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                  <text>Monday, October 7; 2002

www.mydailysentlnel.com

WteUr Wrllln}-

IIIWIIIIIriiEIUCIIIIIkiMIV,_ .. , IUIPIIIII

This

&lt;!:&gt; 2002 by Vicki Wt1itina. Editor

Eagles fall in tri-match, B 1

camer

·Fire satetv

•

·

Jeff Schinkel,

Your Opinion
Do you think newspapers should
be able to print whatever they
want? Should you be able
to -say whatever you want?
Why or why not?

A fire has started at lOl Flintstone Lane! How will everyone in
·
the house know there is a fire?
· By the time anyone in the family smells smoke,
·
the fire could be too big for the p~ople upstairs to get down the stairs. This is

a job for Super Sniffer Blaster Bleepers, your life-saving smoke alarms!

50 cents • Tuesday. Odober 8, 2002 • Vol. 53, No. 38

ji&gt; Put smoke alarms in sevt:rall
places in your home:

Whats Inside

Tracing your roots?

Fireman's parade

' .

Cieneal

Den Dickerson
~allipolili

llailp tn::ribune

825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Please incl~de your school and grade.

1 •.Each bedroom.

2~ Just outside all bedroom
areas.

Ty somerville
St.te Farm lnsur•nce
Point Pleasant, Wtl

fair opens
on Oct. 19

SponsOf'S of: Mrs. Doeffinger'5 3rd grt~de class
North Point Elementary

Point Pleasant, WV

.

3. At least one smoke alarm
on each flom; of the

.

house.

Home Niltlonal Bank
Racine, OH

Sponsors of: Mrs. McNickte's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Raci11e, OH

American Electric PoWer • Gavin Plant

4. Near the kitchen~. but
more than 20 feet away,
SQ that cooking smoke
and steam don 'net it off.

\,

..

";..

.

,'

~test smoke· al~s each ,
month to make sure they
are working, and so you'll
know what they sound
like when they go off.

'

'

~

~

~Replace smoke alaims At ~
least every 10 years: •

~

Quick! Cut out each
of the smoke alarms.
Read the Super
Sniffer Blaster
Sleeper Smoke
Alarm Tips to
find out \Yhere you
should put each
smoke alarm!

,
'

""'
~;;.~4rfnflif-J~'I~fltt;l:f)
I

If your house caught
on fire at night, you 1 - - - might not see fire,
smell smoke or wake •
up in time to get out
safely. Smoke ·
alarms can help.
Smoke alarms are
tools that can tell if
there is smoke in the
air. They work even
if you can't smell
smoke!!

1
I

'

-----n
.... --.

'@

~.

·

· ~Keep smoke alarms d~st
free. Run the vacuum
cleaner attachment over
and around the alarms to
clean away the dust.
I
I

t..n~u

.

Deaths

Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of:. Becky Woodyord's 3rd grade class
Southwestern Elementary
Rio Grande, OH

Rio lire
Rio Grilnde,' OH
Sponsors of: Phyllis Brandenberry's 3rd grade class
Washington Elementary
·
Gallipolis, OH

When you hear
the loud noise,
follow your
home escape
plan and get
o"'tfast!

Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Ours' 3rd grade 'clilss
Washington Elementilry
Gallipolis, OH .

....,
'

Holaer Clinic
Gallipolis, OH
.
Sponsors of : Mrs. little's 3rd grade dass
Central Elementary
Poinc Pleasant, WV

Weather

Bridge ·dosing
..announced ·

Cross;oads Greenhousilts .

Select a newspa'per
pho!o, Qrawi~Jg ox
comic. Studyth~

list ofalhhe dt-~tail~1

letart Falls, Ohio
Sponsors of: Ms. Holter's 3r~ grade class
Southern. Elementary
Middleport, OH
Advan~

..

Heerlna center

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Sandra Mock'!t 3rd grade class
Ohio Valley Christian School
Gallipolis, OH

...
.,

Dr. a Mn.,.Ger..d Shuta
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Jerry Howell's 3rd grade class

Green Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

Jividen's Power Equipment
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Davenport's 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
'
Bidwell, OH

-

Spot the Diffeu·ellflces

Visual Discrimination/Sorting: Find similarities and differences In common

.

'

Edward Jones

Fmd the. words m the puzzle,
•
SMOKE
then in thi~ week's Kid Scoop
ALARMS
storjes and activities.
. DALMATIAN
T S U P E F R P B S
BATIERIES
S C S ME L L AM S
SLOGAN
L T A N I E T 0 F L
FLOOR
STAIRS
0 S E F H T K S 0 S
FIRE
G u· E .A E E M U F R
SAFELY
A D R RM R D E R I
LOUD
NAITAMLADA
STEAM
BEFLLASTET '
DUST
HELP
· SRABYLEFAS
SMELL
Standards Link: letter sequencing. Recognizing identical
. FACT
words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling panems.

'

111
. .1.1!(11

Lotteries
.
.

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Love's 3rd grade class
Roosev~lt Elen,entary
Point Pleasant. WV

Slandards Link: Health and Safety: Students understand and practice safe behaviors to avoid injury by fire.

----"""'-----··--111!!-!11

· - - -...

Smoke Alarm Safety Sticker

POMEROY
The
bridge located in Lebonan ·
Township
on
Sharon
l{ollow Road (Township ·
Road 134), three quarters
:of a mile north of Ohio
Route 124, will be closed
during
the
day · on, ,
Wednesday for needed
repair.
'
It will be open for the
school bus and that night,
according to a spokesman
of the Meigs ' County
Highway Garage.
•

Jividen's Power Equipment

How many differences can you spot?

Are trucks from Pomeroy, Middleport, c'hester, Bashan and Rutland followed a parade
route through Middleport as part of a National Fire Preventton Week, WhiCh began
Monday. (Brian J. Reed)
•

Fire·truck ·parade
,reminder of.fir~ safety
National
Fire
Prevention
Week

· Hober Clinic

Veu1h•n's supermarket
Middleport. OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Struble's 3rd grade da5s
Southern Elementary
Mi~dleport. OH

iinage and'make

Long ago when horses pulled fire trucks, dalmatian dogs
were used to help guide the horses through busy streets.
· Dalmatians have. long been known for their ability to
2:_n? well with horses. Today, horses no longer pull fire
~s.. but the
· . .
dalmatian has
cpntinued to
be the
firefighters'
mascot.

Patricia Karr Carsey, 72
Hattie L. Ridgway, 68 ·
Earl R. Cremeans, 60
Frank Jackson, 51
. Anita Marie Harless, 46
Det.lls, Al

Holzer Clinic
Gallipoli!!o, OH
Spon sors of:· Sheila Bevins' 3rd grade di'lss
Middleport Elementary
Middleport, OH

Middleport, OH
Sponsors of:· Sandy .Needs' 3rd grade class
Eastern Elementary
Middleport, OH

... '

A smoke alarm
makes a VERY
loud beeping noise
to warn you .that a
fire has started .

..

4

V.u1h1111'5 Supermark.._

•

Standards-Link:

Giants beat Braves, B1

Buckeye Rural Electric co-op·

brand new ones at least' ,
oncea'year.
'
'

Bv CHARLENE HOEFliCH
News editor

Tola!l &amp; Toler
lnsur•nce Services
Gal lipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Perry's 3rd grade class
Rio Grande Elementary
·
Rio 'Grande, OH

Gallipolis, OH
~ponsors of: Sandra Walker's 3rd grade class
Pomeroy Elementary
Pomeroy, Ohio

~ Replace:oJd batteries with ...
'

Cheshire, OH
,
Sponsors of: Ms. Crum's 3rd grade class
Addavilll'! El ementary
Addison, oH

Skyline

OHIO
Pick 3: 2-3-2

lnvesbnt~nts

Gallipolis, Ohio
•
Sponsors of: Mrs. Sara Spurlock's 3rd grade class •
Vinton Elementary·
'
Vinton, OH
·

I R Morrison &amp; Assocl•te•
Ciollipolis, Ohio
·
Sponsors of: Mrs. Fellure's 3rd grade class
Hannan Trace Elementary
Mercerville, OH
•
Jhflcl•n's Po]lller Equlpmai'lt ·
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Juila Vaughan' s 3rd arade class
Rutland Elementary
Rutland, OH

Pick 4: 8-1-8-6
IJuckeye 5: 15-24-26-31-37
Pick 3 night: o!3-9
Pick 4 night: 4-7-6-1

W.VA.
"

,_

Daily 3: 1·4·4

· Daily 4: 3-5-6-0
q.sl125: 4-5-10·12-18-20

.Index

Leqn Corporation
Letart, OH
Sponsors of: A 3rd grade clasS
Beale Elementary
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

· 1 Sedlons - 11 Pllps

Women's Ba1ketball Te•m
Unlv•rslty of Rio Grande
Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of : MrS. Price's 3rd grade class
Washington Elementary
Gallipolis, OH
Ohio Valler Tech Prep
Ga llipolis, bH
Sponsors of : Mrs. Saunders' 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

•

Ohio Valier Tech Prep ·
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: M rs. Short's 3rd grade class
Addavllle Ele'm entary
Addaville, OH

Calendar
Classifieds
tomics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies •
· Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
83-5
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
81·3
A2

· c ·2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

MIDDLEPORT A
parade of fire trucks from
Middleport,
Pomeroy,
Chester, Bashan and
Rutland hit tlie streets of
Middleport
Monday
evening to emphasize
National Fire Prevention
· week.
The tankers, ladder
trucks and other fire vehicles ran the traditional
parade route from Ash' to
Hud son streets, loaded
with volunteer firefight-

=:.....

