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                  <text>Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 27, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Junior high Tornadoes finisR..u
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
RACINE - The Southern Junior
High· football team recently completed
a banner season by going unddeatell.
They compiled a 7-0 record this year
while continuing a 12 game winning
streak at the junior high level.
T;Le little Tornadoes. alien retcrretl to
as the "Hustling Tornado tilOtball team"
went 5-1 last season. with the on ly loss
bein~ the first game. This year\ teum
cons1sted of very good athktes and
much of their success was att1ibuted to
team work, team play and good practice
ethics.
The first game of the season led to a
26&gt;8 win over Fedeml Hocking, with
Butch Marnhout n•shing tor 4 touchdowns d Anthony Shamblin added on
a two pomt con versign. Then the
Hustling Tornadoes tooli on the South
Gallia Rebels and to a convincing 28-0
win. The offensive line opened great
holes in allowing Butch Mamhout to
rush for another four touchdowns and
Shamblin ran in an extra two. Ryan ·
Chapman also caught a two point convers1on pass from Quarterback, Cody .
Patterson. Trenton Roseberry was credited with two huge pass receptions totaling 80 yards.
The third game the Tornadoes trav-

Members of the Southern Jun ior High football team are, front row, left to right,
Gabe Hill , Marvin Eddy, Ronnie Wilson, Brody Flint, Cateb Wingett, Trenton
Roseberry. Second row, Dustyn Johnson, Keith Nakao , Teddy Brown, Corey
Brinager, Ryan Chapman, J.R. Grady, Wesley Riffle, Casey Hubbard, Back row.
Coach Terry Patterson. Cody Patterson. Alex Haw.ley, Butch Marnhout.
Sheridan Pierce. Brett Beegle , Mike Brown, Anthony Shamblin. Coach Kenny
Guinther, Coach C.T. Cha pman (absent Matt Lehew, Zach Sigman).
eled cross county to visit the Eastern
Eagles. Marnhout and Patterson rushed
for two touchdowns and Shamblin
added the two point conversions for
both touchdowns tor a score of 16-8.
Southern then tmveled across the
river to play the _Wahama White
Falcons. When the fmal whJstle blew
the score was 22-6. Mamhout ru shed
for two TO's and two extra point
attempts. . Shamblm added one TO.
Once agam the front hne d1d a superb

job offensively and defensively.
For the fifth win of the season the
Waterford Wildcats came to visit. The
Tomadoes won 14-8. Mamhoul had one
TD and one two point conversion, while
Chapman caught an 18 yard touchdown
pass from Patterson . The defense
played tough the second half as all scormg was done the first hal f.
Next on the trail was the Trimble
Tomcats. The score ended in a lopsided
affair as the Tornadoes won 28-0.

b~ten

Shamblin scored a TD and a two point
conversion, Wesley Riffle had an interception and ran back fur a TD, Panerson
rushed for two TO's and Mamhout
added a two point .conversion. Mike
Brown was a key defensive factor o11
the front line as he made several key
tackles on a goal line stand.
The season was completed with the
Tornadoes making the big trip to play
Portsmouth Notre Dame. They came
home huge winners and undefeated for
the season. The Titans were out hustled
by a score of 58-0. Many younger players received valuab le playing time and
scori ng opportun ities were give to 8th
graders. ·
Scoring touchdowns were Marnhout.
Shamblin. Ritfle, Panerson, Roscbeny.
and J.R. Grady. Scoring two point conversions were Shamblin, Riffle. Mike
Brown, Casey Hubbard and Brett
Beegle. Gabe Hill and Caleb Wingett
was credited with some very nice rushing yards while Chapman was prai s~d
for his second half qum1erback play.
Other team members playing were
Corey Brinager, Mall Lehew, Zllch
Sigman, Brody Flint, Marvin Eddy,
Ronnie Wilson. Sheridan Pierce. Alex
Hawley. Keith Nakao. and Dustyn
Johnson . Present but sidelined em·Jy in
the season due to injtny was Teddy
Brown.

Eastern

Reds abruptly
change direction with
newGM, Bt

I

from Page 6
Honaker returned the interception all the way down 10 tht
SHS 2-yanl line. From there
Amsbary scored hi s seconc
rushing touchdown on the firs
play fmm scrimmage.
TI1e Ea~les went on to scon
15 points m the second .quarter
once on a 15-yard run b)
Minear and later when En'
Batey plowed his way througt
the lme fmm a yard away. Tht
score and two-point run b)
Steve Dillon gave Eastern a 360 lead at the break.
Seniors Batey and Dillon an
normally found on coact
Newland's offensive line.
'They are usually linemen
and they have been workin!
their butts off," Newland said
"We just wanted to let them set
what it was like to score an(
give them .something to sen(
them off."
Eastern tacked on two mon
fourth quarter scores to brio!
the fmal tally to 49-0. Fresh mar
Cody "Sunshine" Gerlact
scored on a 15-yard run anc
Amsbmy found Honaker widt
open down the middle- for a 40·
yard pitch and catch to roun(
out the sconng.

Browns hit _bye week
at perfect time, B6

State Rep. Todd Book to keynote Kennedy dinner

SPORTS
• Bengals believe they can
contend. See Page 81

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY -State Rep.
Todd Book, 0 -McDermoll,
will be the keynote speaker
at · the Meigs County
Democratic Party 's annual
Kennedy Day Dinner on
Saturday.
An attorney with the

Harcha and Book law firm,
Book repre sents the 89th
House
District,
which
includes Scioto, Lawrence
and Adams Counties.
The annual dinner and
rally will. be held at the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center in Pomeroy. Dinner
will be served at 6 p.m. , following a 5 p.m. social hour,
according to Party Chairman

S

u

e

Mai son.
Loca I
e le c ted
officials
and prominent party
leaders
will a)so
address the
party faithful at the

dinner. Maison saiu .
"We' re " very pl eased that
Rep. Book is speak ing at our
dinner." Maison said. " It 's
time to rall y the troops for a
strong victory in next year's
election."
" It is vi tal that we
Democrats present a strong
ticket in nex t year's electi on," Maison said. "and just
as importanr that the party
0

Book

unite in an effort to gel our
candidates elected to office
at every level."
Saturday"s event will also
include dinner-hour entertainment by Charles Scott.
and after-dinner music by
The Gilmore s.
Ti ckets are $ 15. and will
be available at the door.
Maison said.

'

Serviceman thanks girl scouts Haley resigns council post

Do you have adoctor
you can call for the
little things~

Bv BRIAN

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Margaret Baker
·• William Ault
·• Jesse Thomas
I

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

WEATIIER
Showert, HI: SOt, Low: 40a

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If so, you qualify for a ·

Michael Macomber of Cheshire. recently visited with Girl Scout Troop 1276 to personally
thank them for Girl Scout cookies the troop sent to him and his shipmates aboard the U.S.S.
Carl Vinson. Macomber is now on Ieaiie, and visiting friends and fam ily in his home com,
munity. In March, the troop sent 15 boxes of. cookies and a scrapbook to Macomber as part
of a service project. He, in turn , presented the scouts with a unique patch to add to their
collections, and discussed his travels in the Navy. He also described life aboard ship and
Navy traditions . Scouts pictured with Macomber, back row, center, are Samantha Pridemore,
Jahnna Lydic. Hannah Cleek, Kayla. Salser, Joyce Romines , and Christian Woods.
Back, Leader Jertena Ebersbach, Jennifer Payne, Macomber, Stacy Macomber, and Ashley
Romines. Macomber is the son of Rick &amp; Jan Macomber and Vicki and Roy Taylor.

Dflallo on Pqe A2

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Discount*
on your home delivered subscription!

LorrERIFS
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2-1-1
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Dudding wins prestigious award
BY J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysenlinel.com

West VIrginia
Dally 3: 1-8-4
Dally 4: 5-5-Q-3
Cash 25: 1-4-7·8-11-19

RACINE- Southern Local School Board
recognized Don Dudding for his excellence
in teaching at Monday's Meeting.
The Ohio Appalachian Center for Higher
Education recently awarded Dudding teacher
of the year for 2003. He was selected from the
best educators in 29 counties in southeast
Ohio for this award. Dudding has taught .
English, journalism, drama and speech for
more than 21 years at Southern High School.
Superintendent Bob Grueser said the prestigious award is a "victory for our school dis- Southern Local School Board President
trict" and that the. school system is really for- Richard Hill hands veteran teacher Don
tunate to have Dudding teaching its' students. Dudding a certificate in recognition for teach· .
"I know our kids are better off with Don ing e~cellence. The Ohio Appalachian Center
Dudding around," he said. "We are really for- tor Higher Education awarded Dudding
teacher of the year for 2003. (J. Mit.e s
tunate to have him."
Layton)
GtiJ.!lser said he nominated Dudding for .the
"It is nice to be recognized, but the best
award on the recommendation of Southern
High School principal Gordon Fisher. Grueser part of teaching is seeing students grow,"
said Dudding continues to grow as an educator. said Dudding. "I am even more passionate
Dudding took a sabbatical to teach last year at · about teaching than I was when .1 first startOhio University. In his spare time, Dudding is ed. I am more excited about meeting new.
pursuing a Ph.D. in English rhetoric.
challenges."

INDEX
2 SE&lt;TIONS- 12 PAGES

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B1

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Trick-or-Treat observances In
the Bend area
CHESTER - Trick or treat will be observed in
Chester from 6 to 7 p.m. on Oct. 30. The fire siren will
sound to begin and end the observ1111ce.
.
MIDDLEPORT - Trick or Treat will be held in
Middleport from 6 to 7 p.m. on Oct. 30.
NEW HAVEN -A COIIllllWiity puty wiD be ~ld on Oct.
· 30 at 'the firehouse following trick or t;reat from 6 to 7 p.m.
The New Haven Police Department and B&amp;J Music
Makers will also sponsor a haunted house at the community building Thursday, Friday and Saturday. There
will be a $2 charge for the haunted house.
LETART FALl,S -Trick or treat will be observed
in the Letart Falls community Thursday, 6 to 8 p.m.
REEDSVILLE - The siren will sound at the beginning and end of trick or tr~at to be held 6 to 7 p.m.
Thursday in Reedsvill• .
POMEROY - ,The Wolfe Pen community on Qhio
143 will have trick or treat beginning at 6 p.m. on
Thursday. Households participating are asked to leave
their porch light on.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Trick or treat in Tuppc:rs
Plaijls will 'be held from 6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday. The
siren will blow to s~ and stop the observance.
BASHAN - Traditi.onal trick or treat will be
observed for c~ildren of the Basban area from 6 to 7 p.m
ThUrsday. jie~hments will be served. at the Basban ·
Volunteer Fiie Department following tri&lt;;lt or treat.

Saturday, November 1, 2003
9:00 am - 12 Noon

MEDICAL CENTER

(Pre-registration and breakfast at 8:30 amJ

Discover the Holzer Difference

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
Continuing Medical Education will be given.

.
t

lannarelli reported to
Village
council
that
Solicitor Linda Wan\er has
notified her that she does
not plan to represent the vi llage in legal mailers after
Jan. I. lanarelli said a letter

.

·Phone
_______________ _ _ ____
'

'(

Other business

will be mailed to local attorneys in a search for new
legal counsel.
lannarelli also clarified to
counci l members that tentati ve plans for an apartment
complex at the Middleport
High School building do not
involve funding: from the
Department of Housing and
Urban Deve lopment.
Joe
Woltla
of
Indianapolis. Ind .. on behalf
of Lege nds Realty Co., has
begun to ex plore the possibility of conve rting the
building into a for-profit
apartment building. but the
building would not accept
Section 8 housing vouchers,
lan narelli said .
Council :
• Endorsed the four-year,
one-mill levy renewal for
the Meigs County Council
on Aging .
• Approved an amendment to the income tax ordinance. as required due to
changes in state law.
• Approved payment of
bi lls in th e amount of
$3.492 .55.
• Approved hiring David
Woolard. Jr. as a full-time
police patrolman.
Present were Counci l
Stephen
members
·Houchin s, Roger Manley,
Robert Pooler. Scott and
and
Fiscal
Robin son.
Officer Susie French.

7th Annual LeWis A. Sch...l•, MD
Men•lal Cancer s.,.nposlum
.
.

·:Subscriber's Name _______________

•

REED

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
accepted the re signation of
member. Linda Haley at
Monday evening's meeting.
Haley. who was appointed
to the council seal in 2001.
submitted her resignation by
letter, which was read by
Mayor Sandy lannarelli .
" I find it more and more
diffi.cull to do an adequate
job as council member," .
Haley wrote . . " Middl eport
needs members that can
devote ample time to village
operations (and ) atthis.ti me
I feel it is in the best interest
of the village to submit my
resignation ."
Haley's resignation is
effective Dec . 31. and
lannarelli said she expects
Haley will continue attending meetings and participating in council business for
the remainder of the year.
Council accepted Haley 's
resignation , with Kathy
Scotl voting in opposition
and Councilman Robert
Robinson abstaining.

..

I
I

J.

breed@ mydailysenlinel.com

)

....... _
!

For more'information, calll740) 446:5057.

...._ ....

..~

'

' ••

•

;'

"

\,

www.holzer.org

.

,

"

\

�I
I

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

OHI
State's utility watchdog releases_
consultant's energy cost report
:ruesday~ October

•

Ohio weather
Wednesday, Oct. 29
AccuWeather.com forecasr for davt1me conditions. low/hiah temoe1atures
MK:H

•

·Toledo
-

40"/50

~ Mansfield

)9 154~]

CO LUMBUS (A P) - An
energy consultant warned
three
years
ago that
FirstEnergy Corp.'s proposal
for recovering money spe nt
huilding power plants could
cost consumers $3.5 billion.
according to the consultant's
draft report released Monday.
The state's utility watchclog released the draft by
. Boston-based La Capra
Associates on how much
Akron-based
FirstEnetgy
Corp. should be allowed to
collect to recoup from what it
spent building the plants
before .the electricity market
was deregulated in 20!H.
At issue is whether state
regulators
would
have

•

IND

---

·- ·)

• Columbus 40°/54

------ ~t

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ci·n_c~;~a_t_i ,l3~' t57°

·-

" iL. Portsmouth
; 43 ~/SBo
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---····~-----•

KV.

C 2003 AccuWeather, Inc.
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Cloody

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.~,, ~..;..... ~,...... -~"'""'' ~

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@D&gt; (!!~\ (!!!,~.!!! ~
Sunny P1. Cloocly

· ·-

Showers

~ ':""':"':"" """"""' "''"'"'

.

T-storms

Rain ·

Flumes

Snow

policy for record storage .
Tongren says Ohio probably would have lost a court
fight to lower the fee s
because the Puulic Utilities
Commission had supported
the higher figure.
"The choice we made was
to participate in the negotiations and ga in pdditional
benefits for consumers rather
than litigate a case that, more
likely than not, we would
have lost," Tongren said
Monday.
Tongren said FirstEnergy
customers are paying no
more for electricity today
than 1993 and many are paying .less because of competition spurred by deregulation.

ordered the utility 'to reduce
that charge if there were evidence that FirstEnergy 's
power-plant costs didn't
amount to what was estimat ed by some at $8.7 billion .
"FirstEnergy's proposal , if
adopted. wo uld provide a
$3. 5 billion windfall to
FirstEncrgy at the Ohio consumers' expense." the report
released Monday said .
La Capra was paid
$579.000 to consult on several deregulation issues by the
office of Ohio Consumer
Rob Tongrerl'.
Counsel
spokesman Ryan Lippe said.
Staffers di scarded all deregulation do.:uments in July fol_lowi ng a change in internal

Time Out for Tips

What -businesspeople can do to keep
sales steady throughout entire year

· FirstEnergy says the report·
was one of dozens of opinions offered at the time by 19
parties involved in the dereg-_
ulation debate.
"The bottom · line is ,
through participation in the
process. a lot of parties were
able to achieve savings for
their respective constituen-.
cie s," ·
FirstEnergy
spokesman Ralph DiNicola
said Monday.
The destruction of the
report is the subject of two
state in ves tigations and two
meetings set for this week.
A message was left with La
Capra Associates seeking
comment.

Ice

Cloudy, ·light showers Catholic priest suspended amid abuse allegation ~
warmer. Highs in the upper 60s.
Thursday night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 40s.
Friday ... Mostly clear and
warm. Highs in the lower 70s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy and
continued warm. Lows in the
upper 40s. Highs in the mid 70s.
Sunday... Panly cloudy. A slight
chance of showers from early
aftemoon on. Lows in the upper
40s. Highs in the lower 70s.
Monday ... A slight chance
of showers d.uring the
day... Otherwise'partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s. Highs
in the mid flOs .

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
&lt;

Today ... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of light rain showers
from late morning on. Highs
in the mid 50s. Chance of rai n
50 percent.
Tonight ... Light
showers
likely 'until midnight...Then
mostly cloudy with a chance
of a leftover shower after midnight. Lows in the lower 40s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Wednesday .. .Partly cloud y.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Wednesday night. .. Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 30s.
Thursday... Mostly su nny and

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
Roman Catholic priest has
been suspended as the
Cleve land Diocese investi gates an accusation that he
sexually abused a chi ld in the
late 1980s.
The Rev. Pattick J.
O'Connor, 45, was placed on
leave Sept. 3, becoming the
16th priest suspended amid
abuse allegations. None of
the cases has been resolved
and none of the priests has
returned to ministry.

The suspension came after
a rev iew board determined
the allegation was credib le
enough to move forward.
said Robert Tayek, diocesan
spokesman.
The priest denies the allegation. said his attorney.
"He Iouks forward to the
day he is reinstated to the
ministry,'' said lawyer Brian
Downey of Cleveland.
The diocese has reported
the accusation to government
authorities, and O'Connor is

cooperating. Tayek said. The
alleged abuse took place the
late 1980s when O'Connor
was assigned to St. Joseph
Church in Cuyahoga Falls
near Akron, said Tayek , who
released no other details.
O'Connor later worked at
St. Basil the Great Cht1rch in
Brecksville and most recently at the college-leve l
Borromeo Seminary, where
he taught religious studies.
No seminary student reported
being
abused
by

O'Connor, said the Rev ..
Thomas Dragga. president of
Borromeo.
Bishop Anthony M. Pilla
has backed national church
policy that any priest who.
has committed even a singl~;.
act of sexual abuse of a
minor will be permanently
removed from the ministry.
The Cleveland diocese has
235 parishes with more than
800,000 Catholics and about
340 priests in eight northeast
Ohio counties.

.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

Ocl. 27, 2003

Dow
Jones
+25-?0·
9.608 16

_ J_U_
L - -A
- U-,G----,-,
SEc-P----,O-=
CT -

Pet change
from previous: +0.27

B.SOO

High

Low

Record high: 11,722.98

9.663.79

9,584.54

Jan. 14 , 2000

Oct 27. 2003

Nasdaq
composite
+1!.32

----,,-:;----,-;-;;;--=:----:= JUL
High

1,882.91

Pet. change

from previous: +0.93

Oct 27, 2003

1.890.66

AUG
Low

SEP

OCT

1.400

Record high: 5,048.62

1,873.62

March 10, 2000

- - - - - - - - - - - uoo

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500
JUL
High

1,031.13
Pet. change

fromprevlous' +0.22

1,037 .75

950

AUG
Low

SEP
OCT
RecCHd high : 1.527.46
Marc/1.,24, 2000

1,028.91

AP

Local Stocks
AEP -26.76
Arch Coal - 23.15
Akzo - 31.35
AmTechiSBC - 23.48

Ashland Inc. - 36.04
BBT -37.72
BLI-14.57
Bob Evans - 26.62
SorgWarner- 75.76
Champion - 3.92
Charming Shops - 6.54
c~ Holding - 32.59
Col -26.78

DG-21 .92
DuPonl- 39.38 ·

Federal Mogul- .294
Gannett - 63.63
General Eleclrc- 26.22
GKNLY - 4.70
Haney Dal.1dson - 4759
KMRT -26.44
Kroger- 17.56
Ltd. - 17.10

NSC - 16.55
Oak Hill Financial - 29.27
ONE - 42.06

OVB -24.522
Peopkls- 27.899
PepSICO- 47.57
Roci&lt;well - 29.41

Rocky BooiS-13.48
RD Shell - 44.54

S-50.02
T - 19.79
USB-26.68
Wai·Mart - 57.79
Wendy's - 36.00
Worthing1oo - 13.66
Dai~ stod&lt; reports are lhe
4 p.m. closing quotes of

the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Partners al Advesl Inc. of
Gallipolis.

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Ofslrtcl Mgr.: TBA, EJ(I. 17

Mall Sllbscrlptl(1n

General Manager

Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks .
. . ... . . . .'30.15
26 Weeks ............. '60.00
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Port Columbus controllers say they can work around tower
flaws .
"
COLUMBUS (AP) - Air
traffic
co ntrollers
and
Federal
Aviation
Administration officials have
come up with a tentative plan
to deal with visibility problems at Port Columbus
International Airport 's new
tower, officials with the air
traffic controllers union said.
The plan calls for two sets
of controllers - one to
keep watch over the north
side of the airport and
another to focus on the
south side, air union officials said Monday.
The $24 million tower set
to open in April is the first
in the country with a 16sided observation area. A
controller noticed on a tour
last month that he couldn't
see all the runways and
taxi ways from where he

Cleveland
violent crime
climbs
9 percent
CLEVELAND (AP) In contrast to a national
trend, violent crimes have
i'ncreased in Cleveland in
recent years, according to
annual FBI crime fi gures
released Monday.
The rate for crimes
including homicide, rape
and rubbery rose 9 percent
in the city, to 6,364 in
2002 from 6, 049 in I999.
The city's overall crime
rate, which includes car
thefts and burglaries, rose
2.4 percent in the same
time.
Nationally, the 1.4 million violent crimes reported in 2002 represented a
drop of just under I percent.
The total number of
crimes in the U.S. represents a drop of 4.9 percent
since 1998 and 16 percent
since 1993, the last big
year of a wave of violence
traced to the crack cocaine
epidemic, experts say.
Police department participation in the report is
voluntary. Departments
vary widely in how they
classify cri mes.
Cleveland
Safety
Director James Draper
said he wanted to check
internal police .records to
determine if there were
any di screpanc ies in
-reporting practices.

Proud to be apart of
· yourlife.

.

about $ 1 million a year,
based on federal wage and
benefit figures . The tower
currently has 48 controllers.
The FAA still must complete a staffing study t)efore
the agree ment is approved
and more controllers are
assigned, said Patrick Forrey,
regional vice president of the

was standing.
It 's becoming more common for towers at the
nation 's larger airports to use
two sets of air traffic controllers. but it would be new
for Port Columbus.
The I0 to 12 additional
controllers could increase the
tower's operatiog cost by

National
Air
Traffic
Controllers Association.
Doug Powers, a manager in
the air traffic division of the
FAA's Great Lakes regional
office. was at yesterday's
meeting but would only say
the agency is worki ng on a
solution to the visibility
problems.

MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment
www.jimsfarmequipment.com

Holzer Medical Center
www.holzer.org
.'

