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                  <text>Page B6 •

Tuesday, September 91 aoo3

www .mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Pirates beat Reds 9-1
Marvin Lewis reassures Bengals
after bungled debut·against Denver
BY JOE KAY

Associated Pl'fls&amp;
CINCINNATI - More than once,
coach Marvin Lewis warned his
Cin~innati Bengals that there would be
some rough moments as they try to resurrect a franchise.
They didn't expect so many, so fast.
Eight months of optimism were
dashed Sunday by three hours of familiar football. As Lewis watched helplessly from the sideline, his team turned
back into the Bungles and lost to Denver
30-10.
"We did things we didn't do for the
four weeks of preseason," cornerback
Artrell Hawkins marveled.
Instead, they did the same things
they've done for the last 12 years, the
length of their reign as the NFL's worst
team.
What now?
Lewis has to make sure that one
dreadful game doesn't snowball into
another dreadful season. His immediate
predecessors - Dave Shula, Bruce
Coslet, Dick LeBeau - each tried a different approach, and each fruled.
· Lewis assured his players on Monday
that there's no reason to lose faith or
start to doubt, regardless of how badly
they played in the opener. He emrhasized that things are headed in the nght
direction.
"The approach is certainly different,"
Hawkins said, following team meetings.
"Whether that translates into how we
perform or not, only time will tell.
We've got to make sure we've done
everything in our .power to make sure
that quicksand thing doesn't happen."
It happens every autumn in Cmcinnati
- the Bengals start losing and can't

stop sinking. They're 9-37 in August
and September since 1991. the mark of
a team that crumbles easily.
Each season follows the same script:
Hope bUilds m the offseason, an opening loss shatters the players' confidence.
"I guarantee it's not ~oing to be like ·
that - . not this year,' receiver Chad
Johnson said.
Based upon the opening performance,
it's certainly got that potential.
Lewis had urged his players not to get
too caught up in the hype over the opening game under a new coach in front of
a capacity crowd. They couldn't help
themselves, playing like they had stage
fright.
"It surprises you, but you know what?
Those things happen," Lewis said
Monday. "You kind of get that deer-inthe-headlights look, and you've got to
move beyond that. We knew that going
into it.
"It was a big day. That's why I tried to
put the pressure on me, so they could
JUSt go out and play. It's a big day for the
city, but you just go play football.''
They played it their own way. The
Bengals got blown out even though
Broncos quarterback Jake Plummer

threw three interceptions and had a 21.7
passer rating.
Lewis sent his team out in all-black
uniforms that symbolized the start of a
new era, then watched it self-destruct in
a ~arne reminiscent of the past.
'There is so much pressure put on
everyone in this building," Lew1s said.
''There is more pressure from the outside .. Sometimes our players feel like
they have to go out and win the game by
themselves. You can't play that way. '
That's just the situation we're in, and we
have to get out of that."
Mllst of the crowd's wrath was directed toward quarterback Jon Kitna, who
forced passes, fumbled twice and threw
two interceptions. His backhand shovel
pass was intercepted and returned for
the clinching touchdown.
Lewis is· sticking with Kitna as the
starter and leaving No. I draft pick
Carson Palmer. on the sideline because
he doesn't want to create another distraction.
"Right now, he's our best option,"
Lewis said. "We're going to ~et this figured out with Jon, and Jon s goin~ to
take that pressure off his shoulders.'
A few more losses, and the owner
might weigh in with a little pressure of
his own. Mike Brown likes to switch
quarterbacks when one struggles, and
rushed first-round picks David Klingler
and Akili Smith into the lineup during
their rookie seasons.
Asked how much patience he'll have
if Kitna keeps struggling, Lewis
responded with a generalization.
"It's about our quarterback givin~ us a
chance to win," Lewis said. "That s the
most important thing. You have no
patience with an~one at any position if
they •re not gettmg the job done for
you."

•

Pruett: Hill may not play against Toledo
BY JOHN RABY .

Associated Press
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
Marshall quarterback Stan Hill could
miss Friday night's game ·against
Toledo with a sprained left knee.
Hill, a junior, hurt the knee in a 3424 loss at Tennessee on Saturday. He
walked off the field after the game on
crutches.
"It's day-to-day. I hope it doesn't
go week-to-week," coach Bob Pruett
said Monday at practice. "Really, it's
him. In other words, he's better today
then he was yesterday. Hopefully
he ' ll be better tomorrow. So the only
person who knows whether they can
play is the kid and the doctor. It's in
their hands."
Hill's leg was heavily wrapped and
he took short steps while walking
around Marshall 's athletic facility.
He did not practice Monday night.
Hill wouldn't rule out playing

Bucs
from Page 81
Johnson's pinpoint pass and
caught it while barely tiptoeing inbounds for the touchdown.
Eagles coach Andy Reid
challenged the call, but it was

Browns
from Page 81
right finger, had IQtackles.
Davis was also pleased the
Browns didn't give up any
long · plays. The Colts' two

osu

from Page 81
intimidated by Ohio State
and its crowd.

Harvick
from Page 81
and that is part of what fuels
a driver's and crew's desire
to be the best," he said.
"Sometimes, though, in the
heat of battle, those emotions
can get the best of you apd
things happen that you regret
later."
Childress said he also
called Rudd;s team, Wood
Brothers Ford, to apologize
and offer to pay for the damage to its car.
It was not. the first run-in
with NASCAR for Harvick,

against the Rockets ( 1-1 ),.
"I'm going to see how it feels on
Thursday," he said. "I'm going to get
my brace in tomorrow. We'll go from
there. I've just got to find out tomorrow when I get my brace."

Hill left Saturday's game for one
play late in the first quarter to get fitted for a knee brace after landing
hard on a Jon~ run .
After throwmg his third touchdown
pass, a 65-yarder to Josh Davis late in
the third, Hill reinjured the knee
while celebrating with another player
and did not return.
'
"It happened to just go out," he
said. "Its real frustrating but you've
got to put it past you. You just look
toward the ~ood things and don't get
down on it.'
Hill went 16-of-24 for 242 yards
against Tennessee. If he can't play
Friday, Graham Gochneaur would
start. Gochneaur was 7 -of- 10 for 52
yards in relief Saturday.
"We're excited about Graham. I
thouglit he did a wonderful job,"
Pruett said . "Not having all that
preparation time, in that atmosphere,
to come in 7-for-10 is pretty good.
He's ready."

CINCINNATI (AP) -Josh tie it in the fifth.
Fogg and the Pittsburgh
Eric Valent singled and
Pirates like facing the Reds- moved to thi'rd on Jason
LaRue's single down the leftespecially in Cincinnati.
Fogg threw his first major tield line. Wily Mo Pena, who
league complete game, and made his eighth consecutive
Craig Wilson homered twice start and batted .3SO on
and tied his career high with Cincinnati's last road trip,
four RBis as the Pirates beat drove in Valent with a double
the Reds 9-1 Monday night.
to make it 1-1.
Fogg (9-8) gave up 10 hits
"Feast or famine - that's
and no walks while striking probably the best way to put
out nine, one shy of his career tt," Reds manager Dave Miley
high, to improve to 3-0 in his said. "We had some doubles .
career - all this season - Wily Mo's swinging it well.
against the Reds.
That's a definite bright spot.''
The Pirates improved to 6-0
The Pirates regained the
this season at Great American lead with a four-run sixth. J.eff
Ball Park and, dating to last Reboulet hit a leadoff single,
season, have won seven in a Tike Redman doubled and
row in Cincinnati for the first Jason Kendall had a sacrifice
time since May 31-Sept. 26, fly to give Pittsburgh a ~-I
1937.
lead. After Redman was out at
. "For some reasol), we swing the plate on Reggie Sanders'
the bats well here," Pirates groundout, Wilson hit his secmanager Lloyd McClendon ond homer of the fame as the
said.
Pirates went up -I. Rookie
. "You can't really explain Jason Bay followed with his
it,'' Wilson said.
second homer of the season.
The complete game was the
Both of Wilson's homers
second in a row for came with two strikes. He
Pittsburgh. Kip Wells went the credited a suggestion by
distance in a 2-1 loss at McClendon with helping him.
Atlanta on Sunday. Fogg
"The only thing I've
threw 113 pitches, 80 of them changed is I spread my feet a
sirikes.
little more," he said. "I'm just
"Finally,'' said Fogg, who trying to hit the ball hard. If I
fell two outs short of a com- strike out, I strike out. It gives
plete game in a 12-9 Pirates me a little more balance up
win at Tampa Bay on June 14. there."
"It took a little while. It was
"His two-strike approach
good to get one finan~.
was good," McClendon said.
"I threw a lot of stnkes, and "He's battled all year, and he
I was able to move my cutter had some good at-bats
in and out - front door to tonight."'
right-banders, back door to
Pittsburgh added three runs
left-handers and the in the seventh against rookie
defense played great. Winning Juan Cerros.
9-1 makes 1t ea~ier, too.''
Jack Wilson led off with a
Wilson had three hits as the single. Cerros struck out th,e
Pirates matched their highest next two, but walked Redman
scoring output in any of their and hit Kendall with a pitch to
last 18 games.
load the bases. Sanders then
Reds starter John Bale (1-2) hit a broken-bat, two-run sinallowed six hits, but three gle, and Craig Wilson folwere home runs. He walked lowed with a run-scoring sinone and struck out three.
gle.
Bale left without comment
Notes: McClendon needs
after the game.
one win to become the 12th
Wilson led off the second manager in Pirates history to
with his 13th homer - and · win 200 games. He is 199-266
second in four games - to in three seasons .... Reds RHP
give Pittsburgh a 1-0 lead. But Danny Graves and Paul
Bale retired the next II in a Wilson have been shut down
row, and 12 of the next 13.
for the rest of the season with
Fogg allowed one hit and, inflammation in their shoutwith the help of a double play. ders .... Cerros becam~ the
faced the minimum nine bat- 57th player and 30th pitcher
ters while throwing 20 pitches used by the Reds this ~cason,
through the first three inninp. extendmg club records m both
He gave 'up back-to-back sm- categones .... He also beca~e
gles by Ray Olmedo and Juan the 13th player to. make h1s
Castro to open the fourth, but major league debut with
Sean Casey lined into a dou- Cincinnati this season. ...
ble play as Olmedo got caught Cerros . and catcher Cc:lfky
off second base and Russell Miller JOmed the Reds from
Brailyan flied out to end the Triple-A
Louisville
on
inning.
Monday.... Wilson's multiThe Reds used three con- homer game was his second
secutive one-out hits to snap a of the season, and third of his
17-inning scoreless streak and career.

No. 22 Eagles jersey, wildly interference call against star rookie L.J. Smith on a fake
upheld.
Johnson was 27-for-36 for arm-pumped and exhorted .safety John Lynch put the field goal was dropped.
It was the last time the
the crowd into a frenzy.
ball at the I, but the Eagles
238 yards.
Eagles
threatened.
A 40-minute pregame celeT))en the Bucs put on the flopped from there.
The Bucs took the fever out
McNabb overthrew one
bration for the l)ew building silencer.
Philadelphia actually start- pass, 'a receiver fell on anoth- of the crowd of 67,772 by
was about all the excitement
the locals got. The Eagles ed well. James Thrash's 47- er and, on fourth down, hold- deflecting Dirk Joh,nson's
out yard run on a reverse to open er Koy Detmer's pass· to punt. Jermaine Phillips
even
brought
Philadelphia's favorite fic- Philadelphia's second drive
;
~~mn'l'!!"'!:o:~ U.J.w.L
tional
hero,
"Rocky." got the ball deep in Tampa
Sylvesier Stallone, wearing a Bay territory. A 15-yard pass

tipped it and the ball rolled
just 7 yards to the
Philadelphia 31.
Philadelphia held near its
goal line and Martin
Gramatica hit from 26 yards
early in the second 4uarter to
open the scoring.

.,.,.,..,...,..,...,.!'1'0"1":1'~

overcome.
"We didn't get off to a fast
start last year and we made
the playoffs," guard Shaun
0' Hara said. "By no means,
does not getting off to a fast
start dampen our season.
There are a lot of good teams
that are 0-1 right now.''

"Gee, I hope they get off on questions about the Wake
the plane," he said of his Forest game halfway through
players. "If they get off the his news conference. When
plane we've got a chance. I the request was broken on the
hope I don't have to prod very next question Amato
them off."
said, "Am I speaking Italian
Amato also put a gag order up here?"

who was suspended from a and Trucks Series driver
race at Martinsville in April Bobby Hamilton for various
2002, fined $35,000 and other post-race trouble in
placed on probation until the Richmond.
'
Shane Hmiel and Jason
end of that year for rough driKeller were fined $5,000
ving.
The melee in Richmond each and placed on probation
was just the latest ugliness at until Dec. 31 for fighting
after Friday night's Busch
a NASCAR race.
Three weeks ago, Jimmy Series · race. Their crew
Spencer was suspended for a chiefs, Gere Kennon and
week arid placed on proba- Steve Addington, were fined
tion after hnting Kurt Busch $1 0,000 and placed on probain the face. Tony Stewart was tion for the rest of the year.
Hamilton
put on probation last · season
was
fined
$1
O
,Ooo
and
placed
on
probafor punching a photographer
at the Brickyard 400.
tion for the rest of the year
Also Monday, NASCAR for intentionally hitting ·
fined . two Busch Series dri- Brendan Gaughn's truck after
vers and their crew chiefs, Thursday night's race.

·u be here Thursday, September 25
Supplement to:
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel

~ I \ I ~., • \ I d

'. I

'

\., . I

\'

0

:

~

MIDDLEPORT - The
Village of Middleport will
seek grant and loan funds
for tbe construction of a new
water treatment plant.
At Monday evening's regular meeting of Middleport
Village Council.. council
authorized its engineering
firm,
Floyd
Browne
Associates of Columbus, to
seek
$400,000
in

Community Development sees sewer and water operaBlock Grunt funds and tions, will also upply for
$100.000 in loan frunds from . $300,000 in grant funds
the Ohio Water Development fnun
the AJ?pulachiun
Authority to help offset the Regional Comn11ssion and
cost of the new facility.
$500,000 111 grant t unds
Plans cull for the new $1. B through the Ohio Water
million plant In be con- Development Authority.
structed on PuJIC Street, on
While the first round of gmnt
property
adjacent
to applications is due next month,
Overbrook Center owned by no. funding will be available
Dr. Hurold Brown .
unul July, 2(Xl4, Hays sUid.
According to Becky Hays
The new water trc;nment
of
Floyd
Browne facility will be completed at
Associates, the Board of · about the same time a new
Public Affairs, which over- water well field in Hobson

'

I \ I\ I\

is up ancJ operating. Plans
for the I}Urchust· of the well
field from Jay Hall were
recent ly completed.
The BPA is also s~cking
grant funds through the
Ohio
Slate
Capital
Improvement Issue Two
program for construction
and repair at the sites of two
"nuttlows" on First Avenue.
The outflows allow for the
discharge of treated sewage
into the Ohio River in times
of dry weather.

Walkway path nearly trips village
BY J. MtLEI LAYTON
llayton@mydallysentinel.com

INSIDE
• Family Medicine. See
Page A3
• Community calendar.
See Page A3
o Ueberroth drops out of
recall race. See Page A6

WEATIIER
Mootty ounny, HI: IIOo, Low: llOo

DWIIIaonPopA2

Lo'ITERIES

POMEROY - The state
will assume responsibility
from Pomeroy for a contract
the village made with M.E.
Company
because
of
increased costs associated
with designing the walkway.
M.E. Company was responsible for the initial engineering
and design work for the
$500,(XXl walkway path located from the village amphitheater to the Waterworks Park.
Before construction truly
began on the project, Parker
Construction, who was the
proJect contractor, discovered
maJor design flaws dealing
with the width of the path.
Mayor Victor Young III said
the project survey inaccurdtely
reported that amount of space
available for the walkway.
John Musser, who has
worked closely with the walkway project, said engineers
had to "go back to the drawing
board" to create a new design
which cost additional money.
Since Parker Construction
wa~ unable to resume work
while new plans were being
drawn up, · there were even
more additional costs.

Plek 3 day: 5-9-8
Plek 4 day: 8-5-6-1
Pick 3 night: 4-2-8
Pick 4 night: 4-4-8-2
Buckeye 5: 9-23-24-27-31

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

West Vll'ginia
Dally 3: 3-0-9
Dally 4: 8-8-4-7
Caah 25: 6-1 0.12-13-19-25

INDEX
a SF.cnoNs- 12 PAoF.s

Calendars

A.1

Classifieds

B2-4

I

Bs

Obituaries

A3
A4
As
As

•

Bt-2,6

Weather

A2

Sports

© 2003 Ohio Valley Publllhlng Co.

POMEROY - A Meigs
County woman has been
elected president of the
Ohio Department Ladies of
the Grand Army of the
Republic (LGAR). the oldest women's herditary society in the United States.
Whitney Ashley, 20. is
the youngest president ever
to serve this Ohio patriotic
organization.
She was installed by the
national president Sally
Krantz of Kenmore, N.Y., at
the annual convention at
Mt. Union College held
recently in Alliance.
Ashley has been the president of the Maj. Daniel
McCook Circle No. I04
LGAR of Middleport since
its chartering in May. 2000.
She joined on her ancestors,
Pvt. Levi Deeter of
Company K, !87th Ohio

These men are working on the walkway path located from the village amphitheater to the
Waterworks Park. When the project Is completed within the next 30 days, It will cost more
than $650,000 which came primarily from state grants. (J. Miles Layton)
Musser said the village has
no way of paying for the
$150.00 of mcreased (.;osts
associated with the proje&lt;:t.
Since the state a~ to take
over the contntct,ll will pay tor

the additional costs.
Once the project is complete,
the state has the authority ~)
cany M.E. Company to coun
to recover the additional cost~
on the proje&lt;:t. Musser said

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Volunteer
Infantry,
.and Cpl.
William
Ashley of
Company
I,
36th
0 h i \)

hoetlich @mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - By adopting u duck to be entered in
the Sternwhccl Festival river
race, you wuld hecomc the
winner of a brand new car.
Don Tate is providing u
$25,000 car to be used in promoting the ducky derby
spunsorcd by the Pomeroy
Merchants
Association .
Be!i&gt;re the event on Saturday,
Sept. 27, one of the numbereu ducks will he drawn
from the many to go into I he
water, and if that duck en ISS es the finish line !irst, the car
'will go to the winner.
After John Musser, presi dent, reported that the Ohio
Lottery will not be sponsoring
the fireworks at the Festival
this year, the Merch:mts
Assocmt ion voted to make a
$5(KI contribution toward lhe
cost. The cust is ;JiJC)Uf $6,0(K)
and businesses are heing
asked to help with the cost.
It wa~ decided to order 30 I

Volunte~

Infantry.
She is the
A1hley
third generation of her titmily to belong
to the organization.
The daughter of Keith
and Emma Ashley is a 200 I
graduate of Meigs Local
High Schc•&gt;l, attended Ohio
University and and is now
enrolled in Shawnee State
University where she is pursuing a career in medical
diagnostic technology.
In addition t@ her LGAR
work, she has served as president of the Mary Gardner
Owen Society Children of the
American Revolution, and as

-

••

I I

J. MtLES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydallysentlnal .com
BY

-

-~

SYRACUSE -- A head-on
cc•llision at 7 p.m. on State
RotHe 124 west of Syracuse
injured one man and stopped
traffic for several hours .
Highway Patrol Trooper
Josh Ri"1cr said David
Sayre, 74, of Racine was
traveling cast on State Route
124 in a 11N9 Chevrolet
Ventura when he went left of
center and hit the 2001
Stcrl ing Jump u·uck dri vcn
hy Michael It Uhinck, 45 of
Pori Clinton, who was traveling west toward Pomeroy.
. Sayre ~as lit'~ tli~htcd to
St. Mary s Hospital tn W.Va.
Trooper Risner Llescrihcd
Sayre's condition as encouraging, though as ol press time

·-------

M.E. Company has already
come to a ;,ettlcrncnl with the
state conccming these costs.
Musser said the walkway
shou ld he completed within
~0 days .

ChtiSUll&lt;L' glass omamenb in a
metallk or bumishcd gold color
with the new hridgc artwork in
hlm:k. Bohhie Karr, Peggy
flanon and Charlene Hoeflich
were aj1pointcd lo a mmmillcc
to tina itc the onJcring aticr a
dcdsion is made about whid1
picture of the bridge is to be
used. lhc omamcnts wi II he
used as a fund raiser 14 )r the
Merchants Asscl&lt;:iation.
Annie Chapman, chairman of
the Morgan's ){aid Rc-cn"ctmcnt festivities in Pomeroy,
said she chedcd with several
merchants who reported gmd
business during the uay.
Members were reminded
that the C'l1ristmas tour of
downtown Pomeroy has
hccn set for Dec . 11 .
During the niceti ng it was
reported by Chapman that
Pomeroy Village Coundl is
moving ll&gt;rward on plans to
tear down the old Pomeroy
Junior High School huilt.ling
to make way for a new hu,i ncss huilding.
PleeH ' " Derby. AS

I'OME){OY - Pomeroy
vi llage cuuncil made a decision regarding the future of'
the oiJ Pomeroy Jr. High
buil&lt;.ling which was d;unagcd
by a fire in June .
Mayor Victor Young Ill
said !he insurmu:c agent ,

Downmg. Cllllds. Mulle11 and
Musser, will provide a sctllcment of nearly $200,IKIO to
lhc village for the loss. This
money wuld he used to
repair the auuitorium in the
building where the garage
was IncHed. or this money
could he us.·d lo purchase
&lt;lllother huilding and ne;1rb y
property owncu by 13oh
rhompson .
Village council unanimous ~
ly volcLI to purchase nearl y
one acre of property and the
old AEP huilding hchind the
Mci~s High School football
stad1um penuing a contract
with Thompson for the sale
of the land late last week .
Thi·s will hccwnc lhe site of
the new garage and hccomc a
storage depot for
and
gravel. There arc g&lt;tsoline
pump' located on the property which Young said will be u
hig help to lhe village. The
insurance settlement will also
pay Jeffers
Ex cavating
Company to demolish the
junior high huilding .
Young tlcscrihcd the purchase uf the properly and the
huilding as a "win win" situ ·
&lt;~lion . He , aiu the insurance
company would only spend
mone y to replace nr repair
the garage .
If the village had choscp to
'
PleeH ' " Ble11lnc. A!J

'"It

ra1nmg
•

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1'nllnlna ~ 1ft Mlllble for both blah IChoolatudenta and lllluha.
I

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••

for
Real

I

I

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentlnal.com

Dave or Brenda

t

111 I I l l

BY

Real 1.

..- - - - -··

'• I

Garage fire
becomes
blessing fo(
Pomeroy

T.

at 991·11.5&amp;

.~ .. d I

Racine man
hospitalized
following
collision

-.--

Ashley leads Ohio New car top prize
Civil War Society in ducky derby

Ohio

I ll

Pie••• ••• Colll1lon, AS

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•

I 0 . :! u

BY BRIAN J. REED
bread@ mydallysenlinel.com

Movies

·~-·------------ -·--

'"'I p I I \I B I · H

Pena lifts Reds. See
Page 81
o Mo

Editorials

• Appliances
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• And More ...

I I ) '\ I ""'I ) \'

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DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ....

Sayre helps Tornadoes
top Alexander, Bt

••

hoetli~h@ mydailysenlinel.com

2003 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION

biggest gains were a pair of
18-yard passes. However,
they couldn't stop Manning
in the closing minutes as he
drove 65 yards to set up
Vanderjagt's 'kick.
The e·nding was a familiar
one, but with 15 games left,
it's nothing the Browns can't

Clarett charged; OSU
ready to cut ties, Bt ·

• =I ..... Citi

c

..

,.0. . . 111

RID a a 1 bOM 41174

~ (740) 245 -5334

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, Sept.11

CLEVELAND (AP) - In
an effort to curb a projected
$62 million deficit by the end
of next year. Cleveland's
finance director said the city
will have to make dramatic
spending cuts.
"We don't have enough
revenues to fund the services
people want and demand,''
Finance Director Robert
Baker said Tuesday, adding
those cuts could include laying off some of the city's
9.400 workers.
Cleveland stands to run a $12

~oflold !57"110' J •

•
/--·

/
W.VA.

