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'
Page B6 • Th~ Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September.28, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.eom

MarsbaJJ hoping_ ·
to avoid first 0-4
start in 35 years, Bt

New group plans to push NASCAR toward diversity
BY MIKE HARRIS
Associated Press
An organization calling
itself the National Association
for Minority Race Fans has
set up a web site and is apparently planning protests at
some NASCAR Nextel Cup
races before the end of the
season.
The NAMRF has nulde
inqumes to officials in
Hampton, Ga., the home of
Atlanta Motor Speedway.
about the possibility of staging a protest during the week
of the Oct. 31 Bass Pro Shops
MBNA 500. There were also

indication&gt; the group might
hold a protest before the EA
Sports 500 at Talladega
Superspecdway on Sunday.
Bud Smith. chief of police
in Hampton. confi rmed the
NAMRF had contacted \he
city but said a permit for sllch
a protest would not be necessary. He said the orgunitatiun
wollld only need to register
with the cit y.
The .
web
si te .
www.namri'.C()Ill, i~ currently
for members only but will he
opened to the public on Oct.
I. The home page features a
clock counti ng down to its
public or~ning at midnight

Thursday. Behind the clock is
what is de&gt;nibed on the site
as a mission statement which
says the group's purpose is to
··create a safe race track environment wh'ile pursuing the
political. sol'ial &lt;\nd economic
eqllality of minority groups
and citizens who desire to
enjoy NASC AR events without racial bigotry."
."We strive to remove the
barriers of racial di ;crimination permitted hy NASCAR,
its sponsors and race teams,"
it &gt;ilitl ..
The home page also
includes
images ·of a
Confederate tlag. a person

wearing a white hood and
robe and a burning cro;s with
a car in the background, all
with titles like ''Entitled to
Damages" and "What We' re
Up Against" superimposed
over them.
There is also l)lention of a
documentary . film
and
NASCAR officials
said
Monday a film crew has
shown up unannounced at the
corporate headquarters of several team sponsors, asking to
speak with company officials.
A newspaper in· Clayton
County, Ga .. carried a story
last week about the planned
protest at Atlanta Motor

Speedway and quoteq a
Dallas attorney, Phillip W.
Offill Jr., as the group's
spokesman. A call to Offill by
The Associated Press on
Monday was not returned.
NASCAR
spokesm'\m
Ramsey Poston said Monday
the NAMRF has not contacted the stock car sanctioning
organization , which is currently involved in two major
efforts to foster diversity in
the sport..
·
"NASCAR represents 75
million fans from all across
America and we don't think
that fan base can be painted
with any one broad brush,"

Poston said. "We think we
have shown that we want to
make the sport more diverse
off and on. the track and we
are ready and willing to speak
to anyone on the issue of
diversity." _
Poston acknowledged that
there are· Confederate flags
often displayed in and around
the tracks where NAS CAR
races, but noted that" such
things are a "fre~ speech
issue."
.
"What we can say is that
you won't see one in any area
controlled by NASCAR," he
said. " .. . I can't take the flags
out of people's hands.

Walker, Cubs blast Reds, 12-5 Tribe crowns Royals, 6-1
BY NANCY ARMOUR
Associated Press
CHICAGO - Todd Walker
loves playing pressure bas~ball
this time of year.
Walker went 3-for-4 with a
walk, a two-run homer and four
RBis on Monday night, helpin,g
the Chicago Cubs extend the1r
slim lead in the NL wild-card
race with a 12-5 victory oyer
the Cincinnati Reds.
· "This is a lot of fun tor me:
For everybody, really," Walker
said. 'The playoff atmosRhere
brings out the best in you.
With six games left, Chicago
is a game ahead of San
Francisco in the wild-card
standings. Houston, which beat
St. Louts 10-3 Monday. is I 1/2
b"5~e'd feel a lot better if San
Francisco and Houston were
abo11t five games back," Walker
said. "The good thing is we
don't have to worry about what
theY. do. lf :-ve wi~ these next six
games, we re m.
·
·Corey Patterson, Derrek Lee
. and Jose Maeias also connected, and Nomar Garciaparra was
3-for-3 with a walk and a pair of
RBls. Carlos Zarnbnmo ( 16-8)
won his fourth straight decision,
allowing one run and five hits
while striking out seven in 6 13 innings.
The . Reds tagged Todd
Wellemeyer for four runs in the
ei~th. including Adam Dunn's
4:frd homer. Dunn also struck
out in the first inning, leavin&amp;
him four shy of Bobby Bonds
single-season mark of 189.

Walker made the playoffs for
the tirst time in his nine-year
career last season, coming up
big tot the Boston Red So.x as
thev took the New York
Yankees to seven games in the
AL championship selies. He hit
.349 in the playoffs and became
the tirst Boston player to hit five
homers in a postseason.
Walke~ enjoyed the playoffs
so much he passed on startm~
jobs elsewhere to sign wit
Ch1cago. Now the Cubs are
hoping he' ll help them in their
quest for their tirst back-to-buck
postseason appearances smce
190~ _ the last time they won.
a World Series.
To get there, the Cubs are
going to need more nights like
tl1is fmm their offense. Alter
mana~ing just seven mn' in
· their mree-game series with the
Mets, the Cubs jumped on
Brandon Claussen (2-7) early:
. Garciaparra got it staned with
a two-run double off the wall in
center in the first, tmd the Cubs
chased Claussen with live runs
in the founh. Walker stroked an
RBI single up the middle. and
Michael Barrett made it 4-1 on
a fielder's choioe. Two batters
later, Patterson hit a two-run
homer to right. Lee followed

with a solo homer into the bush-· •
es in center, gi ving Chicago a 7· runs in a 7-41oss.
BY Douo TUCKER
1 lead.
"Like I said last time. tlie
Associated Press
"I diun 't think the pitch to
bullpen has beeh great for
Pauerson was that bad a pitch."
"
me all year," said Greinke,
Claussen said. "He .must have
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
who threw I 00 pitches.
been looking . middle-in. But
Casey Blake figured luck
''I'm more confident in
that pitch to Lee. anyone could
came to the Cleveland
them coming in than .in me
have hit that pitch out.''
Indi ans twice Monday
staying in."
After Claussen walked
night.
·
Cleveland . added four
Aramis Ramirez, John Riedling
break
was
getrun
s in th e ninth off Jeremy
Their
first
relieved and finally ended the
Zack
Greinke
out
of
Affeldt
on run-scoring sinting
inning, retiring M01ses Alou on
. the game after the rookie
•
gles by .Omar Vizquel, Ben
a popup. Claussen gave up
had shut them out for seven
Jaime
Cerda l ( l-3 i Broussard and Blake, and a
severi tuns and seven hits, last· inning s. The s'e cond was relieved Greinke with a 1-0 double by Martinez.
ing just 3 2-3 innings as he lost
his fourth straight decision.
Kansas City (57-99) must
Blake's two-run single off lead in the eighth, and
The Cubs weren't done,
· D.J. Carrasco in the eighth Cleveland loaded the bases win its final six games to
either. Walker hit a two-run
that triggered a come-from- when Grady Sizemore sin- avoided tying the franchise
homer in the lifth and singled to
behind 6-1 victory over the gled, Omar Vizquel walked record of 100 losses, set
drive in another run in the sixth.
and Victor Martinez was· two years ago.
Kansas City Royal s.
The four RBls were a season
- "Greinke was tough. He hit by a pitch. Carrasco
Greinke gave up four
high for Walker, one shy of his
changes
speeds
real
well,"
then
relieved
and
Blake
hits
; struck out five and
career best.
Blake said. " We were glad singled for a 2-1 lead.
walked two. He has one
"When you jump out to a lead
to see him get out of the
" It was a slider down. It more start to become the
like that, it's nice to keep piling
on the runs." Walker said.
ga me.''
probably wasn't a strike , _first Kansa s City rookie
While the Cubs were beating
Jake Westbrook (14-9) but thank God he threw me since 1992 with nine wins.
up on Cincinnati's pitchers,
" I will noi pitch this kid .
gave up Of!e run and five a slider," Blake said. "He
Zambrano was shutting down
hits in seven innings for the dropped down· and threw a too many ptiches, there 's
the Reds' hitters. He gave up
Indians, lowering hi s ERA 93-mile-an-hour sinker and no way I'm going to
onlv one extra-base hit and
to 3.28, third in the I barely got a piece of it, change- right now so late in
retired seven straight at one
·.American
League behind just enough to knock it out the season," said Royals
point. Cincinnati got its only
Minnesota's
Johari Santana of the catcher 's glove. You . manager Tany p ena. · "I
run off him in the fourth, when
(2.62) and Boston 's Curt get lucky in thi s game from . want to count on thi s kid
D'Angelo Jimenez scored from
Schilling (3.26).
time to time ."
for next year and many
first on Austin Kearns' double
to deep left -center.
"That' s very good comIt 's the fourth time the years to come."
Bartelt almost got Jimenez ·at
Pany,'' sai d Westbrook, 20-year-old Greinke . has
DeJe sus , recalled from
the plate, but Garciaparra's
who matched Greinke until been removed while pitch- Triple-A Omaha to be th.e
relay throw bounced at least
David, DeJesus homered ina a shutout. The Royal s everyd·ay center fielde.r
twice and Jimenez barreled
leading off the · sixth. " It's . ha~e their prized rookie on after
All-Star
Carlos
over Barrett, knocking the ball'
nice
to
be
mentioned
in
the
a
strict
pitch
limit.
In
his
Beltran
was
traded
on
June
free.
sa me breath With those previous start at Tampa,. he . 24, ha s scored 22 run s in
"One dow11, six to go," Cubs
guys.
It 's an honor to be left with a 4-2-read only to hi s last 29 games.
manager Dusty Baker said. "A
there
."
see the bullpen give up five
right
very good game."

'

and 14 kills; Cassie Lee was se~:en kiUs arid two blocks in a
8-10 serving with 5 .poims; 32-37 night spiking. Williams
Samantha Cole was 11 - 12 also had four aces, and a great
from Dage 81
'fith 4 points. and · 14 kills, ·passing game for Southern . .
with ten solo blocks.
The Southern reserves fell
Renee
Bailey
was
1717
to
Meigs in two .sets 25-10
on to a 25-19 triumph.
· Justine Dowler the Meigs serving with 10 points, and 12 and 25-1 7. Meigs is 11-1
Libero, played a great back kills. Joey Haning . had 29 overall at the· reserve level. A.
row and was credited with assists; Erin Cullums was 9- Barr led Meigs with 17 points, ·
outstanding defense. Dowler 11 serving with five points L. Preece · had nine , for the
had many digs that took the and 9 assists. while Brittany winners, and Vining had
sting out of near-perfect Hysell had 4 kills, and six seven. For Southern. Adelle
·
Rice had five, · Stephanie
Southern serves. Meghan blocks.
Overall, Meigs had 47 kills Cundiff seven; and Amber
Leslie also played a great
· Hill six. ·
and
16 blocks.
back· row, along with teamIn
setting,
Southern's
Meigs, goes to Vinton
mate Whitney Thoene, who
was credited with outstanding Bethany Riffle was 32-37 County Tuesday and to
with two aces and was 13-15 Eastern Thursday.
defense.
On October 23 at Wellston,
The Meigs serving was out- passing. Ashley Roush' was
:?6-32
passing
with
a
block;
Meigs
plays Marietta in the
_standing, as the Marauders
A
pounded out · 86-92 serves Brooke Kiser was 29-32 pass- Sectional Tournament.
Meigs
win
would
pit
ing
and
50-52
setting
with
two
the
~verall to keep Southern on its ·
toes throughout the contests. sets for kilh: and Jordan Marauders against the winner
Emily- Ashley was 21-21 Neigler was 20-20 spiking of the Athens-Northwest
game.
serving, with 13 points, and 3 with five blocks ..
Kristiina Williams led th.e
Souihern . hosts Federal
kills; Megan Games was 20Southern
spiking
core
·with
Hocking
Tuesday.
~1 serving, with 13 pointS,
'
'

Meigs

.

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
}ttll'\1"•\ol

News and
information for
senior citizens of
the Tri-County...

'

SPORTS
• Reds hamper Cubs. See
. Page 81

.

Meigs Band qualifies for state finals

.

. OBITUARIES
·Page A5
·
:• Mildred J. Jacobs
.• William Fox

LoTI'ERIES
Ohio

West Vu:ginia

gency declaration applies
only to public property."
The declaration from Gov.
POMEROY - ·A puhlic Boh Taft made last week
damage asse ssment team qualifies local governments
from the Federal Emergency for a 50-percent match for
Management Agency will repairs from. the Clhio
meet with township trustees Etnergency
Management
and village · officials on Agency. but does not assist
Wednesday to begin the homeowners or small busiprocess of assessing and · ness owners in repairing their
repairing damage from the homes or replacing inventory
Sept. 18 flood .
lost in the tlood . Byer said he
The meeting will be held at 9 expects a state of emergency
a.m. at the Meigs County declaration lrom President
Counhouse Annex, according
George W. Bush. which
to Emergency Management wou ld make assistance availDiretor Robert Byer. A tour of
areas affected by the flooding able to private property ownwill follow. Byer said reported ers who suffered losses. .
damage to public roads, · A . tede ra l declaratiOn
bridges, 'culverts &lt;Uld inf(astruc- __would also l,~ssen the burden
ture has exceeded $1 million. A of re~mr costs to townshtps
repon outlining damage from and VIllages. Several count1es
local governments was submit- aflected by both Hurrtcanes
ted to the state on Friday he Frances and Ivan have been
said, but the estimates are only declared federal dtsaster
preliminary, and may go higher areas. Byer smd. .
as the assessment begins.
Byer said at least45 homes
"That doesn' t co unt . any sustained "major damage" in
damage to private property," the flood, and at least .six
Byer said. "The state emer- · were destroyed.

Dally 3: 7-5-0
Dally 4: 1-Q-5-6

cash 2s: 1-2-5-9-18-21

WEATHER

Kathy Goble, LS.W. (right) employee at the Meigs Senior Genter
discusses. heating assistance programs with Jean Thomas of
Pomeroy. Goble assists residents of all ages in property filling out
forms for energy assistance programs offered through the Ohio
Department of Development. (Beth Sergentjphoto)

Calend;us

A3

Classifieds

Bs-6
B7

Dear Abby

.A3

Editorials

Obituaries

A4
As

Sports

B1

Weather

AB

© 2004 Ohto Volley Publishing Co.

Assistance available
for heating your home
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM
POMEROY
With
autumn's arrival comes the
changing
of
leaves ,
Thanksgiving dinner and
higher utility bills.
Many people dread cooler
weathe( because of the added
expense of heating their
homes. Individuals on a fixed

income ·suc h as the elderly.
lind it difficult tO stay warm
without running out of
money to pay the utility company. However, if you meet
certain income requirement s
there is help out there. ·
The Ohio Department of
Development offers several programs to help low-income
Please see Heatins. AS

. The Meigs Marauder Band directed by Toney Dingess returned fr-om competition at Logan Elm
near Circlevil le with three large trophies and w:ns enough to qualify for state finals. The percussion section took a first while band and flag guard took second places. Th is Saturday ,at
noon the band will compete in the Athens contest. (Charlene Hoeflich /photo)

-------

Foundation an·nounces Meigs'High
School scholarship recipients
POMEROY
Three
Meigs High School graduates
have been selected as the first
reCipients
of
Bachtel
Scholarships awarded from a
$700,000 endowed fund established with the Foundation
For Appalachian Ohio by the
late Dr. Harry Keig.
The scholarship' will be
given annually to graduates
of Meigs High School. Dr.
Keig established the endowment to recognize the teachers who influenced his life.
Thi s year's scholarship
recipients are Jayne Davi s, a
freshman at Ohio Valley
College; Oayton Stone. a
freshman at the University of
Rio Grande ; and Erica Poole,
a freshman at the University"
o'f Cincinnati.
Keig set aside S500,000 of
the ovemll bequest to create this
scholarship fund in honor of
Forest, Bachtel , his teacher·and
coach when he was a student at
Middleport High School.
He grew up to be a successfu l surgeon ·in Nebraska, but
he never forgot Bachtel's
dedication as a teacher and
hi s strength in livin g with
Lou Gherig 's disease for
more than 20 years.
This fund represents the
largest private scholarship gift
ever designated to benefit gr'dduates of Meigs High School. ·
"It just doe sn't happen
every day." said principal ,
Dennis Eichinger. He recognized the benefit of Keig's
·affiliation to hi s home region.
"We were very fortunate to
have someone with such a
strong feeling about his high
school and the people in it,"

'

'

·I

~all~l~ Dailp Otribune
'

I

·• ~oint- -lt•ant l\tut•ttr
• the·Daily Sentinel

446-2342
. 675-1333
992-2155
I

Advertising Deadline- Sept. 30. 2004

..

.shopping with local vendors. particularly in light of the November closing
of the Pomeroy Kroger store.
The loss · in sales tax collections.
along with a freeze in state and local
grwernrnent revenue and the collection of pe rsonal property tax from the
Southern Oh io Coal Company's
Meig s Mine.1 . which closed in 2000,
forced commissioners to impose two
acros s-t he-board cu·ts in annual
appropnations to county offices.

BY BRIAN J. REED
'BREED@MYDAtlYSENTINEL.COM

Comics

'·

cent sales tax, but tor the ftrst time siuce
Local officials have interpreted the
March , saw a decline in collections this · upward w il ed ion trend as a sign of
month. This month's payment was better times ahead. Except for
POMEROY - Meigs County's sur- $101.924.06, compared to $120.775.8~ September, only January anu March
plus in sales tax collections for 2004 last September. Collections of sales tax showed sales tax collect ion qeficits
took a $20.000 cut in September, tun two months behind.
when compared to 2003 figures .
according to figures released by the
According to the state. June collecCounty Economic Developm'l!nt
Ohio Depanment of Taxation. The tions reflected im increase in collec- Director Perry Varnadoe said in June
reduction in collections compared to a tion of back sales tax which was the increase in tax revenue is likely
year ago \.eaves the county $30,500 recovered due to a new electron ic col- the sign of an improvi ng national
above collections last year.
lection s process . In June, the county economy, but also a sign of an
The county has enjoyed a live-month collected nearly $30.000 more than it iiKrcase in visitors to the county and
inc\ease in collections of its one-per- had in June. 2003.
a new awareness of the importance of ·

with ·local officials

2 SECI'IONS- 16 PAGES

Senior Citizens'""'
up 65% of the tott.u.,
population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contactyour
Advertising
.
Repr(!sentative.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

INDEX

Odoher 8, 2004 .

\\\\\\.111\(l.tih-.t·••luu·l.tottt

Sales tax collections down in September

FEMA to meet

DeUHa on Pa&amp;o AB

,

\\l · ll'\1~1)\\ . SII'II\IBIR:.!II».:.!OOf

l.l. '\o . .!h

Plek 3 day: 2-8-1
Plek 4 clay: 4-8-8-3
Plc:k 3 night: 6-3-4
Pick 4 night: 6-4-:8·6
Buckeye 5: 4-12-14-2Q-33 ·

·sucks

but don't end with rookie quar- became clear that Tressel was
terback Justin Zwick. The just trying to hang on offensophomore has hit on some big · "sively as the clock ·melted
plays - 80-, 47- and 20-y&lt;!fd away.
from Page 81
scoring paS&gt;es while throwing
"We wanted to seize the
lor 318 yards ag&lt;Jinst Marshall momentum and the tempo of
room"- the Buckeyes' inabil- - but ha~ also been erratic in the game," Tressel said. "But
ity to move the ball.
both his passing and hi~ deci- when you're in a slugging'
Some of that criticism is sion-makmg.
·
match against a good team.
borne out by !he numbers. Ross
"It's definiteJy frustrating," establishing the tield position
gained 141 yards on 17 carries Zwick said. "You want to be of a championship bout is
m the opener agamst able to move the ball up and important. I felt we did a fairly
Cincinnati. In the two games down the tield every game but decent job of that."
since, he has matched that 141 you know it's not always going
Zwick has a solid grip on the
&gt;"ards - on 49 carries.
to happen that way so you take quarterback job even though
: Ohio State enters Big .Ten the good with the bad."
Troy Smith ha' not really had a
play ranked 84th of the 117 . At some point, the lack of fair chance to feature his tal·feams in Division 1-A in rush- production cannot be justified ents. The Buckeyes figure to
ing, 80th in total offense and by another narrow win. That's improve at fullback as Branden
tied for 92nd in turnover mar- the point Tressel wa' making in Joe recovers from an ankle
his "just" 3-0 comment. The injury.
ginNick Man&amp;old is literally the right instep of kicker Mike
Ro~s. however, may soon be
i:enter of Oh10 State's offense, Nugent and the Buckeyes' · splitting time with someone,
llO he has some ~rspecti ve on rock.-hard defense can only be possibly freshman Antonio
What's Wrong Wtth the anemic expected to carry the team so Pittman. There are some rumiunning ~arne.
blings that Pittman might be
far.
.
: "I don t think you can blame
So much for "Just win, doing_ more than sharing the
it on one thing - either the baby." . .
pos1t1on.
running back or the offensive
Some point the blame at the
Pittman has been schooled in
line or the play calling," he coaches. They say the the offense since graduating
said. "It's just one little thing Buckeyes arc far too pre- early from Akron Buchtel to
that didn't happen the right dictable on offense (then aeain, join the Buckeyes tor spling
way that really hinders you as that's a common comr.laint · practice. He has shown a
you try to run the baiL Not hav- whenever the team doesn t win propensity for breaking tackles
mg that one thing kills the play. every game by, oh, I 00 points). &lt;UJd finding daylight - skills
It's a group thing. You can t put
lh the 22-14 win over North that Ross' critics say he does
it all on one guy."
· Carolina State ·on Sept. 18. it not have on his resume.
Ohio State's struggles start

Wmslowout ·
for season, B4

•

+.

Clayton Stone

he said . 'The scholarship creates an opportunity for 'tudents to continue their ed ucation and have hope ."
According to Eichinger.
Keig's generosity also had a
significant impact on the
teachers at the high schooL "I
think all. e ucators are in this
professi
c~use they want .
to help eople." he said.
"This is t e perfect examp le
of somco e who felt stron gly
about
educators. It gives
all .us hope that we can and
d make a difference ."
..es lie Lilly, President and
C 0 of the Foundation for
A alachian Ohio. agreed,
say ng that the Foundation is
pie- sed to work with donors
to elp make these scholarsh· s poss ible for local students. "Increasing access to ·
higher education is a key issue
in our region," she said. "Dr.
Keig's generosity is making '
cullege a more attainable reality for students at Meigs High
School, both now and many _

Jayne Davis

years into the futu re."
Thi's year. two of tlie schol arship&gt; were given in recognition of athletic accomplishments and one for academic
excellence. Each scholarship
recipient received $2.500
toward college expenses at
the i1htitution in which he or
Please ,see Melp. AS

�PageA2

NATION. WORLD
Kidnapp~rs release s~ven
Bush asks for $7.1 billion
host~ges In Iraq1 but In~urgents more for hurricane relief

The bally Sentinel

Wednesday, September 29,

continue campaign of violence
'

BY ALEXANDRA ZAVIS
AssociATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD.
Iraq
Kidnappers released two
female Italian aid workers
and ftve other hostages
Tuesday, raismg hopes for
at least 18 foreigners still in
captivity, But insurgents
showed no sign of easing
their blood-soaked campaign against the U.S. presence 10 Iraq, staging a show
of defiance in Samarra and
striking twice with deadly
,
force in Basra.
It was unclear what
prompted the two separate
groups of kidnappers to
release 'the !tal ians, three
Egypttans and two Iraqi s,
and whether any ransom
had been patd. It was the
second day tn a row that
foreigners were freed.
The Ital ian women were
wearing full black veils that
revealed only thetr eyes as
they were received by the
Italian Red Cross in a
Baghdad
neighborhood,
according to video broadcast by the Arab news station Al-Jazeera.
Looking dazed but smiling, Simona Torretta lifted
her veil and repeated,
"Thank you," in · Arabic.
hesitated
Simona
Pari
before also lifting her veil.
Later Tuesday, the two
women were flown home
aboard a Falcon 20 plane,
arriving at a military airport
in Rome shortly after II
p.m. The two, now in long,
white dresses, emerged
smiling and held hands as
they walked on the tarmac,
their relatives by their side.
Asked by reporters how
she felt, Pari just sa id,
·:Good."
Pari and Torretta were
. abducted Sept. 7 in a bold
: raid on the Baghdad office
: of thetr aid agency "Un
: Ponte Per ... " ("A Bridge To
... "). Two Iraqis, Raad Ali
Aziz and Mahnaz Bassam,
were also seized; they too
: were released· Tuesday.
News of the release came
: after a Muslim leader from
: Italy met with an influential
· Muslim association in
Baghdad on Tuesday to
press for their freedom,
. though it was not immedi: ately known if there was a
· connection.
The
two
women, both 29, had been
working on school and
water projects in Iraq.
The Kuwaiti newspaper
Al-Rai al-Aam had reported
Tuesday that they could be
released by Friday in return
for a $1 million ransom. But
Al-Arabiya TV, citing
unidentified
sources
involved in the, negotiations, said no ransom was
paid.
Pope John Paul II, who
recently urged that all
hostages held in Iraq be
freed, expressed "great joy"
over the release of the
Italian aid workers, the
Vatican said.
Italian Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi went
before
Parliament
to
announce their release.
"Fmally a moment of
joy,'' Berlusconi said, as· the
assembly
broke
into
applause. "The two girls are
well and will be able to
return to their loved ones
tonight."
Four Egyptian telecommunicatiOns
workers
abducted last week were
also freed, their parent company, Oras~om, announced
in Cairo. One of the

Egyptians was released southern city of B.tsra.
Monday and the rest on ktlltng two soldiers. the
Tuesday, satd the company. Ministry of 'Defense tn
Two
other
Egyptian London said.
The soldters· names v.ere
employees reh1ain 10 captivtty.
withheld pendtng famtly
·
The Egypttat1 charge q'af- notification.
faires in Baghdad, Farouq
Also in Basra on Tuesday,
Mabrouk, said the kidnap- gunmen ktlled five mempings were "motivated by bet' of lr,tq's intelligence
ftnanctal reasons." But an agency as they were returnspokesman ing a civilian rescued from
Orascom
declined to comment on , kidnappers to his fami ly,
whether a ransom had been said Maj Jasim al-Darraji.
an intelligence offtcer.
paid.
More than 140 foretgners , In Baghdatl, American
have been ktdnapped in Iraq ltoops
and
in surge nt s
-some by anti-U.S. in sur- clashed Tuesday along cengents and others by cnmi- tral' Haifa Street. an Iraqi
Mtnistry
nals seek ing ransom At lntettor
least 26 have been killed, spokesma n said, and heavy
mcluding two Americans explosto ns rocked the ctty.
whose beheadmgs were There was no immediate
recorded on gri sly video word on casualttes.
Hatfa Street. an insurgent
footage and posted on the
Internet last week.
stronghold, has been the
A Western offictal. sp'eak- scene of bloody car bomb
on
conditton of attacks, ratds and fierce
tng
anonymi ty, said thi s week's fireftghts. Dozens of susback-to-hack releases raised pe,cted in~urgents have been
hopes for those still in cap- arrested there, including
tivity. inclutltng British Synan,
S~danese
and
hostage Kenneth Bigley, Egypttan nattonals.
Desptte the perSIStent VIO·
who was captured with the
American~
from
their lence. the U.S. mllttary
Baghdad house on Sept. 16. claimed . to . be making
But wtth so many different progress tn tt S attempts to
groups involved in the kid- wrest control from msurnappings, the diplomat cau- gents Ill key parts of. the
tioned agamst drawing any country ahead of electtons
concluston.
slated for January,
A French foreign ministry . Weeks of airstrikes target:
spokesman in Paris, speak- tng followers of al-Zarqawt
ing · on condition of h_ave exac.ted a heavy tpll on
anonymity, said: "We do not fighters 111 the rebel-held
have any knowledge of the cuy of Fallu.Jah, the m11ttary
accord mentioned on AI- sa td tn a statement Tuesday.
Arabiya."
Amencan forces struck a
In a statement e-matled to suspected hide-out used by
The Assoctated Pre's in "ns ing" assocJated of aiCairo and also posted on a Zarqawi in FalluJUh e.arly
discussion board of the Iraq Tuesday, the. mtlttary satd.
Islamic Army, the kidnapAnother stte belteved to
pers of the Journalists be used by the network 111
praised France ' s "posttive central Baghd~d :vas ratded
steps toward the Iraqi peo- Tuesday, H satd 111 a sepaple," a sign that the rate statement : A search
hostage-takers may be soft- uncovered enough weapons
ening their anti-French to. stage multtple attacks, u
position.
satd.
The group said it hoped
"this is a beginning for a
new era of understanding
our issues and respect of
our constants."
Meanwhile, dozens of
masked gunmen carrying
flags of Iraq's most feared
terror group drove down the
main street of the central
city of Samarra in a show of
strength Tuesday for the
first time since U.S. troops
briefly entered the central
city this month under a deal
brokered with tribal leaders.
The mjlitants, Joyal to terror mastermind Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, stopped some
cars, asking the occupants
to hand over music tapes tn
exchange for ones with
recitations from the Muslim
holy book, the Quran.
The city north of Baghdad
has been under in surgent
control and a virtual "nogo" area for U.S. troops
since May 30.
Al-Zarqawt's Tawhid and
Jihad group ha s clatmed
responsibility for a series of
bombings and kidnappings,
including those of Bigley
and
the
tw'o
slain
Americans,
Eugene
Armstrong·
and
Jack
Hensley.
Intelligence
reports indicate the alQaida-linked group has
been forced to reorganize
its leadership, the military
said in a statement.
On a day that saw attacks
scattered across the country,
insurgents ambushed a
Briti sh military convoy near
the comparatively peaceful