AUTOMOTIVE
Norris Northup Dodge
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

Pleasant Valley Hospital
www.pvalley.org

NEWSPAPERS

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis
www.turnpikeflm.com

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
www.mydailytribune.com

CHURCHES
Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis
www.LighthouseAssembly.info

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com
Point Pleasant Register
www.mydailyregister.com

~fi;if#
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•

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~-I~
i-,
7 .
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ENTERTAINMENT

/

~-:'ttL
Q
. ~,/\ .' " ~~~

Charter Communications
www.charter.com

"/ A

;/ !-

v

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

Tuesday,Ck1ober28,2003

Down Syndrome families
celebrate their kids' lives

DEAR ABBY: Your readers may have seen articles
about a university professor
With Christmas just around
star-spangled dishes that hapwho killed her infant daughthe comer, retailers and anipen to be for sale.
ter and then days later. hersans become anxious about
You can further increase your . self. The professor said that
whether the shopping sea'&gt;On
profits throughout the year, by
she killed her daughter. who
will mean the difference
providing customers with spehad
Down
sy ndrome.
between "just getting by" and
cial services. Wedding or gift
"didn't
want her
because
she
Becky
"having a successful year.''
registries, e-mail/direct mail · to suffer...
Baer .
Profits tend to hinge on holiday
reminders -about upcoming
Far from suffering. people
purchases. But what about the
birthdays and anniversaries,
with Down syndrome can
other ·months? What can busigift-wrapping, deli very, cuslive full and meaningful
nesspeople do to help ensure
tomizing, and "frequent shoplives. Last month, more than
that sales are steady throughout
per cards" can all encouf'dge
1.600 parents. professionals.
the year'! You might try the fol- blue stars and stripes. The repeat customers.
advocates and
siblings
motifs and designs don't
lowing strategies.
During the holiday season.
attended our national conThink about the coming year. , have to be elaborate. Paper retailers are more likely to be
vention to celebrate the lives
What could you do to com- cut-outs or children's party open longer during the day and
and possibilities of persons
memorate some of the lesser decorations scattered around on Sundays. Some merchants
with Down syndrome.
l)olidays and celebrations? the shop may be all that is seem to forget that in order to
People and resources are
Change store sell, they have to be open.
Mark observances such os necessary.
available in each state to help
Black History Month, Pastor front trimmings and mer- Establish store hours all year
with concerns related to postAppreciation Month, June chandise often to catch the long that caters to shoppers.
partum depression, other
Retailers and crafters can do
weddings and graduations, eye of frequent passers-by.
forms of mental illness, and
To continue the illustration, several things-to help promote
Cinco de Mayo, the Dog Days
issues related to raisi ng a
of Summer. Make a Difference exhibit artwork or crafts that their merchandise at all times.
child
with a disability. Please
8ay. Flag Day, Boss's Day, have flags, banners or nation- not just during the Chri st":~as
inform
your readers with
Statehood Day, National al symbols. Create interesting season. It may take some
questions related to Down
Day, · etc. groupings that show off how ingenuity, imagination and
Grandparents'
syndrome that the NDSC
Capitalize on local festivals, the products can be used in a resourcefulness, but the end
toll-free
hotline is (800) 232fairs and cultural events. What variety of ways in the home or result will be well worth the
6372
;
our
Web site is
items could you feature that office. Extend your show- effort in additional sales.
www.ndsccenter.org.
(Becky Baer is I he Meigs
would correspond and comple- room to the outdoors with aniDAVID
TOLLESON,
ment what is happening in your des for sale cleverly dis- Coun/y Extension Agenl, Family
EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR.
community'! The special occa- played among the landscaping and Consumer Sciences/
NATIONAL
DOWN
SYNCoinmuniry Developmelll
sions you could come up with and seasonal adornments.
DROME CONGRESS
Feature resident artists
References:
could almost be limitless. ..
DEAR DAVID: I have had
Burland, Grace. "Bremhe
Celebrate the special painting inspiring scenes of
many
requests from readers
month or day by decorating our national treasures on an New Life illlo Your Displays,"
ing
me to reprint a wonask
of
media. The Crafts Report, The Crafts
your shop or studio accord- assortment
derful
essay
that was penned
I
0-15%
off
coupons
Advertise
Report
Publishinf(
Co.,
mgly. · Showcase products
by Emily Perl Kingsley, the
that renect the theme, then hidden inside ornaments on a Wilmi11gton, DE. June. 2000.
mother
of a child with Down
Jerome, Sara. "Life After
carry the subject out by fea- patriotically-themed tree, or
syndrome.
Because October
hand out nag lapel pins to your Chris/mas," Niche Magazine,
turing demonstrations, dis- first
is National Down Syndrome
25 customers during a
counts, giveaways, and inex- special open hou se. To com- Rosen Media, Inc.. , Bal!imvre.
Awareness Month, I can
pensive refreshments. For plete the special holiday MD, Aullltmz. 2003.
think of no better time to do
instance, during patriotic hol- atmosphere, serve star-shaped ' Toltell, Carolitie. "Movin'
it. Her essay is dedicated to
idays, dress store windows sugar cookies with white icing on Out," Niche Magcdne.
the families of all children
with Americana fabrics and and red and blue sprinkles on Rosen Media. In c.. Balrimore.
who cope with disabilities.
MD, Autum11. 2003.)
materials. or red, white and
WELCOME TO HOL-

they haven't taken you to a
horrible , di sgusting . fil.thy
place full of pestilence.
famine and disease . It's just a
different place .
So you must go out and
Dear
buy new guidebooks. You
Abby
mu&gt;t learn a whole new language . And you will meet a
whole new group of people
you would ne ve r have met.
It 's. just a different place.
LAND
. It's slower-paced than Italy,
by Emily Perl Kingsley
le ss nashy than Italy. But
J am often asked to after you' ve been there for a
describe the experience of while and you catch your
raising a child with a disabil- breath. you look around and
ity - to try to help people you begin to notice that
who have not shared the Holland has wiodmill s.
unique experience to under- Holland has tulips. Holland
stand it. to imagine how it even has Rembrandts.
would feel. It's like thi s:
But everyone you know is
When you · re ~oing to busy con1ing and going from
have a baby, it's lake plan- ltaly, and they're all bragging
ning a fabulou s vacation trip about what a wonderful time
- to Italy. You buy a bunch they had there . And for the
of guidebooks ahd make rest of your life. you will say.
your wonderful plan s. The "Yes, that 's where I was &gt;UpColiseum. Michelangelo's posed to go. That's what I
''David.'' The gondolas in had planned.''
Venice. You may learn some
And the pai n of that will
handy phrases in Italian . It's never. ever. ever go away.
all very exciting.
because the loss of that
After months of eager dream is a verv significant
anticipation. the day fmally loss.
• arrives. You pack your bags
But if you spend your life
and ofT you go. Several hours mourning the fact that you
later. the plane lands. The didn't get to Italy. you may
night attendant comes and never be free to enjoy !he
says, "Welcome to Holland ." very special. the very lovely
"Holland?" you
say. things about Holland.
" What do you mean .
Dear Abbr is untre11 b1·
Holland? I signed up for Ab1gail Va,; Burell . also
Italy! I'm supposed to be in knoll'n en Jeanne Phillips.
Italy. All my life I've · 1111d was founded b1· her
dreamed of going to Italy."
mother, Pauli11 e Phillips.
But there's been a change Write
Dear
Abhr
a/
in the nighi plans. They. ve 11'\nr.DearAbbr.cvm or PO.
landed in Holland and there Box 69440. LOs A11geles. CA
you must stay.
90069.
The important thing is that

Lydia Council plans upcoming events Second annual King reunion held

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

Bv·THEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

28, 2003,

PageA3

. MIDDLEPORT
on Nov. 23, and fruit trays will
Memhers of Lydia Council of be delivered on Nov. 26.
ihe Bradford Church of Christ
Officers will be elected in
discussed several upcoming November, and the group
¢vents during their regular will discuss what it will do
meeting, held recentli' in the for
moss10naries
for
,;:}lurch activity building.
Christmas. The church youth
: The church plans a hayride will do the Angel Tree.
~t the Shambhn residence on
The meeting was opened
Oct. 12, a ladies' shopping with prayer prai ses and
irip on Oct. 31 , and Faith requests,
with Carolyn
Promise Sunday on Nov. 9, Nicholson leading the open~ith a potluck dinner, and
ing prayer.
Cliff McLongham from
Reports werr6 read and a
kipley, W.Va. as speaker.
visitor's list and sign-up
: A community Thanksgiving sheet for shut-in meals was
~ervice will be held at 7 p.m.
circulated.

.

A report was given on the
ladies' retreat, and those who
brought fruit were thanked.
Charlotte Haning had the
closing prayer, followed by
devotions
by · Madeline
Painter, Becky Amberger and
Diana Maxwell, the hostesses.
Attending were Sherry
Smith, Tracy Davidson,
Carolyn Nicholson, Gerry
Lightfoot, Suzie Will, Cherie
Williamson, Jackie Reed,
Misty
Deweese,
Neva
Chapman, Brenda Bolin,
Charlotte Haning, Sherry
Shamblin, and the hostesses.

'

Community calendar
•

Clubs and
Organizations
Tuesday, Oct. 28
. RACINE RACO will
tneet at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
park. There will be a potluck.
New members are welcome.
; POMEROY - The Meigs
County
4- H
Advisory
j::ommittee will meet at 7 p.m.
et the Meigs County
l:xtension Office. Election of
btticers for the 2004 year will
be hi!ld. All advisors are
~ncouraged to attend .

meet at 2 p.m. at the home of
Pat Holter. Betsy Parsons will
review "The Professor and
the Madman" .. by Simon
Winchester.

Celebration at Rejoicing Life
Church, 6:30 to 9 p.m. Free
event open to all families in the
community. Games and refreshments. Those · attending are
asked not to wear costumes.

Thursday, Oct. 30
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet 1:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Members
are asked to take pressed
flowers far the craft session.

Saturday, Nov. 1
RUTLAND
- Meigs
Elementary school fall festival, 6 to 9 p.m. Public invited

Social Events

Wednesday, Oct. 29
; RACINE - Special meetIng of Pomeroy-Racine
l-odge 164 with work in the
EA degree.

Tuesday, Oct. 28
POMEROY .:... Halloween
Party at Meigs Senior Center,
following evening dinner.
Halloween bingo, cake walk,
skit. Public invited for dinner,
from 4:45 to 5:30, and party.
Costumes optional. .,

MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport Literary Club will

Friday, Oct. 31
MIDDLEPORT - Harvest

PROUD TO BE A.PART OF'YOUR LIFE. ..

WEB SITE DIRECl'ORY
for only a $1 a day.

The Daily Setltincl, .
· · Subscribe today • 992-2155

.

The Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center
is seeking a Head Start Cook for Gallia County
at the Clay Center. High School diploma or
equivalent required. Previous experience working
in inventory, planning, preparation, and handling of
food in a school/institutional setting. Previous
experience in completing USDA reimbursement
forms preferred. Ability to lift !iO pounds.
.. Preference. given to qualified present or past
Head Start parents and employees.
Submit a letter of interest, res.ume and references to
, John D. Costanzo, Superintendent
Athens Mel~ Educational Service Center
. P o Box 684, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Application Deadline: Noon, November 3, 2003.

Monday, Nov. 3
LONG BOTIOM - Chloe
Weber will celebrate her 73rd
birthday on Nov. 3. Cards
may be sent to Ohio 248,
Long Bottom, Ohio 457 43.

The second annual . King
Clan Reunion of the descendants of Quincy Lee Canady
King and Estella Mae
Graham King was held
Saturday at the Hartford
Community Center.
Dinner grace was given by
Jerry Morgan, preceding a
potluck dinner. The group
spent the afternoon visiting.
picture taking and telling of
"Tall Tales." There was also a
table of the families' picture
albums that were shared.
Marjorie Walburn gave a
short presentation on families
and thanked the Morgan family for decorating the center
for the occasion. Amy Roush
provided desceooant posters .
The group presented
Marjorie Walburn a gift for
coordinating the affair last
year. The 2004 King Clan
Reunion will be held on the
fourth Saturday in October.
were
2004
Favors
Calendars with a group picture on the front and were
provided by Michael and
Lorinda King and family.
Lucille King was presented
a gift as the only remaining
member of the original King
Family. Several dour prizes
were presented.
· Attending were: Jerry and
Stella Morgan. and son, John
Robert; Dale and Marjorie
Walburn; Larry and Wanda

King; Michael and Lorinda
King; Robert and Elizabeth
Clarke; Dr. Greg Clark and
daughter Anna: Ross and Joan
King; Bernice Dudley, and
daughters, Vrrginia and Janet;
Yolanda King Holsclaw; Kurt
and Kendra Palmer; Phil ·and
Carla King and son Jason; Chris
Circle; Carl and April King, and
daughter, Avery; Jill and Bob
Darst, and daughters, Olivia and

with

Carly Carpenter: Amy Roush:
Dale and Alice Humphreys:
Kaye and Allen King; Lucille
King; Deborah Roush and
Tristin Roush; Lew and Kathy
King. and daughter, Ramona:
lhab and Nancy Bodran and son
Adam; Susan Oldaker: Faith
Oldaker; Cheryl Oldaker and
Tina Kehlmeier; David and
Jesse Dudley; Jack and Kitty
Kaylor and Pam Frye Lane.

Coming Thursday...

"Pfact&gt;J f"·~ f?
.

~

T/tmg$ (fl ;jp{
Yourplde to ••l,end
entertainment In the 'M·State
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

What's Your Vision For
Our Community

Be a oart of the Dian for Middleport's Future

Keep WARM this winter!

Tire Village of Middlepon is researthing the Opinions or the

·

,;uage residents in order 10 determine projects thai may be
included in an Ohio Depanment of Delielopment Community
Dismss Program Gzant Application.

FIBERGLASS INSULATION

80%of
heatless
occurs
•
through :f
your attic. '

Please checl&lt; all items that in your opinion are the most important for
our Community Improvement

_Stn:et Repairs
_ Sidewalk Repairs
_ Community Center
_Street Lighting

Upgrade Your

Attic Insulation

_· More Street P.ITking
_ Child Care Ccnkr

•

_ Demolition Abandoned Structures
_Fire Equipment and lilcilities

_Storm Drainage Improvements
_ Improved Sewer Facilities
_ Improved Water Facilities

Pk:11e clip oat and return your completed survey to:
Villqe of Mlddlqlort • 237 Raai Street- Middleport, Ollio 4!760
Or bring to the next jdllic mming With your c:omments.
Additional survey forms may be picked up at Village Hall various
local rnen:hants, and the Local Post Ot!lce.

Jet. ~t. 35 &amp; 160 Gallipolis, Ohio

740-446-2002
Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday ll-5

the AM ESC is an Equal Opponunity Employer/P1ovider.

Subscribe today • 992-2 J55

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Birthdays

• HARTFORD. W.Va. -

•I

Next Public Meeting
Middleport Council ChPiben • October 30111 at 4:80PM

I

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o ~rM~Tho\. . . efl\lloW!opoot237Jt.t5crMtl\llil.po... ( l l l l o ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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--~j.....t. ...
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�Qp NION

The Daily Sentinel

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

READER'S

.

'

· PageA4

VIEW

MUSIC
'

Band at risk
Dear Editor:
Imagi ne a high school football game wi thout hearing the
playing of our sc hool \ fi ght song. How about no half-time
shows'' Well . that happened at Sou,thern High School•during a
. period of time fru111 1989 unti I arotmd I'JYK. They had cut the
inusic program and phased out the band. Thi s is about to happen again if you don't l1elr us'
As you probably already ktww. Suuthern Lucal School
District is lmlding •a renewal levy. This levy wil l be on the
Nov. 4 ballot. I'm not going to 1·,)rc you wi th the facts. l'ni
going to tell you about the terrible ac tions that might take
place if thi s levy fails.
If th is levy fai ls. line of the progrums at our school that will
. be in danger is o ur mus ic prog ra m :tgain . As you have seen in
th e newspa per in the past few months. our bam! program is
really grow ing. \Ve have go ne from nothing w over a )0-piece
band. Please don't let th is just be flu shed clown the toi let by
lett ing thi s levy fai l.
At th e beginni ng of l:tst school vear, our boosters started a
huge fundrai si ng program to -rai se monl!y for new uniforms.
These uniforms were $22.000. We ha ve 50 uniforms bought
and are current ly ra isi ng money to replace instruments we
need and no longer have. Are you goi ng to let our new uni·
form s just sit in a room and dry rot like our las t ones did back
in the 1980's'?
We cannot let this levy fail. If it fail s and thi ~ program is cut.
I along with many other student&lt; at Southern High school wil l
leave the distnct and go to a uislrict that has these ex tra-c urriculm activi ttes we w;un to participate in. And as you realize,
· losing enro llment takes eve n more money out of our 'l'hools.
: Are yo u going to lei this happen·&gt; As a freshman and tuba
player at Southern Hi ~h School. I ask you, no, I beg you to
vote "yes· on the levy fo r Southern Local Schools on Nov. 4.
Thank you.

Tuesday, October 28,

Tuesday, October 28,

2003

:Obituaries

US. closer to drug reimportation
Disruptive and possibly dangerous though it may be, it
seems inevitable that Congress
will pass - and that President
Bush will sign - legislation to
pennit mass reimportation of
pharmaceuticals from Canada.
Members · of th e HouseSenate
conference
on
Medicare prescription drug
legislation, increasingly opti·
rnistic that they will produce
a bill soon, say importation is
all but certain to be a part of
their tinal measure.
And ind ications from
health care . lobbyists and
admini stration officials are
that, despite safety objections
from the Food and Drug
Auministration. Bush will go
along.
One administration official
to ld me , 'Our rosition is not
that under no circumstances
could reimportation work.
but we want to make su re that
Americans are ge tting drugs
that are affordable and safe .'
The administration seems
to ha ve shifted from declarinll that mass imports from
Canada would create insurmountable safety concerns to
calling for more FDA authority and resources to ove r~ee
tile imports. . .
The rush toward re im portation seems undeterred by a
blockbuster Washington Post
series on massive diversion.
counterfeiting and illega l
trafficking in drugs rr om
storefront s. over tht lnl ern et
and across U.S. borders that
has overwhelmed the FDA's
enforcement capabil ities.
The rush is driven by politi ·
cians seeking to capitalize on
public outrage- mainl y from
sen iors - over the fact that
drugs in Canada and Europe
commonly sel l for a fraction of
the cost in the United States.
The FDA permits indi vid uals to import drugs for th eir
ow n use from abroad. bu t
Congress is on the ve rge of
al lowing mass imports by
pharmacies and wholesalers.
At least two state gove[.nors

Morton
Kondracke

have saiu that they want to
impon to lo wer Medicaid
costs.
The pharmaceutical industry, despite the millions it
spends on lobbyi ng and advertising. has been unable to convince Congress or the public
that impot1i ng price-controlled
drugs from other countries will
cost li ves by inhibiting drug
llrms' ability to do research
and deve lor new medicines .
A Washington Post/ABC
News poll published Monday
showed that 69 percent of
U.S. adults say it should be
legal for Americans to buy
prescription drugs from
Canada. Euwpean nations and
otller industrialized co untries.
Those arc the terms of a bill
sponso red by Rep. Gi I
Gutknecht. R-M inn ., and Rep.
Rahm Emanuel. D-Ill. that
passed the House by a 243- 186
margin in July, despite vociferous oppositio n from the FDA.
the White House. various disease advocacy groups and
Republican leaders.
Medicare conferees and
he;:fth care lobbyists predict
that a fina l Medicare bill wi ll
inc lude authority fo r mass
drug imports on ly from
Canada, 'dong th e lines of a
bill originally introduced by
Rep. JoAnn Emerso n. R-Mo.
The Senate's Medicare bill
contained a Canada-onl y pro·
vision. along with the stipulation that imports could he halted if the secretary of Health
and Human Services decli nes
to certify that the measure
could be administered safely.
The certification requiremen t has been seen as a 'poi-

son pill' by backers of reim·
portation
because both
Bu sh's Health and' Human
Services secretary. Tommy
Thompson, and former secretary, Donna Shalala. refused
certification. It remains to be
seen whether it makes it into
the final Medicare bill .
Conferees and health care
lobbyists say the pace of negotiations on the bill has stepped
up to the point where they are
opti mi stic about producing a
conference report soon.
They say that House con·
ferees are prevailing on key
issues like means-testing of
premiums and 'premium sup·
port' (eventually forcing trlt·
ditional Medicare to compete
with private in surance plans).
Premium support has been
seen as a showstopper by
Senate
Democrats,
but
Republicans hope to work out
a 'mitigat ing' plan to avoid a
Democratic filibu ster. They
say they can 't pass a bill in
the House without some form
of premium Sltpport.
On .several grou nds. mass
drug reimportatiqn is uncharted territory. According to
drug comranies, it wi ll cut
deeply into the ir profits and
inhibit th eir ahilitv tn do lifesaving researc h. However. it's al so J)Ossible
that bv vari ous means.
importa.t ion mi ght simp ly
even ou( the huge ,price dif·
fere ntial between Canada
and the Un ited States.
By itself. th e huge new
demand from the United
States could raise Canadian
prices. Also, a number of drug
companies have indicated that
they
wit hh old drug sup·
plies to C uwda above that
country \ own needs , possibly
inducing Canada to deny shipments to the United State&gt;.
In an interview. Sha lala
said she cou\Jn't take a posi·
tion on a Canada-on ly import
proposal - she ve toed a
Gutknecht·like plan - but
she said 'there are price con·
trois al l over the world so

"''ill

Oct. 27, 2003, at Pleasant
WPAFB and DESC.
Services will be held at Valley Hospital in Point
I0:30 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. Pleasant , W.Va.
DAYTON- Margaret Hill
30, 2003, at Fairview United
Arrangements are under
Baker, 95, of Dayton, formerW.
Methodist
Church,
828
the direction of Fisher
ly of Pomeroy, passed away
Fairview Ave., Dayton. Funeral Home, and will be
on Monday, Oct. 27, 2003, at
The Gables at Singing Burial will be at Dayton announced upon completion.
Memorial Park Cemetery.
Woods.
Friends may call from 5 to
Mrs. Baker was preceded
7 p.m. on Wednesday at
in death by her husbands,
Funeral
Home
William R, Hill, in 1958, and Tobias
MIDDLEPORT - Jesse J.
Englewood
Chapel,
675
W.
Foster Baker, in 200 I ; a
Thomas, 22, Middleport,
Rd
.,
Englewood.
Wenger
daughter, Marcia Hill Larson;
Memorial contributions died on Monday, Oct. 27,
three brothers; two sisters;
may
be made to the church.
2003, from injuries sustai ned
and her parents.
in a motorcycle accident in
Surviving are her son,
St
. Clairsville. Arrangements
-Robert E., and wife Martha
are
under the direct ion of
Hill of Dayton, five grandFisher Funeral Home and
children and 12 great grand·
MIDDLEPORT
William Louis Ault, 77, will be announ ced upon com·
children.
Margaret retired from Middlepott, died on Monday, pterion.

Margaret Baker

they cost-shift to Ameril:&lt;ms.
It's fundamentally unfair.'
·t absolutely prefer negotiat·
ed prices .for Medicare here to
reimpottation both because of
safety and because I care a lot
about this extraordinary period
of biomedical research that
we're in,' 'She said. ·t do care
about hurting drug company
profits and their ability to do
research. That's why I want to
negotiate a fair price that takes
into account their research
uosts.'
'·
Shala la said that the government should negotiate
through private pharmaceutical benefit managers rather
than direct ly with the manufacturers, which might lead
to l:J.S. price controls.
On safetv, she said, ' I don 't
think it's good tdea to put
the FDA in the posi ti on of
having to watch n ery drug
that comes into the United
States.'
For su re. though, if
Congress passes a reimportatio n bill it will co mpli cate tht
FDA 's already-onerous task
of policing a drug supply that
Commissio ner
Mark
McCle llan s~ id this week is
·under unprcccclentcd attack
from a variety of increas ingly sophisti&lt;:ated threats.'
While terrorism has led
Cungre" lo upgrade the
FDA's capacity to mon itor
food imrorts. he said in a
speech Monday. 'debate in
Congress has mainly been
ahout taking away from our
existinp. alithorities and :;, imply deci'aring more non-FDA·
approved drugs to be legal.'
At a minimum, if Co ngress
and the pres iden t are going to
allow hi llions of pills to be
imported from Canada. they
need to vast ly increase the
FDA\ abil it y to police the
surply and ensure th~t the
drug s aren't fakes orig inally
produced, say, in so me Third
World garage.
(Mm1n11 Ko11dracke is exec·
lllil'e editor of Roll Call. rhe
ne\l·.vwper nf Capiro/ Hill.)

Jesse Thomas

William Ault

a

local Briefs

''

RACINE
Racine
American Legion Post 602
will hae a public ham and
turkey dinner, beginning at
II a.m. on Sunday. The cost
is $6.

The
Meigs
Co unt y
Sheriff 's Department is
investigating a drug overdose
on Woadyard Road in
Columbia Township, invol~­
ing a 15 year-old boy.
.According to Sheriff Ralph
Trussell, the juvenile alleged·
ly stole hi s brother's medica·
tion and took several of the
tablets. He was transported to
0' Bleness
Memorial
Hospital for treatment.
• Jim
Buckley
of
Reedsville reported the theft
of a deer stand .
• Kevin Crabtree of Albany
reported his home was broken
into, and three firearms were
stolen. Entry · was made
through the home's front door.
• Phil Edmiston of Dexter
reported his home was broken into through a rear door.
and a pistol and several tools
were reported missing.
.
• Sarah Searles of Pomeroy
reported vandalism to the
front door of her residence
with a large rock.
• Brian Gibbs of Reedsville
reported the theft of three
firearms and I0 gold dollars
from his residence.
• Ray Wolfe of Rutland
reported the theft of a Ruger
firearm from his home .
• Debbie Shuler of Rutland
reported her home was bro·
ken into by breaking a glass
from the door. A dog was
reported stolen .
• Kevin
Bush
of
Middleport was arresled on a
charge of violating a ci vii
protection order.
• Paul Lambert, Rutlan&lt;;l,
reported that his license
plates were stolen from his
1989 Buicb while it was
parked at the Park and Ride
on Ohio 124.
• Roger Riebel of Riebel's
Used Cars, Cheser, reported
that eggs had been thrown at
several cars on his lot.
• Josh Simpson of Pomeroy
reported someone had loosened the lug nuts on his vehicle.
• Ryan Cozart of Portland
was arrested on a charge of
domestic violence.
• Hank Cleland of Pomeroy
reported that the door of his

Trick-or-treat set
PORTLAND - Trick-orreal will be held in Portland
rom 6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday.
. RACINE - Trick-or-treat
will be held in Raci ne from 6
to 7 p.m. on Thursday.

