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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

The battle ~egins: Schilling
will try to silence Yankees
I

RONALD BLUM

Associated Press
NEW YORK - Curt Schilling signed with
Boston for this very r~a"m - to si lence the
hated Yankees and pitch the Red Sox to that
elusive World Series· title .
" I'm not sure I can th ink of anv scenano
more enjoyable than making 55.000 people
from New York shut up:· he said Monday. a
day before starting the opener at Yankee
Stadium against Mike Mus,ina.
Before the first pitch was even thrown. the
AL championship series had pl aye rs
buzzing. They thought back to the -15 intense
meetings between the ri,als during the past
two years. to the on-field fights and th e clubhouse boasts .
But in a series that seemed predestined
since Aaron Boone 's Game 7 homer off Tim
Wakefield won last October's playoff in the
lith inning , there was an element of ui1certainty fo r the Yankees this time. It centered
on the status of closer Mariano Ri vera. who
returned to Panama on Sunday after two of
his wife's relatives - a cousin and his son were electrocuted in hi s swimming pool.
Though Rivera said he 'd be on hand for
Tuesday night 's game - " I am going back to
New York tomorrow, after the funera l. and
• rejoin the team" - manager Joe Torre wasri 't takin g anything for granted.
"If he's here tomorrow. obviously. it would
be wonderful," Torre said. " If not. we understand that."
Tom Gordon. his left eye still a little blurry after it was hit by a champagn e cork in
Saturdav· s. clubhouse celebration at
Minnesota. wou lu take over as the closer if
Rivera is abse nt. Tanvon Sturt te anu Paul
Quantrill would rep lac'c Gordo n as the setup
man.
While Gordon\ good. he 's not Rivera . No
.one else is.
"I never had a problem with it. 1 enjoyed
closing:· Gordon said. "Whatever it takes for
this team to ge t a win."
Following Boston 's first-round sweep of
Anaheim and New York \ 3- 1 win .ove r the
Twins, Schilling and Mussina are rest ed
heading in to the \lpcncr. The Red Sox rotation has Pedro Martinez pitching Game 2 011
Wednesday. fol lowed by Bronson Arroyo on
Friday at Fenway Park and Wakefield the
following day in Game-l.
Jon Lieber and Kevin Brown follow
Mussin1 for the Yankees. who sti ll haven' t
decided between Orl ando Hernanuez or
Jav ier Vazquez in th e fourth game. El Dutjue. ·
bothered by a tired arm. felt better Monday.
when he th rew about 60 pitches in a bullpen ·
session, according to pitching coach Mel
Stottleh1yre.
Major league baseball decided Monday to
move Game 5. the on ly scheduled afternoon
contest of the serie s. in to prime time. bump·
ing the NLCS to the earlier time slot. They
are the two biggest spenders in baseball. the
Yankees at $ 186.4 million and th e Red Sox at
$ 128. 1 million. according to the Aug . 3 1
payrolL Judgi ng by the TV ratings. baseball

A grieving
Rivera
comforts
re·latives

,I

NEW YORK (AP) Amid the bu stle of the New
York clubhouse . Mar.iano
Ri vera 's untouched locker
stood out as a reminder that
the New York Yankees might
be without their best pitcher
in th e opener of the American
League championship series.
Rivera 11ew home to Puerto
Caimito. Panama, after two
family members were electrocuted in his pool, leaving
the possibility that he might
not be available for Game , I
of the ALCS against the
Boston Red Sox on Tue;day.
That's the same day Rivera
will attend the funera l of
Victor Daria Avi la, a cousin
of Rivera's wife , Clara. and
Avila's 14-year-o\d son. The
father was electrocuted when
,he tried to save his son, abo
named Victor. while clean in £
the pool .at the pitcher's
!.10me. official s &gt;aid.
, The Yankees have arranged
for a private plane to bring
Rivera back to New York.
"] don ' t wa nt to say he·s
going to be back tomorrow."
Yankees.. manager Joe Torre
said Monday. "If he's here
tomorrow. wonderful. If he·,
. not. then we understand
that."
,
Rivera's agent. Fernando
Cuza, told The Associated
Press in ,an e-mail that the
pitcher "should be back in
· tim.e " for Game I.
If Rivera does n't return . it
will be the fif\t time 'i n(:e
1997 that Torre wo n·t be able
to call on the playe r who is
widely . regarded as the be\ t.
closer in po si'ea.~on hi.&gt; tory.

Lava breaks surface at
Mount St. Helens, A2
~...

I
I
vs
Curt Schilling

M1ke Mussina

AT YANKEES STADIUM

THE BRONX , N.Y.
fiRST PITCH, 8:19 P.M.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

fans arc captivated by New York\ Derek
Jeter and Alex Rodri guez and Boston's
Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz.
" I know this is what everyone was hoping
for, I imagine," Muss ina said. " I think it's the
wav it should be ."
Schilling, acquired by the Red Sox f~om
Arizona last November. .plays for moments
like these. He's won six straight postseason
deci sions since 1993, allowing two earned
run s or fewer in all nine of hi s starts. He beat
Mussina for the Diamondbacks in the 2001
World Series opener, then defeated him aga in
on April 15 this year at Fenway Park.
" I don ' t know th at I' ve ever pitched in a
game that wi ll have the atmosphere that
tomorrow's game has. In Arizona during th e
World Series, it was electric," Schilling sai d,
·'but I think the Yankees and the Red Sox is a
step above eve rything else ."
Wearing a T-shirt wi th the words ·'Why
Not Us'?" Schilling talked about how he likes
to quiet fans when he pitches on the road -.
especially Yankees fans' sti ll giddy fo llowing
the seventh stra ight AL. East title for New
York I I0 J.fi I) and the seve nth second-place
fini sh in a row by Boston (9~-64).
"I t's going to be loud," he predicted. "lt"s
going to be th underous."
~ Schilling. who we nt 2 1-6 to lead the major
leagues in wins, threw short tosses Monday.
a day after test in g o ut an inject ion of
painki llet:s on his right ankle . Th ree yeaf'
ago. he sa id the Diamondback s weren' t
intimidated by rhe Yankees because ."my stiqu e and aura, th qse are dancers in a ni ghtclub. those are not th ings we concern ourselves on the ball field.'' Then he watched
New York hit ty ing two-ru n home rs in the
boll om of the ninth on consecutive nig hts to
win Games 4 and 5 before Arizona rallied
aga inst Rivera in Game 7 to stop New York's
qreak of three stra ight ti tles.
He knows games like these define careers,
"You can make a name for yourse lf in one
in nin g. one play, one pitch that you can't
make in another series with an y other
teams," he said.
Sch illing came to Boston primarily
because of Terry Francona, hi s for mer manager in Philadelphia. Francnna. who took
over th e Reu Sox afte r Grady Little left
Martinez in too long in Game 7. kn ew right
&lt;lway th ere W&lt;IS something special to thi s
rivalry.
" I started to feel th at in · sp rin g training
when there was a line at 6 a.m .. " he said . " I
had people yel ling at me because we didn ' t
play all our regulars."

~ 200 4

CAMPAIGN

..

· Military bill
includes funding
for Wright-Patt
projects, A6

2004/TI~e

)II f

· • Eastern wins TVCHocking. See Page 81

Astros .headed to NLC·S
I

The highly collectihle 2004
Campaign Dolla r~ are made with
genuine U. S. legal lende r Bilh. A
detailed •.:u~t o m pot1ntit of tht: candidate is applied by the Monetary
Exchange to create this campai gn
'col lectible. ··so. anyo ne who
. . pcnds tht:...,e . , pccial hmori c treasure' would he fool i, h," explains
John T Wh ite. Exccuti\le Direc tor
of the U.S. Monetary Exchange.
''The ,potential h1 :-.tori c \'aluc of
the...,e colkctor\ items ~o ul d be .~oo
mw.:h more."
At li f."'· it ]l;d,cd likt: th0sc who
mi:-.:-.cd the fiN Public OtlCring wuuld
ht.·lcrr oul. Th&lt;.~t\IX!cuu . . t: all the Hill'
111thc L. S. Mom:tar} F~cha ngc\ tir.~t
relca..c ..o ld m11 dlmo..,t immedimely
But, it hao.. beL'Il Ct lllfilmcd th;tt a
•.:tm trolkJ ..,ccond rL·lca:.c i:. being
i;..&lt;.,ucd 10 the ge neral public &lt;JnJ w~
~Nil I tell ) uu how you c1n get yflur:-. .
The hard to lind Bilh could h..:
t..litli ~:ult ln ~:omc hy. Dt:aler:. may
try tu gr:.Jh them up llfl ...,peculation
th;Jt they t:ould produce a hu ge
\l.indfall for their chil dren of l!randch'i'ldrcn . No one kno\.1(, e; actl y
\1. hat the~ 1). ill he \.\-Or!h . . om~day
ht~..:au~c ~...(JikUihk' ,d'AiiY" tludu '&lt;~tt: . 13UL 1f ['!:lrl"IH 'r or grJn dparenh
had ... a\ eLl a. Tcthl}' R IKJ...,c\'d t ~.: am
pai gn hutr on. it t:ou ld now lir.;t for
up tu ~1.1XIfl On
··~1\ no v.onder people are trying

RESULTS OF REQUESTS PER CANDIDATE
AfTER Til£ FIRST PUBLIC RELEASE:

"BUSH 53.1%
KERRY 46.9%
10

gel

these popular

L inL"uln -Dou,gla:-. campa ign
po:.tt::f')o wnukl hL' worth tpda ):·

.. Savvy coliL'L'Ior:-. ul~o know thai
i t~o:m:-, fo r lu:-. ing Calldl datt:::. can
brcomt: v;1luahk A ncw..,papcr with
the famous 'Dewey Wi n..,· headli ne
from the IQ-lX campaign j.. , 11 0 \~·
worth up to ~HOO.OO." :.aid White.
',' M(N everyone w;mt:- a L·ompklC set
wi th huth L·andidatcs. and they
want ext r a~ 10
give as gift s to

Bills when you the children and

look at the current market for hi storic
treasures from past elections. A vintage Presidential Currency collection
recentl y li sted for $5,750.00 on a
popular online auctidn, and a Ronald
Reagan Inaugural Medallion was list ed a! $3.295.00." White '"id.
The smartest collectclrli arc setting aside their poli tical preferences
to get the Bi ll s for both cand idates,
so they can ha \'c the co mp lete
Presidemial Election se t for 2004.
''Complete col lecti on!-. are al ways
the most desirahlc. Ju.-.t imagine
how much more a matched set or

grandchildren .''
To dist.:ouragl' hoarUi ng,
dealer~
mu:. t
~ u bmit reques t~

in wri ting for
10 or more
bandt:d paL·ks

--

• OVC observe VIP day.

See Page A3

Chamber Holds Meet The'Candidates Luncheon
Detallo on Page A6

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGF.S

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

-~

·-

--

How much are they listed for today?

Values of collectibles fluctuate and there are never any guarantees, but just
took at how much these past historic presidential items are listed for today.
Hisrorjr Electioni.ltem

Vinlage U.S. Currency Presidents Collection
Jhunan ~·60 .Million People WOrking" Burton
Tnldy Roo:~evelt Campaign ButrOn
1912 Democraric Convention Emblem
7ru1111Jn/Dewey "Dewey Wins" News[J(lper
Vi"tage Collection of Cam[J(ligrl Buttons·
Ronold Reagan. Inaugural Medallion
1976 Ca.rter Peonut Handle Cam[J(lign Cane

1bdayS Ust

$j,7JO.OO .
S!.6J0.99
• $3,00/).00 .
$2,499.00
$1100.00
$1,999.99
$3.295.00
$450.00

I

THE U"'llEO SlJI.Tf,S MONETARY EXCHANGE IS A PRIVATE. EXCHANGF ~OT
AFFILIATED Willi lHl US OOVlHI\jMfNT OR A"&lt;Y GOVER('IMENT AGENCY
THE US DOLLAR BI LLS AAEj REAL LEGAL TENDER WHEN PORTRAitS AR[
RFMOYED THl US r.ov·! 'IJbFSN01 ENDORSr THE c'ANDIDAfES IMAGES

Please see Baskets. AS

I

Pomeroy
merchants
plan midnight
madness
sale

Program
could help
with high
heating costs
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

OAILYSENTIN EL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT
BS ERGENT@MYDA!LY SENTi f'.IEL.COM

They are made
with real U.S.
legal tender Bills.
The Monetary
Exchange then
applies a
de1ailed custom
portrait of each

the general public can get what they
need hy calling the National Direct
Hotltnc a! 1·800·755·4998 no" and
asking for Dept . .BK164 . ."Luntl'
for dealer:-. will be :.trictl y l'nrurccd."
White ). ill d.

designated as disaster areas.
Ti]i s aid is avai lable to Ohio
families wi th children who
arc elt gible for Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families
ITANF) and who have
'applied for or received federal
TANF disaster ass istance
runds for the recent tlooding,
Podolski said .
She further noted that grocery boxes wi II be ready for

BRE£0@,!~

of 5 Bills. But.

• GIFT: The firSt 10,009 people even get these spec1a1patnot1c red , white and
l'lue 2004 Presrdentlal Elect1on Protective OtsplaY Wallets 1or each Dollar 8111

See Page A2

LEGAL TENDER:

•

L_

• ·Serial killings suspect
guilty in second trial,
could face death.

HISTORIC VALUE: If grandparents had saved a Ted dy Roosevelt Campaign
Button , it could list for $3,000'.00 today.

~.--

''Thi s assis tance will be of
great value, because foodbank
supplies are at record low lev els, and the recent tlo od in~
from Hurri canes Frances anli
Ivan left already-strappeu
hunger relief providers struggling to respo nd to a new
inl1ux of hu ngry Ohioans.''
She said that the Second
Harvest is coordinating the
food distrihu tion program
through the four Ohio foodhanks serving the 20 counties

POMEROY - Final plans
for a midnight madness sale
to be h ~ l d on Oct. 25 from 6
to 9 p.m. were made at
Tuesday's mecti ng of tbe
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association .
Promoti on; 111 newspaper
and radio were disc ussed a9
th i&gt; is the. first year for a
Halloween sales event to take
place in the village . John
Musser pre sided at the meet- ·
ing and announce tri ck or
treat night in Pomeroy for
Oct. 28 , 6 to 7 p.m.
Also announced at the
meeting was the seco nd
Middleport craft and antique dealers have another home . annual Bend area "Crank It
Severa l have taken over the second floor of the Middleport Up" a car/a udi/light sound
Department Store. Tom Doo ley of the department store and off to be take place Saturday
Sue Stone of Sue's Selectables. his business partner. have on the Pomeroy parking lot.
welcomed seven vendors to The Grafters' Loft, a smaller ver· The event sponsored by the
First
Southern
Baptist
sion of the craft and antique ma ll which operated next door to Church and Mountain Dew
the department store before closing this summer. Crocheted
items. antiques. ret ired collectors' baskets. seasonal home
Please see Sale, AS
decor. gourmet herb and gifts are among the many items
offered by the Grafters' Loft vendors. Here. Sh irley Hu ston and
Tom Dooley took over some of the Americana items she stocks
in the store. while Nida Kearns and Roberta Lewis work in
another area, arranging products on the shelves. Stone said
there IS renta l space available for two more vendors. An open
house is planned (Qr Middle po rt's Moonlight Madness event
from 6 to 9 p.m. on Oct 25. Door prizes will be awarded and
refreshments will be served.

INSIDE

l'he U.S. Monetary Exchange is releasing the popular 2004
Presidential Campaign Dollar Bills to the ge neral public. Call the
National Direct Hotline 1-800-755-4998, ask for Dept BK264.
The standard $9 processing fee plus shipptng gets you a banded
five-pack of the vault fresh , crisp new U S. legal tender
Campaign Dollars at face value. Satisfaction\ is guaranteed.

'" ........... -".... .

The boxes in addition to
shelf-s table food supp lies.
include personal care · product s and some hou se hold
cleaning products. Podul si
said.
"We are pleased to b·e part. nering with the State of Ohio
on this disa ster relief program. and we thank Governor
Taft and th e Ohio Department
of Job and Family Services
for th eir leadership at this critical time." said Podolski.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

How to get them

1 ~60

Needy Families (TANF) is the
criteria for receiving a food
basket valued at $80, according to Lisa Podolsi , execu tive
uirector of
th e
Ohi&lt;)
Association
of
Second
Harve st
Foodbanks
(OAS HF) .
State fu nds of$ 1mill ion was
awarded to Second llarvest
Foodbanks for llood victims in
the 20 atTe.cted counties that
have been declareu·in a state of
emergency.

HOEFLIC H@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

WEATHER

The rush to get them at Face Value may predict our next president

""" · m~d.til"t'nltnd.n&gt;t&gt;t

:!Cllq

New home from crafters

• Reeve remembered as
being intense about
treatment See Page A6

SPECIAL ADVERTISING FEATURE

Public races to get dollars by deadline
Citi1cn" acro-.s th e nati on arc jam·
ming Naliunal Hot Line phone~ in an
dfort to get th(: n c\~ Caf11paign
Doll ar~ for the ir ft1\ ori1c candidate.
So fa r. Georg~' W. Bu ~ h is ahead in
the fir:-.1 round of a ve ry ti ght race to
get the "Pe~· 1al Dollar Bill~.
And rig ln n oV~o, they are the
hottc~t item:-. around.
They are the 2004 'Presidential
Campnigri. Dollar Bill -.. feat uring
candidate" George W. Bush and John
F. Kerry. And everyone is trying to
get their hands on one.

POMEROY With a
Friday deadline to apply for
emergenFY food baskets ,
Second Harvest Foodbanks
are encouraging 11oou victims
to submit their applications
immediat ely to the Mei gs
County Department of Jobs
·and Family Services .
Being
approved
for
Temporary Assistance for

.

Pre.,·idt•nc.r

FIRST TABULATION

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
liOEFLICH@M YOAILYSENTINELCOM

Houston Astros' Jose Vizcaino, right, is safe at home after colliding with Atlanta Braves catch·
er Johnny Estrada in the seventh inning of Game 5 of the National League Division Series at
Turner Field in Atlanta Monday. (AP)

ATLANTA (AP) - It took Central Division rival St. sevemh after Atlanta sum 43 years, bu t the Hou ston Lou is in th e · NL champi- mon~d Chris Reitsma from
Astros are finally postseason onship
series
starting the bullpen. With two outs,
wmners.
Wednesday· ni ght at Busch Biggio li ned an RBI single to
Car)os Beltran hit two Stadium.
right and wound at third
Houston jumped ahead 3-0 when the throw home
more homers anu drove in
five run s. wh ile original on Braves starter .l aret skipped away from Estrada.
Killer B's Craig Biggio and Wright. scoring two itl the lleltran followed with anothJeff Bagwe ll chipped in dur- sccond and addi ng to their ~ er single. driving in his third
ing a rive-run seventh inning lead when Beltran homereu run or the game. before
that carried th e Astros to a into the Atlanta bullpen in Bagwell launc hed a mam12-3 rout of th e Atl an ta thc third.
moth drive to left-center for a
The Braves had the big two-run homer.
Braves on Monday nig ht in
the deciding Game 5 of their crowd roarin g in the tifth~
Reitsma stood be side the
firs t-round NL playoff series. Rafael Furcal~ l ed off with a mound. staring at the ground.
The Astros snapped an 0- homer against Roy Oswalt. Manager
Bobby
Cox
for· 7 record 'or fu tility in the and Johnnv Estrada hit emerged from the dugout to
playorfs against their long- another into· the seats wi th make a pitchin g change,
time nemesis. The Braves two outs, pulling Atl anta to draw ing u mock cheer from
eliminated Houston in 1997. 3-2.
the big crowd - much .of
'99 and ·o I. but they couldBut Beltran , acquired from which then heaued for the
n't esca pe their own postsea- Kansas City in June . quick ly exi ts .
son demons this time.
Before the sevellth was
turned the tide back in
At lanta has lost Game 5 of Houston's favor. He started done . Jeff Kent also drove in
the divis ion series three years th e sixt h with u to wering a run off 1om Martin. giving
in a row - all at Turner drive off Wright that ju st the Astros a 9-2 lead . They
Field . The second-largest cleared the right-field waiL
could "have broke out the
crowd in l·ranchise history.
The Astros~ were back in champagne righ t th en.
54.068, saw another familiar contro l. Th e Braves were . Bagwell and Biggio. who
ending.
,
done .
took much of the hlame for
The team that proudly disUn li ke Los Angeles a mght Hou ston's rutility. fi nal ly
plays 13 stra ight division earli er, Atlanta players didn't silenced their cri tics. Biggio
titles still has only one World come out when it was over to was 8-of-20 I AOO) with a
S~r i cs to show for it. This shake the vktors' hands.
homer and four RBi s iQ the
marked the fi fth straight ye·ar
Oswalt, pitching on three 'er ies. Bagwell was 7-of-22
th at the Brave s' season ended days· rest for onl y the second U 18) with two homers and
at the Ted.
time this season. made it five RBis.
This one was es pecially th rough five inning ,. He
But no (me was hetter than
dismal. equaling the wo rst th rew I l l pitches and th e the newest B.
postseason loss in franch ise Braves stranded runners in
Beltran was
10-of-22
hi storv.
every inning . se,·en in all (.455) with four homers and
Ne;t up for the wild-&lt;:ard again st th e Houston starter.
eight RBis in the five -game
Astros is a m&lt;ttchup aga inst
Hmiston poured it on in the senes .

\\I ll'\ I .SI&gt; \'.()('I Oil I I{ 1:1.

Emergency food baskets available for flood victims

SPORTS

UNIVERSAL MEDIA SYNDICATE

By Laura Fisher

I '\I'&gt; • \ o\. &gt;-l· '\o. :1.;

.

Editorials

A4

Ohio

A6

Sports
Weather

B1
A6

© 2004 Ohitl Val l e~· Publishing Co.

POMEROY - The Meigs
of
County
Chamber
Commerce held a meet the
candidates luncheon on
Tuesday at the Wildhorse
Cafe . .
Candidates who part icipated in speaking at the luncheon .were Terry Anderson,
(D-At hens) State Senate ,
20th District ; Pat Lang. (DHouse
of
Albany)
Representative s,
9~nd
District : Joy . Pllrlgett (RCoshocton) State Senate.
20th Dist ri ct: and Ji mmy
Stewart IR-Athens) House of
Representatives,
.92nd
Di strict. Each candidate was
all otted I0 minutes to address
the chamber 's audience.
Th.e speeche s toucheu on a
variety of i&gt;Sues including
Please see Luncheon. AS

I

MIDDL EPORT The
Gallia/Meig'
Comm unit y
Artillll Agency will begin
acceping applications for
heatin2 bill assistance later
thi, ,n1onth. and it"s just in
time. The agency ex pects ris·
int.! heatinc co~b to create

Tuesday the Meigs Chamber of Commerce held a meet-the-cand idates luncheon. Speak ing
were Terry Anderson (D·Athens) candidate for State Senate. 20th District: Joy Pagett (R·
Coshocton, State Senate, 20th- District:· Pat Lang (D·Aibany ) House of Representatqves. 92nd
Dtstri ct; Jimmy Stewart (R·Athe ns ) State Represe ntative , 92nd Distnct: Jenny Smith . Meigs
County Chambe r of Commerce. (Beth Sergentj photo)

pr(&gt;bktm ~for many lowincome resident' this winter.
CAA\ HEAP begins. on
'Jm. I and will continue
through March 31. ~005 .
Accnrdin~
to
Sandra
(::dwards. ~
Emergency
Sen ic es Division Director .
the agency will begin taking
calls for appointment&gt; at' 8
a.m . on Oct. 25 .
'" This vear. however. an
appoint"ment will not ex tend a
scheduled ut ility shut -off."
Edwards ,aid. "This heating
season will be Yery difficult
Please see Costs, AS

�-

NATION •

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

WoRLD

Wednesday, October 13,

2004

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BATON ROUGE. La. A jury took just 80 minutes
10 find a serial' killings suspect guilty of firs1-degree
murder Tuesday in the
death of a 22-year-old
Baton Rouge woman.
Jurors will begin hearing
testimony Wednesday to
determine whether Derrick
Todd Lee. already sentenced to life in prison for
another killing. should be
executed for the slaying of
Charlotte Murray Pace in
May 2002.
Lee. 35. sat stone-faced
after the verdict was read.
while the victim's mother
began to shake and cry.
"I feel Iike somewhere,
(she) n1llsl be rea l proud
that it happened this way:·
Ann Pace told reporters
the courthouse,
outside
breaking into sobs. "There
is e\·i\ in the world and he
is the personification of
that ."
Prosecutors took eigh t
days to present their case.
which included gruesome
crime sce ne photos and
evidence from Pace's murder and four other killings
authorities have attributed
to Lee . DNA evidence was
used to connect Lee 10 the
Pace murder. and a nurse
testified that Lee tried to
brutally rape and kill h er in
July 2002.
Lee's lawyers declined to
call any witnesses. sayi ng
the prosecution had failed
to prove its case beyond a
reasonable
doubt.
The
defense also questioned the
memory
of
Diane
Alexander. the nurse who

claimed she was attacked.
and said the DNA evidence
was unreliable.
"The state in · this case
si1n ply has the wrong
man.
defense attorney
Mike Mit&lt;:hell said in his
closing argument.
He later said he wasn't
surpris~d by the verdict:
•'Jury members came in
with their opinions and that
was hard to overcome ...
Authorities arrested Lee
in May 2003 following a
10-monlh investigation that
included taking DNA sampb fn,mi .more than 2,500
men in southern Louisiana.
Using
DNA
evidence.
police eventually linked
Lee. a former truck driver.
to the murders of seven
women from \998 to 2003.
For Lee to be executed.
the jury will hctve to vote
unanimously. for the death
penalty. Complicating the
issue will be a defense
claim. filed during jury
selection. that Lee is mentally retarded. and therefore
cannot be legally exe&lt;:uted.
"This is halftime in the
trial."
prosen1tor
John
Sinquefield said.
Outside the court house.
v1cttms family members
traded hugs and shed tears.
with
some
wondering
whether jurors. will agree
on death.
"If anybody deserves to
ge t the death penally, he
definitely does," said Lynne
Marino, the mother of victim Pam Kinamore .
In closing arguments
Tuesday. Sinquefield told
jurors Lee was a predator
who strang led. beat and
stabbed Pace and four of

a

"few

Pub.lic meetings
Wednesday, Oct. 13
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m ., conference · room of
health depanment at 112 E.
Memorial Dr.

minutes

of sexual gratification."
"He's strong. he's young.
he has hi s weapons with
him. ... He ~an kill you
with his bare hand s. and he
demonstrated it in these
&lt;:ases:· Sinquefield said.
In his closing. Mitchell
said that DNA evidence
against his client was questionable because the analysis was done by law
enforcement employees who
trained one another in at
least one lab that wasn't
accredited.
Mit chcll also asked how
Lee could murder several
women
wit\10u1
leaving
behind other kinds of evidence. such as a fingerprint
or a tire track. He also
said poli&lt;:e testified that
some items were found at
the murder scenes they
couldn't match to anyone.
Sin~ue(ie\d said Lee took .
the items that bore his fingerp rints. including phones
and an iron he used to beat
the women. but that he
couldn't erase hi s DNA.
Pace's body was riddled
with niore than 80 stab and
puncture wounds from a
tlathead screwdriver and a
knife. She had just graduated from Louisiana State
University.
Lee was convicted in
August in the beating and
stabbing death of 2 1-yearold
graduate
stude nt
Geralyn DeSoto. He was
sentenced to life in prison
in that case.

