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by

Jackson joins critics
of Ohio vote, A6

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Southern Local Board of Education hires personnel

SPORTS
• Tigers tamed by Eagles
at 'The Cave'.

See Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

The Southern Local Board
of Education recently met to
hire personnel. discuss proving cellular telphones to certain staff, and made a motion to
purchase a truck from the vil lage of Racine.
Board
members
Cammarata, Fisher,' Grueser,
Hill and Smith were present.

In personnel matters, a
motion to approve Clint
Spencer for a $2000 signing
bonus as a math teacher in
accordance with Title VIB Rural was approved with
Grueser abstaining.
The board unanimuuslv
accepted the following rcsignations: Jonathan Rccs. varsity boys basketball coach;
Danny Dewhurst, freshman ·
boy's basketball coach: Steve

Randolph, reserve boy's baskctball coach.
The board unanimou&lt;ly
agreed to employ the following personnel fur supplemental contracts for 2004-2005:
Steve Randolph. varsity boy's
basketball coach, Danny
Dewhurst. reserve boys basketball coach: Jordan Hill.
freshman boy's basketball
coach; Alan Crisp, reserve
gir l's basketball c:oach.

The Me igs
Marauder High
School Band
played a .
Christmas med ley
along.the parade
route.

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Florence Paulene Crace
• Jack E. Harless

The board unanimou~l y
approved Richard Cooksey as
a volunteer for eighth gmde
boys basketball coach for
2004-2005 season to assist Mr.
Clint Spencer.
A motio'n was made by
Cammarata to purchase a truck
from Racine village for
$13,500, was seconded bv
Hill.
and
unanimouslv
approved by the rest of the
board.

The fol lowing motions
were approved during the
meeting .

·

'rhe establishment of fund
461 which is a CareerTe chni ca l Adult Education
supplemental matching grant
in the amount of $852.78. The
district ·mmt match this with a
minimum of 51279. 17. Plans
include the purchase of a com-

Please see Personnel, AS

Pictured are the winners of the People's Pet Parade ai
People's Bank. From left, Darlene Boyd and Rusty who won for
funniest: Scout and Jett Face meyer with Si lver. (d ressed as a
deer hunter) whO won for most original: Lane Cullums with
Ruby who won for most Christmasy.
·

Beth Sergent!Photos

INSIDE

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

R.
f~

lilt .

, 0

• Iran group looks for
suicide bombef'$ to
attack U.S. in Iraq, Israel.

~

SeePageA2

• Deer-gun season
begins Today.

~

See Page A3

• New trend at Ohio food
banks: Letting recipient
choose food.

See Page AS

~·

~--­
(ll

WEATHER

POMEROY ~ There was
no "bah-humbug" on the
streets of Pomeroy on
Sunday as residents braved
the cool. damp weather to
witness the annual Christmas
parade march through downtown.
Before the parade, members of the Community Band
drew applause from the
crowd as they entertained
with traditional Christmas
Carols in front of Anderson's
Furniture store.
When the parade arrived
with George and Nellie
Wright leading the way,
spectators were treated to
Santa Claus . tossing out
candy from. a conve rtible ,
clogging gr.oups, twirling
groups, nurses. fire trucks.

Please see Christmas, AS

BY BRIAN

INDEX
Classifieds

- 0N
\
0
\00

-o

tt:z:
c"&lt;

Ill c
-:I
ID Ill

.. -·
-· a.

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SEcnoNs Calendars

The Southern Tornadoes High School Band participated 1n
the Pomeroy Christmas parade by playing a seasonal musical
number to the crowd.

Pomeroy walkway, rest area dedicated Friday

Detail• on Pace A6

2

Santa
stayed busy
at People's
Bank in
Pomeroy as
he passed
out candy
and posed
for pictures
with children.

12 PAGFS

'A3
B3·4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY ~ Pomeroy's
$600,000 pedestrian walkway
was dedicated Friday, a year
after it was opened to the public, and a special rest stop
along the scenic river route
was dedicated to the late
Pomeroy mayor who devoted
time and energy to the project.
The late John. Blaettnar.
who served as mayor during
the initial planning of the
walkway, and who died in
office in 1993. will be
remembered with the only
break area on the I .6-mile
Ohio River walk . Blaettnar's

wife Eleanor and their children. grandchi ldren and sonsand daughters-in-law dedicated a drinking fountain at a
·sma ll but scenic rest area, just
across the street from the old
Pomeroy Jun i•.)r School building, in Blacnnar's memory. A
plaque will be placed at the
site. and Mayor John Mu sser
said Friday the village plans
to install a few benches there .
Musser said 30 benches are
planned for the length of the
path. Those benches wi II he
paid for, at least in part. by a
fund drive now underv. ay
allowing residents to sponsor
a bench.

The fami ly of the late
John Blaettnar:' His wife,
Eleanor; their son, Rick.
kneeling. and daughters
Cathenne Johnson,
Eli zabeth Blaettnar.
Mary Stewart. joined
Blaettnar in·laws and
grandchildren to dedicate the rest area along
Ponierois 1.6-mile
pedestrian. walkway to
the late Pomeroy mayor.
The walkway was dedi·
cated Friday by Pomeroy
Mayor John Musser.

Please see Walkway, AS

(Brian J . Reed/photo)

An Online Well ness Center ..
HMC Community Health and Wellness
"Dedicated to Promoting Wei/ness''

At .Your Fingertips!

http://holzer.wellsource.com
• Health tips • Health related articles • Resources for better living • Wellness seciion • And everything in between!

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�PageA2

NATION. WORLD.

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 29, 2004

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TEHRAN. Iran - The 300
men filling out form's in the
offices of an Iranian aid group
were offered three choices:
Train for suicide attacks
against U.S. troops in Iraq, for
suicide attacks against Israelis
or to assassinate British
author Salman Rushdie.
It looked at lirst glance like
a gathering on the fringes of a
society divided between moderates who want better relations with the world and hardline Muslim militants hostile
toward the United States and
Israel.
But the presence of two key
figures- a prominent Iranian
lawrnaker and a member of
the
country's
elite
Revolutionary Guards - lent
the meeting more legitimacy
and was a clear indication of
at least tacit support from
some within Iran's government.
Sine~ that inaugural June
meeting in a room decorated
with photos of Israeli soldiers' funerals, the registration forms for volunteer suicide
commandos
have
appeared· on Tehran 's streets
and university campuses, with
no sign Iran's government ls
trying to stop the shadowy
movement.
On Nov. 12, the day
Iranians traditionally hold
pro-Palestinian protests, a
spokesman
for
the
Headquarters
for

Commemorating Martyrs of.
the Global Islamic Movement
said the movement signed up
at least 4,000 new volunteers.
Mohammad Ali Samadi, the
spokesman,
told
The
Associated Press the group
had. no ties to the government.
And
Iranian
Foreign
Ministry spokesman Hamid
Reza Asefi told reporters
recently that the group's campaign to sign up volunteers
for suicide attacks had "nothing to do with the ruling
Islamic establishment."
"That some people do such
a 'thing is the result of their
sentiments. It has nothing to
do with the government and
the system," Asefi said.
Yet despite the government's disavowal of the group
and some of its programs,
there are indications the suicide attack campaign has at
least some legitimacy within
the government.
The first meeting was
held in the offices of the
Martyrs Foundation, a
semiofficial organization
that helps the families of
those killed in the 1980-88
Iran-Iraq war or those killed
fighting for the government
on other fronts. It ·drew
hard·line lawmaker Mahdi
Kouchakzadeh and Gen.
Hussein Salami of the elite
Revolutionary Guards.
"This group spreads valuable ideas," Kouchakzadeh
told AP.
"At a time when the U.S. is
committing the crimes we see

now, deprived nations have no
weapon other than martyrdom. It's evident that Iran's
foreign policy makers have to
take the dignified opinions of
this group into consideration ," said Kouchakzadeh,
who also is a former member
of the Revolutionary Guards.
Iranian security officials did
not return calls seeking comment about whether they had
tried to crack down on the
group's training programs or
whether they believed any of
Samadi 's volunteers had
crossed into Iraq or into
Israel.
In general, Iran portrays
Israel as its main nemesis and
backs anti- Israeli groups like
Lebanon's Hezbollah. It says
it has no interest in fomenting instability in Iraq and that
it tries to block any infiltration into Iraq by insurgents
- while pleading that its
porous borders are hard to
police.
. In 1998, the Iranian govern:
ment declared it would not
support a 1989 fatwa agai nst
Rushdie issued by Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, founder
of
the
1979
Islamic
Revolution. But the government also said only the person
who issued the edict could
rescind it. Khomeini, angered
at Rushdie's portrayal of the
Islamic prophet Muhammad
in "The Satanic Verses," died
iii June 1989.
Samadi described the
movement as independent, with no ties to

groups like al-Qaida.
Despite its very public canvassing for volunteers, the
group can be secretive.
Samadi agreed only reluctantly to an interview and insisted
it be held in ' the basement of
an unmarked building in central Tehran - not the Martyrs
Foundation offices.
Samadi refused to identify
any of his volunteers or Ahe
wealthy sympathizers who he
says underwrote their efforts.
Asked to describe the training
programs, he would say only
that classes were sometimes
held "in open spaces outside
cities" but more often inside,
away from prying eyes.
Samadi claimed 30,000 volunteers have signed up, and
20,000 of them have been
trammg.
chosen
for
Volunteers had already carried out suicide operations
against military targets inside
Israel, he said.
But he said discussing
attacks against U.S. troops in
Iraq "will cause problems for
the country's foreign policy. It
will have grave consequences
for our country and our group.
It's confidential.''
As devoted Muslims, members of his group were simply
AP Photo
fulfilling their religious oblig- Iranian women read papers of registration indicating their ·
ations as laid out by readiness for martyrdom (suicide attack) under a photo of
Khomeini. he said.
Iran 's late leader Ayatollah Khomeini, as they attend in a rally
· In hi s widely published to su pport Palestinians i~ Tehran on Nov. 12.
book of religious directives,
Khomeini says: "If an enemy defend through Hny possible rei igious verdict, we don't
invades Muslim countries means : sacrificing life and need anybody 's permission to
fight an enemy that has occuand borders, it's an obliga- properties."
tion for all Muslims to
Samadi said: "With this pied Muslim lands."

Subm\Hed photo

Julie Hussell, Kristy Dav1s, Conrad .Buffington. Michael Williams and Christy Perkins (Student Counci l advisor) finish packing
up the ~tems donated for the area veterans by the Ohio Valley Christian School students. The school participated in the
Veteran s Project sponsored by the French Art Colony of the Daughters of the American Revolution. All students donated
1tems for the student council to organ1ze.

HP Poll:

Six in 10 Americans think Supreme Court should have mandatory retirement age
BY WILL LESTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - Six in
I 0 Americans say there
should be a mandatory retirement age for Supreme Court
justices, according to an
Associated Press poll.
The survey found public
support for an idea .that has
arisen
periodically
in
Con11ress without ever making headway.
Only one of the ll'ine current
justices, Clarence Thomas, is
younger than 65. Chief Justice
William H. Rehnquist, 80,
appointed to the court ·by
President Nixon, has thyroid
cancer. In the survey, people
were asked if they could iden·
tify what job Rehnquist held,
and 59 percent did not know.
The appointment of justices
without term limits or a
mandatory retirement age historically has helped to insulate the court from politics,
said Dennis Hutchinson, a
Supreme Court expert from
the University of Chicago
Law School. At the same
time, that can have the unintended consequence of letting
some justices serve beyond
their most effective years.
People over 65 were among
those most likely to favor
mandatory
retirement,
according to the poll conducted for the AP by lpsos-Public
Affairs.
The question on retirement
mentioned no specific retirement age. Lifetime appointment of Supreme Court justices is dictated by the

Constitution and could be
changed only by an amendment.
"The justices hold office
year after year," said Opal
Bristow, an 84-year-old
Democrat and retired teacher
who lives near San Antonio .
"Some of them are old
codgers who need to get out
of the way and let the younger
folks with fresh ideas come
in."
Over the years, justices frequently have served into their
70s and 80s and often have
died in office. In the past few
decades, it has become more
cemmon for justices to step
down when they face serious
illnesses.
If President Bush has to
nominate a replacement for
any of the nine justices, the
landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade
decision that allowed legal
abortions in the first three
months of pregnancy is certain to be a central issue.
The survey found that 59
percerit of respondents said
they favor choosing a nominee who would uphold Roe v.
Wade, while 31 percent wanted a nominee who would
overt11rn the ruling.
While the public is generally divided on the abortion
issue, polling consistently has
found a clear majority of people who think abortion should
be legal. in at least some cases.
The preference for Supreme
Court nominees who would
uphold Roe v. Wade could. be
found among both men .and
women, most age groups,
most income groups and peo·

pie li vi ng in urban, subutban
and rural areas. Fewer than
half of Republicans, evangelicals and those over 65 said
they favored a nominee who
would uphold the abortion
ruling.
"While I don't have a strong
feeling about abortions personally, I wouldn't want the
law overturned and return to
the days of backdoor abortions," said Colleen Dunn, 40,
a Republican and community
college teacher who lives outside Philadelphia.
The survey found that 61
percent of respondents said
Supreme Court nominees
should state their position on
abortion
before
being
approved for the job.
Most of those who have
taken a position on whether a
nominee should uphold or
overturn Roe v. Wade say they
wanted a nominee to state his
position on abortion before
confirmation. Almost twothirds of each group said they
would want to know.
"In a perfect world they
wouldn ' t have to talk about
it," said Kenneth Cole, 39, a
consultant from Columbus,
Ohio, and a Republican who
leans toward wanting Roe v.
Wade overturned. " But whoever President Bush nomi nates, peop le will know
· where they stand. They
won't be able to avoid the
issue. "
Another issue the Supreme
Court will have to deal with at
some point is homosexual
marriage.
By 61 percent to 35 per-

cent, people opposed gay
marriage, with young adults
between 18 . and 29 ·about
evenly split. Recent polls
have indicated people are

about evenly divided on the
question of civil unions ,
which would provide many of
the same legal protections as
gay marriage.

On Friday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
If you wish, select one of the following FREE ve....S below to

accompany your tribute.

David C. Andrews
July 10, 1961-May S, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in our hearts,

John and Mona AndreWs and
lan\ily

Fill out the form helow and drop oiT to
The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
lll Court St., Pomeroy, OH iJ;i769

DEADLINE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 12 Noo;l·

r-------------------------------------

1'
Please publish my tribute in the special Memory Page on Friday. December 24.
,
I
1. N a m e o f d e c e a s e d - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

1 Relationship 10 me:-;,--~----------1

Number of selected verse----

I Date ofbirth _ _ _- ' - - - - - - - - - - - - Dme .uf passin,l$-_ _;__..,;_ _

1 .
1Pnnt your name hcre - - - - ; - - - - - - _ ; , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
1A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. Phdne numbcrr-------

a

Lunches and dinners offered

Public meetings

PORTLAND - The Po11land Communitv Center will offer
lu nch and dinner' to deer hunters Monday through Friday.
Lunch will be scn·cd !rom II :30 a.m. to I p.m. and dinner
from 5:30p.m. to 7 p.m . A $5 donal ion i&gt; requested . Al l proceeds go towards rouf repair at the center.

Wednesday, Dec. I
PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at Pageville
Town Hall.
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustees. 6:30
p.m.,
Olive
Township
Garage.

NELSONVILLE - Region 14 Workforce Investment
CEO consortium will be held at 8 a.m. on Dec. 10 at the
Ramada Inn in Nelsonville. A Region 14 Workforce
Inve stment Board meeting will be held at 9:30a.m.

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $I2 IF PICTURE INCLUDED

People line up outside the U.S Sup·reme Court to 11sten to arguments in this Oct. 13, 2004. in
Washington. Six in 10 Americans say there should be mandatory retirement age for Supreme
Court justices, according to an Associated Press poll taken Nov. 19-21.

Community Calendar

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Nov. 29
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club meets at 7 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.

Professor from Wales
visits Rio Grande

•

AP Photo

Local Briefs

Consortium set

The AP-Jpsos poll of 1,000
adults was taken Nov. 19-21
and has a margin of sampling
error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

I. We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever. ·
2. May God cradle you in His arms. now and forever.
3. Forever missed. never fllrgouen. May God hold you in lhe palm ·of
His hand.
4. Thank you for lhe wonderful days we shared together. My prayers
will be with you until we meet agai n.
5. The days we shared were sweet I long 10 sec you again in God's
heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and hravery still in~pire us all. and the memory or your
smile fill s us with joy and laughter.
7. Though out uf ~ig ht . you'll forever be in m\·Jhcan and mind.
8. The days may come and go, but the time~ ~ ~ ~hared will always remain.
9. May the light of peace shine on your face fur ctemitv.
10. May God's angels guide you and protcrt )O U throughout time.
II . You were a light in our life thm burn~ forever in our heart.~.
12. May God's graces shine over )OU for all time.
11 You are in our thou~hts and prayer~ from morning to night and from
year to year.
14. We send this message with a lo\'ing kis' for eternal rest and happiness.
15. May the Lord bless you with His graces and wann.loving hean.

1City--------...;__ _:___ _ _ _ State---- Z 1 ~-l

Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SENTINEL

L--------------~------------------~---~
•

PageA3
Mo~day,

November

29, 2004

Ohio Valley Christian School donates to veterans 'Date rape' is right name
for frat-house assault

Iran group looks for suicide bombers to attack U.S. in Iraq, Israel
BY All AKBAR DAREINI

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

&lt;

RIO GRANDE -. The
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
recently welcomed another
visiting professor from Wale s
to campus who will teac h and
meet with the member' of !he
facultv.
Caroline Hancock. wordinator for the masters programs within the School of
Education Studies and Social
Inclu sion at Trini ty College in
Carmarthen. Wales. VIsiled
Rio Grande for a week in
mid-November.
Rio Grande and Trinity
College have had a successful
student ex change program for
a few years. The fac uli y
exchange program between
the two univer1ities started
onlv thi; school year. In
September, Bryan Thomas. a
ceramics pr&lt;Jfes;or at Trinity
College . visited Rio Grande:
Han&lt;:ock
VIStied
R1o
Grande before and was excited to return th is fall.
"I've ah-.t}' been a big
believer in international travel for students.'' Hancock
said.
As a teacher. she finds that
travel is also very important
so that she can. lellrn about
educational methods in different cultures . She first ~ot
involved in the program with
Rio Grande when talking
with Gre g Miller, Ph .D..
coordinator of graduate studies at Rio Grande. She found
many similarities in how they
view edtJCation. and she was
excited to work with him wHJ
other Rio Grande faculiy
members.
Hancock ,at 111 on cla,ses.
lectured. met I' ith faculiy
member' . spoke with .student s. toured the campus and
vi;i ted ihc community.
"The campus i1 different
from Trinily in re spect to
some of the educational programs. but there are also
many similarities." Hancock
said.
·'Student&gt; in Wales are
often more vvcal in the1r
c·lasses,' but rhe American
cla·ssrooms · (jfe · ol"len mnre

formal ."
Hancock
said .
"American students arc alsP
more ~olitc than students in.
Wales . · '
Hancock·- wa.s impre&gt;Sed
with the faculty. siudent, ,
communi'ty and c1mpu,, and

Saturday, Dec. 4
HARRISONVILLE
Harr iso nvill e Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM, 6:30 p.m ., with
installation of officers.
follow ed by York College
conferring E.A. degree at
7:30p.m . Refreshments to
follow.

said it often reminded her of
home.
"lt''s like being in a pan of
Wales," Hancock sa id . .
She found it particularly
interesting thai while most
people that she meets in
America ask her if she has an
English accent, several .people in southern Ohio recognized her Welsh accent.
"The people of southern
Ohio seem to live in close
communities where family
tie s are strong. and that is
exactly how it is in Wales."
Hancock said.
Hancock also visited local
schools and was impressed
with how the teachers ran
their classrooms and were so
dedicated to helping their student s.
"I have so much respect for
teachers," Hancock sa1d.
Hancock also visited Rio
Grandc"s Madog Center for
Welsh Studies and was
pleased to see all of the information about Webb history
and culture on di5play at the
center.
Hancock enjoyed 1alking
with student s. meeting with
faculty and visitin~ ihe community, hut most irnportant ly
she gained new insighl into
working wilh students and
she took some new ideas back
with her to her classroom in

Friday, Dec. 3
POMEROY
- Meigs
County PERI 1174 noon luncheon. with meeting to follow, Meigs County Senior
Center. Recognition of charter members. Eastern Bell
Choir to perform. All members urged to attend.

