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.'

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

,..,
..
... .11'8IDJDg
:.Ire
us
.

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

Z 5I

'

'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

�..
'

PageA3

'

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October

Ohio weather
Thursday, Oct. 30
AccuWdther.com forecast tor davtime conditions
.... .•. ··- ~ j

•

MICH

•

1

r-Ci nci;~ati" f4S~i7o ;···l
1'
.
•

sunny

-,

w_ VA..

l•&gt;"n2" I

l

0 2003 Acc uWeather, Inc.
.

~·· ~---~

'

[ Portsmouth

KV

.

low/high temperatures

.-:!....__::--r:c~::;:-,

..

.[, n

&lt;li!U &lt;iCloudy
o!:ii!!!I'J "'-Showers

Pt Cloudy

T-storms

Rain

Vll! As SOCJa!el:1 Press

Cloudy with brisk winds
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Lows around 50.
Saturday... Partly sunny and
continued wann. High around 75.
Saturda y
ni ght. .. Partly
cloudy. Lows around 51.
Sunday ... Part ly
cloudy.
High around 72.
Sunday
ni ght. .. Partly
cloudy. Lows around 50.
Monday... Pa rtly cloudy.
High around 67.
· Monday night. .. Partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Low around 52.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. High arou nd 65.

Today ... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s. Bri sk
west winds at I0 to 20 mph.
Tonight. .. Partly
cloud y.
Lows in the upper 30s. South
winds 5 to I0 mph .
Thursday... Mostly sunny and
warmer. Highs in the lower
70s. South winds 10 to 15 mph.
Thursday ni ght ... Mostly
clear. South winds 5 to I 0
mph. Low aro und 48.
Friday .. .Mostly sunny and
warm. South winds 5 to 10
mph. Hi gh around 73 .
Friday ni ght ... Mostly clear.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

Ocl. 28 , 2003

I:k:wJmas

9.500

WFtrials

9.000

+140.15

JUL

9,748.3 1

High

Pet. change
from previous:

+1.46

9,749.94

SEP

AUG
Low
9,609.72

8.500

OCT

Recot'd high: 11 ,722.98

Jan. 14. 2000

Oct. 28. 2003

2.000

Nasdaq
OJtp:s.ite

1,800

1,600

+49.35
JUl

1,932.26
Pet. cha~e

High

from prev oua: +2.62

1,932.26

AUG

SEP

Low
1.892.43

OCT

1,400

Record high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

Ocl. 28, 2003

1,100

St:an:lard &amp;
R:x:lr.s 500

1,050
1.000

,,~,i~ F
JUL

1,046.79

Pet. change
from previous:

High

+1 .52

1,046.79

AUG
Low

SEP

OCT

950

Record hlgl'l: 1,527.46

1,031.1 3

March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
AEP - 28.63
Arch Coal - 23.60
Akzo - 31.50
AmTech/SBC ~ 23.59
Ashlard Inc. - 36.40
BBT - 36. 14
Bll-15.00
Bob Evans - 28.44
BorgWarner- 76.79
Champ1on - 3.94
Charming Shops - 6.60
City HokJing - 33.64
Col -27.16
DG -22.15
DuPonl - 39 99

Federal Mog.JI- .37
Rocky Boots -14.31
Gamen - 83.32
RD Shell - 44.59
General Eleclric- 28.52
Sea&lt;S-51.7t
GKNLY-4.80
AT&amp;T - 19.94
Haney DaV&lt;dson - 47.97 U$8 -27.22
KMRT -27.75
Wai-Mart- 58.76
Kroger - 17.48
Wendy's- 36.32
Lid. - 17.39
Wort11inglon -14.14
NSC- 18.50
Oak Hill Financial - 30.25 Dai~ stock reports are lhe
4 p.m. dosing quotes ol
ONE-42.49
. the previous day's transacOVB - 24.522
licos. PfO"ided by SmiJil
Peoples - 28.29
Pepsico- 48.50
Partne&lt;S al Advest Inc. of
Roci&lt;well - 29 36
GaJiipolis.

The Daily Sentinel
'1

Reader Services

(USPs 213·9&amp;0J
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Policy
Publi shed • every
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•

2,,
OHIO
Staff members concerned
about document destruction
COLUMBUS (AP )
Some staff members at the
state's utility watchdog oftice
were concerned about the
destruction 9f a report criticizing FirstEnergy's cost estimates for electric deregulation. an official with the Ohi o
Consumers' Counsel said.
Eric .Stephens, deputy Ohio
consumer counsel, told the
counsel board that he altributed the concerns to "typical
staff angui sh" over getting rid
of documents. The report by
energy consultant La Capra
Associates said FirstEnergy's
estimates were hi gh.
Stephens said Tuesday that
he and Consumer Counsel
Rob Tongre n considered the
concerns but ultimately
decided to get rid of the document as part of a new pol icy
for di scarding records.
Tangren said the document
was di scarded unger the policy because the case -in vo lving FirstEnergy 's costs was
fini shed .

analytical services. said the
age ncy estimated a much
lower figure of $2.6 billion
using internal re search and
the La Capra analysis.
Tongren and Stephen&gt; said
the age ncy decided it was
better to join an ag reement
negoti ated by 19 groups over
FirstEnergy 's costs rather
than oppose the deal and risk
losing signifi cant benefit s lu
consu mers.
"There was a recognition
of FirstEnergy's conviction
to litigate these cases as lon g
and as far and as hard as it
wou ld .·· Step hens sa 1·d . ,,
Tongren said Ohio probably would have lost a c:oun
fight to lower the fe es
because the Public Utilit ies
Commission had supported
the higher figure.
Durin g a 3 1/2-hour board
meetin g about .the discarded
Helen
document,
MacMurray. a suburban
Columb us board member.
asked repeatedly wheth er the

Several OCC ofticials said
the report was not singled out
for destruction and was one of
seveml discarded under a new
policy for disposing of records.
The document was one of
at least 50 discarded under
that policy, said Monica
Hunyadi. the agency·s director of operations .
At is sue is huw much
Akron -based
FirstEnergy
Corp . should have bee n
allowed to collect to recoup
from what it spent building
nuclear power plants before
the electricity market was
deregulated in 200 I.
The analys is by Bostonbased La Capra criticized
FirstEnergy 's
power-plant
costs, estimated at $8.7 bi ll ion.
a ligure that includes taxes collected by utilities on behalf of
state and local gove rnments.
Without those fi gured in .
the estimated cos.t to consumers is about $6.9 billion .
Joseph Bowser. the consumers" counsel director of

2003

hosted by Gov. Bob Taft at a
downtown CoiLimbus hotel.
The vis it is Bush's 13th to
Ohio as president.
" He's co min g to Ohio
because Ohio is an absolu tely critical state." said Herb
As her. an Ohio State
Uni versi ty political science
professor who has studied
state politics for 30 years.
Dan Trevas . a· spokesman
for the Ohi o Democratic
Party, said Bush is scared of
losing Oh io in 2004 and
there wou ld be a ra ll y at the
Statehouse 10 protest his
visi t.
"The slate is ree ling form
high electric costs and hi gh
natural gas costs and no plan
fro m the Whi te House that

Question: My husband just
gut back from the doc tor's
office . He says he has an
ulcer and that he needs to
take antibioti cs for it. This
doesn 't make any ;e nse to
me. Is he right or do I need to
'speak with the doctor to find
but what is really goi ng on?
· Answer: While it is always
appropriate· to call the doctor's office when you have
questions. your hu shand's
report makes perfect sense.
Let me tell you about ul cers
and how we treat them now.
Historically it was thou ght
that ulcers were cm!sed by

age ncy tallied up a cost fig ure to its benefits to co mpare
with the $4.3 billion difference between the agency's
estimates and FirstEnergy's.
Stephens said the amount
wus significant but he did not
have a dollar figure TuesdaY:
As an example, Stephens
said the agency successfully
negotiated to extend savings
on consumers bi lls that were
previously achieved followin g
mergers involving the three
operating COIT)panies under
.
. FirstEnergy 's: Ohio Ed1son,
Toledo Edison and Cleveland
Electric Illumi nating.
Those extensions alone
amou nt to $150 million, said
OCC
spokesman Ryan
Lippe.
,
·
Tongren's office paid La
Capra $579,000 to consult on
several deregul ation issues.
Staffers discarded all deregulation documents in July fo l·
lowing a change in internal
policy for record storage.

'o ver'- wrou ght

emotion s,

spicy food and a stressful
lifestyle. An ulcer is a sore. ·
'what we doctors c·all an ero'sion. that develops in the lining of the stomach or the first
part of the small intestines
(duodenu m l.
Ulcer symptoms - hurning and gnawing types of
vain in th e stomach reg inn -

·were traditiona ll y trea ted
wi th medi cations that wou ld
either decrease the produc tral ize what Was already present. Wh ile these medic·ations
helped relieve the sy mptoms
and eve n healed some of the
ulcers. they wou ld re iurn .
In 1982 . a bacteri um ,
Helicobacter pylori (H.
pylori ). whi ch i&gt; ab le to survive in an ac idi c stomach
environment. was id entified
as th e cau&gt;e of ulcers. Up to

would protect the environment, jobs and secure energy
source s," Trevas said.
Ohiu Republican Party
Chair man Robert Bennett
said th e vis it is nut a sign that
Bush is afraid to lose the
slate.
"Ohio was the rec ipient of
the blackout on Au gust 14th
and we are not only a large
user but a large producer of
energy.'" he said . "To promote the ene r~v bi II in Ohio.
I think. is very-appn:ipriate."
The Bush-Cheney 2004
campaign declined to say
Tuesday how many people it
expected to attend the luncheo n. Bu sh already has
rai sed more than $84 million
for hi s re-e lecti on campaign.

.Public meetings
Monday, Nov. 3
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees meet at 5
.p.m. at office building.

.Clubs and
Prganizations
•••
••

Wednesday, Oct. 29
RACINE - Special meeting of Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164 with work in the
E'A degree.

MEDICAL
'

MIDDL EPORT
The
Middleport Litera ry Club will
meet at 2 p.m . at the home of
Pat Holter. Betsy Parsons will

Jim's Farm Equipment
Holzer Medical Center

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

www.holzer.org
'

review "The Professor and
the Madm a n" by Simon
Wi'nchester.
·

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Norris Northup Dodge

Pleasant Valley Hospital

:[

www.pvalley.org

'I

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

· Monday, Nov. 3
LONG BOTIOM - Chloe
Weber will Gelebrate her 73rd
birthday on Nov. 3. Cards
may I;Je sent to Ohio 248,
Long Bottom , Ohio 45743.

Friday, Oct. 31
MIDDLEPORT - Harvest
Celebration at Rejoicing Life
Church, 6:30 to 9 p.m . Free
event open to all families in
the community. Games and
refreshments . Those attend-

.,

www.mydailytribune.com
The' Daily Sentinel

www.LighthouseAssembly,jnfo

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, Nov. 4
MIDDLEPORT - Dorothy
Davis of Middleport will celebrate her birthday on Nov. 4.
She was a long-time volunteer at the Meigs County
Humane Society's Thrift
Shop. Cards may be sent to
her at 560 Sycamore St. ,
Middleport, Ohio 45760.

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ENTERTAINMENT

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Cybe rTip line.
Parents must be vigi lant in
monitoring their children 's
lnt~rnet usage . .To do otherwise is to invite a stranger
into your home with unmonitored acce ss to your children. Read on :
DEAR ABBY: My 16year-old
stepdaughter,
"Ginger-," met a man on the
Internet. At ·first he claimed
to be 17 - then 24. He
turned out to be 56. Ginger
became pregnant at 17 . She
claimed her baby was a loca l
boy 's child . We found out on
the eve of her moving out to
live with the predator that
our grandchild was reall y hi s.
In an effort to find out if
he was sincere or a stalker. I
created a fake sc reen name,
. set my self up as an attracti ve
young gi rl (complete with a
photo from a royalty-free
photo site). and developed a
profile that would be attractive to him based on my
daughter's likes and di ~ like s.
He contacted me immediately. and within 10 minutes he
so li cited me for intimate lnnr.DearAhhr.cum /Jr f~()
phone co nversation. Our Box 69440. Lri., 4" ~'''"'· ( -1
chats always ended with him 9()()()9.

'"II

Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America commissions officers
CHESTER
Erma
Cleland. deputy state council. Jean Welsh, credentials
comm itlce member, and
Doris G rueser, state orphan's
co mmittee membei, were
commi ssioned by State
Councilor Nancy Fairbanks
du ring the recent meeting of
the C hester Cou nci l 323,
Daughters of America .
Their com mi ss ions were
attested by Dori s William s.
State Counci l Se cretary.
Esther Smitll was inspecting
officer, and gave her report
on inspection .
Co uncilor
Grueser
presided at th e . meeoing.
Members gave the Pledge of
All eg iance and Pledge to the
Chris tian Flag, recited the
Lord 's Prayer in unison. read

Serving Starts at 5:00p.m.
Tickets $6.00 Advance Only

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Dear
Abby

sc ripture from John , and Biggs. Charlotte Grant. Dori'
sang the first stan za of the
Grueser. Jean Wel ,h .
Star-Spangled Banner.
Several members were
_,
reported iII.
Vote For
Erma Cleland reported that
approximately 60 sc hool children have visited the halL
An auction will be held at
the last November meeting.
Refreshments were served to
Mary Holter, Deloris Wolfe.
Esther Smith, Opal Hollon,
Laum Mae Nice, lnzy Newell. "t for Salem Twp.
Nathan Biggs. Helen Wolf,
. Clerk
Betty Jackson, Everett Grant. "t
Ruth Smith. Esther Hardin. "ton November 4th*
Dorothy Myers, Gary Holter.
Jo Ann Ritchie. Julie Curtis,
j
Goldie Frederick, Sandy .......... b y .,
White, Mary Jo Barringer, .L 21080Pitcellln&gt;n$JRDacl
&gt;
The Irna White, Opal Eichinger, 'J Vlntoon, Ohio 45686
Charlotte Van Meter, Betty

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Charter Communications

Cheryl
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Wells

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Tickets Available at: Quality Print Shop,
Rutland Department Store, Joe's
Market,
i
FlowerS

519 lrldg• St. • Guy•ndott•IHuntlngton
(304) 887-4513 or 1.,00-527-41t2
M-F • 9-!5:30 p.M.

Graves are currently $100.00 per gran'.
If levy passes grave sites will be reduced to
$50.00 per grave. Cemeteries are Rocksprings &amp;
Bradford only. These prices and this le,·y on I~·
pertain to people who live outside the villages
of Pomeroy &amp; Middleport in Salisbury Township
Salisbury Trustees: Bill Spaun, Ed Durst.
Ted Warner, Clerk: Rich Bailey
Paid for

www.charter.com

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

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for only a $1 a day.

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urging me to cull him .
recorded these ' e"1on' ft '' ·
future use again" him . then
reported the pervert to the
Nat-ional Center for Mi " in~
and Exploit ed Children
(www.ncmec.org) .
Thi s incident hu' been
devastatin~ for Gin~er . She
suffers from it dailv. She ha'
missed a lot of f~n in her
high school day' hecau'e of
having a child . She i' now in
coun seling and on a long
road to becoming the bright.
cheerful per&gt;o n &gt;he wa&gt;
before she wa., con, umcd by
this. - 'GINGER 'S' MOM
DEAR MOM : Your 'tory
is chilling. Unfortunate!). I
have received 'irnilar lette r'
from di,trau ght parenh
telling thi &gt; "'me ''"f) and
wondering how 111 hamlle a
situation that i-. ou! of con trol. No one wanh to be told
he or she i&gt; being u'ed or
take~ advantage of. and that.
in clu des tee nag er' who'e ·
self-e steem may be fra gile t&lt;•
begjn with. But it is up to the
parents to take control when .
nece ,sary.
Stay tunetl. There
nc
more on thi" tornurrov.. when I print a ktt t·r that 11 ill
curl your hair.
Dear Ahhr i.1 IITill&lt;' ll In
Abigail Vwi Bur~11 . "'"'
known &lt;1.1 Jea11n e Phillijll.
and •ms- founded hr h~r
mother. Pauline Pliillif" ·
Write
Dear A/Jin
or

ANNUAL

Point Pleasa nt Register
'

tu Martha

Birthdays

Social Events

Subscribe today.• 992·2155
www.rnydailytsentinel.com

www.turnpikeflm.com

lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

~rrite

DEAR ABBY: When you
advised
" Brokenhearted
Mom m Viq~ inia , " whose
daughter is bemg lured by an
Internet predator. to call the
po lice
and
get
them
invol ved , you gave good
advice . My
13-year-old
daughter was in the same situation .
The 37-year-old man who
"loved " my daughter and
"wanted to marry her and
have children with her" was
a pedophile who had already
molested a I0-year·old girl.
He had told my daughter he
was 15. I went straight to the
police with as much infonnation as I cou ld - name.
addre ss. phone number.
The detectives have been
wonderful. My daug hter and
I are now in counseling to
repair the damage this man
did to our "relationship. I am
grateful beyond words for all
the support I have been
given , and thank God every
day that my daughter is still
with me .
By the way, she didn ' t
meet this guy in a chat room.
hut playi ng a ga me on the
Internet. - THANKFUL
MOM
DEAR THANKFUL: I' m
re li eved your story has a
happy ending. Since printing
that letter. I have been
informed that parents shou ld
also report thi s crime to · the
National Center for Missin g
and Exp loited Child ren by
visi ti ng the Web site at
www.m issi ngkid s.com and
filing a report on th e

'

NEWSPAPERS

CHURCHES

l/ll estions,

A.Simp.wm, D.O., M.B.A.,
Ohio Uni&lt;·ersil_\' · Co llegt' of
0.-reot&gt;arhic Medicine. PO.
Box 110. Atht·n.-. Ohio4570 1.
Medical informarion ill this
colw&gt;JII is provided as a11
educatio11al service only. lr
does ndr replace the judgme/11 of your perso11al physicicm. u-/10 should be relied on
ro diagrwse and recomme11d
rrearme111 for any medical
conditions. Past columns are
al'llilable online atwwwJhradio.org/fm.)

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

Thursday, Oct. 30
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Ga rden Club will meet 1:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Members
are asked to take pressed
flowers for the &lt;; raft session.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
.
The Daily Sentinel

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

th ese individuals don 't have
an ulcer. At the present time,
we . only treat people who
have ulcer symptoms. We
really don't know conclusively what we should do for people with H. pylori and no
sympto ms.
So be sure your husband
takes all of his medications
and follows ur. with his
physician as Clirected to
increase the chances of being
cured of the ulcer. Also, eve n
if you never come down with
ul cer symptoms yourself, it
would be a good idea to ask
your physician oc&lt;;asionall y
if th ere is any new information about H. pylori. It may
be that ai some future point
the evide nce wil l indi cate
th at eve ryone with H. pylori
in hi s or her stomach lining
should be treated even in the
absence of symptoms.
( Familr Medicine® i.&gt; a
1refklr ~-olt.ll nll. To suhmit

ing are asked not to wear
costumes.

·'
.I

AUTOMOTIVE

Every Thursday...

.,

80 percent of gastric (stomach) ulcers and 90 percent of
duodenal ul cers are caused
by .H. pylori. Now we treat
ulcers with antibi otics in
addi tio n to medication s to
suppress acid production in
the stomach. In most cases,
this combined th erapy is very
effective at not only curing
the ul cer but also at preventing a recurrence.
The exact mode of transmi ssion is not clearly known
yet. but person to person contact is quite likely.
H. pylori can be diagnosed
by a blood test, a breath test
or a biopsy that's taken when
you have an "upper Gl
scope ." In this latter procedure · - called an EGO your doctor visually examines the lining of your esoph&lt;tgu s. stomac h and upper
duodenum wi th a small camera (flexible fiberoptic endoscope ) whi ch is inserted
dow n the th roat. EGO is the
"gold standard " test for determining whet her or not you
have an ulcer and . if sn. for
finding out if it is caused by
H. pylori.
Since the discovery of H.
pylori as the cau se or most
ulcers is re lat ivel y ~ew. there
are still many thin gs we don't
know about the presence of
H. pylori in the stomach.
Over 60 percent of the
world's population is infec ted
with H. pylori in th e lining of
tl1eir sto machs. but most of

Community calendar

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

2003

Vigilant mom turns Internet
Antibiotics part of ulcer treatment predator over to the police

Bush will promote stalled energy bill during Ohio visit
Ohio Repuhl ican is push ing
hard to get the ethanol tax
change included in the bill.
"The energy bill needs to
eliminate
di since ntives
wh ich make states that use
more ethanol pay a price;·
said spokeswoman Marcie
Ridgway. "Thm needs to be
fixed in this bill ."
Senate Republicans have
urged the White House to put
niore pressure on House
Repub licans tu resolve the
ethano l debate . but the White
House couldn' t say wheth er
the president wo uld comment on th e to pic dLiring hi s
visit.
. Also on his trip to Ohio.
Bush will attend a $2,000-aperson fund-rai ser lunch

_W ednesday, October 29,

Famil Medicine

tio n of stomach ac id or neu-

WASHI NG TON (AP) President .Bush plans to give
the stalled energy bill a push
Thursday by vi siting an Ohio
aluminum company that has
been financ ially hurt by hi gh
energy prices.
Columbus-based Central
Aluminum Co. , which makes
metal shapes, foundries and
aluminum products, runs its
operations using natural gas,
which has increased in price
recently.
"It provides a forum for the
president' to talk about why
it's important for the country
to have a steady supply of
· energy and natural gas,"
White Hou se spokesman Jim
Morrell said Tuesday.'
A woman answering the
phone
at
Central
Aluminum, which employs
80 people , declined to give
her name or comment on
the president 's vis'it.
Morrell sa id the president
also would ta lk about the
energy bill pending in
Congress and why it 's critical that it become law as
soon as possible.
Senate Republicans said
this week that an impasse
over ethanol taxes could
sc uttle the massive energy
bill that Congress has struggled to complete for mo(e
than three years. The bill
passed the House and
Senate earl ier this year and
was being reconciled by a
joint co111mittee.
The iss ues threatening to
derail the bill include proposals to inventory oil and
gas resources in off-limits
coastal waters, open an
Alaska wi ldlife refuge to oi l
drilling and change the way
ethanol taxes are ·spent.
The Ohio congre,, sional
delegation lobbied hard for
the ethanol provi sion,
which would increase highway spending for states by
shifting tax coll ected on
ethanol from the general
fund to the highway trust
fund, which is used to
maintain the 'nation's roads
and bridges.
States get a percentage of
the money they collect for
the highway fund, so states
such as Ohio that have a
large percentage of ethanol
users end up losing mill ions
of dollars.
A spokeswoman for Sen.
George Voinovich said the

BY THE BEND

The Daily SentiQel

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The Daily Sentinel
·~

.,

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

READER'S

VIEW .

Levy
Fears Carleton closing
Dear Editor:
He wit' just riding his bike, this beautiful, healthy six year.old. and tlien the a~cident happened. After weeks in the hospital. he's ready to go home, but the doctors say he is going to
need ·specialiLed schooling.'
Lillie Tommy has brain damage from his accident. He is
gnin t' to neeu speech and physical therapy, help with his bathrooming and feeding, someone to push his wheelchair and get
him lln and oil the bus.
The case worker at the hospital says that since Tommy lives
in Meigs County. Carleton School is where he will attend, and
thank good ness they provide transportation from anywhere
inside the coumy limits.
The children at Carleton School are taught in a safe, strucwrcd and positive learning environment to reach their maximum ability. The classroom size is small. six to 10 children
per room. to better facilitate the individual needs of the children .
Meigs Cmmty is in dan ger of losing Carleton School. If
their levy on Nov. 4 does not pass, Carleton School will close
un June 30. The board made the decision and will stand by
that dec ision. The board members are Walter Heinz, Carson
Cruw. Roger Hysell. Jean Weaver, Nora Rice and Sally
Donaldson. Jean, Nora and Sally are the parents of children
wi th mental r~tardation or developmental disabilities.
The pas,age of the levy will raise the average household
. ta xes by $50 to $70 per year. In the blink of an eye, you could
·have the need for Carleton's services. A birth defect, accident.
· meningit is. a hi gh fever, etc .. and you could have a Tommy
w.hu needs Carleton 's services. Can you afford not to vote yes
fm their levy'.' I know I can't. Please say yes to the Carleton
kid.s.
Meb·a Tracy
Pomeroy

Wednesday, October 29.

PageA4

OPINION

Wednesday, October 29,

2003

Obituaries

'

Very little improvement in airline security
The
Transportation
Security Admini stration is
not amused. 'tt doesn't appreciate being shown up by
Nathaniel Heatwole. the 20year-old college kid who is
charged with smuggling box
cutters anc' other verboten
irems aboard two commercial jetliners last month.
' When you have individnals like t)lis gen tleman,' said
Chris Rhatiga n. a TSA
spokeswoman. 'or other indi.. viduals who feel the y need to
· be testing the system, we
would say. 'You don't know
what you're doin g.' They' re
not helping.'
And to di ss uade others
from following Heatwole's ·
example. the TSA has thrown
the book at him . He was
chargcd thi s week in federal
court wirh taking a dangerous weapon aboard an aircraft. If convicted, he could
face up to I0 years in the
slammer.
But Heatwole . a junior at
Guilford
College
in
Greensboro, N.C.. didn't
mean any harm .
He just wanted to see for
himsehwhether airport security reall y has gotten appreciably better since the Sept.
II, 200 I. terror attacks;
whether Mohammed Atta
could make it past screeners
today with box cutters ,
bleach and ersatz plastic
explosives.
And Heatwole gave the
TSA an edge tbat Ana nevei

Joseph
Perkins

would ha ve: He sent the
agency e-mails telling them
that he planned to place suspiciotts items on aircraft, a
senior Bush administration
official reportedly told The
Washington Post.
Yet , it took nearly five
week s for the smuggled
items to be di scovered
aboard • two
Southwest
Airlines jets. And the discovery was made not by TSA
agent s or atrport secunty personnel. bnt by the airline's
maintenance crew.
And the only reason th ~
TSA was able to trace the
items to Young Man
Heatwole is because he was
thou ghtful enou gh to leave
them a note with hi s name
and phone number.
In e-mails to federal
authorities , the co lle gian
described his stunt as an 'act
of civil di sobedience with the
aim of improving public
safety for the air-traveling
public .'
And while the TSA is
understandably embarrassed
that Heatwole managed to
make such a mockery of air-

Clara Smith

port security, he actuall y per- (sc reeners) is hut acceptable.
A major and continuing
formed a public service .
For he exposed the contin- problem is the ability of the
uin g inadequacy of the system to de tect weapons
nation's screener force , ·two and ex pl9sives.'
years after Alta and hi s fel An unclassified GAO
low terrori sts trai psed past report identifies the root
airport security. comman- problem: The TSA has not
deered four ·"ommercial jets developed or deplo yed a
and flew them into the World supervisory training program
Trade Center. the Pentagon to ensure that screeners ·are
and a Pennsylvania field .
effectively trained and superWe were promised a more vised.
federalized
Indeed. before screeners
competent.
screener force - better edu - can be properly trained. their
cated, better trained, higher supe rvisors must themse lves
paid . But as Heatwole be properl-y trained . And
demonstrated last month. the TSA has n't done that.
new screencr force is hardly
Meanwhile , the TSA's testany more proficient in ing uf screeners has been
uncovering weapon s and exposed as a fra ud by Clark
potential explosives than the Kent Ervin. the actin g
old maligned screener force. inspector general for the
And the failin gs of the Homeland
Security
screener force are not con- Department.
fined to one or two or three
For instance, on a recent
problem airports - like , final exam given to new
Baltimore-Wa s hington screeners at LaGuardta
International and Raleigh- Airport, 22 of the 25 quesDurham , the two airport s tion s were used during a
Heatwole successfull y pene- practice quiz in advance of
trqted. It's a systemwide the exam. That, according to
problem.
Ervin. ·maxim ized the likelilndeed, lawmakers on hood that students would
Capitol Hill were briefed last pass.'
month on an undercover
The TSA has fa iled, so far,
in vestigation by the General to upgrade the quality of airAccounting Office in which port screening. The nation's
federal agents te sted screen- fl ying pub! ic is hardly any
.ers at a number of airports.
safer today than it was on
While the results were Sept. II, 2001.
classified, House Aviation
(Joseph Perkim i1· a colwlvti51
subcommittee chairm an John for T11e Slut Diexo Union-Tribt01e
Mica, R-Fla.. confirmed. and can be reached at
'The performance level of JosephPed&lt;ins®U11iDIITtib.cont)

William Ault ·

Voinovich's staff
to hold open
hours

Ve.LcoM~

io
Co~- i-FoRN ;a,

POMEROY
U. S.
Senator
George
V
Voinovich 's staff will hold
office hours in Meigs County
from II a.m to noon on Nov.
5 at the Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Center.
112 East Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.
Office hours present an
opportunity for local residents to meet with Senator
Voinovich's staff to discuss
federal legislation or to seek
assistance with
federal
agency casework iss ues.
Fpr more information , contact
MarJean
Kennedy,
Southeast Ohio District
Representative for Senator
Vomovich, at (7 40) 441-6410.

