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PageC6

AT THE MOVIES

Sundi!-Y• October 17, 2004 ,

Marshall steps it up
against Flashes, Bt

1"eam America: World Police'
(AP) 'Team
America:
World Police·· arrives in theaters with what has to be the
most unusual, unprecedented
blurb let ex.plainmg why it
received an R rating from the
Motion Picture Association
of America.
contains
The
movie
·'graphic, crude and sex ual
humor. violent images and
strong language, al( involving puppets."
But nothing can prepare
you for the hilarity of hut sex
between a couple of marionettes which almost
earned the film an NC-17 rating and will make you lau~h
so hard, you'll cry - or for
the surprising .levelheaded ness that emerges from what
seems, at least superficially.
like wild. wacky satire.
Trey Parker and Matt
Stone. the mad geniuses
behind ·'South Park." spare
no one from skewering in
their all-puppet extravaganza
about a glooe-trottmg team of
overly energetic peacekeepers - not the so-called evildoers. or the self-riuhteous
forces trying ro stop rfiem. or
the Hollywood stars who feel
compelled to use their
celebrity to comment on the
evildoers and the self-righteous forces tryi ng to stop
them.
The result is a fi lm that
works on every tmagmab le
level: as a comedy. as sharp
political commentary. as a
send-up of bombastic action
. flicks, even as a musical. As
in Parker and Stone's 1999
film "South Park: Bigger,
Longer &amp; Uncut," some of

'P.s: ·:
We already knew that the
lovely Laura Linney cou ld
do anything - drama ("You
Can Count On Me"). tragedy
("Mystic River"). comedy
("Love Actually") - all with
seemingly effortless nuance.
But her co-star in "P.S .. "
Topher Grace , proves himself surprisin gly versatile. as
well, and more than capable
of establishing him self as a
leading man long after 'That
'70s Show" enters the '80s.
Watching their unexpected
chemistry in this adaptation
of Helen Schulman's novel
of the same name makes you
wish for a better movie one that doesn't dally with
the idea of a dead boyfriend
coming back to life 20 years
later, one that doesn't awkwardly insert a competitive
best fr iend into the romantic
mix (eve n if she is played by
·Marcia Gay Harden in margarita-swilling, desperatehousewife mode).
The seco nd film from
writer-director Dylan Kidd is
as wistful as his first, '·Roger
Dodger," was nihilistic. and
just as full of sharp dialogue.
Linney's
Louise
Harrington.
admi ssions
director
at
Columbia
University's School of Fine
Arts, seems a1 first to be having an affair with the profes-

the most inspired moments
come in song, includin~
Team America's rockin
theme. '·A merica. (Expletive)
Yeah,., which blares as they
blast otT in jets from theor
James Bond-style headquarters hidden inside Mount
Rushmore.
That Parker (as director)
and Stone (who co-\vrote the
script with Parker) are equal
opp011unity offenders is one
of the
movie· s great
strengths: They ridicule both
Michael Moore and the U.S.
government. And by placing
their words in the mouths of
marionettes. their observations never seem . heavyhanded . "Team America" is
loud, fast and in-your-face.
But in some ways it's also the
most balanced and sane pol itical offering in a box office
that's stuffed with them.
It's also a oreal visual
achievement. The puppets'
faces are remarkably human
and the sets and costumes are
impressively detailed: in that
way. "Team America" couldn't be more different from the
cut-out kitsch of "South
Park...
.
Yet the characters also
. move with an awkward jerkiness that provides big laughs.
especially during the afo_rementioned sex scene. whrch
take ~ place between_ prettyboy Gary. an actor tormerly
starring on Broadway in
"Lease: The Musical." and
Lisa. who speciali zes in terrorist psychology and has the
blond locks and big facial
fea tures that call to mind
Cybill Shepherd. if Cybill

Shepherd were made of
wood.
At the film's start. Gary is
recruited bv Spottswoode,
the group's silver-haired
mentor, to use his acting
skills and go undercover as a
terrorist to find out when and
where the next big attack is
planned.
(Spottswoode
believes Gary is 'the perfect
weapon" since he 's an actor
who double majored in theater and world languages at
the University of Iowa.)
Gary's crude terrorist transformation consists of some
cotton balls dyed black and
stuck to his chiseled facial
features. a little shoe polish
and a bath towel wrapped his
head. (Parker and Stone have
never exactly been known for
being politically correct. so
why should they start now'l)
Their depictiOn of North
Korean leader Kim Jong II
won't endear them to the
Asian community. either he whines and mopes about
his palace in a powder-blue
leisure suit. singing about
how lonely he is. but in his
heavy accent the word comes
out as "rone-ry."
The puppetized actors in
the movie won 't be happy
with their portrayal, either.
Alec Baldwin. head of the
Film Actors Guild (which is
frequent !v abbreviated you can figure it out for yourselt), is as madly power-hungry as the terrorists th~m­
sel ves. Janeane Garofalo
urges her fellow celebs to
read the newspaper and then
regurgitate the information as
their own opi nions. Matt

sor (Gabrie l Byrne) she
shares a rooftop lunch with
at the l'ilm's start. Then she
mentions their marriage and
you think they're husband
and wife. Then you realize
they're divorced. but still
close fr iends who talk candidly. and with a hint of flirtation.
Louose is clearly ready to
fall in Jove again. though, so
-when she receives an application from a painter named
F. Scott Feinstadt (Grace).
she freaks. Scott Feinstadt
was th e name of her
boyfriend who died two
decades earlier in a car crash.
He was a painter. too. And
when she call s this young
man ro schedule an interview, he sounds just like her
lost love.
Once they meet - and he
looks just like the Scott
Feinstadt she knew - it
doesn't take her long to bring
him back to her apartment
for some red wine and a
romp on the couch. This
makes the encounter sound
tawdry. but it actually has a
tangible tension. especia ll y
as F. Scott lightly caresses
Loui se's neck and chest
before their first breathless
kiss.
Besides, who could blame
her'l He's Topher Grace , a
total curie. And the magnetic
&gt;elf-assuredness he displayed
on ly briefly in ·'Traffic" is in

full bloom here.
He gets to be playful and
quick-witted but also vulnerable. as his character finds
he's totally into Louise, too.
"I know what you're thinking.'' says F. Scott, who's IS
yea rs her junior. ·'You ' re
thinking that I'm too young
for you."
And if the movie had just
been about their relationship.
and how it allows Louise to
discover herself again which Linney conveys luminously and with great range
- we would have been just
fine . But then her best friend.
Missy . (Harden), breezes in
from Californi a and, upon
meeting the new Scott.
insists he could be the old
Scott. Eve n though she 's a
married mother of twins, she
goes after him with the
unabashed enthusiasm of a
drunk sorori ty girl.
Further compounding troubles for Louise - and "P.S."
- her ex- husband the college professor makes a startling confession to her about
his sex life. Here's where the
movie goes irreparably
wrung - but. like the old
Louise and Scott (and the
new Louise and Scott), it was
good while it lasted.
''P.S.," a Newmarket Films
release. is rated R for language and sexuality. Running
time: I 05 minutes. Two and
a half stars out of four.

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o

• Cleveland rocks Bengals.
See Page 81

Patrol sets focus on cutting fatal crashes
STAFF

REPORT

POMEROY - Troopers from the
Gall ia-Me igs Post of the State
Highway Patrol are focusing on plans
to reduce the number of fatal crashes
through increased enforcement of
impaired and aggressive driving violations in Gallia County.
Lt. Richard Grau. the post com(Left to right) Joe , Gary, Chris, Lisa and Sarah in "Team America: World Police." Paramount
Pictures presents a Scott Rud in / Matt Stone production of a Trey Parker film, "Team America:
World Police," The film is directed t&gt;y.Trey Parlier, produced t&gt;y Scott Rudin , Trey Flarker and Matt
Stone, and written t&gt;y Trey Parker &amp; Matt Stone &amp; Pam Brady. (AP)
·
Damon is only capable of
shak ing hi s fist and grunting
his name.
It all may sound adolescent
and goofy, and a lot of the
time it is. But "Team
America" also may be the
best film of the year. It's easily the funniest.
"Team America: World
Police,''
a
Paramount

Pictures release, is rated R for
graphic, crude and sexual
humor, violent images and
strong language, all involv-

BY BRIAN

ing puppets. Running time:
90 minutes. Four stars out of
four.

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00)11~

POMEROY - If the number
of new voter registrations and
absentee ballot appl iculions is
any indication, Meigs County
voters are very interested in this
year's general election.
Rita Smith. director of the
Meigs County Board of
Elections. said nearly !.()()()
new voters hav~ been added to
the roll s since the registration
deadline on Oct. 4. bringing
the county's total registered
voters to t 5. t %. The county
had 14,105 voters registered in
the March primary. and 14:402
in the 2(Xll primary.
"That's a pretty big number
of new voters for Meigs
County," Smith sa id Friday.
"It definitely indicates a high
level of interest in the outcome or both the pre.,idential
and local elections."
"We don't usually see '"
many

Saturday, October 16

._.............

J. REED

BREEp@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Thursday, October 21st, 2004
Dinners start at 4:30pm
0..,

. Life Home Car Business

mander. said motprist s in Gallia and
Meigs countie&gt; can expect two
increased patrols and concentrated
enforcement program' on Oct. 19
through 31, and :-.lov. 9 through 2 1.
"The patrol is committed to the
reduction of traffic fatalitie., in Gallia
and Meigs counties." Grat&gt; said.
"Through enforcement and education. we believe we can alter driving
behavior that is likely to cause a car

crash, which wilt save lives and preven t tragedies." .
Su far this year. there have been
four fat&lt;tlities in four crashes in Gallia
and Meigs counties. Of those crashes,
three have involved ·alcohol . two
were not wearing .safety belts, and
one involved a motorcycle .
" It is very
apparent that
operator/driver impahment. fail Lore to
wear available safety eyuipmcnt and

driving habits, which
incl ude 'peeding. following too close
and improper lane changes. arc the
primarv factor-; tl,at kad to traffic
fat aliti es." Grau ,aid.
· "We arc dedicated to reducing the
number of traffic rawlitic' through
cduc.ttinn. and f~nr. lirm and reason~
able enforcement 'tratcgies," he added.
aggre~ ~ ive

Meigs-voter registration up

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Pomeroy. OH

Aulo- Owners Insurance

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For an AppointmentCall740-446-8105

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new

registrations

before one election as we
ha ve this time." Smit h said.
Smitl1 said the board hired
a temporary employee to
aS'ist with the proce,ing of
the new registrations.

The election board has
received ' 1.000 applications
for absentee ballots, a number almost unheard of three
weeks before tile election. In
fact . Smith sa id. it is the
highest number of absentee
b:lllots requested since the
198R general election - also
a presidential election.
The board will continue to
proce" applications for
absentee ballots through Oct.
JO. the last day the board can
mail an application. Walk-in
absentee voters can cast ballots at th e board office. located in the county :umex on
Mulberry Heights, . through
4JO p.m. on Nov. t.
Election Dav is Nov. 2. In
addition to the presidential
candidates, Meig s County's
general
election
ballot
includes candidates for COLmtv
commissioner. sheriff. treasuo:er. recorder and other countywode oftices, along with candidates for Ohio House of
Representatives. Ohio Senate,
U.S. House and U.S. Senate, a
levy for the Meigs Local
Board of Education. and local
tax Js-.uc~ in various ttl\vmhips
and vi ll ages.

Who qualifies for flu
vaccine; who doesn't
Medicare cards are to pre sent
them. Others wi ll pay $10 to
get th e shot.
She also noted that the
POMEROY - Because of
County
Health
recently announced problems Meigs
with flu vaccine production Department has purchased
and the resu lting shortfall of 500 doses of vaccine from
supply, the Meigs County Aventis but much of that wil l
Health Department will be go to county agencies and
adminis tering vaccine only to local schoo l personnel to
those who qualify under the decrease teacher and worker
Ohio Department of Health sick time and protect chi ldren
(ODH) guide lines.
·
from contracting the tlu.
Sherry Weese. R. N., direcWhat remains will be
tor of nursing . saod Friday administered on a first-come
that only 1.000 doses of vac- first -serve basis starting at 9
cine have been supplied by a.m. on Monday. Oct. 25. and
ODH for use in Meigs if supply remains on Tuesday.
County. Originally it w7os Oct. 26. Weese said.
anticipated that 1.600 doses
She emphasi7ed that onlv
would be available. That &gt;LIPMeigs
Count ians qualify for
ply. according to ODH. can
the
flu
vaccine and that to
only be given to six. groups of
ass ure others do not receive it
Meigs County individual s.
from
the ' local supply. proof
They are ch ildren 6 to 23
months. those 65 and older. of reside ncy must be shown.
those 2 to 6-1 with chronic ill - "That can he a driver's
nesses as approved by ODH. license. or a utility bill showchildren 6 monlhs to 18 years . ing the name of the person
on aspirin therapy. women and the address where thev
·
pregnant during tho season. live.'' said the nurse .
Thl"e under 115 vears of
and hou sehold contact of
those younger than(, month s. age claiming to be at high
Aclinic will be held Friday. risk will be questioned ahout
9 to II. a.m. and I to J p.m .. their medical conditions .
at the Senior Citizens Center "These thing' are being done
for Meigs Countians 0\ er 65 so that we siav l'itllin the
year:-. of age and other" who guide line., o( the Ohio
fall under the ODH guide- Department or hkalth." saiu
lines. Those with Met.t i.?aict or Weese .
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Bob Burton (left) and Bill Spencer discuss a play as the first quarter wound down at the Me igs
Middle School vs. Gallia Academy seventh grade football game. (Beth Sergent( photo)

Local refs still have love of the game
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

. POMEROY - There are
more than tVv'U teams un a
football lield. The third team
consists of the referees who
nften travel together in tightknit crews throughout the
years. One of those local
crews consists of Bill Spencer.
Dick Vaughn and Bob Burton,
nickname "Artie Foo."
Known by some as the
"over the hill gang." the men
have a combined tota l of 132
years of expe ri ence in refe reeing . Spencer has 50 years
under his belt while Burton
and Vaughn have -1 I each.
Meigs Middle School
and
Assitant
Principal
Athletic Director. Steve
Ohlinger appreciates the fact
that all he has to do is give
them the .sc,hool foot'ball
schedu le and the gang shows
up. 'They me dependable.
local guys." said Ohlinger
about the men who have refereed varsity. .IV and juni or
high gan1es across Ohio and
West Virginia.
"It amaLes me that you can
do this all these years and
still work varsity."' remarked
Mary Hawk. principal of
Meigs Middle School.
" You're not going to make
money doing thi s so you ha,·e
to love the game... said
Burton . who turned down
overtime when he used to
work a1 the Kyger Creek
plant to referee junior high
games rur free '
Though referees are now
paid a small fee. the l'act is
most never break even. They
purchase their own uniforms
and pay S-10 for a license fee
every year. not to mention ·
they provide their ewn transportation.
. At each game Burton giYe~

Pictured from left are Bill Spencer. D1ck Vaugnn and Bob Burton.
· Artie Foo." The three local men have a combined 132 years of
officiating experience between them and have refereed at varsity. JV and junior high games all over Ohio. (Beth Sergent/ photo)
a 50-cent piece to tile "inner ball field . Once at a £ame at
of the coin toss. He be~an thi' A lcx,mdcr it wa~ :-.no'Wing so
tradition in tpe 1970s' durin~ hard the\ C&lt;'uldn't see the
an Easteno/Southern fnoth:oft field sn ·it was marked off
gatile . A father of a pk1,cr wnh wal dust and the game
ashed if Burt&lt;&gt;ll would take a went nn .
dollar liu· the 50-c:ent picc·e
Then of course there are
u,ed duri'ng the to's so th,n hi' the times \\hen one or the
son could haH· it a:-. a ~uu,· cnir. other was ac·cidentally clobBurton purc:bci,ed 1.000 bered by a football player
50-cent p&lt;ece~ after tltat malm~ a pta: .
game in · the IY7(h and i&gt;
lhe "owr the hill gang" is
pre,e&gt;Hiy do\\ n tn ~() Ct&gt;ins cnnsiJerin~ I"L'tiring in two
n:m:nnlng .
\·cars lmt Burton m~v mntin There har~ heen memo h\ himself."The ciav t give
rahlc mnnH~nt:-. the men hi.l\C or tuke •me llll'h rr,,m ·a kid i'
&gt;harcd togethn on the foot - Ill) last day." he 'aid .

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�PageA2

NATION -• WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 18, 2004

•,

No Child Left Behind drives education debate for Bush, Kerry
WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush asked for it.
Sen . John Kerry voted for it.
Both candidates now find
their education agendas driven by the No. Child Left
· Behind taw.
The most aggre,sive shakeup to schools in a generation,
'the law is the top. education
issue in a presidential race
dominated by war. terroris111,
, jobs. taxes and credibility.
. The law orders schools to
· ensure all children achieve
· regardless of race. ethnicity
. or 1ncume.

For voters. the line dividing
Bush and Kerry is subtle . The
nominees diverge on how
. much to spend on the law and
how much to tinker with it as
s~hools try to comply.
· The Republican incumbent
promotes
his spending
record, He also says it is time
to expand the law by requir,. ing two more years of state

. math and reading tests in the
, high school grades.
. Kerry says schools need
much more monev to meet
high standards. He promises
an extra $10 billion a year by
erasing Bush' s tax cuts on
' people earning more than
·. S200.000. The Massa~husetts
·. senator talks of cxpandin""
the way student progress i ~
measured in a law built on
tesling.
Both candidates have ideas
all along the education spectrum. from college aid and
teacher pay to high school

rigor and math and science
classes. Some ideas are mod·
est; others would continue an
expanding federal role in
schools.
Yet all this is largely unnoticed by voters and liohtly
. mentioned by the candiJates.
even though the next president will take on a backlog of
school matters affecting millions of people
"People are still concerned
about education, but terrorism and personal security
have signiticantly increased
in concern." said Republican
pollster David Winston.
"And then you've got a rough
economy. made worse by 911 . People are managing a lot
more things."
The result has been a vastlv
different campaign than the
one four years ago. l n 2000,
Bush was the Texas governor
and made educatioi1 a sue·
cessful theme of his presidential bid . His focu s on schools.
traditionally a Democratic
issue. helped mold his
national image.
In oftice, he won bipartisan
support in 2001 for No Child
Left Behind, which calls for
all students to reach state
standards in reading and
math by 2014. Parents get
more school choices, but.
many schools face penalties
if even a single subgroup of
studenb fall s short.
The law has not been a
clear boon for Bush. States
have balked at what they call

federal intrusion. Some parents are perplexed to see their
school' labeled as ·'needing
improvement" under the law
even if those same schools
get stellar marks from their
state,.
"He got that law passed
and has focused people on
the problem of the achievement gap. and that is a big
accomplishment." said Diane
Stark Rentner. deputy director of the independent Cen'ter
on Education Policy. But, she
said, Bush did not follow
through on his spending
promises - a point of endless di spute.
Under Bush. spending on
the law\ progran1s ·and on
help for disabled children has
~rown from $24.7 billion to
:!&gt;35.5 billion. a 43 percent
increase. Counting his current budget request, the
increase during hi s term
would be 49 percent, a number he cites while campaigning . Those figures would not
be as high if Congress had
not added billions to Bush's
requests.
Still. to critics. Bush can
fairly make the point, "How
big of an increase does it
have to be to satisfy you
guys' 1" said Tom Loveless,
senior fellow at Th~
Brooking s In stitution.
But Democrats say Bush
has 'hortchanged the law by
up to $2H billion. As a result.
they say. eve rything from
teaching to testing has suf-

fered.
Democrats make that claim
by comparing whai has been
spent on the law and the maximum allowed, called an
authorization. But laws routinely are not funded to maX·
imum levels .
" It's one of those frustrat·
ing fights. There 's enough
evidence for both sides to
make a claim that's valid,"
said Andrew Rotherham, a
former adviser to President
Clinton. Rotherham now
directs education policy at
the
Progressive
Policy
Institute, which is tied to centrist Democrats.
As for the law itself, Bush
largely talks of staying the
course. Kerry has signaled he
may try to change. how
schools are graded.
Reading and math tests are
the primary way states must
judge student progress.
Schools must use at least one
other academic factor and
may add others. The law says
hi gh schools must factor in
graduation rates, an area
where Kerry is promising
more enforcement.
Kerry has raised the possibility of grading schools on
such additional factors · u~
ieacher attendance · and
parental satisfaction. That
was early this year. The campaign now uses broader
terms. saying it is open to
changes that ensure schools
arc fairly measured.

I ELECTION

2004

School spending

Monday, Oct. 18

No Child Left Behind and
special education budget
49°/o Increase 11
YEARS BUSH
II

II

RESPONSIBLE
FOR BUOG 'E T

.0

10

5
o ~~~~~~~~~~~--

2001

'02

'03

'04

'05

2002 public school funding
·The federal government spends
less than a dime of every U.S.
dollar on education.
49°/o
8°/o
State
Federal
share
share

43o/o
Local
share

On dean's list
AP

Martha Stewart says everyone in prison is 'nice' as townspeople adjust to having her as neighbor
ALDERSON. W.Va. (AP)
- Re,idents or · this small
community are adjusting to
having celebrity homemaker
Martha Stewart as their
neighbor in the federal prison
camp outside town. where
the maven of good taste says
"everyone is niL·e.··
"Thing.,
have calmed
down." said ShirleY. :-.lichob
in the mayor's office. "The
only uiiTerence now is fans
are calling to get her
addre&gt;S ...
Curiosity-seekers
still
arrive in the town of 1.000
people in the Appalachian
hills of southeastern West
Virginia. about 270 miles
southwest of Washington, to
see where Stewart will spend
the next five months for lying
about a stock 'ale .
"With Martha here and the
fall season. it is easy for people to say "Let\ take a drive
there."' said Patti Grafton.
owner pf Wolf Creek Gallery.
The 63 -year-old Stewart
. slipped into the Alderson
Federal Prison Camp. the
· nation 's . oldest prison , for
women , on Oct. 8. She is
expected to remain until
March 6. During her first two

weeks, Stewart is undergoing
an indoctrination period to
learn about the camp and its
way of life for abo ut 1,000
inmates.
ln a message posted Friday
on her Web site. she said she
is adjusting well to. the prison
and described it as "like an
old·fashioned college campus - without the freedom.
of course."
"The camp is fine: it is
pretty much what l anticipat·
ed," she wrote. "The best
news - everyone is nice ' both the officials and my fellow inmates. I have adjusted
and am very busy."
"Your goodwill and best

wishes will get me through
this next chapter in my life,"
she added.
The
minimum-security
facility covers 105 acres of
rolling countryside along the
Greenbrier River. about 115
miles from the state's capital.
Charleston.
.It opened in 1927 and
inmates have included si nger
Billie Holiday. World War ll
figures Tokvo Rose and Axis
Sally. and· would-be presidential assassins Squeaky
Fronimc and Sara Jane
Moore.
Newcomers like Stewart are
assigned to ·'cottages.'' fourwing buildings with 125 bunks

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

per wing, that also house
women undergoing drug treatment and inmates with health
problems or disabilities.
In an accom modation to
her age, Stewart was
assigned to a lower bunk .
After her orientation period.
she could be moved to the
500-bed dormitory. Her personal items must fit inside a
footlocker. Inmates must
wear prison-issued khaki
trousers and green shirts.
Guests are allowed during
visiting 'hours on weekends.
and Stewart's daughter.
Alexis Stewart, reportedly
was here for her mother's

first weekend . Townspeople civic projects in the town..
say there are rumors that
"They were pleased and
Alexis Stewart is shopping felt she would be welcomed,"
for a place to stay in the area Roush said.
to be clo se to her mother,
During her stay. Roush
possibly a 70-acre farm a few said. Stewart will be required
miles from town or a hou se to get up at 5 a.m. and work
on the grounds of The from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Stewart
Greenbrier. a luxurious probably won't be given a
resort
mountain
at JOh assignment until after her
Lewisburg .
indoctrination period.
Families visiting the prison
"They will be luck y to have
this past weekend declined to her in the kitchen." sa id 24talk about Stewart.
year-old Nathan Sams. who
describes
himself as a devotBut the inmates had been
ed
Stewart
fan. "Even with
anticipating her arrival , said
prison-quality
stuff. she will
Neta Rou sh. a retired psychologist who works with make a five-star presidential
inmates who volunteer for meal out of it."

.
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they
might be---..:.:::::~~~!:
voted into o~r
;~

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

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Deadline for entries is: November 15,.2004

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l9oint lSleaSiant

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"Pet Calendar"
200 Main St.
pt Pleasant, wv 25550

"Pet Calendar"
1f1 Court St. 1'
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~·

........... ............ _..,...... ..

meeting will be held in open
house format.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Oct. 18
CHAUNCEY - A Region
14 Youth Council meeting
will be held at 9 a.m. at the
Athens· Department of Jobs
and Family Services on State
Route 13 in Chauncey.
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at 6
p.m for a potluck dinner at
the hall. Meat will be furnished.
· Wednesday, Oct. 20
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of
Eastern Star, will have installation of officers, 7:30p.m. at
the hall.
Thursday, Oct. 21
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association, noon luncheon,
at Trinity Congregational
Church, Second and Lynn
Streets. Anit Moore, volunteer coordinator of Holzer
Hospice Care to speak. For

reservations call992-3214 or
949-2601.
POMEROY - Wildwood
Garden Club, 6:30p.m. at the
home of Betty Milhoan on
Flatwoods Road .

L

· ---------------·-··-----------------~-----------~·
·~ ~·. ~· ·~ ;... .&amp;.......
. ·~ ;.•. &amp;...... ·~ :!.
:•
~ ·~ ~·.

ATHENS -Ann Riftle of
Middleport, Jessica Fisher of
Racine, and Bethanv Barber
of Reedsville were named to
the dean's li st at Ohio
University for the summer
quarter. earning a grade point
average of 3.3 or better on a

4.0 grading scale.

Receive degrees
ATHENS - The following
Ohio University students
received
undergraduate
degrees at Ohio University at
the conclusion of the summer
quarter: David Tennant, New

Homecomings/
Reunions
Sunday, Oct. 24
MIDDLEPORT
Homecoming will be .held at
the Ash Street Church, '398
Ash St., Middleport. The
schedule includes: 9:30 a.m.
Sunday school; I0:30 a.m.
morning worship; noon, din·
ner and fellowship, I :30 p.m.
Earthen Vessels; 2 p.m. Rev .
Calvin Minnis speaking; 3
p.m Glorybound Quartet, formerly JoyFM Trio.