Other events
1\Jesday, Nov. 30
POMEROY - Childhood
immunization clinic, 9 to II
a.m., I to 3 p.m., Meigs
County Health Department.
Bring shot records. medical
cards,
if
applicable.
Children must be accompanied by a parent or legal
guardian.
$5
donation
accepted but not required
for administration.
Sunday, Dec. 5
TUPPERS PLAINS
Coolville Community Choir
performs at 7 p.m., Eastern
Elementary SchooL

Deer-gun season
begins Today
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY -More than
400.000 hunters are expected
to take the fie ld acro s; the
state next week for the deergun season, which begins
Today and continues through
Dec . 5.
The season will be open
each day from a half hour
before sunrise to sunset. With
a pre-hunting season population estimute of 700.000
white-tailed
·deer.
the
Division of Wildlife antici·
pates a kill of 140.000 to
145,000 deer during the
week-long hunt.
Many non-resident hunters
choose Ohio - and Meigs
County, in particular - as a
deer hunting destinati on. for
both qualit y of deer and
hunling accessibility. Deer
hunting is one of the county's
pre 111 iere toll ri "' atlnt&lt;:t ion ~.
and restaurunt s. and other
businesses
traditionally
report .a signific-ant increase
in trade during the deer-g un

make arrangement&gt; with
local deer processors to package the venison for needy
familie &gt;. Hunters who wish
to donate deer to the program
can call Wood at 985-4400.
he said.
Wood has posted the fol lowing guidelines for hunters
panicipating in the deer-gun

Dear
Abby

hoyfriend \ head. there is no
way to make him le » aurae tive. How ever. if your
"friendly guy'' lea\es you 1u
fend for yourself all evening.
that's considered had man ners - and you would be
within your right' to lei him
know it.
DEAR ABBY: I reccnth
went through a difficu li 1\H;year divorce from "Jayson"
after I0 years of marriage .
My former mother·in·la\l.
"Violet." now insi,ts that I
return the china that Ja y,un
and I recei ved during the
marriage. I always thought a
gift was just that - a gift.
Violet insi'is that rhe china
be returned. She says it wasn't from "my" family. I say il
WAS my family - for 10
years. You see. Abby. Jayson
left me . I '"" trying to wn1 k
on our problems. but he
"anted out. Now Violet is
calling me a martyr and saying I have no right to the
china.
l have informed Jayson
and his mother-from-hell that
the china i' boxed and 'in
storage. and thai I'm " 'ving
it for our son. Am I wrong"
- FURIOUS IN VIRGINIA
DEAR FCRIOUS When
your son and hi s future bride
are ready to ;et up a household. they ' II want to select
their own china. Of this you
can be sure. If the china has
been in your husband's family for generations, return it .
If that's not the case, offer to
let your former motber-inlaw BUY it buck.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

Coming wery Thursday in the·Sentinel •.
'

"CWrtc~ fl9 ~ &amp;
Tit~$ ,19 $)19"
Your guide to weekend
entertainment in the Tri-State

season:

• Get landowner's permi s·
sion.

• Plug your shotgun.
• Make sure you meet
hunter orange requirenients .
• Know how to attach your
lemporary tag. Carry a piece
of string. watch. and pencil or
pen.
• Know the rule s for u&gt;e of
communication devices .
• Know the season dates.
W&lt;~l~s .
and bag limits.
hours.
The poinl of the exchange
• Do not litte r. Pick up your
program. after all , is to help
empty
shells.
faculty members at Rio
• Follow proper check staGrande and Triniiy College
tion
proced ures.
become be ncr teachers so that
Members of the Mei ~&gt;
they can reach their students
more effective ly.
High School Fut!lre Farme~s
Hancock said the cxp~ri­
of America will ._assi't &lt;1t.
ence was excellent for her as
che.:h stations a\ Baum
a teacher. She hopes to corre- season.
Lumber in Chester. Country
spond with Rio Grande facu l- . Last year. hunters in Meig s Corner
in
Cnlumbia
tv members in the future. and County harvesied 2.78'1 deer Tow n,hip and Little John's
ltll&gt;k&gt; forward to visiting with
the .Rio Grande professors · during the week-long season. Citgo in Tuppers Pial!".
when th ey visit Trinity Wildlife Offi cer Keith Wood Wood '"i'J. Other check &gt;laCollege in Wales later in the . said. Ohio i.s divided into tions arc Little John's Deer
school year"' pm·1 of the fac- 1hree deer hunting wncs . Proces.,ing in Chester. By the
Wa\ Grocen in Lan esvi ll e.
Mei~s Countv is located in
ulty exchange program
Fur more informati on on the ~talc· s "Zone C." whiCh Twin Oaks Convel&gt;ience
the faculty cx'change pro- allows a three-deer limit for Store at Five Point s. P1ck ami
gram. student exchange pro ~ the ~ea~on .
Sho.vcl in S&lt;liem Center.
.
gram or the Madog Center.
Lumhe'r
in
Wood said he is working 'o euwiller
call the CCIUCr at (K00) 282- with th e Mcig1 Connty Pomeroy. Joe's Countrv
720 1. Addit ional informalion Conperativc Pari"h thi~ year Market in Rutland Jetr,
ahout the ~1aJog Cen\er. a'
well ~~~ infurmulion on the in an dfm1 to collect donalcd. Carryout in Pnmero). Hill's
. wide V&lt;~nety of program' w nison lrum hunt er' who Citgo Ill Rac ine. and TNT .
offered a\ Ri o Grande.. ca.&gt; l'e l'll,!O) I he ...,port tillt do notu..,c Pitstop on. Ohin 7 111
founJ o~ ·l inc at www.ri&lt;,.e.Ju. ihc 11\l'&lt;ll. ·\\ond ,aid he will 'Middleport .
l

DEAR ABBY: My 16year-old daughter went to a
pa11 y at a frat house where
she was given a great deal to
drink . Feeling "woozy," she
went outside. One of the
"boys" she had, been talking
to went with her and suggest·
ed she go back to his room to
lie down . She had known
this fellow before that night
and tnisled him . She was
drunk, and he had sex with
her. It was her first ti1ne. She
claims she tried to make him
stop. but he wouldn'l. and
she couldn't make him .
Shouldn't the young man
be punished in some way') I
feel something should be
done, and I also worry about
him doing this to some other
girL Would this con&gt;titute
date ' rape'' - CONFUSED
IN VIRGINIA
DEAR
CONFUSED:
You ' re darn right it was date
rape. And the ·'something"
you shou ld do is cull the
nearest rape crisis ce nter and
get help for your daughter.
You should also intim11 the
poli ce. I'm sure they'll be
interested to know that
minors are being give n alcohoi and taken advantage of at
that fraternity house. as well
as ihe name of the man v.ho
assaulted your daughter.
You're absolutel y correct !hat
he's likely to do it again .
DEAR ABBY: I haw heen
dating "Howie" for a vcar. I .
love him and want ro · spenJ
my life with him. but there·,
a problem. Women are
attracted ·to Howie like bees
to honey. I have seen this
with my own eyes. Women
come on to him even though
he tells them he's in a serious
relationship. Should I look
the other way when they start
up.? Yes , Howie does talk to
them. but he is just a friendly guy.
I don't want to lose my
boyfriend over this, but it's
really starting to bother me.
How should I handle it? UNCOMFORTABLE
IN
FLORIDA
DEAR
UNCOMFORTABLE: If vou and Howie
didn't have· something specia!, you wouldn't have las\ed as a couple. Short of
throwing a bag over your

All stylea of carpet are included:
BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET,
TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG CARPET,LEVEL
LOOP CARPET and SCULPTURED CARPET.
No enra charJe for movtna furniture
or removlag old carpet.

can us or stop in.
We'D come to your home and measure·
, lor a free no obUgation quote.

Anderson's
FURNITURE • APPLIANCES • CARPET
Pom~roy, OH • 992-3671

�The'Daily Sentinel

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
.Jim 'Freeland
• P.u!;&gt;lisher
· ' • · Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

· · C ot~gress shall make tJO law respecting at,J
establishment of religion, or·prohibitirtg the
)fee exercise the,eofi or abridging the freedom
cif speech, or of the press; or the right.of the
people peaceably to assemble, atld to petitioll
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-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. Nov. 29, the 334th day of2il04 . There are
:12 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Nov. 29. 1964, the U.S.
Roman Catholic Church instituted sweeping changes in the
liturg~, including the use of English instead of Latin .
On this date: In 1864. a Colorado militia killed at least 150
p,aceful Cheye nne Indians in the Sand Creek Massacre.
In 1924, Ital ian composer Giacomo Puccini died in Bru ssels
be fore he could complete hi s opera ·'Turandot. " It was fin is hed by Franco AIJano.
ln 1929, Navy Lt. Cmdr. Richard 'E. Byrd radioed that he 'd
made the first airplane fli ght over the South Pole.
. In 1947 , the U.N. General Assembly passed a resolution
calling fo r the partitioning of Palestine hetween Arabs and
Jews.
In 1952. President-el ect Dwight D. Eisenhower kept his
c:1 mpaign promise to visit Korea to assess the ongoing conHie!.
In 1961. "Enos" the chimp was launched from Cape
Canave ral aboard the MerclJry-Atlas 5 spacecraft, which
mbited earth twice before returning.
Ill 1963, President Lvndon John son named a commission
headed by Earl Warren to investigate the assass ination .of
President Kennelly.
In 1981. actress Natalie Wood drowned in a boating accident off Santa Catalina Island, Calif.. at age 43.
In t 086. actor Cary Grant died in Davenport, Iowa, at age
R2. 'Y.
In 200 I. former Beatie George Harrison died in Los
Angeles following a battle with cancer; be was 58.
Ten years ago:· The House passed the revised General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade by a vote of 288-146. Fighter
je ts att&lt;tcked .the capital of Chechnya and its airport nours after
Russian President Boris Yeltsin demanded the breakaway
republic end its 'ivi l war.
Five years ago: Protestant and Catholic adversaries formed
an ex traordinary Northern Ireland government designed to
bring together every branch of opinion within the. bitterly
div ided society. Game show host Gene Rayburn died in
Gloucester, Mass .. at age 81.
One year ago: Gunmen in Iraq ambushed and killed two
Japanese diplomats; seven members of Spain' s military intelligenc~ agency were killed in Mahmudiyah . Thirty-three pep·
pie were killed in the crasli of a military plane in Congo. •
Today 's Birthdays: Hall-of-Fame sportscaster Vin Scully is
77. Blue s. singer-musician John Mayall is 71. Composer·
musician Chuck Mangi one is 64. Pop singer Denny Doherty
I The Mamas &amp; the Papas) is 64. Country singer Jody Miller
is 63. Pop singer-musician Felix Caval iere (The Rascals) is
60. Musician Wallis Buchanan (Jamiroquai) is 39. Pop singer
Jonathan Knight (Ne w Kids on the Block) is 36. Rock mu sici an Martin Carr (Boo Radleys) is 36. Actress Gena Lee Nolin
is 33. Actress Anna Fari s is 28. Rock musician Ringo Garza is
23. Actor Lucas Black is 22.
'
Thought for Today: "Kee!) away from people who try to
helittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the
really great make you feel that you: too. can become great."
- Mark Twain ( 1835-191 0).

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EDITOR
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be published. Letters should be ·in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel
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(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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PageA4_

·OPINION··

Monday, November 29,

200,..

Overanalyzing the red state mindstate
· It tnay, be a time of

·:

west

~ THERe$
-.

A S·DAY

WAITING

P£RIOD

ON ALL

PURCHASES.

- - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - ---·--·-·-·---

Foreign-born presidents should be allowed
very plea;ed tu see aban28th
don ed."
Amendm~nt
10
the
Constitutional puri sts like
Constitution to allow for. Van Alstvne resist an v tameign-born citizens to run for
perin g with the document .
pre sident isn't about him,
which goes a long way in
Joan
thouglil this news could come
explaining why of the
Ryan
as a surprise to the
11 .000 o r so proposed
California . governor. One
amendments in the past 200
look at those worshipful
years. just 27 have won
"Amend for Arnold" comapproval of two- th irds of the
mercials and "Operation beca11se of continued suspi - House and Senate and threeArnold" Web sites. and even cion of foreigne n; and more fourths of the state legi sla·
the ·most humble megaloma- recently because there has tures. The barrier to passage
niac might imagine himself a been no popular prospective is hi gh, as it shoulu j;le.
savior for whom a grateful candidate to whom the law
We ou ght to change the
nation will move heaven and applied.
natu ral-born citize n law on
Earth to secure the benefit of
In the 1800s, the antipathy \his single argument - that
hi s leadership.
toward foreigners deepened the United State.s has evolved
We are, nonetheless, in as floods of poor. largely and grown enough to ,ubanSchwarzenegger's debt. His uneducated
immi grants don 1he not ion that foreignsupporters are the catalysts streamed into New York har- born ci1izens would not be
for a long-overd ue debate hor. The idea of allowing I00 percent loyal to the counabout a law that. at best, has foreign-born citi zens to be try. But perhaps the stronger
outgrown whatever purpose president would have been argument is tha t the law runs
it might have served and, at shouted down before its count er not only to what
worst, contradict s the very sponsor could fini sh hi s pro- Ame rica was meant to be but
values on which the posal. People wanted to be also what we know it to be.
Constitution is based .
, sure the country's leadership
This has always been a
Article II. Section I. remained
" auth ~ ntiqll y , country where the circumclause 5 stipulates that "no Am er ican ." Thi s nativi sm stances of one's birth meant
person except a natural born carried over well into the not hing co mpa red to the
citizen" can serve as presi- . 20th century with sporadic quality of one's accomplish·
dent. In 1787. this made at pani c about Bol she viks or ments. The fo unding fathers'
least some sense. The communi sts ri sing to power. re jection of titles born or
founders had concerns that
·But America today is large pedigree is 'an example of
foreigners were not "imbued enough and hetcroge ncoLIS this belief. Our in vestment
with the revolutionary fervor enough to quell fears that in publi c sc hool is anothn.
to be trusted with the job," one ethnicit y. rel igiou .s We bel ieve all people can
both as president ·and com· denomination or fore i~n sect succeed
whether
th~y
. mander in chief. says UC could sweep a pres1de mi al emerge from a tenement or a
Berkel ey law professor cand ida\e into office for the manor hoLJse .. from paren ts
Calvin Massey.
purpose of weakening or who are Sllrgcons or ~ trce t
A foreigner might steer the undermining the country.
cleaners.
·colmtry back into the hands
"I· don 't know of any
Similarly, we have been a
of England or try to reshape · good argument nn w (for COLi ntry · in which people
the US. government· to kee pin g th e natural -born from foreit! n s hore~ have
re;emble the fl)Onarch y of clause) ." says William Van found theil: ronunes here ..
hi s hom eland . The clau se Al styn e, one n f the nat ion's s(mie arri ving wi th trunks or
was accepted by th e draftin g forem'"' const.ituti una l law heirloom ~. '''me \vith jLI:-.t
. Comm ittee or Eleven then at experts and a prorc"or :11 their wi1-. and &gt;I \\ illini.!Jic- :-.~
the
Consti tu ti onal ·William and Mary Law ·ln 11ork And" ha.t C&lt;llll;ol he
Conve ntion without a word School. "It 's one or the few denied i; ho w i'und;nnenlally
of debate. There ha&gt; not area!-. o.f t ~c qri g in a l tl1eir contributions have
been · m~ c h s1 nce. fir st Con stituti on that I'll he ;hapcJ and stt·cngthcncd tl1i s

country, even now.
Thus, a surv il'or of N:1zis.

in Hungary coul d t'll lllt' here
at 18 and end up helping to'
found the hi gh-tc·l'11 c:nrp&lt;"ra·
tion. Inte l. A ~irl from
Prague and &lt;I lH•I' rf(l m
Germany could ~"';' up to.
become secretary Pi' stat e·. A
yo ung man from ALI&gt;tria
with ambition; as out si;ed
as his muscles can hecome a·
Hollywood star :md ~l'le ~-·
nor of California.
Immigrants ru11 hanks and
factorie s, decide c11 r1rt cases,
teach at our unin~ r·s itic s ;
serve as commaJJ(kr:.; i 1t Pur"
military. Wh y 11oui d we slop
the pursuit of lhc ,\ ltlt'rican
dream at the slt'i" &lt;&gt;I 1hc
White Hou se? Wily wo nld
we deprive ourscil'es or the·
widest poss ible- at r:ty or'
presidential cand iriHtes'!
"It's not '" ii' we 've
ex hausted all the , Hriations
of erhnicity in l"·,·s idc· nt ial
candidate s," cracks St:mford
hi story profcw•1
J:JL'k
Rako ve. "Kerr1 ·, Jc11 ish
dcscenl qualific~i as d&lt;l\1' 11right exotic."
Perhaps Scln\a l h.:'lll'!!.~~ er

will be the firs! h :; 1 c li ~ i ~• ry
of changing the '""· 11 lrich,
with popular &lt;lli'J "IIi. cm ild
happen in as li ttle as 1\1&lt;&gt; or
three yea r&gt;. Peill:ljh the· i'trst
l'lcneficiary will he .lcitllirer.
Granholm.
,\Jtc lii ~·cll l's :
Democratic: g o\ -L'lll&lt; fr · \vho
_wa~ born in Va nl·ou\ lT
Such c:onsiclcr;ll iolrs are.
beside the poi Jll . The la w:
should be cha nced hcc:t u,c :

School News

(Jnrm R w m i \ 0
jrll

lh£' . S{/ 11

Jack E. Harless

.,

Jack E. Harless. 76, of Racine, died Saturday Nov. 27 at hi s
Mile Hill Road residence.
'
He was born Oct. 29. 4928 in Logan County, W.Va .. the son
ol the late Wrlham Okey and Ella R. Napier Harless.
He was ret1red lrom the General Motors Corporation in
Detroit, Mich . and was a U.S. Army veteran.
He is survived by his wife. Shirley Irene Anderson Harless
· whom he married Feh. 27. 1956 in Gary, 1M
Also surviving is a daughter, Carolyn Jean (Larry) Siniard,
ol Ta~lor.. M1ch. ; two so ns, Kenneth Lee Harless, of Houston,
and James Ray (Cathy) Harless, of Dearborn, Mich .; four
grandchildren, Michael Edward Drumm, Linda Marie
Drumm. Jamie Lynn Harless and Jeffrey James Harless; a
grcal-grandson. Brandon Drumm; and two sisters, Phyllis
Louise Walker. of Mason, W.Va. and Loretta Ann (C harles)
Findley. of Racine .
In addition to hi s parents. he is preceded in death by two
brothers. Orville William Harless and James Paul Harless and
a half-brother, Carl Shultz. Jr.
Funeral Seri';ices will be at I p,m. Wednesday in the chapel
.at the Letart Falls Cemetery with Rev. Jim Satterfield official·
in g. Burial will follow in the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2- 4 p.m. and 6- 8 p.m. Tuesday at
the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine .
Military graveside services will be conducted by Racine
Post #602 of the American Legion and Tuppers Plain s Post
#9053 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Funeral Services will be at I p.m . Wednesday in the chapel
at the Letart Falls Cemetery with Rev. Jim Satterfield officiating . Burial will follow in the Letart ·Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2 · 4 p.m. and 6 - 8 p.m. Tuesday at
the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine. ·
Board Policy 8740, bonding
was approved. The revision
will bond board of education
from PageA1
members, the superintendent,
treasurer, activity advisors,
puterized weather station that food service personnel, secrewill be linked between V.Q~ taries, athletic director and
high school science, )ll'tflsev- principals.
1
enth and eighth grade science.
The board also approved
The total cost is $2568.50.
the first reading of board poliThe board approved the cy 7530.01/staff use of cellufollowing service agreements
lar telephones .
for SEOVEC for FY 2005:
This reading states that the
Basic Service Agreement
Board
of Education may pro- This a~reement covers
basic services (electronic vide cellular telephones to
mail, capital improvements. employees who by the n~ture
cooperative services, etc .) of their job have a routine and
provided to our district for fis· continuing business need for
cal year 2005 at a cost of$1.70 the use of same for official
per student based on 10-04 Board business .
ADM 's.
The Superintendent or
l'nternet Access Agreement
his/her
desi)lnees is expected
-' This agreement covers
internet access service pro· to see that the need for each
vided to the district for tiscal Board-o wned cellular tele·
phone is dearly justified for
years 2005, 2006. 2007.
· EMIS Service Agreement Board Busines~ purposes;
- This agreement covers alternative solutions for work
'EM IS service provided to the production and communicadistrict for lisc:al year 2005 at tion ha ve been considered ;
a cost of $ 1.80 per student.
employees provided with celLMS Service Agreement
lular telephones service
~ This agreement covers
accounts
understand the purln!Dhio service provided to
the district for liscal year 2005 pose and limitations of usage;
at a cost of $1 .75 per student. . cellu lar · telephone se rvi ce
State
Software account invoices outlining the
Agreement - Thi s ag ree· detail of usage are received
men! covers the se rv1ce s and .reviewed for confordeveloped and distributed mance with this policy ;
by the state of Ohio . employees reimburse the
Departmenl of Education. Board for non-busine ss use of
and provided to the di strict
for fi scal year 2005 at u required by this policy.
The meeting went into
cost of $2.50 per student: 1t
Session twice. The
Executive
was previou sly $2.60 per
first session went in at 7:40
student
Student
Manage ment p.m. and was out at 8:35 p.m.
Service Agreement - This The secol1,d session which was
agreement
cove rs • the to discuss negotiations went
SIS/Poise or eSIS services in at 9: II p.m. and was out at
provided to the districts for 9:22 p.f'n :
tiscal year 2005 at $1.75 per
The next meeting of. the
student.
Southern
Local School Board
In other new business, the
first reading of revision of is Dec. 27.

