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Page BS .• The !)illy Sentirlel

Thursday, October 30, 2003

· ww\v .mydililysentinel.com

Smith speech boosts
Jirsa's first

'

NHL Round-up

coaching·clinic, B1

.Blue Jackets' road woes continue, fall to Canucks
VANCOUVER,
British
Columbia (AP) - Vancouver
coach Marc Crawford hopes
Artem Chubarov learned his
lesson.
Chubarov, a healthy scratch
in the last game. tied it with 0.6
seconds left in the second period, then scored the winner 6: 18
into the third as the Canucks
beat Columbus 6-3 on Tuesday
ni~ht.

'Hopefully we don't have to
sit him out to get this kind of
offense again," Cmwford said.
Markus Naslund scored two
goals and added two assists, and
Magnu s Arvedson and Man
Cooke each had a goal &lt;md
assist as Vancouver improved to
5-0-1 at home.
Naslund set up Chubarov's
ftrst goal with a backhand pass
through the crease: "lt's great to
see timely goals from Chubarov
and guys like that," Naslund
said.
·
·
Despite being singled out
between games for a lack of
offense, Chubarov, a defensiveminded Russian who usually
cel)ters the fourth line, said he
didn' t try to do anything differ-

ently.
·
" It's the same game as
always," said Chubarov, who
has heard the call for more goals
before.
'They always tell me that and
I always try. just sometimes it's
not happening. I always play a
defen&gt;tve game, and it goes
slow for me to generate more
offense. It's not that I just sit
back and do nothing. l have
good days. I have bad days."
David Vvbomy, Darryl Sydor
and Rick Nash scored for the
Blue Jackets, who lost their tifth
straight. Columbus has lost all
four of its road games.
Columbus coach Doug
MacLean was particularly upset
with Chubarov 's goals, chastising hi s team for giving up a·
score so late in the period, and
singling out goalie Fred
Brathwaite on the second.
"They were untimely goals
and bad goals when you're
playing yo ur hearts out,"
MacLean said. "It was a joke.
To give up a play like that with
0.6 seconds leti, tt's devastating.
The fourth ~oal was terrible:
short side wnst shot"

Johan Hedberg, making just
his third start of the seasdlt,
stopped 16 shots in a matchuP.
of backup goalies who hadn t
played in I0 days. Brathwaite
made 22 saves ·in his second
game.
Penguins 4, Islanders 4
PITTSBURGH (AP) Mario Lemieux became the
sixth player in NHL history
with I ,700 points with an assist
that started a four-goal run by
Pittsburgh, but the New York
Islanders scored twice in the
third period for a 4-4 tie
Wednesday night.
·
W,ith the Islanders up 2-0 late
in the first, Lemieux took
Konstantin Koltsov's pass
along the right wing boards,
slipped the puck between the
legs of defenseman Janne
Nnnimaa, then made a backhanded pass to the slot to Dick
Tarnstrom for his second goal
of the season.
Lemieux
joins Wayne
Gretzky (2.857), Gordie Howe
(1 ,850), Mark Messier (I ,847),
Marcel Dionne (1,771) and
Carolina Hurricanes captain
Ron Francis (I ,760s) on the

1,700-point list. Only Gretzky
reached the mark faster than
Lemieux.
Trailing 4-2 in the third, the
Islanders scored twice in a span
of 2:48 to tie it as Jason Blake
got his third of the season and
Mariusz Czerkawski evened it
with his eighth at II :13 of the
period.
Blues 6, Red Wutg'i 5
DETROIT (AP) - Doug
Weight had the secohd threegoal game of his eareer and
Dallas Drake collected five
assists as St. Louis · ended
Detroit's club record 15-game
home winning streak
Red Wings goalie Dominik
Hasek allowed four goals on St.
Louis' first 13 shots and was
pulled early ·in the second periOd.
Peter Sejna added two powerplay goals for St. Louis, Keith
Tkacfiuk had a power-play goal
and Mike Danton had two
assists.
For the Red Wings, Brett Hull
scored the 718th goaT of his
career - breaking a tie. with
Phil E.sposito for fourth place
on the NHL's all-time scoring

list.
Hasek was replaced b~
Martny Legace 'after Sejna s
first power-~ goal 4:46 into
the second riod. That goal
made it 4-2.
Flyers 5, Panthers l
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Michal Handzus and Joni
Pitkimen each had a goal and
assist and Robert Esche stopped
21 shots for Philadelphia.
Justin Williams, Jeremy
Roenick and John LeClair also
had goals for Phil~lphia, off
to a 4-1-3 start. Mark Recchi,
Tony A111onte an~ Si!llon
Gagne added two asststs ap1ece.
Vlktor Kozlov scored for the
Panthers, who have lost two of
three.

Roenick and Handzus scored
59 seconds apart in the second
period to break open a one-goal
game.
Ducks 4, Capitals 2
WASHINGTON (AP) Sergei Fedorov scored two
goals and Martin Gerber made
23 saves for Anaheim.
The Capitals lost their sixth
straight and are winless in ei~; ht
game since an opening-day vtc-

tory. The losing streak is their
longest since they dropped the
final six games of the· f998-99
season.
Gerber has allowed four goals
in three games in place of JeartSebastien Giguere, who struggled in Anaheim 's early losses.
Jason Krog and Steve Rucchin
also scored for the Ducks.
Stars 4', Flames-3, OT ·
DALLAS (AP) - Jason
Amon scored 17 seconds into
overtime and Bill Guerin had
three goals as Dallas rallied
from a two-goal, third-period
deficit.
Calgary led 3-1 when Guerin
notched his second of the ni~t
on apower-play rebound With
10:32 left in regulation.
Guerin tied it with 8:35
remaining in regulation. It was
hi s sixth goal of the season and
completed his first hat trick for
the Stars and the fourth of his
career.
.
Jarome lginla scored in ~
ftrst penod, and Oleg Saprykin
and Chuck Kobasew scored for
.. in a span of 4:44 in the second
for the Flames.

·•" 1 I '\1..,•\ol. ) I .·,., ,

SPORTS .

Odom sprained his right ankle
in the season opener on
Tuesday, which Miami also
lost
Raptors 90, Nels 87
TORONTO (AP) - Vince
Carter scored 25 of his 39 points
in the second half as Toronto
r.Uiied past New Jersey in the
season opener for both teams.
Carter, who played only 43
games last season because of
mjuries, almost single-handedly
gave new Raptors coach Ke vin
O'Neill his ftrst win.
Carter shot 15-for-30 from
the field and 9-toi-'l 0 from the
foul line for the Raptors.
Kenyon Martin had 26 points
and II rebounds for the Eastern
Conference champion Nets.
Jason Kidd went 4-for-18 for II
points and missed a 3-pointer
that could have tied it at the
buzzer.
Alonzo Mourning, who
mi ssed all of la~t season with a
kidney ailment, hacj six points
and three rebounds in 17 minutes off the bench for New
Jersey.
Pacers 89, Pistons 87
' AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
(AP) - Jermaine O' Neal had
22 points and 15 rebounds as
lndJana held on for a victory
over Detroit, helping coach
Rick Carlisle beat the team that
fired him.
In the sea~on opener for both
clubs, Detroit erased a 10-point
deficit midway through the
foutth wtth a 13-2 run and led
.87-86 with two minutes left.
0' Neal scored a go-ahead ba~-

ket with I~ 41 to go and Jell
Foster made a free throw with
14.8 seconds remaining.
Detroit's Chauncey Billups
and Mehmet Okur missed shots
in the final seconds.
Ron Artest scored 21 points,
and Reggie Miller 14 for the
Pacers.
Ben Wallace led the Pistons
with 16 points, 17 rebounds,
live steals and six blocks.
Richard
Hamilton and
Chauncey Billups, Detroit's top
two scorers last season, combinedforjust 19points on6-for31 shooting.
Hall of Fame coach Larry
Brown, who spent the past six
seasons in
Philadelphia,
replaced Carli sle. He succeeded
fired coach lsiah Thoma~ in
July.
Magic 85, Knicks 83, OT
NEW YORK (AP) - Tracy
McGrady scored half of his 26
points in the fourth quarter and
overtime. to mlly Orlando to a
season-opening victory over
New York.
Orlando forced overtime with
a I0-0 run over the tinal 3:55 of
regulation. The Magic made it a
IS-point spurt by scoring the
ftrSt five points of the extm sessian punctuated by
McGrady's 3-pointer with 3:42
left
But the Knicks came back
with six straight points, taking a
79-78 lead on Kurt Thomas'
turnaround jumper.
Tyronn Lue responded with a
. 3-pointer that made it 81-79,
and McGmdy then made a huge

defensive stop - blocking
Allan. Houston's 'jumper. That .
sent Gordan Giricek to a fastbreak basket and three-point
play that made it 84-79 with
I :46 remaining.
The Knicks had one last
chance, but Howard Eisley and
Thomas missed shots on the
final possession.
Hornels 88, Hawks 83, OT
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - .
Darrell Armstrong scored 18
points and made an assortment
of crucial plays in his New
Orleans debut, lifting new
coach Tim Floyd and the
Hornets over Atlanta.
· David Wesley added 16
points, including a 3-pointer in
overtime to spark a 7-0 run as
the Hornets overcame a late 8177 deficit. George Lynch, starting for injured All-Star Jamal
Mashburn, added 14 points and
12 rebounds in the opener for
both teams.
The game marked the f!rst
regular-sea~on game for Floyd
since December 2001, when he
resigned as Chicago Bulls
coach after a 49-190 stint in a
little more than three seasons.
Stephen Jackson led Atlanta
with 21 points, including two
fourth-quarter 3-pointers. and a
prur of free throws that ·ued the
game at 75 heading into overt1me.
. Wizards 99, Bulls 74
CHICAGO (AP) - Gilbert
Arenas was a winner in his
Washington debut, scoring 18
points and adding six assists in
the Wizards' victory over

Chicago. .
Larry Hughes added 20
points to lead six Washington
players in double figures, and
Etan Thomas had 13 points and
13 rebounds
The loss spoiled the homecoming of Scottie Pip~n. who
is back in a Bulls umform for
the first time since winning the
1998 NBA title.
Jalen Rose had 15 points to
lead the Bulls, who shot less
than 32 percent and tied the
fran chise record for worst
defeat in a season opener.
Pippen had seven points, seven
rebounds and two assists.
Jazz 99, Trail Blazers 92
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Carlos Arroyo had 18 .points
and 13 assists in his second
career start, and Sasha Pavlovic
scored 14 points in his NBA
debut as Utah began rebuilding
by raUying past Portland.
The Jazz, playing a season
opener without John Stockton
nor Karl Malone in the starting
lineup for the first time since
1.986. trailed by 13 in the third
quarter before overcoming a
noticeable size· advantage with
some torrid shooting.
Utah was 13-for-16 in the
fourth quarter, which Andrei
Ktnlenko capped wtth a onehartded dunk to set off a Jazz
celebration.
Kirilenko fmished with 16
points and seven rebounds, and
Raja Bell also had 16 points.
Zach Randolph led Portland
with 22 points, and Rasheed
Wallace scored 21 for the Trail

Blazers.
Nuggels 80, Spurs 72
. DENVER (AP) - ·Carmela
Anthony had 12 points and
seven rebounds in his NBA
debut, leading Denver to a win
over San Antonio.
Andre Miller added 16
points, Earl Boykins 13 and
Nene 12 for the Nuggets, who
overcame poor shooting to
knock off the defending NBA
champions.
.
Denver shot 29 percent from
the field, compared with 27 percent for the Spurs.
Tim Duncan had 17 points on
7-ot~ 22 shooting and 21
rebounds for San Antonio,
which opened its season
TUesday night with an 83-82
win over Phoenix .
Mavericks 95, Warriors 87
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Dirk Nowitzki had 29 points
and 15 rebounds and Dallas
spoiled Golden State's season
opener by beat;ing the Warriors
for the 18th straigbt time:
Nowitzki scored five straight
points as the Mavericks took
control in the fourth quarter anq
Antoine Walker added 20 point1
and 14 rebounds for Dallas,
which hasn't lost to the Warriors
since 1999 and regrouped after
losing its season opener to the
Los Angeles Lakers a night earlier.
Cliff Robinson scored 18
points and Erick Dampier,
Calbert Cheaney and Mike
Dunleavy had 14 each for the
Warriors, who played without
three starters.

• Eastern falls in regional
semifinals. See Page B1

-...

tSAP 549.991

C&gt;tldtoheet&lt;-

...,...

We thank all who
participated in 2002 that
enabled the Tri·Count., to
send 2,427 boxesl

*
*
*

*~
~

-

DROP-OFFLOCATIONS: @ .
WBYG/WBGS/JOYFM
'I
in Point Pleasant, WV ~
WVYK/WMPO on
Bradbury Road in
@
Middleport, Ohio.
.'I
· aob'sMarketin · ·
.~
Mason, WV or Gallipolis. it

·
.
m comm""one" ye,ter av
Meigs Coun ty Clerk of . Co uri~
Marlene Harri son . paid $ 5.000 i nt~
the co unt y ge nera l . fund recentl y
through the Cert tft cale of tit le
Admini strati on Fund,' and th ose
tunds were subseq uen tl y appropriated tnto Recorder Judy Kin g \
emP.Ioyee salaries fund yes terday.
The money is co llec ted on each auto
title processed through Harri son 's
title otfice.
According to Harri1on. lhe ex pe nses _of starting and operating the tit le
oll tce have been met ·md the S~ 000
represented a s urpl~ ~ in re·;.~ ;J u e
That surplus has traditi onall y heen
pledged to the count v Qe neral fund 10
meet other expe n se s~ '
'
·

d

Other business

Commissioners also:
• Approved transfers

WEATHER
Warm, HI: 70s, Low: 50s

t

I

Details ·on Page A2

Dressing up in a scary or funny costume is not just for children, as staff and members of
the Metgs County Multipurpose Senior Center demonstrated Thursday. These scary, ugly
and funny costumed adults were pnze w1nners. No name does justice to Pam Davis 's costume, far left, but she was a mystery to those who saw her yesterday. Frances Reed and
. Ma~y Altce Btse, R~edsvtlle netghbors, rocked the house as Priscilla and Elvis Pres ley, and
Belmda Wellmgton s Cat tn the Hat was a big hit, too. The seniors also performed a
Halloween sk1t yesterday at the center. (Brian J. Reed )

LOtTERIES

hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com

SEc.- noNs- 20 PAGES
Calendars
1\:3'
Classifieds
B6-8
2

Comics

B7

Dear~bby .

A3

Editorials

A4

Faith• Values
Movies
NASCAR
Sports

A6

Weather

As
Bw
Bl-6
A2

© 2003 Ohio Valley l'ubU.hlna Co.

POMEROY - A · large
black granite marker in tribute to students and staff who
·, left Meigs Local schools not
by graduation or retirement,
but untimely .death , has been
erected in front of the new
Meigs Memorial Field House
on the high school campus.
A colorful school scene from
earlier times is,etched into one
of the dual stones of the monument The other stone contains the names of 48 students,
teachers and other personnel
who .died while attending or
working at a school in Meigs
LoCal sjnce the district's organization in 1966.
The names have been
placed in random order on
the large monument which
has adequate space for addi-

the need occurs.
Most of the marker's cost
wa s paid with donations
from families and friends in
memory of the deceased.
Plans are being made for a
dedication of the stone and
the Field House sometime
next month. The families of
those whose names appear
on the marker will be invited
to be a part of the ceremony.
Included in that list are Rita
Hamm, John Mora, Preston·
Gibbs, Bonnie Fisher, Vernon
Weber, Ben Rife, Barbara
Archer, Barbara Logan, Todd
Johnson, Don Yost, Eric Hart,
Teresa Newfeld, Jack Slavin,
Don Stivers, Helen Milhoan.
Julia McComas, Robert
Morris, William Smith.
Man Ault, Brandi Thomas,
Brad Runyon, Lfudsay Bolin,
Ryan Lemley, Willam Barley,

Bryan Marshall. Benny
Goodman , Duane Howe ll
Matthew Snyder, Dall a~
Castle, Barbara Mowery.
Terry Lee Rathburn, Joseph
Dean Lotiis, Cher~Pence,
Tikiela Burton, Btr( Steven
Kauff, Rusty Nitz, Randy Lee
Haning, Ricky Rowe, Linda
Se'!fls, Sarah Green, Florence
Singer, Matthew Vance,
Jennifer Friend, Gwe ndolyn
Savage, Jerry Napper, and
Penny Hensley.
In a letter to the editor Kari
Runyon expressed her feelings
when tirst seeing the marker.
"As I walked up to the
monument, my heart skipped
a beat,:• she wrote.
"There, listed on this beautiful memorial monument, was
our son 's name, Brad Runyon,
along with so many others.
There are no words to describe

- ·---.-· --·-- - --- ·-

-·---"···· "''-

KANAUGA
Unit ed
Way ofGall ia County is off to
a good start toward the ooal
of raising $150.000 durin ~ it.s
2003-04 campaign.
'
Local pace setter' - individual s and bu sinesses that
made earlv contributions to
the effort -· have accounted
for $27,800 so far.
Thi s year's li st of paceset ters includes Peoples Bank.
Hilda Stotts, LaMar Wyse,
, DCF Graphics. Rockwell.
Ohio
Vall ey
Elec tric
Company. Roberta Holzer.
Lillian Thomas.
Kathy
Cameron. Garry Stover. Dr.
Rick St. Onge. Hol zer Clinic.
Wiseman Agencv. the Re v.
John Jackson. Jean Houck.
Holzer Medical Center, Joan
Schmidt and
Am erican
Electric Power-Ga vin Plant.
A breakfast held Thursday
at the Holiday Inn in Kai1au ga
marked the openin ~ of tiie
campaign for the public .
LaMar Wyse. pres ident and
CEO of Hol zer Medi cal

Center." this year's honorary
chairman. He spoke to the
group of United Way supporte" at Thur;dav· s kick-off
breakfasL
"Karen (Wy,e\ wi fe) and I
have reall y come to love
Gallia County in our four
years here. and thi ~ communi·
ty has enriched our lives in
m ~ ny . man y ways. and this is
a nt ~e opportunity to give
back. Wyse told the group.
Wyse said he was encouraged by the number of
younger people he saw at the
breakfast and hopes that's a
" gn that new leadership is
steppin g fo rward in Gallia
Counlv.
"Thitt \ great. It doesn't just
have to be us ·old guys" who
do this type of thing." he said.
"M y thanks to all of yo u who
are taking any leadership ro le
and helping us meet the
goal .··

Please see Boost, A5

A oedication ceremony for the Meigs Memoria l Field House
an.d a tribute to the deceased students and staff for whom it
was named will be held in mid-November.
the feeling in my heart.
who have lost loved ones, in
. "Thank you _to whomever continui ng to keep their ·
ts responstble for helping us. memories ali ve .
along with the other families
"Thank you for remembering.''

For the latest healthcare information and to
learn more about the programs and services
Holzer Medical Center provides,
·
log onto our web~ite :

••

.

Wyse said the 2003-04
campai gn is the · 13th for
Gallia County overall and the
fourth for UWGC as an independent agency, which means

Information at your fingertips ...

www~holzer.org
"

for

surer and c u lt . .
. f d
.
.
o .t y tnsu rance un ' ·
and an appropnatton mto the Ju ven ile
Care and Cu,lo&lt;l) Grant fund .
• Ap proved appropn att on of
· S::!07 .n .J in grant funds fo r the
Rutla nd &gt;ewer li ne expansion projecL
,A
d,
· ·
ppro\e .uppropna tton of funds
for the Comm unn y Housmg
Improvement Program.
• Approved payment of bill s in the
amou nt of 180.JOJ,ti7.
• Approved closlne the M. eigs
c t c h ~
""'
nun. Y . ourt ousc at noo n on
EleLt ton Day. Ill &lt;ICL'Ufdance wnh the
Ohto Ren &gt;ed Code .
• Approved a S-10.000 one-year
loan for Meigs Emergen cy Sen ices
thro ugh Peoples Bank. 1\A . for the
purc hase of an ambulance .
Commi s&gt;ioner Mick Davenport
the and Clerk Gloria Kl oes abo attende&lt;l.

~~~~=~~ho~~~~:"1~!:."~7J,~~. "~~~~Lstudents, staff, faculty

INDEX
wl1h 1 $50 mait.ln -

111 \ ff.llh ... - · niiiW I I IIIII

~~~~tt froer of the year receivedd a Common Plea' Court . cnu nty trea-

BY ANDREW CARTER

Cash 25: 1-5-6-14·19-22

Big Country 99,
WBGS the Ministry Station,
K- 92 The Frog, ESPN 1390,
JOY-FM 88. 1 and
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses, Inc.
-Invite you to participate in
ali opportunity to make a
.·difference in the lives of
young boys and girls throughout
the world in war, torn countries. -

Thursday ' · t
f
· 11
·
. that county sd/pau~fe~ r .1 ~ 1 pa~~s ~~~
. '
anot her two-week pay period . Each
payroll costs the county $1 1.000, and
a transfer app~oved, _e~ rlie r th!s
month ensured at. least a month s
war~ fo r the deputt es.
$N~S'd1ngh to Sheets, at least
. . tn ou smg costs rematn
unpatd to date, bu~ that bilL for
Southeastern
Oh10
RegiOnal
Correcttona l lnstltutton. dates to
2002, and may not be patd usmg the
2003 appropnattoJ;J .
$ C~~mt.ss toners al so appr~ved a
2 . transfer from Tru ssell s con tract repairs line into hi s gas and oil
fund, and a $1. 195 transfer from his
food ltne tnto ht s employee health
tnsurance lund.

acarter@mydai lytribune.com

Dally 3: 7-8-8
Dally 4: 5-2-8-5

Anyomo-1

\\\\\\

Pacesetters give
United Way big boost

West Vll'ginia
(OOO-a20011ddMIDnBI

Bv BRIAN J. REED
. breed@mydailysentinel.com

Recorder's budget

Pick 3 day: 9·3-2
Pick 4 day: 0-8·7-2
Pick 3 night: 9·2-6
Pick 4 night: 6·0-6·4
Buckeye 5: 3-4-5·9-29

1!100 Mwllll,. MlmdM

I Hill\\ Cl( 1111:1 II .· t 1"···•oo .(
·

POMEROY - . Meigs County
Commissioners have approved
another $15,000 tran sfer of funds to
cover sheriff's depuiies' salarie s.
Sheriff Ralph Trussell had requested the transfer of an additional
$30,000 from funds 'set aside for the
hou sing of prisoners into his employees salaries line . item. The line item
contai ns nearly' $78,000, but
Commi ss ioner Jim Sheets said
Thursday, at the commissioners:.regular weekly meeting, that the commissioners want to ensure enough funds
m the account to pay for an anticipated increase in housing costs, now that
deputies have returned to work.
Commissioners, by Ohio law, are
responsible for the costs of housing,
food and medical expenses for prisA second office experiencing diffi oners in cou nty custody.
culties in making payroll for the

Ohio

AT&amp;T Wireless mUle Local Plan

J:,

Board approves second transfer for deputy salaries

Garnett, Wolves hang on to defeat ·Bucks in season opener
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Kevin Garnett had 25 points, 21
rebounds and six assists as
Minnesota hung on to beat
Milwaukee in the season opener for both teams.
Newcomers Sam Cassell (18
points), Latrell Sprewell ( 15
· points)
and.
Michael
Olowokandi (II points, nine
rebounds) helped out Garnett,
as did holdover reserve Gary
Trent ( 14 points).
Michael Redd and Desmond
Mason each had 16 points for
Milwaukee, playing its first
game under rookte coach Terry
Porter.
After Joe Smith's tip-in
pulled the Bucks within 87-85,
Gamet!, the NBA's highest. paid player this season at $28
·million, hit a turnaround shot
tram 15 feet with 50.3 seconds
left to make it 89-85. Celtics
98,Heat 75
BOSTON (AP) - Paul
Pierce scored 23 points and
Boston made up for the absence
of Antoine Walker by placing
six scorers in double figures a~
the Celtics beat Miami.
Playing without their longtime co-captain, who was tmded nine days before the season
began, the Celtics got 15 points
ap!ece from Yin Baker and Eric
Wtlhams, 12 each from Mtke
James and Raef LaFrentz and
I0 from Tony Battie.
Eddie Jones had 22 points
and eight rebounds for Miami,
which was missing Lamar
Odom. The ce nterpiec~ of the
Heat's offseason overhaul ,

!fameS' s~ores 21
asCavslose
to Suns, Bt

·,

..\.

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
.

&gt;

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
Saturday, Nov. 1
MICH.
Toledo

. ,i

I.ID

'

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• Columbus j54°/68"

' Dayton 50 /68"

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Snow

Ice

""" Anocoaled Press

Warm weather is back
Monday
ni ght. .. Mostly
clear. Low around 53.
Election
day ... Partly
cloudy. High around 72 .
Tuesday
ni ght...Partly
cloudy. Low around 53.
Wednesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. High around 69 .
Wednesday night ... Mostly
cloud y with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows
around.51.
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. High around 65 .

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 70s.
Tonight...Prutly cloll()y. Lows
in· the mid 50s.
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 70s.
night...Partl y
Saturday
- cloudy. Low around 55.
Sunday ... Partly cloudy in
th.e mornin g then clearing.
High around 76.
Sunday
ni ght. .. Mostl y
d ear. Low around 53.
Monday ... Most ly
clear.
H-igh around 76.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10 ,000

Oct. 30, 2003

J:b.l .:T&lt;n:!s

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9,500

9.000

+12.08
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High

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frc;m pre\lk&gt;us:

+0.1 2

9,838.76

AUG
Low
9,7 54 .0 1

SEP

OCT

Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

~1 , 800

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1,600

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•

8.500

2,000

Oct. 30, 2003

Nasdaq

JUL
High

-0.20

1,957.53

SEP

AUG

Low

Record high: 5,048. 62

1,929.77

March 10, 2000
1,100

Stan::lard &amp;

1,050

•
'
•'

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AUG
Low

High

-0.1 1

1,052.62

SEP

950

March 24, 2000

AP

'

•

"

local Stocks
•

Federal Mogul-- .34
Gannen - 84.27
General Electric- 28.88
GKNLY - 4.85
H a ~ey DavKJson - 47.91
KMRT -28.00
Kroger - 17.30

A~ P-28.43

Ai:h Coal- 24.20
Ailzo- 31.95
A~Tech/SBC -

23.48

Ashland lrx:. - 37.05
B!lT -38.42

B(l - 14.85
Beb Evans- 29.62
~rgWar,.,r - 80.34
Cnampion - 4.09
q arming Shops - 6.64
Cily Holding - 34.21
C ~l -27. 18

DG -22.27
DoPont - 40.49

Rod&lt;y Boots- 16.199
RDShell -44.15

S - 52.06
T - 18.90
USB- 27.54
Wai-Mart- 58.80
Wendy's - 38.84
Ltd. - 17.30
Worthington - 14.27
NSC - 19.98
Oak Hill Financial - 29.85 Dally s1od&lt; reports are the
4 p.m. dosing quotes of
ONE - 42.61
the previous day's transacOVB - 24.50
tions, provided by Smitt1
Peoples - 27.88
·Partners at Advest lrx:. of
Pepsicq - 48.01
Rod&lt;wetl - 30.43
Gallipolis.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

. Correction Policy
&lt;Vu.r main concern in all stories is to be

I 4ccurate.
1 ~1 56

CANTON (AP) - Inmate Jeffrey
Church wasn't sure at first whether he
could influence teenagers to stay out of
trouble.
,
But now Church, who is incarcerated
at the Stark County Jail on drug
charges, believes he has a chance to turn
a bad situation into somethiQg good.
Church is pan of the jaH's Turn-Around
Program, which seeks to send a message
to area juveniles: don't come back.
Corrections officers and co-coordinators Jeff Begue and Tim Hostetler started the taste-of-reality program in 200 I.
Since then more than 200 at-risk kids
have experienced the jail and been
exposed to the lifestyle of its inmates.
"The kids seem to be more apt to listen to the inmates than an authority tig·
ure," Hostetler said.
Inmates chosen to participate must
have no escape charges, sex crimes or
crimes against children. Juveniles are
referred to the program by courts or
concerned parents.
Begue said the Sunday moming sessions

Our main number is
(740) 992·2156.
: Oepartment extensions are:

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News

~dltor: Charl ene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
r;teporter: Brian Reed, Ext ~ 4
~eporter: J . Miles Layton, Ext. 13

Advertising
I :
t)utslde Sales: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
C:tass./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

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Circulation
Olstrlct Mgr.: TBA, Ext. l 7

General Ma·nager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E·mall:
news@mydailysenlinel .com
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postage paid at Pomeroy.
Newspaper

Postmaster: Send address correc·

lions to The Daily Sentinel, 11 t
Courl Stre.et. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. '

begin with juveniles, a~es 8 to 18, being
met at the door of the jail by an inmate.
The inmate takes them through a
mock booking procedure, then they're
given the same uniforms as inmates, a
bedroll, and led off to isolation cells
where they are given a jail breakfast
that most of them don't eftt.
They're also given time to just think,
Next, the inmates choose juveniles
who may benefit from their experiences
and take them on a tour of the jail. The
remainder of the session is spent in oneon-one conversation.
High school junior Ashley 0 ' Neal of
Canton was recently sent to the program lor
skipping school. Her mother signed her up.
"It's scary," O' Neal said. "It shows
you the reality."
Church has worked with five juveniles through the program.
·"I didn' t know if my story would help
kids," Church said. "But · they were
more receptive than I thought. "
He recently worked with a 13-year·
old who stole money to buy a bicycle.

a1n

afternoon .
Monday through Friday, 111 Court

will share their memories and
experiences. Older girls will
learn about Wider Ops and
talk to a Wider Op recipient.
Cost is $2 for registered Girl
Scouts , which includes an
event patch.

Saturday, Nov. 1
PORTLAND
The
Lebonan Township' Trustees
will meet at 9 a.m. at the
township building.

food drive, 8 a .m. to t p.m., at
corner of Third a nd Pearl
Stree ts . All do na tio ns for
Meigs Coope rative Parish
food ba nk . To donate items,
call Ann Zirkle at 949-2031 or
Kathryn Ha rt at 949-2656.

Sunday, Nov. 2
Saturday, Nov. 1
Monday, Nov. 3
MIDDLEPORT
- Greg
HARRISONVILLE
LETART FALLS - Letart Ha rrisonville Lodge 41 1, Sears to speak at As h Stre et
Township Trustees meet at 5 stated meeting , 7:30 p.m., Church, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
p.m. at office building.
• with election of officers. Dues services. Public invited.
payable. Refreshments .
TUPPERS PLAINS
SYRACUSE Reviva l
Tuppers Plains Regional
at
Syracuse
Mission
services
Tuesday, Nov. 4
Sewer District, monthly boa rd
Chu
rch
,
Bridgeman
St. , 6
MIDDLEPORT
meeting, 7 p.m., district Middleport
Commun ity p.m. on Sunday, 7 p.m..
office .
Association, 8:30 a .m., Monday through Wednesday.
Evangelis t Majo r Willie
Peoples Bank.
RACINE - Village Council
Cundiff of Atlanta , Ga. from
will hold a regular session
Salvation Army. Specia l
Wednesday, Nov. 5
meeting at 7 p.m. at the
RACINE
Southern music by Higher Calling on
municipal building .
Athletic Boosters will meet at Monday, Earthen Vessels on
7 p.m in the high school cafe- Tuesday, and Rev. Don and
SYRACUSE Sutton teria. All parents and coaches Sherri Swick on Wednesday.
Township Trustees will meet are asked to attend.
adt 7:30 p:m. at Syracuse
Village Hall.
Monday, Nov. 3
Wednesday, Nov. 5
LONG BOTIOM - Chloe
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Weber will celebrate her 73rd
Saturday, Nov. 1
Township Trustees will meet
- ~ ~ 1 g s birthday on Nov.- 3. Cards
at 6:30 p.m at the Pageville · RUTLAND
Elementary school fa ll. osti- may be sent to Ohio 248,
town hall.
va l, 6 to 9 p.m. Public invited . Long Bottom, Ohio 45743. ·

Birthdays

Social Events

dren·s programs.
Campbell , who initially :
suggested an alert be sound- ,
ed whenever a child younger ·
than 12 is missing more than
12 hours, agreed that other
outlets need to be used when
a child disappears.
Campbell started a month 's ·
trial Oct. 24 that includes dis- ·
tributing photos to police officers eve ry time a young ·
child disappears. The infer- ·
mation is relayed to media ·
outlets during regul ar news ·.
programs. She said the plan .
has been used twice and the
children found.
FBI
director
Robert ·
Mueller said that as a whole, ·
the Amber Alert program has been tremendously success- :
ful across the country.
"As I think we all under·
stand there are cenain criteria :
that are utili zed," Mueller :
said Wedn ~s day during a .:
general media briefing in ~
Cleveland. ''And it really is •
up to the facls of a particular :
case and the individual juris- ·;
diction that has the responsi- ~
bility for that case to apply ,;
the facts of that situation to •
·'
that criteria."
·

Clubs and
Organizations

Homecomings/
Reunions -

Friday, Oct. 31
POMEROY
Julieite
Low/Founders Day calebration for Girl Scouts, 6 to 8:30
p.m., Meigs Middle School
cafeteria. Activities w111
include learning about Girl
Scouts from the past, songs.
games and will include a ser. vice project. The video "The
Golden Eaglet" which is
made with original footage
taken during the early years
of Girl Scouting , will be
shown. Former Girl Scouts

Sunday, Nov. 2
POMEROY - The Hunnel
reunion will be held from
12:30 to 4:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center. A buffet will be served
and all relatives and friends
are invited.

Other events
Saturday, Nov. 1
RACINE -Racine Area
Community Organization fall

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.
Saturday, Nov. 22
TUPPERS PLAINS
Fredrick Goebel of Tuppers
Plains will celebrate his 99th
birthday on Nov. 22. Cards
may be sent to him at P 0.
Box 256 , Tuppers Plains
45753.

MMS cheerleaders take first place
The Meigs Midcle
School Cheerleaders
recently took first
place honors at the
Bobcat open cheerleading competrtion
held on the campus of
Ohio University. Team
members include left
to right. front, Meghan
Smith, Sammi
Ackerman. Jorden
Evans (mascot), Laura
Gheen; second row,
Alexa Veney, Chelsey
Noel, Emily Davis and
third row, Debbie
Evans (coach) Breanna
Mitchell, Tiffany
Simpson, Casey Smith
and Courtney Mayes.

"He seemed like a hard-nosed kind of~
kid, the type to build walls," Church ~
said. "He was making choices to lead :
him down the wrong road and Jetting '
others sway his choices . So, when I :
talked with him, I started focusing on :
the future. "
Church said juveniles often begin:
showing remorse for the actions that ·
brought them to the program.
.
After the visit , the inmates write let· ~
ters to the juvenile's parents. ·
'
Participants who have made a successful turnaround are invited to attend
recreational activities.
"If you reach one in a million who ·
won 't have to live this lifestyle, then it's
worth it," Begue said.

Dear
Abby

I ha ve asked O~ocar several time' if there i&gt; 'omething
that he i&gt; afraid to tell me.
hut he 111 &gt;i't' that he i&gt; merely unconventional.
Am I (ight to be worried?
Or am I just being paranoid?
FRUSTRATED IN
MARYLAND
DEAR FRUST RATED:
You are right to be worried.
When you marry someone.
you al'o marry hi s or her
family . Make no more commitlllent' unti l you - and
your family - have met
Oscar\ fami ly. It appears
that vour "unconve nt ionar ··
boyfriend has something to
h1de .
DEAR ABB Y: I never
thought I would ever write to
you~ but last night our sQn who i_, engaged - came
over and told us that hi s
fian•ee ·' parents are upset
wibh u' because we didn 't
pi ck up the check for a dinner T HEY invi ted us to.
Were we wro ng not to ·
offer to pay for the dinner?
- ELO ISE IN NEWPORT.
R. I.
DEA R ELOI SE: There
wa' ohviously a miscommu·
nication 'omew here. Invite
them to dinner ASA P, pick
up the check, and in the
future. offer to split the bill .
Dear AbbY is .. -rirren hi'
Abigail Va ;1 Bu ren. Cl iso

life. You have been handed
the keys to your pri son cell.
You now ha ve the oppcrtunity to re gain a re lation &gt;hip
with the family from whom
you were isolated and to
bui ld hea lthy, supportive
friendshi ps. Once you are
back in the work force. you
wi ll reg ain your . , elf-reliance
and dignity. Counsel ing can
help in each of these areas .
so please stop cl ing1ng to the
past and avail you r&gt;elf or it.
· Consult a lawyer ASA P to
make sure your hu-,band
cannot hide hi., asset'&gt;. and
lind out what you are entitled to afte r 35 years of
servitude. You may be pleasantly surprised.
DEA R
ABBY:
Mv
boyfriend. "Oscar." and ·I
have bee n dating for more
than two years. In the last
few month s. we have begun
talking about elopin g. hut I
have reservations because I
have never been int rod uced
to hi s parent s, who li ve out
of state.
knmm liS Jeanne Phillip s.
· Oscar \ parents are 1101 and ""-' fo unded by her ·
tinanciall y able to visi t us. so morhe•: Paulin e Phillips.
last year. he arranged to have Wrire
Dea r A61J,· a!
us visit his pare nts over the 11'11'11 '. DearAbby.com or P 0.
holidays. However. t11e pl ans Box 69440, Los Ange les. CA
mysteriously unraveled.
90069.

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DEA R ABBY: I have been
married for 35 year,. I
worked for the fir't few
years, but my hu,band .
"Lou," was mean and beat
me. He broke my ann , my
shoul der. my jaw and a couple of ribs. Luu wouldn't let
me have contact with friends
or fami ly because it took
iime away fro m him . He said
he couldn't &gt;land coming.
home to an empty hou&gt;c and
that was why he cheated.
Then Lou dec ided I could no
longer work because he
wanted me home when he
got there.
So I gave up my job.
stayed home and cleaned.
cooked and rai sed our chil dren. (Th ey are now all
grown and married.) I waited .on Lou hand and foot. I
fe lt more like a &gt;lave than a
wife - but I loved him.
Well. now he has a gi rlfriend. He met her at the
countrv cl ub . We used to
golf ihere together.. She
knew Lou was married but
still asked him to co me
home with her and lured him
in to her bed.
Last wee k, Lou told me to
get a job and credi t card s.
and learn to take care of
myself. I want to die. He was
my whol e li fe. If a man
steal s your car or burglarizes
your house, he goes to jail.
Yet someone can stea l your
husband and walk away free .
There ought to be a law to
stop thi s kind of thievery. SCARED OF A NEW LIFE
IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR SCARED: I find it
interesting that instead · of
aiming your anger at your
husband where it belongs .
you have directed it at his
next victim. He was obviously doing a lot more than
the usual amount or "swinging" at the golf club . If she
marries him, he wil l do to
her exactl y what he has dune
to you.
Please recogni ze that the
good Lord has blessed you
with a chance for a better

36nx6Dn Oak Farm Table .
with storage drawers and
farmhouse side chairs.

Dr. Joey D. Wilcoxon can help!

