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                  <text>PRo FooTBALL

The Daily Sentinel

Cardinals turn up heat
in win over Packers
AssOCIATED f»RESS

Giants 24, Redskins 21

Seahawks 24, Rams 23
ln Seattle, Matt Hasselbeck threw a 3yard touchdown pass to Koren Robinson
, with I minute remaining and Josh
Brown made the PAT as the Seahawks
overcame a 13-point deficit to stan 3-0
for the first time in five years.
Rams running back Marshall Faulk,
held to 31 yards on 15 carries, left in the
third quarter with an injured left hand.
Marc Buljjer fell to 7-2 as the starter
for St. Louts (1-2), with both of those
losses coming in Seattle.
.

F

New York Giants' Amani Toomer, foreground , pulls in a pass over Washington
Redskins' Champ Bailey on a 54-yard touchdown pass play Sunday at Fed Ex Field in
Landover, Md. (AP) ·
ovenime. Tampa Bay took out all its
frustration on the hapless Fal~ons (1-2),
who failed for the second week in a row
to give Dan Reeves his 200th coaching
In Houston , Priest Holmes had 156
victory. ·
total yards and two touchdowns, and
Dante Hall had a 73-yard punt return for
a score to help Kansas City to its first 30 stan in seven years.
Holmes, who grew up in San Antonio
ln Indianapolis, Reggie Wayne caught
a career-high I0 passes for 141 yards and and played at Texas, gained 89 yards
two touchdown s as the Indianapolis rushing and 67 yards on four receptions.
Colts are off to their first 3-0 stan since Hall - from Houston and Texas A&amp;M
1996 and only their second such stan - has five punt or kickoff returns for a
touchdown in his last eight games.
since 1978.
Jacksonville (0-3) has lost live straight
dating to the end of last season. ·
Fred Taylor had 17 carries for 126
yards, topping the 5,000'yard career
In Detroit, Daunte Culpepper left with
mark and became the first runner to gain a bruised back after his second rushing
more than I00 yards against the Colts touchdown gave the Vikings the lead.
defense in 15 games.
Minnesota (3-0), with three wins in the
NFC North, is off to its best start since
winning seven games to stan the 2000
season. The Lions (l-2) liave lost two
In Nashville, Tenn. , Steve McNair straight since beating Arizona in the
threw for 252 yards and two touch- opener.
downs, becoming just the fifth quanerCulpepper didn't return after lineback in NFL history to notch 20,000 backer Wali Rainer hit him in the end
yards passing with 3,000 yards rushing. zone when his 2-yard run put the Vikings
Eddie George had 29 carries for 100 ahead 13- 10 late in the second quarter.
yards and ran for his first touchdown of Culpepper was 7-of-13 for 105 yards.
the season to seal the victory for the
Titans (2-1 ). Deuce McAllister finished
with II carries for 8 yards for the Saints
(1-2).
In Miami, Ricky Williams carried a
franchise-record 42 times for !53 yards
and one score as Miami moved into a tie
for the division lead with Buffalo and
.
In Foxboro, Mass., Tom Brady scored New England, all at 2-1.
on a !-yard run late in the third quarter to
The Dolphins made interceptions to
lead the Patriots.
end two early scoring threats by the
Brady, who hut) his right elbow with Bills, whose only points came on Nate
5:45 left in the second quarter, e;ave tlte Clements' 54-y~rds interception return.
Patriots (2-1) a 16-9 lead with hts score.
Drew Bledsoe completed I0 of 25
Asante Samuel added a TO on a 55-yard passes for just 98 yards with two interinterception return.
ceptions and four sacks. The Dolphins
Vinny Testaverde threw a 29-yard held Travis Henry to 7 yards rushing and
scoring pass to Wayne Chrebet early in intercepted his first NFL pass to sty mie
the founh,-making it 23- 16. But the Jets one scoring threat before he left in the
(0-3) could not get closer.
·
second quarter with a rib injury.

Chiefs 42, Texans 14

Colts 23, Jaguars 13

Vikings 23, -Lions 13

Ravens 24, Chargers 10 Titans 27, Saints 12
In San Diego, Jamal Lewis ran for 132
yards and one touchdown on 23 carries,
a week after setting the NFL single-game
record with 295 yards.
.
Lewis needed 182 yards to break O.J.
Simpson's two-game record of 476 yards
set in 1976.
The Rfl,vens (2-1) won their . second
straight. San Diego (0-3) has been
outscored 88-37 thts season. Including
their second-half collapse last year, the
Chargers have lost sevetr straight and 10
of 12.

Bucs 31, Falcons 10
In Atlanta, Defensive -tackle Warren
Sapp scored the first offensive touchdown of his career on a 6-yard catch as
the Bucs rebounded from a disappointing loss.
The Bucs (2-1) were clearly penurbed
by the way they lost to Carolina a week
earlier, getting two field goals and an
extra point blocked before falling 12-9 in

"

Holcomb fractures leg
~Browns' win, Bt

''
'

'The Bus' drives ,
Stealers past
Ben gals, 17-1 0
CINCINNATI - Jerome
Bettis lowered his battering-ram shoulders and
plowed into the end zone.
Joey Porter yanked down
the quarterback as the
Terrible Towels twirled.
·
Different setting, very
familiar scene.
called heads. Porter, the ·
The Steelers got back to Steelers' top defensive
their black-and-gold basics . player last season, also had
Sunday, running the ball one of four sacks of Jon •
when they wanted and turn- Kitna.
ing Poner loose during a
Porter broke through the
17-10 victory over the line, grabbed the back of ·
Cincinnati Bengals.
Kitna's jersey and pulled '
"It was good to see us him down in the third quarkind of re-establish a little ter, thwarting another
bit of our tradition," coach Bengals possession.
Bill Cowher said. "That's
" It seemed like it was a ·
like the days of old."
long time coming," Porter
Tens of thousands of said. " I was ready to go,
Pittsburgh fans were in the and the adrenaline was ·
crowd of 64,596 - the j!Oing to get me through
largest ever to see the JUSt about anything. That
Bengals play in Cincinnati felt like Christmas felt
- and stayed on their feet when I was II yt;ars old."
as the Steelers (2-1) went
Cincinnati was lost withback to grinding it out.
. out . running back Corey
In thetr first two games, Dillon, who strained his
they became dependent groin in the second quaner ·
upon Tommy Maddox's and didn ' t return. Kitna was
passing. Amos Zereoue 16-of-24 for 157 yards with ·.
managed only 104 yards i'! one interception and' a late ·
the two games.
touchdown pass.
.
Betiis, relegated . to &lt;!
As first-year coach
backup role in preseason, Marvin Lewi s watched
showed that The Bus still helplessly from the sideline, ;
has a few miles left. When the Bengals fell to 0-3 for ··
Zereoue needed a rest late the seventh time in the last
in the third quarter, Bettis 13 years, which marks their
took over and led the ~eign as the NFL's worst
Steelers to a decisive touch- team.
down through brute force .
"Nothing is surprising,"
Toppling tacklers as he Lewis said. "We didn't want
went, Betti's ran six plays in to be 0-3. We've played
a row for 23 yards, putting three teams that we knew
Pittsburgh ahead 14-3. He were going to be pretty
lowered his head and pow- good, so there was a chance
erect into the end zone on that it was going to hapfourth-and-goal from inside pen."
the I.
Since Cowher took over
"You get frustrated," said as coach in 1992, the -·
Bettis, who had 59 yards in Steelers have rushed for
16 carries. "As a running more yards than any other
back, you want the oppor- team. They didn't do much
tunity to make a difference after Bettis was benched in .
in the game . It 's tough. the preseason for Zereoue,
When you have two nm- who !)ad 58 yards through
ning backs who want the three quarters Sunday.
football, it 's ·going to be difWhen Zereoue came to
ficult ."
the sideline to catch hi s ·
Cowher ran onto the field breath , Bettis took over.
and smacked Bettis on the
"When Jerome gets ..
left shoulder pad after the goi ng, it's pretty hard to _.
touchdown, a sign of his stop him ," said Zereoue,
delight over a running who finished with 69 yards ,
game that was rediscov- on 16 carries. "! thought, ~
erect.
hey, he's getting it done. -.
So was Porter, who suf- Coach Cowher and 1 both ·
fered gunshot wounds to decided to let him go."
the buttocks and right thigh
Bettis, who had only 21 ',
three weeks earlier. He yards in the first two games,
made an immediate impact topped that total on his first ·
on a defense that kept the six carries. He also did the
Bengals (0-3) in check until tough work as the Steelers
the closing minutes.
ran out the clock after
The Steelers co-captain Kitna 's 5-yard touchdown
came out for the pregame pass to Peter Warrick cut it ,
coin toss and correctly to 17- 10 with 5:541eft.

Jtlli\IS•\td ..)-t

.arkin rejects
Reds' offer, Bt
I

• Bldayes must improve in
Big Ten play. See Page 81

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Martha Childs, 98

INSIDE
Community calendar.
SeePageA3
1 Time Out for Tips. See
Page A6
·
1

'

,.,..

WEATHER
Sunny, HI: 70., Low: -

Ohio

Pick 3 dly: 7-o-a
Pick 4 dly: 5-2-9-5
Pick 3 night: 4-4-2
Pick 4 night: 5-6-3-8
Buckeye 5: 6-9-13-14-32

West Vuginia
Dally 3: 7-2-7
Dally 4: 4-9-9-7
Cash 25: 1-4-5-11-20-22

2

HELP WANTED
SERVICE TECHNICIAN

•,

'

"6})(12e~ i~ · ~ &amp;·

GM Experience a Plus
But Other Qualified Applicants
Will Be Considered.
Call Roger Jessie

•.

~$f~~(J"

740-992-6614 or
1-800-83 7-1094

Nominate them for

"Carrier-of-the-Month/1

Pizza Hut
compliments of
Pizza Hut

POMEROY
Recognizing that "life is short
and you only get one," Stan
McDaniel
decided
in
February 2002 after karaoRe
singing .at a local bar, that the
country music scene was the
place for him.
With encouragement from
those who heard bini and a
dear grandmother who died,
he decided that he wasn't
going to let anything stand in
his way or stop him from
doing things he wanted to do.
Now, 17 months later. he
has done two demo CD's, one
recorded locally and the second of original songs recorded
in f':lashvil!e, and has entered
the"live entenainment field.
The solo artist will be

• The Southern Local
school board received a
$1,100 grant from the
Appalachian
Science
Institute. The grant will be
used to purchase equipment
and supplies for the Biotechnology progr~m at
Southern High School.
· • The board authorized the
treasurer to implement a payroll direct deposit program.
• Board members discussed the water leaks in
the roof at the new elemenPieese see Southern, AS

J. REED

'

)

SECTIONS -12 PAGFS

A3

Stan McDaniel
opening a weekend of entertainment Thursday night at

Please see McDaniel, AS

Committee
takes up
tourism
projed
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

reed@ mydailysentinel.com

The Meigs County Bikers
Association, above, may have
been responsible for Santa
Claus· s first visit to Pomeroy
Saturday, as they lined the
Pom,eroy parlling lot for their
annual Toy Run. The run is
organized each year to kick off
the association's Christmas
toy fundraising drive. Each year,
hundreds of needy Meigs
Cou~ty
children
receive
Christmas toys through the
generosity of the bikers and
their supporters. In his Santa
suit, Arnold Priddy, above, of
Pomeroy leads the parade of
bikers on a tour of the county,
which ended at the Mizway
Tavern for a dinner, auction and
live entertainment. Bikers from
other communities, including
Terry and Penny Little, left,
from West Virginia, pictured
here, also joined in the run.
Meanwhile, the association will
continue to raise funds for the
toy odrive. allowing members of
the general public to contribute
through collection canisters.
(Brian {Reed photos)

82-4
Bs

A3

A4
As
As
B1-2,6

A2

© 0003 Ohio VaUey Publlahlng Co.

Council conducted a
second reading on a proposed ordinance regulatmg the placement of manufactured homes in the village. A third and final
reading will be conducted
on Oct. 13, at which time
the approval of four council members will be
required for passage.
The proposed ordinance
is a revision of an existing
mobile home ordinance
written in the mid-1960's .

PleeH see Field, AS

POMEROY- Local committee members recentlv
returned from Kentucky'~~
Berea College with an idea
- to build a visitor's kiosk
near the Ritchie Bridge at
Ravenswood, W.Va. -and a
grant to help build it.
A I 0-member committee
was chosen to ira vel to Berea
College last week, to determine specific needs of the
community and how those
needs can be st be addressed,
to
County
according
Commissioner Jeff Thornton,
one of the 10 committee
members.
Thornton said the committee has received a $500 grant
from the college to "jump
start" a project in the commu.nity, and has until April to
complete · the project. The
kiosk will be located just off
the bridge approach, and will
provide tourist information to
Meigs County visitors.
Thornton said the committee identified the county's
need for an emer~ency room
and hospital as a lmt priority,
but said the group decided to
build the visitor's information
kiosk because of the limited
funds available.
In addition to the $500
from Berea College, a $500
local match is required,
Thornton said.
"We plan to work with other
groups and agencies in order
to complete the projecf."
Thomton said. "Our committee decided that promoting the
county and all it has to offer to
visitors is a worthwhile project."
Mary Powell of the
Hi storical
Chester/Shade
Association is the chairman.
or facil itator, of the commit-

Please see Project. AS

Sytnposlum
Saturday, September 27, 2003
8:30 am - 12 Noon

Send u~ your name. address and. phone riumbei;.
2.) Include your carrier's natne.,your route number
or subscriber number.
J .) In 50 words or less, tell us why we should choose
your carrier.
1.)

\

{Pre-registration and refreshments at 8:30am}
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

Mall your entries
. to: . Paul Barker
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 Third Avenue
Clalli~lls, OH 456.31
446-3008

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

Middleport Bikers Association makes toy run
approves
field lease

Pain

Fax:

Bl' CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Other business

Other business

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

h -.• t d l l l l l l " ll l

McDaniel to open
Sternwheel Riverfest

would happen if the LIFT
grant ceased, then who
would pay back the loan.
The board was receptive to
the grant proposal and
asked Grueser to do more
research and report back to
at the next meeting.

Monday evening with the Big,
Bend Youth Football League,
for use of the football field,
stadiwn and concdsioos area
at the fanner Middle[XIrt
High School Building.
the league has already
begun conducting "midget
football" games at the
facility, after assuming
res[XJnsibility for cutting .
grass and other maintenance since the school was
closed last spring.
The village assumed
ownership of the school
building, the elementary
building and Gentral build"
ing and surrounding properties earlier this month from
the Meigs Local Board of
Education. The league will
pay the village $50 per
month for the use of the
field and other facilities, and
will assume responsibility
for utility costs. as well.
According to Mayor
Sandy Iannarelli, ' the
league has already invested $7,000 into the facility,
and plans to continue
repair work there.

LO'I'I'ERIES

Patriots 23, Jets 16 ·

/

RACINE ___; Southern
Local Superintendent · Bob
Grueser approached the
school board about a grant
that would provide more
than $270,000 in exercise
equipment to the district.
The Learning and Fitness
Training (LIFT) program
seeks to create healthier students and to make physical
exercise a bigger part of the
educational experience.
According to LIFT, students are becoming obese
due to a lack of regular physical activity. Healthier students translate into a better
educational
experience.
. Without a positive and persistent physically active experience in school, LIFT reports
that 80 percent of children
will never break the habit of
an inactive lifestyle which
will result in health problems

as they become adults.
In order to qualify for the
LIFT grant, the school district
would have to provide a suitable exercise space, floor
mats and take out a loan for
the exercise equipment estimated to cost approximately
$270,000. The LIFT foundation reimburses the district
only if the district sends in the
results month after month for
the exercise regimen. Modest
health goals must be met.
Grueser said more than
70 schools in Ohio are
enrolled in the program .
Members of the administration .have polled six sirnilarly· sized schools who
have said the program . is
excellent and the reim,
bursement payment system
in exchange for exercise
results is successful. The
program a! so allows the
community to get involved.
School board members
were concerned about what

111\tl ..

approved a three-year lease

DebUt on Pqe A2

•

PI/Jt'

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com
BY

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council

INDEX

If they are selected, your ~
carrier will win dinner
for two at
.
.,.•' •

1\\\\\

reed@mydailysentinel.com

Your Sentinel
•

ll1Sil\, , SIPI1'1BIH.·~:{ . :..! UO :;

lh

BY BRIAN

'

! '

\11

Southern Local ponders grant proposal

SPORTS

Dd'YouJust
.

Dolphins 17, Bills 7

Corning
Thursday in the Sentinel ...
... '..
..

•

Monday, September 22, 2oo;t ·

Bv JoE KAv
Associated Press

The Green Bay Packers love cold
weather. Playing in the heat is a different
story.
Jeff Blake wore out the Packers on a
day of record heat in the desert, then
Dexter Jackson sealed it with a clutch
interception at the fini sh.
Jackson, ·last year's Super Bowl MVP,
intercepted Brett Favre's pass in the end
zone with I 0 seconds left to save the
Arizona· Cardinals' 20-13 victory
Sunday.
"The elements are the elements,"
coach Mike Sherman said. "People come
up to Green Bay, and I don't say we beat
them because it's cold out. I say we beat
. them because we won the game. They
beat us because they played better than
we did today- bottom line."
Blake completed 20 of 31 passes for
273 yards, including a !-yard pass to
James Hodgins for the winning touchdown with 3:59 to play.
Favre, ::13-for-33 for 226 yards and a
touchdown, drove the Packers (1-2) to
the Arizona 7 in the final seconds. But on
third-and-goal, his pass was picked off
by Jackson.
The Cardinals (1-2) took a knee and
earned their first victory of the season,
and second in 12 games ..
Favre, 35-1 when it's . 34 degrees or
CIJlder, is 12-18 in games when !he kickoff temperature is above 70, and this one
was way, way above 70.
.
The I 02-degree temperature at kic~off
equaled the hottest game ever for the
Packers. It warmed up to 105 at the start
of the second half, and I06 at the beginning of the third quarter.
That's hot, even by Arizona standards.
The 106 at nearby Sky Harbor Airport
was a record for the date, surpassing the
105 recorded in 1949 and 1984.

In Landover, Md., Matt Bryant kicked
a 29-yard field goal 4:15 into the extra
period, putting the Giants and Redskins
m a tie for first place in the NFC East.
The Giants (2-l) led 21-3 at halftime,
but -a mistake-filled second half and bad
clock management late in the game
allowed Washington (2-1) to tie it on
John Hall's 34-yard field goal with 13
seconds left in regulation.
Kerry Collins threw three touchdown
passes, completing 24 ·of 39 passes for
276 yards. Tiki Barber ran for 126 yards,
and the defense held the Redskins without a touchdown until late in the third
quarter.
,.

PageB6

Targeted audience: Physicians, nui'$8S, pharmacists
4

and allied health professionals. · ,

Continuing education credit avoiJable for some professions - call For more information.

email:

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Dijfe1·ence

www.holzer.org

For more information or to register, call (740)446-5057.
~

I

----r--~-------------..,....___,,--

'

--

_ ________

c__

-

-

- l

--.--- ------...--

--.

�•

STATE • LOCAL

The Daily Sentinel
WednHday, Sept. 24

! Mlnottold 147"n4' I •

•ICOiumbuo ~a·n4' I

--

0

0
W. VA.

0

Inc.

..
...
0 ---~-··iff!·

Sunny Pt CIOI.Kty

ClOud\'

Showers T-stom11

Aaln

""
Snow

Auniee

Ice

Mostly sunny, pleasant
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ers. Highs in the upper 60s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Thursday night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 40s.
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs
in the lower 70s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 50s. Highs in
the lower 70s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a slight chance of showers.
Lows in the lower 50s. Highs
in the upper 60s.
Monday... Mostly
clear.
Lows in the upper 40s. Highs
in the lower 70s.

Today... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Tonight. ..Clear and cooler.
Fog developing late. Lows 45
to 50.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny.
A warmer afternoon. Highs in
the upper 70s. South winds 5
to 10 mph.
Wednesday nighL.Partly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers after midnight. Lows
in the mid 50s. Chance of rain
20 percent.
Thursday... Partly cloudy
with a slight chance of show-

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

Sept. 22, 2003

O:wJCres

9,500
9,000

9,535.41

:n-=.,

JUN

·U3

JUL

AUG

High

Low

9,641 .87

9,50!.72

8,500

SEP

R - high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14,2000

· Sept. 22, 2003

2,000

Nasdaq

1.800

.--...

wr(LS.ite

1.800
1,400

1,874.82 '

:;,-=.., ·1.63

Low

-

1.aee.ea

lllgh: 5,048.82
10,2000

Moro~

Sept. 22, 2003

1,050

St:an:md&amp;
.:Rxlns 500

1,000
1110
800

Low

High

1,036.30

R - high: 1,821.48
Moro~ 24, 2000 ,

1,018.30

AP

Local Stocks
ACI-22.05

Gannett- 77JJ(j

AEP-29.37

BBT -37.05

General E1edrlc- 31 .40
GKNLY-4.45
Hart&amp;y Davidson - 47.97
Kmar1-2620

Bll-17.05
Bob Evans- 27.67

Kroger- 18.15
Ltd. - 15.85

BorgWamer-71.13
City Hoidr&lt;J - 35.59
Champion - 4.95

NSC-19.22
Oak Hill Fi1ardal- 29.25

Akzo - 33.04
Ashland Inc. - 33.76

Charming Shops- 5.70
Col-25.93
Dul'llnl- 41 .27

BankOM-38.49
01/B-24.14
Peoples- 27.96
Pepsico - 45.30

00-21.13

PAII!l!lf -

~Mog~-.23

Rocl&lt;y Boots- 10.84

9

RD Shell- 44.88
Rod&lt;well- 27.89
Sears-45.61

SBC-23.40
AT&amp;T -22.88
.usB-24.32
Wendy's- 32.45
~rt-57.07

Worthir900 - 12J!6
Daily stock reports all! 1he
4 p.m. closing quotes of
1he pt6'o'ious day's 11ansac·
lions, provided b'J Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Galipais.

The Daily Sentinel
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Court Street, Pomeroy,, Ohio

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Ed~or:

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Reporter: B~ian Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton. Ext 13

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Subecr(ptlon Rates
By caorrler or motor route
One month ••••....•. • .'9.95
One year ......... .. .'119.40
Dally ........ . . .. .. .. .. 50"
Sanlor Cltlren ratet
One month ••••. .. .. , ..'8.85
One yeor • .•••.. . ...••'96.70
Subscribers should remil in
advance direct lo The Dally
S&amp;n1lnet No subscription b'J mall
permitted In ·areas where home
carrier service Ia available.

Mall Subecrlptlon

General Manager
C~artene

Hoeflich, Eoo. 12

lntlde Melgt County

13 Weeks . _. . .........'30.15
. .. .'60.00
52 Weeks ... _.. ......'1 18.80
26 Weeks . . . . . . .

E·11111H:
newsOmydailysonlinel.com

~

Well:
I

Tuesday, September 23, 2003

HMC cancer program approved

Ohio weather

•

PageA2

www.mydailysenlineLcom

R - Oullkte Melge County
13 Weeks ............. '50.05
26Weeks .......... . .'100.10
52 Weeks ... _....... .'200.20

GALLIPOLIS
The
Commission on Cancer of the
American College of SIIQleons
has granted approval to the
cancer program at Holzer
Medical Center.
Established
by
the
American
College
of
Surgeons in 1932, the
Approvals Program sets stan-.
dards for cancer programs
and reviews the programs to
make sure they conform to
those standards. Recognizing
that cancer is a complex
group of diseases, the program promotes consultation
among surgeons, medical
oncologists, radiation oncologists, diagnoslic radiologists,
pathologists, and other cancer
specialists. This multidisciplinary cooperation results in
improved patieni care.
Receiving care at a
Commission on Cancer
approved cancer program
ensures that a patient will
have access to:
• Quality care close to home.
• Comprehensive · care
offering a range of state-of the
art services and equipment
. • .A multi-specialty team
approach to coordinate the
best treatment options available to cancer patients.
• Information about cancer

clinical trials, education and
.
support.
• Lifelong patient follow-up
through a cancer registty that
collects data on type and stage
of cancers ;md treatment results.
• Ongoing monitoring and
improvement of care.
Approval
by
the
Commission on Cancer is
given only to those facilities
that have voluntarily committed to provide the best in
diagnosis and treatment of
'cancer and to undergo a rigorous evaluation process and
a review of its performance.
ln order to maintain
approval, facilities with
approved cancer programs
must undergo an on-site
review every three years.
As we prepare for the const(Uction of a new state-ofthe-art Cancer Center here on ·
the campus of Holzer Medical
Center, we can be very proud
of our recent accomplishments as evidenced by the
approval of the Commission
on Cancer and American
College of Surgeons of our
hospital as an approved program at the community hospi tal level," said Alice A.
Dachowski, MD. cancer committee chairperson at Holzer
Medkal Center.