Brian J . Reed/photo
These senior National Honor Society members inducted new members at the 40th annual Eastern High Schoo l NHS Induction
ceremony last week: Casey Smith, Chelsea Young, Krista White , Jennifer Armes , Jessica Kehl , Jaime Reel , Darren Scarbrough,
Derek Baum, Adam Dill, Sara Pore , Morgan Weber, Brittany Barnett, Jennifer Hayman , Abbie Chevalier, Andy Francis, Cody Dill ,
Bryan Minear, and Chris Carroll.
·
·

On honor roll
TUPPERS . PLAINS - Chelsea Breuer, Samantha
Cummins, Erin Dunn. ·Kimberly Minear and Audrionna
Pullins were named to the AlB honor roll at Eastern
Elementary School. Their names were omitted from the
recent li st of honor students.

Hold awards banquet
MIDDLEPORT - River Valley Christian Academy
recently honored students at an awards banquet for the
first nine weeks of the school year.
"A" honor roll honors were presented to Katie

Hoffman, Kedri ck Konkle . Taylor Northup. Adrianna
Rowe, and Kiesha Rowe, lower level, and Joy Billings, ·
Briaunna King, Casey McConnell , Charice Proffitt and
Britnee Sauthers, upper le vel.
" B" honor roll students were Kim Billings, Bethany
Cunningham, Jennifer Kapp. Angle Large. Josh
Nottingham, Bryan Proffitt, Jordan Rawson. A.J . Rowe.
Kel sey Sauters and Brandon Shull.
Readmaster awards were presented to Jennifer Kapp
and Audrianna Rowe, and keyboarding award to Brianna
King .
Scholastic achievement awards were presented to Casey
McConnell. upper level, and Katie Hoffman. lower level.
Academic achievem~nt awards were presented to Charice
Proffitt, upper level . and Kedrick Konkle. lower level.

Ten pickets arrested at aluminum plant
HANNIBAL (AP) - Ten
striking factory workers
armed with kniv es. bats and
clubs were arrested after
attempting to block vans
entering an Ormet Corp. alu minum plant, the sheriff's
office said.
The
picketers
were
charged Friday with violating a court order requiring
them to stay at least 2.000
feet away from the plant's
entrance, Monroe County
Sheriff Manifred Keylor said
in a statement.
Additional charges of
resisting arrest and assaulting law enforcement officers
Weill pending, the statement
said.
Police said they seized
various weapons from the
picketers,
including
a
sledgehammer,
an
ax,

knives, baseball bat s and
wooden clubs.
Eight pickets were being
held Saturday at the Noble
County jail and one each in
jails in Monroe and Belmont
counties, Monroe County
sheriff' s di spatcher Maria
Jones said. She said no other
information was available.
Danny Longwell, a local
steelworkers union representative, said picketers blocked
the vans because they
believed they were carrying
replacement workers into the
plant on Friday. A call to the
union seeking additional
comment Saturday was not
immediately returned.
But Ormet chief executive
Mike Williams said Saturday
the vans were carrying food,
additional security personnel
and one salaried worker, not

replacement workers.
"The management team is
fi ghting for survival of tbe
Hannibal plants and we need
to have supplies available
for them to run the day-to·
day business and keep product moving to our customers," he said.
Williams said production
at both plants in Hannibal is
ahead of the company's
strike plan.
About
1,300
workers
struck Monday against the
company, which has sought
U.S.
Bankruptcy
Court
approval to void its labor
agreements and impose new
ones. The company wants to
save $23 million by freezing
pension benefits, raising
worker health plan contribu·
tions and . changing work
rules .

Union officials want the
court to rule on its motion
to have the company consider bids to buy the plants.
located along the Ohio River
about 115 mile s southeast of
Columbus.
The situation outside the
plants has been tense since
the strike began. A truck
was turned away Monday
morning by crowds of pick·
eters at the company gates
and the driver of another
truck was arrested after hit·
ting a striker several hours
later. The striker was treated
at a hospital and released.
Wheeling,
W. Va.-based
Ormet has about 2,000
employees and plants in
Ohio, West Virginia, Indiana
and Louisiana. Workers are
striking only at the two
Hannibal plants.

Christmas

marching bands among oth·
ers.
After the parade, a long
line quickl y formed outside
People's Bank of Pomeroy
where children waited for
the opportun ity to sit on
Santa's lap to tell him their
Christmas lists. Some chi! ·
dren cried. some smiled but
all were treated to a candy

cane and a free picture to
remember the moment.
Besides children. Santa
also posed for pictures with
pets who were entered in the
People's Pet Parade contest
which produced winners in
most
three
categories:
Chri stmasy. most original
and funnies!. The bank plans
to make the pet parade an

annual tradition .
Later. several residents sat
in the warmth of Trinity
Church and enjoyed a
Christmas musical program
that was also filmed by
WJOS. Ten members of the
Eastern Bell Choir entertained everyone with traditional Christmas songs as did
the Community Band.

from Page A1
.

~

Boy Scouts. G1rl Scouts,
Brownie troops, Model A
Fords, pets in holiday costumes and both the Southern
and Meig s Hi gh School

·walkway

ODOT S
Distri ct
I0 riali ze him, but another fil ·
Deputy Director George M. ting tribute to Bl aettnar's
Coll ins sai d the Pomeroy work for the village is the
project is one of $1 1 million new water system about to go
ODOT funds each year. online . The final product of
Fund s also c·ame through the new system will greatly
from the Ohio Department of improve the ,.iII age\ water
Natural Resources. and the ·qua lity. in el iminating the
village 's own pocket. Village iron and manganese which
counci l approved $ 100.000 allects tile water' s hardness
in village funds toward the and taste.
The new water syste m was
$630.000 final projec t. It wa'
completed and opened to a pri or ity for Mayor
walkers and runners in late Blaettnar. and that the new
syste m is now cotp pl eted is
2003 .
The rest area dedicated in al"' part nf Bl aen nar' s
Blaettnar's honor will memo- record. ~lus se r said.

first conceived as a bike path.
and pitched to fundin g agen cies under that concept.
When the village's app licafrom Page A1
tion was ultimately approved
"Re st. quench your thirst by Ohio Department of
and remember John." the Transportation. it was as a
pedestrian facility. primarily
plaque's biographical inscrip- because of the narrow dimention concludes.
sions of the riverban k area it
The
walkway. which winds along.
begin s at the Waterworks
,;'This walking path is dediPark on Kerr' s Run, and ends cated to the peopl e of
with the riverfront prome- Pomeroy. but also to the citi·
nade
and
riverfront zens of Meigs County who
amphitheater along the wi II come to Pomeroy to
Pomeroy Parking Lot, was enjoy it," Mu sse r said.

7'/easanl Valley Jlospilal aJelcomes...

.

TIMOTHY P. METZGER, DO
Family .M edicine

p!!IJlr JSC:

Office Hours:

r ufi/IIIJi iJI

To Be Located Iu11al' :\t•nr t'uture:

111;111 i\C() ,

(hronicfe. Sfn d r 0 /111!/t ' l ll.t '
' to he! r in ca n &gt;f~{ t/11 ' 1tr' l1 ~~ ~ a .;
per .nr send /i('r f ' IJlt~i! rt f ·
j(}al/ r yuu @ .\fchromr If'. ( 11111.)

Honor Society inductes new members at Eastern High School

, Florence Paulene Crace. 78, of GalliJ;K&gt;Iis, passed away
Saturday, Nov. 27 at her residence follow 111g an extended illness .
·
She was. b.orn on June 6 1926, in Hosbon, the daughter of
the late W1111e Herbert and Mabel Helen Long Willi ams.
She retrred from the Bob Evans Restaurant in 1985 followmg 26 years of serv1ce as a waitress. She was a member of the
Gal hpohs Ptrst Bapt iSt Church .
In addition lo her parents, she was precedeil in death by one
bro!lier and one Sister.
She is survived by her husband . James Hamilton Crace; two
s~ns and dau.ghters·m-law; Jack Edward (Paula) Crace, of
Vm~on , and James H. (Ja~1e) Crace, Jr.. of Racine; one daughter and son-m-law, Beatnce Ann and Larry Sayre, of Carson
City, Nev.; one step daught~r. Wanda Quire, of Dayton; one
brother and one Sister. Le\\' 1s Vernon Williams, of Pomeroy,
and Eldena SmJth , of Fair!ield ; two great-grandchildren ; five
grandchildren; and two very special, long time friends, Jean
Johnson and Lex1e Shelton. both of Gallipolis.
Funeral servrces w11l be held at II a.m. Wednesday in the
McCt:)~-Moore Funeral . Home, Wetherholt Chapel , in
Gallipolis, Wlth Rev. ArchJe Conn offici ating. Burial will fol·
lpw in the Vinton Memorial Park.
: Friends may call at the fu neral home from 5 - 9 p.m .
Tuesday.

America has 0~11 (1 1ow n not '

0rliy the provi ,in'~"'
hut its principle· .

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Personnel

NBA

TICKET

Forget Arnold.
Adding
.a

2004

Florence Paulene Crace

more ·than·2 million house- reports.• "But he is not
: Thanksgiving, but my qishoWs,
'Desperate pulling in Lhe viewers, and
~atisfactit!n nlll5 deep. The
.fiou se.wi ves' is the top-rated that goes for ~tlmos~ all·
, New 'Yqrk Tjmes - · w)1i.ch,
show," ·· tbc
newspaper s tate s.~' Gee, that's too bad.
.like a ' frl'ghteriect squ id,
··
.·
reported .."Nearly 58 perceot Maybe he - llc'l ...:.. 11eeds
keeps sq~ir;tlrig. gushers of
Dia·na
·of the voters in tljose coun- new
rs)Jr£scntation.
ink a l Bush-voters - now .
ties · voted fo r President . Meanwhile, Gmt's Jloppola
Bu sJ1.': I'm DO Statistician~ has .convinced 111c 1.1~ works'
' declares·· t.113[ . teleyisio!l
remilins."'far more likelY. to ·
. .
but it wo.ui'ct' seem that t~ 42 that viewers arefi 't ' Jobki ng ,
•
petcent oi" Atlanta-area vot· for values on til' lube ai ter
• keep pumping from the d~ep
1
'
.. er~ who .didn't go for W. all . Otherwise. "' Vim:om's
well of murder, mayhem and •
. ~exual fransgression than Quite Profound. "Many Who could &lt;ll'9 have boosted the . 'Leslie Moonvp toW th&lt;Y
seek diversi'lln .. :floni · the Voted for 'Values' Still Like smufl.'in•sil burbia hit to the newspape{. "I gu,'ss we'd be·
. ~iraig~t and narrow path."
Their Television Sin," the top of th.e ratin gs. After all, · •.-i:e ing 'Joan or Arcadia'·
Q'f course, m,r. firM ·ques- newspaper headlined. argu- presillential :voters had only doing better tila1 1'C. S.I."' . •
. tion js • .that's it,? .lt's r~ i}l1y ing that "the supposed cui - 'iwo main choices. while
r marvel at till' puny mi nd
·,got to be ,.olle or· the .otber? tuml divide is more like a t el ev i~i 6n viewers ' choose thm sees in ail oi lill'i'atu re,
·. ~inky well · ~r steriJor rath , cultuml mind meld." Why'' from amon~: doze ns of pro· ' ·ul1d film Pnl~ 'itill'r·or: that.
II s. never qmte enougll to Because "Housewives" and g.rap1s .'.l'd imagine .the frac· is. two ' mai11 pi(ll tines:
11\alui me tlitlron the TV Just "C.S.I." are both blue· and tjoq 6f the view~;rship tlmi '\lo'an . of An:adia." u , how
·for fun. Wlljcb i~ why I red.- state hits. This is sup- put~ a TV sh(lw in first pl ace that f~atures a I (J -y c~JI·-old'
haven'! seen '·"C.S.l. " · ,or:' posed to mean somethin g: coufdn't even beJiiiJ to liudge girl's encounters with l..lod,
"Desperate . Housewives :": namely•. that "values voters" tHe. Electoral :c ollege . Even in diffq ent guis(s. an&lt;)
Or, for that matter, the old' - that itt-defined and sli m .'tJid!7.4percwtof tho ·vo\e r~ "C.S.L," a sl10w 111at fc~1:
"Touched b)l an Angel," Lite' slice of polling data that, the around Sir! I Lu\e City .who, tu~£ forensi cs tcd ini',·ia ns'
second, Qf the two kinds of debunked story goes. alone Tljti New York Timt;,S rioted. encounters witi1 tliiTc:rent
sbow that represent the looe- re-elected George W Bush dic,ln't. 1 Dte for Bush, could wounds. So nn1 &lt;:il tilr rhe
ly j1oles of contemporary ~ are watching sex- and probu bl) '
hand human experience .
cultural possibility. That violence-drenched "enter- '' Hou sewives" its local
Which is' why I'm ka"i ng:
doesn't mean I don't feel as tainment." and that th is is a fot)rth-place rating.
the set off thi~ week ;lnd firt-hough I've seen the)n - I paradox . Why, the newspaBut give 'the Times' its pet ing up the DVD player ro.
know character names. plot per wonders, wou ld all those theory ; let's say Bush voters sc reen "Combelur dtl tdw.'' a
lines, how the "Housewives" "values ,voters" become no- are "Housew ives" fans . 1934 gem d i ~cc leu by
creator was all washed up, values viewers'' ·
What then '' That, of course. William Wyler with John
and, of course, how a towelIt's a fault y premise. Not makes Bush voters frauds Barrymore as a Jewish
clad star-housewife jumped only does it de pend on a and hypocrites. And there's lawyer who has m;l!'ricd into
Ron Artest, setting off the zero-sum vision of free will nothing that en li vens a hi gh societ) . cll,·ounll·ring
infamous Pistons-Pacers- and personality. but it also dispirited non-Bu sh voter anti -Semiti s111 .
o~tlu llc ry;
Fans conduct-malfunction . implies that pulling the lever more than "ev idence" in the snappy dial n~u ,·. ,bpair:
Or something. ·
for "tmdi~onal " niarriage or "newspaper of record" that and. come to 1i11nk uf it,
. And so~ehow the Tirn_es against abortion eliminates .~u sh vote rs... particularly renewal '\long tile 1\.Jy. liO&lt;I
1s trymg to pm 1he cause tor cuno~1ty~ boredom, bad taste
val lies voters. are frauds may be out, ~· ·r' m"v be in ..
but the DVD,pl") cr i-, ., 1,.
this cui rural decl.ine on Bush and maybe even sin from the and hypocrites.
voters. By adding exit poll human condition.
But there's more. "On the
(Dinna We st;,,, ,.,,;1111111 isl.
numbers to Nielsen ratings.
Even more dubious is the CBS show 'Joan of Arcadia,' fill · The Wm hin ~l' "' 'lime&gt;.
the newspaper fanci'es it has evidence. "In th e greater God is a recurring charac- S/"' nm be ,·onlwt&lt;·•l l'ia
come up with So mething Atlanta market. reaching ter.'' The New York Times dia,wresl @n·ri;.on.Ju'J.)

~"

Monday, November 29,

•

The i\~ddleport Clinic
788 North Second Street
i\!idclleport, OH 45~60

9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• Tuesday:
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
• \Vednes)1ay:
9. a.m. to 5 p.m.
· Thursday:
9 a.m. to 7 p.m. 1
!. • Friday:
_ _!2_ a.m. to 5 ~
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Monday:

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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

'

Monday, November 29,

2004

..

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Ebersol survives plane crash, Page 82
Nugent finalist for Groza Award, Page 86

Jackson joins critics of Ohio vote
'

BY JOHN McCARTHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS ~ Although
John Kerry has conceded the
election and the Demm:ratic
Party is largely on the sidelines, critics of Ohio's vote
count on Nov. 2 have found
plenty to gripe &lt;\bout uncounted punch-card votes,
disqualified provisional bal lots and too many votes for
President Bush.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson
said Sunday that the Ohio
Supreme Court should consider setting aside Bush's
win in Ohio and that
Congress should investigate
how Ohioans voted.
Bush defeated Kerrv in
Ohio by 1.36,000 v'otes,
according
to
unofficial
results.
"This is about th~ integrity
of the vote. This is not about
the Kerry campaign ," said
Jackson, who suppqrted the
Democrat for president .
On the morning of Nov. 3.
less than 12 hours after
Ohio's final votes were cast.
Kerry called Bush to congratulate him on his vi('tory.
His campaign figured he
would not get enough of the
155,000 provisional ballots.
or those cast by voters whose
registrations could not be
confirmed at polling places,
to overtake Bush's total.
The counting of provisional ballots and wide gaps in
vote totals for Kerrv and
other Democrats on tlie ballots in certain .counties have
raised too many questions to
let the vote stand without
further examination, Jackson
said.

Monday, November 29, 2004

CUIBIIIIoolball Pill
How the top 25
teams in The
Associated
Press' poll fared
through Nov. 27:
(first-place votes)

Aonk

The Rev. Jesse Jackson speaks about voting irregularities during a press conference at the
Mount Hermon Baptist Church in Columbus. Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH Coalition is joining a
lawsuit seeking an immediate recount of Ohio's presidential vote.
"We can live with winning
and losing. We cannot live
with fraud and stealing,"
Jackson said.
Attorney Cliff Arnebeck.
who has represented political
activist groups. said he
would ask the Ohio Supreme
Court.
probably
on
Wednesdav. to take a look at
the election results. If the
court decides to hear the
case. it cai1 declare a new
winner or throw the results
out.
Since the election. several
complaints have surfaced:
The
Green
and
Libertarian parties asked a
U.S. District Court judge to
order an immediate recount.
The jlldge agreed with the
state that a recount cannot
begin until Secretary of State
Kenneth Blackwell certifies

the statewide vote, sometime
between Dec. 3 and 6. The
two parties arc rai sing the
$113,600, or $10 per precinct
statewide, needed to force a
recount.
- People for the American
Way. a national watchdog
group. is trying to stop the
Cuyahoga County Board of
Elections in Cleveland from
rejecting 8,099 of the 24,472
provisional ballots cast there.
The hallots were thrown out
be('ause voters did not properly complete them or 'cast
them . at polling places that
were not their own.
- An error was detected
in an electronic voting sysrem. giving President Bush
3,893 extra votes in suburban
Columbus. Elections oft1cials
caught the glitch and the
votes will not be added to the

AP/Photo
Delaine Jackson, bottom, Richard Graham, center, and William
Edwards, top, help stock the shelves at Community Impact
Organization food pantry in Elyria. Unlike rnost food banks
where people are handed a bag of pre-selected food, this
"choice pantry" allows customers to· make their own choices.
rec ipient can receive based on
income and size of family.
On the shelves thi s past
week were cans of pink
salmon. macaroni and cheese,
potato chips, pasta and sauce
and snacks such as pudding
and fruit cups. Frozen food
was stored in freeLers donated
by a local church.
Ohio food banks say regardless of the setup, demand is
high this year and without
more donations. there mi ght
not be food available.
Hamilton County's largest ·

emergency
provider,
FreeStorefFoodBank, says the
1wmber of people seeking
help at its Over-the-Rhine
pantry in Cincinnati is up
nearly 5,000 a year compared
with three years ago.
" We're running out of
food." said Jennifer Ebelhar,
development director, addi ng
she didn't know if the pantry
had enough to get through
Christmas.
The food banks say a sluggish economy has contributed
to more demand and fewer

