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                  <text>Page D6 • 6auwr t:tma -6euttnd

Sunday, September 2:1, 2003

:Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

.••

Home matters: Buying concrete Back with a Cornish vengeance ·
Whether a project is small
- like steps - or large like
a patio, figuring how much
concrete you need is calculated the same way. How the
concrete makes its way to
your home is another story.
Although most project~ are
expressed in square feet, when
buying concrete, vou measure in
cubic yards- a project's length,
width and depth determine the
amount needed Multiply length
by width (to find square li!et).
. multiply that by depth or thickness (for cubic feet) and divide
by 27 (the number of cubic feet
in a cubic yard) to detennine how
much concrete (in cubic yards) is
required Building material suppliers after free conversion chans
for the !llaiiKhallenged Or you
can buy inexpensive "enter your
dimensions" hand-held project
calculators; and, there are project
estimators on the Internet.
Once you've figured how
much concrete you' II need,
determine how to get it to the
job. Concrete is a mixture of
sand, gravel, water and
Portland cement. It can be
obtained in three ways: separate dry ingredients that you
mix on site, premixed in the
sack where you just add
water, and ready-mixed from
a batch plant and delivered
by truck. There is a variation
to the latter where you can
hau I a small amount of
ready-mix material using a
trailer provided by the batch
plant or a rental yard. Of the
three methods, raw materials
mixed on site are used the
least frequently due to the
availability of premixed
product.
Small projects such as
pouring a step or stoop, setting a few fence posts or
making small repairs can best
be accomplished using the .
premixed sack product.
Premixed bags are reasonably priced. They're avail-

able in two sizes: 60-rund for fhe "short load" (I 0 yards
(average $1.35-$1.80 and full load minus 2 yards 8
90-pound ($2-$2.30). There yards "short" X $17 per yard
are also a number of special average) - and now totals
mixes for setting fence posts around $265. With assorted
and mailboxes. They're sold fees added (environmental
in 40- and 50-pound bags in impact, fuel surcharge, sales
two "no-mix" formats: l) tax, etc.), the final cost is
you dump the concrete into about $295. For this project,
the hole, then add water, and ordering ready-mix would
2) the reverse - first the cost from $55 ·to $120 more
water. then the concrete.
than premixed - depending
Takin$ on a path, patio or on where you buy your bags
other s1zable project using and rent your mixer. It' s a
anything other than ready- small price to pay for a job
mix can be a disaster. There that can be linished in a day,
is a point of diminishing and to avoid a concrete proreturns where the nuinber of ject gone bad.
bags needed for larger proBeyond shopping price,
jects simply overwhelms the there are things to know
economy of mixing it your- about ordering ready-mix .
self. For example, a l 0-foot While some think a cement
X I0-foot X 6-inch patio truck goes from site to site
need~ 1.85 cubic yards of dumping concrete until it is
concrete or about two yards, empty, this is not how ·it
with waste. Using 60-pound works. Rather, each batch js
bags that yield 1-half cubic individually formulated and
foot per would require I00 mixed for a specific use. The
bags. The concrete will set number of "sacks" of cement
faster than you can mix and used per yard of concrete
pour it, and you'll end up inlluences the strength of the
with a poor pour and a nasty
finish (unless you are willing fully cured product. For
to work in phases over time). example, "five-sack" mix is
Ready-mix is a no-brainer stronger than "four-sack,"
for mid- to large projects, but and so on . Also, ready-mix
what about cost? If you use concrete must be off-loaded
60-pound bags, concrete for within 90-minutes of being
a patio this size ranges from mixed or within 300 revolu$135 to $180. But you'll tions of the truck's tank need to rent a mixer, which whichever comes first. Thus,
adds another $40 to $60 per a supplier's location is a key
day.
While
'ready-mix consideration. Too far away
reduces work, it also boosts creates problems with "set"
the ,cost. Each cubic yard times and delivery cost
costs about $65. However, a increases . Narrow your
fully loaded cement truck search to those companies
closest to your home or job
will hold 10 cubic yards and partial "short" loads cost site, then go to work compar$15 to $20 extra for every ing costs and services. Also
cubic yard less than a full determine lead time needed.
Tlie success of a project
load.
depends
on knowing how much
So, our 1.85 cubic yard
patio lirst requires purchas- concrete you need . and detering two cubic yards (includ- mining at what point a readying waste) of ready-mix (2 X mixed deli very makes more
$65 $130) plus another $135 sense than premixed bags.

Well, it's been awhile, but
I'm back.
I've been pretty busy lately.
Several projects have been takinjl up my time, but hopefully
thmgs have settled down a bit.
I first want to thank everyone
for their support. Everywhere I
go people keep asking me
when I'm going to write another column, so .. . here $oes, I
hope you're not disappmnted!
Actually,! really don't have
much to complain about this
week . Mike, (the boyfriend)
is a truck driver and is gone a
great deal of the time, but, we
did $et to spend one quiet
evemng at home together this
week. I dido 't have to cover
any night meetings or events
(a rarity), so I offered to make
dinner (After a chuckle of disbelief, Mike said 0 K.) .
·
Believe it or not, I can
cook. Just because I choose
not to doesn't mean I don't
have the ability - the means,
of course, is a different story.
After volunteering to cook
(at 4:30p.m.) I began to realize that, like Mother
Hubbard, this old woman's
cupboards were bare.
The half gallon of
unopened milk that expired
on the sixth of August and the
loaf of moldy bread that I had
on hand (really, that's not a
joke) certainly wouldn't be
suitable, so I made a mad
dash to the store.
In the fever of domestic
bliss t, I decided that ovenroasted Cornish game hen.
wild rice. and honey glazed
carrots would be a great dinner for the two of us ...
yummy. (Trust me, it sounded
like a good .idea at the time).

Of course, it wasn't until I
was already on my way home
(at 5 p.m.) that I realized that
the hens were frozen (Mike
was scheduled to be home at 7
p.m.), and, after
my
microwave oven died several
months earlier, I had opted not
to ~et another one. So, alas, no
qutck way to thaw them.
I decided that the best way
to unthaw them quickly was
to boil them. So, while the
ch.ickens were boiling, I tried
to keep myself busy by doing
laundry. washing dishes and
sweepmg the floor (yes, I
cleaned - my mother is
gasping as we speak). .
After 45 minutes of boiling, I
decided that I would try to fry
them in the roaster for a few
minutes before sticking them in
the oven. I had seen this done
on the Food Network, something about crispy skin ... ?
So, I thought back to all of
the "professional" techniques
I picked up from "Emeril
Live," and placed the hens on
a bed of lemon slices (to promote air flow underneath) ,
covered them with olive oil
and herbs, and placed ttJem in
my ultra-expensive enameled
cast-iron Le Crueset roaster
(just like Emeril's, · except
mine has been used a whopping three times}, and began
frying.
At 6: 15, I decided that the
frying process was just too
messy. so the birds went
directly to the oven and I
began the rice and the carrots.
Thankfully, at 6:30 Mike
calls and said he would be a
few minutes late, and asks if l
need anything from the store
(What a sweetheart.).

Mighty MAC sends

message to nation, Bt

.

Mllllssla
Russell

•

•
•.

.•

So, as a last minute stall
technique. I declare that t
absolutely cannot go on with ~
Ol!t a gallon of milk and some
chocolate chip cookie dough;
and I have successfullY.
bought myself another hal~
an hour at least.
'
This phone conversation is
also when he informs me thai
he doesn't like cooked carrots,
but peas would be greuL . ·
Just after 7 p.m., Mike come~
over, milk and cookie dough iq
hand, and declares to me (and l
want this recorded for history}
that, "Boy, this smells gooa,
but I was kind of hoping that
we could go to Jimrnenetti 's
and get a steak tonight."
.
What? Hello? Did I just
hear what I think I heard? I!!
this not the man who com~
plained, just months beforei
that I would never tell him
what I wanted to eat until it
was too late ? Grrrrrrrr.
Well, needless to say. he all!
it, and it was good. {}di'TI good:
I'm thinking that mayb~
I' II go and get that steak
tonight. Then I'll call l him
and tell him how good it was,

1 11 11~-.1 '-... • \, , 1

,1

\,,

• Meigs finishes eighth in
golf tourney. See Page 81

0BIWARIES
Page AS • William Sunday
• Eleanor Jordan Logan
• Robert Lewis Jr.

Delolla on Pea• A2

Family

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Staats

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\ \ \ \ " t m d . l l h " t ' lllttHIIHIII

MILO lAYTON

ilaylon@mydailysentlnet.com

by Pomeroy Police Chief leao;e adjoining propeny the vil- Commission, which has p;tid said Downing. Childs, Mullen
Mark Prolitt at last week's lage owns at the comer of tor the lireworks for the pust and Musser Insurance at l I I
meeting. He said that emer- Sycamore and Second Streets. tour or live years. is not paying E. 2nd Street in Pomeroy is
gency personnel had trouble It wa~ noted that fhe church will for them at this year's festi val. accepting cash donations .
responding to a call for help demolish a house located on the
Young is chming a funuraisOn recommendation of
last week because cars parked property and tum it,into a purk- ing drive to mise the needed Pomeroy Fire Department
on both sides blocked incom- ing lot. The church will be $6.000 to pay lor the fireworks. chief Rick Bluettnar, Council
ing emergency vehicles.
responsible for property taxes but indicmed fhat so tar only approved Jordan Shank and
Council also gave final and in.~urance on the land.
about $2,500 have been given. Ben Sec as applicmlls to the
approval for a lea&lt;;e agreement · It was reported that donations
Donations can be sent to the lire depanment. They will now
with St. Paul Luther.m Church. are still needed for fhe fire- Sternwheel
Riverfest have to he approved by the
. For $1 a year over the next works display at the Stem wheel Committee, P.O. Box 442. state befilre fhey are eligible to
three years, the church will Rivertest. The Ohio Lottery Pomeroy, Ohio. 45769. Young work with the fire department .

EXPO draws to close in Pomeroy
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

Nearly 500 Expo visitors voted on their favorite of the 27 antique It can provide the power to grind feed, pump water or oil from
and ne)Y:..QuUts on display. The people's cholee fqr.(lrst p~ was wells, ll"en saw wood, this 1895 Wet&gt;er gas engine owned by
the purple and white quilt of Aunda Klein of Middleport. Here Lita Richard McNaob of Beverly. It was the oldest engine In the
Burt, left and her daughter, Morgan. check out the exhibit before display at the weekend Expo. McNaob , left, talks aoout his
casting their vote. (Charlene Hoeflich)
collection with Warren Sterns of Rutland. (Charlene Hoeflich)
Belles and Beaus and the Big Middleport. $50; Ginger Six Pomeroy, rhubarb; and Edie fnr $52.50.
Bend Cloggers, and a con- oJ' Parkersburg and Vicky Hannon of Rutlaml, ·apple
Fort.fnine antique tractors
cert by the Riverbend Russell of Rutland, $35;' and upside down pie .
and l. restored garden tra..:Kathy Reed judged the tors were displayed at Expo
Community Band.
Linda Rathburn of Pomeroy,
The
w111 ners with Paul Marr h:tving hi s
Of the 27 quilts displayed, $20 and Marci:1 Arnold of entries.
received first through fourth 1940 John Deere Model 1..
five winners were selected Racine, $10.
sclc&lt;teu as the judge's
by vote of about 500 who
Winners in the pie baking respectively. $20. $15. $10. 1940
hoi&lt;C.
·
Th eo II' est eng ·me 1n
·
c
viewed the show. The peo- contest were Donia Cotton and $5 gift certificates from lhe show was displayed by
pte's choices for cash prizes of Norfolk, Vu ., apple; Bob's Market. The pies were
were first through fifth Donna Jenkins of Rutland, auctioned off by D:m Smith
PIHse see EXPO, A5
respectively, Aunda Klein of peach ; Pat Holte r of with the winning pic selling

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POMEROY "There
were lots of smiling people
here," said Hal Kneen
Sunday afternoon as the
eighth annual Meigs County
Town and Country Expo
drew to a close.
The event chairman estimated the crowd to be a bit
bigger than last year, and
noted that participation from
organizations and businesses
was up, and more flea mar- ·
ket and food vendors were
on the Rock Springs fairgrounds. Kneen set attendance at near 3,000.
· The event offefed an
opPortunity for artisans and
erafters to display their products and demonstrate their
skills, and gave businesses,
social and service organizations a way of making the
public aware of their role in
the community.
Entertainment highlights
of the weekend included performances by Bill Crane,
Craig Harrison, Allison
Rose, and Elvis impersonator, Dwight Icenhower;
along with dancers, The

WEATHER

~ [!, OJ

1..,JI'JI\1J~JJ~..! -~

TOWN AND COUNTRY EXPO

• Community calendar.
See Pl9, A3
• T &amp;C eXPO. See
Page A6

c

BY

POMEROY - Since West
Locust Street in the Monkey
Run area of Pomeroy is too
narrow in places for vehicles to
park on both sides of the street
and allow space for traffic to
pass through, Pomeroy Villa~e
Council has decided to restnct
parking to only one side.
The action followed a report

INSIDE

~ ~ [K]I]J [!, 'IT

\ (11"\11\~

I,

e

Council resbicts parking, reaches lease agreement with Lutheran church :

SPORTS

( Mil/issia Russell is a news
reporter for tl1e Gallipolii•
Daily Tribun e. Contact herb~
e-milil at mrussell @mvdai'
/yirilmne.com .)
·

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and
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Pick 4 night: 5-0-2-3
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Calendars
Classifieds
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'
Dear Abby
Editorials
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A3
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Bs

A3
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B1-2,6
A2

© aooa Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Edwards gets Rutland's "stamp" of approval
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@mydallysentilnel.com
RUTLAND - When it
comd to running the U.S.
Post Office in Rutland,
Margaret Edwards is qecidedIy "old school," and her customers are happy about that.
Edwards has been postmaster in Rutland since
1982, and before that, was
clerk at the post office.
While in many ways, postal
re@ulations have become
stncter, and the service has,
in other ways. taken a back
seat to stringent regulations,
Edwards still prides herself
on small-town, old-fashioned customer service.
"I enjoy talking to people
and being of service to
them," Edwards said. "Some
peo~le don't agree, but work·
mg m the post office is a ser-

vice career, and that's what I
enjoy the most about it."
Edwards is especially devoted to ber older customers, who
sometimes need an extra
minute or two of her time.
"One of my customers
can't see to open her post
office box anymore, so I
help her, even though I'm
not really supposed to,''
Edwards admitted.
And how does Edwards deal
with the ocassional impertinent customer? Believe it or
not, she said she has none.
"I've had maybe one impolite customer since I've been
here," Edward said. "Almost
all of my customers are nice.
But remember,! know my customers - in fact, I've watched
a lot of them grow up."
Edwards and her husband,
Larry, have a cattle farm just
three miles outside of town.

They are the parents of three
sons: Rick, Dan and Michael,
and have three grandchildren.
When she's not selling
stan\ps, weighing packages
and sorting mail , she's an
active member of the
Rutland United Methodist
Church, and the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners, who
help her each month in decorating a seasonal window
at the front of the post office.
She also helps the group in
the community, hanging
Christmas wreaths and planting !lowers to beautify the community and its downtown park.
Edwards has received
offers from the postal service
to move to bigger operations,
but she '11 have none of it.
"I have nothing against As Rutland 's postmaster, Margaret Edwards still hand stamps
small towns, but I'm going letters and provides other "old·fashloned" service to the com·
to stay here," Edwards said. munity. She knows all of her customers, and enjoys helping
them in any way she can. (Brian J. Reed )
"This is home."

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PageA2

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 22, 2003

Chemical'plant explosion
forces evacuations
.
.

MIAMISBURG (AP) An explosion at a chemical
plant Sunday injured a worker, blew part of the roof off
and forced the evacuation of
about 2,000 nearby residents,
authorities and witnesses said.
Firefighters were working
with six employees at the
Isotec plant to contain a nitric
ox ide leak when the "catastrophic explosion" happened
about I0 a.m., Miami
Township fire Chief David
Fulmer said. No one else was
in the plant at the time.
John DiPietro, spokesman
for Miami Township police,
said there was "a mad dash"

0 ~--~-

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Showers

T·siOrms

Rain

.....
Flurries

Snow

Police had set up command
posts and patrols to enforce
the evacuation order, DiPietro
said. Authorities planned to
re-evaluate !he situation in the
morning, he said.
DiPietro said air space over
the plant also was restricted.
Investigators had not determined the cause of the leak or
the explosion. However,
DiPietro said preliminary data
Sunday night indicates a failure
in a storage tank might have
allowed the volatile nitric oxide
gas to heat up and explode.
A worker was taken to
Miami Valley Hospital for
with a cut on the head,

Report: Overloaded interstate bridge crash-prone
~
leu

VIa lts5odat8d Pnlu

Showers likely today
Wednesday night ... Partly
cloudy with achance of showers. Lows in the lower 50s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday... A chance of
the
showers
during
day... Otherwise partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Friday ... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s. Highs
near 70.
Saturday ... Mostly
clear.
Lows in the upper 40s. Highs
in the lower 70s.
Sunday ...Mostly
clear.
Lows in the lower 50s. Highs
in the mid 70s.
·

Today ... S bowers.
Thunderstonns are also possible. The rain may be heavy at
times. Highs in the lower 70s.
Chance of min near I 00 percent.
Tonighi... A chance of lingering showers and thunderstorms this evening ... Then
partial clearing. Lows in the
mid 50s. Chance of rain 50
percent.
Tuesday ... Mostly . sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Tuesday night...Ciear and
cooler. Lows 45 to 50.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 70s.

to escape falling debris. He
was standing near the plant
entrance when the explosion
knocked him into a truck and
the area was pelted with
pieces of concrete and metal.
"I've never been this
scared in my life," he said.
People living within a mile
of the plant near this Dayton
suburb were evacuated
overnight because firefighters feared a possible second
explosion. Fulmer said.
Other chemicals were stored
in the area where the explosion happened, including a
large tank of carbon monoxide, he said.

Fulmer said. The worker was
treated and released Sunday,
DiPietro said.
A witness said the explosion pr~J9uced a · plume of
yellow-orange smoke several
hundred feet high and blew
off part of the roof.
The plant is owned by
·Simga-Aldrich Corp., a St.
Louis-based supplier of
chemicals to research laboratories. Messages were left at
the Ohio plant and at company headquarters.
A spill of nitric oxide at the
plant in 1998 forced an evacuation of a golf course and
about 50 residents.

five times higher than that of
Ohio's interstates since 1995,
the Enquirer reported.
The eight-lane bridge,
which was built in 1963 and
remodeled in 1985, handled
about 155,000 vehicles a day
last year, 25,000 more than
its intended capacity.
While some area leaders
have called for the bridge to
be replaced, the estimated
costs for a new bridge already
are at $750 million, about the
price of Paul Brown Stadium
and Great American Ball Park
combined.
· "Considering that we want
something that won't just fix
the problem now but keep traffic flowing for the next 30
years and stay standing for I00
years, this would easily be the
most complicated project in

CINCINNATI (AP) - · A
40-yearcold bridge that forms
a crucial link for regional
shipping and travel is overloaded and conducive to
accidents, causing some area
leaders to call for a replacement, a newspaper reported.
The Brent Spence Bridge,
which carries Interstates 75
and 71 over the Ohio River
between Ohio and Kentucky,
is one of 15 major interstate
bridges nationwide labeled
as "functionally obsolete" by
the federal government, The
Cincinnati Enquirer's analysis found.
Motorists are more likely
to have a wreck on the bridge
than on the interstate systems
of Ohio, Kentucky or
Indiana, and the bridge's
yearly rate of accidents is

the region's history," said
Kevin Rust of the Kentucky
Tnmsportation Cabinet, which
oversees the bridge. ·
Transportation officials are
trying to secure federal funding for a bridge replacement
project in ~ transportation
bill expected to be complete
by next summer.
"It is an urgent situation,"
says Gary Toebben, president
of the Northern Kentucky
Chamber of Commerce,
which is leading efforts to
replace the bridge. "This is
not a problem that has any
possibility of going away on
its own."

According to an Enquirer
analysis of a national database of nearly 800,000 U.S.
bridges, 14 other bridges that
carry as much or more inter-

state traffic as the Brent
Spence are also considered
"functionally 'obsolete."
The Brent Spence ranks
No. 7 among those bridges
for highest crash rate, the
analysis found.
Last January. a 41-year-old
father of three was killed
when his car stalled on the
bridge. The car was demolished when it was hit from
behind by a truck loaded
with garbage. The truck
dragged the dead .man's car .
500 feet before it could stop. ·
"It's amazing that this
doesn't happen more often,"
says Covington Police Spc.
George Russell, who investigated the crash.
Only two other fatalities
resulted from bridge accidents
between 1995 and 2002.

