: 2·3-32-35-36

BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

jlay1on@mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - Parking
ticket offenders in Pomeroy
will be extended immunity
from the additional late
penalty until Oct. 31.
Ordinarily when the two
hour time limit on a parking

West VIrginia
Daily 3: 4-7-5
Daily 4: 6-9-2·0
Cash 25: 5-11-12-13·18·24

meter expires, a person illegally parked gets a $2 parking ticket. If this ticket is
not paid within 48 hours,
the !me doubles to $4.
At mayor Victor Young
Ill's suggestion, village
council voted to drop the
additional fine which doubles the penalty until Oct. 31

2 SECI10NS - t6 PAGES

~2,6

B4-6
B7

A3
A4
A2

As
AS

As
B1-4,8

A6

© 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.

KILL DEVIL HILLS,
N.C. (AP) Hurricane
Isabel plowed into North
Carolina's Outer Banks with
I00 mph w.inds and pushed
its way Thursday up the
Eastern Seaboard, weakening to a tropical storm by
evening but not before
swamping roads and knocking out power to more than
2.6 million people.
Isabel was blamed for at
least nine deaths. Seven people were killed in sformrelatcd traffic accidents, one
death was blamed ·on a

falling tree and a utility
employee was electrocuted.
The storm that had once
threatened 160 mph winds
and a 12-foot storm surge
rolled in around midday just
south of isolated Ocracoke
Island with a 5-foot surge
and· gusts that rattled plywood boards spray-painted
"Bring it on lzzy."
"A 101 of trees are down there's one down across the
garage," Rudy Austin said as
he looked out on his yard in
Ocracoke surrounded by a
knee-deep soup of sea water

for anyone who pays their parking tickets. He said the
back parking tickets. Young police department will be
and Pomeroy Police Chief strictly enforcing the two
Mark Proffitt said applying hour parkin(llimit. On Nov.
, immunity to the late fees I , the pol1ce department
might encourage people to will contact the Ohio Driver
pay unpaid parking tickets.
of Motor Vehicl es office to
Proffitt said there are a report anyone with any
few repeat offenders and unpaid parking tickets.
more than 300 old unpaid
Please see Late. AS

and debris. "There's a lot of
stuff floating around: boardsand buoy s and boxes and
young'uns ' plaslic toys."
The storm downed trees,
snarled air traffic and knocked
out electricity - more than 2
million customers were without power in North Carolina
and southeastern Virginia
alone. More than 430,000
.customers in Maryland,
78,000 in the District of
. N
CoIurn b.18 and 10,000 m
ew
Jersey also lost P'?wer. . .
In North Carolma, a uuhty
employee was electrocuted

Trying to

~EED

POMEROY - A Syracuse
woman has gone to prison for
falsely billing the Department
of Job and Farni ly Services
for child care services.
Sandra Carnahan Hubbard
was transported Monday to
the Ohio State Reformatory
for Women in Marysville for
an 11-month sentence on a
charge of tampering with
records, a fifth-degree felony .
Hubbard was originally
indicted on four counts, including theft, falsification and
deti11uding creditors, but entered
a guilty plea to the charge of
tampering with records. Her
motion to later. withdraw that
plea wa' denied by Judge Fred
W. Crow III, and she has since
appealed her conviction.
Accm;sJing
to
Michael
Swi sher, Director of the
Department of Job and Family
Services. Hubbard provided care
in her home for children eligible
for publicly-funded day care.
ll1e service is provided through
a number of local daycare
providers tor parents served by
the DJFS who are either working or seeking job training.
Swisher said the agency
=i ved •m anonymous tip that
Hubbard was overbilling the
agency for day mre time provided, and the case was referred to
law enforcement for prosecution.
Specifically, Swi sher said,
lhe state delermined that
Hubbard was submitling
invoices for day care services
not provided to agency clients.
.. Because we are caretakers
of public dollars, we mu st
ensure that those dollars are
used to provide care for children in our eligible families,''
Swisher said . "PartJof our job
is take it to law enforcement
when that's not the case ...
According to Swisher, the
agency spends up to $75.(XXJ per
month on providing day care for
children in qualil)ling families.
La.'t year, the DJFS spent $1.~
million on those child care cost&gt;.

Isabel pounds N.C., leaves 2.6 million without power

INDEX

J.

breed @mydailysentinel.com

Grace period extended for parking ticket offenders;
Late penalty fees dropped until Oct. 31

Lo'ITERIFS

For All Your Fall Planting
And Decorating Needs!

...! IJI) ;

hoe II ich@ mydailysentinel.com

· INSIDE

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith •Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

"' ] J•JJ\1 1\l R i tJ

Local writer part of Bicentennial Homecoming Woman

• Janice Hendrick
• Eleanor Logan
• Sherman Buskirk

• The 2nd Annual
Bark in the Park will take
place from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. Saturday at the
Gallipolis City Park.
There will be fun and
games for leashed .dogs
and their human friends.
There will be face paint-·
ing, refreshments, city.
police K-9 search and
attack demonstrations
and much more!

Emancipation
Celebration

]],]Jl\\

• OSU's good luck at an
end? See Page 81

Pt. Pleasant
Elvis impersonator Dwight Icenhower will have two performances Sunday at Expo, one at 2:.15 p.m. and the other at
3:05 p.m. (Charlene Hoeflich)

-,

Cheshire village leaders consider annexation

SPORTS

show
• The Vinton County
air show will be held
Sunday. It is billed as
Ohio's biggest free air
show and will feature
real aerial barnstorming
by classic airplanes
flown by some of the
nation's finest pilots. A
phicken barbecue will be
held in conjunction with
the air show.
in addition to flying,
there will be classic cars,
experimental aircraft,
motorcycles and remote
. controlled
aircraft
demonstrations. There
will be a helicopter
demonstration and skydivers will make jumps
at different times during
the day. A candy drop
from a helicopter will be
held for kids at 3 p.m.
After the show the
pilots from the · Vinton
County
Pilots . and
Boosters Association
will provide plane rides.
The airport is located
five miles north of
McArthur. For more
information call 740357-0268 or leave a
message on the .airport
phone at 740-596-2588

·_.;.

while restoring power, and in
Virginia one person was
killed_by a falling tree . The
storm was also blamed for the
deaths of six motorists in
Virginia and one in Maryland.
Isabel's top sustained wind
eased to around 65 mph by
late evening and was expected to contmue to weaken .
_National Hurncane Cent~r
D1rector :v'ax Mayfield sa1d
fast-movmg Isabel stili
posed a threat because of 1ts
d.1mens1ons
·
- about the s1·ze
of Colorado - and its
Please see Isabel, AS

the Hallit?

"Freedom From Smoking" Cessation Clinic
Meigs County - Monday, September 22 • 6 PM
Pomeroy Library

Crow's Family Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

- OR-

A W IRED WORLD COMPANYN

228 Main St.

Gallia County - Tuesday, September 23 • 6 PM

1/4 mile north of

Pamer.., -Muon Bridge

U.-., ~ Vl'lllnlll
Phone j304) m-5721

. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
J

2400 Eaatem Avenue
Galllpolla, Ohla
Phone (740)448-1711
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Holzer's Tobacco Prevention Center at 2881 State Route 160

1·800·971·5757
''

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover th e Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org

To register or for more information, please call 1740) 446-5940
•

,.

,.

.

,,

...

�FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Church calendar
Revivals &amp;
Homecomings
Sept. 6-20
LEON - Revtval at Shtloh
Commumty Church. 7 p.m daily.
Pastor Sampy Hart wtll be
preachtng. Spectal singing each
mght
Sept. 12-21
POINT PLEASANT - Revtval
at Wesleyan Holiness Church,
7.30 p.m ntghtly. Evangelist:
Paul Draggoo Smgers The
Draggoo Famtly. For transportation call 675-5454.
Sept. 21
POMEROY - Mt. Hermon
United Brethren in Chnst
Church
wtll
hold
1ts
Homecoming
Sunday
Sunday School begtns at 9 30
wtth the worshtp serv1ce at
10:30 A carry-1n dtnner wtll
follow the servtce. Spectal
Singtng wtll begm at 1 30.
Everyone ts welcome
POMEROY -Zion Church
of Chrtst on Ohio 143 will hold
homecommg servtces on
Sunday at the church The
potluck meal wtll be at 12:30
p m. and the program wtll be
at 2 p.m Everyone ts tnvtted.
POMEROY - Revtval servtces will be held at 7:30 p.m.
through Sunday at the
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel State
Route 143, Pomeroy. Lloyd
Campbell ts the evangelist
The Rev Charles McKenzie,
pastor, mvttes the public
There wtll be spectal smgmg

each evenmg
Sept. 25-27
GALLIPOLIS FERRY- Faith
Gospel Church, 7 p m. mghtly,
w1th J1m Franklin, host of the
WEMM radton program, "Songs
m the Ntght " Spectal stngtng
each ntght. Everyone welcome
For more Information, call 6755954.
Sept. 27, continuing
LEON Mamlla Chapel
Church , starttng Sept. 27 and
contmumg, 7:30 p.m ntghtly
wtth Evangelist Cletus Price
Stnging nightly
Sept. 29-0ct. 2
GALLIPOLIS - Fall revtval, 7
p.m mghtly, preachtng by the
Rev Carl Ward and the Rev
Sampy Hart. Special smgtng
each night
Sept. 29-0ct. 6
LEON
Yauger
Communtty Church . 7 p m
nightly,
wtth
evangeltsts
Denms and Jack Parson
Special stngmg each mght.
Oct. 5-8
MIDDLEPORT - Revtval
servtces wtll be held at the
Middleport
First
Baptist
Church, Oct. 5-8. The Rev
Roger Duncan, pastor of the
Ftrst Freewtll Bapttst Church
of Tampa, Fla. , will be evangelist for the revival He is the
son of Buren and Bonnie
Duncan formerly of Metgs
County. Th e Sunday morntng
servtce wtll be held at 10 15
and all evenmg servtces wtll
be held at 7 p.m. There will be
special music each service

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and
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Department extensions are:

lhe

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Web:
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Sen tinel, 111

The Builder's Qluartet will
stng at the Oct. 8 service.

be
preachtng
at · the
Robertsburg
Community
Church, 7 p.m . Everyone welcome.
POINT PLEASANT
Homecoming at First Church
of the Nazarene, 25th Street
and Mount Vernon Avenue.
Sunday School at 9:45 a.m.,
mormng worship at 10:50
a m , covered dtsh dinner at
noon. Concert at 2 p m. with
Sandy Rtchards and the
Gospelaires
from
Parkersburg.
ADDISON
Sunday
School at Addtson Freewtll
Bapttst Church , 10 a.m.;
preaching servtce, 6 p.m .,
with Rtck Barcus preaching.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY Zton Baptist Church will celebrate tts homecoming wtth
Brother Todd Godby bringtng
the morning message, and
Brother Max Spurlock the
afternoon message. Special
singing.
Wednesday, Sept, 24
GALLIPOLIS
Prayer
meeting, 7 p m , Addtson
Freewill Bapltst Church
Sunday, Sept. 28
GALLIPOLIS
Sunday
school, 10 a.m., preachtng
servtce, 6 p m., With Rtck
Barcus preachtng , Addison
Freewtll Baptist Church
Saturday, Oct. 4
SOUTHSIDE
Benefit
sing for Roger and Enka Bmg,
7 p.m ., Hambnck Church ,
Ltttle 16 Road . Stnging by
Eternity,
The
Gloryland
Believers, The Praise Team,
and others.

Special Services
&amp; Events
Friday, Sept. 19
POINT PLEASANT
Bimonthly Gospel Sing, 7
p m , Church of Christ In
Chnsllan Umon, 206 Main St.,
featunng the Humphreys
Family of Dunbar, W.Va., the
Christian Umon Quartet, the
Mason County Area Gospel
Chotr, and others There will'
also be a bnef memonal servtce to honor all choir members who have passed away.
Doors open at 6 p.m.
Everyone invttedl
GALLIPOLIS FERRY Special musical performance
by The Jody Brown lndtan
Famtly of RotJbtnsville, N.C., 7
p m. , College Htll Church.
Pastor Darrell Johnson welcomes everyone.
Saturday, Sept. 20
ADDISON
Addison
Freewill
Baptist
Church
Sunday school p1cmc, 0 .0 .
Mcintyre Park, 4 p.m.
NEW HAVEN
Leon
Umted Methodist Church's
annual church picnic, 1 p.m.,
Union
Campground.
(Ongtnally scheduled Sept.
27.) Please bnng a covered
dtsh
Sunday, Sept 21
MIDDLEPORT
The
G.racemen Quartet will smg at
10 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sunday
at the Vtctory Bapttst Church
5425 North Second St ,
Mtddleport
MIDDLEPORT - Earthen
Vessels wtll be tn concert at
6.30 p m Sunday at the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, General Hartinger
Parkway. Pastor Allen Mtdcap
invites
the
public
Refreshments wtll be served.
LEON - Erin Grate Will
stng at Eddy Chapel, Greer
Road, 6 p.m .
LEON - Ron Shamblin will

Church time
changes
Sunday, Oct 5
POMEROY
Servtce
times
at the Enterpnse
Umted Methodist Church will
change on Oct. 5. Worshtp
service will be held at 9:30
a.m. and Sunday School at
10·30 a.m.

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month
.. .. . .. . ..'9.95
One year ... ..... .. .•tt9.40
Dally . . . . . . . .. . ... . ..50'
Senior Citizen rates
One month ....... , ...'8.95
One year . . .......... .'96.70

ClaeoJCirc.: Judy Clark, Exl 10

Charlene

Oa11y

Court Slree1, Pomeroy, Ohro
45769

Editor C ha rlene Hoeflich , Ext 12
Reporter B nan Reed Ext 14
Reporter: J M1les Layton Ext 13