Ohio nearing first ethanol plant since 1995
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state has moved closer to having its first ethanol plant since
1995, with at least six companies planning to produce the
grain-based fuel additive.
Ohio is the only Midwestern
state without a factory that
produces ethanol, a type of
alcohol usually made from
grain and mixed with gasoline
to boost octane levels. The
state's last plant went bankrupt
in 1995 .
Gov. Bob Taft talked about
the benefits of an ethanol plant
in his most recent State of the
State speech and said he hoped
a company would break
ground this year.
·"It's important because we
are a huge . consumer of
ethanol - one of the largest
- and we're not producing
any of it," Development
Director Bruce Johnson said.
In the United States, R2
plants will produce an estimated 3.3 billion gallons of
ethanol this year, up from 2.8
billion gallons in 2003.
Ohio is the third-large;t consumer of ethanol at more than
220 million gallons a year.
An ethanol plant should be

up and running in northeastern would take this long to start up
Ohio by early next year.
the 50 million-gallon facility
Liquid Resources in Medina and create 33 jobs. Northwest
is nearly done building a faci l- Ethanol started four years ago
ity that eventually will employ with 27 members who pitched
25 to 30 people and produce 6 in $.1 ,000 each.
million gallons of ethanol a
To help bring a plant to
year. The plant should have Ohio, state lawmakers in 2002
plenty of customers in Ohio, passed a Ia w that allowed
but it won't be much help to ethanol producers to apply for
local grain farmers.
low-interest, tax-free bonds
The company plans to use through the Ohio Air Quality
"liquid waste streams," such as Development Authority. The
Department,.
waste from beer, soda and Development
food manufacturers. to· pro- meanwhile. has been working
duce the ethanoL Most ethanol
with several potential producplants elsewhere use grain.
Tim Curtiss. chief executive ers on tax credits and other
officer of Liyuid Resources, financial incentives.
said using liquid. waste frees
In September, the Tax Credit
the company from having 10 Authority gave developers of a
worry about fluctuating corn planned Coshocton plant a 50
pnces.
percent, seven-year tax credit.
The price of com. which is The state also gave Baard LLC
higher in Ohio than some other grants and loans totaling more·
states, was blamed in part for than $12 million .
the bankruptcy of the state's
A spokesman for Baard ;aid
la;t ethanol producer, South . the company is still trying to
Point Ethanol.
determine whether building a
Lynn Bergman. part of a plant in Coshocton County
group of investors and farmers would be feasible.
who
formed
Northwest
Three companies said they
Ethanol tb build a plant in were waiting for permits from
Hicksville in Defiance County, . the Ohio i:nvironmental
said backers didn't think it Protection Agency.
·
I

1. Southern Cal {52)

11-0 1,6 10

3 Auburn (6)

11-0 1,540
1Hl 1,530

4. California

9-1 1,410

5

6 Texas
7. Louisville

1D-I 1,325

6

Georgia

8-2 1,037

980
952

12. Iowa

9·2

911

12

13. LSU

9·2
9·2

877
873

14

14. Michigan

15. Tennessee

9·2
8·3

8{)2

13
15

628

19

17. Wisconsin

9·2

612

20

18. Virginia

8·3
7-3

469

16

].4

2liO

8-3
7-4

231

18

199
172

22

. 16. Florida St

19. Pittsburgh
20. Florida .
21 . Arizona St.
22. Te~~:as A&amp;M
23.· Boston College
Te~~:as

Tech

25. Ohio St

9-2

8·3
7-4
7-4

304

25

17

167
143

Other~~

receiving votes: West Virginia
113, Toledo 63. Purdue 49, Colorado 43,
Fresno St 33. Memphis 32, Oklahoma
St. 30, Navy 23, Miam1(Ohio)16, UTEP
12, Syracuse 11. Clemson B. Alabama
7, New Me)(ico 5, Bowling Green 4, N.
IllinOIS 3.
AP

Prep Schedule
Today's Games
Girls Basketball
Waterford at Meigs
Wellston at Eastern
Southern at South Gallia
Tuesday's Games
Girls Basketball
Marietta at Gallia Academy
Cross Lanes Chr. at South Gallia
Boys Basketball
Cross Lanes Chr. at South Gallia
Thursday's Games
Girls Basketball
Nelsonville-York at Meigs
Eastern at Trimble
Waterford at Southern
Athens at Gallia Academy
Friday's Games
Girls Basketball
OVC Tournament, TBA
Boys Basketball
Gallia Academy at Athens
Nelsonville-York at Meigs
Eastern at Trimble
Waterford at Southern
OVC Tournament
Saturday's Games
Girls Basketball
OVC Tournament
Boys Basketball
Meigs at River Valley
South Gallia at Eastern
OVC Tournament

Rio Grande
men lose first
game of season

#'JONLY#'J
$-}QOO
fer Picture
Prepaid

7

a

11-0

11. Boise St

0ay Merry Christmas
to 0omeone 0pecial wi_
th a
&amp;ntinel Christmas An8el

9-1 1,115

9-2 1,094

9
11
10

24.

Adam Rodgers
"Merry Christmas"
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Mail or drop off at :

The Daily Sentinel
. 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

HUNTINGTON, Ind. Rio Grande's perfect start
came to an abrupt end on the
road.
The Redmen lost their first
game of the season Saturday
to Huntington (Ind.), 82-63.
Rio
couldn't
stop
Huntington scoring threat
Kyle Ganton, who led all
scorers with . 28 points,
• including five 3-point goals.
The hosts (7-4) also had a
double-double from Alex
Kock with. 14 points and I0
rebounds.
Also
for
Huntington. Doug Sheckler
netted 13 points and Adam
Bontreger added 10.
For Rio Grande (8-1 ),
Dawayne Mcintosh and Matt
Simpson each scored 12
points.
.
The Redmen only trailed
by six at halftime, but were
outscored 43-30 in .the second half.
Rio Grande returns to
action Tuesday at Cedarville.

Kent St. 81 , Shawnee St. 67

Address: --------~--~--------------------~
Phone: ____~----~~------~--~-c--------Ads must be pre-paid

Southern

3
4

11-0 1,342

10. Virginia Tech

Weather Forecast

Tigers tamed by

1
2

5. Utah

9. Miami

official tally. Some ·groups ' L---~--------------"'"'
also have complained about
thousands of punch-card hallots that were not tallied
because officials in the 68
counties that use them could
There could be a few rain·
Monday
not determine a vote for
drops ar~und the area.
November 29
president. Votes for other
Temperatures will drop frqm
Morning
offices on the cards were
(
7
a.m.-Noon)
34 early overnight to 31 by
counted.
. Cloudy
morning. 2:00am then increase back
Elections officials concede
some mistakes were made Temperatures will rise to 36 up to 36 ~ate overnight.
but no more than most elec- with today's low of 30 occur- Winds will be 5 MPH from the
ring around 7:00am. Winds northeast turning from the
lions.
will be 5 MPH from the north- east as the overnight pro"There are no signs of east turning from the east as gresses.
widespread irregularitie s," the morning progresses.
Blackwell spokesman Carlo
Tuesday
LoParo said.
Afternoon
November 30
The Ohio Democratic Party
(1~ p.m.)
Morning
believes every effort should Temperatures will hold steady
(7 a.m.-Noon)
be made to get an accurate around 37 with today's high It should be a cloudy morning.
count, but it is not planning of 39 occurring around Expect some patchy fog and
legal action of its own, 1:00pm. Skies will be partly drizzle. The rain is predicted
spokesman Dan Trevas said.
cloudy to cloudy with 5 MPH to start near 7:00am.
winds from the northeast.
Temperatures will rise from
35 to 48 by late this morning.
Evening
Winds will be 5 MPH from the
(7 p.m.-Midnight)
east turning from the southdonations. High gas prices Temperatures will drop from east as the morning · pro·
that are pinching business' 36 early thiS evening to 31 by gresses.
Afternoon
budgets also have contributed !O:OOpm then climb back up
(1~ p.m.)
to fewer corporate donations, to 35 late evening. Skies will
range from partly cloudy to . It should continue to be
pantry workers say.
"I've never seen that ware- cloudy with 5. MPH winds from cloudy. Expect light rain. Rain
should reach 0.07 inches this
house as empty as it is. It's just the northeast..
afternoon. Temperatures will
getting tougher and tougher to
o.vernllht
linger at 50. Winds will be 5
find food," said Gary Gruver,
(1~ a.m.)
to 10 MPH from the southdirector of Serve City, a
Expect a cloudy overnight. east. .
Hamilton food pantry.

'

Record Ptl. Pvt.

2. Oklahoma 171

e.

AP Photo

New trend at Ohio food banks: Letting recipient choose food
ELYRIA (AP)- Ohio food
banks say the days of recipients getti ng a bag full of r'\11dom items are fading .
Many food pantries are now
setting up grocery store type
shelves and allowing people
to choose what they want.
At the Community Impact
Organization Inc. in this city
about 25 miles southwest of
Cleveland, soft rock music
plays in the background and
free samples occasionally turn
up with recipes.
The goal is to allow people
to receive food donations in a
dignified way and redu ce
waste, said Todd Walts, exec utive director of CIO.
"Shoppers can select what
they know the family .will
eat," he said.
The Neighborhood Center
in Elyria also will be switching to the grocery store
approach to food banks, said
Connie Osborn, director of the
center. The change will likely
take place in January.
"It looks like a trend of the
future," said Diane Zemanek,
spokeswoman for Second
Harvest Food Bank of North
Central Ohio.
At the CIO food banks.
recipients must fill out a form
and provide a photo ID and
proof of residence before
"shopping." The form determines how much food the

River City Shootout - - -- - - -- -

APTop~

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas
(AP) - Jay Youngblood and
DeAndre Haynes each scored
17 points to lead Kent State
to a 81-67 win over Shawnee
State in the Corpus Christi
Caller-Times Challenge on
Sunday.
Kent State (4-2) shot 52
percent from the field, while
Shawnee State (2-5) shot 42
percent.

•

.

0 pe ne r

BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalte rs@ mydailytribu ne .com

BY ScoTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent

PORTSMOUTH The
tip-off to the 2004-05 boy&gt;
PORTSMOUTH ~ The sign greetbasketball season cou ldn · t
ing
those entering the campu; of
have gone much better ror
Shawnee · State Univer~ity read
Eastern Saturday in its 67-:15
"Visitor' Welcome", l10wever. the
win over Waverly at the Pepsi
Sou thern
2004 River City Shoot out.
Tornadoes
were
The Eagles 11-0) netted
not greeted to
seven three- pointers and shot
ki ndl y by the
45 percent from the floor.
Adams
North
while holding the Tigers 10-2)
wekuming
comto just l7 of 47 (36 percent)
mittee,
·
as
from the field en route to
Southern
extending a 30-16 halftime
dropped it; 2004
advantage into a successfu I
debut in "The Cave" at
season opener to
the
Adams
Shawnee Slate University.
Collntian; 6-l--ll Saturday in the
Afterward. EHS coach
River City Shoot-out at Shawnee
Howie Caldwell believed his
Stale.
syuad was · ready from the
opening whistle.
The biggest anomaly and almost
unheard of stati&gt;tic wa, in the
"We came out focused and
rebounding department where North
jumped out to a 9-1 lead . I
Adam; garnered more offensive
thought that wa; really important to what we did the rest of
rebound s than the Southern defensive
the night:' said Caldwell.
unit. A&gt; a result. 1\onh Adams had
several second and th lrd attempts at
"We shot the ball really well
the basket that gave ih~m an llnprecetoday. If you knock some
dente&lt;,l offensive advantage.
shots down from the outside.
North Adams placed II of its 13
they have to come out and
guard you. That freed up our
roster players in the 'coring column.
inside game today. It was a
led by Kyle H u~ hes wi th 14_ Curtis
good »tart to our season."
- Gu ards Nathan Cozart.
Please see Southern, Bl
Derek Baum and Adam
Dillard combined for 39
points from the perimeter. and
senior Codv Dill control led
the paint with 18 points, 13 I
rebounds and three blocks in
handing the Southern Ohi o
Conference school its second
setback in as many nights .
Senior Robert Crus; added six
points . four caroms. three
assists, a steal and a block to
the EHS frontcourt in a foulplagued evening.
Cozart finished the eve ning
with a game-)ligh 25 points.
including 15 of those from
behind the arc. four assisb
and a pair of blocks. steals
and rebounds.
Dillard and Baum each had
BY BRYAN WALTERS
seven points. with Dillard
bwalter5@ mydaliytribune.com
chipping in four steals. and a
trio of assists and rebounds.
Baum added four rebound; to
.PORTSMOL'TH - Despite a galthe winning cause.
lant
'econd -halt comeback. the
"It's easy to notice the leadEastern Lad\ Ea~Jc, basketball team
ing scorers and rebounde rs in
was
unabk. to tllercome a ~7-2 1
a game. bllt it i; the unslin g
halftime
deficit S;illlrdav. 1n ih seaheroes that are so very imporson-opening
61-~() lo&gt;S io Northwest
tant to your club." commented
in the inaugural Pepsi 2004 River
CaldwelL "Everyone knows
Citv
Shuotout al Shawnee State
that we 1i1u&gt;t play hard c1 cry
l'nlversity.
night to be successful and I
EHS 10-11 entered th e ' CL&gt;ntest
thought we did that today. It
knowin~ the Mohawks ( 1-01 were
was a total team dfon."
~oin~ t~l he a tall order to handle,
Justin Browning and Brian
~porti
ng a rn~ter thnt consisted of six
Castor each made a free throw
players
tha t we rc 5-feet- 11 ·or taller.
to round out the scoring. and
Ble'led '' ith _ju,t one player at that
Castor also added an offen 'ame
hei~lll. Ea;tcrn knew its front,
sive carom for EHS.
court
and'
depth would ha\·e to make
Seniors Chris Carroll and
Bryan Walters/ photo
the diffe rence in keeping the
Eagles center Cody Dil l (44) soars over Waverly defenders for two of his 18 points. Chris Myers each had an
Eastern defeated the Tigers 67-45 Saturday at the Pepsi 2004 River City Shootout
Please see Eastern, Bl
Please see Eagles, Bl
in Portsmouth.

Girls Basketball

i

Ellis,

Mohawks
fend off
Eastern

Gallia Academy shuts
down Marauders in fourth
BY BUTCH CoOPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune .com
GALLIPOLIS . Going into the
fourth quarter, this one looked like it
would go the distance.
Midway through the fourth , though,
Gallia Academy \vas delivering a &gt;eries
of knock out punches .·
Only leading Meigs by six early in the
fourth , the Blue Devils closed out the .
game on a 16-0 tun. The end result. a
66-44 Gallia ~cademy victory Saturday
in the season opening game for Mth
teams in front of a packed house .
"It's just great (the win), because we
only had two players · that played Ja,l
year of any amount." said Gallia
Academy head coach Jim Osborne
Gallia Academy !;tcld a 43-27 k.od
early in the seco nd half. but the
Marauders rallied back .

Me ig&gt; wa' sllcces;ful at keep ing the
Devils' offense outside of the perimeter
throughout the third quarter. The Blue
De vils' only points in the third came off
3-point goalS by junior Brad Caudill and
freshman Jeff Golden :md a free throw
by Zach Shawver.
The Marauders. meanwhile. outscored
Galli a A('ademy I :l -3 durin~he final
five minutes of the third. tricluding
seven points hy Adam Snowden to cut
the one-time 16 point .advantage to six.
·• we played hard 111 th e third quarter."
'aid Meig ; head coach Cart Wolfe . "Our
work. ethic was lllliCh better in the third
_quarter than it had been anytime during ·
the game ," .
"We were ton an\i&lt;lus in the third
quarter to ,hoot ' the jumrer." added
O'borne. "I don't think \\C even t(lllched
it in,ide in the third quarter."

Please see Fourth, Bl

Brad Sherman/photO
Meigs· Adam Snowde~ (34) goes for the layup 1n front of Gallia
Academy's Kyle Hudson (20) during the Marauders· 66-44 loss Saturday.

�•

NBC Sports chairman Ebersol
survives plane.crash that killed two
MONTROSE, Colo. (AP)
- NBC Sports chairman
Di'ck Ebersol survived a
charter plane crash that killed
at least two people Sunday,
the network said in a statement through its Denver
affiliate KUSA-TV.
Montrose County sheriff's
officials said three survivors,
including Ebersol, were seriously injured when the jet
crashed through a fence and
burst into flames at Montrose
Regional Airport, which
serves the Telluride Ski Area.
The network said the pilot
and co-pi lot were killed .
Rescuers we(e searching for
a sixth person listed on the
plane's manifest whose seat
from the plane was missing,
from the wreckage.
Linda McCool , a nursing
supervisor at Montrose
Memorial Ho spital. said
three men were brought to
the hospital after the crash,
but had all been transferred

Fourth
from Page 61

to other hospitals by Sunday
afternoon. McCool would
not release where or how
they were transported, or
what condition they were in.
Identities of other victims
were
not
immediately
released pending notification
of relatives. but KUSA said
Ebersol's wife, actress Susan
St. James, was not on the
plane.
Authorities were searching
for the missing person in
rugged terrain by helicopter
and on the ground.
The crash occurred in an
area covered with small
brush · and cedar trees, sheriff 's
Communications
Supervisor David Learned
said. A large drainage ditch
also is at the site.
It was snowing in the area
but regional Federal Aviation
Administration spokesman
Allen Kenitzer satd he did
not know if that was a factor.
The
National
Weather

Service had forecast up to 2
feet of snow by afternoon in
the area.
The plane was on its way
to South Bend, Ind. Kenitzer
identified the plane 's tail
number as N873G, a CL-60 I
Challenger re~istered to Jet
Alliance of Mtllville, N.J .
An operator at Jet Alliance
said she had no information
about the crash.
Investigators from the FAA
and
National
Safety
Transportation Board were
en route to the airport, 185
miles southwest of Denver.
Ebersol became president
of NBC Sports in 1989 and.
has turned it into the
Olympic network, buying the
U.S. broadcast right s for
every Summer and Winter
th?ough
20 12.
Games
Ebersol also worked as an
NBC entertainme nt executi ve, and in the early 1980s
was executive producer of
Saturday Night Live .

Gallia Academy travels to
I think that turned the game
Athen s Friaay, while Meigs
around."
Meigs again made it a six- entertains Nelsonville- York.
In the junior varsity conpoint contest as Poole had a
layup and Snowden nailed a test, Sam Shawver scored
Gallia
pair of foul shots, the latter 12 points as
won
,
45-36.
Academy
with 5:52 left in the game.
Little did anyone know at Dakota Smith led Meigs
the time, though, was that with eight points.
Snowden 's
foul
shot s
proved to be the final points
the Marauders would put on
the scoreboard on the
eveni ng.
A pair of fre e throws by
Kyger and baskets by
Caudill and Hudson quickly
put the Devils up by 12 with
five minutes remaining . The
Blue Devils went 8-for-8
from the charity stripe in
the closing quarter.
"In the fo urth quarter,
we're right back to the way
we ha ve been practicing,"
said Wolfe. "We've been
practidng soft. We 've been
lackadaisical in practice and
then we came out and play
that wa y. We never ran an
offense · all night long. I
don 't know anything we did
do right.
"We had no team concept

Snowden
led
the
Marauders with 13 points
and six rebounds .
The Blue Devils had four
players in double-figures as
Shawver led all scorers with
14 points, followed by Kyle
Hudso n with II and Golden
and Alex Kyger each with
10. Shawver also hauled
down II boards for the double-double.
Gallia Academy came out
in the fo urth and reasserted
itself inside as Golden
nailed a short jumper and
Caud ill scored from under
the rim to give the Devils a
10-point lead.
"We made no adjustment
other than mentally, saying
we 're not going to settle for
the jump shot and we're
going to try and get it near
the basket," said Osborne.
''It 's really nice on these
kids part, who have n't
played a lot, to make that
adju stment during the game. whatsoever."

Eastern
from Page B1
Southern Ohio Conference
school off the boards if they
were to win .
"We knew depth was a
question at the start and foul
trouble definitely hurt us
today. We asked a lot of the
younger kids to step up to a
level they had never played
before," commented EHS
coach Rick Edwards. "We
had some that pleasantly surprised us. If they continue to
grow as they did today, that
will make a big difference in
what our club does this season .''

