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Meigs knocks Off Raiders
in opener. See Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE -The support
group "Enduring Freedom"
recently mailed out 43 care
packages to men and women
serving in the military overseas.
The packages were sent to
local soldiers in Iraq,
Afghanistan and Germany.
"Three-quarters of the
packages we sent went to
local people" said Jan
Cardone,
organizer
of
Enduring Freedom. Still,
some of the packages went to
soldiers Cardone and her
group have never met.
"We don't turn anybody
down" added Cardone who
receives
requests
from
strangers who have loved
ones serving overseas and
have heard about the
Enduring Freedom support
group. Then there are the
local soldiers who befriend
fellow servicemen who do
not have anyone back home
and request a care package

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Above: Volunteers from the Enduring Freedom Support Group
recently sent 43 care packages to soldiers serving overseas.
Pictured from left are Jan Cardone. Kay Warden, Marilyn
McFann , Doug Hunter, Charmele Spradling, Sarah Warden.
Right: The Enduring Freedom Support Group credits Racine

Postmaster, Bonnie Brown with being a big help in finding mailing supplies and getting the spec1al military packages del ivered
to the right people. From left, Jan Cardone, Brown, Kay Warden.
for them.
The care packages were
full of the comforts of home

such as fruit. junk food and
Please see Care, AS

OBITUARIES
. Page AS
· • Bobby Joe Rupe II
: • Bertha Marie
Duffy Grimrrr

INSIDE
• Meigs honor rolls
announced.
See Page A2
• Art show set for
· Thanksgiving weekend.
See Page A3
• For the Record.
See Page A3

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Brian J. Reed/photo

Some of the officers of the new AMVETS Post 733 of Pomeroy are. front. Randall Reiber. Artie
Sias, Robert Marcinko, Mike Johnson , and Delbert Fridley. Back row, Dave Barker, AMVETS
organizer, Mike Miller, Terry Reiber and Max Cale.

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AMVETS post growing in seiVice to veterans
WEATHER

BY BRI•N J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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Detalt. on Page •s

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -12 PAGES

Calendars .
Classifieds

A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

Obituaries

A3
A4
As

Sports

B1

Weather

As

Editorials

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY -A new
chapter of . AMVETS has
formed in Pomeroy, with
hopes of serving veterans of
all wars, and particularly of
restoring medical care for
veterans through a local outreach facility.
AMVETS Post 733 was
chartered in July, and immediately received a state award
as the largest newly-chartered post of the veterans
organization, according to
Dave Barker of Portsmouth .
an AMVET organizer who
helped form the local post. .
There are now 59 members
of the Pomeroy Post.
Barker said the major difference between AMVETS
and other veterans' organizations is that AMVETS
accepts reservists, as well as
any honorably discharged
active duty veteran who has
served any branch of the
atmed services -· including
the Coast Guard - since
1940.
Any current member of the
military, including reservists.

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Please see AMVETS, A5

Charlene Hoefllch/ phGto

With a floral arrangement accented with Minnie Mouse,
Breanna Sayre was a blue ribbon winner 1n the Orlando , Fla.
Disneyland class.

Annual holiday flower show
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - It was Christmas. Christmas everywhere in
the Senior Cititens communitv room o\·er the weekend as the
Mei gs County Garden Club; Association ; taged its annual
hoi iday flower show.
The exhibitors di splayed their talents by creating beautiful
Chri stmas lloral arrangements. man y u'ing bells. baubles and
beads. al01ig with Ullli.'ual wreaths and swags featuring fruits
and flowers. and novel gift wrappings using plant materials.
'' An All-American Christmas· was the theme of the show
with arrangement s depicting through design and accessories
states from one coast to another.
The ··oest of show" award went to Joy Bentley with an exhibition table of Southern hospi tality in the Charleston. S. C.
cia." . Her table picture featured a traditional arrangement of
dried fug i mums with a gold bird uf paradise and white pine
on a lall candlestick.
Please see Flower, AS

Memorial Keepsake Ornament

••
1
II

·
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· · 1 · · · · · · 1 ·=· · · 1 · 1 ·
I

for many men and women
who do travel for care.
According to Max Cale, the
coun ty · Veterans Service
Officer and V.S .O. for
. Pomeroy Post 733 AM VETS ,
the county has provided 159
trips for 26.1 veterans to
Columbus.
Chillicothe.
Cincinnati and Huntington.
W.Va. this vear alone.
AMVETS Post 7J3 has
also taken an active role in
the
Veterans
Affairs
Volunteer Services. which
assists veterans who are hospitalized. and sell "white
clovers·· - lapel flowers
simi lar to the red poppic ;
sold by American Legion
posts - to help raise fund s
for needy disabled veterans .
Officers in the local
AMVETS chapter are Artie
Sias , Parkersburg , W.Va ..
Post Commander: Mike
Marc inko. Chester. Fir&gt;t Vice
Commander: Mike Johnson.
Pomeroy. Second
Vice
Commander: Delbert Fridley.
Third
Vice
Pomeroy.
Commander:
Robert
Marcinko . Tuppers Plain&gt; .

I

.•• . . .• . . . . . .•• . .
I
:

and Coast Guard members. is
also
eligible
to join
AMVETS, Barker said.
''AMVETS has one of the
best records in the countrv in
terms of assisting disabled
veterans with their di~abi I it y
claims," Barker said, "so it's
clear that the organization is
committed to helping veterans in any way we can.''
"One of the local post"s pri mary goals is to encourage
the Veterans Administration
to bring its health care out reach center
back to
Pomeroy. so veterans can be
more easily served."
The V.A. operated an outreach center in the Veterans
Memorial Hospital Medical
·Arts complex on Mulberry
Heights for nine months in
200 I, but closed it due to
budget cuts.
Now, veterans receive care
primarily
from
the
Chillicothe V.A. Medical
Center. The Meigs County
Veterans
Service
Commission pays some
transportation costs for veterans who must travel to veterans' hospitals for care. but the
trip is still an inconven ie nce

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Memorial keepsake ornaments, to honor a special loved one . are once again available through
Holzer Hospice this holiday season . ·Each beautiful ceramic angel is gift boxed with proceeds benefiting
Holzer Hospice. Ornaments are $15 each. Snowflake ornamenis from 2003 are also available for $10 each.

Please call (740) 446-5074 or 1-800-500-4850 for more details or to place an order.
"When someone you love becomes a memory, the memory becomes a treasure."

•

..

�COMMUNI'I'Y

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs honor rolls announced
POMEROY- Honor rolls Travis Tackett, Britlany
for the first nine-week grad- Wheeler, Victoria Wolfe.
ing period in the Meigs Local
Meigs Middle School
School District have been
Grade 6: Alaine Arnold,
announced by Superjntendent Shellie Bailey, Kastle Balser,
William Buckley.
Ashley Bateman-Lee, Olivia
Students qualifying for the Bevan. Cameron Bolin.
honor roll in their. respective Brianna Buffington, Suretta
grades at the three schools · Cade, Hannah Cleek, Valerie
are as follows :
Conde. Nicole Davis. Taylor
Meigs Elementary School Dowler, Nathaniel Eblin,
Grade 3: Josiah Beha. Ashley Edwards, Nathaniel
Breanne Bonnett, Ti shea Gilkey. Miranda Grueser,
Hajivandi,
Wade
Boothe, Courtney Burnem. Hope
Dillon Bush, KirnVerly Harrison, Morgan Howard,
Casci.
Megan
Cleland. Lindsay Hysell, Shelby
Hannah Conley, Olivia Johnson, Kassandra Johnson,
Cremeans.
Kimberly Angela Keesee, Julia Lantz,
Cunningham,
Michaela Marissa McAngus, Jonathan
Davidson . Trenton Deem. McCarthy,
Shannon
Alyson Dettwiller, Devan McLaughlin, Tyson Morris,
Dugan, Brittany Durst, Jarret Chelsea Paterson, Bo-Dara
Durst. Patrick Evans. Isaac Powell, Branden Prater,
Gibbs, Rheanna Harmon, Garrett Riftle, Kasey Roush,
Chase
Hayes.
Bradley Kyle Russell, Austin Sayre,
Helton . Derik Hill , Taylor Brenton Southern, Chandra
Hood. Abbie Houser. Jordan Stanley, Connor Swartz,
Hutton, Sara Klein. Anna Tanner Tackett, Michelle
Little, Brandon Mahr, Andrea Unbankes. Paula Vanmeter,
McGrath. Brett Milhoan . Shannon Walzer-Kuharic.
Austin
Miller,
Daniel Kara Welch , Tabatha Wells,
Morman. Joshua Myers, Jose'Whitlatch. Chri stian
Andrew
Nash,
Caleb Woods.
Perry,
Grade 7:
Pearson,
Blaine
Tyler Andrews, Jeremy
Trenton Prater, Autumn
Preas!, Selena Reynolds , Ash , Kayla Bachtel, Lauren
Christian Romine, Cassidy Barnes. Dawn Bissell. Joseph
Rose, Taylor Rowe, Morgan Blackston, Tyler Brothers,
Russell. Briana Smith, Eric Justi n Cotterill, Caleb Davis,
Smith, Levi Smith, Megan Megan
Dunfee,
Travis
Snodgrass. Samantha Spires,, Dunham , Jacob Dunn, Dustin
Katlynn Stanley, Carolann Eads. Autumn Ebersbach,
Stewan, Carly Taylor. Nikkie Kri sten Eblin, Dale Elli s,
Walker, Shannon Walker, Joshua Frederick, Darby
Jamie Walters, Tara Walzer- Gilmore , Kayla Graham,
Kuharic, Nikki Wayland. Veronica Grimm, Megann
Dyllon Wendell. Brianna Halley. Shawn Hawley.
Werry, Cody White, Darriri Charles Hayes, Benj amin
Will , Valerie Wolfe, Tori Hood,
Bradl ey
Hood.
Young .
Benjamin
Jacks,
Ryan
Grade 4: Casi Arnold. Jeffers. Scott Kennedy,
Braden Baker, Matthew Pamela Kessinger, Trinity
Casci, Alyssa Cremeans, Kimes. Annisha Kopec, Cody
Allyson
Davis,
Robbie Lee, Christina Lewis, Shelby
Dillon. Megan Dyer, Codey Ohlinger, Erin Patterson,
Fink, Kacy Fink, Chris , Jennifer Payne. Jacob Riffle,
Folmer, MaKenzie Greene, Latricia Smith. Ashley Smith,
Justin Hettinger, Ashley Cayla Talor. Jaco b Well ,
Jeffe rs, Matthew Keesee, Zachary Whitlatch, Michael
Corey King. Hannah King. Wills II, Kelsey Wilson.
Meranda King, Anthany
Grade 8: Jami e Bailey.
Lane, Adam Little, Jordan Clayton Bolin, Adrian Bolin ,
Meadows, Alexander Morris. Chad Bonnett. Crockett
Jacob Mulholland, Kasey Crow, Le' Anna
Davi s,
Napper, Shawnella Patterson, Kenneth Delong, Stephanie
Emma Perrin, Tess Phelps. Donaldson, Jennifer Fife,
McKayla Powell. Devin Amanda Gilkey, Tisha Han,
Price, Tyler Price, Keana Amber Hockman, Lian
Robinson, Kaitlin Russell , Hoffman, Jessica Holliday,
Chad Lilly
Jacks,
Morgan
Ashleigh
Sayre,
Searles, Maggie Smith, Kyrie Kennedy, Morgan Lentes,
Swann, . Madelyn Thomas, Caitlin Leslie, Ashley Life,
Dustin Ulbrich, Devon Jahnna Lydic , Courtney
Varney, McKenzie Whobrey, Mayer, Mason Metts, Jason
Haley
Will,
Autumn Morris, Andrew O'Bryant,
Williams, Zach Yeauger.
April
Oiler,
Alexandia
Grade 5: Brandon Bachner, Patterson,
Raymond
Leah Barley, Charlie Barrett, Patterson, Eric Priddy, Calee
Cheyenne Beaver, Darienne Reeves, Chelsea Smallwood,
Betzing,
Bruno
Casci , . Caitlin ·swartz, Kimberly
Samantha Chabot, Olivia Swisher, Tess Thomas, Eric
Cleek,
Terrie
Craig , Tolar, Josi Vanmeter, Jessica
Kimberly Curl, Michael Wagner, Catie Wolfe.
Davis, Tara DeMoss, Tyler
Meigs High School
Dunham, Chelsey Eads,
Freshman: Jacob Barnes,
Justin Ellis, Andy Fairchild, Amy Barr, Talisha Beha,
Emalee Glass, Jessica Grant, Rebecca Hanstine, Kaylee
Karl
Gueltig,
Rona ld Kennedy, Kirk Legar, Steven
Hart ing, Cody Harming, Stewan, Alexa Venoy
Raynee Herman. Michelle
Sophomore:
Krystal
Hilyard, Stephanie Hoalcraft, Bail ey, Daniel Bookman,
Marlee Hoffinan. Cassidy Ashley DeMoss. Cory Dill ,
Hood, Cody Hysell . Taylor Dane Eichinger.
Kayla
Keilah
Jacks ,
Jones. Jeffrey Kimes. Ashley Gro ver,
King. Austin King. Samantha Katherine Kibble , Bethany
King, Steven Mahr, Cody Kin g, Matthew Landers,
Mattox. Tanisha McKinney. Luke
Lowery, ,Chalsie
Tiffany McKinney, Trav is . Manley, Nicholas McKnight,
Mitchell. Kassandra Mullins. David Poole, Raben Reed,
Justin Myer,, Brady Norville , Jenn ifer Smith, K.rysta Still,
Timothy Parsons, Ben Reed. Tanisha Thomas
DiJuan Robinson , Jenni fer
Junior: Wes Ault, Nathan
Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb, Becker, Miranda Beha, Stacy
Jeffrey Roush. Zachary Black, Samantha Cole, Holly
Sayre, Mackenzie Se llers, Davis, Sarah Eskew, James
Kayla
Shane,
Zachary Fife, Carita Gardner, Tyson
Sheets, Cayelynn Smith , . George, Brandon Goble .

.

PageA2

,. .
••••.. • .. Thanks to everyone for your vote of
confidence during my campaign for
Meigs County Sheriff.
Lookin~ forward to your continued
support In the future

i
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JEFF MILLER l
Pd for by the candidate

! !ATIENTION!!
BE YOUR OWN BOSS
BUSINESS SOLUTIONS FOR NEW
AND ExJS'nNG ENTREPRENEURS
CALL FOR FREE CONSULTATION

I

,.!

Monday, November 22 ,

2004

Bank, restaurant honor EHS students

Anna Hartenbach, Brittney
Jacks,
Nathan
Jeffers,
Kimberly Johnson, Joshua
Kennedy, Jacob Kennedy,
Taryn
Lentes,
Meghan
Leslie, Kayla McCarthy,
Autumn
McLaughlin.
Brooke O'Bryant, Adrean
Reese,
Jordan
Shank.
Stephanie Snider, Whitney
Scott
Tobin ,
Thoene,
Leonard
VanMeter.
Christopher
VanReeth,
Miranda . Young, Sheila
Zeigler
SeniQf: Emily Ashley,
Renee Bailey, Troy Barrell,
Jeffrey Baughman, Ashley
Baylor, Jeremy Blacks'ton,
Jenny Bowles, Jennifer Cade,
Raymond Colwell, Mirinda
Davis, Trevor Depoy, Patrick
Dowell , Zachary Dunham,
Eddie Fife, Meli ssa Gow,
Amber Handley, Randy Han,
Andrew Henderson, James
Hicks, Amanda Hoyt, Kayla
Icenhower, · Aaron Ihle,
Glena Jarvis,
Ashliegh
Kimes,
Madison
King,
Amanda King, Cassie Lee.
Casey
Manley.
Megan
Mayes, Joshua Ne utzling,
Carl Noel , Samantha Pierce,
Katie Reed, Clare Sisson,
Buford Smallwood, Matthew
Thomas, Paula Weaver,
Curti s Welch, Elizabeth Well,
Ross Well, Lindsey White,
Nicki Wilson. Jennianne
Young.

TUPPERS PLAINS Smith
and
Casey
Chelsea Young have
been named the first
Farmers
Bank/Wild
Horse Cafe Students of
the Month at Eastern
High School.
Smith is the daughter
of Tom Fitch and
Danielle
Smith , and
Young the d11ughter of
Randy and Patti Young.
They are seniors. and
were selected randomly
among the top 18 student s in the class.
They were awarded
cenificates of recognition
and received lunch, with
their parents, at Wild
Horse Cafe. The monthly recognition is sponsored by the Tuppers
Plains bank branch and
the Pomeroy restaurant.
Smith is active in volleyball, softball and basketball , 'and is a member
of the National Honor
Society and
Student
CounciL Young serves
as president of the
Student Council and is a
N.H .S. · member. She
also plays volleyball.

Brian J . Reed/photo
Chelsea Young, left , and Casey Smith, right, were recently honored
with a luncheon at Wild Horse Cafe as the Farmers Bank/Wild
Horse Cafe Students of the Month. Also pictured are Young's parents, Patti and Randy Young, Smith's parents, Tom Fitch and
Danielle Smith, Eastern Principa l John Lindner, Farmers Bank
President Paul Reed and Tuppers Plains Branch Manager Betsy
Kearns, and Lorna Hill, dining room manager for the restaurant.

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Other events

Monday, Nov. 22
POMEROY
-Meigs
County District Library
Board, regular meeting, 3
p.m ., Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Village Council will meet at
· 7 p.m. at the water treatment
plant in Syracuse.
RACINE - The Southern
Local Board of Ed ucation
will meet in regular session at
7 p.m. Monday.
POMEROY - A Title I
No Chi ld Left Behind
meeting wil l be held for
the Meigs Loca l School
Di stri ct from 4 to 6 p.m.
at the
Meigs Local
Elementary
School.
Information wi ll be give n
on Title I , the Meigs
Local report card, highly
qualified teachers, scien, tifically based resea rch
and data driven decision
makin g. Title I teacher s
will be avai labl e to
answer questions from
parents during th e meeting
called by Dr. Wendy
Carper-Haler,
ass istant
superintendent.

1\Jesday, Nov. 23
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct a Childhood
Immunization Clinic from 9
a.m. to II a.m. and I p.m. to
3 p.m. at the health depanment. Please bring children's
shot records . Children must
be accompanied by a
parent/legal guardian. Please
bring medical cards if applicable. A $5.00 donation is
requested but not required.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School's 40th
ann ual
National
Honor
Society induction will be held
at 9 a.m. on Tuesday. All
E.H .S. alumni are invited to
attend the ceremony and luncheon to follow.

Clubs and
organizations

)"

. ..