•••••

Dear Editor:
During every woman's pregnancy, she has a dream for her
unborn child. You look at other children running and playing
in the park and think of yours. You prepare for nine months,
buyi ng all the cute clothes and accessories you want for your
chi !d. The most wonderful moment is the first time you see
your child and hold him for the first time.
· But most parents are lucky enough to not have to go through
. the 11i gh1mare I went through. The nurses were running in anct
our of my room. telling me something was wrong with my
dau~hler. rhal her neck was like a limp noodle. Within two
week s of havi ng her home, she arched so badly she was turning pver in her crib. I took her to the doctor and he let me
.know she has cerebral pal sy and may not walk or crawl for a
l ong time. That is when you feel you whole world has crumbled away and the self-guilt starts. Without the support of staff
and friends &lt;11 Carleton School being there for us and making
sure she got physical rherapy, maybe she would not be where
she is loday.
My daughter walked at I0 months and the doctors couldn't
believe how great she did. She is our little miracle and ·having
a ca rin g staff and a school that is so close to give her therapy
and support we need is our second miracle.
Ple:rse vote for the Carleton School and Meigs Industries
le vy. You never know when an angel in your family will need

Trick-or-treat set
POMERbY - The following communities have set
trick-or-treat dates:

Approves

a miracle. too.

Laura Stewllrt
Rut/ami

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. Oct. 29, the 302nd day of 2003. There are
63 Jays left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in Histo~
On Oct. 2\l. 1929. ' Black Tuesday' descended upon the New
Yurk Stoc:k Exc hange. Prices collapsed amid panic selling and
thousands of investors were wiped out as America's 'Great
Depression· began.
On this date:
In IflX2 . the founder of Pennsylvania, William Penn , landed at
what i... no\.v Chester. Pa.
In llJtll. Pres ident McKinley's assassin, Leon Czolgosz, was
elecr r:ncutcd .
In Jl) II . American newspaperman Joseph Pulitzer died in
Charl eston . S.C.
·In 1923. thc Republic of Turkey was proclaimed. ~
In 194 7. ti1rmer tirsr lady Frances Cleveland Preston died in
Bolltinlore at. age 83.
·
lr&gt; 195(1. during lhe Suez Canal crisis, Israel launched an inva-

sion of Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to .the editor are welcome. They should
he less rhan 300 words, All letters"are subjeCt to
editing and must he signed and include address
cmd telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be puhli.5hed. Letters should be in good taste,
:addressing 'issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. ~- editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

er, George Milton Ault of
Springfield ; a sis ter-in -law
and brother-in-law, Agnes
and Gene Ault of Middlepun ;
and a brother. Charles Smdle
of Glendale. Ariz.
In addition to his parenr s.
he was preceded in death by
his wife, Lorena .Lawhorn
Ault, in 1989, his grandson,
Matthew Ault . a sister.
Loretta Lawhorn , and h i~
son-in-law, Dor Coates.
Services wi ll be held at II
a.m. on Thursday. O ct. 30.
2003 at Fisher Funeral Home
in Middlepon with Re_v. Rod
Brower officiating. Burial
will follow at Meigs Memory
Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. on
Wednesday. Mawnic services
will be conducted at Rp.m .
Friends may se nd condoc
Iences and register on line at
www.tisherfuneralhomes:com.
Memorial co ntributions
may be mad~ to Heath United
Methodist Church. 339 South
Third Ave , Middlepon , Ohio
45760.

.

Dwight Haley ·.
MIDDLEPORT - Dwight
"Kelly" Sherman Haley. 85 .
Middleport, passed away at
his re si dence on Tue sday.
Oct. 28 , 2003 .
He was born on Feb. 9, 191 8
in Rutland, son of the late
George and Julia Romine
Haley. He was a veteran of the
U.S. Anny during World War II
and was a member of FeeneyBennett Post 128. American
Legion ofMiddleport. He was

Local Briefs

1'1-fe. ReGiMe. ~e, gur

SHa~ ouR vaLveS.

Jesse Thomas

Glaze of Middl eport ; Lisa river and started in business
(Randy J Mitchell
of with his father in the Greenup
M idd l~port , Laura floe ) Davis Transport
and
Ferry
MIDDLEPORT - Jesse J. of Middl eport, Darsene
COLUMBUS - Clara F.
Bu
sine
ss.
He
was
Pickens Smith, 75, of 923 Thom ~s. 22, of Middleport Mansfield of Athens; Barbard employed by the Ohio Rialso
ver
• Antwerp Rd.. Columbus. d1ed Monday, Oct. 27, 2003 . Matthewson of Athens, Ellie Company and reilled as a
died on Monday, Oct. 27, as a result of injuries sus- Snow of Albany; Merrilyn
mater pilot. He assisted man2003 at Bennington Glen tained in a
Travis
'of
Alexandria,
and
Jo
agement
in training new permotorcycle
Care Center in Marengo.
Cinda
Ferguson
of
sonnel as deck hands, and
She was born on Feb. 7, , accident in St.
Middleport;
nephews,
trained
new pilots.
1928 in Letan. W.Va., daugh- Clairsville.
Brandon
Daugherty
and
Garis
He
was
fonnerly employed by
Born on
ter of the nne Samuel and
Ferguson;
and
nieces,
Whitney
the
Sohio
Petroleum Co. as a
Mabel Donahue Pickens. She May II . 1981
Dau
gherty,
Jenna
Marshall
tankerman . . He was also
in
Point
was a homemaker.
and
Katelyn
Ferguson.
employed
by the United Steel
Surviving are her husband, Pl easan t ,
He
was
preceded
in
death
Workers
and
served ·a' secreDavid E. Smith of Columbus ; W.Va ., he was
by
hi
s
paternal
grandfather,
tary/treasurer
and the United
a daughter and son-in-law, the son of
Paul
F.
Thomas;
hi
s
maternal
Mine Workers and served as secs. Thomas
Mary
Ann
and
Ron John
George
Eugene
grandparents,
retary/treasurer. He was a memMc Kenzie of Pickerington ; Thomas
of
and
Delia
Stanley;
and
three son s and daughters-in- Middleport and Cheryl J. Wheeler Thomas, Lowell ber of the Middleport Masonic
law: David Lee and Patricia Thomas of Athens. He was a Stanley, Kenneth Stanley, Lodge #363 , and was a member
Smith of Hillsboro. San'iuel 2000 graduate of Meigs High Lindir Stanley ; and an aunt , of the Heath United Methodist
Church of Middleport
L. and Carlene Smith of School. He was a coal miner Thelma Hoch.
Surviving are hi s children,
Century
Energy
Ashley and Paul Lester Smith with
be
held
at
2
Servi
ces
will
of Columbus; brothers and Corporation in St. Clairsville p.m. on Friday, Oct. 31 , 2003. Gerald L and Cheryl Ault of
sisters-in-law : Wesley and and was a member of the at Fishe r Funeral Home in Springfield, Dennis J. and
Louise Picken s of Toledo, Heath United Methodist Pomeroy. Officiating will he Charlotte Ault of Lakeview,
William "Perk" and Vicki
Emmet and Sue Pickens of C hurch in Middl eport.
Rev.
Vernagaye
Sullivan
and
Ault of Syracuse , Celesta
He is survived by hi s father
Toledo, Eber and Mary
burial
will
be
in
Joppa
Pickens of Syracuse, Shelby and stepmother. John S. and Cemetery. Friends may call Bush Coates of Middleport,
and Ruth Picken s of Racine, Jenny Thomas of Middleport ; from 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday. Patricia Kay and Ron Logan
of Middleport and Merri C.
and Rita Pickens of Toledo; hi s mother, Cheryl J. Thomas
Oct. 30, at the funeral home. and James Amsbary of
of
Athens.
a
sister.
Amy
seven grandchildren and six
Friends may register online at Pomeroy;
grandchildren:
Radekin-Daughcrty
of
. great ~randchildren.
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com
Toby
Ault, Ty
Todd
Ault,
Be srdes her parents, she Pomeroy, a step-sister Eddena
Ault, We s Ault, Greg Bu sh,
was preceded in death by her Ru ssell of Racin e; grand Nick Bu sh. Jason Bu sh,
mothers.
Evelyn
Thomas
of
broth ers, Don and Elmer
Darin
Logan, Kevin Logan,
Picken s, and her sister-in- Middleport and Jo Anna
Ken Amsbary and Christian
Ferguson of Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT
law. Mary Pickens.
and
Victoria
Also surviving are uncles. William Louis Ault. 77 . Amsbary
Services wi II be held at I
Goebel;
step
grandchildren.
Paul
(Frances)
Thoma
s
of
Middleport,
passed
away
on
p.m. on Thursday, Oct 30,
2003 at the Let art Chapel Middleport, Lloyd Stanley of Monday, Oct. 27, 2003, at Troy Speakman, Shannon
Cemetery rn Letart Falls, Texas. Russell Stanley of Pleasant Valley Hospital in Xorn and Brooke Ely; great
Athens; ·Larry Stanley of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
grandchildren;
Heather,
with burial to follow.
Oregon;
aunts,
Dorothy
Alyissa
Lauren,
Ashley
and
He
was
born
on
Sept.
9,
Friends may call from 9
(Jessie)
Morris
of
Pomeroy,
1926. in Greenup, Ky.. son of Ault, Andrew and Timothy
a.m. to noon on Thursday at
the Ewing Funeral Home in Jane (Jack) Griffin of the late Frederick Merle and Bush and Bradley and
Hill stioro, Eva (Homer) Goldie Mae Thompson Ault. Connor Logan; five step
Pomeroy.
Griffith of Springfi eld. Pearl Since 1946, he worked on the great grandchildren; a broth-

~~ wase~~DH@.aD~
T~ RULiNG COUNCi~ aFreR ,
ReMeM~, H~'S a~ToF
aHo$Ti ~ RtGiot.f, at4P
He. caN'T~ 'TRVSTEPTo

The Daily Seritinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

Jiigh-tech heck
I mail-ordered a CD burner
for my home computer. I was
going to make CDs in my
own house 1 What a technological wonder. the result of
Jim
years of research and de vel opment by hundreds, maybe
Mullen
thousands of the finest minds
in the world . Ti1eorists ,
mathematicians, engineers,
designers, beta testers - an
entire chain of sophisticated uled me for a test in a one of
talent spent thou sands of those new, multimillion-dolhours coming up with this tar machines that only the
gadget. I can't even fi gure biggest and best hospitals
out how to work my VCR can affon). It is as state of the
correctly and these peo ple art as it gets. One pass
are so smart they can invent through this thing and ·it
one. I don't wanl to think would diagnose me. cure me,
about the hu ge mental gap trim my nails and give me a
there must be between peo- haircut all at the same time,
pie like them and people like . I had to walk to the ninth
me.
.tloor to use it. The hospital's
It arrived at my house in a elevators were stuck. When I
smashed open cardboard got to the ninth floor no .one
box. I have put out my knew . where the machine
garbage in nicer looking qm- \vas. When I finally got to the
·tainers. The box was so poor- ri ght place ·. they had no
ly taped together I was sur- record of my doctor ordering
prised to find what remained such an expensive test. I !fad
of the CD burner still in there dnven three hours to get to
at all. The front of.tt was dan- this machine, and I was not
ghn g b~ some el~ctri ca l · being . my normal , cheery
cords, tl s. hard plastic shell self. Fmally, we figured out
was ' cracked and mangled. what the problem was. I
They can desrgn, a ~ D burn- showed up on Sept. 24. My
er, but .they cant f rgilre but doctor ordered the test for
·how to put one rn a card- Sept. 24. The technician had
board carton.
very carefully written down
My doctor recently' sched- my appointment as 8/24. She

'
asked me why I had never thing really simple. it could
shown up.
need an overhaul. Bring it in
Low-tech trumps hi gh-tech and well hook it up to the
once again . I didn't take the . computer.'
·
test Who knew where they
' Is it safe to drive?
would send the results? I fig' If you're behind the wheel,
ured the chances of my doc- 1 no. Let Sue drive.'
tor getting them were slim or
I walked back to the car
none. After all, the test was and noticed that the gas cap
on the ninth floor and my door was open . 1 slapped it
doctor. was on the 14th. It'd shut and got back in the car.
be·· easier to send a rocket to When I .started up, the
Mars. They were, however. 'Check Engine' light was out
prompt in sending me the cold. Sue was still in the
bUt.
ladies room . I turned off the
Driving back from the hos- engine and opened the hood
pita! , the · c~eck Engine' for the first time in my 4hght flashed on m the car. year-old car's life.
Was I supposed to pull over?·
Try it nuw,' 1 said when ·
Would I hurt the engine if I she came back. She gave me
, 'kept on driving? Sue said, The Lo&lt;;&gt;k and slid behind the
'Let's go to a gas station.' I wheel.
said, 'What are they going to
' Looks good,' she said
do at a gas station'? Sell it a with surprise, 'What'd you
cup of coffee and a donut? do?'
.
They don't fix ~ars at gas sta' I jiggled the whosy o'n top
Irons anymore.
of the thmgamajig,' [ said,
'Do they still have bath- letting ,the hood fall closed
rooms?' she asked. 'I need with a manly thunk. ' Face it,
one.'
no conip'uter ciin replace
Oh.
good, old-fashioned knowI got on the cell phone' and how.'
called the car dealer. What
(Jim Mulle11 is the author of
does II mean when the 'It Takes A Village Idiot· A
'Check Engine' light goes MemoirofLife Afterthe Ciry' ·
on?
.(Simon and Schuster, , 2001).
'It could be a hundred dif- He also contributes regularly
ferent things. The catalytic to Entertainmell/ Weekly,
converter, oil leak, who' where he can l!e reached at
knows? It could be some- jim_fllullen@elv.com)

I

from Page A1
pending completion of all
neces s ar~ requirements for
the positwn.
The
Board employed
Belinda Adams as a special
education aide on an as needed basis effective Oct. 27,
2003.
The Board entered into a
the
contract
with
Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
Education Cooperative. This

Churches
from PageA1
years, · said that while her
church doesn't specifically
discourage members from
paniciP.ating in secular holidays hke Halloween, it sees
its fall celebration as a means
of protecting children.
"We discourage things that
bring fear to small children,"
Barnhart said. "[ just don't
believe in scaring kids. We
choose, instead, to celebrate the
harvest that. God gives us.lllt is
an altemati ve to Trick or t teat,
and an event for the family."
"It's a great outreach for
our church; because most of
the children and families who
attend do not usually attend
services here.':
According to Barnhart, ihe
Rejoicing Life leadership has
asked those attending the
Harvest Celebration to
refrain from wearing cos- .
tumes, not only because of

formerly employed as a boilermaker with Charleston Local
f:iJ 7. He Wa'&gt; a member of the
Middleport ,.' Community
Church. and wa' a Sunday
school teacher for 50 years.
Surviving are hi&gt; wife of 56
years. Eulonda Little Hale y
of Middleport; a daughter,
Elizabeth Moodr,paugh of
Middleport : three "ons and
daughter~-in - law : Harold and
Judy Hale y of Toledo.
, Dwight. Jr. and Kathy Haley
of Middleport. and Mark and
Teresa Haley of Middlepor't;
a 'on-in -law. Gary Drenne r
of Pomeroy: 14 grandchildren and several great grandchildren; a step sister, Flossie
· Hy,ell of Harrisonville; and
several nieces and nephew&gt; .
Be , ide&gt; his parents. he was
preceded 111 death by hi s
daughter. Rebecca Drenner: a
gra ndson. Christopher Haley:
~ gre at g ~a nd so n . Dalla s
Shane Moodispaugh: a sonin-law. Darrell Moodis paugh:
and ~hree brothers: Worley.
Lel and and Floyd Hale y.
Services will be held at I
p.m. on Friday. Oct. 31. 2003
at Middleport Community
Church with Sam Anderson
officiatin g. Burial will follow
at Miles Cemetery. Military
services will be conducted
grave side . Grand&gt;ons will
serve as pallbearers.
Friends may ca ll from 6 to
9 p.m . on Thursday at the
Fi sher Funeral Home in
Middleport. and an hour prior
to the service.
Friends may send condolences and regi ster online at
www.fisherfunemlhomes.com.

...
• Rutland Village. 6 to 7
p.m. Thursday.
• Racine. 6 to 7 p.m.
Thursday.
• Syracuse. 6 to 7 p.m.
Thursday.
• Danville, 5 to 6 p.m.
Thursday.
• Pomeroy, 6 to 7 p.m.
Thursday.
· • Middleport, 6 to 7 p.tn ..
Thursday.
• Chester, 6 6oi 7 p.m.
Thursday .
• Letart Falls, 6 to 8 p.m.
Thursday.
• Reesdville, 6 to 7 p.m.
Thursday.
• Tuppers Plains, 6 to 7
p.m . Thursday.
• Bashan. 6 to 7 p.m.
Thursday followed by party
at firehouse.

Sears to speak

Board meets
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Pl ain s Regional
Sewer District will hold its
monthly meeting at 7 p.m . on
Nov. 3 at the district office.

Lodge meets
HARRISONVILLE
Harri sonville Lodge 411 will
hold its stated meeting at 7:30
p.m. on Saturday at the
Temple. Officers will be elected. Dues tor 2004 are due.
Refreshments will be served.

Seminar plar:m~d
POMEROY - A supplemental retirement planning seminar
tor teachers in Meigs County
will be held from 6:30 to 8:30

MIDDLEPORT - Greg
Sears will speak at Ash Street
Church, 398 Ash St. ,
Middleport, at I0:30 a. m. and
7 p.m. services on Sunday.
The public is invited.

agreement covers the use of
software service s offered
through the SEOVEC computer center and covers the
period July I, 2003 through
June 30, 2004. The cost is $2
per pupil based on the 2003
fiscal year.
The Board approved a
lease agreement between
Gloria A. Wagner and the
Southern Local
School
District for an annual fee of
$1. Thi s is intended to be an
outdoor Ia~ for the science
and vocational agriculture
programs.
their connection to the secular celebration of Halloween,
but for more practical reasons, as well.
"It takes the pressure off the
parents a great deal," Barnhart
said. "It also puts all the kids on
the same level. Besides, personally, I don't think it's cute to
dress a child up as the devil."
Barber said the nature Qf
the costume is irrelevant.
"Even if a child dresses up
as an angel, we feel that sends
a bad message," Barber said.
"It's still panicipation in a
holiday based on the occult." ,

Contract
from Page A1
the Board in 2003 one year
after he started working for the
district - which happened at
the special meeting in October.
Grueser received top marks on
his evaluation from the Board.
The contrdct also required the
Board to notify Grueser in July
2004 of whether or not his
contract would be renewed
past its expiration date in
August 2005.
Smith voted again St
extending the contract.
With two of the five
school board seats up for
election, the move to renew

Red
from Page A1
ago . Some of the losses can
be attributed to open enrollment and home schooling,
but declining regional economics have also been a
factor in enrollment.
II] 2002 , the base cost per
pupil for fiscal year was
· $4,949 which means the
district will be losing nearly
$100,000 in state aid in
2003.
If the four mill three-year
levy fails to be renewed on

p.m. on Nov. II, at the Meigs
High School cafeteria. The seminar is sponsored by the Meigs
County
Retired Teachers
Association. the Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center, and
the Ohio Retired Teachers
Association.
The active teachers planning to attend should make
reservations in the county
office by Nov. I.

Food drive
planned
RACINE - Racine Area
Community • Organization
will hold its annual fall food
drive from 8 a.m. until I p.m.
Saturday at the corner of
Third and Pearl Streets. All
donations will be given to the
Meigs Cooperative Food
Parish. Those who wish to
Grueser 's contract before
the Nov. 4 general election
will deprive the new school
board of an immediate
chance for approval next
year. Board members David
Kucsrha
and
Marty
Morarity, who support the
contract extension, will not
be running for re-election.
Grueser graduated from
Southern High School in
1967 and has served in a
variety of educational positions throughout southeast
Ohio. Most recently he was
superintendent of the
Warren Local
School
District in Washington
County from 1998 to 2002 .
Warren Local has a student
population of more than
2,600 students.
November 4, the district ,
could face an additional
loss of more than $144.000
each year. Grueser said he
has canvassed the district to
raise awareness on the
importance 'of the levy to
education.
.
To make matters even
more difficult for the district. Gov. Taft cut more
than $39.000 ·in state aid to
the district earlier this year.
· All three school .districts
received varying degrees of
·
state budget cuts.

donate items are not available
on Saturday are asked to contact Ann Zirkle at 949-2031
or Kathryn Hart at 949-2656.
and items will be picked up .

Activities will include learning about Girl Scouts from
the past, songs. ~arne' and
willmclude a servtce project.
The video 'The Golden
Eaglet " whtch is made with
original footage taken duri ng
the earl y year' of Girl
Scoutin g. will be shown .
Former Girl Scouts will share
POMEROY - A Juliette their !lJemories and experiLow/Founders Day celebra- ences. Qlder girl' will learn
tion wi II be observed by local about Wider Ops and talk to a
Girl Scouts from 6 to 8:30 Wider Op recipient. Co&gt;t is $2
p.m. on Friday in the Meigs for registered Girl Seoul&gt;.
Middle School cafetetia. which includes an event patch .

Founder's
Day set

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

Voting
from Page A1
registered voters 111 each
c0 unty. Jane Frymyer.
deputy director of the Mei gs
County Board of Elections,
said Meigs County would be
required to purchase 64
units, at a cost of $2.800
each, in order to replace all
of the punch-card units now
being used in the county.
The
new
equipment
approved by the state uses a
touch-screen computer rather
than paper ballots. It is ·
designed to prevent over voting, under voting, and other
voting errors now possible
with the paper ballot system.
It also provides for ballot
counting at the precinct level ;
as opposed to the election
board 's current central counting system.
The county will also provide handicapped-access ible machines under the new
plan, Frymyer said : in com-

pliance with the American s
Act.
with
Disabili ties
Proponents say the new system is also easier for voters
to use . smce it provide s
prompts at each step of the
voting proi:es,.
·
The new system will likely
provide a cost savi ngs to
counties. LaPoro
said .
because it will eliminate the
need for ballot printing . The
state requires that .local election boards provide printed
ballot materials for I05 percent of the registered voters
in the county.
"The new system could
save ,tens or even 'hundreds
of thousands of dollars in
printing costs alone over the
older systems." LaPoro said.
"so the potential for savings
to local governmen ts is
great ."
Board
of
Elections
Director .Rita Smith said the
county will sJ)end approximately $5.000 thi s year on
ball ot card s and printed
ll)aterials for the Nov. 4 geneml election.

screenings/health .
information &amp; door prizes
are available to all age
groups.
The nu shots are available
to Meigs County Residents age
65+ and to those with high risk condlti6nsContact the Meigs County liealth Departmentqt ·
992-6626 for ,. list of these conditions.