City
seeks
to
end
federal
Prisons new concem:
ai-:-Qaida recruibnent oversight of police minority,hiring

of inmates

COLUMBUS (AP) - As a
corrections officer at a maximum security prison in
Louisiana, Ricco DiPietro is
accustom to handling inmate
attacks on guards, prisoners
committing ille~al sexual acts
and other disciplmary problems.
Now he has one more thing to
worry about as he patrols the
Washington
Correctional
Institution in Angie: The threat of
al-Qaida recruitment of inmates.
"They (inmates) have no
remorse," he said about why
there should be concern of alQaida recruitment. "They're
against anything that's right."
DiPietro and officers from
across the country are in
Columbus over the weekend
as part of a conference sponsored by the corrections arm
of the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal
Employees.
FBI supervisory special
agent Andrew Black, who Jed
a program Saturday on the
threat of al-Qaida recruitment
of inmates, said there has not
been any documented cases
of U.S. inmates joining alQaida in prison.
Jose Padilla, a former
Chicago gang member who is
accused of plotting with alQaida to detonate a mdioactive

bomb, became a radical after
leaving prison, Black said.
. Black said al-Qaida operationa! manuals recovered
overseas emphasize recruiting worldwide.
Inmates in the United States
are a logical source, Black
said. They will not attract
attention as al-Qaida members from Muslim countries
would and many already hate
authority, he said.
Officers have to be alert for
signs of religious extremism,
including symbols and Jiterature, he said.
Following the 1993 prison
riots at Lucasville that left one
guard and nine inmates dead,
corrections officers in Ohio
worked harder to identify gang
activity in prison, said Tim
Shafer, a guard at the Pickaway
Correctional Institution.
The information officers
learned at the conference will
help them as they try to watch
for new threats, Shafer said.
Ohio prison officials have
found pnsoners who are members in I,200 gangs or terrorist
groups, including the lslamicmilitant group Hezbollah and
the Irish Republican ·Army,
said Phil Vennillion, the secu.rity threat group investigator
for Ohio's prison system.

TOLEDO
(AP)
Activists and the city have
reached an agreement to end
nearly 30 years of federal
court supervision to ensure
the police department does
not discriminate against
minority officer applicants,
the mayor said.
Lawyers
representing
black and Hispanic applicants turned down for jobs
sued in 1972 to challenge
police hiring practices. A
federal judge approved a
1974 agreement, which
established goals of an integrated police work force and
that police candidates are
hired based on nondiscriminatory selection criteria.
Ending court oversight will
mean the city has met its goals,
city Law Director Barbara
Herrin~ said Saturday.
"We ve made a lot of
progress over the last · 30
years. This is really a historic
event for us," she said.

When the case was filed,
the city's police department
was 6.1 percent black and
less than a tenth of a percent
Hispanic. Today, the force is
18.5 percent black and 7 percent Hispanic.
Under the agreement, the
city would pay $350,000 for
plaintiffs' attorney fees and
up to $50,000 a year through
·2006 to hire testing experts
who will decide what further
changes are needed on applicant entrance exams, Mayor
Jack Ford said.
"I am pleased that this day
has finally come when the
parties to this long-term
process reeognize that there is
more to be gained by collaborating on solutions than on litigating their differences,"
Ford said when he announced
the agreement Friday.
Ford will ask City Council
Sept. 30 to approve the agreement. The deal then will be
submitted to a judge in the

U.S. District Court in Toledo,
which already has given preliminary approval, said Jim
Burkhardt, chief of labor and
employment law for the city.
The agreement would give
oversight of police exams to
testing experts hired by both
sides. The court would maintain jurisdiction over the case
to help resolve any legal
questions until the next two
police entrance exams are
given next year and in 2006,
Burkhardt said.
R. Michael Frank, a Toledo
attorney who filed the original lawsuit, said the city has
m~t its goals of hiring appropnate numbers of blacks and
Hispanics and ensuring test
questions apply to · law
enforcement. The old tests
asked only general knowledge questions, such as who
won a.football game in the
city, Frank said.
An example of a discriminatory question was one that

showed pictures of a cup, a
saucer
and
a
table .
Applicants were supposed to
know that the cup goes on a
saucer, something Frank
argued that poor applicants
might not know.
Attorneys that have taken
over the plaintiffs' case since
could not be reached for
comment on the settlement
Saturday. Their Washington,
D.C., office was closed
because of bad weather from
Hurricane Isabel.
Officer Gary Burks, vice
president of the Toledo
Police
Patrolman's
Association, said federal
oversight opened the doors to
more black officers and the
department now reflects the
city's racial makeup. .
"It does appear that (the
percentages) are pretty consistent with the municipality,
and my hope would be that it
would maintain that," he said.

..'

'

,.
•..

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The Daily Sentirtel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know at an error In a
story, call the newsroom at {740) 992·
2156.

Our 11111ln number Is
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Del)lrtmentextenalone are:

Community calendar
Public meetings

POMEROY....,. Meigs County speaker and music will be
Humane Society board meet- presented by the Blue Grass
ing, 6 p.m at the senior Citizens' Bo~s. Pasto.r Jamie Fortner
Tuesday , Sept. 23
. ATHENS - The Southern Center in Pomeroy. At 6:30 mvttes the public to attend .
Consortium for Children and p.m. there will be a general
Friday, Sept. 26
the Southern Consortium for meeting for the public.
POMEROY
The
Rural Care will meet at 1o a.m.
'Pomeroy
Church
of
Christ,
at the offices 507 Richland
212 West Main Street, wil
Ave., Suite 107, Athens.
Sunday, Sept. 21
host a community supper
RACINE - Oscar Reed with serving from 5:30 to 7
and Charles Hysell reunion, p.m. Chili and bean or potato
12:30 p.m . Star Mill Park, soup along with sandwiches
Racine. Take item for white and dessert will be served.
elephant sale.
Tuesday, Sept. 23
RAC?INE - Gideon and
RACINE - Racine Area
ArrnetiSta
Roush reunon wtll be Community Organization will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill held at Shrine Park in Racine.
Icy Congo Dailey, will
Dinner
will
be
served
at
1
p.m.
Park building. Potluck will be
observE: her B3rd birthday on
served. New members are
Sept. 22. Cards may be sent
always welcome.
to her at 36210 Bas han
Road, Long Bottom, 45743.
Saturday, Sept. 27
CHESHIRE Salaam
Nellie Parker will celebrate
RUTLAND Revival
Masonic Lodge 456, will have services begin tonight at the her 90th birthday Sept. 27 at a
an awards night at 6 p.m. at Rutland Freewill Baptist party to be held in the old
the hall in Cheshire.
Church, 44 . Salem Street, Tuppers Plains school buiding
Sunday, Sept. 28
Rutland, and will be held gym. II is requested that gifts
POINT PLEASANT
through Saturday, 7 p.m. each be omitted. Cards are welRailroad picnic, gathering at 11 night. Kenneth Frisbee will come. Those unable to attend
a.m. with dinner at 12:30 p.m. be the evangelist. At the are invited to mail cards to her
at Krodel Park, Point Pleasant. Saturday
night
service at 40642 Keebaugh-Follrod
Tuesday, Sept. 30 ·
Ronda! Walker will be the Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Reunions

Clubs and
Organizations

Birthdays

Other events

Is your first Social
decision always your fi
special to the Sentinel
Once you make a choice
about when you will retire and
whether you will take reduced
or "full" Social Security benefits, will you ever have the
chance to reconsider that decision? You may, depending on
your sttuauon.
This issue often comes up
in different ways. A woman
may ask: "If I take my own
Social Security, can I later
switch to benefits on my husband's record?" Or a worker
deciding whether to retire
may ask: "If I take a reduced
retirement benefit at 62, will I
have that rate forever?"
Let's look at an example of
each scenario.
Mary, who is five years
older than her husband, started drawing her own Social
Security benefiis at age 62.
Because she never worked
very much outside the home,
and because she took an early
retirement
benefit,
she
received only $400 per month.
Five years later, Mary's
husband started drawing his
Social Security. Because he
spent most of his career · in

News

RACINE - The 2003
Kerwood-Hill family reunion
was held September 15 at the
Star Mill Park in Racine.
Attending were 65 friends
and relatives. A potluck dinner was served following
prayer by Roy Ervin. New
officers elected were Howard
Ervin, president; Roy Ervin,
vice president: Sandy Hysell,
secretary-treasurer.
Prizes were awarded for the
longest married, Dana and
Bernice Winebrenner, 60
years ; newest married, Tom
and Sharon Hall for nine
years; youngest person ,
Dalton Counts, I 0 months;
oldest
person,
Dana
Winebrenner, 80; farthest

Advertising

Oave Harris, EX1. 15
Cl81oJCirc.: Judy Clark, EX1. 10
Ollltll~

SOIH:

Circulation

Dlatrlct Mgr.: TBI\, EX1. 17

Hoeflich, EX1. 12

E-moll:
rwN&amp;OmydaUyaentlnel.com
Web:

www.mydallyaentinel.com

'

IIIJN'I'INC;

Winebrenner,
Patricia
Winebrenner, Pat and Ray
Hayes. Marge Tanner, Kelsey
Tanner, Lacey Hupp, Tanuny
Hupp. Earl R Hunt. Doris
Ervin, Roy E Ervin, Sandy,
Gary, and Brittany Hysell,
Josh Wilson, Kay Hawley
Hunt, Bruce Hawley, Heidi
Willis Hunt. Dakota Hunt,
Briana Hunt. Glenda K Hunt,
Carol, Willis , Eunice, and
Rebecca Peet , Ora Bass,
Dylan Bass, Richard and Barb.
Koker, Betty and Janna
Wicks, Beth and Jerry Clark,
Jerry Clark , Roger and Be'\
Willford, Chari ie Kapp,
Clifford
and
Rosalie
Kerwood.

I~I)J'I~If)N

Thursday, October 23

The Daily Sentinel

Serta ~tdium Firm

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13 Weeke .............' 30.15
26 Weeks .............'50.00
52 Weeks ............'118.80

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992-2156
(

DEAR ABBY: I have been
dating "Lowell" for more
than a year: He's a college
graduate with a professional
job. We have begun talking
marriage, and I am .thrilled,
but I have one concern:
Lowell believes he is from
another planet.
When Lowell firsl mentioned it, I laughed and said,
"I thou~ht there was something dtfferent about you."
The_trouble is, he isn'tjoking!
(Thts IS ndtculous because his
parents are alive, and I know
he was born in Chicago.)
Lowell insists that he is "special" and I should feel honored that he loves me.
Last night was the final
straw. He said it to my brother and his . wife. and they
looked at him as if he WAS
from another planet. When
we got back to my apartment
we had a huge fight. I told
him never to mention that
ludicrous story again to anyone. He insists that if we are
. going to spend the rest of our
lives together, I have to
accept him for who he is.
Abby, I love Lowell, but I
can't have him telling our
friends and family -- and our
future children -- that he is
from another galaxy. What
should I do? -' NOT EASY
BEING AN EARTH GIRL
DEAR NOT EASY: I have
heard of men who are "out
of this world," but not in the
sense that Lowell is trying to
convey. Before discussing
marriage any further, talk to
Lowell's mother and find out
how long he's been nursing
this delusion. We all want to

Dear
Abby

be "special," but your young
man has taken it to an
extreme. His insistence that
you should feel "honored"
that he loves you is another
red flag.
I often advise premarital
counseling for couples who
are considering marriage. In
this case, it should be with a
psychotherapist who can
tdentify what Lowell's problem is before it becomes
YOUR problem. If he refuses to go, my advice to you is
to give him some "space."
DEAR ABBY: I have been
a school bus driver for II
years. I am responsible for
the safety of students traveling to and from school. I am
writing because I am
alarmed at the number of
drivers who do not stop
when they see a school bus
with flashing red lights.
The law says any time a
school bus is stopped with
its red lights !lashing, all
cars must stop. Even drivers
going the opposite direction
on a divided or four-lane
highway must stop.
It nonnally takes no more
than one minute for children
to get on or off the bus.
What's a minute when it

comes to the life of a child?.
--CONCERNED BUS DR!. VER IN OKLAHOMA
DEAR
CONCERNED
BUS DRIVER : Thank you
for your timely reminder.
School ·is back in session -and no appointment is more
important than safeguarding
the lives"of children.
So slow down , folks! Ya
move too fast. This generation's gotta last. (With.
apologies to Simon and·
Garfunkel!)
DEAR ABBY: I am a 16year-old girl who has a wonderful grandfather. He insists
that I read your column every
day. In fact, he calls me up in
the afternoon and quizzes me
about the letters just to make
sure I have read them.
To prove to him that I do
read your column, would
you please print this and let
him know that I think he is
an awesome grandfather and
that I feel lucky to have him?
(Now I can call and quiz
HIM to see if he's read your
column today') -- A.R . IN
PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR A.R.: With plea-.
sure! Please let me know if
your discerning and well-read
grandfather passes the quiz!
(Dear Ah/11• is written hv
Abigail Vmi Burel;!. als;,
kllOWII as Jeanne Phillips, ·
and was {ou11ded hv her
mothe1; Paulilre Pliil/ip.1·..
Writ e Dear A/J/Jv at
www.DearAb/1y.com
PO.
Box 69440, Los A11geles. CA

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traveled, Willis Peel family
of Spencer, Ohio.
Door prizes were awarded
to . Betty Wicks, Patricia
Winebrenner, · Earl Hunt,
Heidi Hunt, Willis Peet,
Tanmy Hupp, Marge Tanner,
Ora Bass, Pay Hayes, and
Shelbi Qailey.
Attending J. R. Hupp, Tom
and Sharon Hall, Megan, B.J.
and Brayden Ervin, T.C.,
Herb, and Macyn Ervin,
Teresa, Ron, Ronnie and
Stacy Wilson, Sara, Preston,
and Alexis Ervin, Dalton ·
Counts, Pa11I Ervin, Nancy
and Howard Ervin, Steve,
Rhonda, Heather, and Shelbi
Dailey, Mick Winebrenner.
Dana and
Bernice

Mall SubiCrlptlan
lnalde Melgt County

General Manager
Cha~ene

Bob decided to return to
work. Because he was earning significantly more than
the $11 ,520 earnings threshold that applies to beneficiaries under their full retirement age. we stopped his
Social Security payments.
Bob enjoyed the work so
much that he kept working
full time even after he reached
his full retirement age. But at
that point, we were able to
restart his Social Security
checks (because the earnings
limit does not apply after tile
full retirement age). Bob, who
was concerned ihat his benefits were "locked in " to the
age 62 rate, was relieved to
learn they were not.
His benefits were recomputed, and the initial 20 percent reduction was reduced to
about 3 percent.. That's
because the law says we can
apply the reduction only to
those six months that Bob
actually received Social
Security benefits before he
turned full retirement age.
So remember, your ftrSt decision about your Social Security
benefits doesn't always have to
be your final decision.
(Usa Crump is the Social
·Security Manager in Athens.)

2003.

www.mydailyregister.com

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high-paying jobs, his Social
Security benefit was calculated at $1 ,600 per month. Mary
was concerned that she was
"locked in" to her own Social
Security benefits because she
took them first. But she was
not. We continued to pay her
own $400 Social Security
benefit, and we were able to
supplement that with about
$300 on her husband's record.
And if her husband should
pass away before she does,
we could then supplement her
retirement benefits with even
higher widow's benefits she
would be due on his record.
Concerning reduced retirement benefits on your own
record, the rule of thumb is
that an early retirement
reduction generally applies to
your benefits as long as you
receive them. But here is an
example illustrating a common exception to that rule.
Bob decided to retire and
start his Social Security at
age 62. His monthly benefit
was reduced by about 20 percent because he started his
Social Security benefits just
over three years before his
"full retirement age."
But six months later, Bob
was getting a little antsy. So

one?

Monday, September 22,

Couple's talk of commitment
may take unexpected turn

Kerwood-Hill reunion held

45769.

Editor: ChMene Hoaflich, EX1. 12
Roportor: Brian Reed. EX1. 14
Roportor: J. Milos Layton. EX1. 13

BY THE ·BEND

The Daily Sentinel

BY ltSA CRUMP

PageA3

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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

TODAY IN HISTORY

Today is Monday. September 22. the 265th day of 2003. There
You do·n 'l see them running
are I00 days left in the year.
laps
or learning how to serve
Today's Highlight in History: On September 22. 1776, Nathan
a
volleyball.
Formal physical
Hale was hanged as a spy by the British during the Revolutionary
education classes in many eleWar.
On this date: In 1656, in Patflxent, Md., an all-female jury mentary schools have gone
heard the case of a wmmm accused of murdering her child. The the way of the book bag.
In San Francisco Unified
• jury voted for acquinal.
In 1789, Congress autho~i zed the oflice of Postmaster General. Sehoul District. for example.
there are no physical educaIn 1792. the French Republic was proclaimed.
tion
teachers in grades K-5
In 1862. President Lincoln issued the preliminary
unless
parents sell enough gifl
Emancipation Proclamation, declaring all slaves in rebel states
wrap
and
snip to cover the
should be free as of Jan. I. 1863.
In 1927, Gene Tunney successfully defended his heavyweight salary. So the classroom
boxing title against Jack Dempsey in the 1lunous "long-count" teachers. some with little aptitude for spurts and exercise.
fight in Chicago.
have to fulfill lhe staleIn 1949. the Soviet Union exploded its tirst atomic bomb.
In 1950, Omar N. Bradley was promoted to the rank of live- required 200 minutes of physstar general. joining an elite group that included Dwight D. ical education.
"I honestly don't know how
Eisenhower, Douglas MacArthur. George C. Mmshall and Henry
teache
r.~ get all the things in
H. "Hap" Arnold.
they·
re
supposed to." said
In 1975, Sam Jane Moore attempted to shoot President Ford
·Chris Loughran, who is paid
outside a San Fr.mcisco hote I. but missed.
·In 1980, the Persian Gulf contlict between lran and lraq erupted into full-scale war.
In 1989. songwriter Irving Berlin died in New York City at age
101.
Ten years ago: President Clinton previewed his health care
reform package in an address to a nationally broadcast session of
Congress. Forty-seven people were killed when an Amtrak passenger train derailed and crashed into Bayou Canol near Mobile,
Ala. The space shuttle Discovery and its five astronauts landed at
Kennedy Space Center. ending a I0-day mission.
Five years ago: Congressional Republicans worked to snuff out
new talk of a punishment for President Clinton shon of impeachment, an idea tloated by Democrats as poll numbers showed that
most Americans didn't want Clinton removed from offke. The
U.S. and Russia agreed to he!~ Russia privatize its nuclear program and stop the expon of sc1entists and plutonium.
One year ago: Thousands of Palestinians marched to protest
Israel's siege ofYasser Arafat's he~dquarters, and Israeli soldiers
opened fire on Palestinians who defied curfews. Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder's Social Democrats won one of Germany's
closest postwar elections. The White House drama "The West
Wing" won its third consecutive Emrny as best drama series:
"Friends" was honored as best comedy for the tirst time in its
eight years on the air.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall of Fame manager Tommy
Lasorda is 76. Actor Eugene Roche is 75. Musician King Sunny
Ade is 57. Capt. Mark Phillips is 55. Rock singer David
Coverdale (Deep Purple. Whitesnake) is 52. Actor Paul Le Mat
is 51. Actress Shari Belafonte is 49. Singer Debby Boone is 47.
Country singer June Forester (The Forester Sisters) is 47. Singer
Nick Cave is 46. Rock singer Johnette Napolitano is 46. Singermusician Joan Jett is 43. Actress Catherine Oxenberg is 42. Actor
Scott Baio is 42 . Actor Rob Stone is 41. Actress Bonnie Hunt is
39. Rhythm and blues singer, Big Rube (Society of Soul) is 32.
Thought for Today : "Art for art's sake is an empty phrase. Art
for the sake of the true, art for the sake of the good and the beautiful, that is the faith I am searching·for." - George Sand, French
author ( 1804-1876).

Moderately Confused

T COULDN'T

SlOP BECAUSE

TilE COfFEE 1
W/6 DRINKING
WOULD HIIVE: SPILLED
ON T11E MAGA'ZINE.
I WAS REAOIN6
TO A FRIEND
' OVER MY CElL.

GfAHltR.
- -

2003 by NEA, Inc

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 taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions qpressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. seditorial board, unless otherwise noted.

PageA4
Monday, September 22, 200i

No funds for PE puts kids in fat dty
In a battle of educational
priorities. kick ball will never
win out over grammar or
American history. I am not
saying it should. Our test
scores in California warrant
all reasonable effons at stuffing as much knowledge as
possible into our kids' brains.
But thos~ bruins don't sit on
desks like laptops. absorbing
in format ion as free-standing
entities. They come with arms
and legs and bellies and
backs. But you'd never know
it to visit elementary school s.
In many urban grade
schools. you don't see kids
playing basketball or soccer.

