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                  <text>Thu,..y, SepiM'Ibtr It 1001

www.mydllllyaentlnel.com

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ALLIYOOP

IRQIO&amp;

football: Eagles meet Falcons, B1

NIA Cro..word Pu .. le

PHILLIP
ALOE II

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Melp County's Hometown

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1\vo :people
questioned·
~n shooting

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BY AGNII HAPIIA

. Sentinel staff writer

CELEBRITY CIPHER
. by Lula C1mpoa

..

Ctltblttv Oillhtr O!'lt'lllllrtmt ara o'"ttd from CI\IOIIIIOnt bV t.,_
- " '· paolond praotnl. Each -In 1111 olllhtr ollndlloi lnothtr.
Tlldly'l «u.: E _,. a

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hORN I.OSER
YC)J Kt-IOW 't.IAAT IINC/If:. /'t\l&gt;{)l
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-F'FII!I/IOUS SOLUTION - 'Wrlttrw

JOVVUK,

T.X.

h11111 rare powtr not ~
en 1o anvon• tiM; we oan bore PIOPI• long alter we are diad.'
- 81nctllr Ltwll
·
·

WOlD
OAMI

POMEROY - 'TWo people huve been questiun~-d in
connection with u shoOiing
near the Meigs-Athens
county line lust Suturduy.
tlccortling to Meigs County
Sheriff Rulph Trussell.
.
Jumes Dcnn1s. 51. ut
Ruck Run . Roud. told
Athens County deputies he
wus riding u four-wheeler
down Rock Run Road.
when he wus shot in the
buck with buckshot. He
wus treuted ut 0' Blenness
Memorial Hospitnl in
Athens und lutl!r re lonsed.
Trussell suid the cnse wus
turned over to the Meil!s
County
Sheriff s
Depurtmcnt nfter the
Athens County Sheriff's
Department dctenniued the
shooting ul:tuully took
pluce in Meigs County.
Deputies from Athens
County cletuincd the . two
suspects nnd then contncted
the Meigs Count y Sheriff's
Department ut uround . 3
p.m .. Trussell suid.
Trussell sni\1 the suspects
live neur to where the
shouting oc,ured.
.Deputies, with permis·
~ ion , seurched the suspects'
residence. ITnding u t'ireurm
and shells which were sent
til . Burenu of Criminal
lnvestigution
und
ldenti11cution fur testing.
· :Trusse ll suid the cnse
~mnins under invcstigntion.

Deaths .
Ma~

Detlllll, AJ

Pli:ANU'fS
PO~ONIUS

TO IOII'.ItOW ANOTMEJt
SM&amp;&amp;T OF PAfi'IIL

SAID, ' NEJTioiER

A 801tltOWEI(. NOR.
A L&amp;NDEit BE ''

Weather
High: 90s, Low: 50s
Detail•. A1

Lotteries
OHIO

ITHURSDAY

SEPTEMBER 5 I

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! rlih ,JO/IIf ' :t.u 1
H '01 A/nt · Nfl' '

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Pick :si 7+3
Pick 4: 5·6-1-7
Buckeye 5:·2·14·17-27-36
Pick 3 nl1ht: 1·8·6
Pick 4 nl1ht: 7·5·9:8

--,!

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W.VA.
Dilly 3: 4·3-6
Dally 4: 7-8· 7·1
Culi 15: 1·11 · 12· 15· 18-20

l'rlday. So\!1. 6. 2002
The po!lt· ve dtnnges you
tnnkc In ihc yenr nhrnd to depun from your previous pnt
tcr111 1111&lt;1 bn•k llfc!tyle could
111111 uut I&lt;Yprovide you with o
lpt rnurc l'un nnd C!&gt;II!Cnttnent
dum you've k11uwn for •ome
time.
VlltGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22)
·• Tudoy, bouollna uboul
thlna• thot you hnve yclto ••·
comr.li•h con mnke you look
bluo crouo. Do whnt you Intend tu du tllld l•t the re!ull•
!peak for lheometve•. Oet o'
ump''" ltfc ·by undentundlnll
he lnnuen~e• thot'll aovern
you In the your uhead. Send
for your A•lro·Oroph pradlo·
tlono by mnlllnJI $2 to A•tro·
Oruph, c/o this newopapor,
P.O. Boo 167, Wickliffe. OH
44092. De •ure to 1tate your
zooloc sign.
LIIIRA (Sept. 2J.Clot. 23\ •
· ~" ' ' bocuu•e *omenne u·
puun~t l&gt;l•lher l~ea1 In a ~ra·
mutlc fll!hlun dncan't neee•·
8UI'IIy muke thh penon
•nuu·ter or beucr.fnulyl.c the
worth of fum on It tnuy dt·
bunk the ilh&gt;!lon. · ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov.
· 22) •• Don' I be o purtlclpnnt
:In n ,)oint venture toduy If the
rule• nrcn 'i cquul. This Ia ••·

l

'•

&gt;eclully true If money Ia be·
Ill ' exchuAged or Ir you."
nokcd 10 luke u minority pool ·
lion.
SAOIT'rARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) •• l(ouiiMicolly 1ize
up tho culiber of thuse with
whotn you joust today .. un·
dcrrutlnil your competition
could produce undealrable

l

co n~equcntc l .

,

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19) .. It may become very lm·
portant today for you to muln·
lain a positive. reallatlc attitude toward your work. If you
Innate the size of a job, you
may let It overwhelm you ..
or you may never even at·
temptlt.
.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Peb.
19) •• You are completely on
your own today. Don't kid
yournlf Into· bellevlna lhot
others are looklna out for
nnythlna other than their own ,
1urvlval. You'll be left unpro·
.tected.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March
20) •• It doe an' t matter If you
are In complete nccord with
your mate;·unle11 you 1uppon
, him/her In front of othero 1t
could cause un emborrau1na
lmprcnlon.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19)
... lnllcad of ballevlna you're

the only one with freah, workable Idona, Invite eo-workers
to expre11 their vlewa and
opinions. You mlahl be
nmozed nl what they come up
with.
TAURUS (April 20-May .
20) ... Aaaln today unleu you ·
ore Financially diaclpllned,
there II 0 aood ' chance rou
will make o aerlou1 den In
your budact. Whnt you lllaata
now will be 1one forever.
GEMINI (May 21 -lune ~b)'
•• If you handle a problell) \O·
day In IUi:h a way that merel):
pula it out or alaM. you won .t
be rlddln1. yoitnelr or It, bul eould, In rnct, be compound· •
Ina it. Resolve it and be done ~
with it.
·
CANCER (1une 21-July 22)
... Thoae who you ore lrylna
to 1ellto today will not be lm·
preoaed by tall atory•teillna,
· but lhey will 111 up and In~• ·
notice of forthrlaht fact• and .,
Oauret. Olve them onJy t)le
portlculan.
LEO (July 23·Aua. 22) •• It
I! bell today thot you avoid
acqualntanc11 who are ~lah
rollcr1, or you mlaht be the
one who aeta roll elf. Spendlna
way beyond your mo1n1 11 a
quick way lo empty your
pocket!.

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index
) Stdlonl - 11 Pill••

calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

l'lD

AS
B5· 7
BB

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AS
A6
A3
A3
Bl-S

A2

C 2002 Ohio Volley Publlthinl C~.

Strickland:
Congress

Thane's a definite patriotic
theme running through the
streets of Pomeroy this week.
Becky Anderson, right. owner
of Anderson's Furnltune In
Pomeroy, seys she f~ls it is
Important to remember the
events of Sept. 11 that
changed so many lives. The
display shows a firefighter's
uniform and models of the
twin towers to "show epprec~
atlon tor those who work to
protect our lives." Bobble
Carr, below, owner of Hartwell
Hause agrees. People need to
"shOw solidarity," Carr says.
adding that she has always
been patriotic. (Agnes Hapka)

has power to

declare war
Bv KIVIN KruY
news edttor

OVP

GAI.l.IPOI.IS
Con!lrt•ss hns the t\''potl\i
hility ft&gt;rdt.'l' lnrin~: wur. li .S.
Rep. Ted Strkkluml \Uill II'
th~ nutiunul discussit&gt;n owr
invmling lmq ht'lll\ up.
Strkklnnd, in Gullipoli' In
endorse tht.' l'llllllidttl'Y nf
stllte rcprcsenttttivc t·umh
,........, dm~ Fred
Ocd. 111\n
he I i c' &lt;''
Pr't·sidt•ut
Bush Inti\!
1t111kc
u
s t r ''n ~ c r
cllse ' for
tlll-.ing on
the t'tfime
t&gt;f
ruqi

MalUS coumv Co•ISslon

Stl'lc:kl1nd

Shelly Company low
bidder on county projects
•

Bretz, 101

-Easl

•

BY BRIAN J, RIID
Sentinel stat! writer

Addte McKnight, 94

QUICK, MAitCII, I Nil!!;)

Newsp~~per

POMEROY
Shepy
Com puny of Thornville, is the
appurent low bidder on three
county roud· projects .. Meigs
County
Commissioners
opened bids on projects in
Chester nnd Sulcm townships
during their regulur meeting
Thursduy.
Shelly bid $36.583. 10 for u
Community Development
Block Grunt formulu project
for the JlUving of porttons of
Scout Cump Rond, A.llen
Street und Mill Street in
Chester.
B luck top
Contracting of Nelsonville
bid $38,255.93 on the project.
· Shelly's bid on u County
Issue II pnving project, which
includes State Farm Road in
Scipio Township·and various
other streets in Chester, was
$125,407.05. Blacktop's bid
wus $140,969.
Shelly bid $1 M8.543. 75 on a
. two-mile paving and culvert.

repnir project on County
Rottd I. According to
En~ineer Gene Triplett, the
proJect is due to mining · r~ lnt ·
ed dnmu11e. nnd the cost of the
repair will be pnid by CONSOL Energy, Inc .. owner of
the Meigs Mines. Blacktop
bid $201.843.
All bids were tabled pending· review . by Triplett nnd
Prosec uting Attomcy Put
Story.
·
In other business. commissioners conducted hearings on
roud vucution · requests, und
upprovcd vucutin~ portions or
Cubin Roud. Golf Ruud. und
Sunford-Dnvis Rand in Sulem
Township, and Hutton Rot.id
in Rutlund Township. Action
on the closing ol' Williams
Road in Sulem Township wus
tabled pending notification of
property owners.
.
Commissioners requested
thnt .the name of a remaining
portion of Hutton Roud be
changed to Molden· Rond. nt
the request of Tom und Judy

Molden, Brinn Molden and ·
John · Jeffers, . who uttcndell
Thursuuy 's heuring.
Commi~sioncrs upprovcd
nppropriutions udjustments
for the highwuy depurtment,
l1uuitor, extensiun se rvice und
Common Pl eas Court.
The hounl11lso:
• Appn&gt;wtl 11 •ontrn•t with
Techni-Cicun. Inc.. Jn•·k&gt;on.
for lend dust cl~ unin g service.
in conjunction with the coun ty 's Icud ubutcment und hmtsing rchahilitution pmgt'u)ll
under
the
Cllm mttnit y
Housing
Improveme nt
Pmgrurn:
• ApprovcJ a &lt;'o ntruct
between the ncpurtmclll or
Job und 'Fumily Scrvic'' 11 nd
Juvenile Court . in the umuunt
of $4.356.30;
• Approved payment of
bill s in the umount of
$242,179.06.
Present
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets.
and Clerk Oluriu Kloes.

Ic

ll

d cr

S II d d 11 m
Hussein if Congres' i&gt; to
!!i"e Bush the decluruti1•11 hr
'ceks.
Tnlk of itwudin• lrutl. itkn.,
. h
titicd by Bush us pnrt ol t c
"nxis of evil" thm foster'
intcrnutionnl · terrorism. hu~
circulmed in Wushln!]tnn fl&gt;r
1
the better pm1 of the summer.
It took t&gt;n n new ttspt't'l
when White House oft'lciuls
snid the president will not
nccd Congress' ttppruvnl if
there is w11r. Bush, however.
htts muintnincd no del."bion
to ttltuck hns been mmle uml
he wil l seck lc).!iS IIIWr, ·
lldvice.
"I think· that hd'orc th "
nut inn de~: ide' to invudt•
lrnq. the AmcriL·uu pc"l'k
und thci1· elec ted represent II·
tivcs mli St c~crl'ist• their
,·onstlttttionul rcspnn shili·
ty." suid Strickl11ud. &lt;cc kiu ~
redcctiou in 11 newl y
rcdruwn 6th Distrit•t thut
nnw
,qrctt·hcs
fronr
Portsmotlth tn YOlli1).!Sil!WII .

Strk kl nnd '' uppo,c\1
N111 . 5 hv hu " m'''lt1(111
~~i~~ H 11 lk~k . u R~ put&gt;lkun
from Snkon.
"Whok " ,. nll" t dnl'' ery ·
thin~: to tn pn•tCt't Olll' fi'I.'C ·
dum,, \\' ~ 'hould on I) go to
Will' when tWt'C"lll')' 1\l pn•t~•·t the tnterc't' of the l'OUil·
try." Strk kl11nd &gt;llid. "There
j, tlll k"''r ,tun,hml fnr thut
kind ,,f nctio11 ...
Stricklund suid he !'curs
the pu'h 11• imudc lruq i&gt;
1wwcrt•d nwrt· h) ful·titul'
within the l:lu&gt;h ·lldmini&gt;lflltinn 1h11n ,~,pert' on the &gt;itullth\11.
"The wi&gt;cr P&lt;'t•plc. th~:
cxpcricm:cd militlll')' &gt;lllll',
11 rc llf!:ingt'lllltion." ht• \Hid.
"We &gt;lwuld lbtt·n to tlwm .."
A t 11 ,. 1" ' ilk• Dcnwmtt.
Strkkl und ""'' , 111 c,tiun'
,., •mcnt ion' tl11lt the · pro·
\'"' &lt;'tl
P cpill't 111C11t
tlf
'llllllolund sc,·urit)' _ 110 w
gning to Congrc" f\&gt;r
nppnll'al - i' fllrj:~ltinjl
ubout il~ wtwkcrs ' ril•hts.
·
..
Bc&lt;'llli'C tht• dt'j)l\l'tment
will nlcrgt• II uumht•r nf fcdcrnl ngt•twic' und pn&gt;pu11Crth \llii.l its wtwk is too
l'illll. th~ White Ht&gt;U\C ,nid
union repo"C,Cilllltinu for its
conplnycc' t' owt cs,cntiul. .
"On ''"'' huud . the prc~l d,·nt ' ""' '"'·li~ ht c• r, 11111.1
t"' l'"'' "hn lu,ti l!\'tt li1c' in
lJ/ II 11''t\' hcn•c·, and llilthe
nth&lt;'l'. he suy' emp loyees
sl1mddn't huvc the npportunit v to he rt•pt\',CIHcu by 11
unfon." Sirkklund •uiu.
" It \ verv t ro u h lin ~ to me
to hear thi; whc11 tit&lt;' ht•roes
who ~ u vc their live' were
mcmht•r, of !.thor uuiou.•.''
he mhll·d.

Salatv

call for

on
overweight
trucks
Ohio, Kentucky submit proposals.

for test uranium conversion.plant
WASHINGTON (AP) bhio and Kentucky officials
have submitted competing
proposals to attract a plant to
test a new wa~ to produce
nuclear fuel, offtcials with the
company planning the facility
said Thursday.
USEC Inc. has pledged to
build a plant b~ 20 J0 that will
use new centrifuge technola·
gy to process uranium into
nuclear fuel for use at commercial power plants. The test
plant being bid on by the two

states is viewed us a precursor
to the new plant, which would
bring new JObs.
·
"Although the siting of the
(test facility) does not guaran·
tee the siting of the commercial plant. there is an advantage in acquiring it," USEC
spokesw'oman
Elizabeth
Stuckle snid.
USEC plnns to accept final
bids by Oct. 2~ and will
announce late this year
whether the test site . will be
located ut the company •s

Portsmouth
Gaseous
Diffusion Plant in Piketon.
Ohio. or at its sister plunt In
Paducah, Ky., Stuckle snid.
T.J . Justice, regional economic development reprc~en­
tntive for Ohio Gov. Bob Taft,
said the state has offered un
aggressive incentive package
to try to land the plant. He
would not elaborate.
Messages left Thursday
with Kentucky Gov. Paul
PluM ... Pl1nt. A3

CHARLESTON, W.Vu .
(AP) - On the 11rst nnnlversury of their deuths. two
West Virgi ninils killed in n
coni· truck crush should be
honored with continued
pressure ugul nst ruising
truck weight limits. sur·
vivors und supponers said
Thursdat .
,
lnvoktng the memory ol
Mury E ll ~ n Ju stice nnd
Jimmy Nelson. speakers ut u
Thursday news conference
ulso culled on Gov. Bob
' Wi se to resume an abandoned cruckdown on overlanded haulers.
"The governor proved that

overweight ~oul trucks cnn
be curbc,d with existing
luws." suid Julie Archer of
the West Vir~,tinin Citi~e n
Action Group. "He needs to
put the health, snfety und
respect uf luxpuycrs ovor the
interests of Cottl."
The Sept. fi, 200 I deuths
of Justice. 78, and Nelson.
63, on suite Route 94 neur
Hernshuw spurred debate
over coul truck wei~ht lim·
its. Coal Cl&gt;mpumes und
hnulers wnnt lnrger legal
loads, while orpnnen ts want
current limits enforced. · A
Pill" ... Truck1, AI

The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, September 8 from 2:00 • 4:00 pm
in the Hospital's French sbo Room .
In Melgt County: Thurtday, Seplember 19 at 10:30 am .. Meigs Senior Center

M E 0 I CAL C E NT E R

Discover the Holzer D(fference
~
. September 9, 10 and 11 from 6:00 • 9;00 pm in the French 500 Room

www.holzer.org .

All are welc:Omel For more information, or to register, call C740) 446·1010
•••

�www.mydallyaentlnel.com

PapAl

The Daily Sentinel

•
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Sat~s.pt.?

•

Local Briefs

Obituaries

Student.hospitalized after building rappel

Ohio weather

Mary Pierce
Ashcraft Bretz
Mal) "Ph) llis" Pierce
Ashcrat\ Bl\'tZ wem home to
-be he L0 n1 w
r
c'&lt;lnesday, Sept.
"4, , 2002.
at the age
,
_ of 101
)e~rs• She ~'as the daute~ of

0

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C.harles _and Al.ta
halen
l't~~ ot &lt;!uysvtile. _Phylhs ·
was hom m Guysvtlie_ on
Aug. 21. 1~1 , and hved
there all. her ~tfe. ,
Her ta11on1e thmg to do
.was to play the pta~o. She
:e~en
..Played
Happy
Btnllday_ to herself on her
IOOth btnhday. She was_ a
member of the Semor
Kitchen Band and enjoyed
the man~ .parades in which
they parttctpated.
She was also a member of
the
former
Guysvtlle
Presbyterian Church where
.she played the pi~no as a
young !!l,rl. l'h»lhs . retired
(rom Ohto Umverstty and
,etljoyed her family most of
all. She also loved to garden
and work i11 her yard. You
, ro~rcly saw her without a
•broom in her hand , sweeping
off her front porch and walk .

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Ohio Briefs

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aevelancl Pops Talks resume In
does new
teacher strike
al'l'ln1ement MAPLE
HEIOHTS (AP)
CUi m.AND (AP) -

.Sunny and warm today

Clc\'llllnd still rocks for
hametllwn stllr Drew C'llrey,
"The Drew Clrey Show"
t'Omml~ian!Mi the Cl~!\&gt;cltmd
Pups O~hl!str~ lO record
- ne~ ~t'fllt~mellls for thl'C\'!
of hs then~ sonjls. The 1\lps lind c:undu~tor
t\ul Topilow recorded
''Ch:wol\ltld Rocks:• "Moon
Over I)""""·~ Ulld "Fi v~
O'Cioct World" h\ hmlll!lC·
mems by Paps tromhotilst
Puul FotiiiSOII In t~n A»aru
thcoter sesslo11 · Th11rsdny
ni»ht,
Nine blinds In ditlllrent
genres from uround the
country wen~ Invited to
record for tho show, Th11
1\lps wus thll only l!l'tlllp to
roc!1rd uilthrel.l S&lt;llljl,S.
Th~ shtl\\1, which Is S&lt;'l I11
C'lo:vclund. will ultcmulc
recordlnl!s from th~ 11urious
lJfOU[lS tltrou~hout the new
SUUStlll lllllJ illlllllj! M\llltluy,

W~thu l''ormlst
Sund~y nlp.ht ...Mtlitly cl~t~r.
Todt~y... Sunny lind \lilt}' Low~ lntllo mid 00&amp;.

- wttml. Hlvhs near 90. &amp;st
Mondlly,..Mtlitly
elonr.
_winds S to 10 mph.
HW.hs In tho lowllt 90s.
Thnip.ht ... Ciot~r. Lows In tho Tucsdoy... PIIrtly clo!ldy.
upptSr SUs. l.lp.ht cllst winds. Lows in thll uppor 60s t\11\l
Extended J!'oree~t
hip.hs In thll up1m SUs.
St~turday... Mostly
sunny
Wildnosday...Partly cloudy
und hot. Hip.hs in tho lower with 11 chance of showers.
9(\s, South wlmls 5 Ill I0 mph. Lows in tho uppor 00s ;md
- Sttturdt~y
nlp.ht .. ,Mostly hlllhs In thll n1ld 80s,
cl~ur. Low~ in th upPdf SOs. - 1'hursday.. ,Mastly elotu.
Sunduy.. ,Mostly
sum1y: Lows In thll lower 00s· lind
Hi11hs in the lowor l)()s,
hljhs in the mid 80s,
1

Four homes found
with mercury in them
DAYTON (AP) - A home ed by the weekend, .
cunulminAted by mti'()Ury Pollee said at least 11 dozen
taken from a jaraae -In the children may have been cont·
noiahborhood had sht tlmea aminated arid the number of
the -fedora! II mit of mercury in chlldrtn teated for mercury
it, uuthorltioa uld ThurJda:,o, probably will lncrtaae aa the
Several children took tho invlltlaatlon contlnuu
mercury from a -auburban
"Aa people art hearlna
Miumi Tawnahip aaraae ear· about _tl\la, parenta are con·
licr thia week ancf then min· cemod, and riaht!Y ao," aald
alcd with other children. Pour aotlna Polloo Chief John
f1omc a were contaminated.
DIPlotro. "You don't know
Stove Ronnlnaor, on·acono how muoh tho~'vo boon
coordln"tor for tile U.S, oxpoaod."
Environmental Protection
Two children wero trolled
A11oncy, uld two of tho at Ml11ml Valley Ho~pltal and
homos hud moroury inaldo rtleaaed.
them and two had ao!l outalde
Mercury Ia a allvery aub·
contumlnated whit mercury, auance found In thermome·
One of the ilouaes hAs been ten, electrical switches, fill·
dccontumlnutcd und the f11ml· lnas for teeth and mercury·
ly ullowod to roturn homo,
vupor lamps. Tho effects of
Renninger suld he did not CllpOIIlfO Clln r1111110 from
know how much mercury Wlt&amp; di:ulness und memory loss to
r~movcd from the gurugo, hlll - kidney und bruin dnmuuo.
thnt several pounds wore d11pondlnu on the umount of spilled on the ~lunge lloor. Be merc ury 11nd durntlon of
suld uuthontlcs r~movcd OXjlOSIII'Il,
ubuul 300 ~hcmku ls in smull
Tho onC•CIIr I!Uriii!C whct'll
oou los from tho l!lii'UI!C ,
tho mercury wus uored Is
Renninger suid nil' monitor· uttuched to u brick, runch·
ln~t shows thoro Is no dnnger style house that wus under
to the neighborhood, Ho suid reno_vutlon by the cu1·rcnt
he hopes clonnup Is compict· owner,

Man may have
served 11 Nazi
IUircl

Thank You to
JIMMY STEWART,
candidate for State

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residents

wonted

CLBVBLAND (AP) lnv~atment
of atato aovom•
mont monoy hu coat Ohio
$~ 1 million to $141 million
over tho puat tilroo yeara ln
mined c11mlnaa when com·
pured to stntoa with almllar
investing outlooks, ~ pub·
llthed report snld Prldn~,
A Pluln Denier 11nnlysltl
found th11t curnlnas on
Ohio's $6.9 billion portfolio
underperformed low·rlsk
couttt~rpurts: treasury f1111ds
ol' n~lghhoring nnd simllnr~it.c ~~~~~~s 1111d Ohio's four
hii!(!CSI counties.
Stnl&lt;l Treusurcr Joseph
Deters, a Republlcun running
for ro·clcctlon, disputed
comparisons to the portfolios
of other stutes und Ohio
coutlll~s us likening "upples
to t hcvrolots."
"It Is very difficult,
bccuusc nil stutos have dlf·
fcrcnl liquidity nueds und
tllffot'cllllnvestment purume·
tcrs, to con1puro trends stahl
til stntc," flu suld. "Even
IMrc lmportnntly, yield's
tllco •• b11t it's not my job,"
lie told tho newspaper thut
he llromlscd voters he would
sufeaunrd their money nnd

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COLUMBUS (AP) -

~ddie

Local Stocks

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COLUMBUS ~
- P) -·
Ropublloan atate
aaurtr
Joaoph Dotora on Thursday
crhlcl1ed hla Domcic:ratlc
challenaor, fonnor Cuyahoaa
County Commlaaloner Mary
Boyle, for a multlcount~
inyostment fund collnpae
durlna her tonun~ and ber
acceptance of 11 pension buy·
out..
Deters, who is seeking re·
election to u second fouryour
term,
(jllestloned
Boyle's role as e~ulrwomun
of un Investment · udvl~ory
puncl during the 1994 col·
lupse of the Secured Assets
Fund Enrnhtll5 pool, u multi·
county investment strut~gy.----------.
stnrted by thcn ·Cuyuhoga
County treusun~r Francis
Onul.