CHESTER - The annual friendship mee'ling of
Distri ct 13 Daughters of
America was held recently
at the Chesler hall.
lnzy Newell, council or,
opened the meeting in ritualistic form. Received officially were Esther Smith ,
di strict
deputy;
Doris
Grueser, nati onal legislative
committee;
Mary
Jo
Barrin ger, state associate
coun cilor; JoAnn Ritchie ,

with ,urcha..,
delivery

.,"'
ll

\

•
f

DEAR ABBY: A year ago, I
that I we nl to 'ee the other
lost my wife of 16 years to
family. because she would no
cancer. "Ethel " and I didn't
longer 'peak to me. and I don't
have a perfect marriage, but
want her mad at me . My par·
we worked at i1. We both had
enh had an extremely bitter
grown t:hildren from firs t mardivorce . Mom 'till hold' a
Dear
riages. We also had a chi ld
grudge, and she expech me to
Abby
together, a boy, "Ben ," who is
a&gt; we ll.
13.
I am being married 'uon.
Last spring I began seeing a
. and now I am being forced to
very nice lady I'll call
. choo'e between my mom and
Blanche. Ethel's daughters they are Jess than thrilled.
my biologkal father. I wou ld
have little to do with me since
Sunday, Nov. 28
Family counseling might like everyone to he there. and
CARPENTER - Jim Eden their mother's death and are be helpful for you. your son, for my "epdad to walk me
of Charleston, W. Va. will be in encouraging Ben to be rude and Ethel's daughters if they down the ai;lc. My fiance
concen at 6:30 p.m. at the Mt. and distant to Blanche. I real- are open to it. Should the likes my hiolugical father and
Union Baptist Church near ize Ben has issues, but I have "g irl s" refuse, go with Ben . hi s side of the family and
Carpenter. Refreshments will be tried to explain to him that life He is sti ll young, and he lost wants them all to be there. too.
served following the service. For goes on. Blanche is not trying his mother at a time when he . I am stuck in the middle. What
more information contact Pastor to replace hi s mother; she still needed her. You are prob- should I do 0 - IN THE MIDDavid Wiseman. 740-742-2568. would like to be his friend.
ably further along in the griev- DLE OUT WEST
My question is, when ing process than your son
DEAR IN THE MIDDLE:
should !tell my in-laws ahout because you had a chance to It's time to grow up and tell
Blanche?
grieve for your wife during your mother what you did .
To everyone reading th is: If her illness.
Although the divorce was
1\Jesday, Nov. 30
at all possible, become a donor
For Ben's sake, I hope you devastating, you have the right
COOLVILLE - Dora M. of some sort. My eternal
take
your time before remar- to know your father and paterCalaway will observed her thanks to the caring individual
rying.
He apparen tl y needs nal relati ves if you wish. Ask
89th birthday on Nov. 30. who gave his bone marrow to
more
time
to adjust and to her, as her wedding gift to you.
Cards may be sent to her Ethel in an effon to save a understand that
the new lady
home at 42-320 Stale Route 7, complete stranger. God ble ss in your life is not a threat to his to bury her enmity for one day
Coolville, Ohio 45783.
so you can have the wedding
you . - NEEDS TO MOVE mother's memory.
DEAR ABBY: 1 mel my of your dreams. Many other
ON IN CONNECTICUT
DEAR NEEDS: Ethel's biological fa ther last June, families have done this, and
daughters most likely have after waiting 15 years to do so. the experience can be heal in~; .
Dear Abby is written by
already told your in-laws His side of the fam ily was
very
warm
and
welcoming.
Abigail
Van Buren , also
about Blanche, so you shou ld
Dec. 4 at the Chester tell them the "news" now. If They treated me as though known as Jeanne Phillips,
Courthouse.
you don' t. it will appear that they had known me all my and was founded by her
An auction was held fol- you are sneaking around li fe. ! was nervous about meet- mother, Pauline Phillips.
low ing the meeting. Others and it' s important not to create ing them. so I took my Write
Dear Abby at
attending the meeting were that impression. It may be boyfriend . They treated him www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Mary Jo Barringer, Esther painful for Ethel's relatives to like fami ly too.
Box 69440, to.~ Angele.~, CA
Harden, Charlotte Grant, hear, s~· don't be surprised if
I have not told my mom 90069.
Laura Mae Nice. Mary
Holter, Goldie Frederick ,
Erma Cleland. Helen Wolf,
Coming Thursday in the Tribune ·Bette Biggs.
Delores
Wolfe, and Everett Grant.
Members
enj oyed
a
potluck dinner.

Church services

Saturday, Nov. 27
MIDDLEPORT - A public art show will be held at
the Riverbend Arts Council,
239 N.
Second Ave .,
Middlepon, I to 5 p.m. on
Nov. 27 and 28. Local anists
and
photographers
will
exhibit. Art students will also
participate in the show.

past state councilor; Jean
Welsh. slate credential committee; Helen Wolf, state
audit committee.
Margaret Amberger who
has been hospitalized was
reponed ill , and the death
of Marcia Keller was noted.
Plan s for a spring rally
on April 23 in Ponsmouth
were discussed. The district deputies and past
councilors' Christmas dinner
was announced for noon on

membership/outreach.
Mary Jo Barringer, pres ident. conducted the meeting
with UMW purpose being
read in · unison.. Roll call
was taken with 78 friendship
calls being reported, and
officer reports were read.
It was reponed that the
Chester UMW is considering
a merger with the Alfred
UMW. The group approved.
Members signed a prayer

Birthdays

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entertainment In the Tri-State

birthday card for Jean Riley
of New Mexico. Plans for
remembering shutins at
Christmas were di sc ussed
and for the program members read thanksgiving articles. Next meeting will be
Dec. 14 with a potluck and
secret sister gift exchanges.
Pastor Jane Beaty gave the
blessing before potluck
refreshments.

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There will also be a section
for students who are enrolled
in the classes being taught by
McClure.
The free exhibit will be open
for public viewing I to 5 p.m.
both Saturday and Sunday.

MIDDLEPORT The
Riverbend Arts Council will
host an art show Thanksgiving
weekend in the Council headquaners at 239 Nonh Second
Ave., Middleport.
Local artists who will be

participating with ac rylics,
oils, pastels, watercolors, and
sculptures
will
include
Rhojean McClure, Julie proctor, Delores Long, Scott
Needs, Becky Edwards and
Marianna McDonald .

Local Briefs

Marathon Ashland clearing trees
from 1,100 miles of Ohio pipeline

COLUMBUS (AP)
Federal security guidelines for
pipelines carrying hazardous
substances are bad news tor
many homeowners whose
expensive land&lt;;eaping ha~ to go.
Federal regulations on
pipelines
for substances such
POMEROY
The
as
natural
gas and gasoline
Meigs
County . Healt h
require the pathways to be
Department will be closed clear of trees or other vegeNov. 25 -26. Normal busi- tation that might obscure
ness operations will resume tampering or pose a fire hazat 8 a. m. on Nov. 29.
ard in case of leaks.
But before the Sept. II terrorist attacks. many pipeline
companies were lax about
enforcing those policies.
POM EROY - A total of
In response to federal calls
700 children received toys for more scrutin y, Findlay,
through the Toys for Tots Ohio:based
Marathon
program in 2003 . Each Ashland Petroleum LLC plans
chil d received several toys. to do aerial surveys of its
The figure was incorrectly 6.000 miles of natural gas
reported in a story in The pipelines , including I, 100
Dail y Sentine l abo ut the miles that run through 45 of
Ohio's 88 counties _ That
program.

Correction

$69
full ea.pc. . .... $99
set. •.... $379

Widower with new companion
has issues with old family

Art show set for Thanksgiving weekend

,.

Health
Department
closing for
Thanksgiving

Twin ea. pc. .. ..

2004

DofA holds friendship meeting

ALFRED - New officers
were elected at the recent
meetin g of the Alfred United
Methodist Women held' at
the church.
Elected were Mary Jo
Barri nger, president; Ruth
Brook s.
vice-president ;
Janice Weber, secretary ;
Osie Mae Fallrod, treasurer; Sarah Caldwell, spiritual growth/reading program;
and Thelma Hender son,

·-

Monday, November 22,

1\Jesday, Nov. 23
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School's National
Honor Society will hold its 40th
annual induction ceremony at 9
a.m. in the school gymnasium.
A special invitation is being
given to all National Honor
Society, alumni of Ea'tem.

UMW elects new officers

Serta

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel·

means vegetation for 25 feet
on either side must go.
The small flags that went
up along the route in recent
weeks - and rapid felling of
trees - came as an unpleasant surpri se for some angry ,,
homeowners.
&gt;
·'·
7-:,
When Timothy Heer bought :~:.-:;
his Columbus home five years i .~~
ago, the title did not show
Marathon Ashland's legal
rights to the pipeline pathway.
So he spent thousands of dollars on a play set and gardening among his fruit trees which will soon be cut down.
The title compan y has
agreed to pay him any loss
of appraised property value.
It's not easy for homeowners to catch such mistakes.
because compan ies keep
secret the maps detailing the
exact pipeline locations again because of security concems.

For the Record
Appointed

Foreclosure

POMEROY - Meigs County Common
Pl ea' C&lt;ILirt- Judge Fred W.. Crow Ill ha'
· appoin ted Mickey Williams to a five-year
term on the Meigs Count y Veteran' Service
Comni ission. to a term expiring Dec. 31.
200'1.
Janice Young of Re e•.hvi lle and
Chrrstopher T. Wo lfe of Racine l1ave heen
appoi nted to serve on the count(s jury commission.

POMEROY - A foreclos ure wa' gran ted
in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to
The O hio Valley Bank against Wayne Sider, .

Dismissed
POMEROY - Civil cases filed by Tonya
. Runyon. and others, against Su-dudc·r W. Linlc. and
others. tmd Tonya L. Fuller. agai nst Carolec S.
Richard.,. have heen dismis;;ed in Meig' County
Common Plea' Cmnt

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily ·sentinel
1 t1 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2151
www.mydailysenllnel.com

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establiJhment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof;'I" abridging the freedom
of ~peech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Go11ernment for a redress ofgrievimces.
-The First Ame{ldment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY lN HISTORY
Today is 'Monday, Nov. 22. the 327th day· of 2004. There are
39 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History :
·
On Nov. 22, 1963, President Kennedy was shot to death
while riding in a motorcade in Dililas. Texas Gov. John B.
Connally, in the same limousine as Kennedy,. was seriously
wounded. Suspect Lee Harvey Oswald was arresteQ.
On this date:
·
In 1718, English pirate Edward Teach, better known as
Blackbeard. was kiOed during a battle off the Virginia coast. ·
In 1906, the "S-0-S" distress signal was adopted at the
International Radio Telegraphic Convention in Berlin.
Ih 1928, "Bolero" by Maurice Ravel made its debut in Paris.
In ·1935, a flying boat, the "China Clipper," took off from
Alameda, Calif., carrying more than I00,000 pieces of mail
on the first trans-Pacific airmaiJ.tlighr.
·
In 1943, President Reosevelt, British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill and Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek met
in Cairo to discuss measures for defeating Japan.
In 1943, lyricist Lorenz Hart died .in New York at ag!l 48.
In 1975, Juan Carlos was proclaimed King of Spain.
In 1977, regular passenger service between New York and
Europe on the superso'nic Concorde began on a trial basis.
In 1990, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. having
failed to win re-election of the Conservative Party le~dership
on the first ballot. announced her resignation.
In 1993, Mexico's Senate overwhelmingly llpproved the
North American Free Trade Agreement.
Ten years ago: A gunman opened fire iJ.lside tile District of
Columbia's police headquarters: the resulting gunbattle left
two FBI agents, a city detective and the gunman dead. Serb
lighters in northwest Bosnia set villages ablaze in response to
~ retaliatory airstrike by NATO.
.
Five years ago: During a visit to the former commumst
country of Bu)garia, President.Ciinton promised tens of thousands of cheering Bulgarians in Sofia that "you, too, shall
overcome" in their difficult struggle for democracy and prosperity.
·
One year ago: The Medicare prescription drug bill narrowly passed the House. 220-215. following a dusk-to-dawn
debate. Thousands of mourners gathered m downtown Dallas
along the street wllere President John F. Kennedy was assassinated 40 years earlier. College student .Dru ,Sjodin disappeared while leaving her job at a Grand Forks, N.D., mall.
·(Her body was found the following April; a suspect, Alfonso
Rodriguez Jr., has pleaded innocent to kidnapping resulting in
Sjodin's deafh.)
·
Today's Birthdays: Rock musician Tina Weymouth (The ·
Heads; Talking Heads; The Tom Tom Club) is 54. Actress
Jamie Lee Curtis is 46. Rock singer Jason Ringenberg (Jason
,&amp; the Scorchers) is 46. Actress Mariel Hemingway is 43.
Actor Steplien Geoffreys is 40. Roc.k musician Charlie Colin
is 38. Actor Nicholas Rowe is 38. Actor Mark Ruffalo is 37.
Tennis player Boris Becker is 37-. Actress Scarlett Johansson
is 20,
·
Thought for Today : "In youth we feel richer for every new
illusion; in maturer years, for every one we lose.'' - Anne
Sophie Swetchine. Russian-French author (1782-1857).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. · No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel ~
Reader Services
Correction Policy

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon, Monday
accurate. If you know of an error in a through Friday, t 11 Court Street,
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992· Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
2156.
paid at Pomeroy
Member: The Associated Press and the

Our main number Is
(740) 992•2156.
Department extensions are:

. .News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Ohio Newspaper Association
Postmaslar: Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel. 111 Court Street,

Pomeroy, Oh10 45769.

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Monday, November 22,

'

Dia~
West
.
ered by U.S. snldiers, the
Taliban-like decrees threat. ening deatll for Fallujah
women who don't "cover,"
or the bomb-making workshops seized before creating
more crater! of ca,·nage.
They emote over the death
of a terrorist dedicated to .all
of the above. . .
Seeing may be believ~l)g ,
but a minute of video doesn't
tell the whole st()ry. And the
whole story is not that an
American soldier stormed a
house of worship io shoot a
pious Fallujah citizen in cold
blood - the ."w&amp;r crime" we
are led to imagine ha ~ happenell. The mosque s~rved
as a fort;· the citizen ·was an
appa~\,intly wounded, apparently dangerous combatant;
and the Marine was fighting
the urban war of his life.
. Even . . so·; ·. .Amne~ty
lntemalional is already tsktsk-ing that "this latest inci dent is just a further
reminder that one cannot
take it for granted that troops
... will strive to aoide by fhe
... law," while the United
Nations. naturally. has called
for an investigation into
alleged "abuses" by U.S

troops
in
Fallujah.
(A nything to (ietract from
the gr?stes.querie~ 9f the
U.:t'/. 01i-for-Food M:andHI.)
\ Meanwhile. · Army Gen.
Oeorge W. Casey' Jr.. U.S:
military comma~der in lraq,
h_as too, quickly co n~eded
that tl)o;, , shooting was a
''tragic itlcident," while U.S.
Ambassador to Iraq Joh'o
_Negro.ponte makes it souM
a&amp; if fhe Marine now under
military" investigu!ion . is
practically guaranteed a
stretch of ltusting ~ocks at
Fort Leavenworth : "The
impOrtant point is that · the
indi v.idual iil question ~ill
be dealt with," he said. "B.ut
l don't think that (the incident) in any way. is a ~e(ICF.tion on the 1\UaltCy and taliber of absolutely fine young
servic~meQ" blab, blah, blah.
Frankly. 1 think it is. But
that's a good thing . In ot~~r
words. I ha~ heard nothing,
n~da, ri kb .that indicates this
MarlQe was doing anything
besid~s . trylog to preserve
life aDd limb in his unit
while fighting to wrest control Of Fallujah for liberated
'
Iraq.
"ln a ..:ombat infantry solt:lier's training, he is alway.s
taiJght that his enemy is -ut
his most dangerous when he
is -severely wounded," commented Charles Heyman, a
senior analyst with Jane's
Consultancy Group · in
Britain. And the jihadist
enemy we· find in Iraq comrade in both faith anil
arms with the terrorists of

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Obituaries

Self-difense on and·qff the battlifield
II\'I he' space between the
fog of war (confusion, peril
and instant reflex~s) and the
edit~q news break. (carefully
scripietl and produced tiller
between Viagra commercials), a young Marine hangs
out to dry.
.
Maybe l should say he
hangs crucified, although
.that particular mj!taphor
these days isn't just politically incorrect, it's mdioactive.
· But what . I'm getting at, in
this land of free speech and
home of brave Marines, is
my unequivocal belief that
Marine X c·orumilted no
"war crimes" in that forti lied
Fallujah m~ue last week
where he shot and killed a
·prone and wounded terrorist.
.He was just doing his jobhis hellish! y dangerofis job
- and thank God for him.
This is hardly tbe consensus view, at least not the one
that is actually spoken out
loud. And I don't mean just
on AI Jazeera, where the
NBC News "get" of the
week - a video sequence of
the Marine in question
shooting a wounded Fallujah
fighter after shOuting that the
man was "fa)dng" his incapacity - has been airing at
half-hour intervals as if it
were fhe Lost Episodes of
Abu Ghraib. ·"Enlightened"
people everywhere are
clucking - but not over th~
heinous
execution
of
CARE's Margaret . Hassan,
the mutilated ·bodies found
on Fallujah's streets, the
beheading chamber discov-

Monday 1 November 22, 2004

Flower
from Page A1

Bobby Joe Rupe II

Beslan. Bali. Jerus,Mm,
Madrid· an/J Manhallan - are even more cktngenms
wou11ded than others.
Some are rigged with snicide-belts. to · detona1e i n
extremk
Booby-trapped
corpses- a Judeo·Christian
taboo Muslim jihadist.~ ovrlcmhe, I suspect, in their perverse belief that killiug inri:
del~ oo j:iiaiih e:u-ns them' virgins io paradtse , - an; a
common hazard in hotspots.
gven one of our beheaded
hostages in June, poor devil,
was pad d with explu.,ives
designed ., detonate at an
Amerioan soldier's · touc)i.
Who. &lt;unong the global milliori s who have w';itchcd
NBC's videotaped-shouting,
re-&lt;~lize s that a comra~lc of
l'he Marine in question was
killed by a booby: u·,~ppcd
.corpse the day before '1 Tilat
same corpse-bomb wounded
five otllers in the unit . And
·wh0, atnong fhose same mi 1lions, realize that even as
Marine X, NB'C' s global
antihero. was shootin~ the
enemy he s u sp~cted w:~s
playing pos sum, i\ISt a block
away; another explnS!vcrigged corpse was kililllll
lUl?ther ·YOu~g _Marine·! . .
· · In that spiH second ot tei1r
and llldectslon, our. , gu y
made the nght call. ·I h111k
about it during the ion~. luxurious minutes of 1hc next
COll,lmercial break.
(Diana Wesr is a mlllmlli.~r
.fiJr The Washi11g/o11 "/im,••.

She can be comacl!'d ria

"Charleston. S. C." exhibition table: Joy Bentley, Peggy
Crane and Janet Bolin.
"New York City" creative
design: Sheiia Curtis. Joy
Bentley, and Peggy Crane.
''Hollywood Calif." depicting a movie: Judy Bunger,
Melanie Stethem, and Shelia
Curtis.
"Vet mont Christmas" featuring snow and glitter: Judy
Bunger, Peggy Crane, and
Shelia Curtis.
"Mall of America" gift
wrap for a child: Breanna
Manuel, Rosemary Eskew
and Melanie Stethem. Gift
wrap for an adult: Rosemary
Eskew. Deborah Mohler, and
Evelyn Hollon.
''Bethlehem, Pa ." the Holy
Family: Melanie Stethem,
Joan (Judy ) Snowden, Pat
Holter.
"Las Vegas" an illuminary:
Melanie Stethem. Shelia
Curtis, Vanessa Folmer.
"Bozeman, Mt." tly fishing: Joy Bentley, Shelia
Curtis, and Evelyn Hollon .
"Willimsburg, Va." door or

POINT PLEASANJ', W. Va. - Bobby Joe Rupe ll, 32,
born on Aug . 8, 1972, died unexpectedly at his home in
Point Pleasant, W. Va. on Saturday, Nov. 20. ~004 .
Bobby was the beloved son of Bob and Kay Rupe of
Pomeroy. Bobby loved life ·and his family which included
his fiance and the love of his life, Dawn Stephens. He is
also survived by hi s children. Bobby Joe Rupe Ill (Tre' )
Kylie and Hannah, two stepsons, Zack and Chris, a sister
and brother-in-law, Laura Horsely and Frank Wang.
He was loved and ·will sadly be missed by these and many
other family members, aunts and uncles, Lawrence and
Phyllis Stone of Westerville, Nelia Seyler and Tom Stone of
Pomeroy, "Elata and Jim Everheart of Vandalia and Jane
Rupe of Gallipolis.
He was preceded in death by his maternal grandparents,
Thurston and Laura Stone, and his paternal grandparents.
Floyd and Lucille Rupe. along with several uncles.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 23, 20i04
ai the Acree Funeral Home, 244 North Second Ave ..
Middleport. Burial will follow at fhe Howell Hill Cemetery.
· Visiting hours will be held at the funeral home from 6 to
8 p.m . on Monday and from noon until time of the funeral
service on Tuesday.