General Manager

Newspaper

AssociatiOn
Postmaster: Send address correc-

News

PageA2

should

rem1t

•••

1n

advance d1rect to The Dally
Sent1nel No subscnptron by marl
areas where home

1n

earner serv1ce

~

IS available

'
" " ~-~

~~~~$)&amp;~··

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks .
'30 15
26 Weeks
'60 00
52 Weeks
'1 1B BO

'

'

Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'50 05
26 Weeks
.'100 1o
52 Weeks
. . '200 20

Friday, September 19,

One of the distinct privileges I have is serving as
chaplam for the Wahama
High School football team
- that and being able to
stand along the sidelines
during the games.
The only concern this year
1s that two of my side line
cohorts are sons M 1ca1ah
and Jamin, who are filhng
various chores in the team
!ramer tradition.
I have made it abundantly
clear to both of them that the
work they do 1s important to
the team Therefore. they
must do thetr work well
But if they are going to
work the sidelines, they also
need to be mmdful ol me. I
do not want to be distracted
needlessly f rom play on the
held because of ca rele ssness
and frivohty on their parts
They are very aware that, i f
necessary, I Will banish them
to the upper regions ot the
home-side stands to Sit with
thetr Momma - an area I
rarely venture myself'
Part of Micaiah 's game
responsibility IS to take care
of the tees. He is supposed
to get the tees to the ktckers
for kickoffs and point -after
attempts. It rather requires
that he pay attention to the
game so that the ktcks are
able to transpire according
to time standards.
During the second quarter
of last Friday's game.
Wahama scored a touchdown, and lhe pomt-after
team lined up for the ktck.
Suddenly, I noticed several of the players lookmg
toward the sideline and gesturing wtth shrugged shoul ders. Despite the din of f an
celebration and band mustc,
the question from the kt cker
wafted to the sidelines,
" Where 's the tee ?"
The next question was
shouted by coaches and
players alike up and down
the line, " Where's Mtcaiah?"
Incredibly, Mtcamh was
standing down at the goal line
where our team had scored.
But, he was clearly not mmdful of the s1tuauon, because
he was talking and laughing
with a friend. As soon as he
saw me heading toward h1m,
he knew the mistake he had
made, and started to run the
tee out to the ktcker.
But, 11 was too late.
Wahama had to take a time

'~

Yl

Ftllowshio
Apostolfc

Rn•er V11 lky
B71 S

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A\( M1ddkpt1r l K ~!' lll K 1m~ll' Ptstor
Sumluy II a Ill WcJrlolla} 7 llll p m
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Ron

Branch

•~ mmunut• l

Apustol il' labl•rnallt Inc.
Lou 1\ Rli 11 11 Nt.W L1 111 ~ Kd ~ullun d

to

Sentu:s Sun 1000 .1 111 &amp; 7

pn1

church ranks are stand 111g
along the sidelines of the
world wtth th e tees of sp tn tual responsthlltty 111 out
hands. not paymg the ne&lt;:cssary attention to the sconng
opportunities. wht ch th e
church should be t ak mg
advantage.
In so many terms. the
chwch 1s charged by God to
engage Itself actively m the
spiritual contest that 1s most
certamly at hand When Chnst
declared that " the gates of hell
shall not prevail against 11,"
the church was gtven the
authority to be 111 the mode of
vtgorous attack agmnst all thc~t
is contrary to God's will.
But the needed mterest is
not there. To the Laodicean
church, Christ termed it,
'Thou art lukewarm."
The redeemed need to better fulfill spmtual responsibility. Do your work we ll It
is tee time 1 It is not time to
take time for a ttme out

I Ron Branch " the pcmor
of the Fauh Bapt1 It Chu n h
in Mason.)

WV,~

Pa~ l nr

Baptist
Mtddllpu rl Pastor RL'\

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Wt•d u~~ti ,L\

f6 years In local business
Rooting &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215

106 Mulberry Ave Pomeroy, OH
740-992-212t
Fax 740.992-2122
Ben H Ewrng
LICensed Embalmer, Funera l

Acts24:16

D1rector

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MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
I Corinthians I Connth1ans I Con11th1ans
I 18-l l
1 1-16
) l·ll

SUNDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY
Ecduaastu
s 1-10

SATURDAY

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Racine, OH

b.m gdt ~ l

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S uud .1 ~

ll"h I \\ lnl

7 40-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for

IO

1 1111p m

I

A

s a nation, the United States is the richest country in the world.

Families butld houses for three that can sleep ten. We warm up
our cars in the winter without leaving the living room Our
trunk opens as if by magic while we are yet halfway across the
parkmg lot, ready to receive our purchases . Why, we call' even take
plc:turu w1th our phon e The list of conveniences ts endless. There is
vet little we cannot buy
hen wh)' are so many of us frustrated, depressed, and unfulfilled?
W e cannot buy peace of mind It is a priceless commodity that is
free, a nd without it, there 1s no lasting joy. Wi t hout the spiritual
elevation that faith In God brings, we trrto numb our fears, often
making life worse. Sometimes we sink ln.&amp;:o despair.
In l Corinthians 4:6-9 we receive the solution. "for It IS God who
said, ' Let light shine out of darkness .we are afflicted en every way,
but not crushed: perpleJted, but not driven to despair; persecuted,

PO Box 683
Pomero Ohto 45769-0683

but not forsaken; struck down, but not destroyed."' John 14:27
summarizes, "Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. h:to not
glvt to you as the world gives."
Tour Heavenly father W&lt;llts In His House to give you p eace or
mind Won't you wonhlp this week?
'&amp;riPiv'" ~ bf T1!l!f ~ m•I1C.In &amp;bitt SOt."'HI/y

C&lt;&gt;!l~ngm ;2003 l&lt; ei,lfU Wll\lllm~

" (f your VCR's m trouhlc
bnng n 10 me the douhl c"

Herbalife Independent
Distributor

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

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33334 Hysell Run Rd

new you

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Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

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Ne""'flaper StMCift; P 0 Sri• 1!005 CI'III I'IOneS\0!11!1 VA l t'll06 ~.t;lUD

Coy's VCR Repair

Hills Self Storage

Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-7996

www.herbsndtet.com

a

Punna

399W Matn St
Pomeroy, Oh
(740) 992-2164

" StuH" For Pets, Farm Animals &amp;
Tropical Flah• Full Line of Purina
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n
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507 Mulberry 'Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Ope n 7

d . ty s .1

l~u r, hiJl

llllt' l ~n llon

n•. mlls

740-667 \1~6 Fax 740-667-0080

(740) 992-4507

Phys1cal Occupallonal anti Spe«h Therap ies
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I)

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7pm

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{ hl'slc;{_ hul'\'h of tht• Nazarene

7 pm

Home
212 Main St- P.O. BoK 188
Rutland. OH 45715

740-742-2333

you1 ll ghl 'o 'hmc hcfmc
!hal the y 111.1y see
wo1h .rnct glimfy
I F'a1l1er 111 hcavl!n "

Our Carini Wavs HelP families

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N Second St

K&amp; C JEWELERS

...212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Mdlthcw 5.1 6

992-3785

Mtddleport OH

740·992·6128
Local source for trophtes,
olaaues. t-,.hirts and more

m:eaforb
lReal (!f~tate

Carolina AntiquE
6- Craft Mall
312 6th St. Point Pleasant
675-1160

216 E. Second Pomeroy
7 40-992-3325

Marketing Property
Bill Quickel

Vanety of fumuure. glassware, c raft s,
collect1on of boules &amp; pnmttt vcOutside flea market April - O ct
Layaways Avatluble

Since 1971

992-6677

.1t•ber .1uneral Jlome

..,............
............
............... EIIblt\N
41111

M1112'1M1

lUll!.-.

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

!
White Funeral Home
Shear Illusions
'h 10
Uea ull' &amp; Nail• Salon
Since 1858
u~eelf..al. ~tJ.Me r·
... •· 291 South Second Av L'
174 Layne Street
9 FiftwStreet
Mr~~l o p&lt;ll l. OH 41760
New
Haven
.
WV
25265
(7401992-2550
Coolville, Ohio •'&lt;•v~rrre&gt; H Anderson

'?

740-667-31.10

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7 pIll

s~ hon l

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and Resp11e C.1re

•

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,J

Sl John l . uthenm C hurch

Christian Union

Catholic

Birchfield Funeral

4 \{)

f' hurrll

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10 \ 0 a 111

Wc ll nc~d .t y

11 1' 111

IO I~ I .tm&amp; 1 1MIJ' Ill

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M ~\n rn .t~

Sttt:rcd llcprl fu lhuh( ( hurt h

Appu l.tch aan H1 gh.,., a)
Musu,: and Art Therup1es

34549 Ball Run Rd
Pomeroy, OH 45769

\V,u , ht J'

Wt:d uc..O I) 7 1' 111

740-992· 7713

1\lld ' ''lllh

6 1[) p m

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week

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l P
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( h,trk s

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I I (Ml ,1 111

no

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Old lklllcl h rc \'VIII Uuph1il ( hurt&gt;h
286{JI St

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Warm Fn.-,uJII

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111 unk oil Kt

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li ti 1 Am1lCt gt r Su ndty S1 hnnl 1) \ 0 1111

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1 'U 1 111

1

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p rayn llltt:tmg 7 p 111

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s~n 1n
-. oo p m

M1111 ~k r

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29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

Ptalm

g l011t y

p 111

..,

llt blt. \ iudl

ll t U~ Im

Rl\

S unda} S,; h,•o l

Wo r ~h•p

Mornmg

Pn nl .. ntl R~m c Rd

a "'

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Wors hip

J 111 ,

Latter-Day Saints

lJuum 1\aph-;1
I

l n~ t1UIII l'111,11

\\nrstu r
l•ts tor

7 p 111

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l l.irrl sllLI Villl

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10

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s.; hlM.ll • IJ lll am

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Rutlund ( 'hun·h

R~ \

set' )Ou r

•lk

Ml Kcllllt.:

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Other Churches

Oil am

Host· of Sharon lluhn css C hun:h
U.•,tdlll !! C'rcl k Rd l{ut l,mt.l P~ sl 1lr K~'
Dcwt \ Kmg Stl llll,\) ~d 1011 l 9 \11 t ill

6

pill

Pr.l)er and Ut hk Stud) • 7 pm

l&lt;n

Sl'll llt s 7 tMI p m

V. cdnc ~ d .J}

9 l 'i

Bth lt' Sim.l y Wl t.i

II ,, m

( uh un 1•n~rim C h1111cl

10 10 ,, 111

\\\1

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rm

6 30

Su nda y Ser.tn

7 p111

rm

I() Ill " m 1\t slllr J ~.: 11 rc) w ,,llll t
~td Sund.l)

or tht Na&amp;artne

Portland First Church of lht"

Lll n ~~\ ll c Pu~ t ur

Sund 1 1~

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\\ur'&gt; hlp

Joh n Sv..t lh!lll Sullll.n Sd11w l

I0,1 111

~

Soeclahsl

Home People"
uardra1l, Fence &amp;

m .ty

good works and
Palher m heave n •·

L1censed Pre-Need Insurance

" So I stnve always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man "

men, th at they

Gar) J tt l .,.Hl

J11sh \J im Sund,l\ Sc hoo l - ':1 10
Ill lll 1 111

hunn" Hdth ( hun h
Rt l l't•l•1 llr•Ul \ l 1\

L(l lll

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Muu ~ t e1

Sc fVIU S 7

bpm

lndul 7p m

10

Ke1\h R,1dc r SUth.loL)- Sdllltll

1 111 "-11r.,h1p

Stn: ct

lhun lilt- llohnt'Ss C hurch

'it h tlld !\.1,11 11 P l ~ ltlr AI H.lrtSLJII Yuulh
V..nt , hlp 1-ll'i

Mam

111

Middlcpurt C hu n.: h or C hrist

Wcdne ~d .L)

s~r.lles

10 00 am
S~hllt ' l

llam

lJ 1fl ,, "'

l 0 30 a m

Fun.'SI Run

\ l(l'i 7 Slalc Rt•tlll \l'i

lhtlll l ~l

S1h tr Run
l' n~h&gt;t

11 \fl

7 00 1' Ill

I ounh &amp; M 1111 St , l\ l t1ldlt. pon

your lig ht so shmc before

fL p

lOa ru

1pm

Su\in s

IJ am

llys1 ll Run Uuhnes.o; C hun:h

s~ h uul

p ' ' l"r RILl Rult Sund.l\

dS

Sund.J\ \dL•" I •J 111.1 111 " " 1• tup

~'hUI-lOUdS
Pa~lor

Wur~ht p Ill

Sum l.!\

Wnr' h1 p

Stmt.l.t) S U\ In - 7 pm

Urudhurv C hunh uf C hri"t

f1 r~ t Uu11h ~ l

Ranm

.,

7 rIll

Ruthmd C hurth

7 10

Stud ) \.l.~:lln ~~l lt \ 7 pm

Wl d nl s,l.t\ St•t1 tt. l'- 7 011 r nt

Sund.1y
"Le t

Rul lantl

Sund a\

1\tllpcrs 111oin &lt;.: hurd1 of C hri st

Lhunh

Mtddh: !H' rl , S u11d I) Sdl11nl

Jill

.1 1111

I I lHln 111

fom~k

Slllt:

\\'cslnun H1hle

AII IUI LIII\ lllii)IISI

EWING FUNERAL HOME

lud1.111~1

( nmnmnlty ( hurc-h

S 111nftc h.l Simd,t} Sl huol

Young's Carpenter Serulce

Kalharm Foster Sumili)

Holiness

Wt:diiL:,dJy Scn1us

Zion ( hunh of(hnst

HaJtltsl

Ml l\lun11h ll11phs l

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

~ll ,, 111

ll C~

. : .. t~rpnn
Puswr ArlanJ Kmg. Swtt.l.a~·

J a m e~

Pomeroy, Re'

St honl .u1J ll ol)

7 pIll

fu csdii} Sen

~Opm

Pa~ lor

Wm sh1p

lO ,1 Ill

I}

H,.,

Ill 1m

Worshap

W~d ne-.Jny S~rHtl!'

Church

3."!(1 E Mm n St
lkm.tt.kl

';I

Rm·k Sprlnf!!s

r r ·r ·r ·r ·r

i'

Pomt&gt;rov C h un: h of Christ
..! 12 W M 1111 Sl
fo.lumt ~ r Ant hon)
Munt'

[p l ~cupal

V.or,htp

IJ]Uam

S~huol

Jant: Hcunt, S unday

S und a) Sc hnol

B11'tlc SiuJ )

l'mt' (,rnH Hable

,Jill Worshi p · II I m

i"

~() IIIII

liJ

Phdllli St P11ul

Ctn tra l f'luslrr
A:.hury ISynto. u,c) Paslor Bob R ubm ~nn
Sund:JV S~ h uo l ~ 4'1 11111 Wor~ tup I I
am w~t.tncS!lu) S~.: rv t cc~ 7 \{) p rn

Episcopal

Wnro;htp

forcsl Run H11()1tst

i"

Sewnd &amp; Ly nn Pmnemy P11s1nr Re\
J.. nath.m Nnhk Wo~htp Ill ~~ a !II

11) I Ill

Wur ~ lu p

7

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Ktarw11 llow Ridg~ L hurth of&lt;.: hrlsl

J•mm•ru'l •irsl IJHIJIIst
P • ~• or Jnn Brudie rt E.ts l M.ttn S1
Sunda) SLh tlol '1 ltJ ,, m \\u r~h•p

41k 7~

am

'l'rlnlt y Chu n"h

Gntct•

10

P u~ t o r

Congregational

7 pIll

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ou t because the play dock
was runnm g down.
I stern ly reprimanded
Mtcaiah for not lultllltng lm
responsibility But. !hen I
put my arm s arou nd h11n ,
and smd. "Son, you need to
understand that a situation
like tht s could have meant
the dtflerence between VIC tory and de teat. If the score
was close, and we did not
have any more time outs. a
critical opportumty co uld be
missed for the team. You are
too you ng to have to bear up
under such an error Do your
job well!"
This incident po 'Sesses cntical mstght upon retl ect10n.
One question often posed
these days around religious
ctrcles 1s. " What ts wrong
with the church'''" When II
comes to spiritual. moral, and
soctal tssues. the ch urch
seems to have ve ty ltttle k~ek
The problem is th at too
man y of us among the

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am

Sut JLI,L) Sl huu l

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Pas10r Re' Herben Gra 1e , S unt.luy Sc hlM.tl
S un M as~

K 4i IJ I S .1 m

Con

Church or Jt&gt;!iU !i Chn~t Apo!iloilr
VauZauJt ami Wun.l RJ P.tst11r J.unes
Mllld Sun t.la) Sdwul - 10 m .1m
F.vt: nmg ,7 10 p 111

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, WORSHIP GOD THtS WEE K

'
A' •

2003

Tee time is not the
time for a time out

.

www mydallysentlnel .com

Friday, September 19 2003

•

Licensed D1rector Fax

Lyon:-. (Owner) Jant cc G 11mm
I

.s. ROCKSPRINGS
lrr,,...,.. family Restaurant
REHABILITIION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
The care yurt de!Jerve, c/me to home
Chicken"
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
W. Main St., Pomeroy
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

992-5432

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We

Fill

Doctors'

God

loved the world

he 1-iave his onlv
lh'' '"'tt••n son ...

Prescriptions

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10

John 3. 16

Pomeroy

ti

M ctgs Cou nt y ' Okk .,1 I h '1 1'1

352 East Matn
Pomeroy Oh

&amp;nouffer'll
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my consctence clear before

TOLJ..flllll
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God and man ."

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740-992-2644

740-992-6298

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t3attdtu &amp; tjil.u
93 Mtll St. Middleport, OH

(740) 992-9513
Gtfts,

" So I strive al ways to keep

Acls24:16

1"rancis Flon st

&amp; More

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
- Middleport, OH
992·6376

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel .

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

READER'S

VIEW

Speak out
Stop mismanagement
Editor.

After reading your recent column titled 'Uncollected fines
make justice cheap in Meigs County' I am finally brought to
the point to speak out.
I have sat by and read and heard all that has been going on
between our Commissioners and the Sheriff and think it is
about time ti1r action. I don't know what can be done or needs
to be done but it is not only a disgrace but also ridiculous to
allow the mismanagement of our tax dollars to continue.
Not on ly has our Sheriff not prudently used our tax dollars
but has failed to provide the protection that we as taxpayers
l1ave paid for.
This is a poor county and we must make every effort not to
waste the financial resources that we have. It certainly appears
that the actions of our Sheriff have been not only wasteful but
also. ina~propriate. To coAtinoe to keep all the deputies on
stat! unttl there was no more money was reckless to say the
least. A good manager knows how much he has in his working budget and takes the appropriate steps to reduce the workforce to continue to provide coverage for as long as possible.
It may be at a reduced leve l but it would still be more protection than is available now.
Then to squabble with the commissioners in an anempt to
get blm&gt;d out of a turnip is again nothing but a sign of poor
management sk ill s. The topper for me was his comment in the
article that read . "Trussell said he doesn't have time to serve
the bench warrants himself because he is to busy responding
to emc1·gency call s or other matters all over the county".
Wl1at I want to know is how Mr Trussell was able to take
time out of his busy duties to drive his county cruiser to Gallia
county and pose for a picture for the Chicago Tribune. ·
As I said I don't know what can be done to remove this man
from office but what ever steps can be taken need to be taken
as soon as possible .. In my opinion we cannot afford to keep
thrs man 111 tillS posrt1on any longer. We cannot afford to wait
on the next election to vote him out
'
Paul ,\-1 Damell

PageA4 ·
Friday, September 19,2003

Pleasant surprise at Adventist church service
The trouble with many
church services is that there
are no surpri ses. We know in
advance what is going to
happen: openingj sentences.
processional. ·responsive
reading.. scripture. sermon
and closing hymn .
But occasionally there are
surprises. Take my visit to a
Seventh-day
Adventist
church.
We were preparing to
receive the Lord 's Supper
when the pastor instructed
the men in the congregation
to retire to one of the rooms
downstairs and the women
to another room .
I followed along with the
30 other men. When we got
to our room we al l stood
around in a circle. The man
next to me asked. "Do you
have someone to serve
you?" When I said no (not
knowing what he was referring to), he said he wou ld be
glad to serve me.
"What are we going to
do?" I asked.
We are going to wash each
other's feet."' he said.
I looked around the room
and saw seve1:al pails of
water. some dippers and
about 20 washbasin s -

George A.
Plagenz

along with some towels.
"What do I doT" I asked.
"I'll get the water,"" said
my partner. who was a sturdy lineman for the local
electri c utility company.
"You take off your shoes and
sock s and sit down on the
chair. "
As luck would have it. I
had a big hole in one S(Kk
but it made no difference.
He k"elt down and washed
and dried my feet. then I put
my socks and shoes back on
and I washed and ·dried his
feeL The other men in the
room were doing the same
for each other.
When we were finished.
we made a circle again and
several of the men gave
thanks for what the Lord had
done for them in their lives.
or asked for prayers for
themselves or somebody

el se in need.
I can' t remember when
have been so moved by a
church service. The simplicity with which this act of
humility
was
carried
through and the lack of selfconsciousness of everybody
(with the exception of me)
brou ght tears to my eyes.
I could not help but won der how the women (with
their more elaborate stock ing get-ups) were managing
thi s operation in their room,
so I asked . I was told that
most
just
put
their
stockinged feet into the
basins. The stockings. I was
as sured. dry quickly.
Then we all went back
upstairs for the Lord's Supper.
This denomination of
about 750.000 members in
the United States is orthodox in many of its beliefs
but is di stinguished from
other churches in mainly
two ways:
The Adv~ntists worshi p on
Saturday because this, they
feel, is the Sabbath ("and on
the seventh day God ended
the work that he had done
and he rested.' ' - Genesis
2:2). The other thing that
sets Adventists apart is their

belief that health is a vital
part of religion. They con sider it as wrong to disregard the laws of health as it
is to di sobey the moral law.
There mu st be something to
it- their average lifespan is
16 years longer than for
non-Adventists . (Adventist
ministers are vegetarians , as
are many lay Adventists .)
These good people, known
for their extensive works of
mercy in health and medical
care , are way ahead of other
Christians in their understanding of what the Bible
means when it says that the
body is "God's temple."
Next week 1"11 tell you.
about a surprise I received at
a Spiritualist service I
attended.
WRITE IN: Which are the
tii'O or three most important
commandments - th e ones
we 1\'ould use to lead tire
evening news&gt; Write to me
with what vou think are the
two or three most imporranr
comma11dmems and why.
Send \'our letters to Most
!mporiant Commandmenrs.
Box 06580. Columbus. Ohio
43206. I will publish the
·most interesting respoitses
in a jillllrl' column.

AHH ...
KIDS ARE
FINALL'Y BACk
AT SCHOOL

T£ACHER/
PARENT

PLAYGROU~O

CONfERENCE

PERMISSfON
SLIP DUE
OR6AN12E
TEtE PHONE

lbanks

LEA~

COLlECTION
DUE

It was worth it

.

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

POMEROY - Eleanor 1.
Jordan Logan, 78, Pomeroy,
passed away on Wednesday,
Sept. 17, 2003 at Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W Va.
She was born on Aug. 18,
1925 in Gallipolis, daughter of
the late Hugh and Florence
Vance Jordan. She was a homemaker and attended the Baptist
Church. She enjoyed volunteering for the Meigs Athletic
Boosters for many years.
Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
daughter, Barbara Logan, her
brothers, Robert , John and
Thomas Jordan, and her sister, Patricia Lippert.
Surviving are her husband,
Howard Logan of Pomeroy;
her son, Ronald (Kay) Logan
Qf Middleport; grandsons,
Dann (Angte) Logan of
Middleport and
Kevin
(Sharon) Logan of Racine;
great grandsons, Bradley and
Connor Logan; and sisters:
Betty Zatkovic of Bessemer,
Pa., Nancy (Archie) Gibson
of Zanesville, and Jane
Robertson of Columbus.
A memorial service will be
conducted at a later date.
There will be no calling hours.
Arrangements are under
the direction of Fisher
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Friends may send condolences to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com .

his residence following an
extended illness on Thursday.
Sept. I8, 2003 . Arrangements
will be handled by Fisher
Funeral Home and will be
announced when completed.

Janice M.
Hendrick

LETART, W.Va. - JaniceM .
Hendrick, 64. of Letart, W Va.
died Thursday, Sept 18, at her
residence. She was a housewife
and a member of the Abundant
Gmce Church in Middleport.
She was born Sept. 15 ,
1939, in Broad Run, W.Va. ,
the daughter of the late
Dallas Patterson Gibbs and
Louise Kelsie Gibbs. She
was preceded in death by her
husband Robert Hendrick ,
nephew Roger Long and
brother-in-law Elson Long.
She is survived by her sons
and daughters-in-law, Rex Allen
(Vicki) Hendrick of Letart,
W.Va., and Dwain (Aimee)
Hendrick of Letart, W. Va; a son
Bobby Hendrick of Letart,
W Va; a sister and brother-inlaw; Sandm (Charles) Wise of
Letart, W Va; a brotber and sister-in-law: Denver (Sharon)
Gibbs of Letart, W. Va; and an
aunt, Irene Justis of Mason
W Va; eight grandchildren and
one great gmndson, and seven~
nieces and nephews.
Funeral serv ice s will be at
3 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 21, at
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral
Home. The pastor officiating
will be the Rev. Brian May
and the Rev. Teresa Davis.
Visitation will be from I p.m.
to 3 p.m. Sunday. She will be
buried at the Hoffman
MIDDLEPORT- Sherman Cemetery in Letart, W.Va.
Buskirk, Middleport, died at

Riverbank work
begins

Coin club sets
show

MINERSVILLE - The
U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, in conjunction
with ODOT will begin stabilization work on a 2,400 foot
section of riverbank itf the
Minersville area of Ohio 124,
just outside of Pomeroy, on
Sept 22. When completed.
the stabilization project will
help to protect the roadway
from river encroachments
and erosion. Traffic should be
minimally impacted by this
project. Project completion is
expected by May. 2004.

GALLIPOLIS - Oh-Kan
Coin Club will hold a coin
show at the Galliipolis
Holiday Inn, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m
on Oct. 5. There is no admission charge.

Homecoming
set

Editor

Arclr Rose
Reedsville

Eleanor Logan

HARRISONVILLE- The
Zion Church of Christ on
Ohio 143 in Harrisonville
will
hold homecoming
Sunday, Sept. 2 I. There will
be a potluck meal at 12 :30
p.m. and a program at 2 p.m .
Everyone is invited.

The prescription drug scam
The basic trouble with
democracy is that it forces
candidates to be forever on
the lookout for new "services·· they can pledge to .
provide for their presumably
greedy constituents. The
dirty little secret. of course
(never mentioned during the
campaign). is that these services will cosi money. which
will have to be provided by
the taxpayers, si nce govern ment doesn' t have a nickel it
can call its own.
Then (if and when the services are provided, and
taxes have to be r4ised to
pay for them) the politician
can complain loudly and virtuou sly about voters who
"demand" services and then
protest about having to pay
more taxes. The truth. in
most cases. is that the voters