Joan
Ryan

by her school's PTA to coach
teachers in youth titness.
The answer is: Many don't.
Some teach their students
yoga or tai chi . or they do
stretching exercises, ropejumping or jumping jacks.
Some stay in the classroom
and teach about the food pymmid, which also wu nts
toward P.E. time . No one outside the indiviJual sehoul is
ensuring that children get
exer~ise: The San Francisco
di s lri~t ' s physical ed&lt;lcation
coord inator was laid off last
spring because of hudget cuts.
This is not ;1 philosophical
decision for most supcri ntendents. It's ahoul money.
Whkh means superintendents
and political IL•m.lers ami pare nt ~

have tn work harder to

push physical exer~ise higher
on the priority li st. The obesity crisis is real.
The number of overweight
kids is growing. bringing with
them new cases of diabetes and

heart problems. Poor nutrition
and physical inactivity account
lor moreJreventable deaths in
the Unite States than anything
other than tobacco. For young
people ages 6 to 19 years old.
the national rate of obesity has
skyrocketed so dnllllatically (up
to 15 percent) that the surgeon
general declared childhood obesity a national epidemic.
According to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC). the past 30 years have
seen the number of obese 6 to
11 -year-olds more than double.
About half of Americall youths
ages 12-21 aren't vigorously
active on a consistent basis.
rcpons the CDC.
California has taken the
unusual step of passin~ a law
this sum mer that will ban
sodas anu certain junk foods
on elementary sch&lt;xll campuses. San Francisco has gone
a step farther: II has implemented arg uably the healthiest food regimen of any
sdwol dislrict in the nation .
Stud~nts wi II be able lo buy
fresh deli sandwi che s, soups.
salads and sushi. Portions will
be Jownsized.
Restoring physic;ll education is the next step. and not
just becaliSC our kids need to
be nrorc fit. Studies show
physical activity helps the
brain. One llJ9K study in
Canada showed thut whe,n

physical education time went.
up, so did academic scores.
Kids who are trying to be'
more active are being hit from
all sides. Not only are there no
funds for P.E. in elementary
schools, but in many cash•·
stmpped cities recreation·
funds are drying up. The San ·
Francisco Recreation and
Parks' budget was cut by $9.7'
million this year. That means'
streamlining programs and
laying off rec directors, gar:
Jeners and custodians.
·'
And with so many school
districts struggling just to pay
teachers. they're looking for
revenue wherever they can
get it. So some are. for the
first time, charging youth
sports organizations thou'·
sands of dollars to use school'
facilities after school and on·
weekends. The fees are mos1-:
ly to cover the overtime for
janitors. but community
groups fear they might have
to cut back on programming if
the costs rise too high .
We ;vere once a nation that
recognized that strengtheninlt
the body was integral to
strengthening the mind .
Wtlere did that wisdom go? .
(Joan Rwm is a columnist
rh~ · Scm
Francisco
·chronicll'. Send comments to
her in cart' of this newspaper
or send her e- mail at joa'!rvan@,,fchrrmicle.cum.)
;

Obituaries
William Sunday
. NEW HAVEN - William
"Billy" Sunday, 76, of New
!1aven, W. Va. died Friday,
Sept. 19, 2003 at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Born on July 20, 1937 at
Bellaire, he was the son of
the late William "Tom"
Sunday an~ Mary Sunday.
He is survived by his wife,
Lorraine Sul)day . of New
Haven; two dl\ughters,
Stephanie Sunday of New
Aaven, and Barbara McCarty
of Gallipolis, a son, Anthony
S.unday of New Haven, and
five grandchildren.
. He as a dairy 'farm laborer
and belonged to the Clifton
ll ni ted Methodist Church.
.. Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Monday at the
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral
Home. The Rev. Doreen
Adkins will officiate and burial will be in Union Cemetery
at Letart, W. Va. Friends may
call at the funeral home ·from
II a.m. to I p.m. today
(Monday).

~leanor

Logan

POMEROY - Eleanor J.
.Jordan Logan, 78, Logan,

.Toys to be displayed
passed away on Wednesday,
Sept. 17, 2003 at Pleasant
Valley
Hospital,
Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
Born on Aug. 18, 1925 in
Gallipolis, she was the
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.
In addition to her parents
she was preceded in death by
a daughter, Barbara Logan:
brothers, Robert, John and
Thomas Jordan, and a sister,
Patricia Lippert.
She is survived by her husband, Howard Logan ot
Pomeroy. a son, ~onald
(Kay) Logan of Middleport:
grandsons, Darin (Angie)
Logan of Middleport, and
Kevin (Sharon) Logan of
Racine:
great-grandsons,
Bradley and Connor Logan;
and sisters, Betty Zatkovic,
Bessemer,
Pa.:
Nancy
(Archie)
Gibson
of
Zanesville.
and
Jane
Robertson of Columbus.
Graveside memorial services will be held at I p.m. on
· Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2003 at
Rocksprings
Cemetery,
Pomeroy. The Rev. Pau I

Stinson

will
otliciate. Middleport; three daughters
Arran~ements were handled and sons-in-law, Penny and
by F1sher Funeral Home, Eric Smith of Middleport:
Pomeroy. Friends may send Ellt:n
and
Harold
condolences to www.fisher- Coughenour of Jackson and
funeralhomes.com .
Cindy und William Doczi of
Rutland :
grandchildren,
Larissa (Suzy Q), Michael
and Kenny Cox, Stephen
Batey. and Morgan and Billi
Reneu Doczi; step-grandchilMIDDLEPORT - Robert dren. Carlee Smith, Dakota
Lee Lewis, Jr. , 52, of and Austin Coughenour: his
Middleport, passed away at mother, Anna Mae Batey
his residence following an Lewis of Middleport: a sisterextended illness on Sunday, in- htw, · Grace Lewis of
Langsville: his mother-in-htw
Sept. 21, 2003.
He was born on Nov. 14, and father-in-law. Sue and
Imboden
of
1950 in Gallipolis, son of Kenneth
s,
Middeport.
three
nephew
Anna Mae Batey Lewis of
MiddleEort and · the late several aunts and uncles. and
Robert ee Lewis. Sr. He was a specia l friend. Don
emplored as a machinist at Hanning.
Services will be held at II
lmpertal Electric. He was
assistant softball coach for a.m. on Wednesday. Sept. 24
three
years
for
the 2003 at Fisher Funeral home
Middleport Youth Le.ague. in Middleport. Officiating
He was a member of the will be Pastor Rod Brower
Heath United Methodist and burial will follow in
Gravel
Hill
Cemetery.
Church.
In addition to his father. he Friends may call on Tuesday,
was preceded in death by a Sept. 23. from I to 4 p.m. and
brother, Daniel Lewis, Sr., 6 to lJ p.m. at the funeral
and his maternal and paternal home. Friends illay send congrandparents.
dolences und register on-line
He IS survived by his wife. at
www.fishcrfuneral
Peggy Imboden Lewis of hnmes.cnm.

Robert Lee
Lewis, Jr.

EMANCIPATION CELEBRATION

Regimen.t provides v·aluable education
BY ANDR.EW CARTER

acarter@mydailytribune.com ·
:GALLIPOLIS
Education and historic preservption are the main reasons
members of the 5th Regiment,
United States Colored Troops
engage in Civil War re-enactments.
:And that' s why the unit partiCipated in the !40th
~mancipation
Celebration
over the weekend.
: Bertram Floyd of Cleveland
has been a member of the 5th
Regiment, USCT for about
eight years. He said he had
attended many re-enactments,
but had never taken an active
r9le until the mid-1990s.
: "I sell Ci vii War books and
&lt;;ivil War mementos and was
going to the re-enactments,"
he said. "Then I said, 'Hey,
maybe I'll try re-enacting.' It
seemed like a real good fit
and it's worked out fine."
: flloyd said the chance to
e~ucate young people about

the contribution of AfricanAmericans to the war effort is
important.
"A lot of young kids just
don't know that we even particpated in the Civil War," he
said. "This is our opportunitr
to bring to light our role in 11
and what we actually did. Not
only as cooks and skilled
trades, but VfC actually got the
gun and carried it into battle
and actually fought."
Frederick
Smith
of
Youngstown said he joined
the 5th Regiment for sentimental and personal reasons.
"I want to honor those
blacks who sacrificed their
lives for the freedom of the
others and also I had a relative
~ho fou~ht, who was a soldier dunng the Civil War,"
Smith said.
Smith is a descendent of
Jonas Blanham, a member of
the 1st USCT which was
based in South Carolina.
Smith, who portrays his
ancestor during re-enact-

ments, said Blanham also had
two so~s who served in the
Civil War.
Smith presented a first-person
performance about
Blanham during a dinner held
Saturday at the fairgrounds.
One of the 5th Regiment's
few female members, Yulanda
Burgess from Detroit, Mich.,
portrays a teacher from the
Civil War period who worked
for the American Missionary
Association.
AMA was an interdenominutional missionary society devoted to abolitionist principles and
educating freed slaves. It was
established in 1846.
During
the
weekend
encampment, Burgess spoke
about the AMA's work and its
contributions to the Union war
effort. In addition to education,
AMA provided relief in occupied areas. She said the
Confederate government targeted AMA specifically with
many of its wartime policies.
Floyd, a sergeant in the

unit. said the group includes
20 men und six women who
participate in re-enactments
on a regular basis. Membets
of the 5th Regiment come
from all over northern Ohio,
he said, including Cleveland,
Toledo, Youngstown and
Columbus":
Floyd said he enjoys the fellowship more than anything
else.
"Mainly it's just a bunch of
guys getting together going
out on the weekend, having a
real good time. camping," he
said. "No modern stuff.
Everything is done the way it
was back during the 1800s.
We do it by the book."
Just a handful of the regiment's troops we.re available to
make the trek to Gallia County
for
the
Emancipation
Celebration due to other
encampments around the state.
Floyd told local organizers that
he will lobby the group's leadership to make a return trip for
the 2004 celebration.

'

spent more than $120 million
over the past five years to
support their pet candidates
and pet ballot initiatives.
Fair
according
' Political to the state
Practices
Joseph
Commission.
Perkins
"That's' a staggeri ng sum of
money," commission chairwoman Karen Getman said
last year, more than any other
special interest in the state.
poor and downtrodden broth- "You have to remember." she
ers and sisters. But they were added, "that every penny of it
more interested in growing was intended to intluence the
their gambling operations to &lt;IUtcome of an election. or
Las Vegas-like proportions.
some legislative proposal."
They didn 't merely want to
Indeed, almost every piece
maintain their ex istin g level of Indian-related legislation
of gaming- the thousands of that&lt;has come before lawmakcard tables. the thousands of ers in Sacramento since passlot machines - they wanted sage of I A would further subto open new casinos, to expo- ordinate the interests of the
nentially increase the overall state's 36 million residents to
number of tables and slots the putative sovereignty of the
throughout the state.
state's tribes.
Indeed, in San Diego
The most pernicious was a
County, which already boast- measure that would have
ed three major casinos run by required government agencies
the Barona. Sycuan and to notify tribes of any deve iYiejas tribes. a half dozen opment projects proposed
other tribes saw the passage within five miles of a reservaof Prop. I A as a green light to tion. If a project threatened a
supposed "sacred" site, a
jump into the casino game.
The ethni c prefere11ce the developer would have to seek
state's voters hestowed upon mil igation acceptable to the
the tribes - allowing them to tribe .
If "sacred" sites had
operate casinos, whi le continumg to forbid whites, blacks become the law of the state. it
and browns from doing so - wou ld ha ve given tribes eiTecallowed them to recruit out- tive veto power over land-use
of-state
investors
th at decisions in many California
promised to put up most. if · counties.
In fact, the measure's five.not all, ·of the investment
money.
mi1e notice would have
Meanwhile, the state 's rich- applied to much of San Diego
er Indian bands, those that County, the nation's sixth
already had gambling lucre most populous, which boasts
flowing into tribal coffers. some 18 Indian rc~ervations .
were so emboldened b~ their
The legi,lation did nut pass
su cces~ful campaign lor I A this year, but the tribes have
that they decided to throw hardly given up on it. They'll
their newfound influence grease as many palms in
around in the state capital.
Sacramento as necessary to
The gaming tribes have get the measure enacted next

year.
That 's why the tribes have
spent so much on California's
recall election , more than any
other special interest.
With more than $3 million
in direct campaign contribu•
tions, they 've bought and paid
for Democrat Lt. Gov. Cruz
Bustamante. whom they hope
to succeed Gray Davis, the
incumbent Democrat governor.
·
Meanwhile, to undermine
the candidacy of Republican
Arnold Schwarzenegger, who
refuses to be purchased by the
tribes, the Morongo Band of
Indians
is
Mission
bankrolling television con1'
mercials for Republican Tom
McClintock. .
The tribes figure that br,
pumping up McClintock, who
has little chance of actually
being elected, they can spht
the Republican vote, ensurmg
a Bustamante victory.
And McClintock , who portrays himself as a conserva"
tive man of principle. is only
too happy to go alon~ with the
Morongo tribe's cylllcal poli(..
ical maneuver, to blithely
accept their special interest
largesse.
·
Calilornia ·s gami'ng tribes
have made fools of those of us
who supported "'Proposition
IA. Who never envisioned
that the measure's passage
would lead to a proliferation
of casinos throughout the
state. Who never imagined
that the tribes' gamhling , ichi
cs would corrupt the state's
political process.
.
A hard lesson has. been
learned: No well -intentioned
vote goes unpuni shed.
(Joseph 1Perkins is a columnist for The San Diego UnionTribune and can be reached at
Joseph . Perkin 's
UnionTrib.com.)

Lynch visit surprises Ohio veterans
PALESTINE, W.Va. (AP)
- Fourteen Ohio veterans
visiting a Veterans of Foreign
Wars post here Saturday
received a surprise visit from
the Iraq war s most recognized soldier - former POW
Jessica Ly.nch.
Members of the Canal
Winchester, Ohio. VFW Post
10523 made the three-hour
trip to Wirt' County, West
Virginia to share fund-raising
ideas with their counterparts
in the rural county Lynch calls
home. They had also planned
to leave gifts for the 20-yearold former Army private first
class.
. "We didn't want to bother
ber," said Bill Gerardino, a
member of the post, located
about 10 miles from Columbus,
Ohio. "But this is quite a gathering, a monumemous thing."
Lynch's visit wa~ arranged by
Palestine's VFW Post 6008 Post
Commander Wayne Wright
,, "I wanted to do something
special for them," Wright
said.
Lynch, who is still recovering from injuries received in
Iraq when her cpnvoy was
attacked, entered the building
11sing crutches, accompanied

by her parents, Greg and
Deadra, and sister Brandi. The
Lynches, who dido 't speak
publicly. were treated to a
lunch of sandw~hes, chicken
fingers. potato salad and
homemade desserts.
"Boy, you are pretty,"
Gerardino told Lynch, breaking the silence after · her
entrance.
During her two-hour visit,
Lynch smiled and spoke quietly to the Ohio VFW members, posing for pictures and
shaking their hands. She
accepted a dozen long-stem
roses, a POW medallion and a
book, "The Purpose Driven
Life."
"Spiritually, i ~ was something I was supposed to do,"
said Bob Barnett of the Canal
Winchester post. "I was hopIng she would be here."
Her rescue on April I from
an Iraqi hospital by special
forces made an American
hero out of the petite blonde,
who joined the Army to
receive an education and
become
a kindergarten
teacher.
' She returned home in July
to a hero's welcome after a
long stay at Walter Reed

EXPO

Morgan Cotton of Norfolk,
Va. was first place winner in
the create-a -scarecrow contest. In the crop contest the
winners were ' Henry Bahr,
first in the tallest corn stalk
and the largest ear of corn and
Devon Baum, first in largest
sunflower and largest pumpkin, and second in com stalk
and ear of corn with Marti
Baum, second in pumpkins.

from Page A1
Rich~d McNabb of Beverly,
a 1895 Weber 5-horse power
biece of equipment. Louise
'Bauerbach of Waterford was
recognized for traveling the
farthest to display small
engines at Expo.
·

Army Medical Center.
Lynch, who was granted an
honorable, medical discharge
last month. has signed a $1
million deal with publisher
Alfred A. Knopf for a book
that will tell the story of her
capture and rescue in Iraq.
But questions remain over
how much she remembers.
The Associated Press was
not allowed to speak with
Lynch or her family during
the visit because she is under
contract with ABC · for her
first interview about her
ordeal in Iraq, said Lynch's
public relations spokeswoman, Aly Gregg. ABC
cameras followed her during
the event.
' Fannie'"Belek, a World War
li nurse and one of only two
women members of the Ohio
post, said she appreciated
Lynch's visit.
"I was surprised she looks
like such a baby," Belek said.
"I have grandchildren her
age."

Palestine post, which has
about 30 members. Lynch's
visit was a bonus.
.
While some veterans have
criticized Lyn~h re~eiving the
Bronze Star, Armstrong said
she deserves it.
"I may be prejudiced since
I'm a veteran, but I don't think
anything is too good for the
veterans," Armstrong said. "If
it wa~n't for veterans. especially World War II veterans,
we couldn't enjoy many of the
things we do today."

.

.. . . '"' --

.

..

u doll to be used in a fund
raiser for the Museum.
Susan Baker. owner of the
Ohio River Bear Co.
Middlepon will be displaying
her bears and antique toys.
Buker will also be demonstrating the making of u bear.
Donations will be token on an
Ohio River Bear dressed in a
1790's period costume.
· The event is free and open
to the public.
·

Allen birth announced
SYRACUSE Mark .........,..,....,.....,.,....,
Allen and Stephanie Bunon
of Syracuse announce the
birth nf their daughter. Lillian
Grace Allen. born Monday,
July 28 at O'Bien~ss
Memorial Hospital. The
infant weighed lJ poumls.
Maternal grandparents ;u·c
Connie Burton and Ron
Allen
Ferguson of Pomerny and

S 1 e v e

Burton o'r
Pomeroy,
and paternal grandparents are
Mitchell
and Jeanie
Allen
of
Syracuse.

Hollon receives
radiology honor
LONG BOTIOM
Chasatie Hollon of Long
Bottom was honored at the
recent gruduution ceremony
at The School of Radiologic
Technology, sponsored by
Marietta Memorial Hospital
and Washington State community College.
Hollon , daughter of Rick
and Mickie Hollo11. was
awarded hi ghest GPA in her
class and was voted best
clinical student by the radiology staff.
The school h&lt;td its graduation ceremony on Aug. 15.
Seven students received the
hospital's certil1cate award
lor successfully completing
the Accredited program of

R&lt;1diologic Technlogy. The
award qualifies the students
to sit for the American
Registry of Radiologic
Technologies
certifying
examination. Upon successful completion of the el'.am,
graduates wi II become
Registered
Radiologic
Technologists.
They alsn rcccved an
Associate
of
Applied
Science
degree
from
Washington
State
Cmtlllllmity College and
have succcsfully passed the
Ohio
Department
of
Health's Gc neru I X- Ray
machine operator's certification examination.

Prison warden killed, wife
hospitalized in traffic accident
WILMINGTON (AP) An Ohio prison warden was
killed and his wife, a spokeswoman for the state prison
system, was injured in a traffic accident on Interstate 71 in
Clinton County.
Kil!OO was John Dean, 50, warden . at the Southeastern
CorrectiOnal Institution near
Lan.:aster.

His wife. Andrea Dean.• 48.
was in fair condition at the
Ohio State Universi,ty Medical
Center in Columbus. She is
spokeswoman for ihe Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction.
The accident occurred
Saturday as the Deruts were
retuming home lium taking their
daughter, CoUJ1ney, 18, to the
University of Cincinnati. when:
she's enl1j&gt;lled a~ a lreshmmt.
The State Highway Patrol
said Mrs. Dean was driving
the ·tlmnily's minivan when it

struck construction barrels on
the left side of the road, went
into the median and overturned several times before
landing on its top.
Dean was ejected from the
front passenger seat and died at
the scene. Another daughter.
Lauren. 16, suffered minor
injuries.
Dean started his career a~ a
parole officer in 1976. He
moved to the prison side of the
depanment. working his way
up to deputy warden at the
Pickaway
Correctional
Institution. In July 2002 he wa~
pmmnted lu head warden at
Southeustem.
Prison officials have
appointed Waller Dillard. the
facility's deputy of operations. to serve as acting warden. A permanent replacement eventually will . be
selected to fill the position .

BOX OFFICE OPENS
8:30 PM MON·FRII
12:30 PM SAT • SUN
JEEPERS CI!EEPERB lA)
8:00 Nlghtty (Only I

All ltrl•• of carpet are Included!

·

Sam Armstrong was thankful he could make the trip to
show . support to the small

BEitlER CARPET, IAXONY CARPET,
TRACKLIII CARPET, IHAG CARPIT,LIVEL
LOOP CARPET and ICULPTURID CARPET.
No elltn eharle tor movtna furniture ·

IN MEXICO (R)
7:0018:00

-

. . . ...

GALLIPOLIS - A local
collection.of dolls. bears und
toys of childhood will be
displayed at the Our House
Museum, 432 First Ave. in
Gallipolis, Sept. 27 and 28
and Oct. 4 and 5. Saturdays,
10 a.m. to 4 p.m . and
Sundays. I p.m. to 4 p.m.
Dolls from the Lloyd
Middleton
Doll
Co .•
Coolville will also be on dis•
play. Middleton has donated

MATINEES SHOWN
eAT &amp; SUN ONLY

or removtna old carpet.

Call Ul or ltop ln.
We'll come to rour ho111e and meuun
c

lor a free no obllpdoa quote.

: ' . . .·. ·"~~Th,;;-j~ $&gt;~"
'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

/i!l·

Gaming tribes have gone too far
I was one of the near! y twothirds of California residents
who voted in March 2000 for
Proposition I A, a ballot measure that amended the state
constitution, no less, to allow
Las Vegas-style casino gambling on Indian reservations.
It's the worst vote I ever
cast.
I was duped by Calilornia's
gamin~ tribes, which spent a
whopptng $8 million of their
blackjack and slot machine
protits on particularly persuasive television commercials.
"Gaming has replaced welfare with work, despair with
hope. and dependency with
reliance,"
spake
Mark
Macarro, the pony-tailed
chairman of the Pechanga
band of Luiseno Indian s.
bedecked in blue jeans. blue
work shirt and bola tie.
"If Prop. I A is not passeo,"
he fretted, "Indian casinos in
California could be shut
.down, and the jobs and economic benefits they provide
will be lost."'
No one who empathized
with America's most needful
minority wanted thai. Not
when so many Native
Americans cont inued to live
under Third World conditions.
Not when a third of Indian
families continued to subsist
below the poverty line. When
half were jobless on the reservation. When a third of Indian
youngsters continued to drop
out of high school. When a
fifth of Indian families lived
in homes lacking indoor toi lets and telephones.
As it turns out, CalifoOli a's
gaming !)ribe s were simply
laying a gui lt trip on the
Golden State's pale s kin ~ and
black skins and brown skins.
Sure, Macarro and his fellow tribal chairmen were
interested 111 uplifting their

Monday, September 2:1,

j

.,

..

