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Page D6 • 611Map tttmd ·6tutind

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 28,

•
2003.

•
~

Kitchen Creativity: Engage children with
fun and creative project and craft ideas·
(MS} - Faced with a
seemingly intenninable number of LOLs (Laugh Out
Loud) and B4Ns (Bye For
Now), it may seem as though
your children are speaking a
different language. However,
it's more likely the kids are
simply wrapped up in today's
high tech world, which
m;lkes it easier than ever to
plug in and tune out, potentially losin$ sight of their
own inventiveness and creativity. As many parents will
attest, the action and allure of
computer and video games
can be a tough act to follow
in this day and age.
Yet there are many easy and
creative ways to engage your
children, and many of the supplies you'll need can be found
right m your kitchen. Actually,
a simple box of baking soda is
a great place to begin. Read on
for several project ideas from
the baking soda experts at Arm
&amp; Hammer® to help you create hours of excitement for kids
while keeping them focused on
creative projects that don't use
a computer or TV

Play clay

Crazy
watercolors

Want to get your children's
hands on something other
Could your child be the next
than the remote control? With
Picasso?
Using ingredients you
adult supervision, kids can
make their own play clay. already have in your kitchen,
Th.is simple project calls for 2 you can help your child make
cups of Arm and Hammer crazy wateroolors with a combiBaking Soda, I cup of corn- nation of 2 tablespoons baking
starch and 11/4 cups of cold soda, 2 tablespoons flour, 2
water. Combine all the ingre- tablespoons sugar, 2 tablespoons
dients in a medium-size water and I packet of dry
saucepan and cook, stirring unsweetened drink mix in any
frequently, over medium heat. flavor. Mix the dry ingredients
After I0 to 15 minutes, the together in a small bowl, than
mixture should be the consis- add water and stir until the
tency of mashed · potatoes. fizzing stops. Divide the mixture
Carefully remove the clay into several small plastic tubs or
from the pot, and cover it with jar lids. To make different colors
a damp cloth. When cool, use different flavors of drink
knead the clay like dough mix. Voila! Paper and brushes
until it feels smooth. To color are all your little artist needs to
the clay, add a few drops of get started on his masterpiece.
food coloring while kneading.
Children can experiment by
molding the clay into a vari ety of shapes while they disDon' t think your children
cover new concepts about
can
get excited about scicolor and science.
ence? Kids have always been
fasc inated by volcanoes and
they'll no doubt jump at the

'Volcanic' fun

chance to make one of their
own with you at home.
For an authentic look, stan
off with flexible cardboard
and shape it into a cone,
securing it with tape. Insert a
4-ounce cup to the top of the
cone to make a crater. While
the cone is standing on a baking sheet, cover it with plaster of Paris, making sure not
to get any in the cup. When
the plaster has dried, you and
your child can paint the cone
together to look like a real
volcano. To create an "eruption," put baking soda in the
crater cup and add a combination of vinegar, dishwashing liquid and red food coloring. Kids will be fascinated
by the flowing "lava."
Taking some time out to try
out these activities together is
a great way for your children
to learn about the world - and
for you both to learn about
each other.
For more "kitchen science"
ideas and other exciting activities your children will love,
visit www.annhammer.com.

Potty training is one of the
key rites of passage of childhood, like getting a first tooth
or learning to tie a shoe, but
it can be a stressful event for
both you and your child.
Getting your toddler used to
the idea of a pottY. may seem
like a battle of wills at times,
but remember that the problems will work themselves
out eventually. ln the meantime, here are I 0 tried-andtrue tips to make the toiletteaching process easier for
you and your little one.
I. Don't wony about how
long it takes. Every toddler
develops at his or her own pace
and is ready to start and tinish
toilet training at a different
time. Most parents stan potty
training when their child is
between the ages of 11/2 and 2
years, but it can take anywhere
from a few weeks to 18
months.
2. Make Sure your child is
ready. Again, every child is different, but there are signs to watch for
to make sure your toddler is prepared to begin potty training. Does
she have the bodily awareness to
become familiar with seeing tell you when she has to go?
words written out and he
3. Let your child watch you
learns to read the names of use the bathroom. ''It's especialthings like lamp, bed and rug. ly helpful if fathers and brothers
( 10) Test his skills. Check set the example for boys, and
your child's reading readi- mothers and sisters set the examness level at www.getready- ple for girls," writes Vicki
toread.org, a site sponsored Lansky in her book, "To!let
by the National Center for Training: A Practical Guide to
and
Nighttime
Learning Disabilities, where Daytime
Training"
(Book
Peddlers).
your child can take a free
"Siblings
are
often
pleased
to act
online test designed for 4as role models."
year-olds which will deter4. Talk about it - without
mine if your child's preread- pressure. Encourage your child
ing skills are weak, strong or to tell you when he's wet or
somewhere in between. Plus, messy or when he needs to use
the site suggests activities the potty.
and resources that can help
5. Get her comfortable.
improve your child's skills.
Have a potty chair in your

Ten tips to_help your child enjoy reading
Whether your child's just get• ling started with books or struggling to learn about words and
reading, you can encourage the
love of literature. Here are 10
tips that will tum reluctant readers into burgeoning bookworms.
(I) Read alOud. Make a ritual
of reading to your kids before
bedtime or after school. They' U
quickly recognize the adventures that exist inside books, and
. they'll want to read themselves.
(2) Point out letters and words
that kids can recognize and
identifY, Start with the letters in
your child's own name, and
build on those sound~.
(3) Reail along with your child
If the two of you read in unison,

your child will learn how to
sound out more difficult won:ls.
(4} Give reading ym,1r undivided attention. When you sit
down to read with your child
- ideally for 15 to 30 minutes
a day - focus on the book to
show how important reading
is.
(5) Talk to your child while
you read. By asking questions
about the plot like "What do you
think is going to happen?" or
"Why did the character just do
that?" you 'II engage your child
in the story and foster his comprehension and enjoyment level.
(6) Get your child her own
libmry card. She'D feel like a
grown-up when she selects

books to borrow.
(7} Join a family book
group. For older kids, a book
group that includes both' children and parents can be a reason to read. Ask each child to
recommend a favorite book,
and hold a weekly or monthly meeting to discuss the
story. You can do this within
your own family, or ask your
local library to help you set
up a community group.
(8} Play word games. A
game of "I Spy" can easily be
turned into a word-learning
activity.
(9) Name familiar items.
Label big objects in your
child's room so that he' ll

Top 10 tips to .i
potty-train
.
your child

OU comes
up short, Bt

OSU struggles
on offense, Bt

h

"..

•

•

child's room or in the bath.
room, and let your child sit
on it whenever she wants tP;
even if she keeps her clothc;i
on.
,.
6. Start teaching bowel conti'Ot
You can usually tell when YOU!'
child is about to have a bowel·
movement - her expression wilf
change, or she may pause hii
activity if she's learned to tell yoli
when she has to go. Explain tb3l
you expect her to use the potty
chair or toilet, and ·be sure !0
praise her when she does.
·'
7. Then stan working on
bladder control. Ask yoox
child to tell you when he has
to urinate, and keep a sched:·
ule of potty visits.
,:·
8. Work on nighttime controf.
Keep your child in diapers during
the night, but praise her each tinl!l
she wakes up dry. Keep in
that nighttime control invol~
the use of involuntary muscles;
and these may gevelop long afil.i
your child has learned to suiy ~
during the day. There's not ilrudf
you can do to "teach'' nighttimC
control, so be careful not to ~
your child anxi.ous by criticizing
her when she has an accident. ·
9. Try a reward system. Post
a chan next to the toilet and
give your child a star sticker
every time he uses the potty.
10. Invent a game. That
can help boys make the tran;
sition to urinating standing
up. (Boys will usually W&lt;lllt
to do so to be more like
Daddy or older boys.) T~
putting a few hollow-circle
cereal pieces in the middle of.
the toilet bowl and telling
your son to aim for them. :
But most importantly, be
patient and don't worry when
you have a setback. After all,
you· ve never met an adult
who wasn't potty-trained,
right?

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H\\\\ltiHi.llh-.t'lllllll'lilllll

SPORTS

Local shoppers:The.backbone of retail economy:

• Bengals win battle of
Ohio. See Page 81

breed@mydailsentinel.com

BY BRIAN

J. REED

and other visitors to the com-

POMEROY - Events like
the Stemwheel Riverfest and
Morgan's Raid re-enactment
which attract tourists help boost
the local retail economy, but
local merchants continue to rely
most heavily on hometown
shoppers for continued survival.
Local merchants have
increasingly relied on tourists

rniii4

munity to suppon their businesses, and the local retail offerings have. increasingly emphasized specialty offerings, such
as .antiques and gift items,
rather than daily staples offered
at "big box" retailers. However,
both the specialty stores and
shops selling more mundane
daily-needs items must rely on
the day-to-day suppon of local
folks to stay alive.

One benefit of a "shop
local" policy is the long-term
effect of every dollar spent in ·
a local store. Peny Varnadoe,
Director of Meigs County
Economic Development, said
studies have consistently
shown that money spent in
one local store does not
remain there. Instead, it recirculates an average of six times
within the same community.
John Musser, president of

the Pomeroy Merchants
Association, said local residents should consider this
"ripple effect" when choosing where to shop.
"The impact of every dollar spent in a local store has a
broader impact on the retail
community as a whole,"
Musser said. "That's why we
all should remain mindful of
the bigger picture when it
comes to local shopping."

Musser said money spent
in local stores a,lso benefits
the community as a whole;
and not just other merchan(9'.
''These are businesses we
all continue to rely on for su~
port of local school grou~;
organizations and eventS;~
Musser said, "and people io
the
community
should .
remember the importance bf /
that local support, too, when
deciding where to shop."
·

STERNWHEEL RIVERFEST
OBITUARIES
Page AS
• David Shawn Wolfe
• Marteen Faye Leone
• Margaret Fields
• Christine Gould

INSIDE
• School news. See
Page A3

• Community calendar.
See Page A5

WEATIIER

. The Southern High School Marching Band didn't let a little rain darnpen its spirit, or its performance, during Saturday's Sternwheel
·
. Reed)

P•rtly a....,, HI: 10, Low: 38

..

Kevin Lane, Todd
Smith and Paul
Gibbs, front, were
first, second and
third place winners
of the line-throwing .
contest held
Saturday in conjunction with Pomeroy's·
Sternwheel
·
Riverfest. vaughan·~
Mitchell and Philip
Jones also competed. (Brian J. Reed)

Lo'I'IERIES
Ohio

Pick 3 day: 2-4-6 .

Pick 4 day: 4-3-3-3
Pick 3 night: B-9·9
Pick 4 night: Q-3-6-1
Buckeye 5:5-7-9-11-25
Superlotto: B-16-31-33-45-46
Bonus Ball: 40
Kicker: 9-7-7-9-1-7

Shaver returns home to Senior Center

INDEX

BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

jlayton@mydailsentinel.com

2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGPS

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Mark Wood, a comic magician, entertained children Saturday
afternoon at the Sternwheel Riverfest with a show featuring
magic tricks, balloon animals and juggling. (Brian J. Reed)

As
B2-4
Bs

A3 ·

A4
As
As
B1-2, 6
A2

© aooa Ohlo Valley Publishing eo.

POMEROY -A familiar
face has returned to the
Meigs County Senior Center.
Beth Shaver worked at the
Senior Center for more than 13
y~ before taking a job as
office manager at .Access to
Human Resowre Devt;loprnent
for the past three yean;. Access
lost stale and federal funding
and closed its doors.
Shaver said she missed working at the Senior Center and
when a job opening came up for
activities director, she jumped

on it. She started a.week ago.
"It's like returning home
again," she said. "It is a
wonderful place to work."
Shaver said she returned to
the Senior Center because she
missed the hands-on atmosphere of working directly
with the people she serves.
''The farther I am away
from actual hands-on things,
the more frustrated I get," she
said. "I like to work at the
Senior Center because I feel I
can make a difference to the
community I serve and it is
an enjoyable place to work."
As activtties director,
Shaver said she will listen to

the senior citizens and "let
them lead the way" ·to the
activities they want offered.
Shaver said there will be
emphasis placed on healthy
activities and bringing in
new people to classes or programs at the Senior Center.
Shaver graduated from Meigs
High School in 1972 before
attending Ohio University. She
has been involved in social
work for more than 25 years.
When Shaver is not worlcing
with senior citizens, she lives in
Gallia County with her husband
Bob. Sbe has three children,
Mark, 30, Amanda, 23, and
Tmvis, who is nine years old.

Senior Center Activities Director Beth Shaver works closely
with Jean Thomas on a project for the center. After a thr!!G
years away, Shaver started work last week and said she I$
glad to be back at the Senior Center and working with the com:
munity again. (J. Miles Layton)

Need Extra Help?
Taking care of a loved one, or need personal care for yourself?
Does housework have you down? Feeling overwhelmed?

·

Let us help!

A professional, private-duty home care agency, we offer
personal care, homemaking antf respite services in your home.

Discover the Holzer Difference

· Holzer Extra Care

www.holzer.org

(740) 446-9560 or toll free (800) 920-8860
'

..

.,

·'

�'

PageA2

I

I

t

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Legislature last hope for gun ·backers

Ohio weather
Tuesday, Sept. 30

i Monoflotd i38' 1511"

I

COLUMBUS (AP) -. The
Ohio Supreme Court's ruling
last week upholding the
state's ban on concealed
weapons sent a signal that it
will be up to lawmakers, not
the court, to decide whether
Ohioans can carry hidden
guns. a law professor says.
The problem for backers,
though, is the Legislature
has been struggling with the
idea for eight years and
seems nowhere close to
resolving it. The bill exists in
two versions: a Senate bill
Gov. Bob Taft supports and a
House bill that Taft does not.
The justices made clear
they're not interested in resolv·
ing the issue, said Andrew
Morriss, a law professor at Case
Western Reserve University in
Cleveland who teaches a course
on weapons law.
"The Supreme Court
dumped it back in the hands
of the Legislature. Both were
waiting for the other to act
first." Morriss said.
He said Justice Paul Pfeifer's
eight-page opinion did linle to
dissect the ban, which lawmakers enacted in 1859 and
the coun upheld in 1920.
There seems to be little
chance of that. Among the
House objections is the
Senate's removal of a provision of law, known as an
affirmative defense. that.
allows people arrested for

•

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/

~- ~
'J

e.

W. VA.

/'l Por1omo~th']~J -

KY.

Monday, September 29, 2003

Inc.

.

1

on.:=~-. . . Will!' - ~~-~.. .. ..
· - · ~·
·.·.·.·
Showeri

T·Siorms

Ram

Flumes

Snow

Ice

Partly sunny, cool today
Today... Partly sunny and
cool. Highs 55 to 60.
Tonight...Partly cloudy and
very cool. Lows 38 to 43.
West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday... Partly, cloudy.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Tuesday night. .. Partly cloudy.
A chance of showers from late
evening on. Lows in the mid

40s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday... Achance of shower&gt; in the moming ...Otherwise
panty cloudy. Highs in the upper
50s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday night. .. Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s.
Thursday ... Mostly clear,
Highs in the mid 50s.

carrying a hidden gun to
prove to prosecutors or a
judge that the practice is
essential for safety ~asons,
The Senate took tt out at
the request of law enforcement ~roups. The House
wants tt back in, said Rep.
John Willamowski, a Lima
Republican who chaired the
House Judiciary Committee
when it debated a concealed
weapons bill two years ago.
Senate President Doug White,
a Manchester Republican, said
he won't appoint senators to a
joint conference committee if it
becomes clear the House
changes will prevail. because
Taft won't sign it
The State Highway Patrol,
which reports to Taft, dropped
its opposition to the bill when
the Senate removed the affirmative defense and allowed
loaded guns in cars only when
holstered in plain view or
locked away. The House wants
those provisions removed, but
that would cost the patrol's
support, along with Taft's.
White has said the House
should negotiate a compromise with Taft, then bring it to
the Senate, which likely would
concur. He said he cannot find
the votes for . the two-thirds
majority the Senate would
need to override Taft's veto of
the House-preferred plan.
Sen. Eric Fingerhut, a
Cleveland Democmt who

sip a bill under

opposes any fonn of conceal-

said he would

in throwing his support behind
the Senate version so early.
''When
caved

that, ~ 8 '::fg porn!
that s JlOffi~~n~ ~~
back from. u'6w"lll Sill

carry, said Taft made a mistake the pressure he s ~n ~·

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories Is to be
accurate. tf you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 9922156.

Our main number Ia
(740) 892-2158.

Dtplrtment exten11on1 are:

News
Editor: Charlene lioefllch, Ext.

12

Reporlwr: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporlwr: J. Miles Layton, Ext 13

Advertising

DlotrlctMgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

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E·RIIIt:

news 0 mydallysentinel.com

-=

Published every anarnoon,
Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio Newspaper
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PageA3

BYTliE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 29,

2003

•

Office party gossip inspires School News
worker to sleuth for the truth On dean's list
DEAR ABBY: My boss
hosts occasional after-hours
get- togetbers with both married and si ngle co-workers. I
am married, and a recent conversation with one of the single women bothered me.
"Yvette" told us that she has
been in contact with an old
lover. ''Luke.'' She said that
while they were together, he'd
had•a girlfriend. but would see
her "on the side." Yvette said
she hadn't talked to him for
more than seven years. She
wasn't sure whethefor not she
should stan seeing him again,
since he had always been a
"skin chaser.''
We left that evening knowing
more about Luke than we cared
to -- his last name, where he
works and other details. The
next day, I called his office
under the guise of being a friend
of Luke's. I said I needed the
infonnation to invite him "and
his wife" to a party. The receptionist !lave me his wife's name
and thetr address.
·
I checked the phone book.
Sure enough, they're listed.
I'm not sure Yvette knows
Luke's married. Should I tell
her? -- WONDERING IN
SAN ANTON IO
DEAR WONDERING: Mind
~our own business. Yvette's
'aH'airs" are not your own.
P.S. Your letter illustrates
why after-hours office gatherings can be a legal liability

Dear
Abby

for businesses. After the
drinking starts , tongue s
loosen and propriety is usually the first casualty.
DEAR ABBY: My husband,
"Jasper." and I have been married for a little more than a year.
He was diagnosed with cancer a
few months before our wed·
ding, and I spent our honeymoon sitting by his side while
he was recoven ng from surgery
and chemotlterapv. Thankfully,
he is in remission. and we are
expecting our tirst child.
Jasper recently brought
home a large dog with long
hair. He knows 1 have suffered frotit all ergies my
whole life. My in-laws tell
me I don't "seem" to be so
allergic, and after the baby is
born I should just medicate
myself for the res.t of my life.
My in -laws also thtnk I
should be the one to care for
the dog because Jasper
"works all day."
I feel li ke I am being made

out to be the "unreasonable
dog hater," and it's stressing·
- and , meezi ng -- me out.
What should f do'' -- RED
EYES IN SKOKIE, ILL.
DEAR RED EYES: Stand
your ground. After 'all your
support during his health crisis, your husband is showing
a surprising lack of concern
for your own health and feelings. Do not he sitate to tell
him what's on your mind.
Inform him thai he has one
weej( to find that dog a new
honl'e, or HE will be sleeping
in the doghouse.
DEAR READERS : I am
pleased to announce that the
author of the poem "Ode to
Myopia," which appeared in
my column last December,
has been located. Its correct
titl e is "Mirror" and the
author is Cary Fellman.
MIRROR
by Citry Fell man
My face 111 the mirror
isn't wrinkled or drawn.
My house isn't dirty,
the cobwebs are gone,
My gttrden looks lovely
and so does my lawn.
I thi nk I will not
put my glasses back on.
( Dt'ar Abbr is writte11 b1•
Abigail Wm Burell, also knowi1
ll.\ .lcamw Phillips, and was
.finmded by her mother, Pauline
Phillips. Wri1e Dear Abby at
WH·'&gt;&gt;:DearAhb)ccom or P.O. Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA ~9.)