never "demanded'" the services : they were sold a piein -the-sky description of
them, and then bi lied for
them at the retail rate.
That is a precise description of the current prescrrption drug scam, which is
now in conference commit tee and is about to be foi sted
on us by the powerful bipartisan team of George W.
Bush and Ted Kennedy.
Thi s nation has struggled

•·

William
Rusher

on fur 214 years without
paying the cost of sut:h prescription drugs as its citizens
needed . But, in the past few
years . tl1 e Democrats have
fastened onto that subsidy as
the next gre at "service" they
intend to confer on the
American people. And
Bu sh. in his 2000 election
campaign. threw in the
towel and match ed the
Democrat s' pitch to the voters. bribe fnr bribe.
The resu lt is going to he
the bi ggest federal entitlement since Medicare , costing many hundreds of billion s of dollars - a figure
that makes the pre sident's
request for $87 billion more
for Iraq (which gave House
minority leader Nancy
Pelosi "sticker shock"") look
positive'ly parsimonious by
comparison. Paying for it
will he the grueling work of
generations to com e.

And yet there is not the
slightest evidence of any
wide rpreacl
popular
·:demand" for this munificent gift. Three-quarters or
more of all Medicare beneficiaries already have prescription dru g coverage 34 percent of them receiving
it through former employers. The mass subsidy now
being fashioned in Congress
is simply intended to make
the Democratic Party look
big-hearted - and to make
Bush look just as big-hearted as Ted Kennedy.
To be sure. there are peosmall
ple who have
resources and large drug
bill s. and it would be perfe ctly proper for government
to step in and help them out.
But Washington has ruled
out any "means-te sted" subsidy. on the grounds that that
would smack of "we lfare"
and thu s humiliate the recipients. So the benefit has to be
~niv e rsal : American taxpayers, in this and all future genenltions. mu st pony up the
Jlough to pay everybody's
prescription bills - yours
and mine. and everybody's
ri cher than we are, all the
way up to Donald Trump,
Warren Buffett and Bill
Gates.

Oddly enough, some
Democrats in Congress
don't think the subsidy proposed (which has a few
exceptions) is generous
enough. But Kennedy disagrees, and his point is devilishly ingenious. Start wi th
this (he says). and we'll
expand it in the years
ahead. You have to admire
his vision : Government is
just a huge golden trumpet,
out of which pour goodies
galore for the lik es of you
and me.
This irresistible tel\lptatioh (to ·politicians. to bribe
the voters) would long since
have ended democracy as a
viable means of government
if a reasonable number nf
voters didn ' t see through the
scam and exercise the selfdiscipline to reject the
bribes. As it is, the survivai
of democracies - including
this one - is permanently
balanced on a razor's edge
between self-denial and
national bankruptcy. It will
be interesting to see how
long America manages to
beat the odds.
(William

Rusha is a
Fellow of tire
Claremont lnstit11te for the
St11dy of Staiesptmtship and
Political Philosophy.)
Distiltgui .~hed

Clinic offered
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct a childhood
immunization clinic from 9
to II a.m. and I to 3 p.m. on
Sept. 23 at the health department, 112 E. Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy. The child's shot
records must be provided and
the child must be accompanied by a parent or legal
guardian. A medical guard, if
applicable, must also be proVIded.

Transfers
approved

POMEROY - Meeting
Thursday, Meigs County
approved
Commissioners
transfers in funds for the veterans serv ice s ·commission,
community corrections eraRACINE- The Church of gram, auditor, grants office
God on Mile Hill in Racine and recorder.
will hold their homecoming at . The board also approved
payment of bills in the
12 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 21.
amount of $241,628.38.

Homecoming at
Church of God.

Late
, from Page A1

have been replacing or fixing
broken meters in the downtown area. Fifty new
"globes" have replaced the
old dingy ones giving the
meters a new look and allowing people to see more clearly how much time they have
remaining in their parking
.
spaces.
Village council approved
spending $250 to purchase
200 more globes to replace
the remaining old ones.

Vehicle owners will have to
pay unpaid parking tickets
before they are allowed to
renew their vehicle's registration stickers.
Village council discussed
the possibility of raising the
amount it costs to park in the
metered spaces from I0 cents
to 25 cents a half hour.
Compared to other cities, l"' Names omitted -~
Young said it is pretty cheap
from
to park downtown. In Athens,
Eli White obituary:
it is 25 cents for every half
Son &amp; Daughter-in -law:
hour of parking and in
. Carroll "Pinky" &amp;
Columbus, it is 25 cents for
(Joyce) White
every 15 minutes of parkin~­
Council member Jackie
Granddaughters:
Welker said if council decidDarla White (Terry) Tucker
ed to pursuit the issue, he Deanna White (A llen) Tucker
would support raising the
amount it costs to park .
Grwtdsons:
Proffitt said the cost for a
Keith &amp; (Jackie) White
Kevin White (Denise)
'new refurbished parking
Great Granddaughters:
meter that is upgraded to take
. quarters would cost approximately $75 . Proffitt and parkNicki Tucker, Lynzee
ing enforcement officer
Tucker, Kendra White
Sandra "Pebbles" Thorla l!lll''---------~
~

---·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Cheshire police department up and running

Local Briefs

OUTY

CHAlN

I would like to express my appreciation to everyone in
Meigs and Vinton Counties who helped with the Morgan's
Raid Re-enactment, everyone from the event planners to those
who got firewood and feed for the horses, to parking attendants. I was filled with pride for our county as I watched the
reenactors perform for our school children and the general
publtc .
,
I had the distinct privilege of working very closely with the
sponsors of this event. the Ohio Sixth Cavalry and the Ohio
Bi&lt;:entenni;rl Commission. It was an opportunity that I would
not have missed for the world. It was a lot of hard work that
stre tched over a three year period. It was this work and the
love of the adventure that inspired people to commit to the
cndea vor. The end product was well worth it I did not talk to
u participant that was not truly overjoyed to be here. The reenactors were from every walk of life and 25 states. I know
personally one re-enactor was from Germany and one was
from Canada. This event truly attracted people from far and
w1de.
.It wa s a grearendeavor that put Meigs County on the map.
!I you arc a Mctgs county resident and did not see one of the
re-enactments then you missed out. They were superbly presented w1th an air of professionalism. The "Big" events like
(ietr yshurg and Antietam have nothing over on what we did
here. Thi s was one-of-a-kind evenL It had never been done
before and may never be done again. For the raiders to travel
almost 50 miles from Wilksville to Bashan and to sleep out
under the sl&lt;lrs must have been truly an experience to behold.
I can only imagine the pride and exhilaration they felt.
I want to express my thanks to the Ohio Sixth Cavalry, the
Oh1o Bi:Centennial Commission , the Meigs and -Vinton
Cm1nt y Com1mttees, Chester Court House Committee, all the
landowners who contributed land, espeCially Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Spencer. plus all the countless volunteers.

Obituaries

Sherman
Buskirk

Pomeroy

IJ~ar

Friday, September 19. 2003

BY MIWSStA RuSSEU
mrussell@ mydailytribune.com

CHESHIRE Drivers
passing through the nearlyvacant town of Cheshire may
want to think twice before
ignoring that speed-limit sign.
In July, the village decided
to take the protection of its
remaining citizens into its
own hands and form a police
department.
"We decided that the older
residents needed a police department here more than at any
otheJ" time in the history of the
village." Mayor Jim Rife said.
"We' ve had a lot of vandalism and theft," he said. "We
want to help the residents
keep a good, clear mind and
be able to sleep at night
knowing that these guys are

out here protecting them. "
·Rife added that the village
had no problems with protection from the sheriff's office.
'The sheriff has rea II y
been supportive ·of us and has
given us a lot of good
advise," he said.
Police Chief Jerry Darst and
officer Justin Rice are the only
full-time officers on the force.
patrolling 24-hours-a-day.
Village ofticials decided to
forego the police protection
contract they have maintained
with the Gallia County
Sheriff's Oftice since the mid1970s, and appoint Darst. who
has been the village marshal
since 1996. chief.
The residents of Cheshire are
proud of their department , even
if it is a bare-bones operation.
"I get so I'm not afraid
anymore," a long-time resi-

dent who wished to be kw problems with the locals.
known as "Boots" said.
"We· ve written seve ral
"It must be because of you · tickets. but nw st of the
arrests sn far have bce1i of
guys," she said, smiling.
But, after65 years in Cheshire, nut-nl-towners." he sa id'.
the 83-year-nld widower and
Tn help combat n ime. the
current council member said she pDiice department rece ntl y
misses her neighbors.
acqu1re&lt;l a patml car. pur'Tm beg inning ~? feel a lit - chased frorn I he county for $ 1.
tie b1l lonely
now.
.. ,
· lor
· the
·. ,
Bu l. Dars.1 sa1u.
111c- v1.11 age · ·· \\e. were walkmg
..
.
.
.•
~ ".
l1rst
lew
nHHllhs.
D;rrst
sa1d.
.l
ll)
be a bI 111 &lt;IIC PU SY
•Seellls.
.. ,
I tl
d' l .
I .
the se days .
" ~~t 1ey K n .~ n~nrp am
'There aren't a lot of rcsi- once. Bmts added. We re l,~l ­
dents len:· he said. " It \ usu - ly lucky to have them. tl1ey n:
ally pretty quiet. but . there's makrng usallled better."
a lot more rralli c - siolll The oll1cers strll walk . but
seers. picture-takers. pc&lt;~pk onl y because they want to .
taking things from the and rr ght now the1 r locus rs
remains of the houses.
keepmg rhm gs qrrret.
"Wetrytopmta·t what we can
"Kids still play on the playof people's pmperty:· he added. grounJ. and older residents
"It's dillicult to know who Ins still sit on their front porchpennission ;md who doesn't."
es ." DaN said . "And that 's
Darst said he has had very the way we want it to stay."

Eastem board approves contracts
STAFF REPORT
news@ mydailysentinel.com

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of
Education approved supplemental contracts and substitute employees during
Wednesday' s regular board
meeting.
The following supplemental contracts were approved:
Sam Thompson, co-elementary student council adv isor;
Carly Hayes, co-elementary
student council advisor;
Martie Baum and Debbie
Weber, junior class advisors;
Cathy Edwards. senior class
advisor; Arch Rose, high
school student council advisor; and Jeremy Casto and
Matt Bissell, junior high
boys basketball coaches.
Linda
Hensley
was

Isabel
from Page A1
potential to bring 3 to 5 inches of rain and tlooding to an
East Coast already sodden
from one of the wettest summers in years.
"This is certainly not over
for people experiencing
Hurricane Isabel," he said.
"This hurricane will not be
remembered for how strong
it is. It will be remembered
for how large it is ."
The storm spread rain
across North Carolina and
Virginia and into Maryland.
Delaware and parts of West
Virginia and Pennsylvania.
In Harlowe, a small community about 25 miles inland from
the Outer Banks, about30 to 40
homes were destroyed, either
by winds, falling trees or flooding, said Jeremy Brown, chief
pf Harlowe's volunteer fire
depa11ment. He estimated
about 200 homes were flooded.
Firefighters rescued a
mother and her two children
who were stranded by the
floo~ waters, Brown said.
But the flooding receded
quickly, said residejlt Joe
Fernandez, who watched the
· water rise over his street and
yard.
" It was like a toilet flushing. It just came up and went
down," Fernandez said.
On the Outer Banks, the
storm destroyed the 540foot Jennette's Pier in Nags

approved as a substitute secretary, Linda Dunlap as substitute secretary and cook,
Keith Downs as a substitute
bus driver and Roger Coates
as a substitute custodian.
following
were
The
approved as substitute teachers: Lee Ann Baker. Holly
Farley, Dorothy Faulkner.
Hector Flores, Joni Grubb,
Ann Hanson, Stacey L.
Howell. Tiffany Laipply,
Jennifer Marcum, Paul D.
Meiss III. Kevin Sheppard,
Deborah Spencer, Troy
Weaver, James M. Yerian,
Lori M. Bumgarner, Tommy
Farrell.
Volunteers were approved
as follows: Fay Amos, Edna
Armes, Laurie Boyles, Paula
Brown. Paula · Buckley,
Mandy Bush, Dorena Card.
Rhonda Carnahan, Robin

Cranston , Tonya Connoll y.
Danicllc Hnpk1ns . Warren
Robin Dorst. Linda Dunlap. Zachary Fau l'. Charles
Gail Eichinger, Ashley Hensley. Sadie l".ox and
Hager, Linda Hensley. Marie Harley Fox were approve d
Johnson. Jennifer Keller. as open enrollment sltldents .
Christy
Maxcy. Stacie
The hoard al so:
• Ad;.nowled l'Cd achieH&gt;
Pullins, Melissa Scyoc. and
"
Teresa Sharp.
ment of the 20m
softball
Betsy Martindale w;rs team ~nd coaches;
• Acc·epted a $ 100 donaapproved as an elementary
specia l education aide. pcnu - tion trorn AEP lor athktio ;
ing certification.
• Approved the disposal of
The board honored two exces~ . unu sable equipment:
district ret irees. Jennifer
• Approved leave without
Jackson, who retired as hi gh pay for Lee Swain and
school secretary with 28 Carolyn Ritchie;
years of service. and Nita
• Ente red into an ag ree Jean Ritchie; who retired ment wi th the ·Ohio Auditor
with 21 ye&lt;trs .of service as a of State to conduct a finan cial and compliance audit of
bus driver.
The
board
app.ro ved GASB J.+ statements:
Francis
Ayres.
Rol&gt;in
• Set the next mect111g for
Cranston and Ronnie Bond 7 p.m. on Oct. 15. in tile ele to tran sport st udents with mentary library conferenct•
disabililies.
room.

Head and at least two beach
houses, where storm surge
picked up a washer, dryer
and refrigerator and carried
them about 500 feet duw·n
the street.
In York County, Va., sheriff's deputies rescued a family of seven trapped on a street
when trees fell and blocked
the path to their car, county
spokesman Greg Davy said.
The family had driven to the .
York River and gotten out of
their car to "experience the
excitement," Davy said.
At II p.m., Isabel was
about 35 miles west of
Richmond, Va., moving
northwest at around 23 mph,
up from 14 mph Wednesday
evening when it approached
the coast.
·
The increase in speed is
not unusual, and could mean
lighter rain and less flooding, said Chris Sisko, a
meteorologist at the hurrical' e center.
"They ' II still have flooding issues over the next day
or two, but the faster motiol),.
is at least a more positive
impact," Sisko said.
The hurricane cou ldn 't
keep football fans away
from Virginia Tech "s Lane
Stadium, where the Hokies
were playing Texas A&amp;M.
The 65,115-seat stadium
was sold out, even with rain
that soaked through parkas
and wind that bent back

umbrellas. Gttsls of up to 50
mph were ex pee ted for the
game in Black sburg .
"My wife\ been calling
me on the cell phone al l day.
... The power's been oil."
said Hokies fan Lee
Wagstall, whose wife and
dairy farm were deep in
Isabel \ path in Clarksvi lle .
abottt 100 miles away on the
North Carol ina border.
Why wasn't Wagstaff at
home? "He y. it 's a Tech ball
game, man!"
lsahel was expected to
move north acmss Virginia
and cut through wc~t e rn
Pennsylvania and western
New York state before dissipating in Canad~ by Saturday.
Up tu a fool of rain was
possible in West Virginia's
hilly Eastern Panhandle and
6 to 9 inches was forecast for
parts of Pennsylvania.
President Bush declared
major disasters . in North
Carolina and Virginia. ordering federal aid to both states.
The
governors
of
Pennsylvania, West Virginia.
Maryland. New Jersey and
Delaware declared stale
emergencies.
Well over 1.500 fli ghts
were canceled at airport s in
the major Eastem cities. said
David Stempler. president of
Air
Travelers
the
Association. As the storm
moved north. all fli ghts to
and from the Washington

metropolitan area\ airports
were likely to be canceled.
he said.
The federa l government
shut down in Washington .
Amtrak halted service south
of Wa shin gton. and the
Washington-area Metro system shut down all subway
and bus service.

Miss Amcrit:a

pageant

organit.ers went ahead with

plans for their annual parade
Friday night in Atlan tic City.
N.J., hoping the boardwalk
would escape damage.
For man y. the hurricane's
passing was merely a sightseeing event.

··For me. this is just like
another little rainstorm. but
you take what you can get,""
storm chaser Warren Faidley
said as he videotaped the
frothy. 15-foot swells on
Atlantic Reach . N.C.
He was impressed that in
the middle of the hurricane .
he was able to get a hot
sausage biscuit at a pier ri ght

on the beach.
"Hot fond durin~ the hurri~ane , " he stlic.l .... (hewin g
away. "This is tl1c most gen tlemanly chase of all times ."

I

MATINEES SHOWN ON
· SAT &amp; SUN ONLY

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON-FRI &amp;
12:30 PM SAT- SUN

1 0 "'"'""
..,.
MOVIES

JEEPERS CREEPERS IRI
9:00 Nightly (Only)

740 · 75 3· 3400

11111

Meigs Senior Center

ONCE U
IN MEXICO (R)
7:00 &amp; 9:00

Last Weekend in September.

\

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((

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'f)

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'· l
\

Infants &amp;
Children up
to age 12.
Teenage Siblings &amp; Pets
can be included with
your younger children
on this certificate.

~~.?,

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One certificate per household .
For information and to make reservations / t.
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call DlanaCoates 740-992-2161 ,
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Monday though Friday between 8-4:30. •
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The Daily Sentinel
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FREAKY FRIDAY (PG)
7 :00 (Only)
Matrnees1 :00 &amp; 3:00
DICKIE ROBERTS: Former

Child Star (PGt3)
7:00 &amp; 9:

�'I

Saturday, Sept. 20

•

Sunny Pl. Cloudy

·" c

'Cloudy

If&amp;
Showers

DEAR ABBY: I just found
out m&gt;' 18-year--old daughter,
"Lorrame," and I have drastically different views regarding sex. ·
Since her 18th birthday,
Lorraine has had sex with
Dear
three different men. She will
meet them, spend a day with
Abby
them; and have sex as part of
the date. Lorraine feels that
sex is " no big deal," but I am
heartsick. She is putting her
health in danger - and I Parenthood, whi ch is in your
don ' t think what she 's doing phone book. would be an
·
is emotionally healthy, either. excellent reference.
While you're at it, contact
Lorraine says I wouldn ' t feel
this way if she were my son, the Ameri can Social Health
A ssociation (ASHA) and ask
but she 's wrong.
Don't young people today for some of their comprehen care about their physical and sive material s on sexually
emotional health? How can I tran smitted diseases (STDs),
make her undersutnd that it is whi ch are rampant in our
important to have an emotional population. That way, even if
attachment with someone before your daughter is not willing
having sex? - WORRIED to 'take your · con cerns to
heart, she will at least know
MOM IN WASHJNGTON
how
to protect herself.
DEAR WORRIED MOM :
Call : National Herpe-s
Since your daughter appears
to be tuning out your impor- Hotline : (919) 361 -8488:
tant message, I recommend National HPV Hotline: (919)
that you both attend some se x 361 -4848; and the C DC's
education sessions so she can National STD and AIDS
hear with a fresh ear what the Hotline: (800) 227-8922. The
address
is
concerns really are. Planned Web

.,., M•
~ M
•.• *

9~~ ..

;;ii::~

W A

hlorms

Rain

Flurries

• •

Snow

Ice

Showers taper off
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sunday
night...Mostly
dear. Lows in the lower 50s.
Monday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thun derstorms during the night.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms until midnight.
Lows in 'the upper 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.
Wednesday .. .Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs near 70.
_Thursday ... Mostly clear.
Lows near 50 and highs in the
mid 70s.

Friday ... Showers
likely
until
mid-morning ...Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 70s .
Chance of rain 60 percent.
.. Friday night... Becoming
mostly clear. Lows in the
lower 50s.
: Saturday... Mostly sunny.
Highs 70 to 75. West winds 5
to 10 mph.
Saturday
night .. .Mostly
clear and cool. Lows in the
upper 40s.
Sunday ... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Sept. 18, 2003

10.000

irc!Rrials
+,113....
--:J:-::UN
, - -J"'
U'"""
L --Ac;-U;:oG---::
S:::
EP~ 8.SOO

High

Low

Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

9,662.84 . 9,538.28

Sept. 18. 2003

2,000

Nasdaq
UOJt(XSite

,___ _ 1,600

+26.45
1,909.55
'

Pet. change
from pravlout:

+1.18

2003

FREE

-:-cc--:--c---:-=---:::::::- 1,400
JUN

High
1,910.51

JUL

AUG

Low
1,874.30

SEP

Record high: 5,048.62
March 1O, 2000

Sept. 18, 2003

Starrlmi&amp;
Ftor.s 500
t13.1$1
1,039.58

JUN

Pet. change
11om p&lt;Ovloue: +1.00

High
1 ,040.16

JUL

AUG

Low
1,025.75

SEP

900

www.ashastd.org. They also back rub. It really upset me.
host a special Web site for We've been going to thi s
teens: www.iwannaknow.org. church for only a few weeks,
DEAR ABBY: I have a· and I felt it didn' t look right.
Johnny says Selma was just
friend I'll ca ll " Don." He's in
hi s mid-2 0s and comes from being nice. I feel that out of
a good family. When we go respect for me, he should
out to eat, Don di splay s prop· have told her to go rub her
er eti4uette and table man- ' husband 's back instead of
ners, with one exception : He his. It made me mad that
holds his fork. in his fi st like a Johnny was standing up for
young chtld and shovels food her. ] think thi s is how adulinto hi s mouth.
.
. tery starts. Am I wrong' Fnends have nottced th1 s LOSING MY FAITH IN
and commented to me about CENTRAL INDIANA
it. When I mentioned it to
DEAR
LOSING
MY
Don, 1t hurt hts feelings. Is FAITH : Not necessarily.
there a gentle way I ~an help However it 's clear that
' b d
mv fnend? - DON S DINNER PAL IN ALBU · Selma rub e someone QUERQUE. N.M .
you - the wrong way.
.
DEAR DINNER PAL : You
_Next Sunday, make a pomt
have already helped your ot sttttng behtnd Selma. If she
friend by telling him what reaches for Johnny agam , htt
people are saying. Now it :s ~er wtth . chaple ~ and ~,erse .
time for HIM to change hts Thou shalt not covet...
eating habit - or·not.
(Dear Abbv 1s wruren by
DEAR ABBY: Last Sunday Abigail V&lt;m Buren, also known
in church. while my husband, as Ja mne Phillips, and 1vas
" Johnny. " and I were on our futmded by. her . m01her,
knees praying, the preacher 's Paulme Plu/ilps. Wrue Dear
wife, "Selma," who was sit- Abby ar Wtvii(DearAbby.com
ting behind us, leaned forward or P.O. Box 69440, Los
and began g ivin ~ Johnny a Angeles. CA 90069.)

Community calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday , Sept. 23
ATHENS - The Southern
Consortium for Children and
the Southern Consortium for
Rural Care will meet at 10 a.m.
at the offices 507 Richland
Ave., Suite 107, Athens.

Clubs and
Organizations

Record high: 1,527 .46
March 24, 2000

Park building . Potluck will be
served. New members are
always welcome.
Saturday, Sept. 27
CHESHIRE Salaam
Masonic Lodge 456, will
have an awards night at 6
p.m. at the hall in Cheshire.

Saturday
September ZO

Sunday, Sept. 28
POINT PLEASANT Railroad picnic, gathering at
11 a.m. with dinner at 12:30
p.m. at Krodel Park, Point
Pleasant.
Tuesday, Sept. 30
POMEROY
Meigs
County Humane . Society
board met;ting, 6 p.m at the
senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy. At 6:30 p.m. there
will be a general meeting for
the public.

Other events
Saturday, Sept. 20
SYRACUSE - Free food
and clothing will be distrib·
uted at the First Church of
God, corner of Second and
Apple Str~ets in Syracuse

AGRICULTURE

Icy Congo Dailey, will
observe her 83rd birthday on
Sept. 22 . Cards may be sent
to her at 36210 Bashan
Road, Long Bottom , 45743.
Nellie Parker will celebrate
her 90th birthday Sept. 27 at
a party to be held in the old
Tuppers Plains school buid·
ing gym. It is requested that
gifts be omitted. Cards are
welcome. Those unable to
attend are invited to mail
cards to her at 40642
Keebaugh -Follrod
Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com
AUTOMOTIVE

• CHESHIRE
- Marine
Corps Lance Cpl. Nicholas
A . George, a 200 I graduate
of River Valley High School
in Cheshire, recentl y went
ashore
to
Robert s
(nternational Airport and the
freeport of Monrov ia in
Liberia to provide support for
West African forces while
assigneted to the 26th M arine
Expeditionary Unit, based in
&lt;;amp Lejeune, N.C. The unit
is deployed with the U.S.S.
lwo Jima.
· George is one of more than
4,000 Atlanti c Fleet sailors

I

12:00 noon· Parade
1:00 p.m. Antique Tractor Pull
(Race Track Level)
1:30 p.m. Rocksprings United Me,th11dl1
Church (Hillside Stage)
2:30 Belles &amp; Beaus Square Dance
(Hillside Stage)
3:30 p.m. Craig Harrison &amp; Allison ROlle ·~
(Hillside Stage)

•

CHURCHES

.

-'
•

·--·----~--

* Annouticements of Peoples

• New trailers, quilts, antique cars
chain saw carving, weaving &amp; more!

VALLEY
LUMBER
992-6611 • Middleport, OH
Stihl
Products

Insurance

7 40-4467"3672
Parts &amp; Dependable Service
1616 Eastern Avenue· Gallipolis, OH

992-6687

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Dodge

www.mydailytribune.com

~

WEB SITE
DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

Your·Bank~4···
~

farDKZI"S Bank
Savings Companv

B

Aouti7P.O.IItttt331 mWllta..t•
l'llppn Plllnl, OH P.lllala "-ar, OH
'wl ttl t
45713
..
- • ntc.
74fl.tll-3111
1~•
t

..

tMLI(tplriiMrllttll
. . . OH7••••

985-3301

of:

·-~![;[

Ingels

252 Upper River Road (Rt 7)
Gallipolis, Ohio
"You 'II Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

,'

"'z ~\

Furniture &amp; Jewehy

T

l i NCOlN
P~f.MI~ R

Middleport, Ohio 45760

740-446:9800 •1-800-212-5119

740-992-2635
"Serving Meigs County Since

1868"

Downing Childs
Mullen Musser Insurance
196 E. Second St.
1-800-454-1096

N

Pomeroy

740-992-3381
Fox: 740-992 - 5374

Mason 424 2nd St. Mason, WV 25260 304-n3-8400

'lrbe &lt;!aualitp l)rint ~bop

The Daily ·Sentinel

255 Mill Street
MiddJeport, Ohio 45760

"More Local News,

740-992-3345 Fax: 740-992-3394

. .. -

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___.. - - ...
.~

EX PER i fNCE

AOVAHTAGE •

Since 1948... Over 50 Years of Service

'.