-~--- ,-----,-----,.---

•

assistant attorney general for
the Offi ce of Justi ce
Programs.
"There's a concern here in
Washington , and as we travel
across the country, that if the
system becomes overused,
people are not going to pay
attention and it will be like
the crying wolf syndrome,"
Nolan said.
But not implementing the
alert in cases like Shakira's
can have devastating results,
her family and community
activi sts have argued since
she disappeared.
'There is a downside 'to the
fact that there's always going
to be scrutiny of the plan,"
Anderson said. "You gotta
have people who are willing
to stand behind the decisions
that are made because you
will face criticism."
Using all other source s
when an Amber Alert does
not apply can help ease parents' concerns and ultimately
help authorities find a child,
said Waite Hills Police Chief
Arnold Stanko, who serves
on the Northern Ohio Amber
Alert board. Those sources
can include the FBI, the
media and other missing chi I-

I

every

and
the
OhiO
Association .

vision statio ns is consuming '
the largest chun k of the
. money.
. .
.
Already, $ 1.1 b1llton has .
been allocated for the Third :
Frontier - $500 million to
build world class research .
centers on university cam- :
puses, $500 million for bio-"
medical research grants and '
$100 million for a loan fund .

Friday, October 31, 2003

Community calendar
Public meetings

BYTHEBEND
Apprehensive wife fears
end of 35-year marriage

Lane MDundH• double redlltlng soffl

Member: The Associated Press

1· •

l:

CLEVELAND (AP) Local and state programs
Police in one city activate a set their own criteria for acti·
missing child warning when vating the system. though
a teenage girl doesn 't return most generally follow the
home on time one night. standards encouraged by the
Authorities in a neighboring National Center for Missing
community don ' t use an and Exploited Children.
Amber Alert when an IIThose include indication
year-old girl doesn't return that a child is in danger and
home from a neighborhood having enough descriptive
block party.
information to bel ieve an
How do they draw 'the line · immediate broadcast alert
between the risks of a child would help. Some states and
slipping through the cracks regions also set an age criteria.
and of rendering the alerts
An alert was not activated
meaningless through satura- when 11-year-old Shakira
tion?
Johnson disappeared in
"The most difticult thing of Cleveland on Sept. 13·
the plan is to reach that bal- because police said there was
ance where you don ' t no evidence of foul play.
overuse it and at the same
After her body was found
time use it when needed," about a month later, Mayor
said Sheriff Dee Anderson , of Jane Campbell and state Rep.
Tarrant County, Texas. "It's a MiclJael DeBose proposed
tough call for people in law making the criteria easier to
enforcement."
meet.
Anderson helped craft the
"We were hmidcutling offioriginal Amber Alert plan in cials ... with these artificially
Texas, which serves as a hi gh
standards,"
said
model for many other states. DeBose ,
a
Cleveland
The alerts - used in 46 Democrat.
states - are bulletins. distribThe current national crite·
uted through radio and televi· ria work well !md should be
sion broadcasts and electronic followed in order to protect
highway signs, on kidnapped the integrity of the program,
children and their abductors. said Cheri Nolan; deputy

(UsPs 213-9&amp;0)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publ ished

0

his firm Thursday.
The Web site for the consuiti ng company, Stevens,:
Reed, Curcio and Potholm,
says it is a " Rep ubl ic _.media f1rm" that h
reated
ads for dozens o elected offi- :
cials, including rizona Sen. ·
John McCain nd Senate '
Majori ty Leader ill Frist of
Tennessee.
Ohioans for the . Third .
Frontier. the campaign for ;
Issue I, has raised $2.6 mil·
lion. according to campaign
fi nance reports.
·
. Hicks said purc hasing air- :
time on Ohio radio and tele- :

Perspective: Finding the balance in Amber Alerts :

If you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical

i story, ca ll the newsroom at (740) 992-

i:

The Daily Sentinel

Inmates' message to teens: don't come back 1

1,000

OCT

COLUMBUS (AP) - To
create
television
spots
emphasizing the importance
of high-tech research in the
state and job deve lopme nt for
Ohioans, a ballot issue campaign turned to an expert on
Ohio politics - a producer
from Virginia.
Alexandria, Va.-based political consul tant Greg Stevens
was hired to produce ads for
Issue I, the ballot issue to
allow the state to raise $500
million for high-tech research
and job development.
Stevens has created ads for
Gov. Bob Taft and Ohio Sens.
Mike DeWine and George
Voinovich, campaign manager Brian Hicks said Thursday.
However, the Issue I ads
were filmed in Columbus
using a crew and actors from
Ohio, said Hicks, who recently stepped down . as Taft' s
chief of staff to run the Issue
I campaign.
The· ads cost $50,000 to
$ 100,000, but Hicks would-

n' t say how much the finn sible for interest on the bonds.
was paid.
Sending production fees
"The lion's share of ·the out of state could be highmoney is spent on th,e day of&lt; lighted as a negative by
fil ming, and that is Ohio opponents, said Paul Beck.
based," he said. 'The vast chairman of Ohio State
majority of the money we nt Uni versity's political science
to Ohio companies."
department.
"A ll things being equaL
One of the ads, which struted airing earlier this month, you would li ke to keep the
features Taft. Issue I is the money at home," he said .
final piece of Taft's Third "On the other hand. you want
Frontier program to help Ohio to get the best quality work
move from an industrial-based for the money, and someeconomy to one that will sup- times that means you go to
port high-tech ventures. :
another state. It's all a balIt would allow state and ancing process and somelocal governments to borrow tt immesakthe_~! 's a diffic ult choi ce
$500 million that would be
inves ted in research and
The onl y statewide ballot
development. The state issue on the Nov. 4 ballot has
would sell bonds and use the little organi zed opposition.
money generated to create - The Ohio Farm Bureau
and eventually commercial- Federat ion and the Ohio
ize- new products.
Farmers Union are urging
The television spots say the their members to vote against
program will create jobs in· it because they feel it leaves
the state without rai sing out agriculture.
taxes. Opponents say taxpayA message seeking comers, however, will be respon- ment from Stevens was left at

Page A3

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:....

Record high: 1,527.46

1,043.82

'

..

1,400

OCT

Oct. 30, 2003

• Eoor.s 500
'

Friday, October 31, 2003 ·

Out-of-state producer hired for Ohio job creation ads :

Ohio weather

-~

PageA2

.,

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hospital Beds
• Wheel Chairs
• free same day delivery
• 24 Hour emergency service
Stop in and register for a lift chair to be
give11 away at Christmas.

Fax: 740-446-2410
Gallipolis, OH 45631

' •·

Vaughan IIGssett
Queen Plfnel Bedroot11 Suite

ftTftv/f11TOD

p

�PINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

We c_tre co ming to that ti!11e

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

hoo ves. H unt i ng sL;aso n is

Diane K. Hill
Controller-lntenm Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
Ge neral Manager-News Editor

READER'S

VIEW

MR DD
·•

Urges support
Dear Edi10r:
As the Director or the Ohio ~D ep anm e nt of Mental
Retard at inn and Deve lopmental Disab ilities. I know the
importance of local levy dollars 10 the COllllt y boards of
MRDD an d the people they se rve.
O n Tues day. yoters in Me igs Co unty wil l be asked to
approve a new. ft ve-yea r, 2-m ill levy to r the co unty board
uf MR/ DD.
·
The dedicate d statT of the county board provides services to peopl e with deve lopmental di sa biltti es who li ve
and work in your communtty. Thi s levy will help th em
continu e the c urrent qu ality servi ces and meet .th e
increas ing demands.
_The services provided by the county board touch the
!t ves o f peopl t! from infancy thro ugh adulthood.
C htldren rec e tve 11nportant early tnterventton, preschoo l and sc_hool age services. Many ~tdLiits get help
wtth datlv hvtn g sktll s so they can rematn tn thetr own
homes wrlil e others receive help in the workplace so they
can work, earn money and pay taxes.
Your local levy dollars are vital in helping peopl e with
deve lopmenta l disabilities and their families live qualit y
li ves and in protecting th e ir health and safety. One o f th e
many respons ibilities of th e county board is t(' assure
th at ll:!x dollars are be ing spent efticiently and effectively. Th e Meigs c ounty board of MRDD also monitors th e
qualit y of services and compliance with the laws governtng those services . As a result o f their cwtstanding
work, the county board wa s recentl y awarded a two-year
accred ita tion by the state.
Ag in g pn re nt s who are the careg ivers o f their adult
child_r_en with d evelopm ental disabilitie s are dealing with
a dt1ftcult tss ue of what will hap\1en to th e tr children
when they can no longe r care for t1 em. Local levy dol lars can he! JJ ease the fears of these Meigs County residents while helping tht; m p~cpare tor th e future .
The county board s o f M~DD and th e people whowo rk
so hard to he lp people wtth developmental dt sabtltltes
are assets to th e state a nd the communities they serve.
We s ho uld all be proud of th e work th ey do.

PageA4

'

-·

Friday, October 31, 2003

approach i n ~.
For the Jaq ~0 years -wheth er I ha l'e bee n in th e
pulpit. on the radi " or wri ting
for a ncWSJXl per -- I have
made it a practi ce to put in a
good woru !'or th e anima ls
during this season.
I ha ve no ill us ions tha t I
have ever persuade d even
one hu nter to put down his
gun, for while I have
received many letters o r
apprec iati on fro m animal
lovers. I have never received
one from a hu nter say ing
that, after li stening to me, he
had thought it over and
decided never to hunt aga in.
Neve11heless. you will never
lind me at the bleS&gt;ing of the
hounds &lt;&gt;r congrat ulating the
hunter home from the kill . My
prayer in humi ng season shall
cont in ue to be. "Remember. 0
Lord. the animal s."
Oh. I know the argument
that
hu nting is really
"hum;l!le" for othe1w ise the
animals woul d starve. Hu nters
al so haVe saitl to me. "You eat
steak, don't you'' And pork
chops?. Somebody had to kill
the steer and the pig. "
To me that is a di fferent
thing altogether.
I remember a scene in the
mov ie, ''The Si ngi ng Nun " in

George
Plagenz

which a young nu n is enlhu-. ias t i c ~dl y be rat ing a wo man
for some sin she has commi tted . The scolding is overbc&lt;i rd by the Mother Prio ress
who takes the yo un g sister
as ide and reprimands her. ·
·•But Mother, " pleads the
nun. "aren't we supposed to
condemn sin ?"
"Yes. sister." repl ies the
Mother Prioress. "but we are
not supposed to enjoy cln ing
it.·,.
That is what is wrong with
hu nt ing . Some argue that we
are supposed to spare these
ani mals the agony of death
by starvati on or help re uu ce
the amount of animals run nin g into th e road s, causi ng
car acc iden ts. And many say
we· need meat tu feed the
world's billions -- althou gh
most vegetari ans would certainly argue th at it isn't necessarv.
But it is the enjoyment that
some gel out of it and the
sport they make of it that ce rtainly makes it wron g l o hunl

a creature as beautiJul as a
pheasan t or as grace fu l as a
deer.
(Not that it\ ri ght tn ki ll a
· humble anima l li ke a wood chuck w h~ n yo u discover
he's bee n at your garden.)
In his book "Reflections·
( Prometheus Books. Jl)9-l ).
the late Steve Alkn told of
ont;e going antelope-hunting
in Wyomin g:
"There is a gre at deal of
warm fel lowship associated
wi th such e ve nt&gt; ," wro te
Allen , the comedi an who was
the fi rst host of the "Tonig ht
Show." "There are parties for
a day or two before the ac tu al hunt and much goodnatured joki ng and smal l
ta lk. "
When the day or the hu nt
came, Al len we nt nul in the
fi eld wi th tl1e rest and bagged
his quarry wilh one shot.
Here is his fi nal comment on
the day's adven ture:
· When I trudged the 200
yards to where my victim lay.
.sudde nl y saw wha t I had
do11e and reali zed tbat I had
killed a healthy. innocent and
re mar kabl y bea utiful creawre . I reso lved neve r to do
anything so foo li sh again.
But it is not onl y recreati ona l hunting that stirs up a
quarrel when it comes to protectin g wildl ife. Seeing th eir
li l'elilwods o n the lin e, logge rs in th e fores ts of th e

Local Briefs
Vaccine
clinic set

Northwe st where the spotted
owl is a protected species are
askin g angri ly. "Must we sacrifice thousands of jobs for a
handfu l of birds?"
So meone even wrote me,
"If ynu thin k hunti ng is
wro ng because it is a violent
sport . what abo ut vio le nt
sports like box ing, hockey
and football ?"
, My answe r is that what
puts vi olent sports such as
boxmg, hockey and football •
- even bullfighting •· on
hi gher mora l ground th an
hu nting is that in hunting
onl y one side has a chance.
The deck is stacked. How
many "sportsmen" would be
on the kill ing fields eac h
aut umn if the animals could
shoot back'' Hunters are win·
ners in unequ al combat.
I have another letter here
from a reader who writes,
"You condemn anyone who
kill s an animal fo r the enjoyment of the hun t, eve n if he
util izes the beast for the food
it prov ides . Foll owin g the
same logic, why don't you
al so cond emn fi shennen who
fish fo r sport as we ll as for
th e food it provi des" Fi sh die
much more slowly than ani mals &lt;tnd endure a crueler
de ath ."
Des pite th ese criti cs, I'm
sti cking to my gun s ...
whoops, bad choice o:
words.

Eleetion day
lunch set

New location

Water District has lifted a.
boil advisory issued for Long
Bottom. from Ohio 124 to
JayMar grave l. Results of a
sample are considered safe .

Association
meets
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Commu nity
Association will meet at 8:30
a.m. on Tuesday at Peoples Bank.

Road closes
RAC IN E - The Ohio
Department of Transportat ion
announces that County Road
30 (Morning Star Road), at
the intersecti on of the new
mainline of the Rave nswood
Cannector project, will be
closed begtnning Monday,
Nov. 3, and is ex pected to
reopen on the afternoo n of
Friday, Nov. 7. The clos ure
will be in p\ace to all ow
pav ing of the new hi ghway.

Stripper charged in
death of Braxton man.
CHARLESTON. W.W. (A Pi - A \t ripper has been charged \~ ith mu rder in th e
death of a man whose bi&gt;dy was round
stuffed in a trash can .
M isly Loise Cabral. I K uf Jefferson wa~
charged Thursday with first -degree murder in
the Ckt. 4 death of 55-year-old Roy Glen
Loyd of Flatwoods, Kanawha Cou nty Chief
Deputy Phi l Morri &gt; said.
At first. poli ce charged onl ) Cabra l's
boyfri end . 29-vear-old Keith Willia m Lowe.
in the death (,f Loyd. who was kn own to
carry th ousands of dollar \ in cash.
But authorit ies th in k Loy d came to
Jefferso n in anticipation of a sexual
encounter with Cabral. Loyd had paid up to
$600 for a single sexual tryst wi th Cabra l,
accord ing to the victim \ finan cial record,,
and had more than one encounter with her.
Morri' said.
Morri s said Cabral lured Loy d into a
Jeffer;on motel room . where Lowe was
wai ting to rob him, .then did nothing when
she may have been abl e to save his life.
Kanawha County sheriff's invc&gt; ti gators

Casino parking garage collapses on
construction workers; 3 dead, 1 missing

;ay Loyd died from massi\l' head tratiiiW
alter be ing stru ck w 1th a blunt instrument
Investigator' ,ay they belie1~ Lo)d's hod:
was lying in the Ru,tic Motel room for se1
era! davs
(he
. becau "~ blood '"a'cd t hrou~h
'
room·\ l'a rpet and carpet pad to the L· nncrete
llour.
" She cho\e to stuy 111 ngh t there and Lio
not hi ng. \o v.•·'rc ~: h argi n g her v.. uh flr'-t deg ree murder." Morns su1d.
Loyd\ hndy v.as found Oct. 15 111" pl,l\tJL
trash can near the K ~naw h" Ri1·er beh ind the
motel. The trash can had l:x;~n 'eakd with
duct tape.
Cabral has tol d poli ce she "'" I Lt me di scussed robbing Loyd and us ing the mone:
to rent a mobile ho me and pa1 drug deht' .
Lowe. who fa.:es l 'WO counts of hCJ ll en ul
:..1 police officer. o ne cou 1H of fleeing a
po lice uffice r' anJ une l'uunt of nh. . tructin ~
police. · i~ be ing helu · in South Cen tra l
Reg10nal Jai l witho ut bond .

Run-DMC OJ remembered
on anniversary of slaying

NEW YORK (API
anJ Darv l --o ~1 C' :'&gt;kDanie l'
Relat ives and fri ends of the late to t;orm 'Ru n- DMC.
'' li sou nd ed like an earth· rap di sc jockey Jam Master Jay
ATLANTIC CITY. N.J . said search camera s and takes fo r poured concrete to
The group. more than an:
(AP) - The top five stories dogs had gone into the rub· settle and harden .
quake. The whole buildin g gat hered on th e one· yc ar other. w"' re ,ponsihle lot
Last October, three work- was sha king . You didn ' t . anni versary of his killi ng ttl 'prcuding the idea that &lt;&gt;n t·
of a parking gara ge under bl e. and trucks c arryin g
construction at a casino col- lumber were being brou ght e rs ,were inju red at th e know w her&lt;! to run: I tried honor him with prayers. poetry per'&gt;on - u Li isc J&lt;K ke ) -iap sed Thursday, sendin g in to shore up the buildin g. Tropican a site wh en a one- to run to a staircase, but the and stories of his legacy.
cou ld pro1 ide the em ire mu' '
"We all suffered a great. cal bm:kdrop for a song.
concrete slab s and metal _ "We are planning for the story panel of concrete they staircase was wi ped o ut. I
great loss: · said Kei th Rock. a
The grou p\ hit' include
beam s cras hing down as worst, " Levy sa id. " It 's one were standing on co ll apsed.
we nt' to a nother staircase
"
K
m ~ of Rock.-- "Jt', Tridv-co media n wh o led the
workers ran for cover. Three of th e worst co llap ses . The!' project 's ge neral cona
nd
that
one
was
wiped
·
Thursday night eve nt. wit h and ' a Top' .J O r~make ·n:
Ke atin g.
people were ·killed and one Atl antic City ha s ever tr actor,
out
,"
sa
id
Simmon
&gt;,
who
Aero, mith·, "Wa" Thi '
tea rs m his eye s.
Con stru ction , said in a
was mi ssing , offici als said. seen."
e
ve
ntu
all
y
follu
wecl
uth
e
r
\Vi1\·. ·· ~-1 ore fL'l'L' Il tl\. Jam
The
Run-DMC
rapper's
About 20 people we re
Stacey Stra sky , 40 . of statement Thursday th at
mot her, si&gt;te r. three young Ma, ter Jav had helped pm
injured in th e collap se at the Voorhe es. said she was out - " thi s is a diffi c ult tim e. workers out.
Cons tructio n
workers ~ u n s i.lnd brothe r were ;;Hnong Uu ce a11d pru m otl' (e..,..,c rCas ino
and side the parkin g garage Obviou sly, our first concern
Tropi cana
Res ort , several critic ally. Sunday wh e n she- heard is the well being of the peo- gathered on the st reet to th o&lt;e who &lt;Jllended the kn own arti sts.
The ci l). mu ... ic 111du...rr~
St ale police said as many as popping noise s. Sh e told a ple that are injured or mi ss- gaze up at the coll a psed memorial in the hormr ~h of
Queens. near where h; wa -. tH ll i. t h h~.., and famil\ lth.' lll ht:r·
30 workers were trapped security guard, who said the ing ."
fram e or th e stnt cture.
ki lied. Betwee n speakers. a ha1·e helped ' ee p the kill !il'
Le s Down, 44, was work ·
immediately after the col- building was only settling.
Alfonso Hernandez. 39. :t DJ played sn ip pets of Run - 111 the he au line' hy otlen n~·
lapse .
On Thursday, Strasky said ing on the sixth tloor of th e constru ctio n fore man, said DM C so ngs.
len' nr thou sa nds or dol la rs ill
Searchers used camera s, her concern s should have garage when a co -worker he had ju st wa lked aro und
A ye&lt;J r ago, a gu nman clad rew&lt;.~rd ..;.
"
"
dogs and the missing iron- be en forwarded to someone felt the tloor drop a coupl e
But pri vately. in \ e . . tigal or·
the corner to a hardware in black wa lked int o JJm
of inches. Moment s later,
worker's cell phone in an with more authority.
store and heard th e noise. Master Jav's reco rdin g studio ha\'e complained th at som,
"For in -hou se sec urity to the fl oor disappeared.
attempt to find th e laborer.
in th e ne igh borhood .,;;h ere he wit nes se:-, have be~n uncoor
"It fell all the way down "It was like a freight tra in grew up and shot hi m once in erati ,.e. And w ith no maj P
Late Thursday, authorities blow it off a s bein g just the
said they were focused on settling of con struction , and a couple of his buddie s coming thro ugh." he sa id .
th e head .
hreak&gt;. the c'1' e h''' dra11 1
that's not profess ional ," she landed on top of him ," said , Fami ly members bega n
recovery, not . rescue.
Police say th ey have pur- cum par i ~o n . . tu t h ~:.' un . . ul\n
arrivin g at the scene look ing sued seve ral si 1rn ifican t lead&gt;. ~ ~a~ i n g~ nf rap . . u per...t~tr '
"There's always a slim pos· said. "Th ere are human Down 's brother, Bru ce.
The ma son worker was for loved ones. " He was incJudi n!.! so me that SU~!H~ ~t Tup;11: Shakur in L 1' Yc~" '
sibility" that the missing iron- live s at stake."
worker is alive, said Chief
Federal safety in spectors able to walk to emergency workin g up there last ni ght. th e rap legend di ed in a' d i&gt;- and the Notoriou' llt G. 11
James Foley, task force leader interviewed Stra sky on crew s and was taken to !know." said one di straught put e over money. But the Los Angeles.
shootin g remains un solved .
Tl1ere hcb heen ' 1-,ecplallnr
for the New Jersey Urban Thursday.
Atlantic
City
Medic al woman .
thai
Mite II. who ,,.a.., dn'\' 11 111~
ide
deteL
·ti
ves
say
the
Homic
Search and Rescue team. "But
Gary
Rosko ski , area Center, where he has two
The Tropit·ana ex pa nsion
in de bt. """
e t-.·,·n kiI~c:
for
the broken collar bones and a project is int end' d to di ve rsi· case re m&lt;.~ i n s a top priority.
we 'don't see anything at this director
n
n
on.Jer..,
from
... ntlll' ( lilt' IlL
Th
e
37
-year-old
1·ic
tim
.
point that would indicate that.'' Occupational Safety and po ss ibl e neck injury. his
fy the casino's offerings with who~e rea l nume \V~h Ja..,un O\\·e L.I m ont.·~ Ot h~r rqJnrt ·
Authoritie s worried about Health Admini stration , said brother said .
Harold Simmons, 42. a fo rms of entertainmen t other M1zell. .JUineU ~0 year.~ agfl have ..,u,gge... tetl he \\ i.t\ inn11\ 1.\
the tO-story building's stabil - inv estigators will examine
ity.
blueprint s for the building pipefilter who was on the than gamblitl g. including an w1th Ju,e ph " Run" Simm &lt;m' t n a J rug .deed gone h;1d.
Robert Levy, the .c ity 's and the "cure rat e" for the second floor, said about 300 IMAX theater, nightclub and
November 4. 2003
emergency
management concrete used in its con· to 400 workers were at the re staurant s. It had bee n
sit e wh en it colla pse d at sc heduled for complet ion
director, said the building struction.
"could go at any time. " He
The cure rat e is the time it about 10:40 a.m.
next spri ng.
ELMER C.

RusH ;s awav --

AL FRANKEN!

h'"

RE-ELECT

I

I

Hillary's plan
•

I RUN A
MARATHON

EVERY DAY...
( I HAVE A

5'-YEAR· OLD)

01'/ll-\lfR.
© 2003 by NEA, Inc

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
to the editor are welcom.e. They should
; b e less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
~:editing and must be sixned ,a nd include address
: :qnd te/eph011e numba No unsixned letters will
;~/Je published. Letlers should he in g ood tas!e,
::addressing issue.1·, not personalilies.
: . The opinions expressed in the column below
'
;;are the consensus of th e Ohio Valley Publishing
••
::9o. 5· editorial board, unless othenvi.i-e noted.

Boost
from Page AS

MoRE' SAP Nt:WS FoR CONSERVATIVgs

il

'

Advisory-lifted

¥¥¥¥¥¥¥

.

POMEROY - The Forest
Run Methodi st Church will
have an electi on day dinner at
the church. Soup, sandwiches, homemade cake and pie
will be served . Take out
orders wi ll be avai labl e.
Serving beg in s at I I a.m.

POM EROY - Voters in the
Pomeroy 2 precinct will vote
at the
Me igs
County
POMEROY
Th e Courthouse Annex base ment,
Friendly Ci rcle of Trinity rath er than th e Pome roy
Congregational Church , cor- Elementary Schoof building,
due to asbe stos removal,
ner of Second and Lynn, will
according to Board of
be serving a soup and sand- Elections Director Rita Smith.
wich luncheo n on electi on
day from II a.m. to 2 p.m.
There will also be a s~l ection
of homemade desserts. For
LONG
BOTTOM
pickup orders call 992-3 172 . Tuppers
Pl ains-Chester

A~DNOW,
~illiN8 iN WHi~

Dear Editor:
Please vote and say yes for the Carleton School and Meigs
Indu stri es levy.
We wan t to work in the workshop. I was 14 years down at
Carleton: anu _1. hkeu it there. People we re good to me. They ·
need thetr statt tor we work beuer and harder.
Will yo u vote yes, for if we do not pass th e levy. I will be
upse t. We need the levy to pa&gt;s.
To God all children and adults like us belong. If the levy
does not pass, where wi ll we go'l
Mary j{m• Curry
Amy Graham
Syracu!·e

Le tte r~:

Election Day
·dinner planned

POM EROY
- Meigs
County Health Departm ent
will conduct a flu vacc ine
cl inic from 9 to II a.m. and I
to 3 p.m. on Monday and 9 to
t I a. m. on Tuesday at th e
department office . The cost is
$ 10 for th ose without
Medic are or Medi caid .

Kennetlr R. Ritchey
Director
Ol1io Dept. uf MR!DIJ

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Friday, October 31, 2003

Remember the animals
or year when the animal
world sta rts sh:Jkin g in its

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

There has been a lot of talk
Hillary
rece ntl y about
Clin ton's political game plan .
Will she run for president in
2004'' Wait until 2008'' Is she
backing Gen. Wesle y Clark,
William
or some other stalking horse.
Rusher
for th e 2004 nomination ?
Might she take the vice pres-.
idcnti al spot on hi s team,
expecti ng him to lose but
poli shi ng her own credent ials
The conventional wisdom,
fo r the top spot next ti me'l Or howeve r, is that President
does she have some even Bush is going to be extrememore deviou s schem~ in ly hard to be beat nex t year.
mind '1
That was certainl y true in the
Act uall y. Cli nton's ga me aftermath of Sept. II , and the
plan.
though
suitab ly vic toriou s
wars
in
Machi ave llian, is not all th at Afg hanistan and Iraq. And
complicated.
while hi s poll ratings have
Sen. Clinton want s to be been d e~linin g recentl y, as
. pre sid ent of the United the occupation and reconStates. She has a large con- struction of lmq has proved
stituency of pass ionat e more pai nful than ant icipatadm irers around the country ed, he is still the odds-on
th at wants her to be presi- favorite to win in 2004. This
dent. There is al so a large will be particul&lt;irl y true if the
constituency that will oppose . eco nomy
co ntinues · to
he r un til its dyin g breath. As impro ve and if the situaLion
a matter or fac t, t suspect the in Iraq beg in s to look better.
latter to be larger than the Above all , the voters regard
former, bu t I may be wrong. Bush as a strong leade r in th e
In any case. she is certainl y a ll ~importa n t war aga inst tere nt itled to try her . lu ck. ronstn.
Moreover. poll s indicate that
So Sen. Clinton's present
sh'e is tbc overwhelmi ng intenti on is to skip 2004 and
choi ce of Democrats for the set her sight s on 2008.
nomi nati on, any year she Howeve r, for this plan to be .
decides to run . So why not successful , the Democratic
give it a shqt''
candidate in 2004 must lose .

Then he or she will be run ning for re-election in 2008
;md Clinton will have to cool
her hee ls.
Luc kily, as noted above,
the 2004 Democratic nominee is very lik ely to lose.
Then Sen. Clinton mu st con trive her ow n re-electioti to
the Senate in 2006 (to lose
that would effec ti vely end
career).
her
pol itical
Unfortunately, it is quire possible that the Republican
nominee fur her seat wilf be
form er Ne w York mayor
Rudy Giuliani, a fearsomely
pop ular ligure who would
give Sen. Clinton a trul y
ex hilaratin g r.un for her
money. But slie has no choi ce
but to run th at risk. and has a
reasonable chance of surviving.
Once re-elec ted to the
Senate in 2006, Clinton can
breeze .to
th e
2008
Democratic nominati on. She
has only to indi cate her willi :~ g n es s to run, and the party
wnl nominate her by little
short of acc lamation. .
Of course, the Republicans
will have a cand idate
. ' too -pe rh aps Gov. Je b Bush of
Florid a, or the att rac ti ve govern or of Colorado. Bill
Owe ns. But Sen. Clinton can
hope tha,t e ight years of
Geo rge W. Bush will , .at least

temporarily, have worn out
the popul ar welcome of the
Bush family, and that,. afte r
eight years of government by
the GOP, voters will be ready
to give the Democrats a
chance to show what they
can do.
But wh at if, despite all
expectation s, the economy
and si tuation in the Middle
East conspire to render
Pre sident Bush a political
basket case by, say, next
spring? ln other words, what
if it suddenly appears th at the
Democrati c nominee in 2004
is likely to win?
There is no reason why
Sen. Clinton can't accelerate
her schedule and let her pct'rty
know th at she is, after all
willing to accept its presiden:
tial nomination in 2004 . Poor
Howard Dean will simply
have to return to Vermont
and
practice · medicine.
Neither he nor any other candidate could withstand the
tsunam i of enthusiasm for
Clinton.
One way or another, we are
going to encounter that lady
in our future. We had better
be ready.
( William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy. )

all fund s rai sed will stay m
the county to benefit local
agencies United Way supports .
He said despite the current
economic climate he believes
local residents will step up
and help United Way reach
its goal.
"I'm confident that the
commitment and the ability
exi sts to. meet our goals th.is
year and to meet the needs of
our community," he said.
"It's amazing that with this
year's campaign we will
cross the million-dollar mark
this year in terms of cumulative contributions from
Gallia County and to Gallia
County through United Way.
"Wpen you take that number and you look at the agencies that carry out the mission
of United Way, it really gives
you a sense of the impact we
have on thi s county," he
added . "I think it's wonderful
and I' m proud that each of

those agencies is part of my
organization."
Wyse
prai sed
Gallia
County residents for possessing what he termed an "attitude of servanthood."
"United Way is about a
cumulative, a coll ective
impact, but we can have an
impact individually," he said.
"In the time we' ve been here,
we ' ve witnessed an ice storm
(in February of 2003), we ' ve
witnessed the tornado of
2002 ,
the
downtown
(Gallipolis) fire (in 200 I);
and in all those we saw
exhibited examples of the
heart of a servant at work.
"In each of those situ&lt;1tions
there was an outpouring of
response to the needs that
exi sted," he added. "That is
really what United Way is all
about. It's about having the
heart of a servant and doing
what's necessary to meet the
needs of people."
Judy Walters, UWGC president, · said more volunteers
are needed to help with the

campaign. She said UWGC
can provide group information for businesses to pass on
to their employees about supporting the organization.
United Way of Gallia
County supports the following local agencies : Gallia
County American Red Cross ;
Arthritis Foundation , Ohio
River Valley Chapter; Boy
Scouts of America, Tri -State
Area
Council ;
Family
Addiction
Community
Treatment and Prevention
Service s; Gallia County
Council o n Aging ; GalliaMeigs Community Action
Agency ; Girl Scouts, Seal of
Ohio
Council ;
Hol zer
Hospice ; Outreach Ce nter ;
Retired and Senior Volunteer
Program; Serenity House ;
and Woodland Centers.
(Editor 's note: Find 0 111
m'ore about Unit ed Way of
Ga/lia Counry 011 its Web site
at www.unitedwaygallia.or.g.)
740 ·753 ·3400
MOVIES

Ann

Hearing Protedion
Custom Hearing Protection for bobbies,

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and MUCH MORE !

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. OH 45769

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't ' Wells
t for Salem Twp.
t
Clerk
ton November 4th*
t
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Pd.IDrllrC. "

Subscribe today • 992-2 t55

10 Years of EXPERIENCE working with other
township and public officials (fUll TERM I.
ABIUTY to work within the ~dget .
KNOWLEDGE to acquire grants and FEMA
monies . HONESTY with all township Residents
always within Legal Rights and Limits .

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Proud to be apart of
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Olester Twp. Trustee
FULL TERM

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The Daily Sentinel

Local Religion Briefs
Missionary
service set

Revival
announced

Special
service set
BIDWELL - A special
service will be held at 2 p.m.
on Nov. 2 at the Poplar Ridge
Free Will Baptist Church of
Bidwell. Calvin Evans, evangeli stic outreach minister.
· will be the speaker. New
Horizon will be singing. John
Elswick, pastor. invites the
public .

Syracuse
Mission Church
plans revival

SYRACUSE - Revival
will be held at Syracuse
Mission Church at 6 p.m. on
Sunday, and 7 p.m .. Monday
through
Wednesday.
Evange li st Major Willie
Cundiff from Atlanta, Ga., of
the Salvation Army, will be
SYRACUSE
The
the speaker. Higher Calling
Church
of
the
Syracuse
wi ll sing on Monday, Earthen
Vessels on Tuesday, and Rev. Nazarene wi ll be holding a
Don and Sherri Swick on revival Nov. 19-22 . .The Rev.
Jerry Boggs wil be preaching
Wedne sday.
and there will be special
singing nightly by him and
his wife, Janice .

Revival planned

SYRACUSE - Revival
services at Syracuse Mission
C hurch , Bridgeman St., 6
p.m. on Sunday. 7 p.m.,
Monday through Wednesday.
Evangelist Major Willie
Cundiff of Atlanta. Ga. from
Salvation Army. Special
nHISIC by Higher Calling on
Mo nday, Earthen Vessels on
Tuesday. and Rev. Don and
Sherri Sw ick on Wednesday.

Jehovah's
Witnesses
corporate meeting
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy congregation of

Harvest
celebration
planned

MIDDLEPORT
Rejoicing Life Ch urch wi ll
host a harvest celebration
from 6:30- to 9 p.m . on
Friday. The free event wi ll
include games and refreshments. The church asks that
costumes not be worn.

Greg Sears
to speak
MIDDLEPORT - Greg
Sears will speak at Ash Street
Church, 398 Ash St.,
Middleport, at I 0:30a.m . and
7 p.m . services on Sunday.
The public is invited.

Priest resigns amid furor over
article supporting gay priest
ROME. Ga. (AP) - An
Epi scopal priest who wrote an
article sy mpathetic to the
churc h's confirmation of an
openly gay priest as a bislJop
resigned from a private religious. school in Rome after
administrators asked him tu
apo logize to dozens of people
upset with hi s views.
John Merchant, 57. became
chap lain
at
Darlington
SchooL a nondenominational
prepamtory sc hool. during the
summer. He wrote a column
for the stud ent newspaper
about
the
Epis,copalian
church's confirmation of V.
Gene Robinson, who is openly gay, us Episcopal bi shop in
New Hampshire.
Merchant wrote in the Sept.
3 column 111 The Darlington
that God is more concerned
wnh spirituality than sex ual
orientat ion.
"I didn 't ha ve to ponder
where I stood," Merchant told
The
Atl anta
JournalConstitution for a story i1~
Monday's edit ions . "B ut I

·r

-r

took time to keep it brief and
try to explai n my beliefs. I
was tryin g to .convey it in a
positive way.''
After the column appeared,
however. school president
David Hicks and headmaster
David Rhodes told Merchant
th.at some school donors were
considering withdrawing their
support at the academy. They
asked him to initiate between
50 and 75 one-one-one meetings over a month to apologize to individuals upset with
the article.
Merchant refused, calling
the request "morally and academ ically intolerable," and
resigned. He provided the
Sept. 30 Jetter in which Hicks
and Rhodes made the demand
to the Rome News-Tribune.
Neither Rhodes nor Hicks
to
repeated
responded
requests · by a JournalConstitution reporter for
interviews.
Calls
were
referred to Atlanta media consultant Chuck Nekvasil.
"We believe in all si ncerity

r -r

that it's time for the healing to
begin and time to move on,"
Nekvasil said.
The column touched off a
debate in the community over
free speech after NewsTribune
Editor
John
Dru ckenmiller
criticized
Darlington in a column titled
"A Failing Grade in Freedom
of Speech 101."
James Polk of Atlanta, who
has a daLoghter at Darlington.
said the school 's reaction to
Merch ant's column lies in the
face of academi c honesty.
'T m concerned that tis sort
of thing could debase the
value of a Darlington degree
in the eyes of the better colleges in this country," he said.
Others, such as Jeff Gable,
a Rome resident who does not
have a child at the school,
supported the administrators.
"It seemed he was watering
down the word of God,"
Gable said. "From my background, I was taught the Bible
was absolute."

r r ·r ·r

He is ihe man with the
camera. He stands sometimes at the forty. and sometimes at the one. But, wherever the action is, he is there
waiting to take a snap at
what is happening with the
football , or the horn, or the
next cheer. Along the sideline scenes, he pictorially
captures our youth in action.
frllming them for moments
of time unforgettably sealed.
It is a man by the. name of
Tim Tucker who voluntarily
takes pictures of students
active ly involved in contributing to the school spirit
of Wahama High School.
For each picture there is a
charge that merely covers his
costs. Parents eagerly go
through his weekly collection searching to see if their
kid was filmed doing something fantastic.
Tim is genuinely un assuming about what he does. He
has no concern to have any
type of spotlight on himself.
But, nonetheless, hi s sideline service provides special
effects . His photographic
endeavors make a positive
contribution to kids. The
inspiration of each shot stimulates energy and esteem.
Meaningful
memories
become memori~lized . The
high school atmosphere
becomes fortifi ed. In no
small way it intensifi es and
strengthens the cords of a
community coming together
for common cause in the
multifaceted aspects• of the
education of all its students.
The cumulative value of
one person along the sideline s helping to facilitate the
success of a great good
seems incredible when one

the role they played along
the sidelines contribu!ed sig"nificantly with such ~pecial
effects that it ensured the
success of the troops.
By way of contrast, many
good pastors and spiritually
successf~l
churches are
located in our area. Why is
this true? Is it because of the
ministers and leaders of the
church involved in what is
seen as the front lines of services? Oh, yes, indeed, solid
spiritual leadership is critical
to the advancement of God's
kingdom through any local
church.
But, I am convinced it is
those in the church providing
those sideline services that
engender the special effects
of God in fruitful ministry
perhaps more than anything
else.
It is those who, along the
sidelines of spiritual activity,
diligently pray for their ministers and leaders that effectively call down the blessings of God. It is those who
usher, those who give quietly, those who provide for
others in need, or those who
worship faithfully that keep
the arms of the church
propped up to do ministry
that brings God honor and
glory.
You may feel no more
important than some sort of
sideline personnel in your
church. But, what you do for
the Lord is critical, and provides those special effects
about which God is very
much aware. I bless God for
you.
By the way, thanks, Tim.