NELSONVILLE- Erron
Aldridge of Chillicothe,
Gary Grueser of Pomeroy.
Angela Pearce of Pomeroy.
Jerry Rowe of Millfield and
Amber Well of Middlepon
were named to the dean 's
list at Hocking Colle;;e for
the summer quaner.
The students earned a grade
point average of at least 3.3
on a 4.0 grading scale.

King wins
state award
POMEROY - Hannah
King of Pomeroy won the
Girl Scout Culinary Arts
Award for the Brownie level
at the Ohio State Fair, baking a stars and stripes cherry
pie. At an awards ceremony,
she was presented with a
grand award ribbon , a
plaque , and a $25 cash
award. She is a member of
the Southern Brownie Troop
11 20. Pamela Ross of the
Little Brownie Bakers, the
awards sponsor, and baker
of Girl Scout cookies, presented the award . King also
won the Brownie individual
project at the fair, and was
presented a medallion · by
Bob and Rose Marie

Hutchinson of Farmers
Realty and Auction .

Poster contest
to begin
POMEROY - Student's
in primary and secondary
schools (public and private .
K-12) are invited to design a
poster for River Sweep 2004 .
Fifteen prizes wi ll be
awarded. The grand prize is
a $1,000 U.S. Savings Bond ,
and the school represeming
the grand prize winner will
also receive an award. A
$500 U.S. Sav ings Bond
will be presemed to the student with the winning
design for the official River
Sweep t-shin. Thirteen $ 100
U.S. Savings Bonds will be
awarded to one win ner at
each grade level.
The poster contest is open
to studenls livi ng in or
attending schools in counlies bordering the Ohio
River, or counties participating in the River Sweep. This
includes all coumies along
the Ohio River in Ohio.
West Virginia. Indiana.
Illinois, Kentucky. and
Pennsylvania .
The annual River Sweep
will be held Saturday. June
19, 2004. River Sweep is a
one-day cleanup project for

the Ohio River and ils tributaries. The Sweep covers
nearly 3.000 miles of shoreline from Pittsburgh, PA. to
Cairo. IL. and averages
more than 22.000 volunteers
a year. Trash collected during the Sweep has included
cars. tires, furniture, toys, a
piano. and a variety of other
items. All trash collected is
either recycled or placed in
&lt;tpproved landfills .
River Sweep is held to
create an awareness t&gt;f water
quality problems c&lt;tused by
Iitter and i!lega l dumping.
The poster contest, held in
conjunction with River
Sweep, is one way to spread
the word about litter preven- ·
tion. Posters submith::d for
the contesl should rellecl
lhis goal and focus on
encouraging volunteer participation. Dead line for the:
conlesl is Dec. 17. 2003.
River Sweep is sponsored
by the Ohi o River Valley
Water ·
Sanitation .
Commissiori (ORSANCO) .
For further information
aboul lhe River Sweep
Poster Comest, or for complete contest rules and regu- ·
lations, l:ontad Jeanne lson
at 1-800-359-3977. or visit
the Commission's website at
www.orsanco.org.

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�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
1 1 1 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 and news editor

NATIONAL VIEW

Drinking
Underage drinking on the rise
The Herald-Joumal, Spartanburg, S.C., on underage

drinking:
The National Academy of Sciences has issued its report on
underage drinking, and lt is clear that raising the drinking age
nationally to 2 I in I 984 hasn't stemmed the now of alcoholic
beverages to this nation's youths .... The National Academy of
Sciences reports that alcohol consumption among underage
persons kill s 6:S times more youths than all illicit drugs com·
bined .... Underage drinking on college campuses has greatly
risen in the past decade .... Kids are having their first drink
earlier .. pn average, just under I 3 years of age.
These statistics undoubtedly show the need to better control
access to alcoholic beverages as well as the marketing of such
drinks.
Members of Congress requested the report issued by the
National Academy of Sciences, and they should be quick 1\l
enact legislation that better controls underage drinking.
Lawmakers instead should quickly adopt standards that
may reduce teen drinking, starting with an overhaul of the
industry 's current voluntary code of not marketing its prod·
ucts to underage consumers.

OPINION

PageA4...

Monday, September 29,

VVho ssaved by sqfe shooting?
Even in a culture as (how to
put it?) comfortable with its
own relativism as ours is, it's
unlikely that a recent
Washington Post front-page
article about Canada's "safe
injection sites" for intravenous drug users went dbwn
quite as smoothly as . the
morning coffee. It wasn't the
pathetic degradation of the
addicts that was tough to
swallow, but rather the
extremely creepy revelation
that the gentle art of healing
now includes such, well ,
harmful practices as "vein
maintenance" and "injection
techniques" ·as part of a
Canadian
governmentapproved effort to ensure that
junkies inject themselves with
their poison of choice according to the highest medical
standards.
First. consider the Canadian
drug lexicon . What are "safe
injection
sites"?
The
euphemistically named product of Canada's euphemistically named "harm reduction"
drug policy, "safe injection
sites" are where Canadians
may shoot heroin, crystal
methamphetamine, Drano or
whatever, directly into their
bloodstreams under the expert
supervision of registered
nurses.
"Go flush with the skin,"
Patti Zettel, a nurse, instructs
an addict - sorry, "client" preparing a fix (dose?) of crystal methamphetamine at the Dr.
Peter Centre, a "safe" · site in
Vancouver, British Columbia.

Diana
West

"Then up. Once in the vein,
release the tourniquet. Look,"
the nurse says, apparently to
the Post reporter on hand. "She
has good blood flow."
Frankly. a pitiable addict's
"good blood flow" is less than
likely to elicit celebratory
whoops in the casual reader
-unless, of course, the casual reader happens to be a
"harm reducer" like Nurse
Zettel. She, along wiih two
nursing colleagues, articulated the definition of "harm
reduction nursing" in a recent
issue of Canadian Nurse magazine as a practice aimed at
"reducing the consequences
of drug use without necessari·
ly requiring a reduction in the
drug use itself."
'
In other words, if a "client"
is killing himself with drugs;
destroying his loved ones
with drugs; reducing his community to a crime-ridden slum
with drugs ; and keeping
money !lowing to narco-ter·
rorists the world over with
drugs, by all means encourage
the "client" to do so - as
long as he is harm-reducingly
equipped with a sterile
syringe, a proper tourniquet

and some decent gauze. "The
approach,"
the
nurses
explained in their anicle, "is
to educate participants and to
support them in making their
own informed choices."
Considering the "informed
choices" a "participant"
awaiting a "safe" injection of
heroin is likely to make, such
jargon is not only peculiar, it
is sanitized to the point of fantasy. Indeed, it is disconcert·
ing to realize that the only
educating "safe injection
sites" set out to do concerns
the unhealthiness of unsani·
tary drug use, which often
leads to HIV infection, and
not the unhealthiness of drug
use in the first place.
Lori-Kim Veenstra, the
addict with "good blood !low,"
says nobody in the center
"pushes" treatmen1 information on her; indeed, the only
signs on the clinic walls mentioned in the Post anicle read:
"No nurse, no fix." And: "If
you are not injecting or using
the bathroom, stay out." Zettel,
who says she wants to come
across as being "nonjudgmental," explains the "safe" site
philosophy this way: "I can't
push my agenda. If Lori is
interested in detox treatment, it
is about what Veenstra wants
when she wants it." The article
ends with Veenstra wanting
another fix.
While a few pesky kinks in
Canada's new policy remain
- addicts, for example, con·
tinue to risk arrest by buying
the illegal drugs they bring to

•

Obituaries

••••
••

Margaret E.
Fields

200:J..'

•

"safe" sites. which operate as
drug-arrest-free zones harm reduction proponent s;
would likely see in Veenstra ·~ ;
case evidence of "safe injec~ ,:
tion site" success. John
Walters, White House drug
policy director, would dis ~ .
agree. "The very name is &lt;\ '.
lie," he told the Post. "It can't ·
be made safe. We believe the :
only moral responsibility is to '
treat drug users. It is repre- ·.
hensible to allow people !md"
encourage people to continue.•
suffering."
I must say it seems doubly.,
reprehensible for medical" &gt;
professionals to allow and.;
encourage people to continue:·
suffering . " It's the most ethi·-:
cal work I've ever done as a':
nurse and a human being," .
says Ms. Zettel. "We as a·
society have reinforced their '
(addicts') marginali zation. &lt;
They have a poor sense of'
se lf-esteem and value. We ' '
have reinforced that. That to '
me is criminal."

' '

So much for being nonjudg'"·
mental. Meanwhile, how it is
that injection sites, which' '.
would seem to promise only''
to keep addicts addicted, can ·
possibly undo anyone's "mar- ,
ginalization" is a mystery. AS ',
for "self-esteem" - "self' ,
respect" would be a healthier ;
aim - it's hard to see how· ·
shooting up, however safely..
can ever help.
'
(Diana West is a columllist
for The Waslriligtoll Times .•
She cmr be comacted via:
dianaw@ wattglobal.rret.)

.

'•
'

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Sept. 29. the 272nd day of 2003 . There
are 93 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History: On Sept. 29, 1978, Pope
John Paul I was found dead in his Vatican apartment just over
a month after becoming head of the Roman Catholic Church.
On this date: In I 789, the U.S. War Department established
a regular army with a strength of several hundred men.
ln 1829, London's reorganized police force, which
became known as Scotland Yard, went on duty.
In I 918, Allied forces scored a decisive breakthrough of
the Hindenburg Line during World War I.
In 1943. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Italian Marshal
Pietro Badoglio signed an armistice aboard the British ship
Nelson off Malta.
In I 953, the family comedy "Make Room for Daddy,"
starring Danny Thomas, premiered on ABC.
In I963, the situation comedy "My Favorite Martian" pre·
miered on CBS .
In 1982, seven people in the Chicago area died after
unwittingly taking Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules laced
with cyanide.
In 1988, the space shuttle Discovery blasted off from Cape
Canaveral, Fla., marking America's return to manned space
flight following the Challenger disaster.
Ten years ago: Bosnia's parliament spurned an interna·
tiona] peace plan, voting overwhelmingly to reject it unless
Bosnian Serbs returned land taken by force.
Five years ago: Former Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley
died at age 80. The Federal Reserve cut the federal funds
rate a quarter-point, to 5.25 percent.
One year ago: Israel bowed to U.N. demands and U.S.
pressure, pulling troops and tanks out through the barbed
wire encircling Yasser Arafat's West Bank headquarters.
West Coast longshoremen were ordered off their jobs for a
second time in a costly labor dispute with shipping lines.
Europe beat the Americans to win the Ryder Cup.
Today's Birthdays: Movie director Michelangeio
Antonioni ,is 91. Actress Lizabeth Scott is 81. Actor Steve
Forrest is 79. Actress Anita Ekberg is 72. Actor Eddie Barth
is 72. Singer Jerry Lee Lewis is 68 . Actor Ian McShane is
61. Jazz musician Jean-Luc Ponty is 61. Television-film
composer Mike Post is 59. Actress Patricia Hodge is 57. TV
personality Bryant Gumbel is 55. Rock singer-musician
Mark Farner is 55 . Rock musician Mike Pinera (Iron
Butterfly) is 55. Country singer Alvin Crow is 53. Actor
Drake Hogestyn is 50. Singer Suzzy Roche (The Roches) is
47. Actress Jill Whelan is 37. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Devante Swing (Jodeci ) is 34. Actress Emily Lloyd is 33.
Actress Natasha Gregson Wagner is 33. Actress Rachel
Cronin is 32. Country musician Danick Dupelle (Emerson
Drive) is 30. Country singer Katie McNeill (3 of Hearts) is
21.
Thought for Today: "Most of the shadows of this life are
caused by standing in our own sunshine." - Ralph Waldo
Emerson, American essayist and poet ( 1803- 1882).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing atUi 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 expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. editorial boar,d, unless otherwise noted.

s

..
.,

WHO'S
THE ANGEL
IN

I
J

EtACK?

Monday, September 29. 2003

"'
..,
"

'')''

.'

..
..
'.
•
'

NEW LEXINGTON
Margaret E. Fields, 78, New
Lexington, died on Friday,
Sept. 26, 2003 at her residence.
She was born March 16
1925 in Hanford, W.Va.:
daughter of the late Robert
and Kathryn Embleton. She
moved to New Lexington in
1969. She was a homemaker
and a loving and giving
mother, grandmother, neighbor and friend.
Surviving are two sons
James Fields and Kevi~
(Tracy) Fields of New
Lexington; a daughter, Kathy
(Chuck) Owen of New
Lexington; a sister, Barb&amp;ra
Brodigl~J! of California; six
grandchildren:
Jeanne
McCullough of Florida,
Tonya Dawson of Newark,
Scott (Shevon) Owen of
Buckeye Lake, Amber Owen
of Houston, Tex., Nathan
Fields of Nevada, and Ashley
Fields of New Lexington;
and two great grandsons.
Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
husband, William Fields, and
a son, David Fields.
Calling hours will be held
from 2 to 8 p.m. on Monday,
Sept. 29, 2003 at Roberts
Funeral Home, 304 Mill St.,
New l,.exington.
At her request, a private
graveside service will be held
at 10 a.m. on Tuesday. Sept.

Revival set
LONG BOTTOM
Revival services will be held
at the Hazel Community
Church at Long Bottom 7
p.m. Wednesday through
Saturday. The Rev. John
Elswich will be preaching
and special music will be by
Sam Delaney on Wednesay,
the Builders Quartet on
Thursday, Earthen Vessels on
Friday, and Ray and Delores
Cundiff on Saturday. The
public is invited to attend.

Yard sale
planned

..

cwood@mydailytribune.com

JOHNNY CASH . 1932-2003

~================================~·'

Does a name empower or stigmatize

There is a scene in the 1981
movie "Absence of Malice"
that still haunts me. Sally
Field plays an aggressive
newspaper reporter who finds
out that Paul Newman, who
has been accused of a crime,
isn't guilty because he has an
alibi: He was at an abortion
clinic, holding the hand of a
close friend. But he steadfastly refuses to tell investigators
in..order to protect the friend's
pnvacy.
Field's character, concluding that since abortion is legal
it ought to carry no stigma,
publishes the scoop, along
with the name of the woman
who had the abortion. In the
early morning mist the following day, the distraught
woman, still iii her nightgown, scurries from driveway
to driveway, gathering up her
neighbors' newspapers.
lthoughtaboutthatscenein
the wake of a radio talk-show
host and several Internet sites
naming and publishing photos
of the young woman who has
accused basketball star Kobe
Bryant of raping her in a
Colorado hotel mom.
The case reignited debate in
journalism circles about the
long-standing policy of not
naming rape victims. Some
ask if we believe rape victims
shouldn' t feel any more
sbame or guilt than other
crime victims, aren't we reinforcing and prolonging the
stigma of rape by treating it
differently from other crimes?
There is also the "unfil-

Joan
Ryan

tered" journalism aq;ument.
The job of the medta is to
report the news as accurately
and completely as possible.
We are reporters, not social
workers
or
therapists.
"Openness serves society as a
whole," one former editor
wrote recently, arguing in
favor of naming victims. "It
serves enlightenment and
understanding and progress."
The arguments are reasonable.
But they couldn't be more
wrong.
The issue here is what rape
victims do feel, not what we
think they should feel. The
issue is what society actually
understands about sexual
assault, not what it should
understand by now. The issue is
what naming rape victims will
do to discourage women from
reporting assaults, thus allowing more rapists to roam free.
Diane Beynon of Bay Area
Women Against Rape in
Oakland has been a rape crisis
couns~lqr since 1978. "Rape
is about degradation and
,humiliation," she says.
Thus, most victims feel
degraded and humiliated, at

least for a time. When everyone around the victim knows
she has been raped, she reads
judgment and even revulsion
into every look from friends
and co-workers because that
is what she is feeling herself.
Now imagine if her name is
in the newspaper for all to
see. Imagine if the details of
her sickening, devastating
experience are printed and
then discussed in the neighborhood coffee shop, on the
evening news or at the Little
League game.
"This is your trauma, your
horror, your nightmare being
fed back to you, whether you
like it or not," Beynon says.
More than other crimes,
rape still invites scrutiny of
the victim: Did she ask for it?
Beynon has a client now who
is a successful busine sswoman. She wants neither her
employer nor her employees
to know she . was raped
"because of all the shame and
· guilt she feels," Bey non
explains. "She keeps thinking, 'I shouldn't have been in
that situation. I should have
done this or that. ' She doesn' t
want people she knows asking
the same questions. She doesn' t want them to look at her
differently."
·
Because of the feelings of
shame and humiliation, sexual
assault is a tough enough cri me
to report. The examination to
collect evidence is ·painful,
invasive and embarrassing.
· The investigators' questions
are painful, invasive and

"

' '
embarrassing. That's why only:,
about 20 percent of sexual
assaults are reported to police;:·
according to some studies.
··
If the media began printing '
names of victims, the number ·
would drop even more. Here's ·
one sure bet: No woman' ·
would ever again come for: ·
ward to hold a famous man
accountable for raping her. ·
Even without naming Bryant's
accuser, the mainstream ·
media have reported on the·
young woman's persona] ·.
problems and relationships1
using the information toques- ·
tion her credibility. On the one.
hand, these media outlets are
withholding her name to pro- .
teet her privacy. On the other .
hand, they are ripping he(,_
open like vultures and parad, ,'
mg her through the streets. .
Some women want their
names published. It provides"
a se nse of empowerment.
RaJ?e counselors say they'rllseemg more teens willing to
speak out publicly. "I think
we're raisi ng a generation
where there is less shame
around rape," Beynon says.
I hope so. But we' re not
there ye_t. What_ little might be
gqmed m pnnung the names
of rape victims is dwarfed by
the mtolerable losses it would
inflict on the victims and on
our justiee system.
(Joan Ryan is a columnisT
for the. Sw i Francisco
Chronicle. Serrd comments ./0
her in care of rhis newspaper
or send her e-mclil at jocm..,
rvan @.~fc/r ro1 ric/e. Cfim.)

30, 2003 at New Lexington with burial to follow at
Cemetery wilh Pastor Larry Greenwood Cemetery m
Brisker officiating.
Racine.
Memorial contributions
Friends may call at the
may llll made to lhe Genesis funeral home from I 0 a.m.
Hospice, Morrison House, 73 until the time of service.
Forest Ave., Zanesville, Ohio
Expressions of sympathy
43701.
.
can be sent and lhe online
guest registry signed at
www.cardaras.com.

Christine Gould

NELSONVILLE
Christine Augusta Lake
Gould, 82, formerly of
Nelsonville, passed away on
Friday, Sept. 26, 2003 at
Doctor's
Hospital
in
Nelsonville.
She was born April 29,
1921 in Ratine, daughter of
the late Francis and Ura
Sayre Morris, and the widow
of Alben J. "~ete" Gould.
She worked for many years at
Ohio University as a book·
keeper in the registrar's
office. She was a member of
the Racine First Baptist
Church and was a violin
player in an orchestra.
She is survived by her son ·
and daughter-in-law, Bill and
Sandy Lake of Millfield; a
stepson, Jan Gould of
California; two grandchil·
dren, Lori Lake of Millfield
and Sean Lake of Columbus;
two sisters, Mildred Swift of
Columbus
and
Audrey
Schroeder of San Antonio,
Tex., and several nieces and
nephews.
Services will be held at II
a.m. on Monday, Sept. 29,
2003 . at Souers-Cardaras
Funeral Home in Nelsonville,

Marleen Faye
Leone
EWJNGTON - Marleen
Faye "Maggie" Leone, 54, of
Ewington, died Saturday,
Sept. 27, at Wilkesville.
Born on Oct. 17, 1948 in
Middleport, 'she was the
daughter of lhe late William
B. Matheny, Sr. and Eva E.
Murphy
MathenyKlinedenst.
Memorial seniices will be
held at 6 p.m. on Tuesday at
lht) United Methodist Church
in Wilkesville. There will be
no visitation. Arrangements
are being handled by
Birchfield Funeral Home,
Rutland.