·HEALTH FAIR PARTICIPANTS
Advanced Hearing
Atthri1is Foundation

Ohio Ke· PRO

R01.:ksprings Rehab center
Holzer Medical Center
Retired and Senior Volumeer
Holzer Hospice
Program
Meigs Coun1y Cancer Initiative
Meigs County Council on Aging, InC.
Meigs County Health Department's Cardiova~Ular Health "'~·~m
O '.Bieness Memorial Hospital

For

SALISBURY TOWNSHtP
TRUSTEE

�•
•

Pag~A6

AROUND TIIE .WORLD
Car bomb kills at least four in Fallujah; U.S. .Rescuers find trapped
soldier killed in Baghdad grenade attack
Russian miners alive

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 29,

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) BritaitJ 's special repre,entaIn Fallujah , a llashpoint
A car bomb exploded Tuesday Su nni Muslim city 40 miles tive in Iraq, Sir Jerem y
west of Baghdad, killing at west of Baghdad , a car · Greenstock, also s.tid Tuesday
least four people a day after exploded Tuesday afternoon that forei gn terrorists could be
three dozen people died . in a on a major street, killing at entering
Iraq
from
wave of suic ide bombings in . least four people. The ex plo- Afghani stan and elsew here.
the Iraq i capital. U.S. officials sion occun·ed about I00 yards
The use of suicide bombsaid one of Baghdad's three from a pol ice stat ion and 100 ings in Monday's attacks "is a
1:leputy mayors was kill ed in a feet from a school, but the tar-· sign of foreign terrorist lachit-and-run shooting.
get was unclear.
ti cs. rather than the Saddam
. The latest attacks, including
Later Tuesday. eight huge loyalist elements that we are
the killing SunJay of Deputy explosions were heard after sun- still try ing to chase down."
Mayor Fari sA bdul Razzaq ai- down from the southern area of Greenstock told BBC.
Assam, raised fears that a Fallujah. U.S. officials in
The car bombing 111
strengthened insurgency is Baghdad said they were Fal lujah was the first in the
increasingly targeting Iraqis unaware of the blasts, which res- city. a center of resistance to
who work wi th the U.S .-Ied idents described a~ "deafening." the U.S. occupati on.
In Baghdad, at least three
Tawfiq Mijbel, who was
coalition as well as international groups that had consid- mortar shell s ex ploded la te badly wo unded by shrapnel
ered themselves at less risk Tuesday in the Jadriya dist ri ct fro m the car bombing. said he
across the Tigris Ri ver from was dri ving d irectl y behind
than U.S. soldiers.
Despite the escalati on in the palace headquarters of the the ve hicle that expl oded. " It
atlacks on Iraqis, American U.S.-.led coalition, Iraqi police stopped in front of the power
forces remained targets, with said : There was no immediate co mpany. A mari go t out,
insurgents llring on a U.S. word on casualties or damage. while another stayed in the
mili tary base and convoy in
Coaliti on officials reported car. A few secotlds later it
two northern cities Tue sday.
little progress in determining blew up," Mijbel said from
In Baghdad, a rocket-pro- who was behind Monday 's his hospital bed.
pelled gre nade attack killed car bombings in Baghdad.
Khamis Mijbul , who owns a
A firth wou ld-be suicide shop opposite the spot wl1ere
one U.S. soldier and wounded
six others wh ile \hey were try- bo mber. who was caught the car hlew up, said the bi'L"
ing to destroy ·roadside bombs. Monday before he could deto- produced a massive hall of li re
the U.S. military said Tuesday. nate his ex plosi ves, told police and debris !lew in all directions.
· The soldiers, from the Ist he was Syrian, accord ing to a
The sehoul was closed, but
Armored Divi sion. were coalition official. In vestigators poli ce said one bod y was found
attacked Monday, the same were tryi ng to confirm his inside. Pol ice Cui. Jalal Sabri
, day a te am of suicide car nationality, the official said on saichtl l the victims appeared to
bombers devastated th e Red condition of anonymity.
, have been bystanders. Sabri
Cross headq uarters and three
President Bush blamed both said at least li1ur people were
police stations, killing th ree loyalists to Saddam and for- dead hut the number coul d
dozen people and wounding eign terrorists fo r the attacks reach SIX . The cou nt was dilli more than 200.
in and around Baghdad, cu lt because some victims we re
: In Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's including a rocket barrage on dismembered. he 'aiel.
'hometown, insurgents opened a hote l Sunday that killed a
The slain depu ty Baghdad
fire late Tuesday on the south- U.S. li eute nant colonel and mayor, ai-Assam. wa.s "shut in
ern gate of the main U.S. mil- wou nded 18 other people.
a hit-and-run incident" Sunday.
itary base, wou nding at least
Bush told a news confer- said Tom Basile, a coa lit ion
one American soldier from the ence Tuesday that "basically spokesman . Ba sile sai d he had
4th Infantry Division , wit- what they' re trying to do is no inform ation that an y susnesses said. A patrol was sent cause people to run ."
peels were apprehenJcd.
out to search for the assai lants,
Resistance forces have
A coaliti on spokesman.
who soldiers said apparently Charles Heatl y, told the assassinated or allempted to
fired from a nearby rooftop.
Briti sh Broadcasting Corp.. assass in ate several fi gu res
And a U.S . military convoy "there certainl y are indica- alli ed with the occupat ion.
. was attacked Tuesday ni ght by 'tions that there are foreign ter- The most prominent was
small arms fire in the northern rorists who are co ming into Aq uila al -Has him i. a memher
city of Mosul, the military Iraq," but he did not explicitly of the Governing Cou ncil.
said. There were no casualties. accuse them of responsibility. · who was fatall y shot Sept. 20.

OAS leaders approve declaration defining
new security agenda for Western Hemisphere
· MEXICO CITY (AP) treaty "remains an essential
High-level officials of the component of our security
Org&lt;mizatiun of American States architecture because it is the
ended two day of talks Tuesday legally bindin·g sec urity
with a new security agenda instrum ent within our hemiencompassin~ a broad range of sphere." The document's relethreats, rangmg from terrorism vance '\¥ US und erscored,
and arms trafficking to AIDS, Grossmanl.saict, when it was
poverty and natural disa,ters.
invoked by flrazi l fo ll owing
They approved a separate the Sept. II terror attacks.
agreement to "fight terronsm in
But Grossman also said the
all its fonms" and to support United States agreed with the
Colombia's ongoing tight against majority of other countries in
drug trafficking and rebels.
the Americ as that "today 's
- The Declaration on Security in threat (to the hemisphere) is
t!Je Americas notes that the multidimensional."
Westem Hemisphere's "rraditionThe tina) security declaraal concept and approach (to secu- tion approved Tuesday also
rity) rrtust be expanded to encom- calls on the Committee on
pass new and nontraditional Hemispheric Security to recthreats, which include political, ommend possible changes in
economic, social, health, and the rol e of the OAS '
environmental aspects."
lnterameri can Defe nse Board,
The declaration outlines which has played a consulting
"new threats, concern s, and and advisory role for military
other challenges" to the operations in the hemisphere.
Americas, inducting terrorMex ico Foreign Secretary
ism, organized crime, l]loney Luis Ern esto Derbez said
jaundenng, drug trafficking, Monday that his country is "not
and corruption.
looking for, nor can we accept,
The li st also includes the mifitarization of the OAS."
extreme poverty: natural and
Also Tuesday, conference
man-made di sasters: AIDS delegates approved a side
and other diseases; environ- a~reement in which OAS coun )11ental degradation ; cyber tnes - in a nod to the United
threats; weapons of mass States - declare their "unshakdestruction ; and tnlnsporting able commitment to continue
hazardous materials at sea.
fighting terrorism in all its
OAS subcommittees wi ll forms and manifestations," as
now be in charge ot' developing well as organized, crime, drug
traffickin g, corruption and
new tools to fight the threuts.
Addressing a major theme of ·money laundering. The agreethe conference, the declaration men! was attached to· a side
recommends that the OAS' accord in which OAS countries
Committee on Hemispheric agree to support Colombia's
Security thoroughly analyze tight against drug traffickers
the relevance of the 1947 Rio and later provide follow-up
Treaty, a Cold War-era accord suppon to help disarm and reinthat called for all countries in corporate rebels into society.
the hemi sphere to defend each
"A thousand thanks to all
other in case of attack.
my colleagues for their supMany countries consider the port,'' said Colombia Foreign
treaty a relic that the U.S. gov- Secretary Carolina Barco at
ernment used to justify fi ght
communist groups in Central
":'
America dunng the Cold War.
Its usefulness also was called
into question when countries
tried· unsuccessfull y to invoke
it .after Britain sent troops to
recapture the Falkland Islands
from Argentina in 1982.
Mexico withdrew from the
rreaty in September 2002 and ·
~orne countries in th e hemisphere · never ratified it .
Brazilian Foreign Secretary
Celso Amorim said Tuesday
that "given that the treaty was
drafted in other historical cir. cumstances, it should be
revisited."
'
: U.S. Undersecretary pf
State Marc Grossman said
'fuesday, however, that the

the signing ceremony. At an
earlier news conference ,
Barco said l11e ag reement
does not include any request ·
for military assistance.
Barco sa id more than 40
percent of the $700 mill io n
the · United Stutes is giving
Colombia thi s year will go to
such prog rams and to
"stren gthe nin g democracy."
The United States has acted
on ly as a c.o nsultant and
adviser to Colombia's army,
she said, and disputed reports
that Colombian so ldiers
trained by the United States
were violating hum an ri ghts.
The declaration, while citing acknowledging the need
to meet defense threats, al so
said natio ns in the region
"will continue to stri ve to
limit military spending:·

NOVOSHAK HTl NS K,
Russi a (A P) - Rescue workers fou nd ali ve Wednesday II
of the 13 miners who had
bee n trapped deep unde rground for six days, Russian
officials said. One of the miners had died. while another
was still mi ssing.
Meanwhile, in the Russian
Far East, an explosion in a
mme in the Primorye region,
cl aimed 5 lives. Another 66
miners were rescued after an
ex plosion
1n
the
"T,sentralnaya Mi ne'' in the
tow n
Partizansk, Viktor
Beltsov. J spokesman fol' the
Russian
Emerge ncy
Situati'ons Minis try said.
At the mine in southern
Russia. the men were
re ached when drillers man aged to break th rough to the
pit area where the miners had
sought refuge, the oJ'J'i cials
s:1i J . The miners were to be
_hro ught up to the surface
later Wednesday.
Rescuers had tunne led
throu~h solid rock from an
ad jace nt mine to reac h the
miners. who had been strand ed by ic y water. Emerge ncy
officials ilad worked to plug
the hole through whtch water
ilad flowed into the shaft.
Hundreds or tons of rock.
soil and reinforced concre te
pillar' had been dumped int o
tile shart to seal the leak .
Eme rge ncy wo rk ers on
Tu esday had sto pped th e
now or wa ter into a ll oc&gt;ded

'*'

St. Rt. 7

Pomeroy, OH

(j.41!Y 1!. DILL
Chester Township
Trustee ·

1

Qualified

Thank You
C arl' R. Dill 48190 Ril'l&gt;cl Rd. Loug Botto m, OH
....... - ··-~-

·~---

Our
Heroes

.OIJil UIIJll7J~ l7Jn~

Ou November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran 's Day, the Daily Sentinel will publish a very special tribute
honoring area veterans. You ca11 join in our salute by including the
veteran in your life, living or deceaud, who have served or is currently
' servi11g in any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces. ,,

Your choice of Two Styles ...
Ad Only $7.00
(s hown ac tual size)

In Honor Of

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Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam

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protes ts over \;age oeJay~

and declininQ safetY qandards. Acco~·din~ -to th e
Independent Co;~ Miners·
Un ion. (JK mi ners were killed
on th e job la st year and 0R in
200 I.

.t-ELECT--

~;;::;::;~~
~.

Outdoor Power
Equipment

Saw Repai

'aid . "But I hope he is alive and
didn 't go fm from the place
where he got lo't. I really hape
everything will be line.' '
Alexander Kurni chenko,
the deputy chairman or the
Ru ssian mine safety authority. said Monday that rescue
officials believed the miners
had found a dry place to stay.
and that temperature in the
mine was 75 degree s. He
said, however. that cvapont·
tion in the mine could expose
them to cold.
"As long as they have oxygen and water. they have a
chance to survive." he said .
There were 71 miners
working in th e mine in the
Rostov-on-Don reg ion . about
600 mile s south of Moscow,
when the accident occurred.
Twenty -fi ve mine r~ nianaged
to esc1pe to 01 her p&lt;ts and
reac h the surface after sever;J( shaft s we re flull(led .
According tu ITAR -Tltss. it
was the second such acc ident at
tile Zapadnaya mine thi s ytw. It
sai&lt;.l water llondcd the mine in
Fcbrua1y. but there were no
people inside at the time.
Acciden ts arc common in
th e Rus~ian coa l industry.
and miners sw~e frequen t

mine . i n sou thern Ru ss ia.

officials · said. CIS dri llers
came with in yCirds or th e
men's presu med locat io n.
Rescuers tunn eled throu gh
solid rock from an adjacent
mine to reach the miners. By
Tuesday morning. the tunnelers
were 6- 10 feet away from the
area where the men W'e believed
to have been s01mded bv the
llood or icy water, said· M&lt;u.
Gen. Viktor Kapk&lt;mchikov of
Ru ssia's Emergency Situations

Dave

lOO/o Off All

Ministry.
Andrei Khudyakov, tl1e
leader of rescuers at ihe
Zapadnaya
mine
in
Novoshakhtinsk, said his team
had plugged the hole through
which water had llowed into the
shaft. Hundreds of tons of rock.
soil and reinforced concrete pillars had been dumped into the
shah to seal the leak, the !TARTass news agency reported.
"' Maybe
we ' II
punch
through and find them .standing there, alive," Khudyakov
told reporte rs.
The rescue teams were
working in shi fts. emerging
from the mine with black,
encd faces and exhaustedlooking eyes. They have tunne led th rough about 165 feet
in i'o llr days. com pared with
the month such a job usually
req ui r&lt; "• . Russian state television t'L'(lorted.
Tht· miners were working
some 2.625 feet below ground
on Thursday when water from
a subt erranean lake leaked
into a ' haft abo ve them.
block ing thei r way to the su rface. On Saturday. 33 otl1er
miners who had bee n ·trapped
,by the flood we re rescued.
Lyubov Tkach .said her husband Sergei had bee n with the .
33 bu t that he got separated.
She sat in the mine company
headquarters on Tuesday, her
eyes red-rimmed from crying.
wa iting for news.
·'We are all in despair." 'he

2003

'

L-----------------~

. In Honor Of

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992
Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your Fami'y

. ....

'.

.....

..... .. .

··~

,.'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992-2155

''

•

, PageA7

REGION
DNA analysts help build database of convicted felon~

The Daily Sentinel.

HUNTINGTON ,
W.Va .
(AP) - DNA analysts at a
Marshall University laboratory are helpih g the West
Virginia State Police and FBI
build a database of .convicted
vio lent offenders that may
assist investigators in solving .
active and cold case crimes.
Master 's degree level-graduates of Marshall's foren sic
science program amplify and
analyze blood samples from
convicted fe lons at the
Combined DNA Index System
-or CO DIS - laboratories.
"Primarily, CO DIS is a
search engine," said Ly nd a
Holup, director of planning and
development for Marshall 's
Forensic Science Center.
The FBI COOlS system
allows local, stale and federal
crime labs across the nation to
exchange and compare DNA
prollles electronically, according to the COOlS Web site.
"The whole purpose of
COOlS is to link convicted
offenders' with un solved
crimes," said Lt. Brent Myers,
CODIS administrator for th e
We st Virginia State Pol ice.
As of September, th e
National DNA Index Sy stem
had nearly 1.5 milli on profiles
that yielded more than 8.900
matches, or "hits," to help
with more than 9,800 investigations; the Web site said.
UniversitY's
Mars hall
CO DIS labs have sent the

Wednesday, October 29 ;

State Police more than 4,000
co nvicte(j offender profiles,
Myers said. Of those, I, 11 8
are included in the national
database, with the rest expected to be included by the end
of the year, he said.
So far, the system has
helped solve two We st
Virginia crimes - one a sexual assault where evidence
matched a convicted offender
in Florida, the other an auto
theft case th at was helped
th rough evidence in a West
Virginia murder.
Myers said it's just a matter
of time before profiles created
in West Virginia help solve
crimes elsewhere.
"The larger the database
gets, the more likely you are
to have a hit," he said.
The process works like thi s:
- The state Divi sion of
Corrections collects blood
from convicted offenders and
sends samples to the State
Police crime lab in South
Charleston.
-The State Police ente rs
information
about each
offender into a computer and
assigns each sample a bar
code to kee p the process
anonymous. The lab makes
blood sta ins of each sample
and sends.a stained sample to
Marshall 's COOlS lab in
Huntington.
- CODIS analy sts ex tract
portions of DNA from the

blood stain and make million•
of copies in a process called
polymerase chain reaction. or
amplification. This proce"
makes it easier to view the
DNA when it is analy1.ed.
-COO lS workers analyze
tbe DNA ponion., throu gh a
process called capillary electrophoresis. Special equipment separates ·th e DNA
according to size and detects
DNA molec ul es with a laser.
The data are represented on a
graph with peaks, each representing a fragmenl of DNA.
Overall. analys ts look at the
same 13 locations of DNA for
each sample.
- A second lab ana lyst
reviews the work.
- The data are sent to
Myers, who has a State Pulice
con sultant review it a third
time.
- The State Pulice la b
retests about 5 perce nt of th e

,HALLOWEEN
.; t

PARTY

.., i

October '30

Jr~ Thurfdav

~

r

1

~ight
Contert

Cortu~e

MORGANTOWN , W.Va.
. (AP)
West Virginia
University will di scipline at
least 40 students who took
part in post-game mayhem
· after the Mountaineers upset
then-No. 3 Virginia Tech,
school official s said Tue sday.
After the Oct. 22 victory,
pour~d
onto
students
Mountaineer Field and tried
to tear down the goal posts
but were turned back by
police who used pepper spray
arid fo~ce to clear the field.
Within minutes, fires large
and small were set in the
streets. More than I00 were
reported, but authorities said
most were doused within minutes. No major inJuries or
property destruction occurred.
WVU officials said the 40
students include 14 freshmen,
six sophomores, nine juniors,
sever seniors and four graduate
students. They were identified
with the help of city, state·and
university po~ce , as well as
firefighters and other sources.·
· . Some students are also fac' ng charges filed by the city's
·Police and fire departments.
' rite offenses include disorderly conduct, public intoxi-·
cation and illegal burning.
"WVU officials have been
gathering and reviewing
arrest and other information
since last Thursday, and there

I&gt;·~

l&gt;RIWK SPf.CIALS!

increases to health benefits.
The union says an independent actuary determined the
company would need to contribute considerably more if
th ey are to keep up with rising
health cost s and Krog er's
offer would slash benefits in
balf by the end of the fouryear contract.
Both the union and company remain
in their
positions and
said they
. anticipate a
The strikers
Kentucky and
a growing nurnbE~
store workers who
the job to protest higher health
care contributions.
About 4,000 union workers
at Kroger supermarkets across
Indiana voted overwhelmingly
Friday to reject a five-year
contract offer from the
Cincinnati-based company.
Similar contract disputes '·
also are going on in Southern
California, where thousands of
UFCW members are striking
three supermarket chains:
Kroger 's Ralphs, Safeway
Inc.'s Vons and Albertsons Inc.
Kroger is West . Virginia's
fourth largest private employer, with about 5, I00 employees statewide . The company
made $542 million in profits
through the end of August,
down $27 million from 2002.

for post-game rioting

the

fore n~i c

... t: ien ce program

il

L't&gt;mputer. " Fenger ·,aid .

VOTE

JOHNW. DEAN
CANDIDATE FOR
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP

TRUSTEE

HALLOWEEN

PARTY
Friday
October 31 ·
Karaoke Night

. ' Ladief

Kroger employees, union
negotiators continue talks

WVU to discipline students

expects tho'c state' to implc- took its fiN clas' in 1995 .
ment CODIS systems soon.
said Terry Fenger. director of
Mar,hJII\ CODIS lab is the Foremic Science Center.
Meanwhile. the 0·enter Is
accredited hy the National
Forensic Science Technology currently under going conCenter and ha' recently been ,truction that will add spac'e
certified by an international
standard' urganiLation as a test- for a computer forensics divjing and calihration lahoratnl) . 'ion . The initiative will help
"lt's ·an indication that you train 'tudents and will offer
have a yuality management lav. enforcement officials
syste m in place ... Holu p said . equipmen t to in,estigate·
The State Pnlice lah is seitcd computers for digit~
accredited hy ASC I.D -LAB - el'idcnc~. Fenger said.
the Amencan
. forma. Souety
- ot Cnme . "Th ere cuuld be .111
Lab
Dlre&lt;:tnr,·
Lahoratw:y
t1on ahout drug deali ng. corAccreditation Board.
At Mar,hall. ahout IIXJ stu - porate espionage. terrori&gt;m
denh have graduated since - all thcse'thing' wuld be on

(;~6J fn~e0 ·

11:00

CHARLESTON,
W.Va .
(AP) - Kroger and union representatives scheduled a second round of talks for
Wednesday in a bid to end a
two-week strike at 44 stores in
West Virginia, Ohio and
Kentucky, a union official said.
Jim Lowthers, president of
United Food and Commercial
Workers Local 400, would not
characterize a llrst meeting
Tuesday ni ght but said the two
sides had agreed to meet again
at 9:30a.m. Wednesday.
"So far it's just been general
conversation," Lowthers said .
"It's better to talk than not to
talk, but I wouldn't characterize this lirst meeting as positive or negative. We have
agreed to meet again; that's it.'.'
. Archie Fralin, a Kroger
spokesman in Roanoke, Va, could
not be reached Tuesday night
Neither side has indicated
where negotiations are being
held. Lowthers said l]egotiators want to avoid being
approached by reporters.
Talks between the union and
the company broke down two
days before the strike of 3,300
workers begah on Oct. 13 and
did not resume until Thesday.
Kroger employees h&lt;IVe been
picketing the 44 stores since
their union voted down a proposed contract from the company that called for 8 ·percent

'ilmples a' a quality control
rrleasure . (So far. everything
ha,· matched, Myers said.)
- The
information
i'
loaded into the COO lS MJft ware. then sent to tile National
DNA Index Sy,tcm .
· -,Once a week, ca.ses on tile
at the national databa;e \ forensic index are wmpared to all
proliles in the convicted offender index to check for matchc,.
Within the forensic index. DNA
profiles are compared to other
DNA pruliles tu see if two ca.;es
can be connected.
Sa mpl es and information
remain bar coded throughout
th e proccs ~. and personal
.informati on is only seen by
designated COD IS officials in
each state.
Every
state
except
Mississippi and Rhode Isla nd
participat es in the national
index sys tem. accordi ng io the
CO DIS Wt!b site . Myers

2003

Costume

Born and raised in Bedford township
for 52 years. Union Construction
worker for 33 years.
Resides on the family farm.

Contest at
11:00 p.m.

DRINK
SPECIALS!

IIi

erson's
.. I

. 'li

. Sflle '..tJJ

;

'

·

may be more to follow, especially as more infonmation filters in,'' said Ken Gray, vice.
president for student affairs.
School officials will notify
each student in writing and
arrange individual meetings.
Sanctions will depend on the
student's level of involvement
and any past brushes with-the
law. Punishments could range
from a warning to expulsion.
With three home games lett,
including this weekend's homecoll)ing game against Centrdl
Aorida, school officials renewed
their pleas for good behavior.
Gray said irresponsible
behavior will not be tolerated
after Saturday's game, which
is set to kick off at I p.m.
Earlier this month, WVU disciplined three students who participated 'in similar post-game
mayhem
after
the
Mountaineers' 22-20 loss to No.
2 Miami. One was expelled, one
is :appealing expulsion and the "
third is on what the school calls
deferred suspension, meaning
he is ~ne infraction away from
expulston. .
·
Before the nationally televisc:d Virginia Tech game, city
crews perfonmed a massive
cleanup of the ~tudent-domi­
nated Sunnyside neighborhood, removing furniture and
other deb.ris, and leaving most
.students with .little to bl!rn .

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Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Wed.Desday, October 29,2003

Witnesses in D.C. Court order restricts anti-abortion
sniper·case detail activist who praised doctor's killer
16 hours of terror
•

VIRGINIA BEACH. Va.
(AP) - Ralph Sheldon heard
an explosion, then saw a
woman slumped over on a
bench. blood pouring from
her head: He thought she
must have committed suicide,
because there was nobody
else around.
"A girl just shot herse lf," he
told a 911 operator in a call
from a restaurant nearby.
Sheldon took the stand
Tuesday and the 91 1 recording was played for the jury at
the murder trial.Qf sniper suspect John Allert"'Muhammad .
• Muhammad and Lee Boyd
Malvo are accused 'in the
sniper attacks that killed ·10
people and terrorized the
Washington ~area for three
weeks last year.
· Muhammad, 42, is on trial
in only one of the killings, the
. shooting of Dean Harold
Meyers at a gas station in
Manassas. Va. But prosecutors are presenting evidence
· from the other shootings,
because they must prove multiple killings to convict
Muhammad on one of the
death-penalty charges agai nst
him.
Sheldon testified about the
shooting of 34-year-old Sarah
Ramos outside a shopping
center
in
Montgomery
County.
The retiree testified in a
shaky voice that he was
putting a letter in a mailbox
when he heard "a huge exp losion," turned and saw Ramos'
bloodied body on the bench.
Just moments before, Sheldon
had seen a "pretty lady sitting
there."
Cynthia Martin, the first
police ofticer on the scene,
testified that she could tell
immediately that Ramos'
wound was not se lf-infl icted
because there was no weapon
nearby. Martin also knew

there was no way the woman
could survive: "When I
walked up. her brain was on
the ground. had fallen
through the bench."
Ramos was one of five people to die in Montgomery
County. M4.. within a 16hour peri&lt;;!ll on Oct. 2-3,
2002.
Prosecutors also presented
testi mony Tuesday in two
other fatal shootings on Oct.
3.
Lori Lewis-Rivera, 25; was
shot in the. back at a
Kensington, Md .. gas station
while she vacu umed her car.
Firefighter Steve Steinberg
and police officer Terry
Ri.dgely described a chaotic
scene, with more than a dozen
people gathered around the
victim as blood bubbled out
of her mouth and nose.
"I felt like a si tting duck out
there." Ridgely testified.
Burnell lrby, a high school
football coach, testified that
later that night, as he headed
to a coi n laundry in
Washington to wash uni forms, he parked his car, got
out, heard a pop. and ·saw a
tlash of Iight.
'
Then he heard a woma n
scream , "Somebody\ been
shot! " and he realized thm the
victim was a man who had
jllst walked in fron t of his car
with a rolled-up newspaper
under his arm. he said.
· The man was 72-year-old
Pascal Charlot, a retired carpenter and immigrant from
Haiti.
lrby said he thought Charlot
was still alive because he had
a grimace on his face and the
body was moving. " It was
just a little bit of movement,"
lrby said, touching his hand
to hi s chest to demonstrate.
Malva, 18, goes on trial
separately next' month in the
slaying of an FBI analyst.

Automated payment machines
at self-service checkout
.
counters reject new $20 bill
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) As ·colorful new $20 bills circulate around the nation ,
more consumers are find ing
out that the notes do not work
on
automated
payment
machines like those found in
se lf-service checkout counters at grocery stores.
The first calls started coming
into the U.S. Treasury
Department's
Bureau of
Engraving and Printing two
days ago, frustrating government officials who had worked
to overcome the vending
machine problems that followed
the 1998 redesign of the bill.
This time the problem
seems to plague most! y automated payment machines a relatively recent arrival in
the indu stry, the bureau said.
"We learned from our lack
of outreach last time, and we
reall y made an effort to reach
out to thousands of business
industries and associations so
they can start working with
their customers and members," said Dawn Haley,
spokeswoman for the Bureau
of Engraving and Printing.
When the colorful $20 bill
was officially introduced into
circulation Oct. 9, the first
purchase made with it was
stamps from a . vending
machine at 'a Washington ,
D.C .. post office.
The ceremoni al purchase
was no ·accident.
"The postal service wasn't
ready last time too - so we
· worked really hard with them,"
Haley said. "We definitely
wanted to showcase the fact the

U.S . Postal Service was ready."
After the problems following
the 1998 redesign, the Bureau of
Engmving and Printing wanted
to make sure its latest version
was technology friendly.
So more than a year· before
the new bills were put into circulation, the bureau reached
out to the vending machine
indu stry, transit authorities
and the gambling industry to
help ·them get ready for the
new bills, Haley said.
Vending machine manufacturers received test decks of
currency to try out on their
software and hardware.
But nobody thought about
the automated payment
machines until the f1rst call s
started coming in to the
bureau after the new currency
was put into circulation.
"The self-service group is
really new," Haley said.
A sign on the automated
checkouts at Dillon grocery
stores now advises customers to
trade their new $20 bill s for
older' bills before using the
machines. A similar stgn is posted at payment machines at the
600 Sprint stores nationwide.
"This is a minor inconvenience for our customers right
now," said Dan Wilinsky. a
spokesman for Sprint. The
company expects to upgrade
its machines to accept the •
bills within a month, he said.
Manufacturers of various
vending and money changing
machines are advertising software and&gt;hard-.;:are upgrades qn
the Internet that range in cost
from free io $40 per machine.

...