Thank you to
Jeff Thornton :
Autism school for buylnQ my:
helps children -2002 Market
Rabbit pen.
CLBVBLAND (AP) -

Romping on u playground Is
Cassie Cleland •·
n difficult learning process
for the younaest of the.__ _ _ _ _ _ _.;.~
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Meigs County Falrl
- Action Facemyer

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Olplttment IKtlnll_ono ar•:

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Suluai/Jc tod11y_

RACINE - Racine Chapter 134,
Order of Eastern Star, will hold a regu.
tar meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday,
Project Committee Representative will
visit and refreshments will he served.

Boil advisory lifted
RUTLAND Leading Creek
Conservancy District has lifted its boil
"llj:!visory for customer~ east of Happy ·
Aollow Road.
.

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SYRACUSE -The Syracuse Board
of Public Affairs will be closed
Monday, Regular. hours will resume on
Tuesday.

Class meeting set
TUPPERS PLAINS - A senior orimeeting will be held for
Eastem High School seniors and their
parellls at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the high
schooL Questions may be directed to
Sheryl Roush or Linda Faulk at the
high sc hooL

~ntation

Citations issued

REEDSVILLE - Carrie M. Sheets,
20, 40335 Christy Road, Reedsville,
was cited for failure to yield half of the
EHS
roadway by the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol following a
lwo-car accident Thursday on Orange
TUPPERS PLAINS -· Eastern Township Road 293 (Silver Ridge),
Troopers said Sheets was eastbound,
Music Boosters will meet at 6:30 p.m.
40
feet west of TR 299 (Betzing) at
(special time) Tuesday at the high
6:05
p.m when she reponedly failed to
school bandroom. All members arc
yield half of the road to a westbound
urged to attend . ·
car driven by Betty L Jackson, 73 •
34737. Partlow Road. Reedsville, and
collided.
Both vehicles had functional damage,
POMEROY Meigs County the repon said.
·
Genealogical Society will meet at 5
Earnest A Greene, 32, Racine, was

music boosters

-~eet

Mtmbert Tho A11oolalod - Preoa
and
lht
Ohio Ntwapaper
Aaooolallon.
Pootmiotlll'l Stnd addreu oorreo·
llono to Tlte Cally Sentinel, 111
Court Blr111, Pomtroy, - Ohio
46789,

•vlubttorlptlan A1111

Cllrrler or motor rouhl
Oril month , , , , ... , , •••11,70
One ye1r •.•••. , • , ••. '1 04.00

cited for failure to control by the patrol
following· a one-vehicle accident
Thursday on County Road 31 (Bald
Knob-Stiversville).
Troopers said Greene was eastbdund.
two-tenths of a mile eaM of Lt!banon
TR 1411 (Rose) at 2:15 p.m. when the
pickup truck he drove went off the right
edge of the road and struck an embankment
The pickup had disabling damage.
Lorna F Seth, 74, 242 Riverview
Drive, Pomeroy, was cited for assured
clear distance by the patrol following a
two-vehicle accident Wednesday on
CR 24 (Union Avenue).
Troopers said Seth was westbound ,
25 feet east of Ohio Rou te 7: at 4:10
p.m. when she was unable 10 stop in
time and struck the rear of a stopped car
driven by John L Jeffers. 33. 1275
Bridgeman St, Syracuse.
, Jeffers was stopped at the intersection at the time of the cra sh. the report
Said. Seth ',s car had non funclional damage, and no damage was li sted to
Jeffers· car.
Jimmy D. Griffith. 6 L 30031 TR
351, was cited for assured ckar distance by the patrol following a one -car
accident Tuesday on Ohio Route 7 near
Pomeroy.
Troopers said Griffith was nonhbound, 142 feet nonh of Salisbury TR
196 (McGuire) at 12:03 p.m. when h~
attempttld to avoid slowing northbound
traffic. went off the left side of the road
and struck a guardraiL
The car had disabling damage, the
report said.

Congress meets in New York to
commemorate Sept ·11 attacks

Pip A1

recent special session on the
issue ended In stalemate,
The pair's car was struck
by a coal truck weighing
165,000 pounds on a road
with a maxim11m weight
limit of 73,500 pounds , then
pushed into the path of an
empty coal truck .
Kanawha County prosecutors had threatened criminal charges until a .State
Pol ice report last month
concluded weight was not a
•

(USPs 213·IMIOJ

correction Polley
Ohio Vtllty P~bllthlng Co.
' 'our main oonotrn In a1111or1e1 11 10 be Publllhtd tvtry aftarnoon, Monday
' aoourale, If you know of an error tn e ltlrough Friday, I If Courl Slreel,
11ory, oalllht neweroom 11 (7~0) 002· Pom11oy, Ohio.
Seoond-olan
:21118.
pothlOt paid at Pomeroy. ·

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PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

OES meets

~m

The Daily Sentinel

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NEW HAVEN . W.Va. - A basket
bingo ganle to benefit the St Paul
Lutheran Church Building Fund will be
held at 6 p.m.. Sept. 12 at the New
Haven, WVa.. Fire Department Entry
fee is $20.

PIant

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p.m. Tuesday lit the Meigs County
Museum.
_

NEW YORK (AP) - - The
city t11at launched the federal
AEP-:12.78
Oul'llnl - 37 26
Pope leo - 37 1o
govcmmcnt more than two
Arch Coat - 17 ~3
~ederal Mogul 65
~remier "":"" 6 90
centuries
ago played host to a
A&lt;zo - JHO
USB - :10 .68
Rocl&lt;well - 18.26
special
session
of Congress
AmTecMlBC - 23 &lt;7
Gannt!n - 73 &lt;48
Rodty Boot&amp; - 4 3J
A!\hland Inc ........ 21 26
General EleCtriC - 28
RD Shell- •2 09
Friday as hundreds of tawmakAT&amp;T - It 79
OKNLY-390
Sears-""' 94
ers headed nonh by tmin for a
H~tley D.tvld&amp;on - o47 70
Bani&lt; ~ - 38 e•
Wai·Mart - 50 94
somber commemomtion of the
Pll - 1708
Koruul - 63
Wendy~ - 35 I 3
Sept I I terrorist allacks.
!!t&gt;b EYono - 23 7~
K!Uijt!r - 18 2S .
Worthington - 18 ~8
Lt&lt;l - 1509
B'OtoWamer - ~9 12
Dtll'f ltotk report1 are the
The climate of tension so typChampion - 2 16
NSC - :10 17
4 p.m. ck&gt;alnsfquotes of the
icai
of this era of terrorist threat
Charming Sl101&gt;8 ;.. 6 96
Oak Hill Flnonclal- 21 72 Ptevh:lus day's tranuc·
was
unmistakubie as members
OVB-2350
lions, prtlYided by Smith
Clly Holdk\g - 2&amp;
of the House and Senate, some
·col -20M
BBT-3716
Partnertt. At A.dv@iat Inc. ol
00-1349
Poopteo - ~8 40
Qalllpoll•
accompanied by their spouses,
lett the Capitol for the three'
hour trip to New York
TI1e Bush :ldminiSil".uion has
Several police officers with
pl~about$70millionin2004
assault weapons and bombto clean up tlte Piketm plant's
sniffing dogs in tow escorted
from PI- A1
tteYel'qlelni centrifuge plant .
the roughly 300 lawmakers
That federal fundmg and
. •to two Amtrak trains just
the existinl! centrifuge build·
after
daybreak
at
.Puttoll 's office were not ings are advantages for Ohio,
Washington's Union Station.
:retumed.
Justice said. The Piketon site
Lawmakers said the trip
" Construction on the $150 al so hus less risk of an eanh- ·
was a necessary statement
million lest facility, which q_uuke because the Paducah
from Washington.
will use 240 centrifuge site is near the New Madrid
"I think il sends a message
·machines, is cx~ected to fault, which could mean -a
to the countr~ and the world
begin in 2004 wuh opera- bigger price tag for a plant
that we're umfied in the fight
&lt;tlons sturtlng in 2005. The - In centrifu~e processing',
against terrorism," said Sen.
.pcnnunent plunt will open by which Is used 111 several o.ther
Harry Reid, D-Nev. Said
2010, Stuckle suid,
countries, uranium molecules
Rep. Jim Moran, D-Va.:
Centrifuge tcchnoiog~ was are separated by gravity in
"We're basically going to
tested briefly ut the Ptketon tuli, spinning cylinders,
extend our condolences. This
plant in the 1980s, then uban· allowing tec hnicians to
is still a year of mounting!'
iloned when the federal gov· extract enriched uranium and
Lt Dan Nichols, a
~:mment predicted laser tech· wuste. The method uses 10
spokesman for the Capitol
nolo¥y would be the future of percent of the power needed
police, said "there are preuraniUm processing, Now, for the 1940s·ern gaseous
cautions we take all along the
j!entrifu~e Is agui~ the gov· diffusion process und pro·
route to ensure the safety of
;emment s top chotce,
duces much less waste,
- the train."
What awaited the lawmakers in -New York was a
, chance to make history; the
session marked only the sec·
&lt;Jnd occasion in modern
'times when Congress has met
outside Washington. The pur-

of abaence from her job 11
director of . tho Ohio
Department of PubUQ Safoty
untll aftor tho Novomblir
eloQtlona,
O'Connor, a Republlclln,
aald ahe won't return until her
campaian for a aeat on tho
Ohio Supreme Court cnda,
O'Connor faces Hamilton
County Municipal Court
Judae Tim Black on Nov. 5th.
The
Public.
Safety
Dcpurtment said · Thomas
Stlckmth, the No, 2 admlnls· trator In the slate prison sys·
tem, will be acting director In
O'Connor's absence,
·
A message wus left with
the Black campaign seeking
COnllllCIII,

:

McKnight

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

Lt.

·1

Basket bingo planned

Sodety meets

· Sept. &lt;), 2002, at Overbrook
Center in Middlepon ,
Arrangements are under
•
, ' I~ARTFORD, W.Va .
the direction of Fogelson!lAddie M(Knight, 94, of Tucker Funerui Home 111
Hartford. W Va .. died Friday, Mason, W.Vu.

Oov. Mauroon O'Connor aald
Thuraday ahe'a takln11 a leave

:

he is survivtd by daugh·
ters
Belen
Ashcraft
Coolville; Carol (Bob)
Bolen, Lancaster, Va,; L.;e
Ashcmn, London, Ohio; Joan
O'Neil, Nelsonville; 28
grnnd&lt;:hildren and numerous
great and 11reat·great gr~nd·
c h'1ld ren.
She was preceded in death
by two sons, Denny an~
Beryl Ashcraft one infant
dauflhter, Mary Ann and two
grandsons. She was the last
of her family of two brothers
and four sisters: Ina ,(Homer)
Morehead, Amesville; Ruth
Pierce, Athens ; Christine
"Dean" (lad) Rodchavcr,
Athens; Mal"flarct (Charlie)
Bond, Lillie
Hocking ;
Hem1an "Hun" (Jean) Pierce
Guysville· Harold "H~d':
Pierce, G~ysvilie.
Funeral service will be held
at 1 p.m.. Saturday, Sept, 7, at
White Funeral Home in
Coolville with Pastor Craig
Boll~y and Rev. Jay Hubbard
offictating.
Friends may call at the
funerJI home on Friday from
7 to 9 p.m. and one hour prior
to the service on Saturday.
Burial will be at the Coolville
Cemetery.

:Deaths

Lieutenant
Governor
taking leave
of absence·

Investment Dettn criticizes
eamlnp laaed Democratic

DAYTON (AP) - Tho
auome)' for a "'•n accuaed
of aervlna 11 u auurd at u
Nul concentr11tlon cump
aaya hor cllont wua atunnoa
by tho fodor11l aovontmcnt's
move to rovoko hla U.S , clti·
zonahlp,
Tho Ju1tlce Depnrtn1ent
flied 11 con1plulnt ThurRdny
In U.S. District Court nllea·
lng thAt lldcfonus Bucmys,
An 81 ·year·old nntlvc of
Llthuanlu, served us u guurd
ut tho Mujdnnek conccillru·
tlon eump near Lublin.
l)olunu. from Dllc~nlhar
I 114ltfl NtlVUIIIbct' I 943.
"Th11 cntlrll J'umily Is In 11
stutc of ~ hock thut ho fuccs
dcportution to u cmllllt'Y he
let\ 60 yours lljjo," suld 11110r·
ncy Ku1'1ln Denise Bruulcy,
Dmdloy. who ttiSJllll s
muny clulms In tho fcdurul
luwsuit, snid tlull hllr client 's
futher, threu brothel'S 1111d
buby sister Wllnl killed by
(lennun soldle1's who,n they
l~tvudod Llthuuniu ln. I!14 L
She suys thut Bucmys guurd·
cd only tho pcrh11CUll' of thu
cump ufhlr his Llth11uni-11n
nutionul I!Ullrd unit w11s
dllfcutcd by tho Ocrntuns untl
thut he deserted his unit ul'lcr
his Llthuunlun oflicct's were
repluted by Oermun ol11cors.

Oxley wants better benefits ·
for emergency responders
WASHINGTON (AP) - Shuron Purdy us un cxumplc.
An Ohio congressman said
Purdy lost her husbund,
'l'hursduy I hilt the fumiJJes of Lee, When he had U hCUI1
emergency responders who onuek at the scene of u house
die while they urc worklna fire In Jnnuury 20()(), She wus
shtlu ld receive Improved ben· nwurdcd st11tc worker's com·
cfi1s.
pcnsutlon but did not receive
The federul Public Snfcty ·federal benctits,
Ufflcers !Jencfit £lund p11ys
"It's difficult for me to
uhout $260,000 to fumllles of understand why we still huvc
fircfi(lhtcrs, police officers not lcumcd thut curdioc· rolut·
u1,1d cmcrgcnc~ mcdicul, tech· cd dc11th8 nro Indeed line of
n1C1uns who d1c In the lmc uf duty dcuths," she suld.
duty, Uowcver, the benefits The Hometown Heroes
urcn'1 uvuiiublc for the fuml· Survivors Benefit Act, which
. lies of emergency responders lA sponsored by Oxley und
who die of hcurt uuucks,
Reps, Bob Ethcrldac. D·N, ,,
"Some fumilics of fullcn and Steny Hoyer. D· M~..
heroes ure being left out," - would make bilncnu avotl·
suid l~cp, Mlchucl Oxley, R· . able to emeracncy responders
Ohio,
who die of cardluc arrest ut u
li e ci ted the cuse of response scene,
Spencerville, Ohio, rc~ldont

- B\llh sides h11ve ~reed to
resume cotiU'IICI ntp.odatlans
111 the th~·d11y strike by
t~m:h~rs !lillinst ~ suburbll11
Clc\)el1111d $thool district,
Tile tem:hor unla11 and tho
school botlrd In the 3.958·
student Mt~plo Heillhts d.is·
trlt:t lli!t\led tt'l mcct 'Sitllrdt~Y
momil\!l under. th~ 1111spkes
of u IWml n~lator,
"I'm ho~efu I t111t on
Stlturd«r w~ II be able to put
this thmg tollether," s1id
11\Cdlutor Tht'lmas Connelly.
Th~ two sld"s hnve li11d
only one ncgotl1tlna sessi011
since clusses bcaan lut
~k. ~nd It lastlld l~ min·
litUS,
A tlro wns lit Inn trush bns·
.kct ~t the high school M
Thursday, 1\ substitute
t~nchcr put the fire aut
tllll\ll'c It ~nused dllmnac. and
th~ · !'it'll dep11rtm11nt was
inv~sl igntlng,
S~curlt)' gllnrds 11nd 7S
Sllbstltutos roplnced the dis·
trlct 's 23S teachers when tho
w111 kout bea11n Wednesday.
Thlrty·Ono moro subatltutea
wore added Thuradty.

school children at the
Clevelnnd Clinic Center for
Autism.
Older students practice
over anti over the proper way
to greet a visitor or now to
. play a boord game,
Seemingly ordinary daily
1\tm:tiolls are big challenges
fur students at thll hospital·
based school, where progress
DA\'TON (AP) - A mas· Is measured one small task ut
sl\111 M11rlne trnlnlng exerdse a time,
with lt'lw· tlylng 11lreraft and
"It's wonderful:' Sllid Blise
1111 tho sJahts and sounds of Koplt, whose 15-year-old
tMibnt hns mldcnts 11nd dty son, Bell, attends the school.
otllclnls.questioning its tim· "It's the' bestthin11 that's ever
ina nenr the ~nni\lllrsllry of happened to him, His behnv·
11111 Sept. II terrorlstnttacks. lors are preuy much under
Resident John Ewers, 67, control. He 11sed to have a lot
s~ld he has no doubts that t'lf temper tantnm1s and we
pcaplo will be ffiihtened by don •r scc very much If It nt
the city's tirst such 3imula· all anymore ."
tion,
"In their subtonseious, It's
aalng to bil revisiting the terror und horror of 9· 11, l just
think It's tho wrong thing at
the' wrong time."
H11ndrods of troops from
the
26th
Mnrillll
Bxplldltionury Unit bused 111
Camp Lejeune, N.C., t~re to
descend upon Onyton for the
two·week trnlnlna exereise
In mld·Septemllcr. The
Marines selected D11yton
beea usc they wan ted an
unfamiliar urban aeulna.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

pose was unmistakable: to attacks devastated the city's nation's capitaL But lawmakshow solidarity with the city financial center. At the ers held their final session in
that lost more than 2,800 request of Bloomberg, the New York on Aug. 12, 1790,
people in the · attacks that Annen berg
Foundation having ' decided to move to
brought down the World offered $1 million to pay for Philadelphia for a decade
Trade Center.
the cere'monial session.
while a new capital city was
"This is a magnificent tribThe setting was steeped in built in what became
-ute to a magnificent city that history.
Washington.
has experienced some heart·
The last time Congress met
Some members had comwrenching sadness," said Rep. in New York, in 1789-90, plained during their years in
Charles Rangel, D~N. Y., who lawmakers watched ·as New York of dirty streets,
helped arrange the session.
George Washington was dirty air and "the stench," but
The scene for the session inaugurated as the nation's they joined in a paning resowas Federal Hail, with Vice first president. The chunk of lution thanking the clly for
President Dick Cheney pre- sandstone flooring where the "elegant and conv.enient
siding. Afterward, members Washington stood was on accommodations" Congress
were to walk to the nearby hand for Friday's event at had enjoyed.
Regent.Hotei for a luncheon Federal Hall. just blocks
Congress relocated again. ·
before laying a wreath at from the 16-ucre site where going lo Washington in
ground zero, where suicide _ the 110-story' towers once 1800s, and there it has met
hijackers slammed airliners stood.
ever since, except for cereinto the World Trade Center.
Back in those days monial
meeting
in
Mayor
. Michael Congress sometimes met 'in a Philadelphia .in 1987 on tile
Bloomberg, appearing .on tavem. Members approved bicentennial
of
the
NBC's "Today" program, the Bill of Rights, rejected Constitutional Convention.
said the session gives the city royal titles and .approved . Rep. Rick Larsen, D"our chance to suy thank you pensions for Revolutionary Wash., called the New York
to Congress and to the War veterans, They dealt session "a time of profound
American people for the sup- with tariffs on imported reflection and a way to
port they gave us. We could- goods and created the State, express America's strength
n't have gotien through this War and Treasury depart- and unity" in advance of the
without their effons."
ments.
Sept 11 anniversary.
"We're here to- show our Most importantly _for the
Some lawmakers had
resp.ecl and solidarity to the future, it debated and enacted reservations about the trip,
people of New York," said a Bill of Ri~hts, amending especially given the crush of
House Speaker Dennis the Constitution to protect unfinished business.
Hastert, R-IlL .
such basic libenies as free"I think Congress ought to
Security · promised to be dom of speech, religion and be here, working," Sen.
extremely tight here, as well, the press
Roben Byrd, D-WVa .. said
with hundreds of New York
There are 8 million people Thursday. "There's not anyCity police officers on over· crowded into New York's thing that I can do by going
time and the Capitol Police five boroughs now. When up there, Lord knows, there 's
and Secret Service traveling Congress last mel in the city, not anything more that can be
from Washington to beef up New York housed 29,000 said about our sorrow."
the ranks.
people, most living on tile
New York has been strug- southern tip of Manhattan so
giing with multibillion dollar damaged Sept. 1I,
budget deficits since the
New York was then the ~~~~
factor in the wreck. The victims' supporters belittled
that conclusion Thursday,
"Surely, the truck could
have slopped much more'
quickly if it had not been
overloaded," said ' Vivian
Stockman of the Ohio
Valley
Environmental
Coalition.
The family has filed suit
over the deaths and hired a
forensic engineer to recon·
struct the crash and challenge the State Police findmgs.
Survivors and supporters
also marked the anntversary
with a memorial service in
Hernshaw. .

SWIM

7:00. l :oq

D•llr
······ ··
··········•
Subtortbtra
thoutd
rtmll In
advance dlreol lq The Dally
Sanllnol. No tubaonptlon by mall
pormllllld In treaa where home
carrier ttrvlct Ia available.

Manleys Self Storage Unit will hold a
public auction at its facility located at
97 Cottage Drive in Middleport, Ohio
on Thursday, Sept. 19, 2002. To sell
the personal items of Robert Dickens,
39549 Smith Road, Pomeroy, Ohio ·
held as security for unpaid storage
rental #4.