David Wolfe
WELLSTON David
Shawn Wolfe, 28, Wellston,
died Sunday, Sept. 28, 2003,
at Holzer Medical Center of
Jackson.
Funeral arrangements are
under the direction of
Cremeens Funeral Home in
Racine
and
will
be
announced upon completion.

Bradbury Learning Cener,
39105
Bradbury
Rd.,
Middleport.

e~penses.

Trustee meeting

MIDDLEPORT The
Village of Middleport is no
longer selling limestone to
village residents until further
notice. ·

Wednesday, Oct. 1

MIDDLEPORT- Mid::leport
Board of Public Affairs has
rescheduled their regiJar meet·
ing of Oct 6, for 5::xl p.m. on
Oct. 1., at ooundl chambers.

Clubs and
Organizations
TUesday, Sept. 30

Union Fellowship building
on Route 33 in Hartford.
Proceeds will go toward
Jordon Runyon's medical

Limestone
unavailable

Public meetings

POMEROY Meigs
County Humane Society board
meeting, 6 p.m. at the Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy. At
6:30p.m. there will be a gener·
aJ meeting for the public.
POMEROY- Meigs Local

GALLIPOLIS -Dolls and
bears of all shapes and sizes
· were on display at the Our
House Museum for the annu·
al show.
Some dolls had expressions
and features so detailed they
seem like the would come to
life at any moment. Some of
the dolls were whimsical and
amusing, while others were
miniature replicas of famous
people. Bears · for snuggling
and cuddling and just being
admired for their craftsmanship were all available for the
viewing at the museum.
One of lhe exhibitors, Sharon
McNabb of Gallipolis, said she
became interested in doll col·
lecting by accident 13 years
ago. She received a porcelain
doll as a gift. The more she
looked at it, lhe more she liked
it and was hooked. McNabb
has more lhan 400 dolls now.
She brought 44 dolls from
her collection with 19 artists
represented. She has porcelain
dolls, vinyl and some cloth
dolls. Also in her collection are
four 44-inch dolls. She brought
one of them to the show.
"I have a doll room. I'm also

Social Events
Sunday, Oct. 5

POMEROY -

In obser-

POMEROY
Julia
Kennedy of Pomeroy was
recently named one of 400
recipients of a scholarship
from the Coca-Cola two-year
College
Scholarship
Program from the Coca-Cola
Scholars Foundation.
Kennedy,the daughter of
Thomas and Anita Kennedy
of Pomeroy, is receiving a
$1,000 scholarship as part of
the program which· supports
students doing outstanding
work on and off campus at
two-year colleges around the
country.
She is a graduate of Meigs
High School and is studying
early childhood education.
"The Coca-Cola Two·
Year-Colleges Scholarship
Program gives support and
encouragement to an underserved population of college
students," said J. Mark
Davis, president of the Coca·

Cola Scholars foundation.
"This program is an ex tension of our long-standing
commitment to college education throughout the United
States."
Kennedy was awarded the
scholarship due to her classroom achievements, and her
work in lhe community. The
Rio Grande sophomore has
volunteered for a variety of
community
activities,
including teaching a Sunday
School class at the Rutland
Church of God, leading a
junior drama team, playing
drums for the last five years
at her church, · getting
involved with programs to
feed the hungry, coaching
softball and even developing
a clown ministry.
When asked if she will
drink little more Coca-Cola
than usual this fall, Kennedy
said that she probably will.

a

Board to meet
MIDDLEPORT The
governing board · of the
Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center will hold its
regular board meeting at 7
p.m. on Thursday, at the

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs has changed its regu·
lar meeting date to 5:30 p.m.
on Wednesday, in council
chambers.

cwood@ mydailytribune.com
GALLIPOLIS
For
those who attended the performance at the Ariel Theatre
Saturday, they will remember a unique experience.
Dan Levenson presented
his guitars, banjos, and fiddles
like lhey were friends. Some
of the instrument.~ were new
and some were old, but as he
played they came alive.
Levenson was very personable with the audience. It was
as if lhe walls of the theatre
had melted away and everyone was sitting on lhe porch
just having a good old lime.
Thanks to the exquisite

:~~gt~MMS~~·~:~~
THE RUNOOWN (P013)
7:00 &amp; 9:20

REEDSVILLE - Wilma
Eynon will be 91 years old on
Sept. 30. Cards may be sent
to her at 40058 Christy Road,
Reedsville, Ohio 45n2.

"I always drank Coke actu·
ally."
The Coca-Cola Two· Year
Scholarship Program is fund·
ed by the Joseph B.
Whitehead
Foundation,
which provides grants in
support of human services
initiatives, particularly pro·
grams that benefit young
people. The late Joseph B.
Whnehead was one of the ·
original bottlers of Coca- .
Cola.

PROUD tO BE~~RiT ·
OF·YOUR LlFE: . .
. The Daily S~~tinel '
Subscribe today • 992-2156
www.,ydailyse!Jtiflel;qam
_ _ _ _ _....,_ _ __

acoustics of the Ariel, the
sounds of old time music
filtered through the air. In
between playmg, Levenson
shared personal stories, history about the instruments
and Appalachian folk music.
During the second set a little
girl from the audience wanted
to dance on the stage. Levenson
showed her a little clogging and
she tried it She danced through
most of a song while Levenson
played the fiddle before she got
tired and took her seat again.
The songs Levenson
r.tayed included "The Fox,"
'Jay bird/Moses in the
Com," and "Virginia Reel."
During the performance,
he was joined by his son,
Jonathan and wife, Jennifer.

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entertainment in the ,.Tri~Stlte 'i[
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Meeting of The Owners

MAnNEES SHOWN ON
SAT &amp; SUN ONLV

BOX OFFICE OPENS

Birthdays

The Southern High School
National Honor Society will
hold a blood drive between
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday,
Sept. 30 in the high school
gymnasium. Last year
Southern reached their highest donated amount ever,
and they would !Ike to beat
that amount this year.
Everyone Is Invited to come
and donate. Pictured from
left to right are members of
the National Honor Society:
Deana Pullins, Sarah Hawley,
Chelsea Dilcher and Bethany
Amberger; back row Codl
Davis, Emily Hill , Katie Sayre,
Stephanie Bradford.

crowd with down home sound
BY CARRIE ANN WOOD

vance of World Communion
Sunday a joint service of
Pomeroy churdles will be held
at 10 a.m. in the f'omerott
amphitheater. Participating
churdles are Trinity Church,
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, St. Paul Lutheran
Church, and Grace Episcopal
Church. Take lawn chairs. In
the event of rain, the event will
be held at Trinity Church.

Southern NHS blood drive

PAGEVILLE
The
Scipio Township Trustees
regular meeting will be held
at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday
Oct. I, at the town hall in
Page ville.

Meeting
changed

partial to red heads. About 30
are red heads," she said.
McNabb works full time at
Holzer as the unit manager for
the River Cities Nurse on Call.
She said limited edition
dolls are highly collectable
and valuable, but she does it
for fun. She plans on passing
her dolls down, not selling
them.
Susan Breech has a display
of dolls in a house setting.
She has several dolls from a
"Little Women" line includ·
ing Meg dressed for her wedding. The doll is adorned with
lace that is I00 years old.
, Among the dolls on display
are by artists like Marie
Osmond,
Jan
Mclean,
Company.
F.
Hamilton
Spanos, Diana Eiffner, Zook,
Virginia Turner and Rustic. A
Lloyd Middleton doll is going
to be raffled off and several of
the Ohio doll maker's works
are on display.
Antique dolls and doll
clothing can also be seen,
along with bears from the
Ohio River Bear Company.
The show also runs next
weekend. Hours are 1-4 p.m.
both Saturday and Sunday.

Board of Education, 7 p.m. in
the Central Office board
room. Meigs County Health
Department representatives
to
discuss
Tobacco
Pr911ention Programs available to the schools.
Friday, Oct. 3
POMEROY
Meigs
County PERl #74 meets
Friday at the Meigs Senior
Center, with luncheon at noon,
followed by meeting and program. Sgt. Pat McDonald of
the Ohio State Highway Patrol
to speak concaming changes
in drilling laws.

Kennedy earns Coca-Cola Scholarship

Doll show at Our House Levenson entertains Ariel
BY CARRIE ANN WOOD

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Community calendar

Local Briefs

HARTFORD, W.VA.- A
benefit yard sale will be held
Saturday, at the Christian

.•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Memory Gardens
We are owners who really care
A meeting will be at the Meigs Local High School

Tuesday, September 30 at 6:00 p.m.
Important Information on:
• New Garden of Remembrance
• New Avenue of Flags
• Improvements in Progress
• Answers to yoJJr questions
If you own or have family with us
you need to attend this meeting

This Tuesday, September 30, 2003
6:30 p.m. Meeting
Call Ken or Vicki at 992-7440 if you have questions.

�'

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

4
"

Social Security milestone~
Special to the Sentinel
Last
month,
Social
Security celebrated its 68th
birthday. On Aug. 14, 1935,
President
Franklin
Roosevelt signed the Social
Security Act into law.
I thought this was a good
opportunity to review some
of the other milestones that
mark the hi story of one of
our country's most popular
government programs.
On Oct. 14, 1936, 14
months to the day after the
law was signed, the new
Social
Security Board
opened its first field office. It
was located in Austin, Texas.
Today, there are about 1,300
Social Security offices in
small towns and large cities
across America. There are
even offices in faraway
places such as Guam and
A~rican Samoa. Because
of our far-flung network of
fii~ld offices, we used to say
that there '·probably is a
Social Security office just
down the road from where
you live. But today, we can
say there is a Social Security
office in the next room!
Assuming you have a computer in that room, you can
do most of your Social
Security business online. at
www.socialsecurity.gov.
On Nov. 24, 1936, the
Social Security Board started issuing Social Security
numbers through local post
offices. The first Social
Security number was issued
to a man in New Rochelle,
N.Y. But the lowest number
ever issued, 001-01 -0001 ,
went to a woman living in
Concord, N.H. 68 years
later, more than 400 mi Ilion
Social Security numbers
have been issued. And people no longer go to the post
office . to get a number. In
fact, today, with the help of
hospital s and bureaus of
vital statistics around the
Social
country,
most

In observance of Constitution Week Meigs County Judge Scott
Powell spoke on the Constitution at a rel::ent meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution . He and Regent Peggy Moore display a copy.
removed by coun order.
"Courts across Amt:rica
have reached different conelusions in the emotional Ten
Commandment Case - some
allowing displays of the biblicalli st, while other bar such
postings. Only the Supreme
Court can resolve the queslion," said the judge.
Moore placed the Ten
Commandments in the court
house in August 200 I stating
that "to restore morality we
must first recognize the
source from which all morality springs. From our earliest
history in 1776 when W!!
were declared to be the
United States of America, our
forefathers recognized the
sovereignty of God." .
In conclusion, Powell
reviewed some historical
quotations, including: I) In
· God We Trust -national
motto; 2) One Nation, under
God, indivisible with liberty
and justice for all - Pledge to

Allegiance; 3) And can the
liberty of a nation be thought
secure when we have
removed their only firm
basis, a conviction in the
minds of the people that these
liberties are the gift of God?
They are not to be violated
but with his wrath?" Thomas Jefferson.
Regent Peggy Moore.
Moore conducted a memorial
service for the late Abbie
Stratton, past regent, and a
eulogy to her for her commitment and service to the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
DAR, to th~: State and
National DAR, for her community service and to her
church. A DAR marker ·Will be
placed later on her gravesite.
Mary Rose was elected vice
regent to serve for the remaining year of the 2001-2004
administrative DAR term.
Next meeting will be held
on Oct. II, 2003, 10:00 a.m.
at the library in Pomeroy.

Carl and Janet Morris of
Rutland. His older brother,
Mark, is a Colonel in the
United States Air Force and
is the commander of the 57th
Operations Group, Nellis
AFB. Nevada. His oldest
brother, Jim, retired as a
Major from the USAF and is
now a teacher at Gwinn High
School, Gwinn, Mich.
Lt. Col. Morris is married
to the former Josie Fajardo
Sabio of Misamis-Oriental,
Pampanga, Republic of the
Philippines. He and his wife,
Josie, have two daughters,
Michelle and Sarah.

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the Middleport community, .
John Hood, right, has retire~
as a mall carrier. His entt~
career with the U.S. Postal
Service was spent working
from the Middleport office;
most of it on a walking rout~
through the village. Tony
Sampson, officer in charge at
the post office, presenteg
Hood with a commendatic:J~
from the U.S. Postal Servi~
and fellow postal employee~­
famlly and friends, honore
him with a Friday reception i
the post office lobby. (Brian
Reed)
r

readiness of 14 Security
Forces units spread through·
out the United States, establishing optimum force protection operations for two
full-time Air Force Reserve
RUTLAND - John M. Command installations, as
Morris of Rutland was promoted to the rank of well as coordinating anti-terLieutenant Colonel in the rorism and· force protection
issues
for
United States Air Force security
Headquarters 4th Air Force.
Reserve on Sept 4.
Lt. Col. Morris is a graduate
Lt. Col. Morris is the Chief
of Security Forces for of Meigs High School, arid also
Headquarters 4th Air Force, a graduate of Ohio University.
March Joint Air Reserve He is an Eagle Scout and forBase, California. He is direct- mer member of Pomeroy Boy
ly responsible for ensuring Scout Troop #249.
Lt. Col. Morris is the son of
the combat deployment

. .f.

Monday, September 29, 2003

•
After 33 years of service 'b)

BY LisA CRUMP

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Larkin re-signs
with Reds .

Bengals win ·battle of Ohio, beat Browns 21-14:

CINCINNATI (AP) - Six
days after Barry Larkin turned
down a take-it-or-leave it offer,
the Cincinnati Reds re-signed
their captain for 2004.
Larkin and Reds chief operating officer John Allen met
during Sunday's season-ending
2-1 loss to Montreal, and they
agreed to a $700,000, one-year
contract that allows the shortstop to earn an additional
$300,000 in performance
bonuses.
"''ve said all along that I
wanted to be a member of the
Cincinnati Reds," said Larkin,
who has spent his entire ISyear major league career with
Cincinnati.
Larkin, completing a $27
million, three-year deal, turned
down a $500,000 offer last
Monday, which appeared to
signal the end of his career with
his hometown team.
"We're very happy that he's
going to be with the O!¥,anization on the playing field, 'Allen
said. "Both sides knew what
we wanted, and at the end of
the day we ended up with what
we wanted."
Larkin, upset more with the
way the situation was handled
than with the actual figures,
called Allen on Saturday night.
On Sunday, Allen called
Larkin out of the dugout during
the game and they started talking. Chief financial officer Carl
Lindner Jr. also was on hand.
"It was always Barry's position that he wanted to finish in ,
Cincinnati," said Larkin's
agent, Eric Goldschinidt. "He
reached out to them, and they
increased their offer from
$500.000 to $700,000. For
Barry, that was all he needed."
'"They moved," said Larkin,
who hopes to join the team's
management after next year.
'"They negotiated. My desire to
be here, to help groom the next
shortstop, to move up into the
front office, to stay rooted to
Cincinnati- that was all part
of it."
Larkin and Allen both credited Expos manager Frank
Robinson with helping them
get back together. Robinson, a
Hall of Fame outfielder, spent
his flfSt 10 seasons with the
Reds before leaving in a controversial ttade that many still
consider the worst in franchise
history.
"He urged me to do something," said Larkin, who met
with Robinson on Saturday.
"He said be didn't want to see
me in another uniform."

BY TOM WmtERS

Waltrip ends
Junior's winning
streak

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gram called Supplement~
Security Income. SSI is
needs-based program th!J,f
today pays monthly benefi~
to more than six million lo\l(r
income elderly, blind an~
disabled people. Although
the SSI program is manageEl
by the Social Security
Administration,
it is not 8
.
Social Security benefit. S$,1
payments are funded by get!
era! tax revenues, not Soci:Q
•
Security taxes.
·On Oct. I, 1988, the..
Social
Security
Administration launched a
nationwide 800-number se~
vice. Today, that number ~
800-772-1213- is one of th~
most frequently called 800
' .
numbers in the world. L,a~
year, we received more than
•
60 million calls on our tol ~
free telephone line.
' •
On May 17, 1994, Socia!
Security jumped onto the
"World Wide Web" with ap
Internet site that has become
one of the most popular of
all government agency websites. Today, you can use th~
site to file for Social
Security benefits, find calc~
lators to help figure future
benefits, get answers to
many questions about Social
Security, do research on var~
ious Social Security topics
and access many other ser'
vices. In 1994, about 22,000
people visited our website;
in 2002, more than 40 mil~
lion did.
So please join me and your
fellow citizens in wishing .
· •J
belated "Happy Birthday", 11;1
Social Security.
(Lisa Crump is the Soci~l
Security
Manager
ifl
Arhens.)

Security
numbers
are
applied for before the child
leaves the hospital.
On Aug. I 0, 1939, the
Social Security law was
amended to include benefits
to the spouses and children
of retirees and to the widows
and children of workers who
died. Today, in addition to
more than 29 million
retirees, Social Security pays
monthly benefits to more
than three million of their
spouses and children. And
Social
Security
sends
monthly survivor benefits to
about seven million widows,
widowers and children.
On Jan. 31, 1940, Ida May
Fuller of Vermont became
the first person in the country to receive a monthly
Social Security check. (Prior
to that, Social Security
issued one-time payments to
workers
who
retired
between ,1935 al)d 1940.)
Ms. FQller's first Social
Security check was in the
amount of $22.54. She lived
until the age of I 00 and
passed away in January
1975. In her 35 years as a
Social Security beneficiary.
she received more than
$22,000 in benefits.
On Aug. l, 1956, the disability progmm was added
to Social Security. Today,
more than five million people with severe disabilities
get monthly benefits, along
with another 1.7 million
spouses and children.
On July 30, 1965, the
Medicare prognun was born.
Although it is part of the
Social Security Act, and for
many years the program was
managed by the Social
Security Administration , ,
control was turned over to
the newly created Health
Care
Financing
Administration.
On Oct. 30, 1972, the
Social
Security
1972
Amendments were signed
into law, including the creation of a major new pro-

Bl

Clllretl'a reinstatement will walt, Page B6

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Morris promoted
to lieutenant
colonel

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Miltary News

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Scoreboard, Page 82
NFL Roundup, Page 88

Monday, September 29, 200!
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The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

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Mail carrier Hood retires

National Constitution
Week celebrated by DAR
POMEROY
The
Constitution, its origin and
turning points were discussed
by Meigs County Juvenile
Judge Scott Powell at a
recent meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution.
The meeting, held at the
Meigs Library, celebrated the
observance of National
Constitution Week, Sept. 1723. A week in September has
been set aside for the observance of Constitution Week
since 1956 when it was
signed into law by Congress.
The proclamation signed
earlier this month by
Pomeroy Mayor Victor
Young III emphasizes the
responsibility of protecting
and
defending
the
Constitution and preserving it
for posterity; and calls for an
understanding of the heritage
and a study of the historical
events which occurred in
September 1787.
Powell
noted
that
President George Washington
in his first official act did
something unheard of today
- he prayed in public at his
inaugural address. TWo hundred years later, few government officials are bold
enough to publicly profess
their faith for fear they will
be labeled "religious right,"
said Powell.
"On the very day that
Congress approved the wording of the First Amendment
of the Constitution," Powell
said its members allowed,
upon request of George
Washington, a day of public
thanksgiving and prayer.
He spoke of the "turning
points" in history. "In 1962.
the Supreme Court outlawed
a 22 word nondenominational prayer to be used in New
York Schools. A year later,
they outlawed the Lord's
Prayer in Pennsylvania and
Maryland public schools,
withQUt the Citation of a single case and ended practices
that had existed in American
Schools for 170 years."
Powell commented on the
new case, that of Chief
Justice Ray Moore- Alabama
Supreme Court- who placed a
monument depicting the Ten
Commandments in the Court
House which was later

PageA6

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TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)Michael Waltrip broke Dale
Earnhardt Jr' s stranglehold on
Talladega Superspeedway,
sweeping high off the final tum
and denying his teammate a
fifth straight victory at the
high-banked oval Sunday.
Waltrip took the checkered
flag in the EA Sports 500, a
typically thrilling Talladega
race that resembled a night at
the short ttack. There was all
sorts of banging and bumping
before it came down to a fourlap sprint to the finish .
After pole-sitter Elliott
Sadler was taken out in a spectacular crash on laJ;l 182, his car
flipping several Urnes on the
backstretch, NASCAR officials red-flagged the cars to
give the rescue crew time to
clean up.
A couple of laps under yellow followed, then Waltrip led
the pack as the green flag
dropped. He never relinquished
the lead, though Earnhanlt was
on his bumper the whole way.
Coming off tum four for the
fmal time, Waltrip went high to
block Jeff Gordon. Earnhardt
got a peak to the inside, but
Waltrip dove to the bottom of
the track to block his DEI
teammate and cruised across
the line to win by about a car
length for his second victory of
the year and fourth of his
career.
He turned a few doughnuts
on the grass in front of the main
grandstand, then emerged from
his car through a new escape
hatch in the roof.