Ron
Branch

gives it thoughtful consideration.
That is why there is
immense spiritual value suggested by it. '
During the Exodus, the
people of God came into
confl ict with the attacking
armies of Amalek. Joshua
led his forces to a great clash
of arms in response to their
unprovoked attack.
Moses stood along the
sideli nes throughout the
struggle. From his position,
he contribu ted significantl y
to the success of Israel on the
battlefield as long as he held
up his hands. But, his hands
got tired periodically, and he
would have to let them drop
by hi s side. Unfortunately,
during those moments,! the
tide would turn in favor of
the enemy.
Howe ver. along the sidelines with Moses were Aaron
and Hur. ·With the undergirding of these two, Moses
was able to continuously
hold up his a(ms through out
the remainder of the fight.
Because of it , "his hands
were steady until the goi ng
down of the sun ." In the end ,
Israel was empowered in
their rout of the Amalekites.
This trio swung no sword .
They did not physically
encounter any enemy. But,

Fourth lawsuit filed against
priest accused of abuse ·
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
fourth lawsuit has been filed
against a Ron1an Catholi c
priest and hi gh school principal who is accused of sex ual ly abusing boys over three
decades.
.
In a lawsuit filed Thursday,
a form er server accused the
Rev. Lawrence Strittmatter
of repeatedly molesting him
and sometimes forcing his
way inside the boy's home.
The man, now in his 30s,
wasn' t identified. He alleged
that he was sexually abused
while at Our Lady of Vi ctory
Church in suburban Delh i
Township in the early 1980s.
Strittmatter's · attorney,

·r ·r ·r ·r ·r

Perry Ancona, didn ' t return a
phone message seeking comment.
Twenty-five men have
sued Strittmatter and the
Archdiocese of Cincinnati,
claiming they were abused.
The latest lawsuit asserts that
church officials should have
known Strittmatter was a
threat to c hildren, and asks
for at least $ 1 million .
Dan
Andriacco,
spokesman for the archdiocese, said he believes the
statute of limitations has
expired. The archdiocese
asserts that it never attempted to hide abuse allegations,
and has been as open about

Strittmatter's case as victims
would allow.
Strittmatter was placed on
administrative leave last
year. He's not permitted to
perform any duties of a
priest.
Are dinosaurs alive today?
What about carbon dating?
The public is
iil\'ited 10 a

Creation Science Seminar
By

Dr. Kent H1&gt;vind
www.drdino.com
1-304-173-s429

Sat Nov.lst &amp; Sun. Nov. 2nd
6:00PM to 9:00PM
Wahama High S&lt;hool Gym
Mason, WV 2~U.O

r r r ·r ·r ·r ·r ·r ·r ·r

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Carvin Out Their Future
SUNDAY

Habakl&lt;uk :.!: 1-20

Young's Carpenter Serulce
2~ ]le~rs in local bul!ine.fl!

Zephaniah 3 I· \3
TUf.SOAY

Jarnt'§ 2':1- 13

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before· God and man."

THURSDAY

, Acts 24:16

Malachi I :6- 2 fJ

WEDNESDAY

FRIDAY
46

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~uardrail, Fence &amp;

sign erection .....-.

209 Third

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Sc""rufl!s 84/«llldby rrte Atnei!Qin B&lt;bie Soc~ely
Cop~n!Jh! 2003 l&lt;fllster ·W~!'~'"'~ N.ilw~ilt- So!JV~CH . P 0 ao ~ 800~. Ctlar1onMw~t a , y~

Coy's VCR Repair
"If your VCR's in trouble
bring it lu me the dnuhlc"
34549 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992.~507

22006, fCINi !cwoewJ com

ARCAD IA NURSING CENTER
" O ld Fo• ~ hi o ncd Compassion- Modem Care''

Nestled in a beauti ful cou ntr,y selling ISR
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Appa lachian H1ghwuy.
Mus ic omJ Art Therapies
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740-66f-JJ5fi F:u : 74£1-6{,7 -11080
Pl• y~ l(.' a l . Occupalional and Speech T hcmpies
We Accept Mcdtcarc, Mc(hcatd. &amp; Ins urance

OH

Racine,

(740) 992-645 1
Fax

Warm Frh•mlly
Atmu!&gt;phen.'

:MifEi.e's i(estaurant

Hills Self Storage

Birchfield funeral
Home ·

Sizes available 5x10 to

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see
. God.
Matthew 5:8

Houn;
6 am - 8,pm

':A Home Bank for
Home People" ·

740·992· 7713

7 40-949-2217

P.O. B0x683
Pomerov. Ohio 45769-0683

Matthew 5: 16

Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Speciols
Open 7 duys a w eek

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

PDK3=&gt;
CONSTRUCTION
INC.

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399 W. Main St.

Pomeroy, Oh

(7 40) 992-'2 Hl4
Purina
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Chows • Garden
ltlzer

212 Main St- P.O. Box 188
Rutland. OH 45115

740-742-2333
Our Carina WaYs HelP families

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Herbalife Independent
Distributor

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A·. JACKSON BAILES, OD

Jeanie Howe ll
33334 Hyse ll Run Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
For a whol e
740 ..992-7996'

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~.
(740) 992-3279
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new you

www.herbsndiet.com

LLC

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Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

llo.lll . ,

Niver Valley
Apos tolic Worship Ct:mer, 8H S. )rd
AYe ., MidJ icport. Kevi n Kun kle . Pastor.
Sund,ly, 11 01 m. Wedne~day . 7:00 p.m .;
Ymuh Fri. 7 .lO p.m.

l!mmanuel Apostolic TxbernMcle Inc.
Loop Rd off New Limit Rd . Ru tland ,
Scr\'u:es Sun Ill:{)(' a m &amp; 7.10 p. m ,
Tiwr~&gt; . 7:00p.m , Pa~ 10r Marty R. ~l unon

Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly of God
P.O Box 4117 . Duddm g Lane , M li~IHI.
Sum.l:~y

. Baptist
HoJM Baplist C hu l'('h {Southern}
570 Gr&lt;tnt SL. Middlepurt. Pastnr : Rev
D::md Bry an. Sunday S(.:hoo l - 9:30 a.m .
Wor~lu p

- I I i"l m. and 6 p m . Wed nesday
Serv ile - 7 I' 111
Rutland Firsl Baptist C hun.'h
Sundn y Scholl ! - 9 JO a.m . Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pom~roy Fin.l B11pdsl
Pastor Jon Brockert. East Main St.
Sunda)' Sl" hool - 9.30 a. m . Worship ·
10 ~0 a.m.

F'irsl Southern Baptist
·II R?:! Pom..-roy Pike. Pasto r: E. Ulmar
O"IJryant , S mHht)' Schoo l · 'LlO a.m .
Worship - 8 15 ;a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00p m..
Wednesduy Scr.·il·es- 7:00 p.m.
rirst Baptl!it Ch urth
Mark Murro w. 6th 11nd Palmer St .
MtdUkpon. Sund&lt;Jy School - 9:15 "m.,
Wot ~h t p
10:1 5 a m.. 7: 00 p.m ..
W..- d nc~da y S~ rnce - 7.00 p. m.

l'a&lt;i\Clr

Radru: Firsl Baptist
Rkt. Rule , Sunday School - 9 JU
a.m. Wor ship - io:40 a.m.. 7:00 p.m..
Wed rlt'~da~ Snvtces - 7 00 p.m
Pa~tor:

Sih·er Run Baptist
Joh n Swanwn, Sunda y Slhool ·
lOam .. Wor ship - II a.m.. 7 00 p. m.
.Wednesd:1y Scrvtn.s- 7:110 p.m.
Pa~ ttW

Mt. Union Baptist
l'a~tur . Oa ~ uJ Wise- man. Sunday School 9 45 am .. E"e nin g
6:3 0 p.m .
Wedne sda) Servil"Cs - 6:10p.m.
Btthlehem Baptist Church
Grc-&lt;Jt 8 ..-nd. Rout e 124 Rac mc, OH,
Pa~ tur : Daniel Mecca. Sunday Sehoul Y .10 a.m . Sun day Worsh tp - IO·JO a.m..
WcUncsday Hiblc St ud y- 6.00 p m.
Old Hethel Free Will Bapllsl Church
2860 1 St . R1 . 7, Mtddleport. Su nday
Sdwol . l 0 a.m .. Evening - 7 00 p.m..
Tim~da y Ser\· rc e~- 7 00
Hill side Baptist Church
St. Rt 14J JUSI ot t Rt 7 Pastor: Rev
J ame~ R. Acree, Sr . Su nday Ur11ri c:d
Sc rv1ce, Worship - 10 30 a.m., 6 p.m.•
Wednesday SerVIce~ -7 p m
Vktury Bapli!l t Independent
525 N. :!nd St. M1Udlcpo11. Pasto r: James
E. Kl· c~ce, Worsh ip - lOa.m, 7 p. m.,
WeJ nc..U.1y Scrv ias- 7 p m
l 'ailh BaptiM Church
Radt oad St. Mason, Sunday School · 10
a. m., Wor shtp
11 a.m , 6 p. m.
Wednesda y .Servkcs- 7 p.m
Forest Run BaptiSt
Pasto r An us Hurt. Su nday School - 10
a.m.. Wor~h tp · II a.m .

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday Sc hoo l - 9:JO ~. m , Worship •
JU 45 n m.. Sundny E..-c n m~ - 6:00 p. l,ll.,
Paswr: Mnrk Ml:Cuma~
Rutland 1-' ree Will Baptist
Sa lem St., P&lt;t st vr. Jamie Fortner. Sunday
.School - 10 a.m , Eve nin g - 7 p.m,
Wcdne~dny Serv1cc-s- 7 p 111.
Set'ond Baplisl Chun:h
Ravcnswood, WV, Su nd~y School 10 am , Morning worship 11 mn E\&lt;en ins - 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m .

Catholic

MiddleP&lt;&gt;rt, OH
740·992-6128
Local source for trophies,
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Sal·l'\!d Heart Ca tholic Church
161 Mulhcrry Ave., Pomno}. 992 -5898,
Pa~tor : Rev. Wal ter E. Heinz. Sal. Con
4:45 -5 I5Jl m.; Mas s- 5:30 p m., Sun

your light so shine be~orel
that they may see
works and glorify
IF'atloerin heaven."
Matthew 5: I

190 N. Second St.

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MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE,

Miller. Sun day School • JO·JU
Evenmg - 7:30p.m

W.Va ., Pas tur. Nei l Tennant,
Serv ices- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Carolina Antlqu&amp;
&amp; Craft Mall
312 6th St. Point Pleaaant
675-1160
Variety of furniture , g lassware, crafts,
collec tion of bottles &amp; primitive·
Outside nca market April- Oct.

Layaways Available ·

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc.

Full line of

Insurance

Products +
Financial
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,.
AGENC!ES

l ~c.

Bill Quickel

Hemlock Grove C hristian Churt'b
Mini ~ h:r: Larry Drown, Wo rshtp - ',I 30
a.m
Sunday Schutll · II H O ~ - ~~~ . 811'1k Study ·
1 p.m.

•

Trlnlt) Chu11:h
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pa stor: Re Y
Jo~mlh an Nuhlc. Won.h1p 10: 2~ a m ,
Sunduy Schuul 9.1~ IUU .

Episcopal
Grac.- Episcopal Chun::h
_,26 E Mnin St .. Pomeroy, Re\'. James
Hcntackl . Rev Kath9rln Fno;let , Sunday
Sd10t1 l and lluly Euchanst 11 .00 am.

Pomtroy Chun:h or Christ
2 12 W. Main St ., M ina~ t er : Alllhl
Mo m ~

Sunday Sl·hoot - 9 ·' 0 II Ill '
10:30 a.m., 6 p.m, Wednesday
7 p.m.

Tuppers PIIUaa St. Paul

Congregational

Church of Christ

w.u~htp·
Sc r vtce~

ll'oliness

·

Pomuoy WesiSklr Churt h of Christ
31226 Children 's Home Rd .. Sund ay
School . II a.m.. Wol"\htp - IOa.m., fl p m,
Wednesday SerYtCt~ . 7 p.m
Middleport Church or Christ
5th and Mnlll, PaStor: AI Hartson Youth
Mmi ~ t cr: Josh Ul m, Sunda y Sehoul 9 30
a m.. Worship- li : 1.5 , 10· 30 a m.. 7 p.m.,
Wcdne'Oday Scrv1.:c~ - 7 p.m
Krno Church of Christ
Worshtp - 9.JO -.1 .11 1.. Su nday Sl huul ·
tOJOa m., Pustor-JdTrey Wallace , 1st and
3rd Sunday
Btarwallow Ridgt Chun:-h or Christ
Pastor Rnll e Terry. Sunday Schoo l -IJ ] {J
a.m.
Worship - IO:JO a.m•. 6 30 p. m.
Wcdn..-sday Scr~• il e:oo - 6·30 p m
Zlnn Church of Chri&lt;;t
Pomeroy, Hurrt ~llll v illl· Rd 1Rt.l4 3),
Pastor. Roger Watsnr1. Sunda) School
9 JIJ am. Worsh tp · liHO ;1m.. 1 on
p m , Wednesday Serv ices - 7 p.m.
Thppers Phlin Chu rch of Christ
lns uumental. Wnr~ hip Servke - 9 a m.,
Commu nmn • Ill a.m., Su nday School 10 15 a.m., Youth· 5 .' 0 pm Sunda y, Hihlc
SIUdy Wednesday 7 pm
Bradb ury Church of Chri~t
Mmt ~ t e r : "fum Runynn , J'-J5~K Bradbury
Ru:.d, Middh:: port, Suud:.y Sd11&gt;C1 \ - 9·30
a.m.
'o\nrsh1p- 10 JO 11m '

Communlly Church
Ptl-iltlr" StcH· To mek. Mam Stre~l.
Ku l\&lt;l nd. Sunday W11 o;hip-lO:OO a.m.,
Sunda y Servtct- 7 p.m.

Rutland Chu rch of Christ
Sundny S&lt;:hool · 9.30 a.m.. Worship anJ
Co mmu nion ·- 10:30 a.m .. Bob J. Werry,

Reedn ille Chu rch of Christ
Pastor Phili p Sturm , Sunda y Sch,m l: Y:30
a.m., Worship s~rvi cc · 10·1 0 am, B1hlc
Study, Wednesda y. 6 30 p m .
Dexter C hurth of Christ
Pastor. Bill Eshclnum, Sunday ~hoo l 9 JO
a.m., Norman Wi ll , superintendent ,
Sunday wnrshtp- 10·10 it. m
C hun:h of Christ
ln terse.:tion 7 and 124 W. E~;ange h s t.
Den ni ~ Sargent, Sunday Hth lc Study 9·JO am , WC1rsh1p: Hl 10 am . and 6:1(}
p.m, W\!tlncsda) Bihle Study · 7 p 111

Christian Union
Hartford Chur(h of Christ in
Christ ian Union
Hartlord , W.Va ., Pastor: Da\ id Gre-er,
Sunday S&lt;.•ht")(ll - 9:30 a.m. Worsh ip 10.30 a.m., 7 :00 p.m . Wcdilesda)
Servtces - 7:00p.m.

Church of God
MI. Moriah Church of God
Mile- Hill Rd , Rannl'. Pastor: J,un ~ s
Sa ucrticld , Su ndny S~&gt; hoo) - 9·45 a m ,
Evenmg - 6 p.m.. W!! dn c~day Scr~tces - 7
p.m.
Rutland Church of God
Ron Heath, Su nday Wor~hip · 10
a m.. 6 p. m . Wedne sday Semces · 7
P&lt;~ stor:

Chun:h of God ol Prophec)
O.J . Whttc Rd . oiT S1. Rl. 160. Pas1ur: P.J.
C hap man . Su nday Sl"hool - lU a m .
Worshtp - II a m., Wednesday Sc-rvt~.:cs 1 p.m:

9 &lt;~ . m

MinenviUe
Paslor. Bob Robi n~n . Sunday School - '}
a.m., Worsh1p - 10 am

HOSI' or Sharon Holiness C hurch
Leitding Creek Rd., Rutland . P.d ~t or : Rev
Dewey King , Sunday "'-.'hool - 9:30 a.m.,
.S und&lt;~y
worsh1p -7 p.m . Wedn ~day
protyer meetmg- 7 p.m.
Pint' Grovt&gt; Bibk- HolinhS Churdt
112 mtlc 1J fl Rt. :l25, P&lt;~s t or: Rc\&lt;. O'Dcll
Man ll.'y. Sunda y School · 9:30 a.m,
Wur.,lu p · l O..lO a.m., 7:30 p m,
Wedl"k!!&gt;ilil y Ser.·tcc - 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible HoliMSS Church
75 Pearl St.. MtddleJ"I(l rt . Pastor : Rev.
DavtU GJ\het1. Sunday School - 10 am.
Wonhip - 10:45 p.m, Sunday E\e. 7·00
p.m . Wed nesday Sei"\'ICC- 7." 3(}p m
Hysell Run Holiness Church
J',l~ t\lr R~~· Lury Lt:m lcy; Su nday School
- Y 30 a.m., Worshtp - 10 :~5 ~.m .. i p.m.•
ThuNdi.l)' Btble Study and Youth - 7 p m.
Laurel Cliff Fret Methodlsl Chun:h
Sc ho0l - 9::\0 a m., Worship ·
Hl:JOo.m. and 6 p.m.,Wl-dnesday Service

W~htp -

Heath !Maddlepnrtl

Pastor: Rod Browe r, SurK!ay Sd1ool - 9 30
a.m.. Worsht p - 11 ·00 a.m.

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School · 9a.m., Worsh1p - 10 a.m
•

Pomeroy
Pastor· Rod Brower, Worship . 9:30a.m.,
Sunday School - 10· 3~ a.m.
Rock Springs
J.'a~tnr · Ke1th Rader. Sunday School · '-J 1~
a.m., Wonh1P · 10 a.m.. Ynulli
Feltowshtp. Sunday · 6 p.m.

Rutland
Sunday School - 9:.10 a .m.. Wor ~h1 p ·
10.30 ii.UI ., Thun;day Se rvtces · 7 pm.
Salem Cente r
Pa sto r: William K. Marshall, Su nda}
School - 10: 15 a.m . Wors.h1p - 9: 15 a.m..
Bible Study Monda y 7:00pm
Snowville
Su nday School - 10 am . WoNhip - Yam
Bethany
Pa ~ tor John Gtlmorr. Sunda y School · 10
a m., Wor shtp
9 :t m , Wednesday
Servtces - 10 a.m

-7.00pm

The Churth of Jesus
Ch rist or Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt 160, 446-6247 or 44 6-74R6.
Sund_:ly School 111:20- l l o.m.. Rdtet
Su~.:icty /P ridthood
11 .05 - 12.00 noo n,
Sa.: ram ent Ser\' ice 9- 10: 1.5 a.m..
Homcmakmg meetmg. ht Thurs. - 7 p.m

Cannel-Sutton
Carme l &amp; Rashan Rds. Ract ne. Oh10.
Pa stnr: John Gilmore:, Sunday Sl"hou\ ·
9 30 a.m . \\-orshtp · 10:4~ :~ . m . , Bible
Study Wed 7 00 p.m
Morning StBr
Pastor John G1lmore, Sunday School - II
a. m.Worship -IOa.m

St. John J.ulheran Chun:h
Pine Grove, Worship - 9:00a.m., S unday
S(· hool - 10 :00 a.m. Pastor : James P.

Coolville Uniled Methodisl Parish
Pastor· H el~ n Kline, Coolville Ch urch,
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sunday S.:hool - 10
a.m , Worship - 9 u.m.. Tuesda) Services 7 pIll

Our Sa\'iour Lutheran Church
Wu lnut &lt;~lld Henry Sts., Rav~n SW\)Od,
W.Va., Pastor: Davtd Ru ssel l. Sunduy
Sc h[l()t · IO·OU 11 rn , Worsh ip - I I am.
Sl. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St , Pom~my ,
Sunday Sl"hnol • 9 45 u.m., Wurshtp - 1l
a rn. Past or: Jumcs P Brady

Btthel Church
Town~hi11 Rd, 468C, Sunday School · 9
am. Worsht p
10 a.m ., Wednesday
Serv 1 c~s - 111 a m

United Methodist
Graham United MethOdist
Wursh1p - 9: 30 a.m. ( ht &amp; 2nd Sun), ,
i :JO p. m t3 rd &amp; 4th SunJ. Wednesday
Scr\"lce · 1 30 p m

Hotkingport Chun:h
Grand Street. Sunday School - I) 15 a.m.,
Worsh ip · 10:30 am., Pa stor Phillip Dell
Ton:h C hun:h
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30a m..
,Worship - 10·30 am.

Mt. OliYt: Unll«l Methodist
OtT 124 llchmd Wilkesvi lle. Pastor Re\
Ralph Sp trcs, Sunday Schoo l - 9:30a.m.,
Wlmhip · ltl·JO a.m., 7 p.m. Thursday
Scrvi~.;e s - 7 p.m

Mlddlepon C hurch of th e Nazarene
Pa stor: Allen Mtdcap, Sunday School ·
9.~0 a.m .. Wo11ihip - 10:30 a m . 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Se rvices - 7 p.m .. Pastor
Allen Mt dcap

RwlsviUe FrUowshlp
Church of the Na1.a renc. Pa stor T~ren
Walde ck, Sunday School - 9 :.~0 a.m..
Worsht p - 10:45 am .. 7 p m.. Wednesday
Sc: rvic~: s - 1 p.m.

Chesler
Putor Jane Bcauie, Worship - 9 a.m ..
Sunday School
10 a.m . , Thursday
Sc rvtce~ - 7 p.m
Joppa
Ranj:]olph, Worship - 9·30

Syracuse Church ol the Nazart:nf'
Pastor Mike Adkms, Sunday Sd10ol - 9:30
a.m.. Worship
10: 30 a.m . 6 p m..
Wedne~ay Serv1ces · 7 p m

a.m.
Sunday Sc hool - 10:30 a.m.
Loni Rollom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m , Wors.h1p IO ., Oa m.
Refllsvllle
Wnrshtp - 9:30 a m., Sunday Sehoul 10.30 a.m .. Ftrst Sunday of Momh . 7.00
p.m . "t'rvice

.........
..L-.-

. Pomeroy Churth of the Nazarene
Pastor· Jan La\end~r. Sund11)' School 9:30a.m., Worshtp - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p m., Wednc!Oday Scmccs - 7 p m.

216 E. Second Pomeroy

74Q-992·3325
.
Marketing Property
Since 1971

Brogan-Warner

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E; Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

IJlessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5.

1-rodily. 7 p.m

Portland Flnt Chun:h ul the Naz.an-ne
Pa~tor Wtlham Just1 s. Sunday School 10.00 a 111 • Murmflg WuNltp . 10·45 ~ m .
Sunday Sen1cc 6 3U p.m.:

Other Churches
Communi!)"of Chrbt
Pl.Jftland-Racmc Rd. P;a~lf"&gt;r Jerry Stngtr.
Sunday S.:hool - Y JO a m., Wur ~ htp Ill l!! 11 m . Wedne:.dl) Ser\lc~~ 7 UtJ
pm
Rdhd Wonbip C~ nter
School, Pa ~ tnr Rub 8 on be1 ,
A ~~t5 1:lllt Pastor· Karen J'Ja~t ~ S u nd :~ y
Worsh 1p 10 am. l: venmg Wor, hlp fl prn .
You1h !-JrnUp 6 pm, Wednei&gt;da) Po~er tn
Pmyfr. and R1blr Study - 7 pm
A1h Slrnt (' hurch
Ash S! , Mtddlepon- Sunda} Sch1ool IJ·JO
a m Morn mg Wor~ht p · 10 ~U a m &amp; 7
pm, Wed ntsda} Ser\"Ke - 7 ('(I p.m , Youth
Se m ct - 7 00 p m
Agape Life l:t'nl.rr
"Fuii -Gmpe l Church"', Pa~ t or~ John &amp;
Pauy Wndc . 603 Second Ave M ii!&gt;on . 771,.
50 17. Servic.;- !nne S und a~ I U J{) a.m .
Wedrlet;day 7 pm

Cahary Biblt Churrll
P1le . Co ~d Pd ~ t or Rr\
Blad~~o olld, ~unda~ Sd1u1l
Y ltJ .1 111
Wor..,htp
llJ l(J " m . ; lit p m .
Wedn~ ~il) Se .... llC 7 WJ p m
Pom~rn ~

Stlvenville C ' ommuntt~ Churt'h
Pw.tur Wa yne k Jc-.,t:fl. ~uu do.J) lien.tln
- IO·OU o~ m 6.: 7·0() p m . Thw...Ua; '7 !•J
pm

5(.0 ~

M tke

Kejoit'ing Lire Church
!nJ A1c . M 1~kpo•n .

P ~-.tur

~11-ren..:r l·flleman . "'11r~h1 p Ifl ltl.hln
Weilile\llu~ Sen ~ec'

"rm

l'linon T•br.rnad.- l'hu~Th
Chf1un. W \ 01 , SundJ~ ~~honl H! o.1 m .
'A ot"~htp . 7 pm \\ .::dnl·'tlia~ 5Cf\K~· '7
p .m

Sew tiff' \'ktor~ (.~ enter
Creek Road. Galhpult~ . OH
Pa~ tnr· Btll Staten. Sund.a) St'r\fl"C'
HJ
ll./11 &amp; 7 p m
Wcdne~dn · ; p rn &amp;:
Youth 7 p m
,
J7B

Gc-u rg e~

Abunda nt GnK"e R.f. J.
q2J S. Th trd St.. Mtddlepon. Pastor T~ re~u
Da vu Su n~la y ~ ~r V I lC . 10 am .
Wednesday servtcf, 7 p m

Full Go!ipel ChuR."h of lht' Livina
Sa,·ior
R t.1~8 A.n11l[ U II ~. Pa,rnr
k-.-t" Vlnrn ~
Semct., Sa turda~ 2 ()II r m

faith Full (;o§pe l Church
Long Bottom, Pastor. S te~·c Reed. Sunda&gt;
SchtM il . 9· JO a m. Wor\hlp - 9 30 a m
and 7 p.m , Wednesday · 7 p.m.. Fnda~ ·
ldlu.,.,. shtp scmce 7 p.m.

Sakm Community Chu rch
L1 evmg Rnad. We•t Cnlumb1a. ~ \ o.~.
P&lt;~~ t or Clyde r-errd l Sund.1~ Schtl\\l 9 "\0
am. Sund1) C\ emn~ ~ ... f\ .,_,.. 6 rrn.
Wedne'oda) ., r~tce 7 p m

Hobson C hri sri•n J-"ello"'!'ihip Church
Her'oChel Wh11e '\umi...t~ ~.:hl~d
10 am. Sunda~ Ch un.: h -er. IL."C f) -~0 pm

Pa~tor·

UarrisonviUe Communit y Church
Pastor· Theron Durham. Sunday - 9:JO
11 m. and 7 p.m., Wedn~ sd .t) · 7 p.m
Middleport Communily Church
575 Pe~rl St., Middletx•rl , Pastor . Sam
Anderson, Sunday Sc hoo l 10 a.m ,
Fve n1 ng · 7:30p m . Wed ne\ditY Scrvtct7:30 p.m

Wedn ~sda}

7 pm

"So I strive always to keep
my consc'i ence clear before
, \.Juu

and man."

, Acts 24:1

••
•

Reston lion C hristian Fdlo-..!jhip
936'1 HOIIJ)Cr Road. Alhl'n ~. Pa sto r .~ .
Lonme Coat~. Su nday \o\.or~h tp 111 01.! am.• ..
Wedne"&lt;&lt;uy 7 pm
Langliwillf' Christian Churt'h
G~pe!. P::lstnr
R &lt;J~rt Mu,"&lt;r.
Sunda~ Schnul \l 30 am.. Wnr,h.tp I n~~~
am 7:00 pm. Wed n e..OO~ Ser\t~·r "1'1 11 1
pm
Fu ll

F111ilh Vail~y T11hernat'k- C hurch
Bailey Run Road, Paswr Re''· Emmett
Raw ;on Sunda) E v~ ntng 7 p.tn .
Thursday Sen•1ce- 7 p m
SyracUif Mluion
t-I ll Bndgeman St., Syracuse. Sunda}
Sclmol - 10 a 111 . E\'enmg
fl p.m
Wt:dnesda y Sr:rv tce- 7 p.m.
Hazel Com munity Churrh
Off Rt. 124. Pa swr. Ed~l Hart , Sunday
. S..-hoot. 'J:JO a m . Worship· IO :JO a.m..

Pentecostal
PcnfecO!llai .,OJ.Wmbl~

St. R1. 12-t. R:a:mc . Paswr William
Hoboc k Sundn} St·hool
Ill am

Presbyterian

7.30 pIll

Sy racu!if Flnt Uniltd Presb.vleri.an
Pastor Ru~11::n Cro..... Wur•l11p · II :t TH

Dy es ville Communlly Ch urch
Su nd11y Schoo l - 9:JO a. m., Wo r ~h1p ·
10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Harriscnv\11~ P~hyterian Church
Pasror: Roben CruYo, \.\."orsht p - 'll am.

Mol'5t' ChapE"I Chul'(."h
Sun day school - 10 a.m , Worshtp ·
am. Wcdnesda)' Servic~ - 7 p.m

Middlepor1 Pre!libyterian
Pastor: Rt1hcr Cro.., ""orshtp l 0 am.

11

Faith GospE'I Chun:h
Long Moll om. Sunday School - 'L \0 am .
Wouhip · 10.45 11.1n , 1 .\0 p 111 .,
Wed nesday 7:30p m
MI . Olive Communi!)' Church
Pastor Lawrence Bush . Sunda ~ School
9.30 a 111., EveninK - 6.30 p m.. Wedneday
Ser.·ke - 7 p.m

Full Gospel Li8hthou ~
Ht!and Road, Pomeroy. Pastor Roy
Hunter. .'lunda~ School - 10 a.m .. E\cnmg
7.J O p m., Tue§day &amp; Thur:id:ty - 7.30
p.m.

So uth Bethel Communlly Chu rc h
Rill ge - Pastor Li nd::~ Dame-wood .
· Sunday S(·hool - 9 am ·. Wnr~htp Servtcc
!0 11.m.
Ca rl eto~ lnlerdenominadonal Church
Kingshu ry Road , Pa~ tor Rnhe rt Vance
1HO a.m., Worship
SundaJ School
Scr\"!Ce 10 _Ill am . E\' ~ ntng Sl!rv trc fl
p.m.
Frtt'dom GO!lpel Mlssk&gt;n
Ba ld Kool'l, on Co Rd. J I . Pn~l or Re\
Roger Willford. Sunday S~hool - Q:JO am.
Worshtp- 7 p.m.
Si l~ er

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se,·enth -D•y Ad)enlist
Hh Rd . Pnm~w~ . Pa-.Mr R!l\
Lno~1n s k~ . Saturdny Sen1~· e,
S11 l-hath
Sch1KJI - : p.rn , W(l r~h • p · J r rn .
~lulb\•rry

United Brethren
MI. Hermo n l "nited Bn-th n-n
in C hrist Churct1
Te xa~ Communi!) J64 ll Wtd .ham RJ,
l'astnr· Peter Martmdale. Sunrla~ S..:h.-..11 ·
9 :.~0 a.m , Wors hip . JO ·JO a m.. 7:00
p.m . Wed ne sday Scr~ t ee~ - 7 00 p m ,
Y(luth 11.roup mcetmg 2nd &amp; -'th Sunda:"'
7 p.m.
Edt&gt;n United 81't'thren in Christ
Stale Rome I~~- Reed ~ nile. Sunda~
Sch.-....ll - 11 urn

Sund.l~ 'o\or~h l? ·

\ (1 ()(1

a rn &amp; 7 00 p tn. WL·dn~sda\ Sen llt''- 7: 00 p m.. Wednesday ) outh Sen 1 c~·
7 00 rm

l

While's Chapel Wesley•n
Cooh·•llc Road, Pastor: Re• . Philhp
Rldeoour. Sunday Sl·hool · 9 30 a m .
Worship · 10:30 am., Wednes&lt;b y Ser.'ice
- 7 p.m

ROCKSPRINGS
Crow's Family Restaurant
REHABILmiON CENTER . "FNtur/ng Kffltucky Fried

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

·

Furemo~n

Chester Churdl of dte Nazarene
Pastor· Rev. lkrN:r1 Gmr~. Sunday St!hoot

The care you deserve, ch&gt;se to lwme
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
. . . . . . . . .p · · ···llttt
992·3785
740-992-6606

m:eaforb
.l\eal &lt;fstate

Faith ft'!Jo•ship l'ru...atk for ChrUI
Pastor R!!' t-r:m.kltn Dtd.rtl\. Sc-nic;· •

3J04~

Nazarene

Meigs Coope rative Parish
Nonhcasl Clus ter, Alfred, Pas10r: Jane
Bcnttic. Sund t~y Sc hool - ') :JO a.m..
'Worship - 11 a m., 6 30 p.m

.1i•ber .funeral •omt
.................
L.

Rutland Clnard1 of tht Nua~De
')undll} School - Y 3U am . Wm-.hip ·
1010 a m., 610 pm
Wc-Jnc:MJ;,r.)
Scn• tce~ - 7 p.m.

pm.

Racine
Pastor: Pete ShafTer, Sunility School - 10
a m.. Wnrship - I I a m.. Wednesday 1
p m.

Btadv

Bob

L..ctan ,

Easl Letan
Pastor: Sunday Sc hool - Ill a m . Wnrsh1p
- 9 am. , Wednesday · 7 p.rn.

Lutheran

Falr~M-w BlbWt.' hun:h
W \'01 Rl I Pa~otur ttn:m M.ito)"
SuOO..)' Schonl II l41 am. 1,\,n,h,p · ""I fXJ
p m , Wednt!&gt;d.a~ Htt"lle S1udy 7 00 p m

am . Worsh1p · I ! a m . 6 p m .
Wednud41.) Semce ~- 7 p m

C h e~te r

Sunday

Pastor

Evening Services- 6.30 p m., Wednesday
Services - 6:30p.m.

Foral Run
Bob Robtn:tOn. Sunda y ~hool · 10

Ca lvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harmorml te Road
Pastor: Charl e.~
Mt.:KcnLic . Sunday S&lt;.:houl 9:30 lUll.,
Wun; h1p- 11 a.m .. 7 00 p.m , WeJnesda)
Sc r~i~ e · HJO p m

pm.

SyriK'use First C hurth of God
Apple and Scwnd Sts., Pnstor· Rev Da-.,id
Russell. Sunday School an d Won-,hip - 10

Enterprise
Pastor· Arland Kmg. Sunday School 10.30 am ., Wu rshtp · 9.30'"'a rn . Btbh:
Study Wed. 7:30
Flalwoocll
Paswr: Kenh Rader, Su nd ay Scho4JI · 10
a.m.. Worsh ip - II a m.

Pa~tor :

Latter-Day Saints

Hickory Hil\!1 Churd1 uf Chri~l
Ev&lt;tngc hst M1kc Mtlllr~. Sunday Sl·ho1l l l} a m.. Worshtp - Ill a m . 6 10 p.m.
Wcdne sdny Scmccs - 7 p.m .

Central Ousltr
Asbury (Syracuse). Pastor Bob Nohtnwn ,
Sunday S~ h uol - 9.4 ~ it.m . Wur~htp - II
am.. Wedne sday Servicc:s - 7·.' 0 p.m.

a.m.,

Mm1~t cr

Bradford Church of C hrisr
Corner ot St Rt \ 24 &amp; Bradbury RLI .
Mim stc r: Doug Shamlllm. You!h Mmi ster
B1ll Amhcrgcr. Sunday Sellout - '}:1,(1 tu n .
Worship - 8 00 a.m.. 10.30 am .. 7·00
p.m ..WedncMJa) Se- rvices - 7:00 r m.

Pastor: hne Beautc, Sunda)' Sthoul - II
am.. Worship - 10 a.m .. Tuuda) Sci"\I(.'CS
• 7 JOp.m

Oan,.-llle Holiness Church
·' l 057 State Kuute :l25. Langsvlle. Pastor
G~r y Jul"ksnn. Sumtily ~hool - Y·JU am .
Sunday worship - I~ _\() a.m. &amp; 7 p.m..
Wedn ~~ay prayt•r scrv1ce - 7 p.m.

R.:\ ' Lc ~ Strandt and Myra L. Stran dt.

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
';u-~e't-al. ';ilue.e
114 Layne Street
9 Fifth Street
New Haven, WV 25265
Coolville, Ohio
IJ&lt;ImEIS H. Anderson
740-667-3110
LIC9nssd Director Fax:

'

•no

'c on .' -3:4.';-9:1.5 :~ m .. Sun ,\.1asll- !H[)
11 .m .. Dailey Man - K:3(J ~a. m .

Cbun:.h or Jesus Chri!il Apo~~tolk
VanZandt and Ward Rd .. Pastor: Jamts

Homemade DesseJ1s Made Dally

740-949-2210

SA111HDAY

These voung entrepreneurs have apparently had earl~·
Psalm 8
cnmuragemcnt in the work ethic, l11r they alrrady ethibit
enthttsiastic ma rketing initi&lt;ltive. How did thev lea m this concept? Perhaps their
parents havt• shown thrm by example. This could be the first of many steps
10ward a successful futu re.
You sec . as surely as many of these pumpkins will be carved into various and
indclibk cx pr~~sions. we carve om a future for our children through example and
in~tructi on . Unli ke cal\'ing tht pumpkin, where we have only one chance to "get it
nght '". our job ts to ronstantly work toward molding the character of our children .
How im portan t that each famil~ succeeds in the raising of its childre n, for as
journalist. writer. and edut"ation Will Durant bdirvcd ... '"the family is the nucleus
of ci,·ili zation ".
!=ortu natcl y, our greatest help come.) frum our Heavenly Father. We read in
I lohn 3: I. ''See" hat love the Fat her has given us, that we should he called chp dren
of God· and '&gt;O Wt' arc." God will hdp us to shape our dtil~rcn 's future as well as
our 01\11 when we worship as a family each Sabbath. It 's never to soon to begin.

Father in heowen."

LK;ensed Embalmer, Funeral Director
Licensed Pre-Need Insurance
S ectalist

lamt&gt;s4:1 - 17

P~al m

good works and glorify your

Ben H. Ewing

Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6215

"Let your light so shine before
men , that they may see your

740-992-2121
Fax 740-992-2122

Roofing &amp; Building Work

·MONDAY

EWING FUNERAL HOME
106 Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy, OH

Fellowship
Apostolic

Mt. Moriah B&amp;ptisl
Fourth &amp; Main St. , Midd leport, Pu stor:
Rc\' Gilhcrt Cnllg. Jr.. Su nday School 9:30 a. m , Worship - l0.4S a.m.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

•••
'.
'.
.,.''

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, October 31, 2003

Sideline services provide special effects!

Jehovah's Witnesses will be
holding their annual corporate meeting at 9: I0 p.m. on
Nov. 6.

MIDDLEPORT - A missionary service featuring
speaker. the Rev. Jesse
llrl'wer who work s with
Haitian people in Florida.
will be held at 7 p.m . Sunday
at the Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church . 75 Pearl
Street. Mid(lleporl. The public" invited to allend.