Church services
Saturday, Oct. 23
LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn sing featuring the
Golden
Tones
of
Parkersburg, wi II be held at 7
p.m. at the Mt. Olive Church,
Long Bottom.

Haven, W.Va., John Domigan
Coolville, Heidi DeLong,
Pomeroy, Heather Dailey,
Racine, and Kevin Konkle,
Syracuse.
Wesley
Thoene
and
Sabrina Smith, both of ·
Pomeroy, received graduate
degrees.

Club hears review of
book on civil rights

..

DEAR ABBY: My mom
baby-sits for my 3-year-old,
"Jessica," while I am at work.
Last night I arrived at Mom's
to find that she had again left
Jessica sleeping in the back
seat of her van, still strapped
into her car seat. Jessica had
been there for an hour, and
although the temperature out·
side was fairly mild, my little
girl was red-faced and sweaty.
Mother says I'm overreacting because the van was
parked in the driveway with
the door left open. But I know
of at least one incident last
year when she left Jessica
sleeping in the van, got distracted with something in the
house. and didn't realize my
daughter had awakened and
been screaming for some
time. For weeks, Jessica
talked about being left outside
alone.
I have asked Mom numerous times not to leave my
child sleeping in the car, but
her only response is to roll her
eyes, tell me I'm making a big
deal out of nothing, and continue to do it.
Maybe if Mom hears from
someone other than me that
it's not OK to leave a child
unattended in a car, even in a
driveway, she'll stop doing it.
Thanks' - OVERHEATED
MOM IN MASSACHU·
SETIS
DEAR MOM: Do not
expect your mother - who is
in denial - to listen to me.
These incidents are recurring
because you are allowing it to
happen. Your mother has

DEAR MOTHER: When
the impudent question is
asked, your son should reply
with a smile, "I'm old enough
to know better than to tell
you." If the questioner perDear
sists, your son can put him in
Abby
his place, and probably gain
the appreciation of everyone
else who's been put on the
spot, by saying: ''I'm. 29
again, and I' II thank you not
proven repeatedly that she is to pursue this any further. It's
too easily distracted and too rude."
forgetful to responsibly
DEAR ABBY: There's a
supervise your daughter.
Recognize that your daughter kid at school named Michael.
is in danger and make other t want to be friends with him,
arrangements for her immedi- but l don't know what to do.
ately. To paraphrase an old Like me, he lost his dad.
saying: If something happens There is only one difference
once, shame on the perpetra- - Michael can still see his
tor. If it happens twice - . dad. l have to wait until I'm
dead to ·. see mine. What
shame on the "victim."
DEAR ABBY: My son should I do? [' d really like to
FRIENDworks at a place where the be friends. IN
MICHIGAN
SEEKER
employees celebrate birthDEAR FRIEND-SEEKER:
days by gathering for cake.
One young employee seems For starters,let him know he's
bent on learning everyone's welcome to eat lunch with
age. Although many people you and your friends. If teams
are reluctant to state their age, are chosen for sports, make it
he persists with his questions known you'd like him to be
to the point of embarrass- on yours. If you and your
friends plan some activity
ment.
Abby, our son was a victim after school , offer to include
of downsizing and recently him. The surest way l know to
joined the group. His birthday make a friend is to be one.
is in early November, and he
Dear Abby is written by
is dreading their "celebration" Abigail Van Buren, also
because he is over 50 and known as Jeanne Phillips,
fears his supervisors will and was founded by her
think he 's too old for mother, Pauline Phillips.
advancement. How should Write
Dear Abby at
that young man's question be www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
handled?- MOTHER OF A Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
MIDDLE-AGED SON
90069.

Courtneuvs

POMEROY
Meigs
County Court Judge Steven
L
Story recently processed
POMEROY - Sena Jeter '"Four Spirits' attempts to repression. Many are jailed.
the
following cases: .
Naslund's
novel
"Four capture not just the struggle and even civil rights leaders
W.
Adkins,
Dennis
Spirits". published in 2003, for equality but each person's cannot always agree on the
Portland.
$20
and
costs,
failwas reviewed by Gay Perrin struggl e for their own identi- best wav to continue the drive
ure
to
register;·
Jesse
L.
Allen,
at the opening meeting of fall ty."Throughout the novel, the for
change.
Then
in
activities of the Middleport reader views the events of September of that year came Portland, $50 and costs,
Literary Club.
those tumultuous times the most shocking event of speeding; Adam J .Ball,
Perrin described the book as through the eyes and minds of the turmoil in Birmingham, Racine, $50 and costs, spee(l"inspirin g and beautifully many characters: black and the bombing of the Baptist ing ; David A. Bates,
set
in white, civil rights advocates church that killed the four Pomeroy; $20 and costs, left
written
story
Birmingham, Ala. amid the and racists, the violent and the children and injured 20 oth- of center; William E.
Behrens, Urbana, $30 and
struggle for civil rights during innocent.
ers.
The main characters range
the 1960's."
The assassination of John F. costs, seat belt violation;
.T
Billingsly,
She said the four .spirits of from Stella Silver. an idealis- Kennedy in 1963 is deep Iy Joseph
the title related to four young tic college student; through T. felt by all the characters, but Pomeroy, probation, 60 days
black girls who were killed in J. La Fayt. a unemployed their reactions differ widely. in jail, $100, drug abuse;
the infamous bombing of the black
recently The novel continues with the Travia A. Capelle, North
veteran
Sixteenth Street Baptist returned from Korea, to Ryder events of the following year Baltimore, $20 and costs, driChurch in Birmingham in Jones, a KKK clansman and a half, and the reader is ving on closed highway;
1963. She noted that the learning to make bombs, and still able to feel the emotions Kevin C. Carter, Westerville,
author, SenaJeter Naslund, to Cat Cartwright, handi- of each character ii.S he or she $30 and costs. speeding;
Nolan D. Conover, Gahanna,
was a college ·student in capped but determined to be
deals
with
the
successes
and
$30
and costs, speeding; Paul
Birmingham at the time and part of the protests.
failures
of
the
civil
rights
E. Dickiinson, Zanesville,
saw many of the events firstIn order to show the
$50 and costs, speeding; Sean
hand. She promised herself thoughts and actions of these movement during that time .
Perrin described "Four Grueser, Racine, $80 and
that she would write about the characters, Perrin asked club
as a book that keeps costs, overload; Dean E.
Spirits"
tragedy ·and the acts of members to read short
courage taking place in the excerpts from the book that one riveted with its actions Hankla, Rutland, $30 and
city, described by many as the she had selected to highlight and insights into thill time in costs, speeding, $30 and
costs, speed, $30 and costs,
most segregated city in the the characters' views of the United States history.
South. Naslund is now a dis- ci vi I unrest around them and Members answered roll call seat belt violation; Jody L
tinguished professor of cre- the murderous bombing of the by recalling a vivid memory Harless, New Haven W.Va.,
of the Civil Rights movement. probation, $50 and costs.
ative writing at the University church.
The next meeting will be held open container in motor vehi,
The
action
begins
in
the
of Louisville and the
at
the home of Phyllis Hackett cle, probation, 10 days in jail,
University of Montevallo, and spring of 1963 as nonviolent
has been awarded the Harper protests to integrate restau- on Oct. 20, with Leah Ord to $50 and costs. dtsorderly
rants, schools, and buses are review • "Living History" by conduct.
Lee Award . ·
In the author's own words, met with violent and brutal Hilary Rodham Clinton.
Max F. Hart. Columbus,
$30 and costs, speeding; Kim
L. Hester, GalliJ?Oiis. $30 and
costs,
speedmg;
Joann
Hickman, Shade, $20 and
.. POMEROY - An appeal planted mums at the rock Midkiff and Bob Reed are ill. A pro- costs, stop sign; Bettina J.
for more recipes to go into the springs near the entrance to gr.ID1 by Romine on Octol:er, the Hill. Racine. $20 and costs,
stop sign; Douglas E.
Grange cookbook was made the fairgrounds.
nation:~ pop::om month wa~ given.
The Pomona meeting was She said Americans aJtlSUl1le 17 Holbrook, Charleston, W.Va ..
by Kim Romine at a recent
meeting of the Hemlock announced for Nov. 5 at billion quarts of J1lCOI11 a year and $30 and costs, speeding;
Harrisonville with an officers
Grange held at the hall.
Joseph M. Holtz, Wellston,
Romine said that she needs conference to begin at 6:30 noted thai during World War II $50 and costs, speeding;
grangers t9 turn in their following by the Pomona people are more popcm because of Thomas D. Hunter. Ripley,
recipes at the November meeting at 7:30 p.m. the shortage of sugar. A quiz on pop- W.Va., $30 and costs, speed·
meeting. Rosalie Story con- Members were reminded to cml wa\ given and brochures and ing. Shane A.
Hupp,
ducted the meeting with com- save their September-October recipe~ were given out Roll1ire also Sandyville. W.Va., $30 and
munications being read from Grange magazine because it prmided gourds and broom COOl costs, speeding; Joshua W.
the Albany Grange. the has the contests for next year
tor everyone to wke home. 'Il1C Hy sell, Middleport. $20 and
national Grange; and the listed in it.
It wa\ reported that Frdllces Novemlx.T meeting will be fii!COO- costs, stop sign; Johnny E.
Department of Taxation. Opal
Jobe. Proctorville. $50 and
Grue ser reported she had Gceglein. Ida Mae Dark. Syl\ia cd lly a ham dinner.
costs, speeding; Douglas J.
Johanning. Dellroy. $30 and
costs, speeding; Daniel N.
Lambert. Vinton, $20 and
COOLVILLE - A program Morgan and Sandee Wright attend a free meeting.
costs, left ofcenter; Tyler S.
·on making good choices and received charms for six
counting calories was pre- weeks' straight weight' loss
AU , ,.,,_ B Join
sented by Pat Snedden. and Judy Morgan was awardleader, at a recent meeting of ed her first IS -pound loss pin .
'I'Dgetller And lle81gn ht
TOPS 2103 held at the Torch
Amy Hendrix received a
l'rolll Pt.o/ec,. f'lral Ate So
Baptist Church .
perfect attendai1i:e award for
l:rulln f'llal ll:an Sell
Members were asked to September. ' ToJ" meets
.
f'lrem, So You Can Ran Jl f!
bfing in low caloric 1;ec ipc-.. tn ~rcry . Tuc , da: L'\L'Ili n~ &lt;~t
share no w tha t \&gt;C '"·e mo\'ill" I he' T&lt;11\ ·h IL1p1i,1 l ' htll c·ll
Job. We Can Do 111 . ~
:"
"
'
toward the holidays. Cindy ·. with 1\cigll in &lt;ll 5: 15 p.m.
Please £et Me Belp. t:. "U" Bvan• "i
Hyde was \he weekly best and the meeting at 6·30 p.m.
,,.,..,.,., ,., l:llflliiJ
loser and was presented a cer- For more information con'
tilkate and fruit basket. Judy tact Snedden at 6o2-2633 or

Grange needs recipes for book

TOPS hear techniques for weight loss·
I

t:,..,..,.,.,

..

Monday, October 18, 2004
..

Parked van is not safe
place for sleeping child

School ne¥IS .

I

SOURCES: Department of Education;
Census Bureau

'

CHESTER
- Chester
Township Board of Trustees
meet at 7 p.m. at the Chester
Town Hall .
RACINE
Racine
Village Council will meet in
recessed session at 7 p.m. at
the municiipal building .
Quote forms on painting the
windows in the building can
be picked up at the treasurer's
office.
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m at
the office building.
Wednesday, Oct. 20
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of
Education, 6:30 p.m., library
conference room.
POMEROY
- Ohio
Department of Transportation
District I0 public meeting
'from 5 to 7 p.m. to discuss
future plans for the section of
State Route 338 located
between the new U.S. 33 and
State Route 124, Meigs
County ODOT Garage, Ohio
7. The public may attend any
time within this frame . The

Federal spending on the No
Child Left Behind law and special
educ;::ation is on pace to increase
49 percent under President
Bush. But Sen. John Kerry says
Bush broke a promise to spend
even more on the law.

$40 billion
35
30 $24.7
25
I
20
. 15'

Community Calendar
Public meetings

I

PageA3

BY THE BEND

.The Daily Sentinel

Lucas, Gallipolis, $20 and
costs, stop sign; Michael D.
Lyons, West Lafayette, $30
and costs. speeding; Michael
P. McCune, Powell, $30 and
costs, speeding; Jerry A.
Nelson, Charleston, W.Va.,
$30 and costs, speeding.
Maria E. Nicholas, Orma.
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Angela E. Pickens.
Racine, $30 and costs, seat
belt violation; Ivan E.
Powell, Middleport, $70 and
costs, No O.L.; James L.
Prandi, Strongsville, $30 and
costs.. speeding; Steven A.
Qualls, Kingsport, Tenn., $30
and costs, seat belt violation;
Justin P. Raines, Gandeeville,
W.Va., $25 and costs, seat
belt violation; Floyd M.
Reitmire , Syracuse, $32 and
costs, speed; Jonathan E.
Sargent, Pomeroy, probation,
90 days in jail, $500 and
costs, no drivers license, probation, $35 and costs, driving
on closed highway; Michael
R. Senchak. Columbus, $30
and costs. speeding; Darrell
E. Shaffer, Belle, W.Va., $30
and eosts, speeding; Gilbert
V. Shepard, Marion, $30 and
costs, speeding; Daniel F.
Short. Pomeroy, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation;

Clifton T. Sisson, Long
Bottom, $20 and costs,
assured clear distance; J .C.
Snediker, Albany, $25 and
costs. No. O.L.
Michael E. Stephens,
Tiffin, $230, no drivers
license; William Storvol\,
Warren, $20' and costs, seat
belt violation; ·Lucy M.
Swartz, Portland, S30 and
costs. speeding ; Joseph W.
Tignor, Lancaster, $30 and
costs. seat belt violation;
Rodney A. Trip, Pomeroy,
$20 and costs, left of center;
Robert A. Tripp. Tuppers
Plains, $35 and costs, speeding; James G. Vining,
Portsmouth, $20 and costs,
assured
clear distance;
Richard A. Ward, Pomeroy,
$24 and costs, speeding; Erik
D. Waters, Newark, $20 and
costs, failure to control;
Alicia D. Werry. Pomeroy,
$30 and costs, seat belt violation; Diana M. Wheelen. $30
and costs. speeding; Roy C.
Whitmore, Athens, $20 and
costs, stop sign; Robert
Wiggins, Augusta, Ga., $30
and costs. seat belt violation;
Alicia M. Woods, Portland,
$20 and costs. assured clear
distance.

'4 Show Off Your "Pumpkin"
~
In The Sentinel
'~

~
;:iii

PUMPKIN
PATCH
~~

'4
~

Pictures will run:
.
Thursday,
;:iii
October 28
I&lt;J&gt;
.
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�PageA4

.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Shuddering at a Kerry victory

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(74'0) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Monday, October 18, 2004

With eye-crossingly close
presidential. ]J!Jils, it's time to
imagine what it would be like
to live through the Kerry
years. Kerry-- unchanged, he
says. by the attacks of Sept.
II -- promises to take us "to
the place we were. where ter-

Diana
West

rorists are ... a nuisance."

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
e$tablishment of rel(Jlion, or prot.ibiting the
· free exercise tlz c:reoj; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or ~f tiJe press; or the right of the
people peaceably to afsemble, and to petition
the Go1'emment for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today i&gt; Monday. Oct. 18. the 292nd clay of 2004. There are
· 74 days left in the year.
·
ToJay's Highlight in Histnry :
On Oe·t. I X. 17ti 7. the boundary between Maryland and
Pennsylvania. the Ma,on-Di.xon line. ~;as ag reed upon.
On this pate:
In 1685. Kin ~ Louis XIV revoked th e Edict of Nantes.
which had established J c~;tl to leration of France's Protestant
population. the Huguenots.
, In 1867. the United States took formal possession of Alaska
from Ru ssia.
In 1892. the first long-dista nce telephone line between
Chicago and New York was for mall y opened .
In 1898. the American tl ag was ra ised in Puerto Rico shortly before Spain forma ll y re~n q ui shed control of the island to
the U.S.
In 193 1. inventor Thomas Alva Edison died in West Orange,
N.J , at age 84.
In 1944. Soviet troops invaded Czechoslovakia during
World War II.
In 1962. Dr. James D. Watson of the U.S., and Dr. Francis
Crick and Dr. Maurice Wilkins of Britain. were named winners of the Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology for their
work in determining the double-helix molecular structure of
DNA.
In 1968. the U.S. Olympic Comm ittee suspended Tommie
Smith and John Carlos fo r givi ng a "black power" salute in
protest during a \'ictory ceremon y in Mexico City.

Flying blind on Sept. lOth.
No messy wars on the hori zon. No civilizational death
struggles in sight. All we have
to fear is the occasional attack
on the skyscraper, the disco.
the emhassy, the barracks. the
school. the resort, the btts.
Twenty -tive Chechens have
crossed the Arizona border''
What a nuisance. Happy days

atcs ttl me. I wonder if the
French definition or ";mns"
includes hacksaws·&gt; Oh well.
I can see the peace conference now, and the White
House photo-op to follow:
Jacque,.
maybe
John.
Moqtada . Which must be
what Kerry means by "global

are here again.

test."

What would Kerry's leadership bring'' He has planned
hi s first swoony days in
office; a post-election honeymoon. but with the United
Nations. not the U.S .
Congress. In those first
weeks, Kerry would go to the
U.N. and "to our traditional
allies to aftirnuhat the United
States has rejoined the community of nations."
Why wait? Inaugurations
are probably overrated.
Indeed, the sooner a President
Kerry returns from his Mea
.Culpa Tour, the sooner a
Pre sident Kerry stans the
Iraqi Peace Talks with all factions, including, as France
has so tactfully suggested, "a
cenain number of groups or
people who now have chosen
the path of resistance by
arms." Sounds like Baathi st
remnants and AI Qaeda affili-

· Rut first. th at quick liip
around the oil-for-food wing
oi' the U.N. Security Council.
For what ebe is Kerry\
"commu11ity of nation~·· but

those hi ~~es t wheels on the
take frotllcSaddam Hussem -Fra!lL·e . Germany. Ru ssi a.
China·• (Yes. the same nations
that obstructed pre:war U.S .
efforts at the Security
Council. ) Meanwhile. the 30
nations of Bu~h's coalition
just might be "no-go" zo nes
for a President Kerry &lt;Ifler all
the garbage Cl)ndidate Kerry
has heaped on their contnbutions to the war on terror.
"Immoral" is what Poland 's
President
Alcksancler
Kwasniewski culls hi ' Kerry
treatment. Ital y. a nation that
has bled for Iraq. is smarting
anew over an old Kerry slap
broadcast on Italian television
thi s week. "The Iraqi army,"

Kerry said before the war. "is
in such bad shape even the
Italian anny could kick their
butts. "
So much for politesse. or
Jack thereof -- something to
expect in a Kerry administration. Remember Debate Two?
Kerry was unguarded! y. true
to his sun-kingly self when
justifying a tax hike for
Ameril·ans, including smallhllsiness owners, who earn
$200.()()() or more. "Look ing
around h er~. at this group
here." he said. ''I suspect there
arc only three people here
who are goitig to be affected"
bv his tax increase : himself,
tlie pre, idcnt and ABC's
Charks Gibson. In other
worcb. Jc•lm Kerry scanned
that l'll&lt;Hll full of American
ci titens and decided no one
looked his equal. Le top
bracket. c'cst mni. Yuck.
Was he· nght'? Not about
1ote r,' incomes. hut. really.
ahout anything? Was Joh n
Kerry right to champion the
ca use or North Vietnam's brutal commun ist dictators''
(They th111k so: The War
Remnants Museum in Ho Chi
Minh Ci ty depicts Kerry as a
hero or its vic tory against the
United States.) Was he right
to hon't the Soviet-supported
Sandini~ ta
regime
in
Nicaragua? To knock the lib~rat i on of Marxist Grenada as
a "bully\ , how of force"'' To
embrace the nuclear freeze
movemen t during the height
of the Cold War~ To vote
aga in st the first Gulf War? If
Ame ricans elect John Kerry

Obituaries

timl! of \Val, \\C elect a mLm

whose idea of pmteeting
American Ji ves is holuin~
summih. cam:eli ng iuch vit,~l
progTdi11S

a~

"bunker-buster" nukes. and
allowing ~uc h cnem i e:""~ as Iran

to keep its nu clear power
plants in cxcha1lge for
promises. we would not only
he repudiating tile sccurityboostmg moral inten·eJ Jt ionism of PresiJent Bush. We
would also be rejecting tltc
doctrine or peace throu gh
strength that Ronald Reagan
app lied with tnumph.ull
resull again-,t LOI11llltti11 Slll ' ...,
evi l empire .
Of course. John Keny
called the Rea gan yc; u·, a
"moral darknc,." \Vas he
right? I would l10pe the
answer breaks the tie .
(Diana West ts Cl coilllllltisr
for The \Vashingwn Tillt&lt;'S.
She can he nmftl('ted riu
dianau·est @l'l)ri::lJII. Ill't.

J

LETART, W. VA. - Darrell Cecil Hoffman. 77. Letan . W.
Va. of Lctan. W. Va. died Saturday, Ocl. lti, 2004 at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Born on Dec . 3. 1926 at Letart. W.Va .. he was the son of the
late Oris Hoffman and Velma Taylor Hoffman. He was a
rettred supervtsor from A.E.P. Phtlhp Sporn Plant.
He attended the Guiding Star Advent Christian Church, was
a HaH of Fame member of the We&gt;l Virginia Bowhunters
Assoc~tllton.• and the Nattonal Rifle Association . a grad uate of
Wahama Htgh School and a Umted States Army veteran of
World War II.
. l.n addition to his parent s he was preceded in death by an
tnfant daughter, Jennife r Hoffman, an infant son. Stephen
Hoffman , and a bn.llher-in-Jaw. John Gerlach.
H ~ is suryived by hi s wife of 54 years, Audrey Thelma
Hoffman ol Letart: a daughter and son-i n-law, Shelby and
Larry Davts ol Letart ; a so n and daughter-in-Jaw, Donald and
Lesa Hoffman of Point Pleasant , W. Va .; a granddaughter,
Katte Jo Davts, and grandso n. Joshua Davis.
He is also su rvived by a sister and brother-in-Jaw, Kaye and
Joe Keathley of Point Pleasa nt , W. Va.; si,ter, Barbara Gerlach
of Mt. Alto: W. Va.; a brother and sister-i n-Jaw,' B. Gary and
Bunny Hoffman of Letart. W. Va.; a sister-in-Jaw. Sylvia
Bnght of Manon, anJ several ni eces and nephews.
Funeral services will be he ld at II a.m. Tuesday at the
Guiding Star Advent Christian Church at Letart , W.Va. Pastor
Mike Martin will olliciate and burial will be in Letart
Evergreen Cemete ry. Military graveside rites will be conducted by Smith-Capehart American Leg ion Post 40 and StewartJohnson VFW Post 9926. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6 to 9 p.m. Monday.

Local Briefs
Clinic issues
flu shot advisory
GALLIPOLIS. Ohio Because manufacturing problems have hal ved the number
of tlu vaccine do.ses av ailable
in the U.S .. Holzer Clinic
announced it will be vaccinating its hi gh risk popul ation first.
"We ask that all other
pati ents forego or defer vaccination at this time. per the
recommendati on of th e
Center for Dise;!Se Control."
a spokesperson ror th e clinic
said .
High risk patients include :
• Children 6 months to 23

Historical Society plans Make
a Difference Day project
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - With a mini -grant
from the Ohio Hill Country Heritage
Area and local matching funds, a Make
a Difference Day project wi ll be carried
out at the Meigs County Fairgrounds
Saturday.
The Meigs County Historical Society
received the mini-gra nt to complete a
volu nteer project in cooperation with the
Meigs County Agricultural Society and
the Meigs County Commissioners.
Activities will wke place from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. anJ will include a collection
of oral histories anJ memorabilia from
the Meigs County Fair and fairgrounds.
clea nin g of the historic cabin and plant ing of bulb' on the grounds. cleaning
around and fenc ing in the spri ng house
area. and repa iring buildings un the fairgrounds.
"To prepare and ra ise awareness for
the Make A Differen ce Day project. several activities are already under way,"
said Margaret Parker. president of the
Hi storica l Society.
"These include applying for an Ohio
Historical Society marker recognizing
the history of the fairgrounds. the gra ndstand, the 1930s Ci vii Conservati on
Corps encampment and one remaining
barrack. the hi storic spring house and
th
e 1829,. log cabin locate d on the
months of age.
grollll ds.
• Adui\S 65 and older.
She said documentation is also being
• Anyone aged 2 to 64 with
submitted
for desig nati on of the fair a se rious underlying medical
gro
und
s
and
spring area to the National
condition such as heart disease. kidney di sease and HI V
infection.
• All women "'ho will be
pregnant during the flu sea-

Re gi,ter of Historic Place,. The unique.
curved grand,tand . built in I S90 , is
already on the register· and the spri ng'
are noted on the Morgan Raid Route
marker placed nearby.
Parker said that to in volve others in
preservation of written and spoken history. residents and students are being
asked to write and submit essay s of
Mei gs County fair menwrie&gt; . The
recording b'y tape and video of reco llections and stories will abo be a;,se mbled
during the Make a Difference Day activ ity, she said.
Residents are also being asked to send
their written essays of 250-500 words to
the Meigs County Hi ; torical Society.
P.O. Box 145. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 or
bring them to the Meig s County
Museum. 144 Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy
dLtri ng open hours - Monday through
Friday from I0 to 4:30p.m.
"These essays wi ll be compiled into a
publication of Meig s County Fair
His tory and Memories. Pi ctures of fair
related eve nts. homecomings, picnics
and other activities on the grounds are
also being collected to be a part of the
publication:· Parker sa id. Pictures and
other materials be taken to the Museum
or brought to the Make a Difference Day
program on Saturday for copy ing.
The first fair of the Meigs County
Agricultural Society was held on Oct.
22. 185 1 in Middleport, with the second
·fair being held at the Rock-Spring Hotel
on Oct 31. 1852.
''It is interesting to note that the
Rod-S pr ing Hotel is the Goeglein

son .

• Re sident s of long-term
care facilitie s.
• Kids on chrqnic aspirin
therapy.
• Health care workers providing direct patient care .
• Hou sehold contacts of
people in th ese categories.
• Out-of-home caregivers
anti household contacts of
c hildren younger than 6
months.