KEOKUK, Iowa (AP) For years, Dan Holman has
protested outside Iowa abortion clinics, handin g out
pamphlets with graphic pictures. videotaping doctors
and patients, and occasionally scuffling wi th patrons.
Then came the September
execution of Paul Hill for the
1994 shotgun murders of an
abortion doctor and hi s
bodyguard. Holman stood
with a group of Hill supporters outside the prison in
Gainesville, Fla., and spoke
admiringly of him in interviews with newspapers.
"Some day, I hope I will
hi1ve the courage to be as
much a man as he was," he
told The New York Times. "I
have n't killed anyone yet,
but I believe they deserve to
die." he told the Orlando
Seminel.
T hose words prompted
managers of the Emma
Goldman Clini c, where
Holman and his wife, Donna,
stage weekly prote sts, to
obtain a temporary restraining un.ter agai nst him .

In an interview with The
Associated Press, Holman,
57. said he could not bring
himst:f to kill · another
human being, but prai sed
those who would - and said
he hopes more abortion
providers are murdered.
"My heart leaps fo r joy
every time one of them gets
popped," Holman said. "You

won 'I lind me weeping over
the grave of an abortionist."
Under the temporary
InJUnction. Pan Holman
must stay across the street
from the clinic and at least
I00 feet away from Karen
Kubby, executive director of
the Iowa City clinic. and the
clini c's medical director.
"Certainly we ' ve seen an
escalatiQn of Dan and
Donna's behavior here,"
Kubby said. "First they had
the bloody signs, then they
were videotaping us, and
then the yelli ng at clients and
staff, standing right at the
edge of the law - wheil you
see that, and then the comments he made at the Paul
Hill execution, it's my job to
make sure our clients and our
staff arc safe:·
Hill's execution and the
impri sonment of James
Kopp, another convicted
abortion doctor killer, have
rai sed concern among abortion rights activists that rad icals among their opponents
are looking for someone to
step into those shoes - and
they view Holman as a candidate.
"Thi s .is somebody who
clearl y is dangerous," said
Vicky Sapm1a, president of
the
National
Abortion
Federation , the professional
organization for abortion
providers in the United
States and Canada.
Holman insisted he would

not rllllrder for his cause.
"I've killed deer, I' ve
killed sheep, I've ki lled
goat s." Hohn an said. "But I
would not bring myself to
kill another human being,
even though he de serves to
die."
'
Holman initially joined the
anti-abortion movement, but
grew disi llu sioned with what
he saw as a lack of decisive
action.
In the 1980s. he began
blocking entrance to clinics
and harassing doctors and
clinic staff. Holman said he's
bee n arrested more than 300
times and figllres he's spent
abuul four of the la st I0
years in prison.
Hi s first wife divorced him
in 199 1. and he is estranged
from his son.
Donna Holman, 68, had
protested abort ion fo r nearly
30 years when she met Dan a
few years ago on a road lrip

sponsored by Missionaries to
the Preborn . a Wi sconsinbased anti-abortion group.
Recently widowed. she
was drawn to Holman's
deeply held beliefs. The couple married last October.
. In the last year, the
Holmans have traveled all
over the Upper fv!idwest, to
Loui siana and New England,
Florida and Colorado. They
stay in the homes of people
sy mpathet ic to the cause. In
addi tion to abo rtion protests.
the couple have turned up at

co n gre~s ion a l

of a ban on what opponents
ca ll parti'al-birth abortion efforts they say breed complacency in the campaign to
outla w abortion emirely.
Mainstream apt i-abortion
actiyists are critica l of the
Holmans.
"They've &lt;.:a used me grief
because when I go out to do
our work. we ' re stereotyped
as being pan of their movement," sH id Kim Gordon,
execu ti ve director of Iowa
Ri ght to Life.
Th e Emma Go ldman
Clinic will return Ill court in
November. seeking to have
its ·injuncti on agai nst Dan
Holman made perman ent.
Holman plan s to oppose the
injunction, but said be won't
mellow hi s sty le.
'"They've tr ied the ni ce
approach for 30 years, and
nothing has happen ed,"
Holman said. '" It 's time to
scream bloody murder. ..

700 W. Main Street, Pomeroy • 992-289·1

Shawnee gets the season
sweep on the Redwomen, winning both matches played.
Rio Grande will step out of
conference on Thursday night
as they travel to Moun tam State
for a 6 p.m. match. Rio defeated the Mountain State,
September 18th at home.
Even though it was a loss, the
night was a special for Coach
Fields and player Wierwille.
"Becky came in and contributed as a freshman and she
was able to make it all the way
through four years, she played
hard and it was an emotional
night."
·
Wietwille is the dau~hter of
Fred and Cindy Wierwtlle and
is majoring m Intervention
Specialist K-l2 and currently
has 3,526 grade pomt average.

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· CLEVELAND (AP) -The
Cleveland Cavaliers are more
determined than ever to make
DeSagana Diop into a decent
NBA player.. ,
.
The club ptcked up 1ts 200405 contract option on Tuesday
for Diop, a former first-round
pick (No. 8 overall) in the 200 I
draft who has done little but
watch from the bench during
his first two seasons as a pro.
, But the Cavs think the 7foot, 280-pounder has a bright
future unaer the tutelage of
ftrst•year coach Paul Silas, a
fprmer All-Star with a reputaIJOn for developing young
tlontline players.
'! "DeSagana's continued
Improvement has been very
~couraging," Cavaliers generill manager Jim Paxson said. ·
;1He is in the best shape of his
lit'eer and is' making an impact
f.)JI defensive end of the floor.
We're confident that, under the
!fuection of Paul and his staff,
tleSagana will continue to
tlevelop and become an imJil,Or1311t part of our foundation . '
· D10p's 2004-05 contract will
be worth $2.65 million. •
· Last season, the 21-year-old
biop played in 80 games, averaging 1.5 pbints, 2.7 rebounds
and nearly one block per game.
· As a rookie, the native of
Senegal appeared in just 18
games. He sat out part of the
season with a sprained knee
and was in poor condition
' throughout the year.

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j

RIO GRANDE - It wa&gt; the
same old story for the
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen volleyball squad in
the regular season home tinale
,as th!IY dropped three straight
~tiawn ee State at Newt
Oliver Arena, Tuesday,' 15-30,
24-30 and 15-30 to remain
·winless in the .American
Mideast Conference South
Division.
Rio Grande (7-22, 0-14
AMC South) bid farewell to
lone senior Rebecca Wierwille.
The New Knoxville native
pounded nine kills in her final
performance before the home
folks, which lead the team.
Freshman Melissa Doss added
seven ki !Is and Chelsea
DeGarmo tallied six. Freshman
setter Jessica Veach handed out
· 26 assists and posted. a teamhigh, II digs. DeGarmo added
nine digs tmd Kim Posey collected seven.
. The Redwomen were once
again victimized by an erratic
passing game, committing 10
errors m that department.
"It was the same old problem, we can't pass the ball,"
said Rio Grande Head Coach
P.dtsy Fields. "We can't get a
ball to our setter, once we get
the ball in her hands. we've got
the hitters to put it down, but
we don't ha ve the passers."
· "The second game, we came
out and ·we played hqrder, .but
we a! ways get to that point
where we just can't pass and
that's what it comes down to
we just cannot pass the ball,"
Fields added.
·
· Shawnee State ( 19-8, 7-6
AMC South) . grabbed control
of the first and third games and
neve r let up. Rio was much
better out of the blocks io game
two, but could never gain the
advantage.
The Lady Bears were lead by
Mandy Goin with 14 kills.
Cheryl Ziser collected 14 digs,
El'in Spriggs and Tabby Gullett
posted 20 and 17 a5sists respectively and Elizabeth Eby served
s1x aces.

j.

''

Redwomen lose
home finale to
Shawnee State

(tpprovat

BIG BEND

~~

\Vednesday,Ck1ober29,2003

several anti-ga y demonstration s.
· The H.olmans hold mainstream anti-abortion groups
in nearly as mu &lt;.: h comempt
i! S
tltey
do abortion
providers.
.
"We wrote to our legtslators unt il we were blue in the
face ami nothing hapren.ed ,"
Donna Holtnan saiu.
The Holmans place little
hor,e in re&lt;.:ent su.:cesse' by
anti-abort inn forces, including

.. l .

..
,.

ady Eagles ready for No. 3 Adena
Bv BuTCH COOPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune.com
TUPPERS PLAINS - So far in
these playoffs. Adena has yet to be
challenged.
Really.
The Warriors (25-0) have breezed
through their sectional and di strict,
giving up only four poi nts total en
route to their meeting against Eastern

•

(20-3) Thursday in the Division IV
Southeast regional semifinal.
The first serve is scheduled to
begin just after the 6:30 p.ni . start of
the other semifi nal between
Well sville (25-1) and Centerburg (251) at Lancaster High School.
"Adena is one of the gu ru's of volleyball," said Eastern head coach
Howie Caldwell following his team's
win over Eastern (Pike) in Saturday's

district final.
In the earlier distrin final Saturday,
Adena made quick work of Clay. !5I. I S-1.
That had been typical . of the
Warriors in the pow.ea.,on this year.
In the district 'emifinal. the y
defeated Southern 15-0. 15-0. and
handled Valley in the sect ional championship. 15- 1, 15- 1.
The key to thi' team ha' been the

play of Scioto Valley Conference lirst
teamer'
in
'enion.
Amanda
Kinnamon. A;hley Sowe" and junior
Katie Roush at the net.
Again'! Southern. Sower; (coplaye r uf the year in .the SYCI and
Kinnamon each had nrne kilh. whrle
Roush had four. In the di"rict champion,h ip game. Sowers had eight

Please see Eagles, B:S

National Basketball
Association
.
'

'City in search of hero
pins hopes on LeBr n
Bv CONNIE MABIN

Associated Press
CLEVELAND - Tourist s stop by the
dozens at Flannery 's Pub th ese days,
snapping photos of a sign on the fro nt
window that offers LeBron James hi s first
Gu inness on hi s 2 1st birthday - Dec. 30,
2005 .
It 's the lea st Flannery 's could do for an
18-year-o ld rookie who's expected to
keep the pub and ot her downtown spot s
booming thi s winter as people flock to
Cavaliers game s.
.
"It's amazing what it's doing to the
city, " said Chri s•.in e Conn ell , ge nera l
manager nf Flannery's near Gund Arena.
home of the NBA team. "Thi s is grea t!"
The Cava li ers' top overall draft pick
ha sn' t played an offic ial game yet, but
hotels. re staurant s and other area businesses are co untin g on him to do more
than score on the (:o urt.
Connell , who updates th e pub sign peri od ically to count down the day s until
James turns 2 1, said the day the Cavaliers
chose James, Cleveland busi ness people
saw doll ar signs.
"I think everyo ne in town co uldn 't
believe that we got that pick ," Connell
said.
The 6-foot -8 James led his hi gh school
tea m to three state championships. Hi s
showing in the pro s is espec ially important in Cleveland, a city used to flound erin g sports teams, economies and its own
reputation .
.
The Cleve land Convention and Visitors
Bureau has not completed a study that will
show just how much money James and
company will help bring to the city, but
expects good things, said spokeswo man
Becky Keck .
"A rising tide lift s all ships," she said.
"People who go to Cavaliers' ga mes,
they pay for parkin g, they pay for drink s

and dinner
before
the
game, they
buy
a
LeBron
James jersey,
they stay in
h ote l s."
Keck said .. "The impact on the economy is
more than people buying a ticket for a
ga me."
The home opener is Nov. 5, but businesses already are se izing the opport unity.
LeBron jerseys, Cavaliers T-shirt s and
caps fill local stores. Lots that charged
$ 10 for game park ing las t season have
raised prices to between $ 15 and $20.
Resta uran ts, whi ch generall y offe r new
ilishe s as the season s change. are revamping thei r menus.
"With the ice and the winter we had last
year, it was toug h. No one wa nted to come
downtown ," said Todd Stei n. execut ive
chef of Vivo. an Ita!ian restaurant near the
Gund. "But now. LeBron James is right
here. We ca n't wait. It 's go ing to be
great. "
The Cavaliers ca n't believe their good
fortune either.
" It seems like we've been wa lking
under a four-Ie'af clover, " sa id Len
Komoroski, president of Cava liers/Gund
Arena Co.
A year ago, the Caval iers sold less merchandise than any other tea m in the NBA.
This season, the leag ue expects Cleve land
to rank amo ng the top three . Komoro ski
said.
As of Oct. 12. 402,825 James jerseys
had
been
so ld,
according
to
SportsScanlnfo, a sports retail tracking
firm.
Among other items fans will be able to
buy is a hologram playing caret that shows Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James (23) soars to the basket
against the Washingto n Wi zards in the fourth quarter
James jumping on the basketball court.
Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2003 at the Gund Arena in Cleveland.
Please see LeBron, Bl
James scored 19 points in the Cavaliers 108-92 win. (API

With James, nothing's the same for Cavaliers
Bv TOM WITHERS

Associated Press
CLEVELAND - Ha s anyone
seen the Cleveland Cavaliers? They
seem to be mi ssing .
Surely, it ca n't be them taking the
floor in J ashionable wine -a nd-~old
uniforms. And all these fans watttng
in ticket lines for hours outside
Gund Arena couldn't be there for
the Ca vs, who lost 65 times last season.
Oh , and there has to be so me reasonable explanation for the No . 23
Cavaliers jerseys popping up all
over the place. Mu st have been
some kind of giveaway.

But, lo and behold, the Cavaliers
haven't gone anywhere. Th ey've
simply undergone a radi cal change.
The y've changed uniform s,
returning to the wine-and-go ld color
scheme they broke in with as an
expansion team in 1970, and
they ' ve ditched the "CAYS" logo
for the more stately "Cava liers."
Cleveland also has upgraded its
roster with draft picks and a couple
of free agents, and the Cavaliers
have hired a proven NBA coach
with a· winning resume.
Although some of the alterations
were planned long ago, there 's one
major reason for the makeover:
LeBron James.
The rookie phenom -helped make

them happen. Go ahead and record
it as his first NBA assist.
"I've been here for seve n years,
and I' ve seen everything. It 's a lot
better around here now." Cava liers
cente r Zydrunas ll gau skas sa id .
"Last year, we had empt y crowds.
Nobody cared abou t us. This year.
everyone has smiles on their face s."
After more than 30 years of fru stration and failure. the Cavaliers
fi nally caught a lucky break .
By winning ,the league's draft lottery. the Cavs we re able to draft
James, the Akron high school kid'
who in addition to selling out the
Gund hopes to one day lead his
home state's NBA team to a world
championship.

That could be years away. especia ll y si nce the Cavs went j ust 17- ·
65 last season and don't have nearly
enough ta.lem to comre~lR-.1!!:
league's elite.
James. though. has given fan s and
the Cavaliers hope.
"This is the most excited I" ve ever
been go ing into a season." said firstyear 'cleveland coach Paul Silas.
" I'm exc ited . The players .are excited. The whole city is excited."
Getting the 60-year-o ld Si las was
like winning a second lottery.
The former All-Star is a perfect fit
with . the you ng Cavaliers. whose
12-man roster will include seven

Pl..ae ... C.vs, B:S

·without ·carter, Bucks face another question on offense
BY RUITY MlUER
Associated Press

door policy on defense,
confirmed
that · the
Buckeyes (7 - 1, 3- 1) have
officially turned the cor-

COLUMBUS - Never has an Ohio State team
been so relie11ed to move "up" to the 99th best neBut many wonder: Did
offense in the nation .
the Buckeyes truly solve
The No. 8 Buckeyes padded their offensive sta- several recurring problems
tistics ·against overmatched Indiana last weekend on offense ? Or did those
with 608 yards in a 35-6 win that wasn't nearly as 600-plus yards say more .
close ·as even the lopsided score might indicate. about Indiana's defen se (or
That output allowed the Buckeyes to barely crack lack of it) than it did about Ohio State?
.
the top 100 in the ranking of the nation's I~A p_ro- · "We may feel a little bit more confident. The
grams 111 terms of total offense, after standing bottom ' line is the Indiana game is the. Indiana
!14th of the 117 teams a Week ago.
· game," quarterback Craig Krenzel said . "We need
"We can definitely build off it, build off the pos- to come out and prove we can do it twice in a row.
itive things we've done," tailback Lydell Ross said lt's,a challenge for us to go to Happy Valley."
.
Tuesday as the Buc ~yes prepared for S'aturday's
The Buckeyes rushed for 216 yards after failing
game at Penn State ( -6, 0-4 Big Ten).
to hit exen 150 yards in six of their I?revious se~e n·
Ross, who set care r highs with 167 yards rush- games . Krenzel had one of .his · btggest passtng
ing and three touchd. wns against Indiana's open-

, .~

,

Bl

The Daily Sep.tinel

INSIDE
James faces expectations, Pllge 82
Prep football notebook, Page 83
Scores and standings, Page 84 ·

'_,

. ....

'

day s, throwing for 272 of Ohio State 's 387 passing
yards.
"Truthfully, I feel that pretty much we 've mad.e
a U-turn," offensive lineman Adrien Clarke said.
"We're going back to our football: jusi hitting people and opening up holes and just running the ball
hard ."
,
Ross said about the only thing that can stop the
Buckeyes is themselves.
.
"If we continue to not make too many mistakes
and get better. it looks pretty successful," he said.
Penn State. it should be noted, ranks as a worse
defensive team against t~e run than Indiana was.
The Nittany Lions lead the nation in pass
de.fense but haven't stopped anybody from running
the ball. They are 107th against the run - 106
spots and 165 yards per game behi nd Ohio State 's
top-ranked effort of JUSt 51.5 yards a game.

. Bucks,
' BJ
Please see
•r

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The [)ajly Sentinel

Wednesday, October 29.

2003

Jafhes faces unparalleled expectations in jump to pros
MtuctA
Associated Press

BY JoE

CLEVE LA ND - Austin Carr remembers
being overwhelmed wi th at tention hi s rookie
year with the Cleveland Cavali!!rs.
Everywhere he we nt there was someone
who recognized the team's No . I overall pick
of 197 1. Carr knqws that the problem is magnified for LeBro n James.
" It's kind of difficult to compare because
the hype is so much more than when I came
out of college," Carr said.
The press ure on James is unprecedented
for an 18-ycar-old athlete . A $90 million
Nike contract and other end orsement deals
are ri din g on every pass and shot. and) ames
faces the expectation that he 's the heir to
Michael Jordan.
Although James has gone straight from
hi gh sc hool to hi s first season with the
Cava li~rs. he doesn't see m fazed.
"There's no pressure for me ,"" James said
al'ter hi s first pmfe ssional practice. " I feel
like if I keep doing the things that I've been
doing, everything will take care of itself."
Dr. Sally A. White. a sports psychologi st
and former consultant for the U.S. Olympic
Committee, said no one wi th the amount of
press ure James is facing can expect to remain
completely composed at all times.
" In this particular situation. with the media
hyping him up as the next Michael Jordan.
the athlete's expectations have gone through
the roof." said While , dean of the college of
education at Lehigh University in
Bethlehem, Pa . "You're talking about this
concept that is incredibly difficult to manage
for even your most mature. experienced athlete. "
White said it 's essential that the Cavaliers
put a support system in place to help James,
a two-time consensus national player of the
year. •
Cavaliers general manager Jim Paxson said
the team has a player developp1e111 group led
by Dr. Charles Maher, the team's psychologist, who will meet regul arl y with James and

other players.
Maher, who has served for 20 years as
mental cua~h to professional baseball. foolball and basketball athletes. said he could not
discuss how he will co unsel James and the
other youn g Cava liers.
,
orr the court , James will be faced with
hangers-on ,and people in every NBA city
wanting hi s time.
"We don't have to look any farther than
"Kobe Bryant to · 'ee the pitfall s of that
lifestyle ." said sports psychologist Dr. Steve
Edwards, referrin g to the sexual assault case
against the Los Angeles Lakers star.
Carr, who cried when the Cavaliers won
the right to select James, led Cleveland w· th e
playoffs three times and averaged 16.2 points
a game in his nine years with the team .
Much like James. Carr joined Cleveland
after a dismal 15-67 season, the Cavaliers'
first in the league. Soon after he was drafted
he heard people referrin g to the team as
"Austin Carr and the Cavaliers."
·'Jt made me realize something , people are
expecting me to .perform at a hi gh level every
ni ght," Carr sa id.
James seems to understand that. ·
"During high school, sometimes you can
just relax, but in the NBA you have to play
every second like it's your last," he said .
"That's the most key thing I have learned so
far."

" You turn it the other
way, it' s LeBron leaping
'-over Cleve land, the skyline," Komoroski said.
The card is a symbol of
, what Knmorosk i rece ntly
told C l~ vcland husiness
leat 'rs eould be a bi g hoost
for a city that had tD fig ht
stcr · &gt;type s.
Cleve land still finds itself
th e butt of jokes for being
the first cit y since the Greitl
Depression to go into
defau lt. in 1978. It's also
remembered by so me as
home to the oil-slicked
Cuya hoga River that ca ught
fireinl969.
The Cavs have been one
of the worst basketball
teams in
th e league .
Browns fans were so an gry
whe n the footba ll team was
mo ve d to Baltimore that
they tore up seats and set
fires in 1995 at the fin al
game
at
Municipa l
Stadium, dubbed "The
Mistake by the Lake."
The Cavaliers see this
se ason as a chanc e to chip
away at the image · of a
down -and-out city with losing franchises, Komoroski
said .
"We ca n create thi s parallel , this synergy," he said.
"Not only is there a team on
the ris~. but here' s a market
on the rise. "
James , who grew up just
40 miles away in Akron,
says he's excited about the
expectations.
"We're a whole ·new
city," James said. "They're
looking for a new beginning "
'
Th~ reach goes beyond
Cleveland.
Sebastien
Robert,
a
Montreal cell phone· company worker, has been fol lowing the Cavaliers since
he was 14.
Robert , 32, said he
searched long and hard for
(

Not a newcomer to hype and headlines, rookie LeBron James will
begin his career with the Cleveland Cavaliers this season. James
was the No. 1 overall selection by the Cavs in the 2003 NBA Draft.
Age 18;
born Dec.
30, 1984

Height/weight
Position
6-foot-8,
Guard/forward
240 pounds
High school career - Named threetime Mr. Basketball in Ohio by the
Associated Press; two-time
national player-of the year by USA
- Today'and Gatorade; PARADE player
of the year as junior and senior, first
repeal winner in award's 47-year history;
scored 2,657 points in high school and
led team Ia three stale lilies in four years
and national championship as selected
by USA Today in '03
Business profile - Received $90
million endorsement contract from
Nike on eve of draft; signed s1x-year
multimillion marketing deal to
endorse Sprite and·Powerade and
$6 million contract with Upper
Deck trading cards; given fouryear $13 million contract by
Cavaliers

6

Education
Graduated
St. VincentSt. Mary
High School,
Akron, Ohio

: Upper Sandu sky is no stranger 10 making
·the stale foo tball playoffs . Headi ng into the
postseason as a confe re nce champion is
some thing new.
The Rams clinched a share of their first
.Northern Ohi o League footba ll championship
si nce 1955 by rallying to beat Tiffin
:Columbian 2 1- 14 Friday night.
Up per Sandusky yualified for the playoffs
·for the third straight season. and NOL cochampions Columbian and Bell evue also
advanced. The Rams. a No.2 seed in Division
·IV, host Lima Bath on Saturday ni ght.
They beat Co lumbian behind junior quarterback Greg Micheli . who led two fourth :qu arter touchdown drives. He threw a 16-yard
TD pass to Brock England and ran 4 ya rds for
:a score to give th e Rams the lead .
: "When we tied that thing up , a number of
'C Oaches turned 'to me and said 'Coach , we're
go ing to win thi .s thing ,"" Upper Sandusky's
Dick DeWitt said. "We just saw our kid s
:lighting up. and I think (Columbian) was a lit·tle shocked that we were wi ll ing to gut it out,
that we were willing to come back like that. "
BIG WINS: Womter beat Orrvi ll e 41 -27
Friday ni ght to win the lirsl championship in

"He's an I S-year-old kid going agamst
grown men. They ~ re going to ban g him

"He 's only IH years old . He 's goi ng to be in
the league for at least 15 more years. It's not
around a little bit. But it' s going to work out necessary for him In come in allCI be an Allfor him. He just has to be patient and let it hap- Star right ttway ...
pen."
- Zydrunas llgauskas, Cavaliers center
- Tim Couch, Cleveland Browns quarEnd advance
terback

BY TIM REYNOLDS

Associated Press
: MIAMI - T he l&lt;;tudest
:cheers from the tens ol· thouSands of Mtirl ins fa;,, lin ed
;up to celebrat e their World
:Series champions came
when teari1 owner Jeffrey
Loria mad e a si mple
promise: The te am won't be
broken up.
With that dec larat ion
Tue .sday. six ye ars of mal content
and
mi stru st
betwee n So uth f-lorida baseball fan s c~nd the Marlin s
vanis hed.
"Thi s is not 1997. This is
,2003. We are nul disman sa id
tlin g. Th.mk yo u.
Loria . who ll&lt;li slcd the
World Series lm phy '" he

was ferried in a convertible
through th e streaming ticker
tape and jersey-clad fans.
Keeping .the team intact
means
manage r
Jack
McKeo n will be back next
year. He agreed to a oneyear
ex ten sion ,
Loria
announced durin g the celebration.
" I have some good new s
and a lillie bad news. The
good news is Jac k is comi ng
back." Loria said. "The bad
news 1s there 's no bad
news.''

McKeon. 72. took over
when manager Jeff Torborg
was fired in May and engineered the Marlins' turn aro und from la st place team
to World Seri es champion s.
" I always had no doubt I
wa~

coming

PPG •Pre·

FG%

FT%

REB

AST

1999·2000
2000-2001
2001-2002
2002-2003

51.6
58.4
56.5
56.4

79.7
71.1
59.3
68.1

6.2
7.4
8.9
9.5

3.6
5.5
6.0
4.7

25 .3
28.0
30.0

NBA PRESEASON

FG%

FT%

REB

AST

PPG

Cleveland Cavaliers• '03·'04

32.9 63.6 32

26

10.3

18.0

season
statistics

as ol
Oct. 19.

