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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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· • 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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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

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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.

_,

�'

Page.A2

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November to,

2005

Prosecutor wants to. try boy charged in school shootings as adult
and
memorial
Their families asked "for flowers
privacy as they concentrate posters to the sc hool gates
on the recovery of their loved Wednesday said no.thing
unusual
about
ones," hospital spokeswoman . see med
Bartley
before
the
shooting
.
Lisa McNeal said.
Bartley was wounded in . Several students and parthe hand when hi s gun dis- ents, however, said Bar\ley ·
·
had been in trouble before
charged.
Ph ill ips, the prosecutor, with Seale.
said police and school offi· · Pam Cannoti. a parent· who
cials handled the situation has two sons at the high ·
school, and several students
well.
.
"It could even be said that said Bartley stabbed Scale in
the specific school officials the hand with a pencil when
who were present when this Seale was Bartley's middle
took place were heroic," he school principal.
The boy's family has
said.
Schools director Judy refused to comment.
"The parents of this yo ung
Blevins said the toll could
man are well-known and
have been much worse.
"The courageous efforts of well-liked in thi s communiGary and Jim and Ken proba· ty.'' Phillips sirid . " It is a
bly saved many other lives tragedy for them just as i(is
.
and the lives of our students.'' for everyone else."
Authorities were interview- ·
she said. "So we have to
think about what they have ing hundreds of. witnesse·s,
done and how they reacted The school will remain
. and what they possibly saved closed until Monday, though
students will be allowed to
this community."
The prosecutor refused to return brie!ly Th·ursday to
talk about a motive, and he pick up belongings. Churches ·
asked all law enforcement· in the community planned
AP Photo officers not to speak with
memorials and the school
Josh Cannon, a 14·year old freshman , places flowers at a makeshift memorial for shooting vic· reporters about the case.
system was offering grief
tims outside Campbell County High School in Jacksboro, Tenn., Wednesday. A stuqent has been · The gun came from . the counseling.
·charged with shootings at the school on Tuesday that left ·one administrator dead and two injured. boy.~s home, Phillips said.
Outside the scHool gates
lli-year·old
"No one else is criminally Wednesday,
administrators and an uniden- chest and died at a hospital.
were hospitalized in intensive · responsible for· the fact that Velissa Ogg fought back
Seale, 55. was shot in the care,
but
investigators this young man had this gun," tears. "It is just never going
tified teacher wrestled the
to be the same walking into
.22-caliber pi stol from h·im.
lower abdomen and Pierce, planned to interview them he said.
Students who . brought that school."
Bruce, 48. was shot in the 56. was hit in the chest. Both Wednesday.

BY DUNCAN MANSFIELD
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

JACKSBORO, Tenn. - A
15-year-old accused of shooting an assistant principal to
death and wounding two
other administrators should
be tried as an adult, the district
attorney
said
Wednesday. adding that the
victims performed heroically
to keep the shootings from
becoming even worse.
Ken Bartley Jr. was being
held without bond in a juvenile detention facility in
Knoxville and cou ld have an
initial court appearance in the
next few days. A judge ultimately will decide whether
he should be tried as a juvenile or an adult.
!'It is appropriate that he be
tried as an adult and subject
to adult penalties," District
Attorney Paul Phillips said.
Authorities said the shooting Tuesday at the I ,400student Campbell County
Comprehensive
High
School began after Bartley,
a freshman, was called to
the office because other students had seen him with a
gun on campus.
When Principal Gary Seale
and .Assistant Principals Jim
Pierce and Ken Bruce began
questioning the boy, he
allegedly opened fire. The

,,

Texas appeals court upholds ruling
allowing new trial for Andrea Ya~es
Bv PAM EASTON

Curry said if the case goes . evidence," he said.
back to trial , he is confident
·Russell Yates, who stood
Yates will be convicted by his wife throughout the
itgain. She was sentenced to trial but later divorced her,
life in prison.
said she never should have
"Andrea Yates knew pre- been tried for their chilcisely what she was doing, " dren 's deaths.
'•J think everyone would
Curry said. "S he knew that it
lose again if they brought her
was wrong.''
.
Yates' attorney, George back to trial," he said.
Parnham, said that although "Although , if she does. go
he wants to avoid another back to trial she could be
trial for his cliet1t, he doubts found not guilty by reason of
he and prosecutors can reach insanity."
Russell Yat~s said he visits
a plea agreement that
addresses Yates' mental his former wife once a month
health needs. Yates has been in prison. He said she belongs
treated for years for severe in a state hospital, where "the
depression atid other di sor· primary emphasis is on care
ders that require anti-psy· and not security."
The lower court, the First
chotic drugs.
"We will examine all possi- Court of Appeals in
bilities and hopefully arrive Houston, agreed with Yates'
at a resolution that could pre- attorney that erroneous testivent Andrea from going mony from forensic psychiathrough the torment of being trist Park Dietz could have
subjected to the evidence of swayed jurors who otherthis case. We all know how wisemight have found Yates
horrendous it was to hear this was msanc.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

\

HOUSTON -The state's
highest criminal court on
Wednesday upheld a lower
court ruling that threw out
Andrea Yates' murder convictions for drowning her
children in a bathtub in 2001.
Harris County · Assistant
District Attorney Alan Curry
said the case will be retried or
a plea bargain considered.
Jurors rejected Yates' insanity
defense in 2002 and found
her ·guilty of two capital murder charges f'or the deaths of
three of her five children.
A lower court ruling in
January had thrown out the
convictions because' of erroneous .tesrimony that prosecutors used to suggest that
Yates had gotten the idea for
the killings from an episode
of the television show "Law
&amp; Order." The episode was
found later not to exist.

Local Weather

Local Stocks

Today's Forecast
Forecast lor Thurlday, Nov. 10

city/Region
High 1Low temps

. MICH .
Toledo•
50' 135'
''

Mansfield•

Dayton•

~

~

t:.__:::)

45' I 36'

*Columbus ~

-r.__::)

48' I 36'

Youngstown •
45' I 40' .

t:__:)

48" l 37"

Cincinnati

• 52' l 37'

oJ'Y.....

t:___:)

Portsmouth •
51' I 40'
©2005

~

~
Partly
Cloudy

Cloudy

Q

~

'C......:.":l

;, ,,~

Showers

T=;-

~

~

'''''
Rain

Flurries

~

Ice

Snow

:::: ••

~~ ,/)-'-, ~ ,:;r,
~
L .. ""' ····· ~
•

~

Weatller Underground • AP

Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Much cooler with highs in the
lower 50s. Not1hwest winds
10 to 15 m·ph with gusts up to
25 mph.
· Thursday night... Mostly
dear. Colder with lows in the
upper 20s . West winds 5 to
10 mph.
Veterans
Day... Mostly
sunny. Hi ghs in the mid 50s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday night... Mostly clear.
Cold with lows in the lower
30s. South winds 5 to 10 mph
in the evening ... Becoming
light and variable.
Saturday and Ssaturday
night... Most!y clear. Highs
in the mid 60s . Lows in the
mid 40s

Srmday... Partly cloudy in the
morning ...Then mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers in the
afternoon. Highs in the mid
60s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
S1111day
11iglrt... Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance or showers. Low&gt; in
the mid 40s.
Mo11day... Partly cloudy in
the morning ... Then clearing.
Highs in the lower 60s .
Monday
11ight
and
Tuesday... Mo;tly clear. Lows
in the lower 40s. High s in the
upper 60s.
Tuesday
11iglrt
and
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance or
showers. Lows in the upper
30s. Highs in the micl40., .

ACI- 72.65
AEP -36.95
Atao- 43.35
·Ashland Inc. - 53.61
AT&amp;T -19.65
BLI-12.56
Bob Evans - 22.34
·BorgWarner- 58.69
CENX - .20.59
Champion -· 4.37
Charming Shops 12.70
City Holding - 36.67
Col- 44.98
DG -18.99
DuPont - 42.08
Federal Mogul - .44
USB -29.63
· Gannett - 65.76
General Electric 33.92
GKN!-Y- 5
Harley Davidson - 52
JPM- 37.72
Kroger - 19.06
Ltd.- 21.34
NSC -41.86
Oak Hill Flnanclal32.28
OVB -25
BBT· 42.87
Peoples - 29.78
Pepsico - 58,30
Premier - 14.49
Rockwell - 56.20
Rocky Boots - 25.16
RD Shell - 61.20
sac- 23.60
Sears - 118.53
Wai-Mart - 48.20
Wendy's - 48.06
Worthington -19.88
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis:

Oil company executives defend profits for Congress
BY H. JOSEF HEBERT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON Oil
executives sought to justify
their huge profits under tough
questioning Wednesday, but
they found little sympathy
from senators who said their
constituents are su.ffering
from high energy prices.
"Your sacrifice appears to
be nothing," Sen. Barbara
Boxer, D-Calif., told the
executives, citing multimillion-dollar bonuses the officials are receiving amid soaring prices at .gasoline pumps
and predictions of more of the
·same for winter heating bills.
There is a "growing suspicion that oil companies are
taking unfair advantage,"
said Sen. Pete Domenici, RN.M. "The oil companies
owe the American people an
explanation."
The executives represented
five major companies that,
along with their global parent
corporations, earned more
than $32.8 billion during the
July-September . quarter.
Consumers, meanwhile, saw
gasoline prices soar beyond
$3 a gallon in the aftermath of
supply disruptions caused by
Hurricanes Katrina. and Rita.
Lee Raymond, chairman of
Corp., the
ExxonMobil
world's largest publicly traded
oil company, acknowledged
the high gasoline and home
heating prices "have -put a
strain on Americans' household budgets," but he defended his company's profits.
Petroleum earnings "go up and

raised the wholesale price of
its gas by 24 cent s a gallon in
24 hours.
Raymond said his company.
had issued guidelines "tq
minimize the increase in
price" but added, ''If we kept
the price too low we would
quickly run out (of fuel) at
the service stations.''
"It was a tough balancing
act/' said Raymond, who said
ExxonMobil was ·not price
gougmg.
A number of Democrats have
called for windfall profits taxes
on the indusuy Other senators;
including Majority Leader Bill
Frist, R-Tenn., have said it may
be time to enact a federal law
on price gouging.
Some Republican and
Deriwcratic lawmakers have
suggested that the oil compa,
nies should funnel some of
their earnings to supp.lement
a federal program that helps
low-income households pay.
heating bills.
· That brought a cool reception from the executives.
·
"As an industry we feel it is
not a good precedent to fund
a government program," said
James Mulva, chairman of
ConocoPhillips.
The head of the Federal
Trade Commission said a fed·
era! price-gouging law "like!~
will do more harm than good. '
"While no consumers like
price increases, in fact,/rice
mcreases lower deman and
help make the shortage shorter-lived than it otherwise
would have been," FTC
Chairman Deborah Plat!
Majoras told the hearing .

.down" from year to year and
are in line with other industries
when compared with the
industry 's enormous revenues.
It would be a mistake, said
Raymond, for the government to impose "punitive
measures hastily crafted in ·
response to short-term market fluctuations ." They would
probably result in less investment by the industry in
refineries and other oil projects, he said.
ExxonMobil earned nearly
$10 billion in the third quarter.
Raymond was joined ·at the
witness table by the chief
executives of Chevron Corp ..
ConocoPhillips Co., BP
America Inc. and Shell Oil Co.
But senators pressed the
executives to explain why
gasoline price s jumped so
sharply in the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina, when
prices at the pump in some
areas soared by $1 a gallon or
more overnight.
Sen: Bill Nelson, D-Fla.,
asked why the industry didn't
fteeze prices, as it did after the
Sept. II, 200 1, terrorist attacks.
"We had to respond to the
market," replied Chevron
chairman David O'Reilly.
Raymond said that after
Sept. 11 "the industry wasn't
concerned about whether
there was adequate supply,"
as it was after this year's Gulf
storms. By keeping prices
higher, adequate supplies
were assured, he maintained.
Democrats said that during .
the .storm some El\xonMobil
gas station operators complained the company had

.PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November to,

2005

Anonymous phone call tips wife s world upside-down Community Calendar
DEAR ABBY: I have been
married to my college sweetheart, "George," for 20 years.
He's a great husband, a good .
father, and we are very compatible. He's the kind of man
who brings me flowers for no
reason, and who would rather
be home cooking dinner with
me than almost anywhere.
Recently a woman called to'
tell me that George was
"screwing around" aJl over
town, and she thought I
should know I was married to
a "pervert.'' She hung up
before I could comment.
Abby•. George swears he is
not having an affair and has
always been faithful. He
insists that she's just a crazy
person.
Of course, I have to believe
the man I have known for 24
years over a complete
stranger, but th'is has been
devastating .' It has made me
question my choice to be a
stay- at-home mom, ·and
made me nervous in crowds
thinking that someone is
watching me - or us when we're out together.
George is trying hard to be
there for me and says he'll go
to marriage counseling with
me or whatever I need. I

Dear
Abby

know he toves me and our
three children. But I can't
help feeling violated and
depressed, and I'm resentful
that this stranger has the
power to make me question
my own happiness . Please
help me. - THREATENED
IN N.Y.
DEAR THREATENED:
Take your husband up on his
offer of counseling, because
you HAVE been the victim of
an assault - an emotional
assault. In a sense, you have
been violated. A wise person
once told me that depression
is "anger turned inward." A
therapist can help you direct
your anger where it belongs
- at the anonymous caller.
Please don't let the venom
some stranger attempted to
spread poison your marriage .
You know rationally that

your husband loves you and
demonstrates it in every way
he can. Whoever made that
call may be angry at you or
your husband for some per·
ceived slight. She may be a
kook. She could even be a
high school student who was
dialing randomly for kicks.
It's not as unusual as you
might think.
DEAR ABBY: I have been
· married three years. After the
wedding, I chose to keep my
maiden name for both personal and professional reasons. Everyone in my life has
honored my decision with
one glaring exception - my
parents.
. On my wedding announce"
ments, my son's birth
announcement, legal documents - even plane reservations - they have either
given me my husband's last
name or hyphenated my
name. I have called and
begged them to stop doing it.
(It caused problems with the
plane tickets, and all of my
wedding announcements and
birth announcements were
wrong.)
·
Every time I ask them · to
stop, they tell me 1 am the
one causing the problem, and

then they either ge t angry or
als to create two ue~ign!-, .
promise not to do it again Friday, Nov. II
and then go ahead and do it.
MASON.
WVa.
Obviou sly, 1 am hun and
Monday, Nov. 14
Widows
Fellow,hip,
noon.
frustrated by their refusal to
CHAUNCEY - Region ·Gino's.
honor my decision. How · 14 Youth Council. 9 a.m.,
Saturday, Nov, 12
should I handle this without Athens County DJFS.
POMEROY
- AA closed
causing a huge family fight?
Thursday, Nov, 17
Big Book study. 8 p.m ..
-STILL ''JANE SMITH"
MARIETTA - District 18 Sacred Heart Chur&lt;'h.
DEAR JANE: You . ~an 't Executive Committee meets
CHESTER
.Return
control what your parent;; call at 10 a.m .. Holiday ·Jnn.
you, or how they refer to you. Purpose to recommend pro- Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
But you can control who jects for Round 20 funding DAR will meeting at 1 p.m.
places an order for formal under Ohio Public Works at the Chester Courthouse.
announcements and makes Commission State Capital Sheriff Bob Beegle will be
plane reservations for you. As Improvement and Local the speake r. Mary Lew
. to legal .documents, 1 would Transportation Improvement Johnson will be recognized.
Monday, Nov. 14
think you would have to be Programs.
RACINE - T!Je Meigs
correctly identified in order
County
Republican Party will
for the document to be valid.
meet.
at
7:30 p.m. at the
The way to solve this prob·
American Legion Hall in
lem is to stop relying on your
Friday,
Nov.
II
Racine.
parents to do things for you
REEDSVILLE
Tuesday, Nov. 16
and take control of your life.
MIDDLEPORT -Special
You don' t have to be 'con· Weekend ·revival , 7 p.m.,
meeting
of Middleport Lodge
through
Sunday,
Reedsvi
lie
.
frontational , but the more
#363.
F&amp;AM.
7:30 p.m.
United
Methodist
Church.
independent you are, the less
Practice
in
Master
Mason
what they do can affect you. Rev. Phillip Scarberry pro- degree.
Dear Abby is written by viding special music.
Saturday, Nov. 12
Abigail Van Buren, also
PORTLAND
- Hymn
known as Jean11e Phillips,
sing
with
"Delivered"
at
and was· founded by lrer
Stivers
ville
Church,
7
p.m.
Friday, Nov. II
mother, Pauline Phillips,
Sunday,
Nov.
13
RACINE
Enduring
Write
Dear Abby at
POMEROY
Trinity
Freedom
Support
Group
and
-www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Congregational·
Church
..
celRACO
host
"Honor
the .
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
lOOth
anniverebration
of
Veterans" program at 7 p.m.
90069. .
sary of the building of the at American Legion Hall Post
present · church, 10:30 a.m. 602. Rep. Jimmy Stewart and
service. Fellowship dinner local soldier Charles Wolfe
will follow.
I speakers. songs by Craig
Harrison. Refreshments.
Fightin ' 79th in World War
Thursday, Nov. 17
11", will officially be
POMEROY - Diabetes
released on Friday, Veteran's
Support Group. 10:30 a.m. at
Day. In addition to biograthe Meigs Senior Center,
phies, it contains over 1,000
Thursday, Nov. 10
collaborative effort with
wartime images, rare audio
TUPPERS PLAINS
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
and video clips, interviews, VFW Post 9053 , 7 p.m. Held every third Thursday of
overviews of selected mis- meeting at hall, dinner at each month.
sions and rosters of all per- 6:3.0 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 19
sonnel. For more informaSYRACUSE- Wildwood
RUTLAND - Benelit for
tion, or to order a copy, visit Garden Club, 2 p.m ., Terry L. Hutton to help with
the CO's companion website Syracuse Community Center. medical bills due to motorcyat
www.fightin79th.com · Janet Bolin to teach class on cle a!::cident injury, 6 p.m. at
&lt;http://www.fightin79th. synergistic and duo designs. the
Rutland
American
com!&gt;.
Members should take materi- Legion hall.

Public meetings

Church events

Other events

CD release, 'The Fightin' 79th in World War IT' coming Friday
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va.When historian Syd Edwards
began compiling information
on the 79th Fighter Squadron
for his soon to be released
multimedia CD,ROM, he
turned to a local music
instructor and musician to .
provide the music.
"From the beginning I knew
I wanted Larry Roush's music
on the CD," Edwards said.
"I've known him for a long
time and he shares an interest
in military aviation, so he was
the perfect choice."
Music has always been one
of the driving forces behind
Laramie "Larry" Roush's
life. As a performer and
composer he has appeared on
stages in two continents and
recorded two critically
acclaimed albums of original
music. As a guitar, bass guitar and piano instructor, his
influence has led many to
f'Ursue their musical paths as
far as possible and many of
his students have gone on to
obtain degrees at colleges
throughout the country. The
culmination of all his hard
· work and passion came in
2003, when he became an
Adjunct Professor at his
alma mater, the University of
Rio Grande.
After a short stint with the
U.S. Army, which included a
. year in Berlin, Germany,
Roush returned to civilian life
and received his bachelor's
degree in 1994. He has also
toured regionally with anumber of music groups since the

mid 1980's, usually while
simultaneously maintaining a
heavy schedule 6f students he
privately instructs. In his
spare time he is working
towards getting his private
pilot's license and is a highly
respected member of . the
online flight simulator community. He currently resides
in Gallipolis, with his wife,
Diana and their two children,
Jade ahd, Laramie.
"Larry's music provides a
great ambiance to the· CD·
ROM. That was important to
me as I wanted to give the
viewer something a little
different, something that
would keep their interest,"
Edwards, stated.
A graphic artist who cur·
rently resides with his family
in Pt. Pleasant, Edwards has
been researching the 79th
Fighter Squadron since 1997.
"I have found some amazing
instances of ordinary men
doing extraordinary feats," he
stated. "However, since the
79th wasn't a high profile 8th
Air Force unit, these stories
were usually only considered
newsworthy by the papers in
the. pilots' hometowns. 1
thought someon·e should
bring .these stories together
and digitally preserve them
for future generations. That
was the start of what would
turn out to be a two-year project compiling everything."
His work has been cited in
a number of publications and
on websites worldwide . In
order to get as close to the

-Witherell displays his trophy

source as possible, he has
corresponded with numerous
former pilots, crewmen . and
their families. "Their input
was invaluable. Many went
out of their way to make sure
I got everything they had:
photographs, scans of documents, rolls of microfilm and
even movie footage taken
from cameras mounted near
the plane s' guns. About 90%
of what they sent is included
on the CD.''
The CD, titled "The

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.

Submitted photo

John Witherell of Pomeroy shot this 14-point buck with a cross·
bow on Oct. 27 . The deer weighed 175 pounds dressed and
had a 19·i nch spread. This is Witherell 's first season of cross·
bow hunting.

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

· ~

·- · ~

..... . .

Anderson's
FURNITURE • APPLIANCES • CARPET
'

�.

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
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 freedom
of speech, or ofthe 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

V·IEW

READER'S

'

Bonanza?
Revimlization ifforts too late
.Dear Editor:

As a former resident of Middleport for 25 years, I am compelled to ~omment on the Nov. 7 article regarding the traffic
question and certain ludicrous statements in connection with
the "revitalization" of Middleport, which is rather like rearranging deck chairs on a ship that's already seven-eighths submerged. It has been proposed that changing traffic patterns in
Middleport would attract hundreds of more customers. What
would they buy? Gas? Printed literature? An old dress'! A hot
dog?
Middleport had its day - · such as it was - long ago. What
you have now are physicians of no value hoping to administer an I. V. to a partially skelitzed corpse while offering
encouragement in firm ringing tones: "Hang in there, kiddo!
You're going to make it 1"
Never having been a small businessman mysel( I don't
-know what kind of problems local officials put upon them, but
I haye heard a couple of former merchants say they had to
relocate to Pomeroy because they felt the local power structure was determined to force them out. This was a number of
years ago, and there's been a changing of the guard since then,
so I don't know how the situation now stands.
But those who believe that a wholesale changing of traffic
patterns would result in a bonanza of business have got to be
. Dumbos going out the gate. Another sugl;lestion: The
Crossroads gang might consider moving to the p1geon roost in
the town's mid section; during the next· big flood, they can
shoo a bird out the window to see if it can find rest for the sole
of its foot.