CHESTER - Alvssa New land. an
eighth grade stu cle nt at Ea&gt;tern
Elementary School. leaves her hume in
Chester almost every weekend for a
hor&gt;e show. But she rece ntly left for the
largest si ngle-bre ed horse show in the
nation. the All-American Quarter Horse
Congress.
The daughter of Grant and Linda
Newland. Alyssa anu her horse. " Lukein
for Roses." ha\C traveled to Virginia.
Tennessee , Georgia. Michigan and West
Virginia th i\ summer in preparation fo r
the event. Along the way. they earned
100 AQHA points and have won numerous circuit ' anti all-a round champion
awards.
She ,md "Ice." a' 'he call ' her horse.
participated in se,en events at the
Congress. and her parents' &gt;tallion. "A
Sweeter In vest ment" stood on the
Mitlion Dollar Stallion Avenue at the
Co ngres ....

Marriage license
TH15 15 THE MOST
IMPORTANT ELECTION

POMEROY · - A marria g~ licen se was issued in Mei~s
County Probate Court to Roger Lee Rou sh. Jr.. 29. and Molly
Anne Tohan. 28. bot h of Pomeroy.

OF OUR LIFETIME!

Foreclosure
POMEROY - A fore closure acti on has been riled 111 Mcig,
Co unt) Co mmon Pleas Court by Bay Financial Savings Banl.
Tampa. Fla .. against Maria Romine. Col umbus. and others.
alleging defa ull on a mortgage agreement in the amount or
$J6 ..m.Jo.

The Army's kid-recruiting game

© 2004 by NEA , Inc.

ADVISORY ON
ELECTION LETTERS
Letters to rhe ediro r 011 /he Nov. 2, 2004, gen. era/ election will not he puhli.1hed or accepted
by this newspaper ajier Tu esday, Ocr. 26, 2004.

The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks ... .
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26 Weeks . . .
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----~------------~

Your kids can download the
"America's Army" video game
for free. Well. it's free for them.
You've already paid for it with
your tax dollars. In the game.
kids get to kill people with cool
weapons. They get to ambush ·
terrorists and. when caught in a
firelight, they can hear bullets
whiz past their ears and even
hear the shell casings from
their M-16s clatter onto the
concrete floor.
The only thing better would
be an actual war witl1 actual
weapons -- which is pretty
much how the Army hopes
your kids will respond.
"America's Army" is one of
the U.S. Army's most. popular
and effecti ve recruiting tools -conceived. designed and distribttted tree to reach the 13- to
21-}ear-old crowd. It's a brilliant marketing tactic. Unlike
TV ads, the game is "sticky"
advertising: Consumers are
engaged for much longer periods than with traditional ads.
The game and its upgrades
have been downloaded more
than 16 million times ;ince the
original version was released
to strong acclaim in the gaming world two years ago. It is
given away at NASCAR
evenL&gt; and state fairs. Th ~re
are more than4 million current
registered players, making it
the No. I online action game .
So what's the problem'' After
all. the Army needs lots of
rccruiLs. The target for this year
is to sign up 77,000 young men
and women tor active duty.
Video games are the new fron tier for marketing and adverti sing .. McDonald's. Pepsi, Nike
and ESPN are among the
many com panies using games
to attract ·customer' and fo, ter
. brand loyally at young ages. ·

Joan
Ryan

More recently, games have
become the way to sell ideas.
too. particularly to kids whu
are , till ttying to figure out
who they are and what they
believe. The Islamic gro up
Hezbollah produced a game
called "Speciul Force." which
hit stores in the Middl e. East
last year. In it. Palestinian g&lt;xxl
guys try tu vanqu t&gt;h ], rueli
soldiers ,tnd settlers.
"Game., are nov- a more
important enoy point into the
consumer world than any other
medium," said Curt Feldman.
senior edttor at GamesJXll. a
Califomia-based Web site tor
gamers. "It has risen to the surface"' the perfect way to reach
very key demographic groups."
The Army wth ... mart
enough to recognize this marketing trend and usc it clfrxtively. B11l there are ·several
troublin g· issues: Should the
govemmc nt be in the busine"
of producing ~ iolent video
.. games when research indicates
a correlation to heightened
aggression'? Is it appropriate to
depict war as a game at ·a time
when real men. women and
children arc being killed in
Iraq''
And what are the ethi cs of
using video games to teed propaganda to 13- and 14-year·
. olds. espedall y propaganda
with &gt;uch complex mural and
Iife-a nd-death implication s''. ..

Let\ face it. The Army isn't
tryin g to sell kids hamburgers.
It's tryin g to sell kids on the
noi!Dn that joining the Anny
wo uJJ be a really cool thing to
do when they grow up. Yes,
they might get killed. But just
think of the awesome gre nade
launchers th ey'll learn to use!
What the game does not capture oJ' Army life is what it
feels li ke to kill . someone. Or
what it reels like to see a
buddy's leg shredded into a
thousand pieces. In the real
Army. you c;mnot press the
escape button on your keylxJard and come back to life.
Col. Casey Wardy nski. who
supervised the game·~ production. points out that only 41
percent or the game is simulated combat. The rest relates to
ad\'cl1tll!c tnuning such a~
p;rrachuting. as well as medic
training. weapons training and
teiun-building. TI1e game, he
said. depicts the Army's values
of respect. discipline and
camaraderie.
And he says the difference
hetwccllthe Am1y\ marketing
to kids and. say, McDonald\.
i' that a kid can impulsively
bu y a hambt1rger as a result of

targeted advertising. but
becuuse he's not old enough to
enl i., t. he can't impulsively join
the 1'1nn y. But marketing to
kids ts important. Wardynskt
&gt;ays. because. "If you don't get
in there and engage thcni early
in lite ahout what they're'going
to do with their live&gt;. when it
comes time illr them to
choose. you're in a fall back
po'oill&lt;lll."
p ...,~ L"llld n ~i..,t ~ll..,all Linn .
authm ol the ltew book .
"Consum ing Cht ld rcn : The
Ho &gt;l i lc . Tak eover
of
C hildhood" (Nev- Pre ss .

2004) disagrees.
"There should be ditterenl
standards about marketing to
kids," she said. 'The frontal
conex of the brain. where
judgment sits. doesn't full;
mature until the late teens &lt;lr
early 20s. ( KiJ,) lend to be
more swayed by emotion
because of that."
Linn pl cryed "i\met'!l'a's
Army" during research for her
book. "The fact tl1ill t h~ Armv
needs to recruit doe~n 't mean it
has the right to exploit children's vulncnrhi lt ties. anu do it
dishonc.-..t ly hy

i;ing

g LltlH )I

\:iolcncc and minimi;ing or
ignoring the utllL·r. m&lt;~n.· complicated !;teet' of 11 ar." ,iJc
said.
Wardynski ha' heard all the·
criticisn1s bcl(m~.
"K tds aren't 'tupid." he scrid
"They knov- the Army i' not "
game . What the g~\lll~ t1nc~ 1"
allow them to trv lll.lll for ... ill'
an d gel

llHJrc" inforn1.1tiun

about the man y job opportunities."

The Army. he 'ai&lt;L put him
through college all the ~~''" tro
hi s Ph.D. It's.~ career chotec Jw
wants to share with al l 'id, .
His enthusiasm " not dantpencJ by the fact that .10 pcrc·~m
of today\ rcmtit; 11ill liehl in
Iraq. .
AmcriGl needs a "tanJing
army. So the Am1y need' to
recruit. Bttl not at all cmts. The
Am1y will have
. time enou coh
to gmb our boys for war when
they tum IR. In the meantime:
maybe it can let our kids bc
kid\ for just" while longer.
Uunn Hn 111 1\ n cullfll/111'. /
.for r/r t • . .~Oil I 1 !ill.r i'!,,
Chrrmlr ·l,~..\emf r ·nnt~utni., ro
her m care (~l tMs !lCH 'Sf1NfJl'r
nr snul her e-nwil at joaurwn@ .1/(·lr nmir h•. ,'"'"·)

home which once 'at in front of the
'pring-hou,e , but ~;a, moved to the hill
above when the four-Jane US 33 was~
built." 'aid Parker.
Suh,equent fairs were held in variou'
locations about the county. until March
14. 1868,.when the first secti on of a permanent location wa' purchased from
Leonard and Jane Carleton and over the
year' expanded to encompass the present picture&gt;que ground' now known as
the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
The publ ic. yo uth groups. garden
dub' and other organizations are invited
to bring their hammers. paint bru&gt;he s.
brooms and gardening tools to participutc in making repairs to bui lding' and
sites on the fairgro unds. The grant provides money to 'upply the materials , but
volunteer; are needed to carry th rough
th e project she ex plained.
"The fmal outcome of the Make a
Difference Day activity will be preservation of written and oral history.
preservation of a historic site. marking
of a historic si te . greater awareness of
the history associated with the Meigs
County Fairgrounds and th e buildings
and si tes on it. and needed repairs to
facilities used by the public." Parker
conti nued.
The Meigs County Historical Society
will hold ns· annual meeting at 2 p.m.
that day at the fairgrounds. Those
mtendmg will be asked to share memories of the Meigs County Fair.
Beginning shortly before noon. the
Society will be serving soup beans and
cornbread. hot dogs and chips.

Shows at
Quarter Horse
Congress

For the record

Moderately Confused

The Daily Sentinel • Page As ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Darrell Cecil Hoffman

president. they will answer
yes, validating a long career
of uninterrupted. unshakeabk
leftism that has opposed, time
and again, the expansion of
freedom and democracy.
If Kerry had his way.
Saddam Hussein woukl still
be in power. ;md in Kuwa it. If
Kerry had his way. Ronald
Reagan's military ~.xpansion .
whi ch blooule"l y defeated
the Soviet Union. would
never have occurrcu. lnueed.
Kerry c;tll cd the Strateg ic
Defense In itiati ve. the vision ·
ar) stnlll that broke the
U.S.S.R.\ hack. a '\:ance·r on
our nation·. ddensc." If. in a

weapons

Monday, October t8,

Soldier who grew up
in Ohio killed in Iraq ..

PROUD TO BE APART OF

YOUR LIFE.

.

E!.JDA (AP) - A soldier
who grew ur-in western Ohio
has peen ktlled in Iraq. the
Depanment of Defense said.
Army Capt. Denni s Pintor,
30, was one of three soldiers
killed when an explosive
device detonated near their
patrol vehicle on Tuesday.
according to a Defe nse
Department release Sunday.
Pintor had been in Iraq since
20th
March with the
Engineer Battalion from Fort
Hood, Te .~as .
Pintor graduated from
Elida Hi gh School about 70
miles s·outh ul' Toledo in
1992 .
··He was a strong st ud ent. a.
good kid. goud ra mil y. kind
of the whole th ing." said
Elicla Hi gh guiuance counse lor Allen Clum . who taught
Pintor in math . " He v-as
active in tennis and · -.occer
and was just a good kid."
Pin tor . joined the Army
after hi gh·schooi' so he could
earn hi s education, said his
uncle. David Garrison Jr. of

Lima .
"He wanted the family' s
resources to be available for
his younger brother and sisters," he said.
Pintar gradu&amp;ted from the
U.S. Military Academy at
West Point in 1998, and also
completed Army Ranger
School, Garrison said.
Pintor 's · parent s n1oved
over the summer from Ohio
to the Ph ilippines. where his
fathe r was born . famil y
fri ends said . Pimor 's wife.
Stacy. and 4-year-old dau ghter Rh ea live in Kill ee n.
Te xas. famil y friend Lillian
Abe lila of Lima said.
" Dennis wa;, the kind of
fat her that would care for the
baby 111 a restaurant allowin g
hi s wife to enjoy her .meal
before it got cold." Garrison
said.

Abelita sa id tentati\ e plans
were to bury . Pint or at West
Point next weekend anu th at
a memorial service wo uld be
held at a L11na church on a
later date .

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

c

"G)?fac~ fe; (;e; f?
f]tAnJ~ fe; Jj;}e;"

The Daily Senrinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
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CLASS

WINNER
Alyssa Newland

Hurricanes, floods,
politics taxing food banks

acred Heart
Church Bazaar

thxled &gt;outheast Ohio. where
CO LUMBUS (APl
Ptmlcro~, 0 II
Storms. a slow-to-recover mon~ tl1m1 200 families remain
"t:nllltes Thursday, October 21st, 2004
economy and even the presi- honieless li1 &gt;Ill &amp;ptember stonns.
Dinners start at-1 :3 0pm
0,
dential mce are ht111in~ Ohio's
Also. the stme 's cconom\ ha.,
food banks. their oper;]tors say. been slow to bounce back.
S7.11U adults-S.1.11ll children under 12
,..~~ ~::::
. ~,. llt~fl
The Ohio Association of Strclppcd l(xxJ n1.1nubcturers are
Second H•uye,t Foodhanks has Ji\Ct1ing prULiul:t~ tu ...enmdouy
.Wn ru : m·.mml ,,,/.wl dridun tJr ihHtl Itt~~~,,!
ll&gt;ed 95 percent of the S2 mil - mw·kcts. such as diSl'(lUllt ..,torc s.
H ''"U' m adt• uoodlt•s-maslud pot.lhH'!l &amp; .~ral')'
lton it received from the stale in itistead of J{x&gt;d pamrics.
.l.''""'' .ht,ws, wit• s l&lt;.~w, rt1lfs &amp; dcsst•rt
July to buy su rplus meat. eggs.
The prc ,itlcntia l election h&lt;h
I run and 1·egctablcs.
'if..fflo: r.1 r•••• $soo.oo
also rlaycd a pan. with trad i'"rve rle\CI' seen anything lik~ tiona donors to food panuies
2.1 r•••• $2oo.oo
it in 20 vears·in this husines..,:· gi\'ing money to poiltical ctausS.l. 41&amp; . Sl&amp; p•i•"
said M&lt;itt Hahash. executive - e-. m. . tead. ao.:nrd i n~ to The
directo r of the Mtd-Ohi" Chromcle Df Pltilanthl·up) .
Food Bank. which serves ~0 central •md e&lt;L&gt;tcm Ohio counties.
A tru ckload oJ' 2&lt;J.O-l0 e·;llh
of bee f slew or 1.\.tillg boxes
'
of cereal lasts one dav instead
of weeks. he said. ·
Th~ ' Mid-Oilto FoudBank
. A Supplies
• Noodles • 8p,·c
• ehristmas Balunz. .
•Jira,'Im•x.
· eh
es
is distribut ing 2A miliiiHI
pounds oJ' i'&lt;lcld a Jnontll.
.
oco/ate eoatings
Arri~inS October 26th
400.000 pound s more tha'n
• 'Dried Fruits • ealte Af·
tw o 1.nonth~ ago - a 20 per• Party 'frays .Made to
cent lllcrea,e. Hahash "'id.
•xes 8 Cle/atins
"'or
the
Holidays
.
Som~ pantrie' lul\·c hccn
order r•
forced tc• reduce hour' or
r~Jul-·c what the\· ~1\ ~ 0;1ch
• 8oup Mixes 8 Ba
!'.Jmil\' to 111 .1k l' t·lw~ f\h l d 1.1-.1
ses
I hlltr-..
Syracuse. OH
In ngel·. A fL'\\ ' ' ith pdid -.1. 11 t
\ h'n ~ S .11 lJ _f,
740-992-4242
ha\L' a-.1-..cd L'lllph)~l'L'" tu
Slllh.tl~ - ( ' I\ \ .. L~I
lllfgo paycl1eck '·
.
·Phone Ahead Orders Welcome!
Pw1 nf the -.hor1;1 ~l' j.., dut: to
l(l&lt; JLI ;md 'uppltc' ll:in~ sent '"
hunicane-dcl·a,lated ~iotilit &lt;•r

NOW OFFERING BULK FOOD ITEMS

B&amp;.R MARKET

�.,

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

•

Monday, October t8,

2004

•

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Prep scoreboard, Page 82
Red Sox still alive, Page 86

OU, Athens address street party issues
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDI\ILYSENTINELCOM

NewsChannel

Weather forecast
Monday, October 18
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noon)
A few light rain showers are
on the way. The rain is predicted to start near noon.
Anticipate rain accumulatiom
of 0.02 inches for this morning. Temperatures will rise to
50 with today's low of 39
occurring around 7:00am.
Skies will be partly cloudy to
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the east.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It will be a cloudy afternoon. You will see moderate
rain. Expect accumulations of
0.34 inches. Temperatures
will climb from 52 to 67 by
late this afternoon. Winds will
be 15 MPH from the east
turning from the south as !he

afternoon pnlgre~~e~.
Eveuiug (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It wi II be a breezy. wet and
cloudy evening. Heavy rain is
expected. Expect 1.50 ind1es
of rain hy the end of this
evening. Temperatures will
linger at ()6 \\·ith today\ high
of 08 occurring around
IO:OOpm. Winds will he 10 to
20 MPH from the so"th turning from th~ southwe.st as the

eYening

rrogre sse~.

01'emight ( 1-6 a.m.)
Cloudy

n\·e rnight.

A

TH ENS - A doorto-door information
campaign designed
to visit with Ohio University
students who reside in Athens
neighhqrhoods
highlights
steps being taken by the city
of Athens and the university
to meet the challenges of the
unacceptablc behavior that
has surrounded the Athens
Hallowecn Street Party in
recent years.
This year's event is scheduled for the weekend of Oct.
30.
Beginning Moi1day. members of Student Senate wi ll
JOIIl Off-Campus Living
Oflice staff members in \:anvassing student residences in
the Mill and Stewart street
areas. which were especially
hard-hit by unruly behavior
during last year's event.
Should time allow. the
effort will be expanded to
other neighborhoods w1t. h
high numbers of student residents.
"'The visits will offer an
opportunity to remind the student-residents of their right s
and responsibil itie s as membcrs of the local community,"
said Jim Hintz, coordinator
for off-campus living. "Since
many of the atTests last year
did not in volve Ohio university students, an emphas is will
MPH from the southwest.
be placed upon the responsibility resid ents have for their
Tuesday, October 19
gtt csts' behavior and how to
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)
deal with houseguests who ·
It should be a cloudv morn- may behave inappropriately
ing. A few sp rinkles aie possi- and unlawfully. in cluding
ble.
Temperatures
will whom to conwct should a
increase from 65~ to 72 by late problem arise."
this morning . Winds will be 5
Student Senate members'
to I0 MPH from the south- involvement emphasizes the
west.
ei'fectivenes.s of fal:e-to-face
Aftemoon ( 1-6 p.m.)
It will remain cloudy. There
is a good chance we cou ld

Light

~ce

some rain. Temperatures will
rise from 7'3 early this afternoon to 75 by 3-:00pm then
drop down to 72 late afternoon. Winds will be 5 to 10
MPH from the southwest
turning from ·the south us the

rain is expected. hut watch
out for a brief hca\y downpour. The ra in could reach
0.36 inches by the end of thi'
overnight in some areas,
Temperatures will hover at
64. Winds wi ll be 5 to 15 nfternoon

other African countries. said
Angela Plummer, director of
Community Refugee &amp;
Immigration Services , a
nonprofit Columbus group.
Applications for almost
4.000 more refugees are
being processed .
The growing number new
arnvals.
with
varying
degree .s of need. has taxed
the ;upport systems in the
city and Franklin County.
"The cultural, educational.
health care and employment
bal.l·l·'.r'. 1.01' til""·' 11 ew
.... .~
.... .3....
Americans
are enormous
...
Mayor Michael Coleman
said. " In Columbus. we
embrace and e .~teml our
hand s to eve rv one."
The Columbus public
school district spent nearly
S I0 million on introductory
Engli&gt;h cla"cs last year.
Near I) I , 120 uf the district's
62.200 were Somali. About
25 pe rcen t of them spent the
school year at one of three
welcome

center~.

taking

En~li&gt;h-as-a-second-lan-

Quige c\a'-.~e;.

' "It will

take most of these
student s seven to I0 years
before thev reach the sa me
competency as students
raised here... said Ken
Woodard. who ;upervises
the
l~nguage
program .
"That's a huge gap"
The federal g&lt;we rnment
will spen d 111 ure than ~1.2
million thi s year- a 23 percent increa..,e from la-,t year
helping Somali&gt; and
other refugees resettl e in
l'ran~lin
County through
such aid as F.n~lish lc"on s.
health serccni~gs and job
trt.~inin!2.

To hring a fam1ly member
to the Lnited States. a
ft!fugee mu..,t promi-,e l o '~P port that · person and must
have an income uf at leaq
125 percent of the federal
povert y le,el. which i'
SI H.X.'\0 a year for a famil y
of four.
Mohamed . who ha s lost
two hushand&gt; . has \'owed to
bnng her hu,band to the
L'nitcd Sta tes.

als to tarnish the reputation of
thi s wonderful comm unity
and our great university:· he
added. "As an alumnus, I feel
strong ly abou t this issue.··
The Off-Campus Living
Oflice. which opened Oct. I.
is an outcome of the task
force's
recommendations.
The office is designed to educate students about the civic
responsibilities associated
with neighborhood li ving.
To further increase positive
interactions between full-time
residents and student neighbors. two picnics were held
by community members to

become acquainted with student-residents in their neighborhoods. The Athens Near
Northside
Neighborhood
Association sponsored a
Congress Street picnic, and
the Athens City Council sponsored a M iII Street picnic.
Future events are envisioned
in the future to build upon the
goodwill generated by these
events.
Once again, the university
expects to spend more than
$90,000 in labor, material,
supplies and other costs to
ensure the safety of the campus and its tesidents during
the weekend of the Athens
Halloween Street Party.
Among the precautions:
• Par~ing restrictions. To
reduce the flow of visitors
through campus, · university
parking lots are restricted to
vehicles that display .a valid
university parking permit for
th e weekend. Most campus
parking lots are limited to one
entrance/exit to control the
!'low of traffic ..
• Residence hall restrictions. Each student living in a
residence hall is allowed one
guest. who must be registered
with the residence· hall. All
guests are given wristbands.
which mLtst he worn to enter
residence
hall s.
Ohio
University stlldents can wear
wristbands or display their
university ID cards to gain
entrance.
• Alternative events. Each
year. the university plans a
slate of social events on
Friday and Saturday nights as
an
alternative
to
the
Halloween festival.

Hurricanes, floods, politics taxing food banks

COLUMBUS !API
Storms. a slow-to-recover
economy and even the presidential race are hurting
Ohio's food b&lt;mks. their
operators say.
progress~s.
The Ohio AsscKiation of
Second Harvest Foodbanks
has used 95 percent of the
$2 million it received from
the state in July to buy surband here -even it it takes plus meat, eggs, fruit and
me the ·rest of my life ."
vegetables.
Abdi has already inter" I've neve r seen anyth ing
viewed with resettlement
workers · but stil l awaits a like it in 20 years in thi s
said
Matt
medical checkup and securi- business:·
Habash, executive director
ty screening.
"We were told we ' d be of the Mid-Ohio FoodBank.
together again in 120 days. which serves 20 central and
That was seven days ago:· eastern Ohio counties.
he said in late August in
A truckload of 29.0-10 can&gt;
Kenya. "I love and miss of beef stew or 13.608
Amina and the children so boxe&gt; of cereal lasts one day
much . They are my life."
instead of weeks. he said.
He' s· stil l wailing.

Somali refugees seek to reunite families
COLUMBUS (APl
Although
Amina
Said
Mohamed has escaped the
violence in her home country of Somalia and the turmoil of Kenyan refugee
camps, life in Ohio hasn't
been easy.
She's taking nursing classes at Columbus State
Community College while
struggling to raise her six
children alone. Her husband.
Afi Mohamed Abdi. is stil l in
Kenya. sharin g a room with
three other .men in a slum on
the fringes of Nairobi.
Mohamed is one of. about
600 refuges in central Ohio
who have applied during the
past year to be reunited with
4,000 relatives stuck overseas. · The
Columbus
Dispatch reported Sunday in
a se ri es on the refugee
camps.
.
"Life is better since we left
Africa. but it'&gt; 'till not complete," said Mohamed, 43.
who's been separated from
Abdi for 3 1/2 years.
The two married in
December 2000.
when
Mohamed and her children
were going through the
process of immigrating to
the
United
Stales.
Resettlement workers told
the couple that adding Abdi
to the family might mean
years of delays. so th ey
decided Mohamed and the
children would go without
him.
Columbus ha' the secondlargest population of Somali_
refugees in the United
· States , behind Minneapol is.
Many think it could surpa"
Minneapoli s as immigration
ofticials work through appli cation backlogs th at date
back I0 years.
A recent easing of security
delays and travel restrictions
has led to a surge of refugees
who wil l soon be joinin g
family . members here . The
family reunification program
accounts for near ly twothirds of all perm anent
immigration to the United
Slates each year.
Almrht .all
the 577
refugee., approved to JOin
relatives in Columhu.s thi&gt; ,
year are from Somali;~ and

,.

meetings with studems and
involving them as part of the
solution.
Members of the Task Force
on Civic Responsibility. a
jllint city-university efforl.
hegan meeting in March to
develop short-term and longterm approaches to limit the
difficulties thai have arisen
from Halloween and other
events and to design educationa! approaches to inform
&gt;ludents of their civic responsibilities when they move offcampus and into Athens
neighborhoods.
.
''Last year's events clearly
dcmonstr;Jted that it is time
for a proactive approach to
curb the risk of future trouble.
and the Task force on Civic
Responsibility responded to
this
challenge."
Ohio
University
President
Roderick McDavis said. "We
continually stress to our students the importance of being
good neighbors ;tnd taking
responsibility for the wellbein~ of their comm unity.
"
Athens is a unique, vibrant
community, and we all have
an interest in its welfare.
"We don ' t want the unfortunate actions of some individu-

The Mid-Ohio FoodRank
is distributing 2.4 million
pounds of food a month.
400.000 pounds more than
two months ago - a 20
percent increase. Habash
said,
Some pantries have been
forced to reduce l10urs or
reduce what they give each
family to make the food
last longer. A few with paid
staff have asked employees
to forgo paychecks.
Part of the _shortage is due
to food and supplies being
sent to hurricane-devastated
Florida or flooded southeast
Ohio. where more than 200
families remain homele s~
from September storms.
Also. the state "s economy
has been slow to bounce
back. Strapped food manu·
.

facturers are diverting products to secondary markets.
such as discount stores.
instead of food pantries.
The presidential election
has also played a part, with
traditional donors to food
p&lt;mtries giving money tu
political causes in stead,
according to The Chronicle
of Philanthropy.
"We are merely a BandAid on a hemorrhage of
hunger:· said Lisa HamlerPodolski. director of Second
Harvest Foodbanks, which
suppl ies 90 percent of the
pantries in the state.