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REGION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 31,

2003_

W.Va. senators split on
Lawyer: WVU official offered to
measure to cut carbon dioxide settle football player's assault case:
WASHINGTON (A P) West
Virginia's
two
Democratic senators di vided
their votes as th e Senate
rejected a plai1 to curb global
wa rrn111g.
Senators
voted 55--B
Thursday to defeat a bill cosponsore&lt;.l by Sens. John
McCain. R-AriL .. and Joe
Lieberman , D-Conn .. that
wou ld red uce emissions of
carbon diox ide and other
gree nhouse gases fmm industrial smokestacks.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd. who has
repeatedly critici1.ed the Bush
administration for not doing
~ nough to cut gree nhouse
gases. voted against the hilL
· West Vir~n1i a ·s senior senator said cli tl l&lt;tte change should
be addre"ed as p:1r1 of a
broader energy bi II rather than
by stand-alone leg islation.
West Virginia 's other setwtor. Jay Rockefeller. voted in
favor of th~ bill. call ill~ it a
" .
good compromi .,c.
"Climate change is a global
problem. and while I lvou ld
prefer a remedy. that included
all the countries of the world.
I believe the United Stales has
an obli gation lO he a IWrticipant
in the solution ."
Rockete ller said .
Both supponers cllld opponenls of the mea:-.ure :-.aiJ the y
were happy about the results of
the chamber's first vote on the

votes:· McCain. the Senate
Com merce Committee chairman. said . He called the hill
"a very minimal proposal that
should be a first step" in
address ing climat e change,
and likened the fight to his
struggle fo r the nation 's new
campaign tlnance la w.
:'We ' re not going to win
thts . b~lllc ... ms~de ,, the
Beltw,ty.. McC.un. s,~td. Thts
ts .t refotm propos.tl .tbout the
'bv:1y A n~~m·a condu cts Its
usmess.
Proponents said global
w;mning is a real phenomenon. and tackling it head-on
will help the economy in the
l&lt;lllg run . flut th e Whit e
Ho~ se and Sen . James lnhnfe.
R-Okla .. the hill's hi•"•est
opponent. said the me~~ure
would el iom i nate johs and
drtVe up electricity prices.
"The sc ience underlying
thi s bil l has been repudiated.
tl1c economic costs are Jar wo
high. and the cnv ironmclltal
benefits are nonexistent." said
lnhofc. chair of the Se nate
Environment and Public
Works Committee.
On e of Pre sident Bush's
nr~ l environmental deci~ions
after tak ing office in ~00 1
was to re, erse a campaign
pledge In regulate industrial
carbon diox JLie emis.-. iuns. He
al so withdrew the U.S. from
the Kyo to treaty, which was

The Mc(;ain-Lieberman
bill would have required
indu&gt;trial plant s - but not
auto manufacturecs - to cut
pollution from burning fossil
fuels to.2000 level s by 2010.
It wou ld have done that by
requiring a nationwide cap on
industria l emissions of carbon
dioxide and other gases that
many scientists say are causing the Earth 10 warm up. The
. bill would have Jet companies
trad e so-called pollution
.
ng~~t :_ ,loh co ver plants that
excc c~ l..etr 1unu: ...
Amcttc.tn E!ectnc Power
Co.: the natiOns largest electncuy generating company,
was neutral on the bill . partly
hL'Ctusc the company's carbon
diox ide emissions already fal l
below tl1e cap. the btll. would
impose. said Dale Heydlauff,
a senior vice president of
CllVtrollmc lltal affairs of the
Columbus. Ohio-based utility.
1-leydlauff said the bill
offered a "reasonable cont rol
program" for emissions at a
time when AEP believes
human-caused global warming is a real problem.

·

Fred Krupp. president of
New
York-based
Envtronmental Defense, an
environmental group, said the
vote Thursday was more than
symbolic - and nothing Jess
issue in more lhan six years.
signed in 1997 by Vice tl1an "the beginni ng of a conThe vo te capped a polarized, Pre., ident A I Gore but never gressiona l revolution " on
two-day debate the two spon- rati fied bv the Senate. The global warmin g.
"The poli tics of climate
sors saw as the open ing shot in treaty has 'not ye t been imp lea lengthy eftonto get Congress men ted hecause not enough chant!e have changed from a
boutique issue to a maintn add ress global warming.
. countries have ratified it.
iss ue." he said. "We
stream
The Ja.q time the Semte
Byrd said that the White
voted on the issue \~&lt;t&gt; in Jul y House has misused his 1997 now have the hasis for a win1997. in a 95 -0 vote to reject Senate resolu tion again.st the ntn g hand in the Senate. In the
many of the princip les he hind Kyoto ProtocoL which wou ld history of environmental lawan int c: rn;ttiona l climate tretJty have requ ire d binding green- making.. we gain momentum
lle\.!otiat L:d f i ve month s later hou se cmi ~ sion cuts. He sa id when 1hcse issues leave the
i i) l&lt;yutu. Japan .
his resolu tion was meant to back rooms lor the sunshine
''I' 111 encouraged hy 4:1 gut de rather than kill that clhm. of recorded votes."

Special Metals cuts ·i.nsurance
plan for some retirees
HUN TINGTON,
W.Va. Stee lworkers of America
(AP) - Specia l Metals Corp: Local 40.
will no longer pay medi cal
The Cahe ll Count y Board
claims for abou t 1.000 of Education sent a memo to
ret irees wh o were sal ari ed employees Thursday mging
worke rs.
them to act before the end of
. Tryi ng to emerge fro m ban k- business Friday if th eir spousruptcy protection. Special es want to sw itch coverage to
Me tals is changing ils insur- the board's policy.
an ce cove rages for re tired
Schoo l b'oard spokesman
salaried employees. A U.S. .l edd Flowers said many
Bankruptcy
Court
in spo uses or school employees
Lex in gton. Ky.. last month work or once wo rked for
allowed the company to Speci al Metals .
replace its former insura nce
"There are a lot of folks like
plan for salaried retirees wi th my grandm other who are
one that costs the company less going to Jose her prescripti on
and provides !ewer benefi ts.
benefits,'' Flowers said . "She
A letter sent to more than has ex pensive prescriptions ...
1.000 ret iree.' thi s week by
Specia l Metals is Cabell
Den nis Wan lass, Special Count y's largest manufact\trMe tals' chief operating offi - ing employer. It makes heatcer. said the new plan lakes resistant nickel alloys for the
effect on Saturd ay.
aeros pace and automotive
The plan provides t(Jr conti n- industries.
ued coverage for prescription
The Hunt ington plant has
costs. but costs paid by retirees about 860 employees. and a
wi ll go up signillcantly.
plant in Boyd COLmty, Ky.,
More than 1.000 hourly has anot her 11 6.
retirees are still covered for
Special Met als bought
the time be ing, said Ri ck Huntington-based Inco Alloys
Kingery. preside111 of United Internati onal from !nco Lid .

in 1998. Followi ng several
years of operati ng losses and
unab le to make a payment on
the Joan it had taken to make
the !nco acqui sition, Special
Metals filed for Chapter II.
bankrupt cy protection in
0
March 2002 .
The company had planned to
emerge from bankruptcy protection on Oct. 20, but appeals
llled in the case have delayed
that until at least Nov. 3.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - A West ty's involvement to Jones' lawyer.
Virginia University football official offered a
"The university and the offi.ce of student
student hit with a pool stick by a WVU play- life would never sanction such an action,"
era contract to seule the case out of court, the WVU spokeswoman Becky Lofsiead said .
victim's lawyer and a county prosecutor say.
NCAA rule s prohibit sports program s.
WVU cornerback Adam " Pac Man" Jones, · from providing athletes with benefits other
a 20-year-old sophomore from College Park, students don't receive .
Ga., on Monday received one year's proba·
An NCAA spokeswoman said the organition on a misdemeanor bauery charge stem- zation does not comment on potential or
ming from the August 2002 fight at a ongoing investigations.
Morgantown bar.
WVU's NCAA compliance director, Brad,
Shortly after the fight the victim, Michael Cox , did not . return a phone message .
Sullivan of Medford, Mass., was approached Neither did Kerin , ..whom Poe said is out of
by WVU football admi ni strator Mike Kerin town thi s week.
Fitzwater is hand li ng personal-injury cases
with a settlement contract. Sullivan's lawyer.
Travi s Fitzwater, said Thursday.
for Su lli van and another WVU student.
The contract said Jones would not accept involved in the fight, Richard Borda of East
liability for hi.tting Sullivan but wou ld pay Berlin , Pa.
Sullivan 's medical bills if the case was kept
Jones and sen ior linebacker Leandre
out of criminal court, said Fitzwater. who Washington, 21, or Key West, Fla., originalturned the document over to police.
ly were charged with felony maliciou s.
Michelle DeMasi, a .Monongalia County assau lt against the students.
Jones on Monday pleaded guilty to misdeassistant prosecutor, said the contract was
di scussed at length in Jones' preliminary meanor battery and was sentenced to a year.
of probation and 100 hours of com munity
hearing a year ago.
"It was a piece of evidence we thought was servi ce.
The malicious assau lt charge against
useful in showing who was the aggre,sor" in
the brawl at Dr. John's Lounge, DeMasi said. Washington was dropped after a magistrate
Asked about the contract, Shell y Poe, ruled th ere was no probable cause.
spokeswoman for WVU's athletic depart- Prosecutors then charged him with misde-·
ment , said, "I don ' t think that 's true." She meanorbattery. His trial has been postponed.
referred other questi ons about the uni versi- and a new date has not been set.

Prosecutors to seek life for Berkeley
Co. man in trooper shooting
MARTINSBURG, W.Va.
(AP)- Prosecutors will seek
to put a Berkeley County man
in pri son for life after a jury
found him guilty of 21 out of
a possible 25 counts in an
incident in which he shot a
West Virginia State Police
trooper in the head.
After deliberating for more
than II hours over three days,
jurors found David Euge ne
Munday, 38, of Hedgesville
guilty of tout counts of second-degree attempted murder.
as well as unlawful assault on
a police oftker, Trooper R.J.
" Bobby" Elswi.,k.
Munday shot Elswick and
fired on three other troopers
who were responding to a
domestic di spute on Oct. 10,
2002. Elswick survived and
attended the trial , though neither he nor Munday testified.
Berkeley County Prosecutor
Pamela Games-Neely said she
will seek a life sentence for
Munday under West Virginia's
three-strikes law. Munday has
been convicted of two previous fe lonies, for seconddegree assault and attempting
to kill another police officer.
Berkeley County Circuit
Judge David Sanders set an
initial sentencing date tor Jan.
5. A second jury trial wi II
have to be held for Munday to
be sentenced to lite in prison.

1l1e jUiy of seven women
and five men declined to con. vici Munday of the greater
of
first-degree
charges
attempted murder and malicious assault on a police officer, ruling that he had not acted
with premeditation or malice .
Munday close&lt;.! hi s eyes
and shook hi s head slightly
at one point while hearing
the jury's verdict but ot herwi se showed no emotion.
walked
Games-Neely
strai ght to Elswick and
hu gged him afte r the verdict
was announced.
Elswick, hi s wife, Terri .
and fellow troopers pronounced themselves happy
with the verdic t.
Elswick said Munday got
what he deserved, add ing,
"He can't hurt anybody else."
Munday 's
defense
Iuwyers, Robert Barrat and
Margaret Gordon, did not
comment on the verdic t but
extended their sy mpathy to
Elswick and his famil y.
Munday broke into the
home of Johnny Lambert Jr.

three times that night, when he
threatened Lambert. his wife;
Sandra, and their 14-year-oJd·
daughter. Munday was angry
that Sandra Lumbert had told
Munday's girlfriend to call
police followin g an argu ment
in which Munday alleged lY.
struck the girlfriend.
When State Police arrived
the y were confronted by
Munday, who was told to drop
the weapon bill fired. hitting
Elswick just &lt;tbove the left ear.
Mund ay was found guil ty
of attempted second-degree
murder for trying to kilT
Elsw ick. Senior Trooper
R.C. Copson. Sgt. E.D.
Burnett and Troope r Firs!'
Class J.M. Dropplcman .
1
He was also' found guilt y of
three co unts of burglary, ftve
counts of wanton endanger-.
ment wi th a firearm, two
counts of brandishing · a
firearm , three counts of discharg ing a firearm within 500
!eel of a dwelling, one count
of destruction of property, one
count of assault and one count
of fleei ng from police on fool .

anet R. Li
Chester

,.ldfor. bylhet~~ndld•te, CLERK
470i5

Do yon have adoctor
yon cu call for the
·little things~
'.

AROUND. THE WORLD
U.S. and Iraqi ·officials blame 'forei n fighters' for ,
attacks ·in .lraq but some comman ers aren't so sure::

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 31,

·'

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) U.S. and Iraqi officials are
pointing at shadowy "foreign
fighter:s" for the upsurge in violence m Iraq , but commamjers ·
on the . ground say they are
uncertam what role, if any, such
figures play. Senior officers
have carefully avoided tying
recent attacks to al-Qaida.
The difference in interpretation suggests llncertai nt y in
senior ranks of the American
establishment about the
nature
of
the
threat.
Commanders don' t know if
they are fighting a nationally
coordi nated insurgency or
.... regional foes united only by
their desire to drive the
Americans from Iraqi soi L
Gathering intelligence has
proven difficult in a complex
society of religious, ethn ic and
tribal riva lries, where governmen! records were burned or
stolen in the looting that fo llowed the collapse of Saddam
Husse in 's regime in April.. .
There have been few claims
of responsibility for any attacks
except for a couple of grai ny
videotapes. Th~ best clues have
come !rom interrogating suspects - difficult to authent icate - or from forensic evidence, such as that which pointed to the use of powerful plastic
explosives in vehicle·bombings
this week in Baghdad.
A senior U.S. counterterrorism
official said Thursday that use of

those explosives, which the offi- remains a mystery.
cia! said were traced to a manu- . "We believe'there is in fact
facturer outside Iraq, pointed to a foreign fighter element," Lt.
possible al-Qaida involvement. Gen . Ricardo Sanchez, comU.S. forces have seized mande'r of U.S. force s, told
large caches of plastic explo- reporters Oct. 2. "There is a
sives among the munitions terrorist element focused on
believed left over from the coalition and international
Saddam 's rule, indicating that community in general and the
they co uld have come from Iraqi people to try to di srupt
undetected Iraqi supplies.
the progress being made ."
On
Thursday,
U.S.
However, Sanchez to ld
Undersecretary of Stale John reporters on Oct. 22 - three
Bolton told the British days before th e missile anack
Broadcasting Corp .. that U.S . · on the AI-Rasheed Hotel commanders believe "ele- that "we don't have any conof
the firmed ai-Qaida operatives in
mems
previous ... regime"
have custody at this point."
linked up with "international
The New York Times, citi ng
terrorists" to strike at U.S. and unidenti lled senior oftlcials,
coalition force s.
also reported on its Web site
Bolton added · the attacks Thursday night that U.S. offi"demonstrated to many Iraqis that cials believe Saddam himself
they. are being used by ai-Qaida may be playing a signilloant
and other terrorist groups ..."
role in coordinating and directReferences to attacks in ing attacks by his loyalists.
Baghdad and the name alSome commanders have
Qaida suggest a link •wit h openly expressed skepticism
Osama bin Laden's terror net- about any intlux of foreign
work. That link resonates fighters.
among Americans scarred by
Brig.
Gen .
Martin
the Sept. II. 200 I, attacks but Dempsey, the commander of
increasingly skeptical of the the Ist Armored Division that
U.S. ro le in Iraq .
con trols
Baghdad ,
told
However, senior American reporters Sund ay that "we
oftlcers in Iraq have carefu lly have not seen any infus ion of
avoided foc using on al-Qaida. foreig n fighters." .
They believe some foreign
"We haven't seen them
fighte rs may be involved in yet," Maj. Gen. Maj Gen. Ray
the in surgency, along with Odierno, commander of the
Saddam loyalists. But th e 4th Infan try Divi sion based in
number of foreign fighters Tikrit, said of foreign fighters.

"We continue to look for that loyalists are working together to information on the organizafight Am~:ri can s here.
lion appe,ars to have come from
every day.''
However, the link between rival Kurdi sh groups with Close
Before the war, Saddam and
his top lieutenants claimed Ansar al-lslam and foreigners i&gt; ties to the United SUite,_
Ansar al-lslam. or "Helper'
they were recruiting forei gn· not altogether clear. Mo;,t memers to tight the Americans and bers of Ansar al- lslam are of hlam ." wu' formed in
even arranged a visit by believed to be.lraqi Kurds, !&gt;Ome northern ·Iraq in 2000 and
reporters to a training camp of whom may have LJ"Jined in "epped up it' acti \ itics the
Afghanistan with ai-Qaida.
followin g year.
near Baghdad in March .
U.S.
ofticiab.
have
alleged
.
An ,a r\ leader 'ince 2001.
Most of the recruits at the
ca mp wore beards, chanted that An sar al- lslam offered Najm al -Din Faraj AhnwJ. is
slogans glorifying holy )Nar, safe haven to Abu Mu;,aab al · an itinerant r~li~ious teacher
voiced deep hatred for America Zarqawi , a Jordanian sought hettcr known " a' Mullab
and said they would seek mar- in the assassination of a U.S. Krebr. He li\cs in Nu rv. a).
diplomat in Jordan . A ke y where he has hc·ld refugee sta tyrdom on the battlctield.
The volunteers said they Ansar figure , A.'o Hawleri. tu' 'ince llJlJI.
known
as
Asad
Kr ekur. " ho opposed
came from Algeria, Libya. also
Muhammad
Ha,an.
report
ed
ly
Saddam
and ha' denied
Tuni sia. Egypt , Syril!._ and
Saudi Arabia. Journali stsl and was captured in the non hern link\ with bin Laden. say'
Iraqi civilians spoke of seeing Iraqi city ofMosulthis month . hi s l '. S · hackcJ ri1·ah in
In the weeks leading to the Kurdi ,h -domina tcu north~rn
non-Iraqi Arabs fighting
war.
Ansar al-l slam was n' t Iraq ha' e tried to link him to
alongside Fedayeen troops in
Baghdad, but many of them even on the U.S. Iist of terrorist Sad J am and htn Laden lu
were believed to have tled Iraq organizations. Much of the dil'cred it him .
after the regime collapsed.
In Washington. a senior
defense official told reporters
Wednesday that a link had been
found between Saddam supporters and foreign lighters.
The oftlcial said on conditi on of anonymity that two
members of the Islamic
extremist group Ansar allslam told interrogators that
lzzat Ibrahim al-Douri , No. 6
on th e li st of 55 most wanted
Iraqis. was coordinating
.
attacks wi th fore igners.
The official described the
repon as the tirst solid indication
that foreign fighters and Saddam

Coming Thursday...

"G})faceJ ffJ ~ f?
~J) ffJ Jf;JfJ ••

Israeli leader expresses willingness to .
negot~te ' with new Palestinian prime minister
JERUSALEM (AP)
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon expressed a wi llingness to negotiate with the new
Palestinian prime mini ster,
but U.S. officials sa id the
Palestinians first must dismantle terror organization s.
Sharon, speaking Thursday at
an economic forum in Tel Aviv,
said he believes "we are on the
verge of a new opportunity to
bring about quiet and peace." ,
Sharon bl amed Palestinian
reluctance for the absence of a
top-level dialogue between
the two sides.
"The ' reason we don't have
prime mini sterial level contacts stems from the fact that
Palestinians have requested
time to allow the destgnated
Palestinian prime minister to
establish him self," Sharon
said. "We are ready to enter
negotiations at any time ."
Israel previously indicated
it would not talk with the new
Palestinian government led
by Ahmed Qureia because
th at Cabinet was too closely
associated with Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat.
The implementation of the
"road map" peace plan, which
was drafted by the United
States. Russia, th e United
Nations and the European
Union and presented in June,
has bogged down in violence
d ff rt t fo m a stable
an e. ? s 0 r
Palesttm~n go vernment..
Sharon s com~e~ts came a
day after Qureta smd he has a
!Wo-stage str~tegy for achtevmg a cease-hre. endmg three
year~ of Mtdea.st viOlence.
Qureta w~nts to ftrs.t ~egou~~e
a truce wtth Palesuman mth·
tants and then ask Israel to
sign on. ·
Any new truce would
replace one that collapsed in
the summer. On June 29, the
main Palestinian militan'!
groups declared a unilateral

" ..

' . '·.•

..,,,

., ;., '

'

halt to attacks agai nst Israeli s. Defense
Sec retary Paul
But six weeks later, there was Woltowitz - the Pentagon 's
a new wave of militant sui- No. 2 official - pmi sed an
cide bombings and Israel i alternati ve peace plan drawn
military operations.
up by a prominent Palestinian
Israe l has been cool to th e moderate and the former head
idea of a new truce, demand- of Israel's secret service.
ing
instead
that
the
Israeli Adm. Ami Ayalon
Palestinians crack down on and Palestinian professor Sari
the violent groups and disarm Nusseibeh claim to have colthem, as required by the peace lected I00,000 Israeli and
plan, · which aims at .e nding 60,000 Palestinian signatures
v10le~c~ and creatmg a in three months.
Palesuman state by 2005.
Their petition call s for
Russia, meanwhile, intra- Israel to withdraw to the bardu ced a resolution asking the ders it had · before the 1967
U.N . Secunty Coun ctl to ·war, when it captured the
endorse the peace plan. But West Bank and Gaza Strip .
U.S. deputy ambassador The document calls for . a
James Cunmngham smd the demilitarized Palestinian state
timing wasn' t right .. citing the in those territories.
absence of a Palesttman govIn a lecture ·at Georgetown
ernment that can Implement University, Wolfowitz said the
the peace plan.
petition's principles "look very
Q~reta lead ~ an emergency much like" the Bush adminisCabtnet appomted by Arafat tration 's " Wad map" to a
Wtth a . one-month mandate peaceful, two-state s(llution.
that exptres Nov. 4. Arafat has
Al so Thursday, officials
asked Qureta to form a full said an Israeli co urt ordered a
Cabtnet by then, but Qure1a U.N. age ncy to pay a landlord
has been unable to do so, part - hundreds of thou sands of dolly because of senous dts- Iars in back re nt on a fiveagreements with Arafat.
story Jerusalem building the
, Israel and the Umted States agency seized 51 years ago.
~e boycotting Arafat, chargThe U.N. Truce Supervision
mg t~at_ he ts mvolved m Organization occupied the
Palesttman terron sm.
build ing after the 1948
.~~ New York ..on Thursday: Mideast war because it overnattonal
secunty . advtset look ed the cease-fi re• line
Condolee.~za Rice satd.the roa~ between Jordan and Israel.
map was afactofJX?httcal life.
Landlord' Paul Siraganian.
"It ts the most rehable gutde who now li ves in Bethesda,
to achieving the objective or Md., questioned why UNTSO
two states living side by side," still needed the property since
she said at the U.S. govern- the cease-fire line was erased
ment's foreign press center.
by a 1967 war and peace was
For the plan to work, Ri ce declared in 1994. said his
said, the new Palestinian gov- law yer, Jonathan Kuuab.
ernment needs to ensure that
In recent years. UNTSO paid
"terrori sm is being fo ught, $2,460 per month for the building.
terrori st infrastructures are
The Jeru salem District
bei ng dismantled and the Court ordered UNTSO to pay
Palestinian leadership has $25,000 a month in bac k rent
control of its security forces." for seven years and then leave
Retlecting Washington 's the premises, Kuttab sa id .
frustration , U.S. Dep uty
Israel' s attorney general
·
,.---'--r=-~========91

cited U.N. immunity in asking
the co urt to reconsider. said
Justice Ministry spokesman
Jacob Galant i.
The court said it will not
rule before the parties try to
negotiate a·settlement.

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Falls The
Time to plant
shrubs, trees &amp; bulbs

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Heroes
On 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
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worker for 33 years.
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NATION
Researchers make vaccine- Mountain res.ort still threatened
by Southern California wildfire~
evading mousepox virus,
igniting scientific debate

The Daily Sentinel

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)A research team backed by a
fed~ra l grant has created a
ge n~ti cally
engineered
mousepox virus designed to
evade vacc ines, underscoring
biotechnology's deadly potential and stirri ng debate over
whether such research plays
into the hands of terrorists.
The
team
at
the
University of St. Louis, led
by Mark Buller, created the
superbug to figure out how
to defeat it, a key goal of
the gove rnment 's anti-terrorism plan.
· The researchers designed
it two-drug cocktail that
promises to defeat their
exceptionally peadly virus.
They hope to publi sh their
work soon in a peer review
journal.
· ·'The whole focu s was to
contribute to the biodefense
age nda of the country. "
Buller said.
:Buller spliced a ge ne
known to suppress the
immune system into the
Li1ousepox virus, then inject·
. ed the combined strand into
vaccinated n1ice. All of
them died.
Mousepox can 't be passed
to humans, but it's a close
relative to smallpox , making
it an ideal virus to study in
animal s.
The research high! ights a
contentiou s
discuss ion
among sc ientists and securi ty experts: Does publication
of such work help or hinder
the
biodefense
effort?
Should such studies be conducted at all?
·In response to heightened
s~c urity concerns, many
sc ientific journals have censored studies with national
sec urity implication s. When

Friday, October 31,

Buller presented his results
last week at an international
biodefense confqence , it
prompted debate.
Some feared that publication of such information regardless of whether sci enli sts' intentions are altrui sti.c - cou ld heip terrorists
create biological weapons
laced with genetically modified superbugs. Such germs
are created by spli cing
drug -resistant genes in
vi ru ses normall y defeated
by vaccines.
"I n the Sov iet Union .
.there was some researc h try ing to develop genetically
engineered smallpox," said
Ken Alibek , a former top
scientist in the Soviet biologica l weapons program
who came .to the United
States in 1992. " It wasn't
very success ful , but now
with all the new advances in
technology. know that it ' s
pretty much obvious that it
can be done."
Alibek. a director of
Georgc Mason University's
National
Center
for
Biode fense ,
believe s
Buller 's work and similar
research should be confidential to impede terroris ts
and rog ue natio ns from
acquirin g knowledge about
ge netically
engineered '
bioweapons.
Buller counters that publicizing such work will
deter terrori sts by showing
that sc ienti sts can build
defen ses again st souped-up
bioweapons. Buller al so
believes scientists must
genetically
engineer
pathoge ns to understand
how to defeat them.
"A ll thi s is out there,"
Bull er said of bioweapons

research. "There are cookbooks easily attainable on
how to make thi s stuff." Buller said hi s work replicated a nearly 3-year-old
Australian study, which the
scientific community continues to debate.
In that stud y, sCie ntists
try ing to beat back an over·
abunda nce of mice in
Australi a spliced a single
foreig n gene into a typ ica lly
mild mou sepox virus in
hopes of creati ng a genetica ll y engi neered sterility
treatment. In stead . they created a mousepox strain so
powerful that i~ killed even
tho se
mice
inoculated
against the virus.
Buller's team improved
upon the Australian acc id~nt. said Larry Kerr of the
White House Office of
Science and Technology
Policy.
"They did a more thorough
analysi s," Kerr said. "It 's
more sub stanti ve and it went
a step further: They developed a counter measure ."
Bull er said infected mice
recove red when tre ated
with a combination of antiviral dru gs, providing hope
that a trea tment .against
geneti ca ll y
engineered
smallpox cou ld be devel-'
oped.
Smallpox
hi storically
kills about a third of its vic tims and can be tran smitted
from person to person,
unlike anthrax and other
biological weapons.
Smallpox has plagued
human s for centuries. and
it 's believed to have killee\.
more people than all wars
and epidemics combined.
Death typically follow s
massive hemorrhaging.

BIG BEAR LAKE, Calif.
(AP) - In the mountains
northeast of Los Angeles, a few
hardy residents dangled garden
hoses from roofs and ,waited
nervously · to see if flame s
would swarm over a ridge and
. claim the last sizable town still
threatened · by Southern
California's' deadly wildfires.
. Seven fires still burned in
lour counttes. H?wever, the
4 resort h~gh up tn the San
Bernardino National Forest
was the only maJor commumty
s_till threatened after a wtek of
hres that have k1lled 20 people.
destroyed 2,817 homes and
burned nearly 750,000 acres.
. Cooler weather helped
ftreft~hters make progress
else" here Thursday but the
sudden 'Yeather .change
proved a mtxed blesstng here
- bnngmg htgher humtdtty
but also ~ gusung wmd that
fanFned flameds. .
h
og· move
mto
t
areah
h
&lt;I Fn'day ,es h'
overmg t an
tg
was ex ected to be a chill
44, wit~ a chance of snow b~
ni hthll ·but winds could
slill ~st '10 31 mph.
Ke1Iy Bragdon bellied up to
.the bar at the Log Cabin
Restaurant on Thursday night,
sipping a beer and watching
television news reports of
flame.s bl azing through the
forest'lessthan !Omilesaway.
While some 15,000 people
in the area chose to heed warnings and flee , Bragdon and a
few others chose to stay and
waich over their property. .
During the day. tumbleweeds and trash bags tossed
across
empty
roads.
Firefighters du g in and cut
lines the width of I0 bulldozers through the forest in
an effort to head off !lames
that had burned some 350
homes in Cedar Glen near
Lake Arrowhead.
Officials worried that the
blaze - which at times moved
a quarter-mile a minute, by one
firelighter's account - could

Jo Ann Willford
John H. Smith
John Hoback
Joppa Church - Reedsville
Don Mayer
Judy Williams
Donna J. Braun
Joyce Bunch
Doris Jackson
Judith A. King
Dorothy Davis
Judy A. Pape
Ab1unclant Grace Church
Douglas D. Hunter, M.D.
Alice Wamsley
Julie Campbell
Douglas W. Little
Alpha Iota Master Sorority ·
Karen Walker
Duane &amp; Betty Longenette
Kathy Johnson
American legion Auxiliary
E. Dean Barnitz
Kay Graham
Anita G. Hamm
Eastern local School District
Larry &amp; Linda Hudson
Ann M. Sisson
Asbury United Methodist Church Edison Baker
Lawrence Eblin
Edna Parsons
Leafy Chasteen
· - Syracuse
Edward Chapman
Auto Zone
Lebanon Township Trustees
Eleanor &amp; James Thomas
Avis Harrison
Lee Lee
Elizabeth Willford
Barbara K. Davis
Leland Parker
Leo &amp; Belinda Wellington ·
Bedford Township Trustees
Ellen Johnson
Enterprise
United
Methodist
Beth Shaver
Letart Township Trustees
Bethany Church
Women
Linda Hudson
Ewing Funeral Home
Bill &amp; Donna Nease
Linda McTurney
Faith Gospel Church - Reedsville linda R. Warner
Birchfield Funeral Home
Falcon Design and Marketing
Blanche Edwards
Loretta K. Hill
Faye Watson
Bob Buck
Local Emergency Planning
Boy Scout Troop 249 - Pomeroy Fisher Funeral Home
Commission "LEPC"
Forest Run United Methodist
Brenda Barnhart
Lori J. Duffy
Brenda Jinks
Church
Luella Jean Thomas
Frances l. Wood
Bruce &amp; Joan May
Lula Toban
Frances Reed
Bruce R. Fisher
M. Thomas Dooley
Frank &amp; Anna Ryther
Candle Creations
Margaret I. Yost
Frank Bobo
Car Care Doctors, Inc.
Margaret J. Crane
Frederick Pullins
Carl &amp; Janet Morris
Margaret West
Gallia-Jackson Meigs Board of
Carla Carter
Margarite Teaford
Alcohol Drug Addiction and
Carroll Norris
Margie J. Lawson, DDS
Mental Health Services
Charles &amp; Ellen Rile
Mark &amp; Teresa Davis
Gallia-Meigs Comm~nity Action
Charles "Sonny" Gloeckner
Mark Sutton
Gar Haggy '
' Mark's Auto Sales
Chris Tenaglia
Gary Walker
Cintra L. Winebrenner
Marlene Harrison
Gene Hudson
Clark's Jewelry Store
Martha L King
George Wright
Clyde Sayre
Martha Lou Beegle
Grace Johnson
Columbia Township Trustees
Marvin T. Hill
Harold H. Kneen
Columbia Volunteer Fire
Mary Alice Bise
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Department
Mary Ann Shoults
Heart of the Valley Head Start
Court Street Grill
Mary E. Ball
Heath United Methodist Church Mary Knopp
Cremeens Fuheral Home
Hilda Stotts
D.V. Weber Construction
Mary McAngus
Home &amp; Garden Desinees
Dale &amp; Kathryn Hart
Mary Powell
Howard Robinson
Dan &amp; Donna Jean Smith
. Mary Price
Howard Russell
Dana Johnson
Maxine Little
Jack &amp; Joan Sorden
David &amp; Michaela Kucsma
Meigs Co. Elderly Housing Board
James G. Mourning, CPA
David W. Fox
Meigs Co. Republican Party
James l. Mash
Dean Wiblin Jr.
Meigs County Chamber of
James Richmond'
Deborah Gilmore
Commerce
Jane Abbott
Deborah Mohler
Meigs County Commissioners
Jean Wrigtit
Delma Karr
Meigs County Council on Aging.
Jeff &amp; Valerie Nottingham
Diana Windon
Inc. Board of Trustees
Jennifer Hoback
Meigs County Democratic Party
Diane Lewis
Jennifer L Sheets
Diane Lynch
Meigs County EMS
Jenny Cleek
Dixie Sayre
Meigs County Health Department
Jim Fry
Dohrman &amp; Phyllis Reed
· Meigs Family Eyecare, LLC

"

..

sweep over the ridge and engulf
the lakeside community of
Fawnskin and the rest of theBig Bear Valley.
Craig Brewster owns the
Robin hood Resort hotel just
off Big Bear Lake . He stayed
in town and opened up his
place for fifefighters. ·
Brewster said Halloween
night usually brings about
4,500 people to the shoplined streets of the village off
Big Bear Boulevard .
Brewster said he was
packed and ready to go if the
fire blows into town.
"We could go in five minutes," Brewster said. "Who
knows, if the wi nds change it
could come right at us."
"It 's unpredictable. We' re
not out of the woods yet," said
Dana VanLuven, tire chief in
neighboring Big Bear City.
At the same time, plans
were bein g considered on
how to eventually re turn
.
·
refugees I? thetr homes.
"We're m the sttuatmn now
where we need to start preparing fo~ a return." VanLuven
satd. · Bnngmg these people
back up can be JUSt as compl!;
cated as gettm ~ them do~n.
Meanwhtle m San Otego
County, motst atr helped firefighters battlmg the Cedar Ftre
near Juhan, a popu lar weekend getaway renowned tor tts
vineyards and apple orchards.
The tire "is linally showin~
some stgn of wmdmg down,
San Diego County Sheriff Bill

2003

Kolender satd. Authonlles
hoped they soon could begm
allowmg more rest dents to
return to check on thetr ~omes.
The Cedar Ftre ts the
large st mdtv~dual blaze m
Cahforma h1 story at 272,318
acres. ec li psing the 1932
Matilaja Fire in Ventura
County that burned 220.000
acres, st~te officials sa~d .
In Juhan, many fi~ftghters
wore black lxutds on thetr badges
in memory of a colleague who
wa~ killed Wednesday.
"We have a somber mood
and we need to be somber, but
it's time to move ahead," incident
commander
John
Hawkins told liretighters. "Get
your chin up and move out." .
In Escondtdo, hundreds of
mourners gathered for a
memorial service for Ash leigh
Roach , a 16-year-old who
died Sunday while trying to
escape from tlames that
destroyed her f anu·1y·s· home.
Ab ·
1
ood
.
agptr,e payer st . outstde the C~tfomta Center tor the
Arts, where her flower-draped
~htte casket wa&gt; escorted by
h~fighters and law enforcement
ofhcers. Hc.r 20-y,'~ar-old stster,
Allyson, was .se' erely bwned
while escapmg the Par~dtse Ftre
and remwned hospttahzed m
cnucal condtttop.
_
. In all , nearly 13.000 lireftghters a~d s~ pport personnel were ftghtmg what Gov.
Gray Davis said may be the
worst and costli est_dt saster
California has ever laced.

For
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

Meigs Local School District
Melanie Weese. O.D.
Middleport Department Store
Middleport Village Council
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
Monica Freeman
Mr. &amp; Mrs John T. Wolle
Myrtis Kay's Beauty Salon
Naomi K. King
Norma Torres
Norman &amp; Jean Wood
Norman McCain
Olive Township Trust~es
Olive Township Volunteer Fire
Department
Opal Diddle
Ora Bass
Orange Township Trustees
Oscar T. Smith
Paige Cleek
Paul Beegle
Paul Harris
Peggy Stout
Pentecostal Ass)mbly - Racine
· PERI1174
Phyllis McMillan
Pomeroy Auxiliary 2 t_71
Pomeroy Gun Club
Pomeroy United Methodist.Church .
Rachael Hupp
Racheal Lefebra
Racine American legion 11602
Racine Area Community
Organization (RACO)
Racine Church of Christ
Racine Fire·Department
Racine United Methodist Church
Racine United Methodist Men
Racine United Methodist Women
Randy &amp; Darla Hawley
Raymond &amp; Susan Oliver
Rebecca Ann Baer
Reed's Store
Reedsville United Methodist Chur.ch
Reedsville United Methodist Women
·Rev. Robert Robinson
Rick Collins ·
Rita Radford
Riverbend Arts Council
Riverview Garden Club - Reedsville
Robert &amp; Edna Wood
Robert &amp; Frances Alkire
Robert Butcher
Robert C. &amp; Etta Mae Hill
Robert Grueser
Rocksprings United Methodist
Church
Rocksprings United Methodist
Church Women
Roger &amp; Diana Coates
Roger A. Ritchie

'

Meigs County
Council o~ Aging, Inc.
P.O. Box 722·112 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH 45769

. 740·992·2161
0 . Lefebre

Rutland Bottle Gas
Rutland Church of Christ
Rutland Department Store
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
Rutland Service Center
Rutland United Methodist Church
Rutland Village Council
Rutland Volunteer Fire Department
S. Ray Karr
Sacred Heart Church
Salem Township Fire Department
Salem Township Trustees
Sampson &amp; Carol Hall
Sara R. Dill
Scipio Township Trustees
Shannon Slavin
Southern Local School District
Star Grange #77B
Steve Burton
Sutton Township Trustees
Swingin' Seniors Dance Team
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Tammy Queen
Ted Hatfield
The Craft Shack
The long Bottom Community
Association
The Maples
The Meigs County Retired Teachers
Assoc.
The Sonshine Circle - Dorcas
The Vaughan Agency
Thelma Jeffers
Theresa Marcinko
Teresa Stewart
Thomas J. Martin
Thomas-Do-lt-Rental Center
Tom Reed
Vicki &amp; Perk Ault
Victor &amp; Alice Wcille
Village of Racine
Wanda Vining
Wayne Roush
Weaving Stitches
Wildwood Garden Club
William H. King
William Heeter
William Middleswarth
WJOS Television

INSIDE
WVU faces UCF,.Page B~
Rio Grande Basketball prevlewa, page B4
Marshall take.a on Akron, Page BS
Scoreboard, Page B6

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
•

Friday, October 31, 2003

2008 Super
Bowl to be held
in Arizona
CHICAGO (APl - Arizona
was awarded the 2008 Super
Bowl by a vote of NFL owners Thursday.
The Phoenix area beat out
Tampa and Washington, D.C.,
and will host its second Super
BowL The 1996 game was
played in Tempe, Ariz., where
Dallas beat Pittsburgh .
The 2008 game wil l be
played in a new stad ium in
Gle ndale, Ariz., curren tl y
under construction.
Commissioner
Paul
Tagliabue had championed a
proposal to hold the 2008
game in either Washington or
the New York area. The New
Jersey Meadowlands cou ld
not put together a satisfactory
bid in time, and the owners
preferred a warmer climate by
choosing Arizona.
The Meadowlands plans to
bid for the 2009 game. No
outdoor Super Bowl ever has
been held in a cold-weather
city.