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Over 100 Cars &amp; Trucks in Stock

Complimer~ts

·&amp;

Hot
Springs
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State Route 248 • Chester, Ohio

NOBODY BEATS OUR DEALS

446-0842 1-800-446-0842
Take your business into the homes of over
40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs
Counties EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web address in our

Wheel
Horse

~ GMAC

Printing &amp; Office Products
Wedding &amp; Graduation Invitations
UPS Service &amp; Much More

--·.- •

3:45 p.m.· Announcement of People's
Choice Awards

Dwight Icenhower

992-2955 • Pomeroy, OH

The Daily Sentinel

~~
,,
- . - . . - - - - . - - . . , _ . -\.. . • ...,...... •

Continuation of

K&amp;C
JEWELE

Different.

Paul Morrison

I

'

Toro

www.mydailysentinel.com

-~-

,

1

3:05 p.m. • Continu.atlon of Elvis
Impersonator

* 2nd Wood Sculpture Auction

*

;

992-3785 • Pomeroy, OH

.992·5627 • Middleport, OH

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

www.charter,com

,

·3:00 p.m. 2nd Wood Sculpture Auction
(Hillside Stage)

hnpersonator

THE SHOE PLACE/ SWISHER &amp;LOHSE
PHARMACY
LOCKER219

Lighthouse Assembly of God · Gallipolis

Charter Communications

Sut?scribe today¥ 992-2156

Elvis Impersonator (Hillside Stage}

* 1st Wood Sculpture Auction
* ~wight Icenhower, Elvis

CROW'S FAMILY
RESTAURANT

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

ENTERTAINMENT

BacmLumber
for buying my
Mat*et Hog at
the2003
Meigs Cocnty
Falrl

2:15p.m. · Dwight Icenhower

* Big Bend Cloggers
* River Bend Community Band
* Antiqne Tractor Games

AND MORE..... SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!
Free Activitites For All

'" j.J&gt;:c, """{J'}§&lt;4: ·'"'m•:-.•lh~"~- iSWJJ;.:'w;~r

BUSINESS TRAINING

992-2156

Thank You

* All Day Demonstrations

* Largest Pumpkin, Sunflower
Ear of Corn and Stalk of Corn
Judging Contest.
* Flag Raising VFW
* Pie Auction
* Antique Tractor PuU
* Rocksprings United Methodist
Church
* Belles &amp; Beaus Square Dance
* Craig Harrison &amp; Allison Rose
* Meigs Senior Cloggers

Choice Awards

, '~ , ·.:)ii;Yc;t-,)£if1:;_'',~-;;1J!)\( ''jf!;;:~;~¥i,;t;~J]~,;;i''.-"

NEWSPAPERS

of more than 2,000 personnel
and are divided into an
infantry batallion, aircra ft
squadron, support group and
command element. With this
· combination, George's unit
supplies and sustains itself
for . either quick mi ssion
accompli shment or clearing
the way for follow-on forces.

· 2:00p.m. · 1st Wood Sculpture Auction ..,
(Hillside Stage)
1

*Town &amp; Country Church Service

Brogan Warner

Point Pleasant Register

The Daily Sentin~l

* Scarecrow Stuffing

"

· 1:30 p.m. • River Bend Community Band

Provided by dorrations from area bu.!iuesse.!.

11:35 a.m.· Ribbon Cutting Ceremony
(Main Gate)

(Hillside Stage}

- 1:30 p.m. • Antique Tractor Games • Teat '
·
·your skills ••. (By Log Cabin} Klddlt
Tractor Pull (log Cabin Area}

www.holzer.org

www.mydailyregister.com

Nicholas George

·

www.pvalley.org

Norris Northup Dodge

Military news
and
Marines
who
are
deployed aboard the ships of
the
U.S.S.
lwo
Jima
Amphibious Ready Group.
The MEU established a
quick reaction force at
Robert's International to provide support for the economic
community of West African
States' forces. if needed. and
assi sted in securing the
Freeport in an effort to faci Ji.
tate humanitarian efforts for
the Liberian people.
George's unit is an expeditionary 'i ntervention f orce
with the ability to rapidly
organize for combat OP.!;ration s in virtually any envi ~
ment. M EU 's are composed

" 1:00 a.m •• Big Bend Cloggers

Free Miniature Golf

Southern Band (Main Gate)

.

All Day Demonstration and
Activities*

Saturday 10-4:30 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10-5 p.m. 1

' 11 :30 • Flag Raising (Main Gate)

Gallipolis Career College

Subscribe today,

Meigs County Fairgrounds

September 20th &amp; 21st

'

~~ l

Sunday
September Z l

J11 :00 a.m. • 5:00 p.m.

Holzer Medical Center

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.tumpikeflm.com

Proud to be ·apart of
· your life.

iiD\

A'::!.t~ell EXPO

. '.'

10:00 a.m.· Town &amp; Country Church
~
Service (Hillside Stage)

1

992-2432 • Pomeroy, OH

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

Gannett- 77.44
RD Shell - 45.11
General Electric
Rockwell - 28.33
32 .11
Sears- 46.21
GKNLY- 4.45
SBC- 2404
Harley Davidson - 48.49 AT&amp;T - 22.55
KMAT- 27.46
'
USB - 24.78
Kroger - 16.00
Wendy's - 33.40
ltd. - 16.36
Wai-Mart- 58.49
NSC-20.00
Daily stock reports are
Oak Hll Financial- 29.07 the 4 p.m. closing
Bank One - 38.87
quotes of the previous
OVB- 24.20
day's transactions , pro~
Peoples - 26.33
. v1ded by Smith Partners
Pepsico - 45.72
at Advest Inc. of
Rocky Boots - t0.661
Gallipolis.

~~·

',

• , •

Birthdays

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

Local Stocks

-~~'
~ ~\

8th A1mual

1M Bend

L__,

· 10:30 a.m .• Largest Pumpkin, SunfltJM!
Ear of Corn and Stalk of Corn
Judging Contest,

-~

111 • •

tram 11 a.m. to noon. For
more information call 920·
1734 and leave a message.

AP

ACI- 22.37
AEP-29.69
Akzo - 33.28
Ashland Inc. - 34.00
BBT- 37. 16
BLI-17.47
!lob Evans- 27 .55
Bo1gWarner - 7t .54
City Holding- 35 .51
Champion -4.93
Charming Shops - 5.79
Col - 26.29
DuPont - 42 .11
OG - 21 .53
~ederal Mogul - .233

11£.(

Paulette Harr!sqrl ......•., . :•··''·'· . '.- ,;)

Sunday, Sept. 21
RACINE - Oscar Reed
and Charles Hysell reunion,
12:30 p.m. Star Mill Park,
Racine. Take item for white
elephant sale.
RACINE - Gideon and
Armetisia Roush reunon will
be held at Shrine Park in
Racine. Dinner will be served
at 1 p.m.

~

/EXPQ 2QQ3 _._\

10:00 a.m.· Scarecrow Stuffing (Junior
·
Fair Building)

·"

~ ~ C()()~ - ~
" ~~~ ,. ~\jU·OP·:t~

/ -'
f~ 1

All Day Demonstration and
Activities*

-'

diJ

~))_,.

,10:00 a.m.· 6:00 p.m.

,. _

Reunions .

.

ADMISSION

4:30 p.m. Meigs S~nlor Cloggers

Saturday, Sept. 20
POMEROY
Meigs
County Biker5 annual toy
run, gather at Pomeroy parking lot at noon, leave at 1
p.m. Party at Mizway with
food, raffles, auctions and
band. Benefits disadvantaged children of Meigs
County. Held rain or shine.
For more, information · call
992·6221. .
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange and Star Junior
Grange 878 will hold a hay
ride and wiener roast beginning at 6:30 p.m. Those
attending are asked to take
hot dogs, snacks and drinks,
buns will be provided. ·Final
plans for a chicken barbecue
to be held on Oct. 4 will be
made.
Tuesday, Sept. 23
RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organization will
meet at 6:30p.m. at Star Mill

r:tw.Jeres

9,659.13
Pet. chango
11om prevlouo: +1.23

Friday, September 19,

Mom, dau~hter miles apart on their attitudes toward sex

Ohio weather

0 '46

PageA6

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Racine Office ... 992-2210
Syracuse Office ... 992-6333
FEDERAL FDIC INSURANCE

Ingel's Carpet

More Local Folks"

992-2155

196 N. 2nd ,&lt;\venue •

~liddleport,

011

992-7028
- ·-·-- ·----------·----- - - - -

�'

•

19, 2003

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

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Scores and Standings, Page B4

Wle atruggles, Page 82
Tribe falls to Royals, Page 83
Reds blanked, Page 83

Friday, September 19, 2003

Prep Football

ovc

Ill&gt; If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette . P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia. NC 28053
W"INS I ON Ct.JP Sl Hll S

MBNA America 400
Where: Dover (Del.) lnterna·
tiona\ Speedway (1 mile),
400 laps/400 miles
When: Green nag drops at 1
p.m. Sunday
WMt:

L11t ye1r'1 winner: Jimmie

Johnson
QUIII!fy!OC record: Rusty Wal·
lace, Ford, 159.964 mph,
Sept. 24, 1999
Race record: MarK Martin,
Ford, 132.719 mph , Sept.
21,1997
Moat recent race: Areview
of the Winston Cup results
at New Hampshire International Speedway this year
suggests dominance by Jimmie Johnson. That may be
too strong a word, but John·
son did indeed sweep both

•

events. It wasn't that long
ago that Johnson , who
turned 28 on Wednesday,
felt uncomfortable on tracks
like New Hampshire ln' "'1a·
tiona\ Speedway, where the
turns are practically bereft
of bank1ng. Then he won the
New England 300 on July
20. And Sunday, Johnson
became the first driver ever

to sweep both races In a
single season·at this 1.058mile track. R1cky Rudd lin·
\shed second in a Ford, lol·
lowed by Joe Nemechek in a
Chevrolet, Bill Elliott In a
Dodge and Dale Earnhardt
Jr. in a Chevrolet. Points
leader Matt Kenseth came

IHm
~
All
Riwr Valley
().() 4-0
Fairland
0-0 3-1
Rock Hill
().() 3-1
Chesapeake
().() 2·2
Coal Grove
().() . 1·3
South Point
Q.O 1·3
Tonight's Games
River Valley at Southam '
Vinton County at Chesapeake
Northwest at Coal Grove
Meigs at Fairland
Wellston at Rook Hill
Greenup Co. (Ky.) at South Point

CB/\11'-IMAN IH\I( : K

tUJSCH s•Htt-S

What: American Racing
What: Stacker 200
Where: Dover (Del. ) Interna- Wheels 200
tional Speedway (1 mile), Where: California Speedway,
Fontana (2 miles), 100
200 laps/200 miles
When: 1 p.m. Saturday
laps/200 miles
Last year's winner: Scott When: 4 p.m. Saturday
Wimmer
Lao! yoar'o winner: Ted MusTrack qualifying record: grave
Mike Skinner, Chevrolet, Tnack qull!fylng record: Kurt
155.932 mph, Sept. 22. Busch. Ford. 177.388 mph,
Oct. 27, 2000
2000
Race record: Dale Earnhardt Raca record: Kurt Busch,
Jr., Chevrolet, 130.152 Ford, 144.260 mph, Oct.
mph, May 30, 1998
28,2000
Moot recent race: John ny Mot! recent race: Jimmy
· Sauter, in a Chevrolet , won

the Sept. 5 Funai 250 at
Richmond. With eight races
remaining, veteran David

Green holds a 48-point lead

over rookie Brian Vickers in

home seventh in a Ford.

the points standings.

Spencer, in a Dodge, won

SEOAL

Saturday at New Hampshire.
He edged Carl Edwards,
Bobby Hamilton. Dennis Set·
zer and Brendan Gaughan
for his first Truck Series vic-

tory.

HIJU

I

IN I HE SPOTLIGHT

or IHl WI: EK

v

MARK MARTIN, WtNSTON CuP SERIES

E
R

s
Tony
Stewart

u

it was a bump from Ryan Newman's

Dodge that sent Tony Stewart's
Chevrolet into a sp1n Sunday at New
Harnpsh~re International Speedway.
Stewart was obviously miffed but ,

typically, had no comment after the
race.

"\ want to apologize to Tony,"
Newman said. "I didn't mean to get
into him, like I did there, and ta ke

him out. I just tried to move in on

him, and we were both lookmg for
the same piece of real estate . Ihope
there's no hard feelings."
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives hi a take: ·For those
who th1nk Stewart was uncommonly
fo rtunate during his championship
season in 2002, the pendulum has
certainly swung the other way this

By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week .,.

M

1. Rvan Newman
: t. Jeff Gordon
• 7• . 'Kurt B~$9~ .

~

· 817
·~'P

' ' . BobbY b&amp;bonle
~ I. Terrv Labonte

' 10. Michael 'Nal!r!o

8liiClf SaiD

; :l:i.

David G!j!en

'
3.583 ".;;
'\

' . !Ill,'·

:i. Brian Vickers

: 3.
4.
1.
8.

Scott Riggs

-65
. 74
·111"

· Ron Homadav
Jasori Keller
,Bobby Hamilton Jr.
· 1. Johnnv Sauter
~...._Shane Hmle!
· ·a. t&lt;asev Kahne
, 10. Scott Wimmer

· 297
·410
·423

· 494
·504
' ·,.

ClwimiAN TIIUCK
1. 'Brendan GaUI!llan

2.786
·9
·62

2. Travis Kvap!l
3. Ted Musgrave
. 4. Dennis Salzer

· 101
·164
· 184

1. Jon Wood

8. Bobb'i Hamilton
. 7. Rick Craw!ord
· I. Carl Edw8rds
8. Terrv Cool&lt;
1Q, Chad Chaffin

· 186
. 341
. 453

· 470

ark Martin, who has won 33
Winston Cup races, competed
in his sooth in a row Sunday
at New Hampshire International
Speedway, finishing 28th -two laps
behind winner Jimmie Johnson.
For Martin, it was a performance
all too typical of what has turned into
a down year. Martin finished second
in the Winston Cup standings for the
fourth time in 2002, but this year he
ranks only 16th, 1,075 points behind
Matt Kenseth.
Yet Martin's influence on the points
race is quite substantial. He was in·
strumental in recruiting Kenseth to
the Jack Roush stable. Kenseth con·
siders Martin his mentor.
Martin, 44, discussed Kenseth's rise
with typical modesty.
"I really didn't discover Matt
Kenseth," Martin said. "I'm very
proud of him. I have very, very little
to do with his success: Matt Kenseth
and (crew chief) Robbie Reiser do.
All of the credit for the success that
they've had belong to them, and they
would have had their success whether
I would have been in the picture or
not."
But Martin conceded that he and
Kenseth have similar styles.
"That was one of the things that I
really liked about Matt," Martin said.
"He knew race cars himself. He
knows how to make them go fast
without anyone's help. He could build
a car with his own hands, take it to
the race track and run up front with
it. He was a tremendous driver, as
well, and he didn't have a huge ego,
and he drove by a code that was rea·
sonable to me.
"Matt's code may be more aggres-

Valley

year."

VOlJH lUHN

!HfHl&gt; fiWM 0\JH llfA!lf!!S

Watch that kid
John Clark/NASCAR This Week

Mark Martin Is credltad with helping bring teammate Matt Kenseth
through the r!lnks of NASCAR. 'He knew race cars himself. He knows how
to make them go fast without anyone's help,' Martin says of Kenseth.

I th ink they need to start check·
ing Ryan Newman's race cat I think
that it is a li ttle fynny that he wins
seven poles and six races. How
come he wins every two races?

.I'll tell yo u what I think. I think
that he is cheating some way. No

wonder nobody else can win any

more races. Iam really getting fed up

sive than minu, but it's certainly tame
compared to some. Yeah, I really, re·
ally admire Matt Kenseth. He's a
very, very smart man. !like the way
he handles his business. I like the way
he handles his team. I like the way he
drives. There isn't anything about
him that I don't admire."
Young drivers have come to domi·
nate NASCAR, and Martin talked
about the increase in ugly incidents
that have occurred, perhaps, as a re·
sult.of talent coupled with enthusiasm
and inexperience.
"There's enough of it going on right
now that it feels like it's not 'contain·
able' to me," Martin said. "It .looks
like things have changed. It looks like
things are going to be different in
NASCAR racing going forward.
Maybe not, but I will say this. Every
week these younger guys are experi·
encing things, and many of them will
look deep inside and say, 'I won't do
that again.' They have to do that.
"Everyone can't be like Matt

Kenseth and already know. without
having to make big mistakes. I made
mistakes earlier in my career. I still
make mistakes, but I made more then
and, I guess, that's my point. We have
a lot of young, incredibly talented
drivers in this sport right now, and
you have to give them the opportunity
to experience things. All of that expe·
rience molds them into the people that
they will be 15 years from now and
the drivers tHat they'll be. I'm neither
defending nor criticizing. I'm just trying to bring up a fact that instead of
everybody just flippin g out because
things are a little bit different, you do
have to put it in perspective."
As for the key to his own longevity,
Martin said: "I ran good enough to
keep a job, number one. Number two,
I was fortunate enough, I'm not going
to say to not get injured, but at least I
as fortunate enough to drive injured
and sick and with death in my family
... all these things."
Contact Monte Dutton at hmd4858@peoplepc.com.

to my neck with him . It used to be

Jeff Gordon, but now I have changed
my mind.

If he gets the pole and wins the

race next week, I am going to stop

watching the ~aces altogether.
Kathr Rhudr
Bluefteld, W.Va.
All we know is that Newman's

Intrepid passed successfully
through NASCAR inspection before

Dodge

and after each qualifying session and
race. In case you were wondering,
Newman won the pole and race earli~
er this season at Dover, Del., the
same _pf8ce the Winston Cup Series
competes this weekend.

FAN TIPS

The NASCAR world turned upside
down after Tara Parker, the wife of
Dale Jarrett's crew chief, died on the
night of Sept . 10 in a traffic acc i·
dent. Memorial donat1 ons can be
made for Shawn and Tara Parker's in·
fant son at the following address:
Jagger Alexander Parker Fund
c/o Wachovia Bank
P.O. Box 2519
Cornelius, NC 28031

&amp; Sup·ply
Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

992-6611

252 Upper River Rd. ,
106 North S1cond A,ve.• MiddlepOrt. OH

Gallipolis, OH

Main Street, •

~utland,

Ohio

740·742·2289 or t-800·837·8217
Call for hours or to make an appolntmant

•

•

'

All
4-0
4-0

3-1
Q.4

2·2
1·3
1·2

TVC

Ryan
Newm11n

s

The two Hoosier hotshots - one
hav1ng a remarkable year and the
other languishi ng through a subpar
season- have clashed before , and

Martin won't take
all the credit in
guiding Kenseth

IHm
SEQ
Athens
1-0
Jackson
1.o·
Gallia Academy
1-0
Warren
Q.O
Logan
0-1
Marlena
0-1
Point Pleasant
0-1
Tonight's Games
Jackson at Ga!lia Academy
Marlena at Point Pleasant
Warren at Athens ·
Cols. DeSales at Logan

:rum

Ohio Division
M

Belpre
Vinton County
Wellston
Alexander
Nelsonville-York·

().O

All
3-1
3-1
2·2
1·3
1·3
1·3

().0
().0
().0
().0
().0
Mei~s
HOcking Division
Illlm.
M
All
().0
Trimble
4·0
().()
3-1
Waterford
().()
Eastem
2·2
().()
Federal Hooking
2·2
().()
().4
Miller
().4
().()
Southern
Tonight's Games
Meigs at Fa1rland
Belpre at Eastern ·
River Valley at Southern
Federal Hooking at Alexander
Nelsonville-York at Trimble
Vinton County at Chesapeake
Wellston at Rook Hill
South Gallia at Miller
Waterford at Wahama

Non-league

rum

Ironton
Wahama
Symmes Valley
South Gallia
Hannan
OakHill
Tonight's Games
South Gallia at Miller
Hannan at Marsh Fork
Waterford at Wahanna
Ironton at Boyd County (Ky.)
Symmes Valley at Oak Hill

AD
4·0
3-0
3-1
2·2
0-3
0-4

·

Woody Hayes'
son assigned to
be judge of
Clarett case
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
son of former ' Ohio State
coach Woody Hayes is the
judge handling the case of
suspended Buckeye tailback
Maurice Claret!, charged with
lying to police about items
stolen from a car.
Franklin County Municipal
Judge · Steven B. Hayes will
pres1de over the case and a
pretrial hearing is set for Oct
3. Cases are assigned to
judges at random.
Cl arett has pleaded inno·
cent to a misdemeanor falsification charge, which has a
maximum penalty of six
months in jail and a $1,000
.fine.
He is charged with filing an
exaggerated theft report with
campus police in April after a
dealership's car he was borrowing was broken into. The
police report said cash and
stereo equipment worth thousands of dollars was taken.
One lawyer had acknowl ·
edged that Claren lied, but
another lawyer backed off the
statement.
The police report was
amons factors that Jed to
investrgations by the NCAA
and university, which sus·
pended the sophomore from
the team indefinitely on accu·
sation s he broke NCAA
bylaws by receiving extra
benefits and lying to mvesti·
gators. Separately, Ohio State
1s investigating charges that
athlete s received improper
help in classes.
'I

Good luck
string about
to break?
. BY RusTY MIUER
Associated Press
COLUMBUS - The star tailback is suspended. The
starting
has a' sore arm. The running game is
. . quarterback
.
.
IDISsmg rn actwn.
.
No. 5 Ohio State is three games into the season and the
Buckeyes must feel as if they're nearing the end of a 14game marathon.
After surviving six overtimes in their last six games,
Ohio State continues to lead a charmed life, blowing a 247 fourth-quarter lead but pulling out a 44-38 triple-overtime
victory over North Carolina State on Saturday. Everyone
close to the program is aware that the string of good luck is
being stretched to the breaking point.
"When you have five turnovers, as we did, and you win
the football game, you need to consider yourself very fortunate," coach Jim Tressel said.
·
Ohio State has won its last nine games decided by a
touchdown or less. The Buckeyes have come from behind
to win in the second half nine times in a 17-game winning
streak.
The Buckeyes are winning. but it hasn 't been particular·
ly pretty or efficient.
There are problems in several key areas. The running·
game - long Ohio State's trademark- has been awful.
Turnovers have mounted. And the defense has been hurt
repeatedly by dumb penalties.
,
The Buckeyes returned every starter on offense from last
year's 14-0 national championship season. Yet offense or the lack-of it - has been the root of Ohio State's probOhio State cornerback Dustin Fox (37) defends against North Carolina State wide receiver
lems so far.
"It's an embarrassment for us right now," tight end Ben Richard Washington (6) in the second quarter against North Carol ina State. The Ohio State
defense was called for six pass interference or holding calls against North Carolina State. Fox
was
flagged for four of them . (AP)
Please see Bucks, Bl

Pr,ep Volleyball

P.rep Golf

Easter11
takes
.
.
.
.
Belpre
sweeps
TVC-Ohio
.F ., H crt···. ... .
»&gt; . ~

a·

down e

·

.

TUPPERS PLAINS - After struggling
with their guests a bit in game one, the
Eastern Lady Eagles went on to sweep a
very good Federal Hocking team in
straight ¥ames, 15-13, 15-6.
The wm improves Eastern to 8-3 on the
season and allows the Lady Eagles to
move into a log Jam atop the Tri-Valley
Conference- Hockrng standings.
·
The game was dominated at the net by
the Lady Eagles to say the least. Eastern
amassed 25 kills as a team and II blocks.
Alyssa · Holter led Eastern in numerous
categories with seven points, lO kill s and
13 assists, all team-h1ghs. Stacey Smith
also set up her teammates nicely with 10
helpers.
Katie Robertson added six kills and a
team-high five blocks. She and Jennifer
Hayman formed a wall at the nel as they
two combined for nine of their team's
blocks.
The junior varsity was also successful,
by a 15· 1, 15-2 count. The team improves
to 9-0.
Morgan Weber shared team-high points
honors with Holter with seven markers and
Kass Lodwick chipped in six.

7

0·
.

! . ,, ......

. .. · . ,: .

o• ••

'STA" 'R~;;;,Rf" '

sports@mydailytribune.com
POMEROY'·- The Mauraders may have
had the advantage of being home for their
Tri-Valley Conference Championship match,
but Belpre played well and took the match
with a score of 149 to win the TVC Ohio
Division . The Golden Eagles were led by
Dan Cooper's par 34 score that earned him
Medalist honors.
The Mauraders earned a second place fin ·

Robertson

ish in the league and in the match with a
team score of 163. Jeremy Banks led the way
with a 4-over 38 and was followed by Jake
Venoy and Josh Ray who both posted scores
of 41. Cody Davidson followed with a score
of 43, while Dru Reed shot a 44 and Josh
Venoy rounded lhings out for Meigs with a
48.
Belpre and Meigs finished 1-2 in the fina l
TVC Ohio standing with Meigs trailing by
II points. Vinton County followed with 29 ·
points and Wellston , Alexander and
Nelsonville· York rounded oul the standings.

Central Michigan, Ball -State
set for Mid-American opener
be focused and pl ay with emotion for four
quarters.
"For some reason, we've been sluggish i11
the ti rst half the past two weeks and picked it
up in the second half. That just won'tmake it
in the MAC." .
Ball Slate scored two touchdowns late in
the second quarter to tie Pill ;;burgh 14- 14 last
Saturday, but the Cardinals were fl at in the
second half and lost 42-21.
"Obviously I was proud of the way our
kids fou ght back in the second,quarler am!
put two.~cores up. but the bottom line is we
lost the game," said Cardinals first-year
coach Brady Hoke, who worked with
DeBord in the late 1990s when both were
assistants at Michigan.
The Chippewas and Cardinals play the
only MAC game of the weekend in what

BY ANDY RESNIK
Associated press

Hayman

Meigs picking up stream
BELPRE - The Meigs volleyball team continued to
pick up steam Thursday evening with a solid 15-4, 15-8
road VJC!ory over league rival Belpre.
.
The wm tmproves the Lady Marauders to 8-2 at the imdway point in the season.
Efficient serving and aggressive net play was key agai nst
the Lady Eagles. Meigs was 45-47 serving as a team with
18 kills and five blocks, four of which were recorded by
Samantha Cole.
Jaynee Davis lead the kills parade with seven while teammates Renee Bailey added four and Cole and Chrissy
Miller chipped in two .
Megan Garnes served for a totaiiO points, Nikki Butcher
and Joey Haning scored six each, Haning also had a gamehigh 12 assists.
The junior varsity improved to 10-0 with two 15-2 stright
game victories.
•
The Lady Marauders will travel to Southern on Monday
for a big game versus their county rival Lady Tornadoes.

Lady Tornadoes storm past Miller
RACINE- The Southern Lady Tornadoes started out a
bit slow, Miller was unable to capitalize.
Souther-n imrro.ved to 8-2 overall. and 6·2 in the Tri·
Valley Conference after crusing to a 15-4, I 5-6 league win.
Kristiina Williams scored seven points followed by
Brooke Kiser and Ashley Roush with six apiece.
Katie Sayre had a a game-high II kills, Emily Hill had
seven.
Deanna Pullins and Kiser had nine and eight assists
. respectively.
The Southern junior varsi ty squad won 15.-4, 15-3 . Jenny
Warner had eighl points to pace the winners.
.
Southern will hosl county rival Meigs (8·2) in a key TVC
volleyball battle Monday.

Central Michigan coach Mike DeBord
hopes his team will have corrected its tirst·
half deticiencies by kickotl Saturday at Ball
State, which has similar problems after half·
time.
The Chippewas (2·1) had to rally from a
17-point halftime deficit to beat Eastern
Kentucky 42-41 last weekend. They trailed
by four points at the half the week before in
what turned out to be a 40-33 win over New
Hampshire.
DeBord hopes' for a 60-minute effort
against the Cardinals ( 1-2) in the Mid·
American Conference opener for both teams.
"We're going to have to play a lot better
than we have the past two weeks to compete
with Ball State," DeBord said . "We have to

I

Ple•se see MAC, 82

Gibson in midst of comeback
Bv JoE KAY
Associated press
CINCINNATI
All
Oliver Gibson could do was
watch and wonder.
·
The Cincinnati Bengal s'
top defensive lineman of the
last few years was relegated
to rehabilitating a torn
Achilles' tendon in the off.
season. While he rebuilt his
leg through therapy, new
head coach Marvin Lewis
rebuilt his defensive line
through free agency.
Gibson knew hi s job wasn't safe .
"It 's kind of tough when
you're seeing new guys
being brought in, and you're
physically unahle to do anything about it,'' he said.

"That was the worst part of said. "I believe as we get farther into the year. he'll
it.''
Gibson, who got hurt· Nov. become more like his old
I0, wasn't able to participate self. He's still not quite 100
in the team's minicamps. percent yet. You can see lhat
where Lewis installed a new burst may not be quite ther~
defense. When July, rolled yet, but it 's coming. It 's bel ·
aro und. he was still learning ter than it was lwo or thrc,·
and still limited by the leg weeks ago.