Associated Press
CLEVELAND Close
losses weren't going to cut it.
Marvin Lewis wanted much
more from his Cincinnati
BengaJs.
Sure, the NFL's perennial
doormats had shown signs of
improvement under their frrstyear coach the past two weeks.
But they were still the Bengals,
bungling their way to defeat.
Lewis needed tangible proof
his team was getting better.
And Sunday, he got it.
Jon Kitna threw three touchdown passes and Cincinnati's
defense stopped Cleveland's
late comeback attempt as the
Benllals beat the Browns 21-14
to gtve Lewis his frrst victory
with the team.
"The guys have worked
extremely hard and they rea~d
their rewards," Lewis said. 'To
me, it's more important to the
football team because they
bought into everything we have
been doing."
Jeff Burris
intercepted
Cleveland quarterback Tim
Couch with less than a minute
left, and Kitna had the rare
thrill of running out the final
seconds by taking a knee.
No, these might not be the
same ol' Bengals.
Just four weeks into the season, they're already halfway to
their win total of 2002.
"People are going to stop
being surprised when we start
winning," said wide receiver
Chad Johnson, who caught two
TO passes. "We did just enough
to win and showed things are
going to get better."
It didn't start that way for the
Bengals (1-3). They fell behind

14-7 in the second quarter,
helpinll the Browns' offense by
commttting six offsides penalties on defense.
Lewis was steaming mad,
and the former defensive coordinator huddled his defense on
the sideline for a heated moti.vational speech, after which he
didn't ask for questions from
the audience.
"He was not happy," linebacker Kevin Hardy said,
Cincinnati responded by
shutting out the Browns (1-3)
the rest of the way, and as the
clock expired, the Bengals
doused their coach with
Gatorade.
"Our defense held up, and
that's a staple of Marvin
Lewis," said Kitna, whose !yard TD pass to tight end
Reggie Kellr in the third quarter put Cincmnati ahead 21-14.
"He's going to be a great
coach."
Lewis inherited a 2-14 team
of underachievers with little
hope for the future. But since
taking over, he has changed the
Bengals on and off the field.
There were pOsitive moments
the past two weeks against
Oakland
and Pittsburgh.
However, Lewis knew his message would lose meaning if the
Bengals didn't start winning.
He doesn 'I have that worry
any longer.
"I was startinll to wonder
when we were gomg to get that
first one," he said.
Another good sign was the
Bengals won without running
back Corey Dillon, who picked
up 20 yards in the first half but
sat out after halftime with a
groin injury.
Meanwhile, the Browns ( 1-3)

Pluse- Benplt, II

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Quincy Morgan (81) breaks tHe tackle of Cincinnati
Bengals' Rogers Beckett (45) and heads downfield on a 71-yard touchdown reception (ti
the first quarter Sunday, in Cleveland. (AP)

Bobcats rally, but come up short in 39-32 loss
BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@ mydailytrlbune.com
ATHENS - Fred Ray and
the Ohio Bobcats had a chance
late in the game to win
Saturday's
Mid-American
Conference opener with
Western Michigan.
Ray, who finished the contest with 12-of-26 passing for
215 yards and one touchdown
and 84 yards rushing on 16
carries for two more touchi:lowns, helped the Bobcats
rally in the second half, but the
win alluded Ohio.
With Ohio down by seven, a
pair of 19-yard pass plays with
less than a minute put the ball
on the Western 34, but the
Bobcats offense was stopped
and Western Michigan survived with a 39-32 victory at
Peden Stadium.
'~It's said that a tough game
makes teams tough," said
Western Michigan head coach
· Gary Darnell. "If that's the

case, then there were two
tough teams running around in
Athens tonight."
After a Chad Munson 44yard touchdown pass to Greg
Jennings
put
Western
Michigan up 31-17 early in the
third quarter, the Bobcats tallied 15 unanswered points,
including a couple of Scott
Mayle fourth-quarter touchdowns. The frrst on a 51-yard
pass from Ray and the second,
a 23-yard reverse run with 8:58
left in the game that gave the
Bobcats their first lead of the
night, 32-31. Mayle had 99
yards on a pair of receptions.
But, Ohio's lead was short
lived.
The Broncos got great field
position on their following
drive began on a Jennings 35yard kickoff return that placed
the ball on the Ohio 35.
Four plays later, Phil Reed
punched one in from !-yard
out, and a two-point conversion pass from Munson to
Antonio Thomas put Western

Michigan up by seven with
7:29 remaining.
Munson was 22-of-39 passing for 315 yards, while Reed
had 30 carries for 115 yards for
the Broncos (2-2, 1-0 MAC).
Western Michigan got the
ball back shortly later and
managed to run the clock
down to less than a minute left
~fore Ohio regained possesSion.
With the loss, the Bobcat~
dropped to 1-3, 0-1 in the
MAC.
"I don't think this was a
must win for either team," said

Reed. "But, I think it was an
extremely important game
being a MAC game."
The Bobcats were able to
overcome a difficult opening
quarter, where three Ohio
turnovers led to 17 Western
Michigan points.
The Broncos led 17-0 late in
the flfSt quarter.
A 44-yard pass from Ray to
Mayle, and a 16-yard run by
Ray put the ball deep into
Bronco territory. Then. on
fourth and two at the Western
4, Ray drove the ball in on a
keeper for Ohio's first points of
the game.
Western countered on its following drive as a Munson 59yard pass set up a Phil Reed
one-yard run for the TO.
Mayle fumbled the ball
away on Ohio's following
drive at the Bobcat 23, but the
Broncos were unable to capitalize this time as a 38-yard
field ~oal attempt by Robert
Mechmger.
That opened the doors for

Ohio to rally late in the half.
With 2:59 left in the second
quarter, Ray ran in his second
TD of the day, this time from
20-yards out.
Then came a rare Western
Michigan miscue as Ohio free
safety Andre Bradford stripped
the ball away from Anthony
Kiner following a completed
pass. Rob Stover ~bbed the
ball while it was still in the are
for the fumble recovery.
Ohio took advantage as the
Bobcats drove the ball again
deep inside Bronco territory,
settmg up a 25-yard field goal
by Greg DiMarino with 16
seconds left to make it a 24-17
game at the half.
"Right out of the gate, we
have to limit those turnovers
and focus more," said Ray.
Ohio has a real tough test
next as the Bobcats travel to
Northern Illinois this Saturday.
The Huskies were a 24-16
winner against Iowa State •.
their third win over a BCS
team this season.

Ohio State struggles on offense but not on defense
BY RusTY MIUEA

Associated Press
COLUMBUS - Ohio State
had a feast and all it gave
Northwestern was a doughnut.
With linebacker A.J. Hawk
leading the charge, the fourthranked Buckeyes limited
Northwestern to 185 yards to
.win their 19th straight game,
20-0 Saturday. Ohio State posted its flfStshutout in 62 games,
datin~ to a 41-0 victory at
Hlin01s in 1998.
"We call that a doughnut,"
defensive tackle Tun Anderson
said of the shutout. "Anytime
the defense can put up a
doughnut ... it was a good day
for us."
· Ohio State (5-0, 1-0 Big Ten)
limited the Wildcats (2-3, 0-1)
to 121 yards rushing on 40
attempt~. The rushing total was
· more than the Buckeyes have
given up in their flfSt four
games combined (96 yards).
"You can't say enough about
that defense," Buckeyes coach
Jim Tressel said.
·
Nonhwestem's
Brett

Basanez hit just I 0 of 24 passes for 64 yards - none longer
than 12 yards - · and was
sacked twice.
,
'Their front four is the core
of the team," BasaJ)ez said.
'They've got a couple of firstrounders there."
Hawk had a career-best 13
tackles, including two for losses, before taking most of the
second half off. Nate Salley
added nine tackles and Chris
Gamble broke up two passes.
On offense, the Buckeyes
clearly miss star running back
Maurice Clarett, suspended for
at least a year for violating
NCAA rules, but it hasn't been
enough to stop them yet.
"Maurice Clarett was a
dynamic back, there's no denying that," tight end Ben
Hartsock said. "He could break
tackles and he was a spark.
He'd make· a play that wasn't
blocked perfectly and maybe
take it 6 or 7 yards or maybe
break it all the way. We can't
allow ourselves to dwell on
that too much."
Lydell Ross had a 12-yard

touchdown
run,
Scott
McMullen hit Ryan Hamby for
a !-yard score and Mike
Nugent kicked a pair of field
goals.
That was it for the offense as
Northwestern missed two field
goals and had a touchdown
called back by a penalty.
"We carne close. That's the
most frustrating
thing,"
Northwestern coach Randy
Walker said. "You total everything up and there's probably
15 reasons why we didn't score
or make more plays. If it was
one thing, it would be easy."
Ross bounced out of a traffic
jam in the middle and coasted
around the left end on a 12yard score on Ohio State's flfSt
possession, capping a 59-yard
march that took I0 plays.
"It was congested up the
middle and I glanced to the left
and saw it was open," Ross
said.
Nugent's 32-yard field goal
made it I 0-0 midway throuldl
the second quarter. Tlie
Buckeyes took over at the
Northwestern 46 after Robert

Reynolds recovered Ashton
Aikers' fumble.
The Wildcats drove into
Ohio State territory three times
in the game but made pivotal
mistakes each time.
Basanez avoided a tackle in
the backfield and sprinted for
an 8-yard touchdown run early
in the second quarter. Zach
Strief was called for holding on
the block that sprung Basanez,
although subsequent replays
appeared to show him pushing
Hawk to the ground and away
from Basanez.
Three plays later, Slade
Larscheid shanked a 35-yard
field-goal attempt that was
wide left. His 47-yard attempt
in the third quarter fell20 yards
short. The snaps bounced to the
holder on both kicks.
"I don't feel that they adjusted to anything we were doing,"
Strief said. "We just killed ourselves over and over today."
Ohio State took the secondhalf kickoff and had to convert
four third-down plays to score,
capped by McMullen's !-yard
pass to Ryan Hamby.

Coming in averaging just
128 yards rushing per game,
they were limited to 125 yarqs
on
35
attempts
by
Northwestern.
Ross led the Buckeyes with
43 yards on nine carries befon:
leaving with a sprained right.
knee. Freshman Ira Guilford
added 29 yards on eight carries
and McMullen helped the
cause with 23 yards on three
attempts.
"Guys who are in the backfie ld ... we have all the confidence in the world in,"
Hartsock said. "We 'II do all we
can for them to help them
move the ball ... but that does."
n't put points on the board." :
Ohio State's regular quarterback, Craig Krenzel, mis~
his second game with a hyper-.
extended right elbow. He threw
some before the game bqt
never left the sideline.
McMullen completed 16 of
25 passes for 166 yards with.
one interception.
:
"We're still surviving ana=
doing what we need to win:
football games," Tressel said.. ·
'

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
National Football League

Baseball
National League
Eut Dlvlalon

W
L
Pet
x·Atlanta
101 61 .623
y·Fiorida ~
91 71 .562
Philadelphia
86 76 .531
Montreal
83 79 .512
New York
66 95 .410
Central Dtvieion
W L Pet
xCticago
88 74 .543
HoUS1on
87 75 .537
St. Louis
85
.525
Pittsburgh
75 87 463
Cincinnati
69 93 .426
Milwaukee
68 94 .420
W..t Dtvialon
W L Pet
x&amp;n Francisco 100 61 .621
Los Angeles
85
.525
Arizona
84 78 519
Q&gt;lorado
74 88 457
Diego
64 98 .395

n

n

san

GB
10
15
18

34',
GB
1
3
13
19
20
GB
15 ~2

16 ~
26 ~

36'•

AMERICAN
Eael
WLT Pet PFPA
M•ami
2 t 0 .667583B
2 2 0 .500 89 57
Buffalo
New England 2 2
.500 11
N.Y. Jets
o 4 o .ooo 45
South
WLT Pel PF PA
Indianapolis
4 0 0 1.000 120 47
Tennessee
3 1 0 .750 89 78
Houston
2 2 0 .500 69 113
Jacksonville
0 4 0 .000 73 109

o

Baltimore
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Cleveland

, 3 0

Denver
Kansas City
Oakland
San Diego

x-cHnched divlskm

Cincinnati 4, Montreal 2
N .Y. Met&amp; 9, Florida 3
~ilwaukee 5, Houston 2
Philadelphia 7, Atlanta 6. 10 Innings
Chicago Cubs 4 , Pittsburgh 2, 1st game
Chicago Cubs 7, Pittsburgh 2, 2nd game
.St. Louis 3, Arizona 2
Los Angeles 5, San Francisco 0, 1st
game
San Francisco 6, Los Angeles 3, 2nd
g~
.COlorado 10, San Diego 2
Sunday'• G1me1
'Montreal 2, Cincinnati 1
!'lorida 4, N.Y. Mel&amp; 0
Atlanta 5, Philadelphia 2
Houston 8, Milwaukee 5
Pittsburgh 3, Chicago Cubs 2
·san Francisco 12, Los Angeles 3
:st. Louis 9, Arizona 5
Colorado 10, San Diego 8
•
End of Regular S.aaon

•

American League

E••t Dlv..ion
WLPctGB
x7New York
101 61 .623
y-Boslon
95 67 .586 6
15
Toronto
86 76 .531
Baltimore
71 91 .438 30
Tampa Bay
63 99 .389 38
·
Cenlr1l Dlvlalon
WLPctGB
a-Minnesota
90 72 .556
Ctlicago
86 76 .531 4
Kansas City
83 79 .512 7
Cleveland
88 94 .420 22
Detroit
43 119 .265 47
Wool Dlvlolon
W I. Pel
GB
x.Oakand
96 66 .593
Seattle
93 69 .574 3
85 .475
19
Anaheim
Texas
71 91 .438 25

n

x-cllnched division
y-cllnched wild card
saturday'a Game•
Texas 12, Anaheim 3
Toronto 5, Cleveland 4
N.Y. Yankees 6, Baltimore 2
Seattle 7, Oakland 4
Tampa Bay 5. Boston 4
Detroit 9, M innesota 8
Chicago White Sox 19, Kansas City 3
Sundty'l aamea
Toronto 6, Cle'ofeland 2
Detroit 9, Minnesota 4
N.Y. Yankees 3, Baltimore 1
Tampa Bay 3, Boston 1
Chicago White Sox 5, Kansas City t
Anaheim 4, Texas 1
Seattle 9, Oakland 3
End of Regular Season

Pro Football

n

n

North
WLT
2 2 0
220

y-clinched wild card
Saturd8y'a Gamea

PageB2

Washington
Dallas
N.Y. Giants
Philadelphia

Pet

:500

PF PA
82 74

5008496

.250 61 84
1 30250 4675
Weet
WLTPetPFPA
4 0 0 1.00011849
4 0 0 1.000 t27 58
2 2 0 .500 87 107

0 4 0

.000

68

122

NAnONAL
Eaet
WLT Pet PF PA
3 1 0 .750 90 85
2t0.667 65 65
2 1 0 .667 79 69
120 .333 33 61

SOuth
WLT
Carolina
Tampa Bay
Atlanta
New Orleans

3 0 0
2

,

0

1 3 0
, 3 0
North

WlT
Minnesota
Green Bay
Detroit
Chicago

4 0 0

, 2 0

1 3 0

0 2 0
Wast
WLT

3 0 0
Seattle
2 2 0
St. Louis
Arizona
1 3 0
San Francisco 1 3 0

Pet
1.000
.667
.250
.250

PF
59
57
71
74

PA

Pet
1.000
.333
.250
.000

PF PA
69 56
77 98
20 73

Pet
t .OOO
.500
.250
.250

PF
89
100
57
92

35
22
100

119

112 56

PA
33
84
130
82

Sunday's Games
St. Louis 37, Arizona 13
Tennessee 30, Pinsburgh 13
Houston 24, Jacksonville 20
Philadelphia 23. BuHalo 13
Washington 20, New England 17
Cincinnati 21 , Cleveland 14
Minnesota 35, San Francisco 7
Kansas City 17, Baltimore 10
Oakland 34, San Diego 31, OT
Dallas 17 , N.Y. Jets 6
Carolina 23, Atlanta 3
Denver 20, Detroit 16
· Indianapolis 55, New Orleans 21
Open: Miami, Seal1te, N.Y. Giants, Tampa
Bay
Monday'a Game
Green Bay at Chicago, 9 p.m.
Sunday, OcL 5
Oakland at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Arizona at Dallas. 1 p.m.
Miami at N.Y. Giants, t p.m.
Minnesota at Atlanta. 1 p.m.
Seattle at Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Den\ler at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Carolina. 1 p.m.
Tennessee at New England, 1 p.m.
San Diego at Jacksonville, 4:05p.m.
Detroit at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
Washi ngton at Philadelphia, 4:t 5 p.m.
Cleveland at Pittsburgh , 8:30 p.m.
Open: N.Y. Jels, St. Louis, Baltimore,
Houston
Monday, Oct. 6
Indianapolis a1 Tampa Bay, 9 p.m.

College Football
TheAPTop 25
The Top 25 teams· in The Associa ted Press
college football poll , with first·place votes in
parentheses, records th ,.ough Sept. 27,
to tal po ints basad on 25 points for a firstplace vole through one point lor a 25th·
place vote, and previous ranking:

1. Oklahoma (57)
2. Miami (3)
3. Ohio St (5)
4. Virginia Tech
5. Florida St .
6. LSU
7. Tennessee
8. Arkansas
9 Mte h•gan
10. Southern Cat ·
1t . Georgia
12. Nebraska
13_Texas
14. Washington St.
15. Pittsburgh
16. Kansas St.
17_N. Illinois
18. Washington
19. Oregon
20. TCU
21. Minnesota
22. Purdue
23. 1owa
24. Florida
25. Miclllgan St.

-Pio

4.0
4-0
5·0
4.0
5-0
5.0
4-0
4-0
4-1
3-1
3-1

4-o

1,615
, ,554
I ,457
1,382
1,347
1,332
1,267
1,133
982
975
973
897

3-1

880

4· 1
3-1
4-1
4.0
3- 1
4-1
4-Q
5;0
3-1
4·1
3-2
4·1

736
559
544
524
501
389

383
378
337
310
129
128

....
,
2
4

5
6
7
6

9
11

3
12
15
14
21
17
16

20
18
10
19
24

22
13
~5

Othe,.. r.ceivlng votee: Louisville 89 ,
N.C. State 62, Bowling Green 47 ,
Wisconsin 46, Air Force 29, VirginiQ 25,
Oklahoma St. 24, Kansas t5, Toledo 10,
Miami (Ohio) 9, South Caroli na 9,
Maryland 8, Oregon St. 5, UNLV · 5,
Calilornla 3. Syracuse 3, Boise St. 1, Texas
Tech 1.

