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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.:tnydailysentinel.com

·2005 girls high school volley~all pairings
S.turdly'• !MUI!a
FAIRBORN (AP)
Pairings for the state girls
DIYIItOHI
volleyball tournament, to be Cln. Mount Nob'e Dame def. Westerville
held Thursday, Friday and s. 25·15, 24·26, 25-18, 26-24
seton del. Cln. MtltY 25-20, 22-25.
Saturday at the Ervin J. Cln.
25·11, 25·18
Nutter Center. ·
Tol. St. \Jroula del. Elyria 25·15, 25-13,

2!;.18
Wooster def. Mentor 26·19, 25-21, 25· 114-

DIVISION I

-

STATI! SEMIFINALS
DIVISION II
Oin. seton (22-31 vs. WO&lt;&gt;sttr (24-a).
·T'hur8~av. 6 p.m.; Cln. Mt. Notre Dame Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit &lt;1. Jellaraon
(21·3) vs. Tol. Sl. Ursula (21-0) , Thur&amp;day. Area25-1t, 19-25.20-25,25-12. 15-13
STATE FINAl-5aturday, II a.m.
St. Bernard Roger Bacon dat Kenerlng
Aller 25-1 8, 25-23, 25-1 6
Sunbury Sjg Walnut.def. Ottawe.-Gtand011
DIVISION H
25-18, 25-16, 17-25,25-11
STATE SEMIFINALS
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit (23·2) vs. warsaw River Vte&lt;N def. Copley 17·25.
.Sumury Big Walnut (22·5). Fnday, Gartltl 21-25, 25·21, 25•19, 15-11
No.5; Warsaw Rivef View ·(24~2) vs. St
Barnard Roger Bacon (27-0). Friday,
Game Na.8.

STATE FINAL-&amp;i!Urday, 1 p.m.

DIVISION Ill
Anna clef. BIOOrn.CarroH 28·26, 25-22.

·

26-26

Clo. VASJ del. Smlllwllle 25-11, 25-18,
25-14

DIVISION Ill

STATE SEMIFINALS

Rockford

Cle. VASJ (22_.) vs. Anna (23-4), Friday,
Game No. 3; CastaUa Margaretta {23-4)

va. Williamsport Westfall (23{1),
Game No.4.
.STATE FINAL-Saturday, 4 p.m.

Parll;way

def.

Castalia,

Margaretta 25-23, 16-25, 25-23, 25-18
Wllllamspon Westlall d&amp;f. Coshocton 23-

Friday, 25,25-21 , 13-25, 25·20. 15-12
·

DIVISION IV
Newark Cath. det. Frankfort Adene 25.Q2,

DIVISION IV
32-30, 26·23
STATE SEMIFINALS
Norwalk St Paul lief. Dalton 25·14, 25. .
Norwalk St Paul (23-4) vs. NIWBrl&lt; Cath. 22, 25·12
(28-0), Friday, 11 a.m.; Old Fort (25·2) vs. Old Fon del. Kalida 16-25. 25·18, 25-18,
Sldnly Lehman (2&amp;()), Friday. Gama No. 26-24
2.
Sidney Lehman def. Marla Stein Marion
STATE FINAL-saturday, 1:30 p.m.
Local 16·2S. 27-26,25-23,26-24, 15·13

Bengals right where
they 'Yant to be, 7-2
CINCINNATI (AP) The bye ·week is usually a
ceremonial time for the
Cincinnati Bengals, a few
, days to take a step back and
say bye-bye to those illusions of playoff contentil!n
arid franchise revivaL
Not this year. Instead of
saying goodbye to a season,
they're starting to prepare
for a playoff run.
The Bengals (7 -2) are
heading into their bye week
with a winning record for
only the second time during
the)ast.l5 years. They' re in
first place in the AFC North,
a half-game ahead of
defending
champion
Pittsburgh - right on target
for their first playoff appearance since 1990.
' There's a lot to ponder
during
their one:week
break.
"The real challenge is to
forget the previous nine
games, because the big boys
start playing now," Pro
Bowl
tackle
Willie
Anderson said. "Year-in and
year-out: the Patriots and the
Eagles and those guys start
separating themselves from
the bunch. If you're going to
be in that postseason tournament, you've got to stay in
that bunch."
The Bengals are newcomers to the lead pack. During
the last 14 years, they've
usually been floundering by
the bye. Their only winning
record came in 2001, when
they were 4-3 at the bye and
finished 6-10.
They had two byes in
1993, and didn't gel anything out of either week off.
They went into the first one
at 0-4, then lost their next
three. games before the second bye.
In 2000, they moved into
their new· stadium and.
opened the season with a
bye. The Bengals then lost

Notebook

their first
six games
with Akili
Smith at
quarterback. It
got so bad
that coach
B r u c e

Coslet quit after the third
defeat, a 37-0 beating in
Baltimore that shpwed they
couldn't even keep up with
the rest nf the league.
There's a little symmetry
with this year's bye. They
held onto first place Sunday
by beating the Ravens in
Baltimore, 21-9, showing
they can't be pushed around
anymore.
The Jasti ng image was
quarterback Carson Palmer
getting sacked on the first
series and losing his helmet
as his face was groupd into
the artificial turf. When he
got up, the left side of his
face was covered with eye
black that was smeared during the tackle.
He kept playing with his
face still smeared. And the
Bengals did most of the
pushing around from that
point.
"That was our motto all
week," running back Rudi
Johnson said Monday. "That
meant a lot to this team,
meant a lot to this organization - what we're trying to
build, what we're trying to
stand for."
Coach Marvin Lewis
wouldn't talk Monday about
how his players are going to
spend the bye week. He
wouldn't say whether he
thinks the.y' ve gotten better
at taking media attention in
stride·. He didn't care to
praise anything they've
done so far.
"That's how you win
games and you get hot and
stay hot," Lewis said. "You
don't put any stock in what
you did last week."

Owens
from Page Bl
million deal he signed when
he came to Philadelphia in
· March. 2004.
Owens is scheduled to earn
$3.25 million this season ,
meaning the four-game suspension would cost him
.almost $800,000.
The Eagles will have to pay
Owens nearly $1 million to
stay home the final five
games.
Owens will either be traded
or released after the season.
He is due to receive a $5 mil lion roster .bonus in March
2006, so the Eagles will
decide his fate before then.
Owens made more than $9
million last season, when he
helped lead Philadelphia to
the Super BowL
Two years ago, the Tampa
Bay Buccaneers decided
they 'd had enough of
Keyshawn Johnson and did
something similar.
After Johnson criticized
coach Jon Grudcn, the Super .
Bowl champion Bucs deactivated the star rucei ver and
sent him home for the final six
games with pay.
The Eagles are 4-4 this season. And McNabb. who feuded with Owens throughout the
summer and has been a con-

College Basketball -

.Top 25 PrEs Eason Polf ·

Duke runs away with No. 1 in preseason AP poll
BY JIM O'CONNELL
AssocrATEo PREss

ranked for 167 consecutive
polls; dating to the preseason APTOP25
poll of 1996-97 season.
Duke is back at No. I in
Kansas had the secondThe Associated Press ' presealongest streak but the
son college basketball poll
Jayhawks are out of the rank-· The top 25 teams in The Associated
while defending champion
ings for the tirst time since Press' preseason men's college
North Carolina failed to even
-the preseason poll of 2000- basketball poll, with first-place votes.in
parentheses, 2004-05 records, total
make the Top 25.
· 0 I. a span of 93 polls.
Kansas,, the preseason No.
Kentucky now has the sec- points based on 25 points for a first.
only three of the ranki no. &gt; out
\lole through one point for a 25thI last year and another regu- oflhe top 1O.
oltd- lorigest active streak at place
place vote and 2004-05 final ranking:
lar in the. poll, also was not
The Blue Devils had a 80. dating to Feb. 12, 2001.
RECORD PTS PV
among .those teams ranked seven-yeanun of at ·least one
The record streak for con- TEAM
27·6 1,785 3
Monday.
.
Week at No. I snapped last secutive polls is 221 by !. .Duke [61)
The Blue Devtls were a
.
.
UCLA from the preseason 2.Texas [S)
26-111,652
.. c hotce
. for No. 1, th e . second.
season. real:hmg as htgh as po11 o f 1966-67 th roug h Jan.
runaway
3. Connecticul
23-8 1,578 13
stxlh llme they hav~ started
"I do expect us to be the 8, 1980.
4. Michigan St. (4) 26-7 1,572 15
the season atop .the rankmgs. best team in America,"
Texas was ranked No.2 for 5. Villanova (1)
24·8 1,413 19
North Carolina be.com~s Redick said. "I expect that one week in December 2002. 6. Oklahoma
25·8 1,378 17
the ft~sl detcndm&amp; nattonal every year. That is just the
"We don' t talk about it," 7. LOUISVille
33·5 1,319 4
champton not to be m the pre- confidence and mentality that coach Rick Barnes said of the 8. Gonzaga
26·5 1,275 1o
lofty ranking. "I think it's a 9. Kentucky
season poll the next season we have to have."
28-6 1,255 7
smce Kansas m 1988-89. The
Connecticut, which will compliment to our program 10. Arizona
30·7 1,212 9
Tar Heels lost thetr top seven play without suspended point and these players. But we 11 . Boslon College 25·5 1,093 14
scorers from last season , guard Marcus Williams until realize it's preseason."
12_ Memphis
22· 16 920 three to graduatton and four Jan. 3, was third followed by
The Big East leads the con- 13. Stanford
t8-13 842 underclassmen as NBA lot- Michigan State, which had ferences with five ranked 14. West Virginia 24-11 652 . four first -place votes , and teams
Connecticut, 15. Alabama
tery draft ptcks.
24·8 621 21
Bolstered by the return ot Villanova which was ' No. 1 Villanova, Louisville, West 16. Syracuse
27-7 586 11
All-~merica
guard JJ . on one baitot. . .
Virginia and Syracuse -the
17. Illinois
37·2 563 1
Red1ck and all-conference
Oklahoma was sixth and first three in the top seven.
18.
Wake
Forest
27-6 524 5
center Shelden Williams from Louisville, which moved
The ACC and Big Ten each
19.
UClA
18·11 499 a team that went 27-6 and from Conference USA to the had four teams in the presea20.
Iowa
21-12
395 reached the third round of the Big East, was seventh. son'Top 25.
NCAA tournament, Duke Gonzaga, Kentucky and . Four of the, teams in the 21. George Wash. 22·8 304 25·7 291 received 61 first-place ballots Arizona rounded out the top Top 25 weren t ranked at all .22. Nevada
23.
Indiana.
15-14 273
last season Stanford,
and 1,785 points from the 72- 10.
19·13 258 member national media
Boston College, which left UCLA, Indiana and Iowa 24. Maryland
25.
Iowa
St
19·12 251 paneL
the Big East for the Atlantk State. This is Iowa State 's
Texas, which has four dou- Coast Conference was II th first time in the poll since the Others recel"lng votes: Washington
·144. Texas Tech 142, Kansas 96, N.C.
ble-figure scorers back from followed . by 'Memphis, final poll of 2000-01.
a 20-11 that ·was beaten by Stanford, . West Virginia,
Kansas, Wake Forest and State 74, Ohio St 74, Wisconsin 56,
LSU 54, Georgetown 46, Charlotte 44,
Nevada in the NCAA's open- Alabama, Syracuse, lllinois, Ilhnots were ranked No. I North
Carolina 38, Michigan 24, N. .
ing round, was second with Wake Forest, UCLA and last season. The lllini ran the Iowa 21, Miami 16, Oklahoma St. 16,
six first-place votes and Iowa.
last 15 weeks and were a Old Dominion .13, Florida 6, Bucknell
· 1,652 points. It matches the
The last five ranked teams unanimous pick six times.
5, Ohio 4, Arkansas 3, S. Illinois 3,
The season starts Tuesday Cincinnati 2, Utah St 2, Wis.highest ranking in school his- were George Washington,
tory.
Nevada, Indiana, Maryland night with No. 16 Syracuse Milwaukee 2, CaUfomia 1, Hawaii 1,
Duke and Texas meet Dec. and Iowa State.
playing Bethune-Cookman in Houston 1, Notre Dame 1.
10 in Easl Rutherford, N.J.
The preseason poll started the 2K Sports College Hoops
AP
Kansas had been in the pre- with the 1961-62 season. Classtc benef111ng Coaches
Arizona) and No. 24
season poll every year since UCLA has the most No. I vs. Cancer.
1991-92, being out of the top rankings with eight, followed
The Maui Invitational on Maryland in its eight-team .
10 only three times. North by Duke's six arid North Nov. 21-23 has four teams in field along with Kansas,
Carolina was in all but one of Carolina's five.
the ' top · 10 (Connecticut, Arkansas and Chaminade, the
the . last 20 preseason polls,
The Bl~e Devils have been Michigan State, Gonzaga, Di¥ision II host school.

basllelball POll

Browns.halfway home, not halfway there
BEREA ( AP) - At the season' s halfway point, the
Cleveland Browns aren't
playing half bad.
Romeo Crennel isn't ready
to say they're half good,
though.
"When you ' re 3-5," the
rookie coach said in typical
simplicity and candor, "You
don't have many strengths."
Maybe not, but the Browns
(3-5) are showing signs of
improvement in nearly every
. facet of the game. On Sunday,
the club emerged from a week
of assorted distractions with a
20-14 victory over the
Tennessee Titans, a tight win
that has renewed the faith .o f
many of Cleveland's players .
"It gives us hope," said running back Reuben Droughns,
who rushed for 116 yards on
20 carries and added four
receptions for 73. "We still
' believe we can make a little
run and get some wins in the
next few games. We can' t
give up right now, and I don't
believe this team is ready to
give up."

Only a few days ago, the
Browns had enough soap
opera-like storylines that it
seemed they were on the
verge of seeing another season spiral out of control.
Quarterback Trent Dilfer's
starting status was becoming
less certain as Cleveland fans
clamored for the club to play
rookie Charlie Frye. Rookie
w.ide
receiver
Braylon
Edwards then compounded
the QB issue by chiming in
that Frye. could spark the
Browns before later saying he
was taken out of contex L
Last week, Droughns was
arrested on drunken driving
charges, and wide receiver
Dennis Northcutl wondered
aloud why he wasn't getting
the ball more. And on top of
that, punter Kyle Richardson
nearly lost his job after two
shanks in a loss to Houston
prompted the Browns to sign
a punter to the practice squad.
But just as the Browns were
beginning their accustomed
descent into dismay, they
managed to make just enough

year career. In 2000. he wus
suspended one game by San
a 56-yard TD reception. But Francisw
Steve
coal:h
the· Eagles' offense continued Mariucci following his infato struggle and couldn't score mous touchdown celebmtions
the tying touchdown with on the Dallas Cowboys'
three shots from the Redskins famed star logo at the center
7 in the final minutes.
·
of Texas Stadium.
The Eagles are 17-5 with
Owens clashed with manOwens, including a 24-21 loss agement this summer and
to New England in the Super earned a one-week exile from
Bowl. In that game, Owens training camp after a heated
had nine catches for 122 yards dispute . with Reid that folafter defying ·his doctor's lowed a shouting match ·with
advice and playing 6 1/2 offensive coordinator Brad
weeks after ankle surgery.
Childress.
They're 2-1 without him in
Owens forced a trade to the
games that matter, winning · Eagles las1 year after eight
twice in t)le NFC playoffs.
seasons with the 49ers and
Owens was set to earn base invigorated the offense with
salaries of $770,000 in 2006, his superior skills. He had 77
$5.~ million in 2007, $6.5 ' catches for 1,200 yards and 14
million in 2008, $7.5 million TDs in 14 games, helping the
in 2009, and $8.5 million in Eagles to a 13-1 start and nine
2010.
victories by double-digit marThis was the second time gins.
Owens ha,s been suspended
The bad blood between
during his controversial I0- Owens and McNabb began

Elect

Robart "Bob" Wood
for

Letart 7ownship 7rustaa
Thank You

big plays to edge the re.building Titans and snap a threegame losing streak.
For offensive tackle Ryan
Tucker, the season has started
over.
"l'.m trying to forget about
the past, the beginning of the
season," said Tucker, who
kept Titans defensive end
Kyle Vanden Bosch, one of
the AFC's top pass rushers,
off Dilfer. "I'm just starting at
each week and I was going to
wait until we got that first win
to start my new season." ·
lri recent weeks, Crennel
criticized an overall lack of
enthusiasm and energy in his
players, whom he felt weren't
playing with as much emotion
in the second half as at the
start of the game. But Sunday, ·
Crennelliked his team's effort
for all 60 minutes.
"At times, in trying to win
the game, I've felt like maybe
we were too tight. During the
course of the week, I talked to
them about positive things,
about making plays. Let's do
what we have to do to make

plays. Let's not play, not to
make a mistake. Let's play to
make a play. Whether it did
any good or not, I'm not sure,
but we seemed to play looser.
We weren't as tight." .
There has been one constant
for the Browns this season.
Through
eight
games,
Cleveland's defense has
emerged as the team's most
improved and dependable
unit, a group that came into
the season expected to struggle while learning a new 3-4
system.'
But as the club's offense
has sputtered and been il.iconsistent, the defense has ~een
able to keep games close.
"I don ' t think people felt
like we would keep teams
from scoring the way that
they have done at this point,"
Crennel said.
Cleveland's defense is giving up just 17 points per
game, and before allowing the
Titans to score two TDs, the
Browns had tied a club record
by not ~iving up more than
one TD 10 live straight games.

after Owens went down with a
severely sprained ankle and
broken leg in Week 15 against
Dallas. Owens was upset that
McNabb and other players
said the Eagles could reach
the Super Bowl without him.
which they did.
Soon after Philadelphia lost
to the Patriots, Owens took his
first shot at McNabb, suggesting the five-time Pro Bowl
quarterback was tired in the
fourth quarter of the loss.

McNabb responded harshly
and the two didn't speak for a
prolonged period in training
camp. They eventually reconciled their relationship and
performed well together on
the field - Owens has 47
catches for 763 _yard~ and six
TDs this season.
· However, Owens continued to throw verbal jabs at
McNabb during his weekly
radio show or whenever he
granted interviews,

Scoliosis
From the desk of. ..
Kelsey M. Henry D. C.
Scoliosis is a sideways curving of the spine and can usually
be detected by comparing shoulder and hip heights. The firs!
sign of lhe condilion is often uneven pan I leg lenglhs. Once
.scoliosis is detected and graded, frequenl check-ups for progression a re important for admini stering proper · care .. The

effects of scoliosis may be minimized with proper spinal
adjustment s (which improve overall spine movement and
ffexibilily), and specific stretches and exercises. If you or your
child is showing signs of scoliosis.. please coni act our office
for a scoliosi s evaluation.

1065 South Second Street
Mason, WV 25260
(304) 773-5773
Office Hours: M , W &amp; Fri 8:00 am . 5:00pm
. Othe r times by appointment only

·.

Police in Australia
say two terror cells
competing to be first
to stage attack, A6

Voters OK road repair, .
once-rejected research
financing, A2

••·scoii8UI

slam target of his c1iticism, Washington and caught ti ve
finally took a stand in the mat- passes for 94 yards, including

ter, saying the team might be
''better off' without Owens.
"Obviously it is tough losing a guy of his caliber, his
,ability, but I think we might
be better off," McNabb said
after throwing an interception
that Sealed the loss to
Washington.
"I think what we did
tonight, we showed that we
played well together. I think
we also showed that when
given the opportunity, guys
can make plays for us. We' re
4-4. We' re not 1-7. I think
that's the way to look at it. For
the guys in the locker room,
we win together and we lose
together," he said.
Asked to elaborate on how
the team could be better off
without ··its top receiver,
McNabb emphasized the
remaining players are united
wilh the same goal of winning.
"Nothing a~ainst him and
his attitude. It s just that when
you get out there on the field,
It's about ('laying together,"
McNabb satd. "I think we all
played with a lot of attitude
and a lot of adrenaline. Guys
played well together. It was
unfortunate that we didn ' t win
this game, but !.think it may
be a steppingstone for us to
move forward ."
Rookie Reggie Brown filled
in for Owens against

Tuesday, November 8, 2005

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
\\' EUN ~.SI&gt;,\ "t, NOVEM HER 9, 2005

:;o CENTS • \' ol. :;:;, ;\lo, b 1

SPORTS
• Marshall falls in
overtime to Southern
Miss. See Page 81

"~'w. mydail~s~ntincLcum

Craig tops Middleport ballot, McAngus Pomeroy's
BY BRIAN J. REEO
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Three new
Middleport Village Council
m'embers were elected and a
current council member
elected in his own right on
Tuesday, and in Pomeroy,
two new council members
were elected and two others
re-elected.
· In Middleport's seven-way
race for . four council seats,
Jean Craig was the top vote
· getter in yesterday's general

election , with 308 votes.
Ferman E. Moore was second, .
with 271 votes, and Sandra
Fultz Brown, with 258. was
third. Jeffrey D. Peckham, !he
only Democrat in the race and
the only current council member to run this year and win reelection, received 233 votes.
Bernard D. Gilkey received
214 votes, Robert Pooler 213,
Councilman Shawn Rice 209,
and Council member Kathy
Scott 170.
Mary McAngus received
183 votes in her bid for elec-

tion to the council. to which
she was appointed. William
Barnhart received 1·77 votes.
Councilman James Sisson
166. .and George F. Stewart.
Jr.. 157. Othercandidates,were
Shawn Arnott, 147. Brian C
Young, 135. Vicki A. Hanson.
114.and Councilman William
Todd NortQn, 93. Arnott ,
Han son. Stewart and Young
are registered Republicans,
and Barnhart, McAngus, and
Norton are Democrats.
Mayor Eric Cunningham
soundly defeated Donna

Peterson in the race for
Syracuse Mayor, 21 0 to 71.
Cunningham was appointed
to the post. Michael R. Van
Meter and Mike Jacks
received I 5~ and 127 votes.
respecti~ely , for seats on
Syracuse Village Council .
' where rour seats were avail ~
able.
Write-in Kenneth
Buckley received 10 votes .
Gordon
Winebrenner
received 241 votes for the
Board of' Public Affair' in
Syracuse. Two were to be
. elected. but Winebrenner was

the only l:andidate to file .
.L Dean Harris. the only
cand i.uale to rile fur a seat on
Rutland Village Council,
received 106 votes . Four
members of council expire at
the end of the year.
Four members of Racine
Village Council were lo be
elected. but no candidates ·
filed One member of the
Board of Public Affairs in
Racine was to be elected, and
no candidate filed .

Please see Ballot. AS

Thesday bad LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICTS COMMENDED FOR
day for many
SCHOOL BREAKFAST PROGRAM
levies, issues BYUTILIZING
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
By BRIAN J. REED

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BREEIJ@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ATHENS- Schools in the
POMEROY Meigs 29 Appalachian counties,
County voters rejected a pro- including Meigs and Eastern
posed telephone line fee for Local Schoof' Districts, have
911 service, voters in been commended for ....outSouthern Local turned down standing achievements" in
a new levy for current utilizing the USDA school
Page AS
expense·s, and Middleport breakfast program.
voters defeated a 1.5-mill
The commendations came
• Bernice Baker, 88
levy for street lights.
at a meeting of the Children's
• Lena Bunce, 82
In the Village of Syracuse, HungerAIIiance with legisla• Ruth Cline, 86
voters said "no" to a new tax tors and superintendents at
the
Athens-Meigs
• James Mason Fisher, 91 for police protection.
A renewal of the Meigs Educational Service Center
County Tuberculosis Levy last week. The purpose of the
passed easily, and vote~ in meeting was .\&lt;&gt; discuss the
Lebanon Township passed no-cost universal breakfast
two local liquor options, . program geared to ensure
allowing the sale, including Impoverished children have
• Family Medicine.
Sunday sales, of beer, wine ttie necessary food and nutriSee Page A2
and mixed beverages at a new tion to grow and learn.
While not all Appalachian
• Free cancer screenings business to be opened there.
schools
are serving breakCounty
Meigs
offered by O'Bieness.
Commissioners proposed the fasts and some are only this .
See Page A3
50-cent telephone line fee for year implementing "universal
• Rutland Garden Club .
all land line telephones in the breakfasts" (which means all
to pay for a 911 emer- students eat at no cost) of
county
' meets. See Page A3
Submmed photo
gency system, but did little to those participating Meigs and
• Pancake breakfast a
Charlie
Kozlesky,
senior
vice
president
of
the
Children's
Hunger
Alliance.
left,
and Dr. John
promote the levy. It was Eastern showed the lowest
Costanzo,
superintenoent
of
the
Athens-Meigs
Education
Service
Center,
speak
at
last week's
percentage of disadvantaged
success. See Page A3
defeated, 3,376 to 2,652.
meeting in Athens about the progress being made on developing USDA breakfast programs in
.
Middleport's additional students participating.
• Republicans enjoy ·
schools
of Appalachian counties.
to
the
Alliance
According
1.5-mill levy, for current
annual bean dinner.
report presented at the meetPlease see Levies, Al
For the past two years the lhc
state's
twenty-nine
ing for the school year 2004- of partidpation was nol
See Page A3
included
in
tile
report.
Children's
Hunger
Alliance,
Appalachian counties qualify
05 a total of 23 school districts
• Local Briefs.
were participating in the uni- However, Tim Thorne. cafe- in partnership with the Ohio for a free or . reuui:eu . rate
See Page AS
versal breakfast program. The teria supervisor, reports . that · Legislature and the Ohio school breakfast.
percentages of disadvantaged in October 52- 1/2 percenl of Department of Education
• For the Record,
During !he 2004-2005
students in the free or (ODE! has been working school year, 43,:107 children
taking
p~rt ranged
students
See Page AS
from a low of 52 percent in reduced category ate break- With school districts lo help in the region ate hreakfast at
• One killed, two
overcome harriers and imple- school l:omparccl to 38.528
the Meigs Local School fast at schooL
Meigs food service supervi- ment
proven- succeosful l:hi ldrcn eating breakfast the
District to a high of99 percent
wounded in Jacksboro
sor.
Marilyn
Meier,
noted
that
strategies
to
increase stuuent prior year. a 12 percent
in
the
Ironton
City
School
school shooting.
District. Eastern showed a 55 in October the percentage of participation in school break- increase in participation.
See Page A7
disadvantaged Sludents (free fast programs.
·
percent participation.
The Hunger Alliance credBY
BETH
SERGENT
According to a report ils the support of school leadSouthern has a breakfast and reduceu ) participating in
• Land transfers posted.
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
program but since it is no! a the no-cost breakfast had released by the Alliance,
See Page AB
91 ,R12 children residing in
Please see Schools, AS
no-cost program, percentage increased to 70 percent.
RACINE -An official
• Meigs County Court
groundbreaking will be held
News. See Page A8
at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Racine
for the village's new water
treatment plant.
The groundbreaking will
WEATHER
precede a a pre-construction
conference for engineers
.and construction personnel
BY BETH SERGENT
that will be a part of buildBS oRGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
ing the plant.
The groundbreaking was
POMEROY - At yesterscheduled at this week's regbusiness- minded lunday's
ular meeting of Racine
c h~on of the Meigs County
Village Council.
Chamber of Commerce the
Other business at the meettopic was how to start up as
ing included:
·
well as develop existing small
The resignation of President
businesses with the free assisof Council Gary Freeman who
Detallo on Page AB
tance of Ohio University's
resigned his seat at the concluVninovich
Center
for
sion of this week's meeting
Leadership and Public Affairs
citing "personal reasons."
at The Rid"e' in Athens.
"I think you've been an
Lissa Joi"li ck, business. conexcellent council member,"
;
ultanl
with the Voinovich
Clerk-Treasurer
David
2 SECI'IONS - 16 PAGES '
Center \
Business
Spencer
said
to
Freeman
.
.
Calendars
A.3
opment
Group
spoke to
Devel
"I wish you' d reconsider,"
the audience about that free
Classifieds
B4-6 Councilman Ivan Rowen said
ass islance whic h includes a
with Councilmen Ike Spencer
vari ety of cnn"ulting services
and Jason Shain sharing the
Comics
includ
ing business plan
same sentiments.
de velopment. finance and
Freeman did not change his
Dear Abby
accounling. marketing, techmind and council reluctantly
nology and process improveEditorials
accepted his resignation .
·mcnt. organizational develCouncil has 30 days to
Obituaries
opment. manufacturing. govappoint another council
ernment proLurement, inter ~
member and may possibly
Brian J. Reed/ photo
Sports
B Section elect another president of
natio nal trade.
Brenda Barnhart. president of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club , presented a check for
The Voino vich Center's
council at the next meeting.
$1,270 to Rev. Keith Rader of God 's NET, at Monday evening's weekly Rotary Club meeting. Business De,·elopment Group
Weather
AS
Racine had no one 'from the
The check represents proceeds from a chil i and soup supper the club sponsored last month to
Please see Business, Al
Please see Rllclne, AS
..
benefit l'lod 's NET's youth nutrition program.
© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
"

OBITUARIES

INSIDK..

Racine water
treatment plant
groundbreaking
tomorrow

Rotary Club donates to God's NET Want to start a

small business?
OU can help.

INDEX

..

�Page A:!