.Bertha Marie Duffy Grimm

Taking "reserve best of
show" was Melanie Stethem
whose winning design in the
Bethlehem. Pa. class using
mums and delphiniums with
evergreen was accessorized
by a statue of Mary and
Joseph.
The "creativity award"
went to Judy Bunger for her
depiction of "Frosty. the
Snowman,"
in
the
Hollywood . Calif. class. On
black metal discs creating a
body for Frosty, she made
arms of lily Siems, swirling
;now with honeysuckle vine
painted white. snow !lakes
with Queen Anne's lace. and
then created an outdoor scene
wifh pine branches.
The show was judged by an
accredited judge of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs.
Winners in the arrangement
classes, listed tirst fhrough third
respectively, were as follows:

wall decoration : Melanie
Stethem, Joy Bentley. and
Shirley Hamm. A ;econd category in the cia&gt;&gt; requiring
the use of evergreen: Janet
Thei~'· Suzy Parker, and Lui a
Toban; a third category featuring cone&gt; and pod,,
Barbara Mora, Suty Parker.
and Vanessa Folmer; and a
founh category of herbs and
dried
materials:
Sheila
Curti s, Janet Theiss, and
Suzy Parker.
In the "Santa Claus" class
for juniors, the winners were
Kara We lch. Kaylee Nelson
and Destiny Sayre. In the
"Orlando. Fla." Disneyland
class. taking the ribbons were
Deanna Sayre and Kara
Welch , tirst; Destiny Sayre
and Kaylee Nelson, second&gt;:
and Breanna Manuel and

Mal&lt;ya Milhoan. thirds.
Winning blue ribbons tn
the di;play of dotem of horclasses
were
ticulture
Barbara Mora. pine. nurrowleaf yew and arborvitae;
Melanie Stethcm. spruce:
Mace! Barton. magnolia.
hemlock . hnlly and blooming
houseplanl : Fvelyn Hollon,
berried branch . potted cacti
or succulent: Joyce Manuel.
foliage houseplant.
Adrian Bolin took first
place in the junior horticulture decorated pumpkins.
with J&lt;hh Bolin. Deanna
Sayre and Breanna Manuel
placing. In the roadsiJe material for junior exhihitor;
Deanna Sayre took liN. and
in polled plants. Brenna
M;uwel was ihe lirst place
winner.

. MIDDLEPORT - Bertha Marie Duffy Grimm, 88, forlnerly of Belpre. recently of Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center in Middleport, passed away on Saturday, Nov. 20,
2004 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W. Va.
She was born on Oct . 15, 1916 to the late John and Lillian
Matthews Duffy. She was a homemaker for m'ost of her life.
She is survived by a sister, Carrie J. Roush of Racine, and
a brother and sister-in-law, Rod and ~arjorie Grimm, and .
several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, Don
Grimm, and three sisters. fn~z Hill, Beatrice Blake, and
Gertrude Neigler.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 23.
2004 at Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Ofliciating will be the Rev. Viki Cundiff. Burial will follow at the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call from 6 to
9 p.m. on Monday. Nov. 22. 2004, at the funeral home.
Friends may send on-line condolences to www.tisherfuneralhomes.com.

di£111{1\l'i!S/ @ I'eri~Ofl .l}('/)

Cha~ene

Hoenlch/,Photos

The numerous entries in the creative gift wrappings classes
which required plant the use of plant materials are admired by
Jan Cleek. Shirley Hamm, and Evelyn Hollon.

This arrangement depicting "Frosty. the Snowman" won the
creativity award for Judy Bunger at the weekend Christmas
flower show.

OVAL

OfFICE

.
'•

·Helping heal young minds qfter crisis ··
Of .~ill the toy kitchen utensils· on the table, fhe 4-yearold boy picked up th~ knife.
"This is like the knife in
my dream," he told . the
University of Califqrnia
fherapist. She w"iis working
with the child and his mother to help him stop biting
and hitting his playmates
and erupting into tantrums at
the slightest .frustration. She
knew aoout the violence in
the boy's home but didn't
know about the·knife.
When the boy was 3, his
motherexplaioed to the therapist, she had threatened the
boy's abusive father with a
knife. The father was now
out of their lives, and the
mother thought the toddler
was too young to have
understood what had happened. So they had never
talked about it.
"There was· a mommy. I
mean a monster, who came
to cut out my heart," the boy
said of his dream.
The mother told her son
that she was very angry at
his father and apologized for
what she did.
"But you get very angry at
me, Mommy," the boy said.
He is one ·o f the hidden
victims of domestic violence, children whose brain
function and behavior are
profoundly affected 'by the
violence they have witnessed . These victims are
finding increasing support
from the San Francisco dis•
trict attorney and the
California attorney· general.
And San Francisco is one of
a growing number of police
departments across the
country that requires officers
to include in domesti c violence re~ports the ·names,
ages and demeanor of any
children present in the home ..
But too often the lack of
knowledge and understanding from law enforcement

Joan

Ryan

and the legal system is staggering, says Dr. Bruce Perry,
a psychiatrist and neuroscientist who heads the Child
Trauma
Academy
in
Houston. He tells the story
· of police and paramedics
responding to a home where
a man had shot his wife. The
scene was so bloody that a
trauma specialist was called
in to counsel the emergency
workers. The woman's children had stood by, stunned
and splattered with their
mother's blood.
"What about the kids"" the
trauma counselor was asked.
"They'll be OK," he said.
''Kids are resilient."
Researchers like Perry
know that witnessing violence - particularly at home
actually changes the
brains of young children.
The neural &gt;ystems that
determine so&gt;ial interaction
are laid down early in lite,
when the brain is most malleable; 90 perce nt of the core
brain structures are organized by age 3. Thu s, as tl1e
brain absorbs and encodes
inf0rmation from the child's
daily life and family relationsh1ps. it form s internal
templates that will guide the
child on how to survive in
the world.
If children. learn from
ex perience that their parents
and .lheir home aren't safe.
how can anyone or any place
be safe'' They perceive
threats where there arc none.
.They la' h nut at playmates.
They lack the capahi Iity to

bond with others . Their
brain stems - which regulate fundamental functions
.
'
like
heart rate. body temperature, the fight -or-flight
instinct - stay in a perpetual low-level state of alarm .
Such children appear distracted. rc!-stless. unfocused.
prickly. They have poor
social relationships. They
often do poorly in school.
The brain devotes so IIlllCh
energy
simple survival
that it · shortchanges the
development of the higher
complex thinking that children need to s ucceed in
school and later life .
"There's so much more we
~ could be doing." said San
Franci~co District Attorney
Kamala Harris. who has
made domestic violence a
key focus of her office. "-But
funding is a big problem."
· She said she wants to hire
·a psychologist to work with
victims and with the deputy
district attorneys so they are
better equipped to address
the complc·x problems of
children in domestic violence cases.
"Abuse gets tran s-mitted
from one generation to fhe
next ," sa id Dr. Alicia
Lieberman, director of San
Francisco General's Child
Trauma Re search Project.
If we don't treat the se
damaged·children when they
are young. Lieberman said,
we are likely to 'ee them in
juvenile hall and then prison .
And they are likely to be
abusers thcmselves "' parents. thus perpetuating the
cycle.
..
"But if we work with
1hem, iheir parenh and
tcachc" early. they &lt;.:an do
fine." "' id Lieberman. who
has treated hundreds 11f chil dren in the pa st decade.
"These children will -always
be more vu lnerable In something major. They ha ve a

io

more sensiti-ve startle reflex
and a greater expectalion of
things going wrong. But
with the regular fru strations
in life. they can do line ."
Yet the money we spend
on psychologically damaged
children from birth to age 5
- when we can make a fundamental difference - - is
nothing compared to wl"~
we spend trying to ch an~e
the brains of kids in ju1 enile
hall and substance-abuse
programs. Shouldn't the allocation of resources he
reversed. loading up when
kids arc very -young?
· "If aliens came from oi1lL'T
space and saw where we put
our resources.'! Perrv "'aid.
"they'd say. Thi s ·i.s, ll!Je
. "'
durn b spec1es.
The California attorney
, general's office has . taken
so me promising steps. It
started a project in 2000
called Safe from the Start.
which has sponsored forums
around the state focused 011
reducing children's expowre
to violence and tesponding
quickly when they arc We
know so much . We can't pretend anymore that bccc1usc a
child has no lumps or bruises. he hasn't heen "·vcrcly
hurt by violcm:c.
The boy with the kni fe
dream spent 18 montl" in
therapy with hi s mot l)cr at
San Frandsco Gcncr:!l 's
Child ·Trauma Research
Project. He is 8 now and no
longer lashin g OLJl. lie is
doing well in school. Until
we can figure out how '" rid
the world of men who beat
their wives. and women who
heat their husbands. we l1a1e
to figure nul how to heal 1hc
children who watch il ;Ill.

46 with today's low of 45
.occurring
around 4:00am .
Morning
Winds will be 5 MPH from
(7 a.m.·Noon)
Expect a cloudy morning. the southeast.
Temperatures will linger at
Tuesday, November 23
49. Winds will be 5 MPH from
Morning
the east.
Afternoon
(7 a.m.-Noon)
(1·6 p.m.)
·A
cloudy
morning.
It should continue to be Temperatures will rise from
cloudy. Temperatures will 46 to 57 by late this morning. Melanie Stethem won the "reserve best of show" award for
hover at 49. Winds will be 5 Winds will be 5 MPH from her arrangement in the Bethlehem. Pa. class accessorized
MPH from the east.
the southeast turning from with a figurine of Mary and Joseph.
Evening
the east as the morning pro(7 p.m.-Midnight)
· gresses.
and using priority mail. most
It should remain cloudy.
Afternoon
of the servicemen and
Temperatures will remain
(1-6 p.m.)
women will receive their
"
around 48 with today's high
It should continue . to be
packages approximatel y a
from Page A1
of 49 ·occurring around cloudy. Expect light ram. The
week after being mailed.
6:00pm. Winds will be 5 MPH rain will start. around 3:00pm.
"Bonnie has been a big
from the east turning from Expect 0 .11 1nches of ra1n by
the southeast as the evening the end of th1s afternoon. candy. Also included in the hdp and the churches here 111
will . hold boxes were programs and town have been super" said
progresses.
Temperatures
Overnight
steady around 59. Winds w111 DVDs from the Enduring Cardone who is thankflli for
event
called donations towards her orga(1-6 a.m.)
be 5 MPH from the southeast Freedom
It will continue to be cloudy. turmng from the east as the "Tribute to the Troops"' that nitation's mission of making
sure the troops know they are·
took place earlier this year.
Temperatures will stay near afternoon progresses.
Enduring Freedom take s not forgotten .
The majority or Enduring
donation s ihat go towards
Reiber, Reedsville, trustee; purchasing iten1s for the Frcec(om's volunteers have
Randall . Reiber. Racine. packages as well as postage.
family members in the miliChaplain; and Edgar Pullins,
Racine Postmaster. Bonnie tary. Cardone has a son. senfrom Page A1
Provost Marshal.
Brown stepped in to help the ing in Baghdad. Kay Warden
AMVETS Post 733 meets group order their priority ' has a granddaughter who
at
noon on the last Friday of mail military care packages recently returned home and a
finance officer; Mike Miller.
Coolville. adjutant; Elson each 'month. Members are online which is a se rvice crandson who is still in Iraq.
Sarah Warden is married
Spencer, Racine, trustee: now searching for real estate available to the ge neral pubto
Kay'
s grandson. Derek und
Jr. . ·_ hopefully donated - to lic .
Howard
English.
By going that ex tra step thi s will be the first
Pomeroy, tru stee; , Terry construct a post home .
Monday, November 22

•

Care

AM VETS

c

•

Christmas they will 'pend
apart after three years nf their
young marriage.
Before Sarah and Derek
moved home 10 Meigs
County. they lived in Hawaii
on a military base. Enduring
Freedom sent them cards and
pictures of home during I hat
time and now Sarah leels
compe lled to give hack after
bein g nn the receiving end.

Volunteer Dou4 Hunter
has no family in the militarv
service but teltlikc he needed
to do something for the
tl'oops after Sept. II til .
'' We can't do anv 1nore
than support the troops and
pray" said Hunter. "We pray
a lm."

I

Channele Spradling also
helped box up the care pad ages. Spradling !u~t he r

brother
Roger
Clinton
Turner. .lr. during the Iraq
War earlier this I 'ear.
Marih n M~Fann's son
recent II · returned · home for
good 11~&lt;'111 Iraq and "lit' l10n- ,
urabl) d i ,L. hargcd from ·,he
Mi.trinL' Corp ....
M&lt;1SI
of

Enduring
Freedu111·' fami 1: members
are due tn return from oyer..,~as in January· nr F~hruary.
H0\\e1er. the group already
)las plans "' s~nd pac~agcs to
tho:-.~ from the area \\ ho an.·
anticipating Jeplo) men! ttl
Iraq . ·
. Anyone \\ i\hing to volun tc~r

~)r

~end

donation-.. tn
Endunng Freedom Support
Group can call Jan CarJPne
at 9~9-2512 and the ir address
i\ P.O. B(l\ 37h. R;ll· lnl!.
-+'i 771.

Pleas an/ Valley Jlospilal aJelcomes ...

TIMOTHY P. METZGER, DO
Fa1nily Medicine

(Joan Ryan is a c u /1/J liJ ii"\'f
jfJr rlu) San Fu n wi~l o
Chronicle. ,)'end ( ' 01 11 1//l' 'l f .\"
Jn lll~r in cure r~{rhi.\· 11~ ' ~\ \f lU ·

To Be l..cK•atlocl In Tht' 't'1u· Future
·ll1c MJJdlcpon Clinic
788 i'\onJ1 Second Suwt
~I iddlq" ll'l, ( l H -+ ::;; (~ I

pt)r or ,send her e-m(li/ o t

joan r_wm @' .'ifchrrmiclt

Joy Bentley's depletion of Charleston. S. C. and its Southern hospitality through a table display won h8r the "best of show" award.

c o 111.)

•

'

· ' ()f1it•t.• II o•rs:
I e Mond~)':
9 a.m.
• Tuesday:

e \Vednesdav:
' e Thursdar:'
L

• Friday: ·

•
to 5 p.m.

11 a.m. to 7 p.m .
9 a:m. to 5 p.m.
9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

304·773-5195
.\l•L•epting Ill'!'' llllticnh. .
Calli for an ·ap(JOintmeut.
' f 1'll/'ll,rj/17 /1 :ro:,J:u,'d.'

/ 11

\I .."''•F.(/:m,· u1!f

R dl• :·· 11 .;~ 11,,·-'·· \//)

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
,...., Scoreboard, Page 82
Artett auspended for Hlton, Page 88

Monday, November 22, 2004

Prep Schedule

High School Girls Basketball

,Today's Games
Glrl1 Besketjlall
Trimble at Meigs
OVC at Fairland
Tuesday's Games
Glrla Basketball
.
River Valley at Gallia Acad.
Friday's Games
Boys Basketball
OVC at Federal Hocking
Saturday's Games
.
Boys Basketball
Meigs at Gallia Academy,
Eastern vs. Waverly (at SSU)
Southern at SSU Tourney
Trimble at OVC
Girls Basketball
Eastern vs . Northwest (at River
City Shoot-Out) , 3:30p.m.

Shawnee State
falls atTCU

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rov.o:n

: FORT WORTH, Texas (AP)
- Judson Stubbs came off the
bench to score 14 points and
lead TCU to a 74-60 victory
over Shawnee State on
Sunday.
The bench accounted for 38
of TCU 's points. The Homed
Frogs
(2-0)
outscored
Shawnee State 25-2 in transition.
Nile Murry had II points
and Corey Santee 10 for TCU
while Chudi Chinweze had
nine points and eight rebounds.
Terrence
Davison
led
Shawnee State (2-2) with 21
points. Aaron Davis added II.
Adam Davenport had 14
rebounds.
TCU led 45-26 at the half.
·The Homed Frogs shot 43
percent from the field to 36
percent for Shawnee State.

Marshall exits
MAC with win
HUNTINGTON.
W.Va.
(AP)
Marshall bade
farewell to the Mid-American
Conference. Coach Gary
Darnell did ·the same to
Western Michigan.
Freshman Ahmad Bradshaw
rushed for 145 yards before
getting hurt, while Earl
Charles scored a 49-yard
touchdown on a sore knee in
the final minute to preserve
Marshall's 31-21 victory over
the Broncos on Saturday.
Marshall (6-5, 6-2), playing
its MAC fmalc before moving
to Conference USA next year,
won despite committing four
turnovers to avoid its tirst losing season since 1983.
Although the MAC has
three bowl tie-ins this season.
Marshall likely will stay home
for the second straight year.
"These type of games are
always tough when you're just
playing for pride." said
Marshall coach Bob Pruett.
"We'll just have to hope some
people don' t get bowl eligible
and somebody will come look
at the Herd ."
Darnell was tired last week
atier eight seasons as coach at
We5tern Michigan (1-10, 0-8)
which lost its IOth straight, the
Broncos' longest streak since
1975.
"There are two -things we
ask of our team. and that is to
play with a great deal of character and play tough. They
dido 't have to play that well
tonight. We had nothing at
i;take," Darnell said.

¢allege Football
:

'1. Southern Cal(48) 10-0
Oklahoma (9)

,3. Auburn f8)

.4. California

-5. U1ah
"6. Texas
"7. Louisville
B. Georgia
9. Miami
10. Bolse St.
11. Virginia Tech
~2 . 1owa

l3. Michigan

l4. LSU

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u sec

BY BRYAN WALTERS
bwalters@mydailytribune .com

ROCK SPRINGS- When
you start something new, you
have the opportunity to find
out exactly what all you have
to work with.
If the tip-off to the Meigs'
girl s season was any indication, opponents had better be
ready for 32 minutes of competitive team basketball.
The Marauders opened the
2004-05 campaign by overcoming a 23-20 halftime
deficit to claim a 57-48 victory over the River Valley
Raiders Saturday at Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium.
MHS (1-0) made the most
of a favorable 34-28 rebound
discrepancy, including a 16-7
edge on the offensive glass,
and seniors Samantha Pierce
and Renee Bailey combined
for 49 points in helping Darin
Logan get his first win as the
head coach of the Maroon
and Gold.
Despite the duo's offensive
explosion, Logan was just as
impressed with the rest of his
squad · for hanging aro und
during the rough start.
" In the first half, we just
had to survive. We had several players with three fou ls,"
said Logan. "Give a lot of
credit to our bench, they
came in and kept us in the
game. Then. Sam hit that
three right before the half to
pull us within three, and I felt
pretty good about where we
were."
Meigs led the opening 13plu s minutes of the game, but
a 15-5 foul disadvantage by
halftime took its toll at 2:06
when Kyla Adkins netted a
pair at the charity stripe to
give RVHS its first lead at
18- 17.
The Raiders held the hosts
scoreless for more th an three
minutes and extended their
lead to 23-17 in the waning
moments, but Pierce canned
her third trifecta of the half as
the buzzer Sounded and cut
the deficit to a single possesSIOn.

Please see Opener, B:Z

Busch
wins first
Nextel
Cup title
Bv MtKE HARRIS
Associated Press

HOMESTEAD, Fla.
Nothing could stop Kurt
Busch from winning the closest
championship
in
NASCAR hi story.
Not a broken wheel early in
the race. Not four extra laps
forced by a nerve-racking
late restart. Not a double-barby
reled
challenge
NASC.A.R's most successful
team. :-.lot all the pressure
fo rged by J new playoff-style
fo rmat .
On a day of high drama,
with the season championship seemingly changing
lap to lap. pa." tn pass, Busch
held on to linish fifth behind
teammate Gre~ Biffle in
Sunday 's Ford ..foo and wrap
up his first Nextel Cup title.
He won it hy eight poi nts
over Jimmie John&gt;on - a
difference of just two places
in the season-ending race -

Brad Sherman/ photo
Meigs ' Joey Haning (14) and River Valley's Ashley Cal dwel l (20 ) battle for the ball during
the Marauders· 57-48 season-opening win Saturday.