the courtroom, and each one.
· will have poster listing the
:.:::::.::.==-- - - - - - names of families on which
CHESTER _ A genealogy they have information to s~are.
Someone conung m will be
fair to assist residents in getting able to check the posters for
started on tracing their family
d
'gh t
roots will be held at the restored family names an go n t 0
the place most likely to have
1823 Chester Courthouse from what they need. Copies can be
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. made right there, tither on
19
R.esearchers from Meigs. paper or disk for a nornmal fee.
Gallia and Athens counties will
'This· -is a place w~ere you
be available to help those who can really learn the bastes about
are J. ust getting started on their research and get all the ?,tateri!Jl
you need to start,
satd ·
·
llenealogy and to share what Blackwood.
mformation they have already
Food will be available for
· ht
t to
nd
compiled.
h
In addition to the 10 or so those w 0 nug wan
spe
· · several hours.
· vendors, the Pomeroy Dtstnct
"The Chester Courthouse is a
Library will· have a table of center for genealogy research,"
infonnation, as will the Latter said Fick, who noted that there
Day Saints Library of are all kinds of historical
records there for use by the pubParkersburg, W.Va.
An emphasis will be on
,
. be .
h
t0
lie . .
. teachmg gmners ow
go
She said they are currently
on-line_and search·for iTormarda- collecting familfi histories to
uon they need. to move
10rw
. 1 d · th 00 lecu·on
th · 'f
'l mcu
em e
.
. on construcung etr · amt_Y
The co.urthouse is open all
~bank of computers wtlf~ dafon. ~oridays and Saturdays,
.·
.
·. . -b -t M . •OUpeclal appomunents can be- - - \
- a'l'llt~le-. . . , ,, .~ , ,.Y-; · se ' made ·by calllilg Fick at 985- · : : 1
·~g. -· h"t ' ~•- learn 4115 or Mary · Powell at 992- · · • .
· "Seeing w a . yo~ ""'' '
·
2622.
about your, fanuly from. someJn addition to research mateone el~ ~~what thts f3lr ts all rials. they offer laminating,
about. srnd Kay Ftck, who binding and copies of color
along .wtth Lloyd Blackwood photos on photographic paper
co-chrurs the event.
fi
II ,
Tables will be set up around or a sma ..,J;;e.

a

POMEROY FIRE TRUCK

ers, to promote the idea o.f
home fire safety.
Fire departments nationwide are using the obser·
vance to remind homeowners . and families of
potential fire risks and
how to reduce the risk of

fires
in
the · home.
Installing smoke alarms
and replacing thei.r batteries and tnspecttng the
home for fire risks are
recommended this week
by the National J;ire
Prevention Association.

'

State, officials dedicate
new fishing access area
_______

Staff report
=~.:_

The ceremony was high- lane concrete boat launchlighted by speeches from ing ramp ~ith. fixed tie-up
several ODNR and federa l docks , ltghttng, paved
CROWN CITY - State wildlife officials.
parking for 75 cars and
and federal offiCials dediThe state purchased and trailers, and car-only parkcated the K.H. Butler developed the site along ing spaces.
Fishing
Access
Area Ohib Route 7, abou_t l 0
The
project
was
. Monday. offering boaters miles south of Gallipolis. designed
to
improve
improved access to the in a cooperative effort access for individuals with
Ohio River and fishing between ODNR Division mobility
impairments.
opportunities.
.
of Watercraft with the U.S. These features include an
"This proJect provtdes a Fish and Wildlife Service accessible lo·a ding area,
new public boat launching through the Federal Aid in open relief curbs, desigsite in an area where boat- Sport Fish Re storation nated parking spaces and
ing access facilities have Program, also known as placement of portable
been limited," said Jim the Dingle-Johnson Fund. latrines .
The total cost for land
The state Division of
Marshall, district manager
of Ohio Department of acquisition, consultati~n~ Wildlife will op.erate and
Natural
Resources' and construction of thts matntam the st te ustng
facility was $2.07 million, monies generated from the
Division of Wildlife.
Boat tours of the site 'and including $1 million from Motorboat Fu.el. Tax Fund
the river by ODNR and the state 's Waterways and rrom. OhiO s licensed
U.S. Fish and Wildlife. Safety F11nd adm.inistered anglers and hunters, as
Dtvtswn
of part of a statewtde comthe
Service staff preceded the by
Watercraft.
mitment to improve motor·
dedication ceremony and
The site features a three- boat access tn Oh1o ..
were conducted afterward.

Kay Fick, left, and Lloyd Blackwood prepare some materials in
preparation for an Oct. 19 genealogy fw to be held at the
Chester Courthouse. Joyce Bowen, doing some research there
Monday, watches as material are laminated . (Charlene
Hoeflich)

Bush makes
case against Iraq
'

CINCINNATI (AP) - ·
President Bush sold his plan
for action against Iraq to an
audience of area civic leader~
that needed little convincing.
Meanwhile, anti--war protesters filled the streets out. side and briefly blocked traffic as audience members left
Monday night. .
Bush told 800 invited
guests. "Saddam . Hus&gt;ein
must disarm himself or for the
sake of peace we will lead a
co-alition to disarm him." He

received a two-minute ovation when he finished his 29·
minute speech in a former
railroad terminal turned
museum.
"This is Bush country," said
Daniel Deters, brother of state
Treasurer Joe Deters and a
political consultant for the ·
Republican Party, which has
many ties in Cincinnati, Gov.
Bob Taft's hometown.
"It's imperative the U.S .

Please see a ·ush, Al

--------------------~------------,

National Heallhcare
Foocl Services

Gallipolis,
OHTech Prep
Ohio vaDer
SpQnsors of: lou Ann Shawver's 3rd grade class
Grl!en Elementary
Gallipoli s, OH

Melp County .·Economic: Development Office
Pomeroy, OH
Sponsors of: Marge Gibbs' 3rd grade class
Sali!&gt;bury Elementary
Pomeroy, OH

Use words from newspaper headlines
and ads to write a bumper sticker slogan
that reminds people to test their smoke
alarms each month:

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Deadline: Nov. 3, 2002
Published: Week of Dec. l , 2002
Send your story to:

.

Meigs County's Hometown Newspaper
M'ddl
I
epo rt. Pomeroy• Ohio

is October 6 • 12

Discover the Holzer Difference

Re•d•

Holzer Medical Center salutes O!)r ,

Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of:
Juila Vaugh11n' s 3rd sr11de
M indy Youns's 3rd srade
Marge Gibbs' ·!rd grade
Plus 9 additional
3rd grade classes

Sl.anderdl Link: Heahh: Students demonstrate an understanding 1
of practices that prevent injury.
· :

Nutrition .Services Department during
their special week. ,

· For more information on becoming a classroom sponsor, contact Den Dickerson at (740) 446-2342
. ~.

'

.,

,.

. .,. -

· ~;.: www.holzer.org

---•

(

.,

�. ...

•o
·
Ohl

The Daily Sentinel

Page A2
Tuesd.y. october a. 2001

Protest planned during.Bush visit

Ohio weather
Wedneedey, Oct. 9

I Mana11tld

•

144'/17'

CINCINNATI (AP) - Anti-war protesters were hoping Preside.nt Bush
would at least see them on his way to a
former railroad terminal where he is to
give a rare evening speech to the
nation on ·Iraq.
Police said protesters would be kept
several blocks away Monday from
Union Terminal near downto'wn.
Sister Alice Gerdeman , a Roman
Catholic nun and coordinator of the
Intercommunity Justice and ' Peace
Center in Cincinnati, was organizing a
protest at a rark several blocks east of
the termina where she said at least
several hundred were expected.
Gerdeman said Bush has failed to
explain why he thinks Iraq is.a potent
threat to the United States.
·
"I'm basically a pacifist and I d(Jn't
think war is the answer," she said .

I •·

ol Columbut 145' 174' I

W. VA.

Aides say the president will offer his
most comprehensive case yet on the
threat posed by Iraq, and why a U.S.led war on Saddam Hussein's regime
may be necessary. At least 700 invited
guests are expected to attend.
·
The speech comes as Congress prepares to vote on resolutions authorizmg. force against Iraq. A vote in the
Republican-controlled House
is
.expected Wednesday or Thursday; a
vote in the Democratic-led Senate
should come by next week. .
Carpenters, electricians and others at
the 1930s-vintage, art deco terminal
were busy making last-minute preparations ·in the building's massive,
columned lobby. Rows of folding
chairs had been arran~ed across the
lobby floor. The buil&lt;lmg houses the
Cincinnati llistoric·a) Society and the

KY.

Cincinnati Museum of Natural History.
In Cincinnati, Bush has benefited
from a politically friendly environment.
The city for decades has provided
generous financial
support to
Republican candidates and officeholders.
Ohio's two senators, Mike DeWine
and
George
Voinovich , · are
Republicans, as are House membets
Steve Chabot and Rob Portman, whose
districts split the Cincinnati metropoli-.
tan area.
Greg Harris, a Democrat running·
against Chabot in Ohio '·s I st
Congressional District, saip he sees ~o
need to declare war on Iraq. He satd
Monday that there is a better way to
eliminate or contain Iraq's amassing of
chemical or biological weap_ons.

'

\) ~ ---. ~-·--·

Swmy Pt &lt;lcudy

Ckludy

SllowM T4101m1

Roln

........

Snow

~'A

war!hero

Company charged in
nursing home aeaths
agrees to changes

k&gt;e

Mostly sunny today·
Weather Forecast
Today...Mostly . sunny.
Highs in ' the mid 60s. East
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight ... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s. Light
southeast winds.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday... Partly sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s. Light
and variable winds.
Wednesday night .. .Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
40s.
ThursdiJy... Partly cloudy

.

with a slight chance of ra{n.
Highs in the lower 70s. ·
Thursday nighi. .. Mostly
cloudy with a chance of rain.
Lows near 50. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Friday...Mostly cloudy with
a chance of rain. Highs in .the
lower 70s.
Saturday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs in the.mid 70s.
·
cloudy.
Sunday...Partly
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs.in the mid 70s.