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 9,

e~its

the voting

Jollick said that the School. Dinner will be served
Business
Development at 6 .p.m. with the show startGroup is there not to tell peo- ing at 7 p.m.
.
$15
apd
must
be
Tickets
are
ple what to do but to interact
from PageA1
purchased in advance. There
wit~ entrepreneurs and be
honest about the feasibility of ts limited seating and no tickhas rec~ntly enhanced its rela- a proposed business for the ets will be sold at the door.
tionship with OU's College of area, which sometimes
Ticket locations are Dan's
Business, making 70 college means telling people what and Fanners Bank of Pomeroy
advisors available to assist in they don't want to hear.
and Mason ,W.Va., Middleport
the development of the free
Jollick said 'the biggest Dept. Store, Peoples Bank and
· obstacle facing small busi- Hometown Market. For more
consulting services.
For those thinking about ness development in Meigs information please call 992. going into business the County is that it is economi- 7396 or 992-6759.
Business Development Group cally depressed with some
A "live swing band" will also
offers classes thai will help limitations as far as product be featured in all of the musical
people evaluate the potential of marketing. ,
numbers. The band members
a business idea and learn what
The services Jollick spoke are all local musicians.
it will take to move it forward. of are grant-funded, keeping
Chamber president Tom
For· recently started firms them at no cost to the public. Reed reminded members of the
and new companies the The purpose of the services Chamber Bucks now available
Development of the Voinovich Center at the Chamber office. The
Business
Group assists in the early which include its Business Chamber Bucks can be spent'at
stages of business develop- Development Group is to any Chamber busine&gt;Ses and
ment by offering its consult- stimulate the economy in can be give·n as gifts.
·
ing services. Established Southeast Ohio.
Reed also reminded that
companies can take advanthe Chamber's 2006 memThose
interested
can
con,
act
AP Photo
tage of more specialized ser- Jollick at 593-1797 or email bership drive will be getting
booth at the Barnett Recreation Center Tuesday in Columbus.· vices such as how to improve
underway soon. Those interher at jollickl @ohio.edu.
inventory control, how to cut
In other Chamber announce- ested should ca11992-5005.
expenses, how to minimize ments Gary Walker of the
Judy Williams and Jenny
waste and manage payroll.
River City Players announced Smith announced a memberThe Center alscihas a pro- his grolijl'S upcoming dinner ship
discount
during
gram on how to help identify theatre production of "The November for The Body Shop
government contracts, keep- Melody Lingers On" which - Go Figure! fitness center at
ing small entrepreneurs celebrates the life and music of I08 West Main Street. For one
stayed clear of publicity for major trade groups and the informed of those jobs big Irving Berlin. The show is on week try 30 minute workout
Nov. 26 at Meigs Elementary circuit for free. Call 992"9070.
Issue I this year.
Ohio Farm Bureau, which and small.
"I don ' t think thi s was opposed the idea two years
protection for five years, 170
• Salem
Township,
a
about me,'' Taft said Tuesday. ago, say the money is needed
against,
I
i
2
for.
replacement
of
I
mill
for
the
"Thi s was about how do we to keep Ohio's infrastructure
~ Rutland Village, a renewal
purpose of fire protection for
create jobs for a better eco- up to date and help the state
of a tax of 2 mills for the pur- live years, 177 for, 68 against.
from PageA1
nomic climate for Ohioans move beyond its manufacpose of current expenses for
Local issues
going forward ."
.
turing base .
five
years,
88
for,
35
against.
•
Shall
. the sale of beer,
"People decided they want- expenses, was defeated 308
Taft said Issue I was one of
•
Pomeroy
Village,
a
renewwine
and
mixed
beverages be
several efforts he backed to ed to invest in their own to 264, despite a strong camal
of
a
tax
of
2
mills
for
the
permitted
by
Roadside
improve Ohio's economy. future." said Lt. Gov. Bruce paign by the village encourpurpose
of
fire
protection
for
Hotspot,
L.L.C.
doing
busiincluding changes to the tax Johnson. who led the cam- aging its passage. The levy
five years, 301 for. 82 against. ness as The Hot Spot, in
code. efforts to limit lawsuits paign in · favor of Issue I. was to have specifically gone
• Pomeroy
Village,
a Lebanon Township, operating
and a tight state budget.
"Roads and bridges will be toward street lights in the vil- renewal of a tax ofl mill for
a carryout and convenience
Some conservative groups built, technology and innova- lage, and Mayor Sandy the purpose of current store? 241, yes, 132. no.
lannarelli said last month the expenses for five years, 258
opposed the proposal , calling tion will continue strong."
• Shall the sale of beer.
it corporate welfare and sayThe vote proves Ohio sup- village may have to turn the for. 124 against.
wine and mixed beverages be
ing · the bioscience funding ports the state's plans for lights out if the levy failed.
• Pomeroy Village, a renew- permitted for sale on Sunday
The additional I .5-mill al of a tax of I mill for the pur- between the hours of I p.m .
should include a ban against . boosting the economy, said
funding any embryonic stem House Speaker Jon Husted, a levy proposed by Southern pose of maintaining and oper- and midnight at the Roadside
cell research.
suburban
Dayton Local School District lost by ating cemeteries· for five Hotspot, L.L.C., doing busia two-thirds margin: I, 102 years, 271 for, Ill against.
But a poll by the Republican.
ness as the Hot Spot be perUniversity of Akron showed
More than 10,000 projects against, 504 for. It was to
• Rutland ' Township. a mitted? 268, yes, 120, no. ·
that 64 percent of respon- have been completed with the have gone for buses, win- · replacement of I mill for the
· Slate issues
dows. technology and other purpose of fire proection for
dents who belong to bond money in 18 years.
Meigs County voters supChristian
conservative
Iss ue I started.out as a sec- educational equipment.
five years, 340 for, 150 against. ported State Issue I, providing
The TB levy passed 3,808
• Lebanon Township, a bonds for economic developgroups supported the bond ond renewal of the constructo2,187.
replacement
of I mill for the ment and local improvement
iss.ue anyway. The poll of tion program. It fell into conOther
levies
purpose of maintaining and projects, 2,807 to 2,278. They
1,076 registered voters was troversy
when
Taft
• Racine Village, a replace- operating cemeteries for five rejected state issues 2-5, dealconducted Sept. 28-0ct: 20.
announced he wanted to tack
ing with state election
Opponents failed to get on the $500 million high-tech ment of 2 mills for the pur- years, 221 for, 150 against.
pose
of
current
expenses
for
•
Columbia
Township,
a
reforms, by margins of 74 pertheir message out and were jobs issue.
five
years,
132
for,
80
against.
replacement
of
I
mill
for
the
cent for Issue 2. 79 percent for
Taft was convicted in
outspent by millions of dol•
Syracuse
Village,
an
addipurpose
of
ftre
protection
for
Issue 3, 82 percent for Issue 4,
Iars. said David Zanotti, pres- August of failing to report
tional
tax
of
2
mills
for
police
five
years,
250
for.
108
against
and
82 percent for Issue 5.
ident of the consecvative that he was treated to golf
Ohio Roundtable. .
· outings.
.
"Now the burden of proof
, Several states are setting
is on them," said Zanotti, up funds to encourage stem
~
who questioned the predic· cell research and recruit scilions of job growth, "We'll enlists. At least five states
see if they can deliver."
limit stem cell research in
Supporters, including all some way.

Voters OK road repair,
once-rejected research financing
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

:

COLU~IBLS Voters'
solid support for a popular
highway repair program and
. a plan to creat~ jobs by funding bioscience was a Yictory
for Gov. Bob Taft. still reeling from historically low poll
numbers and his August conviction on ethics violations.
Issue I, which will proyide
dollars for road and bridge
construction and give com'
· panies grants for high-tech
research. had 1.327.917
votes in favor, or 54 percent,
with 1,128.574 opposed, or
46 percent, with 91 percent
of precincts
reporting,
according to unofficial
returns compiled by The
Associated Press.
Ohio cities, villages and
townships favored Issue I
because $1 .5 billion of it will
go toward bridge and road
repairs and cleaning up old
industrial sites 'in ~ program
·started in 1987.
The remaining $500 million will support Taft's program to invest more in
research in such areas as the
biomedical industry as a
way to generate jobs, a proposal voters narrowly turned
down before.
Taft appeared in some ads
for the measure in 2003 but

Levies

...

-.....••

•

••··'

•--Pet
Calendar
zoo6
~
••
•••

FAMILY MEDICINE

Readers theory about her
gallbladder pain interesting
Question: After five days
of unremitting discomfort,
punctuated by bouts of
intense pain, I was hospital ized and tests showed my
cystic .duct was blocked .
When my gallbladder was
removed,
though,
it
· appeared to be healthy. I
wonder if I had stones that
might have passed, but damaged the duct and caused
blockage. The surgeon'
wouldn 't speculate. I've
·.read
. that there is also something called a coli cky gallbladder and also that the liquid in the bladde r can thicken into a "sludge" thai won't
pass. Can you tell me more
about gallbladder problems?
Answer: While I cannot
tell you specifically what
caused your blockage. I do
find your theory well thought
out. But , before we look at
that in more detuil. let \ tirst
have a brief anatomy lesson
and look at some of the common causes of this type of
obstruction.
The gallbladder is a smal l,
pear-shaped
re servoir
attached to ·the underside of
the liver. The ga llbladder
stores and concen trates the
liquid you referred to in your
question, which · is cal led
bile. It is produced by the
liver and released into a portion of the small intesti ne
called the duodenum. Bile,
released after a meal containing fats. aids in absorption
and digestion of the fat. Bile
duct blockage, a condition
doctors call biliary• obstruc-

.

tion, can occur anywhere
along ductwork that carries
the bile from the liver to the
gallbladder to the small
iniestine. When one.of these
ducts is obstructed, the bile
backs up into the liver and
that causes jaundice . In this
condition, the skin and eyes
turn yellow. because a pigment known as bilirubin
accumulates in the blood.
Several problems can cause
the bile' ducts to become
obstructed. Gallstones are the
primary cause of obstruction.
If a person with gallstones
passes a gallstone that is too
large to fit through a bile
duct, it gets caught and
obstructs the duct. Trauma
can occur to the bile duct
from an auto accident or
upper abdominal trauma,
such as a severe fall .
The bile ducts can have
cysts in them that can narrow
the passageways and cause
obstruction. Tumors of any
part of the digestive system,
inducting the pancreas. can
lead to blockage,.
Pancreatitis,
pancreatic
and
cancer. gall stones,
abdominal trauma are all· risk
factors for developing a bile
duct' obstruction. Any blockage of a bile duct can cause
what you called "gallbladder
colic," which is really co lic
of the duct.
I didn ' ~ find anything that
directly supports your interesting theory about a delayed
reaction from stones that had
already passed. But. it is possible for people to have

"silent'' gallstones, ones that
cause no symptoms, which
can also pass without notice.
This could cause inflammation of the ducts, and inflammation is a cause of biliary
obstruction.
Finally, let me answer your
question about ga llbladder
sludge. This highly descriptive · term refers to an
increased viscosity in the bile
due to crystallization but
without stone formation.
Sludge may eventually lead
to the formation of stones in
some cases.
In one study. in 71 p~rcent
of cases sludge resolved on
its own , in nine percent it
became stones, and in seven
percent of cases it devel oped into a se riou ~ cond! tion
ca lled
acalculous
'cholecystitis.

. Family Medicine® is a
weekly column. To submit
questions, 'write to Martha A.
Simpson, D.O,, M.B.A.,
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O. ·
Box 110, Athens, Ohio
,45701, or via e-mail to read•
erquestions@familymedicinenews.org. Medical informatioll i11this column is provided as an educati011al service only. It does rwt replace
the judgment pf your per.sonal physician, wlw should
be relied 011 to diagnose and
recommend treatment for
a11y medical conditions. Past
column.~ are available online
at
www.familymedicinellews.org.

'

•

...

•..
'

•••

••

••

•

•

••••
•

•••

••
••

....
Deadline for entries is: November 30, 2005

•..

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

•

i~-.--.-----.-.;..--.-.---------------------------- ~

Name of pet:
• : Your Name:
.: Address:
I

c
1

. ••
'
"
I

.,
1,

I

··~I

Phone:

Wednesilay, November 9,

2005

2005

Business

Susie Rodgers

. · PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -

'"

Vindictive sister must be kept at arms length Community Calendar
DEAR ABBY: Our family
has a serious problem with
one sibling. Whenever we
disagree with this sister,
something "happens" to us.
Some examples: I told her
she was wrong to have started a fight with another sister.
Within one week, Child
Protective Services was
knocking on my c!oor.
My other sister had a quarrel with ber, and the very next
day that. sister went to drive
to work and found that
''somepne" had smashed the
windows in her car. My
brother said something she
didn't like one day. She visited him a few days later, and
the next day his parrots (he
breeds parrots) were dead.
(She actually bragged to
other family members about
the parrots and Child
Protective Services.)
All three of us get prank
calls, and we have spotted her
repeatedly driving by our
homes. · Our parents think ·
these are just "coincidences"
and we're making a big deal
out of nothing.
Now this sister needs io go
in for surgery, ·and our parents think we should rally
around her. The three of us
want nothing more to do
with her. I have even
instructed my children to
· call the 'police if she ever
comes to our home again.
Please print this letter, Abby.
We are hoping it will help
our parents see through her
and open their eyes. But in
the meantime, we don't
know what to do next. Any
ideas?- SLEEPING WITH
ONE EYE OPEN IN MASSACHUSETTS
DEAR SLEEPING: Only

Dear
Abby

this: Your sister appears to
be seriously unbalanced. Do
not allow yourselves to be
guilted
into "rallying"
around her. You and the two
siblings who have been victims of her vandalism should
vtsll your local police
department and file a· report
about what happened, who
you think did it, and why.
You cannot force your parents out of their state of
denial. Only she can do that
when, inevitably, one day she
finally goes too far. You are
safer at a distance.
DEAR ABBY: I am '25
years old, the mother of two
beautiful daughters, "Lisa"
and "Lily," who are 3 1/2
years and 19 months old.
Lily suffered· a . stroke two
weeks ago and is now partially paralyzed. She had a
prolonged seizure that lasted
2 1/2 hours that I know of,
but possibly five hours in all.
She can no longer crawl or
sit up by herself. She must
now have heavy and intensive rehabilitation to regain
the use of her left side.
I was told that if I had gotten Lily to the ER even 30
minutes later, she'd have
died. My father-in-law and I
drove her to the ER ourselves. I was holding her in
my arms while she con-

vulsed with the seizure.
Each mile we got closer to
the hospital, the weaker she
became . What kept Lily
fighting w~s hearin g my
voice as I prayed aloud and
feelin·g my love for her..
I thank God that my
daughter is aliv~ today.
Please stress to your readers
how important it is to call
an ambulance when something like this happens. The
ambulance workers ca n do
miracle s. If I had ca ll ed
911, my daughter might n'ot
have suffered the stro ke. LOVING MOTHER , WALTERS , OKLA .
DEAR LOVING MOTHER: Thank you for reminding other parents that in a
medical emergency, the
smart thing to do is call 911.
The last time the subject was
mentioned in this column it
was in the context of middle-aged women having
heart attacks.
Although the first impulse
is to rush a ' loved one to the
hospital ourselves, family
members should realize that
emergency medical technicians are trained, and ilave
the equipment on hand. to
perform · Iifesaving interven- ·
tions. Not only do they know
exactly how to gel to the
hospital, their vehicles have
sirens that can reduce the
driving time and save precious minutes.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Burell, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was fou/lded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P. 0.
Box 69440, Los A11ge/es, CA
90069.

Public meetings
Wednesday, Nov. 9
CHESHIRE - Board of
Directors of Gallia-Mcigs
Community Action Agency.
noon, Chesh ire office.
POM EROY
Meigs
County Board of Health
meeti n)l. 5 p.m .. in the conterence room at the Meigs
County Health Dcpat1ment.

Clubs and ·
organizations
Wednesday. Nov. 9
POMEROY - PomeroyMiddleport Lions club noon
luncheon meeting. Senior
Citi zens Cente r. . Anyone
in terested 111 community
improvement asked to attend.
RUTLAND - Signups for
Biddy
League
Meigs
wrestling. 6 p.m., Nov. 9 and
23. Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department. Cost is $20 per
child. The program is open to
those i:our to 12. Information
from Cara Hall , 992-9066.
POMEROY ~ Narcotics
Anonymous. open dis cussion. 7 p.m.. Sacred Heart
Church .
Thursday, Nov.lO
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters. II :30 a.m .. St. Paul
Lutheran Church. Hostesses
will be Margaret · Stewart.

Donna Byer. and Martha held 7 p.m. Nov. Il -l .1 at
McPhail. Vel ma Rue will the
Reed sv ilc
Un it ed
Methodist Church. l'llillip
have the program.
POMEROY
- AA/AI· Scarberry will be providing
Anon open discussion. 7 special mu'sic.
Sunday, Nov. 13
p.m., Sacred Heart Church. .
POMEROY Trinity
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 will meet at Congregational Church wiil
7 p.m at the hall with a dinner celebrate its tOOth anniversary of the building of the
to be served at 6:30p.m.
· SYRACUSE - Wildwood present church structure at
Garden Club to meet at 2 the 10:30 a.hl. service. A felp.m. at . the Syracuse lowship dinner will follow
Community Center. Janet the service.
Bolin to teach class on synergistic and duo designs.
Members should take materials to create two designs.
Friday, Nov. 11
Friday, Nov. 11
RACINE Enduring
MIDDLEPORT The Freedom Support Group and
Widows Fellowship will RACO will host "Honor the
meet at noon ai Gino's m Veterans" program at 7 p.m.
Mason, W. Va.
at American Legion Hall
Saturday, Nov. 12
Post 602. Representative
POMEROY - AA closed Jimmy · Stewart and local
Big Book study, 8 p.m .. soldier
Charles
Wolfe
Sacred Heart Church.
speakers, songs by Craig
Harri so n. Refreshments to
follow program.

Other events

Church events

Birthdays

Thursday, Nov. 10
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Congregation of
Friday, Nov. 11
Jehovah 's Witnesses, Inc.
RUTLAND . - Roberta
will hold its annual corpora- Wil son. longtime principal
tion meeting at9 p.m. at the at the Salem Center School ,
Kingdom Hall, 37319 State . will celebrate her 93rd
Route 124.
birthday on Nov. II . Cards
Friday, Nov. ll
may be sent to her at 40
REEDSVILLE
A Mayor Street. Emmalenna,
weekend revival will be Ky., 41740.

PANCAKE BREAKFAST A SUCCESS

CHESTER -- The success of councilors meetings.
exchange, and nominations of
the recent pancake breakfast
Charlotte Grant received her ofticers. Door prizes were won
was reported to members of commission to be deputy state. by Laura Mae Nice, Thelma
Chester Council323. Daughters councilor for another year.
White, and Janel Depoy.
of America. at a recent meeting.
Quarterly birthdays will be
Refreshments were served
Jo Ann Ritchie thanked all observed at the Dec. 6 meeting by Charlotte and Everett
· those who donated and helped with a potluck dinner. It will Grant and Doris Grueser.
with the breakfast held at the be the District 13 friendship Oth.ers attending were Esther
Chester Fire Depiartment and meeting and an auction will be Smith, Julie Fleming, Mary
ex pre"ed appreciation to the held with members to take
they are planting thi s fall.
firemen for allowing the Dot'A items. Also included will be a K.. Holter. lnzy Newell. Gary
Holter, Arden · Depoy. Ruth
A luncheon preceded the to use their building. Funds
Chrismas
program,
a
$3
gift
Smith and Sant,ly White.
meeting. Combs gave devo- raised will go toward renovations and reports were given tion of the Chester Academy.
by the officers. There regionThelma White, councilor,
al and county board meeting-s opened the meeting with the
were discussed as was the Lord's prayer and pledges to
upcoming Christmas flower the Christian and American
Church Bazaar
show to be held at Carleton fla gs. Scripture was read by
Pomeroy, OH
School, Nov. 19-20. Theme Ritchie. Esther Smith and
Thursday.
·November lOth, 2005
is "A Cozy Christmas." Set- Opal Hollon gave officers '
up by all clubs will be at 6 reports. The district rally was
Dinners Start at 4:30pm
p.m. Nov.l8 and tear down announced for Apri I 29 at the
$7.00
Adults
$3.00 Children under 12
will be Nov. 20 at 5 p.m. Masonic H011 in Chester mid .
Menu:
Creamed
Baked Chicken or Ham
Each club is to furnish cook- members were encouraged to
Homemade Noodles, Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
ies and sandwiches. Sheila continue studying their rituals.
Green Beans, Coleslaw, Roll &amp; Dessert
Curtis is chairman.
It was announced that the past
The traveling prize fur- Councilors Club will meet Nov.
Rt4/h: 1rl1'ritl. S50o.oo •
.
nished by Marjorie Rice was · 15 at 7 p.m. at the Masonic hall
21111 1'rilt. S200. 00
?-,. St""""'
won by Lowery. Dorothy . with Jean Welsh and Mary Jo
3Nl, 'lilt &amp; 5111 flritl, SIOO.OO
• iJ-u
Woodard is to furnish the trav- Barringer as hostesses, and
·~~~
eling prize for the I p.m. Nov. Opal Hollon and Thelma White
28 meeting at the Rice home. to conduct games. It will also be
the District 13 deputy and past

Rutland Garden Club meets
RUTLAND . -Fall plantings for spring flowers was the
theme of the program presented at a recent meeting of the
· Rutland Garden Club held at
the home of JQy Combs.
Combs talked about planting bulbs noting .their contribution to spring color and the
ease with which they can be
grown. Using "Bring Out the
Bulbs" was her. topic, she
gave planting tips suggesting
that large, medium and small
bulbs be planted together in
"soil-less' potting mix and
then put in a trench lined with
dry leaves for insulate them
from the cold.
As the buds start swelling in
early spring, she suggested
removing the top layer of
· leaves.and then when the first

sprouts appear, remove the
pot and put in a more decorative container.
Combs also gave material
on weaving a tapestry of color
with coral bells which she
said make great cut 11owers,
and attract hummingbirds.
She talked about the variety
of color, the need for sunshine
and good drainage, and talked
about the need to separate
clumps when . the foliage
begin to lose vigor.
Betty Lowery's comments
were on fall garden cleanup
and landscape activities, as
taken from material provided
by Hal Kneen, Meigs
Extension Educator.
Information on how to trace
leaves was given, and for roil
call members noted bulbs

Sacred Heart

·Free tancer screenings offered by O'Bleness
ATHENS - O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital will once
again co-sponsor a "Women
Only" event to assist area
women without health insurance (including Medicare or
.Medicaid).
Free screenings for cervical cancer and breast cancer
·will
be · provided
by
O'Bienes~.
River
Rose

Woodland
·interest group
to meet
ATHENS
The
Southeast Ohio Woodland
Interest Group meeting will
be held 7 p.m. on Monday,
Nov. 21 at the Athens County
Extension office.
The business meeting will
include election of officers.
The program will include a
D.VD entitled "A Forest
Returns". This is the story of
.the establishment of the
,Wayne National Forest as
told by Ora Anderson. The
second part of the program
will consist of sharing by the ·
members . of management
practices that worked or dido 't work on their woodlands
this past year. along with
lessons learned. For more
information call593-8555.

I

PROUD TO BE APAIIT
. OF YOUR LIFE.
~

,

..

!

The ()oily Sentirul
Subscribe today • 992-2155
~ www,mydailyuntirul.com

'

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology.
Pathology
and
Athens
Radiology
Associates.
Appointments are required.
The examinations will be
Friday, Nov. 18. fr&lt;?m noon to
3 p.m. at River Rose
Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology in
the Castrop Center at the
O'Bieness Medical Park. If
the clinical breast exam or the

· Republicans enjoy
annual bean dinner
POMEROY -The annual
bean dinner of Meigs County
Republicans celebrated was
held recently at the Meigs
County Senior Center.
Soup beans, chili, vegetable soup, hot dogs and
dozens of different desserts
were provided · to all those
who attended. Grover Salser
had the opening prayer and
Charlie Barrett, Jr., president
of the executive committee

·• ....

-~

introduced guests .
Door prizes donated by ·
Jim Petro. Bob and Jane
Beegle, and Mr. and .Mrs. Ed
Beatty were awa rded to ·
Glady s Cummins. Gena
Tenaglia, Stacy Walp. and
Randy
Butcher.
Representative
Jimm y
Stewart, Danny Hannon, and
Pete Couladis spoke briefly
and Oscar Smith had th e
closing prayer.

-·--------EE HEARING TESTS
COUPON

1
Will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by
I
I ~.e TM HEARING AID CENTER I
I '
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes Office
.I
1 New Location: 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH 1
FRIDAY, Nov. 11, 2005o 9:00am-noon • (740) 446-1744 I
I Call
Toll Free 1-800-634·5265 for an immediate appointment.
I The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist. I
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding · 1
I conversation
Is Invited to have a FREE hearing test to see if
I this problem can be helped! Bring this coupon with you for I
FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
I
I UMWA •your
UAW • ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
..

...-

woman 's history indicates
further testing is necessary. a
certificate for a free mammogram will be given to the
individual. Women over the
age of 17 are eligible for the
free service. To make an
appointment or for more
information·.
call
the
Community
Relations
Department, Ext. 9300.

---------------

. .....,..... . . .......

WALK-INS WELCOME

·- ,.

•.

I'• •

• -

.

•

.

..

S.O.S. In c. (Savi ng Ohio Seniors) would like to thank the following
p!.!rsons und businesses for their gcncnms contrihutions to our
nrganjzmion . On September I 0. 2005 w~ he ld our first annual hcncfit
in A then s, Ohio at the American Legion Post 21 , Our Organi1.ation

raised $2.500 wilh proceeds going to he lp the elderly and himdi cappcd
in Meigs &amp; Athens Counties.

"---·-- ..J

Home Health Care or S,outhcast
Oh in
.
Boh Jtmcs Excavating
• R1ck Collins Construction

• F&amp;S Tire
• Craig's Flower~
• Wake fields
• Becky "s Tantiquc

• Cheryl McGrath

• The Bllg Barn

• Country Ca ndles
• K&amp;C Jewelers
• R i.ve rfront Past and Present
• Mary Ann Davis
•Milli cs
• Dan's
• Wild Horse Cul'e
• M iddlcport Ocpi. Store
::___.,,. B1Kiy Fanla'iiC~ Tattoo Shop
. . . . Making Memories Scrapbook
' Stt tre
\Vcavi1'ig: Stih:hes
Johnson\, Movies &amp; Moi'c
• Mitch's Greenhouse
• Bob Evans
• Rick Hauhcr
• Hometown Market
• Roche lle Lnmm
• J\ndcrsnns Furniture
• Movie G ~ll cry
• Fram.· is Florist

•1111!1•-l•

a

• Foo&lt;.lland
• Red Lantern Corn~~s
• Professional Auto Pans
• Sofa &amp; Manres~ Outle t
•AutoZonc
• Macs Work wear
• Staples
• Pleasan t Meats
• Lod1 General Store
• Caners Lumber·&amp; Plumbing .
• Lakeview
• Stup-N -Go
•Lucky Dog
• Moto Mart
• Cycle Path
• The Oak Room
• Sonic
•Athen s V.F.W. Post 3477
• KFC
• 50 Flicks
• Save-A - Lot
~

• Lloyd M1ddlcton

• Athens D.A. V. Chapter 3 7

• Dnwn to Em·th Greenhouse
• Powell.\ Food Fair
• Ame rican Legion Po~t 2 J
• Aml:ricun Trophy
• Village Pin.a
• Reeds
• Honakcrs Auto Sale .~
• Quality furniture Plus,

• Fruths
• All Power
• Sherry's Floral Design
• Classic Brands Budwei se r
• Ella &amp; Bill McCalli." cr
• Ginger Bishop
....
• Gene Samples
• Dana &amp; Amy W1lfong
• Fred Collms

• B.P.

• Kim1 Jones

• Farmers Bank

m:iZtl:~.~~*c~t~~,.,
• Pally Ollom

iii-•l: ~~l~ I ~~~~~~c

%an( 9'(ou

i=

�'

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,

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily S~n~inel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

I

Today is Wednesday, Nov. 9. the 3l3th day of 2005. There
are 52 days left in the year.
Today's Hig~lighl in History:
.
,
Forty years ago, on Nov. 9, 1965, the great Northeast blackout occurred as a series of power failures lasting up to 13 1/2
hours left 30 million people in seven states and two Canadian
provinces without electricity.
On this date:
·
In 1872, fire destroyed nearly a thousand buildings in
Boston.
In 1918, Germany's Kaiser Wilhelm II announced he would
abdicate. He then ned to the Netherlands.
In 1935, United Mine Workers president John L. Lewis and
other labor leaders formed the Committee for Industrial
Organization.
• In 1938, Nazis looted and burned synagogues as well as
Jewish-owned stores and houses in Germany and Austria in
what became known as "Kristallnacht."
In 1953, author-poet Dylan Thomas died in New York at age
39.
In 1963, twin disasters struck Japan as some 450 miners
were killed in a coal-dust explosion, and 16() people died in a
·
train crash.
· In 1967, a Saturn 5 rocket carrying an unmanned Apollo
spacecraft blast~d off from Cape Kennedy on a successful test
tlight.
Ten years ago: In a pair of telephone interviews, O.J.
Simpson told Associated Press reporter Linda Deutsch that
people have supported rather than shunned him since his
acq!littal, and that he has learned that fame and wealth are
illusions. Said Simpson: "The only thing that endures is character."
·
. . Five years ago: George W. Bush's lead over AI Gore in anor-nothing Florida slipped beneath 300 votes in a suspensefilled recount, as Democrats threw the presidential election to
the courts, claiming "an injustice unparalleled in our history."
Hussein Abayat, a West. Bank militia .commander, was killed
by a missile from an Israeli helicopter gunship.
One year ago: Attorney General John Ashcroft and
Commerce Secretary Don Evans resigned: they were the first
members of the Cabinet to leave as President Bush headed
from re-election into his second term. Kenny Chesney won
the Country Music Association album of the year award for
"When The Sun Goes Down" as well as entertainer of the
year. Roger Clemens won his reeord seventh Cy Young
Award.
Today's Birthdays: Sportscaster Charlie Jones is 75.
Baseball executive Whitey Herzog is 74. Former Sen. Bob
Graham, D-Fia., is 69. Actor Charlie Robinson ("Night
Court") is 60. Movie dir.ector Bille August is 57. Actor Robert .
David Hall ("CSI") is 57. Actor Lou Ferrigno is 53. Rock
musician Dee ·Plakas (L7) is 45 . Rapper Pepa(Salt-N-Pepa) is
36. Rapper Scarface (Geto Boys) is 36. Blues singer Susan
Tedeschi is 35 . Rhythm-and-blues singer Nick Lachey (98
Degrees) is 32. Rhythm-and-blues singer Sisqo (Dru Hill) is
27.
Thought for Today: "I think charm is the ability to be truly
interested in other people." - Richard Avedon, American
fashion photographer ( 1923-2004).
·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters ro the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All/etters are subject .to editing, must be signed,
a11d include address m1d telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leuers should be in good taste,
addressing issue.\·, not personalities. Leiters of thanks to orga·
ni;;ations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

\

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concem in all stories Is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
. story. call the newsroom at (740) 992·

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Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, HI Court Street,
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paid at Pomeroy.
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PageA4

OPINION

Wednesday, November 9,

2005

\\'ednesday, November 9,

Iraqi resolution. l con.sider
the prospect of a nucleararmed Saddam Hussein who
· can threaten not only his
neighbors, but the stability
the region and the world,
of
Kathryn
a very serious threat to the
Lopez
United States."
So what? You may ask.
Politicians are being politicians, you might be thinkgoi,ng to war with Iraq : ing. Now Senate Dems warit
"And that may happen soon- to get Bush and start winer if he can obtain access to ning elections again (and get
enriched uranium from for- it Senate majority back next
eign sources - something November) - so they're
that is not that diflkult in being selective about their.
the current world. We also memories as they try to find
should remember' we have something that works .for
always underestimated the them. It's a politics of media
progress Saddani has made convenience, changing with
in development of weapons the cable-news-image winds.
of mass destruction."
Big
whoop.
It 's
a
Yet now, Rockefeller has Washin gton pastime .
been more recently seen
Well, it does matter. It
accusing I he White House of matters to the men and
lying to get us into a war women who are over in Iraq
with Saddam Hussein . And, right now - the ()nes that
as Rockefeller's statement both George Bush and the
made clear. he and others on majority of the Democratic
hi s side of the . aisle were gang sent there. It matters to
arguing pre-emption. Even if many families of those who
Saddam was only working · have died serving in the war
on weapons, we had to make ·on terror. (Even if antiwar
sure he didn't get them to activist mom Cindy Sheehan
usc against his people, gets more press time.)
against us and ()Ur allies
A lot of the stories you see
(most predictably Israel).
on the evening news about
On Jan. 22, 2003, Mrs.. Iraq are pretty bad. Suicide
Clinton defended her vote to bombings. Two thousand
go into Iraq: " I voted for the American soldiers dead.

Many of these are complete- ·
ly legitimate news stories.
but they are often covered
with a lack of a sense and
balance. For people who
work day in and day out in
Iraq, this is a demoralizing
injustice and not an argument about who sent-them to
Iraq.
We have a record in Iraq,
imperfect as it is, of
progress. The purple-ink
stained fingers of Iraqis who
voted in for their own constitution last month is not a
sidebar story, it's a feature.
And a milestone event in the
region. For Democrats to
want to pretend there was
never a good reason for us to
go into Iraq, and to claim
there is nothing good happening there is a disservice
to those who have died there
and to every American who
continues to serve there.
Such manipulation is demoralizing to our guys and gals,
to the Iraqis fighting for
their future, and every freedom loving man and woman
living under an oppressor
the world over.
Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online
(www.nationalre- .
view. com). She can be contacted at k/opez@ nationalreview. com.

The Paily Sentinel• Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

.Dems selective memories on Iraq war
The maJonty of Senate
Democrats supported the
war · that' would take down
the evil tyrant Saddam
Huss~in in Iraq, and give his·
oppressed people a chance at
democracy. But you would
never know that by listening
to many of these fair-weathered war supporters lately.
You'd almost think it's a
shame poor Saddam Hussein
is standing trial later thi s
mbnth . But the Secondguessing of the WHite
House's reasons .for going
into Iraq exposes. their own
selective memories on prewar matter.
"There is unmistakable
evidence
that
Saddam
Hussein is working aggressively to 'develop . nuclear
weapons and will likely
have nuclear weapons within the next five years."
No that's not a quote from
President Bush, who the
party line from Democrats in
Congress would have you
believe is a liar and was
determined to get on with
his father' s· unfinished business in Iraq . facts be
damned. The quote comes
We'st
Virginia
from
Sen .·
Jay
Democrat ·
Rockefeller.
On Oct.
10, 2002,
Rockefeller argued on the
Senate noor in favor of

2005

Local Briefs

Bemice Baker

Ruth Cline

Pig roast planned

MIDDLEPORT - Bernice J. Baker, 88, Middleport, passed
away on Monday, Nov. 7, 2005, at Overbrook Center in
Middleport.
.
She was born on Dec. 16, 1916, in Mason County, W.Va.,
daughter of the late Homer and Lottie Howell Johnson. She was in
the fm;t class to graduate frotri Wahama High School. She owned
and operated the Middleport Book Store for 12 years. She also participated in the operation of the Middleport Furniture Store.
She was a member of the First Bapti st Church in Middleport
where she was a Sunday school teacher and an office holder.
Besides her parents, she was preceded by her brother, Lester
Johnson .
She is survived by her husband of69 Years, Edi so n Baker: her
daughters: Patricia (Donald) Russell, Hot Springs Villa, Ark.,
and Janet (Allen) Downie, Pomeroy; her grandchildren:
Jonathan Russell, Cynthia Simmons, Pamela Boskie, Deborah
Person, and Elizabeth Swatzel great grand.,hildren: Nicholas
Simmons, Jake Simmons, Shawn Simmons, Kelly Ru ss~ll ,
Rebecca Russell, Brad Bosk1e, Anna Bosk1e, Lauren Bosk1e,
Ryan Beegle, Hunter Person, Amber Person, Shauna Clark,
Am~a R~ynolds; a brother, Lynford (Juamta) Johnson, Naples,
Fla., a stst~r. BeulahGnmmofCary, N.C. , a.s1ster-m-Jaw, Ruth
Johnson, Summersv1lle, W.Va.: and several meces and nephews.
Service will be held at l I a.m. on Thursday, Nov. 10, 2005, at
the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Rev. Brian
Dunham officiating . Burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may ca ll from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday
at the funeral home, and may . send online condolences to
ww.tisherfuneralhomes.com.

