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Page D6 ·• 6ttnbap 1!:tmH-6mtintl

Sunday, October 19.2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Marauders fall to
Warren
, in sectional
championship, Bt

stgn
(AP) - The Arts and
Crafts movement knows no
geographic boundaries. This
design movement emphasizes natural materials inside
and out. Plan APWB-127 is
another example of a home
. that could be built anywhere.
The core is dominated by a
two-story
semi-octagonal
space encompassing the livi ng
and family rooms and kitchen.
A broad deck provides access
to the outdoors. The master
bedroom is just steps away
from first-floor activities.
A "California bath" is
shared by two upstairs bedrooms. The hallway overlooks the spacious lower
tloor. Roof lines are varied
and pleasing .

ESTIMATED COST
OF CONSTRUCTION
(excludes lot)
·
Northeast $275,500
Southeast
$319,000
$243,600
$278,400
Midwest
$258,100
$295,800
Northwest
$246,500
$272,600
Southwest $278,400
$304,500

•

DESIGNER

COMMENTS
'This is a great first floor,
from the unique shape of the
core living areas to the skylight above the master suite. It
offers plenty of natural light,
and multiple access points to
the deck brings nature that
much closer." - Jonathan
Birkel; Gould Evans Affiliates
,,• \ 1\ \••· \ ,•l

CONSTRUCTION
GLOSSARY

•}

\

Stipu lated Sum Agre.ement.
A written agreement where
a specific dollar amount is
agreed to as the total payment
when a contract is completed.

• Pettitte hurls Yankees 'to
Game 2 win over Marlins.
See Page B1

For a study plan of this
house, send $5 to Hou se of
the Week, Box 1562, New
York, NY 10116-1562, call
(877)-228-2954, or order at
APHouseoftheweek.com. Be
sure to include the plan number. For downloadable study
plans and construction blueprints of House of the Week
before April 2003. see houseoftheweek.com.

'.

:

'

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'

·Sundiiy·,· fimes;.· ·
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'

Dollar .Plus

~ . :~

::,.-_1:

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Subscribe;tciS~Y ~t 740-992~~1~ . • • , ..

OUR LEASE IS UP!!!
OUT OF BUSINESS SALE!
I

GOING ON NOW!
EVERYTHING 88C
HEALTH&amp;
BEAUTY AIDS

The core is dominated by a two-story semi-octagonal space
encompassing the living ,and family rooms and kitchen. A
broad deck provides access to the outdoors. The master bedroom is just steps away from first-floor activities. (AP
Photo/AP House of the Week)

PET SUPPLIES
•Food • Toys • Collars
• Leashes • Supplies

Injuries or illness can cause all kinds of physical problems.
Arbors can help. We specialize in providing comprehensive
rehabilitation services for people either recovering from a
disabling injury, illness, or post-operative procedures.
Our experienced and licensed therapists will work with you,
your family, and your physician to design a customized plan
of care to help you regain your life.

TOYS

: tlolj

" ' ' " ' " ' ' ' ' '' ' '

, ,, , ,,,, !, ,, ,,,

740'446-7112
170 Pinecrest Dr.
Gallipolis, d H 45631

• Gift Bags • Wrap
• Party Toys • Decorations
• Plates • Greeting cards

HOUSEWARES
• Plastics • Gadgets
• Serving Trays
• Storage • Utensils

FOOD

Liquidation

• Keebler • Nestle' • Austin's
• Nabisco • Gums
• candies

'
An .. .... _____

....

•

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Erma M. Meadows, 80

Detail• on Pace A2

"
'

'•

•

lmL

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 0·2-6
Pick 4 day: 9-2-o-O
Pick 3 night: 6-3-6
Pick 4 night: 2·3-4-1
Buckeye 5: 3-7-14-22-35
Superlotlo: 1Q-11-12-22-27-33
Bonus Ball: 34
Kicker: 7-4-6-6-0-3

A:3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials

A:3
A4

Movies

A6

Obituaries

As
BI-2, 6

Sports
Weather

A2

Above : A parade down
Main Street, displays of
ch~rch memorabHia and
historical presentations
helped members of the
Reedsville
United
Methodist Church celebrate is centennial anniver- ·
sary
Saturday.
The
church's parade entry, pictured here, included mem·
bers dressed in' period costumes, a scaled-down
replica of the church, and,
in keeping with the
Methodist tradition, a "circuit rider. ' Right: Other
churches in the community, the local emergency
squad and fire department, elected officials and
candidates, and neighborhood children also joined
in the celebration with
parade entries. A bean dinner was served. and the
church planned its annual
Sunday homecoming for ·
this weekend, too. Pastor
John Frank is pictured
tending to the kettle of
beans cooking in the
church yard. (Brian J.
Reed)

Please see Festival, A5

Ryan Donaldson squeezes through a caterpillar tunnel in the
obstacle course, held as an .event at the Carleton
School / Meigs Industries' Commun ity Olympics on Saturday.
The day-long event pitted business and organization teams
against one another as a fundra iser for the school's le\1)' campaign. A student at Southern High ?chool. Donaldson was
competing for the Carleton School's team. (Brian J. Reed)

© aoo3 Ohlo Valley Publishing Co.

.. '

PLEASANT VAl .I ·EY HOSPITAL
•

12 PAGI!S

Calendars

....,,...

HJIJ I' ~~ 0.. Jt1itif1 "'"

Everyth ing will be free
except the food where a small
charge will be made on the
items selected and the dance
where there will be a $ 1
admission charge .
In addition to providin g
food and fun activities during
the evening the firemen will
give ~moke detectors to the
first 150 tamilies who come,
one per family.
" II 's been proven that smoke
Lletectors save Iives." said
Eber Pickens. assistant fire
chief. "and it"s our goal to see
that after Oct. 31 everyone has
at least one worki ng smoke
detector in their home ...
"Businesses and individual

.Community Olympics

2 SECilONS -

it

SYRACUSE - In appreciation for support of pool parties
and auctions held over the past
year to raise money for new
ftre equipment. the Syracuse
Fire Department will host a
communi'¥ Halloween festival
at the fire station Oct. 31.
The . ni~ht of famil y fun
will begin at 5 p.m. with
soup bean and cornbread dinners, hotdogs and other food
being served. Hayri de s.
drawings for prizes. games ,
and a dance with C&amp;J
Productions providing the
entertainment wi ll be held
during the evening.

Mootty cloor, HI: 70., Low: 50•

INDEX

E4ual Opportunity Proz•uler of Seroices

•

hoeflich@ mydallysentinel.com

WEATIIER

E"-f;NJ?.!~·
www .extendicare.com

Syracuse VFD to host
Halloween festival
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

• Picnic Supplies
• Camping Sterno
. • SuiVivalltems • Water Fun

'

Skilled Nursi!li Center

.CELEBRATING 100YEARS

SUMMER NEEDS

BALLOONS

Not on

Gallipolis, Ohio

her ~wn children, Eddie and ers," Baor said with a smile.
Tric1a, Eddie's wife, Tricia, · Aside from the people she
and Tricia's husband, David.
encounters at work. Baer also
Her grandsons, Matthew, 3 enjoys using her secretarial
SYRACUSE Susan and Brandon, 18 months, are skills every day. She enjoys
Baer has seen a lot of changes her pride and joy.
typing, answering telephones
at Carleton .School and Meigs
''They're the hi~ght of my and performi ng other tradi Industries in 18 years, but of · life, and the best thing that's ever tional secretarial skills. She· s
all the changes she's seen, happened 10 me," Baer said.
an expert typist, averaging
none has touched her more
Baer is a "people person," around 100 words per minute.
than the progress made by and the students and adult
At home, she enjoys reading
those served by the facility.
clients at Carleton School and playing the piano and
"''ve seen many changes," and Mei~s Industries , and organ,
especially
when
Baer said. "I've seen a lot of their fam11ies, all appreciate Matthew and BrJJldon can sing
staff come and go. But the · that about her.
along, and she loves to cook.
progress that our students and
" I am able to develop a good
"I like to cook for others. espeadult clients have made through relationship with those we cially rny family," Baer said.
the years is really impressive." serve here, and their families
Baer is among the most Jl3.'·
An administrative secretary and guardians, just by being sionate supporters of the Carleton
at Carleton School, Baer grew their.friend," Baer said. 'They School and Meigs Industries' Susan Baer, an admin istrative secretary at Carleton School
up in Middleport, the middle depend on all the stalf here, ~ming levy attempt.
and Meigs Industries. enjoys her daily typing and other sec·
of three daughters of the late but I enjoy a special relation- ' "I wish people who aren' t retarial tasks, but it' s seeing the progress of students at the
David and Betty Ohlinger. She · ship with many of them familiar with what happens
school that gives her the most satisfaction. (Brian J. Reed )
still lives in Middleport - a because of my role here."
here would come and visit
block away from both of her
"I get a lot of hugs, espe- the program, and see how our dents and clients," Baer said. could see. clearly. why the
sisters - and stays close to · cially from the pre-school- staff interacts with our stu- " In just 15 minutes. the y levy deserves the1r support."

J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

BY BRIAN

•Solutions • Mops • Brooms
•Sponges • Scrubbies Etc.

•Girls •Boys •Babies
We even have School
Supplies!

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS

176 McCormick Road

675-5200

! _,

CLEANING SUPPLIES

Helium Filled Mylars, $1.00
•Helium Filled Latex 75¢
•Whole Bouquet $4.49
(I Mylar &amp; 5 Latex)

Providing a wide-range of therapy services, including:
Physical • Occupational • Speech Pathology

Rt. 2 Bypass
Point Pleasant, WV

t..1lll111l f ~

• Tools •Tape • Auto
•light Bulbs -Gloves • Etc.

•Medicines • Bath Items
•Personal Care • Make-Up
•Brushes •Jewelry Items, etc
(L-R)Maureen Hennessy· Speech Pathologist, Rehab Director;
Gretchen Spence • P.TA;
Kelly ChaffinI Therapist; seated :
Jordan, PTA.
Not
OT;
COTA

(740) 446-2002

\\~l\.11\,

Sul:lscribe today • 446-2342

· Sentinel · ··: ·:.

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.Gallipolis • Kroger Shopping Piau

Thomas
::loit cetltet

•''

SPORTS

The Arts and Crafts movement still draws considerable attention from homeowners, due in part to enduring style and moderate construction costs. (AP Photo/AP House of the Week)
.
.
t:.;·- ·&lt; ''; ( .
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"!.I.

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Is October 18 • 25

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

Holzer Medical Center recognizes our
Volunteer Chaplains during this special week.
We
iate

www .holzer.org

.•

�'

.

. .

. .

'

The Daily Sentinel

Accu Weath er.com forecast for davtime conditions
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Toledo

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low/hiah temneratures

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Flumes

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Mostly clear, warm
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today...Mostly clear early
in the morning then becoming
partly cloudy. Highs in the
mid 70s ..
Tonight...Partly cloudy. A
slight chance of showers then
a.chance of showers after midnight. Lows in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tuesday... Cioudy. A chance
of showers then a sli gh t
chance of showers in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tuesday
nig ht...Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent

chance of showers. Low
arou nd 43.
Wednesday... Cioudy with a
30 percent chance of showers.
High around 52.
Wednesday night. .. Partly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Low
around 37.
Thursday ... Mostl y clear.
Hi gh around 54.
Thursday nig ht. ..Mostly
clear. Low around 35.
Friday ... Mostly clear. Highs
around 61.
Friday night...Mos tly clear.
Lows around 4 1.

Cleveland open again
to buying homes, but
not saying how many
CLEVELAND (AP) Cleveland has decided to continue with its plan to buy the
homes just south of Cleveland
Hopkins International Airport,
making room for the airport's
expansion.
About 300 residences are
in the area where Cleveland
promised to buy hou ses two
years ago as part of a settlement of a lawsuit.
Officials from Cleveland
and Brook Park. the suburb
adjacent to the airporat, have
agreed that Cleveland's commitment is limited to spending $36 million over seven
years in the area.
Exactly how many houses
Cleveland buys will depend
on appraisals and demolition
costs.
"Let's let it work and let's
see," Brook Park Mayor
Mark Elliott said Sunday.
Elliott said the 200 I settlement does not require
Cleveland to spe nd more than
the $36 million. but al so does
not prohibit it from spending
more.
Cleveland suspended the
purchase program in July,
saying the financial crisis in

the airline industry and related drop ·in airport revenues
left it without enough money
to buy the houses.
The ci ties negotiated over
the Sl'lll mer and last' week
announc.ed Cleveland would
restart the progra m and make
offers to homeowners in the ·
first of six stages in
December.
Cleveland Finance Director
Robert Baker said a review of
the airport's books and a
determination that some
restricted funds could be used
for the purchases showed the
airport could spend $36 million over the next few years.
Port Control Director John
. Mok said recently the airport
would move quickly ()n buy:
ing the houses, in part to
assure homeowners that the
city is serious.
· "The best ass urance that
we can give is through.
ac tion." Mok said.
Brook Park Law Director
Dav id Lambros said hi s city
will monitor the purchases
and look at how to keep costs
down , possibly by demolishing houses in batches rather
than one at a time.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(UsPs 213-9so)

.Ohio Valley'Publlshlng ·co.

Correction Pol icy
Published
every
afternoon,
Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know of an error in a Street , Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, cau the newsroom at (740) 992- postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Associa tion .
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc(740, 992-2156.
ti ons to The Daily Sentinel. 111
Department extensions are:
Court Street . Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

News
Editor: Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, E)(l. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton , Ext. 13

Advertising
Outelde Sales': Dave Harris, Ext. 15
ClaoaJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. tO

· &lt;;:irculation
Dlltrict Mgr.: TBA, EKI. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12

E-mail;....
news@ mydailysentinel .com

Web:
www.mydailysentinel .com

OHIO
Presidential candidate
Kucinich campaigns in H_awaii

~onda~~ober20,2003

Ohio weather

~

Page.A2

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-HONOLULU &lt;AP) Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich
wound up two days of campaigning in Hawaii on
Sunday night before departing for Washington.
The last stop for tl1e Ohio
congresstmm was Church of the
Crossroads, where he explained
why he chose to bring his fledgling campaign to Hawaii
"I have in the last year and
a half been getting so many emails from Hawaii responding to my message of peace
and sustainability, and so I
wanted to come and meet all
the people who have been
supporting my campaign and
who have been urging me to
run for president," Kucinich
said outside the church.
" I' ll be talking about how
we really have to start changing the direction of th is coun-

mer mayor of Cleveland and
former state senator.
"I think that makes me not
only a serious candidate, I
think it makes me the next
president," Kucinich said following a "town hall" meeting
~t Maui Community College.
Kucinich blasted President
Bush for invadin~ Iraq, saying Iraq had nothing to do
with the Sept. II , 200 I, terrori st attacks and hadn't
been shown to have weapons
of mass destruction.
The invasion oniy fostered
more bad feeling for America
and "created more opportunity for terrorism," he said.
Kucinich called for an end
to the U.S. presence in Iraq,
repeal of the Patriot Act,
ehmination of nucLear
weapons and cutting defen se
spending by 15 pe(cent.
"A $400 billion budget for

the Pentagon says nothing
but
that
violence
is
inevitable. war is inevitable,"
he said. "We need to change
that thinking ...
Shay Chan Hodges. a grant
writer from Haiku, said she
thought Kucinich expressed
his true thoughts, unlike other
candidates who say things
because they are popular.
"It's such a breath of fresh
air," she' said .
Kucinich, who attended
two "events after arriving on
Maui on Saturday, also
spoke at a fund -raiser luncheon Sunday before traveling to Honolulu.
Kucin ich is the first of
nine candidates seeking the
Democratic
presidential
nomination to visit Hawaii.

TempeiS rise in farm country when cultures collide
HASKINS (AP) - The
stench of manure drifting
across farm fields. Combines
churning all hours of the night.
Tractors pulling equipment
down the road at a snail's pace.
. That\ not exactly the solitude some city dwellers
sea rch for when they move
to the country.
The clash of cultures
between farmers and folks
leaving the city behind is a
growin g concem in the
heartland where being
neighborl y has given way to
settling disputes with a fi stfi ght or a nuisance lawsuit.
"We' ve had pretty good
relations with our neighbors,
but times are changing," said
Ed Hoskinson. a central Ohio
farmer. "People lose sight of
what we' re producing."
A~nculture advocates say
the nsmg tens10n IS a symptom of urban sprawl and a
lack of understandin g of
farm life. But other~ say bigg~r farms _are bnng,mg more
atr and nOise pollutiOn.
"It amazes me how naive
urban folks ru;; when it relates
to farmtng,
sat~ M~rk
Knudsen, dtrector ot plannmg
m Ottawa County, Mtch.
. His office began distributmg brochures thts summer
that tell people to think twice
before movmg to the country. To drive home that message, the pamphlet includes
a scmtch-and-sniff emitting
a whtff of manure.
The Ohio Farm Bureau has
given out hundreds of signs
that are pla~ted along rural
roads advtsmg people that
they are entering an agricul-

tural area with some unpleasant smells and sounds.
The organization encourages farmers to be good neighlxirs and do things·such avoiding spreading manure when
they know people will be having family outings. Friendly
gestures also can go a long
way in ~verting disputes.
"I grew up on a hog farm,
and we always took cookies
to the neighlxirs before we
hauled out manure." Jeremy
Harrison, head of the Farm
Bureau's Wood County
office in northwest Ohio.
Sometimes, though, that's
not enough.
- A farmer in Medina
County got a ticket for disturbing the peace after a
neighbor complained that he
was out in the fields too late.
- A homeowner in Preble
County threatened to file a
lawsuit because he said a
neighbor's tractor kept him
from heari:~g his te[evision.
- A farmer in Summit
Count}' was sued by netghbors
for usmg a device that mimics
the sound of a shotgu~ blast to
keep birds out. of his sweet
com. The lawsmt was dropped.
Ohto and most states have
a Right to Farm Act that in
most cases protects farmers
from nuisance suits over the
normal sounds and smells of
farm dperations.
But it doesn't protect
farmers in all cases, espedally those who orerate in a
neghgent or illega manner.
A Vermont couple sued a
neighboring ll[_lple orchard in
Orwell over mcreased truck
traffic and diesel fumes after the

orchard expanded its business.
The state 's Supreme Court
said on Oct. I 0 that the
orchard owners must eliminate any substantial and
unreasonable interference
with its neighbor 's property.
Nuisance lawsuits also are
increasing because dairy and
hog farms are getting bigger.
Bobby King, a policy
organizer for the Minnesotabased Land Stewardship
Project, said family farmers
and longtime rural residents
are also upset with big farming operations.
"It's not just the newcomers," he said. "The state is
not adequately protecting
people's health and well
being from the pollution that
factory farms produce."
His organization promotes
small family farm s and has
fought against large scale
farming in Minnesota.
Minnesota's Court of
Appeals in June reinstated a
nuisance lawsuit against a
large hog farm, saying the
state's Right to Farm Act
was too broad and did not
apply in cases of negligence.
Ger~ld
and
Julie
Wendmger of Nicollet
County sued the farm operation over odors that come
from a lagoon that stores liquid manure. They said the
smell forced them to leave
their longtime farm.
Mostfwnltilisilytheygetalong
withamajaityofrew~XJ~m"S.

Petra Kramer, who left
suburban Toledo three years
ago to escape city life, said
anyone who can't deal with
the smells and sounds of the

country shouldn 't move.
"Those are the people who
should stay in the city," said
Kramer, who lives just outside the vllla~;~e of Haskins, .
about 15 mlles south o'f
Toledo. "After all , we ' re kind
of invading on their land."
Ohio State University 's
agricultural extension service
plans two seminars in January
to help explain legal issues to
farmers and their neighbors.
"It's a whole lot cheaper
trying to be a good neighlxir
than going in front of a
judge," said Bonnie Norris. a
farmer who is one of the seminar organizers and an extension agent for Preble County.
She said living next to a farm
during planting and harvest
may mean dealing with big
trucks and tractors at all hours.
"It's like putt in? your house
next to a factory,' Norris said.
Hoskinson, who raises cattle and farm s 1,800 acres
near Newark, said he tries to
be a good neighbor.
"We keep things cleaned
up, spray for flies once a
month," he said. "We built a
new barn a quarter-mile from
the road. A lot of people wondered why I built it back
there. I want to be proactive."
Trying to move farm equipment down narrow country
roads can lead to problems, too.
Steve Bartells, e11:tension agent
in Butler County, said a fanner
on a tractor was hit by a passing
car a couple of weeks ago.
Before that, a.combine operator
and a driver got into a fistfight
Roger Burtchin, a Wood
County farmer, said drivers
are in too much of a hurry.