Clubs and
organizations

Steam billows from the main crater of Mount St. Helens Tuesday in ,Washington State. After
being qu1et most of the night, the crater began to emit a large quantity of steam just after sun·
rise. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

Lava breaks surface at Mount St. Helens
PEGGY ANDERSEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SEATTLE - Molten rock
that has been rising inside
Mount St. Helens after weeks
of earthquakes and steam
eruptions has finally pushed
its way to the surface, forming a new lava dome just
behind the existing one in. the
volcano's cruter.
The quakes subsided as the
new lava emerged Monday
and cooled in the open air,
suggesting molten rock from
deep inside the Earth had
found the path of least resislance by going around the old
dome. Jon Major. a hydrologist with the C.S. Geological
Survey's Cascades Volcano
Observatory in. Vancouver.
Wash .. said Tuesday.
'
Unlike the dramatic rivers
of red-hot lava from Hawaii's
volcano. St. Helen s' extrusian of new rock was sljht\e

and difficult 10 see from outside the crater. A lazy plume
of steam rose slowly from the
mountain for much of
Tuesday.
The la st dome-building
activity m St. Helens began
in the months after its deadly
May 1980 erupt ion and lasted
six years . Layers of emerging
ru&lt;:k gradual ly formed a
rocky _dome nearly 1.000 feet
tall at the center of the crater
tloor. The lOp of the new
dome is almost level with the
old one just to the north.
The mountain had been
shaking since Sept. 23, with
periods of sharp jolts - up
to magnitude 3.3 - occurring as often as four times a
minute at the height of seismic activity.
"The inference was that
those were breaking a pathway" through rock. Major
said.
Explosive eruplion s are

still possible and often follow
lava extn.,ion, said John
Pallister, a volcanologist with
the USGS .
The 1980 eruption left 57
people dead. leveled trees for
miles arounu and covered
much
of
the
Pacific
Northwest with ash. It was
''barely a five" on the eightlevel Volcanic Explosive
Index. Major said .
At this. point , 'cienti'"
believe there is a 10 percent
chance of a 'level four or larger erupt ion at the 8.364-foot
mountain, he said. The area
immediately aroL1nd ·th e
moumain is closed.
Any explosive eruption
would likely go straight Lip.
Major said. blowing ash and
steam tens of thousands of
feet high. That ~ou ld &lt;:ause
concern for aircraft and car..,
in the area. but nothing like
198()', lateral blast.

10
Ravenswood
Castle,
Hocking Hills near McArthur
for lunch. Members are to
meet at the home of Carol
McCullough at II a.m. to
leave.
POMEROY - Republican
Pany meet the candidates with
free hotdogs, II :30 to I p.m.
on the parking lot.

Homecomings
/Reunions
Sunday, Oct.17
POMEROY
Homecoming will be held at
the Morning Star United
Mcthodisl Church. There will
be a basker_din_ner at 12:30 and
a song serv1ce m the afternoon.
John Gilmore is pastor.

Saturday, Oct. 16
POMEROY - Buirlngham
Modern Woodmen , potluck
Sunday, Oct. 24
Wednesday, Oct. 13
dinner. 5:30 p.m. at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT
TUPPERS PLAINS
Hotdog s, pizza , cider. donuts Homecoming will be held at
Eastern Athletic Boosters 6:30 and table service provided .
the Ash Street Church, 398
p.m. at Eastern High School.
Ash St. , Middleport. The
All parents and coa&lt;:hes asked
Sunday, Sept. 17
&gt;chedu\e
includes: 9:30 a.m.
lo attend.
RACINE Republican Sunday school: I0:30 a.m.
POMEROY - Republican Party meet the candidates proParty bean dinner at the Senior grant with free hotdogs II :30 morning worship; noon, dinner and fellowship, I :30 p.m.
Citizens Center.·
to I p.m. on Third Street.
Earthen Vessels ; 2 p.m. Rev.
Calvin Minnis speaking; 3 p.m
Thursday, Oct. 14
Monday, Oct. 18
Glorybound Quartet, formerly
CHESTER - Shade River
CHAUNCEY - A Region JoyFM Trio.
Lodge 453 will meet at 7:30 14 Youth Council meeting will
p.m . at the hall. Refreshment s. be held at 9 a.m. at the Athens
TUPPERS PLAINS
Department of Job s and
VFW Post 9053 will meet at 7 Family Services on State
p.m. A dinner will be served at Route 13 in Chauncey.
Thesday. Oct. 12
6:30p.m.
POMEROY- Revival serHENDERSON
The
vices are underway at• the
Mari_ne Corp League of Meig s.
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 7
Gallw and Mason Counties
p.m. through Wednesday. Rev.
will meet at 7 p.m. at the
David Cantield of Rush. Ky. is
Henderson
. Community
lhe evangelist.
.
Center in Henderso n, W. V&lt;t.
All marines and· former miliSaturday, Oct. 16
Wednesday, Oct. 13
tary persbnnel are welcome.
POMEROY
-Thomas
POMEROY
POMEROY - Alpha Iota Shelton in concen at 7 p.m. at Contemporary service, 7 p.m.
&lt;:"]\,!asters Chapter of Bet&lt;~ the Zion Church of Christ, Saturday at the St. Paul
Sigma
Phi Sorurily. will travel State Route 143.
Lutheran Church.
'

Church services

Social Events
Concerts
and plays

Sunday, Oct. 17
MIDDLEPORT - Earthen
Vessels will be singing at the
Middlepon Church of the
Nazarene 6:30p .m.
Refreshments \\'ill be served.
POMEROY- Revival scrvices will be held at the
Enterprise Church 7 p.m.
, Sunda~. Monday and Tuesday.
Rev. J1m Lambert will be the
sipeaker. There will be special
music. Ar\and King is pastor.

Other events
Friday, Oct. 15
POMEROY- A staff
member of Senator George
Voinovich will hold oftlce
hours from II a.m. until noon
at Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center in Pomeroy.
Opponunity to discuss federal
legislation or to seek assistance with federal agency
casework issues. Call Cara
Dingus. 441-6410.
Saturday, Oct. 16
CHESTER - A genealogy
fair will be held from 9 a.m.to
5 p.m. at the Chester
Courthouse for beginning and
experienced resea rchers.
Genealogist-and vendor tables
can be reserved for $ 10. The
event is co-sponsored by the
Chester-Shade Hi storical
Association and the
Bedford/Lodi Historical
Group.

Southern High School's 2004 h_omecoming court

Egyptian national convicted in
Virginia of lying about business
dealings with Hamas leader
MATTHEW BARAKAT
AUOCIATED PREU WRITIR

ALEXANDRIA, Va.
An Egyptian national who
ran a now-defunct bank in
New Jersey was found
guilty Tue sday of lying to
federal agents about business dealings with a leader
of the
militant group
Hamas.
A jury convicted Soliman
Biheiri. 53 , who ran the
BMI Inc. b_a nk. of making
false statements to federal
in vestigators by denying a
business relationship with
Mousa Abu Marzook. the
political leader of Hamas.
· Biheiri. who has already
been sentenced to one year
in prison for immigration
fraud. now faces up to five
years in federal prison.
Senlencmg was set for Oct.
29.

Prosecutors said Biheiri
deliberately deceived agents
from
the
Bureau
of
Immigration and Customs
Enforcement during a June
2003 interview after arriving on a flight from Cairo.
The
agents
testified
Biheiri told them he had
no business or personal
relationship with Marzook.
Financial records and coun
te.stimony showed Marzook
helped bring Sl million in
investments ro Biheiri\
company.
Prosecutors said Biheiri
and Marzook engaged in
financial transactions as late
as 1996 - one year after
the U.S. government formally designated Marzook a
terrorist.
During closing s~atemenls
Tuesday. prosecutor David
Laufman said Biheiri will-

--J\1-200Ll ~~
..1.. ._
IltJN'I,INfi

ingly shared details of his
business deals with others,
"but he suddenly · drew a
blank when it came to
Mousa Abu Marzook, a
designated terrorist."
Biheiri, who took the
stand in his own defense,
testified he had no reason
to lie about his connections
to Marzook because the
federal government was
already well aware of them .
His
lawyer.
David
Schertler, said the agents'
handwritten notes contained
no reference to Biheiri
denying a relationship with
Marzook. and said · the
interview should have been
tape recorded. "especially if
somebody's liberty wili be
put at stake based on what
they say."

Advertising Deadline is
Wednesday, October loth.

Have Your
Business Included ...
To

- ~

.

Meigs Hi~h School's 2004 homecoming court
The Ohio Valley Christian School, grades kindergarten through
third, observed VIP (very important parents ) day recently. The
parents ate with their chi ld and then enjoyed a musical pro·
gram directed by Christy Perkins. They also observed in the
classrooms. Each year the school has a day to honor parents .
Here third graders sing "God Bless America . The front row
leaders are from the left , Eric Blevins . annie Bowman,
MaKenzie Brumfield. and Caleb Burnett.

:•••

·••••

•·

•••••

'!:

1:

. (740) 992-2156

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·

1

~

2 1
'I

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: Phone: _________:__ _ _:____ _

I

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Ple.a se send or bring this entry form along .with your photo to

I

•· I

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®alllpolis 119ail_v
U::ribunr

l)oint ~Jlrasant
.1\rgistrr

"Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar" .
~25 Third Avenue ·'
200 Main St.
:f; Gallipolis, OH 45631 · Pt P.leasant, wv 25550

4;

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"Pet Calendar" ·
111 Court St.
1'
Pomeroy, ~H 45769 ~·

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Pictures will run:

Thursdav,
October is

;§

~~ Deadline for Entrv:
Thursday,
October 21

~~

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PUMPKIN PATCH~

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~ ~ Address:

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The winner will be highlighted on the cover.

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In The Sentinel
~
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•••

J~

(

flomt .$llrasant l\rgtstrr

DEAR
ABBY:
My
boyfriend of four years.
''Harold." and I are &gt;Ianing to
di scuss marriage and starting
a family . I am he,itant
because of one thing: We
Dear
have very different views
about disc iplining children.
Abby
My parents never used violence as a form of puni shment, and I don't want to use
it to discipline my kids. I
think
d · 1·that other methods of something wrong with me .
ISClp me work just as well. When 1 was younger. 1 '"" a
without destroying the bond hard-core tomboy. 1 "ar·~d
between
and child.
Wh parent
H
that way until I got to he .l
en arold was young,
Finally. in mv fre shman
his father would discipline year of high school. 1 began
the kids by hilling them with 10 wear makeup on occ&lt;JsiOn
a belt. Harold sees nothing _ but 10 thi&gt; uav. 1 have
wrong with this. although the never been interested in datonly argument seems to be, "I ing guy,, 1 mean 1 like guys.
but I don't care to DATE
turned oul OK."
This is only partially true. them . People look at me like
Both Harold and his brother I'm crazy when lhey heu me
have big anger manage ment sav that. Once a gu_y 1 know
1ssues. I love h1m and would sa1'd he Ihought I was ~a1 . I'm
love to spend the rest of my
N
,. · d - ' ·
life with him. but this is a not. ow my nen Is savmg
I m1ght have a problem. ·
major issue for me.
Abby. do J'.' fs it OK 1101 10
Do you think this marriage be drooling 01 e' r guv' right
would work. and are there now'' Should 1 date s(l people
any good comprom ises we won't.gct the impre"ion I'm
could agree on'! - NON- gay·l Pl ease helfr. - NOT
VIOLENT IN ST LOUIS
INTEREST
bEAR NON-VIOLENT CAROLYNlD !\ "fORTH
Your boyfriend may believe
DE.A.R NOT l NTERESTED:
that he has turned out OK. but No. and it is OK not to be
the fact that he has anger man- obsessed with boys ri~ht now.
agement -problems proves that Not everyone inak or
he didn't. Before any decisions female - matures at the same
about marriage are made , rate. I have received letters from
Harold should gel professional readep, telling me thev didn't
help to get to the root of his become seriou.sl\ intere,ted in a
problems. which "!'e likely the romantic relat1oi1ship until the\
were \8 or 19. or e1·en l'lder.
result ot h1 s father s abuse.
You and Harold should You may be a late bloomer.
enroll in classes on child
People are "coming out''
development and parentino : much earlier than they used
Some hospitals. high schooTs to. and were vou attracted to
and community colleges offer people of th e' same sa. you
them. Unless the two of 'you · would p:ob 0bly kno:v it. If
can reach a tirm agreement you don t thmk you re 2ay.
about this subject, you should you probably aren · t. Do' not
NOT marry. The marriage allow yourself to be pre swould last only until he sured into datin~ until vou are
raised a hand or a belt to you ready. To do otnerwise would
or your little one- and then be doing yourself and the
it would be history, and right- other person a disser1ice.
ly so. Children respond far
Dear Abby is written bv
better to praise than to pun- Abigail Van Buren. also
ishl!lent . The only thing thai known as Jeanne Phillips. and
hlltmg a chLid proves is that was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
violence is acceptable.
DEAR ABBY: I am 16 and Abby at www.DearAbby.com
a junior in high school. My or P.O. Box 69440. Los
best friend says there may be Angeles, CA 90069.

Southern High School's week of homecoming festivities came to a close Friday night with the crowning of the queen and her court.
Left to nght. front are N1ck Roush and Macey Rodriguez representing Southern Elementary's Kindergarten class; second row,
sophomore attendant Lindsey Burrows with escort Corbin Sellers; junior attendant Chelsea Smith with escort Dustin Brlnager. and
queen candidates and the1r escorts, Bnttany Ph1\son and Craig Randolph, Jordan Neigler and Wes Burrows, homecoming queen
Ashton Brown with escort Cole Brown, Brook Kiser and Tyler Roberts. Ashley Roush and Jonas Hart, 2003 homecoming queen,
Amy Norman w1th escort, freshman attendant Morgan Brown with escort Stephen Sellers. (Beth Sergent/photo)

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

DAY, OC,.OBER 29th

Couples marriage plans hit
snag over issue of discipline

OVC observe VIP day

•••

I~J)J'I~If)N

Wednesday, October 13, 2004

'

the other women he is
ac&lt;:used of slaying while
seeking

PageA3

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar

Serial killings suspect guilty in
second trial, could face death
MELINDA DESLATTE

The Daily Sentinel _

Katie Reed of Middleport. Meigs High School's 2004 homecoming queen and her escort Ross Well , was jo ined by her
court and their escorts for a picture Friday night at the Meigs
Marauder-Nelsonville York Buckeyes following the ceremony. In
the court from the left are candidates and ·their escorts.
Justine Dowler and Michael Davis, Amanda King and Joseph
How&lt;;Jrd, Reed and Well, Ashley Baylor and Patrick Dowell,
Amanda Hoyt and Grant Arnold. and Renee Bailey and Jeremy
Blackston. Carrying the. crown and rose bouquet were Faith
·· Leach, daughter of Julie and Tony Leach . and Isaiah Ash
Bullington , son of Cara and Adani Bu llington. The candidates
rode in antique cars to circle the fie ld dunng the pre-game ce r·
emonies. (Cha~lene Hoe fi iCh / photo)

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-The First.Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

I
I

Tod,l) "Wedn e,d.J~. OCI 1.1. lhe 2K7th day ot 2004 There
are 79 davs Jell 111 the Wdf
Tod.1y's Htghilgh t tn Ht'IDI Y
On O.:t I I 179!. . the cot nerstonc ol the exepiltvc mansiOn.
later known'" the Whttc Hou se. W.Js l,ud dtmng ~ cetemony
tn the Dtstnct of Columht,t
On th ts d,ue
In AD )4 Roman empetot C'lauLltus I dtcd. ,titer bemg pOisoned by lm w tfe. Agnpptn,t
In 1775 the Un tted Sidles :--Jav:- h,td tls 011gtns '" the
Contmenl,tl Cong.Ie..,.., OJde1ed the LOil'itJucttOn nt .1 n~tvdl
fleet
In 1843. the Je""h Dlg.Jnll,llton B 11,11 B'nth 1'-&lt;lS tounded
m New York Ctl)
In 1845, Texas ralilied ,, st.Jte co nslitu tton
In 1943. Italy declared wu1 on Getm,tny tts one tune Ax1s
partner
In 1944. Amencan ltoops en leted Aachen. Get many
In 1960. Rtchard M Ntxon dnd John F Kennedy parttctpated m the third tclev1sed deb,ne ot thetr prestdenttal campdtgn
In 1962. "Who·, Atratd ol Vugmta Woo!P." by Edward
Albee. opened on Broadw,ty
In 1974. longtime tclells ton host Ed Sulltvan d1ed 111 New
York Cny at age 72
In 1981. voters m Egypt p,nlictpated 111 a relerendum to
elect Vtce Prestdcnt Hos111 Mubmak the new prestdent. one
week alter the assassmatton ot An.,.ar Sddat
Ten years ago Pro-Bnttsh Protestant puramtlnanes tn
Northern Ireland announced a cease-hre matchmg the lnsh
·Republican Army's stx-week-old truce. Japanese no&gt;eltst
Kenzaburo Oe won the Nobel Pnze m literature
Ftve years ago The Senate deleated the Comprchcnstvc
Test Ban Treaty. 51-48 In Boulder. Colo. the JonBenet
Ramsey grand Jury was dtsnussed after 13 months ol work
wnh prosecutors saymg there wasn't enough evtdence to
charge anyone tn the stx-year-old\ strangulation Robert A
Mundell of Columbta Umversny m New York won the Nobel
Prize for economtc sctence s
One year ago The U N Secunty Counctl approved a resolution expandtng the NATO-led peacekeepmg Ioree m
Afghantstan Texas Gov Rtck Perry stgned mto law a controversial redistricttng btll des1 gned to put more Republicans in
the Texas congression ,tl delegatton Democratic congressman
Denms Kucuuch fat nMIIy ktcked ott hts prestdential bid
Today 's Btrthd,Jy s Comedtan Ntpsey Russell ts 80 L1dy
Thatcher, former Bnltsh pmne lllllli Stet, IS 79 Playwnght
Frank D Gtlroy ts 79 Gospel s1nger Sh1rley Caesar IS 66
Actress Melmda Dtllon 1&gt; 65 Smger-mustctan Paul Stmon IS
63 Actress Pamela Ttltm ts 62 Mustctan Robert Lamm
(Chicago) IS 60 Actor Demond Wtlson IS 58 Country smger
Lacy J Dalton ts 58 Smger-mustctan Sammy Ktgar IS 57
Actor John Lone IS 52 Model Be&gt;crly Johnson " 5!. Actor
Reggte Theus ts 47 Smger M,me Osmond 1s -15 Actress
T'Keyah Crystal Keymah "-12 Actress Kelly Preston "42
Country smger John Wtggms ts 42 1\ctress Ttshd CampbellMartin ts 36 Olymptc "II er-medul fi gure sbter Nancy
Kerngan IS 35 Country stnger Rhett Akms ts 15 Rock mt"J CJan Jan Van S1chem Jumor 1K s Choice) ts 32 R&amp;B Singers
Brandon and Bnan Ctsey (Ltgged Edge) "'e 29 Stnger
Ashant1 1s 24
Thought for Today "Thct c "'e some lhtng' one c,m only
achteve by" deliberate le.1p 111 th e opposll e Ju elltnn One hds
to go abroad m order to ftn d the home one h," lost · - Ftdn7
Kafka, Austnan author (I X~1 - llJ 24) I
~------------- ----·----------------

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

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------·--------------------~

go\ ernment

"It
the
dltdcks
ol
Septcmbci II cost the lives
ul 3.000 nvih,ms," tl pronollnced "what would happen tl hundteds ol pl,mes
.Jtl.tcked American ctltes ''
Nov,. 11 S.tddum s regtme
'~hmteU

~lt

st11kes

dgdlll\1

Amenc,t before Sept II .
200 I, then maybe those hmls
could have been dtsmtssed '"
JUst so much bluster. Bill
alter Sept II. no hullS. no
bellicose statement&gt; could he
taken unsenously
That's why the UVCJwhelmtng sent 11nent 111
Wdshmgton, trom the Whttc
House to Capitol Htll, was
that Saddam's regime represented a gathenng threat to
the sec unty of the Umted
States. to the satetv ot the
Amencan people And no two la\\&lt;maker'
were more convmccd ot

,.

".'

..

'

Of&lt;,
'MOVE AWAY
Fll.ONI THE

., .
, '.
'

.

WINDOW...
RELAX ... TEll ME,

..

ARE YOUA
RED SOX FAN oR
A YANKEE 5 fAN?

' '

HARRISONVILLE - A
Rutland woman was tnjured
m a two -cur acctdent Monday
on Ohio 692 at the mtersecuon wnh Sctpto Township
Road tiR1 (Ph!llips). the
G,!lli.t-Metgs Post of the
State H1ghway Patrol report ed
Donna F Barlet. 54. 32925
Stde Hill Road, was transported
to
0' Bleness
Memonal Hospttal. Athens,
b) the Metgs EMS tollowmg
the 8:20 am colltslon, the
patrol reported
Troopers sutd Barlct was
southhound on 692 when she
turned lett onto Phtlltps tnto
the path ot ,, northbound car
dn ven by Matthew T
Stewart.:! I. 32470 Townshtp
Road 176. Rutland. and collided
Damage to both cars w,ts
dts,tbling. and Barlet was
ctted for fdtlure to Y.teld
"h!le
-;,.
lUI nmg tell

Baskets
from Page A1
ptckup wtlhm a few weeks
and "Ill be dtslrlbuted fo;
three months.
Fanlllies must provtde
local agenctes wtth documentation that they have
,applied for or recet ved flooding dtsaster asststance to
obtam thetr grocery box.
For rnformatwn on how to
apply for aSSistance, Podolski
suggested famihes call the
Metgs County Department of
Jobs and Family Servtces or
make contact wtth the Ohio
Assocration
of
Second
Harve st Foodbanks, 614/2214336

. lfj SUICIDE HOTLINE \
,'

Highway Patrol

Sale
from Page A1

Reverse anorexia: won't you please help?
He's about 35 and not very
tall He's overweight. fleshy
and out of shape He doesn't
have love handles, he has
love bucket s He has th tck.
luxunant hatr all over Iu s
shoulders, his back and ht s
arms There JS no muscle
tone, JUSt saggmg flesh Do I
know tht s because I have
seen htm naked 111 the health
club locker room? Do I
know thts because I am hts
doctor'' No Do I know thts
because we're at the beach
together'' No I know thiS
because he IS standmg m
lront ot me 111 the bread atsle
of my supermarkel He "
wcanng ,t slcevele" muscle
T-shtrt and d pan of cut-oil
sweat pant'
Why " Jl that lhe people
wtth the worst hodte' v.e.JI
the most-rcvcalmg clothes'!
Every New Year's D&lt;~y v.hen
the local Poldr Bear Club
goes lor thetr annual dtve 111
the ICC-C() id Wdler It 's
alw,tys the btggest. mo'l out
nl shape polar bear who Is
wea nng the tmtest Speed"
'WI111SU1l forty yc.trs ,tgo
I m -, we he lot1ked grcdt rn Jt
Nov. one ,tcCidcnt,il glance
at htm and you v.,mt run
home to w,JSh your eyes out
wtth lye soap AI 1he b&lt;~ll
gam~. the guys who l&lt;ikc oil

th em ' Some may suffer and it IS trc.tt.tble Muscl e 1~
shlfls should be ptescllpll on
ftom Reverse Buhmta they btnge eat but they lor- only tlems People " lm 'dll
gel In purge - but vtsually demonstr,ue lh, tl lhc\ dCiu .tl
ly ha ve muscles l'' ,, Li&lt;K'Illl
the results are the same
Let me say, nght here, that 01 psychtatn sl s huul d h~
Jim
I do not ha ve a perfect body allowed to buy musc le rMullen
I d11l not one ot those guys shnts Men \\ho se s totn dLh~
wtth 2 percent body fat who are brgget th.tn th c tt Lllc-..h
can crack walnuts between should be. hdnn cd h1 1,11\
theu I orem m and btcep I dill from g01ng topJe ..,, \\.·uiHL' II
thetr slmts and paml thetr you r normal out-of-shape, too.
bodtes 1\&lt;tlh team logos .md posl mtddlc-aged shlub
To buy shotl s. )Oil 11ill
slogans are never 1he guys Whtch "why I keep my shtrl need to get .t duLIUI .., p1 e'-'tlh nppled, s1x-pack , on tn public. It's why I wear scnpllon certtl ) tng the
w,1shbrwd stom,1chs. but the long pants. so you don't have wec~rer ,.., t ree ot \.tiJCo..,c
ones wnh th e bt ggest ldi gest to sec my ch tcken legs and ve m ~ dnd IS ol sullt uenl IQ
beer helltes It looks as 11 " knohby knees It IS only not to &gt;~e&lt;ll black sol'ks '" 'h
gtant or,mgc Jell-0 mold has common decency No I don 't them
e'cdped ,md \\Ill soon Sldll lh tnk \\C shottld all be model
Onl y people \1 hose htp'
nush1n g
Innocent sl111! ,md Ieel unhdppy f01 not lue b1ggc 1 th.111 t h l'l t \\,U'-h
bv standets
hct ng unre ,tltsttctlly perfect will be ,tllo.,. cJ to \\c,u IH p'Men wtth sptndle leg' But lh ,Jl due'll'l medn we huggcts WhCllC\el the ) aJ C
111Si st on weattng sho1ls. ~houiJ go .uound mak1qg 111 l,tshton In d&lt;.ldtlu&gt;ri 111 ~"
women v.tlh Fnsbee-stzed othct people qu~asy. enh cr
Smoktng sec lton ' spotl s
hell yhullons are we,11mg
Wh en
Mr
Reverse stadtums and public ,llellds
mtdntl-hanng !ashton
Anorexic looks 111 the 1111rrot \\.'rll hLJ\C No D1 -. rohrn ~ 'Cl
It\ Just contectme. but I he sec' Mr Um vcrse 2004 · twns.
thmk they all sulfer lrom " He see.., rrpplrn g muscle~ .md
By lollo\\Jn g these S1111pk
diSea se lh dt gets too llltlc " tnm W&lt;llst We 'ee Jackte gUidelines we m,ty he .thl c lo
,JtiCnlHln Ill the pt e" Gl\?.1 "1{111 111 .1 ldl "'llll Wh en
reverse • the dhtllt b1ng t~nJ
Re ve"e Anorext&lt;t Peo ple \1 s Re vetse Anorexic loo~ s up~cttrn g
epllklll!L
nl
who .., u! I er I 1om Re ve r ~c
Ill
lhC llllliOr ' hC 'CL's Rc, cr..,c Allo l l'\J.t V\ u1 1 t
Anor~XId th rnk the y dlt:
C.tmt.: n ln Dr.tl Pcd. . ) lll tl'
\ri ll pk .t\C hl'l p I
'kt nn &gt; ,md bcdutJful when and cUll')' We sec Dr Ruth
1!1111 lllul hn '" thr' quf/f( 'J
they dre not They ,u c ltke
How do we combat the of ' HaiJ\ 1 ·/11 1/ 'lollu o 1
1hc "Amcrtcdn luol " come'- dr \Cd..,e
ot
Reverse Mt) HIUJ' BooJ.. fm A1odeJ r1
ldnts whr&gt; thmk the&gt; can smg AnotCXJ,l 'l· trsl we must rec- PareW\ " Your ttn U'wlllum
but c,111not Will no one help ogmtc thi.lt tt11~ • ~ d Ut~Cd~e at JUII __}Jlllllel/ (rr Ill \ H (I\ (om !
~

'•

will cuo It om 4 to 8 p m wrth
.
pldques to be awarded tn tour
classes, best 111 cl,'"· best
light svstem. bestmstallatlon.
,u]d best ul show A speCJdl
peopl e\ chotec award will
,Ji so b~ m&lt;~de
Chmtnt.ts promouons were
also dtscusseLI ,md funding
tor loc,tl televtston adventsmg "PP' oved Newspaper
and radto ,tdvertismg tunds
Irom the merchants had earHet been approved "Along the
Rtver'' wtll ag,un thts year be
the theme for the holiday
observance.

from Page A1
econon11c deve lopment for
Southcastet n Ohto. poverty
r.tl e' small buSiness Issues.
health care beneftts .mel
schoollunctm g reform .
Other local polilical lt gures who unended the luncheon were Sandy lannarelli ,
Tom Lowrev. Tun P,mcake.
Jun Sheet&gt;. Mtck 0dvenpon.
Chnslt Ly,nch. ,md K,uen
Sloan
Aftet the candtdates spoke
Becky Bdc~ from the Ohm
Stdlc Utmerstty Extenston
Olttcc encouraged dttendancc to a L'onteten.:e enltt led
"Butldtng
Credtive
Econom tcs by Advdn cmg
Commumty Tnunsm" tn
Sardtnl.t The conlcrence wtll
be held I fnm 9 a m to 3 p m
on Oct 27
Baer then p,tssed Olll sur-

....