Trick-or-treat set
HARRISONVILLE
Trick-or-treat will be held
from 6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday
. in the Harrisonville and
Pageville communities. The
tire siren will sound to begin
and end. Costume judging
and refreshments will follow
at th e Harrisonville firehouse .

Classes offered
GALLIPOLIS
Preparation for Childbirth
class will be held from 2 to 6
p.m. on Sunday at the Holzer
Medical Center's CHarles E.
Holzer, Jr., M.D. Surgery
Center. Information and registration are available by calling 446-5030.

. 0TAHLfR.
·wo3
•

Department
closed
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Health Department
will be closed from noon to 4
p.m. on Nov, 4 for election
day, and will resume normal
business hours at 8 a.m. on
Nov. 5.

HOW

Lodge meets

CUTE.,
AGHOST&amp;

RACINE
- Racine
Chapter 134 Order of the
Eastern Star will practice for
.installation at 2 p.m. on
Sunday.
·
A regular meeiing will be
held at 7:30 p.m. on. Nov. 3,
wilh annual installalioo of
ofticers and refreshments.

The eternal Jew

A MUSIC

PIRATE.

~AH!V&lt;.·

© 2003 by NEA. Inc.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
:be less than 300 words. Allleners are subject to
editing and must-be signed and include address
and telephone numbet: No un.~igned letters will
· :be published. Letters should he in good taste,
:addressing issues, not personalities.
. The opinions expressed in the column below
! ~re th~ consensus of the Ohio .Valley .fublish ing
:Co. 's editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

,

Incidents ·
investigated

Dinner planned

Adam Phillips
Raci11e

'

Not since I was a boy long
ago in Boston where the most
popular Sunday radio program,
as in many other cities, was
that of the Rev. Charles E.
Coughlin from tl1e Shrine of
the Little Flower in Royal Oak ,
Mich., have I been so frequent·
ly aware of the insidious presence of anti-Semitism by and
against domestic media and
around the wo'rld.
The mellifluous priest, later
silenced by his bishop, regularly told of the powerful presence of Jews on Stalin's
Politburo, while capitalist Jews
elsewhere, he said, stole mites
li·om widows. He also published a newspaper, 'Social
Justice,' which delighted in
running 'The Protocols of the
Elders of Zion'- the fake tale
of the Jewish conspiracy to
nile the world, still availabi'e
throughout the world, and con·
tinually updated.
Such twi sted words of hate
were echoed on Oct. 16, in
Putrajaya.
Malaysia.
Malays ian Prime Mini ster,
Mahathir
Mohammed,
declared at an Islamic summit
tha t 'Jews rul e by proxy,'
recruiting others 'to tight and
die for them.' The· attentive
sheiks, kings, .emirs and presidents gave the prime mini ster a
stanaing ovation. 'A very. very
wise assessment,' said the
Egypti an foreign mi.nister,
Ahme'tl Maher, after the
speech. And Afghan presidem
Hamid Karlai said the speech
· was 'very correct.'
Cough! in wou ld have been
pleased.
In the Oct. 17 issue of the

Nat
Hentoff

Jewish
newspaper
The
Forward, whic h my father
enjoyed, Gil Troy, author of
'Why I Am a Zionist' (Gefe n
Books, 2002 ), reported that,
'studeiHs at University College
in Cork, Ireland, have put
together a list uf well-known
authors and speakers who are
Jews.' Troy then found that the
Cork Palestine Solidarity
Campaign Web site listed 149
American Jews variously
labeled 'Zioni st American
Jews,' 'anti-Zionisr American
Jew,' ' nco-con conservative
.Jews' and 'hard-line Zionist
American-Israe li Jews.'
A' examples, Martin Peretz,
editor-in-chief of .The New
Republic magazine, was listed
as a 'neo-conservative Jew';
journalists Bob Simon of CBS
and Terry Gross of National
Puhlic Radio were labeled
'American Jews'; and CNN'S
Wolf Blitzer was listed as a
'Zionist American Jew.' ·
Remembeting that The Wall
Street Joumal's Daniel Pearl
was beheaded by. his captors
after being designated a Zionist
American Jew, Troy decided
that when he nex t changes his
residence, his 'phone nuryber
will be unlisted.' ·

Troy init ially considered the
Web site benign, but decided
that the use of "Zionist' as a
pejorative was menacing.'
I have been a Jew for so long
that, even had I been on that
list; no new harbingers of antiSemitism would startle me. I
wasn't even startled to see an
Oct. 13 movie review of 'Kill
Bill,' on The New Republic's
Web site where Senior Editor
Gregg Easterbrook, deploring
the film 's violence, harshly
referred to the executives
responsible for the movie Miramax
Co-Chairman
Harvey Weins\ein and Walt
Disrey CEO Michael Eisner
-as 'Jewi sh exec utives· who
'worship money above all else'
and promote 'for profit and
adulation of violence.'
Easterbrook wrote that,
while 'plenty of Chri sti an and
other Hollywood executives ...
worship money above all else. '
he focused on Jews, say ing that
'recem European hi st01y alone
ought to cause Jew ish executives to experience second
thoughts about glorifying the
killing of the helpless as a fun
lifestyle choice.' Responding
later to sharp criticism of his
calumnious categorization of
Je)"S. Easterbrook said he had
l:oeen guilty Of 'mangling
words' in his article. He failed
to explain which word~ he had
rnangled.
In his apology uti the Web
site, Easterbrook noted that his
'poor wording' did 'invoke a
thousand years of stereotypes
about that which Jews have
specitic historical' reasons to
fear,' but he defended the

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

thoughts of his essay. He told
The New York Ttmes he had
just 'stumbled' into those
words.
However, what did surpnse
me was the reaction of The
New Republic's Editor Peter
Beinart, the publication's most
perceptive and probing writer.
As an editor, he has made The
New Republic much less predtctable than most other political journals. But all that
Beinart said was that 'Gregg
made a mt stake. He recognizes
that. He's a valuable member
of the staff. And I don't think
he's the !_east bit preJudiced.'
As Btl! Cltnton jocularly
told some journalists after he
had su rvived the impeachment charges, ' It's not the
crime that gets you, it's the
cover up.' Beinat1 does him·
self and hi s magazine no
honor by laps ing from ,his customary fearless candor. This
wasn't a crime. It was a centuries-old view· of Jews, cer·
tainly a prejudice.
When the European Union.
prodded by French President
Jacques Chirac, declined to
condemn
Mahathir
. Mohammed's age-old stereotyping of Jews in Malaysia, a
New York Times Oct. 18 edito•
rial justly noted that 'antiSemi tism displays are being .
met with inexcusable noncha·
lance.'
'
Does Beinart nonchalantly
believe that Easterorook just
' mangled' words?'

(Nat Hemoff is c1 iwtionally
renowned authority nn the
First Amendment and the Bill
of Rights:)

.

ve hicle had been kicked.
• Robert
Luke
of
Middleport reported that the
topper window had been bro·
ken out of his truck, and the
sliding
glass
window
scratched in an appare nt
attem pt at entry while the
truck was parked at the Park
and Ride on Ohio 124.
• Elson Spencer, Racine,
was ci ted on a charge of driving under 1he influ ence.
• Keith Clawson of Seattle,
Wash. was cited for possession of marijuana.
• Wendell Barber, Reedsville,
was arrested on charges of dri·
ving under suspension, failure
to control, fictitious tags and
two bench warrants.
• Tina williams, Shade,
reported she was assa ulted.
Charges have been filed
against a male subj ect.
• Dennis
Bryant
of
Pomeroy reported the theft of
a Stihl chainsaw from hi s
garage.
• Linda Tippie, Reedsv ille,
reported the vandalism of her
mailbox.
• Carol Buchanan, Tuppers
Plains, reported a set of license
plates as missing or stolen.
• Michael
Carey,
Middleport, was cited for
possession of marijuana.
• Scott Brinker of Pomeroy
reported hi s home had been
broken into through a rear
door. Two firearms were
taken along with a 12-carat
gold-covered bottle.
• Denver Hughes, Jr. ,
Salem Center, re ported his
home had been broken into,
and a muzzle loader and bow
stolen. Entry was made
through a rear door.

Service
interrupted
LONG BOTIOM - The
Tuppers
Plain s-Che ster
Water District will interrupt
water service from 9 a.m .
until 3 p.m. on Wednesday in
Long Bottom, and along
Ohio 124 from Long Bottom
to Jay May Gravel Pit.
After servi ce is restored,
customers should boil water
for three minutes before using
it for cooking and drinking.
The public will be notitied
when the advisory is lifted.

Tom Dooley, president of Middleport Community Association. said Monday night's Moonlight
Madness promotion was a "big success." Dooley. pictured wrapping an early Christmas gift
for Gerald Powel l of Pomeroy, is the owner of Middleport Department Store. one of many
Middleport and Pomeroy merchants to partiCipate in the late-night sales event. It was held
as part of the associatton 's ongoing efforts to encourage local shopping. (Brian J. Reed )

Wooing Ohio: three top Republicans in three days
COLUMBUS (AP) .
saiu the GOP visits ane a &gt;ign Kim Norris .,aid.
Petro invited Mueller after
Three top Republicans make that Bush knows he\ in trouble.
separate visits to Columbus
Bush w&gt;d hts wtle. Ltura, meettng at a conference 111
thi s week, · showcasing have held . fund-raisers . in Washington } very. very
Ohi o's importance in the Cmcmnau. Vtee Pnestdent Dtck long tune ago, Norns satd.
upcoming president ial cam· Cheney had a fund-raiser in . The meuical conference. is
paign.
Akron in June ;md plan&gt; anot h· tttled the "Future of Medtcme
The headliner is President er in Cleve land next month .
Summit." Frist will talk about
Bus h, making hi s 13th trip to
The Bush-C heney .cam· Medicaid spending and issues
Ohio since takin g ollice, this paign is busy in Ohio and ' uch as malprdctice lawsuit&gt;
time for a fund-rai ser at a elsew he re
becau'e
of against doctors. said lobbyist
do,.;ntown
hote l. ' The changes in campaign fina nce Tim Maglione of the sponsor·
$2.000-per-person event on laws that b~tn corporal~ . or ing Ohio Stat~ . Medical
Thursday is expected to raise union donat to ns to poltllcal Assoetauon. Fnst s tnvttauon.
$1 million, addi tl g to the partie ,, Bu sh i' rai sing hi s abo made months ago, seell)ed
$3. I million the Bu sh- ow n money rather than rely- natural. Maglione satd.
Cheney campaig n already ing on outs ide intere&gt;ts.
"He :s a physician and the
Bennett s:Hd.
maJorny leader of the
has raised in the state.
On
Wedn esday,
FB I · Po litics will be 'isible but Senate:· Maglione said.
Director Robert Mu eller · hardly the main course of the
U.S. Sen. George Voinovich of
speaks at a law-en forcement two conferences " mdwiched Ohio. will speak. as will Ohio
confe re nce orga nized by around the Bush "isit.
· lnsurJiloe Department Director
Ohio Attorney Ge neral Jim
Mueller wi ll be the featureu Ann Womer-Bejnamin and slate
Petro. On Friday, Senate speaker at Petro\ law Rep.
Tim Grendell
of
co nf~ rence. Chesterland.
All
are
Majority Leader Bill Frist , .a enfor&lt;:ement
Tennessee Repubhcan , ts About900 to I,000 police and Repubhcans.
expected to speak at a con· other profess ionals planned to
That there are no Democmtic
ference about li ability in the . attend the event that begins officeholders is coincidental as
medicai care field.
Tuesday. Petro spokeswoman well, Maglione said.
No Republi can has won t h e . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
presidency without Ohio and
only two Den~. " .: rats have
done so without the state
since 1900. Bush beat
Democrat AI Gore in 2000 by
3.5 percentage points in Ohio.
"It does underscore that,
perhaps more than ever, Ohio
ts the essential state fo r determining who will serve as
president the next four years,"
Gov. Bob Taft said Monday.
Bush's
vi sit · was
announced Oct. 13, long
afte r the other two event s
were organized, spo nsors
said. The Ohio Republi can
Party is expecting a sellout
for Bush.
"It is the president of the
United Slates and he is very
popular," state GOP chair·
man Robert Bennett said.~====================~
"Ge nerall y, Ohioans have r
always been ge nerous to the
BUY ONE
pre sident and to the presiSIREN
dent' s father."
FOR
Denny
White,
Ohio
Democratic Party chairman,

Coming Thursday...

"Gj?~fle~ ff; ~ f?

Tkmgr$ ff; ;}f)f;.,
Your guide to weekend

entertainment in the Tri-State

La11e

$499

Rio Class of 1953 holds 50th class reunion
'•

RIO GRANDE The
members of the 1953 class of
Raccoon Township High
School in Rio Grande held a
reunion July 18-20.
On Friday afternoon, they
journeyed to the Lowe Hotel in
Point Pleasant. The holel was
built in J9o I and the tour was
like a step back in time. Marsha
Finley was the tour guide and
. the members were delighted
·with the hotel's unique features.
After the tour they went to the
home of Bob and Elva Jean
Coulson for a pizza party.
Posters were set up in the
Coulson home showing the
classmates in years past and
photos taken at past reunions:
On Saturday, the class members
attended .the alumni reUnion held
on the Univen;ity of Rio Grande
campus and wore the polo shins
~ by Lee Weilrr. Lee' is
lium Ocean Springs, Miss. The
.shirts hOO a round logo stating the
1953 class ·mono. It read, "Out of
,the Harbor Into the Bay, Rio Oass
Jif '53." AI the alwnni reunion Lee
lirttnxluced .the members of his
'class in attendance as follows: Jane
Call Zeh of l..ake Forest, Dlioois;
Jigger Wickline of Springfield,
· Ohio; Thomas Jeffries. of
Cambridge, Ohio; Edward Hively
of Stoutsville, Ohio and Bill

..

. ., _;~~"-~--~~~-.

Williams of Ann Arl:xr, Mich.; Ida
Cain Miller, Elva Smith Coulson,
Mary Walker Niday and Bill
McCulty, all ofGallia County.
After the alumni meeting at Rio
the group was invited to the home
of Fred and Ida Miller for afternoon snacks. On display in the
Miller horrte were IWO posters of
photos taken on the·class trip last
summer. The 50th reunion alwnni
diruter was held at me Grace
United Methodist Church in
OtlliP.JiiS. The class was delight·
edWJththefoodandtheserviceof
the United Methodist Women.
One table at the side of the room
served as the golden table. In the
center of the table was a large
golden sailboat made by Fred
Miller. On the sails were nineteen
gold bows, each with a ll3IB: of
the graduating class. The boot was
bockground fur a cake with the
photo ·of the old Raccoon
Township School on it On the left
side of the table was a bl&lt;d fiame
with the names of the IWo
1
~ class members: Susan
Cooley Gilliam and Frances
Smith Hopkins. Golden globes,
holding ·gold floating candles
flanked the black fiame. Also on
the table were individual gifts of
phot£l5 of the high school wtilj¥d
m gold paper and presented by Ida
Millec. Joan McDaniel Seals tye-