Mill Subtcrlptlon
lnoldo Mtlga County
13Weoko ,.,, _.,,,," .'27.30

26 Wtlkl , , , , , , , , - , , , . '63.8~
52WDikl ,,,,,,,,,, , .1106.56
Allet Outtldt MtiQI County
13 Weel&lt;a , , , , , , , , .•.. , .'60.05
26 WHitt ,,,,, ,,,,., .'100.10
52Weeka ,,,.,,,,.,, ,'200,20

ALL AGES, All TIMES$&lt; 00

•
'

•

�•
•
PageA4
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_T_h_e_D__a_ii_y_s~e~n_t_in_e_I~----~--------~~~·~r!~I~I~•~C~·~~~~~----------------~F~n~d·~y~.s~e~~~em~~~,~~~l-"-2
crimes, prepares for High Holy·Days

T

ACOMA. Wash. ·(AP)
-. The first hate·
crime at Temple Beth
El happened right alter Sept.
11 and just before the
Jewish High Holy Days.
Someone
spray-pai nted
"Zioni sm plus U.S. eq uals
5,000 dead" on the parking
lot.
The seco i1d occurred the
following weekend. Two
flaming. fire -starting lags
were placed at the back of
the synagogue
one
beneath a natural-gas line .
No one was hurt.
The timing was especially
painful for the congregation,
coming during the most"
solemn period of the Jewish
year.
· As this year ' s holidays
begin at sundown Friday.
the congregation will reflect
on the challenges of the last
12 months and pray for better times in the year ahead .
No arrests have been made
in either hale crime.
"Despite all the scary and
horrible things that have
. happened, it 's_ a good time
to be alive," said Rabbi
Mark Glickman, who leads
the Reform synagogue . the only Jewish cangregatwn 111 Tacoma.
The 10-day period of selfcxamination starts with the

. On the Net:
http://templebethellS ..org/

Michael Motota-Barnes, standing in gray suit.
reads along with Cantor Brad Smith during his Bar Mitzvah at
the Tempel Beth El. (AP)

WORSHIP -

fri~hten us," said Wendy security un'd got support

Stncherz . . vice president of
the board of the synagogue.
which counts about . 350
families as members .
_
The parking lot vandals
hit at midnight last Sept. 16,
the day before Rosh
h
Has ana began, with a message su&amp;gesting a link
between U.S. support for
Jewish New Year, called Israel and the terrorist
Rnsh Hashana . It ends Sept. attacks that left more than
16 with Yom Kippur, the 3_000 dead.
. Day of Atonement. when
The second assault an the
Jew s co mmunally admit synagogue came before
their sins and reconcile with dawn last Sept. 23, three
God.
days bef'ore Yom Kippur.
Jews believe that during Flames flickered up the
the holidays, God deter- walls toward the roof before
mme~ ~how: II l~ve and die an alert neighbor summoned
111 the commg year. Despite . fire crews. The damage was
the wavily at the penod, minor.
rabb1 s urge congregants to
Glickman was awakefllld
observe the holodays opto - at about 1:30 a.m. with news
mtsto cally, assunung God of the blaze.
w·oll accept theor repentance.
"At the time. it was kind
Jews d1p :tpplcs In honey at of scary right between our
Ros h Hashana meals as they two big holidays," he said.
w~s h for a sweet year.
"Some people were very
rcmpl~ . Beth El congre- frightened. We had to do a
~ ants will follow that trado- lot of reassuring."
twn .
.
The congregation added
"We can t let these people
1

News in brief
court. and U.S. District
Court Judge Peter j, Messitte
ruled last October that
Edwards had to leave . In
May a federal appeals court
rejected Christ Church's
· ACCOKEEK, Md. (AP) appeal. Edwards then left the
- Leaders of a suburban Episcopal ministry.
Washington ' Episcopal
church have reached an
accord that ends an acrimo·
niaus dispute with the diocese over its. appointment of
a conservative priest.
Christ Church has agreed
not to appeal a federal court
BIRMINGHAM.
Ala.
decision that removed the (AP) -Court rulings fixing
Rev. Samuel Edwards as the
leadership of an
their priest last year. In Alabama-based denominareturn ,
Washington tion haven't stopped memEpiscopal Bishop John bers of the fractured group
Chane has appointed the from accusing each other of
priest the congrepation want- stealing and making threats.
ed as Edwards successor,
The Alabama Supreme
the Rev. Stephen Arpee.
Court upheld a ruling that
The diocese and congrega- ousted Senior Bishop Jasper
tion fought the past year over Roby, 90, as head of the
Edwards, who once called 30,000-member Apostolic
the Episcopal Church "hell- Overcoming Holy Church of
bound " because it ordains God,
"oneness"
a
women and tacitly accepts Pentecostal body that rejects
ho mosexual activity.
the Trinity.
Then Bi shop Jane Holmes
The high court supported a
Dixon rejeqed Edwards' county judge who put
appointment in January Bishop George W. Ayers, 74,
2001. fearing Christ Church of Mobile in charge. Si nee
might join traditionalist then Roby's backers have
parishes that have quit the been dismissed, locks on
2.4 .
milli(&gt;n · membcr church buildings . have been
Episcopal Church. Christ changed and ac-cusations of
Church was split between theft have been leveled.
supporters of Edwards and
Ayers' attorney says Roby
Dixon. ·
··
loyalists are refusing to
Dixon filed suit in federal abide by the court ruling and

CongreJation
and bashop
settle dispute

from a Tacoma interfaith
group called the Associated
Ministries. which held a
candlelight vigil at the synagogue that drew 500 people .
Glickman spoke at the
rally. uddrcssing his remarks'
to the unknown person who
started the fire. "You may
have thought that fire could
destroy, but tonight we here
are going to light flame s of
love and care," he said.
The outpouring at the vigil
and from area Christians
wus "so heartwarming nnd
beuutiful," Glickman said
recently. "It's inspiralional."
But the uttacks weren't the
first on the synagogue. In
previous years, Glickman's
car was damaged :md Nazi
swastikas were burned imo
the synagogue lnwn .
Jim Fnedman, the boar.d's
personnel chairman, said
that when such incidents
occur, congregants debate
how to respond . They do not
wunt to draw so much allen lion to the criine that it
inspires copycut attacks. but

PREPARATION - Rabbi Mark Glickman, right, helps Isaac Motola prepare the Torah to return it
to the Ark during the Bar Mitzvah of Motola's grandson at the- Tempel BethEl in Tacoma. Wash .
Rosh Hashana, the Jewish new year celeoration that begins at sundown Friday, may revive chill-.
ing memories here of last year's high holy days. marred by graflttl and an arson attempt at
Temple. (AP)
"we're not ~aing to go qui etly. either.' he said.
Before Glickman delivered h.is Yom Kippur sen]lOn
last ye ur, the rabbi discussed
the fire :1ud how the nonJewi sh community rallied
urm1nd the congtegatian. He
urged members of the synagogue not to let the attacks
on their building distract
them from observing the
lioliduy.
"I said. 'Look, we're
going to go on and do this.
not because of what they did
- not to spite them, but

despite them . We're going
to do this anyway. To do
otherwise would be to give
them n victory," he sttid,
Jewi sh lenders said they
ex pect rabbis nati onwide ·
will devote at least one sermon to terrorism and the
Reform brunch is distribut ing n special package of
Sept. II m:nerials thut
includes everything from
modern poems to excerpts
from President Franklin
Roosevelt's 1941 "Four
Freedoms" speech to u
Muslim pruyer for peace.

Church ·
announces
have threatened violence.
The denomination originated in 1916. Roby suc- ·name change ·
ceeded the founder in 1973.

Middleport
Church of Christ

2002

YOUTH

Partly due to Roby's failing
health, the .church board
voted two years ago to make
Ayers acting president, and
Roby's faction filed suit.

HARTFORD - The congregation of Hartford Baptist
Church voted recently to
change its church name to
Lighthouse Baptist Church.
an independent-fundamental
church.
The church had been
closed for a nearl~ a year
•
when it reopened .m March
2002 with John D. Sallaz as
pastor.
MILWAUKEE (AP)
Pastor Sallaz is a graduate
The police have declared St. of · Midwestern
Baptist
James Episcopal Church a College, Pontiac. Mich. He
public nuisance because it has served as a pastor in sevallows the homeless to sit era! states and planted the

Adion leaves
denomination · Police dedare
church a public
split
nuasance

Glickmnn said his sermons thi s ye,&lt;~r will "address
living in n post-Sep t. II
world" &lt;tnd how to move
beyond hate crime s like the
ones committed at the synagogue.
· "We remember it. it was a
frightenin g ex perience and we go on." Glickman
said. " If we can survive
pogroms and the Spanish
Inquisition , and, and, and the whole lituny of persecu·
lions we've survived over ·
the years - we can certainly survive this. too.:·
I

KICK-OFF

For youth ages 3 years through 12th Grade

Wear Red, White And Blue

&lt;;UNDAY, &lt;;£PT£1\/\BER B
if :'-I if - 6:30 PI\/\
5th &amp; Main

992•2914 .r
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sleep on during
the lawntheovernight.
outside
day and Norwich, .Conn.
Police say· some of the
'
homeless harass passers-by
and commit crimes. The
action ' means the church
must pay up to $275 each
time police respond to a
complaint.
Police officials met with
the Rev. Debra Trakel but
decided the church had no
plan to solve problems. "[
am utterly outraged," Trakel
said.
City
Alderman
Paul
Henningsen said the church
deserves praise for helping
the poor but needs to provide
services to the homeless if it
continues to allow them on
its property.

Why do YOU
need the new

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r.- 40 Channel Listings

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r.- No Need to Buy·a TV Guide TM
&lt;. . . Local High . S~hool Sports Schedule

Find out by attending Predatory Lending Educational Classes at the Meigs
County Annex· Lower floor on Monday, September 9, 2002. Sponsored by
the Meigs County Fair Housing Office, we are offering two sessions. One
9:00am to 12:00 noon and another at 1:00pm to 4i00 pm. You may choose
the one most convenient for you.
.
If you ever plan lo buy a home of your own or refinance your present home,

you must be informed in order to avoid being a victim and risk losing your
home!

·$unba

You may register by calli11g Jean Trussell, Fair Housing Office at 992·7908.

·.

·.,

'

•

..

mtmes -~enttnel

DEAR ABBY: I am ~n
attractive 33-year-old. unattached woman who is
extremely shy and lonely.
·Please don't tell me to look
for companionship in church
• (done that) or clubs. which
• don't exist in my small town.
• The nearest singles group is
• u 30-mile drive, and the
"pickin!ls" there are slim.
Most ot my friends are married and preoccupied with
• husbands and busy households. We might meet for cof- fee o.r an occasional meal. but
· not often.
•, The few single girlfriends I
. have. ure
ronumticully
involved and do noc want to
leave ·their boyfriends even
for an hour. so I am stuck
every . weekend at home by
. myself. I tried an Internet &lt;h1t: . ing service. All the responses
· • I got were from men 50 and
· · older · - even though I
requested no one over 37.
I am beginning to doubt
myself as a person - fearing
. that no one will ever want to
: : get close to me. My attitude is
:·: starting to affect my job per·. - forman~-e.
Abby, am I asking too much
·
to want someone to cuddle up
_ with at" night; someone to be
· · · there when I've had a rough
: : day; someone to go bike rid·
• ~ ing with or for il day at the
beach?
Cnn you help me? Please
tell me what I can do. My
binhtlay is coming up. All I
want in the whole world is to
spend it with someol)e who
cares about me. ..:... LONELY
IN A SMAiL TOWN
SOMEWHERE IN VIR·
GINIA
DEAR LONELY! Any
experienced fisherman knows
· that in order to be successful.
you have to row your bout to
where the fish are biting.
Take a look at a map and
find a medium-to-large city
that you think might offer you
a chance for employment and
the opportunities to mix with
interesting people your age.
Once there. get involved in
activities where "nice people"
meet. (Volunteer work 1s a
good choice.)
.
• Sitting around in a small
town brooding ubout feeling
isolated is a waste of precious
time.
P.S . If you feel your shy-

Friday, S.,t.tm.-r &amp;. 1001

Community Calendar

Hi&gt;man finds the dating pool
..
. . is fished out in small town

Synagogue, target of post 9-11 hate

the end

_T_he_D_cu_·Iy;;.__se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _..,;;;B;....J

Page AS

Public Meetings

_....,....._.
~

POMEROY -

-

boi

p.tn •

~

CouniY

TUPPERS PlAINS -

County

l\JPPERS Pl.Ali&lt;S -

•1

'

En..,._

LOS ANGELES (AP) Warner Bros. production .
chief
Lorenzo
di
Bonaventura has resigned
as executive vice president
of worldwide motion pictures, less than two months
after taking the job.
·
He 'II become an indepen·
dent producer for Warner
Bras. Pictures. focusing his
attention on individual pro·
,' jects instead of overall stu·
dia output.
He accepted the promotion July 10 afier supervis·
ing the mast profitable year
ever at "the studio, with
films such as "Harry Potter
and the Sorcerer's Stone"
and "Ocean's Eleven" dom·
inating the box office.
As par\ of that new job,
di Bonaventura added to
his duties supervision of
domestic marketing of the
studio's releases and shared
• responsibility for its international film producti"on
program.
He said moving to a
lower-level position will
allow him "to get back to
· : stretching my creative mus·
cles."
'
"I love filmmaking , but
the more corporate the job
, · became the less creative it
: became, and the less ere·
: ative It became the less joy·
· ful
it
became,"
di
Bonaventura s'aid in a writ·
ten sta.temeni released
Tuesday evening. ·
•
This year, the studio had
•
hits with "Scooby-Doa"
and· "Divine Secrets of the
• Ya- Ya Sisterhood."

£•......, S14•

' • ) l\"' \ &gt; "'"'"' t·
........... ts

""'"'"' (1-.- ft

Church meetings

*

sw

"'lilt

ADVICE

..,... ..... Pion$ lQ ... """"' .,.
~ tlloo;;.tft t&gt;artwo.:u.&gt;
·

ness is limiting your opponunities. I urge you to get counseling. It would be the most
valuable binhday present you
could give yourself.
DEAR ABBY: My exmother-in-law. .
Thelma
Barca!. lived in Sioux Ci!y.
Iowa und took delight in
telling this true StOry from the
1920s nbout a pair of you rig
twin girls who hved nel(t door
to her on - I believe . Jackson Street.
Thelma took great pride in
the flowers she grew in her
backyard. Evidently the twins
liked them. too. In fact, they
liked them so much that one
.day they picked ~ost of them.
The next thmg Thelma
knew, .her doorbell rang and there stood the twins at
her front dour wanting to sell
her own tlowe~ back t.a h~r!
Those precoc1ous twm g1rls
grew up to be "Dear Abby"
and "Ann Lande.rs." Thought
you might enjoy this little trip
down memory lane. ALICE
MOSES,
HUNTSVILLE, ALA.
.
DEAR ALICE: I d1d •
indeed. 1' m not surprised that
my mother and my aunt were
so enterprising at such a tender age . However. I'm
relieved the two "hot petal ·
pus.hcrs" . decided to dev~lle
the1r talents to somethmg .
leg1tunate before they w~re
"busted" for . their entrepreneurstup. (Both .were . too
short !O look good 111 horizon·
tnl stnpes !)
.
.
Dear Abby 1s wrl/lm by
Abigail Va11 811nm, . abo
k11ow11 a.~ Jea1111e Plull1ps,
mu/was{o11mled _bY_ l1er mor_her, Pauline Plutups. Wme
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles. CA
90069.

AA ""'~~tr~
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""''' Se(&gt;l $. 111 RQ;at o..~ R9&gt;-.'&lt; t Bf~f'l. l\) !i.pHit.. dl1
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Texan·Kelly Clarkson is now an ~erican Idol'
..

NEW YORK (AP) An estimated 22.5 million
people watched the tinule
of FOll 's "American Idol"
Wednesday night. even
more when Kelly Clarkson
was crowned the nation's
latest pop princess.
As expected. the talent
shaw hit its .ratings peak
with
the concluding
episode. when it was
revealed that viewers had
selected the 20-yet~r·old ·
Texan over Justin Guarini.
23. the big-haired heanthrab from Doylestown.

AND THE WINNER
IS ... - twll1
Clm~&lt;son .•'l\ ,,,

Burleson. h'""·
s•nRs '.\ Mt1lllt'tll
L1~~ lht ~ . ''"'''

. \'\lnnU'R tfl tht' hn&lt;•l

nt ft&gt;\ ~
l't\IIIPt•lt
IoOft ·Aitll'lr&lt;'&lt;ll'
IdOl. • II\ LD~
A.nl\ult•s Tl&gt;l' ""'
nf.'t ~'•''n~ .1
t&amp;CQI\1111~ &lt;'t11\ll&lt;lt'l '
QPIS\lll~

\tlit&gt;'&lt;ISII\1\

&lt;ll1d II Ill ft&gt;t&lt;'&lt;lM' &lt;l
t&lt;lh'l

CO Slnfllt'

thiS month ,m\l ''

Pa.

full illbum "'
No~ mil 1. 1·\Pl

Clarkson's victory was
announced nearly at the
end of a two-hour show.
The audience swelled to .
just under 28 miilion when
the announcement was
made. Nielsen Medin
Research said Thursday. .
· More than 18 million
people watched Tuesday
night. when the two finnlists sang three songs ench
to try and sway funs .
Clarkso·n wins a recording contract. and her first
single is due to be rushed
to the stores later this
month.

•••

On lhe Net:
'!Cox Web site:
. http://www.idolonfox.com/

EXPERIENCE

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(740) 992·2156 • FAX f740) 992·2157
INWw.myd•Uv..ntlnel.com

SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (AP) Medical marijuana activists said they
~ould protest a federal .ruid on a marl·
JUana f~ operated by a couple who
helped wrlle the slate law legalizing
medical use of the plants.
Officers seized more than I00 marijua·
na plants, three rifles and a shotgun in
the rajd Thursday, said Drug
Enforcement Ageot.spokesman Richard
Meyer in San Francisco.
Owners Valerie and Michael Corral
were arrested on federal charges of con·
spirucy and int~nl lo distribute marijuana, he said.
·
Medical marijuana activists said they
planned to prolest the raid Friday.
"These are incredibly compassionate
people who've worked closely with law
enforcement to helP. the sick and dying
in our community, ' ·said Ben Rice. an
anorney for the Corrals. "This is

ITS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

SlmDI~Gf
'

Den Dickerson
Publi$h&amp;r

Bette Pearce

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

I (11&lt;'1'.\ ,,, rite"""''' '"" ''""'•~II(, n... , .•h.•u/.1 ~ '"·'"' rh.m
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mtlt'SS u.tltt"'t'\\ 'l'l:r' uotr•,/,

NA

---

tONAL VIEW

Surprise?
Wfl y so lttuch not~~e if a real
plan to oust Saddam exists?
•1'hll Wm·rl'll tOhhll 'lrlhunt• Chronlde "" ''"' Mirlrllr'
1\11.\ l,'

Whul \11\ ••arlh i~ all th~ wur nuisc (011\ing out of
Wu~hingtnn. 0 .('.. all uhnllt'!
Admini~tmtion nt1kiul~ nt'l: wuy ton pul&gt;lk if they urc scl'i·
ou~ly ~on~kkritttJ. u·yin)l HI nu~t Sudtlum Hussein th.mt power
In h'li&lt;J. ln~tcad of movlnp tunb m1d nther t\n\:cs tn the region,
the ndminlstrath\1\ scctns l\1 think hlttstcr· Is ull that Is needed.
·Ph". thcr\: hn, hc.:n little ctl\H't hl hulld Ufl public suppot'l
tllr n pn~~ihlc wnr. Thl' Amcrl~tllt pcnplc nrc not dumnrlnll ti1r
It und neither m-e its allk~ .
The tim~: to hnw tulicn out Snlldmn Hmscin was llut·in!! the
Desert Stnt•m oJlCt'utlon when the mmps und mutet'i al were·on
the )ll'ound und t\:udy tn )Il l. But the pt-csiJcnt's father. Qcor')lc
II .W. lh"h. din~;' 111H hl )Ill 111 ,3tt!lhllnd with hill Cthll'mnus
liltW of nrm,.
llntil &lt;hunm hin Laden b captut\'d or we huvc Jll'•of he Is
drml. we ~un't ~•·c l'"&gt;thinllnt the mouth over unothcr wur with
lr'l\11.
• F r·~t thin~t~ t'lr~t. thlks .

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

Cruz is known to local law enforcement
agencies that have complied with slate
law ralher than federal drug laws. said
sheriff's spokesman Kim Allyn.
"The DEA didn't te.ll us 1hey did this.
not before, and nm after," he said.
DEA agents have rer~ ·• 1edl r• ·d
down on high-profile mcd1~.
• ~
advocates and distribution c .dh in
California, bypassing local law enforcement agencies that have followed the
stale law.
Andreu Ti schler. owner of the
Compassion Flower Inn, where guests MEDICINE?- Jean Hanamoto smokes what she says is a mar·
with doctors' recommendations are ijuana cigarette she is using for medical purposes. as a Drug
allowed to use medical marijuana. said Enforcement Administration agent stands in ·the background.
guarding an entrance to Valerie and Michael Corral's marijuana
she was oulruged.
farm,
north of Santa Cruz. Calif. Hanamoto was one of sever·
. "We're absolutely shocked that the
DEA would step in like thi s at harvest al members of Wo;Men's Alliance lor Medical Marijuana who
time when so many patients would be came to the farm to protest the arrests. Federal agents raicted
able to benetll from this medication," the marijuana farm and arrested the owners. who helped wnte
the state law legalizing m~dical use of the plants. (AP}
she said.

Case of 13- and 14-year-old brothers
accused of killing theirfather heads to jury

Wt;&lt;;\ DbNlAL Vl RUB

.

SAINTS AND SINNERS

,

The first of the ten commandments we've forgotten,
Mn,t nf us ~now there are Ten
(\ln\lnundments. Hut fewer than hull'
llf liS ~till llllll\C as IIIIIIIY as fl VC of
them, ucconling ttl tl Gnllup Poll.
How t11lllt)' can you mu11c '!
Even if you ctm rut tic otT all I0,
numbering them cuuld prove to he
yotir tlltdnin!!, becuuse the ..:olllntund·
mctlts iU'c not numhercd in the Bihl\l.
'T'hc numberllll! hu~ been douc by
dnu·chnhlll who huve nllt a~recd . The
result ·Is thr'ee dlffe1·ent sets 111' rtum·
bcl'llll! - one us~d by Cathulks. one
by Luthcruns und still another hy
other Protestunts und Orthodox
Chrlstluns.
. "Th(JU shult not kill." for cxumplc,
Is the fifth commandment in the
Luthcrnn und Culhlillc cute..:hlmrs. In
the EJ1Iscopul l:lnok of Cummun
l)ruycr, It Is the sixth .
The Ten Commundmcnts (Or the
Dct:ulnguc, u Cll'cck wmd tn~unlnl!
tl1e "t~n wmds") nrc fnund In twn
llttccs Itt the Bible - · Exodus 20 and ·
)cutct'onom~ .'i. The phrusing uuu
nl'dcr urc ~1milur In the twn Olu
'rcstull\cnt houh. hut urc nut ldcnti -

l

George
Plagenz
COLUMNIST
One Ill' their song~ to the Lord contuined the line, "Who is like thee, 0
Lord, among the gods'/"
Animul worship wus common, too .
It wu~ natural tor jJrimitivc people
tcrrorit.ed by wild unimuls to think
that these ct·eutures were gods, supe·
rior to humuns . Anlmuls were ulso u
necessary source of food. They,
tltercfore, lmd to he propillatcd und
honored .
·
Then there wus the lies ire ur uncicnl
jlcoplc for idols anu images of their
god~. Even today, mnny or us like to
have some visual or tuctilc rerresen·
tation of the invisible spirituu world
- whether crud fix, stutue or alllll'.
Among ull the gods und idols being
worshiped in Mo~cs' time, Jehovuh
wus in uunger or being lost. This
C~lllll~!undmcn.l WIIS uesigned to put
hun first and foremost hy warning the
lsruclltes tlmt th\ly were to worship
him ulone. In ll world of competing
gnus, uti other gods but Jehovah were
tu be forsaken.