,.

a school-record 326 yards and " 'ored five
touchdown&gt; in a 45-0 victory over Ha1 i lan d
Wayne Trace : Josh Cover of Hick" tile ran
for 232 yards and three TD, to b rea ~ hi'
school 's single-season ru; hin g ami touchdown records. finbhing the yea r with I .532
·
yards and 18 TDs;
Blaine Maag had 28(1 yard' ru shin g and all
of Co lumbus Grove'' live touchdow 11\ 111 a
33-14 win over Bluffton ; Fmtoria \ R) an
Hook ran for a school-record 31 0 yard s an d
four touchdowns in a 34-7 win over She lbv;
Cincinnati Withrow\ Robert Will ia m' Inte rcepted five passes. returning two lur touc hdowns, and abo recovered a fumble to lead a
45 -8 win over Cincinnati Taft : Cinc·innati
Hill s C hri stian Academy\ Robbi e Wil son
had 227 yards rushin g and ' cored five TDs in
a 57-27 win over Sidney Lehman .
ODDS AND ENDS: Cleveland St. Ignatius
was held to 15 yards rushing in It"'&lt;
" to
Cincinnati St. Xavier and Columbus DeSale s
to close the regular sea;on . The pia) offbound Wildcats have com mined I~ turno" e"
in their las t three games : Columbu s
Brookhaven .;o mpleted ill fiN undefeated
regular-season (I 0-0) since.the school started
playing football in 1962: S;.ra h" ilk
Shenandoah ( 10-0) wrapped up its first perfect regular-season with a ~ 1-7 "in m n
Caldwell.

bac k. "

said

McKeon. who refu sed to
formally announce his intention s during th e se ason.
When Florida won th e title
in 1997, the ce lebration was
tempered as fans braced for
cost c ulling by then -owner
H. Wayne Huizenga. The
result was a last -place finish
in 199S and a steady decline
tn atte ndance, which lasted
until thi s year 's surpri sin g
playoff run .
·' ] n 1997 we were on top
of th e wor ld. " said Danny
Parra . a sales ·representative
who brought hi s two sons to
Tuesday's rally. "'In '98, we
hit rock bottom. I think
eve rybody know s th ey won "t
be able to keep everybody,
but if they keep a nu cleus
intact. we' ll be happy."
Leaning fro m windows

along the start of the parade
route. fans threw clumps of
ticker tape while some commuter train s were plastered
with signs decla'rin g: "We
love the Marlin s."
A victory drive throu gh
the city's Little Havana
neighborhood fo ll owed . City
workers shredded 2 tons of
paper to se rve as ticker tape
while banners and balloon s
streamed off office building s
along the route festooned
with fre shly painted team
and World Series logos.
Later in Fort Lauderdale, a
boat parade and second rally
celebrated the Marlins. who
beat th e New York Yankee s
2-0 on Saturday night to win
the title in six games.
Marlim players glided
along New River on ctga-

rene boat s with their name s
on the side as crowds on the
shore cheered and firework s
were lit off from nearby
bridges. The tea'm · disembarked
at
Los
Ola s
Rive rfront, where fans went
crazy.
In Miami, Mayor Manny
Diaz walked onto the stage
with a staffer carryin.g a sign
that read: " If we build it,
will you come"" Diaz and
Miami-Dade County Mayor
Alex Penelas have been talking to the Marlins for several month s about new stadium possibilities. but no
plan s have been completed.
"The fact that they won
the World Series doe sn't
mean we ' re gomg to gtve
away the kitchen sink ,"
Pe nelas said. "There 's got to

CctVS

re-examine athletes and to decide what penalties to impose for
from "ge 81
THG use. Four U.S. tmck and field athletes have tested positive for
THG. and Europe's top sprinter has admitted taking it in nutripl~yers with less than four
tiom~ supplements that he says he thought were allowed.
or NBA experience.
years
Exactly who developed THG is unclear. Dozens of top Olympic
Silas
has been through thi s
and professional athletes have been subpoenaed to testify before a
federal grand jury probing a California lab that sells nutritional before·. In Charlotte/New
supplements. Its owner has denied supplying THG, and federal . Orleans, he developed the
officials, including FDA's Taylor, refuse to comment on the scope Hornets into playoff contenders and molded youngor their investigation.
sters
Jamal Mashburn and
Troubling to lawmakers is that THG apparently was sneaked
Qnto the mllrket in the guise of a dietary supplement. It's not a sup- Baron Davis into All-Stars.
plement but an unapproved drug, making any sale or usage illegal, Now he'lltry to do the same
FDA's Taylor said.
·
·
with James. llga uskas,
Currently, however. 'There's nothing to stop another group of Ricky Davis, Carlos Boozer,
folks in another lab from concocting another designer steroid that Dariu s
Miles,
DaJuan
will circumvent this FDA ruling," said Joe Shoemaker, spokesman Wagner. Kevin Ollie, Chris
for Sen. Dick Durbin. D-Ill.
Mihm, J.R . Bremer and the
Durbin is pushing legislation that would give FDA broader over- rest of the Cavaliers .
sight over dietary supplements to prevent steroids from being
"We ' ve got some great
sneaked onto the market.
athletes." . Silas said . "Now,
Sens. Joseph Biden, D-Del., tmd Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, intro- I've got to make them basduced similar legislation last week that also would outlaw steroid
ketball players. They've got
precursors like androstenedione, popularized by ba,eball's Mark
to work . It 's going to take
McGwire.
some time for our guys to
learn the system . One day.
they'll have it and when
to that challenge," said Caldwell. "All sectional championship game.
they do. it's a beautiful thing
The run continued in the district semi- to watch."
year long, one of the things that we said .
was, 'Hey. we're going to have to be final with a I S-3, 15-4 win against Notre
With the Cavs, Silas has
facing Adena (in the playoffs). ' Now. we Dame. then a 15-12. 11 - 15. 15-5 tri- installed the same "UCLA"
get that opportunity. Let's just hope we umph over Eastern (Pike) Saturday.
don 't fall on our face. "
·
Setting up the other semifinal , half-court offense he used
The Eagles, who are making their sec- Wellsville defeated Berlin Hiland in dis- with the Hornets. However,
ond straight trip to the regional tourna- trict chamr.ionshi p play. 14-16. 15-6, he also wants the Cavs to
ment, have had good net play this sea- 15-12 , whtle Centerburg took care of take advantage of their ath leticism and push the ball up
·
son from Katie Robertson, Kass Fisher Catholic.
Lodwick, Alyssa Holter, Jennifer
Wellsville defeated Eas tern in last the floor when they can .
"We want to be a running
Hayman and Morgan Weber.
year's regional se mifinal.
Meanwhile,
Lodwick,
Holter,
The regional championship game is club," said Silas, who envi Robertson and Casey Smith provide schedule for 2 p.m. Saturday at sions a staning lineup of
Eastern with capable servers.
Lancaster with the winner advancing to Jame s and Miles in the
The Eagles' playoff run began with a . the state semifinal next week at Wright backcourt. with
Davis,
15-4, 17- 15 win over Wate'rford in the State University in Dayton.
Boozer and llgau skas up
front . "We should be able to
get .easy layups."
coughed the ball up with regularity. averaging 16.4 yards on his 25 catches.
Silas is also an ideal menThey already have 19 turnovers - two
Holmes, Bam Childress. Roy Hall and tor for the 6-foot-8 James,
more than they had in last year's 14-0 starting cornerback Chris Gamble will
likely be in the mix as Tressel attempts who enters the NBA with
run to the national championship.
Ohio State can ill afford such contin- to find a way to replace Caner's contri- nearly $120 million in
endorsement deals and sufued carelessness, with games against butions.
"We're going to be out there this after- focating expectations.
No . 9 ·Michigan State, No . 18 Purdue
Silas won't play favorites.
and at No. II Michigan to finish the reg- noon without No. 8 (Carter), and someand
he's not going to let one
one's going to have to step up and do all
ular season.
Michigan State (4-0) and Michigan that he's been doing if we want to keep player divide his team. And
(4- 1), who meet this weekend 'in their getting bener," Tressel said. "We're watching him interact with
annual neighborhood rivalry, are ahead going to ~e rotating ~ome ,Qther ·guys the Cavs during recent pracof the Buckeyes and Purdue (3- 1) in the mto Drew s vacant posttton.
· tice s, it appears he has
Big Ten standings.
Holmes regretted the injury to Carter already bonded with his
·
Perhaps more daunting, the Buckeyes but said he was willing to try to pick lip kids.
lost second-leading receiver Drew the slack.
"I'm ,demanding in that I
Carter. The team' s fastest · wide out,.
" Right now I'm not rea lly worried want to 'win above all else,"
Carter injured a knee and will be side- · about who's going to play," he said . "It 's he said. "I've got an easygolined for the iest of the season. Tressel all consisting of who's going to make ing manner when I'm not on
declined to be specific abo ut the nature plays for our t~am . That 's what our the court, but when I'm on
of the injury, citing student privacy · coaches are looking for - receivers the court, I'm a tiger."
rules.
who can get the job done and win the
Davis can attest to that. As
A senior who had bided his time for game."
.an 18-year-old rookie. he
1\is breakthrough season , Carter was
played
for
Silas
in

WASHINGTON lAP) - The newly detected steroid that is
casting a shaLlow on Olympic and profess ional sports is an illegal
dru g that may pose &lt;.:onsiderablc health risks, the government
warned Tuesday.
THG has been sold in the guise of a di etary supplement when it
is in fact a dmg that lacks federal pem1ission for sale iii this country, the Food and Drug Administration said. It is a drug derived
from another steroid long banned in athletics, the agency said.
The FDA's oftlcinl designation of THG as illegal, which had
been anticipated since the .;~amlal over the previously undetectable steroid emerged. puts manufacturers on notice that the
government will crack down on anyone caught selling it.
It also is the strongest warning yet that using THG is risky.
Anabolic steroids can have dangerous side effects, including liver
damage. heart disease, anxiety and rage. While little is known
about THG's specific effects because it is new, its close chemical
si milarity to other well-known steroids means it poses the same
risks, FDA Associate Commissioner John Taylor said.
"The greatest imP?nance is preventing exposure and trying to
nip this in the bud,' he said.
U.S . dru g authorities first learned about THG, or tetrahydrogestrinone, this summer after an unidentified coach guve them a
syringe contai ning it. TH'G apparently was designed specilically to
be undetectable by the standard test given to athletes.
Now armed wi th a test. spons organizations are scmmbling to

kill s.
Meanwhile . the Warriors have
received strong defensive play from
another all-league player, senior Erica
Zurmehly.
Meanwhile ,
Amanda
Atchison and Haley Halcomb round out
a strong Adena squad.
In light of Adena's success this season, Eastern is looking forward to going
up against the No . 3 tea m in the stale.
"I think our kids are lookin g forward

AF

year
ago,
when
the
Cavaliers ranked last· in the
league in home attendance.
The team has repeatedly
refused to say how many
tickets have been sold.
Among ticket holders for
this season are 25 AAA
Auto Club employees.
"We've all been talking in
the cafeteria about how the
Cavs have a great opportunity to make the city proud
of its team again," said
AAA spokesman Brian
Newbacher. "We realize
success won't be overnight
but being able to watch
LeBron and the team develop at the Gund is exciting
in and of itself."

Brian Ferri s and then ran for the 2-point conversion to wipe ou t McComb's 43-28 lead .
Cary-Rawson won a &gt;hare of its first
Blanchard Valley Conference championship
si nce 1992 ; ·
Terry Malone ended hi s 46-year coaching
career wi th a win, guiding Hami lton Badin to
a 45-7 vic tory over Nonh Co llege Hill on
Saturday night. The 70-year-o ld Malone is
the winningest high school coach in Ohio hi story with a 360- 11 7-S record.
COINCIDENTALLY: Col umbus Walnut
Rid ge plays at Co lumbus Independence in the
Divi sion II playoffs Friday ni ght , a week after
th e team; met in their reg ular-season rinale .
Ohio State rec ruit Eric Haw led
Independence's 35-22 win with 249 yards
rush in g. helping his team earn the City
League South Di vision championship .
Walnut Rid ge's Gary Ru ssell ran for 279
yards . Haw has 2.308 rushin g ya rds and 24
TDs. and Ru "ell has 1.935 vards and 27 TDs
thi s season.
·
BIG PERFORMANCES:Kyle Burns of
Pataskala Watkins Memorial ran for 314
yards with five touchdown s and also returned
an interception for a score in a 54-14 win over
Delaware Haye s; Bryan Latani ck of
Worthington Kilbourne had four interceptions
in a 17-0 victory over Hilliard Dav idson;
Kevin McCann of Defiance Tinora rushed for

FDA says new steroid THG is illegal

from Page 81

HIGH SCHOOL SEASON

the coveted James replica
jerseys in Canada. He monitors the team closely on the
Internet and may travel to
Cleveland to see the team
next season.
"My friends, for 10 years
they've been saying, 'How
cun you root for .the Cavs?
They've never won anything.' Now, all of the sudden, they're like, 'LeBron
James, wow,"' Robert said.
It's that kind of excitement that the Cleveland
Cavaliers, a ieam that won
just 17 games a year ago
and rarely filled ·Gund
Arena, is seizing'. Season
ticket sales have tripled
from the reported 3,000 a 1

"LeBron James chose this. He has to under~
"Just for him to be LeBron . I don 't expect stand that this was his choice. He has· to
him to do anything e lse but be himself. Go out remember when he gets there and start s to gel
there and play the game."
down that he chose this ."
- Carlos Boozer, Cavaliers forward
- Dr. Richard Lustberg, sports psychologist

the new Ohio Cardinal Conference and clinch
just its second playoff be nh . Wooster has a
four-game winnmg streak against it s rival for
the first time since 1954-57;
Vanlue ended an 85-game Bl anchard Valley
Conference losing streak with a 13-10 win
over Arcadia on Friday night. It was Vanlue's
first league win since a 33-0 decision over
Arcadia on Sept. 30, 1994. Van Iue scored the
go-ahead touchdown with 10 :18 remaining,
had a goal-line stand later in the fourth quarter and blocked the tying field-goal attempt in
the final minute;
Bascom Hopewe ll-Loudon clinched a share
of its rirst Midland Athletic League championship by beating Seneca East 40-14. The
Chieftains had been th e onl'y team in th e 17year-old conference not to win a title;
Marc Krau ss. intercepted a pass at the 2yard line to ke ep th e game tied and ki cked an
1~ -y ard field goal in uve nime to give Hamler
Patri ck Henry the Northwest Ohio Athletic
League championship with a 17- 14 win over
Wauseon;
Cary-Rawson defeated McComb 56-50
after scori ng 15 points in 15 seconds of the
third quarter to erase a 15-point deficit. Jason
Bormuth started the rally by returning a kickoff 84 yards for a touchdown . After the
Hornets forced a fumbl e on the ensuing kickoff, Andy Cox threw a 20-yard TD pass to

Parades, rallies close book.on Marlins' championship season

Eagles

SOURCES: Associated Press; Gap Communications
. Group Inc.: www.Lebron..James.com

I

..

PROFILE I

Rookie plaver, veteran endorser

from Page 81

_
Upper Sandusky wins first conference crown since 1.955

·

LeBron James will be getting plenty of a low profile."
advice this season . Here's a few pointers from
-Dr. Steve Edwards, sports psychologist
athletes and sports psychologists:
"If you go by the philosophy that nothing
''You became a star by becoming a good good happens after midnight, you can make
bas ketba ll player. Don ' t forget that. Focus on things asJ!asy as you want or as hard as you
your craft."
want.
-Austin Carr, former Cavaliers star
"The easiest thing in the world is to go home
after a game, go into your apartment and shut
"He needs to do his basketball work, learn, the door behind you. The problems come
stay focused on the game . His off-duty time he when you put yourself in a position where
needs to keep a low profile. It 's enormously trouble is able to find you."
difficult; there are many celebrities that run
- Jody Gerut, Cleveland Indians rookie
into this same problem. They manage 10 keep outfielder

I

Prep Football Notebook
BY ANDY RESNIK

James 'said he feel s physically ready to
play, but Cavali ers coach Paul Silas knows
how long and grue ling the season can be.
"I think that at some point in time. like all
rookies, he 's goi ng to hit a wall and he's
going to wonder why he's so tired." Silas
said. "It comes with the territory. It's a natural thing."
But if James is truly destined to dominate
the NBA like Jordan did, the press ure mi ght
only make him better.
"Most elite level athletes, not only do they
not shun that responsibility, they look forward to it," said Edwards, who works with
athletes at Oklahoma Stale. "That's one of
Clevel and Caval iers' LeBron James holds the tools of his trade durin g the team 's media day
the things that motivates them. Those chalThursday. Oct. 2, 2003 in Cleveland. I AP)
lenges aren ' t particularly a bad thin g."

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www .mydailysentinel.com

2003

Associated Press

Sports psychologists, athletes advise NBA rookie LeBron James

LeBron

Wednesday, October 29.

Bucks
from Page 81
Despite th e offensive explosion in
Bloomington , Ind., there was sti ll some
troublin g news for Ohio State.
· "Lost in the 600 yards and all that
stuff is the fact that we still turned the
ball over three times," coach Jim Tressel
said. "And that won' t win at State
College."
··
Santonio Holmes had six catches for
153 yards and two TD receptions, but
fumbled away another potential score at
~he goal line. Ross also lost a fumble
deep in lnOinna territory and Krenzel
t hrew an interception .
"Three turnovers against Penn State
(and) we're going to have a problem;"
Tressel said.
·
The giveaways are nothing new for
Jhe Buckeyes; all . season they have

'I

be four players in thi s llllc' up. The team·, got to come
to the table wi th a st g nificant amount of mane) . the
county's go t to put its part.
the city of Mi ami ... and th e
state's go t to put a piece in...
The Marlin .s won th e
World Seri es with a modes t
$54 million payroll. and \ et
still were projected 111 lll se
milli ons thi ' sea"Jn - 1n
part because they k asc stadium ri ghh from Hui1cn ~ a
and do not ha1·e the sa me
sources of revenue that oth er
teams enJoy.
Official s had prc' Lii cted
that at leJ;t I00.0()(1 people
would attend the Ja) lon g
celebration in Miami . P&lt;•l 1cc
officers declined to relea se
an official e'timate Tu es da ~ .

Charlotte . and the t" n
clashed con tin u(llhl ).
"He was wild." Si las ' "id.
The 6-foot -7 D"\·i, i&lt;
co ming off a brc c~ kou t .sc-;1 - .
son during w;hich he a\ craged 20.6 point ' and leJ the
Cavaliers in points. a"ists.
steals, minutes '111d .1 -r &lt;'int
percentage.
A bundle of encr~ ' . D"' is
emerged as n ne nf th e
league 's most ex c i1 1n ~ pla~ ers.
,
He also shot at ~he \\'ron g
basket.
Trying to pad his stats in
the closing seco nds of a
game to get his fiN career
triple-doubl e. Da1 i, intrn·
tionally fired at Cle\ ela nd ·,
hoop to get a I Ot h rebcl!llld .
It was a shameful moment
for Davis and the C;n·al iers.
who had a season full .of
them .
Da.ttis

~ays

it

~,,.. a~

a

mh -

take . and the 2-f-) ear-old
wants to prove he's not a
selfi sh player.
"This is going to work.""
he said. " We 've ~ot a
chance to be a real· gond
team ."
Hearing Dav is say "\\'e" is
a positive first step. His mefirst attitude rubbed teammates the wrong way last
year. Now. he 's goi ng to
have to share the spotl ight
- and the ball.
"Ricky is one of my leaders." Silas said . "H e has a
chance to prove a lot of people wrong about him ... .
llgauskas averaged a
career-high 17.2 points ami
7.5 rebound s in RI g.a mes .
the most since hi s rook ie
season in 1997-98 .
Just two year, ago. the
Lithuanian giant conte mplated retirement after playing only 29 ga mes ove r a
three-year span beca use of
foot injuries.
Six
surgeries
later.
Ilgauskas is health y and
may be the best center in the
Eastern Conference . But he
takes nothing for granted.
which is wl'iy he appr~cia te s
the Cavaliers' ' new identity
as much as anyone .
. "Every time I look down I
see the scars," he said . "As
long as they ' re not hurting
and the bones aren ' t breaking, I can take everything
else."

�0

ScoREBoARD

'

The Daily Sentinel
Columbtana 33 14 Warren JFK 28 15
Davtd
Anderson
17
16
l sbon
Wheelersburg 16 17 (I e) Middletown
Fe nwtck Gates Mtlls Hawke n 13 19
Chesapeake 12

;Prep Football

.
•

AP Ohto Htgh School Football Poll

'COLU MBUS Ohto (AP) - How a state
panel ol spoils wr1ters and broadcaster s
rates Ohto h gh scnoot tootballteams m the
e•gt1th and ftnat weekly Associated Press
_pol l ot 2003 by OHSAA diVISIOns wtlh
.won lost record and to tal pOints (ftr st place
"votes 111 p arentheses)
DIVI SION I
• 1 Warren Hardtng (22) 10 0
327
.. 2 Mento r (5) 10 0
293
Ctn Cotera.n 12) 10 0
254
1 N Can Hoover (4) 10 0
234
5 Westerv•lle S (2) 10 0
208
6 Cm Elder 9 1
196
7 Manon Hard1 ng 9 1
i 01
.. a Tol Whtmer 9 1
52
• 8 Cte St lgn at1us 8 2
52
: 10 Lancaster 9 1
42

DIVISION VI
1 Cots Grove (24) 10 0

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
tO

!

::1

Norwalk St Paul (7) 9 1
Covmgton (2) 10 0
Newark Cath (2) 9 1
Dola Hardm Northern 9·1
Shadyside 9 1
Mogadore (1) 8·2
Cory Rawson 9· 1
N Lewtsburg Tnad 9 1
Cle Cuyahoga His 8 2

Eaal
WLTPctPFPA
6 2 0
750 154 129
5 2 0
714 144 87
4 4 0
500 143 148
2 5 0
286 111 118
South
WL TPctPFPA
6 1 0
857 208 126

New Eng land
Mtam•
Buffalo
N Y Jets

261
242
180
165
146
139

lndt anapol s
Tennessee
Houston
Jacksonville

84
32

291
26 1
252
229
177
166
122
7t
66
48

Othe rs recet'V tn g 12 or mo re pomts 11
Kell e11ng Aller 43 12 Bellevue 34 13
Cols OeSates 32 14 Cols Watterson 30
t5 Bellbrook 28 16 (tte) Akr Hoban
Rayland Buckeye 24 18 ~ave nn a SE 16
19 (t e) St Marys Me mona I Galltpolt s
Gall•a 14

DIVISION IV
1 Versa•tles (30) 10 0
348
2 Clarksvtlle Clint on Mass•e (21 10 0 278
3 Coldv. ater 9 1
245
4 Coshoc ton 9 t
207
5 Ironton 12) 9 1
199
6 Youngs Mooney (2) 8 2
154
135
7 Upper Sandusl&lt;y 9 1
96
8 Apple Creek Waynedale 9 1
9 Delta 9 i
91
10 Utbana 9 1
52
Ot11ers rece v ng 12 or more pomts 11
Huron 37 12 Bel lome 29 13 Mart ns Ferry
26 14 Wilhamspo rl Wes tfall 25 15
Sullivan Black Rtver 15

Balttmore
Cmcmnat1
Cleveland
Ptllsburgh

750 224 167

2 5 0
1 6 0

286
143

12 1 200
127 184

4 3 0

571

160 132

3 4 0

429

138

3 5 0
2 5 0

375 115 130
286 132 179

156

Ka nsas C1ty
Denver
Oakland
San D1e go

429

(20·6)

Pet

PF

PA

1 000
625
286
143

246
184
125
125

130
141
161
195

5 0
6 0

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Dallas
Phtladelph•a
NY G•ants
Wash ngton

East
W L T
5 2 0
4 3 0

3 4 0
3 4 0

Pet
PF PA
714 150 116
57 1 11 9 136
135

171

South
Carohna
Tampa Bay
New Orleans
Atl anta

Minnesota
G reen Bay
C hJcago
DetrOit

W LT

Pet

PF

PA

6 1 0

857

141

125

4 3 0
3 5 0

571 150 97
375 172 191

143 11 4 220
North
WLT Pet
PF PA

6 1 0
3 4 0

857 196 133
429 200 166

2 5 0
1 6 0
Weat

286
143

W l T

Pet
714
714

82
64

Othe1s rece vmg 12 or more po tnts 11
Syca more Mohawk 5 1 12 Dalton 34 13

121 192
117 184
PF PA
170 131
203 129

375 172 142
286 98 193

Sundays Games
Ch tcago 24 Detro1t 16
Balttmore 26 Denver 6
St Louts 33 Ptttsburgh 2 1
C nctnnah 27 Seattle 24
Tampa Bay 16 Dallas
Tennessee 30 Jacksonv1lle 17
New England 9 Clei/Biand 3
Carolina 23 New Orleans 20 OT
N Y Gtants 29 Minnesota 17
Ar zona 16 Sa n Franctsco 13 OT
lndtanapol s 30 , Houston 21
Ph tladelphta 2 4 N Y Jets 17
Ka nsa s C1ty 38 Buffalo 5
Open Oakland Wash•ngton Green Ba y
Atlanta

Jackson Center { 18 8) vs S dney
lehman Cath (20 6) St Henry (24 t ) vs
Russta 20 3)

Hockey
Atlantic Division

W L T OL PIS GF GA
Philadelphia 3 1 3 1 10 22 19
23 20
N Y Islanders 4 3 1 0 9
New Jersey
3 3 2 0
8 18 17
12 17
NY Rangers 2 3 2 0 6
Ptllsbu rgh
1 4 2 0
4 12 23
Northeast Division
WLTOLPts GF GA
6 2 2 0 14 26 20
Boston
5 1 0 1 11 28 13
Ottawa
4 2 2 1 11 21 22
Toronto
5 5 0 0 10 22 28
Buffalo
Montreat
5 5 0 0
10 22 22
Southeast Dlv1slon
WL TOLPtsGFGA
Atlanta
5 1 2 1 13 26 18
TampaBay
6 0 0 0
12 208
Carolt na
2 2 4 0
8
16 14
Flor~ da
3 4 2 0
8
17 18
1 6 1 0 3
17 29
Washtngton
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Divis ion
W LTOLPts
St LOU IS
5 2 0 1 11
Oe trott
5 3 0 0
10
Chtcago
3 4 3
9
Nashvil le
3 5 0 0 6
Columbus
3 6 0 0 6
Northwest Div ision
WLTOL Pis
Vancouver
5 2 2 0 12
5 4 0 0 10
Colorado
4 4 0 0 8
Calgary
3 6 1 0 7
M1nnesota
3 5 0 0 6
Edmonton
Pacific Dlvlsron
W L T OL Pis
5 4 0 0 10
Dallas
Ph oa n1 x
3 3 3 0 9
8
Los Angeles 4 4 0 0
An ahetm
3 5 t 1 8
San Jose
1 5 3 0 5

o

Two potnt s lor
overttme toss

a w1n

one po mt tor

GF GA
19 16
22 16

3)

DIVISION IV
Sem•l nals start Thursday at 6 30 p m
At Hudson High School
Wtndham (24 1) vs Nor.vatk St Paul (20
5) Ktdron Central Chnsttan (24 1) vs
Ashtabula Sts John &amp; Paul (20 3)
At Elida Hlgh School
Del Ayerslltlle {24 1) vs Lmps1c (1 5 B)
Fort Jen nmgs (16 9) vs Northwood (18 7)
At Lancaster H1gh School
Wellsvtll e {25 1l vs Centerburg (25 1)

FlOrida
Columbia
Greensboro
South Carot1na
Charlolle
Florence
Roanoke
Green1J11Ie

4
3
3
3
2

0
1
0
o
1 o
3 1
4 o
3 0

0

8
7
6
6
4
3
2
0

23
18
17
12
12
11
14
6

15
16
12
8
10
20
20

13

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division

WLTPtsGFGA
Pensacola
Columbus
MtSSISS PPI
Gw1nnett
LOUISiana
Augusta
Te)l.as

Las Vegas
Idaho
Bakersfield
Alaska
Fresno
Long Beach
San D1ego

3

1 0

6

17

12

33062022
2 1 2 6 16 12
2 1 1 5 14 12
2 2 0 4 8
11
2 3 0 4 15 18
1 5 1 3 1732
Pacific Division
WLT PtsGF GA
4 1 1 9
20 16