WASHINGTON (AP)
Billions more federal dollars
will ltkely pour tnto Florida
and other Southeastern states
as they struggle to return to
normal after a series of devastatmg hurricanes.
In his third request to
Congress ·for supplemental
storm aid, President Bush
asked lawmakers on Monday
for an additional $7.1 billion.
Congre~s
has
already
approved Bush's first request
of $2 btllion ana IS considering his second, a $3.1 billion
proposal - meaning the
price tag for all three could
exceed $12.2 btllton.
The government will have
to borrow to pay for the pa~.:k­
ages, adding to already huge
federal deficits.
The latest request includes
$4.5 btllton for the Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency, whtch provides
assistance to individual s and
to state and local governments.
Thitt means- that tf the
requests are all approved,
FEMA would get more than
$8 billion for the four storms
that have pummeled the
Southeast since mid-August.
The most FEMA has ever
spent for a natu ral disaster

Public meetings

Association of Garden Clubs . United Methodtsl Church
will meet at I p.m. at the wtll be hosting a Community
Chester
United Methodist Prayer meeting at 7 p.m with '
Wednesday, Sept. 29
Church.
There will be a 's ervices to continuing each
POMER.OY - FEMA will
potluck
luncheon.
last Wednesday of each
meet with County and
:
Monday,
Oct.
4
month. Public parttctpation.
Village officials only at 9
POMEROY
A
meeting
communal
prayer, testimonia.m. at the Courthouse
of
M~tgs
County
Garden
als. singers and instrumentalAnnex . Individuals with.
Club
members
will
be
held
at
Ists invtted. anything to
flooding concerns wtll be
7
p.m.
m
the
meeting
room
at
share. Choirs, ministers, misaddressed at a later date.
the Pomeroy Library.
sionaries, ev~ryone invited .
Thursday, Sept. 30
Wednesday,
Oct.
6
Sunday, Oct. 2
ALFRED -The Orange
MIDDLEPORT
The
PORTER
- Songfest will
Township Trustees wtll hold
Middleport
Literary
Club
be held at 7 p m. at the Clark
their October meeting on
Sept. 30 at 7·30 p.m. at the will meet at 2 p.m. at the Chapel Church on Clark
home of the clerk, Osie home of Leah Ord. Gay Chapel Road in Porter. Four
Pernn wtll review "Four dt fferent groups
Follrod.
Pastor
Spirits" b} Sena Jeter Clyde Ferrell. For informaFriday, Oct. l
POMEROY
-Meigs Naslund.
tion call 740-388-8075 .
County PERI #74 meets at
Metgs . County Multipurpose
Senior Center, wtth luncheon
· at noon and meeting to folThursday, Sept. 30
low. Reports on state meet- Metgs
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday,
Oct.
3
ing, upcoming elections and
County
Adult
Basic
Literacy
POI'v!EROY -Hemlock
appointment of nominating
Grove Christian Church wtll Education p,rogram plans
., committee for new officers.
observe Its homecommg with open houses at its Middleport
Saturday, Oct. 2
a
9:30 a.m church service and Bradbury AB1.E centers.
PORTLAND
The
Lebanon Township Trustees and Sund&lt;t.y school follow- from 9 a.m. unttl noon at
will meet at 7:30 p.IJl. at the ing. A potluck dinner will be Mtddleport Library and
held at 12:JO R.m. at the Bradbury Learning Center
township building.
Grange
Hall. Take a covered Meet mstructlirs, vtcw learnMonday, Oct. 4
RACINE- Racine Village dish. The homecommg ser- ing matenals and classrooms
· Council will meet at 7 p.m. at vice wtll begin at 2 p.m. with and ask question of staff.
spec ial t~lllsic bx ~cott lnformatton ts dvailable by
the municipal buildmg.
Brown.
calltng 992-6930 or 992Sunday, Oct. 10
5808.
.
POMEROY
The
Saturday, Oct. 9
Carleton Church ()f County
SYRACUSE
The
Road 18. Pomeroy Will have Catleton
School/Metgs
its annual homecomi ng with Industries wtll be sponsoring
Saturday, Oct. 2
dinner at noon and special their 2nd Annual Community
HARRISONVILLE
Olympics from 8:30a.m. to 4
Harrisonville Lodge 411 wtll services at I :30 p m.
p.m. It ts a fundratser for
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
Masontc
Temple.
Marvin Cooper who is batRefreshments.
·
thng c'ancer. Call 1-740-992CHESTER -The regional
Wednesday, Sept. 29
6681 to tegister a team by
board
of
the
Oh10
POMEROY - Enterpnse Oct. I.

highway~.

- $472 million in Small
Business
adnnnt str,ltion
loans for bu sinesses and
homeowners.
-About $400 million for
the Agriculture Department
to aid farme~&gt; sLtl fe11ng crop
and other losses.
Pres. Bush
- $81 million i'or the Army
was $7 btllt,on after the' 1994
Corps
of Engineers to restore
Nort hridge earthquake in
navtgational
channels and
Calitorma.
other repair p~oJects ..
The latest request was
-$ 132 mtlhon to repair
conung to Capitol Htll as the major feder~l facilities,
remnants
of
Hurricane including installations of the
Jeanne, the fourth in a row, Veterans Affairs Department
rumbled north mto Georgta and other agencies. mduding
after adding to the damage its wildlife refuges
predecessors caused
in
- $)0 millton in disaster
Flonda.
and Iamme reltef as sistance
While the first two requests to Grenada. Haiti, Jamaica
focused
on
hurricanes and other countnes struck by
Charley and Frances. the lat- the hurncanes
est was supposed to include
The repeated pummeling
damage caused by Ivan has frustrated many in
and some initial funds for Flonda and made some of its
recovery from Jeanne.
lawmakers impatient for ·
The new package also con- more fetler,1l asststance.

ttomecomings/
Reunions

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

Church services

FAMILY MEDICINE

thousands of li,es in our beneftcidl'y population." CMS
admi111strator
Mark
McClellan satd
Detibnllators are unplanted under the skin . Wtres
attach the device to the heart
The devtce senses an irregularly beatmg heart and shocks
it back mto proper rhythm
Mcdtcare now pays about
$25 ,000 a person for detihrillators that ate Implanted 111
people who have congestive
heart fat lure, but the agency
is considering reducing the
payment.

Enlarged breasts, common in
-teenage boys, go away ·on their own
Question. My 15-year-old
The second time that a
son - 5 feet, I 0 inches tall, male may ha~e enlarged
125 pounds - wants treat- breasts as part of his normal
ment or surgery for his large development is during
breast buds. He is ashamed puberty.
This
bemgn
to take off hi s shirt irt,public. gynecomastia of adoles· What type of physician spe- cence IS commonly seen in
ctalizes in concerns of thts mtd to late adolescence.
nature?
Frequently, it is one-sided or
Answer: Breast develop- unequal and is associated
ment in male s, called with breast tenderness. In
gynecomastia in doctor one to two years this condilingo, can be either a normal tion subsides and goes away
phenomenon or a signal of on its own.
d1sease. It depends on the
A man approaching 'his
timing and. what other symp- "senior years" is 111 the thtrd .
. toms may also be present.
time period where "normal"
Male breast development breast development can
is due to an excess of the occur. Most common after
female hoqnone estrogen age 65, gynecomastia at that
,compared to male hormones, time is usually due to the
most noticeably testos- decreasing amount of male
terone. The normal ratto of hormones that are being protestosterone to estrogens in duced in the man's testicles.
the blood circulation of a
Mal,e breast enlargement
male is about 300 to I. If the can run in families and is a
relative amount of estrogen genetic trait carried on the X
increases: either as a result chromosome. Thts "genetic
of too much estrogen or not form" of gynecomastia causenough
testo s te~one,
es breast development durgynecomastia can result.
ing puberty in males and has
There are three times in a uo other known C(lnsemale's development when quences.
we commonly see breast
Certain medications can
development. First ts in the also cause breast enlargenewborn . This ts due to ment in men. This includes
estrogen from the mother, chemotherapy and some
This is seen in male and blood pressure medications.
female newborns .Jmd may Illicit drugs such as manjuaalso be associared wit~)_ milk na, methadone, heroin and
discharge. The folk name for the anabolic steroids some
this is "witch's milk." It usu- • unwisely use for body buildally goes away a few weeks ing can be at the root of male
breast.enlargement.
after birth.

There are some medical
conditions that can cause
gynecomastia. These mclude
hyperthyroidtsm. renal failure, some mahgnanc1es and
hormone secreting tumors
Whtle the odds are that none
of these is v.hat is wrong
with your son. I'd recommend that you take him to
your family phy sician just to
make sure. It he or she finds
that your son ts developing
as an otherwise healthy
male. you'll be reassured that
there is nothing to be concerned about. In the rare
event that your family doctor
suspects something more is
going on, your son will probably be referred to a pediatric endocrinologist.

DEAR ABBY: Every once
tn a whtle. you pnnt ordering information for "Please
Call Poltce" banners . l
w9uld ltke to purchase some
to use as stockmg stuffers
thts Chnstmas for my
daughters &lt;UJd nieces, and
also one for mvself. l am
single. disabled." and occasionally dnve on the htghways. Once I found myself
stuck 111 Jhe middle of
nowhere. When l tned usmg
my cell phone to summon
help, 'I learned I was in a "no
receptiOn" area It's tough
being a woman alone these
days. Having the banners in
my glove compartment will
gtve me peace of mind.
Thanks, Abby. - GERRI IN
BUTTE. MONT.
DEAR
GERRI
I'm
pleased to reprint the infotm&lt;tti on. The ''Please Call
Police" banners have proven
time and &lt;~gain to be a genume lifes&lt;tver in an emergency Your orders will not
on ly pro~ide a safety measure for you and the people
you love, but they ' ll also
asstst WCIL in providing
much- needed servtces for
indt vidua ls Wtth disabilities.
(l keep two banners in my
glove compartment - one
for the windshield and one
for the rear window.)
The banners can be
ordered by wnting to the
Weststde
Center
for
Independent Living, a nonprolit organization that helps
people with disabilities to
hve more independent ltves.
You will receive one banner
for a $5 contribution , and
another banner for each
additional $4 contribution
(Please mclude $1 per order
for postage and handling. )

Dear

Abby

To order, send a check or
money order (U.S funds
only, , please) to: WCIL
Banners, P.O. Box 9250 I.
Los Angeles, CA 90009.
Allow fo ur to eight weeks
for delivery. For more informauon. visit the WCIL Web
site at www.WCIL.org and
click on the "Safety Banner"
link .
DEAR ABBY: My ex.
"Arnold," and I broke up
two years ago. after he btt
part of my ear off dunng an
argument. I had been trying
to help htm, but that was the
last straw. I finally had to
end it.
·
I moved away an d am
using a mailing serv1ce. but
Arnold won't stop harassmg
me. He had a stamp made
with my name and matltng
address on tt, and he ts sending me thousands of subscriptions. It has cost me
more than $6,000 so far and
the police are involved. This
has been happening for 15
months.
How. should I handle this?
I'm afraid that changing my
mailing address will damage
my credit. - WORRIED IN
VAN NUYS, CALIF.
DEAR WORRIED: First
of all, stop paying for subscriptions you didn't order.
Call
the
U.S.
Postal
Inspection Serv1ce (the number in your area is listed tn

your telephone dtr cc t or ~ 1
and speak tu a fraud ,1 ~c n1
The
Post,tl
Im pc:1ion
Servtce " the l,m cnt mLcment hranch nf lit e L' .S
Postal Sen icc. .t nd " hat
your ex is duin ~ cuuld be
considered fr,llld DEAR ABBY I met tim
boy. "Au,ten ... thlllU£h .t
tnend . He h." dcuue: l he
''likes" me I m.11J e 11 clear
that I tlidn' t feel the same
way. but agreed that " e
could be tnentls
My ptoblem " Alt,ten
calls constatllh .tnd hee ps
me on the phone t,,r hour,. I
try to get hnn tn le ,n e me
alone. but then l feel "ll'')'
for hun becau se he doc"t"t
have mall\ t'rtends I h,l\ e
tried to teil him to call le"
often. It worl\ed tot a 11 htle.
then he 'iarted up .lg .tin.
Austen ts obnoxiou s .tnd
anno ying. and l 11ant him to
leave me alone. lln\\ can I
tell htm thts wnhout hurtin~
his feelings! - HAD IT IN
NEW MEXICO
DEAR HAD IT Be direct.
Tell Aasten that hts call s are
no longer welcome and you
want them 'topped NOW. It
he perststs, repeat the message and get ott the phone.
He may be lonely. or he may
be stalking you. II he tel uses
to "get the message" ami
conttnues to barrage you
wtth calls. your parellt' may
have to mvolve the poltcc to
put a stop to tt.
Dear Abby i~· written by
Abigail Van Buren, all'/!
known as Jmm1e Phillips,
and was founded by her
motlrer, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abby
at .
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeln,
CA 90069.

Right now, to help folks get back on

Famifl Medicine® i.1 a
weeklr column. To subm it
quesrio11S, write to Martha
A. Simpson, D. 0., M.B.A ..
Ohio Unrversity College of
0.1teopathic Medicme, P. 0.
Box 110. Athens, Ohio
45701, or I ' ICI e-marlto reade rque.1 tions@Jami l rmedicmenews.org. Medical mformation in thi'i column i"i pro·
vrded as an educarional service only. it does not replace
rhe judgment of your personal pfrysrcran. who should be
relied on ro dragnose and
recommend
treatment
fur any medical cundllwns.
Past columns are avarlable
online at www.Jamilwnedi-

their feet, we are offering 30-day
loans with no extra fee to all Pomeroy
customers. And anyone holding o
current (ashland loan also may qualify
for special terms. Just call (ashland at
•

877-690-CASH to inquire.

Thankfully, our new 397 West Main
Street location was spored by the.
recent flooding and we are operating

cmenen..s.OI g.

on a business-as-usual basis. Please vts tt

C'.NJ ReSOu nd

us there or for assistance wtth current
or future loans, call·our hotiine:

877-690-CASH .

.\

PROUD TO BEA PART
OF YOUR LIFE.
The.Daily Se(ltinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailysef!tinel.com

you!

•

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_740-992-2155

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Wednesday, September 29,, 2004.

Community Calendar

tam&gt; $889 millton lllr the
Defense Department to repatr
mtlitary L1ctlities 111 the
.
affected area.
Other requests 111 the $7.1
billion package include
- $600 mtllton to make
emergency repatrs to hurn cane-damag'ed 1oatls and

who have never had a heart
attack, would be eligible for
the defibrillator, the federal
Centers for Medicare and
Medtcaid Services satd. In
many cases eligible patients
don't receive defibnllators
because their doctors advise
against tl.
The proposal is based on
new climcal studies, CMS
said. A government-funded
study earlier this year showed
the technology significantly
reduced deaths m pallents
with even mild heart disease.
"These devices can save

Bv~rHE BEND
Emergency police banners
give driverS peace of mind,.

2004

Medicare to expand coverage of
implantable cardiac defibrillators
WASHINGTON (AP) '
Medicare on Tuesday proposed expanding coverage for
expensive cardiac defibrillators that are surgtcally tmplanted in patients who are at risk
for sudden cardtac arrest.
Officials projected that
·77 .000 Medicare pattents
would have the stopwatchSIZe devtces implanted 111
2005 .. That would be about a
50 percent mcrease from the
52,000 who received them in
2003.
.
About 500,000 Medicare
beneficianes, including some

Pag ... \J

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio 45701

Phone(740)594-6333
800-451-9806

·'

W ESTE RN M ONE Y
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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
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•

•

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting tl1e
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speec/1, 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 Wednesday. Sept. 29. the 273rd day of 2004. There
are 9J days teft in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Sept. 29, 1978. Pope John
Paul I was found dead in his Vatican apartment just over a
month tll'ter becoming head of the Roman Catholic Church.
On this dat~ : In 1789, the U.S. War Department established
a regular army with a strength of several hundred men.
In 1829. London 's reorganized police foroe, which became
. known as Scotland Yard-; went on duty.
In llJ 18, Allied forces scored a decisive breakthrough 9f the
Hindenburg Line during World War I.
In I!)43, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Italian Marshal
Pietro Badogl io signed an armisti.ce aboard the British ship
Nehon off Malta.
In 1954, the movie musical "A Star Is Born," starring Judy
Gar-land anJ James Mason. had its world premiere at the
Pantages Theater in Hollywnod.
in 1963, "The Jutly Garland Show" premiered on CBS.
In 1979, Pope John Paul II became· the first pope to visit
Ireland as he arrived for a three•day tour.
In 1982, seven people in the Chicago area1died after unwittingly tuking Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules laced with
cyanide.
In 19g~, the space shuttle "Discovery" blasted off from
Cape Canaveral ' marking America's return to manned space
tlight following the "Challenger" disaster.
Ten years ago: The House voted to end the age-old practice
of lobbyi sts buying meals and entertainment for members of
Congress. The first phase of jury selection in the O.J. Simpson
murder trial ended, wit~ a pool of 304 potential jurors chosen.
Five years ago: Vice President AI Gore abruptly moved his
presidential campaign headquarters from .Washington D.C. to
Nashville to get "out of the Beltway and into the heartland."
The Associated .Press reported on the alleged mass killing of
civilians by U.S. soldiers i!J the early days of the Korean War,
. beneath a bridge at a hamlet called No Gun Ri.
.
One year ago: · The White House denied that President
Bush's top political adviser, Karl Rove, had leaked a CIA
agent's identity to retaliate against an opponent of the administration's Iraq policy. President Bush signed legislation to ratify the Federal Trade Commission's authority to set up a
national do-not-calllist for telemarketers.
. Today's Birthdays: Actor Steve· Forrest is 80. Actress Anita
Ekberg is 73 . Actor Eddie Banh is 73. Singer Jerry Lee Lewis
is 69. Lech Walesa, the former president of Poland, is 61.
Actor-comedian Andrew "Dice" Clay is 46. Singer-musician
Les Claypool is 41. Actress Jill Whelan is 38. Rhythm-and·
blues singer Devante Swing (Jodeci) is 35.
Thought for Today: "Nothing makes people so wonhy of
compliments as occasionally receiving them. One is more
delightful for being told one is delightful - just as one is
more angry for being told one is angry." - Katharine
Fullerton Gerould, American writer (1879-1944 ).

Letters to the editor are .welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and ·must be signe~ and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in· good taste,
addressing is~:ues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
r;,dit.orial board, unless other-Wise noted.

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley

(usPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories Is to be
accurate. If you know Or an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992·
2156.

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through Friday, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Sec;ond-class pcstage
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'
I grew up on CBS News.
it. For on the very evening
That was back in the dark
on which he issued his notages when there were but
so-sincere apology. Rather
three television networks,
continued to stand by the
before the dawn of 2-t-hour
discredited memos, contincable news. The "CBS
ued even to stand by Bill
Joseph
Evenin~ News" was helined
Burkett. the former Texas
Perkins
by .Walter Cronkite. a ·largerArmy (not Air) National
than-life anchor. He was
Guard member who gave
widely considered "the most
CBS News the documents.
trusted man in America."
.
"Do I think they're
Cronkite may ·well have terms of t~e news cycle forged?"' said Rather. when
been liberal. may well have Rather defiantly defended asked by The Chicago
been Democrat. But he his report that Bush got pref- Tribune about the Killian
never allnwed his personal erenti:il treatment during his ·memos. "No." What about
politics creep into hi s n~ws­ Vietnam-era· service in lhe Burkett, th~ well-known
casts. so far as I can remem- Texas" Air National Guard. Bush hater, who admitted to
ber. And that is why CBS · and that the future president lying about how and by
News was the gold standard failed to meet performance whom he came by the
standards.
in broadcast journalism.
· memos'! A "truth teller," said
The anchor bristled at sug- Rather.
That all changed in 1981
when "Uncle' Walter, " as he gestions that memos on · The CBS News anchor is
was affectionately known which ~is report relied were obviously in denial. He just
to viewers. went gently fake. The documents. which can't bring himself to accept
into retirement. He WliS supposedly were &lt;.:ulled that Lt. George W. Bush fulreplaced by Dan Rather, "from the personal files of filled his National Guard
who brought his politics to the late Lt. Col. Jerry obligations, for which he
the anchor chair. And the Killian . ~ush's squadron earned an honorable dis"CBS Evening News" has commander." were backed charge three decades ago.
gone downhill, ratings- up. he maintained, by
He's as obsessed with
wise and otherwise, ever "unimpeachable sources."
"getting Bush," with denyWell. this week, Rather ing the Republicans a second
since.
Now Rather's apparent lib- was forced to concede that term in t)le White House, as
·eral, Democrat bias has hi s damning memos were such Bush haters as Michael
come hon1e to roost. Hi s not authenticated by a Moore, Terry McAuliffe and
sc urrilous defamation of "handwriting analyst and . MoveOn.org.
'George W. Bush, based on document expert," as he preSo obsessed. it turns out,
documents that likely were viously misinformed his that a member of Rather's
forged, abetted by accounts viewers . And his supposedly staff gave John Kerry's pressources idential campaign staff a
from discredited sources, unimpeachable
has brought lasting disrepute were. well, impeachable.
heads up that the CBS News
''I'm sorrv." Rather told his would be airing its report
upon the once-respected
"CBS Eve,1ing News" view- attacking Bush' guard serCBS News.
,.
For the better pan of two ers.
v1ce.
But he re&lt;,Jiy didn't mean
weeks - an eternity in
Joe Lockhart , the Kerry

Wednesday, September 29,2004

Obituaries

'

William E. Fox

campaign's communications
adviser. acknowledg~d this
week that he got a call from
Rather's producer, Mary
Mapes. in advance of
Rather's report. She asked
Lockhart to put in a call to
Burkett. which Lockhart was
happy to do.
Meanwhile. the same
. week that Rmher's report on
· Bush's guard service aired
on CBS. the Democratic
National Committee began
"Operation Fortunate Son,"
a suspiciously timed campaign that also attacked the
president's guatd service.
Meanwhile. a group called :
Texans for Truth, an offshoot
of MoveOn.org, began an
advertising ·campaign also ·
casting aspersions upon
Bush's guard service.
CBS News would have its
viewers . believe that it did
not coordinate in any way
with the Kerry campaign. ·
the DNC or MoveOn.org .
Dan Rather and his col- '
leagues would deny that they ,·
. have chosen sides in the
upcoming presidential elec- . ,'
t1on .
,
But the viewing public no,_
longer trusts CBS News; no
longer trusts Dan Rather. 1
And it will remain that way ,
until there is regime change
at Black Rock.
(Joseph Perkins is a
columnist for Tl11• San Diego
Union-Tribune and can be
reached at Josepli.Perkiru@
UnionTrib.com.)

THEY

Chri,topher Yeauger. Jr ..
Nkk McLaughlin. Jerem1
Yeauger.
'
Autumn
EAST
LETART
McLaughlin. Leslie Yeauger.
William E. Fox. 89. of East and
Shannon McLaughlin:
Letan. passed away at 9:J5 and two great-great gr.mdp.m. on Monday, Sept. 27. children. Natalie Brook
1
2004, at his residence.
Jackson and Vincent Al!en
He was born on Dei:. 9. Theiss.
1914 in Letan Township. son
Also surviving is a sisterof the late Darb Wilbur and in-law.' Geraldine Shane of
Emma Donahue Fox . He Gallipolis. a brother-in-Jaw.
retired from the U.S. Corps Raymond Russell of Newark,
of Engineers at the Racine and several · nieces and
Locks and Dam. He was a nephews.
veteran of the U.S. Army durBesides his parents and his
ing World War II and wife. he was preceded in
received three Purple Hearts. death bv hi s sisters. Mabel
He was a 50-year membt!r of Fox and Georgia Russell. a
Racine Post #(,02 of the brother. Edgar- Nevi lie. and
American Legion and :1 50- three siblin~s who died at
year member ut the Mei~s birth.
"
County Pot of tile Disablt!d
Services will be held at I
American Veterans . He was a p.m. on Friday. Oct. 1. -2004.
member of the Public at Cremeens Funeral Home
Employees
Retirement in Raeine with Rev. Bill
System of Ohio. and Meigs Marshall officiating. Burial
County.
will follow at Letart Falls
He married Hazel Vir~inia Cemetery in Letan Falls. ·
Shane on Oct. I g, 1939, in
Friends may call from 2 iu
.Syracuse. and she pre&lt;.:cded 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. on
·him in death 011 Aug. 24. Thursday. .
2000.
.
Military graveside rites
Surviving is his son a~d will be conducted by the
daughter-in-law, David W. Racine Post #1602 ,,f the.
and Ruth Ann. Fox of East American
Le~ion.
and
Letart: two gra ndchildren. Tuppers Plains "VFW Post
Christopher A. Ycauger. Sr. #9053.
of Cheshire and Terri (Kevin)
Memorial contributions
McLaughlin of Middleport: may be made to Holzer
seven great grandchildren: Hospice. I00 Jackson Pike.
Jennifer (Matt) Theis s, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

·Deaths
Sept. 2~. at the Palm Gardens
Rehabilitation Center in
Clearwater, Fla. Funeral
arrangements for the former
Pomeroy resident will be
POMEROY -Mildred M. announced by Acree Funeral
Jacobs, , 87, died Tuesday . • Home in Midulepon.

Mildred M.

•'

MISS
MARTHA.

