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Page D8 • &amp;unbap l:t~ -&amp;tnttntl

Sunday, October

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

26, 2003

Howie's Eagles
win district, 6

Romanesque: a solid and robust design
80 ft. Recommended lot attractive to homeowners.
size: 75·90 ft. wide, 100-120 The broad, arched entry is
When H.H. Richardson ft. deep 4 bedrooms Baths: evocative of massive, imposs ingle-handedly Jed a revival 3-112 total Laundry: first ing Romanesque homes.
of Romanesque designs in floor Exterior material(s): This design is for homeownthe 1870s, his buildings were stone and cement composi· ers who want space devoted
largely public or institution- tion siding Foundation: full to
formal
entertaining.
al. But his . influence was Reverse
and
mirror-i
mage ·
basement Windows: stanand is - felt at the residen- dard casement 2 in. x 6 in. plans will fit this design to
tial level. too.
Douglas
stud e .~terior walls 2 in. x 4 most lots." Plan APWB- I 28 reflects in. stud interior walls Roof Wells.
Wells
Kastner
Richardson's emphasis 'on material: slate-style shin· Schipper
the solid and fom1al. Here , gles of recycled rubber
exterior stone, cement siding Attic: yes Gas-forced air CONSTRUCTION
and gabled roof complement heating and cooling
a two-story cylindrical form.
GLOS~RY
The interior features a con- ESTIMATED COST
temporary lloor plan (the
Gable.
joint kitchen and family OF CONSTRUCTION
The vertical. triangular end
rooms) and large living and (excludes lot)
of a building's roof. The
dining rooms for entertaingable extends from the coring. The master suite and
nice or eaves to a roof ridge.
Northeast $350,360
upper bedrooms are modern
Southeast
twists to this popular design $405,680
For a study plan of this
$354,048
$309,792
theme.
house,
send $5 to House of
Midwest
$328,232
Northwest the Week, Box I562, New
$376,176
DESIGN DETAILS
$346,672 York, NY 10116- 1562, call
$313,480
(877)-228-2954, or order at
Southwest $354,048
APHouseoftheweek.com. Be
Architectural
style: $387,240
sure to include the plan num·
Romanesque Total: 3,688
ber. For downloadable study
sq. ft. First n·oor: I,868 sq. DESIGNER
plans and construction blue- Imposing formality is the rule of the day in Romanesque homes. Everything about this plan is
ft. Second noor: 1,820 sq.
prints of House -of the Week robust and solid. The floor plan is a mixture of open family areas and private spaces for format
ft. Garage: 2 or 3 car COMMENTS
"The romantic image of before April 2003, see entertaining. (AP Photo/AP House of the Week)
(option) attached Overall
styling is houseo(theweek.com.
width: 54 ft. Overall depth: Romanesque

•
·~·

Buffalo uPsets
Ohio,
6
•

BY BRUCE A. NATHAN
AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Vinyl fenci~g sales at $600 million
recently 1990. And those
· FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
numbers will only rise, rise,
Most homeowners don ' t rise as homeowners get a
hide their feelings when it taste of free weekends away
comes to maintaining a wood from fence upkeep.
fence.
"We don't see any slowHomeowners despise the down in vinyl fen ce sales in the
annual ordeal that forces next five to seven years," says
them to repaint, replace or John Harsch of Kroy, a vinyl
shore up cracked or rotted fence manufacturer and a suptimbers.
plier to The Home Service
But now, fence fans can Store, "We'll grow at least 25
kiss dreaded maintenance percent a year as we have for
goodbye. New vinyl fences the last seven or eight years."
are seeing to that.
Harsch says non-wood
The vinyl fence indu stry fencing is gaining rapidly on
accounts for $600 million in market leader, wood, because
annual residential fence once a vinyl fence is in place,
sales, up from $I 0 million as there is virtually no mainte-

BY DAVID BRADLEY

nance aside from an annual
hosing off of dirt and grime.
Homeowners should pay
particular attention to the
amount of protective compounds and longer warranty
that come with better grades
of vinyl. Quality vi nyls have
higher concentrations of
impact modifiers and Ultra
Violet (UV) inhibitors.
Impact modifiers provide
strength, while UV inhibitors
protect against brittleness.
Top-grade fencing will have
a lifetime warranty and
adhere to American Society
of Testing and Materials
(ASTM) guidelines. The war-

ranty for lower grade vinyls
may be limited to a few
years, if that.
The average installed fence in
North America is 200 feet in total
length. Consumers should expect
to pay $25 ·to $55 per running
foot for a vinyl fence, ir\cluding
installation. Variables include the
height of the fence and the number of gates. Vmyl comes in traditional white as well as tan, gray
and khaki. Newer vinyls even
mimic a wood grain.
Because vinyl fence has
some unique installation
requirements, Harsch recommends homeowners hire professionals. "A professional

Senior Center visit nets 88 units of blood for Red Cross

SPORTS

STAFF REPORT

• Eastern tops Southern
to close out season. Sl9e
Page&amp;

and growing

knows the soil condition s. the
slope of the lot, and knows
how to hahdle gates, post
holes and obstacles," says
Harsch. "They know how to
overcome the little things,
like what to do when you hit
a tree root or a rock ." The
installer should be certified
by the American Fence
Association. The Association
Web site is www.americanfenceassociation.com.
The biggest seller in non-wood
fencing? A 6-foot privacy fence.
"Really, the smaUer the yani, the
bigger the need for fencing,"
says Harsch. "It defines your
area and gives you the privacy

you want. Tlmt's what a fence is
for. But there's no need to maintain it year in and year out. That
hassle has been taken care of."
E"mail your questions on
home management or homeowner-contractor relations to
david. bradley(at)aphouseoftheweek.com.
The Home Service Store is
a home improvement management organization that
provides property owners
with a full range of home
improvement services and
project guidance. For more
information call 1-(866)
HSS-6060
or
visit .
www.TrustHSS.com.

Developer
eyes school
for apartment
development
BY BRIAN

OBITUARIES
Page 5
• Kathleen Dean

WEATHER

Details on Pace 2

Clorox

Shank Portion
Smoked Hams

Bleach

89¢

· 99~.

8

$2. 99 ~~9
Oscar ·Mayer
Bologna, Salami
or Hot Dogs

$1.

99·16oz.

Carnation
Evaporated

MILK

Cheese

¢

99¢24oz.

99¢

Joan of Arc
Ki~_ney

or Chill Beans

21

99¢

15oz.can

Totino's
Party

Ballard
Pork

Pizza

Sausage

99

21

96oz.

Broughtons
Cottage
Navel Oranges

Veg-AII Mixed
Vegetables

Deli Fresh
Broaster Fried
Chicken

$4. 99ap.c

¢

16~z. roll

LO'I'IERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 9·3· 7
Pick 4 day: 9· 7·8·9
Pick 3 night: 1·9·3
Pick 4 night: 7 -4-4·1
Buckeye 5: 4-14-17-24·31
SuperloHo: B-9·22·26·27-44
Bonus Ball: 41
Kicker: 1-3-2·8·6·6
No Buckeye 5 game ticket had
the right combination lor the
drawing Saturday, so no one can
claim the Ohio Lottery game's
top prize of $100,000.

INDEX
1 SECJ'ION -

tO PAGES

Calendars

3

Classifieds

7-8

Comi~

9

Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies

3

4

5

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

5
6,10

J. REm

BY J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@mydaitysentlnel .com

MIDDLEPORT _ The realty
company building a senior living center in Rutland will exam·
ine the possibility of developing
an apartment community on the
site of the Middleport High
School building.
Joe Woltla, a developer
with Legends Realty Co.,
based in Beech Grove, Ind.,
met with Middleport Village
Council at a special meeting
Thursday to discuss the
building's potential as an
apartment building.
The building, which most
recently housed the Meigs
Middle School, is now proper·
ty of the Village of Middleport.
but a citizens committee which
has been raising funds for the
development of building is
officially charged with developing plans for~Wolfla said he has, wi(h
cooperation from _the village
and citizens committee, performed a preliminary inspec·
tion of the high school building. as well as the Central
Building located just behind
it. The soundness of the structure, the good condition of the
buildings' interiors, and, particularly, the relatively new
heating systems in each. make
them both good candidates for
rehabilitation and conversion
into apartment housing.
While the Rutland senior living center now planned would
be restricted to those over 55
who meet income guidelines,
any apartment complex the
firm would develop on the
middle school site would not be
tied to any HUD funding, and
would be operated by his firm
as a for-proftt enterprise, and
open to ail ages and income
categories, Wolna said.
Wolfla said the football
stadium and grounds are also
valuable assets, and could aid
in the development of a
"whole community" on the
South Third Avenue property.
"The biggest problem with
this building is the plumbing,
but the electrical work can be
easily upgraded," Wolfla said.

POMEROY Kentuckv
Fried Chicken guru Co lonel
Sanders is probably looking
down from heaven with pride at
one of the owners of Crow's
Family Restaurant . which has
been a fixture in Pomeroy for
decades.
Vera
Crow.
78.
panowner/manager works I0 hours
a day. seven days a week for the
past 46 years, to make sure that
her customers get the best service, good food and even better
Kentucky Fried Chicken.
"I do it because I like the public." she said. '' I like seeing people and meeting people. You see
new people coming in all the
time and that is interesting to
me ."
Crow said her hu sband
Thomas tasted some of Colonel
Sanders' chicken in Kentucky
and loved it enough to bring it
Vera Crow, part-owner;manager of Craw's Family House. serves coffee at the restaurant that has become an institution in Meigs County. (J. Miles Layton)

Local sportsmen's groups plan youth hunt
ad~lt to aocompany them.

BY JtM FREEMAN .
news@mydatlysentlnel.com
POMEROY - For many
rural youngsters, getting their
first deer is an important rite
of passage, and this year two
local sportsmen's groups are
trying to assist youth in
reaching that milestone.
Tlie Ohio River Valley
Chapter of the National Wild
Turkey Federation, in coop·
eration with the Pomeroy
Gun Club, is organizing a
youth deer hunt this fall coinciding with the statewide
Special Youth · Deer Gun
Season being offered by the
Ohio Division of Wildlife on
Nov. 22 and 23.
This is the first year for the
Special Youth Deer Gun
Season. Hunters must be 17 or
youn~er, have the necessary
perrmts, and be accompanied
by a non-hunting adult. The
limit is one deer of either sex.
Ohi~&gt;'s regular Deer Gun
Season stans Dec. I.
The local youth hunt is being
organi1.ed to assist those young
hunters who do not have an

2

PI•••• 18 School, 5

© :.:oo3 Ohio Valley Publi•hilll Co.

Dove White and · Robert
White. Coolville: Lillian
Scarbrough. Sh&lt;tde: Stephanie
Stanley, Robert Updegmde, Jr.,
Randall Jackson, and Ronnie
Roush. all of West Virginia.
RSVP volunteers assisting the
Bloodmobile were June Ashley,
Riw Buckley. Jerry Crawford,
Ted HatJield. Peggy Harris, Ken
Harris, Gerri Pullen. Betty
Spencer. Jane Walton. Joan
Corder. and Helen Bodimer.
Alpha Iota Masters Sorority
worked in the Canteen area.
The next scheduled visit ·will
be I to 6 p.m. on Dec . 17 at
the -enior center.

Steak-House has much to Crow about

breed@mydaitysentinet.com

Cloudy, HI: 501, Low: 30.

Superior

Windon, Janie
Woods, Nelson , William Cook, Donna
Robert Ramsburg, Marsha Davidson. and Amanda
Barnhart. Paul Marr. Cyndi Molden. all of Middlepon.
King, and David King. all of
John Rice, Deryl Well~'
Pomeroy.
Jennifer McBride. Virgil
Charles Mugrage , James Windon. Carolyn Barta n, and
Cunningham.
Linda Terry Cullums. Reedsville:
Cunningham, David Zirkle. Brent Larkins. Howard
Bonnie Myers, Arthur Roush, Larkins. Phyllis Mueller. and
Paula Brown, Deborah Sayre, Ray Mueller, Portland: Urban
Harry G. Brown, and Ivan ·Graf. Merrille Brvant, Sharon
Powell. all of Racine.
Lawrence. Carleton Thomas.
Donna Hawley. Joseph Jennifer Harris. Trennia
Wilcox, Tim Smith. Daniel Harris, and Amanda Morris.
Thomas, Michelle Si"on, all of Long Bottom.
Norma Wilcox. Patricia
Allen Graham, Kathy
Hayman. Madeline Neece. Cummmgs. Chery l Thomas.
George Harris. Jr.. Tamara and John Thomas. Syracuse:

Donors by _community
were: Brenda Jinks, . Roger
Gaul, Jackie Hildebf\!nd,
Mary Spencer, Billy SpenCer, ·
Brian Howard, Robert Smith,
Geoffrey Wilson. Marcia
Houdashelt , Loraine Venoy,
James Will, Dale Colburn.
Harley Johnson, Kathryn
Johnson. Thomas Hart, Ellis
Myers, Dennis Gilmore ,
Anna Shrimplin, Debra
Mora, Marvin Taylor, Arthur
Roush, Amanda Morris,
Kenneth Longstreth, Paula
Brown, Barbara Smith.
William Cook. Gloria Kloes.
Eunice Jones, Wendolyn

POMEROY -The Red
Cross Bloodmobile collected
88 units of blood during its visit
last week to the Meigs County
Senior Center in Pomeroy.
Loraine Venoy and 1van
Powell received two gallon
pins; Karolyn Welsh received a
seven gallon pin; Geoffrey
WJ.Ison received a 10 gallon pin;
George Harris, Jr. an I I gallon
pin; Vtrgil Wmdon, a 14 gallon
pin; and Donna Davidson, a
seventeen gallon pin.
James Cunningham, Brian
Howard, Janie Woods and John
Thomas were ftrst-time donors.

outer garment while hunting. in their shotguns at the target
The local NWTF chapter
II the parents cannot range. Hunts will occur that
consists of men and women afford the proper licenses. afternoon. and the followwho are dedicated to the or if the child does not have ing morning and afternoon. ·
sport of hunting and wish to a blaze orange ve st. they can
"Parents or guardians
pass this dedication along to con tact Buckley to make need to realize that the ulti'·
the youth of Ohio," said · arrangements.
mate goal of the hunt is for
To help meet the Ohio•their chi ld to actually kill a
event organi1.e r Bill Buckley.
"All guides for the youth par- Hunter Education Course deer. They need to make
ticipants will have years of requirements. you ths can sure that their children realexperience deer hunting and attend one of two hunter ize what is being asked of
who wish to make the deer education classes scheduled them." Buckley said. "Our
hunt an experience for the prior to the youth hunt.
guides will also be aware of
youth that they will remem·
The first class will be held the fact that a child can
ber the rest of their lives ."
from 6 to 9 p.m.. Nov. 11 to chan~e his or her mind at
. F&lt;?r a youth hunt appl_ica- I 3, and 9 a.m. to noon on Nov. any lime an? the_y wil!. abtde
tton torm,parentsorguard1ans 15 at Eastern High School. by.. the cht ld sWIShes.
can contact Buckley at 992- School. Topre-registert'orthat . Our hu~t IS constdered a
2996. The hunt will be a shot· . class. parents can contact
fatr chase. hunt, tht&gt; means
gun hunt, so the child will Gilbert Woods at985-3914.
that our gUJdes w1ll do thetr
need a shotgun and slugs in
The second class will be best to. put· your chtld where
order to panicipate.
held from 3:30 to 6:30p.m.. they will see deer and get.~n
The child should have shot Nov. 11. 14. at Meigs o~portunny to shoot one.
his or her gun and be com- Intermediate School. fo
We cannot guarantee that
fortable with it before decid- pre-register for that class, they Will see deer. let alone
ing to participate in the hunt, parents can contact Rusty ktll one .. There are many,
Buckley said. Children must Bookman. school principal. many thmgs that go mto a
s~c~essful d~er hunt and
have completed a hunter at 742-2666.
education course, and have a
·The youngsters will meet kilhng ~dee~." only one of
hunting license and deer per· at the gun club on the mom- th?.~ tht~f· ak
tJ
mit before participating in ing df Nov. 22 where they 1 ~wt , m eev~rye on
the hunt. They will also need will meet their guides and 0 m e ~our cht ld ' ..hunt a
· ket or have an opportumty
· to stght·
success tn every way.
a bl aze orange vest, JHC

Surgical weight loss with
a personal touch.
ToLL FREE (866) 821-4541 www.ccWL.INFo
"
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Page2

O.HIO
Perspective: DeRolph ended, but
further education lawsuits likely

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
Tuesday, Oct. 28
MICH

(

..

r-Toled-o - ~~~·--~---,/,~··-' ,,_0_~~}1 ' ~~ J
370 4

W. VA.

~
·,..r 8

.r=. fill;,

~

"'·'

, Sunny pt, Cloudy

Cloudy

snowers

w """"':' -.. . _,. M
.r)l. ' ~

~,. -~

T·storms

Ra•n

Flurries

••

••

' ' '

Snow

Ice

Mostly cloudy, showers
·

BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today ... Mostly cloudy with
a' chance of showers. Cool
with highs in the lower 50s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Tonight.. .A slight chance of
rain showers early... Otherwise
partly cloudy. Lows in the mid
30s. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of rain showers tium late
morning on. Highs in the lower
50s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Tuesday
night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of rain
showers. Lows near 40 .
Chance of rain.40 percent.

Wednesday... Pa11ly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Wednesday night.. .Part ly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 40s.
Thursday... Mostly clear and
warmer. Highs in the upper 60s.
Friday... Mostly clear. Lows
in the upper 40s. Highs in the
lower 70s.
Saturday ...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s. Hi ghs
in the mid 70s .
Sunday ... Partly cloudy. A
sli ght chance of showers during the night. Lows in the
lower 50s if\d hi ghs in the
lower 70s.