-- -

thmg hke that might have to
otter to Bend area residents.
Merrett also dtscus~ed a
preference of 'some merchants to JO!Il m combmed
holiday sales packages, rad1o.
televiSion and newspapers m
Gallia, Mason and Meigs
Counties. She satd the advertiSin g would be geared to
attract people commg tnto the
area on day lrtps and lO~\ard
encouragmg
shopptng
around the area rather than m
JUSt one commumty
Nancy Thoene noted that
the personalized bncks were
bemg mst,1lled on the sidewalk at the Mulberry
Comm umty Center Tuesday
and that the sale of bncks is
contmumg

Jamte
N
Robert,,
Reedsvtlle, 10 days 111 Jail,
probation, $350 and costs,
DU I. probation, $70. Failure
To Control. Michael W
Roush, Racme, 3 days 111
jail, probation, $100 and
costs, Receivmg Stolen
Property: Michael
H
Rucker, Samt Albans, W.Va.,
$25, Speedmg; George A
Ruz 1cka. Hollan'd, ,$30 and
costs, Speedmg, Charles W
Sampson, Racme, $30 and
costs, Seal Belt Ytolatmn.
Mary
A
Sheets,
Pomeroy, $70, Drug Abuse,
Mamil L. Shouldts. Gay,
w Va, $20 and costs. Stop
Stgn; Stephen L ShouldJS,
Portland, $30 and costs,
Seat Belt Violatton. Budd J
Smtth, Shade. probauon.
$50, Dtsorderly Conduct,
probatton, DUI, probation,
$30 and costs, Seat Belt
Violation, probation, $100

Home &amp; Car

Exercise, weight loss, diet- both
treat and prevent syndrome

Que&gt;tton My doctor 'ays all sources agree are part of the
that I mtght have metabolic syndrome These are promtlamsyndrome and wants me to rnatory state, a&gt; evidenced by
have a lot of tests She says thts h1gh blood levels of C-reacuve
can lead to diabetes I am only protem, prothrombotic state. mdt45 years old, but I am over- cated by htgh blood leveb of libweight and round in the mtddle nnogen , polycysnc ovary synCan you tell me more about thJS drome. charactenz.ed by enlarged
syndrome and how I can get nd ovanes and tltiid-tilled cysts, and
of 1t and how I caught 1t
acanthosts nigncans, featunng
Also. why ts tltmportant'7
patches of darkly pigmented skin.
Answer: Metabolic syndrome
y,
h ·
t to ask
IS alSO Called lllSUltn reSIStanCe for
r:.~~ant:ili~~ If she
syndrome and sy ndrome X. By doe d
th tabol
whatever name, it is a clu&gt;tenng
s tagnose you wt me
:
together of a number of signs tc syndrome. you can take postand s~toms that indicate an ove steps to reduce your nsk of
incre&lt;l' nsk for coronary heart heart dtsease and diabetes. The
dtsease and type two dtabetes In rnamstay of treatment IS wet~t
addtoon, the person wtth meta- loss through dtet and exerctse
bohc syndrome has an mcrew,ed Getttng ai:J?ut 30 mmutes ot exernsk of dtsew;es related to plaque ~'se daily 1s a mtmmum. If your
bUildup rn artery walls. such as, ,)\lood glucose. ts elevated, y~r
stroke and penpheml vascular doctor may recommend rn¢icadtsease
tton to control your sugars as well
At least 47 ll1111ion American as a dtabettc dtet Elevated blood
and costs, Lett 01 Center: adults have metabohc syndrome- pressure may need to be conPaul C. Sohner. Sahvanta, - roughly 25 percent of the adult trolled With medtcatton, and
Anz , $ 30 and
populatton In addttton, about exce"ive blood fats (hpids) may
costs, four percent of teenagers have It need to be controlled w1th diet
Speeding.
Brendan
T
Accordmg to the Amencan and/or medtcauon.
Spears. South Pomt, $30 Heart Assocmnon, there are no
If 11 turns out that your only
and
costs.
Speedtng: well-accepted cntena for diag- problem ts wetght, I can gtve
Vtctona
A
Ttpton. nosmg metabolic syndrome vou an additional word of
Mtddleport , 30 days m jatl, However. among most of the encouragement. Startmg a dtet
probatiOn, $100 and costs, sources that I checked, there and exerctse program under
Reckless Operation, seven appears to be a general consensus your doctor's supervtston may
days m Jatl. probation, $100 thattl you ha;e three or more of help you to actually tend off
the followmg condruons. you metabolic syndrome and as
and costs, Failure To
ha~e thts ;yndrome .
negattve health consequences
Control , Whttney E Ulm,
Central obesity waist ctrFmml1· Med 1une® 15 a weekMiddleport, $20 and costs, cumterence over 35 mches tn 11 rotw 1111 Tn "'"""' questwns,
Traffic Cont Dev/Signs. A P women and 40 m~hes m men 11 nit' 10 Marlha A S1mpson,
Wemck. Bexley, $25 and Thts centro! obes1ty ts due to D.O, M.B A, Ohto Umverslfl,
Os/eoparMc
costs, Speedmg. $ 100 and excesSive fat ttssue m and Col/eoe
0r
around
the
abdomen
d
b
0~
110 1
costs. No 0 L, R T
o H y p c r 11 p 1 d c m 1 a
Me 1une. P Bm
, At tens,
Wendling, Cincinnati , $30 Tnglycendes. or blood fats, Ohw 45701. 01 1w e-mtul to
and
costs.
Speedmg: over 150 mg percent when readerqt!e\IIOIII @fallul\medlTtmothy
Wtckersham. measured alter an overnight cmene'" org Med,calmfonnaRacme. S30 and costs. Seat fast, low HDL Cholesterol , Itonm r/111 wlu11uw provuled m
Belt VJOiatton, Wtlliam C less than 40 mg/dl tor men and an educat/0/la/ sen·tce only
Woods, Pomeroy, $1 00. 50 m,Udl for women , of thts lr dne.11ot replace the judgment
Drivmg Under Susp/Revoc, so-called "good cholesterol " of llJIIr penmwl ph1s1ctan,
• Elevated blood pressure o&gt;er 11 ho should be relied on to dwgKevm
M
Yarnall, 130185 mmHg.
nose and /~commend tll'annent
Reynoldsburg, $30 and
• Blood sugar (glucose) over for am medtcal condl!lo11s Past
costs, Speedmg, Charles L. 110 mg percent, measured when co/umm llll' mwlllble
Yocam.
Pomeroy,
$26, fastlllg.
onlme at www.tamtlymedtSpeeding
There are other cntena that not cinenews org
-------------------------------------qualtfy 1f thetr total household a copy of the applicant s recent
1ficomc 1s at or below 150 per- electric b11l IS reqUired
cent of federal poverl) gutdeThe followmg mcome levels
hnes
by
household stze should be
from Page A1
Emergency HEAP mcome eli- used to deterrmne ehgtblhty
gibility can be for the past three
on our customers because of or 12 months Those not quali- These mcome gutdeltnes repremcreases in fuel costs fymg on three months mcome sent the I SO% calculation and
Unless the state tncreases the are asked to present thetr full are revtsed annually Allov.able
maximum benefit of $250 for 12-month mcome to see tf eltgt- annual mcome for a one-person
household "$13,965, 1\\o perbulk fuel, I fear that some bllity can be met on that basts
sons, 518,735, three persons,
households will be wtthout
The Regular HEAP program
heat dunng the coldest offers heatmg asSIStance once 523,505, four persons, $28,275;
months of winter, and that per heating season to low five persons, 533,045, and s1x
our help may not be enough. mcome
households while persons, $37,815. Households
Senior ctuzens and chtldren defraymg the htgh cost of home wnh more than SIX members
are at risk and very vulnera- heating. Regular HEAP pays a should add an addtttonal $4,770
ble to extreme cold "
pomon of ehgtble households_ to the yearly mcome
HEAP provtdes financial wmter heating btlls. The amount
Both Emergency HEAP and
heaung assistance for need1est of asSIStance ts deterrnmed by Regular HEAP apphcatwns can
restdents who may be on a fixed total household mcome, the be completed at the Galha
mcome or among Ihe workmg number of people m the house- C A A HE&gt;\P Office, 859 Thtrd
poor HEAP helps semor citi- hold and the type ofheatmg fuel AI enue, Galhpohs. or the Me1gs
zens and liumltes wtth children used
C &gt;\ A HEAP Otlice at I 369
avotd the chotce of "heatmg or
The mcome gutde lines for Po" ell Street, \1tddleport
~atrng"
bolh programs are the same
Apphcauons "111 be taken by
''Peop le who need help How e1 er. Regular HEAP appomtmem lrom 8 30 to II 00
should chouse HEAP Last year, requ1res the pre' 10us 12 months a m and trom 12 30 to 3 00
01 er 400,000 Ohto households mcome "htle the past three p m .
Monda)
through
recetved HE&lt;\P benefit&gt;." months mcome ts acceptable for Thursda) Thts ) ear "e are sull
Ed11 ards satd
Emergency HEAP The 12- The appomlmen! system "til be
Emergency HEAP. prmtdes monih penod or three-month
used to apply for Emergency
asSIStance to households that pcnod for !he test ts detem11ned
fiFAP Apphcams slwuld call
h.w~ had utJhtlt::s disconnected,
rrom date ol applicat ion. maKtng 992-6629 or 16 7 - 7 341 IO &gt;Chcdface Ihe threat of. dtsconnecuon Jt poss1ble l or ~ome '' rth
or h,JVe I 0 days or less supply of decreased mcome dunng 1hcsc uJe an apporntment.
The wll-trcc numbe r tor
bulk fttel The program allows a penods to quahl) la!er m the
Regular HEAP·mqumes 1~ (800)
onc-tmH: payment ol up to $17S
program
282-0880
For th e hearmg
per hi.!attng season to restore or
Examples ol lhese t~ pe Situa1mp.1rrt!d \\ nh a tdecommunwaretam home hcatrng Sl.!r\ rct:s tions could m:cur !rom Ia! ofl
For propane and tuel 011 clients. stnke. rettrement. dt sabllil) or · llon de' Jee lor the deaf (TDD)
1-R00-68b-l55 7
the payment "as recently death of a spoust" or hou se hDid
lnfonnat wn ts "'ail able from
mcrcascd 10 $250 because ot the member Documentation \ ent)~d\\,trd
s al the Cheslure CA &gt;\
mcrease m fuel pnces
mg mcome must be pro' td ed
Homcm,ne-rs or renters may \\hen app lymg for HEAP ,\lso onice at the numbers abo1 e

:-!

Costs

Jenny
Smtth
veys tor bus mess O'-' ners to be tilmmg tn November The Dtrector,
,tssess what thetr needs are per- program wtll run every remmded the audtence that
the next busmess-mtnded
tatnmg to the local work lorl'e Tuesday 111 December
A represent.tttve trom Rio luncheon will be held on
Chamber Prestdent Brenda
Mernllmlormed the chamber Grande Communny College Nov 9 and tcature a speaker
Pleasa111
Valley
of the "Crank It Up Sound 111 Mtddleport announced from
Hosptt.ll
Perry
Yarnddoe
"
01'1" to be held on the they h.tve a record enrollment
also
tentattvcly
&gt;cheduled
to
Pomeroy parkmg lot on Oct of 98 students
16 The competttton of car
Chamber
Executive speak
stereos IS sponsored by the
First
Southern
Baptist
MONEY-SAVING DISCOUNTS
ChUich, K92 The Frog, and
Mnunt,un Dew
Save with Nationwide's
'
M~mtl also remmded that
the-c hamber van can ptck up
Discount.
pdckuges for Opet at ton
Chnsnnas Child
Insure both your home and car Wtlh
In other announcements ,
Nattonwide•, and get a money·savRockspr~ngs Rchabtlllation
ing discount on both
Center wtll hold thet~
Call nie.. Stop by... - it's your
Communlly Halloween at 7
p m on Oct 27 The event
P0014roy
choice!
JEFF WARNER
wtll lealure games, pnLes ,
,13 w 2nd Street
and a bake and hot dog sale
992·5479
Notlonwlde'
A WJOS representative
Insurance.&amp;
also announced that they are
FonanCoal Servoces
searchmg for talent for thetr
Chnstmas Along the R~&gt;~r
Nallonwldt MutUIIInaurlnct Com.peny end Affllla11d CornpanMis,
progr,un They are' mterested
Home Offlc. Columbus, OH &amp;3215-2220 HOC 1HOO
111 soloiSts or chmrs and w til

Luncheon

'

It was noted that 629 ducks
were sold for the Rtverfest
Derby The goal had been to
sell I ,000 but the sale fell
short panty because of the
flood distraction, .Jt was
noted. It was noted that not
everyone ts back m busmess
yet
Brenda Merrttt reported on
the "Fmal Fnday" promotton
whtch
takes
place
m
Nelsonvilk and has been discussed for the Bend area She
said th at It rs really not a merchants' sale, but rather an
artisan sale and demonstration geared to losler an artiSt
community She suggested
so me members mtght like to
dttend the October one to get
"better ptcture ot what some-

·

.

For the record

-

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishmertt of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tlureof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of tl1e
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitio11
the Got•er~mtmt for a redress of grie••a11ces.

-

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Ed1tor

POMEROY
Sheriff
Ralph Trussell is on the
lookout for those removing ,
vandalizing or destroying
political stgns
"Any
person
caught
destroymg or removtng
campatgn signs wtll be
pro sec uted to the fullest
extent ol the law," Tru ssell
satd Tuesday.

Belt Vmlatton. Mtchelle M
Howard, Apex, N C, $30
and costs, Speeding; Angela ,
L Hysell. Reedsvtlle. $70,
Improper Passtng, Donna
Jacks , Pomeroy, $20 and
costs, Failure To , Control,
Mark W Jackson, Franklin.
$30 and costs. Seat Belt
V10latton.
Ktmbery
R
Johnson, Pomeroy, $30 and
costs, Speedmg. JesSica L
Kchl, Reedsvrlle, $25 and
costs , Fat lure To Control ,
Robert
H Ltpscomb .
Letart. W.Va .. $30 and costs.
Se,Jt Belt Vtolatton, Archte
0 Marcum, Vtnton , $30
and
costs,
Scat
Belt
Vtol~lton , Thomas
J
Martm, Racme. $70, Stop
SigLn h
ea M Matson, New
Haven, W Va · $25 and
costs. Speedmg: Raymond J.
Mtchael, Racme, $30 and
costs, Seat Belt ViOlation;
Jusun
L.
Mtddleswan,
Portland, $ 30 and costs,
Seat Belt Violatton, Dwight
E. Mttchell, Athens. $30 and
costs. Speedmg. Kerry L
Moodtspaugh, Reed sville,
$30 and costs. Speedmg:
Aaron L Morns, Rutland.
$30 and costs. Seat _ Belt
Violation; Jason Moms.
Pomeroy, $30 and costs.
Seat Belt Vtolation, Ronald
C. Mullins, $30 and costs.
Seat Belt Ywlatton, Davtd
T Napper, Mtddleport. $30
and
costs,
Seat
Belt
Vwlatton. Rtchard P. Nease.
Pomeroy, $20 and costs,
Trafltc Cont Dev/Stgns,
Curtts S. Ne1gler. Racme.
$30 , Seat Belt V10lat!On,
Jerry E Nolan, Bridgeport,
$30 and costs, Seat Belt
Samantha
J
Vmlatton.
Ostrander, Jackson, $30 ,md
costs, Speedmg. Thomas L.
Parker. Felton. Del.. $30
and costs, Speedmg
Ctndy
R
Parsons,
Pomeroy. $30 and costs,
Seat Belt YJOiatton. Cheryl
L Partlow. Racme, $20 and
costs. Lett Of Center; Jason
D Patnck. Galltpohs, 530
and costs, Speedmg; James
B. Phtllips, Btdwell, $30
and costs, Speedmg: Bobbte
J. Pierce, $30, Seat Belt
VtOiatton ;
Gregory
E.
Pulltn s, Racine, three days
in jail, prob~tion, SI 00,
Use/PosesstOn
Drug
Paraphenra, probatton, $50,
Drug Abuse, 10 days in jail,
probation , $200, DriVlng
Under Susp/Revoc, Corwm
L. Reed, Caldwell, 180 days
in jail, probation, $100 and
costs, Theft, Rachel R
Reeves , Pomeroy, 10 days
in Jatl, probatton, $100.
Dnvmg Under Susp/Revoc,

~

Jim Freeland
Publtsher

The Daily Sentinel o Page As

Family Medicine

POMEROY Meigs
County Coun Judge Steven
L. Story recently processed
the followmg cases·
Gary F. Adams, Ash land,
K Y., $30 and costs, speeding; Grace M. Andrew,
Pomeroy, I0 days in jail,
probatton, $250 and costs,
Reckless OperatiOn; Bruce
G Batrd, The Plams , $30
and
costs,
Seat
Belt
VJOiatton, Robert D Barber.
Reedsvtlle , $25\ and costs,
Failure To Contrtll , Thomas
E Batey, Pomeroy, $30 and
costs, Seat Belt Vtolation,
Jonathan J. Bobb, Pomeroy,
$30 and costs, Seat Belt
Vtolatton, Christopher S
Boggs, Spencer, W.Va.. I0
days 1n Jatl, probations.
$200 111 costs, Drivmg
Under Susp/Revoc; Bernard
J. Bookman, Parkersburg,
W Va • $30 and costs, Seat
Belt Violation, Bennie L
Branham. R1pley, W Va ..
$30 and costs, Seat Belt
Vtolatton ,
Thomas
P
Brooks, Cheshire, $35 and
costs. Speedmg; Mtchael G
Brown. San Dtego, Calf,
$30 and costs, Speeding ,
Steven W Call, Pomeroy,
$20 plus costs, Dtsplay
Plates/Valid Sttcker.
Kathleen
Carpenter.
Rutland, $20 and costs, Stop
Stgn , Sarah
Caruthers,
Pomeroy. $25 and costs.
Fulled To Yteld; Scott R
Chapell, Pomeroy, $30 and
costs. Speedmg: Joseph E.
Cheuvront , V1enna. W Va .
$30 ,md costs, Speedtng,
A.
Clendenm,
Rebecca
Ravenswood. W Va. $25
and costs, Failure To
Comrol; Michael L Oatley.
Long Bottom. I0 days tn
Jail, probatiOn. $350 and
cost~. OWl And/Or Drugs
Of Abuse. probation, $70
and costs,
Fatlure To
Control Belhe J Deeter,
Athens. $20 and costs,
Tmted Glass; Shawn T.
Edmger, Columbus, $30 and
cost~. Speedmg. Anna M
Farrow, Whttehall, $30 and
costs. Speedmg, Mtchael S
Francts, Racme , $25 and
costs, Fatlure To Control,
James T Fultz, Norfolk, Va,
S30 and costs, Speedmg.
Ethan E. Greene, Pomt
Pleasant, W. Va , $20 and
costs, Failure To Control;
Mohammad R Hajtvandi,
Pomeroy, S30 and costs,
L.
Speeding;
Shannon
Harland,
New
Haven,
W Va , I 0 days m Jail, probation, $50 and costs, Hit
Sktp, Leavmg Scene, 30
days in Jatl, $150 and costs,
Reckless Operation, probatton. $30 and costs. Seat

-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

withJts dtsarmament obhga- Amencan people about the
uons" or sutfer the conse- threat posed by Saddam s
regtme .
quences
But President Bush hardly
Well , stx months after
was
the only· one tn th e
Bush's U.N. speech, four
months after the Securny na!lon's capttol persu,1ded by
Joseph
Counctl iss ued tts ulttmatum mtelligence reports warmng
Perkins
to Iraq . Saddam's defiance of that Iraq had weapons ol
Sens
the both the U. N and the mass destruction
Kerry
and
Edwards
\\ere
Umted States contmued
So what was Bush to do ? persuaded b] the sam e
Saddam's menace than Sens Acqmesce to "allies" on the reports, as thetr aforemenJohn
Kerry.
the Secunty Counctl who want- tioned statements md!l'ated
Moreover, while Duelfet 's
Massachu,etts Democrat. ed to gt ve Sad dam a tina I
report
states that there were
and John Edwards, the North "tinal opportumty " to comCarohn.t Demon.tt, who are ply w1th resolutiOns he had no chemical, b10logtc,d 01
nuw st,tkmg thetr bid for the defted for the prevmus 12 nuclear ''-capons lll Iraq hy
Whue Hou se on opp_ilsttton years'' Or make good on hiS the t1me Ll S forces mvadcd
wallllng to bring reg1me the counli 1 he told l"wmdk to the war lll Iraq
In Oct 2002, Edwards stat- change to Iraq rt Saddam ers th,lt inspectot' c,mnot
"defimth el} sa} whcthct 01
ed. "Saddam Hussem\ regtme 1em.uned dettant'?
H,td the nauon s comman- nut \VMD llldtCtJdl-. \~e1e
represent; a grave threat to
Amcnca ,md our ,tlhcs. "We Llct 111 chtef taced such a tr,msferred Olllol lr,lq be lotc'
know thdl he hds chcmtc,J) dectstllll hefote the tellor the w,\r."
He ,tlso st,tkd th,Jt ll\
and l&gt;mhtgtcal wc.tpons We ,Jtlack, ol Sept. II. m,tybc
know tiMt he ts domg Clety- ,111 ,11 ~u mcnt could have 199J, lr.tq wnllld h,11 c bc·cn
lK'l' ll ~ 111~\de for g1ving ,tble lO ptod!I L'C lllU sldid
thm~ he Ldll tn bwld nucle,Jr
wc,t[JOns And we know tiM S,tddd lll ~o many more dgcnl JJl tl pe11oJ tlt llltl nt h...,
each d.ty he ge t' closer to mon t h~ 01 ycdr s to get h1s and ncn e · ·~ ~nt 1n h.&gt;.\ th.m
,, ve~tr or two
~u.:l 11 ev rn g tho~t go,tl
lllllld l ight
-The bottom It nc " Ih,tl
In J.tnudt) 2003. Kcll)
But alter the mass murder
S.tddam
h,td Ihe "til ,uiJ ,,
declared. "We need to d" ol 1.000 people on Amen can
,lfln Sddd,11n Hu ssem He JS soil hy lslamtc extremiSts. way to Lle1elop 111 .Jcquuc
,, brut.tl dtctatot. lc.tdmg dn the scCUIIly ol the Umtcd wedpon~ ul lll d""' Jc ~ l r ti Lopptesstve regtme We all St,nes. the salety ot the tton Anu 11 " cut!Lel\ ,J11ic
know hts htany of oflenses Amellcdn people demanded that tho~~ wcdpon-.. \\ nuld
He pt cscnts a pat1tcul,uly th,H the prcmlclll t,tke act ton httve been u "~ d .tf!..!ll1 "~1
cllhet the Umt~d Sl,lles ur ll'
g t II.:'\ ou.., thr edt becltu~e he 1s
dUi.unst Sddddm's Jec,dcJSO LOnstslenlly p1011C [0 ITIIStr'ant re~ 1111e , even wnhout alltcs. ctthet h~ Sddcl.ll n
CdicUJaiJOn
And now he" the blcs\mg ol the Umted hrm..,ell or hv. ,t \L'l i OI 01~.1111.
1at ron opcr.ttlll ~ ,r-.. S.tdd.un "
mt'LLtiLul lttlng. AmerrL.t.., Ndtmn"
response to hts conunued
In teslimony th" week to proxy
Th,tt\ 11 h) the· l ' ntted
decell dnd hts conststenl the Senate Armed Forces
grl1sp lor weapons ot rn.1ss Commtltre Charles Duelfer. StLHcs Vn!S ngiH to g.o to '' .tr
desliUc!IOll "
the chtel U.S. '-'Capons ag~rms t lrlly \\ liL·thc• r 01 no!
Prestdent Bush concu11ed mspector. told lawmakeJS s,,dd.un dLlu,tll) h,td" Jc,ld!
With Sens Ed.,.Mds .tnd thdl IllS te ,un t11rned up no stockpile ol WfV!Ds
For Ill the w,tke ul the Sept
Ketry In lact. one year ,md evtdence tiMt Saddam had
one d"Y dfter the terrot weapons ot llldSs destruction II tenor Jll,JCks. lhts ndliOil s
att,tcb upon the Unncd dl the lune Prestdent Bush leader~ mu't be tc,nllcd 111
St&lt;~tes. the prestdent v.ent to
took the lhtlion to war wnh take whatever rne.rsure-.. necessary - mcludmg pte-empth e Untied Nattons and latd It aq
out a case tor acuon agam~t
Dueller's findmgs. mclud- ttve war - to prevent .mothSaddam's tegtme
cd 111 a report ol nearly 1.000 er utroc rty dg,u nst th e
The Secunty Counc tl p,tges. ha&gt;e heen seized Amenc.tn people.
(Jos eph f'nklll\ 11 u
responded m Nov. 2002 by upon by war cnucs. by Bush
unan1mous ly
approv rng foes. '" LOnlmnatton ot theu wl11111111 11 Jm 7/w \'w1 Dw~o
Resolutton 1441. whtch vtew tiMl the war was unJUS- U11wn-?i tbull&lt;' and , '"' I"
gave Saddam's regtme ' a utied. th,tt the While House 1eached al }0\e)!h Pe1k1111W
fmal opportumty to comply dellber,nely
nmled the UnwnT11b com I