Remains of MIA buried at home after 35 years
SIDNEY (AP) - About came under heavy enemy
50 members of a .nattonal ftre and ~rashed in Laos.
motorcycle club dedtcated to
lnvew gators found the
remembe.nng tmpnsoned crash stte last. November
and mtssmg troops led the aft.er talkmg With a vtllage
f~ ne ral processton for .a ch,;ef m the area.
pararescuernan . whose hehA .~er? has finally: come
copter. ~as s~ot down over home, .srudpararescue JUmper
southeast Asta 35 years ago. Doug McGill, who served 111
Air Force Sgt. James D. the same untt and years later
Locker w~s bun ed . on he!pect m _the search.
.
Saturday wtth full mthtary
Jtm d!d not hke to be m
honors at the Glen Cemetery the hrnehght. He JUSt wanted
m nearby Port Jefferson.
to accomplish the job he was
Statewide veterans and trained to do and do it well," .
military groups, relatives said McGill, who then turned
and residents packed the to the casket for his farewell.
First United Methodist
"Go easy my friend, I
Church·in hi~ ~orne town of know we will meet again.
Sidney. Locker s llag-dmped Welcome home Jim, weicasket was surrounded by come home."
. photographs and covered
People waving flags from
with medals - including lawn chairs dotted the S-mile
three Silver Stars, one he route to .the cemetery, where
earned on his last mission in members of military and veterthe Vtetnam War.
ans groups lined the drive to the
Locker, 21. and three oth-1 grave with their banners, U.S.
ers were killed June 9, 1968, · flags and POW-MIA flags. ·
whtle attenlpttng to rescue a
Members of the Rolling
downed airman with a bra- Thunder club, which rides the
ken leg. Their helicopter country teaching people about

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prisoners of war .and those
missing in action, led the way.
The helicopter pilot, Lt.
Jack C. Rittichier, was buried
Oct. 7 at Arlington National
Cemetery in Virginia. The
34-year-old from Barberton,
Ohio, had been the only .U.S.
Coast Guardsman missing in
action·from the Vietnam War.
Also killed in the mission
were the co-pilot, Air Force
Capt Richard c Yeend J 0 f
:
·
r.
Mobile, Ala., and_ another
crew member, Atr Force
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Staff Sgt. Elmer L. Holden
of Oklahoma City.
The pilot they were trying
to rescue, Marine · 1st Lt.
Walter R. Schmidt, of
Nassau, N.Y., didn't survive
and was li sted as MIA.
Air Force Master Sgt. Dan
Hollinger, stationed at WrightPatterson Air Force Base near
Dayton, has worn a POWMIA hracelet with Locker's
f II
s d
name or . years. a~r ay,
he handed It to Lockers parents, Raben and Dorothy.
~. ~
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~onday,

Community events·

Eri c, Billie. Destin y a·nd pnmary and
secondary
Mi key Sayre of Raci ne: Mark schools living in counties
John son
and
Debbie lxirdering the Ohio River and
Allensworth of Mason, W. participating in the annual
RACI NE
- Lill ian Va.; Torn , Barbara and Ri ver Sweep, like Meigs
Hayman ho"sted a rece nt Tommy Vari an of West County. are invited to design a
meeting of the Bertha M. • Columbta, W. Va .; Terry, Ka y poster for River Sweep 2004.
Fifteen prizes will be
Sayre Missionary Soc iety.
Spencer and Kyle Johnson of
Mary K. Yo&gt;t opened the S ~ rac u se: Bob Manl ey, awarded. The grand prize is a
meeting. by reading l ette ~s Btdwell ; F!n,.; te Hysell of · $1.000 U.S. Savings Bond.
about mi ss ion workers . It Rutand : Davtd Haggy ol and the school representing
was reported that card s had Athens, Cindy Haggy and the grand prize winner will
been sent to shutins, and Randy Fox of Belpre.
also receive an award.
A $500 U.S. Savings Bond
Noami Stobart read minutes
will
be . presented to the stuof the last meeting and gave
dent
with the winning design
the treasurer's repct t. Others
for the official River Sweep tattending were Nonc)us
shirt
. Thir~e en $ 100 U.S.
Hendricks. Barbara Gheen,
ATHENS
The
Small
Saving
s Bond s will be
Geraldine Cle land, Mabel
Bu
sine
ss
Devel'opment
awarded to one winner at
Brace. Noami Stobart. and
Linda Grimm . Next meeting Center (SBDCJ of Southeast each grade level.
Next year 's River Sweep, a
will be held at the Grimm Ohio, the Athens CQunty
and
Chamber
of
Commerce,
·one-day cleanup project for
home with Hendricks to have
the" Internal Revenue Service the Ohio River and its tributhe program.
will spon sor a Small taries, will be held Saturday,
Business Tax Workshop on June 19. The Sweep covers
Friday, Nov. 7.
nearly 3,000 miles of shoreA few of the topics that wi ll .(ine from Pittsburgh, Pa., to
be addressed include: record Cairo, Ill. , and averages more
keep ing. business tax return s,
RACINE - The Oscar and business dedu ctions, Ohio than 22 ,000 volunteers a
Charles Reed Hysell reunion employment taxes, federa l. year. Trash collected during
was held recently at Star Mill employment taxes. and busi- the Sweep has included cars.
ti res, furniture. toys, a piano.
Park in Racine.
ness use of the home.
and
a variety of other items.
Guy Hysell conducted the
The workshop will be held All trash collected is either
meeting with Bob Manley from 9 a. m. to 4 p.m. at the
leading in a time of prayer. Ohio University In novation recyc led or · placed in
Jane Hysell gave a report on and Technology Center locat- approved landfills.
River Sweep is held to crelast year 's reunion and offi. ed at 340 West Stale Street in
cers were elected for next Athens. Those in terested can ate an awareness of water
year. A whi te elephant auc- register by call ing 740-593- quality problems caused by
tion was held .. Flossie Hyse ll 1818. Registratior. is requi red litter and illegal dumping .
won the door pnze. A di nner two days before the workshop. The poster contest , held in
and fellow ship time was
The SBDC provides free conjunction with River
enjoyed by those attending.
business assi stance to new Sweep. is one way to spread
At the reunion were Guy and existi ng businesses in the word alxiut Iiller prevenHy sell. Gary. Tammy and At hens, Hocking. Meigs, and tion. Posters submitted for
Heather Hysell. Roger and Perry counties . It is partially the co ntest should reflect thi s
Jane Hysell. Randy. Ge ni a funded by the U.S Sma ll . goal and focus on encouragand Cody Hysell , Frances Business Adi niniristrati on ing volunteer participation.
Haggy. Mary and Ryan and the Ohio Department of Deadline for submitting a
poster is Dec. 17.
Caruthers Kathy and Kasey Development.
For more information
'Roush . all of Pomeroy.
about the River Sweep poster
Boh and Betty Joh nson.
contest, or for complete conJoy and Mike Hy sell .
te st rul es and regulations.
Charlotte Hysell. Paul and
contact Jeanne !son at 1-800Debbie Hysell. Crystal.
359-3977, or vtsn the
Missy. Jonathan . Jackie and
Commi ssion's website at
Macinba. all of Middleport;
Larry Hysell , Columbu s;
POMEROY - Students in www.orsanco.org.

Mission society
·meets

Small Business
Tax Workshop

Hysell
reunion held

Poster contest
on River Sweep
underway

Social Security Column
directly "invest" in Social
Security. The only way to pay
Social Security taxes is to wotk in
a job covered by Social Security
or to run a business where vou
pay self-employment Social
Security taxe&gt;.
Question: I get widow's
benefits. My neighbor ge ts
her own Social Security
retirement bene fit , although
she's over 70 and still working full time. I ge t. a cost-of!iving increase every year.
But myneighbor insists she
gets two Social Security raises every year. one in Jan uary
and another, laterin the year.
Why does she get two
increases and I get just one 0
Answer: All Soc ial Security
beneficiaries get just one annual cost-of-living increase that's
paid in January of each year.
Your neighbor is probably
receivi ng an additional annual
increase in her benefit tocornpensate her for her additional
earnings. She would get such
an increase if her current wages
are high enough to increase her
overall lifetime avemge wage.
which fo nns the basis for her
Social Security payment.
Question: My mother was
married to my father for 30 years
before he committed suicide
several years ago. Mother never
remanied and is alxiut to twn60.
She has never wotked outside
the home. Is sheeligible for
widow's benefits on my dad's
record? A neighlxir told us that
Social .Security does not pay
death behelits in suicide cases.
Answer: Your neighbor is
wrong. Assuming your dad

BY LISA CRUMP

Question: I receive Social
Security benefits. but work part
time and still pay into Social
Security. Will the extra taxes I'm
still payi ng increase my Social
Security payment'' If so, how do
I apply for that increa.•;ery
Answer: If your current earnings will increase y04r monthly
Social Security benetit, then you
will get it automatically. You do
not have to'apply lor it. You genemlly get the increa.o;e by October
of the lollowing year. In other
words, if you woti&lt;ed in 2002
and your earnings increased the
amount of your monthly Social
Security bcnetit, you would get a
benefit adjustment by October
2003 that pays you back to
January 2003 and increases your
monthly amount thereafter.
·Question : Can I have my
Social Security checks deposited into a bank thai is in a different .state than where I live?
Answer: Ye s. you can
arrange for direct deposit of
your Social Security check to
almost any bank in which
you have an account.
Question: I worked as a volunteer for many years and did
not pay into Social Security.
Prior to that, I only worked
and paid Social Security taxes
for a short period of time. My
Social Security Staternentsays
I am due less than $200 per
month when I retire. Is there a
way of directly investing in
Social Security to build it up? .
Answer: No, you cannot

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wotked and paid Social Security
taxes, your mother would be eligible for widow's benefits as early
as age 60. About three months
before herbirthday, she should
call 1-800-772- 1213 (ITY: 1800-325-0778) to make an
appointment. or she can file
online at www.socialsecurity.gov.
She will need her birth oenificate,
the rnaniage oenificate and your
fathers death certiticate.
Question: Let's say a man is
rnanied to his first wife for 18
years and then divorces. Then
he remanies and dies while
manied to the second wife.
Who will get his Social Security
- the first wife or the second?
Answer: They lxith could,
;t&lt;;suming they each meet all the
eligibility requirements. And they
each would gel the full benefits
they are due. The money we pay
a di vorced widow does not affect
the other widow's payments.
(us11 Cnunr is the M(JlllJgemf
the Athem Sa:ial Security Pf!ice.)

Dear
Abby

be ready for that step. but
will probably be taci tl y supportive.
As a retired &lt;,chool counsel or and alcoholidrug preve ntion speciali st, I ran
groups for children of alcoholics. Young peopl e are
re silient. They c ~n make
healthy life dec , ion ' wi th
little guidance . If she reaches out for help. it ma y cause
positive changes at home.
Even if it doesn' t happen
immediately. thut girl will
have establi shed u lifeline.
- JUDY F. , TROY. OHIO
DEAR lUDY F. : Let·,
hold a good thought.
Helping herself should be
the first step.
DEAR ABBY: I wa' in a
similar situalion with three
children. A friend sugge sted
I go to Al-Anon. There I
learned that alcohol ism is u
family disease, and that all
members are affected by li ving with an alcoholic .
When I got help. my chil dren also got better. and my
husband eventuall y went for
help. He has been sober for
20 years. and we ha ve a
great relationship. We ju11
celebrated 40 years of marriage and we still attend the
12-step programs . They
saved our marriage . GRATEFUL
AL-ANON
MEMBER IN PENNSYL- 90069.

or

Community calendar
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Righi to Life, month·
ly meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
Monday, Oct. 20
Pomeroy Library. Everyone
LETART FALLS - Letart welcome.
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
Wednesday, Oct. 22
office building.
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will have its
1OOth annual installation of
officers at the Chester hall at
7:30 p.m. The installation will
Monday, Oct. 20
be open and a new concept of
HARRISONVILLE
using men as installing officers
Harrisonville Lodge 411 will will be introduced. Cliff Houk
meet in special session at 7 wil be the installing officer; Don
p.m. at
the
temple. Gardner, the installing marwill
be shall; David Fox, the installing
Refreshments
served.
chaplain; and Bob Powell. the
RACINE - Racine Village installing organist.
Council will meet at 7 p.m. in
Thursday, Oct. 23
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
the municipal building.

Clubs and
Organizations

Masters will meet at 6:30
p.m. at the home of Charlotte
Elberteld . Other hostesses
will be Norma Custer and
Ann Aupe.
Monday, Oct. 27
MIDDLEPORT OH ·
KAN Coin Club will meet at
7 p.m. in the board room of
the lower level of the
Pomeroy
Library.

Concerts,
Shows
Wednesday, Oct. 22
POMEROY - Thomas
Shelton in concert, 7 p.m.,
Zion Church of Christ. Public
invited.

.•

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·
Paul Barker
OaUipolls Dally Tribune
825 Third A\tnue
Oalllpolts, OH 45631

Pomeroy,
---- -·'
v

October 20,2003

VAN IA
DEA R
G RATEFUL:
Congratulations on yo ur
ann iver,ary. Reade r,. the
phone number for Aluteen
and AI -Anon ~h o u ld be li,tec.l in your local telep hone
directory. If i t'~ not. the to ll free number in the Unued
States and Canada i' (XKX 1
4AL-ANON 1425 -2666 ).
DEAR ABBY: I have fall en for a close male friend.
We have been fri end' for
about three years. but only
rece nt ly have I revealed tn)
fee lin gs for him. Abby. it
was a di saster. He not on! )
doe.,n"t feel the same . but he
said he never will . He
as,u red me that our frie ndship is. very import ant to
him. however.
My fri end' tell me he i'
kee pin g me around '"j u\t in
case:· and that I can "t be
objective . Am I fooli ' h 10
ma intain the frie ndship. or
do you thin k I should move
on·'
SPURNE D IN
ARKANSAS
DEAR SPURNED : He
was being hone1t with vou.
That doesn·t ' mmd like &lt;i
" u~er"' tn me . Ho we ver.
unrequited love i' painful.
Mo ve on for now. It wil l
give you time - and space
- to heai. When yo u are
l es~ emotional about him .
and less vulnerable. yo u can
re, ume the friendship if yo u
wish.
Dra r Abhv is "·rillen bv
Abigail Vw i B11ren. als;,
knmm · as Jeanne Ph illip.1.
and \\ 'C/5 frwnded br her
moth er. Pauline Phillip s.·
Write
Dear Ahbv
a/
~&gt;ww. DearAbbr.com
P0 .
Box 69440. LOs Ange les CA

SlO DOWN -SlO PER MONTH FOR ONE YEAR

.

~J) '" 3/i)€1''

DEAR ABBY: I read yo ur
column every day, and I dis·
agree with the advice you
gave the 13-year-old girl
who signed herself "Angry
Daughter/Sister in Kansas."
You recommended she eonfront her mother for tolerating . her husband 's abusive
ranung.
From years of profession. al experience, I predi ct that
if the mother does leave her
probably alcoholic husband.
unless SHE gets treatment
for herself and her co-dependence issues, she ' ll only
pick another abusive addict
she' II need to control. I have
seen too many sequential
relationships where the codependent spouse picked
one addicted person af1er
another - each more abusive than the last.
That child needs her own
support group. At 13. she
can contact Alateen, where
she will learn she is not
responsible for "fixing" her
parents. - THERAPIST IN
BELLEFONTE, PA.
DEA R THERAf&gt;IST: You
ha ve a point. Mea culpa .
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Whoa!
You advised a 13-year-old to
basically "solve'' the crisis in
her alcoholic fam il y system .
Regardh;ss of when or if the
alcoholic gets treatment. the
entire famil y needs help to
avoid lifelong behaviors that
are not health y. School
co unselors,
comm unity
agencies and national hotlines can steer that you ng
girl to family. recovery programs. She can certainly let
her mother know that she is
hurting. and that she is taking action to find help for
herself. Her mother may not

Public meetings

Social Security questions and answers
Special to the Sentinel

PageA3

BYTHE .BEND
Treating manS drinking
must be a family affair

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel'
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Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks .
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try, getting away from war,
pre-empt ion, uni lateralism,
and towards cooperatin~
wit h the world community, '
Kucinich said earlier Sunday.
"And my presidency will
be about reaching out to the
world community and creating conditions where we can
have peace and sustainability being t.he watchwords of
America , instead of war and
poverty, frankly," he said.
Earlier in the day on Maui,
Kucinich, who formally
declared his candidacy Oct.
13, bristled when asked if he
is a serious contender for the
Democratic nomination.
Kucinich said he is 'bri nging to the national debate
such issues as defense spending cuts and extricating the
United State from Iraq. He
also cited his experience as a
four-term congressman, for-

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�Tbe Daily Sentinel
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PageA4

PINIO

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Monday, October 20, 2003

VIEW

Thanks
Syracuse Fire Department
Dear Editor:
On behalf of the Syracuse Fire Department, I would like to
thank everyone who has helped our organization by donating
time and money to us .
Thank you to all who have attended our pool party fund raisers and our auct ions. Because of all your support, we are continuing to purchase new equipment to help us serve you better.
To show our thanks, we are going to hold a Halloween
Festival on October 31 starting at 5 p.m. There win be a be~n
dinner, hotdogs , games for kids and adults, costume judging,
door prizes and rattles, hay rides, and a dance with C &amp; J
· Productions providing the entertainment.
The dance has a $1 admission per person. A complete bean
dinner can be purchased for $3. Everything else is free of
charge. There will be prizes for all of the games. We are doing
this to provide a quality family outing for everyone in the
area, and to sh,ow our appreciation to all of those who have
supported us.
. It has been proven that smoke detectors save li ves. After
October 31 there will be no excuse for anvone to not have a
working smoke detector in their home.
With the help of many local businesses and private individ-_
uals, we are giving away over ISO smoke alarms tree ot
charge. These will be available (one per family) until we run
out. The businesses and individual contributors have realized
how important a working smoke detector is. and they. along
with us, want you to come and get yours.
Soupbeans. cornbread. hotdogs, other fall foods. games,
prizes, costume judging, hayrides. a public dance, and free
smoke det~ctors, all as our way of show in g appreciation and
helping you stay safe. Dress up, come out, enjoy yourselves
and make thi s a night of family fun for everyone.
Eber Picke11s
Assista11t Fire Chief, Syracuse Fire Departme111
Syracuse

Born Aug. 5, 1923 at Poca,
W. Va. she w~ s the daughter
· of James and Ora O'Dell
Smith Buchanan.
Funeral services will be
MASON, W. VA . - Erma held Tuesday at the Haven of
M. Meadows, 80, of Mason, Rest Mausoleum Chapel at
W. Va. died Saturday Oct. I 8 Red House, W. Va. with Rev.
2003 at her residenc·e.
Wayne Jewell and Rev.

Erma M.
Meadows

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denyi ng it a potential source'
of weapons of ma" destruction ani.! discoura ging state s
such as Syria and Iran l'rnnr
suppor.ting it.· WMD thre&lt;ll
and mass but chery astde. th ts
is Ob jec ti ve A in the war on
!shunk termrism. And who
- besides Wesley C l ark ~
John Edward s. Howaru
Dean, Denni s Ku ci nicl1 .
Arthur Schl e· ltt"er. et a!. ~
could ,tsk for anything more''
Such scholarl y confirmation
of the loo ic on the ground
"' solidify the recent
should help
rise in the president's jo~ ·
approval ratings. Am ~ri can '
achievements in Iraq. us deh n-.'
eated by L. Paul Bremer. Iraq's
civi lian administrator. won't
hw1 either: I:1.000 new recon-.
stntction projects. 40.000 new
pol tee officers. 22 mill ton va&lt;:cincs. 4.900 Internet mnn ~c-.
lions. 1.500 sc hool renovations anu mme electricity gen'
crated than betilre the war -:
not to mention freedom from
tonurc and freedom of speedtr
Small wonder. really. that' the
Senate is guing the president's
way on Iraqi aid: that Turkey
has decided to send troops into
Iraq after all: that Japan is
finall y kicking in some cash to
the re&lt;:onstru&lt;:t ion effort. A
new Gallup Poll may prov ide
the most signitlcant development of all : Seventy-one percent of Baghdad residents saythey want U.S. troops to stay
in Iraq for an extended period.
All of which ma y be bad
news for Democ ratic preside nt ial eand idutes, but it 's u
big lift for everyone else.