Oct. 7, 2002

12,000

Dow Jones
Industrials

11,000

XENIA, Ohio (AP) - A ing home, where a maintenance
home
company worker mistakenly hooked it up
nursing
charged. in residents' deaths to the home's oxygen system.
after a nitrogen tank was mis- The tank had an oxygen I&lt;~bel
takenly hooked up to their oxy- partially covered by a smaller
gen system agreed Monday to nitrogen label, authorities said.
make changes in its operations,
The four residents, who had
averting a trial.
been on an oxygen system in
Integrated Health Services one wing of the 84-bed nursing
Inc., based in Sparks, Md., home, died of nitrogen asphyxpleaded guilty to four counts of iation. . They were: · Darla
involuntary
manslaughter Reynolds, 53, of Springfield;
before visiting. Judge William Pauline
Tays,
70,
of
MacMillan in Greene County Englewood; Helen Tomlin, 76,
Common Pleas Court.
of Spring Valley; and Betty
However, as 'part of an agree- Mickey, 77. of Bellbrook.
ment betWeen prosecutors and . On May 23, MacMillan' disthe company, MacMillan didn't missed four counts of reckless
accept the plea. Instead, he homicide against Bot Gases
ordered the company into a Inc. of Murray Hill, N.J., which
three-year program requiring supplied the gases.
certain changes in the operation
MacMillan ruled in the midof its nursing homes.
die of the trial that there was no
If the company completes the evidence BOC intended to
program, it won't be convicted. deliver nitrogen to the nursing
However, MacMillan fined home or that BOC managers
the company $60,000, the max- were aware of the delivery.
imum penalty.
On March 15, a state. law
Four residents died in went into effect requiring med•
December 2000 at Carriage-by- ical gas tanks to be clearly
the-Lake nursing home in near- labeled with colors correspondby Bellbrook, about 10 miles ing to tht&lt; types of gases m the
southeast of Dayton.
tanks. The law also reqwres .
Authorities said a nitrogen . that tank handlers be trained oh
tank was delivered to the nurs- installation.
·

10,000

7,422.84

P&lt;X-....Irom,..,.,...

9,000

·1.40

Low
7,422.84
7,404.94
Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14,2000
High

8.000

OCT ·

7,000
2,000 .
1,800
1,600

1'

Pet. chango

High

m

·1.80

1,146.71

1...00

pt'IYiota

Low
1,113.38

1,200

Record high: 5,048.12
Ma"" 10, 2000

1,000

Oct. 7,2002

1,200

Standard&amp;
Poor's500

1,100

1,000

78,5.28

1100

Pet. c:hangt fn&gt;m p!Wiouo

High

·1.91

808.21

800

Low
782.88

Rtcorcl high: 1,527.48
JUL

March 24, 2000

AUG

SEP

700

OCT
AP

.

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
University of Akron student
convicted of raping another
student should be released
from prison or retried because
his rights were violated at his
first trial, a federal appeals
court ruled Monday.
Nathaniel M. Lewis, 25, was
denied his constitutional right
to confront a witness when a
Summit County Common
Pleas Court judge said he
couldn't use a passage from
the woman's diary to support

his claim that they had consensual sex, the 6th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled.
The ruling by appeals judges
George
Steeh,
Alice
·Batch~lder and Danny ·Boggs
reverses a federal judge's
Ma,rch 2000 ruling against
Lewis.
If the state doesn't retry
Lewis, he could be released
from prison where he has
· served five years .of his eightyear sentence.
Ohio Attorney General Betty

Montgo~ery will decide later
whether to appeal, said her
spokesman, Joe Case.
. Prosecutors said the rape
occurred Oct. 12, 1996, in the
woman's dormitory room.
Defense lawyers said that.
prior to the 1997 triill, someone anonymously mailed
Lewis excerpts copied from
the woman's diary. The trial
judge ruled that Ohio's rape
shield law prevented use of
part of the diary passages as
evidence.

The appeals court agreed ·
that the excluded passage
could have involved the issue
of whether the woman consented to sex and a possible
motive for her to pursue
charges against Lewis.
The excluded passage read:
"I'm sick of myself for giving
in to. them (men).· I'm not a
nympho like all those guys
lhink. I'm just uot strong'
enough to say !JO to them. I'm
tired of being a whore. This is
_Y(he~.it ends."

Local Stocks
AEP-24.51
Arch Coal- 15.68
Akzo-32.44
AmTech/SBC - 21 .03
Ashland Inc.- 24.70
AT&amp;T- 11 .33
Bank One- 32.69
BLI- 12.45 .
Bob Evans- 23.21
BorgWarner - 43o85
Champion - 2.25
Charming Shops- 5.35
Ci1y Holding - 23.61
Col-'21.70
DG - 12.49

DuPont- 37.30
Federal Mogul-- .51
USB- 16.50
Gannett - 66.62
General Electrtc-22.95
GKNLY-3.70
Harley Oavlclleln --46.25
Kmart-.. 41
Kroger - 12.83
Ltd.- 12.90
NSC-·19.97
Oek Hm Flnandal- 21.65
OVB-21
BBT-31 .2l!
Peoples - 23185

Pepsico - 35.78
Premier - 6.12
Rockwell - 15.50
Rocky Boots- 4.99
RD Shell- 41 .23
Sears- 3g.25
Wai·Mart- 50.35
Wendy's - 34.25
Worthington- 18.91
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes o! the previous
day's transactions, pro·
vlded by Sml1h Partners
at Advest Inc.

~ree volunteer fire~ghters among

f1ve men charged w1th arson .

•

Appeals court: Inmate should be released or retried .

•

IRONTON (AP) - Five
Lawrence County men, three
of them volunteer firefighters,
have been charged with arson
for allegedly torching bales of
hay in a field .
Lawrence
County
Prosecutor J.B . Collier .said
incident
occurred
last
· Wednesday and tile men have
been charged with fourthdegree felonies which carry a
maximum penalty of 18
montbs in prison, . plus a
$5,000 fine and restitution .
Collier said the men have
·.not been arre~ted , but will•

receive a summons to appear
in Lawrence County Common
Pleas C0urt. A court date has
not been set.
He identified them as To!Jy
Townsend,
18;
Jeffrey
Blakeman, 21; and Charlie
Adams, 23, all of Willow
Wood and all Aid Township
volunteer firefighters; Randy
Stanley, 19, of Patriot, and
Michael Adams, 21, of
Willow Wood.
It wasn't kno~ what might
have motivated the setting of
l
the hay bales on fire .

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
I

----

·~--- ----·-·- ·

__

,

________.:__

Ohio counties·monitor new.records of summer smog
Ohio counties monitoring· The number of high:smog tions.
ly could lead to restrictions
air quality recorded a record readings shows that"t)re' levc~ - . ·. The new regulations limit on industries and a loss of
amount of smog this summer, of pollutants that are creating ozone to 0.08 parts per mil- federal highway money.
according to a' study of Ohio · ozone are not .decreasing, lion instead of 0.12 parts per
Ohio EPA spokeswoman ·
Environmental Protection Waltzer said. ·
million and ·requires ozone Heidi Griesmer said state
Agency data. ·
Franklin , Geauga, and levels to be averaged over an officials were aware before
The 32 rural and urban . Ashtabula counties had the eight-hour period instead of that big cities in Ohio would
counties with ozone monitors most violati~n~, each ~oing the curr~nl one-hour period. not meet the new standards.
exceeded the federal limit over the hmtt 27 times.
If Ohto falls to meet air
575 times - the most since Preble had the least with 11. quality standards, it eventtJal~
the state began collecting
Communities across the
data in 1995. The previous state suffered from unhealthy ~------ CLY'O(, t IA'tiiE · - - - - - - .
high was in 1998 with 478 air for 46 days during the
·readin.g• ·that were over the summer, . the study said.
E~ATICI4 16 A
Get EDUCA"~'EDI
limit. .,...
Ozone buildups can hurt 1'lOCt66 TIIAT tiTIIEl B
1\ I
The higher ratings were asthma sufferers and others NE.VE'R B.E.GINS... ring ANY INSURANCE
brought on, in part, by the with chronic respiratory ailQUESTION US!
hotter summer. Ozone is ments.
•
d b
·
·d
"Ozone smog is no longer
.orme
Y mtrogen OXI es J.ust a big city issue,'' said
and organic compounds in
the presence of intense sun- Molly Fontana, a spokes- 01
Downing Childs Mullen
light and heat.
woman for the lung associa- N'I:""'D
Musser Insurance
~~
~ys
s
The two groups that
Waltzer said the results E.N'OSI
eat econd L • Pomeroy
released the study - the mean that all of Ohio's urban , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;9~9:2~·3:3;:8:.~t
.1---~
American Lung Association
of Ohio and the Ohio areas are likely to be · ··rtxl~u:z:xu:t:z:li:z:J:u%.!:rn!IJ~gl!;rn~~ll;ma.il
Environmental Council - declared out of compliance ''
in two years when the federsay the results show that 1
· 1
more must. be done to con trol a government tmp ements
2FREEnCms
new ozone regulations in
Iaiiie
pollutants from power plants 2004 that will be based on
SPRINB VAllEY
and diesel engines.
three-year averages.· . ,
"One thing you can't conThe U.S. EPA changed the
CINEMAJ
trol is the weather," Kurt federal ozone limit in 1997
FINO YOUR NAME IN
•
Waltzer, an air quality spe- but it - wasn' t enforced
TODAY'$ CLASSIFIED
cialist with . the · Ohio because states including
SECTION AND W.INI I
Environmental Council, said Ohio fou ght against it. In
Monday. "What we can do is 2000 the U. S. Supreme Court
control the pollutants that are upheld. the new ozone regulatDtn:n:n::z:r.m:n:n:n:m:n::n:rr.a:m:n::n:rr.mn:l
going into the/ ~tmosphere. "

tO

.

