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Pag~

B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 22,

www .mydailysentfnel.com

Prep football

Columbus Grove trades places With
Hardin Northern atop AP football poll
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ignatius, Warre n Harding and
COlUMBUS (AP)- How a state panel d
·sports writMi and brOadcastets rates Ohio
Columbus Grove swept past Cincinnati Moeller.
high sci"Kxi OOtball teams in the seoond
Dola Hardin Northern to take
Even though Avon Lake -"'Y Associated Press pol of 2004, by
dvtsi6ns, wtth won-lOst record anct
.over the top spot in the was No. I on more ballots OtiSAA
total!X)ints (first-place wtes in parentheses):
DIVISION I
'
Division VI rankings in the than any other team, its lead
t , C1n. Colerain (23) 4-0 .
325
second weekly A ~sociated over No. 2 Columbus
2, Lakewood St Edward (7) 4-Q
296
3, Cle. St tgr\alius (2) 4.(}
2S.
Press poll of the season.
Brookhaven still was cut in
4, Warren Harding 4-0
235
Hardin Northern had led half. Ahead by 51 points after
5. C1n. Moeller 4-0
210
6, Marion Harding 4&lt;1
148
Columbus -Grove by seven last week 's voti ng. the' 7,
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 4-0
·tt9
'~ints after last week's initial Shoremen now nre in front by
e. Massllkm Jaci&lt;son (2) 4-Q
89
9, Cin. Elder 3-1
78
poll but now trails the · 25
points.
Macedonia tO.
Centerville (t) 4-Q
51
Bulldogs by 12 points in the Nordonia climbed two spots
receiving 12 or more points: 11 , Cle.
rankings released Tuesday.
to third, Springboro moved Others.
Glenville 42. ~~- Cin. LaSalle (1) 24. 13.
The
Bulldogs
jo in up three to fourth and ·Warren Westerville S. 20. 14, Wadsworth 13.
DIVISION I
Cincinnati Colerain. Avon Howland climbed a rung to
t , Avrxr Lake (26)4-Q
319
Lake, Steubenville, Versailles tifth.
2, Cols. Brookhaven (6).4-0
294
200
3, Macedonia Nordonla 4-0
and Amanda-Clearcreek in
Steubenville and Hoban are
168,
4, Springboro (1 )4-Q
the No. 1 slot.
followed
by Columbus
151;
5, Warren HQWiand 4-0
6, Pickerington Central 4-0
Steubenville owns the Watterson,
St..
Marys
§f
7. Chardon 3-1
largest lead of any of the top Meq10rial and Canal Fulton · · 8, Uniontown Lake 3·1
88
9, Maumee 4-0
49
. teams, 49 points over Akron Northwest ·m. Divi sion Ill. 10.
45
New Philadelphia 4-0
Hoban. while Avon Lake Northwest moved up four
receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
received the niost first-place spots from the first to the sec- Others
Tallmadge 44. 12, Jackson 43. 13, Sylvania
Southview 36. 14 (tie), Louisville (2) ,
votes (26) and Amanda- ond poll .
Steele, Cin. Glen Este 33. 17.
Clearcreek had the highest
Versai lles was just a notch Amherst
Barberton 25. 18 (tie), Maple Hts., Trenton
point total (331).
behind Steubenville in terms Edg'eWOOd 23. 20, Akr. Garfield 21 . 21. Cin.
(1) 19. 22, Pataskala Watkins
Trailing the tqp two teams of . dommaung Its diVIsiOn, Withrow
Memorial 18. 23 (tie) , Lexington, Copley
in
Division
VI
are pihng up a 48-pomt edge 16. 25, Tol. Cent Cath. 13.
DIVISION III
Monroeville, Danville and over No .. ~ Coldwater.
1, Steubenville (20) 4-Q
32:2
273
Sandusky St. Mary, in the Ironton moved up two spots . · 2, Akr. Hoban (5)4-Q
3. Co,ls. Watlerson (3)4-Q
24e
same order as last week.
to No. 3, followed by Delta
4, St. Marys Memorial (2} 4-Q
174
5, Can(l.l Fulton NW (1) 4-0
151
Colerain led the No. I vot- and Belliare.
6, Day. Cham i nade-Juli~nne (2) 3·1 149
ing by just four point~ over
Amanda-Glearcreek led by
Lisbon Beaver (1) 4-0
149
96
Lakewood St. Edward a week 43 points ufter the first poll · 8, Cle. Benedictine 3-1
9. Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 3-1 65
ago. but expanded that inar- and maintained that exact 10. Cols. Beechcroh (1) 4..0
49
gin to 39 points this week. margin over Manon Pleasant.
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11,
The rest of the top five St. Henry was rhird, North Washington C.H. Miami Trace 35. 12, Akr.
Buchtel 30. 13, Napoleon (1) 25. 14,
remain the same and in the Lima South Range No. 4 and Cambridge
22. 15, Chardon NDCL 21 . 16,
same order: Cleveland St. Findlay Liberty-Benton fifth.

Prep football notebook
Rains wash away games

Lima Shawnee 19. 17, SL l&gt;afis Graham
17. 1B (tie), Cirdevi!e LOQ8!1 Em, Al&lt;r.
Coventry 15. 20. Hubbard 13. 21 , Newark
Lid&lt;ing Valley \2.

'

DIVISION IV

t . Va!sailles (23)4-Q
319
2. Coldwater (3) 4-Q
271
3. lrooton (3) 4-Q
220
4. Delta (1)4-Q
188
5, Bellaire 4-Q
171
6, Youngs. Mooney (t) 3-t
146
7, Plain City Jonathan Alder (2) 4-0 141
8 , Akr. Manchester (2)4-Q
127
9, Huron(1)4-0
114
10, Martins Ferry 3-0
90
recei~ing

Others

12 or more points: 11 ,
Upper Sandusky 46. 12 (lie), Youngs.
liberty, Perry 27. 14, Youngs _Ursuline 15

DIVISIONV
1, Amanda-G!earcreek (21) 4-0
2, Marion Pleasant (6) 4-0

3, Sl. Henry (4)4-Q
4, N. LimeS. Range 4.0
5, Findlay Liberty-Benton 4-9
6, Woodsfield Monroe Cent.( 1) 4.0
6, Sycamore Mohawk 4.0
8, Gates Mills Gilmour (2) 4.-Q
9, Mineral Ridge 4-0
10, Hamler Patrick Henry (1) 4-0

331

2e8
224
203
147

t t0
110
84
76
63

Others reCeiving 12 or more PQints: 11,
Delphos St. John's 45. 12, Warren JFK {1)
37. 13, Johnstown-Monroe 33. 14, New
Middletown Spring. 29. 15, liberty Center
27. 16, W. Uberty-Salem 21 . 17, W.
Lafayette Ridgewood 19. i S (tie);
Middletown Fenwick, Rootstown 16. 20,
Dalton 15. 21, Ashland CrosMow 13.

DIVISION VI
·1, Columbus Grove (13)' 4-0
2, Dola Hardin Northern (8) 4-0
3, Monroeville (2} 4-0
4. Danville (2) 4-Q
5, Sendusky Sl. Mary (1) 4.()
6, Mectlanlcsburg (1 } 4.0 .
7, NewarkCath.{1)3·1
B. Mogadore (1)3-1
9, McComb 3·1
..
10, E . Canton (3) 4-0

283
276
237
212
195

136

107
76
65
51

Others receiving 12·or more points: 11, Cle.
CuyahOga Hts. 43. 12, Norwalk St. Paul (2)·
40. 13, New M9.tamoras Frontier 35. 14,
Windham 33. 15, Richmond Hts. (1}29. 16,
Troy Christian (1) 26. 17, Bascom
Hopewell-Loudon 23. ta. Hd&lt;sville 22. 19,
Shadyside 20. 20, Glouster Trimble 17.

and stadiums

2004

Blue ~els defeat
Eagles m four at
Fastem,B1

Weekly computer ratings .
por- lolo(lop'•· """-""'Ill'- wltli-

OOIIJI1811S (AI')- HoN n tho'tlnltWoeidy-""""""" roqa tram .. Orio- -A
Rollr(jo
ond I1IQioo
ond ~Iiipoinlll
in~- to IOgiOnOI ~);
A1g1an 1-1, l'/amln HarOO!J (+0) 10.1250. 2. ~St. Edwa«&lt; (+0)9.7500.3,
CleW. Sl Q'lab(+O) 9.2650. 4, Nonti Olmsled (+0) 9.2500. s,'lllur,g. -.f'ltcll
(+OJ o.~. e. Elllillab Nontl (+OJ e.07SO. 1. Solon (3-11 7.4000. s. StrongsviiiOo ca-11

t 11!50. 9, CIM. OlorMIIe (3-1 J 7.0750. 10, CIM. Kervledy ~3-1) 5.0000., "rod-rill

iloalon2-1 Mloi.Jad&lt;.son(+O) ti .175(J:2,Hudson(3-1 B.3250.3,-(+0)
7.7500. 4, Tol bosale. (3-1l7.i750. 5, Groen (3-1) 6.1750: , Tol. Bowsl18r (3-1)5.275fr
7 (tie), Cant. Mci&lt;Inloy (2·2 , Tol. seca (3-1) 5.0750, 9, Tot St. John~ (2-2) 4.11250. 10.
Bn.nswldt (2·2) 4.0250.
.
.
11-1 . Plc!olrtnglon Norlh (4-0l 9.5750. 2. Malton Harding 14-01 9.2080. 3,
.
1Q10n Kllboumo 13-1 )e.SiiOO..• . Dl.lllln S&lt;:iolo (3-1) e.3750. s (tiel, l:kJillin Colfmln
(3-s&amp;i,Weotoro'ltto Sooiti (3-1) 7.1750. 7, Spring. Norlh (3-t)e.7500. a, Uma SeniOr (3-1! .
6.
9.lanculer (3-1) 6.2000. 10, Newarl&lt;(3-1)5.3500.
.
.
Rog1qn 4-1, Cin. I.ASalle (+0) 11.4000. 2, Cln. Moeller (ol-0)1 0.9760. 3, Cln. Col8rain
10,5000.4, W.Chester'-- W. (4-0) 9.4500
. . 5, Centerville (+0) 9.4100.6, FalrtlOin
oQ) 6.4780. 7, Kottertng FalrmQnt (+O) B2260. 8, Ube[IYl\Yp. Ul«&gt;la E. (4-Q) 7.6750. 9,
. Elder "'-1) 7.5500. 10, Cln. St. Xavier (3-11 6.6750.
·

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)
E

~ TaJrnadgO (4.()) 8.900Q.~·
~
'lloalcO\ 11-1.
2, Macedonia No«&lt;anla (WI 8.301)0. 3, Wanen

HcMfilnd (+O) B.2040. • . GMield Heljhts (+0) 7,nso. 5, Akron t'larlield (3-1) 7.1250. 8.
Chalml (3-1) 6.4500. 7, ,Parma Normandy (3-1) 6.3500. e, _Coploy (3·1) 6.3000. '9,
Olfr*ed Fells (3-1) 6.2500. 10, ~ Hts. (3-1)6.0500.
·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

11-1 Ma!IIIH (4-Q) 9.1500. 2, Amherst Steele (4-0) 6..1260. 3, Sytyanla
SoutfMew (4-0i 7.0000. 4. l.eiOOgton (+0) 7.7000. 5, AYOO Lake (+0) 72250. 6, Oregon
Clay (3-1) 7:o71l0. 7, L-CenterOientangy \3-1)7.0250.8, Tal. Cent. Ceth. (3-1)5.9760.
9, Tlllln Columbian (3-1) 5.9000. 10, Ashlalid 3-1) 4.9760.
.
•
7,-1, Colo. Brool&lt;liaven (4-Q) 8.7500. 2, Unlon!OOn Lake (3-1) 8.7250. 3 (tlo).
Canlold (3-1) New Phiadellhla (4-Q) 7.8500. 5, Plckortng!on Cenlrul (4-Q) 7.5000. 6.
Cerrchln
6.6250. 7, Looisvilko 14-c) 6.5500. 8, PataSkala Wall&lt;ins Memor\al (4-0)
6.0750. 9,
Marlon Fronldirt (3- 1~.8250. 1o. Cols. West (4.0)5.%90.
··
11-t (tie), Cin. Glen Esle 4-Q), Cln . Withrow (+0) 10.0250. 3, Springboro (+0)
.-on(«) B.1750.
(+OJ 7.6000. ChilkX&gt;Ihe (3-11 7.3000. 1.
OOV.Col. Wl1lte(3-1)6.8000. B, Day. Durl&gt;ar (3-1) 6.5500. 9, Cin. McNicholas (3-1) 8.2500.
10, Cln. TIJrpln (3-1) 8.)500.
-

o.401ltl. ·•,

a.

.
·
DIVISION Ill
.
.
.
1-1, Akron Hobao (4-Q) e.4SOO. 2, Aleron Co\lerltry (4-Q) 7 er;Jfl. 3, Chardon
NO-Cathedral Latin (4.0) 7.3000. 4, Cleve. Benedlcllne (3-1)6.6000. 5, Bay VDiage Bey (40) 6.5690. B...buya.l=ails Welsh JeouR (3-1) 6.2900. 7, Werrensvih Hta. (+01 6.11750, e,
Medil\ft amY&amp; (3-1) 6.0250. 9, Medina Highland (1- t) 5.99B(l. 10, Hubberd (3-o) 5.9263.
n Jll-"1, Cola. Wett011100 (4.Q) e.8250. 2, Uma Shawnee (4.()) 7.825(). 3. Colo.
(4oQ) 7.8750. 4, Cols. EaslmoOr Acad. (4-Q)7.3000. 5, Bei~M~e (3-1)e.9250. 6,
Nopo
(W)6.6750. 7, Clyde (3-1) 6.5000. B, Canal Wincheoter (3-1.) 5.7000. 9. Konlon
(3-1) 5.5500. to, Sunbury-Big Walnul (3-1) 5.2000.
Aoglon 11-1. Steuben'o11te (4.0) 9.8640. 2, Conal Fulton N.W. (4-0) 8.3500. 3, I.Jobon
8eaYo&lt; (4-0) 6.3000. 4, Oover (3-1) 7.0500. 5, Cambridge (3-Q) 7.0310. 8, Voung. Rayon
(3-1) 6.3000. 71,T)1omvllle Sl1er1dari (3-11 5.8750. 8, Bekill wesreraneh (2-H)5.7000. 9,

=

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Proud to be apart. ofyour lif.e. ·
.

Subscribe today • 446-2342.
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llH{U'I',I:'&lt;.f'U', g,,•,·~'\1

SPORTS

Meigs should get federal help, emergency officials .say

• Marauders prepped for
Dragons' aerial assault.
See Page81

no justitlcation for leavi ng Meigs
County out."
.
Strickland has sent a letter to Gov.
. POMEROY -· Meigs Count; can Bob Taft on behalf of Meigs Co unty
expect to be included in a federal dis- residents.
aster declaration, according to Rep.
"I respectfully urge you to declare
Ted S~rickland.
Meigs County a state disaster area
"The need is certainly evident and I and seek a presidential declaration as
would be very surprised if Meigs residents there .seek to rebu ild their
County did not receive a federal dec- homes and lives," the letter said.
laration," Strickland said. "There is
Meigs County already has received a
BY

TtM MALONEY

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

state deClaration, which triggers help
from the Red Cross, and 50 percent
reimbursemeni for infrastructure costs.
The important declaration is the
federal one.
Betwee n 65 and 75 homes have been
damaged in Meigs County. Qualifying
for federal disaster relief is going to be
critical for those residents who need
help from the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA ).

"It would be another d"aster if we
did n ot get a federal declaration," said ,
Bob Byer, director of the Meigs County
Emergency Management .A-gency.
Almusl every resi denl who caUs the
EMA office '"ks. "when is FEMA
co 111 i.ng ._,..
Understahly. Byer ha' been worried
about the feJeral de&lt;:l aration. espcPiease see Help, AS

-

GOP headquarters open

&lt;

DIVISIONV
'
FMgton 17-1, Minefal Ri&lt;t9e (4-0) 7.9500. 2 (lie), Gal.. Mills Gilmour Acad. (4-0),
.Aoot81oWn (4-Q) 6.8500. 4, Labrae (3-1) e.4250. 5, N. LimaS. Range (+0) 6.1250. &amp;.
Dation (4-Q) 5.38'ro. 7, Columbiana Ciesiview (3-t) 5.2990. 8, New Middlelown ~
(3-1) 4.7250:9, Smlth'l\lle (3-1) 4.4400. 10, Columbiana (3-1)4.4000.
..
111-1 , Hamler Patriclc Henry (4-0) 6.3500. 2, Ashlend Crostview (4-Q) 6.2250. 3,
St JoM's (3-t) 5.7750. 4, ,Sycamore Mohawk (4-0~
.7500 . 5, Bluffton (4-01

e. Findlay UberiY·Benlon (4-0) 5.3750. 7, Archbold

3-l) 4.8500. 6, SherWood
(2-2)4.2250.
Rtglon 1!1-t, Amenda-Cie- (+0)7.6130. 2. Jollnslown·!.lonroe (4.Q) 7.3750. 3,
IW. Lalayelle Aldllewood (+0) 6.5500. ·4, Woodslla!O Monroe Cenirel (4-0) 6.4250. 5,
· \'lhOelereburg (3·1) 5.8500. ~.Johnstown Northridge (3·1) 5.0600. 7, Coel Grova
aryant (~1) 6.0500. e, SugarGrtM! Berne Unkln (3-1) 4.7500. 9, Belpre (3-1) 4.5870; 10;
Ctooksvllf (3-1) 4.1250. .
.
.
•
• fllaiO&lt;l:!0-1, W.., L~rty&amp;lem (4.())6.7750. 2. Sl Henry (4-0)6.3750.3, l.Bea Creek
E. Clnlxln (4~3000. 4, Marlon Pleasant (4-0)5.9750. 5, Cola. Har11ey l3-1) 5.2250. 6,
Anna (3-1) 4.
. 7, Shn&gt;der Paldela Acedamy (3-1) 4.7250. B, GrandvieW HIS. (3-1)
4.5750. 9, Bl!hop Fenwick (3-1) 4.4830. 10, Chill. Zone Trace (3-1) 4.~260.
'

Fairview (3-1) 4.7250. 9, Uberty Ctr, (3-1)4.5500. 10, Lorain C

INSIDE

0--

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calendar.
The winner will be highlighted on the cover. ·\I

•

,.

· • University of Cincinnati
helps fund developments
near campus.
SeePage A&amp;

Friends of Maitha Clark carry flood-damaged items from her home on Third Street in Racine.
The 82-year-old grandmother had just recently moved to Racine frDITJ Nelsonville, and lost
everything she owned in'1:he flood . (Tim Malone)l/photo)
•

••,.

In Racine, some lose more than others

,.
I'
)

BY TIM MALONEY

Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to

~otnt ~leasant
l\egiiter
"Pet calendar"
20() Main St

Daily Sentinel

RACINE- Friends and relatives of Martha Clark of 309
Third St. in Racine trudged in
and &lt;,JUt of her waterlogged
apartment, carrying one muddy
thing after another.
A few things, like cookware and a plant, they loaded
into a van,
Everything else was piled
alongside the b1.1i !ding, lost
to the flood. Her grandson,
Tom· Proffitt, somberly
reported that the 82-year-old
Clark was devastated.
"It's very hard to see all

WEATIIER

Please see Racine, A5

Steve Tatterson, Sam Terzopolous, John Core and Mark Mattox
work to clear debris from the walking path in Pomeroy. (Tim
Maloney/ photo) .
·

Bv TtM MALONEY
NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

INDEX
2 SI!CTIONS -

.
16 PAGl!S

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics
Dear Abby

'

.

87
A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go .

AS

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

(fl 2004 Ohio Volley PubtlllhiDJ Co.

r

.

POMEROY
-Thirty
members of the National
Guard ·arrived in Meigs
County Wednesday to a5sist
in flood cleanup~
Many of the men and
women have returned recently from duty in Afghanistan,
said Major Steve Fleischman,
commanding
officer.
Between .the hurricanes and
overseas duty, there ar~:n't
many spare Guard members
left in Ohio.
"There isn't an engineer Members of the National Guard roll out of the Meigs County
of Highway Department garage area near. the fairgrounds at
anywhere
north
Columbus," Fleischman said.
Rocksprings. Expected to be here at least a week, they startPlUM 1H Gurd, A5
ed working Wednesday in Racine. (Tim Maloney/ photo).

Salvation Army volunteers, Larry Nichols and Ken Willie. 1
passed out free lunch to hungry workers taking a break from
cleaning up after the flooding. The Salvation Army also distributed free water. coffee. tea and donuts. On Thursday
morning they are even serving a pancake and bacon break·
fast. Willie and Nichols were recently working in Marietta
where they reported. seeing srx inches of mud after the flooding. As far as how long the Salvation Army will be parked in
the Pomeroy parking tot. Willie said. ·we 'll be here until they
get rid of us, or don't need us anymore. " '(Beth
Sergenl/photo)

In celebration of.Women's Health Month, Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Wellness is proud to present their 7th An11ual

Sunday, September 26

l

2:00 PM - 3:00 PM - Program
3:00 PM - 4:30 PM - Health Fair

An e.ent fw niOII-oen, do"ffhlor&gt;, gronJrnolil&lt;n, ""'"'• sisters•
rmJ oil al ""' imporlgnt """"""" in ovr IM:.I

t!.~a~l!~~i!~ '!~ .4~~~! _!! !~e,:l~'!':. ~-~s_s~~ __ ~~~'~!'.~~ -4~~~~ ~:
'

Salvation Army pitches in

National Guard·arrives,
should be here at least a week

DetlllllonPtt&amp;oA7

"Pet calendar"
111 Court St · · ~

'~ .,_..,., ., ... '~.:tA t.\ .:Ar ,~· iiv' :.f

The official opening of the Meigs County Repub lican Party
headquarters in the Union Avenue build1ng at the intersection
of Route 7 took place Wednesday afternoon. A ribbon cutting
by- the candidates preceded a· ra lly of the party faithful.
Candidates from the left are Jim Sheets. commissioner, term
beginning Jan. 3; Howard E. Frank, treasurer; Gene Triplett.
engineer; Joy Padgett. Ohio Senate. 20th District; Ji mmy
Stewart, Ohio House of Representatives. 92nd · District:
Delmar G. Pullins, commissioner, term beginning Jan. 2: Kay
Hill, recorder: Marlene Harrison. clerk of courts: Robert E.
Beegle, sheriff, and Pat Story, prosecuting attorney. Pictured
on the right with the candidates is Bernard Gilkey, chairman ·
of the Meigs County Republican Central Committee . (Charlene
Hoeflich/ photo)

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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"Pet calendar"
825 Third Avenue

'

n.glGn 1~1 ..Al&lt;roll Manchooter (3-Q) 7.3850. 2, Parry (4.())7.1500. 3, Gartlald His.
1l1nltY (3-1) e,7500..4, 'lbung:Mooney (3-116.8500. 5, Yoli1Q. Llberry (4-Q) 6.1500. B. Giro«&lt;
(3-1) 5.2750. 7, Garrettsvilla Garfletd (3-1 5.0500. 8, Sullvan Black River (3-1.) 5.0250. 9,
'lour1Q. Ur&amp;uine (3-1) 5.0100.1 0, Navane Falr1eSS (3-1) 4.9250.
.Roalon 14.-'1, Huron (4.Q) 8.6750. 2, Coldwalsr (4.0)7.4500. 3, Upper SondUlil&lt;y (4-Q)
7.2500. 4, Della E\6.2500. 5. Tonlogeny Otsego (4.())6.1750. 6, Urbana (3-1) 5.9500.
7, Moun! Gilead 3·1 ·S.e750. 8, Castana Margarerta (3-1) 4.3150. 9, Sheffield Brookside
(3-1) 4.1750. 10,
1onf (2·2) 4.1420.
.
Roalon 15-1 , Bellaire .(4-Q) 8.1300. 2. Ironton (4.Q) 7.7000. 3, Martins Ferry \3-o)
6.66&amp;&gt;. 4, Porternouth (3-1) .5]250. 5, New Albeny (3-1) 4.9160. 6, Belmoni Union Local
(3-1) 4.7890. 7, Granville (3-1) 4.4500. e, Wellston (3·1)4.375(). 9, CadiZ Harr~on Cenl.,
(:3-1) ·4.2750.10, Albany Ale&gt;candor (3-1) 3.6500.
'
n.g!Gn 111-1 Plain Ctiy .Jonalhon Alder (4-0) B.1250. 2, Ver!i81Hes (4-0) 6.6000. 3,
Reading (3-I) 6.2250. 4, Brookville (3-t) 5.8710. 5. Balavia (4-01 5.7000. 6, Clri. ·
Flnneytown (3-1)5.6470. 7, Cln. Madeira (3-1) 5.4000. a, London Madison Plains (3-1)
5.3000. 9, Otriton Oakwood (3-1) 4:7120.10, Cin. Marlerroot (2·2) 3.9640. •
•

2005 Pet Calendar!

·~ ~allipoHi 19ailp
•· •
m:rtbune

I

, -.

r

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n.glGn 12-l, Wastt CH MiamiTraoe (4-o) 6.4750. 2, St arys Memor1al (4-0) 7.8000.
3 Day.ChanNulle&lt;me (3-1) 7.6000. 4, Graham Local (3-1) 6.9750. 5, Cirdellllo Logan Ebn
(~) 6.0750. 6, Cilele\ltlle (3-1) 5.6250.7, Nowarl&lt; l.lcl&lt;lng Volley (3- t) 5.5750. e. Cln.lndian
Hill (3-1) 5.1750. 9, Lane. l=airfleld Urion (3-1)4.9250. 10. Arohblaoop A~er (2·2)4.B200.

Send us a
:~ photo of
t: your
I favorite
••• •
et
·and
!:
. hey
\ might be---::::~~~~
voted into our

l:

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- ' " " " ' " Creoi&lt; cs-11 5.~. 10, cant. Cent camJ3-1J 5.0500.