Please see Busch, B:Z

.Wolverines still sniff roses, Bucks head for Texas
BY RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS - Behind the old gray concrete
walls of Ohio Stadium. Michigan coach Lloyd
Carr could barely hear the celebration taking
place out on the field.
Hi s team had just lost to rival Ohio State 37-21
on Saturday. Gone was a No. 7 ranking and · an
outright Big Ten title. ,
He tried to put a good spin on hi s disappointment , because that 's about all that 's left for a losing coach to do.
"We're not feeling sorry for ourse lves ," Carr

said in that amiable makin g the Hawkeyc s and the Wolverines the Big
drawl. " We've had an Ten co-champions. Since Michigan (9-2, 7- 1)
oubtanding
yea r. won the head-to-head matchup with Iowa. the
When you win the Wolverines cndC'CI up exactly where they started
conference champi - the da y - in the Rose Bowl. mo,t likel y playing
mlship . . yo u don't Cal.
haw to apologize or
Ohio State 17-4. -\--\)muted a .500 Big Ten seahang yo ur heads."
son and the many legal and public relations fia s"A re we disap- coes that haw dogged the Buckeyes for the past
pointed.,
You· rc two weeks .
damned right we are. But by the same tok en_ we
The Buckeyes appear headed for Texas for a
did some (good) things thi s year. too."
bowl. most likely the Alamo Bowl against a Big
The payoff came on ly later. aft er No. 17 Iowa 12 representati\'C on Dec. 29 in San Antonio.
thumped No. 9 Wi sconsin 30· 7. se ndin g the
Please see Bucks. B:Z
Badge r&gt; to their second stra ight lop sided loss and

The AP Top 25

fhe Top 25 teams In the Associated
Press college football poll , with first-place
Qotes in parentheses, records through
~ov. 20, total points based on 25 points for
11 first-place vote t hro ~Jgh one point for a
25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
•
• AecordPts
Pvs
~·

Marauders knock off
River Valley in opener

1,603

1

11-0

1,541

1,536

2

9-1
11..0
9-1
8-1
8·2
6·2
10-0
8·2
9-2
9-2

1.413
1,340
1,323
1,1 66
1,093
1,030
920 .
884
878
863

5
6
8
11
12
13
15
17
7

11-0

2
~

8·2

839

14

, 5. Tennessee
16. Virginia

8-2
8-2

766
594

15
18

)7. Boston College

8·2

548

19

28. Arizona St.

8·2

535

20

l9. Florida 51

8-3

523

10

20. Wisconsin
11 . Watt VIrginia
~2 . T81(88 A&amp;M
~3 . Oklahoma St.

9·2
8·2
7-3
7-3

509
319
289 ~

9
21
22

224

23

24. UTEP

8·2

163

24

25. Florida

7·4

75

Othera recelvlnQ votes: Bowling Green 41 .
Dhlo St 32, P"insburgh 25, Purdue 1.1.
Alabama 7 , Clemson 3. Toledo 3,
Memphis 2, Navy. 2, Texas Tech 2, Fresno .
fot 1, N. Illinois 1, New Mexico 1.

Red men improve to 7-0 Redwomen go unbeaten
STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydailytribune.co m

•
WEST MIFFLIN. Pa. - And the
strong stm1 continues.
Rio Grande remained unbeaten
Saturday with a '16-68 win against
.Point Park.
While the Redmen committed 21
turnovers, 10 less than Point Park, Rio
outrebounded the hosts. 44-3 1.
Leading Rio Grande under the
boards was Dawayne Mcintosh with
eight rebounds and Sean Plummer and
Cedric Hornbuckle with seven each.
Hornbuckle also led the Red men (70) scoring with 14 points, whil e
,Plummer and Matt Simpson each
scored 13 points.
Hornebucklc , along with Kris
Wilson, also connected on three 3-

point goals.
Cain Vandall had three steals for
Rio.
Point Park had five players scorin g
in double-digits. led by Taz Williams
and Brian Kennedy with 15 P\)ints
apiece.
Also tor the Pioneers (-\-4), Gavin
Prosser and Denny DiPasquale each .
scored II points and John Jones added
10 points.
Jones and William.\ · al&gt;o pulled
dow n eight boards each.
Rio Grande shay 25-for-53 (47.2
precent) from the floo~~o and 19-for-23
from the chari ty stripe.
The Pioneer&gt; only shot the ball eight
. times from the free throw line.
The Redmen retum home Tuesday
agai nst . Crbana in the American
Mideast Con ference South Division
opener.

at Urbana Classic
STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydailytnbune.com

URBAN A - Rin Gra nde, record ed the swe~p a\ the l lrb ana Class ic
Saturd ay.
. A dav after a 77- 70 win over
Daemen. the Redwomen were victoriou' a~a in. this time an 89-57 win
over Carlo~~o ( Pa. I
Against Daemen . the Redwomen
(7-1 l had to ra lly from an 18-point
halftime deficit . hut on Saturd;w. it
\\a' a little easier as Rio led ~ 7- i~ at
the break .
Tana Richev led Rio with I~
points. while Elrindi Kandel 'cored
II points nff the bench and Tiff;mie
Hager added I I .

Mean" hlle. Carle sha Chambers
had eight assi,ts for the ·Redwomen .
Rio Grande also won the- battle
under the ght's wi th 49 rehounds to
Carlow 's is. Je ss ica Worwell came
off the bench to haul in 1.1 boards for
Rio.
For Carlow (0-61. Jacqueline Muir
rewrded the do uble-double with 15
points and I 0 rebounds .
E"e n though the Redwomen led
by 23 points at halftime. they shot an
impre»ive 58.6 precent ( 17-for-29)
from th.e tloor in the second half.
Rio Grande will play host to
Crbana Tuesday as part of an
American Midea st Conference
South Divi,ion doubleheade r with
the men\ team.
l

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Meias 57, River Valley 48
R1ver valrey
Mei!)S

9
9

14
11

12
18

13 - 48
19-57

RIVER VALLEY (0-1)- Carmen Waugh

2 1 2 5 Knsllna Naylor 3 4 9 11 Beth
Payne 2 0-2 4 Leshe Ward 2 0 2 4 Leshe
Ward 4

o-o 10

Ashley Catdwell2 7 12 11

Kayta Adk1ns o 5-8 5 Letea McAvena 0 2 2
2 Kayla SmitM 0 0-0 0 Haley Marcum 0 00 0 TOTALS 13 19-35 48 TOTALS -

15

19 35 48
MEIGS (1-0)- Samantha PIEN'ce 11 4 6
31 Justine Dowler o 2 2 2 Renee Ba11ey 8
2 3 1a Joey Haning 2 o 2 4 Br nany Hysell
1 0-0 2 Amy Barr 0 0-2 0 Angel Harter 0 Q.
0 0 Cayla Lee 0 0-0 0 Meghan Clelland 0
0-0 0 Amber Burton 0 0 0 0 Lesley Preece
0 0 00 TOTALS -22 817 57

3 pomt goals - RV 3 (Ward 2 Naylor)
Me•gs 5 (P1erce 5)
Ohio High School Glrla Bllketball

Saturday a Results
Ak:r Eller 62 Cuyahoga Falls 45
Ak:r Hoban 70 011'VIIIe 64
Amherst 73 Loram Admiral K ng 29
Anna 59 New Bremen 43
Archbold 43 Edgenon 31
Arlington 45 Cory Rawson 35
Ashtabula Edgewood 53 Orwell Grand
Valey 37
Barberton 70 Tal SCali 50
Batav1a Ame lia 52 Goshen 34
Bloom..Carro I 36 New Albany 32
Bluffton 51 Lafayene Allen E 40
Brookville 34 Troy 25
Burton BerKShire 38 Garrensv tie Garfield
13
Can McKinley 51 Doylestown Chippewa
37
Can T1mken 45 Can Cent Cath 42
Card ngton Lincoln 58 Howard E Knox
19
Carrollton 52 RIChmond Ed1son 40
Ch1ll1cothe umoto 56 Waverly 4 ~
C n Manemont 67 Felicity 19
C1n McAuley 55 Kettenng Aller 46
C n Wmton Woods 52 Liberty Twp
Lakota E 34
Cte Cent Catn 67 Manetta 49
Cle Glenville 57 Cle Bedfonj 55
Cle Hts l:.utheran East 61 Cle Andrews
47
Cle St Joseph 68 Lakewood 41
Cols Hartley 77 Cm Western H lis 48
Cots Tree of Life 47 Cots Franklin Hts 35

Coshocton 44 Magno11a Sandy Valley 31
Cov ng1on 59 Fa rtawn 44
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 69 Parma
Padua 37
Danv1te 52 W Salem NW 36
Day Chamlnade Julienne 75 Cots
DeSales 41
Day Chnsllan 53 Day Stebbins 45
Day Jefferson 80 Eaton 44
Day M~am Valley 46 C n Chnst1an 35
Oola Hardm Northern 54 Ada 52
Dresden Tn Valley 57 K1rksv lie 27
Eastlake N 52 Parma 46
Enon Greenan 60 Yellow Spnngs 40
Fau'born 53 New Car 1sle Tecumseh 50
Fmney1own 34 Ham1tton Ross 33
Fredericktown 50 Mansfield Chnst an 3B
Garfield His 41 Cia His Beaumont 35
Gates M11ts Gilmour 50 Gates M lis
Hawken 31
Geneva 62 Mayf1eld Hts 59
Georgetown 53 C1n lnd1an H1ll 38
Gnadenhutten lnd1an Valley 36 Zoarv lie
Tuscarawas Valley 33
Granv11 e 60 UtiCa 46
Greenville 72 Ft Recovery 54
Grove C ty 58 Canal W nchester 28
Hanoverton Umtad 78 Malvern 27
Heath 56 Ball more Uberty Un1on 46
Hebron Lakewood 51 New Lex ngton 49
Houston 49 DeGraff Riverside 42
Huber Hts Wayne 41 Dey Col While 33
Jeromesville Hillsdale 70 Ashland
Crestv1ew 59
51
Delaware
Johnstown Monroe
Chnst1an 39
Kent Roosevelt 66 Mogadore Field 48
Kirtland 70 Cuyahoga His 14
Lex1ngton 63 Ontar o 25
L1ma Bath 61 Delphos St Johns 49
L1ma Shawnee 54 Celina 45
L ttle M am1 46 Waynesville 37
Logan 47 C rclev1lle Logan Elm 29
Lucas 60 SulliVan Back A1ver 40
Lyndhurst Brush 59 C e Rhodes 33
Mansfmld Mad1son 69 Willard 44
Mar a Stetn Manon Local 50 Ft Loram1e
42
Middletown Chnst1an 36 Xema Nazarene
35
Middletown Mad son 53 Preb e Shawnee
29
MilfOrd Center Fairbanks 46 N Lewisburg
Tnad 42
Millersport 54 Corn ng M1ller 43
Mount Notre Dame 71 McNicholas 35
N Can Hoover 75 Hudson 54
Navarre Fatrless 61 M1nerva 44
New Concord
John
Glenn
53
McConnelsv lie Mo gan 39

Opener
Newark L1ck1ng Valley 54 Johnstown
Northridge 35
Orange 55 RIChmond HIS 39
Ottawa Glandorl49 Miller C1ty 3 t
OttOVIlle 53 Van Wert 45
Parma Normandy 60 Westlake 53
Pemberv He Eastwood 58 Kalida 53
F»errysburg 48 Rossford 21
Aead1ng 50 Clermont NE 34
Russ1a 48 Umon Ctty MISSISStnawa Valley
30
Sandusky Perkms 47 Norwalk 38
Shelby 43 Ashland 37
Sherwood Fa1rv1ew 69 Montpelier 52
Sm1thv1lle 46 Ashland Mapleton 28
Sparta H ghtand 67 Centerburg 23
Spnng Kenton R1dge 79 Urbana 73 OT
Spnng NW 62 Jamestown Green6VIew
39
Spnng S 56 Day Oakwood 37
Spnng Shawnee 6~ Sprmg NE 32
Spnngboro 45 Franklin 38
Sylvan1a Southview 67 Bow11ng Green 33
Tallmadge 63 Uhnchsvllle Claymont 58
T1pp C1ty Bathe 38 Milton Un on 28
Tol Emmanuel Chr 55 Cornerstone Chr
54 20T
Tot Onawa H lis 53 Elmore Woodmore
38
Tot St Ursula 54 Fremont Ross 40
Tontogany Otsego 67 McComb 34
Unmntown Lake 52 Ravenna 38
Upper Sandusky 50 N Rob nson Col
Crawford 48
Versa1Hes 67 A chwood N Umon 28
W L1berty Salem 46 St Pans Graham 38
Westerville S 41 Galloway Westland 27
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 47 Ho land
Spnng 40
WiCkliffe 66 Pa1nesv1He Harvey 28
Wooster 56 Can GlenOak 34

Prep Football
2004 OHSAA Football Playoff Pairings
Pa nngs for the 2004 OhiO H1gh School
Athletic Assoc1a110n football playoffs with
seedlngs and records
Regional Finals
DIVISION I
All Gamea at 7 p m Saturday
(5) Cle Glenv1le (12 l ) vs (5) Can
McKmley (10 3) at Massillon Paul Brown
T1ger Stad1um
(4) Worthtngton Ktlbourne (11 2) vs (3)
C1n Colera1n (13 O) at Dayton Welcome
Stad1um
DIVISION II
All Games al 7 30 p m Friday

( 1) Tallmadge (12 1) vs (1) Avon Lake
(13-0) al Parma..Jyers F1eld
(2) CoiS B~aven (13-0) vs (2) Dayton
Carroll (12 l) at Dubhn Coffman F1eld
DIVISION Ill
All Gamta at 1 p m Saturday
{4) Cle BenediCtine (10 3) vs (3) Canal
Fulton Northwest (12 1) Canton Central
Cathohc Stadium
(51St Marys Memor al (1 2 1) vs (3) Cols
Watterson ( 11 2) at Upper Arlington
Moorehead Stad um
DIVISION IV
All Gamea at 7 30 p m Friday
(3) Youngs Mooney '(1()..2) vs {2) Marlins
Ferry (12 OJ at Massillon Paul Brown liger
Stad1um
(2) Coldwater (13-0) vs (7) Versa lies (1D3) at Dayton Welcome Stad1um
DIVISIONV
All Gamea at 7 p m Saturday
(8) St Henry (12 1) vs (1) Hamler Patr ck
Henry (13 O) at lima Bath Stad1um
(1) Amanda Clearcreek (13 0) vs (5)
Sm1thvll e (1 2 1 ) at Dubhn Coffman F eld
DIVISION VI
All Games at 7 30 p m Friday
(21 Norwalk Si Paul (11 2) vs (3)
HdsVllle (121) at T1ff1n Nat1ona F1eld at
Frost Kalnow Stad1um·
(8) Oanv He (11 2) vs (2) Dola Hard1n
Northern ( 12 1) at Lew1s Cenler Olentangy
Braves F1eld

Ohio High SchoOl Football Playoff
Scores
Regional Flnala
Saturday e Reaults
DIVISION I
Can McKinley 35 BrunswiCk 14
Cm Colerain 34 C n Moeller 6
Cia Glenvllle 22 Cia St lgnallus 14
Worthington Kilbourne 35
H1lf ard
Dav1dson 34
DIVISION Ill
Canal Fuhon NW 14 Thornville Shendan

0
Cle Benedictine 21 Cuyahoga Falls
Walsh Jesuit 0
Cos Watterson 27 Cols DeSales 6
St Marys Memonal 21 Day Cham1nada
Jul1enne 13
DIVISIONV
Amanda-Giearcreek 27 Wheelersburg 25
Hamler Patnck Henry 41 Liberty Center
27
Smithville 4, N L1ma S Range 14
St Henry 41 Lees Creek East Clinton 27

Buckeyes' offense clicking against Michigan
BY ANDY RESNIK
Assoctaled Press

COLUMBUS - An Ohoo
State offense that dtd hltle
nght ail season could do no
wrong agamst Mtchogan
The Buckeyes dtdn t commot a turnover, prevented the
Wolvennes from getting a
sack and com erted bog play
after b1g play m a 37-21 wm
on Saturday
Ohoo State erased ail the
frustrat10ns over a four loss
season whtle denymg ots
archm ,ti an outnght Bog Ten
champtonsh1p
"Before the game I had
tears m my eyes I really dtdn't realize what thts rovalry
was about and ts about until
you get a W unto! you're m
the fight satd quarterback
Troy Smith who led a resur
gen t offense that had little
success runmng or throwmg
before No 7 Mtch1gan
arnved at Ohio Stadmm
Sm1th who took over as
the startmg quarterback after
Justm Zwtck suffered a

shoulder InJury m the season's stxth game agamst
Iowa
tortured
the
Wolverones (9-2, 7-i) with
h1s legs and nght arm
Runmng from the shotgun
or scrambl mg to avotd
bl1tzers, Smtth rushed 18
tomes for 145 yards and a
touchdown He also completed I 3 of 23 passes for 24 i
yards and two scores often
eludong a Moch1gan defender
JUSt before the thro"
The Buckeyes could have
scored more, but Mochogan s
defense made two goal hne
stands on the second quarter,
holdmg Ohoo State to three
pomts
"We knew commg tn he
was an exceptional athlete
and that he was capable ol
makmg bog plays," M1chtgan
cornerback Marlm Jackson
saod of Sm1th 'Today he
made too many btg plays that
kept theor confodence hogh
and offense movmg '
Sm1th led the Buckeyes (7
4 4-4) on thetr two longest
scorong droves of the season

- 99 and 97 yards - cappmg them woth a 2-yard run
and a 12-yard pass to
Santomo Holmes
' Smith had a great day,"
Mochogan coach Lloyd Carr
satd "Ohto State ran the ball
very effectively and more
than anythmg else that "as
Troy Smith He created some
bog plays and he kept some
droves alove
Ted Gmn Jr Smith's for
mer h1gh school team mate at
Cievel,md Glenville, caught
ftve passes for 87 yards and
returned a punt 82 yards for a
TD Semor fullback Branden
Joe, gettmg a rare chance as
the featured runner, added 52
yards on I4 carnes
The Bucke) eS had the ball
lor about none more mmutes
than the Wolvennes, helpmg
to keep Moch1gan s highpowered offense on the sodelme
They
also
outscored
M1chogan 14-0 m the thord
quarter buoidmg on a s1x
pmnt halftome lead as Smith
contmuaily trustrated the

Wolvennes Wtth scrambles
In order to have a day hke
today you have to have all
the days pnor to thos " satd
wtdeout Anthony Gonzalez,
who caught a 68 yard touch
down pass from Smoth on the
opemng possess1on
Smtth satd he "as msptred
by a pregame speech deltv
erect by sen10r linebacker
Thomas Matthews, who dos
cussed the Importance of
wmmng another paor of' gold
pants " the trmkets Oh10
State players are awarded
when they defeat Mtch1gan
"That really dawned on me
that we need to do som~thmg
today to won thos game "
Smith satd
It also was obvtous to hu11
afterward what the Buckeye s
had accomplished He had to
tra\erse a sea of scarlet and
gray to reach the locker
room
'Comtng off the field after
the game I almost got my
neck broken by the fans "
Smith saod 'Thos means a lot
to everybody'