The key to the success of our
cancer program has been the
interdisciplinary treatment of
our cancer patients with up-todate cancer registry and data
base quality improvement
This provides state-of-the-art
pre-treatment evaluations,
staging, treatment and followup for cancer patients in our
community. We are very proud
of the accomplishments of our
cancer program at Holzer
Medical Center, and look forward to the preparation of our
new Cancer Center that will
help with counseling, discharge planning, hospice c·are,
nutritional support, pastoral
care, patient and tamily support, as well as continued
strides in pain management
and oncology nursing guality."
The American Cancer
Society estimates that approximately 1.334.100 cases of
cancer will be diagnosed in
2003. Slightly more than
one-tifth of the country's huspital s have approved cancer
programs, and more than 80
percent of patients who are
newly diagnosed with cancer
are treated in these facilities.
The Commission
on
Cancer is composed of
Fellows of the American
College of Surgeons and

other members representing
36 national cancer-related
organizations. P{)stgraduate
courses, symposia, and programs about cancer are developed by the Commission for
.health ' care professionals
involved in cancer care.
Working with the American
Cancer Society, the Cancer
Liaison Program of the
Commission on Cancer is supported by more than I,500 voluntary Liaison Physicians who
support cancer-control initiatives and the cancer program
aclivities
locally.
The
Commission also tracks national, regional, and local cancer
care patterns and trends
through the National Cancer
Database, another joint project
with the American Cancer
Society. In addition, the
Commission sets standards for
cancer registty data collection
used by all approved cancer
progr.uns and conducts nation.a! quality management and
improvement studi!!S for specific cancer sites. Results of
these studies are used by cancer
program leadership to monitor
and improve patient care.
For more information
about cancer programs at
Holzer Medical Center,
please call (740) 446-5365.

Those not getting a card
can apply at senior centers or
libraries beginning in midNovember. Adults wilh permanent and total disabilities
also are eligible if they are 18
or older.
The program provides 13
percent off the average
wholesale price for . most
name-brand
prescription
drugs and 20 percent off
generic drugs, Taft said.
People enrolled in the program can also get customer
rebates of lO to 30 percent

off the average price on 55
preferred drugs.
About 380,000 Ohioans 60
.and older without prescription insurance will qualify
for additional sav ings if they
have incomes below 300 percent of the poverty level, or
about $30.000 for an individ·
ual and $40,000 for a couple,
Taft said.
Cardholders also can save
up to 40 percent through an
optional home delivery program, Taft said.

Ohio Briefs
Goodyear
considers
closing plant
AKRON (AP) - The
·nation's biggest maker of tires,
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.,
is considering closing an
Alabama tire plant and laying
off workers elsewhere.
A three-year contract
approved last week by
Goodyear employees gives
the company the option to cut
jobs if production and costcutting goals areil 't met But
·no number of job cuts has
been disclosed.
Goodyear lost $236.9 million, or $1.35 a share, for the
ftrSt half of the year.
Goodyear's turnaround plan
includes possibly selling some
of its non-tire businesses.
Goodyear e11;ecutives said
in a conference call for ana·
lysts Monday that the compa·
ny could cut II$ many as 15
~nt of the roughl_y 16,000
JObs at 14 plants m Ohio,
Virginia. Nonh Carolina,
Illinois, Alabama, Nebraska,
Wisconsin, New York,
Kansas, Texas and Tennessee.
The contract also allows
the company to close the
Dunlop tire facility in
Huntsville, Ala., which
employs about I ,300 people
and is Goodyear 's most
expensive plant to operate.
United Steelworkers of
America spokesman Wayne
Ranick satd it's a positive
that Goodyear agreed to
protect at least 85 percent of
its North American jobs.
Workers realize that sacrifices must be made to ensure
a stable financial future for
Goodyear, he said.

gram is expected to help
more than 2 million Ohioans
save up to 30 percent on pre. scription drugs, That number
includes about 680,000
Ohioans who have no insurance or are underinsured for
prescription drugs.
The state began mailing
new cards to eligible Ohioans
on Monday. Any Ohioan 60
or older can get a Golden
Buckeye card. Those with an
Ohio driver's license or who
are registered to vote will get
a card within eight weeks.

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

BUSINESS TRAINING

www.turnpikeflm.com
.

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

\

Buffa~o,

recently
received .
his reeertification in
fa m i I y
practice by
t
h
e
American
Pack
Board
of
Family Practice through the
year 2010. HealthCare of
Leon-Buffalo is a satellite
facility owned and operated
by Pleasant Valley Hospital.
"This achie\'entent is certainly reflective of Dr. Pack's dedi·
cation and interest. in his specialty and community," praised
Al Lawson. JD, FACHE, chief
executive officer of PVH.
Pack was reared in
Lincoln, W.Va. and after
graduating high school
enrolled in the Southern West
Virginia Community College
where he received an associate's degree in 1978 . He
obtained his bachelor of arts
degree in education from
Marshall
University,
Huntington, W.Va. (1981).
From 1981 to 1989, Pack
worked as a physics and science teacher at Van Senior High
School in Van, W.Va. His longtime desire to become a physician steered him to the West
Virginia School of Osteopathic
Medicine (W Va.SOM) in
Lewisburg, W Va. where he
graduated in 1993.
Pack completed an MD
residency at East Tennessee
Universtty (Johnson City,
Tennessee) in family medicine in 1996 and moved
home to West Virginia.
He is a member of the
American Academy
of
Family Phrsicians, American
Osteopathic
Association,
•'THENS _ O'Bleness .
Amencan
College
of
n
Osteopathic Family Practice, · Memorial Hospital will spon·
Amencan
·
Medical sor a "Healthy Cooking
Association and the Mason Health Heart" luncheon from
County Medical Society.
I 0 a.m. until l :30 p:m. on
Pack and his wife, Kathy, Wednesday at the hospital.
have two children, Katie, 12
For a $5 per-person fee,
and Matthew, 10. The family participants will enjoy lunch;
resides in a renovated farm- mformative speakers; and a
house in Leon.
special cooking demonstra- ·
tlon by Chef Yancy Roush.
At 12:30 p.m., Geetha
Conjeevaram, M.D., will present the topic "At the Heart of
Women's Good Health," followed by a cooking demonstration by Chef Yancy Roush, forGALLIIPOLIS - Natalie mer Rounds Chef at the
Gardner, RN, of Holzer Greenbrier Hotel and Sous and
Home Care, was named the Executive Chef at Harmon's at
September 2003 Employee of the Blennerhassett Clarion
the Month, according to Hotel. Panicipants at the lunLaMar Wyse, president and cheon will be able to taste samples from the cooking demonchief e11;ecutive officer.

L----=---..J

Heart Healthy
Luncheon
planned

Tu..day , Sept. 23
ATHENS - The Southern
.. ld n and
Cons Ortlum for Chi
re
the Southern Consortium for
Rural Care will meet at 10
a.m. at the offices 507
Richland Ave., Suite 107,
Athens.

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.com

Charter Communications

www.charter.com

POINT PLEASANT Curtis Pack, DO, a family
phy sician
a
i
HealthCare
of Leon-

Born in Gallipolis, Gardner
from
Gallia
graduated
_Academy High School in
1982, and Rio Grande
Community College's Holzer
School of Nursing in 1984
with her associate degree in
Nursing; She began her
e m pI o y rnent
at
.Holzer
Medical
Center in
1986 as a
registered
nurseonthe
Hospital's
Four West
Unit
In
·September
Gardner
1997, she
began work for Holzer Home
Care, where she continues to
nurse today. (!ardner is also a
certt~ed CPR mstructor.
Pnor to her employment at
HMC,
Gardner
was
employed at Hollywood
Medical
Center
in
Hollywood, Florida where
she was an oncology nurse.
Before her employment in
Florida, she was a nurse on
the Intensive Care Unit at
O'Blenness
Memorial
Hospital in Athens, Ohio.
Gardner res1des m Vmton
with her husband and two
sons, Alex, 15, a sophomore
. at . Gallia Ac~demy High
·School, and En~, 10, a fifth
grader ~ at
Rto Grande
Elementary. Gardner is the
daughter o~ Larry and Joyce
Shong of Btdwell.
As Emplo~ee of the Month,
Gardner recetved a $100 U.S.
Savmgs Bond, a reserved park·
ing space designated in ' h~r
name, a C?mphmenf!HY meal. m
the Hospttal cafetena, her ptc·
ture displayed on the Employee
of the Month wall and her name
engraved on the · 2003
Employeeofthe Month plaque.

Public. m~ttngs
'· VFW
TuPPERs PLAINs ~
~3 meeting at 7:30

NEWSPAPERS
ENTERTAINMENT

Pack 1'8Certlfled
in family practice

stration. To conclude the luncheon,
Barb
Nakanishi,
O'Bleness's registered dietician,
will /'resent the topic, 'The
ABC sofa Healthy Food Plan."
Those who wish to attend
the luncheon may register' by
calling the hospital's community relations department at
592-9300.

OU grants
workshop to be
offered regionally
ATHENS - Back by popOhto
ular
demand.
University Community and
Professional Programs is taking its "Grants and How to
Get Them" workshop on the
road this falL The first workshop is to be held lO a.m. to 4
p.m..
Sept
27,
in
Parkersburg, W Va.
There also will be workshops, Oct 18 in Cambridge,
and Nov. 15 in Athens.
"Grants and How to Get
Them" is an informative oneday workshop, ideal for those
with little or no experience in
grant writing. Participants
will explore step-by-step
proven techniques for identifying and contacting potential fund sources, developing
and submitting proposals.
and following up on re9uests.
The instructor, R1chard
Morgan, an Ohio University
alumnus, has been execuli ve
director of national and international non-profit organiza·
lions and agencies. He has
held several high-level posi·
tions in development and
fundraising and has taught at
several colleges and universities throughout Ohio.
Currently, Morgan is an
administrator with the state of
Ohio, an adjunct professor at
Ohio State University and
Capital University, and is owner
of Resource Opportunities. a
fund raising and gr.mts acquisition consulting firm.
The cost for the workshop
is $109, but residents of the
Appalachian regions of Ohio,
Ky.. Pa., and W.Va .. can
attend for $95. The cost
includes lunch, materials
(I 00-page manual), instruction and a CEU certificate.
Pre-registration is required.
"In such difficult economic
times, there are so many peo- _
pie who need grant money,
but don' t understand the
application process. We hope
to demystify that process in
this entertaining and informative workshop," said Lisa
Dael, program coordinator
for
Community
and
Professional Programs.
For more information or to
register, contact Community
and Professional Programs at
(740) 593-9925 or visit
www.ohiou.edu/noncredit/gr
ants.htm

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com
Point Pleasant Register

p.m. at the _.hall in . Tuppers
Pla~ns. SpeCial drawing.
,
Iunday, Sept. 28
. POINT PLEASANT
·
. .
.
Railroad ~1cm~, gathenng at
11 a.m . w1th dinner at 12:~0
p .m. at Krodel Park, Po1nt
Pleasant.
Tueaday, Sept. 30
POMEROY
Meigs
County Humane Society
board meeting, 6 p.m at the
senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy. At 6:30 p.m. there
will be a general meeting for
the public.

Clubs and
Organizations

www.mydailyregister.com

Tuesday, Sept. 23
RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organization will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Park building. Potluck will be
served. New members are
always welcome.
Wadneeday, Sept. 24
RACINE
Wildwood
Garden Club, 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Janet Theiss in
Racine.
Saturday, Sept. 27
CHESHIRE Salaam
Masonic Lodge 456, will have
an awards night at 6 p.m. at
the hall In Cheshire.
CHES:r'ER National
Hunting and Fishing Day
observance at the Melghs
County lkes Club grounds 9
a.m to 1:30 p.m.

Take your business into the homes of over
40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs
Counties EYERYDA Y with a listing of
your web address in our

. WEB SITE
DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

.,

·-. -

Tuesday, September 23,2003 :

Amber alert jump-starts swift . .
respons~ to child abductions·
DEAR ABBY: Time is the
pared hy law enforccmcnL
enemy when a child is abduct4. Keep a sample of yow
ed. To help in the search, com·
child's DNA, such as several
munities must mobilize
slrands of hair.
.
quickly. That is why it "s criti5. Know where your child ·s :
cal that every community
medical records arc locmcd. ·
Dear
have an AMBER Alert plan.
6. Have your demisi pre- :
Abby
Understanding how it works
pare ;..md maintain dental
may save a child's life.
charls for your .:hild.
AMBER Alert was named
IF YOUR CHILD C10ES
to honor the memory of 9MISSING:
year- old Amber Hagerman,
Missing : . I. lmmed i&lt;~te ly reporl yolll :
who was abducted and murc America's
Emergency .:hild lo your lnc·&lt;ll law :
dered in Arlington. Texas, Broadcast
Response) has become a suc- cnfon:cmenJ ugency.
seven years ago.
2. Ask the law enforce men I
Outraged following her cessful partnership between agency to cmcr your chi ld
brutal murder, the communi- law enfnrcemen l a~encies into lhc Nlllional Crime
ty was determined lo fight and radio and televisiOn sta- Information Ccnlcr (NC ICJ :
back. One day. during a local lions to' activute emergency Missing Persons File.
.
talk radio show. some listen- bulletins to the publi~ when a
3.
Limil
ucccss
lo
your
:
ers called in and suggested child · is abducted and
home until law enlilrccmcnl
that radio stations usc the believed lobe in danger.
arrives
and has the oppor1unil hope you will engage
Emergency Alert Syslem to
warn the public aboulnbduc- your readers to promote this lito mlle&lt;:ljJossible cvitlcm:c.
4. Gi vc aw cnforccmcnl
tions in the same way they worth~ program 111 their comalllhe infonna·
invesligators
do tornadoes. AI that munities. --ERNIE ALLEN ,
tion
you
have
on your child.
moment, the idea to create an PRESIDENT, NCMEC
DEAR ERNIE: Thank you · including fingcrprinls. phoearly warning system for
for
an important letter. If lographs, complclc dcscrip·
child abduchons was born,
proving that just a few peo- .ever a Dear Abby column tion and the facts and cir:
ple can make a difference in should be kept in a safe place cumstances relaled to the
where it can be immediately disappearance.
e!Tecting change.
in an emergency.
5. Call NCMEC'al 1-XIMIaccessible
In 200 I, the National Center
this
is
it.
My
readers
are
the
THE
LOST ( I-K(K)-X4J-567l\).
for Missing and Exploiled
Readers. more saldy inl(w.
Children (NCMEC) launched most ·caring. concerned -·
and
engaged
-people
in
Jhe
mation
can be oht;liucd in ·
a campaign to roll out the
world
.
.
[
am
sure
they
recogSarety for Children - ·
"Personal
AMBER Alert program across
nize
the
importance
of
the
- A Guide tor Parcms" by visit·
America. At that time, there
were only 27 such programs in AMBER Alert syslem. With ing the NCMEC Wch sile :'
the United States. Today, the thiu in mind, here is whal www.missingkids.cnm. l1 i&lt;
program has grown to 93 parents should do to better available in English or Spanish. ·
(Dt•ar Al&gt;hv is ll'rirren h\
plans, 46 of them statewide. It - safeguard their children :
I. Keep a complete descrip- Abigail Vari Burell, alsiJ ·
has also been adoplcd in parts
known as Jt•amlt' l'ltillips, wui
of Canada and England. One lion of your child on hand.
2. Update it by laking color was Jinmded hr Iter motlu•1;·
. hundred children have been
recovered since the program photographs of your child Pauline Pltillips. Writt• Dew
every six months .
· Abbv or www./JewAhl11u mn
began in 1996.
3. Keep copies of your or ·P.o. Box 69440. . Lm
Today. the AMBER pro·
child's
fingerprinls -- pre- Angt'ies. CA 91X)(j&lt;J)
gram (which stands for

COming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

.•

.,

'

.... .• 'r,.

\,

Concerts,
Shows
Saturday, Sept. 27
LONG BOTTOM- A hymn
sing will be held at 7 p.m. at
the Mt. Olive Church at Long
·
,

~

Bottom . Delivered will be
singing.

Other events
Friday, Sept. 26
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Church of Christ,
212 West Main Street, will
host a community supper
with serving from 5:30 to 7
p.m. Chili and bean or potato
soup along with sandwiches
and desserts will be served.

Birthdays
Nellie Parker will celebrate
her 90th birthday Sept 27 at
a party to be held from 1 to 3
p.m. in the old Tuppers Plains
school building gym . It is
requested that gifts be omitted . Cards are welcome .
Those unable to attend are
invited to mail cards to her at
40642
Keebaugh·Follrod
Road , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

HELP WANTED
.SERVICE TECHNICIAN
GM Experience a Plus
But Other Qualified Applicants
Will Be Considered.
Call Roger Jessie

740-992-6614 or
.. 1-800-837-1094
-·

PageA:J.

Community calendar

Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

1--- -----

.

Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

CHURCHES

Local folks

Gardner named
employee of the
month

www.holzer.org

ALJTOMOTIVE

Prescription
discount plan
will be a
welcome
addition
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
prescription drug discoun t
plan reached by drug makers and a coalition representing consumers will be a
welcome addition once the
Legislature makes the
changes to Ohio law
required to put the plan in
place, Gov. Bob Taft Eays.
Meanwhile, people 60 and
over should start saving
money now under the Jongawaited Golden Buckeye
card-based program Taft
al),nounced on Monday.
"We're still waiting for
the details. The bill is still
beirig drafted. That program
is still a long way from
implementation , although
we will work closely with
everybody involved," Taft
said of the coalition-drug
maker plan. "There are still
some bridges to be crossed."
The Golden Buckeye pro·

Holzer Medical Center

www.Jimsfarmequipmeritcom

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel ·

I

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•

-

--'

--- --- ..

•

·- -,----

- ·--..--

~

INSTANT SAVINGS COUPONS MEANS MORE MONEY IN YOUR POCKET!

UALITY FURNITURE PLU

�OPINION
Septe!:!~~
:!!:
.
------~~----------------------------------------------------~~--------.
The Daily Sentiriel

Tuesday,

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Oh lo

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

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, September 23, the 266th day of 2003. There

are 99 days left in the year. Autumn arrives at 6:47 a.m. EDT.

Today's Highlight in History: On September 23, 1952,
Republican vice-presidential candidate Richard M. Nixon went
on television to deliver what carne to be known as.the "Checkers"
speech as he refuted allegations of improper campaign financing.
On this date: In 1642, Harvard College in Cambridge, Mass.,
held its first commencement.
.
In 1780, British spy John Andre was capture~ along with
papers revealing Benedict Arnold's plot to surrender West Point
to the British.
In 1806, the Lewis and Clark expedition returned to St: Louis ·
from the Pacific Northwest.
In 1846, the planet Neptune was discovered by German
astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle.
In 1939, Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, died
in London.
In 1953, the 20th-Century Fox production "The Robe," the first
movie filmed in the CinemaScope widescreen process, had· its
Hollywood premiere, a week after opening in New York.
In 1957, nine black students who had entered Little Rock
Central High School in Arkansas were forced to withdraw
because of a white mob outside.
In 1973, former Argentine president Juan Peron was returned
to power.
In 1999, the Mars Climate Observer apparently burned up as it
was about to go into orbit around the Red Planet.
Ten years ago: Sydney, Australia, was selected to host the 2000
Summer Olympics, beating out Beijing. The Israeli parliament
ratified the Israel PLO accord. The South Atiican parliament
voted to allow blacks a role in governing.
Five years ago: The U.N. Security Council demanded a ceasefire in Kosovo, and threatened further action if fighting continued. Sammy Sosa hit his 64th and 65th home runs, tying Mark
McGwire for the single-season record. Federal regulators
approved the merger of Citicorp and Travelers Group. Actress
Mary Frann, who played Bob Newhart's wife on television's
"Newhart," died in Beverly Hills, Calif., at age 55.
One year ago: A defiant Yasser Arafat dug in at his besieged
West Bank compound, rejecting Israel's demand to hand over the
names of all those holed up inside. A 24-count indictment charging conspiracy, securities fraud and wire fraud was filed against
the founding family and two executives of bankrupt cable company Adelphia Communications Corporation. Governor Gray
Davis signed a law making California the ftrst state to offer workers paid family leave.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Mickey Rooney is 83. Singer Ray
Charles is 73. Singer Julio Iglesias is 60. Actor Paul Petersen
('The Donna Reed Show") is 58. Actress-singer Mary Kay Place
is 56. Rock star Bruce Springsteen is 54. Actor Jason Alexander
is 44. Singer Lita Ford is 44. Actor Chi McBride ("Boston
Public") is 42. Actress Elizabeth Pena is 42. Country musician
Don Herron (BR549) is 41. Actor Erik Todd Dellums is 39.
Singer Ani DiFranco is 33. Rock singer Sarah Bettens (K's
Choice) is 31. Recording executive Jermaine Dupri is· 31. Pop
singer Erik-Michael Estrada ("Making the Band") is 24.
Thought for Today: "Education is hanging around until you've
caught on."- Robert Frost, American poet (1874-1963).

Deans Mideast gaffis help Bush among US. jews .

Democratic
frontrunner
Howard Dean is furiously
revising and extending his
remarks on the Middle East,
but they have hurt his party and
helped President Bush among
Morton
Jewish voters. ·
Kondracke
·. Commenting on last week's
Democratic
debate
in
Baltimore, one well-placed
Jewish activist said, "If the
only Jew in the race is the one
who has to take Dean on, come out strongly."
Dean has responded to critithere's a problem for the
party.''
cism both by accusing his foes
He was referring to the fact of being "petty" and of trying
that Sen. Joe Lieberman, D- to "divide by fear" - and also
Conn.,
was
the
lone by moving to revise his
Democratic candidate to criti- remarks in a more Israelcize the former Vermont gover- friend! y way.
Even so. a number of intluennor during the debate for saying at a campaign·event that the tial Jewish tigures estimated that
United States "shouldn't Bush presently stands to more
choose sides" and should be than double his 2000 perfor"even-handed" between Israel mance - 19 percent -among
Jewish voters and said Dean will
and the Arabs.
Dean also said Israel would be carefully watched to see if his
have to get out of "an enor- revisions are sincere.
mous number of senlements"
They also confirmed that
without making any pamllel Lieberman is having trouble
demands on the Palestinians solidifying what he hoped
and also referred to Hama' ter- would be his political and
financial base because many
rorists as "soldiers."
Jack Rosen, president of the Jews - especially older and
American Jewish Congress richer ones - say that ''this is
and a Democrat who now sup- not the time to elect a Jewish
port.' Bush, told me "we would president."
Dean and his supporters
have expected a more vigorous
and spontaneous response attribute his comments to the
from the other Democrats. The former Vermont governor's
silence of the Democratic lead- unfamiliarity with Middle East
"code words." To Mideast
ership is.very troubling."
Rosen acknowledged that experts, for instance, being
Dean was reprimanded in "even-handed" is code for
statements by 34 House "putting pressure on Israel to
Democrats, includin!l Minority make concessions."
Leader Nancy Pelost, D-Calif.,
In· a letter to the 34 House
and by two Dean rivals, Sen. Members, Dean said the
John Kerry, D-Mass., and Rep. United States should be "a fair
Richard Gephardt, D-Mo.
and honest broker." He told
But Rosen asked, "Where The Washington Post that
were the other Democratic Israel had every right to assasleaders? Where was Hillary sinate Harnas "terrorists" as
Clinton? Where was Tom uenemies in a war."
In his letter to- House
Daschle? You'd ell:pect them to

Members, he also .said that in a
peace agreement, "Israel will
have to remove a number of
settlements," dropping the
word "enormous." He also said
that he called on "the
Palestinian. leadership to
renounce violence and dtsman•
tie the terrorist infmstructure
that exists
inside
the
Palestinian Authority."
Dean supporters .pointed out
that Dean's wife, Judith
Steinberg Dean, is Jewish and
that his children have been
raised as Jews. His campaign
co-chairman, Steve Grossman,
a former president of the
Americ:m Israel Public Affairs
Committee, told me, "I have
not a shadow of a doubt about
Howard's committnent to the
U.S.-lsrael relationship as a
bedrock value."
Still, some skeptics pointed
out that Dean still has not
declared Palestinian President
Yasser Ardfat as an unfit pilflner for negotiations. And Dean
has recommended that•former
Presidents Jimmy Carter and
Bill Clinton be appointed special Mideast negotiators. Carter
is regarded by pro-Israel
activists as "even·handed" or
even pro-Palestinian.
Even before the Dean controversies, Bush's support for
Israel and refusal to deal with
Arafat has garnered him
increased support among Jews.
Rosen said: "Next to Harry
Tluman, he is the most pro-lsmel
president ever." Man Zuckennan,
former chairman of the
Conti:rencc of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Orgunizations,
predicted to me that "Bush will
cany at least 40 petrent of the
Jewish vote in 2004."
If that happens. Bush could
surpass the post-World War 11
record for the GOP, 40 percent
by Dwight Eisenhower in
1956. Ronald Reagan scored

39 percent. Bush 's father
polled 35 percent in 1988, then
dropped to II percent when he ·
was perceived ·as too "even- ~
handed."
As proof of Bush's popularity and support for lsmel by
GOP
House
l~aders •.
Republican Congressional candidates received 35 percent
the Jewish vote in 2002, a··
modem record, according to·
the Voter News Service.
Jews repre~nt just 3 percent
of the U.S. population, but they
are clustered in key swing_
states such as Florida,
Pennsylvania and Ohio. GOP .
activists think a swing to Bush
could even make New York ·
competitive in 2004.
Bush's popularity is one factor cutting into Lieberman's
expected support, which is lagging far behind the over-·
whelming response given by ·
Roman Catholics to John F. ·.
Kennedy in 1960 and by
Greeli-Arnericans to Michael ·
Dukakis in 1988.
One major Lieberman ·
fundraiser told me that he was ..
able to raise 30 percent to 40"
percent less among Jews than :.
he and the candidate exr.ected.
Older potential contnbutors
were telling him, he said, "we
don't need to be visible right .
now" because of rising anti- ·
Semitism in Europe and on ·
U.S. college campuses.
Also. he said, "There's a·.
worry about having a Jewi,sh
president at a time when the
United States is seen to be at
war with Islam. And, there's a;
worry whether Lieberman, as a
Jew, would be able to do what
needs to be done to tight for.
Israel. "Besides,' ' he said ,~
"George Bush, a Protestant, is
already doing it."
(Morton Kondmcke is e.xec- .
wive editor of Roll Call. rile ·
newspaper of Capito/ Hill.)

or

gAHlfR.