Pronger goes
from Columbus
to Vancouver
VANCOUVER,
Briti sh
Col umbia (AP)
The
Columbu s Blue Jac kets traded
forward Sean Pranger to the
Vancouver Canucks on
Thursday for minor league
forward Zenith Komarniski .
Pranger. the older brother of
St. Louis defenseman and
2000 NHL MVP · Chris
Pranger, will join AHL dub
Manitoba .
Sean Pronger had seven
goals and six assists in 78
games with the Blue Jackets
last season. He had two goals
and seven penalty minutes in
seven games with AHL team
Syracuse this season.
The 6-foot-3, 210-pound
Pranger has 58 points and !55
penalty minutes in 257 career
NHL games.
Komamiski , a left wing,
didn 't register a point and had
35 pen alty minutes in I0
games for Manitoba this season.

Eastern falls in regional semifinals
BY BRAD SHERMAN

sports@ mydailytrlbune :com
LANCASTER - For the
second strai ght season ,
Easte rn fai led to get past
the round of 16.
Thi s year it was Adena
that ended the Lady
Eagles' season and did so
with an explanation mark
T hursday
night
at
Lancaster High School. ·
The th ird-ranked Lady
Warriors won convincingly 15-1 and 15-0 to
adva nce to Sat urday's
Division IV Reg ional
chan1p ionship where they
will lace Ce nterburg. The
winner will advance to the
State tournament nex t
week at Wright State
University in Dayton.
In it s five total tournament games. undefeated
. Adena has give n up a total
of just five points. It
improved it s perfect overall mark to 26-0.
Eastern ends the 2003
campaign with a very good
20- 4 record.
After the match, a somewhat stunned Eastern
coac h Howie Ca ldwell
summed up the lo ss well
with . a sin gle word Hwow."

Ca ldw ell talked 'about
what hi s team needs to do
in order to take that nex t
step.
" If we are go ing to that
nex t leve l - get with the

Cenlerburg s,
Adenas,
Wellsvi lles and so- forth we have got to get to team camps and individual
camps," he explained .
"You c~n tell they ' ve put
in a lot more work than
what we did.
" I know the girb are
embarrassed. I 'm very
embarrassed. We just didn' t play tonight."
Eastern simply had problem s handling Adena's
corps of hitters and didn't
hit th e ball well itself. The
Lady Eag les comb ined for
just seven ki ll s the entire
match.
Kass Lodwick scored tile
lone point for Eastern, that
co ming in game one. She .
and
teammate
Katie
Robertson also had a pair
of kills and blocks each to
pace the team .
Jennifer Hayman had
four blocks and Alyssa
Holter hand ed out five
assi sts to lead the Lad v
Eagles.
Eric~ Zurme hly was the
leadi ng point scorer for the
winners with I0. Amanda
Kinnamon had a · game hi gh seve n kill s wh il e
Ashley Sowers and Katie
Roush added six ap iece.
Eastern will be hard hit
by graduation, lose eight
se niors from thi s year's
Di strict and TVC -Hocki ng
championship squad.
They 've got a lot to be
Please see Eastern, B:S

Smith speech boosts Jirsa's first coaching clinic

Pruett: QB to
meet with Ala.
surgeons
HUNTINGTON ,
W.Va.
(AP) - Marshall quarterback
Stan Hill will meet with doctors in Alabama next week to
have hi s troublesome knee
examined, coach Bob Pruett
said Thursday.
Pruett refuted media reports
that the quar1erback would
have surgery on his left knee
as soon as Monday and miss at
least three weeks. The coach
said that decision won't come
until Hill's appointment with
surgeons in Birmingham, Ala.
He said Hill won't play
Saturday· against Akron .
Earlier this week, Hill
expressed hope of coming off
the bench in that game.
"We've cleared him out for
thi s week," Pruett said. "We're
anticipating possible surgery.
We'll go from there with it. His
status will be determined"
after that consultation, he said.
Graham Gochneaur wi II
start at quarterback for the
Herd
(5-3, . 3-1
Mid·
American).
Hill first sprained the knee
against Tennessee on Sept. 6
and missed two games. He reinjured it last weekend at
Western Michigan.

Attention prep
football coaches
· Area high school football
coaches are reminded to send
in their nominees for the alldis.trict football teams by 5
p.m., Nov. 5.
Nominees, along with their
2003 slats, can be e-mailed to
sports@mydailytribune.com,
or. faxed to 446-3008 . You
may also call them in after 6
p.m. to 446-2342, ext. 33, or
drop them ·off at our
G.allipolis office on Third ·
Ave.
·

Morgan Webber (22) calls off teammates as the Junior goes up to bump the ball during the Lady
Eagles regional sem ifin al loss to Adena. (Brad Sherman )
·

Kentucky basketball coach Tubby Smith speaks to a room full
of coaches Thursday, Oct. 30, 2003, during a coaches clinic
at Marshall University in Huntington , W.Va . (AP Photo/ The
Herald-Dis patch , Jeff Gentner)

HUNTINGTON .
W.Va.
(AP) - Focusing on basic
basketball techniques wi l.l
bring success. University . of
Kentucky coach Tubby Smith
said Thursday at Marshall's
lirst coaches clinic.
"You got to have basic fundamentals. and if you don 't do
those things then your team
doesn't win championships."
Smith told the group of high
school coaches durinQ a
catered dinner at the Cam
Henderson Center.
Smith said coaches today
need to form strong bonds with·
their players so that when
times get tough. the players
won't jump ship.
Smith. who in a 12-vear
career has accumulated Io"seasons with at least 20 wins and
a 288- 109 record. said he still
applies to his teams lessons he
learned growi ng up on a
Maryland ltmn with 17 brothers and sisters.
Attendees watched a spec tal

Georgia ami a!\ hi~ a.'~i~tanl al

Marshall pra.:tice where new
coach Ron Jirsa demonstrated
techniques and drills.
Coaches weren't the· onl y
ones who enjoyed Smith's
appc;amnce.
"It's a good oppm1 li1111Y tn
le&lt;Ull from one of the best
coaches in the wuntry." junior
Marshall guard A.W. Hamilton
said. "I want to coach after I
get out of &lt;:ollege. so it \ just a
great oppo11u nit y for u~. ··
The clin ic i' the brainchi ld
of Jirsa. M•u·shall 's first-year
coach who served "' a"ociate
head coach under Smith at

Tukt.
"We' re \'Cf)' close. and it's
spec·ial to me for him to leave
pmctice at UK and fly down
here on a small plane :md real], ~ ~' t' our clinic a 'lhOI in the
~n~ ... Jirsa said.
Smith said Jin.a has helped
him ewr since he was a graduate student.
"I'm just gi·\'ing &gt;amething
hac·k hecau&gt;e of all the things
he has done for me over the
ye,u-,." Smith said. "Whenever
you· re sl&lt;U1ing out as a new
.:oa.:h. you need support."
TI1e Thundering Herd and
the Wildcats will face off on
Dec I. Smith said if will be a
tou~h challenge since he and
Jirsa h&lt;l\·e similar mach ing
stvles.
-.. 11 \ li.ke kissing your sister
or something," Smi th said .
"He'l l know e \'erything about
us. and we don't know anv•
th111g about his team. But we' ll
lim(nul some things."

James scores 21 as Cavs lose to Suns
BY Boa

BAUM

Associatf!.d Press
PHOENIX (AP) - The
NBA's future was showcased
Thursday night, and 20-year·
old . Amare Stoudemire and
the Phoenix Suns came away
with a 95-86 victory over ISyear-old LeBron Jan1es and
the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Stoudemire, last season's
rookie of the year, scored 25
points - including a pair of
three-point plays in a 10-3
fourth-quarter run - ·and
grabbed eight rebounds.
James, with an array of
· soaring dunks, hanging bank
shots, leaping rebounds and
slick passes, flirted with a
triple-double with 21 points,
12 rebounds and eight
assists, but had seven
turnovers.
The 18-year-old sensation
had just one turnover in 42
minutes in his 25-point NBA
debut in Sacramento on
Wednesday night.
Stephan Marbury scored
24 for the Suns, including a
25-foot 3-pointer as the shot
clock expired to . give the
Suns an 89-82 lead with 3:46
remaining. · Clevel!lnd never
was closer than five points

thereafter.
Stoudemire's steal and
three-point play put Phoenix
up 79-75 with 8:22 to pl ay,
then he capped the run with
another three-point play that
made it 84-78 with 6:40
remaining.
Ricky Davis scored 22
points for the Cavs on 9-for23 shooting . Carlos Boozer
had II points and IS
rebounds.
Shawn Marion had 15
points and II rebounds for
Phoenix.
James, on the court for 41
minutes, made eight of 17
shots - 1-for-3 in the fourth
quarter when the Suns pulled
away.
Cleveland led 7 3-72 to
start the fourth, and was up
75-74 on Boozer's dunk with
8:51 remaining. Marion's 8footer with 8:39 to go put
Phoenix up for good 76· 75 .
He was fouled on the play
but missed the free throw,
one of Phoenix's 38 trips to
the line.
'
Turnovers and free throws
doomed Cleveland. The
Cavs
committed
24
turnovers, to 15 for the Suns.
The Suns were 27 -of-38 at
the line, while the Cavs were
only 7-for-12.

Marbury's three-point play
ignited a 9-2 run that gave
the Suns a 49-41 lead on
Stoudemire's
two
free
throws with 2:53 to go in the
half. James scored six consecutive points. starting wi th
a rousing slam through traffic. as the Cavs cut it to 4946 with I :49 to go in the hal f..
But the youngster threw
the ball away twice in the
final mjnutc, and PhoeniJ~
held a 53-49 lead at the
break.
Phoeni x made just four of
20 shots in the third quarter
but still trailed only by one
points going into the fourth.
Notes: James got a mix of
boos and cheers when he was
introduced before the game.
... James had six points, three
rebounds and four assists in
the
first
quarter..
...
Cleveland wraps up its season-opening road trip . at .
Portland on Saturday night.
... By special permission
from the NBA, the Suns
wore their new orange jerseys, which are their alternate road uniforms. ·
Stoudemire was 11-for-14 at
the line .... Stoudemire had Cleveland Cavaliers guard ~e Bron James, center, drives to the
I0 points and fouled out in basket between Phoenix Suns . d.efenders Amare Stoudemire,
left, and Stephan Marbury, right, in the fourth quarter
hi's NBA debut last season.
Thursday. in Phoenix. (AP)

'

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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Friday, October 31, 2003

www. mydailysentinel.com

WVU's Wilson looks for fo.urth straight 100-yard game
MORGAN TOWN. W. V&lt;~ . (APl Cent ral Florida had 10 look pas t its
'tuple of ru nni ng backs to emulate
the punis hing style of West
Virginia'' Qui ncy Wilson, givi ng
tight end Mic hael Gaines the ball on
its seoul team during practice th is
week.
In a month \ span, Wilson has
gone fro m bei ng down on hi s luck to ·
p l&lt;~ y in g with a mission. He' ll be
lookin g for hi s fourth straight lOUyard game Saturda y when West
Virginia (3-4) meets Central Florida
13-5) at Mountaineer Field.
·"It just seems like everything's
clicking. The holes are getting bigger and bigger," Wilson said.
·He ran for a season-high 178 yards
against Virginia Tech last week after
gaining 177 the week before against
Rutgers . A similar performance this
time would give Wilson, who has
,S I0 yards so far, more than be had

all of last y,ear.
"A whole lot of people didn ' t
know about him before the ·season,
but a lot of people are knowing
about him now," said West Virginia
coach Rich Rodri guez.
That widening reputation as a hard
runner received a boost late in the
fourth quarter of a close loss at No.
2 Miami on national TV on Oct. 2.
Wil son took a screen pass from
Rasheed Marshall , juked one Miami
defender behind the line of scrim111age. broke a tackle and then ·
bowled over and jumped over safety
Brandon Meriweather at the 10. The
33-yard touchdown gave the
Mountaineers a 20-191ead.
The 215-pound Wilson earned the
team 's weekly Hammer Award that
week and picked up the ~ arne honor
against Virginia Tech for bowling
over opponents.
"That's sort of my style, to run

hard," Wilson said . "People still
want to hit me high. A lot of people
are learning you 've got to go low.
But for the people who don' t know.
I try to make them pay for it."
Like the Mountaineers, who have
come back from a 1-4 start, Wil son
has turned around a season that hit
one of its low points in a loss to
Cincinnati in the third game. Wil son
fumbled three times and gained only
39 yards on 18 carries.
"It was more a sense of urgency.
The season was starting tO go south,
and we still had a lot of great games
left on our schedule," Wilson said.
"There 's no next year for the
seniors. So we've just got to go out
there and play kind of possessed."
Central Florida's best shot at
answerin~ the bruising Wilson and
winning ns first road game of the
season rests with a bruised Ryan
Schneider.
·

He's completing 70 percent of his
passes and set school records against
Division J-AA Florida Atlantic earli er this season with 37 completions
for 497 yards. He's had 25 completions in two straight games.
" He's got a big-league arm, What
I saw on film definitely verified
everything J' ve heard," said West
Virginia's Brian King, who had two
interception s last week against
Virginia Tech.
Schneider's downfall : He 's
t~ ro wn three interceptions on three
different occasions and has 14 thi s
season .
"I think some of the interceptions
that have been blamed on him were
the result of him trying to take on
too much and trying to make things
happen when it really isn ' t there,"
said Central Florida coach Mike
Kruczek .
Schneider missed two games and

NHL Roundup

played in others wi th a sore passing
shoulder, including last week's
blowout win over Central Michigan .
He didn 't take snaps with the first
team in practice thi s week until
Wednesday.
•
"I think he's probably the key not
just to their otlense but their entire '
team," Rodri guez said. "They've
had success when he 's in there and ·
they've struggled when he wasn't." ·
With three wins still needed in its
fmal five games to become bowl eli- '
~ible , West Virginia is taking noth- .
mg
for granted . But
the :
Mountaineers al so know the differ- '
ence in the opposition's .talent from
week to week , and some players ·
aren' t counting on an uprising from ·
the Golden Knights.
·
"A team like Central Florida, it's'
not really what they can do to us. It's ·
what we can do to ourselves," King
said.

Athletes testify before grand jury probing THG and lab
BY

RoB

GLOUSTER

Associated Press

SAN FRANC ISCO - Two
U.S . track and tield champions were among the first
group of athlete s to '!]Jpear on
the 17th tloor of the federa l
courthouse, which has turned
into a meeting place for some
nf the nation 's top sports
stars.
Shot putter Kevin Toth and
I ,500-meter runner Regina
Jacobs were among four track
and fi eld. athletes testify ing
Thursday before a gra nd jury
probi ng a California lab that
supp li es so me top athletes
w'ilh nutritional supp lement s.
The grand jury eve ntuall y
expects to hear from baseball
player.s such as Barry Bonds
anU Jason Gi·arnbi , several

NFL players and boxer Shane
Mosley.
:Jacobs and Toth ha ve been
cos tumers of the Bay Area
Luboratory Co-Operative, or
BALCO, wh ich is the target
or the probe. Both also have
l&lt;:sted positive for the new
designer steroid THG that has
been linked to BALCO.
:"Regina was here. She did
npthing wrong," attorney
Doug las Schwartz said after
.

'

Jacobs had completed her
al'ternoon testimony. "I r~ally
feel sorry for these athletes,
th ey ' ve
really
because
become the victims here."
An appearance before the
grand jury, or being subpoenaed to testify. does not imply
any of the athletes is a target
of the probe. Federal officials
have refused to • discuss the
scope of the grand jury or its
secret proceedings.
But a source familiar with
Thursday's daylong proceeding said the athletes were
asked whether they had taken
THG or the endurance-boosting hormone EPO.
- The source, who requested
anonymity, said the athletes
were asked whether they had
obtained THG or EPO from
BALCO. An attorney for
Victor Conte, BALCO's
founder, has said his client is
the target of the grand jury
probe and is innocent of any
wrongdoing.
The source also said the
athletes were asked whether
they had knowingly purchased
steroids
From
BALCO, or whether they
though t they were buying
legal nu tritional supplements.
"Did you meet Conte?" the
source said the athletes were

asked . "Did he tell you to be
quiet?"
Jacobs and Toth were
among four U.S. athletes who
tested positive for THG at the
U.S. track and field cham piunships in June at Stanford,
accordi ng to another source
close to the investigation 1vho
spoke to The Associated
Press on Thursday on condition of anonymity.
Jacobs
and
Schwartz
refused to comment Thursday
when asked outside the grand
jury room whether she had
tested positive for THO at
that meet. Jacobs, 40, won
her 12th national outdoor title
in the I ,500 at Stanford.
Toth, who has the longest
throw in the world this year
and won his first national title
in June.• would not comment
after h1s grand Jury appearance.
BALCO was raided by the
Internal Revenue Service and
local
drug
agents
in
September. Conte also has
been accused by the U.S.
Anti-Doping Agency of supplying athletes with the
des igner steroid tetrahydrogestrinone, or THO.
Conte also was fingered by
British
sprinter
Dwain
Chambers, who admits he

tested positive for THG during an out-of-competition test
Aug.
I
in
Germany.
Chambers said through an
attorney that he was assured
by Conte the supplements he
was give n were within international rules.
Authorities in track and
fi eld , and other sports, have
begun retesting samples for
THG since the discovery of
the previously undetectable
, steroid. The U.S. Food and
Drug Administration on
Tuesday declared THG an
illegal drug.
EPO, or erythropoietin,
boosts endurance by stimulating the production of oxygencarrying red blood cells in the
body. A banned substance,
EPO is considered among the
most abused drugs in sports.
Meanwhile, the United
States could lose its I ,600meter relay gold medal from
this summer's world track
and field champio nships due
to a second drug violation by

Calvin Harrison, the sport's
top anti -doping official said
Thursday.
Harrison tested positive for
the stimulant modafinil at the
U.S. track championships in
June . In 1993, Harrison tested
positive for the stimu lant
pseudoephedrine at the U.S .
junior indoor championships
and .was suspended for three
months.
The penalty for a second
offense for a mild stimulant is
a two-year ban .' Arne
Ljungqvist, medical commis~i J;::t

II

'

B;v RICK

make their pitche s. Retired California.
Associated Press
Gen. Tommy Franks · was in
Also Thursday, owners
'
Tampa 's corner and D.C. voted 30-2•·against reopening
;CHICAGO
went to bat with former Sen. the 1925 files and perhaps
c,omm iss ion er
Paul Fred Thompson.
awarding the NFL title that
Tugliabue's best guess is the
But Arizona, with a stadi- year to the Pottsville (Pa.)
n)ajoril y of NFL owners will urn shaped like a barrel cac- Maroons. The Maroons were
w~mt to keep instant replay tu s
and
feat uring
a disqualified from champid~spite recent critici sm from retra.ctable roof ;md a grass-( onship consideration by
B&gt;a ltimore coach
Brian playmg surtace that can be league president Joe Carr for
EJ:illick.
rolled up. won out. The new playing an unauthorized
;"They think, three-quarters facility, . a ~ublic- private exhibition game against a
team
in
or more of the cl ubs will partnership 111 suburban non-NFL
1hink il 's an importa nt tool in Glendale, IS under construe- Philadelphia.
·Iarms of offic iating in the lion and scheduled for comThe Chicago Cardinals
g ~me , "
Tagliabue said , pleuon 111 2006.
were awarded the title, even
a~mitting he ca n' t predict
It will be Arizona's second though they lost to the
the outcome when video Sup~r Bowl. Sun Devil Maroons in a game that was ·
roview is put to a VOle in Stadium ill Tempe hosted the billed as the championship.
March.
1996 game between the Pennsyl va nia officials have
;On the final day of the · Cow boys and Steelers.
stated their case on behalf of
NFL's
fall
meeting
"It 's going to be architec- the Maroons.
Thursday, Tagliabue was turall y significant and I think
The NFL and the Hall of
s(rong .in hi s opinion when that's important we make Fame did give the city some
a1ked about Billick's com- that stamp as well~" Arizona recognition Thursday, if not
ments.
G~v. Janet Napolitano said the title from 78 years ago.
:After two challenged calls ot the new stadtum.
.
They . named the city of
;;lent agai nst his team in a
Of course the weather did- Pottsville the winner of the
victory over Denver las t n't hurt. No cold weather Daniel Reeves
Pioneer
Sunday, Billick had see n city without adome has ever Award and will present it to
eilough .
hosted ~ Super Bowl.
.
com munity repre sentatives
:"I quit. 1 give up," Billick
Washmgton
Redskms 111 August at Canton, Ohio.
s4id . "I've tried to be an owner Dan Snyder vowed to
Eagles owner Jeffr~y Lurie
advocate for instant replay. try aga m.
and Steelers owner Dan
l~ve tried to do the company
"We are disappointed, but Rooney voted for opening
line. I've said the right we have learned many the 1925 files.
important things while p.ur·
t..,.1mgs.
•"League, I' m sorry. Dump suing the 2008 game,"
· it:"
Snyder said in a statement. * * • * * * * * * * t
:Tagliabuc said Bi1JJ.£1s's "We know the District of
cOmments were a "direct and Columbia,
Virginia , *
severe violation of our rules Maryland and a wide variety
STEPHEN X..
a9out criticizing officiating of public and 'governmental 0*
publici¥."
entities can band together to
*
:"I think what Brian Billick present a unified bid."
0
s~id about replay was into!Tagliabue said he hopes by *
TOWNSHIP
erable,
unacceptable, March to have a timeline to 0
uncalled for and he should give owners on the progress *
b~ f
d" T ,. b
·d of a new or renovated stadiAA.B. Business Mgt
. " me '
ag Ia ue sal ' urn in Los· Anaeles that could
adding he didn't know if that
*
U.S.A.F. Veteran
W&lt;luld happen.
lure a team . e also s·aid the
Member O.C.S.EA
:Earlier Thursday, Arizona league could look at ·giving
Member Shade River *
b~at
out Tampa and financial help to · the
Washington, D.C. for the Chargers should they need it
Lodge #453
2()o8 Super Bowl.
because of the· difficulties
Pd fOf by C•ndidalt. 33938 Buhan
Road, Lon1 Bonom, OH
:Tampa and Washington and rescheduling caused by
rl)lled out some big names to the fires in Southern

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u
Candidate For
u
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AGRICULTURE

.·Tagliabue says Billick's
~eplay comments out of line

sion chief of the International
Association of Athletics
Federations,
told
The ·
Associated Press on Thursday ·
that Harrison shou ld not have
been eligible for thi s summer's world meet and could ·
be retroactively disqualified.
Harrison ran the opening
leg in the relay final in
France. The other runners
were Tyree Washington,
Derrick Brew and Jerome
Young, who is engulfed in
controversy over a failed drug
test in 1999.

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,

BOSTON
Manny
Ramirez make s so much
money that even the biggest
spenders in baseball don't
want him .
The Boston Red " Sox
placed him on irrevocable
waivers Wednesday, and
teams have until I p.m. EST
Friday to claim the slugging
left fielder.
If he's claimed, Boston
would get nothing in return
but would unload the con tract, the second-richest in
baseball hi story. If he isn't
claimed, he would remain
with the Red Sox.
The New York Yankees'
payroll of $ 164 million _
not inc ludin g postseason
and award bonuses is the
highest in the major ieagues,
but they have no interest in
claiming Ramirez, a top
baseball executive familiar
with the team's plans said
Thursday on the condition
of anonymity.
Ramirez .has five years
and $101.5 million remaining on a $160 million , eightyear contract, and would get
an extra $1 million if he
switches teams. He is scheduled to make $20.5 million
next season.
That price leave s few
teams in a financial position
to claim him and pay the
entire amount. It also could
hurt Boston's ability to keep
some of its other stars who
can become free agents after
next ·season _ pitchers Pedro
Martinez and Derek Lowe,
shortstop
·
Nomar
Garciaparra, catcher Jason
Varitek. and right . fielder
Trot Nixon.
The Red Sox refused to
confirm that Ramirez was
placed on waivers. Clubs
often place many of their
players on waivers to gauge
other teams' interest and to
lay the groundwork for
trades.
"We're not permitted to

from Page81

a ·CLERK

I

BY HOWARD ULMAN
Associated Press

Eastern

ELECT

(

in ove r a yea r and Steve
Shi elds made 30 saves a,
Florida snapped Ott awa·,
four-g ame winnin g streak.
Ritchie ·e nded a 36-ga me
drou ght with an una" i.sted
goal 7: 1ti into the third peri od . Florida J e fen ~e man
Mike Van Ryn tied it earl ier
in the period with a powerplay s oal.
Oll1 Jokin en scored a
man-adVantage goal in the
first for the Panther,.
Marian Hossa and Vaclav
Yarada scored for Ottawa.
Devils 3., Flyers 2
EAST RUTHERFORD .
N.J . (AP) - Mike Rupp
scored hi s sen m&lt;l go al of
the game with 8:43 to play
and New Jersey won for the
first time at home thi ' season .
Scotr Stevens set ~p the
game-winner and scored the
other goal as the Devil s rallied from a 2-0 defic it to
win for the first time in fi ve
game s
(1 -3- 11
at
Continental Airlines Arena .
Martin Brodeur fa~ed only
one ·shot in the third period
and finished wi .th 16 ' ave,.
Tony Amante and Simon

Tie Domi. Tom Fitzgerald
and Tomas Kaberle scored
fo r the Maple Leafs. who
lost the ir seco nd stra ight
game .
Chri s Drury scored hi s
secqnd goal in three games
and Taylor Pyatt was credited with an empty-net goal
for Buffalo.
Canadiens J, Bruins 0,
OT
BOSTON (APJ Joe
Juneau ended Montreal 's
drought of over three games
without a goal when he
scored I :39 into overtime .
The Canadien s had not
scored
sin ce
Saturday
again st Ottawa, a span of
199 minutes, 25 seconds.
Jose Theodore earned hi s
third .shutout of the season ,
saves for
making 21
Montreal. He denied Brian
Rolston on a breakaway
with 9:38 remaining in the
game .
Fe lix Potvin. who shut out
the Canadiens on Tuesday,
allowed on ly his second
goa l i.[l thre'e games .
Panthers 3, Senators 2
OTTAWA (AP ) - Byron
Ritchie scored his first goa l

Gagne 'cored f!Jr the Flyer,,
who had a three -g am e
un beaten 'treak snappet.l 120- 1J.
Wild 3, Thrashers 2
ST. PAUL. Mi nn . 1API · Andrew Bru nette and Filip
Kuba e a~h had a power-pia)
g&lt;wl and an a" i't a'
Minne,ota beat Atl an ta.
Mann y Fer nand ez ma&lt;le
2 1 ,ave\ and ' ur vived a !u rious ra ll y by Atlan ta in th~
fin al mi nu te . We, Wal t
added a goa l as anot he r
powe r play was ex piri ng .
Pascal Dupui s had a pa ir
of as"i"t&gt; for the Wild .
Franti se k Kaberle and ll ya
Kovalchuk 'cured for the
Thra, her, . Atl anta . off I&lt;~ it'
best ' tart , failed I n get at
least o ne point fur j u' t the
second time in I0 gam e' I52-2- 1).
Kovalchuk leads the NHL
with II goa l&gt;.
Predators 5, Red Wings
3
NASHVILLE. Tenn . 1AP1
- Greg John son sco red two
of Nashv, lle' ' th ree \econdperiod goal ,. and Mare k
Zidlick y added three a" iqs
as th e Predators helu off

De troit.
Na,hvillc\ fir\ t wi n over
Detroit in more than a year
' Poiled Cu rt i\ Jo,e ph 's sea'on debut iri goal for the
Re&lt;l Wing\ . He ; topped 19
\ h&lt; ~ S.

In lhe third. Detroi t got
powe r play goals from Steve ·
Yt erman a;Jt.l Brett Hull .
Penguins I, Black hawks
0
CHI CAGO IAP J - · Marc And re Fle ury stopped 20
' hob for ht&gt; fi rs t NHL
' hu tout. an d Konstantin
Kols tu1· \Co red hi s firs.t
ca reer goa l as Pitt sburgh
beat C hicago .
Pit hb urgh wo n fo r ju stthe
\Ccon&lt;l li me thi ' ' cason (24- 31 and ' napped it s fo ur
game
winle"
streak .
Chi cago·,
five-ga me
unbea te n
streak
was
snapped .
Start ing on co nsecut ive
nig ht\ fo r the first time th is
'ea,o n. ihe 18-vear-o ld .
Fl e ur) loo ked ' harp' and was
he,l ped
by
&lt;1
stin gy
Pi tt'bu rgh defen se.
Mi c hael
Leighton .
Chic ago·, backup goal tender. mat.le 18 \ ave,.

No takers likely for Manny Ramirez

'

•
•

game-tying power-pl ay goa l
early in the third pen od as
unbeaten Tampa B~ y tied
San Jose . .
The Lightnin g (6-0- 1)
were bidding to become just
the ninth NHL team to start
the. season with seven ~on ­
secutive wins.
Tampa
Bay 's
Pavel
Kubina had a goal a nd an
assi st. Nikolai Khabibulin
preserved tie by stopping
Ni Is Ekman on a breakaway
durin~ the final minute of
overtime.
,
Wayne
Primeau
and
Patrick Marleau scored for
San Jose, 0-3-4 in its last
seven games.
Sabres 5, Maple Leafs 3
BUFFALO , N.Y. (AP) Miroslav Satan scored his
200th career goa l with the
Sabres and added an assist
to lead Buffalo past Toronto.
Alexei Zhitnik and Ales
Kotalik each had a goal and
an ass ist as Buffalo won for
the fourth time in five
games. Buffalo registered a
season -high IS shots on
goa l in the second period
whi le holding Toronto tu
just five .

comment on waiver issues,"
team
pre sident
Larry
·Lucchino sa id Thursday
through hi s assistant.
The move, first reported
by The New York Times and
Boston Herald, was con firmed Thursday to the AP
by the baseball executive.
Ca ll s to Ramirez's agent,
Jeff Moorad, and Red Sox
ge neral
manager
Theo
Epstein were not returned .
"W hen· you put a player
through waivers. you 're let tin g teams know they don't
want anyt hing in return,"
said. Scott Boras, a prominent agent who negotiated
Alex Rodriguez's $252 million , I 0-vear contract with
Texas. Rami rez was placed on
waivers two days after the
Red Sox anno un ced they
would not exercise their
option to bring back manager Grady Little. The Red
Sox made it to the seveRth
game of the AL championship series and led the
Yankees 5-2 with one out in
the bottom of the eighth .
Little left Martinez in the
game; and New York tied it
with three runs in the eighth
then won on Aaron Boone's
homer
in
the
lith .
Afterward, Little was criticized severely by fans and
new spaper columni sts for
stic king with Martinez.
In 12 pluyofl games, five
against Oakland and seven
against New York . Ramirez
hit .265.
He signed as a free agen t
with Boston on Dec. 13,
2000, and John Hen ry' s
group bought the team in
February 2002.
Ramirez spent seven seasons with Cleveland then hit
.306, .349 and .325 over the
next three years with

Boston. He led the AL in
batti ng in 2002 and was second to teammate Bill
Mueller's .326 in 2003. He
has Ill homers and 336
RBis wi th the Re&lt;l .Sox .
"Thi s club inherited this
conlract. Their analys is
must consider someth in g
other than hi s performance
o n the field," Boras said.
"When you look at his onthe-field performance, I
think he's performing at a
very high level. Obvwusly.
the club mu st have other
factors in their decision. "
In 2003, Ramirez led the
AL wit h a .427 on-base percen tage and 28 intentional
walks, outstanding numbers
for a team like Boston that
places special emp,hasi s on a
player's abi lity to get on
base. He also had 37 homers
and 104 RBi s.
Ramirez is a diligent student of hitting, often analyzing video studying tapes of
himself at the plate . But he
is an average. often noncha·
!ant fielder who lacks hustle
on the basepath s. The Red
Sox would have plenty of
hitting without him since
they set a major-league
record last season with a
.49 1 sluggi ng percentage.
They also would lose
some of hi s quirks .
He was benched by Little
late in the 2003 season after
he missed a crucial series
agai nst the Yankees with a
sore throat and fever, yet got
to~ether with New York
inlielder Enrique Wilson to
reminisce about their days
in Cleveland .
Then Ramirez didn't show
up for an appointment with
the team doctor, ani:! when
he joined the club the next
day he sat on the bench but
said he was "too weak" to

10. OFF ' .

CHESTER

••

NEW YORK (AP) - Petr
Nedved scored the Rangers'
first power-play goal of the
season, snapping a secondperiod tie and sending New
York to a 4- 1 victory
Thursday ni~ht over the
Carolina Humcanes.
Anson Carter and Jamie
Lundmark each scored their
first goal of the season , and
Mark Messier added one for
the Rangers. Mike Dunham
turned aside 29 shots for
New York, 5-0-1 against the
Hurricanes in the last six
meetings.
The Rangers were the last
NHL team to score a powerplay goal , failing 32 straight
times in the first seven-plus
games.
Josef Vasicek
scored
Carolina's only goal. Kevin
Weekes,
who
posted
shutouts in his previous two
games, made 22 saves but
lost for the first time in six
starts.
Carolina had its six-game
unbeaten streak snapped ( 20-4).
Sharks 2, Lightning 2
TAMPA , Fla. (AP) Dave Andreychuk scored a

~

CARSON

·'

Power play goal sends.Rangers past.Car61ina

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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Friday, October 31, 2003

'

proud of," Caldwell said of
his team's accomplishments
this season. "They can shed
some tears inside , they can
be embarrassed inside, but
once they come outside (the
locker room), I want them
to come in with their heads
up. They 've accomplished a
lot." ·
Eastern wi II lose seniors
Lodwick,
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Holter, Tia Pratt, Brandy
Bissell, Rachel Elliot, Stacy
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And in a game at Yankee
Stadium
in September.
Ramirez tossed the ball into
the stands after making a
nice catch. thinking there
were three .outs when there

were onl y two.
Ramirct. w a~ ~ i [Z n c J ;t" a
free age nt by forn1e r Bos ton
general
manager
Da n
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He al'o i' still owed $5
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�Page B4 •

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 31, 2003

www .mydai1ysentinel.com

Univ.ersity of Rio Grande Basketball2003 Previews

Redwomen look to improve
Redmen reloading on
offense after key losses and return to postseason

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytri bune .com
5TA~F REPORT

Hornuckle (2.9 PPG. ) and
Simpson (5.9 PPG.) will be
counted on to carrv heavier
RIO GRANDE - Til is sea- loads this season. The Redmen have two key
son\ edt11on of the Umverslly players returning from last
of Rill Grande Redmen basket- yetu·'s injury list in guard Cain
balll~am will he Without some Vandall (Huntinaton WV) and
. ~&lt;um!.'~r laces that brought a lot . fellow junior. Sean' Plummer
of fuepower to . the court. (Portmore Jamaica). Both
Gone from a season ago are Plummer 'and Vandall were
· Randru· Luts, Chns Ballenger members of Rio's 200 1 NAJA
and Jerry Barlow. That 111 Final Four team and are being
helped _lead the Redmen to a counted on to give the Redmen
pmr ol tnps to the NAIA
I'd · ·
·
·
D · · ·
II
N' · I a so 1 lllS!de/ouls!de sconng
!VISIOn
anon a punch
Tournament . during the _last
A is~ returning is athletic torthree years (IIKiudmg a Fmal ward Dawayne Mcintosh
~our appearance m 200 1land (Philadelphia. PA). Mcintosh
l~r~nl y, establi~lled
RIO will join Plummer and sopho(JI&lt;~nde s poSII!on d S one ot the more Re .
W'll '·
elite teams in the NAIA.
ggle
I 1.1mson
(Columbus,
OHJ,
who
gamed
- · h
Tl1e Rcd me n 11m s ec1 1ast
·
1
.
11
. d ,
lh . va uable cxpcnence last sea'edson --- 14
. .In "on e sun, as the low post threats for
Amencan M1deas1
Conference the Re·'
· M 1 t h1 d
•. tournament.
end'mg 1he season in 6 7umen.
po·111 t. c nos. .ossed
: in Point Lookout, MO at the
. :
s per game an
· NAIA D' .· ·
N·
·
.
.
Will
111m
son
averaged 3-.2
·
"\S\On 11 . ,\Ilona 1 (Joints (Jer contest.
.
: Tournament. The R1o Grande
.,..
h'
f't' .11 h
d.111. .
•OP newcomers 1or the
·
coac mg sta WI ave a
,_ Redmen are Bowlin&lt;&gt; Gr n
:cu lt task replacmg the talented sophomore transfe~ ~~s
· ;lflo thm represented the he1111 Wilson (Huntinoton wv)
·;and soul ol the squad.
, who will make a~ im'mediate
. Retummg tram last seasons 1·1npacl . t 111 p . t , ·d
.
· AMC'
't
. ,
. a e 0111 gu&lt;t1 (JOSI ,.
.
.
ournamcnt tion.
Wilson was hiohiy
- bh. h
d d
·
. Champlol!Sh!p
. . ~ . . Ssquall
, h D Wi, ll... be
regar e commg ou 1 o1 1g
. 1one se n1o1. et
eerlie 1c1 h 1 H . 11 be . . d b
· IHuntin~lnn . . WV), J·unior se_ttt&gt;O ·B edwt H JOI(!Mle Y
· . . ..
.
nn v ran on ess
ount
sw mgn~an Mall S1mpson Vernon, OH) at the point.
I Reeds11lle, OH l. and sopho- R d ·h. t f ·h ,
J
more
guard
Cedric
e s If res m.tn eromy
Hornliu ·kle (Dunbar WV) DIShman (Ceredo. WV) 1s a
· th e 1eam ,s· 1ead'mg· tremendous. shooter
Dee11-te lcJ 1s
. With great
scorer &lt;1mong the returning · u nde;~tandmg ~~Ill~ g~mc and
players ( 10 PPG .) and accord- s lou give e e_ men a
inn to Rio Grande Head Coach strong pen mete! thre,u. .6-7
· o ,
.
post man Jarrod H·unes
Earl r!1omas. he 1s the leader (Lee b
OH) . b k •1.1 ·
of
the
03-04
group.
s urg.
IS ac a er a
sports@ myda1lytribune.com

°

1

year aw;_1y from the gu me and
will give the Redmen some
needed bulk in the paint.
Rounding out the squad are
guard Rashad Cooper (Toledo.
OH;. who made great strides
after being promoted from the
junior varsity team at mid-season last year and TraVone
Whatley (Copley, OH ), a transfer from Tiffin. Both players
provide depth and more offensive lirepower off the bench.
Once again. Thomas has put
together an extremely dil'tlcult
nnn-mnference scheuule ' to
prepare hi s troops for the
rugged AMC. The schedule
features games ~1gainst national
po\'vers such as Taylor, (rate&lt;.!
No. 7 in the NAJA Division II
pre-season poll) Huntington
(IN), INo. 22) King .. (No 26)
Grace and Lindsev Wil son
(No.5 in. NAIAD I jJoil).
All of those games take
place in November and the
coaching staff is hopin g that
the stiff competition will prepare the Rcdmcnto compete in
another ve ry strong AMC.
While Cedarville (No.3),
Shawnee State (No. 14) and
Ohio Dominican appear to be
the teams to beat in the South
DivisiiHI, ThtHnas thinks the
overall balance or the conrere.nce is as strum:! as it has ever
been.
•
The Redmen will also face
NAIA D II Pre-season'No. 21
and defending AMC North
Division champion St. Vincent
at the Newt Oliver Arena,
January 3.
Rio opens with Taylor at the
Geneva College. November 7.