Ginn's return turns the tide for the Buckeyes
BY ANDY RESNIK
Assoc1ated Press

COLUMBUS - The four Wolvennes
never had a chance - not when Ted
Gttm Jr gets a httle space and acceier
ates
The speedy freshman ret urned a punt
82 yards for a touchdown Saturday, pro
v1d111g the key play m Ohto States 3721 upset of No 7 M1chtgan
G111n s return the fourth tome he has
run a punt back tht s season came w1th
Oh1o State holdong on to a 20-14 lead
"oth 9 56 ie ft 111 the tht rd quarter
He f1elded the punt and almost tmme
dtateiy Juked Mtchogan safety Anton
Campbell He then spnnted past wode
oul Brayion Edwards and defenstve

Bucks
from Page 81
They cou id end up m the
Sun Bowl 111 El Paso agamst
a Pac I 0 opponent on Dec
31
No matter where they go
the Buckeyes savored thetr
season-savmg upset
"We had some great teams
on the mtd- '90s and
(Mochogan) played spotler a
lot," Buckeyes linebacker
Bobby Carpenter satd "Thts
was our turn to play spmler
Oh10 State had been takmg
htts off the field for weeks
Former player Maunce
Clarett charged that coach
Jtm Tressel and h1s staff
helped players get loaner
cars, made sure they got
cushy classes and good
grades and set them up woth
summer JObs that requored

•

tackle Patnck Massey, outrunmng
punter Adam Fmie) for the touchdown
I saw the guy (Campbell ) so I had to
try to make somethmg real quock and I
was JUst trymg to fmd a hole. he sa1d
"Once you see the touchdown there s
no pomt 111 mak111g a mme You JUSt use
your speed and get to the end zone '
M1ch1gan cornerback M,trlln Jackson
satd the return changed the game
He made a great play, J,tckson s.ttd
·He made a great tndivldual pia), m,tkmg guys mtss '
The Woivennes h.ld planned to ktck
the ball hogh, hop111g to get punt cover
age around Gmn be tore he could get any
momentum past the forst few defenders
We had htm bottled up " Moch1gan
coach Lloyd Carr saod "We had htm and

only momma! work for maxImum pay
So maybe Ohto State whtch ostensobly had little at
n sk goong tnto the game needed a wm more than
Mtch1gan d1d
Maybe tor a day ·or two
people won't ask us about
No I 3, cornerback Duston
Fox sa1d, refemng to the Jer
sey number worn by Claret!
The wm was a reitef to
Tressel as well
'You feel like , at least on
thos day, everythmg IS JUSt
nght," Tressel satd m a rare
moment of candor
Mtchtgan led 14-7 headmg
mto the second quarter and
aP.peared wolhng to score on
every possessiOn Instead, tt
was the Buckeyes who dtd,
reehng off 27 consecutive
pomts
to
leave
the
Wolvermes reeltng
The unhkely heroes were a
pa1r of htgh school teammates who d1dn t f1gure mto
I

Monday, November 22, 2004

somehow he got away
Gmn's touchdown set school and Btg
Ten records for most punts returned for
a score tn a season, and he became JUSt
the third player 111 NCAA htstory to
accomplish the feat lour tunes 111 one
year
' I was shocked ' Ohoo State coach
Jim Tressel sa1d ' He JUSt came out of
nowhere
After Gmn s teturn the Buckeyes
forced M1ch1ga n to punt and then
marched 97 ) ards m 10 plays to take a
34 14 lead
The game was no longer m doubt
' He's been ltke the spark plug on our
car saod Ohm State quarterback Troy
Smtth a htgh sc hool teammate ot
Gtnn s ' He got us gomg'

Tressel s plans two months
earher
Quarterback Troy Smith
saw only spot duty 111 the
f1rst Lwo games of the season
and then dodn t play on the
next three game; Only when
Jusun Zwick tnJured a shoui
der at Iowa
"hoch
dropped a stunned Ohoo
State to 0 3 on the conference - dtd Smith get on the
f1eld
As he learned the position,
the Buckeyes won three m a
row before a dtsappomung
performance on a 24 17 loss
at Purdue a week ago
Smith had never run for
more than 62 yards nor
passed for more 192 but on a
day where lottie went wrong
for Oh1o State he earned 18
tomes for 145 yards - one
yard short of tymg a school
record for a quarterback He
also comp leted 13 of 23
passes tor 241 yards and two
touchdov.ns Without an

mtercepuon or a sack
Ted Gonn Jr was Ohio
State' s most accla imed
recnut last wmter, but he
d1dn t play much m the early
weeks of the season either
Recruited as a defensove
back , he started tak1ng on a
larger and larger role elsewhere, returnong punts and
playmg wtde recetver G1ven
a chance, he blossomed ,
Both played the1r best
game of the season agamst
M1chogan
Gtnn turned the game
around w1th an 82-yard punt
return mtdway through the
thtrd quarter whtie Ohio
State was holdtng a 20-14
lead He set school and B1g
Ten records with hts fourth
punt return touchdown
"I'm pretty much at a loss
for words ' Smith saod ' It's
unbelievable "
Carr and the Wolvermes
could have smd the sume
words

from Page 81
Poerce and Baoley account
ed for ail of Me1gs, first halt
sconng, while Rover Valley
used a 13 22 performance at
the tree throw lone to make
up for a siugg1sh 5- i 8 begm
nong
Thmgs did not go an) bet
ter for the vosttors 111 the second hail
The Solver and Blac k finIShed by hntong JUSt e1ght of
24 attempts from the held
and getting outrebounded i9
10 dunng that same span
Metgs netted 14 of the1r 25
tnes and grabbed an ImpresSIVe mne offenstve caroms
down the stretch
We dodn't shoot the bail
from the outs 1de that well
instde either and we had
plenty of opportumues at the
lone,' satd RVHS coach
Harvey Bro\\ n
I don t
know 11 11 was fust game Jitters or "hat but we JUSt dod
n't perform well We let them
have too many second
chance opportunottes
Pterce .tdded two mooe
deep daggers, mcludmg
another buzzer beater that
ga\e MHS a 38 35 edge after
three quarters of pia) P1erce
fomshed with a game-h1gh 31
pmnts
'We couldn 't leave her
open, and we kept talkmg
about tt She's JUSt a good
shot " commented Brown
Pterce also tallied s1x
rebounds (four oftens1ve)
three steals and an ass1st m
the enormous effort B,lliey
ftmshed With five boards and
had a patr of three p01nt
plavs down the stretch that
sealed the deal on the "ctory
Joey Hanmg grabbed a
game htgh mne rebounds and

Busch
from Page 81
and i 6 over Jeff Gordon
Tbe dramatic finosh was a
tittmg end to a nev. I0 m,m
i 0-race Chase for the Nextel
Cup Champtonshop was
prO\ed a b1gger success th,m
new NASCAR dldtrman
Bnan France could h.J\e
hoped for
After years of ho hLom
champoonsi11ps, often dectd
ed weeks before the lonai
race, Bu sch c.tme 111to the
tinaie leadmg Johnson by i 8
pomts and Gordon by 2 i
woth Dale Earnh&lt;~rdt Jr and
M.trk Martm also with .111
outside shot .tt the tttie
It looked as of Busch s lead
moght nol be enough when
the nght tron t "heel broke on
hos Roush Rac1ng Food near
Iy puttmg hun onto the wall
sep.1ratmg the pot !,me t rom
the track on tbe 93rd ol 271
i.tps 1t Homestead Mt.tmt
Speedway
Somehow Busch kept im
car oft the wail as the 11 re
came oft and bounced unto
the track bnngmg out ,, c,Lu
!ton tl,tg th,tt allowed h1m tu
stop tor repa1rs without los
mg a lap He fell to 2~t h but
!ought h1 s w.1y back among
the leaders JUSt good enough
tor 'the 26 year old~
become NASCAR s lourthyoungest champton The
dosest prev10us i 2 lmO'h
tor the se1 1es tttie c.tme 111
1992 when Alan Kulwock1
be,tt Bill Eihott by 10 pmnts
'It's an unbelievable deal
Busch smd ' Thos os what .1
team does to wm a championship The) persevere on a
day such as thts Ali year
long we ve done thmgs ltke
thos, v.hether we put ourselves 111 a hole or had,, sm.oli
problem I JUst ~:.on t believe
we were able to overcome ali
that tuomoil today
I d hke ro put a cap on
toddy and move on to what
we d1d th1s )ear as a team
wh1ch os unbelievable This
champ1onsh1p 1s lor J1mm)
Fenntg and everybody that s
put work mto thiS car"
Longtome ere\\
ch1ef
Fenmg won his forst Cup
IItle
'Thos ts a champwnshtp
team and a champoons h1p dnver " Fenmg satd " Kurt
Busch ts awesome '
Busch, m JUSt hts fourth
season m NASCAR s btggest
senes, ne ver wavered despite
a champ10nshtp battle too
close to call through most of
the race The rotnts lead
changed severa tomes sometimes on conseculive
laps If the results had stayed
as they wer~ at one poont late
m the race, the top tl1 ree dn-

had four markers for Metgs
while Ashley Caldwell paced
RVHS on the glass With.
seven caroms Caldwell led
ali players with two blocks
and along wtth Knst1n&lt;1
N,tyior, added II pomts on
the setback
Justme Dowler, Bnttany
Hysell Amy Barr, Angel
Harter, Cayia Lee, Meghan
Clelland and Amber Burton
each had at least one rebound
on the mght for MHS
In gammg hos maugur.•I
coachmg Wtn Logan defe,lted a group that he was very
famohar Lew1s used to be a
\arslt) assostant with the
R.11ders and knew most ol
thos team comm~ on
When asked 1f {iere was
any pleasure tn beatmg h1s
former k1ds for the achteve
ment, Logan went from
excoted to remorseful
" I knew they were gmng to
go ve i 00 percent and they
dod they really played their
hearts out,' he satd about
RVHS
We threw the
kotchen smk at them tomght
and that,s what ot took for us
to wm I JUSt wtsh I could
have got my forst agamsl

\ers would ha~e tted and
Johnson would have won
b.tsed on his e1ght VICtones
Johnson and four time
ch,ttnpion Gordon gave 11
everything they had fomsh
tng second .md th1 rd after
Boltlc grabbed the lead on
the last req,lrt held oil
Johnson lor the last four
l.lps
Wuh the 97 (Busch)
hehtncl me there .ot the end I
kne1~ the champ1onshtp was
uut ut the queslion and I "'"
JUst r.tc1ng Jell lor second
s.11d Johnson who had won
Jour ol five races betore the
I male
Gntdon l,tt ied to lead a lap
111 the race and saod he knC\1
he dodn t h,11c the c.Jr to Will
'We gave It a heck of an
eflot t Goo don saod
We
had ,1 tlat left rear that reali)
gnt us behtnd and we fought
ai I day long We struggled a
louie btt there at the begin
nUlg and got better and bet
ter Those last couple ol
rest,lrts we h.1d a shot tl
le,Jst to Win the race
I don I know oJ that was
going to "111 us the ch,tmpi
onshop bul 11 "as a gre,ll
year
Johnson and Goodon were
dos,tppUinted not to be able w
dcdic,Jte a ~:hamptonshtp to
the i 0 people who d1ed Oct
24 111 the nash ol a Hendmk
Mo101 sports pl.me on the
'"·tv to ..t rdce m V1rgm~t1 Bul
Bu sc h
"hose
ymtnger
brother Kyle dmes for
Hcndnck 111 the Busch
Seotes took c.1rc ol that, too
I m choked up becaLise
there nothmg h.trder 111 the
NASCAR communoty than
wh,ot we had to go through ,,
couple weeks &lt;1go w1th
Hendt1ck and the problem
they h.1d Busch sa1d i
love them trui) and I want w
dedicate anyth mg I can from
th os champoonshop to them
My little brother was allect
ed by thiS so It hll home
The end of the race was
ch.tot tc as Ryan Newm ,in
was knocked out of the lead
when a detlattng tore sent
h1111 hurtlmg onto the wall
JUSt two laps before the
scheduled fm1 sh That put
Tony Stewart on top
But Stewart s car started
sputtenng runmng OLit of
gas on the Iast restart, and
B1ffle, who led a race-hogh
i i 7 laps sped ahead wtth the
championsh ip contender~
close behmd . He held off
Johnson by JUSt 0 342 secabout four caronds lengths
Busch had to overcome
mostakes and mechantcai
fatlure s several ttmes dunng
the champiOnship playoff bur
won the title by bemg the
most consostent of the contenders finoshmg m the top
i 0 m mne of the i 0 events

~ribune

- Sentinel - ~egtster

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Gall • C(lunty Oil

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~ribune

To Place

Sentinel

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...c~a-~_~_;_~_:_:_Y,_.._._{7_ _:~:.;_;?
r....2ro44~:~~~2. (7!?a~ ro99~:~~~6
Word Ads

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

Display Ads

1 00 p m
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day • Paper
~~:~~::~In-Column 1 00 p m
-F
For Sunday• Popcr

r

GIVFAI\~Y

t

~en~

lwr~ght®lc

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
RIVERSIDE
AUCTION
Shirley Spears 304
BARN At 7 South 5 m1les Set
be ow the Dam EVERY 675 1429
SATURDAY
@
6pm
Cost Technician extensive
(740)256 6989
travel wee~s to months al a
Accounting back
7 mon th otd female Black o:~j=---,,..----, t me
lab m1x Needs room to run
WANIID
ground track project cost
Call (740)245 9677
1U BuY
develop reports procure
men! and contracts expert
Absolute Top Dollar US ence a plus Excel Word
S1 tver and Gold Co1ns and PowerPomt skills Fax
Proofsets Gold A1ngs U S resume to (614)716 2272

I \I I'll Ill\ I

Two 8 week old female K1t
tens must go together
1ndoors on y {740)843 5268

-..1

I~\

It I ..,

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing ra1erve1 the right to edit rajact or cancalany ed at any lima Errort muat be reponed on the flrat day of
Tribuna Sentinel Reglater will be reaponalble for no more than tha coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the flrat lnaan on We
any loaa or axpen" th.t raauha from tha publlcallon or omlaalon of an advertiHment Conacllon will ba made In the tiral available edition
ara always confldantltl • Current rata card appll.. • All real aatate advartleamanta are •ubtaet to tha Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1168
accapta only help wantMI ada mtetlng EOE atandarda Wa will not knowlngtv accept anv ldvertlalng ln violation Of the law

HEt.PWANI1lD
net

1
·------'
3 mixed breed puppieS to
good home 2 female one
mate (740)992 5237

Free puppies Lab/ Rotwe~ler Currency M T S Co n Shop
151
Second
Avenue
m1x Call {740)441 8888
Gallipolis 740 446 2842
Pupp1es to g1veaway Ca I
(740)379 2639
Buy1ng JUnk cars Pay1ng up
Pure bred S1benan Husky to $50 (740)388 001 1
male 2 yrs old (740)949
2698
'
l\

12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publlc:atlon
Sunday Dl•play 1 00
Thursday for Sundays Pat~•!

'
/

3 bedroom 2 bath ut1l1ty 1983 14x70 mobile home
room B1dwe I area $66 000 V1nyl s1dmg shuners new
Call (740)441 t528 after wmdows s 1CI ng g ass back
door central a1r/heat ng
4pm
27t! above ground pool w 1h
3BR 2BA located In Green deck w1th new hner ty,o
Townsh1p close to schools build ngs On Ia ge and pr1
5 129 acres Owner wants vate remed at on L nco n
offer (740)446 7377
P1ke one ml e from G een
Etem school Very wei
ATfENIIONI
ma nta1ned Ready to move
GET YOUR LOAN TO
1n $15 500 (740 )44 1 1560
BUY OR REFINANCE
1987 Schultz 2 bed oom 2
YOUR HOMEI
i 4x70 $8 000 must
bath
FREE APPROVED
be move (740)696 0757
HOME LOANS

/

/

~

CUST SVC REP
NEEDED!
Work From Home
800 210 4689
$500 $1 500/Month
Part hme
$2 000 $8 000/Month
Full t1me

DATA ENTRY
Work
from home
:10
HELP WANITJ&gt;
Flexible Hours!l
1,
SSSGreat Pay!SSS
Personal
Computer
An Excellent way to earn
Required
$500 Reward offered for money The New Avon
1 800-913 2823 ext lt1
1nformat on 1ead1ng to recov Cal Mar lyn 304-882 2645
Delivery Warehouse person
ery of stolen tems from
Arno d Sears residence n Attendant Hostess Must be needed full t1me 1mmedtate
Harnsonvd e call (740)992 Dependable
Fr endly &amp; open1ng mUst have excel
ent drtv~ng reco d apply at
4129
Honest
Var ous
Sh1fts
Ava•lable The Po1nt Cafe L festyle Furniture 856 3rd
lost Go den Retnever Very ocated bah nd PI Pleasant Ave GaU1pohs 9 5 no phone
tr endly lost 1n Addav le VISitOrS Cente r
Apply In calls please
George
Creek
area person
Wednesday Dom1no s now h1nng safe
(740)446 3208 or (740)446 November 24th lOam 3pm clnvers
all
pos 1 o ns
1387
Severa Pos1110ns Available
Gall1polls
Pomero y
PI

NEW PURCHASES/
REFINANCES
$0 DOWN/ $0 DOWN
CASH OUT HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

r

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4 s For Sate,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,, ..
725
Announcement .................. :.......................... 030
Antiques
530
Apartments for Rent
440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
Auto Repaor
no
Autos for Sale
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate
750
Building Supplies
550
Businass and Butldlngs
340
Business Opportunity
210
Business Training
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment
780
Cards of Thanks
010
Child/Elderly Care
190
Etectricai/Refrigeratton
840
Equipment for Rent
480
Excavating
830
Farm Equtpment
610
FannstorRent
430
Fanns lor Sale
330
For Lease
490
For Sale
585
For Sale or Trade
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnished Rooms
450
General Hauling
850
Giveaway
040
Happy Ads
050
Hay &amp; Grain ,
640
Help Wanted
11 o
Home Improvements
810
Homes for Sate
310
Household Goods
510
Houaaa for Rant
410
tn Memoriam
020
Insurance
130
Lawn &amp; Qarden Equtpmtnt
880
LIVtiiOCk
830
Loti and Found
080
Lola &amp; AcrtiQI
350
Mtacaltanaoua
170
Mlacatllntout Marchtndlll.
540
Mobtlt Home Repair ,
880
Mobtla Homaa for Rant.
.. 420
Mobtlt Homtt for Bitt
320
Monty to Loan
220
Motorcycttt &amp; 4 WhHltrt
740
Mu1lca lnetrumanta
570
Paraonala
ooe
Pata for Silt
510
Plumbing &amp; H11ttng
... 820
Proltttlonat Barvtc11
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Rtpa!r
110
Rill !alate W1nl1d ,
380
School a Instruction •
110
9Hd , Plant &amp; Fartlltzar
880
Blluallona Wtntad
120
Sptca for Rant
480
Sporting Gooda
520
BUY 1 for Sate
720
Trucka for Seta
715
Upholstery
870
Vana For Salt
730
Wtnted to Buy
••
080
Wented to Buy· Farm Supptlal
820
Wtnttd To Do
180
Wtnlad to Rent
470
Yard Sete- Galltpotlt
072
Ytrd Stte·Pomeroy/Mtddle
074
Yard Stte-Pt Pltlllnt
078

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
_{. ~
""
Borders$3.00/perod
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

116
,
1

All Dl8play

• All ads must be prepaod'

• start Your Ad• Wtth A Keyword • Include Completli
Detcrlptlon • Include A Ptlc:e • Avolq Abbrt!vlatlon•
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Dayt

\\\01 \(I 'II \ I '

(304} 675-1333

OearltirM

Dally In-Column

someone else "