.Tuesday, October 8.- 2002

www.mvdallysentinel.com

Obituaries

The Da ity Sentinel • Pagi:-A 3

Local Briefs

Patrida Karr
Carsey

Anita graduated frorv Jefferson; one brother-in-law,
Hocking College with a Chuck Lipscomb; sisters-indegree in nursing ard law, Brenda{Bob) Blackston,
received the Joyce Smith and Joann (Jack) Cullen ; and
UPPER ARLINGTON
Award in 1993. She retired several nieces and nephews.
Patricia Karr Carsey, 72, of from
Gallipolis
He was preceded m death
Upper Arlington, formerly of Developmental Center in by his parents; one sister,
Mason, West Virginia, died 200 I due to her illness.
Carol Dixon JackSon ; and his
Saturday, October 5, 2002, at · In addition to her mother, father-in-law,
Thomas
Arl ington Court Nursing Media Schoonover, she is Lip;omb.
Center in Upper Arlington.
survived by her ex-husband
Visitations will be 2 to 4
· She was born December of 28 years, Billy Edward p-.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday,
25, 1929, in Charleston, West · Harless Jr. of Wilkesville ; October 8, 2002, at White
Virginia, daughter of the late three children, · Heather Funeral Home in Coolville
'Irving Karr Jr. and Virginia Harless of Wilkesville, Billy and Wednesday, October 9,
Hodge Karr.
(Sandra) Harless Jr. of 2002, at Leavitt Funeral
· She was a graduate of Vinton, and Vanessa (Allen) Home in Parkersburg.
:Pomeroy High School, and Smith of Wilkesville; grandServices will be 11 a.m.
«ttended Western College for children, Jacob Lambert, Thursday, Octg_ber 10, 2002,
Women at Oxford, Ohio, and Brooklyn
and
Bradly at the Leavitt ~neral Home,
Ohio University.
Harless, and Justin and Seventh Street, Parkersburg,
·· She was a. member of Phi Matthew Smith.
with Bishop Kenneth L. Price
B eta Phi sorority.
Also surviving are two sis- officiating. Burial will be in
She is survived by two ters, Rita (Lawrence) Tabor the Jackson Family plot at
daughters, Mary E.. Carsey of Evanston, Indiana, and Riverview
Cemetery,
and Sarah (Dr. Steven S.) Terra (Greg) Fields of Parkersburg.
Carsey Walker, ·and grand- Wilkesville; nieces and
- Paid notice
children, Kelly Elizabeth nephews. Chelsea and Robert
Walker and Robert lsom Tabor, arid Randi and Taylor
Walker, all of Upper · Fields; and several aunts,
Arlington; and two nieces, uncles, cousins and good
Qarbara
Morgan
of friends.
Charleston, and Jane Grady
She was preceded in death
POMEROY - Hattie L.
of Cross Lanes. West by her father, Charles Ridgway, 68, of Pomeroy,
Virginia.
Fletcher Welch, on December died Sunday, October 6,
In addition to her parents, 19, 1969; her special father, 2002, at University Hospital
she was preceded in death by Charles A. Schoonover; fra- in Cincinnati, following a
her husband, Fred R. Carsey, lema! grandparents, Fletcher sudden illness.
.D.D.S., in 1994.
R. and Anna Hager Welch;
She was born June 8, 1934,
Graveside services .· were and maternal grandparents. at "down on the farm"
~; onducted at I :30 p.m. today, James "Bud" Deweese and Blockhouse Bottom in East
Tuesday, October 8, 2002, m Fannie J. Runnion Deweese. Point, Kentucky, to the late
Evergreen Cemetery in
Services will be 11 a.m. Wilbur T. Webb and the late
Letart,
West
Virginia. Thursday, October 10, 2002, Opal Cunningham Webb.
Visitation was held from II in Vinton Baptist Church,
She was an active member
.;,t. m. until I p.m. today, with the Rev. Dale .Geiser Jr. of the St. Paul Lutheran
.Tuesday, October 8, 2002, at . officiating. Interment will be Church in Pomeroy. She was
.Fishe·r Funeral Home · in in Vinton Memorial Park. retired from the Gavin
.Pomeroy.
Friends. may call at McCoy- · Electric Plant in Cheshire.
·. Memorial contributions Moore Funeral Home m
She is survived by her husmay be made to the Meigs Vinton from 10 a.m. until band, :ferry L. Reiber of
County Public Libraries, 216 · noon and 7 to 9 p.m. Pomeroy; daughter and sonWest Main Street, Pomeroy, Wednesday, October 9, 2002. in-law, Diana and Tim
Ohio 45769.
Pallbearers
will · be Wamsley of Rutland; son,
- Paid notice Lawrence Tabor, Greg Fields, Jeff Ridgway of Pomeroy;
!lilly McQuaid Jr., Tirn son, Dave Ridgway of
Wr.att, Lucas Well and Joe Pomeroy; daughter and sonWilcoxen.
.
in-law, Mary and John
- Paid notice Hoffman of Clifton, West
Virginia; stepchildren, Vince
'.
VINTON - Anita Marie
and (Tonia) Reiber of Racine,
and Je'ssie Reiber of Palatka,
Welch Harless. 46, of Vinton,
Lo. v i n g
Florida.
Also surv.iving are grandwife. mothCOOLVILLE
·Frank
children,
Adam Jenkins,
er
and
Jac'kson,
51,
of
Shannon
and
(Kevin) Ihle,
Downey
grand moth-.
Coolville, ·passed away Jacob
Ridgway,
Noni
er, went to
Saturday, October 5, 2002.
Hoffman, Mike Davis, Cody
be with our
He was born December 4, Ridgway, Mina Hoffman,
ijeavenly
1950,
in Parkersburg, West Hannah Ridgway, Terri
F a ther
Virginia. He' was the son of Reiber and Alisha Recamier;
Monday,
the late William Willard and sisters, Nancy and (Glenn)
·October 7,
Caroline Downey Jackson of Douglas of Reedsville, JUdy
2002, fol.
and (Pete) Lewis of Colonial
lowing a courageous l:!attle Parkersburg.
. He is survived by his wife Heights, Virginia, and Mary
with kidney cancer.
: She was born February 18, of 26 years, Peggy Lipscomb · Jane · and (Jim) Gress of
•- 1'956, in Pomeroy, daughter Jackson; his son and daugh- Letart, West Vrrginia.
Services will ·be 1 p.m.
of Media Deweese Welch ter-in-law, Sgt. John M. and
Karle
Montie
Jackson;
his
Thursday,
October 10, 2002,
Schoonover of Wilkesville,
and the.late Charles F. Welch . son, Spc. Jacob William in St. Paul Lutheran Church
She. was a member of the Jackson, and one daughter, in Pomeroy, with Pastor Jim
Brady officiating. Friends
Community
Christian Jessica Anne Jackson.
He
is
also
survived
by
his
may call at Anderson Funeral
Fellowship
Church
of
in-laws,
Edna
(Carl) Home in New Haven, West
Gallipolis.
Virginia, from 6 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday, October 9, 2002.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorial
contributions be made to St.
Paul
Lutheran
Church
Sunday School, 231 East
Reader Services
. (USPs 213-960)
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publlahfng Co.
Second Street, Pomeroy,
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every
afternoon,
Ohio 45769, with proceeds to
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at
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,www.mydallysentinel.com
Wednesday.
•

HattieL

Ridgway

License issued

•

Not singing

EMS runs

POMEROY - A marriage
POME RO Y - Due to illPOMEROY - Units of
.license has been issued in ness, Junior and Rita White Meigs Emergency Services
M~i gs County Probate Court wil not be entertaining at the answered the fo llowing calls
to Tyson Kenneth Buckley, Seni or Citi zens Center for ~ssi st a nc e Monday:
24, Middleport, and Rebecca Thursday evening.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
• Mae
Johnson. · · 2 1,
8:49 a.m.. Second · Street.
Middleport.
Bobby M(:Conaha. treated:
10:26 a.m.. Ohio Roul e
. MID DLEPORT
681 . Barb Sargent . lreated;
Revival services will be held
10:52 a.m.• Pagev ille, Ann
at the Wesleyan · Bible Quivey, treated;
Holi ness Churc h on Pearl
1: 12 p.m.. Laurel Cliff,
Street
in
Middleport
.
7:30
Emma Fox. Holzer Medi cal
RACINE
Raci ne
p.m.
ton
ight
through
Center;
Volunteer Fire Department
3:02 p.m. , Fifth Street.
will be having a chicken bar- Saturday. and 7 p.m. on
Sunday.
Evangelist
will
be
Tony
Sha mbli n. Holzer;
becue. Sunday at the fireVernon
Shock
ley
of
5:41
p.m.. Brownell
··· house. The Ladies Auxiliary
Crestwood.
Ky.
Public
invi
t'Avenue,
Patricia
McHaffie,
will be selling desserts.
ed.
Plea sant Valley Hospital;
9:34 p.m., New Lima
Road, Virginia McLelland,
Pleasant Valley.
MARIETTA
Area
MIDDLEPORT
Agency on Aging Regional
11:58 a.m.. Vi llage Manor.
RACINE - A white ele- Advisory Council will meet auio fire. Annette Sherman ,
phant auction will be held 5 at 10 a.m. Friday, Oct. 11 at owner.
p.m.. Saturday. the Mount St. Mary 's Catholic Church
POM EROY
M_o nah Church of God, M1le . in Marietta. The meeting is
8:45 a. m., Second Street.
Htll Road, Racme.
· open to the public.
auto . fire, Diane Milliron .

Revival planned

Chicken

barbecue

Auction
planned

Aging agency

owner.

Southern homecoming
Amy Lee was
crowned
Southern 's
Homeco ming
Queen during a
rai ny halftim e
Friday by last
year's queen,
Lindey Smith .
(Carrie Wood)

Anita Marie
. Harless

Frank Downey
Jackson

The Daily Sentinel

Deaths
Eart R. Cremeans

w

•WIN•

.