C 2003 AccuW&amp;.!Iher, Inc.

SuM~

..
·--~- ...

Pt. Ckludy

Cloudy

ShoWEll$

T·storms

~lum&amp;s

Rem

--·
.

Snow

Ice

More sun than clouds
Lows near 60.
Saturday ... Partly · cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Sunday ... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower
60s and highs near 80.
Monday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms until midnight.
Lows near 60 and highs in the
mid 70s.
Tuesday ... Mostly
clear.
Lows in the mid 50s and
highs in the mid 70s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today ... More sun than
clouds. Highs in the lower
80s. Light east winds.
Tonight. .. Mostly clear with
river valley fog developing.
Lows in the upper 50s. Light
and variable winds.
Thursday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s. East
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
Friday ... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Friday night...Mostly clear.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

8,000

JUN

=-=-=

High

9,584.95

·0.82

AUG

JUL
Low
9,490.84

7,000

SEP

Rocord high: 11.722.98
Jan. 14,2000

Sept. 9, 2003

1,900

Nasdaq

1',700

oott;x:Bite

1,500

1,

JUN

:::.=..,

High
1,886.27

·0.80

AUG

JUL
Low
1,867.81

SEP

1,300

Record high: 5,048.132

March 10, 2000

Sept. 9. 2003

1.050

Stan::laid &amp;

950
850

1

JUN

17

-=-=
Pet.

'

Hlglt
1,031 .84

·0.82

AUG

JUL

750

SEP

RICOrd high: 1,527.46
Marth 24, 2000

Low
1.021.14

AP

Local Stocks
ACI-22.74

AEP - 28.95
AJczo - 32.80
Ashland Inc.- 34.04
BBT-37.77
BU- 17.47
BClb Evans- 27.62
BorgWarner- 70.49
Clly Hoking- 34.54
Champion - 4.62
Charming Sl1ops - 5.45
Col-26.ee
Dul'oot- 44.50
DG-21.38

Fedelal Mogul- .24

Gannen ~ 77.94
General Electrtc- 31.16
GKNLY - 4.50
Hartey Davidson - 48.05

Sears- 42.89
SBC - 22.92

Kroger -

AT&amp;T- 22
USB-24

Kman- 28.20

19.10
Ltd. - 15.74

RD ~1- 45.87
R - 1 - 27.10

Wai-Mart- 57.06

QakHillfinancial -29.30 Worlhinglon-14.76
Bank One - 39.43
' Daily s1oCk reports are 1he
CNB- 24.25
4 p.m. closing quotes of
Peoples - 27.62
1he previous day's transacPepsioo- 44.55
lions.' piUVIded by Smith
Premon- 9.24
Pertners at Advest lrx:. ol
Rod\y Boots - 11 .08
GaiiiJolis.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Baker is compiling a series of
suggested spending cuts to present to City Council on Monday.
Some options include asking workers to voluntarily
work 32-hour weeks and dis·
cussing with labor unions
ways to cut health care costs.
Raising taxes is the only
option the council won't consider, said Council President
Frank Jackson.
The city asked its depart·
ment directors two weeks
ago to begin preparing budgets for next year that factor

in a I 0 percent cut in money.
The city has managed to
avoid layoffs and cuts in service during other years
plagued by budget deticits by
increasing fees. retinancing
debt and scrounging up
money sitting unused in its
accounts.
Baker warned such measures won't cut it this year.
"There isn't $62 million
worth of one-time bullets,"
Baker said. "We can't pull a
rabbit out of the hqt in 2004."

Charter schools chafe at proposed
new rules for online education
COLUMBUS (AP)
Online charter schools would
have to create a co mmi~tee to
guide their policies and procedures under one of dozens
of new rules recommended
by the state school board.
Cyber schools :md schools
uttering online classes would
also have to develop policies
explaining students' •ight~ when
installation of equipment is
delayed and come up with ways
to atiJ"dCt qualified teachers.
Lawmakers required the
state school board to recommend
the
guidelines,
announced Tuesday, by
month's end. It's now up to
lawmakers to decide which
recommendations to follow.
Some advocates of online
chaner schools say the rules
are loo intrusive . But the
state says the recommenda-

tions make sure such schools tiona! JlUblic schools.
are held accountable.
Supponers say they give
"I don't see it as adding a students in struggling· public
layer of bureaucracy." said schools an' alternative.
Steve Burigana, executive Opponents say they drain
director of the Education money from needy districts
· Department's Office
of and aren't delivering on their
Community Schools. "It pro- academic promises.
vides guidimce in an area where
The Ohw Charter School
there was virtually none."
Association said it underAt least '16 online charter stands the need for accountschools are open in Ohio. ability. But it questioned a
enrolling 22 percent of the number of the recommendastate's 38,248 charter school · tions, such as requiring the
students and receiving about schools to figure out ways to
$50.6 million in state funds. attract good teachers.
The state expects to pay about
It also questioned why the
$255 million to charter schools schools need a separate advithis year, about 2 percent of the · sory board• from the regular
total education budget.
school board.
Like regular charter schools,
"How are the schools supthey are privately run but pub- posed to be innovative or diflicly funded. Lawmakers stan- ferent when they have to do
ed charter schools in 1997 to all these things?" said Clint
provide competition for tradi- Satow,
OCSA
policy

research vice president.
But Steve Clippinger of the
Lancaster Digital Academy
said he believes the recommendations are overdue.
The guidelines "are things
we ought to be doing," said
Clippinger, president of the
academy's board of directors.
The K -12 school in Fairl'ield
County will enroll at least 30
students this year, Clippinger
said, although current slate
records show just seven
enrolled. Clippinger said public
schools are used to such requirements and being accountable.
Some on line schools were
new to the academic world.
"and I don 't think they had
that kind of understanding of
those levels of accountability," he said.

1DLEOO (AP)- Thcked
inside his brown leather wallet, John Garcia still carries the
identification card he displayed while helping with the
cleanup and recovery of Aight
93 in western Pennsy Ivania.
It's a daily reminder of
how the terrorist attacks
changed his life.
About 250 people from the
Toledo area, including
Garcia, will read the names
of all 2,998 victims of the
Sept. II attacks during a daylong observance Thursday to
mark the second anniversary.
"It's an honor just to say their
names," said Garcia, an
autoworker who also volunteers
with the American Red Cross.
Although" there are fewer
Sept. II anniversary observances in Ohio than a year
ago, cities and churches have
plans for several events.
Chapel bells at the

University of Dayton will
toll to mark when the first
plane struck World Trade
Center in New York .
Scripture readings will be
mixed with dramatic readings of personal accounts
from survivors during a service at St. Bernard Roman
Catholic Church in Akron.
Police officers from around
lhe Cleveland area will join
together for a tribute to
American heroes.
Organizers of the observance in Toledo wanted
something special to remember those who died.
"We always hear about the
numbers," said Juanita
Greene, Toledo's director of
community rel11tions. "We
thought 'Why not say the
names.' We didn't want
speeches, because, really,
what more can you say."
Each of the volunteers will

read 12 names.
"You're talking about 12
people who I don· t know, but
I feel! do know because of the
national impact this had," said
Libby Marsh, who had to find
a baby sitter for her daughter
so she could take part.
Garcia spent two weeks in
Pennsylvania two years ago,
delivering food and supplies to
law officers and investigators
who were working at the site
where United Flight 93 crashed.
Families of passengers
aboard the plane say they
believe their loved ones
rebelled against hijackers by
fighting their way ·into the
cockpit to seize control. The
FBI has suggested that terrorists may have deliberately
crashed the plane.
Garcia said he still feels a
connection to the victims and
the people of Somerset
County, Pa. "They greeted us

like we were a part of their
community.'' he said.
Judith Thompson, of
Perrysburg. said it was an
honor that she could take pan
in the observance remembering the victims.
Some of the readers volunteered through work or
received letters from organizers. Some heard about it on
the radio and television.
Like most of the other
readers, Thompson has read
through her list of names and
practiced saying them. She
also started thinking about
their families and where they
came from .
"I am from the East Coast.
You wonder if you knew
them," said Thompson, a
native of southern New Jersey.
Some of the volunteers
have turned to the Internet
for more information about
the people they will honor.

Cuyahoga county official arrested on assault charges

Wendy's-32

NSC- 19.34

million deficit this year and a
$50 million deficit in 2004.
Soaring health care costs,
fewer dollars collected from
income taxes and fee increases than anticipated, and
receiving $4 milhon less than
expected from the state all
contributed to the city's
problem, Baker said.
The Department of Public
Safety, which includes EMS .
and the Fire and Police
departments, has also spent
about $8.5 million more on
ovenime than budgeted.

Volunteers to read names of the Sept 11 vidims

9.000

9,507.20

Wednesday, September to, 2003

Finance director warns city must cut
spending to avoid.massive deficit

Ohio weather

IND.

PageA2

CHAGRIN FALLS, Ohio
(AP)- A Cuyahoga County
elected official was arrested
on assault charges after a
fight broke out among several people , police said.
County Recorder Patrick
O'Malley and his friend
Richard Pelleschi were

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley
Published
every
afternoon,
Our main concern In all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 1 1 1 Court
accurate. If you know of an error in a S1reet, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, call the newsroom a1 1740) 992- pos1age paid at Pomeroy.
2188.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association .
Our main number I•
Poatml•ter: Send address correc(740) 992-2158.
tions 10 The Daily Sen1inel, 111
Department eX1enolon• are:
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

arrested Thesday after joining the brawl. which
involved several people
including O'Malley's ISyear-old
son,
Brian
O'Malley, according to a
police repon.
O'Malley, 45, of Chagrin
Falls, and Pelleschi, 46, of

Cleveland,
were
later
released, but police are
investigating and charges
against some or all of the participants will be filed soon,
said Chagrin Falls Police
Chief James Brocious.
According to police reports,
the fight broke out between

a in?

two groups in the suburban
Cleveland village's. downtown . Eac.n group has accused
lhe other of staning it.
O'Malley
has
been
recorder since 1997. Before
that, he was a Cleveland
councilman.

HEADACHE
NECK

SHOULDER

Dr. Joey D. Wilcoxon can help!

45769.

News

,,

Editor: C~artene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Repol1wr: Brian Reed, E&gt;&lt;t. 14
Reportw: J. MIIIB laylon, E&gt;&lt;t . 13

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PageA3

BY THE BEND

Wednesday, September ao, 2003

Family Medicine

Love triangle,
Pap smears, mammograms save lives friendship broken
apart by betrayel

Question: My older sister
was operated on for cervical
cancer. Ev~n though the doctor say~ she'll he okay
~cause 11 was caught early.
I m start tng to worry about
my own hculth . As a healthy
25 -year-old woman. I've
never thought much about
see ing the doclor. What
health mailers should I be
com:erncd ahout''
Answer: It's clear that you
have already learned an
impurttm1 lesson from your
sister's experience - early
. detection is a key to successful cancer lreatmenl. Fur this
you should be commended.
Your question really encompasses two kinds of issueshea llh problems 1ha1 are
exclusive lo women (those
relaled In lhe female reproductive organs) anil those
thai afllicl hnlh sexes. some
of wh ich are more common
in wo men and others in men.
Today, I'll focus on two
hcallh prohlems !hat are almost
exclusive ly lemale conccms:

women with this dreaded disease every year! You might be
surprised to learn !hat men. too,
can get breast cru1cer. but it is
very uncommon.
Medicine hasn'l identilled a
way to prevent breasl cancer.
but early deteclion can drammically improve the chances
of your surv1val. Even though
you are only 25. I urge you to
slart regular monthly breast
self-examinations (BSE) and
repon any questionable findings lo your doctor immediately. Your family physician
or gynecologist can teach you
how to do a BSE.
I'm sure most of my female
readers know that a yearly
breast examination by a
physician and yearly mammograms are advised after age
50. But how many of you do
these simple tests'J A national
survey a few years ago
showed only 41 percent do.
This is diswncertmg because
an annual physical exam with
mammograms reduces the
risk of dying from breast canBreast amJ L:c rvi caleancer.
cer by 25 to 30 percenl.
While cancer of all kinds is
Some women avoid mamlhc sewnd most common mograms because of a mistakGUise of dealh l(x women, this en belief that they haVe liltle
swurge originates in the breast risk of dcve loping the disease
far more ollen than in any other because no one in their family
organ. There arc about 180.000 has had il. Unfortunately,

three out of four women who
develop breust cancer have no
family history or other risk
factors for the diseuse. On the
other hand. a woman with a
family history of breast cancer
may need to begin yearly
physi.:als and mammograms
at an earlier age.
The other common disease I
want to discuss is the one your
sister had - cervical cancer.
The widespread use of pap
smears has created a success
story of sons. In 1940, cervical cancer was the most com- ·
mon cause of cancer death in
women. Today it barely
mt1kes the top I0. Despite this
favorable trend, we healthcare providers need to do het·
1er. Cervical cancer is generally a slow growing disease,
and yearly exmninalions usually identify the condilion in
its early - curable - stage.
Of those women who are
ditignoscd with cervical cancer. however. about half have
never had a pap smear.
Pap smear screening for
cervical cuncer is easily dnne
and relalivcly inexpensive.
Those who are poor, clderlr.
uninsured. bel on~ 10 an ethmc
minority. or live m a rural area
arc less likely to gel u regular
pap smear. Theref(Jre, these

groups have more women ·
who die from cervical cancer.
Ewry woman should have a
pap smear when she begins
having sexual intercourse or
reaches the age of 20. Titis
practice should continue every
one to two years thercatier.
There arc other conditions that
make more frequent pap
smears advisable. Please he
sure to get a pap smear. and ask
your doc1or when you should
come back for your next exam.
If you have a friend or family
member in one of the high risk
gmups I listed above, please .
ask them if they've had u pap
smear lately.
(Familv Medicine® i.1· "
weeklv ;·o /umn. To .wbmi1
qut•.,ri~m.,·, wril&lt;' ro Marrlw A.
Simpson, D.O .. M.B.A., Ohio
Unit•n.1·iry
Colle}:e
of'
Osreopmhic Mnlicine, P. 0.
Box 110. Arhens, Ohio45701.
Ml'llical inf'ormarirm in 1his
column i., provitlt•d as ~~~
l'driC(llimwl service onlv. /1
tiot'.\' 1101 replace rhe jwlg-

DEAR ABBY: My heart
is hrokcn. I am a 21 -ycarold wllcge studenl . Today
was supposed to he 111y
wedding day. My lwin sisler. "Diana." my ex -fianre.
"John," and I were always
very dose . John and I have
dated .since hi gh srhonl.
Lasl week . Di ana htld 1nc
she is three monlhs prcg·
nan I with John \ hahy. She
S&lt;tid lhat wl1en I was study ing for exams. she and John
had a one-time !ling while
hoth of !hem were drunk .
The lwo people' I am closest
lo in !Ill' wnrld have
hctraycd me : I no longer
speak In eilhcr nne.
I plan 10 rclmn to c·ollege
10 finish my sc·nior year. Do
you lhink I can ever repair
lhesc rehuionships'' Should I
forgive John aml111arry him''
Please help me. -- UNHAPpy IN HIE MIDWEST
DEAR UNHAPPY: Can
you repair these rclalionship&lt;'
Possihly. with the Jlassagc of
time. Should you marry John '.'
Not unless yctLI want your

mellf of' vour pt•r.wmlll f&gt;h\•si-

cian. who .&lt;lwultl be relied on
to diagno.\'t' ancJ rt'commend
/rt'lllmmr for any lllt'dica /
co1ulirimrs. Pas1 columns r11·e

niece or nephew to ;llso

ava'ilab/e online ril www./lmr -

dio.01'!1/fin.)

Thomas in Mason, W.Va. The
social committee will host the
outing.
Wednesday, Sept.10
SHADE - There will be a
POMEROY
-· Meigs
meeting
of the Shade River
County Board of Heallh
Lodge
#453
at 8 p.m.
meets 5 p.m., in conference
room of Meigs County Health Thursday at the Hall.
Refreshments will be served.
Dept. , 112 E. Memorial Dr.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
RUTLAND
Rutland
Village Council, regular meet- VFW Post #9053 will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
ing, 6:30 p.m,
Hall in Tuppers Plains. There
will be a meal at 7 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 12
POMEROY - Widow's fel·
lowship noon at Craw's
Family Restaurant.
Wednesday, Sept. 10
Saturday, Sept. 13
GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY
Return
Southeastern
Ohio
Meigs
chapter
Jonathan
Advocates for Recovery will
meet . at 2:30 p.m. on DAR, noon luncheon at
Wednesday at the G.allia· Grow's Family · Restauratn. A
Jackson-Meigs Board of meeting will follow at 1:30 at
Alcohol Drug Addition and the Pmeroy Library. Speaker
Mental Health Services, 53 will be probate Judge Scott
Powell. hostesses
are
Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.
Eleanor Smith , Mrs. Paul
Thursday, Sept 11
POMEROY - Alpha Iota Eich, Mrs. Wendell Cleland,
Masters will meet at 6:30 Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Mrs.
p.m. for a chicken barbecue George - Morris, and Mrs.
at the camp site of Eleanor James O'Brien.

Public meetings

·

Clubs and
Organizations

Local folks

Monday, Sept. 15
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters will meet at 6:30
p.m. Monday in the band
room.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 , spe·
cial meeting Monday, 7 p.m.
at the Masonic hall. Degree
work.

reunion, 12:30 p.m. picnic
lunch at the King Farm.
39858 Smith Road, Pomeroy.
Sunday, Sept. 21
RACINE - Oscar Reed
and Charles Hysell reunion,
12:30 p.m. Star Mill Park,
Racine. Take item for white
elephant sale.

Reunions

Other events

Saturday, Sept. 13
CHESHIRE - The 36th
Samuel Allen Eblin family
reunion will be held at the
Cheshire Village Park. There
will be a 4 p.m. social hour
with a covered dish dinner .
following. Family members
are to take table service, a
covered dish and their own
beverage.
Sunday, Sept. 14
RACINE - MrW,S Kerwood
and Chapman Hill family
reunion 1 p.m. Star Mill Park,
Racine. Carry-in dinner. All
family and friends Invited.
POMEROY -Wood family

Friday, Sept. 12
LONG BOTTOM - Hymn
sing at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full
Gospel Church, Long Bottom
with the Gloryland Believers.
A second hymn sing at 7 p.m.
on Sept. 19 there with the
Peacemakers.s

Birthdays
Gwlnnle White of 100 East
Memorial Drive, Apt . 309,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 will
observe her 90th birthday on
Wednesday, Sept. 10.

.

RACINE Johnson
announce lhe
bu1h or their
li1~ cllild. a
son. Owen
Frederick
Johnson.
July 23. l-Ie
weighed 7
pounds. II

Eric mxl Amy

Olllll:Cs.

Palcrnal . Johnson
G randparcnls
arc Bill and Louise Soulsby of
Pomeroy and the late Emest
JohllSOil of Mason. Malernal
grandparents arc Robert and
Louie Lawson of Reedsville,
and Shirley and-John Dunlap of
Willamstown, W. Va. Stepgrandparcnls are Paul and
Avonelle Evans of Racine and
specia l grandparents are
Frederick "Fri1z'' and Carmel
Sisson of Pomeroy.

RACINE - The First
Bap1ist Ch urch of Racine will ,
hosl an appreciation service
to honor the heroes of lhe
mililary. fire, police. and
EMS dcparlments of th.e
Racine-Syracuse area.
· ·
The service will be held at 7
p.m. on Sunday, SeJ.lt..28. at the
Racine Firs! Bapust Church,
404 Fifth SU'Cet in Racine.
The l' lll/&gt;llasi s of. the community .:'C cbratibn is to recognize and !hank those who
work 1irclcssly to keep the
communities safe, according
to a news release.
.

•

There will be a reception
following at the Racine
Firehouse for all those in
attendam:e.
Sponsors of the "Honor Our
Heroes Day" are First Baptist
Church, Enduring Freedom
Support Group, RACO,
American. Legion Auxiliary.
Racine United Methodist
Church.
Dorcas
United
Methodist Church. Racine
Village Mayor Scott Hill, and
Southem Local School District
Superintendent Bob Grueser.
The public is invited to attend

·'

···:',p~tJ.,
dtlfS ...._ you!

hcnllllt' i lll Xiuu~ 1111hcir lll'W
S liiTOLII ll flll g~ \V]ICil l:tl'L' d

.wilh

I~

ar;~denl(t.· rli;~ llcn gcs. II
you suspl!c t thai you have a.

prnbkm ll1a1 l'l'l}ll irc·s cPU II·
s~.' lln g

or lltc..•di~,· alion . you
arc wise to l';u.: c it squiln:lv·
of( ~
Depression is a disease . It i ~"

ami

IIlli

JlUI .. il

lrcalahle ;~ml r ur;~hk . &gt;tml
!hose wl1o have il are IHtl
wdrd. so pkiisc' th•n 'l ll'ilil .
DEAl~ ABBY: I am onh1.1. btll llla \'l' a hig rrohklli .
I low bo1l1 of my par,· n~&gt; .
bu1 I don'l like lhc way 111y
dad treats my mnn1. Dad .
drink s a lol and abu ses
Mom. Nol by hillill)!. hul·
wilh words . Mt1111 Willll s 111
leave . hut she doesn't want ·

1o hrcak up our famil y.
Lately. my older hnnhcrs
an.~

be g innin g lo copy l&gt;ad.

They mou1h off at Mm11 and
il m;1kcs nil' ;JII)!ry. I don ·J·
know h11w lo help my p&lt;~r ­
ents wilhoul huni11g on,· or
1he nlher. Th,·y holh need
help. hul.l)ali refuses In gc'l
it. Wh;~1 Gill I dn '.' -ANGRY DAl l&lt; iHTER/SIS TER IN KANSAS
DEAR ANGRY DALIGii TER: Remind your molhcr '
1ha1 words can hun as much
as physicul hlows. and your
bro1hcrs arc already imitat ing their falhcr \ behavior.
Ask your mother how she .
wi II feel when her sons marry:
and tthusc THEIR wives.
Deep in her hcw1 she knllws
!hat the lime tu pllt &lt;lll end to
this cycle is llllW. Continue
Clll't..luraging your mother to
t.lo whal she knows she should

-- leave your abusive falher
I(Jr the sake of her .:hildrcn.
[)par Ai&gt;hl' is ll 'ril/1'11 1&gt;1'
Abigail

V.rir

/Jrm·n.

knm•·11 as ./ea/111&lt;' 1'/rilliJ•s.

&lt;Ill(/

was finmdn.l h\' her · morht' l;
PwdliiP 1'/lillit•:,. Wrill' /)('(fl'
Ahhv at 11 ·wu·. /)t•ar!\hh rcom
or .P 0. liox fNNO, '"''"
An.~eb. CA 9!X)(iV,

Saturday, September 13
10 am .. 2 pm

Heart health can be fun for all ages. Enjoy educational
seminars, screenings, information about nutrition, exercise,
rehabilitation and lifestyle management.

fQ Free ch o lesterol screening-compl ete
lipid panel, fasting required
. (call 592-9300 fur appointment)

.f!J Free 'J-shirts (while supplies lasr)
({) Adull Heart BING6

O'BLENESS
Memorial Ho~pital
~' lh pil• ll :hhr A!l~r.n• . Clll4"' 1tll

({) SENIORBeat activities
~

111.1·~,

"G})faceJ ftJ ~ &amp;
T!ttrng~ ftl JP(J"

·The Daily Sentinel
74Q-992-2156 .

POMEROY - Dr. Jack
Bailes and his staff will host
an open house and truck
show .from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Sept. 18 at lhe new office,
Meigs Family Eyecare. LLC.
507 Mulberry Heights.
Pomeroy, Thursday. Light
refreshments will be served
and door prizes awarded.
There will also be a truck ·
showing of frames with some
disco.unts. For more information call 992-3279.

COOLV ILLE - Connie
Rankin of Tuppers Plains was
the weekly best loser and
received a certificate and fruil
baskel at the recent meeting
of TOPS #20 13 Coolville.
The meeting was held at
Torch Baptist ehurch with 15
members present. Program
leader Brenda .Cline read the
Tops Pledge to the group and
the group discussed the pledge.