-

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Saddam Hussetn qmetly
celebrated on Sept II, 200 I,
when terronsts. using fuelladen Jetliners as weapons ot
mass destrudton. lmd waste
to the World Trade Center
and gouged a hole tn the
Pentagon
The Iraqi dtctator delighted tn the mass murder of
nearl y 3,000 people 111 New
York. in Washtngton . DC.
and 111 Penn,ylvama "The
Umted States reaps the
thorns tts mlers have planted
111 the world. " he sp,tke
Saddam was not responSIble tor the worst-ever tenor
,ltta.:k on U S sotl. '"
Prestdem Bush acknowledged mote th&lt;~n ,, ye.tr ,tgo
But he cert,llnly denved vtcanous '"tJ&gt;Ial'tton lrom the
des! ruct ton of Sept I I. from
the carnage
And ht&gt; despotic tegt me
,11 the very least. tacttly
cncout u~cd more te1 nu
attdcks 'ctpon the Untied
St.1tcs. ds e\ldenced by .1
polemtL. publ"hed 111 AI Raftd,tyn , an lraqt ncwsp,tpcr controlkd by Sdddam s

Sheriff issues
warning

-

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

i

Local Briefs Court News

-

111 Court Street o Pomeroy, Ohio

www. mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 13,2004

Iraq: the president did what he had to do

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 13, 2004

-

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Pagei\4

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499 Rtchland Avenue
Athens Ohio 45701

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

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

OHIO

Wednesday, October 13,

2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Prep football computer ratings, Page 82

Local Stocks

Quieter)
A U.S. Air Force C-5 Galaxy takes off from the joint-use Spanish and U.S. air base in Moron. southern Spain. Friday. Sept. 28. 2001. At Wright-Patterson. the C-141 cargo planes that operate out
of the base's 445th Airlift Wing are to be retired in 2006. so it's crucial that the base be prepared
to accommodate the new C-5 transport plane. according to Sen. Mike DeWine. R-Ohio.
(AP Pholo/Cflstina

Military bill includes funding
for critical Wright-Patt projects
MAUA RULON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Funding for projects critical
Wrightto
protecting
Patterson Air Force Base
from closing is part of the
$50 million Ohio is to
receive under the federal
military construction spending bill.
Defense Department officials are looking to close I00
bases nationwide next year.
While funding for military
• · ·installations isn' t a guarantee
that a base won't be axed, it
bolsters a base's importance
and makes closure less likely.
At Wright,Patterson. the
C-141 cargo planes that
operate out or the base's
445th Airlift Wing are to be
retired in 2006, so it's crucial that the base be prepared
to accommodate the new C-5
transport plane, according to
Sen. Mike DeWine , R-Ohio.
The spending bill directs
$4.3 million to WrightPatterson to modify an atrfield ramp to make way for
the C-5 plane s and $16.R.
million to build a new hanger for the C-5 aircraft.
"Now, more than ever, it is
critical that we invest in and
strengthen our nation' s military infrastructure.'' said
DeWine, a member of the

Senate
Appropriations
Committee. "Ohio\ manv
servicemen and women need
adequate facilities to mamtain our military's strength
and readiness."
The Davton area base also
was to get $9.2 million to
replw.:e several &gt;team lines
and $740.000 for a special
tactic:al unit detachment.
"]'m pleased we were able
to secure this funding that
will support the m1s,;nn of
our military personnel based
here in our area." said Rep.
Dave Hobson, a Republican
from Springfield who 1s a
powerful member of the
House
Appropriations
Committee that determines
spending.
The bill. which included
S I0 billion for projects
nationwide , won congressional approval this weekend
and is awaiting the president's signature.
It also included a provision
allowin g a new veterans
medical ~enter to be built on
Defense Department land in
Columhus. The facility 1s
expected to serve about
250,000 patients a year.
replacing an olde r clinic that
only is able to serve about
135,000 people a year, which
has forc:ed Columbus area
to
trave l to
veterans
Cleveland or Cincinnati for
treatment.

The legislation also contained $6.9 million for the
Air National Guard m
Toledo to replace its 40-yearold logistics complex , which
is inadequately configured to
handle the size and quantity
of supplies required for F-16
fighter jet&gt;.
The Army National Guard
wi ll get $2.2 million to build
an organizational mainte·
nance
shop
at
the
Rickenbacker International
Airport m Columbu s. and '
about $10 million to replac:e
a separate maintenance shop
in Columbus that is in poor
condition and is needed to
store eqt1ipment tn preparation for mobilization.
The Base Realignment and
Closure Commission
IS
expected to cut $1 billion
&lt;mnually by eliminating as
many as 100 military installations nationwide. A list of
which bases will be cut is
expected by next September
at the earliest.
. Since 1998. the cnmmissian has recommended closing 125 major and 225 minor
military operations and
realigning 145 others. Ohio
lost -three base s employing
about 5.700 people.
'
Ohio ctlrrent ly has abo ut
3~.000 defense jobs across
the state. which have an economic impact of about .$4
billion a year.

ACI- 34.78
AEP - 32.26
Akzo - 35.25
Ashland Inc. - 55.38
AT&amp;T -15.59
BLI-11.41
Bob Evans - 25 .98
BorgWarner - 43 .10 ·
Champion - 3. 76
Charming Shops - 7 .42
City Holding- 33.06
Col. -. 36.30
DG - 18.84
DuPont - 43.34
Federal Mogul - .17
USB- 29.17
Gannett - 83.25
. &lt;;ieneral Electric - 34.02
GKNLY - 4.05
Harley Dav~dson - 59.74
Kmart- 86.99
Kroger - 15.10
Ltd.- 23.18
NSC- 30.93
Oak Hill Financial 35.96
OVB- 31.34
BBT - 40.36
Peoples - 26 .91
Pepsico - 48.29
Premier - 9.26
Rockwell - 38.94
Rocky Boots- 19.05
RD Shell - 52.29
SBC- 26.89
Sears- 38.16
Wal-Mart - 52.92
Wendy's - 33.76
Worthington- 21.05
Daily stock reports are tne
4 p.rn. closing quotes of
the previous day·s transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

NewsChannel

OHSAA boss speaks on sportsmanship at Rio Grande

off his venti lator for eventually as long as 18 hours.
The medical official&gt; who
attended to Reeve said they
remember hi s persistence
and attention to detail with
his treatment.
At
!VIetroHealth.
he
demanded that the staff
return at the appointed
minute after his rest breaks .
The therapy. which exercised
chest and abdominal muscle s
that had been immohile for
years. was exhau sting .
·'He directed everything:·
said Cath y Sulzmann. a
research nuf\e. "He worked
from the time he got up in
the morning unt il he went to
bed at night. "
Dr. Raymond Onders. who
implanted the breathing
de vice, said the procedme is

.

RIO GRANDE - Ohio
High
School
Athletic
Association Commissioner
Daniel B. Ross addressed a
group of athletes at the

' *OUth Pol~t II Ftlver Valli!)/
VInton Cou!lly,al Meigs

Eae_tem ~Trimble
SOUih Glltilo at Hartoan
southttn'al Fedemt - g

llocc:or
Atixander at Gallta Academy

- . ,_It
• .

,,,

,.ridoy•o'ga.,...

steady around 59. Winds
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noon)
wi II be 5 MPH fmm the
It will be a cloudy morn- sou th turning from the
mg. Then~ is a slighl southwest as the evening
chance we could see some pmgresses.
ra in . Temperatures
wtl l
Ovemigllt ( 1·6 a.m.)
climb from 56 to 62 by late
It should continue to be
this morning. Winds will be cloudy. There might be a bit
.I0 MPH from the south of rain around the area.
turning from the southwest Temperatures will linger at
as the morning progre s se~.
57 with today's low of 54
Ajterrwmr (1-6 p.m.)
uccurnng around 6:00am.
It should continue to be Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH
cloudy. Temperatures will
stay near 62 with tnday's from the southwest turning
hi gil of 63 occurring around from the west as the
4:00pm . Wind~ will be 5 overnight ·progresses.
Thursday, Octnber 14
MPH from the SOUthwell
M()mi11g
(7 a.m.-Noo11)
turning from the south as
It wil l he a cloudy mornthe afternoon progresses.
ing.
Temperatures
will
E••e11irrg
(7
p.m.hover at 54. Winds will be
Midllighl)
to I0 MPH from the west
5
It shou ld remain cloudy.
Some
r;;in
likely. turning from the southwest
Temperatures
hold a:-; the morning progresses.

Southern • Waterlord
Pt. "-nt at Atw~­
Wahamo at Buc~&lt;eye Trail

Hannan ill Buffalo ·
•
Saccor
Gta&lt;:a at Ohio Volley Chrlllttan

Volloyboll

· Gmce al Ohio Volley Chr!otlan
.

·-rdlr'• gamaa

' Crua Country
Gallla
Academy . at ' SEOAL
'Champ/cnshtpa ,(a\ Rlo'Grando)
River Vtlley at CNC Meet (at Fairland)
Voltayboll
. Ol')lo

Valley

Christian

at_ ACSl

Reglonals

APPrep

Football Poll
COLUMBUS (AP) - How a state panel
ot sports writers and broadcasters rates
- Oh1o high schoo l football teams in the fifth
weekly Associated Press poll ot 2004, by
OHSAA divisions. with won -lost reco rd
and total points (first-place votes in pa ren·
theses ):
DIVISION I
1. C1n. Colera •n (23) 7·0
314
2, Austmtown·F •Ich (5) 7·0
275
. J, Cle. St. Ignatius (1) 6·1
237
4, C1n. St Xavier (2) 7-0
214
5. Centerville ( 1) 7-0
20g:
6. C1n. Moeller 6·1
180
7. Lakewood St . Edward (4) 3·4 167
109
B. Westerville S. 6· 1
9. Cle. Glenville 6·1
94
10. Dublin Scioto 6·1
47
Others receiving 12 or more po1nts: 11,

W. Chester LaKota W. 39. 12, Lancaster
16. 13, Tal. 51. Franc•s 13

DIVISION II
1, Avon Lake (25) 7-0
2 , Co ts. BrooKtfaven (4) 7-0
3. Macedonia Nordonia 7-0
4. Spnngboro (3) 7·0
5. New Ph iladelphia (1) 7-0
6. Cin . Withrow (2)7·0
7, Uniontown lake 6·1
8. Louis"Ville (t) 6·1
9, Amherst Steele 7·0
10. Jackson 6·1

329
291
254
221
200
t62
161
78
41
34

Others rece 111ing 12 or more po1nts: 11.
Maumee 29. 12. Maple His. 24 . 13,
Carrollton 2 1. 14, Chardon 20 . 15. Akr.
Garfield 18. 16, Wil loughby South 15. 17.
Day. Carroll 13 .
DIVISION Ill
1, Steubenville: (24) 7--0
2 , Lisbon Beave r (4) 7·0
3. Canal Fulton NW (2) 7-0
4 . Cle . Bened1cline (2) 6·1
5, Chaminade-Juhenne (1) 6· 1
6, Cols . Watterson ( 1) 6·1
7, Napoleon (1) 7·0
8. Akr. Hoban 6·1
9, Chardon NDCL 7·0
10, Miami Trace 7-0

99

YOL'R

CHOICE

331
271
266
216
165
164
146
104
98
38

Others receiving 12 or more po1nts: 11 ,
Cambridge 34. 12 , Hubbard 24 . 13,
Ravenna SE 12.

DIVISION IV
1. Coldwater (20) 7·0
317
296
2, Ironton (10) ~-0
234
3 , Akr. Manchester (3) 7·0
4, Huron (1 ) 7·0
208
5, Martins Ferry (1) 7-Q
203
6, Versailles 6-1
152
7. Upper Sandusky 7·0
122
8, Plain City Jonathan Alder 6·1 95
49
9, Bellaire 6·1
10. Youngs . Mooney 4·2
37

PROmR
Rocker Redim-r

Others receiving 12 or more points: 1i,
Delta 36. 12 , Youngs. Ursuline 35. 13,
Urbana 34. 14, Girard 24 15 , Orrville 21

.

DIVISIONV

'

1, Amanda-Ciearcreek (27) 7-0
!2 , Mar•on Pleasant (4) 7·0
3, N. Lima ~· Range 7·0
4, Findlay Liberry-Benton 7·0
~ . Hamler Patrick Henry (2 ) 7-0
6 , Gates Mills Gilmour (2) 7·0
7, St. ~enry 6· 1
8 , Blultto n 7·0
9 , Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 6· 1
10 , Lees CreeK E. Clinton 7-0

h$699''

.

DRF.\\1\\llWER OR VlmG
ROCiiER RECU\ER

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e
·
Lan
'] .. .

f!•~ ··-· q· ·

--

CHOICE
SIO.OO DOWN/$10.00
0'/, INTEREST*

339
295
223
206
184
164
81
51
47
42

Others rece1ving 12 or more pou1ts: 11 .
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 40 12, Mineral
Ridge 38. 13 (lie) , Wheelersburg , Liberty
Cehter 33. 15, W Liberty-Salem 25 . 16:
Sycamore Mohawk 21 . 17 . Sm•thv111e 13.
18. Columb iana Crestview 12..

YOUR

DIVISION VI
'

QUALITY FURNITURE PLUS

1. Columbus Grove (24) 7-0
334
2. Dola Hard•n Northern (3) 7·0 284
3. Danville (4)7·0
259 ·
253
4, San'ausky St Mary (3 ) 7-0
5. Frontier (1) 6-0
177
6, Newark Cath. 6·1 ·
167
7, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 7·0130
8, Monroe'llille 6-1
·
89 ·
9, Mechanicsburg 6-1
72
10, Mogadore 5·2
26
Others receiving 12 or more points· 11 .
Glouster Trimble 25. l2 . Troy Chns!lan 20
13 . Hicksville 16. 14 , C1n Counlry Day 14
.15 (t1e). l eetonia , A1 chmond Hts 12

'

some suggestions on ways to
improve sportsmanship at the
hi?.h school level.
'Anytime you have an
opportunity w spend some
time with collegi&lt;Jte athletes.
who are honing their 1ki lls
here, not only in the classroom
but also nn the lield, und then

have them think buck about
their careers and the thing;
that made a difference or
things that can make it better:·
Ross ;aid. ··so that the ones
following them and their experience can be improved. we.
need to do that."
Ross spoke very candid! y

about how &gt;portsmam.hip not
only impact, a student-athlete
on the field , but off it as well.
"I think especially for people
in college." Ross said.
"They' re getting close to time
running out on them ending

Please see Speaker. Bl

Eastern wins
TVC-Hocking

• Gllllla A&lt;:adOmy at Warren
South Point at Ftlver V.llf!Y
Harnllo at S®th,Gallla .,
· 'Metgs 11 Alexander
'Miller at I!,Qtem

Wednesday, October. 13

University of Rio Grande
Monday afternoon in Bob
Evans Farms Hall.
Ross spoke on tile topic of
Sportsmanship :
It's
Everyone's Responsibility. He
also took questions ubout certain existing policies of the
association and asked for

Prep Uolleyball

,.

1 ,:\' ·

Your online
source for news

I

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

'

~··llolloyboll

'

.

sports@ mydailytribune .com

Qltlla ~Y ~'Marietta

www.mydallysentlnel.com

stil l
experimental.
but
Reeve "s participation has led
to more patients considering
it.
.
Onders visited Reeve at hi s
New York home last month.
"He had lost weight. He
wasn't as outgoing as he was
in the past,'' Onders said .
Reeve·s dedication helped
lead to more advancements
in the field. said Dr. Anthony
DiMarco, a Case Western
Re serve University professor
of medicine who was nne of
Reeve 's
doctors
111
Cleveland.
"He was a beacon for
patients with spinal cord
injuries around the world."
DiMarco said . "He was the
guy leading the fight to bring
srinal cord injury research to
the forefront. ..

citation s. such as .a speeding
ticket. whi ch can be challenged later in court. the justices say a dog owner should
be able to appeal a vicious
dog citation he fore it\ hsued .
"How that should be done
is not clear."· Rhodes said.
He said Ohio\ 88 counties
could interpret th~ ruling in
difterent wav;.
Bridget Carty. a Columbm
a~ ; istant city pro,ecutor. said
municipalitie s will need to
\lrengthen th eir ordinance ;
with the 'tate law in .!lux .
Carty ., ay' ci tie' 'hould ' et
up animal -re view hcl;;rd' to
give dog O\\l'ner\ a fn e&lt;Jn \ to
appeal.

llolloyboll

' Now'~ a1 so\J)t1 &lt;:l.a~ta

Visit us online at

Dog wardens struggle to deal with Supreme Court ruling
COLUMBUS (AP) - Dog
The deci sion e'&gt;e nti ally
wardens say they ·are con- struck down a state luw that
fused about their options said a vicious dog IS one that
when handling vicious dogs kill s . or injures pe ople.
.after an Ohio Supreme Court lawye" sav. Pit btdls were
automati call y
con1idered
decision last month. ·
Previously animal wardens vtclous .
could identify a dog as
Stark County ,dog warden
vicious and require the owner Evert Gibson asked the counto confine it and purchase ty pro;ecutor\ office for an
extra insurance. Animal war- interprwition of the ruling.
(lens could impound the dog Assistant pr01ecuwr Ro"
and fine or jail the owner for Rhodes said he's lli ll trying
noncompli~nce.
' to decipher it.
.
But the high court ruled in
"We took cu ri ous note of it
a 4-3 deci~ion on Sept. 22 w.hen it came m1t. .. Rhodes
that a Portage County woman said . "It \ now unclear what
whose dogs were ruled the authority i1 to iss ue a cit avicious shou ld have had a · tion for vicintJs dng1 ...
means to appeal.
He said th'at un like mmt

STAFF REPORT

Toclay's game

Reeve remember~d as being
intense about treatment
CLEVELAND (AP)
Christopher Reeve was tenacious and meticulous about
his treatment for paralysis,
according to the people who
helped care for him .
Reeve, left a quadriplegic
after his May 1995 horse-riding accident, died Sunday· of
complications from an infection caused by a bedsore.
The actor/director, best
known for hi s role as
Superman in four movies.
spent four days last year at
MetroHealth Medical Center
undergoing therapy after
receiving an implantable
breathing
device
at
University Hospitals of
Cleveland.
He was only the third
patient to have the operation .
which allowed him to turn

Wednesday, October 13, 2004

Championship is eighth
straight for Lady Eagles
BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydailytribune.com
TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Eagles ce lebrated "Senior Night" in gra nd
style Tt1esday. posting a
sweep of Federal Hocking
25-17. 25-21.27-25 to claim
its 8th consecutive TVC
Hocking volleyball title.
EHS (14-4, 12-3 TYCl
honored six seniors before
the game. Chelsea Young.
Jennifer Hayman, Morgan
Weber. Jennifer Annes.
Casey Smith and statistician
Krista White. for their hard
work and dedication to an
Eagles' program that has
amassed a .'i4-12 record over
the last three years .
More importantly, the six
honorees were abtJ renH!nized for their cnmmitme;ll
in the dassroom as National
Honor Society scholar-athletes .
And EHS .:oach Howie
Caldwell acknowledges this
group of seniors as being
instrumental to the success

enjoyed this season and over
the years for the Eagles.
"We'v~ ' ulways had the
philosophy that you go as
far as your seniors take you
and they've exhibited great
commented
leadership."
Caldwell. "Thev have done
a great job or'leading this
young team not on! y on the
floor. hut off as well. You
usually don't go very far in
the reglJ1ar season or tournament without great senior
leaders."
EHS wasted little time in
getting Uown to business in
game one , jumping out to a
6-.+ lead. However, the
Lancers (9-9. 8-7 TYCl had
plans on spoil ing the party.
FHHS rallied from an 8-7
deficit to open a 15-9 lead
and forced EHS to spend a
timec~u l to regroup .
Darcy WinebrcnJlCr ended
Fed Hock's 9-1 run with a
kill and sparked an EHS
rally that tied t11e game ut
17.
Following a Lancer time-

Please see Eastern. Bl

Eastern's Jenn ife r Hayman .125) attempts a block during her Lady Eagles' win over Federal
Hocki ng. (Bryan Walters/ photo)

Belpre tops Marauders
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydaitysenti net. com
BELPRE - The Meigs volleyball team dropped a four-game
heartbreaker Tuesday 22-25. 25 11 . 24-26. 26-2~ to the Belpre
Eagles in Tri -Valley Conterence
Ohio Division play.
. The Maruuders ( I0-7. 9-6
TVC) sp lit the first two games, .
then held a 24-21 lead late in
game three. Nedding just one
point to go up 2-1. the host Eagles

rallied for five unanswered points
to claim game three and momentum for the rest of the evening.
Meigs again found itself with a
24-20 lead in the fourth game.
needing one point to secure the
win for a decisive tifth mat ch.
And again. Belpre responded
with a late rally to hold off the
maroon and gold for the upset
victory.
The Marauders were 9-l-of-Y8
'

Please see Meigs, Bl

'

Lady 'Does fall to Miller
Scorr WoLFE
Sports correspondent
RACINE - The mighty !VIiller
Falcons !lew into Southern's Charles
W. Hayman gymnasi tlm Tuesday
ni~ht. claiminu the match in three sets
and spoiling tiie Southern se nior night
activities. Miller won the match 25-15.
25-21 and 25-18 .
Playing their last game for the Lady
Tornadoes were se niors Brooke Kiser.
' Jordan Neigler. Nikki Riftle, and
Ash ley Roush. The four seniors were

paid a trihute in pregame festivities as
a part of senior night,.
Miller took the early lead after taking the opening serve. going up 3-0.
and 6-3. Southern's Jordan Neigler
made it 6-5. but Southern cou ld come
no closer. Miller\ Courtney Hoops
served up seven maight points to give
Miller COI11111and of the game at 21-1 I
and Miller never looked back in postinc the 25-15 win.
'f..1iller's Hoops gave her club a 3-0
lead after Southern failed to take

Please see Southern, Bl

Star.football player pleads Reds decide to part
guilty in teammate's death ways with Barry Larkin
CLEVELAND (AP) -An 18-yearold recognized as the top prep football
player in the state of Ohio pleaded
~uilty Tuesday for his role in the shootmg death of a teammate.
· Raymond Williams faces three to 20
years in prison at his sentencing Nov.
16 on involuntary manslaughter and
aggravated robbery charges.
Williams, a running back at
Benedictine High School, w&gt;1s named
the 17tli annual winner or The Ohio
Associated Press Mr. 'Football award
last November.
Police
said
Williams.
Jon
Huddleston and Lorenzo Hunter. all
members of the school\ state-champi a courtroom in
on football team. allegedly tried to use Cleveland . after plead1ng gu ilty to lnvol·
a toy gun April 16 to rob Rodney untary manslaughter and aggravated robRoberts, who pulled a gun and began bery charges Tuesday. (AP Photo/The
'shooting . ··
·
Pla1n Dealer. David I. Ande~sen l .,
Huntet. 16. died of ~unshot wounds
tu the che&gt;t. ann and h1p.
•
drew the scholarship alter the shooting .
A grand jury ruled that Rnberts. 20. . Huddleston's trial start&gt; 'lo\. X on
shot m selt-dcfense . He was sentenced murder and aggravated robbery
earlier this year to prnbm10n for carry- char~es .
ing a coi1cealed weapon.
William s will testify against
Williams was initmlly charged with Huddleston. acc:nrding to the terms of
murder and a:egravatcd robbery for ·hi' hi~ plea agreement. The prosecutor\
. pan in the Circumstances that led to oftice will not recommend a sentenc:e
Hunters death . His trial was to start to Cuyahoga County Common Ple;h
Tuesday.
Judge Shirley Strickland SaJTnld.
Williams had received a fmitball
"My prayer' still go out to tile Hwnter
scholarship from West Virginia f.J nil\ ... I'm vel') ""'~''' l\1r "hat hapUniversity where he would have been a p: ned :· William' 'aid nut, idc tlw
frc ... hm;:m.tlli..., fall. Tlw uni\'er. . itv with - · c n lll1f01)11l .