High number of multiple
births concern fertility doctors
. DAYTON (AP) - Fertility
doctors say the ri se in the
n:umber of triplets, quadruplets
and quintuplets born to couples who had trouble getting
pregnant is cause for concern.
: "There's been a tendency
fpr people to glamorize these
high-multiple births ," said Dr.
Mark Bidwell, a reproductive
who
direct s
specialis.t
Kettering Medical Center's
fertility program. "But in my
area of medicine, we consider
'this our No. l problem."
In the past six weeks, two
women delivered quintuplets
lu Miami Valley Hospital.
"This is just a case of lightning striking, which it's always
going to do somewhere, sometime," said Dr. Gary Horowitz,
a specialist in reproductive
hormones who directs Miami
Valley's fertility program.
"This happened to strike in
the same place from two ditl'erent directions. Even using the
injectable drugs, th~ chance of
a higher-order multiple is I percent or less. But somebody has
to win Powerball," he said after
the second set of quints were
born Tuesday.
The per-capita rate of
triplets and higher multiple
births rose fivefold from 1980
to 200 I. according to the
Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention - to 7,471.
including 586 sets of multi-

pies with four or more babies .
The CDC says sophisticated
fertility treatments. either in
vitro fertilization or the injection of hormone drugs to induce
ovulation, are linked to most of
the high-multiple births.
Experts say the best way to
stop this from happening is to
increase the use of IVF while
decreasing the number of hormone injections.
But cost is a problem.
Fertility treatments are rarely
covered by insurance, and
hormone injections are much
more affordable - around
$2,000 tops, compared to the
$9,000 it could cost to get
IVF trea(menl.
The increase in the number
of high-multiple births can also
be attributed to improvements
in fetal and neonatal medicine.
Many babies are leaving the
hospital that would not have
survived a generation ago.
But multiple births can still
be dangerous for both the
mothers and the babies,
Horowitz said.
Babies born in groups of three
or more are most often premature. They often re4t1ire lengthy
care after birth, then long-term
follow-up for physical and
developmental disorders.
That 's all costly, said the
CDC. which calls for greater
o~ersight of both IVF and
hormone injections.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy

COLUMBUS (AP)
Almost 12 years after the
beginning of a lawsuit over
school-funding in Ohio, no
court is consider1ng the case.
That won't last long,
according to education experts
and the group of schools that
brought the lawsui t.
"We're clearly not done
with school-funding cases in
Ohio," said Paul Sracic, a
Youngstown State Un iversity
political science professor.
"They'll keep litigating t~i s
and litigating this and li tigating thi s. It 's the kind of issue
that doesn't go away."
· In West Virginia, for example. a school-funding lawsuit
that Charleston lawyer Dan
Hedges first fil ed in 1975 is
stil l working its way through
the courts, despite earlier
court rulings that led lawmakers to hope the issue was
sett led.
New Jersey has seen a
series of school-funding
related lawsuits since 1973.
"No one should be surprised this issue is going to
continue on and could well
likely wi nd up back in the
courts. unless the politicians

in the state decide that they the state court system .
are going to make some very,
The coalition of about 500
very difticult and unpopular schools wanted the U.S.
decisions," said David Supreme Court to order the
Sciarra, director of the state Supreme Court to
Education Law Center in reopen the case so that Gov.
Newark, N.J.
Bob Taft and lawmakers
Sciarra emphasized that could be forced to comply
progress has been made over with the stale court's previthe years. In 1973, New ous rulings to fix the funding
Jersey 's
urban schools system.
received 40 to 50 percent less
The court ruled three times
money than their suburban in five years that the state's
counterparts, he said. Today, educational system was
increased state funding has unconstitutional becau se it
eliminated that gap.
created disparities between
Last Monday, the U.S. rich and poor districts.
Supreme Court declined to
After the state court's May
hear school districts' appeal of ruling , Taft, a Republican,
the 1991 DeRolph lawsuit, created a committee to make
named for Perry County school recommendations for changboy Nathan DeRolph, now a ing the state's school-funding
Columbus businessman.
system. A report is expected
The lawsuit was originally early next year.
As in New Jersey, court
filed in part because
DeRolph once sat on the rulings in Ohio have led to
floor to take an American significant state investments
history test because his high in education.
school lacked enough chairs.
Following
the
state
In May, the Ohio Supreme Supreme Court's first ruling,
Court ruled 5-2 to end the for example, . lawmakers erecase and ordered state offi- ated the Ohio School
cial s to . fix the system, but Facilities Commission to
then gave up jurisdiction and · rebuild and renovate Ohio
blocked any further action in schools. From 1998 through

tie the allegations for years,
even throu~h appeals of any
adverse ruhngs.
"These companies have
different litigation strategies.
Some of them are more confident than others," Lamb said.
The remaining claims in
the Mi ami case aren't scheduled to go to trial until next
summer. Lamb, a lead attorney for the doctors, said he
filed the first claims for them
in December 1999 and
January 2000.
Lamb said he hadn't seen the
settlement with the Humana
subsidiaries,
announced
Timrsday in Cincinnati, and
said he drdn't know how it
would affect his 'Case.
But he said the seitlements
in his case with Aetna and
Cigna will mean refunds for
thousands of doctors and will
give them greater authority
to appeal insurance company
decisions challenging their
medical reco mmendations
for patients. That will benefit
patients, Lamh said.
The settlement proposals
in Miami. Cincinnati and
northern Kentucky still await
final court approvals.
Humana concluded it was a
good business decision to settle the Cincinnati and northern
Kentucky lawsuits, increase
reimbursement rates to doc-

Department extensions are:

Advertising
Out1lde Salea: Dave Harris, E•t. 15
Clo11JCirc.: Judy Clark, Exl. 10

Circulation

Dlllrlot Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

• General Manager
Chorlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
!·1111111:

neweOmydallyaenllnel.eom
\

Wob:

www.mydallyaentlnel.com ·

'

Community remembers slain girl taken from block party :
CLEVELA ND (AP) Hundreds of mourners
crowded both inside and outside Mount Sinai Baptist
Church for an emotional
funeral service Saturday for
an 11 -year-old girl who was
ki lled aft er disappearing from
a neighborhood block party.
Sh~tkira Johnson di sappeared
Sept. 13, and her body was
fou'nd Oct. 15 after an anonymous tip led police to a field
just 1.5 miles'from her home.
Shakira's body was too

badly decomposed to determine the exact cau se of
death , Cuyahoga County
Coroner Elizabeth Balraj
said Tuesday. She ruled the
case a homicide .
DNA evidence confirmed
that the body found behind a
warehouse near abandoned
railroad tracks was Shakira's,
Balraj determined. Results of
tests to determine whether
the girl was sexually assaulted and the exact time oi
death will take weeks.

At the church service, Mayor
Jane Campbell described
Shakira as "Cleveland's precious little girl."
LaQuan Johnson, Shakira's
older brother, read from a
poem he wrote about her love
of cheerleading. "In my eyes
she will always be my cheerleading superstar," he said.
Burial was at Lakeview
Cemetery.
Police
investigating
Shakira 's death have seized
items from the home of a

every

and
the
Association .

Ohio

•

•

.•. • ..

-MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport Literary Club will
meet at 2 p.m. at the home of
Pat Holter. Betsy Parsons will
review "The Professor and
the Madman" by Simon
Winchester. ,
Thursday, Oct. 30 ,
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet 1:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Members
are asked to take pressed
flowers lor the craft session.

Frank honored at TOPS
COOLVILLE Mary
Frank received the best loser
certificate and fruit basket at
the recent weekly meeting of
TOPS #2013 of Coolville .
There were 17 members and
one visitor prese nt.
Doris
Buchanan
was
Recognized for meeting half

POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Meigs County
Court of Judge Steve Story
between Aug. 25 and Oct. 2
are as follows:
Eugene C. Mu sso, Athens.
speedin g, $30 and costs;
Larry 0. Napper, Rutland,
seatbelt-passenger, $20 and
costs; Madeline Neece,
Middleport, speeding, $30
and costs ; James D. Nichols,
Athens, . speeding, $30 and
costs; James B. Oliver,
Akron. speeding, $30 and
costs; Randy Oliver, Rutland,
seatbelt, $30 and cos ts;
Josephine V. Osborne. Long
Bottom, failure to control,
$20 and costs; Ju stin L.
Owens, Salem, Va. , speeding,
$50 and costs;
L.
Paine,
Frederick
Medina; seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Zachery C. Parker,

PROUD TO BE APART :
OF YOUR UFE. .

POMEROY - A foreclo sure action has been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Home
National Bank, Racine,
against Randy R. Mills,

DEAR ABBY: I am a 'ingle mother with two young
daughters w1d a 21 -ycar-old
son . "Billy." who dropped
out of high school during his
o,enior year. When it happened. I wa' very up,et. l
told him if he wanted to continu e to live at home. he
would have to get a full-lime
job and pay rent. Billy didn't
iike that idea. so he went to
live wi th his girlfri end and
her parelll,. who didn ' t seem
to care that he had no job.
About a year ago. Billy\
girlfriend broke up with him.
Since he had no place to go, I
told him he could stay with
me temporarily: He has been
sleeping 011 my couch ever
since. Billy has only a parttime job. He say' that \ all he
can find. I'm tired of ;u ppor1ing him and I lhink he
shoul d be out on hi' own by
now. but if I kick him out,
he 'l l have nowhere to go. Hi s
father is no help. Bil ly rarel y
sees him . I'm at my wit\
end. Please tel l me what I
FED-UP
shou ld do . •
MOM IN MASSACHUSETTS
DEAR MOM: Your so n
may have trouble findin g
full -time
employment
because he lach a hi gh
school diplnma. His first priority should be to &lt;.:o ntact his
high school and lind oul how
to get his OED . Then he must
start studyi ng again and pick
up where he left oil when he
dropped out.
I know it \ frustratin g. but
he rati ent a little longer. I
don 't know wha t Billy 's talents are. but if he isn't college material. he shou ld &lt;.:onsider going to a tmdc school
and learning a marketable

Portland , failure to control .
S20 anu costs; Michael T.
Reitmire. Pomeroy, seathelt,
S30 and costs; Jacob M.
Ridenhour, Chester. speeding. $30 and costs; Bridget A.
Ritchie. Racine , speed in g.
$30 and costs;
Robinson,
Robert , L.
Cincinnat i, speed ing, $3 0 and
costs:
Matthew
J.
Rosenbau m, Bend , Ore ..
speedi ng. $30 and cmts;
Crockett P. Rou sh. Chesh ire, ·
seatbe lt , VO and costs:
Delbert
L.
Roush,
Middleport. seatbel t. $30 and
cos ts; Donald E. Roush.
Point Pleasant, W.Va., speedin g, $30 and costs; Fa llon D.
Roush . Racine . tinted glass,
$20 and costs;
Gregory
S.
Rou sh,
Hart ford, W.Va .. speed in g.
$30 and costs ; Kimberly L.
Roush. Gallipoli s. seat bel t,
$30 and costs : Amanda J.
Runyon. Pomeroy, speedin g.
ATHENS
Aria n
$30 and costs: Chanda R.
Smedley of Portbnu was
Ru sse ll , Racine. speeding. . named to the dean' .s li st at
$30 and costs.
Ohio University for the
summer 4uarter. ha vin g
earned a grade point ave rage nf 3J or beuer on a 4.0
scale.

Marriage
licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate court
to William Edward Johnson,
25, Pomeroy, and Melissa
Lynn Yo ung, 20, Pomeroy;
Bobby Aaron Smith , 22 ,
Shade, and Michelle Dawn
Buc kley, 23. Long Bottom ;
Matthew William. Marcinko.
23, Long Bottom, and
Stephanie Lynn Barto sick.
22, Long Bottom; Jason

More women die
heart disease th of
any other cause.

New spaper

Postmaster: Send address correc·

tions 10 The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

Talk with your doctor about heart
,
disease. Learn more about heart health
under O'Bleness' Health Resources at
www.obleness.org, or call (740) 592-9300.

Mill Suli•crlptlon
lnelde Melge County
13Weeks .............'30.15
26 Weeka . , ...... , . .. .'60.00
52 Weeks ...... , ... , .'118.80

AO'BLENESS

W
•
'

MemorlJ Ho1piW

The deadliest disease
for women is also the
most preventable.
41~1t

On dean's list

Thomas Allen. 23. Pomeroy.
and Sarah Belinda Hill. 22.
Pomero y; Edson David Hart.
22, Pomeroy, and Lana Ann
Barrett , 20, Rutland: and
Dewayne Ri chard Fisher. 38.
Middleport. and Tabitha Ann
Iannone, 29. Middleport.

Dear
Abby

skill. The job market is diffi cult righl nnw. "' accept the
fact th:rl a ran -time job and
gelling his c4uivalency
diploma may he all Billy can
manage for a whi lc.
A~

long a' your

~on

is

willing to work toward 'u&lt;.:ce", you shou ld be willing to
compromise. However. if he
isn't wil li ng to go to trade
'chool or gel a OED. he
.should get a full-time job.
There are jobs al fa,t-food
plac-es. movie theaters.
supermarket,. etc.. that don't
require ski lls anti/or diplomas. At 21. yo ur son is too
old to he surported . Be prepared to be firm with him .
because if you aren't. he may
never learn to ll y on his ow n.
DEAR ABBY: I need
advice. I am a woman in my
mid-30s. married more than
I0 years. and the mother of
two chi ldren. My husband.
··Howard.'' is a good father
and has an important job
wi th a six-figure income. I
don 't have to work . I buy
whatever l wa nt and Hnwitrd
uoesn't minu .
My problem "· I don't
think I'm in love with
Howaru . He has an ext reme ly low sex drive. We haven't
bee n intimate in years. In
fact. out of frustrati&lt;Jn. l
moved out of the bedroom
last year. l have tried talk ing

to him about our problem to
no avail. He refuses to go to
counseling.
To complicate matters. ·
three year' ago I began an :
alTair with a married man.
Although he !ind his wife
have children, they are ·
divorcing. We want to be
together. but I don't know if I ·
can leave Howard. My lover ,
earns less than half of what :
Howard makes, plus he will '
have to pay child support. I
don ·1 know if I can manage
on his 'alary. Please under'tand . I don ' t work because I
don't want to put my kids in '
day care.
As I see it. I have three
choices:
( I) Continue the affai r and
hope nobody finds out.
(2) Leave Howard and
hope my lover and I can
make it on his small salary.
(3) End the affair.
If we end the affair, I think
one of us wou ld have to
move. We live in a small
town and travel in the same .
socia l circles . This whole ,
thing io, driving me crazy.
What should I do?- FRUSTRATED IN FLORIDA
DEAR FRUSTRATED: In
a nutshell. it comes down to
this: Which is more iinpor• .
tant to you - sex or money? ·
Both are powerful motiva- ·
tors. but onl y you can answer
that question .
Dear Abby is wrirren by
AhiKail Van Buren, also
knmm as Jean ne Phlll•p.1,
will 11-as founded by her
mother. Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abby
ar
\\'1\'II',DearAbby.com or PO . .
Box 69440. Los Angeles, CA .
900fJ9.

.

Divorce
POMEROY - A di vorce
action has been filed in
Meigs Cou nty Comm on
Pl eas ~o urt by Cheryl V.
Palaci os. Portl and. against
Jose Guada lupe Palacios,
Racine.

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today¥ 992-2155

OU graduates

AGRICULTURE

ATHENS
Tara
Johnson and Krist ina
Kennedy, both of Pomeroy.
Alisha Rojas of Tuppers
Pl ains, and Melissa Conkl e
of Cheshire were among
the 578 students at Ohio
University rece ivi ng diplomas at the end of the summer quarter.

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com
AUTOMOTIVE
Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.turnpikeflm.com

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your life.
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CHURCHES
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Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

www.LighthouseAssembly.info
ENTERTAINMENT
Charter Communications

www.charter.com

PROuD 'ro BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

MEDICAL

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,.

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Holze r Medical Center

www.holzer.org

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Pleasant Valley Hospital

All lt)'lu of carpet are lacluded:

FIRST

BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET,
TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG CARPET,LEVEL
LOOP CARPET aad SCULPTURED CARPET.

www.pvalley.org
NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

No utra cJuuoce lor movtqlundtare

www.mydailytribune.com

or l'tlllovtaa old carpet.

The Daily Sentinel

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Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com

Call 111 or stop ln.
We'U come to your home and measure
for a lree ao obllpdoa quote.

t

-., 1 ~n; OhioHealth

This women 's heart health Initiative Is provided by 0'8/enm Memorial Hospital
In collaboration with OhloHtalth.

Monday, October 27,2003 -

School news

· ' The Daily Sentinel'
Subacribe today~ 992-2155

www.mydailytsentinel.com

Page3·

Mom is desperate to get Son
·off her couch and on his own

Sandyville, W.Va .. seatbeltpassenger, $20 and costs;
Darrell K. Parsons. speedin g.
Middleport, $30 and costs.
seatbelt . $30 and c&lt;ists;
Elmer B. Parso ns, Racine,
$30 and costs; Laura E.
Payne, Pomeroy, seatbelt,
$30 and costs; Beverly R.
Pennell , Pomeroy, seatbelt.
$30 and costs; James B.
Pettie. Pomeroy. speed in g,
$32 and costs;
ShaneR. Pierce. Gallipolis,
speeding. $39 and costs; John
M. Powe ll, Middl eport.
speedi ng. $30 and costs;
Todd M. Price, Rutl and, scatbe lt, $30
and
costs;
Christopher
Proffitt ,
Portl and, seatbelt , $30 and
costs;
Monty
Proffitt ,
Portl and, speeding, $30 and
costs: Ali sa M. Queen.
Coolville, speeding, $30 and
costs; Carnl J. Rasmu sse n.
Charleston, S.C .. speed in g.
$30 and costs:
Ray mond
R.
Rauch.
Lowell , seatbelt. $30 and
costs: Anita N. Raymond,

Racine, and others. alleging
default on a mortgage agreement in the amoullls of
$54,435.43 and $16,472.87.

POMEROY - Actions for
dissolution of marriage have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pl eas Court by
Robert R. Eason, Pomeroy,
and Krista A. Eason,
Pomeroy, and by Cindy
Clemente. Middleport, and
Clemente,
Point
Mark
Pleasant, W.Va.

,.

The meeting wa' dmed
with a circle of hand s to
encourage others. The ne xt
meeting will be Oct. 28 at the
Torch Baptist Church. Those
interested may contact Pat
Snedde n.at 662-2633. Weigh
in begin s at 5:15 p.m.. with
the meeting set for 6:30p.m.

For the Record
Dissolutions

-.. ~

way to goal.
A TOPS Fal l Rall y will be
held Oct. 25 at Lancaster
High School, and the group
practiced a skit they will preform at the rally. There will
be no meeting un November
4 due to electi on being held
at the church.