On the Net:
Ohio
A.uociarimt
of
s~nmd Harr ~sr Fuudba11ks:
hiip://IIII'II'.UliShfurg/

h
3
c
e
Reae
ounttes·

,···-···-···-·--~···-···-···-···-···-···-··-···-···-·,··-···-···-··-···-··-··-···-·1

!
:

Monday, October 18, 2004

Prep Football
STANDINGS/RESULTS

IBm

Chesapeake
Coal Grove
Rock Hill
River Valley
South Point
Fairland

3-0
2-1
2-1
1-2
1-2
0-3

8Y CHUCK SCHOFFNER

6-2
5-3
3-5
2-6
2-6
1-7

River Valley 35, South Point 6
Chesapeake 48, Coal Grove 13
Rock Hill 40, Fairland 0

,
·I:.

I'

I

Team
Gallia Academy
Logan
Marietta
Jackson
Warren
Athens

SEQ
3-0
2-1
2-1
1-2
1-2
0-3

5-3
3-5
3-5
6·2
2-6
1-7

Friday's Results

TVC
Ohio Division

IBm
Nelsonville-York
Vinton County
Wellston
Meigs
Belpre
Alexander

~

All

3-0
2-1
2-1
1-2
1-2
0-3

5-3
6-2
6-2
5-3
4-4
3-5

Hocking Division
Team

TVC

Trimble
Eastern
Waterford
Federal Hocking
Miller
Southern

3-0
2-1
2-1
1-2
1-2
0-3

All
7-I
5-3
3-5
2-6
2-6
2-6

Friday's Results

Meigs 35, Alexander 6
Easten 33, Miller 6
Waterford 39, Soultlem 6
Nelsonville-York 13. Wellston 8
Vinton County 27. Belpre 7
Trimble 28, Federal Hocking 0

Cardinal
Team
C1rdi!!11
Wayne
4-0
Herbert Hoover
3-t
Point Pleasant
3-2
2-2
Winfield
1-4
,Sissonville
0-4
Poca

All

7-0
4-3
4-4
5-2
3-4
2-6

Friday's Results

Ravenswood 26. P Pleasant 6
Winlield 14, Poca 13
Sissonville 20, Oak Hill 7
Wayne 44, Tolsia 28
Herbert Hoover 42, Logan 14

Team

All

Ironton
Symmes Valley
Wahama
Oak Hill
South Gallia
Hannan

8-0
6-1
6-2
2-6
1-6
0-8

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
I: Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
•
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
:
I•
The Tri-~ounty Marketplace!

Buckeye Trail 34, Wah am a 33, OT
Buffalo 80, Hannan 6
South Gallia 12, Hamlin 0
Ironton 8, Portsmouth 0
. Valley 53. Oak Hill 0

I

HUNTINGTON.
W.Va.
(AP) - A Marshall Univ~r.,ity
football player has been indicted on a malicious wounding
charge stemming from an Aug.
22 fight outside a bar in which
an Ohio State University player was injured.
The charge against defensive
tackle Roger Garrett had been
, dropped Sept. I 5 at the request
of prose.cutors. who did not
immediate! y e xplm 11 why
Garren was then indicted on
Friday.
Redgie Arden. who told
police he.was attacked because
he was from Oh1o State. was
-hospitali zed With a broken
nose and severe .swellin~ after
the fight.
'
Marshall defensive end
Jonathan · Goddard
was
charged with mi .sdemeanor
battery for his role in the light.
The status of that dmrgc was
not available Satltrday.

I'

1:

:

•.

.
1
•
:1

•
•
1.

., .
•
'I

•

:
1
•

:1

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:

sa;X';:Iis~,;~chc~et~~/:;,·;·hcs2i~ ·· I l§allipo[lg ilBniLv l!rribunr The Daily Sentinel ~oint ~[rnsnnt i\egistrr
~~!~cc~~~~~~~:i n·~Ii n; i:~1 yn~~:~ L_. . ~. ~74~/. 44~~.234.~.-... - ... - ..~--·~740.!. 99~~.215~.-... ~.;,_., __.!,304 )..675.:.133~.-... -.J

-

Please see OSU. 82

A!!

Friday's Results

:

Ferent1 hesitates to "" the Ari10na State lo"
was guud fur his tcani . but it did force the
Hawkcycs to refocus . They pl;~yed hetter in a 3017 loss at Michigan the folluw ing week and now
haw defeated .~1ichigan State and Ohio State by a
combined 71-23 .
'"There are two ways to go when you do that."'
Fe rentz said. "You can either he rea li stic and make
sure you· re determined to change what took place
or you c;111 stay on the ground. Our guys traditionally have gotten hack up and gone back and to

Gallia Academy 46, Warren 6
Logan 35, Athens 7
Marietta 52, Jackson 51. 2 OT

:

•

IOWA CITY. Iowa - One month ago. Ohio
State was winning and Iowa was reeling.
Oh, how things have turned.
Ohio State. once 3-0 and ranked seventh national ly, is 0-3 in the Big Ten and dropped out of the
Top 25 after Saturday's 33-7 loss ~~ Iowa - its
worst start in the league in 16 years.
Iowa . on the other hand, is getting better by the
week and looks nothing like the overmatched team

that lost 10 Arizona State
44-7 on Sept. I g, The
Hawkeye;, (4-2. 2-1 Big
Ten) may not be of
championship caliber.
but they're certainly
good enough til be a factor in the conference
race.
On Sunday. they replaced Ohio State at No. 25 in
The Associated Press poll.
"We're going in the right direction."' Iowa coach
Kirk Fcrcntz said.
·

SEOAL

Others

:1

Associated Press

A!!

Friday's Results

Saturday's Result

Symmes Valley 21, Notre Dame 0

Marshall player
indicted in fight

.,
I

ovc. QllC

Iowa, OSU headed different directions

Bv ToM WtTHERS
Associated Press
CLEVELAND - Chad JohiNln
hettcr &gt;till have a few bottles oftlw
pink stomach medictne . His
Cincinnati Bengals look pretty sick.
Jeff Garcia threw four touchdown
passe&gt; - nne a 9~-yarder to Andre·
Da,·i, to tic an NFL rccurd - and
the Cleveland Browns overcame
their own &gt;loppiness fur a 34-17
win over tl1c _inept Bengals on
Sundav.
William Green ru&gt;hcd for II 5
yard&gt;. Lee Suggs cau[!ht a 59-yar'd
TD pass in the fourth quarter and
the Browns (.1-3) moved to 1-0 at

home fur the first time since 1973.
"Since when°" Browns defensive
end Ke11ard Lmg asked. '"That's a
big step for us. We need to take care
of things at home."·
The Browns took &lt;.:are of Johnson.
Cincinnati's brash wide receiver. He
had shi pped each of Cleveland's
four defensive backs a bottle of
Pepto-Bismol and a note last week.
implying they wou ld get sick trying
to cuvcr him .
In stead. Johnson was the one feeling ill.
"This is my most fru:-.t rallng game
ever:· he said. "I made the challenge. I dtdn't perform ...
Brown' safety Earl Little didn' t
let Johnson off easy.

" I told him . 'Hey. I' m gomg to
FedEx thai stuff hack to you.
becmtse you really need it."" Little
said. "He didn't have much to say
after that."
Garcia. ca lled "skittis h" bv
Browns coach Butch Davis after i1
loss in Pittsbur~h last week. overcame two interceptions in the first
half and finished 16-of-23 for J IO
yards in hi s eighth career four-TD

wa' oiT to the races."
Andre' Da,·is injured his left big
toe early in the &gt;ewnd half and didn't return.
Garciu·~ be.,! lhnJ\\ cLJme on u 5yarder to tight end Aaron Shea for a
TD on the linal play of the first half
when the Bro,~ns uambled after
squanckring a 1-1-p,;int lead with
three 4uil'k tunwver&gt;.
Garcia\, clutch to~ ... was a
rcpri~, ·e for Butch Oi.l\·i..,, who mi~­
~a me.
' He and Andre' Davis hbuked up calculatcd the clock in the dosing
for just the IOth 99-yard pass play in 'enmds and 1warlv en.ded up costthe NFL. giving Cleveland a 7-0 ing the Brow·n:-: poim~.
lead.
But GarL:ia waiteJ a~ long as he
"We made a ureal cal l."" .said could and lofted l1i&gt; pass to Shea.
Garcia. "I ~ot the" ball out to Dre· .
Please see Browns. 82
he made an adjustment on it and it

Victory in Charlotte
Marshall steps it
up against Fl.~shes
KENT (API -

Ahmad attempt midway through the
third quarter. Marshall took
ond-half touchdown s - one over at its own 25. On the
on a 75-yar'cl pass from Stan second play. Hill tossed a
Hill - as screen pass to Bradshaw that
Marshall he turned into a 75-yard
~.··
~
overcame a touchdown that gave the
.. '
IO -p n1n1 Thunucring Herd their first
defi cit
to lead.
beat Kent
On it&lt; final six possesSwte 27-17 sions. Kent State punted
on Saturday. · twice. missed a field goal
MARSHAll.
K e n t and Robert Terrell. Clni&gt;
State 11-6. Royal and Willie Smith
0-4
Mid-American intercepted passe&gt; .
Conference) built a 1"7-7
Ian O'Connor addcd· lield
halftime lead on David 2oal' of 26 and 24 vard' for
Alston's 2-yard touchdown tvlarshall , to cl&lt;lSC ihc scorrun. Charles' Newlon\ 3 1- mg.
yard scoring reception from
Hill completed only 9 of
Joshua Cribb&lt; and Tn1vis 23 passes for 14.1 yards with
Mayle\ 31-yard field goal. one interception. &gt;plitting
Marshall (.1 - 3. 3-0) tonk time
with
Grah;nn
possession at the Golden Gochncaur who hit on o ,,f
Flashes' 3 after punter I 2 passes for '.' 5 ) ards and a
Joshua Brat.cn was pcnal - tou chduw n.
i;.eu for kickin~ the ball out
J,"htt ,l Cnhh, completed
of boLit .cb after fumhling it. 13 of .1 -1 P"""' for I :'2
Till u·
play'
late r \ ard&gt; and a lllUCildo\\ n Witil
l:lrad &gt;hdw scored on a 1- three inlen:eplioll\ fur 111~
) an.! pl u n g~..: .
Golden f'Ja,hc&gt;. He· also
After Ken t St;ttc "s Tr,l\ is rushcJ for _17 \ ards on t (J
Mavlc mi ssed a lic'ld ~"·tl ~;\ITIC\
Brad . . . haw SL'ored two . . ec-

\'

[0]

J11111111e Jol1nson does a burnout after w1nn ing the NASCAR UAW-GM Quality 500 1n Concord.
N.C. Satu rday. See.related story and results oo 86. tAP I

...

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Prep Scoreboard
Oh1o H1gh School Football Scores

C n W nton Wooas 17 C n Love and 6
Cn Wyomng28 Cn Dee Pak7
CrciOVIIIe Logan Elm 14 Cos Hamlton
Twp 6
C a ksv 11e
C n on Masse
20
B anchester 0
C ayton Nor hmont 42 T oy 35
C e Cent Cath 24 Fa rpo
Harbo
HadngO
Ce Colnwood2 Cle E 0
Ce Glenv e40 Ce LnconWestO
Cle Hts 25 Lakewood 0
Cle Rhodes 12 C e John Ma sha 7
CIEj S B Ce E Toch7
Cle mont NE 48 Day Ch st an 27
Cold wale 10 Ve sa I es 7
COl ns W Rese ve 32 P ymouth 0
Cots Beechc ott 42 Cots M ff n 7
Cos B ookhaven 35 Co 5 No th and 0
Cos Cen enna 20 Cols E 6
Cos Ha tey42 Cos Crusades 7
Cos lldependence 54 Cols AI cent c

Weekend Flesults
Sunday 1 Resultt
John~

De phos St

i3 Ma a Ste n

Mar on Local 7
Saturda~

s Results
Akr E e 48 Ak F restone 0
Ak N 28 Ak Cent a Howe 6
Be I n Cente Waste n Reserve 35
B dgepo I 15

Burton Be ksh re 10 Gates M Hawken

0
Carey 20 F emont St Joseph 14 OT
Cha don NDCL 22 Parma Padua 20
C n Jacobs 20 C n Taft S
C n Sh ode 48 Day Jetfe son 6
Cn St Xave 27 Atho Sprngs (NY)

St Francs 0
Cn W how 57 Cn Woodward6

Cle

St

Edwa d 10

gnat us 26

lakewood St

Cots Eastmoo 40 Cots Walnut A dge 0
Day Co Whrte 14 Cn Waste n H s6

1S

Cots Mar on Frank n 36 Co s Br ggs 0
Cos Ready 54 C n Ha many 6
Cots w 27 Cots S 14
Cots Watterson 31 Youngs Ursu ne 14
Cols Whetstone 44 Cos L nden a
Co umb ana 48 E Pales ne 6
t,;o umb ana C estv ew 19 Leeton a 6
Co umbus G ave 42 Delphos elle son

Ga es M Is G mou 20 Cuyahoga H s 7
Hudson WRA 52 8uf1alo (NY) N cho s 6
Lancaster F she Ca h 14 Suga G ove

Bene Unon 6
Malva n
14

New

Ph adelph a

Tusca awas Cent Cath 6

Mass on Wasl"l ngton 72 Wash ngton
(DC ) Fr endsh p Ed son 6
Mento Lake Cath 28 Pa ma His Ho y
Name 1
0 egan Clay 23 To Woodwa d 12
0 egon S ch 37 Youngs Ch s an 0
She wood
Fa v ew 30
Det ance
Aye SV e 28
S! Be na d Aoge Bacon 37 C n Pu ce I
Manan 7
Sleubenv lie 53 E L ve poo 0
Sleubenv e Cath Cenl 21 Be Ia re 7
Thompson Ledgemont 40 Cle Hts
Luthe an E 0
To Aoges13 To Lbbey 12
Wa en JFK 51 Lou sv e Aqu nas 35
Whee ng jWVa) Pa K 32 Zanesv e 21
W ow Wood Symmes Va ey 21
Ponsmouth Not e Dame 0
Youngs W son 2 Can T mken 5
Fnday s Results
Ak Coventry 43 Zoa v e Tusca awas
Va ey2
Akr Hoban 42 Can Cent Cath 2 1
Akr Mancheste 21 Cuyahoga Fa Is

21

Copley18 RchfedRevee10
Co 11and Lakev ew 43 B ookf e d 0
C est ne 21 New Wa sh ng on Buckeye
Cent o
Cuyahoga Fa s Wa sh Jesu t 34 C e
Be ned ct ne 10
Dalton 28 Je omesv I e HI sda e 7
Day Ca ol34 Fa bon 24
Day Cham nade Jul enne 37 8 enhe m
Onta o (Can) 13
Day Dunbar 27 C n Hughes 6
Day Meadowda e 16 C n A ken 12
Day Oakwood 35 F ankl n Co ( nd ) 21
Del ance 35 Ce na 6
OeG all Rversde 2 1 Troy Ch stan 16
De awa e 36 Mt Vernon 30
De ta 4a Swan on
Do a Ha dn No then 21 Coy Rawson

a

0
Dove 42 Byesv I e Meadowbrook 14
Edge on 41 Antwe p 21
E yr a Sr 32 Strongsv lie 1B
Eucl d 36 Loran Adm al K ng 0
Fndlay15 Ma onHadng6
F nd ay L be ty Benton 48 Le ps c 6
F ank n 20 Lemon Mon oe 7
Ga po s Ga la 46 V ncen1 Wa en 6
Garf e d Hts T n ty 32 Cle VASJ 2
Ga ellsv lie Garf eld 34 St eelsbo o 0
Genoa 20 Kansas Lakota 7
Ge mantown Va ey V ew 3a Eaton 13
G ouste li mb e 28 S ewa t Fede a
Hock ng 0
Gnadenhut en
nd an
Va ey
34
Coshoc on 19
G a on Mdvew33 Loan Cea ve'l7
G eensburg G een 30 Lod C ove eaf

CVCA 14

Ak Sp ng 20 A I ance Ma I nglon 19
A a nee 28 Wa en Howland 7
AmandaCeaceek14 C cevle7
Amhe s Stee e 14 West ake 0
Andove
Pymatun ng
Val ey
20
South ngton Cha ke 6
Anna 28 A canum 7
Anson a 53 W A exand a Tw n Val ey S

0
A I nglon 14 A cad a 0
Ashland 27 Mansfed S 10
Ash and
C estv ew
48
Ash and
Mapeton 0
Ash sbu a Lakes de 60 Ash abu a
Edgewood 13
Attca Seneca E 28 Tff n Calve 14
Au o a 46 Orange 0
Avon 14 We ng on 0
Avon Lake 46 Bay V age j3ay 7
Ba t more L berty Un on 20 M e sport 7
Ba be ton 2 Ken Roosevelt 2
Ba nesv e 6 Woods e d Man oe Cent

14

G eenv le41 Sdney 12
Ham ton L ttle M am 17 Ham ton Ross
7
Ham e Pat ck Hen y 41 Archbo d a
Sa nev lie
Hanoverton Un ted 48
Souths n 0
HavlandWayneTace 14 Hagee 12
H cksv lie 20 Def a nee T no a 14 OT
H a d Da by 25 Uppe A ng on 9
H sbo o 34 Wash ngton C H 13
H top 32 Tekonsha (M ch) 0
Howa d E Knox 35 Loudonv I e 7
Hubbard 48 Champ on 0
Hube Hts Wayne 2 Sp ng N 14
Hun ng Va ey un ve sly Schoo 14
Wlougt1byS 7
Huon 21 Cyde6
Independence 2 1 Rocky R ve Lu he an

0
Bascom Hopewe Louelbn 21 Foster a
St Wende n 0
Beachwood 20 Co umb a 12
Bea sv I e 40 Shenandoah 14
~e b ook48 M ton Unon 7
Be eton a ne 21 Lew stown lnd an Lake

3
Be efon a ne Ben1am n Logan 2J..:' Enon
G eenon 7
Be evue 24 Fos o a 12
Be mont Un on Loca 40 Flay and
Buckeye Loca 19
BelotW B anch 2 CanS 7
Be ea20 Becksv e 11
Bexley 37 G anv I e 14
B oomda e E mwood 47 G Dsonbu g 0
B utf1on 35 Coovoy C est-.J ew 14
Bow ng G een 12 Ho land Sp ng 0
Bradto d 14 New Pa s Na ana T a 0
Bookvle31 Day Noth dgeO
B unswck 2a Pa maS 0
Suey us 57 Lucas 2
Suey us Wynto d 32 N Rob nson Co
Cawfod12
Cad z Harr son Cent 9 Hann ba A ve

w 10

anton 8 Po tsmoulh 0
JeHe son A ea 20 Geneva 14
Johnstown Monroe 31 Danv e 13
Kenton 21 Van Wert 14
Kette ng A e 28 Cots S Cha les 7
Ketter ng Fa rmont 22 Beavercreek 2 1
K rtland 5 Orwe G and Val ey 12
Lafayette A en E 17 L rna Cen Cath 2
Lancaste 34 Gahanna 6
Leav nsbu g LaBrae 42 G a d 40
Lees C eek E C! nton 63 Bethel Tate 14
Lew s Cenle Olentangy 23 G ove C ty

21

Lbety15 Newlon Fa s14
L berty Center 4 B yan 0
L berty Twp Lakota E 22 Fa rt e d 20
L ma Bath 24 Wapakoneta 0
L ma Shawnee 35 Ottawa G andorf 7
L sbon Beave 36 New Cumbe and
(WVa) OakGen 7
ock and 27 C n Summ t Count y Day

6
Caldwel 14 Seve y Ft F ye 7
Ca edon a Ave Va ley 33 Gal on
No thmo 26
Can GenOa~ 2 1 Youngs Boa dman 6
Can McK n ey 28 Mass ton Jackson 0
Cana Futon NW 35 M neva 6
Cana W ncheste 20 Fa rt eld Umon 3
Canled7Saem3
Ca d ngton L ncoln
40
De awa e
Buckeye Va ley 33
Ca s e 39 New Lebanon D -. e 0
Ca oton33 Lou sv t e 2
Cenev e54 Sp ng S 4
Chag n Fa s 16 Ches e and W
Geauga t3
Chag n Fa s Kenston 21 Lyndhu st
Bush 0
Cha don 50 Pa nesv e R vers de 0
Ch II cothe 44 Westerv e Cen 27
Ch co he
Hunt ngton
Ross
29
Ch I cothe Un oto 4
Ch co he Zane T ace 27 Ba nb dge
PantVaey6
C n Ande son 56 C n Wa nut H Is 0
C n Co e an 59 W Chester Lakota W

16

Logan 35 Athens 7
Lo a n Southv ew 32 E Cle Shaw 26

OT

MacedonaNodona13 Mayfed10
Mad son 20 East ake N 14
Magno a Sandy Va ey 24 Bowe stan
Conotton Va ey 14
Man sf e d Mad son 24 Lex ng on 19
Man ua C estwood 40 Mogado e Fed 7
Map e HIS 4 Bedfo d 21
Ma etta 52 Jackson 51 20T
Ma on Cath
20
M fo d Cen e
Fa rbanks 6
Ma on P easan 41 Mo a R dgedale 0
Mains Fe y48 St Ca sv le 4
Ma ysv e 16 G oveCt&gt;y Can C ossng

0
Mason 34 Batav a Ame a 7
Mass on Pe ry 24 N Can Hoove 20
Mass I on Tuslaw 34 Woeste T way 6
Maumee 2a Pe ysbu g 6
MeA thu V nton County 27 Be p e 7
McComb 35 Vanlue 6
McCanna sv e Mo gan 8 Ph o 14
Me ehan csburg
53
James own
G eenevew 0
M am sbu g 35 Lebanon 28
Mddebu g Hts Mdpak18 N Rdgev e

20

Cn Ede 0 CovnQon Ky)Cath 9
Cn GenEse 18 Cn Ha sonO
Cn H s Ch stan 42 Cn Country Day
7
Cn Ma emon 28 Cn Made a 14
Cn Moe e 24 Cos DeSaes 19
C n Oak H s 28 C n Sycamore 21
C P neaten 7 Mllod6
C n u on 24 Goshen 13

'
13
Midd et eld Card na 41 Newbury 7
M ddletown 28 Ham lton 14
M dd etown
Fenw ck
16
T enlon
Edgewood 14
M ne a Adge20 N LmaS Range?
Mogado e 28 Pen nsu a Woodr dge 5
Monroev tie 54 New London 6
Mt G lead 9 R chwood N Un on 0
Mt Hea thy 33 Day Be mont 6
Mt
Orab
Western
8 own
40
WI amsbu g 4
N Adams (MICh ) 44 Ecton 1B
N College HI 26 Ham I on New M am

19

Napa eon 4 Sandusky 2
Nava re Fa ess 14 E Can 8
Ne sonv te Yo k 13 Wellston 8
New A bany 24 Hea h 0
New B amen 2B Ft Recove y 14
New Lex ngton 16 New Ooncmd John
Genn 7
'New Matamo as F ante 49 Shadys de

29

New M dde own Sp ng 12 N Jackson
Jackson M on 6
New Ph ade ph a 16 Camb 1dge 14
New A chmond 30 Batav a 15
Newa k 28 G ovepo t 0
Newa k Ca h 16 G andv ew 7
Newa k L ck ng Va ey 42 Wh teha I
Vealng13
N les 31. St uthe s 7
No to 49 Med na H ghland 0
Norwa k 34 Ga on 6
Norwa k St Pau 41 Greenw ch S Cent

6
Norwood 4 W m n~ton 7
Oak Ha bo 27 Casta a Ma ga etta 14
0 d Wash ng on Buckeye T a 34 Mason
(W Va ) Wahama 33 OT
0 en tangy L berty 35 Dub n Je orne 6
0 msted Fat s 2 N 0 msted 15
On a o 44 Mt B ancha d Riverdale 0
0 v e27 M ersbugW Ho mes7
Pa nesv e Havey 24 Conneaut19
Pando a G boa 56 Van Buren 0
Parma No mandy 5 N Roya ton 7
Parma Va ey Forge 42 Mad na 41
Pataska a Walk ns Memo a 26 Co s
F ank n H s 0
Pembe v te Eastwood 14
Elmo e
Woodmo e 6
P cker ngton Cent 25 Dubl n Sc o}o 20
Pkeon43 ChllcotheSE13
P a n C ty Jonathan A de 40 S dney
Lehman 7
Po and 17 Camp be I Memo a 14
Pome oy Me gs 35 A bany A exande 6
Po t Cl nton 20 M tan Ed son 12
Reedsv I e Easte n 33 Co n ng M le 6
R chmond Hts 28 8 oaklyn 12
R timan 47 C es on Norwayne 20
Rocky A ve 33 Fa rv ew Park Fa rv ew

13

Rootstown 35 Atwate Wa er oo 14
Rossfo d 14 Wh teh ouse Anthony
Wayne 9
Sandusky St Ma ys 32 Sandusky
Pe knsO
Shake Hts 35 Mentor 28 OT
Sheff eld Brooks de 28
LaGrange
Keystone 0
Sm thv I e 36 Apple C eek Wayneda e 6
So on 42 Tw nsbu g Chambe n 0
Spa ta H ghland 26 Mar on E g n 20
Sp ng Cath Cenl 31 N Lew sbu g
li ad 7
Sp ng Ken on R dge 63 Cass tow
Mam E 9
Sp ng NE 2a Cedarv e 20
Sp ng
Shawnee
12
T pp C ty
T ppecanoe 10
Sp ngbo o 54 Day Stebb ns 21
St Heny21 Mnse 7
Sl Mays Memo al48 E da 14
St Pa s G aham 60 Sp ng NW 0
St asburg F ank n 38 Newcomerstown

17

Summ Stat on L ck ng His 20 Cots
Ha vest Pep 6
Sunbury B g Wa nut 23 Peke ngton N