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DIVISION IV

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&amp;U

tied a school record with 16 and also returned a fumble Huron's Bob lsphording
RusTY MtLLER
catches
for 206 yards.and one 25 yards for a score in kicked a 43-yard field goal in
Associated Press
TD - he also had an inter- Middlefield Cardinal's 36-27 a 31-7 win at Oak Harbor,
setting a stadium record.
ception and threw a TO pass victory over Wickliffe.
DIVISION VI
,
Some teams may have to _ . in a 31-28 victory over
STREAKING: Lexington
Keith Schrock picked up
FMgton 21-t Eaal canton (4-01 7.0500.'2. Sl Mary Ci1!11ral Catholic ~4-0) 8.1750. 3,
wait as long as Leetonia did Defiance; Cincinnati La beat Mansfield Senior for the his 200th career victory Monrot!';llle (4-o) 6.0750. 4, Mogadore (3-t) 5.9260. 5, CIM. Cuya. HIS. +0) 5.7000. 6,
~
5.3250. 7, Richrnood His. (4-Q)5.0B90. e, Norwalk St Paul :3-1)4.6750. 9,
to fina11y get a home game.
Salle QB Tyler Sheehan first time in 13 years, 48-25; the most ever in Wayne Woll$vllle 13-t)
3-ti4.5920.10, Clreorw.1ch s.caniroJ (3-11 4.4000.
• ·
FMgton 22-1, lla6eem flopeweiH.oudon (+0) 5.4250. 2, Hk::tcsViile (4-0) 5.3000. 3,
Several eastern Ohio teams came off the bench to throw Tyler Hale scored the win- County- in Smithville's 26GrtMI (4.Q) 5.0750. 4, Mo Comb (3-1) 4.7250. 5, N. Baltimore (4.()) 4.5500, 8,
lost their home playing fields for . 153 yards and two TDs ning TO for the second week 0 win over Rittman. The ,Co!Uinbus
Edgor1on (3-1) 4.3750. 7, An~ (3-1) 4.32li0. B. Delphos Jettsrson (3-1) 3.8500. 9,
because of last week's flood- and run for 179 yards and in a row as Colonel Smithies didn't pull away Alilea- East (2·2) 3.4250, 10, ~elpslc (2;2)2.8000.
.
. lloglon23-1, NewMa!arr&lt;&gt;rasFrohlier(s-6)5.4993. 2. Danville \+0) 5.4750.; -.rk
ing, including Be11aire, three scores in a 44-14 win Crawford beat ' Buckeye until the second half.
cath. (3-1)·5.1750. 4, (J.Ol 4.5896. 5, GlouelerTnmbk&gt; 3-1) 4.67\i().o, briM.
(3-1)4.1250. 7, ShaCfl'ei(le (3·1) 3.6030. 8 (tio), Cenlerb&lt;lrg (2-2), l.allc. Fisher
Bridgeport, Be11aire St. John over Gahanna Lincoln; and Central 13-7 ·for its second
"This was just as hard as (2-2) 3.3150.10, tloweiS\oWn'Conottoo Valley (3·1f3.3390.
and East Liverpool. All may Pandora-Gilboa's
Caleb overtime win in a row; the first one," Schrock said. Calfl.
fllaiO&lt;l 24-1, Medlanlcsburg (4-0) 6.8500. 2, Oola Hardin Northem (4-0) 5.2500. 3,
have to give up the remainder Arthur had 206 yards rush- Division I No. I Cincinnati "I'm glad to get it over with TmvCMatian (4-1&gt;) 4.6250.4,Cin. Counlr}' DaV (3-t) 4.0630. 5, Covington (3-1) 3.525(). 6,
Spring. cath. Cent 12·2) 3.3750. 7 (tie), New B1emen (2·21. DeGraff AIV1110k1~ (3-1) 3.3250. ·
of their home games this .sea- ing, 137 receiving imd scored Colerain has outscored its and out of the way.':
9, Wavnoofleld.Goo~en (3-1) 2.9750. 10, S. cnartes10n SE (2·2) 2.eooo.
son because of the floodwa, 5 TDs _ three on runs, one opponents 173-25, and its
on · a pass and another on an starting defense has not
ters.
·Many games were post- interception return - in a allowed more than 1-0 net
yards rushing in any game;
paned and several were can- 56-7 win over Vanlue.
celed because of the rising · v u H R _ s A y L z • : earlier
this
season
water.
Unbeaten .Yersailles - no, it's not pro- Portsmouth .Notre Dame
Cambridge's game against nounced like the city in broke a 30-game losing· skid
Wheeling (W.Va.) Park was France defeated Fort with a 54-8 win over Harts,
postponed until Monday Recovery 40-0 for its 2l'st W.Va., and Covington had a
evening and then later can- consecutive ',¥in spanning 45-game regular-season winceled.
three seasons, marking the ning streak end with a 42-7
Meanwhile, the extended third time since 1965 the loss to Anna.
AIR
COMMAND:
road trip at Leetonia finally Tigers have won a,t least 20
came to a welcome end.
f
J
·
games in a row. The first ·Bluf ton's
aro d · D avtes
The Bears hosted their first streak was from 1965 to 1967 completed 21 of 28 passes
game at their new stadium when the Tigers won 29 for 315' yards in a 54-7 wih
after playing 13 straight on straight before dropping a 1over Paulding; Lemonthe rmid. The old stadium 26-0 verdict to Miami East. Monroe's Tad Kilburn set a
was torn down before last The second was from 1993 school record with 405 passseason and they wandered to 1996 when the they won ing yards and Pat Harrington
until they could return home. 54 in a row before fa11ing to set another school mark with
The Bears celebrated I00 Marion Pleasant in the state 226 yards receiving a 41-33
years of football at the school finals.
win over Waynesville in
GROUND-POUNDING: week three; and Chris
with more than 300 former
players and coaches in atten- Bo Frye rushed for 211 ·yards Jacqueman ran for 98 yards
dance, including Chuck on 35 ·carries as St. Marys on 23 carries and a score and
Mather, who led the Bears to Memorial beat Ottawa- completed 21 of 33 passes
(In beaten seasons in 1941 and Glandorf · 20-7;
Hoban for 242 yards and three
1945 before becoming the defeated Akron rival St. scores in Mentor's 36-24 win
offensive coordinator for the Vincent-St. Mary, 32-28, as over Chardon;
Chicago Bears' · 1963 NFL Northwestern recrui't Tyrell
GAME OF THE WEEK:
championship team.
Sutton ran for 298 yards on One of the most anticipated
The current Bears beat 32 carries and scored three games this week pits
Sebring McKinley 47-0 as times; Sparta Highland's Joe Coldwater against St. Henry.
Aaron Merrill scored three Ulrey scored four. IDs in a The last time both were
touchdowns to become the 34-14 win over Marion River unbeaten in the "Backyard
school's career scoring V;tlley to up his total to 10 in Battle" - the schools are 4
lea~~L ALL-AROUND: four games; Greg Keys had miles apart along Ohio 118
Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004
275 yards rushing and scored - was in 1976. Coldwater
Upper Sandusky's
•.our tt.·mes m
· a vtctory
·
Micheli
accounted foi Greg
over won th at encounter 21 -3 on
493 Galion;
Lima Bath's Josh the way · to a 10-0· season,
total yards and 8 touchdowns Kistler ran for ·211 yards on with St. Henry settling for a
in. a 56-I 0 win over Norwal, 28 carries in a 28-0 victory 9-1 record.
Elida;
Columbus
NOTEWORTHY:
Bob
hitting 21 .of 28 passes for over
315 yards and 6 TDs, and Grove's Blaine Maag ran for Lutz wpn his 324th game as a
rushing 19 times for 178 207 yards and four TDs on head coach when Iro~Jton
yards . and
two TDs ; 28 carries- and also had an beat Boyd County, Ky., 56-7;
-N~~~ ~~ -~~i:~---------------------------------- ·~
Sandusky St. Mary's Spencer interception and recovered a Napoleon's Josh Babcock
Dye now has 17 .touchdowns fumble - in a 30-0'win over had three interceptions in a
· in four games, rushing for Lima Central Catholic; win over Bryan; Archbold's ·~ Your Name:
~.
160 yards and three scores on McConnelsville Morgan's John Downey collected his
'·
offense and adding TDs on Derek Br;agg carried 36 200th career win in a victm;y . • Address:
kickoff returns of 89 and 84 times for a school record 265 over Evergreen; Ontano s
y.ards in a 47,28 win over yards in a win; and Ken Kyle Perry pick~d off three
Port Clinton; Lima Shawnee
5
d
d
h 46
d
is 4_0 for the first time since Bevington ran for 2 8 yar s passes an caug t a -yar
Phone·
on · 30 carries and touch- TD pass in a 26-7 win ov~r
1991 after Ryan Downard downs of I0, 34 and 80 yards Bucyrus
Wynford;
and

·•

Heallh Department
administers ftee
tetanus shots, A2

Topics discussed will include food disorders ond nulrilion. Several displays will be on·hond os well os free health
and above. A parent musl be presen1 fo,.
screenings including non-losling choleslerol ond glucose lor gi~s ages
girls under 18 ld porticipole in the screenings. • fa&lt;"""" iufonuufiOfl, ai/1 (740) .u6-5679M
:::.:E:.D...;::I:.C_A=l=C=E=N=T::::_E;;:R:.I

19

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COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

1P A ItYJ II JLv

oo :a wII cc rrM m o

•

BY THE BEND

PageA2

Thursday, September 23, 2004

Community Calendar

I Holzer

Medical Center's Girls·
Weight }os~ s~rgery for severely Time Out Set for Sunday
obese · at r1sk patients. only
'

'
BY MARTHA A. SIMPSON, D.O., M.B.A.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF FAMILY MEDICINE·
OHIO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE

•

Question: What is the dif- in both the &amp;nJount or food a obese. with at least one other
ference between the two dif- person is able to eat and'the risk factor. like diabetes.
It should be pointed out
ferent types of weight-loss percent of calories and nutri surgery that I've heard about - en ts the bodv absorbs. . RG B that there is · a group in the
- gastric bypass and lap-band can be done ·both by opening United States, the National
surgery'' What· are the bene- the abdomen or using a less- Association t6 Advance Fat
laparoscopic Acceptance (NAAFA), that
tits of each? Is one better than invasive
feels all gastrointestinal
approach.
the other''
The lap-band ·surgery is weight loss surgeries should
Answer: You've cotTectly
identitied two common surgi- .short fo r laparoscopic band- . be discontim,ted as they are
cal procedures· for weight ing. In thi ssargery, a scope is hazardous, and in mary cases.
loss. The tirst surgery of this used to enter the abdominal ineffective in the long-term.
type was developed in the cavity. A restrictive band is · The dec.ision to have
1950s. and since then a num- place high on 'the stomach. weight loss sitrgery should be
. ber of procedures have been This Iimits the amount of food undertaken with a medical
used with varying degrees of that can be eaten. The lap- team that carefui·Iy lays out all
band is also adjustable by the of the risks, benefits and possuccess and risk.
Gastric bypass surgery usu- patient. The band has an sible complications of this ·
They
ally means the surgeon has inner surface that can be major procedure.
performed a" Roux-en-Y int1ated and detlated using should also help you to develGastric Bypass.. " or RGB saline. This procedure is rela- op realistic expectations for
The most connnon weight- tively new to the United yo ur life after surgery and
loss surgery in the Uni ted States, bm has been used in · weight loss. Many people
States, it combines a Raux- Europe, Asia and Australia for think, being thinner will solve
en- Y procedure with some severa l years, with good all of their problems. It does..
form of" stomach reduction." results. For some reason , not.
The Raux-en-Y 'technique -- weight loss results so far have
Family Medicine® is a
developed by a French sur- not been as impressive in ·the weekly co lumn . To submit
·geon, Dr. Phillibart Raux. in United States as in other parts questions, write to Mw·tha A.
Simpson, D.O., MBA , Ohio
the 19th ceniUry -- involves of I he world.
College . of
Both of these surgeries University
rerouting the small intestine
so that food empties into it' have risks and benefits. Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Surgeons usually ·explain Box 110, Athens, Ohio 45701,
instead of the stomach.
A complete RGB ·involves these to prospective patients or l'ia e-mail to readerquesseveral steps. First. a small before any surgical procedure tion s@fa m i l,wnedic inenews. o
stomach pouch is created to is agreed upon. The recom- ' !?· . Medical information in
restrict food intake. This can mendation as to which is best tlzis column is provided as an
be done either by stapling or depends on the patiein's med- educational se rvice only.
vertical banding. Next. a sec- ical history, current health sta- It does not replace the judf5·
tion of the small intestine is tus and other factors unique to metrl of your personal physiattached to the pouch to allow the individuaL Pleast; keep in cian, who should be relied on
food to bypass the lower . mmd, however, that : weight to diagnose and recommend
stomach and the tirst two seg- loss surgery is not for every- treatment for mty medical
ments of the small intestine one. Most physicians will conditions. Past columns are
(duodenUI]l and jejunum). only perform the surgery on availableonline at www.famiThe end result is a reduction people who are severely lymedicinenews.org.

GALLIPOLIS .. -. !he
Seventh Annual Gtrls Ttme
~ut " will be held ~rom 2 to
4.30 p.m. Sunday 10 Holzer
Medical Ce~lter's E~ucation
&amp; Conference Center.
Sponsored by the HMC
Commumty Health and
Well ness Department, thi s
special event is partially funded by the Ohio Department of
Health, Bureau · of Health
Promotion
and
Risk
Reduction, Sexual Assault

Public meetings
Thursday, Sept. 23
POMEROY - A meeting
for the presentation and dis. cussion of the Ohio Health
Care aci to initiate a petition
campaign will be hehl at 7
p.m. at the Pdmeroy Public
Library.
Presented
by
Southeastern Ohio SPAN,
with Bob Smiddie , 6983415,. and Linda Dye, 6986050, as the presenters. ·
Saturday,Sept.25
A
REEDSVILLE
hunters safety course will be
- held at the Forked Run
Sportsmen Club, Sept. 25
: and 26. Hours o Saturday are
: from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on
Sunday, 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. For
additional information, call
740-985-9817 after 5 p.m.
. The course· is sponsored by
the Forked Run Sportsmen ·
Club.
·
Monday, Sept. 27
POMEROY - The office
of Vital Statistics at the
·Meigs
County
Health
Department will be closed
· from noon to 4 p.m. normal
business hours will resume at
8 a.m. Tuesday.
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission will
meet at 9 a.m. at the office,
17 Memorial Drive.
POMEROY- The Meigs
Co. Library regular board
· meeting will be held at 3 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Library.

cence and adulthood.
"Females have many specia! challenges in life, and at
this event we strive to effecti vely address the importance
of wellness and prevention o(
diseases not only to th. e adults
.
.
m . our comm~ntiY: but our
youth as well . satd Bon me
McFarland,
RN,
BSN .
Duector, HMC Commulltty
Health
and
Well ness
Department.

Weight
Watchers
meeting
'

COOLVILLE
Amy sented by Doris Buchanan on
Hendrix . was recognized as Green Tea. Tops meets every
the top loser for the quarter Tuesday. Weigh in . begins at
by Tops 2013, Cool ville at its 5:15pm and the meeting
recent meeting held' at the begins at 6:30 p.m. Anyone
Torch Baptist Church.
. interested . should contact Pat
There was a tie for weekly Snedden at 662-2633 or
best loser between Sandy attend a free meeting.
Wright and Hendrix. Tops fall
At Tuesday night's meeting
rally will be held Oct. 2 at Betty Coen won the cenitiLancaster High School. The cate and fruit basket. The
evenings program was pre- food and exercise charts were

discussed and the club
planned a ski t to be performed at the f!lll rally. lt was
notetl that four members
attended .a Tops workshop in
Procterville. A new contest
was discussed and will start
next week. A re ading on
courage was read by Snedden
and a CD on encouragement
by loraine Sargent was
·
.
played:

Red Cross open.to meet
MIDDLEPORT The
American Red Cross is open
to meet with families and
individuals whose homes
were affected by floodwaters .
Hours will be 8 a.m.-3:30
p.m. at:the Department of Job
and Family Services, 175
Race St., Middleport.

· Red Cross Family Service
workers will be meeting with
those who have immediate,
emergency needs such as
food or clothing. Please bring
identification showing your
current address.
.
For information or to contact a Red Cross·representa-

live, call the Dep31'!ment of
Job and Family Services at
992-2117, ext. II 0 or ,I 03.
Also, cleanup kits are
available at the Community ·
Center located on Mulberry
Avenue.

Additional traffic .changes
set ·for 35 in Ross C.,o unty
STAFF REPORT ·
NEWSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHILLICOTHE - Witl;l
an acceleration agreement
for completion of the U.S.
35 relocation project in
Ross , County, contractors
for the Ohio. Department of
Transportation will expedite construction at the
western terminus of the
project zone and impart
additiomil lane restrictions
in the coming week.
On Monday, Sept. 27,
cr.ews from
Kokosing
Construction Co. will close
access to Township Road
· 288 (Schrader Road) from
westbound U.S. 50. This
closure will remain in
effect for about six weeks
while the contractors complete bridge ·construction;
traffic on eastbound U.S.
50, however, will continue

•

and Domestic Violence, Ohio
UmvefSlty Area Health
Edu~ation Center, AHEC,
Galhpohs BPW and the
Gal!ia
County
Medical
Soctety. .
.
Gtrls Ttme Out. a spec tal
program for mothers, daughters, grandmothers, sisters and
other special . women in our
life, stresses the need of starting a healthy lifestyle at a
youn~ age and continuing that
pracllcc throughout adoles-

to be maintained.
In addition, they will
close the existing westbound U.S . 35 ramp to U.S.
50 in order to complete
reconstruction of the tie-in
to the new U.S. 35 roadway. This closure will be
imparted Sept. 27, as ~ell,
and it will remain in effect
until traffic has been
diverted onto the new
alignment. While the ramp
is closed, motorists will be
detoured by way of U.S. 35
West
to
the. Main
Street/U.S. 50 West exit at
Chillicothe and then back
to U.S. 35/50 East.
Crews have already.
altered other traffic patterns at the U.S. 35150
split, which is located near
the 25-mile marker and just
passed the Kilgore Bridge
,east of Chillicothe. On
Monday of this week, the

contractors closed U.S. 35
at the split ·and routed traffic by way of U.S. 50 over
the newly-constructed connector. In addition ' to the
change it:~ traffic patterns , a
13-foot · height restriction
has been imposed to allow
for the railroad overpass.
The Ross-35 Corridor
project is the last step of
the multi-phase project .to
construct the entire corrido-r, making U:S. Route 35
a four-lane highway from
Dayton .to Gallipolis.
Kokosing Construction
was awarded a contra~t in
April 2002 of around $45
million to complete the
9.4-mile project; and the
majority of construction is
expected to be completed'
by Dec. I.

Clubs and
· organizations .
Thursday, Sept. 23
TUPPERS PLAINS '

Health Deparbnent administers free tetanus shots
'

Linle said donations will be
accepted.
The 100 shots which the
agency started out with
Tuesday morning were all
gone by the end .of the day.
The
Emergency
Management Agency came
to the rescue and art;lllged
for an additional supply to be
flown into the Gallipolis airport and delivered to
Pomeroy in time for the
Courthouse dinic. ··
"Everyone who hasn't had
a shot in the past five years
needs to get one," said Little.
" If this new r supply is
exhausted, we' ll get more.
The important thing now is

BY CHARLENE HoiRJCH

HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSEN'RNEL.COM
. POMEROY Tetanus
: (lockjaw) and diphtheria are
• serious diseases and Connie
•
Little, a Meigs County
Health Department nurse,
was walking Pomeroy streets
. Wednesday
encouraging
: those who had worked
• around flood water to get
. their shots.
A mini-clinic was in operation at the Counhouse for an
hour yesterday afternoon .
Today shots are being given
• at the Health Depanment
·: office all day, 8:30 a.m. to 4
: p.m. 1be shots are free, but

FREE

1\~PECTIO\

that those who need the shots
come and get them."
· Orange flyers being distributed by Little noted the
benefits of the vaccine and
the consequences of not getting the protection.
As for immunization risks,
Little said they' re minimal.
"The risks from the vaccine
are much smaller . than the
risks from the disease if people·don't get vaccinated." ·

TUPPERS PLAINS - A
. teacher at Eastern High
. School is · inviting area
. women to join her in a
regional organization for
women.
Deborah Ray, who lives in
. Vinton, said she is the only
. area representative in the
Appalachian
Women's
Alliance. She is inviting area
women \o join her in attending the group's annual event,
called Ironweed, Saturdi!Y in
·· New Market, Tenn., 30 minutes east of Knoxville.
Ironweed is a celebration
of Appalachian Worhen

.

OFYOUR LIFE.

.....
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"'•
,.,, .,,
Bollllllln
.,.t:lal
117••
,.,

I'M Daily &amp;NiMI
Subscribe today • 992-21 SS
www.mydoilysentineLcom

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t:ee~~~w·

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2004-2005 Season Tickets
!_~=:~=:-- ~-- ~-- ---~-- . .:]
~d

Ls - L'ii - B-

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Fju~:a;,d~!r-t~;;~~~~~~!&gt;~~~~;;s

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Adult $47i Senior $40 Children $32

To order, call no\N

Mei s Coun

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\'O[R
'CHOICE

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Tw$Recliners for Only

599

PRO'UIJ!
Rocker Rediner

We have special low rates and favorable terms for ftood victims.
There are no closing costs. or fees of any kind.
This assistance is available for both consumers and businesses.
Just call us for all the details! .

•

Farmers Bank is in great shape following the fiood.
and we want oJr neighbors to be, tool

1b§9~

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DKU.IItE.~\'EI OR \lll.'G

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YOUR
CHOICE

aocm IEW.\lJ

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Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Co,mpany

.••
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candidate for Meigs

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Mason

Tuppers Plains .

Pomeroj

Gallpolls

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773.6400

985.3385

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Albany,OH

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Subscribe today • 992: 2 t 55

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Sunday Sept, 26th
1-3
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786 N. 2nd • Middleport

artists and activists. Morning
and afternoon activities will
be dedicated to providing a
space for women to' share tlie
stories and songs that reflect
the issues facing women in
the mountains . .
A concert will be held the
evening of Sept. 25, featuring
Elise Witt, the Reel World
String Band, and Wishing
Chair.
Ray alsQ is looking to
sponsor an area woman to
attend the New Opportunity
School for Women. The
school, located in Berea. Ky.,
will be held from Feb. 6-26,

Proud to be apart of your life.

the recent fl~ing, you can count on usr

•

••

·

County Commissioner

fiiTI . . . .Y

Church services

For 100 years, Farmers Bank has alwaYs been here to
help you. If you have suffered propertY damage due to

••

Paul Carter

37819 St. Rt. 689

Support Groups

Let Us Help!

PROUD TO BEAM

Fundraiser
.
for

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Other events

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·

Homecomings/ .
Reunions

the rul e,.
The cost of these measures
is minusc ule compared to a
potenthd liab il ity su it. CHRIS IN PELHAM. ALA .
DEAR CHRIS: Thank you
Dear
for the warning. One or my
Abby
readers sat on a ju ry for a
·- - - - • wrongful death 'ui t with sim.i lar circumstances and urged
me to inform "Desperate" as
fenced. I' don ' t think yo u well as other pool owne rs
went far enough.
that uninvited children using
When I was in college, part a swimm ing pool without
of a constitutional law course permtssion or pare ntal super! took covered the subject of vision should be reponed to
torts and li ability. One partie.- the police for tres pass ing.
ular case we studied stands Better to have it on record
out . in my memory. It than to ri'k being held liable
involved a family whose for an accident.
swimm ing pool was surQUOTE FOR THE DAY:
rounded by a 6-foot-high "How many peop le on Earth
locked fence. While the fam - serve people '' And how many
ily was away on vacation, people on Earth ser\'.e the
several youths sca led the Earth '' The diiTcrc ncc in the
fence and went swimming. numbers mu st be enormous.
Unfortunately, one drowned, It would reveal that the Earth
and the owners of the pool i.s definitely not the primary
were convicted of negligent concern of th e human
homicide!
species . Thi s mi ght be fatal
The ruling stated that the both to the Earth and to
owners of the pool should humanity. Please, leaders of
have contacted each neighbor the Earth and the nations.
and informed them of their wake up to this potentially
plans because .a pool is con- fatal di sparity.'' - ROBERT
sidered an "attracti ve nu·i- MULLER
sance." I would urge
Dear Abby is wrinen by
" D espe~ate" to contact an Abigail Van Buren. also
attorney who can advise her known as Jeanne Phillips,
about local law and liability. and was fou nded by her
At the very least, she should mother, Paul ine Phillips .
place a "No Trespassing" Write
Dear Abb y at
sign on the lawn, install a www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
locked fence, and send a card Box 69440. Los Angeles, CA
to the neighbors explaining . 90069.

DEAR ABBY: After reading
the
letter
from
"Desperate in Kan,as," about
uninvited gues ts showing up
to use their new swimmi ng
pool , I had to write.
Here's how my wife and I
so lved the probleni when
neighborhood children started showi ng up at all hours.
First. we decided that rules
would have to be set - and
enforced .
We began by having a sturdy fen ce and locked wroughtiron ga tes installed around
the pool area. Then we
increased the homeowner's
' liability limits on our insurance. We asked our attorney
to draw up a "liability waiver" to be signed by the parents of the chi ldren in our
neighborhood and returned to
us personall y hy the parent or
guardian . If there was no
signed waiver, the. child was
not permilled to swim.
We allocated two evenings
a week , between 6 p.m. and 8
p.m ., when the neighbors·
children were welcome to
use our pool. These were
evenings when my wife and I
would be home to sit on the
patio and watch and referee
the chi ldren. No swim)lling
would be permitted at any
other time unless by special
invitation.
"Desperate" should try our
method. Her neighbors wi ll
respect her for it. -· EXPERIENCED
IN YUMA ,
ARIZ.
DEAR EXPERIENCED:
Consider yourself fortunate
that yOllr neighbors abided
by your rules. Since I printed
that letter, I have heard some
horror stories. Read on for a
sample:
DEAR ABBY: You suggested that "Desperate in
Kansas" put a stop to the
2005, and the application drop-ins
by
becoming
deadline is Dec. 15.
assertive, installing a flagWomen living in the pole or sig ns to indicate
ApjQ!Iachian regmn who when the pool was open,
have completed high school, increasing the amount of
have a GED . (or actively homeowner insurance, and
working on a GED). and do s uggesti ng the pool be
not have a college degree are
eligible to anend the New
Opportunity
School.
be
Participants
should
approximately between the
ages of 30 and 55 and must
agree to remain on c.ampw;
for the entire three-week program, including weeken.(ls.
Anyone interested can
contact Ray at 7 40-388-8942.

•

a ,
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VFW post 9053 will meet at
MIDDLEPORT
A
7 p.m. at the hall in Tuppers singspiration will be held at 7'
Plains.
p.m. at the Victory Baptist
Friday, Sept. 24
Church in Middleport. The
SYRACUSE'
The Ladies Missionary Fellowship
Wildwood Garden Club is sponsoring the event.
members and any guests are
Saturday, Sept. 25
to meet at noon Friday at
MIDDLEPORT - Gospel
Twin Oaks for a trip to the sing with Soul' D Out at 7
Glasshouse Works.
p.m. at the Middleport
Monday, Sept. 27
Church of the Nazarene .
POMEROY - The Oh- Refreshments .
. Kan Coin Club will meet at 7
STIVERSVILLE - . Hymn
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. sing at 3 p.m. with Delivered,
Final plans will be made for Jim and Shirley Nutter, Mary
the Oct. 17 coin show.
Dailey, Joe McCloud. At 5
p.m. there will be a bean dinner bake sale .
·
Sunday, Sept. 2'6
POMEROY - The 'Eagle
Ridge Community Church will
have a noon picnic at the church.
Saturday, Sept. 25
It
will be a C'Jil)'-in dinner.
·
HARRISONVILLE
The Walter (Squib) and Edna
(Oiler) .Gilmore reunion will
be held at the Harrisonville
Fire Department lunch at
Friday, Sept. 24
'noon family and friends wei- .
MIDDLEPORT - A free
come.
chicken and noodle dinner .
RACINE - The Thomas will be served from 4:30 to
and Isabel Stobart · family 6: 30 p.m. at the Middleport ·
reunion will be held at I p.m. Church of Christ Family Life
at the Racine Star Mill Park. Center.
Take a covered dish.
Lenora
POMEROY Sunday, Oct. 3
Leifheit, Meigs County
POMEROY -Hemlock . Cooperative Parish nurse,
Grove Christian Church will and Helen Holter will be takobserve its homecoming with ihg blood pressures at
a 9:30 a.m. church service ~owell's Food Fair from 10
and Sunday school fo1lowing. a.m. to noon .
A potluck dinner wi II be held
at 12:30 p.m. at the Grange
Hall. Take a covered dish.
The homecoming service will
Thursday, Sept. 23
begin at 2 p.m. with special
POMEROY - The caring
music by Scott Brown.
and sharing support group
will meet at I p.m. at the
Meigs Senior Center. Topic
will be "Caregivers . Stress
Friday, Sept. 25
and the Holidays."

