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                  <text>Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

Sunday, September 13, 2004

.NASCAA Nextel Cup

'

Reds Baseball

.

Mayfield breaks four-year Brewers shut
drought to race into chase out Reds
jump five spots in the standing ~ to ninth . NASCAR has
now reset the points totals of
th e top I 0. and Mayfield
RICHMOND. Va. - It heads into the i O-race chase
was win and in for Jereniy to the title 40 points behind
Mayfield, who couldn't hide le:ider Jeff Gordon.
his
excitement
when
NASCAR chairman Brian
'· I couldn't see us getting
in without winning the
France stopped to congratu- thing,'" Mayfield said. "We
late him on raci ng his way were in trouble. We had to
into the playoffs
win ... we weren't going to
· "Man, I love your .new ac:cept anything else."
points system," Mayfield
But was a victory seriousgushed. "You couldn't have ly in reach for a driver who
caine up with anythin~ bet- last visited Victory Lane on
.
June· 19, 2000- a span of
ter than this." . ..
One of the ltrst. thm gs 142 races ·l
France dtd.upon mkmg over ' Mayfield
infamously
as N~SCAR s chairman was bumped th e late Dale
shakmgup the pomts sy~te~ Earnhardt out of hi s way on
the senes had. used smce th e final lap to win at
1975. The new torm~lcreat- Pocono that day, and
ed a I 0-race pla~oft s~stem Earnhardt congratulated him
tor the top I 0 dnvers tn the with a one-finger salute as
i)e passed him on · the coolstandmgs.
.. . .
The resu lt ts a Wld~-open down lap . .
The years since then have
race that Will_ give Maytrel_d
a chance at hi S first IItle . It ·s · been :i seri es of ups and '
.a pos!lton he never would downs for Mayfield.
have been , tn ~nder the . old
He split with car owner
syst~m. whtch · le warded Rog er Penske
midway
conststency but .made t?r through the 2001 season and
lacklust.er
cham~tOn:~hlp spent the end of the year out
chases With fe': re~l chal- of work. With no job. he
lenges over the stretch run.
stayed away from the garage
. Now, Mayfield IS cledfly area each week. and hi s
111 the hunt, although he had absence fueled gossip and
to earn the nght. 10 get 1 ~· speculation about hi s perMaylteld ended ~ four-year sonallife and his career.
wmle ss drougln . Saturday
Then car owner Ray
mght With a Vlct~r~ ?t Evernham opened up a seat
Richmond
. International for him in his fleet of
Racewa~.
t' ·
Dodges. and Mayfield again
He had go~e 11110 the had a chance to revive hi s
Chevrolet 400 111 · 14 th place career.
in thehstandings and a minhdBut the results were
set · t at a vtctory was t e mixed , and Mayfield was
only way he wquld crack the rumored to be on his way
tot~eO. moment he crossed out at Evernham this time
the finish line, he was offi- last year.
Instead, they tightened up
cially in, using the win to the program · and Mayfield
BY JENNA fRYER
·Associated Press

has been on a rise all year: ninth, ani.! left Richmond
He's got two runner-up fin - II th in the standings - the
ishes a\)d 1·0 tcip I Os.
first driver shut out of the
But the inconsiste ncy that chase.
·
had kept .Mayfield from ever
In a cruel twist of fate, .
being a contender in the though. McMurray ended up
early part of hi s career still· J'ust 15 points out of lOth
plagued him and he found place and hi"s team couldn't
himself outside the top 10 help but look to the 25
this week after three consec- points NASCAR docked
utive
mediocre perfor- them earlier thi s year when
mances.
. hi s car failed a · pre-race.
With just one race to go . inspection at Bristol.
before tlie playoff field was
Tony Stewart had the same
set, the pressure was clea~ly infraction before McMurray,
on.
but his team was not docked
Hi s team was prepared any points. ·
upon·
its . arrival
in
"Tony Stewart had the
Richmond , qualifying sev- same deal and they didn't
enth and wasting little time take and points away from
in moving toward ,the front. him ," team co-owner Felix
He ended up leading a race- Sabates complained. "Why?
high 151 laps, but needed I don't know why. All I
Kurt Bu sch to run out of gas know is we lost. by 25
eight laps from the end to points. NASCAR took it
retake the lead and lock him- away from us ."
self into the chase.
Bobby Labont e. Kevin
Mayfield, who consider~ Harvick and Dale Ja.rren
him se lf a bit of a hardcluck also .failed to race their way
(acer, couldn't believe I his in. ·
good fortune.
·
And Ryan Newman made
"I couldn't believe it it -just barely. ·
because . the way my luck's
The pole-sitter fell two
been, I thought no way he's laps down early in the race
going to run out," Mayfield on an ill-timed pit stop, then
said. "When he did, I said, saw his gas tai1k running low
'This can't be true, now it 's on fuel late in the race . As
my turn to cut a tire or some- his
team
frantically
thing:"
crunched numbers to see
It wasn't all good luck for where they were in the
the ~est of the ·contenders, standings, Newman held his
though.
,
breath and hoped his Dodge
Kasey Kahne, Mayfield 's would make it to the end. ·
rookie teamma~e. struggled
He fini shed - in 20th
all night and dropped out of place - and took the I Oth
the top 10 after his 12th- and final spot in the standplace finish.
.
ings.
Jamie McMurray had late
"We won the battle, but we
engiae problems that prohib- ·haven ' t won the war.'' he
ited him from racing for the said. "We'll get all our guns
critical few positions he polished for the last 10 races
needed to crack ·into the top and do what we have to do
10. He finished the race as a,team to stay focused."

Indians
Baseball
'
.

Zito, A's· shut .down Indians, 1-0
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) When Barry Zito reached I08
pitches after · six ' innings, he
approached Ken Macha and
assured his manager he'd be
fine t.o go one more.
'· .The way things were going,
Macha had no doubts.
Ziw struck out I0 for the
first time in more than a year
and Erubiel Durazo hit his
career-high 22nd home ·run,
leading the Oakland Athletics
over the Cleveland Indians 1-0
Sunday night.
Zito (Il-l 0) had not reached
double digits in strikeouts
since fanning 10 at Minnesota
on May 27, 2003. He had
struck out nine t.wice this season.
"I think I just found I relaxed
a litlle more," Zito said. "I
think I put too much pressure
on myself early in the year to
be dominant."
He also worked on elevating
his fastball between starts, and
it worked wonders.
After the A's rallied w win 54 Saturday on consecutive

eighth-inning home runs by Oakland plays its final 20 to escape the ba ~e·s-loaded
rookies Bobby Crosby and ·games against the division, jam. That was the only inning
Nick Swisher, Zito gave starting Monday night with the an Indians runner · got farther
Oakland one of his best perfor- opener of a four-game series than first when Zito was in the
mances this year, allowing against Texas.
game.
four hits in seven scoreless
"We couldn't ask for any"We took it all the way to the
innings. His 125 pitches were thing more on Sept. 12 being last out," Indians manager Eric
his second-most ever - he two games up and gain~ back Wedge said. "That will pay off
threw ·128 at Cleveland on against our division,' Zito for us in t.he future. We just
Aug. 21, 2000.
said. "This is what we look couldn't ¥elthat final knock to
Chris Hammond, Chad forward to the first day of tie it or gtve us the. lead."
Bradford and Octavia Dote! spring training."
co,mpleted the six-hit shutout.
Durazo connected with one
Dote! pitched the ninth for his out in the second, sending a l20tli save in 25 chances, strik- 0 changeup from Jake
ing o~t Coco Crisp looking to Westbrook (12:8) over the
end the game with runners on center-f1eld wall. He surpa~sed
first and second.
his home run total of 21 from
" I thought it was important last season, and the A's
.to prove to Macha that I could improved to 14-5 in games in
go out after 100 pitches and which he homers.
Zito struck . out Crisp,
still have a quality inning,"
Zito said. "It was big."
Cleveland's leadoff hitter.
Especially since Zito ·left his ~ limes _and didn't allow a
previOus start .last week htt,. until ~tvmg up back-toagainst Boston after 6 1-3 bat;;k one-out singles to Ronnie ·
innings and 119 pitches.
BeMjart,j and Victor Martinez
The Ns maintained their in the fourth.
two-game AL West lead over
Zito walked Josh Phelps two .
Anaheim, which beat the batters after Martinez, but got
Chicago White Sox 11-0. Lou Merloni to fly out to left

lheAPToplS
The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college lootball poll, with first-place votes in paren-

..
~! I

I

•'

theses, records through Sept. 11 , total points
based on 25 points lor a first-place vote through
one point for. a 25th-place vote, and previous
ranking:

ru ~
1. Southern Cal (52) ....... ;!-0 .... .'1 ,611 .... 1
fill&lt;.

2. Oklahoma (10).:.......... 2-0 ..... 1,552 .... 2
3. GeorQia (3) ................. 2-0 ..... 1,478 ....3
4. M181llt .......•.............•.... I -0 ..... 1,398 .... 5
5. LSU ........................" ... 24l ..... 1,344 ....6
6. Texas ...........................24J ..... 1,311 .... 7
7. West Virginia ...............24l ..... 1,087 .... 10
8. Aorida St. ................... 0-1 ..... 1,058 ....4
9. Ohio 51... ..................... 24&gt; ..... 1,030 .... 9
10. California ....... ,............24l ..... 969 ....... 12
11. Florida ........................ 14l ..... 955 ....... 11
12. Virginia .......................24J ..... 812 ....... 15
13: Tennessee:.. ............... 14&gt; ..... 798 ....... 14
14. Auburn .......................24&gt; ..... 739 ....... 18
15. Utah ...........................24&gt; ..... 699 ....... 17 .
16. Iowa ...........................24&gt; ..... 665 ....... 16
17. MichiQan .., ................. 1-1 ..... sn .......8
18. Purdue .......................24&gt; ..... 557 .......25
19: Fresno St. ..................24&gt; ..... 454 .......20. WISCOilSin ...................24l .....404 ....... 21
21. Maryland ................. ...24l .....392 ..... ..23
22. Minnesota .................. 24&gt; ..... 340 .......22
23. Boise St. ....................24&gt; ..... 201 .......24. Louisville ....................24J .... :153 .... :..25. Memphis ....................24&gt; .....86 .........Others recei't(ing votes: Kansas St. 51 ,
Oklahoma St. 47 , Georgia Tech 46, N.C. State
44, Missouri 4 I. Notre Dame 38, Southern
Miss. 37, Troy 31 ; Colorado 27, Clemson 23,
Alabama 20, TClJ 20, Virginia Tech 13, Boston
College 8, Arkansas 5, Stanford 4 .
,

COLUMBUS (AP) -· Universities could be
unfairly targeted ·as discriminating against
women athletes because of wild inaccuracies in
federal data on their sports spending, according
to newspaper review.
An online database of the spending shows that
Indiana University, for e~ample , spent $7.6 million on game-day travel, meals and- other
expenSes for its men's football team in 2001 .triple the costs of any othe~ Big Ten schooL
University officials told The Columbus
Dispatch the true figure was less than $1 million.
The numbers are supposed to indicate if, a
school is complying with the federal Title IX
. law that guarantees women equal access to
intercollegiate spans.
The newspaper reviewed three year's' worth of
data from the U.S. Department of Education and
compared it to ~ produced by the schools,
Each fall, colleges and universities receiving
fedeml aid are required to submit the data electronically to the Education Department, which
posts the infonnation on the Internet.
However, the f.ducarion Department doesn't
check. the reports for accurncy before they are
posted.

·, ,

t

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I'\

\n l.

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&gt;. '" , -l

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• Congressman criticized
for handling of debate on
health studies.
SeePage A&amp;

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center resident, Mary Rinehart, 94, plays the. organ donated to the
facility by Edward Jones in memory of his late wife, Maxine: (Beth Sergent/photo)

Late wife's wish fulfilled when organ is donated
BY BEnt SERQEJ'jl
BSERGENT&lt;ii&gt;MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

inst.ead of selling her beloved
organ, he would give itaway.
Giving it away would honor
POMEROY - When a one of Maxine's last. wishes
loved one dies, their belong- which was to donate the
ings represent a physical con- organ for other's enjoyment.
nection to the people they
Edward and Maxine 'met at
leave behind, Their scents church camp a.~ children and
may linger on clothing or eye were married in 1946 before
glasses may be smudged with moving to Iowa. While Mr.
their fingerprint. Knowing Jones taught school, became
what to hold onto and what to a principal and later superinlet go of can be difficult.
tendent, Maxine raised their
When Maxine .Jones . two boys. The family eventupassed away last October, her ally returned to Ohio where
husband Edward decided that. Mr. Jones worked in the

WEATIIER

BY TIM MALONEY

A3
B3-4

1 Day Ad:
$6.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit
Gets You Great .
Advertising!

Editorials

.

•

Obituaries

I~

'

•
'

Bob Burton, left, and Jim Soulsby look over a large cavity
beneath a section of bleachers on the visitors' side of Bob
Roberts Field. The landslide moved all lhe dirt from beneath
the end section of the bleachers and left wide cracks olong the
hillside below. (Charlene Hoeflich / photo)

Toledo and Warren school
systems. After his relirement ,
he decided to go to school to
become a pastor which led he
and Maxine to the community of Albany.
Maxine always supported
her husband's work by talking, advi sing and praying
with the people of her husband's congregation. Amid
all the changes in her life, a
30 year battle with diabetes
and heart disease remained

Please -

.

Organ, AS

MIDDLEPORT - Mayor
Sandy lannarelli got plenty of
calls about it Monday, but
said Middleport resident s
should not be worried the vii!age was excluded. from the
DuPont C-8 settlement.
Pomeroy, Tuppers Plains
and Mason County warer districts will receive new stateof-the-art treatment plants to
remove the C-8.
Iannarelli said ql Monday' s
regular meeting of village
council that she was reassured by Steve Williams in
the Logan Environmental
Protection Agency office t.hat
Middleport is far enough
away
from
DuPont 's
Washington
Woiks
111
Parkersburg t.hat the C-8
poses no t.hreat.
·
·
:we really don't have any.~ ·
t.hmg to _worry about,
lannarelli sa1d.
The mayor said Williams
reassured her that the parts
per billion of C-8 would be

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - All Meigs
County villages were represented at last week's emergency mit.igation meeting,
including Middlepon and
Pomeroy, which had missed
the first t.wo meetings. .
Pomeroy was represented
by Village Administrator
John Anderson, while his
son, Bmdford M. Anderson.
represent.ed
Middleport,
where he, too, is village
administrator.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The conditions of Union Terrace Road
and the walking path dominated the discu"ion at
Robert E. Byer, director of gency mitigation plan cali Pomeroy .village council on
the . Meigs
County indeed be a tedious, difficult Monday night.
Emergency
Management task, as ·evidenced in Gallia
Pomeroy resident Robert
Agency, . last month had County. where a similar comSmith
of Union Terrace
called · Pomeroy
and mittee spent t.wo daYs outlinRoad, followed up · with
Middleport's failure to attend ing solu~ions to potential
on _his request to have
council
.
previous meetings "ludi- emergenctes.
crous " but was happy with
Nonetheless, Byer satd th~ the road paved. Mayor John
·attendance 'at last week's · work has to be done, to make Musser infomned Smith that
meeting, at which there were Meigs County_ eligible for after checking into it he
10 officials, counting Byer.
htgh-dollar mitigation grants, found that it would cost the
"Definitely," Byer said. "I a new focus of the Federal · village $15.000 to pave the
Management road and funds were not
think the villages are getting Emergency
.
. available at this time. Mu~ser
more interested, and I'm Agency.
pleased to have seen so mariy
Maureen R1chard. an engl- added that he is working on
Issue Two which will possiat the meeting."
bly
result in fundin g for the
.
Ple1se
Meetl-AS
Prepanng a county emer-· ..
road at an undetermined date.

3 Day Ad.:
· $9-00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit

$1 5

Gets Y?~ Great

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ilBatlp ~ribune
, ~oint ~lea~ant ll\egtster
The Daily Sentinel
~alltpolis

••

far below dangerous levels at
Middleport.
"People called and couldn't
understand why we weren't
included." she said. "I would
be concerned, too , if the
chemical was here. It's not
here , so· that's a different
story."
Village
Administralor
Bradford M. Anderson said
the water districts receiving
the new tr~atment systems
are inheriting an expensive
maintenance bill as well.
"If this all goes through,
and those water , districts do
get upgrades to remove C-8,
what's going ta happen when
it comes time to replace the
filter?'' Anderson said.
"There could be a large operating cost ."
In other business, village
council voted narrowly to
deny paying an increase in
health insurance premiums
for employees with depen'
dents . The decision affects
six emp.loyees who w"ill now

Please see EPA. AS

Poor roads and high
weeds top Pomeroy
Village Council agenda

Emergenty meeting is_well-attended this time

Dear Abby

,,

\\\\H , I11HI.nho..,t'11l111d 111111

BY TIM MAL.ONEY
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Comics

'

•

EPA assures Middleport:
No C-8 worries ·. . ·

INSIDE

Elich Kit Contains the Following:

i

I

·

~

Page AS
• Donald B. King

Calendars

t

~

OBITUARIES

Classifieds '

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l · ·•~ tlO

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
about it in the way of correc- he plans to check into thill '
HOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM tive work. He· said the end with Barb Flowers of ·t he
. ' sect.ion Of the bleachers will D~partmenl of Natural
POMEROY .
While be removed and that area will Resources, Division of Mine
~pa1rs to an earher landshde remain roped off.
Reclamation . "To me it
111 the end zone of the Metgs
While the matter will be looks like thi s one is just
Marauder football field were discussed at tonight 's Meigs where lots of water zame off
t.
completed earlier th1s sum- Local B d 0 f Ed
mer. a second one has now
. . oar
uca wn that hill and with the nature
occurred on one end of the r.neetmg Buckley says as he . of the slop and the five inchseating area on the vi sitors sees It the best thmg to do ts es of rain we got, the soil
· became saturated causing it
side of the field
nothmg nght now.
A section · commonly . "I think we need to wait to slip."
referred to as Hannah's Hill and see what happens there. . Buckley said getting in
shifted last week, leaving the We can get along without there with a bulldozer and
hillside w.ith open crevices those ble~ch~rs. When I l~ok starting to move the ground
and what almost appears to be at that h1lls1de ~~ looks like around as he 's been encoura cave beneath one section of more slippage IS occurrmg aged to do by some could just
the bleachers. An area of the and the best thing now is to lead to more slippage. He
hillside and a section of the block the hillside off and see said in his opinion for now
bleachers has been roped off. what happens, and then go the best thing to do is wait"
At the present time, Meigs from there."
and see what else happens .
Local ·
Superintendent
When asked about it possiThe area where the slipWilliam Buckley said there bly being mine related as the
are no plans to do anything other slip was, Buckley said . Please see Lllndslide. AS

2 SECnONS- 12 PAGES

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• Southern golfers take
third place p,t Cliffside.
See Page 81

INDEX

,) l \ l

.._,I I'll \I I'~ ll''\.

Second landslide occ.urs ·at Meigs football field

- o n P. . A8

•• -

II I "II\'1

SPORTS

~m""""""""

CASH?

'

-Bengals' defense
crumbles first
timeout, B6

. Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

GARAGE SALE KITS NOW
AVAILABLE· ONLY $6.00
• 3 Slurtly Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sale Signs - 24" ~ 12"
• 3 WOoden Stakes
• 216 Pricing Labels
• Inventory Sheet
• 4 Mini-signs.,to be p!&gt;sted on bulletin
boards at laundromats, markets, etc.
• 1 Seven-step onstruction sheet, plus
"Secrets of How to Increase Profits al
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• 3 Mounting Materials
• 6 Multk:olored Balloons
• I Mar1&lt;er for Signs

'

en

CINCINNATI (AP)
runs while starting the last
Russell Branyan is with his three games of the series.
third organization this season .
"I feel if I can get some
He thinks he has found the consistent at-bats, I can proright tit.
duce," Branyan· said.
The Milwaukee third baseClark, who spent 2001-02
man,
who played for with Cincinnati, added a
Cincinnati the_ last two years, three-run shot, his career-high
homered twice and drove in seventh overall and sc!cond of
three runs to lead the Brewers the series, to give· the Brewers
over the Reds 11 -0 Sunday.
a 7-0 lead in the fifth.
.
"We never expected that
Jenkins hit his three-run
type of power production, and homer off Todd Van Poppe!,
he 's played · a solid . third his 23rd, to make it 11-0 in
base," Milwaukee manager . the sixth.
Ned Yost said.
·
One ~ay after the Reds beat
Brady Clark · and Geoff the ~rewers 9-0, Luts
Jenkins each. added a three- Vizcaino and Dan Kolb
run hom~r to help the pitched the last two innings to
Brewers gain a split of the · complete the four-hitter for
four-game series.
Milwaukee's nimh shutout of
Branyan responded to a the season. The Reds have
fan's comment that he was been blanked nine times. .
overrated by hitting a solo
"They killed us yesterday,
homer in the second inning and we. responded,' Branyan
and a ·two-run 'shot in the said.
Aaron . Harang (8-9) was
fourth to give him ·10 this
year.
handed hi s third straight loss
"I didn 't even know I was since throwing a three-hitter
rated," said Branyan. who against St. Louis on Aug. 26.
spent time in the Atlanta and He gave up nine hits al)d
Cleveland system.s before seven runs with no walks and
joinin~ th~ Brewers in late two strikeouts. He's given up
July. ' How can I be overrat- II homers in his last three
ed?l couldn' t evenJind a job starts, including three on
in the offseason.''
Sunday, after allowing a total ·
Ben Sheets (11-11) struck of II in his first 22 starts.
out II in seven innings,
"If you look at t.he StLouis
allowing three hits and no game, there's no question he's
walks tor his second win in capable . of doing it," Miley
three starts. He had I0 or sa1d. " Everythin¥ is t.he S_ilme.
more strikeouts for the eighth It's just hi s locat1011 and comtime in his career, allt.his sea- mand. I just think. he's making bad pitches.''
.
son.
"It was nice to get Ben ·an
Harang allowed a seasoneasy game," Yost said. "He's · high four homers in each of
had so many dadgum games his previous two st.arts.
when he's goUen no .run sup"I can't explain it," he said.
port."
"It feels like when I'm throwThe Brewers averaged 3.2 ing the ball, there's nothing
runs per game while Sheets there. It's like a dead arm.
went 1-6 with a 3.99 ERA in We ' ll look at video and look
his previous II starts.
at it in my next side and try to
"ft was nice to get out there fi~ure out if there's someand not have to worry about thmg wrong and try to end the
the home run, like I do some- season on a positive note.''
times," said Sheets, who will
Reds pitchers have allowed
·try for a career-high 12th win a major league-high 209
in his next start.
homers, tying the club record
He's won II in each of his set last season.
"Harang has been tough on
four big league seasons.
"You knew it was gain~ to us all year," Yost said. "To
be tough to score runs agamst score that many rul)s is big,
a guy like lhat," Reds manag- and Branyan· had a lot. to do
· er Dave Miley said. "If you-' re with it.''
·
only down 1-0 or 2-0, you've
Lyle
Overbay
gave
got a chance, but you can' t Milwaukse a 1-0 lead in the
give him that. much to work first, drivmg in Bill Hall from
with."
·
second with a double.
Branyan' s
multihomer
Branyan led off the second
game was the ninth of his with a home 'run to right to
career and second this season. give Milwaukee a 2-0 lead.
He also hit. t.wo against the He made it 4-0 by following
Chicago ·Cubs in Milwaukee Clark's single with a homer to
on Aug . 18. He hit three home center in the founh.