Clinton confirms first postsurgery public speech
LirtLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)
- Former President Clinton
has confirmed his first public
appearance since his heart
surgery three weeks ago - a
speech at Hamilton College
in Clinton, N.Y... on Nov. 9.
ClintOn will appear in
Arkansas at the Little Rock
Chamber of Commerce 's
annual meeting on Nov. 16,
two days before he opens his
library and one week after he
fulfills a promise to speak at
the New York college.
Clintol)'s appearances · settle uncertainty about whether
his health would allow hi!Jl to
participate in weeklong celebrations in conjunction with
the opening of \he libniry.
The annoupcement did not
. address Clinton's availability

CBS ,
CBS should have its license revoked and taken off the air
for what they did with the pictures of the prisoners i.n Iraq.
They made us look like fools to the Muslim people and the
rest of the world. How many of our soldiers lost their lives
so CBS could get a measly higher rating.
General Sherman said "war is hell," and I know because I
have been there. Free speech is not everything.
G.R. "Bob" Thompson
·

Put stones away
Dear Editor:

I was so hurt by the letter from the young, man against the
Democratic Party.
.
Anyone with a heart - Democrat or Republican - fell
the pain of Sept. II. We pulled together as a nation at that
time. But what brought-us together now seems to be the fuel
to tear us apart. Iraq was proven not to be a factor in that horrible day. Even though the wicked had always -been there,
the worl(l is full of dictators, and Hussein was jl,lst one.
Pomeroy
. Just because we don't agree with George W. Bush does not
make us' evil or any less human. We love our country and,
yes, God, because Christianity does not belong to just one
party. We have soldiers over there and some of us were soldiers. We are good men and women, too. On a square in
China 'a few years ago, some students. were murdered for
voicing an opinion that wasn't popular with their government.
In our own blessed America, people have lost jobs and
positions because of political causes, and using their First
Amen(lmen1 right, freedom of speech. IT should be justice
Dear !Jditor:
for all and freedom for all. We have fought so hand for these
The citizens of Meigs arid Athens counties as well as "far freedoms, too.
away" friends deserve a big thank you. On July 24, the comThe freedoms, while given to us, can be abused. Abortion
is
wrong for a birth .control method, but yet in the case of
munities joined forces to raise funds for medical ·expenses
for the Bob White family. The coming together not only , rape and incest, I couldn' t throw stones at them. We wouldraised funds, but also raised spirit and rekindled friendships. n't know what we would do unless we Wl\lked in their shoe.s.
· Special thanks to Rollin Guthrie and Sue Maison for their Homosexuality isn't the only sin listed.in I Corinithians. The
expert organizational skills. Thank you to the many .busi- "Shall not enter" covered many sins. Should we stone them
all?
nesses .that participated through donations an~ advertising .
So let us take the stones from our pockets and pray for all
support.
the lost and that would not be a pany issue . Let us ~ot find
The love and sup~n shown will not be forgotten. We give fault. The decent man; the Godly man, is needed now more
our sincere thanks and appreciation . God Bless . .
than ever. ·

anks

Appreciated community support

Bob and Dove White
and family, CoolviUe. ·

to cam paign for presidential
candidate John Kerry, which
Democrat s are hoping he .will
be able to do.
Clinton's spokesman Jim
Kennedy said . it is still too
early to gauge Clinton's ability to travel before the Nov. 2
election. ·
The Nov. 18 dedication of
the $165 million presidential
library and park is expected
to draw more than 20,000
people. President Bush and
all the livii1g former presidents , along wit.h many foreign leaders, have been invi.ted.
Clinton, 58, underwent
quadruple bypass surgery in
New York City on Sept. 6
after complaining of chest
pain and shortness of breath.

ers, or benefit letters from
Social Security, Worker's
Compensation, Unemployment
from Page A1
Compensations, tax forms, etc.
Also, brin ~ a copy of your
Ohioans of any age pay their- fuel bill Oc ; ny other docuutility bills and improve. the ment showing your main
energy efficiency of their homes. heating fuel or main fuel supApplications for these pro- plier. In addition, you must
grams can be obtained at the bring a copy of your elec.tric
Meigs Senior Center where bill even if electricity is I)Ot
help is also available for fill- your main heating fuel.
Goble does not di stribute
ing out the forms .
money,
she only assists re si-.
Kathy Goble, L.S.W., con·
dents
in
filling out forms for
siders her office at the Meigs
Energy
Assistance
Senior Center, a "satellite the
Programs
li
sted
below.
office" because she often makes
The
Home
Energy
home visits to help homebound
citizens make sense of the ener- Assistance Prngram (HEAP)
is a federally funded program
gy assistance .forms.
designed
to assist lowHowever, people usually
income
Ohioans
. with their
come to Goble's office in the
, Senior Center if they require winter heating bills. The
her help. An appointment is . HEAP benefit normally conencouraged and her hours are sists of a cred'it on your utiliM,onday through Thursday 8 ty account each year. If you
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Her phone are a customer · of a rural
number is 1-740-992-2161. cooperative, municipal utiliGoble can also mail the forms ty, use bulk fuel. or have a
master metered account, you
to any interested residen.ts.
If you make an appointment will receive a voucher.
HEAP Emergency Winter
with Goble to discuss the prop-·
er way to fill out the heating Crisis Program (E-HEAP) is
assistance application be sure to the emergency component of
bring proof of income for every HEAP and is locally adminispetson living in your house- tered through Community
Action . E-HEAP assists
hold. This could include payroll households
whose primary
stubs, s~tements from employ- source and/or necessary sec-

Heating

Freedom

Network shamed US.
Dear Editor:

VIEW

Deloris Sayre
Syracuse

"V'&gt;J"'T-2005 Season Tickets ·
rr======"ii
· 16 outstanding concerts and musical revues

Fine &amp; Performing Arts Center
University of Rio Grande

s. e • R.

,•

e. s

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•'

Adult $45 Senior $40 Children $32
'ro order, call now
1

245-7364 or 446-9356

The Dailv Sentinel • Page As

www,mydailysentinel.com

Jacobs

READER,S

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

Abandoning objectivity at ·CBS

•

The Daily Sentinel

I

PageA4

-

'

Local Briefs
Plan chili dinner
TUPPERS PLAINS National Honor Society at
Ea&gt;tem Hieh School will
hold a chili dinner on Friday
at the high school before the
EasternfTri mble
football
game. Tickets are available
from any N.H.S. member for
$5 or may be purchased at the
school for $6. All proceeds
will benefit the Eastern
N.H.S.. chapter.
The menu will include a
bowl of chili. a peanut butter
sanclwich or hot dog. dessert

,,f

Ratnbm1 RiJ~e .
Long Bnnom. II a&gt; tined s'~o
in l\k i~' Count1 Court lt1r

and drink. Information is
a1·ailable from Chris Carroll
at 985-3607.

Offer
immunizations

Permits required

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Ohio University Colleg~ of
Osteopathic
Medicine'
lmmuniLmion
Childhood
Program will provide fre~
immunizations to ~hildren
POMEROY- Th~ FrienJ,
from birth throu~h 18 nn of the 1\kig' Count) L,.ibrar)
Friday at the " Eastern will hold 1h~ir &gt;emi-anrtual
Elementary School on Ohio 7 book ,ale on O.:t. 7 and S at
th~ Pomerov
. Libran. . Hour&gt;
11 ill ~ frnm !) :un . Ill -1 p.m .
There arc nn 'et 1price, .
POMEROY - Gordon \\'. Dnnatimb wi II be .JCc't'i\ted

POMEROY .- Property
owners in unincorponited
areas of Meigs County must
contact the llood plain manager at 992-2994 before making an llood-related repairs.
A llood plain development
permit · may be required
before any structural. repairs
are needed.

Holt~r

dri,ing :m unlkt"i1,t:"J trader.

Book sale
planned

Name corrected

Craft
show set
.
.

POINT PLEASANT
Handmade holiday treasures.
a popular craft show dating
back to 1986 in the Point
Pleasant area have a few
openings for this year's shoW
on Nov. 13.
Anyone interested in securing a space may call Pat
Johnson at 576-3278 for an
application .
Tha
Mason
County
Educational
Community

Outreach Service is SJ:l9nsor
of the annual craft show to be
held at the West Virginia
National Guard Armory on
Route 62 Nonh.
Basket makers. wood
workers. candle makers and
doll makers are just a few of
the items which will be for
sale each year. The Wohelo
CEOS Club will be selling a
variety of foods in the concession stand.

Beach residents in Florida return
to see Jeanne's damage; storm's
remnants batter Southeast

take place on Oct. .1. with
Members
enjoyed
a
serving from II. a.m . until 2 hayride anJ weiner rua:..t.
p.m. Meet the candiclates
The next meeting 11 ill be
will be held at 12:30 p.m .
Each candida!~ will be Oct.. ~ with a potluck '4P·
allowed to speak and will . per at 6:30 p.m .. followed
be available for questions . by meeting at 7:30.

MGM popcorn blitz planned
POMEROY - From 10
a.m to 2 p.m Saturday Cub
Scouts and Boy Scouts of
Mason/Gallia/Mei gs
Counties will be participating in a Trails End . Popcorn
Blitz Day.
Each y,ear scouts sell
popcorn for their annual
. unit fund raiser. . Seventy
percent of the money collected will go to the scouts
with the money being used
to send youth to camp in

VERO BEACH. Fla. (AP) Three deaths were blamed on
- Janet Hettinger waited the storms and damage was
more than two days to return widespread.
to her home on this city's barThe storm hit Virginia
rier island only to be.tolu she especially hard. dumping a
couldn't go inside.' Hurricane foot of rain and killing a
Jeanne had made it impossi- woman who drowned when
ble.
she was swept from her
"There 's nothing to see any mobile nome. Flooding
more anyway," the 81-year- closed more than 200 roads
old Hettmger said Tuesday. in several counties. In
putting · her pointer finger to Roanoke, rescuers ushered to
her temple and pretendmg to ·safety 11 mill workers who
pull the trigger.
became trapped by the
The five-story condo where Roanoke River.
she lived was severely damThe National Weather
aged by Hurricane· Frances Service was investigating a
from Page A1
early this month before suspected
tornado
in
Jeanne finished the job Pi'ttsylvania County, Va .
ripped off facing, tearing "When I heard the train she is now enrolled.
through walls and leaving noise. I tried to get in the
Jayne Davis, the da•Jghter
aluminum siding dangling .
closet~ " sa1d Joe McDamel,
.
of
Wayne and Debbie Davis,
Rebuilding, if residents whose mobile home was
was
awarded the athletic
decide to, would take about destro~ed. "Five seconds
scholarship
and is now
three years.
later, I m in a pile of rubble."
Ohio
Valley
"I don't know if I will live
In western Maryland, near- attending
College
in
Vienna,
WV.
In
that long. I'm ready to call it ly a half-foot of rain fell.
high
school,
she
earned
12
quits right now," Hettinger Emergency workers rescued
said.
several people from vehicles varsity letters as a member of
Thousands of residents stranded by high water, and the volleyball, basketball and
waited in a mile-long line turned around a loaded softball teams. She also
Tuesday to finally get a Frederick County school bus maintained a 4.0 ~rade point
chance to see the destruction trapped by an eroding road- average and participated · in
various actiyit1es. She is now
Jeanne meted out in Vero way.
.
Beach. Condo owners like
The storms also spawned a studying business manageHettinger fared the worst, tornado near New Castle ment and playing basketball
. whil'e most of the single-fam- County Airport in Delaware, for Ohib Valley C::::ollege's
ily homes seemed to have the Nationa! Weather Service . women's team. ·· ·
made it through.
said. "It is a mess. Storms · Clayton Stone. the son of
As it churned north, the like this are not supposed to Vincent and Barbara Oliver.
stoni1' s remnants dumped happen in Delaware," said received the athletic scholartorrential rain and spawned . Cpl. Trinidad Navarro, a ship to cover part of his
tornadoes and high wind. county police spokesman .
tuition at the University of
Rio Grande. As a student at
Meigs High School , he was
ondary energy source (usual- age reduction; heating sys- the captain of the f-ootball
ly electricity) have be(}n dis- tern repairs or replacements: · team 'and a participant ih
connected, are . threatened electric baseload measures track and field. He is now
with disconnection, or who which address lighting and studying science education
have less than a ten day sup- appliance efficiency, and with plan s to become a high
ply of bulk, fuel.
health and safety inspections school biology teacher.
Percentage of Income and testing.
Erica Poole. daughter of
Payme11t Plan (PIPP) is a speThe Universal Service Don and Mary · Poole,
cia I payment ·plan that Fund
( USF)
Electric
. requires eligible cu.stomers to Partnership Program (EPP) is
pay a portion of their house- money 'set aside as a result of
hold income each month to electric utility restructuring
maintain utility service. PlPP for use in a variety of assis_protects customers from dis- tance programs. THE USF
connection of service, as long . and EPP provides consumer
as they follow the program 's education and measures to
rules about monthly pay- reduce the household's elecments.
tricity use .
Home
Weatherization
The Energy Assistance
Assi.stance Program (BWAP) Programs Income Guidelines
is a federally ' funded. low- are as foll•ows: for a orie perincome residential energy son household, $13, 965; two
efficiency program that persons. $18, 735; three perredu ces the energy use· of sons, $23,505; four persons, ·
qualified
households $28,275;
five
persons.
six
persons,
.throughout 'the siate. HWAP · $33,045;
services include attic, wall $37 .815; seven persons.
and basement insulation: $42,585; eight persons ,
· blower door gu\ded air leak- $47,355.

Meigs

ex/ cfpedat Slhanhj
... to everyone for your love and
support during my recent accident.
The cards, calls, food, flowers,
clothes (to fit over my large cast),
the wheelchair from Continuity of
Care; the magnets from Bobbie Karr.
· and prayers all cheered me up.
Meigs COunty Has A Big Heart!

Margie Lawson, DDS

$10_. . . . . .
f/"':'

penna j'rcN;
. . only $39 and

25°/ooff
.
{

REDKEN

'5tM.

m:l

A\'lji!IUI

8-8,

N'I'C

Silt 8-6, sun 10-5

(no appointment needed)
check the whtte pages or

vtsit ww-N.flestasator1s.cclrr

the summer . and pay for •
mmerials allll programs for
the year.
Communities are encouraged io support til e sale
which will continiued
throu gh Oct. ~9. Seoul\
will be tak ing orders and
payment will be picked up
upon deli\'ery starting No\•.
l.l . For those whq c:1111101
find a sc6ut unit takin g
orders. call .104-675-68.10.
received the scholarship for
her academic accomp li shment s. Graduatin g with a
GPA of 3.87. she was&lt;tctivc
in band, softball. the 'ariety
show. speech &lt;tnd drama.
Now a student at the
University of Cincinnati, she
is still unsure of her major.
The remaining $200.000 of ·
Keig's endowment fund the
Mason Grad~ School Award
in honor of Lena Gibbs. who
was Keig's first grade teacher
in Mason , W.Va.
This $5.000 grant will be
awarded to &lt;l teacher or team
of teachers at Mason ·
Elementary School who
demonstrate · innovat ive cur- ..
riculum development. outstandill'g instructional technique and excellence in mot ivation nf studellts. The fund
also will provide an annual
school award for enrich ing
the curriculum throu gh the
purchase of · educational
materials and/or equipment
that are not within the
school's budget.
For more intonnation or to
establish a fund. contact the
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio at (740) 753-1111 or visit
the Foundation's web,ite
www.appalachianohio.org.

�~

COMMUNI1Y

·The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 29,

2004

N.aming of new o•eteness building honors hospital president
STAFF REPORT

NEWSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

ATHENS
- O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital's new outpatient and medical office
complex has been named &lt;he
Castrop Center in honor of
fl. ichard
F.
Ca,strop,
O'Bleness president.
A dedication and naming
ceremony was held in a large
canopy outside the new facility at 75 Hospital Drive in
Athens Sunday ·With more
than I 70 inv.ited guests
auended the outdoor 'eremony.
The hospital's board of
directors adopted a resolution
to honor Castrop in recognition of his long history of service to and support · of
O'Bleness. "Under his leadership and dedication, the hospital has had a period of
tremendous growth in providing new and needed health
services to the communities
in southeastern Ohio:" said
Fred Weber II.· chair of the
board of directors of the
Sheltering Arms Hospital
Foundation.- Inc . (S.A.H.F. )
tbat operates the hospital.
In Apri l 1979. Castrop
became the administrator at
O'Bieness during a period of
great strife and turmoil. He
served as the assistant executive director of the hospital
from 1977 to 1979. He
earned a bache.lor of science
· degree in business adminis- ·
tration from the University of
Dayton in 1972 and a master
of hospital administration

degree
from
Xavier
University in 1977. He is certified by . the American
College
of
Heallhcare
Executive~.

Castrop recently served a
four-year term on the board
of trustees of the Ohio
Hospital Association and )las
served on several committees
in prior year~. He serves on
the board of . the Ohio
University Centers
for
Osteopathic Research and
Education. He is the chair of
the advisory committee for
the Ohio University Health
Services
Administration
Program. Castrop is currently
chair of the boards of the
Athens Surgery Cent~r and
Athens Medical Laboratory.
The Castrop Center is
located to the west of the current hospital facility. The
tirst lloor of the center will
bring together an outpatient
surgery center. retail pharma- ·
cy. laboratory, physician ophthalmology practice. rehabilitation center. diagno stic
imagi ng and radiation oncology services. Offices wiII be
located on the second and
.third lloors of the center for
physicians specializing in
medical oncology, general
surgery, obstetrics/gynecology, pathology, neurology,
internal medicine, dermatol~
ogy, otolaryngology, onhopedics, dentistry, &lt;;~nd podiatry,
as well as an American
Cancer Society patient navigator working with cancer
Ntients.
Another piece of the cere-

I

• • .,.
••••
• • • ••
I

Coming Thursdak the Sentinel ...

A moment of prayer was
held by Jane HyselL Food and
fellowship was enjoyed by
everyone.
' There were · 29 people
attending were Gary Hysell ,
Roger and Jane Hy sell ,
Janelle and Cody Hysell, Bill
Hysell , Mary Johnson and
Ryan · Carithus all of
Pomeroy; Bobby Johnson,
Betty Johnson. Bob Johnson,
· Mike and Joy Hysell, Josh
and Audrey Hysell, Courtney

Jones, and Charlotte Hysell
all of Middleport.
Shawn, Sherry, T.J . and
McKenzee
Mace
of
Nel sonville; Eric, Billie,
Mikey, and Destiny Sayre of
Racine; Dave and Nancy
Haggy of Jacksonville ;
Rachel Pliss of Mt. Eaton;
and Dennis Hysell of Floral
City, Fla.
Next year's reunion will be
held at 12:30 p.m. on Sept. 18
at Star Mill Park in Racine.

Bertha M. Sayre Missionary Society meets
The Benha M. S&amp;yre
. Mission.ary Society met
recently at the home of Mary
K. Yost in Syracuse.
Nine members were pre·sent and included Barbara
Gheen. Mildred Han, Mary
K. Yost, Geraldine Celand,
Nondus Hendricks, Martha
Lu Beegle, Marjorie Grimm,
· Lillian Haymeh, and Linda
Grimm.
Mary K. Yost opened the
meeting with devotions on
miracles of the Bible. She
used scriptuie from Mark

5:25-34.
scripture from Ecclesiastes
Linda Grimm read minutes 4: I0 and Ideals. Each woman
from the last meeting in the present gave a reading about
absence of secretary Naomi friendship from Ideals.
. Stahan, Lillian Haymen preMary K. Yost served
sented the White Cross quota refreshments.
.to members and it was agreed
The October meeting will
to accept it.
be at Lillian Haymen's.
Barbara Gheen presented a Marjorie Grimm will have the
lipriiioiigiiiraiilmii.iioiiin.ifii.riiiieilndiii!siiih.ip-usiiiiilngi..liipriiio~g.riiiaii!mil.----•-•
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Proud to be apart of yourlife;·
Subscribe'today • 992-2155

r----------------,
I.·.·'P{I/1 ~If~~ &amp;#etKI;I/Iall ,I
I •Name:
I :.• .t\.ddresa;

•I

I • City;Slate &amp; Zip:

'

I e telephone:

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eJwwldlilretoPun:base_

t-

' eN~~tteofindividual(s):

'
I Ow line·
I8 c/raract(rs/1paces. allowedper fi11e
'
I __.___~-------------=

10:00 am • 4:30 pm • Mansion House Museum
10:00 am· 5:00pm •crafts on Main Street
Encampments and Craft Demonstrations at Th~Endie- Wei
10:00 am ·8:00pm • ALPHO Photo Exhibit at Public
12:00 pm • 8:00 pm • Art Show at Fort Randolph Terrace on
7:30pm • Lantern Tour at Th-Endie-Wei Park

Oltlb

10:00 am-4:30pm • Mansion House Museum
10:00 am • 5:00pm • Crafts on Main Street
Encampments and Craft Demonstrations at Th-Ertdije-1
10:00 am-4:00pm • Entertainment on Main '"•"•"
10:00 am · 5:00pm • ALPHO Photo Exhibit at
Public Library
t
10:00 am-8:00pm • Art Show at Fort Ra~olpb
Terrace on Main Street
11:00 am • Parade on Main Street
11:00 am • Beans, Cornbread and Ho~ogs
at Senior Citizens' parking lot
11:00 am • 4:00pm • Activities for all age&amp;~.,
Sponsored by the Main Street Merchants
2:00 pm • 4:00 pm • Author in the Park
6:00 pm - 8:00pm • Colonial Governor's Kel::e1
at American Legion (tickets required)
8:00 pm - 11:00 pm • Colonial Ball at
· American Legion (free)

Mlllm:ard

v...

II
· AccotmtNum/!f!r:c_ _ _~-1
. ~plratfonlJQte: - - - - - L----------------~

3 For 8
8

/

SALE. 12 Pack Pepsi
12oz. cans,, assorted varieties.
Limit 3.

'

""'~~,.,.,-~

'

/' ,

.

.

~.

~/

SALE. Clorox.96oz
AJitra Regular 'Bleach
82oz. Splash less or 96oz.
scented, Sale 3 fo~ $5.

SALE. PAPER BASICS.
24-regular or 12 double rolls
Charmin or 8 roll·s B9unw.
144 or 216ct. Puff
Sale 2 for '

I

/

10:00 am • Colonial Church Service at
Th-Endie-Wei Park
1:00pm· 4:00Pm • Art Show at Fort Ra1ndolpj
on Main Street
2:00pm • Memorial Service at Th-Endie-Wel Park

CAL~ (304). 675-2360

!

FOR MORE INFORMATION.

falf(tft't~ Q.f'e !rte ruiftt - !r'u-et ;Ieee~ to,etlu~ ttlte~ed «&lt;it~
11
tlf(/fet .Q.lfd tea!'~ .· eofo,.el tllt't~ !lfeMDf'let .al(i bof!J(rl ,R!i't~ foll'e,
'

..

~epresent

""'The right landscaping requires careful planning. Trees and shrubs planted in the
wrong place can cause power outages or other hazards. Make sure you plant
trees that won't grow into overhead·~ower lines, Keep shrubs at least 10 feet
away from electrical equipment and call the local underground line locating
service before you dig: Planning ahead helps keep your power flowing safely.

new

'

'Is~~·
, I•Wlndlh~

•

•

For more information please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326.

s.

OHIO ~

' payable to the "Pleasant 1Valley Hospital Foundation."
'

'•

'

.

'

'

the family unity and the varied personalities

.

'

SALE. Frito Lay
10;13oz. Lay's Chips
r or Doritos '\

AEP Ohio is there, always worlcing for you, ·

. '

'

For

I

2520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550. Cash, check and credit cards accepted. Please make checks
.

'

$100

Suriday. Oct. 3rd

your life. Return with payment to: Pleasant VaHey Hoip~~ ATTN: Community Relations Department,
l

~;

10:27 a.m. Saturday

1Gal.
Washer Solvent
· Manufacturer may vary by ~:

Please complete the attached form in honor or remembrance of someone who made a difference in

Cbeck

f '·

'

Saturday. Oct. 2nd

.

11pp111J'I iate

-

CtORll CLOROX
-- . ,

: (AP Pholo/News-Sun, Teesha McClam)

the main lobby of the hospital and will always rem&amp;in n part of the organization's walls, ·

1-----------------I el'lllle dJoclc
box:

(

/

'

·I - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Pepsi Products

Friday. Oct. 1st

engraved with the name of the selected individual then displayed. The artistic creation will be located in .

.
.
1 'No linu • )8 clraracrm/spoces allowedper ll~~e ·

.,_

.

'

I

that comprise our community and hospital. Conan tUes can be purchased for $100 each. The tiles will ·be

,

.

Wittenberg student
Michael Taylor of
Springfield, right, has· a
"Romeo and Juliet" video
signed· by actress .Claire
Danes after a· campaign
event outside BenhamPence Student Center at
Wittenberg University in
Springfield.

October .l-3 • Point Plea~ant; WV

The addition will be created in a "quilt" design to

I

Sunday Sept.·26 tQ Oct. 2

brings ·actress to Springfield·

Honor &amp; Memory Wall that will be created in remembrance or tribute to family, friends and loved ones.

I • Oivai by:

I
I-

Camp~ign

.

Celebrating the first battle of the American Revolution

The PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL FOUNDATION is proud t0 anno~nce a

I
I
I

CINC INNATI
The
company hundling the $4 bil. lion cleanup of radiouctivc
: wustes at the former Fernald
: uranium processing 'plant has
: begun tran sferring waste
: from a 50-year-old .concrete
: silo into holjling tankS in a
· critical step toward . trying to
complete the cleanup by
: 2006.
; After so me initial problems
: last week with hose cn nnec • lions and valves. the transfer
:. began Monday, Fluor Fernald
und un ion offici als said
, Tuesduy. Munagement hopes
: to tlnish retnoving the 9,000
• q 1bic yards of waste in about
: four month s frnm two si los,
. the aging and repaired repositories tha t have containeu
the waste si1tce the 1950s.
Gene Bra-nham. president
of the ll -union Fernald
Atomic Traues and Labor
, : Cou ncil at Fernald. said he

was concerned that Fluor former atomic weapons testing
Fernald has encountered site in·. the Nevada desert.
earl y problems with the Nevada has threatened a Jay,
tran~fer. But company ofJii- suit to block shipment of the
cial s said they anticipated wastes. The dispute ·eould
problems in the st~rtup and threaten the 2006 completion
that they are now making date of the cleanup, which is
progress.
costing tax payers about $320
''The silo waste has not million annually.
moved in 50 years," said Jeff . Removal , treatment and
Wagner, a Fluor · Fernald di~posal of the wast.es in the
spokesman. "Our closure two sil os and powdery,
will be defined by how· mdioacti"fe waste s in a third
quickly and safely we can silo on the I ,050-acre Fernald
remove si lo wastes ."
tract 18 mi les northwest of
The U.S . Depart ment of Cincinnati is the biggest
Energy gave approval on remaining job in the cleanup.
Sept. 16 for Flunr Fernald to . It processed uranium for
begin injecting water into the almost 40 years for the govtwo si los to allow pumping ernment's nuclear weapons
of the clay- like wastes production until . 1989.
through metal · piping and
Most of the old production
into four, 750,000-gallon buildings have been demolsteel holding tanks inside a ished as part of the cleanup.
concrete building.
.The plan calls for the site to
The material is ultimately to. eventually be a wildlife area,
be encased in concrete for with 123 ac res housing perhundreds . of shipments by manent underground storage
!lathed truck s in steel canisters of lower- level radioactive
to the Energy Depanment's wastes.

BATTLE DAYS

.

I

tile(s)llt$100each.

I • Pieueclieck app~opriate box:
I
In Honor of
lnMemoryof
I-

I

II

I

'

2004

"~~c~ f, ~ 0' ~ f, ;]p,"

Reed /Hysell reunion held
RACINE - The Oscar Reed
/Charles flysell reunion was
held Sept 19 at the Route 33
roadside ~ due to high water
at Star Mill Park in Racine. .
Officers from last year
were reelected and new business was discussed.
Prizes were also given out
to Charlotte Hysell, the oldest;
Audrey Hysell, the youngest;
and Dennis Hysell, who traveled the farthest.
Roger
Hysell won the door prize.

II I

The $11.4 Castrop 'center at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital is part of a $23.5 mill ion expansion project. It was named for
Richard F. Castrop, O'Bieness Hospital. and dedicated in ceremonies held Sunday.
mony was the dedication. who choose to ·livt' in these ject. 1t is an impressive new and host a public open house
"On behalf of the board of areas.
three-story. 91 .000 square- of the Castrop Center in the
directors of the Sheltering
The Castrop Center is the. foot facility. The total ~os t of near future when services and
Arms Hvspital Foundation,
offices on the tlrst, second ·
Inc., 1 hereby dedicate this first ph&lt;)se of O'Bieness' the Center is $1 1.4 million .
new facility to all of thecom- $23.5 milli'on expansion pro- . O'B ieness wi ll annou nce and th ird noors are open.
munities of southeast Ohio,"
'
Castrop ·said. He defined
these communities that
i~
O'Bleness serves as people
who live in the many towns
and citie s throughout the
region and everything in
between . . He continued to
detine "co mmuniti~ s" as people from all over the world

Attending were · Donna,
Mary and Wilma Davidson,
Rutland; Jean and Norman
Wood, Steve and Sue
Brickles, Deloris, Cyndi ,
Davitl. Elizabeth, Stephen
and Philip King, Hazel
Oliver, Jimmie Cummins, and
Dal e Hoffman all of Pomeroy,

by Hazel Oliver. Prizes were
won by David King, Norman
· Wood, Jennie Cummins,
Wilma, Mary and Donna
Davidson, Steve and Sue
Brickles, Stephen, Elizabeth
and Philip King.
Next year's reunion will be
held the second Sunday in
September at the King residence.

'

Wednesday, September 29,

:Contractor begins critical
_step in Fernald site _cleanup
JOHN-, NOLAN

''

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Wood Family reunion held ,
POMEROY - The 32nd
annual Wood reunion was
held at the home of Deloris,
David and Cyndi King .
Prayer was given by David
King. Officers reports were
given and new officers elected were David · King,. president and Jean Wood elected
secretary/treasurer.
A guessing game was won

••

PageA6 _

· A unit ofAmerican Electric Poww
•

- For more information abour electrical
safety, visit AEP.com, To locate an
underground line call I -800-362-2764.

•a•

-·

_,..;.:....-;:-:--·:
•

--

'

SALE. Glacier Clear water. I
24 pack, 11211ter bottles.

�Page AS

The Daily Sentinel -

Wednesday, September
A DAY

ON WALL STREET

.,:::~•......,~~~-....."'.- '0.250

;..-----~
-...,..1.11.-.r----

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10,099.52

from pnw~•: +0.89

Sept 28, 2004

.
9 Low
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Nasdaq
composite

c.,._
prwTou'• :

standard &amp;
Poor's 500

1 .800

·--------=-----=~ 1.800
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AUG
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High
low
Reoord high : 5 .048 .62 ·
'k,873.86
1,852.59
M.-ch 10. 2000

Sept. 28. 2004

Advanced:

_I

2,243

Declined:

Today's Game
Volleyball

New hlghe

1,012

Unchanged:
Volume:

1.200

New lowe

164
49
1,780,565,5114

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---

.. ~~·--------·-- ..- · ....JUN .
JUL
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1 .908 Maw htgha'
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AUG'
SEPT
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M«ch24, 2000

......'
AP

.......................................................................................................................................