The problem wi th the anti Wh y? Opponents of the
war elite - and by that I
war necessaril y supported
mean most of the Democratic
the continued reign of the
presidential candidates and
Iraqi despot. The opposite of
their assorted li beral ' wi se
'regi me change' is the statu s
men' , - is th'at po liti cal
quo -. or worse. Much more
attacks on the president's war
Diana ·
unse ttling IS the tac t that lor
West
Clark and Schlestnger.
on ! ~ Iamie terrori sm won't
always be enough to satisfy
amon g other liberals who
them. It's just a matter of ttme
bewail the absence of what
before takin g shot s at the
Clark calls 'intern ational
legitimacy.· &lt;:ri ti cal and
president ( Howard Dean ),
nixing the White House's $87 whammy that. in effect , bol- mural faculties turn not on
billion fund ing reqvest'to sta- sters Baathi sts and vitiates immutable standards of fair
bilize Iraq (John Edwards, vic tory. And it leaves the pl ay and self-preservation.
John
Kerry,
Denms Americ an Left prone to but on such fickle expedienKu cinich) , . and penn ing increasing ly weird wntradic- cie s as ' multinat ional' con: sensus - or animus towJrd
essays f.or Th e New Yor k· t.tons.
Rev iew of Books entitled
Writing in The New York George W. Bu sh.
'Iraq: Wh at Went Wrun g' Rev iew of Books. the everThi s rationale seems to be
(Wesley Clark), wi ll seem evolving antiwar candidate enough for some people. In a
evasi ve at best, even obstruc- Wesley Clark excoriates the slurpy paean to We sley
tionist. Soon. the burning pres iden t at length over Clark , Yal e's Ha ro ld Bloom
qu estion Democrats mu st everything he thinks ·went ' declares in The Wall Street
answer will be not what they wr01ig in Iraq - as if lectur- Journal that because Gen .
think is wrong with George • ing on ancient llistory. not Clark saved tens of thouW. Bush's policy, but what unfini shed business - only sand s of Mu slim liv es in
they. as members of the anti- to throw out thi s startling bit: Bosnia and· Kosu vo, he's the
\Var elite, would do in his ' All else be ing equal. the man for our times. (G iven
place.
region and the Iraqi peo ple that George W. Bush saved
This is a tougll q~estion . II are be!ter off with Saddam that many Mu slim s and more
forces members of (he anti- gone.' So what is it. a reader by
deposin g
Saddam
war elite to admit they would may wonder, that fundamen- Hussein, perhaps the Yale lit
ha ve left Saddam Husse in · tall y and pllilosophi call y light should reco nsider his
and his murderous regime in 'went wrong · here? In the endorsement.) Bloom al so
place - not exactly a ' ure- same ma ~ a zi ne issue . anti- declares his anti-Saddam
fire policy to make etther war
ht stonan
Arthur bona fides: ' I tru st it is clear
Iraq or the world safe for Schlesinger Jr. castigates the that I am no t deploring our
of
Sad dam
democracy. And now that president for a forei gn policy deposing
most of the Democratic pres- ol 'doctnnmre undateraltsm Hussein. thmtgh its motivaidential candidates have and morali sti c arroganci;,' tions remain obscure.'
come out again st the presi- before pausing to observe
Maybe the 2003 ' Military
dent's $87 billion fundmg that were the admmtstrauon Balance' report issued by the
request to stabilize and to have followed the hi stori- International In st itut e of
democratize the terror-torn, an 's own recommendatton s, Strateg ic Studies this week
debt-laden country, they are Saddat)l Hu ssein 'would wi ll clarify things . Among
takin g themselves and thei r probably still be in power in the finding s of the London (Diona We\'f ;~; ll columnist
party to a new. extreme. Baghdad.·
(~robably? ) based thin k tank is it s assessIndeed, belllg antt-Bush and Schlesmger adds: Tht s IS an men! .
noted
by
the fo r Til£• WmflinK IIIII '/{Illes.
antiwar, Democrats now unsell lt ng thought for oppo- A." ociated Press, that the Sf1e n m he cunta cred ria
pack a doubl e poli tical nents of the war. '
war in Iraq ' hurt al -Qaeda by dia/1(/1 1ll' @lltrg lohlll. net.!

Clinic set
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct a childhood
immunization clini c from 9
to II a.m. and I to 3 p.m.
Tue sday at the office on
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
Children 's shot records are to
be taken and all children are
to be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian.

BASEBALL.

Moderately Confused
I LOVE

MY JOIS,

BUT I DoN'T
THINK IT
LOVES ME

BACK.

~

Gf'A~·
2003 by NEA, Inc

•

Off the fast track; on to helping kids
Joan
Ryan

M&lt;ix - kids' with significant
developmentally based learning issues suc h as autism decided the only way to find
such a place was to create it.
They pooled their money and
energy, bought a sprawling
turn -of-the-century house,
renovated it and opened in
September 2000 with just
their own four children .
' Life is a seri es of choices," Aftergut said by way of
explanation. 'You have a
child, and 'you'll do anything
- any thing - to help your
child succeed."
The sc hool now has 14
children , the maximum it can
handle until more money is
raised for expansion. The
tuitions of five students are
bei n~ paid by public school
di stn cts, which see Oak Hill
as ~ . de sperately needed
optio~. Most of these kids
had been written off by
te&lt;tchers and doctors as uneducable. But their parents saw
something else: the glimmer
of thB vibrant. loving child
beneath · the wandering eyes
and awkward movements.

Arti st Mary Porter saw it in
Leah . Doctors had told her
early on that her daughter
might never speak, that she
might never be able to tell
the difference between her
mother and a table. 'I was
handed a lot of Kle.enex and
told to come to grips with my
child's disability," said
Porter, positioning a sprinkler in the school's backyard
vegetable garden.
Leah, now 9, dug in the dirt
nearby, weari!tg long purple
rubber gloves she keeps on
even in the classroom. Porter
uprooted from · Mendocino
last year to ·move to Marin
and enroll Leah at Oak Hill.
Leah now not only talks, she
also engages in gro up conversation and is learning how
to read fac ial express ion s 10
di stingui sh between emotions .
'When I went back to
Washington , D_.C. , to see
Leah's spec iali st," Potter
said. her voice catching, 'he
said, 'We've been tapping
with a tiny ham mer out here
by ourselves all these years.
and Oak Hill took a sledgehammer and knocked · down
her walls." .
Max could barely read
when he began at the fourstudent Oak Hill at age I I.
Now, he buries himself in the
sports section of the newspaper every morning . The other
night, Aflerg~t found Max 's
light on late at night and a
~ Hardy Boys" book on the

1

tloor. He is a different kid .
Afiergut be gan to say, then
he suddenly stoppeu. He
couldn't speak for a moment.'
then apologi zed for being so·
emotional.
·
'
'Max is now open and
curious and able to accept
that to learn so met hi ng new.
you have to take a chance
th at you might fail," he sa id."
It's one thing to watc h a
corner of. society be trans•
formed by wl1at you do in
your professional life.
But it . do~;s n't carry th e
weight of watching nne ch ild
begin to carry llimself with
confidence, to begin to
emerge from the cocoon of
his di sabilities · and see in'
him self what you ;tlways
knew was there .
Thi s is what keeps Altergut
postponing his return to law.
He and the rest of the Oak'
Hill boa r:d want to build
more classroom s and hire ;
more occupationa l therapi sts,:
more psychologists. more;
speech therapists. and more:
learning · specialists to serve:more children.
:
'Thi s was never just about;
o~r kids," he said. 'You want:
10 make thi s happen because:
there are all these families ·
and ch ildren in need and no•
place for them to tum ." , :
(Jorm Rya n is a columni.,·t·
tlte .San Frwtci.l'co:
Cl11mlicle. Send cmnmell/s ro :

for

her itl wre of this 11ewspaper:
or send her e-mail or joan-:
rycm @.~{chronicle.cmn .)
'
' v

Medi cal cards are also to be
presented if applicable. A $5
donation is appreciated but
no one · is denied services
because of inability to pay.

of Alfred, will be closed to.
traffic to allow for culvert ·
replacement. The closure will
be in effect until Monday, Oct.
27 at5 p.m. The detour is Ohio
7, US 33. back to Ohio 681.

Ohio _681 closed · VFW to meet
POMEROY - The Ohio
Department of Transportation
announces that at s· a.m.
Friday both lanes of Ohio 681,
approximately one mile west

TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will mee.t at 7:30
Thursday at the hall in
Tuppers Plains.

Researcher: People worldwide
have songs stuck in-their heads

NOI•
THAT'S NOT
PoST·SEASON

A few years ago, Dennis
Aftergul was u player, someone whose phone calls were
returned and table reservations accepted.
As San Francisco's chief
deputy city attorney, he
argued in front of the
California and U.S. Supreme
courts. He was the lead attorney in succe ssfully defending the city's groundbreaking
domestic-partners ordinance
in the late 1990s against
United Airlines , paving the
way for similar laws across
the United States.
Then, in the summer of
2000, Aftergut disappeared.
' I tell people I'm in the
fourth year of my two-t'nontll
leave," he joked the other
day. sitting m an .office of a
tiny school called Oak Hill in
Marin City. ·
This is why Aftergut
walked away from his career.
This place. A converted old
house with hardwood tloors
and pale blue shingles. No,
that's not exactly right. He
left fo r something else: The
14-year-old boy in the front
room, the lanky kid with
glasses study ing Christopher
Columbus.
1
Aftergut had watched his
son fail year after year in
public and then private
schools. He couldn't find a
place where teachers knew
how to uncover the learner
beneath Max's disabilities.
So, Aftergut and three other
famili es with children like

Willard Ballard officiating.
Friends may call from 6 to 9
p.m.
Monday
at
the
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral
Home and from 12:30 to I:30
p.m.. Tuesday
at the
Mausole um Chapel at the
Haven of Rest Memorial
Gardens in Red House. W. Va.

Local Briefs

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today is Monday, Oct. 20, the ?.93 rd day of 2003 . Th ere
are 72 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Hi story: On Oct. 20, 1803, the U.S.
Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase .
On this date: In 1892 , the city of Chicago dedicated the
World's Columbian Exposition.
· In 1903, a joint comm iss ion ruled in favor of the United
States in a boundary dispute between the District of
• Alaska and Canada.
In 1944, during World War Two, General Douglas
MacArthur stepped ashore at Leyte in the Philippines, two
and a half years after he'd said. ' I shall return.'
In 194 7, the House Un-American Activities Committee
opened hearings into alleged Communist influence and
~nfiltration within the American motion picture industry.
· In 1964, the 31st president of the United States, Herbert
Hoover, diecl in New York at age 90.
In 1967 , seven men were convicted in Meridian, Miss. ,
of violating the civil rights of three murdered civil rights
workers.
In 1968, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy married
Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis.
· In 1973, 111 the so-called 'Saturday Night Massacre,'
special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox was dismissed and Attorney General Elliot L. Richardson and
Deputy Attorney General William B. Ruckelshaus
res1gned.
.
In I 973, the Sydney Opera House in Australia was otTi cially opened by Queen Elizabeth II.
Thought for Today: 'Morals is not preaching. it is beau. ty of a rare kind.'- Ernest Dimnet, French priest, lecturer and author ( 1866-1954 ).
.

Q

Obituaries

"

.

READER'S

www .mydaUysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel. • Page A5

'

Monday, October 20, 2003

Bad news for Democratic candidates

-

·--

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) Une xpected and insidious,
the earworm . slinks its way
into the brain and refuses to
leave. Symptoms vary.
although high levels of
annoyance. and frustration are
common. There are numerous potential treatments, but
no cure.
"Earworm" is the term
coined by University of
Ci ncinnati marketing professor James Kellaris for the
usually unwelcome songs
that get stuck in people' s
heads. Since beginnin~ hi s
research in 2000. Kellans has
heard from people all over
the world requesting help,
sharing anecdotes and offering solutions.
"I quickly learned that virtually everybody experiences.
earworms at one time or
another," he said. "I think
because it's experienced privately and not often a topic.of
conversation, maybe people
really long for some social
comparison. They want to
know if other people experi. ence what they experience."
Kellaris, whose most pervasive personal earworm
(Byzantine chants) likely has
something to do with hi s
wife's jGlb as a church choir
director, has been interested
in the topic of earworms for
decades . As a musician who
now studies how marketers
reach the public, he began
wondering how widespread
stuck songs really are, and
began doing small surveys in
2000.
Last year, he surveyed
about 500 students, faculty
and staff on the Cincinnati
campus asking about the
type, frequency and duration
of earworms, and possible
causes and cures. Among the
songs respondents picked as
most likely to become stuck
were: ''The Lion Sleeps
Tonight," the Chili's restaurant "baby back ribs" jingle
and "Who Let the Dogs Out."
But the choice that topped
the so-called "playlist from
hell" was "Other," meaning
the majority of those surveyed chose a unique song of
their own as the most proba-

ble earworm. That led
Kellaris to conclude that
stuck songs are highly idiosyncratic.
"There are certain tune s
that we would describe as.
catchy that are more likely to'
become one, but just about
anything can become an earworm." he said.
The study. presented at
conferences of the · Society·
for Consumer Psychology in
2001 and 2003, showed :
- Women report more irritation and frustration as a
result of earworm s.
-Peop le who are constantly exposed to music suffer
them more frequently.
- There may be a connection between earworms and a
person 's level of neurosis.
"People with higher neu- .
roticism scores .tend to react
to the onset of an earworm by
sayi ng 'Oh no, here it goes
again, I wonder how long this
is going to last,"' Kellaris
said. "That fretting about it, I
think, exacerbates it."
The atmosphere is ri~e for
earworms at Last Vesuge, a
music store just west of
downtown Albany. As customers flipped through compact discs and records with
markers displaying such subjects as "Eivis·the Pelvis" and
"Beatles Cash-in Copycats,"
employees Jim Kaufman and
Charles Monroe ruminated
on recent bouts with earworms.
"Top 40 pop, usually -.
stuff you wouldn't catch
yourself listening to at
home," said Kaufman, who
named Jennifer Lop-ez's
"Jenny From the Block' as a
past stuck song. "Or stuff
you're ashamed to admit listening to at home ."
Both men said they get rid
of earworms either by trying
to ignore them or by playing
a tune they enjoy. Monroe
said an earworm "usually
happens when I only hear the
song for like a second, like if
. I go to the laundromat and
I'm kind of in and out."
Kellaris heard similar stories after news of his study
reached the public. He got
hundreds of e-mails from rhe

Philippines, South Africa,
Norway.
the
United
Kingdom,
Germany,
Argentina and all over North
America. Among the messages:
- A company that provided background music for
retail stores wanted to know
how to avoid using music
prone to becoming an earworm.
- Sufferers of a psychiatric
condition where patients hear
music when none is playing
sent queries and case histories hoping Kellaris had
found a way to cure or treat
the disorder. The professor
said the two are unrelated.
- Personal stories about
earworms haunting individuals for weeks, months or
years.
-Suggestions of how to
cure an earworm, including
chewing on a cinnamon stick,
passing the earworm on to
someone else or erasing the
offending song by singing the
theme from "Gilligan's
Island."
For marketers, earworms
can be a "double-edged
sword," helpful if consumers
look upon a memorable jingle favorably but with the
potential to breed negativity
toward a brand if the stuck
song is viewed as annoying
or unwelcome, said Larry
Compeau, a marketing professo( at Clarkson University
and executive officer of the
Society
for
Consumer
Psycholegy.
"The trick with earworms.
or with any kind of piece of
music in advertising is to
make sure the music is going
to trigger the kinds of emotions or feelings you want the
consumer to experience," he
said.
Studying when earworms
are most likely to occur is
next up for Kellaris.
One theory is that stuck
songs are "the brain's attempt
to resolve missing information," he said, so that retrieving the forgotten lyrics bf a
song will provide closure that
"unsticks" an earworm.

State college enrollments up,
preliminary figures show
The regents' count shows
CLEVELAND (AP) Enrollment at Ohio's public '457 ,28 I students enrolled at
and private colleges is up the state's public community
from last fall, according to colleges and 13 four-year
public universities - 8,168
preliminary figures.
Enrollment on public cam- more than last fall .
puses has increased 1.8 perAbout two-thirds of that
cent, said· the Ohio Board of increase is due to gains in the
Regents, the coordinating state's two-year community
body for higher education in colleges
and
technical
Ohio.
·
school s, the regents said.

Festival
from PageA1

. tr'

~

,

''

contributors have · realized
how important smoke
detectors are, and they,
along with us, want you to
come and get yours," · he
a
d
d
e .d
· Some items to be used in
fundraising during the
evening will be a crocheted

\

'

'

Private enrollment'is up 2.8
perceht, according to the
Association of Independent
Colleges and Universities of
Ohio. The preliminary head
count at its member schools
totals 127.987 students.
Improved recruiting and
better programs are partly
responsible, association president Larry Christman said.
Stars and Stripes blanket,
over $80 dollars worth of
candles, a basket containing
numerous items and gift
certificates, a pillow, and a
scented bear. There will also
be given away over $500
dollars in gift certificates.
Lamar Lyons is the event
coordinator and questions concerning the festival can be
directed to him at 740-985-

1?824.