EASE THE·
UEEZE!

Report: Errors abound
in university.athletic
.• spending reports

.

Reds snap Phil1ies'
.
stx-game wmmng
streak, B2 · ·

•

Smith requested that the
village cease grating Union
Terrace Road because he felt
it made the conditions worse.
Since there were no funds
immediately available for
paving. Smith also requested
that the village see if they can
oil the road to control the
dust. Musser rep! ied that the
village did not oil roads but ·
he would check with the
Highway Department to see
what they could do on the
matter.
,
Smith complained that a
comtant flow of speeding
cars and ATV" s stir up dust
clouds along the road that
make it impossible for him to
sit on his porch. Smith said if
the 1·illagc could not come up

Please 5ei! Apnd.; AS

'

�•

•

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

·COMMUNITY

PARADE HIGHLIGHTS FROM
THE RACINE FALL FESTIVAL

,.

Tuesday, September 14, 2004

Concert planned at Mt. Union Church

Community Cale.ndar
..

CARPENTER
- The
Boelk Family Singers will be
in concert . at the Mt. Union
Church
near
Baptist
Carpenter on Sept. 26 at 6:30
p.m.
The Boelk family include's
Bob and Heidi and their three
children Ashley, 20; Jordon,
18; and Seth, 15; each of
· whom are talented musicians.
The family has been
preaching and si nging· the ·
Gospel since 1995, traveling
full-time and living in a 40
foot converted bus. Using
Bob's formal music training
and the God-given talents of
all the family members, they
writ.e ·and arrange a lot of the
· songs they perform.
The Boelk Family Singers
Heidi , the family lyrici st,
Pastor David Wiseman may
· also composes · inspirational Great Commissio·n.
Refre
shments
will
_
be
be
contacted at (740)742. poetry and has written a chil·
dren's book based on the serv,ed after the concert. 2568.

Public meetings
Thesday, Sept. 14
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Board of Elections,
8:30 a.ru ., Meigs County
Courthouse Annex.
CHESTER Chester
Township Board of Trustees
will hold their regular month·
ly meeting at 7:00p.m. at the
Chester Town Hall.
Wednesday, Sept. IS
TUPPERS PLAINS. The
Eastern Local Board of
Education will meet in regu·
lar session at 6:30p.m. at'th'e
Eastern EleTI)entary Library
Conference Room.

The

Clubs and
organizations

Curtin to kick off Ariel Theatre's
Great Artist benefit series
GALLIPOLIS - Renowned pianist David
Curtin will kick off the historic Ariel Theatre 's
Great Artist benetit series at 8 p.m. Saturday.
An opening night reception hosted by the
French Art Colony will immediately follow
, the concert.
Curtin is a native of Rochester NY. but is i10
stranger .to. the Ohio ValleY, He earned his
Doctor of Musical Arts degree from the
University
of
Cincinnati
CollegeConservatory of Music and his Master of
.Music degree from the , University of
Louisville School of Music. He has served as
Assistant Professor of music at Angelo State
University in Texas and the University of
Wisconsin-Platteville, Utah State University
and Albion College.
Recognized internationally as a piano
soloist, Curtin made his Korean debut in 1998
petforming with the Changwon Philharmonic.
Recently he was invited back to Korea to present a solo recital at the Changwon
International Music Festival. He has also performed in London, England and Chihuahua,
Mexico.
Curtin's performance at the Ariel is part of
the Great Artists' Benefit Series which
·includes a concert by nationally known
marimbist, Linda Maxey and the Galaxy
This gigantic American flag required several volunteers to carry it along the parade route Percussion Trio on Oct. 12 and a performance
through Racine. The flag was sponsored by State Representative Jimmy Stewart and honored by flutist Welldell Dobbs with guitarist, Leo
Welch on Oct. 20. All performers are donating
thos.e killed during the 9/11 attacks in 2001. (Beth Sergent/ photo)
their services to help keep the Ariel's doors
open.

___

Jennifer Lynn Allen and
Eric Todd Toops will be united in marriage at 6:30 p.m.
on Saturday. Sept. 18, at the
Hysell Run 'Holiness Church.
The bride-elect is the
daughter of Dwaine and
Sonia Allen of Pomeroy and a
200 I graduate of Meigs High
School. She is employed by
Fruth Pharmacy of Pomeroy
and attends Hocking College.
Her fiance is the son of the
late Carol Sue Greene Toops
of Pomeroy and Kenny and
Tammy Toops of Vinton. He
is a 1998 graduate of Meigs
High School and is employed
by CLC of Columbus. ·
Allen's sister, Kerry, will
· serve as maid of honor, with
Melissa Johnson and Brandi
· Smith as bridesmaids. Travis
Edwards will be best man for
the groom and Ray Ohlinger .
will be an attendant. The couple's son, Tycen Toops will be
the ririgbearer, and Madison
and MaKenzie Greene will be .
. flower girls.
The couple plan a Myrtle
Beach honeymoon.

IS

Tllursdav.· .

the Halloman Air Base in
AJamogorda, N. M .

·,.

can

lllnNt or·Brenda
the
y Sent~el.;

•
.

-------

-·- --·-......~-~-- '

........

---· --- - · -- .....--~

..

if he has no frt'ends. It· I·s not
true that they all chose to side
wi'th hi·s ex.
- If your f't·t'e nds di'sli'ke
him, pay· attention. Th,is is
also true if he hates your
f· d
.
nen s.
· · - If he has more than one
DUI and still drinks, run! ·
- lf he is one personality at
·work or with others, and another person alone with you, run.
~ If he has nothing to .do
with his parents, investigate
why. Don 't take his word for it.
- If he 's. an expert at
everything and brags a lot,
underst;md that he will turn
off a lot of people, eventually
maybe even you.
- ·If he has sexual prob!ems, go with him to a doctor
before you marry him.
Believe me, his problem will
become your problem.
- If he is emotionally or
verbally abusive, it will only
get worse. Yelling, name-calling and glowering are class ic
signs of an abuser.
·

Food s~fety starts at the .
store. To be a safe and smart
shopper, read labels when
.purchasing foods. You need
to know What you are buying,
especially if you are trying to
avoid certain · ingredients
because of health problems,
food allergies or intolerances.
Foods which have the word
"sodium" as a component,
baking soda, brine, MSG
(monosodium glutamate),
NaCI (sodium chloride), soy
or teriyaki sauce, all have salt
in them: Ingredients that
include words ending in
"ose," such as sucrose, lactose, maltose, fructose. glucose and galactose and sugars, syrups, dextrin, honey, .
and
sweeteners,
malt
molasses each have sugar.
For people who are lactose
intolerant. the offenders may
be noted on the label as milk,
cream, margarine, whey,
casein and cheese. Gluten or
gliadin intolerance can be
detected on the label in the
form of flour, modified food
starch,
MSG,
HVP
(hydrolyzed vegetable pro·
tetn), cereal, malt or cereal
extracts, lnalt flavoring, dis·
tilled vinegar, emulsifiers,
wheat, rye, oats, barley,
buckwheat, stabilizers and
wheat starch.
Additives, such as sulfites,

FOR TIP-S

Becky
Baer

MSG, FD&amp;C Yellow No. 5
coloring (tartrazine) and
intense sweeteners such as
aspartame, may also cause
problems for some people.
Ingredient information is provided on the label to help people kn!lw what they are eating.
Consumers -can continue
their use of safe practices
when purchasing foods by
checking jugs. jars, cans and
carton ~. Make sure seals are
unbroken and that vacuumpacked jars still have the button down: Avoid cans 'that
are bulging, have dents, · are
lUSted or damaged. These
may indicate spoilage, such
Packages
as botulism.
should be in good shape with
no tears or holes.
Observe "sell by" and "use
by" dates. If the sell by date .
or use by date . will be up
before you have eaten the·
perishable food, don 't buy it.
Make your perishable food

. selections (meat. tish, poultry, el5gs, etc.) just before;
checktng out. Place raw.
poultry and meats in plasti&lt;::
bags to prevent the juice from
leaking onto unprotected:
foods in the cart.
·
When buying frozen foods,
check the package . The food
should be frozen solid. There
should be no signs of thawing', discolored packaging oi.
softness. The package shou let
be completed closed. ·
Pack cold foods together so
they will keep each other
chilled during the trip home.
Immediately take the groceries home and store them
properly. The temperature of
the food can ·increase _up. to
ten degrees just on the shQri
trip from the refrigerator case
to home, so if there will be
more than thirty minutes of
travel, bring a cooler with ice
or chill packs to keep the
foods at refrigerator tempera-.
tures. Remember that refrig-·
erat~d
perishable foods .
should not be out longer than
two. hours at room temperature. This includes the ride,
home from the store.
Be smart when grocery
shopping.
By following,
these suggestions. you can
eliminate safety and health
problems that may occur
when purchasing foods.

will be here Thursday, September ·23
· Supplemen't to:
Poi.nt Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel

Jennifer Allen and Eric ·Toops

Athens Victory 2i04 headquarters, 10 West State Street,
(594-7121 ): law office . of
Attorney Susan Gwinn. 86
Columbus Road, (594-8686);
College gate at the comer of
Coun and Union Streets,
Ohio University, (204-10211 )
They .can aJso be picked up
at the Nelsonville Victory
2004 Headquarters. 25 Public
Square; · in Glouster at the
Glouster Dairy Queen, in
Albany at the Albany Dairy
Queen, and in Coolville at the
Cool Spot' Gas Station.

Proud to be apart of your life..

'

Abby

2004 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION

ATHENS
- On University. he promised that
Wednesday ~venin~. John . one of the Demod-atic candiEdwards, Deniocrattc Vice- dates would .visit Ohio
presidential nominee, will University in the fall.
speak at the Ohio University Wednesday the Kerry earnBaker Center located at '.20 paign will fulftll that promise
East Union St. in Athens.
with -the Edwards rallv.
·
. It is his second visit to
The event is free and open
'southeastern Ohio. Last week to the public. Free tickets are
Senator Edwards campaigned not required, but they are
in Chillicothe where he spoke strongly encouraged and will
provide access to preferred
to a crowd of about 5,000.
In June. when Democratic viewing areas. Gates will
National
· Committee o'ptn at 5:00p.m. ,
Chairman Terry McAuliffe
Tickets are available at the
campaigned
at
Ohio foll~wing locations in Athens :

.,

Joshua 'Tomlo Peavtey

Dea r

- If he is never wrong and
never apologizes, everything
will be "your fault" forever. And
after years of hearing it, you may
even stan to ac~ept the blame.
_ - · If he does so mething.
-•wrong and says, "That .
wouldn ' t ha ve happened if
you hadn't ( ),'' that's
another sign of an abuser.
-And if'he's mean to child
t
· 1
ren, pes or amma s. recog·
· th t h ·
th 1 · 1 d
mze a e 5 pa 0 ogtca ' an ·
the next victim could be you. ~
1
100
ct·
bl dam now
d · d percent
1· 1 ·Is-a e :n tn angeakr0 ostbng
everyt.,mg. 1 was t en m y
someone who came to regard
ine as a disposable item. I only_
hope my letter will save some-~
one else from the heartbreak.
I'm experiencing. - EYES:
WIDE OPEN IN MISSISSIPPr
DEAR
EYES
WIDE
OPEN : Your letter is brim·
ming with well-thought-out
advice. and I hope my readers.
will heed it. Now I have some
advice for you: Start asking_
around for the name of the·.
, best divorce lawyer you can
find, and be prepared for a
fight. I wish you luck.
.
Dear Abby i.~ wrine11 by:
Abigail Van Burell, alsok11own a.~ jeanne Phillips, ami .
was founded by her mother;
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear_
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

.

VP candidate John Edwards
corning to Ohio .University

SEPT: fl,
-~004. "'-"""
\t

: S. Sill Peavley is stationed

of Medicine in Houston. Texas.
He is a Diplomate of the
American Board of Internal
Medicine and the American Board
of
Internal
Medicine,
Gastroenterolog¥.
To schedule an appointment call
Holzer Clinic Internal Medicine
Department 'at (7 40) 446-5131 or
Holzer Clinic Lawrence County
740-886-9403.

Allen-Toops
engagement

~apan .

at

.

,....

NG

·

TIME

.

All performances in the Great Artists'
Benefit Series will begin at 8 p.m. Tickets are
just $25 for the complete series or $10 for
individual concerts and are on sale now at the
Ariel, Ioi:ated at 426 Second Ave. in Gallipolis
OH.
For more information, call the Morris &amp;
Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre at 740-446ARTS (2787).

,space

POMEROY - S. Sgt. Tun
and Kazue Peavley 3JlJ10UilCt
the birth of their mt child.
Joshua Tomio, on Aug. 23 a1 the
Gerald Champion Regional
Medical Center in Alamogorda,
N. M. Joshua weighed 7 pounds.
Paternal grandparents are Jack
and Janet Peavley of Pomeroy
and the great-grimdmolher isOla
St. Clair. Pomeroy.
Ma:emal grandparents are
NaKaKa Nakajima and
Unkichi Hara Ko of Amori.

Other events

Homecomings/
Reunions

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
announces
the addition of
Gastroenterologi st, Marc Subik,
MD.
Subik received his medical
degree from Upstate Medical
Center in Syracuse, N.Y. in 1979.
He completed his medical
Internship and residency at
Marshall University SchooJ ·of
Medicine in Huntington, W.Va.
and
his
Gastroenterology
Fellowship at the Baylor College

.

Peavley birth announcement . ·

Revivals

Gastroenterologist joins Holzer Clinic

"

One of the parade participants gets into the spirit of Autumn for the Racine Fall Festival. (Beth
Sergent;photo)

ily reunion will be held at
noon at Star Mi II Park,
Racine.
Sunday, Sept. 19
POMEROY - Old Bethel
DEAR ABBY: Two weeks
Free Will Baptist Church agb, my husband let it slip
located at St. Rt. 7 'and Storys that he wants a divorce. Since
Run Rd . will observe home- we were married, his personcoming beginning with ality has changed completely.
Sunday School at I0 a.m., a He is not the man I married.
pot luck dinner at 12 p.m.,
I wou ld like to pass along
and special singing in the sometipstoran)loneconsidering
afternoon. Ralph Butcher is maniage,andsharesomeofthe
the pastor and Brother Bob bright-red flags I chose to ignore.
Thompson will be preaching.
- If your parents or sibRACINE - The Oscar and lings have doubts about him.
Charles Reed Hysell reunion pay attention. Listen and
will be held at 12:30 p.m. at .check it out.
Star Mill Park. Take a dessert
- If your intended has
. good to say abou t h'ts
or covered dish. There will be not hmg
white elephant sale after the ex, beware. This is a pattern.
·
1
1·
dinner.
D.t.vorce ts
rare Y on Y one
person 's fault.·
- · If ' his children have
nothing to do with him, do
not believe him if he says his
Wednesday, Sept. IS
ex brainwashed them against
LONG BOTTOM -A him . My stepchildren have
revival wi II be held at Mount
me it was because th~y
Olive Church through Friday told
hated him, and they have
beginning at 7 p.m. nightly. good reasons.
Evangelist David · Crowell
-Look closely at his credfrom Mich. will be preach- it and job history. They are
ing. There will be special
sure predie'tors of what your
singing. ·
life will be like .
- If he's over 30 and has
no money, do not let him
move in with you, and don't
Tuesday, Sept. 14
marry him until he's finanPOMEROY - The Meigs cially solvent. If he has any
County Health Department respect for you (and himself),
will conduct a Childhood he'll insist on it.
Immunization Clinic from 9
- Be sw-e in your heart that
to II a.m., and I to 3 p.m. at you can live with him AS IS. You
1·12 E Memorial Drive. Take cannot change another pers6n.
child(ren)'s shot records.
-This is a biggie: Beware
Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal
Saturday, Sept. 18
guardian. Bring medical
RACINE - The Fink fam- cards. if applicable.

.

David Curtin

Tuesday,Septernberi4,2004

Wife regrets ignoring signs
that warned of bad marriage

behind
Eastern
Elementary/High School at 6
p.m .. The Chester Vol~nteer
Fire Dept. will be there with
their fire engine. Any Boys
that are seven or in first
through . sixth grade )eveis
who are interested in learning
more "dbout Cub Scouts are
encouraged
to ' atte nd .
Contact Gary at 740-9920823 .
Thursday, Sept. 16 ·
. RACINE - . Racine Lodge
164, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. at the
hall. Work in the EA degree.
· Refreshments.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association will meet for a
noon luncheon at the Trinity
.Church. The state president
of ORTA will speak on current issues for retirees. Also
there will be a program of
music by the Treble Makers
barbershop
quartet
of
Gallipolis. Members are to
bring iu school supplies Jar
donation to God's Net' Youth
Ministries which will distrib·
ute them to children. Guests
are welcome. Phone in reservations to either 1-740-992·
3214 or 1-740-949-2601.
Saturday, Sept. 18
POMEROY
Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will hold their
fun night, hay ride and
. wiener roast beginning at
6:30p.m. Everyone is invited
to attend.

Thesday; Sept. 14 ·
POMEROY -Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District Board ofSupervisors
wil! meet in special session at
II :30 a.m. at the Meigs
SWCD Office fot the pur·
pose of personnel issues.
EAST MEIGS - Cub
Scout Pack 235 wi II have its
fall round-up at 6 p.m. behind
the Eastern Elementary
School. In the event of rain, it
will be held in the cafeteria at
the school.
POMEROY
Meigs
County .
Genealogical
Society, 5 p.m. at the Meigs
County Museum. Public wei·
come.
.
CHESTER - Cub Scout .
Pack 235 will be holding .
their annual Fall Roundup to
sign up new cub ·scouts.
There will be a bonfii"e

PageA3

·BY THE BEND

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The D~ily 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 ofreligion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a.redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 14,the 258th day of 2004. There are
I 08 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 14, 1814, Francis Scott Key wrote his poem 'The
Star-Spangled Banner' after witnessing the British bombardment ·o f Fort McHenry in Maryland during the War of 1812.
On this date:
In 1847, U.S. forces under Gen. Winfield Scott took control
of Mexico City.
In 1901 , President McKinley died in Buffalo, N.Y., of gunshot wounds inflicted ·by an assassin. Vice President Theodore
Roosevelt succeeded him.
In 1927, modern dance pioneer Isadora Duncan died in
Nice , France, when her scarf became entangled in a wheel of
her sports car.
In 1940, Congress passed the Selective Service Act, providi•ig for the first peacetime draft in U.S. history.
.
In 1948, a groundbreaking ceremony took place in New .
York at the site of the United Nations world headquarters.
In 1959, the Soviet space probe Luna 2 became the first
manmade object to reach the moon as it crashed onto the lunar
surface;
In 1963, Mary Ann Fischer of Aberdeen, S.D., gave birth to
four girls and a boy, the first surviving quintuplets in the
United States.
In 1982, Princess Grace t&gt;f Monaco, formerly actr~ss Grace
Kelly, died at age 52 of injuries from a car crash the day
·
·
before.
In 1982, Lebanon's president-elect, Bashir Gemayei, was
killed by a bomb.
In 1993, Israel and Jordan signed a framework for negotiations. a day after the signing of a PLO-Israeli peace accord.
Ten years l!go: On the 34th day of a strike by players, acting Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig announced the 1994
season was over.
Five years ago: Indonesian soldiers looted t.he abandoned
U.N. mission in East Timor, just hours after 110 U.N. personnel and 1,300 East Timorese were evacuated and flown to
safety to end a 10-day siege. Hurricane Floyd clobbered the
Bahamas, toppling power Iines, ripping roofs off homes and
pushing a ro\Iing sea into streets before heading toward the
southeastern United States.
One year ago: Swedes rejected adopting the European common currency in a referendum overshadowed by the killing of
Foreign Minister Anna Lindh, an ardent euro supporter. World
Trade Organization talks designed to change global trade collapsed in Cancun, Mexico, amid differences between rich and
poor nations. An older half-sister of tennis stars Venus and
Serena Williams, Yetunde Price, was shot to death in
,
.
Compton, Calif.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Zoe Caldwell is 71. Actor Harve
Presnell is 7 I. Feminist author Kate Millett is 70. Actor
Walter Koenig is 68. Actor Nicol Williamson is 66. Singer- ·
actress Joey Heatherton is 60. Actor Sam Neill is 57. Singer
Jon 'Bowser' ·Bauman. (Sha Na Na) is 57. Singer Barry
Cowsill is 50. Rock musician Steve Berlin (Los Lobos) is 49.
Country singer-songwriter Beth Nielsen Chapman · is 48.
Actress Mary Crosby is 45. Singer Monen Harket (a-ha) is 45. •
Country singer John Berry is 45: Actress Faith Ford is 40.
Actor Dan Conese is 36. Rock pmsician Craig Montoya (Tri
Polar) is 34. Actress Kimbel'ly Williams-Paisley is 33. Rapper
Nas is 3 I. Actor Adam Lamberg is 20.
·
Thought for Today: 'I venture to suggest that patriotism is
not a short and frenzied outburst of emotion but the tranquil
and steady dedication of a lifetime.' - · Adlai E. Stevenson,
American statesman ( 1900-1965).