JoE KAv
Associated Press
CINCINNATI - Barry Larkin's
stellar 19-vear career with his
hometown -team ended Tuesday
with a one-sided phone call .
The Cincinnati Reds informed
their team captain that they weren ' t
interested in keeping him ;\round for
another 'eason . Instead. the Red&gt;
will repla.:e the 40-ye;;r-old ,hnrtstop with two unpro\'Cn youngsters.
Larkin "as at hi, home in
Orlando. Fla .. when general manager Dan o·Brien and manager D&lt;n·e
Miley _:_ a former teammate called with the de,·ision.
"It wa,n't pleasant.'' Larkin told
The Asso..:iated Press in. a phone
inten·iew. "But it is what it i1. It 's
definitely 'di .sappointing . I have
'
Je.:isions to make ." .
Larki'n' s 19 seasons with one team .-'·a, the longe't current streakjn the
majors. He had hoped for a 20fh and
was willing to discuss a utility role
to return. hut the Reds ruled it nut.
· "You hate to say goodbye to the .
grc;l! p!a)CI&gt; hut the process of the
game is ultimately. ;J!l great careers
dn Cl entmlly end,'' o· Brien ' .aid.
Lark1n i,n ·t su re whether hi s
career j..,

O\lT

He ha-..n·t decided

whether to try to
play one more season· with another
team. ending his
career in a different
uniform.
"I ha,·e to see
what opportunities
present themselves,
if there' s anything
that makes sense."
Larkin
he said .
L.ar!..in gre" up in
Cincinnati and spent hi, entire
,·areer with the Red,. dewloping
into one of the most prominent player&gt; in thelf illustrH'Us hi story, He
helpt•d the team win a World Series
in 1990 and won the NL's Most
Valuable Pla\'er award in 1995. the
la&gt;t time the Reds made the playoff&gt;.
He aJ,C, wa, ;J ,teadying influence
in the clubhouse during the 1990s.
"hen former owner Marge Schott
put the franchise in the national
spotlight for her inflammatory comments.
Injuries had limited him in recent
,·cars. and he decided to make the
2lX14 'ca.,on his last. Bill a good
' ""'on - he hit .::&gt; 89 and made
the All -Star team - prompted
h11n tn rccon,iJer and a'k for one
mort· L'lllllract. ·

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Speaker

Eastern

from Page 81

from Page 81

thetr wondcrtul expenence here at R10
Grdnde and entenng mto the worktorce
they re gom g to be carrymg all tho~e
expenences wtth them
Th 11 trammg and that ex per ence we
want 11 to do nothmg but enhance thetr
opportumty tor JOb employment
Ross
added
Sportsmanship
and
the
NA JA
Champto 1s of Character ntltall\ e that
Rto Grande t s 111\0ived m have a tough
c hallenge tl)mg to change the culture
lr1 m all about w mmg to wmmng and
losmg wnh grace and dtgmt) and bemg
qu 1hty ctttzen along the way
It s hard to "atch TV w1d see some ot
the thmgs that you want peopl e to sec
Ross smd lthmk that s why you need to
be m from ol them l!lkmg about usmg
your head and makmg a good chmce
A 1d w hen you make a good chmce
your teammates are fomg to apprecmte
that and your coaches are gomg to appre
c ate that and that s gom g to put you a
whole lot tarther ahead than maybe what
you saw on tele\ 1s10n R oss added
R10 Grande Athletic Dtrector Jeff
Lanham thought Ro ss v ew on sports
man shtp t s a connectton w1th the
ChampiOns of C harac ter tmuauve It IS a
d t ee t hnk wtlh our c ha np o 1s of c hardc
ter Lanham satd 11 (sportsmanshtp) IS
one at our h\ e mttlatlves I thmk D r
Ross stated today th s ts go n g to be
somethm g that 1s •ery 111 portant n the
state of Ohm

out the momentum contmued 111
Eastern s favor as they opened the
lead to 24 17 Morga n Weber s
boommg ktll gave the Eagles a
one game advantage wtth 1 25 17
Will
FHHS came out strong m game
two opemng a 6 I lead The lead
would grow to II 7 when Eastern
m 1de another strong resurgence
Tratl fig II 7 EHS rallied to
take a 15 I t lead 111 the second
game and never looked back The
Lancers wou ld t1e the contest 11
19 but a 6 2 Eagles run ga\c
them a 2 0 l ead on the mght
Game three staned wnh a 9 2
Eastern l ead fomng the Lancers
to spe nd a t meout From th at
pomt FHHS hung around wtlh
E HS and recaptured the lead at

Weekly footWI COIIIpuler ratings
COLUMBUS {AP) - Hera are 1he louf1h lootbaR C001&gt;Ufer ratings from the Ohio High
School Alhlelic Astoclollon Ratingo a e b\1 d vi
$1011 and og10n with ecot&lt;1 an&lt;1 average bi-levol
P&lt;llnto pe game (10(&gt; eighl teams n each egl0f1
odvance 10 og10na quarterfinals)
DIVISION I
~

Region 1-1

Young Austintown F tch (7 0}

185841 2 Cleve S1 lgnabus [6 ) 180100 3
Warren Ha~ng {&amp;-2) 16 2077 4 Solon (&amp;-1)
15 9214 5 Cleve Glenv lie (&amp;- ) 5 0785 6
Stongsv e {81) 147714 7 Mentor {52)
13 3928 8 North Olrmted (S.2) 12 3000 9
Ciwo Kennedy (&amp;-1) 11 7857 o Shake H1s {5
2)10 7918
Region 2-1 Tol DeSaes (8 1) 171214 2
Mass Jackson (5 2) 16 6142 3 Hudson (6 1)
161500 4 G oen (52) 12 0500 5 Brunswick (5
2) 105142 6 Tol Bowsher {&amp;-1) 101857 7 Tol
WM&lt;M (4-3) 10 0642 8 Wadsworth 15 2)
9 7000 9 Sylvan a Northvlew (4-3) 8 5428 10
Cant McK n ey {4-3) 8 5071
Rtglon 3- Dul&gt;lln SCioto (6 1 19 1285 2
Worth ng on K boume (6 1)
6 3642 3
WesteMie South (&amp;-1) 16 1714 4 Lancas or (6
1) 14 77 4 5 Wooster(&amp;-t) 14 1857 6 Gahama

Uncolrl (5-2) &lt;34142 7 Dublin Coffman (&amp;-2)
12 1642 8 HI ard Davidson (&amp;- ) 11 5445 9
Manon Hard ng (5 2) 11 4658 10 Troy {5 2)
11.2000
Rtglan 4- C n Sl XaV1&amp; (7-0) 22 1357 2
Cenlervile (7-D) 22 0395 3 C n Moele (6 1)
19 9694 4 w Ch..ter Lako1a w (7-DJ 18 2500 5
Cln Coleran 17-D) 165000 6 Con LaSalle (4-3)
14 0857 7 Hulle Hto Wtryno (52) 12 9642 8,
Cn Elder (4-3) 12 5928 9 Mason (5 2) 11 9500
10 Ullerty1\Np Lal&lt;ota E (7-D) 11 7785

DIVISION I

Roglon 5-1 Macedonia Nordon a (7 0)
17 4000 2 Wi loughtly South (6-1) 161214 3
Copley (52) 15 01157 4 TOI madge (6 1) 14 9285
5 Ak on Garteld (6 1) 13 6000 6 Maple H1s {&amp;1) 12 7500 7 Garfield Heights (6 1) 12 4488 B
Olmsted Fal s (5 2) 12 3357 9 R~h1181d Reve e
(5-2 11757 10 Chardon (5-2) 111714
Region &amp;-- Maumee (&amp;-1) 16 6642 2 Avon
Lake (7-D) 14 1214 3 Amherst Steele (7-D)
1376 54 Sylvana.Southvew (6 1) 120785 5

Oregon C ey (6 1) 11 8285 6 Olanlangy L berty
(52) 11 4 42 7 To Cen Cath (5 2) 10 9142 8
rotfln Columb an (5 2) 9 7571 9 Spring Shawnee
(5-2) 9 5142 10 Lex ngton (5 2) 8 9428
Region 7-1 Uniontown t.ake (11-1) 16 3214 2
Co s 8 ookhaven {7 0} 14 7071 3 New
Ph ladelph a 7 0) 14 0714 4 Plcke ngton
Cent a (6 I) 12 5785 5 Cos Manon Fan~ n (B
1) 12 4462 6 Ca o ton (6 1) 111571 7
Lousvh(l!-1)103714 8 Canfed{4-3)98857
9 PalaSkaa Walkins Memoria {6 ) 8 7838 10
Cos Independence (3-4) 8 207
Rtglon 8--1 Cln Wllhrow (7 0) 19 9285 2
Spnngboro (7 0) 191785 3 Day Carro (&amp;-1)
15.4 42 4 Cln Glen Esle (6 ) 14 9571 5 Kings
Ml s K ngs (5-2) 14 307 6 C n M1 Healthy (5 2)
12 8285 7 Jacl&lt;son (&amp;-1 ) 12 0857 8 W mlngton
(5-2) 11 5000 9 Norwood {6-1) 11 3500 10
Ch l leolhe {4 3) 0 9000
DIVISION HI
Rtglon9--1 Ceve Benedctlne(61)176095 2
Akron Ho!)an (6 ) 607 14 3 Chardon NO
c,lhedra Lorn {7-D) 13 9644 4 Cuya Falls
Walsh Jesu t (5 2) 3 9081 5 Hubllord (6-D)
13 4296 6 Mentor LBke Celh (5 2) 12 2142 7
Ravenna SE (1 1)

1 7035 8 Med na Buckeye

(5-2)
1732 9 Akron Buchtel (52) 10 32 4 10
Hunt Va ley Un v Schoo (5 2) 10 0910
Region 1G--1 Cols Warteroon (6 1) 16 357 2
Napoleon {7-D) 5 5285 3 L Ina Shawnee (&amp;-1)
13 7785 4 Be evue ~6-1} 13 6285 5 Cos
Easlmoor Acad (6-1) 13 1285 6 Clyde (6 J
11 ~ 7 Van Wert (52) 1 1928 8 Cos
6eeChcrott (6 ) 11 0568 9 Cols DeSales (4-3)
10.2428 10 Pembe vi e EeS1WOOd (6 ) 9 47 4
Roglon 11-1 Sloubenv e (7-D) 21 1700 2
Usbon Beave (7 0) 194142 3 Canal FtJtton
N W (7-D 161928 4 Cambridge {6.0) 14 1873
5 Gal GallaAcad (43) 102785 6 Dove (52)
9 9640 7 McArthu Vln on County 5 2) 9 8214
8 Tho flV1 e Sheridan (&amp;- ) 9 7857 9 A Nance 5
2) 9 1714 10 McConnelsv le Mo gan (5 2
89500
Region 12-1 Oay Cham Ju enne (6 1)
161000 2 Wash CHMam Trace(7-D)153785
3 $1 Marys Memoria (ll-1) 140785 4 Crclevle
(6 1) 13 2ll28 5 Cln Indian HU &amp;-1 12 1500 6
Aronblshop Aile (5 2) 11 8452 7 C n Wyom ng
(S.2) 2642 8 Belbrook(5-2) 08107 9 Ham
Ros s (4 3) 9 4928 0 G aham Local (4 3)
94071

\Vednesday,Octobert3,2004

www mydadysenhnel com

DIVISION IV
A•glon 13-1 Ak on Mancheate {6 0}
169926 2 0 rv e (52) 121357 3 Chagrin
Fa s (52) 11 2357 4 G ad (6 1) 10 5357 5
Young U sui ne (52) 10 4482 6 Ga etts~ e
Garte d (6 t)-. 10 2928 7 Mass Tus aw {52}
10 2838 8 Young L berty (6-1) 10 2120 9
Perry (61) 9 9571 10 StJ I \'an Black A "e (52) 9 8475
Region 14-1 Huon {7 0} 3 7285 2
Codwaler (7 OJ 136214 3 U bana {6 1)
1 9&lt;428 4 De ta (6 1) 11 2928 5 Uppe
SandtJSky (7.0} 11 0714 6 Tontogany Otsego
(6 1) 9 6642 7 Mount G lead 52) 9 2714 8
Sheffeld Booksde (6-1) 80642 9 Aossod
(4 3) 7 9490 10 ,o.,on (52) 7 9225
R~lon 15-1
on on (7-Q) 113071 2 Ma t ns
Ferry (6-D) 15 8653 3 Be Ia o (6 1) 14 2857 4
Welston (ll-1) 1 6642 5 PortsmoU1h (52)
111214 6 NewAbany (6 )98375 7 Zanes
W Muskingum (4 3) 6 5657 8 G anv lie 4 3)
6 2285 9 Be mont Un on Loca (3 4) 5 6525
10 New Lex ngton (H) 5 3330
Reg on 6--1 Plan Cry Jonathon Aida (6 )
13 553 2 Read ng (5 2)11 3 42 3 Ve sa les
(6 1) 107642 4 Cia ksv e Clnon Masse (5
2) 10 2047 5 Sp ng Ken on R dge (52)
9 5142 6 Dayton Oakwood (5-2) 8 6977 7 C n
F nneytown (4-3) 8 4294 e C n Madera (4 3)
7 8571 9 Be eva (5 2) 7 67 4 0 C n N
Co ege H (4 2) 7 2820
DIVISION V
Aegton 17-1 Gates Ml s Gimou Acad (7-Q)
13 7000 2 Roo1810wn (&amp;-1) 12 6000 3 Mine al
Ridge (B 1) 12 0857 4 N L maS Range (7 0)
11 8214 5 Da lon {6-1) 9 9854 6 Co umb ana
C es1vlaw (8 t) 9 6701 1 Smithville (6 1)
96191 8 New Mddetown Sp ng ed (6 1)
9 5285 9 Lab ao (4 3) 8 6437 10 Bu lon
Be kshle (52) 8 0918
Region 18-1 Ham e Pat ck Hen y (7 0)
13 1642 2 Bluffton (7 0} 11 7071 3 Ashland
Creslvew (6 1) 11 6142 4 Uberty C (6 1)
11 0714 5 F nd a~ l be y Benton (7 0)
10 2214 6 Sherwood Fa rv ew {s-:2} B 4857 7
Sycamore Mohawk (6 1) 8 4357 8 Oef T no a
(5-2)80714 9 popnosSt Johns(52)B0357
10 N Rob nson Col C awford (5 2) 6 3571
Region 19-1
Amanda C ea c eek (7 0)
15939 2 Whoee sburg (6 1) 36571 3 W
Lafayette R dgewood (7 0)
1 9785 4
Crooksv le (6 t ) 11 6500 5 Johnstow
Nof1h ldge {7-D) 10 3967 6 Woodsfio d Mon oe
Cent a (&amp;-1) 9 8925 7 Jot\nstown Mon oe (6
1) 9 000 8 Cheaapeakrl (52) 8 9364 9
Ba nesv e {52) 7 9500 10 Na sonv e York
(4 3) 7 6857
RlllJIDn 20--1 Lees Creek E C ln1on (7 0)
14 0531 2 Wesl L be 1y Sa em (7-D) 2 3071
3 Marion Pleasant (7 0) 1 5785 4 Ch I Zane
'Trace (6 ) 111071 5 Arcanum (6 1) 0 0808
6 S1Heny(6 )93142 7 Shade Padea
Academy 5 2) 9 3071 8 Cos Ha I ey (5 2)
8 9588 9 Cots Ready (5 2) 8 3468 0 B shop
Fenw ck (5 2) 8 0235
DIVI&amp;IONVI
Raglan 21-1 51 Mary Cent al Cath olic (7 0)
113142 2 Mon oevlle (61) 9 4071 3
Mogado e (6 2) 9 2028 4 A chmond H s (5 2)
8 1264 5 No walk 51 Pau (5 2) 7 9357 6
Leelon a (8 1) 7 3552 7 Mal's n {4 3) 6 9857
8 East Canton (4 3 6 6614 9 Cleve Cuya
Hts (6 ) 6 4642 10 W ndham (4 3) 5 9357
Region 22- 1 Columbus G ove (7 O) 11 7428
2 Bascom Hopewe Loudon (7 O) 10 8 142 3
H cksv I e (6 1) 8 0428 4 A ca Seneca East
{5 2) 7 1214 5 Me Comb (4 3) 6 2500 6 Del
Aye svle (4 3) 62214 7 PandO a G boa (4
3 6 2000 8 Delphos Joffe son (5 21 6 0642
9 Antwe p (4 3) 5 3428 t o Convoy C estv ew
43)50214
Region 23-1 New Matamo as F ont~e {6 O)

10 2066 2 New a k Catn (6 1) 10 0928 3
Danv e (7 0) 9 4714 4 G ouster Tr mb e (6 )
9 0000 5 W llow Woot1 Symmes Valley 5 1)
8 5426 6 Zanes Rosecrans (5 2) 8 3714 7
Centerbu g (4 3) 7 3642 8 Beallsv e (5 1)
7 2583 9 Lane F sher Ca h 4 3) 6 928 0
Marlon Ce h (5-2) 5 6500
Raglan 24-1 Mechanlcsbu g (6 )
5857
2 Oola Ha din No thern (7 0) 9 4500 3 t oy
Ch let en (6 ) B 1142 4 Cn Coun y Day {6
1) 7 5952 5 New B emen (4 3) 6 1928 6
Sprtng Calh Cent (4 3) 5 8071 7 DeGrall
Rvesde (52) 57500 8 Ma a San MB on
LoeB (3 4) 4 6642 9 Un on C ty M ss ss nBwa
Va ey 34)4 3714 10 N Lowsburg Tad (3
4) 4 0500

a

Meigs
from Page 81
o n the evemng from the sen tce I me
"1th Emtly Ashley Casste Lee and
Sa nantha Cole all enJoy • 1g perfect
sene efforts Ashley added seve n

Southo
ern
from Page 81
advantage o f the first se r\e
Mtller
establi shed what was n ostly a three
pomt ad\ ant age unt I Southern ued
tl at I 0 10 on t o u r sen es hom
Ashley Roush
Mtller s Hoops respm ded t o g t\ e
M11ler a 13 10 advantage but o nce
aoatJ Southern ttghte 1ed the gap at
13 12 when Brooke K1 ser added two
pomb M tHane A It er ea\ e M ller a
16 I) lead a fter Southern s Kn st nna
W !hams had lied the score at 15 15
Miller mamta n ed a o n e pomt
ad va t t age for three vo lleys th en

20 19
The two teams battled to a 24
all lie and Fed Hock to ok the lead
(25 24) and had a c h ance to w n
game three
H owever E HS made one l ast
stand and !ted the co 1test at 25
Then a pmr at semors took care of
the rest
Hay m an came up with an ace
for a 26 ?5 l ead then Weber
ended the match \\tlh k!ll to c latm
the Hockmg crown
After'&gt;' ard s
Caldwell
was

En n C ullums h ad SIX pomts a 1d
added three asSISt s tn the l oss
The Me gs JUmor vamty team
mproved to 16 I o n the season w th
23 25 25 7 16 )4 VICtor)
The
M 11 at der
return
home
tomght "hen they h o t V nt o n
Cou 1ty o 1 Set to r N1,ht at MHS
w th ga me t me scheduled tor 6 p m

Southern took a 20 19 lead on three
stra• ght serves by fres hman Whnnev
R til e Jenna Murphj
dded t'&gt;'o
p011ts tor MJ!Ier tor a 21 20 l ead
then Rou sh Ued ll at 21 21 H oops
ftmshed off the game wllh fo ur
&gt;tra ght pomts l! g 1ve M ll er the 25

st x sen n, pomb Beth 1) R tile
was 14 39 sell n " "llh tour sets t o
k lis and two k li s 11 her ( 0'&gt;' 1
Ashley Roush wa 30 35 passmg
and I I 11 sen 1 g Ash ley Robte h d
three kills Je mv Warner h td three
blocks and 1 14 I 5 sp ktng n g ill
K as e Seller h td 1 ktll nd
hlock
Brooke K ser was 43 46 ell ng w tlh
o ne set for a k II and was., I 10 pIS S
n~ w h l e Jordan Ne t ~kr had a ktll
n a 6 6 sptk ng nt gh t
Southen east l y wo1 lhe resene
, a me ?5 I 0 and 1 5 I I
Wh tn ey

21 w n
Southern led early m the hnale
Alter the score was !ted 6 6
Southern s Ne1g le r gave Southern a
7 6 l ead then Southern went 11110 a
sp raJ The Lad) Tornadoes cam e
back to 15 13 but a l ew \ a ll eys l ater
Kelst Brouwn served s1x strat g ht for
the Falcons to g 'e them a 22 15
lead From there Mtller rolled to the
25 18 wm
Southern s Kr stnna W1lltam s wa s
11 16 sptkmg w tth se \en k li s and

R11n e led " th I ' pDnt&gt; Ashle y
Roht e had 1111e p ll l '
Sat
Edd)
added et~ht and A 1 be r Htll h I
se\e
M1ller was led hy
K Se1rles w th st x md C G11tlllh
five

G

Sheriff s Sale
Real Estate Case
Number 4 CV 55
Farmers
Sank
&amp;
Savings
Pia ntlfl
vs
Michael Warner
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas
Metgs County Oh o
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me

directed from sa1d
Court n the above
entttled act on 1 wtll

expose to sale at
publ c auction on the

front steps of the
Me gs County Court
House on Fr day Nov
12 2004at1000am
of sa p day the fol
low ng descrtbed real

estate
We
Therefore
Command You that
you proceed wllhout
delay to appraise
advert se and sell
accordtng to the stat
ues regulat ng JUdg

ments

and

exeeu

!Ions al law the lol
lowing
described

lands and tenements

I

along with the 1987
Clayton mobile home
altuale
In
Meigs
County Ohto to-wit
Situated
In
lha
County of Meigs In
the Slota ol Ohio
Township
of
Lebanon and bound
ad and described eo
lOll OWl
The following real
eatate
altuate
In
Lebanon Townahlp
Melga County Ohio
and In 180 Acre Lot
No 1173 Town 2
Range 11 ol the Ohio
Compeny 1 Purchue
end being more par
tlculerly ducrlbed 11
loliowa
Beginning
lor reference 11 1
point being the Inter
uctlon of the Will
line of lhlt tr1c1 ol
land conveyed to
Wllilem H Hobeck
and Joyce E Habeck
ae recorded In Dted
Book 284 11 page
Melgl County Deed
Recorda
and tha
exlellng centerline ol
Stele Route 124 (o1 ol
February 18 19aO)
eald
point
bears
South 83 deg 59 min
utes 01 seconds East
a distance of 1386 85

eee

,

feet and South 07
utility saptlc sewege
deg 04 mtnules 34
and satellite system
easements along w1th
seconds West a dis
lance of 2063 75 teet
the rtght to use mam
from a stone found at tain
repawr
and
the Northwest corner replace the same
of satd 160 Acre Lot Sa d real estate s
No 1173 thence leav
subject to all ex sttng
ng sa d east hne and leases
easements
along sa d centerline and r ghls of way of
south 89 deg 48 mtn
record
Reference
Deed
utes 45 seconds East
a d stance of 12 06 Volume 23 Page 207
teet to a point being
Meigs County Official
the tnterseclton of the
Records
centerline of State Auditors Parcel No
Route 124 and the
07 00314 002
centerline of town
Property
Address
sh p road t32 thence 5t296 Hoback Road
leav ng Stare Route Racine OH 45771
124 and along the Also a 1987 Clayton
center! ne of town
mobile home I 0
sh p road 132 South *41682 Cerltftcate ol
03 deg 13 mmules 03 T tie *5300038933 a
seconds West a dls
copy of whtch ts
lance of 150 72 feet to attached herelo and
a point thence south made a part hereof
03 dog 20 mtnutes 15 Current
Owner
seconds West a d1s
M chael Warner
tance al 9 28 feet to a Properly at 51296
point marked by PK
Hoback Rd
natl the true place of
Ractne OH 45771
PP# 07 -D0314 002
beg nn ng for lhe par
Prior
Deed
eel heretn described
thence Weaterly dts
Reference
Volume
lance ol 111 2 feet
23 Page 207
(crossing an Iron pipe
Volume 17 Paga 437
Appraised at
Land
at 11 17 feet) to an
Iron pipe
thence $8 000 Trailer $2 000
Southerly 142 feel to
Sold Separately
the center ol the Torma
of
Sale
creek pasalng an oak Cannot be sold for
leas than 2/3rda of
tree at t3t feet
theACe Easterly along the appralaed value
the center of the
10% down on day of
creek 170 leal to a aale ca1h or cartlfled
point marked by a PK check balance on
noll In the centerline conllrmotlon ol sale
of oald Townehlp rood
Ralph E Truooall
132 which point 11 Melgo County Shorlff
Allornay
for
the
within tho confines of
a bridge thence fol
Plaintiff
lowing the centerline
Llttlt
Sheela
&amp;
of TR 132 North 14 Warner
PO Sox 888
dog 02 mlnutta 33
Pomeroy Ohio 45788
10cond1 E111 81 44
feet thence olong the (740) 882-eeea
centerline ol TR 132 10/81320
North 03 dog 20 min
Uttl 15 IOCOndl Ell!
Public Notice
138 80 teet to tho
piece of beginning
IN THE COMMON
containing 0 8817 of
an •ere more or I••• PL!AS COURT OF
COUNTY
of Which 0 4807 ICrl MEIOS
OHIO PROBATE DJVI
ll 1 tH~rl ol Trtc1 I ond
SION
0 1010 ecr1 Ja 1 pert
DAVIS
of Tract II of 1ho10 , JOYCE
Admlnltlratrlx ol the
trect• deacrlbed In
deed to Wlllllm S
Eel"'
of
Fredo
Carpenter Decea~ed
Hoback 11 recorded
Plaintiff
In val 31V at Page
123 ol tho Malgo
JOYCE DAVIS ET AL
County
Deed
Records There Is Defendants
Case No 33129
also conveyed here
with all connecting
Amended Nottce by

,.

Publica! on
TO
tva

Durst

Carpenter

Ruda

Durst Mtldred Durst
C1rcle Robert Durst
Tom
Durst
Olive
Durst
Randall
Talbol1 Zelia Durst
Boyd Joy Boyd Reva
Jean
Taylor
Std
Durst
Eber
Carpenter
Dana
Carpenter
Eugene
Carpenter
Anna

Ha nes Dana Eugene
H:alnes
Arizona
Carpenter
Lemay
Gen Curtis Lemay
Velma Lemay Scherr
Lloyd
Lemay
Leonard
Lemay
Melhyll
Lemay
K nnear
Dorsa
Carpenter Deal and
Macel
MIter
Schumaker f I v ng
whose addresses are
unknown to Plamtiff
and w th reasonable
d1l gence cannot be
found
ANDTO
The
unknown
he rs at
law
legatees

devisees executors
administrators
ass gns
unknown
guard ans of minor
and/or Incompetent
he rs
surv vrng
spouse If any and
personal represents
lives of the following
If deceased Iva Dural
Carpenter
Ruda
Durll Mildred Dural
Circle Robert Dural
Tom Durst
Olive
Durot
Randall
Talbott Zetto Duret
Boyd Joe Boyd Reva
Taylor
Sid
Jean
Ourtt
Ebart
Carpenter
Dana
Ctrpenttr
Eugene
Ctrplnter
Anne
Holneo Dena Eugene
He nee
Arlzone
Corpontor
Lemay
gen Curtll ~may
Volme Lemoy Schorr
Lloyd
Lomoy
Leonord
Lemey
Molhyll
Lemoy
Klnneer
Dar11
Cerponter
Dool
Mlllor
M1col
Schumoker
end
Freda Carpenter
You are hereby
notified lhal you hove
been named delen
dantsin a agal action
entitled Joyce Davis
Admlnlatrratr • of the
Eslale
of
Freda
Carpenter deceased

a.• •

a ..c. I -..=. 1-. 111: a.,. •

to author ze the sale
ol the real estate of
whtch the sa d Freda
Carpenter d ed wh le
seized 1n fee s1mple
and to apply the pro
ceeds from sa d sale
toward the debts of
the deceased and the
costs of adm1mster
ng sa1d decedent s
estate
You
are
requ red to answer
the complaint within
twenty e ght
(28)
days after the last
publ cat on ol th s
notice whlch will be
published once each
week for six consecu
t1ve weeks The last
pubhcahon will be on
November 3 2004
and the twenty e ght
(28) days lor answer
will commence on
thAI dele In the event
of your failure lo
answer or to other
w1se respond as
reqUired by the Oh o
Rules
of
Ctvtl
Procedure JUdgment
by default Will be ren
dared on December
14 2004 at1 30 PM
1n the Meigs County
Common
Pleas
Court
Probate
Dlvoslon 2nd Floor
Courthouse
Pomeroy Ohio
Judge L Scott Powell
a12a
10/6 13 20 27
11/3

Public Notice
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
COUNTY
MEIGS
OHIO
COUNTRYWIDE
CASE CO 04-CV Dl8
JUDGE
FRED W
CROW
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
HOME LOANS INC
FKA
AMERICA 8
WHOL!SALE
LENDER ANO MORT
GAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYS
TEMS AS NOMINEE
FOR LENDER PLAIN
TIFF
VS
DARRELL R BRAL
LEY ET AL OEFEN
CANTS
DA!IRELL
Fl
BRALLEY
WHOSE
LAST
KNOWN

~

.-. c •

. ,.. ._.a::. ale..:
I ::....-: I I -

_..