Sheriff's department has busy weekend
BY J. MILES LAYTON
ilayton@ mydaitysentinet.com

POMEROY - Tim Pasta!
of Pomeroy is being charged
by : the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department with .
recei vi ng stolen property
after two homes o n
Rocksprin gs Road were
reported burglarized Sunday.
The sheriff's department
reported that the items taken
from one home include a
televisiqn and a RCA satellite with an access card. At
the second nome, the owner
heard a loud noise and as he
got to his front door. he startled the intruder who fled to
a vehicle in the dri veway
and sped away.
After an investigation by
sheriff's deputies, sto len
ttems were found in the
home where Pasta! is residing. The matter is still under
investigation and there are
more charges being filed , it

was reponed.
Also under investi gation
are several incidents reporied by residents to the depart ment. They include:
Tammie L. Felly of Price
Strongs Road, who reported
several unnamed items stolen
from he r home:
Chris
Yeauger of Racine who
reported that someone had
kicked in the front door of his
reside nce with nothing being
reported missing; and Hilltop
Grocery located at State
Route 124 in Middleport
reponing the theft of gasoline
valued at $7.80.
Al so under inve stigation
by the sheriff's department
is an incident of dome stic
violence involving a ISyear-old Coolville gi rl. It
was reported that the girl
was arrested and is awaiting
an appearance in Mei gs
County Juvenile Court.
According to the sheriff's
department. an 18-year-old

Pomeroy man is being
charged with possible fal sification of a report regarding
a 1997 S-1 0 truck. Deputies
di scovered that the truck
reponed stolen had been
crashed and the driver left
the scene .
Also under inve&gt;tigation
are Christopher Holsinger of
Pomeroy, ci ted to Meig&gt;
County Court on a warrant
for assault : Kenny Kearns of
Pomeroy, ci ted to Meigs
County Court on a warrant
for an assa ult charge :
Preston Cook of Syracuse,
cited on a warrant for disorderly conduct:
Phillip
Simmons of Rave nswood,
arrested and charged with
driving under the Influence.
not drivi ng within marked
lanes and reckless operation·.
and Mark Richmond 'of
Rutland, arrested on a
charge of domestic violence.
the
incarcerated · in
Middleport jaiL

Report: Soldiers killed hundreds of
Vietnamese villagers over seven months
TOLEDO CAP) - An supported each other and
elite unit of American sol- some conflicted, he said .
diers mutilated and killed
According to The Blade.
hundreds of unarmed vil- the rampage began in May
lagers over seven months in 1967. No one know s what
1967 during the Vietnam set it off. Less than a week
War, and an Army investiga- . after setting up camp in the
tion was closed with ne , central highlands. soldiers
charges filed , The Blade began torturing and ki IIi ng
reported Sunday.
prisoners in violation of
Soldiers of the Tiger Force American military Jaw and
unit of the -Army 's JOi st the
1949
Geneva
Airborne Division dropped Conventions, the new spaper
grenades into bunkers wliere said.
villagers including
Sgt. Forre st Miller told
women and children - hid, Army investigat\)rs the
and shot farmers without killing of prisoners was "an
warning, the newspaper unwrillen law."
reported. Soldiers told The
Other soldiers said they
Blade that they severed ears sought revenge in the vilfrom the dead and strung lages after unit members
them on shoelaces to wear were killed and injured duraround their necks.
ing sniper and grenade
The Army 's 4 1/2-year attacks.
investigatio n, never before
"Everybody was bloodmade public , was initiated thirsty at the time. saying.
bY. a soldier outraged at the 'We're going to get them
k1llings. The probe substan- back,"' former medic Rion
tiated 20 war crimes by 18 Causey of Livermore. Calif..
soldiers and reached the told The Blade.
Pentagon and White House . Soldiers often cited conbefore it was closed in 1975, flicting views of commanThe Blade said.
ders as a reason they killed
William· Doyle, a former unarmed people. Some comTiller Force sergeant now manders told investigators
livtng in Willow Springs, that civilians could be tarMo., said he killed so many geted in certain circumcivilians in 1967 he lost stances: others said they
could never be attacked.
count.
During the Army's investi"We didn't expect to Jive.
Nobody out there with any gation, 27 soldiers said sevbrains expected to live," he ering ears from dead
told the newspaP.er. "The Vietnamese became routine.
"There was a period when
way !O live is to kill because
you don't have to worry just about everyone had a
about anybody who's dead." necklace of ears," former
medic
Larry
In an eight-month investi- platoon
gation, The Blade reviewed Cottingham told investigathousands of classified tors.
The atrocities carried out
Army documents. National
by
the unit came just months
Archive records and radio
logs and interviewed former before the killing of about
members of the unit and rel- 500 Vietnamese civilians by
an Army unit in 1968 at My
atives of those who died.
. Tiger Force, a unit of 45 Lai .
volunteers, was created to
In the years after that. top
spy on forces of North military officials promised
Vietnam in South Vietnam's to take war crime accusations seriously. But records
central highlands.
The Blade said it ts · not from the Tiger Force case
known
how
many show that didn't happen.
Vietnamese civilians were . The Blade said.
The newspaper found that
killed.
Records show at least 78 commanders knew about the
were shot or stabbed, the platoon's atrocities and in
newspaper said. Based on some cases encouraged the
interviews with former Tiger soldiers to continue the vioForce
soldiers
and lence. Two soldiers who
Vietnamese civilians, it is tried to stop the attacks were
estimated the unit killed warned by their commanhundreds of unarmed peo- ders to remain quiet before
transferring . to other units.
ple, The Blade said.
to
military
Army spokesman Joe . according
Burlas, based at the · records.
The newspaper also said
Pentagon, said on Sunday
that only three Tiger Force Army investigators learned
members were on active about the atrocities in .I 971
duty during the investiga- but took a year to interview
tion . He said their comman- witnesses . Two investigators
ders, acting on the advice of pretended to look into the
military attorneys, deter- allegations while encouragmined there was not enough ing soldiers to keep quiet.
evidence for successful soldiers told The Blade.
Four military legal experts
prosecution.
The only way to prosecute who reviewed the Army's
the soldiers was under court- final report for the newspamartial ·procedures, which per questioned the c'ase 's
·
apply only to active military abrupt end.
. "There should have been a
members, Burlas said.
He also cited a lack of (military grand jury) investiphysical evide nce and gation of some kind done on
access to the crime scene, this," said H. Wl1'jne Elliott,
since a number of years had a retired Army officer who
passed. He· would not com- teaches military law at the
ment on why the military did University of Virginia . "I
. not seek out the evidence just can't believe this wasn't
a pretty high-r,rofile thing in
sooner.
Investigators took 400 the Pentagon . '
Former platoon members
sworn statements from witnesses, Burlas said. Some .still could be prosecuted or

sanctioned by the Army. but
legal e~perts say that 's
unlikely because of the time
that has elapsed.
"We're not saying it didn 't
happen."
Burl as
said
Sunday, but the Army does;
n't have enough information
to confirm each individual
incident.
· "It's too early to say what
the Army's going to do as far
as any apology goes."
Burlas said.
Part of the unit's mission
was to force villagers to
move to refugee centers so
they couldn't grow rice to
feed the enemy. Many
refused to go to the centers.
which · resembled pri sons
and lacked food .
"They wanted to stay on
their land. They took no side
in the war," recalled Lu
Thuan, 67. a farmer, sitting
in his home in the Song Ve
Valley.
.
The soldiers began burning villages to force the people to leave, The Blade said.
One night, an elderly carpenter was beaten with a
rifle before the unit's field
commander. Lt. James
· Hawkins. shot and · killed
him as he pleaded for his
life.
Hawkins denied the alle.gations when questioned by
Anny investigators in 1973.
But he told The Blade he
killed the man because his
voice was loud enough to
draw enemy attention.
"I eliminated that right
there," said Hawkins, who
retired from the Army in
1978 and now lives in
Orlando. Fla.
It didn't stop there .
1\vo partially blind men
found wandering in the vaJIey were shot to· death,
While
records
show.
approaching a rice paddy on
July 28, 1967. platoon mem '
bers opened ftre on I0 elderly farmers. Four were killed.
Kieu Trac, now 72.
recalled watching helplessly
as his father fell .
"All they were doing was
working in the fields ," he
said. pointing l(l the spot.
where his father and the others were killed . "They
thought the soldiers would
leave them alone."
William Carpenter, who
lives just outside the town of
Rayland near the Ohio-West
Virginia border. told the
newspaper he didn't fire his
weapon:
"It was wrong." he said.
"Those people weren't bothering anybody."
Villagers said they dug
dozens of mass graves after
the soldiers moved through
the valley.
"We wouldn't even have
meals because of the smell,"
said rice farmer Nguyen
Dam, 66, interviewed in his
home. "I couldn' t breathe
the air sometimes . There
were so many villagers who
died, we couldn't bury them
one by one."
Of the 43 former platoon
members interviewed by
The Blade, a dozen
expressed rernorse. for either
committing or failing to stop
the atrocities, and I 0 have .
, been diagnosed with Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder.

�l

PageA6

NATION • WORLD
Gay Episcopal bishop-elect responds
No ·progress in strikes
to
Anglican
schism
warning
involving California transit
and grocery wQrkers

The Daily Seritinel

LOS ANGELES (AP) An estimated half-million
~o mmuters faced another
morning rush hour without
city .buses or trains as a transit strike entered its sixth day.
The labor protests in the
nation's third-largest transit
system have clogged freeways and forced users to
scramble. for alternative ways
to commute. The strike, coupled with a grocery workers
strike and lock out, has weakened Southern California's
already troubled economy.
Though
negotiations
between mechanics and the
Metropolitan Transportation
Authority have apparently
stalled, talks with train operators , bus drivers and the
authority
have
gained ·
momentum, said Bill Heard,
spoke&gt;man
for
the
Metropolitan Transportation
Author'ity.
"Things are looking quite
optimistic with the drivers."
Heard said Sunday. "We are
at the table, face to face, and
things are quite cordial."
About 2,200 MTA mechanics went on strike Tuesday
after contract negotiations
collapsed over the cost of
health care coverage. Near! y
6,000 MTA drivers and train

Monday, October 20, 2d03

operators joined the mechanics in the picket line.
The MTA and the mechanics union met separately
Saturday with a state mediator at a hotel in Pomona, but
made little progress, Heard
said. Negotiations between
MTA representatives and the
United Transportation Union,
the union for MTA bus and
rail operators, resumed
Sunday morning.
Calls to Neil Silver, president of the mechanics'
Amalgamated Transit Union,
were
not
immediately
returned Sunday.
In addition to the transit
walkout, a. total of 70,000
grocery clerks from three
companies - Kroger Co.'s
Ralphs, Safeway Inc.'s Vans
and Albertsons Inc. - went
on strike or were locked out
Oct. II in Southern and
Central California. ·
Terry O'Neil, spokesman
for Ralphs, said no new negotiations were scheduled.
"The strikes go on until the
union makes a decision to
come back to the table and
enter into meaningful discussions about the issues,"
O'Neil said.
The supermarket chains
tried to sway public opinion

with a full -page ad in ,
·Southern California newspapers Sunday that described
their contrdct offers as "more
than fair."
"Do you care about the
folks on the picket )ine ? We
do, too," the ad said. "We
want everyone to know that
we're committed to taking
care of both our customers
and our employees."
Rick Jcaza, president of the
UFCW Local 770, took issue
with, the ad, which also ran
Friday.
"How can it be fair if you
reduce our medical benefits?" he asked.
Average pay for clerks ·is
about $15 an hour and most do
not work full time. Workers
currently pay no premiums.for
full health coverage and have
a $10 capay for doctor visits
and prescriptions.
The companies want them
to pay $5 a week for individual coverage or $15 a week to
cover a family.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson urged
Gov.-elect
·
Arnold ·
Schwarzenegger to step in. "It's
time for the Terminator to go to
the bargaining table," Jackson
told about 400 union supporters
at a Santa Monica rally.

The nation's busiest.death
chamber unusually quiet in Texas
HUNTSVILLE,
Texas
(AP) - The state is in the
midst of its longest break in
executions in seven years, a
lull some attribute to coincidence but others say may be
due to recent changes affecting death row prisoners.
So far this year, 21 convicted killers have been put to
death m the nation's busiest
death chamber, the last in
September. But no one is on
Texas' execution calendar
again until December, when
four are planned in about a
week's time. The last time the
state went so long without an
execution
was
from
September 1996 to February
1997.
For death row inmate
Ynobe Matthews, however,
the two-month delay is nothing to celebrate. He is scheduled to die on Jan. 6 after
dropping all his appeals.
"I suppose there will be
more lined up for next year,"
said Matthews, who was convicted of abducting and strangling a 21-year-old woman in
2000. "It's a little too soon to
say whether a trend is developed."
Some death penalty experts
say the lag is a coincidence.

Others say legal fights to halt
executions of mentally
retarded inmates may have
slowed the pace.
At least six inmates this
year successfully
have
delayed their punishment,
sometimes hours before their
scheduled executions, by citing mental retardation in
appeals.
·
'The issue of mental retardation is obviously one issue
that is slowing things down"
in Texas, said Richard Dieter,
executive director of the
Death Penalty Information ·
Center. "It also may have
been just a coincidence that
so many were frontloaded in
the first half of the year."
The U.S. Supreme Court
last year ruled that it was
against the law to execute the
ment&amp;lly retarded.
Roe Wilson, an assistant
district attorney in Harri s
County, which has the most
inmates on Texas' death row,
attributes the slowdown to
changes in' state · law t'hat
require inmates to receive a
warning 90 days before an
· initial execution date is set.
Though the new rules were
passed in 1995, they are only
now beginning to affect

many cases reaching the end
of their appeals.
Texas has accounted for
more than one-third of the
875 executions in the United
States since the Supreme
Court brought back capital
puni shment in 1976. The
state resumed capital punishment in 1982.
Jerry
Strickland,
a
spokesman for the Texas
Attorney General's Office,
said the lull is a coincidence.
lf the four inmates on the
list for December are put to
death , Texas would finish the
year with 25 executions,
compared with 33 last year
and 17 in 200 l. A record 40
were executed in 2000.
And if there's a slowing of
the execution pace, there's no
comparable reluctance by
Texas juries to send convicted killers to death row. Last
year. 36 capital murder convicts received the death
penalty; 31 were handed
down in 2001 , and 30 in
2000.
"There's still so many
cases," said Matthews, who
was sent to death row in
200 l. ."lt's still not over.
They're still hunting for us ."

Doctors take one twin off ventilator,
might do the same with second
DALLAS (AP) - It took a
year of preparation, 18 doctors and a couple's determination to give their infant
twins a shot at a normal life.
A week after a 34-hour
operation in which neurosurgeons separated the intricate
connection of blood vessels
running between the brains of
conjoined Egyptian twins,
doctors say they are pleased
with the boys' progress.
Mohamed Ibrahim, 2, was
taken off a ventilator and was
breathing on his own Sunday
afternoon, and doctors hoped
to do the same with his brother Ahmed as early as
Monday.
·
Dr. James Thomas, chief of
critical care services at

Chi ldren's Medical Center
Dallas, said in an update
released by the hospital that
he is cautiously optimistic
that doctors will not have to
place Mohamed back on a
ventilator.
The twins were listed early
Monday in critical but stable
condition.
"Once each twin is breathing on his own without respiratory distress, his condition
may be upgraded from critical to guarded," Thomas said.
The hospital said the twiris
are showing more motion in
their arms and legs and
improved response to verbal
cues from the family and
medical team.
"The neurosurgical and

medical teams are very
pleased ~.Yith the twins'
progress so far, " Thomas
said.
Thomas said Ahmed has
not had any repeat of a
seizure he suffered Friday
night. A lumbar drain was
removed Sunday after CT
scans showed no accumulation
of spinal
fluid.
Mohamed' s lumbar drain
remai,ns in place.
The hospital said the boys
continue to run a low-grade
fever, but don't appear to
have an infection.
The twins, joined at the top
of their heads when they
were \lorn in Egypt on June 2,
200 I, were separated Oct. 12

MANCHESTER , N.H.
Robinson predicte'd the
(AP) - The Rev. V. Gene church ultimately will surRobinson, the Episcopal yive the turmoil.
thurch 's first openly ,gay
"I've been here an hour
b1shop-elect, told . pan sh- and look! The roof's still on.
wners h1s e.lect1on 1s a s1gn ·I think it will calm down
of a ~hang mil church,. on~ when people see not a lot
that w1ll conunue even tf he has changed," he said.
resigns.
But Apple's question
"If I step down, do you prompted Robinson to talk
really think other qualified about his struggles to dis~
gays and lesbians wouldn't cern God's will.
be elected?" he asked about
"I agonize about this all
40 people during a religious the time. This is one of the
education meeting Sunday at hardest things I'll ever do,"
Grace Church. "My standing Robinson said. "I do have
down isn' t going to make it this sense I'm supposed to
all go away."
go forward, and I do feel
His comment was prompt- that's coming from God and
ed by a suggestion from a not my own ego. But I don't
parishioner that Robinson know."
reconsider accepting the
"If I'm wrong, God help
bishop's role because of the me - and God will help
turmoil it has caused and the me," he said.
threat it poses to the intemaRobinson was elected by
tiona! church .
New Hampshire clergy and
"I personally think it's riot parishioners in June and
worth losing the family," .confirmed by the national
Paul Apple, of Mont Vernon Episcopal Church in August.
said.
He is scheduled to be conseOutraged conservatives crated as bishop of New
have threatened to divide the Hampshire in two weeks.
At an emergency meeting
Episcopal Church in the
United States and the world- in London last week,
wide Anglican Communion Anglican leaders warned
of which it is part.
that if Robin'son is conse"I don't want anyone to crated, "the future of the
leave the church, and I don't Communion itself will be
like being thought of as the put in jeopardy." However,
reason they leave the they acknowledged that each
church," said Robinson, 56. province has the right to
·
· choose ·, ts .own leaders.
But he sm'd the v1gorous
and sometimes bitter church
Robinson remained optidebate over homosexuality mistic, saying the church has
would continue whether or weathered similar crises in
not he left the stage.
the past. Much of the
"It' s not all going to go Anglican Communion still
back to being nice and pretty does not recognize the ordiagain. It's going to be messy nation of women, he said,
for a while," he said. "This is and yet the Communion
not our church to win or lose. holds tosether, he said.
It's God's church."
Asked by one parishioner

to explain what's behind the
anger over his election,
Robinson said he believed it
was a sign that patriarchy is
ending in the church as
women, people of color and
gays and lesbians are more
fully included.
C 0 n s e r v a 1 i ve
Episcopalians in the United
States have said they plan to
form an independent network of churches opposed to
Robinson's elevation and the
blessing of same- sex unions
in some dioceses.
Anglican leaders, representing 77 million members
worldwide, have called
homosexuality "contrary to
Scripture." Robinson and his
supporters say that is outweighed by the Scripture's
call for Jove and acceptance
of all.
Scripture does not address
faithful, committed relationships between members of
the same sex, Robinson said.
The concept didn't exist
back then. What it does condemn is promiscuity and
abusive relationsh ips, he
said.
Robinson has lived openly
for years with partner Mark
Andrew, who was applauded
by the congregation when he
·
d d s d
wasb. mtro uce
un
k ay.
Ro mson is widely nown
and admired in the state,
where he has been assistant
to the retiring bishop for
years.
At the end of a second
question and answer session
Sunday, Robinson received
a standing ovation from
parishioners.

Lieberman, Clark pull
presidential campaigns out of Iowa
MANCHESTER, N.H.
(AP) - Democratic presidential candidates Joe
Lieberman and Wesley
Clark have decided not to
campaign in the initial caucus state of Iowa, gambling
on winning ihe nomination
with a. later surge in -the primary race.
Lieberman and Clark have
decided not to spend their
money in a state they probably have no chance of winning. Their deci sions allow
them to shift money to New
Hampshire and other slates
with later nominating contests.
Howard Dean and Dick
Gephardt are fighting at the
top of the polls in Iowa, with
John Kerry also jostlirig for
a top showing in the Jan. 19
caucuses.
Clark ~pokesman Matt
Bennett said the retired
Army general's month-old
campaign cannot compete
with Dean 's highly organized Iowa field operation or
Gephardt's 15-year history
of building relationships in
the state.
','We have made the decision that we don:t have the
time or the money to compete there," Bennett said.
Lieberman will open four
new offices in New
Hampshire that will be
staffed in part by redeployed
Iowa field operatives, aide!;
said. He' II also add staff in
South Carolina, Arizona and
Oklahoma.
"Unlike years past, this
time around there are nine
early primary states, riot just
two," Lieberman campaign
manager Craig Smith said in
a statement. "After much
consultation, we decided to
focus our resources on
where they will prove most

effective .. Without a doubt,
we feel this is the winning
strategy for Joe Lieberman
to win the nomination." ·
All along, Lieberman' s
strategy has focused on
states
beyond
New
Hampshire,
particularly
Arizona,
Delaware.
Oklahoma
and
South
Carolina. Those states hold
their nominating contests
Feb. 3. But with Dean,
Kerry or Gephardt expected
to wm in the first two states,
he won't be the orily candidate pursuing that strategy.
Lieberman is a hawkish
moderate who preaches
moral values and supported
the war. against Iraq. He
opposes the across-theboard tax increases proposed
by some Democratic candidates, arguing in favor of tax
hikes targeted on wealthier
Americans. He is betting
that his positions will have
more appeal in more conservative western and southern
states than among liberal
caucus-goers in Iowa.
· Bennett said Clark will try
to do well in New
Hampshire, but does not
expect a win there with the
lead built by Dean, a former
governor of next-door
Vermont, and Kerry, a senator
from
neighboring
Massachusetts.
"Let's face it, we're running against essentially two

favorite sons," Bennett said.
"So we want to do well in
. New Hampshire, but we are
not setting the bar too high.
We want to do well and
come out as the clear alternative to wlioever is in the
lead at that time."
Few have attempted to.
bypass Iowa since the caucuses came to prominence in
1976, when Jimmy Carter
used the state as a springboard to the White House.
Those who have skipped the
state since ·have had little
success.
Then-Sen. AI Gore opened
a campaign in Iowa in 1987,
but noisily withdrew, complaining that the caucuses
were dominated by liberals
and promising to make his
stand in southern Super
Tuesday votin~. His campaign quickly f1zzled.
·
Arizona
Sen.
John
McCain skipped Iowa in the
2000 election cycle. He
scored some success in .
states such as
New
Hampshire and Michigan,
but his campaign faded and
he lost the Republican nomination to ·President Bush.
The only other bypass of
Iowa came in .1992, when
Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin ran
for the nomination and other .
candidates, inclu~ing eventual nominee Bill Clinton,
opted not to challenge him
on his home turf.
..

The·Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Kentucky defeats Ohio, Page 82
Bengals down Ravens, Page 86

'.