Strict pool rules may prevent
homeowner_from taking a· bath

Area teacher invites
.women to join alliance

Peggy Stout was one of many who waited in line to get a tetanus shot at a clinic which the
: Meigs County Health Department held ·at the Courthouse Wednesday afternoon. Here Leanne
: Cunningham gives Stout a shot. (Charlene Hoeflich/photo)

•

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The Daily Sentinel
Page A:3
·----------------~~~~==~~~~~--~~Th~ur=sda~y,~Se~pte~m~b~~r2~3,~2004

Proof o( llood damage may tle requved n order to qualify fOf speoal rate and temJS Lo&lt;ns subject to
cred( ;wroval and ~· Offer available 101 a rmted tJml! only.

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

Ge,neral Manager-News Editor

""

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the .
free exercise thereof; or _abridging the freedom
· of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Gopernment for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the

u.s. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Sept. 23, the 267th day of 2004. There
are 99 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History : On Sept. 23, 1779, during the
Revolutionary War, the American warship "Bon Homme
Richard" defeated the HMS Serapis after the American commander, John Paul Jones, is said to have declared: "I have not
.
yet begun to fight'"
On this date: In 1642, Harvard College in Cambridge,
Mass., held its first commencement.
li1 1780, British spy John Andre was captured along with
papers revealing Benedict Arnold's plot to surre nder West
Point to the British.
In 1806. the Lewis and Clark expedition returned to St.
Louis from the Pacific Nonhwest.
In 1846, the planet Neptune was discovered by German
astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle.
Jn" l939, Sigmund Fr~ud, the founder of psychoanalysis,
died in London.
.
In IQ52, Republican vice-presidential candidate Richard M.
Nixon went on television to deliver what came to be known as
the "Checkers" speech as he refuted allegations of improper
campaign financing.
.
.
·
In 1957. nine black students who had entered Little Rock
Central High School in Arkansas were forced to withdraw
because of a white mob outside. ·
· In 1962. New York's Philharmonic Hall (since renamed
Avery Fisher Hall) formally opened as the first unit of the
Lincoln Center for the Performing Ans.
·
. In 1973, former Argentine president Juan Peron was
returned to power.
.
Five years ago: President Clinton vetoed the Republicans'
$792-billion tax cut bill, calling it "too big, too bloated." The
Mars Climate Observer apparently burned up as it was about
to go into orbit around the Red Planet.
·
One year ago:· Speaking at the United Nations, President
Bush rejected calls from France and Gennany to basten the
transfer of power in Iraq, insisting the shift to self-government .
could be "neither hurried nor delayed." A federal appeals
coun unanimously put California's recall election back on the
.
calendar for Oct. II.
· Today's Birthdays: Actor Mickey Rooney is 84. Singer
Julio Iglesias is 61. Actor Paul Petersen ("The Dorina Reed
Show") is 59. Actress-singer Mary Kay Place is 57. Rock star
Bruce Springsteen is 55. Actor Jason Alexander is 45. Actor
Chi McBride ("Boston Public") is 43. Actress Elizabeth Pena ·
is 43. Country musician Don Herron (BR549) is 42. Actor
Erik Todd Dellums is 40. Singer Ani DiFranco is 34. Rock
singer Sarah Bettens (K's Choice) is 32. Recording executive
Jermaine Dupri is 32. Pop singer Erik-Michael Estrada
(:'Making the Band") is 25.
·
Thought for Today: "Each generation imagines itself. to be
more intelligent tban the one that went before it, and wiser
than the one that comes after. it." - George Orwell (Eric
Blair), Britishauthor ( 1903-1950).

)

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I

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Let~ers

to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephon~ · nl;lmber. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
. The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. 's
editorial board, unless oth.erwise noted.

·I

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

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(USPs 213-9110)
·Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

CorreCtion Polley

Our main concem in a'll stories is to be Published ~ry afternOon, Monday
accurare. If you know of an error In a through Friday, 111 Cour. Stteet.
. story. calllhe newsroom at (740) 992· Pomeroy, Ohio. Sec:oncklaaa pootago

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Thursday, September 23,

2004

Kerry needs clarity on Iraq .

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Thursday, September 23, 2004

Page.A4

•

u:s.

electorate before our running
neck-and-neck
Dan Rather has said that
elections.
·
nationally, Bush was leading
his CBS team had spent five
It's clear, as Kerry charges, by 52 percent to 40 percent
years investigating President
that Bush and his aides badly on the question of which
Bush's National Guard sermiscalculated the aftermath l:andidate the public trusted
v;ce in the 1970s. What a .
of victory in the Iraq war, to handle the war.
waste.
Morton
Arguably, Democrat John
Voters said they trusted
ignored State Department
Kondarcke warnings of the · possibility Bush rhore on rraq even
Kerry's conduct in Vietnam
and as an anti-war leader
of insurgency and dismissed though only 47 percent said
professional military esti- they approved· of his hanafterward are relevant to the
2004 ptesidential c'ampaign
mates of the number of · dling of the issue.
because Kerry has made Kerry's candidacy. The . troops needed to provide
. The · latest Gallup Poll
them so. But that, too, was a Swifties' charges showed Bush leading among
that security.
Bus h's approval ratings likely voters by a whopping
mistake .
Kerry didn 't deserve his
What voters deserve to medals - remain unproyen, ought to be sinking and 55 percent to 42 percent. The
hear in a presidential cam- but the comrove.rsy did mar- Kerry's fortunes should be ReaiCiearPolitics.com aver~
rising, as happened this ,age of all national polls
paign is how each candi- ginally hun Kerry.
date 's record qualifies him to
Out on the stump, both · spring when the news from · showed Bush leading 49.1
be president and what his Bush and Kerry .have· been Iraq was relentlessly grim.
percent to 43.6 percent and
But it's not happening his overall approval rating at
plans are for the country's talking about the issues that
_
future .
matter- Iraq, the economy, because Republicans have . 5!.1 percent.
· Character certainly mat- health care - but the med1a succeeded in raising serious
·Kerr:y; is on stronger
ters, but what would it tell us have been preoccupied with doubts about Kerry's record ground on the economy and
if CBS is right - despite the sideshows. If CBS final- . on national security issues. . health care. Pew showed that
documentation that looks ly admits it was had on the and because Kerry himself Bush's approval is only at 44
more bogus by the minute Bush Guard documents, per- has been incoherent about percent on the economy and
that Bush benefited from haps the country can hear the · his own Iraq policy.
that voters prefer Kerry to
"pull" to get into the Texas candidates.
· Kerry has hired skilled manage it by a margin of 46
Air National Guard and then
Kerry has a strong point to political operatives from the percent to 40 percent.
shirked his duty at the close make:. Bush deserves to be Clinton era who think th at, . Kerry has a powerful posiof his service?
judged as commander in regardless of the dismay vot- tive message on the ~cono­
That was 31 years ago, at a chief on the Iraq record, and ers express in focus groups, my if h~ can get it out:
time when Bush admits he conditions there look worse they respond to hard-edged Restore Clinton-level taxes
was · "young and irresponsi- by the day.
negative campaigning. And for the rich and the country
ble." It would undoubtedly
can provide health insurance
· U.S. military deaths lhis Kerry now is on the attack.
However, his new team of for nearly 30 million people
affect the campaign if evi- month average more than
dence developed akin to the three per day, putting message experts has yet to and also invest in educatio~
late-breaking news in 2000 September on track to being tigure out how to help Kerry
Bush ads have been falsethat he'd had a drunken-dri- the fourth most-deadly make sense about Iraq.
ly accusing Kerry of trying
ving arrest, but no one has month since the war began .· In his. latest outing, on the · to fois t government-concome near to finding such in March 2003.
Don Jmus radio show, Kerry trolled health care on the
material this year.
Insurgents control more said there were "no circum- populatiqn when he'd actualOn the other side, Kerry than three dozen cities and stances" under which he · ly provide tax credits for
definitely gets character towns, raising seriou;; doubts would have gone to war in people to buy . their own
points for having served in about whether Iraqi elections Iraq, yet "it was right to hold msurance.
combat in Vietnam, but he can be conducted on sched- (Saddam· Hussein) accountTo make a comeback,
able." lmus, who has Kerry needs to get the public
completely overplayed that ule next January.
record as a qualification to
The Financial Times endorsed Kerry, said "I can't focused on health care and
be commander in chief reponed that U.S. military tell you what he said."
. the economy and to
today.
Kerry is suffering badly explain himself clearly on
commanders say they cannot
Then, when Swift Boat guarantee security even in from his inability to lay out a Iraq. There's still time.
Veterans for Truth raised the Green Zone in the center · consistent position on Iraq.
(Morton Kondr(lcke is
questions about Kerry's of Baghdad, raising the pos- Even in the Pew Research executive editor of Roll Call;
Vietnam record, they were sibility of a catastrophic - Center poll last week, which the newspaper of Capitol
aiming at the very core of attack timed to rattle the showed the two candidates Hill.)

l.?fA~\£R. .,
~-

E~NINGNEWS

www.mydailysentinel. com.

Racine Water Plant -included . Racine
from PageA1
in appropriations bill

your grandmother's things in
ruin," Proffitt said. "She just
Bv TIM MALONEY '
promised to try to protect the funding of Appalachia!\
moved
here
from
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
bill from changes.
Regional
Commission
Nelsonville."
. " As a member of the grants.
Several people, friends of
Appropriations
RACINE - · A glimmer of Senate
At that . time, Spencer
the
family, were helping
~ood news has been recelVed Committee, it 1s one of my promised that Racine would ·
Proffitt,
trying to decide if
111 RacJ_ne'amtd the sadness of · priorities to secure funding
not quit and would keep
anything
could be salvaged:
thj: Oh10 R1ver flood .
for
worthy
projects," working on ' the project to
One held up a ~oggy wooden
A $500,000 grant for the DeWine said . "These pro- replace the old water plant,
table, and looked· at another
village's new water treatment jects are important for devel- built in the 1950s.
man.
plant was included in a bill opmen( in Ohio and I look
"We're very thrilled and it
"This?" he asked.
approved by the Senate forward to working with my
looks to me like the projec.t is
"No, you don ' t wa1it to
Appropriations Committee. colleagues to make sure
in
the
right
direcmoving
save
that," the other man
The bill includes $14.8 mil- funding is retained in the
tion,"
Spencer
said.
said,
and
another item was
lion for Ohio projects over- _final bilL"
The
$500,000
Urban
piled in a heap of Clark' s forall, and $775 ,000 in funding
"These funds will help
Development
grant
is
the
mer
worldly possessions.
for Southeast Ohio projects.
boost Ohio' s recovering
second
chu
Proffitt
nk
of
money
the
said · that they
. Now, all the village has to economy, and l look forward
the building, and
village
has
attained
toward
would
clean
do is hope its portion of the to working with my' colhope for help from the
bill makes it through a Senate leagues in the Senat~ to the $1.6 million construction
Federal
Emergency
of
the
new
plant,
to
be
cost
vote without being amended. ensure that the funding is
Management
Agency.
But so
"As Yogi Berra used to say, maintained in the final ver- built on the property of the
far, Meigs County has been
it ain't over 'til it's over," sion of the bill ," Voinovich Meigs · County . Library in
.
left off FEMA's li st.
Racine.
said David Spencer, Racine's said.
Meanwhile,
Clark
and
her
Racine ·, was
Earlier,
clerk-treasurer.
·
.Last
week,
it
was
grandson are left in disbelief
Both Sen. Mike DeWine announced that Racine'.s approved for a $375,000
that the river could have
(R-Ohio) and Sen. George application for $300,000 had Issue 2 grant from ihe Ohio
up so far, so fast.
come
Voinovich
(R-Ohio) been left out of a round of Public Works Commission.
"[ watched the weather and
saw it was coming up,"
Proffitt said . "Friday night I
called grandma and asked if
she wanted to come stay at
my house. She said she' d
better.
Britton at 740-286-20 18.
road repair due to the recent
"The water was down at
flooding.
the park when I asked this. I
never thought it would get
. f ar. ..
th IS
By Sunday -morning. there
were
eight inches of water in
JACKSON
The . CHESTER - New Hope
Clark's home.
Jackson Craft Guild is now Road in Chester Township
Incredibly, right across the
REEDSVILLE
The
accepting app lications for will be closed from 8:30a.m.
street,
the damage wa~ not
Run
Sportsman
Club
Forked
the Winter Craftfest. The to 12:30 p.m .. Showalter
nearly
so
bad. Four inches of
Craftfest will be held Nov. · Road will also be closed that hunier safety course schedwater meant only a difficult
6 and 7 at Canter ' s Cave 4- day from 12:30 to 4 p.m. uled for this. weekend has
job for Ken McFann
cleanup
H Camp in Jackson. For Both roads are being closed been canceled. A new· date
and his son Bracken, owners
more information call Pat for culvert- replacement and will be announced.
Of HWI Do It Best-Star
Supply Co.
Muddy and tired, the
McFanns weren't complaining.
-..;
·
• "The people across the
street lost everything," the
younger
McFann
said.
DElROIT (AP)- Civil rights
Parks' lawsuit says the 1998 proceeding" and referred to six "Clothes, TV, couches, you
pioneer Rosa Patks has dementia song "Rosa Parks" by hip-hop pages of supporting medical. name it."
·
and should not be forced to group OutKa~t violated her pulr records, including three medKen McFann said the
answer questions in her lawsuit ficity and trademark rights and ical visits in 2002 and late 2003 . . National Weather Service
over a rap song named for her, her defamed her. It also says.OutKast
had done Racine no favors
"Page I is a transfer note,
lawyers said in a court filing.
and record company BMG undated, which sets forth a by revising its prediction
exploited her name for commer- number of diagnoses and
Par~~. 91, rarely has been
downward during the middle
seen in public smce 200 I, cial purposes. OutKast has been makes specific reference to
of the storm Friday. Early
when she canceled a meeting dismissed as a defendant
the
dementia,"
lawyer
Friday afternoon, the NWS
with President Bush.
Defense lawyers have asked to Richard Gianino wrote.
had made the crest number as
.Her lawyers said this sum- inlerview Paries to explain her
low a·s 44.5 feet in Racine.
Par~s was 42 whtrn she
mer she has been in frail claims of emotional and mental refused to give up her seat on a
It reached 50.1 feet.
health, but Monday's coun fil, .distress because of the song. They city bus in Mont~omery, Ala., in • "Most of the time. they
irig is the first public descrip- will be able to question Paries' doc- 1955. She was Jailed and fined · don't miss. it. They don't
tor, Joel Steinberg, about her med- $14.. Her arrest triggered a 381-tion of her heafth problems.
miss it an inch ," Ken
ical
condition in eady Octoter.
day boycott of the bus system
Parks' lawyer Gregory Reed
McFann said. "This time ,
In an Aug. 16 · letter, organized by a then little-known
said her dementia, or severe
they missed it big time."
mental impairment, "comes Steinberg's lawyer said the doc- Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. She
As the weather service preand goes." He said Parks is well tor believes Parks ''cannot testi- became known as "the mother diction continued to ratchet
cared for at her Detroit home.
fy or participate in any coun of the civil rights movement."
up, the McFanns kept moving things fanher and farther
up. They have river levels
The rest of the Guard tank and - an ambulance. It
marked on their walls.
members had arrived earlier, was their cell phones' they
"We waded in half dozen
and Byer had sent them to were having to do without
times . Saturday," · · Ken
help in Racine. Mostly, the yesterday, as it's often very
from PageA1
McFann ·said . . "We ·moved
Guard . will be assisting in difficult to get a signal in the
things up a foot, then another
debris removal. They will be hills of Meigs County.
foot. ·
"Every.one is out."
While they will not do any
"If the weather service did•
Fleischman drove here here for at least a week, and
work
.on
private
property,
maybe
two,
and
will
stay
at
n't
know, they should have
Wednesday from Toledo, and
the
Meigs
MoteL
they
will
remove
debris
if
it
said
they didn't know. They
reported by mid-morning to
Compared to Afghanistan, is put on the sidewalk or
should have said, ' Go ahead
Bob Byer at the Meigs
flood
cleanup
duty
is
routine,
street.
and
get prepared. It may get
County
Emergency
up
to
52 feet."'
Also
.
on
Wednesday,
the
Fleischman
said.
Management Agency. Never
· While McFann said the
"These floods, they ' re a Red Cross was .expected to
having been here before, he
NWS
let folks down in
us,"
he
said.
deliver
500
cltaniilg
kits
to
yearly
thing
for
asked Byer for a county map
Racine,
he said the village
before contacting headquar- "We almost plan ahead for the Mulberry Community
certainly
has not. He praised
it:•
Center. The kits had made it
ters.
the work of firemen, policeDuring cleanup, the Guard as far as Marietta Tuesday,
"You sent me as far as you
men and other volunteers.
miscommunication
can get from Toledo and still members will be using one and
"We've got some people in
-be in the state of Ohio," dozer, two loaders, six dump about open roads led to their
town
who are just phenomeuntil ·
arrival
Fleischman said into the tele- trucks, a tractor trailer to haul delayed
nal ," Ken McFann said.
rolloff dumpsters, a water Wednesday.
phone.

•

George Orwell's · antiutopian satire "1984" depicted a state-controlled media
very different from the information onslaught we currently face in 2004.
George W. Bush isn't Big
Brother. Nor have we
reached the "war is peace"
stage of t~ 2004 presidential campaign, altliough Dick
Cheney s
recent
vote-.
Republican-or-die warning
was a step in that direction.
American's are delu~ed
with so much information,
many can't tell fact from fiction. Ironically, one result
can be a state of mind
Orwell called "collective
solipsism," · the unthinking
belief that truth is whatever
the party line says it is.
l}.nother is corrosiv~ cynictsm that says that smte all
politicians lie and the press .
can't be trusted. it's all a
mystery. That way lies the
death of a democracy
already on life support.
Consider recent media
flaps over the presidential
candidates' long-ago military careers. No, military
experience shouldn't be a
requirement for ' public
office, but I don'l agree with
those who say re-fighting
Vietnam-era conlf!&gt;versies is
foolhardy.
. See, it's a character issue.
Who showed up, who tQOk a
powder? Who's been mostly
telling the truth abOut his
military record, who's been
fudging? The controversy
also is a case study in how
news media organizations
. function under pressure .
First carne the so-called
Swift' Boat Veterans · for
Truth,. funded by Texas oil
'men and consth!ation moguls
with long-standing ties to

Gene

Lyons

Bush. Surely they.can't all be
GOP partisans, Bob Dole
said. In fact, they are. KnightRidder recently reported how
the organization was put
together. Houston lawyer
John O'Neill, frrst recruited
to attack John Kerry by
President Richard Nixon,
hooked up with GoP political operative Merrie Spaeth.
After raising cash, they h~
a private eye, who canvassed
thou~ands of swift-boat veterans for men who resented
Kerry's anti-Vietnam · war
activism. If thal's ·your issue,
they're your fl!YS. But most
served "with' Kerry only in
the loosest sense; the majority appear never to have met
him.
.
One conservative columnist derided Kerry's "band of
brothers" as ·:handpicked,"
but didn't mention who did
the picking: the U.S. Navy,
in 1968. All swift-boaters
,making appearances for the
Kerry campaign served on
his boat - all of the sailors
who served with him are in
the band except one. That
has to tnean something.
Reporters who probed
allegations that Kerry's
medals were undeserved
have falsified accusations by
every
known
method.
Consider fellow swift-boat
commander Larry Thurlow.
He claimed that no fm:fight

took place during the inci- ·
dent that earned Kerry the
Bronze Star. He said Kerry's
rescue of Special Forces Sgt.
Jim Rassmann from the Bay
Hap River took no courage.
But
Rassmann,
a
Republican,
remembers
enemy ftre. So does everybody on Kerry's boat.
Turns out Thurlow earned
the Bronze Star in the same
action. The citation says his
boat was shot full of holes.
Confronted with the evidence, Thurlow claimed that
his ex-wife took the documents. Besides Kerry's crew,
.three sailors, including a
crewman on Thurlow's own
boat, have disputed his
account. None suppons him.
Now Thurlow says Swift
Boat TV ad producers pressured him to say that Kerry
fled from action-that day, but
he refused. ·It's a sad story.
Then there's CBS News'
discovery of "CYA" memos
, allegedly written in !972 by
Lt. Col. Jerry Killian, Bush's
Texas Air National Guaril
commander, ordering him to
take
flight physical he
never took and e"'pressing
unease with political/ressure · l:leing exercise on
Bush's behalf. Fearing darnage to the•president's fly~boy
image, the "Drudge Repilrt"
and other conservative Web
logs sprung into action, citing "e"'pens" who called the
memos forgeries written on
a computer, not a l970s-era
typewriter.
Almost overnight, CBS'
competitors ran with the
story. Upon further review,
those experts turned out to
be all wet. The documents
could have been written on
IBM Selectrics, common
office equipment. More

a

elaborate objections were
raised. Expen opinion aside,
certitude is impossible on
typography alone. CBS is
standing fast, citing lots of
circumstantial evi~ence. ·
So what to think? Keep ·
your eye on the big picture.
As USA Today points out,
"Neither the White House
nor fanner officers in the
Texas National Guard have
challenged the central assertions in the documents: that •
Bush's performance as a
pilot was under scrutiny by
commanders beginning in
!972 and that Killian, his
supervisor, was unhappy
with him." It found another
purported Kill ian memo
challenging Bush's flight
certification. At the same
time, The Associated Press
has learned, Bush was
downgraded from piloting
F-1 04 fighters to flymg second seat on T-33 trainers:
Next, he was grounded altogether.
CBS News appears determined to find out why. By
now, it has almost as much at
stake as the White House,
which has clearIy dissembled about Bush's military
record. Remember, CBS
broke the frrst story disprov- ,
ing the administration's
assurances of "no warning"
before 9/l L It also exposed
the abuses at Abu Ghraib.
Somebody's going to win
this fight. and somebody's
going to lose it.

Jackson
Craftfest
planned

Road crosing
announced

Safety course
canceled

Rosa -Parks has·dementia, can't
testify, her lawyer tells judge

·Help
from PageA1
cially when he received a
press release from FEMA
saying 15 other counties had
been declared.
Indeed, President Bush on
Monday had approved federal
disaster assistance . for residents
in 15 Ohio counties. Meigs
County was oot on the list, which
has ca11sed some confusion.
Monday's
declaration,
however, was for counties
stricken two weeks ago by

(Arknnsas
DemocratGazette columnist Gene
Lyons is a national tnagazine award winner and coauthor of "The Hunring of
the President" (St. Martin's
Press, 2000 ). You can e-mail
Lyons
at
genelyons2
@cs.com.)

'

--

Bracken McFann, who operates HWI Do It Best-Star Supply Co .
along with hi's father,. Ken, is shown among the debris piled up ·
outside the business. (Tim Mal()ney/photo)

Local Briefs

Guard

Searching for trnth in a media maelstrom

The Daily Sentinel·· Page As

a

the remnants of Hurricane decision is up to them."
Frances, Strickland said,
Keven Clouse, representadding that there is no need ing the Ohio EMA, agreed.
to worry that Meigs County · "They know Ohio has been
·severely impacted with both
will be excluded.
"Not Ieally. It's just a mat- Frances and now Ivan, and l
ter of working through the would think that ·would
process," he said.
impress upon them the
Byer said he is convinced importance," Clouse said.
Byer is urging any resident
·• Meigs County has suffered
en01\gh to warrant a federal · who has flood damage to
contact the county EMA
declaration.
"As far as I'm concerned, office at 992-454 I. After regfrom my experience, we've ular business hours, flood
got the numbers," said Bob victims should call the
Byer, director of the Meigs Emergency Medical Services
County
Emergency · office at 992-2617.
"Just call in anct we ' II son
Management Agency. "The

Randy Fryar of Tuppers Plains prepares to load a 40-ton
rolloff dumpster onto a tractor trailer Wednesday morning in
Pomeroy.· Kilbarger Construction of togan , Ohio, had been .
hired to bring in the dumpsters. (Tim Maloney/ photo)
"It' s not too bad," said
"They were out evacuating
people at 3 a.m."
·Opal Biddle, treasurer. •'We
First thing the morning the .. just lost the carpet. mostly.''
Around the corner, at Harts
water receded, volunteers
and firemen· were helping Kountry Kitchen restaurant ,
him hose out the building.
there was the noticeable
" It made our job a lot easi- smell of disinfectant in the
er," he said .
air, and the sound of a shop
M~king the job more diffivacuum running. Debbie
cult was a stream of sight- Williams. an employee, rest seers, a few of whom were so ed on one of the many chairs
bold as to drive right through which had been camed outflooded street ~. with the side.
..., ,
potential of ca using even . "It's more cleaning than
more damage in flooded the loss of stUff here." she
homes and businesses.
said. "We '-ve been fortunate.
"Yo u had stupid people Our coolers ufe up and runcoming through 20 miles an ning."
hour when the water was a
The restaurant will have to'
foot ," Bracken McCann said. undergo a thorough cleaning
Others parked their vehi- before it can reopen .
cles in the middle of the
"They got all the food out,
street to go take pictures, . but it's mud everywhere,"
sometimes· blocking flood Williams said . "You have to
work.
"One thing we can do with- stan at the ceiling and work
•
out is sightseers," Ken your way down."
too.
praised
tht&lt;,
work
She.
McFann said. "This . is bad
of
volunteers.
·enough."
"There's been a lot of peoJust up the street, the volple
put in a lot of eff011." she
unteers at God's Clothing
Parish', at 305 First St., had said. "The community has
just apout finished what really pulled together and
helped."
cleanup work they could do.
Clean clothes were hangRichard Moore. owner of
ing from racks in the fittle AB&amp;T Auto, also on Third
store, which used to be a bar- , Street, was cleaning the front
ber shop.
of his business with a pres" We're just waiting for it to sure washer.
dry now so we can put carpet
"lt's·just hard to believe it
down," said Director Mary came," Moore said. ··we
Huddleston, who rested on a lived through it. Oh well .
chair near a fan . "It was
Grin and bear it."
mess, but it could have been
At Manha Clark's, nobody
worse."
was ready yet to grin .
Only a small pile of clothes
"Just keep us in your
were caught .in the flood and
prayers," Tom Proffitt said.
had to be discarded.

a

it out from there," Byer said. level predictions by the National
"Our main concern is getting Weather Service, Byer said.
"The predictions varied so
word to people that they need
·much and were so much .difto call us."
Also, Byer is issuing a call ferent every time you looked
for all township trustees to that it really messed . with
he
said .
get a damage repon to him as preparation,''
soon as possible. Only two of "Finally, when I ca,lled up
I 2 townships have submitted there the last time, they
infonnation to Byer: Orange wouldn't telr me anything."
Fanners who have had crop
and Lebanon.
"For some reason, we can't damage should contact either
get any infonnation out of the the Farm Service Agency at
townships," Byer said. "! am 992-6646. or the Meigs
suppcised to have 'the infor- County Extension Office at
992-6696. said extension
mation in 72 hours."
Preparations for the flood were agent Hal Kneen.
Kneen also reminded farm hampered by inaccurate crest

...........
·-···-··.

•

.

•

ers and anyone else . with
fruits and vegetable s that
anything touched by floodwater must be discarded and
not eaten.
Free tetanus shots remain
available at the Meigs
County Health Depanment .
for anyone doing cleanup
work in floodwater. The
health depanment was open
late Tuesday night.
"If you can't remember .
when · you got your last one.
come in and ,get another one.
It's not going to hun you."
said Frank Gorscak. public
information officer.