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Thursday, November to,

they can - for a net deticit
increa&gt;e of $35 billion.
But then. what is the
Democratic alternative" Well,
there isn't one. Clearly,
Democrats wou ld eliminate
MortQn
tax breaks for rich people, but
Kohdracke · they ha ve proposed no
- - - - · c:vunter-budget in either the
Senate or the House
And. judging by the amendsilent conspiracy to foist ments they've proposed,
mountains of debt onto thei r Democrats would increase·
children and grandchildren. . spending by at least as much
In the Senate, despite suc- as they could possibly raise ·
cessful · efforts by moderate taxes.
Republicans to temper cuts in
There is no official estimate
Medicaid and other social pro- of their plans, but Sen. Jim
grams, only two Democrats DeMint (R-S.C.) has a"emvoted for. a budget reconcilia- bled a list of Senate
tion bill tlmt cut spending by Democratic
amendments
535 billion over the next fi ye totaling 5460.7 hillion over
years.
five years.
'
In the House, it appears. not
In the House, conservatives
a single Democmt will sup- from the Republican Study
port a budget bill. scheduled Committee have forced party ·
to come to the tloor this week, leaders and committee chairthat calls for $35 billion to $54 men into a game of fiscal
billion in cuts, depending on macho, each going beyond tl1e
intra-GOP-negotiations.
House's original buuget reso!'n the Senate. Minority lution to lind additional cuts
Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) totaling nearly $54 billion.
denounced the budget as "an
Moderates and Democrat's
immoral document" that complain, correctly, that some
would "make the deficit of the cuts - especially in
worse."
Medicaid, food stamps and
''While the majority has welfare reform aid to the
divided .its budget in a way states - di sproportionately
that obscures its ovemll effect, hit the poor, while pr&lt;iJX!
nobody should be fooled," he GOP tax cuts disp
·
said. "Viewed as a whole, a!ely favor the ri ch.
budget reconciliation would
Republicans h e declined
increa'e the deficit by more ro rev isit the por -laden tr.msthan $30 billion. And after port at ion bi lV r repeal tax
five vears ... our national debt . breaks r prolit-rich oil and
wouid exceed $!!trillion."
gas
1panies as a way of
Reid is right so far: After r cing- the deficit. The
they've cut spending by $35
ouse bill makes modest cuts
billion, Republicans plan
in farm subsidies, but the
cutting taxes by $70 bill'
Senate voted down an amend-

ment to limit individual subsidies to $250,000.
Republican modemtes in
the House seem unable to
congeal around a specific list
of changes as a final budget
bill gets assembled by the
Rules Committee.
·
Some environmentalists are
concentrating 0 n the removal
of oil drilling in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge.
Other critics want a repeal of
permission to states to charge
premiums and co-pays by
Medicaid beneficiaries.
And others are drawing a
hard line on spending. "Some
people mistake the moderates
as being closet Democrats,"
said Rep. Mark Kirk (nl.),
chainnan of the GOP Tuesday
Group. "But we're not. We're
all Republicans. And most of
us are ·fiscal conservatives
who
favor
entitlement
reform ."
. "One of the stories here," ·
Kirk told me, "is lhat
Democrats, to a man and
woman, are going to vote no,
which means they have no fiscal responsibility whatsoever.
"For them, this is entirely
political. If this bill goes
down, their votes mel!ll that
they want the deficit to be $50
billion higher - half of it borrowed from abroad and more
debt from your children."
So that's the way it is, even
between the moderates and
the Democrats. Sadly, you can
expect a grand fiscal bargain
only in some other lifetime. .
(Monon Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the
newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

THAT ONE'S IN
.SUPFORT OF FINDING

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries ·

It's clear that no one truly wants to reduce dificits
If Washington, D.C., politi cians were serious about fiscal
discipline, especially to prepare for the baby-boom retirement crisis, they'd mise taxes
and cut spending. But they
aren't serious.
As the debate on budget
reconciliation right now
shows. Republican&gt; are trying
.to cut spending some and cut'
taxes .more, Democmts want
to raise taxes some and spend
a lot more. And the twain shall
never meet.
Last month.
at the
Democratic
Leadership
Council, Maya MacGuinea~ .
who heads the bipanisan
Committee for a Responsible
Federal Budget, proposed a
"grJnd bargain" between the
parties. Democrats would
agree to cut entitlement programs, and Republicans
would raise taxes.
Her reasoning was thi s:
Federal tax revenue s as a
share of the gross domestic
product are 17.5 percent,
which is close to hi storical
lows. Outlays now account for
20 percent, but as the babyboom generation retires. they
will rise to at. least 25 percent
and perhaps 30 percent.
"I think there is something
just as inappropriate as cutting
taxes without' cutting spending," she said. That is
"promising much bigger government in the future that
somebody else will fiiure out
how to pay for. "
•·
Last week, RepubliCans and
Democrats in Congr~s made
it clear that on tiscal jiJiicy, as
on so much else, the)!. are not
in a grand-bargaining mood.
But actually, they are .in a

2005

Republicans out in field while Democrats neutral

Karolyn Boring

COLUMBUS
Republican volunteers spent
the last couple of weeks helping opponents of four ballot
issues get them defeated, giving them experience and
keeping them in touch with
slate party officials who will
need their services next year
in the statewide elections,
GOP figures said Wednesday.
"It was good practice, wasn' t it"" said state party
spokesman John McClelland
after the four issues went
down to crushing defeat.
While the Republican volunteers were calling supporters and doing other get-outthe-vote chores, Democrats
stayed neutral at the request of
the issue's backers, a group
known as Reform .Ohio Now,
said Ohio Democratic Party
spokesman Brian Rothenberg.
MIDDLEPORT -Melvin E. "Tootles" Durst, 75, The group presented the packMiddleport, passed away on Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005, at age as bipartisan.
Overbrook Center in [vliddleport.
He was born on Feb. 23, 1930, in Middleport, son of the late
Harry and Carmin Davis Durst. He was an Army veteran of
the Korea Conflict and a member of the Mason, ·W.Va. VFW.
He was formerly employed as a construction worker.
Bv CARRIE
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by 12 brothSPENCER GHOSE
.ers and sisters.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
He is survived by a brother, Jan Durst, Middleport; daughters,
Debbie Bias and Grace Connelly, both of Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
COLUMBUS -The attorseveral grandchildren and several great ~randchildren and sevney
who won the landmark
eral nieces and nephews. He is also survived by a special niece
1973
Roe v. Wade decision
and her husband: Robi'n and Tom Dorst, Pomeroy. .
that
established . abortion
Military graveside ·services will be conducted at II a.m. on
Saturday, Nov. 12, 2005, at Riverview Cemetery, by Feeney- rights she's leaning against
Supreme Court nominee
Bennett Post # 128, American Legion of Middlepon.
Samuel
Alita, but still trying
Arrangements were handled by Fisher Funeral Home,
to
study
all his writings and
Middleport Chapel.
, On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- opinions before taking a formal position .
homes .com.
"At this point, I will
assume I will eventually
come out against him," Sarah
Weddington said .Wednesday
after a speech at Ohio State
University on women in leadership. "The question . we
have to ask is, would we want
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Fire Department will to live in an America he
have a chicken barbecue Saturday at the firehouse. Serving would envision?"
will begin at II a.m.
Ali to
voted
for
a
Pennsylvania decision that
would have required a married woman to consult with
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Basket games and chili din- her husband before seeking
ner will be served at 6 p.m. Saturday at the Point Pleasant an abortion - a ruling that
Justice Sandra Day
Middle School gym. Doors will open at 4:30- p.m. The event retiring
O'Connor
voted with the
is sponsored by the Mason County Travel Wrestling.
majority to strike down.

Melvin Durst

Chicken barbecue set

Woodmen dinner planned

Today is Thursday, Nov. ·10, the 314th day of 2005. There
are 51 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: ·
On Nov. 10, 1775, the U.S. Marines were organized under
authority of the Continental Congress.
On this date:
In 1871, journalist-explorer Henry M. Stanley found missing Scottish missionary David Livingstone in central Africa.
In 1919, the American Legion held its first national convention, in Minneapolis.
Thought for Today: "The mind,will ever be unstable that has
only prejudices to rest on, and the current will run with
destructive fury when there are no barriers to break its force. "
- ·Mary Wollstonecraft, English author ( 1759-1797).

POMEROY - The Modern Woodmen of America Camp
6335 will . have a dinner from 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
Wildhorse Cafe, West Main Street, Pomeroy. The camp wll
pay $4 toward the cost of each person's meal. A drawing will
. be held for a family door prize. Members and guests welcome.

Letters to the editor are welcome: They should be less than
300 words. All leiters are subject to editing, m,ust be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned let·
ters will be published. · Letters , hould be in good taste,
c•ddressing iuue.1·, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organization~· and individuals will not accepted for publication.

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'

White House schemers too .clever by half
White House conspiracy to that NBC newsman Tim
punish Iraq war cnt1c Russert had told him about
Ambassador Joe Wilson by Valerie .Piame's CIA identity.
revealing his wife's secret But Libby was only half as
identity might look like if clever as he thought. See,
Scooter crune clean.
Fitzgerald didn't need to make
Libby 's own notes show that Russen testify about what a
none other than Vice President · source told him, only what he
Cheney first told him that .told a source. No U.S. court
"Wilson's wife worked at the would shield that from scrutiCentral Intelligence Agency in · ny. A risky gamble, sure. But
the
Counterproliferation remember, these are the same
Division." (Hence secret by geniuses who believed their
delinition, as both men had to own propaganda about a cakeknow.) This happened alter walk into Iraq.
Wilson started talking to
The White House simply
reporters probing pre-war cannot afford to let Libby go
intelligence failures , but on trial. Nor can Bush get
before his July 6, 2003, New away with pardoning him
York Times article accusing before the 2006 congressional
the White House of twisting .elections at the very earliest
intelligence to justify invading So look for Scooter's lawyers
Iraq.
to use every imaginable
Meanwhile, Libby dis- stalling tactic .to postpone his
cussed Plame and her husband . day of reckoning. Or he might
with a half-dozen administra- roll over. Much tougher guys
tion oflicials before allegedly than Scooter have flipped.
leaking her covert identity to
As for Karl Rove, identified
the press. If he goes on trial , as .the so far unindicted
those officials, Cheney includ- "Official A," who also appared, will have to testify under ently leakcil Plame's identity
oath in open court.
· to the media, here's the quesln retrospect, President tion: Did Rove lie when he
.Bush may have given the told President Bush he had
game away at the beginning. nothing to do with it? Or was
''I have no idea whether we'll Bush deceiving the American
find out who the leaker is," he . people when he denied knowtold reporters on October 8, ing the guilty party?
2003. "panially because, in all
.Either way, how come he's
due respect to your profession, still working at the White
you do a very good job of pro- House?
tecting the leakers. 'You tell
(Arkansas
Democratme: How many sources have Gazette columnist Gene Lyons
you had that's leaked informa- is a national magazine award
tion that you've ex posed or · winner wrd co-autlwr of "The
had been exposed? Probably Hunting uf the President" (St.none. '"
Martin~- Press. 2000). You can
Les. than a week later. e-mail Lyons at geneLibby falsely told FBI agents lwms2@sbcglobal.net.)

and Preble (46 percent) had
higher-than-average turnout.
However, Hancock County,
considered among the most
Republican-leaning in Ohio,
reponed just 38 percent.
Rothenberg said local
Democrats· were split on the
statewide issues, which also
would have lowered campaign contribution limits ,
changed how congressional
and legislative district lines
are drawn and removed election oversight from the secretary of state. The split also
suppressed turnout in som_e
counties, but it won't be · a
problem next year, he said.
"Clearly. you had some
local chairmen that opposed
it, so 2006 is totally different.
All of these folks are going to
be focused on the same
t)ling," he said.
The issue's backers also
lacked
something
that
Democrats enjoyed in 2004
- an army of volunteers
from outside groups such as

Local Briefs

TODAY IN HISTORY

.

The result was higher
turnout in most Republicanleaning counties than those
that usually vote Democratic.
None of the four issues
passed in any county, the
closest being Issue 2, which
lost 51 percent-49 percent in
both Athens and Summit
counties. Issue 2 would have
allowed absentee voting by
anyone, without an excuse
needed. The four as a group
lost by an average of 68 percent-32 percent.
Even in counties featuring
big-city mayor's rdces where
all the candidate were
Democrats, turnout was low:
Cuyahoga (Cleveland), 36 percent; Hamilton (Cincinnati),
35 percent; and Montgomery
(Dayton), 36 percent. Only
Lucas County
(Toledo)
exceeded the state average of
40 percent among those counties, with 47 percent.
Republican strongholds,
sue!:) as Crawford (49 percent), Warren (46 percent)

Ame~ica Coming Together.
which specifically work~d to
get Democrat John Kerry
elected over President Bus h. ·
said Ned Wigglesworth of
TheRestofUs .org, a nonprofit
advocacy group that contributed to Reform Ohio Now.
"They didn't leave much of
an infrastructure. A lot of the
people didn 't show up (this
y~ar). The folks who were
really rabid about going
against George Bush last year
weren ' t rabid about this,"
. Wigglesworth said.
Ohio First, the main group
opposing Issues 2-5, built its
own campaign structure and
raised money itself but relied
on the Republicans to help
spread the word as Election
Day approached. said former
President
state · Senate
. Richard Finan, a Republican
fiom Cincinnati.
"There's no question the
Republican Party turned people out," Finan said. "Your
ar~y has-been battle-test~d."

Roe attorney says she's leaning againstAlito confmnation

MIDDLEPORT - . Vegetable soup and hotdogs will be
served from I0 a.m to 2 p.m. Friday at the Hobson Church in
Middleport.
·

Jeff Fields
Syracuse

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

REEDSVILLE- Karolyn J. Thacker Boring of Reedsville
went to be with her Lord at 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 8,
2005, at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg,
W.Va., followmg a long battle with cancer. ·
. She was born Nov. 21 , 1945, in Newark. She was preceded
m death by her fatl)er, William Walker, and her first husband,
Mack Thacker.
·
She is survived by her husband, Paul Boring, whom she
marned on May 17, .1985; her mother, Catherine Walker of
Akron; a daughter, Kimberly Rafferty; two granddaughters,
Kaltlyn and McKenna Rafferty, both of Akron· a son-in-law
Robert "Bubba" Rafferty, Akron; step da~ghters Susa~
Horvatic and Melissa Boring, Akron; aunts, Lib Tyson and
Pos1e; many meces and nephews; along with her church famIly of Reedsv1llc, who w1ll miss her greatly.
Karolyn was a member of Reedsville Church of Christ and
Firestone United Methodist Church in Akron.
S~rvice will be held at I p.m . on Friday, Nov. II, 2005 at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Cbolville with Phil Sturm
officiating. Burial will follow at Reedsv ille Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday.

Soup and sandwiches
to be served

Fortunately, I.
Lewis
"Scooter" Libby has a second
careet to fall back on. He'll
need one. The recently indicted White House aide's first
novel, "The Apprentice," was
Gene
published in 1996. Set in
Lyons
Japan, it came billed as a
creepy political thriller with
exotic .\exual overtones. Some
reviewers found the sex
creepier than the intrigL•e. but (Fitzgerald) said it very clearthat's a matter of taste.
ly. And so I think we ought to
Libby's present dilemma is keep that in mind. This was a
less subjective. It should be cover-up of a non-crime."
obvious to anybody who's
Safire's nobody's fool. He
. seen three episodes of "Law &amp; and others mouthing the same
Order." Basically, Prosecutor line are merely hoping you
Patrick Fitzgerald's got him by are; In reality, the Libbjl indictthe ... well, Scooter's in an ment alleges anyt11lng but a
extremely vulnerable position, technic:al offense. Comparing
and the prosecutor's squeezing himself to a baseball umpire
him. Eithei he rolls over and who'd had sand thrown in his
tells the unvarnished truth eyes, Fitzgerald pointed)y
about the White House refused to rule out an underly·scheme to leak the covert ing crime .
identity of CIA operative
Til be blunt," he said. "If
Valerie Plame, or he's looking you're doing a national securiat serious time in a federal ty investigation, il' you're trypenitentiary.
ing to lind out who comproFitzgerald's running the mi sed the identity of a CIA ·
thing like a classic organized oflicer and ... (il) it is proven
crime investigation. basically that the chief of staff to the
what it is. Republican-oriented vice president went before a
pundits, however, are playing federal grand jury and lied
dumb. On "Meet the Press," under oath repeatedly and 'fab· former New York Times ricated a story about how he
savant William Satire, who learned this information, how
. spent the Clinton years mak- he passed it on, and we prove
ing futile predictions of obstruction of justice, perjury
Whitewater
indictment s, and fitlse statements to the
claimed that Fitzgemld had FBI, that is a very, very serious
matter.,
exoner~ted the White House. ·
"Everybody b walking
He didn't have to add that
around thinking, 'Well, you Libby's clearly lying for a reasee? There was a conspiracy to son. Without saying so, the
undermine or uncover an indictment spells out in far
agent.' Well, there wasn' t," more detail than is really neeSafire said, "And he . essary the outlines of what a

Bv JOHN McCARTHY

Games and dinner planned

A CURE FOR
HEALTH CARE

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

SQU
from

thern
Pag~

A1

district's general fund has
had a negative'balance.
She added that the district is
being squeezed while it is inbetween
. d tax
h .payment
ld besched..
I
pruu es .~n t at 1t wou
dent to borrow money .to
make payroll around the m1ddl~. of De:ember.
. There IS ~ot any doubt th~
d1stnct w1ll need tt,
Burbacher said, citing that
there are three pay penods m
December for the district.
In order to borrow the
money, Burbacher. at~d members of the Conumss1on set a
meetmg date of 10:30 a.m. on
Dec. 7 with Southern's Interim
Treasurer Denme Htll. . After
meeting with Hill the
Commission will approve the
amount of funds needed which
can then be released in the
foim of a loan to the district
As for the1 failure of the
permanent 1 improvement
levy, Grueser saip that in the

long run it does put a financia! squeeze on the district.
The levy was estimated to
generate $100,000 aimually.
With the general fund running a negative balance and
the permanent improvement
levy failing, Grueser said that
the district could be hurting,
particularly on purchasing
future schoo 1 buses.
"When you get so little
from the state to start with.
. the only.other place to get the
money for buses is from the
general fund," Grueser said.
Grueser does not anticipate an increase in funding
from the state for the foresc;eable fuiUre.
Also at the meeting
Southern's five year forecast
was
approved
with
Commission member Paul
Marshall saying it was an
"appropriately conservative
forecast" showing a modest
one to two percent growth in
. both revenues and expenditures.
The next regular meeting
of the Commission will be at
I0:30 a.m. on Jan. II at
Southern High School.

AP Photo

Sarah Weddington speaks at a Women in Leadership Lecture
Series Wednesday ·at Ohio State University in Columbus.
Weddington is a nationally known attorney and spokesperson
on leadership and public issues who argued the winning side of
the Roe v. Wade case before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1973.
0' Connor was the most
important part of the high
court's middle ground,
Weddington said.
"We will really miss her,"
she said, then couldn't resist'
adding: "We honor Rosa

Parks because she refused to
give up her seat for a- white
man. Let's ask Sandra Day
O'Connor to do the same."
The audience of about · 500
roared with ·laughter.
Abortion will be a key

topic at the conservative
judge's confirmation hearing
in January. Alita, 55, recently
told senators in a private
meeting that he had "great
respect" for the precedent set
by Roe v. Wade but didn't
commit to upholding it.
President Bush selected ·
Alito, a judge on the
Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals, after
White House counsel Harriet
Miers withdrew her nomination amid withering criticism
from conservatives. Both
Alito and Weddington have
worked in the White House,
he as counsel to President
Reagan and she as an assi'stant
in charge of women":~ issues
for President Carter.
·
Weddington also
said
Wednesday she wished she
had chosen a different cl_ient as
the lead plaintiff in Roe, a
pseudonym. The woman,
Norma McCorvey, has since
gone public and in 1995
switched to opposing abonion.
This year the Supreme Court
declined to hear her request to
overturn her own case.

Judge orders halt to efforts to uncover coin dealer's finances
"There's no grandstanding
Petro spokeswoman Kim
Norris said Cain's order still here,'' ·he said. "We have put
allows the state to monitor before you multiple affidavits ..
with evidence of fraud by
Noe's assets and spending.
, The decision "does not let defendant Noe."
Noe faces three federal
the Noes off the hook. "
'Norris said. "We will con- charges of using colleagues
tinue to try to lock down and associates to funnel
assets in an effort to get this $45,400 to the 2004 Bushmoney back for the state of Cheney campaign to skirt
federal campaign spending
Ohio ."
In arguments to Cain laws. He is also under crimiWednesday, Noe attorney nal investigation for his hanJudson Scheaf accused Petro dling of the $50 million
of "unabashed political investment for the Bureau of
grandstanding" by pursuing Workers' Compensation.
Auditor
Betty
Noe's assets instead of agreeMontgomery, like Petro a
ing to a delay.
"How much taxpayer Republican running for govmoney does · Mr. Petro want ernor next year, previously
to waste arguing over a used asked Petro to ·delay his
and
said
Jeep'l" Scheaf said, referring investigation
Wednesday
she
agreed
with
to Petro's previous objections
to Noe's sale of a 2004 Jeep Cain's ruling.
Montgomery
"stressed ·
to his sister-in-law.
Becker replied thai the this point in a letter to
state is trying to recover $12 Attorney General Petro
million to $13 million that when she suggested it would
other fmancial matters in vot- Noe's own attorneys have be better for him to help puring the way they did."
said is unaccounted for from sue the .criminal case rather
A 911 committee the com- a $50 million investment by than pursue headlines,". said
missioners appointed pro- the state in surance fund for Montgomery spokeswoman
from PageA1
posed a sales tax for the ser- injured workers.
len Detwiler.
vice, along with a new 911
after expenses were paid, center and emergency trainSheets said.
THE MEIGS HOUSING AUTHORITY
inl;l center. Commissioners
"With problems funding our said that propo sa l was
117 E. MEMORIAL DRIVE
sheriff's department, voters impossible under the counmay have felt that was not a ty's current financial and
POMEORY, OHIO 45769
good way to operate the sys- economic conditions.
.740-992-2733
tem," Sheets said. "People are . "This can't be a dead issue,
paying more . attention to the because Meigs County is one
issues, and may have weighed of only three in the state with·
We will be a~cepting applications for HUD
that issue, the fact that the out a 911 service." Sheets
county's EMS opemtion is now said. "The issue we as comSection 8 Rental Assistance
charging clients in addition to missioners. have to face is
Wednesday, November 16, 2005
collecting levy proceeds, and . how is it going to be_funded."

state could still issue subpoenas .
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
"What part of the stay do
you need clarified?" Cain
COLUMBUS - A judge said. "No, you can't issue
on Wednesday ordered a subpoenas. Nothing's going
halt to Attorney General Jim anywhere, anything you want
Petro's efforts to uncover to get is going to be there ·
the financial dealings of a after this stay is lifted."
Petro sued Noe in May 10
coin dealer at the heart of
Ohio's government scandal, freeze his assets and take
saying the review should control of two collections of
wait until authorities wrap rare coins from the Toledoup ongoing criminal· investi- area coin dealer.
In response, Cain froze all
gations.
.
The decision by Judge personal and business assets
David Cain of Franklin of Noe and his wife,
County Common Pleas Court Bernadette, after Noe sold
was in line with a previous cars, a boat alid other assets.
request from state and feder- Cain has also required
al prosecutors that Petro approval of sales over
delay his civil case against $5,000.
Cain agreed Wednesday to
Noe until criminal proceedlet
Petro and Noe 's attorneys
ings end.
Cain expressed irritation · come up with proposals for
when Petro attorney William how Noe could spend money
Becker asked whether the on living expenses.
BvANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

911 issue

&amp;

., ,

Announcing

.

18th. AnnUfli F$11
Arts'and Oafts Fair

~turctay, N9vember 12, ~005' "
:,
· 9:00am to 4:00pm .
··~ . SpoliSOred by
, Eastem Muslt Boosters

Booths'Still Avdilable .

Held.at Eastern Element~ Scbc&gt;ol

Food, Entertainment, Door Pnzes, Raffles
and Lqts of Crafts
ADMISSIOJ+.$2.00 for Aduhs
·Children fREE Receive • 2Free Door Prize
·Tio;kets,wjth Paid Admissiop.
For lnformaiJOI1
a.t 985-91133

Thursday, November 17~ 2005
Between 9:00AM and 4:00PM
ONLY
The Line Forms In The Front Of The
Building
Please Maintain Your Place In Line As This
Will Determine The Order In Which You
Will Apply
The Doors Will Not Open Until 9:00AM

�COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

Trivia contest winners

Submitted photo

Free clinic to be held
parish nurse, will be discussing
chronic obstruction pulmonary
disease, how it affects the
elderly and how to reduce
chances of getting the disease.
Herbert Carson R.Ph, pharmacist at O'Bieness Hospital
will explain · the common
medications used to treat
chronic obstruction . pulmonary disease.
Those attending are asked

to take a complete list of all
medication they are currently
takin¥, including non-prescription supplements such as
ginkgo biloba or giliseng
and/or over the counter medications or take the medications with them. Participants
will be · able to talk with the
pharmacist one-on-one about ·
the medications they are currently taking.

Seaman promoted
MIDDLEPORT - Navy Training which included
Seaman Dale J. Askey, son of classroom study and practical
Marcia !.,. Kitchen of instruction on naval customs,
Middleport and Robert D. first aid, firefighting , water
Askey of York. S.C., was safety and survival, and shiprecently promoted· to his cur- board and aircraft safety. An
rent rank upon graduation emphasis was also placed on
from recruit training at physical fitness. The capstone
Recruit Training Command. event of boot camp is "Battle ·
Great Lakes, Ill.
Stations." This exercise gives
Askey received the early recruits the skills and confipromotion for outstanding dence they need to succeed in
performance during all phas- · the tleet. "Battle Stations" is
es of the training cycle. designed to galvanize the

basic warrior attributes of
sacrifice, dedication, teamwork and endurance in each
recruit through the ·practical
application of basic Navy
skills and the core values of
Honor,
Courage
and
Commitment. Its distinctly
"Navy" tlavor was designed
to take into account what it
means to be a Sailor.
· Askey is a 2005 graduate
of York Comprehensive High
School of York, S.C.