ADDRESS IS 109
PARK STREET MID
DLEPORT OH 45760
AND THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS
DEVISEES
LEGATEES EXECU
TORS AOMJNJSTRA
TORS
SPOUSES
AND ASSIGNS AND
UNKNOWN
GUARDIANS
OF
MINOR
AND/OR
INCOMPETENT
HEIRS OF DARRELL
R BRALLEY ALL OF
WHOSE
RESI
ARE
DENCES
UNKNOWN
AND
CANNOT SY REA
SONABLE
DILl
GENCE BE ASCER
TAINED WILL TAKE
NOTICE THAT ON
THE 28TH DAY OF
JULY 2004 COUN
TRYWIDE
HOME
LOANS
INC
FKS
AMERICA S WHOLE
SALE LENDER AND
MORTGAGE ELEC
TRONIC REGISTRA
TION SYSTEMS INC
AS NOMINEE FOR
LENDER FILED ITS
COMPLAINT IN THE
COMMON
PLEAS
COURT DF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO IN
CASE NO 04 CV 098
ON THE DOCKET OF
THE COURT AND
THE OBJECT AND
DEMAND
FOR
RELIEF OF WHICH
PLEADING IS TO
THE
FORECLOSE
LIEN OF PLAINTIFF S
MORTGAGE
RECORDED
UPON
THE
FOLLOWING
REAL
DESCRIBED
ESTATE TO
PROPERTY
ADDRESS toe PARK
STREET
MIDDLE
PORT OH 45780 AND
BEING MORE PAR
TICULARI..Y
DESCRIBED
IN
PLAINTIFF B MORT
GAG! RECORDED IN
MORTGAGE BOOK
OFFICIAL RECORDS
VOLUME 182 PAGE
311 OF THIS COUNTY
RECORDER B
OFFICE
THE
ABOVE
NAMED DEFENDANT
IS REQUIRED TO
ANSWER
WITHIN
TWENTY EIGHT (28)
DAYS AFTER LAST
PUBLICATION
NOVEMBER 18 2004
WHICH SHALL SE
PUBLISHED ONCE A

~

.....

*"-" • -...: c.l

WEEK FOR SIX CON
SECUTIVE WEEKS
OR THEY MIGHT BE
DENIED A HEARING
IN THIS CASE
DONALD
K
SWARTZ ATTORNEY
LERNER SAMPSON
&amp; ROTHFUSS
ATTORNEYS
FOR
PLAINTIFF
PO aox 5480
CINCINNATI OH
45201 5480
(513) 241 3100
attyema l@lsrlaw co

m
(9) 15 22 29 (10)
13 20

6

Pu bile Noltce
NOTICE OF ELEC
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code elec
tlons 3501 11 (G)
5705 19 5705 25
Notice Is hereby
g1ven that m pur
suance
of
a
Resolut on of the
Village Council of the
VIllage ol Rutland
Rutland
Ohio
pass.d on the 13th
day of August 2004
there will be submit
ted to a vote of the
people of sold subdl
vlolon at a General
Election to be held In
the VIllage of Rutland
Ohio at the regular
placoa
ol
voting
therein on the 2nd
day ol November
2004 the queetlon ol
levying o lox
In
eKCOII Of thl lin milt
limitation lor tho
benefit of Rullond
Vllllgt lor lht pur
pol8
al
Current
IXPiniiO Slid lax
being
A renewal of 1 tex ol
2 mill* at 1 role not
tKCHdlng 2 mille lor
IICh one dollor ol
vtluetlon
which
amounll to twenty
cent1 (SO 20) lor ooch
one hundred dollart
ol voluatlon for llvo
(8) year1 The Polle
for oald Election wilt
opan •• 30 • m and
remain open untJI
7 30 o clock PM ol
llld dly
By order of tho Boord
of Elactlono ol Melgo
County Ohio
John N lhle

e

'

1 -...:~-

t.-.

I..C. I a.t. 1-. t

f".. .... 111:

c

»

Or Fax To

•

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(10) 6 t3 20 27

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Public Nottce
NOTICE OF ELEC
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revtsed Co!le elec
!tons 3501 11 (G)
5705 19 5705 25
Nohce IS hereby
gtven that 111 pur
suance
of
a
Resolution of the
Board of Townsh p
Trustees
of
the
Township of Chester
Chester
Ohto
passed on the 10th
day of August 2004
there w II be submit
ted to a vote of the
people of sa d subd
v slon at a General
Elect on to be held n
lhe Township
of
Chester Oh o at the
regular places ol vot
lng therein on the
2nd day ol November
2004 the question of
levying a tax
In
excess of the ten mill
limitation
for 111e
benefit of Chesler
Township for the pur
pose of Malnla nlng
and operating come
Ierlea Said tax being
A raplacoment of a
lox of t milt at a rate
not axcaodlng 1 mill
lor each one dollar of
valuation
which
amounla to ten centa
($0 10) for each one
hundred dolioro al
veluetlon lor five (5)
yoara The Pallo for
11ld Election will
opon al 8 30 1 m ond
romeln open until
730 oclock PM of
11ld dey
Br order ol the Board
o Elect on1 of Molg1
County Ohio
John N lhle
Chelrporoon
Rill 0 Smllh
Director
Doted Sept 5 2004
(10) 8 13 20 27

A Jump

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NOTICE OF ELEC
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EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

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SFJM~
POSTAL JOBS
S 4 62 $20 92/h Now h
ng Fo app car ons &amp; 1ee
TURNED DOWN ON
go e nmerJ o_, nfo ca
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Arne can Assoc of Lobo
No Fee Un ess We Wn
9 3599B042 24hs
888 582 3345

"

a so wo ac es and

m e

omR?eaEeka
$65 000 Ca
40 256
9234
FS App o

P va e
emo e
ough
o Move access good hun ng no
675 23 6 make abe mbe M A o

a ea $35 ooo

304 895

3390
~1,1\1'

es men
$35 000

1"10

HOUSfS
mRRENT

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

0

on

ac e g ou d
4 o a m e on Bud Cha n
Ad3046 53 44

Down

&lt;o

Pay men

and

nanc g a a abe w h
app o ed c ed
A e age
c ed qua es you
dow
3 bed oom b ck
payme has kep you om
Ranch Newe oo
y
tluyng hs s you chace
hea
pump
Sm hs
o ow you ow home
Cabnes ca gaage p
you nave a down paymen
corns
bah
age
vng
vae aneo SA 60 8
bu wo d ke o conse e
ac es $92 000 740 388 oom and d n ng oom
k
chen
w
h
2
ca
ga
age
8676
a ached and a 30x60
comoa
ga age and a 6x.24 she e
oca o s
oom d nn ng oom u house 5 m es out Che y
n shed k chen
2 ca A ctge Rd o
he
gh
ga age 2 ou bu d ngs 6 740 245 5 02
you can I vacant pos ons p us ac es c ose o schOo s
New y
n he Was V gna ~\my $94 000 740 742 7200
mon h $400 ctepos No
Nat ona Gua d r you a e
pes 740 256 6408 740
be ween he ages o 7 35
44 05863
o have p o m ta y serv
ce you won wan to pass
hsup Fo Oppo un es n
Mouu Ho"f'
you a ea ca
304 675
FOR S~i.E
Home Eve y h ng new
5837
Poss b e no Money down o
Seeking 39 People qua ty ng Buye s 304 674 4x70 8 Cayton 3 bed
oom 2bah CA newca
5
LocaUy
pe ce arne e wasne &amp;
who wan o ea n money
dye S 0 000 740 446
ATTENTION.
wh e os ng we gh show ng
4233
GET YOUR LO.O.N 0
ohesnow
c ose o hosp a ot1 Jackso
BUY OR REFINANCE
7404411982
P ke S600 en w S600 sec
YOUR HOME
FREE S.O.MPL ES
dep Yo pay a u
es
FRff APPROVED
Re e e oes equ ed Ca
HOME LOANS
(740 446 3644 o app ca

FULL T ME POST ON
L.O.BORATORY TECHNI
NGAL PO S
$8 00 PER HOUR
C AN mmed a e open ng
lo a Med ce abo a o y MUST BE 18 YEARS OR
Tech can Days on y no OLDER HAV E OWN CAR
n ghts
o
we e~e nds
VD ANO A CLEAN
CR M NAL RECORD
Con ac A hens Med ca
EXPER ENCE N
Laboaoy 400 E Sate
SECUR ITY OR LAW
A hens Phone 740 593
ENFORCEMENT
8240
PREFERRED
WE PAOV!QE
FREE UN FORMS
PADTRANNG
.O.DVANCEMENTS
PA D VACAT ONS HEA TH
D e Needs We~ CassA
BENEF TS
COL A E do semens Ca
OFFERED
740 367 7899
NCENT VE PROGRAMS
PLEASE CALL
MON FA
9.0.M 3PM
800-869 8975
CONT NENTAL SECRET
SERV CE BUREAU NC
EOE
Ove b ook Aehab Ia on
Cane s now accep ng
eaumes o the poa on ol
0 eclo o Soc a Sa vicaa
Cand da I mua POUIII
1 ong ve ba and wr t1en
commun ca on
sk 1
11 \\\ 11\l
Med ca o Med ca e and
MDS know edge L.SW w lh dlt on 1 I g OtJP home n ~rllljdr'"-'i:B:"~":"";....;;o.--,
e~o:pe anee n ong Ia m ca a
()ppo
p ere ed btJt not equ ad Bdwo
) 35 h slwk 1pm 8 30om
RruNTI'Y
Qua tad cand da es pease Thu a F
Sat 7pm 9am
con ac
Cha a B own Sun
McGu e Adm nat ato at 2) 3 h elwk 3 8 30p Th/Fr
333
Page
St eel
10p Sat.oSun
M dd epo Oh 45760 EOE H gh Schoo d ploma!GEO

sa a v Pease send esume
and e e ences o PO So
33 Po n
P essen
WV
25550

F nanc ng ava abe w th
NO OOWN P.O.YMENT

08 Leg on Te ace anch
ype house n good shape
faa u ng a saasona po ch
beau u v ew o ve stone House fo sa e
a chway m n mum ~ad $5500 080 304
upkeep 2 bed ooms p us a afte 5 00 pm
o ma dnng oom&amp;k 1chen
nook u basemen w d
hookup 2 ba h &amp; ga age
c ose o bus ness sect on o
own $39 000 740 992
5502 _ _ _ _ __
::_:_:.:..._
2 b

NEW PURCHASES
REF. NANCES
$0 DOWN $0 DOWN
CASH OUT HOME
MPROVEMENTS NO

ba h hea pump A!C ca ne
d

a ce ngs deck S 000
moved 304 882

WELCOME
UNITED SECUR TV
MORTG.o.GE
1 60Q-370-4ie5

Cf&lt;LL TODAY
STAFFED BY U S
VETERANS
MB 5263

3

bed oom

Ga

house

n
mon h

SSSO

en a a

so e

men
de acned ga age
oun y sen ng 5 m nu es
om R o G ancte o m I'IU
ad
om hosp a $700

mon
305
4b

depos

h

n

740

Sv acuse

446

OH

$600 men n $600 depos &amp;
30 n Sy ICUII $475 mon t&gt;
Hud Apo oveo bo r-. no ~~ s

304 675 5332
one men V ew o
v1
Cn
IVC $700 mo
Ga po a Fe y 740 445
34B

5 ooms no
pes aepos &amp; e e e c~"s
740 '742 2424
740 992
3439

Thl• n ew1p.11~ will not
knowtng y •c:~pl
ldvertlltment• to 111
111t1whc:t1 eln
YIO I on ot U'tl IIW Ou
rHdl a lrt t11flby
nfo med thlt 111

IH\II'd\11

Ho~ru;
roas~u:

0

CREO T BANKRUPTC ES

&amp;

CLASS A COL

Need

Norr a Northup
Chryale Jeep

\I

'IK\UIS

buy ng h s s you chance
o own you own home
you have a down paymen
bu wou d ke o conse e
we o e ow down paymen
pogams aso Gea ne
es a es Loca compa y
Mo gage
Loca o s
(740)992 732

1

,.w

v.gaage Tuppes Panso
Ches e a ea P eapp o ed
anc ng 40 949 2 94

a ea DtJ es nc ude sched

u ng and anspo ng o
appo n men s Hou s 9am
Spm Mon F H gh SChOO
dpoma.GED VB d d VB S
teense th ee yea s good
d v ng eJ~pe ence ade
quate au omob e nsu ance
coverage and w ng o d ve
n heavy congested a I c
a eas equ ed Mus have
exce enl commun cat on
and o gan za ona sk Is
Sales
$7 00/h Exce enl bene IS
package
P e emp oymen
A e you ookng o a new
ca ee w th an un m ad D ug Test ng Send esume
oppo un y lo advance o Buckeye Commun y
Se v ces P 0 Bmc 604
ment?
Jackson P ke OH 45640
Wou d you ke 10 be ecog Dead ne dr app can s
0 20 04 Equa Oppo un 1y
n zed as a p ofess ona Empoye
sa espe son n one ol he
country s h ghes pad occu r.z!"""-~---""""1
1""
pa ons
SUIOOl.S
lN.\'TRUC110N
so ou sa espeop e ea n '"--eiiiiiilliilioiiiillit_..l
an 9)(C8 en ncome a n d Gall polls Career College
enoy he bene tso wo kng
Ca ee s C ose To Home
w h a success u and p o Ca Today 740 446 4367
g ess e deae shp
BOO 214 0452

I you e se ous abo a new
cB ee and a e ook g o
he tan ng and gu dance
ha a e essen a to ong
offe padtanng vaca
e m success wed ke o
ons and ho days you
a e se ous abou p o ec ng,. ak oyou
you Second Amendmen
Pease sop n lo anne
gh s ca s oday
877 463 6247 ex 232

CLASSIFIED INDEX

WANTED

FAR\t~

mRSAI E

3 sae F day Sauday and o
davey o Haod
Appo n ments C e k needed nanc ng ava abe w h Hand bu og home 6 yea s
Sunday Oc obe
5 6 7 Dspach n Ga po s a ea
iowokwhpeopewh app oved c ad
Ave age o d P va a w h 10 aces
Ted ol he hasses o he
9AM 4PM
39495 Sta e Es p o $ 1 200 mon1h
menta ela dal on a two c ed qua t es you
down S unn ng ew 3 B
2
p vae pac ce want a
Rou e 7 Ye ow double w de Ca Andy Ma n 800-888
g oup homes n he B dwe paymen has kept you om bah Open oft

2834

4x4 s For Sale
725
Announcement
030
Antiques
530
Apartments for Rent ..................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessor es
760
Auto Repair
770
Autos for Sale
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Bulldtng Suppl es
550
Bus ness and Build ngs
340
Business Opportun ty
210
Business Training
140
790
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
Camptng Equipment
780
Cards ofThanks
010
Chtld/Eiderly Care
190
Electrical/Refrigeration
840
Equ pment lor Rent
480
EKcavatlng
830
Farm Equtpment
610
Farms for Rent
430
Farms for Sale
330
For lease
490
For Sale
585
For Sale or Trade
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnished Rooms
450
General Haullng
850
Giveaway
040
Happy Ad1
050
840
Har, &amp; Grain
He p Wanted
110
Hom1 lmpravementl
810
310
Homeo lor Stle
HOUII~O)d Goodl
510
Houooo for Rani
410
020
In Memoriam
lnouranco
130
Lawn &amp; Gordon Equlpmont
880
LIVOIIOCk
830
Loot and 'Found
060
Lola 8c Acreage
350
Mlocellonaouo
170
540
Mlecollanaoua Merchandloe
Mobile Home Repair
860
Mobile Homeo for Rant
420
320
Mobile Hom11 far Sale
Money to Loan
220
Motorcyclao &amp; 4 Wheeler&amp;
740
Mualcallnstrumenta
570
Persanalo
005
Pols fQr Sale
560
Plumbing &amp; Heating
820
Proloealonal Sarvlceo
230
Redlo TV &amp; CB Repair
160
360
Real Etlale Wanted
Schools Instruction
'
150
Seed Plant &amp; Fert llzar
650
Slluallona Wanted
120
460
Space lor Rent
Sporting Ooodo
520
720
SUV s for Sole
Trucko for Sale
715
Upholstery
870
Vona For Sole
730
Wantad to Buy
080
Wonted to Buy Ferm Suppllae
620
Wanted To Do
180
Wanted Ia Rant
•
470
072
Yard Solo- Galllpollo
Yard Solo-Pomeroy/Middle
074
Yard Sll)o-Pt Pleoaont
078

It

HOMES

roa SALE

Kens 0 good home 3 2

$400
Fo n o rna ton eadng o
t1e a es and convc on o
t1e person o pe sons ha
emoved he portab e gene
ao fom he pope yo
John E Ca ol
42 Ove
Ad Ga pols OH du ng
hepe odo Aug 23 oOc
2004 nlo rna on may be
o wa d o Ga a Coun y
She Hs oHce a 40 446
22

...
Now you can hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.
1m
Borders $3 00/per od
l!,iitlll
Graphics 50~ for small
$1 00 for Iorge

oisplav Ads

Gt\IAWA\

mo hs o d
rna e
eme e 740 446 8657

II

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

De1cr ptlon • Include A Pr ce • Avoid Abbrevllltlon•

I • ,. •,. • •

Rev1sed Code alec
tons 350t 11 (G)
5705 19 5705 25
Not1ce s hereby
g ven that n pur
suance
of
a
Resolutton of the
V llage Council of the
V llage of Syracuse
Syracuse
Oh1o
passed on the 17th
day ol August 2004
there will be submit
ted to a vote of the
people of satd subd
v1s on at a General
Elect on to be held n
the
V llage
of
Syracuse Ohio a1
the regular places of
vat ng therein tln the
2nd day of November
2004 the quest on of
le.vymg a tax
n
excess ol the ten mill
I mltatton
for the
benefit of Syracuse
V llage for the pur
pose of F re protec
tlon
Satd lax be ng
A renewal of a tax of
1 m111 at a rate not
e•ceedlng 1 mill lor
each one dollar of
valuation
which
amounts to ten cents
($0 10) lor each one
hundred dollars of
valuation lor five (5)
years The Polls for
sa id Election will
open at 6 30 a m and
remain open until
7 30 o clock PM of
said day
By order olthe Board
of Elections of Me go
County Ohio
John N lhle
Cholrparton
Rlto 0 Smith
Director
Dated Sopt 5 2004
(10) 8 13 20 27

0

Or Fax To (304)675-5234

• All ads must be prepaid'

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

rI

992 2157

Oetullfiru-

Dally In Column 1 00 p m
Monday Friday for lneertlon
In NeJCt Day • Paper
Sunday In Column 1 00 p m
Friday For Sundaya Paper

- • - - • • • • " • ,...,.

'"'"""c • -. • •

Con

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
'atrtbune
1\egtster
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••

own ng Arne cans
Fu me and Pa

.......-c •

The Da1ly Sentinel • Page 83

urrtbune - Sentinel - 1\e ster
CLASSIFIED

pleased with the result&lt; for hts
te 1111 but admits that they still
have some work to do wtth the
tournam ent loommg next week
I thought at Innes we played
extremely well ajld then at lllncs
we had mtstakcs
satd Caldwell
We d get ahea'll three ol tour
pmnts and then have a 1m stake on
a bad bump or bad set We ha\e to
aile\ tate those mtstakcs tf we
expect to go any\\ here m the tour
nament
Caldwell "as also mpressed
wtth "hat ht s program was once
agam able to accompl sh m
Hocktng d VI SIOll pl1y
A 1yttme
you
wm
etght
stratght title s that says somethmg
about you volleyb til program
satd Caldwell
Jcnmter Hayman led the Eagles
wtth 16 pomts and added four
blocks whtle Morgan Weber wn
tnbuted 1 ne kdl s and three
pomts Armes had seven pomts m
her home ftnale
"tth Casey
Smtth chtpp ng m two pomts and
No ktll s mthe wm
1111 Brannon had I 0 po nts tor
EHS w th Bnttany Bts sell and
Darcy Wmebren 1er 1ddmg stx
p01 1ts and t"e kills respectively
The JUillOr varsity made 1 1
sweep on the mght wtth a 17 25
?) 14 15 !Own
Eastern tra ve l s to Tnmble
Thursd ty for
t s t nal TVC
Hock ng match of the season The
con t est ts schedul ed for 6 p m

pomts and stx ktll s whtle Lee and
Cole each contnbuted etg ht po n ts
Cole also had I3 ktlls and a t eam
htgh 14 blocks 111 the setback
R e nee Batley paced MHS w rh 17
ktlls and I 0 p o u ts and Joev Han 1 g
led the Marauders wuh 27 asmts
Hanmg also had three k lis 111 the
contest Megan Garnes led Metgs
wtth 16 pomts and added fi\e ktlls

www mydallysentlnel com

Wednesday, October 13,2004

Ho sa 3 Bed com
2
Ba h Hea Pump new
Ca pe W ndows &amp; Roof
(21 3 bed oom houses to
Ave V ew 2 Smith S1 No
see 2bahs fepaces on
Money Down o qua ty ng
ac eage Ca
Z40)709
Buye $425Jmontt1 wh.y Ren
66
304 675 :2749

0

New OakWood mega s o e Na cy Homes ead R~a r...
ea u n'W
Ho l"'les
by Broker
OakwoOd Fee wood &amp;
"" \10BILF H O\ID;
Ges Oe sop shopp ~
mR RE.'I,
on y a Oakwood Homes o
Barbou s e wv ( ~ 736
2X65 ae nCou
a
3409
Eec c C A Handcar
SAVE SAVE SAVE
eady
$200 mon n
Stock modes a o d p ces 304 675 4088
2005 modes a v ng Now
4~~:70 2 bedroom C A ota
Co e s Mob e Homes
5266 US 50 Ees Att1ens e ec c
$350 depo&amp;
740 245
Oh o 4570 740 592 972 $350 en Ca
Whe e You Ge You 949 No ca s afte 9pm
pease
Moneys Wo 11

�Wednesday, October 13, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

·Wednesday, October 13, 2004
ALLEY OOP

Children's
Vintage Portraits

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

photo
October 15, 16
&amp; 17th

Regular priced items.

Red &amp; Yellow Sticker items
2 Days Only
Friday &amp; Saturday Oct. 15 &amp; 16th

3 bedroom mobile home, no

pets, (740}992·5858
3 br. mobile hOme 1n
Caruthers Mobile Home
park call 304-675-38 18
\,

Hm rsrnow
GOorJ:o•

:Applications accepted !or
nice two bedroom on private
lot. No pets, $400 plus

Appliance

depOSit (740)446-6890

Beautiful Riverview ideal tor
or 2 people. no pets, refer-

Warehouse

~

ences. (740)441 -0181

1n

Henderson. WV.

Pre-

&lt;Clean mobi le home for rent owned applicanes starting at

m the country. (740)256- $75 &amp; up all under warranty.
we do serv1ce work on all
6574.
Make and Models (304)675Trailer lor Rent $400/ month 7999

Tue....
99.! -) 152

446-2009

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

EHO

FOR RJ.Nf

1 ant:J 2 bedroom aparl -

Beddin g queen &amp; full. 2
large rugs, 6 sma ll throw
rugs. new mattress set. cu pboard 304-675-2801

Good Used A~p li an ces,
Recondi1ioned
and
Guaranteed.
Washers.
Dryers.
Ranges.
and
Refrigerators. Some start at
1 bedroom apt W/0 hookup $95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
$290 month + deposit. Close V1ne St. . (740)446·7398
to Holzer HospitaL Call 740ments , furnished and untur·
nished , securily deposit
required . no pets . 740-9922218.

339·0362.

Mollohan Carpel. 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Por1er. Ohio.
~ br second floor. apartment
in Point Pleasant water &amp; (740)446·7444 1·877-830· .
9162 . Free Estimates. Easy
llash pick·up included in
financing. 90 days same as
rent. call 304-675-2144
cash. Visa/ Master Card .
before 4:00 call 304-675Drive· a- little save alot.
3653 after 4:00.
2 bedroom apts. 10 minutes
tram Holzer Hospital on St.
At 160. Water/Sewer/Trash
Included. $460/mo. Deposit
required . Pets allowed .
(740)44 1· 1184 or (740)441·

Tabl e aM 4 Chairs , good
COndi!IOn $75 call {304)675-

3456

COME BY GSEE ME FOR
YO/JR. BEST DEAL ON A
NEW OR. IJSETJ CAR.
Ty Hill

WANTED: Position available to
assisl an individual with mental
retardation who resides in the Meigs
High School Area. 20 hours/week.
split shift (befroe 'and after school).
Must have high school
diploma/GED, valid driver's license,
three years good driving experience
and ade4uate automobile insurance .
$7.00/hr. Send resume to: Buckeye
Community Services. P.O. Box 604.
Jackson. OH 45040. Deadline for
applicants: I 0/20/04. Pre-employ ment drug testing. Equal Opportunity
Employer.

plus/deposit (304)576-2241
AI~&lt;\.RT!\II&lt;NfS

IIH~SI'ORI

MISCELI.ANEOl!S
MERUlANiliSE
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,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday. 6am-4·30pm Closed
Thursday.
Saturd ay
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

(.'h1..,~·d

BUG .

10

\1101"'

Ann;
H)R SAtE

$5001

Honda's. Chevy's ,
Ect
Pollee
lmpoundsl Cars from $500
lor listings 800-391-5227
EXT 390 1

Jeep·s.