"As he gets better stamina
InJUry.
Gibson
played
well and stronger physically, he'll
enough in training camp lo play more and more. We're
earn a role in the defensive' counting on that."
The Ben gals wercn 't
line rotation . He was in for
about 30 plays in the tirst counting on anything after
two games, improving a lillie Gibson tore the tendon near
more each week.
lhc end of his eighth season
He has made it through the in the NFL . Gibson. 31, wa'
worst part.
at a crnssrt1ads.
"He's made leaps and
He
was
Pittsburgh 's
bounds since we opened fo urth-round pick in 1995.
training camp," defensive
coordi nator Leslio: Frazier
Please'see Gibson, 82

:l - - - - - - · - - -

'

�Page B2 • The Oaily Sentinel

.

,.

Decision on OSU's Krenzel
won't be made until Saturday
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State quarterback Craig
Krenzel will dress for
Saturday's game against
Bowling Green at Ohio
Stadium, but whether he will
pldy for the fifth-ranked
Buckeyes won't be determined
until
pregame
warm ups.
Krenzel has been held out
of practice all week, and
senior
backup
Scott
McMullen is likely to be
Saturday's starter, assistant
coach Bill Conley said
Thursday.
"Craig did not practice

today. The jury is out for
Saturday.'' he said. "He' ll
dress, though, and we'll . see
how it goes the next few
days. The next 48 hours will
tell."
Asked if Krenzel could
start even though he hasn't
practiced, Conley said, "I
would say that right now,
that's probably doubtful.
We 'II see what happens on
game day."
Krenzel injured his right
elbow when his throwing
arm was caught between two
tacklers while he was making
a pass in the second quarter

of this past Saturday's 44-38
triple-overtime victory over
North Carolina State. He
played the rest of the gaine.
Conley said Krenzel won't
attempt any throws before
Saturday. He also said
Krenzel 's lack of practice
time this week wouldn't necessarily prevent him froiD
possibly playing at so~e
point against Bowling Green.
"For a guy who's been in
the heat of battle, I dm1't
know how much that's (not
practicing) going to meaD,"
he said.
·

More Expos games could be moved
NEW YORK (A P) Major League
Baseball asked players Thursday to shift about
a quarter of the Expos' home games next year
from Montreal to San Juan or Monterrey.
· Baseball officials spent much of the past
eight months discussing a permanent move of
the Expos to Northern Virgmia; Portland, Ore.;
or Washington, D.C. Despite baseball's intention to dectde by the end of the regular season,
:it appears no long-term solution will be made
for the 2004 season.
''The handwriting on the wall is pretty stark,"
stlid Gene Orza. the No. 2 oflicial of the players' association.
Rob Manfred, baseball's executive vice president for labor relations, made the proposal during a meeting with Orza. Baseball has not
decided whether it wants to move the games to
Puerto Rico or Mexico.
"It was a discussion that covered both
places," Manfred said.
To increase revenue, baseball relocated 22

Bucks
from Page 81
Hartsock said. "We want to
go out and try to become just,
well, not the weak link of this
tea.m. It 's fru strating for
everyone on the offense to
just go out there and not lose
the game for us. We wanted
· to go out this season and really win some games and put
some numbers up and we ' re
not doing that right now.
We' ve really got to try to figure something out."
Tailback Maurice Claret!
was suspended for the season
for breaking NCAA bylaws
dealing
with
accepting
money and lying to investigators. That meant the subtraction of 1.237 vards rush- ·
ing and 18 touchdowns from
the 2002 season.
None of the players or
coaches wants io admit it, but
the Buckeyes badly miss
Claret!, who was able to
break tackles and turn a short
gain into a long touchdown .
Last week hi s top two
replacements, Maurice Hall
and Lydell Ross, combined
for 3 net yards on 17 carries
in four quarters and three
other possessions . Most
times, they were snowed

Gibson
from Page 81
when Lewi s was an assistant
coach with the Steelers.
Pittsburgh gave up on him
after the 1998 season, and he
came to Cincinnati as a free
agent.
He was the only defensive
lineman to start every game
at the same position from
2000-01, leading the line in
tackles in 200 I. The torn ten don endangered his job.
"Marvin let me ·· know,
' Hey, you're an older player,
you've got a serious inJury. If
you don ' t come back, you're
out of here,"' Gibson said.
"That's one thing about a
coach that you can respect.

MAC
from Page 81
I

could be a brutal Saturday for
the league's teams.
Bowling Green faces the
stiffest test against the
defending national champion, No. 5 Ohio State, on the
road in Columbus. In other
games against ranked teams,
Toledo
hosts
No.
9
Pittsburgh, Marshall travels
to No. 6 Kansas State and
Northern Illinois plays at No.
21 Alabama.
The other MAC games
include : Central Florida at
Syracuse, Kent State at Penn

'

Expos home sarnes this year to San Juan. Orza
said the initial proposal for 2004 called for
about the same number of games to be moved
next season.
"It's better than last year," he said of the proposal. "Whether it's good enough is another
story."
·
Games would be moved to only one location
outside Montreal,.not both.
Expos players initially discussed a split
schedule with Orza on July 31 and said they
were against the plan. Montreal players talked
about it again Sept. 9 and put off a decision.
Orza plans to discuss a split schedule with
Expos players Friday. Games can't be moved
from Montreal without an agreement with the
·
union.
Montreal players complained about excessive tmvel this year. The Expos were 32- I 8 on
May 25, then went 8-14 on a 25-day trip that
included their second homestand m Puerto
Rico.

under an instant after taking
the handoff.
"Everybody had a rough
game," running backs coach
Tim Spencer said. "It 's a
combination of everybody."
Ohio State rank s No, I 00
out of 117 NCAA Division IA teams in total offense (286
yards per game). is 93rd in
rushing (I 02 ypg) and Wth in
passing (184 ypg).
The absence uf a running
game also turns up the heat
on the defense.
"It puts a lot of pressure on
us," defensive tackle Darrion
Scott said of the Buckeyes'
inability to play keepaway by
running the ball. " It seems
like you get on the field , get
off the field and then you
have to right back out there.
(We 've) been throwing the
ball a lot and no time 's taken
off the clock."
With the backs unable to
gain yardage, defenses are
able to tee off on quarterback
Craig Krenzel. He has taken
more hard hits in three games
than he sustained all of last
season.
Now Krenzel, 18-1 as a
starter, has an injured right
(throwing) elbow and the
Buckeyes may have to go
with seldom-used backup
Scott· McMullen against
unbeaten
in-state
rival

Bowling Green on Saturday.
Turnovers and penalties
have also caused Ohio State
to struggle.
The Buckeyes have turned
the ball over nine times in
their three wins. A year ago,
they had played twice as
many games before totaling
nine turnovers.
A year ago, Ohio State
averaged 41 yards per game
in penalties. This year the
Buckeyes are averaging 98
yards a game.
The defense was called fQr
six pass interference or holding calls against North
Carolina State . Cornerback
Dustin Fox was flagged for
four of them.
The Buckeyes have also
been called for numerous late
hits on opposing quarterhacks. But preaching to the
linemen to avoid hitting the
quarterback all but eliminates
one of the Ohio State's
biggest advantages its
active and aggressive line.
"I don't want our guys
playing tentative," Tressel
said. "Some of tltem (penalties) we can live with; others
we need to eliminate, if we're
going to be as good as we
need to be."
So far, the Buckeyes have
barely been good enough.

the fact that he tells it straight
up."
Gibson , known for his
durability, set about proving
to Lewis that he could still
play. He knew the coach
wouldn't keep his spot open
out of sentiment.
"I've earned e~erything ..
that I've gotten ," he said. "I
wotfldn 't be here if I didn ' t.
I'm not a charity-case guy."
He reli shed the season
opener, which marked his
offic ial return from the
injury. He's also looking forward to his game next
Sunday against Pittsburgh,
the team that still holds a specia! place in his heart. Gibson
is friends ·with running back
Jerome Bettis and a few other
Steelers.
" It's just a big game to me

during the week," Gibso n
said.. "Then the minute I go
out there and see that black
and gold and see my old
coaches and a couple of my
old teammates and Jerome
starts with the playful ribbing
- ' You can't catch me, OG'
- that 's when it become's
very personal and very playgroundish.
" It's very fun - unless
you're losing."
Notes: RB Corey Dillon
practiced Thursday and is
expected to be ready for the
game against Pittsburgh. He
hyperextended his right knee
in Oakland last Sunday and
hadn ' t practiced during the
week. ... CB Tory James didn't practice, but was listed as
probable. James has a virus.

State, Eastern Michigan at
Navy,
Connecticut
at
Buffalo. Howard at Akron
and Miami of Ohio at
Colorado State.
'
The Central Michigan-Ball
State game should co me
down to how the Cardinals
handle the Chippewas' multidimensional no huddleoffense.
Ball State has to contend
with freshman tailback Jerry ,
Seymour, whose 115.3 rushing yards a game lead the
MAC, and the quarterbackreceiver combination of Jeff
Perry and Willie Hill .
Early-game stru gg les the
past two weeks have given
the Chippewas plenty of

opportumt1es to test their
hurry-up attack. Their game
plan against the Cardinals
will be "to run our offense as
fast as we possibly can,"
DeBord said.
That worries Hoke, who
says there's not much his
team can do to prepare for the
multiple formations Central
Michtgan could feature in the
no-huddle.
"You can never simulate
that speed, the speed of the
game and the plays they get
to run," Hoke said. "You just
have to try the best you can
during the week with your
scout teams. It's a heck of a~
offensive tool that th'ey
have."

,_

Friday, September 19, 2003

www .mydailysentinel.com

J

Wie strugg·les on greens
BY DoUG ALDEN

Associated press

BOISE, Idaho (AP) Early relief and elation faded
into frustration for Michelle
Wie in the opening round of
the Boise Open.
Wie, the 13-year-old who's
playing in her second men's
tournament in a month,
opened with a birdie
Thursday, then unraveled
and finished with an 7 ,over
78 in the Nationwide Tour
event.
Wie is the latest in this season's small trend of women
crossing over to PGA-sanctioned
events.
Annika
Sorenstam got it started in
the Colonial, where she
failed to make the cut but
gained overwhelming support from the crowds. Suzy
Whaley qualified for the
Greater Hartford Open, also
missing the cut; and LPGA
veteran Jan Stephenson has
accepted an invitation to
play at the Turtle Bay
Championship
on
the
Champions Tour in October.
While Sorenstam, Whaley
and Stephenson are adults
who have seen plenty of
high-level competition, Wie
just started the ninth grade.
She'll be a long shot to
become the first of the bunch
to make a cut while playing
against men.
The 6,769-yard course did o 't require booming drives
as much as accuracy, which
Wie didn't have enough on
the speedy
greens at
Hillcrest Country Club.
Wie's drives were often
right with - and sometimes
past- those of playing partners Kevin Burton and
Joseph Summerhays and her
early iron shots consistently
reached the green, but she
had· very few short putts for
birdies and the ones she did
have just missed the hole.
Wie's only birdie came on
a putt that rolled downhill 20
feet and dropped in the cup.
She followed it with a fist
pump and a very visible sigh
of relief, which was short)ived. Wie bogeyed three of
the next four holes and only

'

'

Page B3

BASEBALL

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 19, 2003

Lima returns, pitches
:Kansas City past Indians
CLEVELAND (AP) Jo se Lima
returned from the di sa bled list to pitch five
solid innings for Kansa s City and Raul
;Ibanez drove in a key run as the Roy als
.beat the Cleveland Indians 3-2 Thursday
:night.
: Kansa s City began Thursday 4 1/2 games
behind Minneso ta, the AL Central leader.
Lima (8-1) allowed two runs, scattering
six hits and a walk for his first win since
:July 27. He got key double plays in the sec:ond and fifth innings to get out of jams.
; T)le Royal s' bullpen shut down Cleveland
;the re st of the way.
Jeremy Affeldt threw three hitless
innings. striking out four and allowing a
· walk .
: Curtis Leskanic pitched the ninth for his
;second save. Ibanez made a diving catch of
.V1ctor Martinez's line drive to the left field
:gap for the final out.
· Kansas City took the lead for good with
two runs in the third.
Desi Relaford and Mike Difelice opened
.the inning with singles. Relaford advanced
:to third when left fielder Jody Gerut bob;bled Difelice ' s hard-hit ball , then scored
:on Angel Berroa's sacri fice fly. Ibanez singled home Difelice to make it 3-1. .
C.C. Sabathia ( 13-9) went seven innings,

g1vmg up three runs on seven hits and a
walk. He struck out five.
Lima, who had been on the disabled li st
since Aug. 24 with a right groin strain , gave
up tw.o singles to start the second but got
out of the inning with a double play and a
fly out.
Ben Broussard walked to start the fifth
and Jhonny Peralta doubled to put runners
at the corners. But Brandon Phillips lined
out and Peralta got thrown out trying to get
·back to first.
Coco Crisp· singled to score Brous sard
and pull within 3-2.
Sabathia, who became a father Monday,
got stronger as the game went on, retiring
12 of the las t 13 batters he faced .
Carlos Beltran tripled and Mike Sweeney
singled to give Kan sas City a 1-0 lead in
the first.
Alex Escobar drove in a run on a fielder's
choice after back to back singles by Casey
Blake and Gerut to tie it in the bottom half.
Note s: The Royals won t.he season series
against the Indians 13-6 .... Lima is 3-0
against the Indians this season after going
0-5 again st them in seve n previous appearances .... A squirrel loose in left field entertained fan s during the first inning .... Gerut
celebrated his 26th birthday.

':,"""' .

~

~-#4-~

Cleveland Indians' Casey Blake slides into third base as Kansas City Roya ls ' Joe Randa waits
for the ball in the first inning Thursday at Jacobs Field in Cleveland . (AP)

Reds shut out by Pittsburgh
Thirteen-year-old Michelle Wie hits out of the rough on the
14th hole during the Albertsons Boise Open at Hillcrest
Country Club in Boise, Idaho. Wie went on to finish the day at
7-over-par 78. Wie became the first female junior amateur to
compete in a PGA-sanctioned tournament. (AP)
a 20-foot chip she rolled in
on the third hole saved her
from four straight bogeys .
Wie finished with nine
pars, eight bogeys and the
one birdie.
Despite her struggles, the
tall and slender teen never
seemed to lose . her composure and was still smiling on
the back nine even after
falling further behind on a
crisp,
sunny afternoon .
Charles Warren led Thursday
after shooting a 6-under 65
and held a two-stroke lead
over Brian Wilson and John
Curley.

It wasn't difficult to~ find
Wie on Thursday, she had
the largest gallery on the
course. Many fans sported
pins that read "Go Michell e"
and the ovation Wie received
when she was introduced at
the first tee was probably the
loudest of th e day.
Thi s is Wie 's second venture aga in st men in the last
month.
She
pla yed
respectably in a Canadian
tour event three weeks ago ,
but mi ssed the cut with
rounds of 74 and 79. This
week 's cut is expected to be
around even par on Friday.

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Tik.e Redman scores
Cincinnati Reds catcher Corky Miller, left, watches as Pittsburgh
after a walk iss ued to Pirates' Rob Mackowiak by Reds pitcher Scott Randall in the sixth inning
Thursday in Pittsburgh. The Pirates shutout the Reds 7-0 . (AP)

PITTSBURGH (AP) Kip Wells retired his first 17
batters and combined with
Brian Meadows on a threehitter Thursday, leading the
Pittsburgh Pirates over the
Cincinnati Reds 7-0.
Wells (9-8) didn ' t allow a
hit until two outs in the
sixth, when Red s reliever
Scott Randall (2-3) singled
to right in hi s first major
league at-bat. Randall tried
to advance to second on a
pitch in the dirt but was
thrown out by catcher Jason
Kendall.
Wells allowed two hits in
seven innings, struck out
four and walked two. He
had been 0-3 against the
Reds.
Pittsburgh won three of
four in the series, and
improved to 37-40 at home.
The Pirates have a chance
for first winning record at
PNC Park, which opened in
200 I. Four home games
remain on the home schedule, starting Friday with a
doubleheader against the
Chicago Cubs.
Reds starter John Bale left
after he strained his right
hamstring running out a
grounder in the top of the
third . Randall came in and
pitched 3 1-3 inning s, giving up four runs and five
hits.
The game was moved
from 7:05 p.m. to 12:35
p.m : in anticipation of bad
weather related to Hurricane
Isabel. While the announced
attendance was 10,390, it
appeared only a few thousand were on hand.

Pittsburgh took a 4-0 lead
in the sixth when Randall
threw a wild pitch with the
bases loaded , intentionally
walked
Craig
Wilson ,
forced in a run with a walk
pinch-hitter
Rob
to
Mackowiak, then allowed a
two-run single to pinch-hitter Matt Stairs.
Cincinnati loaded the
bases with one out in the
seventh, but Wily Mo Pena
popped out and Dernell
Stenson hit into a fielder's
choice.
Kendall hit an RBI single
in the seventh. The Pirates
added two runs in the eighth
on Jeff Reboulet 's infield
single and a throwing error
by reliever Chris Reitsma.
Notes: The Pirates opened
the season 8-21 in their first
29 homes games but are 2919 at PNC Park since then.
... Reds I B Sean Casey got
the day off .... The Pirates
were 11 -5 against the Reds
this season. They hadn ' t
defeated the Reds II times
in a season since 1961. .. .
For the seco nd straight day,
the Pirate s (71-81) avoided
ensuring their II th consecutive losing season .... The
Pirates didn't get a hit until

Tike Redman singled to lead
off the fourth. Redman
extended hi s hitting streak
to I 0 games .. .. Bale was
scheduled
to
fly
to
Cincinnati.
in stead
of
accompanyin g his team to
Philadelph ia, so th at he
could gel hi s -hi: llll st rin g
"'Checked Friday.
lr
Friday's
doubleheader
against the Cubs is rained
out, the teams probably
would play back -tn -back
doubleheaders SatunJav and
Sunday .... The Pirates-have
pitched I0 shut outs. and the
Re ds have been blan ked
eight times.

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�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Football
National Football League
AMERICAN
East
W L T

Buffalo
M1am1
t'sew England
NV. Jets

a

lnd1a 1o apolis
Houston

W L
2 0
1

2 0

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0

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PA

1 000 69
500 41

17
31

X·Atlon1a

500 31
000 23

41
37

~

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PA
13
51
53
62

Tennessee
1
0
Jacksonville 0 2 0
North
e att lmore
P•ttsburg h
C•nc1nnat1
Clevel and

W L
1 1

T
0

1 1
0 2
0 2

0
0
0

West
WL T
2 0 0

PF
1.000 42
.500 31
.500 32
.000 40

120

S!.l.Oyia 13, Mllwa'*"' o ·
1\iUo!itai'LOI Anooleo, 10:10 p.m.

6, Middlefield Cardtnal
7 Columbus Grove

114
108

e. Caldwell

84

9, E Canton
10, Fort Loramie

83
71

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1

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500 4345

£an Diego

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C..,. ·(Zambrano 13-10) a1
Pl11abiirgll (Fogg 1Q.8), 5:05 p.m., 1st

••

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Chicago
81. LOUIS
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Kansas C•ty 2 0

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Dallas

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500 48 59
500 55 48
000 10 48

&amp;undly'• Gunea

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South

1 000 36 32
500 58 46
500 41 37

Tampa Bay

500 26

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PA

1 000 54
500 48

38
55

500 56
000 20

36
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500 40
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W L T

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'

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West

Sunday's Games

•.Mnesota at Detr01t. 1 p m
Tampa Bay at Atlanta I p m
Kan sas City at Houston, 1 p.m ·
New Orl eans at Tennessee. 1 p m.
N Y Jets at New England, 1 p m
Jacksonville at Indianapolis 1 p m.
P1nsbu rgh at Cmcmnatt. 1 p.m
St Lou1 s at Seatlle. 4 05 p m
N Y Gtants at Wash tn gton. 4 05 p m
Gree n Bay at An zona 4 05 p m.
Ba lttmore at San Otego, 4 15 p m.
Cleve lan d at San Franc 1sco, 4.15 p m
Butta to at M1am1 , 8 .30 p m
Open Dall as, Philadelphia, Chicago,
Carolina
Monday's Game
Oakland at Denver. 9 p m
Sunday, Sept. 28
Anzona at St Louis. 1 p m
Tennessee at Pittsburgh. 1 p m.
Jacksonville at Houston. 1 p m
Phlladelphta at Buffalo, 1 p m
New England at Washmgton. 1 p m
Cmcmnalt at Cleveland, 1 p.m
San Franctsoo at Mmnesota , 1 p m
Sa n Oteg o at Oakland. 4.05 p m.
Ka nsas City at Balttmore, 4 15 p m
Dallas at N Y. Jets. 4 15 p m
Atlanta at Ca rolina . 4 15 p m
De trOit at Denver 4 15 p m
lndtanapolt s al New Orleans. 8 30 p m
Open Mtam•. Seattle, N Y Gta nts, Tampa
Bay
•

.

Florida a1 AUan1a, 1:05 p.m.
Montrea1•1i'I.Y. Me1s, 1;tO p,m.
Chicago Cuba at Pl1tsburgh, 1:35 p.m.
'CindnnaU a1 Phllildelphla, 1:35 p.m.
Arizona a1 Milwaukee, 2·05 p.m.
Houlton a1 51. Louis, 2:10p.m.
San Ojjlgo a1 ColOrado, 3'05 p m.
Sa!\ Franru.;o a1 Ulo Angeles, 4.10 p.m.
W L T OL PisGFGA
Anahei m
0000000
Dallas
0000000
Los Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0000000
Phoenix
San Jose
0000000

Monday, Sept. 29
Green Bay at ChiCago. 9 p.m

Hockey
National Hockey League
preaeason
EASTERN

Two po1nts fo r a win , one point lor a he and
overttme loss

Atlantic Divition

W L T OL P1s GF GA

NewJersey o o
NV lstandersO 0
NVAangersO 0
Phlladetphta 0 o
P1Hsburgh
0 0
Northeast

W L
2

Toronto
Boston
Montreal
Buffalo
Ottawa

D

o o o o o

0

0

0 0

0

0
0

0

0

p

0

o o o

0 0 0
Dlvlalon

0

0
0

T OLP1sGFGA
0 ,0

4

14 5

1000210
0 0 0 1 101
00000 0 0
0000000
Southeast Divlelon

Atlanta
Carol1na
Flonda
Washington
Tampa Bay

W L T OLP1sGFGA
1 00 0221
0 0 0 0 000
0000000
0
0

0
t

0
0

0

0

0

0

0

1 2

0

WESTERN
Central Division
W L T OL Pis GF GA

0000000
0000000
0000000
0 0 0 0 000
0 0 0 0 000

Chtcago
Columbus
DetrOit
Nashville
St LOUIS

Northwest Division
Vancouver

Calgary
Colorado
Edmonton
Minnesota

Pct

72 81 .471
68 85 .444

GB · , (S1anfotd 0:.2), 7:05 p.ln.
N.Y. Yankees (Contreras 5-2) a1Tampa
Bay (Waech1e&lt; &amp;0), 7:15p.m. •
5
De1ml1 (Sonderman 6-18) a1 Minnesota
15
(Millon &lt;J.O), 8:05 p.rn.
·
25~
Anaheim (Lackey 9·15) a1TOJ&lt;as (Od&lt;ey
34 '
8-8), e·o5 p m.
Karisas Cl1y (Wrlgh1 1-1) at Chicago
GB
Wh11e Sox (Buehrle 13-13), 8:05p.m.
Seattle (A.Franklln 9·13) a1 Oa~and
3~
(Hudson 15-ll), 10:05 p.m.
4~
Stturdll)''l Go16~
De1roi1a1Mlnnei!018, 12:!)5 p.m
45h
Seattle at Oakland, 4:0S p.m.

GB
5

20
24 ,

Oakland 2. Anaheim 1
Tampa Bay 7, Boston 0
Toronto 6, Detroit o
Baltimore 5, N.Y. Yankees 3
Cleveland 9, Kansas Cl1y 1
Seanle s. Texas 1

1 000 49

Pet

Toron1o (Escobar 11·9) a1 Bammore
(Daal4·10), ~ :05 p.m. . ,
Boo1on (BurkeU 10.S) a1 Cleveland

Wedne"'-r'• Games

x...-diviolon

64

W L T
Carolina
2 0 0
Atlanta
0
New Orleans
0

Detroit

Seattle
Anaheim
Texas

.

·

.549
.526
.520
66 88 .429
38 114 .250
Weot Division
WL Pet
92 81 .601
67 66 .569

•

Cdlotldo
Son Diogo

W L
84 69
80 72
79 73

MiMOSOia
Chicago
Kansas Cl1y ·
Cleveland

a1 St. ·Louis. Oakland

Pc1

0

Wl Ptt
New York
94 58 .61a
8&lt;&gt;61on
89 133 .588
Toronto
79 73 .520
Baltimore
68 83 .450
Tampa Bay
60 ll2 ,.396
Can1rll Dlvitlon

al Miiw&lt;lukee
•

NATIONAL
East
L T

'

Vieot Dlvlalon

~a .

34

E... Dlvlolon

Mlwou&lt;••

LoiAngolel

Pct PFPA
1.000 67 23

1 00068

·. ND THE DIAMO·ND·

168
156
131

~IcoQo

Florida

Pc1 PF PA
500 48 47
500 54 56
000 30 53
000 19

18p

•.

'

SOuth
T
0
0

1, McDonak:t (12 )

American League·

W L T OLPtsGFGA
1000210
0000000
0000000
0 0 0 0 000
0 1 0 0 00 1
Pacific Division

Thursday's Games
Toronto 9, Djurgarden IF 2
Pittsburgh vs . Washington a1 Wtlkes·Barre .
Pe . ppd , humcane
Boston 1, Montreal 0, OT
Atlanta 2, Ta mpa Bay 1
Vancouver 1, M1nnesota 0
Dallas at Colorado, 9 p m
Edmonton at Calgary, 9 p m
Anahetm at Los Angeles, 10 30 p m
Friday's Games
Toronto al FarJestad, 1'30 p m
Columbus at St LOUIS, 2 p m
Buffalo vs Ottawa at Bmghamton. N Y , 7
p.m.
New Jersey at Phtladelphla. 7 p m
Washingto n at Detroit. 7.30 p.m .
Carolina at Florida. 7.30 p. m
Atlanta at Tampa Bay. 7 30 p m
N.Y.·Islanders vs Pi!l sburgh at Wheeling
W.Va . 730 pm
Vancouver at M1nneso1a. 8 p m
Nashville at Ch1cago, 8 30 p m
N.Y. Rangers at Dallas, 8 30 p m
San Jose at Anaheim, 10 30 p m
Saturday's Games
Chicago at Nashville, 6 p m
Ottawa at Montreal, 7 p m
Ph1ladelph1a vs Washtngton at London,
OntariO, 7 p m
Atlanta vs Carol1na at Estero, Fta , 7'30

pm.
N.Y. Rangers at Detroit, 7.30 p m.
N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh. 7 30 p m

a

Dallas al St. Lou is. p.m
Edmonton at Calgary 9 p.m .

Mlnn...,la 4, Chicago Whne sox 2
Thureday'a Gam11
N.Y. Yankees 1. Baltimore 1, 5 mnings,
r810 , tie
Tmcas 2, Ssattle1 , 10 innings
Boston 4, Tampa Bay 3
Toronto' 10 , Detroit 6
Kansas Cl1y 3, Cleveland 2
Mlnnei!01a 5, Ch~ago Whne Sox 3
Flidoy'o Gamet
Colorado vs . Flonda at Fort Collins, Colo.,

9pm
Phoemx at Los Angeles. 10 ·30 p m
Sunday's Games
Boston vs NY Islanders at Bndgepor t,
Conn . 4 p m.
Nashville at Columbus 5 p m
Carolina at Tampa Bay. 5 p m
N Y Rangers at Mmnesota. 6 p m
Sl. Lows at C h1cago. 7 p m.
Buffalo at Toronto, 7 p.m
Pittsburgh vs Washington at Barre, Pa ., 7
p.m .
Los Angeles vs. San Jose at Bakersfield,
Caht , 8pm
Phoemx at Anahetm. 8 p m

Soccer

N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 6:15p.m.
Boston at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto at Bahlmcire, 7:05 p.m.
Kansas Coty a1 Chicago WMe Sox, 7:05
p.m.
Anaheim at Texas. e·os p m
· Sund.J'! ' G Boston at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m.
Toron1o a1 Balllmoro, 1:35 p.m.
Detroit· at MlnneSQta, 2:05 p.m. .
Kansas Cily a1 Chicago White Sox. 2:05
pm.

Se~111e

at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Anaheim at Texas. 7 35 p m.

x-cltnched playoff spot
NOTE· Three p01nts for VICtory. one point
for t1e
Thursday 's Game
Colorado 0. New England 0. He
Saturday's Games
Columbus at MetroStars. 7 30 p.m.
San Jose at Kansas Ctly. 8 p.m
Chtcago al Dallas, 8 .30 p m

•

Notice is
hereby
giv.en that on August
25, 2003, an application wasllled with lhe
Federal
Communications
Commission,
W~shington , D.C., by
Positive Alternative
Radio, Ind., for a
