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Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Vf

www.mydailysentlnel.com

m~n·s College Soccer -

American Mideast Conference

Redwomen
close
out
season
with
loss
•

Tiffin wins AMC
South championship
BY MARK WILLIAMS
' '

SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNE

TIFFIN -It was the final game of the
first ever historic season for the
University of Rio Grande Redwomen
soccer team on Wednesday afternoon at
Tiffin. The home standing Dragons
scored a 3-0 shutout victory over Rio
Grande to claim the American · Mideast
Conference South Division championship. ·
Rio Grande (2-11, 1-7 AMCS) managed only one shot on the afternoon and

it came orr the foot of freshman forward
Krista Butts while the injury-plagued
Redwomen had to fend off 36 attempts
from Tiffin.
Tiffin (12-4-l, 7-l AMCS) put three of
those shots in the net and picked up the
win. All three goals were scored in the
first half. Ciara Gossett began the scoring for Dragons in the 23rd minute with
the assist going to Niquita Amirkhanian.

That would be all that Tiffin would need
to win the game and the AMC So11th
title.
The Dragons would add two more
goals in the waning moments of the first
half. Emily Goldsberry (from Katherine
Murphy) in .the 37th ·minute and Sarah
Rosell scored an unassisted goal in the
39th minute.
The trio of Jen Rosse! it, Abby Grieser
and Stephanie Briggs combined for the
shutout in goal for the Dragons. Senior
goalkeeper Jenny Olding recorded I 0
saves for the Red women.
Rio Grande head coach Amber Oliver
will now be about the task of adding
depth and talent to her squad ll!l she
. begins to gear up for year two in 2006.

Point Pleasant to host Herbert Hoover in finale
.

our seniors, this will be their
last game ever and they have
continued to play hard," said
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va ~ Safford.
.
- After making a late season · Being out of the playoff picrun in the face of one of the ture and having nothing to lose,
toughest schedules of any the Big Blacks hope to make
school in the state, Point senior night one to remember
Pleasant concludes the 2005 for the players and fans, but
football season with a senior standing in tbeir way is one of
night matchup against Class the toughest teams in the state.
AA No.4 Herben Hoover.
· The Huskies (7-1), with the
It will be a tough.task for the help of nearly all of their
Big Blacks, but not one they are staners on both sides of the ball
inumidated by after · beating returning from last year, have
Poca and RavenswoOd in close turned around last season's 4-6
games and 'taking No. 2 James record to not only win seven
Monroe down to the final min- games, but win all seven in
utes last week in a 16-14Joss. dominating fashion.
·
"Well, the mood has been
Herbert Hoover's only loss
surprisingly good at practice, came to Class AA No. I
we have had a good attitude, Wayne, other than that, the
the kids have worked hard and games haven't even been close.
are approaching t~e last game In fact, in the Huskies seve.n
of the season playmg bas1cally wms they are outscoring thetr
for pride because our/layoff opponents 303-80.
hopes are gone," sai Point
The Huskies are led by
Pleasant head coach Steve . returning standout Q.J. Taylor,
Safford.
a speedy 5-foot-9, 160- pound
After staning the season l -5, running back who was the leadPoint Pleasant tilrned the corner ing rusher in the Cardinal
with tl1e three week ·stretch that Conference last season, rushing
put the Big Blacks in playoff for over I,000 yards and II
contention until last weeks two touchdowns.
.
point loss to James Monroe,
This season has seen much of
ending postseason hopes.
the same from Taylor, includ''The key for us now is to ing an incredible 298 yard,
continually see improvement in seven touchdown night last
our young players and as for week in Herbert Hoover's 55BY lARRy CRUM

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

'

27 victory over defending leaders on defehse with Warner
Class AAchampion Bluefield. adding numerous yards at runHelping create holes for the ning back with some time
shifty back is a veteran offen, played at quarterback this year.
sive line which also helps pro- Riffle has led the team in
teet senior quarterback James receiving all year and took over
White. Also making White's as the teams leading rusher
job a litUe easier is a collection after the injury to Warner.
of senior wideout~ including . · Adding to the list of seniors
Wes Hanson, Austin Harper who have made a . serious
and Lucas Burdette.
impact on the team include secBut it is riot all about the ond year player Bobby Errett,
offense as the defense has ftrst year player Dewey Wroten
helped frustrate many teams who helped out in the kicking
throughout the year, limiting game, outstanding tackJe Heath
teams to a mere 14 points per Shirley and Mark Wroten who
game. Nine of last year's defen- ·played in every game this seasive starters return to this years son.
squad to help make Herbert
Seth Beckner saw time at
Hoover one of the most bal- corner and at wide receiver, but'
anced teams in the state. ·
was slowed early in the season
In the final edition of football due to a hand injury, Travis
Friday night for the Big Blacks Baird played on special teams
this year, Point bids farewell to and Edward Johnson cona ·collection of seniors who tributed on defense as a four
helped lead the team to a late year . letterman and captain.
season playoff push, coming up Josh Wroten is a senior who
just short last week
.
only saw half of the season as a
"First of all, two of olir lead- transfer, but helped pick up the
ing seniors probably will not slack on defense with the
play, Brandon Warner and injuries to Warner and Casey.
Chris Casey are out and will
With nothing to Jose, a string
not play this . week, that is a of solid performances against
shame,' said Safford: "Travis tough opponents and Herbert
Riffle. he has just been mister Hoover preparing_ for the posteverything tor us the past cou, season, the mgredtents are there
pie of years and it is tough to for a late. season · upset as th~
lose them all."
Big Blacks ,hope to play the
Both Warner and Casey were role of spoiler on senior rnght.

Thursday, October 27, 2005

MLB -

Fall Hunting Edition
inside today's Sentinel

World Series

Chicago sweeps Astros
HOUSTON (AP) - The
added
in
Chicago White Sox are
1995, joining
the
World Series champions
again at last, and yet anothI 9 9 9
er epic streak of futility is
Yankees .
But
the
not just wiped away but
swept away.
White Soll
After seven scoreless
fans didn't
innings, Jermaine Dye sin- get to enjoy a single celegled home the only run in bration ln person: the divithe eighth, and the White sian title and all three
Sox beat the Houston rounds of the postseason
Astros 1-0 Wednesday_Jere won on the road.
night to win their fim tii!IV" · Houston, which finally
in 88 years.
·
won a pennant for the first
Just a year ago, the same time since it joined the
story line captivated base- National League in 1962,
ball when the long-suffer- became the first ·team
ing Boston Red Sox swept swept in its Series debut. ·
St. Louis to capture their
On a night when pitching
dominated, winrier Freddy
first title in 86 years.
Who's next, the Chicago Garcia and Houston's
Cubs, withom a champi- Brandon Backe pitched
·
shutout ball for seven
onship since 1908?
It was the third title for innings, with Backe allowthe White Sox, following ing four hits and Garcia
wins in 1906 and 1917. five. They each struck out
And it ·was the first since seven.
"Shoeless" Joe Jackson and
Brad Lidge, Houston's
the "Black Sox" threw the closer, came in to start the
1919
Series
against eighth, and Chicago sent up
Cincinnati.
Willie Harris to bat· for
·In the Windy City, where Garcia.
·;;;: ;
the Cubs have long been
Harris lined a single to
king, Chicago's South Side left leading off, and that led
team for once trumped its to Houston's do.wnfall.
North Side rival, no small Scott Podsednik ,j)iJDted a
difficult high pitch iidront
feat for the Sox.
Ownet Jerry Reinsdorf . of the plate, and the sp'eedy
once said he'd trade all six Harris took second on the
of the Chicago Bulls' NBA sacrifice. Carl Everett
titles for a single Series pinch hit for .. Tadahito
ring, a statement he now Iguchi and grounded to
regrets. No swap is needed second, moving Harris to
now: He's got the prize he third.
dreamed of since he .was a
Dye, the Series MVP,
kid
growing
up
in swung and missed Lidge's
Brooklyn.
next pitch, took a ball. then
White Sox manager grounded a single up the
Ozzie Guillen said during middle, clapping his hands
. the regular season that he as he left the plate. Harris
might retire if his team • trotted home from third,
went on to win the Series, and the White Sox celebratand now he'll have to ed in the third-base dugout.
reveal that decision .
Houston was 0-for~ II
Chicago's sweep, its with runners in scoring
eighth · straight postseason position on the night and
win, made it only the sec- 10-for-48 (.208) in the
and team to go through the Series, and Lidge fell to 0- ·
postseason 11-1 since the 2 .in the Series and Oc3 in
extra round of playoffs was the postseason.

·Miers withdraws as
Supreme Court nominee, A2
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;u CENTS • Vol. 55, No.;;;~

SPORTS
• Southem, Eastem
to meet in rivalry.
See Page 81

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ronald Williams, 71

INSIDE
• Grueser addresses
DAR members.
See Page A3
• Church celebrates
anniversary.
See Page A3
• River City Players to
present dinner theatre.
See Page A3
• PVH adds physical
therapy at Middleport
Clinic. See Page AS
• Blessed are the pure
at heart. See Page AS

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28,21105

""''·"')dail)"·ntin"l.""m

AMP-Ohio plans $1.2 billion plant at Letart site
BY BRIAN

.J.

REED

BREED@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY -Columbusbased American Municipal
Power-Ohio' will announce
Friday its plans to build a
$1.2-billion , 1,000-megawatt
coal-fired power plant in
Letart Township.
The AMP Generating
Station is expected to generate $20 million in revenue for
the county, employ 150 full time employees once operational and provide 600 to 8.00
const ruction jobs during construction . The company
hopes to have the plarir operating by 2012 .

Commissioners
approve
additional
funds for
prosecutor

Meeting Thursday aliernotJn
with news staff at The Dailv
Sentinel , Kem Carson, director
of member relations I(Jr AMP.
said the non-prolit who lesale
power supplier will announce
tl'\e plans Friday morning at a
Pomeroy press conference. The
company operates the Richard
H. Gorsuch Genernting Plant in
Marietta, and bu iIt and manages the hydmclcctric project
at Belleville Locks and Dam.
across the Ohio River from
Reedsville.
The uecision to loc·ate the
plant here is contingent on
permitting. geological studies
and negotiations with state
and local oflicials on incen-

tiv cs, i.llTorLiing to Carson.

pany now has options in place
Altcmative sites and options to purchase apprnximatel'y
are also being cuns(dcrcu as a I JOO acres of real estate on
'"Plan B." Carson said.
Ohio 124 near Letao1 Fall s
The plant wou ld consist of a anu i' negotiating wi th other
power plant with two ;tacks. lanuowners. Carson said.
coal unloading faci liti es. allyThe announcement is the
ash disposal area. a substation, result ol a two-year process
and access roads. and would ini tiated lollowing the compleuse the latest in proven clean lion of a stmtcgic plan. and
coal technology to minimize studies perl(mJJed by two conthe environmental impact. su iting engineeri ng !inns. The
The tech nology will also facility will contribute to meet allow the use of a fuel blend ing the long-term energy· needs
that includes Ohio coa l.
of 78 member commu nities.
AMP-Ohio will partner Blue Ridge of Danville. Va ..
with the Blue Ridge Power with !O members anu MSCPA.
Agency and Michigan South . of Litchfiefd . Va. wi th tlve
Central Power Agency to . members. will also receive
construct the plant. The com- electricit y fron1' the plant :

tems. This is the second
announcement this year of
r lan s .to construct a power
plant in Meigs County.
American Electric Power IS
now awa iting the go-ahead to
build its own $1 billion integrated gasi fication combined
cyc·le plant at Great Bend.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTIN EL.COM

Bv B~tAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY
Meigs
County .Commi ssioners appropriated funds into the budget
of Prosecuting Attorney Pat
Story on Thursday. making it
possible for Story to pay his
employees riext week.
Meeting ycste~day, commissione rs approved a $1 ,080
transfer from Story's official
line item, thlit wt1ich Jl&gt;lYS his '
own ·salary, and appropriated
$2 ,500, representing the
fourth-quarter payment of a
litter control grant which Story
uses to pay an investigator's
salary. The transfer, according
to Auditor Nancy Grueser, will
make it possible for Story to
pay his secretary and two full time investigators tor the pay
period ending Friday.

Time to fall
back an hour:
Standard time
returns Sunday

ttting thei r own electric sys-

NINA CREW ON ADVENTIJRE OF A LIFEOME

Please see Funds, AS

WEATHER

Carson cited easy river
transportation for the coal
needed· to operate the plant
•mol the cost of transmission as
the prim•II"Y reasons for selecting the Letart Township site.
AMP-Ohio does not se rve
re tail electri c customers .
Instead. it provides woolesale
power to municipalities oper-

Beth Sergent;Photo

The crew of the Nina have no heat to keep warm aboard the ship that is authentic to the 15th cen'tur y, they simply oundle up and eat well with hot meals
served up by their cook Ellie Kaiser. The entire crew for the Nina:s visit to
Pomeroy are front row. (from left) Bela Berty, Le1gh Brown, and Kyle Friauf (cap·
tain) , back row (lrom left) Jameson Marquardt , Ka1ser. Portsmouth is the next
stop for the Nina.
·

POMEROY - "This was a once in a lifetime opportunity," Leigh Brown of Ashland,
Ky." said about jC&gt;ining the crew of the Nina, a
replica of' one of Christopher Columbus'
ships u"'" to di scover th e neW' world.
The .ship's replica is l:urrently docked iri
Pomeroy until Monday.
With no experience required to join the
vo lunteer lTCW Brown set sail on the Ohio
River last month. findin g it a more adventurmos use of her time than sitt ing at home and
watching tekvi,ion.
Al thou gh the Nina does have a television to
display a video about the history of.the ship,
there are very few modern amenities for this
2ht -=entury crew of five which. include-Bela
Berty. Jmncson Marquardt, .Captain ,Kyle
Friauf and cook Ellie Kaiser.
Kaiser, known as "Miss Ellie" is from New
Mexico anu uses propane to cook the meals
which include chicken, pasta and vegetables.
"We ha ve to cat good," she said because the
ere w has no so urce of heat on those long,
damp nights on the water.
The crew sleep in bunks below deck where
there is a clearance of only four feet , leading
to a lot of bumps on the head.
Without the modern comforts of heat and hot
water, most people wonder why anyone would
volunteer for thi s pal1icular adventure especially with the arrival of autumn temperatures.
·'The Ni na herself." Kaiser sai&lt;l without
hesitation, exp laining her appreciation for the
ship as her reason for braving the elements
from May through December.
Kaiser who is 78 is also a widow and said
that sailing aboard the Nina is her retirement.
Captain Friauf's favorite pan of the ship is
the 14-foot- lon~ tiller which is a 15th century
tool used to steer the boat. Though the Nina has
sails lor sai ling power she also has a 128 horsepower auxiliary diesel engine below ueck.

WASHINGTON (AP) Fall is in the air, the leaves are
changing and that means it's
time to set the clocks back.
Detalle on Page A10
It's fall. so remember to fall
back one hour.
The Blennerhasset sternwheeler has
The change from daylight
docked
at the riverfront for a weekend
to standard time occurs at 2·
full of events which include a murder
a.m. Sunday for most of the
·mystery
dinner cruise at 7 p.m. tonight
country.
Most
folks
will
set
2 SECTlONS- 20 PAGES
. their clocks back before
complete with a drama performed by
Buckeye Edition
Bs going to bed on Saturday
the River City Players, a Meigs County
night, giving themselves an Chamber of Commerce cruise at 7 p.m.
Calendars
A3 extra hour of sleep .
on Saturday, and a Halloween·themed
Classifieds
B6-8
·Some will forget, of course, kiddie cruise on Sunday w1th departure
times at noon and 2 p.m. Tickets for
Bg and arrive at work, church or
Comics
other activities an hour early. these events can be purchased through
Dear Abby
A3
Daylight-saving
tim e
the Meigs County Chamber of
2.
returns
April
Commerce Office. According to the
Editorials
A4 . The change does not affect
captain Harry Bratten,
A8-9 Arizona, Hawaii or the por- Blennerl1asset's
Faith • Values
the boat (and extra barge) has a crew
of Indiana in the
Movies
As tions
of six and can hold up to.300 people.
Eastern time zone, which do
the Blennerhasset gave a
Obituaries
As not observe . daylight time. one Yesterday
hour river cruise to around 80 third
B Section Congress has voted to change ·graders from Meigs Elementary learning
Sport;s
the dates for daylight-saving
Aw time, but that doesn 't take
about the history of Meigs County.
Weather
Beth Sargent/ photo
effect until 2007. ·
© 2005 Ohio Valley Publi!ihlng Co.

Please see Crew, AS

Sternwheeler cruises in for weekend events

INDEX

Holzer Clinic is Close to YoU\Wh Ml' 100 board tellled p~Pjal8,
9c:orweniant b:a, and 28 medal
spedalies, HcB cnc is c1oae to yoU.
The llgion's bell tl8llhcare is r9Jt hn.

1.UirN
, ..1'1·44d ' ' ' '

446-2282

HOLZER
CLINIC

At PleaSIIt Valley Hospital, we want to show how much we truly care about our community. In
collaboration with the Meigs County Cbamber of Commerte, PVH will provide FREE first aid kits to all
local churthes &amp; synagogues in Meigs County upon request (while .supplies last).
This is our way of saying "Tbank You~ for making us your healthcare provider of choice.
For more infonnation or to arrange a time to pick-up a first ai~ kit fi1r your congregation. please call.
(740) 992-5005.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�PageA2

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 28,

2005

MIERS WITHDRAWS AS SUPREME COURT Hurricane-related job losses
.

.

top the half-million mark
NOMINEE IN STINGING ~EFEAT FOR BUSH while new home prices drop
BY DAVID ESPO

White House spokesman
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
Scott McClellan said Miers
informed Bush of her deciWASHINGTON - In a
sion Wednesday night.
striking
defeat . for
In the . Senate, Frist had
President Bu sh. White
been in periodic contact
House counsel Harriet
with officials at the White
Miers withdrew her nomi House
on Wednesday,
nation to the Supreme
offering increasingly dour
Court on Thursday after
assessments
of Miers'
three weeks of brutal critichances for success. Frist's
cism from fellow conservaBob
spokesman,
tives. The Senate's top
Stevenson , said the senator
Republican predicted a
replacement
candidate
talked to White House
within days.
· Chief of Staff Andrew
Miers said she abanCard during the evening to
doned her quest for confiroffer a "frank assessment
·mation because the Senate
of her prospects in the .
.was demanding documents
committee and the Senate
.and information detailing
.as a whole .''
·her private advice to the
In fact , her nomination
·president. "'I Ufll concerned
never
seemed to take hold
:that
the
confirmation
in
the
Senate, given the
:process presents a burden
surprise that greeted her
for the White House," she
appointment, her lack of
wrote .
experience as a judge and
Senior lawmakers on the
the sustained criticism
Senate .
Judiciary
fro in · conservatives in the
Committee said they had
face of repeated endorserequested no such documents from Bush.
ments.
Instead,
Republicans
and
"However nice, helpful,
Demo.crats sa id politics
prompt and tidy she is,
forced her to. withdraw,
Harriet Miers isn't qualiparticularly the demands of
fied to play a Supreme
GOP conservatives who
Court justice on 'The West
twice elected Bush and
Wing,' let alone to be a real
now seek to move the high
one," conservative columcourt to the right on abornist Ann Coulter said in
AP Photo
tion and other issues.
"They had a litmus test White House counsel Harriet Miers walks into the White House one of the more cutting
and Harriet Miers failed Thursday in Washington. M1ers withdrew her nomination to be comments.
Additionally,
Miers
that test," · said Sen. a Supreme Court JUStiCe Thursday in the face of st1ff opposifailed
to
generate
enthusition
and
mountin~
criticism
about
her
qualifications.
Edward M. Kennedy, Dasm for her .n omination in
Mass.
"In effect, she .was
Sen . John Curnyn. a for- for . Justice Sandra Day . private meetings with indidenied due process by mer Texas Supreme Court O 'Connor, whose vote has vidual sen·ators, according
members of her own judge. sidestepped a ques - been deci s ive over the to many lawmakers. Some
party," said Sen. John · tion about his own avail- years . on 5-4 rulings that senators, speaking on con· Warner, R- Va. And former ability, demurring withollt · upheld abortion rights, sus- dition
of
anonymity
GOP Sen. Dan Coats, closing the door on an tained affirmative action because of the · private
whom the White House appointment. "If the presi- and limited the application nature of the sessions,
assig.ned ~o assist Mi~rs ' dent calls me , obviously of the death penalty.
described her as . soft -spoconftrmatton
campa 1gn, I'll answer th·e phone or go
Bush iss ued a statement
ken and reticent and diffi said outside groups and see him if he invites me to saying the 60-year-old
cult
to draw out on the type ·
pundits and "perhaps even come to the White House , Miers would remain as
some senators" had rushed but that hasn't happened White House counsel and of issues like! y to come
to judgment.
and I doubt it will happen ," praising " her extraordinary b~fore the court.
There were fresh problegal experience, her char. Bush, beset by poor poll he said.
lems
at midweek, includ·ratings, a!ll unpopular war
Miers withdrew on a day acter and her conservative
ing the disclosure of a
'in Iraq, high energy prices that two current members judicial philosophy. "
.and the possibility of of the court met with
Senate Majority Leader speech · Miers delivered in
indictments
of White Senate . Democrats for a Bill F'rist told reporters, "I 1993 that touched on the
;House officials, offered no private
lunch.
Justice expect a nominee quickly issues of abortion and vol- ·
:hint about his thinking on a Anton in Scalia told his . ... Within days," and he-ld untary school prayer. "The
:new nominee. He pledged hosts he hoped Bush would out . the possibili~y of con- underlying theme .in most
·to make an appointment in select the most intelligent firmation hearing s before of these cases is the insisnominee available, accord- Christmas.
·
:a "timely manner."
tence of more self-determi: While White House aides ing to one participant who
The White House worked nation. And the more I
;had assembled a lengthy spoke on condition of to depict the collapse of think about these issues,
·list of contenders prior to anonymity, citing the pri- Miers' nomination as a the more self~determina­
:Bush's selection of Miers vate nature of the occasion. simple matter of principle tion makes the most
Whatever
the
next upholding exei;utive
:Jess than a month ago,
s·e nse," she said, remarks
:most if not all of them choice, many Republicans · privilege.
•
·were prominent conserva- seemed ~ager to place
However, in an interview that sparks:d fresh criticism
:tive jurists who could be Miers' nomination and the two weeks ago, Sen. Arlen from conservative groups.
Specter had released a
:expected to trigger a sharp intra-party brawl it sparked Specter, chairman of the
letter
stating he intended to
:clash with Democrats. behind them as quickly as Judiciar;: Committee; was.
question
Miers about con·Other, less contentious possible. "Let's move on," asked whether ·he thought
:contenders could come satd Sen . Trent Loll' of there was a chance Bush stitutional issues in the war
:from outside what Bush Mississippi . "In a month, would withdraw the nomi- on terror, including the
:calls ·
the
"judicial who will remember the nation. "Absolutely not. .I administration's policy of
•monastery," possibly a cur- name Harriet ,Miers?"
think that would be a sign open-ended detention of
Ironically for conserva- of incredible weakness," suspects at Guanta!1amo
:rent or former senator who
:could easily win confirma- lives,
the
withdrawal the
Pennsylvania Bay, Cuba. He also said he
:tion on a btpartisan vote.
means an extended tenure Republican responded.
wanted assurances that
Miers would rule without
sho,w ing "special deference" to ' Bush if confirmed.

~Justice approv(!s

big telecom
· mergers, with.conditions
BY JENNIFER C. KERR

would be the only providers.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Without the condition, the
mergers would have resulted
WASHINGTON - Federal in higher prices for certain
. :antitr-ust
regulators
on customers in eight metropoli:Thursday approved the multi- tart areas in Verizon's territory
: billion-dollar mergers of SBC and II metropolitan regions in
·Communications Inc. with SBC's area, the Ju stice
AT&amp;T and of Veri zan Department said.
:Communications Inc . with
l,n addition to switching to
;MCI Inc.
the AT&amp;T name, SBC also
· The Justice Department said it plans to adopt a new
:approved the deals without stock market ticker sy mbol
:any .significant conditions, and unveil a new corporate
·such as the asset sales that logo. It declined to say
:critics said were needed to whether that meant it might
:ensure adequate competition. adopt AT&amp;T's di stinctive
.:The Federal Communications longtime "T' ticker symbol,
·Commission still must sign or incorporate the familiar
.off on the mergers, and that AT&amp;T globe in the new logo.
could come as early as Friday.
SBC and Verizmi already
TJ:te SBC merger, valued at are the largest regional phone
$16 billion, won 't be the end companies, and AT&amp;T and
ofthe.AT&amp;T name. SBC plans MCJ dominate the market for
to change its corporate name business customers; The
to the iconic AT&amp;T, company mergers would enhance th e
officials
said Thursday. base of business ·customers for
·Verizon plans to keep its cor- Verizon and SBC and expand
porate name after the $8.5 bil- their national and imemation. lion merger with MCI.
·a[ presence.
Justice ·
Department
Critics say the mergers will
·approval requires Verizon and lead to fewer choices for con. SBC to lease to smaller com- sumers and hi gher prices, a·
petitors several hundred claim SBC and Verizon disunused or "dark" lines that run pute ..
'to buildings serving most Iy
Jeff Kagan. an independent
business customers. The leas- telecom analyst in Atlanta.
ing is required in 19 metropol- said the mergers are indicative
itan i;lfeas where the compa- of an indllstry that is in the
. nies, either SBC or Verizon , midst of massive change.

BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER

decline in Augus!. However,
the median price of new
homes sold last month fell by
WASHINGTON Job 5.7 percent, in another indicalosses from hurricanes Katrina tion that the booming housing
an!! Rita have passed the half- market may finally be slowing
million mark with further . as mortgage rates continue to
increases still to come from rise.
Wilma as the Gulf Coast hurFreddie Mac said Thursday
ricanes continue to batter the that its nationwide survey
economy.
showed all types of mortgages
tl!feanwhile, new . home were up this week with the
prices declined in September, 30-year fixed-rate mortgage
a possible indication that ris- rising to 6.15 percent thi s
ing interest rates are staning week, compared to 6.10 perto cool off the red-hot housing cent last week and the highest
market.
· level in 15 months.
The Labor Department
Analysts predicted that as
reported Thursday that an rates continue to rise, both
additional 24,000 workers sitles and home prices will
who lost jobs because of come off the record highs they
Katrina, which hit . Aug. 29, hit earlier this year. But they
and Rita, which struck on said they expect the declines
Sept. 24, filed applications for to be gradual and not c.ause
unemployment benefits last the kind of economic havoc
week. That pushed the total created by the butsting of the
over the past eight weeks to stock market bubble in 2000.
502,000
hurricane-related
"Housing is at the mounclaims.
taintop now and all roads lead
The weekly job losses from down. It is just a question of
Katrina and Rita peaked at how-steeply down," said Mark
108,000 in mid-September Zandi, chief economist _at
and have been trending lower Economy.com. "It will depend
since that time. However, ana- on how high mortgage rates
lysts saia Wilma, which hit go and how fast they go up."
Florida on Monday, will likely
Zandi predicted that mortspark a surge in jobless claims gage rates will continue
in coming weeks.
climbing as the Federal
The 24,000 hurricane-relat- Reserve keeps pushing a key
ed jobless· claims last week short-term rate higher to make
were included in total jobless sure intlation from surging
claims of 328,000. The overall ener¥Y prices does not break
figure was down from out mto a more ·widespread
356,000 jobless applications problem. Zandi said he
for the week ending Oct. 15. · expected the 30-year mortSome analysts suggested gage to be at 7 percent next
that Wilma may have spring.
depressed claims last week in
The Commerce . report
Florida if people who had showed that new home sales
been laid off decided to e.vac- climbed by 2.1 percent last
uate in advance of the hurri- month to a seasonally adjusted
cane instead of going to their annual rate of 1.22 million
local ·unemployment office.
units, but the median price fell
· 'They will show up in the 5.7 percent from the August
numbers next week along level to $215,700.
with people pushed out of
Earlier this week, it was
work by the storm," said Ian · reported that sales of existing
Shepherdson, chief U.S. econ- homes were unchanged in
omist at High Frequency September at an annual rate of
Economics, a private consult- 7.28 million units, the seconding firm. .
highest pace on record, but the
In other economic news, median price of an existing
sales of new homes rebound- ' home fell by 3.6 percent from
ed in September after a huge the August level to $212,000:
W

ECONOMICS WRITER

Former school
board member
Jmisspoke' in
advocating
creationism

!

•

Bv MARTHA RAFFAELE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
HARRISBURG, Pa. - A
former school board member
who · denied saying creationism should be taught alongside evolution in hi gh school
biology classes changed his
story Thursday after being
confronted in court with TV
news footage of him making
such comments.
William ·
Buckingham
explained that he "misspoke"
during the TV intervi.ew.
Buckingham' s testimony
came in the fifth week of testimony in a lawsuit filed· by
eight families. who are challenging the Dover Area
S.c hool District 's policy that
students hear a statement
about intelligent design in
biology classes.
Intellige nt design holds that
the universe is so complex it
must have been cre,ated by
some kind of higher intelligence. Critics of intelligent
design say it is a cleve(
repackaging of the biblical
story of creation and thus violates the constitutional separation of church and state.

Soldiers tour of duty is tearing at his marriage
DEAR AUBY: I'm an
Iem. not a plus, for me in my you with some ce rtainty that it
American soldier serving in
employment.
.
isn't the society we live in. So,
Iraq. When I went on leave for
People tell me I am "overed- that leaves "you." The probtwo weeks to see my family, I
ucatcd" for the job I so dearly Iem isn't that you arc "overeqfound out that my wife had
love. It didn 't bother me until I I ucated.': It may be something
.posted a profile in a chat room
took
a new job that required to do :vnh your personality Dear
on a public Web site. When I
both my college degree and the way you present yourself
Abby
asked her about it, she denied
my technical training: One co- and tHe way others perceive
·it. When I showed her what I
worker complained that my you. I have met "brilliant"
had found, she confessed.
education "intimidated her" so people whom I would
. I wouldn't have been upset,
much she "felt she couldn'tdo describe as intellectual superbut she lied to me - besides,
her job." Our supervisor said it athletes. Some of them are
the profile presented her as sin- of nothing but yourself and was my fault that she was socially adept and make those
gle. It included a picture and your mission. For now, accept lashing Otlt at me.
around them feel comfortable.
information about how she what your wife says. Time and
Since then I have moved regardless of their level of
·looks and what she's &lt;;looking distance can do strange things away from that city. I have education. However, some of
to people's relationships, and
'for." This has really put a dent
there is nothing more stressful asked several friends about the them are not. You may fall
in our marriage. I can't trust her, than what both of you are "intimidating education fac- into the latter category.
particularly from over here. She experiencing right now.
tor" and Was told it's also the
l would recommend that
claims it was a one-time thing
reason
I'm
still
single.
I
know
you
now invest in a different
If your daughters are being
· 'because she was bored.
· well taken care of, accept that that having an education is kind of "education" -· the
I don't want to leave her and for the time being. When important, and I don't under- " University of You ." In other
my three daughters, but now I your tour of duty is over, stand why it's having a crip- words, find a psychologist
have no trust in her whatsoever. there will be time to deal with piing effect on my life . (I'm who can help you tigure out
'It's tearing me up inside. this through ·marriage pot pompous about my educa- why, with so much to offer,
Everything she does I question, counseling or spiritual coun- tion . People have asked and you are not able to fit in. It
. and it's wrecking our marriage. seling. So listen up: Please I've told them.) What I don't will be' nlOney well spent.
I want to trust her, but what trust me and stay strong.
tell them is I have a "genius"
Dear Abby is writte11 · by
should I do? Please he! p me. IQ,
but
it
apparently
shows
.
Abigail
Va11 .Burell, also
DEAR ABBY: When I was
SSG HURTING IN IRAQ
a student, I was encouraged when I talk How do I cope known as Jeanne Phillips,
DEAR SSG HURTING: to further my education. I with this'' Is it me, or the soci- and was founded by her
Un'til your tour of duty is over, hold two bachelor of arts ety we live in 1 - OVERED- mother, Pauli11e Phillips.
your most important priority degrees plus extensive train- UCATED IN THE SOUTH
Write
Dear Abby at
must be your own safety. ·That ing in emergency servi cs. To
DEAR OVEREDUCAT- http://www.Deo,rAbby.com
means you must develop tun- my dismay, however, having ED: Although I have never or P.O. Box 69440, Los
nel vision for a while and think an education has been a prob- met you face-to-face, I can tell Angeles, CA 90069.

.GRUESER ADDRESSES
'

DAR MEMBERS
. POMEROY Meigs
County Audi!Or Nancy Grueser
·talked about the duties and
responsibilities of her office
when she addressed members
of Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution recently.
· Grueser. introduced by DAR
member June Ashley, listed the
county business which is handled through her office includ:ing the sale of dog tags, the
'retaining of information on
·property values and changes in
· ownership, and items covered
by the Meigs County budget.
She said the sale of dog tags
at $4 each does not even supply enough funds to hire a dog
warden and fund the kennel
operation, and noted that the
program is currently supple·mented by the county commissions in about $20,000.
She talked about property
appraisals which occur every
, six years and noted that the
;state tells the county wen the
.. ·Values are too low a(\d need
:reappraised an updated . The
:county contracts out the
. appraisal at a cost of about
:$13 per property, she said.
: Other items reviewed for the
;DAR members included the
;effects of the 90-20 reduction
-factors in relation to tax levies;
:changes by the phasing out of
;the estate tax, the decline of
Meigs County's sales taxes,
the collection of property taxes
:apd how they are disbursed.
: .The new proposed power
;plant is looking positive and
·would be a real plus, said
:Grueser, noting that the east
:end of the county has large
·deposits of coal and there is
:some interest in mining it.
:while there is no interest in the '
west end coal, and the build-ings are being dismantled
which reduces those taxes.
She also discussed the high
·cost of fuel, county employee
_pay raises, benefit from the lot•tery fund, and high tum over in
:county employees. The recycle
:program, she said, will be end-

ing due to a lack,of funding.
During the meeting Phyllis
Skinner was recognized f6r
her service to the chapter, and
the national defense report on
the "Gift of the Code Tallkers"
was presented by Mary Yost.
which included a history ofthe
American Indians who developed secret codes for the military during World War II in
both the European and the
Pacific war zones.
The Eminent domain Law as
discussed and it was noted that
Ohio has enacted a moratorium on the law. A letter was
read from the Point Pleasant
Chapter of the SAR which is
holding a wreath laying ceremony at the Park. Also red was
a letter from the Junior
OSCAC about a money raising
project to assist in the restoration of the Rock Mill at the
head waters of the Hocking
River which was built in 1798.
Refreshments were served
by Mary Yost, Eileen Buck .
Phyliss Skinner and Nancy
Grueser. Next meeting will
be Nov. 12, at the Chester
Courthouse. Members are
reminded to bring gifts tor
veterans. Suggestions for'the
unwrapped
gifts
were
stamps, phone cards, playing
cards, tissues, puzzles, and
toilet articles.

AEP Ohio ca1 help.
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.

'

LONG
BOTTOM
were the oldest members preFamily and friends gathered sent. Others attending were
at the Long Bottom ' United Rev. Bryan and Loi s Blair,
Methodist Church recently to · L.J. and Ashley. Brian, Tanya,
celebrate the I 10 anniversary Karissa
and
Zachary
of the church
,Connolly, Amanda Durham,
During morning services a Larry and Barbara Baker,
portion of the history of the Sonny. Mary Ann and Tim
church was read telling of the Harris, Chip and Gayle .
struggles the early church Thomas, Angela and Julia
members faced with the 1913 Poole, Paula Sayre, Nancy
and 1937 floods. After the · Moose, Bruce, Teresa and
1913 flood the church . was Miranda McKelvey, Connie
raised by placing concrete and Warren Connolly, Dylan
block basement under it at a Morris, Clay Davis, Justin
cost of $2,100. Even then the Hill, Freda and Robert
1937 reached the middle of Larkins, Tina, Taylynn and
the windows in the sanctuary. Tessa Rockhold, Juanita
A noon dinner was enjoyed Wells, Abby Causey, Janet
by those attending. Eloise Connolly, Ron and Mary
Connolly and Ernie Griffin Grace Cowdery

Berlin and dialogue taken
from the book " Irving Berlin:
A Daughter 's Memoir" by
Mary Ellin Barrett and conceived by Karen Baker.·
Musical highlights of th e
show will include: "What' III
Do?'' - ''Puttin ' On th e Ritz"
- "Always" - "Blue Skies''
- "Shakin' the Blues Away"
-·
"White Christmas" "There's No Business Like
Show. Business"- "Stcppin '
Out With My Baby'' "Easter Parade" - . "Heat
Wave·· - "Oh How I Hate to
Get Up in the Morning" "God Bless America" " I've Got My Love To Keep
Me Warm" and many more.
Hometown Market of
Middlepo11 i; spo nsorin g the
event.
· Ticket locations are Dan's
and Farmers Bank of
Pomeroy and Mason. W.Va ..
Middleport Dept. Store.
Peoples Bank and Hometown
Market. For more intimnation
call 992-7396 or 992-6759.

Public meetings
Monday, Oct. 31
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet at
8 a.m. at the trustees building.
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Veterans Service
Commission, 9 a.m.. 117
Memorial Dr.
Wednesday, Nov. 2
Scipio
-PAGEVILLE Township Trustees, 6:30p.m.
Pageville town hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Sunday, Oct. 30
RACINE Order of
Eastern Star 134 will have
practice for installation and
all officers are asked to
attend.
Monday, Oct. 31
POMEROY - Oh -KAN
Coin. Club will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Library fur a
meeting and auction .
Thesday, Nov. I
CHESTER
Chester
Daughters
of
Council,
America, will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Masonic Hall. The
meeting time was changed
due to Election Day.

Church events

Reunions
Saturday, Oct. 29
HARRISONVILLE
Reunion of Walter Franklin
Gilmore family, II a.m.,
S&lt;:ipio Fire Department.
Lunch at noon.