Sunda~~ober20,2003

Eastern,
Southern
advance
to district

Meigs girls 12th,
boys 13th at
district meet
: RIO GRANDE
The
Meigs girls cross country
team finished 12th at the
Division II, Southeast district
cross country meet Saturday.
Megan Clelland had the
best finish for Meigs, finishing 44th in a time of 23:41.
Ashley Samar (23 :45) was
47th and Cayla l,.ee (23:53)
was 49th .
Circleville won the girls
team title as Katy Ankrom
(19:21) and Leah Allen
(20: II), who finished first and
second respectively. ·
. On the boys side, th
Marauders ended the day 13th
as Ross Well ( 19:08) finished
47th to lead Meigs.
·
: Uniota won the boys team
title .
: Belpre and South Webster
each won Division III boys'
district championships, while
Zane Trace was the top girls
Division Ill girls team.

Gordons gets
season sweep at
Martinsville
: MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP)
- Jeff Gordon overpowered
the rest of the field Sunday.
completing a season sweep of
t~e two NASCAR Winston
Cup races at Martinsville
Speedway.
: The victory in the cautionfilled Subway 500 was the 63rd
win of Gordon's career but
only his second of the season.
The four-time series champion
led 313 of the 500 laps on the
half-mile oval.
· Jimmie Johnson, Gordon's
Hendrick
protege
and
Motorsports teammate, started
26th and lost more ground
when he spun out early in the
race, but carne back to fmish
second.
It was a typical short track
race, with plenty of bumping
and banging that. produced 15
caution flags and a record 117
laps run under yellow.
As he did in his victory here
in April, Gordon started from
the pole, dominated early,
struggled for a while, then
came back even stronger.
· Gordon, who now owns five
victories at Martsinville.led the
final 205 laps, easily pulling
away on each of a series of
restarts and staying out of trou91e on the narrow track.

BY

bcooper@ mydailytribune.com

nents with, 15 or more wins in 2003.
But the season did not end without making a little noise inAhe postseason. Meigs upset third-seeded
Scioto Northwest, 15-11 , 14-16 and
15- 11 in the Sectional semifinal to
advance to the title tilt.
Northwest returned every starter
from a team that was one win away
from the Regional tournament last

THE PLAINS - Eastern and
Southern earned the right to play in
this week's Di vision IV. Southeast district tournament by
winning
Sectional
titles Saturday at
Athens High School.
The Tornadoes will
be making their first
appearance in the district tou rnament in
five vears after an
impressive 15-0. 15-3
win over Symmes
Pullins
Valley.
Later that night.
Eastern
defeated
Waterford 15-4. 17-15
as the Eagles. the
2003 TVC Hocking
Divi sion champions.
will be making a
return trip to the district.
In the earlier game.
Brooke Ki ser put
Southern on the right
Weber
track early with 11
straight service points
to open the tirst game. She finished
wi1h 16 points on the day. including
four aces.
Meanwhile . Deana Pullins had four
points and Katie Sayre. Jordan Neigler
and Ashlee Roush each had three
points fur Southern. Pullins and Sayre
each had two aces.
At the net for the Tornadoes. Sayre

Please see Marauclen, Bl

Please see District. Bl

Meigs coach Rick Ash talks with his teams between games two and three of Saturday's Division 11 Sectional
final. (Brad Sherman)
•

Marauders fall to Warren
in sectional championship
BY

BRAD SHERMAN

sports@ mydailytribune.com

WELLSTON - Having to play
six straight games against .two of the
premier volleyball powers in
Southeastern Ohio was just too
much to overcome.
An obviously fatigued Meigs·
team saw its season end on Saturday
night after falling to Warren in the

Division II Sectional championship
held at Wellston High School. The
Lady Marauders won 16-14 in game
one, but lost 15-2 and 15-3 decisions in games two and three .
Warren ~mproved tq 20-4 on the
season and advances to Di strict play
this Wednesday at Southeastern
High School in Richmond Dale.
Meigs wrapped up the campaign
with a 15-7 mark, with all seven of
those losses coming against oppo-

Pettitte hurls Yankees to
Game 2 win over Marlins
BY

~$EN WALKER

Associated Press

Attention prep ·
football coaches
Area high school football
coaches are reminded to send
in their nominees for the alldistrict football teams as soon
as the regular season is completed.
Nominees, along with their
2003 stats, can be e-mailed to
sports@mydailytribune.com,
or faxed to 446-3008. You may
also call them in after 6 p.m. to
446-2342, ext. 33, or drop
them off at our Gallipolis
office on lJ!ird Ave.
.

B~CH COOPER

New York Yankees' starting pitther Andy Pettitte tips his cap
to the crowd after he is relieved in the ninth inning against the
Florida Marlins in Game 2 of the World Series Sunday. (AP)

NEW YORK- The Face of
October showed up and shut
down the Florida Marlins,
silencing all their talk about
wreaking havoc in this World
Series.
With his cap pulled down
low and shadowmg his dark
eyes, Andy Pettitte pitched
neatl y into the ninth inning
and drew the New York
Yankees even with a 6-1 win
in' Game 2 Sunday night.
Pitching on three days' rest,
Pettitte got a little pregame'
encouragement from Roger
Clemens.
"He said, 'This is what we
worked all year for. You got to
go out strong like a horse
tonight," ' Pettine said.
He came out strong, all

right, and his teammates came
out slugging , a take-that
response to a Marlins team
intent on using its speed to
cause trouble.
Hideki Matsui delivered the
big hit the Yankee Stadium
crowd was waiting for. a threerun homer in the tirst inning
on a 3-0 count. Slumping
Alfonso Soriano later added a
two-run drive.
Those shots seemed to
revive a Yankees team that
looked sluggish in losing the

opener 3-:!. And 1hey were
plenty for Pettitte. who tied
John Smaltz's postseason
record of 13 victories .
"We talked about it all
along. Pitching is going to win
this Series," Marlms manager
Jack McKeon said.
Pettine nearly recorded his
first postseason shutout in 29
starts. Third baseman Aaron
Boone· s second error of the
game. a two-out misplay in the
ninth. set up Derrek Lee's RBI
si ngle.
At that point , manager Joe
Torre pulle~ Pettine. who
waved hi ~ cap as he got a
standing ovation from the
55,750 fans chanting his
name.
Pettine gave up six hits.
struck out seven. walked one
and did not permit a runner

Please see Pettltte, Bl

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

er

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Mei.~s County. ha~ again been awarded ~undin_g for the purp~se of providing
houstng rehabthtatton to LMI households m Metgs County. Thts is a two year
program. .
'
·
'f' . ' ' c

. Qualif~ed contractors int~r~sted in bidding on jdbs for the Meigs County
Communtty Improvement program, may obtain a Contractor's Statement of
Qualifications application a the Meigs County Annex at 117 East Memorial Drive
. (behind Holzer ~linic), Pomeroy, Ohio. Office hours are 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.•
Monday thru Fnday. When the completed application is returned it should be
accompanied by proof of Liability Insurance and Workm-an's Compensation.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

'

Contractors on .t he eligibility listing will have the opportunity to submit bids on
Hou.sing Rehabilitation and Home Repair Projects. Questions cim be referred to·
Jean Trussell, &lt;;rants Administrator at 740-992-7908.
.

•

2~20 Vall~ Driw •

•

111--- - ·--··1 -· ---

Pobtt Pl.asant. WV •· 304-67J-4J40

�.P age B2 • The Daily Sentinel

•

•

College Football

Kentucky backup QB
leads Wildcats over Ohio
LEXINGTON , Ky. (APl Shane Boyd's versatility paid
off for Kentucky against Ohio
on ~aturday night.
The Wi Ideals' backup quarterback became the third
NCAA Division l football
player this season to record
touchdowns passing, rushing
and receiving in a single game
as Kentucky beat the Bobcats
35- 14 at Commonwealth
Stadium.
Boyd relieved starter Jared
Lorenzen after Lorenzen lost
two fumbles in the tirst quarter. Boyd scored on runs on 8
and 12 yards, threw a 42-yard
scoring pass to Tommy Cook
and caught a 30-~ard TD pass
from Lorenzen m the fourth
quarter.
"I had to be real patient,"
Boyd said. "I've been wanting
to contribute since I came
here, to help the team get to
where they are. "
School officials did not
immediately know if any previous Kentucky player had
touchdowns passing, receiving
and rushing in a single game.
Louisville · quarterback
Stefan LeFors (Oct. 4 vs.
South Florida) and Kent State
quarterback Joshua Cribbs
(Oct. ·II vs. Marshall) have
also done it this year.
Kentucky (3-4) limited Ohio
(2-5) to 153 yards of otfense

through three quaners but
struggled . to put away the
Bobcats. Ohio led for much of
the first half and was within a
touchdown early in the fourth
quarter after a 58-yard touchdown pass from Austen
Everson to Ray Huston.
Two touchdown passes in
the final I0:07 by Lorenzen, to
Boyd and Derek Abney,
clinched the win for the
Wildcats in the final nonconference game of the season for
both teams . Lorenzen has 74
career touchdowns passes,
tying Jim Couch's school
record.
''Offensively, we started
very shaky," Kentucky coach
Rich Brooks said. "Shane
went in and did what f thought
was an outstanding job, and
then Jared came back in and
played very well in the second
half. We finally hooked up
with what we thought we
might get in the earlier part of
the year with a pass to Shane
from Jared for a touchdown
and a big play."
Boyd accounted for 169
yards rushing, receiving and
passing. His 85 yards rushing
w~s a season high for
Kentucky.
Everson, a freshman making
his second start, lost two fumbles and rushed for just 28
yards on 21 carries.

" I was extremely pleased
with the defensive effort we
had tonight against a very difficult offense:· Brooks said.
"They have scored points on
virtually everybody they have
played and for us to perform
with the disciplined effort, to
me it was an outstanding
defensive effort."
Tyler Russ
recovered
Lorenzen 's fumble at the
Kentucky 7 tQ set up Ohio's
first touchdown, a 7-yard run
Qy Brad Young less than five
mi11utes into the game.
Andrew Hopewell partially
blocked a punt to give
Kentucky possession at the
Ohio 26, and Boyd eventually
scored on an 8-yard ·run midway through the second quarter to tie it at 7.
Down 21-7 in the third quarter, Ohio drove 79 yards to the
Kentucky I but lost the ball on
downs.
"When you play against a
(Bowl Championship Series)
conference team and you have
an opportunity like we had in
the first half, you have to take
advantage of it," Ohio coach
Brian Knorr said. "I thought
we outplayed them in the first
half to go into the locker room
tied 7-7.
"We were in it and feh good,
but we could have done a little
more damage in the first half."

Buckeyes defeat Hawkeyes, 19-10
COLUMBUS . (APl
Michael Jenkins returned a
punt for a touchdown and
Donte Whitner fell on a
blocked punt in the end zone
as No. 8 Ohio State beat No. 9
Iowa 19-10 on Saturday.
The Buckeyes were coming
otf their first loss in 20
games, a 17-10 defeat in the
rain at Wisconsin last week.
Ohio State's offense with every starter from last
year's national championship
team back except for suspended tailback Maurice

Clarell - had one of it s worst
days ever.
The Buckeyes (6-1, 2-1 Big
Ten) had 185 yards of total
offense. rushing for 56 yards
on 42 attempts. Ohio State
came . into the game ranked
I09th in total otlense of the
117 Divi sion 1-A teams.
Trailing 17- 10, Iowa (5-2,
1-2) blew its final chance to
pull even when center Eric
Rothwell snapped the ball
over quarterback Nathan
Chandler's head and through
the end zone for a safety with

Monday, October 20, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

3:03 left.
The Buckeyes led I0-3 at
the half on Jenkins' 54-yard
punt return for a iouchdown.
After Ohio State forced the
Hawkeyes to punt on their
second possession . Jenkin s
pulled in the kick at hi,s own
46 and dodged a near tackle
by Bob Sanders almost immediately. Jenkins cut through
the right side, avoiding diving
tackles by Mike Klinkenborg
and Grant Steen for a score on
only the sec.ond return of his
career.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

m:rtbune- Sentinel- l\e

vent game one from slipping away, and it:· ·
showed the rest of the way. Passing became·
an issue, as did defending the strong spikes of
the Warren strikers .
·.
from Page 81
"We were a step slow. and when you're a
step slow you can't make the good passes ,"
season.
explained Ash. ''When you don ' t make the
• "It was a tremendous win for us against good passes, there are a lot of free balls across
Northwest. and then we had a big win m the the net. They have a great hitting team and
fir~t game against Warren Local," commented they just hammered the ball."
Meigs coach Rick Ash. "We were able to pass
.The result was Warren winning handily 15and hit, I think we ran out of gas."
2 and 15-3 in games two and three .
By the time Meigs' first. match over
Garnes added four points in the loss while
· Northwest had concluded, there were 20 min- Jaynee Davis and Chrissy Miller contributed
utes remaining until the scheduled start time four kills each. Joey Haning handed out II
.of the championship, just long enough for the assists.
LadX Marauders and Warren to warm up.
Against the Northwest Lady Mohawks,
'When you play in the sectionals, they Meigs pulled away from a very evenly conmake you play back-to-back," added Ash. tested game one for a 15-11 win and looked as
"It's very tough and I think the kids were a if it was goinjl to roll in game two for the
step slow there at the end."
sweep.
But at the beginning of its fourth game,
Trailing 7-14 in the second contest,
Meigs was moving just fine. It built a fast 6-0 Northwest pulled victory from the jaws of
lead behind the service of Renee Bailey and defeat. The Lady Mohawks scored nine unanstron11 net play of Samantha Cole.
swered points to take a 16-14 decision.
Batley paced Meigs with II points while
However, in the final contest, Meigs trailed
Cole led the way in kills with six and in only once as it claimed a hard fought l5-ll
blocks with two.
victory.
But like all good teams, Warren responded.
Bailey was again the top scorer with I0
The Lady Warriors rattled off an incredible 13 markers followed closely by Haning's nine
unanswered points to take a 14-10 lead, but and eight apiece from Nikki Butcher and
Meigs responded too.
Cole.
The Lady Marauders rallied to tie the score
Bailey and Davis were a force up front with:
at 14 apiece and eventually won it by a 16-14 I0 and nine kills respectively along with Cole
count.
who blocked an amazing dozen spikes.
Meigs had to expend a lot of energy to pre-

.Marauders

District
from Page 81
had seven kills, while Kristiina Williams,
Emily Hill and Pullins each had one.
Pullins also had seven assists.
"The girls worked hard for it," said
Southern head coach Rom a Sayre. "I'm very
proud of their accomplishment."
Rebecca Capper led Symmes Valley with
two points.
.
Southern will face Adena in the district
semifinal 6 p.m. Wednesday at Wellston.
"They (the Tornadoes) haven't faced a team
of that caliber this year," said Sayre of Adena.
The Eagles will be joining thetr cross county brethren after beating the Vikings in the
final game Saturday.
Eastern earned ,an relatively easy first game

Pettitte
from Page 81
past second base untii the last inmng. Jose
Contreras relieved and got the final out.
"l was missing a little bit, kind of fighting
myself a little bit trying to figure out what kind
of game I wanted to pitch on three days' rest,"
Pettitte said of the first inning.
Pettine is a familiar if not frightening figure

win, but the Wildcats fought a little harder in
the second game as the El!gles were down at:
one point, 12-6.
·
After tying the game at 14-all, Waterford
regained · a one-point advantage. M01:gan
Weber had three straight service points to lift
Eastern to the win.
Both teams combined for 39 kills and I0
blocks in the match.
Weber and Kass Lodwick teamed up for 15.
kills for the Eagles.
Alyssa Holter had nine service points for
Eastern, while Katie Robenson had seven
points, including two aces. Lodwick added
six points, while Weber had five points,
including a couple of aces.
Haley Drayer and Mallory McCutcHeon
each had six points for the Wildcats, while
Hope King had five kills and four blocks.
Eastern. the defending district champions,
will enter district tournament play 7:15 p.m ..
Thursday against Portsmouth Notre Dame.
on the mound. and once again his timing was
impeccable.
.
The Yankees also lost the openers in their
playoff series against Minnesota and Boston
this year before Pettine won Game 2.
"For people to say 'There is no pressure · or
'This guy doesn't feel pressure,' I don't believe
it," Torre said. "It's a matter of how you handle
it."

Now, the Series shifts to Pro Player Stadium
for Game 3 on Tuesday night. Marlins ace Josh
Beckett will start against Mike Mussina.
·

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r
ed.

Ul&gt;"'' ANil
Fou~1J

Found· Small black Scottish
Terrier. 740·256·6336
Lost Black Cane in the
vicinity of Sandhill RCI
(304)895·3566
Lost: Golf Clubs and bag .
Cora Miii!Vanco Rd. Call
740·245·5589 . .
Lost: Whit e Iris h Wolfe
hound. Answers to the name
Sugar. Lost in Vinton Area
740-388·04 16

r

YARil SALE

WANTID

mBuv

Combjned Metgs Coyoty
HealthCommissionerf
Heal!hOepartment
Admjn1strator
Experienced
He alth
Commissioner/Admi nistrator
needed to direct the Meig s
County Health Department
(with 20+ staff members).
Must be able to wnte competitive grant proposals and
multHasl&lt;. Poss ess expertise in budgeting and f1scal
management computer proficiency : excellent written
and verbal (public/interpersonal) communication skills:
expertise in research1ng &amp;
solving problems: familiari ty
w1th emergency procedures.
assessment and Slate regulalions: organ1zational skills,
expertise in policy develop·
ment and program ptannmg.knowledge of public health;
experience in human relations/conflict management.
Must be an active participant in County's total health
care delivery system plan:
be involved In inhaslructl!rB
development and bio-terror·
ism preparedness : collaborate with State/loca l social
service agencies, business.
community organizations,
healthcare
providers.
Confidentiality required .
Minima! educational requirement: Master's Degree in
Public Health or relaled
field . Salary commensurate
with experience with a base
pay ol $35,000 plus benefi ts.
Current or former Meigs
County resident prefe rred.
Submit resume and live professional references to
Meigs County Board of
Health, 11 2 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
by 1t ·05-03.

Full time help needed . App ly
between 10-11 am. Mon ..
Thurs ..
Sat.
McCiures
Resfaumnts. All locations.
.
HEu•WANlEV
Jackson Pike . Gallipol is
740-446-3837; Middleport
An awesome job!, $6-$9 per 740-992·5248;
Pomeroy
hour after train ing! No expe- 740-992·6292.
rien'ce needed! Fu ll/part
time, flexible scheduling . Full tim• salea position.
convenient
Pomeroy experience
prererred.
loca~ion , 20+
positions Apply in person atThomas
available, call 9·9. M·F, t · Do
n
Center, Point
888-974-Jobs.
Pleasant, WV

l ~io

Growing Heating &amp; Cooling
·company looKing lor e&gt;:perienced installers ·with some
tech experience. Installation
experience a must. Good
pay. (740}441-1236 if no
answer, leave message.

AVON! All Areas ! TO Buy or
SelL Shirley Spears, 304·
675·1429
Local Medic81 Office seeking a person with elctensive
Delivery-National Co need· computer knowledge, 10
ing' auto relatep Salesldellv· work in a small office 3 days
ery persona to service local a week/flex time. MuSt work
market. Truck, salary, bene - well with public and children.
fits.. Included. Keystone Some
evening
hours
Automotive
1·800·820- required. Office hoUrs are 8·
3962.
·
· 4pm. If Interested please
send resume to: PO Box.
Domino's Now Hiring all 447, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
locations Pt. Plea sant, Before October 28, 2003.
Gallipolis, &amp; Pomeroy. Safe
drivers, must be 18. Apply in
person at locations.
Medi Home Health Agency,
- - - - - - - - - Inc. t.Eieking lull-tme staff
Earn money for Christmas Physical Therapist tor Oh io
by selling Avon call Joyce and West Vlrginl8 client
304-675·6919
be:.se. We offer a competitive
- - - - - - - - - salary, benefits package,
Nurse Practioner
8l;ld 401 K E.O.E. S5 ,000
Pediatric office in Ripley, WV SlGN-ON·BONUS . Please
lhat sees patients age birth- send resume to 352 Second
21 years old Is seeking Avenue. Gallipolis, OH
FT!PT certified primary care 45631 Attn. Diana Harless ,
Nurse Practioner with pedl - R.N . Clinical Manager
atrlc e·xperience. Position
does not reQuire any on-call
, lbeeper, or hospital cover· - - - - - -- - -1
Need 7 ladies to salt Avon ,
age.
Call
740-446-3358
Competitive salary and ben·
eflt package. Please call
(304}372 ·8250 for more Overbrook Rehabilitati on
Information . You may lax Center Is looking lor Fullresume to .(304)372·8297. or time and Part-time LPNs.
mail resume to
12·hour shirts. Please come
•
Office Manager
in and fill out an application
AT t Box 62 AA
at
333
Page Street ,
'Ripley,WV 2527 1
Middleport, Oh 45760

---~-----

••

lwrighl@llc.not

S27,000. 740·256-9247 or
740·645-0870
Owner Financed hOmes
available . Problem credit OK
let me Help You in find 1ng
your Home 1! Contact Terry
(304)675-1352

Now Hiring· AN , LPN &amp;
Home Health Aides lor local
homehealth agency, apply at
33105 Hiland Rd., Pomerqy,
(740)992·0990 M·F. 8·
4:30pm

Remodeled 3 bedroom , 1
1/2 bath in good neighborMod in Middleport. (740)
992·7743
or view
at
www.orvb.com•B 1503

rM~s~l

-:----~--

Position Announcement
Part· lime Case Manager
Gal!ia County
Cross Roads Program

www.comics.com

0
,.,

HELl' WANTi'D

@

I'EOE
«J

,!t~

2ooJ by NEA,

Inc.