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 23,2004

University of Cincinnati helps fund developments near campus
CINCINNATI (AP) ' The University' of Cincinnati
is funding housing and
office developments near itG
campus, gettmg m return a
nicer-looking environment
and more housing for its
students and staff.
The university has committel! $75 million of its
endowm,ent to help the
. city's Clifton, Corryville,
University ,Heights and
Clifton Hj:ighrs neighborhoods launch major redevelopment projects. It has provtded financing, planning
and architectural services
· for numerous projects now
under construction, said
Scott Enns, the universitY's
community
development
coordinator.
Beginning next year, new
retail and office space, parking garages, · town homes
and condominiums, and new
and renovated single-family
homes will be opening
throughout those neighborhoods, mostly on streets
closest to the campus.
"That $75 million has
_been leyeraged into $300

million in construction
activity through the neighborhood partnerships," said
Tony Bro,wn, president of
the Uptown Consortium,
comprised of major employer~ mcluding \Pe university
and groups representing
neighborhoods.
About $50 million of the
university 's money is being
used or is committed as
revolving loans, with · repay- "·
ment periods ranging from
·. five to · 30 years, Enns said.
It has helped the university by sprucing up dingy
from
access
streets
Interstates 71 and 75 that
bring visitors to the campus.
The environment includes
run-down homes and vacant
businesses and substandard
rental properties.
The, university has only
enough on-campus housing
to accommodate about I0
(AP Photo/Cincinnati Enquirer, Craig RuHle)
percent of its students, JeavUniversity
of
Cincinnati's
Stratford Heights Student Housing
ing the others to commute
to classes. The university Development, foreground, is seen under construction Tuesday
hopes to persuade more of in the shadow of McMicken Hall , background , as part of a $75
its instructors and staff to million plan to help the city's Clifton, Corryville, University
live near campus, university Heights and Clifton Heights neighborhoods launch major redespokesman Greg Hand said. velopment projects.

~Divided court calls

part of Ohio ·Weather Service says flood

vicious dog law unconstitutional

' .CORNWELL
LISA

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio State attracting
better students
COLUMBUS (AP)
"Anyone could come here
said
Martha
The state's biggest universi- before,"
ty is making progress in its Garland, dean of undergradeffort to attract better stu- .uate studies. "Lots of peedents, according to scores pie came, started and left ..·
on admission tests this year. So many were coming and
Freshmen who started fall fail\ng. It was a terrible use
quarter classes Wednesday of parent and student and
at Ohio State University taxpayer money."
were ellpected to have an
In 1991 , recruiting of
average ACT score of 25 .6. National Merit Scholars
improved with 102 freshuniversity officials said .
In 1993, Ohio State men , compared with 23 the
freshmen were close to the year before. The number
bottom of Big Ten universi- ha s staycc) · around 100
ties in average ACT scores since then but is expected
- 23 out of a possible 36. to climb· to 118 this year.
Last year's OSU fresh.
men ranked near the middle
More students . are also m
among Big Ten schools, the top 10 perce nt ·or their
with ml uverage score of htgh- school
graduatmg
• classes, growing fromf 2h5
25 .4. ·
In 1987, Ohio State percent of the 19 87. res stopped its practice of men to 33 .percent last year.
admitting any Ohio resident Among Btg Ten schools,
with a high-school diploma. Ohto Slate has moved from
Over the last 10 years, second to last in that rankeach incoming fl&lt;!shman cla$s ing in 1993, with 24 perhas been better academically ' cent, to the middle last
than the preceding one.
year.

w~ing

Thursday, September 23, 2004

Local Stocks
ACI-34 .90
AEP -32.66
Akzo - 34.91
Ashland ·Inc. - 54.96
BBT - 39.44 ·
BLI-13.12
Bob Evans - 2705
BorgWarner - 43.42
City Holding - 32.11
Champion - 3.72
· Charming Shops- 7.06
Col - 36.56
DuPont - 42.18
DG :_2o.oo
Federal Mogul - .1850 .
Gannett - 84.62
General Electric- 33.93
GKNLY c._ 4.000
Harley Davidson - 59.84
JPMorgan (formerly Bank
. One) - 39.85
Kmart - 84.65
Kroger - 15.58
Ltd- 21.62
NSC -29.17
Oak Hill Financial- 34.72
OVBC-31.72
Peoples - 25.25
Pepsico - 48.69
Premier- 9.51
Rocky Boots - 17.43
RD Shell- 51.93

NewsChann.el

issued as soon as possible

rity from the cancellation of devastation, residents have and som e roads remained
·
impassable Wednesday, said
.the first warning
. · pulled together.
out at trial.
"Some people who saw on Richard Quinlin, director of
"We live with flooding
"We find it inherently
A late-night flood warning . here, and we can prepare my Web site that I was about the county EMA . At least 200
unfair that a dog owner must f{)r a southeast Ohio city when we know what to to lose a piano that my mother homes in the county had susdefy the ·statuiory regulations coul.d not have been issued expect," he said.
saved from the 1937 flood tained some type of flood
and become a criminal defen- earlter because forecasters
Rezek said the National came to help lift it above damage, authorities said.
dant, thereby risking going to had no way to know rain from - Weather Service's skill at water level," he said, his voice
Belmont County sheviff's
jail and losing her property, Hurricane Ivan would intensi- forecasting has increased choked with emotion. "I did- officials continued their
in order to challenge a dog fy upriver and rapidly change tremendously over the years, n't even find out theirnames." search Wednesday for a
warden's unilateral decision water levels, a National but so have public expectaBelmont County also was woman whose car was found
Weather
Service
forecaster
tions.
to classify • her property,"
devastated by the flooding, in a remote area.
Justice Francis Sweeney. said Wednesday. .
. .
."When you are dealing with
Bus! ness o~ner~. restd~mts a tropical system of thi~ magwrote.
.~
and
ctty offictals m Martella nitude and . unique ctrcumIn a dissent 1 Chief Justice
Tom Moyer satd the majority say some of the dam~ge stances, you cannot always
is overruling the intent of caused by sevtre floodmg give people the type of
warning
they
lawmakers who wanted 'over the weekend could have advance
been
averted
if
they
hadn't
expect,"
he
said.
vicious and .dangerous dogs
National Weather Service
confined io protect the public. been misled by forecasts
Friday.
spokeswoman
· Marcie
The law does not specifically
Some
residents
complained
Katcher
said
the
agency is
grant any new powers to dog
wardens, so it can't violate' due that. the Nat_wnal. Weather conducting· a review of the sit-.
process, he wrote. The charges Servtce on Fnday canceled a uation.
"We want to see what was
would be thrown out if prose- flood warning it had issued
·
last
Thursday
and
then
did
not
done
what can . be done
cutors fail to show at court that issue an_other one · until late betterwell,
and how we can apply
the dogs were vicious.
that · information to the ~
Fnday mght.
"Every person informed by
About 600 homes and 600 ' future," said Katcher, of the
a law enforcement official businesses were damaged in agency's Eastern Regional
that he or she must alter con- Marietta after the Ohto Rtver office in Bohemia, N.Y.
duct because it is not in con- reached its highesi level in 40
Newman said despite the
formance with the law or risk years, rising to 9 feet above
•
•
.
•
prosecution is faced with that flood stage on Saturday, said • • . . . ....&amp; •• ••• &amp;...-. :• ...
:• ••• &amp;...-. ..... ......... :• ••
situation (of risking jail or Michael Cullums, spokesman •••
·· ~
• ......... •• •
.......... •• •
property loss)," Moyer wrote. for the Washington County
Cowan's dogs were seized Emergency
Management
only after the dogs .were Agency. He said about 500
found improperly restrained people in. Washington County
more than once and she was remained away from their "••
charged, Moyer noted.
homes on Wednesday.
•
AIan Rezek, chief meteo- ••:
The three dogs were later
killed. Jones has· said Cowan rologist for the weather ser- \
might be entitled to get vice in Charleston, W.Va.,
money for them if she wins said the river usually ,rises
ll)ore slowly, allowing several
the Supreme Court case.
days of warning, but it reacted :.,.
more like a small rivet\ last
week because of the local
drainage from unexpected
intensified
- rain .
in
Pennsylvania and West
Virginia.
"We were responding to a
Resources, since the crus- very rapidly changing situatacean is not native to Ohio.
tion," Rezek said.
...,,.
•
Studies since 2002 have
He said that his agency ~••
shown that shrimp, or actual- issued the first flood warning \
ly freshwater· prawn, can last Thursday when the
thrive in Ohio's climate. amount of rainfall from the
They do better in southern hurricane resulted in a fore- • •
Ohio, though, said Christina cast o f 38 feet, about 4 feet •••
Leighfield, a researcher for over flood, stage, On Friday • •
Ohio State University's aqua- afternoon, the
National •••
culture program.
Weather Service backed off
Ray Barber said shrimp die that warnin!l when the inforwhen water temperatures hit ·mation fed mto the agency's
55 degrees and that the forecast computer program •
prawns can't· breed in Ohio indicated a level several feet : ••
because they do not become below flood ·stage.
"We had not. been able to
.Deadline for entri~s is: November 15, 2004
warm enough.
He said that out of the predict the intense . rainfall \
16,000 shrimp placed in their that would fall in southwestpond, 12,200 survived to ~ar- ern Pennsylvania and. the
vest. The prawns eat zoo- mountains of West Vrrginia, • •
plankton and phytoplankton amounts of 6 to 8 inches .
m the water, and they are fed When we saw that, we went "
. high-protein pellets and dis- back to the river forecast ....
tilfery grain twice a day.
model and reran it, issuing the
.
During the harvest. the ~J~: ~;:t.\~:~ts~lm.
-N~~~ ~f -p~t:
~
·~
pond was drained and the
shellfish were caught in basGlenn Newman, owner of
• Y,
N
.
1
kets.
·
the damaged Fine Art and • • OUr arne.
••
Barber said it normally
takes three years for a shrimp
pond to be a full production. satisfied that the weather ser- ••";
••
By that time, they could get vice gave resideilts as much ·
._
between 2 200 and 2 500 warning as possible.
1
Phone~·-------------------poundS.
'
'
"We were in the midst of 8
1
He said that could force inches of rainfall when they •
Please send or bring this entry form ·along with your photo to
~.
them into selling their harvest canceled the ftrst warning and •••
;•
1
to stores .or wholesalers it was oouring rain in
.«. ({' · ( · "111'1 ' (
~ • t ~( "'
t
llll'a IPO, ti, JUill 1!
"""'Otn """' ea..an
~
••
ity~tead of just relying on Pittsburgh.'' he s.aid. "How
could they Cancelli?"
'&gt;- ....
~rtbune
Daily Sentinel ~
pond-side sales.
"It's a risky busil)ess, but it
Newman, who saw flooa .. , · •Pet cal d r"
"Pet Cal d r"
"Pet Calendar" ~
en a
~n a
111 Court St.
•
can be a lucrative one once waters ri.se to 3 feet inside bis
1
1 825 1h1rd Avenue
200 Mam St.
you get it going," said Ray store and lost his delivery
Barber. "We'll defini~ly do
this again next year. The
pond will just· gel better and
better•as it gets seasoned."

PageA7
A DAY ON WALL STREET
---S~e~p~
t. ?~7,;200C0~4---=======~~~--------10T~

Dow Jones
· Industrials
-135.75
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - 9,250

10 ,109.18
Pct. dla'lgo
from previous!·

JUN

-1 .33

JUL

Higl'l

AUG

SEPT

low

10.244 05

Rtcord high: 11.722.98 ·
10,097 37 ,
Joo 14 , 2000

Sept. 22, 2004

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - 2,200

Nasdaq
composite

.,-v-"'..• ..,.,~.....
"""'"' •

""V\
- ' ~
- - ---=- ..._

-31.47

- - !.800

- - - - - - - - - - - - - \ ,600
JUN
JUL
AUG
SEPT

1 ,885.7 1
Pet. ch!W1QO
from pr~ ous : ~ 1.85

Sept. 22, 2004

High
1,9·1 0.23

Low
1,88485

Record high: 5,048 62
Marctl10. 2000

- - - - - -- - - -- - 1.200

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

. ------·---' 1 150
··. 1,100

- - - - 1.050

·'15.74
1 ,113.56
Pet. chS1Qe
frompreviOUt:

2.000

-1 .39

JUN
High

JUL
Low

1,129.30

1.112.67

Rockwell - 38.89
Sears - 39.80
SBC -26.36
AT&amp;T-14 .87
USB-28 .85
Wendy's - 33.34
Wal-Mart - 51 .67

AUG

··---------- 1.000
SEPT

Ro corO hi9h: 1.527.46
March 24. 2000 ·

Worthington- 19 .32
Da ily ~tock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the pre-.
vious day's transactions. provided by Smith Partners at
Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

J

·,

COLUMBUS (AP) - Part
of an Ohio law requiring
restraint of dangerous and
'vicious dogs is unconstitu:tional because it doesn't allow
the owners to first argue their
dog poses no threat, a divided
. Ohio Supreme Court ruled
Wednesday.
The law says owners of
dangerous or vicious dogs
inay be charged with a misdemeanor if they don't buy
. extra insurance and restrain
· the animals in a specific way.
· The Supreme Court in 1991
upheld the part of the law
saying pit bulls are vicious by
definition. But the court ruled
4-3 Wednesday to overturn
. the convictions of a northeast
Ohio woman ·charged under
the part of a law saying a dog
is vicious af\er it injures or
kills a person.
Janice Cowan, who lives
near Mogadore, was convicted
·· two years ago because her
three dogs were chained
instead of in a cage with a roof
. or in a locked, fenced yard
after two of them severely bit
her neighbor. Her attorney,
'Erik Jones, successfully argued
that the law lacks a hearing
process for owners to argue
their dogs aren't vicious before
they must spend the money on
restraints.and ·insurance.
Prosecutors argued that a
dog owner's property rights
aren't harmed by the law
because the vicious dog clas. _sification might be thrown

~hrimp

·telebrafing-special
dtlfs with you! ·
Sunday Tlmes.;Sentinel
.740-446-2342

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farm a big .
- ~uccess in.first year
:, ST_ MARYS (AP) - Jan
:~d Ray Barber weren't sure
~:U their farm was going to
.:liave a decent harvest until
:::tliey pulled out a flashlight
;:,utd saw hundreds of tiny
~'Orange eyes staring back at
~ ·them.
·
~ ~ That's when they knew
;::their shrimp farln was going
;:to be a success.
·
t- "It's been a learning expe~ence," said Jan Barber, 62.
.;:"It's taken a Jot of work. I
~was a little nervous about the
j .[lflit harvest."
·
:. The couple began setting
8IP the prawn operation in the
Cfmt week of June and took
:.:meir first crop earlier this
::month
•·
·
·
.
d
. j · The shnmp pond ne~te
:·-~ pounds worth of shrimp
. ~ double what they expected
fmt year.
.
.- 'I?e gtant Malay~tan
--:shrimp, a freshwater vanety,
: were harvested and. offered
: for sale to the pu~bc at the
: Jann about 80 miles north' .;west of C~lumbus. .
•• The shrimp, sold m 1-! 2imd 5-pound bags at pnces
~-ran~g from $6 to $9, sold
:; out m about an hour.
{ "We didn't get to. save
~.many . for ourselves, J,ust a
.:few little ones to try, swd
~y ~arber, 60.
.
. Ohio ~ about 20 shrimp
larms, up from lO two years
: ago.
'
! It fii'St was allowed in the
: ·state in 2001. Special
· ;approval was needed from
lhe Department of Natural

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Fired FBI translator sues over government records

Weather forecast
Thursday, September 23
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperature s will rise
from 62 to 77 by late this
morning. Skies will be sunny
with 5 MPH winds from the
: northeast turning from the
· nortll as the morning progresses.
Ajtemoo11 (1-6 p.m.)
. Temperature s will hold
· steady arou nd 81 with
: today 's high of 82 occurring
around 4:00pm. Skies will be

sunny with 5 MPH winds
from the northeast.
Eve11ing (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will drop
from 76 early th is evening to
66. Skies will be clear with 5
'MPH winds from the northeast turning [rom the east as
the evening progresses.
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures wiil linger at
62 with today's low of 60
gccurring around 6:00am.
Skies will be cle.ar with 5

MPH winds from the east.
Friday, September 24
Morning (7 a.m.-Noo11)
Temperatures will climb
from 59 to 76 by late this
morning. Skies will be sunny
with 5 MPH winds from . the
east.
A{temoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will hover at
81. Skies will be su nny with
calm turning from the east as
the afternoon progresses.
.

:CBS fined $·550,000 for Janet
· Jackson Super Bowl show
WASHINGTON (AP) Federal law bars radio and piece of Jackson's black leather
CBS got the bill Wednesday noncable television stations top, ellposing her right breast.
for Janel Jack son's eye- from airing, between 6 a. m.
Timberlake blamed a
catching !lash dance during and I0 p.m., references to "wardrobe
mal funet ion ."
the Super Bowl halftime sexual and excretory func- CBS was quick to apologize
show: a record $550,000.
. tipns .. Those are the hours to viewers. The incident genThe Federal Communications when children are more apt to erated a record number of
Commission voted unanimous- be watching television . Once FCC complaints - more
ly to fine each of the 20 CBS- a complaint is made to the than 500.000.
owned television · stations FCC, the agency determines
Members of Congress soon
$27,500, which is the maximum whether the broadcast was began grumbling about smut
penalty for indecency. The indecent
oi1 te levi ~ion. Both the House
singer's right breast was briefly
The FCC: has stepped up and Senate passed legislation
exp6~ to millions of television
enforcement of the statute in that would· dramatically raise
viewers during the show.
recent years as complaints indecenc~ fines: ·The House
The fine is the largest mounted about a coarsening voted to raise the fine to
against a television broad- of public airwaves. Critics, $500,000, while the Senate
caster.
including radio host Howard voted to increase it to $275,000
" As countless families .Stern, claim tt\e FCC is seek- per indecent incident, with a
gathered •around the televicap of $3 million per day.
sion to watch one of our ing to stifle free speech.
Jackson was at the end of a
Differences between the
nation's most celebrated
are being reconmeasures
racy
duet
with
singer
Justin
events, they were rudely
greeted with a halftime show Tunberlake when he ripped off a ciled.
stunt more fitting of a burlesque show," said Michael
Powell, the commission
chairman: ,
The FCC decided not to
fine CBS's more than 200 ·
affiliate stations, which also
aired the halftime show but
are not owned by the network's · parent company,
Viacom Inc.
The agency cited the
"unexpected nature of the
halftime show and the apparent lack of involvement m the
K~n
selection, planning, and
approval of the telecast" by
the affiliates.
The two Democrats on the
five-member FCC panel said
the fine should have been
'
'1·-'·-~... - - .- - - - - - - - .. ., ,-.::higher. It amounted to a "slap
·
COUPON · . .·
on the wrist" for such a huge
company, said one commissioner, Jonathan Adelstein .
He said the agency could
I
have sent a stronger message
I
by also reprimanding CBS'
affiliates:
.
• Limit 1 per customer, per prescription. :
A statement issued by CBS
1
said it is reviewing its options
&amp;
·!
to respond to the ruling. The
' · ·
explres1().5-04 · · · ' ' ~
company has 30 days to ask
for reconsideration and pro"'-•~•.c-..,.__ • - - - - - - - - • ..---"
vide an explanation as to why
the network should not be
held liable. .
. "While we regret that the
incident occunred and have
apologized to our viewers, we
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
continue to believe that nothHOURS
ing. in the Super Bowl broadCharles Rime R. Ph.
Mon- Frt Sam - 9pm
cast violated indecency laws,"
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
Sot. Sam • 5 Pm
the
network
said.
112 Ecist Main Street
Sun. CLOSED
"Funhermore. our investigaPomerciy,
Ohio
tion proved that no one in our
company had any advance .J
Open Weeknights '1'1119 • Friendly SeJVIce
knowledge about the incident."

WASHINGTON (AP) An FBI contract linguist who
alleged that ihere were security lapses in the bureau "s ·
translator program sued ·the
Ju stice Department on
Wednesday to compel its
. inspector general ~o disclose
results of an inve stigation
into her firing .
The department's inspector
general, Glenn Fine, previously has said he would work
toward releasing parts of the
investi gation involving Sibel
. Edmonds, who was fired io
April 2002. The repon, classified at the "secret"' level,
ha s circulated among the
FBI, Justice Department, the
911 Commission and some
lawmakers on oversight com"
mittees.
"We're continuing to work
aggressively with the FBI
and the department to produce an unclassified version
of this report," said Paul K.
Martin. a spokesman for
Fine. "Thi s lawsuit will have
no impact on our efforts to
achieve that end, efforts that
are ongoing and vigorous."
Edmonds alleges she was
.fired after complaining to
FBI managers about shoddy

wiretap translations and
telling them that an interpreter with a relati ve at a foreign embassy might have
compromised national secu rity after the Sept. II attacks
by passing information from
an FBJ ·wiretap to the target .
of an investigation. She filed
her lawsitit In U.S. Di strict
Co urt for the District of.
Colut)lbia .
· FBI
Director
Robert
Mueller already has disclosed that Fine 's investigation did not conclude the FBI
retaliated against Edmonds.
But Mueller has acknowledged in a letter to lawmakers that he was concerned by
Fine's determination that
Edmonds' allegation s ··were
at least a contributing factor
in why the FBI terminated
her services."
Edmonds" lawsuit, filed
under the Freedom of
Information Act, said the
inspector ge neral's office on
Aug. 12 rejected her request
for records about her case but
did not respond to her admi nistrative appeal Aug . 31 and
therefore "wrongfu lly withheld the relevant records"
This summer. U.S. District

Judge Regg ie B. Walton .
threw out u related lawsuit by
Edmonds cha ll enging her tiring. ruling that Edmonds' suit
might expose government
sec rets' that could damage
national security ..
Walton said he was sati&amp;fied with claims by
Atlorney General John
Ashcroft at1d a senior r;BI
offic ial said the civil lawsuit
could expose intelligencegathering m.~thods and di srupt diplomatic relations with
foreign governments. and
Walton said he was satisfied
by their statements . The
judge said an)' further e~llpla­
nation would expose sensitive secrets.
Edmonds ' lawsuit over her
·records was assig ned to a different judge. Ricardo Urbina.

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T•11 • Tltle

All prlc:Mlnclude

�Thuraday, September 23, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page AB

www.mydallysentlnel.com

INSIDE
Nugent Is Buckeye ot last resort, Page 82
Eastern wins TVC Hocking crown, Page 84·
Homaday and RCR to sJIIIt, Page B4

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

G

1J

Thursday, September 23, 2004

Prep Schedule

'

Blue Ang.els defeat Eagles in fo-ur at Eastern

Today'• gimes
Volloyboll

valley A.itists Series ,
season tickets on sale
.

'

'

.

Jackson at Gallia Academy
River Valley at Rock Hill
Belpre at Meigs
Easter'n at Federal_Hocking
Southern at Miller

Croaa Country
Gallia Academy, Meigs at Jackson

Invitational

Soccer
Ohto Valley Christian at Federal Hocking

Golf
Gatha Academy at Chillicothe"
Riwr Valley at Wahama,
, TVC Championship (TBA)

Friday'• gamaa
Football
Gallia Academy at ChiHicothe
Fairland at Meigs
Athens at River Valley .

Marauders prepped for Dragons' aerial assault.

Volleyball
Ohio Valley Christian at Grace
Soccer
Ohio Valley Christian at Grace
Golf
OVC Championship (at Cliffside)

Saturday'• game•
at

Golf
Riverside/Meigs Invitational at Mason,

W.Va .

Meigs takes
second at
·oxbow C.c~
BELPRE - Dan Cooper's
two-und\!r par 33 earned him
Medalist honors Wednesday at
Oxbow Country Club and
helped Belpre impressively cap
a championship season.
His Golden Eagles shot 159
as a team; 20 strokes better than
runner-up Meigs, while wrap·
ping up the Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division title.
Meigs, which finished sec·
ond at all 10 conference matches this season, finished nine
points back of the champions
1n the final standings.
Wellston took third at the
match with a score of 189 fol- ·
lowed by Vinton County ( 190),
Nelsonville' York (197) and
Alexander (198). That was the
order of finish in the final
league standings as well.
: Jit.k.e Venoy paced Meigs
with a 41 Wednesday followed
by Steven Stewart's 42. Kirk
Legar's 44 and a 46 by Josh
Venoy rounded out the
Marauders' scoring. Dan
Bookman and Josh Taylor,
whose scores did not count
toward the tally, carded 48 and
53 respectively.
·
Belpre, Mergs and Wellston
will join the Hocking
Division's top three: Eastern,
Trimble and Southern at the
TVC interdivisional match
. today.

· DE Powell has
knee surgery
. CINCINNATI (AP) - . End
Carl Powell had arthroscopic
knee surgery on Wednesday,
leaving
the
Cincinnati
Bengals thin on the defensive
line that m;eds to contain
Jamal Lewis.
Coach Marvin Lewis didn 't
give an indication of how long
powell will be sidelined.
· Powell is part of the
Bengals' defensive line rotation. He appeared in their first
two games this season off the
'bench, and started three of
their 16 games last year.
: The Bengals' priority
against Baltimore on Sunday
will be containiog Lewis, who
)las rushed for at least I00
yards in each of his six career
games against Cincinnati.

'XWA Cfnlftfallol LD.GIIIan£

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T,he Eagles were led in
scoring by Morgan Weber
wi th 13 poi nb and Jennifer
Arm es with 10. Erin Weber
had eigh t poinh.
Galria Academy won the
junior ,·ars ity comes l. 1325 , as Ryann Les lie had
seve n point S: three aces
a nd three kill s. Leslie
Niday . eight points and
Sarith ·Cochran six. point s
and four kills for the
A~gcls . Katlin Angel also
had four kills for Gallia
Academy.