Birthdays

Friday, Oct. 28
POMEROY - Rosarv and
Benediction. 7 p.m .. s'acred
Monday, Oct. 31
Heart Church.
POMEROY
Mary
MIDDLEPORT - Annual Wingett of Syracuse will be
Harvest Celebration, 6:30 to · 95 on Oct. 31 . Cards may be
9 p.m., Rejoicing Life sent to her at the Rock
Church. Free family · event, Springs Rehab Center, 36759
with games and food. No cos- Rocksprings Road , Pomeroy,
tumes.
45769.
MIDDLEPORT- Free dinWednesday, Nov. 2 .
ner at the Middlepon Church
MASON
Violet
of Christ. Serving from 4:30 to Millhone, retired Tuppers
6:30p.m. Located at comer of Plains Elementary School
Fifth and Main.
teacher, now residing with
Saturday, Oct. 29
her daughter in Mason, W.
POMEROY- Block party Va., will celebrate her 95th
at the First Southern Baptist birthday on Nov. 2. Cards
Church, Pomeroy. from 6 to 9 may be sent to at Box 287,
p.m. Events will include face Mason, W. Va. 25260.

Heart health can.be fun for all ages!
Join us at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital for educational seminars, health screenings, information
about heart disease, diabetes, nutrition, exercise, rehabilitation and h~althy lifestyle choices. A limited
number of certificates for FREE cholesterol sc reening (complett! lipid panel) will be available the day
of the event. Plus, visitors at HEARTfest will receive a FREET-shirt while supplies last.
' 9:00- Noon

Blood sugar, blood pressure, pulse and blood oxygen screenings

9:30- 10:00

Diabetes and Heart Disease - H ospital Lower Level Classroom

.

Suzanna Theodoras, R.N., Certified Diabetes Educator
9:30- 10:00

CPR &amp; Heimlich ManeutJer Demonstration - Hospital Outpe~iientCenter
Susa n Wakefield, R.N ., B.S .N., Cer.tificd Instructor

9:45- 10:45

Senior BEAT PACE Demonstration - H Llspital Lower Level
Exercise Program fur Seniors

10:00- I 0:30

Get Moving with Ronald McDonald - Castrop Center Lobby
For children accompanied by an adult- FREE T-shirt .while supplies last

10:30- 11:00

CPR and Heimlich Maneuver Demonstration - H osp ital Outpati ent Ce nte r
Susan Wakefield, R.N ., B.S.N., Ce rtified Instructor

I 0:30- ll :00

Preventing Heart Disease - It Starts with You! - Hosp ital Lower Level
David Rich ard s, D.O., MidOhio Ca rdiol ogy and Vascular Con sulta nts

10:30- 11:00

Weight Management - H osp ital Lower Level C lassroom
Barbara Nakanishi, Registered Dietitian

Get Moving with Ronald McDonald - Castrop Center Lohhy
For children accompanied by an adult~ FREE T-shirt while supplies last

II :30- Noon

PretJenting Heart Disease - It Starts with You! - H ospital Lt1wcr Level
David Ri ch ards, D.O,., MidOhio CmJ iulogy and Vascular Con sultants

For more informati on about HEARTfest, call C~m1munity Relations at 592-9300.

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

~'

•

painting. mini-train rides for
kids, hayride and games.
Refreshments will be served.
Sunday, Oct. 30
MIDDLEPORT - Blaine
and Boyd Cornwell, lhe
Master's Encouragers, will
be at the Bmdbury Chmch of
Christ at 10:30 a.m. ·
RACINE - . A community
Sing will be held at 7:30 p.m.
at the Pcn(ecostal Assembly
on Tornado Road in Racine .·
Monday, Oct. 31
POMEROY- Spook-a-la, ·
hosted by Comedy on the
Rocks , 6 p.m., Pomeroy
Amphitheater. Music by
Capstone.
CORE
and
J.U.M.P. drama teams to perform . Free.
Monday, Oct. 31
POMEROY - Enterprise
. United Methodist Church and
Pomeroy Church of Christ
three-night revival through
Nov. 2. Rev. James Corbitt as
guest speaker. Services will
be held at the Church of
Christ, 7 p.m. each night.
Special music.

Saturday, October 29
9:00 a.m. -Noon

II :00- 11:30

2005

Community Calendar

_:_____

·River City Players to pre5ent dinner theatre

Winter is cxrning md ro a-e hi!jler a1ergy costs.

Church celebrates anniversary

Friday, October 28,

Nancy Grueser

__________ _ __
RUTLAND - The River
City Players will present their
first dinner theatre revue ,
"The Melody Lingers On" on
Nov. 26 at Meigs Elementary
School. Dinner wi II be served
at 6 p.m. with the show starting at 7 p.m.
. Tickets are $15 and must be
purchased in advance. There
is limited seating and no tickets wi II be sold at the door.
The River City . Player's
company of five men and
eight women plus seve ral
dancers will sing and dance
their way through nearly 45
of l'rving Berlin 's songs.
Joining the company will be
Katie Childs and her "little
ballerinas ."
A "live swing band" will
also be featured in all of the
musi&lt;::tl numbers. The band
members are all local musicians. The show is directed
by Amy Perrin.
The show is based on a biographical musical of Berlin
with music and lyrics by

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Ho.pllal Dri•c, Albml, OH 45701 -2302

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

:The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysantlnal.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free e.xercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

Dis~conned
Respect our ovetSeas troops
Dear Editor:
There's a problem in our times - a danger really - in
·the way our nation deals with the people who are fighting
in Iraq and Afghanistan. It's what some people would call
a mental dis-connect
Some Americans are paying a horrible price in Iraq and
Afghanistan, put the lives of most our country's people are
virtually untouched. That's where the dis-connect comes
into play.
.
Can you remember a period of war that has ~sked so little of the American people? Only a small percentage of
American families have members in the Armed Forces.
For them. the wars are a constant source of worry. For
2,000 families these wars have cost the lives of dearly
loved children , parents, brothers and sisters.
Again this year, Americans will celebrate Veterans Day
·with gigantic retail sales. Our citizens will flock to the
malls rather than ceremonies or visiting· VA hospitals
where our wounded warriors wait to be welcomed home.
This is a problem of thoughtlessness, not malice . The
American people love their troops and their veterans.
Opinion research proves this.
If Americans are divided over the war in Iraq, they're
nearly unanimous in support of veterans. 'A recent poll
showed them supporting veterans ' programs at an astonishing 95 percent. .
They want our veterans of this world to be treated well
when they come home from defending the cause of freedom. In the interest of our nation' s veterans, we must not
mince wor(js ·about this: At one and the same time, our
government is conducting two wars abroad and shortchanging veterans' programs at home. This is hypocrisy.
Our leaders made a promise to veterans of Iraq and
Afghanistan, saying they ' ll give them only the best But
they placed a two-year limit on that promise. When their
time is up, these veterans go into the general pool of rhose
disabled in the World Wars, Korea , Vietnam, the Persian
Gulf. Over a period of decades, however, Congress has not
provided enough money to fully fund the VA . If you go to
war, you have to face the costs of war.
America has a clear responsibility to the men and
women who bear these costs of war. Our government cannot walk away from these costs when they become inconvenient or someone has other priorities in mind .
THIS DIS -CONNECT HAS TO END.
.Ellen M. Darby
Adjutant D.Ai V.A. #53
Bidwell

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
ullers to the ediror are welcome. They should be less than
300 word.1. All letters are subject to editing. must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will he pubiished. Letters should be i11 good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. Leiters of thtmks to organizatiom and individuals will not be accepted for publication

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Friday, October 28,

2005

Finding God in the little things
A columnist I know once
wrote a piece about a cat
and a mouse. It was a
cham1ing, true saga about a
mouse who was sa.~ed from
the jaws or death by the
kind-hearted wri¢r who
could not bear to : see the
tiny creature devoured by
the housecat, who got all of
the food it needed.
This was simply a luxury
the cal could afford to miss.
A mouse may he one of lhe
more humble and useless of
God's creatures, wrote the ·
columnist. "but I saw no
reason why it should die." .
Well, a Letter lo the Editor
appeared in the paper a few
days· litter. The irate reader
wrote "with so much going
on and so much to talk
about these days, it is unbe.lievable that there should be
a columnist with absolutely
nothing to say who wastes
space in this way."
I was on the side of the
mouse and columnist. We
must not let the problems of.
· the world make us forget the
little. overlooked things in
life. John Kieran. the late
writer for The New York
Times. expressed a prefer-

'
George
Plagenz

ence for "the··common dandelion and the common
daisy over the orchid." He
also spoke approvingly of
the red clover: "It is beautiful; it is fragrant; it is good
for the soil; cattle relish .it;
bumblebees feed from its
floret s; rabbits munch it
with zest; it gives a fine
touch of color to the meadows and it flourishe s from
May to November. It is one
of lhe common things that
we haven't sense enough to
appreciate."
.
I suppose I like to read
things like this because they
remind me of my favorite
tales about the humble
woodchuck from a volume
of Youth's Companion.
Called " Daniel Webster 's
First Case," it appeared in
Youth's Companion ' in
September 1860. In it,

young Daniel (some I0 or
12 years old) and his older
brother Ezekiel set a trap
and capture .a woodchuck
that had been eating vegetables in the Webster garden.
Ezekiel proposed to kill
the animal, but Daniel
looked · with compassion
upon the meek, dumb captive and offered to let him
go free. The boy s could not
agree and they appealed to
their father to decide the
case.
"Well, my boys," said the
old gentleman, "I will be the
judge. You shall .be the
counsel and plead the case
for and against the prisoner's life and liberty."
After Ezekiel made his
·reasoned argument, it was
Daniel's rum. Here is how
the story is .told in Youth's
Companion: "As his eyes
looked upon the soft , timid
expression of the animal and
as he ·saw it tremble with
fear in its narrow prisonhouse, his heart swelled
with pity ... God, he said,
had made the woodchuck.
He had made him to live to
enjoy the bright sunshine,
the pure air, the free fields

Friday, October 28,

Obituaries

PVH adds physical therapy at Middleport Clinic
Bv

J.

o'us settings , including hos- goals is to get more
pitals, home health care, involved with local schools
nursing· homes and private and athletic programs and
MIDDLEPORT
practice. He has most recent · help promote fitness to
POMEROY - Ronald ·:Ron" Williams, 71, Pomeroy, went
Pl
easanl
Valley
Hospital
will
ly
operated a private physi- youth," Harri s said.
to be wnh the Lord on Oct. 26, 2005 at Holzer Medical
b'egin
offering
outpatient
Harris and his wife .
cal therapy practice in
Center, unexpectedly.
physical
·therapy
services
at.
Kristine,
have thre~ children :
Mason,
W.Va.
He was born on Aug. 6, 1934, in Pomeroy, to the late Elbert
the
Middleport
clinic
beginBryan
and
Bobbi and Brynn.
"I
especially
enjoy
sports
and Lilly Harri s Williams-Dyke . .He worked at the Kyger
ning
Monday.
may be
Appointments
medicine, cardiac rehabilitaCreek Power Plant as a maintenance supervisor for many
Paul
Harris
of
Racine
has
tion and general fitness,'' made through lhe clinic at
years and also served in the United State Navy. He was a
Harris said. "I have worked . 992-6434. It is open from 9
member of the Rutland Church of the Nazarene and a member joined the slUff of PVH and
will· sec patients Monday
· with patients from infant age a.m. to 5 p.m .. Monday. 11 -7
of the American Legion Post 39 Drew Webster.
through
Friday
at
the
dink,
to ge riatric patients."
on Tuesday. 9 -5 on
He is survived by his wife, Wanda Williams of Pomeroy; a
along
with
Dr.
Timothy
son, Randy (Denise) Willi,ams, Langsville; a daughter: Linda
He was spent the last few Wednesday. 9-7 on Thursday.
(Mike) Magnotta, Wyoming, Ohio; grandchildren: Kathy Metzger, at 788 North
years of his career specializ- and 11-5 on Friday.
Harris said PVH is now
; (Chuck) Buckley, Syracuse, Rebecca (James) Snodgrass, Second Avenue .
ing in manual therapy, and
Harris, a Meigs Cottn ly
. Langsville, Cassie Marie Magnotta, Ci ncinnati , Olivia
his practice incorporates considering a separate facili Paul Harris
Magnotta, Wyoming, Ohio, Jessica- Magnotta, Cincinnati, native, has been a physical
massage, mobilization and ty for the physical therapy
great-grandchildren: Megan and Wesley Snodgrass. Garrell therapist for 18 years. He and completed his degree at one-on-one exercise and edu- servi ce in Meigs County, and
and Lauren Buckley; a brother, Mickey (Joanne) Williams. began in the field as a physi- Ohio University.
cation.
a location will be announced
Syracuse; a sister, Judy (Bob) Caruthers, Middleport, several cal therapist in the U.S. Navy.
Harri s has worked in vari"One of my personal once it is secured.
nieces and nephews.
·
Besides his parents, he is pfeceded in death by an infant
'
daughter, Peggy Williams, brothers: Elbert, Floyd , and
William Ray Williams; a sister: Mabel Harmon.
The service will be held at I p,m. on Saturday. Oct 29, 2005
RACINE - Darien Diddle,
at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene in Rutland, with Rev.
9, of Racine recently competIsaac Shupe and Rev. Mike Clark. Burial will follow at the
ed in the Amateur Athletic
.
Castor Cemetery.
Union Junior Olympics in
Visitation will be held from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Friday,
New Orleans, La. shortly
Oct. 28, 2005 at the Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
before Hurricane Katrina hit.
American Legion Graveside services will be held by the
Diddle competed at the
Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy.
Louisiana Superdomc and
· Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral·
advanced to the finals in her
homes.com.
three events which were double-mini · trampoline, trampoline and rod floor. She came in
second place in . the· double. mini uampoline, fourth in the
trampoline and titih in the rod
tloor competitions. Diddle .was
Darien Diddle
accompanied to the Junior
Olympics by her mother Gina ers and support from the
POMEROY - Leonard L. Vanmeter. Pomeroy. did not
Diddle, paternal gmndmother Racine community, expressed
commit a DUI offense or receive a DUI conviction in ·2005. It
Linda Diddle, and maternal her thanks to well-wishers and
was incorrectly reported due to a court and computer error.
grandmother
Sharon those that helped her gel to the
McClellan. Diddle, who earned competition to represent Meigs
money to pay lor her trip to County. Diddle is the daughter
New Orleans through fundrais- of Chris and Gina Diddle.
RACINE~ The Ohio River Producers (FFA Alumn;) will
be having another tail ga te party from 4 to 7 p.m. before
Saturday's Southern-Eastern football game at the east end of
the high schoo.l near the greenhouse.
The Ohio River Producers will be selling sausage sandwiches, hot dogs and drinks.
CLARKSBURG, . W.Va. minister of the convention.
(AP)- In a close vote, Wesl who opposed the resolution.
Virginia Baptist delegates
However. they also voted
402-276
against reaffirming the
rejected a proposal to split
POMEROY - Comedy on the Rocks will host Spook-a-ta
from th.e American Baptist state convention's wmmitment
at 6 p.m. on Monday at the Pomeroy Amphitheater, .with
Churches USA in a dispute to the national church. Canico
music by Capstone and performances by the CORE and
' said the vote showed "great con·
over gay issues.
J.U. M.P. drama teams · from Bethel Worship Center and
The
measure
introduced
by
cern" about gay issues an10ng
Common Grounds Mission .
Brian
J.
Reed/photo
the West Virginia Baptists for . American Baptists. Jay Wolfe,
Information is available from Andrew Kitchen at (740) 59 1·
Acree
Monuments
of
Pomeroy
is
now
offering
service
through
Biblical Truth was defeated chairman of the West Virginia
7076. The event is free.
Acree Funeral Home, located at 244 South Second Ave., 391-325 at the West Virginia . Baptists for Biblical Truth, said
Middleport. James Acree . owner of the funeral home, is avail· Baptist Convention's annual he was disappointed, but
able to helP families select the right monument to suit their meeting last week', said the encouraged that the vote on a
need, and may be reached at the funeral ·home at 992-7900. Rev. David Carrico, executive potential break was so close.
RUTLAND - The oftice of Leading Creek Conservancy
'
Districl will be closed on Monday for employee training.
. Emergency . calls should be made to (~77) 742-2597. Regular
·
.
hours will resu me on Tuesday.

Ronald Williams

and woods. He simply ate a
few common vegetables of
which they had plenty and
could well spare a part."
" He destroyed nothing.
except the little food he
needed to sustain his hum. ble life. And that little food
was as necessary to his existence as was to them the
food upon their mother 's
table ... God had furnished
their own food. He gave
them all they possessed and
would they not spare a little
for the dumb creature."
"During this, appeal, tears
had started to the old man's
eyes and were fast running
down his sunburnt cheeks.
His pity and sympathy were
awakened by the eloquent
words of ·compassion and
strong appeal for mercy. He
sprang from his chair while Daniel was in the
midst of his argument and turning to his older son,
dashing the tears from his
eyes, exclaimed: 'Zeke,
Zeke, you let that woodchuckgo."'
(George Plagenz is a11
ordai11ed minister and veteran 11ewsman based ill
Columbus, Ohio.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

BRIAN

REEO

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ACREE MONUMENTS
OFFERING SERVICE

Diddle competes at Junior Olympics

Local Briefs

Correction

Tailgate party planned

W.Va. Baptists reject proposal
to split from national church

Plan Halloween shaw

LCCD closed

Local Church Briefs

Church bazaar set
POMEROY - · Sacred Hemt Church will hold its annual
Fall Bazaar, with dinner beginning at 4:30 p.m. in the church
halL Cash prizes will be awarded .

Committee to meet
.&lt;!IJ

VVhat should be done with the 9th Circuit?
In the view · of conservatives. at least, the 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals
(with jurisdiction over
California, eight other westem states, plus Guam and the
Northern Marianas) is the
Peck's Bad Boy of federal
appellate courts. .It has 24
active judges, any three of
whom, chosen at random.
can affmn or reverse a case
appealed to them from the
district court below. Their
decision, in turn, can be
reversed only by It -members
of the full court (again·. chosen at random) acting "en
bane," or by the Supreme
·Court of the United States.
Since a majority of the 24 ·
judges are liberals, ranging
from fairly moderate to nearhysteric, important c&lt;~ses
often wind up in the hands of
a threesome dominated by
judfcial leftists like Judge
Stephen Reinhard(. (The
Supreme Court has overruled
Reinhardt's de~:isions ' so
often that he has been
reduced to calling these legal
spankings a badge of honor.)
This reputalion of the 9th ·
Circuit is un4uestionably one
of the reasons there arc constant calls for the circuit to be
' plit in two, or even three .
There are currently bills
before Congress that would
accompli~h this in various
ways, most of which would ·
put California in a circuit of

William
Rusher

its own (along with the hapless Pacific islands) and create one or two new circuits
for the other states now in the
9th . Since most or all of the
jtidicial nutcases hail from
California. the result would
be a 9th Circuit crazier than
ever, but most or all of the
eight other states would be
spared having to participate
in its lunatic deliberations.
· Many
thoughtful
observers, however, believe
there are sound reasons, having little or nothing to do
with Judge Reinhardt and his
ilk. for breaking up the 9th.
Its jurisdiction encompasses
almost 40 percent of the
nation 's land mass and onelifth of its population (58
million people). and it
requires nearly double the
number of judges in the average circuit. As a result, nearly a fourth of all federal
appellant litigants undergo a
longer than average time in
the processing of their cases.
The trouble is that there are
equally thoughtful people on

the other side of the · arguWhat's holding the presiment They point to the dent up? To be sure,
inevitable expense involved California's two liberal
in creating new circuits (esti- Democratic senators
mated at upward of $1 00 Barbara Boxer and Dianne
million apiece), and stress Fe.instein - would do everythat the 9th Circuit's process- thing in their power to block
es, from appeal ·to disposi- the nominees. But the
tion, take, on average, just 14 Republicans control the
months. compared to a Senate 55 to 45, and under
national average of II the agreement reached by the
, hardly an outrageous differ- bipartisan Gang of Fourteen
ence. Finally, they charge, the .Democrats have pledged
with some justice, thar the not to ·filibuster Bush's.
critics' real desire is to split choices for judgeships save
California itself between two in "extraordinary circumcircuits (thereby diminishing stances." If they break that
its liberal. impact) - a step promise and try to filibuster
that is effectively impossible, highly qualified conservafor technical reasons.
tives, the Republicans can
Ironically, to the extent always invoke the "nuclear
that the hidden moti vs:. of the option" (i.e. , change lh.e
9th-splitters is to reduce the
clout of ihe current liberal Senate rules to confirm the
majority on its bench, there tradition that judicial nomiis a solution available that nations are not to be filibusavoids the various problems tered), .and ratify the nominathat a split would inevitably tions anyway.
The 9th Circuit. by liberal
raise. The 9th Circuit is currently authorized by law to rulings that the Supreme
have 28 judges, yet there are Court has firmly reversed,
only 24. If President Bush . has made itself offensive to
would simply appoint quali - what Sen. Charles Schumer,
fied conservatives to those D-N.Y., likes to call "mainfour vacancies, the balance . stream opinion" in the
on the court would shift dis- ·United States. The means are
tinctly to the right. The cur- at hand to change that, for
rent liberal majority is not the foreseeable future.
(William Ru.&lt;ller i ., a
large. and four additional
conservatives would, in Di.&lt;tinguished Fellow of the
many cases, produce a radi- Claremon.t Institute for the
cally different- i.e., conser- Swdy of Statesma11ship a11d
vative - result.
Political Philosoph)')

RENO - District 18 Executive ·committee will meet at 10
a.m.
on Nov. 9. at .Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regi~:mal
1
Development Dt stnct m Reno, to ·rate Round 20 Combmed
· Subdivision applications. review projects and ask questions of
the District 18 liaison.
Thi s is not the meeting at which the linal project package is
selected and approved, which will be held on Nov. 17.'\

Funds
from PageA1
Story laid off his only
assistanl prosecutor last week
because of a shortage of
funds in his employee salary
account.

Other business
Commissioners approved a
resolution submitted by
Grants Administrator Jean
Trusse ll, ctisconlinuing mortgage subrogation s for participa"ts in th e Communi ty
Housing
Im provement
Program. The CHIP provides
home repairs and rehabilitation for low and moderateincome households.
Commissioners have, in the
past, subrogated their mattgages so some of these homeowners can re-finance their
home mortgages. Ac.:ording
to Trussell. many of these
homeowners have been victi &lt;'" of pre d ~1tory lending
c&lt;n ll panies and foreclosed
upon. In those cases, the
county loses the funds spent

Bradford to
have guest
speaker
POMEROY - Dr. Hoyt
W. Allen. Jr., executive
director of the KYOWVA
E\'angelistil: Association,
will be speaking at the Nov.
13 8:30 and I0:30 a.m. services at the Bradford Church
of Christ Allen, a former

Now Welcoming New Patients at
The Meigs Medical Clinic
113 East Memorial Dr., Suite
provide care for girls and
Our
women childhood through menopause .
' &lt;p 8 CCf'P' nr st health ins urance and
11

·'J

~cale

based on income.

Call For Appointment

740-992-9158
·we Apolog 1ze . but at this time we are unable to
i

.

Brpthers to sing

MIDDLEPORT - Blaine
and Boyd Cornwell, known
as
th e
"Master's
Encouragers" will be at the
Bradbury Church of Christ at
10:30 a.m. Sunday. The twin
on ·repairing the home dollar Community Distress brothers. born in Athen s
because it has subrogated, or grant program now underway work as one in an evangelissurrendered, its lien position. in the vi llage.
tic mini stry combining
Commis sioners
opened . Quality Window Systems, preaching and singing. Since
bids on two renovation pro- Inc., Pomeroy, was the appar· 1978 they have traveled
jects to be funded throu gh the ent low bidder on new win- extensively · proclaiming
Community Developm~m dows at the Cross Mill in Star Christ in revivals, in school,
Block grant program.
Mill Park at Racine. with a and before congregations.
Four bids were received for hid of · $14,889. T&amp;M
interior renovations. electri- Contractors, Macksburg. subca l work and a new heating mitted a bid of $29,250.
and , cooling system 111 the Those bids were also tabled,
Middleport freight depot.
pending review.
Bids for HVAC systems
Commissioners also :
from PageA1
were submitted by Foreman
• Rece ived a bid from
and Abbott of Middleport, in Asphalt · Materials. Inc .. .
Despite the diesel engine
the amount of $7,400. and Mariella. for bituminou s
the
workmanship on the Nina
Mark's Plumbing and Heating mah.:rial.-. for November.
of Reedsville, in the amoun t
• Approved payment of is completely authentic to the
·of $4,929. The Reedsville bills in the amount of period, having been built
completely by hand and withtirrn also bid $9, I09 for the $360,455.90.
plumbing componem. A bid
• Recessed until p.m. on out the use of power tools.
The ship has been referred to
of $89.925 was submitted by Friday.
Airclaws, Inc., Athens, in the
Present
were as one of the most historicalcorrect
Christopher
amount of $89.925, for the Commissioners
. Mick ly
entire project.
Davenport and Jim Sheets Columbus replicas ever built .
The bids were tabled pend- and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
Friauf hopes thai visitors to
ing review by Penny Mullen ,
the project architect, and the
Freight Station Renovat ion
Committee. The Village &lt;•I
Middleport is the grant rc.:ip·
ient on the project. which is
&amp; \ll:tlllAl EQUIP!IF.NT • '
part of a larger half-million
~·\
Auto Acciderzts Workers'
• Home Oxygen

Crew

First Southern
to host block
party
POMEROY - A block
party will be held anhe First
Southern Baptist Church,
Pomeroy. from 6 to 9 p.m.
Saturday. Events will include
face painting, mini-train rides
for kids, hayrides and games.
Refreshments will be served.

Community sing
planned
RACINE - There will be
a community sing for Meigs
County at the Pentecostal
Assembly on Tornado Road ,
Racine, at 7:30 Sunday.
the ship get a feel of the 15th
·century and appreciate what
explorers like Columbus and
his crew went through.
The Nina replica was built
from 1988 to 1991 in Bahia,
Brazil hy the Columbus
Foundation hased in the
British Virgin l s lan~s. The
replica was also used in the
production of the film " 1492"
and is often mistaken for caravel or pirate ship.
The ship is 93.6 feet long,
the deck is 66 feel long. the •
draft is seven feet, the dis-

(]amilq . tn&gt;r. 1&amp;el!Y "~· o~li\;s
OXYGEN .

• Portable O!!:y~en

.- • .I ;;,

Meigs County Church of
Christ pastor, will also be
presenting a Bible lesson
and a KYOWVA program
during the Sunday school at
9:30a.m.

• Nebulizers
• •Jil't.'trir Hcds
• Wheelchairs
• l)iapers
• Chux
• Mcdil•are/Mcdicaid
' '

1

•

•

'hl' hfllinc lot':llly
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7 .to .J46·-UU07
Toll Free 877-669-0007
70

Pine Street • Gallipolis

l.ocally mwed. Wt ta,.t ahour you!

·. ~~J~~~.n~Qf~J~~

Free dinner
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Church of Christ
will serve a free dinner from
4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Friday at
the dJUrch located corner or
Fifth and Main.

Revival set
POMEROY
The
Enterprise United Methodist
Church and the Pomeroy
Church of Christ will hold a ·
three-night revival beginning
Monday and continuing
through Wednesday. The
Rev. J"'''"·' Corbitt will be
the gucs1 speaker. Services
will he bdd at the Church of
Christ. 7 p.m. each nig ht. ·
There will he special music.
placement I00 tons, the foot
beam is 17.3 feet and the sail
area is I ;919 square· feet
While ill port the general
publi c arc invited to visit the
ship lor a wa lk-aboard sellgu ided tnur. The c harg~:-. ~lrc
$5 fm o~du 1 h. ) ..+ for . . eniors,
and $?. lor " l Ltdc-nh ages five

to 18. Children under four get
on for free .
The ship will be open every
day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .

• Chiropractc..- ci lhc)"t!lll~

\ .P \\ \ Chiroprncric $&lt;lcicty
\lt' 11 1r..·r nl Acn-:ri l&lt;UI

Hoord of

l·nrcn~l Pnlt·~su:mls

.

20)fSt:Xp..'fielll""t

Mcmhcr rl ArrP.:rican Acakmt
of Mro;col A"'"ncnro:

Comperz.~ation
• S !J.lr1~ lnjunes
.. Ml'(!ican:
• M t~l
• A,cupu~H::IUI"C

t

lnsu rJf'!I.'C~

~IC da} Uf'P( .

Ravenswood

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cn!et

=~· 304-273-5321l[
Ravenswood, WV
316 Washln nSt.

We now have theater seata,
with cUp holders for sale al
S1 0 each. If you are interested
in purchasing used theater
keats, please contact the
manager. during regular
business houra, for detalla.

�The Daily Sentinel

AROUND THE WORLD

PageA6
Friday, October 28,

BY ROBERT H. REIO

. ____,

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT-ER

BY NICK WADHAMS

paid · illegal surcharges were
South
Korea's
Daewoo
AND
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Sunni
International and three sub- Arab militants killeq 14
EDITI1 M. LEDERER
sidiaries of Siemens AG of Shiite militiamen and a
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
Germany, as well as the policeman . Thursday i.n a
UNITED NATIONS- In a Brussels, Belgium-based Volvo clash southeast of Baghdad
. - another sign of rising tenscathing linal repon document- Construction Equipment.
On the oil side, contractors sions among Iraq 's rival ething massive corruption in the
U.N. oil-for-food program, listed included Texas-based nic and religious communiinvestigators Thursday accused Bayoil and Coastal Corp .. ties. The U.S. military reportmore than 2:200 companies, Russian oil giant Gazpr6m, ed three more American soland prominent politicians. of and Lukoil Asia Pacilic, a sub- diers died in combat .
colluding
with
Saddam sidiary of the Russian company
The Shiite-Snnni lighting
Hussein's regime to bilk the LukoiL
occurred after police and
The founder and former militiamen loyal to radical
humanitariru1 operation of$ I .8
chairman of Coastal, Texas oil Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr
billion.
The 623-page document tycoon Oscar .Wyan, pleaded raided a house in Nahrawan,
exposed the global scope of a not gLtilty Thursday in New 15 miles southeast of the
scam that allegedly involved York to charges that he con- capital, to free a militiaman
such name-brand companies as spired to pay several million taken hostage by Sunni miliDaimlert::hrysler and Siemens dollars in illegal kickbacks to tants, according to Amer aiAG, a~ well as a fonner French Saddam's regime to win con- Husseini. an aide to al-Sadr.
U.N. ambassador, a f\rebmnd tracts through the program.
After freeing the hostage
His trial date was set tor June and capturing two militants,
British politician and the president of Italy's Lombardi 20.
the Shiite militiamen were
Volcker's report referred to , ambushed by the Sunnis on
regton.
It meticulously detailed how Wyan, 81 , as a "longtime and their way out of the relithe $64 billion program loyal oil customer of Iraq," the giously mixed town , aibecame a cash cow for Saddam lone exception to an Iraqi ban Husseini said. Police Lt.
and more than half the compa- on selling oil to American Thair Mahmoud said 14 otnnies panicipating in oil-for- companies.
ers - 12 militiamen and two
Among the individuals tar- policemen -were wounded.
food - at the expense of Iraqis
suffering under U.N. sanctions. . getcd in the report, investigaThe incident underscores
It blamed shoddy U.N. man- tors found that . Jean-Bernard tensions amon9 hard-line
agement and the world's most Merrimee, France's former elements in Iraq s rival relipowerful nations for allowing U.N. ambassador, received gious and ethnic communi,
the corruption to go on for $165.725 in commissions tium tics at a time when the
oil allocations :\warded to him United States is strug'gling to
years.
"What I do want to empha- by the Iraqi regime. He is now promote a political · process
size is that the corruption of the under investigation in Frdllce.
seen as key to calming the
Merrimee "began receiving insurgency so that U.S. and
progmm by ·Saddam ... could
not have been nearly so perva- oil allocations that would ulti- other foreign· troops can go
sive had there been more disci- mately total approximately 6 home.
plined management by the million barrels from the govBoth Shiites and Sunnis
U.N. and · its agencies," said ernment of Iraq," the report have accused one another of
Paul Volcker, a former Federal said. He has denied wrongdo- . kidnappings and assassinaReserve chairman who led the ing.
tion,, especially in religiousOther "political beneficia- .ly mixed Baghdad neighborinvestigation.
Volcker and many nations ries" included British lawmak- hoods and farming commusaid the repon underscored the er George Galloway; Robeno nities south and east of the
urgent need to reform the. Formigoni, the president of the capital. Majority Shiites and
United Nations .. Earlier reports Lombardi region in Italy; and minority Kurds generally
in his investigation have the Rev. Jean-Marie Benjamin, support the Shiite-dominated
already led to criminal a priest who once worked as an government, while Sunni
inquiries and indictments in the a~sistant to the Vatican secre- Arabs dominate the mnks of
United States, France, and tary of state and opposed Iraqi the insurgents.
Switzerland. Volcker said his sanctions.
Sectarian violence has
Fonnigoni, in a statement, complicated efforts by'- the
team would cooperate with
legal authorities following up said he received "neither a United States and its coalidrop of oil, nor a single cent/' tion partners to promote a
on the report.
The investigators found that Galloway also denied the alle- political process; which
companies and individuals gations, saying "I've never had received a boost this week
from 66 countries paid illegal a penny through oil deals and with the announcement that
kickbacks using a variety of no one has produced shred·of voters had approved the new
methods, and those paying ille- evidence that I have ."
gal oil surcharges came from, Benjamin has also denied any
or were registered in, 40 coun- personal benclit from the protries.
gram.
BY KARIN LAUB
The companies came from
The report strongly criticizes
ASSOCIATED
PRESS WRITER
Thailand, Malaysia, Russia, the U.N. Secremriat · and
Belarus. Syria, Canada and Security Council for failing to
JERUSALEM J.:;rael
many other places. Many busi- monitor the program · anc!
killed
seven
Palestinian;
in a
nesses in the developing world allowing the emergence of
missile
strike
Thursday
made large payments to get front companies and international trading concerns pre- against Islamic Jihad;· and
humanitarian contracts.
Vietnam Nonhern Food pared to make illegal pay- Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
said he would not mee~ with
Corp. purponedly paid $37.5 ments.
ln.a letter to Annan, the com- the Palestinian leader until he
million in kickbacks, while
Egypt's Holding Company for mittee said its task had been to . cracks down on armed groups
Food Industries allegedly paid find mismanagement and evi- - a double-edged Israeli
$30.5 million.
dence of corruption, and response to the latest suicide
Asked what the report said "unhappily, both were found bombing.
Sharon threatened a "broad
about the state of global busi- and have been documented in
and relentless" offensive
ness, Volcker said: 'There's a great detaiL"
lot of corruption in the world."
Yet the report cleared fanner against Palestinian militai1ts,
Most of the contracts went to U.N.
Secretary-General' including mass arrests ·and
Russian (IJ1d French companies , Boutros Boutros-Ghali, who· airstrikes, but security offiand individuals, who were headed the world body when cials said Israel would stop
rewarded for their govern- the oil-for-food progrrun was short of a large-seal~ military
ments' outspoken opposition to launched, of accepting bribes. operation.
Sharon's decision to shun
the sanctions. Still, even flfiUs Volcker had earlier raised susPalestinian
leader Mahmoud
in countries supportive of the picion about the extent ·of his
Abbas
was
the
clearest signal
sanctions, such a~ the United involvement.
~tates, found ways to manipu- .
The letter said responsibility yet that efforts. ·to revive
late the system illegally should start with the U.N . peacemaking after . Israel 's
sometimes by using Russian Security Council, which is pullout . from the Gaza Strip
.!inns as middlemen.
dominated by its tive penna- last month have run aground.
The oil-for-food program, nent members: Britain, China, Abbas has said he cannot and
which ran from 1996,2003, France, Russia and the United . will not confront militants,
allowed Iraq to sell limited and States. "It was, a~ one past fearing civil war, but it's
then unlimited quantities of oil member of the council put it, a · unlikely progress can be made
provided most of the money compact with the devil, and the unless the two leaders meet.
The intemational communi went to buy humanitarian devil had means of manipulatty has been pressing for a
goods. It was launched to help ing the program to his ends."
·ordinary lrdqis cope with U.N:
sanctions
imposed after
S~ddam's 1990 invasion of
Kuwait.
But Saddam, who could
choose the bu)lers of Iraqi oil '
and the sellers of humanitarian
goods, corrupted the program
by awarding contracts to and getting kickbacks from favored buyers.
Volckcr's $38 million investigation, which ran for more
thru1 a year, had earlier faulted
U.N. Secretary -General Kofi
"Continuing to work toward
Annan , his deputy, and the
Security Council for tolerating
progressive education"
corruption.
Tllllrsday's report detailed
just how companies bilked the
Your vote is greatly appreciated!
program: through surcharges
paid for humanitarian contmcts
for supplies; and via kickbacks
for oi I contracts. Most of the
illicit income - more. than
$ 1.5 billion - came from the
humanitarian contracts.
Among the companies that

a

AP Photo

People pray in front· of the coffin of Iraqi police Colonel Arjoman Saed, in Kirkuk, Iraq, Thursday.
Unidentified gunmen in a speeding car opened fire late Wednesday on Arjoman Saed as he was
standing m front of his home, police said Thursday.
constitution in the Oct. 15
referendum, despite strong
opposition from the minority
Sunni Arab community.
Ratification paves the way
for parliamentary elections
Dec. 15. Some Sunni groups
have decided to field candidates in the election, signaling a desire to participate in
politics. Most Sunnis boycotted the last .parliamentary
election in January.
U.S. officials hope Sunni .
Arab participation will draw
away support for the Sunniled insurgency and allow
Washington to draw down
forces in Iraq before midterm
elections in November next
year.
The U.S. command said ·
two more Army soldiers
were killed Wednesday when ·
their convoy hit a roadside
bomb in Baghdad. Another
U.S. soldier died Wednesday
in an ambush 37 miles north
of Baghdad, the military
said. Four other soldiers
were wounded.
The deaths raised the U.S.
military death toll to at least
2,004 since the start of the

war in 2003, according to an
Associated Press count.
U.S. Marines also killed
three insurgents in fighting
Thursday in Ramadi, capital
of volatile Anbar province,
70 miles west of Baghdad.
With
attention
now
focused on the December
elections, Iraqi political parties are locked in intensive
negotiations to put together
lists of candidates, which
must be submitted to the
election commission by
Friday.
Three Sunni Arab groups
have · announced they will
field a joint candidate list,
and the Shiite-dominated
United Iraqi Alliance, which
won 146 of the 275 seats in
the January balloting, was
meeting Tpursday to try to
put together a ticket.
Shiite politicians said tl;te
last-minute · talks were an
effort to convince Deputy
Prime Minister Ahmad
Chalabi, a former Pentagon
insider, to joining the
Alliance ticket. Chalabi ran
under the Alliance standard
in January but is apparently

holding out for a promise of
a greater role if the Shiites
control the next government.
"I think that Dr. Chalabi
will be pan of the United ·
Iraqi Alliance," said Shiite
politician Abbas ai-Bayati.
"He is keen to be within the
alliance and the alliance is
keen to include him."
A Chalabi aide, Haidar alMoussawi, conf.irmed that
talks were under way with
the alliance but said no
agreement had been reached.
Another Chalabi aide, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak for his boss,
said Chalabi's followers
wanted the same number of
places on the ticket as bigger
Shiite parties.
In addition, former Prime
Minister Ayad Allawi is
expected to announce his
ticket this weekend. Allawi, a
secular Shiite, is trying to put
together a ticket of seculat.minded candidates from all
ethnic and religious communities in a bid to appeal to
voters tired of sectanan politics.