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PageA4

OPINION

Tuesday, September 14, 2004

Tuesday, September 14,2004

Deaths

·Bush and Kerry tied again
President Bush may have
gotten a ' bump' in support
during the GOP convention,
but it's already dissipated.
Once again, he's tied with
Democrat John Kerry.
That's the evidence emerging from daily tracks by the
Rasmussen poll. And focus
groups m 17 battleground
states
conducted
by
Democratic consultant Bob
Beckel also suggest that
Bush failed to decisi~ely'
convert undecided voters.
Polling I ,000 voters a
night, Rasmussen found that
Bush
went
into
the
Republican convention with
a one-point lead, 47 percent
to 46 percent, and came out
Sept. 4 with a lead of 4.4
points, 49.1 percent to 44.7
percent.
By Sept. 7, however, the
race had slipped back to 4 7.47. That's a more accurate
measure of the race than the
average of four other current
polls that give Bush a sixpoint lead.
Also suggesting a' tie is the
fact that the Gallup poll,
while showing Bush leading
by seven points amoQg likely voters, also found Bush
leading by just one among
registered voters.
.
Many experts expect that
the prospect of a big turnout
this year makes the registered-voter figure the more
accurate predictor.
Conducting its polls state
by state, Rasmussen reported · that Bush leads in electoral votes by 213 to 175,
· but lacks an edge in enough
of the most hotly contested
states to reach the 270
threshold for election. An
average of state polls by
Rea I c learpol i tics .com
gives Bush a Jead 'of 269 to
228.

which
they
think
is
nowhere.'
Bush did , not impress
focus-group . participants
during the first half of his
Morton
acceptance speech, which
Kondarcl&lt;e cove·red domestic issues.
However, he 'won an Aplus' during the second half,
dealing with foreign policy.
Beckel, who was Walter
Asked to grade the total
Mondale's campaign manag- speech, participants gave
er rn 1984, conducted his Bush a 'B-plus,' about the
focus groups in partnership same grade Kerry earned for
· unnamed his speech. Separate groups
with
an
Republican during both con- watched each convention.
ventions. The duo found that
'When Bush was disneither candidate made a cussing ·domestic policy,
final sale.
people in the groups were
Of 87 'serious' undecided . quite aware that he'd pro,
voters - all of whom voted posed a lot of this stuff
in the last three elections before:· Beckel said. ··And a
only two declared for Bush number of them asked, 'He's
after the GOP convention. had four years. Why hasn't
One decided for Kerry .and he done thi s sooner?'
the rest remained undecided.
'Wlten we said, 'Bush has
Beckel is convinced that been busy fighting a war on
the undecided pool is larger . terrorism,' what we got b;~ck
than the 4 percent or 5 per- from a number of people
cent usually assumed for this was, 'Well, ·if it was that
polarized
e lection.
To · Important, why didn't he
Beckel, 'persuadeables · may rai~e taxes on rich people?'
actually account for up to 15 Older people remembered
percent of the electorate.
that taxes got raised during
While acknowledging that past wars,'
he's a partisan Democrat,
Beckel said that 'the best
Beckel said he thinks 'Bush thing that happened for Bush
is in a lot more trouble than at his convention' was the
people think he is.' The rea- speech
by Sen. John
son: Battleground-state vot- McCain, R-Ariz., that made
ers are more concerned 'a connection between the
about the economy, health Iraq war and terrorism in an
care and stem cells than understandable way.'
about terrorism and Iraq. ·
He addesl that Gov. Arnold
'The best thing to come Schwarzenegger, R-Calif., ·
out of Kerry's convention,' received kudos for taking on
he said, 'is that, contrary to Kerry. 'B4t they didn't like
reports that he talked only (former New York Mayor
about Vietnam, voters heard Rudy) Giuliani,' he said.
him talking about . unem- And the speech by Sen. Zell
ployment and health care. ·
Miller, D-Ga., 'was a disas'They don't understand all ter. People said Miller's
the details of what .Kerry is speech 'represents the worst
for, but they know it's differ- . in politics."
ent from where Bush is,
' Giuliani talked about

9/11,' Beckel said, 'which is
a subject voters simply don't
want to be reminded about.
A number of people said,
'B.u~h needs to •keep us
scared to win this election'
and one woman said 'if you
have to live like this, why
live? It's like the bomb-shelter da'ys."
Also, he said, voters do
not want to hear about
Vietnam. ' They are convinced that Kerry was a hero
and ·that the Swift Boat veterans are under instructions
from the White House. But
they · don't care about
Vietnam. They : want to
know, 'What are you going
to do for me tomorrow?"
Beckel added, ' If there
was one thing that was striking. it's how many people
know and care about the
stem-cell issue. It was the
most remarked-upon single
thing in (first lady) Laura
Bush's speech. They were
offended that someone
forced her to say that Bush
was the first president to
fund stem cell research, even
if it's technically true.
'Sixty of the 87 people
were connected somehow to a
disease that might be cured
with stem cells, either &lt;JS caregivers or as having the disease, and they knew the difference between the number
of lines Bush claimed were
available for research, 69, and
the actual number, 17 .'
·The ·bottom line of both
the Rasmussen polling and
of Beckel's focus groups is .
that Democrats should stop
fretting about Bush's postconvention lead. It doesn't
exist.

(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capitol
.
Hill.)

and the Lying Liars Who·
Tell Them: A Fair and
Balanced Look at the Right.'
The First Amendment also
protects AI Franken.
In recent years, Franken
had gl'eatly enhanced his
career by freely eschewing
the notion of being fair and
balanced, but Franken has
not condemned the anti-First
Amendment complaint to
the FTC by MoveOn.Org
and Common Cause.
None of the attacks alleging that the Fox News
Channel is a tool of the .
Republicans have mentioned
the: regular appearances .of
Judge Andrew Napolitano,
the only commentator on
broadcas·t or cable television
who continually explains our
civil liberties as protected by
the Constitution, particularly
its Bill of Rights, in ·his
analysis of news eyents. He
appears on morning shows
as well as John Gibson',s
'The Big Story' in the afternoon, and often instructs
O'Reilly on constitutional
matters (not always with
success).
Here is a characteristic
commentary by Fox's senior
judicial analyst both on the
air and on the March 5, 2004
editorial · page of the Wall
Street Journal -whose edi:
tors
do
not
share
Napolitano's views on John
Ashcroft. Speaking of the
admi!fistration:S expansion
of National Security Letters,
Napolitano emphasizes:
'Now, without you knowing
it, · the
Justice
Department can learn where
.
you traveled, what you
spent, what you ate, what

-

NEW HAVEN -. Donald B . King, 54, of New Haven, W. Va. died Sept. 13, 2i004 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He is survived by his parents, Revna King, Jr. ·a nd Esther Grimm King of New Haven
Funeral ~e_rvice s will be held at I p.m. Thursday at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home with
bunaltn Umon Cemetery, Letart, W.Va. Fri~nds may call at the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m.
·
Wednesday.

For 1he recOrd
Foreclosure

Also, a judgment was
entered in favor of Oakwood
POMEROY - An action Acceptance· Corp. against
for foreclosure has been filed · Sandra R. Carnahan in the
·
in Meigs CtJunty Common amount of $7 1,875.
Pleas Court by the Bank of
New York against Arthur
Bradshaw of 33940 Hysell
Run Road, Pomeroy, and omPOMEROY
Scott
ers, alleging default on a Autherson of Middleport has
mortgage in .the amount •of been sentenced in Meigs
.
.
$50,852.
County Common Pleas Court
to serve five years' probation
and a six-month · residential
confinement at the SEPTA
facility in Nelsonville after
pleading guilty to one count
POMEROY- A judgment of breaking and entering.
has been entered in Meigs · After completing the SEPTA·
Counly Common Pleas Court program, Autherson will be
in favor of ABN AMRO required to attain fu.JI-time
Mortgage Corp. , Inc. al;lainst employment, and will be .
Clifford Thomas 1li in a fore- under a curfew from 7 p.m.-7
closure action in the amount a.m. An 11-month prison sen- ·
$75,346.
tence was suspended,

Sentenced

Judgments
entered

(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authoritY on the
First Amendmenr . and . the
Bill of Righls and author of
several books, including
'The War 011 the Bill of
Rights and the Gathering
Resistance' (Seven Storie.5
Press, 2003 ).

•

POMEROY - A divorce
act ion h,as been fi led ' in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Coqrt by Patricia A.
Nutter o~ Tuppers Plains
against Russell Nutter of
Tuppers Plains.

Marriage
licenses
POMEROY - · .Marriage
licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
Walter Anthony King, 46, of
Albany, and Tonya · Lynn
Hudnall, 30, of Albany; and
to Troy Michael McDaniel ,
41, of Pomeroy, and 'Lisa
Violet Moodispaugh, 27, of
Pomeroy.

POMEROY
Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph E.
Trussell reports the following :
Ashley Miller of Racioe
was arrested for domestic
violence .
.
Kelly Hayman of Racine
was arrested for Portage
County on a charge of failure
. to appear.
William Durst of Rutland
was arrested for domestic
violence.
Mark Compson of Racine
was arrested for domestic ·

violence.
and driving under the influCharles Bailey ,Jr. of ence.
Reedsville was arrested for
Loretta Atkins of Rutland
domestic violence.
reported a trailer she owns in
Stephen Jenkins of Racine Rutland was broken into.
was incarcerated on a charge · Kenneth Stocker of Albany
of possessing cocaine, having reported his mailbox had
drug paraphernalia and tam- been run over and someone
pering with evidence.
had driven through his yard.
Seth Wehrung of Racine
Mary K. Smith of Racine
reported his truck had been reported her white Chevy $vandalized.
·
· 10 pickup truck was stolen
Reeds Store in Reedsville from her residence.
David
L.
Elkins
of
reported a theft of gasoline.
Brian Hunt of Racine was . Pomeroy was arrested on a
cited for' reckless operation .charge of domestic violence.

Landslide

picnic tables and cooked
"Now that Hannah's Hill
ahead of every home game. has slipped, I don't know
At one time they even had a what they're going to do,"
small black powder cannon said Jim Soulsby who along
which they shot off every with Bob "Artie-Foo" Burton
time Meigs scored.
Over the years they also met there Monday morning
did a little fund raising for the to look over the damage.
"This was the best place to
Meigs Athletic Boosters. The
group had a coffee can and watch .the game . from,"
when Meigs scored they all lamented Burton. "It's just a
shame."
contributed to the Boosters.

from PageA1

page occurred has long been
called Hannah's Hill, named
that a dozen or so years ago
when C huck Hannah and
friends , all avid 'Marauder
fans, brought in grills and

you paid to finance your car
and your house, what you
confided to your lawyer and
insurance and real estate
agents, and what periodicals
you read without having to
demonstrate any.e·vidence or
even suspicion of criminal
activity on your part.'
The judge has pointed out
that these N(llional Security
Letters are sent out by the
govern!'Jent without the
requirement of a judge'.s
approval; and he noies that
this pervasive violation of
our privacy was signed into
law by the president on Dec.
13, 2003, as part of the
Intelligence Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2004.
J's this the work of a
'mouthpiece
for
the
Republican Party?·
Fox News is watched by
more Americans, on many
nights, !ruin CNN. On ihe
fust night of the Republican
convention, an average of 3.6
million viewers watched Fox,
compared with I .2 million
-CNN viewers. Fox continually trumps MSNBC. On three
nights, Fox beat NBC, CBS
and ABC. Its coverage does
indeed appeal to conservatives, but not only conservatives. When I teach, I advise
students to actually watch
Fox from time to time, and
judge for themselves. They
might be quite surprised.

Divorce

Sheriff's Report

•

Meeting
.

from PageA1
'

neer for the company hired
by the county to prepare the
county plan, said FEMA
recently · granted more than
$2 · million to the city of
Fairfield in Ohio for a mltigation project.
The Meigs County planning group has ranked potentHll hazards as follows, with
ihe first being the hi~hest
concern: floods, wmter
storms (snow, ice), severe

storms (lightning, hail, high
winds, tornadoes), landslides,
mine subsidence, earthquakes and droughts.
At the meeting last week,
officials prepared a "wish
list" of potential projects and
purchases that might be funded under FEMA mitigation.
Money to acquire and
remove "repeated Joss" structures was at tile top of the list.
Even as they did the planning work, there was some
amount of doubt among the
officials. Commissioner Jim
Sheets pointed · out that
FEMA had paid to elevate

some homes in Rutland, a
project he called wasteful.
"It creates another problem," he said. "It creates a
false sense of security."
A long list of equipment
could be purchased to help
deal with a flood, including
front end loaders, chippers, a
basket trilck, a dump truck,
chainsaws and a vacuum
truck.
The group will meet one
more time in October before
the mitigation · plan reaches
draft form, to be presemed
for comment at a public .
meeting.

WASHINGTON (AP) with the interests of our said the intelligence director
Homeland
Security department and our agenda should not sit in the presiSecretary Tom Ridge and in mind, but at the same time. dent 's cabinet.
Secretary of State Colin coming together as a seniorPentagon agencies control
Powell endorsed the idea level body to provide advice, 80 percent of the national
Monday of a new national counsel, correction, guidance intelligence budget estimated
intelligence director with ... as to what the overall at $40 billion a year.
budget authority over the . needs of the nation are."
Powell and Ridge said they
nation 's nonmilitary intelliThe Senate Governmental expect a national intelligence
gence agencies,• noting that Affairs Committee will begin director to make both their
authority comes with the debating legislation next . jobs easier.
power to control money.
week to create the intelli" Do you believe that a
"ln this town, it's the ulti - gence director position and a strong national intellige nce
mate command and control," national counterterror center director ... wi II improve the
said Ridge, who was denied as suggested by the indepen- quality of intelligence you
budget authority over other dent commission that studied both
receive?"
asked
security agencies when the Sept. II, 200 I, attacks on
Republican · Sen·. Susan
Congress cre,ated his depart- the United States. House ·
Collins of· Maine, the comment after the Sept. II leauers are working out how
mittee's chair.
attacks.
that chamber will deal with
"Yes. I do. We need a
Powell · also endorsed the commission's legislative
stronger,
empowered quar,
President Bush's suggestion recommendations.
that he, Ridge and other top
The 9/11 commission com- terback." Powell said. Ridge
officials sit on a Cabinet- ·· plained that poor coordina- said: " I concur."
One intellige nce agency
level joini intelligence coun- tion ·by the 15 intelligence
not
affected by the presi-·
cit to advise the intelligence agencies caused failures that,
director. He said he envi- had they not occurred, might dent 's or the 9/11 commissioned its work as similar to have prevented the Sept. II sion's proposal is the State
the military's Joint Chiefs of hijackings and attacks on Department 's Bureau of
Staff, where heads of the New
York
City
and Intelligence and Research,
military branches sit together Washington . Among its sug- which gets its $50 million
to decide the armed forces' gestions to fix ttie situation from th,at department' s budneeds as a whole.
was appointment of an intel· get and works directly with .
"We got the best advice ligence director with the the secre tary of state.
When
questio ned
by
using that kind of 'tech- power to control spe'nding
Senate
Appropriations
nique;: said Powen, a former and to hire and fire.
Army general who chaired . Bush .suggested last week Chairman Ted Stevens, Rthe Joint Chiefs.
that Congress . create a Alaska. ·Powell said he want"Th is I can see i1i that same national intelligence director ed to keep contro l &lt;if that
way, where you have Tom, to control only the nonmili- agency. He agreed, however,
myself, the secretary of ener- tary intelligence agencies, that the national intelligence
gy, the secretary of defense, give that person budgetary director should be entitled to
the secretary of the treasury, authority over those agencies agree on the bureau's direcwhere eac h of us will come but only limited personnel tor, "and if there ·sa disagreetogether with our unique authority. He also ·suggested ment. we'll take it to the
parochial experience and the Cabinet-level council but president."

Agenda

growth was eight inches tall
in some places.
Mayor Musser said the
' city workers are presently
from Page A1
working their way down ·the
with a solution to the speed- path. They began weed eating problem he would use·hi s ing on Friday and continued
backhoe to ditch the road and Monday.
"slow themdown."
Concerned that the work. Mayor Musser twice cau- ers were not done yet,
tioned Smith on taking that McAngus added. " I' d like to
remedy by saying that ditch- ride around in a truck with
ing up the road was not a them for one day."
solution the council would be
Councilwoman
Ru.th
happy with. Smith agreed Spaun said she had also
though he also said, "We're received calls comp laining
going to solve something up about the condition of the
there if we have to do it our- walking path. Councilman
selves."
Todd Norton was also conSmith also inquired about cerned that the weeds would
weed control on Union not be cut for the Sternwheel
Terrace Road and a guard rail Festival and reflect poorly on
he had previously requested. the vi llage to touri sts.
Mayor Musser promised that
Spaun also voiced her conhe would see what the coun- 9ern that the vi llage clean up
cil could do and call Smith. Sugar Run Park. Musser said
Smith requested that his it can be weed eate\1 but not
name be put on the agenda mowed because of the rocks
for the next three council' and debris dumped by former
meetings to ' follow up on his tenants, Mid-West Steel.
concerns.
Musser said he would try to
Pomeroy resident, Vickie find some dirt io fill in the
Hysell asked council ifit was park and estimated a foot of
possible to get a stree t on dirt may be needed to cover
Willis Hill off of Spring Ave. the debris.
closed. The road . connects
Councilman
George
·with Hysell's property and is Wright asked the Mayor if
in popr condition. Mayor the new filter system that
Mussep said he would check Meigs County will received
with the village lawyer to see as part of the Dupont/C-8
if it needs to be condemned. , lawsuit settlement will interDuring the open discus- fere with projects presently
sion, all council members · going on at the ~ater treatvoiced concern about the ment plant. M1,1sser said it
condition of the weeds and would not and felt it would
high grass along the walking be an add on to their 'present
'
system though the EPA
path.
"It looks bad," said coun- would need to review the
cilwoman, · Mary McAngus plan. The.s e changes resulting
who also remarked that the from the Dupont/C-8 lawsuit

for
us
here
in
an individual still are paid lot
Middleport,''
Iannarelli
said.
by the village.
,
is
the
new
policy
we "Sometimes we complain
"This
'
about what we have here, but
don't
think
have
started
and
I
from PageA1
we can back off," he said. we have a lot to be thankful
.
pay an average of $25 more "You've got to draw the line for.''
Middlep,ort was denied in
somewhere."
per month.
Peckham disagreed. "I ihink its first ~pplication for the
Only two councilmen,
grant, and Iannarelli credited
Steve Houchins and Bob we ought to pay it," he said.
Also in other action, coun- · Trussell for finding out why
from PageA1
Robinson, voted to deny vilit
it
was
rejected
and
getting
cil
approved
sending
an
offilage payment of the increase.
the second time.
d'd
Only Jeff Peckham V()ted to cial letter of thanks to Meigs approVed
"She did a fantastic job," consistent. However, so 1
County
Grant
Administrator
pay the increase. When both
Maxine's love of music.
.
mayor said.
·'
.
Kathy Scott and Roger Jean Trussell for .her signifi- theAlso
in other action, trickIn her youth, Maxme was
Hanley abstained, Houchins' cant help i·n the village's getf
a
music
major at Cleveland
motion to deny paymg the ting a $300,000 Community or-treat night has been set or Bible College in Canton.
Distress grant.
· Oct. 28 from 6-7 p.m. Playing and singing music
increase was carried.
The
money
will
be
used
to
her
_pleasure
Electrical work is continuing brought
Houchins said the vilpave
streets,
install
sideat the marina, and is expected throughout her life. At her
lage had paid . all the
employ·ees' prem1ums up walks, demolish condemned to be completed in time for · home, her organ and sheet
American
Legion music sat next to a collection
until recently. and then houses, buy new fire equip- the
ment
and
restore
the
train
Halloween
event
which
will of special dolls and a unique
decided the employees
Park.
depot
at
Dave
Diles
follow the trick-or-treating.
doll house built by her husshould pay 30 percent of
The village already is seekFinally, council approved band.
the premiums for family
Maxine eventually had to
members .
All
of an ing bids for paving on a list the hiring of two pan-time
of
streets
and
alleys.
·
police officers: Brandi Tobin have both legs amputated
employee's premiums · ·as
·"I think it's going to do a and Shannon Smith.
because of diabetes com pi ications. Wi(h the help of
physical therapists, prosthetics and her sheer determination. she eventually learned
to walk again. Unfortunately
she continued to struggle
with heart dise·ase and dialysis until her death last
October.
Stil),
her
husband
remarked that even when she
was unable to walk on 'her
Youralllldeto•••l
·'
.
own,
"She would rqll up to
thebl sbllil