CHESHIRE - Ruth E. Cline. 86, Cheshire, passed away on
Nov. 8, 2005, at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
She was born on Oct. 28, 1919, in Maso n County, W.Va,
daughter of the late Charles and Ethel (Love) Pyles. She was
a homemaker and a long-time member of the Full Gospel
Lighthouse Church.

POMEROY - A pig roast will be held at God's NET in the
Mulberry Community Center. beginning at II a.m. on Sundily.

To dedicate stamps

POMEROY - The U.S. Post Office in Pomeroy will honor
U.S.
veterans of all branches of the military service , including
In addition to her parent s, she was preceded in death by her ·
route
carriers Jim Pullin s and Paul Card of the Pomeroy
husband, Homer Cline: five brothers, two sisters, and a .speoffice,
at 9 a.m. on Thursday.
.
cial friend, Dorothy Roush.
The postal service will dedicate and' unveil the "Di stinguished
She· is survived by a daughter and son-i n-law, JoAnn and
Marines"
series, honoring legendary marines who served with
Robert Conkle, Che shire : grandchildren: Mi chael (Deborah)
and
distinction during the 20th century. The stamps wtll
bravery
Conkle, Cheshire, Sheila (Blake) Northup, Gallipolis, Cindy ·
be
available
for purchase at all post offices on Thursday.
(Bob) Werry, Cheshire: six great grandchildren: six greatgr~at grandchildren; brothers: Larry, Richard and Jack Pyles,
·all of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.: a sister, Virginia Duncan,
Southside, W.Va.
Service will be held at H a.m. on Friday, Nov. I I, 2005, at
th~ Middleport Chapel of Fi sher Funeral Home with Rev.
Roger Hunter officiating , Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. on Thursday, and send
POMEROY - Marriage li ce nses were iss ued in Meigs
.1. _· d 1
.t
fi herfuneralhomes com
County
Probate Court to Rodney Alvin Tripp, 4 1, Pomeroy,
on me con ences 0 www. IS
·
·
and Teresa Lynn Pullin s, 42. Long Bottoni: Paul Shannon
Searls, 27, Pomeroy, and Bonnie Kay Rutt er, 25, Pomeroy;
Brandon Miqheal Detty. 20, Londonderry, and Joanna Renee
Bowersock, I9, Rutland ; Matthew Walter Simpson , 22,
MINERSVILLE - James Mason Fisher, 91, Dutchtown Guysville, and Juli Renee Bailey. 23. Pomeroy; and Victor
Hill, Minersville, died .Monday. Nov. 7, 2005 at Holzer John Morrj s, Sr., 55, and Margaret Ann Parlin. 49, Chesterland.
Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Born on Feb. 19, I9 I 4 at Minersville, he was the son of the
late William Maso n Fi sher and Mary Alice Parker Fisher. He
MIDDLEPORT -Lena Searls Bunce , 82 , widow of G. was a retired carpenter and plasterer and was a member of the
POMEROY -'-- Actions for dissolution of m&lt;UTiage have been
Wendell Bunce and former long time resident of Middleport, Carpenters l,lniun Local 650.
· tiled in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Dawn Rochelle
passed away on Nov 7, 2005 at Hospice of Dayton follow ing
He is survived by two daughters, Carla J. and David Danko Roush, Middleport, and Gregory Lee Johnson, Racine: Eric
a brief illness.
of Marion and Barbara K. Fisher of Columbus, and a special Diddle, Pomeroy, and Ro~J\'11a Diddle, Syracuse: and Barbara
Lena was born on Nov. 8, 1922 to the late John A.and Anna . friend, Steven Welsheimer of Columbus: two sons and daugh- Jean Vanison and Frank Edward Vanison, both of Tuppers Plains.
M. (Gardner) Searls in Kyger. She was the youngest of 10 ters- in-law, William M. and Dorothy Fis~er of Torch, Roland
children, all of whom prepeceased her.
·
d L' d F' h
She was also predeceased by an infant daughter, Marilyn, R. and Verna Fisher of Powell, and Gordon an m a 1s er
and great-grandson Zachary Pyle. She is survived by two of Syracuse: sisters"in-law and brothers-in-Jaw, Mrs . John
daughters, Sandra Matthias, Grove City, and Cathy Fegly of (Violet) Fisher of Uniontown, Mrs. Milton (Sara) Roush of
POMEROY - An action for divorce has been tiled in
Kettering, and one son, Jon (Judy) Bunce of Nashville, Tenn. Syracuse, Ernest E. Harris of Racine, Paul E. and Lillian Meigs Cou nty Common Pleas Court by Brad J. Steele,
Albany, against J.essica N. Steele, Albany.
Lena is survived by her grandchildren, Andrea Junk, Sean Harri s of Minersville.
(Christina) Thaxton, Michael (Lori) Thaxton, Elena (Michael)
Also surviving are grandchildren, William M. II and Sherri
Graham, Jennifer Bunce and Joy Thaxton . She is also survived Fi sher of Little. Hocking, Mason G. and Jodi Fisher of
by seven great granddaughters: Heather and Alexi s Junk, Columbus, Jeremy L. Fisher and Stephani e Bradford. of
Ashley Spier!, Seana and Zayin Thaxton, Olivia Thaxton, Syracuse, Elizabeth A. Fisher of Torch, and great-grandsons ..
POMEROY - A foreclosure action was filed in Meigs
Taylor Pyle, and Orion Thaxton : a brother-in-law, Larry James and Mitchel Fisher of Little Hocking.
County Common Pleas Court by Wells Fargo Bank, Raleigh,
(Reva) Bunce, sisters-in-Jaw, Edna Searls and Maycle Searls,
Mr. Fisher was preceded in death by his beloved wife , N.C. , against Ed B. Zinn Ill, Pomeroy, and others, alleging
and many nieces and nephews. ·
Virginia Ann Fisher: his parents, William .M. and Mary Alice default on a mortgage agreement in the amount of $70,888.23.
· Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Friday, Nov. I I, 2()05, at
F' h.
d
M' h 1 F' h
db h
d
A foreclosure was issued to Beneficial Ohio. Inc .. against ·
son,
IC aeN 1s . er;. and H. rot
ers
an
d
Th
the M'ddl
t eport Ch ape 1 of F'IS her Funera 1 Home WI'th p as. 1or Parker
.
· IS1 er; pa gran
1
H
·
.
L. Carter, and others.
Pamela
1
Wayne Searls and burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery:
SISters-~n- a;', au an .
eresa. orman an
e en, 1ram
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday. Nov. 10. at. and Grace, and John F1sher.
.
.
. .
.
the funeral home. Donations may be made be made to Hosp 1ce
Funeral serv1ces wtU be. held at II a.m. Fnday at Ewmg
·of Dayton, 324 Wilmington Ave., Dayton, Ohio 45420-1885 Funeral Home wnh bunalm Gilmore Cemetery._Fnends may
in her memory.
callfrom2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the !uneral home .
POMEROY - Criminal actions tiled in Meigs County
On-line condolences may be sent to www.tisherfuneral- In heu of tlowers donatiOns may be made to the Mmersv1lle Common Pleas Court against Lisa Waugh and Rex Hoover
have been dismissed.
Methodi st Cburch.
homes.com.

For the Record

Marriage licenses

°
James Mason Fisher

Lena Bunce

Dissolutions

Divorce

Foreclosures

WliAT HAPffNED
TO AU a: lJ.IAT
POLITICAL CAPITAL~

--

Dismissed

Hmong inniligrant receives life in prison
for killing deer hunters ·in Wisconsin

~
'

'a • '

Bv ROBERT IMRIE

Ballot
'

from Page A1

never be freed from pri son .
The homicide charges
Wisconsin does not have a c ar~ a mandatory sentence
of hfe in prison, but Yackel
death penalty.
HAYWARD, Wis . - A
Yackel described Yang as a could have set a parole eligiHmong immigrant convicted "time' bomb ready to go off" bility date for Yang. The
of murdering six deer at the slightest provocation.
judge al.so sentenced V&lt;:~ng to
"These crimes are not iso- three concurrent terms of 40
hunters and attempting to
kill two others after a tres- lated acts, but a pattern of years in prison on the
passing dispute was sen - · anti-social conduct ," the attempted homicide charges.
tenced to life in prison judge said . .
The slayings occurred durYang, a truck driver from ing the state's beloved deer
Tuesday with no chance for
·parole.
St. Paul , Minn ., was convict- hunting season and exposed·
Judge Norman Yackel ed on six count s of first - racial tension between the
ordered Chai Soua Vang, 37, degree intentional homicide predominantly white north
to serve six life prison and three counts of attempt- woods residents ~nd immiterms, one after the other, ed homicide in the Nov. 21 grants from the Hmong ethguaranteeing he would slayings.
nic group.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

Schools

Qff the grid and onto the griddle
A few years ago we
bought a 160-year-old farmhouse. We like big, old rambling houses with tack
rooms and mud rooms and
summer kitchens and maid's
rooms and back sta'ircases
and six-over-six windows
that still have some of the
original panes of glass still
in them. Unfortunately, we
also like electricity, . and all
the things that come with it
- running water, central
heat and tlushable toilets.
Our new/old kitchen was
hopeless. The entire room
had only one electrical outJet. We could make toast and
coffee, but not at the same
time. Unless we unplugged
the refrigerator. Or we could
fire up the gigantic woodburning cook stove that
came with the hou se.
Charming, yuaint, romantic
are the words that may -come
to mind . In midwinter,
maybe. On a 92-degree day
in the summer with 90 percent humidity ? Not so
romantic.
Burning wood - romantic. Chopping wood, stack.
ing wood
boring:
Microwave - not romantic.
Chicken Cordon Bleu from
freezer to table in 10 minutes
- not romantic either, but at
least r m not worn out from
chopping wood.
The cei ling of our new/old
basement was a spider web

from Page A1

solid days a month or was it items.
three? Oh , who's counting?
Not that it really matters)
"Two days a month?" said am typing this in the dark, in
my neighbor Dan. " You the middle of our power
must really raie to get that company's regular, randomkind
of service. Are you pay· ly scheduled blackouts,
Jim
ing him off the books or using up the little remaining
Mullen
something? Lightnin's sup· battery power of my laptop.
posed to be doing some .1 could always phone this
work for me, too, but the story in - oh, yeah, no I
only place I ever see him is can't. I got rid of all our oldof rottin g, cloth-covered on the golf course."
fashioned, low-tech phones
wires and ancient ceramic
What bothered me most that would work during a
insulators. Some of the light was that Lightnin' played at blackout and traded up to
sw itches were rickety push a club that would~ 't let me fancy cordless models that
buttons. Push the top button in. I guess the board mem- will not.
to start your house on tire, bers needed electrical wo~k
I wonder if Now and Then
push the lower button to. done , too. And he did beauti- Electric even knows we
pour gasoline on it.
ful work - · our kitchen now don't have any power.. How
This house needed ele~­ has six four-plug, up-to-code can I Jet them know? I can't
tri city, and lots of it. Because · outlets. We can plug in toast- do it on the computer, that .
I planned to have . that new- ers, . coffee
machines, will be dead soon. I'll have
fangled in ve ntion called blenders, food processors, · to haul out ·that old manual
~lectric light in every room. cordless phones, radios,
typewriter 1.used to use and
f'lot to mention cord less clocks, toaster ovens, iPods, send it to them by snail mail.
phones, .mi crowave ovens, fans - we are running out Will we still be alive when
iPod chargers, DVD players, of plugs.
they get it?
computers and answeri ng
There is no heat because
Half the gadgets we use
machines
have giant, boxy transform- our oil furnace uses an elecHow hard can it be to wire ers on the business end. Plug tric igniter• and an electric
an old house? I won't bore in that little cradle that fuel pump. You know what
you with another "but you charges your cell phone and would be a lifesaver now? A
said you'd be here Monday" you've taken up two and a wood-burning stove in the
contractor story. Besides. l half sockets . Charge your kitchen. We could cook and
can't even remember all the digital camera battery and it would heat the place at the
details now. Did it take you have to unplug your same time. It would be so
Lightnin'
Rod
The printer.'
romantic.
Electrician six month s
I keep buying fancy new
(Jim Mullen is the author
longer tha n he said it would . surge protector strips with of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
to do the job, or eight back,up batteries. They have Complicating the Simple
months'' Did it cost twice eight sockets on the back: Life" and , "Baby
Firsr
what he estimated or three I'm lucky if, after a lot of Talloo." You can reach him
times 0 Did he work two juggling, l can plug in three at jim_mullen@myway. com.)

s

ership and the adoption of
several · proven·-successful
strategies to · the region's
great strides in expanding
participation in school breakfast programs .
·
Key adyancements include
offering all children breakfast
at no cost, developing a "grab
and go" style breakfast for
older students, and in class·
room eating for younger students, and providing a varied
menu selection.
"Leadership makes all the
difference·," said Charlie
Kozlesky, Alliance senior vice
president, who as a former
elementary sc~ool principal in
Southeast Ohio understands
the important role leadership
plays in feeding hungry minds
and bodies through the breakfast program.

"The key to· success in thi s
part of the·state is that school
leaders have been .very open
to our help, and are pulling
.the needs of kids first," said
Kozlesky. "It takes an entire
district, from the superintendent to the custodial staff to
put feeding kids first by
offering school breakfast."
Kozlesky points to John
Costanzo, superintendent of
the Athens-Meigs Education
Service Center, and Judi
Schott., president. Child
Nutrition Services, Inc .. as
playing a major rol e in helping
Children's
Hunger
Alliance meet with superintendents of distriqs throughout the state to explain how
the organization can help
schools expand school breakfast participation .
"Our district perso nnel now
understand the importance o~
making sure children in thi s
region have access to daily
remarked
nutrition ,"
Costanzo. ''The decision to

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Auto Accidents Workers'
Compensation

)car JWI&lt;
V.P. WV ChitoJrocric Su:i c1~
Membl:r of Anl,'f'!Utn Board ~4

20 yrs '-''!Jt'ricoce
Mtmt~.&gt;r 1{ Aull'fican A•:arm~
of Mt'llicill Acupunctun:

• M~t ln.~ur,ux:a;
• San•~ da)· uppt.

304-273-5321 ~

316 Washln

n St.

helping you

ke
osf
Your ability to hear

affects the quality o f the
life that you lead. 'Ve

wont our patient s to
enjoy the best quality

of life pos.-dble. That I ~
we
scrvlres to ensure that your hcarina; is the bose that
it can be. C all today foe a oonsultaHon.
499 Rkhlllntl

Ravenswood
Chiropra~rlc Centet

=

Racine

of Life

Cb•ropr.K.1nr{~· tt..:

• Spurts Injuries
• Mabcarc
• ACI.II'Un&lt;:lurt

Township trustees
Bedford (2): Robert F.
Hawk, 202, Ronald Wood,
11 2; Chester (2): Alan
Holter, 414, Blair Windon,
345 ; Columbia (2): Granville
Stout, 198, Donald Cheadle,
190,' Paul D. Carter, 179:
Lebanon (2) t Donald R.
Dailey, 186, Garry ·Smith ,
109, Bob Sellers, lO I, Patrick
M. Belt, 98, John R. Krider,
94, Lawrence H. Hayman, 35,
Thomas E. Allen, 24.
. Letart (2): Bob Morris,
199, Dave Graham, 119, Bob
L. Wood, 63: Olive (2) :
William R. Osborne, 282,
add a school breakfast pro- Ji~ckie L. Westfall, 228,
gram made sense. and it was Robert Headley, I66, and
the right thing to do, but tiguring out how to offer the morning meal was the bigger problem. Children's Hunger
Alliam:e
and
Ohio
from Page A1
Department of Education
(ODE) consultants brought a
lot of positive energy to the community file for a Council
table and creative · ideas to seal in Tuesday's election.
make it work. That's ultimateMayor J. Scott Hill encourly what made the difference." aged the remaining members
"Ohio has lagged behind of council to become more
. other states in utilizing the involved with the daily activschool breakfast program as a ities throughout the village.
long-term solution to hunger
Hill suggested part of this
and in recognizing the impor- involvement be by forming
tance of breakfast to health committees that meet throughand learning," commented out the month. These commitJimmy Stewart, 92nd District tee s would then discuss in
of the Ohio House of detail various issues like
tinances, the police and ordiRepresentatives.

Ravenswood, WV

A~•• Ather~

.,..

OH 4..4t70l

Medicnl Arb Huildt~
819 St. kt . fJM N .• J..uwan, Oil 4JlJ8

· 594-6JJ3 ur
1 -~ 00 -45 1-'H!06

'

Carl P. Barringer, 146: Olive
Clerk: Sari E: Putman-Suule,
304, Laurie H. Barber, I 81 :
Orange (2): David L. Sheets,
134, Roger Ritchie, 121,
James A. Watson, 120, James
Eugene Watson, 113.
Rutland (2): Steve R.
Lambert, 338, Charles D.
Barrett, · Jr., 288, Robert L.
Birchtield, 163; Salem (2): H.
Dannie Lambert, 143 , R.
Keith Oiler, 128, Cecil L.
Stacy, I 20: Salisbury, Bill
Spaun, 789, Manning K.
Roush, 653, Oscar T. Smith.
535 : Scipio (2): Roger
Cotterill,
I 87,
Robert
Butcher, 143, Tammy Andrus,
140, Kevin W. Payne, 128:
Randy Hill (write-in ), 26,
Philip L. Erwin, Sr. (write-in),
43 : _Sutton (2): Larry C.
Smith, 426, Jerry L. Hayman,
298, Carl Salser. 280. Edward
E. Gibbs , 205; Kenneth

Guinther (write-in), 254.
School Boards
ALEXANDER LOCAL
(Meigs County results, only)
(3): Fred Davis, 255, Michael
S. Chapman , 229, Gordon
Brooks. 196. Synthia S.
Clary, 88, Stephen W.
Thomas, 83: EASTERN
LOCAL
(2):
Howard
Caldwell, 853. Greg Bailey,
767, John R. Russell, 434;
. MEIGS LOCAL (2): Ron
Logan . I .609, .Scott Walton,
1, 165, Wayne E. Davis ,
I, 134, Clarence E. Evans,
519: SOUTHERJII I.OCAL
(3): Richard B. Hill. 852,
Peggy S. Gibbs, 7 I5. Don P.
Smith, 684, Thomas Ron
Cammarata, 4 I 2.
Athens/Meigs Educational
Service Center, at-large (I),
John
Depoy,
3,308;
Athens/Meigs ESC. Southern,
Michael T. Struble, I ,0 16.

nances instead of bringing the mayor not to exce~d $I 00.
them up for the tirst time at the
Racine part-time police
bi-monthly council meetings.
officer C. Brent Rose had his
" I need more help on things work hours restored to 30
to get more accomplished,'' hours per pay period which is
Hill said to council.
everv two weeks. The hours
Hill also thanked council were up for review to check
members and the village 's on ava ilability of funds.
staff for the job they ' ve don e Funds will ag'(in be reevaluwhile serving the community. ated at the end of this year.
Council also accepted a bid
Council was joined at the
from Quality Windows of meetin g
by
Street
Pomeroy for $I l, I00 for the Commissioner
. JOHN ·
replacement .o f 23 windows in Holman . Absent from the
the Racine Municipal Building mee ting were Councilmen
in an effort to make the build- Greg Taylor and Duke Bentz.
Racine Council will meet ·
ing more energy efficient.
Council also authorized the in recessed session at 7 p.m.
purchase of a new chair for on Nov. 21.

�The Daily Sentinel

AROUND THE WORLD

Attackers assassinate
another lawyer, throwing
Saddam trial into question
of the world's most promi nent jurists.
He told The Associated
BAGHDAD. Iraq
Press by telephone that
Three mask~d gunmen in a Iraq's gove rnment should
speeding Opel a:\sassinated·a consider shifting the trial to
second lawyer in the an Arab . country "where
Saddam
Hussein
trial there is security,"
Tuesday. casting doubt on
Laith Kubba, spokesman
Iraq 's ability 10 try the case for Prime Minister .Ibrahim
and l e~d in g a prominent war ai-Jnafari, brushed aside that
crimes prosecutor to urge idea and insisted the next sesmoving the proceedings to sion would proceed in
another Arab country.
Baghdad as planned Nov. 28.
Adel ai-Zubcidi. lawyer for State Department spokesman
former Vice President Taha Adam Ereli . said Washington
Yassi n Ramadan. died .when would support Iraq as it probullets were .sprayed his car ' ceeds with the trial.
in· a largely S~nni Arab
Both the Iraqi government
neighborhood of western and the United States have
Baghdad. Tile shots also long insisted the trial be held
wounded Thamir ai-Khuzaie, in Iraq before an Iraqi court
attorney for another co: so Saddam ~:ould answer for
defendimt. Saddam's half crimes allegedly committed
brother Baraam Ibrahim.
against his own people.
The brazen daylight attack
Iraq 's insistence on the
on a major aven ue came three right to execute Saddam and
weeks i1ftcr the kidnap-slay- his allies if they are convicted
ing of another defense
lawyer, Saadoun ai -Janabi. rules out holding the trial
His body was found Oct. 20. before an international court,
one day after the trial's open- such as the U.N. tribunals
ing session. where he repre- hearing · cases from the
sented Awad ai-Bandar, a for- · Balkans and Rwanda.
Kubba suggested promer official in Saddam's
Saddam
insurge nts were
Baath Party
.
.
for Tuesday's
responsible
No group clmmed respon- .
"We
know that
killing.
sibil ity for the killings. An
Iraqi government spokesman Saddam and his followers
pointed to S&lt;lddam loyalists are ready to do anything
for the latest attack, while when it serves their interest
the dictator's lawyer blamed and to block the work of the
. the Shiite-domimned gov- court,'' he said.
Saddam's· chief lawyer.
. ernment.
Khalil
ai-Dulaimi, accused
Regardless of who was .
the
Iraqi
government, claimresponsible , the killing of
another defense lawyer rein - ing the killing was carried out
forced grave misgivings by "an armed group using
among human Tights groups government vehicles.'' He
and international lawyers repeated his previous demand
about holding the trial in a · that the trial be held in a neucountry gripped by a brutal tral country.
. "The aim of .these orgainsurgen~:y - mu~:h of it led
nized
attacks is to scare Arab
by the defendants\ supporters
and foreign lawyers," alin the Sunni Arab minority.
"1. don't understand how Dulaimi told AI-Jazeera teleyou can have a fair trial in vision. "We call upon the
this atmosphere of insecurity, international'
community,
with bombs going off," ~aid especially the secretary-genRichard Goldstone, the first eral of the United Nations, to
prosecutor · at the U.N. tri- send ari investi gative combunal for war crimes in the mittee · because the situation
· former Yugoslavia and one is unbearable.''
BY ROBERT H. REID

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I'

PageA6
Wednesday, November 9, 2005

Police in Australia say two terror cells competing to be first to stage attack
BY MIKE CORDER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SYDNEY, Australia Two Islamic terrorist cells
were competing to be~:ome
the first to stage a major
bombing in Australia, a prosecutor said Tuesday after
police arrested !7 suspe~:ts in
a series of coordinated predawn raids in two cities.
About 500 police arrested
nine men in the southern city
of Melbqurne and eight in
Sydney, including one man
clitically injured in a gunfight with police.
Police sais they expected
more arrests in coming days
and weeks. but Prime
Mini ster John Howard on
Wednesday assured Muslims
they were not being targeted.
"People who support terrorism are as much their enemies
as they are my or y·our enemies," Howard told Sydney
Radio 2GB. "There is nothing
in our laws, nor will there be
anything in our laws, th~t targets an individual group, be it
Islamic or otherwise." •
Ameer Ali , president of the
Australian Federation of
lslami~: Councils, said the
country's nearly 300,000member Muslim community
was shocked at the number of
arrests and that all the suspects appeared to be Muslims.
Some of their supporters
clashed violently with news
cameramen in Melboume and
Sydney on Tuesday.
One of the suspects, Abdulla
Merhi, wanted to c&lt;my out
· attacks to avenge the war in
Iraq, poli~:e said in a Melbourne
court. Howard was a strong
supporter of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and has sent hundreds of troops to the country.
Norm Hazzard, who heads
the state's counterterrorism
police unit, said the suspects
were followers of the ai-Qaida
leader Osama bin Laden.
"! think you can go back to
Osama bin . Laden and those
who follow his philosophy that is what terrorism . in its
modern form is all about and
there 's no doubt that thi s
group followed that same
philo&gt;;ophy," he said.
Police said the alleged plotters apparently had not set-

BY JOHN LEICESTER

have struck chords in the
Muslim world.
The Egyptian daily AIPARIS - . The French gov- Massaie referred to the riots as
ernment declared a state of "the intefadeh of the poor."
emergency Tuesday after near- Arabic satellite networks have
ly two weeks of rioting, and the given lead coverage to the
prime minister said the nation mayhem, with regular live ·
.faced a "moment of tiuth."
reports. Newspapers have t'olThe extraordinary security lowed the story on inside
to
begin pages, calling it a "nightmare"
measures.
Wednesday and valid for 12 and a "war of the suburbs'
days. clear the way for curArson attacks, rioting and
fews to try to halt the coun- other unrest have spread from
try's worst civil unrest since the suburbs to hundreds of
the student uprisings of 1968. cities and towns - though
Prime Minister Dominique acts of violenq; were down
de Villepin, tacitly acknowl- somewhat Monday night
edging that France has failed . from the previous evening.
to live up to its egalitarian
In the first repotfs of vioideals, reached out to the heav, . len~:e Tuesday night, a dash ·
ily immi grant suburbs where
the rioting began. He said
France must make a priority of
working against the discrimination that feeds the frustration of youths made to·feel that
they do not belong in France.
"The effectiveness of our
integration model is in question," the prime mini ster told
parliament. He called the riots
"a warning" and "an appeal."
Despite hi s conciliatory
tone , Villepin said riot police
faced "determined individuals, structured gangs, organized criminality," and that
restoring order "w ill take
time." Riote.rs have been
using mobile phone text messages and the Internet to
organize a"on attacks, said
police, who arrested two
teenage bloggcrs accused of
indting other youths to riot.
"We must be lucid: The
Republic is at a moment of
truth." Villepin said.
Lawmakers at the impassioned parliamentary debate
also spoke frankly about
France's fail ings. But criti·
cism of the government
extended well beyond the
country's borders.
Images of French teenagers
from north and west Afri~:an
immigrant families pelting
riot police with stones and
gasolme bombs - remmts·
cent of Palestinian youths
attacking Israe li patrols

I

I

'

•

broke out between youths
who threw gasoline bombs
and police who retaliated with
tear·gas, LCI television said.
The 50-year-old state-ofemergency law that President
Jacques Chirac invoked was
originally drawn up to quell .
unrest in Algeria during its war
of independence from France
and was last used in December
1984 by the Socialist government of President Francois
Mitterrand against rioting in
the French Pacific Ocean territory of New Caledonia.
That Chirac took such steps
was a measure both of the gravity of the crisis and of his sorely tested govemrnent's determination to restore control.

)•

'

NATION

Wednesday, November g,

'

AP Photo

Police watch as a van carrying terror suspects arrives at Sydney's Central Court Tuesday. Police
in Australia arrested 17 terror suspects, including a radical Muslim cleric accused of masterminding a cell dedicated to "violent jihad."' in a string of ra.ids In the early hours of Tuesday and
said they had. foiled a catastrophic terror attack.
"
tied on a target.
Adam Houda, a defen se ·
lawyer, said ihe Sydney sus;
pects were innocent.
"There's no evidence that
terrorism was contemplated
or being planned by any particular person at any part icu. lar time or at any particular
place," he said.
The raids came less than a
week after Howard strengthened counterterrorism laws and
said intelligence agencies, had
warned of a possible terrorist
attack. He went on· national TV
Tuesday to say the risk was not
over, despite the arrests.
"This country has . never
been immune from a possible
terrorist attack," he said.
"That remains the situation
today and it will be the situation tomorrow."
Ali trav~led to Canberra on
Wednesday to appeal to the
government to abandon plans
to pass additional ·counterter'
rorism laws by Christmas.
Muslims were concerned
that provisions preventing
terror suspects from discussing their detentions and
interrogations and the media
from reporting it could conceal abuses in the system and
lead to racial profiling.
" Under the existing law s,

they llave averted a disaster
from taking pla~:e in this
cou~try; they have ~rrested
the people who have been
conspiring ... so We don't
need new laws," Ali said.
Both cells were led by one
of the detainees, the 45-yearold firebrand cleric Abu
Bakr, an Australian who was
born in Algeria, a prosecutor
said. Bakr made headlines
earlier this year by calling bin
Laden a "good man."
The suspects were stockpi ling the same kind of'chemicals used in the deadly July 7
transit bombings in London,
prosecutor Richard Maidment
said at a hearing for the nine
people arrested there.
"Each of the members of
the group are committed to
the cause of violent jihad," he
added, saying they underwent training at a camp
·northeast of Melbourne.
Bakr was charged .with
leading the terrori st group
while the Melbourne suspects
were charged wit'h membership of a terror group.

The seven men arrested i.n
Sydney were ordered jailed
until another session Friday on
charges of preparing a terrorist
act by manufacturing explosives. The man shot by police
was under guard in hospital and
was not inunediately charged.
Detective SgL Chris Murray
told the wurt that police surveillance had picked up one
suspect, 20-year-old Merhi,
pleading for permission to
be~:ome a martyr.
Murray
said
Merhi ·
appeared impatient and it was
clear to police he wanted to
die in a way "similar to the
nature of a suicide bomber."
Maidment
said
the
Mel bourne cell appeared eager
to be tirst to stage an attack.
· ''There has been discussion
amongst the Melbourne group
that the Sydney group · were
further ahead of them and
they were anxious to do something themselves," he said.
Associated Press writers
Meraiah Foley in Sydney and
Rod McGuirk in Canberra
cmuributed ·to this report.