AP

Local Stocks
ACI-35.45
AEP - 32.34
Akzo - 35.18
Ashland Inc.-

56.50

AT&amp;T -14 .40

BLI - 12.22

Evans - 26.47
BorgWarner-- 41 .30
Champion- 3.90
Charming Sl1ops- 7 .10
City Holding - 32.50
Col- 36.09 .
Bob

Federal Mogul - .i 8

Pepsico ,. 48.10

USB -28.49

Premier -

Gannett- 84 .66
General Electric- 33.31
GKNLY -3.85
Harley Davidson - 59.16
Kmart - '85.85
·
Kroger- 15.60

Rockwell - 38
Rocky Boals- 18.34
AD Shell - 51 .30
SBC -25.82
Sears- 39.11
Wai-Mart - 52 .78
Wendy's - 32.99
Worlhinglon - 21 .17
,
Daily stock reports are lhe

•. Lid . - 2i .88
NSC- 29.10

Oak Hill Financial - 35.49
OVB- 31 .21

DG-20.04'

9.54

4 p.m.
closing quo1es of the previous day's

· transaclions, provided by Smilh
Parlne!s at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

BBT '""' 39.30

DuPont- 42.11

Peoples- 25 .70

Galli a Academy at Vinton County

1711

Advanced :

1,1i0.06

...... *"

565.66

NYSE diary

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

"

Prep Schedule

2.200

2000

+0.54

from

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

Rusll8 .

1,869.87

Pet.

Nasdaq
compostta

u . 2000

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

10,077.40

9,75&lt;&gt;

RMDI'd high : 11,722 98
J .n

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Dow Jones
tnduatrlals

- J7U"'N,----,J:;-:U-;-l -:....,.-;-:00~--;:S;o:EPT:::;-- 9 ' 250

10,077 40·

New&amp;Channel·

Sept. 28. 2004

10,750

.....

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio prep football notebook, Page 82
Ohio prep football computer ratings, Page 83
Expos to announce move to D.C., Page 84

Market watch

Sept 28. 2004

DowJonea
Industrials

29,2004

INSIDE

Eagles easily beat Trimble
STAFF REPORT

Thursday's Games
Volleyball

sports@ mydailytribune .com

Galli a Academy at Warren
Rivw Valley at Chesapeake
Meigs at Eastern
South Gallia at OVC
Wellston at Soulhern
Soccer
Gallia Academy at OVC
. Golf

River Valley, South Gallia at
Gallia Academy

GLOUSTER - Easlern made qui ck
work of Trimble Tuesday. 25- 14, 25- 19.
25-10.
Darcy Winebri nner had I 0 kill s for
the Eagles in their three-game victory;
while Morgan Weber had . seven kill s
and Casey Smith six .

S1Ti ith al so had six dinks for Easlern
(I 0-3. 8-2 Tri- Valley Conference).
Jennifer Armes leLiihe Eagles scorin g
with 15 service points. on 20-of-20 serving. Jennifer Hayman ( 15- 15) haLl 10
points and Morgan Weber ( 15-15) talli ed nine points .
Eastern also won the junior varsily
contesl, 26-24. 25-18.
Eastern plays host to Meigs Thursday
in a cross-county match.

Ohio high school
volleyball poll
COLUMBUS (API - The third of six
weekly Ohio HiQh School Volleyball
Coaches Association polls tor 2004, with
school, reco rd and total points (first-place
YOies In parentheses):

sports@ mydail ytribune.com

DIVISION I

McARTHUR Meigs contin ued ils
·
assault at the net.
The Marauders racked up 46 kills Tuesday
'l:"'"--, in a five · game win over
Vinton County ( 19-25, 2513. 17-25,2 5-9, 15 -1 1)
Renee Bailey had I ~ kill s
for lhe Marauders (8-4, 7-3 ·
Tri-Valley
Conference).
while Samamha Cole had 12
kills. Cole also had 14
blocks .
Also for Meigs at the net.
Megan Garnes delivered
Bailey
eight kills anLI Emily Ashley
five.
Meanwhile, Joey Haning
haLl 34 assists for Meig s.
Service leaders for Meigs
was Garnes, who was 29-for30 with 20 points and Ashley
( 17-20 J and Cassie Lee (1618 ). who each had II points.
M(lg\; \~ a s 92-for-101
serving as a team.
The ·Marauders also won
the junior varsity contest, 25Garnes
15. 25-14 .
,
Meig; next !ravels to
E_astern for a . cross-coun ty showdown
Thursday.

Findley (II 9·0 .............................. 266

,3, Cln. Mother of Mercy 11 -4 ............195
4, Cln. Seton S-4 .............................. 159
5, Cin. Mt. Notre Dame 7-3 .............. 152
6, lancaster 15-0 ..... .......... .. ............ l48
.7, Cin. 'Ursuline Acad. 9-4.... ... .. ........ 122
· 8. Elyrla 11-2 ..................
..... .89
9, Tol. Cent. Catholic (1) 12-1
.71,
,10, Rocky River Magnificat 9-3 ....... 70

DIVISION II
1, Bell. Benj8min logan (11) 15-0...• 309

Weather forecast
E~~ening

Wednesday, September 29

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Expect a cloudy m()miQg. Temperatures will stay
near 57. Winds will be 5
to 10 MPH from · the
north.·

Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
cloudy. Temperatures will
hold steady around · 58.
Winds will be 5 MPH
from the north tUrning
from the east ' as the afternoon progresses.

2, Cln. Roger Bacon (19) 7-1 ........... 307

J. Kenering Alter 9-2 ........................239

(7 p.m.-Midnight)

It · should remain cloudy.
Temperatures will linger at
58 with today's high of 59
occurring around 6:00pm.
Winds will be calm turning from the west as · the
evening progresses.

Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
It will continue to be
cloudy. Temperatur~s will
drop from 58 to today's
low of 52 by 6:00am.
Winds will be 5 MPH
from the west.

Thursday, September 30

4 , C1n . McNicholas (1) 8·2 ................ 226
5, Millersburg W, Holmes {2) 11 ·3 .... 190
6, Chagrin Falls Kenston (2) 13-1 .... 187
7. Wasl]i"lllon CH (3) 14-1... ............ 141
8. Ottawa-Glandorf 11-0 ..
.... 129

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

.10, Bexley 1'2-2............ .. . ... .. .. ." ... 70

9.

A
cloudy
morning.
Temperatures
will
rise
from ·51 to 64 by late this
morning. Winds will be
calm turning from the
northeast as the . morning
progresses.

DIVISION Ill

Temperatures will · hover
at 66. Skies will be mostly sunny to mostly cloudy
with 5 MPH winds from
the northeast.

DIVISION IV

1, St.

4, Sldrl8}1

New
'

...

lSZIU
'
04 Cototactn Ext.
Z-85
'
04 Clnyon Reg. Cab Z-85
04Canyat ~Cab z..ss SLE.
04 ~ado 4x4, Regular Cab, wr
04 Sihleartn
IS Ext
.
.. Cab, 4x4 ·
04 QwNy B. S.•per Sport Rcatsrer, (Red)
Sltaac,i&gt; is 2SOO HD 4x4, Ext Cab
04 Snhnban 1500 Z-71, 4x4.
04 SbJa 1500 2WD, Ext Cab, SLE. ·
04 SiaJa 1500 4WD, Crew Cab, SLT
04
2500 HD, 4WD, Reg. Cab, f5W
Qt+ ) lObUe Slllouctte C.l S fWD;
04 AVf!D 4 Door
04lmpalaSedan 1llt, Oulse, &lt;D
'
Catwrdble "1.81 u: line
'

0

l:OOp.m.- 1:30p.m- M&lt;igo Hi&amp;h Scbool Bond .t Flag Corp. -Spooiored by Budweiser
3:00p.m. Stm1v.i&gt;&lt;d Boat Cntio&lt;
5:00p.m Stmlv.i&gt;&lt;d Boar Cntio&lt; .
6:00 ;&gt;.JD 7:00p.m. Porn flaaa" - SJXID&lt;OI"d by Budweisor
7:00p.m. Sla:owbed Boat C.Uioe
7:30p.m.- 8:30 fl&lt;m. ...... Elite- SponSored by Budwei...9:00p.m. Slauol&gt;ed Boat Uvioe
9:00p.m. - 10:30 p.m- ... loq WolaruJo - SponSored by Budwriser
!O:OOp.m. - II :00 p.m. ... Biitzkrieg - SponSored by Bud"rioer

SUurday, Oc::tober lad
IO:OOam Pande
ll:OOUL- I:OOp.m ..... Uuelltrowift&amp;Comeil (oigD""'' bepns a1ll .00 a.m.) - Sponsored by IIlcfiana Michigan Power
.li:OOlLIIL- 4:00p.m..... (bill Codl.off - W'"""" anJIOIIIICed at 4:00p.m. - Sponsored by VFW of Mason WV
I:OOp.m. Sla:uwboe!BoatC111ioe
I :00 p.m. -2:00 p.m. ....... Higb Country
2:30p.m. • 4:00p.m ....... Ted 1£ U..
3:00p.m. Stmlwhod Boar Cruioe
4:00p.m. Du&lt;ty Dm&gt;y- SponSored by Pomeroy Mercbaol• Assn.
4:30p.m.. 5:1S pm........Roct N Country
5:00p.m. Stml•lltd Cnuoe
•
~.lOp.m. - c.p..m·, Dinoa-- E..cleoClub- Sponsored by Meigo Eagles 2171
5:30p.m. - 6:30p.m..-.. W"-Plopal
'
6:45 p.m. • 7:30 p.m. ......Mea·, Se&amp;y Leg Cootea
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I:OOp.a. • 10.00p.m..... Sia:o•110d Boar Flre"lo'ooili Czuise
91l0p.a. Fuewwb ~ SpociOR!d by Puwetoy Riverfat Comminee _.
9:00p.m. 10:30 p.m. Couuy l!.ood 5

c._,..

-~

•

'

Friday, October lst

'

...

·Dppday. Friday 4 Sebn]lay Event§;
• - ... Cnru • 111&lt; Trinj!y Owrcb. variouo ...me. sponsored_by 111&lt; RiverfeR Comminee with drawingo to be

*Monthly payment is $13.89 for every SI ,OOO you r.nance. Example down payillent8%.
' Some customers will 001 qualify. Take deliVery by 9/31W4. See deale.- for details.

.

SihP"'" Ercuts;

Biqddfricyde .,., MinJ- i•mp••hdy CollowiJI&amp; tbepandl: liJlOilSOI"Cd by the Meig• CouolyToumm olfJC&lt;. '
lk oy Walkia1 I'Mh.ll&amp;(.i&gt;1raioo 4 10.00 &amp;m. 011 l'aking Lot a cud o( Wllll: polh. Fnt
100 ,_,- ·, •• wiD JI&gt;OCiv&lt; a he T ·Sbin. Aay queaioo• """'-"'Andrew Bnomf-:"'. Meip Cc&gt;uoly lbllbllq&gt;al1m&lt;nl

Mtiaf ia MocioA 51( Fwo Wilt. 1'1

•

l'lwioy l.il&gt;nry · - MJoiD
II :00 Lin. to I :00 p . m . . -· Houli&lt;. Slide Qov."D ml Free B - Aito, heldiul • "o(len&gt;oo..S,. ond popoom from 10:00 a.m. to 2.00p.m.

.,...utop.m.

·

ALL~ ·IDTAKE PLACE ON THE POMEROY PARKING LOT AND

AMI'IIITHEAIER UNLESS OTHERWISE N01lD

SCHEDULE IS SUBJECT ro CHANGE

•

_,l

'

6:00 p.m. Opening ca.mooy by Pomeroy American Legion
6:30p.m. FR Truck Parade
.
7:30p.m-9:00p.m. .. ,... "EJvio" impenonalvr DwightlcenhoworSJlCli'OI'&lt;d by Fannon Bank &amp; Savingo Company

llldt A-.1 MripCouuy BW.. Atoociatioo Toy Run . LiJJe.up&lt;111 U&gt;un Slrcet .t Punkooy Pwting Lot 12:00 nooo

·.

Lancers
pull off win
over 'Does

.. . 23B

Trio homers as
Indians knock
off Royals

...

Thursday, September 30"'

SIRe!."-·

Fei.tawn (6) 16-1

5. Jadmon Center (3) 12-1....,.,........ 232
6, FrankfOrt Adena {2~ ~0-0 .·........... 221
7, Sldn8y l.shman Ca1h, (1) 9-5 ... 137
6, Beaver Eastern 12-0 ........ ............ 82
9, Norwalk St. Paul (2) 1o-1 ............. 74
10, Windham 12·1 ...... :....... ......... .... 59

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

(140)992 -'62Jii

Henry (10) 13-3.... .... .- .............. 301

·2. Maria Stein Mario (7) 13-2 ........... 294
3, ConlertJuog (6) I1-1 ..... ................ 254

_
.·

Stemwftee( ~"erfest
~a((!~ the ~"er

Sa!anlay ewaiug

,

7. Newark Catholic (t ) 13·2 ......... 127
, 8, Rocky River Lutheran West 13-0 .120
9, Day'. Oakwood 14-1. .
.. ........11t
. 10, Columbiana Crestview 13-0 ....... 102

-~Sub~ribe today • 992-2155

.-

B9

·e. Cia. VA-St. Joseph 13-2 .............. 154

The,Daily S'eiltihet

0

.......

1, Orrville (37) 16.-0 .......................... 435'
2, Zoarville Tusc. Valley (1) 12-0 ...... 287
3, Huron 7.() ..................................... 208
4, Sardinia Ea&amp;tern Brown (1) 14-0.. 173
5, Sycamore Mohawk (2) 12-0 ......... 160 .

Afternoon (1-6 p.m.) ·

~w,. ;;m ~~

Olmsted Falls (I I 11 -0 . ...

V• liM Prite ~, H, lli•~ ..

o Tate

740-992--41614 • 1 888 ~TATE

::'E: l=~ !~

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
- Ryan Ludwick, Ronnie
Belliard and Casey Blake
homered to power Cleveland
past Kal)sas City 5-l
Tuesday night, the Royals'
IOOth loss of the season.
The I 00 losses by the
Royals. picked by many as
the preseason favorite in .the
AL Central, ties- the team
record set ill,· 2002.
The only other AL team
-with a chance at 100 losses
is Seattle, which started
Tuesday night with 96.
Cliff Lee (13-8) gave up a
double to Angel Berroa with
1me out in the first and then
(etired 16 in a row until
David DeJesus reached on
an infield single with two
out in the sixth.
• The left-bander went 6 1-3
innings, allowing one run
and three hits. He walked
just one and struck out six.
Darrell May gave up all
three homers and took over
ihe team-record with 38
· lllowed this season. He
leads the majors in losses
,
with 19.
: May (9-19) ·gave up nine
flits and five runs in 6 1-3

innings.

The lefty didn't receive
much help from his offense.
which was held to one run
for the fourth suaight gam_e.
• The Royals' lone run gave
~m a 1-0 lead in the first.
Berroa doubled and came
around on a wild 'pitch when
catcher Victor Martinez's
ihrow to third went astray.
: Ludwick tied it at 1-all
1Vith a two-&lt;lut homer in the
second, and then the Indians
iook a 2-1 lead in £!1e fourth
·oo consecutive doubles by
Martinez and Josh Phelps.
Belliard and Blake each hit
towering home runs in a
three-run fifth.
Belliard hit a solo shot
with one out, then Coco
Crisp singled a/lead · of
Blake's 423-foot shot to center, his team-leading 28th
home run of:•the year.
.I.),

Marauders
doniinate
Vikings at
the net
STAFF REPORT

1, Tot. St. Ursula (35) 12-o .............. 370

2,

Prep Volleyball

BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Josh Hancock pumps his fist after getting the Chicago Cubs' Samrny Sosa
to fly out to end the bottom of the eighth inning Tuesday in Chicago . (AP)

Reds hamper Cubs
0

BY NANCY ARMOUR

'

Associated Press

______ _:_=:.::=:....:...:..::=..______
CHICAGO - The Chicago Cubs are determined 10 do things the hard way.
Greg Maddux gave up three homers. including
Adam Dunn 's 44th of the year. in an 8-3 loss to
the Cincinnati Reds on Tuesday night that could
cost the Cubs valuable ground in the- NL wild-card
race.
"We' ve got to put this behind us and come out
smoking tomorrow:· Cubs mana~er Dusty Baker
said. "We've got five to go. We ve got 10 put it
behind us."
They have little choice. The Cubs began the day
a game up on San Francisco and I 1/2 games
ahead of Houslon in the wild-card race. All lhey
had to do was win · out. imd the wild card was

BY JOHN RAllY
'Associated Press
HUNTINGTON With two
months left in the regular season.
Marshall and Miami IOhio) have reason to believe their postseason
prospects will be determined
Wednesday night.
The RedHawks-Thundering Herd
game has decided the East Division
winner of the Mid-American
Conference ever) year since the
league went to two divisions in 1997.
I

',

theirs.
Instead. 1hey Jos1. Now Houston is just a half· Qame back. I hank' 10 a 2"1' ,·ictory mer St. Loui s.
San Franci sco wa' playing al San Diego later
Tuesday.
.
··You' can' t try any harder. you can't think any
differently ... seco nd ba;eman Todd Walker said.
·'You just have to go oul and keep playing."'.
Dunn reached I 00 RBi s for the first time . and
D' Angelo Jimenez and Darren Bragg also c_onnected off Maddux. Josh Hancock (5-2 ) drove m a
run and finally got a win after being the victim of
blown saves in his previous two starts. He gave up
two earned runs and scanered seven hits over
eight innings. striking oui three and walki'lg two.
"Thi s is kind of our playoffs ... Dunn said . "Guys
are doing everylhin g to win.'·
c

Pluse see Re4s, Bl

RACINE - In racing. it is a photo tinish.
In track. it is a dead heat.
In volleyball. it is as close as one can get
· withouf bringing home lhe "in. as Southern
wem. four almost equally played matches
before finally r~tling 26-24 in lhe finale to
Federal
Hocking
during
Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division volleyball
action Tuesday.
Federal Hockin 2 won in four sets. 25-21.
25-23. 16-25. a1id~l6-2-+
Federal'' Ashley (a, tl e had 20 points.
Ashley Johnson 1-l. and Kelsey Lackey 12 in
lhe witL Brooke Ki,er kd Southern wilh 21
points. Kri&gt;tiina William s had 17. and
Belhany Riflle had 16.
Great plays highligh1ed I he game . and miscues were ma2nified because thev led to
scores that 01herwise were hard-fought to
achie,·c.
Southern's Kristiina Williams had 'three
aces and, four kills in a 23 -28 spiking night
and 39-~5 passi ng night. Brooke Kiser was
46-5-3 setting wilh five sets for aces. Jenny
Warner was 19-21 wilh four kills and
Bethany Riffle was 61-63 setting. Nikki
Riffle was 22-30 passing and had a kj.JJ.
Ashley Robie had eight kills .
, Southern won the reserve game in two sets
25- 16 and 25-17 . Amber Hill had 12 points ·
for Southern. while ,Stephanie Cundiff. had
ten points. and Kaylyn Spradling had nine.
Abby Gillian had eight for Federal and Tracy
Dye seven.
Southern plays Wellston _Thursday.

get a bowl bid.
'"This i' the lone-setter:· \IUP.&gt;hall
quarterback Stan Hill said. "You · ve
got to go out lhere and let this conference know that we fame to win the
championship. Th.is i, the g!lme to do
it. ..
With man\' memorable moments in
this
brief bu·l .healed rivalr.. MUP.&gt;hall
at Joan C. Edwards Stadium
is
hoping
to avoid a low pOint. A loss
Hlllltlngton, W.Va. ,
in their conference opener against the
Klck-Gff, 7 p.m., Today
RedH awks (2-2. 1-0l would gi,·e 1he
Thunderinl! Herd their tirs1 Oc-l o;tart.
The loser has not onlv been left out of in 35 yeUP.&gt;.
the MAC title game but also failed to
··How we did the first three game;

.

I

~

+-

-~---

3-0. 1-2. 2-1. 0-3. whalever - is
immaterial because the league
is startin!!.'' Marshall coach Bob
Pruett said. .. And for u&gt; to gel to a
bowl game. "e·\·e got to get to the
championship game ...
MUP.&gt; hal r s record is due in large
part to ito; tough nonconference scheduk. The Herd's losse&gt; are by a combined 15 points to Troy. No. 7 Ohio
.
Sta te and ~o 3 Georgia.
"\\ e know we '11 see a different.
\larshall learn:· \liami coach l:erry'

-

reall~

PINH see MariHII. Bl

--- --......--".:____

�'

Page'B2 • The Daily Sentinel

\vww.mydailysentinel.com

Tressel hi,nts ·at Joe,
Pittman getting
increased time at
Northwestern·
BY RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS
Even
though No. 7 Ohio State is
unbeaten in three starts, that
doesn't mean coach Jim Tressel
is without brush fires to stamp
out.
Heading into Saturday's Big
Ten opener at Nonhwestern, the
Buckeyes have a lot of positives
going for them. After all, teams
such as LSU, Michigan .and
Florida State would love to be
unbeaten while fielding critical
questions about a bland and
erratic offense or a bad turnover
ratio.
On the other hand, the
Buckeyes have several problems that must be ftxed and
fixed soon if they want to continue to brag about that zero in
the loss column.
For instance, tailback Lydell
Ross gained 141 yards on 17
carries in the ·season-opening
win over Cincinnati. Sinoe that
time he has gained 141 yards on
49 carries. He also lost a late
fumble against Nonh Carolina
State in the Buckeyes' most
recent ~arne prior to last
Saturday s bye week.
Tressel is inordinately loyal
to his seniors, and he has stuck
with Ross even when the
ground game appears to be
stuck in the mud.
.
"Someone brought me a statistic that we're 15-0 when he
· gets more than 15 carries, so I
told the staff, shoot, let's just
give it to him the first 15 plays
·of the game and be done wtth it,
if it's that simple," Tressel
joked Tuesday. ·
Three years a~o, Ross was
insened into the lineup as a 17year-old freshman and respilnd. ed with 124 yards against
Indiana.
That spurred the staner,
Jonathan Wells, to play better.
Now it's gotten so bad that
Wells, who plays for the
Houston Texans, is trying to
counsel Ross. Wells called
Tressel recently and ask!!&lt;~ for
Ross' phone number, so he

could call him up ami boost his
spirits.
Tressel doesn't believe that
Ross' doldrums have anything
to do with a lack of motivation,
so he's not inclined .to stick,
freJihman Antonio Pittmar\ or
fu II back- turned -ta i Iback
Branden Joe into the lineup to
prod Ross to play better.
'Where I think Lydell needs a
little boost of confidence is that
he knows he can do better than
leaving the ball on the ground,
but you have to go out and
prove (things) to yourself
sometimes," Tressel said.
"You've got .to go out and earn
the right to feel good about
yourself."
Pittman, who joined the team
for practice last spring, has
learned the offensive sets and
system and is ready to play. So
is Joe, who like Pittman has
been fighting off nagging
injuries and now appears fully
recovered,
"I would expect Branden Joe
and Antonio Pittman to have a
lot more prese11ce (against
Nonhwestem) than they've had
thus far this year," Tressel said.
Pittman said he welcomes the
op(ionunity.
"!don't feel we're performing up to expectations but we're
just performing enough to win
ballgames," he said. "We need
to work on our running game
more and I think with me coming back this week healthy that
should give us much more of a

Wedn.e sday, September 29,

Wednesday, September 29,

2004

Ohio High s·chool Football
Notebook ·
.
'

BY RusTY MILLER
Associated Press

Lexington coach Dave Kaple wuldn' t be happier to see' Tim Hiller finally ·
leave Orr vi lie.
·
·')'II be sending him a graduation
card." Kaple said .
Hiller completed 20 of 28 passes for
295 yards and five TDs in a 56-40 wirl
last week . Hiller, who has thrown for
I ,245 yards and II TDs with just two
interceptions this season,. also carried
I0 times for 92 yards.
·
La,st season Hiller lit up the
Minutemen for a school-record 419
yards passing and th,ree TDs in a 28-14
win.
"I don't know anyone who's torched
us the way he has ," Kaple said.
• ST. ED PROBLEM: Officials at
Division I No. 2 Lakewood St. Edward
notified the Ohio High School Athletic
Association on Monday that several of
their wins may be jeopardized becau se
an ineligible player participated. The
OHSAA and school officials were
looking into the situation. A decisi Qn is
expected within I 0 days.
·"
• FOR THE DEFENSE: Brothers
Kyle and Ryan Smith returned pass
interceptions for TDs on consecutive
plays in Dayton Stebbins' 37-12 win
over Monroe, Kyle returning his 76
yards and, following the kickoff, Ryan
bringing one back'' 3'1 yards; and the
Eaton secondary returned three intercep!ions for TDs in a 66-7 win over
Dayton Nonhndge.
·
• STREAKY: Port Clintqn posted a
boost~'
24-12 win over Sandusky Perkins , endJoe said he has not been ing a 20-game Sandusky Bay
promised any additional work. Cpnference losing streak; Keith Davis
He said a twisted ankle isn't
I00 percent healed yet, but that scored two TDs as Bridgeport snapped
he still believes he has some- arr IS-game losing streak with a 21-14
thing to offer as he frnall y sees victory over Bishop Donahue ; Troy'
McNeilan had three completions - all
his ftrst action of the season.
"(The running game) has not for TDs ·- in Versailles' 27-19 win
been what we want it to be, but over Delphos St. John's, stretching the
I think me and Tony offer a Tigers' winning streak to 23; and Elida
change-up, a change in pace," won its first Western Buckeye League
Joe said. "Nothing against game in four years with a 22-16 win
Lydell but I'm more of an over Celina.
inside type of guy, Tony's more
of a speed guy and I definitely
think 1t will help us get this running game where we want it."

• STREAKY II: Avon Lake 's 52-24
win over Olmsted Fulls stretc hed its
win streak to 20. as Bobby Doyle ran
for 24 7 yards. and topped 1.000 ya,rds
for the season: Smithvil le posted its
25th straigh t win over Creston
Norwayne , 44-7 ; Scott Martin ran for
three TDs as Hanovert on United
defeated Sebring Me Kinley 28-0, the
Trojans ' 50th straight Tri-County
League loss; and two-time defending
Division I state champion Cincinnati
Elder won its 20th straight home game
by overcoming a 21-0 deficit to beat La
Salle 38-35 on D.J . Hueneman's 26yard field goal on the final play..
• GROUND CONTROL: -cincinnati
Winton Woods' Hosea Simpson set
school records with 402 rushing yards
and five TDs in a 48-28 win over
Harrison; Jake Tamaska of North Bend
Taylor rushed for 352 yards and six
TDs in a 49-21 win over Deer Park;
Dayton Chaminade-Julienne's -Javon
Ringer has 1,238 rushing yards so far
as he seeks a third consecutive 2,000yard season; Ironton 's Darius Lewis
ran for 270 yards and three TDs in a
34-7 win over Ashland, Ky.; Sandusky
St. Mary's Spencer Dye had 303 yards
of totaLoffense in the first half of a 42 7 win over Milan Edison ;
Beaver Local rushed for 515 yards
and passed for none in a 53-16 victory
over Bellaire; ' Ashland Crestview's
Ryan O' Dell rail for 200 yards and
scored four TDs in a 73-27 win over
Plymouth, giving him 1,028 yards and
14 TDs so far; Joe Ulrey of Sparta
Highland rushed for 268 yards and
four TDs in a 51-14 win over North
Union; Plain City Jonathan Alder QB
Kris Jordan rushed for four TDs in a
54-6 victory over rival London; Allen
East's Jordan .Reffitt ran for 305 yards
and sco red four TDS in a 41-20 victory o:ver Paulding; Dola Hardin
Northern's Michael Ridgeway rushed
for 242 yards and four TDs in a 4 I -0
win over Arcadia; Craig Brickner of
Basco m Hopewell-Loudon rushed for
240 yards and both TDs in a 14-10 win
over Carey; and Division I No. I
Colerain built a 56-0 halftime lead in ·

drilling Milford 70-3. grabbing a -1432 1 yardage uifferen li &lt;il .. wit h al l the .
·yards coming ()n the ground .
• PASSING FANCY: Ben Fowler is
16 of 20 passing for 292 yards and fo ur ·
TDs with no interceptions in
Cambridge's 4-0 start ; for the seco nd
time thi s season. Westlake's Jon
Brow n threw six TD passes in a game ·
in a 49-20 win over F&lt;lirview:
Springfield South's Luke Alexander
had 21 0 re ceiving yards and three TDs
on four catches in a 54-27 win against
Sidney; Bluffton beat Warre n JFK 4113 as Jaroct ·Davies co mpleted 17 of 27
for 378 yards and four TDs;
McComb's James Coplts threw for 417
yards and 2 TDs, but was stopped on &lt;1
late two-point conversion try in a 29- ·
27 loss to Pandora-Gi !boa; and
Cincinnati St. Xavier beat Moeller 3531 as QB Rob Schoenhoft, an Ohio
State· recruit , tossed a late 2-yard TD
pass to Kyle Gibler.
•NOTEWORTHY: No rth Robinson
Colonel Crawford played its third
straight o verlime game.. losi ng . to
Crestline 22-21 in double overtime;
Lorain Brookside 's Steve Grife threw
two TD passes and also intercepted
three passes in a 49-14 win over
Oberlin Firelands; Milford Center
Fairbanks' Greg Phelps acco unted for
317 ya(ds of total offen~e in a 46-12
win over Yellow Sprin gs: Upper
Sandusky QB Greg Micheli has accumulated 1,009 totals yards and had a
hand in 14 TDs 1n the past two weeks;
and. Tiffin Columbian's Justin ·Reinbolt
returned a kickoff and a punt for TDs
in the first quarter in a 45 -7 win over
Norwalk.
·
Finally, there is nothing cold about
Coldwater.
After averaging 393 yards in the first
four games, St. Henry was held to just
53 yards in losing for the first time, 280.
. .
Coldwater won the annual Backyard
Battle by limitin g St. Henry to 35
yards rushing and 18 yards passing. St.
Henry did not record a first down in
the second half and had just .four in the
game.