Stewart to speak at Veterans Dax event
RACINE
with the 3664th out of Point
Representative
Jimmy Pleasant, W.Va.
Stewart (R) will speak at the
There will be ·refreshments
"Honor the Veterans" pro- and songs· by Craig Harrison.
gram tomorrow at 7 p.m. at
The free event is hosted by
the American Legion Hall Racine's Enduring Freedom
Post 602 in Racine.
Support · Group and the
Stewart will be joined ~y . Racine Area (:ommunity .
speaker Charles Wolfe of Organization.
Syracuse, a US National
The Enduring Freedom
Guardsman who returned Support Group is made up of
home from Iraq after serving volunteers who wish to honor

Hartford
food pantry
closed

·and remember the veterans.
The group also sends free
care packages to soldiers who
are in battle zones and serving stateside.
Anyone wishing to find out
more about the veterans program on Friday, Enduring
Freedom or how to add a soldier's name to the free mailing list can call Jan Cardone
at 949-2512.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Freemasons of Ohio have
honored Bob Evans, the
founder of Bob Evans Farms.
with their 2005 Rufus Putnam
Distinguished Service Award,
the highest award of the
Grand Lodge of Free and
Accepted Masons of Ohio.
The award was designed to
honor distinguished citizens
and community service
providers who possess characteristics encouraged among
all members of Freemasonry.
Evans is the 19th recipient
of the awarcl. Earlier recipients include C. William
O'Neill, . William B Saxbe,
John W. Galbreath, John W.
Bricker, Woody Hayes, Neil
A. Armstrong, . Oliver R.
Ocasek, Betty Montgomery
and Nancy P. Hollister.
Born in 1918, Bob Evans
began making sa11sage in
1948 on his southeatern Ohio
farm lo serve at a small diner
he owned.
"We served a lot of breakfasts, but we couldn't gel any·
dece.nt sausage," Evans
recalls. "So l decided to start
making my own from hogs
raised right on our farm, using
all the best part of the hog, ·
including the hams and tenderloins." By 1953, along
with a few friends, he established the company that is
now Bob Evans Farms.
As the reputation of Bob
Evans Sausage grew, Bob
Submitted plloto
Evans invited people to his Bob Evans, left, receives the 2005 Rufus Putnam
farm in Rio ' Grande. The Distinguished Service Award from Grand Master Jim S. Deyo.
number, of visitiors grew so This is the highest award of the Grand Lodge of Free and
much that in 1962, the com- Accepted Masons in Ohio.
pany opened the original Bob
Evans Restaurant, which was state's public higher educa- Mason,' ' said Evans. "You
called the Sausage Shop, in tion governing board.
will never fi1id a Mason you
Rio . Grande. Although it
He also works with college can't trust."
started with just 12 stools, students at Ohio State
The Rufus Putnam Award is
today the restaurant seats 134. University's. College of Food, named 'after the first Grand
The company has grown from Agriwltural
and Master of Masons in Ohio,
a "down on the farm" restau- Environmental Sciences.
who served in 1808. His pubrant to a chain of more than
Bob Evans is a Master lie service from 178R to 1824
580 restaurants across 20 Mason himself. He became a earned him the title, "Father
states. Company sales top the member of Morning Dawn of the Northwest Territory."
$1 billi!ln mark.
Lodge 7 in Gallipolis in 1940. Putnam helped establish
Bob Evans retired from The values and lessons he Marietta. Ohio's first permaBob Evans ·Farms in 1986. learned as a Mason had a nent settlement. and he served
He and his wife, Jewell, con- huge influence on his dealing as a territorial
judge,
brigadier general, trustee of
tinue to )ive in southeastern . in business.
Ohio where they raised their
''I pighly recommend a Ohio University, and the first
six chldren. Since 1986, he ~ person become a U.S. surveyor general.
has seltlessly worked with
cattle farmers all across the
nation on easing their load
with innovative farming
techniques, and how t.o
increase profits without
increasing costs.
He also works with 4-H as
the only lifetime member in
C o l d PoP
Ohio. Evans is a big support'12o.z.
er of year-round grazing as a
way to help maintain the traCan
ditional family farms in
America, );Vhereby farniers
can eliminate two of their
biggest expenses-their balers
and stored feed.
The only person in Ohio to
be honored three times by the
National Wildlife Federation,
Evans has spent more than 40
0
years preserving wildlife. He
is a former member of the
Ohio Board of Regents, the

_._ER

SAVINGS

29¢ +Tax

Womens Colosnes
.&amp;: Gift Sets
20' /o ·Off
Times
wa,t ches
30°/o Off

!.

HARTFORD. W.Va. The Bend Food Pantry at the
United Methodist Church in
Hartford will be closed
Monday for the families of
the Point Pleasant area ·
(lower end of Mason i
County) due to the fact that
no government commodities
were received for -the month
of November.
The Upper Parish will be
providing Parish food for the
families of the Bend Area
(upper . end of Mason
County) on Tuesday from 9
a.m .-noon . Families are
asked to bring their own
boxes for food .
·
- In accordan ce with federal law and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture
policy, the rules for acceptance and participation in
the program are the same
for everyone without regard
to race, color, national origin , gender, religion , disability. politi cal beliefs,
sexual orientation and mari- '
tal or family statu s.
For more information,
call 773 -5476, H8 2- J 175 or
S82 -3437 .

Thursday, November 10, 2005

BOB EVANS WINS MAsONS'
DISTINGIDSHED SERVICE AWARD

Michelle Scarbrough of Harrisonville, right, won an iPod and Jessica P, Smith of Middleport a
Hocking College t-shirt in a trivia contest at the recent Paul Bunyan Show at Hocking Col lege ..
Looking on are teachers Ron Vlasik. lett, and Tim Simpson.
·

POJ\,!EROY - The Area 8
Agency on Aging will host a
health promotion with disease
prevention and medication
management clinic on chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease . at
the Mu!berry
Community · Center
il)
Pomeroy, I to 3 p.m. Nov. 21 .
The clinic is free and open to
all Meigs County senior citizens. Lenora Leifheit R. N.,

PageA6
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The Daily Sentinel

Suicide anackers
BY JAMAL HALABY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AMMAN, Jordan
Suicide bombers carried out
nearly simultaneous attacks
on three U.S.-based hotel s in
the
Jordanian
capital
Wednesday night, killing at
least 57 people and wounding
115 in what appeared to be an
al-Qaida assault on an Arab
kingdom with close ties to
ihe United States.
· The explosions · hit the
Grand Hyatt, Radisson SAS
and Days Inn hotels just
before 9 p.m. One of the
blasts took place inside a
wedding hall where 300
guests were celehraling - ·
joined by a man strapped
with explo.sives who had
infiltrated the crowd. Black
smoke rose into the night.
and wounded victims stumbled from the hotels.
"We thought it was fireworks for the wedding but I
saw people falling l(l the·
ground," said Ahmed, a wedding guest at the five-star
Radisson who did not give
his surname. "I saw blood.
There were people killed. It
was ugly."
·
'.: Jordan's deputy prime minister, Mnrwan Muasher, said
there was no claim of respon~ibility but that Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, the Jordanianborn leader of al-Qaida in
Ifaq, was a "prime suspect."
, A U.S. counterterrorism
\ifficial. who spoke on condition oflmonymity because the
investigation is ongoing, said
the strong suspicion is that aiZarqawi was involved because
of his known animosity for
Jordanian monarchy and the
fact that it was a suicide attack,
one of his hallmarks.
In February, U.S .. intelli:
gence indicated that Osama
bin Laden was in contact
with ai-Zarqawi, enlisting
him to conduct attacks outside of lrnq. Jordan has
arrested scores of Islamic
militants for plotting to carry
· out attacks and has also sentenced many militant s to
death in absentia, including
. al-Zarqawi.
·
·
. Its capital has become a
base for Westerners who tly
in and out of neighboring

WORLD
capital,

BY ED JOHNSON
LONDON - In a political
blow to Prime Minister Tony
Blair, British lawmakers on
Wednesday rejected tough
anti-terrorism legislation that
would have allowed suspects
to be detained for 90 days
without charge.
The House of Commons
vote was the first major
defeat of Blair's premiership
and raises serious questions
about his grip on power. Blair
had staked his authority on
the measure and dogged! y
refused to compromise.
Lawmakers, including 49
members of Blair's Labour
Parry, opted instead .for · a
maximum detention period
for terror suspects of 28 days
without charge.
Michael Howard , leader
of
the
opposition
Conservative Party, · said

Thursday, November to,

nu51and

A-LIST

his Labour government commanded an unassailable lead
in the Commons and easily
swatted aside opposition to
its legislation.
But Blair's popularity has
slumped in the wake of the
djvis1ve Iraq war, and his
party was punished in
national elections earlier
this year. Labour's huge
161-seat advantage in the
Commons shrunk to just 66,
making the government vulnerable.
In the immediate aftermath
of the J u Iy attacks on
London's transit system,
terrorism. "
"The country will think Blair had considerable crossthat Parliament has behaved party support for new antiin a deeply irresponsible way · terror legislation.
He drafted the Terrorism
today," he added.
Lawmakers voted 322 to Bill. which aims to tackle
291 against 90-day deten- Mu slim extremism by outtions and bucked the 28-day lawing training in terrorist
c ~mps as well encourag_ing
period by 323-290 votes.
The result is a humilialing acts of violence and glonlyblow to Blair. For eight years. ing terrorism.

Blair's
authority
had
"diminished almost io vanishing point" and said he
should consider resigning.
"This vote shows he is no
' longer able to carry his own
party with him. He must now
consider his position," said
Howard.
But Blair was defiant. He
ruled out resignation and
insisted lawmakers had been
wrong to put the civil liber- ·
ties of a small number of terrorists ahead of the "fundamental civil liberty of this
country to protection from

PleasantValley Hospital offers alithotripsy
option for patients suHering from kidney stones.
Lithotripsy uses the technique of
focused shock waves to fragment astone.

•

•

---

2005

There were no visible signs
of cracks in the structure of
the stone buildings that were
attacked and no traces of
burned vehicles. But there
was shattered glass and some
burned furniture in two of the
targeted hotels. mainly in the
wedding banquet hall at the
Radi sson SAS. where parts
of the false ceiling collapstd.
SAS is a partner of Radisson
in Europe.
In addition to housing
Westerners, Amman's hotels
abo have become a gathering
spot for aflluent Iraqis who
have fled their country's violence. Their presence - and
money - has caused an economic boom , with highpriced prostitution also
pulling in an appearance.
The Grand Hyall has 316
~ucsl rooms as well as 50 luxury residential apartments in
the adjoining Hyatt Tower.·
The hotel , with a beige-andcream facade and a shiny gold
revolving door. is located in
the heart of Amman's business and diplomatic district
on Hussein Bin Ali Street.
The Radisson has 260
.gue st rooms. Its main.
AP Photo • entrance is covered by a
Pplice guard the entrance of a shattered front·to the Hyatt hotel in Amman, Jordan, approximately one hour after a bomb explod- white _POrtico with seveml
ed in the mair lobby. Suicide bombers carried out nearly simultaneous attacks on three U.S.-based hotels in the Jordanian cap- dozen mternallonal flags hnital Wednesday night, killing at least 57 people and wounding 115 in what appeared to be an ai-Qaida assault on an Arab king- 1ng the top.
dam with close ties to the Untied States.
·
. The three hotels have secunty guards h1red from a pnA few minutes after that
"Thi s is a terrible, terrible vate Jordanian firm stationed
Iraq for work. Amman's main Grand Hyatt. The explosion
attack
and
a
short
distance
The explosion took in the reception areas. Each
situation.
luxury hotels downtown are took place in the lobby and
away, police reported the place during a local of I he holels has one or two
often full of American and shattered its stone entrance.
British officials and contracSteve Oldermun, a busi- explosion atthe wedding cel- Jordanian wedding and pol ice cars guarding the
lors enjoying . the relative nessman from England, was ebration, which took place in caused a lot of damage. building&gt; around the clock.
quiet of the city.
attending a business dinner at a special reception hall on the Broken chairs, shattered
Kin~ Abdullah II cut short
thrown
tables.''
Omar
glass,
"Obviously this is some- the Grand Hyatt, where an grou11d floor of the Radisson.
his ~ official
visit
to
thing Jordan is Qot used to," information technology con- At least five people were said. "Everything is still in a Kazakhstan and was returngreat fuss."
Muasher told CNN. "We have terence took place earlier in killed· and 20 wounded.
ing home.
The third explosion, at the
The Radisson is popular
been lucky so far in avoiding the day.
"The hand of justice will
those incidents." He said
"Suddenly, we heard an with American and Israeli Day s Inn. happened after a get to the criminals who tarmost of the casualties explosion and· the whole tourists and was a target of car packed with explosives geted innocent secure civilthe
hotel , ians with their cowardly
appeared to be Jordanians and hotel filled with smoke, and several foiled al-Qaida plots, approached
that authorities had sealed the suddenly we found ourselves including a conspiracy to Muasher said. He said the car acts," he said in a statement.
outside the hotel," said a star- attack U.S. and Israeli tourists could not cross a protective
The White House said the
country's land borders.
A State Department ofllcial tied-looking Olderman. who during the kingdom's millen- barrier so it detonated out- United States was prepared to
said there was no information was on the ground tloor at the nium celebrations. There were side. As a resull. the casual -· offer help in the investigation.
no reports of Israeli casualties. 1ies at the Days Inn were not
In a statement, Secretary of
on any American casualties. time of the attack.
Amin Omar, a concierge at so extensive as at the Olher State Condoleezza Rice said
A Jordanian securitv official. · "We saw bodies lying as we
''su.ch wanton acts of murder
speaking on condition of were cnming out" of the hotel , the Radisson , said Jordanian · hotels , he said.
Muashcr reported 57 killed against . innocent people vioanonymity bec·ause he was said Olderman. who had been security forces later took over
not authorized to address the staying at the Radisson. "It the hotel and that all foreign and II 5 woun&lt;;led in the three late every faith and creed."
1nedia. said the dead included was pretty horrific. We were and local guests have been bombing s, with the M&lt;orst She pledged to Jordan that
at least three Asians, possibly sitting beside a huge plate accounted for and returned to damage was at the Radisson the U.S . .would "stand togethglass window and it just their rooms. He had no details because the suicide bomber er. unwavering. to defeat the
Chinese.
.
The first blast was reported at exploded beside us. ... We on how many casualties were got inside the wedding •party evil that threatens our people
and way of life."
of Jordanians.
sustained in the blast.
about 8:50 p.m. at the Jive-star were lucky to get out alive."

After refusing to compromise, Blair loses
crucial parliamentary vote on anti-terror bill
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageA7

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive • Point Pleasant, WV • 304-() 75-434()

�'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

WEDNESDAY'S SCORES
No local games scheduled

Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, November 10,2005

Thursday, November to, 2005

UNIQUE 'LUMA' PROGRAM TONIGHT AT URG
RIO GRANDE - A great
evening of unique entertainment awaits all who attend the
presentation . by "Lu ma"
tonight . at 8 in the Fine and
Performing Arts Center at the
University of Rio Grande.
This will be the second in
·the Valley Artist 2005-06
series of programs.
"Luma" provides a brand
new interpretation of light,
magic, juggling and music.
Combimng the latest lighti!lg
technologies and colorful creations of famous kite designer
and performer Marc Ricketts,
a one-of-a-kind . theatrical
experience has been produced
by the founder of "Luma,"
Marlin, who has been developing this breathiaking performance over the past I0 years.
The show .has been referred
to as a "three ring circus of
light," using highly expressive ways of dancing in the
dark, withspectacular choreography and music, combin-·
ing natural and artificial light.
·The dancers perform with a
variety of objects, reflecting
multi-colors and changing
lights, while they juggle
hoops and other objects and
perform on trapeze. ·
All subscribers to the
Valley Artist Series have their
tickets. In addition, tickets for
the public will be available at
· the door this evening for $20
per person.
As
VAS
President Gary Stewart points
out, "To spend this evening
enjoying 'Luma' will be a performance, enjoyed by all ages
and something to remember."

COLLELh BASKETBAI.I. I BEVO FRANCIS CLASSIC

•

Redwomen
ready for
home opener

to Stuart's

Luma

actors. The writers this year
will be two professionals
from New York, Richard
Culliton and Lynda Myles,
and Dr. Joanne Ford, a faculty
member in the Rio Grande
English department .
After the one-acts are written in 24 hours, the directors
and actors will have just 24
hours to rehearse the acts,
memorize the parts, put
together all of the technical
parts of the play and get the
production ready for an audience. The audience.will be on
hand on Saturday to see the
performances that have been
created in just 48 hours.
·:It's a challenge,:' Cobb
said.
The actors audition and are
cast for the plays before the
48-hour period begins, but
they don' t know what they are
auditioning for exactly.
"We know who the actors
are ahead of time. We just
don't know which plays they
are going to be in, and no one
knows who will work with
whom," Cobb said.
Cobb and Rio Grande student Matt Abbott will serve as
.oirec'tors for the one-act plays,

and Rio Grande student
Brandon Holley will serve as
the technical director.
"We take his opinion almo~t
as an assistant director," Cobb
added.
The 2004 "Frenzy" performance was a success, and it
was an exhilarating experience for everyone involved.
"We had a great time,"
Cobb said. "Of course, we
were exhausted."
The people involved with
the play do not sleep during
the 24-hour period, but they
are so excited about the whole
process that last year they had
trouble sleeping after the
show ended.
"The show turned out really
well last year," Cobb said.
After the ·one-act plays are
finished, the Rio Grande
improv comedy group "The
Dead Possum Society" will
perform and entertain the
audience even more.
The comedy group performs
sketches that are ·made up on
the spot and are very funny.
The audience is involved in
the show, which features the
cast members playi ng funny
games. trying to solve

comedic mysteries and doing
other activities .to create a very
entertaining show. The comedy is similar to the improv
comedy television · program,
"Whose Line Is It Anyway?"
The Dead Possum ·Society
is made up entirely of · Rio
Grande students, and performs at events around campus. The group is also open to
performing at events in the '
community.
.
·Just as the students in the
comedy group have to think
quickly . and put their fears
behind them in order to create
a good show, everyone
involved in "Frenzy" has to
work quickly and push themselves in order to pull together the plays so quickly.
"'Frenzy' had always been
about being challenged and
being brave," Cobb said.
If the students are given a
tremendous amount of freedom with only a few,parameters in creating the plays, they
will become even more creative," Cobb said.
"It's meant to really ignite
the creative spirit," Cobb said·.
"With a limited amount of
time, it takes away people's

fears. They don 't have time to
question themselves."
.
No one knows yet what thts
year's "Frenzy" performances
will be about but Cobb said
that the plays' may have adult
themes and she does not recommend the shows for chi!dren. Last year, one play was a
comedy about a relationship,
one was a suspense story, and
one was on a serious topic but
had comic overtones.
"You never know what
you're going to get," Cobb
said. "It's a theater grab bag."
She does know, though, that
last year's audience enjoyed
the show and the students
learned a lot by . being in it.
She invites the community to
attend Saturday's · performance in the Berry Fine and
Performing Arts Center on the
Rio Grande campus, and
enjoy this year's performance
of "Frenzy."
For more information on
"Frenzy" or on the theater
department, call Cobb at 2457119 or (800) 282-7201. For
additional information on
upcoming events at Rio
Grande,
log
onto
www. rio. edu.

Fall Pops Concert slated for Friday
PARKERSBURG - The
River Cities Symphony
Orchestra's Fall Pops Concert
scheduled for Sunday, Nov.
13 at 3 p.m. has been rescheduled to Friday, Nov. II at 8
p.m. at the B.lenrierhassett
School.
Mac Lichterman, RCSO
president, states "We apologize for any inconvenience
this change creates for our
patrons, said RCSO President
Mac Lichterman. "However,

•

lS COllllng

Rio theater goes into 'Frenzy'
· RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
is presenting a u.nique theater
experience on Saturday, Nov.
12. On that day, the theater
department . will present
"Frenzy," a• presentation that
is written, rehearsed and produced in just 48 hours.
The show will begin at 8
p.m. in th~ Berry Fine and
Performing Arts Center on the
Rio Grande campqs, and is
free to Rio Grande students
and just $1 for other audience
members.
"Basic·ally, it was something that we started last
year," said J.J. Cobb, a Rio
Grande faculty member who
teaches in the theater program. "The concept is that it's
a 48-hour theater festival."
Three different writers will
be writing 10-minute or 15mi'nute one-acts for "Frenzy,"
and they will have just 24
hours to put together their stories.
Each writer will be given
short physical descriptions of
the actors they will have for
their one-acts, and they will
write the plays to fit with the

BeauSoleil

the change is due to circumstances beyond our control."
The program will feature
many
family
favorites,
including selections from
Mendelssohn's
"A
Midsummer Night's Dream."
The Schrader Youth Ballet
will join the orchestra in a
performance of Prokoifev·s
"Peter and the Wolf' and
soloist Chris Dearth will perform
Albrechtsberger 's
Trombone Concerto. The con-

cert will be conducted by
Music
Director
Robert
Turizziani.
Chris Deanh was born and
raised in Parkersburg. In addition to being the Instructor of
Trombone at West Virginia
Wesleyan College, Dearth is
principal trombonist with the
West Virginia Symphony and a
member of the Trombonanza
Trombone Quartet.
He has also performed with
the Phoenix Symphony,

Indianapolis
Symphony,
Philharmonic,
Evansville
Owensboro Symphony and
Huntington Symphony.
Tickets are $15 f(lr adults
and $8 for students from KCollege and may be purchased
at Peoples News, 0' Briens
Photo and Sound in Marietta,
online at www.rcso.us or at
the door one hour before performance.
For special accommodations, please telephone (304)

NELSONVILLE - The
annual fall fund -raising concert featuring Grammy
award-winning BeauSoleil
wilt be performing at the hi s-·
toric Stuart's Opera House in
Nelsonville at 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 12.
Stuart's Opera House, a
non-profit performing arts
organization and the comerstone of the Nelsonville
Historic Arts District, is celebrating its I 26th anniversary
with an evening of gourmet
food and the Internationally ·
acclaimed
music
of
BeauSoleil.
Stuart's Opera House's fall
fund-raiser is quickly becoming a favorite l!imual event. A
gounpet dinner will be
catered and served by
Rhapsody Restaurant at 6 ·
p.m. for a limited number of
ticket buyers. Dinner will be
served in two locations, the
Rhapsody Restaurant and
Starbrick Clay Gallery. After
dinner, a cash bar will be
available as visitors browse a
unique art-related, fund-raising silent auction.
Since forming in 1975,
Grammy winners BeauSoleil
have claimed their undisputed role as the most esteemed
Cajun group in music.
BeauSoleil with Michael
Doucet take the rich Cajun
traditions of Louisiana and
artfully blend elements of
zydeco, New Orleans jazz,
Tex-Mex, country, hlues and
more into ·a satisfying' musi·
.ca 1 rec1pe.
From the Grand Ole Opry
to Newport Folk, from concert hall to dance floor. the
music of BeauSoleil has captivated audiences the world
over.
Show ti.ckets only are $25
and dinner, drinks and show
tickets are $75. All proceeds
go to support Stuart's Opera
House. For more · information, call (740) 753-1924 or .
on the web at www.stuarrsoperahouse.org.

Court Grill
to host
•

mUSIC
POMEROY - The Court
Street Grill will have entertainers both Thursday and
Friday.
Tonight's performers will
be David Childers and the
Modern Don Juans, the
Wail in' Elroys', and Terry
Clarke; while Friday night's
program will feature King's
X, Mardo, and Blitzkrieg. ·
There is no charge for the
Thursday show, which begins
at 8 p.m. Tickets are on sale
now at the grill for King X
which is out supporting its
new CD "Orge Tunes."

485-7068 and, when possible,
please call in advance as soon
as possible.
· This concert is funded in-part
by Artsbridge, the West Vrrginia
Commissiol) for the Arts/West
To check 0111 the p~rformers
Virginia Division of Culture
and History, and the National go to www.davidchilders.com
www.kingsxonline.com and
Endowment for the Arts.
For additional information,
ca/1(304) 375-1812, or email:
injo@rcso.us or visit the website at www.rcso.us

http://www.mardomusic.com.
For more details on this
week's perfomiances, go to
http://www.courtsrreetgrill.co
m.·

Co.me On Over To BOB'S ...
1/4 Mile North
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone !3041 773-5323
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
446-1711

HOLIDAY.
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday: Novemper 19th

0

Galli polis Location

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALI..IPOLIS - A schedule ol upcoming college
and high school varsity spolilng evems Involving
teams !rom Ga lli&amp;, Meigs and Mason counties.

BY MARK WtWAMS

Friday'• gamu
College Soccer
TBA at Rio Grande, 11 a.m.
College Basketball
Point Park at Rio Grande, 8 p.m.
Women's College Batketball
Saint Vine; nt at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Sgturday's gamaa
College Basketball

point Park at Rio Grande Tournament
Woman's College Batketball
Seton Hill at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.
Fddft Noytmbtr 1R

Women's College Basketball
Rio Grande vs. William Woods (al
Georgetown Classic), 6 p.m

INSIDE

,

. Brad Shorman/OVP File

Rio Grande's Danny Frank dribbles at the top of the key as an Ohio State-Newark player defends during the season-opening victory for the Redmen. Rio Grande hosts the Bevo Francis 'Ciassic this weekend.
.