"France is wounded. It does
not recognize itself In these
devastated streets and neighborhoods, · in this outburst of
hatred and of violence that
vandalizes and kills," Villepin
said. 'The return to order is
the 'absolute priority. "
Under the emergency laws, .
police - with 8,000 officers
deployed and 1.500 reservists
called up as reinforcements
- could be empowered in
areas where curfews are
imposed to put troublemakers.
under house arrest, ban or
limit the movement of people
and vehicles, confiscate
weapons · and close public
spaces where gangs gather.
Villepin said.

rr=========~========~

The Gift That Fits
.Any Size Appetite

.

mental changes in Social the House Ways and Mean s
Security. He traveled across subcommittee on Social
WASHINGTON
the country trying to build Security.
Bush 's
chief support, even visiting the
President
"! think that it is possible
domestic priority for his sec· Parkersburg, W Va, , filing for us to pass Social Security
ond term , overhauling Social ~:abincts that store govern-· reform either next year or.the
Security, probably won't ment lOUs that are supposed year after, simply because the
come up again in Congress to finance .future retirement problem is not going away,"
until 2009 - after Bush has needs. ·
McCrery said. "I think both
left office -.the chairman of
Grass lev said Bush entered Democrats and Republicans
the ·
Senate
Finance his second term with ''some- recognize that this ·problem is
tommittee said Tuesday.
what or a mandate" to not going away."
. Iowa Republican Charles address the Social Security
Brad
Woodhouse,
Crassley told an audience at because . Bush had cam- spokesman for a group that
the' U.S. Chamber of paigned on the issue. But . led the opposition to Bush's
Commerce that he's "very Republican lawmakers, fac- plan, said this year's stalepessimisiic" that lawmakers ing united opposition from mate shows the president's
~n act any sooner.
Democrats, struggled to build proposed aceounts are "dead ·
,. "When you get into an support for the president's as a doornail for the foresee. able future.''
election year, then you're in personal accounts.
the presidential election
It may, indeed, take until
Grassley held !5 sessions
cycle, I'm pessimistic that it with fellow Republicans on 2009 to re -engage in the
could come up before 2009," the Finance Committee but debate over the program's
health.
said
he said. "Doesn't mean that l couldn't
find
common financial
won't try to bring it up before ground even in that group, "! Woodhouse, of Americans
can't even get a consensus United to Protect Social
2009.". '
The White House said the among Republicans," he said. Security.
Derrick Max, executive
president doesn't see ~pcom- . Bush acknowledged last
mg elections as an obstacle month that Congress has little director of the Alliance for
and intends to keep pushing appetite for taking on the Worker Retirement Security,
called Grassley's prognosis
for plans that he outlined in issue this year.
"! did make some progress . "overly pessimistic." His
his State of the Union speech.
Bush wanted lawmakers to convincing the American group is a coalition of busiestablish perso'nal accounts people there was a problem," nesses that want to see the
and shore up the program's Bush said. "And I'm going to proposed private accounts
continue talking about the enac.ted.
financial health.
"! still think there's a
' "The president said he's problem because I strongly
cpan~:e
early next year," he
going to continue focusing on believe that the role of those
Social Security because, as of us in Washington . one role, said.
But if the issue turns against
we all know, the longer you is to confront probl ems.' '
wait , the more difficult it
Lawmakers should feel a Republicans and others who
becomes, " said spokesman sense of urgency to addre ss want to restructure the prothe program's long-term gram in tlpcoming elections,
Trent Duffy.
Bush began his second financial health and not get Max said. it could be a long
term pledging to spend the bogged down by upcoming time before ·lawmakers take
political capital won in re- elections.' said Rep. Jim up the topic again,
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BY BRUCE SCHREINER

PoNDEROSA

C&amp;lllpolls 215 Umler Rlnr Rd (740) 446·1101
Parkenb1J11 3940"lllurdoch Ave (304) 428·3452

·--2()0/o-Off--~

·-·:zoo;c;-oo--

~ Entree at ·
regular menu price

A~ Entree at
regular menu price

PONDEROSA
ST'I!AKHOU8a-

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: ,l,art[ll)jt~~m ll~~tS!Jm~s.
: : ~t 111 rtUp:Jtl~grutooi..UPJtJ12131Al5.

1

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•

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County Board of Education.
Authorities were unsure if
the suspect would be charged
as a juvenile or an adult. He
was being held in a juvenile
detention facility in nearby
Scott County.
The I ,400-student school.
located about 30 miles northwest of Knoxville. was
locked down after the shooting. Students said Seale was
able to get to the school intercom and order the lockclown
after being shot.
"Knowing him. · he probably did,'' the sheriff .&lt;aid . " He
· is a tough fellow and a great
individual. That SOUIJds rike
him . Whoever did it, he did
the right thing.''
Clifford Kohlmeyer, u former assistant principal at the
S\:hool. said the three victims
were dedicated educators'and
fami.ly men. Both Seal e and
Pierce have been educators
more than 30 years, he said.
"Mr. Bruce, the one who
got killed. had been a lieutenant colonel' in the Army
and came back to teach about
eight years ago," Kohlme yer
said. "We shared an office for
two years, He was very dedicated to the students."
Pierce was a longtime
phy sical education teacher
and cross country team coach
before moving into adminis. tration, Kohlmeyer said.
All three men nave chil-

dren, he said.
The incident caused a hu ge
traftic jam at the school as
bus drivers and parent rushed
10 remove students from the
campus closed by police to
the public,
.
"It is s&lt;:ary, it is terrifying,"
said Darren Davidson, waiting
for hi&gt; son Justin to con1e
through the s.:hool 's gates, "1
thought I would have a heart
attack before I got here," added
his wife, Kizzie Davidson.
Roger Wallace. a driver at a
piu.a restaurant -near the
· S\:hool. said he saw the students being evacuated from
1he high school and loaded
onto buses.
"They arc searching ea~:h
student as they are getting on
the buses." he said.
Tuesday"s shooting is the
second fat&lt;d shooting of a
sc hool
employee
in
Tennessee this year.
Stewart County scllool bus
· driver Joyce Gregory, 47, was
killed'" she stqpped to pick up
a student on her route on Mm·ch
I. Jason Clinard. 15, is charged
with murder in the case and
will be tried as an adult.
In August a boy was accidentally shot in the leg in a
middle sc hool restroom in
Jefferson County. The investigation into that incident led
police to charge two students
111 a plot to kill a teacher at
Maury Middle School.

Bush's Social Security overhaul may not come
Hundreds face rebuilding after
up before he leaves office, lawmaker says devastating tornado in Indiana, Kentucky
BY MARY DALRYMPLE
election to promote funda- McCrery, R-La. , ·chairman of

. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRiTER

-sTII!AKHOUSE-

·-

JACKSBORO, Tenn. - A
teenager shot and killed an
assistant principal and seriously wounded two other
administrators at a high
school on Tuesday. oflicials
said. The student was arrested.
"!don't know ·what he was
thinking or what his motives
were ,"
Sheriff
Ron
McClellan said . ·
Campbell County High
School Assistant Principal
Ken Bruce was shot in the
chest just after 2 p.m. 4nd
died soon after at a hospi tal,
law enforcement and school
officials said.
, The suspect. Ken Bartley
Jr., 15, was grazed in the
hand by a bullet fired from
his own .22-caliber handgun
during a scufrle with the
administrators &lt;ind an unidentified teacher who helped
wrestle the gun away, the
sheriff's department said.
AP Photo/The Knoxville News Sentinel, J. Miles Cary
No other student s were
Campbell County Sheriff's Department Captain Don Farmer, left, and Campbell County Sheriff
injured.
Principal Gary Seale was Ron McClellan, right, escort the suspect in the Campbell County High School shootings from a
shot in the lower abdomen, hospital in LaFollette, Tenn., after the suspect was treated and released on Tuesday. Students
and Assistant Principal Jim at Campl)el l County High School identified the suspect as Kenny Bartley, a 15-year-old freshPierce was shut i~ the chest. man . According to officials, Assistant Principal Ken Bruce was fatally shot, Principal Gary Seale
Seale was in serious condi- was in serious condition, and AssistantPrlncipal Jim Pierce was in critical conditio~.
tion and Pierce in critical
School will be closed the Mond~y, sc hools d.irector because our staff followed
condition at University of
the (emergency) plan in
Tennessee Medical Center in rest of the' week, and coun- Judy Blevins said.
"This situation could have place," said Mark Wells, vice
Knoxville, spokeswoman selors will be available to
Lisa McNeal said. ·
help students and teachers on gotten much worse. It did not chairman of the Campbell

KFC making commercials to respond to any bird flu outbreak

-~~~ ai&gt;IJI Tilll

:0

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

a disaster declaration that wi II
clear the way for federal assistance in Vanderburgh and
EVANSVILLE , Ind. Warrick counties.
:
Crews finished draining a
"We're focused on getting
four-acre retention pond · these people back on their
Tuesday as they made sure feet ." said . Eri~: Dietz, state
there were no more victims of director of homeland security.
the huge tomado that killed
State officials said nearly
22 p~ople over the weekend.
600 homes were destroyed or
Five bodies initially were sustained major damage .
found in the pond near the Resident s likely. would not be
Eastbrook Mobile Home allowed to return to the area
Park, which was torn apart by until Wednesday or Thursd&lt;iy.
the twister. Rescuers found
Gov. Mitch Daniels, who
no more bodies in the reten- visited damaged areas of
and
nearby
tion pond, and officials said Evansville
the search there was finished. Newbmgh for the second
Also, President Bush signed time since the tornado, said
BY RYAN LENZ

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

allowing re sidents to gather
what remains of their belongings would be the fir&gt;! step in
a gradual recovery.
"There wi 11 · be people here
who will be without permanent housii1g for a good
while ," Dani els told reporters
after touring damaged . are~s
on foot and by helicopter
Tuesday.
The tornado carved a path
41 miles long and about a
qttartcr-mile wide. At least 18
people died at the mobile
home park, and 1'\our others
were killed in neighboring
Warrick County. Doz«ns
remained hospitalized .

KICK OFF

THE
HOLIDfiY
SEfiSO"!
With your business~~~~;
advertised in the r
'
'

Get
a
FlEE
Buffer
with a GUt Card purchase af '2&amp; or mora

:0 -PONDEROSA
&amp;TEAKHOUBE-

2005

.

~y DUNCAN MANSFIELD

· Admission is FHB1~.
Av:1.rietr.. of eraJ'tf'J'S will hP availahl&lt;'.

•

PageA7

One killed, two wounded in Jacksboro school shooting

'

France, facing 'moment of truth,' declares state
·of emergency, reaches out to angry youths
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The Daily Sentinel

I

------------------ .. ·----- -------------. ____ ...

•••

LOUISVILLE, Ky. -· In
coming days, KFC will have
televi sion commercials ready
to reassure customers that its
chicken is safe tO eat in the
event of a bird llu outbreak.
The chicken chain said
Tuesday it hope s the spots
never have to air, but it's taking no cha11Ces in the face of
a potential threat to business.
"We '11 keep them on tHe
shelf and hope not to us·e
them ,"
Jonathan
Blum ,
spokesman for KFC's parent,
Yum Brands Inc .. said of the
spots expected to be shot soon .
Kentucky Fried Chicken and
its parent , both based in
I..,ouisville, have sr:ent months
making plans to respond quickly in case of bird llu outbreaks
in its markets worldwide.
Executives have discussed ihe
topic with govemment officials
and outside health experts.
"We' re keeping our fingers
. on the pulse of what happens
·day in and day out around the
world," Blum said. "A11d we
arc taking action in terms of
preparing fnr this in the event
11 becomes &lt;ill eventuality in
any market."
The ad;.:ampaign would be

ready to air wherever an outbreak occurred.
National Chicken Council
spokesman Richard Lobb
called KFC' s decision to
have standby ads "wise and
prudent ," but insisted there is
no ·reason for concern of an
outbreak in this country. The
United States will produce
9.5 billion birds this year and
does not import any poultry
from countries affected· by
the avian tlu, he said.
Currently, the virus is hard
for people to catch. and most
deaths have been linked to
Iutman .handling of infected
poultry. Vi etnam, the country
hit hardest by bird llu. on
Tuesday reported. its 42nd
hlllnan death. World heal th
expem warn, however, the
virus could mutate into a form
that's easily passed from person to person , possibly sparking a global outbreak .
"The message is to reassure
consumers that eating cooked
chicken is perfectly s~1fe."
"Blum said. "As our investors
would hope. we are being
proactive in preparing the
materials in the event that we
need to use them. "
Monday, Yum reported that
KFC sales in October were up
6 percent in the United State\.

where the company has detected no consumer backlash from
media reports on concerns
about bird llu, In recent
months. KFC has shaken off a
slump and taken an upward
trajectory amid the success of
its 99-cent Snacker sandwich
and variety chicken bucket.
In Chma, where KFC
recently opened .its 1,500th
restaurant, Yum posted
sharply lower sales growth in
October. Yum has Pizza Hut
restaurants in China, but the
bulk of sales come from KFC.
Sales rose by 8 percent in
the China division, compared
with 24 Rercent growth a year
. ago. Blum attributed the
slowdown to a disappointing
promotion for a crispy chicken steak product.
"It 's too early to tell
whether or not the bird t1u has
had any impact on our business in China." Blum said.
lndu slry analyst Larry
Miller of Prudential Equi ty
Group also cited the weak
product promotion for lowerth;m-cxpected China resu lts.
But in his re sponse to October
sa le s.
he also wrote. ·
"Headlines from the avian llu
sitpati 0 n continue to weigb on
ove rall consumer sentiment
towards chicken in China."

Sentinel
Wednesday, November 23rd

Reach Over

5.000
Households
In Meigs
County!
Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 21st
Call Dave or Brenda

992•2155

�LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

LAND TRANSFERS POSTED
POMEROY
- Meigs Securities, sheriff's deed,
County Recorder Kay Hill Chester.
reported the following transLois M. Christian, Exa
Mae Christian, to John C.
fers in real estate:
Michelle Roush to TTS Harmon, deed, Village of
Rentals , Inc ., deed, Rutland.
Middlepor1/Salisbury.
Kenneth K. Walto n. Dollie · Frederick W. Heldreth,
M. Walton . w John R. Vicky Heldreth, to Home
Monroe . Anna Monroe. deed, National Bank, mortgage,
Salisbury.
Olive.
John R. Monroe. Anna M.
Joseph
A.
Colecchi,
Monroe. to Edward K. Sinith, Claudia V. Colecchi, Mary
deed. Olive.
Kathleen Moore, to Thelma
Gary N. Curtis to Deutsche L. Moore, deed, Rutland.
Bank, Ameriques! Mortgage
Mi ~dy Patterson, Sheryl

Tiemeyer, to Noah Turner,
deed, Lebanon.
Billy J. Trout to Lloyd
Martin, Joan Martin, deed,
Columbia.
Donald Moreland, ' Robin
Moreland, to Roscoe Mills,
Sandra J. Mills, deed, Olive.
Mildred D. Lee to Keith A.
Barnhart, deed, Scipio.
Julia D. · Riffle to Tara L.
Congo, deed, Chester.
· Patrick
D.
Kearn s,
Margaret E. Betsy Kearns, to
Tara L. .Congo, deed, Chester.

Meigs County Court News
POMEROY
Meigs pended, probation, assault: Rose, Long Bottom , $100
County Court Judge Steven Amy B. Harrison, Racine, and costs, probation, disor· L. Story recently processed $20 and costs, failure to con- derly conduct; Roger L.
trol; Mark L. Hart, Pomeroy, Rowland, McConnellSville,
the following cases:
Shawnda L. Akers, Dublin, $25 and costs. parking on $30 and costs, speeding;
$30 and costs, speeding; highways; Joshua B. Hickle. Pattjcia A. Shane, Pomeroy,
William
C.
Almquist, Crown City, $30 and costs, $400 and costs, I 80 days in
Charleston, W. Va , $30 and seat belt violation: Curt J. jail, suspended, probation,
costs, speeding; Shaun M. Hostetler, North Lawrence, receiving stolen property;
Bartoe. McArthur, $30 and $30 and costs, speeding.
Tim Smtih, Gallipolis, $150
costs, speeding; Joshua R.
Charles
D.
Johnson. and costs, I 0 days in jail, susBarton. Coolville, $150 and Syracuse, $250, 180 days in pended, probation, no O.L.:
costs, I0 days in jail, sus- jail, suspended, probation, no Micah
R.
Somerville,
pended, probation, reckless O.L.; Jacob M. Johnson, Gallipolis, $20 and costs, left
operation; Terri L. Brewer, Traphill, N.C.,.$30 and costs, of center; Paul B. Stalker,
Racine, $200, 90 days in jail, speeding; Larry
Johnson, Hellier, Ky., $30 and costs,
suspended,
probation, Rutland, $20 and costs, fail- speeding.
obstructing offical business: ure to control; Mark J.
John L. Stumbo; Pomeroy,
Stephen
L.
Butcher, Makholi , Charlotte, N .C.. $50. open container, $350 and
C.olumbus. $30 and costs, $50 and costs, speeding; costs, 30 days in jail, 27 susseat belt violation; James L. Mark A. Mayes, Pomeroy, pended, probation, DUI, $200
Cereghin, New Bavaria, $30 $20 and costs, use of unau- · and costs, 30 days in jail, susand costs, speeding; Thomas thorized plates; Matthew C. pended, probation, driving
J. Chambers, Avon Lake, $50 McDaniel, Portland, $20 and under susp. I revoc., $70, proand costs, speeding; Danyan costs, failure to control; bation, no taillights on vehiE. Collins, Reedsville, $20 Randy
L.
McFarland, cle; Candace L. Tillis,
and costs, right-of-way, pub- Dunbar, W.Va., $20 and Rutland, $30 and costs, speedlic .highway; Beverly L. costs, traftic cont. dev./signs; ' ing; Jeffrey C. Waybright,
Cooner, Racine, $20 and John Milkovich, Mount Ripley, W.Va., $30 and costs,
costs, assured clear distance; Clemens, Mich., $30 and speeding; Jeremy W. Weber,
Brian K. Curnutte, Gallipolis, costs, seat belt ·violation; Carroll, $30 and costs, seat
$30-and costs, seat belt viola- Jesse 0. Nutter, Pomeroy, belt violation; Faith J. Wells,
tion: Craig M. Defilippo, $100, 10 days in jail, seven Tuppers Plains, $1 00 and
Huntersville, N.C.: $30 and suspended. probation, no costs, 30 days in jail, suspendcosts, speeding; Evan L. O.L., $30, probation, seat ed, probation, disorderly con"
Dickinson, Albany, $20 and belt violation; Andrew L. duct; Angela. Williams, East
costs, failure to control; Patten, Lancaster, $20 and Lansing, Mich., $30 and
Christy
A.
Eastwood, costs, seat belt-passenger; costs, speeding; Charles D.
Westerville, $30 and costs, Harold G. Perry, Johns Wilson, Racine, $562 and
speeding; Rebecca J. Eblin, Island, S.C.; Laura M. costs, · overload; Lena D.
Reedsville, $30 and costs, ·Piazza, Columbus, $50 and Yoacham, Racine, $30 and
seat belt violation; Jennifer L. costs, speeding; Geoffrey S. · costs:' speeding; · Mark D.
Ford, Fredericksburg, Va .. Porter, Logan, $30 and costs, Young, Pomeroy, $25 and
$100, no O.L.; Dorothy D. speeding; _D~onis P, Rahe, cq~t~. p(obation, !eft of center.
Gerard. Middleport, $30 and Western Monclova, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation; costs, speeding; Angie M.
Todd Goode, Racine, $100 Redmond, Galloway, $30 and
and costs, 10 days in jail. sus- costs, speeding; Christina D.

a:

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
The
reports at the center of a legal
battle over how much information Ohio's governor can
keep secret sit in an unlocked
file cabinet outside an aide's
office.
The documents, from state
agency directors, ·detail state
business, possible employee
discipline, lawsuits - and
sometimes vacation plans.
The Ohio Supreme Court
hears
arguments
on
Wednesday about whether
the governor has the same
· right as the presideni to
shield the written communication he receives from his
top aides.
"For me or for future governors, certainly executive
privilege is important from
the standpoint of making sure
that the governor gets a free
flow of complete, accurate
and timely information from
members of the cabinet,"
Gov. Bob Taft said.
Sen.
Marc
Dann,
a
Youngstown Democrat, sued
to get the documents under the
state public records act. He
argues the governor is claiming a sweeping and unprecedented right to secrecy.
"Indeed, the privileges
being asserted here jeopardize democracy itself," said
the argument submitted by
Dann 's attorney, Frederick
Gines.
Dann is seeking weekly
reports to Taft from James
Conrad, the former director
of the Bureau of Workers'
Compensation, and from
some Taft aides. He wants to
show how much the governor
knew about growing investment losses at the bureau .
Taft, a Republican, said he
had the right 't o shield the
documents, but released some
1

anyway because of public
interest in the bureau. The
probe into investment scandals at the bureau later led to
Taft's misdemeanor conviction on ethics violations for
failing to disclose gifts.
His attorneys argue Taft's
right to shield the documents
is twofold.
The Ohio
Constitution says the governor may "require information.
in writing, from the officers in
the executive department."
They say that power means he
also has control over sharing
that information.
Also, Taft argues that federal c.ourts and 'some state ·
courts have upheld the common law concept of executive privilege.
Dann argues that Taft is
wrong to assume a right to
secrecy when no such language is in the Constitution.
He also says the federal and
state court rulings have
applied mostly to cases of
shteldi ng advice and opinions
needed for deci sion-making,
not routine information such
as that in the cabinet reports.
Civil
The
American
Liberties Union of Ohio and
Ohio
Taxpayers · Union
together filed an argument
supporting Dann, saying
Ohio
courts
and.. the
Legislature have several
time s refused to create a governor's right to secrecy.
."The court ought not create
such a privilege. And the governor cannot establish one by
fiat." the argument said.
Recent Supreme Court rulings that shield police officer
photos and state employee
addresses have shown the
court narrowing Ohio's long
tradition of keeping records
open, said Jeffrey Gamso,
ACLU -Ohio legal director.
Ruling in Taft's favor in
this case would further
diminish the public right to
know. he said.

Wednesday, November 9,

2005

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

TUESDAY'S SCORES .
No local games scheduled

Local Weather
Wednesday ... Mostly cloudy

Today's Forecast

with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Some thunderstorms may produce gusty
winds. Higl" in the mid 70s.
Southwest winds I 0 to 15
mph with gusts up to 30 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Wednesday night... Mostly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming partly cloudy. A 20
percent chance of showers.
Much cooler with lows
around 40. West winds I0 to
15 mph with gusts up to 25
mph.
.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Much cooler with
highs in the upper 40s.
Northwest winds I 0 to 15
mph with gusts up to 25 mph.
Tlwrsday
night... Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in the
lower 30s. Northwest winds 5
to 10 mph.
Veterans
Day... Mostly
sunny. Highs in the mid 50s.
Friday night... Ciear. Lows
in the mid 30s.

Wednesday, November 9, 2005

High I Low temps

r.liCH.

Rio volleyball.closes season with loss to Cedarville

Toledo•
65' I 53' .
Youngstown •
68' 152°

Manafteld•
~
68' I 53'
/-" / /
Dayton•~

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
P.~&gt;.

~t'Gmalr

LocAL SCHEDULE
GAlLIPOLIS -A schedule of upcoming college
and high school vars~y sporting evenls involving
teams lrt;~m Galtia, Meig~ and Mason counties.

Fddgv's games

Cincinnati
• 71 ' 159' .

·

College Soccer
TBA at Rio Grande, 11 a.m .
College Basketball
Point Park at Rio Grande, e p.m.
Woman's College Baakatball
Saint Vincent at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.

~
Portsmouth
•
/.' /
73° 158'
®2005

~Cloudy ~
Partly
Cloud}4

~"'---

"1 1 , -'

Thunde
. rstorms
,_
... ;,

9
~

___) Showers

.

~
flumes
,. - ~.

.
"

' ,.-...".
"~C./

. Saturdgy'a qgm@l

W
.....

~

Snow

·~···

*

'

Rq1n

ed the ship
and steadily
built
the
lead in ca pturing
the
fir st game
30-16.
T
h e
Red women
battled back
'-"'---_....., from
an
Urton
early · 7-2
deficit in the
second game to tie the score
at 12-12. Cedarville again
was able · to get the upper
hand and wrap up game two
30;20.
Cedarvi lie m·uscled its
way to an 11-2 lead in the
third game only to see the

BY MARK WILLIAMS

*Columbus
70' I 57'

. 68' t5B'
. ~

Saturday and Saturday
night... Mostly clear. Highs in
the mid 60s. Lows in · the
lower 40s. ·
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a 40 percent chance of showers. Highs in the mid 60s.
· Sunday · · night... Partly
cloudy with a 50 percent

City/Region

Forecast lor Wednesday, Nov. 9

•

"•"

Ice

. . ....

College Basketball
Point Park at Rio Grande Tournament
Women's College Basketball
Seton Hill at Rio Grnnde, 6 p.m.

weather Underground • AP

chance of showers. Lows in lower 40s.
the mid 40s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
Mo11day and Monday chance of showers in the after11ight... Partly cloudy. Highs noon. Highs in the lower 60s.
in the lower 60s. Lows in the Chance of rain 40 percent.

Grande

vs. W illiam

Woods

Red women
come back
and make it
interesting .
getting
a&gt;
close as 21 17
before
falling 3021.
Cedarvi lie
puts the ca p
Kiesling
on a perfect
season in the Ameri ca n
Mideast Conference South
Division with the win. The
Lady Jackets won both
matches versus Rio Grande
this season.
.
Junior
outside
hitter
Lindsay Urton and sen1or

outside hiller Lynnette
Kiesling led the Redwomen
with I 0 kills each. It was
the final ga me for Kies ling,
who honored before the
game.
Freshman outside/middle
hitter Je ssica Rodgers addeu
eight kill s and produced 17
digs. · She was also 9 -for-9
se rving.
Sophomore libe ro Jodi
Smith led the Rio defense
with 19 digs. Freshman
Amanda Stevens tallied 16
digs and was 11-for-11 serving.
Junior setter Je ssica Veach
handed out 29 assists anu
recorded. 13 dig s. Veach was

11-for-11 serving with one
ace. Freshman Lindsay
Hal sey also notched double
fi gures in di~ with II.
Cedarville was led by
Smah Zeltman with 17 kills
ancJ Julia Bradley added 12
kilb . Kelsey Jones dished
out 48 assists and Lauren
. Mahl e and Libby Short were
in double figures in digs
with 15 and II respectively.
Rio Grande head coach
Patsy Fields was pleased
with the effort her team put
forth against the vaunted
AMC South champion. "I
thou ght o ur kids played

Please see Redwomen. 88

CollEgE Football- SouthErn Miss 27. Marshall 24 OT

Erldgy. November 18
Women's College Basketball
Rio

RIO GRANDE The
·University of Rio Grande
Redwomen volleyball team
gave it a good effort versus
NAJA No. 17 Cedarville,
but it wasn ' t good enough to
collect a victory in the season finale. Cedarville won
in three games, 30-16,30-20
and 30-21, Tuesday -evening
at the Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande (7-27, 1-15
AMCS) got the jump on
Cedarville
( 41-2,
16-0
AMCS) in the first game,
. gaining leads of 3-0, 6-3 and
7-4. The Lady Jackets right-

r---:

(at

Georgetown Classic). 6 p,m. ,

·INsiDE

Local Stocks
ACI - 76.64
AEP -36.86
Akzo - 42.77
Ashland Inc. - 54.54
AT&amp;T- 19.61
BLI - 12.23
Bob Evans - 22.24
Borgwarner- 59.59
CENX -19.89
Champion - 4.36
Charming Shops 12.69
City Holding - 36.56
Col - 45.4 7
DG -18.83
fDuPont ~ 43.02
Federal. Mog_~! ::-.-•.;4..45 .•

·

USB - 29.20
Gannett - 65.35
General Electric 33.76
GKNLY _._ 5
Harley Davidson 51.31
JPM- 37.34
Kroger- .19
Ltd. - 20.52
NSC - 41.38
Oak Hill Financial 32.45
OVB - 25
BBT.,..;._ 42.84
Peoples - 29.06
~.P.~~to - ~8:30

Buckeyes still
remember
Northwestern
game in 2004

Premier - 14.50
RockweU - 55.85
Rocky Boots - 24.84
RD Shell - 61.21
SBC- 23.60
Sears - 119.42
Wai-Mart- 47.61
Wendy's- 48.06
Worthington - 19;86

Bv RusTY

• Owens apologizes to
McNabb, team.
See Page B3
• Alabama to third in BCS.
See Page B3

Mason County
Motorcross results

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NeKI race:
Saturday, November 12
Sign ups : 11 a.m.
Practice: 12 p.m.
Race: 1:30 p.m.

CONTACTS
Phone -1-740-446·2342 e.a:t. 33
Fu- 1·740-446 -3008
E-mail - sports@mydailysenlinel.com
Sports Staff

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

55 Hospital Drive, Athens, OH 45701 -2345

www.obleness.org

MILLER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the prevlou!l
day's transactions, pro- .
vlded by Smith Partners" ,,
at Advest Inc. of
·
Gallipolis.
...., .....
) . '•.At •

MEN

Justices to decide if
governor can keep reports
from cabinet secret
Bv CARRIE
SPENCER GHOSE

Page AS

Brad Sherman, Sporta Editor
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33

bsherm8n@ myda.llylribuno.com
Bryan Watters, Sport• Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext 23
bwatters@mydailytribune.com
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(304) 675-1333, ext. 19
Ierum mydailyregister.com

!f

AP photo
Marshall's Hiram Moore (7) has his attempted pass reception broken up by Southern Mississippi's John Eubanks (1)
' Tuesday at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.
·

Marshall falls in overtime tQ Southern Miss
yard field goal attempt as
time expired in the fourth
- - - - - - - - - - quarter.
DeFatta
had
replaced Jan O'Connor earliHUNTINGTON, W.Va.
er in the game after
-Darren McCaleb kicked a
O'Connor had a field goal
34-yard field goal in overblocked and had a kickoff go
time to lift Southern out of bounds.
Mississippi to a 27-24 victo- · Southern Miss is 2-1 durry over Marshall on Tuesday ing. a stretch of four straight
night.
road games and moved withSouthern Miss (5-3, 4-1 in a win of first-place
Conference USA) blew a Central Florida in the East
double-digit lead for the sec- Division.
The
Golden
ond straight game. Unlike a Eagles must play at Houston
21-17 loss at North Carolina on Sunday, a game postState on Oct. 29, the Golden poned from Sept. 24 due to
Eagles recovered.
Hurricane Rita.
Marshall failed to score in .League
newcomer
overtime when freshman Marshall (4-5, 3-3) was
David DeFatta's 27-yard eliminated from the East
field goal attempt bounced race and is one loss away
off the left upright.
from its tlrst losi ng season
Sou'thern Miss' Jasper since 1983.
The Thundering Herd
Faulk blocked DeFatta's 24BY JOHN RABY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

have• fallen twice at home yards to the Southern Miss
this season, the first time 30. and .Ahmad Bradshaw
that's happened in a decade . . eventually scored from I
It was only the ninth home yard out to tie the game at
loss for Marshall since its 24-24 with 8:32 left.
·
stadium opened in 1991 . .
Bradshaw finished with a
Marshall . trailed 24-10 career-high 147 yards on 28
before backup quarterback cames.
Jimmy Skinner led the
Southern Miss' Dustin
Thundering Herd to two Almond completed 17-of-28
fourth-quarter touchdowns passes for 224 yards but was
in place of Bernie Morris, limited to 59 yards after
who left the game with an halftime .
injured foot.
8
h
Shaun Lauzon was . ruled
He threw a 5 -yard touc out of bounds .· when he down pass to Pedi Causey in
caught a 10-yard pass from the seco~d quarter and his
Skinner in the end zone, but 32-yard pass to Anthony
a replay ofticial ruled it a Perine helped set up Cole
touchdown. It was the fifth Mason's 2-yard TD run at
play to be overturned in the th e end of the third.
booth in the conference this
Southern Miss ' Larry
season.
Thomas ran for 115 yards on
Marshall's Chris Royal 24 carries. including a 3then returned a ·punt 33 yard TD run.