Israeli missile kills seven Palestinians in strike against Islamic Jihad

RE-ELECf

·SCOft WALTON
To

Meigs Local Board
· Of Education ·

'

'

•

quick
Israeli-Palestinian groups in February.
. Foreign Minister Sergey
agreement on · new security
Abbas, widely known as Lavrov in Jerusalem.
There had been· repeated ·
arrangements for Gaza's bor- Abu Mazen, condemned the
ders, and a continued dead- bombing. but Israel said he etforts in recent weeks to
arrange a Sharon-Abbas
lock over such issues will pre- must do much more.
vent the economic recovery of
"If
the
Palestinian meeting, but Israeli and
impoverished Gaza. That, in Authority does not take seri- Palestinian negotiators could
turn, could hurt Abbas ' ous and tangible action not find enough common
chances in parliamentary elec- against terrorism, there will ground on issues such as
tions in January.
be no diplomatic progress and Gaza border . arrangements,
In Washington, Secretary of that would be a pity. In such a prisoner releases and an
State Condol.eezza Rice situation, I will not meet with Israeli pullout from some
lodged a new appeal Abu Mazen," Sharon said West Bank towns to hold a
Thursday with Abbas to pre- after meetirtg with Russian : sun1mit.
vent terror attacks on Israel
and dismantle the groups that
· --ELECT-carry them out. She balanced
her request to Abbas with
appe:!ls to Israel to resume
contacts with the Palestini&lt;ms.
For
said
State
Department
spokesman Sean McCormack.
Wednesday 's bombing in
.
an open-air market in the ~:en­
tral Israeli town' of Hadera
killed five Israelis, the fourth
Paid For By The Candidate
Thank You
suicide attack by Islamic
Jihad since Abbas negotiated
Larry C. Smirh 46820 Bowmans Run Rd.. Racine, Ohio
a truce deal with Palestinian

LARRY C. SMI7B
Sutton Township
.

TRUSTEE

FINDINGS -'MD ORDER OF REVOCAnON

The S,uporinlendent of Insurance issued a Notice of OpportunHy for Hearing to ea&lt;:h of the individuals listed
below. The No!ke was '"""don each individual pursuant to.section 119.07 ot the Revised Code. More !han
thirty (30) days have elapsed from the dote of siwlce or from the last ~at&amp; of publlc:abon and each of the
individuals ostod below has not requastod a hearing,
After reviewing the records in these cases. the Superintendent finds that
Each of the individuals tisled betoW is licensed in this state as· an insurance agent
Each of the individuals listed below faited to comply with the continUing education requirements of
seclion 3905.48 I of lhe Revised COde for the 200212003 compliance period.

rf

IS THEREFORE ORDERED !hat putsuant to section 3905.482 of the Revisod Code. the.Ohio Insurance
license of each individual listed betow be and hereby is ,.....o~od. The revocatiOn shel be effactive November 18,
2005.
DEXTER, TED L DOB: 04/0311967 31970 HYSELl RUN ROAD POMEROY, OH •5769
A copy of this Order may be obtaine~ from Stepl1on C. Hombach, Ohio Depan,.,..,l of Insurance, 2100 Stella
Court. Columbus, OH 43215·1067.
As set forth in O.RC. 119.12, an appeal of !his Order may be ta~en by filing a notice of appeal with the
Department of Insurance, A copy of the notice of appeal shall also be fMe.d with the appropriate court of common

pleas. Such notices of appeal shall be filed w~h1n fifteen (15) days of lhe th1rd date of publication of thlo notice .
and Order. Each indlvlduallistod beloW may appeal to the court~ common pleas of !he county in which hlo or
her business is.located or lhe COll"'ty in which he or she Is a resident. II he Of she is not a resident of and has no
place of buolness in Ohio, he or she may appeal to the Court of Cooimon Pleas of Franklin County. The notice
of appeal sllall set forth !he order appealod from and lhe gi'QUnds of the appeal.

BY ELLEN SIMON

The Dow ·fell 115.03, or
1. 11 percent , to 10,229.95 .
Broader stock indicators
NEW YORK 'rA PI
al so lost ground. The
Stocks tLtmbleu Thursday. Standard &amp; P,oor's 500 index
slicing 115 points frnm the dropped 12.48, or 1.05 perDow Jones industrial s after a cent, to 1,178.90, and the ,
larger-than-expected drop in Nasdaq composite index lost
durable goods orders rai sed 36.24, or 1.7 3 percent, to
new question s about the 2.06381.
economy and corp\&gt;ra tc profCrude oil futures moved
its.
higher. A barrel of light
Wall Street · saw the crude settled at $61 .09, up 43
Commerce
Departme nt's cent s, on the New York
report on durab le goods Mercantile Exchange.
big-ticket items designed to
Bonds rose solidly, with
last at least three years - as the yield on the 10-year
aliother in a line of signs that Treasury note fulling to 4.55
consumer spendin g could dry percen.t from 4. 59 percent ·
~p and further lwrm an
late Wednesday. · Bonds were
already deceleratin g econo- pummeled in the early half
my. Orders for durabl e goods of the week as investors wor(ell 2.1 percent in September; ried about interest rates and
far more than the 1.5 percent inflation. The U.S. dollar
drop economi sts llad fore - was lower · against other
cast.
major currencies in European
"We ' re sturtin g to see trading. Gold prices were
·.
some slowing in the ecnnu- higher.
my," Dirk van Dijk . director
Tn other economic news, ·
of research at Zacks new home sales rebounded at
·(nvcstment Research Inc. " I a faster-than-expected pace
don't think we' re go ing into . in Septembei. rising 2.1 pera recess ion. but (l'ederal cent. However, new home
Reserve Chairmall ;nominec sales are well below the
Ben) Bernankc is going to year's highs and the median
price of new homes sold last
have hi s hand s ful L"
Investors al so remain ed month fell by 5.7 percent,
cnncemed that the Fed, in indicating that the booming
raising interest rates to quash hou sing tmtrket may be
inllation, will furtltcr slow slowing.
Traders are watching home
economic growth and company earnin gs hy making sales carefully, worried that a
capital more expensive for decline in . housing prices
companies
lookin g
to might curb consumer spendOutgoing
Federal
expand. The Feu nex t meets ing.
Nov. 1 and is widely, expect- Reserve Chairman Alan
ed to rai se the nation 's · Greenspan has said borrowbenchmark lendin g rate by a ing against homes added
quarter pen.:entag:c pllint to 4 $600 billion to consumers'
spending power last year. A
percent.
AP BUSINESS IVRJTfR

BY RON WORD
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

JACKSONVILL E. Fla. Supermarket gi ant · WinnDixie Stores In~: ., struggling
to emerge from hankruptcy
by closin g unprofitable
stores. reported a net loss of
· $691 million in fi scal year
2005, compared with $51
million loss in 2004.
The figures came from the
company's filin g Wednesday
with the U.S. Securities a.nd
Exchange Commi ssion.
Winn-L&gt;ixie Presiucnt and
CEO Peter Lynch. in an
internal ·e-mail to employees
said, "Quit e simply. fi scal
2005 was the most difficult
year in Winn"Dixic hi story."
"We are not ho we ver looking backward. but instead we
are focusing our e n ~ rg y on
the future." Lynch's e- mail
said.
The filin g list; a ga in of
$148.29 million from reorganization . The largest wmponent of that increase was
$185.6 million in non-cash
income from tl1e rcjec1ion of
store lease.&lt;. The towl was
reduced by ex penses that
included $2:1 millimr for
lawyers, · reed estate agents
and other profess ionals

ANN WOMER BENJAMIN
Meigs

estimates on strength . of retail sales
BY SARAH ANDERSON
. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS -- American
Power Inc . said
Thursday its th ird -quarter
earnings dropped 27 percent
from a year ago. when the
company's profit '" " intlated by a one-time gain from
the sale of property and
assets. Still , the rcstdts surpassed ,nn :dys ts' ex pectations.

. Earning s fur tile 4uarter
ended Sept ~0 we re ~3R 7
milli on. or 99 cents per
share. compared wi th 5530
mtllll&gt;ll . or $ 1.:1-1 per share 111
2004. Witholll n n n - r~c urrin g
items. AEP reponed rarnings
of $370 million . or 1)5 cents
per ~ hare, cn11 1parnl with
$31S million. or 811 cents per
share. a year ago.
The Columbus. Ohio-based
company sa id. its result ,,
which surpassed the X2-ce nt
·estimate of anal y~ t " surv ey~d
by Thomson f'inan ci:tl . we re
dri ven prim ari ly hy im'ITa,cd
electri cit y "a les 111 ll'L1il cu:-- -

in gs impro\t:rHC I!I. hu t our

,,

Winn-Dixie
announced
plans earlier this year to close
326 stores and three distribution centers. Upon completion of its restructuring plan,
it will operate 575 stores in
Florida, Alabama, Louisiana,
Georgia and Mississippi, plus ·
12 stores in the Bahamas . .
In its SEC tiling, WinnDixie said its liquidity and
capital resources will be suflicient to maintain operations
at current levels through the
end of fiscal 2006.
Winn-Dixie has been negatively affecte(l by Hurricane
Katrina in New Orleans and
the Gulf coast. Hurricane
Wilma occurred in fiscal year
2006.
In Katrina, Winn-Dixie
suffered property damage
and inventory losses in about
110 of its 125 stores, totaling
more ·than $100 million.
Winn-Dixie expects its insurance to cover most of its losses.
Ironically, sale levels in
that region have been the
same or bj:tter than that experienced before the hurricane.
Winn-Dixie
also
announced Wednesday that it
would hold its annual shareholders meeting on Dec. 8 at
its ~acksonville headquaners.

AEP quarterly earnings top

an important pan in the earn -

..

Winn-Dixie also reported a
4 percent decline in identical
store sales in fiscal 2005.
The CO!npany attributed the
decline to competitor store
openings, competitor pricing
and the conditions of its
stores.
Burt P. Fli&lt;:kinger III, managing director of Strategic
Resqurces Group in New
York, who follows supermarket trends, was disturbed by
the huge loss.
"Tile company is not out of
the woods just yet and to lose
so much money: may not be a
good barometer for next
year," Flickinger said. "It
doesn ' t seem able to stop the
bleeding."
He noted that Winn-Dixie
still faces · severe competitive
pressures from Wai -Mart
Supercenters and Publix.
"Winn-Dixie is caught in that
tsunami,"
Supercenter
Flickinger said.
On the positive side,
Flickinger said Winn-Dixie is
operating in areas of tremendous growth, which could
bring in new customers.
"That could be a ray of
sunshine for company, but
there are on coming storm
ciOLtd s heading toward the
company," he said.

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

who ke pt 11wi r ai r
conditi&lt;Hl CI ~ 011 dUI ill!! the
quarter that &gt;la rtctl July I.
"Favorable \veathc' played

Supertnhlndent of tnouni,..

sustained decline in home
prices would "shut down the
housing ATM. which is massive," van Dijk said.
Even if home sales stay
strong, 'investors will continue to worry about consumer
spending. In a report
Wednesday,
Lehman
Brothers called rising home
prices. low mortgage rates
and declining energy prices .
"props to consumer spending" that could weaken .or
collapse at ·some point in
2006.
A stop to the Fed's policy
of consistent interest rate
hikes could prevent that, but
much of the volatility in the
market over the past two
weeks comes as investors
debate whether the Fed is
ready to stop raising rates, or
will keep going as still-high
energy costs stoke inllation.
"Volatility is finally picking up, and that's because of
the uncertainties you're seeing not only over interest
rates, but energy prices as
well," said Chris Wiles. managing senior director at the
Allegiant Funds. "You hope
that they stan to signal a
change in rates soon, but in
the end, and with energy
prices, you just don 't know
right now."
Exxon Mobil Corp. lost 60
cents to $55.60 despite
reporting its best quanerly
profit ever. The oil company's third-quarter profits
were buoyed by higher crude
oil and natural gas prices,
even as the period's hurricanes hampered production.
But earnings excluding items
fell below analysts' expecta-

tions.
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Co., one of the world's
largest tire makers, rose
$1.97, or 15 percent, ttl
$15.35 after its third-quaner
prolit surged to the highest
quarterly level in seven
years, as higher prices and
new products helped offset
increased raw materials costs
and boosted sales 7 percent.
General Motors Corp.
shares lost $1.98 to $27. 19
after the company said it
received a Securities and
Exchange Commission subpoena for documents about
pensions and post-retirement
benelits, as well as its dealings with pans maker Delphi
Corp.
Shares of Baidu.com Inc.
plunged $10:70, or 13 percent, to $70.35 after the
Internet company po sted
quanerly earnings that beat
analysts' expectations but
still disappomted investors
who had bet on even faster
growth for the biggest online
portal in the booming
Chinese market.
Decliners led advancers by
nearly 3 to I on the New
york ~tack Exchange, where
consohdated volume came to
2.46 billion shares, down
from 2.54 billion traded
Wednesday.
.
The Russell 2000 index of
smaller companies fell 14.38,
or 2.25 percent, to 624.03.
Overseas, Japan's Nikkei
stock average rose 0.16 percent. Britain's FTSE 100 fell
0.86 percent, Germany's
DAX index was down 1.93
percent, and France's CAC40 fell I .73 percent .

Winn-Dixie reports $691/oss in ·fisca/2005

to rn e r~

or the Ohio Department of Insurance.

Friday, October 28,

2005

Stocks fall after durable goods orders slip; Dow down 115 Wendy's earnings up on slightly

- Eic~:tric

This Order is hereby entered in the Journal

BUSINESS·

'The Daily Sentinel

2005

U.N. probe finds 2,200 ·(LASH BETWEEN SHIITES, SUNNIS· LEAVES
companies made illicit 15 .DEAD IN FIGHTING NEAR BAGHDAD
payments to Iraq

PageA7

AEP increased its outlook
deci sion to focus our strategy
on our strong utility opera- for the year. reporting that it
tion s played an equally expects earnings to be
important
n&gt;le ,"
said between $2.55 and $2.65 per
and
Chief share, up from previous
Chairman
expectation of $2.30 to $2.50
Executive Michael. Morris.
The
company
has per share.
In the .tirst nine months of
improved its "laser focus" on
domestic utility operations this year, the company has
by sheddin g international earned $2.44 per share.
drains on earnings, Morris Analysts estimate the compasaid in a conference call with ny will earn . 32 cents per
share in the fourth quarter.
analysts.
AEP said it expects earnRevenue for the quarter
was $3. 3 billion. down from ings of $2.50 to $2.70 a share
for 2006.
'
$3 .8 billion last year.

BLOCK PA
AT

1ST SOUTHERN
BAPTIST CHURCH
' 7aa 'P~ ' ~ 7w. i&amp;iu • ~·t.t'e
. 17-u . ~ ~ . ~~•• ,{ &amp; &amp;.w
• V.U...w • eue.. &amp; &amp;.ilu . 'P¥- &amp;

e.ua

·~
Pomeroy,OH
Saturday, October 29th 6-9pm
Everyone Welcome

Winn-Dixie shares were
trading at 67 cents a share in
over-the-counter trading late
Thursday, down I cent o.r
1.98 percent. The company's
sales have ranged from 66
1/2 cents per share to $5.05
over the past 52 weeks.

higher sales, trims 2005 outlook
DUBLIN (AP) - Wendy's
International
Inc.
·on
Thursday .said third-quaner
earnings edged higher on a 5
percent rise in sales, but the
company trimmed its fullyear earnings forecast.
The hamburger chain posted net income of $72 . I mil lion, or 61 cents per share, for
the quaner ended Oct. 2 compared with $69. I million, or
60 cents per share, a year
ago.
A strongey.Canadian dollar
lifted recent results by 7 cents
per share and a real estate
sale added a penny per share
to net income. Higher beef
costs weighed on results by a
penny per share.
Revenue rose ·to $960.6
million from $914 million a
. .
year ago.
The results topped Wall
Street analysts' expectations
for earnings of 57 cents per
share ,on sales of $951.7 million.
'
But sales at stores open at
least one year - a key measure of a retailer 's performance - declined 5 percent
at Wendy's stores in the
United States and 5.5 percent
at Wendy's franchises .
Same-store sales at its Tim
Hortons coffee-and-doughnut
chain grew 3.6 percent in
Canada and 4.7 percent in the
United States. Same-store
sal~s at Baja Fresh Mexican
Grill restaurants declined 4. I
percent.
Wendy's also cut its fullyear earnings outlook to a
range of $2.12 to $2. IS per
share from $2 .20 to $2.26 per

share. Analysts had predicted
earnings of $2 . 19 per &gt;hare.
"We've been disappointed
in sales performance in
Wendy's and in Baja, and
we' re very focu sed on
improving the topl'o line,"
Chairman
and
Chief
Executive Jack Schuess ler
said in a conference call with
analysts .
The company said it plans
to introduce deli-s'tyle sandwiches J]ext year in Wendy 's
restaurants and sell 217
stores currently leased to
franchi sees.
That strategy should help
the company focus on paying
down its debt as it prepares to
spin off Tim Hort(ijlS in a
stock offering next March.
Dean Haskell. an analyst
with JMP Securities, said
those moves make sense.
"When you want to focu s
on operations rather lhan
development, it's silly to go
off and build new stores," he
said.
Haskell said that he expects
the company will see a turnaround in its Wendy's store
sales within six months.
Earnings for the three quarters of the year were up
slightly at $ f94 . I million
from
$193.5 . million.
Earnings per share were llat
.at$1.61.
·
Revenue was up 5.6 percent for the year to $2 .8 billion from $2.7 billion .
Wendy 's shares closed
down $2.37, more than 5 percent, at $44 .63 in trading
Thursday on the New York
Stock Exchange.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
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., The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com

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HOMES·

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OCT. 28th -OCT. 29th • OCT. 30th
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tor this receptlv completed

NEWH

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2 Story Construction 1605 s.f.
w/300 s.f. Unfinished Bonus room,
Full Poured Concrete Basement, 3
Large Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths and
1/2 Bath , Spacious Owner S01te
w/Private Bath, Large Living Room.
Krtchen w/Merrillat Oak Cabmetry,
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w/AC, Country Style Wrap Around
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FAITH

The Daily Sentinel

A Hunger For More
Journey long on the tnul of
relationship with God and
you'll quickly notice that not
everyone's feet tread the path
e)(actly the same as yours. We
each have different personalitles. d1fferent gifts. different
memories and different life
experiences that shape who
and what we're becommg.
'f?us, your walk may look a bit
different from other Believers,
but, masmuch as you're truly
pursuing God with all your
heart. that's okay: That's how
God means 11 to be.
In fact, one can examine tl1e
makeup of the Christian people
across the narion and around
the world and rejoice, for the
magnitude of the Kingdom of
God is unfathomable as He not
only works out a spec1al and
customized plan for each congregatton that wtll trust Him
and listen to His holy Word, but
also for each individual
Believer within each one of
those congregatiOns'
The Kingdom of God ts
mighty in length and breadth,
full of a host of beloved indivictuals,
each
carefully
designed and thoughtfully
crafted by the hands of the
Creator to bring a very special
contribution to God's creation.
Just think of how unique you
are, graced with a unique combination of specialized talents,
skills, opinions, and convictionsl Look and you'll see all
kinds of men and women who
have hungered for more than
this life can provide. and have
declared theu· wtlhngness and
desire to set aside and sacrifice
their own agendas and receive
Jesus as Lord. Look and you'll
find all sorts of boys and girls
who have heard the resoundmg
call ofG~ to receive the gift of
eternal hfe and have answered
With a resoundmg "yes!"to the
One Who has offered 11 to
them. Look and YC!~ 'II discover
people of nauonahues from all
over the eanh. who have truly
felt the sweet mv1tat10n ot the
Holy Spm! to_rece1ve salvat1on
through f~1th '"· C~st and are
now walkm_g With H1m.
Some ot these are young
and some are old. Some are
men and some are women.
Some are white while smne
are black. Some are Native
Amencan and others are of
Astan or Polynesian descent.
Some have black hmr wh1le
others have brown. blond or
red hair. Some have long hair
and some have short hair.
Some have no hair at all.
Some have .smal) noses and
others have b1g noses. Some
have freckles on their noses
and some of these have freckles all. over. Some are short.
Some are tall. Some are thm
wh1le others may be stout.
Some are athletic and some
w1shed that they we.re, too.

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as or

Thorn
Mollohan

Some worship with adoration for the Savior lavishly
displayed for all to see, with
hands clapping and feet
stamping. Some are so smitten
with love and humility under
the standard of His holy grace
that they worship with their
souls stilled to quiet surrender.
Some sing songs that have
come down to us from long
ago while others lind that new
songs best capture the joy and
reverence of their hearts.
Inside and out, each man,
woman, boy and girl is uniquely designed to be a umque ereation in the Kingdom of God.
From the tip of their toes to the
tops of their heads, each one is
uniquely gifted for meaningful,
joyful and fruitful hving in this
world until called home to
heaven or until He comes again.
Such design and gifting are not
intended by God to be squandered selfishly upon 'Ol!f own
ambitions or desires, tempted as
we sometimes are to bdng
glory to ourselves instead of
glory's nghlful owner: Jesus.
So, whatever we have in our
checklist of things we can do
and things we have, those
things were given to us to
bring a new dimension to the
great family of God. If you do
not receive God's gift of salvalion, then what hole is left -in
heaven and in the house of
God because of your vacancy?
If you, though perhaps a child
of God. withhold the light of
His love from others in need,
then what shadows remain in
the world for the lack of your
light? If you were to channel
all the talent or material
resources blessings that He's
showered down upon you on
making a name for yourself or
ac~umulating wealth for your
stay here on earth, in spite of
all He's done for you on the
cross of Calvary, what soul
remains SRiritually parched,
over~ome by spiritual thirst
with no refreshment in sight?
What spiritual lives wither and
die because your gifts and talems were not there to contribute to the work of the
. Kingdom of God?
God forbid that you miss out
on how God would bless you
with all sorts of spiritual blessmgs if you would only allow
Him to use what you are and
what you've been given. And
God forbid that others also miss
out on hope and renewal

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Friday, October 28, 2005

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Scripture: Matthew 5.1-12
Some years back there was
a young boy who overheard
Rev.
some folks down at the local
Jonathan
store talking about God and
Noble
th1s piqued his curiosity. He
PASTOR,
wanted to know if anybody
TRINITY CHURCH
could really see God, so he
decided to ask his dad.
His father was successful
businessman, who really dido't have much t1me for his
son - or didn't make much thought he might as well put
time because he was always it all out of his head.
so busy. He was very pragThe next summer thi s
matic, down-to-earth, and apprehensive little boy met a
what some ~ople would call poor but kind old fisherman
a common sense kind of fel- and quickly struck ,up a
low, so his reply was really friendship with him. The old
no surprise. In a very stem, man was very gentle and
abrupt tone of voice he said, patient and seemed to have'
"No, of course not! You need all the time in the world.
to gel your head out of the More than that, the fisherman
clouds or you'll never treated him like he was really
amount to anything."
important, somebody worth
The boy was very shy and spending some time with.
timid. He never argued. with
One evening the boy was
his father. To tell the tru1h, he out with the old fisherman
was seared of him ... and a lot and they were drifting down
of other people, too, for that the river the same way as
matter of fact. Anyway, he they had many times before,
wandered through the woods light dancing over the ripand thought about it. He sat piing waves, a soft breeze
on the riverbank pondering winding lazily downstream
the question. He watched the and around the bend. 'fhe boy
birds build their nests as he looked over and saw tears in
looked through the branches the old man's eyes as he
at the blue sky longing to see watched the sun go down
the God who made this won- behind the far horizon, so he
•derful and exciting world timidly reached over and
around him.
~hed the old man's arm.
One day the minister ca
'I was never going to ask
to dmner,_mostly be~ause h
body this question again,"
mother mv1ted hm1, not he sa1d through trembling
because his dad really wanted lips. "But I' m going to ask
to have him over. He was a you." The old fisherman did- ·
rather large man; who always n't move. He didn ' t even
wore a sharp suit with an look over but the boy continimpressive gold watch and ued, "Can you see God?" No
spoke with quite a command- answer. The fisherman just
mg tone, usmg words hardly sat staring into the sunset.
anybody else understood. He Tenderly the boy pulled at his
was a bit intimidating, to say sleeve, "Please tell me I
the least, and evidently very Please tell me, won't you'
knowledgeable about things Can you see God?"
·
divine - in other words, just
The boy waited, breathless.
the right man.
Finally, the old man turned a
So the boy watched for an magnificently beautiful, tearopportunity to talk to him stained face toward the boy,
alone, and it came, sure smiling an absolutely radiant
enough, so the little boy mus- smile, and replied, "Son, it 's
tered up enough courage to gettin' so I don't see anything
ask, "S1r. can you see God? else ... It's gettin' so I don't
-·
Can anybody see God?" The see anything else."
preacher laughed conde"Blessed are the pure in
scendingly and told ·him that heart ," our Lord sat d. ·'for
no one could see God, at least they shall see God."
not and live, so the boy ran
It's not in the daily rush of
outside to a big oak tree. sat business or in the frivolous
down and cried. He was more entertainment we enjoy so
discouraged than ever and much. It's nor in pubs or ele-

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

gant restaurants or in magnificent cathedrals that 1w sc~
God . It's not even in pmye1s
and songs of praise. thuu~ll
they may lead us to the very
gates of heaven. It is onlv in
purity of heart that we peer
mto the hoi y of hoi ies to
apprehend wondrous visions
of the d1vine.
The pure heart is "cle:u·
bright, transparently smccre ..:
as one commentator says. "It
seeks not to deceive. It has no
, hidden motives, no selfish
aims underlying a fair out' side. Its aim is to be. not to
seem." It is like a crystal
clear, utterly spotless miffor
perfectly reflecting the simple goodness of God. ThiS is
the purity of heart of which
our Saviour speaks he~t· in
this beatitude .
What is this purity of
heart? It is the voice of our
spirit saying sincerely, .. ,,
matters not where I am. nor
in what position of life I find
myself. II meanS nothing [ I)
me whether I am nch or pon•.
popular or detested, filled ot
famished . I only w11n1 to se~
God be a templ7 for His
Splrlt, a vessel fll tor Hi s us•!
lo ·Hts honour and glory...
It is stripping evcrytlnn"
away from our life, sta nd111g
naked before the Timme of
Grace and crying; '·He•e 1
am, ~ord. Have mercy on me.
a smner, and save 111e!
Cleanse me and make nh!
whole and holy in Your stg ht.
Fill me with Your !July
Spirit. Build me up ami make
me the person You intend me
to be. And I ask for no
reward, except knowin g th:~tl
have done Your will. througl1
Jesus Christ. Yom on!; So"
our Lord"
·
'
The little boy \ father i11
our illustration, as well as th•!
minister, could not see ( ioJ
and did not believe ""Y''ne
else could either. Only a kind
and gentle, old fishenn&lt;~rl
with plenty of time to en joy
life and God's creation w11l 1
someone else could sec Willi
the eyes of his hem t w1de
open ... because he hml a
pure heart, you see. And so
our prayer should he th,lt
when someone asks us it we
can see God, like that oi,J
fisherman we· will 'be ab le I•J
answer, " It's gettin' su I
don't see anything else. It'&lt;
gettm' so I don't see :mything else."

Churth of Je~us Christ AJK"toUc
\&gt;anZandt and Ward Rd , Pastor Jame5
M1ller, Sunday School
10.30 am.,
Evenmg - 7 30 p m
Rh·er Valley
Apo ~mlic Worc;h1p Center, 873 S )rt.l
A\C, M•ddleport, KevUI Kunkk, Pa•tor.
Sunday. 10 30 am. Wednesday. 7 00
p.m.. Youth Fn 7-JO p m
Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rll uff Nev. Lumi Rd Rutl:md.
Serv1ces Sun 10·00 am &amp; 7 lO p m.
Thun; 7·00 p m. PBStor Mnny R Hut len

Assembly of God
Liberty AsSt&gt;mbl} of God
PO. Bo11. 467, Duddmg Lane Mu!;(m.
W Va Pasmr Ne1 l Tennant. Sunduy
Ser\'lces- 10·00 am and 7 p m

Baptist
Carpenter Baptist Church
Sunday Schnnl - CJ·~ flam . Pr!!adung
Serv1ce 10 30am
E\cnm~:
Ser.••cc
7 OOprn, Wedne$day B1ble Study 7 00 pm.
lnlcnm Pre a~hcr Fluyd Ros!l"
Cheshire Rapti~l Church
Pastor Steve Lllllc. Su nday School 9 30
am, M1lmmg Wor~hq&gt;
10 30 am.
Wcdn~sd&lt;iy B1ble Study 6 30pm, lhou
prucuce 7.30 yomh and B1hlr Bull1.he~
(j ~() p m Thurs 1 pm hook studjo
Hope Bapti5t Church (Southern)
570 Gram St, M1d d\epon, Sumlav ~~ hool
. 'Y\0 am. Worship . 11 a.m 01ml6 p.m ,
Wednesday S.::mcc - 7 p Ill Pastor· G&lt;ir}
Elhs
Rutland Firsl Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9•30 :.1.111 . Wur~h1p ·
Hl 45 am
Pomeroy •·irst Rapti~l
Paslor Jon Broi:kert East Mam St .
Sunday Won.lup - I[J OU am , Wed D1hle
S]w.ly 6 •o pm
First S(Juthern 8apust
411S72 Pomcrov P1ke. Paslor E Lamar
Q"B•yant, Sund,Ly School - 9 :m ~ m ,
Worsh1p RISam '.145&lt;~m&amp;70U]Jm.
Wcdnc'lday Servi c e~ 7-fKl p m
First Baptist Church
Pastor. . fith ami Palmer St , MLddl cporl,
Sunday School 9 15 a 111 . Wur~ l up 1015 am 70[) pm , Wcdnesdlly
Sen·•ce- 7 ttU p m
RuehL~

Fln;t Baptist
Pastor , Sunday Sc hool q ]0 a m ,
Worsh1p - 1040 11 111 . 700 pm.
Wednesday SCTViteS- 7 011 p rn

'

Si~vl!r

Run Baptist
Pas10r John Swanson Sund&lt;~y Sl:huu l ·
lOam, \\oorsh1p- ll &lt;~m . 7UO pm
,Wednesday Ser.I.CCS· 7 ()()pIll
Mt. Union Baptist
Paslor · Oa\•td Wi seman. Sunday Sdmol6 111 p 111 ,
9·45 a m , Evenmg
Wednesday ServJces - 6· JOp m
Bethlehem Bapti5t Church
Gre111 Rend. Route 124. Ra,.;Hle, OH,
Pastor Dnn1cl Mecca, Sunday S~ hool ~ 30 am., Sunday Worsh•p - 10 ~0 a rn .
Wednesday B1ble Study - 6 00 p m

'PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

Old lkthel Free Will Buptlst Churth
28601 St Rt 7, M •ddl~port, Su nday
Service • I0 a m , 6·00 p m , TuesQ.ay
Semces ·6 00

The Daily Sentinel

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Hillside B'Bptisl Chun:h
St. Rt 143 jusl off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rc~ .
James R. Acree, Sr., Sunday Umfied
Semce, Worsbtp · 1O·30 a m , 6 p m.,
Wednesday Semces •7 p.m.

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Victory Baptist Independent
'2S N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pa~tor : James
E. Keesee, Worship - IOa.m .. 7 p m..
Wednesday Servtces · 7 p m.

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

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Back To The Old Time

26 years in local business
Rooting &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215

ARCADIA NURSING
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Coolville. Oh•o

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook

Located less Lhan 30 nunutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg '

1-740-667-3156

"Still small enouglt to care"

Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of Life"
333 Page Slreet

Mlddleoort

OH

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Mlllwa

700 N. 2nd St.

IUJ46

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Racine, OH
·~·

Middleport, OH

uardrail, Fence &amp;
sign erect1on

(740) 992-M5l

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"A Home Bank for
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Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

1:l-17

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

7 40-949-2217
Sizes ava•lable 5xt 0

to

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If ye abide ia Me, and My

RIH'Ilaulurnit, •~ sure •~ 011r toel bill riMt ~nd tht 801d«n lta¥11 faiL we
turD Olr doe!b baril. ftfle hour, "'bbitk to the ol• tilDe'".
A• dartmus CWfHt etr1kr. nlany of- reel drawn to the nold ·~ whl:n the family sttlled \nearly ror th~ nl@.ht. ptbertna •f'OUDd tlte .. ble l'or Marty
winter fan like sleenllntt ;tOUp or 11ew. A.fter iuppei; ntlrln8 to lhe ftrnlde.,
tht)· bM • than« to rt.1 and •pend dme together •• the end or 1t. day.
Ttlt:lt an- bu•~r lhn~ With wark •IKIIIRrr !K'faool IM'thitles. we often
do not ho"e • U:htduk IMt ollowt for ibe 1ogdhernt:B lhat we lenJ r.... Vet,
• Wtftttf' tpproarlliel •nd the nenlnft~pw lonpr. IMJ we pthu more
dosl:ly to horne and tMre God's word • • ramlly. P.Jm 61:1 Nf&amp;. '4\-Uilln
bhn al aU tlmCII. U people: pour out yaur hnrt• to him, tor Cod h oo.r
nl~. Ttuft In Utm and alto ntltember to honor 111m ret,uhrly It JOitr
thoRn haUM or wor1hlp. (:Jve (;bd Ht.lime nt'h WMIL

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7411-594-6333

1·800-451·9806

The Hppllance man
740-985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Young

Mi[[ie S !l{estaurant
1

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meats &amp; Dally Specwh·
Open 7 days a week

740-992-7713

word.&lt; abide in you, ye sltall
a;'k,what ye will, and it shall
b.e done unto you.
]olm 15:7
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A . JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-327.9
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N Second St

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Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholk Church
161 Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy, 992-51!91:!,
P~stor: Re' Walter E Hemz. Sal Con
~ · 45 5 15p m.. Mdss - 5.30 p m Sun
Con -8 -'5 -9 15 am , Sun Mass- 9 30
am.Da1ly Mass-S·JOam

Church of Christ
Westside Chun:h of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd. Pomcm~. OH
Comacl 74U-44 1- 1296 Sunday mo rn1ng
JO· OO , Sun mormng B1blc study
folluwm1: worship. Sun eve 6 00 pm.
\\oed b1ble study 7 pm
Hemlock Grme Christlun Church
M1n1 s1er Larry Rrown. Worsh1p - lJ 30
am Sund11y Sthnnl · 10 30 am. B1blc
Study- 7 pm
Pomeroy Chun.:h of Christ
212 W M.nn S1 S und&lt;~~ School C) 3()
am , Wor~h1p- HI 30 am
6 pm.
Wednesday Sen 1ccs - 7 p m
Pomeroy Westside Church or Christ
"11226 Children's Home Rd. Sundny
Schon\ - II u m , Worsh1p ll)u m • 6 p 111
Wednesday Services - I p m
Middleport Chun::h of Chrl5t
'hh and M,un, Pastor 1\1 Hnrt son, Youth
Mims1cr Josh lllm. Sunday School - 9 '0
ani , Worsh1p- B IS 10 ~0 am, 7 pm,
, Wcdn~sday Serv 1c~s • 7 p m
Keno Church of Christ
Worsh•p - IJ·30 u m . Sundny School 10 Jtl&lt;! m, Pastor-Jerfrey Wallace, 1st m1ll
~~ll Suudil}
Reorwllllow Ridge Church o£ Chris\
l\1s1or Bruce Terry, Sunday Schnnl 9 ~0
J ill

Worsh1p - I() 30 a m. 6 111 p m,
WeJncsd&lt;~y Scrv•~c~ - 6 JO p m
Z10n Church of Christ
Ham somdk Rd. (R t 14])
P01stur Rot,;cr Watson , Sund&lt;~y SchOll\ 9 3[) a,m. Worsh•p 10.30 &lt;~. m. 7 00
p m . Wcdn.::sda) Services 7 p.m.
Pom~roy,

Tuppers Plain Chun::h or Chr1st
ln strumcntl.ti. Worship Serv1ce - 9 am ,
Communllln 10 a m , Sunday School 10·1 :li um Ymnh 5·30 pm Sunduy. B1ble
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Hradbury Church o1' Chrbl
Mimst er Tom Run}on, 39558 BmUbury
Roud, M1d1Hepnrt. Sunday SchmJl 9 3tJ

'm
Worsh1p - 10.30 u m
Rolland Church uf Christ
Sunday School 9 30 am .. Worship and
Commumon - 10·10 am . B~h J Werry,
Mmt~ter

Brud£ord Church of Chr\51
Ct1rner of St Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd,
Mim ~t er Dnug Shamblm, Youth Mm1slllr
H1ll Amb.::rgcr Sunday School - 9 '0 11m.
Worsh1p - 8.00 am , 1U 30 am. 7·00
p,m ,Wednesday Sen ICii.':S - 7 00 p m.
Hickol') Hills Church of Christ
Tuppers Pl ams. Pastor Mike Moore, Bib le
class, 9 a.m Sunday, worship 10 am
Sunday, worship 6.30 pm Suoday, B1ble
class 7 pn1 Wed

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Faltb Baptilt Church ·
Railroad S1., Ma~on, Sunday School · 10
am., Worship - II am .. 6 p.m .
Wednesday Servicei - 7 p m
Fomt Run Baptilt
Pas10r · Arius H1.1rt, Sunday School- 10
am,Worship - llam.
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Mam St , Middleport. Pa~tor
Rev Gilbert Crail!;. Jr, Sunday SchOol ·
(j·JO am, Worship - 10 45 a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School - 9 30 a m , Worship 10·45 01.m. Sunday benmg · 6·00 p m,
Pa~tor Don Walker
Rullalid Free Will Baptist
Sulem Sl , Pastor Jamie fnrtner Su ndll)
School · 10 a.m , Evcmng - 7 p n1 .'