Court news
Cases heard
in Meigs
County Court

~

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailytsen'tinel.com

Press

Relet Outoldo Molg• County
13 Weeks . . . .......'50.05
26 Weeka . . ........'100.10
52 Weeks . ... . ....... '200.20

Monday, Oct. 27
MIDDLEPORT OHKAN Coin Club will meet at 7
p.m. in the board room of the
lower level of the Pomeroy
Library.
Tuesday, Oct. 28
RACINE - RACO will
meet at 6:30p.m. at Star Mill
Park. There will be a potluck.

Foreclosure

afternoon ,

One month . , ... , , , , , , .'9.95
One year .. .. ...... ..'119.40
Dolly ..................50'
Senior Cltlren retll
One month ............'8.95
One yeor .. . ... , , . , ...'96.70
Subscribers should remit In
advance direct to The Dally
Sentinel. No subscription by mall
permitted In areas . where home
carrier sorvlce Is avallablo.

New members are welcome.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County
4-H
Advisory
Committee will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Meigs County
Extension Office. Election of
officers lor the 2004 year will
be held . All advisors are
encouraged to attend.
Wednesday, Oct. 29
RACINE - Special meeting of Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164 with work in the
EA degree.

Clubs and "
Organizations

man who is jailed as a suspect in the rape of a 13-year-:
old girl.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Exl. t4
Roportor: J. Miles Layton, Exl. 13

reimbursements
have
prompted older physicians to :
retire earlier, which tran s- •
lates into longer waits for .
patients to see speciali sts.
The doctors' lawyers and
Humana also agreed to create ·
a compliance committee to·
monitor reimburse ment rates
for at least three years begin- .
ning in 2007. The panel is to
ensure that rates stay competitive and don't fall to pre- .
law suit levels .
Humana and Anthem are
the biggest private insurers ·
- behind the government's ·
Medicare program - in the .
Cincinnati area.
The court fight isn't over.'
Anthem Blue Cross and Blue·
Shield says the doctors' lawsuits have no merit and it will
continue to fight them. ·.
Spokesmen for Aetna and ·
United Health Group , parent
of
United
Healthcare,
declined to comment.
Anthem, Aetna and United
Healthcare say that any disputes over reimbursement rates:
should be handled through •
arbitration, not the courts.
Humana remains a defen-,
dant in the Miami liti gation,
and considers its settlement .
in Cincinnati to be a separate;
matter, Humana spokesman
Jeff Blunt said Friday.

(UsPs 213-9&amp;oJ

story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- postage paid al Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated
(740) 992·21 56.

the end of this year, Ohio
lawmakers will have made
more than $3.5 billion available for school construction. :
Nevertheless, more law-:
suits are likely, said William •
Philli s, executive director oL
the Ohio Coalition of Equity
&amp; Adequacy of School
Funding, which brought the'
1991 lawsuit.
Rich and poor schools still .
rely too much on local property taxes for funding , creating di sparities at a time when
more and more is being
asked of schools, Phillis said.
"It's becoming very apparent that the problem is related ,
to a lack of resources in inner
cities and poor rural areas," :
he said. "It's just a matter of
time before there's additional .
litigation on thellllatter."
Taft says the end of·
DeRolph gives his commit-,
tee the time it needs to make·
recommendations that all
sides can agree on.
"We've made major. major,
strides, and the question is,·
how much more can you .
accomplish through litigation?" he said.

'

Our main concern in all slories is lo be Monday through Friday, 111 Courl
accurate. If you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical

Our main number Ia

tors and work with them to
recruit more doctors in underserved specialties such as
endocrinology and anesthesiology, company executive
Larry Savage said Friday.
"We' ve been talking about
the lawsuit being a distraction, and we needed to get to
a more collaborative situation ," said Savage, president
and chief executive officer of
Humana of Ohio, one of the
entit·ies which settled.
Humana said it agreed to
increase reimbursements to
doctors in the Cincinnati
area, suburban Butler County
and northern Kentucky by
about $20 million in 2004,
$15 million in 2005 and $10
million in 2006.
The doctors say that settlement
could
ultimately
increase their reimbursements by $100 million over
the next three years. The
alleged conspiracy by insurers since at least 1995 has
pushed medical reimbursements in the Cincinnati market below those paid in comparable regional markets
including
Indianapolis,
Loui sville, Dayton and
Columbus. Lawyers for the
Cincinnati doctors say this is
making it harder to recruit
new physicians to area.
Doctors also say the low

.. -

Community calendar

Doctors obtain settlements, but court battles still loom ;
CINCINNATI (A P) Doctors who acc use health
insurers of skimping on reimbursements for medical services are reaching settlements
wi th some insurers, but
lawyers say the remaining
court battles could take years.
Lawyers for physicians in
'the Ci ncinnati area reached a
multi mi Ilion-dollar settlement
thi s week with two subsidiaries
of Humana Inc. in companion
lawsuits tiled in Ohio and
Kentucky state courts. But
three insurers - Aetna .Health
Inc., United Healthcl'lre of
Ohio Inc., and Anthem Blue
Cross and Blue Shield remain as defendants. •
The insurers say their reimbursement rates are fair and
that they will fight allegations th ey violated state
antitrust laws by con spiring
to hold down reimbursements to doctors.
Lawyers
representing
thou sands of doctors nationwide in combined lawsuits
before a federal court in
Miami have obtained settlements with Aetna Inc . and
Cigna Corp.. but eight defen dants remain in that case.
Archie Lamb. a Bi rmingham,
Ala., attorney representing
doctors in the Miami case.
said he expects the remaining
insurers in the case could bat-

., •

BY THE BEND

.The Daily Sentinel

Mo.n day, October 27, 2003

... J

Pomeroy, OH

e

Take your business into
the homes of over 40,000
consumers in Gallia,
Mason, Meigs Counties
EYERYDAY with a listing
of your web address in our

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
Th~

Page4

Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentlnel.com

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

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Oct. 27. the 300th day of 2003. There are
65 days left in the year.
_
.
Today's Highlight in His_tury: _On Oct. 27. 17 87. the _ft rst. of
the Federalist Papers, a senes of essays calling for ratification
of the U.S. Constitution. was published in a New York newspaper.
.
.
.
On this date: In 1858, the 26th presrdent ot the Umted
States, Theodore Roosevelt, was born in New York City.
In 1880, Theodore Roosevelt married Alice Lee.
In 1904. the first rapid transit subway, the IRT, opened in
New York City
In 1914, author-poet Dylan Thomas was born in Swansea.
Wales.
In 1922, the first an nual celebration of Navy Day took
p~~.
In 1938. Du Pont an nounced a name for its new sy nthetic
yarn: "nylon."
In 1947, "You Bet Your Life,'' starring Groucho Marx, premiered on ABC Radio. (It later became a television show on
NBC.)
In 1954, Walt Disney 's firs t television program, titled
"Disneyland" after his yet-to-be completed theme park, premiered on ABC.
·
In 1967, Expo '67 closed in Montreal. Canada.
In 1978, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin were named winners of the Nobel
Peace Prize for their progress toward achieving a Middle East
accord .
Ten years ago: Brush rires raged across Southem California.
destroying several hundred homes. President Clinton present ed a revi sed version of hi s health care reform plan to
Congress. urging its passage within a year.
Five years ago: Hurri ca ne "Mitch" cut through the western
Caribbean. pummeling coastal Honduras and Behzc; the
storm caused several thousand deaths in Central America in
the days that followed. Serb forc es drew back from former
Kosovo battlefronts. holding off the immediate threat of
NATO airstrikes.
One year ago: Luiz lnacio Lulu da Silva was elected president of Brazil in a wnoff, becom ing the country 's first elected leftist leader. Emmitt Smith broke the NFL career rushing
yardage record held by the late Walter Payton. The Anaheim
Angels won the World Series. beating the San Francisco
Giants 4-l in Game Seven.
Today 's Birthdays: Actress Teresa Wright is 85. Actress
Nanette Fabray is 83. Baseball Hall-of-Farner and sportscaster Ralph Kiner is 81. Actress Ruby Dee is 79. Former
Secretary of State Warren M. Christopher is 78. Actor-comedian John Cleese is 64. Country singer Lee Greenwood is 61.
Actress Carrie Snodgress is 57 . Country singer-musician Jack
Daniels is 54. Rock musician Garry Tallent (Bruce
Springsteen &amp; the E Street Band) is 54. Author Fran Lebowitz
is 53. Actress and TV personality Jayne Kennedy is 52. Actordirector Roberto Benign_i is 51. Actor Peter Firth is 50. Actor
. Robert Picardo is 50. Singer Simon Le Bon is 45. Musician
J.D. McFadden (Sixpence None The Richer) is 39. Rock
singer Scott Weiland (Stone Temple Pilots) is 36. Actor Sean
Hofland is 35. Actress Sheeri Rappaport is 26. Actress-singer
Kelly Osbourne is 19.
Thought for Today: "Happiness is a way station between
too much and too little." - Channing Pollock, American
author and dramatist (1880-1946).
·

Monday, October 27,2003

Monday, October 27,

Diana
West

the U.S. Peace Council , and
the stubborn refusal of the
Un ited States to 'seek a new
paradigm,' as Syafii Maarif,
head of the second-larges t
Muslim group in Indonesia,
advised President Bush during
a presidential visit in Oct.
2003.
"We told him U.S. foreign
policy should seek a new paradigm if the U.S. wants to be
respected by the world community and be safe,' Maarif
explained at the time, exuding
only the faintest whiff of
blackmail. 'New paradigm,' of
course, was a fancy phrase for
ditching Israel and bailing on
Iraq. Which would come later.
Muslim outreach was still a
work in progress in the fall of
2003, when The Washington
Post reported, 'The administration's close tics to Israel are
a perennial complaint of these
(Muslim) critics, and the invasion of Iraq innamed opposition overseas.'
'Luckily, the president had
already green-lighted a commission on public diplomacy
to investigate Muslim discontent.
'Hostility
toward
America has reached shocking levels' in the Muslim
world, the commission con-

.eluded,
adding
sagely:
'Surveys show that specihc
Jl(llicies' (read: specilic poll~ies on Islamic terrorism ,
Israel and Iraq) 'profoundly
affect attitudes towards the
United States.' In other words,
the United States could have
its Muslim outreach or it could
have its 'specific policies,' but
it couldn't have both.
'Then along came Gen.
Boykin. In every war, there
are generals who want to ftght
an earlier war. This was true of
Gen. Boykin. He wanted to
light the war of Sept. II , the
attack that is now, of course,
but. a tiny footnote to Sept.
16th, Death to Cru,sades Day,
the lirst new national holiday
since Martin Luther King Day.
'Gen. Boy kin saw . in the
emergence of Muslim terror
networks a resumption of the
old wars of Islamic expansion
against the J udeo-Christian
West. And he saw rit to
explain his vision in stark religious terms when he spoke in
American Christian churches.
Islamic terrorists hate the
United States, he said in June
2003. 'because we're a
Christian nation, because our
foundation and our roots are
Judea-Christian . · And the
enemy is a guy named Satan.'
When
such
statements
became public through the
now-defunct. Los Angeles
Times, all hell, pardon the
expression, broke loose,
spreading a plague of damning liberal editorials, columns
and statements.
'General Boykin, the New
York Times editorialized in
calling for his head, 'should

•'

~

.

.;;, •... ... .• .

for The WashingTOn . Times.
·sire ca11 be contacted via
dianaww@attglobal.net.)

COLUMBUS - Kathleen " Katy" Ruth Dean, 78', of
Columbus, passed away on Friday, Oct. 24, 2003 , at Riverside
United Methpdist Hospital in Columbus.
She was retired after 36 years as a manager for Ohio Bell
Telephone and was a member of the Telephone Pioneers. Katy
was a devoted member of Epworth United Methodist Church.
She was preceded in death by a loving husband of 49 years,
Clarence "Clancy" Dean, who passed away in 1995; her son,
Craig; her sister, Imogene Prince ; her brother, Millard Wayne
Prince, who was killed in France during World War II ; and an
aunt, Dorothy Riebel.
Surviving are her daughter, Jacquelyn (Sam) Galdas of
Khartoum. Sudan; twin sisters, Betty Linn Burton and Bertie
Lou Polley, both of Columbus; several nieces, nephews, sisters- in-law, brothers-in-law and numerous friends.
A funeral service will be held at I0 a.m. on Wednesday, Oct.
29, 2003 at Epworth United Methodist Church, 5100 Karl
Rd., Columbus. with the Rev. Patricia Miller ofliciating. A
graveside service will be held at 2:30 p.m. at Reedsville
Cemetery.
The family will receive friends from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on
Tuesday at Schoedinger North Chapel, 5554 Karl Rd .. Columbus.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Epworth
United Methodi st Church, 5100 Karl Rd., Columbus, Ohio
43229.

Local Briefs
Dinner planned
RUTLAND
- The
Fire
Rutland Volunteer
Department' s annual turkey
dinner will be held at 5 p.m.
on Nov. 8 at Meig s
Elementary School. Tickets
are $6, and must be purchased, in advance, from
Quality Print Shop in
Middleport,
Rutland
Department Store, )oe 's
Country Market, Hilltop
Grocery and Pomeroy Flower
Shop.
The date for the dinner was
incorectly
reported
in
Friday's edition.

Scam warning

BROTHER,

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark Proffitt
advised local residents of an
ongoing telephone scam, and
advised residents to be cautious of calls offering a "business opportunity" or cash
award in exchange for a
Western Union cash transfer.
According to Proffitt, a
local resident recently wired
cash by Western Union at the
Rite-Aid pharmacy, and the
money was returned to him
by Western Union when the
transfer was re~ognized as
part of a telephone scam.
Proffitt said the caller
offers cash in exchange for a

CAN YOU

SPARE A
MilliON?

IRAQ

wire transfer for •;taxes."

" Reside nt s are strongly
advised to ignore any call
offering cash prizes or · an
investme nt opportunity, especially in case s involving an
unfamiliar business," Proffitt
said.

Plan party
POMEROY
Meigs
Cou nty Senior Center will
host a Halloween party following the evening dinner on
Tuesday. Halloween bingo, a
cake walk and skit are
planned. The public is invited
for both the dinner, from 4:45
to 5:30 p.m .. and the party
.following. Costumes are
optional.

Celebration
planned
MIDDLEPORT
Rejo icing Life ChLrrch will
host a harve st celebration
from 6:30 to 9 p.m . on
Friday. The free event will
include games and refreshments. The church asks that
costumes not be worn.

Fall festival set
RUTLAND
- Meigs
Elementary school wi II have
its fall festival from 6 to 9
p.m. on Saturday. The public
is invited.

EVERYBODY
t)UMPED
ONMY WAGON!

E

8

i
~

© 2003 by NEA,

Inc.

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

I

Lateefah Simon, 26, didn't
know that for the past year
and a half, people were
watching her. Her activities
and words were documented
and sent off in secret packets.
She was videotaped. People
who knew her were questioned.
All the while, Simon went
about her work at the Center
fo r
Young
Women's
· Development on Bryant
Street. a place that is run
entirely by, and for, low income and delinquent young
women of color. It is where
Simon herself. at age 17, had
found an escape from poverty
and a failed edu ~ation. Two
years later, having given birth
at age 19, Simon impressed
the board of directors enough
to be promoted to executive
director.
She soon became a familiar
face at San Francisco's
Juvenile Hall , and on the
streets of San Francisco in
h~r thick glasses and jeans
and Adidas shoes. She was a
young woman who looked
like a street kid but sounded
as if she came from somewhere else, even from another tim!!, when civil rights
leaders were poets and
philosophers.
'We're reframing victimization in to power,' she
would tell. the gi rls. ' We possess a different power: Not
what can be - what is.'
· And: 'You have it iri you to
succeed, and there is nothing
you can tell me that says you
don't. Noth~ng , nothing, nothing, nothi'pg.'
· Men and women · twice

.

'

'I

as a 'genius award.' With it
came a no-strings-attached
lump sum of $500,000.
As she walked back to her
hotel, the news only beginning to sink in, she stopped at
Joan
a newsstand and got enough
Ryan
quarters to call her mother,
who lives in ·low-income
housing in San Francisco.
' Mom, ' Simon said, 'I
think we're going to be all
Simon's age, with twice her right.' She told her about the
education, wondered where award. It was one of the few
this young woman sprang times she heard her mother
from .
cry.
'She is a wise old woman·
'I was just in awe,' Simon
packaged 111 this wiry, said of the award the other
dynamic musical instrument day, sitting in a conference
of a person,' San Francisco room at the Center for Young
deputy city attorney Kamala Women's Development.' In
Harris said after spending the next room, II new interns
time at the center.
- most of whom had been
A few weeks . ago, the incarcerated at Juvenile Hall
phone call came, the kind that -were in the midst of a weihappens in movies and pulpy coming ceremony with the
novels in which the heroine so-called veteran staff, all of
suddenly discovers she's them under the age of 26.
actually an heiress to an oil
Since its inception in 1993,
fortune. Simon happened to the center has been run combe at New York Unjversity pletely by the young women
for a conference. She took the themselves, from program
call on a borrowed cell development to fund raising.
phone.
Everyone, including the
'Are you sitting down?' the interns, is paid a salary out of
man from the Ma~Arthur the center's $478,000 operatFoundation asked. She sat. ing budget.
She was told that the people
The center writes letters
at the foundation had bee!\ tvery day to girls at
watching her for 18 months. California Youth Authority. It
They thought she .was amaz- ftnds money to send a mother
ing and they wanted to lift her to visit a daughter locked up
linancial stress so she could in a facility in Colorado. It
channeJ her creative ·energies · goes into juvenile hall as peer
into transforming the lives of coun selors, helping girls to
the most marginalized girls in tap into strengths !hat will get
San Francisco. She had been them through school and into
chosen as a MacArthur fel- the ' workforce. It teaches
low, an honor better known abused and angry girls that
'I

the power of transformation
is, ultimately, in them, not the
courts or their parents or even
the center's programs.
Of the young women
employed by the center who
had been incarcerated, all
have ftnished their probationary requirements. Nearly 75
percent of the. girls who completed the nine-month internship program are. employed
or enrolled at school.
As we talked, Simon's 7year-old daughter, Amenah,
walked in and handed us pink
roses that had been left over
from the welcoming ceremony. Amenah has been telling
friends that her mother 'is
going to be a legend like
Martin Luther the King.'
Simon laughed as she told
the story. She has aspirations,
for sure, and now with the
MacArthur grant, nothing
seems out of reach. She said
.~he will go to college 'Stanford is my dream,
dream, dream school ' -· to
study nonprofit management.
She also wains to study law.
'This whole process (of the
MacAnhur) has changed my
thinking about what's possible,' she said, 'both. for me
and the girls.'
The award money doesn't arrive until January. In
the meantime , Simon and
her young staff will continue fund raising to keep
the doors open' and to continue teachtng others what
they have learned themselves that there is
nothing to stop them from
succeeding. Nothing, noth·
ing , nothing, nothing .
\

•

? •

.. ....