Foul
trouble
found
Eastern's inside enforcer len
Hayman early in the second
quarter and even sooner in
the second half to help complicate a concern about an
rnexperienced bench.
After si tting down with
three fouls in the first half,
Hay man was whistled for her
fourt h while establishing
position on the block at the
4: 15 mark of the third quarter. A second whistle and a
technical foul was assessed
without another second coming of the clock, ending the
senior's evening. The double
foul also ended a 14-0 opening run to start the second
half that cut the Mohawk lead
to a single possession (3735 ). The Eagles could_n 't any
closer.
·
·
In the end, it was the combination of Kristen Bradshaw
and Heather Ellis, who both
had 19 points for NWHS,
that held off the final Eastern
attack to come away with the
five-point win.
"I'm not disappointed with
our effort, especially since
the girls played in the true
spirit of what we represent,
we don't give up," said
Edwards. "You can get · us
down, but we ·are ·going to dig
in and come back after ybu
with a little bit of fight." .
Led by Morgan Weber's 20
points, Eastern had nine players reach the scoring column
on the day. Erin Weber had a
double-double with II points.
and I0 rebounds. ·while the

elder Weber added seven caroms and a block. Guards
Jessie and Jenna Hupp had
nine and seven points,
re spectively. The duo also
combined
for
seven
rebounds, six steals and two
assists.
Katie Hayman, who played
in her sister's position for a
majority of the second half,
came up with three points,
four rebounds and a steal in
her first varsity contest. len
Hay man finished with three
points, two boards. a pair of
assists and a block in her limited action.
Seniors Krista White and
Cassie Nutter, along with
&gt;or.homore
Amber
Wt!lbarger, each had a point
to round out the scoring.
White contributed four
rebounds and two assists to
the Eastern · cause, while
Nutter added a pair of caroms
and an assist.
Ellis had a game-high 17
rebounds, Including nine on
the offensive glass, for
Northwest, while Bradshaw
and Keri Sanders had four
and six boards, respectively.
In the end, Eastern outrbounded the taller Mohawks
36-34 in the contest, but
committed
two
more
turnovers ( 17-15) than the
Scioto County
school.
Eastern led twice in the game
at 2-0 and 4-2.
Edwards knows it is just
the start of a long season and,
even in defeat, looks at the
positives to come out of this
opener.
.
"The one good thing about
this is that we will learn from
it. You have to go some
through things early on to
prepare· you for the future,"
elaborated ·
Eawards.
"Playing on a collegMite·
sized floor in front of that
kind of crowd, and in that
kind of game, is only going
. to help us down the road.
That's the kind of environment we ·want our kids to
play in."
The Eagles will be in
another enjoyable environment tonight when they open
their home schedule with the
Wellston Lady Rockets in a
Tri-Valley Conference inter,
divisional showdown . Game
time is slated for 6 p.m.

Monday, November 29, 2004

Monday, November 29, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Southern
from Page B1
assist on the day, and Myers also hauled down
three offensive rebounds in the win.
The collective efforts were also felt in the
stat chart, as the Eagles had just eight
. turnovers on the day to go along with 12
assists. EHS also seven steals and six blocks.
Conversely, Waverly committed 10
turnovers and had four assists, along with just
three steals. The shorter Tigers did not have a
block in the contest. but did manage to
rebound paw-to-talon with the Eagles on the
evening. Both schools had 12 offensive
boards and a total of 28 in the game.
When shown that equality, Caldwell
. thought it stressed the importance of keeping

•

www.mydaitysentinel.com

~ribune

his starting big-men on the lloor as much as
possible.
.
"We have to alleviate foul trouble 111 our
post area. We had nine fouls in the first halE
and eight of those were on our btg players,
said Caldwell. "Our size gives other teams
match up problems.
"I was a little di sappointed that we didn't
outrebound Waverlr. That's something we'll
have to work on a ltttle bit."
Waverly. who never led in the ~ontest, was
paced by Jairu s Ward wrth II pomts and five
rebounds. Ward, along with Justin Hilton, led
the Tigers rebounding efforts. K.P. Wickline
and Dustin Carr each had seven markers in
. the setback. WHS had nine players with at
least one rebound.
The Eagles open TVC Hocking play Friday
when they travel to Glouster to take on the
defending-champion Trimble Tomcats. Tipoff is scheduled for 6:30 p.m.

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9 first period advantage, then blasted to a 3016 lead at the hal f.
North Adams's press was unforgiving and
Southern coughed up a near record 31
from Page B1
turnovers, unable to bring the ball up the floor
against the press defense.
Batton eleven, and ten each from Ryan Unger
Southern played even in the third round ,
and Cory Copas.
closing that frame at 44-28 before falling to the
Nortb Adams strived to set the early defen- 64-41 finale.
sive tempo and quickly tightened the reigns on
Southern hit 17-38 overall (rom the floor. hit
the Southern sconng champion Craig 2- 10 three's, and was 5-9 at the line. The
Randolph, who was whistled for a couple early Tornadoes had just 15 rebounds for the game
charges. He spent more time· on the bench in (Nease 4, Sellers 4), II steals (Burrows 4) , five
foul trouble than his first three quarters of assists (Burrows 2), 31mmovers, and 17 fouls.
playing time, scoring 13 of his game-high 22
North Adams hit 26-65 overall, 2-18 three's,
points in the final round.
and was 8- 18 at the line. North Adams had 33
Behind Randolph in scoring was Y/es rebound (Hughes 12, Cory Copas 7), II assists
Burrows with ten, Jake Nease with six, and (Drew Copas 4 ), eleven steals (Semple 9), anu
Aaron Sellers with three. Only four Tornadoes 18 foul s.
hit the scoring column.
There was no reserve game.
The game's outcome was foreshadowed by a
·Southern next plays Waterford at home ·
big North Adams first half.
Coach Dave Young's club whipped up a 16- Friday.

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Gall1polls and Middleport
Happy Thanksgiving
Apply between 10 and
from lnloCisionl
Monday th ru
10 "15am .
Saturday
Gobble up all we have
10 offer .
Pa ramed iCS
&amp;
HilT's
• Up to $S.'hour
needed. App ly at 1354
•Weekly PaychecK
Jack son Pike. GallipoliS
• Full bene! its
• Patd vacat1ons
• Pa1d tram1ng
Call today and start
earmng money for
Chr1stmas1
1·877· 463·6247
ext . 2455
www .1nloc1St0n.com

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS 20
to 30 HOURS A WEEK IN
MEIGS COUNTY. Provide
self-d 1rected , intens1ve support "coachinll" 1nd1V1duals
and the ir fam11 1es to work
tt1rough aifficulties. We give
you speclllc patd training
and earned paid t1me off.
May be assigned evenings
and/or week-end schedule
woriMg prtfnanly within
fa m il y home or preferred
meet1ng place. For apphca·
tlon, call (937)653·1320 or
write
to
HR
Dept,
Champaign
Residential
ServiCBII Inc., 1150 Sc1oto
Street, Urt:Jana . Oh 43078.
Champaign
Residential
Servies Is celebrat iflg 28
years ot services .to adults
w1th challertges and diaabllitius. EOE
MACHINIST,
10
yrs.
expere ience m1 n Abil ity to
read bluepnnts and mlc .
E~pemmce wllathes, mills,
·etc 40 ·hrs. per week, palel
nolictays, vacation and 401 K·
plan
Send resume to
Msch lf1111,
CIO
P01nt
Pleasant Regl&amp;ttlf , Box
TSC18 200 Mai n St Pt
Pleasant. wv 25550
Make 50% st~ lhng Avon .
L1m 1ted
t1m e
ONLY
"(7 40)446·3358 First 510 call
rece ives a g11t
Now hmng All Positions All
Sh1ns
App ly
w1thm ..
GatiiDOi rs Da1ry Qcteen ·

'

~

© 2004 by NEA , Inc.

www.comics .com

Sa lesperson
Li festyle
Furmture. lull !1me p0S1t1on
Apply 1n person 10·5. No
phone calls please
856
Th1rd 1\venue. Gall1polis
TELEMARKETEAS NEED ED- No Expenenc"e OK, $7 9 Per Hour. Easy Work . t 8BB-974·JOBS
VAC ANCY:
Pai"t· lime
Heavy
Equipment
Operator
Instructor.
M1n1mum 5 years e~&lt;perr­
ence as Heavy Equipment
Operator, constructiofl expanence preter 'eel. Two partlime. hOurly con tracts : Dayschool {4 haursfday) afld
Adu lt-school
(4
110urslevenmg) to be held
January 1 7 2005 through
March 18. 2005. CONTACT .
Galha-Jackson·VInton JVSD"
{7401245-5334 ext 201
EEO

WE'RE GROWING
AGAIN

Pari 11me babysiller needed We need to fill the posi·
rn Spnng Valley area . Call tions of Installers . It you
are an individual looki ng
(740)446-7820
to lmprotJe yo urself, &amp; you
h1gh
prol1le work we ll with othe~s with
Promment.
garage seeking co mpetent a clean driving record. We
techniCian Musr be familiar offer thesea following ben·
w1th OTC, Snapon. or other eriltto ourttmployeea.
"Msdiclllnauranc•
scan tools, scopes. Must
"Retlremenl Fund
have own too ls Prefer certl·
' Paid Vaca tion a &amp;
licat1on. but not necessary.
Holidays
Send resume , complete w1th
"Annual
Sonua
3 referenc~s . to Help
' Trucks &amp; Tool a
Wantea , P.O. Bo" 315.
Furnished.
Vmto n. Ohio 45686.
Applications
can
bt
picked up at our office 11

PSYC IIClLO «iiST

Bennt~tt 's

Heeling

&amp;

~

MB 5263
(Oh1o loans Only)

H'\i\\C l\1

110

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1·800-370-4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY U.S.
VETERANS

~10:;;:8:l;IS~~;f;~~S~~ ~-c
01'1"!)KTl Nrn

~

£:~~

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommends tha
ou do busmess w1th peO
le you know. and NOT 1
end money t hrough th
a11 unt11 you have mvest1
a teet the offerin

Opportunity to open Clo·
Bakery
Bel's
and
Restaurant. For appoint ments call (304)525·87 80
or {740)894·3630, ask tor
Mr. George.

pi PHon:--'itoN,\t
SER\'10~'

l:J

OIAECTV

Up to
12 Months Free
Programmmg. 130
Channels plus Free
Equ1pnrent. Free
Protesstonal Installation, up
to 4 Rooms Free Call 1800-523-7556 for details
Jewelry Repa1r Buy, Sell.
Diamonds.
Gold ,
App ra1sal s.
Gemstones ,
Gem Testing, Graduate
Jewele r.
GemoiO&lt;JISt
(740)645-6365 or (740)446·

3060
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee U11less We Win !
1·888·582·334.._5

rib

I

- - -··roiioiiDoiio_.,...

"

·--iiiiiioiiiiii;,._.,i

~10

3-Bedroom 2-bath . !o ta t
electriC At0 Grande area
5375 month 5375 deposrt
No petS (7401245-56 7 t
Nrce 2 bedroom .mob1ie
hOme· No pets (740 )4462003
Very ro.o my 2 bedroom JUS !
outs1de C1ty. no tnsrde pets.
pr1vate · settlflg ava1lable
1mmed1alely. (740)4 46·6890

!"""

.'I.P•KPII.-:&gt;TS
FOR RJ.~'\1

Hot •st~..,

1 ana 2 bedr oom apart·
ments, turn1sheC! ano unturillshed. secur 1ty aepos1t
O'o Down Payment acd reqwred. flO pels. 740·992t
•
tm ancmg ava ilable Willi 22 18
approved cred1t
Average
1 bedroom apt rn Gai11p0I1S
cre dit qua1111es you It dowfl
ground floor. C1A &amp; gas FP
pa;·ment has Kept you from
$.300/ month pius dep ref
buyrng. thiS IS your chance
Water pd (740)446· 7 130
10 own your own home II
you have a down payment 1 bedroom tn·lavel Sprmg
bu! wol!ld hke to conserve 11. Valley area .~oeposlt &amp; reler·
we otter low down paymen1 ences reqwred (740)446programs also. Great mter· 2957
est rates 1 Loca l company
-. Locators l"br Apartment very clean
Mortgage
Refe rence
Reqwed
(740)992-7321
S22Simontt1 plu-s Depos1t
1 oedroo(Yl house. Garl1etd -leave messag e (304\675·
Cal l 4975
Ave . !350 rnonth

mwR ENT

~740)441·0194

or (740)44 1· 2 badroom apartment In
Centenary al Llllillles P81d
2
Bedroom
House
2312
except electnc· $325 C&amp; l!
For sale ·
MaO'
ISOn
Ave
No
Pets
1740)256- 1135
Com./ re1ld/ 4 lots &amp; 1
&amp;
Reference 2BR . c,A. retr1~ era1o r1stove
hOuse
below appra1S8d Deposit
S3501month 1nclud ed .
washe r/dryer
value. ar 1410 Lew1s St 1&gt;1 ReQu ued
hool\-up
10 mm from
Plea.304-548·6818 attar 5 phoM (304)675·2749
pm .
:._2_8od-,'-oo_m:.___
Ho_u_s_• _
N_a_P_o~
s. Holzer (740 )441·0194 or

www.orvb.com

1..

Oakwooel
Flee tw ooa &amp;
!\IOBII.E HO:o-.ll:.."'i&gt;i
Giles One stop shoppmg
n )J{ RE.'T
only at Oakwood Homes of
Barbours1.'1lle WV (304)7362 beoroom trailer. Tupp!rs
3409
Pla1 ns S300 per r1ontn plus
SAV E-SAVE -SAVE
dSI)OS!I &amp; u11ilt1eS (740 )667.
Stock models at old pnce.s. 3487
2005 models arr 1v1ng Now
Coles
Mob1le
Homes. 3 oedroorr.'fra11er . Tupoers
15266 US 50 East . Athens. Plarns $450 per month plus
Oh10 45701 (740 )592 -1972. depoSit. utilltle5 and refer·Where You
Get You r ences (740)667·3487

1184

c

iiili:'--':':':----,

Huge Duplex clear 3 beo·
room. 1 bam. d1n1ng storage No pets rsrnolo;•ng ~595
Call Kelly (7 40)446-9961

New Oakwood mega store oasement. garage. S70.QOO
tea tur 1ng · Homes
by· negotiable. (740 )992-0167

G:t -

Cooling, 1391
Stflord :::mr;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~
We are a well respected School Rd. Gllllpollt, OH.
HOME'! ,
-------national praclics dealing ( 7401446•9418 _
, 1-'0R SAI..Jo:
Housa lor sale 262 H1gh St.
wtt n ger1atncs. We are in
..__ _ _ _ _ __ . Hartford, WV !·acre 101. 4need ol a licensed p&amp;ycho1o·
SllKXUS
...,
bedrooms , 2-tull s1ze bath·
g!st who is Interested in
INSTRl 'C ilON
(2) 3 bedroom houses tor rooms larg e liv1ng room .
working part time We otter a ..__oiiiiiiiiiiiriiriiiio-' sale 2 baths, fireplaces . on kitchen ana ctrnmg room
g ood startmg salary and the Gallipolis araer Co1leu• acreage Call (740)709· combm ed sewing or com·
abilit y to part ic1pa1e 1n our
(Careers Close To Home)
1166
puler room, completely
401K
Call Psychologist Call Today 1740 _44 6_4367 ,
remodeled cal l (304)675Transitions at 877·734·2031
1296-a'o'enmgs. (304)675·
1_800 _214 _0452
01 tax resume to 877-734 0% Down Paymenl ana 504\·day '
wwv. tl•lhpolitU rlefcollege corro
ltnanclng ava 1iable with
2030
Ace reo red M111mDer A.ccre ~rt1~g
cou,ol ~~ ll"1de pende"l Coll lgn app roved credit.
Average
SCt\oCII H HB
credit qus.lities you If down
RN Unit M1n1ger
payment has kept you !rom
Arbort of O•lllpolls
Ouymg, thts IIi your chanct
Mom• L latlnga .
to own vou r own home 11
L1at your home by Clllmg
tn Seerch of a Uflll Manage r
you have a down payment
(7.0).. 8-3830
tor Skilled Nurs1ng Hall of 26 High
sc~oo l
Juniors .
bUt would like to conserve It,
beds thai ha s a work sched - Seniors and Pr ior Serv1ce
we offer- low down payment
View pMtos!i nlo onlt.ne
ule of Mo"nday-Fnelay With you can !ill vacant poall!ons pro~rams also, Great Inter·
on call responatblii!IEis . Th1s m the Wesl Vlrgmla Army
eSI ratul Local comps.ny ~ Bedroom 3 Bath .
IS a satarleo posit ion with NatiOnal GuerCl 11 you are
MottgaQe
Locators. ~oceted 1n Galhpol!s over·
Exceller\1
Heal th
Care, between the ages ot 17·35 (7401 1192·732 1
ooktng the Ohio Rtvar
Dental and Vui10n coverage or have prior milrtary sent·
pver 3000 SQ tt on 3 94
Long Term
Care aM 1ce . you won't went to pass
·,
2 story. 4 bedroom , 1 bath, !B~res . Code 825 or ca ll
Managemen I Expenence 1
thla up. For Opoo rtun i!le&amp; In
140)4 4, ·0323
CI A. detached 2 car garage.
Pre Ierre d aIong ,"'•.-11., S1rong your area. call
304·675wrtnen . comrnuntca11on and
314
ac re, rural water
5837
feadBrshlp s~1IIS Also N 1ght
LOCB!ted lr1 Salem Ctl"lter, feCiwoo d C.ape CoCI
AN pos 1t1ons available - ~1~
\V&lt;\NTED
Me1gs
Coun ty
PhOne ~oms , 9 e acres 4
Prea.se apply n person at
(740)38 4-3955
Sermu&amp; ~e~room . 41 Bath. 41 Ca ·
paraQe, ACOve Qround
t 70
Pmecrest
Dr1ve
•
mqutri&amp;S orly
pool. 8 1ctwelt. Oh- Stoc~&lt;ed
Ga lhPohs Dh to L.J b 11 ..,rcall Wood's Extts Care tor you •
Judy Barc us 111 ?40-446 - Loved one Pr1vate roort1 - 2br House for Sa le 1n West ~-nd Code i14 or call
740)388·b41Q .
7112 tor lurtrrer 1nlorma110n bath 3 hal meals .t:'h one Co lumbia. WV Approx
EOE M ·F D&lt;V
(740.)388·0 1 18
·1 1•2 acres t304 )773·5284

•na

House for Rent 1 112 out o'
tow n.
2-bedroom
S:Z751montt1 S1OG depos1t
call (304]675-1429
b

1·ears on note !3041736· Syracuse - 3 bedroom . 1 1/2
3409
bath on 1.,. acres: CH&amp;A

All relit estate advertisl"g

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertiseme nts tor real
estate which ie In
vi olation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelllnlill• •dvertieod in
thla newep~per are
avlllable on an equal
opportunity bnee.

HrM;sf:'

Pome 'oy. 3 bedroom h:Juse
large yard &amp; oft Sl'eet pari(.
mg. $450 a mQflth plus
depoSit &amp; ut11it1es no oets
1987 Schultz 2 bedroom . 2
lor appllcatton aM apporn1·
bath . 14~70 $8,000, must
ment call (740)992-5228
be move. (740)696·0757
Super clean 38A tBA
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom
large yara . Pleasant toea·
mob1le homes starling at
lion , 20 m1nutes lron1 R10
$270 per. month . Call 740·
Grande .. GallipOlis No pets.'
992 -2167
No
smoklfiQ
5400rmo
Make 2 payments . move 1n 4 (740]379-9465

House 3 Bedroom 1 112 Moneys Worth"
Bath Heat Pump . new
Carpet. WindOws &amp; Root,
~-~\R'l"
R1ver V1ew 12 Sm1tn St No
HJ ~ SALE
Money Down to quahfyrng
Buyer $425/mor~th why Rent Farm . Free gas &amp; monthly
(304)675-2749
royalry check 49 acres 3
btg barns tooacco base .
tenc1ng oonel small 2 bedroorn . 1 bath
house.
Beverly@
$239 000
Stlllpass
Re ally
Co

in this newapaper is
subject to the Federol
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes II Illegal to
advertise •· any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, relig ion, sn
lamili al status Or national
origin, or any In tention to
m.11ke any such
prefere"ce, limitation or
discrimination.··

I

·t-nR RJ.~'\T

3 bedroom . 2 bath , utli ty t983 14x70 mobile home
roo m Bid well area, $66.000 Vmyl s1d1ng . shutters. new
Call (740)44 1-1529 after windows, shd1ng glass bacK
door, central a1rl hea11ng
4pm.
27ft above ground pool . w1th
3BR. 2BA loca ted in Green deck. w1th new ltr;er. two
Townsh 1p close to schools. burld1ngs On large and pri5 129 acres OWner wants vate rented lot on L1ncoln
oller. (740)446-7377
P1Ke . one m1le !rom Green
Elem school Very well
ATTEISTION!
rnamta1ned . Ready to move
GET YOUR LOAN TO
In $15 500. (740)441·1560

AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
Shirley Spears. 304675·1 429.

Sell.