Redmen set for tough weekend
BY MARK WtWAMS
"SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
will celebrate the legendary Bevo Francis led
hoops teams of the early
1950's this weekend.
As a part of the weekend
tile current crop of
Redmen hoopsters will be
challenged by a high-scoring Point Park team on
Friday evening and a
in
perennial
power
Pikeville College on
Saturday in the annual
Bevo Francis Classic.
Rio Grande (1-0) will
get back to action after a
I0-day break by the time
of tip-off on Friday at 8
p.m . at the Newt Oliver
Arena. The
Redmen
defeated Ohio StateNewark, 85-55, November

• Rio hosts AMC/Region
IX soccer tournament.
See Page B2.
• NFLnews.
See Page 83
• WVU defeats Cincinnati.
See Page B4

Five officially
sign on dotted
line for Buckeyes
BY RUSTY MtLLER
ASSOC IATED PRESS

COLUMBUS
Ohio
State coach Thad Matta
expressed
relief
on
Wednesday that he had gotten letters of intent from 7foot center Greg Oden and
one of the best recruiting
classes in the nation and in
school history.
"Any time you have
national letters of intent come
in, you're always nervous
that the fax machine may be
broken or anything along
those lines," Matta said.
"This signing today is unique ·
.because I think we've got
every position filled. There
irren 't many times in college
basketball you have that
opportunity."
The centerpiece of the fiveman 2006-07 recruiting class
Is Oden, who averaged 20
points and 9.6 rebounds a
game last year as a junior at
Indianapolis Lawrence North
High School. Oden was considered· a shoo-in to jump to
Please see Buckeyes, B4

CONfACfS
Phone - t-740·446·2342 &amp;lCt. 33
Fax- 1·740·446·3008
E-mail- sports@mydailysenlinel .com
S~ottt . S.Illlf
Brad Sherm•n, Sports Editor

(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
bsherman C mydai lytribu ne.com
Bryan Wellers, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342 1 ext 23
bwalters C mydailytrlbune.com ,

Larry Crum, Sporta WrHer
(304) 675·1333. ext. 19
lcrum@mydailyregister.com

Redmen ·

Friday
vs. Point Park, 8 p.m.
Saturday
vs. Pike~ille , 8 p.m.

Redwomen

Friday
vs. St. Vincent, 6 p,m.
Saturday
vs. Seton Hill, 6 p.m.
I in the season opener.
Senior forward Reggie
Williamson was one of
three Redmen to score 15
points in the game.
Williamson also pulled
down nine rebounds.
Junior Jeromy Dishman

scored 15 off the bench · American last season.
and· freshman guard Brett
Point Park is scheduled
Beucler scored 15 in his to play Shawnee State on
first college game.
Thursday evening in
Sophomore point guard Portsmouth.
The Redmen will host
.Travis Keefer had a solid
opening outing as well Pikeville College (0-2) on
. with eight points and nine Saturday evening at 8 p.m.
· The Bears have gotten out
assists.
Point Park (2-1) has of the gate slowly this seascored over 90 points in- son. losing to Vorhees (83each of its three games. 64) and Florida Memorial
The Pioneers lost their (75-70).
opener to Siena Heights,
Pikeville has a tremen104-98 and bounced back dous amount of size.
with wins over Toronto, Massive Napoleon Roberts
92-80 and Penn State- (6-9, 240) is averaging
Beaver, 109-54.
16.5 points and I 0.5
PPU is led by a pair of rebounds through the first
returning juniors in Gavin two ouiings. Marcus Jones
Prosser
and
Denny (13.5 ppg.) and Chns
DiPasquale as well as Carroll (8.0 ppg.) also projunior transfer Ryne vide scoring punch for the
Liggins. Prosser is a scorer Bears.
and DiPasquale is a
Admission to the games
perimeter shooting threat. is free as Foodland is the
Liggins was a JUCO All- sponsor for the weekend.

t04
NewBevo
book to hit
stores soon
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

RIO GRANDE- Kyle
Keiderling, author of a
new book about legendary
college basketball star
Bevo Francis, will be in
Rio Grande this weekend
in conjunction with the
Bev&lt;J·Francis Classic .
Keiderling will speak at
a luncheon Saturday on
the campus of the
University of Rio Grande.
His book "Shooting Star:
The Bevo Francis Story"
is being officially released
and should be in stores

RIO GRANDE - As a part of the
very busy ·sevo Francis weekend at
the University· of Rio Grande this
weekend, the University of Rio
Grande women ·s basketball will
have its home opener on Friday
evening at 6 p.m. versus Saint
Vincent.
Rio Grande (1-0)
began the season
' with an 82-74 win
last Saturday on the
road at Carlow.
.Sophomore guard
Bntney
Walker
began her season in
big fashion, pouring in 25 points in
the
triumph.
. Kandel
Freshman Candice
.-------, Crews ·chipped in
12 points, off the
bench, in her first
collegiate
game
and fellow freshman
Sarah
Drabinski added
eight points and I0
rebounds in the
opener.
Sharp
shooting
junior
L - - - - - - ' Brindi
Kandel
Drablnskl
scored I 0 points in
'the win.
The Redwomen will have one of
their walking wounded back as
senior guard Tana Richey has
healed and is ready for action.
Saint Vincent (0-2) is off to a slow
start after losing a close game
against Pikeville College (70-66)
·and being drilled by Shawnee State
(96-59) at ·the Shawnee State
..C.lassic. Senior guard Kristin Myers
leads the Lady Bearcats in scoring _
(22.5 ppg.) through the first two
·games. Myers scored 27 in the loss
to Pikeville. Laura Klimchock (12
ppg.) and impressive freshman
Lauren Reilly (9 ppg.) also provide
scoring punch for SVC.
Seton Hill (0-0) and Wilberforce
(0-0) will begin things on Friday at
4p.m.
Seton Hill will face Rio Grande
on Saturday at 6 p.m. The Griffins
are coming off a 21-11 season in
2004:05. Elena Rade!lkovic paces
the Seton Hill attack. She pumped
in 17.5 points and hauled down 8.1
boards per game last season.
Veterans Denisha Salter,( 11.6 ppg.),
Kaleeda Jenkins (I 0.2 ppg.) and
Autumn Himes (9.8 ppg.) all return
from last season.
Wilberforce and Saint Vincent
will play at 4 p.m. on Saturday.

~ Uwttd
t6 atted th-

4'te

Bob's Marl&lt;et
&amp;.. Greenhouses, Inc.
Gallipolis Garden Center

2005 Holiday Open House
Saturday , the 19th of November
from 8 arn to 8 pm
1 Jenkins Lane
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
740-446-1711

Pted.u ;i~ ua. aa we~ tk ~.

.

.Refreshments will be provided
10% off entire.purchase all day
:::"'1
Free Gift with Purchase while quantities last

•

Please see Book. 84

-- - - - - - - -- - - - - ·: --- - ·-------

----------

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel .

www .mydailysentinel.com

Rio soccer hosts NAIA
Region IX Tournament
RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande
gears up for a huge weekend
of events. One of the events
will be the NA JA Region IX
Men's Soccer Tournament.
Rio Grande ( 17-0) comes
into the region tl(urney as the
NAJA's No . I rated team. Rio
will face off against Saint
Vincent ( 12-7- 1) at II a.m. on
Friday morning at Evan Davis
Field. The Redmen defeated
Walsh for a second time this
season in the American
Mideast
Conference
Qualifying Tournament last
Saturday to advance to this
point.
The Redmen are led by high
scoring
forward
Guy
Heywood with 13 goals and
five assists. Rio has a tremendous amount of firepower
besides Heywood. Freshman
forward Milan Partenijevic
has scored ei~ht goals · and
junior mid-ftelder Conar
Dawson has tallied seven
goals and senior mid-fielder
John Carroll leads the squad
·
in assists with 12.
goalkeeper
Sophomore
Andy Moore has posted four
shutouts in 12 games played
with an 0.82 goals agamst
average.
Saint
Vincent
upset
Houghton in the AMC
Qualifying Tournament, 2-0,
and then dispatched ,Lyndon
State (VT) in the NAJA
Region IX-X play-in game by
. a 4-2 score.
The Bearcats have one of
the top scoring forward~ in
the league in Dave Suski.
Suski has tallied 12 goals and
eight assists this season. Midfielder Shea Simpson has produced seven assists and C.J.
Cameron has recorded six
shutouts this season in goal.
Rio and Saint Vincent will
be meeting for the . first time
this season.
The second match-up of the
day, pits No. · 3 seed
Cedarville (15-3-1) against
No. 2 seed Notre Dame
College (14-2-2), the AMC
North Division champion, at
2 p.m.

lan McNamarlpholo

Rio Grande's Conor Dawson lines up for a penalty kick during
a match earlier this season. Dawson and the top ranked
Redmen host t he AMC/Region IX soccer tournament this
weekend.
The Yellow Jackets elimi- Chris Logan is the top goalnated Ohio Dominican . .2-1, keeper in the AMC. He has
in overtime in the AMC six shutouts and possesses an
Qualifier. Justin Bentz is the 0.71 goals against average
top goal scorer for Cedarville. this season.
.
He has notched J I goals on
An · interesting side note
th e se;tson. Other notable with NDC coming 1'0. Rio ·
players for Ceqa rvi ll e are Grande: It will be a •homeJesse Fox and Ken Davis with com ing for former Redmen
eight assists each.
Luke players Carl Nolan and 'Simon
Marietta has recorded six Carey. Both are members of
shutouts in goal.
the Notre Dame ·coaching
·
· Cedarville lost to Rio staff.
Grande, 2-0. October II in
Rio and NDC have not
Cedarville.
played t~is season.
Notre
Dame Col le ge,
The winners will meet for
ranked No. 18 in the final the NA JA Region IX title and
NAJA Top 25 rating, is Jed by an automatic berth in the
the trici of Nick Jordan (8 NAIA National Tournament
goa ls) . Chris Loughlin (7 on Saturday at I p.m. Rio
goa ls, 5 assists) and Jared Grande has won four consecMiller (7 . goals , 5 assists). utive regioo championships.

Cavs smash SuperSonics
BY ToM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

,

CLEVELAND - LeBron
James scored 3 1 points,
Larry Hughes added 13 and
the Cleveland Cavaliers
made a team-record 28
straight free throws before
their first miss, rolling to a
112-85 win over the Seattle
SuperSonics on Wednesday
night.
Making 1~ of 19 free
throws in the first 24 minutes, the Cavaliers built a
22-point halftime · lead over
the Sanies, who got blown
out for the second game in a
row. On Tuesday, Seattle
was
beaten
94-69
at
Memphis.
James,
averaging
29
points per game, spen t the
final 8:49 on th e bench after
his monstrous dunk put the
Cavs ahead by 28. James
finished 11-of-11 from "the
line, and the Cavs went 31of-33 on free throws.
They were a perfect 28-of28 when Alan Henderson
missed the first of two with
8:16 left. Cleveland 's previous record for consecutive
free throws was 22 on Dec.
17. 1987, at Chicago.
Donyell Marshall added
13 points and nine rebounds ,
and Drew Gooden had ·1 1
points and nine boards for
the Cavs, who outrebounded
the Sanies 56-21.
Ray Allen scored 28 points
but had little help from the
Sanies, who lost forward
Rashard Lewis early in the
first quarter with a shoulder
Ronald
Murray
injury.
added 15 points for Seattle.
James capped his 35 minutes on the floor with a
breathtaking
one-handed
dunk that gave Cleveland a
99-71 lead.
Taking off on a 2-on-1 fast
break, James passed the ball
ahead to Marshall, who
waited for James before lob-

Rivalry weakened by free
agency,.lack of competition

explanation
on eve of congressional report
BY HOWARD FENDRICH
ASSOCIATED

P~ESS

·
·
WASHINGTON - Rafael
Palmeiro took responsibility
Wednesday t:or his failed
steroid test
but offered a
P 0 s sib I e
excuse hingtng on a
tainted vitamin ·shot,
giv ing hi s
first public
explanation
on the eve
Palmelro
of a con.g ressional
report into whether he j ied
under oath.
In a statement released by
his ·lawyers, the former
Baltimore Orioles slugger
acknowledged several facis
that already had been reported, including that Palmeiro
had raised the possibility that
a shot of vitamin B-12 he
was given by a teammate and
took in April "might have
been the cause" of the positive drug test that led to hi s
10-\lay suspension by Major
League Baseball.
"Everything l have been
working for all my life_ to
play the ~arne that I love
with digmty a!Jd earh the
respect and admiration of my
colleagues and fans - has
been changed by my suspensian. For this, I alone take
full ~esponsibility," Palmeiro
said in the statement. "I have
never intentionally taken
steroids. But I must also
acknowledge that stanozolol,
a banned · substance, was
found in my system in May."
. When he testified before
the Hou se Government
Reform
Committee
on
· March 17, alongside Mark
McGwire, Jose Canseco and
others, Palmeiro jabbed a
finger in the air and said: " I
have never used steroids.
·Period." On Aug. I, Palmeiro
became th e highest-profile
player suspended by Major
League Baseball under its
new steroids policy.
Two
days
later,
Government
Reform
Committee chairman Tom
Davis. R- Va., said the panel

would open an investigation
into whether Palmeiro commined perjury. A report on
that investigation will be
released Thursday, and
staffers for Davis. and the
committee's
ranking
Democrat, Henry Waxman
of California, wouldn 't commenton the report's contents
or Palmeiro's statement.
MaJ· or League Baseball
executive vice president Rob
Manfred also declined comment.
Palmeiro's lawye rs posted
on the Web a series of documents, including a detailed
accounting .o f his statistics
and quotations from baseball
plu~ers lauding hi s power.
He s one of four players in
baseball hi story with 500
homers and 3,000 hits - and
the timing of his positive test
means Palmeiro knew he
faced a suspension as he
approached the hit milestone
this summer.
"Nobody is more frustrated and disappointed in me
than I am .... All my accomplishments are now tainted,"
Palmeiro said.
"I deeply regret the pain I
have caused my family, my
. teammates, my fans and the
game of baseball. I am sorry
for the distraction that I have
caused to the Orioles c lubhouse and the League. I
remain opposed to the use of
steroids by athletes," he
added. ·
Palmeiro's case has been
cited as one of the reasons
that lawmakers have conlinued to pursue legislation to
mandate tougher rules for
steroid testing and harsher
penalties for positive tests in
baseball and other major professional sports leagues.
A bill calling for a halfseason ban for a first steroid
offense. a full- season ban for
a second offense, and a lifetime· ban for a third reached
the floor of the Senate. But a
spokes man for one of the
bill 's spon.sors , Sen. Jim
Bunning,
R-Ky.,
said
Wednesday that an unidenti tied senator placed a hold on
the bill, meaning it 's stalle'd
indefinitely.
According to Palmeiro 's .

lawyers. he tested negative
for steroids in 2003 and
2004: after he was informed
he failed a test· in May, he
took a second test that
month, which was negative.
"Every other item that
might be · to blame for
Rafael's failed test - from ·
vi tamins tb protein drinkswas tested. and no steroids .
were found. The only item ·
that could not be tested and is therefore suspect was a via l of liquid, ·
·
·
B- 1'J- ··
injectable v1tamm
which Rafael took in the ·
middle of April 2005," his ;
lawyers wrote, noting" th e
vial wa s thrown awav.
'
"The B-12 was provided to
Rafael bv' a teammate: it was
labe led us B-12: and Rafael
has always been convinced·
that hi s teammate absolutely.
believed it to be 8- I 2."
Orioles shortstop Miguel·
Tejada has acknowledged he
was that teammate; baseball
absolved him of any wrong- ·
doing.
"''m not familiar with B-.
I 2 ever being invoked as an.
explanation for doping with ·
an anabolic steroid," said Dr.
Gary Wadler, a member of
the World Anti-Doping ·
Agency's medical research
committee. "Contaminated·
B- I 2 doesn't sound like a·
plausible explanation as a'
result of the manufacturing ·
pr9cess .... So then if sabo- .
tage was a factor here, the
burden of proof is to suggest.
who, what. where, when,.
wl)y, how. and so on . .You,
can't just throw it out there.,
You have to have some basis
for saying that."
.
When Palmeiro rejoined
the Orioles after his ban, he.
said he would not speak,
about the case until Congress,
concluded its perjury investi- ·
galion.
"I have nothing to hide,"
he said Wednesday.
Palmeiro, 40, had just two·
hits in 26 at-bats after return-;
ing· from hi s suspension and.
was booed by spectators at ·
Baltimore and on the road.
He was se nt home to Texas ·
to rehabilitate injurie s; the
Orioles eventually told him
not to return to the team.

BY ~OE MtUCIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEREA- "Steelers week"
just isn't what it used to be in
Cleveland.
Sure, Browns fans will
make bets with Steelers fans
who live in the area and radio
stations will play unflattering
b
p· b h B
s~ngs a out tits urg · ut
With so many new faces in the
Browns locker room, there
seems to be a lack of passion
for what was one of the
lea~e·s fiercest rivalries.
" f course lou hear about
it, and you fee it from everybody in the area, but other
than that it's another game for
,
us, said
. . guard Joe Andruzzi,
who JOtned the Browns as a
free agent in the offseason.
Center Jeff Faine has grown
.
to appreetate the rivalry in his
three years with the team, but
said roster turnover has weakened the intensit(.
"A b'
1g part o it ha s to do
.
wit h l'ree agency," Faine said.
" It's not the same players
every year that you're playing
against. 1 think that takes
away from a lot of rivalries
around the league." .
The Browns haven't been
much of a threat to the
Steelers in recent years either,
going just . 3-10 .against
Pittsburgh since returning to
the Iea!lue in 1999. Baltimore,
and th1s season Cincinnati,
have been Pittsburgh 's main
competition in the AFC North.
Browns coach Romeo
'Crennei usually stresses that
the most important game is
the one they re playing next.
But on Wednesday he called
attention to the importance of
Suttda_y !light's !lame. .
"Th1s 1s the btggest game of
the year," Crennel sa1d. "We
have to go to Pittsburgh and
play at their place. They have
the Terribl~ Towels and it's a
hostile environment."
Crennel , who tasted the
rivalry as a defensive coordinator with Cleveland in 2000,
knows the players need to
experience the rivalry themselves.
"There are several new
faces and they might not

KICK OFF
TH-E
HOLIDAY
SEASOH!

BY ALAN ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH

_

Ben

Roethlisberger did what many

~ro football fans do on a
unday afternoon. He sat in
his livmg room with a couple
of friends, ·eating pizza and
chicken wings and yelling for
his team.
He never wants to do it
again, not as long as the P1ay,ers he is rooting on are his
teammates.
The Pittsburgh Steelers
arterback was off crutches
,
h fi
·
ed nesd ay .or t e trst llme
since having arthrosco~ic
right knee surgery Nov. 3,- ut
is not yet ready to play or
practice and will miss his third
game of the season Sunday.
"It feels good to be able to
get ilp and walk around a little
bit and feel like a normal
. human being," he said
Wednesday.. "But it's tough to
watch on TV. Those are my
guys out there."
Roethli sberger is ahead of
schedule after having a damaged piece of cartilage
removed from his knee - he
is riding a stationary bike and
has almost full range of
motion in the knee while
doing underwater therapy ·and says he hopes to return
Nov. 20 against Baltimore.
Roethlisberger's right knee

28
bing him a pass in the Jane.
Twisting in the air, James
grabbed the ball with his
right hand and slammed if'in
as Sani es guard Luke
Ridnour took cover.

James ' dunk was strikingly similar looking to the
dunk in his rookie season
that has been immortafized
on a I I 0-foot-high billboard
outside Quicken Loans
Arena. The giant . photo
image was unveiled on
Wednesday.
Lewis didn't return after
getting hurt. He was falli~g
back on defense in the foul
lane trying to stop a driving
James when he banged into
285-pound Sanies center
Vitaly Potapenko.
Lewis
. immediately
grabbed his arm and sat for a
moment on the scorer's table
before being helped to the
locker room .

,

l-Ie was replaced by
Vladimir Radmanovic, who
following Tuesday night's
loss at Memphis complained
to reporters that Seattle
coac h Bob Weiss wasn ' t
playing him enough. The 6foot- 10 fo·rward blamed the
luck of minutes - he came
in averaging 16.5 - for his
6.7-point scoring average.
Last year. Radmanovic averaged 29.5 minutes .
Not onlYJ did Radmanovic
get his wish, but he also
drew the · assignment of
guarding James, who scored
21 points in the-first half.
Like they did in their
home opener against New
Orl~ans, the Cavaliers put
this .one away early.
Hughes hit a 3-pvinter,
and James ,buried a 19-footer and added two free throws
in the final I :3.0 of· the first
quarter as the Cuvs opened a
34-26 lead.
·
- ~--------'--

still there," Porter said
Wednesday. "It's still foing to
be a big game . We ve had
some thmgs in the past that
make it to where we definitely
don't like each other, so you
have to prepare rourself to be
ready because it s going to be
a physical game."
Steelers coach Bill Cowher,
who played for the Browns
from 1980-82, speaks fondly
understand as -strongly as the of the rivalry.
fans do •" C ren ne I sal'd · "They
"It's a natural rivalry ·
might not realize the impor- because of the historicCcast of
tance an d how c 1ose the t wo thes·e two teams," . owher
··
· ''They ' re so close in
Ctt1es
are. ... If Ihey d on ' t sat·d.
d
t
d
h
'II
b
un ers an now, t ey WI Y proximity, two cities .that mirth e d f th
k"
e n o e wee ·
ror each other in their passion
F ormer Browns tac kl e Doug for football and the fan supD' k
h
1 d f
te en, w o P aye
rom port that they both have."
1971 . to 1984 , agrees. Now a
Cowher's teams have domi·1
1 •
h B
co or ana yst •Or t e rowns nated the Browns over the las.· t
d'
k D" k
II
ra 10 networ
f th , t.1e en reca sf ·13 year.s going 17-5, including
some o
e nas ter years o · two playoff, victories. His
h f d
t e"! eu ·
I' · h
h teant humilia.ted the Browns
t was ug ler tn t e Irene - in their return to the league in
es. 11 was uglier everywhere. 1999 with a 43-0 defeat in
There was always a battle here the 1·r first fame.
.
b 1 h
"h
·d "J
or
a
att
e
t
ere,
e
sa1
.
oe
"When
tot
here
in
'99
all
J
'k'
~
one s
spl lng
( erry) you heard a out was the glory
BradshaW. Ron Bolton sptt- days of this rivalry," Browns
ting on (Lynn) Swann. (Jack) kicker Phil Dawson said.
Lambert hitting (Brian) Sipe " You could probably make the
5oing out of bounds. Joe argument that it hasn't been
reene kicking Bob McKay . like that since '99 .... As we
in the (groin)."
get this thing going on o'ur
The rivalry · hasn't. been end, I think you'll see the
without it's moments in recent rivalry rekindle." .
years:
The Browns are heavy
-In 2000, Punter Chris. underdogs goi ng into Sunday
Gardocki, then with the night's game, but their only
Browns, extended a finger win in the" last 10 games
toward Pittsburgh's bench against the Steelers came on a
after linebacker Joey Porter Sunday night in October
·
knocked him to the ground 2003.
while he was watching his
It 's Faine favorite memory
. punt sail down field.
of the rivalry.
- In 2003, ·Cleveland blew
"You really saw what it was
a 12-point lead ~ith 10:17 left like to win against Pittsburgh
to lose 36-33 in an AFC Wild -how the fans react to you." .
Card game against Pittsbursh. Faine said. "The whole city is
ending the Browns' only wm- almost like a different city."
ning season since 1999 on a
Notes: OG Cosey Coleman,
sour note.
who sprained his right knee
- In 2004, Porter and run- against Tennessee, is listed as
ning back William Green were doubtful for Sunday. If
ejected for wildly throwing Coleman isn't available, OL
punches at each other before a Mike Pucillo will start in his
game. They also accused each place .... RB Lee Suggs, who
other of spitting during the has missed a month with a
altercation.
broken right thumb, . was
"It's still Cleveland - it's expected to practice this week.
probably not as bad as ... RB William Green (ankle)
Baltimore, but the rivalry's is still listed as doubtful.

Roethlisberger: .Didn't want
to come out·despite knee pain

~

.
AP photo
Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James goes up for a dunk against
the Seattle Supersonics in the first quarter Wednesday in
Cleveland.
·

www .mydailysentinel.com

.