EPA

Organ

·Com1"ng Thursday in the Sentinel.....
1

nd ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

·Powell, Ridge endorse creating
·strong national intelligence director

Donald B. King

Targeting the Fox.News Channel
On Aug. 31, during the
Republican
National
Convention in New York,
more than I ,000 protestors
..
reveling in their right of free
Nat
expression ironically staged
Hentoff
a ~shut-up-athon' outside the
midtown studios of the Fox
News ·
'Channel.
Demonstrators chanted 'Fox
lies, people die,' while ment watchdog, actually
accusing the cable network filed a complaint with the
of being a Republican Federal Trade Commission
accusing the Fox News
mouthpiece.
I wonder how many of · Channel of decejJtive·advertising be~ause ,if its persis· those clamoring to shut up
tent claim of being 'fair and
Fox have actually watched
balanced.'
the channel. To be sure, Fox
In the July 20 Wall Street
houses an array of such
Journal, FTC Chairman
bristling conservative comTimothy Muris provided
mentators such as Bill
MoveOn.Qrg and Common
O'Reilly and Sean Hannity.
Cause with a basic lesson on
But their hosts continually the 'freedom of the press •
welcome direct, on-air com- clause
the
First
in
bat wjth guests ot vigorously Amendment, saying:
opposing views. I've been on
'I am not aware of any
with O'Reilly's show, and· I instance in which the
didn't have to be carried out. Federal Trade Commission.
Moreover, having coveted has investigated the slogan
Congress and the presidency of a news organization.
for more than a half century; There is no way to evaluate
I rate Fox's Carl Cameron this petition without evaluat- ·
and Jim Angle as among the . ing the content of the news
fairest and most illuminating at issue. That is a task the
broadcast correspondents on First Amendment leaves to
the beat. Also, Fox reporters the American people, not a
in the field, around the government agency.'
world, are professional,
The First Amendment, of
resourcefuf journalists, not course, does not mandate .
apparatchiks
for
the that journalism, or any form
Republican Party.
of .expression, be fair and
But the Fox News Channel balanced. For example, there
is not only targeted by· the is the. loudly panisim AI
sansculottes roaring outside' Franken, a resounding critic
its studios during the of Fox News. The llSually
Republican
convention. astute Roger Ailes, founder
MovOn.Org, which strikes · of the channel, made a dumb
me as a mouthpiece for John mistake when he permitted
Kerry's campaign, . and the Fox News to sue Franken .for
more credible Common trademark abuse in the title
Cau'se, a .grassroots govern- of Franken's ~st seller 'Lies

www.mydailysentlnel.com

the organ in her wheelchair
and play."
Milerta Miller. Director of
Development at Appalachian
Community Visiting Nurse
Association, Hospice and
Health Services of Athens.
visited Mr. Jones rec ently as
Maxine had been under their
hospice care.
Miller noticed the organ
still sitting 'in the same place
and asked what he intended
to do with it. Jones said he
wouldn't sell it but would
dQnate, it to a nursi ng home or
facility where it would be
played and enjoyed by those
who visited and lived there.
Miller COl the ball rolling
by
calling
Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center near
Pomeroy which is both a long
and shnrt term care facility.
The staff there wa delighted
to accept the Jones' gift in
August.
-The organ now si ts in the
cafeteria at Reh abil itation
Center for lhe residents to
hear. play and · enjoy. The
100-bed facility tries to
incorporate new activi(ies for
the residents such as movie
night. backyard barbecues. ·

s.hould take effect in the next
60 days.
Wright also expresSed his
co ncern over the poor condition of the sidewalk near the
old Masonic Lodge . Musser
said he may be able to fit the
repairs into a $300,000 gran t
he is presently working on
although it may take one to ·
two years to receive the
money.
Musser requested Wright
accompany him to the sidewalk to see if there were any
immediate actions the council could take as far as repairing the property.
Musser also noted that
· during last week 's hard rain
. the roof to the municipal
building leaked in severa l
places. He suggested they
replace some guttering and
patch the roof before the next
rain.
·.
Musser
thanked
the
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department for hosing off the
parking lot after last week's
flooding.
In other. business, council
approved both the Mayor's
Report For August and
Clerkffreasurer's Report For
August.
They approved
Resolution
19.04 . 2005
Rev~nue Sharing Budget
which is a budget turned into
the auditors that helps certify
tax levies. They approved
20.04
Resolution
Transferring Money From
General To Street Fund in the
amount of $3 ,000. They also
renewed their contract with
Gates McDonald for $792 a
year.. Gates McDonald han- .
dies all the village's workers,
compensations claims.
the upcoming Trick or Treat·
event. and an indoor bird
sanctuary. According to
Admissions Director Erin
Roush , the organ was a welcome addition and helps
incorporate a slice of home
into the residents ' lives.
The country ·music that
normall y plays throughout
the cafeteria is now joiped by
the new org.an. Much like
Maxine Jones did, 94-yearold
Rock springs
Cemerresident ·
Mary
Rineh art rolled up to the
organ with the help of her
walker. sat down and began
1o play despite her arthritis.
Mary said. she had been
playing piano and organ
since she was I 4, tuok two
years of te·s sons and then
taught herself everything she
needed to know about playing lhe in,struments. She said
she had no favorite songs
becau:.e 'he liked them all .
" I ju:-.t hope someone gets
some good out of it," said
Jones about donating ~he
organ, gening his wish by
fulfilling one of his wife's.

••• ·,._.llt ...,
•
I
~~....,;......-~
· -----~---~------..:.~-------___;,__
'

_ __

....

�'

•

PageA6

O ·H IO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 14, 2004

Congressman criticized for handling
of debate on health studies
,,

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Weather forecast
Thesday, September 14
Morning (7 a.m.-Noo11)
It should be a cloudy morning. Temperatures will rise
from 66 to 76 by late this
morning. Winds will be 5
MPH from · the south.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It should remain cloudv.
There is a slight chance of
. rain. Temperatures will rise

from 79 early afternoon to the early this evening to 66. Winds
high for the day of R2 at will be 5 to 10 MPH from the
2:00pm as they drop back · southeast.
down to 77 later this afterOvemigllt ( J-6 a.m.)
noon. Winds will be 5 to I 0 Tempemtures will hold steady
MPH from the southwest
around 62 with today's low of
turning from the southeast as
the afternoon progresses.
60 occllrring around 6:00am.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) Skies will range from mostly
. It will · remain -cloudy. clear to partly cloudy with 5
Temper~ttures will drop from 77 MPH winds from the southeast.

Local Stocks
ACI- 34.08
AEP-32.26
Akzo- 34.39
. .
Ashland Inc. - 52.28
AT&amp;T - 15.15
BLI- 12.56
Bob Evans- 26.90
BorgWarner- 44.25
Champion- 3.81
Charming Shops - 7.29
City Holaing - 32.73
Col- 36.08
DG -20.54
DuPont - 43.15
Federal Mogul - .18

USB- 29.54
Gannett- 86.32
General Electric- 33.75
GKNLY-4.10
· Harlev Davidson· 62.68
Kinart- 85.33
Kroger- 16.70
Ltd.- 21.07
NSC- 28.91
Oak Hill Financial- 34.68
OVB - 30.85
BBT - 40.25 ,
Peoples - 25.92
Pepsil:o- 50.68
Premier- 8.75

Rockwell - 39.25
Rocky Boots- 15.88
RD Shell - 51.75
SBC-26.84
Sears- 40.93
Wal-Mart - . 53.25
· Wendy's- 36.48
Worthington - 20.80 ·
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions.
provided by Smith Partners at
Ad vest Inc. of Gallipolis ..

WASHINGTON
· · .A
watchdog group has criticized
au Ohio congressman for
whill it says is an attempt to
cut off debate on health studies in a federal spending bilL
Several lawmakers last year
sought to block funding for
sex-related studies being
funded through the National
Institutes of Health, includi!Jg
ones titled "Mood Arousal
and Sexual Risk Taking" and
''Study on Sexual Habits of
Older Men."
Republican Rep. Ralph
Regula, who heads a subcommittee
on
the
House
(AP
. Appropriations Committee, Rep. Ralph Regula, R,Qhio; )VOrks in his Capitol Hill office In
this year asked lawmakers in . this May 11, 1999, photo In Washington. Regula, a leader on
a letter not to challenge spe- the House Appropriations Committee. in 2004 asked lawmakcific grants on the House ers in a letter not to challenge specific sex-related studies
Citizens
Against grants on the House ftoor. Citizens Against Government Waste
floor.
Government Waste says the says the tactic threatens open debate in Congress.
tactic threatens opendebate in
Congress.
Carpenter said members of
Prostitutes/Masseuses" and
"They're asserting their "Study on American Indian Congress have the right to
pawer and it's almost a threat Transgender Research," failed question the validity of any
not to challenge them.'' Mark 212 _210 .
grants and the letter sends a
Carpenter, a spokesman for
the nonpartisan, nonprofit
In the letter circulated to message to lawmakers that
·group based in Washington, lawmakers on A)lg. 13, challenging
House
M
d
Regula
and
House
'd
D.C., sa1
on ay.
Appropriations leaders could
Regula said in the letter tliat Appropriations Chairman Bill put funding for loc~l projects
he did not have enough notice Young, R-Fia., said they in jeopardy.
to answer detailed questions wanted to pass the Labor,
Regula, ·who is vying to be
that came up last year about Health and Human Services,
the s{!x-related studies, some and Education spending ·bill chairman of the full House
Appropriations Committee
of which are multiyear pro- in a "timely fashion."
jects that ·continue to be fundll encouraged lawmakers to next' year, said his letter was
ed in this year's $142 billion seek answers to their ques- not a threat and offering.
.bill, which includes $28.5 bit- ti'ons about specific grants amendments won't impact
lion for NIH.
through the committee and whether a lawmaker gets
'There are 40.000 grants NIH, rather than to "surprise" money for their home state.
out there, so it's kind of hard House leaders with amendprojects.
to be knowledgeable about ments.
"That has nothing to do
each one," Regula said
"I strongly urge the memwith
it . whatsoever," Regula
Monday. "How are you supJ .. bers to resist the temptation to
posed to debate an amend- select a few grants for de- said. "You can challenge me
ment about an NIH grant funding because they do not night and day."
unless you know what the like the sound of them," the
The bill that funds health
grant does?"
·
letter quoied Regula, speak- research and ·education and
Last year's effort by &amp;ep. Pat ing on the House floor last
job training programs passed
Toomey, R-Pa., to cut $1.5 mil- year. "It would set a danger:
lion in funding for four sex- ous precedent and put a chill .the House on Thursday by
related grants, . which also on medical research if we 388-13 with 32 members not
included studies titled "Study start to micromanage individ- voting. It's . pending in ' the
Senate . .
on S.an Francisco's Asian ual NIH grants."

Time is running out for public to get them
By pAHIEL COTTRELL
Universal Med1a. Svnd1cate

(SYNDICATED)- Hoards of people are jamming National Hotline phones to get $2 bills
for face value.
Some collectors are trying to snatch up all
they can.
The crisp, uncirculated $2 bills are being
banded in packs of five and sent directly to
their homes.
·
ff parents and grandparents living in 1928
had kept a pack of five uncirculated S2. bills
they could be worth $2,250.00 today. That's
why people want these new bills so' badly.
"Our current private vault reserves of the
new $2 bills will soon be ·gone. Those ·who
want to get them. should call now,'' said John
Thomas White. Executive Director of the
United States Monetary Exchange.
Origimilly issued in 1928, the Two D· liar
Bill haS largely been locked away in dark U.S.
Federal Reserve vaults, rarely distributed by
banb and almost never seen in circulation.
' That's why it is extremely rare to actually
find one of these historic Two Dollar Bills in
your pocket change these days.
"When our stockpile is gone collectors
will have to sort 't hrough money or .go to the
bank to get them," he said.
'The $100, $50, $20, $10 and $5 dollar bills
have all recently undergone major new desigt)
changes. Now, it's feared that new legislation
may be introduced to discontinue the historic
designs of these Two Dollar bills. That's why
we have authorized the release of a limited mnn~
"b!::r of the uncirculated $2 Bills from our vault

j

l

Tuesday, September 14, 2004

MALIA RULON

NewsChannel

·B·l

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Reds top Phlllles, Page 82
Ryder Cup preview, Page 82
..Browns off to good start, Page 86

reserve to the general public," White said.
The $2 Bills are highly sought after and extremely popular to g!ve as gifts for friends and
family: They are the perfect gift for any occasion," he said.
· ,
Many younger people have never even seen
one of these historically significant $2 bills
that.featW'e President Thomas Jefferson on the
front. A historic engraving of the signing of the
Declaration of. Independence is on the back.
These crisp, new $2 bills are cl.osely controlled by the Treasury Department's Bureau
of Engraving and Printing, makers of the nations paper currency.
The $2 bill makes up less than I% of the $670
· billion in genuine U.S. currency that circulates
worldwide, according to the U.S. Department of
Treasury under Secretary John W. Snow.
Dealers must submit request'l in writing tor lO
or more banded pack.s of 5 bills. But, the general
public can now get what they need by calling the
National Direct Hotline now at 1-800-242-8038
and ask for Dept. 081264. Dealer limits will be
suictly enforced, White said.

How to ·get the..-

'
The U.S. Monetary Exchange is releasing the popular $2 bills to the ,general
public.
Call the National Direct Hotline 1-800-242-8038, ask for Dept. 081264. The
standard $9 processing fee plus shipping gets you a vault sealed uncirculated
pack of five $2 bills at face 11alue.

.-

CUI"''8ffcy value: Currency values always
fluctuate. But. if parents "' grandparents
living in 1928 would have kept a pack of
five unCirculated $2 bills they could be
worth $2,250:00 today.

Hlolorlc: Featuring a tribute to Founding
Fath"' Thomas Jefferson painted by artist
Gilbert Stuart In tt1o1BOO's.

..

TUeaday 't games

Volleyball
MarleJta at Gallia Academy

Well-rested Wolfpack prepares for ·Buckeyes

Coal Grove at River Valley
Waterford at Meigs
!:astern at Nelsonville-York
Grace ChrisUan at South Gallia
Southern at Alexander
'
Hannan at Ohio Valley Christian

Soccer

River Valley at South Point

Wednesday'e game

Volleyball
Gallia Academy, River Valley at Meigs
Go~

.

Thuraday'a games

'

· Volleybali
Athens at' Gallla Academy
River Valley at South Point
Meigs at Wetiston
Miller at Eastern
Ironton St. Joe at South Gallia
Waterford at Southern

,

allowed them to get 'healthy,
and even though both still are
listed as questionable on the
RALEIGH, N.C. _A week injury report, they should be
available.
off did wonders for the health
"I' 11 be able 10 play,"
of rover Andre Maddox and
tailback T.A. Mclendon. Maddox said Monday
The extra week of practice
North Carolina State coach also gave Amato $ld his staff
Chuck Amato can only hope it
·
k ·th h ·
did the same for the rest of the ·more time to wor WI t etr
team .
young players ori fundamentals. N.C. State has a new
The Wolrpack likely will starter at quarterback, where
have Maddox and McLendon
available for Saturday's game . Jay Davis took over for Philip
Rivers, and McLendon's pnagainst No. 9 Ohio State, a mary backups are freshmen.
rematch of the Buckeyes' draOn defense, the depth chart
malic 44-38 victory a year ago lists three sophomore starters
in triple overtime. The two on the line .
"I'm definitely glad it 's this
players missed the opener with
strained hamstrin~s. and they way," Amato said. "Jay has
probably wouldn t have been played .pne half of a football
able to play last week.
d th
1 k h
But a well-timed bye game, an en you oo at t e
defensive line.
KEITH PARSONS

Associated Press

Athens at Ga11ia Academy
'I'Ve Hocking at Eastern
Golf

SEOAL nleet at Warren
TVC Ohio at Nelsonville-York

College football

Soccer

South Point at Galtia Academy

·
Golf
TVC Hodt;lng at Federal Hocking

Packers top
, Panthers, 24.;14

9

College .Socce~

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
-· Ahman Green ran up,
down and all over the defending NFC champion Carolina
Panthers.
Green ran for two touchdowns and caught a third
Monday night to lead the
Green Bay Packers to a 24-14
victory over the Panthers,
who became the sixth straight
team to lose in the Super
. Bowl and their ensuing season opener.
STAFF REPORT
shutouts
. Unable to stop the run or
sports@
mydailytribune.com
over
the
run the ball - the two main
weekend.
principles that carried them
He stopped
· all last season - the Panthers
MOBILE, Ala. - The
four shots to
were out of sync from start to
University of Rio Grande
earn his secfinish.
Redmen soccer team, ranked
ond straight
· Green scored on touchNo. I in the NAIA Top 25
~hutout
of
down · runs of 3 a~\d 6 yards
Poll, held off stiff challenges
the season.
and rushed for 119 yards
from a pair of ranked teams
R .i o
against a Carolina defense · at the O'Charley's Futbol
Grande
that only gave up four indiFestival on Friday and
Moore
made a goal
vidual I 00-yard rushing
Saturday.
· ·.
·
by Hughes
games last season. He did it
Rio Grande (6-0) defeated hold up to fend off the chalwith ease, giving no indicaNAJA No. 13 Auburn- lenge of NAlA No. 14
tion that this was the first time
Montgomery 2-0 on Friday. Mobile on Saturday. Hughes ·
this year Green Bay's entire
The Redmen put two first scored off a comer kick in the
offensive unit was on the field
half goals in the net and held 20th minute. The goal turned
together.
· on for the win.
out to be the game-winner as
Carolina,
meanwhile,
Freshman defender Wayne Moore tallied another shutout
showed just how bad its
Maden scored his first colie- . with six saves.
giate goal in the 16th minute
patchwork offensive line realMobile (2-1-1) kept the
to give Rio a 1-0 lead. pressure on in the pouring
ly is. With three of its starters
Maden scored on a header off rain, missing out on two scor- .
. from last season gone, a rotat·a direct kick from Benn ing opportunities in the first
ing group of aging veterans
Hughes. Hughes was qedit- half. The Rio defense
has gamely tried to fill the
ed
with an assist on the play. clamped down on the Rams
holes.
·
·
Red-shirt freshman for- in the second half. Mobile
But behind 35-year-old
ward Guy Heywood scored, managed only three shots on
Matt Willig, who last started a
his team-leading fifth goal of goal in the second half.
game at right tackle in 1997.
the
season, in the 36th minute
and 33-year-old Rich 1Ylski,
Rio Grande returns home
on
a
breakaway off.a deflect- to face NAJA No. 7 Bethel
who was out of football the
ed pass. ·
· (IN) on Friday at Evan Davis
past two years, the Panthers
Freshman Andrew Moore Fief.d. Game time is set for 2
could do nothing.
gained
the first of two p.m.
Stephen Davis, who ran for
a career-best 1,444 yards last
year, was held to 26 yards and
the Panthers had a total of just
38 on the ground.
· Jake Delhomme struggled
to find time to pass, often
throwing his hands up in disgust after hurrying a pass and
angrily glaring at the sidelines
after several knockdowns.
The lone bright spot came on
Delhomme's 30-yard touch. down pass ·to Muhsin
rier to finish the 5-mile race.
STAFF REPORT
Muhammad that cut the score
sports@ mydailytribune.com Hange, in his first collegiate
to 24-14 with 4:46 to play.
meet, finished 16th with a
time of 29:18.2. Junior Brad
But that came one play after
WESTERVILLE - Senior Gilders was 't8th (29:59.8)
star . receiver Steve Smith
Matt Boyles and junior Dawn and
freshman . Howard
went down with what
Nagle
came
away
with
strong
Hoisington
was
20th
appeared to be a serious left
· perfonnances in the opening (30:44.1).
· ankle . injury. Smith, who
meet of the 2004 Cross
Other Redmen results:
signed a $27.5 million conCountry season for the Cody
Munchel,
28th
tract extension durin~ the offUniversity of Rio Grande (33 : 12.8), Cody Rochus, 29th
season, dropped wnthing to
Redmen and Redwomen. (33:33.4), Kyle Wagner, 34th,
the ground when he was tackBoth runners finished runner- (39: I 0.1 ) and Jonathan
led after a short catch, and
up in their respective races at Huiltsberger, 35th (40:50.8).
· had to be helped off the field.
the Otterbein Alumni Meet
There were 35 runners in
: Carolina was also done ·in
on Saturday.
the
men's race.
by its own mistak~s . Two
Boyles, a native of Tuppers
The Redwomen had four
turnovers led to 14 of Green
Plains, timed out at 26:15.9. runners in the women's race.
Bay's points.
Mike Sawicki of Otterbein After Nagle's second place
. Brad Hoover fumbled at the
was the individual winner in
sophomore Hope
start of the second half, giv- the inen 's race with a time of effort,
Jagodzinski
was 20th with a
jng Green Bay the ball at the
25:25 .6. Nagle. a native of time of 24:04.2.
Carolina 3 L Although Robert
Preston, England, has estabSophomores Jana Marshall
Ferguson's touchdown catch
lished herself as the top run- (24:23.3) and . ·Shannon
was negated by offensive pass
ner for the Redwomen with a Soulsby (24:53.8) were 23rd
interference, the Packers still
solid time of 21: 1g.s for 3.1 and 24th respectively.
converted the tumovef into
miles. Nagle finished behind
There were 3 I runners in
only
Mechainmar Zokrauh of the women's race.
!ieven points when Green ran
Columbus State (21: 13.3).
J!early untouched into the end
Otterbein and Bluffton
The Redmen were second were the only teams to prozone for a 17-7 lead.
out of four teams with 68 duce team , scores with
.The Panthers . then put
points. Otterbein won the Otterbein coming out on top
together their own drive, only
meet
with 21 points. Bluffton· with 17 points. Bluffton talto tum the ball over again just
was third with 74 and the lied 45 points.
as they got into scoring posi~
Otterbein
Alumni was fourth
tion. Delhoinme threw a pass
Rio will compete at the
with
75
points.
·
to Smith who bobbled it twice
Friendship Invitational, Sept.
Freshman Dennis Hange 18 at Yellowsprings.
before it squirted lip and into
was
the 5econd Redmen harNick Barnett's hands.