..

~~~--~

Mary close:! with a benediction
sented everyone present with a
and
an invitation to the cla&lt;is memlighted necklace pen. Jigger
Wickline won the door prize of a bers to visit tre Niday home the
cushion with the Gallipolis band- next morning. The Nidays enter·
stand on it The guest dining tables tained cia~ n-.:mbers f(]' breakfa.&lt;;t
were decorated to cany out the and lwlCh on Sunday. In the after.
theme of the class motto.
noon seveml cia.~ members attend·
F.dwafd Hively gave the invo- ed the memorial SC!Vice reid fa' the
cation. Mary Niday WdS emcee for brother of Lee Weiher at the
the evening. Elva Coulson gave Calvary Bapti.&gt;~ Gm:tery at Rio.
the welcome and Lee Weiher was
Letters were received from
the speaker. Lee spoke of the clao;s Betty Jo McKee ComiU !Tom
motto and of the class being Brvson City, N.C.: Bill Meek
unique, having graduated with a frOm Underwood, Minn.; and
college student Bevo, Fnmcis. Bevo Francis of Salineville,
GleiXIon 0. Evans and his wife Ohio. A phone call wa' received
Juanita were in attendance. Mr. !Tom Emogene Fr.lley Boggs of
Evans setVed as the princi(XII at the Columbus. Ohio. 1'111 were unable
high school for the grnduati11g to attend.
class. Ida Miller r-esented ideas
for future cia'&gt;~ tnps. Each class
member was askedto tell of his or
her last 50 years. Oass members
who joiml the group for the alwnni dinner were: Joan McDaniel
Seals of Colwnbus; Bob Hall of
Grayson, Ky.; and Roma Lindig
Owens of Ctrcleville, Ohio.
·
Also &lt;Onling were Bob Owens,
Shelia Hively, Carol Williams,
Elmer Seals, Vi Jeffries Bob
Coulson, ·Fred Miller and Vic
N'tday, Jane Zeh rea:! several PJEmS
Mitlenvby class ntember; in the .
ea1y (94(), that~ been printfrl in
tre Rio News JAA out by tre high
school students.

~.-w.~------~--~~----~--.__.

______________________________

THE

~D

FREE
&amp;IY ~ IL.AifWI fltllil

$599

I~I&gt;"'Llll\, , ,r,·•L I,
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i::"'Il

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~-----------------------T--~--------~-------c-~--

�J

15 people killed, more.than 1,000 homes

lost; firefighters face another grueling day
SIMI VALLEY, Calir. (AP)
- With wind-driven flames
threatening the densely populated San Fernando Valley in
Los Angeles, firefighters dug
in Tuesday for another brutal
day of battling what was
developing into the most
. destructive - and one of the
deadliest - wildfire seasons
in state hi story.
At least I , 134 homes had
been destrofed and 15 people
killed as o Tuesday by five
separate blazes s·cattered
around Southern California.
Two more people were killed
in Mexico.
The flames dotted an area that
extended on a I 00-mile line
from the Mexican border north
to the suburbs of Los Angeles.
A handful of other fires that
· hadn' t hit any homes al so
consumed tens ·of thousands
of acres of brush and forest
lands, bringing the total
burned to more than 500,000
acres - or about 780 square
miles, roughly three-q uarters
the total area of Rhode Island.
"It's a worst-case scenario.
You couldn't have written anything worse than this. You can
dream up horror movies, ·and
they wouldn't be this bad,"
said Gene Zimmennan, supervisor of the San Bernardino
National Forest, the area in
which two of the most destructive fires began last week.
A blaze in San Bernardino
County called the Old Fire,
which began near the forest on
Saturday, has destroyed at
least 450 homes and been
blamed for the deaths of two
people. It was 10 percent contained Tuesday. The Grand
Prix Fire, which was 25 percent contained, has destroyed
atleast77 homes since it ignited near the forest on Oct. 21 .
One of the biggest fire
fights on Tuesday was unfolding in the Santa Susana
Mountains that separate Los
Angeles' San Fernando
Valley, where 1.3 million people live, from Simi Valley in
neighboring Ventura County.
The Simi Valley fire, which
has destroyed 13 homes since
it began Saturday, was burning
dangerously close to a gated
community of million-dollar
mansions in Los Angeles'

for bums and smoke inhalation at the University of
California, San
Diego, ·
Medical Center, on Monday.
Two were in serious to critical
condition with burns over
more than 55 percent of their
bodies, spokeswoman Eileen
Callahan said .
The fires also knocked out
power to tens of thousands of
people, closed highways and
disrupted air travel.
,
More resources were on the
way from Arizona and Nevada,
which were answering pleas
for help from Gov. Gray Davis.
Each state has volunteered
the use of 50 fire trucks, most
of which are bein~ directed
toward the San Otego fires,
Davis said. Nevada was also
sendi ng three helicopters.
On Monday, President Bush
granted Davis' request to
declare the region a disaster
area, opening the door to
grants, loans and other aid to
residents and businesses in Los
Angeles, San Bernardino, San
Diego and Ventura counties.
"I believe at the local, state
and federal levels they are
doing their parts in this distress," Davis told The
Associated Press.
The Democratic governor,
who will leave office next
month after being recalled,
dismissed criticism from
some Republican lawmakers
that he could have asked for
help sooner.
"It's not time for second
guessing, but to pull their loads
to get these ftres out and checks
in the hands of people who lost
their homes," Davis said.
As the flames continued to
rage out of control, every
Californian seemed to know
someone - or .know someone who knew someone who was affected by the fires.
U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter, RAipine, said his home was
among hundreds damaged or
destroyed in his mountain town.
Maurice Greene, a sprinter
who won a gold medal at the
2000 Olympics, had to evacu- .
ate his 9 ,000-square-fQOt home
near Simi Valley on Monday.
"We have to put it in God's
hands. That's all we can do,"
he said as he left.

Chatsworth section. It was
or\ly 5 percent contained.
Meanwhile, 90 miles away
in San Bernardino County, the
Old Fire and Grand Prix Fire,
which merged earlier in the
week, had jumped a highway
and was moving as one contiguous wall of flames toward
the mountain resort town of
Lake Arrowhead. The town,
which sits at an elevation of
5,100 feet, was left P"rticularly vulnerable to tlames by a
beetle infestation that has devastated the surrounding trees.
"It is one of our major concerns at the moment," U.S.
Forest Service spokeswoman
Carol Beckley said late Monday.
Officials were particularly
concerned about "crowning."
in which flames leap from
one treetop to another, leaving
firefighters on the ground all
but powerless to stop them.
" If that occurs we don't
have the capability to put
those fires out," Beckley said.
"lt will be a frrestorm.'' .
., Conditions were equally
grim in San Diego County,
where ash from three large
fires fell on the beaches like
snow and drivers had turn on
their headlights during the day.
San Diego Fire Chief Jeff
Bowman was worried that the
fires would merge into one
gigantic blaze, pushing
already strained resources to
the breaking point.
"It would be disingenuous
to say we have control of
these fires. Right now we are
throwin~ evefo/thing we can
at them,' Dallas Jones, director of the state Office of
Emergency Services, said of
the San Otego blazes.
· "This will ·be the most expensive ftre in California history,
both in loss of property and the
cost of ftghting it," Jones said.
More than 10,000 firefighters were battling the flames ,
which by Tuesday had
already cost the state more
than $24 million.
The 15 people killed were the
most since the devastating
Oakland Hills ftre that killed 25
people and destroyed more than
3,000 homes in October 1991 .
Scores of people were also
injured by this week's fires,
including eight people treated
1

heart to stop and deprived her
brain of oxygen.
Her parents, Bob and Mary
Schindler. believe their
daughter could be rehabilitated and do not believe she had
any wishes to not be kept on
life support. Terri Schiavo's
feeding tube was removed
for six days earlier this
month before the Florida
Legislature and Gov. Jeb
Bush enacted a special law to
have it reinserted. The move
touched off an international
debate over the Schiavo case
and right-to-die issues.
Terri Schiavo is being
treated at a Pinellas Park hospice while her husband's
attorney and the American

Civil Liberties Union prepares to challenge to constitutionality of "Terri's Law."
The first filings in that legal
figh~are due Wednesday.
A pearing less than an
hour ater on Fox News' "On
the Record with Greta Van
Sustern," the lawyer for the
Schindlers countered that
Michael Schiavo knew his
wife never had end-of-life
wishes.
"It's hard to know what to
believe with him because he
says whatever the occasion
demands or what is in his
financial interests," said the
lawyer, Pat Anderson.
Michael Schiavo denied
that he has withheld therapy

PITTSBURGH (AP) Steelworker Andy Miklos is so
happy with President Bush's
tariffs on foreign-made steel that
the card-carrying Democrat is
considering casting his first vote
for a Republican next year.
In Michigan, meanwhile,
auto parts manufacturer
Dennis Keat is threatening
to defect from the GOP iflhe
White House doesn't drop
the sanctions immediately.
Both voters are emblematic
of their industries I B months
after Bush slapped steep tariffs on imported steel to
shield domestic producers
from foreign competition.
The president's next step in
the process- keep the tariffs
until they expire in March
2005 or elimmate them could be crucial to Bush's reelection prospects in 2004.
The steel tariffs are pitting
the Midwest states against
the Rust Belt - two regions
where the margin between
the. Republican candidate
and Democrat AI Gore was a
hair's breadth in 2000, and
where Bush is determined to
prevail in 2004.
The sanctions endeared
the GOP president to traditionally Democratic steelworkers in states such as
Pennsylvania, Ohio and
West Virginia. But coming
on the heels of a slumping
economy, the taritis have
since angered owners and
employees of small manufacturing companies that
make up part of his GOP
base
in
Michigan,
Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Those states rank high on
the list for Bush and collectively account for almost
one-third of the 270 electoral votes he needs to win
re-election. Both sides in the
tariffs debate also claim turf
in Indiana and Illinois.
Bush and his political advisers are "going to make people
angrier now then they would

from his wife, saying he once
took her to California for an
experimental therapy in
which a stimulator was
implanted in her brain. It didn't work, he said.
He also answered criticism
that he has abandoned hi s
wife for a longtime girlfriend
with whom he has One child
and another on the way.
Schiavo said his girlfriend is
supportive of his care for
Terri Schiavo.
"This is Terri's wish," he
said of the removal of the
feeding tube. "And I am
going to follow that if this is
the last thing I can do for
Terri," Michael Schiavo said.

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have 18 months ago - no
matter what they do," said
Ken Mayer, a University of
Wisconsin political scientist
and expert on presidential politics. "And it raises the risk
because the election is closer."
The 53-year-old Miklos
not only works for U.S. Steel,
the nation's largest domestic
steel producer, he is president
of his United Steelworkers of
America local. Although the
union
has
endorsed
Democrat Dick Gephardt for
president, Miklos said he
would break with his union
brethren and back Bush if the
tariffs stay in place.
"If this president demonstrates that he stands for the
workers, and the Republican
Party is going to stand to help
~s ashima~~rk ~?rceMikl
, woul~dl vote
1
.or
· es, · OS sat ·
But fellow Republicans
who feel betrayed by Bush's
steel policy warn the president could lose his conservalive base if he does not
return to his.free-trade roots.
Already, steel consumers,
who claim the tariffs have
contributed to the loss of
200,000 industry jobs by
increasing the costs of goods
made with steel, are threatening to stay home on Election
Day if the sanctions remai n in
place. The European Union,
meanwhile, is considering $2
billion in retaliatory sanctions
against U.S. exports.
" 1 don't think the administration expected the consequences of their decision,"
said Republican Rep. Joe
Knollenberg of Michigan,
who opposes the tariffs and
represents 15,000 steel consumers . in his suburban
Detroit district. "When you
irritate your own base, which
1 believe he did, at the
expense of· helping some. body who might be a bedfellow for a short period of time
like the Stefl). UJlil;ms, l.thiPJc
that suggests to the president

Actor Tom Sizemore
sentenced to jail, drug ·
rehabilitation for abuse
LOS ANG!';LES (AP) Actor Tom Sizemore was sentenced Monday to six months
in jail and three years probation for abusing his ex-girlfriend, former Hollywood
madam Heidi Fleiss.
The actor first will go
through drug rehabilitation.
Judge Antonio Barreto Jr. said
he would consider reducing
the sentence to 90 days if
Sizemore can show at a Jan.
30 hearing that his courtordered counseling for drugs,
anger and• domestic violence
are workmg.
Prosecutors had requested a
!-year sentence.
Sizemore, who appeared. in
"Black Hawk Down" and
"Saving Private Ryan," apol-

ogized in a letter, saying "personal demons" had,taken over
his life. "I am very chastened
by the trial and my convictions," he wrote.
The judge said that drug
abuse may have been a catalyst in the abuse but that trial
testimony revealed a man
with . deep problems dealing
with women. Messages left
on Fleiss' answering mac hine
were so vicious "it's almost
impossible to perceive,"
Barreto said .
He also ordered Sizemore
to stay away from Fleiss.
Fleiss, contacted by phone
Monday, called Sizemore "a
zero." The two were together
for about two years.

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Pennington takes blame In loss, Page 82
Browns enter bye week, Page 86

2003

there's better things to do.
"If he doesn 't do anythinB
about the tariffs, it will hun
him. Will it hurt him enough
to lose Michigan? It cou ld
it certainly could;·
Knollenberg said.
· Keat, the 52-year-Qldownet
of the Su-Dan Company in
Rochester Hills, Mich .. has
furloughed 10 percent of his
work force - about 25
employees - in the last three
years in part because of rising
costs of steel, which his eompany uses to make car door
handles and other parts.
"lf Bush does not ,do away
with the tariffs, I'm going to
have to think very, very strongly
about not voting for him," said
Keat, a staunch Republican.
Commerce Secretary Don
Evans, who championed the
tariffs, said last week the
sanctions achieved exactly
what they set out to do, but
h
f d
h h
· e re use 10 say w et er
they should remain in place
in the face of 2.7 million
manufacturing jobs that have
been lost since July 2000.
The nine D~mocrats vying
for the nomination have
largely been quiet on the
issue, in part because none of
the states involved holds an
early .primary. Rep. Dennis
Kucinich of Ohio and
Gephardt have expressed
support for the tariffs .
'
But recent polling, circulating in the White House,
indicates voters want the tariffs to stay. A survey by
Republican-leaning Public
Opinion Strategie s, released
Monday, found that 69 percent of registered voters in
Michigan support the tariffs.
That shows "overwhelming support for the president's decision," U.S. Steel
chief executive officet ·
Thomas J. Usher told the
Detroit Economic Club on
, Monday in outlining the
case to keep the tafiffs.

,,,

wr·: JfJ4..675-4J40

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Steel tariffs will be
crucial to president's
re-election prospects

Husband in right-to~ie case says money, activists motivate in-laws
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -. The
hu sband seeking to end his
severely
brain-damaged
wife's life said Monday his
in-laws have set out to block
his actions because they ini tially wanted part of a medical malpractice settlement
and more recently because of
right-to-life political causes.
In his first interview since
the latest round of legal
fighting in the highly publicized case, Michael Schiavo
said on CNN's "Larry King
· Live" that he continues to
fight to end his wife's life
because her wishes were not
to be kept alive artificially.
"He's always wanted the
money," Schiavo said of his
father-in-law, Bob Schindler.
"He wants the money. He
wants the control."
Terri Schiavo, 39, has been
in a persistent vegetative state
since 1990 when a chemical
imbalance, brought on by an
disorder, caused her

PageA6

NATION • WORLD

The Daily 5entinel

'

'

•

Bt L

•

Tuesday, October 28, 2003

Ohio-Marshall
kickoff time
moved up
\

HUNTINGTON (AP) Ohio's game at Marshall on
Nov. 28 has been moved to a
12:05 p.m. EST kickoff to
accommodate a regional television broadcast by Fox
Sports Pittsburgh
The game originally was
scheduled for a 4:30 p.m.
kickoff.

Florida State
moves up to
third in BCS
NEW YORK (AP)
Florida State moved to the top
of the one-loss crowd. ·
The Seminoles were third in
the Bowl Championship Series
standings released Monday,
trailing only undt;feated
Oklahoma ·and Miami in the
race to play for the national
championship.
· The Sooners, the top team in
the polls all season, have been
in first place in the ftrst two
BCS standings. Oklahoma will
have to keep winning to guarantee itself a spot in the Sugar
Bowl on Jan. 4, starting with a
showdown against Oklahoma
State on Saturday.
The Cowboys, 14th in the
AP poll and the BCS standings, have beaten the Sooners
the past two years.
"It's another very important
game this week," Oklahoma
coach Bob Stoops said
Monday. "The more you win.
the more important they get.
We've got to be on top of our
game to stay undefeated and
stay after the championships
that we're after."
The BCS standings are used
to determine which teams play
in a national title game. The
teams that ftnish 1-2 in the
final BCS standings on Dec. 7,
will play for the title in New
Orleans on Jan . 4.
The formula uses the AP
media and coaches' polls,
seven computer rankings,
strength of schedule, losses
and a bonus-point system for
quality wins.
·

Louisville picked
to win C-USA
CHICAGO (AP) - After
talking at length about the
anticipated shake-up of
Conference USA, an exas. perated John Calipari paused
m mid-sentence and posed a
question of his own.
"Doesn't anyone want to
talk about thts year?" the
Memphis coach asked.
The uncertain future of
Conferenc~ USA and the
expected departure of four of
its. top basketball schools
dominated discussion at
Sunday's annual media day,
: Cincinnati,
Marquette ,
l;ouisville and DePaul will
reportedly be asked to jbin
the Big East in November
startihg with the 2005 season,
leaving Conference USA
with just eight teams. As a
result, Conference USA is
expected to add Rice,
Southern Methodist, Tulsa
and Marshall.
The changes will likely
cause a shift in the conference's focus from basketball
i'o football, commissioner
Britto.n Banowsky said.
"Obviously men's basketball is the focal ~oint' of the
league right now,' he said, "It
will still be that way in the
future. Whether it's to the
same extent I think is going ·
to be an issue."
: Not only will Conference
tJSA be left without some of
its top basketball programs, it
lOses some of the biggest
ilames iri coaching in Rick
['itino at Louisville and Bob
Huggins at Cincinnati .
: .Calipari doesn ' t' see it as a
j!roblem, ·at least for
Memphis.
· "Everybody will s&lt;ty, 'This
really shuts out Memphis.'
You do not have to be in one
of the top leagues to have a
top 20 program," he said.
"Our basketball program is
protected because we're a
national program and we're
not going '3nywhere."
1--~-----__;_

BoSox,

College Volleyball
'

Redwomen lose 13th
little
straight game to Mt. Vernon part
ways

STAFF REPORT

sports@ myctaitytribune.com

MOUNT VERNON
The
Rio
Grande
University
of
Redwomen
volleyball
~ quad
dropped their 13-straight American
Mideast Conference con test on
Saturday in three games at Mount
Vernon Nazarene , 17-30, 26-30 and
19-30.

Rio · Grande (7-2 1, 0-13 AMC
South) got great efforts from fre shman middle hitter Melissa Doss and
sophomore .outside hitter Lynnette
Kiesling . Doss returned to the lineup after batt! ing illness with 13 kills
while Kiesling added II kills.
Se nior outside . hitter Rebecca
Wierwille had seven kill s and five
digs and junior Chelsea DeGarmo
posted six kill s and a team-high 17
digs.
·

Junior Kim P9sey added nine digs
and Juli Baile y recorded seven.
Freshman setter Je ssica Veach handed out 37 assi sts. collected five digs
and was a perfect 12-for-12 serving .
MVNU (27-6. 9-4 AMC South )
wa s led by Amanda Stevens with 13
kills. Chel sea Kni gh t had eight kills
and four blocks and Carrie Mason
added six kills' and three blocks.

Please see Redwomen, Bl

Bengals
.believe
they can
·contend
BY

Joe

KAY

Associated Press

CINCINNATI
From the outset,
coach Marvin Lewi s knew one of hi s
toughest jobs would be getting hi s new
team to believe in itself after a dozen
years of los in g.
,
Finally, the Bengals believe.
Two consecutive win s have moved
the Bengals (3-4) into contention in the
weak AFC North - in second place all
by themse lves. one game out. The two
home wins also have changed the
mind-set on the NFL's worst team over
the last 12 years.
"Guys are coming to games and saying, 'We're goi ng to win,"' offe nsive
tackle Willie Anderson said. "In the
past. we have n't done that. "
They certainly weren't doing it at the
start of the · season . They looked like
the same old Bengals - good enough
to stay close. not good eno ugh to pull
one ·out.
·
Linebacker Takeo · Sp ikes left for
Buffalo in the offseason becau se he
wanted to win and couldn 't take those
numbing , close losses. He was rejuve nated the minute he joined the Bills
and felt their confidence in a playoff
run .
The Bills have gone a disappointing
4-4, while Spikes ' former team is on
the rise.
" It 's· funn y, because I've heard Takeo
say this about Buffalo when he was
dogging us earlier in the year." said
Anderson. who is one of Spike s' closest friends. "He said the difference is.
'We believe we' re goi ng to win now.·
"We knew we were going to win this
Cincinnati Bengals' Jeff Burris looks up after intercepting a pass intended ball game."
for Seattle Seahawks tight end Jerramy Stevens in the fourth quarter
Please see Ben1als. Bl
Sunday, in Cincinnati. The Bengats won, 27-24 to improve to 3-4. (AP) '

BY JtMMY Got.DEN

Associated Press

BOSTON - Red Sox manager Grady Little will not be
back next year, paying the
price for his deci siOn to stick
with Pedro Martinez in Game 7
of the AL championship series.
The Red Sox let Little go on
Monday, a hi gh-ranking team
official told The Associated
Press. speaki ng on the condition of anonymity. The move
co.mes less than two weeks
after Boston blew a chance to
play in the World Series when
its ace couldn 't hold a lead
against the New York Yankees.
The Florida Marlins beat the
Yankees in the World Series
that w'rapped up Saturday, ending baseball 's embargo on
major moves and freeing the
Red Sox to cut Little loose . '
Littl e's contract expires
Fridav. so he was not fired . The
team "merely chose not to pick
up his option for next year.
. Team spokes man Charles
Steinberg wou ldn't comment,
but said the Red Sox would
make an announcement later
Monday.
The Red Sox won 93 and 95
games in Litt le' s two years as
manager, reac hing the playoffs
this vear for the first time since
1999. They fell to the brink of
elimination in the ftrst round
against the Oakland Athletics
before winning the last three
.. games to advance to the ALCS ,
and Litt le's job seemed secure.
The Yankees took a 3-2 lead
in the series as it headed back
to New York . and Litt le
seemed to be making all of the
right moves.
He left struggling shortstop
Nomar Garciaparra alone, and
he snapped out of his sl ump
with four hits in Game 6 to
force a seventh game. And ,
because Little chose not to use
Martinez on short rest. he had
his ace available for the decisive game.
Boston staked Martinez to a
4-0 lead, and it was 4-2 after
seve n when it see med like
Martinez' s night was done. But
Little sent him out for the
eig hth and he quickl y ran into
troub le: even after Little came
out to ta lk to Martinez, he left
him in rather than trust the lead
to the bullpen that had struggled· all year before finding
some consi stency in the playoffs .

Please see Little. Bl

Reds abruptly change . Guerrero, Colon,
Tejada,
Sheffield
direction with next GM file for free agency

CINCINNATI - In the
most imJ?Ortant ways, Dan
O'Brien ts the antithesis of
'his predecessor.
·
'Qte Cincinnati Red~ chose
0' Brien as tl!e.ir next general
{Tlanage.r ·on Monday, an
abrupt change of course from
the last II years under his
.high-proftle predecessor.
Jim Bowden loved the
he' II try to reb11ild
grana gesture - sign Deion hisInstead,
boyhood
team by com!l!nSanders, trade for Ken
trating
on
the
unglamorous
Griffey Jr. ...., and the spotthe
farm sysstuff
fortify
light. He ~ad his own radio
show, complete with his own tem, unify the front office.
theme song. He also was figure out how to make ,do on
inclined to change course a limited budget.
During his first day on the
overnight.
By hiring O' Brien, the job, he rromised to be steady.
"You ve got to have a plan
Reds have chosen the antiin
place in order to get you
Bowdet).
where
you want to go," said
The former Rangers assisO'Brien,
who got a threetant general manager won't
$rouse about .a limited pay- year contract. ''The one thing
roll , chase a two-sport we won't do is be haphazard
celebrity like Sanders or in our approach. T can
.
spend $ 116.5 million on a promise you that."
For the first time since the
superstar like Griffey.
...... '19BOs, the Reds are now run

_ __ _ ____

_.!....._ _ _ ... ' - - -

by a chief operating officer
and a general manager who
share the same vision.
Chief operating officer
John Allen is committed to
developing talent through the
farm system, a small-market
approach that clashed with
Bowden's expensive taste for
stars. Allen fired Bowden and
manager Bob Boone last
July, then presided over a
spree of money-saving
trades.
The Reds lost 93 games in
their inaugural season at
Great American Ball Pa'rk,
alienating fans w~o fu nded
the place through a sales tax
and expected a contender.
In a roundabout way,
O'Brien asked for patience as
he rebuilds:
"We have a lot of work to
do in regards to the construction of our·major league club
as well as our baseball operations department," O'Brien

NEW YORK (AP) - Vladimir Guerrero. reigning AL
MVP Miguel Tejada and Gary Sheffield flled for free
agency Monday along with pitcher Bartolo Colon.
Relievers 'Keith Foulke, LaTroy Hawkins and Armando
Benitez also were among the 71 players who ftled on the
second day following the World Series. raisi ng the free
a!lent total to I06 among the approximately 225 players eli~~-

.

. Others who filed included Rafael Palmeiro, Ruben Sierra,
Mike Cameron. Rickey Henderson, plus the Philadelphia
relief duo of Jose Mesa and Mike Williams.
Five players filed fro1,11 the San Francisco Giants: fii'St
baseman J.T. Snow and shortstop Rich Aurilia. plus Andres
Galarraga, Tim Worrell and Eric Young. ·
.
Guerrero, Tejada and Sheffield figure to be among the
most prized hitters in the free agent market, and Colon is one
of the top pitchers.
Colon rejected a three-year offer from the White Sox. His
agent, Mitch Frankel, , said the pitcher hasn't ruled out
returning to Chicago.
1
"We will still continue to talk to the team and see if there's
something that can be worked out," Frankel said Monday.
"He does like Chicago. He liked the players on the team. He
woul~ welcome the opponunity to come back. If somethin~
cbuld equitably be worked out. he would stay in Chicago.'
Colon was only 15-13 with a 3.87 ERA this year and
m,ade $8.25 million.
·

PIHH IH GM, 82

- - -·- ---

l

�Tuesday, October 28,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

2003

m:ribune - Sentinel - lae ister

•

Bengals
from Page 81
The Bengals played their best g ame
yet, beating first-pla('e Seattle 27-24
without running back Corey Dtllon.
Hi s ca r spun off a s li ck int ers ta te
entrance ramp and hit the g uardrail
before Sunday's game, prompting
Lewis to list him as one of the inac tive
players.
It worked out anyway. as' backup
Rudi Johnson ran for I 0 I yards and
Jon Kilna had another error-free performance two touchdown passes
without an interception .
The reviva l - three wins in th e last
four games - cim be linked to Kitna.
who has finally gotten over hi s penchant for throwing the interception
that decide s a game . In stead of trying
to win a game with one forced throw.

Little
from Page B1
The Yankee s ti e d it off Martinez in
the eig hth , then won the game and the
serie s in the II th on Aaron Boone's
homer of Tim Wakefield .
Red Sox players came to Little 's
defense.
"The re.'s no re ason to blame Grady,' '
Martinez said. "Grady does n' t play the
game, I do . If you want to J Udge me or
curse me or whatever, I wi ll swallo w
that , because I am respon s ible ."
Two days later. Little sat in his office

GM
from Page 81
said. "The cha ll enges are sign iti cant. I
canno t and will not unde rest imate the
-task at hand."
O ' Brien knows what it' s like to start at
the bottom.
Hi s father, Dan O'Brien Jr., was a
lon gtime executive in the minors before
serv ing as the Rangers· general manager
from 1973-79. His son grew up in minor
leag ue ballparks around the country,
learning the sport from th e ground up.
''My father was always the type of

Redwomen
from Page B1
Jeni Vanderhoof had seven digs and

Kitna has learned that it's more important not to lose a game with one forced
throw .
··For me·, there was a big· turning
point right belore the C leveland
game." Kitna said. "II was a matter of
IJ;Je dealing with some of the demons
in my past."
.
.
In the last four games. starttn g wtth
a 21-14 victory in C leveland , Kitna
ha s comp leted 63 per'tent of h is passes for 954· yards with eig ht touchdowns a nd one interception' - hi s arm
was hit as h e threw.
It 's no longer assumed be's a caretaker for Hei sman Trophy winner
Carson Palmer, who has mo ved up to
the No. 2 quarterback role .
.
The original plan was to bnng
Palmer along on the sideline .for one
year, possibly getting him into a game
la ter in the seaso n for on-the-job experience before he gets a crac k at run ning the offense next year.
Now. Lewis is hedging - a reflec-

tion on Kitna 's performance.
"Nobody ha s installed Carson a s the
guy for next year," Lewis . sa id
Monday. "You· re domg a 1m le edllonalizing ag ain . You're in to next year."
The Be ngals haven't been in co ntention in November since 200 I . when
they started 4-3 before tumblin~ to 610. They haven't been this opum isti c
s ince 1990, when they were 5-2 and
had their last winning season (9-7 ) and
playoff appearance.
Part of the mood swi ng is based o n
the sched ul e. Their next two opponeins have worse records - Arizona
(2-5) and Hou ston (2-5), which lo st
quarte rback David Ca rr to a sprained
ankle on Sunday.
Lewi s isn't worried about hi s team
getting ahead of itself.
"We hav e not accomplished a ny thing yet, so we· have no reason to be
overconfident," Lewis said . "In some
areas, we have a lot ' of improvement s
to m a ke. "

and defended the dec ision to stick with
his ace.
" If people want to judge Grady Little
o n the resu lt s of a decision I made in
that last game the o ther day. so be it,"
he said in hi s Fenway Park office. " In
my heart, I km;w we had a gr,eat season
here."
Although publicly cominending
Little's work in keeping the cl ubhou se
together, t he Red Sox delayed a decision o n Little 's future while angry Red
Sox fans called for hi s job. The team
had insisted that Little's future would
not hinge on the o ne decision.
General manager Th ea Epstein is
known to rely more on stat ist ica l

analy sis in assessing players and
malchups than Little , who often used
his instincts in making decisions.
Owner John Henry is also in the statistical analysis camp.
Epstein was complimentary .about
Little 's work managing the strong persona li ties in the Bos ton c lubh ouse.
"A lot goes on behind the scenes that
pe6ple never know aboUt." Eps te in
said, "differe nt thin gs that Grady Littl e
does to help preserve and improve the
chemistry of the ball c lub .
" He knows that . he did hi s absolute
best and he knows he reall y helped this
team get to the doors tep of the World
Series thi s year and he 's proud of that."

indi v idual thai there was no menial task
that was too menial ," O'Brien said. " I
did everything. I worked on the grounds
c rew. I did the laundry. I so ld the
pea nuts , the programs. I worked in the
concess ion stands. I loved it."
He spe nt part of his youth in
. Columbus, one of the stops along the
way. He and his father often made the
two-hour drive to Cincinnati to watch
the Big 'Red Machine .
"I know that Cincinnati has tremendo tt s pride in this baseball tea m ,"
O'Brien said. "I also know that at one
time, the Cincinnati Red s were the
model franchi se in major leag ue baseball. And I know that the ownership and
managemen t of thi s organization want to

ac hieve the sa me resu lts in the 2 1st
Century.''
The Reds opened last season with a
payroll of $57 ll]illion bvt are expected
to slash it for the 2004 season. The July
trading spree depleted the bullpen and
the infie ld but brought pitching
prospects who wi ll be counted upon
heavily in the next few years.
0' Brien has no timetable for hiring a
manager but plans to interview Dave
Miley, who finished the season as
Boone's re placement. He's also shy ing
away fro m any questions abou t when the
Reds might conte nd again.
" We are committed to refocusing the
organization." he said. "We do under·stand there are no s hortcuts to success.''

two serve aces and Katey Percival
played a so lid , a ll -around game., tal lying 46 a ss ist s, seven kills, eight di gs
and three block s.
The Lady Cougars were 2-0 versus
the Re dwomen thi s seaso n.

Rio Grande will close ou t the home
portion of the sc hedu le on today when
th e Redwomen tangle with the
Shawnee State Lady Bears . Shawnee
defeated Rio. Oct. 7 in Portsmouth.
Match t im e is se t for 7 p.m.

...

Pennington :
takes blame\
for Jets loss
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP)
It was difficult for Chad
Pennington to watch tape of
the New York Jets' loss to the
Philadelphia Eagles.
While Pennington led the
Jet s on one touchdown drive
in hi s return to the field
Sunday, he threw a costly
interception in the fourth
quarter that the Eagles turned
into the game-winn in~ touchdown drive. Overall, n was a
mixed day for the Marshall
University graduate.
"It 's painful, because we
had the momentum and it
gave them a little bit of life.
because they were just about
ready to fold the tent,"
Pennington said Monday.
" We cou ld have stuck the
dagger in their heart and we
didn ' t. "