COLUMBUS
The
newest \ igns on the walls of
Ohio State's practice facility
Jon 't have dever maxims or
inspirational sayings on
. ,them . All they say is "33-27 ."
That was the score. in overtim e. a year ago when
Northwestern ~ beat
the
Buckeyes tn se nd Ohio State
spiraling to an 0-3 start in the
Big Ten .
It 's not as if the IOth'runkeu Buckeyes. who host
Northwestern in a key conference
showdown
on
Satmday, need to be remind·
ed.
"We remember that game
clearly.'' defensive end Mike
Kudla said on Tuesday. "You
get up there (ond you get
embarrassed like that. It just
kind of sits with you."
Ohio State came into Ryan
Field in Evanston. Ill,,
11nbcaten in three games and
ranked No. 7 i11 the nation.
But the Wildcats moved the
ball up and down the field at
will.
. "I just remembtr liS coming out and being fiat- not
clicking defensively or offensivelv," kicker ·Josh Huston
said.' "I remember them drivin g on us and thinKing, 'Our
defense is better than this.' I
kept thinking, 'They ' re going
to stop them this time.' It just
'
never happened."
Northwestern twice led by
I0 points. with the Buckeyes
tyin g it at 27-27 on Justin

Please see Buckeyes. 88

• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
Byrum among

Thorpe Award ~
semifinalists
•••
OKLAHOMA
CITY •
(AP)
Southern •
•
California's D~rnell Bing
and Texas' Michael 1-Juff
were among 12 players
selected as semifinalists for
the -Jim Thorpe Award on
Tuesday.
The candidates for the
award. given each year to
the natron 's best college
defen sive
hack.
also
include
Ohio's
Dion
Byrum, who leads the
nation with six interceptions, Alabama's Roman
Harper and Georgia 's Greg
Blue.
The other semifinalists
are Darrel Brooks of
At'izona, Charles Gordon
of Kansas , Tye Hill of
Clemson. LaRon Landry of
LSU,
Brandon
Merriweather of Miami
(Fla.), Jimmy Williams of
Virginia Tech and Alan
Zemaitis of Penn State.
'

'

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'

�'
Wednesday, November 9, 2005
Page B2 • The Daily SCntinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, November 9, 2005

Colon wins AL Cy Young Award Steroid bill lightened to gain support
Bv MtKE FtTZPATRtCK
ASSOCIATE.D PRESS

I

NEW YORK - Bartolo
Colon always had the blazing
fastbalL the snappy sinker. the
natural look of a No. I starter.
Still. something was missing: consistency.
So he learned to pull back a
bit, focus on throwing strikes
and getting grounde rs. Now.
he's the dominant ace everyone envisioned. and he' has an
American League Cy Young
Award to prove it.
Colon won a surpri singly
one-sided vote Tuesday. beating out reliever Mariano
Ri vera and becoming the lirst
Angels pitcher in 41 years to
·take home the honor.
.
"If! can get an out with one
or two pitches and use my
sinker or my cutter. r m better
off,'' Colon said throug h a
translator. "I stopped being ·a
village boy. thinking that I
can throw any stone. any rock
throu2h a wall. and started
thinking about be ing a guy
that could last longer, to take
some off my fastball and not
to depend only on throwi ng
hard."
Colon, who led the league
with 21 wins, was listed first
on 17 ballots and second on
the other II for 118 points in
voting by the Baseball
Writers' Association of
America. He was the on Iy
pitcher named on every ballot, easily topping Ri vera,
who received 68 points.
The New York Yankees'
closer got eight first-place
votes for the highest fini sh of
his career, while 2004 winner
Johan Santana of the
Minnesota Twins received
three and came in third.
"After the season, yeah,
I've been thinking about it a
lot," Colon said during a conthe
ference call from
· Domini can Republic . "A nd
one of the prevailing thoughts
was the fact that maybe I
won 't get it. May be it was
going to go to somebody else.
A lot of crazy things came
into my head."
Dean Chance was the only
other Cy Young Award winner in the Angels' 45-season
·hi story, winning in 1964.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Halos' Colon
takas Al onchlnu
prize
t)artolo Colon, the American
l eague 's only 20-game winner,
became the Angels ' lirst Cy ibung
winner since Dean Chance in 1964.
PLAYER

t ST 2ND :JAO T.OT

Colon . LA

17 11

- 11B

Mariano Rivera·NY8_ 7_ 7 00

Jo~an ~antana. Min 3 a

t251
B
M'iirk. BUeh-~&amp; :·chT··· · ·:--- - :~- -·5·--··s

Clitl Lee. Cle

- 2 2

Jon Garland, Chi

-

- 1

1

K!Win-· MiiiWOOCCCie ----~:·--: ·-··i·--- -1

•

Workhorse ace of the staff
led the league 1n wins.
and came Ofl strong in
the second half wi th

a 5·0 record and
1

J

Regular

season

'.

a 1.72 ERA in

Augu't.

~:i:?~f-~ ~ Af.t .

~ -.~

BB

~~

43 1

,_

26~-

HR
ERA348

;

"'

'

~ Col~n
;

--') - .p
Though Colon (2 1-8) was
the league:s only 20-game
winner, this year's Cy Young
race was thought to be close.
Hi s 3.48 ERA and 157 strikeout s r.anked eighth, while
Ri vera racked up 43 saves
and a career-best 1.38 ERA.
Santana went 16-7 with a 2.87
ERA and led the majors with
238 strikeouts. ·
A shoulder injury sidelined
Colon in the playoffs, but voting for all BBWAA awards
takes place at the end of the
regular season and excludes
postseason performance.
"Mariano had a great ye·ar,"
Colon said,. thanking Ri vera
for teaching him how to
throw his cut fastball. "I did
think about the fact that
maybe he was going to come
away and be the winner."
Both pitched for divi sion
champions, but the voters
ultimately, gave more· weight
to the starter: Colon threw
222 2-3 innings to Rivera's 78

1-3,
And despite pitching with
back pain all season, Colon
issued a career-low 43 walks.
. "Obviously, it's made me a
more complete pitcher and
I'm very happy about that,"
he said.
The award was big news in
Altamira, Colon's home town
of about 3,000 people .
• "You don't even imagine
what the scenery is around
here. People stl)ppin jl by and
honking their horns,' he said .
"ll 's been really, really crazy,
crazy, crazy. It's the first time
ever tha t we are celebrating
something like this .... There's
going to be a lot of partying."
Unfort unate ly for Los
Angeles. Colon wasn't much
help in the playoffs. He lost
Game .I to the Yankees in the
first rou nd , then left Game 5
itft.er onl y 23 pitches because
of infla mmation in hi s right
shoulder.
. · "We would not have been in
the position thai we were
wi thout the year that Bartolo
had," Angels manager Mike
Sciosda said. "He's got an
incredible work ethic.
"Hi s ability to turn his fastball into three different looks
is really the key to what he
does on the mound. To combine the velocity with the
command that he has is a
unique package. It puts him in
an elite group." .
Colon's injury' kept him off
the roster for the AL championship series against Chicago,
and the Angels were eliminated in fi ve games by the White
Sox , who went on to a World
Series sweep of Hou s!On.
"I really, desperately wanted to pitch against the White
Sox," Colon said. "Mike
Scioscia knows the pain that I
felt, how'hard it was for me to
come out of that game and
leave the team behind like
that."
Cleveland Indians left-bander Cliff Lee came in fourth
with eight points, and Mark
Buehrle of the White Sox was
fifth with five. ·
Colon gets a $500,000
boqus for winning the award
.- more than the entire salary
of Lee, who made · $345,000.
Buehrle receives $60,000 for
finishing fifth ...

Indians' Shapiro named top exec·
BY

ToM WtTHERS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - There's
one offseason trade Indians
general
manager · Mark
Shapiro would make in a millisecond. He'd pull the tri gger
on this one without even batting an eye,
If only he could, Shapiro
would gladly swap his
Executive of the. Year Award
for Cleveland getting a spot in
the AL playoffs.
. "It's still a hollow feeling to
win 93 games and not make
the playoffs," Shapiro said
Tuesday.
Shapiro, who in a three-year
span di smantled the Indians
and returned them .to prominence, was named baseball 's
top executive by The Sporting
AP photo
News, which announced its Cleveland Indians ge neral manager Mark Shapiro answers
choice during the GM meet- questions at Jacobs Field in Cleveland April 27. Shapiro, 3B,
ings in Indian Wells, Calif.
was selected Major League Baseba ll Executive of the Year by
In voting by baseball execu- The Sporting News on Monday.
tives from both leag ue s,
Sh~piro edged Chicago White contra~:ts and had a $90 miiShapiro stuck with his plan
So.x GM Kenn y Willi ams, li on payroll back then. The and wa.~ rewarded for it.
whose savvy .maneuvering led Indians were also coming off
Following a 9-14 record in
to his club winning its tirst a playoff appearance as well April, the Indians found their
World Series title since 191 7. as a run of wi nning six AL groove under manager Eric
Atlanta Braves GM John Central titles in se,en years Wedge
and
tri mmed
Sc)JUerholz fi nished third . St. ·and making two World Series Chicago's 15-game lead to I
Louis' Walt Jocketty won the appearances since 1995.
I/2 games with two weeks
award last year.
In 2002. Shapiro planned to remai ning.
However,
Shapiro. 38, is the third rebuild the Indians while the Cleveland went just 1-6 in the
·Indians general manager to club continued to contend. It tl nal week and finished two
win the award. Bill Yeeck won didn't take long for him to games out of the AL wild
it in 1948 and John Hart. reali1-e that doi ng both was card.
Shapiro's mentor, won it in impossible.
· Coi ncidentall y, Shapiro,
· 1994 and 1995. .
..The path we were on was who is signed with Cleveland
Shapi ro wouldn't divulge headed for a train wreck," he through 2007, was tabbed as
whom he voted for. but he said.
baseball 's top exec just hours
joked that some of his support
So before the '02 trading before Colon, now with the
probably came before the deadline, Shapiro made the Los Angeles Ange ls, was
Indians faded m the_ season's bold move of dealing Bartolo named the AL's Cy Young
fin al week, collapst ng wi th Colon, the Indians' ace, to Award winner. Lee, who went
Montreal for prospects Cliff 18-5 th is season , was fourth .
October's luster in sight.
"I think I was the benef&lt;_Icto,; Lee , Grady Sizemore and
Now that the Indians are
of a Sept. 15 vot mg deadline, Brandon Phillips. The move back among baseball's upper
he satd.
was universally panned by echelon, Shapiro's next chalBut there is no denying the Indian s fans, who cou ldn't lenge is to keep them there
job that Shapiro, restrained by understand the logic in giving and deliver Cleveland its first
a $42 million payroll, .has up so much for what appeared World Series title since 1948.
done in resurrecting the to be so little.
Shapiro's first obstacle will be
Btl! Shapiro believed he was to replace or re-sign four key
Indians. _who went 93-69 this
season JUSt two years after doing the right thing, and pitchers on Cleveland's staff.
wmnmg only 68 games.
bravely predicted the Indians which led the AL in ERA last
At the end of 1he 2001 sea- would contend again in 2005. season.
son, Hart, who had announced And after two los in ~ seasons,
That's nothing new or
he was steppmg down months some roster reshultling and intimidating to Shapiro, who
earlier, handed over the the emergence of young play- has had to navigate around
Indians to Shaptro. The agmg e", that's exactly what they ownership restricti ons since
' club was loaded with bloated did .
he took over the India ns,
I

'
The Daily
5entinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

elected to baseball's Hall of Marin said the congressman
Fame. "We tried to explain told Bunning and McCain
to them that we are going to he probabl y would accept
act
because of their failure the three- tier penalty strucWASHINGTON
to do so, and I don't think ture.
Aiming for a Senate vote on ,
k· "
.d
·
·
h'
.
In April, commissioner
Steroi
1egis 1atton t ts it Ss sun 111M'
. L d
enate . monty ea er Bud Selig proposed raising
week lawmakers eased the
' d
·
T
d
Harry
Retd, D-Nev., has baseball's penalties to a 50pro~ose pena1ties ues ay, ·s igned on as a co-sponsor, game suspension for an inicalhng . for a half-season and Bunning said he tial posi ti ve test, a 100suspenston the fi rst time an expected it to pass as soon ga me ban for a second
at hlete te sts posrtrve for as
late
Tuesday
or offense, and a lifetime ban
performance-enhanctng Wednesday.
Bunning for a third. Union head
drugs. .
planned to meet with Hou se Donald Fehr rejected that
The bill, sponsored by leaders and sponsors of proposal, and 'the sides have
Sens. Jim Bunmng, R-Ky., simil ar bill s in that cham- b
· ·
and John McCai n, R-Ari z., ber.
een negotiaung.
Under current rule s, a · The primary disagreecon tams a one-season ban
f
d t
d ff
ment between pl ayers and
or a secon . s erm 0 ense first failed drug .test draws a owners is the length of the
and a ltfetrme ban for a 10-day ban in Major
third. It would apply to League Baseball (roughly initial penalty, a baseball
MaJor League Baseball, the I/!Sth of · a seaso n), a 10_ official familiar with the
NFL, , NBA
. , NHL an d base- game ban in the NBA talks said on condition of
balls mmorleagues.
(about an ·ei ghth of a sea- anonymity because the diss
I
b
II
h
ld
· evera. t s t at wou
son) , a four-game ban in the cussions are secret.
standardize steroid ~ules NFL (a quarter of a season),
" I think congre ss ional
ac ross U.S. professtonal and a 2o.game ban in the interventi on in this issue
sports have been proposed NHL (about a quarter of a has promoted a 'better poliin the House and Senate in season).
cy within Major League
~ecent month s .. Most The House has three ver- Baseball ," San Diego
mcludmg the ongmal ver- sions of steroid legislation . Padres chief executive offiston of the Senate ":Ieasure One introduced by Rep . cer Sandy Alderson said.
were based on the Cliff Stearns, R-Fia ., calls
The Senate bill would
Olympic model : a two-year for a half-season ban for a mandate that eac h player is
suspension for a first drug first offense.
tested at least five ti.mes a
offense, a lifetime ban for a
"That we can agre~ on the year and would urge
penalties is very impor- leagues to erase records
second.
During a series of con- tant," Stearns said in a tele- achieved with the help of
gressional hearings and in · phone interview. "It's good performance -e nhancing
private meetings with law- news ·for trying to pass a drugs,
makers, . the leagues and steroid bill."
The ' leg islation would
their players' unions objectHouse
Government take effect a year after
ed to those penalties as too Reform
Committee being signed into law, givharsh. They also say they Chairman Tom Davis, R- ing the leagues that time to
should continue to set their Va., whose panel held a change their own steroid
own drug-testing rules and March 17 hearing with policies and make them at
penalties through collective baseball
stars
Rafael least as tough as the law.
"Maybe maybe bargaining.
Palmeiro, Mark McGwire,
"I think, seriously, that Jose Canseco and others, with a year to operate , to
they are under the opinion proposed a bill with the get their hou se in order,
that we will not act," said Olympic penaltie s. But they will act on their own,"
Bunning, a former pitcher. Davis spokesm'an Dave Bunning said.
BY HOWARD fENDRICH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pete Sr. says son made a 'small' mistake
CINCINNATI (AP) Hits king Pete · Rose
described his son Tuesday as
a good kid who made a small
mistake, . took responsibility
and hopes to continue playing baseball .
Pete Rose Jr. pleaded
guilty Monday in Tennessee
to distributing a drug that is
sometimes sold as a steroid
alternative. He could be sentenced to up to 24 months in
federal prison next February.
His father returned to
Cil)cinnati for a charity' event
Tuesday arid played down
the offense.
"I don't ·think Pete ran a red
light or had a speeding ticket.

That's the kind of kid he is,"
Rose Sr. said. "I wish people
understood how small the
mistake he made is."
Rose Sr. said his son, who
turns 36 on Nov. 16, hopes to
get back to playing baseball
at some point. His son played
for the Long Island Ducks of
the independent Atlantic
League last season,
"Pete's a baseball player,"
he said. "He just wants to
play baseball."
Rose Sr. set baseball's hits
record with the Cincinnati
Reds, finishing at 4,256. His
son got his only promotion to
the majors with the Reds in
1997 and went 2-for-14 with

nine strikeouts.
A federal indictment said.
Rose Jr. acknowledged
receiving GBL from a person
in Tennessee while he played
for the Reds' Double-A team
in Chattanooga. Rose had
stints with the Lookouts in
1997, 2001 and 2002.
. Rose Sr. agreed to a lifetime ban from baseball in
1989 for betting on baseball
while managing the Reds. He
also served a five-month sen'
tence in federal prison in
1990-91 for failing to report
income from signing autographs, memorabilia sales
and gambling· on his tax
returns.

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plays right away. We hope he
plays against the Dallas
Cowboys" on Monday night.
MOORESTOWN, N.J .
Team spokesman Derek
For once, Terrell Owens put Boyko said the Eagles had no
aside his pride, admitted he comment.
was wrong and pleaded for a
A day earlier, Owens was
second chance with the told by the team not to return
this season because of "a large
Philadelphia Eagles .
The
team
appeared number of situations that
unmoved.
accumulated over a long periA contrite Owens, hoping to . od of time," Reid said.
overturn his dismissal from
He said Owens had been
t~e Eagles, on Tuesday apolo~ "warned repeatedly about the
gtzed to coach Andy Reid, consequences of his actions."
quarterback
Donovan
The All-Pro wide receiver
McNabb, the team 's owner ·didn't play in Sunday night's
and president, and fans.
17- 10 loss at Washington, an£!
"The mentality that 1 have, will remain suspended for
my greatest strength can also three more games without pay.
be my greatest weakness," · After that, the Eagles plan to
Owens · said, reading a state- ·deactivate him for the rest of
ment outside his house. "''m a the season.
fiJdlter. I've always been and
NFL spokesman Greg
l'fl always be. I fight for what Aiello said Tuesday that the
I think is right. In doing so, 1 players' union has filed a
alienated a lot ofmy fans and grie~ance on behalf of Owens
my teammates."
seeking to overturn the sus"This is very painful for me pension. It will be heard Nov.
to be in this position," his said. 18 before arbitrator Richard
"I know in my heart that I can Bloch.
help the team win the Super
Owens was suspended
Bowl and not only be a domi- Saturday, two days after he
nant player, but also be a team said the Eagles showed "a lack
player. I can bring that."
of class" for not publicly recHis agent, Drew Rosenhaus, ognizing his I OOth career
said Owens made a public touchdown catch in a game on
apology in hopes of returning Oct. 2~. In the same interview
to the Eagles immediately,
with ESPN .com, Owens said
"We hope he plays again for the Eagles would be better off
the Philadelphia Eagles,'' with Green Bay's Brett Favre
Rosenhaus said. "We hope he at quarterback instead of
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

AP pholo

Philadelphia Eagles receiver Terrell Owens, right, walks w1 th
his agent Drew Rosenhaus outside his Moorestown, N.J . home
to address a group of media Tuesday. Owens has been suspended by the Eagles.
McNabb.
stateme nt he read from includOwens apologized to the ed a dire~:! apology to the liveorganization for maki ng those time Pro Bowl quarterback .
comments, bur didn't address
Thi s time, Owens said he
McNabb, even though the was sorry not onl y to Reid and

.

· PITTSBURGH (AP) Charlie Batch got the job
done Sunday. But Pittsburgh
Steelers coach Bill Cowher
said the team will need a lot
more from him if it wants to
win again.
Cowher named Batch the
starter for Sunday night's
home game against the
Cleveland Browns because
Ben Roethlisberger is recovering from arthroscopic knee
surgery.
Batch made his first start in
four years in a 20-10 victory
Sunday in Green Bay, a game
the Steelers won even though
Batch threw for only 65
yards.
"Hopefully, we'll be more
efficient throwing the ball
(this week)," Cowher said.
"It's riot all on him. We had
protection breakdowns ,at
times, but it's just something
we have to get better at. We
can 't get through games
throwing for 65 ·.rards and
thinking we can wm week in
and week out."
Batch was 9-of-16 and was
intercepted once after previously throwing only eight
passes since joining the
Steelers in 2002.
·
.
Cowher said Batch managed the offense )Yell, but the
Steelers must throw the ball
better against the Browns (35). The Steelers (6-2) were
outgained 268-213 despite
outrushing the Packers 15465 .
"It was good for him to get

Russo

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McNabb. but also to Eagles
president Joe Banner and
owner.Jeffrey Lurie.
"I would like to reiterate my
respect for Donovan McNabb
as a quarterback and as a
teammate." Owens said. "I
apolpgize to him for any comment s that may have been
negative. "
·The Eagles are 4-4 thi s sea:
son and last in the NFC East.
Last year, they were the top
team in the conference, goi ng
13-3 on the way to the Super
Bowl.
" It really hurts rne not to be
part of the team anymore.''
Owen s said. "I came here to
help the Eagles get to the
Super Bowl and win the big
game."
Owens' relation ship .with
the Eagles took a drastic turn
after he fired longtime agent
Dav id
Joseph,
hired
Rosenhaus and demanded a
new contract just one season
into the seven-year, $48.97
milli on deal he signed when
he came to Philadelphia in
March 2004 .
Whilc Rosenhaus .spoke to
reporters and refused to
answer several que stions,
Owen&gt; stood stoically alongside a burl y bodyguard .
He tlashed hi s trademark
sm ile and winked at a reporter
who asked · Rosenhaus what
he's done for his client other
than have him kicked off the

team.
Rosenhaus skipped over that
question and critici zed the
media for bei ng .. unfair' to
Owens.
"There are playe rs in the .
NFI. that are arrested who vi(Jlate the program when it
comes to drugs and substance
abuse and they are not punished as severely as him ,..
Rosenhaus said.
Owens clashed with man·age ment this summer and
earned a one-week ex ile from
training camp after a heated
di spute with Reid that followed a shouting match with
offensive coordinator Brad
Childress.
Owens forced a trade to the
Eagles last year after eight
seasons with the 49ers and
invigorated the offense with
hi s superior skills. He had 77
catches for 1 ~200 yards and 14
TDs in 14 games.
Soon after Philadelphia lost
to New England in the Super
Bowl , Owens took his fi rst
shot at McNabb, suggesting
he was tired in the fou rth quarter of the loss.
McNabb responded harshly
and the two didn't speak for a
prolonged period in training
camp. They eventually reconciled thei r relationship and
performed well toge ther on
the tield - Owens has 47
catches for 763 yards and six
TDs this season.

With Roethlisberger ailing,
Manning finally
Batch to get second straight start has a souvenir

BY RALPH

&amp;untut.!' tlttme• -6enttnel

.--------------------.-----------------------------

Bv Roa MAAoot ·

some game action, and he'll ·
be more comfortable thi s
week," Cowher said.
Batch's ·only significant
game action the past four
years has come in the presea- ·
son. No. 3 on the depth chart
through most of his tenure
with the Steelers - · he was
even cut briefly at the start of
the season - Batch was
bumped up a spot after former ·
starter Tommy Maddox threw
three interceptions and lost a
fumble .in a 23-17 overtime
loss to Jacksonville on Oct.
16, when Roethlisberger was
out with an injured left knee.
"I'm not ~oing to sit here
and scrutimze the play of
Charlie Batch," Cowher said.
"I think offensively as a group
we need to do a much more
efficient job of throwing the
ball."
After Roethlisberger had
surgery last week to remove
damaged cartilage from his
right knee, Cowher said he
would be out 10 to 14 days.
Now, the Steelers hope he
returns for the Nov. 20 game
at Baltimore.
Roethlisberger leads the
NFL with a 112,4 passer rating. Batch has a 39.8 rating
and Maddox a 30.1 rating this
season.
Batch's plight is compound.ed by injuries at running back.
Leading
rushers
Willie
Parker, who injured an ankle
Sunday, .and Jerome Bettis,
whose knee injury kept him
out against Green Bay, are

'

.

NEW YORK - Southern
California and Texas have a
new team on their tails in the
race to the Rose Bowl.
Alabama moved into third
place - slightly ahead of
Miami in the Bowl
Championship Series standings, putting unbeaten ' Barna
ip position to play for a
national title if the lirst-place
Trojans or Longhorns stumble
down the stretch. ·
·
But the chances of Alabama
moving up another spot and
playin!l for college football's
champiOnship on Jan . 4 without a loss by one of the top
two aren't good .
•USC raised its BCS avera~e
to .9802 this week and kept tts
lead on Texas (.9765). And
they' re both way ahead of
Alabama. The Tide has a BCS
average of .8814, leavi ng it
barely ahead of Miami
(.8805).
"It really doesn ' t matter
right now, because the bowls
aren't next week and they're
not thi s week," Tide linebacker DeMeco Ryans said

Monday.
It's Alabama's gest showing
in the .BCS standtngs.
The
Hurricanes (7 - I )
defeated previously unbeaten
Virginia Tech 27-7 . on
Saturday to make it possible
·for both them and the Tide to
move up two spots this week.
The Hokies had been in third
place behind USC and Texas
tn the BCS standmgs for three
weeks.
··
Penn State is fifth, followed
by Virginia Tech, LSU, Ohio
State, Georgia and Oregon.
Like Miami , all of those
teams have one loss. No team
with one loss has ever been
ranked lower than fourth at
this point in the season and
played in the BCS title game.
Notre Dame (6-2) moved
up three spots to II th, meaning the Fighting Irish are now
in place to become BCS eligible by winning their final
three games. Notre Dame
needs at least nine regularseason wins and a final BCS
ranking in the top 12 to be eligible for selection by one of
college football 's four bigdollar bowl games.
This is the final season
Notre Dame can .keep the

worth keeping
JIM LITKE

a defense considerably
weaker than the New
- - - - - - - - - - England sides he faced in
FOXBORdl.JGH, Mass. previous years, he cut the
questioner off.
- Merely kkking the New
"You a Patriot s fan?"
England Patriots when they M ·
k d
·
were down, satisfying as that
annm~ as ·e • grinntng.
"Is that tt''"
must have been. wouldn't. Wilich was as close to
have been satisfyi ng enough.
Besi des, plenty of people dissinjl his tormentors as
· 1h
h Manmng allowed himself
have been domg
at to 1 e afterward. During the ~ame.
two-time defending Super
Bowl champions this season. though, it was a dit erent
So Peyton Manning threw. story.
Early in the fourth qtiiirter,
Short, long, to six different
rec·eivers, three times for Brady wrapped up a 69-yard
touchdowns, a dozen or scoring drive with a 19-yard
.
.
touchdown rass to Troy
more tunes to retam posses- Brown to pul New England
sion , a few times even after
the outcome was no longe r within 34-21. His competiin doubt _ 37 times in all tive juices primed agai n, ·
for 32 1 yards without being Manning res ponded by
sacked and intercepted just . marching Indianapoli s 74
once in a decisive 40-2 ]'win. yards for a score ot its own,
At times, it looked as if he capped by a looping, on-thewere putting on a clinic.
run, off-the-back-foot TD
"There have been some throw to · Marvin Harri son
low moments doing press worthy of a place in his
conferences in this room,'' already overtlowin e career
'
Manning began an interview highlight reel.
session in the bowels of
Because for all the throwthen ing Manning did Monday
Gillette Stadium.
aused and let it g·0 at that. night. more often than not,
e didn ' t have to elaborate. he changed ~a ss plays· c,·tlled
After · going
0-for- by hi s coac to run s at the
Foxboroullh in seven previ- line of scrimmage.
ous tries. mcluding twice in
"Fantasy football players
the playoffs, it was almost as don't like· to hear. that."
if Manning was determined Manning said.
to make up for lost time, to
But consider: Both of the
.cram all those passes he Colts' scores on the ground
could have and should have came on plays called as passcompleted in the past into a es from the bench. On the
single performance.
toss to Harri son, Manning
"It see med like he was see- did just the opposite.
ing something in our
" I kind of got tired of
defense,.. Patnots safety handing off at the end,'' he
Eugene Wilson said . "He admitted afterward - but
see med to have all the there was no hiding the satisanswers:·
faction behind th at grin ,
"Pitiful,.. ec hoed Pats line- either. ·
backer Roscvclt Colvin.
Flushed from the pocket ,
"Embarrassing''
runnin g for his life toward
And more.
the right sideline, Manning
Manning's much-bally - leaned back and lofted a perhooed duel with Patri ots feet spiral j ust inside the far
quarterback Tom Brady was corner of the end zo ne.
pretty much decided after the Harri son ran past Pats corColts' second drive. When ncrback Asante Samuel and
they shook hands at the end, underneath it. Harrison bareyou had to wonder whether ly had time to be~i n celebrat- ·
Brady was as candid as he ing before Mannn1g, running
was afterward - 'Til make along the sideline ·With his
it short and sweet. We got index linger already thrust
our bulb kicked."
toward the night sky. arrived
Then again, it wasn't a fair to join the party. That left it
fight to begin with . New up to Colts coac h Tony
England is missing a half- Dungy to make sure it didn t
doze n key players. soft in the get out of hand.
secondary and stuck with a
"I don 't think this has any
sorry imitation of a running ramifi cations other than wingame. By gai ning only 34 ning one. game." he said.
yards on the ground, th~ Pats Dungy didn' t want to talk
forc'ed Brady into one tough about the Col ts being
passing down after another: unbeaten and largely untestso much so that coach Bill ed. and for a very good reaBelichick
mercifully son.
Mindful of his past wi th
replaced hi s matinee idol
wnh 43-year-old backup the Patriots. Mann ing finDoug Flutie on the final ished the thought.
drive of the game to spare
"We· ll probab ly see these
Brady any more pounding.
guys again," he said. ·'These
Even so, when someone guys are alwuys in it at the,
asked Manning about facing end ...
BY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

-'
AP photo
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Charlie Batch (16) gets away
from Green Bay Packers defensive end Kabeer GbaJa·Biamila
(94) during the fourth quarter Sunday in Green Bay, Wis . Batch
made his first start s ince Dec. 2, 2001, wh en he was with
Detroit.
listed as questionable agai nst hi s left knee, an injury susCleveland.
tained
Sunday.
Clint
If neither can play, Duce Krie waldt re'placed Farrior·
Staley will get his first start of again st Green Bay and would
the season .
start again Su nday if Farrior is
"We have been a very unable to play.... Joey Porter
resourceful football team." (que sti onable, kn ee) and
Cowher said . "Our depth has Clark Haggan s I probable,
been challenged a little bit. groin) are other startin g line~
People . have been tested but backer&gt;.on the official injury
have stepped in to do the job ... report.
... Other than
Notes: Middle lin ebacker Roethlisberger, reserve safety
Jame s Farrior is listed as Mike Logan is the only player .
doubtful with a sprain or the officially rul ed OLit against
medial collateral ,ligament in Cleveland.

Alabama moves into third in BCS standings

cfJalltpolit.t J9ailp ttribune
l'otnt l'lea~ant lttli-ter
The Daily Sentinel

Mall or drop oft thl• coupon along with a copy of your phOto 10 to
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Owens apologizes to Eagles, McNabb and fans

entire $14 million-plus pay- champion to lie left out of the
out from a BC S bowl. BCS ti tle game in favor of the
Starting next seaso n. th e Pac-10 and Big 12 champi Fighting Irish will be guaran - ons. Last year. Auburn had a
teed BCS money every season perfect regulm season, but
- e'ven when they don 't play ended up in the Sugar Bowl as
in a ga me - but will receive . USC and Oklahoma played in
a far smaller share when the y the Orange Bowl for the
do play in ei the r the Rose. national title .
Sugar, Fiesta or Orange
USC and Texas are currentbowls.
IY. Nos. I and 2. res pectively,
Alabama is facing a diffi- in the AP, coaches' a11d Harris
cult stretch run with LSU poll s.
coming to Tuscaloosa on
Alabania is third in the
Saturday and the Iron Bowl at coaches' poll and fourth in the
Auburn on Nov. 19. If the Harris and AP polls. Miami is
Tide survives, it would play in third in the Harri s and media
the Southeastern Conference polls and fo urth in the coachtitl e ~ame, likely aga inst es' voting.
Georg •a or Florida.
USC fini shes th e •season
But even winning out
agai nst that tough schedule. with a ga me at California on
makes the Tide a long shot to Saturday, then home games
catch USC or Texas if those against Fresno Stntc (Nov. 19)
two remain undefeated.
and UCLA (Dec. 31. Texas
"Anytime you go undefeat- plays Kan"\s at home on
ed in the SEC and then have Saturday and at Texas A&amp;M
to play the SEC championshi p on Nov. 25. The Big 12 ti tle
game on top of that. you'd eame is Dec. 3 and Colorado
kind of like to thin k that's wou ld be th e Long horns·
enoullh." Tide quarterback most lik ely opponent .
Brodie Croyle said. "A ll we
The final 13CS standings are
can do is handle our own released .and the pairings for
business."
the Rn,e, ·S ugar. Fiesta and
Alabama could become the Orange bowb are set on Dec.
second straight unbeaten SEC .J .

~

�~rtbune

Wednesday, November 9, 2005

Wednesday, November 9, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

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WANm&gt;
to list
Sportsman 48
TOBIN
Ktchen laundry and ~e
1tems Flva. days Wed (Nov Absolute Top Dollar u S
9) Sun 9am to 4pm
Silver and Gold Coins

OH

Proofaets GoiCI A1ngs Pre
Large Yard Sale 1St 1imt 1935
US
Currency
Add1son behind gas station Sohta.re DilmOnds- M T S
2004 300EX Guns baby CoTn Shop 151 Second
Items
exerc1se
equip Avenue GallipOlis 740-446house etc Fri ·Sat
2842

Lost Chocolate Lab Horner
H 111143
area
Reward Yard sale Nov 10 11 12
{740)992 0080 answers to Rugs desk tables toys
Toby"
clothes etc Burnett Rd

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4 s For Sale
Announcement.......................................
Anllques
Apanments lor Rent ••
Auction and Flea Markel
Aulo Pans &amp; Acceasorlsa •• ••• •••

I buy Junk Cars (304)773

725
030
530

440
.080
760

Repalr;~;~:;,~~:~~;:~::::::::.::::::.::::::::::::::::no

Autos lor Sale
Aulo
Boals &amp; Motors for Sale
Building Supplies
Bustness and Buildings
Business Opponunlly
Business Training
Campers &amp; Motor Home•
Camping Equipment
Carda of Thanks
Chlld/Eide1ly Care
ElectncaiJRetrlgeratlon
Equipment lor Rent
Excavating
Farm Equlpmenl
Farms for Rent
Farms lor Sale
For Lease
For Sale
For Sale or Trade
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
Furnished Rooms
General Hauling
Giveaway
Happy Ads
Hay &amp; Grain..
Help Wanled
Home Improvements
Homes lor Sale
Household Goods
Houses lor Rent
In Memoriam
Insurance
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ...
Ltvestoc:k
Losl and Found •
Lois &amp; Acreage
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous Merchandise
Mobile Home Repair
Mobile Homes lor Rent.
Mobile Homes lor Sale
Money 10 Loan
Molorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
Musicallnstruments
Personals
Pels lor Sale
Plumbmg &amp; Heeling
Professional Servlcee
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
Real Estale Wanted
Schoolslnstructlon
Seed , Planl &amp; Fertilizer
Situations Wanted
Space lor Rdnl
Sponlng Goods
;•
SUV's lor Sale
Trucks lor Sale
Upholstery
Vans For Saki
Wanted to Buy ••
Wanled to Buy· Farm Suppllu
Wanled To Do
Wanted to Rent
Yard Sale· Gslllpolls
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
Yard Sale·PI Pleasant

Buying black walnuts 12e
per pound after hulhng call
(740)698 6060 buy 1ng unt1l
Nov 15th

710
750
550
340
210
140
790
780
010
190
840
480
830
• 510
• 430
330
490
585
• 590
580
450
•••850
040
• 050
..640
110

810
310
510
410

•• 020

130
• •• 660

530
060
350

170
540
860
420
320
220
740

570
005
560
820
230
160
380

150
1150
120
460
520
720
715
870
730
• otO
620
180
470
072
••• 074
076

5004
I \II Ill' \II '\I
, I 1. \

uo

l

I(

I "

HJuW~

.