9

p&lt;jstage stamps. MONEY CAN NOT BE
ACCEPTED. Send the stamps loose inside
your envelope.
.
DO NOT staple, tape or affix them.
3. Mail to:
FREE Coin Processing,
Commercial. Box 3678, Dept IWI264
.'·

• FREE - The new QJtarter Dollar honoring the ·
Crear State of Wisconsin.

•• t

AFflJATEO l'oiTH M US ClCMJM,Dir 00 JW( (l(MRoU3olf PlBCf

Prep Golf

No-.1 Redmen
tackle two
ranked teams
0

•

0

•

Boyles, Nagle
strong in first meet

!09388600 t.

N" •:"' l l
20CN AUTHDiHBED
M lNliD srAil'S WVARY EXtlWG' IS A~TE 00W«:E NJf

goa l to beat Marshall and
This ability didn't go unnostruggling against Cincinnati . . ticed by Maddox, but he had
Ohio State has yet to force a his own take on it. ·
turnover.
"What can I say? It 's luck,"
Predictably. Amato still had Maddox ,aid. then tried to darnothmg but praise for tim ify hi&gt; opinion. "I mean .' I'm
week's opponent.
not going to say it's all luck.
"Only the names and num- They do play a lot of games at
bers have changed," he said . . home. They .hove that 12th
"They had 14 youngsters·draft- man with them."
ed into the NFL, and nine of
The Buckeyes ,certainly
their replacements were two- don't travel · on the road for
year letter winnerS. Every year, many non-confe(ence games.
Ohio State is in the top I0 in This i&gt; their first away from
recruitin~;."
home since 2002, and it is their
One thmg that does appear to tirst· visitto the state t~ a footbe the same about the ball game.
Buckeyes is their success in
At No. 9. they' re the highestclose games. In the past two- ranked non-conference oppoplus sea&gt;ons, they have won 13 nent to come to Carter-Finley
of their past 14 games decided Stadium since Alabama . in
by a touchdown or less, includ- 1996. The eighth-ranked
ing that victory over the Crimson Tide beat the
Wolfpack in 2003.
. Wolfp~ck 24-19 that year.

.College Cross Country

:CD-

Akron, OK 44309-3678

"All the work we can get. the
better off we will be."
Davis was impressive in the
opener against Division 1-AA
Richmond, tinishjng 16-of-22
for 168 ymds and throwing
two touchdown passes. He
nearly matched his passing
total from the previous two
seasons (177).
The team Davis and the ·
Wolfpack face Saturday l)as
changed greatly from a year
al\o. Ohio State returned just
mne starters after a record 14
playe.rs were drafted by the
NFL
Those losses left gaping
holes up front, in the secondary
and at most of the skill pos1tions. Despite opening with
two victones, the Buckeyes
have been far from impress1ve,
ne~ding a last-second field

'

0

• GIFT - The firs/ 10;()1}0 people even gel these
Official Cordomn Co/lec/Ors Wa/leu· with
each Bill. Salisfaction is guaranteed.

The U. S. Mint" has announced the release some' by up to 516%.
date of the newest Of the Fifty State Quarter~".
This national effort assures coins are.availFor a limited time the general public can get able not only to Wisconsin residents, but to all
the new Wisconsin Quaner Dollar FREE. The citizens outside the state.
To be among the first to get the FREE uncoins are being given away FREE in Uncirculated condition for only three stamps to cover circulated coins when released by the Mint in
your order acknowledgement, shipping, han- late October, send 3 first class stamps for the
display capsule which preserves its beautiful
dling and the prote~ti\'e display capsule.
· The coins are special because they are uncirculated condition.
For delivery, follow these instructions to get
siraight from the mint in brilliant uncirculated condition. You cao not find these coins . your FREE coin. Limit I per household: ·
L Write your name and complete. address
in your change.; Only the Uncirculated coin's
have increased in value. All of the earlier neatly on a piece of paper.
2. Enclose along with three nrSt class
state coins have already ·increased in value,

· Prep Schedule ·

•fhe United Stoles Ml'l'lt.. end ·Fifty Slate Quarters..
are regiBtered trademaJks of the United Slates Mint•. ,

"'

.

Southern's Patnck Johnson chips onto the 1.3th green Tuesday at Cl iffside Golf Course.
(Brad Sherman/ photo)

.Southern golfers take
third place at Cliffside
BRAo SHERMAN
while South Gallia did not Hunter each turned in a
bsherman@mydaityregister.com register a team score.
score of 49 for Southern.
Sharrett's score was Brad Crouch finished with
seven strokes le ss than his a SO and Patrick Johnso n
GALLIPOLIS - River
·
rou11ded out the Tornadoes'
VaII ey •s . Ran da11 Sh arre tt nearest competitor. which .score wit. h a 52. Josh Smith
wa tc hed as h .IS m·ne- ho 1e was turned in by teammate had a 54.
school record was broken Joe Hager. Justin Nolan
South . Gallia began with
Mon day - he ha d a go od added a 44. · and Craig !'o ur golfer'. but one was
·
Barker a 48. for the win'
v1ew.
not able to finish and
Sharrett shot a one-under ners.
another ran out of golf
par 35 .at Cliffside Gol.f Craig Jaggers' 53 and balls. Kevin Johnson led
Course to break his own Bruce Stout's 56 were not the way for the Rebels with
school re cord, earning included in Ri,er Valley 's a 50. while Ashley Clark
medali st honors in the team score .
turned in a n .
process. •
Heath Stanley and Darrin
RiYer Valley plays in
His Raiders also won the Reece paced Wahama wtth. Ashland.
Ky. tonight,
team title with a cumula- rounds of 4o ap1ece. lo)- Wahama is at Lavalette, .
tive score of 170, an lowed by 44J ·, from Garrett Southern returns to Triimpressive 20 shots better Kaylor and Danny Roush. Valley conference Hocking
than seco nd place Wahama. Justin Arnold &lt;;arded a 54. play Thursday at Federal
Southern (200) was third . Matt Thaxton and Jake .Hocking.
J

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Page B2 • .The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 14.

www.mydailysentinel.com

.
.
Tuesday,·.september 14,2004

2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Reds snap Phillies' six~game winning streak
.

.

CINCINNATI (AP)
Dave Miley se nt Darren
Jason LaRue and the Bragg up to pinch-hit for
Cincinnati Reds believe Jacob Cruz. and Bragg laid
!hey can still play a role in down a perfect bunt up the
the NL wild-card race. ·
third-base line on the fir st
.
LaRue drove- in the go- pitch .
"There was a chance Cruz
ahead run on a fielder's
choice grounder in the could get it down, but we
eighth innin g and the felt very confident that
Cincinnati Reds snapped Bragg cou ld get it · down,''
Philadelphia 's
six-ga me Mil ey said.
39th &gt;ave .
LaRue followed with a
Guvin .Fioyd gave up three
winning streak with . a 4-3
victory Monday night.
sharp one-hopper to second runs on four hits in the first
The Phillies fell five ba seman Placido Polanco. inning be'rore settling down
games behind idle San who made a diving back- to allow just four more hits
Francisco in the wild-card handed stop but couldn't get in the fina l five inning s of
race .
up and throw in rime ro ge t hi s third big league start. He
. "All we're doing is play- Pena at the plate.·
had one walk and five
lng for next year, but we ' re
"Wily got a good jump on strikeouts.
going to play teams· in the · the co ntact play ... Miley
"We' re a longshot," Bowa
hunt," LaRue said. "We' re sa id . "We were fortunate said of Philadelphia's playnot in the playoff tace. but that he had to dive ·at it. If it off chances. "We've just got
we still have to play hard. was right at him. Wily 's in to keep winning . We have to
We can be spoilers."
'no-nian's land. That's the . win six out of seve n again.
Those guy s are out there
; Wily Mo Pena led off the &lt;.:hance you take."
eighth against reliever Felix
Joe Val entine (2-.l) got the grindin g it out. "
Rodriguez (5-8) with a dou- final out in the eigh th for the
Paul Wilson failed for the
ble into the right-center win. ;md Danny Graves ninth ·time to win his lOth
field gap. Reds manager pitched the ninth for his game. He allowed three runs

~ro

·. ~ribune - Sentinel - l\e

Reds responded with three
runs · in the bottom of the
inning.
Ryan Freel led off with a
single, stole second and
third and scored when Floyd
failed to cover first on
D'Angelo
Jimenez's
groun~er which .first baseman J1m Thome ftelded n.e ar
the . line . and· sever~ ! teet
beh1nd the base . Jtmenez
~as credned wnh an mfteld
smgle . Junenez stole se~on.d
and scored on Adam Dunn s
bloop double down theleftfield line. Cruz drove in
Dunn with a single up the'
middle, snapping a O-for- 10
slump.
."That was my fault ,"
Floyd sa id . "Foul or not. 1
have to oet over there. 1
wish that" first inning had
never happen~d . 1 wish I
could take the first inning
back."
·
Philadelphia tied it at 3 on
David Bell 's two-out infield

and six hits in seven
innings. Wilson is 0-4 with a
7.36 ERA in ·nine starts
since he beat Milwaukee in
his last start before the AllStar breitk. He also left two
games with leads before the
bullpen blew saves and
spent 18 days on the di sabled list with back problems.
''When you throw strikes
down in the strike zone,
you're usually successfu'l."
Wil son said. "l was successful tonight."
The Phillie s took a 1-0
lead on Jim Thome's sacrifice fly in the first, but the

single and Pat Burrell's
homer down the left-field
line .
~·o ne mistake," Wilson
sa id . "That was the right
pitch to throw in that situation . I was trying to get a
groundball to third, and I
.left it up ."
Notes: Jteds OF Austin
Kearns wa~ scratched from
the Reds' original starting
lineup with an eye problem.
Cincinnati 1B , Sean
C
· d ·
1 f 15
asey. mlr.e tn a - orslump, got the .day off. .
Cruz. made h1s .h:sr ~tart ot
the season at first base ....
Reds SS Barry Larkm s~arted tor the ftrSt tune SIIKe
Se~t. 3 ... The Reds t1ed
the1r season h1gh wnh four
stolen bases ... Burrell 's
hqmer was the club-record
210th allowed 1,by Reds
pitchers. The previous
re ~otd of 209 was set last
season.

Co llio (oumy, OH

In One Week With Us
R.EACH ·OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
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Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333.
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Or Fax To
992-2157

Oearl~ir~

Golf. Ryder Cup ·Preuiew
I

:Expect plenty of cheering, and not ju~t for the good shots
Leonard holed a 45-(oot putt stronger on paper.
One of his captain's picks,
on the 17th hole at Brookline
five years ago that cau.&gt;ed Luke Donald, won the
BLOOMFIELD TOWN· players to ·sprint across the European Masters two weeks
SHIP, Mich. _ Vijay Singh green in celebration while the ago for his second victory in
and Mike Weir provided a match was still in progress,
two
months .
Padraig
preview of the Ryder ·Cup,.
How intense does it get?
Harrington, the highest"The only thing that stimds ranked player in .. Eu.rope,
even though neither will be
playing at Oakland Hills this still is the shaft of the club, pic ~ed up his first victory of
~eek.
and that's before you take the the year Sunday at the
·
: Th ere was dea femng noise, club out of the bag," two- German Masters .
"For the first time, I think
so loud that Weir had to force time Masters champion Jose
a yawn to pop his ears when Maria Olazabal once said. we are going over there not
· "Everything shakes - hands, , so much as underdogs,"
he got to the tee.
The pressure was so great legs, everything. That's how Colin .Montgoni.erie· said as
that Weir felt the weight of a it is. That's what makes it so the team left London. "Of
special."
course, it will be difficultnation riding on his every
Monday was as q11iet as it don 't get me wrong. Playing
shot at the Canadian Open,
where some 40,000 fans were will get all week at Oakland . away from home is always
harder: At the same time, l' ll
eager to celebrate one of their Hills..
own claiming the champiPhil Mickelson, who had be very, very di sappointed if
onship for the first time in 50 his worst 72 holes of tht;. year we don't bri.ng bac.k what
at the Canadian Open (7-over we ' re· taking with us."
years.
Donald wasn ' t · on the
Crowds were · so · partisan 291), arrived in the Detroit
that they could not stirle area Sunday night and was plane. He only had a short
cheers when Singh missed a ~he first player at .Oakland drive from Cliicago where he
putt. ·
Hills on a day when the lives. This was the first time
"You understand that's part course was nor opened· to the Langer has seen his entire
of it," Singh said after spoil- public. Jim Furyk and Fred 12-man team together.
ing the party with his playoff Funk arrived later for some
Tiger Woods, .who lost his
casual
practice.
No.
I ranking two weeks a.,oo
victory Sunday.
b
The
European
team
left
for
·
the first . time in five
•
An d that s a ig part of the
Ryder Cup, which gets under Heathrow Airport in London years, held a corporate clinic
way' Friday in a biennial' aboard a Vi'rgin Atlantic about 20 miles from Oakland
match that transforms the flight.- complete with beau- Hills on Monday. . ·
sport from genteel apprecia- ty attendants to give them a
The U.S. team was not
tion of good golf to a football massage - and arri ved just expected to meet until a 7
mentality of "Us versus after 5 p.m. Monday. Langer, p.m. dinner.
Them."
the European captain. cleared
Five of the American rookTen players have no idea customs with the 19-inch tro- ies are hardly fresh-faced
kids. They .include 44-yearwhat to expect, as the United phy in hand. ·
"What is this you have old Kenny Perry and the 47States and Europe each have
five Ryder Cup rookies.
here?" U.S. captain Hal year-old Funk, both ·of whom
All have hear~,! the stories. Sutton said · after greeting played in the Presidents Cup
Raucous . cheering him.
'
in South Africa last year
"Just a little something ." against an International team
drowning out the groans
amid Bernhard Langer's Langer said. 'We' ll fight for comprised of · players from
agony when he missed a 6_ it the next few days."
everywhere in the world .
foot putt on the final hole of
The shiny gold trophy was except Europe.
the final match, allowing the passed around during the
The International team was
United States to win in 1991 'flight.
stronger than
anything
at Kiawah Island.
''lt was everywhere on the Europe can muster, with
_Sam Torrance with arms plane," Langer said. "We players like Singh, Weir,
raised after making . the putt took · some memorable pic- Ernie Els and Retie.f Goosen.
at The Belfry in 1985 to end tUJes. It was nice to pave it in The golf was at a higher level
U.S. dominance and give my grasp.''
than usually seen in the
Langer has reason to Ryder Cup.
. Europe i.ts· first victory in 28
years.
believe his team can capture
What the Presidents Cup is
_. And the scene no one . the Ryder Cup for .. the sev- lacking is the sheer passion
wants repeated but everyone enth tl.nJe in t·he last . 10 of play1'ng under the flag of a
will never forget, when Justin matches, 'even though the ·single continent, the ·77 years
Americans
again
look of history and over-the-top
Associated Press

2004

R E v

E

r

Twenty-four goiters will represent the U.S. and
European teams at the 35th Ryder Cup to be
played Sept 17-19 at Oakland Hills Country Club
in Bloomfield Hills, Mich.

w

ADOPTION A loving couple would like to adopl your
newbor n. Will provide a
- home filled with jo~. happiness, financial security and
a great education. Feel confident in knowing because of
~our brave decision your
baby could look forward to a
bnght and wonderful future.
" Expenses paid . Call toll free
1·866·731-7825. Barbara
I

... .

United States
"'
' "' "'
Captain:

Hal Sutlon

Tiger

Phtt

Davia

Kenny

Jtm

~----~N~om~e_____W~o=od~·~~M~t~c~o~t~•o~n~__~L~o~ve~III~--~Fu~k
Age
28
...... 3.4 .
40 .
34
~ajors won
. Ryde; Cup exp,
Ryder Cup record

Name

Age
Majors won
Ryder Cup_exp.
Ryder Cup record

e

.' ..

'1 . I
'1
Non&amp;
'97, :e9, '02 ·e~:e7:99, '02 '93, '95, '97, :99, '02 '97, '99, '02
5-8·2
8-5·3
8·9·4
3·6·3 '

Chad
Campbell
30

None
Rookie
0-0-0

Chris
Riley

35
None

·None

Rookie
0-0·0

Rookie
0·0·0

David
Toms
37

'1

Rookie

'02

O-D'D

3-1-1

Jay
Haas

30
None
Rookie
0-0-0

47

Perry
44
None

50
None
'83, '95
3-4-1

GIVFAWAY

31
None
'02

1-2-0

Poodle &amp; Terrier Milt While
w/Peach spots (304)6752714

Caplatn:
Bemhard t.angl!r

Lee
Padralg
Sergio
Darren
Miguel Angel
Th.omas
Name
Harrington - . Garcia
Clarke
Jimenez
Westwood
Level
~=---'""-'.""11"'"--~=----=::::::::::__:_----=:=::::_-=.-.:.~:__:_ - Age
33
24
36
. 40 ·
31
·36
Majors won
None
None
None
None
None
None
Ryder Cup exp.
'99, '02
'99, '02
'97, '99, '02
'99
'97, '99. '02
Rookie
Ryder Cup record
3-3-t
6-3-1
4-6-2
1-2-2
7-8-0
0·0-0

Age
Majors won
Ryder Cup exp.
Ryder Cup record

Paul
Casey

David
Howatt

Paul
McGinley

27

29

37

None

None

Rookie

Rool&lt;ie

None
'02
0+2

None
Rookie
0-0{)

O·D-0

,

0-0-0

Colin
· Montgomerle

Luke
Donald

41

26

None
'91. '93, '95, '97. '99, '02
16-7-5

None
Rook1e

0·0-0
AP

expectations built up by the
British press.
It has been two years since
'the Ryder ·Cup was last
played - a 15 1/2-12 1/2
victory for Eurppe at The
Belfry - but there was
another reminder of what the
matches are all about last

week in Canada.
Singh closed wit~in one
shot of Weir until the Fijian
three-putted on the 15th , and
a cheer rang out when his
p'utt slid by on the right. His
caddie, Dave Renwick, was
so offended that he tossed the
ball into the crowd.

sports@mydaitytribune.com
BECKLEY, W.Va. - The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen volleyball team
enjoyed their best weekend in
a long time, sweeping through
the
Mountam
State
Invitational on Saturday and
Suoday to win the tournament
with a perfect 6-0 record. ,
Rio Grande (7-7) began the
tournament getting off to a
fast start, defeating West
Vtrginia Tech in three games,
30-13, 30-ll and 30-10.
Sophomore Melissa Doss and
junior Lynnette Kiesling were
the big players up front for
Rio Grande, pi'oducing II and
l 0 kills respectively. Kiesling
also had three solo blocks and
two block assists. Sophomore
Lindsay . Urton and senior

•

sively with 25 digs. She .was
also a perfect 25-for-25 serving with one ace. Savage
added 24 digs and freshman
Kayla Jewett posted 14 digs.
Rio closed out the Saturday
portion of the tournament
with a three-game' triumph
over Glenville State, ·30-27,
30-22 and 30-22.
Urton had II kills, Doss
added nine and Jcw~:tt · ei~ht.
Veach dished out 25 ass1sts
and went 25-for-25 serving
with one ace~ DeGanno was
once again a force on the
defensive end with 24 digs.
Savage add~;,d 18, Jewett 15
and Doss 10. Urton also delivered three blocks.
On Sunday, the Redwonien
continued their win.ning ways
downing Columbia .College
(SC), 30-28, 30-19 and 30-20.
DeGanno drilled 14 kills to
lead the Rio attack. Doss

'

'

added 12 kills and Urton was
on the vergt of double figures
with nine. Unon also produced three serve aces.
Veach had a solid outing
with 31 assists, 17 digs, 16
perfect serves and two aces.
Savage was ihe top defensive
player with 21 digs. She also
contributed three aces to the
Redwomen cause. ·
DeGarmo tallied 16 digs,
two solo blocks, two block
assists and 18 flawless serves.
Jewett also garnered double
fi~ures in digs with 10.
Kiesling registered three solo
blocks and two block assists.
·The Redwomen moved into
the championship tilt after
they disposed of Ohio Valley
. College in three games, 3024,30-28 and 30-15.
DeGarmo and Doss teamed
up for 26 kills (13 each).
Jewett was on the brink of

.

double figures with nine kills.
Urton added seven kills. Doss
had II digs and six serve aces
·on 27-of-28 serving. Urton
had three solo blocks and one
block assist.
Veach distributed 37 assists
and totaled 20 digs.
The championship game
pitted the Redwomen against
the host school Mountain
State· (9-2).' Rio was up to the
challenge, · beating the Lady
Cougars, 30-22. 34-32 and
30-25.
Kiesling ha&lt;l a monster
game with 19 kills to lead the
Rio auack. She also had four
solo blocks and two block
assists. Doss (II) and
DeGanno .( 10) also had double figures in kills. Urton registered six kills. DeGarmo
also added two solo blocks,
three block assists and 19
digs.