RIO GRANDE - Th e
200 3-04 ve rsiqn of th e
Uni ve rsity of Rio . Grande
Redwomen basketball team
is looking forwa rd to vast
improveme nt over
la st
year's di sappointing 13- 18
se ason that
saw
th e
Redwomen fai I to ma ke th e
pust-seasqn for the first
time in head coach David
Smalley's tenure.
Smalley en te rs his 12th
season on th e sidelines.
three victorie s shy of 250
for his caree r. He has a
so lid nu cleus or retu rnin g
players and ha s added depth
in both th e frontcourt and
bm:kcou rl.
Among the returnin g l)layers. only one. Annie Tucker,
is a senior. Tucker (Wayn e.
WV) has been a productive
player for three seasons and
Smalley will rely heavi ly on
her to provide le adership in
2003-04. She averaged 8.4
points and 5.1 rebound s per
game last season . A trio of
juniors, Alkia Fount ain
(Col umbus. OH ). Tiffany
John so n (Columbus , OH)
and Angel Allen (Beckley,
WV ) are the top returnin g
scorers trorn a season ago.

All three players aventged
double figures and will need
to duplicate those performance s thi s yea r for th e
Redwomen to hove su ccess.
Roundin g out the return ing group of pi ayers for th e
Redwomen includes sophomores
Tana
Ri chey
(B edford. OH), Cynthia
Ward (B idwell , OH), jessica

Worwe ll
(Warrensville (L!Ure lville,
OH)
anc'
Heig hts. OHl and Jill Kendall Re ed (Ch illicothe
Mangion.e (C irclev ille . OH ). OH).
Al l pl aye d important ro les
Th e frontcourt has radi las l seaso n and wi ll ne ed to ca ll v change d as well.
step up produc·tion ito 03-04. Jami e K1n g (Lorain , OH ),
The newco mers arc manv. Nicole DePugh (Waverly ,
as Small ey has brou ght ii1. OH) Candace Ferguson
arguabl y. hi s be " rec ruiting ilrunton, OH) and Bridget
class. Sophomore tra iJSfers Harder (Pa triot. OH) all lop
Tirfa11 ie Hage r (Bidwell. six-fee t and 5-9 Crystal
(Chillicothe.
OH) and M &lt;~ r c ia Smoot McClo skey
(Grove City. OH) lei1d th e OH)
will
give
the
group.
Redwomen
plenty
o·
Hager. a local produ ct, weapons in the paint.
return s home aft er pl;lyi ng
As always, Smalley will
on e season at Kent Stale and put his team to the test with
at 6-4 wilt make the land- a tou gh sc hedule , that
scape under th e bask et vast -· inc ludes Union (KY) and
ly different fr&lt;'"l last sea- Beth el (TN). ranked No. 20
son. Smoot is a transfer in the pre -season NAJA
from Ohio L! niversi ty that Division II poll. on the non will make th e ba ckco ur t conference portion as well
much more dan~erou s. She as the American Mideast
hecom es eligible se cond Conference South Division
semester.
slate . wh ic h will once again
Pattv Mohorcic (Parma be one of th e tou ghest in. the
He ighi s. OHi. a 5- 11 red- nation . Cedan·i ll c is No.5
shirt fr es hm an will don the in the · pre-season poll ,
un iform this yea r after sit- Sh aw nee State is ranked
lin g LHII
la st season . I Oth and Ohio Dominican is
Mohorcic. a lefthander. has 2:1rd.
11 wealth of talent that the
Rio Grande opens the sea
Redwomcn will be re ady to son on the road at Carlo\\ .
unlea sh.
November R. Th e hom ·
The remainder of the ros - opener is November I I ver
ter i.s made up of true fre sh- sus Midwa y Co llege .
rne n. so me ot which will
Also. thi s season, the Rio
make up the newly formed Grande women 's program
junior v11rsity program . The will emb11rk on a new venrookies are led by 5-9 gu11rd lure. A junior varsity proLauren Fox I Morrow. OH). gra m has been implementShe will prnvide immediate cd. \\ hi ch wi ll allow the
help on th e perimeter. 5-5 Red \1ome n to build a feeder
guard Carlesha Chambers syqcm to benefit the varsitColumbus. OH) is a shut- ty. Second-year assistant
down defender with super coach and for mer Rio guard
quicks . Other newcomers in Andreu Jon es will head up
the backco urt are Ra es hawn the JV t C~i lll.
Terry (Clev eland, OH).
Hcmher
Rhoads

Freshman QB one snap away from playing
BY JoEov McCREARY

Associated Press

HUNTINGTON , WVa. Stan Hill accomplished it
la st year. and Graham
Gochneaur did it in an atl ention-MCt ling way last month.
Jimmy Skinner thinks he's
capab le of stepping in at
LJUarterback and winning an
'importanl
game
fo r
Marshall. too _ but he 's not
counting on havin g tQ prove

i.t Saturday against Akron .
With Guch11eaur replacing
Hill in the Thundering Herd
l:ineup, Skinn e r ha s bee n
elevated from carefree redshirt freshman In top hack up .
"I feel bad for Stan goi ng
down . ... He's worked hi s
butt off," Skinner sa id. ''But
I'm one play away .... I'm
ju st the re to back up
Graham . I don 't think any t.hin g's goin g 10 happ en.
He's going to play well , and
th e te am's goin g to play
well . I'm JUst read y ... in
case he needs me ."
. ·Marshall 's backu p qtlarterbacks histori cally have
won emergency starts in big
games.
Hi ll replaced an injured
Byron
Leftwich · last
November ai'ld beat Miami
of Ohio. And Gochneaur
.started in place of Hill and
·led Marshall to a surprising
' win over then-No. 6 Kansas
State last month .
"I have the same· opportunity, and I think I can do the
. sam~ thing they did . last year
.and thi s year," Skinner said .
Skinner, a redshirt fres h-

'i}

man from Chillicothe. Ohio.
emerecl fall prac tice competing for the No. 3 quarterback slot with Adam Black.
When Black was diagnosed
with an 1nner ear ailment
thai seve rel y affected hi s
balance. ·Skinner secured the
No. 3 position.
Skinner took about five
snaps during the win over
Western Michi g;ui but ha s
yet to throw a pass in a
ga me He has been receiving
lirll!led
work
behind
Gochneaur with Mars hall 's
startin g offense this week.
Freshman Bernard Morris is
the Herd's third quarterback
this week.
"!immy hasn' t had very
many game reps, but ne1ther
did I coming into thi s sea son, so thlll really can't tell
you anything," Gochneaur
said . "If somethin g was to
happen to me . I'm sure
Jimmy would step in and
.pull uut a win. He can do

a nyt~in g we c~111 do."

.

Sk1nner enJoys working

b~hind Marshall's t_.i rst -leam
o ff en .\l~e line but t1nds hnn -

self try111 g to keep up w1th
speedy rece1vers Danus
Watt s and Jo sh Davis.
"Not that the o ther
rere1vers arc slow or anyth1ng .... Workmg With th~
l1rst ultenS!ve_line gtvesyou
a little more 111ne. so 111 a
way 1t slows the game
down. hut you've still got to

man.agc
the
speedy
rer e1vers." Skinner s.tid .
The Marshall coaching
. stall has been turning up the
heal on the young backup
quarterback.
"Coaches told me .' You 're
the next guy. If something
goes wrung , you've got to
go 111 th ere and play,"'
Skinn er said.
"They're
putting a little more pre ssure on me, tryin g to uet me
more prepared." · b

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The Daily Sentinel •

www.mydailysentinel.com

, Friday, October 31, 2003

Pag~

Bs

Better blocking by receivers a priority for WVU
BY JoEDY McCREARY

Associated Press

MORGANTOWN , w. Va .
West Virginia's receivers and tight
ends are on alert to play better when .
they don't have the ball .
Coach Rich ,Rodriguez often has
mentioned receivers' blocking as a
constant problem, and he hopes to
tum that around when West Vtrginia
(3-4) plays Central Florida (3-5) on
Saturday.
"It wasn't one particular guy,"
Rodriguez said . "As a group, we're
accustomed to a higher standard of
blocking downfield and turning
those I 0- to IS-yard runs into 25yard runs. It wasn't good in the last
ball game ."
Watching game film gives coaches
the chance to grade each player. For
instance, after reviewing fast week's
Virginia Tech game, receiver Chris
Henry was given 28 "loafs," or plays

on which he gave poor effort .
Travis Garvin, who scored on a
93-yard pa;s play against the
Hokies, knows that in the coaches'
minds, one good catch can be negated by a few poor blocks.
"I've just got to go out, lead by
example, and try to keep doing what
I'm doing and the other guys will
follow," he said.
UCF coach Mike Kru cze k is concerned about how hi s players will
adapt to the crowd at Mountaineer
Field .
WVU officials expect about
49,000 in attendance for homecoming, although temperatures in the
70s could boost that total. It would
be the second-biggest crowd to
watch UCF this season.
"They will be very boisterous,
very loud and very distracting on
game day," Kruczek said. "When
you are dealing with a young football learn like we have , it is a con-

Will get llu stcrcd "
L:C F rank s last 111 the nat H\11 Ill
lumovcr margin wi th "ix tak eawa! "'
and 26 turno ve rs. while Wes t
Virgini a i' fifth be st \Ollh 2 1 tal.caway' anu I I turn mers . r l\ e
Mountaineer turmn ero, came 111 one
~ame. a IDss to Cincinnati .
One reason tor the lower tu rnme r
rate is West Virgi111a l1as allempted
ahnut IIX J lei\ er pa&gt;se s th an Its
o pp• 111e n ts .

The remJ inucr ot those \\ere qual!1 1
hack ups
"An )ll m..: ~nu lc1-.e 22 Itt ~-' pl'r
re nt

11f ' ' ~ur

te:.un .

Jt hc t. t Jillt!.., \ t'T \

Lltlfi cu lt ·to v..1n on a Li Hl..., hll.: nl ha .., 1 ~
We\c ~ot u numht.'l uf ~u un~ gu ~"

" ho ha\ e had t11 •tcp up
\\C II IJc tnre the1r tnne .

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mg l t~r tht' lin.t tim t.· \ awn.IJ) ·,
" Vv'e run a lo'IA.t.:r- r i.., k n fk n..,e. game hqp n' a t v.n -l t lr-nr1L' l'C lll t rt.J L' l
wh ich helps." Rodri gue/ said . "Our that ~~ ~" till' '1• ,untainl.'cr • p ia~ lll f
gu) ' take pride in taking care ot the nex t se;tslln 111 Orlando . !-I a . ~n t t.l t hL'
cern. I think our succe\S hinges on ball ."
tea m.., rcturn 111g to !\!J o rgdnt nv.. n 111
how we handle the n oi~e !eve I and
A.., Jo...,..,c\ mount . 'o do t'XL'li'e" . 21!05

adversity."
Rodriguez
beli eves
Golden
Knights quarterback Ryan Schneider
will handle the crowd j u't fine
because he 's had decent ~a me s earlier this season at Virgima Tech and
Syracu se.
"He's been in big stad iums ,"
Rodriguez said. "He's not a guy who

but Kruct.ek IJclie \ es he ha s legit !·
uc~ ,, o - ~&gt; "ga 11tst ll1g b tst
school s
Scl!l!\.'l ucr 1s n,·d wnl 1
mate ones : lnJun es and youth .
"Thi s ha' bec•n a \·ery. ve ry lrus- PurJU L' . . D rc ~ Hr..:L' -.. J.nJ ·I"L'Il ne ... ... cl'
lrat in g 'cason lor us." Kruct.d st!l d. St ales Joe ·\ da ms l&lt;• r I ~ th pl.1cc • II
" f knew comin •' In we v..·erc euom et' to t11nc 111 the :'\C ·\ 1\ wn h KI caree ·
ha ve our struggl e\. We've lost IX IOLH..: ht.l o v.n ra ..,,l'\ . Sc hll\..'IJL· r l 'plt.~y t.:r .., fn nn I&lt;J \ t ) car\ team for \·ar- lh irJ a mon ~ actl\c' f)B s 111 hn!h Tl .'
IOU \ rea..,,m . ,
..,even Vv-ere \ l i.ir1L'r ... . pa' "l'\ anJ pa . . :-. l n~ ~ arJ ,il d .7 ~l.l
~

Backup quarterback's take center stage for Herd, Zips
BY JoEoY McCREARY

Associated Press

HUNTINGTON, W.Va .
For Marshall , it's the battle of
backup quarterbacks , part
two.
Graham Gochneaur and the
Thundering Herd (5-3, 3-1
Mid-American Conference)
oppose an opponent's reserve
signal caller for the second
time this season against
Micah Faler and Akron (5-4,
3-2) on Saturday.
Marshall coach Bob Pruett
hopes for a repeat of the first
time , when Gochneaur led the
Thundering Herd to a 27-20
win over then-No. 6 Kansas

State , which had Jeff Schwinn
at QB in place of Ell
Roberson .
"He's come in and played
well ,"
Pruett
said
of
Gochneaur.
Faler replaces Charlie Frye ,
who injured his hip early in a
38-37 loss to Connecticut last
week . Frye averages 312
yards of total offense per
game , third best in the MAC.
Faler, a senior making his
second career,start , has played
sparingly in his previous three
seasons, completing 18 of 38
passes for 176 yards.
"He's never played before,
so we'll have to wait and see,"
Zips coach Lee Owens said.

While Pruett downplayed
any thought s of avenging
Akron's 34-20 win last year.
severa l Marshall players
expressed desire for payback
"We've got a lot of revenge
for these guys,'' offensive
lineman Nate McPeek said.
"It was a terrible feeling (last

year) . ... The hall was on the
ground the whole time. That's
a helple" feel ing."
Owen s ex pect' the Herd to
empha , ize the run with "
backup quarte rhac k play ing.
Earl Charles was producti ve
in Butchi e Wallace's ahse nce.
averaging 147 yards in tw o
games as Marshall 's lone tai lback. Playing with a soft ca'l
on hi s brok en righ t hand.
Wallace returned and scored
twice ' last week at Western
Mis: h1 gan.
"When you lose a /Chad )
Pennington and a I Byron I
Leftwich , who yo u retied
upon. and you gel your quarterback banged up like th ey

Oilers down Blue Jackets 4-3 in OT
EDMONWN , Alberta (APl
Brad Isbister took full
advantage of his return to the
lineup.
.
After sitting out Edmonton's
la~t game as a healthy scratch,
Isbister scored in overtime and
set up another goal to lead the
Oilers to a 4-3 win over the
Columbus Blue Jackets on
Thursday night.
"It's nice to contribute,"
Isbister said after converting
Mike York's pass at 2:29 of
overtime. "It's nice to help the
team get a big win. Hopefully
.11 •s a f res h start...
Isbister wa' pointless in his
first seven games, so the Oilers'
coaching staff decided to sit him
last Saturday - a loss against
Calgary.
"Isbister scored a nice goal on
a great pass from York,"
Edmonton
coach
Craig
MacTavish said. "Overall, I
think he played very well."
Captain lawn Smith, York
and Marc-Andre Bergeron also
scored for the Oilers, who
snapped a three-game losing
streak.
Rick Nash scored twice and
David Vyborny had the other

goal for the Blue Jackets,
who've lost six in a row and are
winless on the road this season.
''It's disappointing not to
win," said former Oilers player
Todd Marchant, who appeared
to score the winner for
Columbus with I :08 left in the
thind period "But we 're not in a
position where we can let it get
us down."
Nash deflected in Derrick
Walser's pass on a power play
at 15:37 of the thind to make it
3-3, his team-leading eighth
goal of the season and fourth in
three games.
·
Marchant, a free agent pickup, was playing his first gan1e
against his fonmer teammates
after nine seasons in Edmonton .
He appeared to beat Tommy
Salo at 18:52 but Geoff
Sanderson was called for goaltender interference on the play.
''You go from your highest
moment to your lowest moment
in five seconds," Marchant said.
"(Referee Dan Marouelli 's)
explanation was that Geoff
deliberately ran into Tommy.
It's a judgment call. I didn't see
it. All I know is I got the puck
and the puck went in the net."

"We got a break in a game
that we didn't really catch too
many," MacTavish said . "I
think we hit three goat posts,
then we get a break on the
Sanderson call . II was a bi g
tumaround for us."
York opened the scoring al
4:51 in the first period. Marc
Denis stopped Radek Dvorak's
shot from the circle, but the
rebound bounced back to
Dvorak, who slid a pass across
the crease to a wide-&lt;Jpen York
for an easy lap-in.
"After three losses, it's
always huge when you win in
overtime," Dvorak said . "It
gives you confidence. We have
to keep working hard. We have
to learn how to win one-goal
games."
Nash tied it at 8:22 of the first,
banging in a rebound on a shot
from the point by Jaroslav
Spacek after Marchant won the
faceoff back to Spacek.
Bergeron put Edmonton up 21 at 15: 12 of the second with his
first goal of the season . Isbister
won a faceoffback to Bergeron ,
who ripped a shot into the top
comer from just inside the blueline.

Vyborny tied it for the Blue
Jackets with a short-handed
goal at 17:25 of the second. his
fifth .
Smith put Edmonton up J-2
at 2:-16 of the third with hi ' scrond goal uf the season.

ha\C .

: 11t1

J c penU on ~ uur ru n

::~t rd

!o r

t.il·dn~

~· .1n:

lll thL·

ha ll. .\l .tr, ha\1- ha • II lotal
.\1arshal\ s tartin ~ QB St an tak ca\\ a\ s. hu t h"' lumhlcd
Hi ll . . pruinl'll a k;;el' a l! aJIJ \ I I ~ tlrnt'~ anJ h.:J-. th ru\.1.11 I ~
Tennessee 011 Sept 6 ant.! I Tll l 'f l l:'f11 H ,11 . _
mi ... -.cd l \.\·n gam e'. thL'fl l"t' L.t. . t \ l'a\nn . .-\~ r tl ll !Dfl' t' U
inJured it las t week
the Hc rJ 111t n ... c\ t.:n t u rno\ L' l""' Fur Akrun . B,·,bh' fk nJn and .\·1arshall lost Ill e nl rmrc
leads the MAC witli I I! rusli- tumbles . Co ul d turn o\c r' mg toud1Uov. n' um..f a,·eruge-. nr th e prl' \ t.? I111(H~ nt Ju rn o \~..· r-.
RJ yard s per gam e.
~ he the -.tPr} li nt :t~d in '.'
··\\\.:. \ t' .i u"' t gu t to pr&lt;,I ('L· r
"We try to be as multidt men ... ional
a-.
p o~..,1hle. ·· the lo,tball ." Prue tt s~u t.l
Hendry said .
·w c·,e h.1d 2-1 turiiP\c' rs
Mar.., hall necLI.., '' in ... in it-. That's riJ1 culo us . It's ama t fint.ll fou r game .... :.dl ag. ~1111'1 ing th:.n \\t'·r~..· S- ~ \\.ith t h~..~
di v!SIII!lal ri\ als. lll cl!llc h the· lllturic s that \\c.\\.' haJ an J
MA C\ Ea st 01\l s!on tit le.
-.tl\1 an.' ill pu ... lt Jon !u pLi) lui
That could t1appe11 ucspitc a c·humpion ship ."
what 'eem&lt;, to he a toll\ I eli •rc -

gaml'.·· Qv.en" "'a1d

--ELECT--

(iAI!l' 1!. DILL
Chester Township
Trustee

Experienud
Paid.for B)'

Qu.liificd

Cmdid,uc

Thank You
G.ary R. Dill 48190 Ri ..brl Rd. Lorr.~ Bottom , OH
till'

Key for OSU will be exploiting
Penn State run defense
STATE COLLEGE. Pa. ness. The Buckeyes average
(AP) -For a blueprint of how 122 rushing yards, and Ross
to beat Penn State , No. 8 Ohio and Maurice Hall have just two
State only needs to look back 100-yard games between them
one week. .
this year.
After struggling offensively
"We've struggled," Ohio
most of the season, the State coach Jim Tressel said.
Buckeyes (7-1 , 3-1 Big Ten) "We've had a lot of inconsisamassed 603 yards against tency. We've allowed ourselves
Indiana, including 216 on the to get behind in the count way
ground. Lydell Ross won Big too much with penalties and
. Ten offensive player of the that kind of thing, and we have
week after rushing for 167 lack , o( consistency from a
yards and scored thr.-:e touch- health standpoint as wei L
! downs in that game.
We've not been able to put it
Given the way Penn State (2- together like we'd like to."
6, 0-4) has defended the run, a
But Penn State defensive end
repeat would be a good sign for Scott Paxson said he's not linthe Buckeyes.
ing up against Ohio State's sta"1 think we have somethin~ tistics _ and he knows how
to build on from last Saturday,' good tbe Buckeyes can be.
Ross said, "and I think if we
"They've
some pretty big
continue to not make too many boys on the offensive line.
mis.takes and get better, it looks They're big, they're strong,
pretty successful. "
they're physicaL It's going to
Of course, even lowly be a great challengeofor us as a
Temple and Kent State looked defensive line this week," Penn
pretty successful running the State defensive tackle Scott
ball against Penn State, which Paxson said. "Their running
is giving up more than 216 backs _ they don't have
yards per game on the ground. · Maurice Clarett back there, but
On paper, Ohio State 'might their other running backs, they
not seem like the best .team to might be just as good.
take advantage of that weakMoreover, Paxson said,

got

''

while the Buckeyes may not be
gaining a lot of yards. they're
getting them when it counts.
"They're a team that knows
how to win." Paxson said.
"They get the first downs when
they need to get first downs.
They' run the ball when they
need 10 run the ball. They
throw the ball when they need
to throw it. When they come in
on Saturday. we just need to
stop them ."
That is, unless the Buckeyes
stop themselves. Ohio State is
losmg almost 70 yards a game
in penalties, and Tressel said
his team will have to do a better job of holding on to the ball
_ something they · didn't do
against Indiana.
"Lost in the 600 yands and all .
that stuff is the fact that we still
turned the ball over three
times, and that won't win at
,State College," Tressel said.
"We have to make sure that
we do gain confidence from
our execution on Saturday,
both run and pass," Tressel
said. But if Ohio State has
three turnovers again. "we're
goil)g to have a problem," he
said.
·

'

.'

�PageB6

SCOREBOARD

rl.'be
Daily
Sentinel
'r

www mydallysentlnel com

Friday, Oct 31, 2003

Friday, October 31, 2003

CLASSIFIED

I

Sept
Pttsbu gh

P.ro Basketball
National Basketball Association
I
EASTERN CONFERENCE
At antic 0 v1s on

Wash ng on
qt~a ndo

I

I

500

f\!!Bw Je sey

0
0
0 2

000
000
000

Pfi lade ph a
~wYok

"!i•m
~N

Centra

0 eans

'b v1slon

Pet
1 000

Mana

1 0

1000

Tc on o

1 0

1 000

Al{anta

ch cago

0

000

0

000

Detot

o

Milwaukee
Cleve and

0
0 2

000
000
000

Pc
GB
000
000

0
0

Ulth

0

~las

I

500

1

500
500
000

M~ne sota

Qenyer
~.An

ana

~phs

0 0
Pac t c OIISIOO

•
L 4 .lake s

W L

Sa&amp;ramen o
8&lt;!11~

Paclt c 0 VISIOn
W l T OLP s GF GA

GB

Pet

4 5

los Angeles

10 21 28

333092426
4500B2423

0

1000

San ose

I

500

Two pons to a w n one pont lo a t e
and ave n e ass

1 ooo

0 1

000

L:A C ppe s
pPr and

0 I

000

0 1

000

Wednesdays Games
eos on 98 M am 75

f o o to 90 New Je sey 87
lnd ana 89 De o 87
Q lando 85 New Yo k 83 OT
tilew 0 eans 88 AI anta 83 OT
1;1 nnesota 95 M waukee 89
99 Ch cago 74
:.U ah 99 Po and 92
Oenve 80 San An on o 72
Sac amenlo 106 C eve and 92
Oa as 95 Go den Sta e 87
Thursdays Games
Seatte 09 LAC ppe s 100
New 0 eans 100 0 ando 98
Hous on 02 Oenve 85
Phoen x 95 C eve and 86
Friday 5 Games
Wash ng on a o on a 7 p m
Delat a Mam 730pm
M waukee a ndana 730pm
Boston at Memph s 8 p m
Mnnesoaa NewJesey Bpm
At an ta at Ch cago 8 30 p n
Sdate vs LA Cl ppes at Salama
Japan t Op n
Ph adepha at Sac amen o o 30 p m
Saturday s Games
lndanaa A anta 7pm
De o a 0 ando 7 p m
New Je sey a Wash ng on 7 p m
To on o a M ne ota 8 p m
Boson a NewO eans 8pm
U ah at Da as 8 30 p m
Ch cago a M waukee 8 30 p m
Memph s a Houston 8 30 p m
New Yo k at S~~ton o 8 30 p m
Sac amento at Denve 9 p m
l A lak.e sat Phoenx 9 pm
Ce eandatPo and 10pm
~hi ade ph a a Golden Sta e 10 30 p m
Sundays Games
Go den Sta e a l A lakes 9 30 p m
~ash ngton

Hockey
Nattonal Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic DIV SIOn
W L TOLPtsGFGA

4 23
22923
432002
9
432002724
3

6 4 0 0 12 25 23

000

Clqden Sate

Ph ade ph a
New Je sey
NY sandes
NY Ranges

Da as
Anahe m
Phoen 11

0

a

e

P/i&gt;en X

Edmonton

3 2 0

B

16

B

5406

728

Thursdays Games
NYRanges4 Caol na1
Bulao5 Toon o3
San Jose 2 Tampa Bay 2 e
Mon ea 1 Boston 0 OT
Fo da3 Otawa2
M nnesota 3 At anta 2
New e sey 3 Ph lade ph a 2
Nashv lie 5 Del o 3
P sbu gh
Ch cage 0
Edmon on 4 Co umbus 3 OT
Vancouve 3 os Ange es 1
Fridays Games
At ante at Wash ng ton 7 p m
Va couve a Phoen x 9 p m
Saturday s Games
Boston at P sbu g 1 p m
Anahem a NY slande s pm
Coo ado at New Jersey 1 p m
Bullato at Ottawa 7 p m
NY Ratgesa Montea 7pm
Ph adepha atToon a 7 pm
San Jose a F o da 730pm
Ca ana at Tampa Bay 7 30 pm
ChcagoatS lous 8pm
Oa asa tNashv e Bpm
Wash ngton a M nnesota 8 p m
Co umbus a Calga y 9 p m
Del o at Edmonton 10 p m
Phoen x at Los Ange es 10 30 p m
Sunday a Games
To onto at Ga a na 5 p m
Cao ado at N Y Ranges 5 p m
San Jose a At anta 7 p m
Anahem at Chcago 7 pm
Nashv e at Oa as 7 p m

1 0 8

3

7

106

23

19

14

222B

220 4 8 1
2 3 0 4
15 18
15131732
Paclf c Division
W l T Pts GF GA
4 I
9
20 16
4 3 0 6
20 21

At Hudaon High School
Youngs

Saturday 4 p m
Aust ntown F ch 22 4) vs

Men1or (24 3)
At Norwalk High Sehool
Saturday 2 p m
Rocky R ve Magn I cat (21 5) vs Tol St
I)
At Hilliard Davidson Mlgh School
Saturdey 2 p m
Dubl n Coffman {23 4) vs C n Ursul ne

u sula (25

3 I 0 6

14 10

(23 3)

2
2

12
0
4
1

Saturday 4 p m
Cn St Usula 270 vs Cn Mt No e
Dame (17-8)

4
5
2 0 4
1 1 3
3
3

15

MetroStars vs New England
Saturday Nov 1
New Eng and at Met aS ars 5 p m
Sunday Nov 9
Me osta s at New England 4 p m
Western Conference
Los Angeles vs San Jose
Saturday Nov 1
San Jose a os Ange es 10 p m
Sunday Nov 9
Los Angeles at San Jose 9 p m
Colorado vs Kansas City
Tuesday Nov 4
Kansas c ty at Co orado 9 30 p m
Saturday Nov 8
Colo ado at Kansas C ty B p m

20 21
28

IB

16

2

14

13

5

ReGIONAL ANALS
DIVISION I

17
10
5
17

At Vandalia Butler High School

DIVISION II

At Stow Munroe Falla M gh School
Saturday 2 p m
Chag n Fa Is Kenston (24 3) vs Men o
Lake Cath (23 3
At Wooster High Schoo
Saturday 2 p m
Mogado e F eld 25 2) vs M tie sbu g W

Homes (23 3)
At Ontario High School
Saturday 2 p m
Be levue (24 3) vs Maumee (21 6
At Wilmington High School
Saturday 4 p m
Kette ng AI e (24 2) vs St Be na d
Roge Bacon (22 5)
DIVISION Ill
At Barberton High School
Saturday 2 p m
Columb ana (19 8) vs 0 v e (22 4)
At Findley Uberty Benlon High
School Saturday 2 p m
Casal a Ma garetta {21 5) vs Genoa

(23

3)

At Logan Middle School
Saturday 7 p m
loa v t e Tusca awas Val ey (26 t ) vs
W amspo t Wes fal (22 3
At Wllm ngton High Schoo
Saturday 2 p m
Versa es
(20 3
vs
Johns own
No lh dge (20 3)

DIVISION IV

At Hudson H gh School
Saturday 2 p m
W ndh am
25
vs K d on

Ce t

Chrsl an (25 I

At Elida High School Saturday 2 p m
De ance Aye sv e
25 1) vs F1
Jenn ngs (17 9)
At Lancaster High School
Saturday 2 p m
Cente bu g (26 1) vs F ankfo I Adena

At Vandal a Butler H gh School
Saturday 2 p m

Prep Volleyball

Jackson Cente (19 8) vs St Hen y (25
I)

THURSDAY S RESULTS
DIVISION II

Menlo lake Cath 15 15 Rocky Ave 4

5
Chag nFalsKenson15 15 Sa lem88
Ke ter ng A er 15 15 Ch cothe Un oto

2 10
Be levue 5 15 Cana W ches e 5 3
M I e sb urg W Ho m es 5 15 Cana
Futon NW 4 2
Mogadore F eld 5 15 Ca ro ton 2 9
St Be ard Rage Bacon 15- 5 C n
McNchoas 11 2
Maumee 151 2 5 8gWanut9153

DIVISION IV
W ndham 15 15 Norwa k S Pau 8 4
K d on Cen t Ch st an 15 15 Ash abu a
SsJohn&amp;Pau 1 7
Cente bug 15 5 Wetsv le 3 0
F anklort Adena 15 15 Reedsv le
Easte n 1 0
Jackson Cente 15 6 20 S dney lehman
B 15 1B
St Hen y 15 15 Russa7 12
Defance Aye sv l e 515 lapse 1 10
Ft Jenn ngs 10 5 15 Nor hwood 5 13
11

Auto Racmg

G and p lx A mer ca•

28 _

M am (Ma o Oom nguez)

Final achedule standlnga
2003 Indy Rae ng League

Aaglona

pa ngs for the g Is state h gh schoo 110
eyba tou nament

14

Major League Soccer Playoff Glance
Semifinals
Eastern Conference
0 C United VB Chicago
Saturday Nov 1
ChcagoatDC Un ed 730p m
Sunday Nov 9
DC Un tedatCh cago 1pm

3 2 0 6
1

COLUMBUS on o (AP) -

Soccer

W L T PIS GF GA
4

Regional girls voUeybell pllrlnge

(26 0

Northern Division
WLTPtsGFGA
600225 1
A an t cC ty
4108229
Johns own
3 0 1 7 17 B
Read ng
3
1 7
15 14
Toedo
3
0 6 13 13
Wheel ng
3 3 0 6 18 19
C nc nna t
2 2 1 5
16 14
Peo a
2 3 0 4 12 18
Ten on
0 3 0 0 5 15
Dayton
Southern D vision

3 2

1 1 7

3406

23

23 19

NOTE Two pomts a e awarded lo awn
Ova t me and shoo out losses ea n one
po n and a e refer ed to as t es
Thursday • Games
Tenon4 Geensboo1
Msssspp 5 Coumba2
Pensacola 6 Columbus 2
Friday s Games
Peona at Alaska
Tren on a Charlotte
Augusta a Flo ence
Gw nnett a Flo da
A an cCtya Geensboo
Roanoke a G eenv e
Dayton at ohnstown
daho at Las Vegas
Whee ng at Read ng
Co umbia a Sou h Ca o na
C nc natt at To edO
Saturdays Games
Pear a at A aska
Cha otte at Co umb a
lou sana a Co umbus
C nc nnat at Dayton
T anton at F orence
GwnnetatFo da
Augus a at G eenv lie
Read ng at Johnstown
F esno at Las Vegas
Baker s e d at long Beach
M ss ss pp a Pensaco a
G eensbo o at Roanoke
Idaho a San D ego
At ant c C ty at Sou th Ca ol na
Toledo at Whee ng
Sundays Games
Augusta a Co umbus
To edo at Dayton
Idaho at Long Beach
Cha lotle a Roanoke
Read ng a Whee ng

East Coast Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE

Fo da
Coumba
South Ca o na
Greensboro
Cha o e

3

Gw nnen
Columbus
Lou sana
Augusta
Texas

Las Vegas
daho
Aaska
Bake sf eld
F esno
San 0 ego
ong Beach

1 0 8

3 2 2 8

M SSSSlPP

461092629
4500B2629

M nnaso a

000

4

Pensacola

Central Division
W l T OLPtsGFGA
Sl lou s
6 2 0 1 3 25 21
Ool o t
5500103027
Chcago
3 5 3 0 9 18 28
Nashve
4?0082223
Columbus
3 6 0 1 7 22 26
Northwest DivisiOn
W
T OLPIS GF GA
6 2 2 0 14 34 19
Vancouve
5 4 0 0 10 31 23
Coo ado
4 4 0 1 9 18 22
Caga y

2

20
14 20
613

WL• TPisGFGA

WESTERN CONFERENCE

I
I

11

Centrll DIY liOn

6 o 1 o 13 2210
5 2 2 1 13 28 21
4520
0225
234081718
1 7 1 0 3 19 33

TampaBay
A an a
Foda
Caona
Wa sh ngon

1 3 1 3
1 4 0 2
0300

WESTERN CONFeReNCE

W L T OLPisGF GA

Midwest 0 viston

wl

GA
21
31
22
16

4 3 2 1 11 24 27
Southeast Division

To onto

WESTERN CONFERENCE
~ion

Buffalo
Ottawa

GB

W l

2 0

Boson

Floence
Roanoke
Geenve

7 21

W L T OLPisGF
6 2 2
15 26
6 5 0 0 12 27
6 5 0 0 12 23
5 2 0
11 30

Mont ea

Pet
GB
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I 000
I 000

W l
0
0
0

Boston

2 4 3 0 7
North111t Dlvlek»n

1

The 2003 Indy Rae ng League sched
u e and stand ngs w lh w nne s In paren
theses
Ma ch 2 Toyota
ndy 300
Homes ead Fla (Sco 1 0 xon)
Ma ch 23 - Coppe Wo ld Indy 200
Avondale Ar z (Tony Kanaan)
Ap 13 - Indy Japan 300 Suzuka
(Scott Sharp)
May 25 nd anapol a 500 (G de
Fe an)
June 7 - Longho n 500K Fo Wo lh
Texas (A Unse J
June 5 - Honda ndy 225 Founta n
Coo (Sea D xon)
June 28 - SunT ust ndy Cha lange
A chmond Va Scot D xon)
Ju y 6 ndy 300 Kansas C ty Kan
(B yan He a
F es one
ndy 200
Ju y 19 G adev e Tenn (G de Fe an)
Ju y 27 - M ch gan ndy 400 Brooklyn
(A e~e Ba on)
Aug 10 - Eme son ndy 250 S
Lou s He io Cas roneves
Aug 7 - Be e a Cas no ndy 300
Spa ta Ky (Sam Ho n sh J )
Aug 24 F estone Indy 225
Naza e h Pa (He o Cas oneves )
Sept 7 - Delph Indy 300 Jo e I
(Sam Ho n sh J
Sept 21 - Toyo a ndy 400 Fontana
c a f Sa m Horn sh J
Oct 12 - Chevy 500 Fo I Wo th
Te~eas G de Fe an)
Fins Driver Standings
1 Sea D xon 507
2 G I de Fe an 489
3 He o Cast oneves 484
4 Tony Kansan 476
5 Sam Ho n sh Jr 46 1
6 A Unse J 374
7 Tomas Scheckte 356
Sco Sha p 35 1
9 Kenny B ack 342
o To a Takag 317
1 Dan Whe ldon 3 2
2 Rage Yasukawa 30
3 B yan He Ia 277
4 Aobb e Buhl 26
15 G eg Ray 253
6 Buddy Ace 229
7 A ex Ba on 216
8 Sarah F she 2
19 Buddy Laze 20
20 Fe peG affone 199

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OCt 12 _ Te rne 11 G gante G an Premlo
Me~~: co Mex co C ty (Paul Tr81cy)
Oct 26 - Lexma k ndy 300 Surfers
Pa ad se Aust 8 Ia (Ryan Hunter Rea~ )
Nov 2 _ Champ Ca 500 Fontana
f ppd wldl es

ca

Drlvtr Standing•
1 Pau 1i acy 226
2 B uno Junque a 199
3 M che Jourda n 195
4 Sebast en Bou da s 159
5 Pat ck Ca pante 146
6 Me o Domnguez 118
70oSeva108
8 Ad an Fe nandez 05
9 Da en Mann ng 103
0 A ex Tag an 97
1 J mmy Vasse 72
2 Me o Haberfe d 7
3 Robe to Mo eno 71
4 Ryan Hunte Reay 67
5 T ago Monte o 29
6 M kaSao 26
17 Max Paps 25
18 Rodo oLav n 17
9 Gua te Sa les 1
20 Pat ck Lema e 8

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axe c se he 2004 op on on the con act
ol OF B an Jordan

BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association

MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES-Paced
F G Wa y Szczerb ak on the nJU ed I st
S gned G lien ton Hasse

NEW ORLEANS HOANET5-Wa ved F
K rk Haston S gned G Steve Sm h S gned
C Jaama Mag a re o a th ee yea contract
ex ens on