14.M70 mobile home, 3 bed·
room, completely remodeled
throughout w/palnt &amp; carpet,
$5500 OBO, (740)985 -3625

r

APAIIT\fFNJ'S
FUR RENT

New Haven, 1 bedroom tur·
n1shed .ilpanmenl also have.
washer &amp; dryer, aepoSII &amp;
referen ces.
no
pets.
(740)992·0165

Now Tak1ng Appltcah ons35 West
2 Bearoom
Townhouse
Apa rtmen\s
3 bel. 2 bath. 2-car garage Incl udes Water
Sewage.
extra mce. Addaville school Trasn S350/Mo . 740·446·
dist1 1CI. $750 per month , 0008
deposit
&amp;
referen ce
Tara
Townhouse
requ1red . 740·367· 7039
Apar1ments, Very SpaCIOuS,
3 l:lr. home. water turmshed. 2 Bedrooms . 2 Floors, CA. 1
no pets. $400 deooSII· S425 1/2 Bath Newly Carpeted .
per month . Call 740·245- Ad ult Pool &amp; BaDy Pool
5064.
PallO. Start $385/Mo No
Pets. Lease Plus Secunty
3 Br. house tor rent Located Depos1t ReQu ~re d . Days·
on Sanders Dnve S550 per
740-44A-3481 . Evenmgs
month. OepOSI\ and reler740-367-0502
ences
reqUired
Call
Wiseman Real Estale 740· Twm A1vers Tower 1S accept·
446·3644.
1ng app t ica~10ns lor wa111ng
liSt lor Hud-subs1zed . 1· br
4 bedroom , 2 bath 568
Whitt~
Ad.
Reference apanment. call 675·6679
EHO
required, 1 yr. lease. 740446-2158.
T'NO efficiency apartments m

town . Convemently located
BricK house . Gallipol1s. 3
on Second Ave. Downsta1rs
be'drooms . no pets. S650
1979. 24x48 Sectional3 BR.
Aparlrn• 1t 1S $250 and the
HI \I I "I \II
70
rent: deposit. available Nov..
2 Bath, Den . French City
upstB!rs apartment IS $275MlscELLANEOUS
740·446-9209
Homes Gallipolis Ohio 740·
per montn Rent mcludes
446·9340.
Small. 1 J)ath. 2 bedroom . water, sewer and gas Call
25 Serious People wanted.
tURIIiliiSiiALEIIil'-..-1
LA. DR. k1tchen 42 Henkle .· W1seman Rea l Estate 740·
Who want to LOSE we1ght
-,9-8_3_5-ky-li-ne-.-,4-.,-64.. -2-- Ave. Ref/depoSit reqwred . 446·3644
We Pay You Cash for the 2 br., 1 bath ho!.!se, new car- bedrooms. 1·bath, electric, 740·446·9313.
j~::~-~~--.....,
5 PAl'E
pounds you LOSE !
pet, price reduced to 6950 St. At. 7 South, 59 ,500
Safe, Natural. No Drugs.
$35,500. 304·675·2995
74 (}..446 _9209
tUR lbxr
800·201-0832
3
br
..
2
bath,
appliances.
-------Commercial property tor
Bookcase. chest drawers. nice condition. Central·haat. Cole 's Mobile Homes
2 bd. wlw carpet. a1r. porch rent· a store front 1n
US
50
East,
Athens
,
Ohio,
dresser, entertainment cen- aprox . 1,900 sq. tt Asking
down town
Very nice. no pets. In H1stoncal
45701, 740-592-1972
fer , hide abed, refrigerator, $69,000. 740-379-9887.
Gallipolis. 74o-446·2003 or Pomeroy, Oh tacmg fiVEH ,
stove, and microwave stand,
(740)589·7122
4 BEDROOM, 4 BATH For sale or trade: 1969 740-446-1409.
740-446-9742
HOUSE!
Foreclosure
only
1 Ox60 Mobile home , e11ce!·
-------Power wheelchair. Pronto $9.900. tor listings. 1-800- lent condition. $3,500 call 2 bedroom mobile home lor Mobile home lo1, will take 14
re nt in Aacme , $325 rent. or 16 w1des. $125 month
M71 , lilts over 2~ thr6shold s. 719-3001 E)(t. F144
740·441·8574
Like new. $3,500. Call 740$325 deposit. 1 yr. lease. no 740-446-0175
pets. (740)992·5039 no calls
5 Rooms &amp; bath, acre tot
448 _9289 _
- - - - - - - - House needs some work. Good used 14X70 2 bed· alar 8·30pm
2 bath. Only
Sam Somerville M/SGT Mid 20's Call Somerville room,
$8995.00. includes delivery. 2 mobile hom·es on Ward
USA . original army camou- Realty
(304)675-3030
Call Harold (740) 385-9948 Rd. $350 &amp; $400. 740.245·
flage,s ince
1964,
by (304)675·3431
5671 .
Sandyville Post Office, wide
Good Used App11a nces.
range of clothing sizes JR.· By dwner 3 bedroom 2 bath New 14X70 3Brt2Bth only
For rent Mobile Home 2br
ano
3XL in mens 304·273·5655 riverfront with boat dock 1.5 S995.00 down and only city limits ol Pt. PI (304)675- Reco nditioned
Guaranteed.
Wa shers.
acres
in
Gallipolis $196.43 per month . Cal!
2359
WAN!lD
Dryers,
Ra nges.
and
photosiinformai!On on line Karena. (740) 385-7671
•
To Do
Refngerato rs , Some start al
www.orvb.cam code 90303
· - - - - -. ._.1 or call 740·446-0531
S95 . Skaggs Appliances. 76
New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BR
V1ne St .. (740)446·7398
Licensed Daycare/ Baby sit&amp; 2 Bath . Only S1695 down
ting · watch ~ids all &lt;6hitts. By Owner 3 Bedroom Ranch and &amp;295/mo 1·800·69 t ·
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Heat-N-Gio Propane Insert,
take private pay/state. paid. 2 baths, 2 car garage . 8777
ments. lurn1shed ~nd uotur- Ma)(1m u111 output . 24.000
..Galli~lis photos/Information
(740) 843·1094
n!shed. security deposit BTU Excellent Condit1on.
on line www.orvb.com code
No Problem Sale- Want a requi red . no pets, 740·992MB Handyman Afforda ble 81803 or call (740~367·7039
S1 .000 . OBO. (304)8 95·
new sectional home? No 2218.
3759
Service. Hauling, painting.
Problem. Need foundation
power wash ing, driveway
and septic? No Problem .
Bedroom Apartment . Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
repair, seal coating , gutters,
Need utilities run or drive· Kitchen Furnished ,
.Al l Chapel Road, Porter. Ohio.
chimney, plumbing. Jack of
way? No Problem. Want big Electric, · $300 Month, (740)446·7444 1·877 ·830·
all trades. 30yrs. exp. Senior
savings on a 2003 model. Del)(lsit Required Near H1gh 9162. Free Estima1es. Easy
Discount. Free Estimates.
No Problem. Cole"s Mobile School. (304)675 -3100 Or financing. 90 days same as
(304)882-2196, (304)377·
· cash . Visa/ Master Card
All ret! .-te ldvertlatng Homes. U.S. 50 Eap( (304)675·5509
8266
In thle ne.w.~ I•
Athens, Ohio, 740-592-1972
·
Drive· a- little save alot.
Since 1967, Where You Get 1 BR with stove and retriger·
aubtKf: ID the fecMNI
PICKY PAINTERS
Fair Houtlng Act of 1M8
Your Money's Worth
ator, starling al $290/mo + Aotllop desk $125; console
'lriterior. &amp; Exterior
deposit 740....(41 ·1322
which mana It n..,.. to
stereo; eiQht track $100 ;
Senior Citizens OISC04"I
!tdvwtiH "any
n metal desk S30; wicker setTrailer and 1. 5 acres. 2
1
Residentia l. Commercial &amp;
bedroom
apt
p~•. llmltatk»n or
Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis Centenary. appliances fur- tee S35 . 740-446·9209.
mobile homes.
dlacrtmlnatlon butcl on
minutes from town. 2 bed· nished, utilities paid, except
Roots, barns, presaurertct, c~or. .-.llgk»n, NX
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
rOom/air, (304)576-2314
washing.
electric, ctean-$350 month·
flml\fal 8tiiUI Of national
Repair-675-?388 . For sate,
E)(perlence &amp; Aelerences
origin, or any Intention to
Can 740-256-1135.
re-conditioned automatic
available
meka 1ny auoh
2 BR, in town , no pets. nice, washers &amp; dryere. refrigera304-895·3074
prelet'ance., limitation or
dlacrtmlnadon.'"
S42S.OO + aeposlt. 740- tors. gas ana electric
Free estimates call M·S
ranges. air conditioners. and
441·1322
8am-7pm.
wringer
waahers. Wi ll do
--'-----' repafrl on major brands in
2 br. WID hook up ref. dep,
Will pressure wash hOmes.
no pets 304-675-5 Hl2
shop or at your home.
trailers. _decl&lt;s, metal build lngs ahd guners. Call (7-40)
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
446·01 51 ask for Ron or
MENTS · AT
BUDGET
leave a message
PRICES AT JACKSON

I1'

The
Athens·Meigs
Educational Service Center
is seeking a laacher assistant for publ ic preschool at
Report ing 10 th e Director 01 Alexander Early Learning
Crossroads and Dean of Center. Applica nls must be
Students the candidate lor willing to have a criminal
this position will be responsi- ·eco·d
'
' check · be ce•to
' to·able
·
ng
to
alte"d
and
W
.ll'
ble lor delivery of all servic·
"
es to &lt;:lnd for the participants requ.ired trai nings. The' posi·on .,, lou·' days a week ·
of tha program participants; ll
wo rking
with wor k.1ng WI'lh ch'ld
1 reo ages
,·ce three and lour. Please send
Slall llacu lty /se ...
, ..
providers to insure access to letter 01 ir1terest and three
all Crossroads Program references to Sally Hocking,
components and community · Athens·Meigs Educational
serv 1ces:
provide Service
Cente r.
507
advising/supportive servic- Richland Avenue. Suite 108.
as/application relerrals to Athens.
Ohio
45701 .
enrolled pa rticipants: main- Deadline: October 24, 2003.
taining enrollment and follow The ESC is a Equal
up reco rds of each assigned 0 P P o r t u n i I y
participant ; wOrking with Employer/Provider.
supervisors to . deliver proAthens-Meigs
gramming to each partici- The
Educational Service Center
pant in an effective, efficient
manner consistent with pos- is seeking a teacher assis·
tant lor public preschool at
ilive procedure and requireAlexander Early Learning
olen!; attending meeting or
Center. Applicants ·must be
training sessior\s as neceswilling to have a criminal
sary and other administrarecord chec~ . be cer tifiable
tive duty as assigned.
and willing to attend
MuSt have a valid driver's
license and reliable · ~raos ­ requi red trainings. The posi·
lion is tour days a week,
portatlon . Associate Degree
working with children ages
in Sooial Service or related
three and tour. Please send
field preferred . One year ol
letter of interest and three
experience in providing
references to Sally Hocking,
direct services or r.elated
Athens-Meigs Educational
field preferred. One year ol
Service
Center,
507
experience in providing
Richland Avenue , Suite 108.
direct services 10 economiAthens .
Ohio
45701 .
cally vulnerable yOuth and or
Deadline: October 24, 2003.
adults preferred. No benellts
The ESC is an Equal
available with this position.
Opportunity
Resume will be reviewed a~
Em~loyer/Provlder.,
received and received uiltit
filled. Interested candidates Wanteci Licensed Ohio
stlould send a lener of Inter- Social Worker to provide
est and resume.
cOunseling -services for
Phyllis "MaSon, SPHR,
youth 10 a group home set·
Director of Human
tlng In the Jackson Ohio .
Resources
Area. This is a full time posi·
University of Rio Grande
tlon with competitive salary
PO. B"' 500
and excellent benellts. Must
Rio Grande, OH 45675
be motivated and have a
Fax: 740-245-4909
willingness to work with kldl.
e-mail pmasonOrlo.edu
Senc11 resumes to The
Counatllng
Center,
Artention AI Siebel. 608 Park
Ave. Ironton . OH 45638.

high schO!?I ... diploma or
equivalent . MUst also pass a
drug screen. Apply In person
at M&amp;G Polymers Main Gate
in Apple Grove ' between
9am·2pm dalty. Must be willing to work weekends and
all Shifts. EOE MIF

HOMES
FORSAU:

H0!.5ES
Investor willing lo pay up to
FORRtNr
90% of Appra1sal lor Homes
1n area. Use my Money not
Yolhs '!
Contact
Terry 1·3 Bed FORECLOSED
(304)675·1 352
homes . Buy from $199 a
montn 1 4% down. 30yrs at
New Starter Log Homes. w/ 8.5°"o APR. For Listing Call
1 acre . Ready to go I -800· 719-3001 Ext F 1709

Now hi nng Sales Reps, to
call
GOvernmenl
Departme nts.
City
Departnients. Government
Enlities . We call Busi ness
only, no res idential calls.
$8.00 minimum up lo $12.00
an hour (d epending on
experience) guaranteed plus
bonus, our top Sales Reps .
average between $600 to
$1.200 a week. Call 304·
675·2700 or 1·800 -8752673 ask lor Tommy
Milstead, between 12·2pm
only.

Security Office,.
Guardsmark, LLC "is current·
ly accepting applications lor
part lime security positions'
In the Apple Grove area
Hours will range from 16-32
hrs per week with a pay rate
starting at $7.30 per hr.
An 1·
be
1
......,p 1ca nts must
at east
21 years of age, have a
clear pollee record and a

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
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"P''I*I

· HELP Wo\NTED

The University ·of Rio
Grande announces
an
opening IQr one part time
position for a Case Manager
in the Crossroads Program
10 Galha County. This grant
funded part time position is
availabl e immediately.

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyregister.com

I'OUCIES : OhiQ YaUty Publishing reMrVM tl'le right to edit, refKt, 01" ceneal any .ct et any time. Errort mull bt reported on the flr.t dey of pubtic«lon and
Trlbune-Sentlnei·Regiattr will be reaponllblt tor no more thin t~ cott of the tpttea occupied by tnt error lind only tht firlt mMI'tion. We INII not be 1
any lo. . or expente th1t reeutte from t~ publlc.tlon or omiesion of In tldwrUMnMnt. Corr.ct lon will be mlde in tM firet anileble tdi1ion . • Box
are elwaya confldenlial. • Currant rate card appllea. • .lll raal eatalt advertltemtnll art 1ubjeet to lht F.c::ltttl Ftlr Hoosin"g Act ol1968.
" ..
acceptl onty help wanttd ada mttllng EOE ttandlrda. Wt will not knowtngly accep1any ldvertlllng In vlot.llon oft~ ltw.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I \11'1 0\ \II' I
...,, Jn II I"'

Attn. Pt. Pleasant
Postal positions. clerks/carr!·
ersJsorters.
No
exp.
required. Benelits. For exam,
salary, and testing Informs·
tloo call (630)393-3032 ext
782 Bam·8pm 7 days

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·
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1110

ANNOUNn~\1fNI]; I Emoloymeot Oooortunjtv·

Say good bye to nigh phone
bills! New local phone serv ice with FREE unlimited
nation wide long Di stance
t ·800·635-2~08
or
wwwFreedomMovie.com/itp
aysyou. Loca l Agents want·

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Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day'• Paper
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I \\01 \1 I I II 'Is

C·1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale. Chester Township,
Me1gs County, send letters
~f .mterest to: The Daily
Sentinel. PO Bol( 729-20 ,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

l\egister

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis ·Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lytribune.com
classified@ mydailysentlnel.com

Offte~ ~~o~~

Wanled to buy: Good clean
barrel s w/ lids. Call 740·388·
8978 after 1:00pm .

on your home delivered subscription!

t~ter

G.a.!IY Counry. OH

Absolute Top. Dollar U.S
Si lve r,
Gold
Coiris .
Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rings,
US Currency,·
MTS Coin Shop, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis
740·446·2842.

lor·Discount*

,.'

CLASSIFIE.D.

t

If so, you qualify for a

•
The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

11'1'11l!o---:H~OMES---.,

~r___

r

~~110

M~R'!~m&gt;

1

r

.I r. 1~

• ~"Ul"ft.J

·--1iiiiiiiiiilioo_.l

INOnCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISrtQaUipolla ClrHr Coltege lNG CO. recommends that
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today\ 74Q-446-4367 . you do business with people
t-800-214-Q452,
you know. and NOT to send
mOnsy through the mail Until
www.galtlpolltcareerooli&amp;Qe.com
r:'I:~R;::•:~~o~•:;:90-0::;;;"5·-.12~7;.;:4::B·._, you have investigated the Farm hous• 3 beqrooin, 2
l)aths, 2 story, newly renolT.a.~...u...a. Jtrn'AJlJO
vated, unfinished basement.
screened porch , 221(20
garage. double carport,
Grave site, Mound Hill
public water, Meigs County.
Cemetery. Holzer addhlon . • TURNED DOWN ON
country sertlng 5+ acres, no
SOCIAL
SECUIIITY
/SSI?
$425 .00,
Call (740)742land contract $79.500. call
.No Fee Unless We Win l
2459
(740)742·9937
1-888-582·3345

lrro "-.. . . . .. .,. ........~ ~ I

. --·

-·-· ...

--~·--

ESTATES, 62 Westwood
Drive from S297 to S383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Office building tor rent· 600 740·446·2568.
~qual
S.F. , elect . M$t , Blc, .ceiHog Housing Opportufllty.
tao, River Park, Minersville,
S300/mO+ $200 dep .. (614) Crown City- clean 1 br.,
$275 monlh + doposrt. 74()256·1249. '

2br, 1ba. home 482 Hornton
St Mason. 41 acre lot adjacent Unlan Cemetery Broad
Run. Map parcel 1660003
agents protected. (304)4876723
Lot for sale in
(740)992-5858

Racii1e ,

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

r

Buy Or sell. Riverine
Antiques. 1 124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomerov. 74o992-2526. Russ Moore .
owner.

r~1

1~ Jeep WagOneer. Blown
engine, \ transmission ok.
Body goOd. $500.. SQta•
power with ad!.plers 3-12V
$40., 3881486 Computer
Gracious 11v1ng . 1 ant12 bed- sottware, 2 larger boxes.
room apartments at Village IOO's of utility games. $100.
Manor
and
Riverside ~-675-3542 leaw mea·
Apartments ifl, Middleport. sage.
Fcom 5278-$348. Call 74()992 -5064 Equal Housing 5000 Watt Honda Generator
Opportunities.
SljO(). (304)882·3273

•

•

�· r ~~ ~

ALLEYOOP

r"--"'"F.Qul
iiliiii""
liiiiiFiii-r'·
NT
A

1

haul. Nol responsible for '
John Deere backhoe w/cab,
accid.enis. (304)675-6440
31Q-C, good condil1on. runs
excellent ,

$10.000,
For Sale Extra Good Used
1:!7~
40
~
)!94:;:
9;:
·2,:;
7 00
::::,._ _ __,

Tires ~5 inch $10.00 each.
Phqne Even ing (304)675- U&gt;
5568

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

84 GMC 4x4, short bed AT
350. Asking
740·367·7 148

i

~3. 000

.Call

'

VANS &amp;
4-WDs

I

I

1998 Mercedes ML320 SUV

L IVIiS!OCK

4-wheel drive, 59,000 miles
7~0-44 1 ·1 377 leave ·a _mes-

.ALltEL

sage.
For sale washing machine A Team Feed , 110 Vme
Street ,
shelled
co rn
304· 675·2359
$5.801100# While quantity

last, lim1t 4 740-441 -9090.
J ET

loadef duel exhausl $7000.