Pennington missed nine
weeks after breaking hi s left
wrist Aug. 23 in a preseason
game against the Ne~ York
Giants . Last week, coach
Herman Edwards unveiled a
unique but ri sky plan to play
Penning ton
agains t
the
Eagles.
Vinny Testaverde started
the game and led the Jets to
10 points on three possess ion s.
Even
thou g h
Testaverde was playrng well ,
Edwards put Pennington in
with 5 :37 remaining in the
seco nd quarter, trailing 1410.
·
On his first drive , he took
the Jets from their B-yard line
down to the Eag les 20 before
Santana Moss fumbled the
ball away. But Pennington
was on target, completing
five of seven passes.
After a n interception by
Aaron Beasley, Pennington
led a S(;ven -play drive that
ended when LaMont Jordan
scored on a 4 - yard run just
before the e nd of the third
quarter to put New York
ahead 17-14. They had the
momentum, but Pennington

-

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PUBLIC
NOTICES

NO~T~IC~E~O:F~E~L~E~C~-~~~~~~~~~=~~=~~=~~S~ectlons
3501.11
Public Notice
Public Notice
5705.19, 5705.25

TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code ,
Sections 3501.11 (G) ,
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE is hereby

NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

NOTICE OF ELECtN
TION ON TAX LEVY
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

Revised

Revised

Code,

Code,

(G),

NOTICE is hereby
given that In pursuance
of
a
Resolution of the
Board of Township
Trustees

of

the

given that in purof
suance
0
Resolution of the

Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19,5705.25
NOTICE is hereby

Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25·
NOTICE Is hereby

Township
of
Saltsbury, Pomeroy,
Ohio, passed on the

Board of County
Commissioners
of
the County of Meigs;

given that in pursuance
of
a
Resolution of the

given . that in pursuance
of
a
Resolution of the

24th day .of July, 2003,
there will be submitted to a vote of the

·Pomeroy,

.
Oh 10,

passed on the 10th

day 01 July, 2003 ,
there witt be submitted to a vote of the
. 'd bd'
peop Ie 0 I 881 su ,.
vision at a General
Election ~o be held in
the County 01 Metgs,
Ohio, at the regular
places
of
voting
therein , on the 4th
day of November,

Board of County
Commissioners
of
·

the County or Meigs,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
passed . on the 3151
day of July, 2003,
there will be submit·
ted to a vote of the
people of said subdlvision at a General
Election to be held t'n
the County of Meigs,
Ohio, at the regular

2003, the question of

places

levying a tax , In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the ben·

therein, on the 4th
day of November,
2003, the question of

of

voting

excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the ben·
efit of Unincorporated

places

voting

areas of Salisbury

therein, on the 4th
day of Novembar,
2003, the question of

Township, excluding
Middleport
and
Pomeroy VIllage for

of

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Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
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any tots or e•penlalhtl rttultt 'from lhfl publication or omlt~on of tn ld~IMmtnt . Correction will be mlde In the fiftt .vtllt~ IICIIUon. • Box numW
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accepts only help wanted ads milling EOE sttndlrds. We witt not knowl~ly tc'ctplsny
I In vlolltlon of the llw.

t..-------,.1

YARD SALE

••

M_FOII_~_Rmr_~-_.1~ L,r.IO_ _",.;:.U~;;;,·_ _.

110
.
1

liELP WMTID

www.comics.com

Iwrighl@ic.net

Full time help needed . Apply
between 10.11 am, Mon.,
Thurs.,

Sat.

L,r.IO-·FOR·H;:;OUSES·RF.N-rr;.,..,ll L,r
__

Apartment Used kitchen cab1nets tor
room , large family room , din· Are now taking Applicalions sate. 740--446 -2637 or 740ing room. With stove. relrig- IO&lt; 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR.. 245·0557
erator and dishwashe r. Applicat1ons are taken r.lll"'"_ _ _ _ __
2 Bedroom, 2 baths, livmg ·Pleasa nt Valley

McCiures

$450 plus deposit.

refer·

r

Monday thru Friday. from

ence required. (304)675- 9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Othce IS

8859

r

111111

•

Word Ads
D•lly In-Colu mn : 1:00 p .m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
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•un1day In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

Should Run

alot. Salt and Addressers wanted immedi· Restaurants.· All locations.
pepper hair and beard. atelyl No experience neces· Jackson Pike, Gallipolis
brown eyes. Seeking female sary. Wor~ at home . Call 740·446-3837; Middleport
tor
, dating, possi- (405)447-6397
740·992-5248 ;
Pomeroy
ble
I . P.O Box 123
740-992·6292.
An awesome job! $6 .·S9 per
hour after training! No expe- Jewelry salesperson·tor
rienc'e neededt Ful l/part Christmas season. Must be
time. Flexible scheduling. dependable, enjoy dealing
Convenient Pomeroy toea- with public &amp; have excellent
C·1 Beer Carry Out permit liOn. 20+ positions avai lmath skills Apply at
lor sale. Chester Township. able. Call 9-9. M-F, 1-888- Acquisition
, 151 2nd Avenue
Meigs County. send letters 974-JOBS
Gallipolis.
No phone calls
of mterest to: The Daily
please.
Area
Rep/local
Route,
N
o
Sentinel, PO Box 729·20,
Selling . $100K Income.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45763..
$12,950 lnve.stment fOr Medi Home Heatth Agency,
: SENIOR PORTRAITS!
Accounts ,
Inventory. Inc seek1ng tull-tme staff
Training, Territory. (800)373· Physical Therapist lor Ohio
· Get You best deal at ;
and West Virginia client
Main Street Photography. 5470.
base. We offer a competitive
511 Main Street,
AVON!
All
A.reasl
To
Buy
or
salary,
benefits package,
Point Pleasant.
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· and 401K E.O.E. $5,000
Call for Appointmenl
675-1429.
SIGN-ON-BONUS . Please
(304)675·7279
resume to 352 Second
Community Action is seek· send
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
ing an EPP/HWAP SPE· 4563t . Attn. Diana Harless,
CIALIST for the Emergency A.N. Clinical Manager
GtV.:AWAY
Services Programs. EPP,
SMOC - ERS,
Building
Cats &amp; kittens.Call 740·446- Inspection. Training and _M_ed_i_H
_o_m_e_H
_e-al-lh_A
_ g_e_n_cy,
9935 leave a message if no Weatherization experience Inc . seeking a Speech
answer.
- - - - - - - · preferred. Good reading , Therapist for the Gallipolis,
comprehension. 0 ,,·0 area. We olfer a com. breed, writing.
Free Puppies : Mll&lt;ed
training, organizational and pelitive salary, benefits
2· m.e. Ios and 2 Iema Ies. computer
skills a MUST.
Please call ( 740~992· 0640
package, and 401K. E.O.E.
Send or deliver resume and Please send resume to 430
Friendly tamale cat spayed references to GMCAA. Second A'venue, Gallipolis,
&amp; declawed . 740-446·1944 anention Sandra Edwards, OH 45631 , Attn: Diana
leave a message.
80 10 N. State Route 7· Harless, Clinical Manager.
Cheshire, Ohio, 45620 by - - - - - - - Friendly male white cat. 2 11·03·03. GMCAA is and Now Hiring· AN . LPN &amp;
years ·old, litter tralned.)40· EOE.
Home Health Aides for local
446-3897.
- - - - - - - - ·Driver wanted- need good homeheallh agency. apply at
Kittens looking lor loving drivers record (no COL), 2·3 33105 Hiland Ad., Pomeroy,
home. Aprox 8 weeks Old. days a week, 740·99.2·1397 (740)992·0990 M·F. 8·
4:30pm
At. 141 in Centen~ry. 740- leave message.
446·4753.
Earn money for Christmas Now taking applications at
Regular Size King Mattress by selling Avon call Joyce the Gallipolis Plant tor driv·
to fit watert&gt;ed-speclal sized. 304·675·6919
ers at the Columbus plant.
(304)675-1251
CDL:s required. For more
Emplovmenl Oppprtunitv·
info call 740·446-1594
To good home: 7-8 month Cgmb!ned Mejgs Cgunty
mix·mostly Doberman male HealthCommlssjqner/
Part-lime position available.
pup. Call Angie (7 401 992· HeatthQepartmeot
approximately 5 hours a
9513
Admjnjstrator
week for a Support Group
Experienced
Health Facilitator and occasional
Commissioner/Administrator High School Presenter. This
needed to direct the Meigs is a contract position without
County Health Department benefits. Support Group is
FOUND
(with 20+ staff member~) . held in the evenings.
Male Australian Shepherd Must be able to write com- Position requires experience
with blue eyes. (304)675petitive grant proposals and working in a social service
7264
multi-task. Possess expert· setting and familiarity in
lse
in budgetinQ and liscal dealing with persons in cri·
Found: Male black dog, very management;
computer pro· sis. Interested applicants
nice. Small wlstub tail. ticiency; excellent
wfitten may replay to: Personal!,
Found on Clay lick Rd. Call and varbal (public/interper- P.O.
8o.l( 454, Gallipolis, OH
tne dogpound.
sonal) communication skills; 45631.
·
expertise in researching &amp; - - - - ' - - - solving problems; familiarity Residential
Treatment
with ef'(lergency procedures, Facility, now hiring Direct
assessment and State regu· care workers &amp; one cook
lations; organizational s~il ls. position needed tor boys
expertise in policy develop- program. Pay oased on
ment and program planning, experience. Call 740- 379.
knowledge of public health; oo ask for lisa.
Oct. 31 &amp; NOv. 1·2, from 9· experience fn human rela· -83- - - - - - 5pm. 5 miles S. on 218 from tiona/conflict management. BNIPT LPN/PI
At.
7. Glr.ls/womens Must be an active partici· PT AN &amp; LPN/PT &amp; FT
coats/jackets, Quilts, bed· pant In County's total health Desired, Enjoy Flexible
din , lots of Items t s.
t:are delivery system plan; Sc_hedullng &amp; A Rewarding
be Involved In lntrastructure Career In A Homelike
SALE. - l'oMEROYIMIDDLE development and t&gt;lcHerror· Atmosphere, Many Benefits,
Ism preparedness; collabo· Competitive
Pay,
across
rate
with
State~ocal
social
Protesslonal
Applicants
May
Roul.
124
Racine
from
high
school. serv Ice agencle• , bu. lnoaa , ~pply Dally, Mon.·Sun., 9·
Collectibles. antiques, lllh· community ·organizations,' 4pm, Ravenswood Care
providers. Center, 1113 Washington
-• ld C
1 eet healthcare ,
lng,
hoUISGIIO
·
ome
Confidentiality
required.
S!., RavonM•ood,
WV,
October 31·November 1.
....
Minimal odYcationol require- (304)273-9482,
(Across
WANT'fD
ment: Master's Degree in Ritchie Bridge, At. 2 N., Lear
__.,I PYbllc Heolth or rola1od Buatnoaa on Right) como
1"_ _ _ro_B_uY
tleld. Salary commensurate Join Our Teamt You'll Sa
Absolute . Top Dollar: U.S. with experience with a base Glad You Dldl
Silver,
Qold Coins, pay ol $35,000 pluo bonellla. - - - - - - - - or ·o.
Prootsete. Diamonds, GOld C"rronl
..
wrmer Me1gs Tha Community Cheat
Rings,
u.s. currency,· . County resident preferred. Buyer's Guide is now
M.T.S. Coin Shop; 151 Submit reeume and five pro· accepting applications tor
second Avenue, GallipoliS, telllona! relerencea to oUtside aales r8presantaMalga County Board of lives. Requires excellent
740 .446-2842.
Health, 112 E. Memorial customer raiatlon skills, hOnBaby sitter wan,led In my Or!ve, Ftomeroy, Ohio 48789 . 81 ty '&amp; dependability. To
home, must. be reaponslbte by 11·05·03.
apply:, bring In or mall your
and over 21 . Call 740·446· Experienced full·tima grill· resume to: The Com'muntty
8621 .
prop cook .. Doy ahlft, rotating Choat Byyar'o Guido 28
weekends. 40+/houra, vaca· Looust Street, Gallipolis OH
tionlbeneflts.
Send· 45831 .
resume/salary requirements : : - - - - - - - to: Job F'.O. Box 297 Rio Trucking company Is seek·
Grande OH 45674.
lrlg experienced aeml·lractor
trailer drlver1. Local runs,
NHd 7 !adles to sen Avon, experienced drlvera only.
Call740-448·3358
&lt;;aii74C-8B2-7774.
weight but not

'

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110 HELP WAI'mD
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CLASSIFIEDS
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Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
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Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446·2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
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Offtee 11o~~

r

•r

•

TO
Place
Your

r

ell! of Molga County levying 8 tax, In tevytng • tax, tn the
purpose
of
for the purpose of
' excess 'of the ten mill . excess of the ten mill
Maintaining and oper·
providing and main- limitation, lor tho ben- limitation, lor tho ban- ating cemetorlea
talntng senior clti- altt of Melga County ell!
of
Rutland Said tax being: 2 An
zona Hrvlces or facli· for tho purpose 01
Townahtp lor the Fire additional tax of 0.5
milt 11 1 rate not
11111 (Melgo County Malnonanco, capitol protection
Council on Aging, conotructlon, " and Satd tax being: 2 A exceeding 0.5 milia
Multlpurpooo operation of Carleton renewal olen oxlottng for each one dollar of
·lnc.,
Senior
Clttzeno School and Melgo tax of 1 mttt at • rate valuation,
which
Center
tnduat•loo Workohop not exceeding 1 milia omounto 10 !tva conto
Sold tox being: 2 A for peroono wtth lor each one dollar of ($O.OS) lor each one
which riundrod dollaro of
renewal of • tax ol 1 Mental Reterdation valuation,
mill at 1 rata not and Devatopmantol amounto to ton conto valuation, for ltve (S)
Dloobllltlea
($0.10) lor each on•
Th 0 Poll1 f
oxcoe dl ng 1 (one ) Sold tax betnn·, 2 An h d d d tt
f yoaro.
or
mllto for each one
•
un re
o oro o
oald Elactton will
dotlor of valuation, additional \IX of 2 vatuotton, for five (5) open at e; 30 o'clock
which omounto to ton milia ·II 1 rote not ·yaoro. The Polio ior om ·ond ramotn open
oonto (10.10) for aoch .•.x-chodntnogdo2ttomrlollfovlool~ oatd Elaction twllkl until 7:30 o'clock pm
ana hundred dollaro
open at 1:30 o'c oc
of ootd day.
of valuotlon, lor\!illva · uation,
whtch am and remain open
order of tho B1111rd
Th Pot 1
amounto to twant~ until 7:30 o'clock pm
11 11
1M 1
(•)
orI\ conto (10.20) lor •••
oCounty,
•• Ohio.
ono, o • go
• yoora.
•
aaid
ltactlon
of II ld ,doy.
open at 1:30 o'clock' on• hundl'ld doltoro
order of thl Boord John
N.
thlo,
om and remain open of valuation, for flva o ltaottono, of Molg1 . Chalrperaon
until 7:30 o'clock pm ~J1 ~1 "':i!!'~0",." 11~:,\ ~:~~ty, 0~~·
lhll, Alta D. Bmlth, Dlraotor
Of llid doy,
I 30 , I k
(10) 7, 14, 21,28
By order of the Bllllrd open II : o c oc
ChalrperiOn
of 11 1 1 of M11
·om and ram1ln open Rill D. Smith, Dil'lctor
go unlit 7:30 o'clock pm (10) 7, 14, 21,28
Counaotty 0°nh 10•
·
John ' N. ·
lhlo, of oald day.
By order of tho Board
Chotrperoon
Public Notice
Rita D. Smith, Director of Eloctlono, of Melgo
County, Ohio.
(10) 7, 14, 21, 28
John
N.
lhle, NOTICE . OF ELECChtlrperaon
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
Rita D. Smith, Director EXCESS OF THE TEN
(10) 7, 14, 21 , 28
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code,

,

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

r

Board of Township · peopte o1 sat'd su bd'tTrustees
of the vision at a General
Township of Rutland, Elaction 10 be held In
Rutland,
Ohio, the Township of
passed on the 1St 'day
Salisbury, Ohio, at the
of August, 2003, there
will be submitted to a regu 1ar P1aces 01 vo1•
ing therein, on the 4th
vote of the people of _stay of November,
said subdivision at a . 2oo 3, the question of
General Election to
1 1
t
h
evy ng a tax, n
be held
In
t e
Township of Rutland,
Ohio, at the regular

underthrew
Moss
and
Michae l Lewi s ca me up with
the interc ~ ption , giving th.e
Eagles the perfect opponum:
ty to retake the lead.
.:
They did when Donovan
McNabb threw a 4-yard TD
to Jon Ritc hie .
•
"'(o u can't blame Chad.
Chad did not lose the gam~
by any stretch of the imagina;
tion." Edwards said. "It's a ft
of us. We didn't execute welf
enough in the fourth quarter.'~
That is an understatement:
Though Edwards sa id aftec
the game Pennington lo,oked
rusty, he cannot shoulder ali
the blame.
:
For starters. the defense did
11othing right. missing tack~
les ; blowing assignments and
getting caught out of position
throughout the game. Th~
interception gave the Eagles
the ball at their 43, but the
Jets didn't come close tQ
holding them .
;
The Eagles finished wit~
194 yards rushing- wtth an.
average of 6. I yards a carry
- and had 8 1 yards on the·
ground in the fourth quarter,
Another as toni shing stat:
Philadelphia had the ball
I 0:44 in the fourth period to
just 4: 16 for the Jets.
Edwards said he might
make c ha nges defensively
against the New York Giants
thi s week. He cou ld be without two
more starters:
Defensive end John Abraham
had an MRI on his strained
right gro in and linebacker
Mo Lew is had an MRI on his
hip and back.
"You've got to find a way
to make plays ," Edwards
said. "That's all you can ask
. of the players . .Yo u can't
make them better players.
They are as good as they can
be and you just have to put
them in a position where they
can m ake plays. If we can do
that . we'll start winning
games again."

CLASSIFIED

© 2003 by NEA, Inc.
•'='-~----..,

1141

BuSINESS

I
L._ _,.;l'RA,;;;;;;;ININiiiiG;;;,-".
"
Gallipolis Career Collage
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367.
1·800-214-0452
www.gallipoliscareercollflge com
Reg lt90-05·1274B.

1'76

.

2 bedroom, LRIDR/K, bath. Phone No is (304)675-!?806 Anttques MahOgany Armo1re
dresser &amp; Mahogany
utility room, central ai r. gas E.H.O
Secretary Curto Catunet
heat.
storage
shed.
Immediate occupancy avail- Tara
Townhouse Call 645-4053
,able. · 42
Henkle . Apartments. Very SpaCious. Buy or sell R1venne
{)
Reterence/deposit requ1red . 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1 Ant ques. 1124 East Matn
1
740·446·9313
0
1/2 Bath , Newly Carpeted. on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740·
2br. House. Reference Adull Pool &amp; Baby Pool. 992·2526. Russ Moore
vc
required. $350. month rent, Pat10, Start $385/Mo. No owner
+ $350. Oepos1
t No Pets. Pets, Lease Plus Secunry ~~~------,
Deposit ReQUired . Days . 540 MJS(.'Fl.J.A~
(304)675-5576
740-446-3481 . Eventngs
MF..ROIA.,'f)ti:fo:
3 bedroom house tor rent. 740·367-0502.
$45.0 a month + deposit .
Rodney Village II. 740·446- Two efficiency apartmer.ts 1n 4 P1ece Bed Room Suit. like
new. new mattress $300. 4
4543.
town Conveniently located Tires P215-75Rt5 ltke new
3 Sr. house lor rent. Located on Second Ave Downstatrs $60 13041675·5022
on Sanders Drive. $550 per Apartment IS $250 and the
month . Deposit and refer- upstairs apartment is S275 Bookcase , chest drawers .
ences
required. Call per month. Rent 1ncludes dresser. entertainment ceoWiseman Real Estate 740· water. sewer and gas. Call ter. hideabed . refrigerator.
Wiseman Real. Estate 7~0- stove . and m~e rowave stand,
446 _3644 .
446·3644.
740·446·9742
4 br. 1 1/2 baths. Located on ~~;;;,.;;,.~----,
·
---:..._~___::...__ __
!!:~~------. Jim Hill Rd. 3br, tilt windows, SA . 141 near Centenary.
SPA(.'E
Chain saw- Homelile 240
PRon~ONAL
FUR RENT
. 18" bar. two kerosene
fenced yard, carport. one $700 per month. Deposit &amp; __
heaters. 20" natural gas
___
SERVICE'S
owner_ Call for Details. reference required . Call
Wiseman Real E'state at Commerc 1al property lor space heaters . Mavy duty
(304)675·2578
740-446-3644.
rent- a store tront 1n log splitter: double ac!IOn cyl
TURNED DOWN ON
downtown 24x6' hog turrowtng crate.
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS\? New Starter Log t-:tomes. wl For sale or rent- 4 bedroom Htslorical
No Fee Unless We Win!
1 acre Ready to go house in Pomeroy. $450 a Pomeroy. Oh tac.ng nver. metal toolbox tor lull s1ze
truck, (740)742-3167
1-868-582·3345
$27,000. 740·256·9247 or month rent. $400 security (740)589-7122
740-645-0870
I{ I \I I "i I \II
deposit, no pets, stove. !rig. Mobile home lot. will take 14 Dtamond Engagement ring
appraisal 740-256Nice 1-Bedroom home 1n &amp; dishwasher, (740)949· or 16 wides. $125 month. wtth
1610
7004
Country setting. Great for a
740·446-0175.
starter or retirement, afford· Nice new home, 3 br, 1 bath.
Estate Heatrola Coai/"Nood
\IIIU 11\'lll"il
able (304)576-2'201 alter garage. No pets. Deposit &amp; ,;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;~
large heat stove. Works well
3 Or., 2 bath. appliances. 6pm
S150 740-446-7484 or 740·
reference required. 740HOUiEHOLD
nice condition. Central-heat.
245·5114 ,
339·0707.
aprox . 1,900 sq. ft. Asking )320 Moo[\.E HoMES
Gopos
Firewood for sale. $30 a
$69.000. 740-379-9887.
St. At . 141. 2 bedroom. living
&amp; dining room. LQ. kitchen Furniture hand crafted alder load. S75 cord. 740-256appliances, front &amp; wood luton·tek dining table 6663.
3br. 2 full baths. deck. 1997 Clayton 14x50 mobile w/all
t&gt;ack
porch.
$485 mo .. S400 with two leaves-4 stdM 2
home.
very
good
condition
.
whirlpool tub. Located near
deposit
.
740·446-4254
or armchairs. matching bar Firewood. seasoned oak
s·chool in Gallia. Owner Includes: washer/dryer. A/C, 740-446-0205.
$20. pickup toad .You cut you
stools, computer desk &amp; file haul. Not responsible lor
furniture .
financing is available. underpinning,
cabtnet, wedgewood china accidents. [304)675-6440
$9,500. Phone-740·256·
(304)675·1352
1734.
ape. place set1ing complete.
JET
Call 645-4053
4 Bedroom 2 Bath Pomeroy
AERATION
MOTORS
bedroom
on
rented
lot,
2
Ohio
View
2 bd. wlw carpet, air. porch Good Used Appliances. Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
does
not
have
to
be
moved.
Photo/Information online
Very nice. no pets. In
and Stock Call Ron Evans. 1·
www.ORVB.com
code $5,9oo. Call 740.446·361 7. Gallipolis. 740-446-2003 or Reconditioned
800·537·9526
Guaranteed.
Washers.
80603. Call [740)992-3650 2001
Fleetwood ~7;;40~·:;«;,:;6'-·':,:4;:09;:;._ _ _...., Dryers. Ranges. and
Doubtewide. 3 br, t bath . all
APAR1'1\1ENTS
Refrigerators·, Some start at King
Wood
burning
4 BEDROOM, 4 BATH appliances. $35.000 or
fOR R£Nr
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 Fireplace Insert. $200. 740.
HOUSE! Foreclosure only assume note. Move or lot
Vine St .. (740)446-7395
256-1504.
$9.900. For listings Call 1· rent option_ Located by
1
&amp;
2
BR,
$295
to
$359
per
600·719-3001 E&lt;l. F144
Vinton_ 740·983·1900.
Heat·N-Gio Propane Insert.
month, plus utilities. Near Maximum output . 24,000 NEW ANO USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Ptpe Rebar
Beaulitul Dream Home 97 Redman t6x72, $13,995; Holzer, no pets. 740·446· BTU. Ewcellent Condilton For Concrete, Angle.
2957.
3200sq. ft . with wrap around 96 Uberty 14x70 $7,995;
$1,000. OBO. (304)895- Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
'
deck, upstairs ba!cony. 4· 1i2 _c_ai_I7_4_o_-7_o9_·_11_6_6_.·_ _ 1 and 2 bedroom apart· 3769
Grating
For
Drains.
acres, 4t&gt;r. 2ba. lar~e living Cole's Mobile Homes
ments. furnished and unfur- ----~--­ Driveways &amp; Wal"'-'ays. L&amp;L
room wlfireplace. dining us so East. A.thens. Ohio. nished, security deposit IT PAOV. Di n~ng Room by Scrap Metals Open Monday.
required. no pets. 740 .992 . Drexel. Oval table with 3 Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
room, 2 car garage. Owner
22 18.
leafs. 6 c~airs. plus hutch Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
finanCing Is available. 45701 . 740-592·1972
$500. (304)675-2090 Leave Thursday, Sah.irday &amp;
(304)675·1352
New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BR 2 bedroom apt.
in Message.
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down Centenary. appliances fur- - - - - - - - - Sunday. (740)446-7300
and &amp;295/mo. 1·600-691· nished, utilities paid, expect Late
model
almond
Office Fumltur.
6777
electric. clean·$350 month. whirlpool washer. $85: Hot New. scratch &amp; Dent
Call 740·256-1135.
Point washer, Whirlpool &amp; Savtt 70%. 1·800-527·4662
No Problem Sale- Want a
GE dryers. all white. $65 Argonaut 519 Bridge Street.
new sectional nome? No BEAUTIFUL
APART· each _Call after 6pm. 740· Guyandotte!Huntington. MIF
Problem. Need fou ndation MENTS AT BUDGET 44 6·906S
All ,..., Hlate tdvertltlng and septic? No Problem. PRICES AT JACKSON ----~--BUILDING
In thle newepllptr Ia
Need utilities run or drive· ESTATES, 52 Westwood Late model Roper washer. L---S·I.JPI'LIES~-:;__.1
' subject to lht F. .r..
Fair Hou.. ng Act of 1H8 way? No Problem. WBnt big Drive from $297 to $383. G.E. dryer, Hot point washer, which rNku It 111-ot~l to savings on a 2003 model. Walk to ShOp &amp; movies. Call &amp; Kenmore washer. All white Block. brick, sewer pipes.
No Problem. Cote's Mobile 740·446·2568.
Equal $65 each. Call after
windows, lintels. etc . Claude
tdvtrtt1e "•ny
Homes. U.S. 50 Eaat, Housing Opportunity.
6 p.m. ?4G-446·9066.
Winters. Rio Grande. OH
prtterenoe, limitation or
d~rtmhWion bliNd on
Athena, Ohio. 740-592-1972 F
Call 740.2•5·5 121.
3
Mollohan Carpet. 20~ Clan..
rae., oolor, rellgton, •• Since 1967, Where You Get urnl8hed room apt. over1
looking the river. Call 7• 0· Chapel Road, Pofter, Onlo.
PETs
flmlllal s1111.11 or n1tlon11 YQur Money's Worth
7·______ (740)446-7444 1-877-830·'
.:44=6:.:·2::2=8:..:
FOR SALE
I
origin, or 1ny lntentton to
m•ke •ny euch
Lars &amp;
Graclouallvlng . 1 and 2 bed· 9162. Free Eattmates, Euv
preferenctt, HmltMion or .._
ACREAGE
room apartments at VIllage financing, 90 dayaaame as 2·A~C Male Ba8.g111. 3 yra .
dltorknlnallon ...
Manor and Rlvertlde caan. VIall Master Card. otd. lnDI1n Hilla and Jlggs
Lot for nle In Racine, Apartments In Mlctdleport. Drive- I· little aave alot.
breed. 3 yr1 . old 740-109·
thle ntwepaper will not
From
$2711-$3&gt;18.
Call
7&gt;101881.
knowtngt~ aooept
992·508•. Equal Housing Thompsons Appliance ·:&amp;
for .....
AKC Raglatar«! Yellow Lab
•tate which le In
==~;===~ :::!::~:::.:::::::..._____
Opportunltloo.
Ropalr-675·7388.
For solo, pupplea,
re-conditioned
automatic
born · Q;, 5103. 7
violation ot 1M I8W. Our
16
Utv~
f'11ow Taking Applications- washers &amp; dryer~, refrigera· males, , female. S2501eac, ~
rwdtre tre ·hereby
~
35 West 2' Bedra:om tors, ' gas and electric 1.$0-367-0038 or 740-367·
Informed that 111
FOR RINr
Townhouse Apartments, ranges, air conditioners, and 7202.
-llnp -!I'd In
!nctudea Water Sewage, wringer waahers. Will do
this new~paper are
7 448
old.
53
nallablt on •n equal
1 AKC BeaQioo 8 ~~M:iDBu;e:;i;~e~~~ ~::::
..::':...·_ _501Mo
_ _··_ 4C-__ · ~;~r ~~ ;'~~o=~·· ~ .Wormed &amp; ahota $100. Coli
opportunity b.M.
7&gt;10-446-4172-worl&lt; or ~&gt;I04% down, 30 yeara 0 8.5% One bedroom apt. 76 VIne
256-16t.9-homo.
Used
furniture
store,
130
apr.
For
llstlngallnformatlo.n
Street
Gallipolis.
Cell
r.w.
---:-----Bulavllle Pika. Manreaaes, AKC Reglalertd· mat,e
House tor sale by owner: 4 call 1-600-719-3001 Ext. 357_7888 _
couches, Boaton Terrier. 7 months old.
dressers,
bedroom, 2 bath , ,for addi- 1709
tlonill information or to vieW - - - - - - - - ' - ·Twin Rivera Tower' Ia accept· bunkbeds, bedroom suites, Hod all ohom, $225. 7&gt;10·on line www.orvb.Corrt- 2 bedroom nome In Rutland, !ng applications for walling recliners, Grave manu· 441.0182 aftor 5:3opm.
740-4"'6~782 .
codet10903
or
call out at hfgh water, $325 plus list lor Hud·subalzed, 1· br, men11.
(740)992-2828 or 7&gt;10-992· references , &amp; d,eposlt, apartment, call ~75·6879 Galllpolla OH. Hoyra 10· AKCnt ~ Beagkoo, 8 wk.
t740)992-0309
EHO
4pm. S1op oy .
· old, $100, (7&gt;40)11924te9
3664

r

r

I

~NIDJS IL.,t'.o-·ro•"•::.~.ALE--r~

:i!S Serious

People Wanted
Who want to LOSE weight
We Pay You Cash tor the
pounds you LOSE!
Sate. Natural, No Drugs.
08;;;00o;·:2;:0;.:1,;:·0~8,::32.__ _....,
1180
WANTF.D

To Do
t..------_.1
AHordable Service. Hauling,
painting, power washing,
driveWay repair, seal coat·
ing, gutters. chimney,
plumbing. Jack of all trades.
30yrs. exp. Senior Discount.
Free Estimates. (304)8822196 , (304)377-8266
-- - - - - - - f!Ctey pAINTERS

Interior. &amp; ExteriOr
Senior Citizens Discount
Residential, Commercial &amp;
mobile homes.
Roots, barns, pressure·
washing.
Experience &amp; References
available
304-895-3074
Free estimates call M-S
8am·7pm.
-------Sit with Elderly, light chores
or odd jobs. (304)675·7460
------~­

Will do t&gt;abysitting in my
hOme. link and private pay
accepted. Call (304)675·
6449

----~--­

Will set for the elderly or dis·
abled. Day or night.
Monday-Friday. Call Jan
675·7792 Cell 1·70"'·206·
7,07
1 I ' \ \t I \I

rto

A."~·~
o•""'

Located at 1151 Evergreen
Dri\18 Point Pleasant. WV

B1JsJNF3i
OPPoRn.JNny

L.o_:=;::::;;~

r

to
011
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommsnds tha
ou do bualness with peo
18 you know, and NOT t
end money ttirough th
all until you have inveati

::·'~ed=lh=a~o~ffo~n~n;·;:=::

r

MONEY
· ~·--..;rotlitiLolliiiANiiio-_.1
~

Need extra caah? We are
the loan apeclallet, we Don't
speculate, good or bad creel·
lt axcepted. There are no
fees, fast approval, and IQW
lnterest rates. For mora Into
call toll free 1-886-682·
6875.

r•o

t..------_.1

FOR SALE

r·

t..--itllil.iiiiiiiito-,.1

=::..:..:.:..:=..:.:..=----

i

r:

•dv•rtl"'"'""'

j

:

r

.. __,_,_____ ,·-·-- -J-~-···-----.--------------•

�Page 84 • The Dail y Senti nel

Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

..;;~.-....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~A~n~n~o~u~n~c~~=m~e~n=t=s~~
'

i ALLEY OOP .

Common Grou nd Missions
wiU be holding Bibk Study
~-el)'

'

·Phillip
Alder.

Sunday from

gle

p::~:

.ALLtB

Nose .

es . Call 740·645·4155 or

(304)675·7004 or (304)675· .:__ _ _ _ _ _ _
3781
Seasoned firewood for sale.
~
FRum; &amp;
Stick and Stones. Call 7401~
VEGti ABLES
446·6783 or 740·645·2480.
I \lnl.._,l 1' 1'1 II s
.'-&lt;. I I\ I .._, 14 It 1,

•

Pota toes lor sale 50# $10.

Mon-Sat ..

65002

NeW Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

--------

• Re placement

1994 Nissen 4x4, 90K, AJC,

Windows • Roofing
C0ty1MERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

alarm ,

Oh,

rlO

FARM

~

EQUIPMmf

LIV£SJOCK

Are you 65 or older?

miles.
i997 Jeep Wrangler. Black,
4-cyl., s1d .. 72K miles.

3 Year old . R eg istered
Jersey Bull. 740·992· 7603

59 Jeep &amp; 6 ~ Jeep. Both
run, both have ha rdto ps.
Also Tow Dolly $2,100 740·

379-27()6,

r

40

A mu st see! Two Tennessee i 998 Ya maha
Walki ng horses. Broke , gen·
lie , &amp; extra smooth . 4 yr. old
Gray; 3 yr. ol d Tr ue Blue
Roam. Quarter Horse, bay
bree d. ve ry gentle. 740-367-

If so, you qualify for a

Se:nior Discount*

mi60~~A-U_Il_)~~=-A-RTS-.~&amp;=-ACCK'lS&lt;lRIES

·--iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-

Cordardle sheep. buck ram
co ming
yea rs
old.
3
(740)742_1315
~:::...:::_:::_:__ _ _
Mori1z 3 horse sla nt load
co mbo Stock Tra il er $3.500
ca ll 740·245·5 978 leave a
message.

Automotive part s_ II your
looking for engines or tra nsmissions give me a can at
740-446-0519 .

C A.\ •II'EKS

==:c::._____

200 1 Keystone Ultra Light
Registered Poll ed Hereford 2511. Must sell·, make otter on
Bull call. Exc ellen t bull or
cl ub caH prospect. 740-367755 4 or 740-339-011 2 .

r

10

H,w&amp;

$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS.

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Uncond itional lifetime guarantee. Loca l re ferences furnished . Established 1975.
Ca ll
24 Hrs . (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproo fing ·

Hondas, Chevys. Jee ps. etc!
Cars from $500. For list1ngs
C&amp;C
Genera l
Ho me
1-800-719-3001 ex t 390 1
Ma111 tenence- Pamting, vinyl

i&gt;unbap rEi me~ -i&gt;entinel

1984 Chevy Ca price 79.000
m iles. V-8 auto. a/c. all
powe r. new tires. good work
car. S800. (304)882-3652

• Once you have signed up for the Senior Discount, your renewal notice will reflect your discount.

sidi ng, carpentry, doors,
win dows, ba th s, mobi le
home re pair and more. For
tree es tima te ca ll Chet, 740·

992·6323.

City/State/Zip --------~-----'----,,-----~-

Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ______________

i 997 Mil s. Spyd er conv
61.000 miles. au to. 51o,ooo
OBO. 740-446-8832.

I

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

1998 Chevy S·1 0 Supercab,
air, tilt, cruise. $6,995. 1996
Ford range r supercab, V-6 .
auto, air $5,995. 1996 Jeep
Che rokee 4dr, auto. air, lilt.
cruise, 4wd. $6, 995. 1997
Chevy Cavalier 2dr. Roll ey
sport, auto. ai r, S3.995. 1993
Buick Lasabre. all power
$1 .995. Rivervie w. Motors.

Scanered

Chevy

All

Cavalier,

lmm~diata

Mailing Out Sales 8rocnuresl
Free Supplies, Poslage!

Stan l mmedi a tel~l
Ge!"lline Owor1unit~ !
For Free Information.
Ca ll Toll Free·

' ·800·357· 1110

pot physical ~','
del'fiOndrng. Material, 10011.
trainir"'! incl. 58.000 irrvesln'lllnt
secured by inven tory.

1·8f&amp;.210.24t8
AUTHENTIC $2000.$7000
pvr \'o'&amp;ek income potential
for you 7.'24 reoottled message
800-366-1375 811. 4970

'Tog Good To &amp; Tru&amp;-Don'l CaW

,.

$700.

13100 Can Deli'" · (~56) 776·9436

9milr5 from Pt. Pleasant
on Sand Hill Road.

Sizes 5'x1 Q'
· to 10'x30'
Hours

7:00AM-8:00PM
!11411 mo. pel

New &amp; Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, wv 25271

1-800-822-0417

Trucking

Flreblrd $3,995 . 23 vehicles

In stock up to $4,395

r

COOK MOTORS
740-448-Q103

740-985·3564

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

My money is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance

$23,000. NQ-388·8869.

Louted
1391
School. Gallipolis .

Advertise
in this .
space
for $5o
per month

Safford

(

'

f'ro-BOI'IEIV\D
f'.DW£ 1

'lES?...
YE S '

and Financial Services.
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843-5264 ."

Pomeroy [agles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday

&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
[arly birds start

6:30 .

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

I

~--'"' t~ ·

Let me do 1! for you I

liNDA'S PllrfflNG

Last Thursday of

every month

L-------------~ · u_~~~~~·

·PEANUTS

stb

GOOD MORNING! I-IALLOWEEN IS
CONtiNG SO WE'RE J.lERE TO TELL
TIIE''6REAT PUMPKIN ''

All pack $5.00 •
Brl'ng this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FR[E

..

n

CARPENTER
SERVICE

M

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodel ing

• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

l TI-IINK IT WOIJLD BE
SETTER TO ASK FOR TI-lE.
COOKIES FIRST

fA

BETTY
HE CAN'T
Sl&lt;ATE AND
~E:S SOA'·
SPOKEN ...

FreeEstimates

,.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
1

ma

...
. .

740-992-5232

1995 FO RD E350 CUBE
BOX
TRUCK.
CALl
(740)446·9 41 6 . M-F 9·5.

Vulnerable: Neither
West

~o rth

Pas s

Pass

Pass

4 1.t.

All pass

Ea~&gt;;t

Bedoulno

21 Tar

Info

60 Makes Into
lei! her

DOWN

24 Jaoloua

32
33
3A
35

goddeoo
Auto rod
Forest
grazer
Chilled
Brat
Edible root
Baseball

1 Bonn Mro.
2 Charged

partlcleo
3 Jo sibling
4 Masked

owordomen

"'...

..

' GARFIELD

.

,;z

.

zvzzzzzzzz.e
.
'
1'0A$1'1!R! .. .

IOIIER&amp;,I NOW ANI'

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

1'HeN YOU Ciri!'l'
A MeAN ONe

J&amp;L
Eledric

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Ph 740·H2•0IIn
Cell 740·5111-1 073

(10'x10' 610'x20')

ROBERT
BISSELL
COISTRUCDIN
• New Homes

LIBRA (Sept. 23•0ct. 23) - Othirt will be
lOOking out tor your lnlerftta today II you
flrtt lhow them tl'lat you're looking oul tor

QRIZZWELLS
all-ffi.l~! •. I rcti~D
A~\~A

the lr1. Thl1 11 a 1u reflr1 tarmu la t ~at
1lway1 workllor geHing what you want.

&lt;;\~~~
~GE'?

.-------l"n! SOUP TO NUTZ