THI

Bush
from Page AI
Congress give the president
its strong endorsement," said
John Dyess, 48, a United ·
Way vice president for financial resources· deyelopment.
"The nation needs to be unified when undertakin~: something as serious as thts."
Bush said Hussein is a
"murderous tyr&lt;~nt" who'lllay
be plotting to attack the
United States with biological
and chemi\:al weapons.
Outside, more than 1.000
protesters marched from a
park to the terminal now
known as the Cincinnati
Museum Center. Many carried signs with slogans such
as: "War is a failure of government" and some chanted,
"If we attack Iraq, we create
more enemies.".
"We 've become cowards,"
said David Miller, 53, of
Loveland, speaking with
tears in his eyes from the bed
of a pickup in the park .
"We' re so afraid of what
might happen we're resorting to war. ... I'm not going
to protect my family with
bombs."
Barricades, police on
horseback and about two
dozen ·uniformed officers
standing shoulder-to-shoulder. kept protesters a few
hundred yards away from the
terminal. The somber crowd
packed sidewalks and a
highway ovelllass, spilling
into the street leading to the
terminal.
One man who laid down in
front of a police cruiser was
handcuffed and led away" by
officers, police spokesman
Lt. Kurt Byrd said. The
man's identity was not avail-

Pres ide nt Bush is seen in this image from television address- ·
ing the nation from Cincinnati. Bu sh t raveled to Cincinnati to
address the nation on Iraq. As Congre ss prepares for an historic vote on a resolution on Iraq, Bush is seeki ng to provide
a comprehens ive · as sess ment of the threat Saddam
Hussei n's regime poses to the security of the US and the
world. (AP)
able. At least fi ve people one of twq Benedictine
were taken in to custody, and monks shaking protesters·
Byrd said they likely would hands as they passed. said he
be charged with di sorderly · hopes the nation's leaders get
the · · m e~s age that many
conduct.
The Rev. Jeff Scheeler, 50, oppose force.

'""~~

6:45,9:45
7:00,9:40

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES

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A Physician Specializing In Gastroenterology
• Address:
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• APPointments:
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••

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�:

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel
•

_Jb_e~Da_ily;;....._s_en_tin_e_I----=B=-y the ·Ben

PageA4
TUesdiiJ, Cktaber I, 1002

•

The .Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

.Abby

Den Dickerson
Publisher
Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

DEAR ABBY: I have the
• same problem as "Troubled
Wife in Riverhead , N.Y. "
\Yhose husband refuses to
attend work- rel ated social
functions with her because
he doesn't feel comfortable
mingling.
My solution is to find a
co-worker who might not ·
ADVICE
bave a "date" either and go
with him o.r her. I have
found that, especially with may need- to be financially
people who have recently independent in the fUture. If
become single and are tenta· I were her. I'd set aside a
tive about facing social retirement and savings
functions alone, it is a wel- account of my own.
comed invitation. Should
She doesn't really need a
anyone ask why my husband husband, as an accessory. A
is absent, I simply say, purse and shoes to match are
" ' Betty ' and I decided to sufficient. FEMALE
make it a girls' night out" PH.D., SAN PEDRO,
and leave it at that., CALIF.
SOLVED MY SOCIAL
DEAR FEMALE Ph.D:
DILEMMA,
EASLEY, Now, now! But you're right
S.C.
- in the business climate of
DEAR SOLVED: Way to 2002, it's no longer mandago! An added balms is that tory that a woman be joined
you don't have to worry at the hip with her spouse.
about entertaining your
DEAR ABBY: I'm a procompanion, because he or . fessor of management at an
she already knows every- Ohio liberl\1 arts · college.
one. Read on:
For 15 years, 1 have given
· DEAR ABB": My hus- students a . writing assignband and I agreed a.. long ment that's ., virtually identi·
time ago that there would be cal to the issue raised by
things we would do solo in "Troubled Wife." My pur·
our married lives. We do not pose is to check for gender
attend
work functions bias. I give them all the
together. It saves me from same situation, but for half
having to worry whether he the class the working spouse
is enjoying himself, and I is a woman, and for the
can fully enjoy conversa- · other half, it's a man .
When I started doing this,
lions about work or .workrelated topics without ' feel- if the working spouse was a
ing guilty that . he's not man, about 60 percent, of my
involved, bored or uncom- students would say the Wife
{ortable. My husband is fun should be required to attend.
.to be with. I am ever- so- However, only 40 percent
proud to be with him -- just would require a husband to
not .every minute . - SUE attend hi s wife's business
IN ALDEN, N.Y.
. social events. .
Today the figure is closer
DEAR SUE: I'm pleased
you found a solution that to 50150. My current busiworks for both of you. ness students appear to be
However. not everyone is as indifferent to whether it is a
husband urg;ing his wife to
self-assured as you.
DEAR ABBY: "Troubled attend or vice versa.
I see this as progress . Wife" should leave her [msGLENN
BLAIR, MEDIband at · home as .you
NA,
OHIO
advised . . However, she
DEAR GLENN: So do 1. .
should recognize ·that he's
Dear Abby is written by
sabotaging her career. His
Abigail
· Van Buren, also
refusal to attend company
known
as
Jeanne Phillips,
parties is a not-so-subtle
and
was
found~
d by her
form of abuse that may
eventually make her eco- mother, Paulin~ Phillips.
Dear Abby at
nomfcally dependent on Write
www.DearAbby.com
or.P.O.
him.
Box
69440,
Los
Ar1geles,
CA
Her husband's economic
90069.
.
sabotage is a clue that . she

Dear

. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
•

Couples go separate ways
when attending work functions

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

Letrers to tire &lt;•ditor w :e .,·e/c ome. Tirey shoitldbe less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be
sigm~d and inrltuh• addreJs and relephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good ·
. wste. addressing iJsues. nat persmwNties.
The opin imrs expressed in ihe column below are the. con·
St'llS IIS of tire Ohio Valley Publishillg Co. s ediiOrial board.
tm ll·.~s othen l'i.'lt' nmed.

NATIONAL VIEW
•

•

•

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

D~mocrats

Hint of impropriety loses
crown for contestant

BY MORTON

• The Times Herald-Record, Middletown, N.Y., on the
Miss America pageant: The latest Miss America morality controve rsy has been resolved, not surprisingly, in the pageant's'
favor.
· .· ·
·
Baring your breasts in the privacy of your own home can be·
grounds for disqualification frpm the competition if a woman
is unlucky enough to have lousy taste in men. That's what
Mi ss America directors said, in effect, when they convinced
Rebekah Re vels to relinquish her crown as Miss North
Carolina:
Revels had the misfortune to have ~ former boyfriend who
hinted- hinted, mind- that he had topless photos of Revels
and that he might sell them for publication or posting on the
Internet.
Revels said the photos were snapped without her permission .
while .she was changing clothes. But faced with the Miss
America morality squad worrying that the image of their contest might be tarnished, she withdrew - . even though she had
done nothing immoral. Subsequent legal efforts to regain the
crown were rejected by a federal judge:
That gave the crown to first runner-up Misty Clymer....
. ... So exactly what kind of morality is it that purports to represent what is best for American women, yet penalizes an
apparently outstanding young woman for the despicable
actions of a slime of a man?

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE IISSOCIATED PRESS

·

Today is Tuesday, Oct. 8, the 281 st day of 2002. There are
84 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 8, 1871, the Great Chicago Fire erupted while
· another deadly blaze broke out in Peshtigo, Wis. ·
·
On this date:
In 1869, the 14th president of the United States, Franklin
Pierce, died in Concord, N.H.
In 1890, American aviation hero Eddie Rickenbacker was
born in Columbus, Ohio.
In 1892, Sergei Rachmaninoff first publicly performed his
piano ''Prelude inC-sharp Minor" in Moscow.
In 1918. Sgt. Alvin C. York almost single-handedly killed
25 German soldiers and captured 13 2 in the Argonne Forest in
France.
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann was indicted for murder in lhe
ctea.th of the infant son of Charles A. Lindbergh.
· .
In 1945, President Truman announced that the secret of the
atomic bomb would be shared only with Britain and Canada.
In 1956, Don La~sen pitched the only perfect. game in a
World Series to date as the New York Yankees beat the
• .
.
Brooklyn Dodgers, 2-0.
In 1970, Soviet author Alexander Solzhenitsyn was named
winner of the Nobel Prize for literature.
In 1982. all labor organii ations in Poland, including
Solidarity, were banned.
·
In 1985. the hijackers of the .Italian cruise ship Achille
Lauro killed American passenger Leon Klinghoffer.
Ten Y.ears ago: Iraqi police seized at gunpoint American
bomb d1sposal expert Chad Hall , who was working in a disputed and ill-defined border area between Iraq and Kuwait.
(He was released two day s later.) West Indian poet Derek
Walcott was named wmner of the Nobel Prize in literature.
Former West German Chancellor Willy Brandt died in Unkel
'
Germany. at age 78. _
Five years ago: Scientists reported the Mars Pathfinder had
yielded what could be the strongest evidence yet that Mars
might once have been hospitable to life. The House opened its
own set of hearings , on campaign fund -raising abuses.
Gueorgu1 Makharadze, a dtplomat from the Republic of
Georgia, pleaded guilty in Washington to charges stemming
from a car crash that killed Maryland teen-ager Joviarfne
Walttick.
One year ago: The United State.s pounded terrorist targets in
Afghanistan from the air for a second night. An SAS airliner
ta k it~ g off from Milan, Italy, hit a private jet, careened into an
ai rport bttilding and exploded, killing I I 8 people. Seventeen
Vi rg inians were killed when a di ve boat cap ~ ized during a hurri cane iR Belize. American Leland H. Hartwell and Britons R.
Timothy Hunt and Paul M. Nurse won the Nobel Prize in
medicine. Ru ssia's Kursk nuclear submarine was raised from
the Barents Sea floor more than a year after it sank. Radio
comm entator Ru sh Limbaugh told listeners he was virtually
deaf (Ltmbaugh later had an electronic device implanted in
his skull that restored much of hi s hearing).
f"
Today's Birthdays: Entertainment reporter Rona Barrett is
66. Actor Paul Hogan is 63. Rhythm-and-blues singer Fred
Cash (The Impressions) is 62. The Rev. Jesse Jackson is 61.
Comedi an Chevy Cha,e is 59. Author R.L. Stine is 59.
Co untry singer S usan Raye is 58. TV personality Sarah
Purcell is 54. Actress Si gourney Weaver is 53. Rhythm-andblues singe r Robert "Kool" Bell (Kool &amp; the Gang) is 52.
R o~k mus ician Johnny Ramone is 51.