STUDENT: Til,· 4 slmleni'
heallh l'l'.nler on your campus is lhc place lo ex press
your l'lllll'CI'IIs. Many first ·
Sltltkllls
year
collq.:e

Coming Tomorrow in the Sentinel ...

Open house
planned

Rankin honored

Abby

,'

'· "

Johnson birth

Dear

your s1cpdaughler or slcpson.
Th&lt;it's a lot lo swallow. bul
only time will tell -- lots and
lots of time. In the meantime.
enjoy your senior year.
P;u1icipate in st:h&lt;Kll activities
am! work nn expanding your
cirde or friends.
DEA R ABBY: I am a rol·
lege freshman in a c·ity six
hours from home. I miss my
family. hul I've bee n f&lt;ll1unale to have already made
some wonderful new friemls .
Lalcly. however. I've he en
concerned about lhe way I
fcelmelllally, so lma'k a list
of my feelings and behaviors
thai cause me concern. I then
explored the lntcntct for
advice. A number uf crcdihle
Web sites indi.:ate 1ha1 my
symplums wuld be linked lo
clinical depression.
This has me worried. I
don't wanl my new friends
lo think I'm "weird ." Alsu,
my parents arc old -fash ioned and could very well
insisl I re1urn home .
Above all. I don 'l. wanl
anyone to overreact. This is
all based on my own suspi·
cions. Somelimes I gel
scared that something may
happen t&lt;J me because I didn'l seek help . Wlm should I
turn
lo.
Abby'!
DEPRESSED STUDENT
(NO LOCATION, PLEASE)
DEAR
DEPRESSEJ)

Community calendar

Service to honor
heroes planned

By carrier or malar route

CllltaiH S.l11: Dave Harris, E•l. 15

The Daily Sentinel

Action Shack for kids

•

] \[) ]

17411} 'i' l \ 'i'i~ 1 • """ .,hlnu-"' "1:

•

�•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
Www.mydallysantlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

VIEW

lbanks!
'·

Donations help youth in Meigs
A total of 205 school kits were given out through God's
N.E.T. to school age youth in Meigs County, Aug. 18- 19.
Items for this project were donated by individuals. groups.
.,110d organizations. Thank you to everyone that donated to this
event.

God's N. E. T.
Dee Rader

Pomeroy

STATE

Wednesday, September 10,

2003

Support for Iraq war doesn't wane

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

Pagei\..4

VIEW

EPA

The Democrat presidential
wannabes are confounded.
Their allies in the left-leaning national media are perplexed. They cannot understand why Americans continue to support the war in
Iraq ; why the masses have
not turned on George W
Bush. The Dem wannabes
have done their darndest to
stir up public discontent
about the war.
Bush is '"dead wrong'' on
Iraq. decried Massachusetts
Sen. John Kerry. Iraq is a
'" looming quagmire.'' declared
Congressman
Missouri
Richard Gephardt. America is
'" paying the price'" for the war.
lainented Howard Deim. the
former Vermont governor.
And the anti-war bleatings
by the party of Kerry.
Gephardt and Dean are dutifully echoed by their Bushhating friends in the media
(t he hardcore leftie s who
refer to the conflict in Iraq
as '"Bush 's war"). They not
only report the latest deaths
of U.S. servi ce members- as
they should - but also the
number that have died since
President Bush declared an
end to major fighting in Iraq.
And they took special note
when the death toll from the
current war surpassed the
1981 war with Iraq.
Their un spoken goal is 'to
persuade the American people that the United States
has gotten itself into a quag-

Joseph
Perkins

mire of Vietnam-like proportions. a contlict that will
take mimy years and many
more deaths to get out of.
Meanwhile. every postwar incident in Iraq is portrayed as prima facie evidence that the Bush admin istration supposed ly is losing the peace. from the
recent truck bombing of the
United Nations compound to
the recent assassination of
Iraqi
cleric
Ayatollah
Muhammad Bakr al-Hakim.
The implication is that the
Iraqi people were somehow
safer. somehow more secure
before their country was lib·
erated by the United States.
before Saddam Husse in and
his genocidal regime were
turned out of power.
Yet for all the anti-war
rhetoric by the Democrat
preside ntial wannabes . all
the post-war recriminations
by anti-war liberals in the
media. Americans remain
unswayed. Nearly two of
three say the situation in
lmq was worth goi ng to war
over. according to a recent

CNN/USA Today/Gallup
poll. And only one of seven
savs that the United States
sh(&gt;uld withdraw troops
from Iraq .
The reason the public wntinues to support the war in
Iraq- much to the nlllsternation of anti-war Democrats
and anti -war media types ' is
that it recognizes what is at
stake in Iraq . Indeed. stx in
I0 Americans consider the
war in Iraq to be part of the
war on terror that began on
Sept. II. 200 I. They ha ve
not forgotten the mass murder or nearly 3.000 of their
fellow ' countrymen and
women in the alti,u;ks upon
the World Trade Center and
the Pemagon. the kamikaze
destruction of a jetliner in the
Pennsylvania countryside.
It was imperati ve that the
United States show its enemies that thev cannot take
Amenc.tn lives with impunity: that they cannot threaten
America without consequences . That 's why this
nation went to war with
Afghanistan. That's why it
went to war wi th Iraq .
By turning the Taliban out
of power. by driving AI
Qaeda out of its safe haven .
the United States sent a
warning to despotic regimes.
from Damascus to Tehran to
·Pyongyang: Renounce terror
or face America's military
wrat h.
By turning Hussein out of

power. by bringing justice to
his murderous sons. the.
United States selll a related,
mes sage: This nation no·
longer will sit idly by while
dangerous regimes seek to
acquire or develop weapons
of mass destruction with
which they can one day
threaten the safety of the ·
American people.
,
The Democrat presidential
wannabes. the liberal antiwar media, almost seem to
be hoping for U.S. failure in
post -war Iraq: no matter that
such failure would badly
dimii1ish this nation in the .
eyes of foe s and friends
alike - the beller to lower
Bush's favorable sta ndin g
with the American people.
A recent Boston Globe
story claimed: '" the post-war
environment is becoming a.
serious political liability.".
A i(letter'chance of improv,
ing the prospects of a
'"regime change in the
United States." as candidate,
~rry advocated this past.
spri ng.

But the war in Iraq. like
the war in Afgh&lt;tni stan. lik~
the overall war on terror;
ought be above the usual
partisan politic,, The blood
3.000
of the
nearly
Americans slau ghtered on
Sept. II demands no less. ·
(Joseph Perkin' is a columnist for 71te San Diego ·UnionTribune cmd can be reached at
Joseph Perkin.\ U11ion Trib. com)

Air standards
The News-Press, Fort Myers, Fla., 011 C01rgress and air
standards:
The Bush Administration has made things much easier on
America's industrial air polluters. New. relaxed
Environmental Protection Agency rules allow companies to .
massively update power plants, refineries and other facilities
without installing the costly but readily available modem pollution-control equipment, as formerly required.
The rules, if allowed to stand, will make it possible for polluting equipment to stay in use for decades. This change
would mark a huge, if short-sit,hted, victory for industry. and
a sad defeat for public health and the environment.
It also would be a retreat from an important principle upheld
more than 30 years by Republican and Democratic administrations alike: It may be economically impossible to require
existing industrial units, even ones that pollute hideously, to
retrofit to new clean-air standards. But when those units are to
be substantially replaced, as opposed to merely maintained,
they should be brought up to par.
Otherwise, immense amounts of unacceptable pollution will
continue indefinitely which is what will happen if these new
standards are not reversed.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters 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 opinions expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless othe!Wise noted.
~

/

.

Card Shark
I was in the ·drugstore this
afternoon and it suddenly hit
me that, once again, I am
late getting my Halloween
cards out. Last year, I was so
late I didn ' t even bother to
se nd out any. The year
before that I never ·got
around to at aiL Because I
had never heard of such a
thing as a Halloween card.
Three years ago, nothing.
Today, the drugstore has an
entire rack of them.
Have you ever gotten ·one?
I've never gotten one. If
someone's buying them and
someone' s sending them,
why am I not on anyone 's
Hallowee n
ca rd
li st?
Probably for the same reason no one is on my
Halloween card list. I tried
to put together a li st of people I would send Halloween
cards to, but I couldn 't come
up with a single person who
would appreciate the effort.
The people on my Christmas
card li st'' Why? They'll hear
from me soon _enough at
Christmas.
And what exactly would I
say in a Halloween card?
'" Happy Halloween! Hope
your car doesn ' t get
soaped!" or "Put out better
candy if you don 't want to
get egged ~gain 1" Boy,

Jim
Mullen

'

won't Bernie the accountant
love getting that?
When did Hallowee n
become such a huge holi cjay? Was ·I out of town the
day they sent around the
memo that s:1id let's make a
little after-dinner neighborhood sp·oll the biggest holiday in the known universe·&gt;
!l's bigger than New Year's
Eve.
Halloween is two months
away, and the stores are full
of Halloween merchandise
-costumes. candy. candles.
lawn decorations and window decorations. There are
even outdoor Halloween
li ghts that you put on your
house the way you put up
Chri stmas li ghts. And let\
not forget the orange plastic
leaf bag that looks like a
Jack-o' -Lantern. Whoever
thought that up should win a
MacArthur "Genius Award ."
They are so much better

than the real thing.
I grew a few real giant
pumpkins last year. I carved
them into gi ant scary Jacko· -Lanterns and (J{It them ·
out on the front lawn . They
were big and heavy and I
left
them
out
after
Halloween , figuring I'd
compost them very soon. We
had a heavy freeze that week
and they froze solid to the
ground. In the daytime sun
they· d decompose and
sl ump. and at ni ght they' d
freeze rock h:1rd again. They
got shorter anti shorter. and
wider and wider. The on ly
thing scary about them was
wh;lt they were doing to our
property value. Much to the
nei ghbors· relief. I finally
was itble to pry up the last of
stinking lumps in late
Man.: h.
Halloween may have gotten bigger. but has i! gotten
any better? An extra tall kid

The parents had bee n
spe ndin g on other thin gs.
too . Not one cos tume was
han&lt;;lmade. Thei·e were no
ghos ts with eyes holes cut
out of an old sheet. there
were no gobl in s made up
with old lip stick and
rouge . Th e re were two
Ca rri es from '"Sex and the
C ity'" wearing re al $400
Manolo Blahnik shties
and slink y black dresses,
three "Spider-Mans' in
pumped up lat ex, and one
kid in the same outfit ).
sec him in everyday.
absolutely no atte mpt at a
cos tume at all. The poor
child . what were hi s parents thinking to se nd him
ou t like thilt'!
"Did n't get a costume
made in tim e ton ight ,
Bobby·r·
"Oh. no," he said. "This is
my costume. I' m a reality
TV contestant. "
came around our l1ou se last
Hi s bag was much fuller
year dressed like a policeman tha n all the-- other trick -orin the midst of a big group of treaters .
children. I 'aid, "That is the
(Jim M1dle11 is tlw twtlwr of
m(&gt;st realistk costume. I sup- "It Takt'S A VillaR&lt;' !tlim: A
po'e you wan t to be a polke - Memoir o/Lifi•A/Ier 1lw 'C'i1I' ..
man when you grow up. ISimon lll(d Sciluste1; 2(1()j ):
Where 's yo ur bag?"
He also comrihwe.1· regtli(ll·ir
'" Mi ste r. I'm block secu- ti'J Eurt'rtainmeut Wt' t~kf r.\
rit y. The parents hired me H"here lie call he reac.:hed ;If
for 'th e night.''
j i111- 11111 II&lt;'II@ &lt;' II ', '.,)( II )

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Human remains found near World Trade
Voices of Liberty
Center site; death toll includes 42 'missing'
NEW YORK (APl - For
now, 42 people are listed as
missing - not dead - on the
World Trade Center death toll .
But the recent discovery uf
human bones and tissue at a
building near the si te could
change that tigure as officials
seek to match DNA from the
remains to one or more of the
2,792 attack victims.
So far, the remains of about
1,5 20 people have been identified. most by DNA. and
1,230 others were confirmed
dead by the courts because
families submitted proof to a
judge th&lt;lt the victim was at
the trade center or on one of
the hijacked planes.
The 42 '"missi ng" cases
have no such proof and no
identified remains.
'Those cases stay open. and
w.ill stay open, until it has
been declared a fraud, the person has been idcntitied. or
information comes up in
another way that closes the
case,'" said Shiya Ribowsky.
deputy director of investigation for the city medical
examiner's office.

Some people are listed as
missing because their remains
have not been identified or
their whereabouts on Sept. II
cannot be established with
certainty. Others may hot be
dead. or even exist A few
may be trying to fake their
deaths. city ofticials said.
Workers helping repair the
25-story landmark located
about a block from where the
south ·tower stood found the
latest set of remains Monday.
believed to be from a person
or people who died 111 the
attack.
The jetliner crashes and collapses of the II 0-story towers
blew debris and human
remains throughout the area.
Part of a stairwell from the
south tower landed on the
roof of the same building
where remains were found. A
woman's pelvic bone was
found there a year ago.
The discovery came just
days before the secondanniversary of the attacks.
Days before last year's
anniyersarr.! the ci,tY. rel~ased
tts frrst othctal vtctrms hst.

Relatives and dignitaries read
The family applied last year
aloud 2.801 names, pausing for death certificates. but the
for four moments of silenc~ to court did not grant them.
note the two airplane strikes according to their daughter,
and each tower's collapse, us Kiki Kabeya.
they will this year.
The mother of Fernando
By December, otllcials had Jiminez Molinar says she has
removed nine names read not heard from him si nce
aloud that day. One was a three days before the attack.
duplication. one was fabricat- when he told her he had just
ed by a woman allegedly try-. been hired at a pizzeria near
ing to del'raud victims chari- the trade center.
ties and seven had been
Last March. a judge denied
wrongly reported missing.
a death certiticate for him.
New York police alone have because his whereabouts on
made about 40 arrests involv- Sept. II '"c;mnot clearly be
ing people falsely claiming tixed."
they lost loved ones. and law
Molinar and the Texas couenl'orcement agencies in other pie are examples of two comcities have caught others.
man categories on the missing
Officials said the names of list - illegal immigrants
the missing will be included whose jobs were not wellin the list read aloud at this documented. or people whose
year's ceremony.
relatives say they were near
Two of the mystery cases the trade oenter that morning.
are those of Kacinga Kabeya. but knuw little more.
63, and Kapinga Ngalula, 5!1. . '"If we can't rule it either
a married ,,ouple from Texas. Wily. it's better to have their
Their children reported them name on there &lt;md pay respect
missing .after the pair tmveled to them if they did die," said
to New York' Crty in early Kenneth Ling. a police lieuSeptember 200 I on a sight- tenant pursuing the missing
seeing trip. and disappeared . cases.

Prison misplac~d a dying inmate's parole request
HELENA. Mont. (AP) Montana State Prison otlkials
misplaced a dying inmate's
request for medical parole. a
yearlong oversight that left Roy
Link behind bars where his
medical costs have mounted.
Although the prison ·s medical director said Link should
be considered for early
release due to his failing
health, that recommendation
never made it to the desk of
Warden Mike Mahoney or the
state Board of Pardons and
Parole for review, said Cheryl
Bolton. Mahoney's administrative officer.
Prison otl'icials have since
changed the way they handle
inmates' request for early
release due to medical condi •
tion, in hopes that it will prevent such applications from
getting lost or forgotten.
Cathy Redfern, administrator of health services at the
prison, said a new l'orm for
processing and tracking medtcal parole requests had been in
the works for about six months
and was approved just days
before an Associated Press

story detailed Link's situation.
'" The
medical
parole
process has been a concern of
ours for a while," she said.
A new application for Link
has been prepared and is
expected to be before the warden this week ·said Julie
Reardon. managed care coordinator for the Corrections
Department. If approved. the
Board of Pardons could act as
early as its Octobe.r meeting.
Link. serving a 25-year sentence for helping his sister
murder their . stepfather in
1996, submitted his request
for medical parole in early
August 2002. It got lost in the
prison's bureaucratic system.
'" Did we lose it? Did someone 1 mess up in following
through on the process? I don't
know," said Linda Moodry,
prison spokeswoman.
As a result, the Board of
Pardons never had the chance
to decide if Link should be
released before his normal
parole eligibility date of
December 2005.
In a letter to The Associated
Press, Link, 63, said he wants

to be paroled because he is
terminally ill and can barely
function.
"I' have been mostly confined to my bed due to pain
and weakness, and am not
able to perform the tasks of
daily livin g," he wrote.
"Taking a shower can be all
the activity I can handle.
sometimes for several days.'"
He was diagnosed by Dr.
Liz Rantz. prison medical
director. as having heart disease. diabetes, high blood
pressure and severe back pain.
Link also claimed to have
nerve damage. degenerative
bone disease, arthritis and
migraine headaches related to
his military career. He has had
fo11r heart surgeries since his
first heart (lttack in 1983.
Joe Williams, head of the
Centralized Services Division
in
the
Corrections
Department, said the prison
has spent $14.200 on Link's
medical care in the 32 months
he has been an inmate.
In a May 2002 letter to
Rasha Krishna, another prison
physician, Dr. Alan Gabster of

protest of GOP efforts to
rncrease Republican representation in the U.S. House.
"We will continue to fight
on any front to protect
Texans. And we will win
again," the Democrats said in
a statement Tuesday.
Democrats have a 17-15
majority in the current Texas
congressional delegation in
Washington. The GOP is pushing · plans that would give
Republictms as many as 21 seats.
Eleven Democrats slipped
across state lines July 28 and
stayed away for about six
weeks to block a redistricting
vote. One of the II, Sen. John
Whitmire, defected last ~eek

and said he would attend
another special session if the
governor called one.
That left the I0 remaining
Democrats without the numbers to block a ·quorum.
Twenty-one of the Senate's 31
members must be present for
business to be conducted.
The Democrats planned to
fly to Laredo on Wednesday for
a court hearing on Thursday.
The hearing is on the federal lawsuit they filed that
alleges Republican redistricting plans trample minority
rights . in violation of the
Voting Rights Act and that
their political free speech was
violated.

Historical Society, Racine
Subordinate Grange No. 2606.
Meigs County Pomoma
from PageA1
Grange. Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter DAR., and Chester
state color bearer for the Ohio Council No. 323 Daughters of
Department Daughters of America. She attends First
Union Veterans of the Civil Baptist Church of Middleport.
War and the Ohio Department
Her sister, Rachel, served
Auxiliary to the Sons of Union as pre sident of the Ohio
Veterans of the Civil War. She Department Daughters of
was Meigs County Grange Union Veterans of the Civil
princess and later become the War and her father as comOhio State Grange princess.
mander of the
Ohio
.She is a member of First Department Sons of Union
Families of Ohio. the Society of Veterans of the Civil War.
Civil War Families in Ohio, the
The Ladies of the Grand
Meigs County Pionecer and
Army of the Republic

(LGAR ) was formed in 1881
as an auxiliary to tlw Grand
Army of the Republic. the
largest Union veterans' organization after the Ci vi I War.
Its purposes are Civil War
Civ.il War education .and
preservation, patriotism. and
the honoring of Union veterans as 'well as all living
American veterans. The organization is federally chartered
by act of U.S. Congress.9

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) Democrat and Repl[blican senators were once again on a collision course following the
llovemor's call for another legtslative session and the collapse of the Senate Democrats'
quorum-busting strategy.
Republican Gov. Rick Perry
on Tuesday called for a, third
special session 10 redraw
Texas' congressional districts,
an issue thwarted on two previous attempts by Senate
Democrats who fled the state.
The I0 current senators
who remain in their New
Mexico exile said they would
return to Texas but warned
they were not ending their

Ashley

Collision
from Page A1
he has not yet been released
from the hospital. Risner said
Sayre's vehicle was severely
damaged and was a total loss.
The dump truck, which was
hauling 20.000 pounds of sand,
was moderately damaged .
•

-~

www.mydailysentinel.com

'Missoulit said Link should be
freed because "his further life
expectancy is extremely limit·
ed and the risk he poses.
because of his physical dis·
ability. would seem to be
somewhat minimal."
Link 's request for medical
·parole went to the warden's
oflice in early August 2002
and was routin~:ly referred to
the medical stuff for review.
Rantz. in a memo about two
weeks later. said. "I would
request that his medical con·
dition be taken into consider·
ation and that his parole eligi·
bility be reassessed."
Bolton
said
Warden
Mahoney never received
Rantz's
recommendation.
Link , after not getting a
response to his request, sent
another copy of the application to Bill Slaughter,
Corrections
Department
director.
Bolton said that was
returned to the prison to go
through the proper channels.
But, like Link's first request.
that too cannot be found.

Unrepentant, ready to continue fighting, Texas
Senate Democrats agree to return to chamber

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 10, the 253rd day of 2003. There
are 112 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Sept. I0, 1813, an
American naval force commanded by Oliver H. Perry defeated the British in the Battle of Lake Erie in the War of 1812.
On this date: In 1608, John Smith was elected president of
the Jamestown colony council in Virginia.
In 1846, Elias Howe received a patent for his sewing machine.
In 1919, New York City welcomed home Gen. John J.
Pershing and 25,000 soldiers who'd served in the U.S. 1st
Division during World War I.
In 1939, Canada declared war on Nazi Germany.
In 1945, Vidkun Quisling was sentenced to death in Norway
for collaborating with the Nazis.
In 1948, American-born Mildred Gillars, accused of being
Nazi wartime radio broadcaster "Axis Sally," was indicted in
Washington, D.C., for treason. She was later convicted, and
served 12 years in prison.
In 1955, "Gunsmoke" premiered on CBS television.
In 1963, 20 black students entered Alabama public schools
following a standoff between federal authorities and Gov.
George C. Wallace.
In 1977, convicted murderer Ham ida Djandoubi, a Tunisian
immigrant, became the last person to date to be executed by
the guillotine in France.
In 1983. John Vorster, prime minister of white-ruled South
Africa from 1966 to 1978,died in Cape Town at age 67.
.
Ten years ago: First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton lashed out
at what she called "standpat, negative, nay-saying" opponents
of health reform in an address to state legislators at George
Washington University. The cult series "The X-Files" premiered on Fox Televisioo.
Five years ago: President Clinton met with members of his
Cabinet to apologize, ask forgiveness and promise to improve
as a person in the wake of the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
Northwest Airlines and its striking pilots announced an agreement to end a nearly 2-week-old walkout.

Wednesday,.September 10, 2003

Risner said the recent construction work near Syracuse
was not a factor in the accident.
Uhinck was traveling to the
Five Point~ area to dump off the
sand for use at the R;tvenswood
ConNector project.
Risner said State Route 124
at the scene of the accident was
not opened up completely until
approximately 9:30 p.m. and
the crash scene was not completely cleared uiuil after I a.m.

Whitmire could not be
reached
for
comment
Tuesday, but a spokeswoman
said he disregarded their comments. ..They are my friends
and they are under a lot of
stress,''
Whitmire
said
through the spokeswoman.
Perry spokeswoman Kathy
Walt said the governor would
welcome the Democrats back
and believes there are a number of important issues that
need to be addressed.