P~lmeiro offers

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Thursday, November 10, 20?5

Wednesday, November 23rd

Reach Over

5.000
Households
In Meigs
County!

had bothered him since the by, but I would probably hurt
Sept. II opener against the team rather than help it.
Tennessee, but he was deter"But I don't like to miss any
mined to play each week until games. That was a big thing
coach Bill Cowher talked him for me. I want to be there for
into getting the operation so these guys. I've been playing
he would be ready for the late- through the pain so far and I
season stretch dnve.
felt 1 cou ld keep doing it," he
"My knee actually felt bet- said.
ter, but coach called me and
Roethlisberger, the NFL's
·d
'L
t'
t
·t
·
h
sat , e s ge · t over ·wit top-rated passer with a 112.4
because w ho knows w h'IC h rating, was told by doctors
·
·1d
b d
· .,
game 11 cou get a agam,
that he should be pain·free
Roethlisberger said. talking to once he recovers from the
r· th r· t t
rt
repo ers or e trs 1me surgery. Last week, the
since the operation. "I wasn'l Steelers estimated his recov· d b t h rt.
't d
wome a ou u mg 1 an ery tim e to be 10 to 14 days.
makin~
it worse; it was later
Roethlisberger has hurt both
· t
d ak' ·l
on Ill e season an m mg 1 knees this s·eason. Hi s left
o s and th I
ld 't b
en wou n e knee was hyperextcnded late
w r. e,
there for the playoffs."
·
· The Steelers (6_2) are 1_1 in a 24- 22 v1ctory at ·San
without
the
injured Diego on Oct. I 0 , causing him
Roethlisberger, having lost to to miss the Jaguars game. The
Jacksonville 23-17 on Oct. 16 · right knee injury occurred
with Tommy Maddox at quar- against the Titans, then flared
terback but won 20-10 Sunday up again when he wa s hit durin Green Bay even. though ing the tirst quarter of a 20-19
replacement Charlie Batch victory over Baltimore on
passed for only 65 yards.
Oct. 3 I ·
Despite not being able to
"From what they tell me,
fully extend the knee, once my knee starts to feel
Roethlisberger said he could better, it should feel better
play Sunday night a~ainst than
it
ever
has,"
Cleveland but doesn't thmk he Roethlisberger said. "From
· would be helping his team if .the tirst game on, it's been
he did.
bothering me, and I've been
"Right now. I can barely playing through the pain.
walk without a limp," he said. Hopefully, I should be able to
"The thing is, 1 don't want to play without pain in my knee
hurt this team. I ·could proba- for the first time in a long
bly go out there now and get time."

Browns punter named player of week

Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 21st
Call Dave or Brenda
992-2155

BEREA (AP) - Browns
p!lnter Kyle Richardson noted
last week that players in his
profession are either "a hero
or a zero" in the NFL.
He's been both in a span of
two weeks.
Richardson, whose job was
on the line a week ago after
shanking three punts, was
named the AFC special teams
of
the
week
player
Wednesday for his perfor·
mance against Tennessee .
Richardson, kicking in
winds gusting at 40 mph,
pinned the Titans three times

inside the 15-yard line in the
20-14 win Sunday.
He had five punts for 203
yards (40.6 average), a net
punting average of 34.4 yards
and a long punt of 54 yards.
Richardson also tackled
Titans punt returner Lamont
Thompson to end a 31-yard
punt return.
Besides strong winds,
Richard son was punting
under pressure after shanking
two punts, including a 10yarder in the Browns' Joss to
Houston. He also shanked a
punt against Detroit a week

earlier.
Crennel had said last wee k
that Richardson was on
notice. The Browns looked at
punters last week to replace
Richardson and signed punter
Gabe Lindstrom to the practice squad.
· Richardson said he didn't
approach the game like he
was punting for hh job.
Winning AFC special teams
player of the week won't take
the pressure off Richardson .
With Lindstrom on the practice squad, Richardson is still
on notice. Crenncl said.

___________________

,._

-·--- --

·-

-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Eagles regroup after losing Owens
BY RoB MAADDt
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHILADELPHIA If
there was any linge ring
doubt that Terrell Owens is
no longer a part of the
Philadelphia Eagles, thi s
ough~ to clear it up: A rookie
tight end moved into his old
locker Wednesday.
And other than making his
suspension official, the
Eagles had nothing more to
say.
Like it or not, life after
T.O. has arrived
for
Philadelphia.
No more daily .drama. No
more distractions. No more
sniping and griping.
No more playoffs?
"We kno\\' T.O. is not here,
so everyone who has to
catch the ball has to step
up," tight end L.J. Smith
said.
Without Owens, the soapopera atmosphere may be
gone and team chemistry
might be re stored . But that
doesn't change the fact that
Donovan McNabb's top two
targets are now Greg Lewis
and Reggie Brown.
Lewis, a fourth receiver,
ha s 26 catci)es for 284 yards
and one TD this season.
Brown showed promise with
five catahes for 94 yards and
a TD on Sunday - the first
game without Owens- but
he's still a rookie.
It's enough to make fans
flash back to the days of
Charles
John son
and·
Torrance
Small,
Todd
Pinkston and James Thrash.
The $tfu gg ling Eagles are
4-4 and were havi11g trouble
on offense, even with one of
the NFL's top playmakes in
the lineup. A team that has
played iri the last four NFC
championship games suddenly find~ itself in a difficu lt position to make the
playoffs.
Owens, who was dismissed from the Eagles on
Monday, had 20 touchdowns
in 2 1 regular-season games
with Philadelphia. Losing
the All-Pro wideout put s
more pressure on McNabb,
. running
back
Brian
Westbrook and the rest of
the oflense.
" Everyone wants to say
we didn't win championship

games without a big-play
receiver. Well, our big-play
receiver was hurt last year
and we won a champio nship
game," cornerback Sheldon
Brown said Wednesday..
The Eagles l~d the NFC all
of last season and reached
the Su]ll!r Bowl, despite losing Owens to an ankle injury
in Week 15. But Pinkston
and Freddie Mitchell were
the
startin g
wideouts.
McNabb was playing at a
high level and the defense
was dominant.
McNabb is struggling ,
Pinkston is out for the year
with an injury and Mitchell
is unemployed after being
cut by the Eagles and
Kansas City. Meanwhile, the
defense ha s been inconsi stem. allowing an average of
23.9 points per game.
"With No. 81 being out,
we have to take it upon our- ·
selves as a defense to play
better," end Jevon Kearse
said. "We have to create
turnovers and give the
offense a better chance."
Can the Eagles survive
without Owens?
They won a · playoff game
with Johnson and Small as
the starting receivers. They
went to three NFC title
games - and lost - with
Pinkston and Thrash.
Owens invigorated the
offense when he arrived
from San Francisco and
helped the Eagles to a 13-1
start last season, with nine
victories by double-digit
margins. Now they'll have
to settle . for any wins they
can get.
Owens didn't play in
Sunday night's 17-10 loss at
Washington, and will remain
suspended for three more
games without pay. After
that, the Eagles plan to deactivate him for the rest of the
season.
The suspension followed a
tumultuous week in which
Owens criticized the organization for not publicly recognizing hi s I OOth career
TD catch in a game on Oct.
23, fought with, a former
teammate and took another
verbal shot at McNabb.
Coach Andy Reid said
Owens had been "warned
repeatedly about the consequences of his actions," and
was told by the team not to

return this season because tr
"a large number of ... ituation '~
that accumulated over ·a ion!
period of time."
A contrite Owens plcadet
for another chance in a pub·
lie apology Tuesday. but tht
team was Lmmoved. Owens
agent, Drew Rosenha.us, saic
he wants his Client to pia)
immediately.
The
. NFL
Player•
Association
wants
tht
Eagles to cut dwen s i:
they're not going to reinstatt
him after his four-game sus·
pension is over.
''We're not asking them It
play him, we can't fore&lt;
them to do that." Gent
Upshaw! the NFLPA's exec
utive director, said. "But il
they're not going to let hirr
come back to practice and dr
all· the other thin gs associ at
ed with that, then we wa11
them to cut him, · 'Jet hin ·
become a free agent now."
The players ' union ha~
filed a grievance on behal f
of Owens seeking to over·
turn th e suspension. It wil
be heard Nov. I 8 befon
arhitrator Ri chard Bloch.
"We want the best fo1
T.O., we want th e best fo1
the franchise and ultimate!)
what's best for the sport.'
NFLPA president and Bill~
safe ty Troy Vincent · sa id
"Can't we just get along?"
A picture of Owens sittin!
between Reid and owne1
Jeffery Lurie during happie1
times for the Eagles wa~
removed from team offices
Rookie tight end Stepher
Spach moved into Owens·
locker Wednesday. and i
familiar fuce - Chad Lcwi ~
-rejoi ned the team.
The images of Owen~
might be · gone, but ht
remained the only topic 0 1
conversation inside the lock·
er room.
"When I heard the apolo
gy, I thought it was sincere,'
Sheldon Brown said. " Bu
then Drew Opened his moutl
and ruined it. It 's sar
because it sounded likt
(Owens) was crying out fo1
help."
Other players wishec
Owens would've made tht
apology last week when ht
had the chance.
"It was too little too late .
guess." defensive tacklt
Holli s Thomas said.

••
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�Page 84• The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 10, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, November 10, 2005

WVU keeps .marching toward BCS game Marshall gets F on
A~:O~~~~D ~rs

~~l~\?.~s b~~Cst ~~~~rise'ih~!

CINCIN NATI - A pa1r of
tough-to-catch treshmen kept
No 16 West Virgima out of
reach m the B1g East.
Pat Whne ra n tor II t yards
Wednesday mght, takmg off on
quarterback draws that set up
Steve Slaton \ four touchdowns and a 18-0 VICtory over
Cmcmnalt and tls one-stepslo" defense
The Mountameers (8- I, 5-0)
are m posltwn to clinch the
conference title headmg mto
thetr final regular-season
games &lt;~gain st Pittsburgh and
South Flonda. tis closest pursuer wtth one conference loss
Last year, West Vtrgtma also
wa' in posttton to wm the title
outnght, but lost tts last two
games and then tis Gator Bowl
appearance aga mst Florida
State. The emphasis has been
on avoiding another fade
WhJte, Slaton and one of the
natton's toughest defense led
the Mountameers to their most
lopstded vtctory of the ·season
and their first shutout stnce
2002 .
Whtte, a redshtrt freshman
making hts second start m
place of banged up Adam
Bednarik, spent the night tormenting the natton's youngest
defense He ran stratght up the
middle on draws, turned
uplield on option fakes and
took off on passmg plays.
Cincmnatt (4-5, 2-3) couldn't contain him or catch up
wtth htm Hts runs of 17, 34
and 13 yards sparked three
first-hall touchdown dnves.

season, takmg over the tatlba.:k
JOb alter Pernell Williams and
J,tson Colson tell out of favor.
He scored stx touchdowns m a
tnple-overt1me v1ctory o'er
Loutsvtlle that put the
Moun1amee1s m control of the
conference
Slaton fell hard on hts h•p
last week during a 45-13 vtctory over Connecttcut, &gt;iutlenng
a bruJSe so pamful that tt hurt
when he coughed He looked
fine Wednesday whJle sconng
on two off-tackle runs and a
dtve over the m1ddle of a
defense that starts live freshmen.
Most ol the Cmcmnatt lans
headed tor the extts when
Slaton rw1 untouched 33 yards
for another touchdown on the
Mountameers' lirst possess ton
of the second half, tini shmg
wtth I 29 yards overall Whtte
had a 15-yard touchdown pass,
and West Vtrgtnta j'ut tn 11'
reserves e,Jrly 111 t 1e fourth
quaner
West Vtrgtnta's ht ghly
ranked defense sent Cincinnati
to its first shutouts mce 1998, a
4 1-0 loss to Mtamt of Ohio.
Redshlfl freshm.m Dustin
Grutza was lnmtcd to swmg
passes and dump-offs to tight
ends in the tirst half, when hts
longest completton went lot ·g
yards
The Mountatneers forced
tout tumovets and ptevented
Cincmnati trom gemng closer
than the West Vtrgtma 37 -yard
Ime until the tina! play of the
game.

Buckeyes.
. from Page Bl
the pros next year directly out
of high school before the
NBA changed its mmimum
age rule last summer. Players
now must be at least 19 years
old or out of high school for
one year before they can play
tn the NBA.
··t thmk the thtng that Greg
is gomg to bring ts a defenSIVe presence He's one of the
best shot-blockers I've ever
seen,"' Matta satd. "His abilit~ to hmsh around the basket
ts vety good as well . The
thing I noticed thts summer is
that he was able to step out
and knock down I 2- to 15foot JUmp shots which was
good to see "
Oden, who led Lawrence
North to the last two Class
4A state champtonships, was
selected as the national player of the year by several publicillions
" He has a chance to be spectal," Matta satd " But tt all
starts wtth the humihty he
carries for 17 years old."
Joining Oden is Lawrence
North
teammate
Mtke
Conley, a 6-l guard who
averaged 10.7 pomts and 5
asststs a game last year He is
the son of former OlymP.ic
tnple-Jump champiOn Mtke

Book
fromPageBl
natJOnwtde tlus month.
Keiderling, with an assist
from New York Yankees
-owner George Stembrenner,
who coached agamst Francts
whtle a fi rst lieutenant statt oned at Lockbourne Atr
Force Base, brmgs the
Cinderella story of Francts
back to hfe
Through ex hausttve mtervtews wtth Francts, ht s controverstal coach Newt Oliver,
rival players and coaches, as
well as every member of the
Rt o Grande team
Ke1derllng recreates the storybook events of 1952- 1954
Begmnmg wnh-Francts's
upbnngmg m the Ohto htlls,
Ketderhng detatls Francis's
unlikely path to the limelight.
1t was while he was in ht gh
sc hool tn Wellsv tlle that
Francts mel Ohver.
Ketderlmg follows hi s
story to Rio Grande College,
the tmanctally strapped
school of 92 students, that
hired Oliver as tts coach and
gave Francts a scholarship
even though he had not graduated from htgh school
As a freshman, Francts
averaged 50 pomts per game
and. on Jan. 9, 1953, he
shocked the spons world by
scon ng an unprecedented
116 pomts agamst Ashland
Junior College Although the

AP photo
West V~rgtnta runntng back Steve Slaton (10) Jumps over
Mtchael Villagrana (88) m the ftrst half agatnst Ctnctnnatt.
Wednesday tn Ctncmnatt. Jeremy Sheffey (65) blocks at left
•
Slaton, a tirst-year freshman, a 10-mmute power outage tn
fintshed them wtth runs of 4, I the first quarter Some of the
and 9 yards for a 21-0 halftime light stands went out whtle
lead.
West Vtrgtnta had the ball at
The only thtng that slowed mtdfteld. Once the game
the Mountameers' offense was resumed, West Vtrgtma scored
Conley, who was a track star
at Arkansas before winnmg a
silver in the tnple-jump at the
1984 Olymptcs and the gold
at the 1992 Olympics.
"The first time I called
thetr house, I dtdn 't know
whether to talk to htm about
hts son or ask for an autograph," Matta satd.
,
Roundmg out the recruiting
class are top Ohio recruits
Daequan Cook (6-4, from
Dayton) and Davtd Ltghty
(6-6, from Cleveland), along
wtth 6-9 forward Othello
Hunter from Wmston-Salem,
N.C., who played last year at
Htllsborough Commumty
College.
"They all fit in,"' Mana
said "They're all great ktds
and they all have great character."
Matta satd he believed hts
Indiana background - he
was the head coach at Butler
in 2000-2001 and an assistant
111 the state for seven years
before that - helped him
recruit Oden and Conley.
Within hours of accepting
the Ohio State head coaching
JOb 111 July 2004, Matta
already had prospective
members of his staff watching the players participate in
a tournament m an AAU
tournament m Teaneck, N.J.
When Matta first proposed
recruiting Oden, Conley and
the others, assistant coach
Dan Peters told htm, "You've

got to be kiddmg."
Ohto State ts commg off a
20- 12 season that came to a
premature end because
school administrators banned
the team from gomg to the
NCAA tournament because
of vwlauons whtch took
place under ftred form er
coach Jtm O' Bnen
The highlight for the
Buckeyes was a stunntng 6564 upset ot top-ranked and
unbeaten llltnots on the fmal
day of the regular season last
March. Matt SylvesteJ hit ,t
long 3-pomter with 5 seconds remaming to hand the
Illmi lhetr first loss after 29
wms
The Buckeyes sttll face an
NCAA heanng tn December,

although Matta and athlettc
dtrector Gene Smtth have
satd they don ' t anltClpate any
futther penalties to the program
Shou ld the NCAA levy
addmonal penalttes tn cludmg a postseason ban dunn g:
the five recrut ts' freshman
season, they were gtven written ass urance from Ohto
State that they wtll he
released from thctr letters of
Intent They could then transfe t elsewhere wtthout hd; ing
to stt out the NCAA-mandated year.
'T m glad tht s ts behtnd
liS," Matta satd of sigmng
d&lt;ty '"Now we can move on
and coac h the team thi s
year''

INDIANAPOLIS - The
way Notre Dame went about
replacing Tyrone Willingham
had a greater aflect on tts
mmonty luring repol:( card
gr&lt;tde than us dectston to' fire
fl1e school's first black football
coach.The result · The Ftghtmg
Insh received a B from the
Black Coaches Association.
"We look at the documented
facts, and the fmng ts related
to the overall picture," satd
Ketth Hamson. who conducted the study for the BCA "But
the grade tS what they earned"
South Carolina and Utah,
however, were the only
Division I schools that the
BCA said fmled to document
thetr search process and jomed
Marshall and two other
schools that received Fs on the
report
card
released
Wednesday
The BCA gtves school s
automauc Fs if they don't subnut documents
BCA executive dtrector
Floyd Ke1th again was dtsappotnted by the results.
Of the 119 Dtviston I-A
football schools only three
MisSISsippi 's
coaches Sylvester Croom, UCLA's
Karl Dorrell and Washmgton's
Wtlltngham - are black. In
Division 1-AA, the plight ts
even worse. lndtana State's
Lou West ts the only black
head coach at a predominantly
white universtty.
Ketth believes the report
card also mdtcates the trend ts
getting worse.
Whtle 13 of 30 schools that
made coaching changes in the
last year recetved etther an A
or B, more than half earned
average, below average or failing grades. Among those at the
bottom end were LSU. Flonda
and Marshall .
Marshall recetved Fs m
three of live categones, scoring an F overall. Marshall
recctved a D for tis "documented" compliance with its
own aflirmattve action policies
and an A in the ume spent hiring a coach by takmg two
weeks or more to make a tina!
dectsion. Marshall hired Mark
Snyder earlier this year after
Bob Pruett renred Both are
white.

Schools also are evaluated
on categones that include the
percentage of minorities
mvolved m the hiring process,
the number of minonty candidates who interviewed and the
schools' contacts with either
Ketth or the chainnan of the
NCAA's
Minority
Opponunity and Interests
Committee. Marshall failed
those categories.
"Based on the criteria set
forth by the BCA, the gi1lde is
what it is," said Randy
Burnstde. a spokesman for
Marshall athlet:tcs. "However,
we feel our screening romrnittee did an excellent job of evaluating our final can(lidates and
selected the best candidate for
the position. In faCt, we now
have the most dtverse football
coachin~ stall in our school's
history.'
Of the I0 football roaches
on Marshall's staff, four are
mmont1es - three blacks and
one
American
Indian,
Burnstde said.
·
Overall, Keith said the
re)!Ort card is worse than last
year
"In society, a C means average," Kettn satd. "On this
report card, it represents the
status quo, '!lid m tenns of
dtversity that is unsatisfacrory"
When the repon was
released last fall, there were
live black coaches in the
Dtvision 1-A. That number
was reduced by almost half
wben three coaches, including
Willingham, were either tireil
or quit. Willingham was later
hired by Washington, which
also received a B.
Five schools - Indiana,
lllmois, Ohio University,
UNLV and Western Michigan
- recetved As. Ohio and
Western Michigan, both of the
Mtd-Am~rican Conference,
were the only schools to
receive
an A in all five cate.
gones.
But five schools, including
San Jose State and Southeast
Lomsiana, received Fs. Five
others, including L~U. Florida
and The Cttadef, received Ds.
Indtana State, which hired
West in January, recetved a C.
It was given an F for its search
commtttee, a grade that
Harrison said meant no
minorities were included on
the committee.

.

L-~
. --------~-----. ----------------~1 ·

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLus· YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

..

ca~r;~::v

the renovation of the

amount in favor of the

haattng and plumbing

than 10% of the bid

aforesaid

Metgs

systems
for
the
Portland Community
Center,
Portland,

Co . u n t y

will be received

Proof of Authority of
the offictal or agent

Metgo County, Ohto
by tho
Meigs
County

Commissioners

Bonds

shall

accompanied

Bid

be

by

their oll1ce at the

at

signing the bond.
Bids shall be seated

Courthouse,

and marked as Bid for

Commissioners

Portland Commulllly
NCAA stnpped that record
Center Project and
from the books due to the Thursday, December mailed or delivered
level of competttion, the feat t, 2005 and then at to:
at said office Meigs
County
put Rio Grande on the map _1:15pm
opened and read Commissioners,
and much-needed fund s mto aloud lor the lotlow- Courthouse ,
the school\ coffers.
lng·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
The
followmg
year, Renovations of the Attention of btdders ts
Francis, Oliver and R1o heating and plumb•ng called to all ol the
systems
for
the requirements
con Grande traveled to the Community
Center. tamed m this bid
palaces of college basketball Specifications provid- packet, particularly to
the Federal Labor
to challenge the powers of ed In bid packet
the day Attendance and scor- SpecJitcatlons and Standards Provistons
bid forms may be and
Davls-eacon
tng records fell as the team secured
at the office
Wages, var1ous ansur·
deltghted fans and silenced ol Meigs County ance requirements,
skepttcs by posting a 20-7 Commissioners. various equal opporrecord agamst the likes of Courthouse , tunity provisions, and
Oh1o 45769 the requ1rement for a
Carohna
State, Pomeroy.
North
Phone 740-992-2895. payment bond and
Villanova, Butler and Wake A deposit of 0 dollars performance bond for
Forest
will be required lor 100% of the contract
He was featured in newspa- each set of plans and price No bidder may
withdraw h1s bad with pers around the country, pro- spectllcattons.
Each bid must be '" th~rty (30) days
filed in scores .of magazmes, accompanied
by after the actual date of
tncludmg
Life ,
Look, either a bid bond '" an the opening thereof.
SPORT, and Ttme. and even amount of 100% of the The Me1gs County
bid amount with a Commissioners
was a guest on The Ed surety
satisfactory to
reserve the nght to
Sullivan Show In a game the aforesaid Meigs reJeCt any or all bid&amp;.
agai nst Htllsdale College, C o u n t y Mlck
Davenport,
Meigs
Francts scored I I 3 points, Commissioners or by President ,
cerlllled
check,
C
o
u
n
sull the acknowledged scor- cashiers check, or let- Commissioners t y
mg record
ter ol credit upon a (11) 8, 10,16
Ketderling began covermg
sports as a teena~er and
served as a stnnger for maJor
datlies in the New York metropolitan area Later, he hosted a datly economtc news
and stock market recap show
in Wash111gton and a nationally syndtcated radto show.
He has spent more than lO
years researc hmg, documentmg and writing the story of
Bevo Francis and Rio Grande
College.
He
li ves in
Flemmgton, N.J

For
ANew Home?

TrY the
Classifieds!!