.

look to fare well in off-year election

Kc!NDRACKE

The latest avalanche of polls off\!rs no
clarity at all about how the November
elections will turn out. President Bush's
popularity soarS, but Democrats hold a
slight edge on the generic Congressional
·
·
ballot.
The polls also show that "war" issues,
which favor Republicans, have been
ascendant in the public's mind in recent
weeks, but that voters say that "domestic" issues will decide their vote for
Congress.
..
There's no doubt that Iraq :Jl.Olicy has
been dominating the national news and
Washington debate. but it may be that
40l(k) losses and the costofJ?rescription
drUgs will dominate pre-elecllpn conversation at the kitchen table.
And on the confrontation with Iraq, the
polls show that substantial majorities
back Bush in favoring military action, but
that the J?Ublic sides with Democrats in
wanting 11 to be multilateral and preferably through the United Nations.
Republican pollster Bill Mcinturff;
· author of a usually predictive statistical
model linking censumer confidence, the
national mood, presidential popularity
and election outcomes, confesses that he
doesn't see a clear pattern now.
"Between discussion of the war and
concern about the economy," he told me,
"there are powerful forces at work overwhelming individual campaigns.
"I don't think that indivi~ual campaigns in most states have captured the
public's attention yet. You've got these
countervailing strong forces at work, so
it's hard for me to tell what this election
is going to be all about.''
Democratic pollster Mark Mellman
thinks that voters will end up casting their
ballots on the basis of domestic issuesparticularly if most Democrats back Bush
on the war - but he also thinks that
"hand-to-hand, district-by-district" combat will produce the narrowest of results.
In 12 polls conducted between Sept. 20
and the end of the month, Bush's overall
approval rating averaged 64.4 percent.
Only three presidents since World War II

have rated over 60 percent as they fought
off-year elections. reducing or elimimit·
ing traditional losses for their party.
In 1962. immediately after the Cuban
Missile Crisis, John F. Kennedy's
Democrats lost only one House seat and
gained three Senate seats.
In 1986, Ronal&amp; Reagan's Republicans
lost five House seats and eight Senate
seats and control of the chamber. And in
1998, Bill Clinton's Democrats picked up
four House seats and held even in the
Senate:
Several experts' race-by,race analyses
of this year 's election suggest that
Republicans will keep narrow control of
the House_and may pick up .the one seat
they need to control the Senate.
· .
On the other hand, in eight polls asking
whether voters favored Republican or
Democratic
House
candidates,
Democrats came out ahead in five - by
an average of 4 percent- and three polls
called it a tie.
,.
. .
While the polls show that the public
gives Bush high marks -. 70 percent
approval - for conductinj: the war on
terror and 60 percent for h1s Iraq policy,
.his performance on the economy averages just 52 percent.
The CBS/New York Times and Gallup
polls reported that. slight majorities in
mid-September believed that the economy was in good shape, but these were
taken before it became official that the
stock market had suffered its worst quarter losses since 1987.
Voters will shonly be getting thirdquarter40l(k) reports in the mail, which
should affect their notions of whether the
country is on the right or wrong track.
The public mood certainly is not
upbeat, with the Washington Post/ ABC
poll reporting the right-track number at
43 percent and the wrong-track number
at 53 percent. National Public Radio's
poll showed it at 44 percent to 41 percent.
. NPR's poll, conducted by the
Democratic firm Greenberg Quinlan
Rosner Research and Mcinturff's firm,
Public Opinion Strategies, found that, by
63 percent to 39 percent, voters plan to

base their Congressional vote on · domes~
tic issues rather than international ones.
The poll showed about an even prefer:
ence for a Republican supporting Bush·~
efforts to .eliminate Iraq's weapons of
mass destruction and a Democrat who
advised waiting to see how much support
he got from U.S. allies.
·
· .
Newsweek's poll last weekend showed
that, by 55 percent to 37 percent, voters
reject the Democratic argument that Bush
is using Iraq to distract attention from:
other issues.
..
·. ·
· At the same time, by 65 percent to 23
percent, they side with Democrats who
argue that federal workers in the new
Homeland Security Department should
·
'
keep their union statu5.
The Washington Post poll showed the
anomalous result that, while registereq
voters prefer Democrats by 46 percent to
42 percent (49 percent to 47 percen~
among likely voters), they say they prefer
the GOP to deal with the country's 'main
problem" by 46 percent to 39 percent.
The result may be explained by a 56
percent to 34 percem voter preference fo~
having Democrats in charge of Congress
to keep a check on Bush, as opposed to .
Republicans who'll help him accomplis!\
his agenda.
Voters in the poll don't buy the
Democratic argument that Bush is pri;;.
marily to blame for the weak economy-the Sept. II attacks and · the business .
cycle have more to do with it.
On the other hand, the poll showed -a
distinct preference for Democrats, 47
percent to 39 percent, as the party best
able to handle the economy and, 48 percent to 35 percent. as best to get a pre..
scription drug benefit for seniors.
.
The bottom line seems to be that,
despite all the war talk in Washington,
Democr.ats may 'Still profit by putting a
twist on the old Ronald Reagan question:
Are you better off now than you were two
years ago?
·
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor
of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)
•
·

WASHINGTON TODAY

Emerging independent voters concern major parties
BY W1u. LEsTER

WASHINGTON ·- Democrats have
been told in a new book that there is an
"emerging Democratic
majority."
Republican strategists are scrambling to
make sure that doesn't happen.
The most dramatic _political trend over
the past few decades, however, has been
· the rapid growth of independents.
"There's no realignment," saiO conservative political analyst Marshall
Wittmann. "There's deali~nment. "
The independents have mcreased to 17
percent in the states where voters have to
register their affiliation. In 2000 exit
polls, 27 percent of voters described
themselves as independents.
In polls this year by the Pew Research
Center for the People &amp; the Press, 39
percent described themselves as independents: About three in I0 in those
same polls desc ibed themselves as
Democrats; about the same number said
they were Repub cans:
"The moveme t over the · lasl three
decades has bee a . movement away
from the Democ ·c Party toward inde·
pendents, and sam · movement toward
the Republican Part in the South and
away from Republica s toward independents outside the So th ."' said Curtis
Gans, director of the C nmittee for the
Study of,the American ,!1l ctorate.
0 emocrats and Republicans are as
evenly matched in polls on the 2002 con·
gressional raq'es as they wefe in the 2000
presidential race.

While Democrats are working hard to Oyke silld. Republican programs in areas · ·
hang on to their ant-vote lead in the like education, job creation and tax relief
Senate and regain control of the House appeal to voters from all ~roups, he said.
this election, their activists got a soothPresident Bush's poliucal strategists;
ing message in recent weeks from led by Karl Rove. have worked on
authors Ruy Teixeira arid John B. Judis, broadening the Republican base, with a
in their new book · "The Emerging special emphasis on building support
Democratic Majority." -·among women, labor groups and the
Their book explains in great detail how fast-growing Hispanic population.
·
Democrats have done better with minoriPolls have suggested Bush is popular
ties, women and' professionals , and with Hispanics, though it's unclear if that
appear well positioned to build a majori- appeal will benefit Republicans further
t~ from an jncreasingly sophisticated, down the ticket.
_
dtverse and centnst electorate.
University of Virginia political scieriW.ittmann calls it "literary V(agra" for tist Larry . Sabato says the theo11' abotit
cautious Democrats .
the Democrats' growth is intrigumg, but
Judis, a· New Republic editor and he's not convinced.
·
writer, and Teixeira (pronounced Te·
"They assume Republicans will not be
sherra), a frequent writer on voting able to broaden their appeal to minoritrends, explained recently at a forum ties," he said. "They assume that profeshow the domestic issues tend to favor the s10nals who have . been . switching to
Democrats. They point to Bill Clinton's Democrats because· of social issues will
presidential election victories in the continue to do so."·
1990s and AI Gore's ability to ~et the . Michael Meehan, a senior Democratic
bigger PoPular vote in 2000 despite los- adviser, acknowledged the dominant
-iiig the presidency.
trend is toward voters who are not affili"History is working against them," ' ated with either party. That has led both
Teixeira said of Republicans. He parties to increase efforts to reach patenacknowledged the growth of indepen- tial voters in person:
.
dents, but said: when pushed they lean
"We still only have half the seats in the
toward supportmg a party.
Senate," said Meehan. "We're six seats
"It is a simplistic assumption ... that down in the House, and we don't have
different segments of the population the White House.
·
which have traditionally supported
"Emerging, yes . ... Are we there yet?
Democrats will continue to go blindly No."
•
with the Democratic Party," Republican
(Will Lester covers politics and polling
·National Committee spokesman Jim for The Associated Press.) .

. I

Tuesday,,Odober 8, 1001

Community Calendar
~ublic M~tings
Tueod.oy, Oct. 8
POMEROY - Bedford township
Truslees, 7 p.m. at the lownhaU_
POMEROY - Meigs County
board of Eleclions 8:30a.m. meeling

at the office. Public test of 110ting tab·
ulatiQn equipmenl a I t0:30 a.m.