LEARN
TO

DRIVE
NO

EII:PERIENcE NECESSAHV
FUll TIME CLASSES
COL TAAININO

'FINANCING AVAII-'.Bl.E
JOB PlACEMENT
' ENAOLLING NOW

ALUANCE
TRACTOR TRA.1LER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1-800·334·1203
-

• HIIIICir.c!onrsllllr com

100 WORKERS NEEDED
As!emble crafts
Wood 1tems
To $480/wk
Matenals provided
Fr~~a InformatiOn pkg 24t·h
801-428 4649

M

Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon

Call Morllyn 304 882 2645
Are you ttr«&lt; of your old
eJust1ng job? T1me to make a
change?
Expenenced
Cosmetologist/Nail
Tech
Great tocat1on
needed
great staH $350 s1gn on
bonus L1m1ted Time Only
Please send resumes to
CLA Box 571 c/o Gallipolis
Dally Tribune PO Bmc 469
Gallipolis OH 45631
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429
Cate G1ver to help with
Elderly
Gentleman
(304 )675-«09
Cashland haa a part·tlme
customer service associate
posi 11on at our Galhpohs
locatiOn We are seekmg an
applica nt tha1 wants 10 work
n a fun growth or ented
environment
Candidate
must be pos1tive energetiC
motivated &amp; delalled arlen!
ed Pnor customer aervtct
ana cash handlmg reqwed
Fall resumes to (740)441
8940 or stop by 131 2
Eastern A:v1 Suite El for an
application

HoMES

HOMES

FOR SAUl

FUR SAUl

3 bedroom 1 bath full base

House lor Sate 3 bedroom
w/gar
Racme ful SIZe dry basement
Across from Park 57 000 Greal NetghbOrhood corner
below appr 740 949 1372
lot nght In town Take a look
1001 Kenny Ct (nght beh1nd
3 Bedroom 2 Bath w1th J' High School) Shown by
Fireplace 1n R1o Grande B App1 $84 500 (304)675
40x60 barn 3123 or (304)675 0032
acres m/
m ~ nt

$125 000 (740)709 1168

r

IW
I,

lbllWANm&gt;

IIID
.

HmPWA~'I"F.n

.I IIW HELPWANTED

~:;;;:.;;:.;;:;:;~ ~ls. .l.he•r•e. .a•n•yo•n•e. .o•n. .1ho"e
I

tstnct trcu atlon
Sales Manager

esponsfbllltes mclud
eeruit1ng and trammg o
arners customer servlc
nd meeting sa es goals I
u have a pas t1ve attl
ude are a self starter
nd a team player w
uld hke to talk to you
ust be dependable an
ave reliable transporta
ion Posthon offers at
pany bene! ts 1nclud
g health dental vrs1on
ndhfe nsurance 401 k
aid vacation and person
I days Please se n
esume to
Paul Barker
Circulalian Manager
Ohio Valley Publishing
825 Third Ave
Gallipolis Ohio 4563 1

Pomeroy/Middleport area
look1ng lor full t1me work?
Are you look1ng lor better
than mm1mum
wages?
Pnmary
schedule
1s
Monday Frtday Sam 5pm
Must have valid dnvers
license and dependable
veh~ele Must be ram11tar w1th
Me gs County
Send resumes 1nciudmg
refetences to CLA BoK 2
c/o Pomeroy Dally Sent nel
P:O Bo~r: 729
Pomeroy OH 45769

Patnot EMS seek1ng FT/PT
EMT s &amp; Paramedics After
1nlroductory per od EMT s
$1 0/hr
make
up
to
ParamediCS up to $12/hr
100% med1cal msurance
prescnptton card paid days
off &amp; vacatton retirement
paid tra1n ng All veh1cles low
mileage new equipment
For
more
mtormat1on
www patnatems com or call

(7401532 2222

Now h1r ng full and part 11me
TECHNICIAN
McCiures Restaurants n
For alarm systems closed Middleport and Galhpol s
C1rcu11 TV phone sys lems Apply between 10 10 30am
and Home AutomatiOn Must
be honest dependable and
NRA
-Recruiters Neededl
able to work unsuperv1sed
Help renew membershtps
trammg
or
Prev1ous
of past and present NRA
j:xper~ence In low voltage
members and work w1th
wtrl ng mdustr1a1 ma1nte
othe reputab e Pol I cal
nance IS a plus W II tram the
orgamza!IOns
A1ght candidate
We offer
Respond w1th resume to
•Complete tra1n1ng
•U p io $8/hour
CONSOLIDATED
•An add honal $1/hour w1th
SECURITY SERVICES
attendance bonus
INC
240 UPPER RIVER RD
•Wee kly pay/bonus
•Pa1d vacations
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
•Protess1onal work
Insurance oW1ce seek ng a
env1ronment
quaiHied Customer Serv1ce
Representative The cand1
date must have good cus
&amp;
EMT s
tamer service and computer Paramedics
skills Insurance expenence needed Apply at 1354
very helpful Please send Jackson P1ke Gat11polis
resume and references to
Cook/He per
Dariy Senhnel PO S o~~: 729 Part T1me
needed fo r tOO bed sk li ed
6 FJomeroy Oh 45769
nurs1ng facility
Interest ed
Oh1o Valley Home Health appl cants should apply to
Inc h rmg RN s CNA A'ockspnngs Rehabtlltat1on
STNA CHHA Ful and Pari Center 36759 Rocksprmgs
T ime pos111ons Competlltve Road
Pomeroy
Ohio
Wages Mileage and bene 45769 Extend care Health
f1ts 1ncluding health msur Serv1cei Inc 1s an equal
ance Apply at1480 Jackson opporluMy employer that
P1ke Galhpohs or phone toll enco urages
workplace
d1ve rs11y M/F ON
free 1 866-441 1393

""*"""

Hunt &amp; F1shlllllll
frurn your pass1on 1n1o
~usmess
Call
Jln

NG CO recommengs tha
ou do business w11h peo
pie you Know and NOT I
end money through th
mall Unill you have Invest
~ted lhe offenng.

MON!c'Y
IOWAN

**NOTICE**

WANTED POSitiOns ava1 l
able Ia ass1st nd1v1duals
With mental retarda tion at
two group homes m Bidwell
1) 40hrs 3 11p Sur. 3 30
tt p M!TuiW/Th
2) 35hrs Ba 5p Sun 2 10
M!Tu/W
3) 35h rs lip 8 30a Th/F
Sat 7p-9a Sun
4) 35hrs 3 30 9 30p Th 310p F 9a 6p Sat 9a 8p Sun
H1gh school d1ploma/GED
valid dnver s hcense and
ihree years good dnv1ng
experience
reqUired
$7 25/hr Pre emp oymenl
Drug Tast1ng Send resume
to
Buckeye Community
Serv1ces PO Box 604
Jackson OH 45640 or e
ma1l
to
beye c serv@yahoo c om
Deadlme for appl cants
11 115/05 please spec1ty
pOSition of mterest Equa
Opportun ty Emp oyer

lnsbtut1on
Consume
tta1rs BEFORE you ref
ance your home o
bta1n a loan BEWAR
f reque sts for any larg
dvance payments o
ees or 1nsurance Cal
he OH ct1 of Consume
ffa1rs toll free at 1 866
78 0003 to learn 1f th
ortgage
broker
o
ender
IS
proper!
icensed (This IS a pubh

I'Rt»l!S'aONA.L

SERVICEl&gt;
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1 888 582 3345
I~ I

\I I

s I \II

1 acre w1th 2 bedroom s ng e
story hOme In country 116
Po ndexter Road off Johns
Creek Road {304)576 2247

$179 900 (740)379 2615

Newly remodeled home In
Pt Pleasant 3-4 b~room
centra a1r full basement
hardWOOd floors detached
garage large covered patio
a fenced backyard close to
schools $69 500 For more
mformat1on and/or v1ew1ng

(740)709 1382

Syracuse 3 Br attached
Obi Garage New roof on 7
acre Block utilities buil ding
$85 00
740 949 1082 or
740 416 2786

Syracuse 3BA anached dbl
garage new roof 7acre
block
utility
building

I

16x80 mobile home on lot
S45 000
Will
cons1der
owner
financing
Call
(740)367 7187 0' (740)446

7444
1976 12)(60 2 bedroom 1
bath In very good condl
liOn
Buyer must move
Must sell $6 500 Interested
please call (304)675 5422
laave message
1987 Oakwood
mobile
home lor sale Excellent
cond1t10n excellent location
(Gallipolis) New mterlor
throughout {740)645-1968
1989 14x70 2 3 bedroom
h6at pump porch must be
moved $11 000 (140)388
8375 after 7pm

(740)388 8513 or (740)388
8017 (evemngs)

2 Bedroom Tra ler 1n
Rutland No Pets Call 740
742 2661

2000
Oakwood
14K70
mob1le home 2 bedroom 2
bath very good cond1t10n
vmyl s dmg shingle roof
under sk rtlng total -electnc

CIA $1 6 000 (740)446
0773 (740)446 9543
2000 Oakwood
mobil&amp;
home 16xSO v1nyllsh1ngle 4
bedroom 2 bath CIA

(740)245 0001

PUBLIC NOTICE
Alan Slone Company,
Inc has submitted an
Industrial Minerals
Mining
Permit
Application 0291 to
lha Ohio Depanment
of Natural Resources,
Division of Mineral
Resources
Mansgemenl
The proposed permit
appllcallon area ts
comprised
of
10
acres and is located
In Meigs Counly In
Sactlon(s) N/A Lot
178,
VMS
N/A,
Lebanon Towosh1p
The propose!! appU·
cation area Is located
on the Ravenswood 7
112 minute USGS
Quadrangle
map,
approximately 3 miles
South of Portland on
S R.124
The application Is on
file at lhe Ohio
Departmenl
of
Natural Resources,
Division of Mineral
Resources
Management Dlslrict
office located al 34
Portsmouth
Sl ,
Jackson. Ohio 45640
lor public review end
Inspection
Wrllten
comments or objections concerning lhls
oppllcallon may be
sent to the Chief of
lhe Ohio Deparlment
of Natural Resources,
Division of Mineral
Resources
Management. 2045
Morse Road Building
H-3, Columbus, Ohio
wlthm
43221·6693
lhlny (30) days oflhe
last date lot publica
lion ollhll notice
(1D) 19, 26, (11) 2, 9

Must be

2002 Clayton only $142 per
month will deliver (740)385
4367
Great used 99 Skyline
16x80 Vlnyl!sh1ngle 2~~:5
walls glamour bath Call

(740)385-9621

r

3 bedroom mob1le home 1n
the Shade area Water
sewer trash tncluded $325
a month plus deposit No
pets allowed
{740)385

4019

UBLIC
NOTICES

Public Notice

moved
Thl1 new1paper will not
knowingly accept
adVIrtlumentl tor real
eat1te which 11 In
vlol1tlon of the IIW Our
,.eder. are hereby
Informed thet 111
dw•lllngelldvertlnd In
thfl newspaper are
available on an equel
opportunity b..a•

7pm (740)388 8375

3Bdrms 2 Bath 517 Burdette
For rent 2 story hOme 3BR Street All electriC depos1t
AJC $500/month $500 and reference reqwred No
depoSit (740)446 3481
Pe1S (304)675 5402

*'

New 16 Wide only $190 ptr
month Vinyl Sld1ng Shmgle
For SAle 2 Bd 1 i/2 Bath Roof &amp; Delivery (740)385
112 Pleasa nt Street 3
large liv1ng room/fireplace 7671
Bedrooms
1 1/2 Baths
w th full basement house i
150
New Cen1rai/A1r Cond New
SOI&lt;Xll.~
car- garage on 1 1/2 acres New 16:06 3 bedroom/2
W ndows
Gas Budgel
("Sll!UcnON
By Appt only Call 740 985 bath Minute s from Athens
$65/month i 304)675 4034
4166
In Ou1et country Must sell Move 1n today Call
(740)385 2434
Galllpolle Career College 2 bedroom &amp; bath upsta1rs neighborhood
(Caree rs Close To Horne)
kitchen dmmgroom I vm For sale by owner 3BR
Lors&amp;
Ca Today 740 446 4367
groom &amp; bath downsta1r6 on ranch With 10+ acres
ACREAGE
1 800 214 0452
large lot 328 Mulberry Ave Addlson/Cheshtre
large
www ga I pofscareercollege oom
Pomeroy call before 9pm 24x38 garage 2 full baths 9 acres with 28~~:32 barn 5
A c~ red led Membe
Accredit ng (740)367 0861
pnced $128 500 (740)367 0944 acres with 2 tra ler 11ook ups
Counc I or lndependenl Goleges
under $15 000
alter 5pm
and Scnools 12748
Call740)256 1922

$39 500

Available Nov 15th 2 bed
room house k1tchen fur
mshed no pets prater non
smokers $475 00 per month
plus utilities and $450 00
depos1t
Telephon e 740
992 5421

No Down Payment Less
than perfect credit 0 K Five
minutes
!rom
Holzer
Hospital Three Bedrooms
.One Bath Level lot Newly
remodeled 740 416 3130

1996 Oakwood 14)(70 2
bedroom 2 bath very clean

All real eslata advertising
In this newspaper le
aubject to the Fodenll
F1lr Housing Act at 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertla.e ~an~
prefe,..nce limitation or
dlserlmhlltlon b..ec:t on
race cator religion ..x
tamlllel 1tatu1 or national
origin or any Intention to
makesn-v euch
prefe,..nce limitatiOn or
dlecrlmlnatlon

4 5 bedroom 2 112 bath
hardwood lloors S600fmo
Its a steal• {740)446 7425

stove
refr1g $400/mo
No pets
2 bedroom $275 month
Recently remodeled 644
S100 deposit water 1nclud
Second Ave {740) 446 0332
ed no pets (740)36 7 0102
8am·5pm

rM~~s~
Charmmg bnck ranch Rto
Grande Oua1nt fnendly
neighborhood 3 blocks from
UAG Custom bwlt 1n 2002
lntenor open and aiTy
Trad1t10nal
natural
o.ak
woodwork 1hroughout 3
bedrooms 2 lull baths
Large k tchen With d1ntng
pantry disposal m1crowave
Grea1 room des1gn With
vau ted ce1hng and gas l1re
place w1th oak mantle On
h1ll w1th front porch overlook
mg woods Master su1te with
h1s/her bath 1ncl whirlpool
tub shower 2 walk n cios·
ets 2 car garage landscap
mg A ll new appliances
1nc uded Low cost heatmgl
cooling
1692
sq
tt

2BR 1BA Centra Heal A r
Sto\le
turn 1shed
W/0
hookup $450/month plus
Relerences
Utilities
reqwred No Pets (412)427
N1c e 2 bedroom duplell
6917
near Harrisonville
$425
3 bdrm l blh LA DR K1t
monthly plus ut1ht es
No
Ubi Am 2 car garage wf220 srnokmg no pets Depos1ts
hookup N1ce front yard requ red 742 ~033
Green Twp Water &amp; trash
mcluded K1tchen furm shed Stop renting Buy 4 bedroom
$750 mth plus $500 dep foreclosu re $15 000 For I st
mg s 800 391 5228 BKI
Ref req (740}446 0969
1709
3 bedroom br.ck full s1ze
basement large lot located
at LeGrande Blvd Avarlable Very mce 3+ bedroom 2
1211105 (6141575 1813
bath full basement 2 car
garage n ce yard On SA
3 bedroom house Jackson
143 near Hamsonv111e $650
P1ke close to hosp Ia I
monthly ph.Js ui1hl1es
No
$675/ mo secunty deposit
smok1ng no pets Deposlls
reqwed (740)446 4051
requ red 742 3033
3bdrm 1 5 bath hOmo close
Moou.F. HoMES
to hosp tal oil Jackson P1ke
FOR RENT
$600 mo rent $600 sec
dept
you pay ut11it1es
Refe rences requ1 red Call 1989 14x70 2 3 bedroom
(740)446 3644 lor appllca Rentl$400 Depl$500 Ned
cred 1 report ref Call after
ton

6 rooms &amp; bath

$85 000 (7401949-1082 or
(740)416 2786

•NOTICE•
PHtO VALLEY PUBLIS H

Med Home Heallh Agency
Inc 1s seeking tull11me and
Or amall to
part l1me
AN s
n tile
pbarkerOmydallytrl•
Galhpo s OH area Must be
buna cam
liCensed 1n both Oh10 and
WflSt Vlrg1n1a We otter a
Or vers Aeg1onal great pay competitive salary and ben
bonuses benel1ts home eft package for fu I t 111e
t1mel 1yr tanker or 2yrs lrac employees E 0 E Please
lor trailer experience Mart1n send resume to 352 Second
Avenue
Galhpohs
OH
Transport 866 293 7435
4563 1 Ann VICki Chadwick
Envelope sluffers earn
money work1ng at home Medl Home Health Agency
Call 24 hr Jar details 972 Inc IS seeking a PAN AN 1n
the Jackson Cou nty WV
504 2690
area Mu st be frcensed n
Help Wanted
Equipment West V1rg1n1a We offer a
Delivery Person CDL Class compel t ve salary E 0 E
A Requ red E~r:penence m Plea se send resume to 4245
heavy eqUipment mamtence State Route 34 Hurncane
a Plus Cal Gheen Rentals WV 25526 Attn V1ckl
at740 992 1438
Chadw ck
INSTALLER SERVICE

Ass1sted I v1ng care 1n my
home tor Elderly Pnvate 3 bedroom 2 bath Vmc
room bath 3 hot meals Street Rae1ne on 3 lots
new carpet throughout new
(740)388 0118
roof new detached 28x32
garage neat well ma n
Computer
Repa1r
and
ta1ned home (740)949 4019
Troubleshoot Web Desrgn
Networkrng Programming 4BR
Forec losure
only
Budd New Systems Restore $14 900 For 1slings call
VIrus Removal 800 391 5228 ed F254
Windows
Car t f1ed
Phone#740 992
Attention I
2395
Local company offenng ~ NO
Georges Portable Sawm1ll DOWN PAYMENT" pro
don I haul your Logs to the grams for you to buy your
home ns1ead of renttng
M1U JUSt cal 304 675 1957
100% f1nanc ng
• Less lhan perfec1 credit
Mag c Years Day Care
accep1ed
Preschool 7 30 5 30
• Payment could be the
"Punmg Children F1rst
Ages 2 12 Slate L1censed same as rent
Locators
Link Approved Excellent Mortgag11
Sk11ls Spaces ava1lable lo (740)367 0000
all ages (304)675 5847
Beautiful Fully Custom1zed
Renovated 3BR
1 Bath
W II do Adult care m my
Home w/1 acre n Potnt
Home Alzheimer s welcome
Pleasant W 11 Be Open for
(304)675 6781
V1ew1ng Fn 11th &amp; Sat 12th
11\\\ll\1
1Dam 5pm Th1s Home has
to any Amemlles to list here
It IS reasonable pncod
BUSINI'SS
$59 900 for a hm1ted trme
Ot'I'OiffilNITY
only
Must
see
to
Apprectate Take 24th St by
Wendy s to Monroe Ave
Follow the stgns to 2309
Get Pa1d to
Monroe Ave

3041576·2707

LPN
needed
iu I t1me
Monday Fr day day shIt no
weekends
no holidays
Apply at 936 St At 160
Galhpol s (740)446 9620

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

';

~secanr

Offee 11o~~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sheriff Sales
Case
Number
05CV047
Chase homa Finance
Plaintiff

vs

Gregory
A.
and
Michelle L Duvall
Delendanta
Courl of Common
Pleas, Meigs Counly,
Ohio
In pursuance ot an
order of sale to me
directed tram said
court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at
Public Auction on the
lronl slept of lhe
Malgo County Court
Houao on Frldoy, Dec
9, 2005 at 10 AM of
sold day, the lollow-

lng described Real
Estate· Exhibit A
Legal Description
Being a part of a 122
acre more or less
tract of land transferred to Charles E
and Margaret Mae
Yost, as recorded In
Deed Book 230 at
page 287
Meigs
County Recorders
office, Meigs County
Ohio, also being a
part of Secllon 25
Township ·3-Nor:th,
Renge·12·Wesl,
Sutton
Township,
Meigs County, State
of Ohio and more particularly described as
follows
Beglnnmg al a point
.m the centerline of
County Road #122
betng the Nonhwest
comer of a 0 898 acre
more or less tract as
recorded In Deed
Book 334 al page 653,
thence along the cen
terline or said County
Road #122 lhe followIng twelve courses
1 North 22 deg 10'
18 West a distance ol
42 97feetlo a point,
2 North 45 deg
21 57 weal a dll·
tance ol 58 60 feel Ia
a pomt,
a North 67 deg 13
41 West a distance of
101 05 feet to a polnl.
4
Norlh 57 deg
4411 ' Wesl a dts
tance ol118 961eetlo
a point,
5 North 34 deg
57'04 West a dis·
1ence ol119 93feelto
a point,
6 Norlh 20 deg
30 25" West a dis·
lance ol108 38feetlo
a point,
7 Norlh 06 dog
38 59"" Easl a dis·
lance of 64 05 leal lo
a point,
8 Norlh 34 dog
19 23" Easl a dos
lance of 72 93 feel lo
a point,
9 North 48 dog
1051 " Easl a dis
lance ol222 16feet to
a polnl.
10 Norlh 35 dog
39 17' Easl a dis
lance ol404 28feetlo
a point,
II North 20 deg
44 42 East a dis
lance of 69 14 feet to
a potnl,
12 Norlh 11 deg
17 07 East a dis·
lance of 75 79 feet to
a point on
lhe
assumed East line of
said 122 acre more or
less tract, thence

Mobtle Home for Rent
Located
m
Mason
$375/mo $3751 depos1t No
outs de pels References
reqUired Call (304 )675 3423

Brand new 2BA apt m
Gallipolis $450/month
2BA apt SA 160 past Holzer
hospital $375/month
2BR
ap t
B1dwell
$400/month a40)441 1184
Mobile home spaces In (740)441 0194
Country Mob le Home Park

It

HOUSEHOIIl

Gooos

Tara
Townhouse Used washers &amp; dryers $80
Apar1ments Very Spac1ous and up Gas stove $50
2 Bedrdoms CIA 1 1/2 (740)245 5946 after 5pm
Bath
Adull Poo &amp; Baby
Pool Pat1o Start $385/Mo
No Pets
l ease Plus
A_Nll.QUE';
__
Secunty Deposit Reqwed

(740)367 7086

1920 Hooser Cupboa rd
Ant1que Se rver Buffet sev
Tw1n
R1vers
Tower
IS
accepl
N1ce 3BA mob le homo tor ED &amp; AFFOROABLEt
eral olher Ant1que 1tems
apartments mg appllca r ons for wa1t ng
rent $400!dop $550fmo Townhouse
(304)576 2597
I1st for Hud subs zed 1 br
Need 3 references Ca ll and/or small houses FOR
(740)446 3601 or {740)44 1 RENT Call (740]441 1111 apariment call 675 6679 Buy or sell
AlverJnfl
for application &amp; mformal on EHO
5899
Ant1que s 1124 East Man
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
Furmshed 3 rooms &amp; bath Very mce new 2 BR apt
APAR'IMENTS
Ruts Moore
wlattached garage Depos1t 992 2526
downstairS
su
table
for
1
FORRENI
owner
&amp;
ref
requ
red
(740)446
person 9 19 Secon d Ava
~1\&lt;:":I~ISC-:F_J_.LANEOU--S-,
ut1h1 es
paid 2801
1 and 2 bedroom apar t $295/mo
(740)446-3945
ments furnished and unfur
MERCHANDL~F
SI'I\CE
n1 shed secun ty depos1t
tORRI,NI
requ1red no pets 740 992 Furmshed upsta ~rs 3 roo ms
16FT Trailer Dual Axles titled
&amp; ba !h Clean ref &amp; d ep
2218
and I ct nsed $650 f1rm
reqUired No pets (740)446 Downtown OffiCe Space 5
Robert
room sUite $650/mo 1 room (:304)675 I 165
1 BR Apartment Furnished 1519
Rmmey
off•ce
$225/mo
2
room
leave message (304)675
Secunty
Grac ous llv ng 1 and 2 bed s u te $250/mo
4975
room apartments al l/1llage depoSit regulred You pay 32 n na hght metal door
w/ 32" vmyl screen door
1BR n cely lurnlshed apt Manor
and
Riverside ut1 1Hes All spaces very mce
Ou1et area suitable for 1 Apartments 1n Middleport Elevator Call {740)446 3644 S150 (740)949 2490
adult
pnva le
dnveway From $295 $444 Call 740 for appo1nlm en t
B Valley pooltable one
w/carport
new
W/0 992 5064 Equa Housmg
~740)446 4762
For Lease Otf1ce or retail ptace slate $700 (304)675
Opportumt1es
spaces m very good cond1 3388
2
bedroom
apa tment
t1 on Downtown Gallipolis
NEW
ELLM
VIEW
Aacme very n1ce clean
Approll 1600 sq It each 1 Firewood for sa e Seasoned
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
$425 per month plus
or 2 baths Lease prrce hard wood P1ckup $40/load
I
NOW
LEASING
depos11 no pels references
negotiable to encourage deliv ery $60fmost areas
SPACIOUS
reqUired
740 441 0110
new
bc.lsmess
Call Call (740)388 8738
2
&amp;
3
BEDROOM
(740)992 5174
(74!J)446
4425
Of
(740)446
BOTH FLATS &amp;
F1rewood for sale Seasoned
3936
2 bedroom apartment $295
TOWNHOUSES
oak &amp; hickory {740)245
per month plus depos11 uhll
AVAILABLE
Two Bus1ness Locations lor 9162
t1es plus refere nces Th rd
ALL ELECTRIC
Rent
One oca ted on
Street
Racme
Oh o
CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
Sandh II Road and one 1n For sale hom t940 :s 62
(740 )247 4292
"STOVE REF
Bellemead area
Both 1n p1 eces Fos1or a Amencana
DI SHWASHER
3 rooms and bath All ut1lilles
Po1nt Peasant For Sale clear (740)245 5599
GARBAGE DISPOSAL
pa1d Oownsta1rs nO pets
Platform rocker w cker lurm
WIND BLNDS
$450/mo 46 Olive St
ture s1ngle bed used wash Golds Gym we1ght machine
CEILING FAN S
(7401446 3945
er for further 1nfo ca ll never been used Pa1d $500
WATER SEWAGE &amp;
Will sell tor $300 Ca I
(304)675 3423
"TRASH INyLUDEO
Beaut1fu 2 story townhouse
(740)446 6757
\Ill{! II \\II lSI
PETS CONDITIONAL
overlook ng Gall po liS oty
(304}882 3017
park K1tchen
DR
LA
JET
study 2 'oaths laun dry area
HUUSiliOW
AERATION MOTORS
Reference s requ red secun
Gooos
Repa1red New &amp; Rebuilt In
ty deposit no pets $900 mo
Stock Call Ron Evans 1
Call
(740 )446 2325
or
Tho mpsons Appliance &amp; 800 537 9528
(740)446 4425
Pleasant Valley Apartmen1 Repa1r 675 7388 For sale
Are now tak1ng Appl~e at ons re conditiOned automat c
BEAUTIFUL
APART
tor 2BR 38R &amp; 4BR 1 washers &amp; dryers refngera Nascar Bed room Decor
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Pillow Sheets Bedspread
PRICES AT JACKSON Apphcat1ons are taken 1o rs gas and e eculc Curtams Wail Plaques
Monday thru Friday from fanges a•r cood1t1oners and
ESTATES, 52 Weslwood
N1gh1stand Bean bag &amp;
Dnve from $344 to $442 900 AM 4 PM OHce IS wnnger washers Wd do
Located a! 11 51 Evergreen repa1rs on maJ or brands n Lamp (304)675 5258
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
Equal Dr1ve Po nt Pleasant WV shop or at your home
740 446 2568
New and Used Furnaces
Phone No IS (304)675
Hous ing Opportunity
Used Furn ture Slore 130 lnstallat1on
ava labia
5806E HO
Butav111e P1ke Appliances {740)441 2667
Beech Stree t Middleport 2
bedroom turm shed apart Pomeroy 2/3 BA apt
couches d nettes chesls
ment deposit &amp; prev1ous Naylors Run W/0 hookup bunkbeds grave marke rs NEW AND USED STEEL
rental reference s no pets LG patio/yard S&amp; R Call (7 40)446 4782 Galhpol s Sleel Beams Ppe Rebar
For
Co ncrete
Angle
(740}992 0165
740 992 68B6
OHH rs 113 MS
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Gratmg
For
Ora ns
Dr veways &amp; Walkways L&amp; L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
Fnday Bam 4 30pm Closed
Publk Notu.:es Ill Nomsp'a(&gt;eocs.f,J Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
Vour R1ght tu Know. l&gt;cllvcl ~d Right to Your
Sunday (740)446-7300

(740]385 401 9

CONVENIENTLY LDCAT

r

t

SPAS

leaving saki centerline South OOdeg
40'44 West passtng
thru a 518 ~ron ptn set
al a distance of
199 67 feet and going
a total distance of
107611 feel to a 5/8
Iron pin set, thence
West a distance of
107 00 feel to a 5/8""
iron pin set, thence
South 15 deg 25 03""
West a distance of
67 95 feet to the prlncopal point ol begin·
nlng.
containing
6 6449 acres more or
less, subject to all
legal easements and
rlghts·Of·way.
EXCEPTING any coal,
011, gas or mtnerals
previously conveyed
or reserved
EXCEPTING THEREOUT ANO THERE
FROM lhe following
described real estate,
Sltualed tn Sullon
Township,
Meigs
County, State ol Ohto
and being In Secllon
25, Town 3 North
Range 12 West of the
Ohao Company s purchase and being
described as follows
Beginning at a point
South about 1230 feet
from the centerline
intersection
of
County Roads 30 and
122. said point betng
the centerline of
county Road 122 and
being
near
the
Northwest
Corner
Anderson s Parcel as
described In
lhe
Meigs County Dead
Records Volume 251
page 819 , lhence
Soulh 418 553 feet
along the West line of
the sa1d Anderson
parcel and along the
West line of Nease s
parcel as described
tn the Meigs County
Records
Official
Volume 29 page 763
to an Iron pm set
lhence North 72 dog
51 24"" West 176 415
teet lo a poml In the
centerline of County
Road 122, passmg an
Iron pin set at 161 9
feel for reference,
lhence Nonh 32 dog
23 35 East 233 066
teet along the center
line of County Road
122 to a point thence
North 17 dog 21 02
East99 851feelalong
the centerline of
Counly Road 122 lo a
pomt thence North
10 dog 36 23 ' Eesl
75 740 feel lo lhe
potnl of beginning

conlammg
0 655
acres, more or less,
Excepting all legal
easements and right
of way
Parcel
Number
18-01367
Property
Address 31220 Roy
Jones Road Racme,
OH 45771
Current
owner Gregory A and
Michelle L DuVall
31220 Roy Jones
Road Ractne, Ohio
PP#
18 01367 001
Prior
Deed
References Volume
162,
Page
447
Appraised
al
$80,000 00 terms of
sale Cannot be sold
for less than 213rds of
lhe appraised Value
tO% down on day of
sale, cash or certified
check, balance due
on Confirmation of
sale The appraisal
did not Include an
tnterlor examination
of the house Robert
E Beegle, Meigs
Counly SheriH
Altorney lor the plain·
Uti Manley Deas &amp;
Kochalskl, 495 S
~lgh 51 Sullo 300
Columbus, Oh 43215·
5869 (614)220 5611
(11l 2, 9, 16