Fashion Bug
2 Days Only

Auction
Syracuse Community Budding
(the old grade school)
Turn at 1he Bank
Watch for stgns!
Fnday, Nov 11th
at 5:30PM
Auctioneer:
Capt. Btlly R. Goble Jr
Middleport, OH 45760

Racine Gun Club
Sunday,
November 13th
12:00
Slug Shoot - Any
G~uge

Bring shells
Everyone Welcome

Fri . &amp; Sat. Nov. 111h &amp; 12th
40% OFF reg. pnced tlems
Excludes "PJA" Items

Extra 40% OFF
Clearance Items

Oh1o R1ver Plaza

446-2009

CRAFT SHOW
Sponsored by the HMC
Employee Activtty Association
'

Sat. Nov. 12th

-

8AM-7PM ,

'

HMC Education &amp;
Confe rence Center (Ground
Floor)
(park tn the rear of the fac1llty,
enter through the ASU
Entrance) A vanety of crafters
wtll be on hand sellmg thetr
products. Open to the public

Admisston is FREE!
J

For more tnfo

p.m.
In•ertlon

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •..

r"-------.,.1 r
\'\'\01 '\{I \II \IS

GtVI:AWAY

I

2 month old pupp1es 112
ROIW81Ier. 1/2 P1t Bull free IO
good home (740)446·8603
or (740)578 i055
46m RCA ProjeCtion TV
on/off sw1tch broken new
circuli bo ard (740)2569220
6week old half blue eyed
Husky/Pit Bull pupple$ Free
to
good
hom e
Call
(740)388·8762
1393

(740)44i ·

Beautiful long ha.red cabco
cat, young adult female,
very sweet personality
(7401441·0145
Female
112 ·Lab
1/2·
Greyhound t t /2 yrs old
needs Room to n.m. to good
Home (304)675·72 17

r

l..osrAND

FOUND

Found Female Choc lab 1n
the PPMS Area 11/8/05
(304) 675-6108 or (3041675-

0586
Found Small brownash red
dog, Nov 7 1st Ave area
Call (740)446-2255
lo st· blackllan Mmtature
Pinscher, 11/8 on State
Route
248
Reward
(740)985· 4149 Marsha or
Tim

~:

r. _...~.~-~--·

Lost Dog Lost at Grimms
Estate Sale Today
La ndmg While male w1th
Ruth Butler Farm
Brown head &amp; ears answers
1t 005 St At 7, Galhpol1s
W1fly Part b1rd·dog potnter,
OH
Fam1l y Pet $500 Rewa rd for 2 5 miles N of Byrd Locks
Sate Return or Info on hiS
where abouts (304 )642 ExqUISite VICtoriSn 1nclud1ng
6043 or locally (304 )458' large V1ct onan dresser w/
1721
carved bust above mmor,
armoire, 3 marble top tabl es
-------brass
twan bed, blanket
Lost· Chocolate lab Horner
Hitl/143
area,
Reward , chest early cherry empire
(740)992 0080 answers to and blanket chests 2 blind
cupboard s pewter cup·
'Toby"
board fme art, croc ks qu1lts
glass, ch 1na , Blenko, linens
YARD SALE
French 3 pc 1111mg room set
~~:::::::~ so fa cha ir S, lamps 6 pc
~
wiCker. p1e safe, freezer
YARD SAl.E·
refrtg, seve ral sets of woOd
GALLIPOLIS
cha1 rs s1gned books, lawn
and garage tools, JD lawn
· - - - - - - · tractor outdoor furmlure, 2
Yard sale Nov 10, 11 , 12
lt ft chaars persona l and
Rugs de sk tables toys ,
household mtsc -too much
clothes, etc Burnett Rd
Sportsman 48
to list
Katchen, laundry and office
Garage sale 638 Jay Onve ttems F1ve days Wed (Nov
Fra-Sun Bam·2pm Much 9)·Sun 9am to 4pm
more stuff Baby stuff &amp; baby
1044
accessories brand name Thursday-Saturday
k1ds
ctotl1 es
womens KrauSs -Beck Ad Furmture,
~ l et hes lots new wath tags, rehred Longaberger, boys
tools knick knacks crafts, clothes (mlant-3T) &amp; m1sc
Xmas Items Hom e lntenor,
candles toys. etc

All Display: 12 Noon 2

auslne•• Days Prior To

p.m.

Paper

Sunday Display: 1:00

Thursday for sunday•

• All ada must be prepaid•

• Ad11 Should Run 7 Days

1

iii

Now you can hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads
Publication

1:00

• Start Your Ads Wltlt A Keywont • Include Complete
DescriPtion • Inelude A Price • Awold Abbrevlltlont
• Include Phone Number And Addnas When Needed

Successful Ads

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

992-2157

Oead'lfir~
1:00

POLICIES: Ohio V.ll111y Publlahlng riMrv•• th• right to odlt, n~j.ct, or c:anc:elany ad at any time. Error• muat be reported gn the flrat day of
'Trlbune-S.nt•nei-AIIgiater will be ...aponalble lor ng more than the c:oet of the lpiiC:I occupied by th1 errgr and onlw- thellrat 1 neertl~n We ahall not
any loaa or expenM that reault1 from the publle~~tlon or om laalon of an advertlnmenl Correc:Uon will be mede In the flret available edition • Box
•e alway$ confidential • Currant rate card appllll • AU real "tate Mtvartlumanta are 1ubject to the Fed1ral Fair Housmg Act ol 1968. • Thla n
wanted Ma
atandarda We will not
In violation ol the law

'":::;,,;:!:1

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

rto

WoUJ!

NDW I VAJ{)~(&lt;STA"D
.,Ut\~ 'fo~ Nf;V~ Wi\NTE:D 1o
t-•1'6" vp YOilll. Sf:A-r.' l:tJZE:trr
"'~w r!Zc:M
f-lt;(Zt;"!

)fotsiROCilON

L.-.ilolllioiiilli.iili-_.J

Antiques ............................ ........................ 530
Apartments lor Rent ........... ...................... 440
Auction and Flea Market............................ 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ........................, 760
Auto Repair............................. ...................770
Autos lor Sale..... ...................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale .........................., 750
Building Supplies .......... ................, ......... 550
Business and Buildings ........................... , 340
Business Opportunity .............................. 210
Business Training .................... ................. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards ol Thanks .................... .. .................010
Child/Elderly Care .........,..........................,. t90
Electrlcat/Relrlgeratlon ................. ............ 1140
Equipment lor Rent............... ....................480
Excavating .......... ...................................... 830
Farm Equlpmenl.. ................................... .... 610
Farms lor Rent...................... .....................430
Fermolor Sate .... ...................... ................ 330
For Lease....... .......... ...... .... ....................490
For Sate ......................................................585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables.............. ..... ........... 580
Furnished Rooms.... ...............................450
General Hauling . ....................., .................. 850
Giveaway.....................................................040
Happy Ads .................................................050
Hay &amp; Grain .................... ..... ......................640
Help Wanted ................. .............................. 110
Home tmprovements ...................................8t0
Homes lor Sale ....................................... 3t0
Household Goods ........... .... ................... 5t0
Houses lor Rent .................. .....................4t0
In Memoriam ........... .................................020

Great yard Sale at the
Grate's 1 112 m1le south of
Tuppers Plai nS on Rt 7
Fnday 11th and Saturday
12th
Huge Garage Sale on Sal
12th Bashan Rd , Racine
Tons of baby clothes hke
new and many other baby
supplies Cloth1ng for boys·
gtrls and adull1emales
Yard &amp; bake sale· Thur &amp;

1
.

·.N·S·T·A·LL·E·R···S·E·!!Y·I·CE_.J.

money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304·882-2645
Are you mterested Jn a
rewarding position? PAIS as
currently accepting applies·
t10ns lor part·t• me dtrecl care
postbons the Mason County,
WVareas providing resadenltal/commumty sk1\1 tra1nlng
wath 1ndlvtdua\s with MAIOD
Htgh sc hool diploma or GED
requ1red
No expenence
necessary Cnm1na1 back·
ground check reqwed
Must have reliable trans·

r

6

TECHNICIAN
For alarm systems closed
circuit TV , phone systems
and Home Automation Must
be honest, dependable and
able to work tJnsuperv•sed
Prevtous
tram 1ng
or
Experience an low voltage
wlnng , lndustraal malnle·
nance IS a plus Will tra•n the
Right candtdate
Respond wlth resume 10
CONSOLIDATED
SECURITY SERVICES,
INC
240 UPPER RIVER AD
GALLIPOLIS OHIO

~11""------,

HEI.P WANIED

L._ _ _ _ _ _ _

Tollo

ASSisted hv tng ca re •n my
home fo r Elderly Pnvate
roo m bath 3 hot rpeals
(740)388 0118
-Com
_ p_u-le-r- Ae_p_a_tr_a_n_d

,. ~ ~~~~::~::.~J.·~Ei~~.

NRA
Recruiters Needed!
Help renew m emberships
of past and present NRA
members and work wit h
other rep utable Pqjatical
organazaflans
We offer
•C omplet e trainin g
•Up to $81hour
•An add111ona\ $1/hour With
attendance bonus
•Weekly pay/bonus
•Paad vacat1ons
• p ro1esstona 1work
environment

1·877-463-6247 ext 2311

W•ndows
Cerl1f1ed
2395

2 bedroom &amp; bath upstairs
kitchen, dm1ngroom 11vm·
groom &amp; bath downstairs on
large lot 328 Mulberry Ave
Pomeroy, call before 9pm
pr1ced
(740)367 0861
under $15 000

Virus Removal
Phone#740·992·

Street Racme on 3 lots
new carpet throughout new
roof new detached 28K32
gara ge neat well mam
tamed home. (740)949 40 19
4BA
Foreclosure
only Newly re modeled home 1n
$14 900 For liStlrtQS call PI Pleasan t 3 4 bedroom
800 39 1 5228 ext F254
central aar full basement
hardwood tloors detached
Attention!
Local company offenng "NO garage IBrge covered polio
DOWN PAYMENT ' pro a fenceo backyard close to
schools $139 500 For more
grams for you to buy your
•nformatlon and/or v1ewmg
home 1nste ad of rent.ng
(740)709· I 382
' 100% flnanc mg
• Less than pertect cred 1t No Down Payment Less
accept ed
than perfect cre dit 0 K Fave
' Payment cotJid be the m1nu tes
from
Holzer
same as rent
Hospital Three Bedrooms
Mortgage
Locators
One Balh Leve l lot Newly
(740)367·0000
remodeled 740 416·3130

v

11'\\'\11\l

Are you !Ired of your old
exastlng JOb? Time to make a
New Haven Hts, Thu rs Nov change?
Experienced
10th 9-5, nice oak secre CosmetologlsVNalf
Tech
ta ry 3 very mce writang needed
Great locataon ,
desk, tots d1shes, stone jars great staff, $350 stgn on
8 gun s b1g anvil, qUills bonus L1m1ted Ttme Only
round oak tables old tools &amp; Please send resumes 10
WA~

~

10 BUY

Jun~

Cars (304)773·

5004
1\ll'll),\11\1
..,, I~\ H I "'

110

1.

HiuWANIID

Mobile Home Repair...................................860
Mobile Homes lor Renl ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sate.,............................32D
Money to Loan ........................... ..... ......... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .........................740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570

LEARN
TO
DRIVE

Personals ............... ....................... .......... 005

EXPERIENCE NECESSMIY
• FULL TI I.I E CLASSES
" COL TRAINING
' FINANCING AVAilABLE
'JOB PlACEMENT
' ENAOLtiNO NCI't\'

• NO

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR·TRAILER
T~INING CENTERS

WYTHEVILLE VA

1-800-334-1203
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood 11ema
To$480/wk
Matenals prov1ded
Free tnforma!IOn pkg 24Hr
801 428·4649

Or email to
pberkerO mydaltylrf·
bune.com
Envelope stuflers
tarn
money workmg at home
Call 24 hr ' tor detailS 972·
504·2690
Full T1me Bookkeeper and
ParVFull Time labor and
sales
Agncult ure back·
ground a pl us Send resume
to PO Box 73 Chester,
Ohio 45720
Help Wantad
Equipment
Defwary Person CDL Class
A Required Expenence 1n
heavy ~ulpment ma1ntence
a Plus Call Gheen Rentals
at 740·992- 1438

Syracuse JBA attached dbl
garage new root 7acre
blOCk
Utili ty
bUIIdiOg
$85,000 (740)949 1082 or
(7 40)41 6·2786

m ob ~e
1987
Oakwood
home lor sale Excellent
cond 111on exceltent loca110n
(Galli pOl iS) New lntenor
throughout (740)645 1968

1989 14 w70 2 3 bedroom
heal pump porch must be
moved $11,000 (740)388·
8375 after 7pm

Sales Manager

I buy

_

1976 12x60 2 bedroom 1
bath
In very good cond1
!ton
Buyer must move
Must se ll $6 500 lnteresled
please call (304 )675·5422
leave message

AVON I All Areas! To Buy or
Absolule Top Dollar U S Sell
Sh~rtey Spears 304·
Stive r and Gold Co1 ns, 675·1 429
Prootsels Gold Rings, Pre·
1935
US
Currency Care Gwer to help w1t h
Gentleman
Soh t a~re Diamonds· M T S Elderly
Com Shop, 1 5 ~ Second (304)675-4409
Avenue, Gall1 polas, 740-446·
1stract 1rcu atlon
2842
BuYing black walnuts 12e
per pound attar hullmg, call
(740)698 -6060 buy1ng until
Nov ~ 5th

7 86
6 -_
2_
_74_0_·4_1 ~
_ _ _ __

IURSALE

Da lly Tribune , PO Box 469
Gallipoli s OH 4563i

esponsabahtes anclud
ecru1t1ng and tratnlng o
amers customer serv1c
nd meeting sales goals I
ou have a positive atti
ude are a self-starter.
nd a team player,
uld like to talk to you
us! be dependable a
ave reliable transports
10n Pos1t1on offers al
ompany benefitS 1nclud
ng lleallh, dental, vision
ndllfe Insura nce. 401k
a•d vacation, and person
I days Please sen
esume to·
Paul Barker
ClrculaUon Manager
Ohio Valley Publl•hlng
825 Third Ave
Galllpolla, Ohlo 45e31

-------Syracuse 3 Br auached
Dbl Garage New roof on 7
acre Block ut1h!1es butldlng
$85 00
740 949 1082 or

MOBILE HOMffi

~lo;!Js~m:::o;::re~~---., CLA 8011. 57~, cia Galhpolls

r

For SAle 2 Bd 1 112 Bath.
large hvmg room/fireplace
With full basement house 1
car garage on 1 1/2 acres
By AppJ only Ca ll 740 985
4166
In OlJiet country
neighborhood

3 bedroom 2 bath Vme

Beauttful Fully Custom12ed
Georges Portable Sawm1ll Renovated
38 A 1·Bath
don't haul your Logs to !he Home wi t -acre m Pomt
M1fl just cal f 304·675·1957
Pleasant Will Be Open tor
1ewtng Fn tllh &amp; Sat 121 h
MagiC Years Day Care
10.am-5pm
Th1s Home has
Preschool 7 30 5 30
to
any
Amemlaes
to hsl here
"Pun1ng Children F1rst"
Ages 2· 12 State Licensed It 1s reasonable pnced
Link Approved Excellent $59 900 for a llmtled t1me
Must
see
lo
Skills Spaces available for on ly
Apprec1ate Take 24th St by
all ages (304)675·5847
Wendy s to Mon roe Ave
W1ll do Adult care m my Follow the sagns to 2309
Home Alzhe•mer s welcome _M_on_ro_e_A_"".:_____
1304)675 6781

1,~--Pr-.PulAsANrioiiliiiiiill;.,,.l

Miscellaneous Merchandise..................•540

Pets lor Sale .......,, ............................ ....... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ............. .................... 820
Professional Services ............................... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ........................ ..... 180
Real Estate Wanted ............................. ...... 360
Sehoole Instruction............... .................. 150
Saad , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ..'....... .................... 650
Situations Wanted ................................ ...... 120
Spscelor Rent ............................................ 460
Sporting Goods........... .......... ................. 520
SUV'olor Sale...... ................. ................... 720
Trucks lor Sete ................................... .... 715
Upholstery .............................. ...... .... ..... 870
Vans For Sate ..................... ..........-. .........730
Wanted to Buy .............................................090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies., ............... 620
Wanted To Do ...........,....... ....... .... .......... 180
Wanted to Rent .......................................470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla ....................................072
Yard Sale·Pomeroy/Mtddle..... .... ........... 074
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleasant .......................... 076

WA~

180

Fn Nov 10th &amp; 11th, lrom
9am ? at the Long Bottom
Community Buatdlng
portatiOn Hourly rate startn;;;;;_~:.,;;;~;;;:;_--, 1ng at $7·$8 00/hour Cal11
YARD SA!.£(304)373 1011

Insurance ...... ............ ............................ ..... . 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment . ...................660

Livestock........................... .........................630
Loot and Found .......................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ........................................... 350
Miscellaneous............................ ................ t 70

MISU:U.ANEOUS I

WANTED
Responstble
party to take on small
monthly payments on H1gh
Oefm1t10n B1g Screen TV 1
800·398·3970

"'1111""------, ,..,,...______,IIllO

112 Pleasant Street 3·
Bedrooms
1 1/2 Baths
New Central/Air Cond New
Gas Budgel
W1Mows
$65/month (304)675 4034

House for Sale 3 bedroom
fu ll stze dry basement
Great Neighborhood co rner
lot nght 1n tow n Take a look,
100 1 Kenny Ct (raght bel1•nd
Jr H1 gh School) Shown by
Accredll!!d Membe r Acc.redllmg 3 Bedroom 2 Bath w1th
Appt $84 ,500 (304)675·
Council lor lndepenOenl COIIOQOI Fireplace 1n R•o Grande 8
3123 or (304)675 0032
and Sc~la 127&lt;46
ac res m)l 40x60 barn
170
$125000 (740)7091166
Galllpoll1 Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayr 740 446 -4367
1·800·2 14·0452
WWW gallopo!ISCDf!!o!lrCOIIege com

1

1110 IIELP WAN'IED 11110 HELP WANJFJ)

.......

St.'HOOL."

150

ur

PoJ:gY~~ I~~-n·E·,•,.·u·.n·t·wa-y·1·o·.·.,.lr~ ~-

Large Yard Sale 1sf t1me
Addison behind gas station
2004 300EX Guns. baby
1tems,
exerc1se
equip,
house, etc Fn Sat

I r..1.0_....~.JI .oSA.~.~'.;....... "'1·0--·~-R-0~.,~.~--

r.=:--::-----,

r

e

HiuWANtliD

·Work @ home Earn $450·
$1 500 monlhly part t•me
$2 000·$4,500 lull \1me
www Our Answer com

t:::::------.,
r7U

Announcemant ............................................ 030

solvent bank in the
amount of not less

Or Fax To

446-3008

O{ftee 11o~~
HOW TO WRITE AN AD

lS.egtster

Sentinel

(74o&gt; 446-2342 (740) 992-21ss (304) 675-~ 333

iP-----------.::O::.:r..;.F,;,;;ax To

4x4's For Sale ..............................................725
NOTICE 'ro CON:
TRACTORS
Seated proposals lor

acrtbune

To Place

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until
1:00
pm,

f

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CLASSIFIED

minority report card
Bv MICHAEL MAROT

www.mydailysentlnel.com

1996 Oakwood 14x70 2
bedroom 2 bath very c lean
(740)388 85 13 or (740)38a
8017 (evenmg s)

Telephone
mterv1ewer
excellent computer &amp; com·
munlca!lon Skills tull t1me
no benuflts $10 per hour
after 4 weeks tra1nlng $8
per t'lour dunng tra 1mng m
Pomeroy start lmmedta tely,
call Mark 800-.556 3583
Medl Home Health Agency,
Inc 1s seeking full·hme and
part·t•me
RNs 1n the
Galhpo!is, OH area Must be
hcensed tn both Oh1 o, and
West Vtrgm1a We offer a
competitive salary and ben·
eh1 package for fullt1me
employees E 0 E Pl e~se
send resume to 352 Second
Avenue, Gat11pohs
OH
4563 1 Attn Vtckl Chadwtck

WANTEO

1':1~~;:~~'181

II

Pos1 !10ns avatl·

able
to asstst
1nd•v1duals
w1th mental
retardation
at
two group homes tn B•dwell
1) 40hrs 3-11p Sun, 3 30·
11p M!Tu!WfTh
2) 95hrs Ba-Sp Sun 2 10

~:~~~=~~~

·--iiiiiiiiiiiiil--"

M!Tu/W

TURNED DOWN ON
3) 35hrs 11 p 8 30a ThfF SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
Sat 7p 9a Sun
No Fee Unles s We W1nt
4) 35hrs 3 30·9 30p Th 3
1-888 582·3345
10p F 9a 6p Sat 9a·8p Sun
1{1 \I I " I\ II
High school dlplomaiGED,
Med1 Home Health Agency
vaiiO dr1ver s license and ~r,
10:--~----,
Inc IS seeking a PAN RN In
three years good drlvang
Ho~n·~
t he Jackson County WV
expenence
reqwred
area Must be licensed 1n
!i7 25/hr Pre-employment '
West V1rg1n1a We offer a
Drug Testing Send resume 1 acre w•th 2 bedroom single
compeUt1ve salary E 0 E
to
Buckeye Community story home 1n country 116
Please send res ume to 4245
ServJces PO Box 604, F1:andexter RoAd ott
fi
State Route 34 Hurncane,
Jackson OH 45($40 or e- Creek Road (304)576-2247
WV 25526
Alln
Vlck1
mail
to S39 500
ChadWICk
beyecserv 0 yahoo com
Now h1nng full and part ltme Deadline tor applicants 3 bedroom 1 bath lull base·
w/gar
Aac1ne
McCiures Restaurants 1n 11 115105, please spec•fy rnen t
Middleport and Gallipolis p0:s1110n of mlerest Equal Across from Park 57 000
below appr 740·949·1372
Apply betwee n 10·1 0 30am Opportuntty Employer

·--FOI&lt;itiiiiiiSII'A;;l;;,.E;.._.J

JoM

.:::::.:.=:......____

All real e.,e~ate edvenlslng
In thia newapeper Ia
aubjec:t to 11le Federal
FtHr Houaln11 Act of 1968
which makea H lllagalto
adver11u any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlm1natlon ba"d on
race , color, rellglon, aex
tamlllaletarua or Mticnal
origin, or any Intention to
mak• anyauch
prefefenc:e,llmltatlon or
diacrlmlnallcn '
Thla nawaptper will not
knowlnply •cc.•pl
tdver11HIMnttlcr real
"hill which Is In
violation ot thtllaw. Our
, ..de,. tra heraby
lnlcrmld that all
dwelling• Hvartlaed In
thla news~per are
•v•ff•bt• on an equal

":':::o~p:p~ort~u~•:
''Y:•:•~n:•:::~
-:
For sale by owner 3BR
ranch with tO+ acres
Add1son/Chesh1re
large
24.:38 garage 2 full ~athS
$128 500
(740)367-0944
after Spm

2000
Oakwood
14x70
mo011e home, 2 Dedroom, 2
bath very good cond1f1on
vmyl sJdlng, sh.ng le roo f
under skirting total electnc
CiA. $16 000 (7401446 0773- (740)446·9543
2000

Oakwood
mob•le
16x80 vlnyl/sh •ngle, 4
bedroom 2 bath, CIA
(740)245 0001
Must be
moved
~1ome

2002 Clayton only S142 per
month Will deliver (740);385·
4367
Great used 99 Skyline
t6x80 Vtnyi/sh1ngle, 2x6
wells Qla.mour bath Cell
(740)365-9621
New 16 w1de only $190 per
month VInyl S1dlng Shingle
Roof &amp; Delivery (740)385
7671
New 1 6x76 3 bed room/ 2
bath Minutes from Athens
Must sell Move 1n today Call

r

{740)385·2434

P.=-;....~~"""::---,

J..ms &amp;

ACREAGE

9 acres With 2Bx32 barn 5
acres w1tfl 2 tre1ler hook ups
Cell (740)256· 1922

�I

Page B6 • The Daily Sentin.el

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Thursday, November 10, 2005
ALLEY OOP

NEA Cros.sword Puzzle
BRIDGE

Need to sell your home? 2
Late on payments, divorce .

job transler or a death? I
can buy your home, All cash
a11d quick closing

740-416-

'3130.
Itt ' I \I..,

riO

bedroom
apartment
Racine, very nice, clean .
5425 pe r n~on1h plus
depostt, no pets, references
required
740-44 1·011 0,
(740)992-5174

home again.
/Jw nor forgotten Always in our""'""·

i09 Liberty St . pt, Pleasant. 2BR apt 4 renl W/0 hookup,
3 BR, Appliances mcluded
(304)e75-4655 or (304)593-

0909
2 siciry Colonial home 3BR
1BA. $500 mor1th. S500 sec
deposit. No indoor pets.
(740)446-,34(\1.

l
I

water, sewer. trash pet $400
mo.
(740)367·7746,
(740 )367·---,015, (7 40)446·
4734
- -- - - 3 rooms and bath. All utilities
paid . Downstairs. no pets.
S450fmo: 46 Oti ve St
(740)446-3945.