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IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO EBEA I PICK
ENS
Pia nlrfl
vs
EDWARD R FORE
MAN ET AL
Defendants
Case No 3 CV 89
NOTICE BY PUBLI
CATION
To
Edward R
Foreman
NG
Foreman
aka
N
Gilbert Foreman aka
Nathan
G1lbert
Mlnnre Sutton aka
M nerva Sutton Mary
R Hall
Charles
F.oseman aka Chorl1e
~oreman Frances A
Foreman John E
Foreman
Ltla
Combs
JE
H
Combs
Ge1e W
foreman
George
!cundlfl Ruth Cundiff
t.lary Midkiff Gaston
Wrnters E M Wtnters
aka Edward Wtnters
l&gt;eter Harpold
J
Uawson aka John
Lawson
Frankl n
l,:awson
Jacob
!\lildklff W H Sevy
\Jo)ln Tibbs Earl W
Winters aka E M
Wmters aka Earl T
Winters
Emma
Winters
Una
Foreman
Rose
Foreman
MS
J P Hall
Sutton
Frout A Foreman
Cena Foreman Elza
Foreman
C
E
F.oreman
John
Combs Lilly Combs
Dalla Davis Bertha
Rose
Addresses
Sarah
Qnknown
Foreman Kenneth H
Cundiff A G Midkiff
Lydia Matheny Ellen
Arnott Golda Homey
r;llenn
Cundiff
William C Cundiff
Edna Ours and Stella
Clark
Present
;Addresses Unknown
end the unknown
,._,,. next of kin
.spouses devisees
,egatees admln1stra
.tors executors sue
'Cessors and asstgns
pi
Edward
R
Foreman
NG

Aka N
Foreman
Gtlbert Foreman aka
Nathan
Gilbert
Mlnnte Sutton aka
Minerva Sutton Mary
A
Hall
Charles
Foreman aka Charlie
Foreman Frances A
Foreman John E
Foreman Lta Combs
J E H Combs Gene
W Foreman George
Cundiff Ruth Cundiff
Mary Midkiff Gaston
Winters E M Winters
aka Edward Winters
Peter Harpold J
Lawson aka John
Lawson
Franklin
Lawson
Jacob
M dklff W H Sevy
John Tibbs
Earl
Winters aka E M
Winters aka Earl T
Wlnlers
Emma
Winters Una Forman
Rose Forman M S
Sutton
J P Hall
Frout A Foreman
Cena Foreman Elza
Foreman
CE
Foreman
John
Combs Lilly Combs
Della Davis Berths
Sarah
Rose
Foreman Kenneth H
Cundiff A G Midkiff
Lydia Matheny Ellen
Arnott Golda Hainey
Glenn
Cundiff
William C Cundiff
Edna Ours Stella
Clark and any other
mdlvlduals organize
t ons or entitles who
maybe entitled to
claim an Interest In
lhe real estate which
Is the subject of the
Complaint
Names
and
Addresses
Unknown
You are hereby noll
fled that you have
been
named
Defendants In lhe
action entitled Eber I
Pickens Plalnllfl vs
Edward R Foreman
et al
Defendants
This act1on hes been
ass1gned Case No
03 CV 89
and Is
pendmg In the Court
of common Pleas of
Meigs County Ohio
Tho object of the
Complaint demands
thai the following
described real estate

be quieted in lhe
Ebor
I
Plaintiff
P1ckens
TRACT ONE
The following real
estate situated In the
Township
of
Lebanon County of
Mo1gs and Slale of
Oh1o Be ng a part of
Lots No 201 and 202
n sect1ons 22 and 28
Township 2 Range
11
of the Ohio
Company s
Purchase Beginning
126 rods East of tho
Southwest corner of
Lot No 202 at D
Inman s southeast
corner thence North
61 3/4 rods thence
east 81 3/4 thence
South
20
rods
thence East 32 rods
thence South 41 314
rods thence West
114 t/2 rods to lhe
place of begrnnlng
contam1ng
16 1/2
acres
It is the Intention of
lhls deed to convey
16 1/2 acres more or
less of the above
descnbed 40 acre
tract and It lies North
or the Public Road
leading from Racine
to Portland
Also the following
real estate situated In
the Township of
Lebanon County of
Meigs and Slate of
Ohio and bounded
and described as fol
lows Being in Range
11 Town 3 In Section
22128 Lot 1t middle
of Lot 201 except 5
acres South contain
lng 21 acres Former
owner A G Mldklft
Reference Deeds
Volume 269 Paga 1
and Volume 261 Page
131 Meigs County
Deed Recorda
Plaintiff acquired
title to said real
estate by virtue or
deeds recorded in
Volume 269 Page 1
and Volume 261 Page
131 Meigs County
Deed Records
TRAC'nWO
Situated in the
County of Meigs In

•

.- ~1 8 1-..c

the State of Ohio and rods to the b1g road
In the Township of thence In a westerly
Lebanon and bound -&lt;lirectlon along said
ed and described as ,..tCad 38 1/2 rods to e
follows
stake thence 'horth
Also one other par
24 rods to the place
eel of land Situated In of beginning to con
Lebanon Township
lain four acres more
County or Meigs and or less
n the Stale of Ohio
Reference Deeds
and being In Sections Volume 85 Page 171
Number 22 and 28
Me1gs County Official
Town No 2 Range Records and Volume
No 11 of The Ohio 38 Page 269 Meigs
Company s Purchase
County
Deed
being a one acre lot Records
off the land formerly
Plaintiff acquired
title to said real
owned by John S L
Lawson and cdn
estate fro his sister
veyed by deed by him Ellie Pic ns and/or
Eber
to Mary E Hayman h1s pa ents
who later deeded It to Picken and Goldie
Emma Winters and Picken all of whom
still later transferred are dec ased
to her heirs Bertha
Plar Ills '"'" from
Rose E M Winters Effie ckens results
and Earl T Winters
from er estate Case
and lying on the East No 30604 of tho
side of Public Road Meigs
County
Court
and off East and of Probate
said John S L
Records
by
a
Lawson s five acre Certificate of Transfer
tract
recorded In Volume
Reference Deeds
85
Page
171
Volume 85 Page 171
However
that
Meigs County Official Certificate of Transfer
Records and VOlume mcorrectly described
261 Page 133 Meigs the four (4) acre par
Deed eel described above
County
TRACT FOUR
Records
Plaintiff acquired
The
following
title to said real described premises
estate by virtue of a situate In Lebanon
Meigs
Certificate of Tranafer Township
from his deceased County Ohio
Beginning at the
slater Ellie EIIHbatlf
Pickens recorded in Northeast corner of
Volume 85 Page 171
land formerly owned
Meigs County Official by David Inman of
Records
North lone of Lot No
TRACT THREE
201 Section No 28
The
following Town No 2 Range
11
Ohio
described premises No
situate In Lebanon Company s Purchase
Township
Meigs said point of begin
County Ohio and In nlng being marked by
a stake and marked
sections No 22 &amp; 28
In Town No 2 Range atone from which a
11 Ohio Company Wild Cherry 6 Inches
Purchase
and In diameter bears
South 11 dagrees E
described as follows
to wit Beginning st 21 9 feet and a
the northwest corner Hickory 3 Inches
of a forty acre lot bears
North
72
heretofore deeded to degrees E 4 5 feat
John Kayo by William thence East 1195 feet
H Sevy having a dele o n the North line of
April
13th
1869
said Lol N 201 to a
thence east 38 1/2 stake by a marked
rods thence south 15 stone from which a

tc• -..:::::::.-...--."""'~ ~ ~ li"Vc:-e cl

Beech 18 Inches
bears
North
42
degrees East 5 7 feet
A White Oak 14 inch
es bears North 75
degrees 30 mmutes
W 22 7 feet thence
South 698 feet to a
point 2 feet East of he
West Gate Post of lhe
Gate openmg 1nto a
certain Road here
inafter
Deeded
thence West1217 feel
to a stake and
marked stone from
which a Beech 14
inches bears S 6
degrees East 20 feat
thence North 718 feet
to the place of begin
ning containing 19 6
acres
the above
described tract being
in Lebanon Township
Meigs County Oh1o
Also the followmg
described prem1ses
situated as follows
viz Beginning at a
pomt ten feet easl of
lhe Northwest corner
of a forty acre lot
heretofore deeded to
John
Kaysly
by
William H Sevy bear
lng date Apnl 13
1869 thence South
20 rods parallel to the
West line of said land
to the middle of lhe
lhe road leading from
Cowdery s Mill lo
Portland thence West
in the middle of said
Road 10 feet thence
North on lhe west line
of said Lot 20 rods lo
the northwest corner
of said lol thence
East 10 feet to the
place of beginning
containing one thl r
leenth of acre
The
above
described premises
baing situated in
Lebanon Township
Meigs County Ohio
Reference Deed
Volume 130 Page
284 Meigs County
Deed Records
This real estate
was Intended as
access to the real
estate described as
21 acres which Is
part of Tract 1
described above

a;c.lght

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

r

National Football League
DA LAS COWBOYS-P aced C Genna o
D Napa on n u e&gt;d ese ve S gned RB
Ad an Mu e
DETROIT L ONS- Ptaced P John Jet on
n u ed
ese ve S gned CB Jacoby
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OAKLAND AAIDERS- Wa ved TE Ma cus
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TAMPA BAY BUCCANEER S-$ gned S
Dav d G bson Released FB Cec Mart n
A ena Footba

SAN JOSE SABEACATS-S gned WA
Adam He z ng

HOCKEY
National Hockey League

MONTREAL CAN AD EN S- Ass gned F
Chad K ge to Ham lton of he AHL
ST LOU S BLUES-Ass gned D B yce
Sa vado and F Johnny Poh to Wo ceste
of he AHL

VANCOUVER CANUCKS-Recalled D
Ja os av Obsu I om Man toba of he AHL

WASH NGTON CAPITA LS- Reassigned
D Josef Boumed enne to Po t and at he

AH L

r-.l~'VVI!!olpai&amp;p~.--:!;il

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4 South 84 deg 12
15"West a distance o1
141 99 feet to a point
5 South 78 deg 28
41 West a distance of
150 23 feet to a point
6 South 72 deg 30
24 west a distance of
94 13 feet to a point
7 South 66 dog 32
26 West a distance of
157 50 feet to a point
8 South 61 deg 17
09 West a distance of
121 70 feet to a point
9 South 57 dog 02
19 West a distance of
58 70 feet to a point
10 South 47 deg
45 25 West a dis
tance of 126 55 feet to
a point
11 South 47 deg
50 29 West a dis
lance of 171 61 leetto
a point
12 South 58 dog
31 03 West a dis
lance of 120 92 feet to
a point
13 South 65 dog
40 07 Weet a dislance of 141 43 feetto
a point
14 South 57 deg
16 15 West e dis
tance of 136 67 feet to
a point
15 South 51 deg
37 47 West a dis
tance of 42 37 to a
point on the assumed
South line of 1OD
Acre Lot 202
Thence
leaving
said centerline and
along said South line
North 85 deg 17 39
Wast
passing
through a 1/2 iron
pin wtth I d cap set at
a distance of 39 41
feet and going a total
distance of 290 00
feet to a 1/2 iron pin
wtth I d cap set
Thence
leaving
said South line North
03 deg 29 43 East a
distance of 1693 00
feet to a 112 Iron pin
with I d cap set on
the assumed North
line of said 100 Acre
Lot 201
Thence along said
North line South 8~
dog 56 22 East a
distance of 1327 96
!set to the ~rincipal

point of beginning
28 258
containing
acres more or less
In said 100 acre Lol
201 and 18116 acres
more or less In said
100 Acre Lot 202 lor a
total of 46 374 acres
more or less Subject
to eli legal easements
and rights of ways
Bearings
are
assumed and aro for
the determination of
angles only
All iron pins sal are
112 x 30 rabar wilh
cap
plastic
Id
stamped CTS 6844
The above descrlp
lion was prepared
from an actual survey
made on the 1st day
of July 2003 by C
Thomas Smith Ohio
Professional
Surveyor 116844
Reference Deeda
Volume 289 Page
001 Meigs County
Deed Records and
Volume 85 Pege 171
Meigs County Official
Recorda
You are required to
answer the Complaint
with In twenty eight
(28) days after lha
last publication of
this Notice which will
be published once
each week for six (6)
successive weeks
The last publication
will be made on the
21st
day
of
November 2003 and
tho twenty-eight (28)
days for anawer will
commence on that
data In the case of
your failure to anawet
or otharwloe respond
ao requaoted by the
Ohio Rulea of Civil
Procedure judgmsnt
by default will be ron
dered agalnat you
and for the ralls!
demanded In the
Complaint
Dated 1hla 111 c111y
of October 2003
Dated thle tot doy
of Octobe• 2003
Marlena
Horrloon
Clerk of Courte
(10) 17 24 31 111) 7
14 21

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YARD SALE

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Public Meeting Notice
Cha lesion C v c Cen e
Charleston WV

600 BOO PM
Nove mb e 4 2003
The Was V rg n a Sta ewide
Addres s ng
&amp;Mapp ng
Board SAMB) w hold a
pub c meet ng to d scuss
deve opme nts n he p o eel
to
p ovde
e ly syle
add asses o e\ie y c zen of
WV or E9 1 1 serviCe
The pub c mee ng w l be
held at the Cha es on C v c
Cente n Cha es on WV
on November 4 2003 The
Cha les on C v c Cente s
toea ed o
ex 58B on
nters ate 64 Eas o ex t
58C on nte sta e 64 West
and In ers ate 77 South
Mem be s of the Boa d and
ts consultant M chael Bake
J
nc o C ass Lanes WV
w g ve a b et p esentat on
about the p OJ(Ict answer
quest ons
and pess ou
nlorma 'tt'e w ltten ma e
as Fo more nlo mat on
see the SAMB s web s te a
INWW address1ngwy erg
Say good bye to h gh phone
bi is New toea phOne se v
ce w th FREE un m led
nat on w de ong D stance

aysyou loca Agents wan

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2
The
above
described real estate
Is all described by
new survey as fol
lows
Being a part of
tracts of land trans
!erred to Eber I
Pickens as recorded
1n Dead Book 269 at
Page 001 and tracts
recorded In Official
Records Volume 85 at
Page 171
Meigs
county
Recorders
Office Meigs County
Ohio also being a
part of 100 Aero Lots
201
and
202
Township 2 North
Range 11 Wesl
Lebanon Township
Meigs County State
of Ohio and more par
ticularly described as
follows
Bagmnlng at a 1/2
rron pm with I d cap
set which is assumed
to bear North 85 deg
56 22 West a dis
tance of 2070 74 feet
from the assumed
Northeast corner of
sa1d 100 Acre Lot
201
Township 2
Range 11
Thence South D3
deg 29 43 West a
distance of 688 88
feat to e 1/2 Iron pin
with I d cap set
Thence South 85
dog 56 22 East e
distance of 678 00
feel to a 112 rron pin
with I d cap sat
Thence South 03
deg 29 43 West
passing through a
1/2 Iron pin with I d
ca set at a dlstanca of
151 88 feet and going
a total distance of
176 88 feet to a point
in the centerline of
Township road 135
Sehers Ridge Road
Thence along said
centerline the follow
lng fifteen courses
1 South 80 deg 43
39 West a distance of
134 84 feet to a point
2 South 82 dog 07
28 West a distance of
145 86 feel to a point
3 South 84 dog 53
41 West a distance of
205 71 feel to a point

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740 992 5248
Pomeroy
clothes tw n bed &amp; bedd ng
740 992 6292
Ch stmas
deco a ons
Home In e o bugshe ds

3b

76

(304 )675-1352

I 4 Bedroom 2 Bath Pome

25 Serloua People Wanted
Who want to LOSE we gh
We Pay You Cash tor he
pounds you LOSE
Safe Natu al No Drugs

BOO 201 0632

~::::1'-------., cia net m sc reasonable
Gl"\ f:AWAY
p ces
h ough Rut and
Langsv e tu n eH off 124
Alfo dabie Se v ce Hau ng
onto32541/2m es Wach Lose we ght now Lose up to pa n ng powe wash ng
30ibs n the nex 30 days d veway epa
sea coat
3 dozen M ace Whp Ja s o sgns
F ee samp es 740 446
ng
gutters
ch mney
(7 40)992 2779
4235
plumb ng Jack o al I ades
30y s exp Sen o 0 scoun
Med Home Heal h Agency
F ee Est ma es (304)882
nc seek ng fu I tm e staff
2196 (304)377 B266
Phys ca Therap s fa Oh o
and West V g n a c enl
lema e ca spayed
base We offe a compel t ve
&amp; declawed 740 446 1944
sala y benet ts package
leave a message
and 401K E 0 E $5 000
Ins de Sa e F day and SIGN ON BONUS Pl ea$e
Satu day
Fo urth Pace send esume to 352 Second
Gat po s
OH
Beechg ave Rutland Xmas A11enue
g ns and more (740)742 45631 Attn Dana Ha less
R N Cl n cal Manage
30B2
mob e homes
WTANil
Salu day Novembe 1 SAM
Roofs barns p essu e
FOUND
5PM 3rd house on eft op Med Home Health Agency wash ng
ol Chesler HI (51 AI 248) Inc seek in~ a Speech E~&lt;pe ence &amp; Refe ences
Found Black &amp; Brown male
C olh ng
G Is (2T 5) The ap st for he Ga I po s ave labia
puppy 3 4 man old on
Boys(4T
14H)
and Oho a ea We aile a com 304-895 3074
Rayburn Ad 304 675 3533
benet Is F ee estimates cal M S
Women s{ 14 26 )
coats p e ve sa a y
package and 40 K E 0 E Bam 7pm
toys
who
e
set
of
shoes
Los lema e Boston Terr e
Rescue Hero a Dol s L n e Please send esume to 430
(no a I) K ngsbu y area
People etc Christmas Tee Second Avenue Ga I po s
Salu day (7401992 3165
OH 45631 Attn Dana

Oho
Photo Informal on
www ORV8 com

CJj

Vew
on ne
code

B0603 Cal (740)992 3650
4 BEDROOM

4 BATH

HOUSE
Fa edosu e only
S9 900 For st ngs Ca
8D0-7 19 300 1 E)(t F144
Dream
Home
Beaut fu
3200sq It with wrap around
deck upsra rs balcony 4 112
acres 4br 2ba arge v ng
room wlr~ace dnng
room 2 ca garage Owne
I nanc ng
s
ava able

(3041675 1352

~Y

e

~A~

Los Reward when black
Clean House cook
1
blllol d retu ned w h p ctu es
take ca e o disabjed o eld
&amp; Important papers to
ely Call (3041675-4108
CCFye POBox135 New 4 Fam ly Yard Sa e at K ode
Haven WV 25265 304 593 C ubhO use Saturday Nov Now hiring Sales Reps to
1 8 001
cal
Government
0065
Ch ld en s clothes boy and Departments
C ty
girls f om a zes 3T 16 Home Oepartmenls Gave nment
cloth ng Entt es We ca I Bus ness
decor women s
crafts bedding 2 seater only no es dent a ca Is
battery powered J&amp;ep pant $8 00 m nlmum up o $12 00
H 0 VALLEY PUBL SH
YAROSALEball equ p cd s be I cards
an hou (depend ng on NG CO ecommends tha
GAtJ IPOLIS
exper ence) gua anteed pus
Garage Sale
bonus ou to p Sales Reps
Craftsman e ectrl c Impact
5 famly ya d sae Lo~ of
average between $600 to
wrench router&amp; ta ble speed
Items Something lor eve y
$ 1 200 a week Monday
lock dr I set and othe oo a
onel Mon 3 Tues --4 Wed
F day 8 2 only no n ghts or
5 Rain or Sh ne 416 Electric 1 a n bike 9 n 1 weekends eve Cal 304
ShOestri ng Ridge AI 7 S to game tabl e p nba I mach ne 675 2700 0
I 800 B75
orchard H I Ad Fo ow s gns c othes and much more Sat 2673 asi&lt; fo
Tommy
Nov 1 9 2pm 6 Stoneybrook
Milstead between 12 2pm
3 ml es on Sandh I Ad
Ga age
ony
Oakwood
ust
Saturday Onlyl
Now H r ng AN LPN &amp;
before Out Reach Cente 900am 1 OOpm
Home Health Aides fo oca
New xmas items
805 271h Slreel P1 PI
homehealth agency app y at

r
r

Sal Nov 1 9 ? AI 7 Soulh Yard Sale 1917 N Man 33105 H land Rd Pome oy
(740)992 0990 M F: B
3 mes from Ga pos Street 8 4pm M sc &amp; fu n
430pm
ture Sat Nov 1at
C oth ng and lots of mise

"'

"'

Read your
and learn

All ,...1 nu.t. .cfvertla ng
n tf'llt newtl)lper II
•ubfect to the Faden
Fair Houalng Act of 1H8
which
It H'-vtllo
tldV«&lt;IM any
preference Mmlt.don or
dltc f'i mhMIIion bliNd on
rece colof' NUgton Hl
l•mll tl tt.lut or nation•
origin or eny Intention to
makt an~ auc:h
prefe,.nce tlmltatlon or
dlacrlmln•don

lnlk••

This new~p~per will not
ltnowlngty .cc•pt
advertlaementa for rtl
Htate which I• In
vlo!Mion of the law Ou
rMderl are hereby
lntormtd tt.« • I
dwetllng~lldvertiHd In
11'11• ,..,..,.5*' .,.
.vtlltb" on an equt
opportunity bal...

W seman Rea Es ate 74o- Adu 1 Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pat o Sta t $385 Mo No
Pets Lease pus Secu ty
Depos
Requ ed Days
740 44 6 348
Even ngs
740 367 Qr;Q2

446 3644
able

6pm

r M~s~
10

sa e

0

A estau an coun le p e
cupboa d has s de doo s
an oak a op ea able nea
Me gs Ga a ne 740 992

70 2

Ranc h
Sye
Home
Ga 1pot s Fer y area bes de
84 umber 3BR LR Eat n
k tchen
1 2 bath a ge
20x20 FA Attached s ngle
ca ga age C A Gas Heat
s tt ng on 9 o ace m/1
Shown
by
app
Ca

Used

ho mes

s accept
4 br 1 112 baths Located on
Buy o
A ve ne
ng
app
ca
ons
to
wa 1ng
SA
41 nea Centena
An IQUSS
24. Eas Ma n
tJ
$700 pe month OepoSI &amp; s to Hud subs zed
on SA 24 E Pome oy 74 ()..
e e ence
equ ed
Ca apa men ca 675 6679 992 2526
Russ Moo f!
W seman Rea Es ate at EHO
owne

v

t

740 446 3644

New 3
home 1
eas,e no
de pas 1

I 740 446

unde

$2 000 00 Cal N kk Cal
(7 40 385 9948

SPACE

p4D ML&lt;;CHJ ANH llJS
fllR RFNr
b Ranch Sty e
Mt:J&lt;C11A~UN:
bah ga age 1 y
pets Ae erence &amp; Comma c a p ope ty o
4 pc bed oom su te 8 ond
S500 pe month
en
a soe
ant
n
wgod t m Good co d o
280
H sto ca
down own
C ca
1940s
$300
Pome CJ'f Oh lac ng ve
(740 446 2776
(740 589 7122
month

Housu1ow
Goous

2 br
month

OBO 740 446 1369

4M.70 c ean
$375 depos
446 4060 0 74Q-44 1

$375
74Q12B3

5 pe son Hot Tub New
pump cove and d g ta co
OS S 200 740 339 02 3
leave a message
Bookcase chest d awers
d esse en e a nment cen
e hldeabed e ge a o
save and m c owave sra no
740 446 9742
•

0 amond Engagemen
w th app a sa
16 0

"9

740 25&amp;

Hosp ta bed B and new
Gua an eed
Washe s neve been used E ec It
Coles Mob le Homes
Ranges
and It ask ng $400 740 44
D ye s
APAR'JMEII([S
US 50 Eas Athens Oho
Ref gera a s Some s a at 7390
IURRFNT
45701 740 592 1972
$95 Skaggs Appl ances 76
JET
V ne St 740)446 7398
AERATION MOTORS
1 &amp; 2 BA S295 to $359 oer
Repa ed New B. AeOu II In
month pus u ttes Nea
Stock Ca Ron Evans
no
pels
7
40
446
Hotze
Max mum outpu
BOO
537 952B
2957
BTU Exce en Cond 1 on
New 4 w de' on y $799 00
$1 000 OBO (304 B95
down and on y $ 69 76 pe
and 2 bed oom apa 1
3769
NEW AND USED STEEl
month
Ca
Ka ena ments lu n shed and unfu
(740)385 767
n shed
secu ty depos t T PROV D n ng Room by See Beams P pe Reba
Ang 9
Cone e e
equ red no pets 74o-992 De~ee dva abe w h 3 Fa
New 2003 Doublew de 3 BR
Channa
F
a
Ba
S ee
eaves 6 cha rs plus hutch
&amp; 2 Bath On y $1695 down 22 18
G at ng
Fo
D a ns
and &amp;295 mo 1 800 59 1 2 bedroom homes n fam y $500 (304)675 2090 leave D veways &amp; Wa kways L&amp;L
Message
6777
o en ed pa k Wale lu
Sc ap Meta s Open Monday
n shed No pels Ca 740
a mond Tuesday Wedn esday ll
No P ob em Sate Wan a
441 4540 eave a c ea mes
wh poo washer $85 Hot F day Bam-4 30pm ClOsed
new sect on at home? No
sage
Satu day
&amp;
P oblem Need loundat on
Po nt washe Wh poo &amp; Th u sday
and septi c? No P oblem BEAUTIFUL
APART GE dyes a wh te $65 Sunday 740}446---7300

r

Need ut t es un o d ve
way? No P oblem Want b g
savin gs on a 2003 mode
NO Prob em Coles Mob e
US
50 East
Homes
A hens Oho 740592 1972
S nee 1967 Wh e e You Ge

MENTS
PRICES

AT
BUOGET each Ca atte 6pm 740Office Furn t~tJre
AT JACKSON 446 9066
New sc a ch &amp; Den

ESTATES 52 Westwood
Save 70 o 1 800 527 4662
Dr ve from $297 to $383
A gonau 5 9 B dge Sr eet
Wa k to shop &amp; movies Ca
ng on MJF
GuyandOtte/Hun
740 446 2568
Equa B ass t ame lui s ze bed
$65 B oyh I end table $70
740 388 0460

Gacous vng
oom apa tments al V I age
Mano
and
R ve s de
Apa tmen s n M dd epo
Commerc a nyes men From $278 $348 Call 740
prope ty 512 Second ave 992 5064 Equa Hous n~
Ga pol s G eal locatiOn 4 Opportun 1es
renla unitS $5 OCXJ down Modern one bedroom ap
and contract to ba ance 740-44&amp;&lt;&gt;390
Thompsons App ance &amp;
Contact Johnny Russel fo
Aepa 67S 7388 For sale
e cond toned
automat c
washe s &amp; dryers at ge A
tors
gas and electr c
ranges a cond tiOners and
No th 3rd A11e Middktpo I 2 w nger washe s Will do
bedroom lu n shed apt repa rs on ma1o b ands n
Oepos t
&amp;
rete ence shop Qf a you home

equ ed No Pels 1740)992

0165

Bulavl e P ke Matt asses
!I~10~-~H~OLSES----., No th
4th
Avenue dressers
couches
FOR
M dd eport 2 oom eff1e19n bunkbeds bedroom su les
cy apt Ut it es paid Dep_)S t eel ners
Grave manu
and efe ences equ ed No ments
740,.46 4782
1 3 BED FORECLOSED pels 1740)992.()165
Ga po s OH Hours 10
HOMES Buy lrom $199/mo
4pm Slop by
4% down 30 yea s 0 8 5% Now Tak ng Appt catiOns
ap For Listings/ nfo mat on 35 West 2 Bed oom
Tow nhOuse
Apartments
ca I 1 BOO 7,9 300
E~et
llcludes Wa er
Sewage
709

r

Rmr

cash $350/Mo

74Q-446-

2 bedroom home n Rutland 0008
MUST SELL
out of high water S325 plus
One bedroom lui bath
referen ces
&amp; depos t k !chen w stove n own
(740)992.()309
t
k
C bl
w pr va e pa ng
a e
2001 Doub ew de 2 Ca
QU
wate
&amp;
5400
Gara~e 3 Bed ooms
2
t
Ba ths A I App ances 6
month ease $600 deposit
$6001 mo Located by
VInton Ava able December
House for sale by owne - 1st Call from Octobe 30th App cat ons
a e
takerJ
Novembe
2nd
bed oom 2 bath for add unt
Monday thru Fr day I om
lonal lnlormattan o to vtew (740)388 0118
900 AM-4 PM Olloce s
on I ne www o vb com
2br
House
Refe ence Ltq~ted at 1151 Evergreen
cOde If 10903
or
call
equ ed $350 month rent 0 ve Po nt P1easant WV
(740)992 2826 or 740 992 + $350 Depos No Pets Phone No a (304)(!75 5806

3664

I'ORRFNT

R II es
Townhouse Dee
New Sta ter Log Homes w 3 8 hOuse fo en t Located Ta a
304 )675·6720
acre Ready o go on Sanae s 0 ve 5550 pe Apa tmen s Ve y Spac ous
2 Bed ooms 2 F oars CA 1
S27 000 74o-256 924 7 o mon h Deposit and refe
2 Bath New y Ca peted
ences
equ ed
Ca
740 645-0870

Ca 304)675-3423

2 ful baths deck
wh pool ub Located l"'ea
I BOO 2 4 0452
www ga Ipo sea 68 co age com school n GaIa Owne
ava lable
I nanc ng
s
Reg ff90 OS 21148
MISO:LLANFJJUS

IE

APAKI"ENTS

ono

Ga I polls Career CoUege $69 000 740-379-9887

ca

1r

2001
F eetwood
Daub &amp;N de 3 b 2 bath a
or
app ances
$35
on
assume note MovE! or lot
Pleasant
$350 mon h Fo Sae 8 oyht sofa swv
ent op on Loca ed by
(
nc
udes wale and sewer) e ocke &amp; coffee able S200
Vnton 740983-1900

3 br 2 bath app ances
nice cond 1on Cen at heat
aprox 1 900 sq ft Ask ng

1'

H~

FORRtNr

\ II l&lt;t II\ \lll"' l

(7401742 9937

(Caree s Close To Home)
Today 740 446 4367

HOMES
mRSAJ.E

(304 )695 3417

~.,t__PR...~.ER.VI·~-O.NAI_.,~I

s on chose your own sched
u e Ca
740 446 4247
Personal Touch

45631
lanterns (some w th ed
10 old e ec c
g obes)
lamps 2 old wood cocks 2
od buner chu ns 100 s of
peces of od gasswae
(p nk:
ed yel ow blue
g ass g eene old co n
she er crocks &amp; stone Ja s Ea n money for Ch stmas
Donaugho
old
ocking by se 1ng Avon ca Joyce
ho se old oo s much much 304 675 69 9

MONEY
rul.oAN

Mortgage• Mortgagealll
We offer compel ve nte es
ales on mo tgages and
debt con sol dat ons and
spec a ze n good and bad
cedt Cal toll l ee a tnd
out about our ow nterest
a es and rece ve expe 1
advce
1-88&amp;-739-8719

HELPWAN'IID

7035

Sunday Display 1 oo p m
Thursday for Sunday•

tn.

Now tak ng app cat ens
Dr ve w CDLs p eterab y
w doze &amp; backhoe expe
ence
abo e p elerab y
w some sd ng
oof ng
p umb ng &amp; e eel ICa expe
ence Apply Coles Mob e
Homes 15266 U S 50 East
No
Athe ns Oh 4570

16 Day COL Training
25-cents any tem F day
TMC Sw I &amp; 30 MaJO
3 s and Satu day 1st a
Ca e s Need Entry leve
Ang e s F eama kel Fo
0 ve s G ads Rec Top
more nlormat on a40)992
Pay B tIs/Job Placement &amp;
9734
Be oil wk ends 1 866 602

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

POUCIES Ohio V.t'-y Pub llhlng ~·• the rfvMt to edh ~ or cancel t"'f' td at .,y time Enort muM b1 t..,ortN on the flrtt day of publ cl'tion tnd
T bun.S.ntlnel R-tlttiM' w 1 bl rupont bft tor no mort thin the cOlt of tni tpKt occupied by the IM'TOf .nd on y ttw flrat nMrtlon We thtll not bt H.a.
any 011 or expenM that •utt. from
publlc.tlon Of omit~ of en e&lt;tvertl...,.m C~ion will be m.cle n the flnt avellablt edition Box number
All HI ttl.tl tdwtr1..,.,.tntl trl tubjtct to tht Federtl Ftir Hout nv Act of 1968 Ttl • ,_,..,._ .
1 1 1 w1 ya confldtcntlt • Clln'llnt rttt ctlfd tppllet
acc.pl:t only help wanttd adt mNiing EOE ... nell dt Wt w II not know ngly .c~ tny ~vtrtltlf"'ti1 in v olttion of the ltw

_.,1i

H~l.P WA1&gt;11ID

Vtstt us at 200 Matn Street, Pt Pleasant
Call us at (304) 675-1333
Fax us at (304) 675·5234
E-matl us at
classlfted@mydailyregtster com

(304)675 5578

EHO

Washe

$95 d v•

We ghts
Two 10
La son
740 446

r

&amp; bench se $ ob
speed bl kes S30
sto m doo
$50
2350

AKC eg mate and tem.aJ.e
LMaso Apso s $500 to peor
Phone

740 388 844

o

740 388 81156

AKC Eng sh
Lab adO
Ae r eve pupp es chocolate
&amp; ve tow Champ on blood
ne health gua antee born
1016 $400 304 372-4642

$95

8 ect IC ange 595 etridge
ate wh te (Ike new) $195
Frdg dare ref gersto $150
weshe &amp; drye sets $300
each ~as range $95 couch One Sl week old JactM.
To rle
pupp'y
(ve y n ce an &amp; b own) Russet
$ 25 couch $50 2 fu I s ze remale $125 Cal 740 251&gt;
beds wlbox SPf nos and 1652
manresses $200 p ctu es
$12 each lamps $10 each
mce I rep ace nserl $ 50 2
ove seats $95 each ..
cha rs $20 each

S"-1 APt&gt;'loneet
7-7388
76 VIne StrHI:

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

�•

.

70

Friday, Oct. 31 , 2003·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page BB • The Dail y Sentinel

The Oaily Sentinel • Page B9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Oct. 31, 2003
ALLEY OOP

Ut \\SI'OIO \I 10\

Ml!SICAJ.

ACROSS

INSTRIJMEI-1S

AIIIu;

10

12 Strrng Jumbo Alvarez
Gu1ta r
Mother·Ol·Peal'l
rntays m1nt co nd1tron $400
Drumset 4 pre&lt;;e rncludes
Ttvone/ Hat siCrash. S250
(304)675·7004 or 1304)675·

Phillip

..__ _lioUiiRioS
i "'iii\liii)io
:-·

VHa·:~:&lt; lll.l"

runs
t1res. Ask •n g

good , new

$5.700. Call 740·367-0244
Potatoes tor sale 5011 $10,
Mon-Sa t . 65002 State 19133 Ford 302 . automa t1e
Route 124 . Reedsville , Oh , tor sale 5200. (304)675740 378-629 1
414 3
1984 Chevy Caprice 79.000
miles V-8 auto, a/c. all
power. new t1res. good work
1983 Ford Co untry Sqwe car. SBOO. {304)882·3652
Sta. Wa g: Fla Car. 92 K. 302 - - - -- - -00 Transrmssion. New tires. 1995 Chry sler Newyorker.
new brakes. rebUII! trans m•s- loaded
m mt
condr tron .
sion . new ba ttew ne w $4995 J997 Fora Escort ,
oxnau st. no rust. 5600 or dean car. runs great. $2995
trade tor d•rt b1ke or 4-wheel- (740)992-573 7

will be having a Public Ham
&amp; Turkey Dinne r Nov. 2
11 :00 am · ? Cost $6.00

1997 Mrts. Spyder co rw.
61 .000 mile s, auto. $10 .000

osd. 740-446-SB32.

new

condrti o n,

low

mileage. Phone 740· 446 1079

A:mu st seer Two Tennessee
Walk.1ng horses Broke, gentle. &amp; extra smooth . 4 yr o ld
2001 Monte C arlo LS. white.
Gray; 3 yr. old True Blue A 'C. till, crurse. am-l m-cd.
Roam Quarter Horse. bay E)(cel lent co nditi on . 50k
breed. very gentle 740 -367- $9,500. (304)675-8628

AQgus Bul ls. Herfe rs plu s
Marne-A ngus Steer s and

Heifers. Top bloo d l ~r,es
Slate run larm . Jack son
"140-286 -5395

Sunday November 2
12:30-4:30 PM

4~1-018 4

Buffet Served .

BINGO

740·366·9303

••

.....•

Let me clo it for youl
~achlne

Quilting · Regulated Stitch
18 Patterns A.vallable
Connie Curnutt
895-3962 Shop
ownerf operator
895-3512 nome

Middleport
We also have Bingo eve ry
Tuesday night at 6:30 pm

WANNA

TRICK
OR
TREAT

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

re .-. u rfal'in~ llywhce l s, rc t&gt;&lt;~ir o f alt ern ators &amp;

Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

starters and make h y drauli c: ho ses. Com e i n

ami get quali ty work at afTon.luble prices

1/ 1411 rno . pd

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

p-1-\E OI:&gt;VIOU~LY 1-\1&gt;0

I OCOI W/\TG\I~G TOO

! r-\Uffi SPOI&lt;::TSCJ:WiEJ-:.1

1-800-822-0417

I ln-,..,,.,_.,,__,""'1'""n'T..-m-.J:

·w .v-s #I C h evy. Po n tiac. Bu ick. Olds
&amp; Cu stom Va n Dealer""
_,.....

Pomeroy EagiL-s
BINGO 2t71

Allllyw hccl Grind ing On ly $25.00

THE BORN LOSER

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

NOVEMBER'SPECIAL

..

p~-·-·

-·-~

~

-........

"llostmyshir~'

\ £"~·.,

Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $S.IM)
Bonanza Gel

Ex&lt;iling """ 6, 500 sq11art foot retail
corJctpt coming to Si111er Bridge Plaza.
Now II iring complru• stqy:..l\{,mager,
AsJistam Managi·rs,full atul part time

IO :~ Miam

rmm

tn II : ~Mhun

BIG NATE

HOWARD C
.