OOl

Public NotiCe

Shenff Sales Case
Number 04CVB139
Bay
Flnanctal
Savings
Bank
Platntoff VS Marla
Romaine
at
al
Defendants Court of
Common
Pleas
Melga County Ohto
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court In the above
enlllled action I will
expose to sale at
Public auction on the
front steps of the
Metgs County Court
House on Friday, Dec
9 2005 at 10 AM of
said day, the follow
lng Described Real
Estate
House and
Lol slluated In the
Village of Pomeroy,
Counly of Meigs and
State of Ohto PAR
CEL 1 Betng R E No
22 knows as the
Wrlghl
property.
Spring
Avenue,
Pomeroy,
Oh1o,
bounded
and
described as lollows
Being lol No 38 In
Fraction 18, Sect1on
14, Township 2, and
Range 13, which aald
lol No 38 adjoins lot

no 39 now or former·
ly owned by Nellie A
Meier, tn the Village of
Pomeroy, 1
Ohio
Parcel No 1~1449,
412 Spring Slreet.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PARCEL II Situate In
lhe
VIllage
ol
Pomeroy Counly ol
Me1gs and Stale of
Ohio Being all of tol
no 15 and 16 and part
ollol no 171n Slmual
Wylhs
Pomeroy s
subdlvlston of lot no
1 Fraction 18, as follows, lot no 15 In
Samuel
Wyllls
Pomeroy&amp;
Subdlvlalon tot 1
Fraction 17 in Nay lots
Run tn sold Ctty of
Pomeroy, except the
coal, and Other minerals contained therein
wllh lhe right to mine
the same without
Injury lo lhe surface,
together with all ways
and right of way lot
16 and pert of lol 11
In Naylors run m the
City ol Pomeroy
Me1gs County, Ohio
Begmn1ng at the
northeast corner of
Wilham Kasper's lot,
one hundred (100)
feet, thence east with
the northerly lme of
Wilham Kasper'a lot
to the place of begmning
Be the same
more or less but subject to all lagal highways Parcel No 1601450, 16-01451 , 1601452 Land only
Current Owner Marla
Romtne el al 4t2
Spring
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio PPI
16-01449 000 Houae
and Lol Prior Deed
References Volume
297, Page 597 The
House
and
Lot
Appraised
al
21 000 00 The Land
Only Appraised al
2,000 DO Terms of
sale Cannol be sold
lor tess lhan 2/3rds of
lhe appraised value.
10% Down on Day or
Sale,Caoh or Cenllled
Check Balance due
on conflrmalion or
sale The appraisal
did not Include an
Interior examination
of the house Robert
E
Beegle, Meigs
County
Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
Plalnllff
Kirk
Llederbach, Barnard
&amp; Haffey PO Box
24005,
Lyndhursl
Ohio (216)291 3600

(l1) 2. 9 16

SPAS

SPAS

9ver 30 In Stock
RATLIFF POOL CENTER

2001 Suzuk1 Katana Yosn
exhaust new high perform
ance EVC c utch &amp; spr ngs
w/pro lnct1on d sc black
t 2 000 m les recenlly serv
71 Dodge Dar! Swrnger teed garage kept HJC he
F.
new T res&amp;Brakes
runs met wlt1nted v1sor $3 000
great excelten1 cond1!10n. 080 or trade for 4 wheeler
8 week old Jack Russell bee Garage kept $3 600 740 508 0650
CKC reg1stered $ 100 080 (304)773 5162
(740)256 1052
2002 HD Salt ta I Deuce
65 Chevy Cavalier lor sale Ao1 of extras $15000 11rm
CKC Lab pupp1es Chocolate (304)675 1506
Low m1les l ke new musi
&amp; black Vet check:ed shOts
see
(740)446 28 15
wormed
$200
OBO 85 Mercury MarquiS
(740)446 2673
owner light blue wfwhlte
(740)379 2697
approx 80 000 2003 Harley Dav1dson 100
v111yl top
M mature Pmchers 2 male m11es $700 {304)675 3537
Anmversa ry Road K ng
1female black/tan S300
3000 m1les $7 000 worth of
Ready 11 /10105 Tak1ng 93 Toyota Camry $600 Cars E~r:tra Chro me
$ 16 000
deposl!s (740)388 8124
hom $500 LISting 8CXl-391 ca ll
740 992 6520
5227 E~et C548
between 9 00 5 00
Shusule
Dog
$100 00
House lram ed Jack Ru ssell 95 Monte Car o Z 24 2003 Suzuki 4WD Vmson
for $75.00
130 000 m1les NC PW PL 500 ATV w1th 34 m1les
CARMICHAEL
keyless entry lilt cruse CD $49QO
70
MusiCAl
(740)446
p le~y er
looks good runs EQU IPMENT
IN!.111Ul\IEN!1;
great $3 000 OBO 740 24 12

m~1

508 0650
Ba dwm
stud1o
p1ano
recently
tuned $1 095
Rhodes 73 stage p1ano su t
case $295 Good corKh11on

I \1~\1 'I 1'1'1 II "'i
,'\11\ISIOtl-.

r

2004
Hentage
Solta11
97 Ford Expl orer Eddte 13000 mle $16500 ca ll
Bauer Ed111on $3 800 94 740 992 6520 900 500
Ford Taurus 69 000 m11es
2005
Harley
Oav dson
95 Ford Tauru s 170 000
Electra Gl de $17 000 Ca ll
m tes $795 each (304)675
(740)446 6389
58 15 or (304)593 5354

15
LIVFSIOC'K

r

TRUCKS

FOR SAL£

~..iiiliitiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l

AI.IIO pARJl; &amp;
A&lt;.:CE'i'lURit:S

~

Am raong wheels F 1s Ford
01 green Ford F1 50 XLT 4dr
Arab an mare w11h tack Ca ll auto 5 4L VS bedcover Mustang GT $200 tlke new
between
5pm 9p m BCD pl ayer sunroof good (740) 446 2815 or (740)446
2673
(7 40)388 9841
co nd1t1on
71 000 miles
18/21mpg $1 4 000 080
Butc her lambs Available (3041288 3335
November 14th $3 per lb
hang1ng we ght plus butcher 1974 Ford Ranger piCk up
cost
(740)441 9814 or S600 as IS (304)675 73B8

CMII'tliS &amp;

1740)44 1 5507

MUIOR HOME:s

19B2 F 250 Ford truck
Reg1stered Angus bulls and $350 00
A so 1991
hailers 40 years ot A 1 Bonneville $300 00
740 2000 Dutchman Class C
Motor Home
Sleeps B
breeding Slate Run Farm 992:3457
3401
Jackson
Ave
www slalerunfarm co m
(7 40)286 5395
1985 Ford truck F1 50 6
cy l nder automatiC good
I H.\ "\'1'1 IH I\ I 10'\
body runs $900 (740)44 6

~

AlJM
FOR SAIJ'

10

9742

1993 GMC Truck heavy llall
4 wheel dr1ve 4 3 V6 auto
1987 Bu1ck Century L1rn11ed maliC transm1 Ss1on Runs
Runs great great body &amp; e~~:cellent tranny rebuilt
mter or
sa 000 or gmal motor has low m1las dual
miles $750 (740)446 7820 exhau st to o l bo~r: W111 sale
Jar $3 800 01 basi offer •n
1990 Buck Reatta excell ent cash Call {740)441 9378
cond1 tlon
63 000 m11es leave message

$7 000 (304)675 3388
1993 Cadillac DeVIls 49
VB
59 000 m1l es
all
optons leather new t res
maroon
$5 000
l1rm
(740 )64 5 0626
- - -,-- - - , - - --:-1995 Dodge Caravan V6
aulo power sea ts ~~~
great
$ 1 BOO
740
1652
256
(
1
1996 Stralus 106 000 miles
5spd
AJC ru ns great
$1 300 OBO
(740 )256

9031

COOK MOTORS
328 Jackson P1ke

(740)446.()103
1999 b ack Chrysler C1rrus
LX I leather sears tully
loaded 6 CO changer

S3 000

OBO

(740)256

1652

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond111ona1 l1l&amp;t1me guar
antee Local references fur
mshed Establ shed 1975
Cal
24 Hrs (740) 446
0870 Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

94 Dodge truck 2WD VB
auto
$2100
OBO
(740)256 1652 or {740)256
1233
!!:!:::---~~--..,

r

4x4

~---FtiiOtiiRiiSiiALiiiit-_.1
.,
02

Dodge

Duall y
cab
4x4
Cumm1ns Turbo diesel
21 000 m11es e~tceilent con

e~~:tended

dlt on garage kept $25 000
firm . (740)286 0257

17311

1998 Honda Odyssey van
(740)446 6579
87K loa ded $5 995 1999
1 800-894 6997
Avenger 68K S4 995 2000
www bulllrogspas com
Plym outh Breeze $3 895
199B Blazer 4x4 $4 995 3
Storm wmdows screens &amp;
month s/3 000 mile warranty
doors tntenor &amp; exter or
1989 Newyorke r $995 1996
doors Jacobsons rldmg
Saturn $1 495 1997 Dodge
tractor GT12 Gas BBQ gnll
Caravan $2 395 Others m
(740)367 7328
stock
Vent Free 3 P aqua
Gas Heater
(Propane or Natural)
Manual Control $143 95
Alum1num Frberated Pa1nt
{G reat for Mo bile Homes)
5 gal Bucket S29 95
We now have candy melts
m stock for your
hoi day bakmg
Pa nt Plus Hardware
675 4084

· 4 WHEElER'

Block br ck. sewer p1pes 2004 Toyota Corolla e~r:cel
w ndows 11ntels etc Claud e ent cond liOn 25 500 m1ies
W nters A o Grande OH 39 mpg $12 500 {304)882
3486 or {304)773 5684
Call 740 245 5121

_.~I l

r~.,__

40 MoroRcvcu!V'

AlJI'OS
~'ORSAU

I'

VANS

FoR SAI.F.

1993 Plymouth Voyager 7
passenger
van
Good
sha pe 25 mpg $2
OBO (740)441 1417 alter

ooo

5pm
2000 Grande Cara,van V6
rear heat and a1r child
seats 89 000 limes Sei tor
payott (740)379 2723

40 MoroRC\ a.IN/
4WHEFURS
1977 650 Spec1al Yamaha

$600 (304)675 3388

2002 K1a A10 4cyi 4 door 1995 Honda Four Trall 200
auto 35 mpg 85 000 m11es type II reverse 1 000
$:3 250 (3040675 1192
(740)245 5946 alter 5pm

Fashion Bug
2 Days Only

Syracuse Communtly Butldtng
(the old grade schpol)
Turn al the Bank

Fnday &amp; Saturday

Watch for stgns 1

Nov 11th&amp; 12th

Fnday, Nov 11th

at 5 30 PM
Aucttoneer
Capt Btlly R Goble Jr
Middleport, OH 45760

Rac19e Gun Club
Sunday,
November 13th
12:00
Slug Shoot -Any

Gauge
Bnng shells
Everyone Welcome

40%0FF
Extra 40% OFF
Clearance Items
Ohto Rtver Plaza

446 2009

CRAFT SHOW
Sponsorecl by the HMC
Employee Act1v1ty Assoc1at1on

Sat. Nov. 12th
SAM· 7 PM
HMC Eclucatton

&amp;

Conference Center (Grauncl
Floor)
(park 1n the rear of the facility,
enter through the ASU
Entrance) A vanety of crafters

Lad1es Au)(
Thanksg tvmg D1nner

Tuppers Pla1ns VFW

Nov 13th

2005

Turluty Mashed Potaloas/OJ41VV
0fMS1119 Noodles Green Beans Roll Deuert
Dnnk
Adults $6 so Chi dren 53 S&lt;l Carryout s ~~ 11 1

w11i be on hancl selling the1r
proclucls Open to the public

Adm1ss1on 1s FREE'
F or more tnlo

~~iibiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii~

�Page B6

o

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Wednesday, November 9, 2005
•

Wednesday, November 9, 2005
ALLEY OOP '

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

PUBLIC
NOTICES

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Sheriff Sales
Caae Number 05CV

Meigs and State o_f thence North along
Ohio:
Being
In said line of land
CKJS
Section No. 8, Town
owned by Thomas
Mortgage Electronic No. 6, Range No. 14 of Price 450 feet to the
Sys. the Ohio Company's Southeast' corner of
Registration
Plaintiff
Purchase. Beginning the land conveyed by
VB
65 rods and 13 links deed from Thelmore
Thomas Buckley Jr. South and 2 rods Stansbury and Minnie
at al
East of the North East Stansbury to Asa Oak
corner of Fraction No. Stansbury
and .
defendants
Stansbury,
Court of Common 7; thence South 89 Golden
Pleas, Meigs county,
degress East 106.75 his wife; lhance West
feet: thence South 11 · along said line 250
Ohio. In pursuance of
an order of sale to me
degrees to the South feet to a stake; thence
directed from said line of the parcel of South 570 feel to a
court in the above
real estate described stake in the center of
entitled action . 1 will in deed recorded in the
Dysvllleexpose to sale at pub- Volume 290 , Page
(Carpewater) Roadi
lic auction on the . 739, ~eigs County Thence East by North ·
front steps of the
Deed
Records; 280 feet to place of
-Meigs County Court thence South 87 1/2 beginning, containing
House on Friday, Dec.
degrees West 114.55 2.64 acres, more or
2, 2005 at 10 a.m. of feel; ·thence North 4 less.
aald day, the follow- degrees West 66 feel
FURTHER EXCEPTIng described Real to the place of .begin·
lNG 0 .348 acreS conE"state: Situated in the ning, containing .14 veyed to the Trustees
State of OH, County acres, more or less.
Columbia
.of
of Meigs and in the Ills the intent of this Township,
Meigs
l"ownshlp of Chester.
County, Ohio, for the
deed to transfer the
Beginning at a point west one-half of the
benefit of Rawling'•
on the North line or
parcel of real estate Cemetery. ·
Section 24 where the described In deed PARCEL NO. TWO:
line
of recorded In volume
northerly
Also, the following
Section 24 intersects 290, Page 739, Meigs piece or parcel of
with the center of Old County
Deed land lying and being
State Highway No. 7, Records. Reference
in the County of
thence South 18' 55' ,Deed: Volume 321 , Meigs and State of
Weat 261 feet along Page 535 ancl Volume Ohio and In Columbia
the center of said 290, Page 739 Meigs Township,
and
highWay;
thence County
Deed described as follows:
South 24" 55' West 'Records.
Beginning in the can302 feet along the Auditor's
Parcel ter of the road leading
center of said high· Number:
12· from. Dyesville to
way to the center of 8 00188.001. Properly
Schoql Lot, 15 rods
culvert across the Address: 24 Main. South of the North
said highway; thence
Street, Rutland, OH line of the Northwest
South 76" 10' East306 45775 to make the quarter of Section 1,
feet; thence North 26.
sums as hereinabove and about 31 rods
East 657 feet to the set out, judgment and 20 links East of
north line of Section with the sold Interest the West line of oeid
24; thence West 370 thereon, and costs quarter section run·
feet to the place of aforesaid; and that · nlng thence East
beginning containing you also pay the cost about 22 rods; thence
4·.s acres, more or of this writ, and all ' South 67 rods; thence
18ss. Excepting two Increase an accruing ' West about 40 rods to
acres heretofore con- costs; . and
the the center of the road
veyed to the said residue, If any there leading
from
John L.R. Gillian and be, you bring into this Dyes ville to School
· Mary M. Gillian by Court to abide the fur- lotj thence North
deed recorded in ther order of the along the center of
Volume 186, page Court, and that you said road to place of
473, Meigs County make retufn ot your beginning, containing
Deed
Records. proceeding to . our about 6 acres ,and 22
Parcell No: 03-00453
said Court within rods~ be the same,
Curren•
owner sixty days from this more or less. Current
Thomas Buckley Jr. date, and have you owner
Chlird
Property at: 36998 · then and there this McKibben
et
at
Sumner Rd, Pomeroy writ.
Property at: 38676
Ohio,
PP#
03- Current Owner David, . Stahearl
Rd,
00453.000 Prior Deed Hysell et al Property Pomeroy, Ohio PP#
References: Volume AI 24 Main Street 05-00667.000 Prior
2H
Page
337 Rutland, Ohio. PP ## Deed
References:
Appraised ·
at 12·00188.000 &amp; 12· Volume 167, Page3
$45,000.00 terms of 00188.001 Prior Deed 651 Appraised at
Sale: Cannot be sold References: Volume S130,000.00 Terms of
for less than 213rds of 338, Page 521 , Volume Sale: Cannot be sold
the Appraised Value. 321, Page 535; and lor less than· 2!3rds of
10% down on Day of Volume 290, Page the appraised value.
Sale,
Cash
· or 739, Meigs County 10% down on day of
Certified
Check, Deed
Records. sale, cash or certified
at check, balance due
Balance Due
on Appraised
Confirmation of Sole. $70,000.00 Terms of on confirmation of
The appraisal did sale: Cannot be sold sale. The appraisal
Include an Interior for less than 213rds of did include an interior
examination of the the appraised value. examination of the
10% ·down on Day of house.
Robert E.
house.
Robert E. Beegle, Sale, Cash or cBrtl- · Beegle, Meigs County
Meigs County Sheriff
fled Check, Balance Sheriff. Al1orney for
Attorney
for
the Due on Confirmation the Plaintiff Learner,
Plaintiff
Learner of sale. The rippraisal Sampson &amp; Rothfuss,
Sampson &amp; Rothfuss, did not Include an P.O.
Box
5480
P.O.
Box
5480, Interior examination Cincinnati ,
Ohio
Cincinnati,
Ohio of the house. Robert 45201-5480 (513)241·
45201·5408, 120 &amp; 4th E. Beegle, Meigs 3100.
Street
8th
floor County Sheriff.
(10) 26,(11) 2,9
the
Cincinnati ,
Ohio Attorney for
45202-4007, (513)241- Plaintiff Ll111e, Sheets
Public Notice
and Warner 213 E
3100.
(10) 26, (11) 2, 9
Second St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 (740)992- Sheriff
Sale Case
6689.
04CV169
Number
Public Notlce
(10) 26, (11) 2, 9
United Stales of
America Plaintiff VS
Sheriff Soles
John E &amp; Lori A Miller
Number
Publlc Notice
Defendants Court or
Case
05CVOSO
Common
Pleaa,
Peoples Bank
Sheriff S•les ~se Meiga County, Ohio.
Plaintiff
Number
05t;V056 In pursuance of an
vs
National
City order of aate to me
David Hysell at at Mortgage Co Plaintiff directed from. sold
defendants
VS Chad McKibben el court In the above
Court of Common al Defendants Court entitled action, I will
Pleas, Meigs County, of Common Pleas, expose to sale at pubOhio.
Meigs County, Ohio. lic auction on the .
In pursuance of an In pursuance of an Front Steps of the
order of sale to m.e order of sale to me Meig~ County Court
directed from said directed from said House on Friday,
couri In the above court in the above December 2, 2005 at
entitled action, I will entitled action; I will 1o A.M. of said day,
expose t'o sal8 at pub- expose to sale at the
following
lic auction on the Public Auction on the described
Real
front steps of the front steps of the Estate: Exhibit "A"
· Meigs County Court Meigs County Court DeScription of Real
House on Friday, House on Friday, Dec. Property Situated In
December 2, 2005 at 2, 2005, at 10 a.m. of the Township
of
10 A.M. of said Day, said day, the follow- Salisbury, County of
the
following Ing described real Meigs and Slate ol
Real estate:
.described
Ohio, Beginning on
.Estate:
Situaled
In
th8 the Easterly edge of
Parcel One:
Township
of the black top surface
Situate In the Village · Columbia, County of of .Stale Route 33,
of Rutland, County of Meigs, and State of South 33 degrees 20
Meigs and State of Ohio, end described minutes · E"a sl 24t.5
Ohio:
along
the
as follows: PARCEL feet
Being In Section No. NO 1
Being the Easterly edge of said
8, Town No. 6, Range Southeast Quarter of surface from the
No. 14 of the Ohio the
Northwest North end of a
Company's Purchase . Quarter ol Section 1 Headwall of a culvert
"Beginning 65 rods of Town, County and near a mine opening,
and 13 links South State afOresaid, esli· the place of beginand 2 rods East of the mated at 40 acres, ning
being
the
North East corner of more or less.
Southwest corner of
Fraction No. 7; thence EXCEPTING from the Dwight Logan lot,
South 89 degrees above described real recorded In Deed
East 213 112 feel; estate 3.9418 acres Book 192, Page 507,
thence South 11
as conveyed by Asa Deed Records ol
degrees East 55 feet; D. Stansbury and Meigs County, Ohio;
thence South 87 112 Golden
Faye thence
south 33
degree West 229 feet Stansbury, to Wanda degrees 20 minutes
and 1 Inch; thence Lou Oxley by deed east 154 feel along
North 4 degrees West recorded In Volume the Easterly edge of
66 feel to the place of 247 , page 637, Oeed said surface 10 feet
beginning. EXCEPT Records,
Meigs from the center of
.14 acres previously County, Ohio .
said State Route 33;
conveyed to David W. FURTHER EXCEPT· thence North 56 deg.
Hysell and Psnny K. lNG the following: . 37 minutes east 239
Hysell
by
deed Being situated in the feel; thence North 33
recorded In Volume Southeast quarter of deg. 20 minutes west
321 , Page 535 of the the Northwest quarter 154 feet to the South
Meiga County Deed of section 1, of tho line of logan's lot;
Recorda.
·
County thence South 56 deg.
Township,
Reference
Deed: and State aforesaid 37 minutes .Wast 239
Volume :i38, Page and is described as feel along said line to
521 , Meigs County Township,
County the place of beginDeed
Records . and Stale , as is ning, containing 0.80
Auditor's
parcel described as follows : acres.
Number:
12· Beginning at a stake Property
Address:
in the West corner of 33058 State Route 33,
00188.000
owned
by ,215, Pomeroy, OH
PARCEL
TWO: land
Situated In the VIllage Thomas Price and 45769 Parcel Number:
of Rutland, County of Delbert
Turner; 14-Q1203.000. Current
c

·------

Owner -John E &amp; Lori
A Miller, 33058 St Rt
33, Pomeroy, Ohio,
PP• 14·01203 Prior
Deed
References:
Volume 301, Page
313 , Appraised at
$50,000.00 Terms of
sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 213rds of .
the appraised value.
10% down on day of
sale; cash or certified
.check, balance due
on confirmation of
sale. The appraisal
did not include an
interior examination ·
of the house. Robert
E. Beegle, Meigs
County
Sheriff.
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff Stephen D
Miles Alln. 18 W.
Monument
Ave.
Dayton, Ohio 45402
(937) 461 -1900,
Oct. 26, Nov. 2, 9
Public Notice
Sheriff Sales
Case
Number
05CV066
Wells Fargo Bank
Plaintiff

vs

•

"Wh en Qllnfi(•·,GJmponilm Aruf lnt*'Rri~·· Comt ToKetller''

(740) 992-5232
SxlO, IOxiO,
lOx IS, 10x20,
10x30
.lanet.Jelfers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

Hill's Self
Storage

·

~=~~~~~:~~:~~~ L::::::::':":":'m:o:.p:d~
acra 5 rod tract olroal- ~bile Notice

NOvember 30 • 2 0Q~ at
4,00 PM to the
Middleport
Water
Department. Contract
will
be
awarded
Decembe; 12 • 2005.
The VIllage has the
right to accept or
reJ!!CI any or all bids.
(ff) 7•9•14•16 •21 •23 ·

R""n LP•t•.. u r.~ F. S•obrr
r~.lltf

rt-0-""

~ril '"'"'

'"'"" S•ilber

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lllihmlwliot

'""""'

IIIIS!mo~

Loo&gt;!.H•ol ; .
li!,..r,..;

ll il ~ m F. H
[tfffiiJr

lu.\oo Hus11l

s.. ,...,

~MI I:f

llirtdlf

""""'

\-11

ril-Oire-

tii'OI~~r

lmwdFuml·

1701 Jefferson Blvd.

... '

Soulb

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim

South

West

24

2 1.o

3 NT

P&lt;:tSS

Norlh
1•
J +
Pabs

F.ast

Pass
J l.o
P;n;5

Opening lead:?'?

• Stump Grinding

Buckd Truck

The opening lead
requires hearing

19 Ocean wave
20 Strike caller
22 Arness role
24 l'asl master
(2 wds.)
25 teeter- •
totter
26 Rockies ski
resort
27 Docs pre-.
scribe them
28 Kelly's
possum
29 Scissors
'
sound
34 Letter Info
36 In a road
show
(2 wds.)
42 Ore
analysis

43 "- Slresl
Blues"
45 Revise
47 Started a
gunfight
48 Eavesdrop
49 Tie-dyed
gsrmenl
SO Epoch
52 Once
named
53 And, for
Wolfgang
54 Hog's
abode

Lo ui s Steven son wrote , "All
speech . written or spoken, is a dead lan·

guage, until 1t finds a willing and prepared
hea rer." Surely the written word is dead
until it finds a will ing and prepared read·

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

er.

Owner: Mf Stethem

against three no-trump?

POWER WASHING

East, with five-card spade support, a singleton and only seven losers (one spade ,
two hearts, lhree diamonds and one club
- rememb er to deduct one loser· lor a
Known 10-card or better fit) ; should have
jumped to fo ~r spades, but he was nerv-

(Commer cial and Residential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, DE-cks, Driveways,

Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, pai nting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking .Companies.

Ed OiiVuwner
(740)992-4100
Chuck Wolfe/Mgr.
(740)992-04%

BARNEY

ou s given th e prevailing vulnerability. And

WHATTA YA SAY WE
BREAK FER A Li'L
SNACK, LUKEY ?

LAWN CARE DIVISION
(Commercial an!i Residential)
Mowin_g. Trimming. Tree Trimm ins, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraymg of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting Clnd mulching.
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

~HOLZER CLINIC
www.holzerclinic.com
Medical Excellence.
Local Caring'"

.

As you prepare to read on, look onlY at
the We sl hand. What would you lead

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

:,.1-,Ji-1,'{ \XlC.S

eALLJ\to,\T \~(.

C£ \ ('.. LN:GEK 5\'1'-.C.(.
Tl-\ I&gt;.til 1: CJO ?

,.

...
[ /&gt;.S:.Uf?.f... YOJ, TI-\ORi-11\WLE.,
1\LL H\t:. S\'1\C.£.:) 1\RC..
C011\'? 1\RABLE- 1

1-'£

SUFFE~S

FRO("\

C.U5ic.U::: c:.t-1\JY!

pe rhaps it was lucky that he was.
Yesterday we saw thai when the player
with loday's East hand bid four spades,
the opponents ended in five clubs. which
was made. (Spade ruffed, trump to
dummy, spade rutted , and four rounds of
diamonds played , a heart being discard·
ed from dummy. Today's E ast was endplayed , forced either to lead a heart away
from ·the ace or to concede a rutt-and·
sluff.)
North 's pass over three no-trump is
debatable. but one West, in choosing a
lead, did noi loo~ past fourth-highest from
his longest and stron_gest: the spade six.
South gratefully grabbed the trick with his
king and took nine minor-suit winners to
regi ster an ove rrric~ .
Another West listened more closely to th e
au ct1on. Would South. who was ~now n to

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos •
Celebrit)' Ciphe1cryptogrn are created ffom ~uota~ons b'l !amous people, P&lt;ISI and pr&amp;S&amp;I'll
Eam leTter 111 me etrlJer stands lor ai'IO!her

Today's clue: A eqtJBIS L

HT

BGGSKOR

"S P G

SUH

SPG
Ky

be weak, have bid three no-trump without . · TJSJXG

NWYS

WOZ

NXGIKYGAO

SPG

th e spade king? II was high ly unlikely. So

NXGYGOS

West led the hea rt queen . Now the

Vea[ :Funera[Jiome

defenders took the first 1o tricks in the
majors
The choice of opening lead had made the
"sma ll" difference of seven tri cks.

Dauid R. Deal
Director /licensee In Charge
Charlie Huber, Director
Josh Billings nssoc.

-.

'"FAMILY OWNED"

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

NEVER &amp;EN
D IS&lt;OU~TED

ALL 1·1'1' Ll FE .

WOLFE~
HOME
MAJ)'ITENANCE

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
per month.

~
C huck Wol fe

Owner

• Home Repairs • Remodeling
• Additions i New Homes
Licensed &amp; Insured

(740) 992-0496

WORLD 15 YOURS ..
A 5K'i TO FLY IN .. .

"' Weekl y Trash Serv ice

4 yr~n f Rdiahl e Service
4K~ql Yt•ur ,\o1oncy Ltx:aiJ

CONSTRUCDON

(;&amp;R SANITATION
.H:'i r:. l Haih:y Kun. KU .1

l)nm«.'ro ·. OH

Cornerstone
Elactrlcal
Sarvlca

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

WINTER

SY..HAGE
OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC.
AT THE
MEIGS CO .
FAIRGROUNDS
Nov. 12, 2005
9:00AM- 11:00
For more info. ca ll

740-985-4372

I

·Whole Corn $6.35/10Q
-Cracked Corn $7.35/100
·Triumph 12% Sweet Horse Feed

$5.50/50 .
. ·12% Cattle Feed $7.301100
·Black Oil Sunflower Seed $13.75

SUNSHINE CLUB

Why Drive Anywhere Else?

740-992-1m

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

Stop _&amp; Compare

SEASONED .HARD
.FIREWOOD
CUT &amp; SPLIT
$40A LOAD
CALL

740-949-2038

YOUNG'S

Ohio 45769

~ $· L I NCO LN ·~~ltCUA:Y
Gallipolis, Ohio

- - 1111111

lllii.MI .._

• Room Additlom &amp;
Remodeling '

-·

11,111 . .

GARFIELD
WE:t..COME 1"0
"RICE 15 NICE!"

740-446-9800

• New Garages
• Eltclrlcai &amp; Plumbing

• Rooling &amp; Gutter•
• Vinvl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pllt lo •rtd Porch Decks

ADVERTI1SE

We do it all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG
992--6215

Ill

WV036725

P.omeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex erlence

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

BAlJM LlJl\1BER
Scorpion Tractors
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart}
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1
(740) 446·17 11
1/4 Mile North
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Ma:son WV 25260

--

.,

MU L B

" Taki11g Tile Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
M id -S i ze 4 Wh eel

GRIZZWELLS
tp '-t\1 ~ Wi\fJ /M'4-S
~ '510\' A\\P
•11-\\\\\(. ~'Jt~
~

1"H6 COOKING 5!-IOW W~ERE
AL-L- Wf. COOK IS RICE: ...

ON t.VeR'I,I 51-tOW . ..

yn

-,.--..,-.;;.,.;..,.-,:-'-!

III I

r·

•

.

.

11

.

.

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r
'
1
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I

I

p ENT 1

I I· I : 13
•

.

0

M

relationsh ip.
AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb, 19) - Events
could take on an interesti ng twist to day, in
as much as exactly what yolJ may be
expectin g !rom a,nother is wh at this person
will be expecting from you . B oth will end up
being disappornted.
PI SC ES
(Feb.
20-March
20)
Outstanding achievements are possible !01
ybu today, but , unfortunately, there is a
strong chance that yciu might nevertheless
do things in a mann er whic l1 wil l not serve
your best int erests.
ARI ES (March 21-Aprit 19 ) - It's all up to
you today whether you want to focus on
nega live thoughts or on yo ur ambitious
interests. 1t yo u are enthusia stic and opli·
mistic about life. Dam e Fortune will till in
· lhe gaps.
TAURU S (April 20-May 20 ) - It behooves
you to immediately disassociate yoursell
today from persons whose ambitious
objectives are not In harmony w1th yo urs.
In order to succeed, you must be totally

oft
~

•

P

•

r~

I
•

lh:arnctl early in hfChow to

·

I T

U~SCI Mi&amp;l[

I

~s hnr, . M ~ llad a i Wil)'S Silid that I
shmild dem;wd qualit y li nd b~
~ i ll ing to •.. 1;1r .•
, J! I'J/05

'"e.