•

----,

Romanian
president visits
Cleveland
community

Former boxing .champion
Spadafora arrested in shooting

Crow

in Meigs County to eventually raise three children :
Danny, ·Donna and Debbie.
"I like the people here definitely," she said. "It is a
small town and the people.
here are very friendly."
When Crow is not working, she spends time with
family, friends or her five
grandchildren. Sometimes
and more often than not, she
likes to treat herself' to the
I;:lder-Bcerman department
store in Athens.

!

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

appellate w urt might reject
as prejudicial.
The case is an apparent
slam-dunk , he said. "Why
take that kind of risk when
you don ' t need to?"
Meyers' brother, Larry.
was among the fir st to testify
last week, stoically identifying Dean Meyers from a
photo showing his bloodied
body sprawled ne,xt to a
gasoline pump - a scene so
disturbing that some court-.
room spectators drew sharp
breaths.
That was clear( y an
attempt to gain the jurors·
sympath y, and it could hackfire. said jury consu ltant
Howard Varinsky. who
worked on the tri al of
Oklahoma City bomber
Timothy McVeigh .
" What happen s when
juries see the reaching fur
sympath y? They're not stu pid, they say 'Come on.
what 's thi s for 0 '" Varinsky
said .."As a lawyer, you don't
want juries being cynical of
you. "
Prosecutors also have asked
relatives of other shooting
victims to identify their loved
ones from photographs of
them. both in life and in
death.
Szuszka testified about her
sister, Hong lm Ballenger,
who was shot and robbed on
Sept. 23. 2002, outside the
beauty supply store she managed m Baton Rou ge, Lac
Prosecutor Paul Ebert initially displayed two smiling
photos of Ballenger.
Later, Ebert showed a
photo of Ballenger's body.
He asked if the small cooler
next to l~e body was the one
Szuszka had said her sister
used as a lunchbox . and
Szuszka cried as she said
"Yes."
Despite the effect of such
testimony. the biggest impact
on the jury probably was
made by Muhammad himse lf
when he decided. just before
opening statements, to represent himself, experts said.

Most waitresses know what
a person wants before they
even sit down to read a newspaper at their favorite booth.
"We have regular customers
who have been coming in here
for years," said Crow.
Originally from Texas,
Crow came to Meigs County
by way of marriage. She met
her husband Thomas in a hi s:
tory class at the Southwestern
University of Texas. After
Thomas was discharged from
the U.S: Navy, they got married in 1946 and settled down

home. The restaurant opened
in 1957 and became a
Kentucky Fried Chicken
franchise in 1960. Crow
manages more than 40
employees, many of whom
have worked there for
decades.
"The secret to managing
people is to treat the employees well," she said.
The
employees
stay
because Crow is a good boss.
"She is an excellent boss to
work for," said Cass Bolin, a
waitress with three years at
Crow's. "All the employees
love her::
Angie
Kennedy
has
worked for Craw's for II
.years.
"She is one of the best bosses I have ever had and one of
the nicest people you will ever
meet," said Kennedy.

•

VIRGINIA BEACH . Va.
(AP ) - · Photograph s of
loved ones at happy times.
then after they were killed by
a sniper 's bullet. Testi mony
from vi~tims. one who was
questioned by the very man
accused.
The first week of sniper
suspect
John
Allen
Muhammad' s trial brought
back to life the ·terror the
Washington area experienced
during last October's shooting spree. More emotionallycharged moments were
expected as the trial resumes
Monday. and prosecutors
continue detailing their version of the three weeks of
violence that killed I0 people.
Muhammad is being tried
only in the death of Dean
Meyers, gunned down at a
gasoli ne station in Manassas.
But because one of the capital murder charges against
him alleges multiple murders
over three years, prosecutors
mu st prove Muhammad
committed at least one other
murder.
That means jurors also are
hearing from survivors of
other shootings and relatives
of other people slain. despite
defense attorneys' objections
that their testimony is irrelevant or inflammatory.
They ' re also being shown
crime-scene and autopsy
photos from other sniper
attacks; one autopsy photo
displayed on Friday was so
grisly some jurors looked
away.
During opening statements
last Monday, prosecutors
outlined 16 shootings they
plan 10 link to Muhammad
and fellow suspect Lee Boyd
Malva, including attacks in
Alabama and Louisiana .
But Ed. Bronson. a defense
jury consultant retained in
the Oklahoma City bombing
and Unabomber trials, said
prosecutors need to be careful because they could end
up bringing in evidence that ,
in case of a conviction, an

give local, state and federallawenfon:ement ofticials a one-stop
search engine for a variety of
public and private records.
Because some of Ohio's
records are maintained by
depanments that answer to Gov.
Bob Taft. he also must decide
whether to turn them over.
If the state links its databases,
it would get free use of it for two
years and 34 secure MATRIX
computers that would be put in
law-enforcement offices.
Privacy ri ghts advocates
question the sweeping database, noting that it would contain credit histories, marriages
and divorces, fingerprints and
Social Security numbers.

from Page 1

...

-Emotion-packed trial of sniper
suspect enters second week

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state says it will take it&lt;; time
deciding whether to link ils
databa&gt;es with an interstate antiterrorism progrJJTI that critics
say includes too much information about law-abiding citizens.
In · March 2002. former
Attorney General Betty D.
Montgomery entered into an
agreement with the Aorida
Department of Law Enforcement
to join the federally funded
Multistate
Anti-Terrorism
Information Exchange program..
James Canepa, a chief
deputy attorney general, said
the agreement signed with
Florida in no way commits
· Ohio to participate.
Ohio has until next summer to
decide whether to link its databases to the program designed 10

'

Genius grant for hero of troubled girl

~

CLEVELAND (AP) Romanian President Jon
lliescu visited a Romanian
Orthodox Church and
chatted with members of
the city's RomanianAmerican community on
the eve of hi s meeting with
President Bush.
lliescu headed straight
from Cleveland Hqpkms
International Airport for St.
Mary 's Cathedral and
arrived as the liturgy was
about to end.
The Rev. Remys GrJma,
the parish priest, spent an
hour showing lliescu folk an
;md religious artifacl~ housed
in the church's cultural ocnter.
lliesm went to the church
hall and greeted about 300
Clevelanders.
Later he visited the
Romanian Cultuml Garden,
one of 24 sites devoted to different nationalities near the
Cleveland Museum of ;'\11.
He laid a wreath at the
bronze statue of George
Enescu, the composer of
"Romanian Rhapsody."

State not rushing to link databases
to interstate anti-terrorism program

Moderately Confused

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Kathleen Dean

not be ... providing ammunition for those who portray the
war against terror as a war
against Islam.' (Note the
implicit denial of the specilically Islamic character of the
terrorism aimed at the nonIslamic West - a semantic
victory dating back to early
outreach .) Fareed Zakaria, a
Washington columnist of the
day, suggested Gen. Boykin
be !ired simply to assuage
Arab/Islamic suspicions of the
United States. Others compared the American Officer's
biblical perspective with that
of holy war-mongering
Osarna bin Laden.
'But it was the president
himself who may have tipped
the balance when he rejected
even the basis of the three-star
general's worldview - that
the war on terrorism had its
undeniable religious dimension in being a response to
Islamic jihad on tlie West, a
civilization with Judeo
Christian roots.
'Some say that was the
point at which outreach
trumped terrorism as the war's
priority. Once Gen. Boykin
was history it was just a matter
of time before Hamas had its
AWACS, and jailed Shiite
cleric Moqtada Sadr was
installed as supreme ayatollah
of the United Nations
Mandate of Iraq. Soon, thr·
war's ultimate objective high U.S. poll number'
throujihout Muslim culturewas ours.'
(Dicma We.n is a columnist

•

2003

Obituaries

Boykin and the war for Muslim outreach
Confused over the Lt. Gen.
William Boykin furor'' There
may come a time when the
future's historians ex plain the
controversy this way:,
'The 'war on terror,' later
rechristened
sorry,
renamed - the 'war for
Muslim outreach,' began on
Sept. 16. 200 I. the · day
President George W. Bush
carelessly spoke of a 'crusade.'
His remark was heard neither
as an echo of Dwight D.
Eisenhauer's World War II
book 'Crusade in Europe,' nor
as a sober pledge to avenge
thousands of American dead
still smoldering at Ground
Zero - victims, as Muslims
on the outer reaches would
reveal, of a joint CIA-Mossad
plot. Instead , the word 'crusade' was perceived as a calculated insult to all of Islam
still stewi ng over Holy Land
. incursions by Really Old
Europe a millennium earlier.
'Early victories in the war
for Muslim outreach were
small but significant, such as
forcing a new name unto
'Operation lnlinite Ju stice,' the
distinctly dis-lamic moniker
for the war in Afghanistan.
Thi s was necessary. of course,
since it is Allah who dispenses
infinite justice, not the United
. States military. It wasn't long
before 'Islam is love' was the
word from the president, and
post-Sept. 16 outrea~h iocluded annual Ramadan suppers at
the White House.
'But ther.e were setbacks,
too, including the rapid disintegration of the democratic
Baathist republic of Iraq, the
elevation of Daniel Pipes to

.. . .

~

PITTSBURGH (APJ Former lightweight champion Paul Spadafora was
arrested Sunday night on a
warrant accusing him of
shooting and critically injuring a woman .
Spadafora was taken into
custody Sunday night fol lowing a traflic stop near his
home in Moon Township,
police said. He is accused of
shooting the woman in the
chest in or near his car early
Sunday at a gas station in a
Pittsburgh suburb.
The 20-year-old victim.
whose name was not
released . was in critical condition Sunday night, police
said.
The 28-year-old boxer.
known as the "Pittsburgh
Kid ," was questioned by
Me Kees
Rocks
police
Sunday morning but released
because of a lack of evidence .
according
to
Allegheny Poli ce Sgt. Chris
Kearns said.
A warrant was issued
around noon. but police were
unable to lind Spadafora for

School
from Page 1
While Wolfla has not
committed to tonverting the
property, and the village and
citizens committee have
not committed to se lling
the property, Woltla said
the building should be pre-

Maryland liquor store owner Muhammad Rashid holds hiS
head as l1e listens to his vo1ce on a 911 record1ng dunng hrs
testrmony in the tnal of sniper suspect John Allen Muhammad
at the Virg1nia Beach Circuit Court 1n V1rgrn1a Beach. Va ..
Wednesday. Rl!shid made the call after be1ng shot 111 2002 .
(AP Photo)
Muhammad ended up tion a ...... urrcal.
cross-examining one or hi s
"It '' from the tv.il1 ght
alleged victim,. telli ng tu ne.
LaRuffa
'a iJ .
restaurateu r Paul LaRuffa of "Defendant\ aren't ' uppmed
Clinton. Md .. shot 111 the to queqion ym1. and ·that'·
chest on Sept. 5. 2002 "I "hat happened:·
understand how vo u fe el
Two
d~ 1 \'..,
later.
when your life i; on the Muhamm ad changed hr '
line."
mind and hamkJ hi" Jefen"t'
Outside court. LaRuffa hack to hi-. Ll.lllr1-~1Jlpom t ~d
described the cro&gt;S-examina- altornc' '·

about ei~ht hours.
Haa k. ,arJ he haJ Jl&lt;ll &gt;pnken
In addition to attempteJ 11 1th hr' ,·[ rent. AIH•thcr attorhomicide, Spadafora wa &lt; In nev for Spad"fnra . Fred
be arraigned Sunday ni ght on Sproull. did not 1111nwdiatel&gt;

charges

or

aggra vated ret urn cal l....

aS&gt;ault, recklessly cndungerA hearin g in the shootin[
ing another person and viola- was sc·hcdu lcd for rs:nv. 3.
tion of lircarms laws. police
L'ndeti::Jted :" a prn.
said.
Spadafora's
promoter, · Spadatimr had been the IB~
Michael Acri. said the boxer champion. 'ucce,,fully defendtold police a man approac·hcd ing his title nme tllllt::-.. He g &lt;.J\ 'l'
him in hi s car and tired a up the 135-pound title. 'a) mg
weapon , striking the woman. he wanted to 1111" c up rn tlw
Spadafora's attorney, Ma rk jun ior wcltcn\Cl~ht di' i ... inn _

Coming Thursday...

"G{JfaceJ (t&gt; ~ 0'
TltMtg$ (t&gt; J{;Jt&gt;"
served. and that development should proceed as
soon as possible. considering the good · condition of
the building.
"Don't let thi s building
sit, and don 't let an yone tear
it down," Wolf! a said. " It \ a

bcautrful burlding. and it',
primed f&lt;•r whatc\cr you
plan for ih fu ture .'·
"You have a so lid fuundation here for development.
and whether (we 1 de ci de tn
develop th r, site. nr not . it
should be prc,ervcd."

"LIVIN DOLLS"

GRAND "OPENING
Monday, October 27th

--ELEa--

Ci..lRl' R. DILL
Chester Township
Trustee

Experienced
Qualijied
Paid for By the Candidate Thank You
. R . Dll/48190 Riebtl Rd. Long Bottom,

10%0FF

. btla

Make Great Keepsake Glfts!

"Bring your portraits to life"
:noN. 2nd · Middleport
7 40-446-8640
\

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�..

-.

~

.,.

--.

'

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· ~·

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www.mydailysentinel.com

6

The Daily Sentinel
'

'

\!tribune -. Sentinel - l\e
Mt . . C...,nlf OH

Monday, October 27, 2003

Buffalo
downs
Ohio

Prep Football
TVC
Ohio Division

rn;

All

' Nelsonville-York
5-Q 7·3
Vinton County
3·2
6·4
Wellston
4-1.
6-4
Belpre
3·2
7-3
Meigs
1·4
2·8
Alexander
0-5
2·8
' Wins TVC Ohio title
Hocking Division
IIBm
rn; All
• Trimble
5-0 9·1
Waterford
3-2
6·4
Miller
3-2
3-7
2-3
Federal Hocking
4-6
Eastern
2-3
4-6
Southern
0-5 0-10
• Wins TVC Hocking title
Friday's Results
Belpre 39, Meigs 24
Nelsonville-York 40. Alexander 13
Wellston 24, Vinton County 6 ·
Trimble 48, Miller 6
Watertord 14, Federal Hocking 12
Saturday's Result
Eastern 49, Southern 0
Eastern 49, Southern 0

Eastern

14 22
0 0

Southern

0 13 0

0

49
0

-

Scoring summary

First Quarter

E-

Ken Ambary 1 run (kick failed}

8:32.

E - Chris Myers 28 run (Amsbury
run) :29
Second Quarter
E - Amsbary 1 run (Ross Holter
k1ck) 10:05.
E - Bryan Minear 15 run (Holter
kick) 7:41.
E - ·Eric Batey 1 run (Steve Dillon
run) 5: 40.
Fourth Quarter
E - Cody Gerlach 15 run (Holter

kick)

10:13

E - Bryce Honaker 40 pass from
Amsbary (kick failed) 4 :41.
First Downs
Rushes-yards

Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

s

E
16
42-343
103
446
4· 1 0-0
2·0
15-1 45

B
32-55
71

126
5-15- 1
. 2·2
6-50

Individual Statistics
Rushing: E - Bryan Minear 17147, Ken Amsbary 9·91, Terry Durst
5-52, Cody Gerlach 3-17 , Chris
Myers 1-28, Cory Shaffer 4-8, Eric
Batey 2·1 , Derek Taylor 1-(-1). S ,Derek Teaford 17-42, 9- 12, Andrew

Philson 6-1.
Passing: E -

Ken Amsbary 3·9·0

95, Bryan Minear 1-1-0 8_ S -

Phil

Pierce 4-14-1 46, Derek Teaford 1-1-

o 25.

Receiving: E - Derek Taylor 2-55,
Bryce Honaker 1-40, Ken Amsbary
1·8. S - Jake Nease 3-41, Josh
Smith 2·30.

Winningest prep
coach retires
HAMILTON (AP) - TI1e
!ina! game of head coach Terry
Malone's 46-year career ended
t~ e way most of the games he
roached: With a Hami Iron
e&lt;tdin victorv.
Saturday night's 45-7 victory
against North College Hill was
hi s 360th. Malone is the winningest high school coach in
Ohio history and I Oth nationally with a record of 360-1 I 7-8,
according to the National
Federation of State High
School Associations.
"It's been a great ride for
me," Malone said.
More than 350 fomter players showed up and encircled
Malone dUJing the postgame
ceremony. Mayor Don Ryan
presemed him with a proclamation that declared Saturday as
.Terry Malone Day in the
Hamilton.
A police cruiser was driven
onto the track so that Malone
could use the car's speaker to ·
address the crowd. He thanked
his fomter players and assistant
coaches, say ing they were
responsible fof his success.
Then he renected back on his
tirst win - a 28-22 victory
against Monroe on Sept: 27,
1958.
. Malone said that win has
stuck in his memory all these
year.; not because of _it was victory No. I . but · because. of a
comment that bellowed down
from the stands.
"I remember some lady up in
the stands yelling, 'Malone,
you won't be here next year,"'
he said. "I guess I tooled her a
Iittle bit."
Now, Malone says it's his
rum to toss down the barbs.
'T II come back to watch' the
games," he said. "And whoever the ·coach is. I' II second
guess him right alongside all
the other fans. I'll say 'You're
dumber than Malone wa1.'"

''

-------·~ ·

Eastern head coach Howie Caldwell talks with his players during d1strioct semifinal act ion last week. On Saturday, the
Eagles defeated Eastern (Pike) fo r the district championship. (B rad Sherman)

Howie's Eagles win district
BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune,com
WELLSTON - It was the Eastern
Eagles in green playing the Eastern
Eagles in brown Saturday.
It's probably eas ier than say in g
Eastern vs. Eastern or Eag les vs .
Eagles. After all. it did make it easier
for the fans oheering their favorite
team.