Major College Football Scores
,
EAST
Akron 38, BuHalo 21
Alban~. ~.Y. 42. Sacrod Heart 7
Boston College 53, Ball St. 29
Cent Connecticut St. 28, Siena 10
Colgate 26, Towson 7
Columb•a t9, Bucknell 16
Delaware 24, Hofstra 14
Duquesne 62, La Salle , 4
Harvard 52, Brown 14
Lafayette 28, Princeton t3
Maris! 24, Wagner 13
Massachusetts 31, James Madison 26
Minnesota 20. Penn St. 14
Monmouth, N.J. 20, Stony Brook 14
Montclair St. 23, lone 21
New Hampshire 42, Dartmouth 17
Penn 31 , Lehigh 24
Robert Morris 36. St. Francis, Pa. 6
Rutgers 48, Navy 27
South Florida 28. Army 0
Syracuse 34, Toledo 7
Villanova 28. Northeastern 7
Yale 21 , Cornell 7
SOUTH
Ark.-Pine Bluff 36, Kentucky St. 9
Arkansas 34, Alabama 31, 20T
Auburn 48, W. Kentucky 3
Austin Peay 50, Kentucky Wesleyan 1o
Bethune-Cookman 56, Norfolk St. 14
Carson-Newman 55, Fla . Inte rnational 33
Davidson 45, Emory &amp; Henry 21
Florida 24, Kentucky 21
Florida A&amp;M 15, Delaware St. 14
Florida St. 56, Duke 7
Furman 45, Gardner·Webb 0
Georgia Southern 34, Chattanooga 3
Georgia Tech 24, Vanderbill1 7. OT
Hampton 24, Morgan St. 21 , OT
Howard 48, Savannah St. 3
Jackson St. 21, MVSU 17
Jackson'ol'ille 34, Valparaiso 27
Jacksonville St. 49, E. Kentucky 14
LSU 41, Mississippi St. 6
Louisvme 21. Temple 12
Memphis 38, Arkansas St. 16
Morehead St. 34, Drake 17
N.CarolinaA&amp;T29, Elan 14
N.C. State 47, North Caroli na 34
Nicholls St. 64, Texas Southern 5
Rhode Island 17, Richmond t 3
S. Carolina St. 41, Benedict 7
Sam ford 41, SE Missouri 31
Southern U. 35, Alabama St. 10
Tennessee 23, South Carolina 20, OT
Tennessee St. 41, Tenn.·Martin 10
Tennessee Tech 49, Murray St. 24
Texas Tech 49 , Mississippi 45
The Citadel 24, Appalachian St. 21
Troy St. 33, Marshall 24
Tusculum 58, Charleston Southern 7
VMI 42, Georgetown, D.C. 14
Virginia 27, Wake Forest 24

Virginia Tech 47, Connecticut 13
W. Carolina 28, ETSU 21
Wortord 28, Catawba 3
Voongstown 51. 34 , Liberty 3
MIDWEST
Dayton 47, St. Peter's 6
Florida Attantlc 28, UHnois St. 10
Indiana St. 23, E. Illinois 7
Kansas 35, Missouri U
Kent St. 36, UCF 16
Maryland 37, E. Michigan 13
Miami (Ohio) 42, Cincinnati 37
Mictligan 31 , Indiana 17
Michigan St 20, Iowa tO
N. Illinois 24, Iowa
16
N. Iowa 43, Northwestern St. 10
Ohio St. 20, Northwestern 0
Purdue 23, Notre Dame 10
S. Illinois 1'5 , St. Joseph's, Ind. 0
SW Missouri St. 51, Bacone 14
w . Michigan 39, Ohio 32
Wis.·Stevens Point 56, Butler 7
Wisconsin 38, Illinois 20 ·
SOUTHWEST
Alabama A&amp;M 50, Prairie View 10
North Texas 44, Louisiana-Lafayette 23
Pittsburgh 37, Texas A&amp;M 26
Slephen F.Austin 60, Alcorn St. 7
Texas 63, Tulane 18
Texas State 38, SE Louisiana 17
UTEP 59, Sam Houston Sl. 14
FAR WEST
Air Force 24, QYU 10
Boise St. 33, Wyoming 17
Ca lifornia 34, SOuthern Cal 31 , 30T
Fresno St. 42, Portland St. 16
Hawaii 41 , Rice 21
Montana 41 , Idaho 28
N. Arizona 24, Ca l Poly·SLO 7
N. Colorado 14, Montana St. 10
Nevada 12, SMU 9
New Mextco 24, New Mex~ S~ . 17
Oregon St. 45, Arizona St. 17
Sacramento St. 47, Idaho St. 21
San Diego 46, Holy Cross 45, 20T
TCU t 3, Arizona 10, OT
UCLA 20, San Diego St. 10
Utah 28, Colorado St. 2 t
Utah St. 28, Louisiana-Monroe 10
W. Washington 42, St. Mary's, Cal. 35, OT
Washington 28, Stanford 17
Washington St. 55, Oregon 16
Weber St. 35, E. Washington 23

s•.

Mid-American Conference
Standings
EAST DIVIS'ION

MAC Overall
Kent Sta te
Akron
Miami
UCF
Ohio
Buffalo
Marshall

2.0
2·1

3·2
3-2

0-0

3·,

0-1
1·3
0·1
1·3
0·1
0·5
0·1
2·3
WEST DIVISION
MAC Overall
Toledo
1-o
3-2
Ball State
1 -0
2·3
Northam Illinois
0·0
4·0
0-0
3·1
BowtinQ Green
Western Michigan 1.0
2·2
Central Michigan 0-1
2-2
1·4
Eastern Michigan 0·1

How '!hoy Farwd
COLUMBUS (AP) - How the top teams
In the weekly Associated Pre&amp;a state high
school tootball dKI tt11S weekend:
DIVISION I
1, Cle. St Ignatius (6.0) beat Massillon
Washington 37-12.
2, Warren Harding ~6-0) beat Youngs.
Ursuline 31- 12.
3, Mentor (6.0) boat Lakewood 50-9.
4, Dublin Coffman (6-0) beat Hilliard
Darby 35-1 0.
5, Cin. Colerain (6-0) beat W. Chester
LekDiaW. 51.0.
6, Massllloo Jacl&lt;son (6-Q) boat Cle. S. 35-

0.
7, Cln. Ekler (5-1) boat Covlnglon (Ky.)
Calh. 49-21 .
8, Lakewood St. Edward (5· 1) !:leal
Huntinglon (Ind.) N. 37-o.
9, Westerville S . (6-0) beat Worthington
KilbOurne 28-7.
10, N. Can . Hoover (6-0) beat Can.
McKinley 19-0.
DIVISION I
1, · Macedonia Nordonie (6·0) beat
TWinsburg 38-23.
2. Avon Lake (6-G) beat Fairview Park
FairvieW 41-14.
3, Cots. Brookhaven (6-0) beat Cots .
BeechcroH 34-14.
4, Whitehall-Yearling (6-0) beat Gahanna
Cols. Academy oW-14 .
5, Maumee (6-G) beat Rossford 17-14.
6, Trenton Edgewood (6·0) beat W.
Carro llton 34-6.
7, Sylvania Southview (6·0) beat
Whitehouse Anthony Wwyne 24-14.
8, Warren Howland (5· 1) beat Salem 46·

20.
9, Pickerington Central {6-0) beat
Westerville N. 56·7.
10. Chardon (5·1) boat Eastlake N. 42-13.
DIVISION Ill
1, Cle. Benedicllne (6·0) 9ea1 Akr. SVSM

34-0
2, Germantown Valley View (6..(1) beat W.
Milton Milton-Union ~ .
3, Akr. Hoban (5-1) lost to Cots. Watterson
18-1 3
4, Dover (6-ol boat Cambridge 49·35.
5, Day. Chaminade-Julienne (5-1) beat St
Bernard Roger Bacon 2G-14.
6, Newart&lt; Lidc.ing Valley (6-Q) beat Cots.
Bexley 26· 7.
7, Steubenville {6·0) beat Wellsburg
(W.Va.) Broo ke 46-7.
8, Usbon Beaver (6·0) beat Zanesville 49·
3.
9, St. Marys Memorial (6.0) beat Lima
Shawnee 32-26.
10, BeMevue (6-0) boat Willard 21-14.
DIVISION IV
1, COldwater (6-0) beat ROddorct

Parkwa~

34·0.
2, Versailles (6·0) beat Marla Stein
Marion Local37-o.
3, Ironton (6·0) boat Ashland (Ky.) Paul
Blazer 35-0.
4, Clarksville Ctlnton-Massie {6-Q) beat
Batavia 25-0.
5, Youngs. Mooney (5· 1) beat Youngs.
Austintown-Fitch 20.7.
, 6, Delta (5-1) lost to Hamler Patrick Henry
42·21.
7, Uppe r Sandusky (6-o) boat Shalby 2814.
8, Coshocton (5-1) beat Uhrichsville
Claymont31-14.
9, Apple Creek Waynectale (6·0) beat W.
Salem NW 48-7.
10, Orrville (4·2) lost to Mansfield 26-12.

S.turdey'a Result•
Akron 38, Buffalo 2~
Boston College 53, Ball State 29
Kent St. 36, Ce nt. Florida 16
Maryland 37, E. Michigan 13
Miami (Ohio) 42, C incinnati 37
No. 20 N. Illinois 24, Iowa St. 16
Syracuse 34, To ledo 7
Troy St. 33, Marshall 24
W. Michigan 39, Ohio 32

S.turday'a Gamea
Akron at Miami (Ohio)
Ball St. at Kent St.
Bulfalo at UCF
Cen t. Michigan at Bowling Green
Ohio at N. Illinois
W. Michigan at E. Michigan
NOTE: Division champions based on
overall co nfere nce record . Head-to-head
competition Is initial ttebreaker.

Prep Football

www.mydailysentinel:'tom

Monday, September ~9, 2003

DIVISION Y
1, Marion Pleasant (6-0) beat Delaware
Buokeye Valley 21.0.
2. Smithville {6.0} beat CreSion Norwayne
23-6.
3, Woodsfield Monroe Cent. (6-0) beat
New MartlnS\'Itte (W.Va.) Magnolia 6-0.
4, Delphos St . John 's (5·1) beat Ft.
Recovery 4HI.
5,
Morral Ridgedale
(6·0)
beat
Cardington-Lincoln 37-7.
6, Sycamote Mohawk (6·0) boat Carey
21-7.
7, Sarahsville ShenanDoah (6-0) beat Ofd

washinglon Buclceye Trail 45-0.
8, Gahanna Coli. Academy l"-2) loot

to

Whitehall-Yearling 4-'-14.
9, Amanda-Clearcreek (5-1) beat Bk&gt;om·
Carroll 51 -7.

CLASSIFIED

10, N. LimaS. Range (5-0) beat Vienna

DIVISION VI

1. Columbus Grove (6·0) beat Troy
Christian 42-0.
2.

Cle. Cuyahoga

Hto.

(6.0)

beat

Columbia Station COlumbia 37-6.

3, Maria Stein Marion Local ("-2) loot

to

Versailles 37-0.
4, Norwalk St. Paul &lt;6.0) boat Ashland

Mapleton 55-o.
s, Mogadore (5-1) beat Atwater Waterloo
6.0.
6, Newark Cath. (5·1) boat BaUimore
Liberty Union 42-13.
7, COvlng1on (8.0) beat Arcanum 21-o.
8, Oola Hardin Northern (5·1) beat
Arcadia 41-0.
9, McComb (5·1 I lost to Pancllora-Gilboe
28-26.
10. Oarwllle (4·21 Iosito Centerburg 1&amp;-o.

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

Transactions
BASEBALL
Major LNguo lleMboll
MLB-Suspended Toronto RHP Tanyon
Sturtze three games and fined him SSOO
after an appeal, for getting into an altercation with umpire PhH Cuui in a Sept. 23
game.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Acti&gt;Jaled OF
David Delluccl from the 15--day disabled
list.
National League
CINCINNATI RED5-Agre&amp;d 1o terms with
SS Barry Larkin on a one-year contract.
FLORIDA MARLIN5-Activaled 38 Mike
Lowell !rom the 15-day disabled list.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Aeaoclellon
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS-5igned G
Jason Crowe, F Fadl El Khatib, F Matt
Garrison, C Josh Moore and F Desmond
Penigar. Acquired C Predrag Drobnjak
from Seattle for a future second-ro und draft
pkk. Waived F Fadi El Khatib.
SEATILE SUPERSON IC5-Signed F
Reggie Evans to a mul tiyear contract.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ATLANTA THRASHERS- Retu rne d D
Braydon Coburn to Portland of the WHL,
and C Brian Swanson, D Kurtis Foster and
0 Kiri ll Safron6v to Chicago of the AHL
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKET5-Assigned
0 Todd Roholff, C Don Maclean, C Mark
Hartigan , AW Tim Jackman and G Pa6CBI
Leclaire to Syracuse of the AHL.
DALLAS STARS-Assign ed G Jason
Bacashihua, F Steve Gainey, F Mathias
Tjarnqvist, FRob Valice'ol'ic and G Dan Ellis
to Utah of the AHL.
MINNESOTA WILD- Assign ed C Dan
Cayanaugh, LW Mlka Hannuta, G Johan
Holmqvlst , 0 Zbynek Michalek, C Rickard
Wallin and RW Kyle Wanvig to Houston of
the AHL.
NEW JERSEY OEVIL5-Asslgned G Scott
Clemmensen, G Matus Kostu r, 0 Alex
Brooks, 0 Phil Cole, D Matt DeMarchi, 0
Mike Matteucci, D Krlsjanis Redlihs, 0
Victor Uchevatov, F Maxim Balmoc:hnykh,
F Scott Cameron, F Brett Clouthier, F Greg
Crozier, F Craig Darby, F Steve Guolla, F
Chris Hartsburg, F Joe Hulblg, F Eric
Johansson, F Ste'ol'e Kariya, F Ayan
Murphy, and F Ahren Nittel to Albany ol the
AHL. Reassigned F Cam Janssen to
Windsor of the OHL and F Joey Tenuta to
Sarnia of the OHL. Released F Erik
Jensen.
ST. LOUIS BLUES- Assigned 0 Tom
Koivisto and Mike Stuart, G Reinhard Divis
and Curtis Sanford and F Igor Valeev to
Worcester of the AHL , and F D.J. King lo
Lethbridge of the WHL. Re leased C
Rastislav Pavlikovsky.
COLLEGE
ARIZONA-Fired John MackOvlc, football
coach . Named Mike Hankowltz Interim
coach.

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Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant'
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Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
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\V\411 '\II \II ,I...,

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74

Would th e lady that got 3
cats from the man in
Syracuse on FrL Sept. 19th
please get in touch w/him or
her arhis home or call 740992-9716.

r

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1

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YARD SALE·

Garage sale· Oct. 3-4,
at
40037
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Sumner Ad ., small appli·
ances, glassware, furniture,
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misc . items, 9-4, rain or
shine .

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POUCIES: Ohio Valle~ Publishing reaervn tile right to edit, reject, or cancel an~ acl at any time. Error• must bt reported on the first day or
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any loss or expense that results from the publication or om lsaion of an advertiHment. Correction will be made in the first av11ilsble edition. • Bo11
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KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

110

10

ri.,•-•Fitl~lii~lii~iliALE_ _,JI eo

HEu• WAI'IfEil

rent to Own Land Contract
or buy out right. 3 bedroom
house in Rutland near new
school. No Pets inside
house. Thank you. Call 740·
742·2263

FULL-TIM E POS ITION
AVAILABLE
Competilive Salary and
eJtceptional tringe benefit
package .

MRI TECH -Requirements:
Com pletion of radiological
Inside sale, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, technology training from an
new &amp; us ed, 4th place on left AMA approved school
Beech Grove,
Rutl and, Current ce rtiticalion w1th the
(740)742·3082
AART in Radiology and MRI
equipment and set proto ·
6
YARI&gt; SAu:'"
cots. Work in ot her areas of
1"1; I'LF.ASANT
the department as needed.

C· 1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale, Chaster Town ship,
Moigs County, send letters
of interes t to: Th e Daily
Sentinel. PO Box 729·20, Yard sale Oct. 1, 2, 3. Go to
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Mason Fire Station . Follow
Si ns. To Front Street .
I Marie Plants will not be
WAN'Ilo:t)
responsible tor debts other
10DUY
tha n my own , Marie E.
Plants, ex wile of Alfred A .
Plants J r. 9-19·03
Abs olute Top Dollar: U.S.
Sil ver,
Gold
Coins,
Say good bye to high phone Prootsets, Diamonds, Gold
bills! New local phone se rv· Rings,
U.S. Currency, ice with FREE unl imited MTS Coin Shop , 151
nation wide long Distance Second Avenue, Gallipoli s.
1-600·635-2908
or 740-446·2842.
www.FreedomMovie.com/itp
aysyou . Local Agents want· Land 213 acres, good clean
ed.
ground, tor a mobile home
with water tap, close to town
We Alfred A. Plants Jr. and Good year around road . Will
Loretta A. Plants will nol be pay
top
dollar!
responsible tor any debts $9,0001$ 12,000. Plenty all
other than those made by us parking space A MUST Call
personally 9·12·03.
from 12- 5:00pm. (304)5320190

Riverfront with boat dock .
ni ce 3 br.. 2 ba., 1 5 acres
Gallipolis photo! information
on line www.O RVB .com
code 90303 call ·740-446·
0531 .
MOBILE HOMFS

IUR SALE

Only qualilied applicants
need apply to:
Hol zer Clinic
Human Relations
Department
90 Jack son Pike, Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631-1562
fax 740·446·5532; or call
740-446·5189.
Equal Opportunity
Employer.

Growi ng HVAC company
looking
tor
Cerlil1ed
Technician with Installati on
experience, mini mum 1 1/2
years experie nce in both .
QliLY experienced need
~·Ca ll 740·441·1 236 it
no answer leave a message

r

r

0
1140

L.-------_.1

HousES

FUR RENT

1

II you like the thought of
southern pl antation livin g
this Is the home lor you.
This lovely spacious southern style home has potential. 3 bedrooms, w/ lull
baths. and a large kitchen .
Driginal wood staircase 1n
Ioyer. Upstairs balcony with
a river view and large front
porch. Access to a pool dw ·
ing the season. Loca ted in
Addison at Tara apartments
Gas heal , cen tral a/c. $550 a
month . Please call day
(740)446 -348 1
and
evenings
(740)367-0502. No call s
after 9:00 p.m.

14x70· t 985 mobile home. 2
bedroom, 2 bath .asking
$6.000. Call 740·245-554 1.
Nice 3 bedroom. $400 a
evening s.
month, $400 deposit. Call
1992 Indies Sulton t4X80 3 740-446-7473.
bedroom, 2 bath, central air
and BXB deck. $ t 2,000.00 Taking Applications 3 bedroom house Porter. Will rent
740-992·0031
with option buy 2004.
2 bedroom trailer, $1,500. All Aelerences/deposit. 740388-9946
electric 74Q-36'7-7935.