Prep Football

Eastern at Belpre
Miller at South Gi:lllia
Hannan (W.Va.) at Southern

Cro•• Country
Ga/lia Academy, River Valley
Lancaster ln\litaiional

18 , 25-27, 18-25, 15-11.
and
Weber had
bcooper@mydailytribune.com
Kayla Perty and Felicia
three kills
seven
or
Close pui together a strong
and Larkin s
he rs
·in
four
TUPPERS PLAINS _ In performance at the net for
Eastern's
h 0f
1
the Blue Angels (5-6). Perry
more kill s.
ga me thre e
a rema1c
a non- eague finished with IS kills and·
L e x x i
Will.
contest held during a triRees
finmatch earlier thi s season at Close had 13 .
C a ' e y
ished witli
Chesapeake,
. Gallia
Perry also had 16 digs and
Smith and
12 digs .
Jennifer
Academy turned the tables 16 points, while Annie
F
o
r
on Eastern.
Cornett had 12 digs , I 0
Hayman
~__
_
_
_
...J
Eastern
(?The
Blue . Angels pomts and 33 asststs and
each
had
defeated the Eagles in ,a' Close con.tnbute~ w1tp 16 Winebrenner J); - Darcy ...___ _ _...J four kills.
M. Weblir
Hay m an
Winebrinner
highly contested high dtgs and etght p01nts.
and Morgan
also
had
school ·volleyball match
Whttney Larkm s and
Wednesday 25-19, 25- Ashley Jones ·each ~ad four Weber led the way up front, three block s and Erin Weber
'
block shots. Jones had II each recording 12 kills . finished with four.
BY BUTCH COOPER

BY BRYAN WALTERS
Malone (6-2, 230) and Josh
bwalters@ mydailytribune.com . Moore (6-1. 215) · are
returning at the tackles.
Fairland relies on a quick
POMEROY
The
attack
that thrives on an upFairland Dragons enter Bob
tempo
pace.
Roberts Field this Friday in
Meigs
coach
Mike
the final non-league contest
Chancey
thinkS
·
it
will
be a
for the Meigs football team
tough test tl)at his kids must
this season.
But before concentration be ready for.
"Hill does a real good job
and focus begins on the
of
running that offense and
start of the TVC Ohio seathey
have som~ good
son, FHS ( 1-3) has on~; final
test for the Marauders as receivers that can make
they begin a three-game things happen ," commented
Chancey. " It will be a good
homestand .
The Dragons possess an chall enge for our defense
explosive offense, le.d by and I think our kids are
quarterback Michael Hill. excited about it."
Meigs has been very proHill has amassed over I ,000
yards passing already this ductive in its first four
season and had 623 total games, possessi ng .a plus-16
yards (532 pass, 102 rush) turnover margin and has
in a 47-44 win over outscored it opponents IllSheldon Clark (W.Va.) back 55 on the year.
The streng th of" Meigs
in week three.
this
season has also been its
Last week against Tolsia
particularly
(W.Va.), Hill managed 16- defense,
agai
nst
the
pass . . The
of-44 for . 269 yards and a
Marauders have averaged
touchdown.
allowing
77 yards through
Sam Huff is an AII-OVC
returnee at wideout and has the air.
An advantage that Meigs
nice complimenis in Todd
has
in this contest is the
Maynard and Wes Ripley.
Adam . Fuller . and J.B . size differential and depth.
Smith share time in the Fairland has only 35 play},ackfield and also provide ers, while the hosts have a
good receiving targets for roster 55 stro ng. · The
Dragons also ltave a serious
Hill.
discrepancy
in size on the
On the offensive line,
interior
lines,
and the proof
center Matt Burd (6-foot-2,
215 pounds) is the anchor is in the .rushing category.
Meigs runriing back Jared Casey (34) has had consecutive 100-yard rushing efforts in each
of the Fairland attack.
of Meigs' last two victones. (ian McNemar/photo)
Please see Meigs, B:Z
Clark,
Brad
Cameron

Eastern back on the road Garcia can't·do any
for showdown with Belpre Worse'for Browns
BY BUTCH CooPER
· pleased with his team' s Monday.
bcooper@mydailytribune.com overall efforts during
The Monday game will
those extra minutes.
. only give Belpre .three
TUPPERS PLAINS ·_
· "We really stepped up,'' day s to prepare . for
Th
·
b bl
said Newland. "I think you Eastern.
ere ts pro a Y· a no saw a lot of good leader"Belpre' s a great team,"
better way for a team to
d
•
·
turn around a season than ship that we 've been wait- said Newlan . "Its gomg
to be a good game come
a overtime wi'n on the road ing for for four ·games."
The
win
comes
a
little
Friday night. It will be a
on a Saturday night.
Eastern pulled off ·a under two weeks from the good tune -up going into
of
Tri· Valley league play.''
needed road win over ·the start
Canference
Hocking
Meanwhile, Newland
weekend as the Eagles
.
,
defeated Green, 25-18, in Division play.
. was happy with his team s
Before that happens. the ever-improving pa ssi ng
0
!it was huge," said Eagles will face another game.
Eastern head coach Pat . set of Eagles in non-divi- . .Lt!d by quarterback Ken
Newland. "We were com- sional play as Eastern trav- Amsbary and ·capable pass
catchers in Chris Myers
ing off two straigh.t losses els to Belpre Friday. ·
1
Belpre is led by a strong a·nd Phil Pierce
and anytime you can snap
d , the
· Eitg es
·
running
trio
of
Dustin
had
173
yar
s
ln
"the
atr
.
a losing streak, that a big
Adams, Shawn Colvin and against Green .
g ain."
Matt Alloway.
That, along with the ·
The Eagles used a five·
Adams had 172 yards strong backfield of Durst
k
yard touchdown run by
fullback Terry Durst 10 rushing on 26 carries for and Bryan, ,Minear, rna e
Belpre (3- I) in a 27-16 Eastern a very dangerous
· 1y.
Pull out the win .
win
over Federal . H_ocking team offens1ve
Newland
was
very

BY TOM WITHERS

Associated

Pr~ss

BEREA- Jeff Garcia has
nothing ro show for his most
recent NFL game: Zero .
Really.'
Cleveland's quarterback
put hi s name in the N'FL
record book last Sunday. but
years from now, it 's a safe
.
bet that he'll never bother to" when plugged. tnto the con~plex QB raung tormula spl!
!oo k 1·1 up .
. . ·. · . d
b
Garcia had the worst da y out a p.111 ol 1oun num ers.
.
of his pro career - and ve ty round one,. .
maybe of hi s football life' _
Garct.a ' dtlu hle.-Lero 1s a
wi th a 0.0 passer rating in rare lcat 111 the NFL.
Sunday 's loss to the Dallas Accon.llllg to the Elias Sports
Cowboys.
~ureau, he became JU S! the
" Did he reall y'" tackle ltllh quarterback s1nce 1970
Ross
Verba
as ked to stoop so low and JUSt the
.0
Wednesday. "Wow. I' m sure second st ncc 1976.
he never wants 10 do that
So how does he h~ndle 11 .
"Put
11 behtnd me . he satd .
agatn ."
Garcia went just R-of~27 "I ktl'ow I ha \'et!'t hod many '
for 71 yards &lt;md threw three
Please see Browns, B:Z
interce ptions, numbers that

. DUE

TO INCLEMENT WEATHER •
THE PLEASANT VALLEV HOSPITAL
ANNUAL FAll SCRAMBLE HAS BEEN
CHANGED TO FRIDA)', SEPTEMBER 24; 2004.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Lunch at noon. Shotgun start at 1 p.m. Teams are still being accepted through advance registration.
For more information please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326.
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Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Thursday, September 23.

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Thursday, September 23, 2004

The OVP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Pagr 83

By The

.NUMBERS
.

'

BIG TEN STANDINGS

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREA K DOWN THIS WEEK'S MAT CH UPS
I'

Big Ten

@

A look

at the region's top ·
football teams, as voted by
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
staffers. (First-place votes
in parentheses) ·

.·

Team
Prev. Votes
1. Ironton (6)
1
68
2. Parkersburg South 2
60
3. Huntington , W.Va. 4 50
4. Jackson (1)
· 4
48
5. Williamstown
6
43
6. Wayne
nr
22
7. Portsmouth
9
19
· (tie) Wahama
nr
19
9. Wheele rs burg
7
17
10. Chillicothe
10
14

Butt:h Cooper
Sports W r1ter
Rt'(ord: ~8- 1 2
L.~,r \~ltx·k: 7-3
{Pick i11 l!.2ld)

Brad Sherman
Spurb Wr it~:r

.1t Chjllicothf

Butl:1!u

• 1

,;t

I

'i
I

l

I

I•

,I

!

'I

I

l

.11 C~jllicothe

Pojnt Pleasanl
,lf W infie ld

3-1

'

Fairland

"~

at ~

Gallia Acadell)Y

Gallia Academy

at Chjmcotbe

at Chjllicothe

at

lf utf.1 ll&gt; at

Buffalo :J.t

Wah am a

W ;1h allla

Hannan At
Sourhcrn

Haun,m at·
Sourhern

Milk! ;lt

.Mill.n

Mi.lkr :It

ll!l&lt;l l'l ,11

Jl

Sout li G.llli.l

Trimble a t

at
Hannan a't
Southern

· MiliH at

"

(ial!il Acade my
at Chillicothe

J[

Butf3lo at

Wahama

Wah am a

llufl:do at
· Wahama

H annan at
Southern

Hanmn ;U
Southern

Southern

Souih Ga lli;1 ·
Athl'm at
·Rjyer Valley

Trimble at
N els01JVille-York

Nelsonville-York

Trimbl e at·
Nelsooyille-York

Nel!tonvillti~ York

Rock Hill

Rock Hill

at Wellston

at Wellston

Hm

Wellston

Northwestern . . . . .. . . . . . . .

.Mill.tl ;tt

Rjyer Valley

:lr

..

Hann an ·,n

MiUc:r at

Athens at
River VaJiey

Rock

Point Pk· a ~;·i nt
~ ~ WinGeld

at Winfield

Allwu"
River Valley

Ro ck Hill

Minnesota . : . . . . . • . , . •. , , 213.00

Ohio State . , . . . ... . .. .... .
Michigan Sti!te . . . . . . . . . . . ..
RUSHING OITENSE.
Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Purdue. , . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . .
lllinois . . ~ .. .. . . . . . . • . , '
Penn State. , . . . . . . . . . . . , '
Wisconsin , . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Indiana

E a~ l l'flt

Athens :It
Rjver Valley

Trimble at

M.rii!

Athens al

Athens ,u
Riycr Valley

Tr unhle .tt
Nelsonvme- York

Trimbl e at

Rock Hill

R nck Hill .
· at Wellston

&lt;~,1

Wellston

.,_••._
.....,.....

0-4

,.

1/

SHENNIU

All

Jackson

Q-{)

4-0

Gallia Academy

Q-{)

?.-2

Logan

O-{)

1·3

Marietta

0-0

1'·3

Warren

0-0

.1·3

Athens

0-0

0-4

College Footbail

Nugent has become· the
~uckeye

of last resort

then his sophomore, junior
Gallia Academy at Chillicothe
Associated Press
and senior years have been
Athens at River Valley
spectacular. If he keeps up
Cols. Franklin Heights at Jackson
COLUMBUS
The
the pace he's been. going,
Logan at Gahenna Unooln
three certainties of bhio
.. he could go down as one of
Marietta at Dublin Jerome
State football are , good
the finest kickers in the hisWarren at Chesapeake
defense ; cautious offense
tory of our school."
and Mike Nugent winning
The former high school
TVC
garnes with his right instep.
quarterback
from
the.
second
week
in
a
Centerville
shanked
an
For
Ohio Division
the senior kicker
extra-point and missed a
Tum
M
AI! -row,
saved the No . 7 Buckeyes
1 · 1 · 1 f' 1
1
0-0
3-1
atlve Y stmp e Je d goa
AleXl!nder
(3_-0) in Saturday's 22-1' 4 Everybody knows how re
in a 13-6 loss at UCLA his
Belpre
0-0
3-1
wm at North Carolina · good he is," said long- freshman season in his first
State. Nugent kicked five snapper Kyle Andrews, an
0-0
3-1
Meigs _
field goals in as many . important part of Nugent's exposure to big-time colVinton County ..
0-0
3-1
h
success. "It's a comfort lege football.
·
· I d.
a It emp Is. mc u mg t ree
"Th
h 1
Wellston
0-0
3-1
from 46 yards or farther, to having him back there,
at wast e pw point,".
tie an Ohio State record.
knowing that he's always Nugent said.
Nelsonville-York
0-0 . 2-2
Did we mention that the going to make .those."
He converted only half of
Hocking Division
· field was wet and that the
The defense is allowing his 14 kicks during the
Tum
M . All remnants of Hurricane I van less than 14 points a game 200 I season and the ·
up losing
Trimble
Q-0
J-.1 Were Stl.ll. wa ft"mg t h roug h and 261· net yards. It also- Buckeyes ended
b
Carter-Ftnley Stadium? .:· ended a two-game slump two games Y three points
. Eastern
0-0
2-2
"Mike Nugent's perfo~- without a turnover by tak- and another by two.
Southern
0-0
1-3
.w
mallce
.
. as ·ou tsI an d.1ng, " ,· ng !he ball away from the b' Nugent was one of the
0-,0
1-3
Waterlord
satd a grateful coach Jim Wolfpack five times:
· . tggest factors in the
Federal Hocking
0-0
Q-4
Tressel. "He just did a
Meanwhile the offense Buckeyes' · 'meteoric 14-0 .
great job for us, coming has ru-shed for just 303 national championship the
Miller
0-0
0;:4
through when we needed yards ill three games _ the following year, hiuing on a
Friday's Games
him . We keep saying he ill-fated Maurice Claret! school-record 25 Q{ 28
Fairland at Meigs
may
be the best kicker in had 471 by himself &lt;II the field goals while IJeing
Eastern at Belpre
!,he countrv."
t
named first-team . All.
same s age two years ago. American . by
The .
Hannan at Southern
The week before, Nugent The Buckeyes
are
a!
Alexander at Federal Hod&lt;ing
· ·
so Associated Press.
converted a · 55-yard field- erratic through the air, mir- ·
Trimble at Nelsonville-York.
goal as rime expired as raring
their first-year
Last. year he was no less
Rock Hill at Wellston .
Ohio
State
e
scaped
with
a
starter
~I
quarterback,
efficient,
making 16 of 19
Miller at South Gallia
24-21
win
over
Marshall.
Justin
Zwick
.
field
goals
and all 3~ of his
Parkersburg Cath. at Waterlord
That'll get you carried
Even if the offense slut- poinhafter kicks.
off the field on your ream- rers and stuml;lles , Nugent · Nugent owns 13 scho~l
mates' shoulders. A week is always there to prop up· records _- tymg !,he OhiO
Cardinal
All
later, he put his own team hi s teammates . He has con·- State record set. by Bob
2-{)
4-0
Wayne
.on his shoulders.
verted 8 of 9 field go:tls Atha who had ftve field
Point Pleasant
1-{)
2·2
While the defense stifled (the only . mi ss was 53 goals m a . 1~81 _game - .
the W,olfpack on all but yards) and has consistently and has more m hts s!ghts .
Winfield
1-1
3-1
their final tWO possessions, registered touchbacks on
_He now has 285 pomts !n
Sissonville
1-2
1-2
the " Buckeyes offense . his kickoffs .
~.., hts three-plus . seasons_ m
Poca
0-1
1-3
played as if it was ahead by · W,hen Tressel got the job Columbus, puttm.g htmJu_st
Herbert Hoover
0-1
0-3
50 points· - ineffectively prior to the 2001 season, he 63 pomts behmd Obw
running the ball, melting quickly took stock of his State record holder Pete
Friday's Games
time off the clock and special teams .
Johnson. Johnson had 58
Point Pleasarit at Winfield
''I'd
only
been
here
about
touchdowns from 1973 to
throwing
only
when
Wayne at Sissonville .
Herbert Hoover at Clay County
absolutely necessary.
two days when 1 asked the 197 6Saturday's Game
Nugent converted kicks staff that was remainillg
Nugent, ·who had 86
Magnolia at Poca
of 50, 30, 33, 46 and 47 how they felt about the pomts last year and 120 the .
yards. The drives leading kicking · situation because year befo~e, ~ants the
but IS trymg not to
:rum
All up to those kicks covered, -the kicker from 2000 was record
11
in order, 10 yards in eight graduating," Tres~el said. d':';~ ~~kit. h
ld be
4-{)
Ironton
plays, 34 yards in six plays, "They said, ·we have one
t, m I . at .wou
Wahama
3-1
I yard on four plays, 28 . guy. Untested.' And 1 said ~reat, he satd. 'The only
yards on seven plays and 'Wei( don ' t you think w~ ume ~ really ever think
Symmes Valley
2-1
minus- I yard on four plays. need 10 go out - and get abouf II ts when somebo4y
Oak Hill
1-3
Nugent has obviously another kicker?'
lets me know about ~t,
Hannan
0-3
become the · Buckeyes'
"One thing led 10 another mayb,e after a game they II .
(}-3
South Gallia
court of last appeal.
and we went out and ot say. Oh, y_ou made II to
Friday's Games
His teammates, enjoying Mike Nugent , and ghe th1s pm.nt m the scoring
Miller 'll South Gatiia
. .
·
a bye week before opening became a starter from day re~~rds.
Big Ten play on Oci. 2 at one. He had a tough freshI m not sttllng at home •.
Buffalo at Wahama
Northwestern , all but con- man. year, as m'any fresh- saymg to t;nyself, .'Oh, I
Southem at Hannan
Paul Blazer (Ky.) at Ironton
firm that he is their securi- men do. He· was good by caul? g~t this or I could get
Oak Hilt at Symmes Valley
ty blanket.
·
the end of the year. And that. Its only when some" I know how good he _is.
body bnngs 11 up."
BY RUSTY M ILLER

Cardinal

(

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Meigs
from Page 81
Last week, Jared Casey
ran 33 times for 172 yards
in a 28-7 win over Warren,
while Tolsia 's B.J. Evans
ran for 200 yards in its . 2219 win over the Dragons.
The Marauders have 662
rushing yards on the season, with Casey leading the
way with 361 yards.
.conversely, Hill is the
only I 00-yard rusher that
Fairland has had this season.
With a size discrepancy

that favors Chancey and the
.maroon and gold, expect
Meigs to pound the bal.! on
the ground to eat up clock
and keep the · PHS defense
on the field. Also expect
Meigs to play its same
sound ways that have them
3-1 this season and looking
for more·.
"We are going to try and
do what ·we do. We are
going to try and execute.
come off the football and be
, sound on defense," said
Chancey. "We want to play
four quarters of fundamen tal football."
· Kick-off is scheduled for
7:30p.m.

"

.

213.00
211.67
""
359.3 3
234.00
226.67
224.00
173.67
168.67
168. 00

T~TAL OFFENSE
Purdue ... : . . . . . .' ... , , . , 585.00
Minilesota . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·. 57 2. 33
No~hweste:m ... .. .. ... . .. 479 .00
Penn State ... . .. •. . . . . . . . . 465. 33
Illinois . . . . . . . . . . , , . .. .. 454.33
Michigan State . . . . . . . . . . . .. 368.67
Ohio State . . . . . . .... . .. .. 334.00
PASSING DEFENSE
Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121.33
Ohio State .... . . . . . . . . . . . 133.6)
Puidue . . . . . . . . , . , . , . , .. 141 .10
PennState . . . . . . , . , . . . . . 181.00
Michigan State . .. . • . , . . .
. 183 .00
Michigan . . . . . . . .' . . . . . . . . 228.00
Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 242 .67
RUSHING DEFENSE
Iowa . . .... .. . . . . . . . . . . . 43.00
Puidue . . .... • .... . .. .. . 55.50
Michigan .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63.33
Wisconsin. , .... •. . , , .. , . . . 73.57
?ennState .... • : . . . . . . . ·.. 87.00
Minnesota .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . 109.33
Northwestern ... .. . . . . , .. .. 1i4.33

INDIVrDUll.L LEllDERS
.PASSING YARDAGE
Brett Basanez, Northwestern , , . . . 311 ..00

Kyle Orton. Purdue . . . . . .

. . 308.00

Bryan Cupito, Minnesota .
. . . . 209.00
Justin Zwick, Ohio State ... ... .. 203.33

Zack Mitts, Penn State ... .... . , 197.00
Chad Henne, Michigan .. .. , .. . . 181.33
Matt LoVecchio , Indiana . . . . . . .. 142.67
RUSHING YARDAGE
Marion Barber 111, Minnesota . , . .. 142.67
La~ence. Maroney, Minne~ota , , . ·.. 127.00
BenJarvus ~reen-Ellis, Indiana . . . . 101.00
Tony Hunt, Penn State . . . . . . .. 101.00
Noah HeiToiJ;, Northwestern. . . , .. 94.67
Lydell Ross, Ohio State . . . . . . ·. . , 94:00
Pierre Thomas, illinois . . . . . . . .. 90.00

ot

Ill ustration by Bruc~ Plante c 2004

Illiniface powerhouse
'

C

oming_into the Big Ten -season •.rhe league 's most imposifl g
offens1ve force seems to he Purdue. The Boilennakers have
outscored the ir two opponents by a -combined 110-7 ; leading

the nation in both scoring offense and defense. Behind the
proficie~t passing of serlior quarterback Kyle Orton , Purdue is a
.marked team .
Using coach Joe Tiller's spread offense, Onon is pOist!d for~
record-breaking season that could challenge even former passer
.
·
Drew Brees' legacy .
Orton' s fa\•orite option is wide receiver Taylor Stubblefield ,
and the_pair are feared across the league as Big Ten conference
. play begins. They travel to Champaign- Urbana , Ill .. for their
opener against_an Illinois team looking to erase the memories of
last season's 1- 11 record.
But without'senior passer Jon Beurjer, rhe Illini had their work
cut Ol)l for them in las t Saturday'S game . Jn reds:hin fre shman

Bmd Bower' s first stan, against Western Michlgti.n, Illinois
managed to pull off a tight 30-27 victory. They will need much
more than that to beat Purdue.
· The B'oiiermakcrs moved up to No. is in both national polls
and arc looking to avoid a letdown.lllinoi s reshaped.&lt;!• defense
_du·ring the offseason for this type of game . moving fonner .wide
receiver Kelvin Hayden to the defense. where.he already has two
interceptions .~

• Records: Purdue 2-0 (0-0 Big Ten):. Ulinois 2-1 (0-0 Big Ten).
• Series: Illinois leads 41-34-6. • Coaches: Purdue's Joe Tiller
(96-62-1); Illinois' Ron Turner (41-54). Kickoff: II a.m. Cf
· MarkPhilmore, Northwestern . . . . . 111.67
Saturday. • TV: ESPN.
.
Santonio Holmes, Ohio State ... , . 110.33
"·
Key
for
Purdue:'Auack
!he
QB
.
lllinois
QB Brad Bower,,
Courtney Roby, I:ndiana .. . ·... .. . 95.33
unproven,
and
lhe.
redshirt
freshman
will
probably
be shakable. If • ·
Kendrick Jones, Illinois . . . . . . . . . 88.33 .
the
Boilemmkers
can
apply
pressure
early
and
often;
they will be
Jonathan Fields, Northwestern .. .. . 79.33
able
to
tum
the
effort
into
turnovers,
keeping
their
high-tlyi.ng
Jared Ellerson, Minnesota . . . . . ... 73.00
·
offense on the field.
TOTAL OITENSE
key for Illinois: Piay plenty of nickel and dime sets. lookin g
• Brett Basanez, Northwestern . ... . 335.00 to stop Purdue 's ,potent passing attack . If they can find a way to
Kyle Orton, Puidue . ... . . . . . . 330.50
contain the pass and QB Kyle Orton, the Illini ..can slay in this
Bryan Cupito. Minnesota . . . . . . . 210.33
·game.
Zack Mills, Penn State ... . .. ... 204.33
Justin Zwick, Ohio State . . . . . . . . 197.67
The Rest of the
Chad Henne, Michigan . .. . . .. . . 169:67
Matt LoVecchio, Indiana ... ... .. 159.67
So far this seasiln , lhe league's biggest disappointment has been
POINTS
Michigan , which lost to Notre Dame and edged San lose Stale
24-211ast Saturday. The Wolverines face off against an Iowa team
Taylor Stubblefield. Purdue .... .. . 15.00
coming off a 44-7 blo~out loss to Arizona Stale.
Marion Barber m, Minnesota . . . . . . 12.00
Hawkey"es coach Kirk Ferent~ will .be sure to have his team
ilil:e Nugent. Ohio State . . ... ... 10.33
more
prepared for tylichigan. who will probably start true
Ben Jones, Purdue . . . . . .. , . .. 10.00
freshmen
at both quarterback and running back in their conference
E.B. Halsey. nlinois .. .' ... , . . . . · 10.00
opener.
·
Rhys Lloyd, Minnesota ... .... ... 8.67
As
the
Bi~ Ten season starts, both of these teams .need a victory
Garrett Rivas. Michigan ... .- ... . . 8.33
to gatherthe1r confidence for a title run.
INTERCEPTIONI
Markus S,uny. Michigan .._., .: . . · . . . 1.00 ·
Iowa at Mit:higan
Trumaine Banks. Minnesota .. "-.:... . . . 0.67
• Recorrb: Iowa 2- 1 (0.(1 Big Ten); Michigan 2-1 (0-0 Big Ten).
Ukee Dozier, Minnesota .. ... .. .• 0.67
• Series: Michigan leads 37-9-4. • Coaches: Iowa' s Kirk
Tracy Porte r,. I ndiana . . ... . . . .. . '0.67 . Ferenlz (46-1 ,1); Michigan 's Lloyd Carr (88-27). • Kickoff: 3:30
Kelvin Hayden, Rlinois . . . . . . . . . . 0.67 . p.m. ET Saturday. • TV: ABC.
Anwar Phillips. Penn State .. .. , . .. 0.67
ICey for Iowa: Stop the Michigan passing attack. Iowa was
Chad Gree11way, Iowa .... ... .. . 0.67
tenorized by Arizona State's passing game. and the Wolverines
will anacl.lhat weakness. With WRs Braylon Edwards. l oon
Ryan MWldy. Michigan .. . . . . . . , . 0.67

Matehups

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J

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.......,HIGAN Despit-e the
lll'l'1=i
WolveJ,nes' struggles
with San Diego State, senior wi'de receiver
Brayton Edwards made his presence felt.
With his fourt h reception Saturday. .
Edwards became Mic higan's career leading
receiver, finishing the game with 181
catches for 2,562 yards and 28 career
touchdowns. Saturday , he caught eight
passes for 130 yards an d two t ouc hdowns.

RECEIVING YARDAGE
Braylon Edwards, Michigan
. . . 116.67

Browns

. Six Cleveland starters
were injured in the loss. The
most significant were rookie
tight end Kellen Winslow
from Page 81
Jr., out at least two months
of those experiences in the with a broken 'leg, and
past. I don't want to be that defensive end Couriney
person that says everyone Brown, who has been lost
has a bad day. It's a situation for the season with a tom
that I don't want to have ligament-in his fooi.
Right tackle Ryan Tucker
repeated."
will
miss this week's game
Garcia's. performance was .
w'ith
a strained quadriceps.
so brutal that duplicating it
would be difficult.
· defensive tackle Gerard
Beginning with' his third Warren is out after aggravatattempt, when he missed a ing a strained muscle in his
and
cornerback
wide-open Quincy Morgan chest,
Daylon
McCutcheon
may sit
streaking down the right
sideline for what could have after having three pins surgibeen an easy touchdown, cally inserted into a broken
·
Garcia was off the mark all middle finger.
Those injuries compoundafternoon.
ed
Garcia's nightmarish day,
The three-time Pro Bowler
Wht.
ch came otie week after
with San Francisco rushed
throws, .hesitated on others, his celebrated debut when he
looked flustered in the pock- threw a TD pass and ran for
et and was picked off on another as the . Browns
Baltimore in Week
consecutive possessions in shocked
I.
.
the fourth quarter when the
At 34, Garcia' has been
Browns were still witHin
through
more than his share
five points.
ups
and downs, But
Statistically. it added up to
a big, fat zero. One Garcia although he had a game he'd
never wants to see again and rather forget, Garcia isn ' t
one he needs to forget quick- worried about age eroding
ly as the Browns (1-1) pre- his abilities.
don't have · a problem
pare to visit tl)e New York
wtt,h
my physical skills," he
Giants this week.
... Anytime you experience said. "I don't think that was
a low like we went through ev!.dent Sunday. You go frotl)
last Sunday, you look for- ~mg on top one week to on
ward to that next opportuni- the bottom the next. That's
ty to bring yourself out of it the nature · of the bu~ines s.
. an~ tum things around," he Ultimately. )•ou take the
satd. "I have no doubt in my good with the bad.
mind tha1 ·I will be a better · "I don' t have any concerns
player this week .. Obviously, as far as my health or my age
of any of that holding me
1-have to be."
··
All of the Browns necil to back from doing what I want
step up their game this week to do. I wil I demonstrate that
.
after the club was ravaged this week-."
After
a
zero,
at
least he
by injuries on Sunday.
can' t do any worse.