Rwlsvlllt Church of Christ
Pastor. Phthp Sturm, Sunday School 9•30
a.m., ~onh1p Sen1ce: 10.30 am, Btble
Study, Welhlesday, 6.30 p.m.
Dexter Church of Christ
Sunday school 9:30 a m., Sunday worship
• 10.30 am.
Church o'r Chri11
Intersec tion 7 and 124 W, E-vangelist.
D~nnis Sargem, Sunday Btblc Study 9·30 a:m., Worsh1p: 10.30 a.m. and 6.30
p.m . Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m

Christian Union
Hartford Chun:h of Ghri1t In
ChriBtlan Union
Hartford . WVa ., Pa s10r Dav1d Gr~er,
Sunday School • 9·30 am, Worship 10.30 a.m, 7 00 p m, Wednesday
Serv1ces- 7.00 p m

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Churt'h of God
M1le Hil l Kd , Rac1ne, Pastor James
Satterr•eld, Sunday Schoo! - 9 45 am ,
Evenmg 6 p m , Wednesday Servt~'li.':s · 7

Russe ll. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a m l!ven1ng Serv1ces- 6 ~0 p m ,
Wednesday Semcu- 6·30 m

P

Chun:h of God of Prophecy
0 J, White Rd. off Sl Rt 160, Pas10r: PJ.
Chnpman, Sunday School - 10 am.,
Worshtp . I I am . Wednesday Sen·1ces . 7

Rutland Church of God
Pas lor Kon Heath Sunday Wnr'lhlp - I0
(l 111 , (•
p m, WeUnc~day S..:rvtces - 7

Congregational
Trinity Churrh
Second &amp; lynn P\)mcroy Pastor Re\'
Jonathan Nohle Worshtp IU 25 am .
Sunday Schoo l 9 15 a m

Episcopal

light so shine before
1men. that lhey may see
works and glorify •
I F,&gt;th&lt;er in heaven."
Matthew 5:

KEHLER

Communily Church
Pa510r Slt:\e lomek. Mam Street,
Rutland. Sunday Wul);hl]rlO 00 am.,
Sund&lt;~y Serv•~c - 7 p m.

Forest Run
P.lSlnr· Boh Rohtnson, Sunday School · 10
a m ,Worshlp -9a m

Danville Holinf'§§ Church
31057 State Route '125. Langsvlle, Pastor
Vu;:tor Ruush, Sunday s~hou l - 9.30 am
Sunday v.mslnp - 10 1() 3 m &amp; 7 I' 111 ,
Wednt"hllay pmyer sen ICC • 7 p m.'
Calury l1ilgrim Chaprl
Harnsonv1lk Ro Ld, l',tslor Charle~
M ~ Kcnz1.::, Sunday Sclwnl 9 JU am,
W1•rship - 11 am, 7 Oil p 111 , Wedm:~llay
Scrv1cc · 7 00 pm
Ro~e

of Sharon Hnhness Chun:h
Rd Rutl and. Pastor R~~
De~wcy Kmg, Sunday ~l ho.ml - l) 11} a m.
Sunday wor,., lup 7 p 111 • Wednesday
pra)er meeting 7 [l !II
Leadmg

Cr~c l.:

Pine Grovr Bible l-lohness Churth
'112 nulc orr Rt ~2 S. Pastor Rev O"J)cll
Manley. Sun'day School
9 30 a.m.,
Wor~h1p
- 10~0 a.m. 7~0 p.m .
Wcdnesd.1y Serv1ce - 7 ~0 p m
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churt"h
75 Pea rl St. M1ddlepon Pastor R1~k
Bnumc. Sunclny School 10 a m Worship
-1()45 p 'm. Sunday E~r 700 pm ,
Wednesday S..:rv1ce- 7 ;\0 p m

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Financial Services Firm
6 18 E M.tin Street • Po me• oy

(740) 992-7270

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212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy
992-3785

abide in you, ye shall
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Services
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Johtt 15:7

Bitt

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667·311 0

Oasis Christian Fe\lo"ship
(Non denommat10nal fellowship)
Mt:eung m the old Amcncan lcg1110 Hall
South Founh '\venue, Midd lepo rt
Pastur Chris Stewart 10 00 am Sunday
Other meeungs m homes

•

Contmunity of Christ
Ponlan d- Kacmc Rd, P~stor J1m Proffit!.
Sunday School • 9 30 a m , Wor sh1p I0·3[) a.m, Wednesday Sen 1ccs · 7 00

He..lh (Middleport!
Pastor. Bnan Dunham. Sunday Sdwol 9 !10 t1 m. Wor ship · 1 1.!~ u.m
Mmers,·ille
PaStl! r BPb Rllhtnson . Su nUay s.hool - y
01111. Wn!"!&gt;hlp 10 a 111
Pearl ChaJH!I
Sun day Schoo I- ll am. Wor~h•r - Ill a m
l'omeroy
P.lSitJr Brmn Dunham, Worsh1p
a m Sund"d)' s~hool HU5 a m

9 3U

Rutland
Pasl&lt;)r RKk Bilurne, Sunday School 910 ,un , Won\up. 10.3U am, 1hursday
Scrv1ces 7 p m
Salem Center
Pastor· W1\ham K Marshall. Sund:&amp;y
School- 10 15 ~ m . Worsh1p- 9 1~ u m .
B1ble Study. Monday 7 00 pm
Snow\'ille
SundBy Sch[)ol 10 Cl.m. Worship · q a rn

Run Communily Church
P~sw Rev larry Lemley: SunUay School
'- 9 30 J m , Worshlp- 1045 am, 7 p m ,
lllu0iday H1ble Study and Youth - 7 p m
Laurel Cliff··~ Method~t Church
Puswr Glenn Rowe. Sund t~y Sehoul
1)·10 am. Worsh ip · 10 - ~0 am and 11
pIll ,Wedn~sday ScrviL~ - 700 p m

Latter-Day Saints
The Chul't'h nr Jesus
Christ of Lauer- Day Saints
St Rt 160, 446-6247 or 446-741S6,
Sun day School 1020 -11 ant, R~ l1d
Soc 1ety/Pnes1hood 11 .05 12 00 noon.
S&lt;~cra mcut Scn·1cc 9- 10 1 ~
.1m.
Homcmakmg mcctmg, 1st Thu rs - 7 pIll

Bethany
John Gilmore, Sunday s~hool · 10
am .. Wur sh1p - I) a 111 , Wednesday
Scr\'ll'CS - l 0 a 111

Lutheran

East Letart
P.1~t"r Btl I M~r,hall Sunday School Ya 111 Wur~h1p - 10 am, I o;t Sunda)'
CVCI) IIIOnlh CVCillng :iCfVtCC 7 00 pIll ,
Wednesday · 7 p m

St. John Lulherun Chun:h
Pme Grow. Wor ~ hip -I) Otln m, Sunday
School - 10 00 am Pastor Jnmcs P
Brad)

Racine
Pastor Kt: rry Wool.!, Sunday Schoo! · I0
am, Worshi p · 11 a.m .

Our Saviour Lutheran Chun:h
Walnut and Henry S1s, Ruvenswood
WVa, Pastor· On\'ld Russ elL Sunday
School • 10.00 a m., Worsh1p • 11 a m.

Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St. Pomeroy.
Sunday School · 9·45 a.m, Worship - II

om

United Methodist
Graham Ualkd Methodllt
Worship - I I a.m Pastor. Richard Nease
Btthlel United Methodill
New Haven, Richard ~ease, Pastor,
Sunday worship 9 30 a m. Tues 6:30
prayer and Btble Stud)
MI. Oll¥e Unlled Methodlat
OfT 124 behtnd Wilkesville, Pastor. Rev.
Ralph Sp1res, Sunday School - 9 · ~0 a.m.,
Worshtp - !0·30 am, 7 p m., Thursday
Scmces • 7 p.m
Melp Cooperall¥e Psrlsh
Northeast Cluslcr, Alfred, Pas10r Jane
Beattie, Sunday School - 9·30 am ..
Worsh1pJ II am ,630p m
Ch~ter

Pastor Jane Beattie , Worship - 9 am.
Su nday School - IU a m
Thursda)
Servu;es - 7 p m
Joppa
R11h Rnndolph. Wnrslll[l · 9 JO
am Su nday School - 10 'n am
P~stor·

Middleport Community Church
:li7:1i Pearl St . Middleport . Pastor S.1111
Andcnon, Sunday SL•hno l HI ,t 111 .
E\enmg. 7 lOp 111 W~dnl·~hL ) Scn•i1c.730pm

Morning Star
Pastor. John G•lmorc, Sunday School · II
am, Wor~h1p 10 3m

Faith Valley Tabemude Cburth
Ba•lcy Run Road, Pa ~tor · Rev Emmel!
Raw~on
Su nday E\cn•ng 7 p m .
Thursday Serv1ce - 7 p m
S)'niCU!Ie Mission
1411 Rndge man St, S}racuse Sunday
School - 10 am Evcmng
fi p m.
Wednesda} ServiCe · 7 p m.

Hazel Community Church ·
Ofl R1 124. Po. stor Edsel Han Sunday
School • 9·30 am , Worship 10 30 am .
7 30pm

Coolville United Mdhodlst Parish
Pa~lo• Helen Kline, Cool\ 1lle Chun-h
Mam &amp; F1lth Sl., Sunday School - 10
am, Worship - 9 a m., Tulo':sday Sc:mces ·
7p.m

Dynvllle Community Church
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m , Worshtp -

..

JO · ~Oam,7pm

Bethel Church
To'rl"llhlp Rd., 468C, Sunday School · 9
a.m. Worsh•p . 10 am, Wednesday
Services - I 0 a.m.

Mone Chapel ChuKh
Sunday school. JQ am, Wonh1p - II
a.m .• Wedne!day Semcc · 7 p.m.

Hoekln1port Churcli
Gl\nd Street, Sunday School · 9·30 a.m.,
Wer1h1p - 10 30 a.m , Putor Phillip Bell

Nazarene

Faith Go!ipel Chun:h
long Bottom, Sunday School - 9.30 a.m ..
Worship - 10:45 am, 7:30 p m,
Wednelday 7 30 p m
MI. 011¥e Community Churth
Pastor. Lawrence Bush. Sunday School •
9 30 am .. E\emna: • 6 30 p.i11. Wedneday
Ser.·•ce · 7 p.m.

Mkldleport Church of the NUIIrtne
Pastor. Allen Mtdcap, Sunday School 9·30 a m.,Worship- 10.30 a.m., 6.30 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv1ce~ - 7 p.m.. Pastor.
Allen M1dcap

Full Gospel Ll(lhlhouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Pastor Roy
Hunler. SunUay School- 10 am , E\·emng
7.30 p m.. Tue~day &amp; Thursda} · 7 30

Torch Chun:h
Co. Rd 63, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
Worahlp - 10 30 am .

pm
Reedsville Fellowship
Church of the N~zarene, Pastor Jam1e
Peni1. Sunda) School - 9 30 am. Worship
- 10 4~ am. 7 p m . Wednesday Serv.ces
-7 p m

Syracuse Churth of the Naurene
Pastur Mike Adkms. Sunday SChool· 9.30
am Worship - 10.30 am . 6 p m ,
\\oedne!iday Sen tccs- 7 p m
Pomero)' Church of the Nazarene
Pa~lur Jan lavender, Sunday School -

Lona Bollom

Stht"n;\ille L:ommunily r\poslolil"
t'hurch
P.t&gt;ll&gt;r W,t&gt;IW R J ew~!! Sunda y wor~ lllp
- f, m p m W.::drw ~rl ll} 11 00 p m Btb le
Stud~

RrJuiClllK l•fe Church
Mik~

Harri.c;onvllle Community Chunh
Pastor Th eron Durham. Sunday t) 10
a.m and 7 p m , Wedne~day - 7 p m

Cannel-Sun on
Carmd &amp; Ba•han Rd s Racme, Oh10,
Pa swr John Gilmore~ Sunday School 9 30 a.m Worship 10 ·45 am , B1b!c
Study Wl·d 7 00 p m

Ca harv lliblr Chun:h
Pomcr11y P1ke. Co Rd , Puslor Rev
Rlarky,nod Sundt~} Sth&amp;•l Y 30 a.m,
Wurshtp Ill "10 am, 7 30 p m.
WrliiR:-.d.ij Sl"T\ llC · 7 10 p m

Bethel Worship Cf'nler
3971!2 S R 7. R~!!dWillc OH 4 ~772. I /~
nnlc north ul Ea~\C lll Sd1uob 1111 Slot 7 A
Full Gospel Church P.1.~1ur Rub Harhcr
A.ssucmte P:~swr Karyn Da~ 1s. Y1m1h
Pa~ tnr Su1 1e t' ra nc t,. Sund&lt;~) sen I&lt;~~
10 00 am IHH~Ilip 6 00 pm F.tmdy L1!c
Cl&lt;1 s~cs. Wed Hume C~ ll Gruup~ 7 UO
p m, UutL'r L 1m1t~ Cell Group dl th~
chur~il (l .\If pm h l M IU rm

Faith •·utt GosJll!l Church
Long Aonnm. Pa ~ 1or · Steve Reed, Sunday,
School - I) • 10 n m, Wor~h•p 'J 10 .t m
and 7 p m , Wednesday · 7 p m , Fw.la) ·
rellow.tup serVIle 7 r m,

Pa~tm

l"nd.1y 7 p m

){)() "N !nJ A\e. Middleport , Pastor

Ahundant,Grnce R.r. I.
92'S Thml St. Mukll epon, Pa~1or Tcrc o,,,
D ~~ I S, Sun.Jn)
SCTV ICC . 10 a 111
Wedne~day sen ICC, 7 p m

Hy~;elt

Fair, It&gt;\\ Bible Church
Let.1r1 W \lu R1 I Paswr Bnan :Vby,
Sund~y S( hool - &lt;J 30 ,L m • Worship - 7.00
p m , WeJnesd.•y B1.hl ~ Study · 7 00 p m
Faith F~llo"ship C ru~ade ror Christ
P.1~ tnr l{ ev fr.mklm Dl{kcns. Se rv •n~

pm

Ash Stn'fl Chon h
NR A~h S1 . Mu.ldlepnn P~ shlr J~1f Smith
Sund ,iy Schnol · 9 10 n m, Mor n1ng
Wor ship · 10 lO J m ~ 6 30 prn
Wedn~sda y SerVIle - b 30 p m , Youth
Scr. •~e 6 '\0 11 m
Agape Uf~ Center
'Full Gmpcl ChurLh ·. Pa ~ t nn John &amp;
Patty Wad~. 60~ ScC\ltul A1•c Mastm 77'~017. Serv 1 c~ ttmc Sunday 10 ~0 .t m
WcUnc~ay 7 ]lttl

Rock Spring.~
P.tslor Kenh 1-tJd~r SunUay So:huol · 9 1~
a 111 ., Wunlup - Ill a m , Youlh
Fc llow~hlp, Sund:1y · 6 p m

While's Ch•ptl We1leyan
Cool\·llle Road, Pastor. Re v. Ph1lhp
Rtdenour Sunday School - 9.30 a.m.
Worshtp- 10 30 am~ Wednesday Service
-7 pm

South Bethel Communi!!" Church
Silver R1dgc- Pastor lmda DamcwnnJ.
Sunday School · 9 am, Wur!&gt;lup Scr\ 1ce
I0 a m 2nd and ~th Sunday

i11rt•tn 11 n . P~suw Emcntus
l'n1t;tnttn W(•r,h•p 10·00 am
\\eUu ~ 'da\' s~n ll.:-' · 7 p rn
Lt\\l~ li~~

Cliflun l'abcrnwcle Chun:h
Chiton W VH Suml a} S~ hunl '· 10 a 111 .,
Wur.htp - 7 p m . W~Jnt•&gt;da} Sen 1ce 7

'

]1111

Nr" life Vidor} t:entl'r
'77' G.::nrgc~ Cte\'k R1•ad, G, d l tpnlt~, OH
Pa,l\11 Iiiii Staten Sumlay ScH' lC~.,, · 10
1 m "': 7 p m Wcdnt&gt;i.ln~ - 7 p m &amp;
Youth 7 p nl
•·ull Go~;tJel thun:l;
uf the Living Sa~ior
R1 ''K Anllquny. Puswr, Jcs~e Mmm.
Sen tl C' S.uurd 1) :! flOp rn
Salrm Communilv Church
l\.u;k ul W~~t C'olumhl· l V. Va 11111 LiC\'Itlg
Ru.ttl PNur &lt;'li.l rl c., Rmt 'i h {31141 67i
:!2~ Suntl.•y Sdmnl IJ ll l .1m. Sunday
ncn111~ '~ 1\I [ C 7 OtJ [llll R1hl ~ Stud~
WnJn~-.Ja y ~~ n1~e 7 041 pm
Hobson Chri~tum ~·enu .... ~hip Chun:h
While. Sunda~ SchoolIll .1111 Sunda&gt;, ( hurd1 ~crvlt'C () 10 pm
Wcdn~sda\ 1 pm

Pa~ l llr l k r~~ hd

Kt'!i!U ratmn lhrlstiun Frllo\\"llhip
llnop c• Rou d, 1\lh~n~ . Pa ~lt•r
Ltmnll.' Com,_Su nday Wurslup 1():00 am.
WcJnco;d[l) 7 pm

t)l(l~

lll!ll!lSIIIIt t:hrishan Church
Pull Gu~ !'cl l'&lt;~ ~lo l Kuh ~rl Mu s~cr.
Sund:1y Sdmol ') '11 am. , Wor~hip 10 30
.tm - 7· tJ!I ptn Wtdnco,day S~l\' ll'l' 7 (){)

pm

Pentecostal
Penlecostal Assembly
St Rt 124. R&lt;ll"lnc. Pastnr W1l\jam
Hobnc\.:. Sunday Sr hnol
lO am,
Evcnmg- 7 p m Wednesday ServlCC~- 7

""' Presbyterian
Syratuse t'lrsl United Pres b) ll!ri..n
Pa o;lor Rtlhert Crnw, Worship · 11 am
H•rri5on~ille
Pa~tur

Presbyterian Church
Rohert ( ll'"" · Wu,~hlj) - IJ am

Middleport Presbyttrlan ,
Pastor James Snyder. Sund uy School 10
~ m, ~~oorsh1p serv1ce 11 am

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh·Da) Adlentb;t
Mulberry H•~ Rd, Pomeroy. Pa~lor .
Bennett Luck1esh, Samrdny Services
Sabbath School- 2 p m .. Worship- 3 p m

United Brethren
MI. Hennon United Brtthrtn
In Chrlat Chun:h
Te~o:as Communny 36411 W1ckham Rd,
Pa~lor : Peter Muntndnle, Sunday School 9.30 am, Worship - 10 30 1m, 7·00
p m, Wednesday Setv1ccs - 7·00 p m
Youli1 sroup meet1ng lnd &amp; 4th Sundays
7pm .
Ed'm United Brethnm in Chrllt
State Route 124, between ReedsHlle &amp;
Hockingport, Sundny School · 10 a.m.,
Sunday Worship - I I 00 a m Wednesday
Sli.':PIICCS · 7.0U p m , Pa~ lor- M Adam
Will

cxlttem.t C3nu.Jw.ll

Curleton lnterdenonunallunal Church
Kmg~bury Road, Pa ~ tt•r R11bcn Vance.
Sunday Schon! · q ~(l ~ 111 , Wnr~h 1p
Scntcc II) ~0 &lt;~Ill, E\~nmg ScrlllC fJ

pm
Freedom Gospel Mis~km
Bllltl Knoh, on Co RJ 1J Paswr Rc\'
Rog~r Wllll ord, Sunda) s~houl · Y ltl am

..

Fulll1ne ol
Insurance I w•or&lt;~s

BUSINESS SERVICES

Other Churches
Amazing Grace (ommunity Church
Pa~lur Wayne Dunlup, State Rt 6H 1.
Tupp!!rs Plams, Sun Wursh1p. 10 am &amp;
6· 30 pm.. Thur&lt;idlly A1hle Study 7 ()(} p m

Worsh ip- 7 p m

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

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc. If ye abide i11 Me, and My

~

Chester Church of the Naz&amp;rene
Pastor: Re\ He rbert Grate, Sunday S~hool
. 9 ~0 am , Worsh1p - I I a.m .. 6 p.m •
Wednegday Services· 7 p m
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Sunday School · IJ.3 0 am , Wonh1p 10.30 am .. 6 30 p m . Wedne~da)
Serv1~e s 7 p m Rev M1kc Clark

Tuppers Plains St. P•ul
Jane Bem ue. Sunday School · 9
u m Wor,hip- Hl 11m . Tue~day Ser\'ices
-7 IUp m
l.:enlral Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse), P"dstor Bob Robmson,
Sundu} School - 9.45 am .. Won;hlp II
a m, Wednesday Services - 7 30 p m

Holiness

Syracuse Flrsl Chul't'h of God

7 40-992-6128

source for trophies.
Ia ues !·shirts and more

School • !UO a.m., Worship 10 30 a.m.
'
RHdlvllle
Wonh1p • 9·30 11m, Sunday School 10.30 am, F1rs1 Sunday of Month· 7 00
p.~ sei"\'ICe

t:nterpriH
Pastor Arlaud Knit~ . Sunday School ~
10 30 a.m .. Worship - 9.30 ~.m . B1ble
S1udy Wed 7·~0
Flat wood~
Pastor. Kctth Rader. Sunda~ SLhool - 10
11 m , Worsh1p · II a.m

Grace F.piSl'opal Church
326 E Mam St , Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eu~hanst 11.00 a.m Kev
Edward Payne

pm

I

your

9:30am , Worship - 10 30 am and 6
p m, Wednesday Serv1ce~- 7 p.m

Sund~y

P~stor

pm

pm

Middleport, OH

l-ocal

"Do not steal. Do not lie. Do not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19; II

.

H ou1 ~
6 mn -K I 'll I

Amw1plu:rro

tt'M)'J

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(740) 992·6472
Fax 1740l 992·7406

Wmm Fnnuil\

209Thlrd

Wednesday Servtces • 1 p m
Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School 10 am, Morning worship II am Evening - 7 pm.
Wedne~ay 7 p m

St. Paul Lulher11n Church

~ Sub_scribe today • 992·215~ ~ www.mydailysentinel.com
'

The Dally Sentinel • Page A9

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

BLESSED ARE TilE.PURE AT HEART

IJI.-cause your life was not availabl~ for the Lord to use and
bless. You are needed and have
been sent to this time and this
place to "be all that you can be."
··Let' us hold unswervingly to
the hope we profess. for He
who promised is faithfuL And
let us consider how we may
spur one another on toward
love and good deeds. Let us not
give up meeting together. as
some are in the habit of doing,
but let us encourage one another'' (Hebrews 10:23-25a NIV).
You don't think you need to
go to church to be spiritual?
Think again. If you are not
participating in the life and
work of a local church family, then you are missing out
on experiencing God's great
provision for countering the
forces of darkness in the
world and in individual lives:
The local church.
Unless you're being integrated into a church family,
you can never be as developed and refined a servant in
His kingdom as you ought to
be nor can you ever fully
inherit all the peace that He
has on reserve for you.
And every time someone
else looks into the window of
your life and either finds an
emptiness inside or discovers
the shutters of selfishness
tightly shut ·to protect your
own interests, that person's
life has been diminished, lacking in those things that God
could have accomplished
through you. A httle less hope
than should have been there.
A little less joy than God had
intended. A little less courage.
wisdom, strength and love.
But once you begin to
become involved things begin
to change. Your gifts, talents,
resources and personality characteristics all begin to take on
an eternal dimension. And once
you find yourself living in the
company of other Believers,
growing, learning. worshiping
and serving together, you' ll
begintocatchaglimpseofhow
a uniquely wonderful person
like you can be the very ingredient needed in a recipe of
God's making. You yourself
show the love of God and His
wonderful grace in ways that
could not have been realized
had you not "shown up for
duty." Therefore, as you tally
what you have and what you
are always remember to
" .. .' Guard what has been
entrusted to your care"
(I Timothy 6:20 NIV).
(Tiwm Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past 10
years. He is the pastor of
Pathway Community Church
and may be reached for com·
ments or questions by e-IIUJil oJ
pastorthom@pathwayga!fipo·
lis.com).

•

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God so loved the world
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John 3:16
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Acts 24:16

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II Cor. 12:9

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�.

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OHIO
.

The Daily Sentinel
.

Friday, October 28,

Federal grand jury indicts prominent GOP contributor
BY

JOHN SEEWER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TOLEDO - Coin dealer
Tom Noe made a name for
himself in Ohi&lt;l politics
with the lavish dinners he
bought for Repu blican
power brokers aml the big
checks he wrote to GOP
candidates.
He became one of the
state's top fund raise rs and a
friend to many. turning
those connection s into several politi cal appoi ntments.
Now quest ion s about how
he raised money for
President Bu sh's re-ele c.ti on Campa ign an~ Lh e ba~is
for a feckra l indic tment that
accuses N&lt;lc of ill ega ll y
funn elin g $4'5.400 to th e
campaigl1
through
his
friends and

assuciat~:s.

Prosecutors say Noc
wrote check&gt; to his frien ds
AP Photo/ The Blade, Usa Dutton
in th'e eight days leading up Noel L. H1llman. left, section chief of the U.S. Department of Justice's public integrity section ,
to ·a Bush fundrai ser at a Gregory A. White, center, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Ohio, and Theodore R.
dow.ntown Colum bus hotel Wasky, FBI special agent in charge', are seen .ill the announce ment of the Indictment of Tom
on Oct. 30. 2003 . Nue·s
frie nds the n made the cam- Noe, Thursday in Toledo. A federal indictment accuses Noe of illegally funneling $45,400 to
paign donatio ns in their

ow n names. skirting th e
$~.000 limit ·un indivrdual
. contr ibuti ons, the ind ictment said.
" It's one of the most blata nt and excesSive fina nce
schemes we have er\co un tered.'' sa id Noe l Hillman.
secti on chief of the U.S.
Department of Justice' s
public integ rity section.
Noe was known fo r hosting dinners at a downtown
Columbus steak hou se and
for entertaining at hi s
homes on Lake Erie and in
Florida. where Gov. Bob
Taft 's former chief of staff.
Bri an Hicks , vacatio ned
twice with his famil y.
Beginning in April-, wi th a
rep ort by The Blade. Noe"s
name was tied to the sca n-

dal th at ultimately led to th e
conviction s thi s summer of
Hicks for hi s fa ilure to
rep ort stay s at Noe 's
Florida vacation home and
Taft on charges of accept -

President Bush 's re-election campaign.

ing golf ga mes he didn't
report.
But it took se ven months
fo r Noe to face charges
himself.
"These indictments prove
the svs tem . works. " sa id
Ohio ·GOP chairman · Bob ·
Bennett, whose own party
rece ived $ 10,080 from Noe .
and who has had to deal
with the fall from grace of
one of his party's bri ghtest
stars.
"Anyone who trie s to
manipulate the process for
r ersonal or political advantage will pay a heavy
price. " Bennett said.
Noe also is under investigillion over an ill-fated $50
million investment in rare ·
co ins he managed for the
state worker.s ' compensation
fund.
Noe
has
ack n0w ledged that up to
$13 mill io n is missing, and
Ohio 's attorney general has

accused him of stealing as ated with thei r investiga·
much as $6 million. No tion .
charges ha ve been filed in
U.S. Attorney Gregory
that ca., e. though. state offi - White said prosecutors
cials say they pl an to do so. were nego ti ating Noe 's surNoe is accused of arran g- re nder with hi s lawye r and
ing the contribution scheme they have nut -di sc ussed u
to fulfill his pledge to raise possible plea agreement.
Noe's
atto rney,
$50,000 for the Bu sh
Bill
fu nprai ser that took place Wilkinson, said in a sta tejust over a year before Ohio ment that Noe's surrender
gave Bu sh the White was co mplicated by the fact
Hou se.
that Noe was in so uth
Federal inves tigators also Florida and that many courallege Noe made hi s friends · thouses there were still
and ~associates fill out con- closed
becau se
of
tribution cards and form s Hurricane Wilma.
fal se ly certifying they were
If convic ted, Noe face s
makin g the con tribution s up to 15 years in pri son and
themselves .
fines up to $950,000. Those
The resu lt was that penalties could increase if
Bush·'s cam paign commit- it's fo und that Noe used
tee unknowin gly submi'tted money from the state coin
a fal se campaign report to fund to make the campaign
the
Federal
Election donations.
Commissio n, the indictThe case is the larg est of
ment said. Prosecutors say its kind prosecuted under
the Bush campaign cooper- the 2002 campaign finance

2005

Ohio court
maintains
authority in
adoption case,

reform law. Hillman said.
Noe was o respected coin
expert who headed a committee that helps sta tes
se lect designs for commemorat ive quarters . He also
was a former member of
boards that oversaw the
Ohio Turnpike and the
state's public colleges.
He personally contribut ed
mor_e than $ 105,000 to
Republicans
in cluding
- Bush and Gov. Rob Taft
during the last campaign.
The Bush-Cheney campaign donated $6,000 it
received from Noc and his
wife, Bernadette. to chari ty,
sa id Aaron McLear, a
spokesman
for
the
Republican
Natio nal
Committ ee.
The com mittee said it js
coo pera tin g with federal
auth orit ies but will not
ret urn $ 100,000 that Noe
rai sed for Bu sh fur now.
"A t thi s time it appears
those funds were g ive n
ap propriatel y,"
McLear
said.
The investigation bega n
just weeks before Bu sh's
close victory over John
Kerry in Ohio . Democrats
ques tioned why the allegations weren't made public
until this spri ng.
Several
Toledo-area
politi cia ns who attended
· th e Bush fundrai ser and
contributed testifi ed before
the grand jury this summer.
Prosec utors would not
reveal the names of those
who Noe gave the money to
before the fundraiser or say
if any of them would be
cha rge d . The indictmen t
sa id Noe and those who
gave hi s money to Bush had
conspired together to violate the contribution limit s.
Two people who received
just over $20,000 from Noe
recruited others who then
gave money in their own
names, the indictment said .

NORWALK (AP) - An
Ohio
judge
Thursday
reje&lt;:ted a request to allow
an Illinoi s court · to decide
who should have custody uf
an 18-month-ol d girl an
adopt ion agency wants
returned.
The Cradle Society, based
in Evans1on, Ill., last year
approved the placement of
a baby gi rl with an Ohio
couple.
Authorities
111
September alleged that the
cou ple kept some of their
JJ . adopted children in
cages.
· The nonp rofit adopt!on
agency had filed a matron
in th e juvenil e division of
Huron · Cou nty
(Ohio)
Common Pleas Court, arguing that Mercy Anne
Gravelle requi res supervised care because she may ·
need surgery to correct
unspec ified birth abnormalities. The Cradle Society
wants the girl to be a ward
of Cook County, Ill.
Judge Timothy Cardwell
ruled th at Ohio has au\hority to proceed in the girl's
case. Mercy Anne Gravelle
Is now in foster care in
Huron County.
She is the youngest of II
children who had been livrng with Michael and
Sharen
Gravelle
near
Wakeman, u small town in
Huron County 60 mile s
so uthwest of Cleveland.
But The Cradle Society said
her adoption was not final.
"We are pleased that tb.e .
judge rul ed quickly and he
understands the importance
uf mo ving this along," said
Susan Vernon, • program
director of family services
for The Cradle Society.
Michael
and
Sharen
Gravelle attended the hearrng .

HOLZER

OHSAA computer ratings, Page 82
Ob.io prep notebook, Page 82
National Football League notes, Page 83
OVP leaders, Page B6

Friday, October 28, 2005

PrEp VoiiEybaH Southeastern Ohio Edition

Holzer Clinic is Close to You ...

Medical Excellence.

·Local Caring:

Everywhere
Athens

C!Jarleston

Gall1po11s

Jackson

BWAlTERS@MYDAILYTRIBLINE.COM

WELLSTON - For the
fourth time in five years,
Eastern volleyball will be
in
the
Division
IV
Southeast District final following Thursday's impressive 25- 14, 25-22, 25- II
victory over Ports mo uth
Clay.
The Lady Eagles (21-4)
will
meet
another
Port smouth area sc hool ,
Notre Dame, for th e di strict
championshiP. Saturday at
Well ston High School. The
Lady Titans ( 19-2) defeated
Waterford 25-14, 25-13 , 25-

Team
Prev. Votes
1. lronlDn (41
1- 49
2. Logan
5 42
3. Miami Trace (1)
3 36
4 . Gallia Academy
2
34
5. Wheelersburg ·
4 32
6. Zane Trace
6 19
7. Nelsonville-York
6 14
8. Sheridan"
NR 10
(tie) Rock Hill
NR 10
10. Trimble
8
8

CNP SchEdulE
GALLIPOLIS - A !iChedtlle of upcoming college

end high School vafSit\' sporting !Nef'lt5 i~g
teama !rom Gallia, Melga and Mason oountie6.
Friday's QIID8B

Lawrence

Pt Pleasant ·

HOLZER
CLINIC
Athens

Charleston

A1edicaiExceHence

Local Caring:

Jacksm

Gallipolis

•

Lawrence

PI Pleasant

.

f

i n a I

69. -of-72
fr om
the
~ervice

line,

Thursday at
WHS.
Easter n
jumped at to
a qui ck onegame lead,
'-------' then held otT
Winebrenner a
fur iou s
.
c 'o meback
fr om Cla y to claim a th ree-·
point win for a 2-0 advantage. The Green and White
had little troubJ e·in the final

including a
trio of perfect e ffort s
from Jillian
Brannon,
Erin Weber
and
Kati e
Hayman
Hayn:a n.
Brdnnon
comp leted the nrg ht 17-ot 17 serving. Webe~ was t 1fo r- 1) and Hayman was
perfect in fi ve se rves.
Darcy Wineb renner led
ga me to ~ec ure the· st rai ght
the Eagles with 15 points.
ga me swee p.
EHS finis hed the ga me and Brannon followed with

12 points.
Webc'r fi nished eight
points.
B r i t t ·a n y
Bis se ll had
s ix,
and
K e l sey
H olter
L - - - - _ _ . J added
five
Bissell
roi nt s in th e
tr iLunph .
Hayman Jed th e net att ack
with eight kills and
·Wineb renner followed wi th
seven kill s. Brannon and
Weber had five and four
ki ll s, respectively, and both
Hol ter and Bissell added a

~ ingle

kill.
Weber had a team-high
five blocks, and Hayman
was close behind with
th ree . Bi ssell led EHS with
21 assists and five dinks.
will
play
Eas tern
Portsmouth Notre Dame
Sat urday in the second volleyball contest ai. Wellston
High School. Tb.e first
match will pit Adena
against Beave r Eastern in
the other di strict final at 3
p.m . Eas tern/Notre Dame
wi ll be gin approximately
30 minutes after the completion of match one.

Football
Gallia Academy at Marietta
South Gallia at SCiotoville
Chesapeake at River Valley
Meigs at Belpre
Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant
· Parkersburg Catholic at Wahama .
Hannan at Big Creek

PrEp Football -

WEEk I 0

Southern, Eastern to square off in rivalry

College Croes Country

Rio G r,;~.nde . Home Meet. 4:30p.m.

SaturdiV'' gamBB

BY ScoTT WoLFE

Tournament Volleyball

Eastern vs. Portsmouth Notre Dame (at

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Wellston High School), TBA

·
Football
Eastern at Southern

RACINE
Many
moon s ago, the powers
that be had the insight to
move the
heralded
c ro ssc ounty
rivalry
betw ee n
E a s t er n

Cross Country
Regional meet (at Pickerington)

' College Soccer
Tiffin at Rio Grande, 1 p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at Tiffin . 4 p.m.