"Go Green! "
"Go Brown'"
Then again ...
Any way you look at it. th e Meigs
County Eastern Eagles, the ones
wearing the green, defeated the Pi ke
County Eastern Eagles. the ones in
the brown, for the seco nd strai ght
yem in the Divi sion IV Southeast district championship ga me Saturday,
15-12, I 1-15, 15-5.
With the win, rh'e Eastern (Mei gs)
girls will face a tough Adena squad in
the regional se mifin al. 6:30 p.m .
Thursday at Lancaster.
After the Meigs Co umy Eastern
Eagles (20-3 1 won the first ga me, the
other Eagles (22-2) broke a 11 -all ti e
with four strai ght service r.oin ts by
Rebecca Day to force a th ird game .
At the net, Day led Eastern !Pike)
with I I kill s and three aces. long with
six service·point.;.
For so me time, Eastern (Meigs)
held on to a 3-2 lead, and later 4-2 as
both teams' defenses came through
and fo rced each team to excha nge
serves numerous times.

A block by Jennifer Hayman to

ma ke it a 5- 2 ~ame broke the monotony for Easterl1 (M eigs) which led 10
the first of eight straight serv ice
points by Ka" Lodwick.
Net play by Ha yman, Katie
Robertson and A lyssa Holter played a
big rol e durin g that scoring spree as
Eastern , th e ones in the green, took a
I 2-2 lead.
"We ~ot them to free ball the ball
more dian what th ey really like to
do." said Easte rn (Meigs) head coach
Howi e Caldwel L "Anytime thai you
ge t a club that free ball's il, it's much
eas ier to bump the ball , it's much easier to set up th e ball and it's a lot easier to hit the baiL We 've gol about
four or five kids th at can reall y potrnd
the ball .
"We really took it ri gh t to th em."
Eastern (Meigs) then took a 14-3
lead, but Eastern (Pik e) managed to
regain so me control of the ga me and
even made a couple of points, concernin g Caldwell.
·
Ca ldwell was reminded of la st
yea r's regional semifinal 15-10, 151:lloss to Wellsvill e.
"We got ahead o f Wellsville last
year, 13-5 (in th e second ga me ). and
we get beat 15-13." said Ca ld we ll.
"Of all the sports that I've ever
coached, without a doubt, volleyball
is th e most momentum sport .'
Anytime you do so methin g, it jttst
see ms like it opens the flood ga tes.
After we gave them those two points,
I was kind of worried."
A spike by Morgan Weber returned
possession to the Eagles from Meigs
County and. after a se rv e by

Robertson. Lodwi&lt;:k blocked one at
th e net which le&lt;.l tu the match winner.
"One of th e thin ks we tell our kids
all the· times if th ey've got to play
with poise and character. and I
th ought they did that very well in the
third game." said Caldwell .
" I th ink we got beat on serve reception. " added Eastern (Pike) head
coach Janet Day. "We weren't receiving th e ball wel l, and when we did.
our setters had to chase it clown.''
Lodw ick fin is hed with 15 service
points , while Holter added nine anti
Robertson and Casey Smith each with
six. Lodwiek had six of he r points in
the first game. while Holter had all
six of her points in the seco n&lt;.l game.
Katie Robertson also had 14 kills.
Weber had fi ve kills, Lodwick fmor,
Hayma n two and Holter one.
There have been a lot more ex pecta tions for thi s year 's Eastern I Meigs)
district championship team with the
expe ri ence returnin g lrom last year's
regional squad.
"This year is a little bit different in
th e fact we had a veteran club com ing
h" ck and the expectations were so
hi gh," sa id Ca ldwell. ''Somet imes if
we didn' t play as well as we could
play. then cvcryhody would ask
'W hat's wrong with thi s volleyball
club'&gt;'. We 'd beat people 15 -5 and
everyhody would say, 'Why did we
give up rive points ~ · . "
Up nex t is Adena, who defeated
Portsmouth Cla y in the ser1Jifi nal , I 5I. I 5- I. in the regional chan1pionship
ga me and Southern. 15-0. I 5-0, in th e
se mifinal.

AMHERST. N.Y. (AP)
The wait is finally over for
Buffalo.
Nearly a season and a lplf's
worth of frustration came to an
end as the Bulls snapped an 18- ,
game losing streak. - the
nation's longest - wtth a 2617 comeback win over Ohio on
Saturday.
Dallas Pelz kicked four field
goals and P.J. Piskorik ran for a
tounh-quarter touchdown tor
Buffalo I 1-8, I -4 MidAmerican Conference),
"It's the best feeling in the
world." Piskorik said. "We put
in so many hours - when you
get a victory, there are IJO
words to describe exactly how
it feels."
Buffalo's struggling Division
1-A football program had
become the;, bnmt of jokes from
fans. students aod local media.
Thev were even highlighted on
ESPN.com's "Bottom 10.''
They lost to all kinds of
opponents, including MidAmerican Conference power
Miami of Ohio and Division 1AA Colgate.
The Bulls had been close. at
times so close. They leu Ohio
32-3 I last season before the
Bobcats kicked a gmne-winning tield goal in the closing
moments. Last week they gave
MAC heavyweight Marshall
all it could handle before losing
26- 16.
" I don 'r think very many
people, and to a degree nor
many players don't understand
what goes on and how hard it is
what we were in the middle
of," suid Butlalo coach Jim
Hother. "It's unbelievable credit to a group of young people
who just kept working and kept
believing in something."
Bullalo mllied from a 14-0
deficit. Pi skorik connected
with Matt Kneuven on a 5Xyard TD in the second quarter
- Buffalo's longest pass play
of the season - and Pelz
kicked a 21-yard field goal in
the third to pull the Bulls within 14-10
Buffalo then scored I 6 unanswered points in the fourth.
Pelz kicked field goals of 33,
34 and 24 yards, while Piskorik
had a 6-yard TD run. Pelz's
four ticld goal s ti ed a career
high .
The Buffalo defense forced
four Ohio turnovers while
harassing quarterback Ryan
Hawk all game. Hawk was just
9-for-24 tor 77 yards after taking over for starter Fred Ray.
Ray scored Ohio's first
touchdown on a I 4-yard tirst
quarter run, then hooked up
with Ray Huston for a 28-yard
TD before leaving in the second quarter with a bruised right
shoulder.

Eastern tops Southern to close out season
BY BRAD SHERMAN

sports@ mydailytribune.com
RACINE - Eastern had little diflintlty continuing· its winning streak over coumy rival
. Southern.
The Eagles pitched a 49-0 s hutout Saturday
night at Roger Lee Adams Field thanks to a
strong ground attack and stingy defense.
Eastern won the rushing battle 343 yards to 55.
Leading the attack for Eastern wa~ junior- tail­
back Bryan Minear. who gai ned 147 yards on
17 carries. Quanerback Ken Arnsbary nearly
broke the century mark himself with 91 yards
on the ground. ,
The leading Southern rusher was Derek
Teaford with 42 yards. Teaford also completed
a halfback pass !(" 25 yards. .
Eastern wraps up the season al 4-6 overall
and 2-3 in Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division play.
"I thought we played really hard, all year we
have been playing really hard, that really hasn't
been a problem," commented Eastern coach Pat
Newland. "But tonight everything came together."
Conversely, it never really came together for
the Tornadoes this season. Southem suiTered its
second consecutive winless season. That now
extends the losing streak 10 23 games. dating
back to 200 I. ·
Southem coach Daniel Ono believes that the

trend will continue until his team commits to
harder offseason workouh.
''Unless we start putting in the work during
the offseason, it 's aoi ng to repeat itself," he
said. ''We're not decft'cated enough in the weight
room. When we ,get dedicated in the weight
room, we ' II see thtngs start to turn around.
"If you don 't put tile work in during ihe offseason, you're not going to win ball games."
Eastem broke the ;SCoring ice tive minutes
into the proceedings by drivm g the lootball 52
yards on nine plays. Amsbary punched it in
from a yard out on a quanerback sneak to put
his Eagles on the scoreboard.
Southern was also able to move the football
on its opening possession, but came away
empty handed. A 23-yard completion from
Pierce to tight end lake Nease coupled with a
roughing the passer penalty moved the ball into
Eagle territory at the 39.
The drive stalled but Matt Thomas pinned
Eastern at its own two-yard line with a perfectly placed punt.
However, the bad licld position only delayed
a second Eagle score. A 98-yard scoring drive
was capped olf by a 28-yard touchdown nm by
wingback Chris Myers. A two-point conver&gt;ion
non my Amsbary gave EHS a 14-0 cushion.
After EHS defensive back Bryce Honaker
picked otr a Pierce pass on Southem's next possession, the wheels fell off fo r the Tornadoes.
Please see Eastern, 10

c..m. c......~y, OH

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Expenencecl lull-lime gnllprep cook. Day shift. rotating
weekends. 40-tfhours, vacaAddressers wanted immedi- tion/benefits
Send
ately! No expenence neces- resume/salary requirements
sary Work at home. Call to : Job PO Bow 297 Rio
(405)447-6397
Grande OH 45674 .

SENIOR PORTRAITS!
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Main Street Photography
51 1 Main Street.
Po1nt Pleasant.
Call for Appointment
(304)675-7279

GIVEAWA\'

Dnver wanted· need good
drivers record (no CDL). 2-3
days a "{eek. 740·992- 1397
Ieiwe message
Earn money lor Christmas
by se lling Avon ca ll Joyce
304·675-69 19

!;mlllwJlelll Qo®Jllmll)r;
Combined Meiq~
Hea!thComm!WQLleil

Cats &amp; kit1ens . Call 740.446· t:J~a!thQ.epartment
9935 leave a message if 110 Administr.alQ!
E,~~;pe r ie n ced
Health
answer.
Commissioneri Admlntstrator
Free to good home . Rat needed to direct the Meigs
Terri er 1 112yrs old. house County Healtl'1 Department
broken . Call af!er 5:00 (will'1 20+ stalt members)
("740)992-1951
Must be able to write compet1tive grant proposals and
Friendly malE! white cat, 2 multi -task. Possess e~pert·
years otd. litter trained . 740- 1se in budgeting and fiscal
446-3897
management; computer proftclency: e~Cceltent written
Re9ular Size King Mattress and verbal' (publiclinterperto ttl waterbed-spectal sized . sonal) communication skills;
(3041675·1251
e11pe rtise in researching &amp;
solving problems; familiarity
To good ~ome: 7·B month with emergency procedures,
mix-mostly Doberman male assessment and State regupup. Call Angie (740) 992- lations; organizational skills.
expertise in policy develop95 13
men! and program planning,
knowledge of public health;
l..u.'l' AND
e)(perience in human ratalions/conflict management.
Must be an active partici pant in County's total health
FOUND
care delivery system plan:
Male Australian Shepherd
be involved in Infrastructure
with blue ayes . (304)675development and bio-terror7264
ism preparedness; collaborate with State/local social
Found· Male black dog, very service age!ilcies, business,
nice. Small wlstub tall . community oq;~anizations,
providers .
Found ·on Clay Lick Ad . Call healthcare
Confidentiality required .
the dogP,ound.
Mintmal educattonal requirement: Master's Degree in
WAM'fD
Public Health or related
roBtN
field. Salary commen~urate
with eJCperience w1tn a base
Absolute top Dollar : U.S. pay dt $35,000 plus benelits.
Silver.
Gold
Coins, Current .or former Meigs
Prootsets, Dtamonds, Gold coun ty resident preferred
Rings,
U.S. Currency.· Submit resume and liVe proM.T.S. Coin S1'1op, 151 fessional reterences to
• second Avenue , Gallipolis. Meigs County Board of
Health •. 112 E. Memorial
740.446-2842.
Drive, Pomftroy. Ohio 45769
Baby sit1:er wanted in my
11
home. must be respon-sible by -0S-OJ.
and over 21 . Call 740-446- Need 7 ladies 1o sell Avon.
Calt 740-446-'3358
8621 .

FOUNn

New 2003 Doublew•de. 3 B~

"8. 2 Bath Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo. 1·800-6916777
No Problem Sale- Want a
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and septtc? No Problem.
Need utilities run or dnveway? No Problem . Want big
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No Problem . Cole's Mobtle
Homes, U.S . 50 East.
Athens , OhiO, 740-592·1972
SineS t967 . Where You Get
Your Money's Worth

Horne Health Care ol
Squtheast Ohio ts currently
hinng. Home Health Atds
and LPNs.
Compe!lttve
wages Call 740-662-1222
Jewelry
salesperso r1 -fo r
Chnstmas season. Must be
dependable . enjoy dealing
wtth public &amp; have e11cellent
math
skt lts. App!~· a!
Acquistlion.' 151 2nd Avenue
Galltpolts. No phone cans

I

Inc.

110

WANU:Jl

TnDo

The
Community
Chest
Buyer's Guide is now
accepting applicattons lor
outside sales representatives . Requtres e~Ccellent
customer relation skills. hon4563 1. Attn . Diana Harless. esty • &amp; dependability To
R.N. Clinical Manager
apply : bring in or mail your
resume lo. The Communi ty
Chest Buyer's Gu1de 28
Medi Home Health Agency, locu st Street , Gallipolis OH
Inc. seeking a Speech 45631 .
Therapist lor the Gallipolis,
Ohio area We offer a com- Wanted Licen sed Ohio
pel itive salary. benefits Social Worker to provide
package, and 401K. E.O.E counseling se rv1ces for
Please send resume to 430 you th in a group horne se tSecond Avenue, Galltpolls,
ling in the Jackson Ohto
OH 4563 1 Attn Diana
Area . Tl'1is is a lull It me posiHarless, Clinical Mariager
tion with compe titive salary
and excellent benefits. Must
Now Hinng- AN , LPN &amp; be motivated and have a
H&lt;MTJn Health Aides for local willingness to work with kids .
homehealth agency, apply at Send resumes to "the
33105 Hiland Rd., Pomeroy, Counaellng
Center.
(7401992·0990
M·F. 8· Attention At Siebel, 608 Park
4:30pm
Ave, Ironton , OH 45638
~EOE
Now taking applications at
the Gallipolis Plant for driv- Wanted Licensed Oh10
ers at the ColumbtJs plant. Social Worker to prov ida
COL's required. For more counseling servtces tor
info celt 740-446-1 594
yo uth in a group home setling in the JackSon OhiO
Part-lime position availabl~.
Area . This is a tul t time posi appro~ 1 ma tely 5 hours a
t'·on wilh competit ive salary
week for a Support Group
and excettent benefits. Must
Facilitator and occasio.nal
be motivated and have a
High School Presenter. Tl'1 is
willingness tq work with kids
is a contract position without
Send resumes to The
benelits. Support Group is
Counael lng
Center.
Meld in tl'1e evenings.
Attention AI Siebel , 608 Park
Position requires experience
Ave. Ironton, OH 45638
working in a social service
setlilig and familiarity in EOE
8lJSIN•::$
dealing with persons in cri·
TRAINING
sis_ Interested applicants 1
may replay to : Personett,
P.O Box 454, Gallipolis, OH Gallipolis Career College
45631 .
(Careers Close To Home)
salary, benef tt s package,
and 4 otK EO.E $5 .000
SIGN-ON-BONUS. Please
send resume to 352 Second
Avenu e,
Galltpolis, OH

- - -- ----,- - ----,-c-

140

Galt Today! 740-446·4367,
1-800-214-0452
www.yallipOli9Careercollege.co m
A~#00 -05 - 12748

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Sale, Natural, No Drugs
2 br. 1 ba. hOme wtlh appli800·201·0832
ances In Pt. Pleasant. Inside
ol!iiBO!i"'-•W~AATI-•~"',--, recently remodeled. fenced
yard with outbuilding Mid
L..---l&lt;iioioiiDo
___. 30"s owner wm finance
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down payment . Must see I 1·
MB Handyman Affordable 740-446-4.246 atter Spm or
Service. Hauling, painting, leave message.
power washing , driveway
epair. seal ~atlng, g1.mers.
chimney, plumbing. Jack of 3 tir.. 2 bath, appliances,
all trades. 30yrs . exp. Senior nice condition . Central-heat.
Discoun t. Free Estimat es. aprox. 1,900 sq. ft . Asking
$89,000. 740-379-9887.
(}04}882·2196, (304)377·
8266
Trucking company is seek· - - - - - - - - - 4 Bedroom 2 Bath Pomeroy
, View
lng experienced semi-tractor · Will do babysining in my Ohio.
trailer drivers . Local runs . home. Link and private pay PMotoflnto·rmBtion online .
expenenced drivers onty. accepted. Call (304)675- www.OAVB .com
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Call 740·662-7774 .
6449
80603. Cell t740)992-3650

1

2 Bedroom bottom floor
apartment w1th small porcn
and yard. Gas and water
tncluded $435/mo no pets
For. more tnformatton call
(740)446-446 7 ask tor L•sa
or Faye

Heat-N·G io Propane InSert ,
Max1mum output 24 .000
BTU E)(cellent Cond•tton
$1 .000 OBO (304 )8953769