~~~
1\1~ \..AI&lt;E !

• Complete

Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

\

-.-'lllrthdo\Y:

Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2003
By Bernice Bede Osol
Small. unrelate d opportunities could band
together in the year ahead and form into
one large significant happening. Once you
see the co nnection . you 'll instinctively
know how to put the parts together to
make a who le.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Your personality, charm and brig ht disposilron are
your three greatest assets today tor suc cesstul advance men t. espec1ally if you're
sellmg or promot1ng someth 1ng rn wh1ch
you truly believe .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) ~ The
aspects indicate today that you could ben efit greatly from a peripheral happening
and profit in some manner tram a devel·
opment in which you weren't initially
included .
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) - What
will be very evident to those wit h whom
you'll be involved today is that your leadership qualities are very pron ounced . and
they 'll look to you tor guidance both com mercia ll y and socrally.
20-Feb. 19) 'AQUARIUS (Jan
Observers will be closely sct utin1 zr ng you•
mode ol behavior tnday. but quile for tunately you 'll be at your best and the way
you conduct yo urself will w1n the approval
uf on lookers.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You could
be privy !ada~ to some val uabl e inl0rmation that you·ll be able to use at a future
date. Chances are il'll come to you from
two separate sources. out It will have JUSt
une applicatio n
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - It's up to
you to ta ke a more commanding role
today in an arrangement ..yhere you Shere
a vested interest with som eone. Your Input
can provide momentum tor the venture
TAU RUS (April 20-May 20) - With a little
attention and loving care. harmony and
order ca n prevail In a valued re lationship
that needs a· bit of tending . This important
associate is worth going out ul your way
lor.
GEMINI {May 2 1-June 20) - Chance~
are ynu will be far more astute rn bus1ness
matters today than you were yesterday. so
if you didn't pruduce all that you wan!Bd to
then , make the neceSsary efforts now
CANCER (June 21 -Juty 22)- Cupid has
an eye, on .)IOU today 11nd it IOo"s ltke he is
going to make sure that every1hlng w111 be
c;omlng up roses for you in the romance
department tor ynu and yours.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Thla Is a. good
da~· to uttllze a port ion of your tfme tor
doing 1omethlng productive that Is more
fun than work . All that Is nfetlua.ry Ia to
make certain what you do challenge• your
creatlv ltlea.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Mak1 certai n yo ~J haveeom1lhlng fun ·on lhl ca llndar today that will aa tla~ your res1le11 .
ap lrlt. II you don't, you could idle your
hourt away, doing notl'llng and feeling dll·

• Garages

Adverlise
in this
space for $25
per month.

AstroGraph

H lllflld.

Ucensed &amp; Bonded

[740) 992~3194
. 992-6635

ace, cash the spade ace, and turn to diamond s. Here. though. East ruffs the th1rd
d1amond and has an easy shift to the club
queen: one down.
Better is to ruff a hearl at trick two , then to
call lor a spad e. When E ;~st plays lhe
jack, you can afford to duck. west wins
the trick, but you are - safe. You win hit
diamond exit. cash the spade ace, and
ru n the rest ol the d1amonds.
Yes, East can defeat the contract by playing the spade' king at trick three , but that
is not w1thout risk - imagine West with
the bare ace.
Fo r tull detail s about the magazine. go to
www.bridg etoday.com.

I·

,.

44 "Futureworld"
n8me
45 Singlet

46 Wins 11
rummy

48 Woy out
49 Sago
26 500 ohMII 50 GMI

5 Perla
aummar

atat
6 Pa11 near
36 Gr111y field · Plkto Peak
37 Actress
7 Grass
- Hatcher
8 Type of
38 Total
broc39 Eyepiece
9 Lower
40 Prof.'s
California
grader
..,....:;.;;,:.:;..,..._

39 Muslcll
nolft
41 Solo
43 Morp;i,..

14 Pauatt
flllero
19 "Good
grief!"
20 Stoln rlller
22 - out
(rncued)
23 Border
1own
(2 wds.)
24 RuohH
25 Light brown

61 RemorM

23 Horror-film
street

27
29

Dealer: North

G

a ,new car

Pomeroy, Ohio

Caii740·BB32.

i

""'

Wf\.1\T t GOT W"-':&gt; IAORE L\\(f.

"Not me!

youln

FOR SALE

1992 Chevy 3/4 ton. 5speed. w/toppe r. $4. 800.

P'&amp;fN TriER.£' DOOE. Tf-11&gt;.-T I

market!~

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

33795 Hiland Rd.

199 1 Fo rd F- 150 la riat.
Excell ent condillon w/top pe r. 132,000 original miles.
· $3,500 firm . 740-446·11 66
or 740·446·0 137.

I~

1-.'1"-ILNX.£..
'fOUl

YOUNG'S

TRUCKS

0.2 Chevy S ilve rado 4WD.
Auto, loaded, extended cab,
exce llent
condition.
Charcoal. 16,000 miles.

1-. PRo 6IJt.lO 1-.HOR~E.'{

HAULING :

High&amp; Dry
·Self-Storage

$_
1,695: 91 Cavalier $1,495:

"(OU !lEeK LEG:.N... C.OLJI.&amp;l 1

"I lost my shirt
\ P-'1!117' in the stock

~- ~eltlile9

91 Geo Storm $795; 95

·THE BORN LOSER
. .,..ft\.fl.. GR"-1/E~ITE, t 5UC.G€.5T "'' 'iF YOU DO !o&lt;OT 1&lt;.1-.1/E MF~O~

"WYs # I Ch evy. Ponli ar·, B ui 1·k . Olds
&amp; Cu stom Van Dealer"

m

740·446-2 487

ENNY CHANCE YA
CANGIMME A
RIDE TO PINEY
CREEK,
DOC?

Dean Hill

R.B.
• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime

20

Bobby -

59 Application

28

Comlc.-

republic
s2 saucepan
53 Mouths,

-

(hyph.)
29 Changes
hair color

30

In biology
54 Novelli!

Dory'sneed - Keoey

----

3f Dlocharge

37 Duct -

10 Thick alice

fight to keep Easl oil the lead.

4577 1

740-949-2217

17 Opened .
18 seal
formally

CELEBRITY CIPHER

The obv ious line is to win with the heart

29670 Bashan Road
R ac ill e, Ohio

Classitieds

96 Corsica _$.2, 195; 96 Neon

Soma. Xena.- snd more ...
Secure onlne uvings &amp; CQI'IVtnience.
Call 886-MJ.-3932 or vi&amp;it

J# b11y q11ilt tops

BARNEY

Hill's Self
Storage

The

evenings.

INTERNET PHARMACY
Free Slllppil!lil!
No prior prascriprion r&amp;q ui~
Get Arnbien, Phli~ le r rnine.

A1hens, Ohio

i'lachlne Quilting · Regulated !itltch
18 Patterns 4.vallab1e
Connie Curnutt
895-39112 !ihop
owner /operator
895-3512 nome

cookie

The second independenlly published
American magazine is Bridge Today. II
has a.varied content. but is wrinan for the
serious tournament player. However. the
main news is that with the May 2003
issue , it changed from a bimonthly that
arri ved Dy snail mail to a shorter monthly
that one downloads fro m the magazine's
Web site. It will be interesting lo-see if this
cost- cullin g strategy works
Here is a deal from Peter Kich line 's col·
umn. If you were sitting Sout h, the declar·
er in lour spade~ . what would be your
plan after West leads the heart queen?
North 's four -spade bid wouldn't meet with
universal app roval. bul if he made a
game-invitat ional bid , South would
accept.
If East has the club ace , there are no
p robl ems. So, place that card with West.
But then. if EaSt wins a trick , he can probably attack clubs with effect. You must

(7410)~i93-61)7ll

22 Years

91 Ford Escor t 4 cyl. 5
Speed , green. Runs good

iffiXlme. A11yooe

Phone

f--'omeroy. Ohio

90 - Grand
Prix,
good
3.1
body/t rans .
Needs
motor. $250. 93 Mazda 323:
100,000K, $850. 740-256·
1487

UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY
ln Concrete Restore,tion Huge

[ast State Street

992·6215

675·3127.