Construction Permit
tor
a
new
Noncommercial FM
Translator Station on

Channel 290 105.9
MHz) at Middleport,
Ohio .
Positive
Alternative
Radio,
Inc. seeks authority
to rebroadcast the
signal
ol
Radio
Station WPCN·FM a1
Point Pleasant, West
Virginia on the new
FM
Translator
Station.,
The applica1ion pro·
poses FM transistor
operations with an
effective
radiated
power .17 kilowatts
horizontal and ,17
kilowatts vertical. The
proposed transmll·ting site Is located at
geographical coordinates
of
North
Latitude 39 - 00 - 35
West Longitude 82 •
04 - 14.
A copy of the FCC
Application Is available
for
public
.lnspec11on
during
regular
business
hours at 1he following
location;
WPCN
Studlos-303
8th
Street, P1. Pleasan1 ,

wv.

9/19/03
Public Notice
State of Ohio Onlo
School
Facilities
Commission
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
1. Bids will be
received by the Melgi
Local School Dlatrlct
Board, at 320 East
Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, Attn :
Mark Rhonemus , for
1he following Project:
Meigs
Elemen1ary
School
Pomeroy, Ohio

\

'

I
the Drawings and
Specifications prepared by:
SSOE
Studios
Archllects
tOOl Madison Avenue
Toledo, Ohio 43624t535
Phone: (419( 255·
3838 - Fax : (419) 2556101
SEM
Partners, Inc.

t67
South
State
Street
Westerville, OH 4308t
Phone : (614) 7943100 Fax :(614) 7943088
The
Construction
Manager
tor the
Project Ia:
The Quandel Group,

Inc.
8181
Worthington
Road
Westerville,
Ohio

43082
Phone : (6t4) 8659000 Fax : (614) 865-

9001
www.quandel.com
2. Any
proposed
Equal for a S1andard
shall be submitted to
the Architect no Iaior
than ten (tO) business days prior to the
bid opening.' If no
Addenda Is Issued In
association wHh the
Bidder's reque81, the
proposed Equal-shall
be considered rejected.
Sealed bids will be
received for:
Meigs
Elementary
School,
Et11mated
Contract Value
Bid Package No.
01 :, Brick (Material)
Packegea,
$1,086,792.00 Under
contract
Bid Package No.
02: Early Site work,
S5~8 , 4t 0.00
Under
contract
Bid Package No.
03:
General
Construction ,
$3 ,445,522.00' Under
contract
Bid Package No.
04:,
Maaonry,
$2,018,649.00 Under
contract
Bid Package No.
05: Aluminum &amp;Glasa'

a
S2t3,445.00
Under
contract
Bid Package No.
06: Food Service
Equipment,
$258,336.00
Under
Contract

Bid Package No.
07:, Casework (Div t2
only), $340,790.00,
Under contract

Bid Package No.
08:
HVAC,
$1,728,866.00 Under
Contract
Bid Package No.
09:
Plumbing ,
$603,689.00
Under contract
Bid Package No.
10: Fire Protection:
Under
St52,260.00
contract
Bid Package No.
t t:
Electrical,
$1,053,4t9.00 Under
contract
Bid Package No.
t2:
Technology,
$324, t29.00
Under
contract
Bid Package No.
t3: Hillside Slip &amp;
Paving, $600,000.00
Under contract
Bid Package No.~
14:
Demolition,
$372,668.00
Under
contract
until the bid Date of
October 6, 2003 at
1:00 p.m. (local standard time), when they
wtll be opened and
reed.
3. A pre-bid meetIng will be held on
October t , 2003, at
t :00 p.m. at the following location:
Meigs
Elementary
School Job Trailer
3687t SR t24
Middleport, OH 45760
4.
Bidding
Document• may be
obtained from the
Contlructlon
Manager by Prime
Blddere only, upon
recitlp1 of a check,
which It refundable,
In ths amount of
$25.® . Cltecltt thall
be made peyable to
the
Melga
Local
School Dlatrlct and
forwarded to the
Conatructlon
Manager.
Upon

accompanied
a
deposit as named
above,
the
Construction
Manager will torward
copies of · bidding
documents to the bidder.
5.
Shipping
charges for all bidding documents are
non-refundable and
•re to be paid via a
aeperate chock In the
amount of $25.00,
also made oul to the
Meigs Local School
District and torward·
ad
to
the
Construction
Manager with the
deposit check.
6. Interested bid·
ders should contact
Melissa Hull at (6t4)
865-9000 or send
deposit check directly to Key Blue Print
8180 Cleveland Ave.
Columbus, OH 4323t .
No mora than three
(3) sels will be provided on a retundab(e
basis to a Bldder.
Deposit
will
be
refunded to Prime
Bidders only per
Article 2.t0 of the
Instructions
to
Bidders .
7. The contract
Documents may be
reviewed for bidding
purposes
without
charge during buai·
nets hours at the lol·
lowing loca11ons :
ArchHect's Office:
SSOE
Studios
ArchHects
1OOt Madison Avenue
Toledo, OH
43624-t535
SEM
Partnere
Architects
t87
South
Slate
Street
Weotarvllle, OH 43081
Constr~ctlon

Manager's Office :
Tile Quandel Group,

Inc.
818t Worthington Rd .
W81tervllle,
Ohio
43082
Con str uction
Manager's
Field

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

36871 SR 124
Middleport, OH 45760
Owner Office:
Meigs Local School
Dlstrlcl
320 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
F.W.
Dodge Plan
Rooms In the follow·
ing cities:
• Cincinnati, Ohio
(45202·6001 ),
The
Grand
Baldwin
Building, 655 Eden
Park Drive, Suite 515
•

Independence,

Ohio (4413t) , 6200
Rockslde
Woods
Blvd. (Cleveland)
• Columbus, Ohio
(432t6-1073), t175
Dublin Road
•
o ·ayton ,
Ohio
(45439),
3077
Kettering Boulevard,
Point West Office
Park, Suite 30t
• Toledo, Ohio
(43623),
3930
Sunforesl Court, P.O.
Box 8598
• Charleston, West
VIrginia (25302), 405
Capitol Street
and the following
addlllonal
plan
rooms:
•
Allied
Construction, 10t0
Yale
Avenue ,
Cincinnati ,
Ohio
45206
•

Dodge/Scan ,

Bank One Building,
3rd Floor, t255 Euclid
Avenue , Cleveland,
Ohio 44115
• The
Builders
Exchange, Suite One
Conalrucllon Center,
981 Keynole Circle ,
Cleveland ,
Ohio
44t31
• Dayton Builders
Exchanga ,
1077
Embury Park Road,
Day1on, Ohio 45414
•
Builders
Exchange of East
. Central Ohio , 2521
34th
Street
NE,
Canton, Ohio 44705
• Central Ohio
, Minority
Business
Adm lnlalratlon, . 8t5
Eaal Mound Street,
Columbus,
Ohio
43205
•
Ohio
Valley

construction Trades

Council , 1406 1/2 13th
Street, Parkersburg,
wv 26101
8.
The
Owner
reserves the right to
reject any or all bids
and to waive any or
all irregularities, mis..
takes , omissions or
informalllles relative
therelo .
All questions pertaining to securing
Contract Documents,
Bidders List, etc .
shall be diracted to
Melissa Huff, The
Quandel Group, Inc.,
818t
Worthington
Road , Westerville, OH
43082 (614) 865·9000.
Owner: Meigs Local
School District Board
(9)19,26
Public Notice
Eas1ern Local School
District
50008 SR 681
Reedsville,
Ohio
45772
74D-667·6079
VACANCY POSTING:
Reserve
Boys
Coach·
Basketball
Eastern High School
Girls Junior High
Basketball
CoachEastern Elementary
Contact:
Pam
Douthitt 740·985-3329
Date: September 18,

1 Centervt lle (t O)
2, Bowling Green {2)
3, em. Colerain
4, Cm . Turpin
5, Massillon Jackson
6. C1n . St. Ursula
7, H1lliard Davtdson
B. N Can Hoover
9, Upper Arlington
10, C le St Joseph

178
158
155
154
11 6
98
89
76
70
57

Gallll C o~&amp; n ly, OH

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

DIVISION II
1. N Bend Tay lor (9)
2, Lexmgton (3)
3, Ctrclevtlle
4. Cuya Valley Chnst1an Acad.
5, Cln . McNicholas
6, Perry
7, Van Wert
8, Minerva
9, Napoleon
10, R1chf1eld Revere

176
170
141
129
117
108
90
83
80
56

To
Place
Your

D.C. United at Los Angeles, 10 p m
Thursday, Sept. 25
DC Un1ted at MetroStars, 7·30 p m
Saturday, Sept. 27
Dallas at San Jose, 10 p m
Kansas Ct ty at Los Angeles, 10 p m
Sunday, Sept. 28
MetroSiars al DC United. 4 p m
Columbus at New England 6 p m

Cross County
Prep cross country poll
COLUMBUS, OhiO (AP) - The th1rd of
seve n weekly state cross country polls as
comp1led by the Oh1o Associ ation of Cros s
Country Coaches (first-place votes m
parentheses )

BOYS
DIVISION I
1..-Middletown ( 10)

178
162
144
128
126
104
100
87
75
46

3. Kmgs Mill s Kings
4. Wooster (2)
5, Cin. Moeller
6, Gi n. St. Xavier
7, Reynoldsb urg
8. N Ca nton Hoover
9. Ta l. Cent. Ca tholic
tO, Fa1rf1eld

DIVISION II
1, Ash EdgeW&lt;&gt;od (9)

160

2, Cin. Wyom1ng (3)
3. Akron St V-St. Mary
4. Cuya Falls Walsh JesUit
5. Bay Village Bay
6. N. Bend Tay lor
7,Young Mooney
8, Jefferson Area
9. Lewtstown lndtan Lake
10. Bellefontame

158
137
136
85
84

82

PANTHERS- Claimed

S

Travares Tillman off waivers from Houston
Placed DE Kav1ka P1ttman on tnJured
reserve
DALLAS COWBOVS--S1gned CB Andrew
Davtson. Release d CB Jeff Sanchez.

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Sognod OL
Matt Leonard to the practice squad.
NEW YORK JETS-$1gned CB Leonard
Myers to the practice squad Rel eased RB
Johnathan Reese lrom the praclice squad.
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES- Returned LW Daniel
Pa1lle, RW Branislav Fabry, LW Clarke
MacArthur, AW LOUIS·Phlllippe Marttn , F
Mike Mole LW Michael Tesster. LW Michal
Vondrka, 0 Pavel Voroshni n and G Jeff
Weber to the1r JUnior league teams
PHOENIX COYOTES-Sent C Jakub
Kore1s to Guelph of the OHL and D Marcus
Sm1th to K1tch ene r ol the OHL Reassigned
G Scott 01ckie to Springfield of the AHL

80

COLLEGE

77
55

' INDIANA , PA.- rQamed Aut ger Wiese field
hockey and lacrosse coach.
WENTWORTH TECH-Named Tom Dev1tt
men's basketball coach.

DIVISION Ill

a.m~

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

t

r

to 5:00 p.m.

ANNOUNCEiltENI'S

I

$200. REWARD with lnfor-

;Harvestj
I
the 1
.savings .I
•

1n

Today's

'
! Cia~sifieds! i
I

t

~~

1

r.o

Sundays Paper

mation thar leads to arrest &amp;
con\liction of person/per·
sons stealing Items from my
sons grave at Forrest Hilt Estate Garage Sale
Cem. Cal l (270)B28-3124
washer and dryer. gas
range , kitcnen ta ble and
0-1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
chairs, refrigerator, chest of
tor sale, Chester Township,
drawers. dressers, bed
Metgs Co unty, send letters
frames, vanity,
sewmg
of intere st to The Daily
machines, end tables. typeSentinel, PO Box 729-20.
wnter. couCh and ch81r. desk
Pomeroy. O hio 45769
la mps, camster vacuu m ,
I Mane Plants will not be dtsh es, pot s, pans. flatware,
responsible for debts other electnc skillets, coffee mak·
than my own, Marie
E ers, mtcrowave oven, cast
Plants, ex wife of Alfred ,A. iron skillets, sewing material, lots ol yarn, quilt batts,
Plants Jr. 9·19-03
qu itting fram e, bl ankets.
Say good bye to high phone
sheets, pillows, mason can·
bills! New local phone servn1ng jars, steel and wood
ice with FREE unlimtted
shelves, 28 e~~:t. ladder, connation wide long Distance
crete blocks, old bricks, and
1-800·6 35-2908
or
othe r
mise
items.
www.FreedomMQII/Ie.com/itp
Additional Items added
aysyou. Local Agents want-

r

GIVEA.WAY

Free refridgerator, works
fine. please leave message . .
740-245-918 3
Free to good home. Female
Calico
decl awed
and

spayed Call 740-446·7 124
Giveaway · Gerbils and
Ham sters Cell 740-9925937, 1f no answer, leave a
message

~

Ou1ios include

growmg hortlcultural-specialty prod ucts and crops,
, such as flowers, ornamental
plants, and vegetables,
under environmentally controlled condittons Must have
a Bachelor' s degree 1n
Agnculture or Horl tculture.
Send res ume to Bob's
Market &amp; Greenhouses, Inc.
P.O Box 67, Mason, WV
25260

Hamsters and Gerbils to

give &amp;~~ay. 740.992·5937

.!I

e0

i

roBuv

AZ Dlveraifltd Healthcare
IS looking for full t1me

si lver and bl ack pound, walnuts $10 per hun ·
stnpped female l&lt;iUy, 4 dred pounds . (740)696·
month s old Call 740-44t · 2124
~retty

0145.

Will pay $20 each for JU nk
~upple s half regtstered bor- automobiles to haul away,
der collie , halt boxer. Phone (740)992·041 3 or 740·992·
1071 if no an s. leave mes·
740·256·1558
sage.

r

I \ 11 '1 II \ \ I I ' I

(740)742-25 11

(304)675·9726 or stop by.

m ile from St At. 850.
Furniture, dryer and house-

hok:t goods. Fn 9119· Sat
9120 9 am·3 pm .
858 Kemper Hollow Rd.
i/18·9120. 9 a.m.·5 p m..

A'w'ONI All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Sh i rle~ Spears, 304-

Busy Physician Office needs
part time Ex-ray Tech, ultra sound experience preferred,
but not required. LPN
Certified Medical Assistant,
Secretary with
Med ical
Office e;&lt;perlence, Secretary
with Medical Coderslb UIIng
experience. Good
orge·
nlzatlonal skills. Fax res um,
to : 877 -588·36 12 or send to
JR9 , 200 Main Street, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550

ant i ques ,
aclultlchlldrens/baby brand Busy salon has great oppor·
name clothing, rain or shine.
tu nlty for experienced stylist,
Cia~ Townhouse 7 south, 2 wlth manage r license to lake
,mllaa, Sept .. 18·20. Gunt over excessive clien te le.

movies,
co:s, 740.411-1880 or 740·256tabla/chairs, kitchen appllo 8336.

,aols,

--

r

ances, lots 9f cheap Items.
Help wanted caring tor the
740-446-4419.
elderly, Carat Group Home,
Tools, fishing gear. western niw paying rhlnlmum wage,
books and more. 9/18·9119 new shifts· 7am-3pm, 7amPine Street storage at Aallt

to Ralls.

Overb rook Center IS currently accepti ng applicatiOns for
1ts upcom1ng nursmg asstslant class. Apphcahons Will
be
accepted
thro ugh
Sept ember 19. Classes Will
begtn Mon day September
22, 2003 . Contact Gassy
Lee, Staff Deve lopm ent
Coordinator at (740)9926472 or pick up an appli cation at 333 Page Street,
M1ddleport Ohio E.O.E.

If you are hired before

29 you

will be

eligible for a sign on bonus .

5pm , 3pm·11pm , 11pm7am. call740-992·5023

.
1

IIELP Wi\NilD

lnfoCialon Management
C~np. 1s seektng ind1v1duals
for entrv..fml management
to add to our team at the
Gall!oo!ls tocat1on .
Responsibilities mclude.
'Managing a team of 10 lo
20 people
'Running team meetings
a
n
d
0 151185 30 t 5 t1853co ntests
' Mon11onng calls for quahty
'Employee counselmg
'Knowledge of cli ent and
call center progra ms
'Report writing
Oualif1ed candidates mu.&amp;1
have a Bachelors degree,
strong int erpersonal, commumcahon , and leadership
SkillS.

Plus we offer:

• $8/ hour + bonuses
• Full-time and part-time shifts
• Ability to match your current
pay wage
• Paid traimng
• Paid vacations
• Full benefits package

CALL INFOCISION TODAY!
1-877-463-624 7
ext. 2456
or stop by

242 3rd

Avenue

Gallipolis , OH

675·1429.

2 family, Harrisburg Ad

HEl-P Wi\NJID

" I I~\ II I "

Fou nd set of keys at ~~t;itor;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Mothman Festival. To id entiHFl.P WANTm
fy call Harris Steakhouse ..__ _ _ _ _ _ __..

r

110

11D

.
1

$200 Sign On Bonus
September

I'ROtllSSIONAL
SERVICES

Theraplata Needed
AZ Diversified Healthcare
is looking for full t1me
Llcenaed
Phyalcel
Therapleta
and
Aaaletante, Occ'upatlonal
Theraplete and Aeststanta
and Speech Language
Patliologlat tor rap 1dly
expanding Home Health
Agency In Pt. Pleasant, WV
and surrounding areas

A
Co untry
Craftsman
Furntlure
stnppt ng,
Rehn tshmg &amp;
.repatr s,
Uphol stery &amp; recam mg
Back to School SpeCial 1Q0, 0
off !a!Liabor. Augu st 16 thru
Sept 30 (304)74 3· 11 00

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No FEfe Unless We W•n'
1·888·582-3345

HI II IS I Ill '
310

HoMES
HlHSAI .~.

Therapists Needed

we

25 Serloua People Wanted
Who wan1 to LOSE we tght
We Pay You Cas h for the
pounds you LOSE!
Sale, N atural , No Drug s.
800·201·0832
Fot Sate · Homehte #150
Cha1n saw, $50 00 12' alu·
m1num John Mat w/ seat s.
oa rs and sma ll electnc
motor $125 00 2 Mauve
reclmer/rockers $100 00 ea
Large bench v1se $50.00
740·446·4274

Grow tng HVAC company
tookmg
tor
Cert1f1ed
Techmc1an With lnsrallat ion
exp8rlence, m1mmum 1 1/2
years experience m both
OMJ.Y expenenced need
~ Call 740-441-1236 1f
no answer leave a message.

GISTS lor a raptdly expa nding Home Health Agency 1n
Huge 5 family Yard Sale on Pt. Pleas ant, West V1rgima
town square 1n Wilkesville and surroundmg areas.
Oh1o, housewares, clothmg
otter:
all s1zes, baby 1tems Sat
EXCELLENT WAGES
Sept 20th 9am-?
Comprehensive Insurance
74
YARD SALEPackag e
I'oMEKoYIMtDDLE Pmd Vacatio n. Hol1days,
Personal and Sick days
Job Secunty
112
1
20
1
Sa September
• '
Great worki ng envtronment
mtle.s Hysel! Run 1970s
Zemth stero/record pl ayer,
old glassware, all 1tems 1st Please contact Stacy at:
t1me 1n ~ard sale 992·5275 1-800·577 -4310
or tax your resu me to ·
Sept. 19th, 20th, clothing , 1-937 -695· 1375
furniture, dolls, &amp; m1sc ,
36279 Roc+;springs Ad , rain Propan e truck dnver, needs
cancels.
COL Class A and hazmat,

Absol ute Top Dol lar. U S
Gold
Coins,
Male and female pupp1es, 'Silver,
bkmd and black Half collie Proofsets, Diamond s, Gold
U.S. Currency.half chow Has 1st shots and Ri ngs,
worm ed. 74(}-446-2515 .
M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151
Second Avenue. Gallipolis,
One
ha lf·g rown
part
740·446-2842
Siamese female cat Call
740·388·9680 after 6 p.m
Pawpaw fruit $1 to $2 pe r

'\4t·1565.

•
'nd

-----------.!:lwr:!:!lg::,::f114!!1c.net

v
,;

mile off t41 . Fn 9/19-Sat.

WANilll

170

ML&lt;;CEI.LANF..OUS

9120.

r

___.r

._

lliuWANilll

LICENSED
PHYS1CAL
ovory day. 9/16-9/20. Bam· THERAPISTS AND ASS1S·
ed
? 182 Fourth Ave. TANTS , OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPISTS AND ASSIS·
We Alfred A. Plants Jr. and Golllpollo.
TANTS AND SPEECH
LOretta A. Plants will not be
Garage sale, Gage Rd . 6/10 LANGUAGE
PATHOLO·
reapons1ble for any debts

Addres sers wanted immedi Lost: White Shih Tzu with ately! No Experience necestan markings, wearing a sary Work at Hom e. Call
black collar. lf 1ound call 740· 405-447-6397

•

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlthlng rHerv .. the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time Errore must be repor1ed on tl1e first day of publication and
Trlbune-Sinllnei·Reglater will be rltpOnaible tor no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the llrst tnsertlo n. We shall not be liable
any loti or expenH that rnults from tht publication or om lqion of an advertiaement. Co rrection wlll be made In the tlrat ava ilable ed ition. • Box number
1r1 alwtya confldentlll. • Current rate ctrd appll... • Alt rtal etltlt advert isements are subject to the Federal Fair Hou sing Act of Hl68. • This ne•"P••P••I
accept• only help wanted ada meeting EOE •tandtrdt. We will not knowingly accept any ad~tert!sing m ~tlol atlon of lh e law

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Clearvlow Esta1os, 184 Ann Grower .

Drive 8 miles south of
Gallipolis. Clothes, furniture,
bike s, toys . Sept. 20, t 0-2
p.m.
•

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

Monday•Frlday for Insertion
In Next Day•s Paper
·Unday In-Column: 1:00 p . m .

Detcription • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

895·3789

'

I

8:00

West Virgima grown hardy
mums for sale at Dewhurst
Greenhouse Mt Alto WV.
open 9·6pm Sat &amp; Sun 304-

:

1

Monday thru Friday

othe r than those made by us
personally 9· t2·03

-- --.-

I

Word .Ads
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

AD • Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete

American League
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Activated AHP
Jose Li ma fro m 15·day disabled list
National Basketball Aaaoclatlon
MIAMI HEAT- Promoted A lex Dia2 to
AmericanAirline s Arena general manager
and Brian Babin to AmencanAirllnes Arena
assistant general manager
SEATTLE SUPEASONIC&amp;-Na med Jack
Sikma special assignments coach .
National Football league

CAROLI NA

2. Cm LaSa lle

Offtee llofV'~

Transactions

(9) 19, 22

Classlfleds!

lReg;tster

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailytribune.com
classified@ mydailysentinel.com

Ad ••.

t79
t67
t55
t36
129
115
9t
88
76

2003

Shop

Melp Cctu ru y, OH

GIRLS
DIVISION I

1. Mmster (11)
2. Versailles
3, Fort Loram1e (H
4, Louisville Aquinas
5. Attica Seneca E
6, Bascom Hopeweii·Loudon
7, Findlay L1berty-Benton
8, N Robinson'Col. Crawford
9, Cortland Maplewood
10, Betlalre63

Public Notice

UEILI
NOTI ES

mrtbune - Sentinel- Regi1)ter
CLASSIFIED

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Construcllon
Employers Council,
2t Armory Drive,
Wheeling, WV 26003
•
Marietta
Contractors
Assoclalion , 4424 B
Emerson
Avenue ,
Parkersburg ,
WV
26104
•
ParkersburgMarietta Building &amp;

Sentinel •

DIVISION 111

Major league Soccer
Eastern Division
WLTPrsGFGA
ChiC!\QO
12 5 7 43 42 31
MetroStars
9 7 7 34 33 30
DC Un1ted
9 8 6 33 31 28
Columbus
8 9 7 31 32 33
New England
7 9 9 30 40 41
Western Division
W L T PIS GF GA
x·San Jose
12 5 7 43 35 26
x-Colorado
11 9 5 38 31 32
Kansas C1ty
7 98293735
Los Angeles
7 9 8 292828
Dal las
4 16 4 16 26 51

The Dai

Friday, September 19, 2003
2. Versailles
3, Cortland Maplewood
4, Bloomdale Elmwood

'

PF

o

PageB4

lntoCtslon offers monthly
bonuses and excellent beneftts 1nclud1ng health , 40 1K,
pa1d holidays and vacation

roo

Akron , OH 44333
Or email res umes 10 .
HADirector@mtoctslon com
ViS it our web Site at
www jnfoc tsJon com
Position
Malnlenance
Available
Mu st have Refngeratlan and
Electrical Expertence Other
duttes
include
genera l
equlpme11t and miscellaneous repair
Excellent
Benef1ts and wages Ohio
Valley Supe rmarkets 740-

State-of-the-art optom etnc
pract1ce IS seeking an tndi ·
v1dual fo r a career in a
dynamic work enVIronment
wit h a great team of proles·
s1onals Applicant must be
detail-oriented , committed to
excellence 1n patient care.
self-motivated and possess
good communication skills
Approximately
30hrs/wk,
mcludes some Saturdays
and evemng s
Benef tts
InClU de paid !UIIIOn and
tuition and travel tor career
advancement, pa1d hoflda• &lt;s.
vaCBIIOn and SICk lime,
health insurance and pen·
s1on
plan .
EJC penence
des1red but not nece ssa ry.
Wage IS commensurate with
eMpenence
EOE
Ma1l
re sume
to· Th e Da1ly
~ntinel , PO Box 729· 12,
Pomeroy, Oh 75769

BabySitting 1n Syra cuse
area, cou nty cert1f1ed or pn·
vale pay, days, ntght s &amp;
weeke nds. (740)992·6316
Ch nstn er H tll Top Manor has
a opemng personal ass1st
with t he elderly 304·675·
6183 WV tacthty 508848
MB Handyman Servtce .
Hau lm g . pamtmg , power
washing , dnveway repair,
seal coaling. gutters. ch1m·
ney. plumbmg Jack oi all
trades 30yrs exp Sen10r
Dtscou nt Free E stun ates .

!304)882·2196 . (304)3776266

ttme case man age r vacan· 8266
cie s with highly energetic,
motivated mdwiduats Job
Pieky Patnters
duties inc lude assessm ent, Free Estt mates lntenor and
referral. case management exte nor pa1n11ng G1ve your
and monitoring serv tces to
home or garage a fresh
adult and juvemle clients new look We pa1nt homes.
referred primarily through
garages, mobtte hOmes.
the Meigs and/or Gallia bUIIdtngs. barn s and roots
Coun ty ju st1ce sys tems
Licenced and in sured
An nual salary of $20·$26K,
(Cal1 M·S, 8·6)
dependent
on
(304)895-3074
credential/licensure, educaYears experience
ti on
and
expenen ce
and references.
Competitive benefits package included .
S1drng roohng . Sidewalks.
Resume, cover letter and blocks, 111e. room add1t1ons.
th ree references to be subremodeli ng, new homes.
mitted by 4.00 p.m . on
free est im ates, (740)992·
September 24, 200 3 to 6190, 740-992·3934
Judith Smfthchild, Cllntcal
Director : 8 North Court
Transmlaalons, all typee,
Street- 5th Floor, Athans,
740.245-5677.

:w

N1ght desk recept1on1st tor
Gallipolis Caree r College
Hours are 6:00pm to 10:00
p.m .
Monday
through
Thursday Must be able to
type, have minimal computer $kills. answe r telephone
and work with publ ic Pay Is 446·9312 Elr1. 116. EOE
negotiable send resume to
Gallipolis Career Co llege , Medl Home Health Agency, Onhli-o.;•;;57;.0~1~·-----,
PO Box 542 , Kerr Ohio Inc . seek ing full ·flme and
45643
PRN RN'o rn 1he Gall~lio,
TlwNING
WE Offer
•
Ohio are. Must be licensed ~ ..__ _ttiitiiiiiiiio-•
Insurance Agency now hir• Excellent Wages
In both Ohio and We st
Ing· Local Admi nistrative
·comprehensive Insurance
Virginia. We offer a compet- Qolllpollo CorHr Colle;t
Ass1sta nt, must have clerl·
(Careers Close To Home)
Package
cal , secretariat, business Itive sa lary benefits peck- Call Todayl 74D-446·4367.
•Paid Vacation H olidays,
skills, and knowledge ,ol age, and 401K. Please send
1·8\)0·214·0452
Personal, and Sick days
computers
Good people resume to 352 Second www.gattlpoi tscareercOIIege.com
•Job Security
Aven
ue,
Gallipolis
OH
skills a plus. Full-time posl ·
Aea N90-05-~274B .
•Great working envi ronment
lion available Send resume 46831
Please contact Stacy at :
to· CLA· 574 c/o Gallipolis
Need to earn Money? Lets
1·800·5 77-431 0
Dally Tribune . P.O.Box 469
talk the NEW Avon . Call
or lax your resum e to :
GallipoliS, OMIO 45631 .
Marilyn, 304-882·2645 1o
1·937 ·895· 1375
Freezer. G ibson heavy duty
Need 7 ladles to sell Avon, learn all the ways ft can work
commercial . 740·992·3187
for you.
Call 740·446·3358

1146

•I,

Pt tce reduced, newly redec·
orated 3BR wtlh carpot! 135
Kmeon
740· 44 6-2776

$59.000
rent to Own Land Contract
or buy out nght 3 bedroom
house m Rutland near new
school No Pets mstde
house Thank you Call 740·
742-2263
Rrverfront wr!h boat dock
ntce 3 br . 2 ba . 1 5 acre s
Gallip oliS photo! mformat1on
on 1me www ORVB com
code 90303 ca ll 740-446·
0531

'}~~)

seokong 1o lo ll lwo (2) lull· (304)882·2196. (304)377-

250 N Cleveland·Masslllon
Ad

HOM I:&lt;;
FOR SAl£

Go·cart for sale, 5 horse
power engme $500, ca ll
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes sel u p ~ r,320
~~~-~~---,
740·379·9044
for 1m med1 ate possess1on all
Momu: Ho:\u:r.;
w1th1n 15 m1n ol downtown
HlR SAU:
JAZZY motonzed wheel Gallipolis Rates as low as
c hair, used 1 year $2.500 6% (74 01446·32 18
1980 Fatrmont , 3 bdrms 2
call 740·256·6305
bath ! 3.900 Call 367-0638
3 bdrm . FR . Lg LA. Cath
S!Qp cooling and heat1ng b1ll ceihngs wood beams. l1 re· 1985 I 4x 60 2 bedroom s
surpnses D.QwJ. Sal e patent· place . ha rdwood lloors. CIA. New Doors. Wtndows.
ed process w1th a 30 day more tnfo (740)441· 1724
Carpet and more Porch
satisfaction Guarantee (Unrt
tnctud ed
N•ce
Home
price refunded ) Montto r 3 br . 2 ba new sttck bUilt SB 500
OBO Ca ll 256 ·
hours/min ran on a small ranch home. Pt Pleasant 929 1
digital dtspl ay. from tnstde photos/ mtormatton on 11ne
co m
code 1992 lndtes Sulton 14X80 3
your home. AdJuSt yo ur I he r· www ORVB
90903
can
740·441
·9546
bedroom 2 bath cent ral a•r
mostat and save. No wmng
to furnace or atr unit Adds to 3BA , 1 1/2 bath br1ck ranc h and BX8 deck $1 2 000 00
te 2003 by NEA, Inc. fast , easy mstall at1on (2 wtlh attac hed garage. full 740·99 2-0031
small battery operalton) basemen! located on one
Momtor days, months or acre at 1230 Geo rges 2003 Clayton 3 bedroom s
110
whole year with out battery Creek Ad ask1ng $79 .900 2 bath s. furni shed. on a
rented lot NO LAND CON·
cha
nge. (sensor·driven untt) . 740·367-0244
IIELPWi\NJID
1.
TRACTS' Ca ll lor appotnl·
$79.95 un1t pn ce To order or
men! 94 1·77 6·5894 or 740· "
detai ls Call 740-339-3240 or 4 Bedroom. 2· 112 bath
No expenence nee ded, hard
367·0507
740·443- 2932
Galltpol ts, 2906 Annt ston Dnve
workmg, work ahohc needed
Ohio 45631 (9·5 or aft er 5 Rec roo m. ca rport $8 1.000
dtrecl 1n home sales, call
(304)675· 1213 or (304)61 7· 73 14X65 Wmdsor 2 bd
ask for Freddy)
Gas furnace w/heat pump,
Ken, (740)992·7440 or 740·
2380
fu rn tture
washer/dr yer.
-59_3_·5_2-45_._ _ _ _ _
446 ·43 16 alter
97 Clayt on Hou se Tra1ter $2,000
Optometric
Te chni cian - ..__ _,.;ijioiiiiiioo-· 16X76. asktng $12 ,000. cal l 5pm