Clubs and
Organizations

p.m., OveltlrOOI&lt; Cenler. Jimmy
Stewart and Jim Pancake. Slale
Representalive candidales, to
speak.

Tuesday; Oct. 8
MIDDLEPORT- Top's Oh 570
Middleport. 5 to 6 p.m.·weighin, 6 lo
7 p.m. meeting . RejoiCing Lile
church.
-·

Thursday, Oct. 10
POMEROY - Alpha lola Masters
Chapler, Bela Sigma Phi Sorority.
7:30 p.m. St Paul Lulherar\ Church .
Program by Hal KI\OOn on herbs.
Margaret Stewart and Martha
McPhail hoslesses.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce. monthly

Friday. Oct. 11
POMEROY - Widow's
Fellowship. noon al Craw's Family
Restaurant.

Homecomings
Surday. Oct t3 ;
RUTlAND- Rulland Chun:h of
Cllrisrs t 73ro anniversary to be celeb&lt;at·
ed at hom""..wming day, 10,30 am. war·
ship ar j communion service; noon car&gt;yin dinner; t p.m. aftemooil seNioe IMih
Bob Werry, minisler, and "FoogNen 4."

membership luncheon, noon to 1

HMC to host respiratory symposium
GALLIPOLIS The Center; Elie Saab, MD,
Holzer Medical Center Southern Ohio Medical
Respiratory
Therapy Center; Bennie Gooldin.
Departmeni announces their MSN, RN, CS, University
second annual Respiratory of Rio Grande; and Hope
Symposium. The one-day Blizzard, RRT, Genesis
pre~entation will give respi- Oxygen and Home Medical
ratory care professionals the Equipment. The seminar.
opportunity to learn and will discuss such subjects as
review different aspects and inflammatory response. resconcepts in the respiratory piratory protocols and staff
field. Scheduled for Friday, models, ventilator manage·
Oct. 25, the event will take ment, survival therapy for
place in Conference Rooms the respiratory professional,
A and B of the Hospital's and congressional issues.
Education and Conference
Special features of . the
Center.
Symposium include a venAccording to
Sandy dor display with representaLPH, Therapy lion from a number of local
Moore,
Services Coordinator at businesses and organizaHolzer Medical Center. and lions, soine of who · will
Darlene
Hussell, RRT. have the newest products on
himd to view; lunch, providM anager o f Respir;llory ed
by Bowman.'s Home
Therapy at HMC, the plan- Care; a continental breakning committee has been fast, and two breaks.
working hard to . provide . Healthcare professionals
pattici)J'ants with a superior who should attend this semconference experience.
fnar inclu~ll respiratory
A variety of topics will be therapists, including those
covered over the duration of from hospitals long-term
the Symposium by several care doctor's ~ffices and
health care professionals . H · M E 1 D M ' E .
including, Deb Foley, RD, homecare/DME busines~
Ross Products, Division of owners; registered nu.rses;
Abbott Labs.; Lucy Kester, licensed practical nurses ;
RRT, Education Coordt~ator · respiratory . students ; and
at The Cleveland . Chmc; others who provide respiraScott M. Petttmchl, MEd ~ tory services. Six continuing
RCP,
Cmcmnall !'ducation units (CEU) have
RRT,
Chilctrens Hospital Medic'!!

Preformanee
to highlight
meeting

MARIE'ITA- A perfo~­
mance of "The Escape of
Jane" by Patricia Thonias
Wilson, depicting ,a runaway slave's harrowing .
escape to freedom on the
Underground Railroad with
her seven children will be a
feature of the Friends of
Freedom Society, Inc.
i
.
meeting, Oct.. 18-20 at the
MIDDLEPORT - The life re-enactment of the battle the
historic Lafayette Hotel in
. and times of Captain Thomas previous
weekend
at
Marietta. .
Whetstone of Company D, 1st Hagerstown, Md. in which
The play will be present·
,Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, 11,000 reenactors participated.
ed at 8 p.m. on Friday .of
was detailed at a recent meetPast camp commahi:ler,
the summit at the Mid-Ohio
ing of Brooks-Grant Camp Myron Jones, was reported ill.
Valley Players Theater.
Sons of Union Veterans.
The death of Onnie Mitchell's .
Admission is $5.
.. Descendant David Wingett, wife was noted. A new date for
Another feature of the
assisted by his cousin, Robert release of the upcoming bidmeeting will be the presenWingett, presented the pro- screen Civil War movie, "Gods
tation of a national award
gram noting that Captain and Generals" was given as
from the U.S; Forest
Whetstone was out )Narking in Feb. 28.
Service. It will be presented
Commander Oiler reported
Minnesota when the Civil War
to the Chief of the U.S..
broke out; so He enlisted from that the Lambert Lands
Forest Service for exemPreservation Society had
there.
plary volunteer service to
His original discharge paper, recently restored gtave mark·
the
Wayne
National
presentation sword, and a large ers for 13 U.S. Colored Troops
Forest's
Underground
photograph were displayed at buried in the Lambert Lands
Preservation
Railroad
the meeting.
Cemetery. He sent a certificate
Initiative.
Wingett told the story of of appreciation to the society.
Saturday's events include
presentations by the U.S.
Whetstone removing a dead The cainp sent ~ donation to
Forest
Service
on
driver from an · ambulance assist with the ex~nses.
~agon and then drove it himMembers in umform partici· ·
"Preservation of Early
~elf through the enemy lines at pated in the Emamcipation Day
African American History
and the
Underground
the Battle of Bull Run. He also celebration at the . Gallia
Railroad" by Ann Cramer
talked about the Battle of County Fairgrounds.
and Mary McCorvie and
Gettysbur.g when his regiment
Stephen M~ 'sie of Gallipolis
Underground
was sent forward .to protect on h1s ancestor, Pvt. Jeptha · ''The
in
the
Upper Ohio
Railroad
Gen. Daniel Sickles corps and Massie of Company D, 9lst
Valley"
by Henry and
the· general disobeyed orders Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and
Sandra Moals Burke.
· and marched forward . The George Bremck of St.
The keynote speaker at
first Minnesota Regiment had ' Augustine, Florida, on his
the
e.vening banquet will be
80% casualties that day, he Meigs County
ancestor,
Dr. Charles L. Blocksotl,
said.
Thomas J. Hartley of
Capt. Whetstone returned to Company K. 7th Ohio · · internationally renowned
bibliophile,
lecturer,
Meigs County and lived on Volunteer Cavalry were voted
genealogist. and. sc_holar on
"Pension Ridge" in Letart into membership.
the Underground Railroad .
Township, Meigs County. after
A dinner to honor Ohio's
At II a.m. Sunday, a histhe war. This area was so own Robert Grtm as the
toric
marker will be dedi·
named because all of the resi- newly-elected commander-incated to commemorate
dents were either soldiers or chief of the organization and
David Putnam Jr., a staunch
widows of soldiers receiving James Houston, the Ohio
leader
of the ·abolitionist
government pensions. He is Department commander, was
movement in Marietta. The
·buried in Fairview No. 2 announced for Saturday, Oct.
marker will be located at
Cemetery.
26, at Lafayette. Dinner reserthe end of Putnam Avenue
A moment of silence was vations are required.
on
the west side of the
held in remembrance of the
The camp voted to again celMuskingum River. The
l 40th anniversary of the Battle ebrate the Pres. Lincoln's first
dedication
.is free and open
of Antietam, which was the declaration ·of Thanksgiving
,
to
the
public.
bloodiest one day of war in by having a turkey and ham
The deadline for Summit
American history with nearly dinner at its November meetregistration
is Oct. 9. For
24,000 casualties.
ing. The · Major Daniel
more
information.
visit
It was noted that Keith . McCook Circle Ladies of the
www.OhioUndergroundRa
Ashley, Gerald Crawford, and .G.A:R. will assist with the din·
ilroad.org.
Ronald McClintock att~nded a .ner. ·

Civil War group hears
-about local captain

Page AS

Preparing for this year's Respiratory Symposium. at HMC is,
pictured left to nght, Darlene Hussell. RRT .. B11i1e Ralbusky.
CRT. and Sandy Moore, LPH. of the· Holzer Medical Center
Respiratory Therapy Department. (Contributed)
been : approved . by the
Amen can Assoc1at1on for
Respiratory Care (AARC),
and attendees will receive
these upon completion of
the Symposium.
·
To attend, a registration
form must Qe completed.
. Forms may be obtained by
calling Moore at the
Respiratory
Therapy
Department at HMC at 740446-5919. Registrations are

limited and will be on a first
come, first served basis .
Registration deadline will
be
Oct.
18,
200 I.
Registration s received after
the deadline will be charged
an additional $10.00 late
fee.
. For registration or general
information about
this
year's
Respiratory
Symposium, call Moore at
740-446,5919.

IN noNci::::::n,:::::::o•:::::::~=""Honor
IJIIJ\l'l~

Our

Heroes
.