Late modt;ll Roper washer.
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BEAUTIFUL
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AT
BUDGET $65 each Call affer
PRICES AT JACKSON 6 p m 740-446-9066
ESTATES , 52 Westwood
Lms&amp;
Drive from $297 to S383 MollOhan Carpet 202 Clark
ACRMGf:
Walk to shOp &amp; movtes. Call Chapel Roac:l. Porter 01'11o
74Q-446-2S68.
Equal (740)44 6-7444 1-677-830Lot for !ale in Racine .
9162 Free Estimates. Easy
Housing Opportuni_
ty.
\
~
tinancmg, 90 days same as
4 BEDROOM , 4 BATH - - Furmshed 3 room apt over· cash V1saJ Master Card
HOUSE! Foreclosure only
Jooktng the nver Call 740Dnve- a· httle save alot
$9 ,900 For listings Call 1· '1'1::-"-"":':"'"---..,4.~
46:.·.:22::6:.7_ _ _ _ __
800·719·3001 EJCI. F144
r:: lO
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Hot.s•:s
Gracious ltvir-g t and 2 bed - RepM-675- 7388 For sate.
tl)N RENT
room apartments at Village re·condtt loned
aut omattc
Man or
and
A1ver stae w.,s;ners &amp; dryers. retr•geragas and electr iC
1·3 BED FORECLOSED Apartments 1n M•dclleport tors
HOMES. Buy from $199/mo From $2 78-$348 Call 740· ranges. a1r condit1oners. and
4~o down. 30 years @ 8 5°·o 992 -5064 Equal Housmg wMger wasner s Wtll 00
apr. For l•s!lngs/lnlormatton Opportuntltes
repa~rs on maJOr brands 1n
A.ll realaatate advertising
call t-800-719·3001 E)(1. N1Ce 2 bedroom apartment shOp or at your hOme
in !hie newapaper is
1709
aubjec1 to the Fodera!
m town . Hardwood floors Used turntture store . 13()
Fair Houalng Aet of t968
plus
utility room $385/mO. Bulav•lte Pike Manre sses ...
2 Bedroom, 2 baths, hving
which makes It Illegal to
couches.
room; large fam ily room . din- no pets For more tnforma- dressers.
advertise "any
ing room . With stove. retng· tion call (740)44 6-4467 ask bunkbeds. bedroom su1tes.
preference, tlmltalion or
re.clmers. Grave monu erator and dishwasher for Ltsa or Faye.
dtaerlmlnation blllsed on
$450.
plus
deposit.
refer
Now
Tak
tng
Apphcat
onsments.
740-446-4 782 .
1
race, color, religion, sex
ence reqwed . (304)675- 35
west
2
Bedroom Gall1pol•s OH Ho urs 10familial elatus or national
8859
origin, or any intention to
Apartments , 4pm. Stop by
Townhouse
make any sueh
Includes Water
Sewage .
2 bedroom, LRIOR/K, Oath .
preference, llmlte!lon or
Trash. $350/Mo .. 740·446utility room. central a1r. gas
diacrlminatlon ."
0008.
heat.
storage
shed
Immediate occupancy avail- One bedroom apt 76 V1ne Antiques Mahogany Arrr"IOire
This nawspapt!lr will not
able .
42
Hen~le . Street Gallipolis. Call 74Dknowingly accept
dresser
&amp;
Mahogan"y
Relerence/depos tl requtred 367-7886
advertlhm•nte tor real
Secretary Cur to Cabmet
••tate which Ia in
740-446-9313 .
Pleasant Valley Ap artment Call 645-4053
violation of th• law. Our
nce
2br
House
.
Refere
Are now tak1ng Apphcattons Buy
readera are hereby
or
sen
R1venne
required $350 month rent, tor 28R, 3BR &amp; 4BR .,
informed that all
Ant•ques. 1124 East Matn
t $350. DePOSit. No Pets
Apphcations
are
taken on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740dwellings advartlaed In
this newspaper are
(304)675-5578
Monday thru Foday. from 992-2526
Russ Moore.
available on an equal
9 00 AM -4 P.M . Office ts owner
3
bedroom
house
lor
rent
.
opportunity baua.
Located at 1151 Evergreen
$450 a month ... deposit.
Drrve Point Pleasant. WV
MtSC}]JANI'OU'i
Rodney Village II. 740-446Phone No is (304)675-5806
Investor witting to pay up to
MtRUIANDt.&lt;.'E
H
4543 .
E.H.O
9(JO/o of Apprai se 11 or ames
in area. Use my Money not
3 Br house for rent Located Tara
Townhouse 4 P1ece Bed Room SUit. like
c ontac1 Teny
Yours!t
on
Sanders
Drive
.
$550
per
·
Apartments
.
Very
Spacious. new: new manress. $300 4
(304)675·1352
month Depostt and refer- 2 Bedrooms . 2 Floors. CA. t Tires P215 -75A15 llke new
requ1red .
Call 112 Bath . Newly Carpeted . $60. (304)675-5022
New Star ter Log Homes . w/ ences
Wtseman
Real
Estate
74DAdult Poot &amp; Baby Pool ,
1 acre. Ready to go
Bookcase. chest drawers.
446
·3644
Patio.
Start $385 /Mo. No
$27.000 . 740·256·9247 or
dresser. enterta•nment cen740-645 -0870
4 or. t 112 bathS Located on Pets, lease Plus Security ter h!deabed. refr~gerator,
SA . 141 near Cen!enary. Deposit Required. Days stove. and miCroWave stand
Owner· Financed homes 700 per month . Deposit &amp; 740-44 6-348 1, Evenings· 740 _446 _9742
avatlable. Problem credit OK reference required
Call 740-367-0502
Cham sew· Homelite 240
let me Help You in finding w1·seman Real Estate al
Twm Rivers Tower is accept· 18 •·· bar . two k erosene
your Homel! Contact Terry 740 _446 _3644
(304)675- 1352
ing applications fm wa itin~;~ heaters. 20 " n11tura l gas
For sale or rent- 4 bedroom hsl lor Hud·sutlstzed. 1• br. space heaters; heavy duty
Remodeled 3 bedroom . 1 house In Pomeroy. $450 a apartment. call 6 7 ~· 6679 log spl1tter: double action cyl
112 bath in good ne•ghbor· month renl. $400 secunty EHO
24x6' hog furrowing crate:
hood in Middleport. (740) depOsit. "no pets, stove, trig . C~-wo
-effic
-.-ie_n_c_y_apa
_r_lme
_n_ts-in metal toolbo.: lor tull size
992-7743 or view
at &amp; dt'shwasher. t740 )949- town . Convententty tocated or--~.
(7401742·3167
uo...l\
www.orvb.oomll:81503
,7004
on Second Ave . Downstairs -E-s-ta-te.:_
H_ea_l_ro-le- C-oe_I!W
_ ood
_

r

1£.JJ.J

~~3by

~p:-le:-as_e:-.-~;-:::-:-:-:-=-:­

Residential
Treatment
Facility. now hiring Direct
Care workers &amp; one cook
po si tion needed for boys
program . Pay based on
experience. Call 740-3799003 ask for Lisa.
~=~==---BNIPT ·LPNrp r
PT AN &amp; LPN/PT &amp; FT
Desired . EnJOY Flexible
Scheduling &amp; A Rewarding
Career In A Homelike
Atmosphere. Many Benefits,
Competitive
Pay.
Professiona l Applicants May
Apply Daily. Mon.·Sun .. 9·
4pm, Ravenswood Care
Center, 111 3 Washmgton
St.,
Ravenswood,
WV,
(304)27 3-94d2 ,
(Across
Ritch ie Bridge. At 2 N.. Last
Business On Right) Come
Join Our Team! You 'll Be
Glad You Did!

Furniture hand crafted alder
wood IUion-tek dt ntng table
INI!h two leaves--4 s•ded 2
armchatrs. match•ng bar
stools. computer desk &amp; ltte
cabmet . wedgewooo Cl1•na
1br. Apartment all utlltttes 8pc place setttng compl_
ete
tncluded , pr tvate park1ng Call 645·4053
8. depo sit
quiet , rei
Good used App liances .
(304)675-6676
Reco nellllonea
and,
2
bedroom
a ~Jt
tn Guaran1eed
Was her s.
Centenary. appliances fur · Dryers
Ranges
and
mshed. llttlities patd . e)(peet Aefngerators . Some start at
electric. clean-$350 month $95 Skaggs Apphances. 76
Call 740-256-1t35
Vme St (740 )446-7398

New 14X70 3Br/2Bth only
$995.00 clown and only
$196.43 per month . Call
Karena (740), 385-767t

--------c---

':-----,-~--:::-:-:=-:~

1 and 2 bedro om apart ·
ments, furmshed and unfur ·
mshed , secunty deposrt
reqlllred , no pets, 740-992·
2218 .

Good used 14X70 2 bedroom.
2 bath
Only
$8995.00 Includes delivery.
Call Harold (7 40) 385-9948

Fullttme help needed. Apply
between 10·11 am. Mon.,
Th.urs .
Sa t
McC iures
Restaurants. All locattons
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis
740-446-3837: Midd leport
740·992·5248,
Pomeroy
740-992-6292

Medt Home Health Agency,
rnc_ seeking full -tme staff
Physical Th erapis t lor Ohio
and West Vtrginia client
base. We oflm a competttt ve

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

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

t.-------·
ItO

O.W M 47 .·6"1 a little over·
weight but not alot. Salt and
pepper ha tr an~ beard.
brown eyes. Seekmg ternale
for fnendsh1p, dating . possible relahonsh1p. P.O Bo,~~; 123
Leon WV 25123
An awesome job! $6.-$9 per
hour Alter trAin •ngl No e~pe­
A NM MI ~( 'F:\ IFNTS
rtence needed' Full/part
t• me. Flextble scheduling,
Conventent Pomeroy locaC-1 Be.~r Carry Out permit l•on, 20+ poSihons availfor sale. Chester Townsh1p. able. CAll 9·9. M-F. 1-888Metgs County, send letters 974-JOBS
of intere st 10 The Da tly - - - - - - - - Senttnel. PO Box 729-20 . Area Rep/l ocal Route . No
Pomeroy. Ohto 45769
Selling. S1OOK Income.
$12,950 Investment for
Public Meeting Notice
Accounts.
Inventory,
Charleston C•vic Center
Tratning , Te rritory (800)373·
Charleston . WV
5470.
6:00-8:00 PM
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
November 4,2003
Shirley Spears. 304The West Virgin1a Statewide Sell
Add ressing
&amp;Mappmg 675- 1429.
Board (SAMB) will hold a
Communtty Action tS seek·
pubttc meet1ng to d1scuss
ing an EPPI HWAP SPEdevelopments in the prOJBCI
CIALIST for ·the Emergency
to
prov1de
city·sty le
addresses to every citize n of Services Progra ms. EPP.
SMOC - EAS.
Building
WV lor E9-1-1 servtce.
The plibhc meeting wtll be lnspec\ton. Trammg and
held at the Charleston C1v1c Weatherlzatton experience
Center. in Charleston. WV, preferred. Go od read •ng,
comprehensron .
on November 4. 2003 The wnting ,
Charleston Civic Center is 1ra1ning , organizational and
located off exit 5BB on computer sktlls a MUST.
Interstate 64 ' East , or e~it Send or deliver resume and
58C on tnterstate 64 West HOlfere!lces to GMCAA.
attenti on Sandra Edwards,
and Interstate 77 South
8010 N Slat e Route 7,
Members of the Board and
•ts consultanl Mtchael Baker Cheshire. Ohio. 45620 by
11 ·03-03 GMCAA is and
Jr .. Inc. of Cross Lanes, WV
EOE.
will give a br1ef presentatton
abolit the project, ans.wer Delivery/Warehouse person
questions
and pass out needed, furniture store , full
informalt\le wrtlten maten- time , Immediately opening.
als. For more information apply at Ltle Style Furniture,.
see the SAMB 's web site at 856 3rd Ave , Gallipolis . no
phone calls
WWYf,il~:iJI1~

r

110

~egtster

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailysenti nel.com

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

0'

\\\01 \(I \II '\IS

r

i,

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

Of{tee 11o~.f'

r

Eastern Terry Durst is wraped up by a Southern defender during the
Eagles· 49{) win over the Tornadoos,Saturday. (Brad Sherman)

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

r

-----,----:-:----c-

s

r

MOBO..E H~
loUR SALE

I

-N-~-e-new-:-ho_m_e_,-:3:-b-r,:-i-:-b-at::-h,

·Apar"lment •S S2&amp;0 and the large neat stove Works well

• garage . No pets. Deposit &amp; upstairs apartment iS $2 75 $150 . 740-446-7484 or 740-

b'l
C
14 11 50
1997 layton
mo '"
home, very good condition.
lncludes : washer/dryer, NC.
underpinning,
furniture.
Pho
S9 Soo
ne
·
·
- '40
~ - 256 1734
·
2 bedroom on re r) ted lot.
does not have to be•moved.
S5.900. Call 740-446-3617 .
2001
Fleetwood
DoutJtew1de. 3 Or. 2 bath . all
applian·c"s. $35 ,000 or
assume note. Move or lot
rent option Located by
Vinlon. 740-983-1900.

relerence ·required
740245-5t t4
--------St, At . 141 . 2 bedroom. living
&amp; dining room. Lg. kitchen
w/all appliances, Iron! &amp;

c

back porch. $485 mo .. $400
deposit. 740·446-4254 or
C71!1401!'·,;,44~6~·0;,;2;;05
,;,.
. ":':'....... ,

c.

MOIIIFORI.ERENrlloMEli

per month. Renl includes 339 . 0707 .
w$ter , sewer and gas. Ca ll c:c.:c.:._ _....,-~~::-::Wiseman Real Estate 740- Firewood lo r sale S30 a
446·3644.
load. $75 cord. 740-2566663
SPACE
Firewood, seasoned oak
•UR n.-.
IU.I'I r
$20. pickup load. You cut you
haul." Not responsible for
Commercial property lor accidents. (:304)675 _6«0
rent- a store front in
. JET
Hlstori,al
downtown
Pomeroy. 01'1 racing river .
AERATION MOTORS
(740)589-7122
Repaired , New &amp; AeDuil1 tn
- - - - - - - - - Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1·
Mobile home lot. will take 14 800-537-9628
or 16 wides. , $125 month.

I

2 bd. wrw carpet, air, porcl'1 .
Very niCe, no pets. In
Gallipolis. 740-446-2003 or
~740i%4;;;4;:6"·1;,o
: 409;;;;,·~........- , 740-446-Ql~S.

r

I

~ARfMlNfS
____
fOR llfNr
· r.. 0 i
"---tiiiiiiiiitiio_... 1

97 Redman , 6x72, $13.995;
96 Liberty 14JC70 S7.995 :
Call 74Q-701H 166.
t &amp; 2 BR, $295 to $359 per
monih. plus utilities. Near
Cole"s Mobile Homes
Holzer. no pets . 740-4-t6- Sears washer and d_ryer.
US 50 East . Athens. Ohio. 2957
740-446 -1543.
4570 1, 74Q-S92· 1972

-------

King
W,o od
burning
Fireplace Insert, $200, 740-'
256-i 50o4.

Oflloe Fumltu,.
New. scratch &amp; Dent.
Save 70%. 1-800-527-4662 .
Argonaut 519 Btldge street.
OuyandOtteiHunllngton. MIF'

�.. .

. ., '

.... .

'

.·

•

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Oct. 27, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

~----~---.--~~~--~

Monday, Oct. 27, 2003
ALLEY OOP

ACROSS

Phillip .
Alder

BUSINESS

Clltherw

10
AKC Beagles 6 weeks old
Wormed &amp; shots $100. Call
74(1-446-4172-work or 740·
256-1619-home
Case
- - -- - - - AKC
Registe red
rpa le
Boston Terrier. 7 months old.
Had all shots. 5225. 740441-0 t82 after 5:30pm.

..

......

93 Grand Am . 2-door, hail
damaged, runs good. 152K.
$1,500 740-446-2282 ask
for Bob.
96.Ford Contour. 51.200; 98
Plymouth Neon $2,000: 97
Geo Prizm $2.300; 99
Chevy Cavalier. $2,800; 98

199 4 Chevy 1

Pontiac Bonneville, $1 ,500:
97
Pontiac
Grand
Am ,
$2 ,000;
98 Chevy
Cavalier.
$2 .300 ; 95 Chrysler Cirrus,
$2,000; 94 Eagle Vision,
$2,000; 85 Olds Cutlass
Ciera , $500: 95 Dodge
Intrepid. $1,500: 97 Dor:ige
lnlrepid , $1 ,600 ; 2000 Ford
Mustang, $6,000; 94 Bu ick
LeSabre, $1,700; 97 Buick
Skylark , $1,800

AUlU'i
n&gt;R SALE

LJVFX IIJC K

Buu.mN&lt;;
Sui,,JE:'
Block, brick, sewer p1pes,
windows. lintels, etc_ Claud e
Winters, Rio Grande. OH
Call 740-245-5 121

I'J.:i~
FOH. Si\1.1-:
2-AKC Male Beagles. 3 yrs.
Old. Indian Hills and J1ggs
breet:i. 3 yrs. old 740-709 1'861 .
AKC Registered Yellow Lab
puppies. born 9!15/03. 7
males, I fema le. $250/each
740·367-0038 or 740-367·

7202

1998 4x4, 300 4-wheeler lor f
sa le. Great
Condil ion.
(304)675·7324
-------1998 Yamaha 1OOcc 4wheeler. e)lcellent condition.
new engine, new tires

$1.000 080. Call 740·388·
0436.

60 Auro I'Airls &amp;

Automoti ve parts. If your
lookmg for engines or transmissions give me a call a1
740-446-0519.