4

2 0 8

18

1

4

8

15

2

1 0 4

10

7

2

2 0 4

10 10

1

3

1

1 5

17 20

19 22

1 3

11

17

1 3

4

5

NOTE Two po1nts are awarded lor a w1n
Overttme an d shootoul losses earn one
po•nt and aro relerred to as t•es

GF GA
3 1 18
31 23
15 1B

23 27
22 26
GF GA
2 1 20

24 26
23 20
17 26

15 26

a t1e and

East Coast Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Northern 01\llslon

W L T PIS GF GA

0
0
0
0
0
0

Golden State
LA Clippers

Portland
Sacra mento
Seattle
PhOenix

0
0
0
0
0

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Tuesday s Games
South Carolina 3 Fl ore nce 0
AtlantiC Ctly 4 Roanoke 2
Idaho 4 Bakerslteld 3 SO
Las Vega s 3 San Otego 2 OT
Wednesdays Games
Peo na at A l as~a
AtlantiC C ty at Charlene
MI SSISSIPP at Gwtnnett
Bakers;l1eld at Idaho
ThurSdays Games
Mtsstsstppl at Cotu mbta
Trenton at Greensboro
Co lumbus at Pensacola

000
000
000
000
000
000

Tuesday s Gamet
Ph ladelphta 89 M1am174
San Antonto 83 Phoenix 82
l A Lakers 109 Dallas 93
Wednesday a Games
M1am1 at Boston 7 p m
New Je•sey at Toronto 8 p m
lnd1ana at Detrott 8 p m
Orlando at New York 8 P m
Atl anta at New Orleans 8 p m
Mtlwaul&lt;ee at M nnesota 8 p m
Washington at C t11cago 8 30 p m
Portland at Uta h 9 p m
San Antomo at Denver 9 p m
Cleveland at Sacramento 10 30 p m
Dallas at Go lden State 10 30 p m
Thursday s Games
L A Clippers vs Seattle a t SBitama
Japan 5 30 am
New Orleans at 01lando 7 p m
Denver at Houston 8 p m
C leveland at Ph oem~ 10 30 p m

A ev1sed

gtven that m pur·
suance
of
a

Code,

Sectrons 3501 11 (G),
5705 19, 5705 25
NOTICE IS hereby

Code,

Sections 3501 11 (G),
570519, 5705 25
NOTICE Is hereby

Township of Scipio

Resolution of the
Village Counctl ·of
1he
VIllage
of
Middleport,
Ohio,
passed on the 28th
day of July 20031here
wtll be submitted to o
vote o1 lhe people of

Pomeroy

Ohto,

satd subdvtston at a

passed an the 6th day
of August 2003 lhere
wtll be submitted to a
vote of the people of

General ELECTION to
be held in the VIllage
of Mlddleporl ,Ohto,
at the regular places

at a

of voting therein, on

General ELECTION 1o

the
4th
~ay
of
November 2003 the
question of levying a
tax, in excess of the
ten mill limitation, lor
the
benefit
of
M 1ddleport Village lor
the purpose of F1re

gtven that tn pur·
suance
of
a
Re so lution
of
the

Board of Townshtp
Tru stees

of

the

satd subdv1ston
be

held

1n

the

Tawnshtp Of Scipio
Ohto, at the regular
places
of
vottng
theretn , on the 4th
day
of
November
2003 the questton of
levytng
a tax , tn
ewcess of the ten mtfl
limitation , for the ben
eftt
of
Scipto
Townshtp for the pur·
pose of Ftre protec·
t1on
2 Satd taw betng A
replacement of a tall:
of 2 mills at a rate not
e~~:ceeding 2 mtlls for
each one dollar of
valuatton ,
wh1ch

amounls to ($0 20)
for each one hundred
dollars of valuat1on,

for f1ve (5) years
The Polls tor said
Election will open at
6 30 o'clock AM and
rematn

open

until

7 30 o'clock PM of
sa1d day By order of
1he
Board
of
Elections,

o1 Meigs County,
Ohio
John
N
lhle,

protection

2 Sold tax belng ·A
renewal

of an

existing

of 1 mill at a rata not
exceeding 1 mills lor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounls to ($0 10)
for each one hundred
dollars of valuation,

lor live (5) years.
The Polls lor said
Election will open at
6.30 o'clock A.M. and
remain open until
7 30 o'clock PM. of
said day By order of
1he
Board
of
Elections,

of Meigs County,
Ohio
John
N.
lhle,
Chairperson
Rita
D
Smith,
Director
Dated Sept 5, 2003
10/8,15,22,29/03

Ctiatrperson

R1ta

D

Smilh,

Public Notice

Director

Dated Sept 5, 2003
10/8 15,22,29/03

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

SHERIFF'S
SALE,
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER
01-CV-153
CONSECO FINANCE
SERVICING CORP
fka GREEN TREE
FINANCIAL
SERVICING CORPORATION

Plaintiff
vs
CHRISTINE A MAR·
TIN aka
CHRISTINE MARTIN,
ET AL
Defendants
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In pursuance of an
order of Sale to me
directed from said
Courl In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at pubIre auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on Friday,
November 21, 2003 at
10·00 am, of sold
day, lha following

north ,9 deg 38' 48"
west

along

a

line,

19419 feet to an Iron
pin In the grantors'
northerly
properly
line, thence north 84
deg 41 ' 12" east
a l ong

Birch, Francts Cline,
Archard Cline, Wayne
Cline, Randall Cline,
Dean Cline , Carol

2450 Ed1son Blvd.
PC Box 968
Twinsburg
Ohio
44087
(330) 425·4201
(10) 22 29, (11) 5

Burlingame, Kenneth
Burlingame,
Karen

Passage, Barbra Jean
Htcks, and Charles
Jones, and any other

the grantors'

northerly
property
line, 52 50 feet lo an
Iron
p1n
In the
grantors' norlherly
property

corner;

thence sou1h 9 deg
38' 48" easl along the
grantors' east property line, 201 39 feet to
an tron pin 1n the
grantors
southeast
property corner and

the existing northerly
right-of.way 11ne of
Carroll Stree1; thence
described real estate
north 87 deg. 26' 59'
The following real west
along
the
estate, situate In lhe grantors' southerly
Village of Syracuse,
properly line and the
on the County of existing
northerly
Meigs ami State of • right-of-way line of
Ohio:
Carroll Streel, 53 55
Situate In 100 Aero
feet to the poin1 of
Lot No. 299, Town 1, beginning, and conRange 13, Sutton
taining 0.238 acre
Description lor the
Township, VIllage of
Syracuse,
Meigs above descnbed tract
County, State of Ohio,
being the results of a
and being more fully
survey
made
by
described as follows·
Richard
Glasgow,
Commencing at a
R S No 6161
point In the lnt,roecProperty Owner:
tion of the existing Christine A Marlin
centerline of Slate aka Christine Martin
Route No 124 and the Property at. 2124
easterly extension of Carroll
Street,
the existing southerly Syracuao, Ohio. 45779
right of way Una of
pp • 2Q-00475 000
Carroll Street; thence
Prior
Deed
north 87 deg. 26' 59"
Reference :
Volume
west along the exist·
101, Page 603
lng aoutherly rlght·ol·
Appraised
st.
way line ol Carroll $18,000.00
Street, 503 31 feet to Terms
of
Sale:
an Iron pin; thence
Cannot be sold lor
north 9 deg 38' 48"
lau than 213rds of
west along a line, the appraised "alue
14 32 leel to an Iron 10% down on day of
pin In the existing
aale, cash or certHied
northerly rlght·of-way check, balance on
line ol Carroll Street; confirmation of sale
thence south 87 deg
Ralph E. Trussell
26' 59" eall along the Sheriff,
Meigs
exlatlng
northerly Coumy,Ohlo
rlghl-ol·way line of REIMER &amp; LORBER
Carroll Street, 53.55 Co , L.P.A
feel to an Iron pin and
By · Dennis Reimer
the real point of (Reg. •oo311 09)
beginning lor lhe James C . Wrentmore
land
herein (Rag. 10046779)
deacrlbed;
thence
AHornays lor Plaintiff

Publtc Nottce

lndtVIduals, organ1za~
tlons or entlttes who

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
DONALD C DAILEY
Plainttfl
vs
L.M. PIERCE AKA
LAMONT M
PIERCE, ET AL
Defendants
Case No· 03 cv 110
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

may be entrtled to
claim an Interest tn
the real estate wh1ch

Is lhe subject of the
Complaint, WHOSE
AND
NAMES
ADDRESSES
ARE
UNKNOWN.
You are hereby nolo·
fled that you have
been
named
Defendants In the

DETROIT

Atlantic Dtvls1on
W L Pet
1 0 1 000
Pht ladelphta
Boston
0 0 000
New J ersey
0 0 000
0 0 000
New York
0 0 000
Orlando
0 0 000
Washmgton
0 1 000
Mtaml
Central Division
W L Pet
0
0 000
Atlanta
Ch tcago
0
0 000
0
0 000
Cleve land
Detrott
0 0 000
lndtana
0
0 000
Mtlwaukee
0
0 000
New Or leans
0
0 000
Toronto
0
0 000
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mtdwest Div1s1on
W L Pet
San Anton o
1 01000
Denver
0 0 000
Houston
0 0 000
MemphiS
0 0 000
Mtn nesota
0 0 000
Ut ah
0
0 000
Dalla s
0 1 000
Pacific Division
W L Pet
L A Lakers
0 I 000

PI STON S-S gned

GB

'

'

GB

National Football League
MINNESOTA VIKI NGS-W aived K Jose
Cortez
N EW OAt EAN S SA INT S~Suspended
DT Grady Jackson tor one game lor co nduct detnmental to the team
PHI LADELPHIA EAGLE S-Placed DT
Holl•s Thomas o n InJured reserve Stgned
DT J m Flantgan
SAN FRANCI SCO 49ER S- Watved K
Owen Poc hman Stgned K Todd Peterson
S•gned DB Jo hn Ke lh from the practtce
squad Watved FB Jasen lso m from the
pract•ce squad
Na11onal Hockey League
COLORADO AVALANCH E-Recalled C
Chari e Stephe n s !rom Hershey o f the

AHL
GB

action

entitled

MINNES OTA WILD- Placed F Brent
Bur ns on Injured reserve
ST LOUI S BLU ES- Reca lled F Johnny
Pohl from Worceste r o t the AHL
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS- Ae stgned
D Ka1el Ptlar and asstgned h1m t o St
Joh n s of the AHL Agreed to terms With F
Clarke Wtlm on a one year contract and
asstgned htm to St John s

GB

To: L.M. Pterce aka
Lamont M Pterce,
Ltzz1e P•erce, Charles
P1erce,
Kenneth
Pterce, Frank Pierce,
Allee P1erce aka Allee
Wollmen ,
Frank
Wollmen,
Daniel
Wollmen ,
Franklin

Donald C
Dalley,
Plalnlrfl, vs. L.M.

Pterce, Alma Pierce
aka Alma Curtis,
Zelda Poerce aka
Zelda Jones, Juanita
Birch, Francis Cline,
Richard Cline, Wayne
Cline, Randall Cline,
Dean Cline, Carol
Burlingame, Kenneth
Burlingame, Koren
Passage, Barbra Jean
Hicks, Charles Jones,
Jo
Ann
Dolley,
Burch,
Samuel
ADDRESSES
UNKNOWN: Upon 1he
Unknown Heirs, Nex.t
of
Kin, Spouses,

of Common Pleas of

Pterce aka Lamont M.
Pterce,
et
al.,

Defendants.
actton

Metgs County, Ohio.
The object of the
Complaint demands
that the following
descrtbed real estate

be quieted In 1he
Plaintiff, Donald
Dailey
Situate
In
the
Township of Chester,
In the County of
Meigs and State of
Ohio, that io to say
the Southwest quar·
tar of the Wesl half of

c

Pierce,

Frank P1erce, Allee
Pierce
aka
Allee
Wollman,
Frank
Wollman,
Daniel
Wollman,
Franklin
Pierce, Alma Pierce
aka Alma Curtis,
Zelda Pierce aka

more or less.

Reference Deed.
Volume 80, Page 238,
Meigs County Deed
Records
Auditor's
Parcel

Zelda Jones, Juanita

--

-~

The last publication
will be made on the
3rd day of December,
2003, and 1he twenty·
eight (28) days lor
answer
will commence on that date
In the case of your

failure to answer or

I

otherwtse respond as
requested by the
Ohio Rules of Civil

1n

Marlene

Harrison,

Clerk of Courts
(10) 29, (11) 5, 12, 19,
26, (12) 3

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

--

~

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

r

e~y~~

ANNOUNCEMfNTSI

L~--------,.1
....,

Satu rday November 1 8A M
5PPJ 3rd hOuse on left top
C-1 Beer Carry O ut permit of Chester Htll (St Rl 248)
lor sale Cheste r Townshtp C lothtng
G trl s
(2T/5)
Me•gs County send letters Boys{4T/14H)
and
coats
ot mterest to The Datly Womens(1 4/26}
Sentmel PO Box 729 20 shoes toys
whole set of
Rescue Heros Dolls Ltttle
Pomeroy Ohto 45769
People etc C hnstmas Tree
Dtabet•c· on Med•ca re? No
more ftnger StiCking With
Y~RDSALE·
new meters almost pam
Pr.
PI t:ASANI
less C all Sta r Med1cal AX
800·229· 7894 today for
4 Famtly Yard Sale at Krodel
home del very
Clubh ouse Saturday Nov
Say good bye to h1gh phone 1 B 00 ?
btiiS' New local phone serv Children s clothes boy and
rce with FREE u r~ ltm ted QlriS from SIZeS 3T 16 HQme
nahon w de long Distance decor women s
clothtng
or c rafts beddmg 2 seater
1 800 635 290&amp;
www FreedomMov1e com/itp battery powered 1eep pam\
I
aysyou Local Agents wan!

r

ed
SENIOR PORTRAITS!
Get You best deal at
Main Street Photography
511 Ma1 n Street
Pomt Pleasant
Call tor Apporntment

r

(304)675 7279

Today's
Cia ieds! i

Display Ads
All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1 :00 p . m .
Thur•day for Sundays

110

.
1

H.:t.P WAN'IED

~egtster

V1s1t us at. 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at· (304) 675-1333
Fax us at. (304) 675·5234
E-ma11 us at"
classified@ mydailyregister.com

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

POLICIES Ohio Valle)' Publlthlng reHrVIItht rlghl to tdH, rejtct, Of cancel 1ny act M tny tlme ErrOl's m~nt bl reportltd oo the fiflf dll~ of
Tribune-Sentinel-Register will '" re1pontlbltl for no mOJI IMn the ~~ of thl tptee occupMd by thl lrtOf and only the first tnMf'tiOfl We thlll not be
•ny toll or expenN that retoltt from tnt publication or omlttlon ol M actvertiMmtnt Correction will be made In the firtt IVIIIttM edition • Boa
ere always conftdential • Current r•t• ctrcl applltl • All r•l tttatt •dvertlnmenta 1ft aubject to the Feder•! Faw HouSing Act of 19611 • Th11
accepts only help wtnt.ct ada meeting EOE ltlndardt We wUI not knowingly accept •ny advertising In violation ot the !•w

""'""''""'I

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

0
tL,• -•FOR•"•ou;•IIDrr•iES•-,JI
1

lwrlghl4!llc net

www com1cs com

r

Frida~

900 AM thru
4 PM OtiiCe
IS
Monday
!rom
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drtve Potn t Pleasant WV
Phone No s (304)67 5 5806

3 bedroom house tor re nt
$450 a month + depos•t
Rodney Village II 740 446

I

\

c~~~

Iii)

r.I1M

W.urR"n

L_,;.'-·TiloiiriDollii--,.1

\

on Sanders Drtve $550 pe r.
month Dep0611 and refer
ences
reqwed
Call
Wtseman Real Estate 740

/,c

446·3644
3 br house 1n the country
~ater furnished No pets
N1ce yard $400/d epcstt
$400/month 740 245 5064
4 br 1 1f2
SA 141
$700 per
reference
W •sttman

~

2 bedroom on rented lot
does not have to be moved
$5 900 Call 740-446 3617

HoMES
FOR SALE
piCKY PAINTERS
lntenor &amp; Extertor
Semor Ctllzens Discount
Re sidential Commerc •al &amp;
mobile homes
Roofs barns pressurewashmg
Expenence &amp; References
avatlable

304-895·3074
Free estt mates call M
Sam 7pm

5

S1t wtth Elderly light chores
or odd JObS (304)675 7460

4 Bedroom 2 Bath Pome roy
Oh to
Vtew
Photo/lnfo rmat•on onhne
www OAVB com
code
80603, Call (740}992 3650

"'

"'

r

MoNEY

1lJ Lo,\N

Mortgages, Mortgages! II
We offer compettttve Interest
rates on mor tgages and
debt con sol da ttons and
spectal•ze 1n good and bad
credrt Call toll free to find
out about our low nterest
r.ates and rece1ve expert
adVICe

1-8811-7311-8719

7004

(304)675·1352

SPACE
I'OR iiDrr

Commerc tal pr o pe r !~ for
rent
a store front 1n
H1stor•cal
downtown
Po me roy Oh t.a.cmg fiver
{740)589·7122

74(}446 0175

45701 740·592·1972

\II W II \'111-..1

For sale House tra der and 1
acre m Mercerville Call

740 256 6663
New 14 wtde on ly $799 00
down and only $169 76 ~r
month
Call
Ka rena

All reel eltate advenialng
In thl• new•paper I•
•ubject to the Federal
Ftlr Houelng Act of 1968
which make• It llleg•l to
advertiH any
pr•t...nce, llmltallon or
diKrlmln1t1on baaed on
race, color, religion,
familial statu• or national
origin, or any Intention to
m•ke any such
preference, limitation or
dl•c:rlminatlon '

(740)385·7671
New 2003 Ooubtew1de 3 BR

&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down

and &amp;295/mo t 800·69 1·

sn7

••)1,

No Problem Sale· Want a
new sectiOn al home ? No
Problem Need toundatron
and septtc ? No Problem
Need uhhtres run or dnvewa~? No Proble m Want btg
sav1ngs on a 2003 model
No Problwn Coles Mob1le
Homes
US
50 East
Athens Ohto 740-592 1972
Since 1967 Where You Get
Your Money"s Worth

Thla newapaper will not

knowingly accept
adveniHmentt tor real
estate whlch Is In
vtot•lon ol tht taw O~ r
rNdtrs trtl htfeby
Informed th•t all
dweltlnga advertised ln
this newtp~~p~r 1re
•vallabtt on an equal
opportunity b8MS

t

-

Lot

Need extra cash? We are

loTs&amp;
ACREAGE
for sate

1n

Racme,

Located behtnd Fox s P1zza
on
Sandhill
Fload Pt
Pleasant
$350 /mo nth
(mcludes water and sewer)

Buy
or
sell
R•ver1ne
Ant1ques 1 124 East Mam
on SA t 24 E Pomeroy 140992 2526
Ru ss M oore

r:~~~~~~EJ
4 pc bedroom su•te

F1rewood for sa le $30 a
toad $75 cord 740 256

6663
JET
AERATION MOTQRS
Repa11ed New &amp; RebUilt In
Stoc~ Call Ron Evans 1
800 537 9528
NEW AND USED STEElv
Steel Bea ms P1pe Rebar
Conc rete
Angle
For
Channel Fla t B ar Steel
Grahng
For
Drams
Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday llo
Fnday Bam 4 30pm Closed
T hursday
Satu rday
&amp;
Sunday (7 40)446- 7300

Office Furniture
New scra tch &amp; Dent
Save 70oto t 800 527 4662
Argonaut 519 Br1dge Street
Guyandotte!Hu nllngton MIF

r

S100
$30
$50

740-446 2350

r

Call (304)675·3423

B liiUJING

SUI'PLIEi

1 &amp; 2 BR $295 lo $359 per

Block bnck sewer p1pe6
Heat·N Glo Propane Insert
w1ndows hotels etc Cl aude
Ma~~:lm u m ' output 24 000
Wtnters Ato Grande OH
BTU Excellent Cond !ton

month, plus utll t1es Near
Holzer no pets 740 446

$1 000
3769

2957

OBO

I

I304 )895

IT PAOV D1n1ng Room b)'
Drexel Oval table w1th 3
2 AI&lt;C Mate Beagles 3 yr5
leaves 6 cha1rs plus hutCh
old Indian H11is and J•ggs
$500 (304 )675 2090 Leave breed 3 yrs old 740-709
Message

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments furnished and unfur·
nlshed
secunty depostt
requtred no pets 740-992·

1861

2218
Late
model
almond
whirlpool washer $85 Hot
Potnt washer Whtrlpool &amp;
G E dryers all white $65
each Call after 6pm 74Q-

2
badroom
apt
1n
Centenary apphances fur·
mshed uttlitles paid m:pect
etectnc ctean-$350 month
Call 740 256 1135

446 9066

- -- - - -

AK C RegiStered Yellow Lab
pupp1es b€Hn 9115/03 7
males 1 female $250/each
740·367 0038 or 740-367

7202
AKC Beagles 6 weeks old

2 bedroom homes m family Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clall; Wormed &amp; shots $100 Call

l!lj

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
!lENTS
AT
BUDGET
New Starter Log Homes w/ 1·3 BED FORECLOSED PRICES AT JACKSON

Chapel Roa,d Porter Oh10 740-446-4172 work or 74(}(740)446 7444 1 8 77 830 256 1619· h0me
9 162 Free Est1mates Easy
llnandno 90 days same as AKC Tn color Beagles 8 wk
cash Vtsal Master Card old $100 (740)992 4169
Dnve· a· little save alot
Beagle Pups Copper Nose
Thompsons A ppliance 8. 8 weeKs old $30 (304)773

onented park Water fur
ntshed No pets Call 7 4Q441 ·4540 leave a clear mes·
sage

HOUiEli

(740)992·2828 or 74(}992·
v6ii,87;,:5;;_.,__ _ _ _ _., 3664
i'RoflSSIONAL

A~&gt;TIQUt:S

Wetghts &amp; bench set
Two 10 speed btkes
La rson sto rm door

2 Bedroom Mob1te Home

House for sale by owner 4
bedroom 2 bath for addt·
!tonal lnlormatron or to view
www orvb com
on
hne
codeil 10903
or
call

SF.R\'ICES

r

Mobile home lot w ilt take 14
or 16 w1des $ 125 month

tl'le loan specialist we don t
speculate good or bad cred·
rt excepted There are no
fast approval and tow
mterest rates For more Info
call toll free 1 866 882·

'"s

w

BeA utrfut
Dream Home
3200sq H with wrap aro und
deck upsta ~rs balcony 4 112
acres 4br 2ba large bvmg
dtmng
roo m w/fnepiace
room 2 car garage Owner Coles Mobile Homes
fmanc rng
•s
avatlabte US 50 East Athens Ohto,

r~.IO--·Biilli!SINESSiiiiiiiiiiioi-~
0PPORTIJNfiY
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH

Two efttclency apartments 1n
town Conventently located
on Second Ave Downsta rs
Apartmen t IS $250 and the
upsta~rs apartment IS $275
per month Rent tncludes
water sewer and gas Call
seman Rea l Estate 740
446 3644

For sale or rent 4 bed room
house 1n fi'omeroy S450 a
month rent $400 s ecur~ty
deposit no pets stove fng
&amp; dishwasher (7 40)949

N1ce new home 3 br 1 bath
200 1
Fleetwood garage No pets Depostt &amp;
Doublew•de 3 br 2 bath all reference requ1 red
740
apphances
$35 000 o r 245·5114
assume note Move or lot
rent optiOn Located by St At 141 2 bedroom h111ng
&amp; dmmg room Lg k1tchen
Vmto n 740 983 1900
w/all appliances front &amp;
97 Redman 16x72 $13 995 back porch $485 mo £.400
96 l iberty 14x70 $7 995 depostt 740 446 4254 or
740·446-0205
Call 740-709 1166

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

lNG CO recommends tha
ou do busmess wtth peo
le you ~now and NOT t
end money th rough th
atl unt1l you have 1nves11
ated the otferm

balhS Located on
near Centenary
month DepoSit &amp;
reqUired Call
Real Estate at

740~6-3644

"' 2003 by NEA, Inc

740 446 2842

Servtces Programs EPP Tru cking company 1s seek
SMOC-E RS
Bulldtng
mg expenenced semi-tractor
lnspectton
Tra tnmg and tra iler dnvers L ocal runs
4 Family Yard Sale Inside 1he Weatherization experience exp ene nced drtvers only
Rutland Fire Department, prelerred Good readi ng, Call 74()-682 •7774
com prehens•on,
Saturday November 1st wnt1ng,
training organizational and
B~
from 8 OOAM · 3 OOPM
c omputer sk1lls a MU ST
TRAINING
Big garage sale· rain or Send or deltver resume and .· - - - - - - - ·
shtne Saturday Nov 1st, refe rences
to GMCAA Galllpo/la Career College
Sam ? corner of Eagle attention Sandra Edwards,
(Careers Close To Home)
Rid~e &amp; Pine Grove Roads 8010 N State Route 7,
Ca 11Todayl7404464367
lUSt off St At 7 at Meigs Chesh ire Ohio 45620 by
1 8 214 0452
Memory Ga rdens lots of 11·03 03 GMCAA Is and
EOE
www ga~~llsca ree rcoll&amp;ge com
old ol d stuff 10 old ot i
Res lf90-05·1274B
lanterns (some with red
Onver
wanted·
need
good
globes), 10 old electric
la"lP" 2 old wood cloct&lt;o. 2 drivers record (no COL) 2 3
days a week, 740 992 1397
old butter churns 100 s ot
2:5 Strloul People Wanted
pieces of old glaseware le!Ml message
(pink red yellow blue, Eam money for Chrlslmas Who want l o LOSE welghl
gtaas, greene old corn by selltng Avon c• ll Joyce We Pay You Cash lor the
sheller c rock&amp; &amp; stone jars· 304-875·6919
po~nds you LOSE I
Oonaugho
old
rocking
Safe Natural No Drug s
horse, otd tools, much, much El{perienced full-time gnU· a800~~
20~1:_;0~83~2'----"''
moro, (700)99N599
prep cook Day shift, rotating
weekends 10+/hours, vaca,.... ,..~
Garage Sale October 31 •
tlon/benems
Se nd
November 1
Christmas resume/salary requirements
ijems, t ools 39• storm door to Job P0 flax 297 Rio AHordable ServJce Hauling
true~ tool box drill-press Granda OH 45674
pamting power washmg
7967 State Route 554
driveway repair seal coat
f\IOW Htrlng AN LPN &amp;
lng
gutters
c h •mney
Racine Route 124 across Home Health Aides tor local
plumbing J ac~ of ah trades
from
h1gh
school homehealth agency apply at
30yrs e~~:p Senior D1scount
Collectibles anttques , l t&amp;h· 33105 Hiland Rei Pomeroy
Free Estimates (30 4)882M·F, 8·
lng, household Come seel (740)992·0990
2196 (304)3n 8266
430pm
October 31 -November 1

"