Most of us have an easy time witli
this commandment.
~
Too ea~y perhnps. We believe iri
only one true God. No problem. You
won't catch us worshipping any gold·
en culfl
:
As n prncticnl mutter, however, wi
mu~l admit we nflt:n love and lnt,J
things or nth~r people more than w~
love und trust God. Except maybe on
Sunduy.
·
A's for fearing God, we don't. The
lsruelltes' iden of God wus of some'
one wh9-~e laws and commandments
huvc to ne obeycu. When they are not
- when "God is ungry" - there urc
lrugic consequenc_es not only f~r lh~
wrpngdoer~ but lor countless mno·
cent partie~. as well.
•
The sins of the fathers. God
reminded lhc lsruelitcs when he guv.~
them the communrJments, ure "visiletl
upon the childrert." We know lhal tn
be .so. We cull i-1 ltcrcdity or we lt'acc
it to the envimnlnctH in whkh chil·
drcn grow 11p . In any cu~c. there is u
prke to puy when we ignore God'~
comnwndments.
·
,
Do we cmphusi7.c u loving God Ill
the exclusion of u God who must be
feared us well? God should perhups
be compured in our thinking to clec·
triclty. Although we can 't see elec~
tricity. it cun light up our lives antl
give us wurmth and comfort und pro•
vide power.
•
But It must ulso be feared und
'respected.
(Copyril(llf 2002,
NeW,IJ!IIJW'
Entei·pri.ve A.w1.) ·

1Hl AS5clCtA1Cil P~ tSS
'1\iduy i~ l·'ridny. Sept. It the 2~ (1th duy 11f 2002. There nrc
UN dnys left In the ycnr.
'1\llilly',, lli!lliii!lht til lli't\H'y:
~ul.
. One ycnr ll!lll, 1111 Sept. I,1, 20t)l. l're .~ldcllt ticot'~e W. IJush
The l:liblc say~ the eiii1111HIIIdii1CIIl~
~.·ullcd the tcn·nrlst t\ttu,· k~ In New Ymk und Wn~hllllltlln "the
were 11lven by God to Mose~ on Ml.
flr·st Wut' \If til•• 11st ~cntury" ns his ndntinisu·utlon Iat~ led
Sinal. Mllsc .~ was hi puss them on tu
fll(,lhlvc Ostllllll hln Ludcnu prime ,uspc.:t. The U11itcd !'itutcs
the lsnlclltcs. the first Cl\11111\unumcnt
pt·nrniscd to WIIIIC nll ·mH t'Clt&lt;liutlon n~:tnlnst thnse rcspnnslhlc
wu~ "Thou .~hult huvc no other gods
hctorc
me . Whut nthcr !f.Ods wns
nntlnny rc~l111c thut pnHe,·tctl them . ktlhicr~ t'dllmctl to the
Gnu
rcfcnlng
to '/
.
nntlnn's ~~te&gt; fnl' lhc fiN time lnlwo duys, ~tn'l'ylng ucr·v,ius
The people of uttdertt times wor·
pusscn(,lcrs who f11.:ed 'trit·t new security mcusurc,,
shlpcd
tnuny I!Ods. Even the Israelites
On this dutc:
of
Moses'
duy bclicvcu In the cxis ·
1!1 17~\l. dlll'ill!l tile fluulll1\'ll~h 1111d htdl1111 Wtu'. the l:lr·ltlsh
tctKe of god' other thnn Jchovuh .
dd\:ntcd the F1'c11~h \l\t the l'lnln~ of Abmh11111 ovcri&lt;lokllll!
Quehc.: City.
In I?HH. the C\llt!lrcss of till' C'onfc&lt;lcnulnn nutilol'ltcd the
•
first mulonul clc~tlllll. uud dc..:htrcd New York City the tem·
•
pomry nuti\111111 ..:upltnl .
lu I K!i I. A11tcricu1t mcdknl piLlncct' Wuhcr Reed wus b111'11 In
Cllnuccstct' ('111111ty. Vtt . .
.
111 1\l~~. t'hiun11 Kul ·,,hck IJC.:umc l"'csldcnt ufChlnu .
•
111 IY4H. l(cpuhlkull
Mur11nrct Cliusc Smith of Mu\11~ wu.~
Bu~k l_
ust sprinl!, when Enrun col ·
elected to tile U.S, Se11utc. hc~omlnl! the 1'\r·sl Wllii1Un til sei'Vc
Its stock .1)11\1 sold it for $1 R million jusl
lupscd .und corporutc mlsbehuvlor of vur·
In b11th lmuse' ol'ronl!rcss.
uheu~ ot rls collupse, s1ncc the crony id
itlus sortN WU.I dlscovcl'l!d In hulf u dol.en
q~esuon ,wt':~ Terr:Y McAuliffe, longtime
In I\l&gt;l\l, the Ludic' l'mfcs~lonul Golf Assoclutlon 'of
other
111t\lor
Amerlcun
businesses,
it
frtllnd of Btll Clmton und chairman oj'
Amcrkn wu~. fon11cu in New Ymk City, with Putty Ber11 tLs Its
scen1ed
possible
thut
this
wus
just
the
lip
the
Democrutic Nationul C0111mittee.
first president .
of the lceber11. Perhups coqJor·ute
Worse yet, the Citigroup executive
In · I471 , 11 fnur·duy luntutc .~' rcllcllhlll ul the Attku
America wus one big writhing muss of
~ho
. .1uggestcd to a Bush Treasury offi.
Cufi'C~·tlonul htd Iit y i11 upstlltc Nc w York crlr.lcd u .~ pol icc unu
cvllrJoer.1, bent on. enrlchlnl! tftcnisclves
crallhat
he pul pressure on credit-rating
l!liUrds ~ton ned the pri~on : lite ordculund flnul ussuult clulm~d
nt the expense of their stockholders und
companres n(•llo downgrade Enron wu~
4~ IIVCI .
cntployecs. Maybe the pmblem wus
none other I hun Robert Rubin, Clinton·~
"systemic," or In other words, rooted.ln
In l\l77 . condu•·tm· J.~oilnld Stnkowskl died In Humpshlrc.
Tre~sury Secretary and Mr. Clean him:
the very nuture of th~ cupltullst system
En!!luhd . ut ~~~~ IJ5.
sell.
:
COLUMNIST
Itself. Oemocruti'c polltlcluns licked their
In IIJYl ullh~ Whltl.'lhwsc, lsruclll'rimc Minister Yll1.huk
So, the Democrats have been reduced
chops und prepared to uccuse the
Ruhin und PLO ~huirnHu\ Yusscr· Al'llfut signed un uccord
to
burrowing Into the corporate careers'
Republlcun Purt)' of being little more
grunting limited Pulcstlulun uutomJiny.
community cun be expected to hurt ()f Bush and Cheney themselves, in the ·
thun u hundmuklen of Big Btlslness.
Republicans more thun Democrats, forlorn hope that something discredIn J\)l)M, t'nnner Aluhun\11 Unv: OellrllC t'. Wullucc died ut
But here It is September. uttd the bccuusc the 001' Is regarded as closer to ituble could be found in one or the other
uge 7\l.
·
,
.
.
dimensions of the corp&lt;trulc scunduls of busmcss. And cenuinly this is true in the and analogized to the recent scandalr.
'Ibn ycurs lll!n: St~fun Edhcr14 dcfculcd Pete Su111prus lo win
2tKJ2 huve been pretty well scopcd out. case uf smull business, whose proprl· The problem here is that their misdeed!
the U.S . Open title lr1 New Yor·k, u dny ufter Mmticu Selcs bcut
· The CEOs of the nutlon's thousund etors have ion~ been heuvlly Republican . if any, ull occurred while the Democrut;
Amntxu Sundtc/. Vicul'lo to win hct' seventh Grund Slum title.
largest cnrporutlons met the newly In the cuse ol big businesses It lends to were in control of the SEC and in a per·
Five ycur,, U~\1 : hmcml ~crvlccs were held Itt Culcuttu,
llnposcu August deadline lor cerllfying, be less true, because corporate movers feel position to expose und penaliie them
persnnully und under outh, to the uccura - and shukers like to have frien\ls in both ·• yet they never did so. As a matter of
lndlu. foi· Nnh,•l pcu.:c luurcutc Mol her 'rcrcsu. Kute Shlnlllc ·
cy of their companies' 11nundul stute - purtlcs, und Democratic politicians enjoy fuel, In Bush's cusc, the SEC conducted
·
of llllttor. w'" .:rnwrtcd Mi&gt;s Amcl'lcu .
ments, tmd none of them confessed to s~nding weekends on the gulf links an inyuiry into his dealings with the .
01\c ycur u~tu : A&gt;trcss Dorothy McGuire died irt Suntu
ml~l\lpresenlutitins
on I he order of tl1osc Wllh ftlt cats justus much as Republicans . Harken corporation and duly concluded
Mnnicu. Culif.. utul!c H~.
·
"11111tlltted
by
lhe
Dirty
Hull' Dm.cn or du.
that nothing culpable had occurred.
Tod1ty's Birthdliys: A~u·css l!llccn 11ultmt ("As the World
so.
So, the Denmcruts haven't hud much
All of which Is not to say that the
1\rrns"l is MI. TV producer Jll'l!d SllvcmJun Is ()5. flor·mcr
Su,
u
few
of
the
mu.lor
corporute
mls·
luck
punning
for
political
gold
In
the
Corporate
Scandals of '02 haven't left a
White llou.,c •pokcsmurt Lurry Spcukcs Is t'll Actor Rl\!hurd
crcurHs
huvc
been lnJictcd und wulked recent corporute scandals. They're just HOUr laste in the voters ' mouths that, cou.
Klcl is (t.l. Rock slngc1· IJuvld Cluyum·'Fhmttus (Hioml, Swcul
"the perp wulk" (ill hundcuiTs, with u too damnably bipurtisun, you see. Sure, pled with the economic downturn of .
&amp; 'lbursJ is hi. Aclrcss Juc4ucllnc Bisset Is 5!!. Slnl!cr Peter
burly mitrshul ot1 cuch side), un.d Presklent Bush culled Enron's CEO 2001 and the slow recovery from it will
Cctcw i.~ ~H . Actress Ndl C'tll'tcr Is ~4. Singer Runuy Jones
Congress urtd thr: Sl:lC urc preparing to Kenneth Lay "Kenny boy," but it turns accompany them into the voting booth
(Th~ Villngc P~npl~) i' ~0 . Rccnru prmJuccr Don Wns is ~0 .
issue new luws und regulations In ntukc out thut there were more Democratic on · Election Day: But they uren''t the
A~lrc ss Jcun Smurt Is 4.1. Colllllry sl nl!cr 13uhhic Cryncr 1,, 41 .
sure, if possible, thut lhclr Jlurtkulttr mls· Congressmen than Republicuns among knockout blow to the GOP that the
Rllck singcr-ntu,iclull IJuvc Mu .~tulrtc ( Meguuclh) is 41. Rock
uceus uon't huppen uguin. And we ure the lop- I0 reclpientN of En ron's cum· DemQ\:rats were, forgivably, hoping for.muskiun Zuk Sturkcy i~ ~~ . Olympic gold mcdul runner
Jell to wonder whul, if unylhirur the pa~n contribution.~. And it's difficult for
(William Ru.l'her is a Dirtinl(uMreJ
Michucl J'l&gt;hll'llll i' ~5 . l(ock lllll'kiur1 Steve Perkins (Porno
politlcul fullnut of lhcse 'ctmduls Jl1 be. a emocrat to wmk up much outrage Fellow of the Claremomlnstitute for tire
For l'yro~ : Jn11c \ Addiclion) i~ l~ . Tennis pluycr Gorun
AJ'tcr nil. l:llcction Duy Is coming up.
over the fact thut one crony of Global Study of Statesmanvlrip and Political
Jvuni ~cvic i' .1 1. ( 'ountry nru •i.:illn Joe Don Rooney (Ru•cul
Normully,\ scun\luls i11 the business Crosslng'H ofllcers bought $100,000 of Phl/moplry.)
I' IUisJ i.• 27. Actor ~colt Vickuryoll' i• 27. Sin11cr Fionu Apple
Is 2~. Mlill' lkn Suvu~c I• 12.
· ·
Tbou!(lll lor 'Ji1duy : " l~ cvol t und terror puy ·u price. Order
82&amp; Third Avt .. Qllllpollo, Ohio
111 Court &amp;t;, Pomtrov, Ohio
100 M1tn St., Point Ploloont, W.Va.
und luw huw a co.&lt;t."
C'u1·1 ~umlhurg. i\mcricun puc1 uml
7~~~8-2341
740.ot2-2tll
301·011·1333
.
.
'
nulhetr t I ~7K· I 'Jili J,
.
I
IJY

absolutely outrageous."
Valerie Corral said the weapons the
agents seized were heirlooms that
belonged to her and her husband's
fathers nnd grandfalhers.
The Corrals helped write the 1996 law
thai allows patients and their caregivers
to grow marijuana for their own medi·
ci.ne. They work with local authorities to
dispense the drug to people with doctors'
recommendations to use marijuana.
Mardi Wormhoudt, a Santa Cruz
County supervisor, said county officials
had been very impressed with the
Corrals' professionalism in running the
club.
,
.
The raid was a surprise to local med·
icalmarijuanu growers and advocates, us
well as the Santa Cruz County SheriiT's
office and even DEA ofliciuls in the
agency's closest office, in San Jose .
The furm about 15 miles north of Santa

Friday, September 1. 1001

s medical marijuana

Agents raid fann that

There~ NO need

H 1 Court St!Mt • Pomefoy Ohio

Nation • World

·The Daily sentinel

Frld1y, s.,-mber 1, 2002

PageA7

ON TRIAl:--' Defense lawyer James Stokes puts his arm around his client, 13-year-&lt;lld Alex

King, and whispers to him while a prosecutor makes his closing argument In Pensacola, Fla.
Alex and his brother, Derek, 14, are on trial for the murder of their father, Terry King, who was
be~ten to death with 'a baseball bat. Afex ~:~nd Derek have recanted confessions they gave
pollee and accused a convicted child molester of killing their father and have sex with Alex. (AP)

PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP)
- The case against 13· and
14-yeur-old brothers accused
of a deadly baseball but attack
·on their father is headed for
the jury.
Deliberations were set to
begin Friday in the first·
degree· murder trial of Alex
and Derek King, who face
mandatory life in prison with·
out parole if convicted.
In an unusual twist, it is the
second trial in the same
killing. Convicted child
molester Ricky Chavis, 40,
was also tried under a com·
pletely different theory of the
crime - that he wielded the
. aluminum bat thai killed
Terry King. The verdict

Man accused of t ing to help
terrorists is injure in jail fight
DENVER {AP) - A man said.
aoouacd of tryina to help
UJaama fumlly spokesman
ltlamlo terrorhta was Injured LeHa McDowell said the
in a flaht with another prison injuries were serious und
al a Viralnla jail, officials f,cq~lircd medical attention.
auld.
· He deserves protection, as
James Ujaama, 36, and an someone who Is Innocent
unidentified inmate aot into a·. until
rro~en
guilty,"
fight Wednesday in the jail's · McDowel sa1d.
aymnasium,
Justice
Ujaama was not charged.
Department spokesman Drew The other inmate faces
Wade said Thursday. He said charges of assault on un
the men were fighting over a inmate, fighting and creating
,newspaper. Ujaama suffered a a security disturbunj:e.
lump on his forehead and an . In Ujaama's most recent
abrasion on one cheek, Wade court appearance last week,

his lawyer complained n jail
guard had referred to him 111
"bin Luden boy." Ward said
Ujuumu Is "being given the
_same privllo~es as .any ~ther
Inmate who ts nol m sohtury
confinement" ·
. No delalls have been
.
,
released ubout UJuama s
expected trunsf~r ~o Seattle,
where he wa~, md1cted by a
federal grand Jury .Aug. 28 ~or
allegedly developmg a traming camp for Islamic terrorists
111 rural Oregon. .

reached last week in his trial
was sealed until the King
brothers' trial ends . He faces
the same sentence.
On Thursday, prosecutor
David Rimmer asked jurors
not to be swayed by anger
with.Chavis.
·
"You don't like Chavis?"
Rimmer said. "Nobody likes
Chavis. Chavis is the kind of
guy everybody wants to hate.
What's lower than a child
molester?" ·;
Firefighters found the body
of Terry King. also 40, on a
recliner inside his burning
home. and the brothers con·
fessed to police a day after the
slaying. The puir now say
Chavjs is the real killer.

But Rimmer ·said the boys
were .telling the truth the first
time. and that their, confessions are filled with the kind
of detail only someone who
was there would have known.
Defense lawyers conlended
the boys confessed to protect
Chavis and parroted what he
had coached them to say. Thut
included such gory details as
being able 10 see the victim's
brain through ,a hole in his
head and the raspy sound of
his last gasps.
"Everyone in this court·
room can repeat those
details," said James Stokes,
Alex's lawyer. "The boys'
stories line up because t.he
boys ' stories are rehearsed."

Don Tate's·
DELY~ OSlO
WHED

&amp;TRUOKSI

CONSERVATIVE ADVOCATE

So much for all of those corporate scandals
William
Rusher

DROP US ALINE.

STORM- James and Hillary Shaw of Houston, Texas walk out Into the surf on Surfside Beach.
Texas as a storm brewing In the Gulf of Mexico stirts up the waters along the coast. (AP)

1 Chevy Blazer

Tropical Storm Fay makes its .way toward
Texas coast; landfall expected by weekend
.

HOUSTON
(AP)
Tropical Storm Fay slowly
c)lurned Friday toward the
Texas coust, where it was
expected to make landfall by
the weekend. Some residents
were being urged to evacuate.
: Galveston Mayor Roger
"Bo" Quiroga said tides of 4
to 6 feet were expected to lap
onto a highway that traverses
the length of Galveston
Island.
· The Gulf storm officially
became a tropical depression
at 4 p.m. Thursday and was
~pgruded 10 Troprcal Storm
Fay about six hours later as
winds pushed above 35 mph.
Seven counties in a I()().
mile stretch along the Texas
• coast were under the tropical
storm warning. The Weather

Service projected that the night
storm would · pass directly
"We're trying to be careful
so there's not another situa·
over Galveston.
As much as 6 inches of rain tion Iike Tropical Storm
was predicted with possible Frances, where the tides
accumulations of 10 inches rolled in and, 'boom,' people
near the coastline. When Fay were trapped," Jennings said
makes landfall late Friday or in Friday editions of The
early Saturday, the wind is Galveston County Daily
expected to be gusting at News. "The warning's lukeabout 60 mph.
warm right · now, but it'll
It's the first tropical storm probably get a lot firmer. If
to threaten Texas since June anyone has any concerns,
2001, when remnants of . they should get out now. You
Allison dumped up 10 3 feet'· really can't go wrong with
of rain on the Houston area, that advice."
.•
killing 22 und causing an esli·
Late Thursday, the center of
mated $5 billion in damage. the storm was about 125
Galveston's
emergency miles southeast of Galveston
management director, Eliot and was stationary. The
Jennings, was talking by lele- Weather Service said little
phone with federal, slate and movement was expected
regional officials Thursday , through Friday.

'18,950
USED CARS
1997 Olds Cutlass Supreme ..... $ 7,990
2000 Toyota Camry LE ... ... ....... $11,900
1998 Olds Delta 88 ................... $ 6,900
1999 Chevy Monte Carlo .......... $ 8,950
1998 Grand Am GT.. ................. $ 8,950
2001 Chevy Cavalier .................$ 7,950

1998 Cadillac Sevilla STS ........ $21 ,900
2000 Chevy Lumina .................. $ 9,999
2001 Cadillac STS ................... $31,900 .
1997 Cadillac Devllle ................ $11,900
2002 Chevy Prizm · 1OK miles .... $11,900
1999 Ford Taurus ............ 1,......... $ 8,900

USED TRUCKS
2002 Olds Bravada .................. $26,900
2000 S·10 Ext Cab .................... $ 9,900
2000 GMC Yukon Delanalll.. .... $26,900 .
2000 Silverado Ext Cab 4X4 .... $19,900
1997 Old1 Br•vada ................... l 9.950
1997 Chevy Surburban ............ $15,900

1996GMC Sonoma .................. $ 5,450
2001 GMC Sonoma Ek1Cab4X4$14,900
200QTracker Convertible .......... $ 8,900
1992 Ford F150 4X4 .............. ,.. $ 5,950
1991 Fcml i!Cptorer .................. ,t 7,100

Don 'rate lfotora ~·

East Main Street • Pomeroy, Oh
· · 74Q-992-6614 • 1-888-DON-TATE

'

PON'I'1AC
~$.
IX(:trfMlHT.P.t.M ON .._;;

------ --·I '

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If

•

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P•sa AI • Tbt Ptlly Stntlntl

lfll \htlt'.'m \\\" , t'l.lltll'h\\. w~
l'll'l"\f Mt\ \\.t.lt~trj: lk'm1

~~ C.\'"

A.,:..t...·

('~-.m. ul JHMS (..,..

1\ilt~'\

Pl•-hW Jj1jtlr) Mtll«
ui\IJit.\ S.:hl.•ll \0 \1.1 am
ti,· ~\1"1 • ': \0 r "'

'

\\,ll'hiJ'I

Kt.. ~~. h,.q~-...

~~~

W VII

IO·nn a.m. lUI&lt;.I 1 r-m.

S\tt'll.ll\

~~~~~.-· Rt: '' n.-•11.11\ryl'"
Sun1.l•)' St'h\~tll . IJ;Jli iUll.
\\'l\l'li.htl' . I I am aiiLI ~p. m .
WC\JJ-.c-S\Juy Ser,· w~o• • 7 p.m

"'"'('"'~ t-1nt ltaptlst
l'!"tm J1m H!'l.xl.:...-rt
t-.:a,t Mwn St
Sunday Si.'tlOlll . 1):_\0 1un.
\\\lf~h1p · lU : ~O 11..111

Wlll'l'hll' • 11\.,\llllm., fi .\\11• m
\\'nl n\·-.d,l) S\'1\ ! ~'\'' t. 'U I' 111

H~ :.,Utun .

MI. l lnlun R11p11.~1
· lla\' ltl WiM'IIIII!I
m.

bt' llllltl . h.J(I pIll.
11~1.111

WPMihl jl •

tUII) 11.111. lll:JIIa.m.. 7: UU jllll
St'r'''''\'S 7:\)() p.m

l!''lllltll' llst Mlkr M•"-'1\'

WnNhip • 10 .\11 n.m
W~: diK'St.lu y ~I hie Study . ~ : 110 p.m

Sm•k c!ow 7 jUn.

Wt:dn\". ~duy

Clld R.ohtll'"' WIU Ropllll Chur&lt;:h

l~ti~IIIIYillo Chri11lhm Chun:h

St. R1 . '7, M\tkllcpnn
S1mduy SchOt.ll • I() 11.111.
f.\&lt;enlllj • ?:(Ml p.m.

~ liM\

Pn"Of: Rnhotl

Mu~~cr

Suml-.y SdliM\I · 9':.'11 11..1 11.
Will1hiJ1 · I0:4~ 11.111.
81hla S1udy W~l . 1:tM) p.m.

Suntlay Sd\1.1111 IO:J0-11 11.111.
1-M let' Sill.'l ti)'I Prh:~ th\1\'11.1 11 : 0~ - 1 ~ : iM)

Montina Star
l'll!tli\r: Dewayno St11tlor

IIIII II\

Sunday S.:hool • II tt .m.

St..,:nummt Ser' leo iJ. I\l: I~ u.m.
1-hmwlmtkhli me~t~t-ln~ . I ~t 'll1uu .• '1 t•.m.

Woralllp • I0 u..m.

IUIINid!i' 8apd11 Chun-h

I 111 lu·rau

..:.., Ltt.rt
l'll~tor : Arl1u1 I-IArknc~~
Sund1y Sdw.nl · 1011.111.
W1lfShlp . ~ u.m.
W~dlle•duy • 1p.m

S1. John l.u1h~r111n Churth
l•int'Onwc

ur

Ri!tld•,·llllll ('hun.'h thrill I
Pu-.111r: t•hmp Stlum

St. Rt 14) J U~II.lll ' Rl. 7
P u~h•r: Rev. hunot R. Acree, Sr.
Suntlll)' LnlfiL'll Servic-e
Wn r~ hl11 - \O:J.O u.m.. tip m

Sundll)' Sch1'otll : I) ·JtJ u.m.
Wonh\p St'r\ lee. IU.\tl 11111
Hlhl r Sttlll) . W~·dnl.'~d!l)'. l'dtl 1'·.111

•7 1'1.111.

WtlUhll' · IH~l!t . m ,
Sun\luy Sch•'k•! • !ll:IHl 1un.

Our S11ovlour Lulheran Churth
lle~~:ter

Victor)' P11ptl•t lndepondont

Chun:h ul Chrllll

Wulnut 11nd licnry StK.. R•~·on~wiiO'J.

N. 21l11St. Middleport
Pu5lnr: Ja•noN E KeeNoee
Wur$hlp - 10u.m.. _7p.m
WCIIILCSdll)' Servlcu · 7 ll ,fl\,

N11thun Rullin.s~m
Sunday AChi)(IIIJ:.\0 ll.lll
Nnrmtm Will. ~upcrintll nd,·nt
Sunduy w11rshlp - 10:).0 1un .

Sunduy School • Hl:OO IU11 .
W11rshlp . II 11.1\1,

l''•lth llt~11t1111 Chun.-h
H.u\ln•.lo..l St., Mmum

Chul'\'h or ChriNt

St I'Mull.ulhenn Chun:h

l'u~tur

!12~

Wci.lue~d lt )'

C't\IIICI'

Smul11y Schnnl . I.J · 4 .~ ll.IIL

Stllllltl)' hlhlc. Study . '1 : '" 11.111 .
WtlfMhip· IIJ:.lO 11.111, 11111! (I ,\ 0 p.111 .
Wt,ln~MIIIY 1lJhhfS1u4.ly · 7 11m ,

II a,m,, fl1tm.
S~rvil.:l!~ • 7 p.m.

W11r8hlr - 11 11.111.

t'nml Run H11ptl•t
Sundt!~

•

SL·honl · 10 u.m

WurMhlp - II

a.m.

Mt, MoriMh B1pllrrt
Sumlny SchOtll . 'J:_,II a.m.

l'usltll" Rev. N.ulph Spin:•
Suntlny Sduli.tl • Y:JO u.m.
Wm~ hil' • lll:.\llu.m., 7 p 111,
.'l'hur8dlly S!i!rYicc• . 7 p.m

?:W p.m.

Mt. MoriMh L:hurt.'h or Uotl
Mile Itill Rd .. R11dne
P11Ktor: J1uneh Sllucrllcld

MeblM Cuopc~r•ll~e P1rblh

Sutt~f.ty .~t:lmul - lj : 4~ n.m.
Evcnln11 · fiJI.! II .

l'u~ tnr · Jonc Ucunlc
Suntlll)' School • 9:]0 11.111.
WurMhlr · II u.m.. 6::\0 p.m.

wc,ln c~tluy

Sunday S~.: h1 lill · l\li.m
g~eninw - 7 p.m.
Wcdn c~duy Stu· vlc.:e~ • 7 p.nt.
H~tptl•l

(In· 124 ~hi nll WilkeKYille

JU:.'o 11.111., ? : !~ 1 p.m.