2BR house on Graham
School Rd . $400/month . Beautiful 2·story townhouse
$200Jdeposit. trash/water overloo king Gallipolis City
included (740 )256·6702.
pa1k. 'Kitcllen , OR, LR ,
sl udy. 2 baths. lai.Jndry area
2BR. 1BA. Central Heat Air. Aelerences required. securi furnished.
WID ty deposit, no pets. $900 mo.
Stove
hookup $450/month piLJS Call
(740)446-2325
or
Utilities
References (740)446-442~
require d, No Pets (412)42769 17
BEAUTIFUL
APART ·
AT
BUDGET
MENTS
3 bdrm, I bIh . LA . DR." K .tI ., PRICES AT JACKSON
Util. Am, 2 car garage w/220 ESTATES, 52 Westwood
hookup. Nice front yard . Drive from $ 344 to $ 442 .
Green Twp_ Water &amp; trash Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
included. Kitchen furnisned . 740-446-2568.
Equal
$750 mth pltJS $500 dep. Housing Opportunity
Ret raq. (740)446-Q969,_ _.:__:_c_ _:____
Beech Street, Middleport, 2
3 bedroom brick. full size bedroom ftJrn 1shed apartbasement, large lot. localed ment, deposit &amp; previous
at LeGrande· Blvd. Available rental references, no pets,
12/1/05 . (614)575-1813
(740)992-0 165

Frank,

Children &amp; Grandchildren

HOUSEHOIJ)

1 \1{ \1 .., t 1'1 ' 1 II -.,

GooDS

.\ 11 ' 1 " H ~ !h

r

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675· 7388. For sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers. refrigerators, gas and electric
ranges , air conditioners , and
wringer washers . Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at yoLJr home

~

~~--------'

·------pi

~C;;alli-17:,;4;:.01~;;44;::6:;;-3;:.6~62...- - ,

r

Available Dec. 15th. 3 bedroom house furnished. no
pets-prefer non-smokers.
$775.00 per montl1 plus utilities.

5750.00 deposit.

Telephone 740-992-542 1.
Available Nov_15th: 2 bed-

rqom house', kitchen fur·nished, no Pets-prater non
smokers, $475.00 per mon th
plus utilities, and $450.00
depo sit. Teleph one 740992-5421.
For rent: 2 story home, 3BR,
AJC. $500/month, $500
deposit (740)446·3481 .

Pomeroy 2/3 BA. apl. ,
Naylors Run. W/D hookup
L~ . patio/ya rd. S~R -- Call
Very nice 3+ bed room , 2 740-992·6886
bath, full basemel)l, 2 car
TownhotJse
garage. nice yard. On SR Tara
143 near Harrisonville. $650 Apa rtments. Very Spacious,
monthly plu s utilities. No 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
smokin g, no pf)ts. Deposits Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, PatiO, Start $385/Mo.
required. 742·3033
No Pets. Lease Plus

14"'

MORD .F. HOM~:S
FOR RENT

Security Deposit ReqtJ ired.
(740)367 _7086 _

Twin Rivers Towe r Is accept·
1989 14x70 2-3 bedroom. ing applications for waiting
Rent/$.400- Oepi $500. Ned list tor Hud·subsized, 1· br.
.,credit report. ref. Call alter apartment, call 675·6679
7pm. (740)388·8375.
EHO

Gas Heater"
· (Propane or Natural)
Manual Control $143.95
Aluminum Fiberated Paint
(Great lor Mobile Homes)
5-gal. Bucket $29.95
We now have candy melts
in stock for yo ur
holiday baking
Paint Plus Hardware
675·4084

Auros

t"OH SALE

1993 Cadillac DeVIlle, 4 9VB,
59,000 miles. all
options, leather. new tires,
maroon.
$5,000
firm.
(740)645-0626.
1995 Dodge Caravan, V6 ,
auto. power seals. runs
great
$1 ,8oo
a so.
(740)256- 1652
1996 Stralus, 106,000 miles,
5spd , AIC, runs great,
$1,300 080. (740)2569_03_1_· - - - - - - _
1998 Honda Odyssey van
87K loaded $5,995: 1999
Avenger 68K $4,995; 2000 ,
PlymotJth Breeze $3,895;
1998 Blazer 4x4 $4,995. 3
months/3.000 mile warranty.
·
1989 Newyorker $995: 1996
Salu;n $1,495; 1997 Dodge

~~':;an

$2.395. 01hers m

COOK MOTORS
328 Jackson Pike
1740l446-o1o3
2002 Kia Rio 4Cyl, 4 t:loor,
auto, 35mpg, 85,QOO miles

H~~

Nice 3BR mobile home fo r
rent. S400!dep ., $550/mo.
Need 3 re ferences. Call

nm

Blgll aniiDry

sale, $125 each, (740)7422_1_9_2_ _ _ __:__ _
Miniature Pinchers. 2 mate."
!fe male, bla.ckltan, $300.
Ready 11 110105 . Taking
depOSits. ( 74 o)386·B 124.

-=-----,

rlor;:i$:-;,7;.5·;.00~,

A K J 10 2
• 63

t

16 Winter
. 19 Here ,

!I !l fi :1

"' 7 4 2

Phone

JONES'

Clll r.sm. .

.\drOPiol!lt

y,.. s'"'r

Ill"""""'"' ..1........

..~ '

.00i&lt;n111)

i"liom [. H.,~

ll.\nn HusseH

l.llwd Fmal .

S«rdal)

Riilln LPlllt"" 11
M•llll'