,

Blond
w/ gold tflm Good condt llon
i 940 s
$300
Tara
Townh ouse Ctrca
Apartment s Very S paCIOUS (74 0)446 2'n6
2 Bedrooms 2 Floors CA t
Bookcase chest drawers
1/2 Bath Newly Carpeted
dresser enterta•nment cen
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
ter h1deabed refngerat or
Pal• o Start $38 5/ Mo No
stove and mtcrowave sta nd
Pets Lease P lus Secunty
740-446 974 2
DepoSit Requcred Days
740 44 6 34B1
Evenmgs Otamona Enga gemen1 ong
740-367 0502
w1th appra sal 740 256
1610
Twtn R1vers Tower IS accept
mg applicallons tor wartmg Estate Heatrola Coal/Wood
list lor Hud subs•zed 1 br large heat stove Works wen
apartment call 675 6679 $150 740-446-7484 or 740339-0707
EHO

EHO

3 Br hOuse tor ren t Located

Med1 Home Health Agency
Inc
seel&lt; rng a Speec h
T herapt st lor the Gallipolis
Oh1o area We otter a com
Absolute Top Dollar U S p et1t1 ve salary
beneftts
Stiver
Gold
Co ns p ackage and401K EOE
Prootsets 0 1amonds Gold Please send resume to 430
Amgs
U S Currency
Seco nd Avenue GallipoliS
MT S Com Shop
151 OH 4563 1 Attn D1ana
Second Avenue Galltpol•s Harless Cllntcal Manager

r
r

It

House

4543

FOUND

FOR lb:NT

req u~red $350 month rent

Med1 Home Hea lth Agency
tnc seekmg lull tme staff
Phystcal Therapist for Ohto
and West V11g m1 a clu::mt
base We offer a c ompettttVe
sala ry be nelt s pac kage
and 401 K E 0 E $5 000
SIGN O N BONUS Pl ease
send resume to 352 Second
Avenu e
Ga llipOliS
OH
4563 1 Attn Dtana Harless
R N Cl nrcat Manager

Nee d 7 ladtes to sell Avon
GIVFAWA)
Baby Sitter wanted m my Call 740 446·335B
home must be responstble
Now taktng apphcatrons at
Cats &amp; ktttens Call 740 446 and over 21 Ca ll 740 446
lhe Galltpolrs Pl ant for dnv
8621
9935 leave e message tl no
ars at the Colu mbus plant
answe r
I \ 11 '1 (l\\ 11 \I
CD Ls req u1red For more
-.. 1 H\ IC I -.,
tnfo call 7 40-446 1594
Free Puppt es M111ed breed
2 males and 2 females
Treatment
Restdenttal
Please call (740)992 0640
Fac1ilty now htrmg O~rect
.
HELrWANTID
Care workers &amp; one cook
Fnendty female cat spayed
pos1t1on n eeded lor boy s
&amp; declawed 740·446- 1944
16 Day COL Training
leave a message
TMC/Sw1ft &amp; 30 Major prog ram Pay based on
experience Call 740 379
Garners Need Entry Leve l
Kttte n s looktng tor lovmg Dnvers Grads Rae Top 9083 as I&lt; lor Lisa
home AproK 8 weeks old PayfB'ftts/Job Placement &amp; RNIPT LPNI PT
At 141 1n Centenary 740 Be off wk'ends 1-866-602· PT AN &amp; LPN / PT &amp; FT
446 4753
7035
Destred
EnJOY Flex1ble
Schedutmg &amp; A Aewardtng
l.aiTAND
Addressers wanted 1mmed1
atelyl No expertence neces Career In A Homelike
Atmosphere Many Bene ftts
s ary Work at home Call
Com petitive
Pay
Lost- Reward when black (405)447 6397
Proless1onal Apphcanls May
btlllold returned Wlth pictures
&amp; •mportant papers to An awesome JOb I S6 $9 per Apply Datly Mon -S un 91
4pm
Ravenswood Care
C c Frye PO Box 135 New hour after tra1n1ng No expe
Cente r 111 3 Washmgton
nence
needed'
Full/part
Haven WV 25265 304-593·
Ravenswood
WV
ltme Flexrble sc heduling St
0685
(Across
Convemenl Pomeroy loca (304)27 3 9482
t1on
20+ poSit ons avail· Rttchte Brtdge At 2 N Last
YARDSAI.E
able Call 9·9 M F 1·8B8· Busi ness On Right) Come
Jo tn Our Team' You II Be
974 JOBS
Glad You Otd'
Area Rep/Local Route No
Y 11RD SALF.Sell ng
$1 OOK Income The
Commu nity
Chest
GAILIPOUS
$1 2 950 Investm ent tor Buyers Gutde IS now
Accounts
Invento ry acceptmg applicati ons for
Oct 31 &amp; Nov 1 2 from 9
Tralmng Terntory (800)373 outs tde sates representa
5pm 5 mtles S on 2 18 from
5470
ltves Aeqwes excellent
Rt
7
Gtrls/womens
customer relatton skt\ls hon
coats/jackets aunts bed AVON I All Areas 1 To Buy or esty &amp; dependab 1tty To
1
d tng lots of ttems toys
Sell
Stmley Spears 304 apply bnng 1n or ma11 your
6.:..7..:5_1_4.::2.:.9_ __ _~- resume to The Community
Three famtly yard sale Frt &amp;
Set on St At 2 18 Two Community Act1on IS seek- Chest Buyers Gutde 28
tng an EPPIHWAP SPE· Locust Slreet Gallipol s OH
miles south of Mercerville
C IALIST for the Emergency 4563 1

APAR'J1\1lNTS

Reference Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now takmg A pphcal1onS
+ $350 Oepostl No Pets tor 2BA 3B R &amp; 4BR
App lica!IOns
are
taken
(304)675·5578

2br

Fu ll t1me help ne eded Apply
between 10 11 am Mon
Thurs
Sat
McCiures
Resta urants AU loca tions
Jackson Ptke
Gallipolis
740 44 6 3837 Mtdd leport
740 992 5246
Pomeroy
740 992 6292

1'70 ~1

Shop
Ctassifleds!

Word Ads
Dally In-Column: 1 :00 p . m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p . m.
For Sundays Paper

• Start 'tour Ads W1th A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrev1atlon1
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

oo

I
..

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

t

weeks

Section 14 and 15 In
Town No. 3 of Range
No. 12, as surveyed
by E. Hutton. the said
parcel
measuring
16 50 chains North
and 20 &amp; 12·t/2
chains East from the
Southwest corner of
said Fraction and
containing
33·211 0
acres, be the same

Pierce, Lizzie Pierce,

Pierce,

answer the Complalnl
wllhln twenty-eight
(28) days alter the
last publication of
lhts NOIICO, which will
be published once
each week lor six (6)

the Fraction num bered one No 1, In

Assigns
of
LM
Pierce ake Lamont M

Kenneth

been

assigned' Case No
03·CV· 110, and is
pending In the Courl

Devisees, Legatees,
Administrators ,
Executors,
Successors
and

Charles

has

This

Offiee lfo~Oi'

\\,IH \( I \11 \ l "l,

~

Sentinel

V1s1t us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis V1sit us at. 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at. (740) 992-2155
Call us at. (740) 446·2342
Fax us at· (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
E·malf us at.
E-mail us at.
classified@
mydailysentinel.com
classified@ mydai lytri bune.com

1 ~10

You are required to

by default will be ren·
dared against you
and for the relief
demanded in the
Complaint.
Dated this 13th day
of Oct , 2003.

-arrtbune

F

No 03·00974 000

Procedure, judgment

Ad ...

Nattonal Basketball Association
C LEVE LAN D CAVAUEAS- Exerct sed
the 2004 05 contract option on C
DeSagana D•op

Nattonal Basketball Assoc1at1on
EASTERN CONFERENCE

successive

Your

Amencan League

1-.ublic Not:iccs in Nc"VSJ&gt;upc•-s.
Your Right. tu Knc.vv.. Deliv~red Right: t:o Ynu1· Duns·..

Revised

To
Place

DETROIT TIGERS-Named Rtck Sweet
ma nage r ot Ene of the EL Named Pete
tncavtgha coach and Mtke Caldwell pitchIng coach
MINNESOlA TWIN S- Dec lined the 2004
contract option o n IN F Ch11 s Gomez
TORON TO BLUE JAY S- Agreed 10
terms with OF Fran k Catalanotto on a one
year con tract

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

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

In One Week With Us
REACI:i OVER 285,0(}0 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Transactions

Trernatne Fow lkes
HOUSTON ROCKETS-S1gned F Scott
Padgett
LOS ANGELES LAKER S-F ned G
Kobe Bryan t an undtsc tosed amount

ster

C.aliJ. ( ~M~nty OH

National league
COLORADO
ROCKIES-Mutual ly
declined the 2004 contrac t optt on w1th INF
Ch r s Stynes
FLORIDA MARLINS-Agreed to terms
wtth Jack McKeon manager on a one year
contract
NEW YORK
ME TS-Named
J1m
Du quette general man ager

Basketball

1-

ijtribune - Sent
CLASSIFIED

2003

17

18 27

Mondays Games
Phtladelphla 5 Montreal 0
Atlanta 3 Toron to 2 OT
Tuesday s Games
Mtnnesola 3 Buffalo 1
Boston 2 Montreal 0
Carolina 3 San Jose 0
New Jersey 4 N Y Islanders 0
Anaheim 3 N Y Rangers 1
St Louts 1 Nashvtlte 0
ChiCAgo 2 Phoemx 2 11e
Colorado 4 Calgary 2
Vancouver 6 Col umbu s 3
Wednesdays Games
Anahe•m at Washmgt on 7 p m
Florrda at Ph ladelphta 7 p m
St Lou ts at Detroit 7 30 p m
N Y lslandet s at Pttl sburgh 7 30 p m
Ca lgary at Dal las B 30 p m
Thursdays Games
Montrea l at Boston 7 p m
Toronto at Buffalo 7 p m
San Jose at Tampa Bay 7 p m
Caroltna at N Y Ra ngers 7 p m
Flonda at Ottawa 7 30 p m
Atlanta at Minnesota 8 p m
DetrOit at Nashville B p m
Philadelphia at New Jersey 8 p m
Ptttsburgh a1 Chtcago 8 30 p m
Columbus at Edmonton 9 p m
Vancouver at Las Angeles 10 30 p m

DIVISION Ill

5 0 0 10 22 9
Atlantic City
41 08229
Johnstown
3 0 1 7
17 8
Aead1ng
3 1 1 7
15 14
Toledo
3 1 0 6 13 13
Wheeling
3 3 0 6
18 19
C1nc1nna!l
2
1 1 5
13 10
Peona
I 3 0 2 8 17
Trenton
0 3 0 0
5
15
Dayton
Southern Division
WLTPisGFGA

National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE

Semthn als start Wednesday at 6 30 p m
At Barberton H1gh School
Columbia na (18 8) vs G11a1d ( 17 9)
Cleve VA St Joseph { 19 6) vs Orrvtlte (2 1
4)
At Findlay Llberty·Benton Htgh School
Casta! a
Marg aretta
vs
Rocklord
Parkway (10 15) Wellngton ('204) vs
Genoa {22· 3)
At Logan Middle School
Zoarv•ll e Tusc Valley (25· 1) vs Newa rk
Cathol c (23 -1 ) Wtlltamsport Westfall (21
3) vs Albany Alexander (17 6)
At Wllmmgton High School
Middletown Fenwtck (19 6) vs Verssttles
(1 9 3) Anna vs Johnstown Northr dge ( 19

o

'

Wednesday, October 29,

Frankton Adena (25 0) vs Reedsville
Eattern ( 2~3)
AI Vandalia Butler High School

At Wilmington High School
Chtll!cothe Umoto (19 6) vs Ke ttenng
Alter (23 2) Cm Roger Bacon vs Cm
McNicholas (14 7)

1 6 0

5 2 0
Seattle
5 2 0
Sl Lou s
San Franc• sco 3 5 0
2 5 0
A11zona

34 1
291
23t
202
182
125
118
B7

COLUMBU S Oh•o (AP) - Reg tonal patr ·
mgs lor the gtrls state htgh school volleyball
tournament
DIVISION I
Sem1fma1s start Wednesday at 6 30 p m
At Hud son Htgh School
You ng Au st r.town Fttch (21 4) vs Solon
(20 5) Mentor (23 3) vs Mas stlton Perry
A t Norwalk High School
Aocl&lt;y A •ver Magntftcat ( 19 5) vs
Amher st Steele (24 1) Tal St Ursul a (2 4·
1) vs Perrysburg (17 8)
At Hilliard David6on High School
Westervtll e North vs Dublm Coffman (22·
4) Cots wanerson (23 2) vs Cm LJrsultne
Acad (22 3)
At Vandalia Butler High School
Day Cham•nade Jul en ne ( 19 6) vs C•n
St Ursula Acad (-26·0) Ctn Mt Notre
Oame (168)vs Ctn Seton (11 36)

429 134 140

WLT
8 0 0
5 3 0
2
t

Prep Volleyball

DIVISION II
Sem1 t1nals start Thursday at 6 30 p m
At Stow·Munroe Falls Htgh School
Chagnn Fa lls Kenston (23 3) vs Salem
(22 4) M en tor Lake Cat h (22 3) vs Rocky
Rtver {14-12 )
At Wooster High School
Mogadore F1eld (24 2) vs Carrollton (223) Cana l Fulton NW ( 17 B) vs Mtllersburg
w Holmes 122 3)
At Ontario Htgh School
Canal Wmchester (24 1) vs Bellevue (23
3) Sunb ury B1g Walnut (20 5) vs Maumee

West

DIVISION V

1 Manon Pleasa nt (24\ 10-0
2 Sarahsvtlle Shenandoah (7 ) 10 0
3 N l tma S Range (2) 100
4 Gates Mtll s G lmour (3) 10 0
5 Amand a C learcreek 9 t
6 Sa nbndge Patnt Valley 10 o
7Srn thvtlle 9 1
"
8 WOOd!&gt;tteld Monroe Cent 9 1
9 Delphos St Jo hns 8 2
I 0 Hamler Pa l riCk Henry 9 1

6 2 0

North
W L TPctPFPA

DIVISION Ill

o

~

Monday's Game
Mt amt 26 San Otego 10
S ~mday, Nov 2
Oakland at Detro•! 1 p m
San Otego at ChiCago 1 p m
NV Grants at NY Jets 1 p m
Carotma at Houston 1 p m
Indianapolis at Mt am• 1 p m
Jacksomnlle at Bal l more 1 p m
New Orleans at Tampa Bay 1 p m
Ptttsburgh at Seattle 4 05 p m
Cmclnnatl at Anzona 4 05 p m
Washtngton at Dallas 4 15 p m
Ph tladelphta at Atlanta 4 15 p m
St Lou sat San Franctsco 4 15 p m
Green Bay at M nnesota 8 30 p m
Open Bullalo Kansas Ctty Tennessee
Cleveland
Mondtly Nov 3
New England at Denver 9 p m

Regional volleyball patrtngs

National Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

308

Steubem lie (13) 10 0
Dover (4 ) tO 0
Cle Bened1ct ne (11 ) 9 1
ltsbon Beaver (:1) 10 0
Canal Fulton NW (1) 10-0
Sunbury Btg Walnut { 1) 10 0
Chesterland w Geauga 10
Gern e~ntown Valley V1 8\\ 9-1
9 Newark l ck•ng Valley 9 1
10 Day Cham tn ade Julienne 8 2

147
125
116
80
29

Pro Football

..0111e rs rece1 v1ng 12 or more pomts 1t
Jac kson 18 12 Chardon 14

1
2
3
,4
5
6
7
8

192

12

330

.

309
272
236

11
Mana Sletn M anon Local21 12 W1ndham
20 13 W111ow Wood Symm es Valley 15
14 Monroevi lle 14 15 Glouster Tn mbte

DIVISION II
: 1 Avon l ake (23) 10 0
• 2 Cots Brool&lt;haven (4) 10 0
• 3 Sylvama Sou thvtew (3) 10 0
• 4 Trent011 Edgewood (5 ) 10 0
5 Macedoma Nmdonta (1) 9 1
6 Wa rren Howlard 9 1
7 Kn1 gs M liS Kmgs 9 1
8 Pd.ermgton Central9 1
.. 9 Wh lehall Yea rl ng 9 I
:1 0 Youngs Ch am:~y 9 1

343

Othor ~ tlw etvmg 12 or more potnls

"Others rec e v ng 12 01 more potnls 11
PDubhn Coffman 23 12 (tte) Lakewood St
Edward Ctn Moelter 22 14 Cte Glenvi lle
.20 t 5 Clayton Nor thmon t 18 16
Bru nS NICk 17 17 Huber Hts Wayne 16
18 Ctn St Xavter 13

PageB4

FORJbNr

Reptur-675-7388 F..,ale 5038
Ready to go HOMES Buy from $199/mo ESTATES, 52 WesrwoOd
re-condtttoned
automatiC Fu ll breed mm lature COIIIfl
$27 000 740 255-9247 or 4%-down 30 years 0 8 5% Drive from $297 to $383
74(}645·0870
apr For Ustingallnformatton Walk to shop &amp; rT10V18S Call washers &amp; dryers retngera pupp 1es Parents on premts
Equal tors gas and electnc es Call 740-645-4155 or
call 1-81)().719·3001 Exl 740-446·2568
ranges llf conditioners and 7 4()-441-()865
Housmg OptXIrtunlty
Nlce 1 Bedroom home m 1709
wrmger washers Will do - - - - -- - -Country set1mg Great for a · - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - . . , -Gracious hvlng 1 and 2 bed· repairs on major bra,nds 1n One 9 week old Jack
sta rio r o r re Itreman I al1o rd • 2 bedroom home in Rutland,
..
room apartments at Vlll*"'e snap or at your home
Rus5ell
Terner
puppy
bl
2201
13041578·
aner out of high water $325 plus
"""'
6a e
Manor
and
A lverslda
female $1~5 Call 740-256pm
references
&amp;
deposit Apartments ln Middleport Used furniture store 130 1552
Ranch
Style
Home (7.W)992·0309
From $278-$348 Call 740. Bulavtlle Pike Mattresses oioir;..._..,._ _ _ __,

L~---i:::i:~~ii.-,1 1 ac re
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win I
1·888·582-3345
I~

I \ I I .._ I \ I I

~rif.•ar;;;;;FOR~"~~;;SAI.E;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Gallipolis Ferry area bealde
3 br 2 bath appliances 84 lumber 3BR LA Eat In
ntce condition Central heat kitchen , 1·112 bath large
aprox 1 900 aq ft Asking 20,aO FA Attached single
car garage CIA Gas Heat,
$1!9,000 74().379-9687
sitting on 9 of acre 1'1'\11
3br ~ full baths deck, Shown
by
appt
Call
wt"llrlpool tub Located near (304)8Q5-34l7 _..
school '" Galtla Own&amp;f'

l,_
_n•_n_c_ln~g--"--'-•_•_lla_b_l•_

(304)675· 1352

4 BEDROOM

4 BATH

j~

MOIIIUFOR"'~
~

992·5~

I:

bedroom, LA/OM&lt;, bath tncludos Wllor
• utility room. e&lt;ontrtll air, gas Traah S350/Mo

10 Used homes under
HOUSE! Foreclosure only
$2 000 00 Catt Nikki Call
$9 900 For listings C'atl 1(740) 385-9948
800-7 19· 3001 Eld F144

~ dressers

Equal Houtlng
2 Bedroom, 2 baths living Opportunlt1e&amp;
room largefamllyroom, dln·
lng room Wlth stove, refr ~- ·Modern one bedroom apt
era1or and dishwasher 740446-0390
$450 plus deposit raterence required (304)875 Now Taking .&amp;.ppllcttlona8859
35
west
2
Bedroo m
TownhO use
Apartments,

couches ,
bunktt.ds, bedroom sunes
recliners
Grav6
monumenta
740-446 478:2
Galllpoha OH Hours 10
4prn Stop by •
--------Uaed kitchen cabrnets for
sale 740-446· 2637 or 740-

j

'-~~~~

L•-ri"""liir'iiii"ullii""""iil-'~_.j
12 String Jumbo Alvarez
Guitar
Mother-Of-Pearl
Inlays mint condition $400
Drumset 4 piece lnch.Ktel
Throne1Hat,9/Crasn $250