1995 FORD E350 CUBE
CAMI'ERS&amp;
1996 Grand Voyager, 125K
80~
T RUCK .
CALL
MrnuR HoM"~
miles, very good mechanical
(7401446 -9416. M-F 9-5
condition. $4,500 or best
Located
1391 Safford
2001 Keystone Ultra L1ght
offer. Call 740-709 -9596.
School, Gallipolis .
25ft. Must sell, make o1fer on
1998 Chevy S- 10 Supercab,
a1r. tt!t , cruise. $6,995. 1996 97 F-150 Ex t. Cab pick up
V6 .
135K .
Ford ranger supercab, V-6, Automatic.
auto, air $5,995. 1996 Jeep $6,900. 740-446-2282 ask
10
HoMt:
Cherokee 4dr, auto. air, ti lt, for Bob.
1.\WROVEI\IENTS
cruise, 4wd. 56.995. 1997
Chevy Cavalier 2dr. Roll ey 98 Ford Windstar, $2 .900;
BASEMENT
sport. auto. r.ur. $3,995. 1993 97 Ch evy S-10 Blazer. 4x4 ,
WATERPROOFING
Buick Lasabre, all power $4,00D,;_ 92 Chevy P.U., 4)(4 ,
Unconditional lifetime guarHAY&amp;
$1,995. Riverview Motors $3.600~ 90 Chevy P.U. 4x4
99 HD Fat boy. lots ol extras:
antee.
Loca l refe1 ences lurGKAIN
(740)992-3490
•
$2,BOo: 98 Dodge Dako ta,
91 Olds Cutlass Supreme
4x4 $5,900; 93 Ford Ranger nished Es tablished 1975
Call 740-44 6-9954 af1er
Round bales of mi)(ed hay, 1999
Chevy
Cava lier, Auto, $1 ,BOO; 93 Chevy S· 10 Call 24 Hr s. (740) 446 7prtl
66,000 miles . $3.950 or bes t Blazer 4x4 , S1 ,600· 95 08 70. RogErs Basement
Dodge Dakota. S2.000; 95 Waterprooling .
offer. Call 740-256-6169
Seasoned f1rewood for sale.
Ford F-150 ext. cab $2.800;
St1ck and Stones Colt 74010
2000 Monte Carlo LS. Fully 2000
Dodge
Dakota .
446-6783 or 740-645-2480
Amos
loaded, 72K mites. Call 740- $4,900; 96 Geo Tracker. 4 C&amp;C
General
Home
FORSAI.I-:
door, 4x4. $2,800; 94 Olds Mamtenence- Painting. vinyl
675·3 127 .
Bravado, 4x4, $2,900.
siding , carpentry, doors,
SSOO! POLICE IMPOUNDS
91 Ford Escort 4 cyl. 5
wmd ows. baths, mobile
Hondas. Chevys. Jeeps. etc!
speed, green. Runs good
B&amp;D Auto Sales
home repa1r and more. For
Cars from $500. For liStings
$700.
740 -446-248'7
free est1m111e call Chet, 740SR
160
N.
1-800-719-3001 e)(t 390 1
evemngs
740·446-6865
992·6323.

a weeks old

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

PUBLIC
"NOTICES
Village Council of the

Revised

s uance

a
the
Village Council of the
Village of Pomeroy,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,

day of July,

Code,

Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19,5705.25
NOTICE is hereby

given

that

in pur·
s uance
of
a
Resolution of the
Board of Township
Trustees
of
the

of

Resolution

ol

pessed on the 16th
day of July, 2003,

on the 8th day of July,

there will be submit·
ted to a Vote of the
people of said subdivision at a General
Election to be held in

2003, there will be

the

Township of f hester,
Chester, Ohio, passed
submitted to

a vote of

the people of said

subdivision
at
a
General Election to

bt

held

In

Village

of

Pomeroy, Ohio, at the
regul ar places of vot·
ing therein , on th.e 41h
day of November,

the

2003, the question of

Township of Chester,

le vying · a tax, in
excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit
of
Pomeroy

Ohio, at the regular
praces
of
votirtg
therein, on lhe 4th

d'y of November,
2000 , the question of

Village for the pur-

there will be submitted to a vote of the

November, 2003, at
the regular places of
voting therein , the
que stion of levying a
renewal tax outside
of the ten-mill constitutional limitation for

people of said subdi-

the benefit of the

vision at a Gen eral
Election to be held in
the
Village
of
Pomeroy, Ohio, at the
regular places of vot·
ing therein, on the 4th
day of November,
2003, the question of
levying a tax , in
excess of the ten mill
limitation , for the benefit
of
Pomeroy
Village for the purpose of Fire protection.
Said tax being : 2 A
renewal of a lax of 1
mill at a rate not
exceeding 1.0 mills
for each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to ten cents

Souttfern
Local
School District for the
purpose of providing
·fund s for current
expenses, at a rate of

Village of Pomeroy,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
passed on the 16th

2003,

pose
of
Current
levying a lax , in
expenses.
excess of the ten mill
Said tax being: 2 A
limitation, for the benrenewal of a tax of 1.9
($0.10) for each one
efit
of
Chester
mills at a rate not
hundred dollars of
Township for the purexceeding 1.9 mills
valuation, for five (5)
P9Se of Fire protec- for each one dollar of
years. The Polls for
tiQn.
valuation ,
which
said Election will
Said tax being : 2 A · amounts to nineteen
open at 6:30 o 'clock
replacement of a tax
cents ($0.19) tor each .. am and remain open
of 1 mill at a rate not
one hundred dollars
until 7:30 o'clock pm
exceeding 1.0 mills
of valuation, for five
of saiQ day.
for each one dollar of
(5) years. The Polls for
By order of the Board
valuation,
which
sa id Election will
of Elections, of Meigs
amounts to ten cents
open at 6:30 o 'clock
County, Ohio.
($0.10) for each one
am and remain open
John
N.
!hie,
hundred dollars of
until 7:30 o'clock pm
Chairperson
valuation, for five {5)
of said day.
Rita
D.
Smith,
years. The Polls for
By order olthe Board
Director
said Election will
of Elections, of Meigs
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27
open at 6:30 o ' clock
County, Ohio.
am and remain open
John
N.
lhle,
until 7:30 o'clock pm
Chairperson
Public Notice
of said day.
Rita
D.
Smith ,
By order of the Board
Director
NOTICE OF ELECof Elections, of Meigs
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27
TION
. County, Ohio.
Notit:e is hereby
John
N.
lhle,
given lhat pursuant
Chairperson
Public Notice
to a ·resolution adopl-

Rita

D.

Smith,

Director

(10) 6, 13, 20, 27
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX ~EVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code,

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised

Code,

Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE is hereby
given that in pur·
suance
' of
Resolulion of

a
lhe

ed by the Board of
Education
of the
Southern
School

Local
District,

Ohio 45771
Said
Premises
Appraised
at

$51,000.00 and cannot be sold for less
than two-thi rds of
that amount

each

one

certain

right of

way bounded

and described as fol lows:
An easement and
right of way along the

Boundary

said real estate for
Ingress and egress

renfainder upon ten-

for property lying an

der of deed.
Ralph E. Trussell,

the North side of the
above described real
eslate and being - a
righl of way and ease-

or

Meigs

($1 .00) of tax valua-

WOO~DRIDGE

tion, which amount lo

L.P.A.

&amp;
CO.,

ment 20 feet In width
and extending the
entire distance along

forty cents ($0.40) for

Attorneys ror Plaintiff

the

each

600

Boundary.
Save and Reserve the
Oil and Gas as prevl·
ously reserved ,

one

hundred

South

dollars ($100.00) of

Street

tax valuation, for a

Columbus,
43206
(514) 221-1662
EXHIBIT A

period of three (3)
years , commencing
in 2003, first due In
calendar year 2004 .

Situated

The polls will be open
from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30
p.m . on said date.

in

State of Ohio:

Racine, OH 45771.
Oct. 6 , 13, 20, 27, Nov.

following
situated

real
In

Township,
Meigs
County, Ohio:
Beginning at an Iron
pipe al the Northeast
corner of Chaney's
l.SO acre tract and
being a corner to the
Original 11 .50 acres
of Elmer G. &amp; Ruby K.

(10) 6, 13, 20,27
Public Notice
. The State of Ohio,
Meigs County,
Beneficial Ohio, Inc.

vs,
Robert D. Ellis, el. al.
Plaintiff
Defendants,

Young;
48 27'
feet to
thence

Sheriffs Sale of Real

Fast 505.80 feet to an

Estale

Iron pipe; thence
South 56 00 ' East
210.94 feet to an Iron

CASE NO. 03CV031
In _ pursuance of an
Order of Sale· in the
above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at
public auction, at 't he
Courthouse
Jn
Pomeroy, Ohio, in the
above named County,

said school district at
the election to be
held on the 4th day ol

Said

thence North
West 102-09
an Iron pipe;
North 47 42'

Chaney's

every Su ml:t~· fmm
ltl:O&amp;.am 111 II :f.IOnm
111 202 East Main Street in

t•omrmy slarting Nov. 2nd
1-:vti)'(IRC Welcome!

A Jump
on

SAVINGS

Premises

ALSO the following

Grove Road, Racine,

described real estate:

I

t:rR.E."~ I DR. Pf\IL Sf&gt;-,'IS ('r&lt;\ ""'l
I--lOT 01'-1 ('._DIE..\, l 'M 0~ "
U ff.~\'ILE: (f-\~G( 1

"llostmyshirt
, -""" liT" in the stock
market!"

"Not me!

My money is with

Shop the

Classifieds!

22 Conteen

. K Qii6 5 t

lniUoio
23 Shouto
26 Hook up
30 l.oll(f

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services,

SIJGI&gt;.R .

Box 189. Middleport, OH
, Phone 843 -5264." /
' ··, , j,~~-ono~.,oM WV

· -------.--

....... --··'

,,•'

P1uneroy Ea~ ll'S
IIINGO 2171
Every Thursda y
&amp; Sunday
Door~ Ollen 4:30
Early birds start
6:3(1
Last Thursday oF

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do it for youl

liNDA'S PAINTING

PEANUTS

SORR-'1', THE PUNCH LINE

month
All pack $5.&lt;HI
Bring this coupon
every

Rl61-lT OVEII- M'{ ~EAD !

lluy $5.00

Bonanza Get
5 FREE

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp; ·

Remodeling
• New Garages
• Elec1rlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gotters
• 1 Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

BETIY

Free Estim ates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

~~~
High&amp; Dry

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

•

4

We1t

Pass

,.

· See
COULP WI&lt; PI~CUS5
AFTER PINNER?

'!"HI~

Athens

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

Electric
Licensed &amp; Bonded

97 Beech St.
ffiiddleport, OH
(lO'xlO' li 10'x20'1

ROBERT
BISSEll

GRIZZWELLS

(740) 992-319'4
CONSTRUcnOII
992-6635
·New Homes
·Garages

• Complete
'· Remodeling

140·992·1871
Stop &amp; Compare

4
5

6

""-- a

7

32 -- Vadlo?"

33 Good

dilgUIH
8
34 Lunch
35 Home
9
fumlohlngo
..,
36 J ..red
39 Qub
40 ~ubrlcate
12
41 -vivant
tho Hot"
42 Capri ond
man

For one week,
monthly magazines

'+I'AAi \-1/1.~
.'IOU (i1f ~~;7--,JrJ

boo:

oppoelte

38 Bollr'o

This week, let's have a looK at the inde·
pendently published Engl ish -l anguage
bridge maga zin es. First. The Bri dge
World , the Ferrari that aims primarily at
experts but has t 2 pages at the back for
the improving player. Here is an interesting deallrom th is Bridgeworks section
You are sitting South. First. what would
you bid with your hand after East opens
one club? Next, assume you end in lour
spades. West attacks wittl the club three.
You win with dummy's ace and call for the
spade jack East takes the tnct with his
ace and leads the club king. How would
you continue?
There is no ~right• bid over one club. I like
the immediate jump to four spades. That
rates to be a sensible contract , you prob·
ably do not ha~e a slam, and you make
life as hard as possible tor the opponents.
Your othe r choices - one spade and
(especially) double - give West a
chance to show some signs of life (not
This deal will always trip up the unwary. It
looks so otwious to rut! the club king low.
But if you do. West overruns and plays a
heart to his partner's ace. Then a third
club lead promotes another trump. trtck
for West. You lose three spades and one
heart
Instead, cut the defenders' communications: At tnck three . ·discard the heart
king, which is an una\fOidable loser. Then,
when East continues with the club
queen, you ruff low and lose only three
!ricks:. two spades and one club.
Full details are available at www.bridgeworld.com, where you wi !l also lind lots of
material for all levels of player.

AstroGraph

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CeietJJty ~r -~~are creat!d ffom q~..~:Ut~::t~S tr, lw!ws pec(lle_put n:t ~
Ead'l tentr 10 'dle ~ starm for lnltlel

Toaa(s clue: Sequals G

"JVIY
TK

F

JTZ

ATKFVI

EGO

LVI

T

JTZ

ZWGDLZJOFLIO

&lt;!bur~:

.n

I

.n

1:-,.

-e

RTLLION. "
VGJTOC

OGKI

we-r:.: ::8.

l!»'m ~ou: slm~lt &lt;IIC~ ~1.

i&lt;IO C88E

V!IRrsrl
~

r--C::-:L--:A""'T=""'"H,---,1!

I• 1. Is
_

" Have yo u ever nchced.' one

overweight rr.an said tc his friend
allhe local gym, "m:ls: people at
r--:::--:--,:-~,-..,,..--,health clubs don't look like people
_No'

.

~,..,E,_l.,.-O.,.P--,..P..;E~0tlo nee:llo--

•

• • ·- ·?"

. I I I I o c•..,,...
'"I
~il"'9
the "'"""' ,.. d0¥tlol&gt; ltom lfoo No. l below.
@
NUM!fiEO l!ITERS
IN THE!E
I' I' ~ I" I
ct..ci!• qUOIOd

L_.J...-L..-I..-1.-L.....J

by

In

P~INT

SO\JA~ES

•

'

SQIM-IJTS AHSWW I0·:•-01
Luxury -Ne•'VSY- Hatch - E!emuse • EXCUSES
"There are :nree kinds of people in the wortd,' my
pessi"]istic friend sigh:d. 'These who m;ke :l(Xld, those
who rr.ake trouble and lhose who make EXCUSES.'

ARLO &amp;JANIS

..-:

Jt

DIZWGYZFRKI

t"l. ~eerrt:n;s '~t!•n ci ~~~.

V i::L·r ::c:c:nb1tC

.~:

A wW&gt;M~~~~M~Pi/.ill?MB'ilMi):loM TuTr. ~ 11Y •H

1.:

LVGXSVL

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Hollywood ... is!tie place where ltiey take an
aultior'ssteaktartare and make cheeseburger out of it." - Fletcher Krlebel

SOUPTONUTZ

n

F

wau
'~;~;~' S©R,¥J~\-~ctrs·
GUll
Ut.ti 0... C:.AT I. ,OUAN _;;__ _ __

Financial arrangements Into wh ich you
enter in the year ahead could prove to be
more fruitful tha n usuai .' Your opportunities
may be quite cli lferent hom th ose with
wh ich you're fam• •ar, and !he returns could
be extraordinary.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - A ch ance
for personal gain that' s been floating about
you lor some lime (and which you've no t
been able to capita lize on) is once more
upon you. Oori't let i! evade you again
today
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) - This
can be a propitious day lor you 1n which
you should be able to reap the types ol
rewards you anticipate !rom situations or
Involvements you personally ~:;reate or control at this time.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - A
guardian angel hovering about you today is
providing you with the proper Inner resolve
necessary to manage well anything that
co mes your way. whether it is favorable or
unfavorable.
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Plan
something tun that lakes you to where
there is plenty ol activity and where you
can mingle with lots of peopl e. You'll be in
a gregarious mood today .thai needs to be
e)(pressed
'
PISCES ! Feb. 20-March 20) - This is one
of yoUr better days for being able to
breathe new tile Into something that IS
sorely in need of revival. This Is especially
true if il should Pertain to your vocation or
career.
ARI ES (March 21-April 19) - Place yourself in the other guy's shoes today when
ma~ i ng a judgment call on someone. By
Viewing !hiS from hiS oi' her perspecti\18,
you may see things quite differently.
TAURU S (April 20-May 201 - The 1ntrinsic
value ol a jo1nt endeavor that has had you
puzzled for some lime could reveal itself
loday. Whether it proves to be pro or con,
r:ieal with It accordingly.
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 201- So that you
do not disturb a delicate balance in a relalionshlp betwMn you and another that is
significan t to you, adopt a give-and-take
attitude today that will prove to be most
effective.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Kind words
anr:i sensible procedures will enable you
and others to do · a good job regarding
something all wo uld rather not do. l!'s
amazing Mw a positive attitude can make
th ings right.
LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22) - Make It a point to
do everything aceordlng to Mill Manners
and Hoyle in your •ffllrs with others tod•y.
How you deal wi1h 1oclal contacts oo.uld be
\more Important than
r.. lfze.
VIRG O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22i - That persona! identit}' you·,. loot&lt;lng for that givea you
" a meaningful oonnectlon can be found
today by riNfewlng your &amp;lrly expt~rltncea .
The •nswer Ilea •t the core of where It a!l
began.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - Should you
find yourself In a Nrloua dltouulon today
In wtHeh you 're trying to otr.r .,other what
you believe to bt constructive aug~1tion1 ,
be ct.rwful lt dotln't come off 10uMing lflw
cr111elam.

1\-\E~?

AFC,

TKATKFVI

vou

J&amp;L
Ph 740-991·0133
Cell 740-591-1073

s-

follower

Pau

Pau

wtapan•

heroine
3ll Fluy
20 Spoil
drinko
Aolo border 22 Component 41 Divulged
range
23
42 Squib
Spice
24 Dlckeroon 43 c.tlon
Pole
of the NFL
depc.•ll
Enjoy • """" 25 Kldo' block 44 Sl._
Newlywed
brond
l.onlbl tHfe
28
4!1 NoiWOft
Foil
Hammer"
48 Sit ond
planting
27 Green lot&gt;- 47 "lfl.UII, -"
New Age
blue
(hn&gt;b.)
olnger
28 Tolft
50 Envlr.
Perfoct
28 SUIIIr 1111111
monllor
31 Applt okln 52 P.-t o1 TGIF
=nt
35 Vtgal
cotfluret
oltlmative
"The Cat In 37 Ally

3

31 Upsilon

Eut

~ortb

18 Auel

1 RolefruH
2 Europt-

measure

By S.rnlc. lhde O.ol

you in
anew car

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

t

K
A Q JJ

DOWN

portner

Tuead•~Oct .28.2003

ALL T +1ESE
CANDIES
CONTAIN

1-'ome ro~. OhiO
22Vee •s Local

Self·Storage

19 Mob , olllen
21 Hhhtr'o

Sou th

G

BIG NATE

992·6215

740-992-5232

35 10" West 118.06

at 341 DO Pine

~ocated

Curnmon Ground Missions
will he holding IJiblt Study

3,50

feet .to the place of
beglr:thing , containing
2.56-.acres.

t:rSTI-$.111-\G /&gt;.. 1\\f.\-1 \:&gt;IE.T, Ef'. 7""'1

&amp; C u s1om Van Dealer··

,~"

acres; thence North

description consist·

r

'CE.LER."( f&gt;.NI) COTI !&gt;(,((flUS£

"WV s #I C hevy, Pontiac, Buick. O lds

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

3

iron pipe at _another
corner· of the 11 .50
acres and also corner

lo

~~~====--~~~~~

THE B.ORN LOSER

YOUNG'S

Road

6 A
• Ai 5
• 7s 2
6K QJV 85

that he would with his hand here).

34100

of the 11.50 acres);
thence South 46 1 T,
West 559.84 feet to an

the
toll.o wing
describet;f real eslate ,

ing of one (1) page.)

949·1405

an Iron pipe a'l 45·17
feet to another corner

at10:00 o'clock a.m.,

qualified eleCtors of

•free Estimates.

11 ,50 acres (passing

2003,

lo wit:
(See attached legal

Grove

pipe at the Southeast
comer of Youngs'

on the 20th day • of

County of Meigs, OH
on the 28th day of
July, 2003, there will
be submitted to the

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMLESS
GUmR

II

1-800-822-0417

Hi\ULING:
• Li me;tone

740·985-3564

SEE IT

1

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Trucking

• Ag Lime

WHEN I

~

New&amp; Used

R.B.

• Dirt

TH' RUNT OF TH'
LITTER

J

Dean Hill

1/ 14/1 mo pd

• Sand

l KNOW-· l AI.SO KNOW

11:

P R 0 P E R T V
Pin•

ONE,DOC!!