Pine Hills GC has
awards dinner

a

POMEROY - ·. The Pine
Hill s Sen.ior Golf leag ue
recently celebrated its end of
season awards dinner with
the installation of new offi cers and a golf scramble.
New
officers
Bill
McDaniel , Raymond Jewel
and Bob Duddings replaced
outgoiug officers Tom Wolfe,
Bob Hysell and Bub Stivers.
Over the past two weeks,
the Senior league has
enjoyed a good turnout to its
golf scrambles at the golf
course in Pomeroy.
On October 14, 23 players
were on hand for the scramble with top honors going to
the teams of Tom Wolfe. Roy
Long, Terry Hupp and Bernie
Shrivers and the team of Don
Hunnel, George Stewart, Ron
Phalin and Lennie Jewel.
On October 21, bad weather limited the turnout but 16
players were on hand for the
event with top honor s going
to tb.e team of George Wolf,
Gary Wolf, Jim Snyder and
Dave Jacoby with a score of
12-under par.
During the course of the
year, 65 different players
have participated m the
Senior Scramble.
The Senior league will continue to play on FridaY. mornings through the \.v inter,
weather permitting. After the
time change, the league will
be signing up before 9 a.m.
and playing soon afterward.
Players interested can
show up at the Pine Hill s
course and participat~ in the
league throughout the winter
month s.

n

'Does to
honor 1985

d

Southern to a Saturday
ni ght'. Mixin g in the
atmosphere
of
the
Halloween sp irit adds to
some of the aura of the
game that traditionally has
been a big gate no matter
how well the teams have
done during the season.
Although
Saturday's
game is a battle for the cellar of the Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division, the game means
much more within the
county. It mean s pride and
bragging rights for an ·
entire year. Southern has
two wins overall and
Eastern is winless. Both
have no wins in the league.
All that will- change
Friday.
To bolster some ent~usi­
asm and pay tribute to
worthy honorees. Southern
will honor the 1985 SYAC
(Southern Valley Athletic
Conference)
championship team. That was one
of only two Southern
teams to· ever win the
SVAC . The team was
coached by Bill Hensler.
Pregame ceremonies and
parents night will begin
around 6:45 p.m.
Some Eastern-Southern
games have been blowouts, but most have been
competitive. Eastern leads
the series four to one, but
the game has proven to be
the premier event and the
Bryan Walters/photo
game even the Jess-thancas ual fans wants to see. Southern defender Mi ke Brown (7;1.1 wraps up Waterford ,running back Jason Sampson (401

Please see Rivalry, Bl

during a Week 8 contest at Adams Memorial Field. This Saturday. Tile Tornadoes wi ll host
rival Eastern in the Tri-Va lley Conference Hocking Division fi nale . .

RIO GRANDE - For the
third time this season Mount
Vernon Nazarene took care of
business
against
th e
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen voll~yball team,
winning in three strai ght
games, 30-28, 30-20 and 3017 on Thursday evening at the
Newt Oliver Arena in
American
Mideast
Conference South Division
action.
Ri o Grande (7-24, 1-13
AMCS) showed some life in
the opening game. After
falling behind early. 10-5 , the
Redwori1en fought back tu
take a 15- 14 lead and it
looked like the game was on.
Mount Vernon Nazarene (33 -

SVAC

chaUJpions
BY ScoTT WoLFE
SPORTS CORR ESPONDENT

RACINE - Thi s Saturday
night members of the J 985
SYAC
championship
· Southern Tornado football
team will be honored with a
pre-game tailgate party and
recognition ceremony during
the Eastern-Southern football
game at Sou-thern High.
School.
Team members to be honored are 1985 varsity football
players . Pete · Ro~sh, Bo
Willis, Scott Grueser, Tim
Smith, Mickey Tucker, Eric
Thoren. Jay Proffitt, Brian
Freeman. Wendell Clark,
Heath Hill , Danny Wolfe ,
Sean
Gruese r,
Kelley
Grueser. Jimmy Wolfe, Jeff
Connolly, Scott Wickline,
Eric Taylor, manager; Kevin
Layne, manager; and Joey
Hensler,
manager.
Bill .
Hensler was the head coach.
Rese rve players on the .
team who also saw varsi ty
minu tes were Kevin Spaun,
Chris Stout. Tony Connolly,
John Riftle , Brian Diehl,
Crage Brown, Mark Porter,
Mike Amos, Brian Weaver,
Clyde Sayre. Todd Lisle,
Danny Gheen, Pete Johnson,
and Kevin Grueser.
Cheerleaders for the 1985
squad were Lisa Pape, .Kelly
Rizer. Jill Nease, Angie
Please see SVAC. B4

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

t=all 13a I Cued
:•
•
Suftball 1-f)lJr-nament •~

Rio swept by Mount
Vernon Nazarene
SPECIAL TO THE SEt-JTINEL

With over 100 board certified physicians,
9 convenient locations, and 28 medical
specialties, Holzer Clinic·is close to you.
The.region's best healthcare is right here.

IR in th e
other sc mi -

BY BRYAN WALTERS

A look at the top football t eamS
· (pound-fQr·pound)
m
Ohio's
Southeast District as voted by t he
Ohio Va lley Publishing staff. (Firstplace votes iii parenthesis)

BY MARK WtUtAMS

'

Division IV District 5Emis

Eastern soars past Portsmouth Clay, advances to final

CollEge VollEyball

CLINIC

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

9, 9-5 AMCS) built the lead
to 26-22 and seemed to be in
control. Rio made one last run
to tie the score at 28-28
before succumbing.
The energy seemed to leave
the Redwomen after the near
miss in the first game as the
Lady Cougars cruised to victory in the next two games to
take the match. In game two,
Mount Vernon Nazarene held
ie a_~~of 10-3. 13-5.25- 12 am.l

7

It was more of the same in

•••

•••
••
••

••• • s-lay, November 12, 2005
•
:

••
:
•
:
0

the third game as MYN U :
gained control in jumping out 1
to a 10-4 lead and building •
the advantage to as high"' 15 •
pointsat 27-12.
·:
R,io was Jed by junior out- ,
side hitter Lindsay Urton with o

•

. Please see Swept, 84

••

AU JINI'?Fir, t .Jl' 1M
PPHSl
+
" , . . , 41
••
TT.
'!!' = ..

t

$200emby pertelln • Limited teams!

0

Pactds available at PVH \Vdl~ Ca*r

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1o top (3) &amp;aisiUng ~
Pia~US ~~JUSt L...J8
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For:-&amp;'~, "lliUI L"f~. "lUO nk..,._

• ·

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IWUIIIICIUWI,

~••••••

~IJ-LJVIO rv-~J

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0

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.'·\I.,,, ,II/ ttl h1 /'lea.\tll/1 I alley

llospita/

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1 , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·, • • , • . • • • • • • • • , 1 • • • :

•

�'
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.corri

OHSAA computer ratings
COLUMBUS (AP) - Here are the sixth
weekly football computer ratings from the
Ohio High School Athletic Association.
Ratings are by division and region with
recor(! and average bi-level points per game
(tol? eight teams in e~rh region advance to
regtona1 quarterfinals):
DIVISION I
Region t-1 , Lakewood Sl. Edward (8-0) 28.7320. 2, Solon (90) 27.8388. 3, C!i. Glenville (9:.Q) 26.2888. 4, Lyndhurst Brush
18-3) 19.om. 5, North ~msted (7-2) 17.8055. 6, E"'lid (6-3)
t6.7214. 7, Cle. St IQnatius (5-4) 15.6487. 8, Cle. Kennedy (7-2)
14.8383. 9, Strongsville (6-3) 14.4000.10t Shaker His. (5-4)
11 .9637.
RtQion 2-1, Mass. Washington (g.Q) 27.03.97. 2, Cant.
McKinley 19-0)'25.5818.' 3, Firldlay (8-1) 24.82n. 4, Tot. so.
John's (8-1 ) 23.4611 . 5, Elyna (7-2) 20.2555. 6. H"dson (7-2)
19.6055. 7, Sytvania Northv1ew \7·2) 18.82n. a, Green (6·3)
16.6722 . 9, Amherst Sreele (7-2 16.5944. 1(1, BrunswiCk {8-1)
t6.2222.
Region 3-1 . H~llard Davidson ~9-0) 28.5944. 2, Gahanna
Uncoln (6-3) 22.7944. 3, Grove Crty (6-3) 20.72'[7. 4, Lancaster
{6-3) 20.2444. 5, Worthington Kilbourne (6-3) 19.7833. 6, •
NeWar1t (7-2) 17.9055. 7, WesterviHe South {7-2) 17.7555. 8.
Cols. Brookhaven (8-1) 17.6444. 9, Upper ArlingtOn (5·4)
t1.1m. 10. 1..ooan 17-2) 16.8166.
Region 4-1 , C:in. St. Xavier (9-Q) 33.8106. 2, Hube'r Hts.
Wayne (8·1) 28.42n. 3, Centerville (B-1) 24.~722. 4, Cin. Glen
Este (8-1) 22.9555. 5, Cin. Moeller {6-3) 22.3582. 6, Cin. LaSalle
{7-2) 20.8944. 7, Cln. Colerain (8-1) 20.6762. B. Uberty Twp.
lakota E. (7-2) 20.2666. 9, Fairf~ld (7-2) 19.2111 . 10, Claylon
NOithmont(7-2) 19.1833.
.
.

\,

•
\'I

'\

DIVISION II
Realon 5-1 , Tallmadge (9-0) 29 6444 2, Maple His 19-0)·
28.51l55. 3, Willoughby Sooth (9-0) 23.8888 4. Copley 7-2)
19.811 1 5, Olmsted ~al!s (8-1) 19.7555 6, Parma Normandy
(7-2) 18 6444.7, A.kro.n Hoban {7·2) 17 0166 8, Chardon (6·J)
15.2722. 9, Chagrin Falls Kenston (6-3) 15.1388 10, Bedford (63) 15.0722.
Region 6--1, Avon lake (9-Q) 30.7888. 2, Tol. Cent. Cath. (8-1)
21J~055. 3, Olentangy Uberty (8·1) 19.2611 . 4, Sylvania
Southview (7·2) 18.0833. S,lewis Center Olentangy {7·2}
17.7833.6, Tot ~rs (6-3) 15.5833. 7, Mans. Madison (6·3)
15.1000. 8, Piqua ,-4) 15.0222. 9, Lodl Cloverleaf (6-3)
14.8166.10, Tiffin
lumbian (7·2) 13.7000.
Region 7-1, loulsviHe (9-0) 29.1222. 2, Canlleld (9·0)
26,2285. 3, Cols. Watterson (8·1) 21 .93B2. 4, New Philadelphia
(8·1) 1S.2m . 5, Cola. Marion Franklin (8-1) 17.7012. 6, Dublin
Scioto (8.S) 17.6388. 7, Dublin Jerome (6-3) 16.7222. 8, Cols.
Beechcroft (7-2) 15.3m. 9, Young. RaySn (7-2) 13.7858. 10,
Col&amp;. Millin (8-:l) 12.9222.
Region 8-1, Springboro (9-0) 27.3722. 2, Cin. MI. Healthy (9·
Ol 23.3333. 3, Wash. CH Miami Trace (7·2) 20.0166. 4, Kings
""~Kings (8-1) ,18.'1166. 5, Bellbrook (7-2) 15.6866. 6,
~ (B-3) 15.4134. 7, West Carrolhon (5-4/ 1!1-.5388. 8,
T - E~oewood (8·1) 14.3333. 9, Day. Carroll 7-2113.6389.
10. ,.,.: Orab Weoter~ Brown (7-2) 13.0555.
DIVISION Ill

, Region 9-1, Men1or Lake Cath. (8-1) 26.5098. 2, Aurora (8·1)

21 .1388. 3, Parma Hts. H,oly Name (8·1) 20.4888. 4, Akron
Buchtel (7-2) 18.4222. 5, Yoong. Liberty (9-0) 17.1 555. 6, Cle.
8tnedictine l~) 15.8675. 7, Cuya. Falls Walsh Jesuit (5-4)
15.4138. 8, AIIWnna SE (8·1g 15.0888. 9, Rlohlield Revere (5-4)
14.0611.10, Niles McKinlay 5-4) 12.4283.
. •
Region 1Q-1, Clyde 18-1) 3.7500. 2, Spring. Shawnee (8-1)
21.3578. 3, Napoleon~~-~ 19.9277. 4, Day. Cham-Julienne (E!·
3l17.6783. 6, i&lt;SniOn 7-2 16.9944. 6, Tlpp City Tippecanoe (72 16.6002. 7, St. Marys emorlal \7·2) 15.9055. 8, Archbishop
Aher (7-2) 15.7888. 9, Eaton (7-21 4.9722. tO, Graham Local
(6-3) t1.8028.
Region 11-1, SteuberMIIe (9-o) 28.5346. 2, Newark Licking
VolleY 19-0)23.8277. 3, Medina BtJCkoye (9.0) 21.4088. 4, Canal
Fulton N.W. (7·2) 21 .0333. 5, New Concord John Glenn {7-2)
~~1. 6, Coni&gt;rldgo(S·t) 17.9385. 7, Dover (7·2) 17.3666. 8,
Boa'l8r (7-2)14.6160. 9, Salem (8-3)t3.5353. tO,
(7-2) 13.0388.
n 12-1, Cin. Indian Hill (9-0) 20.7944. 2, New Albany (9)
t1t . 3, Qoll. Qolllo Acid. (7-2) 17.0777. 4, Thornville
Sheridan (7·2) 18.7333. !i, so. Bernard Roger Bacon (6-3)

15.7722. 6, Cols. DeSales (5-4) 14 .8888. 7 , Cin. Taft (7·2)
14.8635. 8. Hillsboro {7·2) 14.4611 . 9, Lane. Fairfield Union (6·3)
13.9555. 10, Jackson (6-3) 13.0633
DIVISION IV
Region 13-i. Young. Mooney (8·1) 21 .3631. 2. ZoarvilleTusc.
Valley {8·1) 17.8380. 3, Garrettsville Gar1ielcl (8· 1) 1 5.01 11. 4,
Orrville {5·4)14.7833. 5, Akron Manchester (8·1) 14.5500. 6,
Akron St. VIncent-St. Mary (5-4) 13.7444. 7, Cant. Cent. Cath. (6·
3) 11 .2388. 8, Cadiz Harrison Cent. (6-3) 9.6058. 9, Cuya. Falls
Cuya. Valley Christian (6-2) 9.0415. 10, Beachwood (6-l)
8.7611 .
' Region 14-1 , Ottawa-Glandorf (8-1) 20.5500. 2. Coldwater
(9-0)20.0555. 3, Huron (8-1) 17.6555. 4, Marion Elgin (8-1)
H .2222. 5, w. Milton Milton-Union (7·2) 17.1444. 6, Bell!iille
Clear Fork (6·3) 16.92n. 7, Tontogany Otsego (B-1) 16.232 1 8,
Elyria Catholic \7-2) 14.9555. 9, Wauseon (7-2) 14.6963. 10,
Rossford {6·3) 4.2570.
Region 15-1, Bellaire {9..0) 27.0960. 2. Ironton f8-1J 25.4222.
3, wn1iamsport West1all (7·2) 17.0000. 4, New l'x ngton (7·2)
16.9222 . 5, Zanes. W. Muskingum (7-2) 15 7222. 6, fromon Rock
Hilt (8~ 1) 14.6458. 7, Heath (7-2) 14.4222. 8, Cols. Hart~y (7-2)
13.9847. 9, Chill. Zane Trace (8·1) 13.9222. 10, St Clairsville (7·
2)t3.6283.
Region 16--1, Gefmantown Valley View t&amp;-1) 20.58BS. 2,
Monroe Lemon-Monroe (8·1) 17.6722. 3, Clartc:sville ClintonMassie (8·1) 16,. 6055. 4, Gin. Wyoming (7-2) 16.0000. 5, Plain
City .Jo11athon Alder (8-1) 15.5705. 6, Blanchester (7 ·2) 13.0000:
7, C1n . Mariemont (6-3) 11.6000. 8. Cin. Madeira f5-4 ) 1~. 1388 .
9, Cin. N. College Hill (7·2) 9.2658. 10, Ham. Bad n (4·5)
8.6111 .
DIVISIONV
Region 17-1 , Barnesville (7-2) 18.2575.' 2, N. LimaS. Range
(9·0) 17.9277. 3, Warren·Kennedy (8· 1) 16.0396. 4, W. Salem
Nw (8,1) 15.81311.5, Smithville (8-1) 15.5500. s, W.Lafare«e
Ridgewood (8-1) 15.5444. 7. Columbiana Crestview (8-1
14.2388. 8, Rittman {7·2) 12.6666. 9, Labrae (4-5) 11 .3444 . 10,
New' Middletown Springfield F·2) 10.0944.
Reoion 18-1 , Hamler Patnck Henry (9-0) 17.5451 . 2, Bucyrus
WynfOrd (9-0) 16.2333. 3, Findlay liberty-Benton (9·0) 15.5500.
4, Haviland Wayne Traca (9·0) 13.7833. 5, Bloomdale ElmwOOd
(7-2) 13.4343. 6, ·convoy Crestview (8-1) 11 .7888. 7, Gates Mills
Gilmour Acad. (7-2) 11 .4590. 8. Collins Western Reserve (7-2)
11 .2555 . 9. Sherwood Fairview (7·2) 11.1310. 10, Rocky River
luth. W. (7-2} 10.9593.
Region 19-1 , Cols. Ready (8·1} 20.1055. :2, Howard E. Knox
(8·1) 17.7555. 3, Wheelersburg (7·2) 17.6410. 4, Grandview Hts. ·
(8·1) 16.6254. 5, Lucasville Vahey (8· 1) 15.4690. 6, Frankfort
Adena (6-3) 12.9888 . 7, Centerburg (7-2) 12.7666. 8,
Nelsonville-York (6-3) 12.3555. 9, Slewart Federal Hodl:ing (7-2)
12.2804.10, Glouster Trimble (8-1) 11.5300.
Region 2~1 , Cin. Hills Christian Acad. (9..0} 17.9234. 2, lima
Cent. Calh. (8·1) 17.6833. 3, Lees Creek E. Clinton (7-2) .
16.6055. 4, Harmony Community School (8·1) 16.4037. 5,
Arcanum (8·1) 15.9444_6, Versailles (8-1) 15.1777. 7, Anna {8·
1) 14.3333. 8, Marion Pleasant (7-2) 13.0777. 9, Bluffton (7-2)
12.3055. 10, Waynesville (5·4) 10:!}500.
,
DIVISION VI
Region 21-1, Columbiana (9·0) 19.5277. 2, Cle. Cuya. Hts.•
{8·1) 14.2111 . 3, Staub. Cath. Cent. (6-3) 13.0398. 4, Mineral
Ridge {7·2) 11 .9833. 5, Dalton (5·4) 1o.em. 6, Thompson
Ledgemont (8-1) 10.4222. 7, Mogadore (6·3) 9.0666. 8,
McDonald (6·3) 8.5833. 9, Lowellv!Ue (5·4) 8.2611. 10, Vienna
Mathews (6-3) 8.1888.
Region 22-i, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon {9-0) 11.nn. 2,
·Ubar;ty Ctr. (B-1) 17.6222. 3, Norwalk St. Paul (7-2) 15.3388. 4,
Monioevllle (6-3). 13.1611 . Sycamore Mohawk (7-2) 12.1388.
6, Tol. Ottawa Hills (7·2) 10.8388. 7, StMary Central Catholic (54) 10.7386. 8, Crestline (7·2) 10.4500. 9, Arlington (7-2) 9.0722
10, Columbus Grove (7·2) 8.5500.
Region 23-1, Lane. Fisher Cath. {B-1) 15.0444. 2, Hannibal
Rivet (7·2) 13.4544. 3, Newark Cath. (6-3) 10.7555. 4, Caldwell
(B-3) 9.9480. 5, Shadyodo (7-2) 8.9735. 6, Willow Wood
Syrnmeo VaNay (6-3) 8.8888. 7, Slrasi&gt;Jrg-Fran~ln \8-3) 8.2444.
8, Milford Ctr. Falrbanks (7-2) 8.2317. 9, Beallsville 6-3} 8.2183.
10, Crown City S. Golllo (5-4) 7.4160.
Region 24-1, Mechanicsburg {9·0)19.6458. 2, Spring. Cath.
Cent. (8·1) 15,7111 . ~. Dola Hardin Northern (9-D) 14.5500. 4, '
Covlng1on (8-1).14.4944 . 5, Delphos Sl. John's (8·1) 12.2888. 6,
Waynasfleld·Goshen (8·1) 12.1Q21.7, Marla Stein Marion l~l
(6·3) 7.8444. 8, Cln. Country Day (6-3) 6.3123. 9, DEiGraff
~lverslde (6·3) 8.0193. 10. Ansonia (4-5) 5.1166.

s:

Rivalry
fromPageBl
ltfs the only show in town
and everyone wants to be a
part of it.
For years, pads cracked
harder than in just a regular
game, and the baltles on the
line were a game within
themselves. Some suggest
today that the game has taken
:on a much too polite
· approach in recent years.
-This year we will see. Last
. year at Eastern. the Eagles
claimed a 27-0 win.
Last week, the . Trimble
Tomcats (8-l , 3-l) took out
· its frustrations on the
: Southern Tornadoes (2-7, 0. :4). blanking the visitors 3S-O
: Friday at Glouster Municipal
: Stadium. ·
l
n
: Waterford, Jason Sampson
: scored two touchdowns with: in a span of 43 seconds in the
· second period to help carry
: Waterford to a 25-20 victory
: over winless Eastern. Easlern
:dropped to 0-9.
Recent common opponents
: between
Eastern
and
: Southern include Federal
Bryan Walters/OVP file
· Hocking defeating Eastern
Eastern
fullback
Terry
Durst
(31)
talks
strategy
with head coach
: 40-6, and Miller defeating
Newland
during
a
Week
2
coritest
at
Zane
Trace
High School.
Pat
: Eastern 12-6. Southern lost to
: Waterford 49-7, lost to Newland and the Eagles will look for their first \vin of 2005 when
• Federal Hocking 25-6, and it travels to Racine for a Week 10 matchup with Southern.
: reB io Miller 14-6. But throw offense to putting up so me McKnight 6-16. ln the
: out the scores and throw out very convincing numbers.
receiving depanment Butch
:the records. This is THE
Ag~insl Waterford, Eastern
Marnhoul went 1-40, J .R.
·Eastern-Southern game and had ·195 yards rushing and Grady 1- l 0, and Wes Riffle
: anything can happen.
100 yards passing for a 295 2-5.
: Last week, Waterford total. Southern has struggled
Defensiv ely,
Butch
· established a 13-0 lead in the to do that in its last cottple of Marnhout had nine tackles
first quarter on a pair of ga mes put toge1her ( 159 for
Southern,
Jesse
touchdown passes. Eastern against Watert'ord, gg ·against McKnight had seven, Jo sh
got on the board with a· safe- Trimble = 247 yards). The Pape six, Mike Brown six,
ty early in the second period, Southern defense at times has and Darrin Teaford four.
but Sampson . br0 ke through been solid, but has started to Other tackl ers were Wes
. with his two shon touchdown show fatigue late in the sea- Riftle , Weston
Counts,
runs, from one and five son, while the otlense has Randy Collins. Matt Lehew,
yards, to extend Waterford 's been sporadic. Some of that Ryan Donaldson, Cody
lead to 25-2. But the second certainly goes to lo~ing a Patterson, Kreig Kleski and
half is what makes the couple players to injuries, R J L h
Tornado camp a liltle anx- including qu arterback Ryan
· · eac ·
One week ago against
. ious. Eastern established its Chapman to a season-ending
·offense and held defensively injury. Josh Pape. however. Waterfor.d, Eastern rushing
to make the game close at the stepped forward and has done was led by Bryce Honaker
a credible job. Showing a who had 8-35 yards, Jordan
'
.finish 25:20.
of its potential , Pierce was 4-19, Terry Durst
glimpse
Eastern countered with
another safety and two shon Southern had a career type 33-142. Corey Shaffer also
·TD runs by Bryce 1-lonaker game against Hannan. who carried a co uple times, and
:and Terry Durst to make recently picked up its li rst Derek Young was 2-9.
·
Sharing
quarterbacking
things interesting in the sec- Will.
Coach Gru.eser of Southern duties were Jordan Pi erce 2•ond half
· Like Southern's watch on noted that "everyone wants to 3-0 for 26 yards. and Corey
. increased Eagle productivity, . win thi s game." Both teams Schaffer who was 5-9-0 for
Eastern feels the anxiety of have been working very hard 74. Receiving-wise Bryce
possibly going winless for and are to be praised for lhe Honaker caug ht three catches
the year. A win would cer- effort they have put into the for 41 yards, and Levi Clagg
.tainly heal a year without game in 2005. Despite the was 1-17, and Terry Durst
prosperity.
Momentum ?' outcome, fans from both was 3-42.
No matter what th e out· Advantage? The game looks sides · must appreciate the
hours the young men log to come. Saturday
night's
to be fairly even.
achieve
their
goals.
hoopla
and
surrounding
Eastern has undoubtedly
Offensively for Southern activities sho uld produce a
·improved throughout the season. Pat Newland's club has last week, Butch Marnhout must-see event. Game time is
17-26. and Jesse 7:30p.m.
gone from producing limited was

•

I

Friday, October 28,2005

Prep Football -

Ohio Notebook

DUELING
BACKS:
Massie rushing mark with
347 yards on 18 carries, Mansfield Senior's Dante
scoring four times, in a 56-6 Davis rushed for 285 yards
When Canton McKinley win · over Madison Plains; on 35 carries and scored five
and Massillon Washington Bobby Doyle of Chardon TDs, while Wooster's Ryan
meet this weekend, it'll be ran for 327 yards on 19 car- Kopina gained 257 yards on
the first time the two bitter ries and scored on runs of 3, 25 attempts with three TDs.
rival s have both been 20. 50, 70 and 70 yards in a .Davi s, however, helped push
unbeaten since a couple of 43-20 victory over Madison; the Tygers to a 42-34 win.
household names were their Charlie Peffley set a
PASSING
GRADES:
head coaches.
Hicksville record with · 322 Mason's Matt Koman com- ·
Back in 1964, McKinley's yards in a 48-33 win over pleted all nine of his passes
coach was Don Nehlen and Antwerp. scoring six TDs to and broke a school-record
Massillon's
was
Earle push his career mark to 52 to with 5. TD passes - all in
Bruce. They both went on to go with his career records in the f\rst half - in a 39-20
Hall of Fame collegiate rushing (3,347) and receiv- win over Harrison; Perci
coaching careers,' Nehlen at ing (l ,475) yards; Columbus Garner of Dover broke his
Bowling Green and West Grove 's
Jeremy . own school record by throwVirginia and Bruce at Ohio Harnishfeger had the second ing seven TO passes in the
State, Tampa. Iowa State and highest total in school histo- first half of a 55-12 win over
Colorado State.
ry (304 yards) and had TO Gnadenhutten Indian Valley;
Four decades after leaving runs of 19, 6, l and 29 yards and
McComb's James
Bruce
still in a 39-29 · win over Copus ran for three scores
Massillon,
believes
McKinley- Paulding;
and threw for 322 ·yards and
Massillon to be one of the
Dustin Supan rushed for a two TDs in a 40-6 victory
great rivalries in football school-record 303 yards and over Cory-Rawson. .
and not just high school scored three times on 21 carNOTABLE: Proctorville
football.
ries in a 42-7 win over Fairland ran just 21 plays to
"It's second," Bruce said. Sheffield
Brookside; Cheshire River Valley's 76.
"Right behind Michigan- Trammell Williams rushed but the Dragons averaged 22
Ohio State."
·
for 279 yards and four TDs yards a play in winning 66This comes from a man as defending Division I 18; Louisville is trying to go
who had a front-row seat for champ Colerain - averag- l 0-0 for the' second time in
games such as Iowa-Iowa · ing 53.5 points since being four seasons; Toby Hill had ·
State
and
Colorado- · shut out in its opener-. won two TD receptions and
Colorado State.
its eighth game in a row with. kicked six extra points to
Massillon and Bruce won a
68-14
beating
of become the all-scoring
that matchup 31 years ago, Middletown; J. J. Johnson leader at Sherwood Fairview
20-14, to cap the first of rushed for 241 yards and with 33 7 points; Ashtabula
Bruce's two 10-0 campaigns three TDs in a 30-14 win Saints John and Paul ended a
with the Tigers before he over Warren How land to 13-game losing streak with a
moved on to the collegiate break Salem's season rush- 19-12
victory
over
level.
ing record and his nose on Southington
Chalker;
He said he took his team to the same play, finishing with Cincinnati Elder lost 34-28
a hotel near Orrville to I ,508 yards on the year;
to Cleveland Benedictine,
spend the night before the
Koby Frye. rushed for 238 assuring the Panthers {3-6)
game, just to get away from yards and older brother Bo of their first losing season
all the madness in the cities. added 167 as St. Marys beat since 1986; the 74th and
Bruce also recalled speaking , Elida 47-26; Delphos St. final Tri-County League
"morning, John 's had three 100-yard championship - it and the
engagements
noon and night" on Monday rushers in a 55-0 win at New Inter-County League will
and Tuesday of the week of Bremen, including Andrew merge next season -will be
the showdown.
DeWitt's 212 yards; Antoine decided when backyard
" And then there'sthe big Moore ran for 212 yards and ·rivals Columbiana and
· parade on Friday,'' he said. 3 TDs as Fairfield beat Columbiana
Crestview
"It's incredible. Not many Milford 37-0; Josh Strub had meet; and Darius Ashley ran
people understand the enor- 208 yards rushing and three for two TDs as Cincinnati
mity of that rivalry."
TDs on just seven carries in St. Xavier beat Cleveland St.
Saturday 's ~arne is already Patrick Henry's 60-0 win Ignatius 22-0 in Parma for
a sellout wtth more than over Delphos Jefferson; and its fifth shutout of the year
22,360 expected at Canton's Cincinnati Anderson's Jake and its fourth consecutive
Fawcett Stadium.
Davis rushed for 206 yards win over the Wildcats since
GROUND. CONTROL: and three.tDs in a 41 -6 win losing the .2001 state title
Drew Frey set a Clinton- over Walnut Hills.
game to them.

BY RusTY MtUER.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

'•

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•·••... Pet Calendar

2~05

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www .mydailysentinel.com

National Football League

McKinley, Massillon poised
to renew acquaintances

.~

Friday, October 28,

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e·

2006

Crennel skipping Browns practice to moor~ Mara
BEREA
(AP)
Cleveland Browns coach
Romeo Crennel remembers
watching Wellington Mara
circle the Giants ' practice
field for exercise, observing
·from afar and not saying a
·smgle word.
Mara didn ' t have to.
"Wellington knew th e
business,'' said Crennel,
speaking fondly of Mara, the

longtime New York owner,
who died on Tuesday of can.cer a1 89 . "He knew football
in and out. He knew good
coaches and bad coaches,
good players and bad players , and he always had an
affection for coaches and
players. " ·
Some of the game's best
and brightest, including
Crennel, Dallas Cowboys

coach Bill Parcells, Carolina
Panther&gt; coach John Fox,
Notre Dame 's Charlie Weis
and the entire Giaoits team
are ex peeled to attend
Mara's funeral on Friday at
New York's St. Patrick 's
Cathedral.
Crennel is skipping practice to pay his respects to the
man who gave hom his fir st
job in the NFL.

After one year as a defensive line coach at Georgia
Tech, Crennel joined the
Giants in 1981 as their special teams coach and stayed
with the club for 12 years,
winning twp Super Bowl
··
titles .
During his time with the
Giants. Crennel grew close
to Mara , a father of II and
·one of pro football's most

influenlial owners for more
than a half century.
"He was a solid, down-toearth person," Crennel said
Thursday. "If you didn 't
know that he was the owner
of an NFL team, you couldn't tell by his actions. He
had no ego about him ."
Crennel recalled Mara
walking laps around the
track and quietly watching

practice, .never bothering to
onterfere while the coaching
slaff instructed players. He
knew his place, a trait some
current sports owners could
take a le sson from .
"He never said anythin*
and he never compla.ined, '
Crennel said. ''I'm very
respectful of what he has
done for the NFJ_. and for the
Giants."

No respect: Browns underdogs to terrible Texans
BEREA (AP) Talk about
unnecessary roughness. Even the
·oddsmakers are piling on the scuf.fling Cleveland Browns .
For Sunday 's game, they're listed
as 2-point underdogs to the Houston
Texans. THE HOUSTON TEX_ANS!
Yep, the boys out in Las Vegas
think the NFL's only winle&amp;s team,
.which hasn't led for a second this
season and has dropped seven
straight games dating to a 22-l4loss
against Cleveland in the 2004 finale,
can actually win one.
. "We'll take it," Houston quaner,back David carr said of being
·favored. ''We'll take whatever confidence we can get at this point."
Some of the Browns aren't taking
the underdog role very well.
"I take it personal," said kicker
Phil Dawson. ''I'm a Cleveland
.Brown. that's who I am, and anytime
my team is questioned or criticized

or anything like that, l take it personally. And I think if more guys
around here would do that , we'd be
all right." ·
After·· a re spectable qart, the
Browns (2-4) arc sliding backward
- fast. They ' ve lost two in a row,
have failed to score an offensive
touchdown in 15 of th e past 16 quarters and quarterback Trent Dilfer is
barely holding onto his starting job.
On top of that, Gary Baxter. the
club's top coverage cornerback, is
out for the season with a torn pectoral muscle.
As coach Romeo Crennel grossly
understated at his Wednesday news
conference: ''We're in the midst of
adversity."
A lo.ss to the terrible Texan s, who
have lost by an average of · 17.5
points per'game and are last or nextto-last in the league in virtually
every imponant statistical category.
would plummet the .Browns into a

deeper hole.
Dawson
says
Cleveland 's pl,ay:
ers should voew
the gambling lirie
as a slap in the
face, an insult they
Notebook can channel into
motivation.
" Hopefully some guys in this
locker room will use that," said
Dawson, a perfect 10-for-10 in field
goal tries. "l don't think anybody
has paid much attention to it. But at
I his point, if some guys in this locker room need a little mcentive to go
out there or need a little extra energy
that coach referred to, maybe they
can use that."
Following Sunday 's . loss to
Detroit. Crennel said there was little
enthusiasm or energy on Cleveland's
sideline in the second half. He
couldn't understand the apathy since
the Browns were ahead l 0-7 at half-

time.
endured plenty of. hard times in the
"Guys on the team need to be into past and he's eager to atone for his
il, and ihey need to be excited about mistakes.
where they are," Crennel said. "And
Di 1fer has blamed much of
we weren't quite there. and that was Cleveland"s ·offensive problems on
somewhat disappoinling to me. We an overall lack of execution. As a
have to work on that and get that reminder to keep hi s focus. he has a
level of enthusiasm to stay constanl sign tape d to t he wa 11 next to h'IS
throughout the game."
.
locker that says: "Execution Is The
Crennel is searching for a spark.. K ..
But despite saying for the second
~.): m chomping at the bit to get
straight week that he might make back out there and redeem myself,"
personnel changes, Cleveland's
first-year coach has decided to he2~~~el will let others concern
remam with the status quo. .
'Tm going to slay the course,'' he themselves with Sunday's linescore,
said. "We need to give guys the ben- point spread and over/under. He's
efit of the doubt and !hat's what I'm solely focused on getting his team
doing. lt will give us a chance to ready, and he knows if the Browns
right the ship. We ' ll see if we can do aren'l careful, they could become
that."
· Houston' s first vic1ory.
Dilfer has thrown .six· interceptions
" l would hate to go down there
in the past three games. and in and be their first win,'' he said. "This
Sunday's loss he recorded a 22.4 rat- is the NFL and lhi.ngs do happen.
ing. The 12-year veteran has . Hopefully, that won't happen to us."