At rms
S.\1.1'

4 WllEELI-:R'

T~l 'L '"-'

m~

r

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED 6 AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
anc1/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441·1111
ror application &amp; information .
Gracious living. 1 and 2 oedroom apartments at Vill age
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments In Mladleporl .
From $295-$444 . Call 740lili2·5064. Equal Hou11ng
Opportunities,
Huge clean , 3 bedroom, 1
bath. dining, storage. apro11.
2,500· sq. ft . No pets/smo~ ­
lng, $610.
Call Ke ll y

(740)446·9961 .

ANTIQUES
Buy or sell.
Riverine
Antiques . 1 124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992·2526. Russ Moore.
owner.

s.,u-:

1972 Chevy Tow Truck, 1 112
tun . excellent work,1ng condi 1ion. wench works off PTO.
everything
new,
over
$13.000 .00 inves te d. will
take
$8.500.00
OBO
(7 40)992-0622
1989 DoCige 112 ton p1ck up.
8 ft . bed . 318, V8, 60.000
miles. new rubber. 10w1ng
package. new pa mt . e ~~: cel­
lent cond1!ion. 3 speed overdrivEL...
$3.250
Call
(740)446-4514 8am-5pm
740 -446-3248 after Spm.

fOR SALI:

60

Used mes 4- L1 265lC75
R16.F1restone AfT
4- P245x7R17 Michelin LTX.
3- P265lC7DR17 Goodyear
Wrangler RTS
304-675-3354

CAMPER&lt;;&amp;
Mom~ HoM~

Nice 4psta1rs apartment
quiet area, (740)992-6849

wicker couch &amp;
chair, oa~ Sideboard , old 7ft. International Bush Hog.
poster bedroom su ite and 3 point hitch, good condition
NOTICE OF ELEC·
fifties era 4pc bookcase, $600 . (740)446·0116 or
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
bedroom suite, yellow/brown 304 675·333 1
EXCESS OF THE TEN
PhaltzQralf stoneware. 614
MILL LIMITATION
St. Flt. 325 south R io
Revised Code, alec·
LIVFS!OCK
Grande. (740)245-5845

sale

Wood 20 beet cows , 2nd calf to a
year old 15 blacklbaldies, 5
OnE! bedroom apartment
reds. Bred lo a black Ma 1nno pets, in Pomeroy
JET
AnJou bull. $ 1,000 each
(740)992·5656
AER ATION MOTORS
(740)245-9315.
One bedrOom garage apart· Repa1red, New &amp; Rebuilt In
menf, kitchen furn ished Stock. Call Ron Evans . 1· Bull baoy calves . 5100 each
800-537-9528
$400. (740)992·3823
No Sunday calls (740)388·

Pleasant Valley ApartmenJ
Are now taking Applications
for 2BR. 3BA &amp; 4BR ,
Appllcalions
are
taker.~
Monday thr u Friday, from
9:00 A.M.·4 P.M . Office is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Orlve Point Pleasant. wv
Phone No 1s (304)675·5806

8524
Kole s Insulated Metal build·
ings in Hartford WV. Special Short Horn
In
8lC8 S695 oo· or 10lCt2 Raised

$1295.

(740)256·6574 .

Completely furnishe d ins1de
&amp; out Floor wall &amp; rool
made w/ 1 3/4' mch metal
~.Janels. 518 plywood on
21n.x6 1n 1reated floor JOin ts ,
4lC4 treated runners tor easy
movinQ, 2 metal doors for
easy access. different styles
&amp; S I Ze~ . Will bUI!CI to your
spec panels are pnmered I
ready to pamt 1ja,ncmg avail able 1-304-532-8943

r

tiona 3501 .11 (G),
57D5.19, 5705.25

.

Nolle$ 11 hereby
given that In pur auance
of
8

Resolution

F1re

Fa1r · Steer
Gallle
Co

- you~
we- PliT
fo~YOV./

10~ Off All===

BARNEY

most bnnds. Located an Rt1 bypass

I&lt;EEPIN'

REPAIRS IN OCTOBER!
we hive 1arts and accessories tor

-·.

••• •

I THINK LUKEY'S
SOMETH!N'
FROM ME,, LOWEEZY !!

lh'fl.lll'.l

THE BORN LOSER
r-LE.J\'&lt; £::. II 10 t'lY 1)00
TO GE.\ FUI&lt;. 1'$1\~ 1

'rBtry's Englnu
.. "' .\ l ;r 1r1 \t.

l'uun:w1
h ~~ ~ d~ L.1 rr~ ·.., Fi-uii St:mJ

See
Rocky "RJ ..

BIG NATE

Hupp

Rlii -A ir A~ (lllllpn: . . ~ors
01"" H:30-6:00 ~I-F;

FRANCIS AND

l'EDD'(
SAID

IMPORTS
Athens

Sa1. H:30-2:00 992-1033
J'rdo·lljl &lt;IIIli Jdi\\'~ ~T\ ll:l'

IT LOOKS 1'10RE LIKE
A GROUP OF E&gt;LACK
SLUGS ERUPTING OUT
OF YOUR SKULL 1

JUST
t"\"(

HAIR LOOKS
L\KE ., HAIR'V
STAL,A,.GI11T E.s:

YOUF'.
ENGL!SI-l -\---- - SEE'MS 10 THAN'I'- "('0U 1
yOU 'RE
BE' IM ·
WELCOME
PROVING.
VERY MUCH'.
ARTU!&lt;.