,

YARll SUE-

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

PoMEROY/M]oou:

HOMEli
h:JRSALE

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Steve-(740)388-8731

Jl1ti

Singh understood the
scene.
"They were not cheering
against me, they were cheering for Mike. There's a big
difference there," he said.
"A Ithough on .15 when I
missed the putt, they all got
excited."

Veach had 41 assists, 14
perfect serves, and 13 digs . .
Jewett was the top defensive
performer with 21 digs.
Savage allded 20 digs. Henry
was on the verge of double
figures with nine digs.
DeGarmo was named . the
Most Valuable Player of, the
tournament
''Chelsea or
Jessica (Veach) could have
been named the MVP," said
Rio Head Coach Patsy Fields.
"Chels~a stepped up and
Jessica played her heart out."
Fields was happy with the
overall performance of her
squad . . "We played hard and
improved with each match ."
Rio Grande will have its
home opener . on Tuesday,
entenaining
American
Mideast Conference foe
Cedarville. Game time is set
for 7 p.m. at the-Newt Oliver
Arena.
·

\

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Business Opportunity ................................. 210
Business Tratnlng ..;.................................... 140
Campara li Motor Homes ........................... 790
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David@ 1-772-567-0559

ABSOLUTE GOLOMINEI
60 vending machines/

0.

HE:LPWANTED

1111

NOW HIRING- A leading
provider to individuals with
mental retarc:lation and
developmental disabilities is
looking for direct care·staff in
Gallipolis. No experience
necessary. Paid training. If
you would like to join our
team 10 help individuals
achieve their fullest poten·
tial. apply In person at
. Middleton Estales, 8204
Carla Drive, Gallipolis.· OH
An
Equal
Oppo rtunity
Employer. FI MIDN
•
Ove rbrook
Rehabilitalion
Center is curren tly accepting
applications f&lt;lr a Night Shift
(7p-7a) AN Supervisor. II
you are interested, please
oome m and till out an apph·
cation at
Page Street,
Middlaport EOE

333

Pa ramedics
&amp;
EMT's
needed. Apply at 1354
Pike, Gallipolis.
RAOIOL,OGY

J~ckson

TECHNOLOGIST CT
POSmON

all for $10,995
800-234-6982

IIELPWANIED

Absolute Goldmlnel 60
.
. .
vending machineslexcefJent
Rockspnngs . Aehablhl~hon locations all . lor $10.995.
Center Is lOOking for dediCat- (800)234 _6982
ed compassionate State · ·
·
·
Tested Nursing Assistants.
.,
·
us
Competitive wages, he81tti
HIO VALLEY PUBliSH
and dental benefits , anc:l NG CO. recommends tha
401 K 'available . we take
· u do ·business with peo
le you know, and NOT t
pride In our home and resi nd money through th
dents and need great team
ail uniil you have investi
players to joln us. It you have
atect the oHenn .
these qualifications please
apply
to :
Rocksprings
Rehabllilation Center, 36759
Rocksprings
Road.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769.
Extendicare
Health
TURNED DOWN ON ,
erv1ces, 111C. ·IS an equa1 SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
opportunity employer ·.that
.No Fee Unless We Wlnl
'encourages
workplace
1-888-582-3345
diversity. WF DN
. , - - - - - - - - - =~-~----,
ServiceMaster has cleaning
HOMJ:S
p.ositions in the Apple GroVe
FUR SAU:
t.,--oi.iiiiliiiiiii;;,._.l
area . Call888-305·7378
c...................
, 50
~
· 0% Down Payment C'JCn
1
1
with tess than perfect credil
Easy qualifying. Own don't
Gallipolis Cllreer College rent
local
r:ompany.
(~
c•--- ~ H' ) Mortgage Locators. 740vareers IVOCI IO ome "
Call Todayl 740-446-4367. 992-7321

s ·

Prime lot. 5 wooded acres
on' Buckeye Hill s. Great
homeSite, $27 ,500 . Calt
740-645-2950 or 740-386·.
9649.
Ul\1\1~

1
214
52
Seeking ARRT registered
"600-04
www.ga~ipolilcareercollllge.com
technologist for full time
Accredil~ Uarnber Awedrtlng
pos1t1on . Primarily for CT eounar t&gt;r ~~noem Colleqes
__.. .,_,_ __.., ,-,..
·
wilh opportunity to work in ..... .,._,...... £1
MAl or Ultrasound. as welL
S"-tokan Karate Glasses
Expenence preferred . but
IIU
:
employer will provtde tra1n· Monday &amp; Thursday tlqgin·
t
d
IT ·
ning September 13th, 6:00
mg owar
cer 1ICa 11on .
.
G 1
rt itv
k' g PM.
Carleton
School.
rea oppo un .• , wor m
··•
equt·pmenl In a Syracuse, Ohio. For informa·
Wlu ' new
hosp1·1a1 b ased
ra d'101DQY tion contact; Kenny TOlliver
(740)985-3994.
Steve
department Friendty team - Kempton (740)66r-3039
oriented atmosphere that
~=~':d e:~:::cned 1170 ~
..
3 ' bedroom brick front
Ranch. Newer root, vinyl,
professional development .
heat
pump.
Smiths
candidates,
Interested
lea.
•
1
(740)592 High
SGhool
Juniors, Cabinets. 1 car garage, pnP 00 1nqu re at
•
9483 and send resume to:
Semors and Prior Service vale lane ott SA t60. 1.8
you ,can fill vacant positions acres. (7 40)388-8676.
Radiology Associates of
Arhens
in the West
Virginia
National
Guard.
If )'OUArmy
ere 3 Bedroom . Hud Home
PO Box 2608
Sl4.000 Won't lut! more
Athens, OH 45701
between
the
ha
· ages
mtlitaof 1?-35 Homes available! lor IIShOQS
__...:F.::ax:::_:~(7_:
40::_)::59::2_:·9::396=._
or
ve pnor
ry serv- 800-366- 9783 ex 1797
ice. you won't want to pass
RN's
tl'\i.S up. For Opportunities in 3BR, 2BA , 5.129 acrej,
your area, call: 304-675- Green Township close to
Need
a
Hardwortdng, 5837
'
school. Pneed to sell. More
dapendabte
Night WIIIITED
P!OPLI
into (740)446-73n.
74
Supervisor,~ set days ror
the hOurs of 7pm-7am wi1h
We P;!y Youl
3br, Briel&lt; Home. Sunroom
pay starting 81 $19 an hOur
$CASH REWARDS$
&amp; extra large 2 Car Garage.
wilh
Excellent
Health,
For the Weight you Lose
Full Basement. sit on BCfe
10 30 Days.
Vision. and Denial Benefit&amp;
tot 1n New Haven HeiQI'Itl In
at ~titiW rate&amp;. Ofter a
CaJI Tracy 740'"44 1"1982
New H8Y8fl (304)882-22 30

I

401K P!an and Smart Plan
tor Heahh BeNtfits and Chikt
Day Care to ·save money.
Please appfy irJ pe!"'fl. tax
or ma1'I apph
ICB fton wt'th
resume to the folk)wing

addr

...:
Arbors of GaH......_
...,.......
170 PineCrest Drive
Galipolis, OH 45631
Phone: 740-446-71t2
•• . 7•~"•--•
F.....
...,._,.._...

www~=.com
~·.......

------=,.-:-:-=:=WOttiC fROH ltOttl
Basad BUsiness
Earn $200-$500 PJT
Earn $2,000 and U9 FIT
Paid Vacation&amp;. Bonuses
HorT;e

740-44 1- 1964
888-5-40-8097
www.worM.tcasa.com

HOC'SES
IUR RE.vr

All real estate adver11alng

In this newspaper ti
subject to lhe Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which mak.. It Illegal to
advertise "any
preterence, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
rtce, color, religion . Hx
familial atatua or national
origin, or an~ lntenlloo to
make any such
preference, llmibillon or
dlacriminetlon."

0% Down Payment evell
With less than perfect creclit 1
Easy qualifying. Own don't
re nt
Local
company.
Mortgage Locators 740·
992-7321.
1
bedroom
house irT
Gallipolis
$350/montl'\
deposit required. (740)441 1184 .

2br
house
lor
rent.
$350/month . water and
trash paid, no pets. Deposit
and reference required.
(740)388-1t00

Thla new1paper will not
· knowingly accept
adverttaementa for real
estate wtllch Ia In
violation ot the law. Our
readere are hereby
Informed that all
dwelllnp advertlaed In
thle newapaper are
aVailable on an equal
oppdrtUnity baHti.

3 · bedroom in country.
Ava il able immediately. no
pets. $400 month, deposit,
refe rences. (740)446-6890
for appointments.

3 bedroom on SA 160. close
Homes
fro m $10.0001. to hospital. $500/mo dep &amp;
Forolosure. VA Hud for list· reference .
Redecoraled
ing 1-800-749-8106 ex H09 mside
bedroom farm house on
House 3 'Bedroom 1 1/2 Rt . 35 w1th buildtngs;
Bath Heat Pump, new $500/mo. dep. &amp; reference.
Carpet , Windows &amp; Roof, Call after Spm (740)645 Aiver View 12 Sml1h St. No .:.61:.:5::7_ _ _ _ __
Money Down to qualifying
3br in Syracuse. Ohio No
Buyer $425/mon'th why Rent
Pets. $475.00 a month Hud
(304)675-2749
Approved (304)67~-5332

- - - - - - - - ,4

New Ustmg for sale 01' rent
in Maron WV manufactured
1560 sq. FT on 80 11 200
fenced lot~ 3br, 2balh. LA.
DR, Kit, 3 seasoned glass
porch.
$68 .500
01
$425/month plus last month
rent, no pets, Re.t. reqwed
(304)773-9181 or (304)n3·

A Foreclosed Home
Only $8.900! Th•s Home
Must Sell' tor listmgs call 1·
800-366-9783 e)( b83B

m~:~ tr:~ ~ 10 °~r!nde

~~u~e~i~T~~F~r;~~r ~~~;..

Beautilul Downtown 3·bedroom, 1-bath, storageroom
Close
lo
everythmg.
S6t0/month
No
pets
5040
DepoSit reqwred . Call Ke lly
- - - - - - - - (740)446-9961 . •
A
h
1 h
1 1/ 2 :c...::::._c.:....:='--~on
Cllerry Rid!Je Rd Cal l
(740)245 _5102 .
port QlJlet locatiOn , edge of
town $550/mo 8 $sso sec
MOBII.f. HOM~
dep. You pay all utilities. Call
F~
(740)446-3644 for Info.
..__ ~
•·JOBJ u : H~
n~
·
1•
..,.......
...::o
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom
.~
th. modern hOf!l8. on 1.
r~ ArJ'IJ
mobile homes starting at
res . newly refinished 1
001 . central air, hea 5270 per month. Call 740- 2 bedroom . ltke new. central
992·2 167
ump-, basement. conv1ent
air. (740}446-2003
v ~ocated 1.5 miles ot
.
50 &amp; 1 5
t
Make2payments. movem4 3bedroom . 1· 1/ 2 batn . CIA.
ou 1e
on y mmu e
T
PI ·
;tears .on note (304)736- t4x70 w1th eltpando. no
rom
upp~Jrs
arns
pproxtmataly $850
pets $450 month • deposit
.
onthly payment. Cal
(74QIAA6-4824
.
... ~
s1o
,-.-.
A
ew 0 a nvvu mega
re
hris
or
obble
a featurirfg
Horn6s
by Mobile hOme tor re nt
~.7c:4=0e:7.::&lt;l=041"-.- - - - - ' OakwoOCI , FleetWOOd &amp; ~. 00 . j740)742-Q703

r10

~UCilON

lms&amp;
.ACRKAGE

Mobile home lot for rent at
Johnson's. Mobile Home.
Park. (740)446·2003

Do you need odd jobs done?
Painting &amp; general home
rj3palr. Pleas e call (740)99?·
6926

WAf'mD

Gallipolis,

It

Care Giver 1n your Home
1304)675-1996

r

CLASSIFIED INDEX

'

lan
Poulter
28 .

1.

Full blooded Siberian Husky
to a good home. Call
Garage Sale; September
(740)446-7449.
13-188AM-4PM.3 mttesup
KJ«ens- inside only. Litter #143 off #7. lots of baby girl
trained. Phone (740)446- clothes, toys , other clothing
3897.
and lots more. Rain or
P8kingese/Jack
Russell shl.ne,. Watch tor signs.
female. 4 months ol~ , to a
good home,· (740)992-5891

Name .

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publlehlng re..rvea the right to edit, ~~~1, or canc:•l any ed at·any time. Error• mutt be reported on the flr.t day of .
Trlbun...S.Otlnoi-Re,glater will be reeponalble for no't'nore than lhe coat ot the apace occupied by the «tor and only the flrallf1Mr11on. We
not be
I
any lou or expanu tlwl: retuhl from the publication or omlaalon of an advertlaament. Correetlan wlll bl·m•de In the first available edition. • Bax number
are alway• confldentl"l- • Current rate card appllea. • All real eatal11 advertla11manta are aubject to th• Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • Thll '&lt;WOPOI,..I
tccapta only halp wen ted 1d1 mHtlng EOE atand•rda. We will not knowingly·accept 1ny advert Iaing In violation of the lew.

Losl· female miXed pred dog AACO yard sale· Star Mill
missmg
from Park. Rac ine. September
Rocksprings / Fl atwo ods' 14, 15, from 9am-4pm &amp;
area, answers to Sheba, September 16 from Sam·
2pm, all items 1/2 price &amp;
Reward , 1740)992-5120
- - - - - - - - clothi ng $1 a bag on
Lost- male Beagle mix, red- Thursday. All proceeds go to
dish brown/gold and White, scholarship fund . 16' fibermissing since Sept. 3 Meigs gla ss garage door, computer
Co. SkinneriW Shade Ad desks, exerc1se eqUipment,
area, answers to Rusty, coffee table . bicycles. TV's,
Reward! Famil~ pet, sadly niicrowaves, Christmas &amp;
missed, (740}98~·4492
holidny decor~tlons , toys ,
clothing, craft items &amp; fats of
misc. Tha nks fer your sup·
YAIIDSALE
port.

j

Stewart
Clnk

" I

- "'vt .
~~

4

ads must be prepaid'

RIVERSIDE ,- AUCTION
Moving sale 59 Texas Ad .
BARN
At. 7 South, 5 m11es
8:30·5pm Thurs. Fri &amp; Sat
below the Dam EVERY
Sept. 16-17·18.
SATURDAY
@.
Spm.
4 . YARD SALF.7401256'6989.

Europe

.

~~D

• All

All Display: 12 Noon :1
Buslneas Day&amp; Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thuraday for Sunday•

AucnON ANll
FLEA MARKET

:Redwornen enjoy successful weekend, take home championship
Chelsea DeGarmo added
seven kills each.
Freshman libero Alex
Sava~e led the defense with
18 dtgs. DeGarmo tallied 13
digs and Jessica Veach added
eight. Veach had 26 assists.
Brittny Henry, returned to the
line-up. with four serve aces
to top the Redwomen in that
department. Freshman Jodi
Smith was 16-for-16 serving
with one ace.
· Rio Grande picked , up
steam with the second game
Salem
triumph
over
International, 30-19, 31-29,
and 30-17. Doss (13),
Kiesling ( 12) and Urton (II J
all posted double figures in
kills. In addition to 'the 12
kills, Kiesling had five solo
blocks ana one block assist.
Veach ,dished out 37 assists
and registered eighi digs.
DeGanno led the way defen-

ANNOUNCEMK'ffii

rI

In Next Day•a Paper . '
·sunday Jn-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

e Start Your Ada With A Keyword e Include complete
De1crlptlon e Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevletlon•
• l,nclude Phone Number And Addre•• When Needed
~Ads Should Run 7 DBVI

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\.\,\UI \,(I \II \I..,

Rvder.c
p

HOW IQ WRITE AM Al2

.

.College Uolleyball
· STAFF REPORT

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for lnaertlon

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

DouG FERGUSON

{p;.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
rn
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

5 Mdt'oom . 1112 battl
house tor sale Pomeroy". 314
acre. 3" 4 remodeted, 0%
down possible.
payment
.r.o'K
00 ___
approx. .-..J. "-"''• no
land contract. (740)208·
7080

r

sur

I
i

n-- I

E·
GlklS

One stop shoppmg
only at Oakwood Homes of'"'
Barboursville VW (304)73fi:3409 .

r

1

APARThiE\'I'S
'

_.

t'olt lb~'T

.

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apl. startlng

Next to new 2000 Redman
16X80 , 3 ~oom/2 bath.
:..~·mw-&amp;mg
" ' . le roo I fu.."·,
vr'nyl s....
loaded. $27.900.00 Can
...rnn
_,p ...,,.,,
~ .....,
--·~.
• . .. ""'·
...... 1 ~
""
Nikki (740)385-9948.

at $290/month . deposit
reqUifed . No IMtl . WD
hookup. (740)441- .11 84
.
1 ancl 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furn•shed and unfur·
nished, security deposi t
SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
required. no petS, 740-992Stock modet&amp; at o6d prices, 2218.
·
2005 models amv1ng Now_
1
Cole's
MObile
Homes,
Dedroom apt
utilntes
15266 U.S. 50 East. Athans, included. $450 month, S300
Ohio •5701 . 1740)~2 - 1972 . deposit Calf (740)992·22R
"Wtlere You Get Your 1BR partially furniShed . all
Money's Worthnew. sujtable for 1 person or
~r~;;.;.~.;;;.--..., a couple. no. pets 7 minutes
~
from town and RIO Grande.

A~ 8tJnJJ1NGs

1

FOf Sale: Estabtiehed Pizza
&amp; Drive In business in the
Chesapeake. Otuo area .
Call 7-40 386-9327.

iiir-;;:1;~~~--,

Lars &amp;

$575/rnonth. all utilities
mcluded
74o--245-19&amp;&amp; 7~
:....::~.:..:::_:.:._ _ __
1 br. Studio Apt. very c:lean. furniShed $325 + Deposit
(30')675-2970

ACREAGE
2 bedroom apartment tm
5 Room House on 55~ lot. 4it------~ rent ., Syracuse $200.00
1n Pl. PI Hou&amp;e needs '
¥'10fi!;. SS,BOO Ph (304)773-

depos1t , , S330.001month
1 acre of land with septic. renl. lnctudes water, sewage
electriC an&lt;! water on aM trash Must I'\8WI IUfft5040
Shepherd Lane'. Vmton
c~ent
u'\Come to Qualify
A Affor~sble 2-ll80room (740~18.
(740)37fl.6l11,
It further information is
Home, Everything new.
needed please call Judy
l'ossibte no Money down to 5 lots k»f sale dose to 2 . 2 or 3 becboom apartment in
no
pell,
aan:ua or Jimmie 5nyOe! •I
quo1ilying 1luyo&lt;1 (304)674- 8CftS AIIISOf'l lane. Phone M1ddleport,
[304)615-51()«! ""~ • pm
(740)992-5858
•
.
74~7112 .
.__ _ _ _ _ __, 5111
·

SHOP
CLASSIFIED.S

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

�Tuesday, September 14,2004

. www.mydailysentlnel.com

Tuesday, Septem'ber 14, 2004
ALL~Y OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
2 bodloom opll. tO minutes One bedroom garage apart· $TV's

from

Holzer

from

$101 ,

DVD-, Beagle pups, tri-color, 10

ACROSS

Hospital. ment, kitchen furnished, Players,

$460/month. Pots atklwed,
storga~ units available.
(740~441-1184 or (740)4410194.
.,...,-------2 bedroom, stove, refrigerator furnished. $150 deposit,
$275 rent. 34 1/2 Smfthars
Street. Call (740)446-3870.
Apartment Available Now.
River Bend Place, New
Haven, wv now accepting
applications for HUO-subsi·
dlzed , 1 bedroom apart·
menta. Utilities included Gall
(304)882:3121 Apartment
aval.loble for Qualified senlor/disabled person. EHO

Vldeo·Games, weeks old, 1st shots. Call
Computers, Ectl now avail- (740)256-1659.

$400, (740)992-3e23

able for into call aoo-366·
Pleasant Valley Apartment 9850 ox M655
Are now taking Applications
lor 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR ., 1998 Weber Horse Trailer
Applications are taken 38' wfshowtlme conversion.
Monday thru Friday. from 3 horse trailer wlfull living
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office Is quarters. Excellent condiLocated at 1151 Evergreen tion. $25,995.00 call Harold
Drive Point Pleasant, WV (740)3e5-7671
Phone No is (304)675-5806.
E.H.O
For Sale Dress Clothing &amp;
.
Dress Coats sizes 10-14
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- (aD4)8B2.:!339
lng applications for ·waiting 'ft~~~~~""J:I",
list tor Hud·subslzed, 1· br, I H~r~~~ o:n~~~ ~~~e\.
apartment, call 675-6679
op quality, warranties.
EHO
~Ilion, WV, Flea Marke
SPA..-.~
k-ectlon
C.
Fndays,

j

CKC Jack Russell Terriers,
$125 each. (740)256-1652 .