-

..

t
Pomeroy, OH • 992·3671

�"

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•

•

The Daily Sentinel

TOWN

&amp; COUNTRY EXPO

Page A~

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

·Monday, September 22,2003•

NF.L roundup, Page B6

Monday, september 22, 2003

Major League
Baseball

Devon Baum took two firsts for largest in the produce contest
at the weekend E.xp6 of 2003. His 65-pound pumpkin and his
large sunflower were grand champions. In addition to his con·
test entries, Devon, a five year exhibitor, prepared an attrac· Avariety of entertainment was featured on both Saturday and
tive display of flowers, gourds. pumpkins, and grains accented Sunday at Expo. Here Elvis impersonator Dwight Icenhower
with toys and scarecrows for the enjoyment of visitors. moved into the large crowd to sing some of the King's love
(Charlene Hoeflich)
songs to the ladies. (Charlene Hoeflich)
.

·.

I

PROUD Tb BRA PART
OF YOUR LIFE.
Popular with -all ages was the
Expo petting zoo. Here
Charlotte Wams ley of Racine
shows her 18-month·old
grandson, Clay Wamsley, a ·
lama, one of several animals
orought to the Town and
Country Expo by Lamaland of
New Mars hfield (Charlene
Hoeflich)

Morgan and Abigail Cotton of Norfolk, Va., granddaughters o{'
Peggy Crane of Middleport. were in Meigs County with rei~
tlves over the weekend to escape the fury of Hurricane Isabel;
In the create-a~scarecrow contest at· Expo, Morgan took first .
place. (Charlene Hoeflic h)

j

r'

I

~~:-cl i nched

· dtlfS
'

'

v•,l

18 ~
33~

GB
~

4

1, :;
17h

18 ~

GB

13
15
25

34~

d ivision

. San Francisco 6, Los Angeles 0
Sunday'a Oamee

with you! , .

'

'

The Daily Sentinel
740-992.21 .56

·•.·

'

Atlanta 8, Florida o
Montreal 4, N.Y. Mats 2
Chicago Cubs 4, Pittsburgh 1
Cincinnati 4. Philadelphia 3
Milwaukee 6, Arizona 4
St. Louis 6, Houston 4

~'

Loa Angeles 7, San Francisco 5
Mond1y'1 Qamea
Florida (Redman 13·9) at Atlanta

L

(Hampton 14·7). 7:35p.m.
San Francisco (J.WIIIiams 7-4)
Houaton (VIMone 6·5), 8:05p.m.

'

r

"

.·, i

'

. ',.
1.~

at

Los Angeles (Od .Perez 12-n or
Jackson 1·1) at. San Diego (Bynum Q-3),

10:05 p.m.

l'UIIdiiV'I Glmel
St. Louis at Mllwaukao, 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia at Florida, 7:05p.m.
Plnsburgt'l at N.Y. Meta, 7: 10p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati. 7:10p.m.
Montreal at Atlanta, 7:35p.m.
San Francisco at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
Arizona at Colorado, 9:05 p.m.
l os Angeles at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.

WHILE
SUPPLIES
LAST

CHECKS

1a
12

Colorado 5. San Diego 3

'

NO
RAIN

GB

S1turdey'1 Olimee
Montreal 4, N.Y. Mars 3, 10 Innings
St. Louis 3, Houston 2. 131nnlnga
San Diego 11. Colorado 3
Florida 6. Atlanta 5, ~ 1 Innings
Pittsburgh 8, Chicago Cubs 2
Arizona 10, Milwaukee 4
Cincinnati 2, Philadelphia 0

,Celeblvting s,Hidul:,

The Daily S1mtjnel .•
S~bscribe today • 992·2~$6

1/

National League
EootDMolon
w L Pe1
K~Atlanta
97 S9 .622
Florida
85 70 .548
Phlladolphlo . 85 71 .545
Montreal
81 76 .516
NewYofk
63 92 .406
C.ntrol DMolon
w L Pel
Houston
84 71 .542
Ch~go
84 72
.536
St. Louis
81 76 .S16
Plnaburgh
73 83 468
Cincinnati
57 89 .429
Milwaukee
86 90 423
Weal Dlvlelon
w L Pel
K-San Francisco 95 59
617
Loa Angeles
82 72 .S32
Arizona
81 75 519
Colorado
71 as .455
San Diego
61 94 .394

Mighty MAC sends message to nation

Smithfield Whole Boneless

"

.

., ..

American League
Eoot Dlvlolon
w L Pel
K-New York
97 66 .626
Boston
91 84 .667
Toronto
81
523
Baltimore
69 85 .448
Tampa Bay
60 95 .387
Control Dlvlolon
w L Pc1
Minnesota
81 69 .666
Chicago
81 74 .623
Kansas City
81 74 523
Cleveland
67 90 .427
Detroit
36 117 .245
~Wool Qivlolon
w L Pel
Oakland
93 63 .596
Seattle
89 67 .571
Anaheim
73 83 .468
TeMas
70 66 .449

·-

GB

6
18
27'h
37
GB
5~
5~,

201,
&lt;68 ~

GB

4
20
23

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.'
'

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POTATOES

sl ~~...

TRIPLE

CO PON
Good For
5COUPO ·s

Saturd1y'1 O.me1
Minnesota 7, Detroit 3
Saante 9, Oakland 3
N.Y. Yankees 7, Tampa Bay 1
Cleveland 13, Boston 4
Baltimore 2, Toronto 1
Kansas City 7, Chicago White SOx 1
Texas 13, Anaheim 4

Fresh Lar~

ECG:t

Sundoy'o &lt;llmoo

Boston 2, Cleveland 0
N.Y. Yankees 6, Tampa Bay 0
Toronto 7, Baltimore· 4
Minnesota 6. Detroit 4
Kansas City 10, Chicago White Sox 4
Oakland 12, Seattle 0
Anaheim 11 , Texas 6
Mond1y '1 Gam••
Baltimore (Johnson 10-8) at Boston

89~0""

tSuppan 2·3), 7:06p.m.
Ta mpa Bay (Bell 4-•) at Toronto
(HaiiMay 21·6), 7:05p.m.
Detroit (Koons 3-7) af Kansas City
(Abbott 1·2), 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Wells 14·7) at Chicago
Wh ~e So• (Colon 14·13). 6:05p.m
.
Seatl!e (Moyer 19·7) at Anaheim
(Waohburn 10·14). 10:05 p.m.

UP TO soe Each

TBX\1&amp; (Mounce 1·4 or Crase 2·4) at
Oakland (Zito 13- 12), 10:05 p.m.
Tuoodoy'o Gomoo
Baltimore at Boston, 7:05p.m.
Tampa Bay at Toronto, 7:05p.m.
Cleveland at Minnesota , 8:05p.m.
Detroit at Kansas CitY.. 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees·at ChlcaQo White Sox, 8:05
p.m.
Seattle Bt Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.
Texas at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.

Not Good On Advertised Items
Coupons tripled once daily.
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Newman
sweeps at Dover

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Prices Good Sept. 23 &amp; Sept. 24 Only.

•

DOVER, Del. (AP) Ryan Newman overcame a
flat tire. that cost him two
laps, then gambled on fuel
and completed a sweep
Sunday of the races at Dover
International Speedway.
He went the final I 06 laps
without stopping to get his
seventh win this season, benefiting from two late caution
flags that slowed the field for
12 laps. Newman didn't have
to race hard to get the first
lap ~ back because of
NASCAR's new rule awarding a lap to tne highestscored car' off the lead lap.
This was the first Winston
Cup_event in history in which
racing back to the !lag stand
under caution was prohibited . NASCAR outlawed the
practice after Dale Jarrett's
wrecked car sat precariou~ly
in the middle of the track as
others attempted to unlap
themselves or improve their
positions a week earlier in
New Hampshire.
Newman regained the second lap by -staying on the
track on lap 328.
f

~-

-,-

Bv .Ioiii DuiOW
Associated. Press

have had
a concentmtion of
games on
one day
like yest erday.
-.:. .
' • ' It '.
We've
had teams
spring upsets, but to have so many on
one day against elite opponents doesn't
happen often."
Marshall started the memomble day
with a 27-20 win at No.6 Kansas State,
the highest-mnked team ever beaten by
a MAC school.
Then Northern Illinois and Toledo
followed with big wins of their own at
night, with the Huskies winning 19-16
- \\l i. ,~ ,r.

Wake up college football. Look out
for the Mighty MAC.
The overlooked conference filled
with directional schools and other disrespected programs had the biggest day
in tts history Saturday.
From Kansas to Alabama to the
Glass Bowl in Toledo, Ohio, the MidAmerican Conference sent a clear message to college football's big boys:
Don't overlook us anymore.
"Heading into the weekend we had a
sense our teams would compete well,"
MAC commissioner Rick Chryst said
Sunday. "But I don't know if we ever

~
.' '

at No. 21 Alabama and the Rockets
beating Nu. 9 .Pittsburgh 35-3 1 at
home.
Throw in Miami of Ohio's 41 -21 win
at Colorado State, which was ranked in
the preseason poll, and Bowling
Green's narrow 24- 17 ·Joss at No. 5
Ohio State, and the MAC -showed oil
de~th that must make the ACC jealous.
'It was a roller coaster," said Chryst,
who was in Alabama tor Northern
Illinois' win. "You're just tr&lt;1cking each
play and cheeri ng like a fan. Everyone
m the league shares in those wins. In
the long term it really benetits us. In the
short term it makes it that . much
tougher to get games like those scheduled."
Unfortunately, Chryst is correct on

that point.
,
Kansas State coach Bill Snyder, who
tries to schedule as many patsies as he
can each year. wi ll surely think twice
before invi ting Marshall back tor
another visit.
.
And other big-name schools might
be hesitant. too, as they don't ~ant to
see their championship aspirations
thww1ed in September.
Players like quarterbac ks Bruce
Gradkowski of Toledo,
Ben
Ruethlisberger of Miami of Ohio, and
Josh Harri s of Bowling Green, and running back Michael Thrnl!r of Nm1hern
Illinois are making the hig-time schools
that shunned them out of high schnol

Ple11e see MAC, B:l

Marauders finish eighth Browns
rally
at Meigs Invitational
past
BY BUTCH CooPER

bcooper@ mydailytrlbune.com

49ers

MASON, W.Va. - In a
final tune-up for many teams
in the area, Jackson showed
why it is the area's top golf
team.
The lronmen, who. earlier
last
week
won
the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League championship, won
Saturday's Metgs Invitational
at the Riverside Golf Course.
Jackson finished with a 319
in the 16 team meet, followed .
by Warren (322), Ironton
(334 ), Logan (338) and
Wahama (344).
Also
locally.
Gallia
Academy (349) was seventh,
while Mei(!S (355) came in
eighth, Eastern (373) lith,
Southern (388) 13th and
River Valley (402) 15th.
Point Pleasant had golfers
compete, but didn't have
enough to complete the
course to qualify for team
points.
On the individual side,
Logan's Nick Poindexter
took top medalist honors with
a 72, followed by Jackson's
Brandon Loudermilk and
Ironton's Dennis Gasai, who
each shot 76.
For fifth place Wahama,
Ian Smith shot 80, Heath
Stanley 82, Brandon DeWees
87, .Daniel Kaylor 95 and
Danny Roush Ill .
Gallia Academy was led by
Matt Wiseman 85 and Greg.
Russell 86, while Travi s
Stout shot 87, Tyler Merola
91 and Andy Noe 97.
Jeremy Banks of Meigs
shot 80 •. while teammates
Josh Ray shot 90, Jake Venoy
91. Josh Venoy 94 and Cody
Davidson 95 .'
Eastern's Natha·n Cozart
finished with a 89, while Jon ·
Owen shot 91, James Wi1196,
Evan Dunn 97 and Steve
Shepard 100.
For Southern, Patrick
Johnson returned to the club·
house with a 87, Brad Crouch
92, Matt Thaxton 99 and Josh
Smith 110.
Randall Sharrett paced
River Valley with an 85. In
addition for the Raiders,
Craig Barker shot · I 00,

Pluae ... lnvltti, B:l

BY GREO BEACHAM

Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO
Though Carmen Pol icy wore
the biggest grin in the
Cleveland Browns' locker
room, the win and the fourthquarter comeback were even
more important to Kelly
Holcomb.
Andre Davis caught an 11 yard touchdown pass from
Holcomb with 29 seconds
left as the Browns rallied for
two 'late scores and a 13-12
victory Sunday over the San
Franctsco 49ers .
The Browns ( 1-2) had one
touchdown in their first II
quarters this season before
scoring two in the fo urth
agai nst Sa n Francisco \
defense, which held them to
113 yards in the first three
quarters. It wus all leading up
to another comeback win fur
a franchi se that has spec ial ~
ized in them since rewining
the NFL four seaso ns ago.
"That's Cleveland Browns
football : Just wait u'ntil the
las t minute &lt;llld 35 seconds of
the ga me," coach Butch
Davis said.
Holcomb beat out Tim
Couch in training camp, but
.two middling performance s
in losses had plll ~i s job ami
Cleve land's season in jenp·
llrdy. Hi s first three quarter'
against
San
Francisco
weren't much better - but
with two sore ankles and a
12-point deficit, he led the
Browns on two stirring drives
for the victory.
"We just hung in there, and
when we had to make plays,
we made them," Holcnmh
said. " It\ just sati sfying that
when we had tn do it, we
stepped up ."
•
Both scoring drives ended
in TD passes to Davis - the· •
second cappi ng a 91-yard
drive comprised mostly of
short, expertly thrown passes.
Kevin Johnson cau ght I I
passes for I09 yards.
Meigs ' Josh Venoy swings away during action at Saturday's Meigs Invitational held at
the Riverside Golf Course In Mason. (Brad Sherman)

Please ••• ~rowns, B:l

Ohio State struggling to put teams away
'

.

MtW:R
Associated Press

BY RUSTY

COLUMBUS - Safety Will Allen believes
that Ohio State is allowing teams to stay· in
games.
,
"We've got to dominate for 60 minutes, not
54," he said.
Those other six minutes? Allen will take care of
those.
Allen intercepted Josh Harri s' pass on the final
play as No. 4 Ohio State (4·0) held off a late
Bowling Green charge in a 24-17 victory
Saturday.
"Once again, it came down to one play. and
thank God I was in the right spot," Allen s'ilid.
"It 's beginning to be second nature to have the
..

--.---- -

ball in my hands at
the end of the game."
The
victory
marked the IOth time
in the last 15 games
that the defending
national champion s
- riding an 18-g'ame
winning streak have won a game
decided by a touchdown or less. Allen, it seems,
i.s usually the guy providing the magic at the fin ish.
Last year, he won games against Cincinnati and
Michi gan with interception s on the final play, and
he had the hit that knocked Miami 's Willi s
McGahee out of the Fiesta Bowl.
Allen had a 100-yard interception return as the
j

.

Buckeyes edged 32 - poi~nderd og Sun Diego
State 16- 13 two weeks ago, then recovered a
fumbled kickoff and made Ihe critical wckl e just
j.nchcs short of the goal line on the final play as ·
the Buckeyes held off North Carolina S,tate 44-3li
in triple-overtime last week .
.
"Will's where he' s supposed to be. He 's poised
and patient ,' even when the game is hurri ed, "
coach Jim Tressel said. "II looks like it 's sup.
posed to be the most important play in the world.
He knuw s what he 's suppnsed to do , gets himself
in position, slows the play down und makes good
decisions."
·
Lydell Ross scored two tou chdown s and the
Buckeyes held the-nation's most prolific offense
to 366 yards. The Falcons came in &lt;tverugin g 575
Plu11 1H Struglln~o

•

B:l

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Plenty of movement in AP poll
BY JosH Duaow

·lhe AP Top 25

Associated Press

The Top 25 lOoms In The Associated
Press college football poll, with flrst ptace votes In parentheses, records
through Sept. 20, total points based
on 25 points for a first -place vote
through one point for a 25th-place
wte , and pnwlous ranking:

A weekend full of upsets
caused plenty of movement in
The Associated Press college
football poll.
OkJahoma and Miami
remained in the top two spots
for the third straight week
when the Top 25 was released
Sunday, but four other teams
dropped out of the Top I 0 in
balloting by the panel of
sports writers and broadcasters.
The Sooners, who have
been No. I all season.
received 55 of the 65 firstplace votes and I ,612 points.
The Hurricanes got three ftrsts
and I ,537 points.
Michigan became the highest-ranked tea.nl to lose this
season when the Wolverines
fell 31-27 at then-No. 22
Oregon. Michigan dropped
from third to 11th and Oregon
moved up to No. I 0.
Kansas State and Pittsburgh
lost to unranked teams from
the
Mid-American
Conference. The Wildcats fell
from sixth to 16th after a 2720 loss to Marshall, the highest-ranked team ever beaten
by a MAC school. The
Panthers dropped eight spots
to 17th after a 35-31 loss to
Toledo.
Georgia was the other Top,

Rec Pts
1. Ol&lt;lahoma (55)
2. Miami (3)
3. Southern Cal (2)
4. 0hloSt(5)
5. Virginia Tech
6. Flork:la St.
7. LSU
8. Tennessee
9. Arkansas

Monday, September 22, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pvs

4.() 1,612 1
4.() 1,537 2
3.() 1,495 4
4-ll 1,4155
3..0 1,304 8
4.0 1,265 10
4.0 1.257 11
3.0 1,227 12
3.0 978 14

10. Oregon

4.() 966

22

11 . Michigan

3·1 918

3

12. Georgia

3·1 888

7

t3.1owa
14. Te)(as
15. Nebraska

4-Q en
2·1 788
3-0 737

18
13
15

16. Kansas St
.
11. Plnsburgh
18. Washington
19. TCU
20. N. Illinois
21 . Wasnington 51.
22. Purdue
23. Missouri ·
24. Minnesota ·
25. Floridll

4·1
2-1
2·1
3.0
3.0
3-1
2·1
4.()
4.0
2-2

S.W

6
9
19
20

457
441
409
392
265
234
175
168
142

24
25
23
17

Others receiving 1101es: Toledo 109,
Arizona St. 90. N.C. Stale 90,
Louisville 79, Wake Forest 54,
Bowling Green 44, Virginia 36,
Wisconsin 32, Marshall24, Oklahoma
St. 17, Alabama II , Miami {Ohio) 9,
Air Force 8, Maryland 7, Michigan St.
7, Cincinnati 6. UNLV 6, South
Carolina 5, T8xas A&amp;M 3, BYU 1

Southern Cal, which was
idle, moved up one spot to No.
3 and had two first-place
votes. Ohio State also moved
up one s~t to No. 4 after its
18th stratght win and 'had the
remaining five first-place
votes.
Virginia Tech was fifth. followed by Florida State, LSU,
Tennessee, Arkansas and
Oregon.
The USA Today/ESPN
coaches poll had the same top
eight teams as the AP.
Following Michigan and
Georgia in the second I 0 were
Iowa, Te11:as, Nebraska,
Kansas State, Pittsburgh,
TCU
and
Washington,
Northern Illinois.
Northern Illinois (3-0) made
its first appearance ever in the
poll, debuting at No. 20 following ' a 19-16 win at
Alabama, which dropped out
after one week.
Minnesota (4-0) also joined
the poll at No. 24 when
Arizona State dropped out following a 21-2 loss at Iowa.
The bottom five were
Washington State, Purdue.
Missouri , Minnesota and
Florida.
The Big 12, Big Ten and
SEC led all conferences with
five teams in the poll, followed by four from the Pac-1 0
and three from the Big East.
Florida State is the only entry
for the ACC.

Struggling
from Page81
yards and 51 points. .
A week ago, the Buckeyes blew a 24-7
fourth-quarter lead before beating North
Carolina State. Ohio State again led 24-7
with fewer than 4 minutes left yet barely slid
past the Falcons (3-1 ), who had won their
last five games against teams from BCS conferences.
"There are no medals for trying," Bowling
Green coach Gregg Brandon said. "It's a
loss. It stinks."
Ohio State did not have quarterback Craig
Krenzel, who watched the game from the
sideline because of a hyperextended right
elbow. Scott McMullen took his place and
passed for one touchdown .
The Buckeyes led 24-7 on Ross' 4-yard
touchdown run with 8:46 left a~Jd appeared
close to putting a team away for a change.
But Harris, who completed 3]. of 54 passes for 326 yards and two touchdowns with
three interceptions, led the Falcons back.
"I don 't think we played a very good football game," Hartis said. "It was disgusting.
You saw it - except for three drives. They
have a great defense. They' II bend but not
break. But they gave us opportunities."
With 3:25 left, Harris hit Cole Magner on
a 25-yard scoring pass. The Falcons ' Janssen

Re1arve

Soya

BaakelbaU CoachEaelem High School
Glrle Junior High
BaskelbaU CoachEallem Elementary
Contact:
Pam
Doulhllt 740-985-3329
Date: S.plamber 18,
2003
(9) 19, 22
Public Notlca
PUBLIC NOTICE
No!lce Ia hereby
given lhal lhe Melge
Counly
Aulomallc
Proceealng
Dale
Board eheU meet
September 25, 2003
11 10: 15 A.M. al lhe
Melga
Counly
Commlaalonere'
olllca.
Nancy
Parker
Orueeer Secralary
t/22103
Public Nollce
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Ia hereby
given lltal the Matgl
Recordt
County
Commlatlon
ahall
mill September 25,
2003 11 10:00 A.M. a1
lhl Mlltlt County
Cori1mtulonera'
· olllce.
Nancy
Parker
orltertllry.

ti22IOS
Public Notice

'.