1"20

MOBILE

I"OR

() 2003 by NEA, Inc.

www.com ics.com

Help wanted car ing lor the
Mtsu
:u.ANmus
0----_.1
elderly, Darst Grou p Home, l 7 •
L,
GtVMWAV
now paying minimum wage ,
Pawpaw fruit $1 to $2 per
new shills: 7am·3pm , ?am· 15 1 / 2 ~ ton-IOW · IOg ·s pli lte r·
pound, walnuts $10 per hun5pm , 3pm·11pm, 11pm· 600 . Delta 10" bench-ba nd12 Cats to good home dred pounds, (740)698·
7am, ca ll 740·992 -5023.
saw Della 10" Power-miterVariety to chose tram . Males 2124
Radial arm saw with
saw:
&amp; tamales. All neutered
Kipl ing Shoe Company takI 111'1 &lt;t\ \II \1
automatic brake. Ph . 74D(304)675-5234
ing appl ic ations fo r Part·
.., , iH It I._,
367-7878
Time sa tes clerk, Point
t 2 Week old Black/while .,..10
. - - - - - - - . . , Pleasant Location .
male kitten to good home or
HELl' \\rANI'EV
- - - - - - - - - 25 Serious People Wanted
!arm. {304)675· 1251
Mec hanic
needed . Who want to LOSE weigh t
Experience required. Call We Pay You Cash for the
2 young mate cats . 1 white-1 Addressers wanted immedi- 740-388·8613 0 1 740-367 · pounds you LOSE!
gray. very lriendly, litter ately! No experience ne ces - 0255 .
Safe . Na tu ral , No Drugs,.
trained . PhOne: 740-446- sary. Work at hOme. Call
800-201·0832
Mad• Home Health Agency,
3897.
405·447-6397.
Inc. seeking full·time and Large Superior brand chest
3 kiltens. 8 weeks old. 2 Addressers wanted immedi- PAN AN's in th e Gallipolis, boor coole r, excellent condimates, 1 female . Please call ately! No experience neces- Ohio are. Must be licensed tion, holds 42 cases. $850 .
740-441 -0 145
sary. Work at Home _ Call in both Ohio and West call 740-446-0798, after
Virginia. We oller a compet- 5:00p.m
405·447-6397
Mitsubish i TV, some picture.
itive salary benefits pack·
27" screen, VCR hook-up. An awesome job!, $6 ·$9 pe r age, and 401K . Please send
WAN'ffi)
large conso le. Call 740·446· hour alter training! No e~pe ­ resume to 352 Second
To Do
0004.
rience needed! FuiVpart AvenuS ,
Gallipolis
OH
time, flexib le scheduling. 45631 .
Babysitting in Syracuse
Puppies (FREE) Chow m1x,
convenient
Pom eroy
area, county certified, or pri·
hea lthy, beautiful, need
Locati on, 20+ positio ns Need to earn Money? Lets vale pay. days, nights &amp;
home and loving m aster.
avai lab le. call 9·9, M·F, 1· ta lk th e NflY Avon . Call wee kends. {740)992-6316
740·245-9372 or 740·446Marilyn, 304-882-2645 to
B88-974 ·Jobs.
1517
learn all the ways it can work
Ch•ld care in my home:
I.AlST ANO
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or for you.
+ Gallia County school di sNI&gt;
Sell. Shi rley Spears , 304trict
FOU
Overbrook
Center
is
looking
L,.............~ _67_5-_14_2_9._________
for a Part-Time LPN. 7am- + A clean, sale env ironm ent
7pm shift . Ple ase aoma in + 4 minutes from Addaville
Lost: Male , neutere d and AWESOME CAREER
and fill out an application at School
'dectawed dark grey cat with $14.80·$36.00+/hr,
green eyes_ Family pet Postal Positions. Hiring tor 333 Page Street Middleport. + Care·giver has associates
degree m early child hood
named Brutus. Lost in VICini· 200312004 Full Benefits, No Oh 45769
e)(p.
req.,
Call
Now
1·800.
development
ty of 588 and lower
WANTED : Billing Clerk lor call 740-·367·0807
Reward . 875-9078 Ext. 2072.
Chill iCOthe Ad
physician
office. Futi or part
Please call 740-446-6142
Busy salon has great oppor- lime. Must have reliable HOUSECLEANING
Anytime.
tunity tor experienced styli st, transportation and medic al Available day or evening .
with manager license to ta~e office eJtperience-computer Gall 740-446·1756. Ask for
REWARD lost big, older,
over excessive clientele . and typing skills a must. Deanna or leave a message .
whltellan male cat. Very
740-411-1880 or 740·256- Benefits
awailable . Fax
akimmlsh , In the Riverview
to
304-675-7800
or MB Handyman Service .
6336.
resume
Vet area call446-2977
Hauling, painting, power
CNA's and i'oiHA's needed to m ait to Box 565.
was hing, driveway repai r,
provide In-Home Ser..,.lces to WANTED : LPN or Medical
YARDSALE
seal coating, gutters, chimthe Elderly/Disabled In the Office Assistant tor physi·
ney, plumbing . Jack of all
wayne, Cabell and Mason clan office. Full or Pert lim e.
trades. 30yrs. exp. Senior
County Areas. Cal l To ll Frea Must have current license or
Discou nt . Free Estimates.
YARD SALE·
1·868-453-4992
certificate , reliable trans· (304)682-2196 , (304)377GAILIFOIJS
Therapletl Netded ·
portation end medical office 8266
AZ Olveralrtld Htalthcs re experlence·co mputer skills
3 lamlly Yard Sele. 10/01·
Is looking for full time preferred. No weekends or M B Handyman Serv1ce.
10103 , Sam·? Brick School
Llceneed
Phyalcal holidays. Fa)( resume to 304· Haulmg, painting, power
Ad . beside Addav•lle school.
Thtrsplat 1
and 675-7800 or mall to Bo)( washing, driveway repair,
Oct . 2·3 9:00-4:00. Junction Aaslstante, O ccupltlonal 56~5·-------"t seal coaling, guners , chlm·
ney, plumbing. Jack of all
B u~
279 &amp; Centerpoint Ad. 1 Theraplata snd A11fstent1
trad es. 30yrs. exp. Senior
TRAINING
mile from Centerville. Shirley and Speech Languag e
Discount. Free Estimates.
Arrowoods 740-682-7 163
Pathologist tor rl!e_idly
(304)882·2 196, (304)377·
expanding Home Health
VINTON -Big Yard Sate. 710 Agency In Pt. Pleasant, WV Galtlpolla Career College 82 66
(Careers Close To Home)
Cherry
Point
Rd . ott and surroun ding areas.
Call Toda~! 740·446-4367.
Picky Painters
Keystone Rd. tollow signs. WEOHer
1·800·21 4·0452
Free Estimates. Interior and
Oct. 1-2, 900-?
• Excellent Wages
www.gBIIIpoliscareerconege .com exterior painting. Give your
·comprehensive Insurance
Ren #90 ·05·12748.
Yard Sale: 381 Dillon Rd. Package
home or garage a fresh
Sept 27 • Oct 4
look. We paint homes,
new
'Paid Vacation, Holidays, 170
Mt.SOJMNEOUS
garages,
mobile homes,
Personal,
anCI
Sick
days
074
YARD SALEbuildings. barns and roofs.
·Job Security
PoMF.ROYIMwilLE
Licenced and insured.
'Great working environment All Type s of loans. 3K to
(Call M·S, 8·6)
Pl ease contact Stacy at ·
200K any purpose. quick
TWo yard sates on Willow 1·800-577-431 0
(304)895·3074
results.
good
or
bad
credit.
Creek Rd . .olf Laurel Cliff. or fax your'resume to :
20 Veara experlence '
1·666·425-8210.
Oct. 1·2-3
and reference~ .
1·937 -695·1375

r

classified@ mydailyreg ister.com

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

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
;u,ndav In-Column; 1:00 p.m.
Sundays Paper

• Start Your Adi With A Keyword • Include Complete

PoMF.ROViMIDDLE
PERSONALS

~egtster

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

rl

I

Mtip Collnty, OH

Mathews 34·3.

If so, you qualify for a

800.949.4444 - www.rfi6olf.rom

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BR
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo. 1·800-691 6777

rio

Siding roofing, sidewalks ,
blocks, tile , room additions.
remodeling, new homes,
fre e estimates, (740)9926 t90, 740·992·3934.

By builder, new, 3 bedroom.
New 3 br/2 bath. Only $999
bric k, 2 car garage. Good
down and only $184.04 per
loc ati on. $140.000. 740·446month , call Nikki 740-3859966 call evenings.
767 1

.

•

~

I"OR SALE

Will pressure wash homes.
tra ilers, decks, metal buil dIngs and gutters. Catl (740 )
446-015 1 ask lor Ron or
leave a message

II\\\&lt; I \1
8USIN~

0PI'ORJ1JNI1Y
INOTICEI
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends th at
you do bu sine ss with people
you know, and NOT to send
money through th e mail until
you have in'ol'estigated the
offering.
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 vending machin es with
eKce llent location s all lor
$10,995 (800)-234-6982

r

I'ROFE.'iSIONAL
SERVICES

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Un less We Wlnl
1·888·562-3345
I&lt; I \ I I ..., I \ I I

H~
I"ORSALE

All real estate advartislng
in this newspaper Is
subJect to the Federal
Fair Hou1lng Act of 1968
which makea It Illegal to
advenlae "any
preference, limitation or
dlscdmlnatlon baaed on
race, color, religion, sex
famiUal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
dl•crlmlnation."
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
estate which Ia In
violation of the law. Ou r
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings adwertlsed In
thla newap•per are
avsllsble on an equal
opportunity basn.

Meadowb rook Drive 3b r.
2ba, Hardwood floors, large
family room. Private, lanced
back
~ard .
and
garage.(304) 675·1303
(304)675·, 252

2 story, 4 bed room house,
gas hea t &amp; 8Jc, 132
Butternut,
Pomeroy,
(740)992·3650

Newly built ranch , country
set1ing, 3000 sq. feet . 3 br., 2
ba., lnground poo l, 5 min utes from Holzer off 160,
photos, Information on line
3 br. , 2 ba. new stick built www.ORVB.com
code
ranc n home, Pt. Pleasant 73103 call 740-448-0149.
photos/ In fo rmation on line
www.ORVB. com code Nlca older 4 br. 3000 sq
90903 call740-441·9546.
teet, 1.5 baths, Pomeroy,
4 bedroom . 2 bath in
centenary.
Detached
garags, abo'ol'e ground poo l.
Green SchOol. 740·446·
3150
- - - - - - -- 4 BEDROOM, 4 BATH
HOUSEl Foreclosure orily
$9,900. tor listings. 1-800719·3001 Ext. F144

photo/ Information on line
www.ORVB.co m
code
80503 coli 740·992-3650.

Approx. 2400sq. 11. 3-5 bedroom, 2 bath, 1 car garag e.
tenced back yard, storag e
building, has large den, new
carpet. Vinyl &amp; central air.
Good location , close to
sc hool. Also incl udes 2
apartm ents on back lot, currently rented . $130,000 tor
all, (304)675·7633

Price reduced. newly redecorated 3BR with carport 135
740-446 ·2776
Kineon
$59,000

PRICE REDUCED
Must sell . 3 bedroom 2 balh
in a nice fam ily oriented sub·
division In New Haven.
(304)593-3690

APARlMENTS

ruRRrnr

Gracious living . 1 and 2 bed·
room apartmen ts at Vi llage
Manor
an d
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport:
From $278·$348. Call 740·:
992·5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.
New Haven. 1 bedroom furnished apartment also have
washer &amp; dryer, deposit &amp;
refere nces,
no
pets,
(740)992·0 165
'
Nice one SA unfurnished
apartment Range &amp; relridg.
provided. Water &amp; garbage
paid. Deposit requi'red. Call
740·446-4345 attar 6 p.m
Now Taking Applications35 West
2
Bedroom
Townhouse
Apartments,.
Includes Water Sewage .'
Trash , $350/Mo. , 740-4460008
One bedroom in Mercerville
Appliances includ ed $295
depositlmonlh . No Pets_Call'
740·256- 1245, leave amessage

Pleasant Va lley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
for 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BA.,
Appl ica tions
are
taken
Monday thru Friday, fro m
2 bd. w/w carpet, air, porch . 9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
Ve ry nice. no pets. In Located at 11 5 t Evergreen
Gallipolis. 740·446·2003 or Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Phone No is (304)675·5806.
740-446- 1409.
E.H O
2 br. all electric, CIA, clean.
Reference , and deposit Tara
Town hou se
req uired. $335 a month . At Apartments, Very Spacious,
160 Evergreen. 740·446- 2 Bedrooms , 2 Floors, CA, 1
6189 or 74Q-446-6865.
112 Bath , Newly Carpeted ,
A dull Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
2 br. 1 bath-a/c·wl d outbuild·
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
1ng, no pets. rei 740·446Pets. Lease Plus Security
4234 after 5:00 p.m
Deposit Required, Days :
Clean 2 bedroom-e lectric 740-44 6·3481 ; Evenings:
mobile home- Spring Valley 740·367-0502
area . 304·675-2900 or 1·
740-44, -6954.
$250 Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications tor waiting
deposit, $300 monthly.
list tor Hud·subsized. 1· br,
Taking applications. 2br apartment, ca ll 675·6679
mobile home. No pets. $100 EHO
deposit , $245 a month ,
\liiH 11\'\111._,1
includes wate r. 740·446·
36 t 7.

14Jt70 Trailer, eleclr •c heat, 3
Good used 14x70 . Only bedroom, HUD approved.
$9995 includes delivery, Ca ll No Pets . Phone (740)741 Harold, 740-385-9948.
2714.

l'a___
o W!;ANTil~~-D-_.11

· HOMFS

HOMES

REN'r

r·

No Problem Sale· Want a
new sectional home? No
Probl em. Need fou ndation
and septic? No Probl em.
Need utiliti es run or driveway? No Probiem . Want big
savings on a 2003 model.
No Problem . Cole's Mobile
Ho mes. U.S. 50 East.
Athens. Ohi o. 740-592-1972
Sincf!. 1967, Where You Get
Your Money's Worth

r

FARMS

IURSALE

r

Fa rm for sale 36 acres, near
APARTMENTS
Ashton Elementary School.
HJRRENT
(304 )895·322 I
304 895-333,
1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furnished and unlur·
LOTs &amp;
nlshed . secu rity depos1t
AC'RFAGE
required. no pets. 740·992·
22 t8 .
2 Semi Private Trailer lols for
rent. Located 2 miles fro m 2
bedroom
apt
in
Pt. Ple asant on Sandhill Rd . Centenary, appli ances furCall (304)675·6678
nlshed . utilities paid, except

''"

HouSEHOLD

Goons

Good condition . gold Maytag
washer and dryer 5150. Late
mode l wh ite whirlpool wash·
er $65. Hot point washer
$65. 740-446·9066 alter 6
p.m.

Good used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed
Washers,
electric,
claan-$350
a Dryers,
Ranges ,
and
4 Year Old Ranch Home and
month·call 740·256·1135.
AelriQerators . Some start at
acres
in
Leon
t 76
$95 Skaggs Appliances. 76
(304)458-1519
2 BR Quiet Location, Near
Vine 51. , (740)446·7398
Holzer CIA, WID Hookup,
Land for sale. 3 acres, great No Pets. $399. Plus Utilities
Mollohan Carpet, 202 ClarK
building site. At . 566, (740)446·2957.
Chapel Road, Porter. Ohio.
$35,000, 740-446·9966.
2 br. WID hook up ref. dep, (740)446- 7444 , ·877-830·
9162. Free Estimates. Eas~
Lot tor sale In Racine, no pets 304-675-5162
financing , 90 days same as
(740)992·5858
Apartment Available Now. cash . VIsa/ Maete r Ca rd .
HI \I \ I._,
AlverBend
Place,
New Drive· a· flnle save alai.
Haven, WV now acceptln~
MOVING
applications for HUD·subs•·
dlzed. 1 bed room apart· Must sell complete 1ormal
ment. Utilities Included Call dining room set 60x40 oval .
(304)882 ·312 1 Apartment table w/pad &amp; t2 inch leaf,
6 cushioned chairs
1·3 Bed FORECLOSED available lor qualified sen·
wlcained high backs, 2pc
ior/disabled
person.
EHO
homes. Buy from $.199 a
...China Cabinet. w/lots of
monthl 4% down, 30yrs al
BEAUTIFUL
APART· drawers also 2 cushioned
8.5% AP R. For Listing Catt
MENTS
AT
BUDGET winged back side chairs
1-600·719·3001 Ext. F144
PRICES AT JACKSON samon color. 4 matching
ESTATES, 52 Westwood throw pillows over $4,000.
2 Bedroom 11/2 bath with
Drl'ol'e from $297 to $383 . New will sell tor $975.
full basement, paved driveWalk to shop &amp; mo,ies. Call FIRM. (304)882·2072
way. $325.00/month plus 740·446·2568.
Equal
utilities, $250.00 deposit. HOusing Opportunity.
Refrigerator $75., Whirlpool
740·992-e51 1
Furnished 3 rooms and bath Washer $95 .. Kenmore
233 Second Ave, 2-story
upstairs apt, clean. no pets. dryer S125 .. G.E. refrigera·
house 2BR, 11/2Bath, fur·
like
new.
S195 ..
&amp;
deposit lor,
reference
nishad kitchen, WID hook·
Kenmore Washer /dryer set
required. 740-446·1519
up, off street parking, walk
$300. ,' 3·COUChS· $50. each,
anywhere downtown, 12
Furn •shed one bedroom table 4-chairs. $95 .. King·
months mi n. $545. month.
box -spring/mattress
apartment clean, no pets: size
ref/dep, no pets. 740·446Must be wilting to give refer - $·100 .. chest/dresser w/mir·
4926
Skaggs 740ences. Phone . (304)675· ror $140.
446-7398
1 eR. 1386
House For Rent
unlurn. AJC, washerldryer-

Remodeled 3 bedroom. 1
112 bath In good neighbor·
hood in Middleport. (740)
992-7743
or view at hooK-up, $350/mo. no pets.
~:6o::~-~:~~oes required .
INWW.orvb.com#81503

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

•

�..

..
'

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Help Wanted

..
'

Established local business
tokin9 resumes for cook In
Gollio, Mel9s, Mason oreo.
Full-time position, competitive
wo9es, &amp; benefits.
Send resume to:
Doily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729-30
Pomeroy, OH 45769

••

Tho mpsons Appliance

FOR A CONFIDENTIAL
INTERVIEW CONTACT

pi pes ~

re-conditioned
a~Jtomatic Winters, Rio Grande, OH
washers &amp; dryers, relrigera - Call740-245-5 121 .
tors, gas and electric
ranges, air co ndilioners, and
PE:rs
wringer washers _ Will do __
I&lt;UH SAU:
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.
CKC
Registered
Jack
Russell pupp1es. 2 males, 1
female. (74 01245·9301
Wh irlpool washer almond
color $95, dryer $95. Hot Male Boxer llouse broke ,
point
refrigera tor 575 . good witll kids. Very obediKenmore lrost free almond en!. (304)593-2374
refrigerator $150. Kenmore - - ' -_.:.- - ' - - - - . washer/dryer $275. w ooden Min. Pin. Puppies lor sale
table w/ 4 chairs $95. Couch Black and Ta n. 5 wee ks old .
$50 . Rocker recliner $20 Male $200. Fema les $250 .
Chest of drawers and dress- ---'----'-----Call (304)576·2002
er w/ mirror $140. FuU size
Old English Sheepdog
me.nress box sprin gs $65. Pup s. First shots and
Queen size $95.
wormed Lovable, beautiful
Skaggs Appliance 76 Vine shaggy dogs $200 _00 eacll
St 740.446·7398.
_ 5740 98 9823

i----·"-o
=-_.J.I
i
ANn:tv~

L

Registered Boxer for sale .
$100 .obo. (304)675·2888

FRUITS &amp;

Buy or sell. Riverin e
Antiques, 1124 East Main ~--·ViiiEGiiiE'J:iiii)\]JiiiiiiLfSiiloon SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
992-2526. Russ Moore , Suing p~yv paw fruit $1 .0D2.00 lb buying wa lnuts
$10.001001bs.
Caii74D-698·2124
1

'

1930's mallogany dining
room lable, $150.00. 1978
Story and Clark piano, ll'lll"_ _ _...._ _~
$1000.00
740 -949·2263
LIVF.SIUCK
after 4:00.

r
-------L.-------,.J
-

•
Firewood, seasoned oak
2000 Martz Goose-neck
$20. pickup load. You cut you
haul. Not responsible lor stock trailer. 3500 lb axle,
accidents. (30~)675 -6440
red, eKcellent condition.
$3, 600 · 740"245"5672·

Chuck or Jerry at
(740) 592-2497

Mo walk-ins please

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS
SUPERSTORE
93 Cotumbuo Ad., Alhono, OH 45701

E.O.E.