MB Handyman Servtce
Haulmg. pamttng , power
washing. dnveway rep a1r.
If you would like to conseal coaling, gut1ers. ch1m·
tnbute to our success m
ney. plu mbing. Jack of all
Gallipolis, send your resume
::,-:.,---:----:-:-: trades 30yrs exp Semor
10.
TASC of Southeast Ohio is D1scount Free E stim ates
tntoC!Sion Management
Corp
Attn· Sam Gasket

1D

BISJNESS

-W-11-1- -d-o- -B-a-b-ys-,1-to-ng(304)675·7844
11 \ \\~1\1

BUSINES'i
OPPORTUNITY
INOTICE1
OH IO VALLE Y PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends that
you do bu stness with people
you know. and NOT to send
money through the mall until
you have mvesttgated the
offermg

740·256·6663

Cole 's Mob1le Homes
US 50 East, Athens. Oh to.

45701 ' 740·592·1972
Good used 14JC70 Only
$9995 tncludes delivery, Ca ll
Harold , 740·385·9948
All real estate adver1isi ng
in this newspapl!r is
subject lo the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes 1t illega l to
ad\lertise "any
preference. hmnatton or
discrimination band on
race, color, religion , se•
fam ilial s1atus or national
origin ,,or arty intention to
make any such
prefe rence. limitatiOn or
di scri mination."
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which 16 in
vlot&amp;tlon of the taw. Our
readers are hereby
informed that all
dwellings advertiSed 1n
this newspaper are
avatlable on an eq ual
opportunity bases.

Land Home Packages avail·
able In you r area (740)446·

3384

.

Li be rty 12x70. 3 Br 1 bat h
refreshed 1nS1de. All new
ca rpet 55 .900 Call 740-256

6608
New 2003 Doublewtde 3 BA
&amp; 2 Bath On ly S1695 dowr
and &amp;295/mo 1-800·691·
6777
New 3 br '2 ba th On ly $999
dO\\n and only $184 04 per
month ca ll N1k.k1 7 40-3~ 5
767 1

No Problem Sale· Want fl
new sec! tonat home ? No
Problem Need foundatiOn
anr! septtc ? No Pro bl em
Need uttht1es run or dnve·
way? No Problem Wa nt btg
House for sale by owner sav•ngs on a 2003 model
2br. 1 ba at 11 12 Hogg No Problem Cole s Mobile
US
50 East
Stre et
Pt PI $28 900 Homes
Alhens Oh10 740·592· 1972
(304)675·3458
S1nce 196 7 Where You Get
House for sale by owner Your Money s Wor th
3br, 2ba 1200 sq teet. Full
I.ms&amp;
unl tntshed basemen t gas
o\('kEA(;E
ftre place. hardwood floors
At 36 Greenway Dn ve. PI
PI (30 4) 675·3458
30 Acres rwa l wate1 . elec ·
tr tc. wooded 32 x40 bl oc k
Letart Falls. OH. 3 bed room
garage hunting $55 .000
house, 1 ba th de tached
Call
740·64 5·0863
garag e. new roof. stdtng .
wmdows, carpet &amp; kttchen ,
Lan d for sale 3 acres great
$65 000.00 (740)247·2000
bulldmg s1te
Rt 58 8.
Newly built ran ch. cou ntry $35,000, 740·446· 9966
selling. 3000 sq. feet 3 br 2
ba .. 5 mtnut es from Holzer Lot tor sa le m Racme .
off 160. photos, mformatl on (740)992·5858
on ltne www ORV B com
N1ce mobile home tots . qu1et
cod e 73 103 call 740-446·
country setting $115 per
0149.
month. mclude s wate r.
Ntce olde r 4 br 3000 sq sewer. trash , 740·332·2167
feet , 1 5 ba th s, Pomeroy
Opening Morning
phOto/ mformat1on on line
Deer Seaaon
www O AVB com
code
where will you be?
80603 call 740·992·3650
Pomeroy· 9 rooms. 2 baths. Scout our prope rty now ij_nd
firep lace two-car ga raQe make 11 yours by Hunting
with storage or wo rks hop Season Call lor tree mapsl
spac e
overhead
For
800•213·8365
appomtment call '!40·992·
www countrytyme com
2828 or 740·992·3664

.,

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
I{ I \ I \I ..,

r

:ta

'

www.mydaJiysentinel.coin

Help Wanted

HO!N&amp;'&gt;

Friday, Sept. 19, 2003

Help Wanted

Friday, September

19, 2003

ALLEY OOP

NEA

BRIDGE

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 Brokaw's
network

42 Took out

4 "--

46 Soda

fountain

7 Monk 's title
order
10 Team cheer 47 Passionate
11 Runs

Hill's Self
Storage

required_Call 367 -~553

51 Nobelist

45771
740-949-2217

.r......~
.. _,l r
RRENr
__

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished. security deposit
required , no pets. 740·992·
2218.

7 :00AM ·8:00PM

For Rent One Room
Efficiency
apartment.
Utilities included. $300
Single $350. Couple. 92· 4th
Ave. 446·8677 Days 256·
1972 Evenings.

peaceful &amp; quiet setting. No
inside pets. Located 3 miles
from Rio Grand University.
(304)675·7624

Rutland Post487

thank tlteryone

Pay $80.00 or

who said a prayer,
sent flowers, cards,
food or just came
by to ,visit. A very

Furnished 3 rooms and bath
upstairs apt, clean, no pets,
&amp;
deposit
refere nce
req uired . 740-446- 1519

more per game.
Several specfal
games for extra

10x60 2BR mobile home
$325/mo. $200/dep, no pets,
references, will sell tor
$4,000.
740-388·0578.
leave message

2 Bdrm Mobile home. All
electric, Spring Valley area.
$300 a month, p lus $250
deposit. Call 304-675-2900
or 740-441 ·6954.

M

lime 6 :30 p.m.

sptcialthank you
to Holzer Hmpice
(Mtigs),Jot Roush
Funerdl Hom e,

Starburst $1500.00

Pastor Larry

2 or3 $300

Fisher, RacitJe

Luck Ball Games

United Methodist

EVERYONE

Ch~rch,]enny &amp;

money.

No Pets, $399. Plus Utilities
Manor
and
Riverside
(740) 446·2~57 .
Apartments in Middleport.
2
BR ,
unfu rnished, From $278·$348. Call 740·
$ 300/mo, $ 300/dep, plus 992-5064. Equ"al Housi ng
utilities, no pets 740 _446• Opportunities.
4313
Nice,clean 2 br with small
2BA apt .. $375/mo utlltltes yard in town. Major appliincluded ,
$300/deposit, ance provided . Security
deposit ol one month rent
740 -992-2274
- - - - - - - - - and referances required .
BEAUTIFUL
APART- MonthlY rent $400. Utilities
MENTS
AT
BUDGET not included. No pets. 441 PRICES AT JACKSON 1108
ESTATES, 52 W~stwood
Now Taking AppllcatlonsDrive from $297 to $383.
35 West 2 Bedroom
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Townhouse
Apartments,
740-446·2568.
Equal
Includes Water Sewage,
Housing OpportUnity.
Trash, $350/Mo., 740·446·
Beech Street, Middleport. 1 0008.
bedroom furnished apart· Pleasant Valley Apartment
ment, utilities paid. deposit &amp; Are now ta king Applications
references,
no
pets, fo r 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BA..
(740)992·0165
Applications
are taken

pack

you can play for
$20.00. Starting

Free Walleye

Bingo players

22, 2003

1-10x1 2 ', insu lated, rn.etal

siding tan &amp; brown, rollup
door, was $ 1750 now
$1400; 1·10~t15 , insulated,
metal siding tan &amp; green,
rollup door, was $2 100 now
$1700; (740)742·4011

Tara
Townhou se
Apartments, Very Spacious. 4
__ h_o_m_e_c_omin_g_ d_r_
es_s_e-s.

2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 Long burgundy size 7/8 ,
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted, long gold wl sparkles medi·
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, um, long burgundy w/

Patio, Start $385/Mo. No sparkles medium, short dark
Pets, Lease Plus Security blue w/ sparkles w/ jacket

2 BR, perfect, air, porch, For Lease: One bedroom, Deposit Required, Days: size 9/10 $5o each 740·44 t ·
740 "446"3481 ; Evenings: 8289.
very nice. 740-446-2003 or unlurnished. newly redeco- 740-367-0502.
rated. second noor Apt. ; at :..:::....:;::.:...=:::.____ Cool Down!!
Centra l
740·446-1409

~::orner of Second and Pine.
AIC ; $300 .QO per month;
water included. Security and
key deposit. OH street parking. References Required.
2 mobile homes both with No pets. 740-446-4425 or
3br. Located in Glenwood. 446 . 3936
All
appliances
with For rent 1 room apt. with
W/0(304)576·9991
shared , bath. util, included

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list tor Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apar tment, ca ll 675·6679
EHO

2 mobile homes . both with
3br. Loca ted in Glenwood.
All
appliances
with
W/D(304)576-9991

85 Olds Cutlass. Runs good,
looks good, new rims
$1.500 call367·7134.

95 Bere tl a 3.1 V6 auto.
118.000 miles. runs good.
very dean. $3,000 obo. Call
256·1375.
Estate sale of 1998 Ford
Taurus and 1994 Dodge
Caravan. Call 740-388·
0480.

Used Car, 1995 Sa turn 4
door; Excellent Condition ,
$2,495. 2903 Parrish Ave ,
Buing paw paw fruit $1.00· Point Pl easant . (304)675· .
2.00 lb buying walnu ts 3275
$ 1o.oo 1DO lbs.
TRUCKS
Call 740-698-2124
HJRSAU:
--------Potatoes
fo r
sale 1990 Ford F-250 4X4 302
(Ken nebec, Red Pontiac), auto, solid work truck .
Mon~Sat..
65002 State $3.500 call 740·2 45·9248 ..
Route 124. Reedsville. Oh.
50# $10
1995 FORD E350 CUBE

FREE ESTIMATES

FARlM

2002 Dakota needs painted,
2 wheel drive, V-8, automatic, loaded. $5,500 or besl
Cooling
New and Gehl Silage wagon tandem, offer. (7 40)256-1233
u d 1Systems,
t
se . ns ailed. (740)4466308
3 beater" &amp; roof. Call "94 " Ch
(J04) 675 _4308
evy Silverado e:d.
Greenhouse. 72 .xJO' hut
ca b, 5-speed, runs good,
3 500
style, all acces oriews includ- .
\V,.t.!I.."'U)
$ ,
or best offer,
an J ~
(740)992 3357
ed, $3,350, (740)992·2762
m BuY
.

I

Oct.

r

Mobile home space for rent.
$125 a month, $100deposit.
60 FT or less. 740·446·
0175.
\ IIIHII\'\111 . _, 1

GOOO'i
Good Used Appl iances,
and
Reco nditioned
Guaranteed.
Washers.
' oryers,
Ranees,
and
Refri gerato rs, Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine•St. , (740)446-7398

St.

Rl.

124

Between Racine

&amp;

Syracuse
.Large Spaces $7.50
949-2734
Refreshment
stand open

Special of the day
CHILl

MOBILE HOME FOR RENT
1st

&amp; last

month

Rent in advance

&amp; deposit.

$400.00 per month
2 bedrooms, 2 fu ll baths
740· 696- 122 7 Available O ct. 1st

AND THE HOMESTEAD
Saturday, November 15,

2003

Cost: $50
includes basket, breakfast &amp; door prizes
740 -985-4339 or 740-992-0565

Alexis Taylor
Gardens

windows. lintels, etc . Claude
Thompsons Appliance &amp; Wi nters, Rio Grande, OH
Aepair-675-7388. For sale, Call 74 o- 245 _ ~ 1.
re-co nditio ned automatic
PETs
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators, gas and electric t.--tttiFOiiiiiRiiltiSiiAii
LE
- -,.J
ranges , air conditioners, •and
wringer washers. Will do AKC Miniatu re Pinchers,
repairs on major brands in re8dy to go! Tails &amp; declaoNs
shop or at your home.
docked,
Vet
checked!
BeaUiifu l
2-females, 1·
used fur niture store, 130 black/rust. 1.red/black for
Bulaville Pike mattresses, Information please call 740·
d ressers ,
co uches, 256 _1033
bunkbeds, bedroom suites,
reciiners, grave monuments. AKC small Yorkies 2 males,
740-446-4782
Gall ipolis. 10 weeks old. $500 7400hio HAS 1Q-4pm. Stop By
245'1217
Washer/Dryer combi ned, - - - - - - - - Kenmore Heavy Duty, All in
Old English Sheepdog
One; white, clean works well Pups. First shots and
"
_
_
wormed Lovable. beautiful
$200. 74~ 446 7711
h
s aggy dogs $200.00 each
740
985 ·~~---~
9823
Whirlpool washer almond ~~·,;,;,;;;;

r

(Formerly Harris Farms)
We have all your fall needs

Mums
$2 .99 - 8" pot
Hanging Bas~et Mums
$5.99 -10" pot
Pansies, Pumpkins, Fodder
Mon-Sat 7:30 - 7:00
Sun 12-5
Portland, Oh

843-5577

color $95, dryer $95. Hot
point
refrigerator
$75.
Kenmore frost free almond
refrigerator .$150. Kenmore
washer/dryer $275. Wooden
table w/4 chairs $95. Couch
$50. Rocker recliner $20.
Chest ot drawers and dress·
er wf mirror $140. Full size
mattress box springs $6S.
Queen size $95.
Skaggs Appliance 76 Vine
St. 740·446·7398.

FOE 2171

Eagles Club Band
for September 19tti &amp; 20th
From Charleston, W.Va

Friday &amp; Saturday
8 pm - 12 Midnight
Members &amp; Guest Only

'

s

r

ANnQrns

r

Rl~erine

M~1CAL

1 ,.. ~Uli1JlNTS
•~--i""'iiii'iiil
ftliiilittitiiio.,J

very good c.ondition. $2,800
Call 740-446-7711 .
--------1986 Ford Escort, 4 dr., 4
cyl. , auto, great little car, lots
new parts, $1400. (740)742.
0509
--------1986 Ford Taurus wagon
tota l or for parts; 1988
Linco ln Town car, $600,
(740)992-911 4
1994 Thunderb ird 65,000
miles, excellent condi tidn.
$4,800. Call740·44 1- 1302.

1998 Dodge Neon . 90,800
miles. Great mechanically, 5
speed trans. $2,500. 740446-8585 .
--------1999
Pontiac
Flreblrd
67,000 miles T·Top, very
clean , view photos on line at
www.ORVB.com or call 740446·3620
Upright piano $160.00 080 - - - - - - - - -

p

X25 , fish finder, trOlling
motor. 120hp Evinrude ,
bla cK &amp; silver metallic, white
bottom, trailer. $7000 firm.

~71:i4!:
0-~7~42:;.·,.05;;:0:::9:...,--,.....,
60

AUI"O PAKIS &amp;

A(.~RIF.S

t.,-..;,iiiiiiioiiilliiiii-_.1
2-Molor stands used very lit$175
abo. 1·400
tle
Transmission w/co nverl er
worked good when pulled
out. $150. obo., 305 Molor
short block $150. abo., B &amp;
M Transmission co'oler
w/own fan brand new. $100
(304 )773·5054
::--------Engine for sale ou t ol 99

HOME

..,_liiiiiiiiOioiiiiiiioliiliorl
C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting, vinyl
siding. carpentry, doors,
windows, baths. mobile
home repair and more . For
free estimate call Chet. 740·
992· 6323.

VEGfift:fUS

2001 Chevy Cavalier 40,000
miles, 2 door, spoiler, CD
Bell peppers Red/Green
player, 17 inch wheels .
you pick $8 .00 a bushel. We
$5,500 or best oHer. 740pick $10.00 740· 247·4292
256-6169.

L~~:!!2~~~~_j

··-------~--

as a bill

name

forum
5 Vivid color
6 Loafing
7 Newspaper

25 Author
48 tion' a pride
- Follett
49 Small
27 Mo. expense
guitars
29 Trait carrier 50 Fixes

edition
8 Long-

31 Dune

llmhed
9 Melodramatic cry
12 Swamp
grass

32

33
35
37

:;...--~-

a eeam

buggy kin
54 Craving
Baby s seat
Distress
signal
Couch
Hassock

1.,,-f--+ -

contai ns seven lo ser s. So, if partner
makes a single r aise, you should pass
with seven losers, bid game wit h only

t

fiv e losers, and make a game-tty with
silt losers.

In· this deal. the Sou th hand has only
five l ose r ~: one spade, one heart, one
diamond and two clubs. So, opposite
the two -spad e rai se, South should

TilE BORN LOSER

WE REPAIR
•

Lawn Mowers

.,...
1&gt;¥-.C '&lt;OU ~C.6C;,\It-IG
l f&gt;...tl\ I"&gt;ORl ~G 7

'iF ll~( Wt.REf&gt;...:,M.ORG/'65a&lt;.Q
'&lt;CJJ NCUU&gt; &amp;. ~~TOfU 1

jump to (our spades. True, it is thi n,
but if you smell a gam e. bid that game.
West leads the club two. East takes
two club tricks, then shirts to the.di a·
by Luis Campos
mond nine : king, ace, fo ur. West re·
Celebnty
Cipher
cryptograms
created tram quotations Oy lamous
turns t he dinmond jack : five, two , "Jeople, past an d pre sent Eachare
letter m the cipher stands for another.
queen. As South, ho w would you con·
Today's clue : M equals J
tin ue from there'?
You must establish a Ion~ heart for a
diamond d1scard. Dut if twO heart ruffs " N
Z L F L K
Y E N B
EZC
N Z
are needed, you require thr ee dummy
entries : two for the ruffs nnd one to ge t

·w.v·s # I Chevv. Pontiac . Buick .
&amp; Cusi~rn Va n Deal er..

Take the spode ace, th en switch to K E H
hearts. cas hin g the ace, cr oss ing to

Olds

Chain Saws
Snow Blowers

•

• Weed Eaters

Tillers • Edgers

'

-~

'

·~- ~·.:. .~',
·, .._ 11""'. ,.,,
•1

J

.

Don't l eave the debt of

I burial and final expenses

~.:;;;;,.:

fur ~·our family and
loved ones.

.·~~ •.O ~

Go Karls. Mini
Bikes

,'

;;1;-.

Let me shnw you how
affordable and easy it is to
get 1he t'fwer.age you need.

:BIG NATE

189

!

THEN

'(OU HERE ?

G

'(ot.J NOTICED
KY BAG. OF

II C.HEEZ.

Wf&lt;'l' ARE

DOODLE S,
D tD N 'r you ?

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
Box

1---- -- 1

WH'I AM
I HERE ?

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

6:30

*SUMLESS
GOnER

Last Thursday of

*fr&amp;l Elllmii"'S*

Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

Middleport

Let me do 1t for youl

liNDA'S PllmNG

ME, AND I'LL BE

SFREE

YOUNG'S

'blr'lllrthday:

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ollie

GIVe !I£ A$ECOND.
MV TASTEBUOS
HI\VS ENTeRED
i~l: DE~ATE

Ill

L..ET'S

I

BUY NEW
CURTAINS

Sf.E ...

I

- - - - - - - Edlt1d by CLAY R. POLLAN

Hf'f 1 Baes ... w~Y aRe. 'Yt:lu
sTaNDinG 5tLL Wrn; B tl(j GteD tn YouR HaNDS ... ~

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE
THE GRIZZWELLS

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
OBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRICTION
I

fK;Y,,

UR? ! 1\-\ll.i \-lll.\1 io SE THE.
Bl~t?T PILE Cf

ME: !

ME!•

C\.\IC:K£~ \Jol\~~5
r\1~ E:'JEI&lt;.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

MF.!

I DOU'fLOO&lt; fO~WA~D
lO "''I ft Mo Of W&lt; ~£.!~ .

EAiEN

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

\,

WOlD
GIMI

There ·s a strong chr:mce thm an assOCI·
ate will be resp onstble for putting you
Reorronge lerters of the
four scramb led words be·
onto somethin g good ifl t11e year ahead
low 10 form fo ur simple word~ .
that will help add to your bank account.
Be sociable to all - thai person could be
anybody.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- As the day
1
2
wears on. il will become Important to you
tha t you have some kind of social panici ·
palion planned. II you don't ha ve any·
thing on the calendar, create an e11ent
ET ART
yo urself.
•
UBRA [Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - Others may
be scrutini.z ing your modus operandi
today when it comes to situatiOns where
L 1
"Th e book you
this
you are 1n charge. Fortunately, you·n hancourse won't be u sed much ." the
dle your leade r ship in ways that are l-;5
.
.
.
.
.
teacher said . "You m e an I wasted
admirable.
'---'--J'---'-..J- ~ my money?' a st udent asked '
SCO RPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) - Try to
break ou t of rou tin e si tuati ons today , ·1
R y 5 E J E !"See .." the teacher grinned, ''you';::
because A lack of ' spontaneous acti vities ~--r-...;,,.::.,-=-.:;-.::...,.,.....,learnlng
to think--.-- •• t"
'
may leave you with a nega tive. outlook.
!
C..omp!ete d .e ch uckle quotol. :
.
.
.
.
.
.
by h lling m the minmg word: •
Being uninhibited allows you to grow with
'--'--'--1-..J.-.L- you develop from step No . 3 below. ~
the times.
SAGI TTARIUS (No v. 23-Dec . 2 1) PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS 1
3
Others will display a willin gness to share
IN TH~S[ SQL;ARfS
what tl1ey have wiUl you to day. This is
be cau se 1n !he past you went out ( 1 you r
UNSCRAMBl E LETT ERS TO
way to do for them. Good always finds a
GET ANSWER
,
•
,
•
.
,
way to return itself.
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
CAPRICORN (De c 22·Jan 19 ) - You
•
Nutmeg -Pouch· Knock- Trudge- ENOUGH
·
hav e a talent tod ay to draw ou t 0111ers
While eat1ing a steak in the college cafe t er ia, a coed
and make them feel worthw hile and
appreciated. so don "! be surprised when
said that her steak was nol rare . "Quieti" whispered an ;
others seek you out in order to share
othe r coed. "S1eak once a year is rare E NOUGH !'
their tints wrt11 you .
AQUARIU S (Jan . ~0-l=eb . 19)- For you,
thai nee d to be sorted out. You should be
being rndus trious and productive today
especi &lt;~ lly go od at fig uring out complicatwill be more lun and reward ing than goof·
ed si tu &lt;~tions .
ing off . II yo u have your way, you'll turn
GE MI NI (May 21 -June 20) - This is an
off the te levis ro n and do something
BICCellent day to spend your trme designworthwhile.
ing me asures th at wil l make your f~mily
PI SCES (Feb. 20·March 20)- !l's a day
more secure. It won't matter il what you
to spend outdoors. in the. fresh air. Being
fu rnish is love, 11elp or money , they're all
part ol na ture ilself wi ll have a marvelous
pr ecious .
affe ct on re lurbishing your outlook . Put
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22)- The most
on your hiking boots and hit the trails.
importan\ lh1ng lo you today will be your
AR I ES (Mar ch 21 - Aprll 19) - Your
independence to operate as yo u see fit.
inslln cts wi ll be right on target today
Don·t let anyone jockey you into a corner
when it comes to gauging the needs ol
where you 'll lind yourself under his or her
your fellow man. This can be an enor control .
mous plu s lor you should you have any
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22} - Your logic is
di rect dealings with the publ rc
one of the most Important Ingredients
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- Instead of
when an intelligent decision Is called for,
balancing the barbells today, spend some · yet there 's nothing wrong with letting a lit·
time weighing and ba lanc ing problems
tie instinct help . Blend the two today lor
rea ching conctusion !J.