E-mail us: sports@mydailytribune.com

•
ww\v.mydailysentinel.com

2004

No change~ at top but plenty
elsewhere in third AP prep poll

.

Orrville's Hiller just seems
to have .Lex's number·

.

·

COLUMBUS (AP) how long St. Ed will be nearest pursuers .
The big shake-up came unbeaten. Officials at the
Despite
No.
2
lower in the top 10 while school notified the Ohio Coldwater's 28-0 verdict
the No. I teams held their High School Athletic against Division V No. 3
spots in the third weekly Association on Monday St. Henry, Versailles main·
Associated Press Ohio high that ~everal wins may be taioed a ·47-point edge in
·s chool
fo!)tball , poll, jeopardized becau se an Division IV as the top four
released Tuesday.
ineligible player participat' teams
remained
Cincinoati
Colerain, ed. The OHSAA and unchanged . Ironton was
Avon . Lake, Steubenville, school officials were look - third, Delta fourth and
Versailles,
Amanda- ing into the situation. A Plain City Jonathan Alder
Clearcreek and Columbus decision is expected within moved into the No. 5 spot.
Grove held the top spots in 10 days.
·
Division
V
leader
the voting by a statewide
Rounding out the new A manda-Clearcreek had
media paneL
top five in the big~school the most first-place votes
Colerain continued ahead division,
Youngstown (27) and matched Colerain
of Lakewood St. Edward in Austi'ntown Fitch climbrd for the most points (351) .in
Division I. although the four spots to · No. 3, the poll. Marion Pleasant,
margin dipped from 29 Centervtlle moved up six North Lima South Range.
points last week to 12 spots to No. 4 and St. ·Findlay
Liberty -Benton
points this time .. St. Ed Ignatius dropped to No. 5. and Woodsfield Monroe
po~nded two-tit:ne defendThe tOJ? five remained in. Central filled the next four
tng poll champiOn Warren a h'o ldmg pattern in positions.
·
Harding
45 - 12 . on DiVision II, with · Avon 'A Week after taking a
Sa~urday,
dropping . Lake
followed
by narrow· seven-point lead
Brookhaven, over Dola Hardtn Northern
Harding from fourth to Columbus
seventh. .
Macedonia
Nordonia, in Divi sion VI, Columbus
The Nos. 3, 4, 5 and 6 Springboro and Warren Grove received a clear
teams from the second•poll Howland. Avon Lake leads mandate with a 70-point
all lost,· with No. 3 Brookhaven by 36 points, bulge. The first-place
Cleveland St. Ignatius los- . up from 25 after the second votes, 13 to 8 a week ago,
ing to· Athol Springs (N.Y.) poll.
favored Columbus Grove
St. Francis 28-13, No. 5
In
Division
Ill, by a 20-2 margin this time ..
Moeller
'falling
to :Steubenville's margin over The rest of the top five
Cincinnati St. Xavier 35- Akron Hoban fell from 49 remained
static:
·31 and No. 6 Marion to 27. Canal Fulton Monroeville · at ·No. 3,
Harding going down 21-19 Northwest,
St. Marys Danville at No . 4 and
to Westerville ,South.
Jillemorial and Lisbon Sandusky St. Mary at No.
No one knows for sure Beaver rounded out the 5.

WEEKLY OHIO FOOl BALL COMPUTER RAnNGS

The Daily Sentinel • Page B:~

THE WEEKLY

AP SIAIE FOOJBAI.L POLL LIST

COLUMBUS (AP) - How a stale panel of sports wrMers and broadcasters rates Ohio high school foolball
teams in the third weekly Associated Press poN ol 20114,
by OHSAA divisions, w~h won-lost recC!rll and 10111
points (first-place 110tes in parentheses):
DIVISION I
t. Cin. Colerain (24) 5-0 ....................................... 351
2, Lakewood St. Edward (12) 5-0 .........................339
3. Youngs. Austintown-Fitch s-o .:......................... 249
4, Centerville (I) 5-0 ............................................. 183
5, Cle. St. Ignatius 4-1.. ....... ...... ,............ .. ............. 156
6, ·cln. Elder 4-t ...... .. ............... ............................. 153
7, Warren Harding 4-1 ..........................................92
8, Cin. Moeller 4·1 .................................................87
9, Westerville 8.4-1 ..................... ,........................72
10, Marion Har&lt;llng 4-1 .. ...· .......... ................ ......... 59
.
Others receiving 12 or more points· .. 11 (II&amp;); Cin. ·St.
Xavier, Cle. Glenville 55. t 3, Massillon Jackson 38. 14, .
N. Olmsted 20. 1.5, Cin. LaSalle 16. 16, Eastlake N. t2.
DIVISION II
1, Avon Lake (24) 5-0 ........................................... 344
2, Cots. Brookhaven (6) 5-0 ... ..... ........................ ,_308
3, Macedonia Nordonia (1) s-o ................ .-............257
4, Springboro (2) s-o ......... :..................................202
5, Warren Howland 5-0 ....................................._... 195
6, New Philadelphia (1) s-o ..... ............. :............... 108
7, Uniontown Lake 4·1 ............ ............................. 103 1
8. Chardon 4-1 ..................................................... -100
9, Louisville (2) 5·0 ............................................. ..48
10, Jackson 5·0 ........................................ -...... :......46
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Amherst Steele
41. t2, Sylvania Southeiew 39. 13; Cin. Glen Este 30. 14,
Pickerington Central 26. t5, Cin. Withrow (1) 25. 16,
Maple Hls. 24. 17, Copley 21.18 (tie), Maumee, Garfield
Hls. 19. 20, Akr. G.artield 15.
OIVISION Ill
.
t . Steubenville (20) 5-o .........................................329
2, Akr. Hoban (6) 5-0 .......... ...................................302
3, Canal Fulton NW (I) 5·0 ..................................207
4, St. Marys Memonal (t) 5-0 ...............................196
5, Lisbon Beaver (3) 5-0 ........................ :.............. 195
6, Cle. Benedictrne~l) 4-1 ............,. .......... ,............ 153
7, Day. Chaminade·Julienne (3) 4-t ..................... 144 ·
8, Cots. Beechcroij (I) 5·0 .............................. :..... 115
· 9, Cots. Watterson 4-1 ................................: .........70
10, Napoleon (t) 5·0 .. .... ,....... ,, .............................. 38
Others receiving 12 Qr more points: t 1, Chardon NDCL
35. 12. Akr. Buchtel31 . 13, Hubbard 30. 14, Washington
C.H. Miami Trace 28. 15, Lima Shawnee 18. 18,

Cambridge t7.17, Bellevue 14. 18 (tie). Dover C&gt;rclevlile
Logan Elm 13.
DIVISION IV
1, Versailles (22) 5-G ... _ ..... .......
.347
2. Coldwater (5) 5-Q ........................ .....
300
3, Ironton (3) 5-o.......... .........................
.. ... 265
4, Delta (2) 5-0 .......... ... ,... ...............
. .... 199 •
5, Plain City Jonathan Alder I~) 5-0 ...
.. ... 164
6, Akr. Manchester (3) 5-0 ... ... ...........:·.................. 140
7, Huron 5-0 ........ ..... .. _....................
......... 134
Martins Ferry 4-0 ... ,_ ..... _... .... ... .............. .. .. 128
9, Youngs . Mooney 3-1.. ....... ................................. )1 3
10, Upper Sandusky s-o .. .... .. ................. ............... 49

a,

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 . Bellaire 45. 12,
Youngs. Ursulin6 30. 13 (tie). Tontogany Otsego. Perry
•
16 15
15
- · • Urbana ·
DIVfSIONV
t , Amanda.Ciearcreek (27) 5·0 ......................... 351
2, Marlon Pleasant (5) 5·0 .................... ............. 309
3, N. Lima S. Range 5-0 ...............
236
4. Findlay Liberty-Benton 5·0 ......... ..................... 188
5, Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 5-0 ........... .............. 181
6, Sycamore Mohawk 5-G ....,............................ 125
7, Gates Mills Gilmour (2) 5-0 ............................... 114
8, Hamler Patrk:k Henry (2) 5-0 ...... .., ............ :...... 106
9, Mineral Ridge 5-0 ............
.. .. ... ................... 103
10, St. Henry 4-1..................... ...........
.. .... 81
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, W. Liberty· Salem
27. 12, W. Lafayette Ridgewood 26 . 13, Ashland
Crestview 24. t4 (lie), Bluffton , Rootstown 16. 16, Dalton
t4 ..17, SmHhville 12.
DIVISION VI
t, Columbus Grove (22) 5-0 ...... ..................... ...... 334
2, Dola Hardin Northern (2) 5·0 ... ... ....... .. ..... .. ... ... 264
3, Monroeville (3) S-0 .. ... - ............ .. ................... 253
4, Danville (4) s-o ........................... ...... .. .......... .. 231
5, Sandusky St. Mary (1) 5-0 ................................204
6, Newark Cath. 4-1 . .... .. .. ................................. 140
7, Mogadore (1) 4-1 ........ ..... ... . .. .... ..... .. ...... 135
8, E. Can. 5-o .............................. .......................... 67
9, New Matamoras Frontier (1) 4·0 ....................... 61
10, Mechanicsburg 4-1 ....:................ : ... :............ .46
Others receiving t 2 or more points: 11 , Troy Christian (I)
36. 12, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 33_ 13, Cle. Cuyahoga
His. (1) 28. t4, Shadyside 24. 15, Beallsville 20 : 16,
HICksville 17. 17, Windham t6. 18, Glouster Trimble 14.
19, Norwalk St. Paul12.

Reds

ed in the bushes in center. giving Ci ncinnati
a 4-0 lead.
,
"You can 't cover your mistake&gt; when you
give up home runs after it. " Maddux 'aid. "I
from Page 81
hit "two guys with two strikes. That\ whe n
•
you're
supposed to get guys ou1."
Corey Patterso n drove in a pair of runs
.The
Reds
capitaliz~d on another Maudu.x ·
with a triple. but the Cubs couldn't muster
much more offense with the . wind howling mistake in the fifth. After Casey drew a
leadoff walk,. Dunn followed by putting a 3in at 20 mph .
·
Maddux ( 15-11) has struggled against the 2 pitch into the stands in right-cente r fm a
Reds all year, going 1-3 with a 6.75 ERA in two-run homer, giving him 100 RBls for the
five start s ag~inst then1, and Tuesday was no first time in ·his career.
II was the third time th is ycllr Maddu .x ha,
different. He gave up six runs - all on the
given
up three home runs to the Reus.
three homers - and six hits in five innings .
" ! felt fine. I felt good:· Maddux sa id . " I
He also plunked two batters in the same
inning for only the second time in his career made a couple· of mistakes and they were all
home runs."
- both th is year.
The Cubs 'finally ended Hancock\ bid for
Who was the other learn he left black-anda
shutout in the fifth. driving. in tw·o run&gt;
blue·' The Reds on April 7, the four-time Cy
Young Award winner's first start with his with a triple into the corner in uccp righ1.
Sammy Sosa's sac tly in the sixth uli the
original team &lt;lfler II years in Atlanta.
And just as they did in April, the Reds lead to 7-3, but the Cubs managed on ly "'"
more hils the rest of the game .
made Maddux pay for the errant throws.
"We got three run s tonighl. ~tnU that":.. a
After Maddux plunked Felipe Lopez to lot,"
Maddux said. "On a ni ~ ht li~e ihi, .
start the third. Jimenez followed with a
that's
good. That should hav~ been more
homer that just cleared the fence jn right
than
enough."
field. Maddux hit his next batter, Sean
But it wasn't, ·and the Cub\ road to the
Casey. in the leg. Two batters later, Bragg
playoffs
is a little harder becau se of i1.
hit a monster shot into the wind and it land-

COLUMBUS (AP) - Here are the second weekly Elm (5·0) 7.9000. 7, Graham Local (3-2) 7.6000. 8,
football computer ratings from the Ohio High School Circleville (4·1) 6.4000. 9, Cin .. Wyoming (3-2) 6.2500.
, Athletic Association. Ratings are by division and region 10 , Germantown Valley View (4-1) 5.6000 . DIVISION
.
. with record and average bi-level points per game (top IV
eight teams in each region advance to regional quarRegion '1 3-1 , Akron Manchester (4-0) 9.4400. 2,
le'rtinals):
Orrville (3-2) 7.9000. 3, Perry (5-0) 7.3500 . 4, Young
DIVISION I
'drsuline (4·1) 7.0100. 5. Young. Mooney (3·1) 6.9940 .
Region t - 1, Lakewood St. Edward (5-0) 13 .0500 . 2, 6, Sullivan Black R1ver (4-1) 6.7000. 7, Garlield Hts ·
North Olmsted (5-0) 12.2000. 3, Young. Austmlown- Tnnity (3-2) 6.5500. 8, Girard (4·1) 6.3500 . 9.
Filch (5-0) 11 .5070. 4, Warren Harding (4·1) 10.8010 . Garrettsville Gartield (4-1) 5.9000. 10, Cuya. Fal ls
5, Solon (4-1) 10.4000. 6, Cleve. St. Ignatius (4-1) Cuya. Valley Christian (4-1) 5.8500.
9.8040. 7, Cleve . Glenville (4-1) 9.1500. 8 (tie).
Region t4-t , Huron (5·0) t0 .9000. 2, Coldwater (5·
Eastlake North (5-0) , Strongsville (4-1) 8.6000. 10, 0) 9.8000. 3, Upper Sandusky (5·0). 7.7500. 4 , Della (5Cleve. Kennedy (4·t) 8.4000.
·
· 0) 7.4000. 5. Mount Gilead (4-1) 7.1500. 6, Tontogany
Region 2-1 , Mass . Jackson (4-1) 12.3500. 2, Otsego (5-0) 6.9000. 7, Urbana (4-1) 6.5000. 8,
Hudson (4-1) 11.4000. 3, Tal. OeSales (4-1) 9.8500 . 4. Rossford (3-2) 6.0290. 9, Highland (4-1) 5.4500. 10,
Green (4·1) 8.8500. 5. Wadsworlh (4·1) 8.7000. 6, Tal. Ollawa-G iandort (3-2) 5.3000.
Bowsher (4-1) 6.7500. 7, Sylvania North view (3·2)
Region 15-l,lronton (5·0) 10.9000 . 2, Marlins Ferry
6.4500. B, Tal. St. John's (3-2) 6.4000. 9. Brunswick (3- (4-0) 9.2890 . 3 , Bellaire (4-1) 8.6810. 4. New Albany
2) 6.3000. tO, Cant. GlenOak (3-2) 6.2500 .
(4·1) 7.t350. 5. Porlsmoulh (4- 1) 7.0500. 6, Wellston
Region 3-1, Dublin Scioto (4- 1) 11.6500. 2, (4·1) 5.5000. 7, Belmont Union Local (3-2) 5.0970. 8,
Westerville South (4-1) 10.9500 . :l, Worthington Granville (3-2) 4.2000. 9, Cadiz Harrison Cenl. (3·2)
Kilbourne (4-1) 10.1000. 4, Lancaster (4·1) 9.3000. 5. · 4.0150. to : Albany Alexander (3-2) 3.8000.
Pickerington North (4-1) 8.5000. 6, Woo ster (4-1)
Region 16-1, Plain City Jonathon Alder (5·0)
8.2000 . 7, Marion Harding (4·1) 8.0330 . 8. Lima Senior 9.6000. 2, Versailles (5·0) 8.7000. 3, Reading (4-1)
(4-1) 8.0000 . 9, Newark (4-1) 7.8500. 10, Hilliard 8.2500 . 4, Batavia (5·0) 6.6500. 5, Brookville (3-2)
Davidson (4· t) 7. 7820.
6.1330. 6, Oaylon Oakwood (4-1) 5.7700. 7 . Cm
Region 4-1, Centerville (5'0) 12 .7 t80 . 2. Cin. Madeira (3-2 ) 5.5000. 8 , Cin . F1nneytown (3·2) 5.4270 .
Colerain (5-0) t2 .3000. 3, Cin. Moeller (4-1) 12.0730. 9, Cin. N College Hill (4-1) 5.3730. IO .. Spring. Kenlan
·
4, Cin . LaSalle (4-1) 12.0000. 5, W. Chesler Lakota W. Ridge (3-2) 5.1500.
(5-0) 11 .7500. 6 (tie). Cin. Elder (4-1). Cin . St. Xavier
DIVISION V
. (4-1) 11 .2500. B, Fairborn (5·0) 9.4390. 9, Huber His.
Region 17-1. Mineral Ridge (5·0) g.3500 . 2,
Wayne (4·1) 8.7500. tO, Liberty Twp. Lakota E. (5-0) Roolslown (5-0) 8.7500. 3, Labrae (4 -1) 8.5000. 4,
8.3000 .
Gates Mills Gilmour Acad. (5·0) 7.8500. 5, Columbiana
DIVISION II
Crestview (4-1) 7.4930. 6, N. Lima S. Range (5·0)
Region 5-1, Macedonia Nordonia (5-0) I 0.9500. 2, 7.1000. 7, Dallon (5-0) 6.2210. 8, Smilhville (4-1)
Warren Howland (5-0) 10.2440. 3, Garfield Heights (5- 5.4730. 9, New Middletown Springfield (4·1) 5.1000.
Hill got his first career stan in place of the
0) 10.1970. 4, Copley (4-1) 9.8500. 5, Akron Garlield 10, Burton Berkshire (3-2 ) 4.4000.
injured Leftwich, throwing fnm TD pa»c'
· (4-1) 9.0500. 6, Tallmadge (4-1) 8:9000. 7, Willoughby
Region 1 ~~ , Ashland Crestview (5-0) 7.6000 2,
and scoring on a l-yard run with:; 'emnds left
South (4-1) 7.3500. 8, Maple Hts. (4-1) 6.9000. 9, Hamler Patrick Henry (5·0) 7.5000. 3. Bluffton (5-0)
Westlake (4-1) 6.6500. 10, Chardon (4-1) 6.7000.
7.3000.4 (lie) , Findlay Liberty-Benlon (5-0), Sycamore
to lift the Thundering Herd to a J6-J-I win.
Region 5-1, Avon Lake (5-0) 9.8000. 2, Maumee (4- Mohawk. (5-0) 6.4000. 6, Delphos St. John's (3·2)
Moments
later, police led Miam1 dcfcm.ivc
t) 9.6500. 3, Sylvania Southview (5-0) 9.5000_4, Tal. 6.0000. 7 (tie) , Archbold (4-1). Sherwood Fairview (4Jon Wauford off the field in handCent. Cath. (4-t) 9,1500. · 5, Amherst Steele (5-0) 1) 5.8500. 9, Liberty Clr. (4-1) 5.6500 . 10, Oel. Tinora
Hoeppner said. "The players know it's a must- coordinator
cuffs.
·
8.8840. 6, Tiffin Columbian (4·1) 8.0500. 7, Oregon (3-2) 4.8000.
win if we're going to control our own desClay (4-1) 7.9500. 8, Lewis Center Olentangy (3-2)
Region 19-1, Amanda·Ciearc reek (5-0) 10.0540. 2,
Wauford
allegedly
knocked
a Jan 1.0 the
tiny."
7.8000. 9, Lexington (4-1) 7.4500. 10, Sprin,g. Woodstield Monroe· Central (5-0) 8.3500 . 3 ,' W
Shawnee (4-1) 6.6500.
This will be the teams' final meeting before ground in the postgame crowd 'mge . The fan
Lafayette R,idgewood (5·0) 7.7500. 4, Wheelersburg (4was hospitalized briefly .wit)l a conn"sion,
Region 7- 1, Uniontown Lake (4-1) 10.7500. 2, Cols. 1) 7..1000. 5, Johnstown-Monroe (4-t) 6.9000. 6,
Marshall heads off to Conference USA next Wauford
later resigned and a mi,demeanor
Brookhaven (5-0) I 0.0500. 3, New Philadelphia (5-0) Johnstown Northridge (4-1) 6.1270. 7, Sugar Grove
season.
9.2000 . 4, Carrollton (4-1) 8.6500. 5, Louisville (5-0) Berne Union (4-1) 5.9000. 8, Crooksville (4-1) 5.8500.
battery
charge
was dropped.
The series, led by Marshall :5:2 since it
8.4500. 6,· Can1ield (3-2) 8.2000. ·7, Pickerington 9, Chesapeake (3-2) 5.3570. 10, l)ld Wash: Buckeye
rally in 2()()2 is one of the hri ght spoh
rejoined the league in '97, has featured three ofHill's
Central (4-1) 7.8500. 8, Cots. Marion Franklin (4-1) Trail (3·2) 5.0770.
an
up-and-down
career. He mis,ed the sec-.
6.2740. 9, Pataskala Watkins Memorial (4-1) 5.4590.
Region 2(}--1. West Liberty -Salem (5-0) 8.1500. 2, current NFL staning quanerbacks- Miami's
ond
half
of
the
2003
- includi m: 1he
10, Cots. Independence (2-3) 5.1000.
Lees Creek E. Clinton (5·0) 8.0000. 3. Marion Pleasant
Ben Roethlisberger and Marshall's Chad Miami game- with aseason
knee
injury
:1' Mar~ hall
Region 5-1 , Cin . Withrow (5-0) 13.3000. 2, Cin. Glen • (5-0) 7.0000. 4, Cols. Hartley (4-1) 6.6500 . 5, Chill.
Pennington and Byron Leftwich.
Esle (5-0) 11.7000. 3, Springboro (5-0) 11 .1000. 4, Zane Trace (4-1) 6.2500. 6, Sl Henry (4·t) !3.0500. 7,
Roethl isberger stayed calm through fierce failed to secure a postseason berth of :mv kind
JaCkson (5-0) 9.6500. 5, Norwood (5-0) 9.4000. 6. Anna (4-1) 5.7770. B. Grandview Hls. (4·1) 5.3500. 9,
Chillicothe (4-1) 9.0000. 7, Day. Carroll (4-1) 7.8500. 8, Arcanum (4-1) 5.1720. 10, Frankfort Adena (3-2)
wind gusts last year as Miami won 45-6 to end for the first time since 1990.
He's only thrown two TD pa"e' "' far thi'
Kings Mills Kings (3-2) "7.8000. 9, Day. Col. While (3-2) 4.7000.
Marshall"s six-year reign as MAC East season,
while Miami 's Josh Bells leads rhe
DIVISION VI ,
7.5500. 10. Cin . Mt. Healthy (3-2) 7_5000.
champs: In 2001. Marshall running back conference with I ,099 yards passing and ni1k
DIVISION Ill
Region 21-1 , Mogadore (4-1) 7.5400. 2, Mooroeville
Brandon Carey outdid both Leftwich and touchdowns against five interception,.
Region ~1. Akron Hoban .(5-0) 11 .2000_ 2, Cleve. (S-0) 7.4500. 3. StMary Central Catholic (5-0) 7.1500.
.
Roethlisberger
by throwing a pair of touch~
4,
East
Canton
(4t)
6.5000.
5,
Windham
(4-1)
6.0000
_
Benedictine (4-1) 10.6500. 3, Chardon NO-Cathedral
"Our
margin
for
error
in
'this
game
i'
not
Latin (5-0) 10. tSOO. 4, Medina Buckeye (4-1 ).8.3470. 5 , 6, Cleve. Cuya. His. (5-0) 5.9500. 7, Wellsville (3-2)
down passes.
very big," Pruett said. 'This is truly t\1 o ream'·
Hubbard (4-0) 8.3280. 6, Mentor Lake Cath . (3-2) 5.2890. 8. Richmond His. (4·1) 4 .7180. 9. Greenwich . But maybe the oddest occurrence came two
8.3000- 7, Akron Buchtel (3-2) 7.5500. 8, Akron S. Central (3-2) 4.6500. 10, Leetonia (4- 1) 4.6000.
that are evenly matched. The one thai make'
Coventry (4-1) 7_5000.' 9, Bay Village Bay (4-1) 6.7260 .
Region 22-1 , Columbus Grove (5-0) 6.7000. 2, · years ago, the last time the schools 184 miles
the most mistakes usually is the one that will
apan met in Huntington.
10, Ravenna SE (1-1) 6. 7000.
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon (5-0) 6.5000. 3. Hicksville
come
up on the shon end of the slick: ·
Region 10-1, Cols. Beechcroft (5-0) 10.2970. 2, (5·0) 5.6000. 4, Delphos Jefferson (4-1) 4_6000. 5 (lie) ,
Cots. Eastmoor Acad. (5-G) 9.9500. 3, Lima Shawnee · Edgerton (3-2). Me Comb (3-2) 4.5500. 7, Pandora(5-0) .9.4500. 4, Cots. Watterson (4-1) 9.2500. 5, Gilboa (3-2) 4.2000. 8, Antwerp (3-2) 4.1000. 9 (lie) ,
Napoleon (5-0) 9.1500. 6, Clyde (4-1) 8.6500. 7, Cots. Leipsic (3-2) , N. Baltimore (4·1) 3.8500.
' I
Region 23-1, New Matamoras Frontier (4-0) 6.4530.DeSales (3-2) 7.8000. 8, Bellevue (4-1) .7.6500. 9.
2,
Danville
(5-0)
6.2500.
3,
Newark
Cath
.
(4-1)
6.2000.
Sunbury Big Walnut (4-1) 7.5500 . 10, Cols .. Ham1llon
4, Beallsville (4-G) 6.0440. 5, Centerburg (3·2) 5.9000 .
Twp. (3-2) 5.6290.
.
Region 11-1 . Steubenville (5-0) 12.1010. 2, L1sbon 6, Glouster Trimble (4·1) 5.7500 . .7, Willow Wood .
Beaver (5-0) 11 .8000. 3, Canal Fulton N.W. (5-0) Symmes Valley (3-1) 4.9270. B. Slrasburg·Franklin (39.3500. 4, Cambridge (4-0) 8.8750. 5 , Young . Rayen (4- 2) 4.4500. 9, Zanes. Rosecrans (3-2) 4.4000. 10,
.
: 1) 8.2500. 6, Dover (4-1) 8.1000. 7, Thornville Sheridan Reedsville Eastern (3·2) 4.2700_
· (4-1) 7.8500'. 8, Wintersville Indian Creek (4-t) 7.4080 .. Region 24-1 , Mechanicsburg (4-t) 7.3000. 2, Dola
9 , Warsaw Riverview (4·1) 6.5500. 10. BeloH West Hardin Northern (5-0) 6.3000. 3, Troy Christian (5-0)
Meet authors James Alexander Thorn
5.6500. 4, . Cin. Country Day (4-1) 4.5830 . 5. New
Branch (2-1) 6.2750.
Region 12-1 , Wash.CH Miami Trace (5-Q) t0.3500 . Bremen (3-2) 4.SOOO. 6 , Spring . Cath. Cent. (3-2)
and Dark Rain Thorn during the
2. St. Marys Memorial (5-0) 10.3000 . 3, Day. Cham- 4.2000. 7 (lie), Covington (4-1) , Waynesfield-Goshen
Julienne (4-1) 9.9000. 4, Cin. Indian Hill (4·1) 6.0000 . (4-1) 3.9500. 9, Minster (3-2) 3.3500. t 0, DeGraff
Battle Days celebration
5 , Archbishop Alter (3-2) 7.9960. ~- Circleville Logan Riverside (3-2) 3.1500.