( 'hurrlluf(;cul

Mutl1nd ··n:c Will Batptbll
' S11lcm St.
P11~1m : Kcv. Puul Tuyl.,r

H oven~wnod,

MI. Ollv,, Uulttd Ml!lhoflllil

Wtu1nc~llll~ Sllrvke~

Anthtully R1ptl•l
~uml11y Schr•ul · 9:.'0 o.m
Wur~hi(l • 111:4,11.111.
Sundt!)' E\'cl\111¥ • fo:Uil p.1n
P11 ~1t1r : Mnrk MI.'CIItllllti'

SKond

l'll~tnr: lluvi•l Gr~:c.J

Sllltthl)' Sehoul · \1 :,\U tun .
w,,l~hlp

u.m,

SyrMC'UIIt

t•nHior: Da~id W. McCI11lr1
Sunday St.&gt;honl 10 11m·
Mnlllllllil WllfHhlp II 11m R\·enlnl - 7 prn
Wcdnclldlly 7 p.m.

'

Service\ . 7 p.m.

Flnt Churrh nf t;od
.,u~lnr :

Wedne~duy .~llrvkeM .

Wohhip • 9:~() 11.rn ,

l.ony llottom
Suntluy SchtiOI · 9:30 un.
Wnnhlp • 1.0:30.11.111Metldnllle

Church ol' GOO or l'roph«y

Sacred 1te11r1 Cathollt Ch11reh

Jupp_
lt
Bnh Rnndulph

Sundoy Schuul • 10::\(h .rn,

(,:30 p.m.

O.J White Rd . nfY St R1. l tiO

St. Rt.
l'n ~tt1r:

Slll~o.lny

MlddlllJMirl C111nmunll)' {'hul'('h
~H ~ttrl St., Mlddlcpon
l111stnr: S11m A.n1l~nlln
Sun!.luy StlhtMII 10 &amp;un.

AIUI\'1nbly

I ~ -*. Rn~· mc

W(lllum lll,lllldl
Sdhit!l • In 11.111.

tiwnhtll · 7 jl.lll,
• W!!!.IM!Iidll~ Scr..-h:e' . fp.m.

l'n·'h' ll'rian
~'nnllip .

· 7 : ~0 p.m.
S11rvk\1 - 7:.\0 p,m,

1111.111.

llttrriAOnovllle P~byterlan ChuR"h
W•ll'l! hlp • ~ 11.m. ·
~ : 4~ 1t.m.

t'1llh Vtllty 'httbcrMde Ch~n:h
R~t.Uoy R11n Muud
tliiNtur· Rev. Hmmotl Rnw~111
Sun!.luy INc:nlna 7 p.m.
Thuudny Sor\'JcC . l p.m.

Wnrtthlp • II 11.111.
WeU1tt1duy 7 p.m.

Evcnlna • h p.m.
Wcdncliday Sorvlcc . 7 p.m.

SuntJ.ay SchC'M.ll .

MlddluJmrll1rtlbyltrllln
Sumluy S~;htKll • Y a.m.
Wtll'$hlp • I0 11,11\,

Sno·111l..tl;11 \ol11·11h'C

SIIIUI'II~)'

Off Ro. 124
P11'111r: l!d•ol ~hu1
,.; Sunt.lny Schc)(ll • 9:301un.
WLirahlp . 10::\{] 11.111., 7:)0p.m

Pelhel Chun:h

W II

MI. llermun U11i1ed Brelhren
In Chrlfru t:hurch
Cummunlty Jf\411 Wlck hmn Rd
11nstur: H.uhtlrt Sundcnt
Sumhty Scht1111 • ~:30 ti.ri1.
w~,rMhlp · 10::\011.111 .. 7:00 p·tu.
Wedno:~Uny Srrvlcliltt • 7:110 p.m.

TcHIII~

S~mt.111y H~ hlllll ·

10 II. Ill .
Wm~hlp • 11 n.m.
Wrduc~dpy S!iirvkc - 7 p.m.

Wurahljl • 1011.111.
Wctllli!Mtluy S\li'Vit'OI · 10 11.11\.

Fllllh Got)H!I Churth

lh)l.:kii'IIIJNirt Chun:h
Qnmd Stfccl
Sund•y School • 10 11.m.
Wtmhlp • II a.m .
Wcdnclldu.y ServiL-e• . Mp.rn,

•:den UuUed Hrelhren In Chrl~t
SIIUe Ruutc 124, Rccdllvltlc
Pustnr: Rev. BUI Duly
Sunda y School • II 11.m.
Suni.llly Wm~hlp · 10:0011.111. &amp;. i:O() p.m.
Wcdn118day ScrvicaM • 7;(X) Jl.lll.
Wednaiidny Youth Serl'lcc · 7:00p.m.

Lnna Uuuum
Suntlny S~honl · \I :~Oa . m .
Wnulllp • 10 :4~ n.rn ., 7:~0 p.m.
Wcdnolldny 7:lO p.m.

Mt, Olive Community Church
Pustnr: L.awrcn"c 8u81l
Su1K.)11Y Silhunl · ~:30 a.m.

Thn:h Chur&lt;h
Co. Rd . !l
Sunt.luy School · IJ:JO u.m.

l

I uitl'd Brl'lhn·•1

Mc11'Ne Cil•pel Churt•h

TnWI\Mhlp Rd., 4tJM("
Sumluy Schnol • IJ 11.111.

S\lrYicc.l:

Suhb11th Schc10l • 2 p.m.

Uyenlll• Community Church
Sun!.luy Sehtl\..ll · 'ii:~O u.m.
Wnrrlhl11 • l0:30 u.m., 7 p.m.

TueMtlity S\lrvi(:C~ . 7 p.m.

.

y

Mulllcrry Hts. Rd .. Pnmoroy
Pu•tur; 'R1.ty Lawln1ky

Htlel CommuRIIy Chunoh

Coolville Church
Mmln tt FUlh St.
Sund11y Schuol · 10 u.m.
WnrMhlp . 9 u.m.

f!vcnlfijl · i p.m.
Wcdncd11y Sorvlco • 7 p.m.

Wor M hi~ · IO: )IIJt , ll\.

c..poll.lyhlhou..
Hllnnd Ri,.u, t•mnerny
PllMIIlr: Roy Hunter
Suodll)' &amp;:hoot • 10 11.m.

Mlddlcporl Church of' the N111rene
P11stnr: Alif:n Mldcup
Sumluy School · IJ:30 a.m.

Hvon i nM7 r ~ p.m.
ThoMdlly &amp;. Thurlll.la~ • 7 : ~Q JI.IR,

Wnnhlp - 10::\0 u.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wt!dno.U11y Se~rvlt:cM • 7 p.m.
P11~ 1or .

Allen Mhll:llfl

South Helhtl CommunUy Church

Retdnollle Ftllowahlp
Churth l'lf 1h~: Nllmene
PIINtur: TertMI Waldeck
Sundlty Schuul ·9:30a.m.
Wor.hlp · 10:4.! 1.111., 7 p.m.
v/cdncMdl)' Service• · 7 .p.m.

SIIYot Ridac
Dlhlc S1udy 911.m. Su ni.luy
C~rlelon lnlerdenomlnlllonll Church
Kln11•bury Road
PMttur: Rnhcrt V1nt.:o
Sunday School · 9:l0 11.m.

Syrafult Church or lht Naurene
P•-lnr Mlke Adkina

Wor•hlp Service lrt:;lO 11.m.
Hvcnlnl Ser-vice 6 p.m.

Sund11y SchlKJI · 9:30 11.m.
Wnr&amp;hlp • 10:30 un., 6t'l.lll,
Wednc•duy Service~ . 7 p.m.

frmlum Gotpol Ml11lmo
Ibid Knob, 1111 Co, Rd . l I
Ptulor: Rev. Roaer WllllhnJ
Sunday

S~o:hool ·

Counly'• Otdcsl

Plori••

Main

Pomeroy, Oh
740·882·2844 740·882-8288

Insurance
· Products+
Financial
Services
AGENCIES Inc.

Bill Quickel

l\eal estate
216 E. Second Pomeroy

7 40·992-3325
Marketing Property·
Since 1971

1192-8877

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740·667-3110

'111-IIUal ~&lt;J.Ht-e
7'
·174 Layne Street
New Haven, WV 25265
1

IJB1meo

H. Anderson
Dlr~tar Fax:

30•1·8tl~-ll20&gt;01

Brogan·Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
982-5130
Pomeroy
''Let your light so .&lt;hl11e before
men, thm rhey may see your

H"""

works arid 11 torify your
Father;, Heave11 ...

Mallhcw 5:16 ·

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
FLOWER
PHARMACY
106 BUITERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
Po~OY,OH 992-6454
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy . 'Flowers tor all occasions'

Ingel's Carpet
168 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-7028

~.

6nouffrr'•
;flu&amp;. 61fttp

.............,
10...._

------...,._..........

Herd defensive
end will miss

season
HUNTINGTON,
W.Vu.
• (AP) -· Murshull defensive
el)d Muurice McKinney ' will
miss the seuson with u knee
'11'\iury suffered during preseason prncticc.
McKinney. u 6·fllot·3. 235·
pound junior, is scheduled to
huve surgery Monduy. He
injured the knee on Aug. I0
and missed the opener lust
Saturday.
"It felt kind of good. blll then
it would swell up," he suid.
"So it wus un ongoing thing.
One day it felt ~reat, und the
next day it felt kmd of bud."
McKinney will be given a
medicul redshi11 this yeur und
huvc two scuscms of eligibility
remuining.

Team USA loses

aialn
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
There will be no medul
gold, silver or bronze - for
the United Stutes at the World
.Chwnpionshlps.
In yet unother stunning outcome, Yugosluviu came back
(rom a I0-point deficit in the
fourth quurtcr und defeated the
U.S. tcum Sl-78.
After _going 58-0 using NBA
players 111 intemutional competitions, the Americans huve lost
twice in a row. The best they
can do now is finish tifth in
this topsy-turvy tournament.

the Pabtots·

•ut u1 Nhd uout rhoulhr• wtth •JIOCt•l a.tt'

Full line of

RACINE - The Southern
lbrnudo nthlctic boosters will
meet ut 7 p.m. on Monduy in
the high school cufeteriu. All
boosters, pnrents, und community members nre urged to
nuend.
·

Y:30 11.m.

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Davla-Qulckltl Agency Inc.

boosters to

Johnson leaves

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Southem

SUII\III)' Sd11111l • ltl 1un.

Rv~nlnJ

RHI~tt
Pn~h, r: l!rhan Uu rknc!'l~
~und•y School · IO,n.m.

TUPPERS
PLAINS The Eustcrn Youth Footbull
Leuguc will huve u meeting
ut 7 p.m. on September 9 ul
the Tuppers Pluins Fire
Depurtment,

Sfti('Ut«! •'lnlllnlted llmlbyltrlln
Ptt~lnr : Rui'ICin Crow

HIM~

Chutcr
l'nMtur J1111c t:h!llllic
Wonhlp • Y1.11\.
Sund11y S.:hnol • 10 a.m.
Thuu~oy Scl'\'lccH · ? fl./11.

Apple und Sccnnd Sb.
l'wllor: Re~ . 011vld RuRIICII

l~n\e{,l!thd

. ~ull

CluMtcr
Alfrc.t.l

SuuoJ11y Sehoul ~11t.l WurNhlp- I 0 u.m,
Evetlin11 Strvic:t'~ · 6JU p.m.

( 'a I holir

ti1!11Th1oowlllt1 (~Qmmunily Chul't'h
l'u~11 1r: 'lllrl'llll Durhtuu
Sutt1l11y • '31:JU 11.111. un\.1 i j\.111.
We\lm:~tluy : 1 ~. nl.

Syracuwl\tlulon
1411 Dridacmun St .. Synu.·use
RcY. Mike Thump110n,I 111Sillr
Suncli1y Scht"Mll • I0 11.111.

meeting

meet

• 111.m.

Wcdn;oMiny, 1:-'0 11.111.
SmuJuy. J·.\0 jl.m .

N•111h~ 11111

Hulland Chllrth or c:od
l 111~1nr : Rnn Heutlt
Sunday WmHhip · J() 11.111 .. 0 p.nt.
Wcdn c~duy Scr\lkcll. 7 p.m.

Church
WV

\ll'lhodi~l

ltr11h11m Un\1\ld M,lhodiNI
Wnrll hljl - •1:.\11 u.m. ( IMt &amp;. 2ntl Sun),
7:.\11 r.m. I 'rd &amp;. 41h Sunl ..WcthwKI.luy Ser~lcc . 7 : ~ 0 jl .lt1 .

lhtrttnrd ('huM.'il or ( 'hrlst In
Cbri11IIMn Unhm
1-hu,funl, W.Vu.

hturlh Hi M11111 St., Mlddlclll.ll't
l'u~lnr: l{c\'. Gilllcrt Cn&amp;Jiil. Jr.
Wtt r~h ip . 10 : 4~

I uih'd

( 'hrislian I 'uion

t•rtMhll' : Arlu~ I hu't

Syt:lllll\11'1:' &amp; s ~·t: nml St., llllliWI'IIY

Huboon fhmll•n l'tlluw•hlp Chu"'h
Ps111r; lh:no.:h!ll White
S11ttday Sd"-11.'1 ; Hl 11111
Sund1y Ch11~h :torvlc" • ~:.\U pm
Wodt\l.'~dll)' 7 pm

Suudll.Y l!\'('llh4J lo.\.lrvke 1'1 pn1
Wtdttrllill)' I'IN \'il'e 711111

Pt-lltt\'tl"'l' •'cllnw11hlp Mlnl11try
N,-,w l.lt1ttl H1l.. Ruthlll\1
Pu~tur: Rll\'. Mlll'JIII\1 1 J, M.tlhln~on

CunMIIo Unllod Mllhodl" hriJII
PutOf: Helen Kling

Pll~lnr : ou~ltl ~Uj•cll

httcr~c~· llnn 7 11111112~ W
i ~~l111tldl~t: Dunn\~ SJirYI'IIt

S11111h1y S~ho~o)l • I tl lUll .
w~~~-~ h lp

W.VA.

Follh hll G01pol Chu"'h
lunK Runt'm

Wi:\lm,,~l"y

MIDDLEPORT - The Bmd
Runyon Mcmmiullbummncnt
wi II be held Sept. 1-1-15 ut the
Middlcpon Bull Park for uges
15 nnd up.
.
·
·
lh enter u tcnm. cull Duvid
Boyd ut W2-:166H.

Saltm Cummunlty Chufth

S.:r\' k~~:

'l'hco t ' Fmrth of' Je~1111
('hrbl nr l.•lltll'lll)' Silnt•

HK\11.1!1

Lkl vlny Rnad, W&lt;'~l (\1lumbll\, W.VIt.
llutt,r: ('lytle 1\&gt;n"tll
Suni.l"Y S..:hl''ll.ll Q:.\0 tllll

'l'h~

a.m.

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i.

Youth Football

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R~t~.'UW' M:\1.

Wahama, Eastem to clash .in Mason
Bv GARY CLARK

OVP correspondent

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

Page 81

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The Daily Sentinel

Hnd's ~ms ~ady to go, Page 82
Sco"boord. Page 83
NFL news, Page 85

~) f't1Yrt-a.oltM-NoartM

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Inside:

Friday. StQttmbtr §. 2002

www.mydlllyatntlntl.cgm

arace
for thee: for mil
strenath Is made
Perfect In weakness. i
II Cor. 12:9

M~

Office.Service &amp; Supply
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

· FOXBORO. Mass. (AP) New England Patriots line·
backer Ted Johnson has left the
team for undisclosed rea,wns.
Coach Bill Bclichick said he
was unaware of any injuries to
Johnson in the last few days,
but would not say if Johnson
left the team because of an
i)ljury or because of concern
a!lout pla~ing time.
.

. Tennessee
sprinter pes pro
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
- Justin Gatlin, who won si1(
NCAA sprint titles as a freshltlan and sophomore at
Tennessee, ended his collegiate career by signing a professional tmck contract with
Nike, which voided his two
years of remaining eligibility at
· Tennesliee.

• r

'

MASON - After u seusvn opening
.33-6 win over Fedcrul!iocking couch
Ed Cromley's Wuhumu White Fulcon
footbull eleven returns lo uction at
7:30 p.m. Fridny when unbenten
Eastern visits .the Muson Counly
cumpus fnr u signifkunt curly scuson
ent·ounter lbr both tcums.
Eustern, the second of four stluight
opponents from the somhcastern
· Ohio. Tri-Vullcy Cnnfcrence, sports n
2-tl recnrd tmlhe 2002 grill cumpuign

with victories over South Gull in 34· 7
and Fon Frye 20- t 5. The Eugles arc
coming oiT buck-to-buck 9- l regulur
seasons in which they udvuncec.l to
the Buckeye stute playoffs and will
be favored for the fourth conseo.:utiw
year uguinst the White Fulcons.
This will be the 21 s1 meetin g
between the two neighboring schools
and although Wahumu owns u 14-6
edge in lhc overall series. the Meigs
County teum has won the pust three
outings. which included u 30-R decision in 200 I.
.
·
Eustem reiUrns 14 lettermen untl
five sturters from u year ugo under

new heud/ coach·. Put New lund .
Ncwlund. un Eus1crn ulumnu~. luke&gt;
over for Scott Christm&lt;lll who
enf·oyed four suc~essful seuMHh
be ore stepping down 'to ussumc un
ussi,tunt W&lt;lching position on
Newlund ·s stuff. The Eastes strength
lies in its veteran front lme while its
&gt;ophomore-dominutetl buckfield i&gt;
young und inc~pcrienced.
Anchorlng the Eustern squud this
season ure returning senior &gt;turler'
Truvis Butey (6-4. 290):. Cucy Faulk
(5-9. 195) und Cody Faulk (5-9. 195)
ulon~ with returning junior tight end
Truv1s Wilford (5, 11,
t 90).

Eastern
at
Wahama
Friday

7:30p.m.
Sophomore Ro&gt;' Holte r (5-I (). 230)
and juninr Eric Butcy ·(fl- t. 240)
ruum.l oul the Eagb huge fronl line.
. The M&gt;phomorc dominated Ea,lern
Please see Clash, 11

Niners open NFL season willll&amp;-13 win
'

EAST RUTHERFORD.
N.J . (AP) - About the only
thing thut lived up to the
billing in the NFL's rurc
weeknight season opener wus
the linn! score:
The Sim Francisco 49ers
cume intn the gume us 3point fuvorites and won 16- ·
I J. beuting the New York
Giunts on Thursduy on Jose
Cortez' 36-yurd lield gaul
with 6 seconds left.
"We mude enough pluys to
win tonighl but we cun't
ull'ord to pluy like thut every
si ngle week bccuuse we
won't be coming out with
wins," 49ers quurterbuck Jeff
Gurcin suitl.
·
Garciu was shackled mnsl
or the ni~ht before launching
the winmng drive. throwing u
33-yurd puss to Terrell
Owens on the first play ufler
New York scored the tying
TD.
The Giants joined Sun
Francisco in u gume thul for
most of the nigllt looked like
un episode of "Footbull
Follies.''
·Owens, one of the NFL's
top receivers, hud just three
cutchcs fnr 8 yards belbre the
big cutch, und dropped u couple in the first hulf.
,
.
New York quurterbuck
Kerry Collins threw for 342
yurds but ulso hud three pusses intercepted and couldn't
get the GIUnts into the end
zone until I :55 wus left.
Gurciu threw one interception
und hud only 160 yurds pussin~ 115 before the final
dnve.
"We just mude criticul mistakes.'' Collins suid. "If you
muke llhem uguinst u good
footbull tcum, they come
buck to bit.e you."
The gume. played six duys
before the first unni'l'ersary of
the Sept. II uttucks. was preceded by u Times Square
concert in New York during
the duy. At the gume, Jon Bon
Jovi performed u short
reprise of his concen act.
The ESPN telecast seemed FIRE AWAY - San Francisco quarterback Jeff Garcia Is pressured by Giants defensive
nppropriate tor u conference end Michael Str.ahan In the second period .Thursday In East Rutherford, N.J. Garcia's
pass was Incomplete, but the 'Niners pulled out a 16-13 win to open the 2002 NFL seaPlu1e ... NFL, 12
son. (AP)

Injuries piling
up for

•

BtoWns

...
•

•

Geiger pleased .with
Southem wins first game .Buckeyes on, off the field
Tornud~es

BY Icon WOLi'l
Sentinel correspondent

RACINE - Finally shaking the
string of "close, bot no cigar" type
games, the Southern Tornadoes battled to a hard·
fought win over the
Waterford Wildcat~
Thursday
night
during Tri- Valley
,C o n f e r e n c e
Hocking Division
volleyball play in
Charles
W.
Hayman gymnasium.
Sayre
Southern is now
1-3 both overall
and in the league.
Southern had come close on several occasions this year, twice winning the first game of the set, but
then ending up dropping the match
in a barnburner. Th1s time Southern
was the one on top. Emily Hill ~ot
things started for Southern, servm,g
up the first three points after an inrtial side-out by both clubs.
Miller went up 4·3, then junior
Katie Sayre took over for the
I

•

and reeled off a string of
l1ve pomts to grve SHS an 8- 4 leud
and force u Waterford time out.
Several key volleys followed but
Southern emerged the eventual win·
ner, chipping away to victory with
two pomts each from Amy Lee,
Deana Pullins, and Ruebel
Chapman, who delivered gamepoint and the game winner, I 5-12. ·
The· second contest was also a
battle, however, after WHS went up
3-0, Southern got on the books with
a Pullins score, 3·1. Emily Hill then
tied the score and went on to tally ·
six straight points . for u 7-3 SHS
lead. Waterford · was not to be
denied and reclaimed the lead at 8-7
before Brooke Kiser hammered
home four Tornado markers.
The Wildcats clawed to 11-9, then
Katie Sayre notched her second
series of game-clinching points for
the 15-9 SHS win.
Sayre and Hill each had nine
points on the nil!ht, followed by
Kiser with four, lee three, Pullins
three u~d Chapman two. Sayre was
11 -of- 11 servrng with a 17-of-20
spiking night and 15-of-23 passi,ng
Pleale ... V-ball, 12

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Athletic director Andy· Geiger
said Thursday ~e is pleased
with the direction of the Ohio
State football team despite
a recent spate of legal
problems, blamins much
of the bad publicity surrounding the program on
"bored" reporters.
"Thai's not epidemic by
any stretch of the imagination·,"
Geiger said of the off·the-field matters dogging the No. 8-ranked
Buckeyes. who play Kent State on
Saturday. 'T m not at all disturbed."
Several players expected to be
.fronhline players for the Buckeyes
have run ll)to legal or disciplinary
problems in recent weeks.
· Fullback Branden Joe and defensive
lineman Quinn Pitcock have been
· practicing with the team aqd are available to play Saturday. Joe wa~ arrested in 1uly artd charged with drunken
driving and PitcocK in Augus1 was
charged with underage drinking .
Pitcock was convicted of a lc•ser
charge of disorder!~ conduct.
Flanker Chris Vance, the team's
second-leading receiver a year ago,
wa~ held out of Ohio State's Aug. 24

opener against Texa~ Tech by head
coach Jim Tressel because of an
unspecitied violation of team
policy that occurred last winter.
Backup wide receiver
' Angelo Chattams was
excused from the team
earlier this week. lie may
face charges in the theft of
a sci of gulf clubs in 1uly.
prosecutors suit!. They h••ve approved
but have nol filed a theft charge, opening the door for Chattams to avoid a
charge by enrolling in a program for
nonviolent, t1rst-time offenders.
"It's a distraction at the time .it aris·
es,"·Tressel said. "It's a distraction as
you contemplate what's · the next
step."
Chattams' status with the team was
being evaluated.
Geiger said reponers have made too
much of the discipline problems with
football players. ·
"I think you're bored. I think things
arc going really, really well," he said.
"Somebody opened the question-andanswer ~riod after the Texas Tech
game w1th, 'This was a good game

,,'

PIMMM1GIIpr,l2

•

�Friday, September II, 200a.