'S600.S900iweekl
T11.1inee pay. Food, Transpot1ation.
lod;iulQ Included

Al08 64

First on paper, then
over the ether

offer. Call 740-256-6 169.
loaded, 72K miles. Call 740-

KY8 76
9 3
QJ I09

: FRANK &amp; EARNEST

66,000 miles. $3,950 or bes't',

2000 Monte Carl o LS. Fully·

E:ast
• K J

¥
•
.

56 Mo. Horne

cattail

a4

A z
t K l0 2
... K 3 2

!::=======~

. 949-1405

(7 40)992;3490
1999

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

i*Free EsUmltBh

You'll
Find
SAVINGS

fi

"

::======~~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
&lt;

GOnER

1996 Grand Voyager, 125K
miles, very good mechanical
con diti on. $4,500 or best
offer. Cal l 740-709·9596 .

•

4

South

740·992-7599

•*ROOFING
' *HOME
MAINTENANCE
I *SUMLESS

1992 Cadillac S eville Sedan.
White. wine leather interior.
107K mil es. 2 ow ners
$2,995. 740-44 6- 0853.

Address ____________________________________

FREE ESTIMATES

WRITfSfl

1985 Toyol a Hatchback,
su nroof, reduce d $75 0.00
good cond. ca ll 740-992·
7580 to see it.

------------------------------------------------Subscriber's Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

can do thia ·

HoME
IMI'ROVI:MIJ&gt;'l~

GRAIN

JDail!' ~rtbune

-'oint f'lea~attt 1\tllt~ttr
The Daily Sentinel

EXT 1847

&amp;

. M&lt;rn&gt;H HoMI·:~

Round ba les of mixed hay.

1-SOo-ROMANCE

1OOcc

Angus Bulls, Hei fers plus
Maine- Angus Stee rs and 95 Jeep Wrang ler, 5-spe ed
Heifers, Top blood linP.s tran smission. Works great
Slate r.un term, Jar;: l&lt; so n. $500 . Ca ll 740-446·32 10.
7 40·286·5395

Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

Train1ngl
F r~te lnlormahu11!
BOQ-331-4555 X 1513

1

4wheeler. excell ent condition.
new engine. r:~ew fires.
$1 .000 OBO . Call 740 -388·
0436 .

70 10 aher 8:00p m.

on your home delivered subscription!

Mall or drop off this coupon along with a copy of you'r photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

MUIDRC)'0 .•1i

58 Er -Bruln

South

740·245·5970

Case
extend a boom.
304 675·3773

START DATING
TONIGHT!

740-742-

1998 Linco ln Naviga1or.
S1ale ;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Red, 4x4 , loaded, 145K

(740)378·6291

~alltpohs

$3,40 0.

3142 .

onock
16 Bulrush or

Opening lead · " Q

199 4 Chevy 1 ton, 4 wd,
Silverad O, flat bed, ·tool
boxes , tow pkg. 10.2k miles
$8000. 619- 770-0493

5 spd., CD, 4" lilt. 32 " tires.

5
A ~ J 5

A 8 7

TFN

800· 446·0842

99 HD Fat boy. lots of extras;
j nlays mini co ndition . $400. 91 Olds Cutlass Sup reme.
Drumset 4 pieoe includes Call 740-446-9954 alte r
Throne/Hats/Crash . $250 . 7 pm .

Route 124 , Reedsville,

51 Purdue, e.g.
52 Jab
55 Gillie YH

"
•

•

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·~.o·~·;·::.,~J ~.,r_....~.~-~.
sA•.LE.~...pll ~.,__
r~ ..r.Wos,.·.&amp;..._.l ~'~~~~~

sentinel
j

25f'Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-44'6'-0842 • 949·1155 Evenings

44 Hindu

myllk:o
47 Mantel

lover

57 Tw~lor

Q
QJ1 0 4 3
8 7 fi ..

MUSICAL

Q~ly, .
,.

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE

One 9 week old Jack
Russe ll
Terrier
puppy,
female $125. Call 740-256·
1652.

honoree

42 " Al ley -1"

North
L0·2li·O:l
rt. 97 532

•
"
•

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

740·441-0865

41 June

12 Actor
- Kruger
13 Sound
15 Aardvark

West

:MONTY

Cellular

puppies. Parents on premis-

~

4 Europo 'a

11 OYI

Enryone Wclrome!

E

11 Prevar~lte
8 ABC rival

;·.:· ~.,·5.00 pe'r·m· ·~.n. 'h.'
{/II,
'J ::~:::e:dm~:~~~:~,~.
..,

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

IO:OOam to I1:00am
at 202 W t Main Strwt in
Pomeroy starting Nm•. 2nd

()n this page for tiS low as

Tfie

The Dai ly Senti nel • Page BS

www.mydallysentinel.com

BRIDGE

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS
.

tuesday, Oct. 28, 2003

by Luis Campos
Ce!ebrr~f Crplier cryp:ograms are c.re111ed lrorr qUot~1005 b)' faiT(IUs ~ puilnd p--SM!t
Ea&lt;:n letter ·n !,e ctphef !t!rd$117 olr10!h&amp;r

Today ·s clue. 0 equals G

" E NKI R

FNK

H 0 LA

FNK

UODNE . "

" SK8' E
FNAB

YTA
LOVEKT

HAE

XKPT

CKFRT

X KPT

ENKIR

FOHH

TKYT

KB HX

E N K G YI

FNO I CRTI ."

NPDK

UP H HR T

PREVIOUS SO~UTION - 'When I was a k1d I lhoughl AI Kaline was
responsible lor the a l~ahn e battery .. - Sportswnl er Howard Cole
(C) 2003 by NEA . Inc. 1Q.28

~::~:t;~' ~cr;tt,-t)V
.. - ~ t-tr~·
i oitt•oi lr~ Cl.\T I. Pf:.!.&amp;AN

_ _:.:=;:._...:;;,~

tl":t ~-.:m~,; • ~r..r: cf +.e
V lew ~r~m~ i "d 'NOte!! ::..t1~ ~~ :o:'11 f~ u r 3im;:.lt worc't

..,..--.....__..-,..

MUF'AS O

I T I D0 i

T

1'1 T .
~

~·

DEflEN

'

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I'V l I

N

•
...--A
- R_M
_ E_N
_ D__,I
0

" ~u n g s !.e r to dad, ' I ne;l!d to

take some extra money to school
today Our teach er IS retring and

we getting her something tc give
tulr. bf\tter •. • •• • • ·''

I I• I .,.t j ,

I _.J,
L-l..-!......!.._l,,_J.

C)

'::o,.oiOI•

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clwckle Qll.,.d
by fillin; in •ho """'"' -c.
you d"""loc&gt; ~ ""' ""' No. 0 bel.,...

2 \uNSG '-M!lf fO R

· ~AN SWE R

S~S ANSWBS

lo -~7-0 I

C;:,bweb - Sa110r- Laic.~· Fropte - BE THERE
·~ave

you ever noticed." or.e cverweight man said to
his !rie1d at the local cvm "most r;ecple at health clubs
ci~ n· t !ocl&lt;. like oe oole -,,~c r.eed to BE Ti-iERE?'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

u~

DD!j
-

'

~
0

·'

.~
~

�. . ..

.

.'

J

Tuesday, October 28,2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

-

Final Prep Footbal.l Computer Ratings and Playoff Pairings
COLUMBUS lAP) - Here are the final

week~

loot·

ball computer ratings from the Ohio High SChool
Athletic Asaociation . Ratings are by division and region
with record and awrage bl-levet points per game (top
eight teams in each region ac:Nance to regional quarUtrfinals):

DIVISION I

DIVISION IV
. •
Region 13-1, Sullivan Black River (8·2) 21 2270. 2,
Apple Creek Wayr1edale (9- 1) 19.1500. 3, Young.
Mooney {8·2) 18.7500. 4',~ Wooster Triway (7·3)
18.5000. 5, Akron Manchester (7·3) 18.0500. 6, Cleve.
VA·St. Joseph (6-4) 17.8500. 7 , Cuya. Falls Valley
Chrislian Academy (9-1) 17.1120. 8, Orrville {6-4)

16.7500. 9, Perry (8·2) 16.6500. 10, Young. liberty (8Harding (10.()) 31 .6000. 3, lakeWOOd Sl. Edward (7-3) 2) I 5.7500.
Region 14-1 , Urbana (9· 1) 24.3000. 2, Upper
27.4350. 4, Ci&lt;lve. GlenvK1el9-1) 24.8940. 5. Cleve. St.
Ignatius (8-2) 24.5-450.6, Strongsville {7-3) 21 .6000. 7. Sandusky (9-1) 23 1890. 3. Wallington (8-2) 21 .7500. 4,
Solon (7·3) 19.8000. 8, LakowOOO (7·3) t8.2500. 9, Delta (9·1) 21.2500. 5, Huron (9 -1) 20 .6500. 6,
Parma Hts. Valley Forgo (6-4) 17.6000. tO, Euclid (6·4) Coldwater (9·1) 20.3500. 7, lima Bath (7·3) 17.7500. a.
Milan Edison (7-3) 16.2000. 9. Ontar~ (8·21 14.9680.
16.8000.
· R"''k&gt;n 2-1. N. Canton Hoover (10.()) 360520. 2. tO , Avon (7·3) 13.2500.
Region 1s-1, Ironton (a-t) 29.7800. 2, CoshOcton
Tol. Whitmer (9-1) 29.8500. 3, Brunswick (9·1 ) 25.7500.
4, Gr""n (8-1) 25.7213. 5, WadswOrth (8·2) 24.1470. 6. (9·1) 22.8000. 3. Martins Forry (8·2) 20.3500. 4,
Tol. OoSales (8-2) 23.0000. 7, Tol. St. John's (7·3) Bellaire (8-2) 20.2210. 5, Williamsport Westfall (9-1)
22.1800. 8, Hudson (9-1) 21.8000. 9, Mass. Jackson (7· 18.5000. 8, Proctorville Fairland (7~) 1•.!5600. 7,
Granville (7·3) 14.4500. 8, Ironton Rock Hill (7·3)
31 19 6000. 10. Meoina (6-4) 19.5500.
Region 3-1 , Westerville South {1().{)) 34.9500. 2. 14.31520. 9, ~ ew Lexington (6-4} 1 1.9790. 10, Well1ton
Lancaster (9-1) 29.1000. 3, Dublin Scioto (9-1) (8-4) , .5500.
Region 16-i , Cla~ksvi lle Clinton·Massie (10·0)
27.2000. 4, Dublin Coffman (8-2) 25.5500. 5, Marion
Harding (9·1) 25.2000. 6, Wooster (8·2) 22 .3500. 7, 24.9540. 2, Versailles (1()..()) 23.0000. 3, Reading (8·2)
Grove City (7·3) 19.9500. 8, Hilliard Davidson (7-3) 17.7000. 4, Cln. Mariemont (7·3) 17.2000. 5, Plain CUy
19.5000. 9, Upper Arlington (6-4) 19.1000. 10, Logan Jonathon Alder (7-2) 16.9997. 6, Spring Northeastern
(7·3) 15.5500 7, Batavia (7-3) t5.0890. 8. Dayton
(6·4) 15.9270.
Region 4-1. Cin. Elder. (9-1) 33.n10. 2, Cin. Oakwood (7-3) 14.6500. 9, london (6-4) 13.2030. 10,
Colerain (1G-O) 32 .6660. 3, Cin . Moeller (7-3) 30.6310. Brookville (6-4) 9.9000.
DIVISIONV
4, Mason (9-1) 29.7500. 5, Clayton Northmont (9·1)
Region 17-1, Gates Mills Gilmour Aced . (1o-D)
28.8000. 6. Huber Hts. Wayne (9·1) 28.5500. 7, Cin.
LaSOlle (6-4) 24.3240. 8, Cin. Anderson (9·1 ) 23.6000. 25.4500. 2, Warren JFK (8·2) 22.6310. 3, N. lima S.
9, Cin. Princeton (8·2) 23.1330. 10, Cin. St. XBIIier (6·3) Range (10-0) 21.6260. 4, Dalton (9·1) 20.0500. 5,
Columbiana (9·0) 19.6664 . ,6, lndependerice (9·1)
22.9247
19.5500. 7, Smi1hville (9·1) 19.4560. 8, Lisbon David
DIVISION II
Region 5-1 , Warren Howland (9·1) 27.0500·. 2, Anderson (9-1) 17.1350. 9, Mineral Ridge (8·2)
A~lon

1-1 , Mentor (10-0) 35.7000. 2. Warren

Macedonia Nordonia (9·1) 2-4.8500. 3, Chardon (8·2)

21.4500. 4, Parma Padua (7-3) 21.0260. 5. Copley (7·
3) 20.4680. 6. Maple His. (9·1) 20.1000. 7, Olmsted
Falls (6·4) 18.5000. 8, Twinsburg (5·5) 16.5500. 9,
Madison (7 -3) 16.2500. 10, Akron Gartield (7-3)
15.8500.
Region ~1 . Sylvania Southview (1Q-O) 30.1000. 2,
Avon Lake ( 10-0) 25.8500. 3, Maumee (8-2) 22.9500. 4.
Defiance (8·2) 22.1500. 5, Grailon Midview (7·3)
18.7000. 6. Tiffin Columbian (8-2) 17.6000. 7, Ashland
(8-2) ,6.6240. 8, Whitehouse Anthony Wayne (7-3)
16.3500. 9, Holland Springfield (6·4} 16.2500. 10,

Oregon Clay (7-3) 16.0500.
Region 7-1, Cols. Brookhaven (1D-O) 28.4090. 2.
Pickeri ngton
Cenl. (9-1) 26.7500. 3, Cols.
Independence (8-2) 22.5370. 4, Whitehall · Yearling (9-

1) 21.1500. 5, Young. Chaney (9·1) 20.3050. 6, Cols.

15.2000. 10, Middlefield Cardinal (8·2) 14.5 120
Region 1r1. Hamler Patrick Henry (9· 1) 23.6000. 2,
Sycamore Mohawk (8-1) 20.1863. 3, Delphos St.

John's (a-2) 16.0000. 4. Del. Tinora (7·2) 15.6983. s.

9, Newcomerstown (8·2) 15.3500. 10, Johnstown

Northridge(7·3) 14.2000.

'
DIVISION VI
Region 21 - 1. Mogadore (a-2) 21.2750. 2. Norwalk

Calh. (8·2) 25.6140. 4, Hunt. Valley Univ. School (9·1)
25.0700. 5, . Medina Buckeye (8- 2} 22.0340. 6, Akron
Hoban (8·2) 21 .3230. 7, Chardon NO-Cathedral la1in

Southington Chalker (8-2) 9.0470.
Region 22-1 , Columbus Grove (1Q-O) 21 . 1000. 2,
Rawson Cory-Aawson (9·1) 18.9500. 3, Ho'pewell·
Loudon (8-2) 15.9180. 4, Edgerton (7-3) 14.7no. 5,

Cols. OeSales (6-4) 25. 1670. 3, Gals. Watterson (8-2)

24.8500. 4. Bellwue (9·1 ) 24.3500. 5, Kenton (7-3)
19.0000. 6, Pemberville Eastwood (8·2) 18.6000. 7.
Sandusky Perkins (7·3) 16 .9000. 8, Cols. Beechcroft
(8·2) 16.7470. 9, lima Shawnee {7·3) 15.8000. 10,
canal Winchester (6-4) 15.7500.
Region 11-1, Steubenville {10·0) 32.0950. 2. Dover

( 10·0) 29.4000. 3, Canal Fulton N.W. (10·0) 28.6500. 4,
lisbon Be aver (1Q.O) 28.61 BO. s, Gall. Gallla Acad. (91) 21 .8730. 6, Rayland Buckeye Local (10-0) 20.257 0.
7, Thornville S heridan (8-2) 19.9000. 8, New Concord
John Glenn (8-:2) 18.2500. 9, Poland Seminary (7-3)
16.8500. 10, Beloit West Branch (6·4) 14.7500.
Region 12-1, Archbishop Alter (9·1) 29.8500. 2,
Bellbrook (9·1) 27. 1000. 3, St. Marys Memoria l (9-1)

Northwooo (8·2) 13.9590. 6. Carey (7·2) 13.7887. 7.
Antwerp (7·3) 13.76 10 8. Hicksvillel8·2) 13.4540. 9.
¥c Comb {7-3) 12.0000. 10, W. Unity Hilltop (7-3 )
11.9710.
Region 23-1. Newark Cath . (9- 1) 20.7500. 2.
Shadyside (9-1) 16.9500. 3, Lane. Fisher Caltl. (8-2 )

16.6500. 4. Centerburg (7·3) t5.9500. 5, Willow Wood
Symmes Volley (9-1) 13.1489. 6, GlouotorTrlmble (9-

1 ~ 12 .9500. 7, Danvil le (8-2) 1 ~.8960 . 8, New
Mata moras Frontier (7·3) 11 .9920. 9, Strasburg -

Region 4
Cin. Anderson (9·1) at (I) Cin. Etder (9-t)
Clayton Norlhmonl (9-1) at (4) Mason (9·1)
Cln. LoSalle(6-4) at (2) Cln. Colerain (10.())
Huber His. Wayne (9·1) vs. (3) Cin. Moeller (7-3)

at Lockland

•

Region 24-1, Covington (1 0·0) 21.5500. 2, Dole
Hardin Northern {9-1) 18.6500. 3, N. lewisburg Triad

(9·1) 18.3000. 4, DeGraff Riverside (9·1) 16.5660. 5,
Spring. Cath. Cent. (8·2 ) 15.4000. 6, Troy Christian (82) 13.7270. 7, Mechanicsburg (7· 3) 10.8500. B, Maria
Stein Marion l ocal (7-3) 10.3000. 9, Minster (6-4)

Day. Cham-Julienne (8·2) 23.3 140. 6, Cin. Wyoming (9·
1) 21.8000. 7 , Germantown Valley View (9-1) 21.6500
8, St. Pa ris Graham (9· 1) 20.9000. 9, Ham. Ross (7·3)

DIVISION H

DIVISION I
Regional Quarterflnala

·

Ft.glonal Quarterl!Mit
All Gamel at 7 p.m. Saturday, unlua noted

Roglon 13
(8l Orrville (6-4) at (1) Sullivan Black Rlvar (8·2)
(5 Akr. Manchester (7-3) at' (4) Wooster TrrNay (7-3)
(7) CUy. Valley Christian (9-1) at (2) 1\wle Creek
Wayneoale (9-1)
(6) Cle. Villa Ange la-St. Joseph (6·4) at (3) YoUngs.
Cardinal Mooney (8-2)
Region,.
(8) Milan Edison (7·3) at (I) Urbana(9-1)
(5) Huron (9-1) a1 (4) Oeka (9- t)
(7) Lima Bath F-3) at(2) Upper Sandusky (9-1)
· (6) Coldwater (9· I) at (3) Wellington 18·2)
Roglon 15
(8) lrontonjllock Hlll(7-3) 11 Ill Ironton (9-1)
(5) Williamsport WesHall (9- I) at (4) Bellaire (8-2),
TBA
(7) Granville (7-3) at (2) Coshocton (9-t)
•
' (8) Proctorville Fairland (7-3) 11 (3) Martino Forry
(8-2)
RV$1on

Region 5

Massie (10..0)

(S) ·Plain City Jonathan Alder (7·21 at (4) Cin.
(7) Batavia (7·3) at (2) Versailles (1 u-o)
(6) Spring. Northeastern (7 ·3) at (3) Reading (8·2)
DIVISION V
Regional Ouartertln•la
All G1m11 at 7:30p.m. Friday, unleu noted
Raglan 17

(51 Copley (7·3) at (4) Parma ·POjjue (7·3). 1 p.m.
Saturday
{7) Olmsted Falls (6-4) at (2) Macedonia Nordonia (9-

t)

.

(6) Maple Heights (9-1) at (3) Chardon (8·2)
Region 6
(B) Whitehouse Anthony Wayne (7·3) et (1) Sylvania
Southview (10-0)

(51 Grafton Midvlew (7·3) at (4) Defiance (8·2)
(71 Ashland (8·2) at (2) Avon Lake (10-D)
(6) Tiffin Columbian (8-2) at (3) Maumee (8·2)

(9-1 I
(7) Louisville (6-4) at (2) Pickerington Cent. (9-1)

Cols. Walnut Ridge (8· 2) at (3)

(8) Lisbon David Anderson (9· 1) at (I) Gates Mills
Gilmour (10.0) , 1 p.m. Saturday

(5) Columbiana(9-()la1(41 Dalton (9·1)
(7) Smithville (9-1 ) at (2) Warren JFK (8·2)
(6) Independence (9·1) at(3) N. LimaS. Range (10·
0)
Region 18
(6) Findlay Liberty-Benton (8-2) at (1) Patrick Henry

(9·1)

Region 7

(6)

18

(8) Day. Oakwooo (7 -3) at 11) Clarksville Cllnton-

(8) Twinsburg (5-5) at (1) Warren Howland (9-1)

Cols.
·

Region 8
{8} Vandalia Butler (6-4) at (1) Trenton Edgewood (10-

0)
(5) Cin. McNicholas (7-3) at (4) Dey. Carroll (7-3)
(?)Wilmington !8-2) vs. (2) Kings Mills Kings (9-1) at
Galbreath Field

.

(5} Lorain Clearview (7-3) at (4) Defiance Tlnora (7·2)
(7) Bloomdale Elmwood (7·3) at (2) Sycamore

Mohawk (8· t )
(6) Blulllon (a-2) at (3) Delphos St. John's (8·2)
Roglon 18
(8) W. Lafayene RidgeWOOd (8·2) at (I) Amanda·
Clearcreek (9-1)

(5) Neloonviii&amp;-York (7-3) at (4)Woodoflold Monroe
Central (9-1)
(71 Minford (7-3) at (2) Sarahsville Shenandoah (100)

(6) Whoolorooorg (8-2) II (3) Chooopooke (8-2)
Roglon 20
(8) Middletown Fenwick (7·3) at (1) Marion Pleasant

(6) Cln. MI. Hoolthy (8-2) at (3) Jackson (8-2)
DIVISION Ill

(10.())
(51 Anna (9·1) at '(4) at (4) Cots. Academy (8·2)

Regional Quarterfinals
All Gamea al 7:30 p.m. Friday
Region 9
(8) Raven na Southeast (8-2) at (1) Cle. Benedictine

Valley (10·0)
(6) Cin. Jacobs (7-2) at (31 Morral Rldgeoele (8·2)
·DIVISION VI

(9·1)
'
(51 Medina Buckeye (8·2) vs. (4) Hunting Valley
University (9·1) at Lyndhurst Brush

(7) Chardon NDCL (7·3) at (2) Chesterland West
Geauga (tD-0)
(6) Akr. Hoban (8·2) at (3) Montor Lake Cath. (8·2)
Roglon 10
(8) Cols. Beechcroft (8·21 at (1) Sunbury Big Walnut
(10.())
(5) Kenton (7·3) at (4) Bellevue (g· t)
(7) Sandusky Perkins (7-3) at(2) Cols. OeSales (6·4)
(6) Pemberville EastwOOd (8-2) at (3) Cols. Wat1erson

(8·2)
Raglon 11
(8) New Concord John Glenn {8·2) et (1) Steubenville

(10·0)
(5) Gslllpolla Gellis (9-1) at (4) Lisbon Beaver (100)

'

(7) Thornville Sheridan (8·2) al(2) Dover (10·0)
(6) Rayland Buckeye (10-0) et (3) Genal Fulton NW

(10·0)
Region 12
(8),St Paris Graham {9·1) vs. (1) Kenering Aller (9·1)
at Kettering Fairmont

IS) Day. Chamlnade-Jullenne (8·2) at (4) Newark
Lid&lt;ing Valley (9·1)
(7)._Germantown Valley View {9· 1) at (2) Bellbrook (9·

Ol'lk) high school football atate playon palrlnga

DIVISION IV

Mariemont (7-3)

Regional Quartartlnata
All Gamn 11 7:30 p.m. Frld1y, unltll noted

Franklin (8·2) 11 .1000.10. Millersport (7·3) 10.8500.

26.2500. 4. Newark licking Valley (9·1) 24.7000. 5, . 8.9500. tO, Ado (5-5) 6.4500.

19.1000. 10. Circlwille (7·3) 18.1000.

Saturday

3) 16.8500 a. W. LatayeHe Ridgewood (8·2) 15.5000.

(6·4) 9.3500 9, Richmond Hts. (6·4) 9.16.80. 10,

3) 19,3040.
Region 1(}-1, Sunbury Big Walnut (10.()) 27.6000. 2.