Marshall
from Page 81

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Cavaliers sign
veteran center

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(

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Go where satellite can'tl

1-800-972-5757
ch•rter.com

ill

the Park

James Alexander . Thorn &amp; Dark Rain Thorn

o1 w1th yo.x remote

....

Phone~·--------~--~---------------

fill;

l'Vitllove Cherter DICifal.

-~

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Television

CLEVELAND (AP) - 'The
Cleveland
Cavaliers
on
Tuesday signed veteran center
&amp;ott Williams to a one-year
contract.
Frnancial terms of the deal
were 001 disclosed.
Cleveland has been looking
for ano!her veteran big man to .
back up Lithuanian center
Zydrunas llgauskas on what
remains a relatively young

rerun.

.

Williams, 36, slmred for four
~:U,the University of Nonh

on Saturday, October 2nd
between 2 and 4 pm 'at Battle

COME BY AND JOIN THE FUN!!

'

Monument Park in Poim Pleasant.
West Virginia.

We're Having a

THONG CONTEST
~aturday. Odober lnd 1OPM

At that time they will also be signing
their books. which will be for sale &lt;~l
their table at Battle Monument Park .

Pre-register today by calling
or stopping by!

Ricky=s Bar
&amp; Grill
.
.

SR#S6

Ravenswood. WV
1-304-273-5031
'I

..

~

James Alexander Thorn and Dark Rain Thom are co-authors of a novel ha-.ed on lhe lit e of
the famous .Shawnee woman chief known in history as '"The Grenadier Syua\\ ... Bnih the
Thoms h'ave wriuen and lectured about the culture and history of the Sha" nee_ Darl, Ram·,
ancemal people. James Alexander Thorn has wriuen &gt;everal no•·el,. includmg rollo11 rlu
· Ril'er and Pamher in the Sh. which were both transferred in10 ;c r.,., npl a ~ ' lnr
·
films on which the Thoms assisted technically and culturally. Dark Ram' rhom lia' •
wrinen ~ thousand-year history of her people, titled The Shml'llee: KoiJI.umtiJma ·,
Grandclrildren. h was illustrated by her husband.
.

�•
Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

. www.mydailysentioel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

'

National Football League

Major League Baseball

'al:ribune - Sentinel - lae tster
CLASSIFIED

D.C. official says baseball Browns' Winslow
returning to Washington; out for season,

a~~?w~nc:~:~~ ~?~~~ ' "'""'""' needs more surgery
Associated Press

WASHINGTON ~ Major
League
Baseball
will
announce Wednesday that
Washington will be the new
home , of the Montreal
Expos, bringing the national
pastime back to the nation' s
capital for the first time in
33 years, The Associated
Press has learned.
A city officia l. speaking
on co ndition of anonymity.
smd Washington has been
notified by Major League
Baseball ol the impending
announceme nt .

The city is planning it~
own news conference at a
·
location
downtown
Wedn esday afternoon. the
offic ial sa id .
" I think we ' ll be in a position where we can have a
ce lebra tion
tomorrow,"
Mayor Anthony William s
told WUSA -TV.
The announcement will
come one day before the
33rd anniversary of the
Was hing ton Senators' final
game. The Senators moved
to Tex as after the 1971 season. \vh tch was also the last
time a maj or leag ue team
changed ·cities.
Baseball has been looking
· for a new home for the
Expos si nee the financially
troubl ed tea m was bought by
the other 29 major league
owne rs in 2002. The
Was hin gton official said the
bidding group had been. told
that baseball had reached an
uqderstanding
with
. Baltimore Orioles owner
Peter Angelos, who had preVIously objected to having a
team relocate just 40 miles
from hi s franchise.
·
Bob DuPuy, baseball 's
chief operating officer, did

sages
Tuesday
night, of major Ieagve owners and
Ange.los refused comme nt survive lega l cha llenges by
when reached at his home, the Expos' former limited
and there was no confirma- partners.
tion by baseball of a deal
After the announcement,
between the com missioner 's the process of selling the
Expos will start . A group
office and Angelos.
includes
fo rmer
Las Vegas; Norfolk, Va .; that
Monter rey,
Mexico; Rangers partner Fred Malek
Portland , Ore.; and Northern has
been
seeki"ng
a
Virginia also made bids, but Washington franchise for
Washington clearly took the five years. In addition , sevlead during negotiati ons er-a! baseba ll offi cials have
over ·recent weeks, strength- said in the pas t week" that
ened by its wealthy popula- Stan Kasten, former presition base and a financial dent of the Atlanta flraves,
package that would build a Hawks and Thrashers. might
new stadium primarily with be tryin g to assemble a
group.
taxpayers' money.
The original Senators
The negotiations have produced a 30-page document played in Washington from
that would conditionally 1901 -60 before moving to
award
the
Expos
to Minnesota to become the
ex pansion
Washington,
pending Twins.
The
approval by the City Senators called Washington
Council. The document had home from 1961 -7 1 before
not yet been signed as of moving to Texas.
Tuesday night , the city
In the Senators' last game,
source told the AP.
on Sept. 30, 1971. they led
Baseball commissioner the New York Yankees 7-5
Bud Seli g, reached at his . with two. outs in the ninth
Milwaukee home, declined inning when fans see kin g
·
: souvenirs went on lhe RFK
comment.
Plans call for a $440 tl)ij,t Stadium field, which could
·lion package that would not be cleared. The Yankees
include a new ballpark to be wound up winning the game
built along the Anacostia in a forfeit,
River about a dozen blocks
The Rangers retain ownersouth of the Capitol. The sl)ip · of
the
name
Senators,"
package also includes a $13 "Washington
million refurbi shment of base ball
spoke sman
RFK. Stadium, where the Carmine Tis0 said after co nteam would play ·for three suiting with Ethan Orlinsky,
seasons while the new facil- a lawyer for · Major League'
ity is being built.
Baseball Properties, the
Washington needed a11 sport's licensing divi sion .
answer from Major League
Montreal' s la st home
Baseball this week because game 1s sc heduled for
the ballpark legisla-tion had Wednesday night against
to be introduced by Friday . Florida. Monday 's series
in order for it to be passed opener drew a crowd of
by Dec. 31, when terms 3,923 to Olympic Stadium .
(AP sports wrirer Ronald
expire for several pro-baseball City Council members . Blum in New York conThe move must be rributed to this report.)

Bv ToM

WtTHERS

Ass6ciated Press

-

CLEVELAND ~ Browns
rookie tig ht end Kellen
Winslow Jr. needs a ~eco nd
operation on hi s right leg
and will miss the remainder
of this season.
Winslow, who broke hi s
leg during a loss on Sept. 19
in Dallas and had it operated
on last week, will have
surgery Wedne sday to stabi lize ligaments.
Winslow, the No. 6 overall
pi ck in thi s year 's draft. was
in itially expected to be out
for at least eight to I0 weeks
but will now need longer to
recover.
"Our No . I concern is
Kellen 's health and hi s longterm co ntribution to the
Cleveland Browns," coach
B,lllCh Davis said in a statement Tuesday. "We know he
will approach hi s rehabilitation wtth the sa me determi nation that he shows. on the
football field and look forward to hi s return .for th e
2005 season."
Winslow fractured his
fibula - the outer bone in
hi s lower leg ~ whil e
scra mbling to ' recover an
onside kick in the final seconds of the Browns' 19-12
loss to the Cowboys.
Las t week, the first-round
draft pick had screws and
plates in serted to stabilize
the fracture that was clean
through the bone.
Followin g the surgery.
Davis reported that doc.tors
fo und no ligament damage
and said there was a good
chance Winslow would be
back in November.
But
after
evaluating
Winslow, team doctors

detided he the former University of
needed more MJami
All-American . .
surge ry.
Winslow made an immedi" K e II e n ate impress ion in . mini needs a sta- camp, wowing Cleveland's
bilization of · veteran players and coachhis
syn- ing· staff with his marvelous ,.
desmosis (a skill s.
.
At the advice of notorious- :
sprain of the
high agkle ly demanding agents 'Kevin
WI . 1
li ga ment s) and Carl Po ston, Winslow
ns ow
.in order to held out of training camp for
prevent further laxity," head a bigger contract before settling after a 12-day holdout
trainer Mike Colello said.
An
injury ~ uc!Y as and contentious negotia- ·
Winslow 's can sometimes tions.
Winslow didn't need long :
require additional surg~ ry.
Following a trauma .to the to make his presence felt.
lower leg or ankle, 'the joint
Just a few days after arrivcan become unsteady and. ing , the 6-foot-5, . 250painful , requiring an inva- pounder lowered his shoulsive procedure to allow the der and leveled defensive :
li gaments to heal properly. back Roose velt Williams :·
Not only will Winslow not during a non-contact drill. :
play again for the Browns in Williams called Winslow
2004, but he stands to lose a "unprofe ssion.al." Winslow
$5.3
million
one-time said the Browns needed to .
bonus. As part of the six- get tougher.
"I wasn' t here last yea{, ·
year, $40 million contract he
signed in August, Winslow but they only won five ·
had to participate in 35 per- games, " he said.
cent of Cleveland's plays
In hi s first preseason
thi s season to reach an game, Winslow got calle,d
incentive to trigger the for a personal foul when he
bonus.
shoved Titans safety Lamont ·.
The announce ment that Thompson.
Winslow
ne eds
more
Later, he declined inter- :
surgery is yet another blow view requests to -local '
to the battered Browns ( 1-2), reporters for nearly three
who have lost eight starters weeks before breaking his
lo injory in the season's first silence a few days before the
se&lt;tson opener.
three weeks.
In addition to Win slow,
With Baltimore linebacker ·
defensive end Courtney Ray Lewis vowing to flatten ·
Brown and linebacker Ben him, Winslow, wearing No.
Taylor are out for the year 80 like his Hall of Fame
with injuries. Taylor was father, caught four passes
placed on injured reserve for 39 yards in his pro debut.
Tuesday. •
A week later, he was wide .
Although Winslow 's first open several times but made
season in the NFL wa s short, just one catch for II yards ·
it was very eventful.
before breaking his leg in a
The Browns traded up one pileup with teammates as the ·
spot in April 's draft to select Browns tried to rally.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Are you·a5
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
COUNTRYWIDE
CASE CO. 04-cV.Q98
JUDGE: FRED W.
CROW
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
HOME LOANS, INC.
FKA
AMERICA'S
WH-OLESALE
LENDER AND MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYsTEMS., AS NOMINEE
FOR LENDER, PLAINTIFF, ·
.

vs.

DARRELL R. BRALLEY, ET Al., DEFENDANTS
DARRELL
R.
BRALLEY, WHOSE
LAST
KNOWN
ADDRESS IS 109
PARK STREET, MIDDLEPORT, OH 45780,
· AND THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS, DEVISEES,
LEGATEES, EXECU·
TORS," ADMINISTRA·
TORS,
SPOUSES
AND ASSIGNS AND
U N K N 0 W N
GUARDIANS · OF
MINOR
AND/OR
INCOMPETENT
HEIRS OF DARRELL
R. BRALLEY, ALL OF
WHOS'E
RESI·
DENCES
ARE
UNKNOWN
AND
CANNOT BY 'REASONABLE
DILl·
GENCE BE ASCERTAINED, WILL TAKE
NOTICE THAT ON THE
28TH DAY OF JULY,
2004, COUN'THYWIDE
HOME LOANS, INC.
FKS
AMERICA'S
WHOLESALE
LENDER AND MORT·
GAGE ElECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYsTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR LENDER
FILED
ITS COM·
PlAINT IN THE COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO IN CASE NO.
04-CV-1198, ON THE
DOCKET OF THE
COURT, AND THE
OBJECT
AND
DEMAND
FOR
RELIEF OF, WHICH

•

PLEADING IS TO
FORECLOSE
THE
LIEN OF PLAINTIFF'S
MORTGAGE
RECORDED UPON
THE
FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED REAL
ESTATE TO:
PR,OPERTY
ADDRESS: 109 PARK
STREET,
MIDDLE·
PORT, OH 45760 AND
BEING MORE PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED
IN
PLAINTIFF'S MORTGAGE RECORDED IN
MORTGAGE BOOK
OFFICIAL RECORDS .
'VOLUME 182; PAGE
311 OF THIS COUNTY
RECORDER'S
OFFICE . .
THE
ABOVE
NAMED DEFENDANT
IS REQUIRED TO
ANSWER
WITHIN
TWEN'FY-EIGHT (281
DAYS AFTER LAST
PUBLICATION,
NOVEMBER 18, 2004,
WHICH SHALL BE
PUBUSHED ONCE A
WEEK FOR SIX CONSECUTIVE WEEKS,
OR THEY MIGHT BE
DENIED A HEARING
IN THIS CASE.
DONALD
, K.
SWARTZ, ATTORNEY
LERNER, SAMPSON
1o ROTHFUSS
ATTORNEYS
FOR
PLAIN11FF
P.O. BOX 5480
CINCINNATI, OH
45201-6480
. (5131 2.t1-3100
attyemalt 0 ltrtaw .co

sentatlve appointed
by the vtllagea of the
county, one repraaen·
tatlve appointed by
the
townehtp
trustee~, on• r8pra·
sentatlve appointed
by the county commissioners, one representative appointed
by the county engineer and a fifth member setacted by the
four appointed rapresentatlvea. ·The purpose of this meeting
Ia to select the fifth
member.
·

administrators,

assigns,
unknown
guardian• of minor
and/or Incompetent
hairs,
ourvlvlng
spouse, If any, and
personal ropresenta·
lives of the following,
If deceased: tva Durst
Carpenter,
Ruda
Durst, Mildred Durst
Circle, Rober! Durst,
Tom Durst, Olive·
Durst, Randall Talbott,
Zetta Durst Boyd, Joe

Boyd,

Reva

9129

Taylor,
Ebert
Dana

Sid Durst,
Carpenter,
Carpenter,

Jean

1014

Eugene

Carpenter,

Anna Haines, Dana
Eugene
Hatnee,
Arizona
Carpenter
PL!bllc Notice
- - - - - - - - · Lemay, gen. Curtis
IN THE COMMON Lamay, Velma Lemay
PLEAS COURT OF Scherr, lloyd Lemay,
MEIGS
COUNTY, Leonard
Lemay,
OHIO PROB~TE DIVI· Methyll
Lemay
StON
Kinnear,
Dorsa
JOYCE
DAVIS, Carpenter Deal, Mace!
Admtnlatratrl• of the Miller
Schumaker,
Eatate
of
Freda and Freda Carpenter;
Carpenter, Dllcuaed
You are hereby
notified that you have
· Plaln!Hf
bien named delenve
JOYCE DAVIS, ET Al
danta In a legal action
entitled "Joyce Davte,
~ante
Cue !Ia. 33129
Admlnlatrralrl• ol the
Amended Notice by Eetate • of
Freda
Carpenter, dec:ealled,
Pub!IC811on
TO:
Iva
Du,.t to authorize the aala
Carpenter,
Ruda of the real eatate of
Durst, Mil- Durst which the aald Freda
Circle, Robert Dural, Carpenter died white
Tom Dural, · Olive seiad In lee almpte,
Durst, Randall Talbott, and to apply the proZelia Durst Boyd, Joy caede from aatd ute
Boyd, Reva Jean toward the debta of
Taylor, Sid Dural, .. the dlcUIId and the
Eblr Carpenter, Dall8 coeta ol lldinlnlaterm
(91 15, 22, 29 (101 6, . Carpenter, Eugene tng uld dacedent'a ,
You
are
Carpenter,
Anna eetate.
13,20
Hat,.., Dall8 Eugene required to anaW.r
Helnea,
Arizona the complaint within
Carpenter
Lemay, · twenty-eight
(211
Public Notice
Gen. Curtla Lemay, daya attar the leal
Velma Lemay Scherr, publication ol thle
Public Notice
The Melga County Lloyd Lemay, ~rd notice, which will be
Sub-committee for
Lamay, Methyll Lamay publtllhld once each
Kinnear,
Dor.. WMklor sl• conii8CuRound 19 SCIPILTP
Projecta wilt mae! Carpenter Dell, and tlve WMka. The laat
Miller pUblli:odlon wiH be on
lllureday October 7, Macel
2004 llf 10:00 A.M. at Schumaker, II living, November 3, 2004,
the Melgo County wlloae -.see are and the lwelity..,lghl
Commteelonere unknOwn to Ptetntlfl, (211 dllye tor aneOffice
In
the and with .....,.,.btl wttl commence on
CourthouM
on diligence cannot be - - · I n the event
of your failure to
Second Straet In launcl:
ANDTO:Tbe unknown a n - or too-Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Commlttae Ia com· hei......... tiglllll, wl• reapond ee
posed of~ ........ dlvl-•,
. , executora, raqidrad by the Ohio

Rules
Of
Civil
Procedure; Judgment.
by default witt be rendered on December
14, 2004, at 1:30 P.M.,
In the Motgs County
Common
Pleas

Court,

Probate

Division, 2nd Floor,

Courthouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Judge L. ScoU Powell
DATETORUN

9129
1016,13,20,27

1113

MO!iJS co ..nt~. o tt

In One Week With Us
"REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
•
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
'a!:rihune
Sentinel
Register
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 ' (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today.~.

O{ftee 11o~8'

Word Ads

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

r

ANNOUNCEMfNI'S

Ir
~

'

Reddtsh
brown
male
Dachshund.
1/2 yrs
Sale October 1st, 10am· old,last seen 10 Mtle Rd.
8pm Krodel C lub-House. Reward
(304 )895·1 890
Pt Pleasant.
Jewelry. (304)'674-5592
Bas~ets,
lnd1an
Oeco rat1ons, Fabnc, Toys,
Pictures,
Chnstmas
YARtJSALE
De corations. Fl owers &amp;
much Mtsc.

r

pn

Grv£AWAV

YARtJSALEGALLIPOLIS

Giveaway. Cats &amp; krttens. 1 2 m1les ou1 Route 218
Bottle fed Calico
Gall Sept 29·30 Oct. 1·2
(740)256·1092.
2 yard sales Fn·Sat. Oct. 1·
(740)992· 2 Out Georges Creek Ad &amp;
Hosprtal bed
McCully Ad oil 7
2509

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

In Ne xt Day•s Paper

Publication

Sunday In -C olumn: 1:00 p.m .
' rl&lt;l•v For Sundays Paper

Sunday Display: 1:00 p .m.
Thursday for Sundays Pa

• All ads must be prepaid'

Trlbun•Sentlnei-Regllltr will be responsible tot no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the ettor and only the tlrtl inaertion We aha II not btl liable
any lou or expenn that r..una from the publication or omlatlon of an advertiMmant. Corractl on wtll be made In the firs t available edtlton. • Box number
are aiwa~a conti!Hintial. • Current rate card applies. • All real eatate ad~"\rtleementa tre aubjeet to the Federal Fair Hou&amp;ing Act of 1968 . • Thia
acceptS onl~ help wanted ada meeting EOE ttlndtrda. We will not knowln!)ly accept an~ advert iatng in violation of the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARilSALEG.~LLIPOLL~

lwri~ht@ic . net

Big yard sa te Sat Oct 2, 8·
5. 520 Ball Run Rq . off
Skidmore Ad. Tools. dishes
some antiques, lots of mtsc

fam•ly yard sale 5170

St At 850. Bidwell '8·5,
Octgber 1·2·3 (740 )388·
16 18

b

•

.

Garage Sale 59 Texas Road
8 30 to 5.00 Jhur. Fn . Sat
9/30 through 10/2
Kittens, liner tra1ned. &amp; 7 3 fam ily garage sa le·
months old cat lnstd e only Oc tober 1 &amp; 2. 271 McCully Garage sate. Fri &amp; Sat. 614
Rd. 1 1/4 mrles of Route 7 At 325 So Rto Grande
(740)446-3897.
•
Bopks, dishes , kttchen Adult clothtng , collectibles,
losT ANIJ
·ttemS. Iamps. b'tcyc Ie. 1oIs oI furnitu ro.
glassware .
..__ _ _
FiiOUNiiiiiitll_ _,. clothtng, Including plus siz e Pfaltzgratf stoneware tw1n
..,
&amp; mens Amencan Eagle. , bedspreads. books shoes,
Found small black dog on baskets, magaztnes
oaby &amp; household Items
Union Campground Ad has 3 famtly yard sale Fn &amp; Sat.
Nadine/Jason in Hartlord on 10/ 1-10/2. 9am-? 225 Texas Huge sale 4 family Sept 29·
30·1 Oct Good cloth ing art
collar (304)682-3461
Ad (740)256·6005
s1zes. househOld ttems. fur·
Golden Retriever found rn 4 family garage sale Oct. 1· ntture 9·4. 101 8asltanl Ave .
the Pr Pleasant, Gall1poi1S 2, 9·5 7-112 m11es ou t 218 to
Huge yard sale Off Blauen
Ferry area (304)675·6023
16 Rock L1ck Lan e.
on Swan Creek Pd 1st
Lost mostly blac~ M1nl·
house
, 3 fa mlltes Name
4 fam ily yard sale 64
Pincher,
male.
on
brands.
Infant and toddler.
Sycamore St. Sept 30. Oct.
Applegrove-Dorcas Road A
boys &amp; g1rls clothes vanous
1-2 9 00-5'00
Middleport lady found and
stzes 10 womens. etc Ratn
was looking for owner on Baby clothes. toys, movtes. or Sh1ne. Oct 1-2
2-ST
ect
20 18
Friday ntght Grandson's pet kids
Call
(740)949-2546
or Centenary Rd. bes1de T J. s ln s1de &amp; Outside Moving
Sale 97 HOi teysuckle Drive,
(740)949-8011
Fri -Sat. 9·?
Ad\11son , 1 block oft 7 N, Fn
1011 thru Sun 1013. 9arn·
6pm Every'lhtng must gol
Sunday 50% off. (740)367·
4x4's For Sate ................................... ........... 725
0868
Announcement ...................... :..................... 030

Gallipolis Career College
(Carems Close To Home)
Call Todayt 740·446-4367
' 1·800·214-0452
WNW ge.liiPOitscareercoliege com
Accre01ted MemDer Accredtllng
CCM.mctl lor independent Collegss
and

Scl1ool!&gt; 12746

•

170

MISCfllANEOl&gt;S
High
School
Juntors,
Sen1ors and Pnor Servtce
you can It'll vaca;1t poslt1ons
in the West V1rg1nia Army
Nat1onaJ Guard. ll you are
between th e ages of 17·35
or have prior m1htary servICe, you won't want to pass
thts up. For Opportunittes m
your area. call· 304-675·
5837

Seeking 39 People
Locally

r:'

CLASSIFIED INDEX

10

IN•;rnucno~

,...-------...,-----~w~'ww. comics .com

Clay . Townhouse Lovers
Lane Oct 1·2 McCart y.
Barnes. Donne!.
F tve

~--Hiii&lt;ll&gt;~iii!
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:~...,_.~
~
FOR S•LE
~ --Hiiiiooii'iilltiii
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ScnOOt.s

\i'S M'l fAVO!ZXfEZ
ANIMAL.- CH!.r-iN£&lt;1.- REAL!'f'f
&lt;71-1-oW, ... ~A"f' liY~ foFL
-r~-~~ ~ 6ti.J'f. "

Church Sale. Saturday. Oct.
2. at Gr1ffm's located At 7
N .. Kanauga Somethtng fo r
eve ryone · Ra1n or Shine.

© 2004 by NEA, Inc .

who want to earn money
while losmg wetght showing
others how
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180

~

74

YARn SAI.E~

·

POi\ti•::RO\'/MJI)()LE

Fa ll cteanout sale· one day
on ly. Oct. 1st. ratn or shine.
34 1 , Rutland
Street,
Middleport sqmethtng lor
everyone
Frt, Sat. Oct 1st-2nd, 9~
4pm,
108
Pearl
St ,
Middleport Ohto. m-std e.
rain or shme

Beg1nning Adult · Children
P1ano
Lessons,
More
I ntoCtston
Management
lnformatton (304)675·1038
Corp. is currently accepting
appltcatiOns for Fuii·Ttme
For all your Home ProJects
Dayshlfl pOSi hOnS (8a-5p) . and Repa1 rs Early, late . b1g
Qualified applicants should or small. Call lhe Handyman
be stable, highly mot1vated
(30.4)593-36 11 '
Land tn Gallt:l County lridivtduals with good com·
WOods and hills fme Wtll do mumca110n skills We otter a Georges Portable Sawmtll,
dozer work for property lull beneftts package and don't haul your logs to the
401K. No previous eKpert· mtll JUSt call 304·675·1957'
(740)388-8228
ence necessary We are the
I \ll' \. 0\ \ II\ I
professiona l dJfference m Housecleamng $10 a Hr
...,1 !{\ II I ...,
teleservices and need great (740)446-3385

Absolute Top Dollar lJ S
Silver and Gold Cams
Proofsets Gold R1ngs, U S
Cu rrency,-M TS Com ShOp,
151
Second
Avenu e
Galllpolts, 740-446-2842

Garage sa le· d1nette set.
ln s1de garage sa le Some tires, Nintendo w1th games.
furmture , lots of other Items gas g nll clothes, m1sc .,
1467 Jackson Ptke, Fnday County Ad. 19 ott 33
towards Athens , Oct 1st,
9·5
'f{UP WANTI:O
2nd, 4th, 5th. ·
Oct 1·2·4 end of year clear·
' ar1ce Home lntenor, furni- Mise ttems 1262 Church An Excellent way to earn
ture , clothes, 1 mtle below St . Syracuse. Fr1 1st, Sat money The New Avon
2nd. Sam-?
dam.
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645

O.r ol;der·? ·· ·

If so, you qualify for a
'

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
.·SUbscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out·the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a.,
copy of your photo ID.