As lor the Raoders, Brown
knows there ts still a lot of
b.tsketbali lett to be played
,md that h1s squad IS gomg to
h,tve plenty of chances at
redemption
'We know what we ha\ e to
do .tnd we, II keep workmg to
get tt dune ' saod Brown
The Marauders made It an
evenong sweep as the JUnior
'ar&gt;~ty squad defeated the
Ratders b) a score of 19- i 2
Me1gs contmues a f1ve
game home stand today when
they take on the Tnmble
Tom~:ats at 6 p m
while
Rover Valle) travels to Gal ltd
A.cademy
5 30
pm
Tuesday

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

Prep Scoreboard
Girls Basketball

Monday, November 22, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pleasant &amp; Eleanor call
store (304 )67 5 5858 for
appl cat10ns
Dr ver wanted CDL Class B
Tanker
Endorsement
$10 50/ hr plus benef Is
(740)245 5514 Bam 4pm
Drivers
"Home Weekends
"99° DNo Touch Fre1ght
"No NYC'
·st 000 Stgn on Bonus
1 yr OTR reqd
1-800 927-043, or
www arctlcexpress com
Happy Thanksgiving
from lnfoCiskm!
Gobble up a I we have
to offer
•Up to. $8/hour
• Weekly Paycheck
• Full benef1ts
• Pa1d vacat1ons
•Pa1d tra1nmg
Cal today and start
earn ng money for
Chr slmasl
1 877-463-6247
ext 2455
WWW lnfOCISIOn COm
MMEOIATE O~ENINGS 20
to 30 HOURS A WEEK N
MEIGS COUNTY Prov1de
self d~tected ntens1ve sup
port "coach1ng 1ndlv1duals
and their families Ia work
through difficulties We give
you spec lie paid training
ancl earned paid time off
May be 811 gned evenings
and/or week end schedule
worKing primarily within
fami ly home or preferred
maetmg place For appllca
lion call (937)653 1320 or
wr te
to
HR
Dept
Champa ign
Auldentlal
servlcea Inc 1150 SciOto
Strtet Urbana Oh 43078
Champaign
Rteldentlal
StrVttl II Ctltbratlng 28
yeara of aervlo11 to adulla
with cl'lallengea and dlllblll
lltt EOE
10
yro
MACHINIST
expertltnce min Ability to
retd blu eprlnll 111d m1c
Experience w/lathll milia
etc 40 hrl par w. . k paid
holi day• vacatiOr'l lr'ld 401 K
plan
Send reauma lo
Mach n1at
C/0
Point
Pttaaant Rtglattr
Box
TSC18 200 Main St P1
Pleaunt WV 255!0
Makt 50% ltlllng Avon
Li mited
time
ONLY
(740)«6 3358 F rot 5to~all
rect!vea a g ft

II

~

www com1cs com

~._

~

2004 by NEA,

Inc

lrn1"'"------,
~~-------,
1116
1110
HELP WAN'lm

MB 5263
(OhiO Loans On y)

HF.I P WAN'llJl

ID
·-------'
Salesperson
L•festyle
MR/DD Advocate
Protect \19 serv ces repre Furmture full time poSit ion
sentat1ve postbon Full t1me Apply 1n person 10 5 No
H 0 VALLEY PUBLISH
1n the Gall1pohs off1ce phone calls pease
856
lNG CO recommends tha
Bachelors Degree m human Third Avenue Gall polls
serv1ces or related f1eld and
ou do bus ness w1th peo
te you ~now and NOT t
expenence 1n mental retar TELEMAAKETERS NEED
EO No Expenence OK $7
end money through th
dat1on reqwed
9 Per Hour Easy Work 1
a1l unt1l you have 1nvest
Send fax resume to
888 974 JOBS
ated the offenn
Mary Helen Swan
Fax tf614 262 9752
VACANCY
Part time Opportunity to open Cloor Matlto
Heavy
Equipment Bel s
Bakery
and
Mary Helen Swan
Operator
Instructor Restauranl For appoint
Advocacy &amp; Protective
Mm1mum 5 years exper
menls call {304)525.S780
Services Inc
ence as Heavy Equipment or (740)894 3630 ask tor
41 10 North H gh Street
Operator constructiOn expe Mr George
I Sf Floor
r ence prelerred Two part
Columbus OH 43214
t1me hourly contracts Day
I'ROI'L''&lt;;l!lNAI
Now h r ng Full and Part school (4 hours/day) and
SER\ICI.~
14
ttme pos1t1ons McCiures Adult school
hOurs/even
ng)
to
be
he
d
Restaurants m McArthur
Gall potts and Middleport January 17 2005 through
Marcl1 18 2005 CONtACT
Apply between 10 and
iO 15am
Monday
thru Gall a Jackson V nton JVSD
DIRECTV
(740)245 5334 ext 201
Saturday
EEO
Up to
Paramed iCS
&amp;
EMT s
WE'RE GROWING
12 Months FrH
needed Apply at 1354
AGAIN
Programm ing 130
Jackson Ptke Gall pohs
Channels pus Free
EQuipment Free
Part t me babys1tter needed We need to f1ll the posl
m Spnng Val ey area Call lions of lnslallars If you Profess onal tnstallat on up
to 4 Rooms Free Call 1
(740)446 7820
are an Individual looking
BOO 523 7556 tor detailS
- - - - - - - - - - , - lo Improve yourself &amp; you
htgh pro!Jle work well w1th others wtlh
Pro m nent
garage seeking competent a clean driVing record We
techn 1c 1an Must be lam liar offer theses following ben
Gemstones
Aopra1sa s
wtth OTC Snapon or other eflts to our employees
Gem Testtng
Gradua te
scan tools scopes Must
•Medical insurance
Gem ologtst
Jeweler
have own tools Prefer cerll
"Retirement Fund
(740 )645 6365 0 (740)446
f1catlon but not necessary
•paid Vacations &amp;
3080
Send resume complete With
Holidays
TURNED DOWN ON
to Help
"Annual Bonus
3 references
Wanted
PO Box ~ 1 5
•Truck• &amp; ToQie
SOCIAL. SECURITY ISS17
VInton Oh 0 45686
Fumlehed
No Fee Unless We W1nt
- - - - - - - - Application•
can
be
1 888 562 3345
picked up at aur attlce 1t
PSYCUOlOGIST
Bennett a
Healing
&amp;
1{1\11 ... 1\11
Cooling
13e1 Salford
We are a wen respected School Rdt Gatllpoll• OH
Ho~IFS
national practice dealing ( 740 )448 IM 1
FOR
with gerlatrlca We art In
nnd of a llcenetd paycholo ~1~
ScHooLS
gist who Ia nteruted In ,
~Ul.IJON
(2) 3 oe~oom houaea tor
working part time We otter a
ule 2 baths f1replacta on
good lltrtlng utary and the Otltlpolla CtrHr College acreage Ca
(740)709
ab llty to particlp1t1 In our
(Caretrs coat To Home)
1166
40, K Ca t P1ycnotogtat Call Todoy l 740 448 4387
Tranaltlon1 at 817 734 203,
1 800 214 04!2
0% Down Payment and
or tu re1ume to 877 734
www gallpOI tcltllteol •ge com
"cered tao M•mb• .f.cc •d I ng financing ava l abe with
2030
A\ltragt
Counc l lO lnCI,I)Incl,nl Colle;ll approved crtdit
11nd Schoole 11P•B
credit qual f ta you It down
~N Unit Managar
peyment 1'\11 kept you trom
Arbo,. at O•lllpolll
ll1U MlscELIANEOUS
buying 11'1 11 a your cnance
to own your own nom1 If
In Search of 1 Unit Manager
you have a down payman1
tor Sklled Nurtlng Hall of 28 H gh
School
Junlora
btda tl"rlt n.. a work achtd Senlora and ~rlor StrVICI but wo1.1fd Jlkt lo cona•rvt It
ula or Monday Friday with you cen Ill vacent poa lt ona we offtr low down payment
on cal raapona bhlt" Tnta In the Weal VIrg inia Army programa alto Ortt1 Inter
Ia a llltrltd potlllon with National Guard II you are eat rattal l.ocel comp1ny
Loca1ora
Excel tnt
H11lth
Care betwttn lht ag" ot 17 35 Mortgage
Dental and Vltton coverage or have prior mil tary 11rv 'l'ol01~92 7321
Long Ttrm Cart and
tee you won t want 10 Pill
Management Experience Ia th lt uo For Qpportunitlta In 2 atory 4 btdroom t tlatl'l
CIA detached 2 car garage
Pret.rred along wl!h l!rong
your aru cal
304 67!5 3/4 ac re
rural water
wr "an communication and
Locatael n Sa em Center
teaderahlp aklla Alao Night
County
Phone
Meigs
AN pot Ilona avt l&amp;bte
(740 )384 31il55
Ser OU!I
Pleaae app In per10n at
lnQu r u only
170
Plnecrtat
Dr ve

..,

"'

t:J

e

SALE

v

Galllpotl a Ohio 45831 or call Wood a Extra Care tor your
Now hlr ng All l'oalllons All Judy Barcus at 740 446 Loved one ~ rlv111 room 2br House 1or Sal&amp; ln Weal
Shlfta
Ap oly
within 7112 ror turtntr Information bath 3 hot meal• Pno ne Co umbl a WV Appro•
(Jaillpoha o ~ r~ Queen
1 1/2 acre&amp; (304 )773 5284
EOE MI FID'V
(7 40)388 0116

- ----- ----

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
H!OD-37D-4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFEO BY US
VETERANS

House for Rent 1 1/2 out of
town
2 bed room
$275/molith $1 00/deposlt
call (304 )675 1429
Huge Oup ex clean 3 bed
room 1 bath dtnmg star
age No pets/smoking S595
Call Kel y (740)446 996t
Pomeroy 3 bedroom house
large yard &amp; ol1 street park
ng 5450 a month plus
depos1t &amp; ul11t1es no pets
tor appt cat1on and appo1nt
ment call (7 40)992 5228

Super clean 3BA 1BA
For sale or rent 2 bedroom
arge ya d Pleasant loca
mobile homes startmg at t1on 20 m nu tes !rom A10
$270 per month Call 740
Grande Gall pol s No pets/
992 2167
smokmg
$400/mo
No
Make 2 payments move 1n 4 (740)379 9465
years on note (304)736
3409

Syracuse 3 bedroom ~ 1/ 2
ba!h on 1.... acres CH&amp;A
New Oakwood mega store bas ement garage S70 000
featunng
Homes
by negotiable (740)992 0167
Oa~wood
Fleetwood &amp;
G les One srop shopping
1
only at Oakwood Homes of
Barboursville WV (304)736
2 bedroom tra ler Tuppers
3409
Pia ns $300 per monlh plus
SAVE SAVE SAVE
depOSit &amp; Ulll I es (740)667
Stock models at old p ces 3487
2005 models amvmg Now
Coles
Mob1le
Homes 3 bedroom tratler Tuppers
15266 US 50 East A!hens Pta1 ns S450 per month plus
OhiO 45701 (740)592 1972 Clepos t ut1ht es and reter
Where You Get You ences (740)667 3487
Money 5 Worth
3 Bed oom 2 bath tota
~F.;..;~'""'----,
electr c R•o Granoe area
F~R\IS
$375 month $37 5 Oeposrt
tUR SM.E
·--iiiiiiiiiliiiii.a-" No pets (7 40 )245 5671

r M~RE~~

House 3 Bedroom i 1/2
Bath Heal Pump
new
Carpet Wmdows &amp; Roof
A1ver V ew 12 Sm th St No
Money Down to qualify ng
Buyer $425 month why Rent Farm Free gas &amp; monll"' y
(304)675 2749
10yalty check 49 actes 3
btg barns tobacco base
tenc ng pond small 2 beel
room
1 bath
house
$239 000
Bever y@
St llpass
Rea ty
Co

j

All real estate advertising
tn this newspaper Ia
subjec:t to the Federal
Fair Housmg Ac:t ol1968
whlc:tl makes It Illegal to
advertise any
preterenc:e limitation or
d1scrlmln at1on based on
race ector rellg1on sex
ramltlalstatus or nationAl
origin or any rntenllon to
mllke any such
preference 11m1lallon or
discrimination "
Th1s newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
estate which I&amp; in
violation at the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advert1sad In
thrs newsplllper are
lllll&amp;llable on an equllll
apportumty bases

For sate
Com J reeldl 4 ots &amp; 1
house
below appra sed
va ue at 1410 Lewis St P1
Pea 304 548 6818 after 5
pm
House for sale 262 High St
Hartford WV 1 acre lot 4
bedrooms 2 tull slzt bath
rooma large hvln g room
kitChen and Clln ng room
comb ned aew nQ or com
complataly
puler room
remodt ac call (304 )675
1296 IV1n 1nga (304 )675
504 1 day
· - - - - - - -. .

•

wwworvb com
Home Llttlnge
L1at your home by ctiiiMg

(7'0)UI.3120
VIew photoa! nto onlne
Bedroom 3 Bath
ocattd In Ga llpo!l1 over
OOkiMQ tht Oh io Rlvtr
ver .JOOO IQ ft on 3 94
cr11 Code 121 or clll
740)441 0323
edwood Cape Cod
ome lil5 acr11 4
edroom 2 Bath 2 Car
arage Aoove grouno
ool
dwti Oh Stocked
nd Code eu or Cl lt
740)388 0410

a

~
10

N ce 2 bedroom mob e
home No pets (740)446
2003
Very roomy 2 bedroom JUS!
outs1de c1 ty no mstde pets
pr va e senmg
ava able
mmed1ately (740 )446 6890

&lt;\~~liT\ IUHS

mR Rt:ro.T

Houst s

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments I urn shed and unfur
n shed
secur ty depos11
requ
red
no
pets 740 992
oc o Down Pay menl and
!inane ng ava table w th 2218
app oved cred1t
Ave age
1 bedroom apt m Ga llpol s
cred t qua f1es you It down grouna f oor CIA &amp; gas FP
payment has ,.;ept you tram
$300 month plus deplret
buytng m s s your chance Water pd {7 40 )446 7 130
to own your own home II
you have a down payment 1 bedroom tr1 level Spnng
but would ke to conserve t Va ley area Oepos t &amp; refer
we offer low down payment ences requ ed (740)446
prog ams also Great 1nter 2957
est rates Local company
1br Apa tment very clean
Mo tgage
Locatofs
Reference
Requ red
( 40 992 732 1
$225/month plu s Depos1t
1 bedroom house GArt eld lea\le message (304 )675
Ave
$350 montli
Ca ll 4975

FOR R£~1

(740\441 0194 or !740)441
1184

2 Bedroom House 2312

2 bedroom apartment n
Centena y all u111 t es patd
except electr c $325 Call
(7A01256 1135

Mad son Ave
No Pets
OepoSII
&amp;
Reference 2BR C A relr gerator/stove
ReqUired
5350/monlh mclud ed
washer dryer
phone (304)675 2749
nook up
10 m1n !rom
Holzer
(740)441 0194 or
2 Bedroom House No Pets
1740 4.41 , 184
$3?5Jmonth Referelices &amp;
Oepos t Requ ired !304)8?5 BUUTIFUL
APART
5578
MENTS
AT
BUOQET
2 atory 2 bed room 1 5 batl'1
kltchan with stove &amp; rtfrlger
ato r 233 Second Ave
no
Convement ocat on
pttl $585 month p u• ra1er
tnce &amp;. aeootlt (7401•46
4i28

PRICES 4T J4CKSON
ESTATES 52 W111twood
Drive trom $344 to $442
Wa k to st'oO!' &amp; mov 11 Ca ll
740 446 2588
Equ11
Houa ng Qpportun ty

Apa rt 'T'Itnt
nclud 81
wa1ar tras h
POll iO I 5 1!'1 M110n WV
Secur ity
DIPOI t
IM
No
Ptil
S3001dtOOI t
~ala enc11 requtrt d c11
S•251month (304 )882 3652
after 5pm (3041)e75 3042

2 Story !-lome for rent 4BR

3Br Homa n New HIVtn
WV Tott ElectriC I Heat
Pump
$300/depoa 1
$400/ mOr'lth
No
Pttl
1304)882 3852

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
EO • 4FFOROAILEI

Townhouse
apt rtmenta
and/or ama I hOUHI FOR
RENT Cal (740)441 1111
tor
apgllcatlon I tntormalior'l
3br In Syracuae $475/month
Hud Approved no Ptta For rent 2 btoroom garaga
"(304)875 5332 wookondo apt Cal a40)44S 1652
only cal {740 )5Q1 0265
Grac1oua IIV no 1 lnd 2 biO
49A 2 Olth Mu l l In room apartment• at VIllage
Galllpoha
$6! 0/mon th Manor
and
Rivera dt
d8POIII requrtd (740)441 A"a rtmenta m Mleld leport
01i4 or (740)441 1184
Frofl1 $295 $44.4 Cal 740
lilQ2 5084 Equa Housing
Condo 3 bdrm 2 bathl v.
OooortunltltS
Olltr""'lr'lt V1 ew ol rv er
Cntr
AJC $700 mo One beoroom garage apart
Galllpoha Fe rry (740 )446 ment I&lt; tcht"1 turn l~'~tO
$400 (740 1992 3823
3481

�..
Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 22, 2004
ALLEY OOP

AllunMmTs
FOIIRF.Nf
F»&gt;easant Valley Ap(lrtment" Buy or sell. AI&gt;Jerine AKC GQiden Retriever pup1 1988 'Chevy Nova, body &amp; 20€10 Ford Wihdstar Van,
.6.re i\ow taking Applications Antiques, 1124 East Main pies. Call (740)256·1686 or ~ter ior in fair condition, runs pOwer Windows/cnlise , 7
great, good engine &amp; trans- passenger, 91 ,000 •rfliles
for 2BR, 3BA &amp; 48R , on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- {740)&amp;15-2793.
mtssion. needs ball JOrnt, askrng $6,900 (304~675·
Applications are taken 992-2526. RU6s Moore.
4014
•
AKC Pekingese 2 mele. First $175 OBO
Monday tl'1ru Fnda~. ~rora
9:00 A.M .-4 P.M. Office is
~'EOUS
shots &amp; wortned . $400 firm, 1995 Pontiac GrandPrlx fully
Located at ,5, Evergreen
MERDIANDISE
(740)446-1~ , or leave ~oaded, 4tlt, rebuilt, ·v·6 ,2003 Chevy Ex,press C;:~rgo
eilgine, body &amp; Interior, V~n ~4 t6n, ~500 serle~
Drive Point Pleasant, WV "--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii;...~ · messai•·
Phone No is (304)675-5806.
~~---14 solid oak church pews, AKC Pomerariar'l puppiesE.H:O
11 feet long. (740)256-6539 . black, brown. (female), 1
sable (male) vet checked
Tara
Townhouse
88 Full-size Bronco 4JC4 , $400 each, {740)69tl-1085
Apartments, Very SpaCious ,
$1 ,350; 20x8.5 Hallmark
2 Bedrooms , 2 Floors, CA. 1
enclosed trailer. S4,500:
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted ,
4000 Ford w/loader, $4,000.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
(740)379-2544.
Ftatio. Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Le'ase Plus Security Btltter N Bens woadburner
AKC Sctrnauze~ puppies.
~eposfl Required. Day s: insert lor fireplace . Good
Black, salt &amp; pepper. Vel
740-~·3481 :
Evenings: shape . Call {740)446-0138.
each.
chlilcked. ,
$400
740.367-0502.
leave message.
{740)696- 1085.

Twin AiV8fs Tower is accept· Englander pellet stove and
ing applications tor wait1ng insapipe Used 3 seasons,
list lor Hud-6ubsized. 1· br. $450 080. {740)388-8575.
apartment. call 675-6679 Firewood, $30 · pick~up ,
EHO
mostly Oak &amp; cut up stabs,

{740)441·9872.

.