@rHE CINCINNATI P'OST&lt;l003

YEP...

THEY'RE
RIGHT lN
FRONT
OF ME.

Martha Childs
MIDDLEPORT - Martha
J, Childs, 98, Middlepon,
passed away on Monday,
Sept. 22, 2003, at Overbrook
Center in Middleport.
She was born Oct. 19, 1904,
in Bradbury, daughter of the
late Fred W. and Minnie
Horden Gilmore. She was a
lifelong resident of Middleport
and was formerly employed a~
a clerk for the former Roush
Shoe Store and Bahr
Clothiers. She was a homemaker. She was a lifelong
member of the Middleport
Church of Christ and was a
Sunday school teacher for 70
years. She. was active in all
~outh activities and turned the
••.rst shovel of dirt for the new
Family Life Center. She was
active in the PTA, Band
· Boosters, and many other
school organizations. She was
a member of the Modern
Woodmen of America and
Pythian Sisters Lodge.
Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
husband, George W. Childs;
her daughter, Nelle Childs
Bahr in !996; her son-in-law,
Cash A. Bahr, in 1998; three
br:Jthers: John, Milton and
Althur Gilmore: and four sisters: Leona Ebersbach, Mary
Qurst, Esther · Burns, and
Helen Gilmore.
Sur-viving are her son and
daughter-in-law, Bill and
han Childs of Middleport;

Revival coming
CARPENTER - Revival
services will be held
Thursday through Saturday at
the
Carpenter
Baptist
Church.
David Rahmut, missionary
from Trinidad, will be the
s~eaker. Singing Thursday
m~ht will be Proclaim,
Fnday night, the Gloryland
Believers, and Saturday Ray
and Deloris Cundiff. The
pt•:..tic is invited to' attend.

Luncheons to
be served

•

two daughters and sons-inlaw, Dorothy and Ralph
Gibbs, Jr., New Haven,
W.Va., and Janis and Joe
Falkner, Fairhope, Ala.; nine
grandchildren:
Christine
(Charles) Williams and
Candace (George) Pope of
Gallipolis, Sheila (Tom)
Harris, Mick (Twila) Childs,
and
Gloria
(Larry)
Compston, all of Middleport,
Gregg (Robin) Gibbs of New
Haven, Tim (Marcy) Falkner
and Jill (Donnie) Smith, both
of Birmingham, Ala ., and
Dan (Joellen) Falkner of
Robertsdale, Ala.; 26 great
grandchildren and six step
·great grandchildren; seven
great-great grandchildren;
and 12 step great-great
grandchildren.
Services will be held at I I
a.m. on Thursday, Sept. 25.
2003 at Fisher Funeral Home
in Middleport with AI
Hartson officiating and burial
to follow at Riverview
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6 to
9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home.
Memorial · contributions
may be made to the Citizens
Committee,
Village
of
Middleport
for
School
Development, Attn: Jeannette
Thomas, 237 Race St. ,
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Friends may register online
and send condolences to
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Local Briefs

REEDSVILLE The
Forked Run Sportsman Club
will hold a gun shoot at I
p.m. on Saturday at the club
house for RIM fire and rifles
only. Adults and kids are
invtted. Cash prizes will be
awarded.

Thursday.
The parade will follow the
opening ceremony to be conducted by Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, at 6
p.m. Fire department from
Meigs and nearby Ohio and
West Vir~inia stations have
been invtted, said Howard
Mullen, par ade chairman.
This 'will be the third annual
fire truck parade.

Benefit auction
being planned
RACINE -The Methodist
Men are planning an auction
to be held at I0 a.m. on Oct.
4 on the Larry Circle farm
located on Carmel Road at
Racine to raise funds for
needy children of Meigs
County.
Consignment and donations are needed for the auction with about anything
being accepted including
anti~ues, tools, appliances,
furmture, and farm equipment.
For . information contact
Larry Circle 949-2021: Dick
Sterrett, 949-0032; Tom
Theiss, 949-2072, or Dale
Hart, 949-2656.

POMEROY Trinity
Church will be serving luncheons during the Sternwheel
Riverfest on Thursday,
Friday and Saturday from II
a.m. until 2 p.m. Homemade
chicken and noodles, bean
soup and com muffin, several
kinds of sandwiches and a
selection of sides and homemade desserts are on the
POMEROY - Lineup for
menu.
. the Saturday ~arade at the
Sternwheel Rtverfest is 9
a.m. at the Meigs football
field. The parade directed by
Toney Dingess will move out
at 10 a.m.
POMEROY - Fire units
Children are invited to parwanting to take part in the ticipate witlr their decorated
annual Sternwheel Riverfest bicycles. The bicycle decoparade are asked to be at the rating contest will take place
tennis court area on East immediately following the
Main Street by 6 p.m. on parade.

Parade set for
Saturday

DO EMPLOYEES

GET nttiR OWN
GUN lOCKERs?

A club for whites?

STAHLER
0 2003 by NEA. Inc.

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 exprf!ssed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

It's a wonder that no one
has thought of it before.
Though it's likely that others
have and were either talked
out of it or simply ordered to
forget
it.
But
Lisa
McClelland, 15 and a student at Freedom High
School in Oakley, Calif. ,
launched the idea, which has
attracted
the
national
media's attention. Now the
fat is in the fire, and where it
will all end (in the words of
a famous parody of Time
magazine) knows God.
Lisa's idea was to start a
Caucasian Club at her high
school. After all, the ·school
already boasts a J3lack
Student Union, a Latinos
Unidos, and an ALOHA
Club (for Asian Americans) .
Lisa, who is white, felt that a
club for whit~s was needed
· to round out. the symmetry
of the situation. Some 20
other students, mostly
friends of hers and not all
white, have already signed
up . And Lisa, who heard that
previous attempts to start
such a club had been vetoed
by the principal, took the
precautiQn of collecti ng
some 300 names of students
and adults (again, not all
white) on a petition requesting his permission.
As Li sa sees it, the club

William
Rusher

wo'Uld be a pl ace where
members could gather to
discuss "racial dynamics,"
and how one person's whit~­
ness may affect others who
aren' t white. Racial injustices and, prejudices, she told
a reporter for the San
Francisco
Chronicle ,
"belong in the past." And
her membership in the
school 's
Gay-Straight
Alliance would appear to
testify to her own basic
open-mindedness.
Nevertheless, the idea of a
Caucasian Club has run into
stiff opposition. Again, not
black student s at
all
Freedom are again st it.
Larischa Dorton, 16 and a
member of the Black
Student Union , for example,
feels that if there's a black
club, there should be a white
club. But the local chapter
of the National Association
for the Advancement of
Colored People says that it

is "vehemently opposed" to might address prec isely such '
the name of the club. "It' s . questions, and come up with
not culturally sensitive to an answer or two. Surely ,
the community we are whites are not utterly devoid ·
addre ~s ing, " sai d Darnell of accompli shments to be·
Turner, vice presideot of the proud of. If America is truly ·
chapter. "The club, in name, a multicultural society, then
see ms like a backdoor whites have as much reason
approach to separation. to celebrate their contribuFrom a historical perspec- tions to it as any other social:
'
tive, thi s will bring up group.
fears."
I don't know
how
In response, supporters of Principal Eric Valto, who'
the proposed club have sug- will have the fin al say, will
gested other names: the rule on Lisa's petition. But I
White Heritage Club, the suspect we have not heard;
Euro-American . Students the last of her inspirati on . In
Union , and so on . But these 'high schools and colleges all
might strike the club 's oppo· over the country, her exam-.
nents as even more alarming pie will encourage others, .
and "divisive."
and opponents of the idea ,
In truth, it's hard to see will be hard put to explain
what logical objection there why white students, uniquecan be to a club for white ly. must be denied the right.
students. . especially jf · to organize in beni gn groups.
blacks, Latinos and Asians to discuss important social
all have their own clubs. All issues.
three of the latter are minoriIt shouiJ be emphasized,
ties, to be sure, but in again, that students of all .
California whites them- racial and ethnic back-.
selves became a minority in grounds will be welcome to
the 2000 census, to the join Lisa's Caucasian Club .:
accompaniment of consider- Its membership won't be
able fanfare .
confined to whites ; only it s
"What is white culture? subject-matter. .
What are we proud of?"
(William Rusher is a
asked Clint Simons, 17 and Distinguished Fellow of rhe:
white, who opposes the idea Claremom lnsiirure for rhe.
of a Caucasian Club. But Srudy of Sraresmansltip and·
presumably such a club, Political Pltilosoplty.)

f.,

·- - - ~-

Obituaries

Shoot planned

Moderately Confused

•

Tuesday, September 23. ~003

~-- --.,-------------------------------............ ...,..,.,. ._'1"

,

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

. r; .

. , '

'

, •..

I

.' ' . .

..

Sternwheel Fire
truck parade

Police shoot, wound
student who brought
gun to school
SPOKANE. Wash. (APi Police shot and critically wounded a 17-year-old boy who
brought a gun to school and fired
a bullet into a wall Monday.
The teen .w,as hospitalized with
life-threatening wounds, police
said No one else was hurt.
Police said they were trying
to establish a · motive for the
incident, which took place in a
thi,rd-floor science classroom at
Lewis and Clark High School.
"He was angry at everything. He was making threats
about everything," said
Police Chief Roger Bragdon.
Police negotiated with the
boy for about an hour and a
half, then "at some point he just
decided he was not going to
talk anymore and got aggressive," Bragdon said. llte boy
. '

pulled out the gun and officers
shot him, the chief said.
Earlier, about 2,000 students and staff were evacuated from the school after the
boy entered the classroom
' and fired a shot from the
9mm semiautomatic into a
wall, Bragdon said.
The boy ordered the teacher
and at least three students to
leave and sprayed the room
full of retardant from fire
·extinguishers, Bragdon said.
Students 'were taken by bus to
the Spokane Arena, where their
parents were told to pick them up.
Sch6ols in Spokane do not
have metal detectors, school
Superintendent Brian Benzel
said. There are no plans to
change 'that policy. School
was to resume Tuesday.

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Researchers study drought as a
way to predid West Nile virus
NEW ORLEANS (AP) The worst outbreaks of West
Nile virus seem to follow
summer droughts preceded
by mild winters, a pattern
researchers are studying as a
j:&gt;ossible way to predict
where the virus might hit
hardest.
"Drought is where this is
focused ," says Pa,ul R.
Epstein of the Center lor
Health and the Global
Env ironmen t at Harvard
Medical School.
Though Epstein sounds
convinced, other researchers
say more work is needed.
"I suspect that it is going to
be more complicated than
just saying that West Nile
virus transmi ssion will
increase or decrease based
on periods of rainfall," said
Dr. Ned Hayes, an epidemiologist at the Centers for
Di sease
Control
and
Prevention.
Epstein, one of several
researchers studying factors
in the spread of West Nile for
a seven-year government
study, points to these historical patterns:
The initial U.S. outbreak
in New York in 1999 followed a three-month drought
and three-week heat wave .
Last year's devastating
spread followed a year of
wi,!le spread warm winters
and spring or summer
droushts.
Tht s year the di sease has
spread throughout the West
with Colorado reporting

more West Nile virus cases
than any other state.
"There was no snowpack
in the Rockies because of the
warm winter," Epstein said
recently at a conference here.
And, over the summer and
fall . "the disease raced
across 44 states and
Washington. D.C., five
Canadian pro~inces, and we
staned seeing outbreaks in
the Caribbean and Centritl
America and in Mexico."
Colorado, Nebraska and
other states with the worst
outbreak s all have had
droughts.
Outbreaks on the other
side of the world in the
1990s - in Israel, Romania,
and Russia - also were
associated with drought,
according to Epstein .
The Harv ard researcher
may be right, hut he hasn' t
proven it, said Dr. Bob
Shope, a Texas profe ssor
who echoed the CDC official's caution . There has
been no controlled study and
more data is needed, said
Shope who teaches at the
University of Texas Medical
Branch in Galveston .
Still, Epstein explains how
drought could intensify an
outbreak, espec ially in urban
areas.
Standing water collects in
drains and catch basins, stagnating and attracting the
female house mosquito for
egg-laying. Ponds and creeks
dry up, reducing the numbers
of frogs , dragonflies and

Moussaoui seeks
access to testimony of
key bin Laden operative
A.LEXANDRIA, Va. (AP)
- Zacarias Moussaoui. the
on!~ person indicted in the
Umted States as a Sept. II
conspirator, wants access to
statements by Hambali, one
of Osarna btn Laden's key
Asian operatives.
Moussaoui contended in a
motion filed last month and released Monday that Hambali, now a prisoner, could rebut key prosecution testimony.
Moussaoui said in a hand- '
written motion that Hambali's
"knowled$e of Zacarias
Moussaout Malaysian activity
wiU destroy" testimony that
Moussaoui dreamed of flying
a plane into the White House.
U.S. District Judge Leonie
Brinkema previously granted
Moussaoui the ri~t to ~:~uestion
tl)ree key al-Qatda pnsoners,
but the government has defted
her order and is awaiting imposition of penalties that could
include dismissal of the case.
The witness access issue,
however, will be fought out
in a higher court - possibly
the Supreme Court.
Hambali, 39, whose real
name is Riduan lsamuddin,
was southeast Asia's most
wanted man until he was
arrested Aus. II in Thailand
by Thai pohce and the CIA.

U.S. authorities then flew
him to an undisclosed location. He was the operations
chief of Jemaah Islamiyah, a
terror group operating in
southeast Asia.
Defense pap:rs ft.led earlier
in Moussaoui s case disclosed
that a member of the Asian
organization,. Faiz Bafana, testified that Moussaoui - during a visit to Malaysia in 2000
- "talked freely ... about a
dream he had to fly an airplane into the White House."
The defense papers also
said Bafana did not believe
Moussaoui was serious
when describin,g the dream.
The Assoctated Press
reported Sunday that Khalid
Shaikh Mohammed, mastermind of the Sept. II attacks,
has told American interrogators that ' the original plan
called for hijacking five
commercial jets on each
U.S. ~oast before it was
modified several times.
Mohammed also divulged
that, in its final stages, the
hij acking plan called for as
many as 22 terrorists and
four planes in a first wave.
followed by a second wave
.o f suicide hijackings that
were to be aided possi bly by
ai -Qaida allies in southeast
Asia.

Southern

Weaver and James Yerian.
• The board approved the
following. substitute classified list tor the 2003-2004
school year pending completion of all requirements
for the position: Karen
Mullins (aide) and Barb
L!ine (custodian).
• The board accepted the·
resignation of Tim Thoren
as technology coordinator.
Thoren will still be
employed in the multiple
other jobs he does for the
district.
• The board voted to
employ two Carleton School
aides, Deborah Allen and
Linda Boggs, on an as needed basis at $7 an hour without benefits.

from Page A1
tary school. Legal steps inay
be taken in the future to
remedy the situation with
the contractor. Grueser will
be working with the Ohio
Facilities Commission for a
possible financial remedy,
• The board approved the
following substitute teacher
list for the 2003-2004 school
year pending completion of all
the requirements tor the position: Emily Bain, Lee Ann
Baker, Ann Gillillian Hanson,
Erin Hemmelgarn , Stacey
Howell, Tiffany Laipply,
Jennifer Marcum, Paul Meiss,
Deborah Spencer, Troy

Project
from PageA1
tee and the touri sm project,
and Thornton said the committee is made up of a
diverse group of people representing a cross section of
the county.

other predators.
Remaining sources of
clean water become a gathering spot for birds making
them an easier target for the
insects. 'While house mosquitoes prefer birds to people, later in the summer, the
spedes that find people just
as tasty as birds become
more pervasive.
"So the sequence of earl y
drought all ows it to reall y
get spread among the bird
population s, and a little bit of
rain in . the summer can
spread it lo humans," Epstein
said.
But Hayes .. of the CDC ·
said. "Many complicated
interactions come into play
that are often difficult to predict."
He noted thut although the
mosquito thought most likely to be spreading the virus
out West is in the same
Culex genus as the house
mosquitoes in the South and
East, its breeding pattern is
different.
Epstein's research was
sparked by similar patterns
with St. Louis encephalitis. a
close ly relat ed bug . That
encephalitis strain fir st
showed up in thi s country in
1933, .three years into the
Dust Bowl drought that started in the East and moved
west.
At the CDC in the 1970s,
Dr. Thomas Monath com pared St. Louis encephalitis
and weather. Ten of the first
12 bi g urban outbreaks, he

Field
from Page A1
The revtsmns were recommended to council by the
Middleport
Planning
C9mmission, in hopes they
can ultimately bring about
the replacement o! older
mobile homes - many of
which are located in areas
not zoned for such homes with permanent home structures . Such replacement
would increase income from
property
tall:es,
while
mcreasing property values of
those properties surrounding
mobile home sites, the planning commission maintains.
The ordinance spells out
minimum manufactured home
lot sizes, requirements for
tongue removal, front porch
dimensions and specifications,
and underpinning requirements, and states that any
mobile home must be re-occupied within 30 days after it is
vacated.
Council approved an ordinance removin~ a $1 per
hour wage differential tor
employees not enrolled in
the village insurance plan .
"We
believe
every
employee should take the
insurance because it 's provided to them by the vil lage," Clerk Susie French
said last night.
Three employees now opt

McDaniel
from Page A1
the Stemwheel Rivcrfest in
Pomeroy's
amphitheater.
Those attending the festivl~ can
hear him tium 8 to 9:30p.m.
Entertainment will continue Friday with Paul
Doeffinger at 7 p.m.; Phi I
and the Thrill at 8:30 p.m.
and Blitzkrieg Unplugged
at 9:45.
Saturd ay's performers
will be Middleport's "King
of the Ca lliope" Myron
Duftield performing every
hour on the hour from noon
to 4 p.m. ; Elvis imperson ator Dwight Icenhower at

found , came after two-month
droughts: an II th occurred
after one month of drought.
The fact that the mosquitoes that spread St. Louis
encephalitis· also are thought
to spread West Nile strengthens the argument, but three
or four years is probably just
not enough time to make any
absolute
conclusions,
Monath said. "With St. Louis
encephaliti s, we were able to
look back about 40 years
over a serie s of multiple outbreaks."
Going afte.r larvae as much
as possible is a good idea in
areas prone to either virus,
he said. " It 's much easier to
control or prevent the disease by early meas ures than
it is to try to prevent an outbreak once the virus is
cranked up."
"When we· ve got a little
more data in , we'll be able to
say whether that hypothesis
is supported by the data or
not," said Marm Kilpatrick,
a research scientist at the
Consortium
for
Conservation
Medicine,
which is coordinating the
seven-year study.
Cornell University scientists are doing similar
research, aimed at creating a .
Web-based ·calculator to
advise public health officials
on when conditions are
friendly to mosquitoes.
The weather link is "a very
promi sing idea," Kilpatrick
said.
out of the insurance program, and receive an additional $1 per hour instead.
They will not be affected by
the new regulation.
French said last night the
state does not consider the
$1 eligible for Public
Employee
Retirement
System consideration, so
does not count · toward an
·employee's retirement benetit.
Council approved a $10 to
$20 charge to village residents for chipping services
offered through the street
department. The cost is
meant to help defray the
cost of the chipper purchased this summer.
lannarelli said pine neeictles, vines, dirt, and grass
cannot be processed through
the chipper.
·
lannarelli also asked residents who place yard sale
signs and other notices on
telephone poles to remove
them immediately. The village has a sign ordinance
which requires a $25
deposit, and American
Electric Power, which owns
the poles, prohibits posting
any signs on their poles.
Council also set Trick or
Treat for 6 to 7 p.m. on Oct.
30.
Present were Council
Stephen
members
Houchin s, Linda Haley,
Roger Manley, Roben
Pooler, Robert Robinson
and Kathy Scott
3:30 p.m .; the Rock 'n
Country Cloggers at 7:30
p.m.; Joey Wilcoxen at 5:45,
and the Robbie Ducey Band
at 9:15p.m.

SHOWN ON
SAT &amp; SUN ONLY

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON·FRI &amp;
12:30 PM SAT - SUN

"This is a mixture of people from throughout the
county, and many of them .
are people who have not '
been previously involved in
projects like thi s," Thornton
said. "Not only will we be
able to complete a good project, but hopefully we can
involve some new people in
efforts to improve the community."

•.

�..
.

BY·THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Time Out for Tips ·

Dates on foods can be confusing
Dates on foods can be very
confusing - "sell by," "use
by." "expiration date" - what
do they mean? Are they the
same? Are they different?
To make things even more
complicated, there are very
few federal guidelines that.
regulate these different dates.
Generally, though, if you
·· see "sell by" or "pull" dates on
food, this is when the grocer
should remove the product
from the shelf. Most perishable products will last five to
seven days after that date if
they are refrigerated at 40
degrees Fahrenheit. They will
keep even longer if the temperature is colder than that.
So if your family drinks a
gallon of milk in less than a
week, you don't really need
to worry about the "sell by"
date. However, if the milk is
kept at temperatures above
40 degrees, its lifetime will
be decreased.
"Use by" and "expiration"
dates are a different matter.
Both mean that the product
s hould be used by that time.
But the question is, "Why?" It
may mean that the quality will
not be as good as it would
have been, if it had been used
by that date. For · instance,
yeast and baking powder may
lose some of their rising capa-

though the date may be a year
or two away. the food will
probably still be good after
that date. Make sure the cans
are stored in a cool, dry
place. If they become dented
Becky
or rusty, microorganisms
have a greater ch&amp;nce of
Baer
invading the food ·and causing spoila~e.
Low-actd canned foods,
such as meat, vegetables, and
bility. or pectin may not thick- stews, can be stored up to
five years. High-acid foods
en jellies as well.
But the expiration date may like tomato-based products,
also be on there to warn about juices, pickles, and sauerpotential food spoilage. Dairy kraut, should be" used within
foods such as sour cream, . eighteen months.
Most canned goods have a
yogurt, or cream cheese might
code
stamped on them. This
show signs of mold after that
allows
manufacturers to idendate. Since there are no governmental standards for these tenns, tify where the product was
food safety specialists say, processed. If you find a can
of pears that have been in the
"When in doubt, throw it out 1"
Eggs may contain a "pac~­ back of your pantry for an
ing date" on their cartons. unknown length of time, conThey should be used within tact the manufacturer. The
three to five weeks of that name and address of the comdate. Some ~artons will have pany will be on the label.
expiration dates, though ~ The processing date can be
which are less than thirty determined from the stamped
days of the packing date. In code. This number also is
either case, eggs should be extremely helpful in the
stored in their cartons large event of a product recall.
(Becky Baer is the Meigs
end up in the refrigerator to
County
Extension Agent.
help prevent food poisoning.
and
Consumer
Canned goods may .have a Family
date stamped on them. Even Sciences/Community
Development)

Local folks
Pullins fourth
birthday
POMEROY Chelsey
Pullins celebrated her
fourth
birthday
with
a
Barbie
party
on
August 23.
Attending
the party
was
her
parents
Pullins
were Angie'
and Kevin Pullins and sister
Emily; her grandparentsDanny and Judy McDonald
and Linda and Bill Pullins,
Tiffany McDonald, Mindy
Morris, Jason and Crystal
Hall, Shirley and Tommy
Simmons, Danny, Tracy,
Gracie, Colton and Kenzie
Hall, Dee and Trista
Simmons, Paul Hall, Melanie
Dudding, Tracy, Amber and
Dylan Davidson, Alice
Cremeans
and
Jerry
Lightfoot.
Also sending gifts were
Danny McDonald Jr., T.T.,
Thomas and Tyler Simmons,
Carl Hall, Lee Morris, Kathy
and Amanda Jeffers, Charlie
and Jerri Ball, Mary Bowen,
John and Barbara Weeks,
Ruby Frick, Lori and Ernie
Miller and Randy, Carolyn,
Rachel
and
Michael
Kesterson.