Q

ABOVE lfH[ i S

1(1 GET AN SWH

Shrewd
(ir:tntl~

SCRAM LETS 1''~'~' '
lf ainy (Juic ~ · B:·and~

ARLO &amp; JANIS
Y~5, !ill DOWIJLOADIIJO:
~£-W RJIJil. 101.1~5 fOR
MYW..L PHOI.l~

~~1

for you.

YOU lJou'f

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) - O th ers wi ll find
you a most pleasant person to be around
today, so long as everything is gorng your
w8y. Should you encounter an opposition
in any form, however,' you could overreact
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) - As etten is
the case, you may filld rt much easrer to
please fnends and outsiders than you can
your own family today, no maller how hard
you tr y. Strive to appease them anyway.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - II you apply
yourself today, you should be able to
e11pand small advantages into something
far mo1e worthwhrle. Howe\ler, even
th ou~h you'll be aware ol this !act, you
might not do so.

KIJOW ~OW,
DO You;

SOUP TO NUTZ
Po "I. Ha'&lt;'e "TO
LeaRn T1-rts ~uNK?'

l.'l.L n 'e VeR USE \i Q

Drive Tractor

Me~ NdT I&lt;J1o&lt;J
lT NO W .. Birr GoEO COMeS IN f13ND'I LaltR

iN LtFe ...

with 30hp &amp; 40 hp Kubota Engi nes

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

-~------------..!.--

----- -

II \\a~ nwrc

kcrp do.:a11 hetw&lt;.•t:! tlH· c;!r.~ th;m HI.I !Jl\D

Tlte111.

GE MINI (May 21-June 20)- You sho uld· ,.
n't have any trouble handlin g large issues
in stride today, bur when it comes to petty
disruptions yOu may start scurrying lor the
aspirin bottl e, especia lly if others are
involved.
CAN CE R (June 2 1-Jul y 22) -Situations
you take care at you rse lf today should
work out to your satisfac tion . However.
when it comes to matters assigned to oth·
ers, theY cou ld end up makmg more work

w~'-1

IIIJ IINil

,'\ h\ :1\'-s lnld hl'f );r&lt;tnd. hildrcn tim:

i mpurtani iP

committed.

1815
~150414

CARPENTER
SERVICE

fovr sc:romblt d 'tliOrdt b.·
low to lwn f~ur 1lmplt wo rd;.

Thursday, Nov. 10, 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol
The ha rder you wo rk al your chosen ente r·
prise in th e year ah ead. the luckrer you'll
be. and big things co uld start to happen for .
you. Try to use these ben efi c asp ects to
your maximu m ad vantage.
" SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-Nov. 22 ) - Be very
selective regardrng your associatio ns
today. 11 you suspect someone is attem pt ing to use you in some manner, don't stand
.there and be dumped on , make a last

rial ways, but. sadly, this good in!luence · ~,,--r~-~r:S--.1--,1-T
.I-i
Comr:l~t"
ch1.c~ie au ofe d
might not spill over into your social allalrs,
L..__l.L..l.- J ..- J..~L
. .-J.
hv lil/.1'1~ •"' thl"' m •lJ i r"l~ word ~
especially wh en involved in a negatrve
you develop from sft'P No. 3 b~low

i

ROBERT
BISSEll

ltt1er! ·of

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - You
coutd be lucky tod ay in a nu mber of mate·

!

Gene Arms/OwnerOperulor 740-992-3174

l~iltd

- . . "'llrlhdo,y:

shopping today lor someth ing that could
be e11pensive, keep 1n mind that durat:Jility
and quality should take precedence over
pnce or fad s. Don't grab something. just
because it 's on sale .

AND A GROUNP
FILLED WIT~ MILLIONS
OF WORMS'

SPHXGWJ

~:~~:t;~' 'O@R&lt;i{llA-lGt~S· WOlD
UMI
!.y CLA'r A. POLLAN-----0 RtQr~anQt
,r.. '

SAGI ITARIU S (Nov. 23· Dec. 21) - When

i~E

Z WC K Z

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Politics is the art of government."- H.S. Truman
"A politician will always be there when ,he needs you." - Richard SmoliK

exist.

PEANUTS

BHBGOS .'"

PGOXD

AstrcGraph

•

biG
NATE
..,

David, Donna &amp; Brad Deal

740-367-0536

...THE

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Easl-West

E3 r::;;:J

*Heating &amp; Cooling

740-367-0544

u

K 10
6 52

Answer to Previous Puzzle

Robert

f!OIIf ~EMON~
~'f#MJ"M

• FOR All YOUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY
• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 3 8244

'r
_l
. 1
., .

+

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Over 30 years.
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A83
IIl ii li 5
... 7

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fultl~

(304) 675-2630 ~

.
•

t J9

Wh ich way i~ yolir nest egg going?
NOT SURE? CALL TODAY!

Storage

East

West
l.lAJ 76 4 3
• Q ,J 10 g

Box 189
Mi ddleport, OH 45760 ,

-Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

K 7 4

"'"AK Q052

and Financi al Serv ice s

High and Dry

11-09-()5

t KQ 4:!

•
•

MANLEY'S
SELf STORAGE

Village of Middleport
Bids are being taken
for a contract for
Solid
Waste
Collection·&amp; Disposal
for the yaer 2006 for
to
January
1
December 31 , 2006.
Bids need to be In by

·-

Rocky Hupp Insurance

/

Phone

!

North

PIINlll

David Lewis

Public Notice

'/

Lei me do 11for youI

Lisa
Dill
el
at
Defendants
LEWIS
Court of Common
CONCRETE
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
CONSTRUCTION
In pursuance of an
Concrete
Removal
order of sale to me
directed from, said and Replacement
court In the above
Al1'~';6f" i
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at C!l~~\\'!)~·
Public Auction on the
25 Years Experience
frOnt steps of the
Meigs County Court
Hquse on Friday, Oec.
740-992-6971
9, 2005 at 10 A.M., of
Jnsur£d
said day, the followFree Estimates
Ing described Real
Estate:
Situated in the Stale
)
of Ohio, County of
Meigs and Township
of Scipio: Being In
Fraction No. 7, In
Town 7 and Range t4
97 Beech Street
of
the
Ohio
Company's Purchase,
Middleport, OH
beginning at the
northwest corner of a
1Ox 1Ox 1Ox20
one acre 5 rod tract of
real estate conveyed
992-ll94
by Asa E. Jordan lo
Or 992·66J5
Thor 0. Carsey and
·
Mary L. Carsey by
"Midlfieport's only
deed recorded In
Self-Storage ..
Volume 190, page · '::::;;:;::;:;:;;;:~
601 , Meigs County I S
EY T
Deed Records, said
TANL
REE
place of beginning
TRIMMING &amp;
being the center of
GE!IIERAL
the road running
CONTRACTING
between Harrisonville
• Prompt &amp; quality
and
Downlngtoni
work
thence northeasterly
• Affordabl"e Rates
along the center of
, References
I bl
said road 206.5 feel;
thence In en easterly
Aviii a e
direction to an Iron
• Free Estimates
pin In the
line
"Insured"
between c.c. Cuckier
Call Gary Stanley
and
George
E.
740-742-2293
·Mayhugh property 3 . ,
Leave a message
feet south of a locust
tree 8" In di~meter
which said polnl Is
also approximately 15
feel south from a gas
pipe line laid on lop
of the ground; thence
29670 Bashan Road
Is a southerly direcRacine, Ohio
tion along the east
45771
line of. the George E.
74D-949·
2217
Mayhugh 135.62 acre
tract of real estate to
~Jiia !'~10'
tha south line there·
of; thence In a waster·
\':&lt;.&gt;'
10 10'K~l0'
"" .f~&lt;··
ly direction along the
south line of the
Hours
George E. Mayhugh
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

estate . referred to
above; then n.o rth
along the weatllne of
said one acre 5 rod
lracllo the northeast
corner
thereof,
thenca westalong the
north line of said one
acre and 5 rod tract to
the place of begin·
ning, containing 6
scres, moreor•less.
The abpve described
real estate Is identl·
fled In the office of
the Meigs County
Auditor as Parcel No.
17-1)001 .000
Currant owrler. lisa
Dill Properly AI:
38546 S SR 684
Pomeroy, Ohio PP•
17·00021 .000 Prior .
Deed
References:
Volume 199, Page
473.
Appraised at
$30,000.00 Terms of
sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 213rds of
the appraised value.
10% down on Day of
Sale,
Cash
or
Certified
Check,
Balance
Du.e
on
Confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did not
Include an interior
examination at the
house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff.
Allornoy for
the
Plaintiff
Learner,
Sampson &amp; Rothfuss,
P.O.
Box
5480,
Cincinnati, Oh. 45201 •
5480 (513)241-3100.
(11)2,9, 16

42 Social
insect
1 Slipped up 43 Violinist's
6 Romantic
need
sight
44 legal matter
12 Nolfalr
46 Poem
14 Wtthout
by Keats
shells,
48 Heroes'
15 It has
horses
51 An outer
a neck
16 Raises
piS:net
17 Pixie
55 Xerxes
18 In the
ruled here
doldrums 56 Soften
19 Dentist"s
57 Like bread
drill
dough
21 Commercials 58 Overgrown
23 Salon styles
26 VHsllty
DOWN
27 Sprint rival
1 Recede
28 Puahes
a rail
2 - de
Jane.iro
30 Htqh
mountain
3 Informer
31 Sushi-bar
4 Chemical
compound
selection
5 Wooded
32 Utah ciiV
33 Achilles
valley
story
6 Game •
35 Journal
with pawns
7 Emanation
37 Air-pump
8 Husky
meas.
38 Parliament
(2 wds .)
members
9 Gentle
39 She loved
treatment
Lennon
tO Allow
40 Criticize
11 Mag. staffers
41 Margo
13 Vandalize

Phillip
Alder

Take the PAIN
ou~ of PAINTING!

Page B7

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J'age B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Wednesday, November 9, 2005

Duke teammates lead senior-laden preseason AU-America team
BY JIM O'CONNEU
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Duke lops the preseason AllAmerica team, too.
Senior
leammates
J .J.
Redick and Shelden Williams
.
o f the No. .I Bl ue Dev1 1s were
the
leadmg
vote-getters
Tues~ay on The Assoc~a~ed
Press preseason AII-Amenca
team:· h fi . h .
.
h
It 1s t e 11t lime smce
t e
AP started the preseason team
in 1986-87 that · teammates
were chosen by the national
media panel that selects the
weekly Top 25 .
Seniors Dee Brown of
. illinois and Craig Smith of
Boston College also made the
team, along with junior Adam
Morrison of Gonzaga.
Redick, the only returning
first-teamer from last season,
received 67 of 72 votes, while
Williams, a third-team choice
last season, was on 63 ballots.
"Having seniors is great. ...
Over the years, that has been a
big thing for our program is
out upperclassmen teaching
the younger guys," said Duke
coach Mike Krzyzewski,

whose leam was picked No. I
in the preseason Top 25
released Monday. "Hopefully
that will promr.t J.J. Redick
and Shelden Williams to play
be
1 1
d
at an even
tter eve , an
they've played at a real good
level.''
The 6-foot-4 Redick averaged 21.8 points last season,
shooting 40.3 percerit from 3. ~int range and 93.8 percent
rom the 1·ree throw 1·me. H.1s
most impressive statistic. was
averaging 37.3 minutes per
game, a number that should
drop this season because. of
added depth.
"The was we played lasl
year was strenuous and taxmg ," he said. "It is not like I
will only play 20 minutes a
game but 1 will detinitely be
able to get a couple of rests
and breaks during the game
which will be beneficial to
me."
The 6-9 Williams debated
aboul leaving for the NBA,
but is back after averaging
15.5 points, 11.2 rebounds and
3.7 blocks last season while
shooting 58.2 percent from the
field.
"I had a lot of unfinished

J.J. Aidk* and Shtldel1 Williams ot the No. 1 Blue Devils were the leading \oOie-gettefs
Tue:sday on The As&amp;ocla1ed Press' 2005-06 preseason AII·Amtrlea team.

J.J.

lledlclt

''

Williams

0\lkt
j Duke
11-4, Sr.
6·9, Sr.
' 15.5
21:8 PPG
PPG
'
40.3 3-IX FG% i 58.2 FG r.
80FT% ' 11.2 REB
&gt;

37.JMIN
{11)

!

l

Doe

Sheldtf1

!

3.7 BLK
(63)

Brown

Adam
Morrison

lllinola
Gonzaga
6-0, Sr.
6·8, Jr.
1UPPG
19.0 PPG
49.9 FG%
49.8 FG%
43.431&gt;1FG% 1 . 5.5 RPG
4.SAPG ; 2.8APG
1.8 STL(S1) 1 (45)

Craig
Smith

i Bos!on Coli.
6-7'. St.
18.0PPG
50.4 FG%
8.5RPG
1.6 STL

{31)
AP

business here at Duke
University," he said. "I want
to win a national championship and that is one of the
things that 'motivated me to
come back. I wanted to do that
before I left and moved on to
the next level."
It is the second time Duke
has had two players on the
preseason All-America team.
Bobby Hurley and Grant" Hill

were the firs t teammates to do
it in 1992.
The other pre"season teammates were Raef LaFrentz and
Paul Pierce of Kansas and
Mike Bibby and Miles Simon
of Arizona, all chosen in 1997,
and Luke Walton and Jason
Gardner of Arizona in 2002.
Brown, a 6-0 ~uard, was
also considering a JUmp to the
NBA but broke hr s foot at a

predraft camp and returned to
the Ill ini, whom he helped to a
No. I ranking for mo st of last
season.
He was ~ second-team AllAmerican last ~easo n after
. averaging . J3.3 points, 4.5
assists and 1.8 steals. He and
James Augustine are the only
starters back from , the team
1ha1 lost 1o North Carolina in
th e national champions hip
game.
"You're always going 10 be
compared to last year's team
whatever you do ," said
Brown , who received 51
votes. "You can't do that. It 's
going to be a different team
and it's going to be fun 10
watch because everybody's so
new."

Morrison, the only nonsenior on the team, was picked
on 45 ballots. The 6-8 forward
has become a bit of a folk hero
in the Northwest with his mop
of brown hair and strong
offensive game. He averaged
19 points last season on 49.8
percent shooting while grabbing 5.5 rebounds and handing out 2.8 assists.
"Adam simply knows how
to score," Bulldogs coach

Mark Few said , " It was obvious as the season went on last
year that his presence was felt
more and more."
The 6-7 Smith and Boston
College are making the tllove
from the Big East to the
Atlantic Coast Conference. He
averaged 18 ' points and 8.5
rebound s last season and at
250 pounds is one of the
tougher players inside.
"Craig Smith does a great
job, and he 's got a great work
ethic," said Eagles point guard
·Louis Hinnant, Smith's roommate for all tour years. "He
sets the tone for the team."
Connecticut sophomore forward Rudy Gay was sixth in
the balloting with 26 votes.
Last year's preseason team
also had four seniors and an
underclassman. Three players
- sophomore Chris Paul of
Wake Forest, Wayne Simien
of Kansas arid Hakim Warrick
of Syracuse - were also on
I he postseason first team.
The other players selected to
the ·preseason team last year
were Lawrence Roberts of
Mississippi State and Julius
Hodge of North Carolina
State.

Suicide attackers
strike hotels in
Jordanian capital, A7

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o ("l·.N "IS • Vol. :,5, No. 6:!

IRA

PDDEU

ASSQCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - Like a
true Broadway star, rookie
Sidney Crosby stole the
spotlight.
And he took it from Mark
Messier in Madison Square
Garden, no less.
"I didn't mean to do that,"
the 18-year-old phenom said.
Crosby's . first game in
New York City produced his
first goal in the Big Apple.
That helped the Pittsburgh
Penguins beat the New York
Rangers 3-2 · on Monday
night and move out of last
place
in
the
Atlantic
Division.
Moments before Crosby
scored his fifth NHL goal in
his 15th game, the fans stood
and cheered when Messler,
the Rangers ' former longii"me captain. was shown on
the. center ice scoreboard in
his first appearance at the
arena since his retirement in
September.
"Oh yeah, I noticed it.
Everyone was standing up,"

Redwomen
fromPageBl
extremely · well tonight,"
Fields said. "Lindsay Urton
had a great game, I thought

Buckeyes

said Crosby, who was 6
when Messier led the
Rangers to the 1994 S.tanley
Cup. "He's a great player. I
watched that playoff run."
Crosby's latest score left
him just 689 goals behind
Messier, seventh on the
NHL's career list.
Penguins captain-owner
Mario Lemieux also scored a
goal, moving him closer to
Messier in the record book.
Lemieux' s sixth of the seas.o n gave Pittsburgh a rare
early lead and moved him
goals
of
within
five
Messier's total of 694.
Lemieux made it · 1-0 at
15:20 of the first period.
In other NHL games, it
Jodi (Smith) passed super
well."
"We hustled in the back
row, " Fields added.
"I
thought we played hard, but
Cedarville's just got too
many weapons and that's
what it comes down to ."

"We are in November,
playing for a bowl game,"
said Walker, a native Ohioan
fromPageBl
who was the head coach at
Miami (Ohio) from 1990 to
Zwick's 21-yard pass to 1998. "To me, we are still in
Santonio Holmes with I :54 the championship hunt.
Maybe no one else believes
left in regulation.
it,
but I believe it and the kids
The Wildcats then scored
it."
believe
on Noah Herron ' s 1-yard ·
The
Wildcats
and quarterplunge in overtime to capture
back
Brett
Basanez
are
their first win at home against
ranked
seventh
in
Division
IOhio State since 1958. It was
also Northwestern's first win A in passing offense, averagover Ohio State anywhere in ing 319 yards a game. With
that, they 've added a solid
;33 years.
ground
game led by fresh"Well, the results of the
man
Tyrell
Sutton, third in
game are put away, and
everyone knows them. and the conference with 121
everyone knows how they yards per game. .
A year ago, Sutton was
feel about it," Ohio State
selected
as Ohio's high
coach Jim Tressel said.
"We ' ll obviously use the school Mr. Football by The
technical part - why did it Associated Press, but slipped
happen, what didn't we do, off to Northwestern because
what did they do well - all he wasn 't pursued by Ohio
of those things. But it's not State. He has already rushed
something we'll spend a for 1,085 yards and 16 touchwhole bunch of time on downs this season.
Ohio State is led i:Jy tailbecause we're a different
back
Antonio Pittman. He
team than then and they're a
different team from back need s just 22 yards to reach
I ,000 for the season.
then."
Sulton and Pittman are
Just like last year, the
Wildcats (6-3, 4-2 Big Ten) from Akron, Ohio, and both
enter thi s game with a high - . have been looking forwatd to
powered offense and · a squaring off for bragging
defen se that has given up a rights.
lots of yards and points.
The Buckeyes appear to
Ohio State (7-2, 5-1), rid - have a clear advantage on
ing a four-game winning defense, ranking first ir the
streak, would earn at least a conference and seventh m the
share of the Big Ten title with nation in total defense. They
a win over the Wildcats and a are No. 3 in the land against
victory at Michigan in the the run.
regular season finale.
"They are very impressive
Northwestern coach Randy on that side of the ball,"
Walker still thinks the stakes Walker said. "They run to the ·
are high for his team even football extremely well. They
though jt trails front-running are big and physical and they
Penn Stale (9-1, 6-1) and do not give you mtich breathOhio State by a game with ing room. We are going to
just two games left.
have to execute very well."
I
'

was Dallas 4, ·E dmonton 0;
and Calgary 4, Vancouver 3.
After starting the season
with nine consecutive losses
- five in overtime - the
Penguins jumped over the
New York Islanders into
fourth place in the Atlantic
Division.
Crosby has three goals and
two assists through the first
four games Of the Penguins'
longest road trip of the season. And it's no surprise
Pittsburgh is 3-1 with one
game left.
"Every game he gets better," Lemieux said after
Crosby was chosen as the
game's first star. "That 's
amazing that he just turned
18 and he's our best player
night in and night out. It 's
incredible."
Ziggy Palffy also scored,
and Sebastien Caron made
35 saves in hi s sixth straight
start for the Penguins· (4-65), who rebounded from a 63 loss at Boston on Saturday.
Lemieux has 61 goals and 71
assists in 68 games against
the Rangers. Crosby's goal
brought a wide smile to his

face.
" I know he was looking
forward to playing here in
this building," the 40-yearold Lemieux. said. "For him
to get a goal in his first game
is special."
Ryan Hollweg broke up
Caron's shutout bid at 6:51
of the third period with his
first NHL goal and Marcel
Hossa got the Rangers to 3-2
with 6:24 left. Bul despite 13
third-period. shots and a late
power play, the Atlantic
leaders had a two-game winning streak snapped. ·
" It's tough when you try to
pull the rabbit out of the ha t
at the last minute," said
Kevin Weekes, who made 2·1
saves. " It was not the start
that we would have liked,
but the fact that w.e hung in
there and gave a valiant
effort says a lot about our

Sheets: 911 issue will be reconsidered

SPORTS
• Bevo Francis
Classic this weekend.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

"This can't be a dead Issue, because Meigs
POMEROY - Why did County Is one of only three In the state without a
911 service. The Issue we as commissioners
Meigs County voters reject a .
have to face Is how Is It going to be funded."
$6 annual fee for 911 emer-

SeePage 81

gency service?
Meigs
County
Commissioners proposed a
50-cent monthly telephone
line charge to finance the
service, but in Tuesday' s
general election,. voters
rejected the proposal by a
56-percent margin, 2,652
for, and 3,376 against.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said he's not sure why the

team .''
Jaromir Jagr' s 12-game
point streak was also ended
by his former club.
"We had some chances,
but we didn't play . well ,"
Jagr said. "We couldn't play.
the way we wanted to."

on Holmes status
for final home game
COLUMBUS (AP) What's brewing today with
the 2005
Ohio State
Buckeyes .. .
BUCKEYE BUZZ: Ohio
State honors 16 se niors
playing their last home
game Saturday against
Northwestern. WR Santonio
Holmes is a junior but also
might be making a final
Ohio
appearance
at.
Stadium. He 's inade no
secret of the . fact that he
would like to jump to the
NFL next spring. Coach Jim
Tressel says he and. Holmes
will discuss the matter after
the season.
" He's been here four
years," Tressel said Tuesday.
"We'll have that discussion
after the season. Bul my
standing rule has always
been, let' s discuss guys
going out if they might be a
first round (pick). · I don't
know why he wouldn ' t be a
first round (pick), but I'm

Page A5
• Karolyn Boring, 61
• Melvin Durst, 75

r-·-·-··-··-·-··-··-..- . - . . ~. -··-··-..·-..-:-..·-··-··-..- . -·1

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Reaeh 3 tounties

~-

F.ree clinic to be.held.
S8e Page AS
• Stewart to speak at
Veterans Day event.
See Page AS ·

•

•

I Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's. I
! Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or I
I Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In I
The Tri-County M~rketplace!

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I~allipolis llailp Wribunt The Daily Sentinel ~oint llltasant ll.egiSttr

• Bob Evans wins
Masons' Distinguished
Service Award.
See Page AS

WEATHER

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.L_. _,!Z!!.~:~~·-·-. .- . _J?~!')..~:.~~.-. .~. .- . -~~. ~H~~.-. _.J

$250,000 per year, and
that 's more than we would
need for the service," Sheets
said. "The telephone line
charge would have generated about $35,000."
Commissioners also considered the successful operation of the 911 service in
Vinton County, which also
collects the 50-cent telephone line charge. That system, which operates from
t.he sheriff '.s department,
has
actually
returned
money to the general fund

Please see 911 Issue. A5

RACINE - A day after its
permanent improvement levy
was beaten by a two-thirds
margin, the financial difficulties and decisions continued
for Southern Local School
District at the quarterly meeting of the district's Financial
Planning and SuperviSion
Commission, a state appoint·ed oversight commiU;ee that
oversees the district's fiqancial recovery.
. .
The Commission, which
has the ultimate power when
it comes to financial matters
in the district, unanimously
rejected the proposed contract between the Southern
Local School Board and the
Southern Local Education
Association which included a
one percent salary increase
for teachers. The same contract
was
unanimously
approved by the Southern
Local School Board earlier
this week and endorsed at
yesterday's
meeting
by
Superintendent
Southern
Robert Grueser.
After the meeting, SLEA
representative Ann Ohlinger
sard she was not shocked by
the vote but had no further
comment. In an earlier interview Ohlinger said the SLEA
may consider taking the wage
issue to court, citing the concern that the Commission
interferes with the · SLEA's
right to collectively bargain a
contract with the school board.
.At yesterday's Commission
meeting, shortly before . the

1

vote on the SLEA contract,
•
Southern
High
School
teacher Carla Schuler spoke
about her concerns that
$10,000 had ·already been
spent in legal fees by the district to keep the teachers from
getting the one percent raise
. that is estimated by the SLEA
to cost the district $18,635
for the 2005-06 school year.
In a fact-finding hearing
with the State Employment
Relations Board last month,
Gll!eser testified that the one
percent raise might cost the
district between $31,000 and
$33,000 instead of the
$18,635 due to a "me too"
clause in the contract with the
district's other union the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees which includes
Beth Ser,entjpholo
non-certified personnel,.
The Indoor walking facility at the Mulberry Community Center is becoming po_pular with locals
The "me too" clause says who are also earning free T-shirts by walking five miles or 10,000 steps. T-sh1rts are available
that in effect if another union while supplies last. Walkers at the Center include front row (from left) N1cole and Kenard Prunty,
in the district gets a raise, so Zach and Billy Fink; second row ·(from left) Tina Prunty, Alex Contreras. Rose Prunty, Jennl
does the OAPSE.
Dunham, Paula Fink and John Gilmore.
About the "me too" clause,
fact-finder Sarah Rudolph
Cole said, "I did not consider
, relevant that the school district would have to pay addiBY BETH SERGENT
Free water is also available to walkers.
tional money to OAPSE
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
The walking program began last month and
employees · if I found that
already has a quickly growing list of walkers,
SLEA employees were entiPOMEROY - Walking five miles at the including 48 kids from God's NET.
tled to a wage increase."
indoor walking facility at the Mulberry
The kids are doing a ·~walk to Hawaii"
Yesterday the Commission Community Center can not only make you
which will require walking for six to eight
did approve the contract physically feel better but get you a free T-sh1rt
months. Miles will be kept track of and calbetween OAPSE and the that says "Mulberry Community Ceqter. Take
culated until they _are equivalent to the 4,500
Southern Local School Board. I 0,000 steps and call me in the morning."
miles from Meigs County to Hawaii.
The Commission's Ohio
In order to get a free T-shirt a walker must
For example, when the kids have walked the
Department of Education walk five miles. The walker's progress is
miles
it would take to walk to Ch1cago, they
Consultant
Nancy charted by Paulette Harrison and Ro se Prunty
will
be
treated to a Chicago style pizza party
· Burbacher reported that who are in charge of the program." The
since the first of July the ·progress of the walkers is displayed on a large and a luau at the end of the walking project,
Kids and adults alike are walking 21 laps
bulletin board in the Center's hallway.
Please see Southem. As
around
the course at the Mulberry
Also assisting with the walking program is
Community
Center's indoor walking facility
Bryan Hoffman of the wellness program at
·
the Meigs Senior Center and_ Lenora Le1f)le!t, to equal a mile .
Hours
for
lhe
walking
facility
are 9 a.m. to
Parish Nurse whose office rs located wrthm
Monday
through
Wednesday;
9 a.m.
6
p.m.,
the Mulberry Community Center.
The T-shirts have been donated by the to 4:30p.m. on Thursday; 9 a.m. to I0 p.m. on
Meigs County Cardiovascular Progra~T! whose . Friday; 6 p.m. to I0 p.m. on Saturday. The
director is Andy Brumfield. The sh1rts are walking facility is closed on Sunday.
The indoor walking program at the Mulberry
available while supplies last. The cardiovascu- .
Iar program has also donated pedometers that Community Center was funded by a grant
from the Osteopathic Heritage Foundation.
can be loaned to walking participants. .

·Free T-shirts forindoor·walkers

Holiday decorations going up

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PagEi'A3

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· • Prosecutor wants to
try boy charged in
school shootings as adult.
See Page A2
; • CD release, 'The.
: Fightin' 79th in World
. War II' coming Friday.

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INSIDE

'

•

there are no active cases of
TB, while rejecting a minimal charge for a 911 service
that would potentially benefit
thousands each year.
"I don 't know the rea soning behind what happened,"
Sheets said. " I don 't know
how to read it. I do under-

!' t t \:"&gt;.t

I

.

measure was turned down,
but said commissioners will
continue to pursue the implementation of the service,
even if a different means of
funding it must be found.
Voters readily approved a
1.5-milllevy for the county's
tuberculosis office, although

District to borrow money to make payroll.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·see

-Commissioner Jim Sheets

stand where people are coming from. The economy is
.bad, a nd money is tight, and
it may be that people are
voting against any kind of
additional tax or charge for
public services."
Sheets said commissioners
proposed the telephone li11e
charge over a sales tax or
additional
property
tax
because it would cost less to
the average re sident, and
because it would distribute
the cost among more than
just real estate owners.
. "A ·one-mill levy would
generated
about
have

·Pay raises rejected
for Southern teachers

OBITUARIES

not an NFL guy."
MICHIGAN KICKOFF:
ABC Sports made it official
- · Ohio State's game at
Michigan a week from
Saturday will kick off at I
p.m.
SPEAK
OF
THE
DEVIL: Tressel said the
days are long gone when an
Ohio State team could look
past its next-to-last opponent . to
prepare
for
Michigan.
·
"In the Big Ten you ' re
going to have to stay
focused," he said. "And if
anyone is looking out
beyond
Northwestern,
we've got a problem ."

""""· "'~'l.oil~wnlilll· l.•·om

"l"lll ' RSil
• ·\' · ",,' ()\ 1···\IBFR
· 10 • :!oo-·'

•

Crosby top star in Madison Square Garden debut Questions remain
BY

Unique 'Luma'
program tonight
atURG,AS _

Meigs Local reviewing bus bids
Details oo Page A2

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Calendars
Classifieds

The hope of the board has
been to have the bu ses here in
early 2006 to replace five of
POMEROY Bids on · the older buses currently on
five new 71-passenger diesel route s. There are now 28
buses for the Meigs Local buses on the road every day
School District were opened transporting. s t~dents and ·
Monday but the Board of four or five. spares .at the bus
Education ha s' postponed garage to use on qays when
action pending review of the regular buses are off the
bids by the transpor1a11on routes for servicing or maindirector Paul McElroy.
tenance. Buckley had earlier
While the board had esti mat- said that once the new buses
ed cost per bus would be about · are here , live of the older
$65,000, Superintendent B1ll ones will be sold or scrapped.
Buckley reported at Tuesday
During the meeting Gloria
night's board meeting that the Van Reeth was hired as a tutor ·
hase without options added had for a health handicapped stucome in higher than expected dent at the rate of $20 an hour
and the overall cost per bus not to exceed five hours per
would probably be higher. The week. Teachers added to the
two bids received were from substitute for this sc hool year
Marietta • Truck Sales and were Gary Cunningham,
Edwin H. Davis of Clarksburg. · Pearce Dietrich, Laura Goetz,
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CoM

16 PAGES

A3
B4-6

Comics

B7

bear Abby
Editorials
NASCAR
Obituaries
Places to go
Sports
Weather

A3

A4
BB
As
AS
B Section
A2

rf' :.&amp;005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

B~an J. Rood/photo
Dale Riffle was decorating street lights with evergreen garland
and holiday banners as Pomeroy's merchants prepare _for the
upcom ing holiday shopping season. The decorations Will be m
place for Saturday's historic walking tour, the first holiday
event of the year.

John
Healey,
Lorraine
Kombudo, William Korner,
Cathy
Lentes,
Wendell
Morrison, Jennifer Orion,
Adam Remnant, Shannon
Roth, Eric Paul Scites, Kevin
Shima, Ryan Straight, Aaron.
Surface, Carrie Ann Towne,
Troy Weaver, Jason Williams,
Mindy Anne Williams. Kate
Zawidzki and Paula Pickens.
The board gave approval to
an overnighl field trip request
for Meigs high school vocationa I s1udents to attend the
Oh10
Fall
Leadersh!P
Conference on Nov. 16-18 m
Columbl!s.
.,
Attendmg the meettl)g were
Scott Walton , Victor Young,
Norman Humphreys, Ron
Logan, and Roger Abbott,
board members, Buckley and
Mark Rhonemus, treasurer.

_,

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