DATA ENTRY
t
Work from home
AND
..__ _ _ _ _ _... Flex1ble Hoursl!
$$$Great Pay!SSS
Fot"NI)
An Excellent way to earn Personal
Computer
money The New Avon
ReqUired
$500 Reward offered lor Call Mar~lyfl 304-882-2645
1-800-913-2823 ext. Jf 1
lnfon;nation lead1ng to recovOel1ve ryiWa rehouse person
ery 01 stolen rtems lrom
ostess
Must
be
needed.
fulll1me. immed1ate
Attenda
nt-H
Arn old Sears res1dence 1n
Harrisonville. call (740)992- Dependab le. Fnendly &amp; openrng. must have excelHonest
Various
Sh1tts tent dr1v1ng record. apply at
4129.
Avar table. Th e P01nt Cafe. Lifestyle Furn1turc. 856 3rd.
Lost· Gotelen Retr1ever Very located behind Pt. Pleasant Ave . Ga lhpohs 9·5 no phone
Apply m caus please
friendly. lost 1n Addav1!1e- Vrsrtors Center
VVednesday
George
Creek
area . p~rson
Dom1no ·s now h1r •ng sale
(740 )44 6-3208 or 1740)446- Noveritber 24th lOam- 3pm.
dnvers
al l
pOSitiOfiS.
Several Pos1110ns Available
1387
Gall1po l"ls . Pomeroy.
Pt
Pl easant. &amp; Eleanor call
store (304)675-5858 lor
applicalions

10

\10BII.f: IIO\IB'&gt;
FOR SAt.F.

lwright@ic.net

$500-S1 .500JMonth
Part-time
$2.000·$8.000/Month
Full·t1me

eso

FREE
Parking

10

I \11'10\\11 \I
'I H.\ H I s

Farms for Rent.. ........................................... 430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330

S99

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

0

CLASSIFIED INDEX

l!'i4

w•

I

'

How you can have borders and Qraphlcs
'-'
added to your classified ads
(.~
.1m
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small ·
S1.00 for larQe

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publll hlng reurv .. the right to ~It, retect. or cancel any ed at any time. Error~ m1.11t be rwport.d on lhelltll dey.of publ ication end
Tr!bune·Sentlnei·Regleter wilt be reeponelble for no more Ulan file coet of the Sp.ce occupied by the error end only the llretlneertlon
ehe!l not be liable
eny lo.. or expenee thet resutte from the publlcaUon or oml11lon of an advertlllment. COrrecUt~n wJII b4o made In the tlret available edition. • Boa n1.1mber
1re alw1y1 contldentlal . • CuHent rata card appllelll. • AM real eetate edvertiMmente are 11.1bject to the Federal Felr Ho1.11lng Act ol 1968. · • Thi• oow·op'"''
ICCept• only help wented 1d1 mHtlng EOE elenderde. We wlll not
I I
any
I
In yJotetion of t11e lew.

Work From Home.

Excavating ............................................ ....... 830

Fuha.pc. .. ...

• All ads must be prepaid'

Buymg Junk cars. Paying up
to $50. (740)388-0011 .

Farm Equipment.. ........................................610

•••

All Dlaplay: .12 Noon :Z
Bualne•s Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay : 1:00 p.m.
Thu.-.day for Sunday•

.0

Two 8 week old temate kit-

lil&amp;i

Display Ads

CUST SVC REP
NEEDED!

Pure bred $1berian Husky.
male 2-yrs old (7 401949 2698

tens . must go together.
Indoors only. (740)843-5268

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
Monday-~rlday for In•ertlon
In Next Day'• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:0. ~ p .m .
F•lday For Sundaya Paper

MARKIT

RIVERSIDE
AUCTION
BARN Rt . 7 South . 5 miles
below the Dam . EVERY
SATURDAY
@
6pm
(740)256·6989

Oeari/Jiru&gt;

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Pl'l o ne Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

Aucnol\ AND

Brittany Spaniel mix tema le
pup.
4
months
old.
(740)992-7335

.•

4

Word Ads

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

Auction and Flea Market ..............................OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760

"""'"' '69

...

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

3 mixed breed puppies to

8

.Twin ea. po.

W.• COY'-'_,
Melp, GaiDa,
Arid Maaon
Countt.. i.Jke

Serta

Serlo
Gentle Firm

- Sentinel - 1\,egi~ter

1

S375!'month. Refe rences S. ( 740 ) 44 ~- 1184
Depos1t Aeqwred {304)675- BEAUTIFUL
APART·
5576
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
2 story, 2 bedroom , 1 5 oath . ESTATES. 52 Westwood
kitchen witt! stove &amp; retr~gerator 233 Sec:"o nd Ave Dnve from $344 to $442
Convenient loc auo n
no Wa llo. to shop &amp; movt es Cal!
pets $565 mol""l!h plus reter- 740 - 446 -2568
Equal
once &amp; deposit (7401446- HouSing Opportun.ty
49_2_6_ _ _ _ __ _ Clear. tum1snea StudroApart meflt
$325 mdntt'l
2 S.tory-Home tcr rem 4BR
Includes
water tra1h
DOS$1ble 5, In Mason, WV. Sec ~_ir ty
DepOIIt
and
NO
Pets ,
$300/depOSit
542.5/montr 1304 )882 . 3652 Rele rences reqw eo c1ll
atttr ,5orr '304 \6,75·3042
38r Home lfl New Havl!ln.
CONVE~I~NTLV LOCAT·
wv Totai·Eiectrlc &amp; Heat ED &amp; I.FFOAOABLE !
Pu mp,
$300/Clepoalt Town nous e
apa rtl"'l ents .
No
Pets
$400. month
an01or srna\1 hous'Ss FOR
(304)882·3652
A~NT C1il (740)4-4 1·1111
3br tn·Syracvse $475/'Tionth t.or ao ~l l caiiCn &amp; nto•maliOn
Hud Ao orov ed no Pets For rMI 2 beelroom Qarag s
(304 )675 -5332 weekends apt Call (740)446·1 652.
only cell (740)591-0265
Grac10us !ivrnQ t and 2 bed·
46 R 41 ba 111 house ·n room apartments at Village
GalliPOliS
$650/montt"l Ma r,or
ana
~ 1 verstde
Cleposlt requir ed (740\44 1- Aoa'rtrn enls m Mrddteport
0194 or (740 )441 -1 184
From ·$295-$444 CAl 740992-5064 Equal HO.JS ir g
Condo 3 ·bdrrr 2 bat'"ls w
OpuortunltiBS
l)a&amp;ement V1 ew ot ·•v9r
C1t rt
A 'C
$700
rno One bedroom garage apartGall iPOlis Farry (7 40 1446· ment "'tche n ' urnr shtd
348 1
$400 [7401992-3823

'

�Page 84 • The Pilily Sentinel

M~nday, November 29, 20Q4:

WW'f#.mydailysentinel.com

Reel Esiata

•

Real Estate

Monday, November 29, 2004
ALLEY OOP

Relit' Eaiate

The Dai ly Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Cr ossword P u zzle

BRIDGE
Ple._asant
Ap8rtment
Art no\v taking Appi1Cabons

·commercial

2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BA ,
Applications
are · taken

fur

Monday thru Friday'. lro m
g·oo A.M -4 PM . Office is
Located at \151 Evergreen
Drive ~ tnt Pl~asanl , WV

PROPERTIES

Phone No is (304)675-5806.
E.HO

6,93 0 total s/jJiaro feet.
(LucareJ in Nrw Rdvefi. W¥)1

Pets , Lea$e Plus Security
Deposit Required, · Days:
740-446-3481 ; E~tenmgs :

'.i

740-367-050.2.

list for Hud·SUbSiZe"d , 1· br,

apartment . call 675-6679

EHO
Warm 2 bedroom upsle:lrs

'•

'

'dell

Hel p

.~

c

,

._ &amp;erious inquiries o'n~v, please.

FOt: R resi dential rentallfQitt, ...

Wanted

'HOlJsEHOU)

,..I"V'VV'

.1

Sinart lierd Dispersal

5225 .
Franchi 2BgauQe
automatic. $600. (740)446-

PHYSICIAN PRACTICE
O FFICE MANAGER

Frigidaire relrigerator $95; r:---Al
- NTI
_Q_U_ES_""'I
Kenmore electric range $95;
Kenmore dl'ljer $95 ; Maytag
wash•r $95; GE wash~r/
Buy or selL
RJverine
dryer $300; T.V. $45 : cfla1r
Antiques
.
11
24
East
Main
$45 nighl stand $1_5.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Skaggs Appliance~
992-2526. Russ Moore,
7f; VIne Street
owner.
(74ll)446·7300

r

Plensanl Val ley Hos pital is curren tl y
seekin g a phy~ i cian praclice u lfice munager,

for "all physic ian offices. P ri or
physi cian office manage r exper ience

responsib le

required. including accouncs payable, payrol l
and general office Jllalljlgement. Assoc iates

I

L.,_..;;.iiliiiliitillliiiiiliio-"

1, feet long. (740)256~6539.
financing, 90 days same
cash. VIsa/ ~aster Caret. 88 Fuli·SIZ8 Bronco 4x4 ,
Dri\l'e· a· little save alot.
$1.350: 20xa.s Hallmark
enclosed trailer, $4,500:
Thompsons Appliance &amp; 4000 Ford wlloader. $4,000
Hepair-675·7388. For sale, (7 40)379-2544
re -conditioned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrlgera- Belter N Bans wooclburner
turs. gas and electric tnserl tor fireplace . Good
r;Jnges. air conditioners. and shape. CaH {740)446-0138,
wringer washe rs. Will do leave massage.
1Cpairs on major brands in
Englander pellet stove and
~ hop or at your hOme
insapipe Used 3 seasons,
Used FtJrniture Store, 130 $4560BO. (740)388-8575
E!ulaville Pike. Appliances.
Firewood. S30 PICk·up.
Ur~ssers. twin. tun . queen.
rnostty Oak &amp;. cut up slabs.
kmg mattresses. dressers. 1
7 949 "3061
couches. dinettes, recliners. $ 5 k&gt;ad .l 40)
grave monuments. fnuch Gray Gooch &amp; Love Seat
more.
(740)446-4782 $150 (304)982·3129
Gallipolis OH . Hrs. 11-.3 (MHOI IUO eacrory VUtlet
S)
Holiday Sale!
1520
SPORTING
Op quality. warrantres,
Goous
.
Milton. wv, Flea Marke

as

r

2004 Chevy Silverado 4x4
Z71 Off Road 1500, V·S,
aulomatic, liss than 3,000
miles. (740)378-6349
95 Joep w~angler 4-in . lift
ki t, new wheel 8 tires, 3tops. loW mile&amp;, $6 .50&lt;t.

(740)256·8 149

VANS

FoR SALE "''

401•
2003 Chevy Express Cargo
Van 3/4 ton, 2500 series
with side doors. 373 VoriB.IC
engine. air. cruise. tilt.
$5001 Honda's, Ch evy's, 44,000 miles . S16.500 . •
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police (740)446-9585 or (740)446,
'
Impounds! Cars tram $500 7724.
for listings 800·391·5227 2004 Chevy Express Cargo

--

JET
AKC Registered German
AERATION MOTORS
Shepherd Puplii, Excellent
Repai red, New
Rebuilt In Blood Line (304)675-572-4
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1AKC &amp; hnaulers puwies.
B00-537-9528
Black, salt &amp; pepper. Vet
checked,
s4oo each EXT 3901

s.

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
For
Drains.
Gratmg

I

1

(740)696- 1085.

01 Pon tiac Montana Van.

Full-b looded Lab puppies. 6 $8 ,000, cash special: 01
Dodge Caravan Sport Van ,
wee ks, black , choco late. yet$7.995; 2002 Toyota Tacoma
low. Phone (740)«6-2460.
~u 4M4, 4 cyl, s-sp., factory
Please give one of these wa rr/3 7,000 miles (New),
dogs a home tor the S t 2,900; 2000 Ford F-150
Holidays, contact th8 ¥ eigs
XL 4 door, 2 WD, PU, VS,
County Dog Pound at automatic. miles -077 .41 t.
(740)992·3779; 1emale b'ack Sl O,OOO (Nice).
Southern Auto. Sates
Lab, 3-4yrs: 2 shor t 'hairftd
·
701 2 nd Ava.
Fox Terriers, one is mike!J; .
(740)44
6-8554
female Rot., (gentle); mate
Border
Collie/Aust. 1988 Chevy Nova, body &amp;
Sheppard mix, 4yrs; many interior in fair condition, runs
nice mixed breed dogs ..
great. good engine &amp; trans-

(740)446-9356.

Pure brep Border Collie
Refrigerator, $ 125: Tykes pups. Imported Oloodllne!;.
working parents, 1 shots &amp;
workbench &amp; too ls, $45 :
round childs picn rc table, wo r m~td . Call (740)379!il' t t O
$25; compute r desk/hutch,
$30; snow blower, $20: K4
FoRS~~&gt;LF.
AOeka teacher currrcu lum,
$10; Holmes humidifier, $1 5.

r

(740)379· 9211 .

B UIWING

SuPI'LlllN

,J

Block. brick , sewer pipes,
windows, lintels; ate. Claude
Winte rs Rio Grande, OH

r

Call74ci-245-5121.

AKC GoldEin Retriever pup·
pies. Call (740)256·1686 or

(740)645-2793.
AKC Pekingese 2 male. First
shots &amp; wormed. $400 tirm.
(740) 446-1000 or leave
message
AKC Pomeran,an puppieS·
black. browfl (female). 1
sable (male) vel checked
$400 eac~ . (740)696-1085

OBO

OBO. (740)742·2861 . .
I \l&lt;\l"i\1 '1'1 II ..,
,\ I I\ J .., II u I

rio

fARM

(740)992·21 43 0&lt; (740)992·

White truck bed topper, trts 7
1/2 to S ft. bed Very good
96 Monte Carlo Z34. co ndition $ 100. Ca ll 740·
143,000 ~ti es $3,500 OBO 645-0873.
6373 eve nings.

"' ' 1{\

(740)268·6200.

740-949-2217

. · ""-..~ll.'lio··
* ·::~=:.:\1.-U:,....\· ".---,
.... u JCIU;, •

1'
i(

''*

Hours
7:00AM · 8:00PM

I( I ""

IT MA~tSA

~

FASI'IION
§.
~TAT~M~NT, F
YOU MIX~l&gt; ~~
YOU~

M~TAPf'IO~~.

~;

i

New Homes • Vi nyl
Siding • New Garages

• Replnt.:emcnt
Windows • Roollng

KNOW

CO MMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FRE E ESTIMATES

HE ALWAYS SEEMS
TO KNOW WHEN
I'M TRESPASSIN' !!

140W OL' MAN
LEDBETTER
'DOES &gt;T !!

740-992·7599)

~

KEEP

i

OUT!!
TMIS

Ir

MEANS

YOU!!

•

~----~ B ~~~~~~

re!~ns­

Birthday parties· Family
Festivals · Business promoti ons etc
Comedy Magic· Skits ·Gospel illusions
Balloons &amp; Face painting

P"f..le.U., [ GUE~:'&gt; '(OV RE:.\L.IZE::""l
'(Ol&gt; t&gt;\E£1) ME:.
l'roV~I) I.I£.R£
/&gt;..f if.R /&gt;..LL I

·740-992-1747
email- ronandtrix@rnsn.com

I'"
YE~ ... f&gt;..\

""l

L£1\Si UNTIL WE:: (,(T

Tfl.E. DI:,I'.W/'-S.r\CR.
IZE\'/I.II&lt;.ED I

!

1
~

.97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

•~

•

SHE TOLD

;.• G~UI1BLE . ;,•
c;.R.E.G PR0)(1'11RE ~

992-3194
or 992-6635

WHAT DOES

IMPORTS
Athens

"Middleport's only
Sell-Storage"

JENNY SEE IN JENNY?
T HAT GUY?
SHE
DOESN.T
SEE AAY·
THI NG
IN HIK .

S" E

. WHICH MAY Tl,IRN OUT
TO HAVE E&gt;EEN THE
\',IGC,EST MI STAKE O F
HEF&lt; LIFE .

Hlr&lt; SHE
WAS READY
TO ::.TART
A NEW
PHI'\SE OF
f!ER LIFE

DLIMPED
Htr&lt; OVER
HE WEE K·
END .

Whaley's Au to
Parts
Sl. R1.68 l Darwi n, Ull
7-Hl-992-70 13 or 740 -9n -.\~'U

Rl»&lt; lockif!lJ In le Mf)(lr/ !';, I"I.IJ&lt;'
mod •lfler .\IH rkt •t ll 11•fs
St!e

R rent or

M-Fri

Brian Whaley

PEANUTS
THE NEXT
(.40LE IS A
PAA FOUR •.

~::l0-5:00

Sal. 8:30-Noon
Sun. C losed

lolOW COME
Tlol EV NEVER
lolAVE A
CATLE6?

DOGLEG TO
lllE RI611T

Deer Shop
•~· )-~ u /(.~ (

r

r&gt; f J

1

· {{ "r·~,l. ~I
c/1 u
J 1645 S R

" 'Y " \ r~
C'")