·

-...miANA While the Hoosters
lfiiii"'D
suffered their first loss
ofth'e season, 52'·32 to riyal Kentucky,
wide receiver Courtney Roby had a
~ reakout performance. The.cousin of
former Miami Dolphins punter Reggie
Roby, the younger Roby caught se""n
passes for. 184 of Indiana's 412 yards of
pffense, inclu.diilg two touchdowns.
~A Avenging a 21-2loss to [owa
,_ . . ,.
last season, Arizona State
bombed [owa 44-7. While the Hawkeyes
· managed just 100 yards of offense, they
all owed 511 yaro s. including 428 yards
from senior passer-Andrew Walter, who
was 31 -of-43 w:il h five touctdowns. The
Hawkeyes' pu sitiveS on.defense were
limited to one interception by defensive
back Antwan Allen.

Northwestern .. . . . . . . . . . , . 311.00
PennState . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 241.33

:1t

Point Pleasant

Pul'due at Illinois

Average p"er game

.[{~

South Gallja

at Welluop

Jt

GAME OF THE WEEK

lilllroLrNQIS -With starting senior
P1R11
quarterback Jon
Beutjer out with an injury , redshirt
freshman Brad Bower stepped iti for the
Illini. winning 30-27 ove' Western
Michigan_ in his first game. Bower threw
for 177 yards on 10-for- 19 passing.
including one touchdown. But Bower also
showed his inexperience, thr owin g two

i,nterceptions.

Illinois . .. .. . . . . . .. . .... 227 .67

Mril:i

qo o4 Longwing Publications Inc.

TEAM LEADERS

F.1i rland

Fa irl~ nd

at

South Gaiji:1

'

85
75
44
59
61
95
54

PASSING OITENSE
Purdue .... . : .. . .. . .. ... . 3Sl.OO

South GaUia

Trimble at

7

M r. Radi o Guy
Reco rd : 24- 16
Last We e ~: 6-4
(P1ck in l!!llil)

Poi1lt Ple;tsant
~~ Wjn6eld

Buffalo

92
87
63
86
62

58
41
16

Ad. Representive
Rero rd: 26- 14
LascWt·~ k: 7-:3
(Pick i~ h2Ill)

at~

Pojnt Pleasant
at Winfield

gg

PA

And'tew Carter

Sm1th GalkJ

Nelsooyillr~ York

ROl:k Hill
;n We11sto·n

Last Week: 7-}
(Pick in b.2kl)

PF
134
73
61
110
109

0·0
0-0

Dave Harris·

Eastern

l:kl pr~

Jt

Uuttillo

Others

'

Fairla nd

.lt"Meigs

Stafi-Writer

1-3

SEQ'

:rum

'

Fairland

Wahama
So uti]ern

Rock Hill

Rec.ord; 25- 15
Last Week: 8-2
(P1c k in b.2kl)

Eastern

B..dpn_

H.11m:m
Southern

at Wellston

R t:cord: 20-20
Last Week: 5-5
(Pick 111 hlilil)

Point Pleasant
at W infidd

Nd~onv iii L·- Yo rk

2-2
1-3
1-3

Ian MCNemar

Point Pleasant
at Ulinfi t'ld

Itiyer Valley

Friday's Games

I'

Chillicothe

· Athens nf

AU

SEOAL

I

,lt

Wahama

ovc

I

Winfield

South Calli .t

0-0
Coal Grove·
0-0
Chesapeake
O-{)
Fairland
0-{)
River Valley
0-{)
Rod&lt; Hill
South Point
0-{)
Friday's Games
Athens at River Valley
Warren at Chesapeake
Coal Grove at Vinton County
Fairland at Meigs
Rod&lt; Hill at Wellston
Northwest at South Point

.1 1

Paul U. Polcyn
Copy Editor
Record: 28- 12

Mr. Staff Report
T he Masked P-icker

. Gallia Academv
at C hillicoth e

Eastt'TII

Standings 1Schedule
QllC

f ,Jirl.itld

,]{ Mrict

,H

too'Jl ruaa

Im!m

Bryan Walters
Spom Writer
R.ecorll: 27- 1J
L.tst Wc:ek: 5-5
(Pick in bsllil)

( ;,,Jh.t Ac-~1 ~.-km.\'

.1t

'

(Pic k in .b.Qkl)

F.1irl.1nd

p, unt Pk -•~.lilt

[?~[!)

R c-ro rd: :lY-11
LJ~t Wl·e k: 7-.1

.It ' ~

Others receiving votes:
Parkersburg 7, Trimble 6, Cabell
Midland 5: Nelsonville-YOO&lt; 2 . .
Coal Grove 2. Gallia Academy
1 , Meigs 1, Buffalo 1.

'

AU Top 25
3·0 0·0
Ohio State
3·0 0-0
Wisconsin
0~0
3-0
0-0 '
Puidue
0·0
2-0 0-0
Indiana
0-0 · . 2-1 1-0
Illinois
. 0-0
2- t
0·0
Penn State
0-0
2-1
0·0
Michigan
0-0
2-1
0·0
Iowa ·
0-0
2-l
0·0
Northwestern o-o
1-2
0·0
Michigan St. o-o
1·2 0·0

"Minnesota

Avant and Ste ve Brcaston. the Wolverines should be able to take it
tt? the air . The onl y question is whether QB Chad Henne c ~n get
them !he ball. ·
Key for Michigan: Eslabl ish a running game . The Wolverines
have shuftlcd in plenty of backs and seem·to have eliminated RB
Da ~id UnderwoOd . the starter atlh.e&gt;'llCginning of the ·se.ason. from ·
~he Jr_rl a ns-'tfter a slight injur&gt;:- True fre shman Mi ke Hart stepped
l!t wJth 12 1 yards against San Diego State and made a difference
lor the W'olvcnnes.

Penn State at Wisconsin

· • ltec!brds: Penn Sratc 2- 1 (0-0 Bi g Ten): Wisconsin 3-0 (0~0 Big
T en }. • Series: Wi sconsin leads 6-3. • Coaches: Penn State' s Joe
Palcrno (341 -110-.l) : Wiscon sin' s Barry Alvarez ( 102-67 -4).
• Kickoff: 4:-15p .m. CT Sa!urday. • TV: ESPN .
Key for Penn State: Eliminate the turnovers. Senior QB Zack
Mills was aturnover machine again st Central Florida and .has beeO
inc..onsistent all season . When tliey put the ~all in running back
To~y ~ uht' s hand s. t~ e results have been better. Another healthy
option IS ~~~ ·~urpose player., Michael Robinson, who threw.Ja lOng
pass to M1lls 111 the v1ctory over Central Florida.
Key for Wisconsin: Keep !he running game rolling with · .
Booker S!anley. S!arting RB Anlhony Davis wtll probably miss
this gam.e ~ i th an eye inju ry . s.o Stanley will be the Badgers_' only
true opuon 111 the run ning game.

Nor:thwestern at Minnesota
• Records: NorthweSiem 1 -~ (0-0 Big Ten): Minnesota 3-0 (0-0
Big Te n). • Series: Minncsou leads 43-28-5. • Coaches:
Northwe~tern ·:-. Rmtd) .\Valker (84-72-5); Minriesota ' SGlen
Mason I. I06 - I[J~- 1 l. • Kickoff: 8: 12 p.m. Cf Saturday . • TV:
ESPN2.
•
•
.
.Key fo~ Northwestern: Slow down the Gol,derl 'Gophers'
running game Run ning had s Marion Barber Ill and Laurence
M aroney :tre as good as they get. The Wildcars' hcsr chance is if
they can fore~ new quanr-r b ~_d. Bryan Cupiro to win the game .
Key for Minne~ota: Disrupt ~ orth wesl crn 'S passing game.
QB Brett Basancz is ~rcll ar when give n the·timc for a play ro
develop . He has ~cvcr~lt op receiving options to work with.
.~__,·

Michigan State at Indiana

• Re«:ords: \1 i~ h igan Strite 1-2 i0-0 Bi g Ten): Indiana 2- 1 (0-0
Big Ten1. • Series: Mic higan Swre lead&lt;35- IJ-2. • Coaches:
Michigan Slate's lohn L. Smith ( 1-19-67): Indiana', Gc rrv
DiNardo (58-69- 11. • Kickoff: II a .m~ Cf SaiUrday. • Tv: ESPN
Reg ional
ICeys fo.r Michigan State: -~top Indiana early. The Hoosier.;
h~ ,·e used earl) lea~l.s· to beat Central Michigan and Oregon to
begin the !&gt;eason. ln the Hoosiers· only loss. KcniUc ky took a
27-17 lead at halfti me and turned it intq a 51 ~~2 win.. : . Establ ish
a running game. The Spartans ha\"C used several runners. bur
redshirt frc~m an Jc huu Caulcrick sc.."\'!mS to be the right back rOr
this offense. The runni ng bac,k ~ have fulnblcd plenty~ far Ibis
season and mu'sl !&gt;lop the turnovers . which cost the Spanans dearly
in their 31-24 loss to Notre Dame.
·
, Key for Indiana: Run the footb•ll . When runn ing back
BcnJarvus Green-E II i~ ~~on . the HoosierS have been suc~essful .
When they are fnrced ro pa~~- as the) "ere against Kentucky. the
Hoosiers will struggle.

-HiGAN ST The Spartans'
· quarterback
, carousel continued to twirl m Saturday's
·31·24 loss t o Notre Dame, but Michigan
State migh t have found its running back.
While senior Jason Teague strug gled,
getting stripped of the ball by Not re
Dame's Tom Zbikowski for a touchdown.
redshirt freshman Jehuu Caulcrick ran
for 85 yards on 15 carries. ·But late in the
game, Caulcrick fumbled on the ! -yard
line and the ball was recovered by the
[rish for a toucl]back.
IIIIIID.rNESOTA As, they plan to all
seaso n. the Golden ·
Gophers ran the ball a ton in t heir 34- 16
victory over Colorado State, gaining 360
yards on the ground. Marion Barber ll!
ran for 201 yards and two touchd owns,
and sophomore Laurence Maroney · .
rushed for 132 yards: [! was the sixth time
the pair have rushed fo r 100 y'ards each in
a 9arne and the second tim e it has
happened this season.

.-rn

~~::s~7~e

.liRTHWESTERN
Wildcats finally won a game last Saturday,
defeating Kansas 20-1 7. While the passing
game and quarterback Brett Basanez
were the key foi the Wildcats, the best
sign might have been the kicking of Brian
Huffman. After missing five field goals in
a 48·45 opening loss to TCU. Huffman
finally came around and made two field
· goals of 21 and 23 yards. Huffman is now
. 3-for-9 on the season .

-...ao STATE The
Buckeyes have
struggled for

.-rn

touchdowns this season, scoring only one
in a 22·14 win over N.C. State. but kicker
Milce Nugent has picked up the slack.
After hitting a 55-yarder to beat Marshall
· the week befo re. Nugent made five field
goals Saturday, connecting from 50. 30,
33 , 46 and 47 yards. Nugent is now 8-for-9
on the season and ranks second
nationally with an average of 2.6? field
guals per gam e.

-.w...r STA"'E

Senior QB Zaclo:
Mills continued to
struggle. throwing two interceptions and
fumbling four times in a 37 -13 victory
over Central Florida, but Tony Hunt .
emerged as the team's best running back .
Hunt ra n for 125 yards with th1ee
touchdowns on 16 carries.
DUE The Boilermakers had
~
.the week off, but senim
quarterback Kyle Orton remained on toP
of the country in pass efficiency rating,
with 215.08. He has nine touchdo.wn
passes and 616 yards on 39-for-56 passing
in Purdue'~ two games.
~n

~~

-....a:.

· ~_CONSJN Filling in for injured
...,.....
runrung back
Anthony Davis. Wisconsin's Booker
Stanley had ao&lt;areer day in a 9-7 win over
Arizona. Stanley ran for a career-high 135
yards on 30 carries with a touchdown for
the Badgers.

fillS/' HiE 1'/UJl'/JU \/'0\ 'iORUJ 10' Jill:· FOU.OHI\G Hl SI.\.ESS1:)':

:·1

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The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 23,

www .mydaiJys~ntinel.com

Thursday, September 23, 2004

2004

Eastern golfers win TVC Hocking title Hornaday and RCR
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

lt

TUPPERS PLAINS -The Eastern golf team won
its
first
Tri- Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division title in school history with a first place finish
Monday at Oxbow Country
Club in Belpre .
.
The Eagles. who shot a
173 on the day, clinched the
division crown in dramatic
fa shion by posting a oneshot win over Southern in
the next to lasi match of the
season
It was the third straight
match victory for Eastern.
Michael Owen led the
way for the winners with a
41 followed by Ryan
Nave's 43, a 44 from
Nathan Cozart and James
Wi II carded a 45.
Brad Crouch led · the
Tornadoes with · a round of
42 . Pat Johnson and Jacob
hunter were close behind

with 43's Josh Smith finished with a 47' to round out
Southern's scoring.
The scores of Eastern's
Evan Dunn (47) and Nick
Kuhn (54), and Southern's
Matt Thaxton (49) did not
count toward · the final tallies .
Eastern
and Southern
finished up their regular
seasons by finishing second
and third respectively on
Tuesday at Logan's Brass
Ring course. Trimble won
the match with a 173.
Eastern recorded a team
score of 176 led by coMedalist . Cozart's 39. He
shared the honor with
Trimble's Ty Barrett.
Dunn shot a 45, while
Will and Jacob Warner both
shot 46 for Eastern. O.wen
and Nave finished with 50
and 5 1, but ·those scores
were omitted.
Crouch and Johnson were
again near the top of
Southern's leader board

•

2004 TVC HOCKING GOLF CHAMPIONS
In front, from left are Kyle Edwards, Evan Dunn, Derek Roush
and Nick Kuhn. In back, from left are Ryan Nave, Michael
Owen, Jim Will , Nathan Cozart, Jacob Warner and Brian Castor.
The Meigs ·county teams
with 43's followed by a 48
and 49 from Hunter and will · tl\ke part in a TVC
Thaxton. Josh Smith's 51 interdivisional match today
was outside rhe top four.
at Oxbow.

"'

currently is sixt h.
"Racing at this level is a
big business," Hornaday
said. " I understa nd what
RCR has to do to enhance
iis NASCAR Nextel Cup
series efforts. We've· had a
pretty good run together and
the friendships will still go
on, but business is business."
Childress said a new driver for the teafll'S No. 2
ACDelco Chevrolet will be
announced before the end of
the season.

'

··;·

playing better than Kyle ·
Orton has," said Tllinois
coach Ron Turner, who must
find a way to bottle up Orton
Experienced quarterbacks as the Big Ten opens conferare proving their worth in the ence play this week.
Big Ten. Just look at the slats.
Six of the Big Ten's top.
The top four pass ing teams had to find replaceoffenses
(Purdue, ments for senior quarterNorthwestern, Penn State and backs. So far, the growing
Illinois) are all led by veteran pains are evident.
Here is a glimpse of how
quarterbacks. Five of the top
seven QBs in pass efficiency things are · going for the six
are holdovers.
"If
,
.
h
new guys:
you .re gomg to ave . --Drew Tate, Iowa (2-1 ).
only one ex~nenced play~r Good: sophomore completing
back on your squad, you d 59 percent of his passes. Bad:
want .. htm back at quarter- 44 yards passing in 44-7
back, satd Purdue coach Joe thrashing at Arizona State last
Ttller, who has the luxury. of week.
hav mg the best returmng
"We 're having a lot of
quarterback m the confer- problems offensively right
.
. now," coach Kirk Ferentz
ence, Kyle Orton.
Orton leads the nauon m said. "(DFew) is probably
passer effictency, compleung about where we hoped or
70 percent of hts passes wtth would wish he would be at
~ine to~chdowns · and no this point. What we need to
m!~rcepuon.s..
.
do is give him more support,
I couldn t tmagme a quar- . give him a chance to operate
terback around the country . better."
.

-Chad Henn~.. Michigan
(2-1 ). Good: true .freshman
has learned in · two close
games. Bad: has as (llany
interceptions (five) as TO
passes.
"He's made some big plays,
he's made some mistakes and
that's exactly what a young
quarterback is going to do,"
coach Lloyd Carr said. "B ut
he's done a good job considering his inexperience and
thai he's in an offense that
requires the quarterback to do
some things that are quite
complicated."
-Drew
Stanton
and
Stephen Reaves, Michigan
State (1-2). Good: Stanton is
athletic and Reaves big-time
potentiaL Bad: combined 15
of 34 with three INTs in 31 24 loss to Notre Dame on
Saturday.
"We're slower as a unit
because that . progress is sort
of tied into' your quarterback
progress," coach John L.
Smith said.

-Bryan Cupi!o, Minnesota
(3-0). Good: has been eased
in to complement stellar running backs. Bad: untested
heading· into conference play
because Gophers are rushing
for 359 yards a game.
·
"If he gets us in the right
running play, takes the snap,
turns around and hands off to
(Marion)
Barber
or
(Laurence) Maroney, that's
not real difficult. I could have
a manager do that," coach
Glen Mason said. "If you
have a young guy and he had
to throw the ball every down,
obviously the degree of difficulty goes up."
·
--Justin Zwick, Ohio State
(3-0). Good: can go deep with
the best of them. Bad: has
been careless with the ball (4
INTs)
"I feel good about the
amount of progress he's made
and I think we ' re as prepared
as we can be to head into the
Big Ten," said coach Jim
Tressel. whose team has a bye

Call TOday...

week.
-John Stocco, Wisconsin
(3-0). Good: makes good
decisions. Bad: needs injured
RB Anthony Davis back to
keep pass-rushers honest.
. "He's not throwing it up for·
grabs, and he's getting rid of
the ball and not taking sacks,"
coach Barry Alvarez said.
"He should improve more
and more as the season goes
along."

HOLDlNG

PATTEgN:
Northwestern · linebacker
Braden Jones is expected to
be readmitted to school this
week, but coach Randy
Walker said he won'.t travel
with the team to Minnesota.
Jones left school last spring
after being accused of
. assaulting a cab driver. The
charges were dropped, but
Northwestern suspended him
through the start of the . fall
quarter. Classes begin this
week, and Jories is expected
to be back on campus._

...

to the M.D. Brk:kles to construct a
LEGAL NOTICE
corner; thence south two-ear
garage,
The
. Unknown 40 deg. 3 1 ' - 80.35 togsther with lhe
Heirs,
Devisees, to !he place ol right to make euch
L 'e g a t e e s , beginning.
excavation and to
. AdmIn Is Ira to ra,
S•ve •nd e~:cept antar upon the pramExecutors
and the coel, which has , _ for the purpose
Assigns of Robert T. heretofore
of c:onstruc:tlng ukl
Southern, Deceased ..-vec~ and aub(ecl garage. s.td garage,
whola last piKe of to all - t a and If construc:ted, lhslt
reaklence and . - rights-of-way
of be constructed of
present place ol resi- noc:onl.
concreta or COl ICiele
dence Ia unknown
The
above btoc:lcs wt1h • conwill lake notice that
crete roof and ukl
on November 7, 2003 will be ciHigNitecl .. roo! ahatl be cowrecl
0
1:48
p.m., Lot 110. 10 on a plat ol with soli so •• to
Mortg- Electronic Fairland Subcltvtslan, make the surface
Registration which will subaa- above the . garage
Systems, Inc., its ....,. quently be flied with conlomi lo the gener.....,. asslgnl, the Meigs County . al surface ol the
aa
nominee
for . Reeoldsl.
remaining portion ol
Houoehold Finance
Together *ilh a Ule lot conveyed
11s ....,. right-of..., it being
the hereby.
......,... and uslgna public
teecling to unclerstood that !he
flied its Complaint in Nkl poopeolf, which
l'lti8I'W the
Csoe No. 03CV-129 will be dedicated . . . - almple - s h i p
and on ll8y 5, 20114 0
public street when ol ... percal 'of rMI
the plld .. flied.
12:28 p.m. flied its
-~
PARCEL NO. 2:
Supplemental
by.
~r. !he
Complaint In the
Also, ... fol'-ing . Gt•tllll . . pibid
iWII to rnftt..
Court of Common
I
tbedi'MI-, _, I
P1eal Meigs County, snu.llodlnflleVIItsge 1ltln the surfKe ol the
Ohio alleging that the ol ..,., I oot. County
abov...,anew olllelgs- ol the page, provided
party Defanclant(o) Ohio. bou- and that they lhslt not In
I 1tbedMfol-: !hair uu interfwre
-ordalmto811 inlet ... In !he real
Beglnnt~ st the wlthsuchpage.
estate
.... . . - aoutt 11114 comer
Aa currently set
ol ...... No. 1 . . . forth In duel book
below:
INSTRUMENT point wlllch will be .. Volume 711 st pege
2001000011057
OR the _ , ol !he 255M&lt;II--12Book 11tl"-ge110
con18lned on ..... Also commanly
Situeted in the the plld whlcll Is knoWn
a:
124
• VHiags of _.........~
FshWid,
lli......,ort.
to , ~ ·
whlcll will ........ Ott
County of Meigs be ll1lod In the olflce P8n:el No. 15-01294
- o f Ohio:
PARCEL NO. I:
ol the - . . Coiriy 8RCit5-01213.
The Pelllkwler .,.._
Beginning- 21 Rl coo del'. theiiC8 In a
a 11 ly,. clan 10 lhlr iliiiQ I that by
dsg. 5T - . 711.15
'-l from sn 1n1n pin fMI; IIMIC8 Narll 63 , _ o f . , . . . . . of
locoltecl at ... _.,.. clsg. 5" East to 11e the Defenclant(a) in
the ...,....... of •
I
llilly - o f the
public .-d; - nota,
M.D. .2112 fol-hll the _..., promlaory
. _ lol which Nkl tine 01 the public
-··toils-.
. . . . .. . . , the condlllona ol •
pin illlocolllod on ta
... ~-of boundary ol .......
.............. """'" Ill
Grant Iii the No. 1; ........ - " " daed~to-qf uld
... the . the
Vilfsgo olllld..., • I, 53 dsg. 5' piece ol lleglnnlng.
..cl
COI"Aeyll-sJ
Ohio; ........ the
.,.....,_
211 dsg.
81.10 COitllllnl•• qp oalr
... to • point, ........ m 7 't 0.15-=n•
I
lwcl.'-'-'
_ . . 3&amp; dsg 55' llfot ~-.,.­
llld-· hM
bKatM
~.t5; thence north
tSeve
he
-......
l atuk.
~ dsg.. 5' 135.8 heNtolare
I Ill ted llld ..lbject
The
~
~ to the public
that
the
raed; ........ _,., 31
ol DelendMI(a) named
deg. 3' t17.S l1giii»--O...,
feel; ........ soulii ~
be nqu~ed .lo
F""'- ••.,.ping. . . . . . . . . . . . . . up
deg 77" - · 113.5
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the lhalr
Hne; ............... 63 .llld
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dsg. 8' -

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along the ' I

baiTed

from

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~lght

or Fax To (740)

Items

\ '\'\()I \ C I \II'\ I '

r

RECOVERING:
Iowa
defensive coordinator Norm
Parker missed the first three
games after surgery to
impro.ve circulation in his left
leg.
He called the Hawkeyes
locker room at halftime of.
every game and is expected to:
return for this weekend's·
game with Michigan.
The Hawkeyes played outstanding defense in their first
two games, victories over
Kent State and Iowa State,
but were shredded in a 44-7
loss at Arizona State last
weekend.
"We're not helping the
healing, not with that performance," coach Kirk Ferentz
said.

,_,_

-:

a.-a

..., ......... _......
,....--failed
-,_.,A

to

ac:.-

I&gt;c::.&lt;Oo.--

ule Is for !be period
beglniling November
1, 2004 thru October
31 , 2005. The time
pa.r lods are as folI-a:
January
thru
February, From 8:00
AM to 5:00PM
March thru April,
From 7:30 AM to 6:00
PM
May thru August
From 7:30 AM to 8:00

1·866·731-7625.
and Michael

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Bu•lne. . Day• Prior To

audible warning lllld
a l . - signals:
At
l•st
one
mlnutll, but not more
than two minutes
biilun !lie detonstlon
ol a btu!, thrM iong
"""""' of M 1eu1 five
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sli'81'1 or. slrhom will
lndicata "Rudy to·
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llffllod the certified ........ Is certain

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when an unliChad.uled blllst may be
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Where ...... ligllthljj,
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cooldlllol• or

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SUpeili .... dill
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Help Wsiltecl ................................,................ 110
ttome lmprovementa...................................8t0
ttomea lor Sale .............:..............................310
Housilihold Goods ...................: ................... 5t0
Houses for Rent ........ ,................................. 410
In llemorlam ...............................................020
tnauranca ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ...................:.... 1180
Uveetock. •.... _,, .... _,,,, •...••••• ..:.•••••••••.••~ ..........l30
Lost and Found ...........................................1180
1.o111 &amp; Aaeage ...; ........................................ 350
.--ltsneoua............................................... t70
Mtscel-llerchlndloe....................... 640
Moblls Home Repa1r••" ...............................aao
Moblls- for Rent ...............~............... 420
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Money to .._. .............................................220
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IIIUIIcallnatr'unM1bl-................................ 570

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•

Address
Cily!Statea.&gt;

Phone

'

I

Yard Sale: 123 Pine St. Sept.
24-25. Paneling. pool table
and other nice things. 8am5pm.

-

.

September 24th . !t 25th.
Multi-family ·
Avon ,
Christmas gifts, collectibles,
clothing ; men 's, women's
children's. birth td plus sizes.
Bookshelves, radio, TV, CB
radios, bedside potty chair,
shower bench and misc.
Bra~ry area jUSI off CO
Act 15 Twp 174 NobleSummitt on NHQI Rd.

Follow

1t. ·-·Hn.P-•W•Ar&lt;mD-_.1

1!.1

..

Second

Avenue.

... , '' \ r1

lnfoCision Management
Corp. is \:urrenUy
• accepting applications for
Full-Time Oayshift
,
positions (8a·5p)
Qualified applicants should
· be stable, highly moljvated
Individuals with good communlcation skills.
We offer a full benefitS '
· padtage and 401K.
No previous experience is
necessary. We are the
professional dilferencs in
teteservices and need gr8at
team players to join usl
1-Bn-463-6247 ext 2458
Or apply Online
www.intocision.com

Processing
Instructors
needed for morning classes
beginnjng Oct 4. Please
send resume to: Gallipolis
Career
College,
1 176
JQckson Pike, GalliiXJiis. OH
45631 or fax 740-446...e124.

26.

Agent.

Point

Pleasant,

wv

I _.;·.---==-=-=-=-:-

~--------~~
lfn.p WAN!m
MAIN STREET JEWELRY

' - - - - - - - • ·· Mue;t
- n gbe
lor 8sales
ellgillle
"""""'·
oriented.
1200 Sign on Bonuol
Smalllrwestmant (740)742·
2418.
Call br oomelhing you
I"
A
believe in and make great Mak 8 ·
&lt;JV,. se Qng
von.
money doing ~'
Limited
time.
ONLY.
(740)416 3358 . Arll: 5 to call
Recn.iH: VolunteerJ and
~a gift.
aocepl dona1ionl br tho
Nuraing Asslstant C&amp;aues
Nation's leading Non-Profll beginnlng October 4, 20,

organizationll

0&lt; .
He&amp;p racruil: naw meldJers
10 join lhe NRAI

Apply online

0&lt;

www.tntOcieion.com
An Excellent wrt 10 eam

mOney. The -

Avcn.

ean Marilyn 30&gt;H182·2645
AVON! All Areas! To Buy Of
5hir1ey Spears, 304-

Sel.