..
I

COMBINED NOTICE
NOTIC! TO PUBLIC
OF A FINDING OF NO
IIGNIFICANT IMPACT
ON THE !NVIRON·
MENT (FONSI)
To All lnltreeltd
Plraona, Agencllt,
and Groupe: The
Vllloge 01 Mlddltparl
propo- to reque•t

lr

llated by 4:30 p.m. on
Ocll!ber 7, 2003,
which Ia a1 least 15
days after publication
of lhla combined
nollce.
NOTICE
OF
INTENT TO REQUEST
RELEASE OF FUNDS
(NOI/RAOF)
To All lnllralled
Persona, Aganclea,
and Groupa: On or
aboul, bUI nol be!'ore
Oclober 9, 2003, lhe
Vlllago ol Mlcklleporl
wilt requell lhe Stale
of Ohio lo releuo
F-ral funds under
Secllon 104(g) OITIIII
I 01 thl Houalng and
Communlly
Devetopmanl Acl ol
1974, aa amended;
Secllon 288 of Tl11a II
of the
Cranelon
Gonzelea
National
Allordablo Houalng
Acl
(NAHA),
aa
amended; and/or Title
IV 01 the Stewart B.
McKinney Homeleea
Aaalalanca Acl, ••
amended; !o be ueed
lor lha prolacl(a)
daacrlbed above.
Tho VIllage ol
Middleport Ia certifyIng 10 the State ol
Ohio, that thl Vlllaga
ol Mlddlaport and
Sandy lennaralll In
har olllclal cepaclly
11 VIllage Mayor, conaenl lo accopl tho
ol
jurladlctlon
F-rtl caurta 11 an
action Ia brought Ia
enforce reaponalblllllta In relation to
environmental
revlewe,
daclalonmaklng, and action;
and
1hat
theaa
rtlpanalblllllta have
been aatlalltd. The
legal a!IICI Olthl cer·
tllfctllon la·lhat upon
Ita approval, the
Vllllflll of Middleport
may uae !he Federal
Iundt, and the lhlte
Of Ohio will ha.. uttalled the reaponalblllllta
under
the
Nation, I
Envlronmenlal Polley
Acl of 1989, 11
amended.

In One Week With Us

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Your
Ad •••

The State of Ohio
will accepl an ab(ocllon lo lla epproYIII 01
lhe rateaae o1 lunda
and accepl8nct of
lhe cellllcallon onlY II
It Ia on one 01 IIIII following baaea: (a) lhe
cerllllelllon wu nol,
In feel, executed by
lhe Vlllage'e chief
execullve officer or
other officer ol lhe
VIllage approved by
lhe Sllle of Ohio; (b)
lhll the Vlllege'a envlronmenlel
review
record lor the projocl
lndlcaled omlaalon ol
I lltp or IIIIICI IO
make a declalon 'o r
finding required by
HUD regulation II 24
CFR Plrt 58; (c) the
grent reclplenl has
commltled lunda or
Incurred caste nol
aulhorlzed by 24 CFR
Pari
58
before
approval of a releaae
of lunda by lhe State
of ohio; or (d) another
Federal agency actIng purauant lo 40
CFR Pert 1504 haa
aubmltltd e wrltlen
finding that !he project In unaatlalectory
fro tile t1andpalnt of
anvlronmantel quality.
WriUen oblectlona
m111t be prar,arad and
aubmltlad n eccordenct
wllh
lhe
required procedure
(24 CFR Pert 88), ond
mual be tcldraaeed to
the Slole of Ohio;
Environmental Oronl
Analyat; Olllot of
Houolng
·
end
Communlly
Partnarthlpe:
P.O.
lox 1001 ; Columbua,
Qhlo
43211·1001 .
Obleollona lo the
Rtleaae of P'unda on
baaea olher lhan
lhDit llllld lbOVI
will not be conalderad by lht Stale of
Ohio. liiO objtoltona
rtotlved
alter
Ootober 211, · 2003,
(which Ia 15 daya
alter II la antlclpaltd
lhal th~ Slale will
recelva 1 requ111 lor

relaeaae of !undo),
will be conolderad by
lhe Sine of Ohio.
The tcldraaa of lhe
chltf tKecullve oil!_ Ia:
Mayor
Sandy
lanneralll, 237 Race
Sl., Middleport, Ohio
457110
Monday, September
22,2003
(I) 22

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• Include Phone Number And Addrw1 When N•ded
• Adl Should Run 7 Day•

ANNOIJNCilMF.NIS

I

• AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spoors, 304 C-1 Beer Carry Out permll 675- ~ •29.
for sale,, Chester Township, - - - - - - - Meigs County, send leners AWESOME CAREER
ol Interest to: The Dally $14.80·$38.00+/hr,
Sent1nel, PO Bo~~: 729-20, Po;tal Positions. Hiring lor
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
200312004 Full Benefits, No
exp. req., Call Now 1-800I Marie Plants will not be 875.0078 Ext 2on.
responsible for debts other
Busy Physician Office needs
tha n my own, Marie E.
part time E~~:-ray Tech. ultra·
Plant s, ex wile of Alfred A.
sound experience preferred,
Plants Jr. 9-19·03
but not required . LPN
Cerlllled Medical Assistant,
Say gOOd bye to high phone
Secretary with Medical
bills! New tocal phone serv·
Office experience, Secretary
Ice with FREE unlimited
with Medicei, Coders/bllllng
nation wide long Distance
experience.
Good
orga·
~ -800-63 5-2 908
or
nlzatlonal skills . Fax res11 me
www. FreedomMovle.com/llp
aysyou. Local Agents want· to: 877·588-3612 or send to
JA9. 200 Main Street. Point
ad.
Pleasant, WV 25550

We Alfred A. Plants Jr. and
Loretta A. Plants will not be
responsible for any debts
other than those made by us
personally 9~ 12-03 ..

r

GIVEAWAY

Busy salon has great oppor·
tunny for experienced 1tytlat,
wllh ma n ~ge r llcenae ·1o lake
over excessive clientele.
740·411-1880 or 740·2511·
6336.

Detail and cleAn up person
lor body shop. See Glen at
1·112 train walkers, 1·1/2 Air Smith Buick Pontiac 19t~
Dale puppies. First shots Eastern Ave Gallipolis, Ohio.
and wormed. To good home.
Growing HVAC company
Good
huriting
dogs.
looking
lor
Certified
(304)675·537 1
Technician with Installation
experience, minimum 1 t/2
2 friendly- kittens 8 weeks
years experience In bolh.
old, IIIIer trained, Inside only.
OMJ.Y. axoerlencad need
Call 740·446·0420.
llilJllll. Cell 740·441·1236 II
no answer leave a message.
Free cats and kiHens. Call
740.386·8582.
Help wanted caring tor the
etderl~. Darsl Group Home,
Free kittens assorted colors, now paying minimum wage,
7 weeks old, litter !rained new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am304-675-6563
5pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm7am, call 740-992 -5023.
Free relrldgerator, works
fine . please leave message. M1lnttn1nce
Poe Ilion
740·245·9183
Available
Must have Refrigeration and
Free to 1100d home. Female Electrical Experience. Other
Calico
declewed
and duties Include general
spayed. Call 740.446·712 4 equipment and miscellaneous repair. E)Ccellent
Friendly, Inside mala cat, 6 Benefits and wages. Ohio
monthS old, litter trained . Valley Superniarkats 740·
Call 740-446-3897.
446·9312 Ext. 118. EOE

Company .
Must enjoy physical outdoor
work, possess strong lead·
ershlp skills. have a good
driving record. and be tle:MI·
ble to tra\4el to various work
locations primarily In Ohio
and West Virginia .

Oamoae, Inc.
Cell toll·free tor Inform•·
H7H76-8731
EOE M/FIDN

·--iiii

ca-r

...

•

lion

r:noro Information ca ll1 ·800241 -7454.
--------TASC of Southe111 Ohio is
seeking to till two (2) fulllime case manager vacancies with highly energetic ,
motivated individuals. Job
duties lndude assessment,
referral, case management
and monltort'ng services to
adult and juvenile clients
referred primarily through
the Meigs and/or Gallla
County justice systems .
Annual salary of $20·$26K,
dependenl
on
creden!lalllicensure, 9duca·
tlon
and
ell:penence .
Competitive benefits package Included.
Resume. cover letter and
t.hree references to be submltted by 4:00 p.m. on
September 24, 2003 to
Judith Smithchlld, Clinical
Directo r: 8 North Court
Street· 5th Floor. Athens.
Ohio 45701 _

r

l..oTs&amp;

At'AKIMt:N'lS

ACIU:AIOt:

tUII RtNr

· Newly Refinished Home· lor
aale In Gallipolis. 3BR. 2·
lull-bath s.
best-location.
vinyl -siding. Price to sell
now. 740·446·9539

For. men
"Btnlflte/Co.
TtuckiBonutH
• Tough Job-- ONit

I

l'

Hn~m•

lllll SAu:

Ouldoor Careers
'HI~ng Field Crew

- - -- - - - - Securltas security Services
USA Is now accepting appll·
callona tor security offers to
co11er possible tabor dispute
in your area. Premium
wages paid as well as uni·
forms and equipment provided . Experience preferred
but all appllcante wlll be consldered . ~lease apply at:
Sacurltas Securltv 1032
12th St. West Huntington·
WV between the hour!! of
8:008m·11em end 1 : 00pm~
3pm, Monday-Friday or lor

I

eoe

lf¥.u•WANTEU

~Z l=k~~ltl~r H~~i~th~~~=

r

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publllhlng rwallfVII the right to 1dlt, reject. or Clnctl 1ny ld It eny tlmt. Ert'Ofl muat bt reported on tht llrtt dly of
TtlbY,..S.nllnti·R.;Itllf wilt be ,.,ponalbltlor no mort lhtn the 0011 of tht tpttlt DGCupitd by thl error and only the llratln ..rtlon . We
any loaa or ••penH thalrtllutta from the publloatlon or omlat6on or an edwet1:1Mmtnt. CorrMtton will be mtdt In tht flrat lltltllabltlditlon. :j~;,,":;:':'~.~~;
trt IIWIYI conftdtnUal. · ~Current rill otrd epplltt. • All rill 11111tld¥1111Hmtnll art aubjtal to tht Ftcltral Fair Houalng Act of 1HII. • ,Thll
IOCtpll only twlp wanted •• mHtlng
atandardt. WI will not knowingly .aoapt any tcNertttlng In vlol111on of thtlaw.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Medl Home Health Agency,
Inc. seeking lull-time and
PAN RN 'a In the Oallipcll&amp;,
Ohio are. Muat) be licensed
In both Ohio and West
Hamsters and Gerbils to Virginia.. We offer a competThtrtpleta NHdtd
lllvo salary benefits packgive away. 740-992·5937
age, and 401 K. Ploase send
One
h el~ ro w n
part resume to 352 Second Llcenlld
Phvalcal
Gallipolis OH Thereplltl
Siamese tamale cat. Call Avenue,
and
740·388·9660 after 6 p.m.
45~31 .
At•l•tantl, Occupational
Thef'llpltta and A1111tant1
Pretty silver and blac~ Need 7 ladies to sell Avon,
1nd SpHch Languege
stripped female kitty, 4 Coll740·446·3358
Pathologllt for rapidly
months old. Call 74~41 - Nead to earn Money? Lets
expanding Home Health
0145.
te.lk the NEW Avon . Call Agency In Pt. Pleasant. WV
l..a.T AND . Marilyn, 304·882·2645 10 and surrounding areas.
FOUND
le!irn all the ways It can work WE otftr
. . . . . . . . . . . . . _ro~ry~ou_.__________ ·Excellent Wages
·comprehensive Insurance
Lost: White Shih Tzu with No eKperlence needed, hard
tan ma rking s, wearing a working, work ahollc needed Packago
"Paid Vacation, Holidays,
black collar. II found call740- direct In home sales, call
Personal, and Sick days
Kon. {740)992-7440 or 741). 'Job Security
446·1565.
593-5245,
"Great working environment
Please
contact S:tacy at ,
Optometric
Technic i an~
1-6()().577 ·431 0
State-ol·the-art op tomatrlc
or lax your resume to :
Ab9olute Top Dollar: U.S. practice Ia aeaklng an Indi1-937-895· 1375
Sliver,
Gold Coins, vidual tor a career In a
dynamic
work
anvlronment
Prootnts, Diamonds, Gold
SrruATIONS
Rings,
U.S. Currency,- with a oreat team of proreaWANru&gt;
M.T.S. Coin ShQp, 151 tlone.ll. Appll~lnt muat be
Second Avenue, Galllpotlt, detall·orltntea, committed to
excellence In patlen1 c1re, Home health care compan·
740-446·2842.
ion, my home or yours. I
lelf·motlvated 11nd po11eea
have rtleren ces/20 years
l'swptw fruit $1 to $2 per good communication akll11.
e~~:perle nce . Call 740-2 45·
30hralwlc,
• pound, walnutl $1Q ptr hun· Approximately
dred poundo, (740)698· Include• 1ome Saturdays
::;.,J;v.~;;;~-,
and tvenlngt . Benefit•
2124
Include paid tuition and
I \II 'I r
\II '\ I
tuition and travel for career
" I I!\ II I
ldvancement, peld holldaya, Qalllpollo
Collage
vacttlon 1nd 1lck lime . (Careera Cloae To Home)
health lnaurance snd pen· Call Todoyl 740·446·4367,
slon
plan. , E~perlence
1-800-214·0462
desired but not nece1s1ry. 'f!IWW.g•lllpoll.e•r..I'COtlagt.oom
An aweaome job I, $6·$9 per W1g1 II commenaurate wtth
Rap r9Q-05-1 274B.
hour attar training! No expe· experience. EOE. Mtll
rlence naededl Fullfpart reeums to• The Otllv
time, llexible scheduling, Sentinel, PO Bo;~~ 728·12,
oonvonlant
Pomeroy ~Po:m::.:•::roy::.::..,.:O::.:h_:_7_::57..:8.:.9_ _
Location , 20+ potlllon-.
d1
ed Go-cart tor sale, 5 horse
avalllble, call 9·9. M·t:, 1· Proplne truck rver, na I power engine. $500 , call
COL CIIH A and hazmat,
740·379·9044.
888•974·Jobs.
{740)7~2·2511
Giveaway: Gerbils and
Hamsters. Call 740·9925937, II no answer. lea11e a
message.

(

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1116__lb_lJ'_'W•ANIU--l·11"8

classified@ mydallyreglster.com

Word Ads

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

\ \'\ 411 \4 I \ I I \ I "

l\eglster

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: {740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:

Offtee 11o~&amp;'

Browns.

Invite

i~ter

CLASSIFIED

•

MAC

lhe Slate of Ohla Ia under lha Nallonal
relaaoe Federol lunda Envlronmentel Polley
under . Secllon 104111) Act of 1989, . u
of Title I of lha amonded.
Houalng
and
Envlronmontat
Communlly Revlow 118canl (ERR)
Development Acl of lor tho Projocl llaled
1974, as amended; abo.. hao been conSection 288 of Tille It ductod by Floyd
o1 lhe Cranalon Browno Aoaoclatea,
Gonzalae Natlonol Inc. Thl ERR dOCU·
Allordeble Houalng menta the environ·
Act
(NAHA),
as menlol revtewa of the
amended; and/or Title projocland more fully
IV of lhe Siewert B. aetalorth the rauono
McKinney _Hometou why auch ehllamenl
Asololance Act, aa 11 nol required. The
amended, 10 be ulld ERR Ia on ftle and
lor the following pro)· avallabtt lor lhl pul&gt;eel:
llc'a uamlnallon and
Projecl
Name: copying,
upon
Conalrucllon of 1 requell, between the
New Welt Field and hours ol 8:00 a.m. 10
Walerl'realmenl Planl 4:30 p.m. Monday
Source of Federol through
Friday
Funds:
CDBG (e•cept holldaya) at
Revolving loan Fund the above acklrtaa.
Deecrlpllon
ol
Thl following nag·
P u r p o a e : alive lmpacla have
Developmanl ol 1 been the mt~ns to
new wen field and mltlgalt thllr allecl: •
conalrucllon ol 1 new tiH'Ough a preliminary
340 gpm waler lraat- IYIIUIUon ol environ·
manl planl and a new menial lmpacta, It
Hl•lnch
llnlahad waa judged lhat
walor lranamlaalon malar lmpacta - not
main Ia connecl to e•pechld and thua, an
lha new lraalmant envlronmanhll Impact
planl and 1 , _ 1tf- ataleman1 Ia no!
lnch llnlahad water requaatad.
only
lranamllllon ·main lo ahorl·tarm lmpacta
connacl 10 lha new due to conatruc11on
1ree1m11n1 planllo the notee and dual art
IKII!Ing Wiler dlllrl• aKpecled. Na further
ayllam. environmental review
bullon
ldtnllllcallon
. of otavch pro(ICI Ia proSlnr:l• or Mulii·Yaar poled to be conductPro ICI: 2003•2004 ed, prior lo thl
Pro act
Locallon: requeat lor reluee 01
SWcorner of Plge Flclllrallunda.
The VIllage ol
and Elm Slrma
l!atlmaled Coal of Middleport plane lo
Proleel:
underhlke thl project
TOIII
11,141,000 deearlblcl with lhl
(CDIG
'1800,000; P'tclersl lunda oiled
Other 11 ,341,000), II abo¥1. Any lnltrllled
hla been dalerml'*«&lt; perton,
aganolea,
that auch Requeellor and/or groupe, who
Relute of FUndi will hiVI any commenl8
nol conalllule an regarding the anvl·
ac!lon algnltloantly ronmtnt or Who ella·
allecllng 11'11 quality lllfl8 wl1h thll lind·
Ollhe human environ· lng of No Significant
ment and acconllngty lmpec! cllclalon, are
!hi
Vlll1g1
of lnvlled to aubmH wr11Middleport hll decid- . len comment• lor
ed not to prepare 1n conaldera11an to lhe
!nvlronmantal VIllage 01 Mlddleparl
lmpacl
Sl8tament a11hl addreea above

tltribune .. Sentinel - Re

Patton then recovered the onside kick at the :
Ohio State 44.
The Falcons drove to a third-and- I at the
Ohio State 5 before two penalties forced
them to settle for Shaun Suisham 's 33-yard .
field goal with I :46 left .
.
Ohio State's B.en Hartsock covered the :
on side kick, but the Buckeyes ran only three ·
plays - nearly losing the ball on third down
when Ross fumbled but was awarded the
ball in a scramble.
Bowling Green took over at its own 24 :
after the punt. Harris was incomplete on hvo :
passes before finding Magner over the mtd- .
die for 29 yards to the Ohio State 47 with 23 :
seconds left.
Out of timeouts, the Falcons stopped the
clock by spiking the ball on first down.
Harris' pass for Patton was too long in the
end zone on second down. On the nellt play, .
Harris stepped up to avoid a rush and tossed ·
a pass into the left flat where Allen picked it ·
off and ran out the clock.
"We let this one slip away. Period," Harris
. said.
Ohio State has not lost to another Ohio
college since falling 7 ~6 to Oberlin in 1921.
That streak might have ended had not wide- .
open Bowling Green tight end Craig Jarrett :
dropped a touchdown pass. from Magner on :
a double-pass play early in the third quarter.
"We had the trick play designed. It worked
like a charm," Brandon said. "We just didn't
make the play."
·

ing forward to where we wouldn't happen after Steve
want to be. ... We were Mariucci was fired.
I 0 to lose, going down 17-10
Garcia went 21-of-35 for
Nineresque at the end."
at LS U. The Bulldogs fell five
·198
yards. Owens caught
Both
offenses
sputtered
from Page 81
spots to 12th, and the Tigers
and stalled on a stifling day, eight passes for 90 yards - .
but Cleveland made an and in a familiar refrain, he :
moved up four places to No.
The turnaround thrilled a · uncanny rally to win the broke his media boycott long :
7.
miniature Dawg Pound at dubs' first meeting since enough to demand a ~igg~r :
Candlestick Park, which at 1993. Holcomb was 25-of-38 role in San Franctsco s
times was loud enough to
offense.
unrimked tean1s against tean1s in .!heAP poll this drown out the disappointed for 222 yards.
"I don't know how many
Cleveland's offense finally
season - matching its total from the previous thousands in San Francisco's
helped out its defense, which times we've been in the red
21 years - including the two against Top I0 . sellout crowd.
kept
Terrell Owens and Jeff zone and my number hasn 't.
teams. But it's likely only two of those teams
from Page 81
"I think we saved the sea- Garcia out of the end zone been called," Owens said. "I:
will play in a bowl.
son today," said Policy, the despite several decent drives. feel bad from an offensive .
"Days
like
yesterday
really
heir,
build
awareCleveland president who New kicker Owen Pochman standpoint, because we ' re
regret those decisions.
·
ness
about
our
level
of
football,
'
Chryst
said.
Despite the early success, the lack of respect "Yet it is still frustrating. Last year, eight teams held the same job for eigh! made four field goals for the lettin~ the defense down.
will be stark come bowl season when the MAC went to bowls that had sub-.500 records in their years with the 49ers. "When 49ers (1-2), who had the type They re playing their tails
will be relegated to the Motor City Bowl and the conference. That part of the postseason we hope you go 0-3, everybody is of timid, inconsistent offen- off, and we can't help them
focused on where you aren't. sive game that supposedly out.n
GMAC Bowl, while schools that lose five we can get a look at."
Now, we can focus on movgames will play in more prestigious and lucmNorthern
lllinois'
second
win
against
a
ranked
tive bowls.
team this season - the Huskies beat No. 15
But this is an improvement. The conference Maryland
20-13 in their opener - . put the
Saturday.
added a second bowl tie-in for the 200 I season, school in the
AP Top 25 for the ftrst time ever at
Gallia Academy, River Valley and Meigs
which came too late for Toledo and Miami of No. 20 this week.
will
compete in the Division II sectional at
Ohio who stayed home after one-loss seasons in
Toledo,
Bowling
Green,
Marshall
and
Miami
Shawnee
State Park in Friendship. while
from Page 81
2000 and 1998, respectively.
·
also
received
votes
in
this
week's
poll,
giving
Eastern and Southern will be at the Jaycees
With talks beginning about changes to the the conference as many ranked teams and as
Golf
Course in Chillicothe for !he Division Ill
Bowl Championship Series, Chryst is more many teams with votes as the ACC.
Darren Clark 108, Joey Hager 109 and Justin sectional.
focused on getting better access to the smaller
"Right now, we're fighting like the devil to Nolan 113.
Regional tournaments for West Virginia
bowls.
·
For Point Pleasant, Ryan Young shot 92, schools don 't begin until Sept. 29 with
get
resf?CCI
for
our
league,"
Northern
Illinois
Most of the slots are locked in to the big conJtm Novak said "A few weeks a~o I•said Brad Deal 105, Todd Burris 130. Daniel Wahama playing host to the Class A, Region
ferences, which can send teams that finish 6-6 to coach
was our biggest win, but thts has to Chrislenson, who shot 64 early on, was VII meet, while Point Pleasant travels to the
a bowl game while more deserving teams from Maryland
be. When you talk about Alabama, you're talk- unable to finish.
Shady Brae Golf Course in Spencer for 'the
smaller conferences sit home and watch.
Sectional tournament action begins this Class
ing
about
one
of
the
best.
This
is
a
win
we'll
AA, Region VII meet.
The MAC has provided five of the IS wins by never forget."
week for most of the local teams competing

Eaelern Local School
Dlalrlcl
50008SR 681
Reedavllle,
Ohio
45m
741)-667-6079
VACA•~CY POSTING:

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~

www.comtca.com

1'111111""______.,

1176

.