325

t.angS\'ille. OH

45741
Keith &amp; Gloria Oiler

137 S. Sih AH•ttue
Middleport, 1111
(740) 992- 7".13

SUNSHINE CLUB
H£ ~lD"I WAS
1 JUST f.IAD A S&gt;IG
TAKlr..lG
~~~
ARGUMENT WITH 1I-1m
eot\U\EAD WILLARD _.---..... ()(IT ~ (~'lCT"

740-742-2076
Skin , Cut, m·ap &amp;
l' reeze. A llthi.'l' fnr only

/

$45.1)0

I

.'WD J ~ID 1 NE.V&amp;R
lOOK tW'fff·HIV6 TAAI
I.(XlStSr Ml~ IN Wl'r'

ure:

~·- --.J.

HA!
J

' ,.Jii';;;:\"

HoME
IMPROVEMENfS
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
UncMdltional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references fUT nished. Establi shed 1975
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Bafiement
Waterproofing

www.orvb.com
Car Ll1tlnga.
Uat your ca r by catfin g

(740)448-3820

The contract for
solid waste collection
6 disposal lor the peri·
6538
od January 1 through
Dec. 31 , 2005 lor lhe
• 4x4
Village of Middleport
FoRSAL~
will be awarded on
December 13, 2004 .
1979 Ctlevy. 4wd. 6" rrtt kif. Bids need to be pjcked
327
300hp,
$800 up and returned to 237
tire/wheels .
$4 .500 Race St., Middleport,

r

Ohio no later than Nov.
.. 30, 20D4 .

1989 Ford F-t50, 4x4 . t1.1ns
good. 302 engm e $1 500

'

[740)388•8 152.

1'HA1''5 I)CAC1'1-Y
WHA1' 1'HA1' MeAN~

I I

Public Notice

1999 Ford F-250, 7.3 Diesel,
Ext Cab. 4WD, (304)675-

(740)843- 1168

ANP YOU KNOW WHAl
"!'HAT MeAN e... ,

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

Sandy
lannarelli ,
Mayor
VIllage of Middleport
(11) 24,26, 29 -

G

AstroGraph

Deer Processin g

mapte141f!HL
JAke

Tu e 9day , N o~ 30 , 2004

By Bernice Bade Oaot
Your skills and talents lor being able to
manage thmgs for others wrll be heightened in the yea r ahead and you could be
called upon to IBke on a fo rmidable task .
With your proficiency and c le11erness.
you 'll succeed.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2t) - No
maner how ugly th1ngs may look lor you
co nce rning a financial matter you have
with another, if's not too late to renegotiate the terms_Oot,. t give up on trying.
CAPR I CQR~
(Dec. 22-Jan _ ,9) Turnabout is fair play and today you may
get that opportunity to even a long overdue score that needs· to be settled
Rather lhan steam over 11. slay the
course and wait for yo ur chances.
AQUARIUS (Jan_ 20-Feb_ 19) - Things
m1ght not go nght at first or you may
merely be a reluctan t starter today. but
once you ·~et a course, you're capa ble of
making up for lost time regardless of th e
obstacles.
PISCES (Feb_ 20-March 20) - Cryi ng
the blues about not hEwing any socia l
mrent on the caler1dar today won't do you
any good. If you're restless and want
somethi ng to do, get on tile phone and
instiga te something yourseH.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Should a
serious family issue arise today. get
everyone together, put your cards on !he
table and try to iron it out Things won 't go
away by 1gnoring them; you must tackle
them head on.
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - One of
your strongest poinls is your ability to
forcefully make things happen. but today
don 't carry this over the line and become
obr1owiously stubborn . Tone )'OUr wi llpower down
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Be realistic
regBrdi ng your resources today. If you
plan to make a large expenditure. be certain your purchase is based on a rear
need and not on fanciful Imagining of illu sionary requirements.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Don't be
easily discouraged or give up on something important to you today just boc:auso
it doesn't come off on your first try. It you
regroup your forces and try again. you'll

Campgrt~und
• Skinned • Cnl
• Wr:tppt'll
• Sunmll'r Sausagt
\l ade •·Cam psite;
A'a ilahle

74!1-94'1 ,27.14

talcea fn handlll'lg lt.

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION.
• New Homes

• Garages
• Comple.te

Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; C01npare

O\\fat1H060PY

l\I&lt;ES A

'~RA.66f'KT
'

Wotghed
down
4 9 Social
lnoect
50 J""" Auston

novel
52 Squib
54 Covlar
55 Bank
transaction
56 Moniker
57 Roollr'a goo

20 Largoat
square
desert
59 Jacket style
22 Has
permlaslon
DOWN
23 People,
lnlormally
1 Harah cry
24 Trellis
2 Diet opread
27 Cleopatra'• 3 Bring up
ri ver
4 Mukluk
wearer
29 Toon OtiYa 30 Uke some
5 Wet
statues
6 Kind of agent
(hyph.)
7 Friends
34 Mild
8 Currently
condiments 9 Big pltchero
37 WollMan
10 Warrior
princess
portrayer
38 Swine
13 Dotwi1's shlp
3 9 Farm
19 Paddle
buildings
coutln
41 Doesn't
21 Tlnta
stay
24 Copacetic
43 Want-ad
(hyph.)
abbr.
25 Grain crop

26 Olner
27
28

30
31

32
33
35
36
39

sandwich
Removes
by pinching
lhaiBiHaul
Not well
Hectic piece
Naval on.
" Mermalda"
star
Cheap
lodging
Jellyfish
habitat

llic k
43 Large
antelope
44 Pltywrlghl
Mooa45 RN
employer•
47 Coup d' 48 Juieo Veme
captain
51 1960s

Chairman
53 Hubbies

40 Trace
element ·
In aaH
41 Columbuo'
port
42 Cowboy

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~t,·

C1pt'er cryptOglaf'lti alf! crealed hom QWlaoorts by laroous pwple Plil anCJ presen1
Each letter 1n lhe t1pher Sl8rds lor arolher

raooy 's

'' YA

equals u

TPPRFOB

WORA

FN

NIHPZNXFXFWO

SP

IOR I GLA

XW

P0 E

XIIP

WT

cfu~.l

GWVGM

V S WI X
FX.N

XM VX

SPMFOE

V

X

X II P

BVYP. "

E ITT A

EVIBIIPZ X A

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ··As soon as I got ma"ied I knew I was in !rouble
My in-laws sent me a thank-you note." - Rodney Dangerfield
(c)2004 by NEA, Inc. 11·27

- . . 'lllrthdo;y;

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Jt's Important to
remain hopeful and positive today, not
doubtful. If you'r8 negative you might not
respond to development&amp; that could alleviate the load you 're carrying on your
ahoutdefl .
VIRGO {Aug . 23·Sept. 22) - Jf you find
yourself today dealing with hard feelings
of dlscouregemem and doubt concerning
a relationship with a friend , challenge
that hopere..n.aa by caUinlil your par and
ta lki ng thinga out.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0et. 23) - 11'1 at precl aely the moment when you teel things
~ren ' t going your way .toaay wP'Ien you
muattake the bull by thl hOrns and makl
thl nga nappt~n . Major aceompllanmenll
are PDIIIble.
SCORF'IO (Oct. 2•·Nov. 22) - Vou may
hl'4 a touchy altuatlon wl1h which to con·
tel'\d today similar to one. that r.d oaused
yo~,~ amcle ty In the peat. Craw .on tMat
experience and you won't rapaat old mla·

GARFIELD
CHRI51'MA6 15 COMIN/!t

ruck. 16ft bed wittl 411 ca
ver. 23,000 regular miles.
all (740)446·3620.

Thomas Jefferson . our captain from 1801
to 1809, wrote: "The art ollife is the art of
avording pa1n; and he 1s the best pilot.
who steers clearest of the rocks and
shoals with which it rs beset."
In bndge, the best declarers steer clear·
est ol the roCks that can destroy a con·
tract. In today's deal. how would you try to
avoid the pain of running aground in your
three-no-trump contract? West leads the
heart five ; three. two, jaclt
North was righ t not to show his dramonds.
When three M·trump is the logical spot.
leave diamonds for engagement rings
and tennis bracelets!
You start with seven top triCks : one spade,
one heart (trek one), two diamonds and
three clubs. Obv1ously, you w111 pilot tne
diamonds tor the extra tricks that yo1.1
need. However, hre the re any potential
rocks hidden beneath the surtace?
The only danger is that East can gair1 the
lead and push a heart through your
remamtng K· 10 rnto the jaws of West's A·
a. So. you must make an avoidance play
in diamonds to ensure that East never
wins a triCk there.
Overtake your club jaCk with dummy's
queen, then run the diamond seven . If the
finesse lases, you r contract is safe
because West cannot profitably continue
hearts. Here. though, the diamond seven
wins. Play a diamond to your 10, cash the
dramond kmg, cross to the spade ace.
and run the diamonds. You collect an
overtrick.
Finally, note East's play at trick one. When
one cannot contribute at least a nine (or
its equivalent), one should give count.
Here, East's two - hts lowest - showed

SUCC&amp;ed.

View photos/into online,

1Q97 3500 Chevy Carg

Avoid being ruined
by an opponent

an odd number of hearts.

BIG NATE

10x10xl0x20

740-992-5232
~==;:====~
OI'ler's

~

0

MANlEY'S
SELF STORAGE

33795 Hiland Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio

3 NT

East
All pa"

45760

1(1411 mo. pd

~'R~
High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

North

Opening lead: ¥ 5

BUILDERS InC.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , O hio
4577 1

West
Pass

Middleport

(740)339-2856.

ACCI'SSORJES
"-•ooitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio_.l

South
l NT

BISSEll

Hill's Self
Storage

tO ,OOO miles, starts &amp; runs .
sat ~ for paris or trade for
truck
{740)44t-9755 .

1999
Harley
Heritage
Springer FLSTS, 11 .200
miles, rech excellent oondltron with extras _ $16 .000.
(740)446·6253.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

BUT ~ Tf'll NJC ~ ~

1 99~ Honda C BR900R R

i

OBO. (740)256·1 81 B or

All Sizes

4WID:ULIIS

1983 Honda XL 185 anct 14 inch Chrome Spo~e
New Holland 367 Haybind 1974 Yamaha 250 $200.00 Wheels. will lit Chevy.
Chrysle r, Ford $300 call
$ 1,200.00. (740)992·21 43 for botl't (740)949-9008
(304)675·3168
or (740)992..e373 evenings.
1999 Chryskl r Ci rrus LXI,
~r.:r------.., 2.5, V6 , power windows! Brush Guard &amp; PI-' fog Ughtl
locks/mirrors, 65.300 miles. or 2002 Chevy P/U paijj
J,JVTh'TOCK
$790.00. Brush Guard
~--------,.1 (740)367·00 18
$359.65. Fog lights ss'so.oo.
2000 Buick LeSabre, V6 ,
Angus
Bull sTop sedan , 4-door, limited , 92 Jesp 4 cycle motor lor
paris. Rod on front cylinder
Perlormance Lines. 40·Years
80,000 miles, garage kept.
Artrficial lr'lsemination . Slate $8,500.00. (740)949·221 7 broke went thru Oil pan .
$200.00.
Rur1 Farm (740)266-5395.
7AM · 10PM
68 GMc 2o.ooo lb Gw.
www. sla leru~ lar m . com
2003 Tracker. 4x4. 3.000 Dump truck motor &amp; trans
- - - - - - - : : - - miles. All electric , Alum $400.00
Aprox 50 barnyard Bantam wheel. S 14,500.
080 Radiator support. grill. hood
chickens. Priced at $2 ee.ch (740)388-8432 .
&amp; bumper for 69 GMC
Call (740)379·2429
Jrmmy. Also tits 87 ad older
95
Jeep
Wran gler trucks $350.00 (740)992$4.500.00.
2143 or (740)992·6373
9'9 Chay Lumina $4,800.00 evenings.

Mitsublshl l ancer, rebuilt ,
40,000 miles, auto, $5,200

+ K 10 4

.. A K J

- Amilahlc.
740-•!92-5776
Mon-Sal. 10·4.

MoroRCYCLt:s/

$2,500.00

(M4)675-888 1

Poi n setti a!~,

• Q 6 5 2
11 1094

• J 6 43
¥ . K J 10

Home • Auto • Life • R e·tirl~m ,ent
• IRA • 401 K Roillovers • Maj or Med •
Medicclre Sup.,• cancer • Accident

(740)446·9585 or (740)446·

1999
Polaris
500
Sportsman. 4x4. One owner,
very good condiiiOn. Lots ol
eKtras. Winch· etc. Never
been abused. Call daytime
740-44 6·9777 ask for Chuck
1992 Mercury Cougar. 2 dr., or 740-245-5096 afler 6p~
V-6, runs goodlclean. $85 0. $3.500.
before 2pm (740)992·2191 ,
after 2pm 740-59 1-8936
Atrm P AIITh &amp;
1993 Bonneville, great car

.....;.:!.~.~'&amp;

7724.

1997 CR SO. Very good condition. Race ready. $1.000.
Gallipolis area. Cell phone
miss1on , needs batl joint, 740-645-0873.
$175 OBO
1995 Pontiac GrandPrix tUl ly
loaded; 4dr, rebuilt , V-6
engin'\o body &amp; interior.
excellent condition . $ 1,500

Q98
AQ954
3
8 s3 2

44 Fireside

~

COOI1Biation 58 Greasy

East
lo Kt07
• l 6 %

South

~inancial Service$
Box 189

Van 3/4 ton 2500 series with
side doors. Air. cruise. 1111,
9,200
miles
$21,500.

1980 Van new engine &amp;
transmiSsion, V-8 loaded,
Ladies black leather motor· cru ise/AC/CO player nice
cycle jacket. size M· worn body &amp; interior $1 ,300 080
2x. CDSt $400 asking $200 (304)593·121 17

ro~LE l~w-·=--tmr-_.1

AKC Miniature
Prnchers, 7 weeks old.
Black/rust ,
$250. (740)368·
8124 .

..

For sale. orchard grass &amp;
lllfalfa , square bales for ca t- 2000 Ford Windslar Van.
$2.00 per bale. power windows/cruise. 7
tle.
(740)992-2143 or (740)992· passenger, 91,000 miles
asking $6,900 (304)675-

~--MERiiiiiiiiiCiiiiiiiiDISEiiiiiiioo,.i
HAN

Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
1
Tuesd ay, WednesQf!;Y &amp;
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Embodv. Hutch· Idiot· Greedy· YOU into DEBT
My husband says there are all kinds of credit cards
but thev al; have one lh1ng m common, they run YOU
inlo OE.BT

ARLO &amp; JANIS

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wWw .mydailysentineJ.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

~

..

Monday, November 29, 2004

.

~q~~~~~ ~

•

Ohio State Football

Holiday Song Book
inside today's edition

'

Lightly recruited Nugent candidate for GrOza Award
COLUMBUS (AP) When
Ohio State linebacker A.J . Hawk
and kicker Mike Nugent were still at
Centerville Hi gh School . Hawk
couldn' t understand why Nugent
was generating so littl e interest
from big-time colleges.
Hawk says recruiters were making a big mistake in not see ing the
' All-America potential in Nugent.
" It made me mad when people
weren 't offering him scholarships;·
Hawk said. "He's gone from being a
lightly recruited kicker to the best
kicker in the natio n."
Ohio State had been trying to lure
Nugent to campus as a walk-on until

coach Jim Tressel was hired in Skladany shudders to think what
200 1. Tressel took note of the Nugent would have accomplished
absence of a proven ki cker on the before attempts to marginalize speroster and offered Nugent a full ride ciali sts with rule changes beginrimg
just one month before signing day in the late 1980s.
Goal posts were narrowed from
hi s senior year.
23
feet, 4 inche s to 18 feet, 6 inchAt Ohio State, Nugent has ki cked
a school-record 68 field goals and es. And the 2-inch tee that improved
connected on nearly 90 percent of the trajectory of kicks was outhi s attempts the past three years.
· lawed.
" He unequivocally has the
Nugent was named to The
Associated Press All-America team strongest leg in college football,"
as a sophomore in 2002. when he Skladany saitl. "It makes no sense
made 25 of 28 rie ld goals as the what he can do with a football. I
Buckeyes won' th e national champi - can't imagine a ball being compressed that hard. He's a freak of
onship.
Former Buckeyes ki cker Tom nature."

River City Shootout
at Portsmouth
Eastern 67, Waverly 45

Lima Sr. 86 . Oef1ance 51
Logan 57 . Pataskala Wa l kins Me mona!

6

10 11

18 -

45

Eastern

13

17 24

13 -

67

Waverly (1-1) - Dustin Carr 3 0·0 7,
Corey Wil l1amson 0 0·0 0, Cody
Higginbotham 0 0-0 0, Justin Lett 2 D-0 4,
Cory Elliott 1 0-0 3, Roy Conley 2 0-0 4, K.
P. Wickline 3 1-2 7, Jairus Ward 2 6-10 11.
Justin Hilton 2 0-0 4, Trevor Wall s 0 0-2 0.
Trevor Arnett 0 0-Q 0, Bryan Willis 2 0·0 5.
TOTALS: 17 7- 14 45.
Eastern (1-0) - Justin Browning 0 1-2 1,
Derek Baum 3 0-0 7. Nathan Cozart 8 4-4
25, Alex McGrath 0 0-0 0, Brian Casto1 0
1-2 1, Adam Dillard 2 2-5 7, Ed Beatty 0 00 0, Mark Guess 0 0-0 0. Chn s Caldwell 1
o-o 2 , Chr1s Myers 0 0-0 0, Derek Roush 0
o-o 0 , Robert Cross 2 2-2 6, Cody Dill 8 23 18. TOTALS : 24 12-18 67.
Three-point goals: W ~ 4 (Carr. Ell iott.
Ward , Will is). E ~ 7 (Cozart 5. Bau m.
Dillard).

North Adams 64, Southern 41
Southern
North Adams

9
16

7
12 13 14 14 20 -

41
64

Southern ~ Derek Teafo rd 0 0-0 0. Aaron
Sellers 1-2 3, Craig Ranolph 10 1-3 22,
Chns Tucker 0 0-0 0, Josh Pape 0 0-0 0.
· Dustin Brinager 0 0-0 0, Tyler Roberls 0 0·
0 O, Wes Burrows 4 1·2 10. Brad C rouch
0 0·0 0, Dann Teaford 0 0-0 0, Jake Nease

2 2-2 6. Tota l s~ 17 5-9 41 .
North Adams - Drew Copas 1 0-0 2. Nick
Shreffler 0 0-0 0, Ryan Unger 3 2-2 10.
Eri c Semple 2 0-0 4, tan Eldrid ge 1 2-2 4.
Cory Copas 4 2-2 8. Brandon Cross 1 0-0
2, Mat1 Geeslin 1 0-0 2, Kyle Hughes 5 46 14 . Jordar"1 Turley 1 1-1 3 . CurtiS Bolton 5
t -1 t 1. Tyler Hickey 2 0-0 4. Totals- 26 818 64
Three Poi nt Goals: Southern 2 (Randolph
and Burrows ), North Adams 2 (Unger two).

Gallia Academy 66, Meigs 44
Meigs
11 16 13 4 - 44
Gallla Acad
22 17 7 20 - 66
MEIGS i0-1) - Jared Casey 1 0-0 2
Jeremy Blackslon 2 1-2 5, Carl Wolfe 3 39 9, Eric VanMeter 1 1-2 3. Andy Kinnan 1
1·2 3, Adam Snowden 4 4-5 13, Dave
Poole 3 3·3 9 . TOTALS- 15 13-23, 44 .
GALLI A ACADEMY (1·0)- Tra\luS Stout 1
0-Q 3, Chris Miller 0 2-2 2. Kyle Hudson 4
1·2 11 , Jaymes Haggerty 2 2-2 7 . Brad
Caudill 3 2-4 8, Alex Kyger 3 4-5 10,
Shawn Thompson 0 1-3 1. Zach Shawver
4 6-8 14, Jeff Golden 4 0-0 10. TOTALS-

21 18-26 66.
3-point goals - Meigs 1 (Snowden ), GA 6
(Hudson 2 . Golden 2 , Haggerty)
Rebounds - Mei!ll 24 (Snowden 6), GA
47 (Shawver 11 }. s!eals- Meigs 7 (C asey
3), GA 13 (HUdson 3, Thompson 3)
Assists - Meigs 7 (Casey 4) , GA 17
{ShaW~~er 7). Turnovers - Meigs 12. GA

15
Ohio High School Boys Basketball
Saturday's Results

'

l

Bellelontaine Benjam1n Logan 46
Lexington 40. MI. Vernon 37
Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 88 , Cle. Glenville

75

Waverly

Akr. Hoban 84 , Akr . Garfield 51
Akr. SVSM 62, Cambndge 53
Arcanum 55, Brookville 35
Archbold 72 , Wauseon 42
Ashtabul a Edgewood 64 , Cle. John
Marshall 47
Atwater Waterloo 63, Bertin Western
Reserve 37
Aurora 81 , Middlefield C ardinal 34
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 50, Co ry ·
Rawson 40
Beavercreek 69. Trotwood-Madison 50
Bedford 67, lyndhurst Brush 60
Berea 60, Lakewood 56
· Bloom Carroll 73, Washington C.H .
Miami Trace 33
Bowling Green 65, Sylvania Southvi ew

59

Cadiz Harrison Cent. 69, Beallsville 57
Can . Cent. Cath 60, Can . S. 47
Can . GlenOak 78, Ak r. Kenmore 46
Can . McKinley 65, Cia. Hts. 43
Carlisle 49 , Preble Shawnee 48
Castalia Margaretta 64, New Riegel 58
Chardon NOCL 50 . Garfield Hts. 48
Chesterland W. Geauga 60, Mayfield

48

53
Maple Hts . 78. Cle. Hayes 60
Massillon Jackson 66, Youngs. Rayen

33
Massillon Perry 49. Manetta 47
Maum ee 65. Sylvania Northview 53
McGufley Upper Sc1oto Valley 53. Lima
Perry 47
·
Medina Highland 79; Slreetsboro 46
Miami Valley 57, Trotwood Chr istian 34
Middleburg His. Midpark 78 , Cle. MLK

54
Mtlan Ed1son 49 . AII1Ca Seneca E. 40
M1nster 83. Spencerv111e 55
M ogadore F1eld 74 . Uniontown Lake
Cenler 59
New PartS NaiiOnal Trail 51, New
MadiSOn Tn·Vil lage 42
New Philadelphia 51. Akr. N. 49
Norwalk 68. Clyde 42
Oak Harbor 76, Millbury l ake 41
Olmsted Falls 74 . Stro ngsvi ll e 6 1
Ottov1lle 56. Van Wert L1ncolnv1ew 25
Pa1nesv1ll,e R1vers1de 56, Ashtabula
LakeSide 52, OT
Perr)'Sbu rg 64. Rossford 35
Pettisv,lle 56. Del ta 4.9
Pickerington Center 61 . Cols. Lmden

56
Piketon 63. Portsmouth W. 54
Piqua 57 , Vandalia Butl er 20
Plymouth
66.
New Washinglon
Buckeye Cent. 57
Port Clinton 63. Genoa 38
Read 1ng 56. Norwood 42
Reedsville Easter n 67, Waverly 45
Reynoldsburg 62. Greenfield McC :a,n

53
Rootstown 39. Akr . Spnng. 3 1

S Webster 52, Ch illicothe Zane Trace
34
SarahSVIlle Shenandoah 60. Waterlord

38
Seaman N . Adams 66 . Ra cine
Southern 4\
Sheffield Brookside 63. Sullivan Black
River 53
Solon .72, Shaker Hts. 59
Sparta Highland 54. Mansfield Temple
Christian 52
Sprmg. NW 61 , Tipp City Bethel 53
Spring S. 74, Troy 57
Spring. Shawnee 70, Cedarville 63
St. Pari s Graham 63, W. Liberty-Salem

61
Slow 75 , Green 55
Thomas Worthington 53, Delaware 36
T ipp City Tippecanoe 74, Casstown
Miamt E. 37
Tot. Ottawa Hills 56, Edon 39
Tol. St. John 's 81 . Fremont Ross 46
Tol. Start 57 , To l. Christian 32
Tontogany Otsego 63. Tol. Wa ite 52
Uniontown Lake 74. Mmerva 46
Urbana 53. L ondon 47