HAGKAINY
&amp;

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; RebiJIIt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- Orc hard Grass and Clover.
Round Bale Hay. Call 740 .
600-537-9526.
446· 7787
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drain s.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446--7300
Office Furniture
New, scratch &amp; Dent.
Save 70%. 1-800·527·4662
Argonaut 519 Bridge Street,
Guyalldotte/Huntlngton. MIF

IR\\'\I'ORI \Ill)\

FlO

Al-"TTi

·--FIIUiiRiiSIIALiiiiEO..-'
'
$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, etc!
Cars from $500. For listings
1·80()-719-3001 e)(t 3901
1979 MG Conv
(304)675-2454

r·O

1

the ·

Savings'
in
Today's
.ctassifieds! i
1

1993 Fairmont
Mobile Home
for sale
2 Bedroom , 2 full baths,
garden tub, 12 x 15
covered deck, C/A,
all appliances stay,
gas heat, must be
moved.
$12,500

740-696-1227

A~

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

"1.!1:"'------,

I 1.,--CilliAMPERSililoi.iiiO&amp;Iillo..J

"riilo==u"OME;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

i

r 1\1~~0\~

TRUCKS
tuRSAI£

1985 Cllev. C-10, Looks
good, runs good . (304)6754177
1987 4x4 Toyota Pickup ,
22R
Engiile, 5-speed.
$2,500 740-446-4759 alter
5:00 or leave a message.
1989 Dodge 314 ton , 360 IJ8, $1800, (740)985-9857

•

10 • 3

t

K 3

Vulnerable: East-Wes t

••

South

Wut

North

lA

Pass
Pass

2A
4A

I

3NT

Refreshment
stand open
Specie/ of the dey
CHILl

Hill's Self
Storage

•

750 East State Street

Phone (740)593-6671

.,

will make when four uf th e maj or
would fail , but that is a rnritv .
Normal service will be resumell in
one moment. Now, though, plea se excuse a brief interruption . On this deal,

'

takes three tricks In the suit, then
plays a fourth round. After ruffing

Linda's 'Beauty Sfioy {
Color &amp; Peril!$ 25"

--.

Ldles Style Cuts r , ..

'

\io.n-IAT DO YOU LIKE I DECIDE
BEST 'BOUT BEIN'
MY HOURS
YORE OwN llo_:~j.. WILL BE !!

TODAY, F'RINSTANCE--l'M
MAKIN' M'&lt;SELF FISH
-..__
OVERTIME !!

I
~

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

~~...z:::
Ir11'---./
~;;:: ~~~~~:::=! i ~~

1 minimum . However. North had fourcard support, so he corrected to the
major-suit game.
On top. you have four !'pades, three

f\P-.ND -c.'(€:.
COO~DI t-.l"'i lOt-\
I~ Tr\E: FIK~T

New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.
•
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417

Tf\1 ~G. TO C.O!

'

•"

"

"W.Vs #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Old s ':
&amp;
Van Dealer "
'

r:.~ ~·: : . ~].J ~,"
.'
,...

J ·

and

L.(lt,ST 'I'EI\R, P6 r
REMEMBER IN 1\LL MY

Box 189 Middle~rt

~:'.

(740) 843-5264

ii

*ROOFING
*HOME
UINRIIAIICE
dEAMlESS
GOnER
*frll EsUmahiS*

849-1405

1995 Ford E-350 Van, 14ft.
high cube bO)(, e)(cellent
cond. 740·446-9416

BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds star!

6:30
Last Thursday of

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

JUST LEAVE T~EM THERE ..
IT'S TilE ONLV WAV I CAt.!
FIND M'&lt; WAV BACK TO
--._,_

____

SERVICE
• Room AddiHona &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutt•r•
• VInyl Siding &amp; Palomlngj
• Patio and Porch O.ck1

Free Estimales

V. C. YOUNG Ill

11"5 HAll-ING ...

WINTER ST.OitAGE
Meigs Ci:Kanty

Fairgrounds
Arrival: 01'1. 11 &amp; Of t. 19

9:00am· 12:00 pm
Release: Apri l 2{), 200 .~
A fee nf $20.00 will tx·
~:hargc d for earl y an i,•td.
liCCC~S i~ Udln1 cd IO

fairi:Jn,und s ulhcr lfnm
slnh'&lt;l
__ dn1cs. Bui lding
~ pu~:c is li r~t l"OIIl~ fi rsl

serve.
Insi de Slnragc: $4 {)()/If

Open Span : .i2.(MJ/If
IMi de FenCl' : $ l .()(JII f~;"""'

1

AVERAG-E
MONPAY

'--f:)o...,/::'7"-oi

Athens

(1 0'111 0' 610'K20')

740)992-3194
992-6635
SELF
STORAGE
In Mason
1Ox1 0 - $35.00
1Ox20 ~ $55.00

740-992-3961

Ph 740·991·0933

•

tHE GRIZZWELLS
~1'\l.E~. '#:lULtl
~t;AY

ROBERT
BISSEll

l'M

\m£\..LEC1U tilLY
a\~~'E.I'
'?

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complele
Remodeling

140-992-1111
Stop &amp; Compare

PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20 ) - Give toJ:&gt;
priority to any secret amb ition you 've
been quietly nursing . Today will prove
that you 're on the right track. and any
steps you take at this time will bring you
closer to fulfillment.
ARIES {March 21-April 19) - One ol
your greatest talents Is your ability to pre·
sent things in such a pleasant manner
that even when compla ining, your cr itiques sound !Ike compllmenls. You 'll find
good use for this today .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- A matte r
that ha s been greatly mismanaged by
another cou ld be lashed onto your back
today . Fortunately, you 'll be more than up
IO the 1ask and able to sorl lbingo ou1
ralher Quickly.
GEMINI {May 21·June 20) -The main
reason you'll be able to so comp9!tenlly
handle 1 c:rltlcal Issue today Ia that you
won't discount any ol the views or differ-

SOUP TO NUTZ

IMPORTS

lai c n!Tiva l. l!nd y removal.

laic n: mmal, l lf anytime

r--:----....,------..;..,
L.OCU51'5 ARE J
JU''T' ANOTHER

EATING '!'HE LAWN... .

strengthen your financial position. sub stantlally. Don 't be too apathetic about
mi:lking the most of 11 .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 _09 , 211 _
Chances are you·n be able to ge t what

waste your time today going to hard-hearted people when seeking a favor. Those
with compassionate natures, as alway s,
will prove to be the most helpful to you.
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20·Feb. 191 - You·••
definitely the guy or gal who should be
leading the parade today. Wherever you
go. tllOse with whom you 're involved wi ll
sense this and Immediately turn to you
for leadership.

"----/~

Cell 740-591-1073

20 Hobby

39 - p o o l

41 .._the

r-n..--r.r-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created !rom quotations by famous
people, pa st end present. Each letter in tile cipher stands for another.

Y USB."

E YU

VCAEVVEJ

WDID
GAM I

O Rearrange

letters of the
l our sc:romb led words b~t­
low to form four simple wo rCs.

.

G0 T 0 S E

1

I

III I
.

.

·

J
·

I

·

•
'
•

.
1

.
1

.
1

;~;:: ~~~~~h~ra~~b~:~~ w:~~ed:,~::o~~~r- D U 0

you want today because your natural
charm and enchantment. which others
find so appealing, will be in strong evi dance- and irresistible .
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan . 19)- Don'l

~--

5FREE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

38 Shodo

"======~

~

885·3884 ' ~.