Racine and the late Robert D.
Ashley. She is currently serving as the state president of
the Ohio Department Ladies
of the Grand Army of the
Republic and the president of
Maj . Daniel McCook Circle
No. 104 Ladies of the Grand
Army of the Republic of
Middleport.
Her other Civil War activities have included serving as ·
state color bearer for the
Ohio Department Daughters
of Union Veterans of the
Civil War and the Ohio
Department Auxiliary to the
Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War.
Her' membership .in these '
Civil War hereditary organization is based on her ances-.
tors, Pvt. Levi Deeter of. the
187th
Ohio
Volunteer
Infantry and Cpl. William
A~hley of the 36th Ohio
Volunteer Infantry. She also
has a previously issued 4year Civil War scholarship
form the United Daughters of
the Confederacy on her paternal ancestor Pvt. William
Zoll Wickline of the 108th
Virgin ia Infantry and her
Pvt.
material ancestor.
Benjamin F. Inglis of the 4th
Tennessee Infantry.
She is attending Shawnee
State University where she is
majoring in medical diagnostic technology.

Ashleys attend
Lancaster Civil
Ashley awarded War -celebration
scholarships
POMEROY - · Keith and
.

Emma
Ashley
of
POMEROY - Whitney Rocksprings attended the
Ashley of Rocksprings was recent festivities in Lancaster
honored at Ft. Thomas, Ky. h
· c· 'I w
1
recently by both the Sons of onormg tvt
ar genera '
Union Veterans of the Civil William Tecumseh Sherman.
The event was held at
War and the Auxiliary to the Sherman Rouse in downtown
Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil Wai.
Lancaster. The house is the
Com rna nder- in-Chief boyhood home of the general
Robert Grim of the Sons of and is restored and operated
Union Veterans of the Civil by the Fairfield Heritage
Association.
War presented her with one
The Ashleys were the
of two $1000 scholarships guests of Mrs. Frederick
given annually by that orga- Cauldwell of Grafton, Mass.
nization. A recipient must at the event. Mrs. Cauldwell's
have a Union ancestor in the
husband, the late Frederick
Cl. vt'l war as well
5 eadem
,
a
a
ic credentials. II is the first Sherman Cldll
au we ' was the
time a current department great-great-grandson of Gen.
president of one of the five Sherman and the owner of
Allied Orders to the Sons of many prized possessions of
. "
the general.
Umon
veterans was given the
Keith was instrumental in
scholarship.
Cynthia Brown, national locating the general's family
president of the Auxiliary to . several years ago and in placthe Sons of Union Veterans ing Sherman House in contact with the actual Sherman
of the Civil War also awarded family descendants after
that organization's only
national scholarship to many years of havinl! no
Ashley. This is only the sec- knowledge of their locations.
ond lime in history that the
Mr. Cauldwell was recruitsame person re~eived both of ed by Ashley, a merriber of
Sons of Umon Veterans of
these scholarships. Her sister, the Civil War, until transfer. Rachel, received both schol- .
.
&amp;
rin!l his membership from
ars htps a .ew years ago.
Ohto to Massachusetts where
Whitney is the daughter of he
later
served
as
Keith and Emma Ashley of
Rocksprings and the y:· and- Massachusetts Department
commander.
daughter of June Ash ey of . The Ashleys dined with

Mrs. Cauldwell as her guests
at
Shaw's
Restaurant.
Afterward, they attended a
special reception at Sherman
House whtch featured a
recent author of a history on
Gen. Sherman.

Cole honored
COOLVILLE-· Joan Cole
was presented the certificate
and fruit basket as weekly
best loser during the recent
meeting of TOPS 2013,
Coolville.
The group met at Torch
Baptist Church with 14 memhers rresent. .•
.
AI members read the
Pledges.
The club's next meeting
will be Sept. 23 at the Torch
Baptist Church, with weighin from 5: 15 to 6:15p.m., and
the meeting at 6:30. Anyone
interested in attending should
contact Pat Snedden at 6622633 or attend a free meeting.

rCererrtony
include$ bridge
walk
POMEROY
Bridging
Juniors from Girl Scout
Troop 1276 walked across
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
as part of their Bridging ceremony recently.
Before they walked across,
Troop Leader Beth Lydic and
Junior Girl Scouts Jahnna
Lydic, Joyce Romines, Paula
Vanmeter, Hannah Cleek, and
Olivia Cleek did the official
good luck Wish to the bridging girls.
Chassidy Wills, Ashley
, Romines, Stacy Macomber,
Nikki
Lawson,
Hailey
Ebersbach , and Amber
Hockman were greeted by
Cadette Girl Scout Ericka
Cogar.
Leader Jerrena Ebersbach
greeted the girls and put their
Cadette vests on. Amber
Hockman, Hailey Ebersbach,
and Stacy Macomber completed the six required steps
for the Bridging Bar. Flying
up but liot attending were
Chelsea Davis and Chelsea
Smallwood.
The girls wanted to walk
the bridge (back and forth) as
a way to say good-bye to the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge as
construction has begun on the
new bridge. Plans for their
Cadette Bridging Ceremony
is to walk across the new
bridge in 2006.

•

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]'he Daily Sentine,l
Subscribf today • 992-21,56

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PageA6
Tuesday, September 23,2002

INSIDE

.....

•.Sccnboard 82
Broncoe blitz Raldn, Page B6
Dillon blames field for InJury, Page 86
.~

King becomes doctor, ·
meets biological warfare
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

SHADE -. One native son
of this tiny town along State
Route 33 is conquering the
world of biological warfare.
Kevin King, the son of
Larry and Gloria King, has a
PhD in molecular biology
from the University of
Missouri and is a scientist
with the Midwest Research
Institute, Kansas City, Mo.
"We are very proud of
him," said his mother, Gloria.
King's team of scientists
at the Midwest Research
Institute set out with a job .
refining a test to detect biological warfare in food by
. reviewing literature, sifting
more than 50 tests for the
pathogen and whittling them
down to the four most practical for testing food.
"He was always interested
in science," said his father,
Larry, who can recall when
his son planted trees and
played with ants.
.
·
King graduated third in his
class from Meigs High
School in 1988 and got his
bachelors degree in zoology
from Ohio University in
1992. In 1994, he became
the first graduate student to
receive
the
American
Federation
of
Aging
Research Fellowship for his
work in the biology of aging.
In 1995, King was one of 24
students worldwide to successfully complete the embryology
course at the Marine Biological
Libnuy in Woods Hole, Mass.

•

Eastern takes
· care of South
Gallia, Wellston

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

Gloria and L11rry King attend the graduation ceremony where
their son Kevin King is awarded a Ph.D in molecular biology
from the University of Missouri in 1998. King is working on !!
test to detect biological warfare in food at the Midwest
Research Institute in Kansas City, Mo.
·
King became interested in
science early in life. His
mother said she always
thought he would !!O into
something , scientiftc. He
planted trees and played a
lot with nature growing up.
"He loved anythin~ that had
to do with the earth,' she said.
Renowned science teacher
Rita Slavin taught King bioiogy for two years at Meigs
Hi!lh School. Slavin. who
retired after 34 years of
teaching, said she and her
daughter Shannon, keep in
touch with King. Slavin said
King always had a "keen
mind which could always get

to the core of a problem" and
was one of her top students.
Even then when King Wlls
a neophyte student using the
scientiftc method for the
first time in biology·class, h,e
was interested in genetics.
When King did post-doctoral work at the University of
Kansas, he studied genes
related to kidney disease.
"He was one of the most
promising scientists to come
out of my classes, and there
were many · others that
became doctors ·or went infu
other scientific related fields"
she said. "We had a lot of suecess at Meigs High School."

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

TUPPERS PLAINS - At
Eastern, Wellston and South
Gallia made the trip for two
games against the Eagles and
Eastern came· out on top
against both opponents, posting wins of 15-13, 15-7
against Wellston and 15-0,
15-0 against South Gallia.
The Eagles were led by
Casey Smith, Becky Taylor
and Katie Robertson.
In JV action, Eastern also
took care of vistors South
Gallia and Werllston with
winning scores of 15-0,15-4
and 15-6, 15-7, respectively.

Southern beats
Meigs
POMEROY - In a battle
of Meigs county rivals,
Southern (9-2, 7-2 TVC) prevailed over Meigs, winning
the second and third games
15-7 and 15-11 after dropping . the first game to the
Mauraders. Southern was led
by Christina Williams 17
points and was followed by
Dina Pullins seven points and
Brooke Kayser's five points.
Katie Sayre led the teamde- .
fense, going 53-61 with 19
kills and one block. Emily
Hill was close behind, going
39-44 with seven kills and
Jordan Negler was 3-3 with
three kills and three blocks
for kills to go along with
strong performances from
Ashley Roush and Nikki
Riffle.
Meigs (8-3) was led by
Samantha Cole's 12 points
and five blocks. Megan
Games was just behind with
nine points and one -kill. Joey
Haning added 26 assists and
Jaynee davis had 16 kills.
In JV action, Meigs lopped
Southern i5-6 and 15-fO to
improve their season record
to 11-0.

Cavaliers plan
to scrimmage at
Kent State
CLEVELAND (AP)
LeBron James will be playin~ close to his Akron home
th1s preseason.
The Cleveland Cavaliers
have scheduled an intrasquad
scrimmage at Kent State
University's MAC Center on
Oct II that is free and open
to the public. The scrimmage
will feature the entire
Cavaliers team playing two
12-minute halves.
The Cavaliers· open training camp next week and play
their first preseason game '
Oct. 7 at Detroit.
James is spending this
week in New York for the
NBA's rookie orientation
program, which is designed
to help first-year players
adjust to playing professionally.
.
James was among 20 rookies, alonll with hall of farner
Bob Lanter, who spent time
Monday reading to children
at a New York City public
school.

Blue Jackets
send players to
minors
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Columbus Blue Jackets pared
their roster to 40 players
Monday by re-assigning
seven players.
Head coach and general
manager ' Doug MacLean
' announced that the Blue
Jackets sent defensemen
Darrel Scoville, Nate Kiser
and Tyler Sloan, center Brad
Moran and left wings Jeremy
Reich and Joe Motzko to
Syracuse of the American
Hockey League.
Columbus also returned
right ·wing Steven Goertzen
to the Seattle Thunderbirds of
the Western Hockey League.
The Blue Jackets, 0-1-1-0
in the preseason, have 23 forwards, 13 defensemen and
four ~oaltenders remaining in
traimrig camp. They host the
New . York Rangers on
Wednesday night.

Tuesday, September 23, 2003

Holcomb fractures leg in Browns' win
ToM WITHERS
Associated Press
BY

BEREA - Kelly Holcomb may
have saved the Browns' season on
Sunday at the expense of a portion of
his own.
'
Cleveland's quarterback fractured a
bone in his right leg during the first
quarter but refused to come out, rallying the Browns to a stunning 13-12
win over the 49ers.
Wincing in pain and hobbling,
Holcomb completed 12-of-14 passes
on a 91-yard scoring drive in the final
minutes, throwing an I !-yard TD pass
to Andre' Davis with 29 seconds left to
give !he Browns (1-2) their first win.
"It was somewhat John Wayneesque," Browns coach Butch Davis
said Monday. "It was kind of heroic.
He fought through the whole day and
refused to surrender, 'like a heavyweight prize fighter. He kept getting up

off the mat."
But Holcomb could· be down for a
while.
X-rays taken during halftime and
again Monday revealed that Holcomb
has a hairline fracture of his fibula; the
smaller bone located on the outside of
the leg.
Holcomb could miss a few games,
but Davis hasn't ruled him out of prac-tice this week or playing Sunday
against winless Cincinnati.

That's typical of Davis, who usually
downplays injuries hoping. that his
optimtsm can help a player return earlier than expected.
Davis dismissed a radio report that
Holcomb will be out 4-to-6 weeks as.
"totally erroneous." He added that
Holcomb could conceivably play with
the injury all season.
. ..
"He played the whole game yesterday on it·," Davis said boldly.
"All the information I have from our
medical people is that they think there
is a moderate to slightly reasonable
chance he will practice on Wednesday.
If something transpires between now
and then we 'II tell you ..
"If he was going to be gone four-tosix (weeks), twst me, I wouldn't be
telling you and setting myself up for
looking like a fool."
Holcomb, named the starter over
Tim Couch at the end of training camp.

Larkin
rejects
Reds'
offer
BY JoE KAY
Associated Press

Please see Browns, 86

Buckeyes must improve in Big Ten play
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press ·
COL.UMBUS- Ready or
not, the Ohio
State
Buckeyes play their first Big
Ten game on Saturday
against Northwestern.
Four games and foJJr victories into defending their
national title, they have
shown flashes of brilliance
along with moments of
unvarnished ineptitude. The
rest of the time, the No. 4
Buckeyes have appeared to
be a very pedestrian team on
offense instead of the pow'erhouse many expected.
Some of the statistics are
mediocre. Then again, it's
hard to improve on a perfect
record.
"Ohio State is a great football team. Ohio State knows
how to win. Ohio State has
18 wins in a row," Bowling
Green quarterback Josh
Harris said after safety Will
Allen picked off his last-second pass to cap yet another
24-17 skin-of-the-teeth win
for the Buckeyes on
Saturday. "You can see why.
They have each other s
back. They find ways to win
the game. That's the mark of
a great football team." ·
The
Buckeyes
host ·
Northwestern (2-2) on
Saturday in the first step of
their defense of a 15th outright Big Ten title. The game
ends a five-game homestand
at Ohio Stadium. They then
get a week off before their
first
road
game
at
Wisconsin.
Close ~ames have caused
some senous palpitations for
Ohio State's fans, but like
Indiana Jones - and not the
Indiana Hoosiers - the
Buckeyes always seem to
escape at the end. Nine of
their last II wins have been
decided by a touchdown or
less.
"Bowling Green played us
tough. One bad series and
they were back in the game,"
said Allen, savior of the past
three 11ames with big plays.
"This ts the seniors' responsibility to get the team to

r....-.:..1
Ohio State tailback Lydell Ross turns the corner on his way to a touchdown against Bowling
Green Saturday, Sep. 20, 2003, in Columbus, Ohio ..Ohio Stale opens its Big Ten season
Saturday, at home against Northwestern. (AP)
play Rood for the whole
game.
There are some encouraging signs. The Buckeyes
finally got their running
attack going after struggling
to get positive yardage in the
first three games. Just like
last year's 14-0 season, the
defense · has given up
yardage at times but never
when the game is hanging in
the balance. Linebacker A.J.
Hawk is off to a monster
start. Kicker Mike Nugent
and punter B.J. Sander have
been dependable.
Mostly, the Buckeyes'
timing has been impeccable.
"We made the plays when
it counted," defensive end
Simon Fraser said. "Our
fourth quarter is a little lack-

adaisical. We need to study
why thafs happening."
Ohio State has churned
ahe-dd despite the loss of
leadin g rusher Maurice
Claret! - suspended for the
year for violating NCAA
rules - and quarterback
ctaig Krenzel. Krenzel
watched the Bowling Green
~arne from the sideline, restmg a hyperextended right
elbow. He may not be availabl~ for the Big Ten opener.
with Scott McMullen again
filling in.
The biggest strength is
that opposing teams have
run into a· brick wall when
they've attempted to run the
ball . Ohio State has surrendered less than a yard per
carry, giving up 96 yards on

I03 rushing attempts.
"I didn't anticipate being
able to run the ball,"
Bowling Green coach Gregg
Brandon said after the
Falcons mustered just 40 net
yards on 23 carries. "No one
has run the. ball against
them ."
Still , coach Jim Tressel
remains perplexed by a
series of ongoing problems .
The Buckeyes had three
more turnovers on Saturday
and now have 12 for the year
-they had only 17 in a 14game marathon season in
2002.
Asked the cause of all the
turnovers. Tressel said, "I
don't know. If I knew, hopePlease see Bll Ten, B&amp;

Clarett attorney meets with NFL officials
COLUMBUS (AP) - The attorney for suspended Ohio State tailback Maurice Clarelt met with NFL
executives Monday in Washington to
discuss whether he will be able to
enter the 2004 draft.
Attorney Alan C. Milstein and
Clarett's mother, Michelle, met for
about an hour with NFL executives,
said NFL spokesman Greg Aiello.
"It· was an exchange of views and
it was a good discussion," Aiello
said. "We told them we would get
back to them."
Aiello said Clarelt didn't attend
the meeting and declined further
comment on the discussions. Aiello
said earlier Monday the subject of
the meeting was "to discuss his
(Clarelt's) status in next year's
draft."
NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue

said last week that Clarett and
Milstein had asked to meet with the
league about changing its rules to
permit Claret! to be drafted jn 2004.
The NFL bars anyone. from bein g
avaUable for the draft before they
have been out of high school for
three years. Clarett rushed for 1,23 7

yards and scored 18 touchdowns a
year ago as a freshman while leading
Ohio State to its first national championship ' since 1968 . Under the
NFL's present rule. he would not be
eligible to be drafted until 2005.
Clarett is suspended from the Ohio
State team for at least a year after an
investigation determined he had broken NCAA bylaws concerning benefits for athletes and lying to investigators.
Milstein did not immediately
return telephone messages reque sting comment Monday night.
The NFL was represe nted by
Harold Henderson and Jeff Pash.
league executive vice presidents.
Henderson oversees labor relations
and is chairm an of the NFL
Management Council' s executive
committee ..Pash is the league's chief
counse l.
····--··

CINCINNATI Barry
Larkin rejected a one-year
contract offer lln Monday.
leaving the Cincinnati Reds'
captain to finish his career
with another club.
Larkin, 39. has spent all 18
major league seasons with hi s
hometown team, and hoped
to return as a backup infielder next year before retiring
and moving into another role
with the Reds.
The club offered a one-year
contract with a $500.000 base
salary. Larkin turned it down ,
and owner Carl Lindner
declined to increase the
amount after talking to the
shortstop by phone on
Monday.
Larkin didn't attend a news
· conference Monday nighi
with chief operating oflker
John Allen, who said the club
wouldn 't change its offer.
"I got the impression that
he felt it was a smack in th ~
face," Allen said.
Allen said the club had
decided to move ahead with out Larkin, who grew up in
Cincinnati and was the Reds '
first-round pick in the 1985
amateur draft.
·
"Barry Larkin for many
years was the heart and sou I
of this team ," Allen said.
"He 's going to be greatl y
missed.''
Larkin helped the Reds win
a World Series in · 1990.
earned NL Most Valuable
Player honors in 1995 and
was a steadying intluence in
the clubhouse during former
. owner Marge Schott's suspensions in the 1990s.
The Reds had hoped to get
back into contention when
they moved into Great.
American Ball Park this sea- ·
son. but fared so poorly that
they tired general manager
Jim Bowden and manager
Bob Boone in July, then traded away top players in a pay roll-slashing spree.
With no general manager
running the team. Larkin' s
fate became a major issue as
the season wound down .
Larkin is on the disabled li st
for the third time this season.
and had recognized that he no
longer could be an everyday
player.
Larkin is in the final year of
a $27 million, three-year deal
that Lindner approved in
200 I. Larkin's agent said he
was willing to take much less
to stay in Cincinnati, but the
$500,000 otfer was unacceptable.
"I don 't know how you
describe a contract like that
to a player like Barry, but it's·
extremely disappointing :"
agent Eric Goldschmidt said.
"All Barry was looking for
was something . respectable
and fair. ..
Goldschmidt said Larkin
will try to play one more season for anoth er dub . No
other active major league r
has spent more years with
one team .
Although Allen said Larkin
would .still be welcome to
join the ,Reds in another
capacity when he retj re~ .
Goldschmidt doesn 't consider that an option.
"His goal was to play 2004
with the Reds and then get
some kind of affiliation with
the club to use his expertise,
Please see Lartdn. B6

~ ---

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Baseball
Netlonel League

Eut Olvlelon
WLPctGB
x Adanta
97 60 618
Florida
BB 70 551 10 112
Pllitadoiphia
85 71 545 11 112
Montreal
81 76 518 16
Now York
63 92 406 33
centnol Dtvlolon
WLPctGB
Chicago
114 72 538
Houston

84 72

538

5I Loull
Plttollurgh
CinciMatt

81 76

518 3 1/2
468 tt
429 17
423 18

73 83

87 BB
MlBB 90
-DMaton
WLPctGB
•·San Aonclooo 98 59 819
l.oo Angotoo
82 73 529 14
Artzone
81 75 519 15112
Colorado
71 85 455 25 112
Son Diego
82 II( 397 34112
X-elfnc::hed diVISion

Bundey o Gomoo
Atlanta 8 Florida 0
Montreal 4 N Y Mets 2
Chocago Cuba 4 Pittsburgh t
Clnclmat14 Phiadolphio 3
Mrtwaukee 6 Arizona 4
St Lou1s 6 Houston 4
COlorado 5 San Diego 3
Los Angeles 1 San Francisco 5
llonday o Gomoo
Florida 6 Atlanta 3
San Franc1100 6 Houston 3
San Diego 9 Los Angeles 5
Tundlly o Gomoo
Plliiadelphoa (Moiiwood 14 11) at Florode
(Willis 13-6) 7 05 p m

Tampa Bay 5 Toronto 2
Kansas C1ty 12 0etro1t 6
Chicago White Sole 6 NY Yankees 3 10
mnlngs
Seatt&amp;e 5 Anaheim 1
Oakland 1 Texas 3

Ch6cago Cubs (Wood 13-11) at Crncrnnatr

(Randall2 3) 7 10 p m
Montreal (Vazquez 13 11) at Atlanta
(Raynoldo t 1 9) 7 35 p m
St Louis (W Wlll1ams 16 9) at Milwaukee

Cleveland (Westbrook 7 9)

12 11) 905pm
Los Angeles (W Alvarez 6 1) at San

Diogo(Peavyt2 tt) 1005pm
w.dnnday I G11m11
San Francisco at Houston 2 05 p m
Montreat at Atlanta 7:05pm ..