I

Ferret for.gJe 2/years old
decanted &amp; fixed, 2/story
cage, hammock, house &amp;

more

~ry

Wh~ley's

friendly $,50 for

an call (304)675-1935

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH

AKC, excellent · hUnters,
$250-black, $350-yettow.
www.staelepolntlnglabs.com

(740)256-6172.
Rat Terrier puppies. born
Augusl 3rd, all female, very
cute, shots, ' dew claws
removed . (740)742-1703

~---miRiiiRiiENflioi-,..0 f'. ~!~ays and Sundays.
...,
110;;606
:;;~:."9:.;2;:i2;o·7•165
:;,;i,·---.l
Camper lots for rent River
JET
Park: permanent hoo.k-up. 3
AERATION MOTORS
small mobile home oc Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Schnauzer, miniature AKC
camper lots, $1 25.00/mo. 1 Stoc+t. Cell Aon Evans, 1· male puppies. Salt &amp; /pe p· office building. $300.00/mo 800-537-9528.
per $150.00 each . Sheltles
pupPies AKC male-Blue
each.
Merle,
$150.00
lmr-~~
NEW AND USED STEEL (740)696-1 065
HOUSDJOW
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
1
G&lt;:loD;
For
Concrete,
Angle,
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Channel, Flat Bar, 'Steel
1
MENTS
AT
BUDGET ~
PRICES AT JACKSON Good Used Appliances . Grating
For
Drains,
ESTATES. 52 W!!SJwood Recondition~d
and Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L Student Saxophone for sale,
Drive from $344 to $442. Guaranteed.
~ Washers. Scrap Metals Open Monday, 1or more Information c.all
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call Dryers,
Ranges,
and Tuesday, W~dnesday &amp; 740 441 -1892.

Applk:atlons being taken for
very clean 1 bedroom in
country senlng. yet close to
town. Washer, dryer, stove,
fridge inclllded. Water and
garb&amp;ge Included. Total alectrie with AC. Tenant pay alectrlc. $300 deposil, $375 per
month. No pets. No smokIng. 740-446-~205 or 740.
446-9585 ask for Vi'rgiMt.

Pomeroy Eagles
'· BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early ~irds slart
6:30
Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

Auto .

Parts

Labrador Retriever pups.

e;::81

"-1:..

Phillip
Alder

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Restock!Jw I.B.te Model Saltage
and After Market Parts
See Brent or Btian Whaley
M-Frl 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun •. Closed

Equal A t .
t
S
I t-t
e ngera ors, ome s ar a
Housing Opportunity.
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vine St. . (740)446·7398
Beech Street, Middleport. 2
tMtdroom, furnished apart· Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
ment, utilities paid, deposit &amp; Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
reference,
no
pets, ("740)446-7444 1·877-830(740)992'-0165
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
-~----...,-.,:-:-::- tinancing, 90 days same as
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- cash . V,isa/ Master Card.
EO &amp; ~FFOADABLEl
Drive· a- little save alot. ·
Townhouse
apartments.
and/or small houses FOR ThOmpsons Appliance &amp;
RENT. Call (740)441-11 11 Aepalr-675·7388. l=or sale,
for ,applic8tion &amp; information. re-conditioned automatiC
wa!&gt;hers &amp; dry~ts, refrigeraFurnished small 1 bedroom tors , gas anq electric
Apt. No pets. No Smoking ranges, air conditioners, and
+
Electric wringer washers. Will do
$295.00
References.
$200.00 repairs on major. brands in
Deposit (304)675~2651
shop or at yollr home.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- Used Furniture Store 13Q
room apartments at Village Bulaville Pike, dressers,
Manor
and
~iverside
Apartments in Middleport. couches, mattresses, reclln·
ers, grave monuments,
From $295-$444. Call 740- much more. (740~446-4782
992-5064. EQual · Housing Gallipolis, , Ohio Hrs. 11 ·3
Opr?Ortunities.
(M·F) .
-New--'--1-bed_r_oo_m_ap-t.-P-h-o-ne
SroGooosRilNG
(740)446-3736.

r

Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
·Thursday,
S&amp;turday
&amp;
Sunday.: (740)44 6-7300

I

-------New 2 bedroom No pets.
$400.00 a month $375.00 Horton •

Super
Mag.
deposit. (740)992·4119 ask Crossbow with scope &amp;
for Marge
case, 5275, Call (740)367- - - - - - - - - i:i7564;;:,;;..
· -----.....,
New 2 bedroom with
attac hed
garage.
" ..n'IIYmcI"LL·u ~~
$400/ mon1h ,
t
no
pes.
deposit
&amp;
references
required. (740)446-280 1.
Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
One bedroom apartm"ent., on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740no pets. in Pomeroy, 992·2526. Russ Moore,
(740)992-5858
owner.

i

j

.

o-

' 1985 Oldsmobile Delta 881n

(740)992-2932
93 N's""n Pathfin.-1-r needs
._
vv
transmission, $1 ,500.00·. 96
Toyota
4-RUniler
nice
$6,900.00 Call (740)9922136

r

VAAS

real
good
condition,
FOR SALE
(740)992-7274
AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab J- 20M, Dautz-8006, Four 1992
Mercury
Grand
. puppies. Shots. wormed &amp; Bonom Piow, NH Hay-Hea~ Marques, loaded, all power, 2001
Dodge
Cara·van,
dew claws i"em.oved. $300- HayWagon, NH HayBine, JO new c/dlslereo, !ires &amp; t01 ,700 miles. $5,900.00
"'350. (740)441-0130:
48-Loador,
JD-Mower brakes,
&lt;~~
$2300
OBO, Call 740 992-2136
(304)862-3459
(740)985-3e10
AKC Blond Lab pups. Shois,
wormed. (740)441-0013 or
1994 Pontiac Flreblrd 6cyt.
Model 782 New Holland
(740)441 7333
runs &amp; leo'• """"· $3,500
•
·
Forage Hatvester with 36~ 2
,.... li:J"""""
(304}675-6986
1985 Honda Shadow 500.
row corn head. Modei770W
great condition, new tires.
·
Hay head. New Holland crop 1998 Ch~ S-~0 Blazer LS, $ 1,BOO. (740 )379 _2601 _
AKC Registered
carrier 8 silage wagon &amp; Loaded, 4.3 Automatic
Gehlsilage wagon. All are in 80,000 miles (304)675-5828 1995 Harley Davidson Ultra
Collie Puppies Parent on Site good condldon &amp; field ready.
·
Cla;&amp;slc. Excellent condition ,
Mking S150 (304)675-889A
(740)245-5047.
1999
Bonneville
88K
mileage,
extras,
$5,295; 1997 GMC 1500 SL low
piCk-up, 135K $3,895; 1995 $12,000.
(740)441-0541
(lran&lt;I-Am2D 99K$1,995. 3 _•11e_r...;5p_m_._ _ _ _ __
months/3000 mil~ 'warranties.
COOK MOTORS
328 JACKSON PIKE
(740)4.46-o1 03

1999 •Red Honda Foreman
4505 4x4 Adult Ridden. Exc.
Condition $3,300 (:io4)7735103

2002 Yamaha Road Star
89 TauruS S,H,O., 5 sp,, Warrior 1700cc $7,500
ne008 11111e work, boCy In (304)882-8290
great shape, needs fuel
pump, cooling ian assembly,
runs good. new clutch,
$600, 740-742-Q507.

r

BoA~.,~~
.
....__ ~

I

$6,700.00 call (740)992- Aquatraller,
213e

has

cover.

92 Corsica V-6, new tires,
brakes, paint (buogundy)
runs great, looks great
$2,700, (740)742.0509
1978 Yellow Stone 24ft.
good condition, new tires:.
95 Z-28 1 350, auto, T·tops,
$2,500. (740)379-2601.
leather, dark gree.n, tan lnteriof, great shape, $7,000, 2002 Hornet 27'; 2003
(7-40)742-4011 leave mes- Starcraft
29';
1978
sage .
Yellowstone
24';
2002

For Sale 1986 El Camino, Hornet 35'; 11192 Colef!)an
$2,995. (304)675-7790 or f'ot&gt;-up. (740)446 0800.

FORCentury-Special
SALE
2002 Buicl&lt;
Edition Color-Light San&lt;jdrift

r'Q

.F'~

Colpor~~Uon

d/b/a

the
following
-.:rlbecl· ...1 ..-

UCUnclng
Phtlnllll.

,.

to wit:

Property Addrna:

INneWella,.tal

Daland-.tla
C.. No.: 04CV1174

Judge:

F,...w_ Crow

NOIIce In

Sui!

-..,.

for
of

··~l'tg ge
............. -

II
lllat _ , 8Cidl
1811 Ill !berry A - .
" - - y, Ott 45761,
and lhe unlln-n

....,., dwluu, ._...
-.
-utore,
admlnlalfaton,
IP 01 I PI 8nd MtiiM
and

-

1ll1llnOwn

~ of minor
. and/or lncompetant

· llalrw of nne Welle,
.. of ...
diiiCM . . unlaw»wii
Mel C81NIOI be ,.....

_

• • .... ...
...... wilt,..

nollca -

on the
171h ...,. of June,

2004,

gage recooded ,..,..

/l.,;.llorlgaga

CorjiOi&amp;lkM
d/b/a
UCL.Iodlng flied Ita

c-plelnt In the
Ca uww101• Pilei: Court
of lllelga ~.Ohio
In c- No. IMCV074,
on lhe iliA I I of the
Cowt, and lhe object

Notice
given

lo

lhet

on

10:00 am a public
.... will ... held for
lhe pu.,... of -

115 Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy, OH45788 lylngala-'allen
and being mont ...,.. on t h e - of
llculally ~ucolbad In aall-unrlca atoraga
plalnUII'o mortgage
- - Tile goocla to
beaold-~IIC­
-dad In lriOrtglge genarelly
u .....,_
104, . . . 713,
will
of · 1111•
County . hold. Tile be opened for view~·a Office.
All of lhe above Ing lmmedlalaly prior
named -...om. . to aollcltatlon of bids.
. are required . 10 . , rlptlon of property . . lolluwa:
- - tw.dy- Jauatry Box. NWrtl
alght ' (28) dltya 8llar
fut
publlcetlon, . ...,. and ' drua
ehlrts. tool boll, comwhich llhall ... publlehed once a ....., puter componanla,
for alll con-utlve wooden ahonhlne
a 1..,, or 111ay mlgllt kit, . , _ molda, •
......... ..
... donlad • '-'Ill camping
begaofcloiM6,unlIn thll c...
form ' -.Ill, miiC.
AI " "'a
liNt
~. cull llllb,
~. SempiOII ..
many onllc. tooll,
AoltlfuN
alloM, liNt . . . ldt,
A-•P for Plolntlll cookwaa, Vllllapu,
P.O. Box 5410
pllcf¥, poiNI' .......
CIIICIIotall, 011 452111·
llahlng ...-.
5410
a.yM1
•
(513) 241-3100
,...,., .,.,.... Fink
attyamaiiOiorlaw.co
AddteN:
31004
m.
(I) 7, 14, 21, 28, (10) 5,
lllddllport9
Ohio
12

--

Notice

Take, the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

- ... of
held
far
lhe purpoM
......
lying • ._ldlord'a llln
on the conlantl ol

aall...vlca atorage

,..,.•

Rooling,
&amp;
(304)675-3733

Painting

..

..,,..,.,_VDylaa

,..,. ·
laid.......mlac.
-

Chicago. Sitling

...
BARNI;Y

:-jLrJ::;:::I:=:z:=:;::;:=::;s:;;:::;j
._

THE BORN LOSER

11-\E: ~PE:LL U"t..l-1'..
~ II\'1' roii\PUlrEfi: .c-;.,

1::0 MCJQ:.I('t(, Mi. I

....,

Tam~

oflhe ule will
be. o:Mb or . . lllled

fUnd. .

Mowers, Chain Saws,
Chain Sharpened
&amp; Parts

13UT REI\l&gt;tNG
HE t10RNtt&lt;6
1Wt&lt;OUNCEI1ENTS
IS
JOB 1.

New General Standby .

SaL 8:JO-l:OO 991-1033

~ ~e«/"9

High I Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

MY

IMPGITS
Athens

Open 8:30-6:00 M-F;

YES. BUT NO.
BECAUSE YOU

BISSEll

BUILDERS lOt

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding .• New Garages
• Replacement

PEANUTS

COMMERClAL and

PE66't' JEAN TWA'!'.. SUE
SAYS SIIE 5nLL LIKES ME

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

LOVE ~5 DESTRO!o:ED
A LOT OF 600D
. PITC~ER5..
.

Hours ·
111411 mo. pd

BETTY

1-800-822-C).f 17

GRRR

.Giuw6~1

~--~~aw740-99Z-m2
7-1~1570

·LasH-

•PultF,._

oComplote RftiMMidi"'

•llqJiaameol W"uodows

748-667-6080

•

CARPENTERSERVICE

...........,
AI

og

·-a...

.-.
.• -.
•VInyt-. .........
•E'

llcoill~

• Pillet ... Pclrclli Dlclcl

Wedoftolercopl

--"

V.C. YOUNG 117

. lellaT
IISIEU

23 Kareem's

-as -'-

62 Just out

- Williams
25 Hahed
29 Freeway
clogger
31 Zllch
34 Shoulder
enhancer
35 Dart about
36 Revlval
shout
37 Place lo slay
38 Reporter
Lola39 Apple goody
40 Crepy ·
feeling
42 !lo•lng wins
44 Uncle or
grandpa

DOWN
1 Hall a cab

2 Lake birds
3 Jacl&lt;l.onpon
selling
4 Back oul
5 Turmoils
6 Tum sharply
7 Gusto
8 Osaka yes
9 Vase wllh
a foot
10 My, my!
.
13 Tar's saint
18 Gaorgla city
20 Oul olthe
ordinary

alma mater 48
24 Run fasl
26
49
27 Nol daffy
28 Novelist
5()
-Ferber
51
30 Hwy.
31 Shock
52
32 Give forth
33 Have a
53
strong odor
35 Dogs' bane 55
40 Gl
entertainers
41 Some
T-shirts
43 Switch
settings
45 Fresh scent
46 Wed

In haste
Toomarnent

pa....
Kazan
of filmdom
Worry a lot
Current
meas.
Gathered
dust
401 (k)
cousin
Nlght
balore

GRRR

---

O

W~n..day,

Sept. 15, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
You had better get your roller. stakes out
and ready as soon as you celebrate your
birthday or anniversary, because your calendar is likely to be overcrowded with
mjlny invitations you 'll lind exciting and

personality in

a mos t

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ~ Bemg born
under your Sign. you are gifted· with a
sense of. beauty that you carry into your
demeanor. and it rarety goes unnoticed.
This will be a majOr asset today in accentuariri:g your Charisma.
GEMINI (~ 2.1 -June 20) - Household
Chores can be made easaer and even tun
and excfting when leh up to you to demonstrate how to go about doing tn•ngs. The
entire famify Will profit from· your 1nput.
CANCER (June 2t-July 22)- Groops oMII
be quite happy to have yoou at gathtirfngs
today. Your enter1aining personaitty contributes to the test:Mties.
'
lEO (~ 23-Aug. 22) - There WIH .be
excetlent oppor1unities and situa.
nons out there today that could help
improvE! things tor you hnanclalty or materially. You'l possess a sharp eye tor spottiltg them.

WOo/¥ Sl'-S "if
DiSCo llaNci&gt;i 8&lt;JRsiE o

J:

.o

N

K Z F N E,

NCRGVPR

GNZZR

BNC ·

B V YCEZR ,

KZVD

YT.

EV

C W F Z F'
GF

XF."

KVHPDNEFZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'The way to catcll a knuckleball is to wait until ~
stops rolling and 1hen ~ck it up." - Bob Uecker
·

tht

I ·I I I' I I
low ro form fQUr word1.
"

1

._,S_L,O,G-;-Er.P-r-1
I

z

_

':~=~~;::::~~-.J

II IIII
I Is I I 15 I..r
r

MI XA Q

J-:---r.-r--r-r---1
3

~

•
,
.---~------, ~

0L0E

I

~•.. SitES .510Me

141112-1111

" LE' A

A con1idential
~'
Granny always told me that
disclosure today may put you on track to
someth;ng that could be niost mean;n91UI
truly confusing person will
' to you as well as large in scope. You'd be
give you good advice wW!e setsmart to keep·things to yollrsetf for now.
t 1ng
'
a poor - - - - • - -.
.
SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-Nov. 22) - Allhough . f--..----r:-'--T----r...::.-r::---1
there is nothing shy about you, er~cour·
Complete !he chuckle quoted
agement trom pals could prompt you today ·
.
.
.
.
_
.
by lilling in rhe miUII'IQ words
to behave a liHie bolder than you normally
vou. -develof) from s:ep No. J below.
00 when dealing with others. You'll come

krt&lt;Pa

• Garill!es

by Luis Campos
Celetrlty Cipheretyp~o9rams n craated !rom qlJOiitions by llmou! people, p.ast arid J:1tMr11
Ear::h ieft!ll' in tile opher stands 101 II'IOther .
•
TOday'sclue: J equals X
.

Rearronge
Krcimbled

J1 SJIE.S KIP... SHE.s .I'J

• Complete
Remodeling

CELEBRITY CIPHER

- - - - - - Uitod. ~~ CLAY l. P O l l A N - - - - - -·

SOUP TO NUTZ

.New Homes

SIDp &amp; Compare

environs

08

Astro- - '~~:~~~, S©R~lA-""t.ffs· :::~ .
Grapb 0
leTters of
. four
wordJ be ·
-... 'lllrlhllllr=

some

740-74l-:W2

Free Esllmates

•

GARFIELD

YOUNG'S

21 Catch
22

FJBFTE

your ideas.

""" Sldhtr
ll•pltlc•-"'II..,. .t4diiiDfu

57 Rovers'
planol
58 Like
Mr. Hydo
59 Unfold,
·
In poetry
60 Grad•
school org •
61 Shark

·six: •

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-DeC. 21) Should you have an ambitious plan Jk&gt;ating around in the back of your head, this
may be the day to launch it. With care. you
can pull rt off.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) ~ Idle talk
proouces little, as you so weU understand,
so today you'H be prepared'" to back up
your words wilh action and demonstrate to
onlookers how to make grand things happen.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- Any lucky
person who learns up with you todav.
increases his or hm chances lor succeSs.
You know what you want and how to get it.
whiCh makes your presence and conrribu·
tion what counts.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Others will
not possess the Skills as an arbrtralor that
you have today, and they'll immediatetv
recognize it. Don't be surprised if they sit
back and let you smooth things over when
needed.
ARIES (Marcti21 -April19)- Your modus
operandi today will be speed, efficiency
and purpose. Your drive is so strOf1Q that
there is little doubt that you will allow anvlhtng to inhibit your abilities to cany out

( Oll', ft "t HI lOll

Artideptiel

T-ollla . . wlll
be calli or '*tilled

had been alive to the situation, the
delense would have gone club ru ff,
spade to lhe k&lt;ng, club ruff. However,
West led the spade ace. After that card
lived, West woke up, shifting to the club

ott well.

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

BID
New A: Used
• .&amp;'lrt'l South Churcb St.
Ripley, wv 252'n .

56 Witticism

with her previous four·spade bid, was
intended as a Ughtner double. If West

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) -

I 60T ALETTER FROM

_1.1, I

Builder•

ROUTINE'

740-949-2217

RESIDENTIAL

Falco
13 Taocup
handleo
14 Hunky-dory
(hyph.)
15 Eggy drlnka
16 Conneet up
17 Dwarfs
19 Gobbler,
mayba

doubled. This action , Inconsistent

~:e:~:n:.ur

~'**

.,...._......
·-

HIISIIIT MASTERED
EW&amp;LISH YET"~--'--

Storage

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

Barnhart

1\LREi\DY
WITH THE "LOI/i\BLE
EXC~NGE STUDEHT

Hi ll's Self
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45nt

(2 wda.)
54 Bellow

Amalya

;nv;gorating.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Although
. sometimes you can be labeled as being
indecisive because you'll votce all sides ol
an issue. today you'll diSprove this by

Windows • Roofing

HOWARDL
WRITESEl

......
·-

.. AND ENOIJGH

WERE NoT HERii

Dean

c-odallllld

Hill'• s.JIItooaga
(I) 31, (V) 7, 14

East was

Declarer should also have realized what
was happening and called for a low club,
but he went up witb dummy's king. Eas1
ruffed. and West eventually got a etub
trick to defeat the contract.

1·740·843·5382

Generating Systems and
Roi-Air Air Compressors

8 Cabin

11 A Coattllo
12 Adams or

American Contracl Bridge League's Hall
of Fame last July. The auction was exciting. AI her first turn , Kearse produced an
unusual negative double. This would normally include length &lt;n bolh majors, bul1t
responder is short in one major, she must
know what to do H partner rebids " the
"Wrong' major (probably either bid notrump or support diamonds) . Also, East
would typically have at least seven or
eight high·card points, but she lraded on
her excellent distributio~ to compensate
lor the shorlage of points.
Later, when West made a penalty double
ol lour heans, East ran to lour spades.
But after South con1inued to live hearts,

-'-'==! • Easl

Warranty Repair •
Lawn Tractor &amp; Push

•NewHa.es

Addnn: 110 Wilda
Drive, ••• ....,. Ohio

All pass

49 Flip-chart
atanda·
51 Gel rNII

4 Heckle

Kearse , who was inducted into the

Pomeroy

D«u

woodan

Redbl.

1 Pop-up

Anower to Provlouo Puzzlo

pockat

Yesterday, I made mention of 1he Lightner
slam double, which asks for an unusual
lead . However, it is possible tq .extend the

beside Larry's Fruit Stand

Blmr11 I1Ualllllon
I'.U Btdldhtp

VHIItapM, lumltvre,
-ral
bega
ol

DbI.