Derby
from Page A1
Councilman George Wright
contlrmed that plans are afoot
to raze the school building
because of its condition. A ftre
occurred in the old gymnasium
earlier this year and insurance
money is becoming available
to the village.
·

.I

Ii
l

l
The Voices of Uberty has been reorganized and made their
first public appearance Saturday at Pomeroy's observance
of Morgan's Raid . June VanVanken is director of the chorus
which was accompanied on the piano by Donna Jenkins.
Singing Civil War and other old songs were Hal Kneen and
Rod Brower. soloists. linda Mayer. Diane Hawley, Paula
Eichinger. Cheryl Jarvis. Vicki Morrow. Texanna Wehrung,
Carolyn Thomas. Frankie Hunnel . Richard Nease. Steve
· Jenkins and Allen Downie . Lawrence Eblin played the harmonica. (Charlene Hoeflich)

15 ways to stretch

a tank of gas
GALLIPOLIS - As gas
prices continue to hover at
record highs. mototists lmk li1r
ways to stretch out a umk of gas.
Routmc mmntemmL-e ts necessary to fuel conservation. A
neglected engine can inL'rease
fuel consumption by I0 to 20
pen.-ent." KL-eping up on tires.
motor oil and other vehicle
maintemUlcc will contribute to
irx:reasetl lill'l L'I,'Onorny.
The U.S. Department of
Energy re(J{&gt;rts that practidng
fuel efficient drivmg techniques can improve fuel
mileage more than 10 pen.·ent.
Tips for wnserving fuel
mileage me: Be sure tires are
properly inllated; keep front
suspension and steering in
proper alignlncnt and brakes
are properly adjusted to minimize rolling resisllmce:
chm1ge motor oil as recommended by the vehicle manu·
facturer. consider an energy-

Blessing
from PageA1
make repairs. Young esti·
mates that it would cost
approximately '$90.000 for
only "cosmetic" repairs to
the auditorium where the
garage was located and not
to the rest of the building.
Young said the res! of the
building was in sad shape
due to water leaks and other
structural problems. Since,
the $90,000 was all that is
necessary to repair the
garage, the insurance com- .
pany would not need to piiY
out any more money.
But since village council
decided to purchase the land
and building to replace the
garage instead. it will be able
to use up to the $200.000
amount the insunmce company allotted for the claim.

conserving oil: check and
replace air lilters. dogged air
li lters Gm cause up to a I0 percent increase in fuel consumption: follow recommended
engine maintenance schedule
to ensure optimal engine per·
fonnance; do not use prennum
fuel unless the vehicle requires
it: observe the speed limit. fuel
economy deneuses past 55
mph: use overdrive gears during highway driving; use the
cntise contrul to maintain a
constant speed on hi~hways;
avoid hiU'd acceleration and
drive defensively, try to bruke
and accelerate smoothly;
avoid idling unnecessarily; run
crmntls with H plan; take a load
oll' wheels by not having a
weighed down trunk: tmvel
light, il loaded roof mck can
decrease fuel economy by 5
percent and take advantage of
car pool or ride-share programs when possible.
Young said if the village
had kept the old junior high
building. it would have to
pay huge insurance premiums necessary for the
replacement value building
which he said was worth
more than $1 million . Since
the village does not have
any money available lo
make additional repairs to
the dilapidated water damaged building, it would
stand vacant e11cept for ils
·use as the village garage.
Young said there is still
$22.000 owed on !he property from when the village
purchased it from the Meigs
Local School district.
·
Once the old junior high
building is gone. Young said
the village will have space
available which can be sold
to potential developers.
"'This building has to go to
make room for progress,"
said Young.

Questions were raised instead of using money to
about the bullfields behind tear down the. building it be
the old school. Wright said used to renovate it.
those would not be alfected
by the sale because that land
is owned by the Meigs Local
School District not the vilFAt 8115103 • THUAS 8111/03
lage.
TUEB BARGAIN NIGHT
Chapman expressed con$3.75 ADMISSION (ExcludrH Sony
Plctu,.l)
·
cern about te.aring down -the MATINEES 13.'1&amp; ADULT 112+) IUS
Child (11·) 13.71
.
school contending tha·t '"we
WED·FRI MATINEES END AUQUST 21
need to preserve what we
A SMOKE FREE ENVIRONMENT
have." She suggested that

FOR
RENTAL
APPLICAnONS
ASSISTANCE FOR LOW/MODERATE
INCOME HOUSEHOLDS WILL BE
AVAILABLE AT THE OFFICE OF THE
MEIGS MOROPOLITAN HOUSING
AUTHORITY AT 117 EAST MEMORIAL
DRIVE, POMEROY, 0 HIO 0 N
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, AND
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2003
BETWEEN THE HOURS OF .9:00 A.M.
AND 4:00
P.M. 1 INTERESTED
HOUSEHOLDS SHOULD ARRIVE AS
EARLY AS POSSIBLE. IF THERE ARE
ANY QUESTIONS. P.LEASE CALL
740·992-2733.

THE
OPEN RANGE (Rl

7:00 l.11:30
2 (Rl

7:00 ·11:00
MY BOSS'S
(PG13) 7:00 -11:20
FRIDAY (PGj

7:10 111:10
ROBERTS: F..ORMER
CHILD STAR (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 11:10

.'

�NATION

The Daily,Sentinel

Peter Ueberroth drops·out of
California recall race, leaving
Republicans still divided
COSTA MESA, Calif.
(AP) - Even with former
baseball commissioner Peter
Ueberroth out of the
California
gubernatorial
recall race, analysts said the
two prominent Republicans
left seeking to replace Gov.
Gray Davis can't win with
the other still running.
Ueberroth, a Republican
businessman and the chief of
the 1984 Los Angeles
Olympic Games, said his
focus on creating jobs had
caught on with voters but
conceded his candidacy ran
out of time and his poll numbers were poor.
Ueberroth's exit Tuesday left
Republican
front-runner
Arnold Schwarzenegger and
conservative state Sen. Tom
McClintock in a contest
observers think neither can win
as long as both stay in the race.
Schwarzenegger has the support of many Republican leaders who believe he offers the
party its best chance of winning.
Many of his backers want
McClintock to drop out so that
Republicans avoid splitting their
vote and handing the contest to
Democmtic · Lt. Gov. Cruz
Bus\a!llll!lte, who opened a slim
lead over Schwarzenegger in
the latest poD.
But McClintock dug in his
heels Tuesday and issued a
press release calling on
Schwarzenegger tQ debate
him at' this weekend's
California Republican Party
convention in Los Angeles .
"Let Arnold tell · the convention what besides celebrity and money does he have to
offer," the release said. "We

.PageA6

know he can play the role of prominent candidates. found
governor. We do not know if much to agree on in the seche can be a real governor."
ond debate of the campaign.
Schwarzenegger's camThe three concurred in
paign said the actor would opposing the state's antistick with his plan of engag- affirmative action law, criti- '
ing in only one candidate cizing its three-strikes law
debate, on Sept. 24 in and promisi ng to fight
Sacramento. Candidates are
Republicans who want to
getting the questions for that
overturn newly signed legisdebate in advance.
Ueberroth 's departure is lation giving driver's licenses
the latest among GOP candi- to illegal immigrants.
Meanwhile, Richie Ross, a ·
dates. Former gubernatorial
candidate Bill Simon and consultant to Bustamante,
U.S. Rep. Darrell Is sa, who told The Associated Press the
financed the recall effort, ear- Democrat will shift his stratelier said they were dropping gy to emphasize his camout of the race.
paign for governor, not oppoUeberroth declined to sition to the recall.
endorse any candidate.
"I am opposed to the
His decision could be good recall," Bustamante told
news for Schwarzenegger if reporters earlier. ''But I'm in
Ueber,roth ~brows his support competition with Arnold,
behind the actor, said Ken · now Peter Camejo, Arianna
Khachigian, a former strategist for Ronald Reagan and a and Tom McClintock and I'm
going to focus my energies to
GOP analyst.
The actor, however, did not make sure I'm the best candiappear to benefit significant- date there. I'm not on the bally from Simon's earlier lot with Gray Davis."
Most of the state's
departure. Simon had 8 percent support before dropping Democratic lawmakers and
out. And with only two major unions had earlier embraced
Republicans left in the race, Bustamante's "No on recall,
McClintock's
campaign Yes on Bustamante" plan to
could be aided as well.
keep the governor's office in
"McClintock has got much party control.
more of the spotlight now,"
Bustamante also got a boost
Khachigian said. "He can go to Tuesday when . three major
the convention this weekend
and say, look, there's two candi- environmental groups - the
dates in the race. Let's hear from . Sierra Club California, the
League
of
both of them to see who's best." California
Also Tuesday, Bustamante, Conservation Voters and Vote
independent
Arianna the Coast - endorsed his
Huffington and Green Peter campaign, saying he had a
Camejo. representing the left proven record of protecting
wing of the recall's more the state's air, water and coast.

Wednesday, September 10, 2003

condition but expected to
live, Bratton said.
Blood and book bags
remained on the sidewalk where
parnmedics treated the teens.
All were students at Taft
· High School in the Woodland
Hills area, said Los Angeles
Unified School District spokeswoman Francine Eisenrod.
Their parents were notified, but
the school declined to release
their identities.
"We do know those children
were not gang-involved. They
were innocent kids," said Taft
interim Principal Pete Ferry.
'This is a community crisis
that we just aren't used to."
The victims had been
standing at a bus stop across
the street from the school,
police said.
Steven Montalvo, a student
at Taft, said he was waiting

Music downloading suits ·could intensifY
backlash against recording industry . ·
LOS ANGELES (AP) .The recording industry has
taken its piracy fight directly
to music fan s, suing more
than 200 people this week
alone. Now comes the hard
part: Persuading the very
people it has threatened with
legal action to revisit music
stores or sample legal downloading services.
That might prove difficult.
some observers say, because
the industry's lawsuit campaign could spark a consumer backlash spurred by
the discontent many music
fans already feel over soaring CD prices and the shrinking number of retailers offering varied music titles.
''The real hope here is that
people will return to the
record store," said Eric
CEO
of
Garland,
BigCampagne LLC, which
tracks peer-to-peer Internet
trends. ''The biggest question is whether singling out a
handful
of
copyright
infringers will invigorate
business or drive file-sharing further underground, further out of reach."
Jason Rich, of Watervliet,
N.Y., said the record companies' campaign prompted
him to stop downloading
music from file-sharing networks, but he called the
issue "disconcerting."
"I think it's kind of silly to
go after individuals," said
Rich, 26. 'There are so many
Web sites out there, people
don't know necessarily they're
doing anything wrong."
" Some of the music fans
caught in the piracy net cast

for the bus when he heard the
gunshots. He thought they
were fireworks at first.
"All of a sudden two more
shots, and everybody started
running," he told KCAL-TV.
Montalvo said the girl was
shot in the stomach, and one of
the boys was shot in the chest.
Taft's 3,400 students had been .
given a scheduled early release
about I :30 p.m. and the shooting occurred about a half-hour
later, school district spokeswoman Hilda Ramirez said.
Officials planned to have
crisis teams at the school
when
classes
resumed
Wednesday.

by the recording industry
took steps Tuesday toward
settling
the
copyright
infringement lawsuits levied
against them for sharing
song files over the Internet.
The industry sued 261
people on Monday and has
promised · to sue hundreds
more in coming weeks as it
strives to stamp out music
piracy it blames for a threeyear slump in CD sales.
The Recording Industry
Association of America settled the first of the suits
Thesday for $2,()()() - with
the mother of a 12-year-old
defendant, Brianna LaHara of
New York. Brianna was
accused of downloading more
than I,000 songs using Kazaa.
RIAA ViCe President Matt
Oppenheim said he was not
surprised to see young and
old alike caught in the industry's snare.
"We know that there are a
lot of young people who are
using these services and we
totally expected that we
would end up targeting
them," Oppenheim said. "As
we have said from the beginning ... there is no free pass to
engage in .music piracy just
because you haven 't'come of
age. We're not surprised and
we •re not deterred."
Consumers already think
so little of the music companies, that the lawsuits likely
won't make much differen·ce, said Josh Bemoff, an
analyst
with Forrester
Research, Inc .
"The industry has been
backed into a comer, and
their image is so bad, the

lawsuits are not going to ~
much of a problem," he sai&lt;t
The industry opted to target individuals earlier this
year, figuring music fans
who prefer to get their music
online now are beginning to
have viable options to do s0
legally through for-pay
music download services
like Apple Computer Inc.'s
iTunes Mu sic Store and
Buy.com's BuyMusic.com. ·
But while iTunes has sol&lt;3
more than I 0 million son~
downloads since its April
launch, no service has
emerged for the large majority of computer users on the
Window platform.
.
There are signs some peo'
pie have stopped file-sharing
since June, when the RIM
announced its lawsuit campaign, and also have moved to
other file-swapping networks
perceived to be safer than th~
market leader,
Kazaa.
.
Traffic on the FastTrack
network, the conduit for
Kazaa and Grokster use~.
declined over the summer
and climbed again lasl
month, as has the number of
people using less popular
file-sharing software like
eDonkey, Garland said.
·
At the same time, a decline
in CD sales worsened.
Between June IS and Aug. 3,
the decline in CD sales
accelerated 54 percent. And
as of Aug. 3. CD sales were
down 9.4 percent over the
same period in 2002, according to the Yankee Group.

Community Pig Roast and
Craft Fair

Rocksprings Rehabilitation
36759 Rocksprings Road
· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Please call 992-6606

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APPearinl! several times throul!hout the dav. ·

12noon-1 :00 - Bi2 Bend Clo22ers
3:30-7:30 DC's Shininl! Star
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••

Ohio Division

JHm
Vinton County
Belpre
Alexander
Nelsonville-Vorl&lt;
Wellston
Meigs

1YC

All

0-0

2-1
2-1
1-2
1-2
1-2

IHm
Trimble
Eastern
Federal Hocking
Waterford
MiHer
Southern

1YC

All

0-0
0-0
0-0

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

(}.0
(}.0
(}.0

0-0
0-0
Hocking Division

'I

8:30·1 0:30 Dwil!ht Icenhower
- Award Wlnnlne Elvis ImPersonator

Chainsaw Carvers
Unadvertised SPecials

(}.3

(}.0
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0-0

0-3

Friday's Results
River Valley 14, Meigs 12

Wahama 40, Eastern 7 ·
South Gallia 50, Southern 0
Athens 40, Alexander 6
Belpre 55, Fort Frye 19

Sayre helps Tornadoes·top Alexander
Pullins led

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

t

RACINE - Katie Sayre had nine kills a11d 10
service points as Southern defeated Alexander
Tuesday, 15-8, 15-7.
Sayre was also 16-for~ l6 serving and 26-28
hitting for the Tornadoes (5-3, 3-2 TVC).
Meanwhile, Kristiina Williams was 9-for-9
serving with seven points and 13-for-13 hitting
with five kills and 20-for-20 passing.
Also serving for Southern, Emily Hill had four
points and Brooke Kiser and Ashley Rouse each
had three.
Hill, meanwhile, was 15-for-18 hitting with a
pair, of kills and was 21-for-26 l?assing, while
Deana Pullins was 31-for-33 passmg and Rouse
was 21-for-22. Hill was 21-for-26 passing.

h

e

Tornadoes in
assists with
seven.
"We just
played well,"
said Southern
head coach
Roma Sayre.
uwe
were
Sayre
Williams
fundamentally sound."
The Tornadoes travel to Waterford Thursday.
• In the junior varsity game, Southern lost to
Alexander, 15-10, 15-7.
Erln Wise led the Tornadoes with seven
points.

Marauders down
Waterford in three
WATERFORD- Meigs out dueled Waterford in the
thi.rd game to earn a 15-9, 5-15, 15-13 victory.Tuesday.
Jaynee Davis and Chrissy Miller each had five kills for
the Marauders (5-2), while Renee Bailey contributed with
four kills.
·
Serving for Meigs, which was 63-for-67 serving, Nikki
Butcher had nine point~. while Joey Haning and Samantha
Cole each had seven points. Haning also had 13 assists.
Meigs plays host to Wellston Thursday.
The Marauders won the junior varsity game, 15-10 151.3, to improve to 7-0.

Nelsonville-'rtlrk 14, Fairfield Union 7

Jackson 35, Vinton County 7
Wellston 27, Waverly 20
Berne Union 48, Miller 6
Trimble 40, Southeastern 39, OT
Waterford 27. Green 0

Clarett
charged;
OSU ready
to cut ties

Saturday's Rasult
Federal Hocking 14, Sciotovllle 8

ovc
River Valley
Fairland
Rock Hill
Chesapeake
Coal Grove
South Point

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

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

1-2
(}.3

Friday's Results .

Bv RusTY MtLLER
Associated Press

River Valley 14, Meigs 12
Chesapeake 26, Symmes Valley 9
Fairview (Ky.) 31, Coal Grove 6
Fairland 18, Winfield 13
Rock Hill 44, Oak Hill 14
Wayne 18, South Point 0

.

COLUMBUS - Maurice Clarett was
charged Tuesday with lying about items stolen
from his car, and Ohio State coach Jim Tressel
said the school is ready to cut ties with the star
running back.
Clarett was charged with misdemeanor falsification, city attorney spokesman Scott Varner
said. If convicted,
Claret! would face
up to six months in
jail and a $1.000
fine. But probation
is likely the harshest sentence a
- judge
would
impose, city prosecutor
Stephen
Mcintosh said.
Tressel said he does not expect Claret! to
return this season to the defending national
champion Buckeyes. He would recommend
that Claret! be released from his scholarship if
the request was made by Clarett, the coach said.
Clarett h~s already been suspended indefinitely from the team, and probably will not play
for the Buckeyes this season. He is also being
investigated by the NCAA.
Tressel was asked if it was time for Claret! to
move on.
.
"I think that he needs to make, along with hi s
family, whatever decision he thinks is best for ,
him," Tressel said.
If Clarett's career at Ohio State is over, the
running back's last carry would rank among the
most memorable in school history. He scored
on a 5-yard run in the second overtime in a 3124 victory over Miami in the Fiesta Bowl, giving the Buckeyes their first national championship in 34 years.
Alan C. Milstein, the Claret! family attorney,
said he wasn't surprised by Tressel's commentg
or the misdemeanor charge.
"Nothing Ohio State does surprises me," he
said. "I don't think the family recognizes what
Ohio State's actions and motivations are,
either."

Non-league
JHm
Ironton
Wahama
South Gallia
Symmes Valley
Hannan
Oak Hill

All
3-0

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

Friday's Results

South Gallia 50. Southern 0

Wahama 40, Eastern 7
Ironton 20, Gallia Academy 7
Rock Hi1144, Oak Hill14
Chesapeake 26, Symmes Valley 9
Saturday's Result

Eagles fall
to Buckeyes

if you are interested in obtaining a craft table

Prep Volleyball

TVC

Pig Roast and Bean Dinner llam - 2pm
. Craft Sale 1 Oam - 3 pm

Saturday September 13th
All Day Event 9:00 a.m. to ???

If they are ~elected, your ~

Prep Football

Montcalm 22, Hannan 16

Coolville Store Only

"Carrier-of-the-Month"

.

Wednesday, September to, 2003

Saturday, September 27, 2003

7th

Nominate them for

Rio aoccer wins, Page 82
Ohio AP prep poll, Page B&amp;

'

Three studentswounded in drive-by,
shooting outside California high schQol·
LOS ANGELES (AP) Three teenage students were
wounded, one critically, in an
apparent drive-by shooting
Tuesday . across the street
from a San Fernando Valley
high school, authorities said.
Police Chief William
Bratton said investigators
believed the shooter, one of
three people in a car, missed
an intended target, instead
hitting three of the hundreds
of students in the area.
Someone in the car yelled
out "where are you from,"
police said, describing that as
gang language.
A 17-year-old girl and a 16year-old boy were rushed by
ambulance to trauma centers
where they were in stable
condition. A 15-year-old boy
who was flown by helicopter
to a hospital was in critical

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern varsity volleyto ·
ball
team
fell
Nelsonvilley o r k
Tuesday,
15-10, 1614 .
K a s s
Lodwich
had
eight
service
points for
the Eagles,
Holter
while
Alyssa
Holter added seven points.
Stacy Smith had eight
kills for Eastern and was
37-for-39 setting. Holter
was ;39-for-40 setting with
four kills.
Eastern travels to Miller
Thursday.
The Eagles won the junior
varsity game, 15-8, 16-14.

Meigs still
trails Belpre in
TVC Ohio
BELPRI:: - The Meigs
golf team finished second in a
TVC Ohio meet Monday at
Oxbow.
Belpre, with medalists
Jeremy Banks (39)and Mike
• Kellison (39) won the meet
with. a 158, while the
Marauders finished with a
174,
For Meigs, Jeremy Banks
SQOt a 41 , followed by Josh
Ray (43), Dan Bookman (44),
J h Venoy (46), Cody
son (51) and Jake
Venoy (53).
·
Belpre leads the overall
standings with 25 points after
five matches, while Meigs
has 20. Vinton County is third
with 14 points.

___..__.,-' --···--

····r

/

Cincinnati Reds' Wily Mo Pena (26) is congratulated by third base coach Ray Knight after Pena hit a tworun home run off Pittsburgh Pirates' Brian Boehringer in the sixth inning Tuesday in Cincinnati. Cincinnati
won, 10-6. (AP)

Mo Pena lifts Reds
CINCINNATI (AP) - .Sean
Case.y didn't know that the
Cincinnati Reds just got their
first win in thetr new home
against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
That made Thesday night even
sweeter for the Reds first baseman and Pitts!Jurgh native.
Russell Branyan hit a three-run
homer and Wily Mo-Pena added
a go-ahead two-run shot in
Cincinnati's six-run sixth inning
as the Reds beat up on
Pittsburgh's bullpe,ll for a 10-6
win, their first m seven games
against the Pirates at Great
American Ball Park.
"That's unbelievable," Casey
· said. "It's about time we beat
these guys. It was good for us to
stop the streak."
Pittsburgh led 6-2 when

D' Angelo Jimenez and Casey
opened the sixth with singles off
starter Salomon Torres.
Mike Gonzalez gave up
Branyan's opposite-fteld homer
to left and was followed by Brian
Boehringer, who Jlrorilptly gave
up Jason LaRue s double and
Pena's third homer of the season.
a drive to center field that gave
Cincinnati a 7-6 lead.
"That was on a broken bat,"
Casey said. "Did you know that?
He 's impressive. He needs atbats. When he's in the lineup
every day. he 's impressive."
Rookie Matt Belisle ( 1-0)
earned his first major league win
with one inning of one-hit relief.
John Riedling. Phil Norton and
Chris Reitsma each pitched on'e
'inning of scoreless relief, com-

bining to allow one baserunner.
Boehringer (5-4) allowed three
hits and three runs, two of them
earned, with one strikeout in onethird of an inning.
"That was our 24th blown save
and 27th loss by our bullpen,"
Pittsburgh
manager Lloyd
McClendon said. "We didn't
pitch well. We were pretty much
(bad) all night."
Torres left the game in line for
his first win in last eight starts
after allowing four runs on live
hits and striking out a seasonhi~h eight in five-J?lus innings.
'Our starter dtdn't give us
everything he had," McClendon
said . "He had the fielders back on
their ,heels. He gave up (two-

Please see Clarett. B:Z

Grambling coach
expresses
interest in Clarett

Please SH Reels, BJ

Indians deth~one Royals, 7-1
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) Jason Davis' shoulder feels fine.
Thanks for asking.
The right-hander, co min~ back
from stiffness that kept htm off
the mound since Aug. 16, relied
on his fastball to gave Cleveland
five shutout innings.
After that, the Indians parlayed
Angel Berroa's error into a big
sixth inning and a 7-1 win over
the fading Kansas City Royals on
Thesday night.
Victor Martinez hit his second
.career home run, a three-run shot
that capped Cleveland's five-run
sixth, as the Indians broke a sixgame losing streak and handed

. )_

Kansas City its eighth loss in II
games.
"It feels great to get back out
there again," Davis said. "I feel
needed, you know?"
The Royals fell to 4~ games
back in the AL Central, after the
first-place Chicago White Sox
beat second-place Minnesota 8-6
on· Thesday night.
Davis (8-1 0) scattered five hits,
all singles, over five innings on
the way to his first win since June
29. 1\vo of those hits were wiped
out by double plars in the first and
second, and Davts retired the last
eight batters he faced before Jack
Cressend took over to start the

sixth.
Cressend retired the ftrst five he
faced before back-to-back doubles by Desi Relaford and Brent
Mayne broke up the shutout with
two outs in the seventh.
All five of Cleveland's sixthinning runs were unearned, the
result of a rare fielding error by
Berroa that undid Jimmy
Gobble's strong start.
Gobble (3-4) gave up just one
hit through 5 2-3 innings and was
on his way to a perfect sixth' when
Berroa - who had just two errors
in his previous 75 games- misplayed Casey Blake's groundball
to deep shonstop.