Steelers' Cope to be
Bengals want to get back to running the ball
:honored Monday night
PITTSBURGH (AP) ·Former Pittsburgh Steelers
·announcer Myron Cope· won't
.be added to the team's injury
:.list for Monday night's game
against Baltimore after all.
. Cope . was released from
UPMC Presbyterian Hospital
on Tuesday following a 3 l/2day stay with bronchitis and is
looking forward to being honored durin~ the Monday night
game for hts 35-season stay in
the broadcast booth.
- "My doctor told me there
was a bug going around, and I
felt so sick Saturday I thought,
'I may kick the -bucket right
:here,'" Cope said Wednesday.
;"I didn't have an ounce of
·strength. But the next day I
:turned around and by the third
'day I was fresh as a daisy. I'm
:feeling better now than I have
·for a long time."
: . The quick recovery comes
:in· time for a busy two weeks
:of recognition for the 76-year·old Cope, whose uninterrupt:ed streak of seasons from
1970-2004 represents the
longest tenure by a team
. broadcaster in NFL h.istory.
Cope will be sal~ted by
·numerous former · Steelers
:players and team officials at a
:$175-a-plate charity dinner
:Sunday night at Hemz Field
called " Yoi! A Tribute to
MYron
Cope::
. The
:Pennsylvania Legislature has
:designated Monday as Myron
·Cope Day in the state to coin:cide with Cope's recognition
:at the Ravens-Steelers game
'that night.
On Nov. 5, Cope will
become the first NFL team
;announcer to be inducted into
·the National Radio Hall of
•

Fame,
whose
members
include Bob Hope, Edward R.
Murrow and Orson Welles.
lt's an honor Cope calls "the
highest recognition l' ve ever
received.'
Earlier this summer, Cope
received the Pete Rozelle
radio-TV award at the Pro
Football Hall of Fame for
longtime contributions to the
spon.
Cope retired in June on. the
advice of retired Steelers
executive Joe Gordon, who
felt Cope's work had .declined
during an illness-interrupted
2004 season. Cope mis sed
one game due to a concussion
that resulted from a fall at his
home and also was bothered
by a long bout with hoarseness and a leg injury. .
The hoarseness has persisted, though Cope said his voice
has been much bener in recent
days, and he is glad now he
didn ' t attempt to come back
for a 36th season.
"My health went bad on me,
bin I fully believed my voice
and legs would be ready for
the preseason. But it didn 't
happen," Cope said. "I couldn't have done this season."
Cope was a longtime free lance spans writer wl10 wrote
regularly for Sports lllustrated
and the Saturday Evening
Post bet'ore becoming a
broadcaster at age 40. His
screechy-voiced
delivery,
quirky phrases and trademark
Terrible Towel. which has
been twirled by Sieelers fans
at games since the 1970s,
gained him national reco~ni­
tion as the Steelers won tour
Super Bowl s in six seasons'
from 1974-79.
1

CINCINNATI (AP) Where was Rudi'?
The biggest difference in
the Bengals off~:nse last
Sunday . wasn't · Carson
Palmer 's !wo interceptions
or Chad Johnson 's inability
to get both feet down in the
end zone. It was the way
their record- setting running
back gut overlooked.
Rudi Johnson spent most
of the last three quarters
pedaling a stationary bicycle
behind Cincinnati's bench,
staying ready for chances
that never came. He carried
nine times for 46 yards in
the first quarter. only three
more times the rest of the
way in a 27-13 loss to
Pittsburgh .
It was by far the fewest
times the Bengals (5-2) have
run the ball this season,
undercutting an offense that
gets publicity for its passing
but gets wins by running .
'Tm frustrated , Rudi's
frustrated ,"
quarterback
Carson Pal mer said. "The
thing we know about Rudi is
he 's. a team guy. ,He's frustrated right no'.J. but he 's
going to show up to prepare
and play this week, and he's
going to go out and get I 00
yards however he docs it."
Johnson set a club record
last season by rushing for
l ,454 yards . He had 126
yards in a season-opening
win over Cleveland, but hasn't gotten more than 90 in
· any game since then.
Part' of it is due to the
emergence of Chris Perry. a
first-round pick who now
splits time in ihe backfield
with Johnson . On Sunday, it
was a matter of the Steelers
giving an in spired perf&lt;ir-

·

mance.
T 'h e
Be Jl:-.ll·a l s
opened the
game with
t
w
o
impressive
Notebook drives, but
managed
only three poinls. Trailing 73 in the sewnd quarter, the
Bengals decided to start
throwing the ball - l 0 pass
plays, one run by Perry in
that quaner.
The trend. accelerated in
the second half as 'the
Steelers pulled away and
Cincinnati ran out of time to
catch up.
· "Our goal is to run the
football every play and just
knock them off the line of
scrimmage, but that doesn't
happen very often," coach
Marvin
Lewis
s.aid
Wednesday. "But that's
where we start every week:
defending the run and running the football. So that 's
where we've got to go."
That · will be a point of
emphasis Sunday against
the . injury-ravaged Green
Bay- Packers ( l-5), who
havci lost their top two running backs and three
recei.vers
to
injury.
Cincinnati ran the ball an
avecage of 32 times in its .
five wins, showing the type
of balance teams crave. In
the firs I six games, the
Bengals ran 194 times and
passed 205 times.
On Sunday, the offense
had a pronounced tilt.
"We as a team are built to
do both," right tackle Willie
Anderson said. " We ' re at
our be st when we get the
running game going and get

the
play-action
passe s
going, because then it's like
pick your poison. Do you
want our running backs · to
kill you for four or · five
yards a pop, or our receivers
to go over the top of your
heads?"
·
·Johnson's 12 carries were
his fewest since late in the
2003 season, when he was
sharing the job with Corey
Dillon. He's eager to get the
ball more against the
Packers and restore balance
to one of the league's top
offenses.
"It helps everybody out_
defen se, offense. special
teams," Johnson said. "It
helps everybody out and
opens up a lot of opportun·ities for different 'guys."
· The Steelers' defense also
contained the Bengals' passing game, holding Palmer to
a below-average 53 .8 passer
rating. Cornerback lke
Taylor held Chad Johnson to
four catches for 94 yards.
with 47 of the yards coming
on a final, meaningless
drive.
Trying to stop him this
week is Al Harris, considered one of the best bumpand-run cornerbacks in the
league. Chad Johnson called
him the NFL's second-best
cornerback, behind Champ
Bailey.
"I want everyone to pay
attention 10 the · tfaule this
week, which will probably
be one of the be st,' ' Johnson
said. "Like Ali and Frazier
- they did fight , right?
Now ils Harris and John so n.
lts probably going to be a
classic.
"They . might want to
switch our game to Sunday

night because that's the type
of matchup that the world
needs to see."
Notes: S Madieu Williams
had shoulder surgery. but
1he Bengals didn' t immediately put him on injured
. reserve
Wednesday.
Williams hurl his shoulder
when ·he fell during practice
after the third game cif the
season .... LB David Pollack
didn't practice Wednesday
and was listed as questionable for Sunday's game. The
first-round
draft
pick
sprained his left knee Ill a
game against the Steelers.

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�Page 84 •

The Daily Sentinel

..

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 28,

2005

Friday, October 28. 2005

www.rriydailysentinel.com

The Daily

s~ntinc l

• 85

Yale bans drinking games, curtails Swoopes comes out: 'I'm finally
tailgating for Harvard-Yale game OK with the idea of who.l love'
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)
- Yale is banning drinking
games from this year's football game against Harvard
and will shut down all tailgate
parties after ·halftime - a
move some alumni say could
put a damper on one of college football's oldest and
most storied rivalries.
The rules to discourage
binge drinking at the . Yale
Bowl will take effect Nov. 5,
when Yale faces Brown, but
they are clearly aimed at the
most raucous event of the season - the Nov. 19 HarvardYale game.
The Ivy League contest•.
known simply as 'The
Game," dates to 1875 and
draws Citearly as many fans
outside thy stadium as inside.
Student.s and alumni fill UHauls with kegs, grills and
hard liquor and set up elaborate buffets under party tents.
Some parties serve up domestic beer; others offer champagne and shrimp cocktail.
"Our major conc.em is for
the health and safety of our

!

I

. I

students,"
said
'Betty
"I th ink it will have an
Trachtenberg, Yale dean of effect on the character of the
student affairs. "Perhaps over game, independent of alcohol,
the years those concerns h&lt;td just for tailgating with fami:
been lost sight of."
lies," Ruwe said.
. Harvard tightened its rules
Jilrian Ameche, a 1975 gradlast year, requiring wristbands uate and former defensive
to prove people were old end, said : "U nless you have a
enough to drink. The school personal interest in the game
also limits the amount of _ you' re a fanner player or
alcohol that can be brouj;hl you have a child who'&gt; playinto the tailgate area. Yale fol- ing _ it's as much about the
lowed suit this week, issui ng tailgating as it is about the
· game of football."
.
eight new rule s.
Harvard athletic department
Among &lt;)ther things, drinking games will be banned
.
h
.5pok es rn an Ch uc. k Su11 rvan
along with related para~ er- said the unive·rsity wanted to
nalia, such as the tables used
to play beer pong.
prevent tailgating parties
"We don ' t want 10· send from spilling over into nearby
hordes of students to the hos- neighborhoods. Last year,
pita! after each game. police issued a number of
Drinking games are meant to citations for underage drinkget
people . drunk," ing and threatened to ban stuTrachtenberg said.
dent tailgating .
·
·
For ·alumni, the biggesi New Haven Police spokeschange will be the early dos- woman Bonnie Winchester
ing time for tailgate parties, said that while there have
said Patrick Ruw~. a 1983 · been no "remarkable" probgraduate and the president of lerns at Yale in recent years,
the Yale Football Association the department welcomes
Board.
Yale's new rules.

Redmen host Tiffin in season rmale
BY MARK WtLUAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL ·

RIO GRANDE - The
NAIA's top ranked men's soccer team, the University of Rio
Grande Redrnen, will host
Tiffin in the 2005 regular season finale on Saturday at Evan
Davis Field.
Rio Grande ( 15-0, 7-0
AMCS) is coming off an 8-1
win over Shawnee State on
Wednesday evening in which
freshman · forwards Frank
Brown and Milan Partenijevic
and freshman defensive back
Kyle Segebart all scored two
goals in the win.
The Redmen will look to.
extend an lOS-game regular
season unbeaten streak on

Saturday. The Redmen have always dangerous and Rio
played 69 games at home with- Grande head coach Scott
out a loss and the streak sits at Morrissey will not allow his
48 games in .the American team to look past the Dragons.
Mideast Conference.
Tifj'in is led by Moe
Sophomore forward Guy Karanouh with II goals and
Heywood leads the way for the two ·assists and Chad Smith
Redmen with 13 goals and live with eight goals. Andy Mortek
assists. Partenijevic has racked has played eight games in.goal
up eight goals and one assist for Tiffin and has one shutout
and senior . mid-fielder Ben with a 2.19 GAA.
Calion (Blackburn, England)
Tiffin is coming off a 3-1
has notched six goals and live loss to Saint Vincent last
assists.
Saiurday.
Sophomore
goalkeeper
Two years ago when Tiffin
Andy Moore will likely been came to Rio, the two teams
in the net for the Redmen. · played to.a 1-l tie.
Moore has recorded 24 saves
It will be the final regular
this season with four shutouts season home game. for Rio·
and an 0.79 goals against aver-. seniors Calion and John
age.
Carroll.
Tiffin (9-7-l , 4-3 AMCS) is
Kick-off is set for l p.m.

HOUSTON (AP) - The
only thi'ng tha.t outshines the
exquisite diamond on Sheryl
· Swoopes' left ring linger is
the glow on her face as she
discus ses the love of her
life.
It's a love that the WNBA
superstar has kept hidden
for more than seven years .
On Wednesday she "quit
pretending," disclosing that
she is gay and in a committed relationship.
"I feel like.J've been living a lie," the Houston
Comets' star said in an interview with The Associated
Press. "I'm at a place in my
life right now where .I'm
very happy, very content.
I'm finally OK with the idea
of who I love, who I want to
be with. "
Swoopes said she currently lives With her partner, former Comets assistant coach
Alisa Scott.
The story was first reported in ESPN the Magazine,
which
hit
newsstands
She
also
Wednesday.
announced · an endorsement
deal with Olivia, a lesbian
cruise line.
Swoopes, the only WN BA
player to win three MVP
trophies, said she never had
feeling s for a woman before
Scott and didn't understand
them when they began. But
in the· seven years since, she
. said she's been "hurting"
while hiding her relationship.
Now, Swoopes said, she
final.ly feels free.
Swoopes is a five-time
All-Star,
three-tim.e
Olympic gold medalist and
WNBA champion as a member of the Comets, whose
run of four straight titles
began when she was a rookie in 1997.
While piling up accolades
and accomplishments, the
34-year-old Swoopes said
she dreamed about the day
when she could attend an

"''m happy for Sheryl;"
Wicks said. "!think all peopie deserve to be able to live
their lives openly and honestly, and I applaud Sheryl
for her courage."
Former Minnesota Lynx
player Michele Van Gorp,
who no longer plays in the ·
WNBA, also came out while
an active player in July
2004.
No man has ever come out
while still active in the
major leagues of football ,
baseball, basketball or hockey. If an NBA ever player
did, commissioner David
Stern said, there'd only be
one question:
"How many points? How
right. ~'
many rebounds? I think that
"She'll probably never it's a non-issue."
accept it ," Swoupes said. ·swoopes said her news
"But she's dealing with it." had been well received so
And she Is· nervous about far.
the response from her horne"What she does 'in her pertown of Brownfield, Texas, sonal ' Jife is her own deciabout 600 miles northwest . sion," Comets coach Van
of Houston, where. cotton is Chancellor said in a release .
king and Swoopes reigns as " I respect everything about
Sheryl, how she's handled
queen. .
Not to mention what peo- herself on and off the court.
ple will think right down the To me, she will always be
road .in Lubbock, where she one of the greatest ambasbrought Texas Tech it 's only sadors for the game of
national championship in women's basketball ."
basketball by scoring 47
She has long reveled in
·points in the final game in her position .as a role model
1993.
and hopes that parents won't
"I worry about the reac- discourage their children
tion throughout the country, from looking up to her
but I really worry about because she is gay. Her wish
Brownfield and Lubbock," is that her coming out could
she said. "Because they're help someone dealing with .
both small towns and Sheryl the same issue.
"If a kid out there who is
Swoopes is a local hero.
Now what'! I hope it doesn't struggling with their identichange. It 's important to ty can read this article and
me."
say, 'If she did it I can deal
Swoopes is perhaps the with this,' theri this .is worth
highest . profile team-sport it," she said.
athlete to come out and fol- · Swoopes said her decision
lo\vs two other WNBA play- had nothing to do with the
ers. Shortly before she proposed Texas co'nstituretired in 2002., New York tiona! amendment to ban
Liberty player Sue Wicks gay marriage, which is
became the first active already illegal in Texas. In ·
WNBA player to open up fact , she didn't know about
it until Wednesday morning.
about her sexuality.
awards banquet with
Scott on her
arm.
"We have
had to celebrate behind
c I o s e d
doors," she
said.
"I
don't want
Swoopes
to have to
hide from
the world anymore."
But that 's not to say that
she isn't concerned about
repercussions from her
admission. She worries
about her mother Louise,
who· has known for Jive
years, but "doesn't think it's

Our
Heroes

~. Honor

On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
ofmen and women who have proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Daily Sentinel will publish a very special tribute
honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by including the
"".......,. veteran in your life, living or deceased, who have served or is currently
serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.
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Major

I

Earl Jones
1969-1971

Brad Sherman/photo

Rio Grande Iibera Jodi Smith digs the ball during Thursday's AMC matchup against Mount
Vernon Nazerene.

t

Swept
fromPageBI
19 kills (only two errors) and
seven digs. Senior outside
hitter Lynnette Kiesling and
freshman outside/middle hitter Jessica Rodgers were on
the ver11e of double figures in
kills with nine each. Rodgers

SVAC
fromPageBI

•

Hayes, Annette Cardone, and
Kim Adams, along with
Tracy Beegle, Rochelle
Davis, Carrissa Hill, Jessica
Evans, Monica Hill, and Dina
Shuler. Sandra Baer was the
advisor.
Southern upended Eastern
I 8-6 to claim the SVAC title
with a 5-0 record. It was the
first time Southern had ever
. gone undefeated in league
play. lr&lt;:~ni ca lly. · Southern
posted only a 5·5 mark after a
tough non-league slate, but
improved throughout the season to take the undisputed
SVAC championship.
.
Pete Roush, who·ended the
1985 campaign with 922
yards1 had three touchdowns
m that game. One was set up
I .

added 13 digs on the defensive end.
Sophomore libero Jodi
Smith paced the defense
with 16 digs while freshman
Amanda Stevens added 14
digs.
Junior setter.Jessica Veach
handed out 35 assists ..
The Lady Cougars make it
a season sweep of the
Redwomen with the win.
MVNU
defeated
Rio
by a Charlie Boso interception and another by a fumble
recovery by Kelley Grueser.
·Southern learned that
Southwestern · had upset
Hannan Trace the night
before allowing SHS to control its own desti ny. The 18-6
win sealed the league title for
the Tornadoes.
To this day. former
Southwestern coach Jack
James remembers one loss
more than any other, the loss
it suffered in Patriot to the
Southern Tornadoes 21-14.
The loss ultimately kept
Southweste.-n out of the state
playoffs and ended on a play
that would have tied the
game for the Highl anders.
however, one official overruled the touchdown and
Southern held on for the win.
Sean Grueser · had ' a touchdown and Pete Roush two in
that important title drive.

•

Grande in four games at the
Robert s
Wesleyan
Invitational over Labor Day
weekend and followed that
up
by
besting
the
Redwomen in three straight
at Mount Vernon, Oct. I.
Rio Grande will travel to
Tiffin, on Saturday. Game
time is se.t for 4 p.m. Tiftln
beat Rio Grande in three
games at the Newt Oliver
Arena. Oct. 8.
Earlier Southern defeated
North Gallia 21-8 in Vinton,
and won the homecoming
game against Ky ger Creek
28-q. In the first league game
of the season, Southern held
on to upset a favored Hannan
Trace team 12-7.
In 1985 Southern first team
ali-SVAC selections were
Pete Roush, Charlie Boso,
Kelly Grueser. Jimmy Wolfe,
Scott Wickline , and Jeff
Connolly. Honorable mention honorees were Danny ·
Wolfe and Sean Grueser.
Jim
Venari,
longtime
Rutland Red Devil coach and
former Cincinnati Reds scout
was the speaker at the banquet that honored the team
coached by Bill Hensler and
assisiant .Qarrell Dugan.
Game time is 7:30 p.m. at .
Adams Memorial Field with
pre-game activities starting
aro und 6:45p.m.

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Love, Your Family

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Love, Your Family

BIG TEN STANDINGS
Teams
Penn State
Wisconsin
Ohio State
N'westem
Michigan
Iowa
Minnesota
Indiana
Mich. State
lllino1s
Purdue ,

Big Ten

W L Pet.

Overall
W L Pel.

4 1 .800 7 1
4 1 .800 7 1
3 1 •750 5 2
3 1 .750 52
3 2 .600 53
3 2 .600 53
2 2 .500 5 2

13
13

04
04

.875
.875

.714

.714
.625
.625
.714
.250 4 3 .571
.250 4 3 .571
.000 2 5 .286
.000 2 5 .286

AROUND THE BIG TEN
No. 25 Michigan at
No. 21 Northwestern
There is a battle within a battle every time Northwestern (52, 3-1 Big Ten) plays. The Wild·
cats' offense has to constantly
move the ball to keep ·ahead of
their defense, which allows
other teams to run up and down
the field almost unimpeded.
At least that's the way it appears. Northwestern-scores 37
points a game and gives up 32.
The Wildcats .rank fourth nationally in total offense in NCAA Division 1-A and last (117th) in
total defense. If there is a miti·
gating factor, it is that four of
the teams Northwestern has
played rank in the top 20 na·
t1onally in offense (Michigan
State, Arizona State. Northern
IllinOIS, Purdue) . .
Northwestern quarterback
Brett Basanez has completed
67 percent of his passes for
1,384 yards and eight touchdowns.and has been intercepted only once this season~
Michigan 's last three wins
have been on the final play of
the game by three po1nts, two
points and three po1nts. The
Wolverines (5-3, 3· 2 Big Ten)
have lost three games by a total
of 13 points. '

Will Tressel, Mason remember history on Saturday?
The head-to-head matchup
is what adds a little extra to
this game.
Ohio ~tate-Minnesota hasn't
been much of a football rivalry most of the time. The
Buckeyes have won 37 out of
44 games in the series and
have never lost in nine
games in the Metrodome, the
Gophers' cold, concrete of!~
campus home.
But lately, there has been
some warmth when the two
teams get together.
Watching the Buck.eyes' defense, ranked No. 1 in the

When Jim Tressel was
wants to kick Tressel's butt.
hired in 2001, the runner-up And Tressel probably wants
Jim
for the job was Minnesota
to return the favor.
Naveau
coach Glen Mason.
I am not implying anyMinA
year
earlier,
after
thing ill about one coach
The ttma News
nesota
beat
Ohio
State,
then
who
has weekly Bible study
jnaveau@limanews.com
coached
by
John
Cooper,
with
his assistants and an419·993·2087
Mason did everything but
other whose biography says
country against the run, take plant a big, sloppy kiss on
he received an award for liv,on Minnesota's running
Brutus Buckeye as he talked ing out Catholic yalues in
game, -also No. 1 in the coun- about how much Ohio State
society.
try, on Saturday will be inter- had meant to him, a 1972
I am not suggesting that
esting.
graduate.
they would secretly like to
But the really interesting
Make no mistake. He
forget about their $600 suits
part might be wondering
wanted the job when Tressel and perfectly combed hair
what is going through the
got it.
and roll around on the
minds of the two coaches.
You have to figure Mason . ground in a grown-up ver-

Alook at the key matchups be·
tween No. 12 Ohio State (5-2, 3·
1 Big Ten) and No. 22 Minnesota
(5-2, 2-2 Big Ten) on Saturday at
the Hubert H. Humphrey
Metrodome in Minneapolis:

Quarterbacks
Two of the quarterbacN; in this
game played in.the 2002 Ohio
North-South High School All-Star
Game but on~ one of them will
start on Saturday.

That would be Minnesota's
Bryan Cupito, a Cincrnnati McNicholas graduate, who quarterbacked the South team against
OSU backup Justin Zwick, who
led the North team, in 2002.
Cupito (82 of 149 lor 1,208
yards) has thrown 10 touch·
down passes and
six intercepuons.

Running backs

Ohio State
defensive tackle
Marcus Green

Minnesota is on
to have two
1,000-yard rushers for
the third straight sea·
son. No. 1 tailback Laurence Maroney already is
over 1,000 with 1,133 yards
and his backup Gary Russell
has gained 644 yards.
Maroney, a JUnior, has his third
stra1ght season with more than
1,000 yards.
Both Minnesota backs run with
power but also have some speed.
Maroney broke a 93-yard run in a
38-34 loss to Wisconsin two
weeks ago and Russell's
61-yard run set up the
game-winning field goal
against Michigan. Russell
has more touchdowns
(10) than the starter
Maroney (eight).
Sophomore Antonio
Pittman had his fourth 100-yard
game of the season in a 41-10
win over Indiana last Saturday.
That doubles the number of
100-yard games by Ohio State
running backs last season.
Advantage: Minnesota
sc~edule

Other games
Wisconsin at lllihois
Indiana at Michigan State
Iowa bye

OSU TEAM I OOERS
Interceptions

2
1,032 Whitner
Tackles
Rushing Yards
75
Pittman
696 Hawk
Receptions
Tackles for loss
Holmes 32/579 Carpenter 10.5

Smith

Advantage: Ohio State

. Special teams

Defensive line

G1nn put the thrills baok into
Ohio State 's kick return game
last week when he took a punt
back for .a touchdown and
would have done the same on a
kickoff return if not for a boneheaded penalty by a teammate.
Kicker Josh Huston is 13 of 16
on field goals.
Jason Gianmni is 12 of 15 on
field goals for the Gophers, including the game-winner against
Michigan.
Advantage: Ohio State

8

Miami (Ohio)

w34-14

T~xas

L 25-22

San Diego St.
Iowa

Jim Naveau's
Player of the Week

w27-6

w31·6

Gmn" retumed a
punt 62 yards for

L17-10
W35-24
W 41 -10
SATI,IRDAY @MINNESOTA NOON

a touchdown and

Nov. 5
Nov. 12
Nov. 19

Advantage: Minnesota

sacks

7 Carpenter

OSU SCHEDULE
Sept. 3
Sept. 1o
Sept. 17
Sept. 24
Oct. 1
Oct. a
Oct. 15
Oct. 22

.isn't. the only·coach in the
Big Ten who thinks the
week he plays Ohio State is
special. And there's another
Big Ten coach who really, really doesn't want to lose to
Minnesota.

caught 10 passes for 254
. Three-year starter Anthony
yards and three touchdowns in Montgomery has two-sacks and
the last two weeks. Ted Ginn Jr. Mark Losh has started for three
has four catches each of the
years.
last two games.
Advantage: Even
Wide receivers are seconda!l)l Unebackers
options in Minnesota's offense,
Middle linebacker M1ke
but Logan Payne (19 catches)
Sherels
missed the Wiscons1n
and Ernie Wheelwright (18
_
game
with
an inJury but coach
catches) lead the Gophers.
Glen
Mason
pronounced him
Four other receivers have 10 or
"fine"
and
said
he is practic1ng.
more catches. Not surprisingly,
Outs1de
lrnebacker
John Shevlin
Minnesota 's light ends concenhas
caused.
three
fumbles
this
trate on blocking for the running
season.
game. Wheetwnght is one of
Ohio State's A.J. Hawk (75
16 Ohio players on Minnesota's
tackles), Anthony Schlegel (47
roster.
· tackles) and Bobby Carpenter
Advantage: Ohio State
(38 tackles) impressed Mason,
Offensive line
who said, "I don't know when
Minnesota ranks first in NCAA they've had a group like this
Division 1-Ain rush ing at 299
there."
yards a game. A big reason for
Advantage: Ohio State
that is that center Greg Eslinger Defensive backs
antl guard Mark Setterstrom
Free safety John Pawielski
both have started since the first
leads
the, Gophers with 52 tack,
games of their careers as fr~sh­
les, lour of them for losses. He
men. Eslinger has been firstalso has an interception.
team All-Big Ten for two years
Turnovers have been rare for
and Setterstrom was a firstOhio State's defense and
teamer last season. Veteran
turnovers that produced points
tackle Joe Ainslie has played
were even rarer. Brandon Mitchell .
in only two games because of
might have t'umed that problem
injuries.
around when he took .an interOhio State's offe nse proception to the end zone last Satduced 4 78 yards and 386
urday against Indiana,
yards the last two weeks.
Talk about Ginn plaYing defense
Starting tackle Kirk Barton
appears
to be just idle chatter for
could be out for the third
now.
straight game.

Ohio State's defensive line will
. have a change of pace this
week alter facing teams that
liked to thFow the ball the last
two weeks aga1nstlndiana and
Michigan State. The Buckeyes,
led by end Mike Kudla, will
match the1r No. 1 national rank·
Receivers
ing in stopping the run against
Santonio Holmes has Minnesota's No. 1 ranking in
been the biggest bene- rushing.
ficiary of Smith's im·
Freshman Steven Davis (five
proved accuracy. The
sacks) is the standout on the
junior receiver has
defensive line for Minnesota.

BYE WEEK

@PennS!
Michigan St
@INDIANA

Illinois
Northwestern
@Michigan

What
is li nebacker A.•.'Hawl&lt;'s !')ven name?
.
I

had a 98-yard
kickoff return for a
touchdown called
back by a penalty.
It was h1s first

TBA
TBA
TBA

"Copyngl1t (C) 2005 The Uma New.;. Re·
production of all or any portion or thiS ma· ·
terial is prohibited without e~erress consent ~

Weekly Buckeye
Brain Busters

'

punt retum for a

KR- Ted
Ginn Jr.

Ans&gt;wts: 1. Aaron James Hawk 2. Valentine's Day
3. JlJex Boone and St&lt;M&gt; Re!lnng are both 6 feet, 8 indies rail

The Daily Sentinel

BUCKS

·::~

Who are the ~t playerS on ·
Ohio State ~~
all roster?

TO this season

after taking four to
the end zone last
season.

.

On what holiday were ltnellacker Anthony Schlegel
and h1s wife Stephanie married in 2004?

L~----------------~

111 Court Street
. Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992-2155

He will be playing for the first tlflle
s1nce Minnesota's 23-20 win over
Michigan on Oct. 8. He suffered
1njuries to both shoulders that
game and is still wearing a brace
on his right shoulder.
OSU's Troy Smith (69 of 113
for 1,032 yards) has thrown for
seven TDs, run for five and has
had three intercepuons. Smith
has completed 63 percent of
his passes the last two weeks
for 4 75 yards. His average of
·one interception every 37
pass attempts ranks third in
. the Big Ten in that category.
Advantage: Ohio State

The Boilermakers (2-5, 0-4)
are the runaway choice for dis·
appointment of the year in the
Big Ten. Many people predicted
they would contend but they
have flopped, especially on defense. Starting quarterback
Brandon K1rsch lost his job to
redshirt freshman Curt1s Painter
last week.
Penn State (7 -1, 4-1 Big Ten)
is probably the pleasant surprise
of the year in the Big Ten. The
Nittany Uons bounced back from
their first loss by hammering Illinois '63-10 last week. Quarterback Michael Robinson passed
for four touchdowns and ran for
i:wo more in tha~ game.

Smith

was hired. ·
.
Let.'Rjust say Hoeppner

·Gophers make run at OSU

No. 11 Penn State

Passing Yards

sion of some playground
smackdown.
But there io something diffei'ent here.
Last week, rndiana coach
Terry Hol·ppner said he had
circled the Ohio State game
on the srhepule as soon as he

THIS WEEK'S OPPONENT: MINNESOTA

Purdue at

Touchdowns

VietNam

..

An inside look at this week's ·game

OH 992-5432

Say what?
"You want
to stay out
of there
unless he
calls you
in for
something
real quick
and you're
in and out."

f

r

tW

Michigan vs.
Ohio State
Lint:backer
Anthony

St:hlegel,' al&gt;out
spendi ng t ime
in coachjirn

Tressel 's offke .

days until kickoff

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

OVP Leaders (thru Week 9) - ---------GALUPOL S - OVP Leaders s a list ot the top ottensrve high $&lt;:hoot football pe
formet's In the tr -county area Playa s sta~stiC5 are comp ed by OhiO Vat ey Put&gt;! shlng
sports wqters and may not match numbers comp led by ti'le r espective teams

Rushing
Player

Yards
1027
825
807
767
717
693
560
527

Jared Casey (M)
Terry Durst (E)
Curt Waugh {SG)
Berme Fulks (SG)
Alan Dye (H)
Butch Marnhout (S)

Dave Poo e (MJ
Trav s A1Hie (PP)
Oust n W nters (GA)

515

Krls G1bbs (W)
Chr s Edwards (RV)

476
457
378
365

Brandon Wa ne (PP }

Jayme Hagge ty (GI\)
SeH1 Hane (GA)

352

293
290
277
261
256

Jordan P erce (E)

Josh Buzzard (M)
Weston Counts (S)
Bryce Honake (E)
8 anton C a k (Wl

TD
12

AH
168
153
129
135
131
133
77
80
93
62
101
90
56
76
64
31
66
52
57

3
6
B
6
4
3

5
10
4
3

5
5
4
0

Casey

7
3
3
2

Passing
Yards Comp Att TO
142 14
377 83
136 7
726
54
48
92
2
624
436
31
90
8
427
42
82
5
378
25
51 3
376
45 3
25
331
22
54
5
18
44 2
266
12
206
44 2

Player
JeH Golden (GA)
8 anton C ark (W)
Bryan Mor ow RV
Seth W II amson (SG)
James Casto (PP)
Jordan P1erce (E)
Aa on S ory (M)
Josh Pape (S
Cory Shaffe (E)
B andon Wa ne (PP)

lnt
6

7
4
9
3

6
2
3
4
1

Recetvmg
Player
Jayme Haggerty (GA)
Chase 0 d ~W)
Shaphen Rob nson (GA}
M che.el Co del (RV)
Trav s R fl e (PP}
Ryan Hen y (RV)
Ousl n McCombs (SG)
Te ry Ours1 (E)
Bryce Honake (E)
Budd~ Young (S)
Ty Way and (M
B andon Fowle (W)
Ja ed Casey (M)
Chr s McCoy (GA)
W II Slone (PP)
K sGbbs(W)
De ck Beaver (SO)
De ek Young (E)
Josh Buzzard (M)
Cody Gerlach (E)
E c VanMeter (M)

Yards

647
459
437

384
345
292
273
195
189
168

7
5

144

135

5
1
3
2

5
0
2
1
2

13

1

11
11
12

, 14
104
89

9

83

5

n

5

12

16

1
2
3
0

8
10

2

3

1
3
1

6

0

6

63
57

Golden

6

24
22
26

211

163

TD

Rae
31
25
59

Friday, October 28,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Haggerty

2005

expected the team to break
the 88 year drought
that
It s a hie lesson
you never ever g1ve up
Daley satd
He sa1d even the Chtcago
Cubs - who haven t won a
World Senes smce 1908 can learn that lesson from
the1r crosstown n~al
Everybody thought the
Wh1te Sox couldn t go he
satd Sure the Cubs can go
next year
Also Thursday thousands
of fans gathered at Mtdv.ay
A1rport to welcome the
team back from Houston
As pncher Mark Buehrle
drove by
he stopped
opened h1s door and thrust

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAG6 (AP) - The
party 1s to full swmg m
Ch1cago
Two days after the While
Sox swept Houston for the1r
ftrst World Senes tllle smce
1917 the team was set to hll
the streets Fnday for a llck
er tape parade and rally
Mayor R1chard Daley a
lifelong Wh1te Sox fan
called the star) book season
a spec1al moment for the
c11y of Ch1cago
Daley speak10g Thursday
at a West S1de school sa1d
the VIctory was especmlly
sweet
because nobody

As a rook1e
wllh
the
Atlanta
Braves
on
1996 he was
2forl7
( 118) Wlth
one RBI m a
loss to the
New
York
Yankees
Dye
I was JUSt
exc ned to be there JUSt hav
mg fun You JUS! never know
1f ) ou re go10g to get th at
chance agaon
Dye sa1d
Nme yea1 s later I 0 years
later or whatever I think I
kmd of knew what 1t took to
ge t back to the playolts and
wm
Th1s tlme b1g hits and
pure JOY And 1t all capped a
remarkable personal resur
gence after a st11ng of
mJunes that 111cluded a grue
some broken leg when he
fouled " p1tch oft 11 dunng
the 200 I playoffs agamst the
Yankee s
A proven slugger Dye
struggled so much With
Oakland on 2003 that backup
catcher Adam Melhuse pmch
h1t tor h1m m the playoffs
w1th the season on the line
But there was nobody
Chtcago would rather have
at the plate 111 tlns Senes
It s been a long !!me smce
they ve been m the World
Senes and won Dye satd

HOUSTON
(AP)
Jermame Dye was one of the
few players on the Ch1cago
Whne Sox wnh prev10us
World Senes expenence
No wonder he looked so
confident at the plate
Dye drove m the hrst run
of the Senes and the last
making hun the most valu
1ble player from start to fin
tsh H1s two out RBI smgle
off Brad L1dge m the e,tghth
mmng snapped &lt;1 scoreless
tte .and sent Ch1cago 4o lts
ltrst champ1onsh1p 'smce
1917 \\ uh a l 0 VICtor)' over
the Houston Astro; on
Wednesday mght
I told guys all my expen
em;e about what 11 takes to
get there and what 1t s hke
Dye satd You JUS! have to
treat 1t ltke a regular season
game
The scra ppy Whtte Sox
polished off a four game
sweep thanks on no small
part to the1r b1g nght f1elder
who went 7 for 16 ( 438)
w1th a home run and three
RB Is to earn MVP honors
He also scored three times
walked tw1ce and had a 526
on b 1se percentage
It feels unbelievable Th1 s
IS an excltmg moment Dye
Sllld It s somethmg I never
v. Ill forget
For Dye tt was a much
better performance than h1s
f1rst tnp to the World Senes

And 1t means a lot not only
to us m the clubhouse but to
the orgamzanon to the fans
to the c1ty and 1t s JUSt a
great feeltng And we re JUSt
happy to be able to br10g a
champtonshlp to the c1ty of
Ch1cago and 1t s really spe
em!
Dye homered off Roger
Clemens m the f1rst mmng of
Game I glVlng the Wh1te
Sox a qUick lead 10 the1r f1rst
Fall Class1c smce 1959
Then he wound up m the
m1ddle of a ruckus m Game
2 when plate ump1re Jeff
Nelson ruled that Dye was
h1t by a pllch 10 the seventh
mnmg even though replays
sho\\ed the ball glanced ott
hts bat
Dye knew that all along
and adm1tted 11 later But he
kept qu1et at that moment
and went to f1rst base Paul
Konerko followed With a go
ahead grand slam and the
Wh1te Sox pulled out a 7 6
" ctory on Scott Podsedmk s
surp11smg homer 1n the
mnth
We don t have any egos
on th1 s team I thmk that was
what was really spec1al
about th1s club Dye smd
He wanted to stay near
home wl!h the Athletics after
last season but wasn t wtll
mg to take a huge pay cut to
do 11 Oakland dechned h1s
$14 m1lhon opt10n for 2005

Lookmg to fmd a comfort
able spot and cut down on
some cross country travel
Dye s1gned a $1 0 15 m1lhon
two-year contract
w1th
Ch1cago
I ve been around a long
t1me he sa1d ThlS IS my
mnth season 10 the b1g
leagues I felt hke th1s club
was the best fll for me We
have a lot of young guys
m1xed wllh some older guys
that JUSt knew how to wm
It's been a long season a lot
of stuff went on but we
fmally got 11 done
He had b1g shoes to f1ll
too - those of star nght
fielder Maggho Ordonez
who left tor DetrOit after last
season
But Dye gave the While \
Sox plenty of productwn 10
the m1ddle of the lmeup all
year He stayed healthy
enough to get 529 at bats
hmmg 274 w1th 31 homers
and 86 RBis
And 11 only got better 10
October
I JUS! knew our startmg
pllchers and our bullpen had
the capablllly of gomg out
there and shuttmg a lot of
teams down he sa1d From
the start of spnng tra10mg
everybody was hungry
Everybody wanted to go out
there and v. 10 together
Everybody was pulling on
the same rope

h1s arms tn
umphantly toto
the a1r Fans
mobbed man
ager
On1e
Guillen s 11m
ousme as 11
slowed down
many chant1ng
Ozz1el
Ozz1e 1 Other fans held
brooms aloft symbollztog
the sweep that the Wh1te
Sox completed Wednesday
n1ght w1th a I 0 v1ctory
My heart 1s poundmg
sa1d Da\\ n Gas tor who
greeted the players w1th her
two children Th1s 1s great
We re so grateful to them
and they're so grateful to
us

Many houses sported eel
ebratory s1gns and banners
wh1le bakene s decorated
spec1al
cupcakes
Employees proud!) wore
Sox gear to work And at
several
sportmg
good
stores lines snaked around
the block as fans wa1ted to
buy T sh1rts hats and Jer
seys
Bud SkaJa watted for
more than four hours at a
sports store JUSt blocks from
U S Cellular F1eld Fearful
of Jtnxmg h1s ulttmate
hopes for the Wh1te Sox he
refused to buy any mer
chand1se before Thursday
SkaJa
who sa1d he
expected to spend about

$300 listed all the heart
breakmg seasons he s expc
nenced stnce becom1ng a
Sox tan about 30 years ago
Not th1s t1me They re
there to stay he sa1d But
I couldn't believe they d1d 11
m four
At Toots1e Roll Inc s
headquarters on the ctty s
South S1de company ofh
ctals were busy prepanng
for Fnday s Sox Day
where workers w1ll be
encouraged to \\ear the1r
Jerseys and Sox gear to
work
Several costume shops
smd that whtle they ve been
dotng a good busmess dur
mg the playofls se lhng

black and whtte face paml
the team s colors they re no\\ thmkmg they
m1ght see some last mmute
requests for Sox outflls for
Halloween
Courtland H1ckey genera l
manager
of
Ch1cago
Costume sa1d he had a
woman ask for help m
dresstng up her 9 year old
daughter as GUillen the
colorful team manager
known for h1s salty lan
guage
I asked 1f her daughter
knows how to swear hke a
sa1lor H1ckey satd addmg
that he sold the woman a
fake goatee and mustache
combmatton