Antlquea ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ............. :..................... 44.0
team players to JOtn usl
Auction and Flea Market.. ...........................080
Jim's Ca rpen try &amp; Small
Interested
' Candtdates
Auto Parts &amp; Accessorl~s .......................... 760
Landscaping Ca ll (740)446·
please call 1-877·463·6247
Auto Repair ................................................... 770
2506
ext 1901 or apply onhne
Autos lor Sate .......................... , ................... 710
WWW jntocjsjon com
Wtll clean house SB/hour
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sate ............................. 750
, avatlable
References
Bu lidIng S~pplles .................................. ...... 550
ltUie
John's
Cttgo Preferably tn town or
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Centenary, now acceptmg Gallipolis
area .
Call
Business Opportunlty................................. 210
OctOber 1·2. 10am-? 938 Moving Sale Friday, October AVONI All Areasl To Buy or applications for the following
(740)446-2977
Business Training ....................................... 140 . Morgan C~nter Ad . Bidwell 1st and Saturday, October Sell Shirley Spears 304· po SIItOns· Full time experl·
2nd
Dave / Bee~!
Ball
Campers &amp; Motor Homes •.'...:..................... 790
Someth1ng for everyone ..
675-1429.
enced Deli Clerk, Full time W11f S1t &amp; Care lor Elderly
Broadway Street. R9clne.
Camping Equtpmen,l ........................, .......... 780
Cashier:
Part
time Call Bev al (304)675· 1084
Sunbeam mt)Cer. glassware, Ohto
Carpenters wanted set
Cards of Thonks .......................................... 010
Deli/cashier. Ta ~1ng appllca· Have references
books, collec l tbles, toots,
Posts &amp; Trusses for Pole
Chltd/Eiderty Care ....................................... 190
girls clothes (sizes 4·7). Octob8r 1st &amp; 2nd Fnday 9· Barns, some Tra11el requ ired tions Mon-Fri at Locat1on.
Will
s11
w1th
elderly.
Etectrlcai/Relrlgeratlon ...............................840
adult clothes &amp; coats Fn &amp; 5 Saturday 9·2. Toys, boo~s. call (937)7 18· 1471
MAIN STREET JE WELRY DaY/Night Weekdays/week·
Equipment lor Rent.... ..................................480
Sat 8 00. 2677 Rou te 141 , video!; , boys clothes 8· 12,
looking lor 8 el1g1ble people ends
Have references
Excavall ng ................................................... 830
OaUtbase Coordinator
Centenary
g1rls 5-8 household. crafts,
Must be sales oriented Many years ot experience
Farm Equipment.......................................... 61 0
adult clothes 101 Holly
Small mvestment. (740)742· (740)949·2543
Thurs. &amp; Fri 2 1/2 mtles east
Farms lor Ront ............................................. 430
Duties Involve keying
Lane. near Meigs Chmc
2418.
---,----,:--I
·
of
Porter
on
554
.
Farms lor Sate ............................................. 330
retail price Information
Wood's Extra Care lor your
For Lease ..................................................... 490
a
database. Make 50% sell1ng Avon . Loved one. Pnvate room·
Yard Sale Oct 1. Toddler October t st and 2nd. 9 00· Into
5.00 3 1am1ty ya rd sale. Information Includes mer- Limi ted
For Sate ........................................................ 585
time
ONLY. bath, 3 hOt meals Phone
clothing , car seats mise 9·?
For Sate or Trade .........................................590
Chlldtens
t~s and clothtng.
chandlse unit price, Item (74o)446_3358 First 5 to call (740)388·01 t8.
t m11e Out 218 @ Haner's
Antiques Intersection of description, quantity, pur· receives a g tt .
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
1
Yard Sale Saturday onl y, Ohto Stat e Route 143 and chase
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
orders,
data -~~..:..._ _ __
Ctmn'EU&gt;EIILY
Oct. 2. Household ttems, old State Route 346. Albany changes, new 11endor
Ganeral Haul lng ...........................................850
CAKE
Need a job?
baj:ly-adult
clothes,
Glveaway ......................................................040
Information. Muat have
we are hir1ng!
Longaberger. curtams, 11 52 Plus sizes, k1ds. Xmas varl·
Happy Ada....................................................050
good visual an'd m8ntal
You could earn up to
Accepting appllcattons for''
2nd Ave.
ety of thing s, Fnday Oct.' 1,
Hay 1o Graln..................................................640
coordination, be able to
$8/hr plus bOnuses
care of elderly in my home.
Saturday Oct 2. Yellow Bush
Help Wanted .............,................................... 11 o
key accurately and with we also oHer paid tratntng, Pnyate rooms, nutniiOUS
4·
YARD SALERoad, Racine . quality items
Home lmprovemanls ...................................81 0
production IPMd, have
holidays, and vacatio ns.
meal planning, 24 hour care
l'oMEROYiMIDDLE
working knowledge of
Fun or part time shifts
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
w1th 20 years of expenence
. y ARtJ SALEWord
and
avf1!abla
HouHhotd Goode ....................................... 51 o
740-446 ·7855
8am-3 PM
tst &amp; 2nd , 9am-5pm , no
Pr. PlFAsANf · 1. Mlcroaoh
Microsoft Office . Sand
Call Todayl
Houseolor Rent .......................................... 410
early
b~rds,
furntture.
reaume
and
talary
1·877-463·6247 ext 2454
In Memoriam ................................................020
an11ques
&amp;.
collectabl
es. 769 2 Family Yard Sale 2514 Mt requlremen1s to: TSC-24
lnaurance ...................... :.............................. 130
Vernon
lots
of
stuff
Short 4th Ave . by McOlure's.
&amp;
E MT's
200 Main St., Pt. Pleasant, Paramedics
Lawn 1o Garden Equtpment........................ 660
Bus!NJ'li&lt;;
Thur/Fri/Sat.
in Middleport (no checks) .
needed
Apply
at
1354
wv
25550
Llvealock ...................................................... 630
OPI'OtmJNITY
Jackson Pike, Galltpolls
Loat and Found ........................................... 080
Garage·Sale Expenenced with cake dec·
5 family yard sale. Sep) 29· 3-Family
Fnday-&amp;-Saturday
Oct
Lata 1 Acreage ,...........................................350
1st.
&amp;
Oct. 1, 362 16 Rockspnng s
orating.
Please
call Part ttme tax preparers
"' "V"'-&lt; 01
. Mlacelteneo~e .............................................. 170
Ad , table &amp; chairs, Inside 2nd, 9am until ? 350-Bro"NM (740)992·5129
needed lor buiy 18)1 oHice, OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Mlacellaneoua Merchandlse ....................... 540
doors, all s1:ze cloth ing &amp; Lane, Apple Grove, WV
Pomeroy location We will NG CO recommends tha
Full time Front Dpsk Clerk.
Mobile Home ReRalr .....................,..............860
mise
tram
Computer
skills vou do business with peo
4-Famllles
Bunk·Beds.
person
Holiday
Inn,
Apply
m
Mobile Homealor Rent ............................... 420
requ1red Send resume to:
le you know, and NOT to
Basement Sale Tuppe rs Stereo &amp; lots-of-mtsc 3rd· 577 St Ai. 7N. No Phone
Mobile Hamel for Sate ................................320
The Daily Sentinel, PO Bo;~~
end mone~ through the
Plains
St. Paul U.M House on the right·above calls please
Money to Loan ................................ :............220
729·13
Pomeroy, OhiO mad until you have lnvestl
Church October 1st '9AM· · the Y on At62·South Thur
Motorcyclea lo 4 Whaelera .......................... 740
Full/parltme Paramedics. 45769
aled the offering.
7PM. October 2nd, 9AM· 9to?
Muelcat tnatrumentt .:................................. 570
2PM Clothing, books, dish· --'-~~~~~­ $9/hr , part-t1me EMlJ'·B's,
POSTAL JOBS
·Your Personal Treasure Map
Personate .....................................................005
es, furnllure , anct mise 1tems Back Yard Sale 2221 $7/hr, lor 12 and 24·hr .
S14
62·$20
92/hr,
Now
htr·
internet
Profits .
10
Pelt lor Sate ........................... :.................... 560
shihs
Apply
Mason
Co.
Jefferson , N1ce Clothes.
Plumbing lo Healtng ............................-........ 820
Bill Cross residence. 806 Household 1tems.a Beddtng, EMS, PO Box 34 Point ing For applications &amp; free www uprofttflrst comiQeal _.
government job Info, call
or cal l (304)675·118i
Profeaatanal Sarvlcee ................................. 230
PiCken, St , Rac1 ne, Oh1o. Rugs, Furni ture Thur Fri Sat Pleasant, WI/ ·, 25550,
American Assoc. of labor 1'1!:1"'""::"_ _ _ _ _,
girls clothing tor summer &amp;
Redia, TV 1o CB Repair .............................. 160
(304)675·6134
t -913-599-8042 , 2~ hrs.
fall , all k1nds of sizes. gtrls lnstde-Sale 2400 JeHerson
Reat Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
f230 I'RoFEssiON.U
emp serv
Sf.llVI~
coat &amp; snoes all s1zes, Oct Ave . Pt. PI:. WV. Thurs &amp; Fri NurSing ASSIStant Classes
Sclloota Instruction .., ................................. 150
Sept 30th &amp; Dct- 1st: ' 8-2 beginning October 4, 20,
1·2 ..
'
~~-------_.1
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertlllzar .............................. 650
Bes1de Wendy's, Ant+ques, 2004 thru October 20, 2004 Substitute RN/lflN wanted
Situations Wanted ....:.......................,.......... 120
illflJRNED DOWN ON
Carport sale- Oct 1st &amp; 2nd, Pictures, Men &amp; Women's fl you enjoy elderly people tor the Me1gs Co unty Board
Space for Rent ............................................ ,460
and
want
to
become
a
mem·
of
Mental
retardation
and
SOCIAL
SECURITY ISSI?
9am·5pm . 918 S 3rd, SM &amp; Plus clothes. Jr, Gtrl
Spontng Goods ........................................... 520
No Fee Unless We Wtn '
Middleport. books . toys, clothes. Toys, Books, Home ber ot our health care team, DeveloPmental Disabilities
suv·a for sate .............................................. 120
clothes, beddtng. tr ':Jis. lnt . Scrapbookmg-Supplies. please stop by R~nngs Hours 9am-3pm Must have ·
1 -888·582·3345
Truck&amp; lor Sale ............................................ 715
1~ 1 \ 1 1 ... 1\11
Rehabilitation Center at current AN license tn the
kn1ck~nacks low prices.
TV. Coats. Chma. Ytsc.
Uphotatery ................................................... 870
36759 Aockspnngs Road. Stat&amp; ot Ohio Prefer expen·
, Vena For Sate...............................................730
Church Garage Sale. 39558
AucnOJ'l M'D
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and fill ence tn publtc health nursing
Hm115
Bradburry rld . Middleport. •
. Fl.EA l\tARKET
· Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
out an apptictition for the ant11or workin g with childrsn
FOR
SALE
September
301h l0ctober
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppltes ...., .............. 620
cl asses.
and adults w1th developmen2nd.
g·Q0-2
00
M1sc
ttems
,.
W.nled To' Do .............................................. 180
Health · tal disabihlles. Send resume
RIVERS IDE
AUCTION Extendicar e
(2) 3 bedroom houses tor
and clolhtng
W.nted to Rent ........................................ ,... 470
SerVICes.
Inc.
IS
an
equal by Friday September 3rd to': sale 2 baths. fireplaces. 011
BARN AI 7 South, 5 mileS
Yard Sate- Gattlpolls....................................072
last one of year, new stuff below the Dam . EVERY opportuntty employer· that MCBMROD, 1310 Carleton
Call (740 l7° 9 ·
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middte ......................... 074
'!orkp!ace Street, PO Box
307, acreage
added, 786 Hysell St . SATURDAY
@
6pm. ~[lCOura ges
1166
Yard Sate-Pt. Pteiaant ................................ 076
Syracuse, Oh 45779
diversity M!F DN
Thursday. Fnday. Salurday. (740)256·6989.
1

rw

r

I

I

r6

iiiiDiiiill

c65allipoli• JBailp Utrtbune
~oint · .-lea•ant B.egh~ter
The Daily Sentinel

L'o

6unbap «tme• -6eittinel
~-------------------~-- · --------Subscriber's Name - - , ::-------Address

L

.,,

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

r

Phone_-'----,---- - - - - - - - - - -

,
Mall or drop off thla coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O_ Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

------------------------------'

I,

4

POLICIES: Ohio Yallay Pubtlahlng ruervea the right to adlt, reject, or cancel any ad at any ttme. Error• must be reported on the l ir11 day of publicatton ood lhol

• St•rt Vour Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descrlptlbn • Include A Price • Avoid AbbrevlatioflS
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

losTANO
FOUNIJ

Now you con have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{, ;
.m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00forlorge

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1 : 00 p . m.
Monday·Frlc:lay for Insertion

Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

0 eaciiJire.f'.

I

I

0% Down Payment and
f1nancmg avatlable w1th
approved credtt
Average
credit qualtfies you If dowt1
payment has ~ept you from
buytng, thts ts your chance
to own your own home If
you have a dowr pnyment
but would like to conserve.tt ,
we ofler low down payment
programs also Great tnter·
est ratest Local company
Mortgage
locators
(740)992 7321

House 3 Bedroom t 1/2
Bath Hea1 Pump
new
Carpet Wmdows &amp; Roof
Rtve r Vtew 12 Smtih St No
Money Down IQ qualtly1ng
Buyer $425/month why Rent
(304)675·2749

A Allordable 2·Bedroom
Home . Everythmg new
PoSSible no Money down to
qualifytng Buyers (304)674·
5 111

1987 14x70 mob1le home 3 .
bedroom. 2 bath some fur-·
ntture &amp; aopltances $8.500.,
Call [740!245·9040

House tor sale by owner 4-+
bedrooms 2.5 baths. large
coun1ry kttchen I' 5 story 2·
car attached garage. plus
two
large
outbuilding!:.
Blacktop dnveway. many
e~ l ras 5129.000 w1th 713
acre let. cir $159.000 With an
3 bed ~oom bnck front
addtt tonat14B5 acres olllat
Ranch Newer roof v 1nyl
ground Very close to town .
heat
pump.
Smtths
on Spruce St ell ten ston
Cabtnets. 1 car garage pn·
Cali (740)591·0437 anyttme
vate lane ott SR HiD 1 8
acres . $92,000 (740)388· House tn Kanauga . Old
8676
Farmers Ad Gall:polts. Oh ·
540 000 2 tra1ters Krodel
·on
Neal
Ad
3 bedroom ful l basement, Par~
mvestmont
garage approx 1 acre ol $675/month
hatters
$35 ,000
land, 5 mtles from town on Both
SR 7 @ Ftve P01nts. call (740)441·5725
740-416·0768 or 304·882·
One new custom built home
2299
28x56 on 4 5 acres mil
S85.000 One 1 t /2 story
5 bedroom house. Pomeroy home &amp; 3 bay garage w1th
(town). 314 acre new root . an apartment above Both
wtndows, Cia, lurnace. s1d· IOI
$115.000
060
mg. porch. tns ulation 3/4 (740 )388-8273
remodeled , no land contract
$58,000 OBO, (740)208·
MoHJJ.t: Hom,,
7080
'
H)R S\1.[

,\l"fENTtON!
GET '{QUA LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOME t
"FREE " APPROV ED
HOME LOANS '
NEW PURCHASES1
REFINANCES
SO DOWN/ SO DOWN
CASH OUTt HOME
IMPROVEMENTS NO
CREDIT! BANKRUPTCIES
WELCOME'
UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1·800-370·4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY U.S.
VETERANS
MB 5263

1989 3 bedroom. 2 bath
14ll70 Completely remod ·
eled tn srde 740·256·1526 or
740·645·0446.
1992 Southern Elite Mobile .
Home 16ll70. 2 bedroom 2
bath, some appliances
S9 900 Call 17 40)949·201 1
1993
Manston
Mobt!e
Home·14X60 2 bedroom t
bath to ta l electriC good
condttton. central atr stove .
re!t~gerator and mtctoWave
mcluded ,
$8.500 00
(740)9 49·9016
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom
mobile homes startmg at
5270 per month Call 740·
992-2167
Make 2 payments move tn 4
years on note (304) 736·
3409
New

G:t

All real esrate advertising
in thla newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatton baaed on
race, ector, religion , au
familial atatus or national
origin, or·any Intention to
make any such
preteranca, limitation or
discrimination ."
Thla nawsp.tper w ilt net
knowingly accept
advarttsementa for real
estate which is In
vlolatlcn of the lew. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that aU
dwelling• advartlaed in
thla new1papa:r are
available on an equal
opportunity basea.

Oa~wood

mega sto{e
Homes
Oakwood
Fleetwood &amp;
G1les One stop shopptng
only at Oakwood Homes ol
Barboursvtlle WV (304)736·
3409

by

~a tvtmg

Next to new 2000 Redman
16X80 3 bedroom/2 bath .
vtnyl s1dtng/single roof tully
loaded. S27 900 00 Can
help wtth deltvery Ask for
NtkkJ {740)385·9948

'
Nice 14X52 94 Flem1ng. 2
bedroom shingle roof , Lot
100X120
m
Sytacuse .
(740)992·5888
SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock models at old pnces,
2005 models amvtng Now.
Cole 's
Mob tle
Homes.
15266 US 50. East A11hens.
Oh10 45701 , (740)592·1972.
·Where You
Get Your
Moneys W6rtt1"

Small Vtnctate 'Mobile Home.
needs liOOr repa1red &amp; car·
pet Rest of home tn good
condillan New water heater
~~~~~~~­ Pnce 52 .500 (304)675-3000
For Sale or Rent New 3 Leave Message
bedroom. 2 bath home on
2.86 acres 25 mtnutes tr'om
F.•.Rr.t~
Aihens,
Pomerdy
or
Gallipo lis. Alexander or
Metgs Schools $93 ,000 Putnam Farm and 3BA
{740)698•35o4
House
2BA . basement.
new roolflurance . central atr.
For' Sale or Rent· New 4 43 acres. fenced , barn wtlh
bedroom, 2 bath home on water electrtcity. concrete
14 4 acres. 25 m1nutes from floors
13
mtles from
Athens .
Pomeroy
or Buffalo/Kenna
$173 .500

i._.....,;,;FORiiiiiSiiiiiiALE......I.

14;,;4.:.
3lc,7,;;
45i::·~
7 7~B:':4:.-::---,
Gal't ?olis. Ale•ande r ·or iMeigs Schools S115 000
(740)698·3504

'SHOP

-H-om~
••~-fr-o-m~--

- ,
0
5 10- 00

Forclosure. VA Htid fOr list·
tf1g 1·800·749·8106 ex 17.09

CLASSIFIEDS.

�(

·I

Wednesday, September 29, 2004
ALLEYOOP

ww'!'.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip

t

6
11

Alder

13
14

Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
Yard &amp; Bake Sale
Saturday, October 2, 2004
Come one and all!
Proceeds to I
fund.

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt. starting
at
$290/month . deposit
ation
ami
hunting.
required
No peta. WD
$99,500.00 Call (740)742hookup. {740)441-1184
2637
L,and on McCormick. Rd: 2
large lots 1/2 acre each
(more or less) EleCtric ·and
water on one suitable tor
'building or mobile home
(740)367-7886.

r

r.:r

Hous~

FOR RFJ\'T

0% Down Payment and
financing available With
approved cred1t. Average
credit qualifies you. If down
pe;yment has ~ept you from
buying, this ls your chance
to own your own home. 11
you have a down payment
but would like to conserve it,
.. we offer low down payment
- programs also. Great 1nterest rates! Local companu.
1
Mortgage
Loca tors.
(7:40)992·7321 ,

1 bedroom house $250/mo.
2 bedroom house $350/mo.
4 bedroom house $450/mo.
Deposits negotiable.
14K65, mobile home averything InCluded. excellent
BEAUTIFUL
APART~
· condi tion , $4.000. (740)446MENTS
AT
BUDGET
4854.
PRICES AT JACKSON
· 1 bedroom
house m ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Gallipolis
$350/month
Drive !rom $344 to $442..
deposit required . (740)441·
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
1184.
740-446·2568.
Equal
Housing' Opportunity.
2 story Colonial 3 bdrm. 1
bath . Gas heat. Cntrl AJC. CONVENIENTLY LOCAl~
$600 mo. (740)446-3481
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
3 bedroom house 4 miles Townhouse
apartments,
lrom Holzer. $400 mo. plus and/or small houses FOR
sec. deposit and references , RENT. Call (740)441·1111
No. pets. 740.446-6865 or for application &amp; information .
740·446·6189.
Graciousliving.t and2bed·
3 bedrOom house lor rent in room apartment~ at ,VIllage
PomerOy. HUD approved, Manor
and
Riverside
$500/month plus deposit. Apartments in Middleport
Call (740)388·0435.
From $295·$444. Call 740·
bedroom
house.
Water
fur·
992-5064.
Equal Housing
3
Opportunities.
nished, no pets, $450 ----~---month . $400 deposit. Call Huge claan. 3 bedroom, 1
(740)245·5064
bath, dining, storage, aprox.
bedroom,
Oath,
Mason
,
2,500 sq. fl . No pets/smok·
3
1
WV. Remolded, gas heat, ing, $610 . · Call Kelly
CIA, 545 o.OO/month plus (740)446-9961.
deposit.
(740)698-7002
(740 )590 _41 23
New 1 bedroom apt. Phone
(740)446-3736.
3 br. 120 Howard St. New _ _.:________
One bedroom apartment.,
Haven WV. $350 month +
in
Pomeroy,
deposit Rental application &amp; no pets.
1740)992-585"0
ref. required 1-vr
min.
lease
'
(304)415-0585

ru11~
r~~

One bedroom garage apart·
U1..J\.JUl
._
Condo 3 bdrm 2 baths. w/ ment. , ~itchen
furnished,
9
Horton Crossbow
with
basement. View of river $4 OO, (740) 92·3823
quiver and arrows. Great
mo. Pleasant Valley Apartment shape. $200. (740)379·
Cntrl
A/C
$700
G•llipolis Ferry. 17401446 · Are now taking Applications 2601.
3481.
for 2BA, 38 R &amp; 4BA., - - - - - - - - nvRENrn~·~
.
Applications
are
taken Set of new Golf clubs with
u..r..
~
Monday thru Friday, from carrying case. (740)388·
18
9:00 AM.· 4 P.M. Office Is i8~
;8;;· _ _ _ _ _ __,
Located at 1151 Evergreen
14x70 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath , Drive Point Pleasant, WV
ANriQu&amp;s
\
QIA, no pets, $450 &amp; Phone No Is (304)675-5806.
deposit Call (740)446·4824. E.H.O

C

M~

I

1Bedroom Trailer in Letart.
Townhouse
WV.
s-miles
from Ta ra
Moun .talneer-Piant. Apartments, Very SpaCious,
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
Furnished, all utilities paid,
so/month.
$
SO/deposit
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
3
3
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
3041882
(
2858
•
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
2 bedroom, 2 bath. quiet Pets. Lease Plus Security
seHing, city· water, natural Deposit Required , . DayS:
gas, no pets, $400, refer· 740·446·3481; Evenings:
ences. {740)446-6890.
740-367.0502.

s

i

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

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

•
•

2
K J

•

108 743

"'K8 654

(740)385·767~

•
•

18

na

Dish washer $150. like new.
83 Blazer, 4 wheel drive. Ask
for Jr. (740)256-1102 .
---'--'-----Exercise Bike $15 , U~e new
Smith Coron·a Deville 700
Electric Typewriter $20 •

o

c

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete .
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
· For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; WalkwaYs. L&amp;L
Scrap 'Metals Open Monday,
Tues· dav, Wednesdav &amp;
'
1
Friday. aam-4·30pm. Closed

Thursday, . Saturday
Sunday. (740)446-7300

&amp;

Black Lab puppies.
Shots, wormed &amp; dew claws
removed . $300. (740)441·
0130.
---------AKC LabradQr Retrievers.
Parents
field/waterfowl
trained. Very family oriented.
Shots &amp; wormed. 740·9e:B·
4081
uttilab@mall .ohiohills.net
---------CKC Regi stered Golden
Retrievers. 6 weeks old,
$250 female , $200 male.
Call (740)388-0435. .
k
i
•
oc er
pane 1 pup, 3
months, registered, $250.
(740)441-9894.

c

s

Full blooded St. Bernard
puppies lor sale, $200. Call
(740)379-2605.
::_::,::~.::.:.:.::.:_ _ __
Old English sheepdog Pl,IPS.
lovable. shaggy dogs, first
shot &amp; wormed, price $250,
call (740)985·9623

r

MUSICAL

l...o-IRu•·•L'~-""

'"u:.~ "' 1 "

1.1'0

2000 GMC Jimmy Blazer
$6,500; 2000 Chev S-10
Blazer . $6,500; 99 Dodge
Durango $7.200; 2000 Chev.
S· 1-0 OK. cab $5 ,500; 98
Olds Bravada $3.900;95
Dodge ax. cab PU $2,500;
96 Dodge work van $S50; 00
Dodge Neon $2,600; 99
Mazda $2.500; 98 Ford
Explorer ·as is" $2,800; 96
Ch-·. Lumo·na van ·as .,, .
.,.
$950.
8 &amp;. D Auto Sales
Hwy 160 N
(740'"~-~o~s

_(9'!3!"7)•5•59··~838~5--.;..-, ~
BlllL.DING

'

"·- _
.:rurrL11'..3

,

liNDA'S PAINTING

,.....-.v-vuv

j

4X4

'\

South

1997 Ford F-~50 4x4 Lariat,
114K . .black, leather interiar,
c/d player, $9,200 OBO,
(740)992·2932

r .Fo~A~Ul

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month
g20

Ea~l

~ii:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
AUIOS
-,
FOR SALE
.._ _ _iiiiiiiiliiiii;,w
1986 Chrysler New Yorker.
Body good, interior good.
Needs motor wOrk. 2.2 Turbo
$400.00 (740)992-2306.

FlO

~

'··.
'

.

A~'.s'

NO

ll/Y\Of'

\JPPJNG

East

4•

p.,s
All pass

38
39

40

42

ahd art
historian, said in an interview, ~The lesson!! taught In great books are mislead~
ing.·
Doas this imply that ondga book&amp; cannot
be great unless they are full of errors?
Monday, I gave a deal In which the declar·
. er, kn6wing from the auction that West
had to have the spade ace, offered East a
little 10pe and he hanged his partnership.
But East should have known that South
knew·he. couldn't have the spade ace and
delended accordingly. Today's deal Is on
the same theiT)e. Do you see any way lor
South to fail In lour hoorts a~er Weet
leads his singleton spade?
II North had taken a shot at three no·
trump, he might - or might not - have
made
But bidding lour hearts is "normal."
East won with the spade king, cashed lhe
spade ace, and continued with the spade
three, his lowest·remaining card being a
suit-preference signal for clubs.
Suppose West ruffs with the heart jack .
then shifts to a low club. This will mark
West with the heart king . Why? Because
assum ing East has a club honor, if he. had
the heart king as well, he. would have
opened one spade. So, declarer should
play a trump to his ace. hoping that the
king will drop. (AisG, if West's hearl jack is
a Singleton . East's kingtfourth cannot be
pocked up.)
To deflect declarer, West should ruff with
the heart king . nen, surely South will
place East with jack·fourlh of hearts; he
will run the heart 10 on the .first round of
the suit and go down.

(WINf',WINf'.)

'

Advertise
in this
·space for $1 00
per month.

'

•. •

.. '.

...

'·

Neon, e.g •
Propane
Wry lace
Lobslor

3 Climber's

23 Respect

challenge

24 Grumble

46 LP
sucC!!!SSors

4 Be rife with

25 Predica-

47 Allc;JW to

5 Fabric edge
ments
6 10661oser 28 Busch

43

7 Fuddyduddy
possum
8 Hubbub
Beste lite
9 Abbot
incumbent 1 USCG officer
Pizazz
12 Pulp lree
Long time
13 Lacking
Whiz leader
color
Compulor
18 Old lhe floor
key
19 Oval-nest
Qui-of-date , builder
Speaker'•
20 Type ot tiger
pauaes
22 Debate
Bounce
loplcs

o

30

34
35

40

pass
• 48 Zsa Zoo's
of old
sister
movies
50 Heir, often
Opposing
51 Handy
Had a smick
.abbr.
Smiled
52 Actress
nastily
Ruby Explorer

-de leon

4t Vaulted
recess
43 Curls and
ringlets
45 Nursery
word

IT""""l'r-r.--.:-..,-

An~a Brookner, a British novelist

•

BARNEY

JA.nnette 1S
J{ouse Cka~ing Service
THE BORN LOSER

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

PI\':, G()()t) \0 R.Ut-1 \i'i.\0 '{OU ~

(

I'""~R£. \'%UIU:'&gt;! AA'IE. '{OUR."'I

SOf&lt;\E:
Tlti\E.I

Pt:.OPLE 1

PEOPLE Cf&gt;..LL II\'( PWPL-E.!

1\Fif.R. ::,0 LONGrTOI&gt;\! LE-\'Y
DO LUNW __.----.,

1·740-843-5382

P'"Uf-1 .· .. t {)Ot'\'1 MVE: NW

1

./

~

Pomc:roy

G

&amp; Push

Mowers. Chain Saw~.
Choin Shorpcncd

61V tNG

IMPORTS
Athens

Pick·up a1M.I delivery ~en• icc •

r
0

BUILDERS InC.

HoW M'\

supfosE.D

LITTLE EYES

0

Hill's Self
Storage

I

To CONCEN'TV.TE
WITH ITS 'BEAW

0

BISSEll

'

ME

THE WILLIES!

Now servictn Kerosene Heaters

SeH-Storage

.

THAT STUPID TI1.0LL
DOLL OF G INA'S . ""

Genera tin g System.' und
Rui-Air Air Cu mpn:ssurs
Open 8:30-~:00 M-F;
Sat. 8:30-2:00 992-1033

~~~
I High 8l Dry

1991 BMW KLT tOO, t,OOO
CC less than 25,000 actual
miles, $5,200. (740)2566796.

BIG NATE

&amp; Pans
New General Swndby

STARt.JG AT I1E &gt;

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

PEANUTS
W~AT

KIND OF= A
DID '&lt;OU WANT,
,. PIGPEN '' ? •

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

P~OTO

740·992·5232

WELL, IF IT'S 601N6 TO
SE A CAMPAIGN f'l.lOTO, I
FIGURED IT SHOULD HAVE
A D061N fL

•.

___ __

Dean Hill
1999
Nlssan
Ouest.
2003 Wolverine 4x4, Brand
Excellent condition. auto,
New, Ramps included
CO, 5 disc changer, A/C, fac·
$4,000 (3041675·361 3
tory power sunroof, new
tires, power seats, $7.500.
(740)388-6228.

t lloA::s~~ I

2000 Dodge Neon, air,
57,000 miles. $2,600 OBO. 1973 Tidecrafl15' boat w/65
.Mercury outboard. 0illy trail17401256-1233.
er $400.00 740
~2306
2000 Ford Explorer exc.
CAMPERS&amp;
condition, bladdgrey interior,
4 wheel drive, 98.000 miles.
$9,950. (740)446-6754.
1975
Dodge·360 motor
2003 Dodge Neon, 4 cyl.
hor:ne. Runs good. Was
auto, 11 ,000 miles, cruise,
$2,900.00. Windows broke
Hit, A!C, $7,000. (740)441·
out, now asking ·$1 ,200.00
0337 or (740)645-6153.

MOIUR HOMEJ&gt;

HOWARD l.
WR/TfSfl
diiRII
*IIIE
IIIITEIIIICE

New&amp;: Used
South Church St.

Ripley, WV 25271

..'.-

,CLUB
. SUNSHINE__;__

1-800-822-0417
-w.v·s #I Chevy, Pontiac. Buick.
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

_,
NO. ACTUAU.Y.

THERES MARTHA 11\l
HE.R NE.W CAR.. '.OJ
. S£E HE.R?