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Watts will retum for VT game
HUNTINGTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - Darius Watts is buck
in Marshall's offense. giving
the Herd another weapon
they'll need in their toughest
test of the season next week at
No. 12 Virginia Tech.
Waus returns from a slight
shoulder separation suffered
in r.reseason drills. He was
ava1lable to pluy in the selison
opener against Division 1-AA
Appalachian State last week.
but Herd coaches wanted to
give him another week of rest.
He wasn't needed as
Marshall piled up 634 yards of
offense, including 469 passing
yards by Byron Leftwich, in a
50-17 victory.
"It was hard to be on the
sideline and not be able to
play," Watts said: "I ~ant to
make sure my mJury IS comletely healed, though, before
go out there and face live
tackling again."
Even with Waus, 16th·
ranked Marshall might be
hard pressed to flash any high
offensive numbers against the
Hokies, . who annually have
one of the country's top
defenses. Tech held then-No.
14 LSU to 214 total yards last
week in a 26-8 victory.
·
Watts said he's prepared for
Tech's stingy defense on Sept.

r

12.
"Last year we played at
Florida and that really helped
me the rest of the year because
of the speed their d·bucks
had," Waus said. "I think the
only way you can really compare yourself against the best
ts to play the best." .
A~uinst then-top ranked
Flonda. Watts caught six passes for 116 yards to jump-stwt
a stellar sophomore season in
which he finished with 1,417
yards and led the ~ation with
18 touchdown catcnes.
Having sat out one game
this season, Walls will be hard
pressed to mirror those numbers.
"I don't. really think about
that stuff," Watts said.
"Whatever happens in the
future will happen, but I'm
just worried about helping this
team win this year." .
Growing up in the heurt of
Southeastern Conference foot·
ball, the College Park, Ga.
native wasn't offered a scholarship by any SEC team. Most
of the schools felt he was too
skinny to play their brand of
football.
"Darius kind of fell into our
laps," coach Bob Pruett said.
"f bet some of those big
schools wish they hadn't over-

Meigs second at
leiguemt!et

third overall, Josh Ray (39),
Josh Venoy (41 ), Jake Venoy
(42) and Cody Hysell (49).
During the previous week,
POMEROY _ The Meigs the Marauders had finished
varsity golf team finished sec- third in league meet action at
ond at the TVC Ohio Division Wellston, and second at
meet held Tuesday at Pine Jl!elsonville without the serHills
·
v1ces of Bllllks.
Beipre won the meet on a .At Wellston, Ray finished
tiebreaker using the fifth and With a 38, Jake, Venoy (44),
even sixth place scores of each Bookman (4S), Hysell (47),
team
Josh Venoy (S I) and Kris
Jer~my Banks returned from , Ginther (54) . .
pn automobile accident for the
At Nelsonville, J~e Venoy
Marauders to earn medalist led. the Mlll'lluders With a 40,
honors, shooting a 33, which wh1le Ray had a 4·1, Josh
included an eagle and birdie. Venoy (43), Hysell (44) and
Also for Meigs, Ben Bookman (45).
Bookman shot a 36 to finish Belpre won all three league

HE'S BACK - Marshall -wide receiver Darius Watts (40) runs
the ball as coach Bobby Pruett, background, watches In this
file photo. Nicknamed "Spider· by his teammates, Watts led
the nation In 2001 with 18 touchdown catches. (AP)

looked him now."
Nicknamed "Spider" by his
teammates for his ubility to
snag seemingly uncatchable
passes out of the air, Watts
caught 36 passes for six touchdow·ns as a freshman in 2000.

meets, with Alexander finishing second at Wellston.
Meigs is 21-9 overall in
league action.
·

Southem
finishes third'
LOWELL -It took six tries
but the Trimble Tomcats finally pulled off a big Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
victory over ·the Waterford
Wildcats, who lost on their
home
course
166-167.
Southern a~ain nailed down
third to solidify their position
in the league, while Waterford
managed eriough points to

expired.
·
Some of it indeed was good defense.
San Francisco stuf.fed New York's
.
running
game - the Giants ran for just
from Pap 11
43 yards on 22 carries, an li verage under
championship. The network's halftime 2 per try.
The New York secondary forced
show featured a chat on an on-fidd set
Garcia
to throw short swing pusses. The
among commentators from each of the
San
Fra.ncisco
quarterback wasn't
four networks that televise NFL games
sacked
all
night
but was constantly
-·John Madden (ABC), Phil Simms
(CBS), Terry Bradshaw (Fox) and Chris under pressure, thrown off his rhythm
by Michael Strahan, Keith Hamilton and
Berman (ESPN).
.
Michael
Barrow. Offensive tackle Mike
That might have been a better show
Rosenthal
blocked Cortez' tield goal
than the first half, which ended with
attempt
on
the
first series.
New York taking a 6-3 lead on Mau
Bryant's 33-yard field goal · as time · The 49ers finally got the big play they
needed late in a the third quarter, when

NFL

V-ball

ftom Pap 11
night; Emily Hill was 10-of-10
serving with 14-of-16 spiking
and 9-of-12 passing; Deana
Pullins was 6-of-6 serving, 2-&lt;lf3 spiking, 14-of-14 setting and
32-&lt;lf-33' passing in a great floor
game: and Amy Lee was 6-of-6
serving, I0-of-13 spiking, 2-&lt;lf2 setting, and 18-&lt;lf-22 spiking.
Rachel Chapman was 5-&lt;lf-S
serving, 7-&lt;lf-9 spiking, and 13of-14 passing; while Brooke
Kiser was 7-&lt;lf-7 serving, 30-of·
32 setting, and 7-&lt;lf-8 passing;
and Jeri Hill was 6-of-6 passing.
The Southern reserves lost
13-IS and 14-16 iJi two sets.
Kristiina Williams had six
. points, Nikki Riffle had five,
Mirindu Davis three and Ashley
Roush three.
Southern plays host to Belpre.
on Tuesday.
EAsrllHN VOLLEYBAlL WINS
AGAIN .

mulches on the schedule,
Thursdayls Eastern-Miller volleyball was nothing but a cakewalk for the high-flying Eagles
of Howie Caldwell.
Ea.'llern mised its mark to 5-0
by defeating Miller IS-S and !54 in ju.~t two games in the 1iiValler Conference Hocking
Divis1on match.
In the first game, Eastern led
4-3 and 6-5 before pulling awuy
on five straight serves by Katie
Robertson. Miller, noted for its
front-line play at the net, gave
Eastern a good test but again
Alyssa Holter, Kass Lodwick,
and Robenson excelled. Casey
Smith and Morgan Weber did a
great job in coming off the
bench with 6-of-6 and 6-of-7
spiking nights respectively.
Tiffeny Bissell helped put the
game away with three key
serves in a S-&lt;lf-5 serving game
and Robertson added the gamepoint after several lengthy volleys.
Eastern went on to the IS-S
win.
In the .second

Lust year, he was named
first tenm Mid-American
Conference and wus one of II
semifinalists
for
the
BiletnikoiT Award, which is
given annuall~ to the nation's
top wide reco1ver.

enjoy a comfonable lead in the
division. Southern had a 177
just eleven strokes off the pace
and Federal shot u 190, Eastern
199, and Miller 209. ·
Jordan 'Hill led Southern
with a 42, whi.le Ty Hill had a
43 .. Brad Crouch and Justin
Connolly each 46's, Craig
. Randolph 49, and Curt Crouch
58.
Darin Swnpson of Waterford
and Noah Barrett of nimble
tied for match Medalist honors
with a 37 ·
·
'
Eastern was led by James
Will with a 47, Jonuhtan Owen
with u 49, Nathan Cozllrt SO,
Eric Shepard 53, Roush 56, ·
and Ryan Wachter with a 61.

Kevan Barlow took a short pass from
Garcia, broke several 'tackles and took
the ball29 yards to,the New York 5. TWo
plays Iuter, ufter a penalty set the 49ers
buck to the 9, Garcia flipped the ball to
Garrison Hearst, who slipped by Barrow
and dived to the goal hne, just getting
the ball over.
Cortez' 33-yard field goal made it 13·
6 midway through the fourth quarter
before the Giants got going, movmg 77
yards in 14 plays to tie the game on Tiki
.Barber's 1-yurd sweep. That drive was
marked by a 23-yard puss on third-and16 from their own 17 to Amuni Toomer,
who finished with nine catches for 134
yards.

out with the score 84 with
· hopes of winning tbe second
game and forcing a game three
playoff. The tactic neyer materialized as Lodwick added four
straight markers · and Stacy
Smith six points to push Ea.~teni
over the top for the 15-5 win.
·overall, Alyssa Holter played
a good floor game and was I0of-11 serving, 2Q.of-23 passing,
and 12-ot~ 17 spiking with a kill.
Kass Lodw1ck was I().ot~ 10
serving , 29-of-29 passing, and
11-&lt;lf-17 spiking with one kill:
Robertson wa~ 9-of-9 serving,
17-0f-24 pa~sing, and 11-of-15
spiking with two kills; and'
Stacy Smith was 2-&lt;lf4 serving,
37-of-37 setting, and 2-of-2

passing. Tiffeny Bissell had
another grcut game gain$ I5-&lt;lf'lS serving, 46-of48 semng and
S-of-5 passing; Morgan Weber
wa~ 6-of-7 spiking with a kill:
Ca~ey Smith 6-of-7 passing,
and 6-of-6 spiking, Krystal
Buker 2-of-2 p1111sing: and
Nicole Phillips 22-of-23 passing
with a 4-of4 serving night.
Eastern won the reserve
match 15-9 and 15-13 in two
sets. Jessica Pooler hud ten
points, TifTany Smith and Slll'll
Yost each had five points, and
Jamie Reed added four.
Ea1tcm hosts Vinton County
Tuesday at Eastem High
School.
.

WANTED .
Motor Route Carriers ·

Geiger
.10111 ..... 81

considerin!l ull the distmctions .. .' You guys are the
ones·· who are distracted.
There isn't 1mybody in the
football' program that's distracted."
Geiger hired Tressel to
replace John Cooper. who
was tired in January of 2001.
Cooper's players were
accused of a number of
problems off the field and in
the classroom.
Geiger suid one reason
why it seems a.~ if Ohio State
players are getting into trouble more in recent weeks is ·
that their problems are being
handled differently by
Tressel und his staff.
"John never sat unr,body
down." Geiger suid. 'It ull
comes out on !lllme week
becuuse we don't' let the kids
pluy if they do stuff they're
not supposed to do." ·
Vunce, Joe, Pitcock and
linebacker Redgie Arden
were all held out of lhe
Texas Tech ~arne.
During h1s weekly news
conference this week,

legal

on..,

A1m1.

740-992-2155

·

.

w.

8aturdly agalnt1 Klnt llllt.

'
Dtlw!1tlve IIMman Quinn 'llnok: 1rmttd AI!IJ. 17. Till frHilmlr!
waa ohlrvld with undllraaed drinking b)' aotlot In ~Ia homt10Wn of
Piql!a. Ht
IUiptndllf m the W.m fo! the l~rtt Wllilt of P!'•,
"'Wl -kou\t, HI Ia Prl*lng wllh the ltlm and IYiillblt 10 •
agaln111&lt;1nt Slllt.
,
.
···
Planklr Chrla Vlnot' Vlnot, lha B~a· uoond•ltaOJno ""ty.
tr from 1001, waa IU~ndlcl from tlllttam bllolt ~~~~- ~·
I! lor whlllltHII otilid I Violation olltlm ~· Vlnol WU wltli ille
ttam lll11111tldtllnta bu1 did not play IGIInil 'rlliaa Ttol\. Ht rtJOI!\Id
1M 1ttm fo! praollot llllwttk and piiOtlold IIIII wttk but wll not D1!1Y
llllintl K8111 8\llt, AthlltiO Oirt0104' Artlii Otlgtr llld Thui'IICIIX ltlal
Vinot'l uniPIQitlld Ylollllon camt lilt wlnttr.
Wldll rto~lm An ..lo Qhlltlme: may '-ot en.!'''" the lillald
lhttt eta 111 of golf Dluba July ae 11om ~ tpOit utll ~loll in Welt

w"

Cleveland beats Wh
CHICAOO (AP) - Jose (7-7) iavo up Nlck-to-IIIICk
Val&lt;'ntm w1s.t\&lt;'s he had anoth· wall·.s 10 MHtoo Bmdley ood
~r chance.
Omtll' Vilquel tu lo&lt;1d th'
As Jim Thome's gl'l'\lndef . bases. Ellis Burks ~:h~s«&lt;
rolled towlll'(l ~im. Vulentin Glnver with a two-run silljle
thought 11! tumu'V u dooble to give the Indians a4-ll~lill.
pill)' to end u nt\h-mnina jan1.
Bl\rd's
homer
and
Instead. the Ch1cago, shonstop Mcl);&gt;nald's shot, lhe flrsl llf
b\1t&gt;bled the bull.
his
c11re~&gt;r.
ex.1t~l1ded
The next hatter. Karin1 Clevehmd's 11.'\ld to 11-4 in the
Gurica, hit a gruud shim. and eiahlh,
the Clevelundlnditms wem 011
Ricardo Rodfiguez (2· 1),
heal the White SOli 11·6 makillj his foorth c~t sturt
Thursday niaht.
for Cfevt~land, t~llowed f011r
"You m s11pposed to ma~e r1ms und flvt~ hits in t1ve
those plt~ys," Yult~ntin said. innilljs.
"This is about getting the j1&gt;b
Rodri»ue:t w11.~ pkked up by
d011e and I didn't do the J(&gt;b Cleveland's hittllli and a sen·
Md it co.~t us 1he aame."
sationul oveNhe-head catch
Thome and Jo.~h Bnrd had by Millon Bradley in lhe si~th.'
t-wo-run homers, aud J(lhn
D' Alljelo Jimenez loo oil'
McDnltllld udded \1 solo shot · the tlrst with a shlllle ntld
for Clevehtild,
Rodrigue! walked C11rlo.~ Lee.
0UI1-'ia 's grand slam put the Maggllo Ordone:a followed
ln•linns up 8-3and highlighted 1~ltlia three-nm homer, brellk·
· a six-nm fifth,
lug an O..for-20 slump to ma~e
"I'm hat'I'Y . to huve the it ) .0.
Qpportunhy 111 piny every dur,
Burks si1111led in the lounh
here tmd help out this team, '· inuingund Thome hit his 4)1'&lt;1
suid Gnrcia. who Wll.\ called honwr to CUI the White s(\)1
up from the minors Aug. 6. lead to 3·2. Chlc~~go's Puul
"Right now C'levelu11&lt;l Is my Konerko ndded un trnl sl~le
home. We' ll tulk ovt."r the win· iulhe sillth nnd Jl\~h Pm1l hlt n
ter and see whnt hlii'Jl4lns."
two-run si ngle in the eighth.
McDonuld singled and Glover ullowed six nms in 4
Whhe Sox suu1er Gary Glov~r 1·3 Innings.

: CHICAGO (AP) - Btl~ebnll OWilill~
\lp]lnlVed their new labor conii'UCl quickly
1111d overwhelmingly.
voting 29-1
~'llursdny 111 mtify the deal negotlmors
;~m1ck hl~t week to aven a strike.
: The New York Yunkees, the team thni
~umd1 to lose the mo.~l. voted t~ulnst the
~reement. which ensures lnbor pel~et~until
December 21Xl6. Approval by the execu·
,tlve board of the union is considered ce1'
•wn.
: "I'm not going to su~esi to you toduy
lhnt thilre nre not c lnl\~ with very dlll'eront
:Views, but ut some puint youlmve to come
(ogether," commissioner Bud Selig suld
idler rhe rwo-hour mooting, flnnked by his
phief negotiators, Bob DuPuy und Rob
:Mnnfred.
• "I told ynu h~qt Friday I waq n Yo11i BeiTII
theorist - 'It idn't over until it's over.' It's
over"
..
· But btt'leball's tum1oil might not be.
: 'lbc Ynnkees are considering a luwsuh,
)Uld owners must resolve the uncertain stll·

....

2FREEDDim
IPRIN8 IIlLEY
CIIIEMIJ

DING·DQNG - Chit:{lfl.Q ~atcher Ju~h Paul, left, ant\
Cle~eland's Karim (lar(lltl, ri&amp;h\, Wti\Qh QarQit~'~ ar!lnd 1111111
In thll filth lrmlnil \htl\ ~~or~ll Orn!lr·\lllqYIII. Ellill aurk!tlllf\0
Jim Them!! on Thuraday In Chieqo. (APl

tllllnl will stuy Ill' ellplort~u move.
lllo'OIIIlll1ics. tl\.\-~ll,lllliJ 111 1~1\l Nr.~l\llll &lt;\111·
Sl.lllll hnd spi'ul th11usmuts··uf lllliU~ Qf1 cinl nt the S\\'\.~Qf1, who s1d&gt;e 110 l'OII&lt;Ihh:\11
U1e telephone wllh llWilill'll to develop 11 of 111101\Xmlty.
·
1.-Xlnsensus fur the lubor ~reemem, lllld he . Neg1ith\lOrs ~reed tn U)e &lt;k&gt;nl11i&lt;k\y jusl
upproved the t1nul moves ll1tl(W by his ~ lr.l 11\XI~ !XIIOre Uw 111~1 j,ltu11il lltul
negotiutors h\qt week. ·n1e llelli'-IIIIIU1inW~ts 1\'1)\ild huve lftn utl'tlcted 1\r "stiike. Sh11.--e
vote wt~q " slsn llf suppurt h11 lu~~ IUnllllll the la.~t &lt;hml wltl1111n 11 Will'k sto(ll1lliJe In
il1e owners.
·
11170, Ol~~ebnU hnd ~n dlsnrptr~l lly l1v\l
''I'm In Mnyor Richard J. Duley's hom()- strlk\ls tu1d three i(ICI\1\Ills,
·
town. 'lbey'd hnve been plet~~oo wllh lhe ChiCIIIlo Whll1.1 Sill\ chninmm J\II,.Y
1\lS\IIt; tu1d I'm vel')' plea.q\l&lt;l with lhe Reoinsd111'r - wh11 Vllte~lt~iJulnst ilw IIIIXI
result.'' Sells suld.
"l!fWI111lnt ulun» with Clevetnlld, 'Kansa.~
. 111e .Ynnkees, who uenerate the most City mld Onl.:limd - Vlltll(l tar thl~ \.ltllll.
money In WL'Ieball, e~thrtnte the nnnunl llui'itliJ the meeth1jl. h~ :lllid lw !l.~ki\1: "(\m
amount thily jjlve up to other club,q will u.t011111 u~o revont1Nhlll111iJ 111011\lY to C\lt
incre11.1e tmm $28 millio11 in 2001 to it~ lll.'\.~e.~'l"
llCiween $'0 million und $" million ne11t
Ne11otiutnrs ~id&lt;l l!l.~t week thllt 1he.rll
yetU'. 1111l tt~tun ·~ lawyers huvo been exnni· nren 't 1111)' restrictions on whut tllllm~ Qlln
lning 111\lUn'l~ fut' uluwsult,
do with 1\IVemt()-shltriniJmonoy
· Yan"kees presldt&gt;nt · Rundy l.evh11&gt; SelliJ now m11st II')' 1o dovelop " ~'O~~~~n·
decllmxl comment 11ftor 1he mee1in11.
sus on whnt to do wllh tlw ~~X\~. 'll1e fmn·
"!bore's ub.~olutely no blLqlq for 1111~ cbl~o. which h11.q nvt?n~edju~t 1wer IU.&lt;X:Kl
chnllenae to U1o lltlfWment 'Whuls(l(.lvor, ' 1\m~ llllf hPml;) t,mme. w11.~ puwluL~Ild by th
Rl\ld DuPuy. m•ll:8Qhler (lpllnltillj om- mhor 2~ 101111\S lllllt wlntor tbr $120 minion.
cer.
No mi\Jor le~uo teum h11.~ movlld sin~
~l\llsall City Raynls owner ·nuvld Ol11.qs th1.1 expansion Wllshin1J11l11 SontltM
snld during tho mwtlng thut the tljiiWmeni ~11mt.1 the 'fllx!l.q RMIJrl'$ 111lor the I~71
Willi only u sturt to retbrmlnll bnsobaU's Setl.~(ll\.