675-1429.

DeiMtryrWarehouse peroori
needed, fuM lime, immediate
opening, must haYe lenl driving

~.

apply ••

Ufestyte Fuml!ura. 856 :lra.
Ave, Ga11ipolis, 9-S no phOne

calls please.

HELP_W_Ar&lt;mD
_ _.,

BliSINt~~
OITOtm.;Ntn

.

lNG CO. recommends lha
ou do busrness with peo
pte you know. and NOT I
end money tflrough th
Are you looking for a new
career with an unlimited man until you have investi
oppor tun ity lor advance- Q.~ted the otferina.
ment?
Your Personal, Treasure Map
lo
lnlernet
Profits:
Would you ·like to be recoghllp:/lwww.uprofitfirst.conVd
nized as a professional
eal or call (304)6~5-1181
PT!LPN
or
Medication salesperson in one of 1he
Technician
Desired, country's highest paid occu,MONEl'.
Flexibility
Required, pations? ·
IDLOAN
Interested Applk;ants May
Apply Daily, Mon.-Fri. 9am- If so, our salespeople earn
5pm, Ravenswood Care an excellent income and Caslll Cash! 3K·350K' any
Center~ 1113 Washington enjoy the benefits df working purpose . Good/Bad credit.
St.. Ravenswood, WV, with a successful and pro- 1--866 ~306 ~ 133 7
References
Required , gressi!fe dealership.
I'KotlNSKlNAl.
.
E.O.E.
.
SER\1CES
if you're serious aboui a new ~-------·
career and are IQOking for
RADIOLOGY
TURNED DOWN ON
the training and guidance
TECHNOLOGIST ct
that are essential for long- SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
POSITION
No Fee Unless We Wln l
term success- . we'd like to
1-668-562·3345
talk to you.
Seeking AAAT registered
1&lt;1 \ I I "' I \ II
te&lt;:hnologisl for full lime
Please, stop in tor an inter- =iii~;;;;:::-;;..-...,
position. Primarily for CT
view.
with opportUnity· to work in
MRI Of Uhrasound, as well.
Nomo Norll!up Dodge "'-----iiiliiia_.l
Experience preferred, but
Chr;afer Jeep
(2) 3 bcrlroom hou;::es for
empla'fer will provide trainsale. 2 baths, fireplaces, on
ing toward certification.
Ravenswood Care acreage . Ca ll (740)709Gr~at opportunity working Tile
with new equipment in a Center 1113 Washington 1166.
t]ospital-based
radiology 51.. Ravenswood , WV is
department Friendly team~ .Accepting AppliCations For 0% Down Pa~ment even
oriented atmosphere that AU Positions. In Order To wfl:h less than perfect credit
suppor'ts
indepe11dence, Update Our Files 11 You Are Easy qualifymg Own don't
Local
company
continued education, and A Re!iatMe Person With rent.
prOfessional development Compassion &amp; Team Sprrit Mo rtgage locators. 740·
Interested
candidates, Come Join Us! Applicants 992-7321
P'88SEI inquire at (740)592- Mav Apply, Mon·SIJn 9- 4 -3-b-ed_r_oo_m--b-ric_k_l-ro-n1

Saln ...

r

riO ~~OS~

Radiology Assoclales 01
Alhens

PO Box 2608
Athens. OH 45701
Fax: (740)592·9396.

Rockaprt'ngs Aehabllilation

.,1.50 . ara....
..~UCilON

I

GlrlllpoHa C.rMr Col lege
(Careers CIQH To Home)
•• •••
7 ...
,.
~ 7·
·c all Tbdayl

1..ac:.n-~14-0452

Center II looking for dadicat·

ed companionate State

,.._titive

bt;tii.,

1176

·

mernbe-'""

I
B
A JO

IN THE

CLASSIFIEDS

'•

HoUSES

FOR RENT
Oo/o Down Paymenl even
with less than pertect credit.
Easy qualifying . Own don't
rent
Local
company
Mortgage Locators. 740-·
992-732f .
bedroom
house in
Gallipolis
$350/month
deposit required . (740)4411184.
A ForeCloSed Home
Only $8,900' This Home
Must Sell! lor listings call 1·
600·366·9763 ., b838

Thia newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
estate which ill in
violation of the laYf. Our
readers are hereby
informed that all
dwellings adver1laed in

HOUSE FOR RENT 3
bdrm. 1 bath , LA wfFP. 2-car
carport , qwet locatiOn, eclge
of town . $550/mo &amp; S550
sec. de,P. You pay all utilities.
Call {74p)44.6·3644 tor 1nfo

thia Mwapaper are
avallabht on an equal
cr-portunlty bases.
House 3 Bedroom 1 1/2
Bath Heat Pump, new
Carpel, Windows &amp; Root.
AivBr View 12 Smith St. No
Money Down 10 qua.ilfy1ng
Buyer S42Simonth why Rent
(304)675-2749

Nice house· 3 BR. 1.5 ba ths.
Good 10cat10n Close to hos·
pi!al. S650 rent w/$650 sec .
dep.· You pay all· utilities
References
req1.med
(740)446-3644 ·

Cab10ets. 1 car garage. pri·vate lane off SA 160. 1.8
acres . $92,000. (740)388·
6676.

!'W MORn.£ HO\m;
FOR
2

bedroom .

Jb:NT
remodeled

mobile home . all electnc· 1n
1986, 14lC65 Clayton. Good Middleport. 645 Broadway
con~ition . Must sell. Call Street, $350 plus deposit. no
(740)446-0368.
inside pets. (740)992-31 94
- - - - - - - - or 740-4 16·1354.
1992 Southern Elite Mobile
~\liT\ tENt'S
Home 16x70. 2 bedroom. 2
tOM RINr
bath. some appliances.
59.900. Call(740)949·20f 1.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt. slartmg
1997 Single-wide. 3 bed· at $290/month . deposit
room. 1 bath. all elec1ric, requrred . ·NO pets WO
goOd condition , must be hookup. {740)441 -1184 ,
moved. Call (740)44HXI34.
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom ments, ' turnrshed and unfur·
mobile homes starting ' at nislled . secur rtv deposit
$270 per month. Call 740- required , no pets. 740-992·
2218.
992·2167

r

For sile· By Owner· 10•50 tbr. StudiO Apt very clean .
3 bedroom, lull basement, Mobile Home n'iMate) Has furnished S325 + Deposit
' • new hOI (304)675-2970
garage. approx 1 acre 01 been remodeled.
land, 5 miles from town on
water tank. furnace 3 yrs. 2 bedroom aptS'. 1 0 mrnutes
~:~ :0 ~ OfPoin~~s:l~ old. oew plumbing. on rent· from Holzer Hospital.
ed lot. Only interested par~ $460/month Pets allowed.
2299
- ·- - - - - - - ties call (740)446-8002; slorgage un its available.
Bedroom, Hud Home. (740)388-9241 .
(740}441-1 18-t or (740}441$14.000 Won't lastl more - - - - - - -_o•_94_
. -----,-Homes avaHable! lor listings Make 2 payments. mow in 4
800-366-9783 8)( 17g 7 .
years on note (304)736· 2 bedroom. stove. re1r;gttra3409.
tor furnished $150 deposit
A Attordable 2-Bedroom - - - - - - - - - $275 rent 34 112 Smrttters
Home, Everything new. New Oakwood mega store Street. Call (740)446~9061 .
Possibte no Money down to featunng
Homes
by
qualifying Buyers (304~74- OakwOOd, FleetwoOd &amp; . 2 or 3 bedroom apartment in
5111
Gites. OntJ stop shopping Middleport.
no
pels •
- - - - - - - - only at Oakwood Homes of (740 1992 · 5858
For Sale or Rent: New 3 Ba~.11 wv (304)13S
bedroom. 2 bath home 011
•uuUFS\11 e
• AppiiCBttOns berng taken for
3409.
11ery clean 1 bedroom in
2. ~ acres. 25 minutes from
country setting vet close to
Pomeroy
or Next to new 2000 Aectman
W he
Athens,
Gallipolis. Aladnde r or 16 )( 80 , 3 bedroomf2 bath, town . as r., dryer, stove.
Ueigs , Schools. S93.000.
lodge included. Water and
~=••n•
VInyl sK!ingls~r&gt;gle roof fully n•rbage included. TOialele&lt;:·
~~
loadect. $27,900 00 Can ,~r~
~ AC.Tenan1 pay elec·
"'"""

1 7

,___. ..
13

wo.,...

r··

Land on McCormrck Ad. 2
large Jots . 112 acre each
(more or less) Electric and
water on one surtable for
bu1l ding or mobile home.
(740)367·7686.

Ic M~~s~rn; I

Many Benefits AvailabJe . Ranch . Newer roof, vrnyl.
References Required
heal
pump,
Smrths

Tested NutSing Aaalstants. : . : . : .a.m:;~
wa....a health Co.ndl tor ~
•• r ;d~ntat
and and smoo. fv~
..01tc" available. We take
pride In our Aome and ret.iMrscrl1 ANEOl5
denta and neec1 S~JNt team •
•
2004 thru ();;tuber 20. 2004. playat'l to Join Ul. H you haw
fl ·you entDV eldertv paoJM
High
SchOol
'Juniors.
and wanllo become I ~ tt.ese quallficallonl pAaua Sernors and Prior SeMce
lo: Center,
Rcd&lt;lpringa you can fiH vacant positions
bar ol OUf ,•--_ . , ,_.. ~-- · ·· apply
Rehabilitation
36759
pleMe S1Dp bv Aodmprings
in the West Virginia .JVrrry
Rehabilitation Center &amp;t Rock&amp;prlt)QI
Road. NatiOnai Guard. tt you are
45769 · between the alj18S of 17-35
36759 Rockspringa Road, Pomeroy, Ohlo
fl0rneroy, Ohio~719andfll ·&amp;tendicare
Health or have P.rior military serv·
out an ........._lion br the Sarvk:es, Inc. la an equal .
,
~
opportunity emplOyer that !C41, you wont wam to ~
da$&amp;8$.
,
·
re-..1
this up. For Opportunities 11'1
EJ:tendicare
,Health encourages
ace
-u
'U'LI • ~~: _
..c.-fh.. Mlf ON
your area, \,iOQ: ~ 7.,.
SeMces, Inc. is an ecp11 ...,,__,,.
5837
opportunity employer that
-~
-------~.,..ace Tho ~ SOil and Water ;;__1 n-k
br
encourages
diversity.
Mlf ON
Oistr1ct is taking applications •sale,
.....,. .. ..__
_ _..._______
great deal·-·....
$700.
Paramedics
&amp;
EMrs for
an
Education (304)874-4169
Coord in ator / District .:;
. . .~"":'::"~~--,
needed. Apply a1 ' 1354
Pike, G a l -.
Technician. Applications and
WANJID
job opportunity announceTo Do
ments are available a1 the
Meigl SWCD Office, by certllied Childeare PriMoer
phoning (740)992.,..282 or has openings Mon-Fri Sam'" a ., 1 ., n g
E • m
pnal dya£000 napdntrLneJ . 6pm Privale-pay aa:epled,
7
Appllcalioris are due by ~~=.ed~304)6 54PM, Oelober 4.

.-son

I

r

For Sale: Acreag e Meigs
County. 82 acres. woods
and hillside . Great lor recre·
ation
and
huntrng
$99,500.00 Call (740)742 2637

All real e11tate sdver1ialng
in this newspaper Ia
subject to lhe. Federal
Fair Houelng Act 'ot 1968
wt\ich makea it illegal to
&amp;dver11ae "any
preference, limitation or
dl"rlmlnation baled on
race, color, religion, aex
familial statue or national
origin, or any intention to
make an~ such
preference, limitation or
dl"riminl1ion. "

k~IO..,VA~~,y~~U';LISH

HELP WAr&lt;mD .

l . o ·_ _

Send Resume to PO Box 9483 and send resume to:

1 ....

l'.io

11110 .

Part time tax preparer.s
needed for busy tax office,
Pomeroy location. We will
train ..
Computer
skills
required. Send resume to:
Full time Front Desk Clerk. The Daily Sentinel, PO . Box
Applv ln person Holiday Inn, 729- 13
Pomeroy, Ohio
5n St. At. 7N. No phone 45769
calls please.

Experienced Rooling Crews
needed
in
Florida's
Hurricane Area Top Pay Call
David_@ 1-772·567..0559

lnsuranca/Cierk

I ' II'I!J\ \1 1'1

l:to.

Commercial bui lding plus
1.5 acres m Green Twp.
Central heat &amp; air, bath and
complete kitchen . $165.000.
Call Clifford Realtors 740446-7702.

~

iiiiiiiill
p1o

Lms&amp;
ACREAGE

0.97 acre building lot on
Grandview Ave near County
Fairgrounds. Nice ne•ghborhood . all utilities e~e.cept
sewer $10 .000 (304)4891363

M8 5263

'

ss-

Absolule Top Dollar: U .S.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Prootsets. Gold Rings, U.s.
Cooency,·M.T.S. Coin Shop,

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1·800.370-4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY U.S.
VETERANS

Accepting applications tor
ca re ol elderly in my home.
Private room s.. nutritious
meal plann ·ng
I
24 ho urca e
with 20 years of experience ...
8am-3PM
740-446·7655

110

GET YOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOME!
"FREE " APPROVED
HOME LOANSI

NEW PURCHASES/
REFINANCES
SO DOWN/ $0 DOWN
CASH OUT/ HOME
IMPROVEMENTS. NO
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES
WELCOMEI

Woad's Ex;tra Care lor your
Loved one. Private roombath. 3 hot meals. Phone
(740)388·0116. '

RlVERSlDE
AUCTION
BARN At 7 South, 5 miles
below tile Dam. EVERY Instructors Needed
SATURDAY
6pm. Medical
Transcription.
0
Medical
Terminology,
740 2 6989.
~~;;;;.;~;;;._ _ _., Bus~ness Law, Financial
WANJID
lnv8slments,
and Word

"'---=ro-iiBuYiiii0--,1
....

•

Will
sir wrth
elderly.
Day/Night. Weekdays/weekend~ . Have 'references .
Many yearS ol experience.
(740)949·2543

www.comics·. com

It

AITENTIQN!

Jim's Carpentry &amp; Small
Landscaping. Call~ (740)4462506
.

MOVING- 'Chest of drawers
dressers and lull size bed. &amp;
much more. Call (740)367 ..
0868 If ~our looking for
something.

_ . e.t.11t Wanl8d ••••••,... _, ••, •• _,, •.•.••• - •..•. 380
Schools ~ .............:.......................150
Seed ' Pillnlll Fertlttllir ..... - ...................... 650
Sltustlon8 Wanllfcf ....................................... t211
st-c-lor Rent ............................................. 480
Sporting
520
BUY's lor Sale.........:...........................~.......720
lnic:tts for Sale ....... - ................................. 7t5
UpiiOisllll y ................................................... 870

,,

Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the
mill just call 304-675· 1957.

Inside &amp; Outside Mo11ing
Sale. 97 Honeysuckle Drive,
Addison , 1 block off 7 N, Fri
9124 thru Mon. 9/27, 9am6pm. Everything must gol
Sunday 50%, Monday 75%
oH, giveaway after· 6 Tues. &amp;
Wed .· Call (7401367-0868 if
you need sometl)ing before
Sale!

Calloday br an •
appoii11liienl
't ..77.-.e247- 2457

V - For Sale...........- ................................730
'Wanled to Buy ............................................. 0110
W•llld to Buy· Fsnn SUppllea .................. 620
W.tlld To Do .................- ..............;.......... t80
winllod to Rent ............................................470
Yerd s,ete.. G .,, c.IIS-•• - .............- .............072
Yard Sell Polll8i oy/Middte.........................074
Yard SaiH'L r;·u'l"lt ........................:....... 076

lllor*"PGtllflil....., .....
wll ICO(IJ Ofyow-11 Ill
'
0111o V111r N11111iig P.O. eo. 411, c I'] .1111, ott 45131

1\NO'f'I-\Ef'l... Sl&amp;t-l "foiJ~
t&gt;AIE&lt; I~ A 1)0'=1 Paso N :

Saturday (9/18), 9am-1pm.
. 178
Brentwood
Drive.
Fumiture, tools, play station,
karaoke machine car, motorcycle. flatbed trailer, canoe,
clothes, kitchen ilams, toys
and more.
·

Pelt tor
···510
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng.........-~....................... 820
Ploflltlonal S..d~ .... - .....•......•....••.•••••.. 230
Radio, TV &amp; ~B Repair ...............................1110

GCJDCili-------···········-····"..........

·····················~---·······

I

r

oso

Ott 45695

\0'

140 Ui 77211
(1)23

_.tl

Happy Acls ......... ,..........................................
Hay &amp; Gratn ..................................................640

················~···············

I ,

HOMES

FOR SALE

i

Announcemeni ........................................ ,... 030
Antlques .......................................................530
Apartmenls for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market. ...........:................oao
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................... :............................ no
Autos for Sale .............................................. 7t 0
Boata &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity.................................210
Business Training ....................................... t40
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cerda o1 Thanka ..........................................OtO
Child/Elderly Cate .......................................190
Eteclrlcai/Refrlgeratlon .....................:......... tii;O
Equipment for Rent .....................................480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment..........................................610
Farms for Rent .............................................430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Laau ..................................................... 490
ForSale ........................................................ 585
For S.ls or Trede ........................:................ 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ...............................:..... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ...........................................850
Giveaway......................................................040

ap$1'11-

tor or public ut.ty ""

S:o.oo Reward Missing Friday (9117), 9am-5pm,

s1nce September 3rd . Male
Seagle miK, Reddish brown,
gold and white , neutered.
Lost
in
Meigs
Co.
Skinner/West Shade Ad
area. Family pel, piaase
return no questions asked.
(740)985-4492
--------Hunting Dog found In th e
Corn,s talk area.
Red in
·color, no collar (304)675·

POUCIES: Ohio V.illey Publishing r...rvea the rlghlto edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any lima . Errore muat be reported on lhl Urat day of publle111on 11nd
TrlbuM-hntlnei·Rtglater will be rnponaible lor ng m~Ke than the cgat of the apace occ:upled by the errgr and only the llrat lnurtion. We ehall not bo llabla
any lou or expenae that raaulta from the publication or oml .. lon ot an advertl..ment. Cprrectlon will be made In the flrat IVIIlable edlllon. • BoM number
to the Federal Fair Housing Act of , 1168." • Thia "'"''P'•P"'I
are alw.ya confldlnt!ai. • Current rate card applies. • All real estate edverl!••merfta are
help wanted
EOE atllndarda. We will not
accept
I In violation of the law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

CLASSIFIED 11\!DEX

atmosphw!C

.-.

----~

'

iuda~ ltmtf ·itatind

lheblasl_ts_
to .. act.. , OM long

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlatlan•
• Include Phone Number And Addr••• When Needed
• Adt Should Run 1 Days

Cleaning out t~e house sale!
~
Sat. 9/25, 9-4, '608 Teens
Dar·k Brindle Mix, white- Run Ad ., Basketmaking
patch under chin. Found supplies 1 kitchenware, throw
2miles out Rt62 oH At2 con· rugs, old jars, tools , slates.
and much more! Rain or Estate Sale, Racine Ohio.
tact Animal Shelter.
103 4tll Street. State Route
Shine.
124. September 24-25 .
8AM..fiPM. Furniture, appli~
ances , tools, collectibles ,
much more.
c
4x4's For Sale ..............................................725

Joiat JltBaat ltp-ttr
The Daily Sentinel

btasltiu--

• All ads must be prepaid'

..ALE_ _.

L---·FIIOUNDiiiiiiloo-_.1

Here's all you
need to do...
Fill out the coupon
below and ~op off or
. mail it with a .
copy of your photo ID.
iallifolif ••nr lribunt

.-.
Type- paiiBifl of

Publication
Sund•y Dl•play: 1:00
Thursday for Sundaya

rrou:o It..r_....~A-~-S

r

on your home delivered
subscription!

n•l•, peraonal •ur·

I

4 monlh old puppy, mixed

Senior Discount*

velllance and/or bani-

r

breed, will be 35-40# when L~--·GiiiALLII'OLLSiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia_.l
full grown. Very friendly. Has ..,
had shots. Call after 4:00PM 2nd House on Bladen Rd.
weekdays. C740)985-4339
from 21 Bat Mercerville. Fri &amp;
Sat. 24·25. Antiques &amp; col·
lectibles, household. someCast Iron Bath Tub in good thing br eJeryone. 8-5.
condition call (304 )675-4435
Big Yard Sale &amp; Garage
after Spm
Sale. Fri.. Sept. 24 &amp; Sat.
Siberian Husky/ Golden Sept . 25, 8am-6pm. 113
Retriever mix. 1 1/2 yrs. old. L~rande Blvd. First tir:ne
Call
(740)388-9665
or sale. Lots of new things .
Most everything priced from
(740)388.0575.
.25t-.50C. Last day 50o/o oH
lm AND
,, everything.

If so, you qualify for a

September, From
7:30 AM to 7:00 PM
October
thru
December, From 11:00
AMto5:00 PM
Methods used to
control access to the
blaatlng araa:
• Uniformed ii8CUrlty
.personnel, blasting
signs, warning sig-

···-·.'.

.

Now you can have borders and graphics
....._..
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
If"!",
Borders $3.00/per ad
1!ii4
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

Huge
Sale:
Clay
Townhouss Lovers Lane. Fri
9124. Sat 9125. 9:00-5:00.
Adult ·&amp; girls clothes, linens,
Barbara _7:;:f6~5-------, toys, housewares, golf bag
&amp; much. more.

•G•IVL\-•W•AY_

.or older? ·

PM

report ol .. five
-idawtltli.ckats

'

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ADOPTION: A loving coupie.. would like to adopt your
newborn . Will provide a
home filled with joy, happiness, financial security and
a great education. Feet conlident in knowing bec8use of
your brave decision your
baby could look forWard Ia a
bright and wonderful future .
Expenses paid. Calltolllree

teari1."

....

992~2157

Oecui/Jire4

• Star1 Your Ad• With A Keyword • Include Complete

Ar~you· 65

ro.~.,_,..p_p~.--­
~ v~ ... .-

Type and pattam of
aiiSIIrllng the Saine, Met .u s·Counly.
for forectcsure of Courthouse at tho · audible warning and
said mortgaga, Ilia comer ol Court Street all-clear signata:
At
least
ona
marshaling of any and Second Street In
,....., and file ule of Pomeioy, Ohio, on the minute, but not more
uld reel - · and · Second Floor ol uld lhan two minulea
before the datonatlon
the PfOCIIcla ol ukl courthouse.
ol a blast, three long
ule applied to tha Judith R. Seslon
payment
of PJOba1e Judge/Clerk
n&gt;porla ol at least five
Petitioner's Claim In 8126 ·
seconds 8llch from a
-proper order of its 912,9,16,23,30, (10) 7
siren or alrhom will
priority, and for such
lndlcaie "Roady to
other and further
Shoot". After tho
blast has - n detorelief • Is )ust and
Public Notice
llqllltsllte.
nated and the certiPUBLIC
NOTICE fied blasliir .Is certain
THE DEFENDANT(S) BLASTING SCHED- the blast area Is safa
NAMEQ ABOVE ARt: ULE
SOUTHERN to ............ one long
REQUIRED
TO . OHIO COAL COMPA- report of ......... fil(f!
seconds witt indlceta
ANSWER ON OR NY MEIGS MINE 12
BEFORE
PERMIT NO. IMI355
"all clear".
THE Oct. 2t PAY OF , IDENTIFICATION OF
Poatbte
eililir2004.
THE
SPECIFIC gency
aituattona
BY:
REIMER , AREAS
WHERE when an unached·
&amp; BLASTING
WILL uled bleat may be
LORBER
,
ARNOVITZ CO., LP.A. OCCUR:
Meigs necesawy:
County,
Columbia When&gt; rain, lighting,
Edward G. Bohnert, Township, Sactlon 25 olher atmospheric
conditions or _ .
Allome, SI·Law
on Southern Ohio
Allome, lor Plaintiff- Coal Company prop- tor or public ufBiy ""
.erty, opproxlmately requires.
P.O. lox 188
1.4 mlln Southeast Mike
Uvely,
olthelntatucllonof Supertntetidenl
Twtnsbuig, O t t (330) 425-4201
Ohio Slate Route 689 Southern Ohio Coal
11"18,21
.
Meigs Counly Company
112,9.11,23
Raacl27;- - - P.O. Box269
lmately 4.5 mtlel WttkMvllle, Ott 45695
Northeast
of 740 6111 77211
(9) 231 tc
Wilasvills. 0111a.
Public NOtice
Date . and Tlilili ·
PROBATE COURT OF Pwlods
when - - - - - - MEIGS
COUNTY, Biaslli'l WIH Occur:
Public Notice
OHIO
Thla blasting sc:hedNOTICE
ltl lltE MATTER OF uls Ia lor the pertod PUBUC
THE ADOPTION OF begli.,tng No ........ BLASTING SCHEO.
DUBTitl RAY BURHS
1, 2004 tlvu
ULE
SOUTHERN
CASE NO. 33t41
31, 2005. The time OHIO COAL CO-·
TO:
TIMOTHY periods are •• fol- NY MEIGS tlllfE t3f
IIARCREED
PERIIIT NO. 'l-03"
Januiry ·
thru IDENTIACA.OON OF
Known Addl ··: '
1124 EUisNih Drive
Fellnay, From 8:00 THE
SPECIAC
. _ . _, OH43130
AREAS
AM to 5:00PM
WHERE
A
"-~~~ion
for
WILL
Morch thru April, BLASTING
Adoption ol Duatln From 7:30 All ID 8:00 OCCUR:
-ga
PM
County,
Salem
ll1lod with the - . .
ll8y thru August TOWMhlp, Fraction 2 ·
From 7:30 All ... 1:00 on s-thern Ohio
Court,
Caae
No.
PM
eo.! Company poapCounty
·
33t41. n 1a slt.gec~
erty, loc ...d Narll ol
~.From
to 7:311 All lo 7:GII Pll
Ohlo-~124
COilliiilllllcMwtlllor
October
thru llpflfC&gt;IInoaiblly,
t.8
aupport the minor DecamtM, From 8:00 -East of Salem
AlfloS:OOPM
Centar, Ohla; and
chid for ...... tllelhocll uaec1 to appiOXJ_.,.
'I ...
t.7
on the petition _. be COl ibol ICCISI to lhe mil" NotU•a"t of
nug . .:
the lntwuctlon ol
on
Friday,
hjlllmlla&lt; 17, 2004
Uniformed aecurtty Ohio Stata Routes
.. 1:15 ...... If ,.... ........... . btaatlng 124Md325.
object, ,.... Mould signs, warning sigDele and· Tlilili
Ill pur and lnfonn nsfl, personal sur- Perlocla
when
the Court. The eo..t wlllasiC&amp; andfor ..,._. Bl 1»11 Will Oac:ir.
ill located in the
Thl8 . bll ... ached-

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

to•

·

All Dleplay: 12 Noon 2

"I think he's takeh the right
steps outside football and
outside the program to get to·
the right place," Walker said.
"If he is readmitted, I'll let
him back on the football

'

·1\egister

Sentinel

or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-aooa

Offtee lloar~ ·

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
"'V.:» . . r

(11\jnty, OH

Your Ad, · .(740) · 446-2342 (740) ·992-2156 (304) 675-1333

-

28"-

\!tribune

To Place

Monday thru F.riday
.8 :00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

BY RusTY MiLLER
Associated Press

M~lp

In One Week With Us
REACH ·aVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS .YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Six teams rise and fall with young ·quarterbacks

"*'

.d

C.,tll1• Coonty,.OH

Big Ten Notebook

c.,.,.,.-.