Frigidaire refrigerator $95;

Kenmore electric range $95:
Kenmore dryer $95; MaYtag
washer $95; GE was/1er/
dryer $300; T.V. $45; chair

Skaggs Appliances
7e Vine Street
. {740)446'-7398

NEW AND USED STEEL

f.(1cUohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porler, Ohio.
(740)446·7~~4 1-877-8309162. Free Estimates, E~;~sy
finanCing , 90 days same as

cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Drive· a· little save alot.

r

FoR SAL!:

e

ranges, air conditioners. and {740)446-9356.
wringer washers . Will do

UYI!SIOCK

Pole Barn 30:J~50X 1 0FT
$6795. includes Painted
shop or at your home.
,BullsTop
Metal, Plans, Instruction Angus
Used Furniture Store; 130 Book. Slider, Free Delivery Performance Linee. 40 Years
Artificial l~emination. Slate
Bul'aville Pike. Appliances. (937)559·8385

r_ s= ,.Ir

{740)379-9211 .

Bl~UliNG

Beretta BL4 12gauge 0/U
SUPPUE'i
full. S800. Remington
11'87 12gauge slug gun, Block , briCk, sewer pipes.
$400.
RemJ.[lgton 870 windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Express 12gau~ slug gun. Winters, Rio Grande, OH
$225.
Franchi , 28gaugi Call 740-245-5121.
automatic, $600. (740)446·

30~

i

~

Winchester 1300 12gauge
with 2 barrels. :t325.
3
Mossberg 12gauge sluggun .
Fie 410 singleshot. $85 .
NEF 20 sirgleshot. $75.

1740)446-1306

.I

ro~u:

"--------·
2 male AKC Miniature
Pinchers, 7 weeks old.
Black/rust , $250. {740)3886124.

Run Farm {740)286-5395.
www.staterunlarm.com
Aprox 50 barnyard Bantam
chickens. Priced at $2 each.
Call (740)379-2429

12 cows

Mitsubishl Lancer, rebuilt,

40,000 (11lles. ~u1o. $5,200
(740)266-1618
(740)256-8200.

080

www.orvb.com
Car UsHngs.
Li st your car by calling

View photos/Into online.

*
**
**

*

*
**

1~,$·Jtk ·

)'' ·,;.;\' '•' '

·~·

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

740·992·7599

tleo. Call {740)441 -

or (740)446-7807

1997 Ford Lariat extended
cab, 3rd door, red, side step.

7272.

2004 Chevy Silverado 4x4
Z71 Off Road 1500, V-8,
automatic. less than 3,000
miles. (740)378·6349
95 Jesp Wrangler 4-in. lih
kit, new wheel &amp; tires, 3·
$500! Honda's. CheiiY's,
tops, · low miles, $6,500.
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police
{740)256·8149.
Impounds! Cars !rom $50(]
for l1stlngs 800·:391·5227

Help Wanted

40 I (k) Plan .
Life Insurance
Lon&amp;·term Disability

Educational Assistance

Bereavement Pay

Jury Duty Pay
Paid In-services
Leaves of Absence

Regular Rate Increases
Experience Pay
l,;niform Allowance

"Star''

Perfect Attendance

Time and a Half for Worked Holidays
Time and a Half for Overtime

If you ore seriously considering a career In the Reid or
Healtb&lt;are, ond want to be a member or a caring, dedicated
team,
us a call at.740-446-5001, or come see us In person
at 380 Colonial Dr., Bidwell.

Ill••

of~...

n..
(An equal opportuni1y employer)

**
**
**
*
**
*
*
**
**
**
**

********************

Let me de il for you,l
BARNEY
LET TH' CAT
IN, JUGHAID n

'fES, MA'AM,
AUNT
LOWEEZ'f !!

THE BORN LOSER
-q

1""1&gt;\ I&gt; 'iOI.J Kl-IOW

I mce.: IZAt-l tOR

f-\OW D\ I&gt; 'iOU

PJ1 \:) Wf-\8'\ 'IQI W£R.(.
RU!-11'&lt;\NG Ut-101'1'0~0

oo-;

CIT'i C.OU~IL?

~=\

:...1!

MAILErS
SELF STORAGE
'

:BIG NATE

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232
Oiler's

IMPORTS
Athen s

THIS.
KID a! THE
FORENSICS

,.........

TEAM.

HEII.I.TH't' s NAcKs'

/

!I
Whaley'~

Auto
Parts

St. Rt.oRl -Darwin . OH

N0-992-70 13

ot 740-992-5553

Re.~lockitlf}

In le . ~kKid l!ft Hll•£11'1
and Arter .\h rkel Pn rts

PEANUTS

Wf.lAT IF I DECIDED TO
BECOME A WAITER 50MEDAV?

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri ~:30-5:00

PROBABL't', I-IOWE'l!:R.
NOT ~E SORT OF TI-liNG
TO PUT ON A RESUME ..

Sal. R:JO-Noon
Sun. Closed

•

Deer Shop

HAWKINS

•• y,;,, '"' {f ;,,,
tJi' f'!r ; l'("e,,/

TAXIDERMY
1.17 S. 5th A•enue

31645 SR 325

Middleport, OH

We

GOT

BUT WAIT! How CAN
HHS IE? CANDY ISNT
ALLOWED 1N SCHOOL!
THE VENCIN6 1"\1\(HINES
ONLY SERVE

992~3194

~'R~

Langsville, OH

SUNSHINE CLUB

(740) 992-7533

45741
Keith &amp; Gloria Oiler

L!
...

·-&lt;

74Q-742-2076
Skin, Cut, Wrap A
l'rei!Zf!. Alllhi.~ fur only
45.00

o~·tr 1 J rran

rr.s

Expt&gt;rit'm·t

••

EPSV 'TO SE-E. WHO HAS
A ~FIBRtllA10R

Alioull.l D HER£;.

Award H'iunilll,'

Ta.xidt:nniSI ·r

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
NEA 1nr

Public Notice
NOTICE OF DRAWING
JURORS
Rovlood Code, Soc.
2313.20
Olllco
of
Commllllonofl
of
Juror1, M1lg1 County,
Ohio
Novombor 1~. 2004
To All Whom It Moy
Concorn:
On Wodnoodoy, the 111
doy of Docombtr. 2004
11 8:3D o'clock a.m. at
tho olllco of tho
Cammlealonera
of
Juroro
ot
Molgo
County, Ohio, Jurora
will bt publicly drown
for tho 200~ Annual
Jury Lilt of tho
Common Ploao Court
of oald County. .
Chrlotopher T. Wolfe,
Janice
Young
of
Commlaalonora

Jurors
Above annual 1ury
draw will be held at the
Melga County Board
of Elections located at
112

Mulberry

Pomeroy, Ohio.
(11) 22

Ava .,

4.
24

Pass

GARFIELD
C$ARFIEL-D, ARE
----~~YOU HAPPY"&gt;

f~riW@@~
Locust, Oak
Maple $45 Delivered
Bill Slack
740-992-2269

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICTION
• New HomE!s

GRIZZWELLS
~ ~ l't~/&gt;.\.\2E
E'I~Y'I\\\Hq

'
•'

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

~ 11&gt;.\.K

A~IAA$

wt:o WIT\1
fO,O

740·992·1671
Stop &amp; Compare

•'

At.lto$1

NO FOOD,
NO HAPPY

to

East
Pass

All pass

play a trump.

G

97 Beech Street

"Middleport's only
Self· Storage"

North

Recently, I saw some operating inslruc·
tions Wtlh five pornts. the fifth berng "Read
these instructions frrsl." There are some
bridge declarers like that, who relegate
the key aspect of a deal to last. Today, you
are sittrng South. How would you try to
make four spades after West leads the
heart queen?
North used Stayman, intending to rebid
two spades over two diamonds to show a
game-invitational hand with five spades
and four hearts. However, when South
surprised him with a two-spade reply,
North correctly upgraded his hand.
Some players would win the first trick and
immediately drtve out the spade ace. But
then East should return a heart, setting
up four tricks lor the defense: one in each
suit.
Better declarers will notice these four
potential losers. There IS nothing to be
done about the three aces, so the heart
problem must be add ressed - and it
must be addressed now. They wrn the first
trick with their ace and lead a sneaky club
jack from hand. However, West goes 1n
with his club ace and returns a heart.
stranding the declarer in the dummy: one
down .
The best Souths notice this entry problem
and win trick one on the board, keeping
the later entry - the heart ace - in the
hand where the club winners will be
established. Then. a club lead at trick two
lea\leS the defenders with no rrposte .
Wesl takes his club ace at)d plays a second heart, but. declarer wins in hand and
castles his two top clubs. discarding
dummy's remainrng hearts. Finally, it is
sate

or 992·6635

J

Try to put first
things first

in this
space for $1 00
per month.

10x10x10x20

K Q

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.. Advertise

{740)388-8152.

A 65

Opening lead: or Q

COMMERCIAL and
•RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

Middleport, OH

v-e.

01 Pontiac Montana Van ,
$8,000, cash special ; 01
Dodge Caravan Spor1 Van,
$7,995; 2002 Toyota Tacoma
PU 4M4, 4 cyl, 5-sp., tactory
warr/37,000 miles (New),
$12,900; 2000 Ford F-150
XL _. door, 2 WD, PU, V6,
aulomatlc, miles-0 77.411 ,
$10,000 (Nice~.
Soulhern Auto Sales
701 2nd A11e.

2.

Winduws • Roofing

Hours

1969 Ford F-150, 4x4. runS
good, 302 engine, $ 1,500.

or &lt;740)992· $14.500. (740)441-0 182.

Holzer Senior .care Center, a 70 bed long-term care nursing
facility has limited positions available for RN's, LPN's and
STNA's, We offer a'competitive employment package including:

Come join the caring people

$4,500.

lex&lt;:ellentcondi1ion, $10,000.
_ {7401387-7762, {740)367-

: CAREER OPPORTUNITIES :
IN HEALTHCARE
:
:

Program

$800

door, leather, IQaded, Vortex
auto, 138,900 miles,

********************

•

~:·~~ - . · :r '· .:
''··
"'!'"f1..~· 7;. t ,.
~;\l.'lt; ~...·140"~'''.-,

19114 S-10 Blazef 4·WD, -4

EXT 390 1

·,

· • 'Replacement

TRoc'KS

tire/wheels,

non-rrofit

Help Wanted

Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Shan-term Disability

. 467-71

740-949-2217

•

South . West
tNT
Pass

Take the PAIN
out of P~ INTING!

BUILDERS InC.

g.ooo. Call 1740\446-.3620.

{740)1143-1168

1740)446-8554

**
**
*
*
·*
**
*

29670 Bashan Road
·Racine, Ohio

New Homes • V\nyl
Siding • New Garages

K 7 4 2

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

45760

BISSELL

•

t K85

Middl~port

Hill 's Self
Storage

1960 Willys Jeep Truck.
8,000 regular miles.
~ood Condition, Aun '

300hp,

8 3
• 1 6 4 3
41 096542
"

Soutb.

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• 1RA • 401 K RoUavers • Major Med •
Medicare
· • Cancer • Accident

Call {740)446-3620.

For sale, orchard grass &amp; 2000 Dodge Ram 1500,
alfalfa, square bales for cat· 4x4, Quad cab. short bed.
$2 .00 per bate. SLT, loaded, 80,000 miles,
tie.
{740 199~·2143

Help Wanted

4t.::~.~~

ruck. 16ft bed with 4ft ca
ver 23,000 regular miles.

327

r·------1!"1

For more information:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
% Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
AAIEOE www.pvalley.org

. '----'---'-'

QJt09
A A2
A 8 3

4

1997 3500 CMvy Carg

01,31

&amp;
GIIAIN

healthcare facility. has a position avai lab le for
a Radiologic Technologist-.
App li cant must meet the registry
require ments ' by tile ARRT. Applicant must
have a West Virgin ia license.
Exce llent salary. holidays. health insurance
si ngle/family plan, dental. life insurance.
vacatio n, long-tenn di sability and retirement
Join our family of profes sionals to be the
resource for com,munity health service needs.

.

• A

9

4

Fihant~ial Services
Box 189

{740)446-3620

1979 Chevy, 4wd, 6 ~ lift kit.

Most are black and black
white face Ar.lQIJ6 cross.
7 are carrying second
calves.
3 wilh 400-5001b calves
at side.
Aestlstered Bull out of
Saughatchee 3000C.
All cows have been breed
to him.
2 Heifer calves.

HAY

a

740.245·509~ •M•r 6pm, .

8 5 3

lnsuranc~ ..

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references turnished. Established 1975.
Call 2• Hrs. (740) 44e0870, Rogers Basement
waterproofi!'IQ.
·

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

F.ast

•

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

BASEMENT

1999.
Harley
Herilage
Springer FLSTS, 11,200
miles, red, excellent co11dition with extras. $16,000.
(740)446·_9253.
'
.
·
t999
Polans
500
Sportsman, 4x4 . One owner,

or

F

· Snfall Herd Dispersal

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospita l ,

{740)'992·6373

tORSAU:
Pygmies. Billy, Nanny. Both
eJCcellent breeders $60
each. 2 does, biJCk &amp; wether 1999 Ford F-250, 7.3 Diesel,
$30 eaoh. $150 aiL Call740- Ex1 Cab. 4WD, (304)675645-0073.

Mu st take all. ·
740) 245 "5393
&lt;
&lt;740 )645-2571

RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST

or

West

t

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
' • Roads 1 Streets

--''-----~~

740-645-0873.

)6 -.. ' Monte Carlo Z34, $3,500.
t43,000 Miles $~. 500 QBO
(304)675·8881

SJ.Ooo

Help Wanted

214~

MONTY

Cell PhQne !574-3311 Fill&lt; 304.·675·2457

CBR ·' -R White truCk bed topper, fits 7
90OR
1994 Ho'nda
l /2 to 8' ft. bed. Very good
1(1,000 miles. starts &amp; runs, condition $100. Call 74Dsale""lor parts at trade lor 645·0873.
1999 Chrysler Cirrus dJ. tcuck..
· (740)441·9755,
..,I In It I ...,
2 .5, V6, power windows/ {140)339·2856.
locks/mirrors. 65.30Q miles.
{740)367-0018.
1~97 CA 60. Very good con·
HoME
dillon. Race ready. $1,000.
IMmQmtFNili
2000 Buick LeSabre, V6,
sedan,
4-door,
limited, GallipOlis area. Cell· phone

I

repairs on major brands in

2905

evenings.

MaroRCYcu;s/
I~404 WHEELERS

·878-2487

Jitnmy. Also ~ts 87 ad older
trucks $350.00 (740)992-

very good condition. Lots of '" r---:~-:-.:~~--,
t;~Xtras, Winch- etc. Never
been abused. Call daytime
{740)992-2143 or {740)992740-4,.6-9n7 ask for Chuck
·
6373 evenings.

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Anglo.
Ladies black leatt1er motorChannel, Flat Bar, Steel
cyble jacket, size M- worn
Grating
For
Drains,
2x. CosJ $400 asking $200
Drlvlilways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
I \ll\1 -.1 1'1'1 II . _,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
.\ I I\ I ..., II I( 1,
Fridciy, Bam-4:30pm. ·closed
ThurSday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. {740)446-7300
FARM

Refrigerator, $125; Tykes
wmkbench &amp; tools . $45;
round chrlds picnic tal:fte,
$25: computer desk/hutch,
$30: · snow blower, $20; K4
Abeka teacher curriculum,
$10; Holmes humidifier, $ 15.

till

1t-22-u..

• Q J 1o•6
• K 7 4 2
• Q J 10
4 7

Henderson, WV

Full·trlooded lab puppies. 6 1983 Honda XL 185 and
weOks, black, chocolate. yej. 1974 'm;,aha 250 $200.00
low. PhOne (740)446-2460. for both. {740)949-9008

·~
Thompsons Appliance &amp; Nordic Track, like new, $100:
Aepair-675-7388. For sale. new computer desk. $40;
automatic 1925 soiMJ oak desk. S25; New Holland 367 Haybind
re-cooditioneel
washers &amp; dryers. refrigera- Modern oak and upholstery $1 ,200.00. {740)992·2143
tors, gas and electric srde chair, $15. Phone: ~401992-6373 •••minos.

dressers, twin , lull, queen,
king mattresses, dressers,
couches, dinettes, recliners,
grave monuments, much
more.
(740)446-4782
Gallipolis OH . Hrs. 11·:3 (M·
S)
'b

1993 Bonneville, great car

(740)992-3779; female black.
no uo raco"'Y. vu"e
Lab, 3-4yrs; 2 short haireQ
·
t:toliday Sale!
Fox Terri~s. one is mixed: · 80,000 mUes, gi!T{lge kePt.
op ·· Cjuality, warranties, female Rot .. (gentle); rnale $8,500.00. (7,.0)949·2217
Millon. WV, !'"lea Marks
Border
COllie/Aus1 7AM. 10PM
~ectton C. Saturdays ano Shepp.ard mix, 4yrs~ many -~------­
nice mixed breed ctogs.
20M Tracker, 4JC4 , 3 ,000
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miles. All electric, alum.
JET
Pure bred Bord9r Coll ie wheel. $ 14,500.
OBO
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.
'
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99 Chevy Lumina $4,800.00

$45 night stand $15 .

,_

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Rad'
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&amp; bump&amp;r for 89._ QMC

$2,500.00

Please give one of these
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Warm '2 bedroom upstairs $15 load, (740)949-3061
apt. Trash/wats r. stove, Gray Couch &amp; Love Seal Holiday$, contact the Meigs
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fridge included. $391J plus $,150 {304)882-3129
deposit. (740)446-7620 or

•. '

NorU.

MYERS .PA1fliG

op

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

eKcell8nt CQndition. $1 500 Wlfh Sl~ dooTs. 373 Vortex
'
engine, air, cru ise, tilt.
1980 Van new engine &amp; 44,000 -'• miles. $16,500.
transmission, v-a loaded, (7~0)44&amp;-9585 or (740)446cruiss/AC/CO player nice 7724.
$200.00.
body &amp; interior o$1 ,300 OBO 2004 Chevy Express Cargo , 68 GMC 20,'000 lb GW.
(304)593-2111
Van 314 tolil 2500 series With . Dump truck motor &amp; tr~ns
~
side .,oors. ~tr, CJrur.te, ,
d
1992 MercwY .... ~.~ugar, 2 r., ·. 5.200 . , mites.
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before 2pm (740)992·2191 ,
·
7724
after 2pm 740..591-8936
·

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
BRIDGE

14 tneh Chrome Spoke
Wheels, will fit Chevv,
Quysler. Ford $300 call
(t)675-3168
~
Br~ Guard &amp; PIA log IIQ'hts
ot 2 • Chflvy P./U paid
$790.00.
Brush • Guard
$359.65. Fog lights $650.00.
92 Jeep 4 cycle motor lor
parts. Rod o"n lront cylinder
brOke want thru
pan .