A

GRAMBLING, La. (AP) - Grambling
coach Doug Williams carried a No. 13 jersey
into his n~ws conference on Thesday, not hiding his interest in having Maurice Claret! transfer to the Division 1-AA schooL
"That's what he would wear," Williams
joked. "lsn 't that what most of the questions
will be about?"
The news conference was dominated by
questions about Clarett, but Williams said no
one at the school had spoken to the suspended
run ning back from Ohio State.
"We could use him ," Williams said.
Clarett was charged Tuesday with lying about
items stolen from hi s car, and Ohio State coach
Jim Tressel said the school is ready to cut ties
with the sophomore ..
Tressel said he does not expect Claret! to
return this season td the defending national

Please see Grambling. BJ

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Holzer ·Clinic helps
develop athletic trainers
for area .high schools
POM EROY
Holzer
Clinic has supported athletics fo r several years in conj unction with area high
sc hools and the graduate
athletic program at Ohio
University.
Once the athletic traine r
is enrolled at the uni ve rsity,
the y are placed in.area high
schools to provide athletic
trainers for the male and
fe male athletes. These certified athletic trai ne rs
remain in an academic curriculum at the uni versit y as
well as servin g the hi gh
sc hools
from
Augus t
ttJrough May of the school
year.
· This has · proven to be
extremely beneficial to the
athletes in an effort to provide timely. on-s ite assessment with follow-up care
and/or referral to physician
and rehabilitation as appropriate.
According to Am y Blake,
Certified Athletic Trainer at
Holzer Clinic Mei~ s, "the
quality of the athleuc trainer from Ohio University has
been outstanding and they
liave been able to provide
immediate care and treatment for the injured athlete .
Holzer Clinic is pleased to
assist financiall~ m the support of this serv1ce to Meigs
and Eastern High School s
and its community of athletes."

Clarett
from Page81

Milstein decli ned to comment on whether
Clarett would consider transferring.
If Clareu transferred to another Division IA school, he would have to sit out a year in
. addition to any suspension or ineligibility
handed down by the NCAA. He could transfer to a Division 1-AA. II or lll and be immediately eligible to play. but any possible
penalties would also penain.
NCAA spokeswoman Kay Hawes would
not speak about the Clarett case, but did say
that if a suspended or ineligible player trcmsferred, the athlete's new school would first
have to declare him ineligible, and would
then seek his reinstatement through the organization.
Ohio State has been working for more than
two weeks on a response to "several pages" of
allegations sent by the NCAA to the university.
Ohio State athletic director Andy Geiger
wouldn't comment Tuesday on the progress
of the response, and said he didn' t know when
it would be fini shed.
Hawes said the . NCAA had not received
Meigs High School, above, left to right, Rick Blaettner, Athletic Ohio State 's formal response.
Director, Helen Uou , Gri!cluate Assistant Athletic Trainer from
Ohio State and the NCAA have been lookOhio University ancl Amy Blake, Athletic Trainer. Eastern High
School . t&gt;elow. left to right, Pam Douthitt, Athletic Director,
Kristin Husteclcle, Gracluate Assistant Athletic Trainer from
Ohio University ancl Amy Blake, Athletic Tramer.

Grambling
from Page 81

champion Buckeyes. He would recommend
that Clarett be released from his scholarship if
the request was made by the player.
. ·
Clarett has been suspended indefinitely
from the team, and also IS being investigated
by the NCAA.
If Claret! transferred to another Division 11\school, he would have to sit out one year in
addition to any suspension or ineligibility
handed down by the NCAA. He could transfer to a Division 1-AA, II or III program and
immediately be eligible to play after the possible penalties.
Hall of Fan1er Jim Brown, an adviser to
Clarett's family, said last weekend he would
encourage Clarett to transfer to Gran1bling

TIFFIN - The University
of Rio Grande Redmen soccer
team, ranked No. 3 in the
NAIA Pre-Season Top 25
poll, remained unbeaten and
unscored upon with a pair of
shutouts on Friday and
Saturday at the Tiffin
lnvitationaL
Rio slid past NAJA No. 22
Madonna 1-0 on Friday and
blitzed Viterbo 7-0 on
Saturday.

Junior forw ard Simon
Carey provided the Redmen
(4-0) with all the scoring it
needed against Madonna as
he knocked home a goal in the
25th minute. Ben Hunter was
credited with the assist.
Rio goalkeeper Oliver
Sanders recorded a third
straight shutout as he tallied
three saves.
The Redmen continued its
perfection with a complete

domination of Viterbo on
Saturday. Rio scored three
first-half goals with Nil s
Hocke scoring first in the
ninth minute with an assist
from Ben · Calion . John
Carroll recorded an unassisted marker in the 14th minute
to rtake the score 2-0. Carey
then scored the first of liis
three goals in the 24th minute
with an assist going to
Carroll.\

Reds
from Page 81
strike) hits. and went three balls to a lot of batters. He was shaking off the catcher every
other batter. If he thought that was a good outing, he's fooling himself."
The Pirates piled up eight hits In the first
three innings against rookie Josh Hall, who
allowed six runs on I0 hits and one walk while
striking out five in his second major league
stan.
Craig Wilson followed Matt Stairs's one-out

m:rthune - Sentinel - l\e

ing into Clareu's finances since' springtime.
Claren acknowledged earlier this summer
that he filed an eKaggerated theft repon after
his car was broken into in April. The car. a
Chevrolet Monte Carlo. was borrowed from a
local dealer.
Clarett said he lost more than $10,000 in
items in the theft, including $800 in cash.
$300 in clothing, hundreds of CDs and thousands of dollars in stereo equipment .
Clarett has until Oct. I 0 to enter a plea and
won' t have to appear in coun to plead innocent. Mcintosh said. If he pleads guilty or no
contest, he can be sentenced the same day.
The university does not have a set punishment for athletes charged with misdemeanors.
Geiger said. The charge will not factor into
the length of a suspension the u~1i versity will
recommend to the NCAA, he saJd.
.
Unrelated to the suspension. Claren is also
being investigated by an Ohio State panel
lookmg into allegations of academic improprieties involvi ng athletes.
Clarett set Ohio State freshman records last
season with 1,237 rushing yards and IS
touchdowns.
Clarett's mother. Michelle. did not return a
phone message seeking comment on the
charge. Former NFL star tailback Jim Brown.
a family adviser. said he wasn't aware of the
charge ana declined comment on it or
Tressel's statement.

should he be released by Ohio State.
Williams didn' t have any more information
about the possible move, but said he met with
his staff to discuss the possibility of having
the talented running back join the Tigers.
NCAA spokeswoman Kay Hawes would
not speak about the Clarett case. but did say
that if a suspended or ineligible player transferred, the athlete's new school would first
have to declare him ineligible. and would
then seek his reinshl!ement through the organization.
Grambling has won two straight
Southwestern Athletic Conference titles with
a wide-open offen se di rected by quanerback
Bruce Eugene, the reigning conference player
of the year.
"It would alter our offense to more of a running attack," Williams said, "and would take
some pressure off of Bruce Eugene. It would
give us a chance to win a fourth straight."

'

Redmen soccer defeats Tiffin

www.mydallysentlnel.com ·

Wednesday, September 10,2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

single with his third homer in two nights to
give Pittsburgh a 2-0 lead in the second.
Reggie Sanders hit a run-scoring double and
Wilson added an RBI single as the Pirates
made it 4-0 in the founh .
The Reds cut the lead in half in their half on
Brcu1yan's one-out walk and LaRue 's homer to
left, his 16th of the season and fi rst in 60 at
bats dating back to Aug. 15.
The homers were Cincinnati's first in 33
innings dating back to last Friday.
"That was probablyl as huge as anything,"
Reds manager Dave Miley said . "We' ve
talked about it the last couple of days. That
was a big difference for us."

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

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'·

the real point of
beginning for the land
herein daacrtbed;
thence N 37 degrees
00'00" Walong a line
passing an Iron pin at
t31 .321eel a total distance of 499.39feet to
an Iron pin; thence N
2 degrees 00'00" W
along a line. 177.09
feet to . an Iron pin;
thence S 84 degrees
00'00" E along a line,
277.00 feet to an Iron
ptn; thence S 17
degrees 00' 00" E along a line, 332.00
lee! to an Iron pin;
thence S 26 degrees
30'00" E. along a line,
21 .00 fHI to an Iron
ptn; thence· S 53
degrNa 00'00" w
along a line, 121 .00
feet to an Iron pin;
thence S 26 degrees
30'00" E along a line,
125.00 feel to an Iron
pin In the BKlattng
northerly rfghl of way
of Wright Street;
thence S 53 degrees
00'00" W along the
exlatlng northerly
right ol way tina of
Wright Street, 43.00
leet to the point of
beginning .and containing 2.725 acres.
SubJect to all legal
highways and ••••mente of record.
Deecrlpllon tor the
above
dtacrlbed
tracta being the raault
of a aurvey made by
Richard C. Glaegow,
R.S. No. 5161.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 118, Page
183, Melga County
Ofllclal Recorda.
Audllor'o P11rcel No.
&gt;16-CI0302. 000
The abova deecrlbed
real aatale te ootd "at
Ia" without warranllaa
orcov-nto.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS: 31.7 Wright
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45718
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
175,000.00. The real
eatala cannot be sold
for 1111 than two·
thlrda the appraloed
value.

'

TERMS OF SALE:
10% down day of
sale,

balance , on

delivery of deed. Sold
subject to accrued
2003 real astate
taxes.
ALL
SHERIFF'S
SALES
OPERATE
UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS
ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, •OHIO. THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
THE STATUS OF
TITLE PRIOR TO
SALE.
Douglas W. Ltttte,
Attorney for Plalndfl
(8) 27, (9) 3 , 10

Read your
newsj,aper and leam

I

Ferndora ]~ne (Bable)

On Sole Now:
Budweiser &amp; Bud Light
6pk.....$4.19 12 pk .... $8.39
Busch &amp;Busch Light
12 pk... $6.19 24 pk....$11.99
Corona
6 pk ....$6.49
Marlboro
Pack...$2.80 Carton... $27.99
Camel
Pack.... $2.65 Carton $26.49
DoraI
Pack...$2.35 Carton ...$23.49
USA Gold
Pack...$2.15 Carton...$21.49

Sunday.
Sept. 14, 2003
li:OO' am 6:00pm
Rutland
American Legion
AII you can eat
Fish, Cole Slaw,
Baked Beans
$6.00 (includes
Drink) Hot Dogs
· also available
Meals to Go!!

Sept. 10, 1943- Oct. 11, 1993
Don "J I grieve for me, for !'OW I ·m free
I .. m following the path God laid for me
I took His hand when I heard Him ull
I turned my back and left it all.
I could not stay another day
To laugh , to love, to work, or play
Tasks left undone must stay that way
I found that peace at the dose of day.
. If my parting has left a void
Then fill it with remembered joy,
A friendship shared, a laugh, a kiss
As yes, these things I too will miss.
He not burdened with times of !iorrow
I wish you the sunshine of tomorrow
My life .s been full, I savored much
. Good friends, good times
a loved one -,touch.
Perhaps my time seemed all too brief
Don I lengthen It now with undue grief
Lift up your heart and share with me
God wanted me now, He set me free.
(J. Mehsen Joseph · -,
Memorial Service - June 16, 2003)

Ra ks in ths
' ~aving~
'

y~u'll

find
in the
Cla!:!:ified!:!

Longaberger Basket
BINGO
Thurs., Sept. 18th
Middleport American Legion
6pm
21 games for $20
Sponsored by Southern K-4 PTO
for tickets call
Jennifer Hoback 740-94~·2169
Kathy Crow 740-992-7511
Janet Maynard 740-949-4222

FREE
COMMUNITY
HEALTH FAIR
at

Wyngate of Gallipolis
Sponsored by

Holzer Medical Center

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

Announcement•

WALLEYE
FISH FRY

~urelic

and

Wyngate of Gallipolis
Saturday,
September 13, 2003
9 am- 12 noon
Thank you everyone for
donated school supplies
to God's N.E.T.
· 204 kits were given out.
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department monthly auction at
Fire Station
Saturday, Sept. 13th 6 pm
New &amp;different merchandise
Craftsman tools- JC Penney nA"1" ,

Word Ads

Dally ln·Column: 1:00 p.m.

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to ~ s:oo p.m
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~

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2

Bu•ln••• D•y• Prior To
Publlc•tlon
Sunday Dl•pl•v: 1 :00 p.m.
ThUT"•d•y for SunC~~•v•

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlthlng fiHI'V" the right to tell!, reject, or cenceltny ad at tny Umt . Errort mull be 11porttd on tht flrt t day of publlc•tlon and
Trlbune-Stntlnti·Aegl ..l f will bt naponalble for no mort than the colt of the .p~~ce oc:cupl.c;l by tn. error and only the flrat ln aertlon. We t ht ll not be liable
1ny lolt or exptn" lhll '"ulta from tht publlcaUon or omlatlon of 1n advtrtlument. Correcllon will be made In the Urt l lvtllllblt edition. • Sox number
1r1 always confl~ntltl. • Currtnl ratt ctrG tppllll. • All rtll 111111 edvtrtlttmenlt 1r1 tublt ct to lht Ftder•l F•lr Hautlng Act of 1068. • Thi• nowopel'"'l
acceptt only help wanted •d• mHIIng EOE et•ndlfdt. Wt will not knowingly tcc.pt 1ny edvertltlng in vlol•tlon of the law

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Pr. PU:A.'iANT

r.....

VV~AN
ro~IU·l--~

_ed_. ________
The Montgo mery · Fa m1ly
BuY
reun ion
will
be
held
September t 4. 2003. 0 .0 . Absolut e Top Doll ar: U.S.
Mcinty re Park. Shelter: Kil l- Si lve r.
Gold
Coins ,
Oeer. l Oam-du sk
Proofsats, Diamonds, Gold
.
u. s. c urrency,·
Rrngs,

Operat or :
Driver/Owner
DEDI CAT ED Owner opera·
tor Positions available now!
'2500
miles/week .
homatim e .
Guaranteed
Qualified owne r ope rato rs
with in
50
mile s
ol
Parkersburg. call todayl You
can be approved in tO mln· utes. Must haVe Class A
C OL + I Y'· OTR 800·496·
4698

Washe r S7~ .
Dryer $50.
Mirror dresser wl!h 4 draw·
ers $25.
Childs desk &amp; chair $5.00
Double Door Cab1net $20
Watt Stove &amp; tank ol gas
$100
2 wooden end tables $15
bed·matress &amp; frame lull size$ 30.
chicken ll)cubator $10
cablnet 3-door 10" s1de 1' 6"
w ide 5'9" tall $10
love seat blue $15
740-441· 1594

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--------Furniture ·Wareho use/dehv·
ery po si tion , immediate
ope ning, lull ·lime. Apply in
person. Life Style Furniture.
3rd &amp; Olive Gallipolis. OH
9:30-5pm , No phone ca lls
please!

.

0

jl80''

Help wa nted caring lor the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now pay ing minimum wage,
new shifts: 7a m·3pm, 7am5pm, 3pm·1 1pm , 11pm7am, ca ll 7 40 -9 92~5023 .

Babysitttng m Syracuse
a rea. co unty cerlitied. or pri·
vate pay, d ays, nights &amp;
w eekends, (7 40)992-63 16

M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
Second Ave nue. Gallipolis, Hot tub Installation and
740·446-2842.
repair technician. .e lectri·
1 Flag Pole, 4 black &amp; white
eel/plumbing
experie nce
I \11'1 jl\ \ll \I
6wks old li tter t1ainad k'itneede d , co ntact Baum
" IH\Itl "
tens. (304 )675·6 11 8
Lumber, Chester, Ohio

cat 740· 742·3066

1.

Htl.PWAN1l:V

tory, earn $3U-$40 per hOur.
Giveaway allerg1c 10 cats.
gro und floor (Jppo rtunity. no
triandly male 4 rna old. free
quotas. no territory. work
to good home 7 40-446·4842
when you want. have fun,
House plant (fig tree) 36" see lor yourself, call today,
Home &amp; Garden Party
bushy. (740)992·7280
Independe nt
designer.
Young male Rottweiler to Kathleen Roell, (740)992·
good hOme only, (740)992- 0657 tea 11e messa ge
7894
...
Busy Physician Off ice needs
ANtl
part time Ex-ray Tech, ultra·
sound experience preferred,
FllUNil
but n ot required. LPN
. Found long-hai r, female cali· Certified Medical Assistant.
co cat, dectawad and Secretary with Med ical
Otllca experience. Secretary
spayed. 740-446· 7124
with Medical Co derslbllllng
orgaYoung black male lab to und 9Kperience. Good
9/6 at Fruths StAt 160. Call nizational skills. Fax ~esume
to: 877-588-3612 or send to
Vet's office 74 0-446-4090 .
JR9, 200 Main Street, Point
Pl easant. WV 25550

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i

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Insurance Agency now hir·
lng: Local Administrative
Assistant. must have clerical, sec ret aria l, buSiness
skills. and know ledge o l
computers.
Good people
skills a plus . Fu ll·time position avaliable Send resume
to: CLA-574 c/o Gallipoli s
Daily Tribune. P.O.Box 469
Gall ipolis, O hio 45631.

Licensed Practical Nurse&amp;
(LPN) for full-time a nd parttime work in a 114 Bed .Long
Term Ca re State Facility.
Full.-t1me employment offers
an extensive benefit package, incl uding State civil
se rvice retirement. ea rn up
to 15 days vacation, 18 days
sick leave. and 12 plus paid
holidays; hea lthflife insurance Is available. Salary is
co mmensurate with experl·
ence. Co ntact Kim 8ill4ps,
DON at laki n Hospital.
Lakin , WV at (304 )6750860, ext 126, Monday thru
Frldav from 8:00 a .m.-•1:00
p.m. Lakin Hos pital is an
EEOIAA EmployeL

Y~ROSALE

~

Y,IRtl SALE·
GM.LIPOLIS

Busy Salon has great opportu nity lor ex perienced stylist,
with managers license 740·
441· 1880

De ntal
Sea lant
Meigs
Program needs P. T. employee, will train , cell 740-843 5268 or 740·992-3913.

"Ho

C 2003

"li'lllo"'""______.,
Htl .PWANIID

Office Clerica l positi on ,
Word . Exce l. Access. need·
ed, Gallipolis ar ea. Kell y
Services 866-286·4777

Th e Appalachian Center tor
Ec on omic
Networks
{ACEnet), a reg1onal nonprofit economic deve lopment organization . seeks
applicants for the position or
Tech Ventures Programs
manager. T his position
repo rt to the Director ot
ACEnet Tech Ve ntures. Tech
Ventures Is the division of
ACEnet that works to stlmu·
tate the technology sector by
providing acc ess to techno!·
ogy and to creating opportu ·
nl tle s for indl11lduals and

Part-time main tena nce position for renta l properties
must be able to do pl umbIng, electrical, so me con·
struction . Must be able to
deal with tenants. Send
res ume to .CLA 573 C/0
Gallipolis Dai ley Tribune P.O.
Bo:..: 469, Ga llip olis, Ohio
45631

(304 )67 5·0880, " ' · 128,
Monday thru Friday !rom
8:00 a .m .-4:00 p.m Lakin
Hoopl111 Ia on EE OIAA
Employe r.

POMI:t«JY/Mnmu:
2 miles oH At. 7 on Leading
Creek Road, Monday 8th·
Sat urday 13th, 9am·5pm .
4 Fami ly yard sa le All cloth ·
lng .25-cents 33456 Bailey
Rum RD. Sat 9113 9am·Jpm

Robert Be.rratt residence on
124, 11th &amp; 12th , rai n can·
celo 151h &amp; 1 61h .
Satu rdaY. Sep tember 13. 93 David SpenCer 605 Main
Stree t, Racine Adult a nd
teen clothes. VldM&gt; games,
lurnllure , lamps, household
11ems
Sept 121h &amp; 13th , 3177 1 SA
325, one mile from SA 124.
guitar with accessories.
·wicke r turnltura , multiple
game table , toys, teen and
adult clothing. curtains. bed·
ding,. bicycles. hot wheels,
misc .

INFOCISION IS
OFFERING
A $200 SIGN ON
BONUS

Up to

1n hour, wHkly pay, wHkly bonua
potent11l and full beneflte

$200 Sign-On Bonual
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$200 Sign-On Bonusl
.t,t lnfoclaloln w• offer more thin )uat a(ob,
we oHer you 1 ca.raer.

Call today~ ..._
1-877-463-6247
ext. 2454

or atop by:
242 3rd Avenue
GatllpOIII, OH
www.lnfoclalon.com

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

,
··~1~1611""

HFl.PWANIHl
WANTED:
Emergencv
Relief Workers (Substitutes}
needed to work with people
with mental reta rdation in
Ath ens &amp; Meigs Cou nties.
Hou rs: as schedul ed/as
needed ; some overnights
Requirem ent s:
required
High school dlploma/GED,
valid driver's license, three
ye ars good driving ex perience and adequate automobile insurance cove rage.
$7.00/hr. Send resu me to:
Buckeye
Communi ty
Services, P.O. Box 604.
Jackson.
OH
45640.
Deadline tor applica nts:
9/16/03. equAl Opportuni ty
Employer.

Bu tternut Avenu e acrosa
from
Meigs
Hl11 tortcal
Society. Frid ay, Sop! 12 9-5,
Saturday Sept .13 9-1!

YARtl S ALE·

______.,

Occupational Therapy
OTR
$3,000 Bonus!
Progressive Step Rehab \
Services is cu rrently
seeking a tale nted and
cari ng OTR to join ou r
in-house therapy team.
This full-time position offers
exce llent pay and benefit s,
including med ica l, dental,
401 (k), cont. edu . and morel
co ntact
Beth
Please
Carlson.
Recruiter. at :
1-866-368-7620. Fill&lt;
8 13·926·6874, Ema il:
bcarlson @ extendicare .com .
EO E

Bag yard sa le . Sept. 12 &amp;
13, kids clothing, plus size
clothes and knick knacks.
297 Ash Street. Middleport.

f!14

"l1~16~~""

~

by NEil, Inc.

______.,

Child ca re In my home:
+ Gellla Cou nty schOol dis trict
· + A clean. sa to environment
+ 4 minutes from Addavltle
School
+ Ca1e-giver has assoc1a tes
degree In ear ly child hood
develop ment
ca!l 740·-367-0807

RNILPN (HOM! HIALTH)
Pari or Full time. per villi or
hourly,401k, oaletorla plan,
·
mileage, uniform
allowance•, CEU rt lm·
buraemerlt, Sam's cl ub,
Health &amp; Ll1e Ina.
which aoc umulatea from
llrat work day. Top pay In Trl·
State. Sign on bonus. 800-

PTO

759·~3 8 3

EOE

Wanted someone to live In
or care tor an elderly lady,
must have references. 740256-1267 or 740·339·1287

smell business owner8 with·
In the Appa lachian Ohio
region . The
Programs
Manager will be risponalble
for the planning , staff· man·
agement. and str ateg ic
developmen t of the Tec h
Ventures programs. He/She
will be responsible tor work~
lng with the Tach Ventures
itaft to provlda conttruotlve
feedback on Tech Ventur11
eyatem• and program a,
tocua on team development
and facilitate tetm/dlvlalon
meeting•. Tht Program•
Manager 111 r11pon1lbl e lor
the aupervla fon ot a staff or
aeven end d irectl y acc ount ~
able tor the evaluation end
reflection of th1 outcom11 or
the
Tech
Ventu rl l
Program•.
Othe r areu ot resppnalblllty
Include: reaatrohlng poten·
ttal funding oppo rtun l1le1,
gran1 writing and propJnng
report1 for l undtrl. and
developing
re latlont hlpa
with key people and organizations to further anlat In
ACEnet'a toc u1 on economIc development (antrepre ·
ne uarahlp an d butln ell!l
lncubaUon).
The Ideal candidate will pos·
aes- a bachelor's degree In
business
admi nistration,

public adm inistration. economic development or related fiel d , plus 3 years ol relet·
ed profess ional experience.
A master's degree is pre·
!erred. Candidate must also
possess aflectlve interpersonal skills. sta t! management and team bui lding
skills and strategic program
rna n agement/developme nt .
ACEnet ls seeking someone
with proven expe rience in
systems development, network building an d ec onomic
development Ini ti atives. This
is a fu!l-tlm a position. otlerfng a competitive benefits
and
sal ary
package .
Anticipated salary would be
$35,000
ol
$40.000.
depef'ld ing on experience
and qualifications. For co nsideration. send res ume. letter of application. salary histo ry and the contact i n lor~
mellon for three professional
references to the attention of
Renee
Lawlls·Mar!in ,
ACE net . 94
Columbus
Road. Athens, Ohio 4570 1,
renee!Ogpenetworks org. A
review
of
app lications/res umes wi ll
begin on Septe mber 21st
and continue until position
is filled .
._._""'!!~----...