•

\!tribune - Sentinel - Regi~ter
CLASSIFIED

-

splitting after season

WELCOME , N.C. (AP)
- Ron Hornaday• will be
looking for a new ride at the
end of the 2004 Busch
Series season.
Richard Childress Racing
said
Wednesday
that
Hornaday, . a
two -time
NASCAR Craftsman Truck
series champion, will not be
re-signed for 2005.
"We had two great years
with Ron and I wish him the
best in the future," said
'team owner Childress. "We
talked about next season
and beyond and felt it was
in our best interests to make
this announcement now to
give him the best chance
possible to catch on with
another team."
Hornaday has two victories and 28 top I 0 finishes
in 60 Busch starts for RCR.
He finished third in the season standing s in 2003 and

www.mydallysentlnel.com

1740

For Sale Of Rent: New 4
.. ~-bechoom. 2 bath IOVIl"tt on
IHacreo 25 minu1es from
Athens
Pomeroy .
or
Gallipolis. A~xanoer or
Meigs Schools. 5115,000.
(740)69B-3S04.

help wrt:h dettvery. Ask tor lric. $.300 deposit. S375 per
Nikki (740}385·9948.
mon- . No pets No s-•.
U l

-SA-~"'E=--"sA-v"'E=--=s-Ac:~c:E-,--- '"''· 7~2205

Stock models at old prces.
2005 models 8ITIVIng Now.
Cole's
Mobile
Homes 1
15266 U.S. 50 East. Arhens.
Homes from $10.000!.. OhiO 45701 , (740)592·1972,
For-.ue. VA Hud for 1~1· 'Where You Gel You•
ing HI00-749-8100"" 1709 Monev's Wonh"

, ,.....,..

or 740- .
446-9585 ask for Virg1rna ..

Basement Apl- Bulaville Pk.
2 SO, 1 bath. S6001mo. +
S600 sec OQp. Utihtres
jncluded
ex~pt
trash .
References
requ~red.
(740)446-3644 .

�Thursday, September 23, 2004 .

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, September 23, 2004
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

APART· Mollohah Carpet. 202 Clark Pole Barn 30x50xtOFT John Deere 34 Chopper.
BUDGET Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. $5,995 Includes Painted New Idea 272 Cutditloner
..PRICES AT JACKSON (740)446-7444 1-877-830· Melal, Plana , Instruction (304)895-3506 or (:304)895·
.
, ESTATES, 52 Westwood 9162. Free Estimates, Easy Book, Slider, Free Delivery 3362
, Orlw from $344 to $442. financing, 90 days same as (937)559-8385
Jiouslng Opl)ortunity.
--------:CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
..ED 6 AFFORDABLE!
"'Townhouse
apartments.

r

St25 1:304)675-2371

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675-7388. For sale,

BUD.DING

l

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

i

i

: .:Oraclous living. 1 and 2 bed~ shop or at your home.
room apartments at Village
and
Rl\lerside

Manor

Ir

ANilQ~

,
Apartments In Middleport.
'From $295~$444. Call 740· Buy or sell. Rlver,·ne
992~5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Antiques. 11 24 East Main

FOI'tTsR
.S"

~

~

'I

r10

fUR SALE
$5001

Police Impounds!
from
1 male 1 female miniature Cars!Trucks/SUV's
Fox Te,rrier, register stock $500 Honda's, Chevys,
J
•
1 f I' t'
or~ 1s mgs
Ina papers). $150 each; tree 8eeps go 98more
3.
v7
366
klttens, .(740)378-6437
- 1, e&gt; 17

oo-

- - - - - - , - - - - on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Huge clean, 3 bedroom, 1 992·25~6 ., Russ Moore,
AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab 1994 Pontiac Flrebird Scyl .
bath, dining, storage, aprox.
puppies. Shots, wormed &amp; runs &amp; looks great, $3,500
2,500 sq. ft. No petsfsmok·
dew claws removed . $300· OBO (304)675-6986
Call Kelly
lng, $610.
$350. (740)441-0130.
j740)446-996t.
1~94 Pontiac Sunbird, 2
AKC l.ab Puppies 3 Black. t door, 2.0, 4 cylinder, 5·

Pomeroy Eagles

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.681 Darwin. OH

BINGO 2171

Every Thu,rsday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
.
6:30 :
Last Thursday of

740-992-7013 or 740,992-5553
Resto.ckf'l9 ' Late .Model Salvage

and AJ'ter , Market
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat: 8:30-Noon

Parts

every month
All pack $5.00

Bring this coupon
Buy ss.oo
Bonanza Get
SFREE .

Sun. Closed

North

MYERS PAVING

4 K 9 7
• K J 9 5
.•

~lenderson, WV

875-2497

·-

West

MONTY

Fax

304-675·2457

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
·• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

•

Old English sheepdog pups,
lo\lable, shaggy dogs, first
stt6t &amp; wormed, price $250,

, Hard Drives; C; 2,82GB, 0 :
1.20GB McAfee Virus Scan, call(740)985·9823

-!;.H.O

'TWin Rivers Tower Is accept~ 160.0 MB of Ram 3D
. lng app'llcattOns for wailing Processo r ' Free Printer
· list for Hud·subslzed, 1· br, Carrying Case and Software
apartment, call 675·6679 w/purchase $300 call 458 •
·-EHO
1997 for more information

r

o u

Boat &amp; Camper Storage
Mason County Fair-Grounds
$8.00/per-Foot. Sat &amp; Men
. during OCt 9am-~m otl'ler

times by Appt. (304)675'
5483

\ lll&lt;t II \ \ 111" 1

1scoun

ue.

Grand Opening Sale
op quality, warranties.
Ilion, WV, Flea Marke
action
C.
Fridays,
turdays and Sundays.
606 922·7t85.

JET·
AERATION MOTORS

11

11'13 04~)5•7•6-·3~0~76----,

FoR SALE

·1-~8763

t K 4... K Q 10 4

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

•
Dealer; South
Vulnerable: Both

r

Ml'SIO\L

2000 Ford Windstar LX
PW,
Extra
Door

9t ,000/mlles
(304)675-40t4

'"'

4x4
FORSIILE

Ph: (740)446·8554

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In

882·3407

r

VANS

FoR SALE

)995 Dodge Ram Van. 3/4

East

Pass
Pass

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

wt Tt'l Tt'IAi?

IMPRoVEMENfS
'
BASEMENT

Call
0870,

24 Hrs. (740) 446-

Rogers
Waterproofing.

Basement

Reaeh 3Counties

ONLY A FOOL
WOULD STOP TO
PICK POSIES FER
TH' TEACI-IUR

5tnnette S
J{ouse Cuaning Service
1

ii

MY

!! UM". WELL, SEE
T IT DOESN'T HAPPEN
AG'IN ... REAL SOON ... IF
YOU CAN HALP IT ...

I

i
i

j
g
•

~·~~-),~:?;';',

~~~~~~j

No Job to Big or Small
Serving: Meigs, Mason,
Gallia &amp; Athens Co.

Of\ ... WI-\0~
~'""

e.ll&lt;.\f\\)~'{5

\&gt;It&gt; W0\1~~ 7

diamond to cut the defenders' communica-

f'~~MI.ED I .

Chain Sharpened
&amp; Parts

BIG NATE

~

Lt
&lt;101.1
\.JOULD

YOU
KNow?

Now servicin Kerosene Heaters

I

Pomeroy, Ohio

i 740·992·5232
I
i
I HOWARD£.
WRITESEl
••

BISSELL
BUILDERS InC.

29670 Bashan Road

Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

Racine ~ Ohio

4577t

1-lERE'S THE WORLD I=AMOUS

RESIDENTIAL ,

SERGEANT OF TI-lE FOREIGN
LE610N CAMPIN6 OUT IN T~E

740.992·7599

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Tf.IE Nt61-lTS ARE
COLil ANil LONEL.'&lt;...

!pe~;ERT WITIIIII~ TROOP$ ..

SAGITTARIUS

WIIO WANTS TO
CUDDLE UP WITf.l
A &amp;EACI-l &amp;ALL?

----

Dean Hill·
·- New &amp; Used
475 South Church St.

IT! I\'M GOit-K;101'\JI&lt;E

1-800·822-0417

'l
.I
I
I

IN~EOOSHES!

"W.V's #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

NAP&amp; ARE Al-WAY5

z
~~~::::=._j!

•
•

•

Barnhart
Builders
J8 years txprrknc:e

•New Homes

•Lot! Homes
• Post Framr
&lt;omplete Remodeling
•RcplacrrMnt Wiodo"·~
•Koofj
Commercialllltd
Residential

I~allipoli~ ilBatlp lribune The.Daily Sentinel l)oint ~lea~ant l\egt~ter I
L_i~~~---~{~.!!!:~-.-~........t~.~~~·-·_j

Free Estimates

740-667·6080

A HE F F

RB

FPRLMEMU ."

vou· 11

~eorronge

let~ert

of

the

lour JCrornbltd words be·
low to form four $jrnple words.

I

I

H E L·C A B
1

2

1 1 1

f--r~--T~-;;.,.-,-,-_, .

L-...J..-.L--1.-.l----.J-_J

I 1-TI-,1-,1-'-1I
FUp YF

·

1--...
3

it.

L._J.
_ -.1.._.1.-.I.~.J

I I 'I

I
f
16 : :,

~

£ MA B Y

I

5

•

I

We had very poor service at

a posh restaurant My

m

GA D

I'

saE

friend

believes that ltps are wages we
pay other people 's ~ ...... ~. ~

1--T~::-7 -rl-:-8 -r~-,~--,~r:94 1,\

Complete · tne chuck le- quoTed

'il .b'i' f 1Jt.n ;n the m•U!nQ words
L-L....l.-.l...-.1-..1--l you develop 9I rom tt~ p No. J below .

~PRI NT

NUMSfREDI' I' I'

~ lEtr..E&lt;S

!)

UNSC~AM8lE
ANSW~k

FORI I I
.

•

SCRAM·LETS

.

I' I; I'
I II
.

.

•

I' I'
I I

I'
I
.

.

,

ANSWERS ~ .. 2 2-0 ~

US BORE
Casmo ~Obese. Wreck~ UnJess.
a
Overheard at polilical meeting "It tsn't so much what
we say , bul the number ot times we say il that makes
US a BORE. •
'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

.one.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

•

sacond-best tompared 1o

&lt;Feb. 2o-March 201 _

camptotc ty outdistance your compcti ·
tion today in areas where you are
slrongly motivated to please another
whO is rooting lor you . It'll give you the
thrust you'll need to win .
ARIES (March 21 ·April 19) - Today's
conditions intensify your feelings for
those you like, and you'll reflect thiS in
all the linte things you do ' lor friends
and loved ones, but thtly could bu
quite profound with your special some·

IM NOT GOING TO IMVJ:

Ripley, WV 25271

ofl

~~~cEs

GARFIELD

•

pleasant manner you display. Theii
actions will be spontareous.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Although yov may not rt~allze it. you
carry_more weight with "others today
than you might think . Even if someone ·
tries to upstage you. thiS perSon will
COn]e

BETTY

••

••

-

won'thavetoaskothersrorhelptoday.

811111

I
I

21 l

and you shouldn't. They'll happily do
nice things for you because of the

•

•

O

Use !he soft approach if you are trying
to sell or promote , something today
and you'll get the type of results you
desire. People will be responsive to a
quiet presentation Versus a pushY one.
C APRI CORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 1 9 ) - Vou

111411 mo. pd

0 Z L E A HX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Aniline morning a pow&gt;r saw can lett a tree that

"hhr'lllrthd'l)':

23-Dec.

I XL

RMK

took a thousand years to grow. - Edwin Way Teale

AstroGraph

(Nov.

TPHHPL.

B A L L (R U P

A

BEDZPFAMUPFX

ou l your finer qualities. Vou may sea
your personality emerging into being
that which you always wanted it to be.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Even
though _you'll see -right through people
and be aware of their faults and short·
comings. you'll rocus Only ,on their
virtues and liner qualities. They'll do
their best to prove you right.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - You
won'! let slde Issues distract you from
keeping your sights focused on some thing oo·n cerning your work or career
that could do wonders tor _your mater!·
ai well-being. Good for you!

THE

PEANUTS

740.949-2217

COMMERCIAL and
FREE ESTIMATES

OVE~

---.,-

Hill 's Se lf
Storage

New Homes • Vinyl

••

I
I •fniEII"'-*
I --5

"E

FEW P

EA

CXLAP. "

will be qulle instrumif!ntal in brlngin~

WAS
I!&lt;ROADCAST

••

diiRIG
diiE
•
IIIIIIUIIIICE
dWiliSS

I XL

There ts a good chance you could
meal someone in the year ahead who

THING.

RL H

"8 D

Friday, Sept. 24, 2004
By Berrt.tce Bade Oaal

WHOLE

IMPORTS
Athens

Open 8:30-6:00 M-F;
Sat. 8:30-2:00 9'12-1033 .

33795 Hiland Rd.

Taday's r;/ue: Tequals B ..

tions. II inslead I play a Irump, East wins with

THE

Air Compressor~

•

tile limit

by ~uls Campos

the queen and returns his last club. Then
Easl, when in with the heart ace, can lead a
diamond to llis partner's ace and receive a

~
~

New Gcneml Sumdby
Generating Systems and

High&amp;! Dry
I Self-Storage
I

to

56 Paramedic
letters
57 Lawyer's
thing

C,letni1y Cipher (1'{1lt0jlrams are created hom quotations oy !MIO\Is peOPle pas I ~ presem
·Eactllette• in tJe ciptlttr slands tor aoolher

paper to see the right answer.

Mowers, Chain Saws,

•

(save)
47 Luau
Instrument
48 Window
part
49 OPEC
member
51 Shade tree
53 " Who - to say?"
55 Push

CELEBRITY CIPHER

killing club ruff.
At least I didn't have IO Wall lor lhe nexl day's

Warranty Repair •
Lawn Tractor &amp; Push

I ~~~

moods.
Worried that Wesl was short in spades, lied
a trump at trick lwo. East won, shifted lo the
diamond two, and I had lour red -suit losers.
Although I could have been right, thai was an .
uninspired pertomiance. lf I had been in midseason lorm , I would have run the spade 10
al lrick two. Then, I would have played a club

I .lU:&gt;I &amp;.UEVE:.
11'-1 &amp;.i\&lt;1.0

1·740·843·5382

P,kk-up and delivery !lervkc

•

19 Foxes ' pnay
20 By ~self
" Yo!"
22 Just a
- de
little bit
cologne
23 Tire support
Si•th sense 25 "Ughl" ·
Railroad
27 Maurice's
station
thanks .
Oidedelijob 28 He played
Analyzed
the Wlz
Crumb-toier 3t Sigma
Like the
follower
Piper
33 Prizm maker
Beige
35 Startled cry
NYSE
39 Became
regulator
liquid
Goodbye,
41 Vampire
to Gaius
target
Wind up
44 Caroler's
Soothing
tune
salves
46 Put-

llelllike that after completing this deal . Take

N.050D'&lt; 5...

820 East Main St.
Pomeroy
.•
beside larry's Fruit Stand

I

DOWN

my chair as the declarer in four hearts. West

·lhe spade king. That would have been a good
· start, but l 'wouldn'l have been out of the
woods. I would have had to continue wilh a

'l'etty'• IIDI/Inn

Rol~Air

t2

to the dummy and discarded a diamond on ·

THE BORN LOSER

~;:::::;::;;;:::;:::~

r

standstill
40 Pistachio
42 Dove's

Hang
around
Shiny paint
lady's
address
Writer
- Bagnold
Student's
armload

continue?

(304) 273·5321

' HOME

t1

Dojo

activity

leads the spade lour (lhird-highesl il ~om
length) seven, 1ack, ace. How would you

YES, MA'AM, MIZ
PRUI'JELLY, IT'S
ALL MY FAULT !!

Advertise
in this
space
for
.$50 per
month

-Anewer to Previous Puale

Do you tackle crosswords? If sa, probably
you usually fill in the answers without difficul·
ty, but E!llery so often you stare uncompre hendingly at the clues. It is strange how the
brain runs like a well-tuned engine one ~ay,
but coughs and splutters the next.

II isn't customary to make a weak jump over· ·

99 Honda Shadow Ace;
6,200 miles, excellent condltion $4,300. {740)446·1 948
call after 6:00pm.
..., , I~\ II I ...,

9

38 Bring to a

sound
13
43 Superman , t7
incognito

Is the gray matter
working well?

Puzzle

dieters

fl!~read

37

call wilh four cards in an unbid major, but
modern tournament players tend not to worry
about such niceties. North's four-diamond
c:ue·bid showed a game-forcing heart raise; it
made no promises about his holding in dia·

_. _,_"_,_,_,_,,....... . . . . .,. . . . . . . . . . . . . _,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,1

•

North
4t
Pass

CC less than 25,000 actual

ton, 130,450 miles, $1 ,000
as is. Can be seen at the
For Sale; Poplar Lumber
Gallipolis Dally Tribune. Forsheeting boards .45 per
more
information
call
board ft. Hardwood mul.:h •
(740)446-2342 ask lor Paul.
$20. per Bkt. (740)992-eees

(740)446-73~8

We~t

J t
Pass

199t BMW KLT 100, 1,000

4x4, extra clean, Stainless
Steel Brush Guard &amp; NUrt
Bars. set up for Goose Neck ·
WATERPROOFING
Hitch
$25,000
Firm Unconditional IHellme guar(304)576·3259
antee. Local references fur·
nlshed ." Established 1975.

Good Uaed Appliances,
Reconditioned ,
and
Guaranteed.
Washers,
Dryers.
Ranges,
and
Refrigerators, Some· start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76

r

Let me do 1t for youl

, PO i~tY wANT
SOME flltAilS

miles, $5.200. (740)256·

2000 Oodgi3 Dakota Sport,
4x4, club cab, CD, 51,000
miles, L.C., tilt. Tonneau .
covar, V-8, auto, $12,900,
call (740)992·2459 or 304-

Story &amp; Clarl&lt;. Piano, $850.
Lowery Organ (electric) with
Genia $250. 74Q-245·5428.

GE electric oven.&amp; Gl stove
lop. Excellent condition.
Amana
micro/ w. lg.
21•t4xt7D. (740)446-34t6.

VIne St.,

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

liNDfS PAINTING

2000 F350 Super Duly 7.3
Diesel •. 43,000 miles, Dually,

,I

$6,900

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Silverado ext. cab Z·71, 4x4. 1997 Ford F·150 4x4 Lariat, 6796.
__ · INsrRUMENTS
350 ··automatic, high rT]Iles, 114K, black, leather Interior,
c/d player, $9;200 090, 2003 LTZ 400 all Skid
$5,995.
Alveran 6 string Bass brand
(740)992·2932
Southern Auto Sales
Plates, white Brothers Pipe,
new condition. (740)446Second Ave.
$4,000 (304)576-2668

9709.

A S'MA/..L TOwN IN tl&gt;At'IO
N~t£&gt;5 A Pllt~5T fOil Tt'l~lll
CO/'IGil~GATION.

740)446-256t

99 Olds Alero 4 door, miles·
103.483 $4,500; 96 Chev.

8()()-537-9528.

.

FOR SALE

'
2001 Dodge Caravan Sport 1994·Chevrolet Suburban .
miles- 72,960, $7,500; 2001 Three seats, all leather.
Che\1. Cav. L S 4 door E(luipped for trailer towing .
$5,900, miles· 053,007; 99 Can be seen at 136 First
Pontiac Montana ext. Van, Ave., Gallipolis, OhiQ. Phone

Stock. Call Ron Evans, l·
'

VANS

TRUCJ&lt;S

L.r__

=~:.:::.:::..:.="---UKC Registered English miles- 097,927, $6,295,
Coonhound Puppies, 6w~s Nlce1; 98 Chev. Blazer LT
old, First Shots &amp; Wormed 4x4. miles 101,357, $6,295;

South

4 A 10

Home • Auto • Lif.e • Retirement
• IRA • 401 KRollovers • Major Med •
Medicare
• Cancer • Accident

3076
76 Ghevy Truck Good 1995 Ford Windstar GL.
Labrador Retriever pups .
Condition (304)675-1545
Dual air, new motor, very
AKC, excellent hunters, ~000 Ford Explorer exc.
clean, high mileage, $2,000.
$250·b!ack, $350-yellow. condition, blac!v'grey interior.
ttiFoii'OSlNiiiRIISiiiALEiiS
_ __,.IJ Call(740)446·1082.'
www.st&amp;elepointlnglabs.com 4 wheel drive, 98,000 miles.
$9,950. (740)446-6754..

t0 7 2
... 9 3

.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$175.00 (740)698-0475

(740)256-6172.

6 52

AQ4 2

•

Opening lead: • 4

· -s.oo.

Are now taking Applications
. for 2BA, 3BA &amp; 4BR., Exercise Bike $15. Like new
· Applications
are
taken Smith COrona Deville 700
: Monday thru Friday, from Electric Typewriter $20,
· 9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is Texas Instrument S&lt;:lentific
.located at 1151 E\lergreen Calculator $20. qompaq
--Drive Point Pleasant. wv Presario
1270 Laptop
)'hOne No is (304)675·5806. Computer, Windows 98, 2

•

tAQJH 65

South
1•
4•

$10! , DVD~ Yellow $250 each call 638- speed. Easy on gas. $1,200
Players,
Video·Games, 5268
(740)446-3736.
080. (304)675-56 t2.
- - - - - - - - Computers. Ect! now avail·
One bedroom apartment., able . ~o r Info call 800-366- AI&lt;C Miniature Pinscher 1997 Chevrolet Monte Carta
puppies. Tails docked, 1st LS. P9wer moonroof, leather
no pets, In Pomeroy, 9850 ex M655
shots &amp; WOfmed . .
(740)992·5858
irlterior, loaded , exCellent
1998 Weber Horse Trailer
Jack
Russell puppy, male, 8 condition. (740}388·0198 or
One bedroom garage apart· 38' wtshowtlme conversion.
weeks old has 1st shots (740)388·8997.
ment: kitchen lurnitihed, 3 hors,e trailer wllull living
been wormed , tall docked.
(740~992-3823
quarters. Excellent condl ~
1997 Pontiac Grand AM GT,
Pure bred. No papers,
• : - , . - - - - - - - - tion. $25,995.00 call Harold
asking $2,200 (304)576-

East
• J 8 53

... Q 6 4 2

•'

Cell Phone 674-3311

9 3

o!o A J B 7

New 1 bedroom apt. Phone $TV 's lrom

"pleasant Valley Apartment (740)385·787t

camcorder

10 Art atanda 52
12 Canal city
14 BMW driver, 54
maybe
15 Toward
·58
the rudder 59
16 Of bl.ack
magic
~0
18 Flop
19 Dislike
61
· ' Intensely
21 Exigency
23 Music
genre
24 Make
1
a tunnel
2
26 Humid
29 Neat-egg
3
4
letters
30 Diluted
32 Broken-of! 5
glacier
6
34 Simply
7
36 . New Zealand 8

09-23..{J4

Crossword

45 Curls and
ringlets
47 News agcy.
50 Successful

1 Obeys
6 Uoe a

~~-------,..1

Registered
purebred
re-conditioned automatic
'SuPPI.IES
Limousine, 10-cows, 8·
washers &amp; dryers. relrlgeraC(lives, 1-bull . (740)446andlor small houses FOR tors , gas and ·electric Block. brick, sewer pipes, 7380 aftar. s~.
: "RENT. Call (740)441 ~11 11 ranges , air conditioners, and windows, lintels, ere . Claude Hiti§MUiifE
, for application &amp; information. wringer ~as hers. Will do Winters, -Rio Grande. OH
repairs on major brands in Call740-245·5121 .
.
At.Jl'Gi

'
~

· NEA

BRIDGE

BIAUTI,UL
MENTS
AT

: Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call cash . Visa/ Master Card.
, 74Q-446-2568.
Equal Drive· 8• little save alot
Washer &amp; Dryer for sale

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER

SERVICE
• Room AddiUom '
n.tLCdt:l ..

·-Gon9oo
• Eloetrical • . , _
• Roofing &amp; Gutters

• Ytnyl Sfdlng I P1inling
• Patio and Porch Dec:kt
We do it all er~

furnace wort&lt;

V.C. YOUNG II!
• 992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohla
22 y_. Local El

'GRIZZWELLS

ROBERT

SOUP TO NUTZ

BISSEll

cea•m•
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

O.:X.. Fido~

I&gt;l 'i&lt;lME PrnCES, ""&lt;aT

Stop &amp; Compare
\

J;:

DID 'WOUlD BE' CcNS1D€RED
A CbMPLtMEr.IT. ..,

I

740-882-1811

MORE FUN WHEN
'fHE'Y'RE 5NUCK

You will
rise to the occasion today when you
are moHvated by unselfish desires to
do something nice for another. When
you see someone struggling you 'll
jump right in and tend a hand .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - In mat•
lers where you and your mate's objec·
tives are 1n harmony with one another.
outstanding benefits can be gained
today. Be totally suP.PQJI•ve of ' each
othtlr and watch the results.
CANCER (June 21 -Juty 22) ~ This Is
a good day to begin to make corrections in your looks by star1ing a diet or
exerc1se program. Chances are what
you bagin now will have staytng power
with resuns you'll like.
LEO (July 23~Aug . 22) -Your wonder·
ful charm and good humor will put you
in good stead with friendS and famity
today. so just be yourset1 and let what
comes naturally to you spring forth. All
will love you tor· it.
VIRGO (Aug 23.-Sept. 2 2) - Much to
your Credit. you'll let compassion rule
your thoughts and actions today. Go
ahead a,nd do things out of the good·
ness of your heart , even 1f others th1nk
you are ~ing illogical.

I
'

"

0..

ro'.

.,.,~

••,

- """""·(e&lt;""

~-.a(h:"

......

EspECiaLL'• / IN
BELC~

�www.m.yaany•enunet.cgriJ

PlUS...

2004 Ford
Explorer
4Door

2004 Ford F250 SC 4X4

2004 Ford
F150 ·

6.0 l Diesel, Auto, XLT

tE0077

$16,195
.·

V6, Auto, CD, 4X4,
Sport Group

#E0426

$8,000
OFF MSRP

2004 Ford Ranger ~c

2005 Ford Focus ZX4
CD, Auto, 4 Cyl.

Edge, Auto, V6, Flareside ·

.

2005 Ford
Taurus S.E

s2ggoo

V6, CD, Full Power

Per Mo.

$18 799
.

2004 Mercury
Grand Marqurs

I

2004
Lincoln Town car
Signature Series

$33,395
·.•

Linco~.

·
··
··1
#1 Namepkzte ilf c-q&amp;tomer · ·'
' satisfaction
wilh dealer' service, 1
,._.
.
'

-··

2004 Mercury
Monterey

.

~

'

:

2004
Lincoln Navigator
Pwr. Moonroof, Pwr. 3rd Row, Pwr. Liftgate,
Entertainment System.
V-6, C/D, Reverse Sensing.
Dual Climate Control

$11,400
OFF MSRP

1151&amp;Jirllnrlll•
......lis. II
www.tumpikeflm;com

MERCURY ...._.._.. "_••
·- ·-·.._.. _,
LINCOLN

'•

.

.

..
i
'·
---- -· --- -- -- -------'-----~--------------

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