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Card of Thanks

. . . .-....... .In the Common Pleas
Court of Meigs
County Ohio Home
National
Bank

more fully described
ln deed recorded In
Volume t22 Page

1991
REDMAN
RIVERMAN MOBILE
HOME 11237745

256, Meigs County

The

Farmers Bank

Plaintiff vs C.nnls D

Olflctal Recorda and

and

Boothe Aka Dennis
Boothe
et
al

costs of this action

Defendants Caae NO

foreclosed and that

Company Pomeroy
Ohio reserves the
right to bid at sale

05CV88 Notice By
Publication
To

that the mortgage be
the liens and/or Inter

eats In or on said

Dennis D Boothe aka

property If any be

Dennis

marshaled and the

Boothe

whose last known

address Is 32390
Bailey Run Road
Pomeroy Oh10 45769

present

address

unknown and Tina L

Boothe

aka

Tina

Boothe aka Tina Lynn

real estate title quiet·
ed and sald property
both real and person
al sold In the foreclo
sure action and all

amounts due Plaintiff
be paid from the pro
caeds of the sale

Boothe, whose last

You are required to

known

answer the Complaint

address

Is

32390 Bailey Run
Road

45769

Pameroy OH

present

address
unknown
and John Doe the
unknown spouse If
any of T1na L Boothe

within twenty eight
(28) days alter the
last publication of
thls Notice which wlll
be published once
each weatc for six (6)
successive

weeks

aka Tina Boothe aka

The last publication

Tina Lynn Boothe
address
unknown
Vou are hereby notl

will be made on the

fled that you have

been
named
Defendants In the
action entitled Home

National
Bank
Plaintiff vs Dennis D
boothe
at
al

Defendants
This
action
has been
assigned Caae No

05-CV-88 and Is pend

lng In the Court of
Common Pleas of

Metgs County Ohio

The obJect of the
complaint demands
judgment agamst the

Defendants Dennis
D Boothe aka C.nnls

Boothe and Tina L
Boothe aka Tina

Boothe aka Tina Lynn
Boothe In the sum of
$16 040 20 plus inter
est at a rate of $4 993

2111h day of October
2005 and the twenty
elght(28) daya lor
answer will com
mence on that day In
the case of your fall
ure to answer or oth

erwlsa respond as
requested

by

the

Ohio Rules of Clvll
Procedure judgment
by default will be ran

dared against you
and for the relief

demanded In the
Complaint
Dated thos 2t st day ol
September ,2005
Marlene

Harrison

Clerk of Courts
By Deputy Clerk
(9) 23, 30, (10) 7 14
21 28

per day from ,llugust
23 2005 In order to

PUBLIC NOTICE.
NOTICE Ia hereby

foreclose upon a
mortgage upon real
estate and securlly

given

Interest In a 1964
VIrginia mobile home
IDIFDCEXBMV3691
Ohio Certificate of
Title 153001 t4540
located at 25671
McNickles
Road
Racine OH 4Snt
wh1ch real estate IS

and to withdraw the
above collateral prior
to sale Further The
Farmers Bank and

Savings

on

cerllflad check the

following collateral

by Section 571519 of

the

Ohio

Revised

Code
Nancy
Parker
Grueser
Meigs
County Auditor

DS01522
(tO)
26 27,28 30 2t
(lt)l2346

~•w•-.•

'-••

~

order, etc Interested
persons may submit
written comments or
request a public
meeting
regardmg
Draft
Act1ona
Comments or public
meeting
requests

must be submitted
within 30 days of

not1ce of the Draft

Public Not1ce

reserves the right to

Acllon PROPOSED
ACTIONS are wnllen

statements

of

the

ra)BCI any or all bids

The Syracuse Racine

dorector s Intent wtlh

submitted

Regional

reSpect
Issuance

The above described
collateral will be sold
as Is where 1s with
no expressed or

Implied

warranty

given
For further informs
lion
or for an

appointment
to
Inspect collateral
prior to sale date con

teet Cyndle Stacy or
Randy at 992 2136
D$01285 (10) 26 27
28
Public Nollce
NOTICE TO TAXPAV
ERS
Reference 571517
Ohio Ravtsed Code
The Meigs County
Board

of

Sewer

Dostroct will be
accepting sealed bids
unt1l November 16

2005 1 00 pm on a
1980 Chevy Custom
Deluxe 10 Service
Truck All bids are to
be turned In to the

Clerk s Office at 405
Main Street Racine
OH or malted to P0
Box 201 Racine OH
Sale 1s as Is wath no
expressed or wr1tten
warranties Truck may
be seen at the Racine

Muntclpal Building
(10) 25 28 (11) 1 4
Public Notoce
PUBLIC NOTICE

proposed or final
actions were 1ssued

and are open for pub
lie 1nspect1on 10 the

Environmental
Protection Agency

valuations completed

ofllca of the Meigs
County
Auditor
Second
Floor
Courthouse Second
Street
Pomeroy

OhiO

year 2005 mull be In

accordance

with

Section 57t5 19 of

County Auditor Will
be heard by the
Board of Revision In

verlfted complaints
were received

and

the following drall
by

the

to

the
den.al

modification revoca

Ohio

(OEPA) last week
ACTIONS Include

the adoption modlfl
cation or repeal of

orders (other than
emergency orders)
the issuance denial
modification or revo

1""._.1:.11-.. 'T'oiii••CI-..:-- 1•-. 1'01..,_..-_I,_•~P-• ...
. . . . . . . _...~ .......... ..-. ~lyl-.t: ..... ~~ .... ..- ~ ........ ....,

...... _
the

Ftnal

3745 07 a Final
Action tssulng deny
lng modifying ravok

ing or renewing a
permit license or

variance which Is not

preceded
by
a
Proposed
Act1on
may be appealed to

the ERAC by filing an
appeal within 30 days

of Issuance of the

final action ERAC
appeals must be Iliad
wtth

Environmental

Review

permit license or
variance
Written
comments
and
requests for a public
meeting regardmg a
proposed action may

Commission
South Fourth

be submitted wtthln

30 days of not1ce of
the Proposed Action
An adJudication hear

tng may be held on a

proposed action If a
heanng request or
objection Is received
by the OEPA wtthon
30 days of 1ssuance
ot the proposed
action Written com
ments requests lor
adjudication heanng
requests must be
sent to
Hearmg

Clerk Ohio

Environmental
Protection Agency

PO

Box

t049

Columbus Oh10

43216 1049
(Telephone 614 644
2129)
FINAL ACTIONS
are act1ons of the
director wh•ch are
effective
upon
Issuance or a stated
effective
date
Pursuant to Oh1o

cation of licenses
permits leases var!

Revised
Code
Section 3745 04 a

ances or cert1f1cates
and the approval or

final action may be
appealed
to
the
Environmental

Action

Pursuant to Ohio
revised code section

tlon or renewal of a

public meetings and

The
followmg
applications and/ or

Revision
has completed Its
work of equalization
The tax. returns for
tax year 2005 have
been rev1sed and the

Saturday October 29 the Ohio Revised
2005 at 1000am a Code These com
public aale will be plaints must be flled
held at 211 WSecond In
the
County
St Pomeroy Ohio Auditor s Office on or
The Farmers Sank before the 31st day of
and
Savings March 2006 All com
Company Is selling plaints filed with
for cash In hand or

the manner provided

Company

Complaints against
the valuations as
established for tax

Public Notice
that

Savings

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Senhnel • Page 87

Dye-cast: Jermaine an MVP from start to finish

Chicago celebrates White Sox's World Series victory
BY TARA BURGHART

Fr1day, October 28, 2005

Appeals

309

Street Room 222
Columbus
Ohlo
43215 A copy of the
appeal
must
be
served on the d~rec

tor within 3 days after
filing the appeal with
the ERAC
Applocatton
lor
An II d eg r ad a II on
Project

Tupper
Plams
Chester Water D1stnct

36625 Sand
Cemetery Road
Leier! Twp OH
Action

10/2512005
Receiving

Date

Waters

Oh10 R1ver
FaCility Description
Wastewater

Identification
OIZ00063

10 30 days of notice of

Final approval of
Plans
and

Specifications
Pomeroy Village PWS
a20 E Main St PO
Box 666
Pomeroy OH
Action
Date
1012012005
Facility description

Community
System

Identification

Water
No

should be submitted

within 30 days to
Ohio EPA Division of
surface water Attn

PPU 122 S Front Sl
PO
Box 1049
Columbus
Ohio
43216 1049
VIllage of Pomeroy
Water Department
Date

t012512005
Receiving Waters UT
to the Ohio River
Fac111ty Description
Wastewater
Identification No

Oty00102

43216 1049 Tel (614)
644 2621 Notice ls
hereby

given

on

October 19 2005 In
accordance
with
OACRule 3745 37-08
The Director of Ohio
EPAhave determined

that Meigs County
Health Department
Mulberry His P 0
Box 631

Pomeroy

OH 45769 Is In sub
stantlal compliance
and hereby place the
Meigs County Health
EPA s Approved lists
of Health Districts

In Memory of

authorized to admln
lster and enforce the

!ZJwtg.fl

solid and Infectious
waste and construe
t1on and demolition
debris laws and rules
In accordance with

Sections 3734 08 and
3714 09 of the Ohio

approval ls subject to

posed acbon and Is

and spec1fled condl
t1ons

appealable to ERAC
Detail plans for PWS
ID 5300212 plan No
398865
regarding

Carbon Un1t addition
for
VIllage
of

Pomeroy

Annual Survey of
Solid &amp; lnfecllous

Waste
&amp;C&amp;DD
Program
Metgs County Health

Action

In Memory

Revised Code This
all rules regulations

.'lraley~~Oct 28 2003
1~11/

If e wultl

en

A 1be" 11/ (l odm
M beforamm e f
!he I""

uufd

go(,
We ould 1

'a

ur

~rms

arr u J

A I• lmfJer

(10) 28

ords

so tr e

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Tl 1 I

11g

life

• tlo t\OI

c enlcnr

lu

S&lt;u/f\ M1 fed
IJ Wife &amp; I ltire11

lwrlght@!IC net

Date

Descnpllon Solid
Waste

H~ foUo&gt;I&lt;'Eb

ldentlllcallon NO 53
0004

~1m
C~rl

This final action not

I

~flih\

preceded by pro
posed action and Is
appealable to ERAC

7

Persons wishing to

be on Ohio EPA s
Interested parlles
malting list for this

0
{)

•

project must submit a
request 1n writing to

Ohio EPA D!vlslon of

solid and Infectious
waste management

Attn
Systems
Management Unit
PO
Box
t049
Columbus
OHio

'

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
\!Cribune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad,
446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740)
Or Fax To
446-3008
Or Fax To
992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234
\\'\Cil \(

r

www com cs com

r

L\lt\ 'IS

GI\EA\1 \\

--

WANIHl
IUBUY

1

~-------_.! Buy ng black walnuts 1~(
per pound alte hu ng ca

1 femae mxed Lab fee to
good ho ne 2 3 rr on hs old
very lovable and ado able
Call Yvonne (740)709 6557
(740)388 0878

lh:tP WAN'IllD

GUARANTEED

JOB

(740)698 6060 buying unl
N o~ 15th

.

lhLPWANmO

ass

l

r

1fli~

C 2005byNEA nc

I'Ll \."\..\NI

Co pe t 1ve
Wages
Oe el ts Ava able Plea sant
lnte ested
B ggest Ya d Sa e Ye A mosphe e
App y
Havens Hts New Haven \ ppl canis
W Va Oct 281h and 29th mmed ate y Ravenswood
WI/
(Ac uss The B dge
12 Ou1ts 17 guns log cab
No
h
On At
2 Last
cook stove old cooke 1a s
On
A ght)
Bus ess
clott es old lamps bea If
RAierences
Requ
red
ple sa te old cab ~" and ~
n-ee w t ng desks

t..-oioilioitlliiiiiioiiOi'-r'

,.~

110

1.

$150 $300 day Loca meat
d sl buto took ng for nde
Wa ted o buy Jtmk Cars pendent Route Managers
(304)67:&gt; 6473
w th e abe p ckup trucks
No truck no prob em What
1' \11'1 0\\11 \I
a e you wa I ng for call the
"il R\ H I ~
Captam Now (740)645
EZMEAT
110
--------1
Holzer Santor Care Center
pupp es to good homes o y
Seeking Dedicated Health
Need oo n Jo u (740)441
An Ex cl ent way o ea n
Care Professionals
141 7 after Spm
money The New Avon
I you enoy wo kng n a
Cal Mar lyn 304 882 2645
earn o anted health care
set ng you may be nterest
ed n one of the follow ng
Cloth ng G ve Away
F ee
n rs ng pest ons
Cloth ng G ve away al the
F rst Chu cJ of God Seco d
STNA
&amp; Apple St eels Sy ac so
AN
Thu sday Oclubm 27 h om
LPN
11 OOa m 1200 NOOl
Com nun ty Act on s seek
g a HEAP Intake C erk to f you a e nterested n a full
Sofa &amp; loveseat n good con
wo k
w th
Emergency tme o par \me poston
dit01 No teas o rp s Cal!
Programs 0 gan zat o al please stop by and II out an
(740)367 7328
sk I s co npute e~pe 1ence appl cat on at 380 Colonial
ad flb lty to dea wtn pe
Dr ve B dwell Oh o or gNe
UJSI ANll
so ns of var ous soc o eco Phyfl s Ca trell DON a ca ll
FOUNil
on c backgrounds Val d at (740)446 5001
0 ve s 1cense h gh school
Found Beaut fu cal a n n
g aduate or equ valent
sect on of Route 35 and
Resu new lh lh ee (3) efe
Tornado Road (Oh o R ve
ences to Ms Edwa ds
Salvage) Butte1scolch coo
Ga lo.MegsCAA BOlON
wlblue eyes Ve y ovab le
State Rou e 7 Chesl e Home Health Care of
740 949 237 1 af e 600
Oh o 45620 by 11 4 05 Southeast Oh o s curran! y
PM
h r ng a1des and RegiStered
GMC AA s EOE
Nu ses
Full Tme Pa 1
1stnct 1rcu ahon Tme
Pe D1em
Compel t ve wages fie)( ble
Sales Man agl'r
sci eduUng Call tal free 1
Haspons b htes
nclud
368 1100
ecru! ng and tra n ng o
arr e s customer se v c
d neelmg sales goals
Nu se
Pract toner AN
ou have a pos 1ve an
Phys can Off ce Excellent
ud e 'He a self sin ter
Sa ary &amp; Benef ts Reply
d a team p aye w
CLA Box 566 c o Gall pol s
ouc1tke to tak to you
Tr bune PO Bo~ 469
Must be dependable an
Gall po s OH 45631
ave ehable transporta
Hea thy wei Ira ned
on Pos1t on offe rs a
Is there anyone n lhe
ed collar w II keep o a
o 1 pany benelts nctud
Pomeroy M ddteport a ea
week '304)675 6605
g I ea th dental v s 011
ookmg for full t me work?
F'ound Puppy Shepherd
ndl fe nsu ance 401k
Are you look flQ for better
Co lie m x Hannan Trace
a d vacat on and pe son
than m mmu m wages?
~ /Swan C eek Rei &lt;1 eet
a duys Please sm
schedule
s
P mary
Call (740)256 1668
esume to
Monday Fr day Bam 5pm
Paul Barker
M ust have val d d 1ve s
Clrculallon Manager
t cense and dependable
Ohio Valley Publishing
veh cle Must be tam lar wltll
825 Third Ave
Megs County
Gampolls Ohio 45631
Sand resumes nctud ng
Or emalllo
Golde
Lost
references to CLA Bo)( 2
pbarker@mydailytrl
Ret ever
A sves
o
c o Pame oy Da ly Sentmel
bune com
S1mon He s wea ng an
PO Bo~ 729
o ange nylon col a
LEis
Pomeroy OH 45769
Drivers Needed
seen Thu sday on Lo1'1 g
Hollow Ad Leta t Ch ld ens COL Drvers w\1 ng tad ve Jan !oral se v ce has 1mme
n
the
Pet Pease call (304)895 Ia toea ready m x cone ete date open ng
Galhpo s
area
Call
company Exper ence s
30B3or (304)895 3163
o
p efe ed but not necessa y 1800)988 7847
\1\RDS\.II
0 ver must be wl ngtodo
LICENSED SOCIAL
p e tna ntena ce on truck$
WORKER
&amp; equ pmenl ya d wa k &amp; Ova brook
Rehabll tat on
=""
othe r m see aneous cho es
Cen e s now accept ng
urL.
YAIUJS\ItExpe enceoperatngeq p
resumes for the post on of
GAI.Lil'UI L"l
o 1 &amp; extra sk Us such as Director of Social Services
weld ng a plus
The qual fed cand date
Call (304)937 3410
Movmg
Sa le
must be a LSW possessing
Saturday/Su11da y Ant ques
Enve ope stuflers earn st ong ve bal and wr tten
k !chen tables dresse s
sk lis
n6ney work ng at home commumcat on
desks TVNCR c oU !J $4
Ca I 24 h fo data Is 972 Med ca d Med ca e and
bag 3636 SA 850
MDS know edge long term
50 1 2690
ca e expe ence prefe ed
Yard Sale 593 Debb c D F EstabliShed !ann g and ha r
but not eqwred Qualified
&amp; Sat Household c o h ng sa on ook ng for an expe
cand dates
may
send
protess anal keyboa d au o enced Cosmo olog sl and
esumes o Char a Brown
harp mise
Na Tech Ber ef Is ndud McGu re
AN
lNHA
ed Send resumes to CLA Adm n st ator 333 Page
074
YARil S \LJo:J'&lt;IMEROY/MIOlll .tc Bo)( 555 co Ga po s Street M ddtepo t Oh o
Tr bl ne PO Box 469 45760 EOE
Gall pols OH 45ft31
2 Family Oa1 age ;,a e
LPN Career Opportun ty
Satu day Oct 29th B 00 r
Make a d ffe ence and joln a
400 3d Houseonleflo
ca g team!
Echo ng
Top of Cheste H II (SH 2 itl
Meadows s an MRDD tac l
G rls Clothes (S te 4 7)
ty offenng re s dents out
Boys (Sze 5 4) WOJ I::!I s
stand ng nu s ng ca a We
Costume s
S v es
cu re nt y have an LPN
Household Toys Etc
even ng pos tion ava abe
Wages start at $13050 per
Apply n person
CP
Ex1 e o 1ced Even 1 g Sh tt hour
Cook Des ed Serv ng 75 EChOing Meadows 319 W
Un on Athens Oh 4570 I
i-~~-::---, 80 Pe sons N ghtly 3 4
6
Y\Ril SAil
N g ts
Pe
Week 740 594 354 1

PI

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Mf pCoun y OH

c. • County OH

~:::;:::.:::~

Gene &amp; Wanda
Imboden

Department on Ohio

398865
Thts final actoon not
preceded by pro

Department

ed parties mailing list

Act1on

of a permit license

PPU t22 S Front St
PO
Box 1049
Columbus
Ohio
43216-1049

1011912005
Facility

(formerly known as
the
Environmental

folong an appeal woth

surface water attn

exclUSIOn or W81Ver IS
applicable Requests
to be on the Interest·

are written state
menta of the director

(D1rector s) Intent
with respect to the
issuance den1al etc

applicable Requests
to be on the Interest
ad parties mailing list
should be submitted
within 30 days to
Ohio EPA Division of

Protect as defined by
OAC 3745 1-05 An

Carroll Street
Sutton Twp OH

a person who was a
party to a proceedmg
before the director by

ex:cluslon or waiver Is

Mulberry Hts POBox
63t
Pomeroy OH 45769

Review Appeals
Commtsslon (ERAC)

Board Of Review) by

No

Ant l deg r ada t 1 on

disapproval of plans
and specifications
DRAFT ACTIONS'
of
Environmental
Protections

Ho!l

Antldag radatto n
Prolect as deftned by
OAC 3745 I OS An

We w1sh to thank
all who helped us
celebrate our 50th
Anmversary at the
Tnmty Church
Also those who
sent cards &amp; gtfts.
God bless you all

CLASSIFIED

LPN needed
ful 11me
Monday F day day sh ft no
weekends
no ho days
Apply at 936 St At 160
Gall pobs (740)446 9620

Apphcat ens Are
Be ng Accepted For An
LPN Campet t ve Start ng
Pay Pad Vacat on Pad
Meals
0 scounts
and
nsurance
Ava lab e
nteresteQ Appl cants May
Appy
Oay
94
o IT PT CURVE S
Wo td s
arges
I tness Rave swood Care Cflnte
ii:iiF;,;;.;~~----1 o gamzat on look 1 g lor 1113 Wash ngton St
WV
Mrmage Tramee I you a e Ravenswood
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,. e e get c
se f motivated (304)273 9236
FAX
'
n.vt&gt; an outgo g pe sona Rete ences Requ (ad
Absolute lop Dot a US y and love to work w th pea
Med Home Heath Agency
S ve
and Gold Co s pie drop oft esume and
nc s seek ng a PAN ANn
P oofscts Gold A ngs P e
u nple e an app !calion at
the Jackson County WV
1935
US
Cu e nq 432 S Jve Br dge P aza
area Musl be ~eensed n
Sota e O a no1ds MT S I&lt; ow &lt;&gt;dge ot hea tl /nut
Com Shop 151 Seco d o lilt ess a sa es expcn we~t V gna We ofle a
conpettve saary EOE
Avenue Ga po s 740 446 r~nce a plus
Please send resume to 4245
2842
MClke up to 50"., w lh The Slal e Route 34 HurriCane
Ann
V•ck
I b\Jy Junk Cars (304)773 New Avon Call les e WV 25526
ChadwiCk
7 0)98 ;.~ 3362
5004

~f-~.:.::."'•A·L_.J ,.r.IO_....'OR.".~.~.""..._.f eo

IL.,11.0_HEL_.._w_AN11lD
__ L.,r·.o_HEt.P
__w_AN11lD
__,n,__PR
...
Med Home Health Agency
Inc s seek ng full time and
he
part t me ANs m
Gall po s OH area Mu st be
I censed m bolh Oh10 and
West V rgln a We offer a
compel lve salary and ben
ell patkage lor lull t me
employees E 0 E Please
send resume to 352 Second
Avenue
Gall pols
OH
45631 Attn VICk Chadwick

SECURITY
PROFESSIONALS
Nat ona security f rm seeks
full time SUPERVISOR lor
the Apple Grove WV area
Quahl ed applicants must be
al least 1!1 years old HS
d1ploma/GED no c mlnal
record &amp; pass drug lest
Pr or secur ty supe 11 sor
exper ence required or else
taw enforcement/m litary
WE OFFER
Excellent Pay
Middleton Estates a leading FREEhaalhcao
prav der of suppo I serv1ces
to nd v duals With mental Lfe lnsu ance
retardat on and deve op
Match ng 40 1(k)
menta d sab It es 1s look ng Free uniforms
for direct care employees Tu non ass stance
An
Equal
Opportunity Awardsfbonu51;1s
1 866 325 4150
Employer
F M/DN Call
-··en 90m &amp; 5pm M,..
r.
Appl cat ons w H be taken b. '""'
Mon day th ough Fnday or else fax resume to 41.2
8 OOam 4 OOpm at the faclll 325 4154
EOE
ty 8204 Carla Dr ve No
phone calls please
l iz~-"::"----.,
--,..,-,..,--,..,-----Now h r ng lull and part t•me
McClures Restaurants n
M ddleport and Galhpal s
Apply between 10 10 30am

.·.

150

co,_ •........,. ..

~
•·-ucnON
1
1,--""'iiiliiii'Kiiiiiiiiiiiio_.l

Gallipolis Career Coll.,.e
....
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740 446-4 367
~214 0452
1 .....,..

8

Ove brook Center IS current
ly accept ng apphcat ons lor
Nursng Assistant Casses
The c asses w 1 be October
25 November 13 Classes
wm be held during the day
w1tt) some classes dur ng
the even ng hours Class
days w II vary Monday
Sunday A schedule w II be
ava lable at the front off ce
Space s J m ted AU mter
estEJd appl cat on at 333
Page St eet M ddleporl
OH NO
PLEASE

Phone

.__ _ _ _ _ _ _•

DIRECT TV 3 room w th
T1vo FREE 145 channels
only $39 00 per month Ask
how to get FREE HBO
MAX and home enlerta n
ment system Call 600-5237556 for deta1ls

1180

WANJID
To Do

..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,...

CALLS

Overbrook Cente 1s cu rent
ly accept ng apphcat ons lor
a Full Time AN Superv sor
Th s s a 7PM to 7AM sh ft
All mterested applicants
should pck up an app ca
t on at 333 Page Street
Mddleporl Oh For add1
tonal nfo mal on please
contact Helle Bumgarner
Ove brook
Staff
Development Coo d nator at
992 6472

,--,------,Babysit! ng or housekeeping
anyt me Rae ne or Pomeroy
area call Juan ta n Aacme
(7401949 2188

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Un ess We W nl
1 866 5B2 3345

IH \I 1 ...,1\ 11

r,o

Patr at EMS seek ng FT/PT
EMT s &amp; Paramed cs Afler
n roductory per ad EMT s
make
up to
$1 Ofhr
Paramedcs up to $12/hr
100% medea! nsurance
prescr pi on card paid days
off &amp; vaca1on ret ement
pad training All veh cles low
m eage new equ pmenl
For
more
mforma11on
www patrlotems.com or cal
(7401532 2222
SECURITY
PROFESSIONALS
Nat1onal security firm seeks
lull t me SUPERV SOR for
the Apple Grove WV area
Qua if ed applicants must
be at least 21 years old HS
d plama/GED no cr m•nal
ecord &amp; pass drug test
P 10r secur ty superv sor
exper ence equ red or else
taw enfocrementlmll tal"!
WE OFFER
Excellent pay
FREE Heallhcare
L fe nsurance
Match ng 401 (k)
Free un forms
Tuit10ns ass stance
Awa dslbonuses
Ca111 866 325-4150
between 9AM &amp; 5PM M F
o tax resume to 412 325

4154
EOE

Work around your schedule
$450 S1500 monthly part
1me $2000 $4500 full t me
(303)292 9960
www home303 com
Wo k @ home Earn $450
$1 500 monthly part 1me
$~ 000 $4 500 lull I me
www OurAnswer com

bath Ava !able Nov 15th 2 bed
W th oom house k !chen fu r
1 om n shed no pets p eter non
appr smokers $475 00 per month
pus uti 1es and $450 00
depos t
Telephone 740
992 5421

"---ioliiilliliiilo-,.1 •---ljiiioiiiiiiiii'-_.J
1 acre w•th 2 bedroom Single
slory home n country 116
Po ndexte Road off Johns
Creek Road {304)576 2247
$39500

For rent 2 bedroom t bath
fu Y enovated al apph
1985 14)(70 Schultz taler ances
$475/month
w/factory 6x20 e)(pando $475/depos t Call (740}446
3BR 2BA 3 ton central a r 3481
porches new ca pet goad - - - - - - - condton (740)3677133
Forrent2stoyhome 3BA
AC
$500 month
$500

1995 Ooublew•de 3b 2ba 1994 Cayton 14x72 3BR
w/anached
Garage 28A C A wlhealpump very
Breezeway &amp; Barn
1 56 clean elCce lent cand I an
Must be moved $12 900
acres Sandhill Ad $72 000
{304)B95 3068
(740}379 2617 or (740)379
9489 leave message
3 Bedroom 2 Bath With
Freplace In AID Grande 8
aces m/1 40x60 barn
$125 t:XXl (740)709 1166
2BR 2BA Tra1ter $2 900
3 bedroom 2 bath house
Owner F1nanc ng available
for sale basement 1 car
S y acuse can slay on tol {304)675
garage
2359
{740)645 0164 or 614 475
8185
G eat used 99 Skyl ne
3 Bedroom 2 bath Spl t
L
1 H
V
eve
orne
ery n ce
Ne ghborhood
$145 000
{304)675 7770

16x80 V nyl shingle 2)(6
wal s glamour bath Call
{740 )3B5 9621

New 16 wde ony $190 pe r
month Vmy Sdng Shngle
7BR 5BA Foreclosure only Roof &amp; De Ivery 1740)385
$18 000 For I st ngs call
7671
B00-391 5228 B)(t F254
New 16x76 3 bed oom/2
Attention!
ba1h M nutes from Altlans
LOcal company offer ng NO Must sal Move n today Call
DOWN PAYMENT
pro (740)3B5 2434
grams for you to buy your ' - ' - ' - - - - - - home nstead of renting
Tra e to Sale
2000
100"/cfnancng
Clayton 16 X 70 3 bed
Less than perfect cred1t room 2 bath centra a r
accepled
po ches $23 000 740 992
Payment cou d be the 5972
same as rent
Mortgage
Locate s
Lars &amp;
(740)367 0000
ACREAGE

'I '. ··-

. ,. . . 'I'"
.' l
•:

'

Hunt &amp; Fsh n
urn your passion nto
Call
J•
us ness
304 576 2707

oNOTICh
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tha
u do bus ness wllh peo
le you know and NOT I
end money through th
a I unt I you have mvest1
ated the of1er n

r

MONEY
roLoAN

1BR apartment up stal s
720
Second
Ave
Washe /dryer
hOokup
Water/sewer trash pad No
pets Aefe ence $325 mo
(740)645
$325/depos t
2192 day (740}446 0 01
even ngs
2 bedroom apa tment for
rent n Sy acuse $200
depos 1 $335 per month
rent must have suff1c1ent
ncome lo qual ty {740)378
6111
~:.__ _ _ _ _ __

was h ar1d yer
elect/ c
and
5400 00 a mont
400 00 depos 1 Accepl
pets 740 992 2557

2 Bedroom Apartment WID
Hook up
Water
T ash
Sewer
Pad
$375/mo.
(740}367 7746 (740)367
7015

bedroom
apartmenl
Rae ne ve y n ce clean
Hpuse for Rent $400 a $425 pe
manlh plus
month pus ubi t es Depos I
depos t no pets reterences
References
No Pets requ red
740 441 0110
(304)675 4874
I
740)992 5174

s

N ce 2 bed oom duplex
near Herr sonv li e
$425 2 bed room 2 balh ape rt
....-~
man1hly pus ut iles• No mentS600 No pets Loca1o:o\l
d
1
c
1
!740)441
smokmg no pets Deposts own own
a
11 24
requ red 742 3033
-S-1'--,-B--4-b_d__ -26-R--a-p-1--,o~-,-.nl
op ren ng uy
e room
foreclosure $15 000 Far st $425/depos t $425/rent plus
lngs BOO 391 5228 8)(1 ut tes
In
Kanauga
1709
{740)4464107 or (740)441
2707
Totally remodeled
lnlerlorl
3 bed oom house centra
heat &amp; a
washer d ye
hook up (anced yard stor
age bdg $ 475 per month
ant (740)441 1111

3 ooms and ba th All util t es
pad Oownsta rs no pets
$450/mo 46 OJ ve 51
{740)446-3945
Beautfu 2 story townhouse
overtook ng Ga I pohs city
park Ktchen
DR LA
study 2 baths laundry area
References requ red securl
ty deposit no pets $900 mo
Ca
(740)446 2325
or
{740}446 4425

Very mce 3+ bedroom 2
bath full basement 2 ca
ga age n ce yar!;l On SA
143 near Harrlsonv I~ $650
monlhly plus ut hes
No
SfllOkmg no pets Oepos ts
req u red 742 3033
BEAUTIFUL
APART
B4 5 acres 6 m les south of ~i!io~~-~~--, MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
Oak H 1 Wayne Nat onal
Foest borde s ton 3 sides --Al!l'i•
• laSTATE&amp;
52 Westwood
(740)682 731 B aHe 6pm
Dr ve from $344 to $442
14)(70 28R At 35 new car Wa k to shop &amp; mov1ea Call
$425 dep
$425 740 446 2568
Equal
lots lo sale 1 3 acres pet
water and sewe Ca for (740)367 7762 o (740)446 Housmg Opportun ty
prices Also have severs 4060 or (740)367 7272
Beautiful 2 bedroom 1600
mob1le homes for sale
sq ft restered and decorat
(740)388 96B6
2 bedroom n Po tar Water
ed 2nd f oa apartment 57
~111'-=---=----, t ash
sewage
pad
n Galhpol s
REAL EsrA:rE
Washer dryo
no pets Court St
Spacious 1vmg &amp; d n ng
~~---WiiiiANIIDii.iiOii-_.1 $450/mo
$450/dep rooms New app ances 1
~(7:c4='0)'-3a_a:-:9:-:3_2:-:5---,--­ 112 baths storage space
Need lo sell you home? 26 A mobile home lor rent rear deck lor sunn ng
Late on payments d1vorce $32 5/depos t $3251 ant plus HVAC $600 pe month plus
JOb lransler o a death? l ut 1 as On ...Po ecat Ad
ut l t es Secunty and key
canbuyyou home All cash (?40)446 4107 or (740)441 deposit
No
pets
andquckcloslng 740416 2707
equ ed
Refe ences
3130
(740)446-4425 or (740)446
2BA mob e home for rent
3936
~;;=:::;===::, $325/depos t $3251 ent plus
ut Ue s On Po ecat Ad Beech Street Mlddlepo 1 2
10
H~
(740)446 4107 or (740)441 bedroom lurn shed apart
men! depos t &amp; prev ous
FOR RENT
2707
3 bedrooms 517 Burdette rental ~ferences no pets
(740)992 0185
116 South Park
ve Street A I electnc deposit
requ red and reference required No CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
References
Pets (304)675 5402
(304)675 7808
ED • AFFORDABLE!

r:

MottFOnR.En~~

I

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"---ioliiioiiiiioiio-,.J

I

,..1

"tate advertising
In thl• new1p11per l•
IUb)eet tO lhll Fltderal
F11lr Houelng Act of 1968
which ma:kte It Uleg~~l to
edvertlH any
preterenc. llmlllltlon or
dlscrlmlnlllon beud on
race color religion sex
fllmlllel etllue or netlo~W~
origln or any Intention to
make any auc:h
prefennc:e llmlle'llon or"
discrimination
All

•URRENT

2

r

Charm ng br ck ranch A1o
Granda Oua nt fr endly
neighborhood 3 blocks from
UAG Custom bu t •n 2002
lnlerlor open and alry
Trad tonal natural
oak
woodwork lhroughout 3
bedrooms 2 ful baths
Large k tchen w1th dmmg
pantry d sposal miCrowave
Great room deslgn w th
vaulted oo bng and gas f re

~\IITI\IEN'I~

depos t (740)446 348 1

o

2

~Get Pad to

1r

MOBlLE HoM•.:s
foOR SAl£

HOMFS
•UII: SALE

Computer
Aepa1r
and
TroubleshOot Web Design
Network ng Prog amm ng
SuHd New Systems Restore
Wmdows V rus Removal place w th oak manlle On
Certlf ed Phone#740 992 hH with front porch overlook
mg woods Maste su1te w th
2395
his/her
bath ncl wh r1pool
Owner Operator
MagcYears Day Ca e
tub shower 2 walk n clos
local Haul ng Wellslon Area
Preschool 7 30 5 30
ets 2-car garage Jandscap
Monday Saturday
Pun ng Chlldren F1rsr
ng All new app!ances
You 1i uck our Tanker
Ages 2121mled pul up ncuded Low cost heatngl
Full t me Short Team
Stale cooling
spaces ava table
1692
sq
ft
Call 800 548-8894
L1censed Link Approved
For Details ask for H A
Excellent Sk1lls
Spaces $179 900 (740)379 2615
Dept
ava labia tor all ages

Reduce h gh heat ng b jls by
Paramed cs
&amp;
EMT s
add ng nsulat on to your
needed Apply at 1354
an1c Call loday for an esti
Jackson Ptke Galhpol s
mate (740)441...0564

Th ee Bedroom one
full basement Garage
appl ances
Ac oss
Park $57 000 be ow
740 949 1372

HotJSI:';
RENT

I'OR

Thla newspaptr w II not

knowing y accept
advertiHments for real
estahlwhichlsln
violation of lhe law Our
rudera are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised ln
this newapaper .,.
av~~llabla on an equal
opportunity baaaa

House fo Sa e 3 bedroom
full s ze d y basement
Great Ne ghborhood oorner
Jot nghl n town Take a look
1001 Kenny Ct (r ght behind
Jr H1gh Schoo ) Shown by
APPI $84 500 13040675
3123 or (304)675 0032
No Down Payment Less
than perfect cred t o K FIVB
m•nutes
from
Holzer
Hasp tal Three Be&lt;lrooms
.One Betti Level lot Newly
remodeled 74()-416 3130
Syracuse 38A Attached
Db!Gar New Root Vmyl
Sid ng Block Ut tity Bu ld ng
$85 000 740 949 1082 Of
74Q-416-2786

bedroom house
n
Pomeroy
area
HUD
app oved
(740}992 7546
afler 5pm
Beaut fu
r ver view
n
Eft c1ency Clean 1 Bd m
Ideal
for
1
2~
peo
Kanauga
2 story Colon al home 39A
Good local an Rei Dep No
p
e
No
pets
please
1BA $500 month $500 sec
Pets {304)675 5162
depos t No ndoor pets Apphcat ons bemg taken
CaH
(740)441
0181
(740)446 3481
Furn1shed upsta rs 3 rooms
&amp; bath Clean ref &amp; dep
2BD house all e ectr c Mob le Home for Rent
rOQu ed No pets (740)446
m
Mason
Located
depos t 5400/month no
1519
pels 15 m les soult) on At $375/mo 5375/ deposit No
Reterertees
outs
de
pets
7 (740)441 1917
Grac•ous 1v ng 1 and 2 bed
mq1.11red Call (304)675-3423
room
apartme11ts at V ttage
2BR 1 1 2 bath $350 month
Man
or
and
A ve s de
Mob
le
home
s
tes
In
mcludes water depoe11
Shade Apartments n M ddlepo ~
reqwred Call alter 9pm Country Homes
From $295 $444 Cal 740
Sl30 mo (740)385-1019
1740)379 2303
992 5064 Equa Hous ng
3 Bedroom House In Pt Nice 3BR mob e home to Opportun 1es
renl $400 dep $550/mo
Peasant 5475 pus depos t
NeecJ
3 rele ences Call
call t740125S 1610
{740)446 3601 or {740)441
3BA 2BA 3 acres an rver 5899
NEW ELLM V EW
w th dock lor boats Very
TOW NHOUSEIAPTS
nice
$BOO dep
$800 Tra e with add-an Room &amp;
NOW LEAS NG
(740)367 7762 (740)446 Ut hty Room Crab C eek
Ad Rent $2501month plus
SPAC OUS
4060 (740)367 7272
References
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
ut lt1es
6 corns &amp; bath s1ove required No Pets (304)675
BOTH FLATS &amp;
retng 5400/mo No pets 1206
TOWNHOUSES
AVA LABLE
Recent y remodeled 644
Two BdAm I ale wale &amp;
ALL ELECTRIC
Second Ave (740)441).()332
trash Included $350 pe mo
CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
Sam Spm
&amp; depos t (740)441 0000
STOVE REF
AtttnUonl
DISHWASHER
APAliTIIIIJ\T;
Loca company offering NO
GARBAGE D SPOSAL
FOR RtJ\1
DOWN PAYMENT
pro
WIND BL NOS
grams for you lo buy your
CEILING FANS
1 and 2 bed oom apa t
home Instead of enttng
WATER SEWAGE &amp;
ments furn shed and u lu
100~'o I nanc ng
TRASH INCLUDED
Less than perfect c ed t n shed secu ly depos I
PETS CONDIT ONAL.
requ red no pets 740 992
accepted
(3().4)882 3017
Payment could be the 2218
same as rent
1 badroom mce y furn shed ....~
Mortgage
locates
apt Ou e a ea 1 adu t $500
1740)367 0000
mo (740)446 4782
One BR apt qu e prrvate
Ava al:l e Nov 15th 3 bed
1
La ge
Bedroom ocat on c ose o hospital
com house fu mshed no Apartmen Bath K tchen
ef &amp; depos t equ ed
pels p efer non smokers
L vmg Room on quat
$n5 00 per month p us ut St eet Pr vale pa k g (740)446 2957
t es $750 00 per month plus
Construct on wo ke r pre
uUI t es $750 00 depos t
le red
1 per1on $300
Telephone 740 992 5421
month plus ut1Utle1 2 per
10n1 S625 no utllltlea apa tmenl
EHO
(304177HO..

r

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Fnday, October 28, 2005

Frlday, October 28, 2005
ALLEY OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B9

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA

BRIDGE
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are nqw laking Applications
tor 28R, 38R &amp; 48A ,
Applications
are
taken

Remington 870, 12 ga., 30"
lull, early model with small
groved forend , with additional Remington rille sighted
Monday thru Friday, hom slug bane!, full box of shells
9:00 A.M .-4 PM. Office is with purchase. Looks new
Located at 1151 Evergreen 99°1c· $500. (740)533-3870.
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Vent-Free, 3-Piaque
P'hone No. is (304)675·
Gas Heater
5806. E.H.O
(Propane or Natural)
Manual Control $143.95
Tara
Townhouse
~artments, Very Spacious. Alum1num Fiberated Paint
2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 1l2 (G reat tor Mobile Homesi
5-gal. Buckel $29.. 95
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
POol. Patio, Start $385/Mo We now have candy melts
in stock for your
No Pets, Lease Plus
holiday baking
Security Deposit Requ ired,
Pa1nt Pl us Hardware
(740)367-7086.
675-4084

i

For Lease: Office or retail
sp aces in very good condllion . Downtown Gallipolis.
ApproM. 1600 sq. tt. each 1
or 2 baths. Lease price
negotiable to encourage
new
t&gt;us1ness .
Call
(740)446-4425 or (740)4463936 _
For Ren1 2 1arge single bays
in a well protected garage,
· cq.n be used for storage of
car, camper, !&gt;oat $30J per
IT1!=Jnlh (304)675-6259
storage Rentals for Boals,
Campers, Cars. Mason Co
FAirgrounds At 62 $8 a loot
(304)675-6463
\IIIH ll \ \Dhl

HOU&gt;EHOLD
GOOlli
Dtning room table and 6
cbairs. like new $350. Curio
cabinet $200. Call (740)441-

8299.
Kenmore Washer $125,
Maytag Dryer $75, Kenmore
Refrigerator fairly new $100.
1 Green Machine WeedEalec
wlolades
_s1_oo_..::(;J_04_:)_77_3_-5_9_3o_ _ _

1993 Chevy Ca maro LT1
$4,300. 1990 cnevy shortt&gt;ed stepside 2WD, $3,800.
(740)645-6008.
1994 Buick Lasabre. High
miles, loaded, leather, great
condition, runs great. Asking
$2,000 080. (740)388·
0140.
'

_01_1_2_
. -,--'-----1998 DOdge Grand Caravan

r,

6 male lull-blooded Sheltie
·
Collie, Swks old, multi col.
orad,
very
adorable .
$l00/each , ready now.
(740l.3 67 -76B9.
_ _:___ _ __ _ _
AKC 6 month old Pekingese
black mask, all shots.