Van Wert 67. Bryan 28
Vanlue 76 , Bettsville 48
Vermilion 42 , Avon 27
W. Alexandria Twin Valley S . 57 ,
Germant own Valley VieW 49
W Milton Mllton-Un 1on 58. Day
Northridge 54
Warrensville 79. Cle South 63
Waynosfield-Goshen 55, New Knoxville

42
Westerville Cent 57. Fredericktown 46
We sterv1lle N. 57 . Belle fon laine 26
We stlake 64, LaGrange Keyst one 47
Wh itehouse Anthony Way ne 70 ,
Holland Sprmg. 57
W1ll ard 71, Ontar10 47
Wilm1ngton 57 . Hillsboro 4 1
Wooste r 52 . LoC11 Clove rleaf 39
Xenia Nazarene Chr1stian 61 . New
Miam155
Zane sville 67 . Tal . W oodward 49
ZanesYlll e Maysville 62 , Philo 50
1

Girls' Prep Boxscores
Northwest 61, Eastern 56
19 18 7 17 8
13 17 18 -

61
56

Cin . Clark Montessori 70, Batesville
{Ind.) Oldenburg 55
Cin. Hills Christian Academy 56 , C in.
Madeira 46
Cin. Jacobs 57 , N. Bend Taylor 54
C in. LaSalle 42, Mason 38
C in. Sycamore 70, Lebanon 45
Circleville 75, W illiamsport Westfall 50
Clarksville
Clinton-Massie
53.
Waynesville 42
Cle. Collinwood 75 , Tal . Libbey 70
Cle. Rhodes 79, Gals. Eastmoor 69
C le. St . Ignatius 57, Medina 53, OT
C lermont NE 41 , Batavia Amelia 33
Cols. E. 57 , Zanesville
MusKingum

Northwest - Kabe Jordan 3 0·3 6, Kr1sten
Bradsl'law 7 5-10 19 , Heather Etl1s 7 5·7
19. Brmany Hackworth 2 0-0 5 , Tracey
Montgomery 1 2·2 4. Krista Crablree 1 2-4
4, Ken Sanders 0 2-4 2. Desiree Campbell
1 0-2 2. TOTAL S: 22 16-32 61 .
Eastern - Kat1e Hayman 1 1-4 3, Krista
While 0 1-41 , Amber Willbarger 01-3 1,
Cassie N1.Jt1er 0 1-2 1 Morgan Werry 0 0·
0 0. Morgan Weber 8 4-6 20, Erin Weber 3
5-5 11 , Janna Hupp 3 1-1 7, Jessie Hupp
2 5·8 9. Jen Hayman 1 1-2 3 TOTAL S: 18
20·35 56.
Three-po1nt goals: NW - 1 (Hackworth) , E
- None

42

Prep Football

w.

Cots. Frankl in Hts. 79, Grove City
Christian 27
Cots . Hart ley 52 , Summit Station
Ucklng Hts . 29
Cols. Mifflin 84 . Chillicolhe 64
Cots .
St.
Cha rles
63.
Co ts.
Independence 56, OT
Day. Chri sti an 65. Enon Greenan 54
Day. Col. W hite 84, Day. Jelferson 50,
Day. Stivers 64, Day. Bellbrook 55
Dresden Tri-Valley 56 , Crooksville 26
Dubl in Coffman 54 , Marysvil le 50
Elida 46, Lima Cent. Ci!th . 34
Fairborn 75 , Cin. Woodward 68
Fairlawn 64, Covington 57
Findlay 66 , Tol. Rogers 63
Fostoria St. Wende lin 68, Sa ndusky St.
Mary's 66
Franklin-Monroe 76 , New Lebanon
Ohcle 54 •
Georgetown 54. Fayetteville 29
Greenville 69 , Eaton 60
Hamilton Little Miami 76. Franklin 68
Harrison 49, Ross 47
Haviland Wayne Trac e 53, Rocktord

Parkway 36
Hlllfard Darby 54, Dublin Jerome 40
Houston 79 , Newton 65
HudSon 5,8, Wadsworth 47
Kansas Lakota 40 , Old Fort 39
lewis Center Olentangy 77, Delaware
Buckeye Valley 71,
Lewisburg
Tr1-Co un ty
N.
52,
Middletown Madison 49
Lewistown
Indian
'Lake
53.

RusTY MtLLER
Associated Press

BY

2004 OHSAA Football Playoff Pairings
Pa1nngs tor the 2004 Ohio High School
Athletic Association footba ll pla yoffs , with
seed111gs and records :
·
State Finals

DIVISION I
A.t Canton Fawceu Stadium
Can. McKinley (t 1-::3) \IS , Cin. Colerain
(1 4·0). Saturday, 7 p.m .

• ' DIVISION II
At Maa•lllon Paul Brown Tiger

Stadium

1

Avon Lake ( 14-0) vs . Cols. Brookhaven

(1 4-0). Friday. 7 p.m
DIVISION Ill
At Canton 'Fawcetf Stadium
Cle. BenedicUne (11 · 3) vs. St. M arys
Memorial (13·1) . Saturday. 11 a.m.

.
DIVISION IV
At Canton Fawceu Stadium
Youngs. Mooney (1 t -2) vs
·

Versailles

(1 1-3), Friday, 3 p.m

DIVISION V
At Massillon Paul Brown Tiger

Stadium
St. Henry ( t 3-11 vs . Ama nda-Ciearcreek
(1 4-0). Saturday, 3 p.m.

DIVISION VI
At Maulllon Paul Brown Tiger
Stadium
Norwalk St. Paul (12-2) vs Dola Hardin
Northern (13- 1) Fr1day 11 am

COLUMBUS - Bert and Ernie got
th e new co urt, the Ohio State
Buckeye s got the old one.
Advantage: Buckeyes.
They set school records for 3-pointers made ( 17) and attempted (35) in
beating Chattanooga 84-67 Saturday
ni ght hefore a raucous crowd at St.
John Arena . T.he gitme was shifted
from comparatively anti se ptic Value
City Arena because it was hosting a
Sesame Street show.
'They need to keep playing here,"
Chattanooga coach John Shulman said,
shaking his head. "The crowd 's on top
of"you. It 's hot. It 's nasty. It 's loud. It's
what college basketball is supposed to
be about."
The Buckeye s (5-I ), who came in
hitting 7 of 18 3-pointers on an average nTght, seemed to make everything
they looked at from outside . The previ ous school marks were 13 3-pointers
made and 30 attempted . ·
"They were the right nets - I know
that ," said Ohio State's Tony
Stockman, who hi t 4 of 9 3-pointers in
scoring 16 points. "We need to move
those net s over. "
J.J. Sullinger scored 21 points,
including a called-shot 3-pointer from
111 front of the Mocs ' bench at the first-

half buzzer.
" He told me he was going to make a
3 before the half and he did," Shulman
said. " I' ll say this - he's a very truthful guy."
Sullinger, a transfer from Arkansas,
said he knew some of the Mocs from
his days with the Razorbacks.
"You say some things in the heat of
the moment," he said . "I did tell him ' I
was going to hit one. Luckily, I did." ·
Ivan Harris added 17 points - hitting all five of his 3-pointers in the
second half - with Terence Dials
scoring II.
St. John Arena was Ohio State's
home co urt from 1956 to 1998. It seats
just over 13.000 - about 6,000 fewer
than Value City Arena. But the fans are
on top of the court, louder and more
distracting.
They cheered , howled and taunted
after every 3-pointer the Buckeyes
made . At the team's newer arena, fans
can carry on a conversation without
raising their voices.
"I think for the most part , it may not
be a bad thing to bring it back over
here once or twice (a season),'' said
Ohio State coach Thad Matta, who
called St. John one of the 50 be st college arenas in the country.
Chris Brown had 12 points and
Mindaugas Katelynas and Matt
Malone each scored 10 for the Mocs
( 1-1).

Bengals best
Browns in shootout
CINCINNATI (APJ
Kelly Holcomb threw for
400 yards and live touchdowns-· and lost.
Strange'' Not as strange as
those other numbers glowing
on the scoreboard as
Holcomb trudged off the
field with his head down and
more 111 isery ahead ..
Cincin nati 58 , Cleveland
4g _
The intrastate rivals played
the wildest game in their history Sunday. one that defied
logic and wound up as the
second-highest scoring game
in NFL history.
" You just can't explain the
second half, and there's no
need to try to," Bengals linebacker Brian Simmons said.
"It was a great game for the
fans, I guess."
It started as a referendum
on the two head coaches, and
quickly turned into a rewrite
of the record books. The
points came so fast that it
seemed a recount might be
needed to determine who
won Ohio's bragging rights .
"It was crazy." said the
Bengals' Rudi Johnson, who
ran for 202 yards and two
touchdowns . "Ju st crazy."
The I06 combined points
were the second most in an
NFL game, trailing only the
Redskins ' 72-41 victory over
the Giants on Nov. 27, 1966.
Unti l Sunday, the mo st
points in a game since the
NFL-AFL merger in 1970
was 99 Seattle beat
Kansas City 51 -48 in overtime on Nov. 27, 1983.
In the end, the Browns (3.
8) had the ball and a chance
to send this one to overtime.
as well. Deltha 0 ' Neal 's
interception and 31-~ard
return for a touchdown ftnai Iy decided it with I :43 left.
"We kept putting them
away, and they kept coming
hack,'' sa id Cincinnati's
Carson ·Palmer, who threw a
career-h.igh · four touchdown
.passes. "We kept ·expecting
th em to slacken up, b~t they
never did. "
No one ex pected anyt hing

like it.
The Brown s' defense has
been the only dependable
thing during their losing
streak , now up to five . The
Bengal s ( 4-5) have been
watching
their
young
defense grow up fast. allowing only two touchdowns in
the three previous games.
On Sunday, it looked like
they were playing two-hand
touch. Two previously struggling offenses combined for
49 first downs and 966 yards,
gaudy numbers set up by
innumerable missed tackles
and broken coverages.
The first five fossessions
of the second hal resulted in
touchdowns, many of them
as easy as they get because of
defensive breakdowns .
"It is what it is," Browns
defensive
back
Robert
Griffith said glumly. "We
gave up too many big plays
-deep balls, long runs. It 's
just frustrating. When it
rains it pours, and right now
we ' ve got to turn off the
sprink ler. "
Holcomb , who took the
Browns to' the playoffs under
coach Butch Davis in 2002,
nearly got him a desperately
needed victory. Holcomb
threw four touchdown passes in the second half, including a 1-yard tos s to Steve
Heiden that put Cleveland
up 48 -44 with I0:22 to play.
Holcomb knew it wouldn't
be enough.
"The way the game was
going, l felt like we needed
to score two more times,"
said Holcomb, · who has
thrown for 400 yards twice
in hi s career and lost both
games .
The Browns put up their
most points since a 51-0 victory over Pittsburgh in the
1989 opener. This one surely
will ·turn up the heat on
Davis, who has been assured
of finishi ng the season and
nothing more.
'
"I'd be lying if I didn ' t tell
you it was demoralizing ,"
Davis said . "There's not a lot
of joy in losing ."
·

264 South Seeond A&gt; e.

590 Ea&gt;l Main St.

Middleport, OH
(740) 992-5141

(740) 992-5444

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Iannarelli: Village will rezone school area for developiJ1ent

SPORTS
ground Rockets.

See Page Bl

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
- The
area
surrounding
the
Middleport High School
building mu st be re -zoned if
the school building is to be
conve11ed into apartments.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
told members of Middleport
Village Council last Monday
that the vi llage is now preparing to contact owners of
property adjacent to the
school and set a public hearing . to discuss the changes .
The village owns the school ,

Bucks make themselves at home in old arena

lorain Southview 72. Amherst-Sleele

48

Northwest
Eastern

one will ever know."
Nugent would like to cap his collegiate career by wmmng the Lou
Groza Award which will be presented Dec. to the nation's outstanding kicker. But his time with
the Buckeyes already has exceed his
expectations .
"! think back to my freshman year
and go, 'Who would have thougbt
I'd be a captain rhy senior year? Or
that people would say I should wm
the Heisman,' although I· neve~
thought anything would come from
that. But things like that can happen
and do happen if you just do your
job every time," he said.

College Basketball

Prep Scoreboard
Boys' Prep Boxscores

Nugent routinely boots his kickoffs out of the end zone, and he is 8for-9 in his career from beyond 50
yards.
"He has tremendous whip and
tremendous timing," Skladany said .
"His timing on field goals is akin to
the timing of Tiger Woods when he
was driving in the fairway."
Skladany believes the longest
field goal in Big Ten history - 63
yards by Michigan State's Morten
Andersen - would have fallen if
Nugent had kicked in a different
era.
"I .think he could go 65,"
Skladany said. "The troul)le is, no

!Jisli£r ![unera[9-{omes

Chattanooga started the ga me double-teaming Dials every time he
touched the ball down low, giving the
Buckeyes' perimeter shooters a clear
window to shoot. And shoot they d1d.
"Going into the game we thought
they would shoot pretty good, but
nobody in their right mind thought
they
could shoot
like that,"
Chattanooga 's Casey L\)ng said. "Our
defense is based on maRing teams take
tough shots. A lot of the 3s they took
were tough. They just made them."
Sullinger hit 4 of 5 shots and the
Buckeyes were 9 of 20 behind the arc
in the opening half as Ohio State
opened up a 43-33 lead. The Buckeyes
went up 64-43 midway through the
second half, thanks to 3s on consecutive possessions by Stockman, Harris
and Je' Kel Foster.
The Mocs drew as close as 67-54 on
Brown's tip-in with 7:43 left , but then
Ohio State pulled away again. Harris
broke the record with Ohio State's
14th 3-poinie'r with 6:24 left and then
hit another shot from the opposite corner with 4: I0 left to eclipse the mark
for 3-pointers attempted .
Matta gave St. John Arena - now
used
primarily
for
volleyball,
wrestling and gy mna stics - a lot of
the credit for the win .
" I hope th e vision we have for this
•program is to take thi s crowd and add
6,000," Matta said.

and plans to sell it. At least
one interested buyer, The
Legends Realty Co. of
Indiana, has expressed interest in converting the building .
into 35 apartment units.
lannarelli said la st week
the village must change the
zoning classifi cation of the
portion of South Third
Avenue and Pearl Street from
one specifically for school
properties to a residential
classification like those residential properties surrounding it.
lanarelli said the adjacent
landowners will be contacted

later thi s month , by mail , Building, all located on the
about a public hearing. The same block in Middleport. to
hearin g wil l be held in the village. The vi llage plan '
January, lannarclli said. and to conve rt the ne we r elementhe village will work with tary bui lding on Pearl Street
Jim Hartz ler, a zoning spe· into a jai l and municipa l hall.
ciali st based in Columbus,
The Legend' Realty Co.·,
who has worked with the vil - Joe Wolfla ha' 'aid cm1,1ruclage to complete zoning tion or the apartment comchanges in th e past.
plex wou ld be \ Upponcd with
The building has rema ined fund s fro m
the
U.S.
vacant since the Meigs Local Departme nt of Hou\i ng and
School Di strict moved its Urban Development , but the
middle sc hool into a new finished building not he
buildin g at Rocksprings near- res tricted to those yualifying
ly a year ago. The district for Section 8 ren tal assi'returned the high sc hool . Clc- ta ncc. Wol na· ~ firm would
mentary school and Central co ntrol occ(lpancy and opcr-

ate the complex"' a for-pro fit bu , inc, s. and the apartment ' wo uld be open to any
resident s who wish to li ve
there. r\! gard l c~·~ of age or
in L.:nme le vel.
Bctorc an v con, truction
can he Ullllpieted . the bui lding mu"'t he i.HJYCrt i~ed for
'ale. and the 1ill age plan., to
accept 'ca led hid' from
potential buyer,. although a
'ale date · h~h not been 'et.
lallni, rcl li 'aid she has heen
workin~
with
Vi llage
Su lk itu~ Raberta Hill to COlllpktc the bid packet fo r
prospective hu yers .

Terminally-ill woman donates
bear collection to senior citizens
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HO EFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES

POMEROY - Nancy Shaw has donated
her 25-year collection of over 200 bears - a
Steift', several made by Dean's , America's
oldest bear company, numerou s Boyd and
Ohio River bears, others just cute and cuddly
- to the Meigs County Council on Aging .
The bears were given .with a request that
they· be sold and the proceeds go toward the
agency 's meals -on-wheels for homebound
residents.
"I thought a long time about what to do
with my bears;' said Shaw, '"and decided by
giving them to the meals-on-wheels program
many people would i&gt;enefit.
''It is important that I get them out of the
house before I leave so that my husband
won "t have to deal with that," she added,
making reference to her terminal illness.
Shaw ~oved into the Salem Center communit y from Florida seven years ago when
she married Carol Pierce. The bear collection,

which required 17 moving crat es, came with
her. At the couple's home they have been
prominent in every room. except. she sai&lt;l.
"my husband 's bathroom. "
Before donating her bear co llection to the
ce nter, she invited her three children and
seven grandc hildren to select a special bear
by which to remember he r.
The value of the bears. ranging from $3 to
$_100, is unimportant to Shaw. who st resses
that " not one was bou ght for value but alway s
because of the way they made me feel."
She equates love with the bears she cuddled
th ese many years and her hope is that whoever buys them will feel tl1 at lo ve .
For Shaw, giving the b&lt;•ars to th e meals-onwheel s program is what 'he describes as
"another step in preparing for 'my journey.'·
Chartene Hoefllch/ photo

Before leaving her collection at the Senior
Center, Nancy Shaw gives a big hug to the
bear which was a Mother's Day gift from he r
daughter.

Local guardsman fulfills
two missions in Iraq

Page AS
Carol Theiss
• Ethan Samuel Perry
• Gail Jean Chqse
o

BY NICOLE FIELDS
NFIELDS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

WEATHER

GALLIPOLIS - Nearl~

10

month s ago. Jered Hill knew
the mi ss ion he wa' being
when he was 'en! to l ray to
serve · with the 366-lth
Mainte nance Un it ,,f tht"
Arm y National Guard.
Two weeks ap1. Hill realized he mig ht ha ve heen there
for a different rca &gt;o n.
Hill \ reali1ation came In

i1im as he 11 atL·hc d his
l·ounQer brother. Jnhn . wait
t·or "Lirgc-r) after hei ng '-lhot in
tile left tl1iuh 'J&lt;ll'. 13 in
F;dl ujah . Fnl~tuiJately for the
hrother,. John was e1acuated
,Ill tile 'arne ba'e where J ered
w;Js ,erving.
" It 11·a, wo rth be ing there
the 11IHJie Year to be there that
. om· da1 ... "Hil l said. " I would
Jo it ;tga in for that one rea-

Please see Iraq, AS

Parker re-elected Historical
Society president

INDEX
Beth Sergont/ photo
2 SECTIONS- t2 PAGF..S

Children who attend Heart of the Valley Head Start enjoy sit-down lunches to promote a home
environment while at school. A full-day/full-year program was recently added to Hea rt of the
Valley and they are currently accepting children.

I

Calendars
Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Head start program expands to full days
BY BETH 5EROENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Heart of the Vall ey
Head Start located on Bradbury Road has
B Section - recently added a full-day/full-year program .
Sports
The program targets low-income families
A6 who are employed or going to school full- or
Weather
part-time. This can include job training and
participation in aGED program .
© 2:004 Ohio Volle,., P\lblishing Co.

" ---- -- --"·-

Heart of the Valley Head Start is partnered
with Jobs and Family Services that help pay
for child care. and th ey al so waiver all copay,. In oth er words. they acce pt no payme nt
from fam ilie s that qu alify for the ful lday/full -ye ar program .
Currently they serve II chi ldre n but hal'e a
goal of 17 with a waiting list to help sec u r~

Please see Head, AS

Bv

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HDEFLICH@MYDAIL YSE NTINEL .COM

POMEROY - Margare t
Park er h;h heen re -elected
prcs idc111 "r the :Vk1g'
County Hist11ric·al Societ) for
200'i h\. thL' SociCI\.-,
Board
.
or Trus!Ct'' ·
Other offiL'l'l'"- nam r:d \"'ere

Othe r 1 rustee' are Keith
-\,hk1- . .-\ n11a Clelmd. Pauv.
l&lt;'Ok . .\lar: Grace Cowdery.
Jtn c·c 1l,11 i'· Hrnv ard Frank .
P;tll' (;r·o"nieklc. Cl1arlene .
H&lt;,cfill'il . Ferman Moore.
:O.I arlt-nc· Rineh art. Marilyn
\\'olfc• a11d Karen Werry.
\\ ern and Rat' \1 &lt;~lrt' we re
llall1L'd

d1aJf\\'omc n o f 1h e

Ro) Holter. fi r•t 1·ic"c pre,i · me m her• 111 p
l"Olllllli ttee .
dent: Rae ,~lu tnc. -.econJ 'iu.:- Rt~~t ' ldr memher-.hip' &lt;tre
pre,idcnt: Robert Wing,· tt . S I 0. f.unil: mcm herships.
thi rd 1icc prc,idcnt : ~la .\ine
\\-" hlll'hl' t~d.
\l'l i'L'tan :
the
\\ ingL'II llolt'd that the
Rc1 . Wi llia m \l itkllc.,ll.ll'lh.

Please see Parker. As

rn:a"-Llf~r.

'

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