IJ

I8

PARCEL NUMBER:
03·009114.000
the

YOU SAID

I-# buy quilt tops

SIZI!S 5' x1 0'
to 10'x3Q'
Hours

/

BARNEY

9 miles from Pt . PleaSdllf
011 Sand Hill Road.

Fraction 24, Town 3,
Range 12, Chester

Rita D. Smith
Director

November,

East

ADDRESS:

estate

county of Meigs, Ohio

Ohio

said

Township of Chester,
County of Meigs and
The

By order of the Board
of Elections of the

Pearl

!"'achine Quilting - Regulated Stitch
18 Patterns Available
Connie Curnutt
89ii-a962 Shop
owner1operator
895-3512 nome

MA~x.

'~~~~~H~·

750 East State Street Phone (7,10!59:1-6671
Athens, Ohiu

740-949-2217

7:00AM· 8:00PM

STOP 61VIN
M~ MA~~s.

FAIL~l&gt; TO
S"ttA~E.

YOU

Racine, Oh io
4 577 1

of

OF SALE.$5,000 .00
down,

County, OH
FRANK

dollar

that

TEA~S

Sherilf

four (4.0) mills for

Being

East

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

57 Total

otole

16 DIWn ciMJw 56 Help lenoro
17 Kind ot gao

Opening lead: 4 3

29670 Bashan Road

WRITESfl

Sections 3501 .11 (G),
5705. t 9, 5705 .25
NOTICE is hereby
given that in pur -

4•

Hill's Self
Storage

HOWARD l.

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

'

-rotly

Orang
55 Doll ordot
14 Foil boot
56 Naturol
15 Tomporory
olev .

r..,.,

Dealer: East
Vulnerabl e: Roth

l:======= ~;;;;;;;;;;A;I!;e;ll;ei~·;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;

Beagle Pup s Copper Nose. Angu s Bulls, Heifers plus
530 (304)773- . Mfli'ne·Angus Steers and
Sea rs
Snowblower. 5038
Heife1s. Top blood lines .
Excellent Cond1t1on 5-hp.
Slate ru n far m, Jackson.
1'1wns&amp;
sell propelled, 6 forward and
740-286-5395.
reversed. Paid $699. new.
VH;E'!ABI.I·"
sa te tor $275 . (304)773-

6076

IDA 4

•

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCI AL and
RESIDENTIAL

I.

B&amp; 0 Auto Sales
An."E:SSORIES
SR 160 N.
FAR"
1985 Toyo tf! Hatchback ,
74D-446·6865
95 Jeep Wrangler, 5-speed
EQIJII'MENT
sunroof. reduced $750.00 !';!:::""--~-----;....,
tran smi ssion. Works great
good cond. call 740·9g2.
TRUCKS
$500. Call 740-446-321 o.
Backhoe cab with 7580 to see it.
FOH. SALE ·
1992 Cadillac Seville Sedan. 1989 GMC Truck 5 speed,
Wh ite. wi ne leather' interior. AC. one owner. (304)675107K mi le s. 2 owners 4874
$2,995. 740-446·0853.

t

TFN

New Ho 111cs • Vi nyl
Sidi ng • New Garages
• Replucem.l'nl

1994 Nissan 4)(4, 90K. NC ,
5 sDd.: CD, 4" lift, 32" tires,
alarm. $3.400 . 740-7 42C3::1
14~2,_.- - - - - - . ,

L

10 9 3 2
10 643 2

BUILDERS me.

ton . 4 wd.

MmURL'VCLt:S

•
.

·BISSELL

Si lverado. lla1 bed. too l
boxes, low pl&lt;. g. 102k miles
$8000. 619-770-0493

Ford Taurus. $2 .300: 96 g
40
Chevy Beret!a, $1 ,200: 95 ~

-9,92~2155

NEW AND USED STEEL
~ teet Beams, Pipe Rebar
Fbr
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel. Flat Ba r. Steel
(!.rating
For
Drains,
Qriveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesd ay. Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4 :30pm . Closed
Thursday,
Sa turd ay
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446- 7300

.

MONTY

South

'--....i.iliF(~N-lJ~l-A~E-- r~_ r'WDs_
NS_&amp;_.~I

'"

10

992-5479

13 Stunn -

AI 071i2

Wul

Jeff Warner Ins.

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
· 740-445·0842 • 949-1155 Evenings
800-446-0842

It-U-02

t K i6
•

Cellular

....

r

numeral

A Gerohwln 53 Long time
11 PC ownero 54 'Watchol

• Q J 87

..GLLt&amp;L

The
Daily
s ·e ntinel

FOR SAtE

I Motor'o
oound
4 Equip
10

N
• J

Antwer to PnwJout Puzdt

Wight
45 Mud boot
48 Poodle
variety
49 - lncognltl
51 Sundiof

1-

NORTHUP DODGE

1· \)(\ISII'I'III· S
8.: II\ I S l()( h.

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

. t/Jis page.for .as low as
$25.00 per month!

~--- """

The Daily Sentinel• Page g:

•

Pus

,...

www.mydailysentlnel.com

.1JllVERTISE YOUR..

.

..

~~

"'

q

.11

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 27, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Junior high Tornadoes finisR..u
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
RACINE - The Southern Junior
High· football team recently completed
a banner season by going unddeatell.
They compiled a 7-0 record this year
while continuing a 12 game winning
streak at the junior high level.
T;Le little Tornadoes. alien retcrretl to
as the "Hustling Tornado tilOtball team"
went 5-1 last season. with the on ly loss
bein~ the first game. This year\ teum
cons1sted of very good athktes and
much of their success was att1ibuted to
team work, team play and good practice
ethics.
The first game of the season led to a
26&gt;8 win over Fedeml Hocking, with
Butch Marnhout n•shing tor 4 touchdowns d Anthony Shamblin added on
a two pomt con versign. Then the
Hustling Tornadoes tooli on the South
Gallia Rebels and to a convincing 28-0
win. The offensive line opened great
holes in allowing Butch Mamhout to
rush for another four touchdowns and
Shamblin ran in an extra two. Ryan ·
Chapman also caught a two point convers1on pass from Quarterback, Cody .
Patterson. Trenton Roseberry was credited with two huge pass receptions totaling 80 yards.
The third game the Tornadoes trav-

Members of the Southern Jun ior High football team are, front row, left to right,
Gabe Hill , Marvin Eddy, Ronnie Wilson, Brody Flint, Cateb Wingett, Trenton
Roseberry. Second row, Dustyn Johnson, Keith Nakao , Teddy Brown, Corey
Brinager, Ryan Chapman, J.R. Grady, Wesley Riffle, Casey Hubbard, Back row.
Coach Terry Patterson. Cody Patterson. Alex Haw.ley, Butch Marnhout.
Sheridan Pierce. Brett Beegle , Mike Brown, Anthony Shamblin. Coach Kenny
Guinther, Coach C.T. Cha pman (absent Matt Lehew, Zach Sigman).
eled cross county to visit the Eastern
Eagles. Marnhout and Patterson rushed
for two touchdowns and Shamblin
added the two point conversions for
both touchdowns tor a score of 16-8.
Southern then tmveled across the
river to play the _Wahama White
Falcons. When the fmal whJstle blew
the score was 22-6. Mamhout ru shed
for two TO's and two extra point
attempts. . Shamblm added one TO.
Once agam the front hne d1d a superb

job offensively and defensively.
For the fifth win of the season the
Waterford Wildcats came to visit. The
Tomadoes won 14-8. Mamhoul had one
TD and one two point conversion, while
Chapman caught an 18 yard touchdown
pass from Patterson . The defense
played tough the second half as all scormg was done the first hal f.
Next on the trail was the Trimble
Tomcats. The score ended in a lopsided
affair as the Tornadoes won 28-0.

b~ten

Shamblin scored a TD and a two point
conversion, Wesley Riffle had an interception and ran back fur a TD, Panerson
rushed for two TO's and Mamhout
added a two point .conversion. Mike
Brown was a key defensive factor o11
the front line as he made several key
tackles on a goal line stand.
The season was completed with the
Tornadoes making the big trip to play
Portsmouth Notre Dame. They came
home huge winners and undefeated for
the season. The Titans were out hustled
by a score of 58-0. Many younger players received valuab le playing time and
scori ng opportun ities were give to 8th
graders. ·
Scoring touchdowns were Marnhout.
Shamblin. Ritfle, Panerson, Roscbeny.
and J.R. Grady. Scoring two point conversions were Shamblin, Riffle. Mike
Brown, Casey Hubbard and Brett
Beegle. Gabe Hill and Caleb Wingett
was credited with some very nice rushing yards while Chapman was prai s~d
for his second half qum1erback play.
Other team members playing were
Corey Brinager, Mall Lehew, Zllch
Sigman, Brody Flint, Marvin Eddy,
Ronnie Wilson. Sheridan Pierce. Alex
Hawley. Keith Nakao. and Dustyn
Johnson . Present but sidelined em·Jy in
the season due to injtny was Teddy
Brown.

Eastern

Reds abruptly
change direction with
newGM, Bt

I

from Page 6
Honaker returned the interception all the way down 10 tht
SHS 2-yanl line. From there
Amsbary scored hi s seconc
rushing touchdown on the firs
play fmm scrimmage.
TI1e Ea~les went on to scon
15 points m the second .quarter
once on a 15-yard run b)
Minear and later when En'
Batey plowed his way througt
the lme fmm a yard away. Tht
score and two-point run b)
Steve Dillon gave Eastern a 360 lead at the break.
Seniors Batey and Dillon an
normally found on coact
Newland's offensive line.
'They are usually linemen
and they have been workin!
their butts off," Newland said
"We just wanted to let them set
what it was like to score an(
give them .something to sen(
them off."
Eastern tacked on two mon
fourth quarter scores to brio!
the fmal tally to 49-0. Fresh mar
Cody "Sunshine" Gerlact
scored on a 15-yard run anc
Amsbmy found Honaker widt
open down the middle- for a 40·
yard pitch and catch to roun(
out the sconng.

Browns hit _bye week
at perfect time, B6

State Rep. Todd Book to keynote Kennedy dinner

SPORTS
• Bengals believe they can
contend. See Page 81

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY -State Rep.
Todd Book, 0 -McDermoll,
will be the keynote speaker
at · the Meigs County
Democratic Party 's annual
Kennedy Day Dinner on
Saturday.
An attorney with the

Harcha and Book law firm,
Book repre sents the 89th
House
District,
which
includes Scioto, Lawrence
and Adams Counties.
The annual dinner and
rally will. be held at the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center in Pomeroy. Dinner
will be served at 6 p.m. , following a 5 p.m. social hour,
according to Party Chairman

S

u

e

Mai son.
Loca I
e le c ted
officials
and prominent party
leaders
will a)so
address the
party faithful at the

dinner. Maison saiu .
"We' re " very pl eased that
Rep. Book is speak ing at our
dinner." Maison said. " It 's
time to rall y the troops for a
strong victory in next year's
election."
" It is vi tal that we
Democrats present a strong
ticket in nex t year's electi on," Maison said. "and just
as importanr that the party
0

Book

unite in an effort to gel our
candidates elected to office
at every level."
Saturday"s event will also
include dinner-hour entertainment by Charles Scott.
and after-dinner music by
The Gilmore s.
Ti ckets are $ 15. and will
be available at the door.
Maison said.

'

Serviceman thanks girl scouts Haley resigns council post

Do you have adoctor
you can call for the
little things~

Bv BRIAN

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Margaret Baker
·• William Ault
·• Jesse Thomas
I

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

WEATIIER
Showert, HI: SOt, Low: 40a

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If so, you qualify for a ·

Michael Macomber of Cheshire. recently visited with Girl Scout Troop 1276 to personally
thank them for Girl Scout cookies the troop sent to him and his shipmates aboard the U.S.S.
Carl Vinson. Macomber is now on Ieaiie, and visiting friends and fam ily in his home com,
munity. In March, the troop sent 15 boxes of. cookies and a scrapbook to Macomber as part
of a service project. He, in turn , presented the scouts with a unique patch to add to their
collections, and discussed his travels in the Navy. He also described life aboard ship and
Navy traditions . Scouts pictured with Macomber, back row, center, are Samantha Pridemore,
Jahnna Lydic. Hannah Cleek, Kayla. Salser, Joyce Romines , and Christian Woods.
Back, Leader Jertena Ebersbach, Jennifer Payne, Macomber, Stacy Macomber, and Ashley
Romines. Macomber is the son of Rick &amp; Jan Macomber and Vicki and Roy Taylor.

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Dudding wins prestigious award
BY J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysenlinel.com

West VIrginia
Dally 3: 1-8-4
Dally 4: 5-5-Q-3
Cash 25: 1-4-7·8-11-19

RACINE- Southern Local School Board
recognized Don Dudding for his excellence
in teaching at Monday's Meeting.
The Ohio Appalachian Center for Higher
Education recently awarded Dudding teacher
of the year for 2003. He was selected from the
best educators in 29 counties in southeast
Ohio for this award. Dudding has taught .
English, journalism, drama and speech for
more than 21 years at Southern High School.
Superintendent Bob Grueser said the prestigious award is a "victory for our school dis- Southern Local School Board President
trict" and that the. school system is really for- Richard Hill hands veteran teacher Don
tunate to have Dudding teaching its' students. Dudding a certificate in recognition for teach· .
"I know our kids are better off with Don ing e~cellence. The Ohio Appalachian Center
Dudding around," he said. "We are really for- tor Higher Education awarded Dudding
teacher of the year for 2003. (J. Mit.e s
tunate to have him."
Layton)
GtiJ.!lser said he nominated Dudding for .the
"It is nice to be recognized, but the best
award on the recommendation of Southern
High School principal Gordon Fisher. Grueser part of teaching is seeing students grow,"
said Dudding continues to grow as an educator. said Dudding. "I am even more passionate
Dudding took a sabbatical to teach last year at · about teaching than I was when .1 first startOhio University. In his spare time, Dudding is ed. I am more excited about meeting new.
pursuing a Ph.D. in English rhetoric.
challenges."

INDEX
2 SE&lt;TIONS- 12 PAGES

4JalltpoU• JBatl~ Qtribune

Calendars.

A3

Cl.assifieds

B2-4

Jotnt lelea•ant·~egil1ter

Comics

Bs
'

The Daily Sentinel
j,unba~ tl!ime&amp;-i&gt;entinel

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

Obituaries

A4
As
As

Sports

B1

Weather

A2

Movies

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Trick-or-Treat observances In
the Bend area
CHESTER - Trick or treat will be observed in
Chester from 6 to 7 p.m. on Oct. 30. The fire siren will
sound to begin and end the observ1111ce.
.
MIDDLEPORT - Trick or Treat will be held in
Middleport from 6 to 7 p.m. on Oct. 30.
NEW HAVEN -A COIIllllWiity puty wiD be ~ld on Oct.
· 30 at 'the firehouse following trick or t;reat from 6 to 7 p.m.
The New Haven Police Department and B&amp;J Music
Makers will also sponsor a haunted house at the community building Thursday, Friday and Saturday. There
will be a $2 charge for the haunted house.
LETART FALl,S -Trick or treat will be observed
in the Letart Falls community Thursday, 6 to 8 p.m.
REEDSVILLE - The siren will sound at the beginning and end of trick or tr~at to be held 6 to 7 p.m.
Thursday in Reedsvill• .
POMEROY - ,The Wolfe Pen community on Qhio
143 will have trick or treat beginning at 6 p.m. on
Thursday. Households participating are asked to leave
their porch light on.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Trick or treat in Tuppc:rs
Plaijls will 'be held from 6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday. The
siren will blow to s~ and stop the observance.
BASHAN - Traditi.onal trick or treat will be
observed for c~ildren of the Basban area from 6 to 7 p.m
ThUrsday. jie~hments will be served. at the Basban ·
Volunteer Fiie Department following tri&lt;;lt or treat.

Saturday, November 1, 2003
9:00 am - 12 Noon

MEDICAL CENTER

(Pre-registration and breakfast at 8:30 amJ

Discover the Holzer Difference

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
Continuing Medical Education will be given.

.
t

lannarelli reported to
Village
council
that
Solicitor Linda Wan\er has
notified her that she does
not plan to represent the vi llage in legal mailers after
Jan. I. lanarelli said a letter

.

·Phone
_______________ _ _ ____
'

'(

Other business

will be mailed to local attorneys in a search for new
legal counsel.
lannarelli also clarified to
counci l members that tentati ve plans for an apartment
complex at the Middleport
High School building do not
involve funding: from the
Department of Housing and
Urban Deve lopment.
Joe
Woltla
of
Indianapolis. Ind .. on behalf
of Lege nds Realty Co., has
begun to ex plore the possibility of conve rting the
building into a for-profit
apartment building. but the
building would not accept
Section 8 housing vouchers,
lan narelli said .
Council :
• Endorsed the four-year,
one-mill levy renewal for
the Meigs County Council
on Aging .
• Approved an amendment to the income tax ordinance. as required due to
changes in state law.
• Approved payment of
bi lls in th e amount of
$3.492 .55.
• Approved hiring David
Woolard. Jr. as a full-time
police patrolman.
Present were Counci l
Stephen
members
·Houchin s, Roger Manley,
Robert Pooler. Scott and
and
Fiscal
Robin son.
Officer Susie French.

7th Annual LeWis A. Sch...l•, MD
Men•lal Cancer s.,.nposlum
.
.

·:Subscriber's Name _______________

•

REED

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
accepted the re signation of
member. Linda Haley at
Monday evening's meeting.
Haley. who was appointed
to the council seal in 2001.
submitted her resignation by
letter, which was read by
Mayor Sandy lannarelli .
" I find it more and more
diffi.cull to do an adequate
job as council member," .
Haley wrote . . " Middl eport
needs members that can
devote ample time to village
operations (and ) atthis.ti me
I feel it is in the best interest
of the village to submit my
resignation ."
Haley's resignation is
effective Dec . 31. and
lannarelli said she expects
Haley will continue attending meetings and participating in council business for
the remainder of the year.
Council accepted Haley 's
resignation , with Kathy
Scotl voting in opposition
and Councilman Robert
Robinson abstaining.

..

I
I

J.

breed@ mydailysenlinel.com

)

....... _
!

For more'information, calll740) 446:5057.

...._ ....

..~

'

' ••

•

;'

"

\,

www.holzer.org

.

,

"

\

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