.

~~~~~ of tho Montrelll BllllQR, who llOUid try to
Cl10VC to Wtlqhinstoo or another chy by
~ext ~~e&amp;.qon. Expos president Thny 1uvi!R!s
;want~

to knuw with1n I0 days wliether the

Mll&lt;l
ICAAIIRAV
SA~

•WIN•

Sox. 11 6

:Owners ratify labor' deal; Expos status next

CaiiCIIIton. Prououtora approvtd but hlvt not 11 1 111111 olll'lll!,
paving lilt '!1Wt fo! Chlttemt 10 potllbty tn!OIIIn 1 PIOOrlm fo! 1101ivl•
otem,llrat-tlmi offendtra and avoid a ohlrve, Ht wa• ·~~- m 1!lt
1ta111 en 'ftltaday. Hll IIIIUI With 1111 ttam Wll btlng 11111\Atttdo

BOB
ANDERSON

THIIEIIII .

II

OWNIIR

FIND.VOUA NAME IN
TODAV'B CLA881PIED
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CHRYSLER

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ON PREDATORY LENDING

.•

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SEPTEMBER 9, 2002
9:00am· Noon &amp; 1:30pm-4:30pm

OHmlER

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NOW

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Real Eatate A~nt:JIBrokera and the PubUe

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Spon110red by Melp County Fair Housln11 Proi&amp;nun

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ReaJ•tratloh II nformatlon ·
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111 Court Street • Pomeroy

from Holter, Nicole Philli.P.s,
TUPPERS PLAINS.
Lodwick, Robertson, Sm1th,
Touted as one of, the premier and
Bissell. Miller called a time

·

Tight •net Pltcllllt Alliin: ~ltd Maroh 1, aooa on • Chlrgt of
drun~tn d~vlno In lila ~ometown otlronton. Tht rtda~lrtll'llhl!lln waa'
unltiiOICito lhiH dlyl tn jail and nned. SUapendtd lndlftnllliy 1ro1n •
1111 ttam, Ill did not partlolilalt In IUmmtr -kOull btlortllli 10011
tMaon. Ht 11 ourrtntl)l With the ~tam and Prtcttclng but Wilt not bl ,
IVIII&amp;blt lor Saturday'~ Qlmt IQIIMI K8nt Slate,
Llnaball..- Mlroo 01101*: armttd Ain1117, ROQII, Tt1t NMI! wn'
tl'!tlttd haurt alllr 1111 IUCiktYtt' annll'l l!llraeq~ad ao!IMIMQI
Chlfllld wtl~ litany drug tbull lnd cai!Ying I - · WIIIPQn, ~
w11 bti'I'ICI 11om campua and tdalctd 011 the ttam.
Pullblok lrlndtn .lot: armltd July ae. Pollot found 1M ~ '
mo~ 111HD ill 1 car on 1 ~lghWI)' ramp ntl! Cll= 1ndlliG ht•
rtlulld to fa"' 1 lll'lllilllynr lltt. ~ Wll IIUIP'
!of 1M lhNe
Wltilt ol P!tMiltOn DI1"P and lhl. IMm'l IIMOII ot~~ntr •l!tet
,_.., ~. He It praqiiQlno with 1111 1Mm and Ia ~ltd 10 PlaY

The Daily Sentinel

led 84 on intermittent scoring

at Ohio• ~

COLUI,4BUS, Ohio (API.;., A... Qlpt~ytra who hive hid ~I Dfllb..
lema or wtlo 11M bttn IUII)endtd !tom the dhlo Stilt lootlillt \tim
Ill not Jim 'tl'tt"l ' * - hied 001011 In Jl.nutrv or 1001:
comtn~"k Dertk Ploea: ~ltd Ql1 Mt!Qh at, aoo1. ~
to 30 dlya In Jilt for ~ 1nd g[vjng the otftotr I IIIIM Mm41. ~ '
Wll IU11*1dtd m Ohio 81.-'1 lOOt IPOntl praotlott, then Di~Yt4 •
mo11 of tht 1001 tMaon, ~na thelllg ~ Ill ln!MtPIIonundtjl'!l' •
Ina MOOncl-ltlm •11-oonln!lct 1\onorii, ~tft Mm to mtllt hln\Mlf,
Mlltblt lo! the NFL dra.ft a Yllf Mrly,
Quantrback lttvt ltllllllli: armltd lll1t dlunlltn driYI!lQ
Nov. 10.1001, \WO diYt btlo!t 11111 D1!M IQIIM\ llinolt. Thtlitllk'.r:'
t~Nt-Ytllr 1111111 wn glvtn an tndtflnllt IUifllnaion Ill' 'tl'tull,
n
w11 rt1M11ttd to 111t !Mm tl\rtt ~ llttr. AMnlor$.
htraOllotd wllll'
thl 1ttm lol thl Mk:~lgan Qlmt but did ~~ltV·
oemt ol! 1hl
btno~ to pftV moet of 11\t wam'l Outbt&lt;llt
!ott to
~.·
Ha lllltr ttrVtd 1 -iltnd'ln jaM. Now '" lht NFI. -wlt~ 1M Sl. l.oult.

Apply at

game, Eastern

Tressel suid he and his staff
m I.'Onstantly Pfelll.'hiug to
the players that there are
duogers wheneve~ the players an: out m public,
''There t\l'e some real perils .
out there in this world," he
said. "We have somethinj
1hat our players snicker at
sometimes but we happen to
think is true: 'Nol much
good or n01hing ~ood ever
happens past 10 (O clock)."'
Geiger said the cumulative
grade-point avemge of cui'- ·
rent football players "is so
much higher it's almost
impossible to compare it"
with that of previous Ohio
State teums.
He said he wus very
pleased with the direction
Tressel was taking the tean1.
"It's all about Columbus
and football und the higher
standard und lhc ·higher
expectntions. We understand
that. We deul . with that,"
Geiger suid.
"But l'ni telling you lhat
J' m absolutely delighted
with the way such thin11s are
being handled und the disci•
pllne and the consequences
that kids face for doing what
they do. That's part of the
new day. That's part of what
I expected him to do."

Friday, Septembtf 11. 2002

CHOOIII'ROMI

1-=-=
......:=:.;;;;.:::;:..-rCHIVROLIT
CAVAI.IIR

A Physician Specializing In Gastroenterology
.lddrtll:

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Ptlll PIIIIIDI, WV 2111110

'• IPJDI-11111:

TeiiJhtne: 13041 811-1871
FIX: 13041 IJI-1112

New patients are being accepted through a referral frt»n your primary care physician,

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CAMRY

PLEASANT
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J

Frld1y, September 6, 2002

Friday, September 6, 2002

www.mvd•llv•entlnll.com
•

Badgers hope to silence
Mountaineers' musket

t'OLtJMBliS. Ohi&lt;l tAl')
1\rnt
C'nhbs '"ill sene "' a li~&lt;:.al point for
Stall' ~'\~h lk;m p,..., \\tint' hi• players an Oh10 State del'cn'~ \\Inch had seven
ltlt'IIJOY the mon~nt hut not llt' a\\&lt;"l) hy sacks against Te~ns Tech's ;K-claimcd
it.
&lt;tUarterhack. KliiT Kmgsbury. '''" wt-eks
With Ill&lt;~ than HlO,IlOO cxpel'ted nt ago in ;145-2 t vkt,,ry.
Oh1o Stadium. 1\cnl Stale '"" he play"Just when you l'XIll'Ct tn put ll~:tt hig
injl hctbtc. its lal)lt'St aud1ell&lt;'C c1cr "''' hit till him Cribbs wtll m;~~r a move and
Saturday \\ hct\ it talo.c, &lt;Ill No. ~ Ohio nm~e you miss and malo.c you look very
Sl&lt;lte.
foolish." said Ohio State linebacker Matt
"\~\" phtycd at\\Und the c\mntry in Wilhelm.
c'1'11ail\ studiums but-there's nothinll hl..e
111c Goldci1 !'lashes have won six '&lt;•f
playh\1! ill Ohio Sl:1dium. cspcdally ti1r their last seven ptuncs. To JJut that into
a hunch uf Ohiu kids." 1\-c~ said . "It's ilCI'li!l&lt;'Ctive. it tll&lt;lk them 2 gmues to
ju~t' t1 thtillh111 &lt;\llll&lt;lt1ullity: the ~mwd , win six times ptior 1&lt;1 the &lt;:un'l'nt hot
the po11111 and dtcumstant~. the tradi- strettk. It has been 25 years since :1Kent
tlon, All th,;,~e sort~ &lt;'lfthmgs. l thin~ it 's ·State team has played so well over so
a gl't'l1l thhiJ! thr uur entilc P"'llr.tm, not lot\1! a time.
jttst 011ly fhc players but everybody
In its only previuus games against Bill
tnl'\llved."
'l'Cn teams. Kent State lost 51-0 to Iowa
Kent State bc:1t New Htmlpshit-e 34-7 last ye:tr arid 45- l0 to Punlue the year
last Wt'Ck - the Golden Flashes ' first before.
win In a season-o!X!IIer it1 seven ye,trs.
"The ditl'eren~'t' here is we finally won
Sotlhomure Joshua Ctibbs - u 1\tn fil'lit, wme games," he said. "If 1 had 11one in
pass Iuter quatterbm:k - collected 191 there with a team with a 1· 10 or 2-9
of Kent Stare's 399 roshin(! yards. Eddie recurd that's just been thumped by Iowa
Bco::les added Hl4 yat-ds and Antonio· Sl-0, I don't know if I cuuld say anyKitll! hnd 6~ oil the gmtmd.
thing to them. The ditlerence l think
And the {k)lden Flashes were without now Is that we've won six of our lust
stlirtlhl! tailback Onvtd Al~tun, who sat seven games. Th:~t's not happened here
11Ut while 1\ursh" an ankle inj ury. He is in a long, 101\ll time. Uopefully that in
Hslcd as doubtt\il for the game against a11d of itself will help the kids to have
the Buckeyes.
some l'On!ldence to make plays."

M \I)(S\l • \\'i, \.·W )
h.~ n t.c&lt;l\1\ that '~ \\~Ill il'l !lr&lt;t 111'1
)Mt\11'\ 11 tth "' I 't (II~~ t~l the 'tdclnl\'s, 1~ :2Sth-rani..'Cd
\' l'''~"llllla..~
htt&lt;.l ''~1\C lllklb..'ll di~ll;!o.·tions.
lu,l, tll&lt;'ll 1-i ~~~~~~{It tl L\ 1'11\k.'..l midl\ay thltll"h til&lt;'
h11n1h \lll&lt;ltll't l\l\.'all:lt' 1\1' &lt;1 ji\1\I'Cr failure, 1\IC':\IIitiJ! tl\Ctr t\lns
,wtl&lt;lll't ~~\Ill'\'I tlll.'u· \111111111¥, ltcts l~•auSI' nl\l.st spo~1s books
ll\\11 't 1\'\.'\\llllln' n t'\llll'lt1' !\.. ~hall I'Csttlt tmlc~s ,';~minutes ltaw
11\'o:'n ''''ntlll~l.'\1.
·
Ill&lt;' 1'1&lt;1\la ~lull' tl:tmit\1! t\llllh\l 1\11&lt;\h.l snld it lirt&lt; l\\1 evi11\'t\\~ 1\\ mt'lit •I (t\11111\&lt;11 HIW&gt;Httnliol\ hill.\ the lll&lt;tthlllt
''&lt;11111\ll\~ tl()l.ht,
N11 ''"~""'· ha.l til\' 11~1~ tcttt\1\Cd l\\1111~ thall UW 11nld111~
hll.nt&lt;.l lil&lt;'m'"" ' the 1lh~l 111' mtHi111al S\'\1111 1\w t1'lllsh" ttl
11111111 the \\ '' \ ~lllittin Mllllllt&lt;lhll'l'r tllaS\'\'11 1\\ btit'll his attti~tllc
tl1l\\~t'l iltl\l sl\1.1\11 it 11tl' l\1 ('1\1\1~ lti~tll.lrtll 'Stadt IIIII '"' S&lt;tlttl\l;ty.
H.tt~l'l&lt; athll'lt1' 11il'l.'ll\1t l'llt Rldltl't su.wsst\rlly ll~llllru uni'""'~' Chnii&lt;'CIII~' Mm Wiley 1\1 1\\ll.~" nn ext'Cptiolll\w the 1\n~l
!!IIIII\' I 111'\.'\'11 Ill\' s · l~t.l&lt;lh sitll.'t' IIJ.'i7.
"H1ts is &lt;llllitllt&lt;ly l~lj' imtxm"'" to _
wvu ,u\l.ltheir tllns,"
Rkhter saM.
•\1~'11'~\ the Bn~1-s know the best wny to silct~« the musket
Is t\ll..'t'Cp the MmmlnltiCI't-s out ol' the cml rune.
Wlsl.'\\1\sht 's ti'VIItnl1l'd tlel'ell~. whll:h ~unl.'tll.lered Jg plays of'
.l~ tll' mt\1\' :Vnl\lslnsl \'('(~)' lll\d WM the tllahl ~ulprlt hill tilll' loo.it'll s~,·un, ht~t~ tU\1\Ill:lthhiJ!s 111\lllnd with nine lumovets so lOt,
1\ntl\111) lln~t-s t~.lso l\lllll'lll' ltl hn\'1' 1\mnd a suitable f'lll·ln t'or
, 11l11t 11 ide t~'Ch'l'r. L!!t! 1ivw1s, who Is out fur at\Oiher 1\tollth
'' hilc 1'1.'\.'lll'l'.rlt" \l,m, 1-.n!!t! otlt!l'&lt;ltlotts.
J1."1n1han Ott ~U\I(Iht sel'l'tl pns~s thr 150 yards and a tooch·
tltl\1 11 in the tlatltzers' vkl\liJI o\'l'r the Rebels lost wt&gt;ek, btcll.kh't\ tht&gt; ~dlll&lt;JI 1'1.'\.'\M\1 fur 1'1.'\.~lvh'll yal\ls by &lt;1 1\eshlllall.
'lii'Ci!kh~ t'\'\.'lll\18, thnt's nllt llty &lt;.'llllt'l'tn," Orr s&lt;~id. "I expect
~~~·\ell' t11 mnke plttys whet\ l j!et the \liJt\()rtunltll!$. 111uess h
lfi'I~IIJS till thl' eytmt\\lcs of Ihe l!lii\IC, 1\I'I:J Of tl\tec tal\:hcs, if
thnl 's lltl I ~~ but ~~ hal'I' o~t· JOO yards nmnlng. then it ret~l·
lv ~~~~~tt't nutth'r 1\1 me."
' 1\lthmtjih the lltthts 1\J\.llllll l!n &lt;lilt h1 11~ fourth qul\rtet'l they
, nv· nil: ASSOCiAtED PRESS
· 11!,\lllttst ll tetlm that wasn't the
Wllllt ''" ftt the ~'llil~hcs'. hc11ds 111\-cr Oft' cnliJ!hl n l3·ynN pnss
fool bull couches ., huv~ u· cu li~r of Mt chigan Stute. it
1),111\ llt'"'"' IMIItlttllr lilt he l~inllhll! 11f the sC\.'Ohd qunrh'r.
knack for sp1111 ti11 ~ ne~atl\'cs ~an build so,me false se~·unt y
llv hidl\ltnc. Ot1' lmd tlllcd up1 l.l ymxls l't'CI'il&gt;hll!,
lntu
P&lt;lsitlves . At bstcrn :1hnut where you're ut and
"\W ~ttw Hnll tht\lll(lh&lt;lltt &lt;'ltiiiP," oll~nsl\1'1' ~rdlnntur 13dan
Midti!l&lt;lll, J~tr Wuud~tt!l has whut you need to work Ott"
While ''till, "Anti I wn~ t'Ci!l~ hnpllYthut he wns nblc ltl put it on
till dt&lt;lkc .
The Eagles . .:oming oil' u
tit•• nd.ll\1.'\'tltt:o~c hc'li tlt'l'lllly cxdlit'll pli.cyer tlmt needs 111 pltty
llis
jll:tycrs
likcl
~
need
last
place finish in the MAC
ltlnhi)th lewl f11r us Ill l~ tl ll•~l&lt;.t lhllth:tlttctml."
convincing
that
thctr
dcfi
West.
have 111 improve in sev. Ott, \I h1 \ :tddctl ltl \l&lt;.ll\II&lt;IS It\ his t\-!\1\lt-,, , l ~4-fl'JIIIid build
l'icndcs In htst weekend's 5(1- et·al nt\'tls if they're ~olng to
'"~'· 1,1,1 scus1111, suld he s·t\&lt;11 sll\'1' whul 1\1 CX!)t'Ct tlum the
7 blowl\llt nt Mkhigan .Stutc hung with the clctendmg con1\ "lllllttlil\1'1'11&lt;,
won't
curry over · · to terence champion Rockets.
'11t~ 1\lmttltnll\cct'll tl -tl/11"' 1111\lt' l'\llll'l't11ed with the Bnt4tcr11'
Sutut-duy\ · home opener
S tm11n ~ quarterb:tck Troy
jltllllliil ~111 11c lctl h)• Dnv s, the l!ljj '1'~11 's lcndh'll Mher,
ugt\i
nsl
Toledo
the
first
Edwards
completed just 18"l'hcv me bljj. tcully hljj. 11tdr lhmtls ull o~r 3tltltx11111ds."
Mid-Amcri..:nn
Confcrcn~c
of-41
passes
for 133 ymds
\\ll'~l Vtll!iniu ~~~~~c lu~klc Ouvld Updtut~lt suld. "Stl, we will
1
Jinmc
of
the
seusnn.
uguinst
the
Spurtatts
and
htllt' hl )tl't 111the hull llllkkly. 11tcy will tttnrlght UI IIS. We \Vtlt\t
·
"
Itt
muny
w:ws
it
'll
;I
bene('Ollld
be
on
the
verge
of
111 shiJI tltl' t'ltll tlt'llh then IV•ln'Y nll\lllt the puss.
·
11t,"
Woodt'ulf
'
s
aid
of
open
hcing
rcpluccd
by
backup
...111c1· m\' cxllCticnl'l'd, ton, But I think we rnn piny with
1111! the season versus 11 Big Jell Crooks. who looked
thrt\1," \ llll'httt~ 1itd1lcd. "ll 's siiiiiJic ttl Sl\Y lil\d h:lll,ilhct• to exe·
Thn
tcu111, "It 's like stu11ding ~o1 1cl In mop U!) duty lnst
~1ttr. '11tcy tll tty snmsilnmuth, like tt\uclt 111 the Blt~l1ust. Mttybc
1
11
there
ttgutnsl u guy that s:mmluy.
tht•~ ' lilll l'rl.l\\~ liS S\\1111\ '11\C)' Ul" lt lllp l:\ tt'llll\ !11\d it 1Vt1Uid ·
1HtlWs u I 00 mph fu.~ thull.
t
C'moks guided the Eagles •
ill.• 1!11'•11 hi ~IIIli' ~ 11!1' thtlt t'tllil!Ct' lll' !Ct\1\\,"
Thttt helps you, It shows you nnly scoring drive - in the
l1tc Bml!lct'll, thmttth, tile 1:1-1 h\ their Ius\ Ill home ttttttl'OIIthe speed &lt;lf the l!tllnc.
fimrth quarter - to help sal It't1'11\'C !Htntes tlltd lmvc ~~~~tjustlhur tlmcsltt thdr lust 33 ~mncs
"1!
we
had
stttt·tcd
out
vagc till llftcrnoon that
hi "hldt they wctc tnttkl.'\l Uttll thclt· 11111\\lllcl\l wu.~n't,

'"''"Mill'

al F
Glenn starting over in Green Bay

ish shot at Ohio State

Golden Fl s

The hca11 h fa~&lt;ln'&lt;l Bu~~cyes will hr
tryiti!l "''' t&lt;i l&lt;1ok ahca&lt;~ to the gam&lt;'
st'ven day~ later agatnst No. II
w,l~hmg~&lt;m st.lll'.
"If 11c o&lt;crl&lt;ll'~ Kent f,,r Washington
State. the~ 're )!&lt;1111~. to conw in ~~~~unci
give us,, ~&lt;l&lt;ll.f nul t&lt;'r our muncy, Ohtll
State dclcnsiH' ta~lo.lc Tun Anderson
said. "·Nc,r week we'll work on
Washingttln Stute."
llist&lt;m-:ally. Ohtt' teams haw ~~~~ !itt lc 111&lt;11~ than cam1nn !odder for the
Buckeyes.
Thcv haven't lost t&lt;' an in-state school
since· l'i21, a 7-6 setback ae,uinst
Oll&lt;'rlin: Of coul'lie. Ohiu State dtd not
play any sdl&lt;Klls fmm the Bu~keyc State
betwlocn I 'i.\4 and 19'i2 before tt was
decidL'd to ~cep the muncy in the state.
l11e football team at the state's largest
university has met at least o.ne team
froth ins1dc the honler em:h ot the last
five yeal'li. winning the six games by ah
average of ttlmost four touchdowns a
game.
.
With Washin!ltoll State und quartrrback Jason Gesser coming to town vn
Sept. !4. who could blame n bunch of
20-yenr-ulds for looking ahead? · . · ·
Ohiu State coach Jim Tressel, for one.
"We dun't look at pl;~ying Kent as a
preparation (for WSU ).'' Tressel snid.

EMU looking for positives in blowout

•

included only 12 first downs
and a miserable 241 yards pf
total onense.
On the field for most of the
gtln\c, the Eagles • defense
allowed the Spartans to put
up 31 first downs and 625
yunl~.

"Fitly petcent of our possessions were th ree and out.
That memts the dejense never
gets a rest. We need to do
sume things of!en&amp;ively to
keep the other team 's otlense
on the bench ," ' Woodrun·
sui d.
Things could get better
Saturday if the Eagles' quarterbacks complete more thun
47 pcreent of their passes. :1s
they did uguinst the Spartans.
"We need to be a lot more
etl'icieill in that area, just
throwing :tnd cu tchill!l,"

Woodntll' said.
Woodruff was impressed
with the play of sophomore
strong sufet~ Jerry Gaines.
who had mne tackles and
intercepted Michigan· Stnte
quurterbuck Jeff Smoker in
the end zone. preventing a
touchdown.
"Unfm•tumttely when your
safety has to make u lot of
tuekles, tlmt 's u bud sign."
Woodrufl' sttid.
lie wants to find more
playing time Saturday for
buck up linebucker Steven ·
Bednarik, 11 redshirt freshman
who ulwuys seems to be
uround the footbull.
"Somehow we huve to find
u way to get him on the field
in some capacity .because he
just conti nucs to make
plays." Woodrutl' said.

•

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)- ing camp last year after the
Terry Glenn has gotten on Patriots, tired of his injury
with his life.
history and tendency to disNot just on the football tance himself from teammates
field, where the immensely and collches. withheld a signtalented but so often troubled ing bonus installment because
wide receiver is getting a sec· he was suspended for violatond chance with the Green ing the league's substanceBay Pockers after a messy abuse policy.
divorce from the New
He had missed a mandatory
England Patriots.
dmg test. Glenn said it was a
But Glenn's home life, pep- miscommunication;
the
pered with tragedy smcc Patriots said it was a violation
childhood, also has taken a of the morals clause in his
turri for the better.
contract.
Glenn, 28, and his fiancee,
After an arbitrator ruled the
Monica, are expecting. a· team couldn't suspend him
daugh!er any d_ay. The fam1ly, for the entire season, Glenn
mcludmg. h1s 6-~e~-ol~ son, retumed, but played in only
Te~ Jr., love li vmg m the . four games before bein~ sideNFL s smallest m~ke.t, whe~ lined with a hamstring mjur;:,
the talle~t bu1ldmg IS
Glenn said he harbors no 11l
Lambeau F1eld.
·
will toward the Patriots
"Right. now, . things have
"They won .a Super ' Bowl
ch~?ged m my hfe f01: the bet· without me. They proved that
ter, the f~nn~r Ohro ~tal~ one man doesn't make a
standout s~1d .. Footb~ll rsn t team," Glenn said. "I respect
the best thmg m my hfe a~y- New England for what they
mo~. It used to be everyth!ng did. They did what they had to
. and tf that faltered, everythiJig do and 1 just wish people
f~!e,red.
.
.'
would understand I did what I
- I m pl~nmng on gettmg had 10 do, too.
mamed. I ve got a daughter
"We parted ways. We all
on the way. People are S?tng came out happy And 1 love
to be there for me 1f thmgs
·
·
B ..
don't go my way. That does- everytht!"g about 0 .reen ay.
n't mean I' m tess dedicated to
Espec1ally catchmg passes
the ~nme . l'vejust got my pri- from ~ret! Favre, who s~ys
orittes straight."
Gle~n ts the best pu~ re.~elvAlong with a clean slate.
er I ve eve~ play~ With.
conch
Mike
Glenn swd he s never seen
Packers
Sherman rescued Glenn from an,~body a~ good as Favre . .
HE'LL PAY FOR THAT ONE- Packers recelvar Terry Gl.enn
his Patriots purgatory, trading
The thmgs me and hrm_ catches a pass In front of Tennessee's Andre Dyson In the first
for him in hopes he could could get done on the football
revive his career and Green field th1s year could be astro· quarter of an exhibition game last week. (AP)
Buy's passing attack at the nomical:" Glenn said.
.·
same time.
There s the catch: gettmg the season stans.
. Glenn still is trying to pul
The Packers gave Glenn a Glenn ont~ the field.
.
"He's a very intelligent . the pain of the past behmd
. five-yeur contract that includ- . Glenn mtssed most ~f tram- player,'' Shennan said. "He'll him. It's a past that includes
ed u $1 million signing bonus, mg cump wrth a .spramed left figure it out."
living in foster homes after
a pittance compared to what knee and ca~ghtJUStone pass
Questions about Glenn 's his mother was murdered a
he left on the· table in New from Favre rn the preseason. toughness and chanicter few blocks from their home in
.England.
And he was gimpy after land- might have subsided already Columbus, Ohio, when he
Glenn said he gladly gave ing u.wkwardly on that leg in were it not for his injury Aug. was 13.
up u claim to $8.5 million in pracuce Wednesday.
7.
Glenn won't say he's found
bonuses from the Patriots "to
Injury problems llfC a big
"This setback he's had to true happiness yet, but he
get me out of those shackles.'' reuson Glenn hasn't duplicat- . deal with is noi his fault," trusts he's on the ril!ht road.
and clear the trade to Green ed his rookie season in 1996, Favre said. "What's happened
"I can see the future a little
. Bay, ending a bitter stay in when he ~et an NFL ~kie to him_ \n the _past is the pas!. bit. Everythinf. is laid out for
:-New England that culminated record wtth 90 receptiOns. Now, It s easter fo~ me to s~t me," he said. 'If I don't mess
: with him watching his team· He's played in every game up, here nn? say. that. Until this up. this should be great
• mates win the Super Bowl on only once, in 2000.
he s had a ht.tle btt of succ~ss for me.
·
·,
:- television.
Sherman isn't worried here, he's gomg. to be heanng
"And I don't plan on mess' Glenn walked out of train- about Glenn being behind as that for a long ttme."
ing this up. There's no way."
•

:_:Steelers 51¥ Randle El•·s someth•·ng spec
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Frerotte and Westbrook try
to reconnect in Cincinnati
CINCINNATI tAP) - Gus frerolte and M11·had
Westbrook had some timng ttmes together m Wu,hmgt&lt;'n
- late comebacks. long touchdo~n Pll"Co. !la-.h&lt;"s -&lt;•f ~
promising future together.
There were bad ttmes. too. The "orst "a' a b11 arr~ tt~
against the Giant~ tn I997, when Frerotte h~ad - buttrd the
wall and Westbruok thre" a tantrum .
Now, the{ve got a ~han~e to ·make u httlr hi'IUf} good or bad - together again.
Frerotte and Westbrook llfC trying l\l re' i'e 'ome of thw
early mRgic in Cincmnati. hooking up on the NFL', \\ON
team since 1991. Frerotte will \tun the B~ngah ' h&lt;•riw
opener Sunday agamst San Otego, and We\tbroo• \\Ill
return from a broken "rist.
They're hoping it quickly feels like old ttm~s .
"We made a lot of big plays in Wa;hington ." We&gt;tbrook
said. "We were young and ambitious . l don' t I.. no\\ tf you
want to call it a connection; we were JUSt two gu)' 1hat
knew how to perform."
In the offseason, they 11ere ju-r looking fot u place to
stan over.
.
Frerotte, a seventh-round pick in 1994, played five seasons with the Redskins. then bounced to Detroit und
Denver. He signed with the Bengals in May after they
promised him a chance to win the starting JOb.
·
Two months later. Westbrook cume aboard . The first·
round pick from 1995 played seven seas&lt;m wtth
WaShington, which decided not to keep him after la\1 'euson.
The Ben$als were concerned about Durnal· Scott·' 'ore
leg and n:ttcent demeanor and decided to rep ace htm \\ tth
Westbrook.
· ·
'
Just as they were getting reconnected in training ''amp.
Westbrook broke the small bone· at the base of hi' right
wrist during practice. He missed all four presea&gt;Otl games
but will play Sunday wiili a brace.
"Over the last few years. I haven't 'een him that much
and haven't really seen how he's played.'' Frerott~ '"'d.
"That's why I missed not being able to practice with hun ill
trai ning camp, not knowing if he's ch;mged.
"I know he has matured a lot. and he's still thl' same pia)'·
er. Guys grow up and learn how to mn routes agam\1 different defensive formati ons. 1 think we're gomg to get mto
the game and learn u lot more about Michael."
Westbrook already knows Hbout Frerotte.