St Louis at Mllwaukos 7 OS p m
Philadelphia at Florida 7 05 p m
Plttaburvh at N ~ Mats 7 1o p m
ChiCago Cubs at Cincinnati 7 10 p m
Arizona at Colorado 9 05 p m
Loa Angeles at San D1ego i 0 05 p m

American League
E11t Division
W L Pet
X

New York
Boston

97 S9 622
92 64 590

Toronto
Balttmore
Tampa Bay

81
89
61

75
86
95

519
445
39,

GB
5
16
27 112
36

COntrol Dlvlolon
W

Minnesota
Chicago
Kansas City

L

Pet

87 69 558
82 74 526
82 74 526

Cleveland

67

Detroit

38 118 244

90

427

GB
5
5
20 1/2
49

Wnt Dlvlelan

W
94
90
73
70

Oakland
Seattle
Anaheim
Te"""

L Pet
63 599
67 573
&amp;4 465
87 446

GB
4
21
24

x-clinched playoff spot

Sunday 1 Game•
Boston 2 Cleveland 0
N Y Yankees 6 Tampa Bay 0
Toronto 7 Baltimore 4
Mmnesota 6 Detro•t 4

Kansas City 1o Chicago White Sox 4

Oakland 12 Seattle 0

Anaheim 11 Texas 6

at

Minnesota

(RogeiS 12-8) 8 05 p m
Detroit (Maroth 7 21) at Kansas C ty

(Umal!-1) 805pm
N Y Yankees (Contreras 6-2) at Chicago

WMe Sox (Buehrle 14 13) 8 05 p m
Seattle (Garcia 12·14) at Anaheim
(Shields 4 6) 10 05 p m
Texas (Drese 2-4) at Oakland (Harden 5

4) 1005pm
w.clneadiy''l QIIMI

N Y Yankees at Ch1cago White Sox 2 05
Texas at Oakland 3 35 p m
Seanra at Anaha•m 4 05 p m
Ba~•rnore at B&lt;lston 7 05 p m
Tampa Bay at Toronto 7 05 p m
Cleveland at M•nnesota 8 05 p m
Detroit at Kansas City 8 05 p m

Monday, Sept 29
Green Bay at Chicago 9 p m

Wodnoodoy o Gomoa

N Y Rangers at Columbus 7 p m
Boston at Detroit 7 30 p m
N Y Islanders at New Jersey 7 30 p m
Phoenix vs San Jose at Portland Ofa
10pm

Pro Football

Buffalo
Miami
New England

WLTPCIPFPA
2106677634
2106675838
2106675457
030 0003960
South
W L T Pel PF PA
3 0 0 1 000 65 26
2 1 0 667 59 65
1 2 0 333 45 93
0 3 0 000 53 85
WLTPctPFPA

National Hockey League
EAS'TJ;RN

2

Baltimore
P1ttsburgh
Cleveland
C nc1nnat•

1 2 0 0 2
0 1 0 0 0
0 3 0 0 0
NorthMII Dt¥11fon

NY Rangers
NewJersey
Pittsburgh

1 0 0 1

3

9
1
3

17
6
9

6

5

1100236
0101

135

St Louis
Nashville

WL T OLPtoGFGA
2100483
2 1 0 0 4 11 8
2

13 9

1200249
1 2 0 0 2 6 13
WESTERN
COnn! Dtvlolon
WL T OL PtoGFGA
2 0 1 0 5 10 6
1020494

Chicago

0 1 2 0

COlumbus

0110125
0 2 0 0 0 5 10

Detroit

2

6

11

NorthwNt Oi'llslon

WL T OLPtoGFGA
Vancouver
2100454
Caigar'/
1010374
ColOradO
1010396
1110367
Edmonton
Minnesota.
1 2 0 0 2 11 6
Paofflc Dtvlolon
WL T OLPtaGFGA
DaMas
1011498
Anaheim
2 1 0 0 4 10 9
Los Angelos 2 1 0 0 4 10 6
Phoenbc
1 0 0 1 3 6 6
San Jose
0200038
Two points for a win one point for a tie
and ovettime toss

Bunday'o Gomaa
N V lslandere 6 Boston 2
Nashville 2 Columbus 2 tie

Washington 4 PHtoburvh 2
Tampa Bay 3 Caronna 0
Minnesota 9 N Y. Rangers 1
St Louis 4 Chicago 4 tie
Buffalo 4 Toronto 2
Los Angeles 4 San Jose 1

Anaheim 4 Phoenix 3 OT
llonday'o Gomu
Edmonton 2 Vancouver 0

Tuoodly'l Gomao
Carolina at Atlanta 10 30 a m

pm
New Jersey vs Philadelphia at Trenton

0 0

1 000

uo

48

NY G1ants
Washington
Dallas
Ph1ladelph1a
Carolina
Tampa Bay
Atlal')ta
New Orleans

W L T Pel
2 0 0 1 000
2 1 0 667
1 2 0 333
1 2 0 333

South

PF PA
36 32
57 22
68

77

53 64

North

W L T Pel

Chicago

1 537 2

3
4
5
8
7

3
1
1
0

0
2
2
2

0
0
0
0

PF PA

1 000 77

51

333 6! 78
333 69 56
000 20 73

West
W L T Pet PF PA
3 0 0 1 000 89 33
1 2 0 333 44 93

Seattle
Arizona
San Franc~o 1 2 0
St Louis
1 2 0

333 65

47

333 53 71

40

Southern Cal (2) 3 0
Ohoo St (5)
40
Virgon e Tech
30
Florida st
40
LSU
40

8 Tennessee
9 Arkansas

1 495
t 415
1 304
1 265
1257

4
5
8
10
11

30

1 227
978

12
14

3o

to Oregon

4o

956

22

11 Michigan

3 I

918

3

12 Georgoa

3t

888

7

877
788
737
540
457
441

18
13
15
8
9
19

30

409

20

N lllno1s
30
Washington St 3 1
Purdue
2 I
MISSOUri
40
Mmnesota
40
Florida
22

392
265
234
175
168
142

13 Iowa
14 Teleas
15 Nebraska
16 Kansas St
17 Pl11sburgh
18 Washington

19 TCU

3 0 0 100099 33
1 2 0 3335376
0 3 0 000 37 88
NATIONAL
Eatt
WLTPctPFPA
2106677969
2 1 0 657 70 68
1105004859
0 2 0 000 10 48

Mmnesota
Detroit
Green Ba~

1 612 1

20
21
22
23
24
25

3

Kansas C1ty
Denver
Qakland
San D1ego

1 Oklahoma (55) 4 0
2 M1am1 (3)

1203333254

0004070

25

The Top 25 teams m The Associated Press
oollege football poll w th I rst place votes 1n
parentheses records through Sept 20
total pomts based on 25 po nts lor a lust
place \/Ole through one p01nt for a 25th
place vote and previous ranking
Record Pte
Pva

030

0100024

1 1 0 0

57

WLTPctPFPA

Soulhealt Division
Tampa Bay
Washmgton
FlOrid&amp;
Atlanta
Carolina

667 72

Welt

WL T DLPioGFGA
2000475

Ottawa
Buffalo
Boston
Montreal
Toronto

1 0

2106677166

At.. ntle Olvlelon

W L T OL Pto GF GA
NYistanders 3 o o 0 6 11 3
Pholadelphoa 2 0 0 0 4 10 3

The APTop

E11t

North

Hockey

College Football

National Football League
AMERICAN

Indianapolis
Tennessee
Houston
Jacksonville

Boston vs Pittsburgh at Halifax N S 6

Mondey I Gamel
Boston 7 Baltimore 5

Open Mlam1 Seattle N Y G1antt; Tampa

Bay

Toronto at Montreal 7 30 p m
Chtcago at Mmnasota 8 p m
St Louis at Dallas 8 30 p m
Los Angeles at Colorado 9 p m
Vancouver at Calgary 9 p m

NY Jats

pm

(Sheets 11 12) 8 05 p m
San Francisco (SChmidt 16 5) at Houston
(W MINer tot-12) 8 05 p m
Arizona (Webb 1Qo.7) at COlorado (Oliver

NJ 7pm

1'uooUf o Gomoo

Baltimore (DuBose 3 5) Bt Boston
(Wakefield 11 7) 7 05 p m
Tampa Bay (Zambrano 11 9) at Toronto
(Towers 7 1) 7 05 p m

Pittsburgh (Wells 9-8) at N Y Mats (Lerter

149) 710pm

PageB2

4o
2 1

3o
4 I
21
21

24
25
23

Others rece1vmg votes Toledo 109
Ar zona St 90 N C State 90 Lou sv1lle 79
Wake Forest 54 Bowling Green 44
V1rgrma 36 Wlscons n 32 Marshall 24
Oklahoma St 17 Alabama t 1 Mram1
(Oh10) 9 Air Force 8 Maryland 7 M1ch gan
St 7 C•llCinnali 6 UNLV 6 South Carolina
5 Texas A&amp;M 3 BYU 1

How the Top 25 Fared
How the top 25 teams n The Assoc atecl
Press college football polllared lh1s week
No 1 Oklahoma (4-Q) beat UCLA 59 24
Next at Iowa State Oct 4
No 2 Mram1 (4 0) beat Boston College 33
14 Next vs West V1rg n1a Oct 2
No 3 M1ch1gan (3 1) lost to No 22 Oregon
31 27 NeK1 vs lndu~na Saturda~

No 4 Southam Cal (3 0) dod not play
Next at Callforn a Saturday
No 5 Oh1o State (4 O) beat Bowling
Green 24 17 Next vs Northwestern
Saturday
No.6 Kansas State (4 1) lost to Marshall
27 20 Next at No t 3 Teleas Saturday Oct
4

Seattle 24 St Louis 23
N Y Giants 24 Washington 21 OT
Arizona 20 Green Bay 13
Balt1more 24 San Diego 10
Cleveland 13 San Franc1sco 12
M•aml 17 Buffalo 7
Open Dallas Philadelphi a Ch1cago
Garolna
Monday 1 O•me
Denver 31 Oak and 10

10 Next vs No 21 Alabama Oct 4
No.8 V1rg nla Tech (3-Q) beat Teleas A&amp;M
35 19 Thursday Next vs Connect•cut
Saturday
No 9 Pittsburgh {2 1) lost to Toledo 35
31 Next at Texas A&amp;M Saturday
No 10 Florida State (4 0) beat Colorado
47 7 Next at Duke Saturday
No 11 LSU (4 O) beat No 7 Georgia 17
10 Next at MISSISSippi State Saturday
No 12 Tennessee (3 0) beat No 17
Florida 24-10 Next vs South Carolina
Saturday
No 13 Texas (2 1) beat Alee 48 7 Next
vs Tulane Saturday
No 14 Arkansas (3 0) beat North Texas
31 7 NeK1 at No 21 Alabama Saturday

Sunday, Sept 28

No 15 Nebraska (3 0) did not play Next

Arizona at St LOUIS 1 p m
Tennessee at Pittsburgh 1 p m
JacksonviUe at Houston 1 p m

Philadelphia at Buffalo 1 p m
New England at Washington 1 p m
C•nc nnatl at Cleveland 1 p m
San Francisco at Minnesota 1 p m
Kansas C1ty at Banimore 4 05 p m
San Diego at Oakland 4 05 p m

Dsllssat NY Jats 415 pm
Atlanta at Carolina 4 15 p m
Detroit at Denver 4 15 p m
lndlanapol~ at New Orleans 8 30 p m

et Southern MISSISSippi Sept 25
No 18 An zona State (2 1) lost to No 18
Iowa 21 2 Next at Oregon State
Saturday
No 17 Florida (2 2) lost to No 12
Tenne ssee 24 10 Next at Kentucky
Saturoay
No 18 Iowa (4 0) beat No 16 Ar zona
State 21 2 Ne•t at M chlgan State
Saturday
No 19 Waahmgton (2 1) beat Idaho 45
14 Next vs Stanford Saturday
No 20 TCU (3 O) beat Vanderbilt 30 14

Next at Anzona Saturday
No 21 Alabama (2 2) lost to Northern
llllnors 19 16 Nex1 vs No 14 Arkanss.s
Saturday
No 22 Oregon (4-0) beat No 3 Mich gan
beat 31 27 Next vs No 24 Washmgton
State Saturday
No 23 MISSOUri (4 0) beat Middle
Tennessee 41 40 OT Ne)(t at Kansa&amp;
Saturday
No 24 Washington State (3 1) beat New
Me11lco 23-13 Ne)(t at No 22 Oregon
Saturday
No 25 Purdue (2 1) beat Arizona 59 7
N&amp;lCt vs Notre Dame Saturdav

Major College Football Scores
EAST
Brown 21 Albany NY 3
Colgate 31 Dartmouth 9
Connect•cut 38 Buffalo 7
Cornell 21 Bucknell 19
Delaware 49 West Chester 7
Fordham 37 Columbia 30
Harvard 43 Hoy Cross 23
Ions 29 Pace 22
La Salle 28 College at N J 27
Leh1gh 28 Princeton 13
Marlst 28 S1ena 14
Massachusetts 24 Maine 1
M1am1 33 Boston College 14
Monmouth N J 12 Georgetown 0 C 10
Navy 39 E Michigan 7
Northeastern 48 William &amp; Mary 14
Penn 51 Duquesne 10
Penn St 32 Kent St 10
Rhode Island 55 New Hampshire 40
Robert Moms 31 St Peters 24
Sacred Heart 27 Cent Connecticut St

e

Ston~

Brook 28 Wagner 21
Syracuse 38 UCF 14
Tulane 50 Army 33
Yale 62 Towson 28

Valparaiso 38 St Francs Pa 6
Tenn Mart n 0
Wrs P'lattevrlle 21 Drake 20
Wisconsin 38 North Carolina 27

CLASSIFIED

w llhnols 56

SOUTHWEST
Alabama St 24 Ark Pme BluH 22
Arkansas 31 North Tew:as 7
Baylor 27 Sam Houston St 6
Houston 42 M sslss•PP' St 35
Jackson St 28 T8)(as Southern 21
Oklahoma 59 UCLA 24

Oklahoma St 52 SMU 6
TCU 30 Vanderbilt 14
TeKas 48 Rice 7
Texas A&amp;M Kingsville 27 Nicholls St 26
Texas State 34 UC Dav1s 32
Tulsa 54 Arkansas St 7

FAR WEST
A r Force 35 Wyoming

29

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

Cal Poly SLO 24 Montana St 21
E Washmgton 49 S Utah 21
Fresno St t 6 Louisiana Tech 6
Miami (Ohio) 4i Colorado St 21
N Arizona 23 Portland St 0
Oregon 31 MIChigan 27
Oregon St 26 Bo1se St 24
San Diego 45 La Verne 7
San Diego St 37 Samforcl 17

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Stanford t 8 BYU 14

To

Washington 45 Idaho 14
Washington St 23 New Mex co 13
Weber St 49 Montana Tech 14

BASEBALl
MLB-Suspended Atlanta manager Bobby
Cole two games and lined htm an und1s
closed amount for hiS on lleld actions fol
lowing an e ectlon n a Sept 11 game
Amencan League

DETROIT TIGERS-Recalled INF Orner

SOUTH

FOOTBALl

Alabama A&amp;M 37 MVSU 0
Appalach an St 24 Morehead St 21
Bethune Cookman 24 Fla lnternatronal

National Football League

14
ChO!rleston Southern 49 W V1rgrn a St 42
Clemson 39 Georg a Tech 3
Elan 14 ETSU 0
Flonda A&amp;M 10 Tennessee St 7
Flonda St 47 Colorado 7
Furman 31 R•chmond 17
Gardner Webb 23 Chattanooga 13
Hampton 53 Tuskegee 0
lnd ana St 17 Murray St 10
Jacksonville 14 Coastal Carohna 9
James Mad son 23 Hofstra 20

LSU 17 Georgia 10
Uberty 47 Kentucky Wesleyan 7
Lou•sv•lle 42 UTEP 14
Maryland 34 West Vlrgm1a 7
McNeese St 31 Grambl ng St 20
N lllnols19 Alabama16
N C Central21 De aware St 14
N C State 49 Texas Tech 21
Northwestern 28 Duke 10
Northwestern St 14 Lou1stana Monroe

10
S Carol na St 53 Savannah St 0
South Carohna 42 UAB 10
Tennessee 24 Ftonda 10
Troy St 28 SE LOUIS ana 0
VMI 34 Norfolk St 9
W Carol1na 28 The Citadel 21
W Ken1ucky 36 E Kentucky 3
Wake Forest 34 East Carol na 16
Watford 20 Georg• a Southern 14

MIDWEST

Rosevelt Cot111n and G MIKe Compton on
InJUred reserve S1gned AB Patrrck Pass
and OL Wrlbert Brown
NaUonal Hockey League

ATLANTA

THRASHERS-Asslgnad

F

BUFFALO SABRE5-Named Rod&lt; Martin
Skill development coach

CALGARY FLAMES-Aslgned C Garett
Bembrldge 0 Oeryk Engel and D Brennan
Evans and LW Martm Sonnenberg to
Lowell of the AHL

COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS-Asslgnad
D Darrel Scov lie 0 Nate Kiser D Tyler
Sloan C Brad Moran LW Jeremy Reich
and LW Joe Motzko to Syracuse of the
AHL and RW Steven Goertzen to Seattle
of the WHL

FLORIDA PANTHERS-Namad M chael
Yormark ch et operating offiCer
Glut ano C Yannlck; LehOUII 0 Francis
Naufl RW Pavel Rosa and L.W Dan Welch
to Manchester ot the AHL

NASHVILLE PREDATORS-Assogned F
Jonas Andersson F Landon Bathe F L1bor
P1vko F Den1s Platonov F Brandon Segal
F T1mofel ShiShkanov D Aaron Gionet 0
T mo Helbling 0 Steven Spencer G Brian
F nley and G Wade Flaherty to Milwaukee
of the AHL

NEW YCRK RANGERS- Reassigned F
Cory Larose F Lucas Lawson F Garth
Murray F Jed Ortmeyer D John Jakopln
and D Crarg Weller to Hartford of the AHL

PHOENIX COYOTES-Assigned G Davod
LeNeveu 0 N1kos Tselios AW Frank
Benham LW Frantlsek LuKes LW Mike
Stutzef C Jason Jaspers and C Martin
Podlesak to SpnngUe d of the AHL

VI

Hetblrt L Miller, II 11
De~Mdanltt

COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS,
MilOS
COUNTY,

OHIO
In purauence of en
Order of llle to 1111
directed from nld
Court In the ebove
entitled lotion, 1 will
H to Hil II
c IIICIIon on the
• ...,. ol the
Melge County Court
Hou" on Thurecltty,
Ootober 18, 2003, II
10:00 e.m , of llld
day, the following
cllaorlbed rtll elllll
Bltuetecl In Llllfl
Townahlp,
Mllga
County, Ohio, commencing II • ateka 11

=

the IOIItltw.t

,

corner

of Ed Sergent 1 land,
lying Eall of the public 1'0id running from
Lllerl
Faile
to
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
thence Eaat with the
south line of Ed
Sargent's land 120
feet to allake, thence
South so leet to 1
llake, thence Weet
120 teet to the middle
of the road, thence
North with the public
road 5D feet to the
place o beginning,
conlllnlng
6,000
aquara teet, being a
part of the one-half of
the too-acre lot died·
ad by Florence Miller
and others to Edgar
M
Chapman, aa
recorded December
15, 1986, Vol 81,
pages 259-260, and
being the ume property conveyed by
John Quillin and
Florance Quillin, hlo
wile, to Harold Quillin
and Fklaeell Quillin,
by died dated May
14, 1836, and record·
od In Book 142, Page
67, Melge County
Deed Aecordo, end
the
tnter11t
of
AUIHII Quillin there- ,
In hovlng been con•
to
Herold
vayad
Quillin by died doted
June 13, 1136, end
recorded In Book 142,
Poge
90,
Melga
County
Deed
Aecordo Subject to
ell legal hlghwoyo
Currant
Ownero·
Herbert L Miller and
Frencee M. Miller
Propaf!r It 41210
Stile Route 331,
Recine, OhiO 41771
pp • 111-®482 000
Prior
Dlld
Reference
Volume
211, Page 413
It:
Af.tpraiHd
• 1,00000
Terma of llie·Cennot
be lOki tor 1111 than
2/3rda
of
the
eppreiHCI velue 10%
clown on e11y of ule,
e~~eh
or certified
check, balenca on
conflrmlllon of 1111
Relph E TrUIHII,
Sheriff,
Melga

•

County, Ohio
Reimer I Lorber Co ,
LPA
Dennla Reimer (Reg
110031109)
Attomeyo for PlalntiH
2450 Edlaon Blvd
PO Box 968
lWinaburg,
Ohio
44087
(330-) 425-4201
(9) 16, 23, 30
Public Notice
SHERIFF S
SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE
NUMBER
02CV095
DEUTSCHE BANK
NATIONAL
TRUST
lka
COMPANY
BANKERS
TRUST
CO OF CALIFORNIA,

NA,
Aa Trustee for the
Morgan Stanley ABS
Cephal ITruat 2000..1
Plalntltl
.y...

WANDA JOHNSON, at
11., Defendant•
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In purauance of en
Order ot Sale to me
directed from 11ld
Court In the above
entitled action, I will
expoll to 1111 II
public euctlon on the
front 11ep1 Of thl
Melga County Court
HOUII on Thut'ldly,
October 9, 2003 et
10 00 AM, of Hid
day, the following
daocrlbed rill 111111
ParceiOna:
Bltuetod In the
County of Melge, In
the IIIII of Ohio, end
In the VIllage of
Middleport,
end
boundad
end
ciiiOrlbed II IOIIOWI.
lelng Lot No 184
In Lower Pomeroy,
Middleport,
Ohio,
aald lot being fifty
feet by one hundred
end eleven feet, end
being one of the Iota
conveyed by J M
Srechtal, 11 AI, to
John A Veith by dMCI
recorded In DHCI
Book No 170, Page

360 of the Recorda of
Daeda
In
the
Recorder's
OHice,
Meigs County Ohio
Parcel Two
fotlowlng
The
described raal eatate,
situate In Salls~ury
Township In Meigs
County and State of
Ohio to-wit
The
following
described real estate
situate In Marcus
Bosworth a Addition
to Lower Pomeroy
now
Incorporated
Into the Village of
Middleport, Qhlo, and
marked and known
on the aald pill of
Lower Pomeroy as
Lot Number 165,
being the asme pram
lses convoyed by
deed from John A
Veith and Oorothy
Veith, husband and
wife, to Paul E Taylor
and Arlene M Taylor,
dated January 14,
1953,andrecordedln
Book No 175, Page
517 of the Deed
Racorde ol Meigs
County, Ohio
Excepting therefrom
The
following
cllocrlbed reel 111111
sltuetld In the Village
of
Middleport,
Sellabury Townohlp,
Melga County In the
State of Ohio, Section
29,
Townohlp
1,
Renge 13, a portion
of Lot 1&amp;&amp; of the
Marcuo
Booworth
Addition
(Melgo
County Plot Aooorde
Vol 2, Poga 12 and
being 1 new percal
creeted out of the
Burdell
encllor
Kathryn
McKinney
property
(Melgl
County
Deed
Recorda VOl 187, Pg
277) bounded end
deocrlbed 11 tollowa:
Commencing for
relerence 11 an Iron
pin eel by thla aurvey
at the northHat cor·
ner of Lot 1&amp;8 of the
Mercua
Botworth
Addition from which
an Iron pin found by
IIIII Iurvey It tha
northllll comer of

~lgha.

t.oe.. ..CO:.-..:.._.-.

Sycamore Street and
General
Hartinger
Parkway bears North
12 deg 46 03" F11t a
distance ot 355 11
leet,thence along the
eaatllne of Lot 156 of
the Marcut Bosworth
Addition South 03
deg 02 24" Wast a
distance of 5D 00 feet
to on Iron pin set by
thla survey at the
aouthaaat comer of
Lot 156 asld Iron pin
being the true point
of beginning for the
parcel of real estate
herein described
Thence along the
Eall llna of Lot 155
SOuth 03 deg 02 24
Weal a distance of
13 00 feet to an Iron
pin aet by this sur-

vey, thence leaving
the eoat Una of Lot
155 along aline creal·
ed by this survey
North 86 dog 57 36
Waat a distance of
111 00 feet to an Iron
pin aet by this survey
on tho weal line of
Lot155, thence along
the Will Uno of Lot
15&amp; North 03 deg 02
24' E11t a dletance of
13
feet to an Iron
pin eel by thlo survey
at the eouthweet
comer of Lot 156
thence along the
eouth llna ol Lot 156
South ae dig 57' 36
E11t 1 dlatence of
111 00 feet to the
point of beginning,
contolnlng
0 0331

oo

IM:f'll,

more or leaa

All iron plno ere HI
Ill In 1 3 0 In rebar
with ~lillie I d cop
tlllmpacl "I! Triplett

H7&amp;e,
lllb)ecl to 111 legel

-•manta.