Kcro\cnc lklltlr'

~~~

High 81. Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232

BISSELL

Hill's Self
Storage

New Homes • Vinyl

29670 Bashan &lt;'load

Siding • New Garages

Racine, Ohio

BUILDERS InC.

45771
740·949-2217

• Repl acement

Windows • Roofing
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

' 7 40·992· 7599

· !4 I mo pd

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.

HOWARD l.
WR/TfSfl

PEANUTS

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'x30'

COMMERCIAL and

Ripley, WV 25271

1·800·822-041 7

SUNSHINE CLUB
HOW AB(X)T AtJ
EARLY BIRD Sf'EI:IAl .. .

.SEAMLESS

of

the

Village Council of the
Village of Syracuse,
Syracuse,
Ohio,
passed on the 11th

day of Augus1, 2004,
there wlll be submit·
ted to a vote of the

people ol said subdi·

11mB
amounts to eighteen
canis ($0.18)1or oach
ona hundrad dollars
or Valuation, for fiVe
(5) yoars. Tho Polls lor ·
sold Election will
open at 6:30a.m . and

2003 ELK .TRAILER
5F4BB20f03E001715
2003 MERCURY 90
HP ELPTD OT733103
1992 MARINER BASS

7:30 o'clock P.M. ol
sold day.
By order or the Board
of Elections , ol Melgo
County, Ohio
John N. lhle
Chairperson

Ohio ,

Rl1e D. Sml1h

right 10 b id al this

Director

sale ; and to withdraw
the above collateral

open

until

Doled Sept. 5, 2004
(tO)_6, 13, 20, 27

The

Electfon to be held in
the
VIllage
of
Syracuae, Ohio, at lha
regular placaa of votIng therein, on lhe
2nd day of November,
2004, the quaatlon of
levying a tax, In
exceaa of tho ten mill ·.

and

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
HAY&amp;
given
that
on
·GRAIN
Saturday, 'Oclober 16,
2004, at 10: 00 a.m ., o
E.H.O
For Sale Ear Corn (304)675· limitation, for the benpublic sale will be
Tara
Townhouse
1506
efll
of
Syracuae . held at 211 W Second
VIllage for lhe purApartments, Very Spac1ous.
St, Pomeroy, Ohio .
2 Bedroom s, 2 Floors, CA. 1
pose
of
Current
The Farmers Bank
Laymg Hens and Hay- expenses Said taK
112 Bath , Newly Carpeted
and
Savings
Square or round bales. 1981 being:
·
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Company is selling
Bu1ck · LeSabre
Call A renewal of a taK of
Patio, Star! $385/Mo No
tor caah In hand or
1740)386·9033.
Pate. Lease Plus Secunty
1.8 milia at a rate not
certified . check the
OepQsit Requ ired. Days "Long wood burner insert,
exceeding 1.8 mills
following collateral :
740·446-3481 : Everi1ngs · $250
Phone (740)446· Ro und Dales and squares lor each one dollar of
2003 ODYSSEY PON ·
740-367·0502
3697
bales . Call(740)441·7390
valuation,
which
TOON FRUA 7385A303

reserves

the

prior to sale . Further,

vlalon at a General

Public Notice

I

*Free Estimate•*

I

949·1405

~·~'~'~"~"~,~ ·~·~·"~"'~'~"~'~·"~·~·~''~'~'~"----~~~~

S K E E T E R
STER0241 Ft 92
1992
sKEETER
TRAILER
1991 MARINER 150
HP MoToR ooor983s
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,

remain

Farmers

Company

Bank

Savings

,reserves .

Advertise
•
m
th,1s
space
for
$50 per
'
month

~::;:::;:::;:~

lhe rlgh11o reject any
or all bids submi11ed.
B
h
The
above
dascrlbed ·colloleral
Builders
will be sold "as is· . .io yem experlence
where Is"; with no ·~ew Homes

arn art

expressed or implied
warranty given .
For furthe r infcirmation , or tor an
appointment
to
inspec t
collateral,
prior to sale date conl ac I 01 ana R ec 1or or

Randy Hays a1 9922136 .
(10) 13. 14 &amp; 15 3TC

• Lo~ot Homes
• P11..,t Frame '
•t 011111 1{' t t' Rt·mudelin~
•Ht·plan·nH·nt \\ indm1'

•kouf,
c ommcrdal and
Rc.,idt·nlial

Estinmtcs .
7411-667-60HII

Free

GARFIELD
SOMEBOI'Y. OUt 'THERE'S

HOW'S 'THE
DIET GOING-?

.

0
0

r-------......,

~M OAWo IO·l'

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
----·--

• Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling
• New Gar•~••
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutter I
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Deck•
We do it all except
rurnace work

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garages
• Comple1e
Remodeling

V C YOUNt: Ill

140-992·1611

Pomeroy. Ohio

Stop &amp; Compar~

' ' 992·~215 "1

22 Yea·rs Local Ell

lence

Pass

Pass

Pass

21
23

24 Bureau part
25 Unruffled
26 Uses hanna
27 Memo abbf.
28 Duplicate
29 Sleek
planes
34 Dieter's
unll
36 Tossed
softly
42 Splrlled
mount
43 Choir
selacllon
45 Met role
47 Crusty
cheese
48 lnveotment
options
49 Savvy

26 Fonostgramr
27 Each and
t Royal symbol
every
2 Green &amp;hade
28 Smokes ham 3 MI. abov.
sea lelitl
30~no.
4 Queen's tar
31 My, my1
32 Sharlt and
5 Jazz ganre
6 Full
Khayyam
33 Mandate
of energl
35 Zurich peak 7 Aware o
37 Dronched
8 Nuclear
38 Driver's
reactor fuel
choice
9 Do film
39 "The Thin
edlllng
Man"
10 Pipe fining
CI&gt;-Siart t Dell bread
40 Naval olf.
13 Growls
41 Computer
19 Phrased
kiy
20 Lodgo
42 Family
22 Caustic
mtm.
solution

50 Do the
wrong thin'
52 Kangaroo
pouch
53 Riviera
summer
54 Klkl or Joe)

slopper.

992-4598

:'lll·,\ G.:neral StarrJI:I)

3"

Pass

16
17
t8
19

wo uld opt for two. Suppose you have two
finesses. You take the first one. If it wins ,
you are home; but if it loses, you lall back
on the second finesse . Theoretically. you
will succeed three times in four.
However, sometimes you must guess
which string to trust- if you misguess, it
is too late to try the other option.
Is this a try-both deal, or a guess-whichone problem? Against three no-trump,
West leads fourth-highest from his
longest and strongest heart suit. As
South , what would be your plan?
North's three-heart cue-bid asked his
partner to bid three no-trump with a heart

'\OWO~~

COLD WEATHER IS COMING SO

G-: n~rattn!! Sv~tcm~ ;md

Pass

t2
14
15

Is it batter to have two strings, or on)y one.

poLl.AlZS

OCTOBER SPECIAl

&amp; P~trt:-

East

t

6

43 Before,
In combos
Gematones 44 Nose-bag
Mora llaohy
b~
Heirlooms 46 Kid 's ammo
WIIHul
48 Hanrl's
Masked
honey
auperhero 51 Wiped out
Pony ped
a file
KLM dalum 55 Make lun of
Won-ooup 56 EKpand
Dryly
57 Sumpluous
humorous
meal
Glimmer
58 Quiz-show
of hope
hool
Badges and
such
DOWN

1o your brrdge-1able bow? Usually, you

*"OME
MAINTENANCE

A nU&lt;:~ue

For

Licensed in Ohio and WV

dOOFING

,\11\l \ 111("

1304)682·2537 •

740-843-5264

W;UTanty Repair •
Lawn Tra~.: !or &amp; Pu!'&gt;h
Mowers, Chain Saws,
Chain Sharpened

North

Two options are
worse than one

1·740-843-538~

~011 ,a,h.'lnl!

1986 51h whee l Wilderness
Cimarron travel tra iler. 36
f~t long several new parts

•

e

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

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

~..::u 1.::

West

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Jfouse (~aning Service

Acn:~&lt;;ORII:'

Looking tor engine 01 transmiSSion? Grve me a call at
(740)'ZI46·0519

l •

51nnette's

AUIU P~l(fS &amp;

4 new BF Goodwrench
P235-70-R16 t1res, wheels
and
chrome
hubcaps.
Wheels 111 late model Forg
F-150 $375. (740)446·6 137.

South

Opening lead : " 6

. ...

IS UIVIIIU

l. ,. 2.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable : North-South

Box 189

PH:

2001 Caravelle Interceptor,
21FT, 56/hours 9 passenger, like new call (304)6740102 or (304)8'82-2840

r

1740)387-333 1

... A 9 7

3NT

(fu nncrl~ D; \\C· ~ S111;1ll l ; n~lllt'

RoATS &amp; MnmR~
IU~ SALE

I \l&lt;\1 ..., I 1'1'1 II -...

(686)569·2812

• K 7 3
t A K J1065

3t

Middleport
~0!.~.~:;. 45760

• 9 4
... K Q 5 2

South
• 5

and Financial Services

1740)388·9673.

1998 Pontiac Grand AM . 4Door, Ps , PB. AC . 97.000 I 987 Ford Bronco II 6cyl. (7 40)446·1759.
miles. Excellent cond1tioti 4x4 w/air, 4-speed wfoverinside and out , $4,500 or drive.
runs
good
best offer call (304)892- $1 ,500/080 (304)675-1408 1998 Palommo Pop Up
Camper w1th Roof Air, very
3773 or (304)895·3045
or (740)418-0790
good
condition
asking
1999 Mercury Cougar LS. 1996 F-150, 4x4, extended $2.600 (304)575-2331
V6, loaded. 1740)446-0946. cab. _ 5.0, auto. 102,000
miles. winterized , (u ned up. 2003 32 It Cougar camper,
78 Cadillac Eldorado. Goo d
new tires &amp; brakes, $6500, 1 slide out , used 2 man . exc
body, lair interior, engme &amp;
Racin e Service Ce nte •. cond., at a good price 304front end needs work .
(740)949-2700
675-36 16
$1 ,500 firm . Call (740)4461704 alter 5pm.
1999 Ford ElCplorer XLT
SIK\ICI"'
4X4. Red. CD, excellent conAvenu_e
88
Chrysle
r
Filth
dition.
54;000
m1
1es.
$9.800
AKC Boston Terrier pups.
10
Shots &amp; wormed .1 Black &amp; Body good. new tires . 1740)367-7090.
H0\11:
white. $250. (740)388-8743. breaks. shocks. battery, runs
hu·~O\ E.\II:N'I);
40
good. $1,200 740-545MomRnuE'&lt;I
Border Collie mi){ pups. 1165
4WHEIU:RS
black &amp; white , $50
BASEMENT
Pygmy Billy goats. $25. 93 aMW 325i. Custom cover 1978 GS750 Suzuki Faring,
WATERPROOFING
1740)386·1520.
&amp; 'extra . wheels , $3,500. backrest and new seat. 14K Unco nditional lifetime guar::(7::4-:
0):4:-46_·_95
::5_5_.-__,-- _miles. E)(cellent conditiOn. antee. Local refe re nces fur FoR SALE.
nished . Established 1975
95 Chevy Blazer, 4 x4. 4 _3 $1,200 (740)441-0638
Call 24 Hrs. {740) 446Vortex. all power, auto. run- 2001 Kawasaki· 300, 4x4
087 0. Rogers Basement
Firewooa tor sale. $30 pick- ning boards. $3,500.00 . excellent condition . $2.700
Waterprooling .
up or $50 delivered , in most (740)992·6664 ..
l irm .(740)4~6·6115 .
Delivery
starts
areas.

Middleport,
North
4th
Avenue . 2 bedroom , fUr·
nlshed apartment. Depos1t Cash paid lor Dish Network 2 mmiature male Donkeys ,
and references . No Pets equipment Have model $300 each. Born on Mothers
number's ready . To ll free
(740)992.()1 65
Day. (740)446 -01_1
or

• ·a 3

... 6 4 3

Rocky Hupp Insurance

outside Pomerov. Ohio

2003 Honda CABS, great
5 speed . CD changer. cond1!1on. new chain &amp;
62 .000 m1les. S6.500 080 ·sprockets_ Selling because I
(740)256- 1618 or {740)256- out grew 11. GraphiC k1l &amp;
6200.
seat cover Renthal handle
bars. Ask1ng $2.200 080

r

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Jennings Buck Mas ter Bow.
Drive from $344 to $442. fully equtped . with hard
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call case. good conditiOn S 150
Equal 304)882-3775
740-446-2568.
Housing Opportun1ty.

liNDA'S PAINTING
(1401 985-4180

99 Voltswagon Beetle. Red.

r

r

MomRclu .t:-;.1

&lt;10

HJR

15

674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Let me clo 1! for youl

:::::::::

1992 Chevy Lumma Z34 ,
good cond .. Wh ite CD player
$1200.00 080 304-5762000 N1ssan pickup. 5
- - - - - - - - 4W7 or 304-674-3768.
speed , AMIFM a~r, Super
Pole Barn 30lC50x10FT
Condition.
$5 500. (740)446$6395 .' includes Painted 1994 Pontiac Fireblrd 6cyl
4782.
runs
&amp;
looks
good.
$3.000
Metal, ~lans. Instruction
Book. Sl1der. Free Delivery 080 (304)675·6986
2001 Dodge Dakota Quad
(937)559-8385
Cab. 4x2 . Call (740)441 1995 Chevrolet Lumma;
0712
Solid maple 2 pc. hutch , Original owner : looks and
good couch , writing desk, 3 runs great! $2,200 080. Ph· 92 Toyota 4 Runner. 4 WD. 5
pc . table set w/solid marble (740)245·0135.
speed, loaded, 117K. e~~:cel­
top, glider chair w/ottoman.
lent COndi!IOn , $4,800.
new Zenith color TV. micro 1996 Bui c ~ Century, 94.000 (740)245-01 24
oven, new Nintendo game in mile'3 :
good
shape
4x4
box cal\ (740)992 -7527
1304)675·1506

Thompso ns Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675-7 388. For sale,
re-conditioned
automatic
0194.
washers &amp; dryers. refrigera3 rooms &amp; bath . stove/refrig- tors, gas and electric
erator, down· stairs. utilities ranges. air conditioners. and
paid. $450/month. No pets. wr1nger washers . Will do
46 Olive St (740)446-3945 . repa1rs on maJOr brands in
Block, brick. sewer pipes.
shop or at your home.
Applications being taken for
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
very clean 1 bedroom in Used Furniture Store 1 30 Wmters , Rio Grande, OH
country sening yet close to Bulaville Pike . Dressers, Call 740·245·5121 .
town . Washer; dryer. stove. co uches. mattresses. reclinPE-rs
fridge included. Water and ers, refrigerator, washer,
t"OR SALE
garbage included . Total elec- dryer gas. electric range ,
tric with AC . Tenant pay elec- Grave Monuments much
tric. $300 deposit. S375 per more!
(740)446-4782 2 miniature male Donkeys,
month. No pets . No smok- GaU1pohs, OH Hrs. 11 ·3 (M! $300 each. Born on Mothers
ing. 740-446-2205 or 740- S)
Day
(740)446 -01 16 or
446-9585 ask for V1rgmia.
(740)367-3331 .

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1-1!00-!122-0417
10

Q7 2
... J 10 8
East
A 10 2
• J 9 8 7
. A J 962
• 10 8 5

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

en 2nd Ave
Mi ddleron. Ohio
14 5N. St!coml Avt.•.
11 Open Dailv 10 00-5:00
Sun. 1~:00-4:(Xl

Extra 20% off

2 bedroom, all eleGtriC } 4 Twin Rivers Towe r is acceptmiles north of Holzer $350 Ing applications for waiting
month + sec . depos1t &amp; ref- list lor Hud-subs1zed. 1- br.
erences. (740)446-6865 or apartment . call 675-6679

8:30-Noon

Q 4

•

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

8:30-5:00

Antiques

excludes "Priced Just Right" Items

APARTI\ lENTS
Ill~ RENT

CelrPhone

Sun. Closed

40% Off

•

871-2417

Brent or Brian Whal ey

M - Fri

Sal.

Ohio River Plaza

10

See

10-13-04

.KQfi4 3

Henderson, WV

740-992-7.013 or 740-992-5553
R..stockif!9 Ia te .\lode/ Sa hU.!I'&lt;' I
and Arter Market

1 Certificate per household

FASHION

(740)3n2923

Parts

740-992-2161

'

MYERS PAVING

, S!. R1.68l Darw in, OH

Call now to purchase

Call Scott Reuter
7 40-446-9800

MoBILE Hmu:s
mR RE.vr

Whaley's Auto

Meigs Senior
Center

Located on Second Ave . in
Middleport Masonic temple
(Formerly Dan's)
Approx. 3600 sq . ft . of floor
space plus storage,
2 bathrooms, heating and
cooling

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

$10.00 for 8x10

BUSINESS SPACE
AVAILABLE FOR
RENT.

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydallysentinel.com

GRIZZWELLS .
1\lCI&lt;.tR, RiMtMI'~it. , ~1\E\o\
'm ~Uit.~\&lt;;E t.. atlii'C.R
()UT If\ \\olE \NOOC!&lt;;,
A\.WA~

Oi\VE HWI
AV/1.\it. Si-1 AI&lt;~

EATING!

BACON!

You slart with eight top tncks: one heart
(trick one) , siK diamonds and one club.
Shou)d you turn to spades or to clubs lor
the ninth winner?
Before answering that question, though ,
you must put up dummy's heart queen at
trick one - the honor from the shorter
side fi rst. Here, it holds. Now you must
work to keep East off the lead ; otherwise.
he will lire a heart tnrough your remaining
king·doubleton and you will fail ,
Perhaps that suggests taking two club
finesses because they are into the safe
West hand. However, this is the key point ·
If East has lhe spade ace, you should
always go down. So. it is wrong to play on
clubs; that can never gain. Instead, cross
to hand with a diamond and play a spade
toward the dummy. (Or, at trick two, lead
the spade king from the dummy.) That
string does not break!

G

AstroGraph
-

'lllrthde,y:

Thursday, Oct. 14.2004
By Bernice Bade Oaol
In the year ahead you are li~ely lo e11pe rience rewards and benefits h om undertakings that have slymied others. It will
be due to your ingeniou§ way§ of handling matters that make§ you successful
m the Wt1YS they failed _
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23) ~ Thi§ IS an
ex cellenl day to present that brainstorm
lhat's been floating around in your head
to your boss. Chances are your boss will
be much more receptive !o new ideas
and will go along with it.
SCO RPIO (Oct. 24;Nov_22) - A chance
meeting ot someone new today could
prove to be personalty rewarding for you
down the line. Be receptive lo fresh faces
because one could add zest and excitement lo your life.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 -Dec. 21 ) Conditions could move off ot dead center
today regarding a matter th-at1s of Impor tance to you . When you see things mov ing . stay w1th it and you·11 be able to conclude things to you r liking.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - A
friend with a vivid Imagination could have
a favorable mfluence on your thmkmg
and attairs today Armed Wllh your new
rn sp1rat10n , good things could begin to
happen lor you .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Look for
the possibility of a small wmdfall today,
because cond1!ions are perfect lor just
such an occurrence to happen to you It
might not make yo u a forlune. bul every
tinle bit helps
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Don't
hesitate for a second about di scarding an
old, outdated procedure for a bright new
one. Ideas you get today could be quile
futuristic and have ex celtenl chances of
su cceeding.
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprll 19) - Quid~
decisions and prompl act1on may be
called for today should an oppor!unity
stri~e out of an une11pected quarler.
which 1s quile likely to happen. Be alert
because it could be a good one
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Newly
awakened mtere st s which came about
from someone who likes the same rhings
as you may begin to show some early
indications today of being quite a worth white activity tor you .
GEMINI 1(May 21-June 20) - Today
could offe r a unique . possibilily to better
yourself at wor~ or with your career.
ShOuld somelh 1ng pop up. be the first to
jump on the opportunity. even if it means
more respons ibility.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22)- By adding
just a slight !wist lo something today
wl'llch you have always done utlng the
same procedure a, you'll be able to get far
better results. Don 't be afraid to exper1 ·
ment.
L.EO (July 23·Aug . 22) - Wltrr a little
Imagination, you ahould be able to do
woncltra wltn ch anging 1omathii'IQ wl!hln
your evaryday anvlronman1. By refurbllh·
lng your aurroundlnga, you 'll refraah you r
mlrid •• well
VIAClO (Aug 23·Stpt. 22) - u·a qulta
poatlbla that you'll comt 111..,. whllt
undar prattu~ tOdiY lnat ..d of collapl·
lng. Thla ama orlva wil l glvi you an edge
ovar your compelltlon and catch them ·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrity C~ cryp1ograrll'S are crealed !1-om quotations oy famous people past ani:l prese'll
Each letter 1'\ 1M opner Slilrlds lot another

Today 's clu9. K equals C

HW

VPYL I

"L

LIIX

" EBX

YPEBXG."

WXOEPI

RLWHK

BJYLI

B XG

LIA

EBX

HW

PGWPI

XWWXIEHLZ

VPYLI. "

VXZZXW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "In a democracy, bo!h deep reverence and a sense
of the comic are requ isite· - can Sandburg

1

~~i~t~~~

S©tt.:rU1A -&amp; t-zr~s

WORD

GAM I

Edilld by CLAY R. POLLAN -:-~---------

Reor rcnQe
0 four
serombled

of the
wcrc:'s be·
low '" form 1o•Jr ~1rnple word~
lenf':S

GoJd motlc lo l;ve by . "Giviog ad·• ice is lik e cooking you

should :ry it oefore giving i! to

-=r--,1 "Jt .... .
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(:"J~r.l ~1e the chuckle cyo:~d

u

.
.
.
.
.
b\ ldl •r g in 1h!! rr• sm-o word'
'--'----'---'--'---"--' you devi!loc f:or:-t s'e c No. j ~!!!low.

e

FRINf NUMa~RW LETiERS 1
IN 1HESE SQUA!ES

~ ~~ic:~~~\E, LFTERS 10

IIIIIII

J

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1 o- 1 2- o'

Nature- fjr/trt ·Lunch - Rosary- GOALS
I had a hard tir'le w ith seve·al_problecns at work. My
husband says that obstacles are what you see once you
lose sight of your GOALS.

ARLO &amp; JANIS
/~

j
~

~-

~ '&lt;&gt; . .

&gt;1. . . -.:c:;

./

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0

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P'

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unawt,..l.

SOUP TO NUTZ
"tbl.) MlliHT Hlih'i'
fbNr T&gt;&lt;EII.e: .

a

rre:

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Di!&gt;WN Wn&gt;t
HoRsE. 'Ttl
i&lt;NoW ~eN Wr1\1 ON&amp;.

Ya DoN'T.

a

�Wednesday, October 13, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Fighting brain drain:
Young professionals
network m new club, A2

z.. MJNUTE

•• •• ••
JIG m STMDIKGS
Big Ten

All Top 25

••
•

PF

PA

Wisconsin

3-0

6-0

1-0

125

39

Michigan
Pwdue

l-0
2-0

5-1
5·0

1-0
0-0

179
209

114
66

Minnesota

2-1

5-1

0-1

201

102

Northwestern 2-1
Michigan St. 2·1

3-3
3-3

1-1
0·0

150
146

146
137

Iowa

1-1

3-2

0-1

0-2
0·3
o-3
0-3

3-2
2·4
2-4
1-4

0-1
0·3
0-1
1·1

118
ll3

107

Ohio State
Penn State
fllinois

Indiana

115
154
161

.. .....

• •••

"2 004 Longwing Publications Inc.

•

GAME OF THE WEEK

Wiscoasla at Punlae

Average per game

. 351.2
- 165.3
. 145.5
. - 125.7
- . 119.4
.. 114.8
-- . - 101.0
GAOirlirK.PAE
. . _301.0
Minnesota ..
. 194.3
Michigan State ..
188.5
illinois . . . . . . .
181.1
Wisconsin . . . . . .
!73.1

157.8
130.1

Penn State . . . . .

'WO'I'U. 410ill"li~IDilUU:~

Purdue _____ . _ .

. . 509.0

Minnesota . . . . . . .
Northwestern . . . . .
Michigan State . . .

. 486.2
. . 438.5
. . 409.2

nlinois . . .

- - 389-5

. Michigan . .
Penn State .

. . 361.3
. . 355.8

Wisconsin. . .
Ohio State. . .
Penn State . .
Michigan State
Michigan . . .
Iowa . . . . .
illinois . . . .

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

.
.
.
.
.
.
.

.
.
.
.
.
.
.

Purdue . . . . . • . ·. . .
•

126.3
167.8
180.2
197.7
210.5
241.8
244.5

•

•

•

•

• • 85.2
. . 113.2
125.3
. . 131.8

Illustra tion by Bruce Plante ,. 2004

Battle of unbeatens

'l'e7&amp;DDI
Wisconsin ..
Michigan ..
Penn State
Ohio State.
Purdue

. . 198.3

- . 181.3
- .. - - 305.5
. .. 314.4

- - 316.2
.. 327.0
. 372.0

. Iowa . ,

A

fte r three wed-.

tlf L"\IIJ fcrerK'e pia~ .

the

prc:-tender~

ha,·c

been \~eedcd out anll only twnteam:-. remain unclcfcat~o·d .
Thi.., \\t"l'l-.. tht.· unhe~Ht·n ~ f&lt;II.T oil All eyt:-.. turn 10 \\o\: ...t
Lafa ye th~. !mi .. "ht;re Wi :-.n m:-. in and Pun.iw:. h1 llh r:mJ...r.:J in the
IlfDmDUAL LEADERS
top 10. will hattk f{lf &lt;1 "hare of thr.: B1g 10 le:1d ..
~
For the fir~t tifilL' t'\r.:r. ESPN·.., College GameDay \~ill
1.642
Kyle Orton, Purdue . . . . . . .
ori ginate from l&gt;urdue\ campu~ ~~~the l3oilt:rmaker~. with their
.. 1,585
Btett Basanez. Northwestem
hi ghe~ t ranking (No.5) in the Jne 'l"i\ler era. '\ook to holJ off the
.. 1.424
Chad Henne, Michigan ...
Ballger~. It will bt• u hank between the ..:onfcretKc ·~ highc:-.t
- - ... \ ,183
Zack Mills, Penn State . .
powered offense und 11~ tout-;hc st defense.
Bryan Cupito. Minnesota .
. - 1.051
At the bcgi111111l~ of the sea;;.un. both tl"l.lnl~ had Hcismun
Matt LoVecchio. Indiana
. - - . . 1.049
lnlphy
cam.!iJatl'S. Purdut: ·~ Kyll" OrtiH\ ami Wis~.:~m ~ in 's
1,010
Drew Tate, Iowa . ...
Anthon~ Davi s. But Da\ 1s spent three wech 1111 the shdf Wllh an
&amp;
eye injury . ..,u..,taincU 111 i.l bloWtiUI \ ictul") over Central Florida.
815
Laurence Maroney, Minnesota
and finally is hal·k on track. The unfor~seen benefit of thi.! injurY
. 672
Noah Herron. Northwestern .
wa" that when Davi.., "as tlUt. two of his barkul)'l were foro.:d into
. 641
Marion Barber m. Minnesota .
:.JL"tinn
Hoth Bunk.cr Stanley am.l Mall Bt'rnste tn were imprc ~sive
505
Pierre Thomas. nlinois .
and
arc
llO\'v e\ en more confi(\ent in backup role\.
. 496
Michael Hart. Michigan . . . .
At
Purdue.
Orton has played all seasnn and leU th~·
. 450
BenJarvus Green· Ellis, Indiana .
Boi
lerrnaker~
thrnug.h th~ air to hec11mc the Glllft'rCJll'~ · s best
. 419
Tony Hunt. Penn State . . . .
pa~ :.i ng team Orton staned the ~ea~nn \\ ith 17 hJuc:lu..lown:Ui&amp;8~
wi thnut an interceptiun. hut had his own ~truggle" in a 20- 1J
Btaylon Edwards, Michigan. . . .... 763
\'ictory lH'Cr Penn St:ltl' Ia ~ \ week. throwin g twn int l;'rt:c ption ~
Courtney Roby. Indiana. . . .
. .. 592
while gell ing "adcd llnec time~.
Taylor Stubblefield. Purdue. .
. ... 568
This week. Purdue wi ll face one of the most fcar~nme dcfen:-.es
Mark Philmore, Northwestern .
. . 533
in college football. a w·i.. con~in team that ha~ ull(med just 65
Santonio Holmes. Ohio State .
. .. 464
Kendrick Jones, nlinois. . .
. ... 434 . point:- per gnmL' all year. The) arc kJ by linemen Amwj
Hmvthorne &lt;.IIIJ Era..,mu~ Jame .... whnleads 1he Cflnfercnl.'e \\&lt;lth six
Jonathan Fields, Northwestern ....... 363
S:.JCb .
337
Jared EUerson, Minnesota ..
The Badger" lead the Big Ten in\ imwll y e,;Cr) dGfcn,i\·e
TeiJIL •wll"ltn••
category.
They are fi N in sacks. tow! dcfcn:.e. pa"' defe n~L' .
Brett Basanez, Northwestern .
. 1.736
~cori ng dcfe mr &lt;tl1d pas .., effi('iency defen se, and arc "c&lt;.·onJ in
1,704
Kyle Orton, Purdue .
rush in£ Jcfen~e .
. . 1,35 7
Chad Henp.e, Michigan .
Thi ~ i~ the .:la:-.~ic battle of offense again:-t dcfL' Il"C. and the
Zack Mills, Penn State .
- ' 1.184
. 1,184
winner v..ill h;nc the in:-.ide track for the Bi g Ten title .
Matt LoVecchio, Indiana
Bryan Cupito, Minnesota .
- 1,091
• Records: Wi ... .;.:nmi n 6-0 {3-0 Big Tent: Pu rdue 5-012-0 Dig
. 1.087
Drew Stanton. Michigan State
Ten 1. • Series: W 1:-.l·onsm lead:-. 36-29-8. • Coaches:
W i~L·on:- 1 11 · ~ B:mv A lvarel ( I 05~6 7-4); Purdue\, Joe Tilla
199-6211 .11 Kickoff: 4:JO p.m . CT Saiurday. a TV: ESPN 2.
Taylor Stubblefield, Purdue . . .
66
54
Noah Herron. Northwestern .
keys for Wisconsin: Pre~~ure QB Kyle Orton without the
48
blitz. D..:fen~ive linemen Erasmu:- Jame:-; and Anltaj Hawthorne
Brayton Edwards, Michigan ..
48
Marion Barber lll. Minnesota.
ha\·c been cffeni'e thi~ ~ca~on. and the Badger~ will need to keep
47
Mike Nugent, Ohio State .
all of their defenM \ e back~ in coverage to ~top the Boilermakers·
47
Ben Jones, Purdue . . . . . .
spread offeme .... Control time of possess ion. Runnin g the ball •
. 45
Garrett Rivas. Michigan ... .
with RB .Anthon ) Do.tvi'~ is the only way to eat up the clock. The
WI * I IW
longer thi Badger~ ~an maintam pos~ession , the le~s time Orton
3
Markus Curry, Michigan .. .
has to tire their defeme.
3
Tracy Porter, Indiana . . . . .
keys for Purdue: Stay patient with the passing game. Orton
3
Jason Harmon. Michigan State
has proven he can make the right decisions to lead the
Anwar Phillips. Penn State .
3
Boilermaker~ to yictory. so they need to keep the game in his
J
Ukee·Dozier, Minnesota . . .
hand~ . ... Play aggressively on defense . The Boilermakers need to
1
Ernest Shazor, Michigan .. 1•
keep eight men mthe box to stop the Badgers' running game.
Chad Greenway. Iowa . . .
2

.... ...

. Michigan State .

o

n-·

··=··

Ryan Mundy. Michigan .. ,
Kelvin Hayden, Illinois . . .
Tru maine Banks, Minneslilta .

Calvin Lowry, Penn State .

1
.. . . . . 2

·. . . . .

DRILL

"

.

The ntini struggled to
generate an offense in
Saturday's 38-25 loss to Michigan State,
and switching quarterbacks at halftime
didn't help. In the first half. senior Jon
Beutjer was 10-for-14 for 96 yards. His
replacement. Chris Pazan, was 5-for-11
for 48 yards. Most of the ntini's offense
came from Pierre Thomas, who ran for
!88 yards and two touchdowns on 21
carries.
While Indiana lost-to
......Northwestern 31·24,
Hoosier senior Courtney Roby put himself
into the record books. With eight catches
for !50 yards. Roby became Indiana's
career receptions leader V(ith 149, one
more than Thomas Lewis. Roby is now
second in the conference in receiving
yardage with 592 yards .
lllm&amp;fA The Hawkeyes had the week
..........
off, but they did take one big
hit. Last Wednesday, Iowa \earned that it
would lose RB Jemlelle Lewis, who has
an injured ACL. for the season. Lewis, the
team's original starter, is the third Iowa
running back to suffer a season-ending
knee injury this year. Marrus Schnoor
and Albert Young are already out, so
Marques Simmons now becomes the

· Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,~J(I '\ 1 '.. •\ul

,J :\ , 1 ; t 1

11111\"-. J)\\

\'"''~lll\ tl ,nh .., • · H U udr o H•

fUJ()BfHtf ,.• tHtt

Officers seize crack cocaine h1 Pomeroy

SPORTS
• Meigs makes short
work of Vinton County.
See Page 81

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - Cpl. Ronnie
Spaun of the Pomeroy Police
Departmenl Iurned a traffic
stop on Liberty Lane into two
arrests and se izure of 8.3
grams of crack cocaine on
Saturday night.
Spaun, a patrolman with
Pomeroy
Police
the
Department, observed a suspiciou s vehicle with a West

FEMA
advises
retailers
on loss
reduction

-..u:-HIGAN ST

. •... 76.0
•

•
""4.

....,...
QB Chad Henne
started the season for Michigan, he was
the first true freshman since Rick Leach
in 1975 to statt his first game. On
Saturday , when he beat Minnesota 27-24.
his numbers were the highest ever for a
true freshman. He was 33-for-49 fo r 328
yards. Henne fo und Tyler Ecker for a
31-yard touchdown to secure the victory.

. 70.8
... 72.0

Iowa . . . . . . o • , ,
Minnesota. . . .
Penn State . . . . . .
Northwestern . .

•.•

-..u:o.HJGAN- When true freshman

DU
Michigan .
Wisconsin

.......

•

team's top rusher.

GDDI P: -

..IF

~

••

•
•
•
•

IIIII.ID.IANA

.

... . .
Purdue .
Northwestern . . . . . .
Michigan . . . .· .
Penn State
Iowa . . . . . . . .
Michigan State . .
illinois .. .. . .

Purdue . . . . . . .

•
• •

•

~·

98
104
151
181

Northwestern .. .

•
•

•.. '

..._.NOIS

TEAM LIIDEBS

..

~

Marauders try to stop
shQrt sldd, Bt

1
1

f !I I~ J&gt; 1(,/: PI&lt; Of /Jf.}

'llle Peat of tlae MetcJaapa
While

Wi sco n ~ in

and Purdue continue to roll. the rest of the

~PO \SORUJ

·,
t:nnkn:IKL' i~ lm1k.i11g tu ptck up the pieces. Michigan lost to Notre
D&lt;llllt' l'arlv hut ha.., ra llied tn a J-0 confcrt'IH.'t' ~t;.trt. anJ the
Wolwn ne" \\ill he It Hlk 111g hll'Ont inu~ tlwir \\ tnntng '~ ay.., ;.u
Illi nois
~linn~.:~nta i~ likl'\\ i... ~.· ltloking to turn ;.1WUild ih fununc" after a
~ 7- 2-lll)S&lt;., tu Mt-.·h igan. tlw Goptcrs· tir:-tlo:-.~ ofthl' . . l';l..,on. Th~~
lfi.l\ t'l tn Mil.'higan S t at~ t h i~ WCI.'~cml.
The hi8~C~t surpri "c ufthl.' early conference ~ea~on i ~ the fall ul
Oh io State. The Bu..:kt.:ye-. ha\'C nuw lo..,t two cnn,e.cuti\e gtune~
,111d an: looking tu g.~t bat.:~ nn th~ \\inning trat.:k in low:~ Cit).

'

l nwi.l

Minnesota at Michigan State
~1innc~ota 5-1 f~- 1 Hig T~.:n l~ Mid1igan State J.J (~ - 1
Big Ten) . • Series: M ichi):'tlll Stall' ll'ad~ :2-1-- 1·-L a Coaches:
Minne .. ota·~ Glen M:..:-on I IOK-105-1 ): M idli~;.m State's JDhn L
Smith l I] 1-fiHl. • Kickoff: 1] nnon ET Smurday. • TV: ESPN.
Key for Minnesota: :\H1iJ the ktdown . Lt:-.t :-.Ci.~:-t)n.losing to
Mich igan hurst the Golden Gophl'rs· nmlilknu~. Thi~ ~e;.t.'oon.
th.:y lost a lead lat~ ag.&gt;~i n . lo~ in g :!7-~-1.. hut the ~ llllht mme nn
The~ h•~t to the Sp;.1rt:u1~ last year, hltl must bt:;.l\ them if tile~ \\ant
tu keep ali\ l' tht'i r chanct:~ for a Big Ten title .
·
Key for Michigan State: Conu:ntrate on ... rnppln~ RB
Laurcncl' Maroney . Thr S partan .~ 111\' ninth in !he Big Ten in
ru~hing defcn:~c. allnwing 174.3 yarJs per gumc. Tlw Gopher"
r~aturc two running bad." who avcrag.t' mnft' thJn 100 yard:- per
g1.1 mt:. so the Spartatt:-. :-.hould ha\ e the 1r hands full .

• Records:

Ohio State at Iowa
s

Records: Ohio S t all:) - ~ (0-2 Big Tt'IJ) : IO\\;J 3-2 ( 1· 1 HI£! rc n) .
• Series: Ohill S t ~ttl' kmh -12·1 ~-~. • Coaches: Oh i(l State'" Jim
Trt~~d LJT.:!.(,h- ~ ): In" a·" Kir\o.. Fen:: nil (.p. 12 ). a Kickoff: 1:)0
p.m . CT S~llurda~ · • TV: ABC .
Key for Ohio State: Break the "treak The Bud eye~ h&lt;Jve lo ~t
two ~traig ht games. to North\\ estern cmd Wi sconsi n. and mu't
break the slidt' to n:main in th~: top half of thr conferen~:c.
Key for Iowa: The rn:tturity nf QB Drev. Tate. With RB
Jermellc Lc\~ i~ out with an ACL tear. the Huw keyes · Offen~e
dcpenUs. on the sophumorc play c.d kr .

Michigan at Il\inois
ill Records:

Mich tgan 5-l (J . Q l:!tg Ten): lllinot&gt; 2-4 10- 3 Btg

T en). • Series: Michigan lc:.Jds 64.21 ·2. • Coaches: Michig•m·s
Lloyd Carr 191-27 ): lll inoi &gt; Ron Tumcr (41 -57). • Kickoff: I I

a.m. CT Saturday. • TV: ABC.
Key fo't Michigan: Moti, miun. The

~partans oB
....,...
· Drew Stanton
has shown that he can pass and run for
touchdowns, but in Michigan State's 38-25
victory over Illinois last Saturday. he
fo und a new way to score - as a receiver.
WR Jerrarny Scott took a pitchout and
threw an 18-yard touchdown pass to
Stanton. who was 21-for-28 for 199 yards
and three touchd·owns.

lllflNESOTA Gophers
When the Golden
fell to
Michi gan last Saturday, they lost out on a
golden opportunity to win their first

conference title since 196 7. since they
don't have Purdue or Ohio .State on the
schedule this year. Minnesota hasn"t
beaten Michigan since 1986.

IIBRTHm;STERN ~~dcats
have won with the passing game of senior
QB Brett Basanez so far this season. But
in Saturday's 31-24 victory over Indiana ,
it was the running game that made the
difference. RB Noah Herron ran for a
career-high 197 yards and three
touchdowns, including a 16-yard
touchdown run in the second overtime
that secured Northwestern its second
consecutive or victory.

-.u_n

ST'"'TE

When the Buckeyes
"
lost 24-13 to
Wisconsin last Saturday. it ended their
18-game home winning streak. The backto -hack losses were the first for coach Jim
Tressel. It is the first time Ohio State has
opened the Big Ten season at 0·2 since
1992 .
~

STATE

~N
While the Nittany
....,.....
Lions suffered a
20-1lloss to Purdue. they did give the
Boilermakers a surprisingly close game.
Wh en Calvin Lowry intercepted a Kyle
Orton pass, it was Orton's first
interception of the season and also the
Boilermakers' first turnover. Hawaii is the
only Division I teaP1 without a turnover.
Penn State's Anwar Phillips intercepted a
second pass later in the game.

POMEROY - Pomeroy
retailers lost inventory. fixtures and revenue in the Sepl.
18 Ohio River flood. and at
Page AS
least one has announced it
• Rolland D. Smith
will not re-open because of
• Charles L.
the extent of the losse&gt;.
Those businesses might
'Bud' Bickel
qualify for assistance-through
the
Small
Business
Administration, in the form
of loans to replace or repair
real estate, machinery, eq uip• Polymer bridges slowly ment and inventory destroyed
by the wor&gt;l llooiling on
making inroads in niche
Pomeroy's Main Street si nce
markets. See Page A2
1964.
Economic Injury
• Onge conducts Ohio
Disaster Loans are also avail able to small businesses
Valley Symphony.
unable to pay bills or meet
. See Page A3
• Jones boys do good at · operating expenses.
But what can a business do
archery contest.
to help redu(e losses should a

0BfTIJARIES

INSIDE

Please see FEMA. AS

New Syracuse
Fire Department
officers are
announced

WEATHER

Senior WR Taylor
Stubblefield became the
Big Ten's all-time leader in receptions,
breaking the record of 266 set by Purdue's
John Sandeford last &amp;eason. Stubblefield
caught seven passes for 63 yards and a
touchdown, upping his career total to

ha ve the
~CONS
When the Badgers
tendency to play down to thdr competition and do ju~l enough lO
. ..,.....
beat Ohio State
win. They did bure ly enough tO beat Minnesota 27-24la~t
24-iJ, it was Wisconsin's third
weekend. Illinois should be an easier win. but the Wolverines
cori.secutive victory at the Horseshoe in
mu~t maintain a sense of urgency.
Columbus , the first time a visitor has won
Key for 1\linois: Getting QB pre~~ure . The Wolverines'
tlnee straight there since illinois in I g88·
freshman QB. Chad Henne, has sho wn the ability ro throw for lot ~ · 94. Wisconsin had never before won even
of yards, but he is also mistake-prone . If the lllini give him too
twice in a row at the Buckeyes' stadium
much time to make deci~ion s. he will connect.
dating back to 1913.

IN

IJ Y Till:' FOLIJJ \rJ.\'(j /lC.'-,'1\'/:'S.'"'/:'S:

class three felony carrie' a
sentence of 18 month' or
more in pdson.
Also arresteu with Thabe-t
was Chris D. Ward. 38. of
Pomeroy. Ward was abo
charged with possession of
drug paraphernalia.' and an F3 felony for possession of
crack cocaine.
Ward also had outstandin&amp;
warrams from the Pomeroy
Department
for
Police
domestic violence. posses -

' lcln of crack coca ine attu
_weupott' uttuer u"abilily.
Sgt. D.tnny Leo nard anu
Deputy Jim Stacey from the
Mcig '
Counl)
Sheriff',
Dcpartmcttl took Ward into
cu,lmly. \\here he "'" later
incarcerated at the Middleport
hil. Thabc1 '"" incarce rated
atlhc St&gt;ulhea'l Regional Jail.
Both men \\'ere arraigned in

cnunl y court on MonJ:ry "ith
Please see Cocaine, AS

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
- Jim
Cundiff of Racine operates
the
Maplewood
Lake
Christian Campground. His
business involves several
components, including a bait
shop , paid fishing , and ca mpsite rental s. He hopes lea-rning to create spreadsheets
will make his business easier
to manage and more success·
ful.
Janet Craig of Middleport
hopes improving her comput·
er skills will help her realize
her dream of a secretarial job.
Cundiff and Craig are two
of six students ·taking a fourday compuiCr class aboard
the Techmobile, a rolling
computer laboratory operated
by the University of Rio
Grande Crossroads/Work Net
program. It is parked at Ihe
Church of Christ Family Life
Center in Middleport throu gh
Oc1. 21.
Robert Taggart. the technology coordinator at the
URG/Rio
Grande
Community College Meigs
Center, is the instructor for
the itermediate class now
Please see Lab, AS

Robert Taggart of the Univers ity of Rio Grande/RIO Grande Communtty Co llege Meigs Center.
standing, instructs Janet Craig and Jim Cundtff on the creation of spreadsheets dunng a computer class in the URG Techmobile, parked in Middleport for two weeks. (Brian J. Reed/ photo )

'Bend Area Crank it Up' Eastern homecoming

candidates and escorts

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

SYRACUSE- '\lew oiTicers of the Syracuse Fire
Department were annOtmced
Oetallo on Pa&amp;a A2
al last week's meeting of
?yracuse Village Council.
They are Larry Ebersbach.
president: Mike Hoffman.
vice
president :
Donna
2 SECflONS- 12 PAGES
Peterson. secre tary : Tammy
Bable, assistant &gt;ecretary,
Calendars
A3 and
Eric Cunningham, trea·
Classifieds
B3-4 surer.
Named fire chief was Jack
Comics
· Peterson. with other officers
being Bill Roush. assistant
Dear Abby
A3 chief:
Bud la vender, captain:
Babic. first lieulenant:
Editorials
A4 Jeff
and Don Whan and Doy Nit z,
A6 second lieutenants.
Places to Go
Wood
Mayor
Mony
Obituaries
As appointed Kenny Buckley as
B1 the village·, project manager
Sports
·and representative to the

INDEX

Bs

Weather

A2

© 2004 Ohlo Valley Pui)UshinM Co.

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS

then sent to Bureau of
Criminal Investigation to
verify the resulls.
The driver of the vehicle
was John F. Thabel, 41,
Mason. W.Va. Thabet was
charged with DUI , failure to
signal. possession of drug
paraphernalia and possession
of crack cocaine. Because the
amount of crack cocaine was
between 5-l 0 grams, the pos'ession of crack cocaine was
classified as an F-3 felony. A

A computer lab·on wheels

See Page AS

., 'ROUE

271.
Wol verine ~

Bv BRIAN J, REED
BREED@MYOAILYSENTIN EL.CO M

Virginia license plate on
Liberty Lane. When the driver
failed to signal, Spaun pulled
the vehicle over at II :04 p.m.
on Saturday.
Pomeroy
Patrolman
Christopher Pitchford arrived
to assist Spaun. Both officers
then found what appea red to
be crack cocaine. Preliminary
tests done at the Pomeroy
Police Department confirmed
the substance was crack
cocame. The substance was

Please see Officers, AS

Bend Area Crank It Up will take place from 4 to 8 p.m.
Saturday OQ Pomeroy's parking lot. At last year's event. about
300 people turned out to listen to the stereo competition.
·BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - For those
into car stereo svstems with
quality and intensity of
sou nd, Pomeroy's parking lot
where the "Bend Area Crank
it Up" will be staged may be
the place you want \o spent
your Saturday, 4 to 8 p.m.

Anyone and everywhere
can COmpete in the ·_judged
event where .plaques will be
presented to the winners in
the classes of best in class.
best light system, best instal latio n. best of show, and people's choice.
This is the second annual
Crank it Up which attracted
Please see Crank It up, AS

Homecoming queen candidates and thetr escorts from
Eastern Htgh School are. left to nght: Kayla Nave and Robert
Cross. Morgan Weber and Ryan Sm ith . Ctlelsea Young and
Adam Dillard . Abb te Chevalier and Andy Franc ts and Knsta
Wh tle and Cody Di ll. The quee n wtll be 'crowned at halft tme
Friday evening. A hdmecoming parade is planned at the school
for 6 :30p.m. on Wednesday. IBrian J. Reed ' photo I

LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE !'tOMES • HOSPITALIZATION

'

I

-*

· Bank
~~:u:..
'

196 EAST SECOND ST. • POMEROY, OH

992-3381

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Fo

Farmers
Bank
&amp; So
Company
vtrgs

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