_ _
Angus Bulls , He1ters plus
304 576 3122
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In Maine-Angus Steers and m~------.,
Stock. Call Ron Evans. ·1- Heifer s, Top blood lines .
800·537 -9528.
Slate run farm. Jackso n.
MUIURCYCU:S
740-286·5395.
~
•

F'IO

I

Horse Boarding tndQ9rl out- 1989 Yamaha Pro-hauler 4-

r

Sunday. (740)446-7300

$1500. (304)882·3273

New, scratch &amp; Dent.
Save
%. _ _ _
70
1 800 527 4662

AUIUS

FOR SALE

1998 Ya maha I OOcc 4·
wheele r, exc ell ent condition ,

BISSELL

new engi ne. new tire s.
$1 ,000 OBO. Call 740-367·
0436.

New Homes • Vi nyl

I reo
.

"-1111111-iiiiiiiiii;;,_.l
'

Auro PARTS &amp;
AIXE\IDRII;;&lt;;

01

1

I

Sidi ng • New Garages
• Replaceme nt

.

WfndO\IiS • Roo fing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

1d

FR EE ESTIMATES

1-8()().719·3001 e&gt;l 3901
Remembe ring Elvis , co mplete ape sat of plates. $200. 1986 Ford Escort 2dr., auto,
2 Pear t Bracelet 7- 1/2 in 39,000 miles. Great Shape.
black, . white. $20. eac h. (304)675·3354
~H o nora ~ (304)773-5490
1990 Fo rd Pro be 120k. go'od
cond . $1400. 304-675-5205
Sears upright freezer l or or 304 -"675-4595.

Automotive parts. If your
looking,for engines or transmissions give me a call at

r

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

'iii(\J(IS

HoME

fuel pump. $4,000. obo.
(304 )576·2236

2000 Chevrolet Impa la,
'
Sed an 40. 68.000 miles,
AKC Boxer p ups, 3 white e;.;cellenl conditio n. AJC,
fe mal es- $250, 1 Brindl e cruise, cassette. $7,900
male· $275 .· 740·388-8955. firm. 740-446-9289.
94 Corvette Coupe. White,
Full blooded Rat Terrier pup-_ red leather. glass top,
pies. 6 weeks old , tails loaded $10.000 . 7-40-682dockedlwormed. Born -9- 11 . 75 12.
'

C&amp;C
Genera l
Home
Maintenance- Painting, vinyl
sidmg , carpe ntry, doors,
windows , bat hs, mobile
home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chet. 7 40-

992· 6323.

1991 S-10 Ta~ oe , V-6, 5 sp.,
Potatoes for sale 50# $10, power steering/brakes, NC
Mon·Sal. , 65002 State $1.500. Ca ll 740·256-1487.
Route 124 , Reedsvill e, Oh,
1994 Pontiac Sunpird 2dr.
740 378-629 1
FoR SALE
V6, auto. A/C. ti iVcr uise,
OR TRADE
fully-l oaded. purple , nice

• L imestone

1995 Ford E-350Van. 14 ft .
hi gh cube box. exc ellent
cond. 740-446-941 6

• Sand

• Di n

• Ag Lime

740-9,.5·3564
1

I

UBLIC
TICES

Your Right to

Know~

Public Notices i n News pupc r s .
Delivered Ri g ht t o Your Duo •··

HOWARD l.
WRITfSfl

dOOFING
dOME
MAINTENANCE
I dEAMLESS
GOnER
I

Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given lhat In pur·
suanca
of
a
Resoluttpn of the
VIllage Council ol the
Village ol Pomeroy,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
passed on the 16th
. day of July, 2003,
there will be submll·
ted lo a vote of the
people of said subdi·
vision al a General
Election to be held in
the
VIllage · ol
Pomeroy, Ohio, at the
regular places of votIng therein, on the 4th
day of November,
2003, the quesllon of
levying a tax , In
excess ollhe lan mill
llmltallon, lor lhe ben·
of
Pomeroy
eflt
Village lor the pur·
pose
of
Current
expenses.
Said lax being: 2 A ·

Being th ot certain
Village Council of the November, 2003, at Ohio 45771
Village of Pomeroy, the regular places of Said
Premises
righl ol way bounded
and described as folPomeroy,
Ohio,
Appraised
at
voting therein, the
passed on the 16th question of levying a $51,000.00 and can·
lows:
day of Ju ly, 2003 , renewal tax outside nol be sold for less · A", easemenl and
righl of way along the
there will be submit· ol the len-mill constl· than lwo·thlrds ol
led to a vote ol lhe tutlonal limitation for that amount.
East Boundary ol
said real estate for
people ~I said subdl· the benefit ol the TERMS OF SALE.·
vision at a General Southern
$5 ,000.00
down,
Ingre ss and egress
Local
Election to be held In School Dlslrlct lor the 'remainder upon ten- lor property lying an
lhe
Village
of purpose of providing
der of deed.
the North side ol lhe
Pomeroy, Ohio, atlhe funds for current Ralph E. Trussell , above described real
regular places of vot· expenses, at a rate of Sheriff of
Meigs
estate and being a
right of way and ease·
ing therein, on the 41h lour (4.0) mills lor Counly, OH
day of November, each
one
dollar FRANK
&amp; menl 20 leal In widlh
2003 , the question of ($1.00) of lax valua·
WOOLDRIDGE CO. , and exlending lhe
levying a lax, In lion, which amounllo L.P.A.
entire distance along
excess of lhe ten mill forty cents ($0.40) lor Allorneys for Plaintiff
lha
said
East
limitation, lor lhe ben· each one hundred 600
South
Pearl
Boundary.
ellt
of
Pomeroy dollars ($100.00) of Street
Save ahd Reserve the
Village lor the pur· tax valuation , for a Columbus,
Ohio Oil and Gas as previpose ol Fire protec· period ol three (3) 43206
ously reserved,
tlon.
PARCEL · NUMBER:
years, comme:o~elng (514) 221-1662
Said tax being: 2 A In 2003 , first due in EXHIBIT A
03·00904.000
· renewal of a tax of 1 calendar year 2004.
lhe
PROPERTY
Situated
in
mill at a rate not Th.e polls will be open Township ol Chesler, ADDRESS:
34100
exceeding 1.0 mills from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 County of Meigs and
Pin• Grove Road
lor each one dollar ol p.m. on said date.
Racine, OH 45771.
State of Ohio :
valuallon,
which By order of the Board The following real
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27, (11)
amounts to ten cents ol Elections of the estale silualed In
3
renewal of a tax of 1.9
($0.10) lor each one counly of Meigs, Ohio Fraction 24, Town 3,
mills al a rale not hundred .. dollars ol AHa D, Smflh •
Range 12, Chesler
valuation, for five (5) Director
exceeding 1.9 mills
Township,
Meigs
for each one dollar of 'years_ The Polls lor (10) 6, 13, 20, 27
County, Ohio:
valuation ,
wh ich
said Election will
Beginning at an Iron
amounts to nineteen ·open at 6:30 o'clock
pipe at the Northeast
Public Notice
am and remain- open
cents ($0.19) for each
corner of Chaney's
one hundrad dollars until 7:30 o'clock pm
3.50 ecre lract and
of valuation, for five"" ~!said day.
·
The Slale of Ohio, being a .comer to the
(5) years. The Polls lor By order ollhe Board Meigs County,
Original 11 .50 acres
said Elecllon will . of Elections, ol Meigs Beneficial Ohio, Inc.
of Elmer G. &amp; Ruby K.
County, Ohio.
open al 6:30 o'clock
Young; !hence North
vs,
am and remain ·open
John
N.
lhle, Rober! D. Ellis, el, al.
48 27 ' Weal 102·09
unlll 7:30 o'clock pm
Chairperson
Plaintiff
feet to an Iron pipe;
Rlla
olsald day.
D.
Smith , Delendanls, ·
·thence North 47 42'
Sheriffs Sale of Real
By order olthe Board - Dlraclor
Fasl 505.80 feel to an
of Elecllons, ol Meigs (10) 6, 13, 20, 27 '
Eslate
Iron pipe ; thence
County, Ohio.
CASE NO. 03CVQ31
South 56 DO' Easl
John
N.
lhle,
In pursuance of an
210.94 feet to an Iron
Public Notice
Order ol Sale In lhe pipe el tha Soulheasl
Chairperson
Rlla
D.
Smith ,
above entitled action, pomer of Youngs '
Director
NOTICE OF ELEC·
I wfll offer lor sale at · 11 ,50 acres (passing
(10) 6, 13, 20, 21
TION
public auction , at the an Iron pipe al 45-17
Nollce is hereby CourthouSe
in
feet to anothar corner
given lhat pursuant Pomeroy, Ohio, in lhe · of the 11 .50 acres);
Public Notice
loa resolution ·adopt· above named County, !hence Soulh 46 1 T,
ed by the Board of on lhe 201h dey of Wesl559.84 le.e llo an
NOTICE OF ELEC·
2003 , Iron pipe al another
Educallon of lhe November,
Local al10:00 o'clock a.m ., corner of lhe 11 .50
'TION ON TAX LEVY IN Southern
EXCESS OF THE TEN
School
District, lhe
following
acres and also corner
County ol Meigs, OH described real eslale , lo Chaney "s ·3,50
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code, on lhe 28111 day of to wit :
acres ; thence North
Sections 3501.11 (G), July, 2003, there will (See attached legal
35 10" West 118.06
5705.19, 5705.25
be submlnecl lo the descrlpllon conslsl·
feet lo lha place or
NOTICE Is hereby qualified electors of lng of one (1) page.)
beginning, containing
given lhat In pur·
said school district at Said
Premises
2.56 acres.
suance
of
a the elecllon to be Located al34100 Pine
ALSO lhe following
Resolullon of lhe
held on the 4th day of Grove Road, Racine, described real eslate:

You'll

find

Scattered All
The

Classmedsl!!

I

i •free Estimates.
I

949•1405

750 East State Street

Phone (7-111)593· 667

Pau
Pass

,.

Our Fall Specials:
Color &amp; Perms 2500
Ladies Style Cuts r r..
Klds&amp;Men5 ..
l.MIJI" Hair Slig l!tly Hi,~ll er

BARNEY
LOOKIT, LUKEY,
l WHITTLED A

~ow
Ta rwn1g A 1'crilahle

FLUTE FER

..)IJGHAID !!

Hld/kiru or Appoitrl mt•uls wdcom t' ar i)'tim e.
985-3348 Tfl auks f i.' r )'OU r b1u inn$.

HOW ' D YA
KNOW HOW
MANY
HOLES TO
PUT IN IT ?

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

THE BORN LOSER

475 South Church St.

P'"
1&gt;-~UR.E Sl G!'\ YOJ 'R.E.

Ripley, WV 25271

1·800-822-0417

'"'l

GET\\t-\0
OLD.,

FMo~ZE 1c£ two:'&gt;
'/OJR F ~Z£.1&lt;:.
Tflt--N FOOD I

"W,V's # I Ch evy , Ponliac. Bu ick . O ld s
&amp; Cu s t om Va n Dea ler"

Eut
Pau

•NT
S NT

P ass

Pu iS
All pass

Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (BOO) 274·

2221 to

"llostmyshirt '
in the s tock
market!" .•

BIG NATE

-'lllrtbdlt':
1\leectay, Oct. 2, , 2003
IIATE f Oil

llfASUU.R?
!T I&gt;OlSH 'T
ACIO U' !

"' ·· ~ - ltoQlo,o •~&lt;I W V .·-'
................. -~--- ·'"

""'-···--

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:311
Early birds sl art

6:30
Lasl Thursday of'
every month

'lf@'ll"l£

•••

GINA!

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do it for ycul

liNDA'S PAINTING

11401 985·418

NO, T).lE STUPID
SCHOOL BU5
COME'I'ET!

HA5TI-lE
5C~OOL

6U5

COME 'lET'

lluy $5.00
Bonanza Gel
5 t'REE

NO MILK A6AIN mR

YOUR CEREAL Tl-115
MORNING, I·IUH ?

,

CARPENTER;
SERVICE
• Room .Addl tlons &amp;
Remo delin g
• New Garages
• Electri ca l &amp; Plu mbing
• Roofin g &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pai nting
• Pat io and Porc h Dec ks

BETTY
vel&lt;~ PEW
GOT PRoMOTED
TOAN6WJ09

Fre e Estimates

IN ANEW

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CITY

992· 6215

GARFIELD
.,

l

WONDER IF I'P Ml!le
...OU IF YOU WfNT AWAY

AND Ho WAS
COMPETENT

eNOOGH

36
37
39
40

42

-

v.., to.

55 Sharif of
the movies
56 31881
57 Cal's
unerance
58 Inaugurate
se Mh.
neighbor
in Abadeiwt 36 NurHSorg.
20 Tire·
39 Brozlllln
preature
por1
meaa.
41 Mol&lt;e bultllr.
22 Slop
42 Gllt·lllg
23 Explosive
word
lenora
43 Compotenl
24 Prolrud4i
« P1norama
25 PDQ kln
46 Moul
26 VIolin ports
coot&lt;out
27 Occupieo, 47 Is oil bose
• • a post
46 Art genre
28 EXICI
50 Boby 51 Go,.
29 Lor.don
perk
official
31 Luxury cer 52 Clwlolla 33 Poetic
contraction
35 Brower;
product

DOWN

"' '1111·-·

36F~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celtbr!ly C•pher ~rams 1111 CtUted from quotat10ns b)· la"noul people _PHI n prftl!nl
Eacn ill1fet, N O tto!~" strc:b lt't 1W'Oiher
Toaay ·sc~ue

" BOWNSBZ J
BAE

GXRR

NART

FBH Y
BRGBTJ

ZWMRT

BAE

LXWBOMRNMJ
Y.V,

OequaiSC

BRGB T J

SVYA ,

WYLB X A ,

ZFY

FNAYJ Z R ·T

ZF X AUJ ."

OMLLXAUJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "We don'l make mo~ es for crillcs. ~nee tney donl
pay to see them anyhow .· - Charle s Bronson

4J ~.-:rr;r. -•

i~ t· · ~ ~ : ~ 't; e
lour ~r: t:mt:lc ct v.- c ~c~ C!-·
1::-w to io.·:r· k ;; : S:r:-toie wcrc-!s.

.

8 I R DY H

I' I I

I

I

P NE 0
2

1

3

1

I

..•

I

-..."

T HA WE

.1 I

5

1

,I
I

I

"You'll find .' Granny mused,
"people make a grea1er impac: on

r--:--:-:--::-:-:--:-- -, other people by the way they lis·
L UT ME L
ten not by the · • • they •• • • •

I
1--;-1-"l'~r,-rl_,.,;rl. -7-l 0 C:mple:e the
'--'--'· -'-·~.1.
.-

.1.. .....J.

@-PP. It&lt;T

LETHRS

NUMSERED

;N I HE : E

-

~QU ARtS

chu&lt;klo quctod

by lilli n; In the rniSSif\9 war~
ycu develop tram Jflp No. 3 below.

I'. I' I'

14

•

I I they I' I I I I

SCIAM-UTS ANSWW I o- 11 - o3
Notoon ·Uncut · Logtc · Domain · GOOD NOUN

I lhoughl '"Yfo urlh graders had learned the ciffereoce uelween nouo s and pronouns unt1i one youngster
defined a pronoun as a reaiiy GOOD NO UN.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOMEniiNG

row

PRo'IIOW??!

r--------?::::::::;::::--'!1J

J

IMPORTS
Athens

High Bl Dry

By S.rnlce BIMM Oeol
You may fin d yourself far more social in
the year ahead than you 've bee n for quite
awhile. However, this le good, because it'll
provide just the rl ghl amount of balance
you need for yo ur more serious naturl'l.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - II you're in
need of anything material or financial
today, the p lace to beg in looking is among
your family or loved ones. They'll be the
fi rst to come through for you and give you
whal's required
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Some people are just takers, but not the one you 'll
run into today. This person Will demoo st rate this to l!'Oll by carryi ng out to the lette r that which she or he promises 10 d o fo r
your help.
SAGI TTAR IUS (Nov. 23- Dec. 21) So meth ing nice you d id for another a while
back Is going to be reciprocated today with
a good deed des1gned just lor you. This
person will maKe certain hi s or her actions
witt eq ual you rs.
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan . 19) - Peace
end quiet is not e:otactly what you need
today. Your restles:. spirit will welcome as
much activity as possible buzz ing around
you from morning until night. Be a mover
and a shaker.
·
AQUARI US (Jan. 20 -Feb. 19) - That
opening you've been looki ng lor to talk to
an important person may present itsell
today, but cold feet must be wa rmed qu1ck - ·
ly Do not hes1tate to ut11ize this very propi tiOus moment .
PISCES (Pet:i. 20-March 20) - Your per sonality has a lot of extra p1zza zz at this
tim e and this could malw you quite an
appealing pe rson to be around. I hope you
like crowds, because you 'll be drawing
AT · o ne to you today
ARI ES
(March
2 1-Aprll
191
Conce ntrate on your ma.Jor goals today.
Conditions are now npe tor things to work
out quite advantageously, but you must do
you r part to l ake advant age of this propl·
tious day.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - A good, oldfashioned gab ses sion with a lew choice
aseoclates today coul d yield much more
than happy times . Wh at you learn from an
exchange ot 1deas could lighten your spirits as well as yo ur burdens.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Without asking. others could offer you the ir skill s and
muscles today in the development of a
specia.l project you have on the drawing
board . With their help, it'l l be a huge aucceaa.
~
CANCER (Jun e 2 , -J uty 22)·- tt'a to your
advantage to be a lea m player today. You
~ and other participants may each only ha"Je
I a lltlle to offer, but coll«:tlvely It'll add up to
1 dynamiC co m~ l nar!o n to produce a win-

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EXCESS OF THE TEN ·
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code.
Sections 3501 .11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given that In pur·
suance
of
a
Reaolullon ol the
Board ol Township
Trustees
of
the
Township of Chesler,
Chesler, Ohio, passed
on lhe 8th day of July,
2003, lhere will be
submitted lo a vote ol
the people ol said
subdivision al
a
General Election 10
be
held In lhe
Township ol Chesler,
Ohio, at the regular
pieces
ol voting
therein, on lhe 41h
day of November,
2003, the question of
levying a lax, In
excess ollhe len mill
llmllalion, lor lhe ben·
ell!
of
Chesler
Township lor the pur·
pose ol Fire protec·
Uon.
Said IIIX being: 2 A
replacemenl ol a ta•
of 1 mill at a rate not
exceeding 1.0 mills
for each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to ten cents
($0.1 0) lor each one
hundred dollars of
valuation, lor live (5)
years. The Polls lor
said Elecllon will
open el 6:30 o'clock
am and remain open
until 7:30 o'clock pm
olssld day.
.
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County, Ohio.
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Monday, October 20, 2003

Monday, October 20, 2003•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

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LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) - It btlhoovea you
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Wl'lat lhll lndl'il'ldual promt•• • . t he or he
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Monday, October 20,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

2003

•
'