MtSl'tlJ.ANtllUS

I'"

"Ill!'-'""!~----,

WAN1'EJ)

To Do

.
25 Sartoua People Wanted
Wh o want to LOSE weight
We Pay You Cash lor t11e
pounds you LOSE!
Safe, Natural, No Drugs.
800-201 -0832

Picky P1inter1
Froe Estlm alos. Interior and
exterior painting. Give your
home or garage a fresh
new look. We paint homes.
garages. mobjle homes.
buildings , barns and roots.
Licenced and Insured.
(Call M·S, 8-6)
(304)895·3074
20 Ytlrt experience
and reference• .

For Salo: Homel ite H150
Chain saw, $50.00 . 12' aluminum John boat w/ seats,
oars and sma ll electr ic
motor $125.00. 2 Mauve
recliner/rockers $100.00 ea .
Large bench vise $50.00. Tranaml11lona, all type1,
74D-446·4274
74Q-24!Hil77.
JAZZY motorized wheel
chair, used 1 year $2,500
call 740·256·6305 .
- - - -- - - - New 26 Trusses 4/12 pitch
still in bundle Wil l deliver
74o-388·9645
- - - - -- - - SlOp cooUng and heati ng bill
!IUrprlses Do.w.i Sata patented process with a 30 day
satisfaction Guarantee (Unit
price refunded) . Monitor
nours/min. ra n on a smell
dlglle l dlsplav. from Inside
your hOme. AdJust your thermostat and save. No wiring
to furnace or air unit. AddS to
last, easy Install ation. (2
small battery operation)
Monitor days, months or
whole yenr without battery
chango . {sensor-driven unit) .
$79.95 unit pr'lce. To order or
de tails Call 740·33 9-3240 or
Gallipolis,
740 _44 3-2932
Ohio 45631 _ (9 _5 or after 5
ask lor Freddy)
11'111""-~----.,
1
WAIVU1)

To Dn

Will pressure wash llamas,
trailers, decks, metal build·
ings and gutters. Call (740)
446-01 51 ask lor Ron or
leave a message

w111 pressure wash homes,
trailers , decks, metal buHd lngs and gutters. Call (740)
446-0151 ask for Ron or
leave a m ~ssage
11 \ \ \ t l \ l

·m:ll""-~----.,
IIU~INI'~~
Ollll(lRitJNTIY

·--iioiiiiiliixiiiti-rol
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you do business with people
you know, and NOT lo send
money through the ma1l until
you have Investigated lhe
offering .

--------:-cc=ABSOLUrE GOLDMINEI
60 vending maclllnes with
excellent locations all for
$10.995 800-234·6982

Sabysl11ing In Syracuse l'l'li!""":PR~Of--lX'l•
'"'t"ON
__
A_l,..,
area, county certified, or prlSER\'ICI'S
vate pay, day5, nights &amp;
weekend&amp;, (740)992·6316
TURNED DOWN ON
., SECURITY ISS!?
MB Handymen Service . Socl "''"
No Fae Unleu We Win!
Hauling, pain ti ng , power
1 ·888-~82·3~e
washing, drlvewa~ repair ,
seal coating. gu!lera, chlm·

ney. plumbing. Jack of all ~11111""-~~---.,
trades. 30yra. exp. Senior j10
HOMFlt
Dla counl. Frae Estlmatas.
tUR SAU~
·{304)882· 2196, (304)377- t.,.-------~
8288
(3)FHA &amp; VA homu Ill up
MB Handyman Service . lor Immediate potielllon all
within t5 min . ol downtown
Gallipolis. Rates as low as
seal coaling, gurtera. chlm· 8%. (740)448-3218.
nay, plumbing. J•ck ol all
trades. 30yra. e~~:p. Senior 3 bdrm , FR. Lg LR, Cath,
Discount. Free Estimates . ceilings. wood beams, llre(304)682 ·2 196, {304)377- .place. hardwood lloora.
8266
more Into (740)441 - 1724. -

~=~~~~. ~~~~~:y ::~~~

Siding rooting, sidewalks,
blocks, llle, room additions,
rem ode ling . new homes ,
free estimates. (740)9926190 . 740-992·3934.

Lot lor sale In Racine, 2 BR Quiet Location. Near
Holzer C!A. WI D. Hookup,
1740)992-5858
No Pets, $399 Plu s Utilities
lots N 9 &amp; 10 Heatley S {740) 446-2957
Addition In Bidwell, two large ---~---­
BR,
unlurn1shed.
level lots. Priced to sell now 2
$300/mo. $300/dep, plus
Nice older 4 br. 3000 sq. 740-446; 9539
utilities, no pels 740·446·
!eel. 1.5 bath s, !)omeroy,
IU \ I \1 ...,
photo/ information on line
4313
wwW.ORVB.com
code
rmr--~-----, 2BA apt. . $375/mo lliHII!es.
80603 call 740·992·3650 .
t"10
Hnt!SI•:S
included,
$300/duposit,
Pomer&lt;t,' - 9 rooms. 2 barhs.
tHK R•JI/1'
740·992·22~--fire place, t~ o-car garage
APART·
with storaoo or workshop · - - - - - - · BEAUTIFUL
AT
BUDGET
233 Second Ave, 2-story MENrS
space
overhead.
For
hOuse 2BA , 1 1f28a th, fur- PRICES AT JACKSON
appointment call 740 -992·
nished kitchen, WID hook- ESTATES , 52 Westwood
2828 or 740·992-3664
up, ott street parking, walk DriVe from $297 lo $363.
Price reducod, newly redec- anywhere downtown, 12 Wnlk to shop &amp; movlus. C!lll
EQual
orated 3BR with carport t35 months min. $545. month, 740·446-2568
Klneon
740-446 -2776 rel/dop, no pets. 740·446· Housing Oppo11un1ty \.....
$59.000
4926
Beech Street. MK1dleport, 1
rent to Own Land Contract 3 bd . house m country. b8Clroom turn lsherJ npartor buy out right . 3 bedroom Water prov1ded. No pets. ment .. ullll!les paid, deposit II.
no
pe ts.
house In Rutl and Mer new $450 a month, $400 daposlt roteroncos,
1740)992-0 165
school . No Pets In side 741).24 5·5064
house. Thank you. Call 740For LeAse : Beautllul, 1600
742-2263
6 Rooms, 1 bath, kitchen Sq.FI. , restored, second
CIA,
Riverfront with boal dock , appliances,
lloor apartm ent in Historic
washer/dryer hOokup . No District, Ideal for prof esSIOil·
nice 3 t::lr., 2 ba ., 1.5 acres
Pets. Deposit and re !erenoo
Gallipolis phOt o/ Information
al couple. all modern
on line www.ORVB.com required. Call 367-7553
amenities. 2 bedrooms:
code 90303 call 740-446spacious liv•n{Jidlnlng. lots
For Rent · Nice 4 BR home
ICI2003 by NEA, Inc . 0531 .
of storage, 11 12 bath s. roo r
near Rio Ora.nde. $750,00
deck; HVAC. $600/month
per mon lh. Deposi t and
Ho~ms
plus utiliti es. Security and
References
requi
red.
Ca
ll
1310
I-IOM~
flHI SAu:
Wiseman Real Es tate at Key do posit . No pels.
mR SAU:
Reference• required. 740740·446·3644
14x70 mobile home. 2 be d- -------~ 446·4425 01 4,46 ·3936
38R, 1 1/2 bath, brick ranch room. 2 bath with garden For sale or re nt, 3 or 4 bed·
For Loaso. One bodroom ,
with allached garage, full tub, $5,000, (740)742·2144 room house in Pomeroy,
unturnishod, nowly rodeco·
basement. locatod on ono 1992 Indies Sulton 14X.BO 3 heal pump, total EVe, refermtod . secon(l floor Apt. ; at
acre, at 1230 Georges
ences &amp; deposit required, corner of Second and Pine .
bedroom,
2.bath,
central
air.
(
}
_
Crook Rd. asking $79,900
740 949 7004
and axe dock. $12 ,000.00 -------~ A/C ; $300.00 per mon th:
740.367 -0244
740·992·003 1
House For Rent
1BA , water Included. Security and
unlurn. AJC, washer/dryer - key deposit Oft atroot park·
4 Bedroom. 2-1/2 bath .
200! Clayton, 3 bedrooms
hook-up, $350/mo, no pets, lng . Attarencea Required.
2906 An niston Drive.
2 baths, lumlshed, on t1
No DOif&gt; , 740·446-44 25 or
Rec room, carport . $81 ,000. rented lot. NO LAND CON· deposit/references 1equired ,
446-3936
740-446·3667
{304)675- 1213 or {304)617 - TRACTS! Call tor appoint ·
2380
For Rent One Bod room
. men! 941 -776-5894 or 740·
If you like the thou ght of Apartment 920 FO Ul !h
- - - - - - - - 367·0507 .
soulhern pla ntation living
4 BEDROOM, 4 BATH
Utilities 1nclud£1d $400 446·
HOUSE! Foreclosures only 73 14X65 WlndaDf. 2 bd this Is the home for you 8677
days,
256 · 1072
$9,900. tor listings t ·BOO· Gas fu rnace w/heat pump, This lovely spacious south- evenings.
719-3001 EKt . F144
waliher/dry-er,
furniture . ern style home has poten $2,000. 446' 4316 al1er tial. 3 bedrooms, w/ !ull For Rent One Room
apar lmont
baths , and a large kitchen. Elliclency
97 Cla'yton House Trailer 5p.m.
Origi nal wood stai rcase In Ul l itles included . $300
16X76, asking $12,000, call
foyer. Upstairs balCony with Single $350. Couple 92· 41h
Colo's Mobile Homes
740·256·6663 .
US 50 East, Athens, Ohio, a rl 11er view and large hont Ave 446·0677 Days 2b6·
_::_::7_:_
0_::
1•_::7_::
40_::·_::
59:.:2:_-1
:.:9_:_12:__ ' porCh_Access to A pool dur· t972 Even 1ngs.
By builder, new, 3 bedroom, 45
brick , 2 car garage. Good Good used 14:c70. On ly ing the season. Located iri Furntshod 3 rooms and bA th
iDeation. $140,000. 740-446· $99951nctudos delivery, Call Addison at Tara apartments.
upstair~ apl. clean, no pols,
Harold , 740 -385-9948
Gas heel , central ale $550 A
9966 call evenings
releronco
&amp;
cteposl t
month. Please call day
requlrm{
740-44fi15
19
land Home Packages avail- (740)446-3481
and
able. In your area, (740)446-- evenings
Gracious liv1ng 1 ond 2 bod·
3384
{740)367-0502 No calls room apartmenls at Village
Manor
and
A1vers1 do
liberly 12•70, 3 Br 1 bath _
s_
ua_r_o_
:oo_p_
.m_ _ __
Apartmen ts 111 Middleport
refreshed Inside. All new Older 2 Story house In coun·
F1om $278 -$348 Ce ll 740·
All rill •at... tdvertlelng
carpel $5,900. Call 740·256· try 3br, 1ba , 2 showers,
992-5064 . Equal Housing
In thla nawtp~~per Ia
6608 .
peaceful &amp; quia! setting. No Opportunities
aubJect to the F~•r•l
New 2003 D&lt;Jublewide . 3 BA Inside pets. Located 3 miles
Fair Mout~lng Act oi1M8
&amp; 2 Ba1h. Only $ t 695 down !rom Alo Grand University. N1ce,clean 2 b1 w1lh smnll
which makaa It Illegal to
yard In t own. MaJOr appl1·
·and &amp;2951 /no. 1·800-6 9 t. Ci31'104~)~67~5~
·7·6-24-:o:----, ance provided Security
advertllt " any '
11
preftrtnca, II " ltd on or
6777
!""' MontLE Ho~m; deposll ol one monlh ren1
dlecrlmlnell.. laHd on
New
3
br/2
balh.
Only
$999
L---IUiiRiioiRii~it:N'iil'--" and ro ferances requi red
race, color. religion, ...
down and on lv $184.04 per
Monlhly rent $400 Ulil ltltlS
familial 1111\.11 or national
montl'1, ca ll Nikki 740-385· 2 Bdrm Mobile home . All no! Included No pets 44 1·
origin, or •ny lntenllon to
_7_
67_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ . electric, Spring Valley area. t 108
mike any euch
preftrence, llmlt..lon or
No Problem Sale· Want a $300 a month, plus $250 Now TaklnQ App!lca llonadltOflinlnallon."
new sectional home? No depOBit. Call 304·675·2900 35 Wa st 2 Bedroom
or 740·441-1:1954
Apartments,
Thlt n•w•p•per will nol
Problem . Need foundation -:-=-=---:--~ Townhouse
knowingly .ccept
and septic? No Problem . 2 BA , perfect , air, porch, Includes Water Sewage
Tra sh, $350/Mo , 740~44 6 ·
adltlti'IIHmtnlefor real
Need utllltkta run or drivevery nice. 740·446-2003 or
tlltate whloh ltln
way? No Problem. Want big
_ •
oooa
740 448 1409
violation of the law. Our
aa11lnga on 8 2003 modal.
Pleasant Va lle'.~ Apartment
rudtre 1re hereby
No Problem. Cola's Mobile 2 mobile hom11 both with
Are now taking Appl ications
Informed that 111
Homos · U· S· 50 "East · 3br. Locatad In Glenwood.
for 2BA , 3BA · &amp; 48R ,
dwtUinga edvertlttd In
Athena, Onto. 740·592-1972
appliances
with Applica tions are
taken
lhll ntwlpeptr 111
Since 1987, Whera You Get All
W/01304)~76·999 1
available on., tqull
Monday thru Friday, trom
opportunMy biHe.
Your Money's Worth
9:00 A M.-4 PM Ollice Is
lo========~
LOTs &amp;
23bmr olboclleahomledlena ().bo1en'"wowodl1h Located al 1151 Evergreen
.
·
·
Point Pleasant . WV
Hou11 tor 1111 b')l owner. --•AiiiCREAiii
'iiGii,Eiii~-_.,1 All · tppliancta wltl'1 Orl11t
Phone No II (304)675 ·M06
2br, 1ba. II 1112 Hogg
_Will/0
1!'1~304-:-)-~7-6•
-9•9•
9 1___.., E.H.O
Street, Pt. Pl. $28 ,900 30 Acre• rural water, elec· c
{304)6,7&amp;·3468
tr lc, wooded 32x40 block
APAR1111F.N1li
Tara
Townh ouee
- - - - - - - - - garage , hunting. $55,000
tUR lb:Nr
Apsrtmen!l, Ve ry Spacloua,
Hoult tor lilt .by owner. Call740·645·0863.
2 Bedroom&amp;, ~ Floora, CA , 1
3br, 2ba, 1200 1q. fttt , Full
1 and 2 bedroom apart- 1/2 Balh , Newly Carpeted,
unllnlthtd ba1emen1, g11 30 acult, 7 acrtt tillable, wt menta. Jurnllhed 1nd unlur- 4dult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
tlre place, hardwood floor1. 42X70 veal barn ·48X60 barn nlahed. security deposit Patio, Start $385/Mo No
AI 36 Clreenwey Drive, Pt. Southside WV $6Q ,QOO.OO required. no pall . 740-Q92· Pets, Leue Plus Security
304 · 676•54 90
PI {304)875·3458
2218 .
Deposit Requi red . Dayt:
- - - - - - - - L1nd tor sale. 3 teres, great --'-------~ · 740·446·3481 : Evenlngt:
Newly buill ranch, country building lite. At. 568 , lbr All ulllltlet included . 740-367·0502
&amp;etting, 3000 sq. feet, 3 br., 2
$32 ~ . month. {304)676·3654 ~-:::--:--::----­
$35,000, 740·448·9966
ba .• 5 m1nute1 !rom Holzer
- - ' - - - - - - - . Twin Rlver1 Tower Ia accept·
oil 160, photos, ln!Ormatlon Large lot aproK. 10 1' " 17~ ' . 2 Bedroo m apartmen t $250."' lng application• lor waiting
on line www.OAVB.com city water, aewer, nat . gal, per month + utllltl11 and list lor Hud ·suoarzed. 1· br,
co de ?J103 call 740-446- electric, all are avail1ble. dtpotll. 3rd Street, Ra cine apa rtment, call 675 ·6679
740·24H2_92
EHO
740-446·9639
'0149.·

3 br. , 2 ba1. new stick built
ranch home, Pt. Plea,ant
photos/ rntormall on or( line
Www.OAVB. g6m code
90903 call74&lt;f.441·9548

.,11""______.,

Momu:

- - - -- -

·-~~~-

i

!
. .

r

.,

�Monday, September 22, aoG3

Monday, Sept. 22, 2003:.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel• Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

l"fEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE "
Real Eatata
I

Home For Sale
CommerciiiU
Ruldendal
FlbUIOUI
Home,
ApproKimetely 4500
Sq. Fl., Brick, Sitting
On 12,967 Sq. Ft.
Fenced Property 13

I

;Harvest;
the ;
·savings'

ALDER

commercial Kitchen
Poaalble ·
u-:
D1ycere, An11que Mall,
Reatauran1 Could be
restored to lamlly
home, Original Oak
Floors Appraised lor
$294,0110 Will consider
any reasonable offer
below appraisal price,
Partial
Financing
Available Cell for
appointment 273-9824
after 5:00 pm or leave

I

1

•• 2
• 7 3
I R6 5 2

Hill 's Self
Storage

Alexis Taylor
Garders

Cellular

Mums
Hanging Basket Mums

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·

843-5577

MEROIANDISE

.._r......~r:-Rl~A-~ ,...J'
2002 Dakota needs painted.
2 wheel drive. V·B, automat·
ic, loaded. $5.500 or best
otter. (740)256· 1233

80().537·9526.
Men's black ·suit .size 56
tong, pants 48/30 worn once

$75.
2 sports jackets 3XL $25
each _ Black leather jacket
3XL $50, 740-441·6289.

NEW AND USED STEEL

"94 " Chevy Silverado ext.
cab. 5-speed, runs good,
$3.500 or best offer,

r.....-FR..

urrs_&amp;
_
VEGHABJB;

~

10
_.JI. F
L

Potatoes
for
sale
(Kennebec, Red Pontiac).
Mon-Sat., 65002 State
Route 124, Reeds11ille, Oh.
50# $10

Ir:JI

1996 Grandam 4D $2.395,
1997 Honda Civic $4,795.,
1992 Cavalier SIW V-6
loaded $1.495 others in
stock, we take trades
CQOk motors
740·446·01 03

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
FoR SALE
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
OK'fKADE
1997 Pontiac Suntire 2dr,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Sport Coupe, new wheels
Fridiiy, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Used washer/dryer, good and tires, sunrool, excellent
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
condition. $150. Call 740· condilioh. (740) 388· 8997
Suhday. (740)446-7300
.245·0339.