2
Sycamo

Sy van a

e Mohawk 20
Southv ew

N Ba more 6
20
Sy van a

No thv ew 14
Talmadge 30 Wadswo th 16
Tho nv e Sher dan 35 C :ooksv le 0
TffnCoumban23 Sheby13
T pp C ty Bethe 21 Cov ngton 7
To Cent Cath 20 To Bowshe 0
To Ch s an t 3 No hwood 6 OT
To Ottawa H Is 20 Lakes de Danbu y 0
To St F anc s 20 To Sta t 6
To St Johns 41 To Sco116
Tot Wh tme 24 To Wa te 7
Tontogany Otsego 42 M bu y Lake 3
T atwood Mad son 35 P oua 2
Un on C ty M ss ss nawa Va ey 42
Le w sbu g T County N 34 20 1
Uppe Sandusky 2 W a d 6
Urbana 15 New Car s e Tecumseh 4
Ut ca 28 F ed cK own 7
Venna Mathews 47 Ash abula Sts John
&amp; Pau 0
W Ca o on 34 Q)(lo d Talawanda 21
W Jefle son 7 London Mad son Pans 0
W La aye e R dgewood 23 Suga c eek
Ga away 2
W L berty Sa em 27 Sp ng SE 7
Wa en Had ng 28 Cle JFK 6
Wa saw Ave V ew 65 Uh chsv lie
C aymonl 0
Wash ng on C H M am T ace 41
Lo ndon 3
Wa erfo d 39 Rae ne Southe n 6
Wauseon 8 Me amo a Eve g ee n 0
Wav~J y 29 G eenf e d McCan 8
We svlle22 Be a eS John6
Wes e v e N 34 Reyno dsbu g 27 OT
Weste v e S 38 Wo h nglon K tbo~.~rne

"

Wh efo d (Mch) 24 Paud ng 22
Wck te i2Pey5
W "mspo
Was a
4
F anklo t
Adena 13
W ndham 14 Ravenna SE 0
W n e sv e ndan C eek 48 R chmond
Ed son 2

Wooster 26 Bel v e C ear Fork 3
Xen a 2a Vandal a But e 7
Yellow Sp nQs 37 L ma Pe ry 22
Youngs Aust ntown F1tch 34 Umontown
Lake 14
Youngs Mooney 19 Akr SVSM 14
Za esv lie Rosecrans 39 Zanesv e
Maysv lie 7
Zanesvl e W Muskmgum 35 Oresdeo
TrValey14
How t t'le top 10 team•
In the AP state poll tared

COLUMBUS (API- How the top teams
n he weekly Assoc ated Press state loot
ba I pol fared

D1VISION I

No1 Cn Coean(BO)beatW Chaste
Lako ta W 69 20
No 2 Youngs Ausl ntown F tch (8 0) Deal
Un ontown lake 34 14
No 3 Cte St tgnat1us (7 1) beat
Lakewood St Edwa d 26 10
No 4 C n St Xav e (8 O) beat Atho
Sprngs(NY ) St Fancs270
No 5 Cente v lie (8 0) bea Sp ng S 54

14

No6 en Moe e {71) beat Cos
DeSaes24 19
No 7 Lakewood St Edwa d (3 5) ost to
C e St tgnat us 26 10
NoB
Westevle
S
(7 1)
beat
Wo th ngton K lbou ne 3B 17
No9 Ce Gtenvlle {71) beat Ce
L ncoln West 40 0
No 10 Oubl n Sc oto (5 2) lost to
P ckerlngton Can 25 20

DIVISION II

No Avon Lake (8 0) beat Bay VI age
Bay 46 7
No 2 Cots Brookhaven (8 O) beat COs
Northland 35 0
No 3 Macedoma Nordoma {8 0) beat

Mayf eld 13 10

No 4 Spr ngboro (8..()) beat Day Stebb ns
54 2 1
No 5 New Ph ade ph a (8 0) beat
Camb dge 6 14
No 6 C n W th ow (8 0) beat C n
Woodwa d 57 6
No 7 Un on town Lake (6 2) ost to
Youngs Aust ntown F tc h 34 14
No 8 Lou sv e (6 2) lost to Ca ro ton 33

12
No 9 Amhe st Stee e (8 O) beat Westlake
14 0
No 10 Jackson (6 2) ost to Mar etta 52
51 20T
DIVISION Ill
No 1 Steubenv lie (8 0) beat E L verpool
53 0

No 2 L sbon Beave (B 0) beat New
Cumbe and (W Va ) Oak G en 36 7
No 3 Cana Futon NW (8 0) beat
Minerva 35 6
No 4 Cle Benedict ne (6 2) lost to
Cuyahoga Falls Wash Jesu t 34 10
No 5 Day Cham nade Jut anne (7 1)
beat Ontar o (Can ) Blenhe m D strict 37

13

No 6 Cots Watterson (7 ) beat Youngs
Ursu lne 31 14
No 7 Napoleon (8 0} beat Sandusky 14

12

No 8 Akr Hoban {7 1 ) beal Can Cent
Cath 42 2 1
N o 9 Chardon NDCL (8 0) beat Parma
Padua 22 20
No 10 Wash ngton C H M am Trace (a
0) beat London 41 13

DIVISION IV

No 1 Codwate (8 O) beatVa salles 10..7
No 2 Ironton (8-0) bea Portsmouth 8-0
No 3 Ak
Manchester (8 0) beat
Cuyahoga Fa Is CVCA 21 14
No 4 Huron (a 0) bea t C yde 21 6
No 5 Ma t ns Fer y (8 0) beat St
Cta1rsvll e 48 14
No 6 Ve :sa lies (6 2) lost to Coldwater 0

7
No 7 Uppe Sandusky (8 0) beat W Ita d

21-6

No 8 Pia n C ty Jonathan A der {7 1) beat
S dney Lehman 40 7
No 9 Bel a re 6 2) ost lo Steubenv lie
Cath Cent 21 7
No 10 Youngs Mooney (5 2) beat Akr
SVSM 19 14
V
No t Amanda C ea c eek (a 0) beat
C clevle 14 7
No 2 Ma on Pleasanl (a-0) beat Morral
Rdgedae 410
No3 N Lma S Range (7 1) lost to
Mne a R dge 20 7
No 4 F nd ay L be ty Benton (B 0) beat
Lepsc4B6
No 5 Hamle Patr ck Henry (8 O) beat

DIV1SION

A chbod

41 8

No6 Gates Mls G mou (80) beat Ce
Cuyahoga H s 20 7
No 7 S Henry (7 1) beat Mnste 2 1 7
No B uffton (8 0) beat Convoy C estv ew

35

a

4
No 9 Woods! eld Man oe Cent (6 2) lost
to Ba nesv 1e 6 0
No 10 Lees C eek E C nton 8 0) beat
Bethe Tate 63 14

DIVISION VI

No 1 Co umbus G ove (B O) beat De phos
Jaffe son 42 21
No 2 Dola Ha d n No lhe n (a 0) beat
Coy Rawson 21-0
No 3 Danv e (7 1) ost o Johnstown
Monoe31 13
No 4 Sandusky St Ma y (8 0) beat
Sandusky Pe k ns 32 0
No 5 New Matamo as Front e (7 ..Q) beat
Shadys de 49 29
No 6 Newark Cath (7 1) De at G andv ew
HIS ~6 7
No 7 Bascom Hopewe I Loudon (8 0) beat
Fosto a St Wende n 2 t 0
No Monroev e (7 1) beat New London

546

a

No 9
Meehan cs bu g
(7 1)
beat
Jamestown G eenev ew 53 0
No 10 Mogado e 6 2) beat Pen nsu a
Wood dge 28 5

Women's College Basketball

Buckeyes look to crack Big Ten establishment
BY JON KRAWCZYNSKI

Assoc ated Press

•

INDII-\NAPOLIS - Ohto State htrcd
coach J m Foster three years ago lookmg
to 0 Ct the women s basketball program
back to tespeclabtltty
It looks hke 11 was the nght dec 1s1on
The Buchyes were pteked bv the Bt~
Ten coaches IS the preseason tavonte to
wt ll ihe conlerence owr trautttonal pow
ef\ Penn Stale and Purdue
Speakmg Sund ty at the Btg ren medta
d 1V Fmter wou ld not say whether t!Jl:
proeram has reached the hetghts he env1
wmed tot t when he left 'v tnderbtlt Ill
2002
We re close r he satd Part of tl ts
retleCied b) whal goes on m the offsea
son Our playe" have learned to work
very hard m the offseason whtch makes
1t a much mor~ competttlve envtron
ment
Leadmg the way tor Ohto State " cen
ter Jesstca Davenport and guard Carty
Matter
The Buckeyes return four starters from
a team that went 2 I I0 and fim shed thtrd
111 the con ference v.lth an I I 5 record
They also fimshed the season strong
wmmng I I ot thetr fmal I4 games and

Monday, October 18, 2004

www mydailysentinel.com

then lo&gt;mg 111 the second round of ihe
NCAA tourn 1men1
Other tc,uns have lost people we lm
tshed thtrd and only lost one Foslet
satd explammg the lolty cxp~ctalwns
bestowed b) 1he coaches
The Btt ckeyes wete pte ked 11 ltlllsh
ahead ot Mtcht gan State and Mt1nesot 1
by the co tches The med t pte ked them
lo tmtsh second behtnd Purd te and
ahead ot ,003 04 cham111 111 Penn Stale
Purdue lo&gt;~ tour scn tors mcludm,
Shereka Wn, hl and Fr ka \; 1l ck amlthe
Nttt my Lu ns lost Kell ) Maua lie ih~
Btg Tens al l lime lead n, scorer amon
others
Th.tt lea\ es the lrad t on tl pm1ers 1ul
ner tble to 1 lew up 11d cnn ers lt kc the
Buckeves and Sp lfl Ills
I hope "e c 111 take so 11e bteger steps
and get alter our potcnttal Spartans
coac h Joanne McCall te satd It s not 111
over111ght process
Don t tell that to Fo'ier In h,; ftrsl se,t
son 1n Colum bus Ohto Foster led the
Buckeyes to a 22 I0 record the hest
smce I992 93
Last year the Buckeyes made thet r
second stratght NCAA tournament
appearance alter not ha1mg recet\ed a
btd smce 1999
When he came m he ra"ed the b tr

tot the expect It tons we put on our
selves Matter s,ud
The players ha\ e started to respond
md thetr opponent s are takmg nottce
He s one ot the best coaches 111 the
eame bar none Indmna coach Katht
Bennetts 11d He s bnllt mt
Penn State coach Rene Portland goes
way b tLk v.tth Foster Both sel\ed as
head coach at St Joseph s (Pa) before
mm tn, on m thetr respective careers
He h" cert unly recrutied hts kmd ot
ktd Port I md Sdtd He s got the pro
,r nn nght on the Jtm Foster way and
that s good for our league
P trtt) was a hot top1c at medta day
w th mosl cntches s tymg the more the
betlet
It s no se&lt;.:rel thdt Putduc and Penn
State h tve dom1n tted the le •, ue m
recent seasons Bul some tea ms are
beg nnm~ to emerge wtth Mmnesota s
tnp to the Ftntl Four last season the
o
btggest example
The Buckeyes arc hopmg to be the
next upstart It thai happen s Foster w11l
desene much ot the credit
He s a gre tt coach ver) tnlense
satd Davenport who was named the Btg
Ten fteshman of the year last season
\h JU'i Jove playmg tor htm

www mydallysentlnel.com

Monday, October 18, 2004

Big Ben conquers
Cowboys, 24-20
DALLAS (AP) The
Dallas Cowboys spent a week
companng Steelers rookte
Ben
quarterback
Roethhsberger to a young
Dan Manno
How about some Terry
Bradshaw to go wuh 11'
Roethlt sberger comp leted
2 1 of 25 passes and two
touchdowns completmg I I
stratght throws nme on the
Steelers last two sconng dn
ves
Sunday
leadmg
Pittsburgh to a 24 20 come
back wm over the Cowboys
Roethh sberger 1S the hrst
rookte qua rterback to go 4 0
smce Phtl Stmms on the 1979
New York Gtants He al•o
became the first Pittsburgh
quarterback to "m tn Dallas
smce Bradshaw m 1982
And whtle a rookte led the
way tl was a tnnely Daii,Js
fumble and a short TD from a
Steelers old tuner that pro
vtded Plltsburgh (5 I ) wnh

mrtbune - Sentinel - 1\egititer
CLASSIFIED

the wmnmg pomts
After the Cowboys Vmny
Testaverde fumbled late m the
fourth quarter the Steelers
drove to the 2 Jerome Bettis
rumbled m for the fmal touch
down m the last mmute
The Cowboys (2 3) had one
last chance to wm wtth some
razzle dazzle Dallas covered
30 yards on a pass and lateral
that moved the ball to the
Pittsburgh 30 with I second
left But Testaverde s fmal
throw mto the end zone fell
11\COIIIpiete
James Famor had two
s 1cks and forced three fum
bles tor the Steelers mclud
mg the last one by Testa verde
ihat changed the g une
But
11
v.tll
be
Roethltsberger the cool rook
1e who stood m the pocket
agamst a tough pass rush
\\ho Wi ll be credtted wtth
gUtdtng the Steelers to the

c.u .. Coo..r1 y OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
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from Page 81
who made a dtvmg grab
I almost screwed n up
Davts satd Aaron made a
great catch Jeff made a great
throw The players batled me
out there We would have
looked foohsh tf we dtdn t
score
Phil Dawson ktcked two
second-half fteld goals
extendmg the NFL s longest
current streak to 23 But the
Browns d•dn t chnch the wm
unttl Suggs TD catch put
them up 31 17 with I 0 15
left
All week long the Bengal s
(1 4) talked about th1 s bemg
a must wm game
But
coach Marvm Lewts team
must get much better m
every area before 1t can thmk
about wmmng agam
I am shocked satd quar
terback Carson Palmer Not
to take anythmg away from
the Browns but I thmk that s
a team we can beat I m
shocked to be I 4
Cmcmnatt s offense dtdn t
cross mtdfield until the fmal
play of the thtrd quarter and
moved mto Cleveland terrlto
ry JUSt twtce The Bengal s
ga med onlv 189 yards com
mttted I 0 penalttes and wen I
1 for 13 on thtrd downs
Johnson who stu red up the
Browns "'uh hts sht pment
had three catc hes tor 17 yards
and tour drops
I stunk 11 up tod •Y he

osu

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Sentinel

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40) 992-2156
Call Today••• (7 40) 446-2342 (7Or
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Monday F'rlday f'or :lnaertlon
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r

• All ads must be prepaid*

Will
\ \ \ 01 '\t I \ II

Browns

Ut:rtbune

To Place

smd Thts loss IS really on
my shoulders
Johnson though had no
regrets about ht s stunt and
satd he d do It agam
No one stopped me he
satd I stopped myself
The Browns who came m
wtth the league s 30th ranked
offense sco red thelf ftrst
offenstve TD 111 the first half
tht s season 111 re cord setttng
fashiOn
Pmned at ht s I Garc1a
rolled n ght m the end zone
spotted Dav1s m smgle cov
erage and htt htm m stnde at
the Cleveland 38 Da\ IS who
anchored Ytrgmta Tec h s
400 meter relay team pulled
away
from
cornerback
Deltha 0 Neal and scored the
longe st play 111 Cleveland
htstory untouched
The play echpsed Bemte
Kosar s 92 yard pass to
Webster Slaughter m 1989 as
the longest 111 Cle\eland ht s
torv
Eastest call of the day
Butch Dav" satd It "as
et ther a home run or an
mcomple te pass
NOTES Browns G Kelvm
Garmon sust amed a mtld
concuss ton m the I trst halt I
was out cold he smd He
lett wtth 1 leg lllJllfY m the
thtrd quarter Garmon wtll
h JVe an MRI on Monday
Bengals LB Landon Johnson
dtd not return &lt;1fter bemg flat
tened by Brown s rB Terrelle
Smtth m the second qu at ter
Suggs had 100 )ards
recetvmg the ftrst Cleveland
back to have I00 s1 nee Enc
Metca lt ( 10 I) m 1993

shown an ,lbtltty to scramble
out of trouble and throw on
the run On an I I y 1rd touch
down pass to Chnton
from Page 81
Solomon on S Hurday the
quarterback
work and I thmk that s wh 11 nght handed
v.as rolling lett and threv. a
we vc done
Ohto State (3 :1 l faces the perfect stn ke across hts body
The more I play the bette r
same sort o l challenge
because the Buckeyes most I see th111es T tic sat d I ve
certamly are down Thetr e1e n started chang mg the
meptttude on offe nse re 1ched prolectton I don t thmk
s been done around here
a ne" low Saturday and ihe that
defense had no answer for tot t while
Tressel changed quarter
Iowa quarterback Dre w Tdte
bac
ks alter statler Justm
who threw tor :13 1 yards and z.,. tck
fumbled on the second
three touchdowns and r 111 for
play ot the thtrd quat ter set
a TD
tm,
up an low 1 10uchdown
Who could have 1magmed
that
made
tt 17 0 Z" tck got
an Ohto State team rushmg
for only 27 )ards - bul htl on the shou lder 111 the hrst
halt and Tressel satd he " IS
that s all the Buckeyes man
n t sure how well he equid
aged agamst Iowa They lost throw
two fumbles whtch led to 10
Smtth w ts h trdly an unmc
lo\\a pomts ~md 1he1r only
dt
ne sp 11 k gutdm g the
decent dn ve 111 the It rst h lif
to onl y 15 yards 111
Buckeyes
ended with an tnlercepuon m
lt
\e
possessions
before lead
the end zo ne
tng the late dme
It took Troy Smtih s 21
He dtd a couple of good
yard touchdown pass to Rm y
thmgs
ob1 10us ly on th ll l tst
Ntcol with 2 19 lett to keep
dnve
Tressel satd He dtd
Ohto State tram bemg shut
out tor the ftrst tune smce t the thmgs you need to do to
28 0 loss 10 Mt cht gan m mo ve the ball I thou ght he
1993 Ohto State totaled JUSI v.~nt 111 md dtd some pretty
177 yards wtth 73 commg on fatr thtn gs
Tt es\e l h " a week to
thai last dnve
dcctde
1f Smith dtd enough to
I don t know tf I would
w
trr
1111
more t1me tn next
say that we re dmng anythmg
Saturday
s home g •me
well Ohto State coach Jun
tg unst ln dt 111 1 (2 4 0 3)
Tressel s.ud I thmk the sta
Ohto
Slate h 1sn t losl to
ttsttcs can pomt to that nr t
lndt
ana
st tiL e 1988 but such
gut lee it ng c.tn poml to that
slteaks
don
t seem to miller
Iowa s tmprovem~nt has
parall eled the maturation ot mymore The Buck eyes h.td
Tate 1 sophomore m ht s first not lost tl Iowa smce 1983
season ts st 11 let He h ls and they h td 1 24 g une w11
sttca~
a~ unst
bounced b tck fro m 1 mtser ntn g
Nort
hwestern
broke n~ two
able outm0 Jt Amon 1 St tie
- 8 lor 19 lor 44 vards - 10 weeks tgo
We ate trymg to get tl
become the focal pomt ot the
done We JUSt need to keep
Hawkeyes olt ense
In three Btg Ten games he worktng at tt ttght end Ryan
Nobody ts
ha s completed 70 percem ot Hamby satd
gomg
to
gl\e
up
We
wtll JUSt
hts passes tor 94 I yards and
keep
pluggmg
away
S1X touchdowns Tate 1lso has

i

\I'-~

ANNOUNCEMENTS
1

r

troo: ~; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;~
l
I \ 11'1 " ' \I I ' I
"i l H\ li I &lt;.;

1

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

·-·FOR·"·OMEli·SALE
__

lwnght@1c net

itO

Lost Redd sh b own Beag e
HELP WANIJD
m x w th purp e collar
Female sma I med um s ze
$S REWARD$$
Answers to D x e Very spe An Excel ent way to ea n
S400
FOI" Informal on lead ng to cal fam ty pets (740)441 money T he New Avon
Cal Ma yn 304 882 2645
the arrest and conv ct on of
the person o pe sons tha
AVON! AI Areas To Buy or
removed the portab e gener Lost Male bla ck &amp; wh te Set
Sh ley Spears 304
ator f om the property ol Australian Shepa d has col 675 1429
a on answers to Duke
John E Carrot 1142 Otve
CUST SVC REP
Ad Ga I po s OH dunng Pease ca 740..245 9469 or
the pe od ol Aug 23 to Oct
NEEDED'
1 2004 nformat on may be
Wo k From Home
forwa d o Gal a Cou nty Reward Lost n the Mason
BOO 2 0 46B9
Sher ff s ott ce at 740 446 a ea on Wed Oct 13 2004
$500 $1 500 Month
1221
Pa ttma
L ght Ye tow Part Chow
S2 000
h
em ate dog was wear ng
Fu t me
Help Suppo a New B eath pupe co la
I seen cal
of Poll cat a r n th e Mason
County
Comm ss on
Work from home
E ect on Race Novembe 2
Flexible Hourat!

AITENT!ONI
GET YOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOMEI
FREE APPROV ED
HOME LOANSI

1269

(3041773 5094

()
0

r

•

SSSGree1 PoyiSSS

Free to good home Mate
German puppy (740 )643

i

___

___,
:~C::nAf:!!. Jan 10 oal se v ce has 2
rLI'A lnAau~r..•

VERSIOE

LPNo

c

740 256 6989

Jacloe al (740)446 2700

r

FOUND

z

~um

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4 s For Sale ................................................. 725
Announcement
030
Antiques
Apartments lor Rent
Auction and Flea Market
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
Auto Repair
Autos lor Sale
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Building Supplies
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Business Opportunity
Business Training
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
Camping Equipment
Cards ol Thanks
Child/Elderly Care
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Equipment lor Rent
Excavating
Farm Equipment
Farms lor Rent
Farms lor Sale
For Lease
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For Sale or Trade
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Furnished Rooms
General Hauling
Giveaway
Happy Ads
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Homes lor Sale
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In Memoriam
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•
Loot and Found
Lola &amp; Acreage
Mlocellanoouo
Mlocollaneouo Merchandise
Mobile Home Repair
Mobile Hom11 lor Rent
Mobile Homes lor Sale
Money to Loon
Motorcyclol I 4 WhHIIrl
Muolco lnetrumenll
Plreonalt
Ptlelor Solo
Plumbing I Hooting
ProiiiiiOnll ServiCII
Radio TV I Cl Ropalr
Rill !IIIII Wonted
School• lntlructlon
8Md Plonl l Fortlllzer
Sltuottont Wonted
Spa.. lor Rent
Sporting Goode
tlor B1t1
Truckl lor Ball
Upholetery
Vent For Sell
Wanted to Buy
Wlnlld to Buy Farm Supplies
Wontod To Do
Wonted to Rent
Yord Sell• Golllpoilt
Yard Sale Pomeroy/Middle
Yard Sale PI Ple11ent

auv

EOE MIFON

530
440

080

760

no

710

750
550
340

210
140

790

780
010
190
840
480

830
610
430

330
490

1.
Positions ava table now

Up to S9 25/hr

585
590

580
450
850
040
050

640

110

810
310
510
410

020
130

660
630

060
350
170
540
880
420

320
220
740

570
,005
550
820

230

1SO
310
150
ISO
120
480
520
120
715
870
730
090

820
I 80
470
072

074

076

with

qualified elilperlencet
Excellent pay and
benefit•
Gal tOday for more
nformat on
1 an-..63-6247 aak for
llilt 2457

POSTAL JOBS
$1462 $209 2/hr Now hr
ng Fo app cat ons &amp; free
gave nment JOb nfo caU
Amencan Assoc of Labo

1913 599 9042 24 hrs
emp serv
Pr vate owned Beauty Salon
need~
s yl 51 to
work
Mondays Tuesdays and
Wednesdays W I pay 60° o
and w buy a supp es
C en tele preferr ed Send
esum e to CLA Box 555 PO
60)( 469 Ga I po s OH

WANTED
Full t me
Appo nlments Cle k needed
o wo k with people w th
menta etardat on al two
group homes n the B dwe I
area Out es nc ude sched
u ng and
anspo I ng to
appo ntments Hou s 9am
Spm Mon Fr H gh schoo
d p oma/GED va d dnvar's
cense lhree years good
drtv ng exper ence ade
quate automob le nsu ance
cove age and w ling to d lYe
n heavy congested traff c
areas requ red Must have
commun cat on
exce len1
and organ zat ana sk t s
$7 00 h E)(ce enl benefitS
package P e employment
0 ug Test ng Send resume
to
Buckeye Commun ty
Se v ces P: 0 Box 604
Jackson Pike OH 45640
Dead ne for appl cants
10 20 04 Equal Oppo tun ty
Employer

Galllpolla Career College
(Ca ee s Close To Home)

Cal Today 740 4464367

1 800 2 14 0452
www 11a Hpo sea ee oo &amp;g,e oom
A cad ed '-'1embe At:&lt;: ~d ng
Coun
o ndt'lpenden Colegt~~
and Schools 2746

1'

70

888 974 JOBS

Need someone to I ve n &amp;
ca re
lo
elder y
ady
Housekeep ng cook ng &amp;

TLC (740)379 229

New Ho zons Ch dhood
Enr!chmen Cente s lak ng
app cat ons for Teach ng
Ass slant and subs lute
pos t ons New Ho zon w II
ope ate
Septembe May
Mondays Th u sdays 9am
11 30 am and serve ch dren
ages 3 5 App canis must
have at leas a h gh school
d ploma expe ence n ea y
ch ldhood p eter ed For
mo e
nfo mat on o to
request an appl cat on for
employmenl packet ca 740-

949 2381 or 740 992 2712

Overbroo~ Center wI soon
b"e offe ng the State Teatad
Nurse A de c asses f you
a e nterested please come
In and I 1 out an app cat on

SPACE IS LIMITED EOE
Overbrook Rehab I tit on
Cente
a now acce pt ng
reaumea for tt'le poaltlon of
Olreotor or Soetat St 'o'lcta
Cand da te mutt POIIIII
at OnriJ verbal and wr tten
communication
ek a
Mt!l cad Medicare end

~EOC~

I

H gh
Schoo
Juno s
Senors and P or SerVIce
you can f I vaca n pos t ons
on Ag ng s accept ng appl
n the West Vr.gna A my
cat ens/ resumes for Home Nat ona Guard If you a e
Ca e
A des
App cants between the ages of 17 35
shou d have a h gh School or have p or m I tary serv
D ptoma or G E D el able ce you won 1 want to pass
transportal on tel ephone n th s up For Oppo tun t es n
the home and w I ng o wo k you area ca
304 675
week ends &amp; ho days Must
be mot va te d and I ex ble
W I tra n Exper ence n pro
v1d ng d rect ca e o work ng
Seeking 39 People
w th olde adu IS a plus
Locally
State tested nu s ng ass s
who wan to ea n money
!ants encou aged to app y
wh1 e os ng we ght show ng
App Cat ons a e ava able at
otha 5 how
!he Me gs Mull purpose
Sen o
Center Mu be ry
He gh s Po me oy Oh an
www famousnutr lion com
EOE ampoye