2000 Lincoln LS ( White, all
Opfo
1 ns $10 ·800 (304)6757565
2001 Honda Civic EX ssp.,
NC , power steering, win dOWS &amp; locks, n,OOOmiles.
Excellent condition $9.000.
(740 ) 446 -3754 ·

Unable to care for $1 50
including cage. (740)388_98~2_4_.- - - - - - Full Blooded Pit Bull
Puppies, 6 weeks old. First
shots and wormed. Call
740 . 667 _0186 _

2002 Honda Accord EX
Sedan 40. Eslale Vehicle,
only 14,000/miles, Loaded,
Silver, Leather. Moonroof, 6·
Disk CD..Chang:er &amp; More.
$15,000 NADA is $17,900
See at Casey Law Offices,
611 Viand Street, rear. or
Jack Russell puppies. $125 call (304)675-3999
ior males, $150 for females,
(740 )742 _2192
85 Chevy cavalier tpr ·sale
~:::.:_.::.::.:_::____(,.304:c..:).:.:67.c5-..:1.:.:50:.:6____
Mln-Schnauger
puppies, AKC, 2 mates -black/silver, 1 93 Toyota Camry S600. Cars
from $500. Lis1ing 800·391·
black
male, $ 400;
1
5227 Ext. C548.
Yorkshire Terrier, AKC, male, - - - - - - - - 3 lbs, $600; parti cream 95 Park Ave. Good condition
Pomeriain puppy, male, (tires, body, AJC) Good gas
AKC. $350. (740)696-1085
mileage.
$2.000
firm.

=:..:::2::.:..::_:::=.___

r

70

IN~
. USI~AL

I

Alto Sa11ophone Bundy 11.
Selman Company, good
pads, excellent condition .
740-949-2575 clays or 740949-2293 n•ghls
$300.00
080.

I \H\1 "'! 1'1'1 11"'
Thompsops Appliance &amp;
,\ I 1\ I "' ll )( h
Aepair·67S-738B . For sale,
re-conditioned automatic 0
washers &amp; dryers. refrigeraFAAAI '
tors , gas and electric
EQUIPI\-IEN"I'
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do 12· New ·Idea Manure
repa irs on major brands in Spreader. Pertect ·condition,
shop or at your home.
$1 ,800. Eve- (740)3792171, Day· (740)441·7717
Used Furniture Store. 130
Bulaville Pike. Appliances. cell.
couches, dinettes, chests, John Deere Commercial
bun~beds, grave markers. Workslte
Products.
(740)446·4782, Gallipolis, Compact Excavators/Skid

.,...--..,.----r

r·o

IlL 111

-

r~1

740-992-3673 .
New ·shipment of

fl eece panels &amp;

100%

FOC/2

Underground. civil
war

-~-------

&amp; grannie

I

llllEfS

SElf STORAGE

~

~~N~

I

HOME
IMPROVEMENI'S
·BASEMENT

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage•

WATERPROOFING

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

r

BlgJI alld Dry

,

OWner: Jeff Stethem

POWER WASHING
(Commercial and

*Iieating &amp; cooihig
24hr Emergency
Service
Ed DIIVowner
Licensed &amp; Insured (740)992-41 00
Over 30 years
,Chuck Wolfe/Mgr.
(740)992-0496
experience

www. holze rclinic.com

·BARNEY

OR WUZ
A
i.t-----.
R14ETORICAL INSULT i'!
THAT -.lEST

LAWN (ARE DIVISION

~

(Commercial and Residential)
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertiliza tion·,
Spraymg of fence lines, leaf Removal, as well as srnall
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching

6:00pm.

.SUVs

FOR SALE

98 Ford Explorer XLT. 4dr,

garage

f
•

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

Director/licensee In Charge.
· Charlie Huber, Director
Josh Billings Hssoc.

lrt~~
•

~-~'~~L2==~~~

THE BORN LOSER

,..'(OU /11£1-N,

'(OU L1 KE

P'ji.,~~OW\U.'(, (f\\E.f I [ Tf\lt-~2

/&lt;\'(

I\)(./&gt;., FO!':. TI\U-\E.W

'iOU'~t:. .~IC..I'.T 01'-\ \1',(. 11\0t~E.'(

"-1&gt;\1 &lt;'-RI I~\ 1'-1 (;,

Wilt\ \AAT

5 IGI'. ...
WI\E:.~ Dl t&gt; 1:
GO WROl'o\G?

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

Hill' s Self
Storage
29670 Bashan flood

work

Racine, Ohio

45771

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates,
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley

740-949-2217

mii=======:;
V1o

740-742-2293

• leave a message

Auros

4 yrs of Reliable Service
(Keep Your Money local)

G&amp;R SANITATION
3356 1 Bailey Run Rd.,
Pomero , OH

Commerciul refrigerator 2
door, stainless steel, runs
like new, S500 finn .
Electrical, plumbing, hot
water heater &amp; HVAC parts,
ventless natural gas heater.
{740)441-1236 after 6pm,
Mon-Fri.

Cornerstone
Electrical

DP Ultra Gym-pac, complete workout w~;tight systems w/t&gt;ench $50 080.
(740)441-0135.
Firewood for sale. Seasoned
hard wood . Pickup $40Jioad,
de livery $60/most areas.
Gall (740)388&gt;8738.
For sale- air conditioner ,
18,000 BTU, window unit.
$150, (740)985-4183
For Sale: Firewood . Ca ll
(740)386-8264
Four church pews. 15 ft .
long. each, red padded
seats. Good condition , $300.
Oak pulpit, $200, very good
condition. Piano, good con·
dition, $1(19. (740)682-7624.
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red . New &amp; Ret&gt;u111 In
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1800-537-9528.
New and Used Furnaces.
Installation .
available.
(740)441-2667

NEW AND USED STEEL
Sl:eel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle .
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
· Gratmg
For
Drams.
Driveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
· Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
S•nday. (740)446-7300

RIM FIRE
Rifle Shoot

WV Jobs Foundation

BINGO
"NOW PLAYING"
EVERY FRIDAY &amp; TUESDAY

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUcnON
• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete

Remodeling

Service

140-992-1611

• FOR ALL YOUR
ELECTRICAl NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME

Stop &amp; Compare

REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY

SEASONED HARD
FIREWOOD
CUT &amp; SPLIT

• RooF • PAINT
OmO IJCENSE # 38244

Iron Gale Presents
Halloween Costume Con1es1
Sal. Ocl. 29th al 6:00 pm
Cos1ume Judging at 9:00pm
Special door prizes every i12
. 1st-place $125
2nd-place $$75
3rd-place $50
Sam Stephens playing
Fri. &amp; Sat 7- ?"
Food &amp; Drink Specials
Come in &amp; participate
675-7030 or 675-2200

740-367-0544 '
740-367-0536

Wii.TER
STOHiiE

TONIGHT'S
PROGRESSIVE
COVERALL
PAYS

OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC.
AT THE
MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS

$2350

Nov. 12, 2005
9:00AM· 11:00

Guaranteed Payouts!
Doors Open 4:00pm
Early Birds 5:15 pm
Regular Session 6:30 pm

For more Into. call

740-985-4372

$40AlOAD
CAll

7 40-949-2038

at 1:00PM
Public Invited

IMPORTS
Athens

$

•

f-158 414

PEANUTS

••sonoma

mu.•11111

I"'AY&amp;E
THE ttEIIORY
I!&gt; TOO

/.-=--Th,T!U&gt;-llt1"-Tlcl.

~
LiNCOLN
.MER CU _RY
Gallipolis, Ohio

•
MA'Y6E T~E'r''RE
. ALL TOO
SMART•.

LINUS, N060D'( BELIEVES
IN T~ESE PAMPIILET5
''6REAT P~MPKIN•

-18
lUIIIRes

MAYSE WE 5!-IOULD
60 IO 50MEONE'S
HOUSE WI-IO !5
STUPID ENOU6H 10

II ~---~~ 11-11s ...

7 40-446-9800
got

you

'

·Whole Com $6.351100

'

·Cracked Corn $7.35/100
·Triumph 12% Sweet Horse Feed
$5.50/50
-12% Cattle Feed $7.301100
·Black 011 Sunflower Seed $13.75
Why Drive Anywhere Else7 ·

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rl 7 N ¥

Ohio ~5769

W£&gt;M~F~~
MAINTENANCE

Chuck Wolle

• Home Repairs • Remodeling
• Additions • New Homes

V.C. YOUNG Ill

IN THIS SPACE

Pomeroy, Ohio .
25 Years Loc•t Ex rlence

BAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across lrom KMartl
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740)446-1711

L __
'

-- ·---·--··-----

80&amp;,&gt;, TO THINK OF AL.L. THE

"iiMf 1 WA'S"i!Oc:&gt; BARKIN&lt;:.

FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At

124 Highland Ave. P1 Pleasant, WV

-·--

!

(740) 992-0167
(740) 992-0496

ADVERTISE

- 992-6215 wv 036725

GARFIELD

Licensed &amp; Insured

•PMwGaragn
• Eleelrlcal a Plumbing
• Rooftng &amp; Gune,..
• VInyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
• Pallo and Porch Deck• .
We do It all except

furnace work

S.UNSHINE CLUB

GRIZZWELLS

Broad Run Gun Club
Outlaw &amp; Slub Match
Sunday, October 30th
12 noon

chants

01

1/4 Mile Nort~
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV 25260

___J~

Poor old- or young- Eas1 had a nasty
decision. At my table, he not unreason·
ably opted to pass both limes, so lhree
diamonds doubled became the final contract. ·But the defense had no chance.
West look two spade tricks, then shifted
to a club into my ace•jack. I ruffed my
third spade on the .board and ptB.yed on

trumps, losing only two spades and tw·o
diamonds lor plus 670.
Note that three no-trump is hopeless,
going two down, but even it it is doubled,
it woUld still be cl1eaper. Three spades by
Wosl. which migh1 be reached 1f Wes1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeb!'ily Clpfler Clylllcgrams &amp;le.createo:l trom q\flta!in by lamous pe~ , past and present
Eadlleller in the ophel stns lor enolhel

Today's clue: 0 equals G

''ZR

ZL

HKM

K

RF

WB

CZHLBJT,
ZR

ZL

ODBKR
ZM

WPR

'-'Taki11g The Slillg 0111 Of
/lard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Eugim· '

BAUM LUMBER
St: Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

'tlfi'O
\1-111\E WdJ

-nl\S ~I~G · ~ ~D 5~

'

. I {)\.11&lt;1':10 .. -

Slf '+IA"*n
Sl'tCitiG

1'

j

'CBJV
JFAB

TFD

KWLFJPRBJI

DFWBDR

TFD

K

EZRC

KM

KNRFD

BLLBMRZKJ."

HFDJBI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Now I realize I'm a leaf lloaling along on lho walar
on top of some ri11er. That's where 1:m at." - Neil Young

AstroGraph
-

'lllrlhday:

S.turday, Oct. 29, 2005
By Ber.nlce Bede O.ol
Sonle smoother times should be in store
lor you In the year ahead, due in part to
some lessons you learned recently which
wilt now prove quite valuable to you . You
won't be repeating too many past mls·
takes.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Seek out
companions today who are interested in
many of the same types of acti\l~ies as you
are. Not only Will you enjoy each other's
com pany, but you may learn something
!rom an exchange ot ideas.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Others may think that bits of Information
that are out there tOday are of little consequence, but your agile mind w111 locus on
the substance ot the messages and use
them to your advantage.
CAPRICORN (OEic-. 22-Jan. 19) - Friends
have great ' respect lor your views and
opinions and today may ask for your input
on a number ot things. Be helpful to them
by altering suggestions that could expand
thei r outlook
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Even if
you aren't In one of your original thinking
forms today. you'll have the knack of taking
the· ideas of othe rs and transforming them
Into something that would be worthwhile to

~~~:::~' S©RoU'lA-LGt.~s·
h
.

ltlllt4

Reom;'ll'l~• ltttera of
0 fo~r
tc:rombled W'Ordl

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Having that
tra.nk discussion with your mate today as
you've been intending can prove quite
beneficial in SOI\Iing a collective problem.
Say what needs to be said without l;lmbelli!)hment.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19)- Jobs or projec ts that require your full concenirallon
arJd brainpower are your cup of tea today.
Let your muscles rest lor the moment and
giw your splendid mental faculties a workau•
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Tact and
diplomacy have always been two of your
greatest assets. Today when you become '
in\IOived in several Situa tiOns that require
their use , you'll employ them to your
advantage.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Your quick
mind readily responds to new ideas today,
which could benefit you and/or your family:
Use your Sharpness to help sor1 oUl any
good suggestiOns from the bad ones.
CANCER (June 21 -Jul~ 22) - You are
likely to be in both a sociable and restles s
mood today. so why not plan u schedule
that would encourage and accommodate
drop-Ins by a number of friends or family
for brief vtslts7
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Normally you
loss your junk mall into the trashcan, but
today you might be wise to scan some of
the advertisements you receive. Among
them could be just the bargain. you're look·
ing lor.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept: 22)- Your mind is
likely to be exceptil:mally receptiw to new
information today and you won't be afraid
to ask questions. You'll want to learn more
about the latest ways to advance your
interests.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 23).,... Opportunities
that are not likely to be recognized by oth·
ers W(.ln't escape you today. Even If you
know they may not make a klll1ng . you'll
welcome the chance lor even some small
gains .

....
lAIII

CLAY • . POl\..lN

fh•

low .ro form .f®r 11mp!t

•. t
"f just heard lhe mosl useles.s
tl&gt;ins." anoFy nei[:hbor relal~d.

I•

"A

friend •~ld

mt gossip not

======~-!worth --------:·

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I

&gt;OU

Owm.·r

_Racine Gun Club

Oct 30th 2005

OHHHH,
YEA+i'
HOW
COULD I:
fORG.El"?

Gene Arms/Owner·

Operator 740-992-3174
•Weekly Trash Service

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

38 Deadly
snakM
39 "Ben· - "·
41 Graceful
and quick
42 Doozle
43 Ant horde
45 Film
director
- Kazan
46 "Jurassic
Park" alar
47 Luggage
49 Ullmann
of cinema
51 Mantra

Greed may be a sin, exploitation of other
people might. on the face of it, look rather
nasty, but who can blame a man lor
'doing the best' for his children?n
Many would agree wlth that, but the key
word in today's deal is the worst of those :
nasty. Look at the East hand. Your lef1·
hand opponent opens two diamonds, a
weak two-bid. Your partner doubles for
takeout and your RHO' raises to three diamonds. What would you do?
Suppose you .decide to pass. It is passed
back to your partner, who doubles again,

G

"FAMILY OWNED"

..--....,...,.,...,'=--..,

~~it!

overcalls two spades instead of doubling ,
is defeated by an unlikely club lead.

Dauld R. Deal

tR ''""( nu '111 ,,

8' Valley pool1able , one 1972 Mach 1 Mustang
piece slate, $700 , (304 ) 67 5. Cobra Jet, 3.51 Cleveland,
3388
C6 transmission, 3 out of 4
·Car. all numbers match.
Beautiful 3 piece Antique $10,500 or trade and cash
Bedroom Suite, Full size, (304)773·5054 ,
Call (304)675-7770 $500

Pass

19 Raw melal
21 Frame
of mind
24 PD
24
1 Throng
dispatch
chuckle
· 2 Gulhrie
27 Wallliltlure
• oltolkmuali: 25 Pepper
grinder ·
30 Carton of
3 Click-on
26 Tilt
milk
Item
27 Used e·mall
31 Tend lhe cal 4 Mostlrllly
28 Burn
32 Pith helmet 5 Blueprints
slightly
34 Dinar order 6 Promise
29 Tombslone
35 Cell
1o pay
dopu1y
habitants
7 Carries out
31 Plane body
36 Stlents vamp
the law
33 Cosmic
Tlieda8 Caesar's
force
37 Grasstroops
hopper
9 Help with a 35 Renoir
39 Marx
heisl
subJect
brother
10 Crumbles
36 Cook's
40 Kind poem 11 Ganelic
con1est
41 PuHin's kin
malerlal
(hyph.)

DOWN

opponent.

C.lo.J'l\\'I&gt;.IGt-1 ?

Phone
(740) 992-5232

1993 F1 50 4lC4, 6 cyl, 5spd.,
lilt kit, 33~tires on American
rims.
$3,500.
2617 or (740)379-9489, L~--•ffiilliRIISAIIiiLiiE;.._.I Racing
"leave message.'
(740)446-2350.
w/garage door, must be
moved. $1,900. (740)379-

F:ast

,Pass

sounds

23 Aussle

Nota Norfh's three-diamond raise. He
knew his side had nine diamonds, so he
bid to the nine·trick level. II also rated to
make life harder for East. his left-hand

J

Medical Excellence . .
Local Caring'"

'J)eal :Funera{:J{ome

LOOking For
ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

North

20
22

What woiJid you do now?

!

...

S'•IDI81f8
•

R~idential)

Mabile Homes, Houses, tog Homes, Decks, Drive~ays,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment. Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Alummum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking an"d Dump Trucking Compar1i e~.

·~HOLZER CLINIC

1

Dbl.

3.

17

Eva Figes, an · Anglo-German author,
wrote. "ProViding for one's lamily as a
goocl husband and father is a watertight

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883

W""MJteM

10x10x10x20
992·3194
or992·6635

Dbl. ·

When things take
a nasty turn

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

cotton 45''
for the gujlls.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Bolh
w~st

13
14
15
16

42 Brand name
44 MonoySnail hunger
Apple goody 47 Protruding
Kltcllen
motel edge
ilaple, once 48 - Saba
Killer whate 50 Low·fat
Mr. Chaney
spread
Poet's black 52 Mme. Gluck
Alliance
53 Hodgu of
- Wiederbaseball
oehen
54 Unylaldlng
--grlpl · 55 Paople,
Burger
Informally
topper
56 Fastlva
Leaves out
nlghl
Hesllant
57 Supporters

excuse for making money hand over fisl.

• Caring • Professional
Affordable Services
(304) 675-6000
1401 Kanawha St.
Pt. Pleasant

Regis1ered Angus bulls and 4x4, au1o, A/C, lilt, CD,
16FT Trailer Dual AKies titled hailers, 40 years of A.l. cr uise.
172,000miles.
and licensed $700 firm breeding. Slate Run Farm, $3,500 firm. 740 245·5033.
(304)675-1165
Robert
www.slateruntarm.com
4x4
'-• .
Almmey
(740)286-5395.
FoR SAlE
metal

I

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Jofferson Blvd.

Mill End Fabrics
Machine Quilting
Middleport, OH

9 8 6

Opening lead:• K

David, Donna &amp; Brad Deal

j

&gt;fo l0642

South

Pass

Uoadfom

Zap Tournament grade paint
balls . .2,000 per box, $25.
740 441 - 1417 after 5 m.

18lC26

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding •
• Buckd Truck

LWA.HIIlll Jr.

I

2.

Tree Service

UNI1 PIIIITIIG

Goon&lt;;

Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moore,
Club calf tor sale, Sired by
owner.
Jazz .. Angus bull for sale .
Phone (740)446·6157 after ...._

-

&gt;foQ 87;

JONES'

Funeral Home,

Let me do tt for youl

2003 Suzuki 4WO Vinson
500 ATV with 34 miles.
$4900.
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENT.
(740)446· ·
2412.

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local ~eterences fur·
nlshed. Estat&gt;lished 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

4 3'
A K 8 6

South

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Middleport. OH

1988 Chevy S-10 Pick-up
.Ax 4,
Auto, · Air $500
(304)882-2845 .

A 5 4

•
•

• J 10 .
tQJ 9753
&gt;lo A J

Ta~e

feed sack!
A«entlon
hunters·
Get
$800 offdeer
our already
low
Come
see us.'
price on new John Deere
:.
tUR SALE
Buck ATV's. Call tor details
'-~-------_.1 Carmichael Equipment, Inc.
01 green Ford F150 XLT 4dr, :(7•4r0:..)4.;4;;,6-~24.;,1.;2;;,._..,._.., II.I.I..,.I.II.J.I,;y,&amp;,II.J.I~
auto. 5.4L, VB, bedcover, 111
MCOTORMIPERSH~~~
6CD player, sunroof, good
Vl... ~
cond ilion, 71 .000 miles,
18121mpg, $14,000 oeo.
{304)288·3335
2000 Dulchman, C lass c.
97 Beech Street
Fully self-conrained. SO&gt;eps
1974 Ford Ranger pick-up 6 to 8. 3407 Jackson Ave.
$600 as is (304)675·7388

1985 Ford truck F150 6
cylind13r. automatic, good
body, runs. $900. (740)4469742.
.

•

•

K 9 7 5

8

t8

•KQ J73

NOT SURE'CALL.TODAY'

1977 650 Special Yamaha,
$600, (304)675-3388
--------2000 Honda CBA 929RR ·
adult
ridden,
Mieron
System, power commander.
Sell or 1rade for car or pick·
up, $3.800.(740)446-0746.

r

and Financial Services

Which way is your nest egg _goi ng?

I.

~

West

David
740-992-6971

1!::1~~,;,;,.,;,;.~.;_-,.~

p:l WM~!!.(Wi/

&gt;loK93
East

•

ES. Leather. qua.d·seating,
rear air, loaded, good tires,
Stapleton rebuilt. 104,000
actual miles, was purchased
at 12,000 miles. well-main·
tained. NAOA value $7,200,
asking
$3.900
OBO.
(740)441 -0135.
--------1999 Cflevrolet Venture
Extended Van: blue 82,000
miles: great condition; one
Owner·, $8,500·, (740)3677435: (740)339-3955.

l_4

.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
Box 189
Middlepon, OH 45760

r(71405).446-4TR336l!CKSanytlme .

19B9 C-70 Dumptruck
43,000 actual miles, 9ft. tele·
seeping pump, air brakes,
OH Hrs. 1.1-3, M-S.
Steers/Tractor
loader 427 motor w/AIIison auto.
Warm Morning Wood burner Backhoe in stock. Check Good rubber. no rust, runs
stove. $125. Call (740)256· out our rental rates! Great and works good. $6.800.
financing
available. (740)388-1579.
1424.
Carmichael Equipment, Inc.
(740)446·24, 2.
SPORTING

r

r11 1111 m-Mf-2212

1993 Plymouth Voyager, 1
passenger
van.
Good
shape, 25 mpg, $2,000
OBO. (740)441-1417 after
Spm.

Block,. bnck, sewer pipes. 1979 Chevy trucks. 3
windows. lintels, etc. Claude monti1S13,000 mile warranty.
Wmte.rs. Rio Grande . OH Olhers in stock.
COOK MOTORS
~
C:\laii-17:,:4:::0:;:-2;::4,;,5·~5;_:12i,i1,;..--~
(740 )
_
446 0163
i'I."TS
Jackson
Pike.
328
- FUR SALF.

BLIWING
SUI,'LIES

Norib
10·28.05
• 10 2
ilfAQR 62
• 111 4 :l

Call Tarv PIW&amp;rsl
@ Ul-2212111. 111

1
5
12

I

r

1997
Plymouth
Voyager. White 2 sl. drs.,
good cond. , runs good.
$3,500 OBO. ·Call (740)441·

Puzzle

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Accepted!

1998 Blazer 20 4x4; 1999
Saturn 3D; 1999 &amp; 1998
Sunfires; 1999 Voyager SE
Van; Two 1989 and one

SPACE'
FOR Rmr

Downtown Office Space· 5
room suite $650/mo: 1 room
office- $225/mo.; 2 room
suite' S250/mo. Security
deposit required . You pay
utilities . All spaces very nice.
Elev8tor. Ca ll (740)446-3644
for appointment.

1990 Buick Reatta, eMceJient 1993 GMC Truck heavy half
condition, 63,000 miles, 4 wheel drive 4.3 V6 auto·
malic transmission . Runs
$7 .000, (304)675-,3388
excellent, tranny rebuilt,
1993 Cadillac DeVHie, · 4.9· motor has low miles. dual
VB, 59,000 miles, all e~Chaust, toolbox . Will sale
options, leather, new tires, for $4,000 or best offer in
maroon.
$5,000
firm. cash . • Call (740)441 -9378
(740)645-0626.
leave message.

Crossword

I' 11 j' I'

!' I' I

I I I I0

ICIUlMLI!TI ANIWIRI IO':l7.\!~
JwnJlcr --Gross - 1\'CBI'e -- Walle1- GET to SLEEP a
conJOdian Cl'llcked up lite audience wheu b~ quipped,
~i.ife is 'QIItedting to d\J when you CM"I Obi' to
SU:CI'."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
IT'S ~OT "IMJS'IIJ FOO'IeAU..
IT'5 "POIIJT~&gt;-"

l'E~L ME ~ETilllt:i . SOUP TO NUTZ
! t:t*IT KNcm
TTHiNK ~~s
HOW

su,.,.,_&lt;r&lt;&gt; f'U:l¥

�r

Page Bto • The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 28, 2005

Four teams have four weeks to decide Big Ten championship
Bv

RUSTV MILLER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

And then there were four.
Four teams stand at the
surhmit of the Big Ten lead
with a loss, with another
three stuck on two ,Aosses
waiting· for the co-leaders to
stumble in the final four
weeks of the conference
race.

Here's what remains for
the top teams:
Penn State (7-1. 4-1 ):
Purdue:. Wisconsin , bye
week, at Michigan State.
Wisconsin (7-1, 4-1 ): at
Illinois, at Penn State, Iowa.
bye week.
Northwestern (5-2, 3- 1 ):
Michigan, Iowa, at Ohio
State, at Illinoi s.
Ohio State (5-2. 3-1 ): at
Minnesota,
Illinois,
Northwestern. at Michigan.
Of course, the game of the
year figures to be Wisconsin
at Penn State on Nov. 5. But
don't go asking Joe Paterno
about his team's prospects in
that game ur any other ·game
beyond Saturday at 3:30p.m .
"I am learning about
Purdue, period, nne game at
a time. That has been my life
not only as far as football
goes, but everything in my
life," said the 78-year-o\d
coach. "Take care of the little
things· first and the big things
will take care of themselves.
I have· never felt that I had
the luxucy of being able to go
beyond that."
Purdue is' clearly the
biggest disappointment in
the
conference.
Some
thought the Boilermakers
might just steal the championship; instead, they're winless .
Still, Joe Pa isn't checking
out the terrain in November.
" I know so metime s you
say, 'Ah, ·he is full of
baloney,'" Paterno said of
reporters questioning hi s
focus . on the Boilermakers.
"I am telling you that the
only thing I am worrying

record and you can see wh1t
about right now is whe ther
we can beat Purdue."
he's done, but when you see
MICHIGAN MAN: New
coaches that stay there for a
long period of time, I think it
England Patriots quarterback
Tom Brady once asked Jon
says a lot about the way he
Falk, Michigan's equipmen t CONFERENCE runs the program."
manager. which of hi s slew
BEAT-UP BADGERS:
of championship rings was Barry Alvarez fa rewell tour Several Wisconsin players
his favorite.
stops in Champaign this have bumps and bruises, but
"The next one.'' Brady week
when · No .
15 don't expect the m to get a
recalled Falk saying.
Wisconsi n takes on lowly rest any time soon .
The Badge rs hal'c nm had
The next time Falk, who · Illinoi s. Alvarez. who's stephas been at Michigan since ping aside as head coach at a bye week yet this year -1974, wi ll work during a the end of the year, is 7-5-1 and the~r week off doesn't
game is unknown because against the 11\ ini since taking come until after thei r final
his leg w.as broken after ove r at Wisconsin in 1990. . Bi g Ten ga me against Iowa
being hit .on the sideline at
"He's done an . unbeliev- on Nnv. 12 . Iowa ha s the preIowa. He had surgery earlier able job with thei r program. vious Salurday off to prepare
'
When you go back and you for that game, marking the
this week.
"I went into the training look, up until just maybe third time a Badgers' opporoom after the game and Jon two; three years ago, his staff nents will have had two
had tears in hi s eyes as I was pretty much intact for weeks to get ready.
talked to him." Wolverines such a long period of time, "
Alvarez said he is holding
coach Lloyd Carr said. '' I said first-year Illinois coach lighter practices to keep hi s
said, 'You must be in unbe- Ron Zook. "To me, that real- team fresh.
.
''I'm sensitive to the length
lievable pain.' He says, 'No, ly says a lot. You look at the
I was just thinking next
Sillurday. is going to be the
firs t Michigan foo tball game
I have missed in 30-some

of the season and how beat
up a lot of our people are,"
he said.
IN THE ENEMY CAMP:
Minnesota head coach Glen
Mason played at Ohio State
under Woody Haye s, and
then was an assistant for
eight years under Hayes and
Earle Bruce at his alma
ma,t er.

behind ours." Jim Tressel
saicj, cracking a smile.
QUICK-HITTERS: The
winner of Indiana at
Michigan State on Saturday
will 'need just one mo(e win
to become bowl-eligible .
The Hoos iers haven 't been to
a bowl game si nce 1993 ....
Penn State QB Michael
Robin son, Northwestern S
Hersc hel Henderson and
Ohio State punt returner Ted
Ginn Jr. were the Big Ten's
players of the week. . ..
Minnesota's Glen Mason on
his team 's lack of success
against
Ohio
State:
"M innesota hasn' t beaten
Ohio State very often. Do
you know how many times
since 1969? Twice. We (the
current coaching staff) have
one of those. I don' t know
who the other guy is, but he's

Th ree other members of
hi s stall have extensive ties
til Ohio. Only one, however.
has to watc h what he says at
fam ily gat herings.
The Golden Gophers firstyear recei ver:s coach is Luke
Tressel, the nephew of Ohio
State head coach Jim Tressel
and son of the Buckeyes running backs coac h, Dick
Tressel.
"Their wide receivers
might be the second-best
coached in the country not around anymore.''

years.'"
DIRTY WORK: As the

nation 's third-leading' rusher,
Laurence Maroney is no
secret.
But Minnesota's big-time
running back doesn't owe all
that success to a stout offensive line or his professio'nalqualit y, breakaway . speed.
Gophers receivers have
developed into excellent
downfield blockers.
,This season, Maroney has
scored nine times, including
once on a pass. Six of those
TDs came from distances of
30 yards or more, an impressive statistic that wouldn't be
possible without receivers
sustaining their blocks in the
secondary.
"Our wide receivers love
to block," said sophomore
Ernie Wheelwright. "We like
catching the ball. but we get
a lot of enjoyment out of
blocking
for
Laurence
Maroney."
FAREWELL TOUR:· The

OSU football players
love 'The Animal'
COLUMBUS (AP)- The
"When we went to homefathers of some Ohio State coming games in elementary
players are doctors, some are school .and middle school,
lawyers, some are wealthy my friends would be like,
business men and some 'Hey, Joe, can you paint our
played professional football. faces for the game?'" James
Only one, however, leaves said. "And he'd paint them in
the Buckeyes begging for either his design or the Road
Warriors design. He'd do it in
autographs.
James Laurinaitis is a blue and varsity gold, our
freshman who has seen little (school) colors instead of his
playing ti me at linebacker co lors. He was pretty cool
and on special teams this sea- about it. He uses that artist
son. But he's a big man with paint instead or. face paint.
his teammates because hi s Halfway through the game
father is "The Animal" of your face would be peeling
professional wrestling fame, because the paint would dry
part of the legendary WWE up, and you'd be scratching
tag team called Road all over the place."
Warriors or the Legion of James Laurinaitis was
Doom.
counseled early on by hi s
"A lot of the guys are into father that he was not to folit, a lot more than you would low . him \nto profe"ional
think,'' said Laurinaitis, a 6- wrestling. James played footfoot-3 , 2'3 1-poupder. "I was ball - his father was offered
kind of hoping I'd come here a scholarship to play at BYU
and maybe no one would before he began wrestling really know about it. But i( baseball . and hockey at
turns into every day someone Way zata High School in
Hamel , Minn . He led the ·
will ask me about it."
College kids have grown football team to the 5A state
up steeped in WWE lore. lt championship a year ago.
James,
Joe
Besides
means far more to them to
meet a professional wrestler Laurinaitis, and hi s wife.
Julia, have a younger daughthan a senator or celebrity.
"1 knew all of the guys: ter, Jessica, considered one of
Hulk Hogan, Ric Flair, Andre the top female hockey playThe Giant and all of those ers in Minnesota. Joe 's brothguys,'' said sen ior linebacker er John also works for .WWE
Anthony Schlegel. ·"And of as Vince McMahon 's rightcourse, his dad. Now he's hand man - when he isn't
here and we talk to him. He's wrestling as "Johnny Ace."
a great guy."
Even though James was
rec
ruiteq heavily by the
A.J. Hawk, the Buckeyes'
All-American
linebacker. University of Minnesota, he
said the word sp read quickly elected to go to Ohio State.
when Laurinaiti s was consid- He had longed to play fo r the
ering Ohip State.
Buckeyes since his father
"Everybody's excited to· bought him an authentic
see his dad," he said. "We Andy Katzenmoyer jersey
heard when James was get- years ago.
ting recruited about his dad . "He was a big fan of
It was cool. Hi s dad's a really (Chris)
Spielman
and
good guy. He come.s· in and Katzenmoyer. He was a fan
talks to us. He ·s stil l out there of tough guys," James said.
wrestling at 40-so mething. "He always thought Woody .
So we have a lot of respect Hayes was awesome, that he
for him."
shouldn't have gotten in.trouJoe Laurinaitis. sti ll the ble for hitting that Clemson
WWE tag-team champion itt player. He loved that. He
age 43, is a doting father who loved it. He said Woody
has only missed one Ohio shou ld have just said he
State game this season and is slipped or something."
Laurinaitis is looking for a famil·iar face around the
team. And , no, that face isn·t ward to goin g bome this
painted when he attends the weekend. No. 12 Ohio State
games, as it is when he steps plays at Minnesota in a key
Big Ten game.
into the ring.

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On sel.e!led models. Not responsible for typographical erro~. rrlres good Ortober 27th thro11gh October 31st.
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