(304)675 7004

or (304)675·

3781

Sewage. 245.0SS7
740-«6- r-::::-::-::-=-=::,.-=-:--=-:::-:::-::=::-:==-=.,

~~~E=::~:~. ~;?~~~~g~·ISHOP CLASSIFIEDSI
- -·

_..

____. -----------..,

'

••

�-

'

Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

VVednesda~Oct.29,2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

T he Dail y Senti nel • Page B7

ALLEVOOP
Announcements

Announcements

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Pomeroy Auto Parts

Phillip

11 9 W Secona St. • Pomer oy. OH

I Grant

6 Man with a
4() ~:::ky
van
11 Mythical
42 Study

Alder

740·992·2139

Welcomes Back Roger Pullins
We do automobile machine work. including
comple te h ead work , bl oc k

&amp;

NOVEMBER SPECIAL
All llywhee l Grinding Only $25.00

Saturday, Nove mber 1s t 6PM
Electric scooters, New electronics,
All kinds of Christmas Stull , QVC

Auros

Bath accessorie s

will be having a Public Ham
&amp; Turkey Dinner Nov. 2
11 :00 am ··? Cost $6.00
t1P.L.u

Bu ick La sabre. all power.
51,99 5 . Aiver11iew Motors.

FOOD DRIVE
Racine

(740)992-3490

--------

Hennell Reunion

r

Buffet Served.
All relatives and
friends welcome

Beverly 992-5105
Shirley 992-4025

Charcoal. 16,000 miles.
$23,000 740-388-8869.

~.,r_,.v.:o:;;;:::si;i
. •~:::~.:..·_.~I ~.,r
__L.~v.•:.s·lo.c.·K-"'

1991 Ford F-1 50 Lariat.
Exce llent conditi on w/topper. 132,000 anginal. mites.
$3,500 firm_ 740-446-1168
or 740- 446-0 137.
1992 Chevy 3/4 to n, 5-

speed , w/topper. $4,800.
Potatoes lor sale 50# $10, Register ed Polled Hereford Call 740-8832.
Man-Sat.. 65002 State Bull call. Excellent bull or

"'

1995 FORD E350 CUBE
BOX
TRUCK .
CALL
(740)446 -9416. M-F 9-5.
Located
139 1 Sallord
.1 School. Gallipolis .

Route 124, Reedsville, Oh. club calf prospect. 740-367-

~7~4~01;1,37~81,;:·62~9,:,1- - -.... 7554 oc 740-339·01 12.

r
i.w------_.1
---

HAY &amp;
GRAIN

.

NO
WHAT vn,fll?l
STYlE...

S(u1re

FREE ESTIMATES

r

1 \lnr "' 1'1'111 s
,\II\ I "'If)( h.

LIVI:SIOCK

3 Year

old. Registered
Jersey Bull. 740-992-7603

A must see! Two Tennessee
Walk1ng horses. Broke, gentle, &amp; e)(tra smooth. 4 yr. old
G ray: 3 yr. old True Blue
Roam. Quarter Horse. bay
breed. 11ery gentle. 740-3677010 afte r 8:00pm.
A'ngus Bull s. Heifers plus
Maine-Angu s Steers and
Heifers. Top blood lines .
Slate run farm. Jackson .

740-286-5395.

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

... THE

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

f

Bridge J&gt;fa za ill Gaffipofis.
.
To sclr ed~de an iura11ierv please ca i'J j
~
H e•tltrr H•ydrn toll-free
~
~877-2]0 ... 7473 or en111il your resume to~

II 1w)'dcn@Jlctio11''"terpris,·s. emu

Moritz 3 horse slant IQad
combo Stock Trailer. $3,500
C311 740-245-5978 leave a
message.

/
Phone (740)59]-6671
Athens~ Ohio

.A Be!f(!l" H{n: E1·err

$2,995. 740-446-0853.

r# buy quilt tops
9 milts from Pt. Plcasaur
ou s;,d Hill Road.

Dean Hill

4577 1

New&amp; Used

,,·~-.~·:.

·&gt;:·'&gt;

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

,.,

Hours

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
1/1 4/1 rno. pd

1-800-822-0417
-- w .v ·s #I C hevy. Pan l i ar. lJu i ck. Old s
&amp; Cu stom Van D ealer··
__

R.B.
Trucking

740-985·3564

HOWARD l.
WRITESfl

PW 50 , $500
Call 740·446-

*ROIFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
I *SUMlESS
1

!

CAMPERS&amp;

MOTOR HOl\U::S

GUmR

,dree EsUmates.

1.-:,;:;----~

' 949-1405 .

2001 Keysl one Ultra Light
96 Corsica $2 ·, 195 ; 96 Neon 25ft. Mu st sell, make offer on
$1,695 ; 91 Ca11alier $1,495; inspection . (304)675-5802
9 1 Geo Storm $795; 95
Firebird $3 ,995. 23 vehicles
in stock up to $4,395.

8~

;.., :--

F.o.st

I•

Pas~

l •

Pal:iS

Pas~:;
Pa~&gt;s
Pas:;

-1 •

Pass

5 "

Pas;;

Pass

Pass

Pass

h~ad :

A li

HE ATE STOREBOUGHT
FOOD AT A
FRIEND'S HOUSE
AN' NOW
THAT'S All
HE WANTS!!

TOO BAD!!

-.JEST HAFTA
EAT LiKE TH'
REST OF
us !!

SORRY,
OL' BULLET
II

THE BORN LOSER
f""C.LI\DYSI Tf-\E. FIS~ C&gt;OC:':&gt;t-f\""l
LOOK UK£ I I WI'Q C.OOK.t.t&gt;

BIG NATE
wEVl'
(oOT

and Financial Services.

TO

Box 189. Middleport. OH
, Phone. 84 3- 5264." •
•

TI\LK -

'"--._4.fca.l-l ko0hlo~fi&lt;IWV ~·/
--~-~-

--

Ta~ e the PAIN

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every T hursday

out of PAINTING!

&amp; Sunday

Let me do it for youl

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

liNDA'S PAINnNG
ll40J 985-4180

6:30
Last Thursday nf

everv month

'·"
.,.(f;:tl

All pack $5.oo

Alter 6pm "; 'i
(Belore 6pm
~;..:;:.:
leave Meuag!)_; ~4.--~ ,. t!t:t'

'Jr. '

Bring this coupon
lluy $5.UO
Bonanza Get

.=-.. -o!J ... ~

PEANUTS
IF '(OIJ ~E NOT OFF Ti-115 1
. PORCI-I IN TWO SECONDS, I LL
SIC MY DOG ON YOU~~
1

GOOD MORNING! WE'~E
I-I ERE TO TELL YOU ALL
ABO\IT THE ''6~EAT PUMPKIN ::.

PLEASE n/\..,•.,.
BITE M'(
TOES ..

5 FREE

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room AdcUtlons &amp;
Remod eling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

BETTY

• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

PRt(.iiC.E ...

PI..ANNIOO ...
~!'ZING ...

F ree Est1mates

'

V. C. YOUNG Ill

~MA~­

992-6215

Mali...1AAtNING,
1r~C.T1CS .. .

P.IGfiT
NOW, I 'M
PEADtNG
\JPON
DIET

''·

&gt;.See
Rocky "~IJ:;

·Hu'pp , ·,,

~'R~
High&amp; Dry
Seff-Storage

&lt;

.,.

GARFIELD
OUR 1"0A51'ER 15 POSSE55E!I7
IW AN EVIl. SPIRIT

IMPORTS
Athens

I)

MANLEYS
··J&amp;L
33795 Hiland Rd.
SELF STORAGE Eledric
Pomeroy, Ohio
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Ph 740·Hl·O!illl
740-992-5232 97 Beech St.
een 740·511-1 073
middleport, OH
(lO'KlO' ti 10'x20'1

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

has a 11aned

conte nt .

ROBERT
BISSEll
CQNSTRUCnON

111e LAST lJ.IING -~WANT
IN A ~GIIS AGUY WHO

USES1llt:'P"WORP

punch
21 Common
phrase
23 Nohti's
''48 - "
26 Jacques·
pat
27 Dime-novel
wrtter
- Buntllna
28 Grimace
29 Light

Novoc:aln

40 Plant• with

18 Wild dog

41 Bear con- -

Retect

13
DOWN
Capt." I
heeding
2 Goose egg

3 Double helix
4 Tony's
cousin
5 Longing lor

19 Microscopic
atellollo!i animo!
43 Tough fl~
2(1 Charged
45 Pr.flx lot •
for
pod
22 Lolly goo Ia 4e Hlp-hop -

23 Put up
muolc -24 Steal cattle 47 Clllcogo'.25 tnaerto,

at.

as a sleeve 48 Batman ~
(2 wds.)
Robin

6 Polite

perfume
address
31 Remove
7 Hodgefrom office
podge
8 Dana or
32 Seaweed
33 Confront&amp;
Oamone
9 ld - .
36 Help ala
10 Musical
holdup
notes
37 Southeast
Asian
12 Give

!rondo · _

28 Dairy

50 Borl&gt;arlon
51 Joule
:
fraction •
52 Med.

sound
30 - out
(w~hdraw)

34 Small wheel
"' bottle
35 WoH
relatives

personne(

but aims

pn mar11y

Jourdam

G

I

Ouic~

18

May 1926. making •I the world's oldest. II

Note that you succeed even when East
has queen-fourth of clubs. You lose when
West has a singleton club queen . but that
is much less likely than a low stngleton .
Fu ll
delatl s
itre
ava1lable
at
www.bridgemagazine.co uk

1

board Info
17 " - Te
Ching"

There are two Independently published
bndge magaz1nes in England. F1rst. let's
look at Br1dge Magazme. wh1ch began 1n

nece ssa ry. repeat the club t1nesse

LO~G (i'-10U6~ I

"I lost my shirt
, .,QiJtr 'inthestock
market!"

" Not me!
My money is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance

Two magazines fr~m
across the pond

Here 15 a p10blem devlsed by Patrrc ~
Assume you are South. the
declarer in s1x no-trump. How would you
plan th.e play after West leads a low
spade?
Jourda1n. lucky fellow. d1dn"t have to g1ve
an auct1on . This 1S the best I could pro·
duce . w1th two hearts Deing fourth-suit
game-forcing. Of ".course. in the. real
world , South would probably select s1x
clubs, which should make eas1ly enough .
It we 1gnore obscure squeeze chances.
you should try f'"" r these 12 tricks two
spades. three hear ts. two d)arnonds and
f1ve clubs. However. your communlca\lons are tenuous. mak1ng 11 dlfftcult to get
those three heart tricks.
The best l1ne is to win tnck one w1th
dummy"s spade king. then to Ptay a club
to your 10, tak1ng a first-round fmesse.
Assuming it wins. unblock the king-queen
of hearts, cross to dummy's club kmg.
and cash both major-sUit aces. discarding diamonds tram your hand. Finally. if

~

SYm/YIS.. .

•'

~or"t h

?
~

... .

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

740-446·0103

Wf' st
Pass

at 10urOament players

YOUNG'S

COOK MOTORS

AJIU.:iJ

z

BARNEY

Pomeroy, Ohio
2 Yo.~ars Local

•

H

/

• Lime stone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime

1996 Grfin d Voyager, 125K
miles , very gbod mechanical 95 Jeep Wrangler. 5·speed
condition . $4 ,500 or best transmission. Works great
offer. Call 740 _709 _9596 _
$500. Call 740-446-3210.

w

-. h~~

-

HAULING:

I

l:( Ttlfl~E

M.:.-.

l'tilchlne Quilting - l!egulated Stitch
18 Patterns A-vailable
Connie Curnutt
895-3962 Shop
owner/operator
895-3512 nome

Call 740-388-

PARTS &amp;
ACCmiORIES

..'g ,

fr .

./Size• S'x1 0' ·

L-.------_.1
r60

v/11-L

......, 1 GilA ('IT YOU

_@

. toWX3o· .

1984 Chevy Capr ice 79 ,000
miles. V-8 auto, ale. all 1998 Yamaha 1oocc 4power, new ti res, good work wheeler. excellent condition.
car. $800. (304)882-3652
new engine. new tires

fll~tiNG M~ . ~

l' wA5tiES!

750 East Stale Street

29670 Bashan Road
Racine . Ohio

'···

MO'IURCYCU:S

Cordardle sheep buck ram
coming
3
years
old. 1997 Mils. Spyder c onv.
61,000 miles, auto. $10 ,000
(740)742-1 315
IAHA Reg . 1994 Chestnut
Mare, asking 2K. "call 740441 -0184.

fOil

740-949-2217

1983 Ford 302, automatic -3;.,;
79;,;-2;,;7.,;:0;;
6----.....,
for sa le. $200 . (304) 675- 1!140

1985 Toyota Ha!chback . 51 ,000 OBO.
su nroof, reduced $750 .00 0436 .
good cond . c all 740-9922002 Yamaha
7580 to see it.
or best otfer.
1992 Cadillac Seville Sedan. 7199.
White, wine leather interior,
107K mi l es, 2 ow ners
Auro

Suu lh
• :f
¥ K &lt;I
. AK::o.\2

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Hill's Self
Storage

engine. auto matic. run s 59 Jeep &amp; 61 J eep. Both
good , new ti res. Askin g r\m , bo th have hardtops.
$5,700. Call 740-367-0244 . Al so Tow Dolly $2 ,1 00 740-

4143

""' (J ~ ll 7

Open ing

Help Wanted

740 -.245-5970

1980 Chevy Corvette. L48

080. 740-446-8832.

&lt;! ":J •
-1 NT
ii NT

740-992· 7599

4-WDs

Seasoned firewood for sa le,
Stick and Stones. Call 740·
446-6783 or 740·645·2480.

S.outh
I +

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

1

96 Chevy P:U. 1/2 ton. A.T. ,
P.S .. P.B .. 4.3 V6 eng1ne.
Sta Wag . Fla. Car, 92K , 302 Round bales ot mixed hay,
83,000
miles. EJC cellent
00 Transmission . New tires,
Condition.
(304)675-7595
new brakes. rebuilt transmission , new bartery, new
VANS&amp;
exhaust, no rust $600 or
trade tor dirt bike or 4-wheeter. 740-446-7527.
1998 Lincoln Navigator.
99 HD Fat boy, lots of extras; $500! POLI CE IMPOUNDS. Red , 4x4, loaded , 145K
Hondas. Chevys, Jeeps, etc I miles.
91 Olds Cutlass Supreme.
Call 740-446-9954 alter Ca rs from $500. For listing s 1997 Jeep W rangl er. Black,
1-800-719-3001 9)(t390 1
4-cyl , std , 72K m ile s.
7pm .
1983 Ford Country

TFN

Wi ndows • Roofing

Exciting nrw 6 JOO sq11arejlJot retail
concep t comin;t ro S;t,,er BrMgt Plaz a.
Noll' lririn.~ CMIIJ'lett• staff-.1\lauager,
Assistmll Matra.t:ers,.f,ll ·alld part timt'
Sllil!s associaus. ' 0SIIoe St•ustrtimr, will fealllre Olll'Y 10,000 pair~· ~(slwes.JOr tlu•
f imrily. PLUS 11 Uttdcrgmmd Au~ tude" will
fi:atllrefamous lt~bd junior apparel at
u ~tder,~ro••wd prices. JOB FAIR- Saturd•y.
Nor' 1-From tOA .1\ 1to 5PM at Si11Jer

~

.I 111 !J

• Rcpl acc m enl

mRSAtE

02 Chevy Silverado 4WD.
Auto. loaded . 'extended cab,
excell ent
conditi on.

•

Vu lnerable: Rol h

(', -

TRUCKS

Q ltl
W ,J I U !i 4

Dc&lt;tlcr: South

Sidin g • New Garages

Pmm:roy, Uhit'
Help Wanted

•

.

BUILDERS InC.

Residential
Bulldozer &amp; Backhoe Tru cking Sen•ia.'i
Septic System Installation
L...aud Cleari, g
1/ome Sites Pouds IJrivewayJ.·
740-992-.1470
Tolll'ree I-866-2f¥-0072

·

J&lt;:a&amp;a

!J 8 II ~

New Hom es • Vinyl

Comm~rcial

15 L.awa
16 Flight

II~

8 7 :l
Q 7 fH

... '

10D,OOOK, $850. 740-2561487

Pomeroy Senior Care Center

FOR SALE
ORliw&gt;E

HOM[

body /l ran s
Needs
3.1 992-6323
motor. $250_ 93 Mazda 323;

Sunday November 2
12:30-4:30 PM

"
•

BISSEll

Wicks Hauling
and
Excavating

1999
Chs11y
Caval ier,
~U,ROVEMEN"I"S
66.000 mi les. $3,950 or best L-.-.iiiiioiiiiiioiiiiiiiiioi.
offer. Call 740-2 56·6 169.
C&amp; C
Ge neral
Home
Mamtenence- Pain ting, vinyl
2000 Monle Carlo LS. Fully
siding . carpe ntry. doors.
loaded. 72 K miles. Ca ll 740windo w s. ba ths. moOIIe
675-3 127.
home repair and more. For
90 Grand
Pri ~~: ,
goocl free esl imate call Chet. 740-

Nov. 1st • Bam- 1pm
All items donated to
Meigs Co-op Parish

4 J

MONTY

992-5479

Sllni(IS

18 10

West

Jeff Warner Ins.

Common Ground Missions
t 998 Chevy S-10 Supercab. will~ hokling Diblr Stud~·
ai r, tilt. cruise. $6,995. 1996
ev~ry Sunday frum
Ford ranger su perca b, V-6,
auto, ai r $5, 995. 1996 Jeep
iO:OOHmto II :Oflam
Cherokee 4d r. au to, ai r, tilt,
at 202 i'"".as11\1ain Sln.'\'t in
cruise, 4wd. $6,99 5. 1997 Pomeroptarting Nm·. 2nd
Chevy Ca11alier 2dr. Rolley
Everyurw Welcome!
spo rt, auto, ai r, $3,995 . 1993 L__ _;,_ _ _ _....J

The Racine American
Legion 602

bag
14 May or
Strkch

Af&gt; .) ]

"
... I&lt;

Cellular

Announcements

mRSALE

.

.ALLta

start ers and make hycirauli c hoses. Come in
and get quality work at affordable priL·e:-.

Monthly Auction At Fire Station

.

piston work.

43 That ship
c:loee for
c omfort
46 Subway
patrons
49 Worker
with acid
53 certain
grad
54 ProiK
55 Falls softly
56 Ditties

« -

t 3 Corry-&lt;&gt;n

Nurth
.11 !~I Ul
. AK 1fl"l

res urfacing n yw heels, repai r of alte rnator!~ &amp;

Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department

sailor

I

A 20 Year Veremn of Awomobile Mal'hinc U'tJrk

38 Colton gin
name
39 Highland

AstroGraph
"&lt;bur &lt;Jiirthda,y :

Thursday, Oct. 30, 2003
By Bernice Bede Osot
Should you deci de to make a mator
change in directton m the year ahead . be
sure to explore tt completely before ven·
turing into it. The more you discover abou t
this venu e th e bet ter your chances lor
success .
SCOR PIO (Oct . 24-Nov 22) ~ It you·re
ptann1ng a get-together at your place
today. be sure those you lrMte are com·
pati ble w1 th one another. The wrong type
cou ld p ut a damper on your affa1r
S AGITTARIU S (N 0\1 . 23-0ec 21) Some one with whom you get 1nvo!ved
today may not be all tha t you e)(pected
Don't blame th 1s person tor not hv1ng up to
your e)(pectations; blame you rself for ere·
atr ng your own vers1on o f the truth .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J an. 19) - You
cou ld be a bit too careless wi th your pas·
sessions or resou rces today by trust 1ng
someone you know little about Be senst·
ble when it comes to protect1 ng or tend1ng
your "Va luables
AQUARI US (Ja n. 20 -Feb. 19) - Usually
you"re pretty good at keep ing your obJeC:
11ves in focus. but today your vts1on could
be a bit tuzzy and you're not apt to ach1eve
tha t wh1ct1 you set out to do.
PISC ES (Feb . 20-March 20) - n1e worst
thing you can do today IS to try to cover up
a m1sta1&lt;e. If wh at you att empt to h1de can ·
not be rectified . 1t co uld be emba rrass 1ng
tor you when it is discovered.
AR IES (M arch 2 1-Apnl 19)- When look·
ing tor tinanc1al adv1c e today, don "t rely on
a friend tor th e answers. Go to an exper t
who won "! turth er complicate you r silua tio n with well -rne aning but costly counsel
TAURU S (Apri l 20 -M ay 20) - The coop eration you're took1 i"lg for !rom others
tod ay has gol to sta rt w1th you. Oon·t
ex; pect-oth ers to do your b1dding 11 you
focus only on your pri orities and totally
1gnore th e1rs.
GEM INI (May 2 l ·June 20) ~ Take things
at lace val ue today and don't read more
into wh at compan ions are saying than rs
1ntended . II you all ow senSIIivities to dom inate. your feelin gs could ~ee dl ess ry be
hurt.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) - You could
dee ply upset one who loves you today by
being overly attentive to someone else in
his or her pre sen ce. Be careful where ,
when and on whom you cast your roving
eye.
LEO (July 23- Aug. 22) - Do not pur pressu re on others to m ake commitments to
yo u today that they shouldn't commit to or
simply don'! wa nt to do. What you 're antic·
ipating from them won't be there &amp;lien II
they are.
VIRGO (AuQ . 23-Sept. 22 ) - No mette r
how ma ny excuses you ma ke that certain
jObl rightfully belong to e6-worke rl , 11
yo u're the one who 11 responsible. you're
tht one who 'll be htld accounttblt . Gtl
the job done.
LIBRA (81pt. 23·0ol. 23) - Tr1 nOIIO Qlt
Involved In 100111 tltuallo nl today whe re
yo u ~now beforehand that the cot\ will bt
far mort tl'lln you Cl l'l atford. FilM tviiU·
&amp;Ilo na will put you In It'll rtd .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cel&lt;-bllti C•pt1er CT't~lcqr;:trn~ 2re :r~ at~(t , .,,,.., ~\IC'·at&lt;O~ t:1y ramo~ po;!Otllr! DiiSI Jro:l O&lt;eown! E~:'llenl!! r r .. ~rpr&gt;o&gt;· ~taM~ lor ano1~r
·

Toaav s ctue 4 eouals H

" K AT L
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RBFTBLT

UDL

GTSTLG

DNOHLRX

UJHXHUHOTR
FIIRTZS ;

WJDHRT ,

H

FT .

VVX _

OF

GTSTLRTZTRR .
RHNFYLG

SJTYG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Those who lwe are those who hght."
- Victor Hugo
"Don 't let your wtll roar when your power only whtspers " - Thomas Fuller

lci2003 bv NEA Inc

10-29

~:~~:~;~' ~.:g~,~-n~\-~t~s·
ill!'" bv C'..A.., I .
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P UR0 C

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,._
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••

S_A
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' Boy d•d 1mess up_" one lel low
~, sard to ~.1s tr;enc. 'If yov tried and
1 I
6 · ...
_ _
fa:le ~: hts wisetrienc reolied."you ,
I_ 1
r-------...,are better off thar. ~ -YOU had aone.·
U G L E 0 E nothing and .. - .... - -'

• T I . 1 O C...oiolt Ofoolhod11dla
'IVolad
I
""'i&lt;tlt -"'
YOll dfM!Iiop frc111
No .
&amp;'&gt;. ~~ IN] NUMSfR ~D I'
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I I I I I I I l:
. SC:tlM-lETS AI-ISWEU u • 21 • o1

F~mous - Diflo - Emend - Rem;;nd • MOMENTUM

Y:un1=s•er to dad ·1need to tjlke some ext~•

tc

sc~;c 1

t:loa·; _O ur

teache r

IS

re tiring and we

h.:r s~ metn •ng :o Q&gt;ve her bettH MOMENTUMi'

-.

money::

gelllng:;

:!

-·:~

ARLO &amp; JANIS
.

l CMJ'T GO- IM C.IIOOIJDE.D
FOR MUTIIJY

YE-AH, 1HAT'' j WHAT
1'j~&gt;. I D, "MUT I ~Y-"

-••

YOU'D HAVE. 'Ql KkJOW
MYDAD

SOUPTO NUTZ

·New Homes
• Garages

Adverlise
in this
space for $25
per month.

• Complete •
Remodel ing

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compore

''

\

�•

Wednesday, October 29, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page .8 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Throat slash draws
coach's :wrath, Bt

•

•-TVC Hocking
·Division Champions
• Sectional Champions
• District Champions

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,II(

I

, ,~.\~.1

,,

'\ 41

Restaurant
Deily Speciels. Home Cooked Meals.
Piu:as,
Drive lbru, Dine ln. Cell-Ins Welcome

740-985-3902

36361 SR 7

Chester, OH

Ridenour

Brown's Taxidermy

• James dazzles, but
Kings prevail. See Page 81

44 781 Pomeroy Pike
Racine, OH

985-3364

Chester

985-3307

BlUM

MBER

StRte248
Chester 985-3301

Pomeroy • 992-3785

Wesam

Mark's Plumbing
&amp;.. Heating

State Route 7 • Pomeroy

Chester

992-6466

499 Richland Ave.
Athens, OH

740-594-6333

CROW'S
· FAMlLY
RESTAURANT
Pomeroy 992-5432

TNT PIT
STOP

MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
Pomeroy

Construction
Reedsville • 378-6293

WAY TO GO!

WV 031925 OH34636

St. Rt. 248

Valley

&amp; Supply

Co.

Best
Middleport

992-6611

Attorneys at Law
110W. Second Street
Pomeroy 992-6059

NELSONVILLE - While
there ha' been delay after delay
on selecting the route for the
proposed Nelsonville bypass.
Ohto
Department
of
Transportation District IU
Deputy
Director George
Collins says he "hopes to be in
a position to announce a preferred alternative route early in
2004."
ODOT has completed and
delivered a series of preluninary environmental documents for review by key state
and federal agencies in order
to prepare the recommendation for the preferred altern a-.
tive route for the proposed
Nelsonville Bypass.
The documents. which
include the Preliminary Draft
Environmental
Impact
Statement (PDEIS). the draft
Biological Assessment (BA).
the draft .Biological Evaluation
(BE) and the Ecological Survey

Report rES RJ. were distributed

for review to state and federal
agencies. such a' the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, the Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency and Wayne National
Forest. morder to foster collaiJ..
oration and resolve issues while
the project is still in the planning process. Agencies' comments are. to be received by the
OOOT District I0 office in
November.
Di scuss ions regarding the
potential impacts that this
project would have to threatened and endangered species
have further delayed the proje&lt;.:t's advancement of a preferred alternative.
"It was our hope t!tat we
could announce the preferred
alternative to the public earlier this year. but it is important that we address any
issues that arise with public
Pleese see Bypess, AS

WEATHER
Warmer, HI: 701, Low: I50t

...,

Students at Me igs Middle School work feverishly to save a tiny
village in a simulated catastrophe. Throughout the mission,
Challenger Mission Control at Wheeling Jesuit University is live
and in constant contact visually via chat window over the
Internet. (J. Miles Layton)

O.U.IIoonPaceA2

Students save .villagers
from catastrophe

Pick 3 day: 4-8-1
Pick 4 day: 2·7-7-2
'Pick 3 night: 9-4-5
Pick 4 night: 0-1-4-9
Buckeye 5: 5-9-15-30-35
Superlotto: 2-4-10-40-43-48
Bonus Ball: 41
Kicker: 2-6-3-0-3-4

A drive out Mulberry
Avenue In Pomeroy Is
proof enough that some of
the folks with the most
when it comes to
Halloween di!~oratlons

West Vll'ginia

. While
arem"a;•nv

BY J. MIL£5 lAYTON
jlay1on @mydailysentinel.com

'

ROCKSPRING S - A vi llage in the Caribbean sea was
in trouble. A volcano was
about to erupt and a hurricane
was close at hand.
The clock was ticking and
the seventh graders at Meigs
Middle School had to act fast
to save more than 13,000 villagers in a mock simulation
coordinated by Challenger
Mission Control at Wheeling
Jesuit University Wednesday.
The Challenger Learning
Center at WJU in Wheeling.
W.Va. is part of a growing
oetwork of centers nation wide established by the
Challenger Center for Space
Science Edu~ation in memory of the ill-fated Challenger
Shuttle. 'f,,he center is a
unique hands-on learning
experience designed to foster
interest in math. science and
technology education.
·
The students served as
ex.pens or specialist~ to solve
real-life problems associated
with emergency events.
Mission day began with a
space shuttle launching. Within

the~~;~~~~;~;
I

Opt
happy
', stuff like smiling scare-:
·crows. carved'.pumpklns .
!lnd colorful mums. .,
· The .extensive &lt;II splay prepared by C.arql McCullough
~lth an ' e.mpl\asls on fun
ovar fear fills the front
yard and decorates the ·
. porch.
Spotlights and strings of ·
orange, lights enhance th!l
. . · decorations ani! toqlg!l~~· ·
' :, wtn lliflt th.~ ~ay to~, t11tf ,
, . · . hQrdes of trick ahd
treaters 'sure to visit their
home. (Charlene Hoeflich)
.' '
.(I "
MU1l.UII'OU1!11~

Kennein McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.

112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

'\burBank (in~...
(FsJ . ~~-~k a·

Cutting -Cellar
80 Race Street • Mlddlepo
t

41503 Sumner Rd
Chester OH 985-3813

.

Jesse Thomas, 22
William Ault, 77
Dwight Haley, 85
Jack Lusk, 90

2 SECTIONS-

t6 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

Congratulations
Eastern ·Eagles!

'

HA.LLOWEEN
DECORATIONS

Dally 3: 0-8-1
Dally 4: 7-0-8-2

•

0

•

,

Pomeroy
Gallipolis
992-2136
446-226S
Tuppers Plains 985-3161
Mason (304)773-6400

I

Crow&amp;.. Crow

STAFF REPORT

Ohio

992-6682

G&amp;W Plastics

'

Nelsonville bypass environmental
documents up for review

LotTERIES

Insurance

992-4247

• \''

Page A5

Chester

Brogan-~arner

AB

'(II•:

J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

OBITUARIES

985-3857 .

Mark E. Smith

Pomeroy

til

Summerfields
Restaurant

66260 St Rt 124 •Reedsville, OH

740-378-6571
orl-800-767-4223

I~

CO#eq/l4l~~·~ E~!

992-3381

CONVENIENCE STORES

CHEVRON
ST RT 7 e CHESTER
985-3350

DVWeber

We are proud of you, Girls!
Good Luck at Regionals!
GO EAGLES!
Eastern Athletic Boosters

Good Luck Eagles! DOWNING CHILDS

Karr Audiology

~ 12 East Main

Mounted with Pride

~ Ga~ ~ Construction
serv1ce

0
.
~~et.relers

·Congratulations Eastern
on a Job Well Done!

tH I4HU

SYRACUSE
Carleton
school
has
opened a third special
education class for pre ~ .
sc hool students aged three
to five, using 'funds provided by the Eastern,
Meigs arid Southern Local
School Districts.
Because of budget problems, the Meigs Board of
Mental Retardation and
Developmental
Disabilities had considered
. discontinuing the class,
which provides interven: Sarah HofffT\an, teacher in the third pre-school classroom
tion work for students at Carleton School, which opened earlier this month, works
experiencing developmen- with two of her students. The class is designed to prepare
tal delays. · The class is students with developmental delays for kindergarten . The
designed to prepare those class is funded by the Eastern, Meigs and Southern Local
students who may not be School Districts . (Brian J. Reed.)
prepared for work in a reg- garten . Activities include ly-a ppropriate
learni ng
ular classroom setting
Pleese see MR/DD, AS
prior to entering kinder- hands-on, developmental-

Eastern 20-3 vs. Adena 25-0
Thursday, October 30, 6:30p.m.
Lancaster High School
Regional Finals
Saturday Nov. 1st, 2:00p.m.

Great Job Eagles!

1111 ''-" 1)\'\

BY BRIAN

GOOD LUCK IN
REGIONALS!

In front is Brenna Holter. In first row, from left to right are
Brandy Bissell, Jenny Armes and Cassie Nutter. In second
row are Jamie Reel, Tia Pratt, Becky Taylor, Stacy Smith
and Rachel Elliot. In back are Alyssa Holter, Jennifer
Hayman, Morgan Weber, Katherine Robertson, Kass
Lodwick and Casey Smith (Brad Sherman)

11

Districts fund MRIDD preschool program

SPORTS

Won20Lost3

MJ~FamiiV

· Winner 'gets the ax'
when Wolverines and
Spartans meet, B2

The Daily
Sentinel
992-2155

Dear Abby
Down on the Farm
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

As
B4-6
B7

A3
A6

A4
As
· As
B1-4
A2

I

.-,
•,

© &amp;003 Ohio VoUey Publishing Co.

moments. a crisis began to happen on the tiny island where the
village is (or was) located.
Students received real-time
data about an area where an
emergency might happen. In a
90-120 mmute lime frame, students analyzed data and determined the risks. Throughout
the mission. Challenger
Mission Control was live and
in constant contact visually via
chot window over the Internet.
Students used all the
knowledge the y have learned
in the past month to save the
village. Seventh grade science teacher Carmen Manuel
said the students used math,
science, graphs and loads of
data to come up with a workable soluti on before the day
of truth arrives.
"It is really a great leamin~
experience for the students,'
she said. "In this simulation,
you have the lives of 13,000
people in your hands. This is
really hands-on learning and
you are in charge."
Were the residents evacuated?
Did the hurricane hit land?
Pl•se ... Students. AS

7th Annual Lewis A. Schn~lclt, MD
MeiiiOIIal cane. SymposiUM
Soturdt~y, November 1, 2003

·9:00am- 12 Noon

MEDICAL CENTER

(Pre-registration and breakfast at 8:30am}

Discover the Holzer Difference

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
• Continuing Medical Education wiH be given.
For more information, call (740) 446-5057.
,'1

www .holzer.org

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="21927">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="21926">
              <text>October 29, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2185">
      <name>ault</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1358">
      <name>haley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="251">
      <name>pickens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