740-992-5232

18 Thunderotruck

Plooood

~~~=:±~=~=~ , chance
to do something nice lor them .
E V V...:;.
E..:.:.,--l
R .
today. 1!'11 do a great deal to enhance f.--.;;...:.,.,;.
2

UNDI'S PAINTING :

Licensed &amp; Bonded

olgh
52 Entor clato .

y0ur image .
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Atlt1ough

-·

Caleta ria

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

pllchor
31 Scheme
35 Epic
37 Commond
to a horse

I

Let me do 1t for youl

J&amp;L
. Eledric

serving
9 Repaot
11 Wormth
12 Drip-dry
fabric

The aspects indicate thai in the year
ahead you could find yourself a bit more
socially Involved tllan you've been previously. Th is camaraderie will produce the
types of mutual benefits thet gopd friendships yield.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23 ) -Be cognizant
of the fact that everyone remembe rs
acHons better than word s if you have a

ABO !..IT 1'. DI\Y TR.t P
TO t)O K CITY!

Rring this coupon
Buy $5.1HI
Bonanza Get

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

linger

50

50W TIE! T"'L-K

992· 621 5

High&amp; Dry
Self·Storage

40 Goologlcol
period

Flow"

29 Waohotlrld

Tuesday, Sept 30, 2003

WEI'.!'. 1\

All pack $5.00

~7(~

35 Ad word

36 Riddles
39 More
.unusual

t-"'-

47 "diinoco

'lbur 'lllrlhdio':

every month

Advertise
in this
spacefor$100
per month.

34 Dlreclor
Splke-

tempor81Y -

44 Big ftghto •
45 Trick
48 Bound

cream

NIGHT"AR£S, YOU
_tiADE ME

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services •

Pomeroy Eagles

31 Slammer
32 Boord alto
33 Kipling~

Plnheed"
42 Polr
of oxen
43 Uvy con-

claim.

~Astro­
~Graph

11

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

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL

5

ender
22 One,
In Bonn
23 Boaltroller
24 Could hear
- - drop
25 Ha~.
In comboo
26 Goou
formltlonl
27 Portly open
28 Strong wind

diamond!!, one club and that heart
Today's clue: G equals V
ruff. Because you have only three
~ trumps left in ~our hand, ruffing a
club in the dummy will not produce an "OAB
VEK
NAM
G U B N P
extra trick. And taking two club ruffs
risks the contract if trumps are 4-1.
OAB
NMDYJ
EO
sus ow
· Best is to take another ruff in y our
hand (although in some layouts you
OAB
PEVB
. EP
A B
J uJ
E 0
may hove to guess West's shapel .
Play a trump to dumm:v. lead a diamond to your king, and return tn dum- ONBKOW
A E P
NEPOBJ
my with a diamond. Ruff dummy's re·
maining low diamond high in hand,
WBEDP
M S
AU P
draw trumps using dummy's goodies, OAUDOW

Don' tteave the dehl of
" burial and nnal expenses

for your family and
'. r ~~~ ~~ ~
loved ones.
.'
Jh· L~t m~ show you how
affordable and easv it is to
·get the coverage y~u need.
\ ..

1 Kangaroo
h
2
purpla
3 so slant
4 Wraith
5 Pan
ol • ohlp
6 - Kippur
7 Proton's
place
6 Whlppod-

26 Choice
30 tmltelod

Let us return to the initial discussion . H yuu are not sure of an eightcard fit , think three no-trump . That is
what South was doing when he
jumped to three no-trump on the second round. It was possible tha t North
had raised with only three spades:
perhapti he had something like a 3-4·5·

i

Dean Hill

; · ~

DOWN

17 Reid
19 ln-belween
stale
21 Stir~ry pan
22 Dllughler
of Hyperion
23 Nonswim-

high in hand. how would you contin-

I.LI&gt;...

'

16 "-Baby
Baby"

ue?

~

Walkin1 or Appt~intment1 "'tlcomr unyti,.t.
985-JJ48 Thank! for yo11r l11uin eu
Susa lt Bau•u

740-949-2217

Pen ftuld
Melody
Fotuouo
Gaze at
Rx glverw
"Yol"
Sunriae
lo sunael

you {South&gt; are in four spades. West

SNUFFY?

Longer Hair Slightly Higher
NOW
Tamung Availa~le

45771

51
53
54
55
56
57
58

leads from his doubleton heart. East

Kids &amp; Men SOO

Racine. Ohio

49 Gray-brown

Sometimes, of cour se, three no-trump

~~::::::::~====:;.
Our Fall Specials:

42 Dry Off
45 Expand
48 Role lor
Madonna

1 Hotsprlng
4 Watch
secretly
7 Era
10 "Rope+
dopa" boxer
I 1 Cook'o
ani"'
13 What RNo
dl1pense
14 Cow's
mouthful
15 Wide

It i5 drummed into beginn ers that if
they fin.d an eight-card fi t in a major,
that suit should be tnmlps. And most
of the tim e. it will be the right move.

Athens, Ohio

J#lcomes Betty Hoscllar

Answer to Prl¥f0ut Puzzle

41 Tum
sharPlY

By Phillip Alder

•

29670 Bashan Road

Advertise
in this
space
. for
$50 per month

Pass

Pass
All pass

The eight-card-fit
advice still works

FLEA MARKET
Oct. 3·4
Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Between Racine &amp;
Syracuse
Large Spaces $7.50
949-2734

East

Opening lead: • 9

BUILDERS IRC.

:======~~

t

ACROSS

mer, maybe

A J 9 5

Dealer: North

Ml!r§ Into. Qllll

•

... Q • • 3 2

olo

New Homes • Vin yl .

740·9~2-7599

1a 9 4

.. A Q 54

Beginner class lll
6:00 Ia 7:00 9/15/03
Eastern Hlgh

- -r -

•

South

BISSELL
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

7

¥ AKJ 8

,. K 10 7

SHOTOKAN KARATE

I

•

I

r====

97 Chrysler Concord. Air, tilt,
cruise, automatic. Runs
good 120,000 miles. $1,200
or best offer. 740-256-1875
o'r 740·256-1233

Ea"t

.. 8 6 3 2
• 9 6
• J 8 7 2

••'
•
'

.

Windows • Roofing

r lloA~~muRS I

2002 Impala-perfect condi·
lion 19,500 miles. One
owner. Burgundy, priced to
sell fast·$12,500 call 740·
446·0299 evenings.

West

'- .'•

• Replace ment

----.
--,e:-~---.,........,
1995 FORD E350 CUBE F!!r..,
~r
BOX
TRUCK.
CAL.L
MOIORCYCUS
Maroa HuMES
(740)446-9416 . M-F 9·5.
Located
1391
Safford
02, Honda Rancher ES, 4)(4. RV for sale 24ft, good tires.
School. Gallipolis .
Excellen t
Condition. new brakes, 33, 000 original
1996 Ford Mustang $3,500; - - - - - - - miles, sleeps 6. EJ~:ce ll ent
{304)773·5284
1999 Dodge Intrepid $4.200;
1997 Plymoutll Breeze 1998 0 odge Dakota Sport.
condition inside &amp; out, see·
V-6 A/C automatic tilt 2003 Honda XR100A3 Dirt at Lot 20, Krodel Pa rk .
$2,500; 1998 Dodge Neon
Bike , excellent condit ion. $5 ,500. (304)675·2327 or
$1,900; 2001 Monte Carlo AMIFM cassette, aluminum $ 1,600 call 740 -441 -9665
$10,500 : 1998 Chevy Malibu wheels. 58K·$5.400 call
{304 )859·948·3555
$
740-379-2748
2,800;
1998
Chevy
..., , II\ H I ...,
Cavalier$2,500: 1998 Buick. - - - - - - - Skylark. $2,800; 2000 Neon 2000 Ford Ranger ext. cab
$2,950; 1997 Buick. Skylark. loaded
50,000
miles.
1985 Bay lmer 19ft pen
IMPRoVEMENTS
$1,600; 1994 Pontiac Grand E)(cellent condition . Asking
Am $1,500; 1989 Escort $12,900, caii74D-446-313B bow V-8 engtne. New OMC ~~--iiiliiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiorl
Cobra out drive. Good
s.w. $975; 1997 Dodge _•«"!:el"r-6:-oo_p~m~.-~--, Condition. (304)675-3354
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Intrepid $1 ,700
VAJNS &amp;
B&amp;O Auto Sale
1993 Marada 2100 Explorer Unconditional lifetime guarHwy 160N.
4-\VIls
21ft. all fiberglass pontoon antee. Local references fur74()-446-6865
style boat. 115hp. Evin nished. Established 1975.
t 990 Chevy Conversion Rude. All seats replaced. Call
24 Hrs. {740) 4461997 Plymouth Breeze Van. Low miles, fully loaded. Has bathroom &amp; gas grill. 0670, Rogers Basement
$2,395. 1997 Sunfire Red TV/VCR. convertible bed, Tennessee duel axil trailer. Waterproofing
20 $3,195. 1990 Astro Van rear air. $3,500 740·379· $6.500. obo. {304)675·7833
$895. 19 otller vehicles. 261 5.
50 H.P Mercury boat motor,
COOKS MOTORS 740-446·
- - - - - - - - needs minor repairs. $400 C&amp;C
General
Home
_0_10:.:3~
. - - - - - - 1998 Dodge Dakota E)(. cab, 740-675-5131, alter 5 pm . MaintenancePainting , vinyl
1998 Toyota Corolla VE , 4x4 $5,900; 1998 Dodge
siding, carpentry, doors,
44,000 miles, 4-door, e)(cel· Durango $6,900; 3·1997
windows, baths, mobile
lent condition, power steer- Chevy S-1 o Blazers $4,200
1 home repair and more. For
ea.; 1999 Ford Conversion
tree estimate call Chat, 740·
ing,
power
brakes ,
amlfm.cass.
ale,
no Van raised roof, etc. $9,950; 1998 Fleetwood Camper 992-6323 .
mechanical or physical 1993 Cllevy S-10 Blazer 30ft. sleeps-6. E)(cetlent
defects. $6,000 call 740· $1,800; 1993 Ford Explorer Condition. Used very little.
441·9661 or 1·866· 780· $2,300
also has Tip Out. (304)675·
B&amp;D Aulo Salus
0087
1499
Hwy 180 N.
1999
Pontiac
Firebird
740-446-6865
67, 000 miles T·Top, very
clean. view pholos on line at - - - - - - -www.ORVB.com or call 740- 90 Ply. GR Voyager, runs
good, body good. Make an
-446·3620
- - - - - - - ofler. (304)675-1870
2001 Chevy Cavalier 40.000
miles, 2 door, spoiler, CD
player, 17 incll wlleels.
1996 Chrysler Concord,
120.000 miles, air, tilt.
cruise . $1 500 080
256-1875 or 256-1233

A Q 6 5

... 6

Siding • New Garages

L--•FOR~-SAI£:::0:i.._.,J. ~~--·ffiiiiiiRiiSIIALEiiii--"

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·Harvest
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TRUCKS

$2100. $5,500 or best oller. 740256 -8169.

1994 Pontiac Sunbird LE,
automatic·AC·AM/FM cassene. Fully toaded-alu·
minum wlleels. 81K·S2.450,
call 740·379·2748.

North
119-29-DJ
A K J 10 9
• Q 75 2

• ..,.._ _ _ _ _ _..,

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JET

PHILLIP
ALDER

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5 Dar Work Weak.

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Excellent Income, Paid
Vacations, Group Insurance and

Aepair-675-7388. For sale . windows. lintels , etc. Claude

•'

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Athens County's M1
Volume Used Car
Dealer Is looking tor a
S.a lf Motivated, Salas
Oriented Individual with
soma Salas Experience.

SUI'I'LJES
&amp; Block, brick . sewer

Help Wanted

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U UIIJ)ING

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Monday, Sept. 29, 2003.,

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Help Wanted

Monda~SepbHnber29,2003

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couples wilhoutchildren know just
how you should raise .. - -- - ?n

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you develop from step No. 3 below,

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couldn't give it away without getting a little on YOUR·
_..;S;,;E;:L::.,F.;,.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ing opinions of those who share the con·
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CANCER (June 21-July 22) Th is is an
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The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 29.

www.mydailysentinel.com

20~i

NFL Roundup

,

Manning throws for six touchdowns to top SaintSJ. .
.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) Peyton Manning visited his
hometown Sunday night and
humiliated his dad 's old
team.
Manning became the first
NFL quarterback in more
than a decade to throw six
IOULhdown passes, leading
the Indianapolis Colts past
the New Orleans Saints 5521.
The Colts are 4-0 for the
first time since 1996. The
Saints are 1-3.
Manning went 20-of-25 for
314 yards, with TD tosses
that covered 17, 14, 79, 12,
32 and 11 yards. Marvin
Harrison caught six passes
for 158 yards and three of the
TDs.
With his father, Archie,
watching in the stands,
Manning set a team record
and carne close to the NFL
record for most touchdown
passes in a game - seven,
shared by five players: Sid
Luckman, Adrian Burk,
George Blanda, Y.A. Tittle
and Joe Kapp.
Manning ts the first quarterback to throw six m a
~arne since Mark Rypien did
11
for the Washington
Redskins against the Atlanta
Falcons on Nov. 10. 1991.
Manning grew up attending
games in the Superdome and
cheering for the Saints.
Titans 30, Steelers 13
PITTSBURGH (AP)
Steve McNair threw three
touchdown passes following
Pittsburgh
mistakes · as
Tennessee got a third win
over its longtime rival in less
than a year.
The Steelers led I 0-0
before the Titans had a first

down, but three costly mistakes by quarterback Tommy
Maddox were turned into
Titans scores. Backup linebacker
Rocky
Boiman
returned a Maddox interception 60 yards for a touchdown
and sacked Maddox for a
safety
that
started
Tennessee's comeback.
McNair, who has eight
touchdown passes and only
one interception this season,
threw touchdown .Passe s of
I0 yards to Drew Bennett, I
to Erron McKinney and 29 to
Justin McCareins as the
Titans (3-1 ) beat the Steelers
(2-2) for the lOth time in 12
games, including their 34-31
qvertime playoffs victory in
January.
McNair, 15-of- 16 for 161
yards, is 10-3 against the
Steelers, throwing 19 touchdown passes and only four
interceptions.
Chiefs 17, Ravens 10
BALTIMORE (AP)
Dante Hall did it again for the
Chiefs, this time on a secondchance kickoff return.
After the Ravens (2-2) tied
it on a touchdown run by
Jamal Lewis, who fini shed
with 115 yards rushing,
Baltimore pinned the Chiefs
inside their 20 on the kickoff.
But the Ravens' Adalius
Thomas was called offside,
and Hall took the next kickoff
all the way, encountering few
would-be tacklers to keep the
Chiefs unbeaten at 4-0.
Hall returned a kickoff for a
touchdown last week and also
has a punt return for a TO this
season.
Vikings 35, 49ers 7
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Gus Frerotte threw for 267

yards and four touchdowns.
three to Randy Moss, as
Minnesota stayed unbeaten in
four games.
Moss had eight receptions
for 172 yards as Minnesota
scored on four of its five firsthalf poss.essions, intercepted
Jeff Garcia three times and
held Terrell Owens to five
catches for 52 yards. The
49ers are 1-3.
Frerotte was filling in for
Daunte Culpepper, who
broke three small bones in his
lower back last week against
Detroit.
Bengals 21, Browns 14
CLEVELAND (AP) The NFL's sorriest team for
the past decade gave rookie
coach Marvin Lewis his first
victory as Jon Kitna threw
three touchdown passes, two
to Chad Johnson.
Lewis might have sparked
the win himself. After the
Bengals ( 1-3) fell behind 14·
7 in the second quarter, Lewis
huddled his defense on the
sideline and the former
defensive coordinator deliv·
ered a heated motivational
speech .
Cincinnati responded by
shutting out the Browns (1-3)
the rest of.the way, and as the
clock expired, the Bengals
celebrated by dousing Lewis
with Gatorade.
Redskins 20, Patriots 17
LANDOVER, Md. (AP)Led by Champ Bailey,
Washington's defense intercepted Tom Brady thr~e times
as the Redskins almost
squandered a 20-3 lead but
hung on to bear the Patriots.
Leading 6-3 at halftime,
Bailey's fumble recovery
helped Washington open a

I

.

20-3 third-quarter lead. But
two touchdown passes by
Brady put the Patrtots within
three points with 2: 10 to play.
Qryan Barke(s punt gave
the Patriots the ball at
Washington 's 45 with 1:39 to
go, and they drove to the 38
before Brady 's fourth-and-3
pass was broken up by
lfeanyi Ohalete.
Eagles 23, Bills 13
ORCHARD PARK , N.Y.
( AP) - Brian Westbrook
capped a breakthrough for the
Philadelphia Eagles' offense
with a 62-yard run to seal the
Eagles' victory.
Philadelphia ( 1-2) had
scored just 10 points in its
opening two games and
almost squandered a 16-point
edge in the fourth quarter
against the Bills, who lost
their second straight after
opening the season 2-0.
The Bills managed just 129
net yards through three quarters before Drew Bledsoe hit
Bobby Shaw for a 3-yard
touchdown and ran I yard for
a TO to make it 16-13 with
2:49 remaining .
Rams 37, Cardinals 13
ST. LOUIS (AP) - As
Marshall Faulk nursed his
broken hand, his replacement, Lamar Gordon, ran for
81 yards on 21 carries and
scored the game's first touchdown m the Rams •· vtctory
over Arizona (1-3).
Marc Bulger threw two
touchdown passes and ran for
a third in his second start
since replacing Kurt Warner
for the Rams (2·2). That
included a 7-yarder to Torry
Holt that put the game away
at 30-13 early in the fourth.
Bulger was 28· for-41 for

272 yards.
Texans 24, Jaguars 20
HOUSTON (AP) - David
Carr sneaked in from less
than a yard out on the final
play of the game to give
Houston (2-2) the victory
after coach Dom Capers
eschewed a field goal that
would have sent the game
into overtime.
The score came after Byron
Leftwich, making his first
start at quarterback, fumbled
at the Jacksonville 41 with
2:41left to set up the winning
drive . Leftwich, making his
first career start, had an 84yard touchdown pass to Troy
Edwards for the Jaguars (0·
4).
Carolina 23, Atlanta 3
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- Stephen Davis ran for 153
yards and his first touchdown
of the season to help Carolina
snap its six-game losing
streak against Atlanta.
Jake Delhomme threw a 5y-ard touchdown pass to
Ricky Proehl and John Kasay
kicked field goals of 53, 23
and 38 yards as the Panthers
opened the season 3-0 for the
second consecutive year. But
Carolina went on an eightgame skid last season, not
likely to be repealed after the
confidence-building win over
Atlanta (1-3).
Cowboys 17, Jets 6
EAST
RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (AP) -Troy Hambrick
ran for 127 yards and a touchdown on 24 carries as Bill
Parcells' Cowboys racked up
202 yards on the ground to
beat the struggling Jets. It
was Parcells' second straight
win against a New York team
he used to coach,

The Jets are 0-4 for the firsl
time since 1996, when thF)l
ftni shed 1-15.
:
Two weeks .ago, Parcelll
and the CowbOys {lulled off ~
35-32 overtime vtctory o\!ef
the New York Giants, a tean;l
Parcells coached to twd
Super Bowl championships. :
He has one more stop Pit
hi s tour of games against ~i~
former teams: Dallas (2~'1
plays at New England !&gt;~
Nov. 16.
· •
Broncos 20, Lions 16
~
DENVER (AP) - Jake:
Plummer completed 1Q
straight passes in the first hal{
and threw for two touoh·:
downs as the Broncos held on
for coach Mike Shanahan'&amp;
1OOth career win.
• :.
Denver is 4-0 for the fiftlt
time in team history and fits!
sine~ winning 13 straight tq
start the 1998 season, wheq
the Broncos won their second
straight Super Bowl.
~
Detroit (1-3) has lost 13
straight road ~ames, with it~
last away vtctory coming
Dec . 17, 2000, against th~
New York Jets.
•
Raiders 34, Chargers 31
(OT)
.t
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) d
Rich Gannon and Jerry Ricq
combined to rally the Raidl!!l
(2-2) from 14 points down
the second half. Theii
Sebastian Janikowski made
46-yard field goal with 5:0!
left in overtime.
Gannon recovered from
another bad start with three
fine scoring drives. He fin:
ished 26-of-43 for 348 yards
and three touchdowns, while
Rice had seven receptions for
118 yards.
San Diego is now 0-4.

Bv

RusTY MtUER

COLUMBUS Ohio
State will wait until at the
least the spring to ask the
NCAA to reinstate suspended running back Maurice
Clarett.
" I think we want to see the
fall and winter quarters, to
see how things go," Ohio
State athletic director Andy
Geiger said Saturday.
·
Clarett started his fall
quarter on Thursday and
attended one class.
Ohio State's winter quarter
ends in late March, and the
Buckeyes begin spring

workouts in ~arly April.
Claret! was suspended this
season from the national
champion Buckeyes after
Ohio State said he violated
NCAA bylaws by receiving
improper benefits and lying
to investigators.
On Tuesday, Clarett sued
the NFL. seeking to throw
out a league rule and allow
him to be. drafted in 2004. He
would not otherwise be eligible until.2005, his third year
out of high school. That lawsuit does not affect his eligi·
bility at the college level.
Ohio State coach Jim
Tressel has held out hope
that Claret! might return to

-," l I '\I..., • \ .. 1 -. '\ 11
•

SPORTS
• Lewis plays down first
win. See Page 81

0BOUARIES
Page AS
• Laura Mae Hager
• Harold Jeffers
• D. Shawn Wolfe

INSIDE
• Community calendar.
SeePageA3
• Time Out for Tips. See
Page A3

.

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

WEATHER
'

Mootly -·HI: io, lAw: lower 40o

www.pvalley.org

Norris Northup Dodge

Dttlllll on P.,• A2

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

Ben gals
from Page 81
are 0-2 at home and 3-9 in
their last 12 in front of their
own fans. Cleveland committed a season-high 11 penalties.
"We have to win at home,"
said wide receiver Quincy
Morgan, who had a 71-yard
TD catch just 54 seconds into
the game. "We have great
fans. We better start winning
·· or they're going to stop com·
ing."
Couch, starting in place of
the injured Kelly Holcomb,

threw two TO passes and
went 23-of-36 for 280 yards.
He threw one bad pass - his
last one.
With the Browns driving for
a tying touchdown, Couch
underthrew Kevin Johnson
and was intercepted by Burris.
"I'd like to have that one
back," Couch said. "It was a
horrible mistake on my part."
Burris felt lucky io have
played.
Early Saturday morning, he
fell asleep behind the wheel
and crashed while driving
from his home in Indianapolis
back to Cincinnati.
"I'm OK." said Burris, who
left in the first half with a
strained neck unrelated to his

accident. "I wanted to get
back out there because of all
the support from the guys
making sure I'm all right."
The Bengals just may be all
right, too. Notes: Despite the
loss, the Browns lead the
"Battle of Ohio" 31-29. ...
British Open champion Ben
Curtis. who lives in nearby
Stow, served as one of the
Browns' honorary captains
and participated in the
pregame coin toss. "I've
always been a Cleveland
Browns fan, so it was pretty
cool," Curtis said. "When I
was down there, I felt like a
mid~et." ... Browns WR
Kevrn Johnson has caught a
pass in 68 straight games.

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

BUSINESS TRAINING

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The Daily Sentinel

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DIRECTORY
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BY

WestVqinia
Dally 3: 9-1-6
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C88h 25: 2·5-9·1 I ·18·21

INDEX
12 PAGES

calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Movies

A6

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

J.

MILES LAYTON

jlayton@ mydallysentinel.com

J. MILES LAYTON

POMEROY
After
months of waiting, Pomeroy
has received the $39,766
grant from the Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency to help defray costs
of damage resulting from the
February ice and snow storm.
The storm required the village to buy many more tons
of salt to keep the streets
clear. Since the power went
out at the Pomeroy Police
Department during the storm,
the village had to purchase
two new emergency power
generators for the police and
ftre departments, each costing
$3,000, to restore electricity.
Kathy Hysell, clerk-trea·
surer, said the village has
been waiting a long time for
the FEMA money because
the street department has
been operating day to day on
a very tight budget. Since the
storm, the village has been
unable to pay for many street
repairs to Lincoln Hill and
other areas still scarred with
potholes.
"11tis is good for the village," said Hysell. "We are
now better able to afford to start
working on all tho~ potholes
before the winter begins."
The money will also be used
to purchase salt before the winter storm season hits. Hysell
said the village will replace
several tons of salt stored in the
village garage which was
destroyed by the fire in June.
Hysell said the village is still
waiting on more than $5,CXXJ the
Ohio Emergency Management
Agency promised. Depending
on the paperwork, the village
could receive this money within
a month.

Boys from the Hocking Valley Residential Center in
Nelsonville help Keith Rader, director of the Meigs
Cooperative Parish. move into the new Mulberry Community
Center building. (J. Miles Layton)

POMEROY - A dream is
slowly becoming a reality at
the old Pomeroy Elementary
School on Mulberry Avenue.
The Meigs Cooperative
Parish purchased the property from the Meigs Local
School District three weeks
ago for $1. Since then.
P3jii.sh Director Keith Rader
anOJ his crew have begun
renovatin~ and restoring the
school butlding.
"This is a dream come
true," he said. "We have
been working at least five
years to find a place like this
for our ministry."
Rader said the project,

now known as the Mulberry
Community Center, will
cost more than $390 000
which will come fro~ a
variety of grants, a loan
from a local bank, and donations from local businesses
and individuals.
The Meills Cooperative
Parish recetved a $60,000
gram from the West Ohio
Conference of the United
Methodi st Church. Rader
said the grant will be used to
pay for asbestos removal.
Once it is finished, the
Community
Mulberry
Center will feature a daycare
center, space for a food
pantry, and the GOD's Net
youth program. Classrooms

PleaseseeLHe,AS

Methodist women quilt for the less fortuntlle
Bv CHARLENE HOEFUCH
hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - They describe
themselves as "rippers, stitchers
and 'knotty' ladies", -the nine
or so Methodist women who
spend Wednesday mornings
making quilts for families who
have fallen on hard times.
Gathering in an upstairs
room of the Meigs Cooperative
Parish building on Condor
Street, the volunteers pride
themselves on doing something· to help the victims ·(}f .
fires and floods as well as
those who are just having a
hard time making ends meet.
"We help keep them warm
when the weather gets cold,"
said Edith Sisson of the Forest
Run church. "And we have a
good time doing something
for others - it gives us a good
feeling," added Dolores Will
of the Enterprise Church.
Most of the women have
been with the quilting group

Please see Quilt. A5

Barbara Sargent, Edith Sisson, and Dolores Will tie a comforter, the last step toward mak·
mg somethmg warm for a needy family. (Charlene Hoeflich)
.

news@mydailysentinel .com

Pick 3 day: 7-4-6
Pick 4 day: 2-6-6-6
Pick 3 night: 8+3
Pick 4 night: 4-7-6-6
Buckeye 5: 3-4·2G-36·37

2 SI!CI10NS -

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School gains new life as community center

STAFF REPORT

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I '-. P 1\ . '-.I I' II \Ill) l{ •'Ill · ·•oo·1
•

Columbia Gas' rates Ducky Derby winners announced.
go down for winter

LoTrnluES

The Daily Sentinel

Point Pleasant Register

Pomeroy
•
rece1ves
FEMA money

Dillon could miss
Buffalo game, Bt

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

a

the team to practice this fall . er. He didn't want to run the cameras. He gave up in dis- vide security for Clarett to
Geiger said that was no gauntlet between I don't gust," Geiger said.
get to class in the future,
The university will pro· Geiger 'said.
longer an option.
know how many television
"He will not (return) this
season," Geiger said. "We're
not ruling out spring quarter,
but fall season he will not be
a part. We'll see how fall and
wrnter go."
Clarett's attorney, Alan C.
Milstein, declined to com·
ment.
AGRICULTURE
MEDICAL
Clarett, who rushed for
I ,237 yards and scored 18
Jim's Farm Equipment
touchdowns as the Buckeyes
Holzer Medic~! Center
won the national champiwww.jimsfarmequipmentcom
www.holzer.org
onship in 2002, was able to
get to only one class
AUTOMOTIVE
Thursday, Geiger said.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
"He couldn' t get to anoth-

1t

•.,

--

BY

in

OSU won't ask for Clarett's reinstatement until springl
Associated Press

Browns blue after
loss to Bengals, Bt

..

B1· 2
A2

(Q 8003 Ohio Volley PubU.hl"'l Co.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Contrary to expectations ,
Columbta Gas of Ohio is low~ring the price it charges for
Its natural gas as winter
approaches.
Experts had been predicting
that natural-gas shortages
would cause prices to sky·
rocket this winter.
But Columbia said on
Monday that when it changes
rates f~r t~e three-month peri od begmnmg tn November, it
will charge 69 cents per 100
cubic feet, down 3 cents from
the current price.
· The average residential
monthly bill from November
through January will be $122.
That will be about $5 more
per month than during the
same period a year ago.
Columbia serves about 1.3
million customers in 64 of
Ohio's 88 counties.
The company said it was
able tO keep rates down
because cool summer weather
and a soft economy combined
to keep use down, which
boosted supplies and lowered

wholesale prices.
"Lately there's been a little
more stability in the marketplace,"
Columbia
Gas
spokesman Doug Flowers
said. "We've seen prices that
have gone down a bit, and
that's reflected in the prices
we have paid our suppliers."
The change won't immediately affect Columbia's budget-plan customers who
spread their gas costs over 12
months. Budget amounts are
typically adjusted in February
or March.
It also won' t affect people
enrolled in Columbia's gaschoice . progmm unless their
supplier's rate is tied to
Columbia's.
Columbia is allowed to
adjust its gas charge every
three months to reflect what it
pays its suppliers. The next
adjustment will be in
February, during the peak of
the winter-heating season.
The rates could go up again
if the weather gets very cold
over the next three months.

POMEROY - Lucky
Duck #431 did not win the
Sternwheel
Riverfest's
Rubber Ducky Derby, so
Bryan Young of Pomeroy,
who adopted him. did not
win a new car or truck.
Instead,
the
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association,
which sponsors the annual
derby, awarded Young a
$250 consolation prize.
Young also won two additional prizes in the derby.
A vehicle valued at
$25.000 from Don Tate
Motors was to have been
presented to the winner of
the pre-selected duck had it
crossed the finish line first.
The association Monday
&lt;innounced the winners of
many prizes given away in
the derby. Winners, in the
order of duch crossing the
finish line, were : Robert
Hall , Pomeroy, $500 U.S.
savings
bond;
Linda

Rathburn, Pomeroy, $200
savings bond; Brandon
Moodi spaugh, $100 sav·
ings bond. Robert Spencer,
$75 savings bond: Steve
Sellers, Pomeroy, $25 gift
certificate from Detwiller
Lumber; Sis Spencer, $20
gift
ce rtificate
from
Chapman Shoes; Bryan
Young, $20 gift certificate
from Hartwell House; John
Dennis. Pomeroy. Meigs
County
crock,
from
Anderson ·s
Furniture:
Margaret Spencer. $25 gift
certificate from Young's
Carpenter
Service;
I.
Carson Crow, candle from
Pomeroy Flower Shop;
Emma Powell, umbrella,
from Insurance Plus .
Melody
Gloeckner.
Pomeroy, clock from K&amp;C
Jewelers: Larry Mitch,
Middleport, eyeglasses case
from A. Jackson Bailes,
O.D.: Frona Riflle , Long
Bo11om, $10 gift certicate
from
Craw's
Family
Restaurant; George Bet z.

Long Bottom, $10 gift cet'tificate from Kroger; Bob
Murphy of Racine, gift certificates from Pizza Hut and
Subway; Rita Morrison, gift
certificates from Pizza Hut
and Subway.
Peggy Yost, Rutland,
movie rentals from Mitch's
Video and gift certificate
from Pizza Hut; Charles
Fleming, movie rentals
from Mitch's Video and gift
certificate from Pizza Hut;
Larry Lieving, Letart,
W.Va., gift certificates from
Pizza Hut and McClures;
Meigs County Auditor's
Office. jacket from Pioneer
Gun
Shop!
Darrin
Cremeans, Pomeroy, handmade throw pillow, donated
by Fabric Shop; Frona
Riffle ,
pendant
from
Clark's Jewelry ; Alexa
Layne, gift certificate from
Weavi ng Stitches; Violet
Lee. Pomeroy, gift certifi:.
care from McClure's.

Together we can change your body.
And your life.

Call to have your
business Included!

992-2156
ToLL FREE (866) 821-4541 .
~

·--·-

--·--·~-

www.ccwL.INFO

�</text>
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