(7) Grove City 17·3) at (2) Lancaster (9·t l
(6) Wooster (8·2) at (3) Dubin Seloto (9·1), 7:30p.m .

lndependance (8-2)

Region 9-1, Cleve. Benadicline (9-1) 33.1850. 2,
Chesterland W. Geauga (10-Q) 27.5500. 3, Mentor LS.ke

(7·3) 21.3000. 8, Ravenna SE (8·2) 20.6710. 9.

(~)Marion Harding (9·1) at (4) Dublin Coffman (8-2),
7:30p.m. Friday

(8) Uniontown Lake (4-6) at (1) Cols. Brookhaven (10·
D)
{5) Youngstown Chaney (9· 1) at (4) Whitehall· Year1ing

St. Paul (10-0} 19.7000. 3, Windham (8-2) 17.5400. 4,
Monroeville (8-2) 15.6000. 5, C leve. Cuya. Hts. (8-2)
13.2470. 6, New Wash. Buckeye Cent. (7-2) 11.6658. 7,
St. Mary Central Catholic (6-4) 10.5500. 8, East Canton

Hubbard (8·2) 19.6080.10. Cuya. Falls Walsh Jesuit (6-

Region 1
(8) LakeWOOd (7·3) at (I) Mentor (1D-o)
IS) Cle. St. Ignatius (8-2) vs. (4) Cle. Glenville (9-1) at
Bedford
17) Solari (7-3) at (2) Warren Harding (10.())
(6) Strongsville (7-3) at (3) LakOINOOd St. Edward (7·
3)
Roglon 2
(8) Hudson (9-1) a1 (1) N. C~n . Hoovar (to-o)
(S) Wadsworth (8·2) at (4) Green (8·1)
(7) Tot. St. John's (7·31 at (21Tol. Whitmer (9·1 I
(6) Tot. St. Francis (8·2) at(3) Brunswick (9-1)
Roglon 3
(8) Hilliard Davidson (7-3) at 11) Westerville South
(10-0)

(a)
(5)
(7)
(6)

,.

a.mea at 7 p.m. Blturdl)', un~11 noted

Lorain Clearview (7·3) 15 .6000. 6, Bluffton (8-2)
14.3500. 7, Bloomdale El mwood (7-3) 14:2500. 8,
Fi ndlay Liberty-Benton (8·2) 13.5000. 9, Bucy ru s
Wyntord (7-3) 12:4440. 10, Elmore Woodmore (6·4)
11 .8410.
.
Region 19-1, Amanda-Ciearcreek (9·1) 25.3000. 2.'
Sarahsville Shenandoah
(10-0) 24.2040. 3,
Cheaapuke (8-2) 20.8230. 4 , Woodsfield Monroe
Central (9-1) 19.6220. 5, Nelaonvllle·York (7·3)
18.6500. 6, Wheelersburg (8·2) 18.0930. 7, Minford (7-

Region 2~ 1 . Marion Pleasant (10-0) 22.9500. 2 ,
Walnut Ridge (8-2) 17.9520. 7, Louisvi lle {6-4) 16.0000.
8, Unionto'Nh lake (4-6) 14.9000. 9, New Philadelphia , Bainbridge Paint Valley (10.0) 19.5500. 3, Morral
Ridgedalei8·21 17.7000. 4, Gahanna Cols. Acad. (8·21.
(7-3) 14.3500. 10. Alliance Marlington (6-4) 13.6500.
Region 8-1, Trenton Edgewood (1Q-O) 30.4000. 2, 17.6280. 5, Anna (9-1) 16 .8500. 6. Jacobs (7-2)
Kings Mills Kings (9· 1) 28 .5000. 3, Jackaon (8-2) 16.4591 . 7, Cin. Hills Christian Acad. (8·1) 16.2025. 8 ,
20.1610. 4, Day. Carroll (7-3) 20. 1000. 5, Cln. Middletown Fenwick (7-3) .14.2000. 9, Arcanum (8 ·2)
McNicholas (7·3) 19.4000. 6, Cln. MI. Heallhy (8·2) 14.1 000. 10, Cols. Hartley (5·5) 12.6060.

18.8500. 7, Wilmington (8·2) 17.8500. 8. Vandalia
Buller (6-4) 16.2000. 9, Cin. Withrow (6-4) 15.6750. 10,
Day. Dunbar (6-4) 14.9000.
DIVISION Ill
.

All

1I .
(6) Cin. Wyoming (9·1) at (3) St. Marys Memorial (9·
tI

(7) Cin. Hills Christian (8·1) at (2) Bainbridge Paint

Regional Quart•rflnale
All Oemea 11 7 p.m. Salurdly, unleta noted

Region 21
(81 E. Can. (6·4) at (I) Mogadore (8·2)
(51 Cle. Cuyahoga His. (8·21 et 14) Monroeville (8·2)
(7) Sandusky St. Mary's (6-4) at (2) Norwalk Sl. Paul

(10.())
(6) New Washington Buckeye Cent. (7-2) at (3)
Windham (8·2)
Region 22
(8) Hicksville (8-2) at (1) Gels. Grove (1M)

(5) Northwood (8·2) at (4) Edgerton (7-3)
17) Antwerp (7 -3) at (2) Rawson Cory-Rowson (9-1)
(6) Carey (7·2) at (3) Basco m Hopewell-loudon (8-2)

Roglon 23
(B) New Matamoras Frpntier (7-3) at (1) Newal1&lt; Cath.

(9·1)
(5) Willow Wood Symmes Volley (9·1) at (4)
Centerburg (7-3)
(7) Danville (a-2) all2) Shadyside (9·1 )
(6) Gloueter nlmbla (9-1) at (3) Loncaotor Ftohar
Coth. (8-2), TBA
Region 24
(8) Maria Stein Marion local (7-3) at (1) Covington

(10.())
(5) Spring. Cath. Central (8-2) at {4) DeGraff
Riverside (9·1)
(7) Mechanicsburg (7-3 ) at (2) Cola Hardin Northern

(9·1)
(6) Troy Christian (8·2) at (3) N. l ewisburg Triad (9-t)

Struggling Browns hit bye at perfect time
Bv ToM WITHERS
Associated Press
BEREA - Ah, the bye
week. A time for the Cleveland
Browns to finally kick back and
get some much-needed R&amp;R.
Rehab and Recovery, that is.
"We need a break," said linebacker Andra Davis, referring
to some time off, not another
injury.
The Browns (3-5) certainly
don't need any more medical
setbacks.
Cleveland has had more than
its share of sprains. strains and
separations over the first half of
a season that began with coach
Butch Davis having to pick
between lim Couch and Kelly
Holcomb as starting quarterback.
On Monday, Davis said neither QB would be an option if
the Browns had a game sched-

uled this week.
"Both of them are hurt If we
played tomorrow, Nate's the
quarterback," Davis.said, refernng to Nate Hybl. the Browns'
rookie No. 3 QB.
Couch sprained his right
thumb while throwing a pass in
the first quarter of Sunday's 9-3
loss at New England and was
replaced for the second straight
week by Holcomb, who hasn'r
started since Week 3 when he
broke his right fibula and tore
ligaments in his ankle.
Davis said Couch's thumb
was swollen on Monday, and
there was some concern
because he's injured it twice
before.
Couch had an operation on
his thumb after s lammin~ it
onto a teammates • helmet m a
2000 practice, and he had a
screw mserted in it when he got
hurt while in high schooL
Couch was not available for

comment, but
a team
spokesman said he did not
undergo an MRI.
Holcomb, who went 15-of25 fo~ 11 5 yards in relief of
Couch, wasn't around while the
locker room was open for
reporters, either. On Sunday,
HolComb said his injuries were
improving, and that he was satisfied to have survived an afternoon against the blitzing
Patriots behind a patchwork
offensive line.
But HolComb's not I00 percent, and may not be again this
season, a fact that could make it
tough when the Browns return
next week against unbeaten
Kansas City.

Unclaimed Vehicles To Be
Set Free in Gallipolis .
Unclaimed Auction, repossessions, lease returns and other used vehicles to be let go
at rock bottom prices; Five days only at Norris Northup Chrysler Dodge Jeep

. Norris Northup
Chrysler Dodge Jeep 252 .

Automotive Correspondent

"Carrier-of-the-Month"
If they are selected. your
~
carrier will win dinner ·
for two at

Plf!t,

Pizza Hut
compliments of
Pizza Hut

1.) Send u,s your Rjtme, address and phone number•

2.) lnck!sft: your carrier's name. your route number
,or sublcrllicr number.
l.) 1_1) !16 words or tesS. tell us why we should choose
)'0111'

earner.

Mall·your entries-to:

'

Paul &amp;irker
Clalllpolls Ditlly Tribune
82~ Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 4Mll

'

GALLIPOLIS, OH · A
unique opportunity takes
place thi s week for consumers in the market for
cream of the crop used vehicles.
This Wednesday, Octo•
ber 27th through Sunday,
November 2ud, Nor ris
Northup Chrysler Dodge
Jeep- in cooperation with
Fleet Liquidators of
America - is hosting what
may be the greatest fiveday sale in the history of
Ohio. Over 145 unclaimed
and other used vehicles are
being offered direct to the
publi c at ro c k-bottom
pnces.
Mike Northup of Norris
Northup Chrysl er Dodge
Jeepstated , "For those in
the market for a great' used.
car, this will certainly be
the best time to buy. For a
$59 down payment• plus
tax, title &amp; fees, then start
maki_ng payments, custom-

ers can get into the quality shield. Just pick your veunclaimed or other used ve- hicle and pi ck your payhicle of their choice at ab- men!. You won't find a
solute rock bortom prices . faster, easier way to purThis is a once-in-a&lt;lifetime chase a great pre-owned
event, so adju st your
car," stated Mr. Northup.
schedules and make room
Extra sales and finance
for thi s live-day event."
staff will be on hand· to asWhile unclaimed and re- suro customers prompt ,
possessed vehicles are some quality service and the best
of the most sought after ve- finance terms possible. Mr.
hicles in the used-car mar- Northup said, "We'll have
ker today, they are also the over $3 million in financing
most difficult vehicles for available for this event, so
the public to come by. But, chances are we can arrange
as Mr. Northup said, "This financing for just about any·
may be the only time rhese one who is employed."
vehicleswillbeofferedtorhe
Trade-ins will be acpublic . We have obtained cepted , and customers
these vehicles wirh the intent should bring their title or
of passmg the great savings · payment book to ex pedite
on to the customer."
delivery.
Almost every rype ~f ve"The Ohio bargain-hunthtde and pnce range w11l be · ers dream come true hapavallab!e, from luxury ~x4 s pen s this We d~esday
to ba s1c transportation . through Sunday at Norris
Many are even still under Northup Chrys ler Dodge
warranty.
Jeep. Every unclaimed
"We've mad·e it easy for -fleet and other used vehicl~
yo u. We'll -mark the pay- · is just $59 then start makments rigltt on the wind- ing payments• Customers

,....

·LOCATION·:
Upper River Rd.
· Lancaster • HID0·529-6282
,

DAYS AND TIMES:
Wecto•·sda1v, October~9am-8pm ·
Thurilday, OctobeJ 30
. ' · 9am.-8pm : ·
Friday, Octobel-:31
. 9am-8pm · · .
Saturday, Nov•mber 1
· . · 9•m • Tprri
··
Sunday, November 2
... · Noon-Gpm
Flrst-oome, first served. No dealers orwholesaleril allowed.
may never see savings like
thi s aga in , " said Mr.
Northup.
After the $59 Down Unclaimed Vehicle SuperSale ends
at 6:00p.m. on Sunday, .November 2nd, many of these vehicles will be. sent to auction.
Any questions can be directed
to (740) 446-0842. See the
box above for more infonnation.

..

Lady Eagles ready for
No. 3Adena, Bt

Grueser's superintendent 'contract extended to 2008

SPORTS .·
• City in search of hero
pins hopes on LeBron. See
Page 81

J. MILES LAYTON
Jiayton@ mydaitysentinel.com
BY

RACINE
The
Southern Local School
Board
officiall y
reapproved Superintenden.t
Bob Grueser 's contract
Monday. The Board had to
vote again on the contract it
approved &lt;It a special meet ing in · early October
because it did not follow the
guidelines established by

the Ohio Re vised Code:
When the Board called
that special meeting, it was
only going to evaluate
Grueser's performance as
superintendent. There was
nothing on the agenda about
whether or not the Board
was going to extend
Grueser's contract. Since
approval of Grueser 's contract was not on the agenda,
the action taken by the
Board to extend the contract
was in violation of the Ohio

Revised Code.
Also, Board Prcsidem
Richard Hi II said the Board
needed a leiter of recommendation
from
John
Costanzo. Superintendent
of
the
Athens-Meig s
Ed ucation Service Ce mer.
before it could take acti on
on lhe conlract. Hill said
Costanzo wrote a letter in
support of Grueser's job as
superintendent.
Grueser 's contract was set
to ex pire in 2005 bui will

now extend to 2008 .
Board member Don
Smi th
quc &gt;tioned
the
urgency
of
extendin g
Grueser ·, contracl when
there was nearly a year lu
evaluate it before it came up
for renewal in July 2004 .
Smith was abse nt from the
special meeting and did not
vole on the first contract..
According to Grue~r \ contract. he was to be evaluated by

Please see Conttact. AS

Churches plan Halloween alternatives
j, REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

BY BRIAN

OBITUARIES
· Page AS
:. Clara Smith
·• Jesse J. Thomas
• Dwight Haley
· • William Ault

WEATHER
ctoildy,)I.Ji SO., Low: 301

Details on Page A2

LotTERIES
Ohio

MIDDLEPORT - Many
local fami lies will avoid
Halloween celebrations,
and some local churches are
planning Christian-based
alternatives to the season of
witches, goblins and other
scary notions.
Pastor Rob Barber of
Bethel Worship Center said
he disco urages families
attending his church from
participating in traditional
Trick
or Treat
and
Halloween· observances.
"We discourage any participation in observances of
the holiday, period," Barber
said . "Its roots are from
satanic worship, and even
today. it's still the high holiday for Satanists.''
BariJer said many'"elements
of
the
contemporary
Halloween observance date
back to tl1e original Druid celebration of the Lord of the Dead.
"Some of the things that
are common in our culture
date back to thar celebration
of rhe 'grim reaper," Barber
said. "such as dressing up in
costume, which the Druids
did in order to scare off
demonic forces ."
"While many people think
their participation in the
modern holiday is innocent,
our position is clear," Barber
said. 'The Bible teaches that

INDEX
Calendars
Classifieds

tfi PAGES

A3
B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As
As

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sp~rts

Weather

MtLES LAYTON

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

Dally 3: B-2·2
Dally 4: 4-7-3-0
Cash 25: 3·6·11·12·22-24

2 SECHONS -

we should stay away from
any and all occult practices,
so even if we do it innocen&lt;ly, it's still against the
Bible's teaching."
Barber's church and the'
Rejoicing Life Church in'
Middleport, where Mike ·
Foreman serves as pastor,
are among the local church-

state provides to the district
each year. Since the school
district was declared in
Emergency status in
RA CI NE -Careful cuts Fiscal
1999. it has obtai ned
and prudent spending mea- advances to tinance tiscal
sures by the Southern Local years 2000, 200 I and 2002.
School District mea·n the
Last year, the district had
district will have to borrow to borrow approximately
less than it did last year to $665,000, but th1s year it will
operate, but it still faces a only have to borrow about
$648,000 deficit thi s year. . $648,000 for a "savings" of
Due to increased health more than $17,000. The disinsurance costs, . utility trict must repay this money
deregulation and several within two years. Carter said
other factors, the district this cycle of repeat borrowhas to borrow moneY' from ing will continue until the
. the state each year. The district is out of debt and
school district has experi- financially stable.
enced recurring general
Soulhern
Local
fund operating deficiencies Superintendeni Bob Grueser
for the past three . years said part of the savings came
which has forced it to bor- because health insurance
row against future revenues rates increased by only six
to tinance its operations.
percent this year. He&lt;1lth
Southern Local Treasurer tnsurance costs have draPam Carter said the money matically · increased each
the district borrows is an year for the fiSt three years.
;~dvance on the money the
Grueser sa1d the district
BY

West VIrginia

·

Brenda Barnhart of Rejoicing Life Church helps Colton Stewart demonstrate the fishing
pond game, which is one of several planned fo r the Rejoictng Life Church's Harvest
Celebration on Friday. The church is one of several 111 the community planning a Christianbased alternative to Halloween . (Brian J. Reed)
·
es offering harvest-themed
altern atives to the traditional Ha llowee n festivities .
Both events feature u visit
from a clown. free food and
games for families.
The Ha rvest Party at
Bethel Worship Center and
the Harvest Celebration at
Rejoicing Life C hurch

begin at 6 p.m. and 6:30
p.m..
res pectively.
on
Friday evening.
Brenda Barnhart
of
Rejoicing Life Ch urch. who
has helped organize the
chu rch's harvest parties for

Please see Churches, AS

New voting
equipment
likely next year
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@ mydailysenlinel.com
POMEROY - The dread_cd chad may go the way of
the hand-marked ballot next
year if 1he state 's plan 10
rep lace outmoded election
, ystem s &gt;tatewide continues
on schedule .
Meigs County voters may
be usi ng new electroni c votin g mac htnes as early as the
2004 pre,idential eleclion.
according lo a spoke sman for
Ohio Secretary of Stale J.
Kenneth Blackwell .
A federal allocation of
fundin g for 1he new equip- ·
menl is upec1ed to offsel I he
cost to counties in purchasing
it and training vo ters and
elec1ions- workers in how to
usc it. Blackwell anticipates
the reteipl of$161 million by
nexl elecl ion season 10 purcha'e 1he equipment. and
train vote rs. poll workers and
elections offici als on how the
new sy.,tems operate . The
fundin g is designed. in pan,
to absorb lhe costs 10 counties in install ing the new
computeri zed equipment.
The plans are part of Ohio's
implemcntmion of the Help
America Vote Act of 2002.
which wa' pa"ed following
the controversial pre sidential
votetin Florida in 2000.
"We ha ve negotiated the
besl per-unit price on equipment in the country, so lhis
will not be an unfunded mandate for counties:· Carlos
LaParo of Bl ackwell' s office
said Wednesday. "Individual
counlies w1 ll nol be expected
10 bear 1he cost of the new
equipment. and those countie s which hare already
impl ememed new voring
machines will be reimbursed
for I heir cos1s 10 date:·
According 10 LaPoro. the
state has a goal of prol'iding
one voting machine per 200

Please see Votlnc. A5

Despite savings and budget cuts, Southern Local approves
Southern Local still in the red
personnel
for
school
year
J.

Pick 3 day: 3-4-7
Pick 4 day: 6-8-3-1
Pick 3 night: 1-6·8
Pick 4 night: 4-0-8-3
Buckeye 5: 4·12·24·27-35

B1-4

A2

© 2003 Ohio v ~lley Pubtlshina eo.

probably has the highest
health care costs in the state.
Other reasons for the savings
involve
staffing
reduced
changes . · and
expenditures across a wide
variety of departments.
The Finance Planning
Supervision Commiss ion
approved a recovery plan in
June which will eliminate
more than $430,700 from
the debt. Since the school
distric-t declared itse lf in
Fiscal Emergency, the commission's role is to oversee
the school district's financial recovery.
Grueser said the district
will get less money from
the state this year because
enrollment has decreased
by 20 students. There are
currentl y 739 students in
the' district which had 759
studenrs lasr year and at
least 930 st.udenrs 10 years

·. Please see Reel, AS

BY J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel .com

Phillips. aide: Leah Rose. aide:
Stacey Smeck. aide : Connie
Sou lsby. aide : and Cynthi·a
RACINE - The Southern Stanley. aide.
The Board received $2,050
Local School Board approved
the fo ll owing subsli tute from the Federal Emergency
teachers for the 2003-2004 Managemcm Agencv 10 reimschool year pending comple- burse 1he district (or losses
tion of all necessary require- rece ived fnr I he 2003 storm.
The Board det:tied the
mems for the job: Ali Calis. grievance
filed by Connie
Bryan Corn, Jeffrey Henry. Enslen again st the Board.
Jennifer Lambert , Teresa Enslen was absent. .
Morris, Li sa Schenkelherg
The Board approved a medand Irvin Voltin .
ical leave of absence for
The Board approved the fol- Martie Rose effective Dec. I 0,
lowing personnel recommen- 2003 through March 8, 2004 .
dations for the 2003-2004
The
Board
employed
school year pending comple- Rebecca .Evans -as reserve
ti on of all necessary ·requ ire- ~irl's basketball coach for the ·
ments fo r the~e positions: _003-2004 school year pend- ·
Carla Teaford, custodian and ing completion of all requirecook ; Penny Wolfe, cook: .ment s for the position.
.
Terry Snider, aide: Lynne
The Board employed
Anns. aide; Dorena Card, aide: Jordan Hill as a voluntary
Robert Curry. janitor; Beverlv high school basketball coach
Ferty. aide; Tammi Lavender.
aide; Karen Mull ins. aide :
Pluse see Approves, A5
Madeline Neece, aide: Diana

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us
.

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....
NLZ.... 7
b - 7N

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'

'All offers with approved ·cr~it. $59 plus tax, title &amp; fees. Additional down payment may be required for credit approval. "Example: 1997
Pont•ac Grand Am. Sale Pnce $3174. $79/mo for 48 mos. (ill 10,0% APR. $59 down payment, for a total of $59 down plus tax, title and
fees . Total amount financed $3115 plus tax. Subject to credit approval &amp; lenders final approval. ~003 G&amp;A MarkeHng Inc. Unclaimed
vehicles refer to used vehicles currently without a binding offer. ·
.
·
· '

•
/

starters from rhe preseason.
Because of injuries, they faced
New England using four backup offensive linemen and were
without running back William
Green (separated shoulder).
Still, the Browns had a
chance to win until Holcomb
threw an interception in the
final minute.
Davis has spent the past few
weeks ~ing to keep his players· spints up, but acknowl-.
edged that it's getting tougher.
"Our football team.._is a little
bit battered," he said. "They're
frustrated. They want to play
better. There's opportunities to
make plays, we re just not in
sync."

TEMPE, Ariz.
With their home s~~~~:~
being used as an e·
tion center and the neafbY
hills in flames, the
Diego .
mo·veU
their
Monday night game
miles to the east fell flat.
Brian Griese, in his
start for Miami, complet·
ed 20 of 29 passes for 192
yards and three touchdowns and the Dolphins
intercepted Drew Brees
three times in a 26-10 victory over the Chargers.
Griese, at least for one
night, lived up to the heritage that his last name
carries in Miami. He completed his first six passes
and was 13-of-14 for 145
yards and three scores as
Miami built a 24-3 half·
time lead.
Patrick Surtain had two
interceptions, setting up
Miami's first touchdown
with the first and stopping
a San Diego scoring threat
with the second.
Less than 24 hours
before kickoff, NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue
t:lecided to move the game
to Sun Devi l Stadiu.m
because of the deadly
wildfires that have devastated the San Diego area.
Admission was free ,
and the place was rocking
and rowdy. There was .no
official crowd count, but
all 73,0 14 tickets were
distributed. Five Arizona
Cardinals players helped
collect donations for the
San Diego Fire Relief
Fund at the stadium
entrance.
The game, San Die~o's
first o n Monday mght
since 1996, was supposed
to be the celebrated return
of Junior Seau, who was
the heart and soul of the
Chargers for I 3 seasons
before he was traded to
Miami before this season.
But
the return
to
Qualcomm Stadium never
happened.
Instead, Seau had &lt;o be
content with a dominant
performance
by
the
Dolphins' defense, and a
magnificent night for
Griese.
Griese signed a free
agent by the Dolphins
after five seasons in
Denver four as a
starter. He knew he would
be a backup for a fran ..
chise that his father Bob
led to two Super Bowl
championships. They are
the first father and son fo
play quarterback for the
same NFL team.

$59 DOWN*
UNCLAIMED
VEHICLE RELEASE
INFORMATION :

By Todd Mich&lt;tels

Nominate them for

Davis, who started the season
with two able-bodied quarterbacks, suddenly h a~ none. And
if the Browns are going to tum
their season around as they did
a year ago, Davis needs count
on one of them.
"We want to get one guy to
go in and lead this team, and to
play," he said. "There's no
question that any football team,
especially us, is better when
somebody is out there playing
all the time, whether it's quarterback or offensive line or running backs~ We ' ve played
offense by committee long
enough."
On Sunday, the Browns
played without seven projected

WithoutCarter, OSU
faces another question
on offense, Bt

Dolphins,
blast
Chargers,
26-10

~ (740)
.
...........

'

-~-

'

'

'

r

,

245 -5334

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