PUBLIC NOTICES

t'\lblk' "-'"'' ' lu ''"'IWfi•t~"•

' 'IIUr II.IJit.llb ... ....., LJ.Ih.r... W.1 ..11 h&gt; \o11orl.... r

... ....._ ..... "*"

The Molga county Theoe boctorlo ore eflecla. Under lhlo
Floodplain Vorlanco generolly not harmful llanderd , drlnklog
Boord will hold 1 thei'nlelvee , but \heir waltr umpteo muat
pre11nce In drinking be free or coliform
;:,"~~~~· St~~:~::: water
11 urt'ouo boclerlo. Drinking
10 at a:oa p.m. tn \he becauaolhoy
often ore wotor which 11 free or
. Melgo
County anoclattid with aew- coliform boctorla to
Commleetonera
ago or animal waetoa. uaual\y·not aaaocialad
The preaenco ot lheee with o heollh rlok trom
Office.
bacteria In drlnktn~ dta.....cauelng biC•
(ll &amp;, e. aot12
woter ~enerolly ta a terta end anould be
reaull or a' probtom coneldered life. Sllle
wllh Wiler trea\manl lnd IOCII hlllth
Pubf!c Notice
or \he plpea which dla- outhorltloo recom•
AppendiX Cl · trlbule lhe wlter, and mond that conoumoro
Enmptololl
lndtcotea thll lhe toke lhe ' following
Advloo ·Public
woter moy be conllml· precautlona:
Notte~Acuto
na\ed with organ lama Until further notice.
Bacterlotogtcat
thot · can
CIUitoympdie- conaumera
1111
VIolation
Dlllooe
boll, for ot vtgorouoly
lo11t ono
Public wolar a •· lama may Include mlnula, any walor
lema are roqutrod yby dlorrhea, cramp•. uud tor drinking
rule 3748-al-21,
of the fever.
una, and
!Including
water
ueed
Ohio
Admtntatrotlve
ponlblynolaundlco,
ond 10
make rcej,
cooking
Code (OAC), to rou· ony ooooctatod hud· or orot hygiene."
tlnety monitor the blc· achoa ond fotlgue . The water deparl·
tarlat quollly of tho Then aymptome, mtntlm~nagem ent Ia
drlnkl water In thllr however, are novuat conducting an lnvoolldlttrt~tton eyattm. ~~ooctatedt tth oddttlonal
gallon and collecting
The tempting con· oeaoe-caua ng
umptn
dueled tor the Racine orgont•rn• In drinking and hopea to havelhla
VIII
water, but otoo may bt problem corrected
1
1

· pun t re t'urns, trw'I'mg DetrOt't. wh'tc h
won only twice all season.
"I want to make some ~lays in the kicking game, too," he said. 'I've been trying
to get them to let me return some kickoffs,
too. Special tewns can aet you. 1 know in
l
"
col ege we lost some games on special
teams.''
Memo to Randle El: the Steelers have, tnd:~.:~h:~ t~"::.~ ~~~:~o~Y o~h:~~.:':~ ao~n. A~ •:dltlfnat
too. Most notably, he might want to watch mt11tble mutmum your drinking woter. ~~~~e t~o wa~o~ ::~
tapes of the Steelers' 24-17 AFC champ' i- contaminant
tavet lor
F
toto! coliform
11 USEPA · hao 111 on •dv1aory 1• tltl~
~ . or
onship game loss to New England, wh1ch opoclltl&lt;lln rule 3748• enforcHbta drinking further Information
was decided by two New England speciai et ••• oltht OAC wae .water
contact
John Holman
coliformllondard
baclorlo tor
to ot
11411-2820
teams touchdowns.
ucttdtd during roduce the rlok of (II) 8 7 8 ·
And while it's been speculated the ~~r.'':-1::2itatoo than odveroe haollh
' '
Steelers will employ Randle El in some Envtronmontat
sort of Stewart-like "Slash" role, perhaps Protection Agoncy
to take an occasional snap froni center. (USEPAl •••• drinking
Randle El doesn't think 11 wUI happen water llandarda end
Mon day m~
· ht.
hll preatnct
dttermlntel
that
the
of coli·
"We don t have time for wrinkles in this form boctarta to 1 oerl·
game," he said. "New England isn 'I ouo health concern.
falling for that."
·
.
'801 column lrteh wttkdeya
The Patriots likewise shouldn't expect
'1 0'" column Inch Sunday
Randle El to be nervous or edgy in his
ANNOUN&lt;.l:Mil\'111
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 892-2H15
NFL debut, despite the setting or the
importance of a game matching the
defending champion against a team fOrked RUI
favored to win the AFC this season.
,.
"Nah, I won't be nervous," Randle El SDOftSmll
said. "for what? It's football, nothing
Sat. Sept. 7th
more. It's a little faster, with some more ,.
U •
Starta at Mlzway 12:001111 I :00
c~vernges, aDd they hit harder." But it's fall Gun Sbopta
Ends at Good Times
sun football.
,
Starting
Last Bike In at 5:00 113 miles
Sept. 7
·
at7:30
. ---~------'-------'------------------Every

~ Weather forces
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Lomas Brown
thought he had seen it all in his 19 sea·
sons in the NFL.
.
That is, until lightning and heavy
rain Thursday forced the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers to practice in a parking

g':.~~gh~ve

never done that before. It
was definitely the first time," the
offensive tackle said , .. I've practiced
: In a gym, Inside the (training) facility
• and even an ·auditorium but never .
: before in a parking lot.'' '
• Rather than cancel the two·hour
workout, coach Jon Oruden moved
practice to the third level of a parking
• garage at an office building adjacent
·
: to One Buccaneer Place.
: The Bucs. open the regular · season
·.Sunday against New Orleans. . .
· • "It's no different than pracllcmg in
: the gym . ... As long as you can run out
•

' Talol, Tilgl, Tttll ~lllilltl, Al~llilnoludlld Inllitll PNCI Ol ntw Y
IMiolt lllttd whtrl appllotbli. "On llpprovod ortdll. On uleotad lllodolt Not roaponalblolor ""'O ra•"l 1
~rto"

•
' l'.or th'IS IJWTIC.
·
"
•• PITTSBURGH (AP) - 0 ne of un NFL · ge ts a .ee
:tewn's I?rimary challenges each s-eason is
Randle El's addition is the most intrigu·
_·getting 1ts rookies up to speed- namely, ing new element of the Steelers, who oth·
: the much faster game speed than they erwise retum vinup.lly intact from their
• were a~customed to playing in college.
13-3 regular season of a year ago.
- The Pittsburoh Steelers don't expect
He is undersized for an NFL receiver at
. .,
I
that to be a problem with rookie wide 5-foot-9, but Randle El has e1lce lent
receiver Antwnan Randle EI.
jumping ability - he can dunk a blisket·
Randle El, the fanner Indiana quarter· ball while wearing sandals - and his
back, hud little problem adjusting to the speed has never been an issue.
blink-and-it's-over world of the NFL durRandle EI will be used any time the
: ing the preseason, scoring three times in a Steelers employ more than two receivers,
- spun of two ~ames.
and his presence - and his speed : "You wutc him one-on-one, and he's should make it more difficult for defenses
: going to beat his one-on-one coverage,'' to employ extra-defender coverages
Steelers receiver Plaxico Burress said. "I against Burress, their lop playmaker last
don't think the regular season is going to season.
speed up for him. He plays with speed.''
What has most su~rised the Steelers is
With Rundle El set to tnake his debut the seamless transition · Randle El has
· de.en
' d'mg super made from a success.u
~ 1 co11 ege quarter·
Monday night · agamst
· Bowl champion New England, the back to u pro·receiver:
• Steelers are more interested in seeing how
After throwing for more than ·6,000
: he handles the various nuances that NFL yards and running for more than 3,000
: defenAes employ against ·receivers: the yards in a big·time conference such as the
two-deep zones, the line-of-scrimmage Big I 0, some players would have been
contact, the press covem~es.
reluctant to change positions, but Randle
"I haven't seen an&gt;' indrcatipn that with El wasn't.
everything that's bemg thrown at him "I've always wanted to play in the
blitz pickups, reading routes - that he· NFL," he said. "I didn't want to have to
: has missed them," coach Bill Cowher go to Canada just to play quarterback."
: said. "Then: will be things that he sees
The Steelers also hope Randle El will
: each week that he will learn from, and he help them as a punt returner, one of their
- :fill grow from. The biggest adjustment many special teams deficiencies last seawill come week to week as he grows and son. They ranked only 23rd in the league

:
:
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Tampa indoon to practice Business
Services
News and
notes
lAvender Sr.

there and ,set !he ~ental aspects ofthe
game. its ft.ne,., receiver Keenan
McCar~ell s~1d. We went through
~verythmg with a fine-toothed comb
tn the aarage, so It was worth it. You
can't lust ~~ home. You've got to do
somefhlng.
TEXAS MAYORS ISSUE FOOTBALL
CHALLENGE .

.

HOUSTON (AP) - Houaton Mayor
Lee Brown said he wouldn't wear a
Dallas Cowboys cheerleader uniform
if the Houston Texans, in their first

r

regular season game, lose Sunday
when they play the Cowboys.
.
But Brown, in a challenge to Dallas
Mayor Laura Miller on Thursday, did
say he was willing to don a Cowboys
cap and jersey to a City Council meeting if the Texans, the National
Football Leaaue's newest team, don't
win.
In 'their telephone convenation,
Miller jokingly sugaested the mayor
of the losing city sport the cheerleadinM_ uniform of the winning team .
It would be a great photo-op,"
Miller said of her cheerleading uni·
form su111estion.
.
"It would be, but I think we've got a
aood deal with the hat and the jersey,"
Brown said.
Miller agreed to wear a Houston
Texans hat and jersey if the Cowboys
head home with a loss.

In Memory

iUiam .

Jan. 27. 1936
Sept. 6. 1996
From the moment
the sun riSCI.s to 1ut
beam of days Baht
you are in my hean
and thouahll till
we're together
aaain.
Loved and Sadly
missed
Pany and Tommy

�,.

•
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C OMM EAC IA~ tnd
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P1ge I I • The Dilly Sentinel
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FRANK &amp; EARNEST
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•
Maraude~

beat Raiders. II

Deaths
Addie E. MacKnight, 94
Genevieve Opal fife, 83
Marjorie Anne Shimp. 67
Margaret J. "Sis" ClarK. 66
Lorelta l. Wright. 64

BARNEY

'WOW!! I NEVEF!

BUT YOU'VE

KNEW THAR WUZ BEEN UP \-\ERE.
SUCH A

BO~IOUS

LOTSA TIME.~~
!!

VIEW UP

I ALWA'&lt;&amp;
YEAH,BUT
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IN I-lOT

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In tho ~ ollndo IO&lt; anotn.&lt;.

•
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THE !lORN LOSER .
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High: 90s, Low: 60s
Detllls.A2
MKLJ

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None InJured In
two-car wreck

UZLTKI

POMEROY -

':~~:t~~, set:~Q{l~-l£~trs·

accident Friday evening at
the intersection of Ohio
Routes 7 and 143.
According to the Guilla·
Meigs Post of tho State
Highway Patrol. Robert W,
Reed, 82, of Pomeroy was
eastbound on Ohio Route
143 when he attempted t(l
turn his 199 I Dodge
Dynasty north cinto Ohio
Route 7. arnd A. Knotts, 26,
of Pomeroy wns southbound on Ohio Route 7.
Reed entered Knolls· path
und wus struck by Knotts .
Knotts was cited for not
huving a driver's license
und Reed wns clled for fnll·
uro to yield . .

WORD

DAM I

1411t~ ~y CLAY A. POLL,t.N - - - - -

WHAT .!&gt; A FAMI L '(
WITHOUT A&gt;l - EVIL·

horronge l•ner.a of
0 lour
..:romblod worda

~

the

bo·

low to lorm lour almplo worda.

E ,J L

u r,

II
I

L ADI E

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...:_i--.aa..~L ~:S::..'---111!!1 ~~ ~~~~
~ BORROWERS ME

W~ERE

NEARLV ·AL.WAV5

6E T TllAT STUFF,
MARCIE7

ILL· SPENOER5''

DO VOU

A BOOK

0~

~UOTATION5 ..

2
1

I

h3r-+14:...:.R;.::40.,:.0..;N,_-l..,',:
l. I . 1 I I .

"Yes, I want to live a long life,'
one not so smart cutle said to her
~======::..,friend. "But," she added, "I sure
E KTT E L
!don't wanl to reach - - ••• ·I"

COULD I
BORROW IT?

Lotteries

tho ehueklt quoted
by filling In tho ml ..lng wordo
L-..1........1-.1.-...1.......1--l you dovelop from llep No. 3 btlow.

I FRIDAY

.

•

.

•

.

.

OHIO
Pick s: 2-0·2
Pick 4: 0·3-7-1
Buckeye 5: 12-14·20·30"34
Pick 3 nl1ht: 3-2·2
Pick 4 nlaht: 2·3·6· 1

SCIAM-Lm ANSWERS
Unwind· Yacht- Pagan· Relish-HIGHWAy

SEPTEMBER 6 I

i:

NEWSPAPERS
Covor All Tho
Malor SUblectol

W.VA.

Statistics show that three quarters of the populalion
live in or near cities. I believe :the other quarter Is out
there looking for the exit off the HIGHWAY.

Deily 3: 4-9·5

Pally 4: 3·8·4·1
ta•li 211: 8-9· \ 1-16-20·21

Char

'BJJ1bday-- - - - -

Index

•

Snturdny, Sept. 7, 2002
In the year nhcod rou may
lind yourself bcncfittng from
rour pusl CKperlences by betng more lltKihle and adnplnble Ia your presem ones .
Now, when you gel blocked
by certain kinds of obstacles,
you'll know how to circum-

vcnl thctn.

. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Leaving things 10 the last
minute couhl result in u frustrating jumble fur you. Allo·
cule your dny ~u lhul you ulluw adequate time for laking
care of all essential mutters.
Trying tn pmch up a broken
rnmunce'/ The Astro·Graph
Mutchmnker con help you understand what to do to make
the relationship work. Mail
$2.75 Ill Mutchmaker. c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 167,
Wickliffe, OB 44092. .
LlllRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- You hnve us gaud a chance
'"the lliher guy of winning in
t.:ompetitive involvements to-

day. However, if you gu in
seeing yourself us the underUo8, you may feel it necessary

to prove yourse lf.
SC:ORl'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
:22) -- It will · be wi'c nut to
mi.11 financiul

lrun~nctions

with friends todny: H things
go omlss, o bi~ mlsundcr·
stun~lng may unse. Trent nil
money muLlen In a businesslike munner.
SAGIH ARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- If your judgment
concernmg u t:un1petilive involvement is a trifle distone~
today. there is o very strong
chance you could get yourself
immersed in something lhnt is
way over your head.
CAPRIC~RN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- You re not going to be ·
in the mood today to put up
with an acqlininlance who has
a domineering personuill~ and
who lends to tmpose ht5/her
wtll on others. You're liable
to knock Lhe chip off the person's shoulder.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)-- Mnke a point todar of
not asking too many queshons
of a close associaLc who is
keeping someLhing to
him/herself. Your pul may
have valid reasons for not
muklng any disclosures.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Murch
20) -- Should someone not be
in QCCvrd with your way of
dotng things today, bccuuse it
does not benefit him/her, you
can expect (his person to

2 lldlon• ~ 12 ......

cause u problem tor you.
ARIES (Murch 21·Aprll 19)
-- Expecting OLhero to do :
something perfectly thai you
youroelf. aren't able lo do is
being unrealislic, noi lo men~

tion demeaning, Lend by ex·
ample, not by humiliation.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Sometimes II is necessary to take a cnleulnted risk
but tiJduy It is npl to prov~
counterproductive. You mlsht
take a gamble that goes be·
yond rcasonnble probabllltlca.
GEMINI (Muy 21-June 20)
•• Going to the wrong penon
for counsel I• worst than getting no guldnnce ut all. If you
need ildvlce today, talk to an
expert, nol another pal who
may know leu than you do, ,
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
•• If you start pointing out the
shortcomings of oth~rs today,
don'L expect to be immune
from criticism yourself. The
responses you get could severely deflate_~our ego.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) •• 1r
your male Is presently munagmg the budget and dolna a
good job, leave well enough
alone . Your ability to handle
resources mny not be up to
par.

NEW YORK lAP) Sluing vn tt t&gt;em:h in Cupo
Cod midsummer, the memories wush~d (IVtlr hi 111, lolling him, wilh(&gt;\11 wunilng.
bu~k h• tho horrur.
For a n1oment, he h11&lt;1j;·
ined he wus hu~~ t&gt;11 the
pile, perched in ull his t'ruillty umongst the wroLChed
punorllo\11 of smoko 1\nd
smells nnd mansled steQl,
everythin~ t•euctlht~ sky·
ward. everythhtll ~co~ h ei.l

by hopelessness und demh.
And he thought of the
deud and how their ghom
hmmt th\1 flr~;~hous\1, sometimes inspiring, sometimes
unnerving, nlwftys there.
And he thought of ull lhtl
e ulogl~;~s he hus dtllivllred.
ul\ the widows he hns ~nm ­
forted, all the wrenching·
decisions he hus 11111\le tryIng to guide his men.
And he l'lngered the ~np-

\ll'l' llt'ltl.'\ll~tt&gt;n

his wristt,l\11

otwe belon~,w,ltn Cml

As&lt;•rn

- hnni\S(&gt;ttw, t&lt;lll'nl\l\' Ctnl
- his driv~r. his •~mt1dnnt(l,
whnm h~ l&lt;w\'\1 H~\lll snn:
Alllne&gt; umoug tht~ \1\lll(IS,
the v~Tentll l'lre lihiilf wept .
And this Is whttl ht~ li\111·
duded mul whm he tells hi&gt;
nit-n: II will alwny&gt; t&gt;e with
11s, wiWr\lY\lf we~\.\. thl~ t\lrrible scar. these \erriblil
11it&gt;murl\ls, thi~ tilfflbltl time,
"Wlwre ""e w\l n\\w~"
Bitttu\imt ll Chlel' Joseph
Nal\lonil fi~~s. hllck a1 tho IN HONOR - C11pt. O!ml\ll
ftrehou~e ut the eud of th\l Q'CallaQhlll1'a iPIIrt flrtl
summor, He glvt&gt;s n hug\l, QQI&gt;t lltlll h@l\ii 011 1\ 11\\lk 1\t
wellt')l sigh,
th\l ba~k Qf tho flrohoute 1\t
"Who knnws where we ~11ijl11!l M 1111\1 l.t~tt(JI!r 4 111
nre. One yeur Ill tO I'. W\l 're New York. An entire ~hlfl of
stil l ouryln~ (l\lt' dt~ml . "
l!l mlln from till~ flr!lho\l~e.
•••
includinj! O'Callaghan, wt~re
Tho tiny lliU'k u~rnss tlw la~t when thll tow\lr~ of tllfl
stre\lt fmm t 111 fireh11use h u World Trade Cent!.lr ool·
lllP~ea on Sept. U ; IAfll
PIHIIIH 1/11 1 AJ

Woomer takes reins as Point mayor
BY KIV1N KILLV

I~--.~:O.s-rl-,..1.......,1,.,6;;...,1_, 0 C:om.ple~o
.

No one

was il\lW'tld in a two-vehicle

'Prayer ahould be tha key ol tha
day and tha look of tht night.'- Thomu Fuller. M.D.

BIG NATE
:,TE PMOTHEFI.

Weather

Zl

PAEVIOUS SOLUTION -

....-! L~c:::=:=i__j
IT'!&gt; TOTALL V &amp;O&amp;US!
ALL OF A !&gt;LI~DEN
I't'l SLIPPO!&gt;ED TO SE ·
LlEVE WE'RE ALL ONE
l!oiGo HAPPY FAMILY?

OSKCN

ANKOOLC

AKOI)
TNANLK
PKHJNH

l

·

NYNHIZLN."

(UHOJODT

I

C

WH08

NOMKHOOKL.

r\N'PI t-\Q~ 7

e~~Wis

his t~way r(lctio at Engine 54 al\ct lOO®r 4 Sillllion in New 'iorl\, Nllrdone we&lt;~r'i. a co~
per bracelet on his wrist that once belon&amp;ect IC\ his driver &amp;nd oonfictante Cart Asaro.
N&lt;~rdone lost fifteen men, tncludtng Asaro, on Sept ll when the towers \If the WQ{Id TTOOe
Center collapsed. (AP)

''One year later, we're
· still burying our dead."

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Ir

RI!MIMIERINQ -After retumln&amp; from II CCIII, llatt&amp;llon 9 Cllief )QSieph·N&amp;rdooe tal~a 01\

•

Calendar
A5·6
Classifieds •
83·5
Comics
86
DearAbby
A6
Editorials
A4
Movies
A3
Obituaries
A3
Sports
81 ·3
Weather
A2
! C 2002 Ohio Volley PubllohlnJ Co.

OVP news editor
POINT PL EASANT
Clurk Edwurd "'Ed"' Woomet'
suiil he hus gouls for Point
Plonsunt thnt us mayor, und
with the consent nf city
Coltncli. he wunts tu see
accomplished.
"With council's help. 'I
would like to contln11e lhe
cleunup ol' our city und I
think we need lo J(lnk ttl our
streets as u high prlarlly.''
Woomer suld nl'ter he wus
sworn ln to the mayor's post
Frlctay.
Woomer wus uppolnted to
fill the unexpired term of
John Ranch by council on
Thursday. Rouch.
who
resigned to resume employ ·
ment ut M&amp;a Polymers, put
in his last duy (ln the Job on
Wednesdny.
In u ceremony hold In
council chambers, Woomer
took the onth of pfflct;~ !'tom
police secretary Louisll
Hudson. nccampanled by
city officials ~nd stul'f. Also
on hand were Woomer's

\\'iillii,·~. ~~~~ ~ Smith ""''

III)VItl\11 1'1'1' 111 lh~ \l~t'nt't •
1111'111 Ihill h~lj) 'Y NOl\'ll thl~
~' tis~ .
llt·~nl
llnun\let'N

flll'dl'~\ IH~' ·t'~t'~OIIill \hunk s
h!t' il toil 11 ~ II t.lmw. nml

.It 11111 1'11 11 l. ''I 11w tlr II I'm
p111t111 11 his h ~nrt "ml
tnhi ~olvln~ thi Nl'I\Nil ."

TAKING COMMAND - Ed Woomtn ttlkl!l thl! Otllh of olfloe
flS Point Pleasflnt'o m11yor In t1 Frldtly eoromony In council
c hambt~ra by LI;)UIIe Huaaon. Point Pla11111nt polieo aoeretary.
Council appolnt!ld Woomer to fill out tho rom111naor of John
RoPoh'a torm. (Kilvln Kelly)
mlniNter, the Rov. llill Bonk~
Wuumer hAM bQen the
of GoNpel
LljhthouNo ·~lty'~ lnMPQQtor for tho puNt
Church, und tho ohuroh 'M two yonrM nnd wurked In
(IN~I~ tl\nt · llftNtor. !..loyd trun ~portAiion munaiJement
Mnyes. ·
. 1 1 kl 11 110
·
Hnving annkN nnd Muye~ pr,pr
to " 11,! city Jub.
on hund for the oerumon~ . I feoljrOAI, ho MAid ulmul
·"wu~ very importpnt tu mo. • beoomlnj! ffi(lyor, "l look
Woomer Rllid. .
111.... '" Mlftr, AI

~nul

l~ rln Ynun~ . t-liit'y'M Jll)'~ ur nlll &gt;luupht~l', tiiN\t
thnn~ell . OVIU'YCllll.l
who
llllltWII s~nil thme r NpllnNI·
hie t'm mYnle1'in~ her l'nther

lo pri Nnn,

01tli111ll1 lell f'Olll' Ql\illll'M
timl nne ~runi!Qhllil bllhln&lt;l .

"S lw und {lnry only !lot to ·
h prnmlptlt'Qn1N l'or \l if"yK,"

OuJtnllll 1 111111hor. NonQ)'
Jullll, Mull!. "All nl' lhQ Qhll ·
dron uro hmullln~ It dlffQt'•.
anlly. 11111 I knnw lhllfro
j!]~d lt'i OV\W, Now WQ hiiVI!
tn ~llthi't' UJl lhQ j)II!QQ~ ftt"l

llvo fnr

ltllllOI'I'IlW,"

Trylna to Break the Halalt7
HFreetlom From SmolcingH
Smoking C~ssation Clinic

Tuesday, September 10 • 6 PM
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
To register or for more information, pi Cit call
446·5940

MEDICAL CENTER
Discov r· tlw Hol~cr· 0{(/i I'Qnc

www.holz r.or1

I

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