5837

(7401441 1982
FREE SAMPLES

5+ ac es Ba n w th fenced
n lot shed carport Pr vate
sett ng on Adamsv le Road
Must see to apprec ate

(740)245 5157

$95 000

o {304)675 4024 ask tor
Nancy Homestead Realty
8 oker

12X65 Tra e n Count y al
Electr c
C A Handicap
ready
$200 montn

(304)675 40BB

1bedroom li ate n Letart 5

For sate or ent 2 bedroom
mob le homes start ng at
$270 pe month Ca I 740

992 2167

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W nl

1 88B 582 33-&lt;5
I~ I \ I I .., I \ II

(2) 3 bedroom houses for
sa e 2 balhs f replaces on
ac eage Cal
(740)709
1166
0°o Down Payment and
t nancmg ave lab e w th
approved cred t
Average
credit quat f es you f down
payment has kept you from
buy ng th s s your chance
to own your own home If
you have a down payment
but wou d ke to conserve it
we offe ow down payment
prog ams a so G eat nte
est ates Local company
Mo tgage
Locators

(7401992 7321
BR

Leta t
v ng oom wff re
place k tchen has d sh
washer stove &amp; efr dg
cha n nk fence ca port
gassed
n back porch

$28 000 fi m(3041 882 3011

Ranch Newer ool v ny
neat
pump
Sm ths
Cab nets 1 ca garage pr
vate lane off SA 160 t 8

ac es $92 000 (740)399
8676

3
bed oom
ho use
n
Sy acuse wlth garage on
n ce tot F nanong ave tab e
No down paymen
w th
approved cred t (740)992

3595

3 bedroom 2 bath

1v ng
roo m d nnlng room fur
n shed k tct'len
2 car
ga age 2 outbu dings
plus acres close to achoola

e

(740)397 79&amp;9

Bdwol
1135 h lliwk 11pm 8 30om

High Schoo

All r•l estllte edv.rtlslng
In this newtpllper Is
subltct to tht F.cltrtl
F•lr Houalng Act of 1818
whlct'l m~~t.• It lls.gtl to
ldv.rtiM 1ny
pret.rence llmltlltlon or
dltcrlmlnatlon b..ed on
race ~olor religion Mlt
f1mllllll 1tatua or Mtlonal
origin or any Intention to
maO any •wr;:h
pr.t'arwnc• limitation or
diRrlmln•Uon

d ptoma/GEO

valid d vera I cente and
!h ee yea 11 g.ood dr.., ng
expe ence
equl td
S7 DO h
P a emp oyment
0 ug Tast ng Send esume
to
Buc,.;eye Commun y
Se vlces PO Box 604
Jackson
OH
45640
Dead! ne to
app can 1
10 20 04 Ecua Opco tun ty
Empoyer -....

on1rym lng (7&lt;101&amp;8&amp; 3820

$16

$1 5000 740 245.0133

2001 moble home 16x80
a so two acres land 1 ml e
f om At 7 near Eureka

$65 000 Ca
9234

I~

(740)256

I '\ I \I ..,

Hou;ES

opportunity t.ua

FOR RENT

Hai'IMI For Sale
Hand bull og home 6 years
old Pr vate w th 10 acres
StunnnQvew!3B 1 12
bath Open loft
Financing avallablt wtth

po1S (740)992 5856

no

1 or 2 peop e no pets reler

ences (740)441 0181

B dwet area clean remod
eled 2BR $400 month
nc udes wale &amp; sewe
Deposit/rete ances No pers

1304)576-4037

For Rent or Sa e 2br 2ba
Mob1 e Home n Mason

(304)n3 5751

r

1 and 2 bed oom apart
ments fu n shed and unfur
n shed
secu ty depos t
requ ed no pets 740 992

2219

1 bed oom apl WID hookup
$290 month t deposit Ckmt

to Holzer Hosptal Ca I 7400% Down Payment and
fnancng ava abe wth
app oved cred
Average 2 bed oom apts 10 mmutes
credit qualf es you f down f om Ho zer Hasp 1a1 on St
payfTlent has kept you from At 60 Water Sewer/Trash
buy ng lh s s you chance nc uded S4601mo Depos t
to own your own home If equ ed
Pets a towed
you have a Cfown payment
(740~1
Homes
!rom
$ 10 000
but wou d I ke to conse ve t 0
Fore osure VA Hud fo I st we offer tiN down payment
ng 1 BOO 749 8 106 ex 709 prog ams a so Greal ntar 3 rooms &amp; Oath stoveJretr g
est ates Local company e ato down sta rs utillits
House n Kanauga Old
Mo tgage
Locato s pa d $4 50 month No pets
Farmers Ad Gall po s Oh
o;e
$40 000 2 tra e s K odel
App cat ons be ng taken to
Pa k
on
Neal
Ad
2 Story Colon al 3 bd m
S6751month
nvestment ba h Ges heat Cnt AIC ve y c ean 1 bedroom n
coun1ry sen ng yet clOSe to
$35 000
Both
tra ers
town Washe dryer stoYe
20
house
tor
ent frtdge ncluded Water and
garbage nc udeo Total e ec
$350 month
wale
and
wwworvbcom trash pa d no pets Deposit t IC w th AC Tenant pay e ec
and
ete ence requ red t IC $300 deposh 5375 per
Home Liatingt
month No pets No smok
L st your hOme by cat ng
ng 74Q..446 2205 or 7403 bd m house 1 5 balhS 446 9585 ask to V rgm a

339.0382

NO DOWN PAVMENTIII
(740)388 0164

(7401441 1184 or
94

(7401992 7321

(740144 5725

(740)446 3620

Bed rom Br ck Home 2
ath 3 Car Br ck
nattached Garage 2
tory outbu ld ng Code
270ot o call (740)446

566
Bedroom 1 1!2 Bath
ul Baeement

lddloport OH Code
11 orcot (740)992
743

46 0

St (740)446 3945

S600 mo (7401446 3481

(7401388 1100

c ose to flospita off Jacl\son
Pike $600 ent w $600 sec
dep You pay a ut t es
References equ ed Ca
[740)446 3644 fo app ca

I on

3 bedroom basement 2 car
garage newty emode ed
No patl $650 month plus

dopool1 (740)446-4824

Apl 4 Ren1
washer Drye

Re1 Deo

clean 2br
nookup

No.ht:;

13041675

5162

BEAUTIFUL
APART
MENTS AT BUDQIT
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 WestwOOd
Drow I om 5344 10 5442

Walk to shop &amp; movtea c.n
740
446 2568
EQua
4 Bedroom Moult In Muon
Central Heat/A r AI Electric Hou1 ng Ooportunlty

S4501mon1h S3001dtPOII CONVINIINTLV LOCAT
(3041882 2888
ID 6 A~,ORDAILII
TownhOUII
IPirtmlntt
~vollob&lt;o Nov 1 2BR I 6
and/or 1mal r,ou~n FOPI
blith 01ntra air gu heat
RENT Cot (740)441 1111
$4~0 month + dtpot t
tor app ~tlon I ntormetlon
(7&lt;101446 10i&amp;
en c!tncy apt tor tnt
CondO 3 bdrm 2 batnl w

blltmtnl

V+tw ol rlvt f

$3SO!month tnoluda Willer
ltWtr &amp; trael'l No pera

Cn1r AJC $100 mo
Gollpolo Forry (7&lt;101U6 (740)448-4313
3451

14x70 with 71&lt;21 monufoc In Pomeroy 2 3 btdroom
3 btdroom tonoo '" "'"' e l - l 1375

-ndO

11on (7401388 04Q9

Bt.OONE\1!

on' sa

(740)245 5102

Lois&amp;
ACREAGE

2 acres on Ingalls Road

Informed th.. 11
dwelling• ltdvertlled In
thll nltWapeper ara
available on an equal

Green Town1t'llp cloll to
W I care lor tldt y ful or
achoo Pric ed to 11 t Mare
part tlmt Night Sh f1 have •t
1UIO&lt;!
1 15 bath at app lane"
&amp;
newer lurnact Greet condl
Ranch ety t home with f n
I I\ \ ' ' I \ I
11'110 b111men1 3 ~d
ooma 1 bath arge tv ng
t Q87 1•b70 moble home
oom and din ng room 3BA 2 bltl'l app 1nc11
OPI'ORTUNITY
k tchan with 2 car garag1
aomelurn~ure Sl loul ca 11
anachtd and a 30xeo
000
Abao ute Go dmlnet
60 ga agt and a 18x24 l ht lttr
vend ng machines
axce
nouae 1 5 ml 11 Otlt Ct1trry Make 2 pll)'mtnta move In -'
ent ocattona' tor $10 995 Ridge Ad on ttlt r grn ye1ra on nett (~)736
34()g

IBOO 234 9982

r

Get

,.....••,. hlrtby

00 (7&lt;10)1186 3813

nlo (740)446 nn

Whe e •You
Moneys Worth

knowingly Rotpl
ldvtrtlaemenl• for reel
a.tMe which fa In
violation Dl tht ltw Our

3BR 2BA 6 12&amp; ocroo

oxp 304 976 7981

3 bedroom mob e home

3 br mobl e home In
Caruthe 5 Mob le Home
Your Park ca 13Q.4-675 381 a

Thl• newap1per wl t nol

Bedroom 3 Bath
ocalod In Golllpol. O\'Or
22°
oo~ng 1ht Ohio Rlvtr
r 3000 ooq ft on 3114
307 Sp ng
reo Code Ul or con
Wlboth ond I1I 2 btdroom 7&lt;10)441 o0323

22 2004

(7401379-2923

Oh o 45701 (7&lt;10)592 1972

r

2

SAVE SAVE SAVE

Stod&lt; moele s at old pr ces
2005 models a nv ng Now
Co e s
Mobile
Homes
15266 u s 50 East .Athens

$94 000 (7&lt;10)702 7200

1 10p SattSun

00

lNG CO recommends tha
u do bus ness with pe
le you know and NOT t
end money througt'l th
a I until you have Invest
ated the offenn

V age ol Mddepo t Is
seek ng a Fisc a Officer
(Clerk Treasurer) Must have D var Needs Work C aaa A 3 oedroom full beltment
compute and sccoun11ng COL A Endoreemente Call garage acprox 1 aor• of
land 5 miles f om town on
experience Send resume to
SR 7 tl c n Po ntt cal
237 Race Street by October
IJ 7
0 304 882
740
Geo gea Portable Sawmll
don t haul your log• to the
WANTED
Part I me poa
A'e Pomoroy
m just ca 304 87~ 19~7
liOn IVIlltb t IO I l l If with
Double (1) " bedroom
lndlv duala wlth mental retar
dation at a group home n Let me un your trrandl for wJbath ~u bailment 2
you toea ly 110 l'illlblt 2 ata
Ntw mtta
roof
day• • wlfk tor data
000
ThurtiFrl
Sal 71)m lilam

Sun
MOS know odgo LSW w1h 2131 hra/wk 38 30p Th!F I

ll(per •nee n long term care
preferred but not reQu td
Qualified cand datee please
oontacl
Charla Brown
McGu e Admin at ator at
333
Paoe
St eet
M dd epa Oh 45760 EOE

n Pont Peasant

Barboun" le wv (3041736

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH 675

HELP '1\ANilD

45631

TELEMARKETERS NEED

..

.,

110

Manager needed fo mob le
home park n Shade send
esume to Country Pa k Reta I sales c e k 27 hours
nc PO 1033 Logan Oh or mo e per week mu st be
abl e to work some even ngs
43138
N o Sunday s $6 75 hour
¥echan cal Techmc an
P ck up appl cat on at
Must have hands on expe
Sw she &amp; Lohse Pha macy
ence us ng powe laos Pome oy
elect c saw d It p ess and
others Mus be abe to ead
eng nee ng
draw ngs
Some mach ne shop knowt ED No Expe ence OK $7
edge helpfu
Electr c and 9 Per Hou Easy Work 1
gas
wedng
a
p us
UTAON Inc Ashton WV
Fax esume to (304)576 The Me gs County Counc I

3376

Aenta

$400 month {304)675 5MO

(7401256 1009

e 2004 by NEA Inc

www com1cs com

5366

Arbors at Ga pol s
170 P nee est Drve
Gal po s OH 45631

(7401379-2923

2 bedroom tra ter for rent
New Oakwood mega store W D hookup no pets $350
Homes
by tnonth p us deposit Call
Beautiful A F arne Style leatur ng
Fleetwood &amp;
Home B acres 2 bath arge Oakwood
whlrtpoo tub 2 car garage G1 es One stop shopping
AU elect 1c home natu al only at Oakwood Homes of 2 l&gt;ed oom a electric o4
m es north of Holzer S350
gas
ava1 ab e
on
month + sec depos t &amp; ref
Sassatraa/L evlng Ad (304) 3409
erences (740)446-6865 or
6809 alter 5

~-~~

. mmed1ate openn gs n the

AUCTION

N ce home on SA 160
m e from Hotzar $650 per
month (740)446-6865 or

(Ohio Loans On y)

I

Ga po s a ea E)(pe ence
n stnppmg and wax ng I e
A
1002
BARN A1 7 South 5 m les floors Ca BOO 9Ba 7B47
be ow the Dam EVERY
6pm
Fuel 0 I Furnace not sure I SATUR DAY
It works (304)882 3200
ltaiji0.:-~-----. The Arbo s at Gal pols s
WANJ'ED
seek ng dependable ene
10 8tJy
get C C8 ng nCIMdua S IO
cats Jackson the A cove
lull t me and part t me pos
Book store cat 3 y old
neulered
mate
r ge r Absolute Top Do ar U S ton s We cur ently are ull z
ng 12 hour sh fts We offe
str pped w th wh te Cat S tve
and Gold Cons
compel
t ve wages nclud ng
P ootsets Gold A ngs U S
pay
tor
exper
ence Exce ent
Cur ency M T S Co n Shop
La&lt;ITAND
health and dental nsurance
151
Second
Avenue
401K and pad vacaton If
Ga po s 740 445 2842
nte ested
ca
J mmy
Snyder Stat Developmenl
Found
10 11 04
Blue
Wanted 3 Bed oom house Coord nato a (740)446
HeeerCol e mx Vcmty of
w garage Tuppe s Pta ns o 7 11 2 o come appy n pe
Peasant HI Ad (740)245
Che81e a ea Preapproved son at
f nanc ng (740)949 2194

---------

MB 5263

Pereonal Computer
,
Required
1 800.913 2a23 8lilt 11

Desk clerk needed P ease
2 250 gallons fue 011 tanks Huge ya d sale Sy acuse apply
at
Budget
nn
1n bas emen! not usted Monday Oct 1B 23 50tt bag Jackson p ke Ga pol s No
must take both (304)8a2 ii
saiiile~c;;;
o;.•':':..ofr.oee-.
phone ca Is pease

3200

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1-800-370-41165
CALL TODAV
STAFFED BY US
VETERANS

0

OATAENTRV

YARD SALE

1995 Redman 14x70 1
owner non smoker central
B nte lherm gas fu n 3
lon Co eman heat pump 2
p assure t eated decks &amp;
app ances (740)245 5071

2000 C ayton 14x76 M
NEW PURCHASES/
Home s t on 462 aces n
REFINANCES
Mason County (734)654
$0 DOWN/ SO DOWN 2237
or (7341654 9696
CASH OUTI HOME
IMPROVEMENTS NO 28.c52 Doubewde (convert
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES ed to eal estate) 3 bed
WELCOME I
room 2 ba h eat n k tchen

740.245 5029

$8 000 Mon

r

_.~I ~s~~ I rl.oi·O--~-Ol.SfS-RENriiii-_.1

Or1c outliving 1 and 2 btd
room apartment~ at V lla"'
Manor
end
Pltvtraldt
Apartment• In M dd eport

per month 1 month dllpaalt From $295 $444 Coli 740requ rtCI very n6ct "Oml QQ2 e06A EQua HOUI ng
35ai
Opportuntt 11

(7401H2

Large farml'lou••
3 tltd
room 1 bath $450 pe
p u1
secur ty
month

(7&lt;10)245 11040 (76())992 6244

M ddlepo 1
North
(tl'l
Avenue 2 bedroom fur
n ll'lld apartment O.potlt
and eftrenc11 Na ~tt

(7001992 0165

Nlcl 1 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
Apartmentli etal epact Modern

1 bedroom apt

aloo lor on1 (7&lt;10)1192 3702 Phone (7&lt;10144e.Q3e0

�Monday, October 18,2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, October 18, 2004
ALLEY OOP ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Nice upstaifS apartment. Koles Insulated Metal build· For Sale Ear Corn (304)675- 2000 N1ssan PICk;Up, 5
speed. AM/FM air, Super
quiet area, (740)992-6849
mgs In Hartford WV. Special 1506
Condi1Wln $5,500. (740)446·
Round bales and squares 4782.
S1295
Completely furnished 1nside bales. Call (740)441-7390.
&amp; out Floor wall &amp; roof
Square bales- miXed ~ass, 2001 Dodge Dakota Quad
made w/ 1 31 4 inch metal
Alphapha and dover, $2.00 Cab. 4x2. Call (740)441·
panels. 5/8 plywood on
0712.
2.n.x6 1n. treated floor jo1nts, Round bale· Oats &amp; cbver,
Barn kept, $18.00
4x4 treated runners fo r easy
Round bales - 1st curting, 88 Ford Ranger, good tires,
moving, 2 metal doors lor
mixecl grass, Alphapha and runs good. $800, (7 40)992easy access. different styles
2 70 or Des! offer.
clover. $12.00
&amp; s1zes. wilt bUild to your
Round bales· 2nd cutting·
4x4
spec .. panels are primered I
mb:ed grass , Alphapha and
ready to pam! . hahc1ng ava1l·
FORSAUi
~;:lover, $15.00
able t·304·532-8943.
Round bale - wheat hay,
1971 Chevy 1/2
ton. 5
NEW AND USED STEEL $12.00
speed,
flat
bed.
4WD.
350
Steel Beams. P1pe Rebar Last years round bale . engine . Runs gQOd , · good
$6.00.
(740)245-5047
For
Concrete.
Angle.
tires. 304-675·1295 Or 740·
CtJannel. Flat Bar, Steel
I H \ ' "l'l llll \ \\( ' '
446-3344 $1 .300 firm
Grating
For
Drams.
Dm·eways &amp; Walkways l&amp;L
iO
AlTTOS
1999 Ford Explorer XLT
S~;:rap Metals Open Monday,
~
4X4. Red . CD. excellent co n·
Tuesday We'dnesday &amp; Lw--liri'UiliRO.SIIAIIUiiiio
dition, 54,000 miles . $9,600.
Fnday, 8am-4·30pm Closed
$500! Honda's. Chevy's. (740)367-7090.
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
Jeep's,
Eel .
Police
Sunday (7 40)446 ~7300
Impounds! Cars from $500
Pole Barn 30x50x 1OFT for listings 800- 391·5227
$6395 . nctudes Pa1nted EXT 3901
Metal. Plans. Instruction
Book , Slider Free ~elivery t992 Chevy Lumina Z34 ,
good cond ., White CD player
(937)559-8385
$1200.00 OBO 304-57640 MO'IlJRCYCLE.'V'
8UIWI:-«.;
41 07 or 304-674-3768.
4\'I'Hi:~U:RS
Sum .I~~
1996 While Lincoln Tow n
Bloc~ br ic~ . sewer pipes, ca r.
Good
Condition . 1984 Honda ves Magna
Windows. ltntels. etc . Claude $4,500.00 (740)985-36 13
Black, 1-owner, new condi·

-------One Bedroom Apartment lor
Rent $325Jmonth. landkJrd
pays water &amp; trash . call
{304)675·6668

BxS

One bedroom apartment ,
no pets. in
(7 40)992·5858

Pomeroy.

One bedroom garage apart·
ment, K1tct'len furnished ,
$400, (740)992·3823
Pleasant Valley Apartme nt
Are now taK1ng Applications
lor 2BR. 3BR &amp; 48R. .
ApplicatiOns are
taken
Monday thru Fnday. !rom
9:00 A M -4 PM Off1ce IS
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Dnve Pomt Pleasant. WIJ
fhone No is (304)675-5806.
E.H.O

S89500

or

-·

Lao-tzu

11 Gutter site

Parts

t Driveways t Tennis Courts

i

9162. Free Estimates. Easy
financing , 90 days same as
cash . Visa! Master · Card.
Drive- a- little save alai.
Thompsons Appli ance &amp;
Repa ir·675·7388. For sa le.
re-conditioned automati c
washers &amp; dryers. refrigera·
tors. gas and electric
ranges , air conditiOners, and
wringer washl;l rS. Will do
repairs on major Orands in
• shop or at your home

r

i"\.f"j

11

L--------.....1

Antiques

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

on 2nd Ave
,\ l iddiC'[Hli"L. Ohiu
l-t5N. Se~.:owJ A\c.
Upt•n [) ,ul~ HW0-5 :00

Sun. 1:!:00--LOO
n o~eJ Tu..:~.

lJlJ&gt;:"i 152

COME BY 6 SEE ME FOR
YOUR BEST DEAl ON A
NEW OR USlTJ CAR
Ty Hill

r10

u~

Buy or,. sell. Rivenne
Antiques. 1124 East Ma1n
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740·
992 -2526 Russ Moore.
owner

~ ML'U:I.I.ANFllUS
MERCHANDI.''E

r'I '

FMtM

1972ChevyTowTruck.11/2
ton, excellent working condiIMPIIoVEMENrS
New Idea Two Row Narrow lion, wenc:h works oft PTO,
Corn Picker 304 675-5724 everything
new,
over
$13,000.00 invested . will
BASEMENT
take
58.500.00
OBO
WATERPROOFING
LIVfSfOCK
(740)992-0622
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references fur20 beet cows. 2nd cal l to 8 1999 Chevy 1 ton with 11ft. nished. Established 1975.
year ok:l. 15 blacklbaldies, 5 utility bed, welder and air Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446reds. Bred to a black Main· compressor. $155.00 OBO 0870, Rogers Basement
Anjou bull . $1 ,000 each . (7 40)256 -6403 -7 40 -645 - Waterproofing.
.
0446.
(740/245-9315.

HoME

-

f:wv~ i
Memory

Pauline }. Tillis
Dec. 13, 1923
.. October 18, 2002 :'
I

loUR SALE

EQulPMENI'

2T TV. treadmill, bar stools.
6· 1 6~ 10 ply t1res , Apsen
wood stove. Troy tiller. 8"
Public Notice
slate pool table, row bar, 2
bikes, 1955 cub tractor. NOTICE OF ELECPhone (740)446·1 352 .
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Cash paid for Disn Network
MILL LIMITATION
equipment. Have model
Revised
Code, alec·
number's ready. Toll free
lions 3501.11
(G),
(BB8)569-281 2
5705.19, 5705.25
Notice is hereby
. CheSt -a-drawers. 4 large
drawers [unfinished ). good given that in purof
a
cond ition. from Sears, SSO suance
Resolution of the
firm, (740)949-2607
Village Council of the
Wood Village of Racine,
For
sale
Fire
(304)882-2 537
Ohio, passed on the
2nd day of August,
Go Cart Road Boss 409XL. 2004, there will be
Tecumseh 5 hp . 5450 submitted to a vote of
Mossberg 500 fully·r1lled the people of said
barrel. $100. Volvo, 1980. subdivision
at
a
240DL . $ 1,700 Saddle,
General Election to
$150 . (7 40)446-0910 .
be held in the Village
Hamilton Ra ilway spec1a1 of Racine, Ohio, at the
Pocket Watch- 950-B. 23 regular places of votjewels S995: also black bear ing therein, on the
rug has fel1 backmg, ·111th 2nd day of November,
head and claws- $250 2004, the question of
levying a tax, in
. (740)533-3870
excess of the teo mill
limllatlon, lor the benJET
AERATION MOTORS
efit of Racine VIllage
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In for the ' purpose of
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· Current
expenses.
Said lax being :
800"537-9528.
A replacement of tax
of 3 mills at a rate not
REAL ARMY
exceeding 3 mills for
CAMOUFLAGE
each one dollar of
Sam Somervill e's. Since 1964.
valuation ,
which
· by Sandyville. WV PO. Satellites.
to thirty
TV Sales/In stallation (304)273· amounls
cents (50.30) lor each
5655
.
one hundred dollars
of valuation, lor live
In Memory
(5) years. The Polio lor
said
Election
will
_, open ot 6:30a.m. ond

ramaln

open

until

7 :30 o ' clock P.M. of
said dly. •
By ordor of tho Board
of Electlono, of Melge
County, Ohio
John N. lhle
Chalrpereon
Rita D . Smith
Olroctor
Datod Sept. 5, 2004
(10) 4,11,18,25
Public

NotiCI

NOTICE OF ELEC. TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
RIVII.~d Code, IIICIIono 3501.11
(G),
5705.19,
Notice Is heroby
given lhat In pur-

s7ops

euanee

of

a

Resolution ·of the
Board of Townohlp
Truateos
of
the

and Financial Services
Box 189

Middleport

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

/

-5264

Public Notice

Public Notice
Township of Orange,
Reedsville
Ohio,
passed on the 4th day
of May, 2004, there
will be submitted to a
vole of the people of
said subdivision at a
General Election to
be
held
In
the
Township of Orange ,
Ohlo 1 at the regular
places
of
voting

the

JlJST itiiS
ONCE?
/0·18

BARNEY

Is glviiD 10% OFF
IEPAIIS IN OCTOBER!

LUKEY WON A

MoSS

maS! biiDdS. I.Kitld on It 1bVPass

therein, on the 2nd

and operating ceme-

day of November,
2004, the question of
levying a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the ben·
eli!
of
Orange
Township lor the pur·
pose of Fire protection
Said tax being : 2 A

teries.
Said tax being: 2 An
additional tax of 1 mill
at a rate not exceed·

lutsllll romem. Ohll

Pl:l1401

~nnette's

1fouse Cfeaning Service

renewal of a tax of 2
mills at a rate not
exceeding 2 mills lor
each one dollar of

valuation,

which

·amounts to twenty
cenls (50.20) lor each
one hundred dollars

THE BORN LOSER
Help Wanted

WANTED: Position available to

assist an individual with mental
retardation who resides in the Meigs
High Schut~! Area. 20 hours/week,
split shift (bcfroc and after school).
Mu st have high school
diploma/GED. valid driver 's Iicen se.
three years good driving experience
and adequate automobile in surance.
$7.00/hr. Send resume to: Buckeye
Community Services, P.O. Box 604.
Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline for
applicants: I0/20/04. Pre-employment drug testing. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
Public Notice

Public Notice

ing tax of 1 mill at a
rate not exceeding 1
mill for each one dol-

remain

open

expenses.

cution of the trust,

Said tax being :
A renewal of an exist~

not less than live
days prior to the date
set for hearing.
J.S. Powell
Judge
Common Pleas Courl
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio.
10118

lar of valuation, which
amounts to ten cents
($0.10) lor each one
hundred dollars of

valuation , for five (5)
years . The Polls for

said

Ele.ction

open at 6:30 a.m. and
open until
7 :30 o'clock P.M. of
said day.

remain

Salisbury Township

By order of the Board
County, Ohio

Tr.ustees on October
23rd at 9:00 A .M. will
hold an auction at the
Township
Garage
next to the horse

John N. lhle

barns at the Meigs

·Chairperson

County Fair Grounds.