11
11!10

M B Handyfllan Service .
Hauling pai nting, power
washing~· .driveway repair,
seal coating. gutters. chim
ney, plumbing. Jack of all
trades. 30yrs. exp Senior
Di scount. Free Esllmates
(304 )882·2 196, (30 4)377·
826 6

BUSI~

...,_ _oiTRAiiiiiiiiNtiiiNGiiii-_.1
Oalllpolle Career College
(Careef8 Clo se To Home)
Call Today I 740·446·4367,
1·800·214·0452
www. gtMi po llto~r••roolleg• .com

I

Tranem1111ona, all typea,
74().245·5677.
Wen t to care tor elderly person in their home. Call 740368·9783. anytime. leave a.
message. call co llec t II
needed
Will babysi t In my home .
Come and enjoy a fu n, lov ing. and educational envi ro nment. I am a Mother ott
two and have over 5 years
professional expe rience with
c hildr en
Flexible hours.
Call or leave message 740·
258·6338

rnr::R:~oej,;o~110~
·0:;;:5-;,:1:,
27;,:4::;B:.,.-., Will preaaure waah homes,

1176 "-"'.._,,.,...., ~ ~ .....,.,..,.....
Lnlo!K••~.u.Af"~~r.A.A.J"'

211orloua Peopro Wonted

tra ilers, decks, metal build·
lnga and guHers. Call (740)
448·0151 aak ror Ron or
leave a message

Who wont to LOSE wolghl
We Pay You Cal h ror the
pc undo you LOSEI
Safe, Naturll, No Oruga.
800·201·0832

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
excelle nt locatlonl all for
$10.99 5 800·234-6982

(2JO

PROitli.&gt;;IONM.
SEK\'I('t:oi

INO'nC!I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you 'do business wiJh people

Wei ght-EQui pment. power·
ca ge-sq uat·rack w/ puii·UP· you know, and NOT to. send
money through the ma1t uritll
bar, T- row back-machine,
you have Investigated the
peck-deck $400 or will sell oftarlng
·
separate 740·367 -7630

limn"
I U K SAu :

Small hou se tor snl1:1 u1 BHss
Rond Inside co mple toll(
remodelod Sto11e. relnge ra ·
to r. washer and dryer 1nclud:
ed . Pel'loct ns a getaway .
spot. 18tltei110ilt soot. or tor
R new ~.:o upl e (30 4) 576·
3335

Darst Adult Group Home
has a vacancy lor a male or
tama le. cal l (740)992 ·5023

1ft!{'""~--.,.---.,

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345

Cole's Mot&gt;1 le Homes
US 50 East, At11ens. Ohio.
45701 ' 740 -592-1972 .

10

llo~ 11·:-&lt; I
1-llKS,\I .E

f320 Mouu .1·: UOME"'i
I·'ON. S1\I.E

Good used 14.:70. On ly
$9995rncludos delivery. CA ll
HArOI11. 740·385·9948.

Land Home Packagos aval lablo_In your rues. (740)4 463384
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
tor rm mediate possessron a!l Mobrle Homo t 2x70, 38r , 1-•
w1thin 15 min. ot downtown bath . newly rernodoled. 740Gallipolis. Rates as low as 256-6608
6%. (740)446-32 18 .
New 2003 Doublowide 3 BR
10 Room house. 7 acres ot &amp; 2 BA th Only $1695 r1own
land. fenced p&lt;.~s t u r f:l, A1ve r ond &amp;29S/mo. 1-800 ·691 Va ll e ~· .Oistr1ct
740-367· 6777
\
0 144
New 3 br/2 ba th Only $99~
2 br Houser
down and 011ly $1!.14.04 pA'
HUD home Only $6.500 monlh. cn ll Nikkr 7 40 - 385~
For listrng CAll 1·800·7 19· 7671
300 1 Ext F144
No Problarn Sale- Wont a
JBR hOu se tor sa le. asking now sectional hOmo? No
$40 ,000 . 740· 44 6-4084 or Problem. Need loundntlon
7&lt;0-388-8923
and se ptic ? No Problem .
Noed u!ilitios run or drrveJBR .l l /2 bath. bnck range
WHY7 No Problem Want big
wi th anach ed garRge, lull
savmgs on n 2003 model
baseme nt. located on one
No PJolllem _ Co le's Mobile
acre. at 1230 Georges
Homes U.S
50 East ,
Creek Ad . asking $79,900 Allums. Oh10. 740·592 -1972
740·367-0244
S1 nco 1967. Whe re Yo u Get
5 Marn Stn;&gt;et, Middleport , 3 Youl' Mone~• s Worl h

:wl

lA m;&amp;
AI 'KEAIOJ.:

32 acres o n Con10 nary
Road
740-446·0936
5Sprn senous calls only
La rge lot aprox. 10!' x 17 1',
city water, sewe r. na t gas.
electriC . all are avarleble

7 40 -446-9539
Lot fo r sa le m Ra cine.
(740)992-5858
All real estate a«tv.ertlslng
In thi• newepaper 11
1ubject to the Feder• !
Fe lr Hou• lng Act ot 1968
whic h me ke~ II illegal to
ed vertl•e "a ny
pr•fertnce. limitation or
di•crlmln•tlon based on
r1ce, color, religion, •••
familial ltltUI or netiOftll
origi n, or • ny Intention to
m•k• any 1uch
pr.ter•n c• , limitation or
dl sc:rtmlnetlon."
Thl l new • pt per w!ll not
knowingly I CCt pl
• d11ertl..mentt for reel
• •t•l• which Is In
vlo lltlon of th• law. Our
re•d• r• • r• hereby
Informed thl1 all
dwelling• 1dvertl..d In
thl1 new1paper art
•v•ll•ble on • n •qu11
opportunity biHI .

Lots II 9 &amp; 10 Heatley S
Addi tion In Bidwell, two largo
leve l lots. Priced to so li now
740-446·9539
New on marke t. Beaut1lul 5 ..
acres. Country sallrrlQ. 5
min !rom hosprtal fl!lb all
amenities Homes1te ready
With stoned d(IVe way en d
water .
Timber. ser ious
lnquifles on ly
740·4 46·
0908 01 740-645-0244
Nice mobile homo lots, qu1e1
country setlln g. S1 15 pe r
month, Inclu des water.
sewtJr, trash , 740·332-2 167
Openi ng Mo rnin g
Oter Seaaon
where will you be?
Scout ou r property now and
make It yours by Hunting
Season. Call lo r tree maps!

r

Home with 3 Acres In West
Colu mbia
ac ross
!rom
Ballfield. Pr iced
below
appraisa l.
$48,000 .

Wi ll take care of elderly, (304)773-5343
NIQ tlll , axpa rlenca &amp; reler- Letart Falls. OH; 3 bedroom
ancao. (304)875·7Q81
houae, 1 bath . detached
garage, new root , aiding ,
Willing to alt with an e lderly wtndowa, c11rpe!, &amp; kitchen .
3 rolla 4' u1ed !Ink fence, person . 5 daya a week , $88 .000.00 (740)247-2000
hourt 7a m·5pm, no wllk·
740-367·0144
Newly Aellnrshed Home- tor
ondo, calli740)949-2722
Le nnox gi l tumece end air
sa le 1n Gfll lllpolls, 3BA , 2·
I I\ \ \ I I \ I
beSt·IOCAtlon ,
ful l·bathl,
eond-unlt, only 2 yelrt·ofd ,
axe. oond $2000. 740·446·
vl nyl· lldlng. Price to !Isle
now, 740.446·9539
2815
REWARD· lor llndlng 1 rod
2003 lour-wheel er, sto len
Aug 30-31 , call B.J. 740·
367!.0249

!10

60 Vending machine• wllh Bend on Pt oasn nt Ridge

O&amp;J Picky Pa inters
Free Estimates lntefior an B)(teriOf' pa inti ng Give your
home or garage a fresh
new took_We pai nt hOmes.
garages. mobi le homes.
buildings. ba rns and roo fs
Licenced and insured .
(Coli M·S, 8·8)
(304)895·3074
20 Vears ex pelience
and relerencas.
bed roo m, brick , 1 l&gt;ath .
library. gara ge. hard wood
Georges Portable Suwmlll. lloors. $74.500. 1740) 592d on't haul your togs to the 4409
mill just call 304-675-1957.
8 Room Ranch on lull bllseJim 's Carpe ntry and small men t 3BA, 2 112 baths. 2 112
landscaping _ 20 yrs aMperi- acres. covaracf deck. F.R
a nce
Free
eslima1o . $107,900 740-4 46-2196
(740) 446 -2506

Htl .PWANTEil

•

Domino's Now Hiring all
Need 7 ladies !O sell Avon,
locat ions
Pt.
Pleasant ,
Call 740·446·3358
Gallipolis. &amp; Pomeroy. Sate
drivers, must be 1B. Apply In
Need to · earn Mon ey? Lets
parson at locations.
talk the NEW Avon. Call
Roglotorod Nuroo (RN) lo'
Drivers to transport cars &amp; Mari lyn , 304·882·2645 to
lull time and part-lime work
learn
all
the
ways
It
can
work
pic k-up trucks. call 740-992·
In a 114 Bed Long Term
tor you
9716
Care State Facility. Fu ll-time
em ployment olfers an e xten~
slve bene UI package, IncludIng State civil se rvice retirement, earn up to 15 Clay&amp;
vacation, 18 days sick leave,
end 12 pl us paid holldtiys ;
heallhlllle Insurance Is avail·
able. Salary Is commensurate
w ith
experience .
Contocl Ki m Blllupo, DON a1
SB
Lakin Hoapltal, Ltkln, WV at

3 family, Thurs·Fri -Sa l ,
11458 SR554 , adult/baby
clothes . furni ture. tools. tovs.
and much more

WAN'Il-:U

To Do

GIVEAWAY

110

8t JSINI•l-.';

01,~ lR111Nln'

Rl \I I '\I\ II

___

3 Fuzzy kittens plus marria

210 -

170
ML'OlJ .INEOI IS

a-

r

sunday• Paper

YARD SALE·

End of Summer yard sa le.
Don't miss this one! Friday &amp;
C· 1 Beer Ca rry Out permit Saturday, Sept. 12th &amp; 13th,
tor sale. Chester Township, at 122 English Ad ., Pt.
Meigs Coun ty, se nd leners Pleasant. WV. 8·5
ot interest to : The Daily
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20, MT. Union Church Sale. 6
miles o ut Jerrys Run Ad ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Apple G rove_ Sept. 10-11 Margaret Hutching I have 12 .. 9-7 Rose Leona rd
your properly. Please Call (304)576·2635
(304)675·8872
Y8'd Sale, 911 1-~112, 3223
Say good bye to high phOne Howard Ave. excellent claM
Tommy,
A E.
bi ll sI New local phone serv- clothing.
Too.
LEI.
ice with FREE unlimit ed Lim ited
nation wide long Distance Aberc rombie. Qlrl s Infant.
1-800-635-2908
0' 14, ju niors 0-5, womens.
www. Freedorn Movre.com/itp plus size. boys 2T·3T. 8, 14,
aysyo u. Loca l Agents want- mens, house hold.

~--

Mond•y- Prld•y for In•ertlon
In N•xt D•y'• P•p•r
l. . r•d••yln-Column : 1 : 00 p.m.

e Start Your Adl With A Keyword e Include Complete
Detcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl1tlon1
e Include Phone Number And A.ddrtlll When Needed
• Aclt Should Run 1 D1y1

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

classified@ mydallyreglster.com

classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

classified@ mydallytrlbu ne.com

Of{tee 11o~~

\\\Ill '\t I \II \I..,

3L\egi~ter

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Call us at: (740) 992~2155
Call us at (740) 446-2342 .
·
Fax
us at: (304) 675-5234
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:

Fema le cat. 5 months old ,
4 acres ol tobacco needs
has had l1 rst shot. call 740CUI. Call 74 0-682-6 11 6.
367 -7347.
'
AVON! All Areast To Buy or
Free
PtJp pi es
Sell. Shi rley Spears. 304Beagle/Shepard mix
9
675·1 429.
weeks 3 males 740-992·
35 16
Be you r own boss. no inve n-

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
HOME
NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 03 CV 40
-vaCHRISTOPHER D.
SMITH AKA
CH .R ISTOPHER
SMITH, ET AL.
SECOND AMENDED
NOTlCE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order
of ·s.te taoued out of
the Common Ple11
.Court ol Melga
County, Ohio, In the
caoe of the Home
Nattonat
Bank,
PlalnttH,
VI.
Chrtotophar D. Smith
llkll Chrletopher
Smith,
et
al .,
Defendants, upon a
Judgment therein
rendered, being Can
No. 03-CV40 In aald
Court, the SheriH of
Melga, County, Ohio,
wtn oller for uta at
the front door of the
Courthouoe
In
Pomeroy,
Melgo
County, Ohio, on the
23rd day of October,
2003, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following lando
and te-te, located at 317 Wright
Street, Pomeroy, OH
. '45781. A complete
legal deacriptton of
the rMI 1111118 II at
fotlowa:
Situate In the
VIllage of Pomeroy,
Metgo County, State
of Ohio and more
fully deacrlbed ae fol- : Commencing at
1 point In the lnlera.tlon of the exl•ttng
Nelllrly right of way
line of Mulberry
Awnue and the lXIII·
Inti nartllerly right of
way ttne of Wright
Street; thence N 44
degrHI 82' 28" E
along the exlottng
northerly right of way
fine of Wright Street,
871 .72 fNt to • point;
thence N 53 degrHI
00' 00" E continuing
along Uld IIIII 428.01
INI to an Iron pin and

t~ter

100.213-8385
www.countrytyme.com
Hl '\ l\1 '

~~=~~===~
r•o
Hous•:~
FOR Rf.:r--7

2 Bedroom house on St At
7, south of Middleport No
Indoor Pats $300. month.
$300 deposl1 740-992-0542

2 BR , 2 car garage , tull
baaement , 127 Klneon Ave,
$500/mo. + deposit, 740·
Price reduced , newly redec- 441 ·1322
orated 3BA wl!h carport 135
233 Second Ave . 2·story
Klne on
740· 446·2776
house 28R , 1 1 /2 ~h . t~:~ r·
$59.000
nlshed kitchen . wfo hook· .
-Re_ m
_o_d_e_ta_d_ - - d
- ,-oo-m
- .- 1
3 08
up. all street perking. wal k
.~ 1 , 2 bath In good neighbor - anywhe re downtown, 12
hood In MiddlePort . ( 740 ) months min. $545 month.
_
992 7743
or
v 1ew
at reffd ep. no pats, 740-446.
www.or'vb.coml;8 1503
4926

I

�vvednesday,Sept. 10,2003

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

~~:.:1l~r•,a•"OOiEIIOIJ)m,..._miiil

3br In Parle Drive w!Washer BEAUTIFUL
&amp; dryer &amp; knchen appli - MENTS
AT

~

an&lt;~es .
No pets.
Day
{304)675-2.404
evening
(3Qol)675-4li55
.:._.:.:________
7 Room, 2 full baths, basement, water paid, no pets,
ck&gt;se to schools, $550/mo.
740.388· 1100
For Rent· Nice 4 BR home
near Rio Grande. $ 75Q.OO
per month . Deposit and
References required . Call
Wiseman Real Estate at
740-446·3&amp;04

Gold Maytag, Washer and
dryer $150 Whirlpool washer
$100 Whirlpool dryer $75
both while. Cat! after 6 pm
446·9006

Home from $199/month.
foreclosure
homes 4%
down, 30 years at 8.5% apr.
4 listings call 800·319-3323
ext 1709.
House For Aent
1BR.
unturn. AJC, washe r/dryer·
hook-up, $350/mo, no pets,
depoaltlreferences required,
740-446·3007

~~;~m;~~oo7~ebpi~•n:~~s~

APART·
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dnve lrom $297 10 $383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies.. Call
740-446-2568 .
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Good Used Appliances,
Beech Street. Middleport 1 Reconditioned
and
Washers,
bedroom furnished apart- Guaranteed.
Ranges,
and
ment. utilities paid. deposit &amp; Dryers,
references,
no
pets. Refrigerators, Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
(740 )992 "0 165
VIne St . (740)446-7398
For Lease: Beautiful , 1600
Sq.Ft., restored . second
Mollohan Carpel . 202 Dart~
floor apartment in Historic
Chapel Road. Porte.. Otvo
District, Ideal for profeMion(740)446-7&lt;1&lt;&amp;~ 1-377-330al couple. all mOdern
9162. Free EsllmttM. EM-")1
amenities. 2 Oedrooms:
financing, 90 Clays s.tmt 11
spacious living/dining; lots
cash. VIsa/ Mur.t Ctl\l
of storage. 1112 baths: rear Drive· a- little SIIIW tiOt
deck: HVAC. S600/mon\h
plus utilities. Security and
Refrigerator $75 .. ~
Key deposit. No pets.
Washer $95 . KlnmoN!
.Ftefwr8nCII required. 740· dryer $125 .. G .E relnQ'dlrA·
446-4425 or 446-3936
tor, like !Htw. $195 .
For Lease: One bedroom. Kenmore Washer •dryer set
$300., 3-couchs- S50 eacn.
unfurn ished. newly redeco- table -'&lt;hairs. $95 .. K ino·
rated, second floor Apt. : at
corner ol Second and Pine. siZe
box-sprlnglmanress

AJC : $30o.oo per month:
water Inc. ludad. Securlru and
references , will sell lor
.,
$4,000 .
740·388·0578, Ke~ deposit. Off street parK·
leave message
ing. Refwrence1 Requi!"R.
No pets. 740·446·4425 or
12x50 2BA, nice-lot-water- ~44.:.:6.:.:-3:::9:::3.::_6_ _ _ _ _
paid,
no
pets. Furnished 3 rooms and bath
$275/mo.+dep/ref.
3897
Georges Creek Ad . 740- ·upstairs apt clean. no pels.
reference
&amp;
deposit
446. 4316 a ft er 5pm.
r~ur'red
. 740-446-1519
""
14x60 2BA, w/AC, WID. F/S.
no pets, $200/ctep. At218. Furnished one Bedroom
740-256-1044
Apt. Clean. No pets, MustOe
wtlllng to gi\le references.
2
bedroom
bath Phone (304)675-1386
washer/dryer. no pets. refer· _.:.__:__::_~:._:___.::_:.::___
ence.
$325/inonth. Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
$300/deposlt.
(740)446· room apartments at Village
4234 after 5pm.
Manor
and
Ai\lerstde
Apartments in Middleport .
2 BR . perfect, air. porch, From $278·$348. Call 74Qvery nice. 740·446·2003 or 992-5064. Equal Housing
740-446-1409
:O:cP::PO::_rt::u::n~:::·e::•::·- - ' - - - -

2 mobile hamu . Oath with
3br. Located In Glenwood.
All
appliances
with
W/D(304)576-9991
2BR trailer In Rodney, $250,
can 74()..446· 79 91.
3BedroomTraileronStAt7.
south of Mlddleporl. No
indoor PelS $300. monlh.
$300. depositi40-992·0S42
3 BR Mob1'Ie Home. water

and gas paid $4 00/dep.
5400/rent.
2Br MoOile
Home. 740·446·0241
Trailer tor rent. 3BA. 2 full
bath, exc. cond. on St. 160.
in Porter. $400/mo +deposit
740-446·4514 or 740-446·
3248

r

1 and 2 bedroom apar tments. furnished and unfur·
nished. security deposil
required. no pels. 740-9922218.
1 BA wtth slo\le and refrigerator, starting at $290/mo. +
deposit 74D-441·1322
1 br. apt . lor rent in Pl.
Pleasant WV, no pets
740-446-2200.
1 room· cotlage 4 rental.
Bath &amp; kitchen. $175 . a
month . (304)675-2495 after

6pm.
1br All utilities included.
$325. monlh . (304)675-3654

2

BR.
unfurnished.
$300/mo, $300/dep. plus
ulilities. no pets 740-4464313
2·2BA apt., $375/mo ultilites
included,
$300/deposi t,
740-992-2274
3 bedroom apartment lor
rent. no pels. (740)992-5858
Now Taking Applicalions35 West 2 Bedroom
Townhouse
Aparlments .
Includes Waler Sewage,
Trash, $350/Mo .•
0008.