Athens

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

'unm

S~\tl\}A-~£trss

11

17

0

I I I I I I

SOUP TO NUTZ

IMPORTS

(740) 992.-3194
992-6635

THAI DAILY

Saturday, Sept. 20, 2003

€)

CARPENTER
SERVICE

·" GARFIELD

(lO'xlO' 6 10'K20')

-Madonna

f9

985-3994 · ~

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Ar~lval : Oct. 5 &amp; Ocl. 19
9am-12pm
Releaae April 26, 2003
A tee of $20 will be
charges for early arrival , late arrival , early '
removal, late removal ,
or anytime access Ia
wanted to fairgrounds
other than stated dates.
Building space 18 first
come Hrat serve.
lnolde Storage: $4.00/11
Open Spa n: $2.00nt
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf

PREV IOUS SOLUTION - .:To me , th e whole p rocess ol being
a brushstroke 11, someone else's pain1ing is a little difficult. "
,.

I I I I

LEFT STANDING
1-\ERE ALL ALONE

. Bonanza C.ct

!&amp;!!

740·992-5232

AstroGraph

I

HO ONE WILL TELL

SHOTOKAN KARATE
Beginner class al
6:00 to 7 :00 9/15/03
Eastern Hig h
Cafeteria
More info.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

EPHSEIIC

u c::_,...:..TI--i::
c I~~
:-1°!,::,

ONE OF THESE
1HE SCHOOL BUS
GOING TO COME,

22 Years l ocal

Self-Storage

B N K H C

I I 1I 1
I
. I I' I' I

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

every month
AII pack $5.00

~~~
High&amp; Dry

s

AILDI'N

1

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

N

J

O

(740) 843-SZ64
Pof!)froy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday

G DE H

c

dummy 's hear t king (e ntry onel , and
N
8
9
Y E C
G E Y
'M S B C!
r urnng a hcnrt high in hand . Play a
trump t o dummy's jack (entry two) ,
ruff another heart high, lead a spade to M S 8 C I
M S B C!
dummy's kin g (entry three). and cash
the heart seven , throwi ng away the diMEWL ·Y
PEOZLC
amond three.

• Power Mowers

•

.www

beck to the dumm)' to cash th e win- X N I W )
ning heart.

1-800-822-0417

.\
--··- -·.

Ching"
39 Pass,

to moneieur

4 Socrates'

A m inimum opening bid normally

POOL. IS A FRUSTRATIN'
GAME,
SNUFFY

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Makes &amp; Mod els
Free Estimates
Fas1 Turnaround

IMI'ROVEM~ ,

·675·7: u m &amp;

...._

BAHNEY

;994 Stato s 17'6 " bass boal

1996 Dodge Neon $2 ,000.
Call740-367-0102.
--------1996 Grandam 40 $2,395.
1997 Hon.da Civic $4 .795,
1992 Cavalier SIW V-6
Pont1ac Sunfire 2.2. Can
loaded $1,495 others in Hear run . $500. (304)773stock, we take trades.
5343 or (304)773-5033
cook motors
SIIH H IO..,
740-446-0 103

Baldwin Orgasonic Organ
and ~ench. Excellent condllion. Perfect for home or
church. 740-446·77 11.
--------Bundy Alto Saxophone, nice
condition $450. (304)6757653

I

Buy or sell.
AnUques. 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 74D992-2526: Russ Moore.
owner.

52

83
1 100
Gold
wmg
II&lt;\ '"'1'111&lt; I \Ill l '
,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; Inters tate 54,000 mites .
~tO
AUTOS
Runs good , looks good .
~.--..;FOiiliRiiltiSiiAiiiJ--,J
C
$2.000 firm . 740-256-8133
Harley
Davidson
85
$500 POLIC E IMPOUNDS Sportster XLH. 1000cc 4Hon das,
chevys,
etc! sPeed. To many new parts to
carsltrucks from $500. For list. Ca ll 256-1375.
listings 1-800-7 19-3001 ext m:::-:::-..;.;-::--=-::--~
3901
·
BoATS &amp; M010RS
IUR SALE
1964 Olds Cutlass Supreme .._ _ _ _ _ _ __.

Wh en you raise partner's suit, the
bes t evalualion m ethod is the Losin g
Trick Count. You look a t th e first three
card s in cnch suit; any beyond three
are assumed to become winners. For
each of ·t he top three honors missing,
count one loser.

New&amp; Used

9491405
•

ro40

olo 2

1 U.N. locale
2 Flex
3 . Bamboo
stalk

L oo k £ir st a t the Sou t h hand . You
open one spAde, partner rai ses to two
spades, and East on your right butts in
with th r ee cl ubs. What would you do

(74(1)5'13-1~67'11

J)ean Hill

HOWARTJ L
WR/TfSfl

r

I

Stone Street

i

:~ •

21 Merrily
· 23 Heyerdahl 's
" Kon · -"
26 Bristles with
28 Smashing
serve
29 8 pts .
30 Wild ducks
34 Car-wash
step
36 Dawn
goddess
38 " - Te

41 Heller's ,,
hello
42 - Lama
43 Adjust the:
wheels
45 Encloses
46 Game aho"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1969 Chevy G20 Van 3/4
long, pants 48/30 worn once
ton. good cond .. Blue &amp; L._ _...;..;,;;...;...;,;.;,;,....,l
$75.
·
LIVESfOCK
Gold color WVU logo $2500.
2 sport s jackets 3XL $25 L~--------,.1 firm 304-675-2860
- -each. Black leather jacket
-1-99_5_ FO_I_d_E--3S-O_V_a_n_,-14-ft.
3XL $50, 740·441 ·8289.
Baby calves for sale. Call
740-388-8524. No Sunday high cube box, excellent
NEW AND USED STEEL calls please.
cond. 740·446·9416
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar - - - - - - -- _ _ _J-ee_p_G-ra:_n:_d:_C.:_h_ei-Ok_e_e
1997
For
Concrete,
Angle, For Sale A.l. reg . Angu s Laredo, 4x4, excellent co nChannel, Flat Bar, Steel heifers , cows &amp; calves ,also;
dition, high miles, but well
Grati ng
For
Drai ns, reg. black Limousine open
D · a &amp; W tk
L&amp;L heifers 7 bulls.
maintai ned.
$6,000.
nvew ys
a ways.
(740)446-8981.
Scrap Metals Open Monday, New digital li,estock scales - - - - - - - - Tues day, Wednesday &amp; weighs up to 3.4001bs 740· "93" Chevy Ast•o Van.
Friday, Sam-4:30pm . Closed 256-1352
143,000 miles, runs good,
Thursday,
Sa tu1day
&amp; - - - - - - ' - - - - $3,000 or best offer,
"
Su nday. (740)446-7300
Opening Monday Sept. 22 · (740)992·3357
A-Team Feed, at old JD ~~------..,
Ofllca Furniture
Norris Building, 110 Vine
New, scratch &amp; Dent.
Street. 740-441·9090.
1
MuroRCYCU::S
Save 70%. 1-800-527-4662
Argonaut 519 Bridge Street, Pigs for sa le. Hampshire 1988 Kawasaki 454, LTD.
Guyandotte!Huntington. M/F Yorks hire cross 5 weeks nice. $1,500 ca ll 740-256old. $35. each (304)695·
6276.
Retired Longaberger bas- 3454

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio.
(740)446-7444 1-877-8309162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card .
Drive- a- little save alot.
kets, lots lo choose from
mint
cond ., some with boxeS
t $75 Wh. t
1
·
ReI ngeraor
.,
1rpoo CHEAP!! 304-675·2 17\
waSher $95., Kenmore
dryer $125., G.E. refrigera- Ut.ility trailer. 1997 Pace
tOr.
like
new, $195., American, double a1cle.
Kenmore Washer /dryer set 7'x14 'x7
i /2 '
S3,550.
$300 .. 3-couchs- $50. each, ti(7!::40:r-)9•9•2-:
-2::"7.62;..._ _ _"'1
table 4-chairs. $95., KingBUJWING
size
box-spring/mattress
. $100., chesVdresser w/mir- t.--tttlltU
IIPI'LIIi.ii:~:O
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ror $140.
.Skaggs 740·
446-7398
Block, brick, sewer pipes,

East Sta le Street l'hone
Athens, Ohio

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

Maplewood lake

dOOFJNG
*HOME
MAINTENANCE

HOUSEIIOIJ)

750

740·992·2432

L--•FOiiiliR:OilENT=::~-.,.1 Men·s black suit size 56 (304)429·3333

Fo1 Rent One ' Bed1oom
Apa rtment 920 Fourth.
~ br AU utili1ies included. Utilities included. $400. 446·
$325. month. (304)67 5-3654 8677
days,
256- 1972
evenings.

East

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22 Sums lor
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FLEA MARKET

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behind
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now ?

BOX
TRUCK.
CALL
-(740)446·9416 . M-F 9·5.
Located
t 391
Safford
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740-992-7599

Upstairs apt. for rent. 2
bdrm., 1 bath, kitchen wf
appliances. Gas heat, water,
JET
f1::X.
VANS &amp;
trash paid . $350 a month.
AERATION MOTORS
A commercial 3 door refng4-WDs
JIM'S SMALL
(740)446·3481 . Repai red , New &amp; Rebuilt In erator. (304) 675-9726 ask
For rent 1 br. trai ler $.300. a $200. single, $250. couple Day
607 2nd 740·446·8677 Evening (740)446· 1567. No Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1• for Carolyn.
1988 Chevy 4x4. 350, 5
ENGINE REPAIR
mon ., water paid 49 Spruce
(da ys)
740·256· 1972 cc;;al;;;ls~a;;;h,;,er~9;;;:00;;.:P;;;·m;,;·~-... 800-537·9526.
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St. 740-446-8677 (days)
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(evenings) .
S"•CE
work, S1800, (7401742·4011 . p
OH 45769
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working order or no t.
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APAR1MEN1li
FOR RENT

14

RESIDENTIAL

92 Corsica, 6 cyl., auto, 4
dr., new tires. paint. many
other new parts. $2200.
(740)742·0509

avith so many
friends and sincerly
Thank Yon!

Monday
Sept.

CD-change r, 5 St:J eed, AJC,
$6 ,5001080. (740) 2566745. (740) 256-6877, (740)
256-6467

Th e Johnson
Family is blmed

Fish for all

COMMERCIAL and

+9

Fury
Cookie type
Bloater
French

wine
17 Commanded 59 Dash widths 13 Luggage
item
19 Trails
60 9-digit ID

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Vulnerable: East-West

Garages
• Replacement

all power. spoiler, 4-disc-

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Dealer: South

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2001 Mazda Millenia-S.
Loaded
31 ,000
milesExcellent condilttion . Call
446-3838, leave message if

Chelsa Dilcher.

WELCOME

Monday. thru Friday, from
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WV
Phone No is (304)675-5806.
E,HO

For Lease: Beautiful , 1600
Sq.Ft. , restored. second
floor apar tment In Historic
District, Ideal lor professional co uple. all modern
amenities. 2 bedrooms;
spacious livin!)'dining: lots
of storage, 11/2 baths;· rear
deck; HVAC. $600/month
plus utilities. Secu rity and
key deposit. No pets.
Referenc,a required . 740·
446-4425 or 446-3936

r•

14 A Turner

ol&gt; AKQJ7

o!o t032

.South

BINGO

t1 you like the thought of 2 BR Quiet Location, Near
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedSouthern plantation living Holzer CIA, WID Hookup,
room apartments at Village

Ptder 2 Story house in counlry 3br, 1ba, 2 showers,

t

TFN

10

K7632

East

AMERICAN
LEGION

KJ 4

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Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Hours

Announcements

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13 Glass bottle 52 Doll' s cry

... 9 4

Cellu·lar

Racine, Ohio

2 Bedroom apartm ent $250.
HOUSE: Brick ranc h on
per month + utilities and
Bulaville Pike.
deposit. 3fd Street, Racine
APT: 84 Olive Street Celt
740·247·4292
(740)441-1124.

After 9:00 p.m.

.AU:iil.

29670 Bashait Road

For Rent· Nice 4 BA home
near Rio Grande. $750.00
per month
Deposit and
References required Call
Wiseman Real Estate _ at
740-446-3644

this is th e home for you.
This lovely spaciOl.ls south·
ern
. style home has paten1181. 3 bedrooms, w/ full
baths, and a large kitchen.
Original wood staircase in
foyer. Upstairs balcony with
i river view and large front
~KJrch . Access to a pool durD"lg the season . Located in
Addi son at Tara apartments.
~as heat, central ale. $550 a
mon th . Please call day
(740)446·3481
and
evenings
(740)367-0502 . No calls

I

44 Pair

·Blue?"

6 Rooms, 1 bath. kitchen
appliances,
CIA.
Washer/dryer hookup. No
Pets. Deposit and referen.ce

House For Rent
1BR,
unfurn. A/C. washer/dryerhook-up. $350/mo. no pets,
deposiVrelerences required,
740·446·3667

Answer to Pnvlout Puzzle·

41 Sports

around

down. 30 years at e.s % apr.
41istings caii S00-319-3323
. I!JCt 1709.

Puzzle

honoree•

3 bd. house in country.
Water provided. No pets.
$450 a month, $400 depo_sit.
74(}245·5064.

Home from $~ 99/month
, foreclOsure homes 4%

Crossword

Help Wanted

1'1-County

FORRfNr

Page 87,

The Daily Sentinel •

www. mydailysentinel .com

'

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�Page B8 •

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 19, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Swi_
ss man held for allegedly offering to kill.Kobe Bryant accuser /·
BY AlExANDRIA SAGE
Associated Press

'

MONTEREY PARK, Calif.
- Authorities on Thursday
arrested a Swiss bodyb-uilding
coach ihey said made a $3
million offer to kill the
woman who has accused Los
Angeles Lakers star Kobe
Bryant of sexual assault.
Patrick Graber was arrested
for investigation of soliciting
a murder after making the
offer to Bryant's security
director and then meeting
with undercover detectives,
Los Angeles County Sheriff
Lee Baca told a news confer-

ence at his headquarters.
Baca said Graber, 31, of El
Segundo, agreed to carry out
the murdef for $1 million up
front and $2 million after the
fact.
"We believe it was a credible threat," sheriff's Lt. Jim
Taylor said. He added that just
before the arrest, Graber was
given a bag full of movie studio prop money.
Graber was booked and
held on $1 million bail, and an
arraignment was set for
Monday. Sheriff's officials
said he had an expired visa
and worked at a local gym.
The investigation began

Sept. 8 after security personnel employed by Bryant said
they had received a letter
from Graber saying he could
solve Bryant's problems, the
Sheriff's Department said.
A security official met with
Graber and then contacted
sheriff's investigators. A
meeting was arranged with
Graber and undercover sheriff's detectives.
The detectives concluded
that Graber was offering to
commit murder and they contacted the accuser's family in
her home state of Colorado
and authorities 'there to advise
them of the alleged threat:

Sheriff's undercover inves- has cleared the Eagle County
tigators had several more sheriff and district attorney of
meetings with Graber in leaking details. about the case
which a money exchange for to the media.
Sheriff Joe Hoy said he had
the murder was arranged, offino doubt his office would be
cials said.
Telephone messages left by cleared.
The Associated Press with the
"We just do not spread leaks or
accuser's family and · her allow leaks to happen," he said.
attorney were not immediateDistrict Attorney Mark
ly returned.
Hurlbert did not immediately
Bryant is charged with raping respond to requests for coma 19-year-old employee of a ment. . Defense attorney
mountain resort in Eagle County, Pamela ·Mackey declined
Colo, on June 30. He has said comment.
the two had consensual sex.
A number. of print and
Also Thursday, authorities . broadcast media stories have
said an investigation request- detailed the investigation and
ed by Bryant's defense team quoted anonymous sources.

County Court Judge Frederick
Gannett, who had already
issued a gag order in the case,
ordered the investigation after
Bryant's defense complained.
Pitkin County investigators
cleared authorities in Eagle
County, but it remained
unclear who is leaking details
to the media.
Free on $250,000 bond,
Bryant faces an Oct. 9 preliminary hearing to determine
whether he will stand trial. He
faces up to four years to life in
prison if convicted.
(Associated Press writer
Robert Weller in Denver con,.
tributed to this article.)

Harris headed home NFL satisfied with Shanahan's explanation
to take on Buckeyes
BY

JOHN MARSHALL

Associated Press

BY RusTY MILLER
Associated Press
COLUMBUS - Some coaches suffer through fitful
nights seeing their quarterbacks caught under an
avalanche of tacklers or throwing footballs to happily sur- ·
prised defenders.
Not Bowling Green ·coach Gregg Brandon.
"I sleep like a baby at night," he said with a smile. .
With Josh Harris running the Falcons' high-powered
offense, Brandon has considerably fewer things to worry
about. It's opposing coaches who are losing sleep.
Harris leads unbeaten Bowling Green (3-0) against No.
5 Ohio State on Saturday at Ohio Stadium.
·
In his two previous appearances against Big Ten teams
- wins over Purdue and Northwestern- Harris has averaged 26-of-43 passing for 380 yards and three scores.
Now he heads back to his hometown for the biggest test
of his career.
"For me it is fun, I have had a lot of friends calling me
telling me they are going to be there," said Harris, a 6foot-3, 225-pound senior. "Whether they are there to see
me, or to see Bowling Green, or to see Ohio State, there
·
are going to be a ton of people there."
Harris is the son of M.L. Harris, who played I0 years in
the NFL, including six seasons with the Cincinnati
Bengals. He grew up in the Columbus suburb of
Westerville, so he's well aware of the mania that sur·
rounds Buckeye football statewide.
He's gone to many games at Ohio Stadium, but has
always cheered along with the 105,000 or so who are
behind the Buckeyes. That will be a big change.
Harris was passed over by Ohio State and the rest of the
Big Ten because he was adamant about playing quarterback. When the Mid-American Conference school said he
could remain a quarterback, he jumped at the offer. ·
"No, I don't have any regrets," he said. "We still have
the opportunity to go there and play Ohio State, and we've
had the opportunity to play teams like Missouri, Kansas
and Purdue. The MAC is no slouch. Everybody in the
MAC seems to be taking these bigger schools down to the
wire. I am not disappointed about where I am."
Harris is 5-0 agamst teams from BCS conferences. The
Buckeyes are not looking down their noses at the kid who
left town to chase his dream.
"Definitely he's legit. He's probably one of the best
quarterbacks I'm going to play against in college," safety
Will Allen said. "We've ~otto be ready for him. We can't
underestimate him at all. '
Coach Jim Tressel was asked what past opposing players reminded him the most of Harris.
"I coached one time against Steve McNair when he was
at Alcorn, and I coached against Daunte Culpepper when
he was at Central Florida," said Tressel, then the head
coach at 1-AA Youngstown State. "They both threw it so
well, and when there was nothing there, they could run it
so well."
Then, including Harris in the mix, he added, "They're
just big, strong guys that you better tackle."
Defensive tackle Darrion Scott said, "He can run, and he
really has a good arm. He's almost like a 240-pound tailback. A quarterback with good speed and a great arm like
he has is going to be a good challenge for us."
"They've got the No. I offense in the nation," defensive
lineman Will Smith said of the Falcons, who are averaging 575.3 yards a game. "They can do a lot of things. Josh
Howard is the leader of the team, so we have to shut him
down."
.OK, so maybe the Buckeyes aren't too well versed on
Harris - not Howard - yet. They will likely remember
the name after Saturday's game.
Brandon has a lot of faith in Harris, who has completed
57 percent of his career passes for 34 TDs with 18 interceJ?,tions.
'He has to bring his A game," Brandon said. "He has to
be crisp with his throws, with his reads, his decision-makin~ and he has to take care of the football. If he does those
thmgs, which I anticipate he will, then we have a chance
to win."
Harris is married to former Ohio State track AllAmerican Tamara Smith, but she does not have a split
allegiance.
. "She is in my comer, and is almost as excited as I am
about this game," Harris said. "She knows a lot of the
guys that are on that team, and she's very excited to get a
chance to go back home ... and to get to go see a game like
this."

Fan" dies after fall at
Giants baseball game
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A fan attending a Giants
game fell&gt;t6 his death from the elevated right-field wall
at Pacific Bell Park.
The man attempted to climb down the outside of the
wall to retrieve something he dropped onto rhe walkway 24 feet below during the eighth inning Wednesday
night, according to witnesses.
He slipped and fell, Giants vice president of communications Staci Slaughter said.
Police and paramedics responded, but the man died
from his injuries, Slaugh~er said. Police did not immediately return phone calls.
"As far as we' re concerned, it was an acCident,"
Slaughter said. "lt'sjust a tragedy." .

DENVER
Mike
Shanahan lied and got away
with it.
The Broncos coach was
cleared of any ·wrongdoing
Thursday after explaining to
league officials why· he lied
about Jake Plummer's injury
during a game last weekend.
"The key is we' re on the
same page and moving forward, so the matter that
occurred last Sunday is
closed," NFL spokesman
Greg Aiello said. "We're satisfied that it is resolved and

that Mike understands the
policy."
The league started looking
into Shanahan's actions after
he gave a false injury report to
CBS during halftime of
Sunday's game against San
Diego.
Plummer was .injured while
diving for a first down midway through the second quarter, but Shanahan told the network that the quarterback sustained a concussion instead Of
a separated shoulder.
Shanahan came clean after
the game, saying he didn't
want the Chargers to have an
advanta~e if backup Steve
Beuerlem got hurt. The

Broncos had just two quarterbacks at the time.
Rules for' reporting in-game
injuries aren't as specific as
pregame · injuries, · but the
league didn't like Shanahan's
deception tactics and said it
would look into whether he
broke any rules.
Shanahan did not hear from
league officials early in the
week, so he decided to call
NFL executive vice president
Roger Goodell to make sure
there were no problems.
"If they were going to call
me, they were going to call
me before today," Shanahan
said. "When something's that
big and people are talking

about it, I think it's up to me
to address at least what my
thoughts were. what I did and
why I did it."
Shanahan said he would
protect his team if a similar
situation came up again, but
he would be a little more subtie about it.
"( I'll say) we're not really
sure the extent of the injury
and we're going to wait and
· see, just kind of handle it
without talking about something else specifically," he
said. "I did It more as of a
joke afterward, but it kind of
turned into a firestorm. It's
not the ftrst time I've gotten
myself in trouble."

Coach has He~ ·preparing for Roberson
BY STEVE BRISENDINE
Associated Press

Snyder was impressed by
Gochneaur's numbers, too.
"I don't like how well he
throws the football and his
completion
percentage,"
Snyder said. "I think h~ has
completed 78 percent of his
passes this year, and you
know my response to that.
He's a talented young guy."
Roberson has been off-limits to the media since he was
hurt in the second quarter of
the Wildcats' 55-14 win over
McNeese State on Sept. 6. He
has thrown for 502 yards and
five touchdowns and run for
256 yards and four TDs this
season.

MANHATTAN, Kan. As far as Jeff Schwinn is concerned, he's Kansas State's
starting quarterback until he
hears otherwise.
Marshall · coach Bob Pruett
says he's heard otherwise.
injured in the third quarter.
"My mindset is that I am
"I'm a confident person,
starting, but right now it is but going out and having a
still a question," Schwinn good game solidified myself
said. "I'm going to prepare and gives me no doubts,"
myself like I'm going to be Gochneaur said. "I've already
starting and whatever hap- been there, I've already done
pens, happens."
that and I'm confident I can
Pruett, however, said he's do well."
preparing his tt;am to face Ell
Roberson
when
the
Thundering Herd ( 1-2) visit
the sixth-ranked Wildcats (40) on Saturday.
"W.e anticipate the quarterback from Kansas State to
play. That's the scuttlebutt we
heard back from UMass,"
Pruett said Tuesday. "Their
coaches thought he ' d play
this week. We've got to pre. pare like he's going to play."
Kansas State, however, has
never said whether Roberson,
who sat out last week's 38-7
win over Massachusetts with
an injured left wrist, will miss
a second straight start.
On Tuesday, coach Bill
Snyder - who doesn't discuss the specifics of injuries
-- said Roberson was "uncertain" for Saturday's game but
was expected to start in the
Wildcats' Big 12 opener Oct.
4 at Texas.
·
Kansas State is idle next
week.
The Wildcats aren't the
only team with quarterback
questions, though.
Pruett, who on Monday
said that starter Stan Hill ·
would miss a second straight
start with a sprained left knee,
seemed to hedge a bit later in
. the week.
"He did move around a little bit at practice and threw
some, but it's going to have to
be a significant improvement
for him to play," Pruett said.
Hill, injured in the Herd's
34-24 loss at No. 12
Tennessee on Sept. 6, also
seemed to raise the possibility of an earlier-than-expected
return.
"I \hink my knee's holding
up better than I thought it
would," he said. "I practicea
and didn't have any flaws and
was able to do a lot more than
I thought I could."
If Hill cannot play, junior
Graham Gochneaur will get
· the start against the Wildcats.
,. tM
of rh¢ ·
Last week, in his first start,
Gochneaur completed 31 of
Jpb&amp;t T~ JOJJU Gblf ~ and forrt ' .
39 passes for 289 yards with
aU tbit otbd tmf:' .... ~ ptlt ,.,.,. b~
two interceptions as Marshall
'
.
opened itS Mid-American
i• 1be ·r4Pt pl. e.,~ ht4tlY1ill follow.
Conference season with a 2417 home loss to Toledo.
Against
Tennessee,
800.9'49.4444 - www.rrjgolf&amp;~m
Gochneaur was 7-of- 10 for
52 y.ards after Hill was

-

'

_____________
,

.1.

Schwinn was 17-of-26 for
228 yards and one touchdown
and threw two interceptions
in his first start against
Massachusetts. He also ran
for one score after replacing
Roberson in the McNeese
State game.
And when Roberson is
healt)1y again, Schwinn
knows he' II be back on the
sidelines.
"There's not much controversy there," he said with a
smile . "There'.s just a question of whether or not Ell can
go. I'm just trying to keep
myself prepared."

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