Pati~

820 East Main St.

- . . Tile goocla to
hold. Tha ,_,. will'
... _
.... for .......
lng llllllladlalaJr' prior
to aollcllatlon o l D olptloo1 of proptlrly
•a follow•:

Pass
Pass

.

principle to include game contracts.
This deal occuired during the Life Master
Pairs at the 1971 Summer Nationals 1n

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

_,_

t.sold . . t
ilbid
genatllly •a ........

457110

I

or

f_

~nnette's .

Ia hereby
that
on

.......,.... 25, 200411
10:00 1m • public

c:toiiMI,

tfic;HwAY lfVMPf LIM

(304) 273-5321

1fo~e Ckaning Service

Pass

Moving down from
slam to game

WHEN HE SAID WE WUZN'T
DONE WIF TH' FU~ST ONE
YET!!

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

Dbt.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

or t.lff

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

r-------""1

East

Opening lead: 'I'

Ravenswood Chirqpractic
Center I ·

Le: me do 1t for you 1

North

West

Obi.
3 4

149-1415

sa-

given

Vulnerable: East-West

740-843-5264

•fiiii«F

· Public Notice
.Public

Dealer: Wesl

ana

hereby

Saplamber 25, 21104 at

c,_

521,000. (740)388-qt51
(740)3394l584.

(8) 31, (8) 7, 14

Public Sale

... 9 8 1 3

llMI'IQJYrmrnt~

Fix
It,
Home
Lariat 4x4,· 53,000 miles, Mr.
Repairs.
IXCI!IIIInt COIIICiitiOn, loaded. Remodeling,

Hilla' s.JI Storege

-

L,-iliiiiiiiiiiiii:iliii..

SALE~

. 2001 F-150 Super

lund.

Public Notice

. K Q I 0972

floME
,, _
_ ...:.-.

Metallic. MDoage-52,000
,.l
miles. InteriOr-cloth seats,
BASEMENT
IIOUnd 8)'8WATEfti'IIOOFINCt
tem lh Exceptionally clean Uncondilibnal lifetime guarcar. Call Mike Brown antee. local references fur(740)44&amp;-0925.
ni8hed. Established 1975.
irn~~:-;.----., Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·~
0870, Rogers Basement .
FOti
......
wsterprooflng.

and demllnd for relief
PLEAS MEIGS COUN- of Which ~ng Ia
TY, OHIO
to torec:t.. lhe lien
Aegla
Mortpge · of plttlnlltl'a mort·

sOuth
• 5 3 2

South

(304)593-4111.

COURT OF COMMON

·.
,.,. ••3. 4.

4

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

• Pick-up and dt:li\lety st:r'\lice
Now servicin KenNne Heaters

92 Bu~ R*l, St ,OOO.OO; 98 Basestream boal, 99
20CIO Pontiac Grand AM SE, Mercury 150 HP motor•. 97

Notlcft:
'"'&amp;c":~:-;=:.:
Your Rl&amp;bt to Know, PabUe
DeUvend
JUpt

4Q J1084
• J 3
+JI0 98S3

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

.

$5001 Police Impounds!
Cars/Trucks/SUV's
from
$500 Honda's, . Chevys,
Jeeps &amp; morel for-listings
800-366-9813 ex v7 17

£1.-u--.....

Ea11t

4 A K 9 6
• 8 6
K Q 1
... Q J 6

+

Box 189 • Middleport

I'

""'llt'-""'"!~--""'
rii"·O
FARM

MONTY

Rocky Hupp Insurance
~and Financial Servict!S;~
1961 Amc. Eacle, All Wheel
Drive, Auto, Grea.t Work Carl
1984 Amc Eagle for parts 4
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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

·Ben gals' .defense
crumbles first time out
JoE KAv
Associated Press

'

CINCINNATI - Carson
Palmer pUt up some attention-grabbing numbers. So
did his defense, erasil)g
. everything that the kid
quarterback accomplished
in his NFL debut.
Yes ,
the
Cincinnati
Bengals ' defense was that
bad the first time out.
It couldn't stop the run.
It couldn't pressure the
quarterback . It couldn't
even fight through blocks
during a 31-24 loss to the
New York Jets that could
be a blueprint for Palmer's
first season.
Unless things change
dramatically, the Bengals
will be on the wrong t;nd of
a lot of high-scoring
games.
"We don't have anybody
to blame but ourselves,"
s~id safety Kim Herring,
who led the Bengal s in
tackles because Jets running backs were in the secondary so often. "The only
t~ing we can do is get bet-

ter.''
One game into the sea- ·
son, the defense has
already bottomed out .
Curtis Martin ran for 196
yards against a unit that
spent the offseason trying
to get better against the
run. Cincin nati fini shed
28th overall on defense
last season, allowing opponents an unacceptable 4.8
yards per carry.
On Sundav, the Jets averaged 6.4 per carry and 2 19
on the ground overall, running right over a unit that
knew exactly what was
coming but was helples s to
do much about it .
"They presented things
that they had presented last

Tuesday, September 14. 2004

Browns' fioally start out right
TOM WITHERS

Associated Press
BEREA, Ohio - More
than an hour after Sunday's
game, the parking lots outside Cleveland Browns
Stadium were still full of partying tailgaters, and the few
cars rhat did leave pulled
away with their horns blaring .
For a change, the honking
wasn't in anger.
Cleveland won iis first season operier since rejoining
the league , a convincing 20-3
victory. over the Baltimore
Ravens, who were outplayed
in every phase by a Browns
team seeking redemption and
respect.
Everything felt different on
a sun-splashed-. afternoon
along the shores of Lake
Erie.
Jeff Garcia, . the Browns'
. new quarterback, scrambled,
made big plays : and even
jumped into the Dawg Pound
to celebrate a touchdown.
Cleveland's
defense
swarmed "like bees fo
honey" on Ravens running
back Jamal Lewis, and
73,068 fans stood, barked
and screamed like they once
did for Jim Brown and
Bernie Kosar.
' It was one of the few times
since their rebirth in 1999 it
felt like the Brown s were
back - all the wav back.
"It's a great fee-ling." said
defensive tackle Orpheus
Roye, one of the few players
available ill the locker room
MoAday. "Hopefully; we can
keep this going."
Getting started had been
Cleveland's problem the previous five seasons. The
Browns had begun each year
· .since '99 with a loss, all of
them at home.
But feeding off the positive
vibes created by a weekendlong tribute for the Browns'
1964 NFL championship
team, Cleveland played perhaps its most complete game

les, often as the last line of
defense.
It wasn't just mistakes in
lining up that caused the
problems.
·
"It was a little physical,
too - getting to the right
spots . and attacking the ·
blocks," Lewis said. "They
won at the point of attack
and we didn't."
year. thin gs we had spent
So, now what?,
time on. and we didn't get ·
into the game and react as
Lewis expects Simmons
well to thern as we should . and O 'Nea l back for a
have ,"
coach
Marvin game Sunday night against
Lewis said. "So we have to the Miami Dolphins (0-1 ),
fix it."
a team that has more problems than the Beng J!s .
There's no quick fix for Simmons is their best linethis problem.
backer and was dearly
Injuries have sapped a missed in New York.
unit. with littl e depth.
" He would have· oeen a
Second-round draft pick big plus, with the youth we
Madieu Williams - a safe- played at the linebacker
ty at Maryland - started at spot. " Lewis said. "He
co rnerback
Sunday would have been in the
because Deltha O'Neal right spots."
was slowed by a sprained
Palmer's solid debut _
ankle. Not surprisingly, 18-of-27 for .248 yards and
Jets quarterback Chad two touchdowns - was
Pennington
repeatedly encouraging, an indication
took advantage of the that the Bengals will be
rookie .
able to put up a lot of
Third-round pick Caleb · points despite an inexperi-··
Mi.l ler started at outside enced passer.
linebacker in place of
The defensive meltdown
Brian Simmons , who is was tremendously discourrecovering
from aging, although Lewis didst i 11
arthroscopic knee surgery n't want to dwell on it
on
Aug.
30.
Miller Monday.
"Who you going to
sprained his left ankle during the game and was on blame it on this week?" he
crutc hes Monday.
said, forcing a smile. " I' II
' There's more . The defen- blame it on myself. If we
sive line got pushed arou nd don 't play good enough,
and . veteran linebackers it's my fault. If we don't
Nate Webster and Kevin get aligned right and get
Hardy made little impact .the leverages and play the
- Hardy had four tackles blocks, it's my fault."
and Webster three .
He needs to get i.t sorted
The Jets gave Martin out quickly. Nothing drags
nice running lanes by a te am down faster than a
immobilizing the Bengals' defen sive performance like
linemen and stopping the the one in New York.
linebackers in their tracks
"We go through . trials,
with crisp blocks. Herring and that was· one trial right
wound up making II tack- there," O'Neal said.

since Butch Davis took over too. Sometimes by the half
.as coach in 2001.
dozen.
"It was a double exclama"Everybody to the ball,
tion point at the end of a that was our motto all week,"
great weekend," Bavis said. Roye said.
That's a big improvement
The defense's tenacious
on the 'usual. question marks. effort came a few days after
Davis credited Cleveland's end Kenard Lang, who had
flawless special teams 1 the three sacks and forced a fumBro~ns' gang-tackhng on ble, predicted Lewis would
Lewis and not turning the not be able to break through
ball over against one of the Cleveland's defensive front
NFL's toughest defenses as four.
the keys to victory.
"That was a bold statement
Finally 1-0, the Browns are right . there," Roye said.
not starting a season m a "Hopefully, he won't make
hole.
· no more predictions. But if
"It's a better way to set the he was ihat confident, we had
tone than the alternative," the confidence."
Davis said. "But it's just one
The Browns took the field
game."
•
more sure of themselves than
There were plenty of posi- at. any time in recent memolive signs, though. And ry. In ad&lt;;lition to not being
Garcia's debut may have favored, Cleveland's players
been the most optimistic.
had taken issue with the
After · a shaky start, the pregame buildup focusing
three-time Pro Bowl quarter- . solely on the Ravens.
Bu1 beginning with the
back threw il 46-yard touchdown pass to Quincy Morgan pregame coin flip, . the
in the third quarter before 'Browns showed they weren't
calling his own numbe~ on a going to be intimidated by
bootleg and going 3 yards for Ray Lewi s, Deion Sanders or
the clinching TD late ' in the anyone else wearing purple
fourth.
and black.
·
Garcia's scoring to~s came
Linebacker Andra Davis
on a play that looked doomed got into it with Ravens tackle
from the start. He danced in Orlando Brown, who had to
the pocket looking for a be pulled away from the
receiver, and unable to find exchange . of handshakes
one, he pump-faked enough between the teams' captains.
to get safety Ed Reed to bite
"There was a lot of emotion at the start. Nobody was
and come up.
Garcia then floated the ball going to back down," said
to a wide-open Morgan, who Andra . Davis, who joked ·
only had to haul it in and not about the topic of con versatrip over any blades of grass tion. "We talked about the
pn his sprint to the end zone. Presidential election. But we
"His scrambling, · stayitig didn't get far enough to find
alive in the pocket, that was a out who was voting for
vintage veteran quarterback who.".
play," · Davis said. "He. hung
The Browns' landslide win
onto the ball, reloaded and caused Garcia to throw an
found Quincy wide open."
open-house party following
Lewis, on the other hand, the game.'The gesture under- .
was never alone. . ·
lined his leadership and a
The reigning league rush- new ~ond among Cleveland
ing champion, who ran for players.
500 yards in two games
Garcia now just needs to
against Cleveland in 2003, work on the guest list.
"I was mad. He didn't
was held to 57 on 20 carries.
Wherever Lewis went, invite the head coach," Davis
orange helmets were there, said.

Richmond downs Clippers in game five of IL semifinals
RICHMOND, Ya. (AP)- · series begins Tuesday with
Kyle Davies and two reliev- the first of two games in
ers held .C olumbus to three Buffalo, then switches to
· hits, and the Richmond Richmond.
Braves survived a reversed
Davies (1-0) worked 5 1-3
home run call to beat the innings, allowing a run on
Clippers 4-1 Monday 'night two hits and striking out
in the decisive fifth game of four. Buddy Hernandez got
. their International League out of a two-on jam in the
semifinal series.
sixth and worked 2· 2-3
The Brave s advanced to innings · before
Matt
the Governor's Cup against Whiteside pitched the ninth
Buffalo , The five-game for his second save of the

senes.
Hernandez, who. came on
with one out and runners at
first and third, struck out
Andy Phillfp'S and got Jason
Giambi on a fly ball to deep
right-center.
Giambi , on a rehabilitation assignment from the
New York Yankees after battling a benign tumor, an
intestinal parasite, a strained
groin and a respiratory

infection this season, was 0for-4 and finished the series
2-for-16 with four strikeouts.
He was expected to return
'to the Yankees following the
game.
The Braves went ahead in
the third, but not without
controversy.
Jorge Velandi reached on
an error, Pete Orr singled
and Bill McCarthy walked

to load the bases. Ryan
Langerhans
drove
in
Velandia with a sacrifice fly,
and Luis Lopez followed
with a fly ball down the left
field line that home plate
umpire Troy Fullwood ruled
a home run . After the .
Clippers
complained,
Fullwood consulted with the
base umpires and changed
the call, ruling it a foul ball.
Lopez then lined a double

to left off Lance Davis (OJ), but only one run scored.
The Braves added a run in
the fifth on Langerhans'
double, and got one more in
the seventh on a sacrifice fly
by Damon Hollins.
Davis allowed three runs,
only one earned, in 4 1-3
innings .
The Clippers scored on an
RBI hit by Robinson Cano
in the second.

l\1eigs County Fair "Thank Yott" Ads

College football

Goddard named
MAC East Division
player of the week
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
Northern Illinois strong
(AI') - Marshall's Jonathan safety Ray Smith was the
Goddard has been named the MAC West Division defenMid-American Conference's . sive player of the week.
East Division player of the
On offense'; Miami of Ohio
week on defense.
quarterback Josh Betts took
The senior .defensive end . the award for the Easi
had nine tackles, incl.ud.ing
five solo, as well as a fumble Divi ~ ion
and
Central
return during the Thundering Michigan running back Jerry·
Herd's :?4-2 1 Joss at No. 9 Seymour was· tabbed for the
Ohio State on Saturday.
West Division honor.
Goddard also recorded two
Special team awards went
tackles for a loss and was to Akron 's Brett Briggs for
credited with three quarter- kickoff returns in the East .·
back hurries.
Division and Charles Sharon
Marshall
limited
the of ~Bowling Green for punt
Buckeyes to 79 rushing yards. returns in the West Division.

.'

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See Page 81

'

L....J_;-~.........'-- -L.,~~-

--

"POMEROY - It turns out
Manning Roush' s nightmare
may be just beginning .
Roush, owner of Gravely
Tractor Sales at 204 Condor
St. in Pomeroy, rejoiced a
few weeks ago when work .
began on a project to repair a
slip behind 'hi s business.
On Tuesday morning,
despite the fact that contractor
Maiden and Jenkins out of
Nelsonville already had
removed a considerable
amount of earth, the hillside
slipped badly and. nearly
demolished Roush 's building.
When Maiden and Jenkins
employees arrived for work
at 7:30 a.m., they discovered
the slip, and a massive tree
about to fall on Roush's busi-

·~ ..

• Family Medicine: 'PHN'
means the shingles are
gone but the pain lingers
See Page A3
• Bicycle decorating
contest planned.
·See Page AS
• Our House to feature ·
toy exhibit.
See Page AS

John Dore of Pomeroy was hard at it Tuesday morning doing
away with what has become an increas1ng subject of debate in
Pomeroy, the high grass along the riverfront walking path.
Several village residents have pointed out the hypocrisy of
Pomeroy passing a noxious wee.ds and high grass ordinance
while maintaining its own along the walking path, but the grass
is cut now. (Tim Maloneyjph?to)

WEATHER .

•

. •'· t' i '

Chattanooga Star

Chattanooga Star
coming to ,Pom.eroy
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDA ILYSENTINEL .COM

Jesse Kimes, (left) representative of Tractor Supply of Gallipolis presents new hand tools valued
'between $2000 and $4000 to the Meigs Local Vocational Agriculture Program. Tim Simpson, (right)
.. director of the FFA program gratefully accepts the tools for his students . (Beth Sergent/ photo)

Meigs FFA receives new tools free of charge
Wrong. Tractor Supply of
Gallipolis decided to donate
between $2,000 and $4.000
worth of hand tools to th e
Meigs Vocational Agriculture
Program.
Jesse Kimes, representative of · Tractor Supply
explained that · they were
changing tool distributors
and instead of destroying old

Bv ' BETH SERGENT .
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

· POMEROY - Rl!ceiving
thousands of dollars worth of
hand tools free of charge
would ·seem like Christmas to
Tim Taylor from the old sitcom, Home Improvement,
but things like that only happen on TV,' right?

inventory they decided to
donate the products to the
FFA program.
"We get a lot of business at
our store from Meigs
County," said Kimes when
explaining one reason why he
wanted to partner with the
program. · "I am so tickled

Please see Tools, AS

Retirement planning focus of luncheon

INDEX

BY BETH SERGENT
.
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTtNEL.COM

12 ..AGES

A..1

With a stock market that
has been down for three years
in a row, he pointed out that
retirees with once adequate
financial assets have not seen
the projected return on their
· in:vestments. This has forced ..
people to draw upon assets
that they cannot replenish.
This coupled with the rate of
inflation has .. left many
retirees faced with returning
to part time employment to
make ends meet.
Proper financial planning
can prevent .returning to \York
after retirement: One way to
get started on your retirement

plan is to take advantage' of
corporate or public plans at
your place of employment.
Smith also suggested that
after participating in an
employer's plan, a Roth IRA
is a sound investment. Roth
IRAs allow a person to accumulate their dollars tax free
and is the next best thing to an
employer's retirement offer.
Smith suggested that
young people without access
to an employer's retirement
plan put away as . much as
they can . comfortably afford
into a Roth IRA, or other

Please see FOcus. AS

POMEROY - The Chattanooga Star. an authentic . side
paddle wheel riverboat, will be coming into Pomeroy Friday
and docking at the levee through Tuesday to provide student
and public cruises.
The Chattanooga's visit this yearto the Bend area follows a
successful run down the length of the Ohio River as part of the
Ohio Bicentennial Celebration in the autumn of 2003 .
The riverboat will bring RiverTrek a unique. non-profit.
interstate educational program for students with three one'

.

Please see Star, AS

Meigs board hires personnel
nccd.~d

b&lt;l&gt;is were Lee Ann
Baker. Miguel Bendezu .
Stephen
Bentley. Jadey
POMEROY An art Berger. Justin Blick. Pricilla
teacher 'for Meigs . High Bowen , Jason Busic. Teresa
School was hired and several Carroll. Cynthia Civale.
supplemental contracts were Melissa Cominsky. Cathy
awarded at Tuesday night's Crow, Kyle Dee!. Le.slie
meeting of the Meigs Local Dunfee. Tommy Ferrell.
Board of Education .
He~ tor Flores, Qwyn.dolyn
. Sc.ott Needs was employed Freeman, Judy Gilmore.
as
the
art
teacher. Holly Grim. Keith Hiestand.
Supplemental contracts were Sara lhle. Jeffrev Linscott.
awarded to Kathy Reed. stu- Seth McCoard. Hugh Meyer.
dent council advisor; Mary Dayna Millon. Misty Nixon.
· Grueser and Kristin Camara James Pyle. Jenny Ridenour.
were named co-newspaper Keri Shaw. Emil Ray Tope,
advisors; .Paul Morrison, Troy
weaver. Geoffrey
yearbook advisoc Danny White.
and
Roxa·nne
Davis, head wrestling coach. Williams .
and John sharp, eighth grade
Penny Hy sel l was hired as
girls basketball coach.
~ ubstitute ~U&gt;todian to be
Hired as meqtors for first used on an as-needed basis
year teachers in the district for the 2004-05 year effective
for the school year were immediatelv.
Jennifer Henson.. Pennv
During ihe meeting the
Kramsburg, and
Sandy, board approved a contract
Walker . .
wil'h the Health Recovery
Employed as substitute
Please see Hires, AS
teachers to be used on an asBY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
AOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

~r.ee

2 Col. x 2"

$32.80

Roush, owner of Gravely Tractor Sales on Condor
Street in Pomeroy, thought his problems were over when repair
work began a few weeks ago on a slip behind his business. As
seen behind him, the hillside slipped badly overnight Monday,
and depcsited large chunks of earth just feet behind the back
of his building. (Tim Maloney/ photo)

Page AS
• Warren Herald, 57

•

2 Col'. X 3"

Ma~ning'

OBITUARIES

POMEROY ~ The MFigs
County
Chamber · of
Classifieds
83-4 Commerce met on Tuesday at
Wildhorse Cafe to discuss
Comi~ .
Bs the
retirement plannin~ for small
businesses and indtviduals.
A3
Mark E. Smith, who has
•Dear Abby
been a financial advisor ·with
Editorials
A4 Smith Financial Group for
past twenty three years
Obituaries
As the
was the guest speaker. Smith
B1 addressed the luncheon about
Sports
· the benefits of retirement
A2. planning and cautioned
Weather
against counting solely on
social seciJrity for income.
© 1004 Ohio Volley Publlahlnx Co.

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. Please see Slip, AS

2 SEC'IlONS -

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c~~~2~~treet slip repair collapses Clearing the path

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or call992·2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.

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