""'-""'

AKC Miniature Plnchers.
ready to go! Tails &amp; declaws
docked .
Vet
checkedl
Beautiful
2-temales . 1black/rust, 1-re&lt;Vblack for
Information please call 7-iD256-1033

92 Corsica. 6 cyt.. auto. 4
dr., new tires. paint many
other new parts. $2200.
(740)742-0509

Hill 's Self
S to rage

'DXht\l...tlo."\

P\JtatOf':s
"-"
u l•
1Ktnn•~- A.-1 ~nti AC) .
M\,) t\· S.AI , 6.5002:
Stali

~~~~~,

--

741)..94&amp;-2217

r

5.

BUILDERS IHC

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

750 E:asl State Street

Phone
Athens, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992· 7599

(740)593"667

';:======~~=======::::; ~r.;i-~;;;~~~~ii~iii~:iiPiiiiiiiiii~;

---=------2001 Honda Shadow Spirit,
VT 1100. 7,400 miles, asKIng S5.900. 740-446-7668

Jio

Jio

'i'

•

~~
g.~

YOU1

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

.,.,.,..vr:~
l;~S!.!~~~~~~~~~~~~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~.J~~'1~-~I~O~J
~

MY DECISION TO ONLY
SELL LOCAL PRODUCE
11 .

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1·800-822-0417

Pa!IS

Paa9
Pat!

9
tO

bloaaom

Q

20 Gotowoy
21 "Phooey!"
22 NMdlog
Irrigation
23 Coupling
devlco
24 Warning,
perhapo
Park feature 26 "-and get
Thai ship
It!"
Halr·atyllng 27 Hodge.
goo
Jacob'• twin 28
Total
31 Oppooing
Indifference
vote
35 lnplecea
Actor
36 Fall behind
-Beatty

G1'1jtard

11

38 "The final
12
frontier"
40 Get·up·ond· t7
go

- R-'ner

40 Dootgeunlt
41 NopoleOrl'a
lalond
42 Quoy
44 Conturion'a

v

45
48
47
48

Brllnelorm

Market
Strtve
Great the

maater
49 Bolore
51 Intend

English did not understand America .
So, he sent • lacetlous letter to a·
London newspaper, including this
sentence: "The grand leap of the
whale up the ~·all of Niagara Is es ·
l l!emed, by all who have seen it, ns

ll or
wa~ agreed, by all who Sow It, lhnt
one
t.he rlnest spectacles In nature."

South's play in this contract was of the
finest. Will you be a player who leaps
up the Fall, or who fnlls down with n

Mnybc South should have rebid two
heorts, hoping io reach three no·
trump . Rut that contract eRn be de-

.

diamonds Is that Lhe defender!! receive lhe minimum of information.
You have a top loser in each minor
sull. So, you must finesse East for
both major-suit kings. However, since
you are in the dummy for the first and
last time. you mu st take those fines s·
es immedintely. Also, clearly you must
begin with the heart suit. Which card
would you lead from the dummy? .
~
If von start with the nine, that will

THE BORN LOSER
P"AlLTf\OSE

rr

I~ VI\IJOR , SIG~IFY"'&lt;

A,Ll TI-\OSE 01'1'0::£0 C.N-l PICK.

UP lf-IEIR SEI/t:RI,JK.£ Pi\,'I (&gt;.,\

B'{ 5{'.,"1'1NG, "I\'I(" I

Tl-\( C.I\~1-\IE.~ OfF\(.(!

-w.v·s #I Chevy. Ponllae . Buick. O ld s
&amp; Custd"m Van Dra i er~

BRI NG IN THIS AD
FOR ON LY $ 13 00 PER HUNDRED

'

1~
1
1

Bring your

*Last checking statement

I
I

I

(l~l
1
I

GEt Cash Today

' Photo LD.

'Last pay check stub
'Phone Bill with nama and address
116 Main
•
.

,

•

1
1

,,~~

:, ~-:1.~ "'
J ~ . .,

\:;"' ..-:;..3

kmg, stranding you

by Luis Campos
Celebrlt~

Cipher cryptograms are created I rom quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter ln the c1pher stands for another.

Today 's clue.· 0 equals X
"Z K F
S W F K

hand . Instead,

and.

nffordablt' and eus~· it is to
get the cuveragl' you need .

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

J K

nnd can take the spade finesse . G D I J V

S F

SDNNDKINR

AstroGraph

T LZC F

SMALL i HOWARD L
WRITESEL
ENGINE •ROOFING
REPAIR dONE

RINGO 2171

I

MAINTENANCE
.SEAMlESS
GOnER
1-------- *fraelstlllateh
WE REPAIR
Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

I

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
•Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

I

949·1405

Let me do 1! for youl

Early hirds slur!

PAINTING

6:30

-

DON'T YOU
TH\NI(&gt;

I

89 Hollda~ Rambler Bumper
pull. 32ft. excellent conc:tl·
lion! Has queen bedroom.
Askin g $5.500. (304)882 2576

.

985-3994 ' ""

SORR'f', Mi.AM ..
~E LOVES

All pack $5.(Hl

THOSE &amp;VNN'f
BOOKS ...

Uring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Gel

~'R~

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garage1
• Etectrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo end Porch Decka

'"'EY'RE WAY
MoREiPMF'f

ii1AN ~I:S

Free Eslimates

~AiFIT!

V. C. YOUNG Ill

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

.., , H\ II I ...,

HOME

740·992-5232

IMPIIOVIMEN'~
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unco ndilion~ l litetime guar·
antee. Local references IUI nished. Established 1975.
Ca l\ 24 Hro. (740) 446 0870, Rogers Basemen!
Waterproofing.

THE944

STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp; Cars
County Rd.

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting, vinyl
siding. carperitr~. doors .
windows. Oalhs. mobile
1987 2.8, 5-10, 4;~~4 engine. horT(e repa'r ond more. For
Hear it (un. $350. {304)773- tree es11mate call Chet. 740·
992 -6323
5033

'

•

L.OOK AT T~E BUNNV BOOKS,
BUT TO DO IT QUIETL'f ..

#35

Racine, Ohio

(740) 517·9138
or
(740) 949·00~0

II

I

I CAll

rEET

IN AND OUT

so WI lit 11-l~E SPO!l1S

YES I
SHOES,YOU'LL 00 EVEN IRONic.
~ESS EXERCISE 'TWIN l~'r IT?I

YOU DO NOW?

WITHOUT
\'AlliNG TO

•

-y-

SEND C'IEII !

VI C

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 -Dec . 21) - If
you lind thAI the most lmponantllltng In
the world to you tod ay Is to comdnce
those aroood you to come around to your
views. it means you 're stuck In a menial
rut . Move on.
CA~RI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191 - You
may need a btl of time to yourself toda~
to put your menial house In order, but do
not be toIaiiy reclusive. II coutd lea11e you
In a funk and more con tused !han ever.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-·Feb. 19) Focusing completely on your Inner-sell

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

COIISTRUCTIOII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

148-992-1811
Stop &amp; Cot'flpore

O

li I' I" ~~ I' I' 1• I' 1
;;~;;~;;::;:;:;,;:~=:;:~=::;:~=:!::::!:::::!:~
€J
FORI I I I I I I I 1
·I
.J,-;-J.-.J._.J.--'.L.......J.L........l...-L.-l.. .._I
P~INT

A

NUMBERED !'

f3 lETTtRS

•

•

.

•

•

•

•

UNSOAMBtE

__;;
A:.;:N.::,S&gt;:.;:V.:ER:.,._ _

SCRAM.LETS

ANSWERS

Willow - !dior • Ouora - Levity · TOO LOW
I had attended a thirty year high school reunion and
co ncluded that most discontented people aim for what
they want out or life, but aim TOO LOW."

today could luve your social . skills wlth a - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - tot to be desired. Gain control over your ""
psychOlogical energies and M your con. over with so you can once ag~in charge
genial sell again.
aheM
PISCES (FeO. 20-March 20)- It might GEMINI ( Ma~ 2 1·JU111B ?0)- Being pre ·
be time to re-evaluate your goals loday, occupied today over one way of thinking
but use this Introspection positively . A closes your mind of! to the point that
project upon which ~ou·ve placed a high nothing else can make an Impression priority can be transferred Into something anel when someth ing good · comes along,
far more significant.
you won '! even recognize 11 .
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprll 19)- If you CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) re senl having to change something that Compulsive thinking and trying to coerce
ha s a direct effect upon your work olhers that you're right" will bring you
because you don't see It the same way greal frustration today, because you
others do, you could end up throwing the · probably won't get your woy no matter
b~by out with the belhwater.
what ~ou say . Be a Joiner Instead.
TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20) :_ In order to LEO (July 23•Aug. 22) -It woh't be the
make any progress tOday you may have dollars thai wilt gel you In trouble today
to oo along with a Clecl&amp;ion that Isn't opU- - vou could nickel-and· dime yourself
mal. Instead ol dragging your feet , get It Into poverty by spending small sums on a
wh ol&amp; bunch of little th ings you don 't
need. Be careful.

WE WERE: 001' OF
CHOCOL.ATE CHIP~, 50
1 U5ED BACON BIT5

,....-------------"!'1
CAT~

AREN'T FAMOUS FOR
BAKING 5KIL.L.5

·Results

I

ROBEilT
BISSELL

5

Fast

WV Contractors Lie . #003506

(10'x10' 610'x20')

6

Get

674-3311 Fax 304·675·2457

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

I

Classlfleds

879-2497 or 448-2912

MANUYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

I

1 1 1 1 1

Henderson, WV

• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

l E0
j

1

TiiE TEACHER SA'f'S '(OU CAN

CARPENTER
SERVICE

t Driveways• Tennis Courts

I I

wrong.
L.
down
LIBRAon(Sept.
yourllll
23·0ct.
today23)
simply
- Don'l
because
gel "
M A 0 R A •I :::::::_
I had called the copy room
what you accomplish may not be totally ~-:.:.,;5~~~:;.,.,;~,.....j
Ideal. Accepl lhe lacl lhal ~hat you '••
and asked if I could get something
done still repre sMts lmpro\lement. wilh L-L..l..-L..l..-' ,., blown up. After a pause the fel~
more to come
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 22)- Try not 1o
CJ
~~o-~ :~g-h~~: ;~bt~ink you need a
misdirect all your energy today In pursuit 7
9
9
C
·
ol goals the! are of Small slgniHcance .
•
omplcre the chuckle Quoted
.
.
.
.
.
.
by fiil in~ in lhe miuing words
AAgroup your thinking and channel II
vcu deve lop from step Na. 3 below.
toward something of value and.growth .

MYERS PAVING
Cell Phone

11 Ii

I==·==·==-==-~

Pome•oy. C!lnu
2 Year L 81

1988 Cruise Master Motor
Home Class A. Ford 460 V8 , 33,000 miles asking
$1 1.900. 740-992-2060

I

I

992-6215

Call

"America mourns the loss of one
President Bush, on the death of

0 four
lharrango l•ners of n,.
scrambled wards be•

I

YOUNG'S

at

A J V Y R

you In !he year ahead thJough a change low to form four simple words.
1
..--.. 1n direction your lila might take . What . - - - - - - - - . . . . . . . . ,
'II lind In your new arena will be ways
capllallze In greater measure than ~au 1--,..T!-R~H~U!L..A~!!O.,--l

5FREE

SHOTOKAN KARATE
Beginner class
6:00 to 7:00 9/15/03
Eastern High
Cafeleria
Mru info.

NRKHJ

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) - Nothing of ~=·=~-=~-=~-=~-...J
substance will be gained today If you try r
to defend premises that have pro ven to
Ky
be unproductl \le. Don't be too proud to 1-.,....;;._;..,..:...;,,..:.,....~.
3
4
I ch•onno your mind when ~ou realize you

· tast Thursday of
every month

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

FOYNZHDKI

'blr'l!lrlhdoy:

--:----.~-1 Opportunities will be made av&amp;llable to

FOil.
1'. SIT OF
/0. 81.0\oiOU T,

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
l)oors Open 4:30

..

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ol Its greal treasures ." Bob Hope

could belore.

Pomeroy Engles

PVF M H

Thursday, Sept. 11, 2003

CI\~LS

189 Middle.P'!rl

N Z X F

D K

TOILMKH

as-

G V J U R

D T

•

GOING ON
51\BBATtCI'.L

X F V R

DT

"N Z X F

Let mt.• show yon how

Box

111

begin with dummy's queen

Alternatively, if East covers with his
king, win with your ace, and return
later to dummy with a heart to the 10
for the spade finesse.

(740) 843-5Z64

lf'i/1 Hold /oiJI' 30 D.IJ'-'

f~r ihe quee~. East c~n cover with the

CELEBRITY CIPHER

suming East plays low, unblock your

burial ond finul CXJ)Cnses
)I
ror your f11mlly und
loved ollt.'!'i,

'

win ihe trick. but when you next call

jack. Then continue with the nine. If
East ducks, you are still in the dummy

~ Don 'llc11ve the dt•bt of

'

,• ; •... \'

l .}t JIN§'1rA- CA$n-Jl ~ l

1986 Tlago Motor Home.
21'". generator. fully self-con tai ned.
24,000
miles,
$7,500. 740-441 -1583

Ohio Va lley Bank will otter
for sale by public auction a
2002 BOAT&amp; TRAILER el
the Ohio Valley Bank Annex ,
143 3rd Ave , Gallipolis, OH
on 09113/03 at 10:00 am.
Sok:l to the highest bidder
-as is-where is" without
expressed or implied warranty &amp; ma~ be seen by call ing the Collection Dept at
44 1· 1038. OVB reservas
the right to accepl/reject an~
&amp; ell bids, &amp; withdraw Items
from sale prior to sale
Terms of Sale: CASH OR
CERTIFIED CHECK .

Pass
Pas11

+

8

Kind or
plato
37 Largo

38 Actor

· purchaaea

feated by a t!lub lead . And an advan-

New&amp; Used

CAMI'ERS &amp;
Maroa HoM~

1994 Statos 17'6~ bass boat
X25, fish tlncter. trolling
motor. 120hp Evinrude,
black &amp; slt'oler metallic, white
bottom. trailer, $7000 firm .
740-742-D509

I

girl

34

19 Milk

2 Noot-beg
tldblto
3 Pomplono
cheera
4 Eonh
orbiter
5 Llon 'o prey
6 Tonota
7 Cortoonlat
- Goldberg

splash? In five diumonds, you win the
first trick With dummy's club ace. How
would you continue?

I MAY HAFTA RETHINK

740·992·2432

H&gt;RSALE

&gt;
~

Dean Hill

32119 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

lklATii &amp; MamRS

U
!

Are you in the market
anew cor

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

Ohio Valley Bank will offer
for sale by public auction a
1998 HONDA MC 0700655
at Ohio Valley BanK Annex ,
143 3rd Ave ., Gallipolis, OH
on 09/13/03 at 10:00 am.
Sold to the highest bidder
"as is-where Is" without
expressed or Implied warranty &amp; may be seen by call ing the Collection Dept at
441 · 1038. OVB reserves
the right to accepl/reject any
&amp; all Olds, &amp; withdraw items
from .sale prior to sale
Terms of Sale: CASH OR
CERTIFIED CHECK .

Ea111t

1 Tow-owoy

16 Blyth or
Sot hom
18 Undorelond
19 Slngle·flle
line
21 Morell
25 Nlghtclubo
29 Calo
aHrtctlon
30 Mr. Powell
32 Trail uaor
33 Pablo'o

tage of skipping s traight to five

98 Kawasaki Bayou 220.
$2,000. (740)985-3399

North

many

r~~=::.;.:;::;,:...-==-=------------------. Make sure to select
~{j ~{j~ f. tt~Y! YOU Tt-fltE~ viEfltN'T SNMt:ING OUT the .finest card
/
""
v/ITf'40UT {~ By Phillip Alder
PAYING, ~i
yle.fle. ~~ Benjamin Franklin felt that the

JONES'

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

I

t

West

DOWN

15 Not ••

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• R~plac~:mcnt
Windnws • Roofing

I

r:m

2.

South

Opening lead: •

Siding • New Garag:es

I

J 8
K Q J I0 9 7
9 7

Dealer: South
Vulnerable : East· West

rL-------_.1

~7:40:-4:4:6~-~~~~:~:~~~Winters,

•

corn

door
· 14 Figure

\0 9

¥ A

BISSEll

a.c. !lit.

fi 4 3 2

4 A Cj

CB550 motor- ,.."""~~~~~~
1986 0100, 2
pickup. $600:
Avenue. V-6.
door.
S900:
'
,JOol--l7_73_-_9'_5_'_ _ __
New Homes • Vinyl

-1993 S-tO Tanoe. 4.3 auto.

Q

•

-Camus
53 Energetic
54 Hera~ light
55 Ground

u••• the

13

West

992-5479

1974 Hondl
RH\.1$\'Itt.i. Oh. cycle. $500:
wd. Dodge
1989 ,ark
auto.
4

•

+

grtdder
52 Wrher

certain

OHo-oa

""AS32
Easl
4J976
4K8$32
¥ K64 3
• 7 5 '
+ A
• 8 5
10 8 4
• K 6
" QJ
South

MONTY .

Jeff Warner Ins.

7~(1.446 ·6865

r

r

Cellular

45771

B I. D Auto Sales HWY 160
N

atrap
10 Hoc:koy
player
12 Make

North
" t0 4

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio

sroo.

•Rtn-s &amp;

t'11nd
·
48 Trickier
50 Oeklond

1 Go very

..

a

j

43 Turlciah YIP
44 Clenched

loot
5 Saddle

CF.4. registered Himalayan
kittens. $250 each : name &amp; 99 Ford Musrang $6500.
98 Toyoit Camry $4900.
saal point (740)992-Q383
98 Ponilac Flrablrtl $4900.
CKC Cocttr S~niet pups 9S Oldl Cutlo,. 2dr. $2800.
tor sale. butt. buff l white 9S FonlProbe $1750.
cream . shots a worm.ct. 98 Ford Doni\J"' $2500.
S200. (740)992-737 t
00 Ford Focut 5·speed
Min Pin, ~5 tor Mil $2800.
BIM"il: «Ni Tan 5 WHM otd. 112 CovaiOir $1200.
Ml.lt
r:.r,,.... s 5.250 96 Ford Cooture $1600.
87 ~nhac Grt~~nd .4.m $300.
CAl' 1_30.4~-n~ .

,i;p:;;.;;;;.~;;;;;;...,-""1

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

95 Pontiac Grand Prbt 35k
miles. Blade &amp; gold whHia.
garage kept. (000)675-1805

new chrome wheels
&amp; new tires . cd pla~e r.
1 1 2 )"Nt old while II}'11'\Q $3.500
FIRM (304)675·
hens fOr Sf'le. SOt ~~~en 8868
(740)985·3956
1994 Chevy Blazer Tahoe
For Sale A. I r.. Q A.ngus LT. 4WO. 4 door. $4.000.
111
hatters . cows..\ calves .also OBO. 740. 256_1539 or 740 _
wringer
washe
, .......
L
pen
.
. rs .b Will
nd do
. reg . .......,th
..... m\Ous•ne o
256 _1343
repairs on major ra s m he•lers 7 bulls
shop or at your home.
New dtgetal 11'&gt;'8Stock scales
1997 Tahoe. 4dr, 4)1.4,
weighs up to 3.40010s 740- $10.000,
1981 Chevy 314used furniture store. 130
256·1352
ton. 4x:4. $1500.
1611 •.
Bula.ville Pike . manressos. m;;~;;;,~~~-"""'1
Checkmate-Speedboat.
dressers.
couches.
Ho\Y L\
115hp Merc ury, $2000.
Ounkbeds . bedroom suites.
GR.t.IN
740·
recliners. grave monuments. ~~--------" prices-lirm/no-trede
245-0J;44
•
740 -446 -4782
Gallipolis.
Ohio HAS 10•4pm. Stop By Hay for sale. Tm10thy and
SLT
Orchard
grass. Rou nd 1998 GMC Vukon
Bales. $15.00. Square bates leather . loaded. e)(C. cond
ANnQtJt:S
$3.00. Good horse hay. Call 304·882·3855 or 304·882·
3 138.
~
(304)937-4811
Honeysuckle Hills Apts .
-------Located on Colonial Dr. Buy or se ll. Riverine Wrap round or big square 1999 Dodge Ram 1500
behind Highway Patrol Post Antiques, 1124 East Main bales of wet na~. McHale La ramie SLT 4X4, V-8. AT.
on Jackson Pike 1 &amp; 2 br". on SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 740 · bale wmpper. Call Hartsock AC. PW . CD . 51 ,000-miles
.
$255 1
asking-$13.500 . 740-992ren 1 star tmg
· ow &amp; 992·2526. Russ Moore. Ag at 740-775· 1383
2060
moderate income . . Equal ;;;ew=-ne:,::;
r·- - - - - " " " ' 1
II~ \\..,1'(11{1 \ IIO\
Housing Opportunity. 740MIS(.'EI...LAN[.()Uii
2000 Ford F-350, super
446-3344 TDD 1-800·750·
MERCHANDISE . riO
ALJI•~
duty,
4x4, power -stroke, 6
0750.
...._
•
~
_:_:.::________
..__ _ilf'OiRiiliSiiAiiiU:i'-_.1 speed. 48,000 miles 740New 18A apt. 740-446- 1-10x12". insulated. metal ~
643-2089
0390
siding tan &amp; brown . rollup
--------·.:;_:.::________ door. was $1750 now $500 POLICE IMPOUNDS. 2000 GMC Sonoma 32.000
Nice 1BFI apt, furnished, $ 1400; I · IO)(lS. insulated. Hondas.
chevys.
etc! actual miles. loaded. excel·
\ Crown metal sidtng tan &amp; green . ca rs/trucks !rom $500. For lent condition.
8 PP IIances. no pes.
(740)446Cl.\y · $250 and security rollup door. was $2100 now listings 1-800-719-3001 ext 4385
deposit. cal1740·256·1249. $T700: 1740 )742-401 1
390l
2003 Ford Ranger &gt;&lt;LT. A/C.
Pleasant Valley Apartment
1947 Jeep Overland SW, 4· 6 dr·sc CD player brand new
20 cub ic loot freozer for sale
Are now taking Applications
WD, 4-cy, std, 2-door, runs, 5700
miles
$10,700
for 2BA. 38A &amp; 4BA. , (740 &gt;992 · 7869
needs care. 740·446-4999 (304)675-3354
Applications are taken Cool Down!l
Central
Monday thru Fnday, from
1986 Ford Escort. 4 dr., 4
VANS &amp;
9 :00 A.M.-4 PM Office is Cooling System s. New and cyl., auto, great liHie ca,r. lots
4--WDs
Located at 1151 Evergreen Used. Installed. (740)446- now peris . $1400 . (740)742 ·
63_0_8_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _o5_o_9_ _ _ _ _ __
Drive Point Pleasant. wv _
1988 Che\ly 4x4, 350. 5
Phone No is (304)875-5806.
JET
1992 Buick Lesabre custom speed. 112 ton. needs little
EHO
AERATION MOTORS
133.800 miles. runs good. work. $1800. (740)742-401 1
Tara
Townhouse Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In needs paint work $900 neg.
t995 Ford E-350 Van . 14 tt
Apartments, Ve ry Spacious. Stock. Call Ron E\lans, 1- 740-446-0519
- - - - - - - - high cube Oox, exce llenl
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1 800-537-9528 .
1994 Ponliac Sunbird. 4 cond. 740-446-94 16
1/2 Bath. Newly Carpeted,
cyl inder. 100.000 m•les. 4dr,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
NEW AND USED STEEL axe. cond. $1850 740-446- 95 Nissen Pathfinder 4x4,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
5-spe8d. $2600
•
Sieel Beams, Pipe Rebar 4514 or 740·446-3248
Pets, Lease Plus Security
97 Ford Ranger 4x4 $4600
For
Concrele,
Angle,
Deposit Required, Days:
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel 1995 GMC V-8 AJC excel· 96 Ford Explorer 41C4 $4200
740-446-3481 ; Evenings:
Grating
For
Drains, lent Condition $3,995
B &amp; D Auto Sales HWY 160
740..367·0502.
Driveways &amp; WalkwayS. L&amp;L 1989 Che\ly 2500 $1,895
N . 740-446-6865
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- Scrap Metals Open Monday, 1990 Astra van $895
ing applications tor waiting Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 18 cars in stock.
MmoJKYCU:S
list for Hud-subslzed, 1- br. Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed COOK MOTORS 740-446·
Saturday
&amp; _o_
w_3_ _ _ _ _ __
aparlment . call 675 -6679 Thursday,
1998 Harley
Davidson
Sunday. (740)446--7300
EHO
1996 Chrysler Concord,
FXSTS Springer Softall.
120.000 miles. air.
till,
Office Furnllura
Simster Blue, 10,000 miles.
SI\K'l:
cruise. $1500 OBO
New, scratch &amp; Dent.
$14.500080 740-645-3309
FOR RENT
256-1875 or 256 -1233
Save 70%. 1-800-527-4682
Offices (Downtown For Argonaut519 Bridge Street. 1997 GEO Prism, 55.000 1998 Kawasaki 800 Vulcan
Rent) All electric. one is 3 Guyandolle/Huntington. M/F miles, excellent condilion, 4 Classic, 3700 miles , excel·
rooms . one is 4 rooms. both
stat sa fe!~ rating $4.ooo. lent condition. (140)992·
Very Nice sofa $250., chair
6879
740-992-6280
on first floor. 400 blocK in
$150., 2.7 acre campsite
Gallipolis . clean 7 nice.
$4,000., Silverado $6,250. 1997 Lincoln Town Car, 2000 Arctic Cat 300cc 4x4,
74Q-446-9539
Executive Series. 100.000 2000t0
Warn
Winch,
(304)675-1636
miles. Excellent condition. Loading ~:lamps, Low miles.
BUUJliNG
$4,800. abo. (304)675·6442 Great shape, k8pt Inside.
$3,200. 1997 SuzuKi Katana
Sum..IES
1997
Pontiac
FireOird, 600, 11k miles. runs great ,
Block, brick, sewer pipes. 3.8Liter. T-Tops, soun d sys- kept I nside ~ $2,900 . Call
Leave
windows. lintels. etc. Claude tam , 1 OOk mile s. $7,000. (304)675-1501
Call (304)675-1501 Lea\le Message
Rio Grande, OH Message.
Caii74D-245-5121.
2001 Honda 450 S, 4-wheeler, green. tow miles, 74 0446-6688

r

The Dally Sentinel • Page 85
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-------ThOmpsons Applia nce &amp;
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re-conditione d automauc
washers &amp; dryers. retngent·
tors. gas and ele&lt;;tric
rannes. air condrliOr1ers. and

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WONDeR WH3T

THaT MeaN S ..?

THE GRIZZWELLS
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�Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

First prep
football
poll
released
COLUMBUS (AP) - · After letting others have a share of the spotlight for two
seasons, Cleveland St. Ignatius is back in
its accustomed position at No. I.
The Wildcats haven ' t been a factor in
the rankings since the 2000 season, fini shing lOth two years ago and mis'sing the
top I 0 entirely last season . Around the
pre:eminent prep power in the state, that's
a century.
Going two years without an Associated
Press poll championship marks the first
time that 's happened since 1988 . St.
Ignatius has won seven AP titles and nine
state playoff championships - all in
those magnificent last 15 seasons.
The Wildcats in Division I are joined at
the top in the initial voting of The AP's
57th annual poll by Macedonia Nordonia
in Division II, Cleveland Benedictine in
III, Coldwater in IV, Delphos St. John ' s in