The above deecrlp·
lion Wll mede In
ICCOrellnce With In
ectuel aurvay con·
ducted under the
aupervlolon
of
Eugene Triplett S·
conducted
8781,
Septamber 3, 9, end
Baerlnge
10, 111119
IN IllUmed and Ira
Ulld 10 IXPflll
sngulet
manure-

p.._.bllc Nc.Jo•lces 1•.. Nc~ s p-p~a-8 ..
l:&gt;~llvetr~d H.lgl-.e. 11;.._ V••~•..- • .._."-•"-••·

mont only
Current Owner
Wanda Johnson
Property at
4n Sycamore Street,
Middleport,
Ohio
45760
pp ., 5-D0928 000
and 15·00930 000
Prior
Deed
Reference
Volume 104, Page
619
APPRAISED
AT
$2500000
TEAMS OF SALE
Cannot be sold lor
lesa than 2/3rda of
the appraised value
1 0% down on day of
aale, cash or certified
check balance on
confirmation ol sale
RALPH E TRUSSELL
Sherin Meigs County
Ohio
REIMER &amp; LORBER
Co, LPA
By
Dennis
Reimer
(Reg
110031109)
Jamaa C Wrantmora
(Reg 1004&amp;nl)
Attorneys lor Plaintiff
2450 Edison Blvd
PO Box 968
lWineburg
Ohio
44087
(330) 425-4201
(9) 09 18,23

Items to be
In the scope ol work
e~~n be obtained from
the
VIllage
Admlnlttrllor at 320
E
Main
street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
The owner Intends for
this work to be com·
plated by November
15,2003
Each
proposal
must contain lhe lull
name of the party or
parties submitting a
bid and all peraona
Interested
therein
Each bidder muat
eubmlt evidence of
Ita experience on
demolition project•
of similar size and
complexity
Each bidder mull
Insure
that
all
employees and appll·
cants lor employment
are not discriminated
against becauoe of

race, color, religion,
sex national origin,
handicap, anceetry or
age
The Village
of
Pomeroy reserves the
right to waive any
Informalities or lrragularltlea The VIllage
ra11rve1 the right to
reject any or all bldo

or to lncreaae or
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed bide will be
received for furnllh·
lng atl labor, mellrl·
all end equipment
neceonry to com ·
plato a project known
11 Pomeroy Jr High
l!lulldlng Demolition
II the Office of the
Mayor
In
the
Munlclpel Building 11
320 li Meln 8tr11t,
Pomeroy, Olllo 41719
until 10 30 AM locel
tlmo on Wadnoodey.
October t, 2003, end
1t llld time end
piece,
publicly
opened , ond reed
eloud Bldt may be
mellld or dallvered In
adVIOCI to the publiC
Opening II the lboVI
addran
A lilting of the

decraan or omit any
Item or tlmn ancllor
ewerel 1111 bid to the
low11t, raoponolve
end reeponalble bidder
By order of the
Village of Pomeroy
Victor Young, Meyor
September 17, 2003
(9) 23, 28 2TC
Public

Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Melgo County
Sub-Committee lor
Round 18 SCIP/LTP
Projecte will m111
Friday, September 21,
2003 at 10:00 AM at
the Malgt County
Commlulonero
Office
In
the
Courthouoe
on
Second Str11t In
Pomeroy, Ohio The
Commlltea 11 com-

•

posed of one repro·
sentatlva appointed
by the villages of the

county, one

repreaen~

tallve appointed by
the
township

trustees, one repre
sentatlva appointed
by the county com

missioners, one rep
reaentallve appointed
by the county engl·
neer and a filth mem
bar selected by the
lour appointed repro
aentatlves The pur
poea or this meeting
Is tq select the llfth

merfrber
The Meigs County
Sub-Committee lor
Round 18 SCIP/LTP
Projects will meet
Friday September 26,
2003 at1030 AM at
the Meigs County
Commlaalonero
Office
In
the
Courthouse
on
Second Street In
Pomeroy, Ohio The
purpose of thla mHt·
lng Ia to asalgn local
priority to Melga
County applications
oubmltted lor Round
18 SCIP/LTP
(9) 23, 24 2TC

Home For Sele
Com marc leU
Realdentlel
Home,
Fabulous
Approximately 4500
Sq Ft , Brick, SIHing
On 12,967 Sq Ft
Fenced Property 13
rooma, 4 112 Baths,
Commercial Kitchen
Poaalble
Uaea
Daycare AnHque Mall,
Restaurant Could be
reatoracl to family
home Original Oak
Floors Appralead lor
$294,000 Will conalder
any reasonable oHer
below appralaal price
Financing
Partial
Available Call lor
appointment 273-9824
after 5
pm or lnva
meueae

oo

In Memory

The ladies of
the Widow's
Fellowship
wtsh to express
their deepest
sympathy to the
families of
Elsie Hines and
Cecilia Milch.

'-§

They w1U be
sadly miSsed

Word Ads
In Next o•v'• Pep•r

In-Column 1 00 p m
Sundey• P•p•r

--....o--=_,
.
r A~ I
t ' 'I I \ I"

tffi

l

:w
1.

HRPWANm&gt;

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

f110

IIELPW.oom

'"A·n-.w·e·.·orno-·jo·b·l·$8-$9_por,. '"o·p-to·m·.·,r·lc-·l·e·c·hn·lc·l.·n,..

hour after trainlngl No e)(pe
C 1 Beer Carry Out permit rlence neecled! FuiVpert
for sale Cheater Township time flexible scheduling
Me gs County send letters convenient
Pomeroy
of mterest to The Dally Location
~ posltlona
Sentonel PO Box 729-20 available eaU 9 9 M F 1
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
888 974-Jobs
I Mane Plants wll not be
responsible for debtS other
than my own Marte E
Plants e• wtf8 ol Alfred A
Plants Jr 9-19 03

AVON! All Anlasl To Buy or
Sell Shirtay Spears 304
675 1429
AWESOME CAREER
$14 80-$38 OO+Ihr

Say good bye to high phone Postal Positions H~rlng lor
blllsl New local phone serv 2003/2004 Full Benefits No
Ice w1th FAEE unlimited exp req Cal Now 1-800nat on wrde long Distance 8711-9078 Ext. 2072
1 800 635 2908
or - - : - - : - : - - - : -

State of·the art optometric
practice 11 seeking an lndlvidual lor a career In a
dyna!Tric work environment
with a geoeat teMl of prates
sionats Applicant must be
detalk&gt;rlented commtnect to
excellence In patient care
set! motivated and possess
goocl commun cation sk!lls
Approximately
30hns/wk
Includes aome Saturdays
and evenings
Benefits
Include paid lull on and
tuition and travel for career
advancement paid holidays
vacation and SICk time
health Insurance and pen
slon
plan
Experience
desired but not necessary
Wage Is commensurate with
&amp;leparlence
EOE
Mall
resume to
The Dally
Sentinel PO Bole 729-1 ~

r

GIVEAWAY

0
'

one week, mostly 'M'Ilte and Eastern Ave Qaillpohs Ohio
yellow Liner trained to
paper (304)895 35n
Full
Time
Registered

1-8T7-e76-6T31
EOE 11/F/ON

tlon

Physicians Offtce m Pt PI
Send Resume &amp; References
to PO Bo• 18 Point
Pleasant WV 2S550

Pretty oli..r and black

lltl1li¥ Cali

stripped female kitty 4
months old Call 740.441
0145
--------To a Good Home only Gray
K Uen Litter trained Call

noaneweriM¥eame181g8

12th St West Huntington
WV between the hours of
Help wanted oerlng tor the 8 ooam 11 am and 1 oopm
ekterly Caret Group Home 3pm Monday Friday or for
now paying nMnlmum wage more rntormatlon call 1 800
new shift! 7tm 3pm 7am 241 7454

(304)675-4431 anytime

5pm

Growing HVAC company
looking
tof
Certified
Technlclen tiMh lnstallat6on
experience minimum 1 112
years experience In both
gP'rltnc:ed nnct

- - -- - - - - - aw:t

r

{.()6'f AND

FOUND

~411238

3pm-ttpm

~.,r211_ _s,.,w.A.~.:
__pll'86

11pm

7am catl740-092 5023
LOVE TO SHOP??

LOVE TO EAT OUT??

White Sltlh Tzu with

tan marking•

Wtlring 1 MtlnttniMI

Position

biackcollor Htoundcall740- Available
Muet have Rltt1garatlon and
446 1585

r

W.oom
T08tJY

Absolute Top Dollar US
Sliver
Gold
Coins

Electrical Experience Other
dulles
lnofude
general
equipment and ml8cella·
neous repair
E)Cctlltnt
Benefits and wages Ohio
Valley SuptnTitrketa 71140·

WAN!l-l)

To Do

MB Handyman Servrce
Haulmg painting power
washmg driveway repair
seal coatmg gutters chlm
ney plumbing Jade of a I
trades 30yrs exp SeniOr
D1scount Free Estimates

Home health care compan
on my home or yours I
have references/20 yeEhs
elepenence Call 740 245

0339

Bu.lNINS
'f'RAININ&lt;.

.

1176

I

(Caiiii·S 8·6)
(304)895·3074

20 Ye1r1 experience
and l'lfel'lncee

Addrassera wanttd lmmedl working work ehollc netdld expanding Home Health MB Handyman Service
Hauling painting power
atelyl No ~r1tnce nee•• direct In hol'lll aalea call Agency In PI Pleasant WV
washing
drl11eway repair
Kan
(740)1Wt-7440
or
740and
ourrounding
areas
sary Work at home Call
seal coating gutters chlm
593-5245
WE Oltet
405-447-8387
ney plumbing Jack of all
- - - - , . . - : - - - - • Elttelltnt Wages
tradea 30yrs e~ep Senior
AddreaMra wanted lmmedl Pen Tlme Filing Clerk eome "Comprehensive Insurance
Discount Free Estimates
otelyl No~ n_. -nlng Moi\c1ay Frldoy ~ Package
(304)882 2196 (304)377
9pm
.,.,.,_,
tr\lotwor
'Paid
Vacotlon.
Hol
idays
osry WOlfe at Home Coli
8268
thy
Send
reaume
&amp; Peraonal and Sick days
405 447-8397
Siding roofing sidewalks
blocks tHe room additions
remodeling new hOmtl
free eatfmates (740)992

6190 740-992 3934

4 BEDROOM

4 BATH

HOUSE I Foreclosures only
$9 900 for liStings t 800
719 3001 Elet F144
By builder new 3 bedroom
brick 2 car garage Good
location $140 000 740 446
9966 call evenings

740-245-5677
Will pressure wash homes
tnuers decks metal bu ld
lngs and gutters Call (740)
446 0151 ask tor Ron or
leave a message
ll \ \ \ tl\1

BusiNENS
r.'0-oliiiiiiiiililiiiiile,.l

0PI'OR1lJNI'IY

lfll.PW.vm:o

Marilyn liO'ote2 2645 to Ptppeno fn4 drlvor nott1o 1.6Q0.577-4310
tearn all me w.y~ It Clln worti COL Ciaoo A and hlz1Nt or tax your rosume to
(740)742 2811
1 937-llg!l-1375
tor you

---~----­

Transmleslone all types

r ~~AL

"Great working environment
Plea1e contact Stacy at

Crsak Ad asklnQ $79 900
740 367 0244

(304)675 12!3 or (304)617
2380

2SSertouaPtoplsWenlld
Who want to LOSE weight
We Pay You Cash tor the
pounds you LOSE!
Sale Natural No Drugs
800 201 0832
-'------TASC at SOutheast Ohio Is For Sale Homellte #150
seeking to fill two (2) full Chain saw $5000 12 atu
time case manager vacan mlnum John boat w/ seats
cles with highly ensrgetlc oars and small etectr c
motivated Individuals Job motor $125 00 2 Mauve
duties Include assessment red ner/rockers $100 DO ea
referral case management
740-446-4274
and monitoring services to Larg_s_b_en_c_h_v_ls-e-$5_0_00_
adult and juvenile clients referred primarily through JAZZV moton:zed wheel
the Melge and/or Gallla chair used 1 year $2 500
County justice systems call740 256 6305
Annual salary of S20 $26K
dependent
on New 26 Trusses 4/12 pitch
credentallllcensure educa still In bundle Will deliver
tlon
and
e11perlence 740-388 9645
competitive benefits pack
W.oom
age Included
To Do
Reaume cover letter and

Aaforoncoo to PO Box 18 'Job Security

3BA 1 1f2 bath bnck ranch
w1th attached garage full
basement located on one
acre at 1230 Georges

Pteky Painters
Free Estimates Interior and
exterior pa1nl ng Give your
home or garage a fresh
mlrR:.;;•::~~e-.;•:.o:90.:;.::0o.5~~2~7.;;4;;;B._, new look We paint homes
garages mobrle homes
buildings barns and roofs
Mtn'JJANI&lt;DUS
Licenced and 1nsu red
•
•

Otlllpollt Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740 446 4367
1 BOO 214 0452
www Q11111pall&amp;e~~. &amp;ercollege com

448-9312 Ext 118 EOE

Need to earn Money? Let&amp; Point Pltuant. WV 25550
tolk the ~ Avon Co"

Ho~m;

.ORSAI.h .

4 Bedroom 2 1/2 balh
2906 Anmston Drive
Rec room carport $81 000

ABSOLUTE GOLDMtNEt
throe rstorencea to be sub·
Babysitting
In
Syracuse
60
vending machines with
mlttod by 4 00 p m on
Modi Home Hoalth Agency Soptombor 24 2003 to area county certified or prl excellent locations all for
Inc aeeklng full time and Judith Smllhchlld Clinical va.te pay days nights &amp; $10 995 BOO 234 6982
PAN AN 1 In the Galllpollt Director 8 Nortfl Court weekends (740)992 8318
Ohio art ~ be llctnald Straat~ 5th Floor Athena
both OhiO and Woot Ohio 457llt
Child care In m~ home
Pawpaw fruit $1 to $2 por In
Vlrglnlo WI Olltr a compel
+
Galfla County school dl1
pound wotnuto ItO por hun
trlct
dred poundl (740)6Q8 ltlva oalof'l blnotno pack· '"'-llta N aga ond 401K Pleooa lind AZ DIVONHiod HoelthoON + A clean aate envlronmant
TURNED DOWN ON
2124
rtlume to 3!:2 Second 11 looking tor fu lt time + " mlnutea from Addavilla SOCIAL SECURITY 18SI?
I \ II 'I r 1\ \ II ' I
A'onue
Gaillpollo OH Llconood
Phyolcot School
No ,fee Unfel8 We Win!
._, I II' lr I
1-888 582 3345
45831
Thertplttl
•nd + Care giver has associates
t.: I \ I I ' I \ I I
Noed 7 lodlil to """ .....,, Aoolotonlo Ocoupotlonol degree In earl~ childhood
116
_,
Thonlpllll ond A o i i - development
Coll 740 4iviiU
ond Spaooh Lonuu~tt•
1
_ D7- - - rL.•io•...iFORiiiHiior.m;iiiSiiiALEiiiii•,..t
No a&gt;q&gt;a~enoe noadod herd Pothologlll tor rapidly _ca_II_74.:.D-_38_7_-0B
Prootssta Olomonda Gold
Rings
US Currency·
M TS Coin Shop 151
Ssoond Avenue (lalllpolla
74().4482&amp;42

~~·

(304)377

(304)882 2196
8266

It Securltaa Sacurlty 1032

Lost
tn
Rio
Grande Make $10 $-IOihr
Pleasant Valley area Black Free lnlormatlon
tab bright orange collar Call Now! 1-800 609 2985
E11t 102
Family pot 74()-245-9651
www homawarkpro com

Lost

--------Securltas Security Services
USA Is now accepting appli
cations lor security oners to
co~Jer poaalble labor dispute
in your area Prem1um
wages paid as well as unl
forms and equ pment pro
vlded Experience preferred
but all applicants will be con
sldered Please apply at

www comics com

~2003 by NEA, Inc

- - - - - - - - - Medical Asoillllnt tor busy
Free cats and kiQens Call
740 388 8582
--------Fre&amp; klnens assorted colors
7 weeks old litter trained
304-675 6583
--------Friendly In Bide male cat 6
months old litter trarned
Call 74()-446-3897

73 t03 call740 446-0149

(740)992 5858

Lot for

Monn~ HoMt .,
H&gt;R Jb iV1
3 bedroom 2 lull baths
$375 a month Oepos 1
$300
m
Henderson

(304 )576 3235

sa te In Aacrn e

110

HOUSJ&lt;:S
FOR REN"I

•••iiiliioioiiiii-_..1

I and 2 bedroom apart
ments furnished and untur
n1 shed secur rty deposit
requ1red no pets 740 992
2218

2 Bdrm t bath LA DR
Price reduced newly redec
kitchen wl stove utr rty lbr All utllrt es ncluded
orated 3BR with carport 135
room 42 Hanke Ave Call $325 monih (304)675 3654
Klneo n
740 446 2776
740 446 9313
$59 000
2 Bedroom apa rtment $250
Remodeled 3 bedroom 1 2 Bod room 1 t /2 bath w th per month + utrl tie s and
112 bath rn good ne1ghbor lull basement paved drive deposrt 3rd Street Rae ne
hood n M1ddleport (740) way $325 00/month plus 740 247-4292
992 7743 or v ew at utr lt1e s $250 00 deposit
740 992 651 t
2 BA QUiet Local on Near
wwworvb comlt81503
Holze CIA WID Hookup
rent to Own Land Contract 233 Second Ave 2 story No Pels $399 Plus Utrl t es
or buy out r ght 3 bedroom house 2BA 11/2 Bath fur (740)446 2957
house n Rutland near new nlshed krtchen WtD hook
school No Pets ns de up off street pa king walk 2 br W/0 hook up ret dep :
house Thank vou Ca I 740 anywhere downtown 12 nO"JleiS 304 675 5162
•
mon ths mrn $545 month ~--------------- ·
742 2263
reltdep no pets 740.446 2BA apt $375/mo ultthles:
Alvorfront with boat dock 4926
mcluded
$300/depos t
nee 3 br 2 ba 15 acres
740 992 2274
Gatlpolls photo! lnlorma!IOn 3br In Park DriVe wlwasher
on !me www OAVB com &amp; dryer ll kitchen appl
BEAUTIFUL
APART :
code 90303 call 740 446 ances
AT
BUDGET •
No pets
Day MENTS
053 1
(304)675 24 04
evening PRICES AT JACKSON:
ESTATES 52 Westwo od.
(304)675 4655
Momu HOMl-.."'
Dnve hom $297 to $383 •
•••itlliJRiiiSiiil\iiiUiito
: •~ 6 Rooms 1 ba th k1tcllen Walk to shop &amp; moves Cal
.
app11ences
C/A 740 446 2568
Equal
14x70 mob1le home 2 bed washer/d ryer hookup No
room 2 bath with gard en Pets Depos•t and reference
Beech Street M dd epo t t
tub $5 000 (740)742 2144 requ1red Call 367 7553
bed oom furni shed apart
1992 Indios Sulton 14XBO3 For Rent Nrce 4 BR home ment ut1111es pad deposit &amp;
bedroom 2 bath central air near Ala Grande $750 00 refe rences
no
pet s
and BX8 deck $12 000 00 per month Deposit and (740)992 0165
References requrred
740 992 0031
Call
W seman Real Estate at For Rent One Bedro or
2003 Clayton 3 bedro oms
Apartment 920 Fourth
740 446 3644
2 baths Purnrshed on a
Utrlltles Included $400 446
rented lot NO lANO CON
For sale or rent 3 or 4 bed 8677
days
256 19 72
TRACTS I Call for appoint
room house In Pomeroy evenings
ment 941 776 5894 or 740
heal pump total ale rater
367 0507
ences &amp; depoSit requ1red For Rent
One Room
(740)949 7004
Efhclentll'
apar tment
73 14X65 Windsor 2 bd
Utll t as
ncluded
$300
Gas furnace w/heat pump House For Rent
tBR Single $350 Couple 92 4th
washer/dryer
turn lure unturn AJC washer/dryer
Ave 446 8677 Days 256
$2 000
446 4316 after hook up $350/mo no pets
1972 Even ngs
5pm
deposrttrelerences req u red
740 446 3667
Furn shed 3 rooms and bath
Cole s Mob1le H,omes
US 50 East Athen s Ohio 11 you ke the lhOught ol ups ta rs ap1 cl ean no pets
eterence
&amp;
depos I
45701 740 592 1972
southern pl ants! on rv ng eq wred 740 446 151 9
Good used 14)(70 Only thrs s the home for you
$9995 mcludes delivery Call Th1s love ly spacrous south Furn shed one bedroom
ern style home has paten apartm ent clean no pets
Harold 740.385 9948
1 al 3 bedrooms w/ lull Mus t be wlllrng to g ve refer
Liberty 12x70 3 Br 1 bath baths and a large k1lchen ences Phone (304)675
refreshed lnsll:le All new Original wood staircase n 1386
carpet $5 900 Ca ll 740 256 layer Upstal s balcony with
6608
a river view a 1d large front Gracious I v ng ~ anet 2 bed
porch Access lo a pool dur room apartments at V111age
New 2003 Doublewlde 3 BA
and
Riverside
ng the season Located n Manor
&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down
Addison at Tara apartments Apart ments n M1ddlepon
and &amp;295/mo 1 800 69 1
Gas heat central ale $550 a From $27B $348 Cal 740
6777
month Please call day 992 5064 Equa Housing
and Opportunn es
New 3 br/2 bath Only $999 {740)446 348 1
down and only $184 04 per evenings
month call Nikki 740-385 (740)367 0502 No calls New Haven 1 bedroom fu r
after 9 00 p m
n ahetJ apartment also have.
7671
was~ er &amp; dryer deposit &amp;
no
pets
No Problem Sale Want a Older 2 Stor~ house In coun refe renc es
new sectional hOme? No try 3br 1ba 2 showers (740)992 0165
Problem Need foundation peacelul &amp; quiet setting No
and septic? No Problem malde pet1 Located 3 m lea Nice clean 2 br with sman
Need utilities run or drive from Rio Grand University yard In town Major appll
anee p ov ded Security
way? No Problem Want big {304)675 7824
depoat of one mon th rent
savings on a 2003 model
and releran ces reqUired
No Problem Co e s Mobile
1 Monthly rent $400 Ul Utlea
Homes
US 50 East
not Included No pets 441
Athens Ohio 740.592 1972
11 08
2
Bdrm
Mob!
e
home
AI
Since 1987 Wharo You Get
electric Spring Valley area
~Yoliurr•M~o.na~v~•-w..,o.rt":h_ _, $300 e month plus $250 Now Tak ing Applrcahon aLc:rrs &amp;
deposit Call 304 675 2900 35 West 2 Bedroom
ACREAGE
Townhouse
Apartments
or 740 441 6954
Incl ude! Wate r Sewage
30 Acres rural water elec 2 BR perfect air porch Traah $350/Mo 740 446 ;

--:-:----·

Truek1Bonu111
• Tough Job- Great

-:-::-:-:-:----...,.-,- tor body ahop See Glen at
5 Calhc Kittens weaned ln Smith Buick Pontiac 1911

Large lot apro)( 1Ot x 171
c ty water sewer nat gas
electric B I are available
740 446 9539

60603 call 740 992 3650

Poremtn

Oomo11,1nc
Coli toi~lrM tor tntormo·

Lc:m; &amp;
AcREAC.!

Newly built ran ch country
setting 3000 aq teet 3 br 2
ba In ground pool 5 min
u1es from Holzer olf 160
photos Information on lne
www ORVB com
code

Nice older 4 br 3000 sq
feet 1 5 baths Pomeroy
photo/ lnlormallon on t ne
www ORVB com
code

'Bonatlto/Co

1 1!2 train walkers 1 1/2 Air
Company
Dale pupp... Flrlt shota Busy salon hal great oppar
Must enjoy ph~slcal outdOOr
and wormed To good home tunlty for experienced stylta\
work pouess strong lead
Good
hunting
dogs with manager license to take
over I)CCeatlve clientele ershlp skills !'lave a good
(304)675 5371
7404111880 or 740256 driving record and be tte111
ble to travel to various work
2 friendly kittens 8 week8 6336
local ons primarily In Ohio
old litter trained Inside only
Detail and olean up person and West Virginia
Call 740 ~20

r

TaK1ng appilcat ons 2br
mob1le horns No pets $1 00
deposrt $245 a n onth
Newly Rei n1shed Home lor Lots # 9 &amp; 10 Heatley S rnclud es water 740 446
sale n Galllpohs 3BA 2 Addlhon In B dwell two large 3617
ful baths
best location teve lots Pr ced to sell now m:~~-----.,
vinyl s1d rng Price to sell 740 446 9539
Al 1r\KT1\UNIS
now 740 446 9539
t'OM Rl N I
l&lt;t \I \Is

www FreedomMovle comlltp Busy Physician Otf1ce needs
aysyou Local Agents wam part time Ex f'IY Tech ultra·
ed
sound e;,cpertence preferred
but not required
LPN
We Alfred A Plants Jr and Certified Mtclcal Aaafslant
Lore"a A Planta will not be Secretary With Medical Pomeroy Oh 75769
responSible for any debta OffiCe experience Secretary
other than those made by ua with Medical COders/billing
Outdoor CarHra
e)Cperlence Good
orga
personally 9 12..03
'Hi~ng Ft~t~ Crow
nlzatlonal sltiMa Fa11 resume

ilr-------,

classlfled@mydallyreglster.com

POUCIES Ohio Vtllty Pubtlthlng rHirVN tht rlghlto tdll N)tct, or Clnul tny td tl tny llmt Errott mutt ~ rtpOrt.d on thtllrtl dty of
Trlbunt-Stntlnei-Regltter will bt rupontlblt for no mortthtn tht COli of tht lptel occupied by ltlt error tnd on!~ lht tlrtt lnttrtlon Wt
any 1011 or tlptnH that r11u111 from tht publication or oml11ion of tn ldVtrtlttmtnt Correction will bt mtdt In lht flfll tvtlllblt tdltlon
n -'wtyl oonfldtntltl • Current rtrte ctrd tpptltt • All r•l tltttt tdvtrtlllmtntt tl'tl IUbjtct to the Ftd-.1 Ftlr Houtlng Act of 1168
tceeptt only http wanlld adt mHIInliJ EOE tlandardl Wt will not knowingly tectpltn~ tdvtrtitlng In vloltUon ot the IIW

DHc:rlptton • Include A Plica • A.vo'-1 Abbrevl1tlon1
• Include Ph- Number And Addreu Whon Noadod
• Ada Should llun 7 U.p

\\'\ 1 \(

E-matl us at

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

D•lly In-Column 1 00 p m
Mondey- Prldey for lneertlon

AD • ltort Your Ado With A Moyword •lnctudo Comptoto

BOSTON BRUINS-Assognad G Tom

LOS ANGELES KINGS-Ass gned C Jeff

Akron 65 Howard 7
Ball St 27 Cent Mlch1gan 14
Callforma 31 llllno•s 24
Clncrnnat• 30 Temple 24 30T
Davidson 45 Butler 27
Dayton 35 Austin Peay 13
Flor•da AtlantiC 13 Youngstown St 6
llltno1s St 21 E lllnols 14
Iowa 21 Ar1zona St 2
Kansas 41 Jacksonv lie St 6
Kentucky 34 Indiana 17
Marshall 27 Kansas St 20
M ch gan St 22 Notre Dame 16
M nnesota 48 Lou1S1ana Lafayette 14
M ssouri 41 M1dd!e Tennessee 40 OT
Oh1o St 24 Bowlmg Green 17
Purdue 59 Anzona 7
SW Missouri St 17 SE M1ssourl 10
Toledo 35 Pittsburgh 31

classified 0 mydallytrlbune.com

Zdenek Btatny F Simon Gamache F
Derek MacKenz e F Bnan Maloney F Brad
Tepper D Joe D1Penta 0 Luke Sellars D
L bor Ustrnu l and D M ke Weaver to
Ch cago ot the AHL
ThOmas G Hannu TOivonen D Shaone
Morr sonn D Kev n Dallman 0 Ed
Campbe 1 F Darren Van Oene F Brett •
Nowak F Robert L1scak F Pat Leahy F
Man Herr F M1ke Gallard end F Doug Doull
to Providence of the AHL and LW Patrlk
Valcak; to Lethbrrdge of the WHL

E-matl us at
classified 0 mydallysentlnel.com

E-ms11 us sf'

Monday th ru r=rlday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

HOCKEY

l\.egt~ter

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis V1stt us at. 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Vtslt us at 200 Majn Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at (740) 992·2155
Call us at. (304) 675-1333
Call us at: (740) 446·2342
Fax
us
at
(740)
992·2157
Fax us at (304) 675-5234
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008

Olfee 1/orq-~

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Piacad LB

(

Sentinel

tltribune

to 877 588 3812 or send to
L.~•••••••• JR9 200 Mtlln Street Poln1
~
Pleasant WV 25550

~~a.ar

SHERIFF'S
SALE
REAL ESTATE
CIH Number
02..CV.Q20
Mortlllllt Electronic
Aeglllretlon
Bylllml,lnc
Plttlntltl

Ad •..