I \ R\I -..t 1'1'1 II
• Otftca Furniture
New, scratch &amp; Dent.

,\

J

t....

1\1-..1111 ,,

Save 70%. 1·800·521·4662

=;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;
II'
(;"

Argonaut 519 Bridge Street,
Guyandotte!HuntlnQton. MIF

..___EQuiiiiiiillli'tlli1fii:Nlii·- ·

rAR.\1

South

•

I A K QJ
... 8 3

4-WDs

BISSEll

2 NT

BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replace ment

1986 Chevy Blazer. 350.
auto. excellent co ndition.

,.· . .

• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

1997 Ford

Conversion· Van. very good
condition. $4 .800· 080.

(740)992·0219

1998 Dodge Neon. 90,800
miles. Great mechanically, 5 1966 C~evy 4x4, 350, 5
speed. 1/2 ton, needs little
speed trans. $2,500. 740·
wo r~. $1800. (740)742·4011
446-8585
.

1999
Pontiac
Firebird 1995 Fo rd E-350 Van . 14ft.
•
67.000 miles T·Top, very high cube box. excellent
Gehl Silage Wagon tandem. clean, view pho!os on line at cond. 740-446·9416
BUUJJING
3 beater &amp; roof. ~ all www.ORVB.com or call 740·
SUPI'IJES
~3~04~6~7~5-~4;30~8~----., _44_6_
·3_~_o___________ 91 Dodge Caravan LE.
loaded. one owner. 86K.
WANll.ll
200 t Che11y Cavalier 40.000 $2 ,000. 740·949·2481 or
Bloc~. brick, sewer Pipes,
"IU BUY
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
miles. 2 door. spoiler. CD 740·992·6 145 leave mes·
player, 17 inch wheels. sage.
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Older Pin ball machine in $5.500 or best oHer. 7-40- - - - - - - - Call 74~245·5121.
not. 256·6 169.
"93" Che11y Astro Van.
PETS
2002 Neon SXT, 19,500mi, 143.000 miles. runs good.
H&gt;RSALE
all power, spoiler, 4-disc· $3.000 or best offer.

Special of the day

--

.-J

· ·~

_.~l r

.r_AI'AR'IMElvrs_FO_R
Rmr
__

r

LIVFJITOCK

AK'C Miniature Pinchers,
ready to go! Tails &amp; declaws
docked,
Vet
checked!
Beautiful
2-temales, 1black/rust, Hedlblack for
·
information please call 7402S6-10JJ

calls please.

- - - - - - - - - 92 Cors1ca 6 cyl auto 4

Buy or sell . Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main - - - - - - - - , - - on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- AKC small Yorkies 2 inales,
992·2526. Russ Moore, 10 weeks old. $500 740·
iow;:;ne;or·~------. 245-1217

r

I

i

I
~--··NSTR-·UMENn;·--· r•6'

r$6

0175.

$1700; (740)742·4011

IUR SALE

· · ··
·
dr., new tires. paint, many
other new parts, $2200,
(740)742-0509
-------94 Cl)evy Camara, $3200;
98 Ford Contour, $2300: 98
Escort, 2 dr, $2400:98 For'd
Escort. 4 dr .. $1800; 98
Pontiac Sunfire, $2400: 97
Ford Escort. 4 dr.. $1800: 97
Mercury Tracer, $1800; 97
Ponliac Grand A.m, $2600:
96 Plymouth Breeze, $1800;

I

.t t4AVe t4ALF A MINI&gt;

~m

TO r&lt;Uftl

l il
!~

I~

___"____. .

GOV.

l-==========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,..

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

!! I JEST

~~

'- TLIAT
~LIOlJL"
I"'
i11"'
V
IrE MOll"I'
TLIAftl "NOlJ(;LI

''r'I\AI l:'~ ~

THAR

RECI&lt;YMEMSE~E"D
.-......~.ov...V:~T I FERGOT

'

J

!.

u

? ~

~

' II IH II \\1)1 -.. 1

r

I

Long burgundy size 718 ,
long gold w/ spar~les medi·
um, long burgundy w/
sparkles medium, short dark
blue w/ sparkles w/ jacket
size 9110 $50 each 740·44 1·
8289.

11'111"""~:------, Cool

iO

HOUSEHOW
GooDs

Oown!l
Central
Cooling Systems, New and

A.J. Auto Sales, Slate Route
124, Wilkesville, Qh, 1·740·

669·1603 or 1·740·742·

$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76

Vlno St. (740)446·7398

-------

i

FRuITS &amp;

Call740·446·771l .

Estale sale of 1998 Ford
Taurus and 1994 Dodge
Caravan. Call 740-388·
0480.

X25. fi sh .finder, trolli ng
motor, 120hp Evinrude ,
black &amp; silver metallic, white
bottom, trailer, $7000 firm ,
~7iiJ
40f·7:;4::i2~
·0:;;5:;:09~-~~

AtrlO PARI'S &amp;

At:Cl-.:\.-.;;()RIK~

L,-~~~~~;..,.1
Engine- lor sale out of 99
Pontiac Sunfire 2.2. Can
Hear run . $500. (304)7735343 or 304 773·5033

CAMPER.'!

MoroR

&amp;

HOMES
·-:;,:;~~~=~
2002 Jayco 30f1. travel trail·
er.
$12.500.
FIRM .

IMPROVEMENTS

$2,495. 2903 Parrish Ave.
Point Pleasant (304)675· C&amp;C

VEG£I'ABLES

Lw------_.1

Genarat

Home

Maintenance- Painting, vinyl
siding , carpentry. doors.

windows. baths.

mobile

home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chef. 740·

992·B323.

Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Chapel Road. l)orter. Ohio.

(740)446·7444 1·877·830·
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. Vi&amp;al Master Card.
Drive· a· little save alot.
Refrigerator $75., Whirlpool
Washer $95., Kenmore
dryer $125., G.E. refrigera ·
tor,
like
new, $195.,
KenmOfe Washer /dryer set
$300., 3-couchs- $50. each,
table 4-chairs, $95., Kingsize
box-spring/mattress
$100., cheSt/dresser wtmir·
ror $140.
Skaggs 740·
446-7398

St. 740-446·7398

JIM'S SMALL

ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Ripl~y.

*IIOfiNG
*liME
MAINT£1111CE
II

*SUilESS
GUmR

•frUistlmiiiS•

...

EllEN. ...

wv 25271

1-800-822-0417

!~lopped

!lull; that is partner's respon·

slbllity.

To get home, South needH to win

CELEBRITY CIPHER

N.WI\'1~
~~G~'( I

I
~

&lt;

1

=
·
Iii

_. ·· · ·~ Don'tleave the debt of
. ' burial and final expenses
1.: (·-' j
·.:_. . · ~;:..· :!·~·~
for your family and
:. ~ ..a')~·
loved ones. ·

..

, .

0
....

33795--Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Arrlva~~~1~ ~:p~ct.19
Release Apnl26, 2003
A fee of $20 will be
chargee for early arri-

val, late arrival, earl¥-,
removal, late removal,
or anytime acce11 Is

wanted to fairground&amp;

other than stated d1te1.
Building lf)ICI II flrat
come flrat aerve.

lnolde Storage: $4.00/11
Open Span: $2.00111
lnalde Fence: $1 .00/tf

G

1he

Box

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171

&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

Let me do 1l b r

dlfllcul! the tASk you

SCORPIO

THAT'S IT ..
TJ.IAT'S ALL'THE
LEAVES I'M
RA!i:IN6 TODA~ ..

All pack $5.00

te~e

BETTER

HURR'(..

THE 6ATE5

ARE

(O ct

I

on, the more

YOUNG'S
CARPENTE~
1 WPS WORKING
OtJ ASPREAD·
S!Ui

• Eloc1rlcal a Plumbing
• Roofing 6 Gutttra
• Vinyl Siding a Paln11ng
• Patio and Porch Decka
Free Estimates

"' '

fi

CAN Y0J REMISMeEfl.
\'MAT "TlliGGE.Ra&gt; IT?

I

i'Hf. ''EAAOII" &lt;;lOoN
'""\!""

you're prepared lo tak e a loss.

PISCES (Feb. 20·Marc~ 201 - This Is
not a day to show any reluclance to

I

l

V. C. YOUNG Ill

~

992-6215

8

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0

•••
•
GARFIELD

~

I

IMPORTS
Athens

J

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E v I s E I:;;
I I I' I ~
&lt;to

J E L NAG

14

I

15

I I

8
W

c01mume•
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

!l&lt;'f .
~e•f ­

'1&gt;''~

740-BB2-1m
Stop &amp; Compare
I

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that altract • - - • •. ~
'
f t Compete
I
r•ne ch1.u;:~;'·I • quoted
..,
.
bv fl\lmg In th• mining word1

:
'

1

TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Inlaid · Treat- Lucid· Jersey- ALREADY
'The book you bought lor this course won't be used
much " lh e teach er sa id . "You mean 1 wasted my,
money?' a slud ent asked. "See," the teacher grinned,
'you're learning l o think ALREADY !"
----------------------bl) th e case todAy. Ta ke the necesaary
time to gather all the ta cts Instead ot
rushing to 1udgment.

C AN CE R (June 21 -July 22) - Be
extremely careful that you don 't use negative em otion to phrase your comme nts
to others tod ay. The deep er you tee t
about something. the more CBreful you'll
nli ed to b&amp; In e•presslnu 11.
LEO (July 23·A.ug . 22) - Ceratessneu
on you r p!!rt lads ~ could Causa yoU to
damage· or lose something that Ia of gnuu
value to you . Ta~e exlrn precautions to
protect your holdings and belongings .

VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sapt. 22) - One-on·
one rete tlonshlps could be a bit problein.
eric for you today . espec ially If you art
more reactionary than patient an d lnlto·
apectlva. Don't let small Issues get out of
hand.

Lord ... we. 11&lt;3Nt&lt; 114~e
jt,., "IRe. BLess,NG9

ROBERT
BISSEll

that cost

k
ree uc S, a co-wor er
mused. ~' "1 believe, that expensive silk ties are the only o.nes

over

k •

~~~T;H~ES~E~S~O;U;A:R~E~S~~~;::=~=*=~=*=~=~
A UNSCRAMBL E ABOVE l ETTERS

SOUP TO NUTZ

-

never
th
b

Pli!NT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

oF 11-1\!!. 1\:&gt;oD

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

.,

you d11velop from atep No. 3 below.

cooperate with people wh o you don 't
especially like . They could make things
quite difficult for you If you don'! make ~
lew concessions.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) - Allhough..,.{
you'l l be lndustrlou!l today snd have a
number of new projects you'd like to stM .
you could end up splnniMg your wheels
jumping from one to the otMr end gelling
nothing done.
TAURUS (April 20 -May 20) - It m i9~t
seem to you that people In general
appear to be a bit difficult to get along
with today . However . th.e real cause
could stem from your being too exacting
and demanding . Lighten up,
GEMINI (Mey 21 ·June 20)- Jumping to
conc1uelons can bt one ol your blggeJI
problems fr om time to time, and this may

1

12. I

N

ca10lut what you lend out today and to
whom you lend 11. 11 you don 't know the
person'5 tra c ~ record on repayrnent ,
you·d be wise not to offer help, unless

IT KEPI' GIVING ME

I

1

24 -Nov . 22) -

AQUARIUS (Jon . 20-Fab . 19) - Be

Remodeling
• New Garages

NOHRE
I

~-

1

time with the wrong people. Stick to your
Initial game plan.
CAPRICORN (Oec . 22·Jan. 19) - Try
not to bring up lssuMI todoy thAI you
know from expe11ence con get someone
tiled up and on lhe detensl11 e. This per son might really lose his 01 her cool, with
you being the tetgel.
·

SFREE

I I I I I

f--:;.....;;..,;;-:;....:.T~

Timi ng will be essential today, so you
must be on guArd regarding your objec·
lives not to make changes at the wrong

SERVICE
• Room Addnlono 6

111

rockol doosn"t hove any luol leaks before
li ghtl~e fuse.(Nov 23-Dec . 21),
you
SAGITTARIUS

CLOSING .. ."

Ky NEAE

~;-::.,..::..:;..::,---j

r'-=========~....J

Condi!ions could be 5omewhal uncertain
for you today, especially If you're attempt·
lnQ to try something new . Be sure your

Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

~

t-

L_J QUitO llkoly to nail yourselt to·~· tloor.

Bring this coupon

(740)992-3194
9D2-663S

I

methodlcnl It musl be handled today. If
you use a hii·OI ·mlss approach , you ore

yc.ul

OYICP ·

lOw lo term lour almpl• wordJ.

~ovellkOd
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c t. 23) -The more

6:30
Lasl Thursday of
every monlh

6 10'X20')

'blr 'Birthday:

adding 10 other areas ol your llle where
ttungs haven't gone as pe rlectly as you 'd

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

PTG B K

..

WOlD
':~~:t:~T S©"R~lA-~"EirS"
UMI
hilled by CLAY I . P'OLLAN _..;..._ _ _ __
O four
Rearrange l• tter1 of the
ICrtlmblad word1 be·

bringing you much happiness. but also-by

Early birds start

(10rK10'

AstroGraph

reach new levels ot tulltllmont. not just by

843-5264

KTIXRNCP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I never said lin anr 111m) 'Mmm,
you dir1y rail" Wha1 I actually did say· was "Jud y Judy! Judyl'" ·
- James Cagney
·

In the year ahead your soctet life could·

189 Middlej&gt;l!rt

S M W P C P H

TIIRWISCP

Tuesday . Sept. 23, 2003

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

wz T

E T 1

defeats the conlrRct

Lei me show you how
,affordable and easy It Is

-?40-992-5232 97 Beech St
~W;;:;:IN;;TE:;;:RS;TO;R;;AG;E~· middleport, OH
Meigs County
Fairgrounds

ber.l ·
Therefore. when West plays the club·
two on the first round, F:ast knows
that South began with either two or
four club~ . Since in the latter case,
nothing can be done, f;osl Rhould nssume the former. And if declarer has
only two clubs, East wants to wln the
second club trick. Here, that defense

J~}~

. -'

by Luis Campos

However, when dummy has n ~cmi·
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created hom quotations by lamoul
solid suit like thiS - e!ipccially when
people. past and presen1. E:ach tetter In the cipher stands lor another.
there Is no side·suit entry -· ills vitnl
Today's clue; K equals H
ror the defender without the nee to
signal count., He does this by plny ing
high-low with an even number, or up "UC'GG
DC
PYXKM
OTSO
the line with an odd number. (In the
United Slates, a high-low I• also called
MKYH
URPJ
Z PRE
nn echo. So, Echo with an Even num· TZMCP

1-\E:'S

0tFI((.7

··w.v·s #I Chevy . Pontiac. Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dea1er"

740-992-2432

1/0IIJ~
High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

'

llow do you ltll partner how many
cards you hold In a suit? Sometimes.
by discarding! When you can no
Jon~er follow suit, portner knows how
mony you had originally . At other
limes, lhere Is lillie or no point; portner I• more concerned with other mal·

trump - do not wnrry about an ltn·

985·3994 ' ~-

$200. 74().446-7711 .

By Phillip Alder

three no·tnlmp?
South IR correct to open two no ·

RELEA~IN I

~info . ~

Washer/Dryer combined,
Kenmore Heavy Duty, All in
One; white, clean works well

Whirlpool washer almond
color $95, dryer $95. Hot
point
refrigerator
$75.
Kenmore frost free almond
refrigerator $150. Kenmore
washer/dryer $275 . WOOden
table wt 4 chairs $95. Couch
$50. Rocker recliner $20.
Chest or drawers and drsss·
er w/ mirrDf $'140. Full size
mattress box springs $65
Queen size $95.
Skaggs Appiiance r 76 Vine

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
•Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
~ Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karls • Mini
Bikes

Ul'lt~l L\1'\(,L..]'

SHOTOKAN KARATE
Beginner class lll
6:00 to 7:00 9/15/03
Eastern High
Cafeteria

Ohio HAS 10-4pm. Slop By

Guy

enccd pairs rnisderend. How should
the carding go for East· West to dcfent

WATER FROM
TH I DAM TODAY

475 South Church St.

All Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

Y ar

used furniture store, 130
Bulavilte Pike. mattresses.
dresserS,
couches,
bunkbeds, bedroom suites,
recliners. grave monuments.
740·446·4782
Gallipolis,

bevorego

the!le nine tricks : two spades , one
heart, four diam onds and two clubs.

Pomeroy. Ohio

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675·7388. For ·sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, relrigera·
tors , gas and eleclric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will ·do
repairs on major brands · in
shop or at your home.

localt
Blond
lwlft
Amuon
IOUICI
Excited
- Nltl
monottr
Poomo
Colt'o
portnl
Twltt
Clluldron
Molt

should Immediately attack clubs, hop·

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

celt (740)949·2764

Sock hOp

tors. Occasionally, though, it is vllat.

I!

Dean Hill
New lie J.Jsed ,

949-1405

Martin Industries gas heating stove, 70,000 BTU's, $75

19 ''011 ~of . 31
lho1junkl"
20 Chop
3g
22 Furnlturo
41
protoctor
42
23 Script by
24 Rtmotl
43
25 Game plan 44
26 Sleckon all
27 MTV
41
watchlr
47
28 Or. Frenkonotaln'o golw 48
29 Mlcrowtvt, 50
tlanglly
51
31 Encott
33 Brooke or 52
Tllllo
35 Canadian
prov.
38 Courting

After w\nnlnR the firRl trick, dcclnrcr

Every Thursday

Used Car, 1995 Saturn 4
door; Ellcelle nt Condition ,

17 ~ranch wine
dlaguat
18 Trek
58 Look after
20 Cathedral 59 Meko 1 hom
port
DOWN
21 Crotor odgt
22 Gore-1 Sorrowt
24 Meodow
2 Gumbo
27 Decolvt
Ingredient
(2 wdt.)
30 tolllt-- 3 Foundling
4 Adago
31 Had betn
5 Royat
32 Bubblopronoun
34 Thing,
8 Moutho,
Inlow
In zoology
35 Boordlng
7 Oppoolng
ochool
vote
36 Comtto
8 lnvllotlon
37 Grooco'o
ptoo
Ill
38 Muthroom 9 l:ye port
10 Tree with
40 Kenna!
noodleo
aound
41 lponema'o 12 Every
Januory
city

duck twice.

nvrrl1

~

"'

sometimes trivial

(hyph.)

nee for two rounds. And If EH!:!l thinks
South might have three clubs . he will

~~~04)667755··446253~Eve. Days . . ~ - -JJWR•t\ii/JfA"T!-:
· ~ :· HOME

1986 Ford Escort, 4 dr., 4 3275
cyl., auto. great little car, lots rnn
TRUCKS
Bell peppers RedfGreen new parts, $ 1400, 17401742. 1·tUK SAI..E
Greenhouse, 72'x30' hut you pick $8.00 a bushel. We O509
style, all accesoriews includ· pick $10.00 740·247-4292
1994 Thunderbird 65,000 1995 FORD E350 CUBE
ed, $3,350, (740)992-2762
miles, excellent condition BOX
TRUCK .
CALL
Utility trailer, 1997 Pace Buing paw paw fruit $1 .00· $4,800. Call 740·441-1302. (7401446·9416. M·F 9·5 .
American, double axle,
Located
1391
Safford
7'x 14 ,x 7
$3 ,550 . 2.00 lb buying wa lnuts
112.
1996 Dodge Neon $2 ,000.
_
$10.00 100 lbs.
School. Gallipolis .
17401992 2762
Call740·367·0102.
. Call 740·698·21 24

Used. Installed. (740)446·

~--------~- 6~~~8---------­
Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed.
Washers,
Dryers,
Ranges.
and
Relrtgerators. Some start at

tion . Pertect for home or Hondas,
chellys,
etc!
church. 740 _446 _7711 .
cars/trucks from $500. For
listings 1.800·719·300 1 e•t
- - - - - - - - 3901
Clarinet like new $250.00 or
make otter. 740·742-2176·
1984 Olds Cutlass Supreme
very good condition. $2,800 ,

1994 Slates 17'6" bass boat

range

58 "Yanka"
1t1r
57 Word of

lng thnt East nervously hold5 up hi s

WE REPAIR

tuRSALE

canal

To start the week, an elementary
_:·~;'I·!Z!2J example
I have seen many lnexperl·

CHILl

BoATS &amp; M&lt;rroK~

96 Chevy Lumina, $1700;

- - - - - - -- -. _ _:.:___:_____ Baldwin Orgasonic Organ
2357.
Offices (Downtown For' 4 homecoming dresses. and ben~h. Excellent condi· $500 POLICE IMPOUND S.
Rent) All eleclric, one IS .3
rooms , one is 4 rooms , both
on first floor, 400 block in
Gallipolis. clean &amp; nice.
740-446·9539

(740)992·3357

· - - - - - - - ' $6.500/0BO. (740) 256·
Baby calves for sale. Call 6745, (740) 256·6877. (740)
740-'388-8524, No Sunday 256·6467.