V and Dola Hardin Northern in Divi sion
VI.
St. John's is following a script similar to
St. Ignatius' . The Blue Jays have won five
poll crowns and three state playoff titles
and hold the slate record with 57 consecutive victories from Nov. I, 1996, to Nov.
17, 2001. Yet they haven't finished higher
than ninth in the final rankings the last
two years.
Nordonia was the biggest surprise
among the No. I teams. The Knights never
finished in the top I 0 of an AP poll until
placing ninth a year ago . They went on to
the state title game , losing 41 -26 to
Dayton Chaminade-Julienne.
Dwight Eisenhower was in the White
House when Benedictine won its only previous AP title in 1957. The school finished
No. 2 in the rankings in 1981 , '86 and '97
but hasn't appeared in the final top 10
since.
Coldwater is the only defending poll
champion listed at No. I this week.
Hardin Northern has finished a season in
the top I 0 only twice - fourth in 1997
and sixth two years ago.
The tightest races are in divisions II and
V. Nordonia leads Avon Lake by only 13
points through three games, while St.
John's has a 22-point edge on defending
state playoff champion Marion Pleasant.
St. Ignatius leads last year's poll champ,
Warren Harding, by 23 points in Division
1..
Among the other 2002 playoff champions. Cincinnati Elder is ranked No. 8 in
Division I, Cham,inade-Julienne dropped
to Division Ill where it is No. 4, and
Mogadore . is No. 6 in Divi sion VI.
Division III winner Columbus Watterson
and Division IV's Kenton are unranked.
, The poll voters include 45 sports writers
and broadcasters around the state. The
weekly balloting will continue until chl.lmpions are declared on Oct. 28.

Ohio Prep Football Notebook

AP Ohio Hilh School

FootbaD Poll

COLUMBUS (API - How a slate panel of sports writers and
broadcasters rates Ohio hlgh-sthool footballteamsln. t~e first
weekly Associated Press poll of 2003, by OHSAA diVISions,
with won-lost record and total points (first-place votes in
parentheses):
DIVISION f
1, Cle. St.lgnatkJs (13)
3.0
247
224
2. Warren Harding (10)
3·0
3, t.tentor (1)
151
3·0
122
4, Marion Harding (2)
3·0
5, Cin. St. Xavier (1)
119
3-0
118
6, Dublin Cortman (1)
3.0
ItO
3.0
7, LAkewood St. Edward
100
8, Cin. Elder (2)
2·1
9, Cln. Colerain
76
3-0
10, Massillon Jackson
53
3·0
Others recelviOg 12 or more points: 11 , N. Can. Hoover 42.
12. Findlay 38. 13, Can. McKinley 27. 14, Massillon
Washington 26. 15, Brunswick 23. 16, Cle. Glenville 21 . 17
{tie), Lebanon, Tol. Whitmer. 19, Upper Arlington 17. 20,
Massillon Perry 16.21, Westervllfe S. 15. 22, CTn. Anderson
12.

DIVfSION I
1, Macedonia Nordonia ( 11)
2, Avon Lake (9)
3, Chardon (3)

4, Cols. Brookhaven (31
5, Trotwood·Madleon (t 1
6, l oveland (1)
7, Garfield Hts. (1)
Maumee (1)
9, Lewis Center Olentangy
10, Whitehall-Yearling

3·0

219

3.0

206

3-0

170

3·0

153
84
75
57
57

3.0
3·0
3·0
3·0
3·0

a.Q

56
5t

Others receiving 12. or more points: 11 (tie), Sylvania
Southview, Warren Howland 46. 13, Vandalia ~utler 43. 14,
Trenton Edgewood 42. 15, Cols. Walnut R1dge 40. 16,
Pataskala Watkins Memorlal36. 17, Jecklon 35. 18, Holland
Springfield 29. 19. Madison 25. 20 (tie), Tallmadge. Kings
Mills Kings 22. 22, Alliance Marlington 20. 23, Tiffin
Columbian 17. 24, Otmsled Falls 15. 25, Marysville 14. 26
(tie), Pickerington Central, Youngs. Chaney 13. 28 {tie),
Uniontown Lake, Piqua 12.

DIVISION Ill

1. Cle. Benedictine (17)
2, Germantown Va!ley VIew {2}
3, Akr. Hoban (1)
4. Day. Chaminade.Jullenne
5, Cols. OeSales (1)
6, Dover
7, Poland (1)
8, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit
9, Newark Licking Valley (2)
10, St. Marys Memorial

3·0
3·0
3·0
2· 1
2· 1
3·0
3·0
3·0
3·0
3·0

236
120

ff7
109

94
84

79
70.

65
61

Others receiving 12 or more polnta: 11 . SttubenYrllt se. 12
(Ue), Cols. Wattaraon (2), Hubbard. BeU.vue ~5. 15, Cln.
Wyoming 53. 16. Limo Shownoo 48. 17, Canol Fulton NW 41 .
18. Sunbury Slg Wolnut 3fl. Ill, Montor Loki Cath. 31 . 20.
Usbon Beaver 28. 21, Chtlltrllnd W. GtluQI28. 22. Willard
24. 23, Colo. Hamilton Twp. 16. 24 (llo), l!ololt W. B11nch,
Ravenna SE 14. 2~ . Akr. Buchtol 12.
1, Coldwater I f1)
2, Youngs. Mooney(5)

DfVflfON tV

3, Akr. SVSM ( f I
4 , Coshocton (1)
5, Versailles {2)
Huron ( 1)
7, Ironton (5)
8. Clarksville Clinton-Massie (1)
9, Delta
10, Perry

3·0
3·0
3·0

248

188
181

3.0

151

3·0
3·0
3·0
3·0
3·0
3·0

129
129

fiB
81
72
58

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Upper Sandusky {1)
56. 12, Williamsport Westfall (1) 43. 13, Bellaire 40. 14.
Struthers 29. 15, London Madison Plains 16. 16, Apple Cree+~
Waynedale 15. 17, Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 14. 18, Sullivan
Black River 13. 19, Navarre f:alrless 12.

DIVISIONV
t, Oelphoa StJohn's (13)

2, Marion Pleasant (6)
3. Amanda-Ciearcreek {3)
4 , Gahanna Cots. Academy
5, liberty Center (2)
6 , Smithville (4)
7, Sycamore Mohawk
8, Woodsfield Monroe Cent
9, Morral Ridgedale ( 1)
10, Cols. Hartley

·a-o

241

3·0
3-0

219

3.0
3.0

98
91
90

169

3-0
3·0
3-0

88
86

3-0

84

3-0

61

Wednesday, September 10,2003

Wildcats go out like Mildcats
for at least another week
RusTY MILLER
Associated Press
BY

Vanlue eventually is going
to win a conference game.
Not yet, however.
The Wildcats tried to end
their footnote in Ohio prep
football history Friday mght,
but had one touchdown
called back because of a
holding penalty and were
stopped at the goal line on a
two-point conversion with
six minutes left in a 20-18
loss to Van Buren.
It was the 79th consecutive
Blanchard
Valley
Conference defeat
for
Vanlue, one of the smallest
schools in the state offering
football.
Van Buren quarterback
Matt Blair carried 36 times
for 222 yards and two TDs
and threw a touchdown pass.
Elsewhere,
Newark
Catholic pulled out a wild
25-23 victory at Thornville
Sheridan on Doug Stevens'
70-y ard TD pass to Chris
Wohlheter
just
after
Sheridun hud scored on a 47yunJ pols&gt; from Jush Barrera
tu Jush Duv~··
Wohlheter earlier had
returned a fumble 60 yards
for a score after a short TD
burst by Sheridan.
All this action occurred in
the fourth quarter, which the
Green Wave entered leading
13-7 in the first meeting
between the two perennial
playoff teams.
• PASS-HAPPY: Findlay's
Tyler Curl is caught II passes
for 219 yards and tw9 TDs in
the Trojans' 27-19 victory
over Upper Arlington, giving
him 30 receptions, 481 yards
and four TDs this season;
Upper Sandusky's Greg
Micheli, 1moved from wideout to quarterback this season, threw for 253 yards and
three TDs and rushed for 67

yards and three more scores Plains was 2-8 a year ago
tn a 42-0 decision over and has won its fust three
Bucyrus; Hamler Patrick games under new coach
Henry 's Marc Krauss caught Kenny Hinton; in a 52-0 win
seven passes for 220 yards over Leavittsburg LaBrae,
and two TDs in an opening- Jefferson Area piled up 618
yards of offense- 315 pussgame defeat;
McComb's James Copus tnS and 303 rushing. Angelo
completed 21-of-38 passes Mtrando completed 15-of-22
for 391 yards and three TDs passes for 3f5 yards and a
in a 34-33 overtime win over touchdown and ran for a
Leipsic; in a 34-24 defeat · touchdown . What 's more.
Friday
night
against Jefferson has not allowed ~
Chardon,
Ashtabula point this season.
·
Lakeside receiver Rashaad
• DEE-FENSE: Columbus
Osborne caught six passes Grove, a Division VI state semifor 194 yards, including finalist last year, has not
touchdown passes of 75, 61 allowed an opponent to score
and 31 yards; and seven-time a first-quarter point in ! 1
state chamJ&gt;ion Cincinnati straight games; Cincinnati
Moeller avOided its first 0-3 St. Xavier's Brad Scheidt
start with a 27-14 victory returned a fumble 98 yard'
over East Central (Ind.) as for a TD with 4:15 left, giv•
Blake Carter - nephew of ing the Bombers a 14-7 vicOhio State and NFL great tory at Columbus DeSales;
Cris Carter - caught five Pataskala Watkins Memorial
passes for I02 yards and a and Gahanna Lincoln arti
TD.
both 3-0 and have nol
• GRINDING IT OUT: allowed a point this season::
Ashland's Nate Summerfield and Lowellville pushed it$
has nine rushing touchdowns record to 3-0 with a thir~ ·
in three games; Columbus straight shutout - and fifth
Grove's Blaine Maag carried over the last two seasons 22 times for 325 yards and by stopping Brookfield 7-0.
five TDs in a 41-7 triumph
Neither Mount Blanchard
over Lafayette Allen East: Riverdale nor McGuffey
scoring on runs of 3, 62, 3, Upper Scioto Valley ha~
56 and 4 yards; and scored a point this season
Chillicothe
(formerly before meeting last week;
Richmond
Dale) end. That changed in a hurry
Southeastern's Jeromy Detty when Riverdale's Joe Weber
ran for five touchdowns and returned the opening kickoff
218 yards and Glouster 80 yards for a score. Th~
Trimble 's AJ Jenkins scored Falcons went on to score 38
three TDs, threw for one and . points; USV remains scorekicked four extra points in a less.
40-39 victory.
Williamsport Westfall , the
• BALANCING ACTS: smallest school in Pickaway
Whitehall- Yearling's Matt County, won its first county
Angle had three receptions championship in seven years
for 142 yards and two TDs with a 21 -14 overtime victo(55 and 76 yards) and ry over Circleville. The
returned kickoffs 96 and 91 Mustangs beat Ashville
yards for scores while piling Teays Valley 20-14 in overup 360 all-purJ&gt;OSe yards in a time and Circleville Logan
48-13
dec1sion
over Elm 25-20 earlier this seaColumbus
Eastmoor son. All three are in higher
Academy; London Madison divisions than Westfall.

2, Columbus Gro'JO (9)
3, Marla Stein Marlon Local (5)
4, Cte. Cuyah9ga Hts. (2)
5, Danville (3)
6, Mogadore
7. Newark Cath. (1)
8, Lowellville (1)
9, Norwalk St. Paul I 1I
10, Windham (1)

2·1

149
141
135 '

3·0
3·0
2· 1
2·1
3·0
3·0
3·0

194

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

118 .
105

78

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11

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.

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

• Eastern vs. Meigs: The
new rivalry. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED

breed@mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY
Meigs
County Health Department
will receive nearly $94,000
to prepare for the possibility
of a bioterrorism attack. or an
infectious disease outbreak.
Ohio has received $46.3
million in federal funds to
strenghten the efforts of local
health departments in protecting communities from the pos-

sibility of biological attacks, public prominence:
Of that, Meigs will receive
Statewide. the funds will be
$93,926, ·according to Health used to create a disease reponCommissioner Norma Torres. ing system, provide small pox
According . to Torres, the vaccinations for I,900 public
goal of tile funding program health and healtll care profesis to prepare local communi- sionals and install a high-speed
ties for more than a deliber- internet system for all local
ate bioterrorist attack. It also health departments.
will increase the ability of
Torres said the local fundlocal departments to respond ing will be used to pay the
to naturally occuring dis- salary of the county's public
eases,such as SARS and health infrastructure officer.
monkeypox - two diseases Frank Gorschak, as well as
which have recently come to two other staff members, to

OBITUARIES

Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

www.LighthouseAssembly.info
NEWSPAPERS
ENTERTAINMENT

serve aces each and Veach
totaled 28 assists.'
The Redwomen were finally
derailed in the final game
against the host school,
Hiram, in three games, .16-30,
13-30 and 22-30.
Doss led the Rio attack with
seven kills. Posey had 22 digs
and Veach registered 22 assists
and I0 digs. Wierwille posted
six kills and two aces with an
11-for-11 serving effort.
Wierwille and Doss ·were
named to the All-Tournament
team.
Rio Grande is idle until
Sept. 16 when the Redwomen
travel to Central State. Match
time is set for 7 p.m. in
Wilberforce.

----------EE HEARING TESTS

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.&lt;om

INSIDE
• Community calendar. ·

SeePageA2
• West Texans honor
those killed in terror
attacks. See Page AS

.

Teacher overcomes obstacles
to return to classroom
J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
BY

Ohio
Pick 3 day: Q-5-9
Pick 4 day: 1-3-5-3
Pick 3 night: 1-Q-6
Pick 4 night: o-o-6-1
Buckeye 5: 7-13-16-26-32
Superlolto: 1Q-16-20.24-33-43
Bonus Ball: 42
Kicker: 5-6-1-2-1-0

WestVuginia
Dally 3: 7-1-5
Dally 4: 5-344

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1
l&amp;ftDce ™ HEARING AID CENTER I
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INDEX
SEcnoNs- 12 PAGES
Calendars
A3
2

Classifieds

82-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

81-2,6

A2

© aoos Ohio V.Uey Publlohl011 Cu.

TUPPERS PLAINS - In
a split second, a life can
change forever.
Jayne Collins of Long
Bottom
had
always
dreamed · of bein~ of
teacher.
She ~ra uate d
from the Universtty of Rio
Grande in 1993 with a
degree in elementary education and a year later she
would be working in the
Eastern Local School
District teaching .writing.
Students, faculty and staff
held her in high est~em.
April 29, 2002 .was an
ordinary day until another
motorist ran a stop sign and
struck Collins' vehicle. One
person died, a couple others
were injured and Collins
was in critical condition.
After the dust had settled
she would learn that sh~
was a quadriplegic. She has
limited movement in her
right hand and can move
her head but her life
changed 'forever in th'e
space of, a moment.
During rehab at Marietta,
there was a "family meeting"
between several doctors,
nurses, support staff, therapist, socilil service people,
and main family members.
"This was the first time

the word 'quadriplegic' was
ever used and my future was
realized," Collins said. "The
realization that I was going
to be a 'quadriplegic' for the
rest of my life was discouraging. Up 10 this point in
time, there had been encourld
agement that I wou over
time get well. I somehow
felt that I would be lixed."
Collins had a battle to
fight. The detnons in her
soul began taking her to
dark places few return from.
. "After .a bout with an
mt~rnal d1gesuve pr~blem,
:. wh1~h occurred wh1le at
Manetta M~!".onal, .I ~~It I
was brok~n. s.he sa~d. My
mother. Sister. and slster-mlaw. who had been staymg
wtth me ~ay and mght, sa1d
to me If you can get
through th1s, .Yo~ .. can get
through anythmg.
Thoughts began to echo
in Collins' head as t.o "why
ne." She was bltler. .
"I was and I am bllter;
however, I hope not to be
one day. Although another
person's recklessness, careless act10ns, negligence,
and total disregard for the
laws have drast1cally
changed my life, I won't let
it destroy, me ::
~
Colhns .sptrtt wo~ld rally.
"The htghest pmnt was
when I was able to come

home for my.first visit, which
happened three months after
the accident. I was able to lie
in my own bed, which had
been purchased and delivered just a lew days before
the accident."
Despite
everything,
Collins does not feel God
has forsaken her.
"All I know is that there
were many prayers said for
me and continue to be. I
have had said to me , 'God
does not give you more than
you can handle. "'
As the days wore on and
Collins began to recover, she
discovered life is not something to be taken for granted.
"Yes I appreciate everything and everyone more. I
did not realize how much my
family and friends were willing and arc still willing to
help out in any way they can.
I never knew how many
good friends I had and the
lengths they will go for me."
Collins had a dream. a
calling, that would not go
away despite the changes
that she was going through.
"I didn't want to be on dis-,
ability the rest of my lite,"
she said. "I wasn't going to
let the negative act of &lt;mother person destroy my life."
She wanted to go back
into the classroom. When
Please see Teacher, AS

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Anyone who hal trouble hearing or understanding
1
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munity in the event of a
biotcrrorism incident or ·an
outbreak of an infertious disease," Torres said. "We nelwork with the Emergency
Management Agem:y, in partkular, to ensure that we're
prepared to protect the community in the event of such
an outbreak, but thi s new
funding will allow us to
increase the leamwork aspec\
of those efforts, by training
and preparing our stall"

in metals and wood. spent a
year
completing the sculpture.
kkelly@ mydailyregister.com
"Working with stainless steel,
you have to know what you're
POINT PLEASANT
· doing," Humphrey s said.
The second annual Mothman "Art1sanship and sculpture is
Festival on Point Pleasant 's .really a gift. Very few are good
Main Street Saturday will at it, bui he \ nne nf those few
begin as unusually as the who is really good at it."
entire phenomenon surroundThe red eyes were created
ing Maso n County's winged by Blenko Art Glass at its
visitor has been since its century-old factory in Milton ,
beginning in 1966.
and the company became
At 10 a.m., a 9-to-9-1112 excited about participating in
foot · steel sculpture of the project.
Mothman, red eyes and all,
"As soon as it is up, ther,
will be unveiled on the Main want to come up and see it,'
Street side of Gunn Park, Humphreys said.
across from the Lowe Hotel,
The second Mothman
where most of the festival Festival is expected to draw ~
activity will be focused .
large crowd to Pmnr Pleasant,
The sculpture. to sit on a 30- and Marcia Finley of the
inch base, is the creation of Lowe said most of the hotel's
New Haven artisan Bob Roach. rooms are already booked for
His work brings attention to the weekend.
the Mothman legend and its
Vendors, displays and preimpact on the area. and will be sentations will be a highlight of
another draw for visitors to the festival, which willlilf most
Mason County, said Charles of the space at the Lowe buildHumphreys, executive director ing once filled by Woodyard's
of Main Street Point Pleasant. Mmi-Mall. The festival runs
"This statue celebrates the until 6 p.m .. but hay rides and
signilicanre of Muthman to guided tours of the TNT area
Mason County and the area, - where Mothman was first
and the fact that it has a big seen -begin at 7 p.m.
economic impact on the
Music, food and other
county," Humphreys said. diversions are planned at the
"The whole idea is to get peo- festival.
The
official
pie down to Main Street .'
Mothman web site developed
A ce remon y surrounding by Donnie Sergent Jr. and Jeff
the unveiling is in develop- Wamsley. who organized the
ment, Humphreys satd.
event in conjunction with
Humphreys . approt)ched Main Street, promises that at
Roach about creating the stat- least two eyewitnesses to
ue, an idea RmKh had been Moth man will be on hand.
considering for awhile. The
John A. Keel, whose book
former American Electric
Power employee. who works Please see Mothm•n. AS

BY KEVIN KElLY

Page AS
• Mae Bletner, 90
• Elsie M: Hines, 86

LoTIERIES

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

CHURCHES

purchase equipment and
informational materials, and
to provide training for publk
health employees as Ill how
to react to the possibility of a
publir health emergency.
The funding will also
allow the dep:n:tment to
retain Dr. Douglas Hunter on
a 24-hour, on-call basis in
the event of a biological
emergency, Torres said.
"We work very closely
with other agencies in our
effons to prepare the com-

Mothman sculpture to
kick off Saturday festival

www.pvalley.org

Gallipolis Career College

tlilttt&gt;l''''"

Health Department receives bioterrorism funding

www.hol:z:er.org

BUSINESS TRAINING

l t td11l

SPORTS

Holzer Medical Center

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

COUPON

1

'

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Norris Northup Dodge

Redwomen volleyball team has
strong.performance at Hiram
HIRAM - It was a much
improved weekend for the
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen volleyball squad
as they rolled up three VICtories in four matches at the
Hiram College 2003 Terrier
Invitational on Friday and
Saturday.
Rio Grande (4-8) defeated
Concordia (Micb:o1 on Friday
in three straight games, 30-23,
30-24 and 30-27. Senior
Rebecca Wierwille posted
strong numbers with 14 kills,
nine digs aild was a perfect
22-for-22 serving.
Melissa Doss added II kills
and two block assists. Jessica
Veach handed out 35 assists
and collected I0 digs. Kim
Posey led the way, defensively, with 15 digs. Chelsea
DeGarmo had 13 digs and six
kills. Danielle Thomas tallied
II digs and one serve ace.
The Redwomen picked up
where they left off on
·saturday with a 30-27, 30-24,
30-17
triumph
' over
Wilming.ton College. Doss
crushed 12 kills, Lynette
Kiesling added II kills,
Wierwille had 10 , and
DeGarmo registered eight.
Veach notched 39 assists.
Posey led the team with 15
digs, followed by Veach and
DeGarmo with I I each.

I

Detallo on Pa.. A2

AUTOMOTIVE

71
59

College Volleyball

sports@mydailytribune.com

I

I

MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Leetonia 52. 12,
StraSburg·Frank!in 40. 13, Convoy Crestview 38. 14,
Covington 31 . 15, Mechanicsburg 2B. 16, Gory-Rawson 26.
17, GlOuster Tri mble (1) 22 . tB (tie), Spring. Cath. Cent., N.
Lewisburg Triad 19. 20 (tie), Attica Seneca E., Carey 17. 22
(tie), Millersport, Minster 13. 24, E. Canton 12.

Thomas had two aces and was
23-for- 23 serving with seven
digs. Juli Bailey made her
presence felt at the net with
one solo block and three block
assists.
Rio then disposed of
Ursuline College in three
straight games, 30-28, 30-27,
and 30-22. Wierw1lle delivered 13 kills, seven digs, two
blocks arid two block assists.
Kiesling and Doss added eight
kills each. Kiesling also posted five solo blocks and four
block assists. Posey topped
the stat sheet with 16 di~s. followed by DeGarmo w1th 14.
Bailey with 12, Veach and
Thomas had I0 each. Thomas
and Bailey also delivered two

I

..

www.turnpikeflm.com

STAFF REPORT

'

· Eastern Elementary fifth.grade teacher Jayne Collins has overcome adversity to return. to
work. A year ago ·~he was In an auto accident that changed her life forever. Her dream was
to return to the classroom. When school started, that dream was realized. (J. Mi les Layton)

AGRICULTURE
212

•

Mootly ounny, HI: BOo, Low: 80o

DIVISION VI
3·0
3·0

•

WEATHER

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 . Middletown Fenwick
54 . 12, N. LimaS. Range 47. 13, Dalton 40. 14, Middlefield
Cardinai3B. 15, Sarahsville Shenandoah 37. 16, Gates Mills
Gilmour 29. 17, Independence 26. 18, Bainbridge Paint Valley
26. 19, Warren JFK 23. 20, Lisbon David Anderson 19. 21,
Ashland Crestview 20. 22, Cin. Hills Christian Acad. 18. 23
(tie). Lees Creek E. Clinton. Crooksville 17. 25 (lie), Arcanum,
St. Henry 12.
1, Dola Hardin Northern (4)

Southent set to
face Wahama, Bt

Clarett suspended
for season, Bt ·

.•

I.

Queen candidates

The candidates for the Racine Fall Festival queen are: Codi
Davis, Bethany Amberger, Emily Hill , Stephanie Bradford and
Deanna Pullins. Each of the se young women is a senior at
Southern High School. The queen will be crowned noon
Saturday at the festival. (J. Miles Layton)

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