Infante from Toledo at the IL

Real Estate

Public Notice

Place
Your

Transactions

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Athone·Molgl
EduC11tlonel Service
Cantor, 320 112 E
Main St Pomerov. OH
45788 11 accepting
ualecl blda lor thrM
(3) 1993 Chevrolet
Held Start buHI The
buill ara surplue
and
lnformlllon
regarding the condl·
aon Clln be obtained
by Clllllng 985-4468 or
1192-4202 Bids will be
opened at12 00 noon
on October 1, 2003 at
320 112 Eall Main St
Pomeroy, OH 45769
The Heart of the
Velley Polley CouncU
Govarnlng
Board
reurvea the right to
reject any or any part
of the bid Blda
ohould be labeled
' Bid for School Buo"
and mailed to
Atheno Melga ESC
Truourer'a Office
320 112 E Main St
Pomeroy, OH 45789
(8) 18,23

m:rtbune Sentinel - l\egt~ter
'!"

24 SOT
17

No TGeorga(31)iosttoNo 11 LSU 17

Sunday 1 Gamea
Minnesota 23 Detro1t 13
Tampa Bay 31 Atlanta 10
Kansas City 42 Houston 14
Tennessee 27 New Orleans 12
New England 23 NY Jets 16
lnd1anapots 23 Jacksonville 13
Pittsburgh 17 Cincinnati 10

Tuesday, September 23, 2003

..,

3 bdrm FA Lg LA Cath
ceilings WOOd beams fire
place
hardwood floors
more Info {740)441 1724
3 br 2 ba new stick bu It
ranch home PI Pleasant
photos/ Information on line
www OAVB
com code

90903 call740 441 9546
97 Clayton Houae Trailer

1

All real ..tatt tdvertlllng
In thll newtpaper It
1ubject to the Federal
~llr Houalng Acl ot 1968
which rmrk11 ltlll1gtl to
advertlae any
preftrt~nct llmllltlon or
diiCirlmlntllon butd on
r101 r:rolor religion ae11
ftlfttllll ll11UI or llltlontl
origin or tny Intention to
mtkt toy tuc:h
preftranct limitation or
dltcrlmlnttlon
Thla newap1p1r will not
knowlngtw ter:rtpl
tdvenltamtntl tor re•l
atttll which It In
vlolttlon at the ltw Our
rucltraera hereby
Informed that til
clwllllnga •dvtrtlled In
lhll niWIPIPI' 1r1
tYIIIable on tn tqutl
oppanunU:y btHI

Houae lor sale by owner

2br tba at 1112 Hogg
Strset Pt PI $28 900
(304)675-3458
Hou11 for sale by owner
3br 2ba t200 1q feel Full
unflnlahed beument gas

fire place hardwood floors
AI 38 Greenway Drive PI

Pi (304)675 3456

r M~::~~

r

Meadowbrook Drive 3br
2ba Hardwood lloors large lrlc wooded 32le40 block very n ce 740 446 2003 or
family room Private fenced garage hunting $55 000 740 -'46 1409
back
yard
end Call 740 645 0863
2 mobile hamll bOth with
garage (304)875 1303
30 acres 7 acres tillable w/ 3br Localed In Glenwood
(304)87!;-t 252
appliances
with
42x70 veal barn 48x60 barn All
Pomeroy 9 rooms 2 bath! Southside WV $59 900 00 W/D(304)576 9991
fireplace two car gerage 304 675 5490
2 moblll hom11 ~lath with
with storage or workshop
space
overhaad
For Land for sale 3 acres great 3br Located 1n Glenwood
app lances
with
At 588 All
appointm ent call 7-'0 992 building site

t8X76 asking $12 000 cal
740-256 6663
2828 or 740 992 3664

$35 000 740 446 9966

W/0!304)576 9991

•

0008

Pleasant Valley .Apartment:
Are now taklng .Applrcahons
for 2BA 3BA &amp; 4BA
Appli cations
are
taken
Monday th ru Friday !rom

900 AM 4 PM Ott ce is
Located et t'15 1 Evergreen
Drive Po nt ~feasant WV
Phone No rs (304)675 5806 " ,.

EHO

'

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

1\aesday, September 23, 2003

Tuesda~Sept. 23,2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

'

.

ALLEY

BRIDGE

NEA

PHILLIP

ACRoss

ALDER

1
4

Hil l's Self
Storage

'

..AILIEL-

29670 Bashan Road

•

992-5479

+K

K ,J 5
South

QJ

10

"' 8 2

ti' KQJt0982
J 8

•
•

5 4

Vulnerable: Neither

~~RUJUjiiliiiiiils~~~ BISSELL
BUilDERS me.
1998 Jeep Grand Cherokee
l imited. 5.9 liter, Daytona
Edition. White with gray
leather. Every option. 95,000
miles. $10,600 neg . 740-

256·6169.

740-992-7599

2002 Neon SXT, 19,500mi,
al l power, spoiler, 4-discCO-changer, 5 speed, AJC,

740·3!17.()502.

call

Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
lng applications tor waiting
list for Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apartment, call 675-6679
EHO
,.-----,.----Upstairs apt. for rent. 2
bdrm., 1 bath, kitchen w/
appliances. Gas heat, water,
trash paid. $350 a month.

Day

(740)446-348 1.

Evening (740)446-1567. No
calls after 9:00p.m.

r

SPACE
FOR

RENT

Mobile home space tor rent.
$125amonth, $100 deposi t.
60 FT or less. 740-44601 75.
Offices (Downtown For
Rent) All electric, one is 3
rooms, one is 4 rooms, both
on fi rst floor, 400 block in
Gallipoli s. clean &amp; nice.

740·446·9539
\ lll{ t I I \'\ I JI...,I

r

iO

~.,.,

HOUSEHOLD
Goons

_ _ _ _ _ __ .

Good condition, gold Maytag
washer and dryer $150. Late
model white whirlpool washer $85. Hot point washer
$65. 740-446-9066 after 6
p.m.

(740)949·2764

Whirlpool washer almond
color $95, dryer $95. Hot
point
refrigerator
$75.
Kenmore frost free almond
refrigerator $150. Kenmore

' Men's black suit size 56
long, pants 48/30 worn once ·
$75.
2 sports jackets 3XL $25
~ach. Black leather jacket

washer/dryer $275. Wooderl

Old English Sheepdog
Pups. First shots and
worme'd Lovable, beautiful

shaggy dOgs $200.00 each
740.985·9823

!!'Ill'""-:":'---....,

3XL $50, 740·441·8289.

r70

table w/ 4 chairs $95. Couch

$50. Rocker recliner

$20

NEW AND USED STEEL

Chest of drawers and dress- Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
er w/ mirror $140. Full size For
Concrete,
Angle,

MUSICAL

lNsiliUMENTS

Baldwin Orgasonic Organ

wtMT

~/l

..

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Between Racine &amp;
Syracuse
Large Spaces $7.50
949-2734
Rafrashment
stand open
Special of the day
CHILl

94 Chevy Camara, $3200;
98 Ford Contour, $2300; 98
Escort , 2 dr, $2400: 98 Ford
Escort. 4 dr., $1800; 98
Pontiac Sunfire, $2400; 97
Ford Escort, 4 dr., $1800; 97
Mercury Tracer, $1800; 97
Pontiac Grand Am, $2600;
96 Plymouth Breeze. $1 800;
96 Chevy Lumina, $1700;
R.J. Auto Sales, State' Route
124, Wilkesville, Oh, 1·740·

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

Tf'tf Cl-Iff

, II!"'
PUL ._.,(jO..,

750 East State Street Phone (74.0)~;93-·667H
Athens, Ohio

FLEA MARKET

Oct 3-4

tMPPfN~P

o· ·r
U'

tHS t'NIFf...

"

~

(

fOB

}

Gra't lng
For
Drains, tion. Perfect for home or
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L churc~ . 740·446·7711.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Clarinet like new $250.00 or
Friday: Sam-4:30pm . Closed make offer. 740·742·2176 ·
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;

r

i

t

Sunday. (740)446-7300

FRUITS &amp; .

VEGEfABLFS

Office Furniture
Bell peppers Red/Green
New, scratch &amp; Dent.
Save 70%. 1-800-527-4662 you pick $8.00 a bushel. We
Argonaut 519 Bridge Street. pick $10.00- 740-247-4292
GuyaridotteJHunlington. M/F
Buing paw paw fruit $1.00- - - - - - - - 2.00 lb bu"ing walnuts
Ut"l't
t
.,
1997
P
II y
ral er,
ace $10.00 100 lb 's.
American, double axle, Call 74 o-s 98 •2124
7'x14'x7
1/2'
$3,550,
(740)992-2762
Pot atoes
lor
sale
(Kennebec,
Red
Pontiac),
8UJUliNG
Man-Sat. , , 65002 Stale
SUWUES
Route 124, Reedsville, Oh,
-Block, brick, sewer pipes, SO# $ 10

I

ed. $3,350, (740)992·2762

r

~ &amp;..

i

FOR SALE

iicz''i-";.:4;;,0·;:;2;;:45~·::-51;:2"-1'-.-....., ~~--•ORiiittiTRADt:itiitiii.....

i

PE'IS

·
Used washer/dryer, good
condition. $150. Call 740AKC Min iature Pinchers, 245-0339
ready to got Tails &amp; declaws
I \I{\ I ...,l 111'1 II ...,
docked,
Vet
checked!
.\ II\ I " ll H 1,
Beautiful
2-fe mates, 1black/rust,
1-redlblack for
FARM
information please call 740~'OR SALE

F.QuiPIIIENT

256·1033

Registered · Jack
CKC
Russell puppies. 2 males, 1
female. (740)245-9301

ffiRSAI.E

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

1995 FORD E350 CUBE
BOX
TRUCK.
CALL
(740)446·94 16. M·F 9-5 .
Located
1391
Sal1ord
School, Gallipolis .

2002 Dakota needs painted,
2 wheel drive, V-8, automatic, loaded. $5,500 or best

"94" Chevy SBvec~do ext.
cab, 5-speed. runs good,

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

offer,

19 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769 .

VANS &amp;

4-\VDs

740.992-2432
1979 Jeep CJ-7 new Outlaw
wheels and tires, different
tops, extra engine, good
condition. (740)388-8997

·-------,.1

co ndition,

(740)992-0219

HOWARDl.
WRITfSEl
*RIORNG
-*HOME
MAINTENANCE
dEIMLESS

OBO,

1995 Ford E-350 Van , 14ft.
Older Pin ball machine in high cube bo 11 , excellent
working order or not. cond. 740·446-941.6

f

91 Dodge Caravan LE ,
loaded, one owner, 86K ,

GUmR
•Free Esllmatn•

949-1405

$2,000, 740·949-2481 or

740·992-6145 leave mes2000 Martz Goose-neck sage.
stock tra iler. 3500 lb a~~: le.
red, excellent condition. "93" Chevy Astro Van,
143,000. miles, runs good,
$3,600. 740-245-5672.
$3,000 or best offer,
Baby ca lves for sale. Call (740)992-3357
740-388-8524, No Sunday
calls please.
99 Ford raised roof conversion Van. Fully equipped.
For Sale A.l. reg. Angus Excellenl condition $9,950.
heifers, cows &amp; calves ,also; 740·446·6189 or 740·446reg , black limousine open 686,5.
heifers 7 bulls.
~'l:i'::O -::~:""'
New digital livestock scales
BoA'IS &amp; MOTOAS

First ConliMnlar
52,500.00 to $150,000.00
Bad credit weloo~
LOANS O.A.C I

waighs up to 3.4001bs 740- .__ _titffiiiiRttiSttiAJiii"iii
E_
256-1352
.

·'"' ~

· - .~

/ ~'': :J · )

'(.._ :1-:.I· ~· ~
/, -: ...~ _.~. . ··

t'&lt;.:"

'·.

_, .

.

tee

Tolt.ltM 1~79
w-.lwlll-lft.cont '

,...fi.OW BETTe.~".
TO 1-\C.~LD
Ti-\E: Fl R~T t&gt;t&gt;-,'{
OF f"-LL I

1&lt;/HAT

00

1

T'VE BEEN
WATCHING YOU
DURING WARM·

YOU
MEAN? UPS . AND IT
LOOKS TO

lX\ 0(1
1

(740) 843-5264

C

ME A S IF
YOU'RE.
U S ING
STICI&lt; · UM .

,.r.,-

®,.,
'

'

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

L _______

Let me )c i' for youl

Zamboni

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)- You

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER :
SERVICE
• Floom Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guttars
1 VInyl Siding &amp; Painting ·
1 Patio and Porch Decks ·

BETIY

AQUARIUS IJa.n. 20-Feb. 19) - Keep
your atte ntion co nstantly focused on a
lofty obj ec ti ve for which you've been striv-

e

992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
Veers L ttl

FINANCIAL PROBLEMS?
Need moMy tigllt &amp;way?
Money available for business.
home equity or cooSOfidation.
Min. $5K. Goocl or bad credll.
NO FEES! S.nkruplcy at:Qtl)led.
Ma~ng Our Sales -

..1

Free~s , POOtaQOI

Stort lmrM&lt;Iatelyl
Geoone ()gportunityt
Fat Free lnfoftnatiOn,

CaiiTOI Free:
1-800-357-!170

TO P~Y CHECK?
We can htlpl
Coli toll-treei--M0--4111

----------------1994 Thunderbird 65,000
miles, excellent condition.
$4,800. Call 740·441- 1302.

HoME

Self·Storl\ de

I

"Ej

IMPROVFlltENfS

1996 Chrysler Concord.

33795 H"l land Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

12(),000 miles, air.
tilt.
cruise . $1500 080
C&amp;~
Gelieral
Home
Mairl'tenence- Painting, vinyl
256-1875 or 256-1233

Win 1 HouM 11'1&lt;1 BuslnMa
In Wadla, Atnkl
E11ay Conte~t D!tans
www.wuvtacont..t.com
' .9f SASE: Wasilll Web WOf'ld

113 W. Packo Hwy. C-130
Wutt~. N&lt; 99664 $10(\'por enCry

'::;;:;;,;:;::;:;:;;~

1997 1-Conda Civic $4,795, i9i902io·6io3i02iio3io
. -----,

Malgs County

1992 Cavalier S!W V-6
loaded $1,495 others in
stock, we take trades.
cook motore

740·446·0103

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS·
·

1999
Pontiac
Firebird
67,000 miles T-Top, very
clean , view photos on line at
www.OAVB.com or call740-

446·3620

•'

740-992-5232

1996 Dodge Neon $2 ,000. siding, ca·rpentry, doors ,
Call 740•367•0 102 .
windows, baths, mobile
home repair and more. For
1996 Grandam 40 $2,395. free estimate call Chet, 740-

1997 Pontiac Sunlire 2dr,
Sport Coupe, new wheels
and tires, sunroof, e~~:cellent
condition. (740}388-8997

,...

IMPORTS
Athens

Days ,

~

rto

-- -- -&lt;c-~--

" K N B J
FA H

B J

X

N Z X D

LXG

~AYBGS

WVXLZ

MAD

TNZDZ

MXVV

YBVZJ."

PHDXVK ,

LNXDVZJ

AG

YXDJN.

PREVIOUS SOLUTIO N -

"We'll be righl back after this word

from Manufacturers HanQover.n- Announcer Raloh Kiner

T:~~:t:~' S©tl.l\}1\.-~t,;,S"
by CLA.Y l. POLLAN
0 fou
~•arrange l•ttars of the
r terombled wo rds be..

WORD

lAM I

~cllt•d

l_ow to form four simple word1 .

PARHEM

I DEM BE

'r-------"1
I' I I I

m

I---TL:....::D"T7F-iC r!T.:'R-I ~

Times sure have changed. My ·

1 ~~ ;; husband asked our teenage son
I
1
'-=:~~=~~~.,:_'..,if he wanted to play baseball and
5

,..

A RT L

u1

irhee'~~~~~· _· -~~re, dad, I'll go get

f---,,.:.:.-,;.:..1,;.Jrsrji'-"'jr--t 0

~~~c:~~LiR

I I I I I. I I I I

"I never wear ties that cost over three bucks," a coworker mused." "I believe, that expensive silk ties are
the only ones that attract GRAVY."

Ing and you will have better chances than · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
usual tmtay for hining a bulls·eye.
PISC ES (Fell , 20-March 20) - Take all
IJP doing more lor you in return than you
the necessary ti me you need to examine
do for them. It proves thai good bege ts
an important decision thal should be for - good.
mulaled today . II you check it outlrom
CANCER (June 21·July 22)- When you
every angle, careful study will protect you
want to you can pour on the humor, so
!rom oversights
when dealing with others today lighten up
ARIE S (March 21-April 19)- Don't le i
your approach wi th a bit of wit. You'll easannoying tasks get the bette r of you
ily get other s smiling and cooperating.
today. You nave the necessary stick-to-it
LE O (July 23-Aug. 22)- Alt hough
mindsel to take ca re of anything that
returns on investments could come in
needs to be done. And you'll take pride 1n small installments, their long- range paytheir completion.
offs could add up to a tidy sum . Don't
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Unt1ke
become needlessly wary with one tOday
yesterday , when you might have te ll a bi t
and give up something good.
out of sorts, you'll be .back to your ol d
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - A gregari·
sweet sell tOday and friends will find you
ous mood could overtake you today and
a delightful companion to be around .
put you in a mora talkative mode .
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- An interestHowever, listeners won't mind - they' ll
Ing twist could be put on things today
approeia!S; your upbeat outlook and posi·
when the very people you try to help end
tlve take on life.

Fast

WI~H

1-4AC' BS:fN

-

Today's clue: Y equals M

Classifieds

ANI7, BOY. 1

(304)675-4230

by Luis Campos
Celeb rity Cipher cryptograms are created lrom quotations by famous
people. past and present. ~c h lener in the cipher stands tor another.

Get

1984 Olds cutlass Supreme 2002 Jayco 30ft. travel trailvery good condillon. $2,800. er.
$12,500.
FIRM .

Call 740-446-7711 .

CELEBRITY CIPHER

@)

3901

DIABETICS. F'ho -rill
No Coot 011111•• &amp;upptlesl
Join Dltbttoo care Club
FREE Mtmbol'ohlpl
FREE HOME DELIVERY I
1-1101).2117·1'137.
I

~~~~

could be amazed today when you learn
Comp lete the chuckle quoted
that someone who likes you Is spreading
.
_
.
•
.
by filling in the mi1sing words
the good word , about you. It 'll be quite 1-...1..-L-...1..-1-...l......J you devoelop from step No. 3 below.
flaltering to know that you are so highly
A PRINT NUMBERED
I
tl1ought of.
':II LETTERS IN SQUMES
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan . 19)- Today
might be th e right day to implement an
LETTERs
important plan w1th whi ch you've been
toy ing . If you see the signs, take the
SCI!AM.LETS ANSWERS
action. because its very e nergy wil l
Yankee • Heron • Sieve - Jangle - GRAVY
increase your chances for success.

Bonanza Get
SFREE

$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.

MEDtC~RE

You better than any other sign knows the
value of cooperation, which will prove
quite benefi cial for you in the year ahead.
Through teamwork you 'll actually gain
more personal advantages than you
would have on you own.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - II you' re in
need of a favor today from so meone who
you coils ider to be above you, all you
.,l~~ have to do i's ask. You'll be amazed at
how Yt~e ll thought of you are by this person .

SCOR PIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 221 - Don'l

Zambezi

Hondas,
chevys,
etc!
cars/trucks from $500. For
llstlngs 1-800-7i 9-3001 ext

l·lllf.Bil-7213

'lbur 'l!lrthday:

allow a few individuals who bore you to
stop you from allending a social function
today. Go anyway, because the majority
of the peop!J3 will prove to be fun and
uplifting.

GARFIELD
Preecription Buytrs G~ .

AstroGraph

Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2003

Ta~e

Free Estimates

38 Jeoro

er, but your ruff will leave him with TBJ~AGJBG
four loser s.

IH\ \..., 1'4)1{ 1 \I Ill'\

Aefih. Guaranteed. $3.00 periOCmg.
Why pay mor111? We have the answer!
Vio:q, Ctlebtex, lipitOr, more!

course, but this sequence i~ reasonable.
Sitting East, you should be asking
yourself: With how many diamonds did
partner st&lt;ul ? If h'e began with only
three diamond s, declarer a lso had
three. Then, you can cash the spade
nee to denude dummy of trumps, and
follow with the diamond queen for an
easy one down.
H owever, if partner began with four ·
dia mond s, you mUst now shift to the

Declarer will play three rounds of N A D B L A G
hearts , hoping to discai-d his club los-

Box 189 Middlel"!rt

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ohr1.U

The bidding might have taken a dif-

you switch to the club eight.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

_...

c.-

48 Tlckllllnfo
51 lndl1111
Jones
quest

plateau
31 'r'"top
nibbler
33 Surprised
cries
35 Teen
hangout
38 Shabby

~~r-

Here, West continues with the diamond two, so yo u know that h e had
four diamonds Initially. At trick three,

affordable and easy it is to

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
DoouOpen 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday or
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

7 Insulation
measure
(hyph.)
8 Stillier
9 Apply point
10 Boulevard
liners
13 Make camp
19 Fermi

47

ferent

doubleton . Alternatively, if West has
three cards lert, he should lead hi s
lowest: bottom from an odd number.

for your family and
lo\o·ed ones.

get the coverage you need.

35 Fllefolde•
label
36 Deolrt
37 Wedding
places
39 Woo bl1s
40 Chicken
- - king
41 Bal club VIP

46 Mollulk

to your nine. What would you do next?

should signal count with t he card that
he leads. H he has two cards remaining - i.e., he s tarted wi th three diamonds - h e sh ould lead the higher or
hi s remaini ng pair: high-h,l W wi th a

fl!lt Let me show you how

" ·,

3 Promontory
- lves
4 Snaazt
27 Rock
31 Fa1f guy _ 5 Chandelier
coverer
32 Flecont (lnl.)
pendent
28 ACor1mont
34 Polite word 6 H•d wood 29 H gh

39 LMgellurd .
41 Bloc:ltllu.ter ·
42 Natitd lovo :
epewer
43 Pot!" I
contriCIIan ·
44 Tiny I n -

Look
at the
North
East
l o only
convey
eounl
in a and
different
hands. Defending against four spades,
your partn er {West&gt; starts the defense
with the diamond ace : six, king, four.
West continues with a second diamond

New&amp; Used

Don't leav~ the debt of
burial and linal expenses

Opening Monday Sept. 22, 1985 Bay liner 19ft. pen
A-Team Feed , at old JD bow V-8 engin e. New OMC
Norris Building, 110 Vine Cobra out drive. Good
Street. 740-441 -9090.