OBO

www.mydailysentinel.com

AstroGraph
-... 'lllrthda,v:

Tuesday,Nov.23, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
In the year ahead. you may feel compolled to make some major changes m
your lifestyle _Whatever you choose To do,
ma~e sure it's posit1ve and then proceed
with your game plan without looking
back.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - L:.ady
Luck is taking the day olf and won 't be
around when you need her today, so ifs
best to avoid speculative situations.
Without her help. the odds will be running
againsT you
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) Unless you 're careful an o ld. unresolved
domestic 1ssue could sur1ace tOday at a
least proPitiOUS tilne , such as when
you're around outsiders. Something
unple asant and embarrassing co uld
result.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It's good
to be careful about yam work. but in
doing so today Take care you don't make
hard tasks even more difficult. II a coworKer suggests a better method . be
recepTive. not resistant.
PISCES (Feb. 20 -March 20)- Instead of
co'ndemning yourself tor past mistakes,
review your financial situatiOn realistically. A lesson can be learned in budgeting
that would serve you well in the lulure.
Guard
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19 ) against be1ng too dictatorial with persons
over whom you have dominion today
Even the Iasser weights will lind a way to
rebel it they are unfait1y ordered about
and pus)led around .
TAURU S (April 20-May 20) -Watch out
Thai dark thoughts don't run ramPant
within you today. because they could cas t
a shadow so long thai iT'll flow over to all
your Involvements. A negative allitude IS
a ltab1l1ty
GEMINI ~May 21-June 20)- Do noTpermit your peers to draw you into e11pens1ve
situations today that you rea lly can 't
allord . If you haven't got the money to
back you up, don't get involved in the tirst
piace.
CANCER (June 2 t -July 22) - Subdue
tendencies today To seesaw where your
obtectives are concerned. The results will
be as haphazard as your thinking and
you won 't bA able to get anyth1n g done
LEO {Jllly 23-Aug 22) - Yo(J could be
loa tough on yourself today and allow
lhese sell-defeating thoughts to govern
IJOur involvements. The be!il way to turn
th1s about is To get yow tt1mking onto oth·
ers and oH yourselt.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Be parti cularly cautious regardmg wh om you place
your trust 1n today. espec1aUy if you are
dealing w1th someone abou t whom you
know little . Don't be taken In by outward
appearances or smooth talk
LI BRA (Sept 23-0c!. 23) ~ In \/Ontu res
or actiVIties today that requtre JOtnt eHort ,
be sure that all par ties Involved understand the gro.und rules and have inPut
Each must be wttltng to make an equal
contribution
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·NOV'. 22) - It will be
far batter for you to temporarily !ihelve a
lrustratirig project today rather than put
Torth a dismal effort that can only produce sad results . A poor attitude
realr~t l na 11

good outcome

SOUP TO NUTZ

meat
49 Very very

1 T......,. choice 51 Navaho foe
53 "Car Talk"
7 1040 org.
network
1D Dashboard 54 Swimming
info
holes
t 1 Mon! beahtut 55 Little one
13 Spy org.
56 Former JFK
14 Oistrns
arrival
15 Sports
57 Employ
palace
58 Compass pt.
16 Naval off_
17 Caught
DOWN
19 Mooch
21 Irritate
Mercedes
22 Mgml biggie
rival
23 Squander
2 Familiar
26 Duds
with
30 Cash
(2 wds.)
dispensers 3 Mets '
31 Parkingstadium
32 Earth,
4 Green ogre
in combos
5 Took a
33 Gloppy stuff
gander at
34 Notre Dame 6 Half a score
sight
7 Cooled
35 Large
8 Be~ry
amounts
aotJnd
36 Buoy
9 Courtesy
39 Roundup
env.
need
It BuHalo
40 -Diego
hockey pro
Chargers
12 Track
41 Lay low
competitor
42 Recoils
18 Byte parts
45 Team spirit 20 Great!
48 Low-fat
(hyph.)
4 Lay down

22 Appealing

41 Crowd

23 Pay

42 Olin and
Russell
43 Gremlins

24 Egyptian
sun god

25 Urban haze 44 Brusque

26 Related

· 45 Natural

27 Paythe

etevs.

COitrtpOt~ 46 Mandolin

28 Cravings
29 Average

cousin
47 British

(hyph.)

school

31 Legal claim 50 Mr. Plnlella
35 Mock
52 Summer,

fanfare
(hyph.)
37 Get nosy
38 Make a
pit stop
(2 wds.)
39 Old nallen
currency

In Montreal

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celel1•1',' C pner cryprograms an~ crMiecl tram ~uol~l•oos by famws pe:-ple casl and pres&amp;nt
Each ~ner to ltle :~phe1 stands fc1 ~ncttl!!f

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Fashion is find1ng something you're comfortable in
and wearing rt into the ground."- Tuesday Weld
{C) 2004 by NEA. Inc
\MAT DAnT

11-20

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Juggle- Ideal · O'own- Kelt/e - OLD AGE
"Yes. I want to l1ve a long l~e. " one.not so smar. cut1e
said to her fnend . "Bu! "she added . "I sure don't wa~t to
·eath OLC AGEl"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
rom

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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, November 22, 2004

National Football League

N6A suspends,Artest for
'Bus' keeps Steelers on right rest of season; eight
road in win over Bengals
players get shorter bans
take the blame." said
Roethlisberger, who was .15of-21 for 138 yards. but lost
54 yards on sacks. "I wasn't
CINCINNATI - Jerome flustered, just disappointed in
Bettis
and
Pittsburgh's .my play. But it's a sign of a
defense made quite a posse.
good team when you can wm
Bettis ran for 1~9 yards and when you don 't play well."
the Steelers' blitzing defense
With Duce Staley sidelined
created havoc Sunday. setting a third straight game because
up a 19-14 victory over the of a sore hamstring, Bettis
. Cincinnati Bengals that kept came through with his thrrd
the NFL's longest winning straight triple"digit game. He
streak growing.
.
repeatedly bowled over tackQuarterback
Ben lers during his II th 100-yard
Roethlisberger played like a performance against the
rookie, so the 32-year-old · Bengals, and he moved ahead
running back and the old- of Tony Dorsett.for fifth
style defense bailed him out
h NFL
areer
in Pittsburgh's eighth straight place on t e
s c
. Th S 1
f
rushing list.
.
wm.
e tee ers are 9 - 1 or
Bettis decided to stay m
the first time since 1978, Pittsburgh as a hackup, openwhen they won their third ing the season as a des 1gnated
Super Bowl in five years.
goal-line runner. On Sunday,
"Everybody expects us to he was the whole show be flawless," Bettis said. one opponents have seen
"Sometimes you' re not going manv times before.
"It reminds me of Steeler
to have your best game.
That's when you have to find football. the way • we've
a way to win."
b
h "
f T
played since I've een ere.
. They took an old, ami tar said Bettis, in his mnth seapath: run the ball and let th.e son with Pittsburgh. "That's
defense do the rest, taking the
k'd
important. We've got to
pressure off I he I quarter- remain ourselves. We've got
BY JoE KAY

Associated Press

I

I

I

ba~~thlisberger h~s

earned
comparisons
to
Terry
Bradshaw during his remarkable introductory season with
eight starts, all wins. This
time, he looked much more
like a green rookie than
black-and-gold legend.
.
The· Bengals (4-6) came at
him from all sides. had a season-high seven sacks and
forced him to make poor
decisions. Three times. he
scuttled scoring chances by
taking sacks, grounding the
ball or fumbling.
"On a lot of the sacks, I

an identity and we've got to
stick 10 it."
After Ruethlisberger put
the Steelers up 17-14 with an
8-yard touchdown pass to
Dan Kreider in the third
quarter, the defense did the
rest, stifling Carson Palmer's
passing and Cincinnati's
playoff hopes.
.
Linebacker James Farnor
had a 14-yard interception
return that blunted the
Bengals' momentum in the
first half.
In the second half.
Cincinnati's offense man-

aged only 42 yards and two
first downs. Everythtng
imploded: Cincinnati had
seven second-half penalties
for 75 yards.
The clinching play came
with 2:38 left and Palmer
under heavy pressure in his
end zone. He threw the ball
away, drawing a grounding
call and a safety. Fans tossed
three beer bottles onto the
field in disgust.
Afterward, coach Marvin
Lewis uncharacteristically
screamed at his team in the
locker room.
"This is the angriest I've
been," said Lewis, who
always tries to accentual~ the
positive. "We're not gmng to
accept mediocrity. 1!'. we
accept getting close, 1f we
accept leading m the f1rst
half, we're not going to get
any better. We· re not going
to accept that."
.
·
With Pittsburgh out of sync
in the first half; the Bengals
did a little dancing.
Chad Johnson made good
on his promise of a new
touchdown celebration, an
end-zone boogie after his
acrobatic 36-vard catch.
Kelley Washington also
swayed and squirmed in the
end zone after his 19-yard
touchdown put Cincinnati up
14-10.
In no time, the dancing
ended and Lewis' screaming
began. .
"Everybody feels like
that," said Palmer, who was
13-of-25 for 165 yards.
"Everybody's frustrated. It
makes everybody feel the
way
Marvin
feels.
Everybody
knows
he's
right."

Injured Martin puUs through
as Jets down Browns ·
·
BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press

CLEVELAND Curtis
Martin's injured knee wouldn't
let him play. His heart wouldn't let h1m quit.
Knowing he was too hurt to
be effective, Martin still wanted to be in the huddle as the
Jets attempted to rally in the
fo\lrth quarter. So he went to
New York coach Herman
Edwards and asked a favor.
"I said. 'Just let me go in
there, let me look the offensiv.e
linemen in the eye and see 1f
we can't get this thing going,"'
Martin said.
One week after mi smanaging the game clock, the Jets
beat it as Quincy Carter threw
an 11-yard touchdown pass to
Justin McCareins with 5:32
remaining to give New York an
ugly 10-7 win over the
Cleveland Browns on Sunday.
Last week, the Jets (7-3)
bungled to an overtime loss
against Baltimore because they
failed to manage tune w1sely
and because of some questionable play calling. New York
cleaned up those issues, but
there wasn't much else It d1d
well offensively until Carter
rallied the Jets from a 7-3
deficit with a 75-yard TD
drive.
Sacked six times and under
pressure all afternoon, Carter
completed a crucial third-and! I · pass to McCareins, who
stretched out to pick up the first
down at Cleveland's 24. After
13-yard pass to . Santana
Moss, Carter again hit
McCareins, who stepped out of
c;omerback Michael Lehan's
tackle and scored.

a

Associated Press

NEW YORK- Ron Artest was suspended
for the rest of the season Sunday, and two of
his Indiana Pacers teammates must miss a
total of 55 games for ftghting with fans during a melee that broke o~t at the end of a
game against the Detrmt P1stons.
Overall the NBA issued some of the harshest penalties ,in its history by banning nine
players for more than 140 games .. Artest's
suspension is the strongest ever lev1ed for a
ftght during a game.
.
"The line is drawn, and my guess IS that
won't happen again - certain1y not by anybody who wants to be assocmted w~th our
league," commissioner David Stem srud.
Indiana's Stephen Jackson was suspended
for 30 games and Jermaine O'Neal for 25.
Detroit's Ben Wallace - whose shove of
Aries! after a foul led to the ftve-minute fracas - drew a six-game ban, while Pacers
guard Anihony Johnson got five gill,"es.
"I'm sick about that tor lnd1ana. I m devastated for them," Pistons coach Larry Brown
said. "And we lost our heart and soul."
Four players - Indiana's Reggie Miller,
and Detroit's Chauncey Billups, Elden
Campbell and Derrick Coleman - were suspended one game apiece for leaving the
bench during the initial fracas.
All of the suspensions are without pay.
Artest will lose approximately $5 m1lhon m
salary, while O'Neal's suspension win cost
him nearly 25 percent of h1s $14.8 mllhon
.
salary for the current season.
Players union director Billy Hunter, calhng
the penalties excessive, said an appeal would
be filed Monday.
"We have to make the point that there are
boundaries in our games," Stern·said. "One of
our boundaries, that have always been
immutable, is the boundary that separate the
fans from the court. Players cannot lose controland move into the stands."
Artest, O'Neal and Jackson began serving
their suspensions Saturday.
·
Artest's penalty was the most severe
because of his checkered history. Artest hemg
provoked into running into the stands by a fan
who threw a drink did not appear to he a mlligating factor in Stem's decision. . ..
"It was unanimous, one to nothmg, Stem
said. "I did not strike from my mind the fact
that Ron Artest had been suspended on previous conditions for loss of self-control."
The Pacers will he able to place Artest,
O'Neal and Jackson on the suspended list and
sign players to take their f!lace. Limited to just
six players Saturday, lndtana dropped an 8683 decision to Orlando.
Billups, Coleman and Campbell served
their suspensions Sunday. Wallace w11l he ehgible to return Dec. 3 agamst San Antomo.
Stem took the un~ sual step of calling a
news conference at Madison Square Garden
prior to the Knicks-Cavaliers g~me to
announce the suspensiOns, commentmg that
Friday night's fracas represented "the worst"
of the 20,000 to 25.000 games he has pres1ded

first two snaps of New York's
game-winning drive before the
Jets put the ball in Jordan's
hands.
Martin's return to the field
may have been brief, but it
inspired the Jets.
"! never count Curtis out,"
Jordan said. "I've been around
him for four years and I've
seen him play through some
incredible injuries. You can't
count Curtis Martin out unless
he says he's out. Doctors can't
even tell him no."
Meanwhile, the Browns
were booed off the field by
their fans after dropping their
fifth in ~ix games.
Qu.arterback Jeff Garcia didn't play after halftime after · SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)
slightly separating his throw- - Jacqueline Batteast came
ing shoulder. Kelly Holcomb through for Notre Dame when
couldn't rally.Cleveland, com- the Irish needed a big boost.
Batteast scored
seven
pleting just 4 of 10 passes for
points in Notre Dame's game32 yards.
Garcia said he only would ending 12-0 run and blocked
a potential tying 3-pointer
have played in an emerg~~CY:
"I was not I00 percent, smd with 2 seconds left to rally the
Garcia, who will have an MRI 11th-ranked Fighting Irish to
on Monday. " I couldn't a 66-62 victory over No. I0
squeeze the football. I just Ohio State in the Preseason
wanted to he out there ro sup- WNIT championship ga me
Saturday night.
pon my teammates."
Batteast finished with a
Dawson's miss with II :27
career-high
32 points on 11left gave the ball to the Jets at
,
of-23
shooting
from the field.
their 25. · Jordan powered up
"What can you say about
the middle on four straight runs
Jackie
?" Notre Dame coach
as New York moved into
M
uffet
McGraw said. "She
Cleveland territory. Carter,
had
a
spectacular
night - a
who finished 11-of-20 for 116
yards, then had three straight career night. When things got
completions to cap a scoring tough, I think in every huddle
drive that kept New York m the we said, ' Go to Jackie.' I
think every play we wanted to
thick of the AFC playoff race.
..
"On that last drive, we keP,t get the ball to her."
The
Irish
(4-0)
were
tra1hng
saying, 'It's now 9r never,"
Carter said. "The defense kept 62-54 with 4:39 left when
us in the game and it was up to Batteast, who was 10-of-12
from the free-throw line,
us to win it."
made a pair of free throws to
start the comeback.
Batteast converted a threepoint play with 3;59left to cut
the lead to 62-59. Megan
Duffy,- who had 15· points, hit
a . 3-pointer to tie it and
Batteast put the Irish ahead
for good on a 12-foot jumper
that bounced twice off the rim
before falling in.
NCAA allows coaches to arrange jobs and
The Buckeyes (3-1 ). who
r~quires only that athletes be pa1d· a fa1r rate set a Preseason WNIT sin~le­
for work actually performed.
game record with 13 3-pomt"The right things w.ere done, and we ers against Bowling Green
moved on," Geiger said .
and set a tournament mark
The newspaper' studied. football player · with 27 3s in the four-game
employment records, heav1l~ ed1ted by the tournament, missed their final
umversny to protect student 1dent1t1esunder ~wo 3-poim attempts . First,
federal law, followmg the latest allegatwns Caity Matter missed ~n
by former ta1lback Maunce Claret!.
attempt from the top of the

"We made the right plays at
the right time," Moss said. "It
doesn't matter how pretty 1t
was as long as we did what we
came here to do."
New York's LaMont Jordan,
filling in for a banged-up
Martin, rushed for 61 yards m
the fourth quarter. Jordan,
whose ill-timed and poorly
executed halfback option pass
a week ago underscored the
Jets' woes, ground our 34 yards
as the Jets ran out the tinal3:55
to hand tae Browns (3-7) their
fourth straight loss.
Jets safety Erik Colem&lt;m had
a key sack to end Cleveland's
final drive.
The Browns also were hun
by usually reliable kicker Phil
Dawson, who was wide right
on two field goals - his tirst
misses after making 27
straight.
" It's hard to swallow,"
Dawson said. "I proved today
that I'm nor perfect - unfonunately. I didn't do my job."
Martin rushed for 88 yards
on 17 carries. In the ftrst quarter. he went over I ,000 this
season, joining Hall of Farner
Barry Sanders as the only players in NFL history to he gin
their careers with I0 straight
·
I,000-yard seasons.
Martin bruised his right knee
in the second quarter and carried just twice in the founh as
the Jets rode the powerfu I
Jordan, who spent the past
week hoping for a chance at
redemption after his option
pass was intercepted.
As the Jets' offense continued to misfire in the second
half, Martin wanted back in
and Edwards finally let him.
He picked up 13 yards on the

I

over in his more than two decades as commissioner. ·
.
"To watch the out-of-control fans m the
staiids was disgusting, but it doesn't ex~se
our pla~ers going into ~e stand~," Stem saJ~,
promismg a wide-~gmg_ rev1ew that w11l
encompass everythmg from secunty procedures to alcohol sales at arenas.
"We have to do everything possible to redefine the covenant between players and fans,
and between fans and fans, and make sure we
can play our games in very. welcoming and
peaceful settings," he said.
The NBA also has to "redefine the bounds
of acceptable conduct for fans attending our
games and resolve to permanently exclude
those who overstep those bounds," Stern said.
For Sunday night's home g."?'e against ~he
Charlotte Bobcats - Detrmt s first outmg
since the melee - the Pistons doubled the
number of armed police to about 20 in the
arena and increased other arena security personnel by about 25 percent.
.
When some spectators lined· up to take piCtures with Pistons guard Lindsey Hunter on
the court before the game, two police officers
stood just a few feet away.
Friday night's brawl was particularly vialent with Artest and Jackson boltmg mto the
stands near center court and throwing punches at fans after debris was tossed at the players.
Later fans who came onto 'the court were
punched in the face by Artest and O'Neal.
Pl38ers who entered the stands and tried to act
as peacemakers were not penalized. .
Nine people were treated for. lllJUne.s, and
police are investigating poss1ble cnmmal
charges.
Wallace began the fracas by delivering a
hard two-handed shove to Artest after
Wall~ce was fouled on a drive to the basket
with 45.9 seconds remaining. After the ftght
ended, the referees called off the rest of the

ga~~ initial skirmish wasn't all that bad, with
Artest retreating to the scorer's .table and
lying atop it after Wallace sent h1m reehng
backward. But when a fan tossed a cup at
Artest, he stormed into the stands, throwing
punches as he climbed over seats.
Jackson joined Artest and threw punches at
fans, who punched back. At one pomt, a cha1r
was tossed into the fray.
.
"Mr. Jackson was well into the stands, and
certainly anyone who watched an~ television
this weekend understood he wasn t gomg m
as a peacemaker," Stem said. "Jermaine, I
think it's fair to say, exceeded any bounds of
peacemaking with the altercation with the fan
in which he was mvolved.
"His penalty actually would have be~n
harsher if he had succeeded 111 gettmg mto h1s
stands, which he tried to do but was restrained ·
from."
The most recent example of an NBA player going into the stands and punching a fan
came 111 February 1995, when Vernon
Maxwell of the Houston Rockets pummeled a
spectator in Ponland. The le~gue suspended
him for 10 games and fined h1m $20,000.

No. 10 Buckeye women suffer
first loss at No. 11 Notre Dame

Newspaper: OSU pl~yers land
well-paying jobs from boosters
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Many Ohio ·
State University football players cashed in
the summer after the Buckeyes won the
national championship, taking well-paying
jobs from em.ployers connected to the
school, The Columbus Dispatch reported on
Sunday. .
. · .
Athletic director Andy Geiger sa1d the hlr'
ing is reported to the .NCAA, an.d nothing
was flagged as an institutional violation. The

BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

key, then had her final shot
from the right corner blocked
by Batteast.
"I saw her coming, but I
thought I could have got it
off," Matter said. "!obviously
should have pump-faked."
Batteast had to cover a lot

of ground to get her hand on
it.
.
.
"l was thinking, 'I don't
want this game to go to overtime,"' Batteast said. "She
was wide open, and I did my
best to ~et in her way and
tipped it..

All •trle. oE carpet are Included:
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LOOP CARPET aad SCULPTURED CARPET.
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Call as or stop in.
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..

'

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