Janel Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

-------\
Ca-Ot~tr

ff.Oiwf

-

(304) 675-2630 ~

~=======
LEWIS
CONCR£71:
CONSTRUCTION

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
~.~~llilfR

~~~w~,

25 Years Experience

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883
POWER WASHING
(Commercial ~ nd Residenti~l)

Mobile Homes, Houses, log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awn ings, Degreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Camp ers, Tractor Trailers.
Dump Trucks, painting or stain ing of your deck
or log home, Aluminum bright~ning.
.
Sp~cial rates to T11Jcking and Dump Truck1ng Compames.

LAWN CARE DIVISION

Ed Dill/owner

(740)992-4100
Chuck Wo·lfei'M2r.l
(740)992-0496

Insured

:;~m;;;.~F~n!~e~E;.s;li;'";a~I&lt;S~
p..u.~l~~:_1::1~~&amp;6~

MANLEY'S
SELf STORAGE

(CommeiCial ~nd Residential)

Mowing, Tr imming, Tre e Trim ming, Aeration, Fertilization ,
Spraying of fence lines, Leaf Rem oval, as well as small
landsCaping Jobs such as planting an d mulching.

BARNEY
NO CHURCH
.NEXT SUNDAY,
PARSON'S ON
VACATION!!

FREE ESTIMATE • CiUARANT£ED LOWEST PRICES

~HOLZER CLINIC

h5
97 Beec treet
,
Middleport, OH

www. holze rclinic.com

THE BORN LOSER

...

lOXIOXIOxlO
992 -~.. 194
or 992·6635

r- OF C.OUI&lt;.SE:. t--101! 11-\E:.'i~

~IJER. &amp;.E\'1

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring'•

WE:.RE:. P..LL 1'\\:JUL\S

11\f\RR.IE:.\?,
R!&gt;--LP\-\ "?

..Jiiddleport's only

!

Self~Storage..

AA~RIFS
· &amp;
..... ~

fJJea[ :Funera[:J--{ome
Dauld il. Deal
Director/licensee In Charge
Charlie Huber, Director
Josh Billings Hssoc.
David, Donna &amp; Brad Deal

WS~tlfE
MAINTENANCE

Reese 5th wh eel hitch slid·
ing 15kw $300. (740)245·
5946 after Spm.

2000 · Dutchman, Class C.
Motor Home. Sleeps 8.
3407
Jackson
·Ave.

~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
94 Dodge truck 2WD, V8.
auto,
$2.100
080. Unconditional lifetime guar(740)256- 1652 or (740)256- antee . Local references fur·
nished . Established 1975 .
1233
Call 24 Hrs. (7401 4464x4
0870, Rogers Baseme·nt
FOR SALE
Waterprooling .

r

fiGCrt:AJUiiT!iil

Chuck Wolfe

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

(740) 992-0496

MEAN ,
" tiKES"'

IMPORTS
Athens
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACT! NG
• Prompt &amp; quality

740·7~2-ll9l

• leave a message

740-949·2217
'"

.'"1

Slze8 5'x10' ·'"H

ii", . ,.to 1..:;g:
gji30•
·...1X
,\I
.'
Hours

MICWS&lt;OPE ,
AND ...

,,...
I

~~

i

· L-~~~~L-~~"'

SEE TJ.IAT SKY ?
Tl-lAT SKY IS .

YOURS!

'(OU.R.E

A BIRD I

SOAR. AS

~11 GH

AS YOU WANT!

7:00AM - 8:00 PM
1114/1 mo. pd

4 yrs of Reliabl e Service
(K eep Yvur Money Lnca l l

G&amp;R SANITAtiON
Bai ley Run Rd ..
Pomero 1 OH

33561

Electrical
Service

• FOR. AlL \'OUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garages

. • Complete
Remodeling

740·992·1611
Stop

&amp;

Compare

FI REWOOD

• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO liCENSE # 38244

CUT &amp; SPLIT
$40A LOAD

WINTER
STOHiGE
OF BOATS,
CA)IIIPERS ETC.
AT THE
MEIGS CO."
FAIRGROUNDS
Nov. 12, 2005
9:00AM- 11:00
For more Info. call

740·985·4372

·Whole Corn $6.351100
·Cracked Corn $7.35/100
·Triumph 12% Sw~t Horse Feed
.
.
$5.50/50
·12% Cattle Feed $7.30/100
·Black Oil Sunflower Seed $13.75
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

SUNSHINE CLUB

e,11r I

"1141NI&lt;.

GOING 10

I=!ND ITS TOO EXPENSIVE.

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

CALL

7 40-949-2038

Ohio 45769

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; PlumtNng
• Roofing &amp; G~o~ttera
• VIny l Siding &amp;Painting
• Pallo 1nd Poro::h Dec:b

We do it all except

furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 wv OJ67:1S
Pomerov, Ohio
25 Years Loca l Ex rlence

w

~
L1NCOLN
.Mi-.cUIIY
Gallipolis, Ohio

1195

1114 IMC Sllllll

F-150 4X4
llUB.IIIIUIIea

bto,V6
18.800 Mlln

7 40-446-9800

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At

"Taking Tile Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Whccl Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

-..'Ill~:

In ll1e year ahead you could develop some
unique 1nvolvemonts !hat might even bring
you before the public. Regardless of ~hat
transpi res. they will serve to enhance your
status and open up many new doors of
opportunity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NO'w'. 22) - Try loman·
age your mcmey today like a tighr-fisred
banker so that your fi:OCtravagan l WhimS
don't· gain th e uppor hand and cause you
to stupidly wash~' funds thai are needed lor
necessities.
SAGITTAR IUS (Nov_ 23 -Dec 21) - Tai5e
care to handle s11uations that intHblt your
wil l with as much tolerance as possible
today. If you're too insistent Ofl doing eve rything your way. others will define you as a
spoiled brat
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - Th1nk
your moves throug h carefully today before
you take act1on so that you don 'l ena up
being the &gt;Jictim ol you r own m1stakes.
Above all . do nat hastily do anythmg Out of
spite or anger.
AQUAR IUS (Jan 20-Feb. t9) - Be opti·
mistic And positive tpday. but make sure
you are bas1ng your hopes on reali St iC
premises . especially where your maler1al
Interests are concerned Be a doer, nor a
dreamer.
PISCES (Feb_20 -March 20) - Make ce r·
ta1n you r m1nd 1s calling all the shots today
and not your emotions. Your goals are h1gh·
ly achievable, but w1ll be thwarted II you Ja il
to use log1c.
ARIES (March 21-April t91 - Be carelul
th at yo u don"! pry too deeply into the affairs
ol a close fr iend -today, even 11 you mean
well. You might diScover or in terpret some·
th1ng uncomfortable you 'd be better off not
io.OOWIIlQ .

SEASONE D HARD

• CARPENTRY

l4G-lii7-0544
74G-l.6 7-05l6

cost of fertlllze~ got you

Scorpion .Tractors

Classlfleds!

LINDER THE

PEANUTS

45771

AstroGraph

Friday, Nov. 11, 2005

Racine, Ohio

WOik

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• F1ee Estimates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley

wisdom
23 Begged

1 Pep
2 Galleon

25 Ms. Novak

cargo
3 Make after
taxes
4 B ad guys
5 Contradict
6 Provide
capital

28 Licorice
herb
30 Vas, a1111e

ol1ar (2 wds.)
31 Caviar,
ootually
32 Playing
marble

-

19 Column

· 46
. tvpe
47
20 Cattle &amp;lalls
22 Bedroom
49
fixlure
51
24 Financial
52
average

Adams

Thln9
Ump s
ahoul
Ms . Luplno
Malh subj.
Curly's
friend

25 Tiny shrimp 53 Not Dam. or
26 Smidgens
Rap.
27 Jumble

7 Happy

29 Plumbing
band

slgha

34 Dupes

8 Modem speed unit

assistant

45 Singer

state

. 36 Helped a .

9 Decoy
·
crook
I 0 TVA supply 39 Agllaled
14 Mouse
state
43 Pals1\ghtly
catcher

35 SUs llghl

37 Laptops
38 Cambodia
neig~bor

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CelebHI'( C1pner cryptograms are creared lmm !Jjotaoons try famous peaple:pastand present.
EBch te~er tn lrtoe Clpl".er stands !or anolher.

Today"s clue: Requals M

•• p

ATZ ' C

CXLEL

VTPC

TZG

CXEJV

ELJKLZPZV
ZLV

CJ

CXL

KTECI

JZ

J' ENLTZo . ··

OLERPC

VLC
YETZG

CXL

ZLV

CEWRKLCLE

EWMMPZO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The meeting of two eternities, the past and future
... is prec1sely the presen1 moment."' - Henry Dav td Thoreau

WOlD
GAMl

0 lour
Re&lt;!l·~c,;c
io ....-

y.;

le"e rt o! ~~.

Jcramb led wc rd 1 bto·
i:;nm foJ r 5 im DI~ word$

By Bernice Bede Oaol

29670 Bashan Road

BA UM LUMBER

Shop

L.DOI&lt;.ED

Hill's Self
Storage

on

SAVINGS

T

liT JENNY'
HAIR

Gene Arms/Own er·

Operalor 740-992.3174
"'Wt!ekly Tr1,1sh Service

,

2673.

£.
Owner

I Cornerstone

F 250 Ford truck.
$350.00.
Also, 1991 Am racing wheels. Fits Ford
Bonneville $300.00. 740· Mu stang GT $200 like new.
992·3457 .
(740)446-2815 or (740)446-

WHI'.Tf...Y/1,

Professional

Affordable Services
(304) 675-6000
1401· Kanawha St.
Pt. Pleasant

Ea st
All pass

At the bridge table, you sometimes have
to gambl~. hoping partner can ~ome
through with the necessary cards. When
you are disappointed, you must grin and
bear it, happy thai you took your only
cnance. But when partner for once has
the required values, you can smi le happi·
ly to you rself
_
In this deal, you are sitting West Against
th ree no-tr ump, you lead the heart jack:
two; three, king. Declarer cashE!s the ace
and king of clubs, ·then leads a low dia·
mond from his hand. How would you plan
the defense? ·
North has · a routine raise ~o three notrump.
East's heart three at trick one sholJid
deny anything lJSeful in hear-ts. (With
honor-doubleton , East should throw hiS
court card onto the table as '.twere a care·
less ·trifle.) So, 1f South started With the
top three heart honors and he gets. into
the dummy, he will have nine tr iCks: three
hearts, one diamond and five clubs.
The re isn't a moment to lose You must
tiope that partner holds strong spades
Rush in with Your diamond ace and cash
the spade ace, paying no attenlion to
partner's two. He cannot afford to signal
with a higher card. Next , lead your
remaining spade and watch partner take
tt1ree more tricks in the suit.
Doisneau continued by claimmg : "You
have to pay for it (chance) and.you have
10 pay for it with your life, spending a lot
of time; you pay for it with time, not the
wasting of time but the spending of time.· ·
But time le arning is surely wel l-spent.

G

"FAMILY I)WNED"

• Caring •

DOWN

44 Round lent

buy:

Owner: Jeff Stelllem

~•Jl!ll!

to Pierre
21 Gore and
Capone

Frenc h photog rapher Rober! Doisnea u
wrote , "Chance IS the one thing you can 't

........-..c.~.._,.
· -.r~~.-y

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

HE"4MJr~
*Heating &amp; Cooling

David Lewis
740·992-6971

I&gt;ON'T WO~~y ···IT'S WITtiiN
I viAL'(.ING DISTANCE.

E3 t::'l

J:!Of/2 "MON~

:1NT'

With one chance,
shoot for it

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Point Pleasant, WV

1701 jefferson 81\/d.

.~orlh

Pas~

offender

56 Water vapor
15 Allevlaled
57 Bordered
17 Mldwesl

33 RN

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stunip Grinding
Bucket Truck

Co-OY~r

West

Opening lead : ¥ J

Tree Service

" Wh ere Qualily,O,mpassitm Alld Integrity Cvmt' TOgtlht,."

(740) 992-5232
SxlO, IOxlO,
IOx 15, l Ox20,
10x30

Vulnerable : Neither
Snuth
1 f\T

mo.

22 Folk

Dealer: South

NOT SU RE?CALL TODAY!

In white

16 Unnumbered ·55 Serious

olo A K

· Which way i~ you r nc~l egg going')

Crow-Hussell
_Funeral Home, Inc.

Storage

198~

(740)446-3601 or (7 40)441· ~::;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,....;~ Shusuie Dog
$100.00.
5899.
rE1o
HOUSioJ--IOLD
House trained . Jack Russe ll 02 Dodge Dually 1-ton
extended
cab,
4x4,
1
AI'AR1111ENTS
GooDS .
•
Cummins Turbo diesel,
21,000 miles, excellent con·
~
R ENT
•
i70
MUSICAL
dition, garage kept. 525,000
'Close out on Bal of Furn at
INSTRUMFNI'S
1 and 2 bedroom apart· Mollohans,
200
Clark
ments, turn1shed and unfur· Chapel Rd . (740)388-0173. Baldwin
studio
plano,
nlshed, security depo s.it
recently tun ed
$1,095:
requ1red , no pets. 740-992· CoUch and l oveseat for Rhodes 73 stage piano: suit·
Sale . Recltners in both
221B
case $295. Good condition.
1993 Plymouth Voyager, 7
pieces. Blue Plaid, made by
(740 )44 1-13953
passenger
van .
Good
1 BA Apartment Furnished England. lass th,c;ln 3 years
shape , 25 mpg, $2,000
leave message (304)675- ol d. bought a1 Big Sandy for
OBO. (740 )441-1417 after
4975
$1 .BOO. Excellent cond•tion
5pm.
Selling for $800. (304)882·
1BR n1cely furn1shed apt. 3570 after 5PM
Quiet area, suitablo for 1
2000 Grande Caravan V6,
adull.
prl'w'ate
dnveway Used washers &amp; dryers $80
rear heat and a1r, child
w/c arport,
new
WtD. and up Gas stove $50 .
seats, 69,000 limes. Sell tor
(740)446-4782
(740)245-5946 aher 5pm.
"payoff. (740)379·2723.

r"--------piI·, .

1900 EASTERN AYE. • CAU.lf'Ol.IS,

fM

i

Mobi le home spaces· in
Country Mobile Home Park.
{740)385-4019.

"

1974 Ford Ranger pick·up .
$6DCI as Is (304 )675· 7388
1_

I~B.Io·ck·_·b·r·ci.k.-seiiwiieir

Approx . 1600 sq. ft . each. ,
or 2 betns. Lease price
negoliable to encourage
new
bus1ness.
Call
(740)446-4425 or (740)4463936.

A Ag

54 -Woman

cheek

South
Ali B 7 6 3

condition, 71,000 miles, 2 aos
Harley
Davidson
18121mpg, $14,000 OBQ. Electra Glide, S17,000. Call
(304)288-3335
{740)446-6389.

2 bedroom, $275 month, Very nice. new 2 BA apt.
$100 deposit, water Includ- w/atl:ached garage. Deposit
19B5 Ford truck F150 6
ed, no pets. (740)367·0 102
&amp; ref. required. (7 40)446 - r~~--::~~~-.., cyli nd er, automatic"," good
body, runs . $900. {740)4468UIWING
3 bedroom mobile home in 2801.
9742
~B---~------~
s~
the Shade area. Water.
sewer, trash included, $325
•p'!'ip.epl
s. 1993 GMC Truck heavy half
a month plus deposit. No
4 wheel drive 4,3 V6 auto·
windows, lintels, etc. Claude matic transmiSSIOn. Runs
pets a llOwed . (740)38 5·
Downtown Office Space- 5 Winters , Rio Grand e, OH e)(cellent, tranny rebu ilt,
4019.
room suite $650/mo; 1 room ,c:Zaii-117.:.;4;:0:,:·2.:.;4;:
5-;:5~12~1~---., motor has low miles, ducfl
38drms,2 Bath 517 Burdette off1ce- $225/mo. ; 2 room
e)(haust, toolbox. Will sale
Prm
· Street All electric, deposit. suite $250/mo. Secu rity
tor $3,800 or best after in
and reference required No deposit required . You pay ~---FOiiiRiiSiiAiiLEiio-pl
cash . Ca ll (740)441-9378
Pets (304)675-5402
utilities. All spaces very nipe.
leave message.
Elevator. Call (740)446·3644 CKC Lab puppies Chocolate _ _ _ _:__ _ __
Mobile Home tor Rent
lor appointment
&amp; black. Vet checked, shots, 90 S·10 ext-cab. 4 wheel
Lo cated
in
Mason,
wo rmed,
$200
OBO. drive. automatic transmis·
$375/mo, $375! deposit. No
For Lease: Office or retail (740)379-2697.
sion, 4.3, tool box $1,300
outside pets. References
spaces in very good condi· - - - - -- - - - (304)576-2753
required Call (304)675-3423 tion . Downtown Gallipolis. Jack Russell puppies for ' - - - ' - - - - - - - -

r

East

t Ai 2
... 9 6 j

Middleport, OH 45760

Gold's Gym weight machine,
";;:::;====~
never been used. P.aid $500, $3,250 (3040675-1192
wi ll sell for $300. Call 2004 Toyota Corona ex_cerMoroRCYCI.lW
(740)446·6757.
lent condition 25,500 m1les,
WHEFLERS
4
39mpg, $12,500 (304 )882jET
3466 or {304)773-56B4
AERATION MOTORS
1977 650 Special Yamaha,
Repaired, New &amp; AebtJill In 71 Dodge Dart Swinger, $800, {304)675·3388
Stock. Call Ron Evans,- 1- new Tires&amp;Brakes, runs - - - - - - - - great, excellent condition 1995 Honda Four Trax 200
800-537-9528 .
bee Garage kept $3,600 type II "reverse 1 ,000.
(740)245-5946 after 5pm.
(304)773·5 182
Mixed Fire Wood $50 Pick
Up load . Delivered Local 85 Chevy .Cavalie r for sale 200 1 Suzuki Katana, Yoshi
exhaust, new high perform(304)675-5521 or (304)593· (304)675-1506
ance EVC clutch &amp; springs
5862
85 Mercury MarqLJis, 1- w/pr o friction disc, black,
Na scar Bedroom Decor, owner, light blue w/white 12 ,000 miles, recently servPillow, Sheets, Bedspre ad, vinyl to p. approx. 80,000 iced, garage kept, HJC hel·
Curtains , Wall Plaques, miles $700 (304)675-3537
mel w/tinted viso r, ·s3,000
Night st ar;~d ,
Bean ·bag &amp;
93 Toyota Camry $BOO. Cars 080 or trade for 4 wheeler,
Lamp (304)675-5258
from $500. listing 800.391-- 740"508 -06 50
New am:l Used Furnaces .. 5227 Ext . C548.
2002 HO Soft-tail Deuce.
Installation
available.
z.
Alot
of elCtras. $15,000 firm ..
95 M on t e C ar Io
24 , L
(740)441 -2667.
.1
lk
130000m
"les
AJC
PW
PL,
ow
mles,
I e new, mus1
'--'------=:::1
·
·.
' . '
' see.
(740)446·2B15,
NEW AND USED STEEL keyless entry, tilt, cru1se, CD (
)
_
_
740 446 2673
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar player, look s good, runs -----::----:c--c:
For
Concrete,
Angle, great, $3,000, OBO, 740- 2003 Harley Davidson 100
Chian'ne l, Flat Bar, Steel 508·0650
Anniversary Road King.
Grating
Fo r
Drains,
3000 miles. $7,000 wortll of
Ford
E)(plorer
Eddie
97
Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
El(tra Chrome. $16,000,
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Bauer Edition $3,800 . 94 call :
740-992-6520,
Ford
Taurus
69
.0QO
miles.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
between
9:0().5:00.
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed 95 Ford Taurus 170,000
ThUrsday,
Saturday
&amp; miles $795 each (304)675- 2003 Suzuki 4WO Vinson
5B15 or (304)593-5354
500 ATV with 34 miles.
Sunday. (740)446--7300
$4900.
CARM IC HAEL
TRUCKS
SPAS SPAS SPAS
EQUIPMENT.
(740 )446·
H&gt;RSALE
Over 30 In Stock
24 12
RATLIFf POOL CENTER
(740)446-6579
01 green Ford F150XLT 4dr, 2004
Herita ge
Softail,
1-B00-694-6997
auto, 5.4L , V8 , bedcover, 13,000 mile. $16,500, call :
www.bulltrOgspas.com
6CD player, sunroof, good 740-992-6520, 9:()()."5:00.

-----=--'---Vent-Free, 3-Piaque

strong

\Vest
¥ J i0 9 ~ 4

Box 189

"-oiioioiiiiiiiiii___

ext

MONTY

42 Overhead
railways
43 Texllle
colorer
46 Be firm
48 Look s at
lhe books
50 Teahouse
mat

15 Double-

... QJIOB:J

and Financial Services

f7•
I

Newly remodeled t10use in
Gallipolis,
$495fmontll
Brand new 2BR hOuse in
Gallip olis ,
$495/montll
{740)441- 1184: {740)4 41- Pleasant Valley Apartment
0194.
Are now taKing Applications
for 2BR, 3BA &amp; 4BR.,
Nice 2 bed room duplelC,
Ap plica tions are
taken
.near Harrisonville. $425 Monday lhru Friday, from
montllly plus utilities. No 9:00 A.M.-4 PM. Office is
smOking, no pets. Deposits
Located at 1151 Evergreen
required . 742-3033
Drive Point Pleasant, wv
Stop rent1ng Buy 4 bedroom Phone No_ Is (304)675·
foreclosure $15,000. For list- 5B06. E.H.O
ings 800-391-5228
1709.

Rocky Hupp Insurance

UNDI'S PilliNG

1990 Buick Reatta, excellent
condition, 63,000 miles,
$7.000. (304)675-3388

I

11 10·05

t KQ

Let me :k 1' fer Y'~u'

41 Prevail

lois
' 6 Legend
11 Goddess
of peace
12 Mover's
rental
(hyph .)
13 Extremely

• J 10 5 4

Remington 50 cal. in line j110
muzzle lOader with scope. 1

MEMLliANOOE .
Furnished 3 rooms &amp; bath. 6 rooms &amp; bath, stove. downstairS, suitable for 1 16FT Trailer Dua1AI(Jestlt1ed
refrlg . $400fmo
No pets. person, 919 Second Ave.
Rece nlly remodeled . 644 . $295/mo. utilities pBid and licensed SS50 firm
(304)675·1 165
Robe r!
Second Ave. (740)446-0332 (740)446-3945 .
Rlmmey
Bam-5pm.
Furn1shed upstairs. 3 rooms
Anention!
&amp; bath. Clean, ref. &amp; dep. 8' Valley poo llable, one
Local company otlering "NO required . No pats. (740)446- piece slate, $700, {304)675·
3388
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- 1519.
grams for you to buy your
F1reWood for safe. Seasoned
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· hard wood. Pickup $40/load,
home instead of-renting
room apartments .at Village deli'w'ery $60/most areas .
• 100% financing
·and
Riverside Call{740)388-8738.
• less than pertect credit Manor
Apartments in Middlepo rt.
accepted
• Payment cou iQ be the From $295·$444. Call 740· Firewood 1or sale. Seasoned
992·5064. Equal HOUSing oak · &amp; nickory. (740)245same as rent.
9162.
Mortgage
Locators . Opportu nities.
NEW ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSE!APTS
NOW LEASING!
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp; ·
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABlE
• ALL ELECTRIC
·cENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
·sTOVE. REF..
•otSHWASHEA
•GARBAGE DISPOSAL
·wiND BLINDS
'CEILING FANS
' WATER . SEWAGE , &amp;
"TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)682-30, 7

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

(;ooui;

Brand new 2BA apt . in
Gallipolis, $450./month
2BR apt SA 160 past Holzer 1920 Hoosier Cupboard ,
hospital, $375/moritn
AntiqtJe Server, BuHet, sevother Antique items
eral
3bdrm-, .5 batll home, cl ose 2BA
apt
Bidwell.
to hospital off Jackson Pike. $400/month. (740)441· 11 84: (304)576-2597
$600 mo. rent. $600 sec. (740)441·0194.
Buy or
sell. Riverine
dept· yolJ pay utilities. C_O_N:_V_E_N_IE_N_T_t:_V_ L_
O_C_
AT
-AntiqtJes , 1124 Easl Main
References required . Call ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
on SR. 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
( 740 &gt;446 · 3644 for applica· Townhouse · apartments, 992-2526. Russ Moo re.
lion
and/or small houses FOR owner.
4·5 bedroom, 2 112 bath, RENT. Call (740)44 1-1 t 11
ML'K.'Ili.ANIXJUS
hardwood floors, $600/mo. for application &amp; information.

(740)367-0000

1 Like city

¥ AKQ

Butcher lambs. Available
November 14th. $3 per lb.
hanglilg weight plus butcher
used Furniture Store, 130 cost.
(740)44 1-9B I4 or
Bulaville Pike. Appliances , (740)441·55()7.
couches, dinettes, chests,
Registered Angus bulls and
bunkbeds. grave markers.
nailers, 40 years of A .1.
(740)446·4782, Gallipolis.
breeding . Slale Run Farm,
~O:.iH~H.;;r;;s-,;;1~1~·3,;,,,;,M.;;-S;;·- - - , www . sla teru nfarm. com
SPORTING
(740J2e6-5395.

r

North
4 Qj 4
• 76 2

Ta~e

Arabian mare wilh tack. Call
between
5pm-9pm.
(740)388-9841

3 bedroom house. Jackson
Pike, close lo llosp1tal.
$675/mo, security deposit
required . (740)446·4051 .

It's a steal! (740)446-7425.

Gll-

Phillip
Alder

9/12/37 - 11/10/04

H tears could build a stairway,
and memories a lane,
1·d walk right up to Heaven and bring you

per month plus deposit, utilities. plus references, Th1rd
Street.
Racine .
Oh10.
{740)247-4292

InK R ENT

ACROSS , 40 Lesage hero

In loving memory
My Wire and Our JVIUUler
Lora Mae Imboden

2 bedroom apartment. $295

HousES

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentinel.com

GARFIELD
1-r•s fOOOH
MUJ.IWI!I:SI
COMI:SMPGKI 1"0 fAL..K WITH
A rJA~
COMI:SMPGKI
PL..ANNJ:R UP
MUJ.IWEE!
YOUR NOSI:S

TAURU S (Apri l 20-May 20) - It could
re lurn to haunt you down the line it yo~ rec·
ommend to a lriend today a person who se
bus iness elhics are ac tually unknown 10
you . Endorse "'Only those people yolJ are
sure about .
GEMINI (May 2 1-J une 20) - There's a
chance you cou ld be far too easi ly 1nflu·
anced by others toda y lor your own good
Unfortu nately. you could follow sam~
unw1se adv 1ce and lind yourselt 1n deep
trouble.
·CANCER (JI.Jne 21- July 22 ) - A poor iltli·
tude toward your work today could ca usa
you nat only to perform far below )lour
standards. but may cause problems tor
your co-workers as well. Turn your h.ead
around
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) - Tread wearil)l
t&lt;;Kiay regarding ventures which are h1ghly
speculative . II you re not caretul . you m1ght
and up tak1ng a large r1sk on some thi ng
that &lt;Jf!ers nothing in re lurn.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sapt. 22) - Unless you
are carelul , an old issue that prev1ously
creatad disruptions within your household
could resurface today. If thiS should occur.
try to be smaner 1r1 handling It this· t1me
around.
LIBRA (S epl 23·0ct. 23) - Do not say
anyth ing ab.out anyone today that you
would r)Ot say to hie/her !ace, b~ause
what you tell othe rs wiH be repeated to the
person verbatim. If 11" 111 negativ e, you'll pay
ttl&amp; price.

W II I

s

C I

I I I I' I
GUDEN

T I SH0

I 1·

rI

I

M\ m:.'mmale a!wnv~
aro~md c:1d just wi~h~~

I

c ,, s s !: c.

(' I I I' l
r p:r.Jr hJUt.~ :~.

•
for the

11c.;~ . 1 t)lllll thai thr n· ~ rc nl 1

sh::Jdl' tr:·~·~ 11n the wa: H1 ------1r: ll• •1'

0

(;Jm~!~· e;o th(" ,;,\lckit ~Juoted
tly f di.ro ;, !T'I the /!1 15$11'19 WOfdS

'r'O ~ deve lop from slep No. 3 below.

lUi~RS r1

:·ro

lie~

IN i"l~~· E ~.·y,:.'.r;- '"1

1:

:J .

I"

~~

I

:._ lr 4:·._t! t1,', \ (•.: . [" l:r.~ ·n

C·i i

fdJ~ \ 'c' [

P

SCRAMI..ETS 11-"''''''
Inept · Import PI\Y for IT
t IL:iirncd e&lt;"tr!v in li fe how to shop. My Dad always said
!hat 1 ~hntd d dr:m&lt;uid quali t y &lt;1nd h~ wi lli11f!. to PAY for
Dumt, lv ·· (hill II

i~ .

ARLO &amp; JANIS
~OU

t!U5f CHOO!£

A ~IIJ(l fOkl~ YOU LIKE.,

A MUll DO~ AfUllf. ,,

SOUP TO NUTZ
..,.~~ 'l&lt;aR 1\:&gt;R lk&lt;_
PasT Deca~e . PaD &lt;NT•R.S
a ftJN -Wt!\"f, NG CoNTesT
hoPiNG. To WiN a ~·rte.

BAUM LUMBER

st: Rt. 124

Chester , 985-3301

'
----~------------~-------:--- --{: . ______~------~-----------------:--------:-~~:--I

�The Daily Sentinel • Page 88

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, November 10, 2005

China reports new bird
flu outbreaks, raising
fears of fak~ vaccines, AS

.

. County officials
embaiTassed by slow

count,Alo

.

~ If you have a question or a comment,.write: NASCAR Th is Week , cjo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
I_I IJ6uli Sf-HIE&amp;

Race: .Checker Auto Parts
500

ry of career on March 20 of

this year, now has reeled off
Where: Phoenix International four victories. No one exRaceway, Avondale, Ariz. (1.0 pects him to win the champi·
miles). 312 laps/miles.
onship, but Edwards has
When: Sunday, Nov. 13
proved so adept at defying
Last year's winner: Dale the odds that it's almost as if
Earnhardt Jr.
he's destiny·~ child, roaring
Quatlfylnl record: Ryan New- up into third place with two
man. Dodge, 135,854 mph, races to go after consecutive
· Nov. 5, 2004.
victories at Atlanta and
Race record : Tony Stewart, Texas. Stewart, who would

·

Race: Busch 200

Where: Phoenix International
Raceway, Avondale, Ariz. (1.0
miles), 200 laps/miles.
When: Saturday, Nov. 12
Last year's winner: Jam1e
McMurray
Qualifying record: Kyle
Busch, Chevrolet, 133.819
mph, Nov. 4, 2004.
Race record: Jeff Burton,
Ford, 115.145 mph, Nov. 4,

Pontiac, 118.132 mph, Nov. now lead Edwards by 644 · 2000.
7,1999,
points if the championship Last week : Kevin Harvick
last week: Carl Edwards be- were based on an entire sea- won for the fourth time this
came the second driver to

Me-..:
his

:to )qin
·l!liVing
to mqve
South a

son and not 10 race s,

season, driving his Chevrolet

win consecutive races with a passed all the tests once

victory at Texas Motor Speed-

to a rather comfortable victo-

again, finishing sixth and

wards, who got the first victo-

spitting out another top-10,
his 18th in a span of 20
races.

ry in the O'Reill y Challenge,
a 300-miler at Texas Motor
SpeedwaY'

way. Tony Stewart has performed the feat twice, Ed-

,

BRIAN VICKERS

CRAfTSMAN li&lt;U&lt;IK

Raceway. Avondale. Ariz. (1.0
miles).150 laps/miles,
When: Friday, Nov, 11

25

No.

;,u CENTS • Vol. ;,5, No. I&gt;:J

last year's winner: David
Starr

. BY BETH SERGENT

• Carpenter wins NL
Cy Young Award.
SeePage 81

Race record: Kevin Harvick,

Chevrolet, 108,014 mph,
Nov. 8, 2002,
last week: Todd Bodine, in a

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Yesterday
'two se parate fire s heavily
damaged two homes, one in
Middleport and the other in
the Five Points area of
Pomeroy.
The fire at Five Points
began late yesterday morning
at the home of Randall Gibbs,
34404
Brown
Drive,
Pomeroy.
The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department was alerted of
the fire at II :27 a.m. and
responded with i 2 firefighters. The Bashan Volunteer
Fire
Department
also
responded with six firefighters and manpower assisfance
was provided by the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department.
Chester Fire Chief Larry
Cleland said that the fire
began in the garage and
quickly spread to the house.

Toyota, won at Texas Motor

Speedway for the second
year in a row. It was his third
victory of the season and

fifth of his career.

+

f-ElJf) Of !HI: WH~

v

GMAC/DITECH.COM CHEVROLET

E
R

mad It official
that he was leaving
He could be ·
McMurray's successor or a re., placement for Scott Wimmer. No
.' WOld yet.

:: ~It's lolng to take 'some getting '
· uslid to when a driver named
· Busch is driving a Dojlge sponsored by Miller.
~Also official: Mark Martin will
Indeed be back for one more
. year, vmh Truck Series regu lar
Todd Kluever taking over in
Roush's No. 6 Ford for 2007.
~ R)&amp;n Newman qualified first but
had to start last at Texas. That's
" because he totaled his Dodge in
the second qualifying lap after
winning the pole on his first. GoIng to a backup·car means giving
up the starting spot.
~In NASCAR, when the pole win- ·
ner goes to the back, the runner. up doesn't move to the pole. ln~ed. as a means of simplifying

the recanfiguration of the lineup,
the rows move up. As a result,

the driver on the Inside of the
second row, Matt Ken seth, start,f!d the Dickies 500 up front.
1&gt; OffiCially, though. Newman was
the pole winner, meaning that he
has won 35 poles In 150 career
· races. He has .already clinched
the award for most poles this
season. By winning both poles at

Atlanta Motor Speedway, he became the only dnver to sweep the
poles at one traCk this season.
1&gt; TeJ&lt;as offered the largest purse
of the 10 Chase races and also
boasted the largest crowd and
was held In the largest market.
·on the other hand, Texas won a
_place ill the Chase. indirectly, at
the expense of Darlington, a track
considered by many to have been
the best In the 2004 Chase.

I

WltU ~» I ltH
ANt• Wt1U ::1 NlJI

:'l ..,\

; I&gt;WIIo'a' hot '
' L -:Who
else? Carl
' Edwards has

w:won .two .
It ·races In ·a
t·. 1~ :· ·and .
.................:, ,
~·~~ 9V'' .......'!."'....
f) .otten hlmt.l' self back in

'' Championship contention ....
··-1 Meanwhile, Tony Stewart has
, fl~lshed In the top 10 in 18
~;~ of 20 races.
-

t..~iw!io.. jiol- ~~my Mayfield
l![i-~ lost ~7 points to Stewart
~' 'elnee the Chase· began ....
RUII)' Wallace has 'dropped
3jlfi points and Is back In

......
'·~ "'Ll,l'

'

'

.

.

s•

omorrow's ews
Vickers, one of NASCAR's rising stars, tested the 'Car of Tomorrow'
· By Monte Dutton

-~

s

Martin

Tony Stewart
va. Mark Martin
It was, for once, a friendly feud.
Martin drove into Stewart during the

late stages of the Dickies 500 and
quickly apologized afterward, leading
Stewart to say: 'Most of the guys in

has the guts to come up to you, and
that's the end of it. That's why I re- spect him more than anyone else out
here." Martin said: ~After he got done
blessing at nie, I said, 'I messed up,
man.' I think Tony has too much re·
gard for my ability. I make too many
mistakes for an old man.~

NASCAR . This Week's Monte
DuHon gives his take: "Martin Is too
modest. Actually he make's very few
mis takes. He is, quite simply, the

Texas thriYI,.. at expan11i
of Wllkelboro, Rocld...,._m
Indirectly, Texa_s Motor Speedway '
played a role in t~e demise of two
significant tracks. In 1996, Bruton Smith and Bob Bahre each bought
half of North Wilkesboro Speedway,
thus enabling Smith to take one of
the track's Cup dates to Texas and
Bahre to move the other to his track
in 'New Hampshrre. Eight years later,
a court settlement put in motion a
se-ries of events that led Smith, the

CEO of Speedway Motorsports. to
purchase North Carolina Speedway
in Rockingham. That purchase made
room for Texas getting a second spot
John ClarkfNASCAR This Week

In just his·second full season in NASCAR's major circuit, Brian Vickers is 16th in the points
standings.
•

The new car - its design will be shield isn'tlaid back as far with the
standard in all areas except the nose, new car. You can see everything out of
which will be different from make to the front of the windshield. I felt like I
make - is wider, higher and generally could see the moon, the stars and the
has a more upright look. The most no- . spotters on top of the spotters' stand.
ticeable difference is in the enlarged That can easily be fixed by applying
driver compartment.
more black paint to the top of the
"The seat has been moved closer to windshield, which helps to keep the
the center of the car, but only by a sun out of our eyes."
couple of inches (actually about four
Let's see. Vickers said he could see
and a half)," Vickers said. "For me, the moon and stars but needed somewhen you go off into the corner at 200 thing to keep the sun out of his eyes.
miles an hour, it's the least of my conFor the record, the tests were held
cerns and you don't even notice it.
in the daytime.
. "The most noticeable difference is
how high the roof is and how tall the
Contact Monte Dutton
car looks in general. The front windat hmdutton50@aol.com

on the Nextel Cup schedule and put
Rockingham out of business.

YOUR 'I' UHN
I.Hif HS FROM OUH HloADERS

Does dlaaater at LMS fall
on Wheeler'llhoulden?

L

owe's Motor Speedway is sup-

posed to be just that, not a
wrecking yard. NASCAR should
tell Mr. (Humpy) Wheeler to get his

Clelan&lt;l a&lt;lde&lt;l that the fire
was declared electrical in
nalure and that the home was
heavily damaged.
No one was home at the

time af the Five Points fire
and flo firefighters _wen:
injured.
The Middleport Volunteer
Fire Department was called

Middleport and Pomeroy Volunteer Firefighters put out this
chimney fire yesterday afternoon at the home of George .Sauer
in Middleport
out at 12:43 p.m. to respond
to a house fire at 39 Rutland
Street in Middleport at th e
home of George Sauer.
Sauer was home at the time
of the fire hut was not injured
nor were any firefi ghters.

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Robert Harper, 79
• Eldred Parsons, 82

Middleport Fire Chief Jeff
Darst said that the fire began
in the chimney.
The M i&lt;ldleport Volunieer
Fire Department was assisted
in the call by the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire D~partment.

County to sbare
state forestry
proceeds with
Olive, Eastern
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

most admired drl'v'er on the tracK."

Ll:Gl NIJS AND L Ollie.

Submitted photos

Chester, Bashan and Pomeroy Volunteer Firefighters were
called to the scene of an electrical .fire that began in the
garage but spread to the home of Rahdall Gibbs in the F1ve
Points area of Pomeroy.

HONORING OUR VETERANS

this sport would've headed for the
hauler and not said a word until they
ca lled you a day or two later. Ma"rk

NASCAR This Week
Brian Vickers has been considered
one of NASCAR's stars of tomorrow
since he earned a ride with Hendrick
Motorsports and won the Busch Series
championship at age,20 in 2003.
Now in his second season with Hen- ·
drick in Nextel Cup, Vickers has
shown considerable improvement in
the latter half of the current campaign, improving his average finishing position from nearly 23rd in the
first half to about J41h. He finished a
career-best second at Pocono in June .
and subsequently finished third at
both Indianapolis and California.
More recently Vickers, who is from
Thomasville, N.C., was one of six drivers chosen to test the "Car of Tomorrow" at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
NASCAR officials plan to debut the
new design in the fall of 2006 at Tal- ·
ladega and make it standard in 2007.
"It looks more like a 19SS Chevy, or
a New York taxicab from years ago,"
said Vickers. "Not much to look at, but
it's still a race car."
Fans of the old BelAir might take
exception to that remark, but more importantly, how does the new car drive?
"It's riot that far off from the Cup
cars we have now," said Vickers.
"Once you get the balance right, it
doesn't matter what kind of car you're
in. It's still a race car, and you're still
searching for a balanced feel, a neutral feel, or whatever you prefer as a
driver. You notice a lack of total downforce and loss of grip, but more aerodynamic drag down the straightaways.
"In traffic, there was a big difference. The car was affected quite a bit
with other cars around it: There's
some work to do there. I don't think
it's exactly what everyone wanted. All
in all, I think it was a great test. I applaud NASCAR for what they're trying to do. They're trying to cr~ate a
safer, more economieally friendly car,
and they're also trying to create a better car from a competition standpoint.
There's still some work to do, but we
can get there."

u
Stewart

"~'w.mydaityscntincl.com

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, :.mus

Fires damage homes in Middleport and at Five Points

SPORTS

Qualifying record: ·Jack
Sprague, Chevrolet, 131.186
mph, Nov. 5, 2004,

IN '1'1-11=. SPOTLIGHT ··

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Race: Chevy Silverado 150
Where: Phoenix International

• A Hunger' For More.
See Page A2
• Local Church Briefs.
See Page A2
• Religion News in Brief.
See Page A2 .
• Election brings new
member to fair board.
See Page A5
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• For the Record.
See Page A5
• Point Pleasant radio
stalion sets Christmas
shoebox drive.
. See Page A6
• College admission
consultants grow in
popularity. See Page A6
• Arctic drilling plan
dropped from House
budgel bill. See Page A7

go

house in order or we'll
somewhere
else, i.e., Darlington andjor another
one-date track. It's pretty bad when

the cars don't average at least 140150 mph for a 500-mile race on a superspeedway,

POMEROY Meigs
County, Olive Township and
the Eastern Local School
District have received $8,497
in revenue from· the sale of
timber this year at Shade
River State Forest.
David Glass. forest manager for the Hocking State
Forest Division of Forestry,
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, presented Meigs
County Commissioners with
a check Thursday, represent- ing proceeds from timber
management projects on tl)e
state land. Commissioners
will keep $2, 124 of those
funds , the township, $2,124, ·
and Eastern Local $4,248.75,
through the state's "Trees to
Textbooks" program.
Statewide, ODNR will distribute $484,369 in 12 counties from the program. State
forestry exp'erts use 'forest ·
management projects · to
improve the health and diversity of state forests, with an
eye to their value for recreational opportunities, soil and
water conservation and ·
wildlife habitat~ Glass said.
Brian J. Reed/photo
When selected trees or
Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets and Mick Davenport and Health Commissioner Larry Marshall hang the American Flag
. areas of wood land are barfrom the third floor balcony of the Meigs County Courthouse in preparation for Friday's Veterans Day service on the courthouse
Please see Forestry, AS
steps, which begins at 11 a.m.

Pomeroy Post Office honors Veterans

David Ugg!ns

El Centro, Calif.

ThanKs for writing. There's plenty of
blame to go around concerning the
UAW-GM Quality 500, and all of it
shouldn't be dumped on the track
president's shoulders: Mo'st of the
cr4sfles were caused by tire failures.

'.

&amp; Supply

Co. -

Details on Page A10

INDEX

Charlene Hoefllchjphoto

Susan Clark of Clark's Jewelry Store prepares a display of pictures and other memorabilia of Pomeroy businesses and happenings. Included is a history of her store which was founded
in 1882 by August Goessler.

2 SECTIONS- 20 PAGES

Buckeye Edition
Calendars
Classifiedis
Comics

B10

A3
B9

Dear Abby
A3
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A2-3
Movies
As
Obituaries
As
8 Section
Sports
Weather
A10
© :wos Ohio Vn.lley Puhlishh1g Co .

•

Pomeroy's historic walking tour
kicks off holiday activities

84-6

BY CHARLENE HOEFI.ICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

,

Charlene Hoeftlch/ photo

Pomeroy Postmaster Tom Sanders. left, presents certificates to veterans Jim Pullins. crty route
carrier, center, and Paul Card, rural route earner. dunng a ceremony honoring veterans in conjunction with the unvei ling and dedication of the "Distinguished Marines" postage stamps
Thursday. The commemorative postage stamps saluting the bravery and distinction of four legendary Marines are now available for purchase at post offices.

POMEROY - Not only
are holiday decoration' in
place hllt pictures and histo- ries of bllsinesses operating
in century-old buildings lining Main and Second Streets
fill display windows for
Saturday\ historic walking

tour of Pomeroy.
The journey into the past is
a kickolfto holiday activities,
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Mercl1:111ts Association. It
will take place at 10 a.m.
beginning at Trinity Church,
corner of Lynn and Second.
A&gt;
participants
walk

Please see Tour, AS

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