Free consultation with live agent

h tell partner how manhy c ard s yotuh
ave m a sut1, you p1ay 1g11- 1ow w1
an even number or up the line wilh an
odd number. Some times. though, you

:;'

How do you know partn er 's.diamond
length ? On t he second r o und, he

"WV's # I Chevy, Pontiac. Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

Advertise
in this
....., space for $1 00
I
per month.

...

j

Conoolidate your bil~ with

No application

$4.800

~~~

"split" It
21 Sec'y
24 Undorgrod
dego. .
25 Charles
Lamb name
26 Folksinger

we saw that if you need

DeanHin

1-800-822-0417

TRUCKS

TO BUY

304
, )429·LMsrocK3333

IIOCI-:I31-455h N1H2

3275

WANllD

Pas s

By Phillip Alder

I MEAN ONE 1HATLL PICK
1H' INEDI6LES, TOO !!. _,{J-f~,

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

1986 Chevy Blazer, 350,
AKC sm811 Yorkies 2 males, Gehl Silage Wagon tandem, auto, excellen t condition,
10 weeks old. $500 740-- 3 beater &amp; roof. Call $4,000 OBO; 19 97 Ford
75
ii3;,:04~6;,;
;;,;-4~3;;:0:::
B _ _ __, Conversion Van , very good
. 245·1217

- - -- - -- -

Training!
Free l nforma~on!

Used Car, 1995 Saturn 4
door; Excellent Condition,
$2,495. 2903 Parrish Ave,
Point Pleasant . (304)675-

i

Pass

Pas~
Pass

club, eight.

0480.

$3,500 or bes t
(740)992-3357

l t

~~
-·
ii~
i _-

WTf~,

Estate sale ot 1998 Ford
Taurus and 1994 Dodge
Caravan
Call 740·388·

windows, lintels, etc. Claude II!!C:r""-::-~:---., ·Offer. (740)256-1233
Winte rs, Rio Grande. OH

2•

Yesterday,

d•nce

'lA
/
;;'A:Oiii~=====~:_===~~~~~~=~~~~~!~~~~~T~~~~/'1~S!A~~--j~-~~~d

669- 1603 or 1-740-742·

r

ERst

1"'
2¥

i ~. in another way
.,.

~

57
mat1ress box springs $65. Channel. Flat Bar, Steel and bench. Excellent condi- 23
_ _ _ _·- - - - - -

Queen size $95.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark Skaggs Appliance 76 Vine
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. St. 740-446-7398.
(740)446- 7444 1-877-8309162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card .
Drive- a- little save aiot.
Buy or sell.
Riverine
Refrigerator $75., Whirlpool Antiques, 1124 East Main
Washer $95., Kenmore on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740dryer $125., G.E. refrlgera- 992-2526. Russ Moore,
tor,
like
new,
$1 95 ., ~ow'iinl"e"!r."'!"'_ _ _ _ _'l
Kenmore Washer /dryer set
u -. . .~. _
$JOO., 3-couchs- $50. each,
Ll'UM.I .•' LLAru..uu~
••~~ •• · - JSE·
table 4-chairs, $95., King- · - - - 1 "U'..K\...nAl"'~U
•
size
box-springJmaltress
$100., chest/dresser w/mi r- 4 homecoming dresses.
ror $140.
Skaggs 740- l ong burgundy size 7/8,
446-7398
long gold w/ sparKle s medium. long burgundy wt
Thompsons App liance &amp; sparkles medium, short dark
Repair-675·7388. For sale, blue w/ sparkl es w/ jacket
re-co nditioned automatic size 9110 $50 each 740-44 1washers &amp; dryers, refrigera - 8289.
tors. gas and electric
ranges. air conditioners. and
Antique
Marble
table,
wringer washers. Will do
sewing
machine,
baby
repairs on major brands In
1tem1. (304)675-2801
shop or at your home.
-------used furniture store, 130 Cool Downll
Central
Bulaville Pike. mattresses, Cooling Systems, New and
dressers,
co uches, Used Installed. (740)446bunkbeds. bedroom suites,
6308
recliners, grave monuments.
Gallipolis,
740-446-4782
Greenhouse, 72'x30' hut
Ohio HAS 10-4pm. Stop By
stvle , alt accesorlews InclUd-

START DATING
TONIGHT!
1-800-ROMANCE
EXT 1847

NOyl, T~~L Tttf JU~Y

.......

$6,500/080. (740) 258·
6745, (740) 256·6877, (740)
256·6467.

North

~~~~~~:;=;-r;::::~~~--:;:;.:;-:;:z,-;-:;:;:;:~~;-il
.. You can give count

RESIDENTIAL

"
FREE ESTIMATES

West

Opening lead: • A

COMMERCIAL and

2001 Chevy Cavalier 40, 000
miles, ,.. 2 door, spoiler, CO
player. 17 inch wheels.
$5,500 or best offer. 740-

Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
Wa shers,
Guaranteed.
Dryers,
Ranges ,
and
Refrigerators, SOme start at
$95 . Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine St., (740)446·7398
-------Martin Industries gas heating stove, 70,000 BTU's, $75

1~
4~

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Rooting

388-8893

Tara
TownhOuse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Deposit Requ ired, Days;
740-.,46-3481; Evenings:

~outh

acronym

warehouse
30 Slvpllc

Dealer: North

t

target

17 Bode or Ant 57 Maune 18 Bodin of
58 Albuquor·
water
que hro.
20 Hotel
employees
DOWN
22 Wooton cap
23 Buckeys
1 Thouoond
campus
as o prolix
24 Jazz form
2 S&amp;L
27 Hllllory .
protector

"' Q 10
TFN

swallow up
Round units
Mo. neighbor
Trpe
a bean
Harper or
Mojoro
Orderly
l.ofn:chaun'olond
FBI

Image

ti' A 6 4 3
• 6 5

107432
A 8 3 2

·42
45
Fa114ood
49
chain (abbr.) 50
Navy
noncom
52
Indy 500
Spud st.
53
Bodauln
54
Fill fiddle
ChopStick 55

Puzzle

16 Polynesian 56 Music and

East

Jeff Warner Ins. .
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

5

7 6
A9764J

Cellular

Racine, Ohio
45771
740.949·2217

7
1I
I2
14
15

AKQ9

Crossword

r

WINTER STORAGE
Fairgrounds
Arrival : Oct. 5 &amp; Oct. 19
9 am- 12pm
Relean April26, 2003

A lee ol$20 will be

charges tor earlv arrlval , late arrlwal, early
removal, late removal,
or anytime accetsla
wanted to fairgrounds
other than stated dates.
Building space Ia flrtt
comeflrsturn.
lnalde ~toragl: $4.00/lf
Open Span: $2.00/tf

Inside Fence: 1.00111

---------

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

J&amp;L

Eledric
Licensed &amp; Bonded

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Ph 740-992·093:1
Cell740·5t1·107J

(1 D'11l 0' 6 1O'll20')

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON

(740) 992-3194

992-6635

·t New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stap &amp; Compare

THE GRIZZWELLS

t,JOU

rHe:~e:

Results

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 23. 2003;

www.mydailysentinel.com

Broncos dominate Raiders in 31-1 0 Monday night win~

.arkin wants to
leave quietly, Bt

.- .

Bv

0AVJD GOLDBERG

Associated Press
DENVER (AP) - For one
night, Jake Plummer - son;
shoulder ~nd all - outdid
John Elway.
Plummer threw two first·
. quarter touchdown passes and
ran for another Monday night
as Denver improved its
unbeaten record by routing
Oakland 31-10. Plummer also
broke one of Elway's team
records with a 40-yard scmmble that set up a field goal.
Elway's longest run of his 16year career was 34 yards.
This game was all but over
by the end of a first period in
which the Broncos (3-0) took
a 21-0 lead, outgaining the
Raiders 170 yards to seven
and scoring on all three of
their possessions.
The scores came on an 18.
yard pass from Plummer to
Shannon Sharpe; a 44-yard
pass to Ashley Lelie and a 6·
yard scramble set up by
another 44-yard pass to Lelie.
The first TO was a short flip,
but the two 44-yarders were
both long strikes -. proof that
the right shoulder that
Plummer se parated in San
Diego last week is healthy.
"There's always- room for
improvement - nobody can
be perfect," coach Mike
Shanahan said. "But I thought
Jake did a great job. He made
Denver Broncos quarterback Jake Plummer (16) breaks loose on a 40-yard run against the some great moves out of the
Oakland· Raiders in the second quarter Monday night, in Denver. Denver's Mike Anderson (38) pocket. He made the big plays
when we needed them."
blocks Oaklands' Tyler Brayton (91) in the background. (AP)

Plummer, signed in the offseason after six seasons in
Arizona, has been considered
by some Denver fans to be the
next El way, although his
career with the Cardinals
hardly portends that - he had
90 TDs and 114 interceptions
in the desert, and his caree~
passer rating of 69 .I was
decidedly mediocre.
But on this ni!;lht he was a
reasonable · facs1mile, espe·
cially on the 40-yard scamper
in which he evaded a rush. cut
through a hole ·o n the right
side and ran out of bounds at
the Oakland 15. He finished
14-of•21 for 197 yards and
ran five times for 48 yards.
He got help from Clinton
Portis, who had 43 yards
rushing when he left in the
second quarter with a sore
chest. The defense chipped in
with five sacks, 2 1/2 by
Bertrand Berry and two by
Reggie Hayward, and later
held the Raiders on the 10
after they threatened to cut the
lead to 14 points after · a
blocked punt with II minutes
left.
"They fed off each other. I
thought our defensive line and
our defense played great the
whole game," Shanahan said.
Portis returned in the fourth
quarter after the Broncos
announced that he was being
held out of the ~ame on a
·"coach's decision.' That was
a tactful way to avoid the
problems of last week when
Shanahan said after the game

that the "concussion" that
caused Plummer to leave in
the second quarter was real]f
a slightly separated shoulder,
Shanahan said he had
'"fibbed" because he didn~
want the Chargers to k_now.
Plummer couldn't throw 1f he
had to re-enter the game. All
32 teams were notified by
commissioner Paul TagliabUJ:
last week that future "fibs''
would be disciplined.
:
Mike
Anderson,
who
moved from fullback to tai:C:
back, finished with 14 carrieS
for 70 yards. including a 44.;
yard run that set up his 1-yaril
TO run in the third quartet
that made it 31-0. That cafi\le
seven minutes before Oakland
(1-2) finally got on the boar(!
on a 4-yard run by Zack
Crockett at the end of an SOyard drive.
·
Sebastian
Janikowski,
arrested in a bar fight la$t
Saturday night, kicked a 4
yard fourth-quarter field goal
that made it 34-10.
·
The game was a form of
payback for the Broncos, _wh~
lost twice to the Raiders last
season. The most painful
came in a Monday night ga"*
here won by Oakland 34-10 ~~
a time when the Broncos were
.6-2 and the Raiders 4-4 ani!
on a four-game losing streak.
It turned around the season
for both teams - the BroncoS
missed the playoffs ani!
Oakland lost only one garnll
on the way to the AFC chan1·
pionship.
'

BY JOE KAY

CINCINNATI - Corey Dillon
blames the grass field a t Paul
Brown Stadium for his latest
injury and the Cincinnati Bengals'
latest loss.
The durable runmng back
strained his groin in the second
quarter of a 17- 10 defeat against
the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday.
With their top offensive threat
missing, the Bengals (0-3) could·
n' t move the ball consistently.
Dillon felt better Monday, but
was upset that the club hasn' t done
more to fix one of the NFL' s most
maligned fields. Since the stadium
opened in 2000, the grass consistently has come up in clumps,
drawing harsh criticism from play-

ers around the league.
"The field caused my groi n
injury," Dillon said. "If it was in
better condition, maybe I wouldn't
be sitti ng here talking to you guys
about the injury. We might be talking about a win."
T~e field was ranked as the
leag ue 's third-worst in a survey
the NFL players association
re leased in January. The team's
grou ndskee per was replaced and
the field was resodded with a lesssandy base.
Dillon said he hurt his groin and I aggravated my groin.
when he made a cut during a 1- There's nothing I could do about
yard run in the second quarter. He it."
.
.
.
stayed in for one more play, then
The stadiUm's. managmg dl~ecleft the game and didn't return.
tor agreed Monday that the fteld
"As you can see, that field is ter- · could be better.
rible," Dillon said. "I planted my
:·we ar~ not satisfied and we
foot in that grass and it gave way, will co ntmue to take ~teps ~o
address the issue," satd Enc

Browns

While at Middle Tennessee
State, Holcomb finished a
game despite a broken jaw.
Davis said initial X-rays
from Page 81
didn't show the fracture. He
was injured while making a considered switching · to
quarterback sneak near his Couch in the . third quarter,
own goal line. As Holcomb , but decided against it when
pushed into the line, 49ers Holcomb - blitzed nearly
defensive end Chidi Ahanotu nonstop by the 49ers in the
fell on the quarterback's leg. first half - appeared to be
Holcomb got his ankle dealing with his inj\lry.
taped and continued to play.
"He was moving around
He sprained his left ankle m fine and he was playing
the third quarter and stiU fin- fine," Davis said. "We were
ished 25-of-38 for 222 yards more concerned about getand twoTDs.
ting the protections chan~ed
He has played hurt before . than we were about changmg
Last year, Holcomb broke the quarterback. He w;as able
his left leg while filling in to plant and able to throw.
when Couch suffered a con"Mobility was a little bit of
cussion against Baltimore. an issue, but it wasn't much
Holcomb stayed in despite of a factor. I don't think anythe injury and nearly rallied body is going to mistake
the Browns to a win.
Kelly for Michael Vick any-

Big Ten
from Page 8~
fully I could solve it."
The offensive line continues to be a nagging problem,
with Krenzel and McMullen
taking some frightful hits and
rushers frequently running
into defenders in the back,
field. After piling up penal·

ties in record numbers for the
two
games,
the
past
Buckeyes were fla~ged just
three times agamst the
Falcons.
"The running game was
better and the passing game
was OK," said wide receiver
Michael Jenkins. "We' ve still
got a lot of growing to do."
That might be the bottom
line. Since every starter but
Clarett was back on offense,
many assumed points and

way."
On the Browns' final drive,
Holcomb completed II
straight passes, He threw to
five receivers and converted
four third-down situations
despite excruciating pain.
"To see him in that kind of
pain made us want to go out
and make plays for him,"
said Andre' Davis, who made
two big ones. catching a 2yard TO pass to get
Cleveland within 12-7 .
Davis'
game-wi nning
catch came on a perfectly
thrown ball by Holcomb,
who put it high enough for
the wide receiver to jump
and catch it between five
49ers.
If Holcomb has to sit
Sunday or is sidelined for an
extended period, the Browns
will again turn to Couch,

'

••\l'\1',.\,•!

·'

'"

SPORTS
• OSU to wait and see on
Krenzet's condition. See Page B1

\ \ I P \ 1'. 11 \ \

I•

'. 11 ' 11

\l l i. l l '

I

' "Pi

"'

ly that I won't play."
.
Dillon hasn ' t been able to get
rolling in his seventh season. He
hyperextended his right· knee
when a player fell on him one
week earlier against Oakland, then
hurt his groin Sunday after only
seven carries for 26 yards.
Dillon is one of four players to
run for ·J,OOO yards in each of his
first six seasons and has missed
only two games because of injury.
He recoiled at a suggestion that
years of running hard might be
catching up with him.
.
" If that crept in anybody's mind,
they need to get their braip
checked," Dillon said. "If thf)l
don't think I can do it, something's totally wrong. If that's t~
case, I'm sorry you feel that way,
but this guy can still do it."

"Tim has won games here.
Tim prepares. His mental
attitude has been very good.
When he 's on the sideline,
he 's watching coverages. He

and Kelly are talkin~. He'.s
into the ga mes as 1f he's
going in on the next posses"
sion. From that standpoint,
we feel good."
·

BY

Ct!ARLENE HOIFLICH

chocolate chip cookies people who have an allergy
spoonable dough.
or sensitivity to milk could
Torres received an alert result in a severe allergic
from the Ohio Department of reaction. She emphasized
Health along with a notice of · .that the product only poses a .
recall on the cookie dough potential hazard to milkwhich is sold at Wal-Mart and allergic individuals.
Neighborhood
Markets
Packages marked with any
nationwide. She said milk is use -before expiration date
in the product but not listed as through Jan, 4, 2004, are
an ingredient on the package. being recalled, Torres said.
Torres eltplained that con- The expiration date, applied
sumption of the product by by inkjet, may be .found on

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - . Norma
Torres, administrator of the
Meigs
County
Health
Department,
warned
Tuesday that residents who
have an allergy or sensitivity
to milk should not be using
the IS-ounce l'ackage of
refrigerated Great Value

the lengthwise seam of the
package. ' It will be marked
with a number for the day.
followed by an abbreviation
for the month, followed by
the last two digits of the year.
Torres noteci that the
affected packages ·have' been
removed from store shelves
and are no longer available
for purchase, but some packages may remain in consumer refrigerators or freez-

ers. Consumers may retiJCrl
the cookie dough packa~
to the store where purchas~ll
for a full refund.
.
· Earthgrains Refrigerated
Dough Products, which maP,.
ufactures the cookie dou11b
for Wal-Mart, discovered tft~:
label discrepancy during : a
quality-control label revieyJ.
Earthgrains is
workin~

."

Please -

Alert. AS •

for school-age · ··
MR/DD programs ·
BY BRIAN J. REED

Page AS
• Frank Turner, 87

breed@ mydailysentlnel.com

INSIDE
• Community calendar.
SeePageA3
• Family Medicine. See
Page A3

WEATHER
MMt1J ...m,, lll: TOo, Low:

-

.
Construction workers lay thousands of tons of concrete each day as they build the high~ay from Darwin to Athens. (J. Miles Layton)
BY J. MtLES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

Detalll on Pap A2

LO'I'I'ERIES
Pick 3 day: Hi·2
Pick 4 day: 9+7·1
Pick 3 night 4·2·1
Pick 4 night 0.5-9-1
Buckeye 5: 2-4·1 0.35-37

West Vuginia
Dally 3: 3-0-5
Dally 4: 6-3·2·3
Cllh 25: 7·11·14-16·20-22

INDEX
a SI!CI'IoNs - ta PAGFS

Calendars ·
Classifieds

yardage wouldn't be a prob·
lem. They have been. It s not
as if the Buckeyes don't recognize that.
"We must get more consistent," said tailback Lydell
Ross, who ran for two scores
against Bowling Green. "We
have to drive down the field
every time - and I mean
every time - and start making big plays. That's what we
need." ·

" ' 'I'

U. S. 33 construction continues Districts responsiblei

Ohio

Thursday, October 23

1.1

Allergy alert issu.ed for refrigerated cookie doug~~

OBITUARIES

Brown, who is ' not related to
Bengals owner Mike Brown. "It is
our exP.ectation that the playing
field w1ll be much improved when
the Bengals host the Baltimore
Ravens on Oct. 19 ."
Dillon hasn ' t mis,sed a gall)e
since 1999, when he sat out the
season finale against Jacksonville
because his left kneecap had slid
out of place the previous week.
He expects to see ;~ction this
Sunday m Cleveland, where he 's
played some of his best games. He
ran for 1OS yards and caught eig ht
passes for 67 yards during a 20· 7
defeat
in
Cleveland
last
September. He has averaged 118
yards rushing in eight games
against the Browns.
"Don't ever count me out,"
Dillon said. "I doubt very serious-

who led them to eight wins
last season before losing his
job this summer.
~
"Our
football
team
believes in Tim," Davis said.

•

t-

Bengal's Dino·n blames field for groin injury, loss:
Associated Press

Marauders take down
Vmton County, Bt

I

Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

Sports
Weather

B2-4

Bs
A3
A4
As
As
81-2,6

A2

© aoo3 Ohio Valley Publiohln&amp; Co.

DARWIN . - With cold
weather just weeks away,
construction crews on U. S.
33 between Darwin and
Athens are working 12 to 14
hours a day pouring concrete
on the Super II highway
which will connect to the
four-lane between Darwin
a.nd Rock Springs.
Greg Schafer is the plant
superintendent for the gigantic
Mar-Zane cement mixing plant
located where State Route 6Sl
and U.S. 33 meet at Darwin.
The cement mixer. reserved
for high volume jobs, came
from Zanesville and is only
one of a handful used on highway construction projects
statewide.
The I00 foot tall portable .
cement mixer can easily produce 2,500 cubic yards of concrete a day, .or enough for 250
truckloads. At peak operation
lt can tum out twice that much.
Instead of using regular
cement mixer trucks to haul the
· concrete to the work site, dump
trucks which hold more are
used to expedite the process of
paving the 13.5 miles.
Once the highway is completeo in June, it will be a
direct
route
bet,ween
Colufubus and Charleston, W.
• way of a new connecVa. oy
Greg Schafer, plant supervisor, stands high In the air on tor from Five · Points to the
the portable central cement miKer located at the U.S. 33 Ravenswood Bridge sched·
construction site near State Route 681 at Darwin. (J. uled . for completiun in
Miles Layton)
' December.

TUPPERS PLAINS - As
the Mei!;lS Board of Mental
RetardatiOn
and
Developmental Disabilities
considers closing the Carleton
School if voters reject its
November levy proposal,
local school districts are considering the effects such a
closing might create for them.
The MR/DD board passed a
resolution last week, vowing
to cease its pre-school and
school-age programs if the
five-year, two-mill levy does
not meet with voters '
approval. Adult .· services
through Meigs Industries
sheltered workshop would
continue, even if the levy
· does not pass. ·
Meanwhile, local school districts are required by state law
to provide a "free and appropriate public education" for
children three to 22 years of

age in their respective districts.
If Carleton School, which
provides school-age and preschool programs for children
with developmental disabilities under contracts with the
county's three local school
districts closes, the local districts would become primari;
ly resronsible for the educa·
Uon o those children. accord·
ing
to
Deryl
Well,
Superintendent of the Eastern
Local School District.
"I don ' t think our teache'rs
have the expertise, individually, to meet the educational
needs of children with devel·
opmental disabilities , nor
does th is district hav e the
class size needed," Well said.
"We're operating on an IS-toone student/teacher ratio."
"We also hav e no preschool program in place, so
we would have no way of
providing pre-school services, at all.'

Please see Propams, A!!

Upcoming levy

Meigs County Senior Center Executive Director Mark Sutton
energizes the troops for the upcoming vote to renew an e~ist·
ing levy which supports the Senior Center. Sutton said the levy
provides funding for the large variety of services the Senior
Center offers. (J. Miles Layton)

In celebration of Women's Health Month, Holzer Medical Cenler Community Health and Well~ss is proud to present their 6th Annual

Larkin
from Page 81
whether on the field or in the
front office or a combination
of both," Goldschmidt said.
"If this is the way John Allen
feel s about Barry Larkin,
why would Barry Larkin
want to work for John
Allen?"
· Bowden repeatedly said

during his tenure that he
wanted Larkin to spen.d his
entire career with the Reds,
but tried to trade the shortstop to the New York Mets in
2001.
Touched by the reception
Larkin got from fans that
year, Lindner decided to give
him the three-year extension.
Combined with Ken Griffey
Jr.'s $116.5 million, nineyear deal, the Red~' payroll
was tied up by two large con-'

tracts.
Griffey and Larkin have
both been hurt for much of
the last three years. Larkin
has been limited by torn
groin muscles, a hernia, toe
surgery, strained rib cage
muscles, a. sore neck, a pulled
hamstring and recurring
problems with his calf muscles, in addition to a finger
injury that landed him on the
disabled list for the third time
this season.

can to have your
business included!

.992-2156

·IS. . 1•11118
Septem~r
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*...., .................... ,., ............. ,••.•.
,__
. . . ,. .. .

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•

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:

Sunday,

1

28 • 12 Noon • 4 PM

12 Noon · I PM : Health Fair In French 500 Room
u •• t
I

.........

Woof~

-~ Oirfo- 10-II _ _ ,.......,_IOpalkl: 0 loKrow.Wopa.

An own~ lor 11101#,.,., Jallfllor.n, gtant/motllen, _,,., JisiWI,
and oil o1 1M;,...,..,,_, in our liwsl

1 PM • 3 PM • Program Begins in Education &amp; Conference Center
3 PM · 4 PM - Health Fair Re-Opens

Featuring National Speaker Rebecca RadcliHe · "Dreams Grow In Every Heart"
lnlorma~on on heart disease bnd nutrition will

be available as well •

Far more information, calf (740) 446·5679 ~~~=-=--====:=~::::::=:=::=::;::;

n,;, ,..,_, ;, ~,. lho ""-; Hoolilo Sodion, e..- al Hoolflo """""'""' and 101 1....,.,.,, Oloio 0 I ••• 1a/Hoolflo, ·
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