Bengals down
Ravens, 34-26
I

BY JOE KAY
Associated Press
CINCINNATI (AP) - The clock
hadn't yet reached zero when Ravens
linebackers Ray Lewis and Peter
Bout ware ran to the opposing sideline, right hands outstretched.
They knew how much this one
meant to their close friend.
The Cincinnati Bengals turned
Kyle Boller's three turnovers into a
24-point swing, then held on for a ~426 victory Sunday that was tndescnbably sweet for their fired-up rookie
coach Marvin Lewis.
In a measuring-up game, his
Bengals (2-4) showed they belong.
"He wanted it," said Chad Johnson,
who had five catches for 130 yards.
"He wouldn't say so, but he did. I
wanted to win for him more than anybody. He wanted it bad."
He got it with a solid plan- make
Boller sweat, then make the Ravens
pay.
Jon Kitna threw touchdown passes
of 45 and 82 yards - the latter off a
fo rtuitous deflection as the
Bengals went ahead 24-7 during
Boller's disastrous first half.
After a couple of slop-time touchdowns pulled the Ravens close, the
Bengals ran out the clbck and their
coach got a series of hugs. Marvin
Lewis was defensive coordinator on
the 2000 Ravens team that won a
Super Bowl ~ nd is the standard for
everything he s done to Cmcmnat1.
During the week, Lewts conceded
that he practically got tears in his
eyes as he watched game film of
Baltimore's defense.
Abandoning
his
in-control
demeanor, Lewis screamed from the
sideline Sunday and went onto the
field to exhort his players during
ti meouts - a sign of how much this
one meant, though he wouldn't admit
it.
"I' ve got a job to do, they' ve got a
job to do," Lewis said, glossing over
his feelings. "I love them all, but
we' re competing against them."
The Ravens made no attempt to

hide their disgust with how they
played . They had 13 penalties for 11 3
yards and looked nothing like a firstplace team.
,
Though 3-3, they're still atop the
AFC North, the only divisi\)n without
a winning record.
"It's not the end of the world, but
it's a wake-up call for us," said safety Ed Reed, whose misplay turned
into an 82-yard touchdown pass. "We
made a lot of mistakes, and they capitalized on them."
Boller's touchdown pass to Travis
Taylor put the Ravens ahead early,
but his first fumble changed everything.
Matt Schobel beat linebacker
Adalius Thomas down the middle for
a 45-yard touchdown catch, the
longest by a Bengals tight end ~n nine
years. Boller then fumbled agam on a
sack at the Ravens' 15 , setting up
Corey Dillon's 2-yard scoring run
less than three minutes later.
Then, the Ravens' defense joined
Boller in the self-destruction .
Kitna severely underthrew a long
pass to Johnson, who had three
defenders around him. Reed perfectly
played the ball, but it slipped t~ro~gh
his hands and deflected off hrs nght
shoulder - directly to Johnson, who
caught it waist-high and kept g~ing
for an 82-yard touchdown receptton,
the Bengals' longest in eight years.
"The bounces have been gomg to
the other teams this year," Kitna said.
"Sometimes, it's out of your control.
Obviously, today was one of those
days, because Reed made an unbe.
lievable play."
Kitna's 2 1-yard touchdown pass to
Peter Warrick on the first play of the
fourth quarter put the Bengals up 3410 and capped one of hi s best days16-of-2 1 for 274 yards without an
interception or fumble.
Boller later threw a 73-yard touchdown pass to Taylor - cornerback
Jeff Burris went for the ball and
missed - and Lewis mn 2 yards for
a touchdown that cut it to 34-26 with
I: 16 to go. The on side kick deflected
off Warrick and went out of bounds,
and the Bengals ran out the clock .

Chargers beat
Browns for first win
of season, 26-20
I

ing 'San Diego run nearly eight minutes off the clock by runmng for 48
tough yards to set up Christie's field
CLEVELAND - As he danced, goal with 3:44 remammg .
The Chargers should have put the
darted and dashed his way around the
game away on that drive, but with
field, LaDainian Tomlinson had just first-and-goal at the 8, sa.n Diego
one thought: Don't let the Chargers inexplicably cal led two runnmg plays
lose again.
for fullb,ack Lorenzo Neal and Brees
The Chargers' lightning bolt of 3 was sacled for a 13-yard loss on third
back rushed for 200 yards and one down.
touchdown and San Diego held off
"I made a bad call," Chargers coach
Kelly Holcomb's comeback for its Marty Schottenheimer said. "If I had
first win, 26-20 over the Cleveland to do it all over agam, 1 would have
Browns on Sunday.
run the ball."
Steve Christie kicked field goals of
Down by six, Holcomb got the
44, 50, 42 and 32 yards, and K waime . Browns to midfield but threw three
Lassiter returned an interception 38 straight incompletions and gave the
yards for a TD as the Chargers (1-5) ball back to the Chargers, who didn't
became the final NFL team to get a have to punt until there were just 25
win this season.
seconds left.
Tomlinson couldn't take the losing
Holcomb, who missed his fourth
any longer.
straight start with a broken right fibu"He was bound and determined not Ia, finished 11 -of- 19 for 90 yards and
to let us lose," quarterback Drew two TDs in relief of Couch, who went
Brees said. "He wanted the ball."
13-of-24 for 102 yards and two interEarlier this week, the sensational ceptions.
third- year back said half-jokingly that
"This was disturbing," Browns
he was willing to do anything -even coach Butch Davis said. "We played
break the rules - · just lo get the about as inconsistently and poorly as
Chargers a victory.
you can possibly play in several dif"No, I don't think I did," he said ferent areas. It's frustrating."
with a smile when asked if he had, Couch declined to speak with
done anything illegal. "But I was will- reporters following the game and had
ing to, I'll tell you that. For some rea- X-rays taken on his !eli ankle, whtch
son, I felt strongly that we were gomg were negative.
to get a wiri. I just had a feeling we
He wasn't the only Browns player
were going to put it together."
hurting. Left tackle Barry Stokes .left
Tomlinson broke off a 70-yard TO the stadium on crutches after remJurrun on his first carry after halftime ing his right ankle. Running back
and picked up 143 yards in the second William Green suffered an unspecthalf as the Chargers snapped a mne- · tied shoulder injury and was used
game losing streak dnting to last sea- sparingly in the second half.
son.
Green, who was coming off con~cBut they had to survive Holcomb's utive 100-yard games, had 14 carnes
heroics to do it.
for 65 yards.
·Holcomb replaced an ineffeCiive
Tomlinson's TD burst was a thing
Tim Couch late in the third quarter of beauty.
and threw two TO passes - the secRunning left, he froze cornerback
ond to tight end Darnell Sanders with Anthony Henry with a stutter step,
II :40 left - as the Browns (3-4) broke attempted tackles by Andra
trimmed a 17-point deticit to 23-20. Davis and Robert Griffith and out"! was scared," Tomlinson said. "I raced the Browns to put the Chargers
really was."
ahead 20-6 just 2:33 into the third
Bui he felt a little better after help- quarter.
BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

Buckeye Football Notebook

Reynolds still factors
into Buckeyes' victory
BY RusTY MILLER
Associated Press
.d
Robert Reyno ld s d1 not

COLUMBUS play Saturday. Wisconsin quarterback Jim
Sorgi did- for a while.
Reynolds, Ohio State's senior linebacker,
was suspended for No. 8 Ohio State's home
game against No. 9lowa. Sorgi- the man he
choked in the third quarter of last Saturday
night's game- play~d for the Badgers before
being sidelined w1th a knee InJury Ill
Wisconsin's 26-23 loss to Purdue.
TV commentators, columnists, callers to
radio shows and letters to the editor have
almost all ravaged Reynolds for his ~ttack on
Sorgi last week. Ohio State ended up suspending him for the Buckeyes' 19-10 vtctory.
That, for some reason, inspired his teammates.
.
"We wanted to go out and play for Robert,"
linebacker A.J. Hawk said . "He's hurting now
and we dedicated this game to him."
Ohio State athletic director Andy Geiger
said before the game that the length of the suspension was detennined only after several discuss ions.
· .
"Coach (Jim) Tressel talked to coach
(Barry) Alvarez . I talked :OVith (Wisconsi~ AD)
Pat Richter," Ge1ger satd. "(Commtsswne~)
Jim Delaney at the Big Ten satd that thetr
assessment would be a game. Alvarez thought
a game. Richter thought a game. So we felt
kind of unified in that."
Without saying so specifically, Geiger said
he was as outraged by Reynolds' behavior as
most.
"!don't think my o~inion was much different than anybody else s," he said . . . .
Tressel said Reynolds was on the stdehne 10
street clothes, cheering on his teammates.
• DOUBLE JEOPARDY: Iowa coach Kirk
Ferentz said a team can overcome only so
much.

The Hawkeyes had a punt blocked for a
touchdown and had anot~er punt returned f?r
a touchdown in Saturday s 19-10 loss at Ohto
State.
"You experience one of them and get away
with it and you're fortunate," he said. "If you
experience two and it's going to make it really tough _ . especially playing a team like
Ohio State. That's a bad formula.''
Iowa had not had a punt blocked all year.
The Hawkeyes also had not had a punt
returned for a score against them this season.
In fact assistant coach Lester Erb was selected as the nation 's top special-teams coordinator last season.
In Iowa's six games ·this season, they had
blocked three punts and returned one for a
touchdown. They blocked two punts a year
ago as well.
"We knew coming in it was going to be up
to the defense and special teams," Iowa taiiback Fred Russell said. "And they beat us
with their special teams."
·
• NO KIDDING?: Eric Rothwell played
the entire game at center for the Hawkeyes,
replacin~ starter Brian Ferentz, the son of
coach Kirk Ferentz.
· Blame it on Rothwell, quarterback Nathan
Chandler or a combination of the two, but the
Haw keyes fumbled two critical center.
exchanges and Rothwell also snapped a ball
over Chandler's head for a safety. /
"It's something we need to get ~Iter at,"
Cl]andler said.
• QUICK-HITTERS: Ohio Stat has now
won the next game after its last six losses ....
The Buckeyes are 11-1 in their last 2 games
decided by I0 or fewer points, the -only defeat
coming in last week' s 17- 10 loss at
Wisconsin . ... Ohio State WR Drew Carter
matched his career best with six catches, for
95 yards . ... Dome Whitner fell on a punt
blocked by Roy Hall to provide Ohio State
with a touchdown, the fi rst points Iowa has
given up in the third quarter this season.

NFL
AMERICAN
Eoot

WLTPctPFPA
New England s 2 o ,714 t45 126
Miami
Buffalo
N.Y. Jets

Indianapolis
Tennessee
Houston
Jacksonville
'
Baltimore
Cleveland
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh

4 2 o .667 118

4 3 0 .571 138
2 4 0 .333 94
South
' Wl T Pet PF
5 1 0 .833 178
52 0 •. 714 ' 194
2 4 0 .333 100
1 5 0 .•167 110

110
94

PA
105
150
170
154

North
WLTPctPFPA

3 3 0 .500 134 126
3 4 0 .429 U2 12 1
2 4 0 .333 111 132
2 4 0 .333 11 1 146

Wtat
WLTPctPFPA

KanSBS City
Denver

Oakland
San Diego

6
5
2
1

0
2
4
5

0
0
0
0

1.00
.714
.333
. 167

NATIONAL

191
178
115
115

115
115
1i$4
169

E11t
WLTPctPFPA
Dallas
Philadelphia
Washington
N.Y. Giants

5 1 0. .833 150 100
3 3 0 .500 ,95 119
3 4 0 .429 135 171

2 4 0 .333 105 123
South
WLTPctPFPA

Carolina
Tampa Bay
New Orleans
Atlanta
Minnesota
Green Bay
Chicago

Oelroll

5 1 0 .833 118 105
3 3 0 .500 134 97

3 4 a·
1 6 0
North
Wl T
6 0 0
3 4 0
1 5 0
1 5 0
West

)I~

1\ I',. \•tl . ) ..J . \o. :;-

(

SPORTS
• Chiefs survive Raiders'
comeback in 17-10 win.
See PageB1

.429 t52 t6B
.143 114 220
Pet
1.00
.429
.167
.167

PF
179
200
97
101

PA
104
166
176
160

WLTPctPFPA

Seallle

5 t 0 .833 146 104

St. Louis
4 2 o .667 170 108
San Francisco 3 4 0 · .429 159 126
Arizona
1 5 0 .167 82 160

Sunday's Games
Dallas 38. Detroit 7 '
New Orleans 45, Atlanta 17
Sl. l ouis 34, Green Bay 24
Tennessee 37. Carolina 17
New England 19. Miami 13, OT
Philadelphi a 14, N.Y. Giants 10
Cincifmati 34, Ba\limore 26
Minnesota 2B. Denver 20
San Diego 26 , Cleveland 20
NY Jets 19, Houston 14
Seattle 24, Chicago 17
Buffalo 24, Washington 7 •
San Francisco 24, Tampa Bay 7
Open : Indianapolis, Pinsburgh ,
Arizona. Jacksonville
Monday's Game
.
Kan sas City at Oa~land, 9 p.m.

Sunday, Oct 26
Detroit at Chicago, 1 p.m.,
QQnvar at Baltimore. 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Pittsburgh , 1 p.m .
Seattle at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Dallas at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Tennessee at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at New England, 1 p.m
Carolina at New O•lean s, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Minnesota. 1 p.m.
San Francisco at Arizona. 4:05p.m.
Houston at Indianapolis, 4: 15p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Philadelphia, 4:15p.m.
Buffalo at Kansas City, B:30 p.m.
Open: Oakland, Washington , Green
Bay. Atlanta
Monday, Oct. 27
Miami at San Diego, 9 p.m.

BY J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

Please see Bids, AS

WEATHER
Plrtly aLitfl)l, HI: 701, Low: SO.

www.holzer.org

AUTOMOTIVE

O.tollo on P•l• A2

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
www.turnpikeflm.com
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.com

CHURCHES
Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

The Daily Sentinel

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

www.mydailysentinel.com
PointPieasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com
ENTERTAINMENT
Charter Communications

www.charter.com
Take your business into the homes of over
40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs
Counties EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web address in our

WEB SITE ...............'""''"'
for only a $1 a day.

our business in Pomeroy as
well as most areas, however
the decision to reopen our
Pomeroy store will be based
on that particular store's
ability to absorb the cost of
the strike (the shorter the
better) and that particular
store's ability to pay it's
employees whatever is ultimately agreed to at the bargaining table," he said. "At
this point it is purely speculative to predict which if any
of the stores will not reopen.
We hope to reopen all of
them but to do so we must be
able to negotiate a contract

which allows us to·manage
"We remain hopeful that
our costs and remam com- talks wtll occur soon once
petitive against Wai-Mart."
there is something .,ubstanBetty Writesel, who has live to talk about." he said. ·
worked at the· Kroger Store "We believe that the offer
in Pomeroy for more than 30 which we have already made
years, does not think her deserves serious considerastore will close.
tion by the union ." . .
"I'm not worried at all that
Wntesel hopes the stnke
the store will close," she will be settled soon.
said. "If it does it will be a
'They are not talking yet,
surprise for .me."
'
but it ~o~ :r be much longer."
Fralin satd there are no she satd. Kroger ts losmg a
talks scheduled between lot ot money. Nobody really
Kroger and the United Food wants this strike but we can't
and Commercial Workers live with the agreement
Union which represents the Kroger has put to us. Kroger
workers at Kroger.
will have to be the one that

Wl'I'ERIES

'

refuses to
pay sheriff's
unpaid bills

,.

BY J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ myda1lysentinel.com

POMEROY Monday
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph
Tru sse ll submitted to the
Meigs County Commissoners
a list of $52.000 in unpaid
bills left over from last yeat
that
he.
wants
the
Commissioners to pay.
Since Trusse ll spent his
entire departmental budget
last year (2002) without paying the se bill'l, his request
amounts to a forced budget
increase. Commissioner Jim
Sheets said the commissioners are not going to pay these
bills which may force Trussell
to seek a legal remedy
through the courts.
'We are not going to pay
these
bi lls...
said
Commissioner Jim Shee rs.
"We don't have the money."
Meigs County Auditor

The water was shooting high in the sky over the Ohio River near the Pomeroy levee
Monday proving that all is well with the pumps on the Pomeroy Fire Department trucks.
Firemen Stacy Shank and Jeff Shank, pictured , were doing the required annual pump test,
checking different flows and pressures used in fighting fires. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Pluse see Bills, A5

SOUTHERN PTO HOLDS FALL CARNIVAL

Ohio

Pick 3 day: 1-3-3
Pick 4 day: 8-0-0-8
Pick 3 night: 2-7-3
Pick 4 night: 9-4-9-6
Buckeye 5: 9-11-13-17-31

. West Vu-ginia

The Southern Elementary
Parent Teacher Organization
had a fall carnival Saturday at
the elementary school. Right:
Christopher Chan·ey, 8, tries
to capture a prize from the
sea with his fishing rod, wh ile
other students (left) enjoy
the dinosaur bounce house.
In the royalty contest Morgan
Roush, a first grader, was
named princess and Timothy
Elam, third grader, was
named prince for the kindergarten through fourth grades.
Sarah Eddy, eighth grader,
was named queen, and Mike
Johnson, 6th grader was
named king for the fifth
through eighth grades. The
royalty contest and the carnival events raised more than
$7,800. The money will be
used for field trips, student
planne·rs and other needs of
the elementary school. (J.
Miles Layton

Dally 3: 3-5-7
Dally 4: HH·2
C8sh 25: 3-8-16-18-21 -25

INDEX
2 SECI10NS -

12 PAGFS

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

Sports

A3
A4
As
B1

Weather

A2

Editorials
Movies

© 0003 Ohio VaUey Publlshl1111 Co.

Top five remain the same in AP poll
NEW YORK (AP) - The top five teams
remained the same in this week's Associated
Press college football poll after a weekend
·
devoid of major upsets.
Oklahoma kept ItS season-long grip on the
top spot of the poll by receiving 62 of the 65
first-place v~tes after a 34-13 win over No.
24 Missoun on Saturday. Mtamt got the
other two first-place votes after beating
Temple 52-14.
Oklahoma received I ,622 points in ballot-

-- ·-··------

-------

,, _____

ing by the panel of sports writers and broadcasters and the Hurncanes had I ,558.
Virginia Tech, the only other unbeaten
team from a major conference, was third,
followed by Georgia and Southern
California.
.
Florida St&lt;ite and Washington State w~re
tied for sixth, followed by Ohio State, LSU
·and Purdue.
·
.The USA Today/ESPN coaches poll !lad
the same top three reams as the AP.
. --

~- -- ···-

-- -- - - - - - -

NING

.......
.

·-·-~-·----

\'

-

•·

will step in and settle it. We
really do not want thts t? go on
much longer. but we wtll have
to do what we have to do."
If the store 'hould close,
Fralin said under the "old"
contract employees had the
right to exercise their ;eniortty to .~ 131m JObs m other
stores tf thetr store closed.
This would not change 1f a
new contract. is sig ned .
Wrttesel. satd It would be a
tragedy tf the store closed . .
"It doe; bother me if It
~ l oses because I have a lot of
tnends that come here. It 's
like familY..'. she said.

ANNUAL PUMP TEST County

hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - Bids on
the asbestos abatement and
demolition of the · Salem
Center and Rutland elementary schools, vacated
earlier by the Meigs Local
School District, were
opened Monday afternoon.
On the · demolition
Jeffers
Trucking
of
Pomeroy had the apparent
low bid of $67,600. Slater
Welding of Albany bid
$140,000 for the cleJllolition project, second to the
low bid, while the highest
bid was $208,800 from
B&amp;B Wrecking.
The apparent low bidder
on the asbestos abatement
was Lepi Enterprises of
Zanesville, with a bid of
$119,136. The other bids
ranged from $138,900 to a
high of $169,866.

NEWSPAPERS

\\ \\~' lltHI ,Hh-. ~· niHuii H tll

:.!uo;;

BY CHAJUNE HOEFUCH

Holzer Medical Center

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

:! t.

Kroger fate looms as strike begins second week

Demoliton,
asbestos
removal
bids taken

Jim's Farm Equipment

Norris Northup Dodge

It 1 Sl&gt;\\ . ()( Jt)BJI{

POMEROY - Since the
workers at the Kroger Grocery
Store in Pomeroy have been
on strike for a week, the corporation is evaluating whether
or not to reopen the store.
Archie Fralin, public relations manager at Kroger,
said the Wal-Mart in Mason
has affected business in
Pomeroy and the decision to
reopen the store wi II be
based on several factors.
"Wal-Mart has affected

MEDICAL

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

Judge to make
decision on evidence
in Clarett case, Bt

n

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

Conference USA
delegation visits
Marshall, Bt

'

I'

•

'

l·

..

I

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