I tx)IU'T

Olds

•SUillSS·
I mEl
•frll Elllllllll•

1149-1415
rM AN
EMP"t"Y
GROCERY
eACK!

95 Geo Melro." Looks
naed motor, 43 mpg.
OBO. Call (740)645-0018.

TRUCKS

FORS:g

Pass

North

36
37

Try to mislead
a wise declarer

beside Lurry'.; Fruit Stand

1(7"4.;0,;;12;;5.;,6.-t.;,6.;,52;;..._ _,_..,

4 WM~;!.~

33

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

45760

Main St.

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
·windows, lintels, etc. Claude hay $1 6. ~1 Ford Tractor, (740)446-2342 asK for Paul.
Winters, Ala Grande, OH good condition $3,200. Ph. 98 D d C
.
Call740-245-5121 .
(740)446-7782.
good~ ~.o~~v~B~~· r~~~

F40

deep lhought 2 Bl9 Tan sch.
26
27
28
,29

3t Top. and oz.
32 Comic-strip

'

'l'erty'B BngbreB

Lawn Tractor

1995 DOdge Ram Van. 314
L- - - - - - - - . , l ton , 130,450 miles, $1,000
as is. Can be seen at the
Last year 2nd cut Round Gallipolis Dally Tribune. For
bale hay $6. New 2nd cut more
inforr:nation
call

mes-

8 4 3·

Opening lead : • 2

Warranty Repair •

GRAIN

'
(740)696-8211, Leave
sage.

Q9

- H n g t Tumbler's
SOUnd of
pad

2t
23

n.

1993 F-150 XLT supercab
4x4, 5.0 liter w/air, cruise, till
wheel, ps, pw, pi, w!llberglass topper, $5,500 OBO,
(740)742-2957

HAY &amp;

-A-o-un_d_ba_le_s_o_l_h_e_v_lo_r_s-ale-.

West

2•

FOR SALE ·

--

Pole · Barn 30x50x1UFT 2 year old Gelding horse, 1984 Chevy Conversion
$6395 . 1
·nc 1udas pa1nte
· d green , broke. Nlca do'sposl- Passenger Van. Very good
Metal , Plans, Instruction oo·on. 54" tall . $250.00 condition. 120,000 miles$2,000. (740)367-7284.
Book, Slider, Free Delivery 740)992·2306

i

Let me do it for youl

1'10111'"---~--...,

Gulbransen
Mastertone '--'-----~-Upright Piano tor sale. $600. 1997 Ford F-150. Lariat, 6Kt
_17_4_0_)4_4_6_·8_1_9_2._ _ _ _ cab, step-side, exc. condi·
lio n. 4·wheel drive. 812,000.
Story &amp; Clark Walnut Plano 740·367-7762 or 740·367·
with bench. 58" width 7272.
$1,000. (740}446-727 1.
2000 F350 Super Duty 7.3
Wurlitzer Piano. Excellent Diesel, 43,000 miles, .Dually,
condition
$900.
Call 4x4. extra clean, Stainless
(740)446-2684.
Staal Brush Guard &amp; Nurl
Bars, set up for Goose Neck
I \ll\1 ..,I 1'1'1 II "i
Hitch
$25,000
Firm
,\ I I\ I ..., I CIC 1,
(304)576-3259 '

~.,t__LI_wsroc
_ _K_.I

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

A
5

DOWN

18 Oater extras

claws

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: I)otb

Box 189
Middleport

740·11'1~•·:::t,LD'I
Ta~e

award
17 Culllmbar

"'J 92

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K-Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

$60 each Buggy wheels, ll!li!!!""--~PE~·•---, .,,..-_,TR,..U•CKS---..,
$5S each . Ph. (74 0) 44 5.
·--•FOiiiiiRiiiiSiiiArEiii
'iiio-.,l L---Fii'OKiiiioiiiSAL.Eiiiiiiio-.,l
1.

16

South
• J 10 7

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

.......:!~~.•~~

15

E~st
. AK643
• 7 5 2
• J 9 6·
"' Q 10

West

MONTY

Financial Services

8 padded church pews. t 2 ft.

Antique BoHle Show. West Ilriiii',;.;;:;,;;.~J'E~•,•,--...,
.~
St at8 Farm, Fa II
JUR SALE
Festival, Point Pleasant.
Oct 2 to 3 2004 Info
· ·
- ·
'
·
(740)992·5088
5 AKC Beagles, trained rabbit dogs, 2 started pups,
Buy or sell. Riverine excellent
blood
li ne,
Antiques, 1124 East Main (740)742·2728
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- AKC Blond lab pups. Shots,
992·2526. Russ Moore,
wormed $300. · {740)4410013 or (740)44 1-7333.
owner.

v·lrglma
··

871-2417

Hupp Insurance

1998 Weber Horse Trailer
38' w/shOwtime conversion.
3 horse trailer w!full living
quarters. Excellent condition. $25.995.00 call Harold

wv.

SPOrnon.rr

Bonanza Get

Sun. Closed ·

09-29-04

• Q 9 8 5
• 10 6
• A K Q2
"'A73

Henderson, WV

1974 Ford Bucket truck ,
$3.900. Call (740)44~-~725.

riO ·

r

Bring this coupon
Buy $5.011

MYERS PAVING

1976· M01or Home. $3,900;

Texas Instrument Scientific
CalculatOr $20, Compaq
CPresario
1270
Laptop.
omputer. Windows 98. 2
H
G D
ard rives: : 2·82 B, :
H~
1.20GB McAfee VIrus Scan,
-, '
U\.1\.JU"t
t60.0 MB ol Ram 30
Processor
Free Printer
Gibson refrigerator 31" wide, Carrying Case and Software
62"
high,
$100.
Call wlpurchase $300 call 458 ·
1"997 for more information ·
(740)388·8788.
Heatwave wood burner
Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
~nd stove . Have stove. pipe. and
accessories. $450 .00 OBO
Guaranteed.
Washers.
Dryers,
Ranges,
and (740)992·5006 Can leave
Refrigerators,· Some start. at _m'!e!!ss!l'o'g!!a~~~l'l'!~!"'l
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 I, Hot 1uo UISCOUnt uuuet.
Vine St , (740)446-7398
Grand Opening Sale
op . quality. warranlies.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark ~ilton ,
Flea Ma rke
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio. ~~ection c:;. Saturdays an(
(740)446-7444 1·677·830· llsundavs.'(606 )6ls-one
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
JET
cash. Visa{ Master Card .
AERATION MOTORS
Drive- a· little save alot:
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1.
Super single waterbed. 800 _537 _9528
$ISO. c _
all ( 74 o)446-~ 568 .
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair·675-7388·. For sale,
re-conditioned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera ·
tors, • gas and electric
ranges, air co nditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

DoorS

Sunday
Open 4:30

Early birds start
6:3o
Last Thuri;day of
every month
All pack $5.1MJ

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat 8:30-Noon

'-lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.l

i

&amp;

#lestockjng 1-a te i'rlodel $a h ·ag~
and Arter Ma.rkel Parts

_____.,

bedroom apt. uti lilies The Valley Apts . located in
included. $450 month, $300 Mason has openings tor 2
deposit. Call F40)992·2274. bd. and 3 bd. Applications
will
be
accepted
on
1br. Studio Apt. very clean, Tuesday's only !rom 9•3 81
furnished $325 . + Deposit 501 Shawnee Trail, Pt.
(304}675-2970
Pleasant. WV
675 _4900
Equal Housing Opportunity .
2 bedroom, stove, refrigera·
tor furnished . $150 deposit.
$275 rent . 34 112 Smithers Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
Street. Call (7401446 _9061 . ing applications for waiting
. list lor Hud·subsized, 1- br,
2 or 3 bedrOom apartment In apartment , 'call 675·€679
Middleport.
no
pars, EHO
\740)992-5858
Sn•cr
--------...-...,
Applications being taken lor L_ _ _FO_R_RilNI'
_ _ _,.I
very clean 1 bedroom in
country setting yet close to Boat &amp; Camper Storage
town. Washer. dryer. stove, Mason County Fair-Grounds
. I ded W t
d $8
f rid ge me
u
. a er an
. 00/per-Foo~ Sat &amp; Men
garbage included. Total elec· during Oct 9am·5pm nther
tric with AC. Tenant pay elec· limes by Appt . (304)675·
tric. $300 deposit, $375 per 5463
month . No pets. No sr'nok·
·ng
l . 740-446-2205 or 740.
446-9565 ask for Virginia.

BINGO 2171
Every Thursday

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

ments, furnished and unlur· ~l!""-------,
nlshed, security ' deposit
l~r~""!''="'
required, no pets, 740.992· ,
. APAKI'IIIENTS
MISCELLANEOUS
22, 8.
mK RJ-Nr
MEHC.'HANDISE
1

IH \I \I ..,

16

1 and 2 bedroom apart·

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.68 I Darwin, OH

North

44 Doess
bodom
Zoo barriers 46 Launders
Garden toot 49 Wiped oul
Dorman!
a file
Jr.mate'a
53 Gadget
hope
54 Take away
Elvis·
rank
birthplace
55 Fixed look
Pri!"Ciples
56 Twist or
Baseball
tango

~

f'

1..,

,r,,f

·
\[

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
1978 Dodge Truck, uses no
Oil, new Transmission, runs Unconditional lifetime guar-

. .

great, ToPper included antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
St ,275 (304)674-()()92
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
1990 Chev. 1 ton pick up. 0870, ROgers Basement
Clean &amp; nice truck. Call74(h Waterproofing.
441-o941 or 740-845-5946.

..,:;.-\

J

-

1

J

by Luis Campos
Celtbrlt)o Cptltr cryptograms are t:rea!ed lrom QUOIItKmi by lamous people past and prestnt ·
Eilth letter 111t~ Ophel slilnd51or llllO!hfn

Today's clue: Zequals V

"RN

XNRHX

G 0 K X."

Thursday, Sept. 30, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol
There·s a strong chance that you'll be
invited to participate in a money.Fnaking
venture In the year ahead. It may require
participation on your part. but it'll bo with
associates who have good track records
in ~his
ty e of endeavor.
LIB
pt. 23-0ct. 23)- Your grasp of
co I Situations is apt to be remark ·
ably q
today. whiCh allows you to take
advantage of events as they iuise and
leave others in your wake trying to catch
up.
SCORPIO (Qcl. 24-Nov. 22) - Be sure
to take advantage of any last-minute
social gathermg that might pop up today,
especially if there are some newcomers
1nvolved. Fresh contacts could open up
exciting opportunitieS tor you
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) ~
Break away from the routine today and
eXperiment with new methods that are
Introduced to you at this lime. It doesn't
matter if your work is business or house·
hold· related .
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19)- Try to
keep your schedule as t1e1uble as possible today. There are indications that
something uneKpectod and tun could
suddenly pop up that you won't want to
miss
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 · Feb . 19) - Be an
aler.l shopper' today because there 1s a
chance that bargarns galore m1ght be out
there , and among all the pickings &amp;orne·
th1ng very spec1al could be had at a very
handsome pnce
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Valuable
information may be on its way to you
today, but it could come about m a
cha'hcl:! remark or someth1ng you accidentally read about. You 'll know how to
put1t to good use.
AAIES~March 21-April19)- Your mate·
rial prospects look very encouraging
today, but they won 't neceSsarily come
from your .usual sources. Chances are
your own mgenwty Will hgure out a way to
bn~ m the bul",kS.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - When the
unexpec ted occurs today, those with
whom you share ydur day will look to you
lor leadership and directiOn - whiCh, of
course, \IOU'II supply with your usual sert·
assurance.
GEMINI (May 2 1 ·June 20 ) - Tum ,to
those who are progressive thinkers to
help you achieve your otiiectives today
when you need 1deas. Don"! waste time
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CANCER (June 21-July 221 - Do no1
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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS!~2a~o;

Foraae- ChiCk • Fltnt ·Dorsal -LOOKING
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

�1

IIC TEl STUDIIGS
Big Ten

Minnesota
Wisconsin
Purdue
Michigan
Michigan St.
Ohio State
Penn State .
filinois
Indiana

All

1-0

4-0
!-()
4-0
1-0
3-0
3-1 .
1·0
1:o
1-2
0-0
3-0.
0-1
1-1
0-1
1-1
0-1 . l'1
Iowa
0-1
1-1
1-3
Northwestern 0·1

Top 15
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-1
0-1
1-0
0-1
0-1

PF PA
177
75
77
19
148
37
117 76
74
91
73
41
95 60
119. Ill
113 115
80 91
86 95

-.uNOJS
_.:B

· c2004 Longwing Publicatioru Inc.

GAME OF TH E W E EK

Pean State at Mlaaesota

......

TEAM LEADERS

The Hoosie!S 1emain
........solely a fi1st-half team .
Indiana led 20-7 at halftime and ended up
losing 30"20 to Michigan State. The
HoosieiS have outsco1ed their opponents
80, 37 in the first half, while they have
been outsco1ed 78-43 in the second half.
., -.a&amp;~A The Hawkeyes lost 30-17to
...,.......
Michigan, but receiver Ed
Hlnke\eme•ged as QB Drew Tate's top
option. Hinkel sco1ed the operring
touchdown. diving fo1 a highlight-reel
2-ya1d catch, and finished the day with
wee• highs in 1eceptions {7), ya1ds (89)
and touchdowns (2).

••. . . . .

356.0
165.0
filinois ...
114.5
Ohio State . . .
113.0
' . '
Minnesota . . . . . .
210.5
Michigai:t . ., . . • .
103 .5
. . .' . 201.8
Penn State .. '
• • •.
, .Gill OJ I &amp;WI&amp;
Minnesota .
. ...... 332.2
. 113.8
lllinois . .
. 105 .7
Purdue . .
Penn State . . . . . • . ' ... •. ' 185.5
177.1
Michigan State ... . .
161.8
wiSconsin . . . :
Northwestern . . . . . .
161.0
'

'

Northwestern . ·. . .

. . ..

-.u.t:!HJGAN Struggling to find
~

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

561.7
541.8
. '438.1
filinois .... .
Northwestern ..
. 416.0
. 388.1
Penn State . . .
Michigan State ... .. . . , . . . . ' 379.8
334.0
Ohio State. . . . . . . ... .
PI
8DUW
. ·, .
117.1
Wisconsin . . . . . . .
Minnesota . . . .

Ohio State.. . . . . ' .

.. ...

Iowa . . .

.......... =

.
'
.
.

\
Penn State . .. . .....
.

43.8
55.5
71.8
95.3
97.8

Minnesota. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

1'1 7.0

Northwestern . . . . .

148.5

.. . ..

ftn&amp;8ll

I

WisConsin . . . ..
Ohio ~tate. . . . . . .

190.0

. 261.3

Pu1due . . . .. , • . .. . . . . .

. 161.3

Penn State . ... • .. • . . .. . . . 271.0

Michigan . .. . . ... . . , . .. . . 182.1
. 296.5
Michigan State : . ... .. ... . . . 347.5

Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . .

. 394.2

)llinois .. . ...... . . • .. ... 440.0
Northwestern . . .. . . . . .' . . .. . 440.0
Indiana . . .... . ... .. . . . . .

464.2 ~

IDIVIDm LEIDEIS

•••••a n•11s18•K

Btett Basanez, Northwestern ... . . . 1054

Kyle Orton,.Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . . 981
Bryan Cupito, Minnesota ... .. . . . . 782

Chad Henne, Michigan . . . . . . . .

780

Drew Tate, Iowa . . . . . . . . . o o • • • 670
- lack Mills. Penn State . . . , . . . . . . 640

••••n

1

: Laurence Maroney, Minnesota . . . .

Marion lla!be! m. Minnesota . ' ' .
Tony Hunt, Penn State . . . . . . .
BenJOIVUS G!een-EIIis, Indiana . . .
Noah Herron, Northwestern. . . . .
E,B. Halsey, filin6is. . . . . . . . .
•IICiaUfl&amp;&amp;&amp;lll*
•
Braylon Edwards. Michigan .....
Courtney Ruby, Indiana . . . . . . .
Mark Philmore. Northwestern. . . .

. 526

. -.
...
.
.
.

514
375
368
362
350

. .. 500
. , . 372
. . . 361

lendrick Jones, fllinois. . . . . . . . . . 340

· Santonio Holmes. Ohio State . . . . .
. Taylo1 Stubblefield, Purdue . . . .

331
324

Ni ' tA.,irlll&amp;K
• Brett Basa.nez.. Northwestern . . . . . . 1141

lyle Orton, Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . 1033
Bcyan Cupito, Minnesota .. . . . . . . . 799
Chad Henne. Michigan . . . . . . . . . . 731
lack Mills, Penn State . . . . . . . . . . 661
Matt LoVecchjo.Indiana .. .. . . . . . 641

• ••

Taylor Stubblefield. Purdue . .
Marion Barber m, Minnesota . .
Rhys Uoyd. Minnesota . . • .•
lli);e Nugent, Ohio State . . . .
Garrett Rivas, Michigan . . . .
Biayton Edwards. Michigan. . .

nlustration by Bruce

Paterno magic gone?
M

any observers believe that Penn State coach Joe Paterno
has lost his magic . After several unsuccessful seasons in a
row. the Nittany Lions have fallen from national
powerhouse to one of the Big Ten's worst teams.
On Saturday , they will face one, of the Big Ten's upstart
programs. Minnesota. The Golden Gophers pin their hopes on one
of the best rushing pairs in the country. senior Marion Barber Ill
and sophomore Laurence Maroney. They are the perfect match of
mw spCed and power , leaving dtfenses looking for anY way to
stop them :
·
Throw in freshman Carhon Valentine, who had three
touchdown runs in Minnesota's 47- 13 victory over Northwestern ,
and the Nittany Lions have their work cui out for them .
The one potential weakness in the Gophers' attack is new
quanerback Bryan Cupito, but he ~o far hasn' t failed in his auempt
to replace Asad AtxJui-Khaliq , who a.'i a senior led Minnesota to a
Sun Bowl appearance and fini shed wilh a 63.2 pen;em complelion
percentage .
The Nitt;.my Lions are taking to the road again after getting
embarrassed 16-3 at Wisconsin. Penn State lost starting
quane!back Zack Mills early wi1h a shoulder injury. lhen back-up
Michael Robinson had to be taken off lhe field in an ambulance
wit~ a concussion . Things look bad for the Nitlany Lions. and they
will have to turn them around quick before the Big Ten race gets
away from them .
• Records: Penn Stale 2-2 (0-1 Big Ten); Minnesola 4-0 (1-0 Big
.Ten). • Series: Penn S1a1e leads 4-3. •Coaclles: Penn Stale' s Joe
Pa1emo (341-111-3) ; Minneso1a's Glen Mason (I 07-104-1).
• kiclroff: 7·p.m. Cf Satmday. •1¥: ESPN Plus.
Key for Pemi State: Conlain Minnesota RB Laurence "
Maroney when he runs·ou1side lhe 1ackles. He is the speedy
attacker in the ofrense. and the Ninany Lions' defense' will need to
stay at home to stop the runner who had 145 yards and a
touchdown last wttk .
Key for Minnesota: Pressure whoever gets the ca ll at
quarte!back fm Penn Sl81e. lf Zack Mills and Michael Robinson
can'r return from injuries.third·stringer Chris Gaoler. who was 6-fm-23 for 32 yards last week . will have to fill in.

••

The top player iii the converence race. Ohio Stale. opens Big

. . . • . . 48
. . . . . . '3s
. . • •. • 33
. . . . . . 31
. . . . . . 3I
. . . . . . 30

WI WI I
llarkuJCuny,Michigan .· . . .

£llllllll'&lt;i

166.0
173 .2
175.5
' 138.5
141.0

Michigan . .
Iqwa . . .. , . . .. .. .
Wisconsin .
Purdue . .. .. . . • : ..

Minnesota. . . .

·~Hl.GAN ST

Ill .I

Penn State .. .
Michigan State .
Michigan . . . .

~

... . .. 3

Tracy Porter. Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . . l
Eptest Slwar. Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . 2

• Tnunaine Banb, Minnesota . . • . . . . . • 2
llkee DOzier, Minnesota •. . .• , •• . .• 2

lelvin Hayden. Rlinois • . . . • • • . • . • 1

Penn State : . . . . . . . .
Chad G1eenway. Ion . • • . .•... . .•
Ryan Mundy, Michigan . . . . . . . . ...
.Juon Harmon. Michigon State .. .... .
Anwar Phillips,

2

2
2

1

some cohesion on the

offensive line. Michigan n\oved its best
lineman last Saturday. All-Big Ten guard
David Baas, a fifth-yea! seni01, became ·
the team's center, starting his first career
game at the position. In his place. seni01.
gua1d Leo Henige got his first ca1eer start
at left gua1d: The moves helped to make
holes for true freshman RB Micllael Bart,
who had 26 cairies !01 99 ya~ds.

Pu1due ..

Pu1due ..

an effect1ve runnmg

game, RB E.B. Halsey got some help in
the Ulirri's 38 -~0 loss to.PUrdue, Jurrior
fullback Jason Davis had a meer-high 77
ya~ds rushing , including a 32-yard dash in
the second quarter, and caught
touchdown passes of.2 and 26 ya1ds from
QB Jon Beutjer.

lilloiD:JANA

Average per game

Pu1due

A!. Ulinoi~ search~s for

Ten play against Northwestern. Michigan . Wisconsin , Michigan
State and Minnesota all look to improve their cOnference records
10 2-0. The rcs1of the league will be looking 10 move back up 10
500 and gel back inlo the hun!.

Ohio State at Northwestern
• Rec:orda: Ohio Slale 3-0 (0-0 Big Ten); Northweslern 1-3 (0-1
Big Ten). • serlee: Oliio S1a1e leads 53-13-1. • Coacllu: Ohio
Slate's Jim Tressel (I65-69-2); Northwesrem's Randy Walker
(84-73-5). • Kictoff: 8 p.m. Cf Sarwday. • TV: ESPN2.
Key for Ohio State: Utilize a Iough linebacking co1ps 10 blitz
Northweslem QB Brett Basanez. Basanez runs an offense lhar
uses plenty of audibles, so sma/llinebacking can mess with the
Wildca!S' plans. · '
Key for !fortbwntem:. Sustain longer drives. The Wildcals
will need 10 keep lbe fOotball ouloflbe Buckeyes' hands . Running
back Noah Herron collected 78 yards on II ~atries last week and

needs more curries to help comrol the game against Ohio State.

Michigan at Indiana
• Records: Michigan 3- 1 (1-0 Big Ten); Indiana 2-2 (0-1 Big
Ten ). • Series: Michigan leads 46-9. • Coaclles: Michigan's
Lloyd Carr (89-27) ; Indiana 's Gerry DiNardo (58-69-1).
• kickoff: 2:30p.m. Cf SaiUrday . •rv: ABC.
Key for Michigan: Sp1ead the ball around on offense. The
Hoos,ers aren't a speedy team. so a steady Jxtlance of Michigan' s
three ·top receivers, along with freshman rusher Michael Hart. will
be important.
ICey for Indiana: COntinue to score early. The Hoosiers have
1aken an early lead in all four games and have been able to hold on
twice. Lasl week, lhey led Michigan S1a1e 20-7 a1 halflime before
los ing 30-20 .

filinois at Wisconsin
• Records: Illinois 2-2 (0-1 Big Te'n); Wisconsin 4-0 (1-0 Big
Ten ), • Series: Illinois leads 35-30-7. • Coaclles: Illinois' Ron
Turner (41-55); Wisconsin's Barry Alvarez ( 103-67-4).
• kickoff: I p.m. Cf Sarurday. •TV: None .
JCey fOI llUnoia: The lllini should pul eighl men in lhe box IO
stop the Badgers· ·running game. Wisconsin lost anOther back,
Boolcer Stanley. to turf toe, but expect Anthony Davi s 10 reiUm iri
at least a SJD~ II role against Illinois.
Key for Wiaco111in: Disrupl lhe Illinois passing game. Wilh
QB Jon Beuljer back in aclion , the lllini will look to sp1ead the
field through 1hc air. Wisconsin's All-Big Ten safely Jim
Leonhard will have his hands full .

Purdue
. at Notre Dame

• Recordl: Purdue 3-0 (1-0 Big-Ten); Nom: Dame 3-1
(lndependenl) . • Serlea: Notre Dame leads 49-23-2. • Coachea:
Purdue's Joe Tiller (97-62- 1); Notre Dame's Tyro'1" Willingham
(62-47-1). • Kictoff: I :Jo p.m. Cf Sawrday . •TV: NBC.
Key for Purdue: Conlain Notre Dame freshman RB Dariu s
Walke! . Since bealing Michigan , Walker has been lhe cenlerof
the Irish's offensive plans. Her.111 for 81 yards oo 23 cames in a
38-3 vie1ory over Washing1on lasl Saturday.
ICey for Notre Dame: Conttol ihe lime of possession. The
longer lhe Irish keep the ball, the less damage-Purdue"s highpowered offense can do. QB Brady Quinn can use his multiple
receiving options to spread the field and make Purdue work .

Michigan State at Iowa
• Rec:onb: Michigan Stale 2-2 ( 1-0 Big Ten); Iowa 2-2 (0-1 Big
Ten). • Seriel: Iowa leads 18-17-2 .• Coarhu: Michigan Stale' s
John L. Smilh (120-67); Iowa' s Kirl&lt; Ferentz (46-12).·•1Cicltoff:
II a.m . Cf Sarurday. •TV: ESPN Plus.
· Key for Micbigan state: Try 10 pass the fOotball. Iowa got
beal up by Arizona Slate'' passing anack, and Michigan lhrew for
236 yards against the Hawkeyes in lbe Wolverines' 30-17 victory
lasI Sarunlay.
· Key for lo"a: Try 10 prevent Spartans QB Drew Slanlon from
rushing. Suuuon. coming off off-season ACL sw-gery , has
swprisingly become a ronning lhreal, meoning learnS must use a
spy against him. S1an10n ran for 134 yards in a30-20 victory over
Indiana.

The Spartans,

• sea1ching fo1 a

new quarteiback and a leading rushe1,
might have found both in redshirt
sophomore QB Drew Stanton. Making his
first caree, start. Stanton ran for 134
yards and two touchdowns while
completing 15 of 23 passes fo1 172 ya~ds .
Stanton is the first MSU quarterback since
ChuUe Baggett in 197 5 to rush for more
than 100 ya~ds in a game.

-.a,NESOTA All the attention

£IIIIIIIIIT'
has gon~ to RBs
Marlon Barber III and Laurence
Maroney, but in last Satunlay's 43-17
victory over Northwestern, a new runner
·emerged. Fullback Jllll:ln Valentine
. scored a career-high three tou.chdowns,
one on a 3-yard catch (his first TD
1eception) and two rushing.

IMRTHWESTERN ~r;~~t
spot for the Wildcats in their 43-17loss to
Minnesota last Satmday: the play of kick
1eturne1 Jeff Backes, who took a kickoff
g7 ya1ds !01 the team's only touchdown of
the first half. The 1etum was the fifthlongest in Northwestern's history. ·

lllllll.un S"'A""' Afte1 hitting five

_.a\1 lnl " field goals against
N.C. State 'on Sept. 18, Ohio State kicker
Mike Nugent was named Big Ten Special
Teams Pl.aye1 of the Week f01 the second
time. Nugent is now 8-fOI-9 for field goals
and has hit 54 consecutive PATs.

. ~n
~~ STATE

The Nitt.any Lions
lost therr top two
quarte1backs. Zack Milll and Michael
Robinson; to injmy in the 16-3 loss to
Wisconsin last Saturday. Particularly
frightening was the injury to Robinson,
which required an ambulance on the field
to bring hisn to the hospitaL Robinson was
injured on a sack by Wisconsin's Erumu
~.amu. ile spent the rright at the
Urriversity of Wisconsin Hospital and
Clinics for obse!Voltion and was released
Sunday morning. He is doubtful for this
weekend's game and will be evaluated

daily.

.....,"UE
A!. he has been for most
.-nu ·of the season, senior QB

Kyle Orton was on top of his game in
Purdue's 38-30 victOiy 0\'01 nlinois,
completing 35-of-50 passes fo1 366 yards
and fom ,touchdowns, and running f01 a
TD. Orton·was cool under pressure,
completing 12 Passes to convert on third
downs, and for the third consecuti..
game, he didn't throw an interception. For
the second time this season, he was
named a finalist for Cingular/ ABC Sports
All-America Playe1 of the Week.

~CONSIN Observing Yom

........

Kippur, W"JSCOnsin
running back Matt lerutela had to fast
and-then run fast A 270.pound fullbaclt.
Bernstein ran for 12~ yards in the 16-3
victory over Penn State. Bernstein had
fasted ~r 24 hours·before the game,
before chowing down on oranges and .
turkey on the 'Badgers sideline after'
ldclroff•

.

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\

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