Rita D. Smith
Director
Dated Sepl. 5, 2004
(10) 4, 11 , 18, 25

Items are:

of Elections, of Meigs

2

Used

Gravely walk behind

mowers, B.C.S r made in

Italy

14hp

walk

behind mower, 3/4 hp •
Public Notice

of Elections, of Meigs

IN THE COMMONof valuation, for five County, Ohio
PLEAS COURT,
(5) years. The Polls lor
John N . lhle
PROBATE DIVISION
said
Election
will
Chairperson
MEIGS COUNTY,
open at6:30 a.m . and
Rita D. Smith
OHIO
remain open until Director
IN THE MATTER OF
• SETTLEMENT
7 :30 o 'clock P.M. of
Dated Sept. 5, 2004
said day.
(10)4, 11, 18, 25
OF ACCOUNTS,
By order of the Board
PROBATE COURT
of Electlona, of Melgo
MEIGS
COUNTY,
Public Notice
County, Ohio
OHIO
John N. lhlo
NOTICE OF ELEC·
Accounll
and
Chalrperaon
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
voucher• of the folRita D. Smith
lowing named fiduciEXCESS OF THE TEN
Director
MILL LIMITATION
ary hoe bHn flied In
Dated Sap!. 5, 2004
Rovload Codl, olocthe Probata Court,
(10) 4, 11, 18, 25 .
tlono 3501.1 I
(G),
Melga County, Ohio
5705.19, 5705.25
lor approval and aetNotice Ia hereby
tlement.
Public Notice
given that In pur·
ESTATENO. 24905
IUinCI
Of
I
Tho 19th Account of
NOTICE OF ELEC·
Rooolutlon
of tho
Jonnlltr L . Shoell,
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
Vlllogo Council of tho
guardian of the per·
EXCESS OF THE TEN
VIllage of Middleport,
aon and estate of
MILL LIMITATION
Ohio, pa11od on the
Oliver E , Bailey, an
Rovl. .d Codl, IIIC•
2nd day of Auguol,
lncompotant.
llono 3501.11
(0), 2004, thoro will bo
Unltll oxceptlono
5705.19,5705.25
oubmlttld to o vote of
oro flied thereto, aald
account will bl ael for
Notlco 11 horoby
tho poor.•• of uld
aubdlvlo on
at
1
hearing before eald
given that In pur·
auance
af
a Gonorol Election to Court on tho 18th day
be held In tho Vlllogo of Novamabr, 2004, at
Rooolutlon
of tho
which
time · eald
of Middleport, Ohio,
Boord of Townohlp
Truot111
of
tho , at the regular piiCII
account will be con·
aldored and contln·
Townohlp
of · of vollng lho111ln, on
tho · 2nd
day
of
uld from day to dey
Columbia,
Albony
November, 2004, the . until finally disposed .
Ohio, pe11ad on the
of.
71h dey of June, 2004,
quoatlon of levying a
Any person lnterthoro will be aubmlttax, In e•ce•• of the
ootod may file written ·
ten mill limitation, lor
ted to a vola of tho
tho
benefit
of
exception to said
people of aald aubdlaccount or to ma«era
Middleport VIllage lor
vlolon at a General
pertaining to the oxothe
purpooe
of
Election to be held· In

,

P"l !mf\E..I'\et:lt - - - - - - - , ~0 &amp;. /',LLOWE..t&gt;
\0 "J\f','( UP
-.JI-\EN l W"-&lt;.:&gt; ,._,
1 u~m..·n1E
KID l C.OULDN'I
\Ot-1 IGI-\I )I-lOW"
WI\\ I \ILL L

f

I· 7 40-843-5382

I

OLD rnouGIL

Porm:ru)
hc~ idt&gt; Larry\ Fruit Stand

Wammty Re-pair •

IT

CDME.5 01'-1 1

'f;;:::'.:;tlu~p · ·.·

Nc" General Slandh\·
Generating Sy ~1 ~111~ ai.d
Rol -Air Air C n mpr..: ~"u r ~
Open 8:30-6:00 M-F:

c

.........,

0

~l'r&gt; kill£ KeflhL'n~ H eater~

Self-Storage
33795 H1land Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232

BISSEll

Hill's Self
Storage

New Homes • Vinyl
Sidi ng • New Garages
• Replacement
Window~ • Roofing

29670 Bashan Road

BUILDERS InC.

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Racine , Ohio

PEANUTS

45771
740-949·2217

S~OULDI-iT EVEN 8E
~ERE ..I'M SUPPOSED

I

M'&lt; PARENT5 ARE DRIVING
ME CRAZI(,CHARLE5~TI-IE'&lt;

:w . . . ~¥10' .

i'tf':tO 10'1!30'

FREE ESTIMATES

7 40·992· 7599

I WAN I ME TO BE PERFECT

TO

7:00

8:00

AM -

BE ~EADIN6

•1VAN~OE''

Hours

KEEP TALKING
W~ILE

I READ
Hl15 LA5T
CI-IAPTER ..

PM

1 14, • mo pd

Campbell

Hausfe ld

air compressor, 1984
Ford 250 van, 214.00X 24 road grader

tires

mounted,

2·

13.00X 24 Road grader tires mounted, 213.00X24 road grader
tires not mounted , 2·
19.5LX24 rear back

.Dean Hill

SUNSHINE CLUB

New&amp; Used

dOOFING
•HOME
MAINTENANCE
•SEAMlESS
GUTTER
*free EStlmltiU
949-1405

1-800-822-0417
Chevy. Pon tia c. 13ul!·k. l)ld..,
&amp; C usrom Va n Ocain"

'
/0 /t!

hoe tires, all items are

GARFIELD

used . 2 Sllhl weed-

eater.
(10) 18
Public Notice
PUBLICNOTICE
A road viewing will
be held Thuroday,
October 28th at 10:00
a.m. to vacate a por·
lion or T-327, Sheell
Road,
In
Salem
Townohlp . Tho porllon to be vacated Ia
beginning at the )unc·
lion
with
T-326,
Pilgrim Rldga Road ,
thence In a northerly
direction 0 .36 mile .
The viewing will be
held at the rood olte.
Tho hearing lor the
vacation wUI be hald
at
the
Comrrilaaloner'a
office at 1:00 · p.m .,
October 28th. du ring
the Commissioner s'
regular
J!leeting .

WHY ARE' CA1'5 50
MY5,-ERIOU5?

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month
Barnhart
Builders
30 year!! experience
•Nt!w Homes
• l.uM Homes
• l,nst ~· rame
•( 'om pll·te N:emodellnR
•l( ~e plut t'llll'lll \\'Indo"!&lt;.
•k nol~

Everyone interested

( wn ml•r dal :mel

Is invlled ·to a11end
both the viewing and
the haarlng .
10/18,25

ftc ult•tlliul ·
~ r~e

Esli111ates

740-667-1\()80

! A~L..OW
WAY

'

I

YOUHG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
' Room Addition• 6
·Remod•llng

• N1w G1r11••
,
• Eleclrlctl &amp; Plumbing
• Roof ing &amp; autters
·• Vinyl Siding &amp; D •I ling
• P1tlo &amp;nd Porch "t:• •
We do It au '· ' ept

furnace

· Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611

992 -6215

Stop &amp; Compare
IMCI

ME ,-0 t::XPI-AIN BY

OF

AN IN,-ERPRE01WE
17ANCE

A

YGIJ

\-IO'N ABOJT,· 5\MI'Lt-/1\1\-\0~P ~I~R
CA~~ \l'J M'-&lt; ~B«
'N\\It/1 13\l\ I CAl-\ ~IlL
't'fA\-1 , T CA\-1
~Eh,i \..1\(t.

.'tMJ

'

c

M'l FEE\'.7

ll'*- 1JI\\i

-n1Ai..

&gt;

9 Diva

ten nil
33

35
36
38
39

sharply

champ
50 Computer
Change
term
hair color
51 Literary
King beater
miscellany
Hall of N.D . 52 Farm
Sales
enclosure
pilches
Lela' s

in biology
rescuer
42 Prejudice
24 Pizza Hut al- 41 Boor
45 l!aUcry posts
ternalive
42 Baby 00\l!!rS

PISCES {Feb. 20- March 20\ Relat ionshipS be1ween you and those
w1th whom you assoc1a1e may no t be 1he
bes1 today because of fee11n gs or restnct•on or of be1ng put upon It won I De
wor lh tang11ng over lhmgs
A R IES (Marcn 21 -Ap ril HI ) - II you'd llkC
to avotd trouble among the ranks. be sure
to garnm everybody's approval today
concermng a decision you 've reached
that would alle~;:t the enl1re clan before
act1ng on 1t
TAURUS (Apnl 20 -Mc.ty 20) - When hop Ing to launch a new 1dea today, be sure to
scrutrn1ze the de ta•ls one last t1me to
make certa1n all loose ends are 11ed up
securely II even one thread IS danghng.
you·l1 be lnpped up
GEMINI tMay 2 1-June 20] - Evon 11
t h1~gs look pre tt y good fm you l lnun~;:Jal ly,
unless you correct any unw1sc spending
hab 1ts today. your ga1ns w•ll eno up
cou n11n g 101 little Don t throw your hard earned mane~· away
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Subdue
yoUI lrlChnatlon s lor mdependence Ieday
and be wrlhng to war"- 111 ta ndem w1th oth
ers. Unless lull coope~ hon IS acl)•eved .
you 're no t likely to make any pe•scmal
hef1dway
LEO I July 23 Aug &lt;!21· - Torlay s 1nllu
ences w111 begu1 weeding out OlOVC(SC
mllucnces thm ha-ve been hOIOmg you
back tram mak•ng progre ss The tmuble
rs you m1yht hghl the c h.anyt;~ rather Than
llow Wll!l t11e1n
VIRGO 1Aug 23-Sei.Jt 221 - Ell&lt;1mn1e
you• m&lt;;;:t•ves carefully today pert.;un•ng 10
yow behav, or tow&lt;1rd yO\'lf &lt;~ssoC,tl l Ps to .
ma"-e SLir i? you re not 1he one. res1rw11ng

SOUP TO NUTZ

redhead

41 ChaHer

Goals thai you set for yourse ll1n the year
ahead Will have much better chances fo r
success than those that are established
lor you by others. unless you can lind
ways to work harmoniOusly together Be
a tea m player
LIBRA (Sep t. 23-0ct . 23)- Your ta11ure
to take a firm pos•t1on on an 1mportan t
•ssue today could prove to De Cleletenous
tor not on ly you. but for those w1th whom
you share th e en terpnse Be courageous.
not vactllating.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- If you're
attempting a task today that requ1res
both mental dexterity and phys1cat
prowess make ~;:e rtain you have both in
~:~lace be fore beg• •wi ri g yoUI pro1ect.
There rnay be no turning back..
SAGI ITAR IUS (Nov 23-Dec 21) - Two
polar oppos 1tes coul d charactenze
today"s events Tread slowly Detore en1er•ng 1nto a 1o•nt endeavor w1th someone
w1t h whom you ve never teamed up
before A maJor clash could occur
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 -Jan 19) Should-an 1ssue ar1se today between you
and your mate. and if quicKly becomes
clear that !here wil l be no resolving it.
postpone decrs1on·makmg lor a few days
until your w1ser heads preva11 ,..
AQUARI US ~Jan. 20-Feb, I 9} - By fa1 l·
1ng to plan properly today you could end
up spend1ng all your productiVe 11me tryIng to l1gu re out the r1ght course'oi actron
The confhct w•ll t,e between du1y and

them fro m ach1eV1ng theH goals as wall

~HE/\\\\

• New Homes
·Garages

.

To \\.liNK oF

A7 1/-oR£ \1-\A\-1 '3U5T A ~IE\-\D

CINSTRUCTIIN

V.C. YOUNG Ill
22 Velrl LOCI I Ex

f1~RI't:1.NT , TO LII&lt;E

ROBERT
BISSELL

~ Jn

Pomirpy, OMIO

All pass

se!t -~ratrf l cat i On

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

HOWARD l.
WRITESEl

Pass

Tuesday, Oct . 19, 2004
By Bernice Bade Osol

Athens

P1c:k-up anJ Jd1H-ry "L'n ll"C

~~~
H~h8l Dry

F...ast

27 Observe

• -Gluck
10 Thumbs-up
12 Good to eal
cousins
19 - a lid on it!
36 Stand up lo 20 Port of TGIF
37 Exullenl
22 Hockey
39 Urgency
goals
40 Kiki or Joey 23 Moulhs,

"'our 'llirt~:

~;)

IMPORTS

SaL 8:30-2:00 992-t033

terrier

AstroGraph

BIG NATE

'· Roc~,ty .''RJ"

Part~

dine

2221 to order

/===f! t=======J

:::[,:. see ....

Pu~h

Mower:-.. Chain Saws.
Chain Sharpened

Nov.

(.I\~( Ot-~1

it

H20 b.;t M ain St.

&amp;

LUC.K'( IF l
C./&gt;\1-l 511\'(
1\WN&lt;:..E. Ut-ITIL

.I

,..,,•• EllgU...

Lawn TTi.Kim &amp;

P"I-lOW , 1'1&lt;\

Public Notice

will

until

7:30 o'clock P.M. of
IBid day.
By order of the Board

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

Help Wanted

Ing therein, on the

.cents (50.10) for each
one hundred dollars
of valuation, for live
(5) years. The Polls for
said
ElecUon will
open at 6 :30a.m . and

TH'

(fonnc rl y Da ve":. Small Engirw

Current

ing 1 mill for each one
dollar of valuation,
which amounts to ten

AT

CARD GAME!!

caveman

43 - - l o r 11&gt;&lt;
money
44 "Green
Gables"

5 Advanced · 28 Makes ends 46 Oil barrel
degs.
meel
47 Blarney
7 Cu«ing tool 29 Crevice
Stone siht
6 Make haole 31 Memorable 48 Increase

30 Wine and

With the end of the year raptdly approach·
1ng. 1fs 11me 1orthe l1rst column that men·
liOns books you m•ghl l1ke a retat1ve or
fnend to buy you tor the forthcom1ng g1f1·
QIVIng penod
F1rst. Mas1er Po1nt Press has put out
three more ~00 -page booklets 1n 1ts Test
Your Bridge Techmque senes by DaVId
Bnd and Tim Bour~e. 'rhe new titles are
"El1mlrlat10n Plays ." ·Ptannmg 1n Su1t
Contracts." and "The Simple Squeeze:
Each starts w1th a short 1ntroduc11on to
tt1e top•c, lollowec! by 36 problems to tacKle.
Here 1S an example from the su1t-con·
1racts booklet. You are South. the declarer
1n lour hearts. West. who opened one
spade. leads the spade ace rwo. four,
five. Judgmg the spade sttua!IOn correctly.
West shifts to the heart queen 1n an
attempt to stop a spade ruff on the board.
How would you cont1nue?
Note South's balancing ttlree-heart 1ump
overcall Thi s ·guarantees at least a SIXcard SUit , w1th some 14-16 h1gh·card
po1nts. North makes an aggressive ra1se
to game.
If you play three rounds of trumps, you will
lose four tr~cks : three spades and one
heart. You have 10 potent1al red-surt wmners, along w1th the club ace. But to run
the d1amonds. you must hrst draw trumps.
In order to do that while keep1ng a trump
in the dummy to control the th ird round of
spades. you mu~t hold up at trick two. letling West take the tnck w1th h1s heart
queen. Now you have an answer to anyth ing he tnes.
The booklets are' available from Baron
. Barclay Br+~ge Supplies. Cal l (800) 274-

YOV/lS~LF

IY

Wllllllllllrll IOIIICCBSSIII'IBS 101

Township
of
Columbia Ohio, at the
regular places of vot2nd day of November,
2004, the question of
levying a . lax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the ben~
elil
of
Columbia
Township for the purpose of Maintaining

•••
CAN'T YOlJ 60
.

oneself
27 Creepier

32 Billy the34 Sedan
35 Cobra

The decorations
are up already

~·,., Tl/l~t&gt;

c1inlc
59 Mal dedeer
15 Silvery fish
16 Church pert
DOWN
17 lloclors' org.
18 Dulch bulbs 1 Guslo
20 Sl&lt;irmloh
2 Surling
21 - a ride
mecca
25 Hall-moon
(Mchhike)
3 Egg-shaped
tide
22 Fjord terr.
4 Deep cleft
26 French I
24 Low8fed
5 Comic-slrip
verb

Vulnerable: Both

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

45760

58 Famous

antlered

31 Whodunit

Openmg lead : •

ensemble
54 Slorage unil
55 Wal...-eof
56 My&amp;11que
57 Fem. saint

13 Fraud
14 Broad·

Dealer: We st

Pass

~9 7 5 Oldsmobile Cutlass. 1995 26 toot

89 Honda Civic $800 st'lape. $5,000 (740)441·
lmpounds/Aepo's
from 0804
$500! listings 800-391-5227
2003 32 fl . Cougar camper,
ext. c548
1 slide out. used 2 mon. exc.
Seasoned Oak firewood for 99 Voltswagon Beetle . Red. cond .. at a good price 304Sale Sfljt and Delivered 5 speed. CD changer. 675-3818
Loc ally $SO a truck load
62,000 miles, $6,500 OBO.
( 3041675 •3508
(740)256-1618 or (740)256· 20Ft Bumper Pull Bonanza
6200.
Camper for Hunting ~;:amp
ll'l:'--::::-'__,_--, $1 .100 call lor details
5
TRUCKS
(304)675·5724

•
... Q9853

Wt:st

Let me clo 1\ for youl

1-800-822-0417

8 ti 4
8 4
i 6 3

I.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
-~
- 4t~~lt~~

•
•

W AKi'jJ2
I AK J
... 7

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

I
M~~MES

lnsbrook
24,000 miles, all original
Gulfstream
5th
wheel
41_67
99_ _ _ _ camper. Sleeps 6, great
_13_0_
_5_·4_3_

Q J)-

Soutb
• 915

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

&amp;

Firewood lor sale. $30 pick·
up or $50 delivered. in most
areas.
Delivery
start s
SeptB. (740 )3 88-8738.

I

•·~Q·~

FoKS.UE

A KJ tOJ

•

• Parking Lots t Playgrounds
• Roads t Streets ·

Auro p,am;

Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
(740)446·7444 1-877-830·

.

• 5 t'
... K 4 2

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Sal. 8:30-Noon
Sun . C l o&gt;cd

10 6
Qi 098 4

... A J 10 6
East

W~st

MONTY

871-2487

Sec Brent or Brian Whale y
M - Fri 8:30-5:00

r

•
.

Henderson, WV

St. R1.68l Darwin , OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Rei&lt;IOC'kin,g l.a le' Model Sa lmge
and .4 fl&lt;•r· ,\Ia rkel Parts

10 13 04

• Q2

PAVIIG

Whaley•s Auto

Twin Rivers To...,er is accept·
ing applications lor waiting
list lor Hud-subs1zed. t · br.
W1nters. Rio Grande. OH 1999 Mercury Cougar LS, tion, rebuilt carbs . 19,500
apartment. call 675-6679
EHO
~Cii:
ai:Ot7;.;4;;;0,:
· 2,:45~·~
51:,:2,:1.;..._ _, _vs_lo_a_de_d_.:._
17_40:._)_44_6_
-0_9_46_
. m11es. $3.BOO (304)882l'lo s
1102
FOR SAL!;
2000 Dodge Dakota Ex.
~~~-----.., ~--xxiiiiiriiiiiriiiiil-r Cab. auto &amp; a1r. $5.495; 99 2001 Kawasaki· 300, 4-..:.4,
_15 10
.
Merci.Jry
Moun tain eer. excellent condition . $2. 700
HOCSEHOLD
Gom~
2 beautifu l male Siamese $5.295;
2000
Dodge ·11rm . (740 )446• 61 15 _
Iaboy pomr k1t1ens. pet qual· Strauss. $2.595; 2000 Neon .
1ty. $25: othe rs ava1la tJte, $2,595; 98 Dodge Dakota 2002 Honda 400 Ex., good
(740)992-62 36. 740·992· Ex. Cab, $4,195; 98 Pontiac condition, $3.500 060. Call
7680
Sunfire. nice. $2.695 : 95 (740)256-6 403
740-645·
Ford F250. $2,995; 95 Geo 0446.
Appliance
AKC Black fernie Lab pup· Tracker, $1,395; 96 Olds
p1es Shots. wormed &amp; dew Bravada. $3,695: 97 Probe.
&amp;
re moved . 5200. $1,695: 96 Dodge work van.
Warehouse claws
ACCESSO~t~
(740) 44H130
$895.
. Tn Henderson. WV
PreB &amp; D Auto Sales
AKC Boston Terrier pups.
Looking for engine or trailsowned appli~;:anes start1ng at
Hwy. 160 N .
mission? Gtve me a call at
Shots &amp; wormed. Black &amp;
$75 &amp; up all under warranty.
(740)446-6865
white. $250. (740)388-8743.
(740)446-0519.
we do serviCe work on all
Make and Models (304)675· Good. lovmg homes. Dusty!. ~~. D~~-g~iltN. ~~·s 6g6~~ Used tires 4- LT 265x7S
7999
Weimaraner, 1 year. lots o
AlB.Firestone AlT.
fun on the ' run! ; Brody, $2,000 080. (740)256·
Good used Appliances. chocolet Lab. neutered, 9031.
4· P245x7R1 7 Michelin LTX.
and 1eves water co., rerre1vmg,
· ·
3· P265x7DR17 Goodyear
R.cond'.t,·oned
Hyundai
Good Wrangler RTS.
Guaran,eed.
Wa shers. waiting to be you r loyal 2000
Dryers.
Ranges.
and friend; 740 _992 _3354 ; Benji. Condition. 34.400 miles _
30::4!"-6_7_5-.,3~354--~-..,
Refrigerators. Some start at Temer brothes Bert &amp; Ernie, $ 3 ·500 (304)675 . 1810
C
$95 . Skaggs Appliances. 76 !year. very smart &amp; loyal; 2003
Mercedes-Benz,
Vine St., (740)446-7398
740·667·9712 (Donation)
24.000"miles. Loaded
-•

i

book
8 Way of

North

49 Bed-and-

breakfast
1 Menagerie 50 Toohalty
4 Robin Cook 53 Muaical

Phillip
Alder

10x12

r

Tara
Town t'l ouse
Apartments. Very Spac1ous.
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
1/2 Bath. Newly Carpeted,
' Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
Pati o. Start $3851Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Secunty
Depos1t ReQUired . Days .
740·446·3481 . Evenings·
740-367-0502

ACROSS

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
1re crsated !-orr J!JillatCI'I t)' •a-:hls :::eo:Jie
EW'l tr..er ,, till!:~~ S"JJ1Cl! lor !I'Gti'W

C@&lt; ~br) CU~er O)'IJIDQ!ITIS

;!11!18~~ J"I!Se"ll

Toa'I VSc4Je E equals N

" RSVSGRSGOR
RKXXMBS

OVE

CP

V E T S. L G E F .

KRPI

SM

GE0 YKI GEF

RSVSGRSGOGVER . "
XLGYVIPYXLGV
BPXMBSPB

CGYY

GEUKGBPB
YTME

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' He got a reputation as a great actor just by
think ing hard about the next tme • - Kmg V1clor. on-Gary Cooper
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc. 10·16

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

T~~~~~:~T S©~~lA-LGt-~~" :~!~

- - - - - - - ldl11d b, CLAY • . POll4N

0

horrc'lge lrllrrs of tht
fou r K t01'1'1bl ~td words below to form lour words .

E

~0

0 l T

' I' I I I I
B_,i,,..-41 :

--.-1M_,,r-C-.-1

1 - 1

~,~=N =r~,=u~cl:'~li.

Humor sh ows that no mat-

=u[

.
. .
. ... ter how high the thron e one sits
-,--::--::-::-:-:-::-:---,on, one sits on one's--- •• -.

GOTNEC

I

I

.

-.,lr-TI-,-.-r,---.-1;--i O

~-~r:-5

Como l•'• 1he &lt;hv&lt;kle GVC &gt;el
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
by frllon'O) on :he m1UinQ W0/1!1
L-l.-..J........J'--'--'--' you de ... ~lop lrom m!;:l No. J be low

6

PI( INT NUMBERED lfl!ER:S IN
tH~lE

lQ UA IES

UNlCRAMSlE ABOVE UTTE1l
10 GET ANsWER

SCRAM-lETS

ANSWERS !:- : ~-

c4

Flunk·; - Scour- Wh ole- Paddle - SHOULDER
A fo1e:-10 o~ ou ;~ s-"'emE:c to by mad at the v..·orld H1s
w1fe toic h1rT. l ha: lhe heaviest loac on e can car-y IS a
chic oc. r's S!-iOU ~ DER

ARLO &amp; JANIS

*~,1\£, Dl ~iY..,_,,'
"'.,,.,..qp.,~

~,_~ S11l~~ll MY'
WlfJD C~IM&amp;~!.'

�. Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 18, ·2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

r

NASCAR: Nextel Cup

It's USC
and ... Miami?, Bt

Busch bounces back from everything to hang on to points .lead
BY JENNA FRYER

UAW·CiM Quality 500 .

Associated Press
CONCORD, N.C tAP\- If Kun
Busch goes on to win his first
NASCAR title, he can ]1&lt;&gt;int to the
500 miles at Lowe·, Motor
Speedway as the dellning rac·c or hi'
season.
Busch rallied from a fender-bender
in practice. a wreL'k on the li rsl lap of
the race. battled with a temperamental call and avoided two ncar disasters.
All in a day's work for Bu,rh. who
emerged from the UAW-GM Quality
500 on Saturday night with a ti&gt;urthplace linish and his lead in 1he poims
standings intac:l.
"To be able to do this with dodging
so many obstacles - it was the
adventure of Kw1 Busch and le&lt;im ...
he said. "We did a good job of _j ust
avoiding disaster as m:my times as it
did .strike. We had to avoid thi s and
avoid that and l'Untinue tu ·make
adjustments on our car."
·
That Busch and his Roush Raci n£
team were able to survive, and leave
Charlotte with a 24-point lead over
Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the standings.