I

WRITESEL

j

·~ll,dt~~ro;ulld

PUBLIC
NOTICES

l'uhlit- Nolin·.~ in

Ncw&lt;li"'l'"'"''· l'l

Yuur• f.ti j.{h1 lo Knun. IJdi \'t' l'l'fl Hi g ht tn Your

State of Ohio
proposed Equal shall
Ohio School Facilities
be considered reject Commission
ed.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bids will be
re'ceived for:
1. Bids -will be
received by the Meigs
Meigs
Elementary
School ,
Local School District
Estimated
Board, at 320 East
Contract Value
Main Street, Pomeroy,
Bid Package No. 14:
Ohio, 45769 . Alln :
Demolition ,
Mark Rhonemus, for
$174.00.00
the following Project ;
Bid Package No. 15,
Demolition
and
Asbestos Abatement,
Abatement of Salem
$138,900.00
Center and Rutland
until the Bid Date of
Elementary Schools
November 171h, 2003
Pomeroy, Ohio
at 1:00 p.m. (local
i n accordance with
standard time), when
the Dr.awings and
they will be opened
Specifications pre- and read.
pared by :
"3. A pre-bid meeting
Gandee &amp; Associates
will be held on
4488 Mot:Jile Drive
November 10, 2003
Columbus,
Ohio
1:00 p.m. al lhe fol·
43220
lowing location:
Phone: (614) 459·
Meigs Local School
8338 · Fax : (614) 442·
District Board Office
2158
320 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
SSOE
Sludios
Atchitecls
4.
Bidding
1001 Madison Avenue
Documents may be
Toledo, Ohio 43624·
oblained from the
1i;35
construction
Phone ; (419) 255- · Manager by Prime
3838 • Fax {419) 255·
Bldders only, upon
6101
receipt of a check,
which is refundable,
SEM Partners, Inc.
167
Soulh
Stale
in the amount of
Street
525.00. Checks shall
Weslerville , OH 43081
be made payable to
Phone ' {614) 794·
the
Meigs
Local
3100 • Fax : (614) 794·
School Distri ct and
3088
forwarded to the conThe
Construction
struction Manager.
Manager
for
the
Upon receipt of a
Ptoject is:
requ est, accompaThe Ouandel Group, nied by a deposit as
Inc.
named above, the
8181
Worlhington
construction
Road
Manager will lorward
Weslerville,
Ohio .copies of bidding
43082 .
documents to I he bid·
Phone' (614) 865- der.·
9000- Fax : (614) 8655.
Shipping
9001
charges for all bidwww.quandel.com
ding documents are
2. Any proposed
non-refundable and
Equal for a Standard
are lo be paid VIII a
shall be submltled 10
separate· check In the
lhe Architect no later amounl of S25 .00,
lhan ten (10) busi·
also made oul to the
,ness days prior to the
Meigs Local Sc~ool ·
bid opening. 11 no
District and forwardAddenda Is l11ued in ed
10
lhe
association with the Construction ·
. Bidder's requeal, lhe Manager wilh the

.....
deposit check.
6. Interested bidders should contact
Melissa Huff al (614)
865-9000 or send
deposit check directly
lo Key Blue Prln16180
Cleveland
Ave .,
Columbus, OH 43231.
No more lhan three
(3) sels will be provided on a refundable
basis to a Bidder.
Deposit
. will
be
refunded to Prime
Bidders only per
Article 2 .10 of the
instructions
to'
Bidders .
7. The Contract
Documents may be
reviewed for bidding
purposes
without
charge during business hours at the following locations:
Architect's Office:
SSOE
Studios
Architects
1001 Madison Avenue
Toledo, OH 436241535
SEM
Partners
Architects
167
Soulh
Slale
Slreet
Weslerville, OH 43081
Gandee &amp; Associates
4488 Mobile Drive
Columbus,
Ohio
43220
.
Cons-truct i on
Manager's Office:
The Quandel Group,
Inc.

8181 Worthington Rd.
Westerville,
Ohio
43002
F. W. Dodge Plan
Rooms in the follow·
ing cilies:
• Columbus, Ohio
(43216-1073), 1175
Dublin Road
an~ the following
addllional
plan
rooms :
•
The
Builders
Exchange of Central
Ohio, 1175 Dublin
Road,
Columbus,
Ohio 43215
•
Ohio
Valley
Construction
Employers Council ,
21 Armory Drive ,

Wheeling , WV26003
• Marietta Contractors
Association, 4424 8
Emerson
Avenue,
Parkersburg,
Wv
26104
Owner Office:
Meigs Local School
District
320 Easl Main Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
8.
The
Owner
reserves the right to
reject any or all bids
and to waive any or
all irregularities, mistakes, omissions or
informalities relative
thereto.
All questions pertalnin9
to
securing
Contract Documents,
Bidder' s List, etc.
shall be directed lo
Melissa Huff, The
auandel Group, Inc.,
8181
Worthington
Road, Westerville, OH
43082 (614) 865-9000.
(10) 31, (11) 7
Public Notice
Bid for Bus
Eastern
Local
School Dislrict, 50008
State Roule 681 ,
Reedsville,
Ohio
45772 is accepting
bids for a 71 passenger
school
bus.
Specifications for bus
can be obtained by
calling the superintendent 's office at
740-66Hi079. Quotes
will be opened in the
treasurer's office at
noon
on
Friday,
November 7, 2003.
The board reserves
the rlghl to reject any
or any part of the bid.
Bid should be labeled
" Bid for School Bus"
and mailed to:
Eastern Local School
District
Treasurer's Office
50008 State Route
681
Reedsville,
Ohio
45772
(10) 24, 31

prices.JOB FAIR-Saturday,
Nm• 1-From lOAM to 5PM at Sil,er
Brid.~e Plaza i11 G,rf/ipolis.
.~ ·
To schedule au itltert,iew please
1
~
Htmlur HaJ•dell toll-fret
~
~~77-ZJ0-7473 or email p01or remme to~
II #r a}'den @Jpcti onen

caiV

dODFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
dUMlESS
GmER

I

dree Esumaleu

~JO
L

949-1405

.•__ _
ThliliCOii
'iiiKSiii
" .........._ _,.;V.,;ANoisiiil
· &amp;O.._.J
fUll
SAI,E
4-WDs
02 Chevy Silverado 4W D.
Auto, loaded. extended cab.
e ~c e i J e nt
condilion .
Charcoa l, 16.000 miles.
$23,000 740-386·8869.
1991 Ford F-150 Lari at.
Exce ll ent condition w/top·
per. 132.000 original miles.
$3.500 firm . 740·446· 11 68
or 7 40-446·0 137.
1992 Chevy 3/4 ton . 5·
speed , w/topper. $4.800.
Ca ll 7 40·8832 .

"Not me!
""
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services.
Box 189. Middleport, OH
Phoneo843-5264 ."

PEANUTS

I CAN'T IMAGINE AN'ITHIN6 MORE STUPID T~AN
SITTING IN Tf.lE RAIN IN A PUMPKIN PATCI-l ON
~ALLOWEEN NIG~T WAITING FOR SOMEONE Wf.lO
DOE:SN''T EXIST~ W~ATCOULD BE DUM6EIUf.lAN Tf.lAT?

Land Clearing
Home 51ites Ponds /Jrivewuy.\·

740-992-3470
Toll f'ree 1·866·267-0072
l'omeroy, Ohio

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Add itions &amp;
Remodeling

BETTY

• New Garages

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Viny l Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Oacka

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy Ohiu
22 Years Local

1998 Yamaha 100cc 4wheeler. excellent conditio n.
new P. ngine, new tire s.
$ 1,000 OBO. Call 740·388-

0436.

F::lMr-A':"IIfO-~P::-,..-RTS-o:&amp;~

r

I __
4-WDs
CAMI'ERS&amp;
._
_ __.I1 ~ MaroR
HoMEN 1
.
1992 DOdge Caravan. 4
cylinder, automatic, 161,000
miles, very good condition,
second owne r, S1,200. Call
740-446-7215 or 740·4467669.
1998

Lincoln Navigator.

Red , 4)(4,

loaded.

145 K

miles.

Self·Stor~e

Star Craft Ca mper 1711 .
popouts, air, bath, hot waler.
stove $6,500. (304)458·

33795 Hiland Rd.

2569

Pomeroy, Ohio

"IU\1(1..,

rib

HOME
11\.IPKOYEJ\-IENIS

.... . . . . . . . . . . . .

1997 Jeep Wrangler, Black.
4-cyl., std ., 72K miles.
'740.245·5970

General
Home
C&amp;C
Malntenence- Pai nting , vinyl
siding, carp entry, doors,
59 Jeep &amp; 6 1 Jeep. Both windows , bath s, mobile
run. both have hardtops. home repai r and more. For
Also Tow Do lly $2,100 740· free estimate call Chet, 740·
992,6323.
379·2706.

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

740·992·5232

':::::::::::::~

r

Athens

MANUYS
SELF STORAGE

.97 Beech St.
middleport, OH ·
(10'Kl0' 610'x20')

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

HEL.L.O, HANK'S
APPL.IANCE REPAIR?

IMPORTS

High 81. Dry

S500. Ca ii740 -446·321Q.

GARFIELD

" ' "" t;to~p

'itM.t 'R~

---·A·Cij'clii:Eii'lo.'&lt;;O-RI;;;;;E&lt;;-_.J

&amp;

r.,k,
. ·*, See ;.·, . {¥
i'"f
\ •: ,,'·,.
i Aocky 1'RJ"

r--------,

95 Chevy P.U 1/2 ton , A.T.,
P.S ., P.B.. 4.3 V6 engine. 83 ,000 mi les. E)(cellent 95 Jeep Wrangler, 5-s pe ed
Condi tion. (304)675-7595
transmission. Works great

VANS

LADY
AS TH E

:-:c..,---.,----

~JO

T HE C.I\T

THE' FOOD PYR.MII D'

Cmmuercial Re.~·idelllial
BulfdtJzer &amp; /lacklwe Truckil1g Sefl!ice.\·
Septic Sy!Jiem Installation

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

1999 F250, 4WD. cruise.
AJC, AMIFM cassette, bed
liner, topper also included. 2!)02 Yamaha PW 50, $500
Fiber glass Tonneau cover or best oller. Call 740-446e)(tra
wheels &amp; · tires. 7199.

$t 7 ,700 740·446-7554.

JUS T

REPLACED

PARi OF

Wicks Hauling
and
Excavating

1995 FORD E350 CUBE

BOX
TRUCK .
CALL
(740 )446·9416. M·F 9·5.
Located
1391
Saftord
School, Gallipolis .

E.SSEN"TlA. L

NEIGH ·

98 Ford F-150, 3141 on, nice
truck , 122 K,
runs wet! ,
everyt~ing but electric win·
dows &amp; seats, $8.000; 90
Ford Ranger, 4 cyJ 5 sp ..
$1,100
OBO;
Jeep
Cherokee Pioneer, 4 dr.,
4x4 , real nice, just painted,
$3,500 080 or trade for 4
wheel drive S-10 or Ranger
wiauto; 97 Chevy Cavalier
engine, 350, (740)992·5532

r&lt;IO MmnRCVO,E:S

T HEY'RE CRUNCH"'' ,
THEY 'RE DE.LI C loUS.
AN P T HEY 'fl.E At-.4

5 FREE

sales associatrs. r•Sfwc s~·,uatior• " will feature over 10,000 pairs o.fslwesfCJr the
family. PLUS uuuder,gotmd AllitudeH wilt
jcdture Jarnous lahel jmri"r apparef. at

llf 2H2 F.asl Main Sin.'t't in

~NT

l'&lt;tS!-!

1-'ass

G•

All pass

breaker

lead. A 2

(740),92-3194
992-6635

J&amp;L ¥
Electric ~
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Ph 740·991-0913

1

Cell 74D-591·t 073

GRIZZWELLS

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISTRUCnDN

Lool&lt;, 1'\ER.fbl\-\i... I

~·T

t:\-\Jo'1'

SREI&gt;.I&lt;I\&gt;16 ~R 1-\t:ART, "BUT ..

T he re are two brrCige magaz1nes pub·
hshed rn the AntiPOdes. Frr st . the mont hly
Austratran 8r1dge . whtch IS rn a la rgepag e forma t. It rs a good publrc at10n
a1 med at tournament players
Thrs problem was supphed by the pubhsher and eclrtor, Paul Marston . Loolung
only at the North-South hands, how woWd
you and your part ner brd? And 1! you
reached srx spad es desprte haYrng onl y
25 combrned pomts. how wou ld you pl an
the play after West lead s a lrump and
Ea st tallows wrth the Jack?
In Marston's sequence. Nqrth's response
IS l he Jacoby l=orcrng Ra1 se . South's
three-c lub rebid prom1ses a srngleton or
vo1d 1n that su1t. When game-lorc1ng vat·
ues and a good til are fou nd. 1mmed1ately
showing a side-sur! short age usually
helps partner to determ1ne how well the
hands mesh. Here. th ree ct ubs was musrc
to No rth 's ears . so he rolled out
Blackwood.
S ill spades is Bllce!l enT, but wrth trumps 31 and diamonds 4·2. 11 requrres careful
play Alter winn1ng the spade lead rn
hand , concede a club tnck. (I f you erther
wm the f1rst trrck rn the du mmy or rmmea•·
ately draw a second round ot Humps . you
should fa1l wrth thrs layout .) Let's assume
West wrns the trrck to play another spade
Aller wmnrng rn hand . enter dummy three
t1me s 1n the red surts and trump the
remarn1 ng clubs. Ftn ally. cash the heart
kmg . rut! a heart rn the dummy, draw
West' s last trump wrlh the spade k1ng .
and cla1m - a classrc dummy reversal.
Your 12 tricks are lour spades. two hearts,
three diamonds and three club ruffs rn
hand.
Full details are avarlable at www.aus·
trahanbridge.com.

G

inthestock
market!"

Eurly birds shtrt

Announcements

C\CI) S unda~·

r.,__,

?

Hill's Self
Storage

$,1~e 5'x10'
tO 10~.x30'

llnlllin~ Uihk- Stud.'

/ ( ( ( l'r

WIF

6:30

will ht:

HOW'D '&lt;A KNOW
IT WUZ ME 'i'!

us

A 20 Year '~«'INWI r~/ A IIffJIIWIJi/e Machim' Work
WL' do uu t&lt;.mmhi!L· mal'hin c work , inc ludi11 g
l'nmrlt!tc head work. hlo(,;k &amp; pi ston work.

Common ( ;muml Mis~ions

....... , r , ,

HE'(, JUGHAID - -

9 miles }rom Pt. Pltasallt
011 Sa 11d Hill Road.

Welcomes Back Roger Pullins

Feeney Bennett-

BARNEY

m hrlj' quilt tops

11 9 W. Seco nd St. • Pomeroy, O H
740-992-2139

AMERICAN LEGION
POST 128

SHI

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

v

Pomeroy Auto Parts

All Packs $5.00
Starburst $1650 .00

1987 F01d E 150 Van $650:
1988 Ford
Thunderbird
Square barl s ol hay tor sal e S 1.000:
I 992
Chevy
$2 -$3 per ball . 740-24 5- Ca'.laller. 5 spd .. $800 ; 1994
9044
Plym outh Voyager, $1 .800:
1987 Mercury Marqui s,
$500: t 989 Dodge Dynasty.
Happy Ad
SBOO: 1992 Ford Tempo.
$900. 1990 Old s C1era .
S1,200;
1985
Pon tiac
Sunbrrd. $600: 1992 Olds
Ciera, $1,200; 1994 Chevy
Caval ier. $ 1.600: 1993 OJds
Crera, S9 50: 1993 Plymou th
Sundance . SBOO
1994
Chevy Co rsica , $ 1,600 ,
199 1 Chevy S - 10, standard ,
$ 1.000
Haw s: 9-5 Monday-Friday
Closed
9-3
Sat urday,
Sund&lt;'ly

740-992-7599

740..992-2738

November 1
6:30pm

Live ly's Auto Sales
hay.

Drinks are FREE

East
I'ass

Bridge magazines
from Down Under

VAMPI~E

RES IDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

'\lorth
'l NT

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• Rou fin g

FOR $6.00

w ~st

Open i n~

COMMERCIAL and

Sunday, November 2, 2003
Crafts and Indoor Flea Market
Tables $10.00
Doors open 8:00am lor set·up
For information contact
Charlie Picaroni

Beverly 992-5105
Shirley 992-4025

$1 .695:91 Cavat 1er 51.495:
9 1 Geo Sto rm $7 95 . 95
F ~reb1 rd $3,995 23 vehrcles
rn stock up to $4 ,395.

GR-IIN
mi~ed

•

All relatives and
friends welcome

COOK MOTOR S
Montz 3 horse slant toad
740 -446-0103
combo Stock Trailer. $3.500 - -- - - - - c411 740·245-5978 leave a Burgundy 93 Eagle Vision,
loaded. V6 . CD player.
message
Power everything. $ 12.000
HAY&amp;
OBO. 740-2 56-1652 .

Round bales ol
(740 )698-8211

Window~

Rutland American Legion
November 2, 2003.
11 :00 am until 6:00 pm
Come one come all
Everyone Welcome

Meigs Sen1or C;;tre Center

96 Cors1ca $2 .195. 96 Neon
IAHA Reg . 1994 Chest nut
Mare. as km g 2K Call 740-

FISH FRY

Hunnell Reunion

90 Grand
PriK . good
Need s
3. I
body/trans.
motor. $2 50 93 Mazda 323;
100.000K, $850. 740-2 561487

""'
;,

• Rcplnccmcnl

ALL YOU CAN EAT

7G1 0 aft er 8 :00pm

,..

T~ESE

COOKIES
ARE GETTING
SOGGI{ ..

22
23
24
27
30

"' "

AstroGraph
'lbur 'Birttoiq:

Saturday, Nov. 1, 2~3
By Barnlce Bede 9so1
Condr t1 ons m general writ ba much more
hopetul in the year ahead than they've
been lor a long hme. You are now likely to
receive thi ngs you deserve but whrch
mrght .h ave been prevrous ly den1ed you tor
. one reason or another
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22 1 - An oppor·
tunity could present 1tselt today thal'll
enable you 10 tre down to your sat 1slactr on
a situahon tllat nas bean lett hang1ng
Move on 11 now or you may never get the
chance agmn.
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23·Dec. 2 1) - In a
matler where there rs a shared rnterest
involved. you could come out better than
the other guy in ways greater ' than you
thoug ht. but only if selfishnes s is not at the
bollom ol rl
.
C APRI COR N (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - You'll
be tar luckrer today simply socializing with
frrends instead of trying to use them to
help you in rnak1ng deals. Wait unt•l anolh·
er day, when they' I! be all business.
AQUAR IUS (Jan
20-Feb
19) Compensation rs on its way tor help you've
given another and today may be 111e day
when 11 comes about. Be gracious about
what you gel, even il it isn't as perfec t as
you would have liked.
PI SCES (Feb. 2Q- March 20)- An enterprise in which you're Involved is still rathe r
chancy. but it's lar lass a gamble than
many close tr lends or acquaintances
would have you believe. Don 't bail out
now.
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprtl 19) - The re is
wary il'ldicat!on that lady luck wilt be put·
ling you In just the right place at the right
ttmo today to reap a special advantage
Don't negate her influence with negative
thinking.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Jt's to your
benefit today to do more listening tha n
talking, especially if you l ind yourself in the
presence ol peopltf who know l1ow to
make things happen. Learn, dml' t be a
know-it-au.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - There are
positive influences al l abo ut you today that
could rmprove things for you Immensely in
areas that are impor tant to you Hrey'll be
lleeting, so don't treat them casually.
CANC ER (J une 21-July 22) - Have the
courage today to handle 1mportant matters
yourself and be lhe one to do all the nego ·
tia1ing . Using Intermediaries wilt not get
you what you want; work out the arrange ·
rnents yourself.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22 ) - Even though you
might have been planning to take a bit of
time tor yoursel! today. 11's to your actva ntage to g1ve attention to more serious mat·
tars. Work lirst. pl an to play later .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - How well
you handle dealrngs with others today w11l
determine your success, level. The better
1
you work wl1h them . the more you 'll
accomplish. Trying to be a loner wi ll v•eld
tittle .
'
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - It's not that
you won't have ample opportunit ieS to add
to your resources today and even make a
killing , It's what you do with Jt once you get
lt't~at could be lhe problem . Be sensible .

5o4 Fitzgerald
ol jau
55 Wotar,
to Pierre
~ Hldeouo
creature
57 BIUI-ilrHn
58 Gretzky 's
grp.
59 Dozos (off)

20 Lone

Pass
Pas!J

"' K Q 7 3

mouee
50 Troll behind
52 Drive a ..,.,;

12 Long·octlve
voicono
13 Aclor
- Holbrook
14 Trot , e.g.
15 Cruy
18 Robo
17 .. GrMn
Goblet" kid
18 Pawna
Ranger's
aide kick
Border
Kept secrel
Mombaaa' s
land
Threaten
Oklahoma
I own
Morl&lt;'s home
Rage
Dog sound
Sound· •
barrier

Ocalcr : Sout h
Vu lneral}lc: East Wes t

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

WALLEYE

t; ast
• J
• J JO ~ j
t I ll !.1 8 2

• Q ,') " 3

BISSEll

Announcements

y 8 .. 2

oJ

Suuth
. AQlU ii &lt;l
• K 6 ti

BUILDERS IRC.

6 pm
21 games $20 .00
3 special games · 3 Draw1ngs
Info- 949-2656 or 949-2 169

2000 Lmcotn Conhnental
Lrke

Announcements

•

.L

K 6 5 3

•
A A./ 6 5

South

Nov. 6

otter. Call 740-256·6169

•

TFN

STAR MILL PARK BASKET BINGO
Middleport Legion

1999
Chevy
Cava lier,
66.000 miles. $3, 950 or best
3 Ye ar o ld . Registered
J':rsey Bull. 74 0-992-7603

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-446-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

A 4
A K 6

IJ 7 ~
Q i 3 2
J 1

•

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-54 79

NORTHUP DODGE

The Racine American
Legion 602

•
•
•
w~u

Cellular

Nov. 1st • Sam - 1pm
All items donated to
Me1gs Co-op Parish

"' lR SAI.I:
OR TR-IIlE

er 740-446-7527
I \tnt Sl 1'1"1 ll·."i
.~ I I I lS I Ot"l&gt;.

...GlltEL

RACO FOOD DRIVE
Racine

to

1 Wi..erack
5 PC media

breWera

11
r\orth

43 Might
Pinkloh·
ytUow
46 Eye nerve
4V Field

«

e Colfoo

Alder

S500 1 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas. Chevys. Jeeps. etc'
Cars from $500 For listings
t -800-719-300 1 ew t ~90 1

376,:.
1 - - - - - - , 1980 Chevy
F~I II"IS&amp;
eng 1ne. automatiC.

r

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

31
32
34

35

DO~N

1 Proof abbr.
2 Beehive
state
3 Dala
4Spotty
5 Fissure
6 Smidgen
7 Spread
liberally
8 Zaire
neighbor
9 Declaim
vlolenlly
10 Mexican

37 Ottoman
oHiclal
38 Parrots
40 Animal
track

24
25

26
27
28

urr,

-

29 Conse·
51 Sigh of
quently
uti afaction
33 Cup handle
53 Brown
35 Ep•c
ol renown
36 High ,
as a river
39 Breakfast
food

boy
11 Canonized

Mlle.

42 Arrogance

40 Exhau•t
41
ana e
43 Ski slope
noise
bump
Actre ss
- Kendoll 44 SongwrHer
- Porter
Imported
45 Earthen oot
cheese
California 47 ··othello' ·
villein
wine valley
Witticisms 48 Whey
oppo•ita
Breezy
49 Bolly ·a
greellng

19 Groen
parrot
21 Barnyard

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
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SCIAM-lEiS ANSWBS 1 o- ; o- c 1
Victor. Yac/11 . Ur. ,. ed · 1n:a.1c · Whfl i ro DO
"How-do you like workmg al the same s:ore as your ·
mom?' the dad asked the tee 1 "ll"s great'" the teen·
beamed. · Now 1 gel :a1d wh•le shes le•'lng ~e WHAT
to DOl"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUPTO NUTZ

• New Homes

·Garages
• Complete
, Remodeling

140-892-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

I

•Bi
•

,,

••
I

'

�ALONG

INSIDE

L I\T\i( ;

GAHS Key Club
works to make a
difference, A5

THE RIVER
Art Council's focus
remains same, Cl

2004 Acura
TL Sedan, 01

I

u·n a

_. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/O Th~ Gaston Gazette, PO. .Box 1893, Gastonia. NC 28053
WINSION ",GlJP SEUil:.S

his crew had problel)1s on

What: Checker Auto Parts 500
Where: Phoenix International
Raceway, Avondale. Ariz. {1

pit road . Near the end of

BUSCH Sf IUCS

What: Basha s' Supermar-

kets 200

Monday's Bass Pro Shops
MBNA 500. he charged
through the pack to take
second and close in on Gordon, but he could never
quite get to the rear bumper
of Gordon's Chevrolet. Gordon caught a break on lap

Where: Phoenix International
Raceway. Avondale. Ariz . (1

131.339 mph , Oct. 26.
2001

dur ing the past six races.

man's Dodge·crashed while
battling with D~le Earnhardt
Jr.'s Chevrolet. Th e victo ry
was Gordon's third of the
season and second in a row.
PointS leader Matt Kenseth
ral lied to fin ish 11th and
widened his gap on second-

Stewart led th e most taps
but lost track position when,
on two separate occasions.

points with three races remaining.

mile), 312 laps/312 miles

When: Green flag drops at

3:30p.m. Sunday
Last year's winner : Matt
Ken set~

Qualifying record: Rusty Wal·
lace, Ford, 134.178 mph,
Nov. 3,2000

Race record: Tony Stewart,

•

'

Pontiac, 118.132 mph, Nov.
7, 1999

Most recent race: Jeff Gor-

don outdueled Tony Stewart
in
a battle
between
NASCAR's hottest drivers

322 of 325 when Ryan New-

place Earnhardt to 256

mile). 200 lapsf200 miles
When: Gree n flag drops at
3:30 p.m. Saturday
Last year'&amp; winner: Scott
Wim mer
Track qualifying record: Jimmy .Spencer, Chevrolet,
Race ret:ord: Jeff Burton ,

CHAf-ISMI\N

fle , in a Chevrolet. won Saturday's Aaron's 312 at Atlanta. David Green finished
eightl1 to regain the points
lead with three races to go.

•

Tt~U C K

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

What: Chevy Silverado 150
Where: Phoen ill. International
Raceway, Avondale. Ariz. (1

Ohio\ &lt;.~I h.·~ Puhli,hiug (

mile), 150 laps/150 miles
When: 5:30p.m. Friday
Last year 's winner : Kev1n_
Harviek

• The season ends for
GAHS. See Page 81

Race record: Joe Ru ttman,

.

Ford, 103.942 mph. Nov. 1.
1997

Polllt'l'u~ •

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'liddlt·por·t • ( .allipuli.., •

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: ~ .i

Meigs County voters will have a busy election year

SPORTS

Track qualifying record: Joe
Ruttman , Dodge, 129.204
mph, Nov. 2, 2000

BY BRIAN

J •.REED

breed@ mydailysantiriel.com

Most recent race: Jon Wood,

Ford, 115.145 mph, Nov. 4, - in a Ford, won the Oct. 13
race at Ma rtinsville. With
2000

Moat recent race: Greg Bif-

tm
•

POMEROY - Voters in
Meigs County will elect
township and village officials
and will determine the fate of
two county-wide levies and
several village and township
tax issues.

two races remain1ng, points
leader Brendan Gaughan
leads Travi s Kva pil by 45
points, Ted Musgrave by 69
and Dennis Setzer by 72 .

FEUD OF THE WEEK

All Meigs Coumy voters
will determine the fale. of two
county-wide levy issues. The
Meigs County Council on
Aging seeks the renewal of
its one-mill , five year levy for
operations.
The Meigs Board of
Mental Relardalion and
Developmental Di sahilili es
proposes an additional two-

mill. ti ve-year levy for maintenance. capital construclion
and operation of the Carleton
School and Meigs Indu stries .

County's five vi llage, .
In Mi ddleport . Mayor
Sandy lannarel li is seek in g
re-elcclion. She is the onl y
candidate 10 appear on the
ballot. although Councilman
Robert Pooler is a write-in
candidate.
Mayors, vi llage co uncil
Robert E. Robi.nso n. a
members and members of
Boards of Public Affai" will Democrat. and Stephen
be elected in each of Meigs Houchins. a Republican. are

Village races

the two candiates seeking reelection in the Middleport
council race. where two
mcmbe" are to be elecied.
John Ti llis . Sr. is a wri te-in
candidate .
Thomas R. Anderson is a
write-in candidale for the
Board of Pu blic Affairs in

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

v
TODD BODINE,

Meigs County
voter turnout
estimated
less than half

E

WIN STON CUP SER IES

R

Dale
Earnhardt
Jr.

T

odd Bodine is the youngest of lhree racing brothers
from Chemung, N.Y. Unlike brothers Geoffrey and
Brett, Todd has never won a Winston Cup race.
The recent race in Marlinsville, Va., marked Thdd Bodine's 200th start in NASCAR's premier series.
"I reached a similar mark in Kansas with my Busch (Series) slats, and to be honest, I don'l keep track of this type
of accomplishment," Bodine said. "Thinking about it,
though, I've actually got mixed emotions.
.
"Cerlainly, I would have hoped to have a Wmston Cup
win under my bell by now. At the same time, I realize I'm
very fortunale to be racing in NASCAR's top series."
The youngest Bodine debuted on Aug. 9, 1992, at
Walkins Glen, the lrack
closest to his home·
town. He's won five
poles, beginning
in 1997 at the
Glen.

Ryan
Newman

Geoffrey Bodine, still an occasional driver in Cup at
age 54, has 18 victories to his credit and was voted one of
NASCAR's SO greatest drivers in 1998. Brett Bodme, 44,
won in 1990 at North Wilkesboro, N.C., and began I he 2003
season as an owner-driver. Sponsorship problems sent
Brett's team to the sidelines, and he has been seen mostly
as a radio analyst for Performance Racing Network of late.
On a weekly basis, Todd Bodine is the only member of
his family left in NASCAR's top series. A victory earlier
this year in Darlinglon, S.C., was Todd's 15th in the Busch
Series.
·
Because of his veleran stalus, Bodine is well-versed on
many issues in NASCAR, namely the adjustment lo the
rule lhat allows drivers to get a lap back.
"It's fair or unfair for everyone competing," Bodine
said. "It's fine as far
as I am concerned
because it applies to everyone ."

YOUR TURN

LffiERS FROM OUR READERS

Learning the ropes

W

hat d oes t he '" R"' stand fo r

be h1nd
some
drivers'
names? How does the
·points system work? I am a late
bloomer in my late 40s. Th is is my
first season.
First-year fan

Contact
Monte Dutton
at hmcl4858@
peoplepc com

J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinal.com
BY BRIAN

Wh ile raci ng for sixth place, con·
tact with Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s Chevrolet sent Ryan Newman 's Dodge spin·
ning out of control and into the backstret ch wall. Not only did the crash
cost Newman, the pole winner. a sol·
id finish in Monday's Bass Pro Shops
· MB NA 500. it also brought a prema·
ture end to the battl e up f ront be·
tween winner Jeff Gordon and second-place Tony Stewart.
·
NASCAR This Woek'a Monte
Dutton gives his take: "Newman had
very little clearance when he moved
over to block Earnllardt. and the sudden move made his car just loose
enough to skid out of contro l when
Earnhardt. perh aps understandab ly,
tapped Newman's car in the rear."

Youngest brother is storied family's lone Cup regular
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

s
u
s

INSIDE
• Appeals court hears Ten
Commandments case. See
PageA2
• Holiday home tour set.
See Page A?
• Car rams arena where
Bush gave speech. See
PageA7
• Two U.S. soldiers die in
attack. See Page AS

Dickinson, N.D.
We/come aboard.
The "R" stands for rookie, a driver
who's in his fi rst full ye ar. Greg Biffle

Todd Bodine,
left, and older
brother Brett have
raced against
each other In the
Winston Cup Series
since :1,992. But Todd
has never won In
NASCAR's premier series,
and Brett hasn't won
since 1990. The old·
est of the Bodines
-Geoffreyhas 18 wins.

and Jamie McMurray are currently
ba ttlin g for the Raybestos Rookie of
the Year award.
Th e Winston Cup points system,
wh ich has been in place since 1975,
is as follows: A driver earns five bonus
points for leading a lap and five bonus
points for lead ing the most laps. The
first-place driver gets 175 points, and
because he would have had to lead Cit
least one lap - the final one -..:.. to
win, he gets five more for 180. If tne
winner were to lead the most laps, he
would get 185. Second place gets 170

points. third 165, fourth 160, fifth 155

Page AS
• Robert D. Fife, 77
• Johnny Paul Phipps, 65

WEATHER
Sunny, HI: 70&amp;, Low: 601

and sixth 150. The distribution th en
dwindles in four-point increments from
seve nth to 11th. From 12th all the way
to 43rd, it goes in three-point in cre·
ments. Here 's an example: In Monday 's race at Atlanta, Jeff Gordon got
180 points for winning th e race and
leading the final lap. Second-place fin·
is her Tony Stewart led the most laps,
so the 10 bonus points also gave him
180 poin ts. Brian Vickers, wh o f inished 43rd, earned 34 points.

John Clark/
N.4SCAR
This Week

..
''

'

OBITUARIES

WHO 'S HOT
· AND WHO 'S NOT

Details

' ~ HOT: Jeff Gordon's average fin-

on Page A2

FAN T I P S

Ish In the past six races Is 3.67.
• ,.. Jam ie McMurray didn't pest
·. another top 10, but he did finish
. 15th.
: "' N.OT: Ryan Newman had a
streak of seven straight top-10
finishes end Sunday.

NASCAR This Week incorrectly
li st ed hotrid e.co m as the Web site
where fans could buy "Lookin ' fo r a

Ride," a CD collection of NASCAR-related songs. The correct name of the
site is hotride. net. and the to ll-free

number is 1·888·277-9365.

Valley

&amp; Sup-ply

Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

.

•,T •

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

4 SECTIONS- 28 PAGilS ·

AroundTown
Celebrations
Classifieds
' .
Com1cs
Edito.rials
Obituaries
State
Sports
Weather

A3
C4
D3-5

insert

A4
A6
A2
B1
A2

.@ 2003 Ohio Valley Publishlns Co.

992-6611

252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

INDEX

'"''"·
·-r~

'

~\

.

'

.

.

Main St.reet, • Rutland, Ohio

740-742-2289 or 1·800·837·8217
·can for hours or to make an

Meigs s~niors gather for health fair
cCHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - While the
emphasis was on ge tting the
e lderly and those with hi gh
ri sk conditi ons in for flu
shots, the heallh fair held at
the Senior Citizens Center
Friday offered somelhing for
everyone regardless of age or
condition .
More than 500 Meigs
countians came for the
influ enza vaccinations and
while there those and many
olhers took advantage of the
health fair' s screenmgs.
Blood pressure s were
taken. derma scans were done
to check skin for sun damage.
hearing tests were given, and
pulmonary function tests 10
measure lung capacity were
offere~ - all without charge.
Then there were numerous
health professionals joined
by volunieers givi ng oul

..

,.

"

'

f

POMEROY
Ohio
Secretary of State J. Kenneth
Blackwell estimates that 47
percent of regislered Meigs
County voters will turn oul
to the poll s on Tue sday,
while the projecied turnoul
statewide is just 36 percent.
According · to Blackwell,
6525 of Meigs County's 14.(Xll
registered voter.; are ex peeled to
vote in this week's genernl election, and 8.523 of the 21,250
registered voters in Gallia
County. or 40 percenl , are
expected lo vote.
The anlicipated turnoul is
consistent wnh similar eleclion years. Blackwell said,
and estimates are based on
lurnout in past election years
Marvin Craig learns about living choices for Medicare beneficiaries from Karen Galligher of Ohio V.ePRO.
with similar races and issues.
Brochures on health care at home or in a nursing home setting were distnbuted. (Charlene Hoeflich )
Polls will be open from
6:30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m. on
Tuesday.
'
...
In Meigs County, polls are
located as follows: Bedford,
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly
Campgrounds;
Bradbury.
Bradburv School; Ea.~t Chesler,
Shade River Ma&lt;;Onic Lodge;
in the area are offering their
West Chesler, Pomeroy Gun BY KANDY BOYCE
kboyce@
mydailyregister.com
facililies
for drop-off locaClub; Columbia. Columbia
tion
s.
Bob
's Market and
Township Fire Department;
Laurel Cliff, Laurel Cliff Free
POINT
PLEASANT. Greenhouses Inc. in Mason
in
Gallipoli s,
Methodist Church ; Lebanon; W.Va .
Operation or
WBYG/WBGS/JOYFM in
Lebanon Township Building; Chri stmas Child is gearing up
Point
Plea
sanl.
Letart,
Letart
Township for another year of helping
Building; Miner.;ville; Forest disadvanta~ chi ldren in WRYV/WJEH in Gallipolis
Run United Methodist Church. war-lorn countries. and sev- and WVYKIWMPO on
111
Road
North Olive, Tuppers era l local busin esses have · Bradbury
Middleport,
Ohio,
have
graPlain s"' Elementary School volunteered as drop-off cenciously agreed to help by co lbuilding; Soulh Olive, Long ters for the gift boxes.
Bottom
Community
Operation Christmas Child lecting lilled boxes.
Anyone wanting to donate
Building; Orange, Tuppers is a project that brings com·
a
box should pick up a
Plains Firehouse; Racine fort and hope to hurting kids
Precinct'\" Racine American whose world has been torn brochure at any of the dropoff locations. at Willa's Bible
Legion Hall; Racine Village, apart.
Racine
Town
Hall;
Families,
churches. Book Store in Point Pleasant.
Rocksprings, Rocksprings schools, seoul troops, c1v1c or the Good New s Book
United Methodist Church.
qrganizalions .and individuals Store and Bossard Library in
Rutland Village, Rulland can join the efforts of ihou- Gallipoli s.
To prepare I he boxes. use a
Civic Cenler; East Rutland, sands of others who have
sturdy
s ho ~ box and Jill it
Rutland Civic Center; West brought a little happiness to
with
items
suitable for a boy
Rutland, Rutland Civic Center; these children by preparing a
or a gitl. Suggested gifts
Salem,
Salem
Center shoe box full of gifls.
Firehouse; Syracuse Village,
What people in the U.S . include small cars, balls ,
Syracuse
Village
Hall ; would think of as a trivial gift dolls. stuffed animals, plastic
Middlepon 2, Middleport Fire may be the only gift that kazoos, harmonicas. yo-yos,
Department: Middle)J?rt 3, these children will ever have . jump ropes, small Etch A
Middleport Library; M1ddlepon
"If you could see how Sketch®, toys that light up or
4, Overbrook Center; Pomeroy appreciative these children make noise (with extra batI , Counhouse Annex; Pomeroy are and how their faces ligh t teries), Slinky's®. pens, pen·
2, Counhouse Annex, Pomeroy up in smiles, it would melt cils and sharpener, crayons or
3, Pomeroy Firehouse.
your heart," Domestics markers, slamps and ink pad
Those voters who are Mission Partner Helen Lanier sets, coloring books, writing
or an pads or paper, solar calunsure of their polling loca- of Gallipolis, Ohio, said. .
tion or registration status can
To have the boxes ready in cu lators, toothbrushes. tooth·
contact the Meigs County time for Christmas, it is paste . soap, combs. hair clips, Little Kaylee Katona who came costumed as a lion had a love;
Board of Elections, located important to ready them now. washcloths. hard candy. lol- ly time at the firemen 's Halloween festival. Here she pose~
in the courthouse annex on
The deadline for drop-off is lipops, mints, gum, su.nglass- with a bubble blowing witch one of several interesting displays;
Mulberry Heights, at 992- Nov. 20. Several busmesses
Please see Chrlsbnes, A&amp; To read more. turn to page A5 (Charlene Hoeflich).
2697 .

Operation Christmas
Child gears up for season

AT THE
FESTIVAL

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