For Sale A.L reg. Angu s
-heifers, c~s &amp;·calves ,a lso:
reg, black Limousine open
heifers 7 bulls
New digital livestock scales
weighs up to 3, 4oolbs 740.
Mlsc:::F.LLANDXJS ~-------- 256·1352
MERCHANDISE
Old English Sheepdog
Pups. First shots and Opening Monday Sept. 22 ,
SPACE
wormed Lovable. beauti ful A-Team Feed. at old . JO
.
FOR RENr
1-10x1 2', msulated, metal shaggy dogs s2oo.oo each Norris Building. 110 Vine
__
s1d1ng tan &amp; brown, roltup 740•985•9823
Street. 740·441 ·9090.
door, was $1750 now
Mobile home space for rent.
$1400; 1·10X1 5, insulated,
MUSICAL
$~ 25 a month, $100 deposit.
60 FT or less. 740·446· metal siding tan &amp; green,
rollup door, was $2100 noW
•
AlJil)S

Upstairs apt. for rent. 2
bdrm., 1 bath, kitchen w/
appliance's. Gas heat, water,
trash paid. $350 a month.
Day
(740)446-3481 .
Ellening (740)446·1567. No
calls after 9:00p.m.

CD·changer, 5 speed, A.JC ,

All po ,.

. . . . .------, Count often useless,
MYSEI..f.

"V"'JIIii-'

St. Rt. 124
Between Racine &amp;
Syracuse
Large Spaces $7.50
949-2734
Refreshment
stand open

EaAt

3 NT

r-~~~~~=:----:--------

Window~

FLEA MARKET
Oct. 3-4
Maplewood Lake'

North

Opentns lead: oil Q

740-992-7599

·1979 Jeep CJ-7 new Outlaw
wheels and ·ti res. different
lops. e•tra engine, good
condition . (740)388·8997

Wts t
Pass

South

FREE ESTIMATES

VANS &amp;

$4.000 OBO

Dealer; South
Vulnerable : Neither

RESIDENTIAL

(740)992·3357

AKJ

¥ A •6 52

t
'

+A 74

6 52

992-5479

$5.99 -1 0" pot
Pansies, Pumpkins, Fodder
Mon-Sat 7:30 - 7:00
Sun 12·5
Portland, Oh

•

Jeff Warner Ins.

$2.99 · 8" pot

MR:EiJANF.OUS

• 4

A{l.l1091i
• K J 8 ~

42 11 may be
read
1 Reolly
45 Prlnclpleo
lmprno
49 '"I" troublo
4 Satolllte
50 Soductlvt
8 Tttr
woman
11 Juotllnt
53 Con.
13 Atrnoophorw
nolahbor
14 -Lanka
154 Foblod bird
15 Old blrgo 55 Klrghlz

device

F:ul
• 7 fl 3
• Q 10 9
• 10 9 7 3

Anl_.r to PfiYIOUI Puult

ACROSS

18 Dlagnootlc

+KQ.ItO!I
W~Rt

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

(Formerly Harris Farms)
We have all your fall needs

meaN

Today's r
lassifieds!

OH · ~~ · U3

Norl

rooms, 4 112 Baths,

1

I

PHILLIP

Classlfieds

Get

Fast
Results

�PRo FooTBALL

The Daily Sentinel

Cardinals turn up heat
in win over Packers
AssOCIATED f»RESS

Giants 24, Redskins 21

Seahawks 24, Rams 23
ln Seattle, Matt Hasselbeck threw a 3yard touchdown pass to Koren Robinson
, with I minute remaining and Josh
Brown made the PAT as the Seahawks
overcame a 13-point deficit to stan 3-0
for the first time in five years.
Rams running back Marshall Faulk,
held to 31 yards on 15 carries, left in the
third quarter with an injured left hand.
Marc Buljjer fell to 7-2 as the starter
for St. Louts (1-2), with both of those
losses coming in Seattle.
.

F

New York Giants' Amani Toomer, foreground , pulls in a pass over Washington
Redskins' Champ Bailey on a 54-yard touchdown pass play Sunday at Fed Ex Field in
Landover, Md. (AP) ·
ovenime. Tampa Bay took out all its
frustration on the hapless Fal~ons (1-2),
who failed for the second week in a row
to give Dan Reeves his 200th coaching
In Houston , Priest Holmes had 156
victory. ·
total yards and two touchdowns, and
Dante Hall had a 73-yard punt return for
a score to help Kansas City to its first 30 stan in seven years.
Holmes, who grew up in San Antonio
ln Indianapolis, Reggie Wayne caught
a career-high I0 passes for 141 yards and and played at Texas, gained 89 yards
two touchdown s as the Indianapolis rushing and 67 yards on four receptions.
Colts are off to their first 3-0 stan since Hall - from Houston and Texas A&amp;M
1996 and only their second such stan - has five punt or kickoff returns for a
touchdown in his last eight games.
since 1978.
Jacksonville (0-3) has lost live straight
dating to the end of last season. ·
Fred Taylor had 17 carries for 126
yards, topping the 5,000'yard career
In Detroit, Daunte Culpepper left with
mark and became the first runner to gain a bruised back after his second rushing
more than I00 yards against the Colts touchdown gave the Vikings the lead.
defense in 15 games.
Minnesota (3-0), with three wins in the
NFC North, is off to its best start since
winning seven games to stan the 2000
season. The Lions (l-2) liave lost two
In Nashville, Tenn. , Steve McNair straight since beating Arizona in the
threw for 252 yards and two touch- opener.
downs, becoming just the fifth quanerCulpepper didn't return after lineback in NFL history to notch 20,000 backer Wali Rainer hit him in the end
yards passing with 3,000 yards rushing. zone when his 2-yard run put the Vikings
Eddie George had 29 carries for 100 ahead 13- 10 late in the second quarter.
yards and ran for his first touchdown of Culpepper was 7-of-13 for 105 yards.
the season to seal the victory for the
Titans (2-1 ). Deuce McAllister finished
with II carries for 8 yards for the Saints
(1-2).
In Miami, Ricky Williams carried a
franchise-record 42 times for !53 yards
and one score as Miami moved into a tie
for the division lead with Buffalo and
.
In Foxboro, Mass., Tom Brady scored New England, all at 2-1.
on a !-yard run late in the third quarter to
The Dolphins made interceptions to
lead the Patriots.
end two early scoring threats by the
Brady, who hut) his right elbow with Bills, whose only points came on Nate
5:45 left in the second quarter, e;ave tlte Clements' 54-y~rds interception return.
Patriots (2-1) a 16-9 lead with hts score.
Drew Bledsoe completed I0 of 25
Asante Samuel added a TO on a 55-yard passes for just 98 yards with two interinterception return.
ceptions and four sacks. The Dolphins
Vinny Testaverde threw a 29-yard held Travis Henry to 7 yards rushing and
scoring pass to Wayne Chrebet early in intercepted his first NFL pass to sty mie
the founh,-making it 23- 16. But the Jets one scoring threat before he left in the
(0-3) could not get closer.
·
second quarter with a rib injury.

Chiefs 42, Texans 14

Colts 23, Jaguars 13

Vikings 23, -Lions 13

Ravens 24, Chargers 10 Titans 27, Saints 12
In San Diego, Jamal Lewis ran for 132
yards and one touchdown on 23 carries,
a week after setting the NFL single-game
record with 295 yards.
.
Lewis needed 182 yards to break O.J.
Simpson's two-game record of 476 yards
set in 1976.
The Rfl,vens (2-1) won their . second
straight. San Diego (0-3) has been
outscored 88-37 thts season. Including
their second-half collapse last year, the
Chargers have lost sevetr straight and 10
of 12.

Bucs 31, Falcons 10
In Atlanta, Defensive -tackle Warren
Sapp scored the first offensive touchdown of his career on a 6-yard catch as
the Bucs rebounded from a disappointing loss.
The Bucs (2-1) were clearly penurbed
by the way they lost to Carolina a week
earlier, getting two field goals and an
extra point blocked before falling 12-9 in

"

Holcomb fractures leg
~Browns' win, Bt

''
'

'The Bus' drives ,
Stealers past
Ben gals, 17-1 0
CINCINNATI - Jerome
Bettis lowered his battering-ram shoulders and
plowed into the end zone.
Joey Porter yanked down
the quarterback as the
Terrible Towels twirled.
·
Different setting, very
familiar scene.
called heads. Porter, the ·
The Steelers got back to Steelers' top defensive
their black-and-gold basics . player last season, also had
Sunday, running the ball one of four sacks of Jon •
when they wanted and turn- Kitna.
ing Poner loose during a
Porter broke through the
17-10 victory over the line, grabbed the back of ·
Cincinnati Bengals.
Kitna's jersey and pulled '
"It was good to see us him down in the third quarkind of re-establish a little ter, thwarting another
bit of our tradition," coach Bengals possession.
Bill Cowher said. "That's
" It seemed like it was a ·
like the days of old."
long time coming," Porter
Tens of thousands of said. " I was ready to go,
Pittsburgh fans were in the and the adrenaline was ·
crowd of 64,596 - the j!Oing to get me through
largest ever to see the JUSt about anything. That
Bengals play in Cincinnati felt like Christmas felt
- and stayed on their feet when I was II yt;ars old."
as the Steelers (2-1) went
Cincinnati was lost withback to grinding it out.
. out . running back Corey
In thetr first two games, Dillon, who strained his
they became dependent groin in the second quaner ·
upon Tommy Maddox's and didn ' t return. Kitna was
passing. Amos Zereoue 16-of-24 for 157 yards with ·.
managed only 104 yards i'! one interception and' a late ·
the two games.
touchdown pass.
.
Betiis, relegated . to &lt;!
As first-year coach
backup role in preseason, Marvin Lewi s watched
showed that The Bus still helplessly from the sideline, ;
has a few miles left. When the Bengals fell to 0-3 for ··
Zereoue needed a rest late the seventh time in the last
in the third quarter, Bettis 13 years, which marks their
took over and led the ~eign as the NFL's worst
Steelers to a decisive touch- team.
down through brute force .
"Nothing is surprising,"
Toppling tacklers as he Lewis said. "We didn't want
went, Betti's ran six plays in to be 0-3. We've played
a row for 23 yards, putting three teams that we knew
Pittsburgh ahead 14-3. He were going to be pretty
lowered his head and pow- good, so there was a chance
erect into the end zone on that it was going to hapfourth-and-goal from inside pen."
the I.
Since Cowher took over
"You get frustrated," said as coach in 1992, the -·
Bettis, who had 59 yards in Steelers have rushed for
16 carries. "As a running more yards than any other
back, you want the oppor- team. They didn't do much
tunity to make a difference after Bettis was benched in .
in the game . It 's tough. the preseason for Zereoue,
When you have two nm- who !)ad 58 yards through
ning backs who want the three quarters Sunday.
football, it 's ·going to be difWhen Zereoue came to
ficult ."
the sideline to catch hi s ·
Cowher ran onto the field breath , Bettis took over.
and smacked Bettis on the
"When Jerome gets ..
left shoulder pad after the goi ng, it's pretty hard to _.
touchdown, a sign of his stop him ," said Zereoue,
delight over a running who finished with 69 yards ,
game that was rediscov- on 16 carries. "! thought, ~
erect.
hey, he's getting it done. -.
So was Porter, who suf- Coach Cowher and 1 both ·
fered gunshot wounds to decided to let him go."
the buttocks and right thigh
Bettis, who had only 21 ',
three weeks earlier. He yards in the first two games,
made an immediate impact topped that total on his first ·
on a defense that kept the six carries. He also did the
Bengals (0-3) in check until tough work as the Steelers
the closing minutes.
ran out the clock after
The Steelers co-captain Kitna 's 5-yard touchdown
came out for the pregame pass to Peter Warrick cut it ,
coin toss and correctly to 17- 10 with 5:541eft.

Jtlli\IS•\td ..)-t

.arkin rejects
Reds' offer, Bt
I

• Bldayes must improve in
Big Ten play. See Page 81

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Martha Childs, 98

INSIDE
Community calendar.
SeePageA3
1 Time Out for Tips. See
Page A6
·
1

'

,.,..

WEATHER
Sunny, HI: 70., Low: -

Ohio

Pick 3 dly: 7-o-a
Pick 4 dly: 5-2-9-5
Pick 3 night: 4-4-2
Pick 4 night: 5-6-3-8
Buckeye 5: 6-9-13-14-32

West Vuginia
Dally 3: 7-2-7
Dally 4: 4-9-9-7
Cash 25: 1-4-5-11-20-22

2

HELP WANTED
SERVICE TECHNICIAN

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But Other Qualified Applicants
Will Be Considered.
Call Roger Jessie

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740-992-6614 or
1-800-83 7-1094

Nominate them for

"Carrier-of-the-Month/1

Pizza Hut
compliments of
Pizza Hut

POMEROY
Recognizing that "life is short
and you only get one," Stan
McDaniel
decided
in
February 2002 after karaoRe
singing .at a local bar, that the
country music scene was the
place for him.
With encouragement from
those who heard bini and a
dear grandmother who died,
he decided that he wasn't
going to let anything stand in
his way or stop him from
doing things he wanted to do.
Now, 17 months later. he
has done two demo CD's, one
recorded locally and the second of original songs recorded
in f':lashvil!e, and has entered
the"live entenainment field.
The solo artist will be

• The Southern Local
school board received a
$1,100 grant from the
Appalachian
Science
Institute. The grant will be
used to purchase equipment
and supplies for the Biotechnology progr~m at
Southern High School.
· • The board authorized the
treasurer to implement a payroll direct deposit program.
• Board members discussed the water leaks in
the roof at the new elemenPieese see Southern, AS

J. REED

'

)

SECTIONS -12 PAGFS

A3

Stan McDaniel
opening a weekend of entertainment Thursday night at

Please see McDaniel, AS

Committee
takes up
tourism
projed
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

reed@ mydailysentinel.com

The Meigs County Bikers
Association, above, may have
been responsible for Santa
Claus· s first visit to Pomeroy
Saturday, as they lined the
Pom,eroy parlling lot for their
annual Toy Run. The run is
organized each year to kick off
the association's Christmas
toy fundraising drive. Each year,
hundreds of needy Meigs
Cou~ty
children
receive
Christmas toys through the
generosity of the bikers and
their supporters. In his Santa
suit, Arnold Priddy, above, of
Pomeroy leads the parade of
bikers on a tour of the county,
which ended at the Mizway
Tavern for a dinner, auction and
live entertainment. Bikers from
other communities, including
Terry and Penny Little, left,
from West Virginia, pictured
here, also joined in the run.
Meanwhile, the association will
continue to raise funds for the
toy odrive. allowing members of
the general public to contribute
through collection canisters.
(Brian {Reed photos)

82-4
Bs

A3

A4
As
As
B1-2,6

A2

© 0003 Ohio VaUey Publlahlng Co.

Council conducted a
second reading on a proposed ordinance regulatmg the placement of manufactured homes in the village. A third and final
reading will be conducted
on Oct. 13, at which time
the approval of four council members will be
required for passage.
The proposed ordinance
is a revision of an existing
mobile home ordinance
written in the mid-1960's .

PleeH see Field, AS

POMEROY- Local committee members recentlv
returned from Kentucky'~~
Berea College with an idea
- to build a visitor's kiosk
near the Ritchie Bridge at
Ravenswood, W.Va. -and a
grant to help build it.
A I 0-member committee
was chosen to ira vel to Berea
College last week, to determine specific needs of the
community and how those
needs can be st be addressed,
to
County
according
Commissioner Jeff Thornton,
one of the 10 committee
members.
Thornton said the committee has received a $500 grant
from the college to "jump
start" a project in the commu.nity, and has until April to
complete · the project. The
kiosk will be located just off
the bridge approach, and will
provide tourist information to
Meigs County visitors.
Thornton said the committee identified the county's
need for an emer~ency room
and hospital as a lmt priority,
but said the group decided to
build the visitor's information
kiosk because of the limited
funds available.
In addition to the $500
from Berea College, a $500
local match is required,
Thornton said.
"We plan to work with other
groups and agencies in order
to complete the projecf."
Thomton said. "Our committee decided that promoting the
county and all it has to offer to
visitors is a worthwhile project."
Mary Powell of the
Hi storical
Chester/Shade
Association is the chairman.
or facil itator, of the commit-

Please see Project. AS

Sytnposlum
Saturday, September 27, 2003
8:30 am - 12 Noon

Send u~ your name. address and. phone riumbei;.
2.) Include your carrier's natne.,your route number
or subscriber number.
J .) In 50 words or less, tell us why we should choose
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{Pre-registration and refreshments at 8:30am}
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

Mall your entries
. to: . Paul Barker
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 Third Avenue
Clalli~lls, OH 456.31
446-3008

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

Middleport Bikers Association makes toy run
approves
field lease

Pain

Fax:

Bl' CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Other business

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h -.• t d l l l l l l " ll l

McDaniel to open
Sternwheel Riverfest

would happen if the LIFT
grant ceased, then who
would pay back the loan.
The board was receptive to
the grant proposal and
asked Grueser to do more
research and report back to
at the next meeting.

Monday evening with the Big,
Bend Youth Football League,
for use of the football field,
stadiwn and concdsioos area
at the fanner Middle[XIrt
High School Building.
the league has already
begun conducting "midget
football" games at the
facility, after assuming
res[XJnsibility for cutting .
grass and other maintenance since the school was
closed last spring.
The village assumed
ownership of the school
building, the elementary
building and Gentral build"
ing and surrounding properties earlier this month from
the Meigs Local Board of
Education. The league will
pay the village $50 per
month for the use of the
field and other facilities, and
will assume responsibility
for utility costs. as well.
According to Mayor
Sandy Iannarelli, ' the
league has already invested $7,000 into the facility,
and plans to continue
repair work there.

LO'I'I'ERIES

Patriots 23, Jets 16 ·

/

RACINE ___; Southern
Local Superintendent · Bob
Grueser approached the
school board about a grant
that would provide more
than $270,000 in exercise
equipment to the district.
The Learning and Fitness
Training (LIFT) program
seeks to create healthier students and to make physical
exercise a bigger part of the
educational experience.
According to LIFT, students are becoming obese
due to a lack of regular physical activity. Healthier students translate into a better
educational
experience.
. Without a positive and persistent physically active experience in school, LIFT reports
that 80 percent of children
will never break the habit of
an inactive lifestyle which
will result in health problems

as they become adults.
In order to qualify for the
LIFT grant, the school district
would have to provide a suitable exercise space, floor
mats and take out a loan for
the exercise equipment estimated to cost approximately
$270,000. The LIFT foundation reimburses the district
only if the district sends in the
results month after month for
the exercise regimen. Modest
health goals must be met.
Grueser said more than
70 schools in Ohio are
enrolled in the program .
Members of the administration .have polled six sirnilarly· sized schools who
have said the program . is
excellent and the reim,
bursement payment system
in exchange for exercise
results is successful. The
program a! so allows the
community to get involved.
School board members
were concerned about what

111\tl ..

approved a three-year lease

DebUt on Pqe A2

•

PI/Jt'

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com
BY

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council

INDEX

If they are selected, your ~
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for two at
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Your Sentinel
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ll1Sil\, , SIPI1'1BIH.·~:{ . :..! UO :;

lh

BY BRIAN

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\11

Southern Local ponders grant proposal

SPORTS

Dd'YouJust
.

Dolphins 17, Bills 7

Corning
Thursday in the Sentinel ...
... '..
..

•

Monday, September 22, 2oo;t ·

Bv JoE KAv
Associated Press

The Green Bay Packers love cold
weather. Playing in the heat is a different
story.
Jeff Blake wore out the Packers on a
day of record heat in the desert, then
Dexter Jackson sealed it with a clutch
interception at the fini sh.
Jackson, ·last year's Super Bowl MVP,
intercepted Brett Favre's pass in the end
zone with I 0 seconds left to save the
Arizona· Cardinals' 20-13 victory
Sunday.
"The elements are the elements,"
coach Mike Sherman said. "People come
up to Green Bay, and I don't say we beat
them because it's cold out. I say we beat
. them because we won the game. They
beat us because they played better than
we did today- bottom line."
Blake completed 20 of 31 passes for
273 yards, including a !-yard pass to
James Hodgins for the winning touchdown with 3:59 to play.
Favre, ::13-for-33 for 226 yards and a
touchdown, drove the Packers (1-2) to
the Arizona 7 in the final seconds. But on
third-and-goal, his pass was picked off
by Jackson.
The Cardinals (1-2) took a knee and
earned their first victory of the season,
and second in 12 games ..
Favre, 35-1 when it's . 34 degrees or
CIJlder, is 12-18 in games when !he kickoff temperature is above 70, and this one
was way, way above 70.
.
The I 02-degree temperature at kic~off
equaled the hottest game ever for the
Packers. It warmed up to 105 at the start
of the second half, and I06 at the beginning of the third quarter.
That's hot, even by Arizona standards.
The 106 at nearby Sky Harbor Airport
was a record for the date, surpassing the
105 recorded in 1949 and 1984.

In Landover, Md., Matt Bryant kicked
a 29-yard field goal 4:15 into the extra
period, putting the Giants and Redskins
m a tie for first place in the NFC East.
The Giants (2-l) led 21-3 at halftime,
but -a mistake-filled second half and bad
clock management late in the game
allowed Washington (2-1) to tie it on
John Hall's 34-yard field goal with 13
seconds left in regulation.
Kerry Collins threw three touchdown
passes, completing 24 ·of 39 passes for
276 yards. Tiki Barber ran for 126 yards,
and the defense held the Redskins without a touchdown until late in the third
quarter.
,.

PageB6

Targeted audience: Physicians, nui'$8S, pharmacists
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email:

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For more information or to register, call (740)446-5057.
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