Results
1. (9) Jmroe .Jol'nsoO. Chevrolet. 334, $191 .450.
2.1'23) Jefl Goolon. CheYrole&lt;, 334, $161 .678.
3.
Dale EamhaJdl Jr . Chevrnlat. 334. $155.928.
4 (21 Kurt Busdl. Ford. 334, $110250.
•
5. (8) ..00 Nemechek. COO\Iflllet. 33&lt;1. $112,750.
6 (39) Dale Jarre~ Foro, 334, $1 13.992
7. (5) Elloft SaOOr. Foro. 334. $112,158.
8. {241 Jame McMU""Y, Dodge, 334, $80,625.
9. {351 Jefl Burton. Che;rolet. 334, sn. 700.
10 l1 51 Tony SteWart, Chevrolel, 334, $113.903.
11. 361 Matt Konseth, Foro, 334, 5113,003
12.(311 Smng Marin. Dodge. 334.$100.525.
13. (12 Marl&lt; Ma&lt;tin. Fold. 334 . $74.500,
14.{11Ryan
Dodge, 334.$136,117.
15 (11 1Bobby Hamllon Jr.. Chevrolel333, $88,150.
16. (411 Ricky Ac.dl, Fom, 332,$89,006. .
17.(341 BobbylBbonte. C - t . 332.$103.483.
18.( 191 Actll&gt;{ GO!don, Gr&lt;Molet. 332. $93,137
19.l43 Ward Buf1on. Che;rolet. 331 , $61 ,350.
20 3) Casey Merus. Dodge, 331.$79,400.
21.(301Ken Sch&lt;ader, Dodge, 331. $60,550.
22. (201 John AndreW. Ford, 330. $06,675.
23.(16)- Gaughan. DoO;!e, 329, $69,375.
24. (291 Jolmny Sauter. Dodge, :!29. $60,455.
25.(401 Teny ltlbon1e. ChevrOlet 328, $88.325.

251

N""""".

doesn't bode 11cll rur the rest of the
Chase contenders.
He's snmeh(m managed to avoid
mi,take' and overcome bad breab
thruu~h all rive nf the rirsl 10
NASCAR playorr races. Busd1 ha'
lini,hed in the top I tJ in each of the
events. and head&gt;. imo the stretch run
with victories on three of the remaining five tracks.

26.1421 SooitWinmer, Dodge. 327, sn,375.
27. (32 Kyle Flltly, Dodge. 326, $66.934.
28. t6) Michael I'V!IIOiJ, Chevrolet. 319, a:x:idont.
$91 .991.
29. (22) Jirrvny Sperolr, Ctelrole1. 310, a:x:idont.
$58,050.
.
30. (131 .Jeremy Maylielj. Dodge, 2n. aocidwlt,
$66,425.
31. (14) AuslyWal..... Dodge, 274,$96,633.
32. (21 Kasey Kame. Dod!le. 267, """'"""· $133,050.
33. (18) GAI\l Biflle, Ford, 265, $63.550.
34 {38) KYJe Busch. CheYrolet. 264, accident.
$54,575.
JS. (33) Jefl Groen, Dodge. 238. ecgi1e lailure.
$00,750.
38. (7) i&lt;e.&gt;in H~ ~. 221, ecgi1e lailUre,
$00,793.
'
37. (10) o .... Blane,: Ford. 218, aociden1. $88,007.
38. (4) Scott Riggs. COO\Irolet 30, ergme laHure,
$EI2,022.
'
39. (27) ~n Lepage, Dodge, 25, t;lnilion, $54,290.
40. (17) Brian Vickers, Chevrolet, 22. aotident.
$62.255.

41 . lOTlG~Sad&lt;s, Dodge, 10,acciden1. $54.220.
42. 26 Jeff uller, Dodge.?,- . $54,180.
43. 28 Tony Aair&lt;ls, Cf1evrolel, 1, aocidenl $53,499.

Asked Saturday night as if it was
starting to seem like destiny that he
would win the Nexte\ Cup championship, Busch wasn't sure.
"You've got 10 have the whole
package, and right now we're very
hlessed to he in thi s situation." he
said.
The weekend gu t otf to ominous
start for Busch during Friday's prac-

Major League Baseball: NLCS

Astros even series with Cards
the Houston Astros like this is
a great team.
Bcltrun exacted reven~e
with his bat. He reached d01vn
HOUSTON - By the time and golfed a 2-2 slider over
Carlos Beltran's shot landed the wa iL sending the crowd at
in Houston 's bullpen. this Minute Maid p,lrk into a frenmuch was clear: At least base- zv.
ball had one competitiv ~ · Beltran
broke
Jeffrev
playoff series still going.
Leonard·, 19~7 mark fnr cnriBeltran did it again. homer- secutive po .... tseuso n game:-.
ing in a record fifth stra ight with a home run . and matched
postseason game and lifting Barrv Bonds· 2002 record for
the Astros over the St. Louis homers in a single postseason.
Cardinals 6-5 Sunday to even
Tcl\·arel further an~ered the
the NL championship series at Astros when he thre\1· a fast2-all.
ball ove r the head of the next
Beltran's tiebreaking shot hiller. Jeff Ba £well. Thev
in the seventh inning off exchanged words.
plate
Astros nemesis Julian Tavare7 umpire Mtke Wimers warned
·ensured the teams will gu against further troub le and
back to Busch Stadium to set- play resumed without any
tle who goes to the World problems.
Series.
Dan Wheeler wound up
Meantime. there's Game 5 1~ith the win. pitching one
Monday night. with Brandon inn in2 in relief.
Backe starting for Houston
With Rov Oswalt on the
against Woody Williams .
motJnd. the -A "rn' really liked
Sluggers aga in dom.inated. this pi tching matchup. Yet.
Not quite the way they did at the righty whD led the league
Fenway Park , where th e with 20 wins wa., far from his
Yankees obi iterated Boston be&gt;l - he hun~ around for si.\
19-8 Saturday night for a 3-0 innings and clidn 't s.trike out a
lead in the ALCS.
single hitter for the tirst time
Albert Pujols homered for since .!Ltly 20D.1 .
St. Louis. then came close til a
o~walt \V ~ Il l 2-0 ll!!i.linst St.
go-ahead two-run homer in Luui-, thi . , ..,ea~on. tT1en \vun
the ninth against Brad Lidgc. the clinchin~ Game 5 of the
But the ball was caught on the first round &lt;ii Atlama. But he
warning track. and the Astra' seemed too eager and too
closer .struck out Scott Rolen excited at the stan and neve r
for hi s second straight save.
fpund hi' rh yt hm .
Lance Berkman also homeFnrtunate lv for the Astros.
red for Houston. giving the Ja,on Marquis wasn't much
teams a combined 19 home better. Bumped do\\·n in the
runs through only four games. rqtation after getting hit hard
The exc itable Tavarez upset bv Los An~elcs in Game 2 of
his opponents last week by the opening round. he was in
remarking. ··we don ' t look at constam trou blc aga inst
BY BEN WALKER

Associated Press

Houston.
Cardinal&gt; manager Tony La
Ru"a kept looking for edges.
and a couple of lineup shifts
paid off John Mabry started
in place of left fielder Reggie
Sanders and hit an RBI single.
and rookie catcher Yadier
Molina
replaced
Mike
Matheny and threw out Craig
Biggio trying to steal. and
added a hit.
For the fourth straight
game. the visiting team horliered in the first inning. It was
Pu_jols' turn this time. and he
lined :1 two-run shut into the
Crawford boxes abDve the
left-field wall.
Rolen followed with a double and later 'cnred on
Mabry's single. marking the
first time in 20 innings that St.
Louis scored on something
•
besides a home run.
Pujols was in the middl~f
the Cardinals next two runs.
He walked and scored on Jim
Edmonds' 'acrifice fly in the
t~ird. and hit an RBI single in
\he fourtil for a 5-.\ edge.
Even though he was pitclling with a lead all game.
Marquis stru gg led.
•
Bagwell hit an RBI double
in the first and Berkman doubled home two more runs in
the third.
Berkman 's third homer of
the NLCS pulled the Astros to
5-.f in the sixth against reliever Kiko Calero . •
Houston tied it later in the
inning nn an RBI single by
No. 8 hitter Raul Chavez he is Oswalt \ personal catcher and not known fur hi s hitting. and he c h~ercd himself
all the way down the line .

Major League Baseball: NLCS

Red Sox not finished just yet
BY RONALD BLUM

Associated Press

rice session. With his younger brother. Kyle. in the race and stmggling
with his car during practice, Busch
plilled up to his bumper in an effort to
assess why Kyle wasn't running welL
He lost concentration for a split
sewnd, and bounced off the waiL
His crew was able to make enough
repairs to keep him from going to a
backup car, but it was a very close
calL
Then it took just I0 seconds of the
race for his team to figure oui what
kind of night it was going to be. Scott
Riggs missed a shift on the start, and
his car became an ob;tacle for the rest
of the speeding field.
It started a chain-reaction nash that
damaged the cars of both Busch and
third-place Chase driver Jeff Gordon.
Alter tixing the damage. Busch
found the car w;ts difficult to drive.
Then Kevin Harvick blew an engine
and dumped oil right in front of him,
and Busch had to scramble to avoid
it. He did, but Chase drivers Matt
Kenseth and Jeremy Maytleld could
not, and both crashed.
Then. late in the race. Jimmy
Spencer and Brendan Gaughan
wrecked, and Busch had to dart
through the infield grass to keep from

becoming a participant. Chase drivers Mark Manin and Ryan Newman
didn't, and both were collected.
"It was a tall order of adversity to
overcome,'' Busch said. "I was just
far enough behind some · of those
accidents to stay away - , having a
blown motor in front of us, to have a
few wrecks and just being able to
avoid the disaster. It was an adventurous night and we were able to come
away with a good fin\sh."
Qordon had just as many problems
as Busch. and he too came away with
a strong finish . He ended up crossing
the finish line in second place right behind teammate Jimmie
Johnson - and left Charlotte 74
.
points out of the lead.
Gordon battled back from the firstlap crash. came back from two laps
down. and wasn't significantly damaged in a spin that caused Rusty
Wallace to hit him in the rear.
"That's why this team is so incredible," Gordon said. "I don't know
what in the world happened at the
beginning. We were junk. I got loose,
I got a lap down. and all of a sudden
it just came to life. We didn't gain a
lot of points. but we didn't lose a lot,
either."

" It's like two-a-days." he said.
His campaign literature ties into the football
theme. He distributes 4-by-6-im;h cards with a
photo of him in his Bmwns unifonn wearing
No. 52 on one side. and on the reverse the 2004
Browns schedule and a smaller photo of him in
his /·udge's robes.
" thought that that was obviously something
that would be an altention getter," Ambrose
said. ''It was set up like a football card."
Ambrose. 51. faces an opponent, John l
Russo. who also has some . name recognition
goi ng for him . There are five Russos on the
bench in Cuyahoga County and his cousin
Frank Russo is the county auditor.
Some attribute the political power of the
Russo name to inspection stickers on gas
pumps and cash registers throughout the county that bear Frank Russo's smiling mug.
"That is some form of advertising. It's probably better than being a fom1er Browns player.' Ambrose said .
John Russo. 39. a criminal defense attorney.
said he doesn't deny hi s name has political
power. He also docsn 't fault Ambrose tor using
his Browns career to promote himself.
But with eight contested common pleas
court races on the Nov. 2 ballot in Cuyahoga
County. Russo hopes voters will Jake the time
to look at judicial ratings by various bar associations and not just vote on name recognition.
"I'd like to think that voters are educating
themselves," he said.

MtLtCIA
Associated Press
JoE

CLEVELAND - Judge Dick Ambrose
wants his name to stand out on the November
ballot like an orange Browns helmet in a sea of
Steeler black and gold.
That's why the former · linebacker. who
earned the nickname "Bam Bam" by cracking
his shoulder pads in practice. is using his glory
days with the Browns in his campaign to be a
cmmty judge.
•
A political rookie. Ambrose already knows
name recognition is key to vtctory.
"Unfortunatel y. it is important in a judicial
race. just because a lo\. of people don't have
e.xpenence wnh JUdges. Ambrose smd. "They
don't know who thev arc."
He acknowledges ·his high proJile was a factor in him getting the Republican rarty's nomination and the appointment by Gov. Bob Taft
as a Cuyahoga County Common Pleas judge
four months ago.
'They were looking not only to qualifications ... but also somebody who has the abil ity
to get elected." he said.
•
Ambrose faced Hall of Fame running backs
Earl Campbell and Franco Harris as a linebacker for the Cleveland Browns from 1975RS. He said hi s new job. combined with the
pressure of campaigning. is even more difticult.

USC extends lead over Oklahoma
in AP poll; Auburn moves to No. 3
!API - On the eve of the season's tirst
Bowl Championship Series standi nos. No. I
Southern California increased its leaJ on No. 2
Oklahoma in The Associated Press Top 25 on
Sunday.
Auburn slipped ahead of Miami to No. 3 in
the media poll for the ftrstiime this season .
Last week, the gap between the Trojans and
Sooners had closed to 19 points - the smallest il has been all season - alter USC edoed
Cahtomw and Oklahoma shut out Texas. !3ut
on Saturday the Trojans played their best
~ame, beatmg previously unbeaten Arizona
:.tate 45-7.
The voters_ apparently took notice. USC
recetved 50 hrst-place votes and 1.6 10 pomts
and now leads Oklahoma by ~3 points.
The Sooners recetved 13 IIrst-placc votes.

__.,._

down 10 from last week. and 1.567 points.
Oklahoma beat Kansas State 31-21.
_ No. 3 Auburn received the remaming two
IJrst-place votes and slipped by No. 4 Mmmi
itfter the Hurricanes had to rally for a 41-38
v1ctorv over Lolllsville last Thursday. The
T1gers were 30 pomt s ahead of MI&lt;mlJ Florida
Stale is No. 5. and Wisconsin is sixth after
· winn ing a battle of unbeatens at Puodue.
Auburn .received its highest ranking in the
AP poll smce 1994. W&gt;Sconsin had its best
showing since Sept. I0. 2000. when the
Badger's were No.4. California. Texas. unbeaten Utah (6-0) and Georgia round out the first
I0. Notre Dame moved into the rankings for
the first ume thts season at No. 24, while Ohio
State dropped out for the first time in three sea&gt;Oils.

plenty

(lf cner~y

in

o!J sco red and Ri vGla

~wung

BOSTON _ Down to the ir Fenw&lt;11 Park .
right arm in dis~usl. H ~ ha'
last three outs of the seaso n.
E1·cn Ortit danced home to . bl~&gt;wn just lmu·",avcs in 34
the Boston Red Sox r:lll ied his wailing teammates at po,t,;cason chances. but two
_ agamst Mariano Ri vera . home plate.
have come thi ., year. lie has
the New York Yankee.s and
,This game lasted 5 hours. 2 ]o,l to Boston twice to •
decades of di sa ppointment.
minutes and ended at 1:22 Bo,lon during th e re gular
Bill Mueller si ngled home ·a.m. EDT.ju'i one night after 'sea,on.
· run o f'R'
·
~cw York \ 19-8 win took
Doug- Micntkiewicz fo lt he tymg
t 1ve ra mthe
ninth inning and David Ortiz 4:20. The teams have little lowed with a sacrifice . and
against
Pau l time to get ready for the next . Johnny Damon hit a hopper
homered
Quantrill in the 12th. leadjng one: Monday·, game st~rt s at to fiN that Tony Clark. play Boston to a 6-4 victory over 5: 10p.m.
ing in place of injured John
Of the 25 pre 1·ious teams to 0\erud. fumb led fur an error.
the Yankees on Sunday night
that avoided a four-gam e fall behind 3-0 in a best-of- That left runners at firs t and
.
sweep in the AL. ch&lt;imp i- seven serie'. 20 were s11ep1. 1l1ird.
onship series.
three ·]o,l in fi\e games and
Orlando Cabrer&lt;~ 'truck
Pedro Martinez will start the other two ]o,t in six.
uut. the Yank ees lei Damon
for · Boston iri Game 5
Quantrill. New York'' fifth take seco nd ~llld RamJreL
Monday
against . M i k~ pitcher. relic~ed Tom .Gord,un walked. loading the ba,es for
Muss ina. trying to force the . to '-lart the \_th .md aii O\\Cd Ortl7, who llted to n ght.
WJth ~lme r Ke1th Foulke
series back to New York the a leadotf smg.le to Mann}
following night. If the Sox Ramtrez. Ortt/ '·shot on a 2- · already ha ving pitched 2 2-J
win. injured Curt Schilling i; 1., ptlch landed 111 the nght· mmngs. Alan Embree came
expected ti&gt; be ready to start IJdd bull pen. .
11; and got throu gh the lOth .
Game 6
Bo,ton wa' lac tng the end Curtis Leskantc CSI:apcd an
· Red Sux fans 11 ho had of a di,arpoillling em\ to a \ !th -inning i&lt;tl1l hy getting
been praying. holdin g hand s scas~&gt;ll 11hcn Rtlc:ra \\.tl,cd lk rllic Willianh on a b:"c'and hop ing aga in't hope a Kev1n M1llar v.alked k:tdtng loaded llyoul. then ,lrandcd
few inning' earlier bur'i into oil the Ill nth .
a runner at second Ill the
cheers when on 11 ron nected
Pinch -runner Da1e Rohc n' 12th h)' "riktng IIUI .'llligucl
stole second on the first pllch Cnro.

'

..
'

'

FEMA sets deadline for applications

SPORTS
• Current skid isn't a
first for Ohio State. ·
See Page 81

BY BRIIIN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILY SENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
The Federal
Emergency Management Agency has
received 138 applications for individual assistance from Meigs County
residents affected by the Sept. 18
flood, and has set a deadline of Nov.
18 for those applications.
FEMA observes a 60-duy application period when a disaster is
declared. Since President Bush issued
a disaster declaration on Sept. 19. a
total of $ 191 ,609 in grants has been
awarded to Meigs Countians who
were left homeless or without essen-

DAY, OCTOBER 2
Advertising Deadline is
Wednesday, October 20th.

To Have Your

Business Included ...

~omt lllrasmtt l\egister

(304) 675-1333
&amp;&gt;allipolis tnailv
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(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156

tial goods &lt;llld services in the aftermath of Hurricanes Charley. Frances
and Ivan last month.
Gene Rom;mo, public in format ion
officer with FEMA. said Monday that of
the 138 appliratio1b from Meigs County.
60 housing ao.;sistancc grants totaling
$98,922 have already been approved.
Those grants. said Romano . arc
considered the greatest priority and
cover temporary rental assistance and
emergency essen tial s.
Twenty-six claims have also been
approved for other needs a"istance
grants totaling $92.6X6. he sa id .
Those grants cover medical. dental.

personal property losses like appli-

ances and heating equipmc.nt. alon~
with tran:-.portat ion.
. ._
"This hring' a combined Iota!
amount nf grants to Meig' Cu~1nty
thus far of S 191 .609 ... said Romano.
Acco1:Liing to Mcig~ Emergency
Mana~emcnt Direc10r Robert Bver. at
least ·six homes were t(H all y·
de stroyed in the fla sh and river flooding which devastated areas or the
county in September. The tloods arc
the wor., l to hit Meigs County 'inc·e

c!Jgihlc for ca'h for home repairs and
utlter flood-related needs, including
mcdic:al and dental expenses, personal property repair and unemployment
hencfits. FEMA has awarded more
than \ 19 mill i11n in grants and lowimcre't disa.&gt;ter loans in 18 counties,
including Athe1h. Gallia and Vinton .
Applicaills may call FEMA al (800)
1\21-FEMA between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m.
A FEMA spokesman said Monday the
agency
has begun tll receive a high num! 964. and cau:-.~d sn mc damage to a~
ber
llf
cal
b. reganJing a lack of tempordl)'
many a' 50 humes , and over $2 mil linn in damage to infra~tructurc rental housing in some communities, and
including roads. bridges and culvert,. 'aid FEMA i' equipped to assist those
Those residents affected arc also needing rental housing in tinding it.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~====~

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Alice Garnes, 69
• Darrell Cecil
Hoffman, 77

LoTrnRIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2-2-9
Pick 4 day: 3-3-3-4
Pick 3 night: 7-4-6
Pick 4 night: 1-2-6-1
Rolling cash 5: 16-25-28-31-39

West Vll'ginia

Several who came to Bend Area Crank it Up had extensive and
expensive systems: otl1ers were less elaborate. (Charlene
Hoeflich /pho to )
Fan a Smith. owner of Riverfront Past and Present. inspects a replica of a Confederate uniform
made for Civil War re-enactors. It is one of many unusual .antiques and craft items that fil l her
store in a variety of rooms with different themes. (Beth Sergent/photo)

What's old is new again in the antique business

· Dally 3: 2-4-8
Daily 4: 4-5-5-6
Cash 25: 10-15-16-18-20-23

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAI LYSENTIN EL.COM

POMEROY- The antique
business is booming and
what was once old is new
again. Just ask Fona Smith.
owner of Riverfront Past and
Present at 204 E. Main St.
When customers initially
walk into the store they are
fooled by the small sales
floor. In fact, that room con nects to several back rooms
full of antiques that have different theme s.
For example. one room
has a Christmas theme.
another a Victorian theme.
while still another has a late

-WEATHER

Detallo on Page A6

INDEX

v
2 SECI10NS -

hi\

up

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

12 PAGES

Calendars

A~

Classi fi eds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

1800s feel next to another
decorated to re semble a
kitchen from the 1930s .
Each of these rooms has
been filled with furniture and
figurines from estate sales.
Sometimes the item' are
brought
111
by D:u:ny
Thomas. who has opened up
hi s own amiques store on
Avenue
in
Second
Middleport. Smith credits
Thomas with helping to stock
her store with unique items.
but she also attends estate
'ales as does her daughter to
gather inventory.
•
At time s Smith has even
purchased antiques from clhtomers who visit her store.

During one of thDsc 1 i' its 1ile
purchased an old ,ted whose
unu..;ual runn~,:..., \\ere rounJ

instead of lla1.
Un usual antiques are intermingled throu!!hmttlhe store.
A framed intact Wapakoneta
Dailv 0kws dated Jul v 21.
1969 h:m ~' on the ,t;tirc&lt;tse
leading ur to the loft. The
ncw . . pt~per\ headline rl.'ad"i.

"Neil si~P' &lt;'n the m"on" to
commemorate tile nlllnn
landin g.
P a~t till· \lairca-..c j, a loft
full of a 1ariel} "f antique'
including a baby carriage.
retrn furniture and a Formira

Crank It Up rocks Bend Area
BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MY DAILY SE~ TIN EL. COM
PO~IEROY Pom~rov·,
riverfront 11as tile liveli est
and loudest place around
Saturday evening .ls I (I cars
equipped with stereoS} stem'
nuised into 1o11n for the second annual Bend Area Crank
II Up competition.
For the \50 or ."' who

turned out to see and hear
what's new in audio. it was
all about who had the best in
qual it,· and intensity of sound
as well as 1·o!ume.
Spon,ored by the Southern
Baptist Church. 92.1 WVYK
and Mountain Dew, the event
was judged by H&amp;K Sound
Professional Car Audio of

Please see Crank. AS

EHS Homecoming Court

Please see Antique, AS

Bloodmobile coming Wednesday

I

Long after Sunday turned to Mueller. who lined one up
into Monda y. there was 'till the middle as Roberts easil y

camJl;:ns

at

Former linebacker uses Browns
glory days in judicial campaign
Bv

Presidential
•
•
nng
spen
in Ohio, A6

A6

© 2004 Ohi_o Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - A goal of
60 productive donors has
been set by the American Red
Cross bloodmobile for its
visit to Meigs County
Wednesday.
The bloodmobile will be at
the Senior Citizens Center
from I to 6 p.m.
"The recent llonding.
power outages . and displaced
households have continued tu
interrupt the normal blood
collection sc hedule , stifl ing
efforts bv the Red Cross stall
to rebuild the blood invemories," said Kathryn Solmon.

regional public relatiDns specialist. " ln crea~ing · those
inventorie' is crucial for the
Great Alleghenies Reeio n to
be able· t&lt;; re main re"ady Ill
support blood needs in other
parts of the country also feeling the effects of the hurri c~mes."

Solman ,aid that continued
community support i' needed
Ill help rep leni'h &lt;nid main tain needed bluod 'upplie, .
Over I00 hospitals in a I00
count y r~gion that reaches
into part s of six states. ·arc
serviced through the Red

Holzer Medical Center

Cro" whic:h supplies about
70 to~() JJelWJll of the needs
of all h\ood types exrert 0
ne1:!atin~

\\ hi ch

i~

onh he itH!

filled at 50 percent . ·
•
The inventory supply
charts ar~ showing a critical
need lor OA and l3 positive .
A and [l negative. 0 negati,1·c
remains at an extremely critica l need at a I 0 pcrc:ent
ir'l\ entorv le\'e l.

lndiviZluah who would like
to donate mu:-.t

P~

at

lea~t

17

vcars old. wci~h at least 105
j1ounds and b~ 111 ge nel'ali &gt;
good health .

Eastern High Schoo l's Homecoming Court is pictured following
half-ttme ceremontes on Friday: Juntor Attendant and Escort
Kelsey Clark and Jini Wlll: Queen Candidate Chelsea Young
and Adam Di ll arti. her escort: Queen Candtdate Morgan Weber
and her escort. Ryan Sm1th. Queen· Kayla N&lt;Jve and Robert
Cross . her esco rt: Queen Candidate Abbie Chevalier and her
escort. Andy Franc is: and Krista White and her escort. Cody
Dill: Sophomore Attendant Erm Weber and her escort. Alex
McGrath: and Freshman Attendant i\1ki Young and her escort,
Joe l Lynch. Jordan .Chadwell and Lau ra Pu llt ns. crown bearer
and flower attendant. are also pictured. (Brian J. Reed / Photo )

Respiroto~y Therapy Department's 4th Annual

Respiratory ·Fall Symposium
Friday, October 29 • ·7:30 am - 4:00 pm
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center - Gallipolis
A one-day event that gives respiratory care professionals
the opportunity to learn and review different aspects
and concepts in the respiratory fiekl. ..

.J)iscm ·c ,. I hc. 11 ()izer Difference
www.holzer.org

For more information, or to register, call Sandy Moore at

(740) 446~5919
'

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