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

The Daily Sentinel
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Page A&amp;
Tuesday. tktober a. 2002

Equine West Niler Second WorldCom executive pleads
cases increasing guilty in deal with prosecutors
COL l) MB US (AP)
to- borne
viru s
has
The number of Ohi o .bars- inc reased dram atically thi s
es in fected by the . West year. Last year. the U.S.
Nil e virus has increase(! Departmeni"of Agriculture
more than fi ~te fo ld in less report ed 738 equine cases
in 20 sta.tcs. Thi s year, af
than a month . ·
Ohio De partment of least 7,462 horses have it..
Glauer said owners who
Agri culture spokeswoman
Melanie Wit said that as of noti ce a horse is having
Friday. 524 horses in as trouble balancing , seem s
many as 76 Ohio counti es depressed or is not eating
had the virus. Three weeks should immediately conago. 101 had it.
suit a veterinarian .
Holmes County had 1!4
Heidi lmmegart, a v.etcases and Wayne County erinarian who serves the
had 80. Agriculture offi- Delaware County area ,
cials said that was largely said mo st cases of West
becau se of the nearby Nile found in horses mani Killbuck Marsh, an ideal fe st themselves before
home. for mosquitoes.
that. When a horse con.tinDave Glauer, Ohio 's ually twitches around the
state veterinarian, said that mu zzle and chin, that's
just because an animal · usually a good indication
tests positive for !Vest Nile it 's been infected.
doesn't mean it's about to
Tile viru s can progress
di~bout 3o percent of quickly, downing horse&amp;
infected animal s die of the sometimes in 48 hours.
virus,
which
causes
West Nile, although it is
swelling of the brain.
not contagiou s, is treated .
"The key is to notice any in horses the same way .
type .of unexplained fame- peopl e are treated for the
ness," he said.
flu .
.
Among humans, · Ohio
"You take an asp inn and
has five confirmed cases get plenty of rest," Glauer ,
and 307 probable cases of said.
the virus, and it's suspectA vaccine for the virus
ed in 14 deaths; the state has been available for
Health Department said horses since August .
Friday.
So far only three vacciThe numbe r of horse s nated horses in Ohio have
infected with the mosqui- · been infected by the virus.

Child shot near·school in
Ma_ryland suburb, not far
from where sniper struck

NEW YORK (AP) - A
On the inleu*'former WorldCom accounting executive pleaded guilty
Monday to securities fraud . SEC: http:/Jvw,w.sec.gov
and conspiracy, and agreed to
cooperate with investigators
against his bosses in one of in September to securities
the biggest cases of crooked fraud, saying he was instructcorporate accounting in U.S. ed by senior management to ,..._ _.!!
history.
falsify ledgers.
Buford Yates, 46. said he
Yates' lawyer, David
was instructed by supervi sors Schertler, said his client had
to misreport expenses, allow- argued again st the accounting
ing WorldCom to overstate tricks, but was overruled by
earnings. by $5 billion superiors.
between October 2000 and
"When he raised those
objections, he ,was told they
April 2002.
"I came to beli eve that the had been approved by the
adjustments 1 was being highest levels of WorldCom
directed
to
make
in m
. an~gement," Schertler said
WorldCom' s .financial state.- outside court.
· ·r· ·
The lawyer would not say
ments h a d no JU S!t !Catton if that included former CEO
and contravened generally
accepted accounting princi- Bernard Ebbers, who is under
pies," Yates said in federal investigation but has not been
court.
·
charged in the case. Ebbers
"I concluded that the pur- has denied any wrongdoing.
Two other accounting exec- .
Po.se .of these ' adJ"ustments utives
· who worked under
w·as to incorrectly inflate
ldC •
d
Yates are expected to plead
Wor om s reporte earn- guilty as part of cooperation
ings in order to meet the deals
with
authorities,
expect at ion s of securities'
analysts and . mislead the according to court papers.
Prosecutors say those execinvesting public," said Yates,
utives, Betty Vinson and
46, who was WorldCom's Troy Normand, carried out
director of general account- orders from Sullivan and
ing.
.
Myers to hide the $3.8 billion
Prosecutors say Yates car- in operating expenses as capried out orders by chief finan- ita! expenses.
cia! officer Scott Sulli·van to ."ft.s Sullivan, Myers, Yates,
hide $3.8 billion in expenses Vinson. and .. Normand well
to make the telecommunica- knew, there was no justifications giant appear profitable. tioh in fact or under general- .
Yates told U.S. Magistrate Jy accepted accounting prinJudge Andrew Peck-he knew ciples for these entries,' the
the wrong information would indictment said.
be reported to the Securities
Since the accounting mess
and Exchange Commission first · came
to
light, Buford Yates, right, former accounting executive at Worldcom
and relayed to the public.
WorldCom officials have accompanied by his lawyer, David Sche~tler leaves lJ.S. District
Peck said he would recomc said roughly $7 billion was . Court in New York after pleading guilty to securities fraud and
mend that a federal judge misreported, and reports have cQnspirac9 as part of a deal to cooperate with investigators
accept the plea. Yates faces pinned the final figure as against his former tiosses. Yates said that he was Instructed
10 years in prison on the con- high as $9 billion.
by supervisors to misreport expenses ind increase Worldcom's
spiracy charge and a $1 milSullivan, who is . free on reported net revenue by about $800 million. (AP)
lion fine at" sentencing Jan . 9. $10 million bond, has mainThe SEC also filed a .civiJ tained his innocence. He is"
laws~it against Yates fOf"'tlil&gt;" under increasing pressure to
role m the sch.eme.
, . cooperate after the actions
Yates is · the . second taken by Yates and Myers,
WorldCC?m . executt ve - to and . the e11:pected pleas by
plead gUJity 111 the scandal.
Vinson and Normand.
. Subscribe today.
David Myers, WorldCom's
992-2156
e11:-controller, pleaded guilty

BOWIE, Md. (AP) - A the bullet damaged the
13-year-old· boy was shot .boy's spleen, stomach, panand critically wounded as creas, lung a!Jd diaphragm,
his aunt dropped him off at parts of which had to be
school-- Monday, brjnging removed.
:fresh
terror
to
the.. The doctor said the
Washington area where a surgery team made a special
sniper killed six people last effort to find a portion of
week .
the bullet, which they gave
Anxious parel)IS streamed to police.
in to retrieve their children
Sharon Healy had just
from the school, and police st!nt· her 12-year-old son,
in neighboring Montgomery Brandon, to school on his
County hunting f~r the .seri - bicycle when she heard of
a! sniper rushed to the the shooting, She said she
'scene. Official s stressed ran to the school and pulled
that no link to the him out of class.
Montgomery shootings had
"You think you're safe,
been established, but many but you're only as safe as
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
school districts in the area your next step," Healy said.
Eli Lilly &amp; Co. and
canceled outdoor activities. Said her son: "I was
Bristol-Myers
Squibb have
Another
shooting scared ...
settled
more
than
300 ·lawMonday that left a man critThe shooting happened
ically wounded in the weH before classes were - suits aCC\JSing them offailing
to stop a pharmacist from
Di strict of Columbia also scheduled to begin, so there
watering down cancer drugs,
was .being investigated, but were not a lot of witnesses,
an
attorney for the plaintiffs
Washington
police Prince George ' s County
"
said
Monday.
·
spokesman Kenny Bryson
ld w ·I
said the re was "no link Police Chief Gera
t son
Michael Ketchmark, an
whatsoever"
. the said. A gunshot . was heard,
10
attorney for cancer patient
Mary land attack~ He said and the boy slumped over
Georgia Hayes, did .not give
poli cq, ·believe . the motive . and told his aunt he thought
details of the agreement.
he had been shot, Wilson
was rollbery.
Another attorney said resolusaid ."
·
tion of the cases still needs
"Whether they'~ ~ His aunt took him to a
nccted or not, the fear has
approval of all the plaintiffs.
ratcheted up quite a bit," small hospital in this suburb
Representatives for both
Montgomery
County northeast of Washington,
companies de~lined immedi- .
Executive Doug Duncan and then he was transferred
ate comment. ·
said .
by helicopter to Children's
The · pharmacist, .Robert
The boy was shot shortly · Hospital.
Courtney, pleaded guilty in
after 8 a.m. outside
Police cijrs. surrounded
February to federal charges of
Benjamin Tas ker Middle the school and officers put
adulterating, misbranding and
Sc hool in Bowi e.
up crime scene ~ape and
tampering with chemothera- ·
He was shot once, in the searched the campus.
py medications . Federal
Othar Haskins, !3, standchest. and was in critiqi1Jut
authorities have suggested
stabl e conditi on and breath- ing outside the school with
Courtney 's scheme may have
ing on a ve ntilator follow- hi s mother, said he was a
affected as many as 400 docing two hours of surgery, friend of the wounded boy.
tors, 4,200 patients and
said
Dr.
Martin
"He's funny, he's always
98,000 prescriptions.
Eichelberger, director · of around friends," Othar said.
Courtney, who faces up to
emergency trauma service "He helps you out when you
30 years in prison, has said he
at Children 's Hospital.
need it. He's a good friend."
diluted the drugs for profit
Eichelberg er said he was Othar cried and put his head
and because he owed thouoptimi stic about the child 's on his mother's shoulder as
sands in taxes and ·church
chciilt:es for survival, though he spoke.
· pledges.

.Eli Lilly, Bristol
Myers Squibb
settle lawsuits

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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a ticket to more serious drug Yse.
"Some addicted drug uselli
look back to cigarettes as the
start of it all," said Jeff McAlpin,
director of marketing for ED)'M,
a Birmingham drug-testing company.
Short ofcalChing them in the
act, school officials previously
had no way of proving students
had been smoking. · · -~
Testing students for drugs has
spread in recent years and was
given a boos~ in June when the

U.S. Supreme Court alfmned
random testing of those in
extracurricular
activities.
Tobacco can easily be-added to
the usual battery of tesl~. . ·
1
"I agree with it," said !6-year.
old Vestavia Hills High School
junior Rosemary Stafford, a
member of the marching band.
"It's illegal, it's addictive. Maybe
the punishment shouldn't be as
severe, but they should test for
it."

.

.

Champions
crowned in
TVC cross
. cou~tty
BY JtM Souuav

Sports correspondent
ALBANY - Lee Boestler
· of Trimble captured the boys'
Tri-Valley Conference cross- .
country championship at
Lake
Snowden
last
Wednesday.
Ashley
. Meadows of Alexander won
the girls' championship.
: Boestler ran the 3.1-mile
course in a time of !8:07 to
outdistance Greg Joy of
Belpre.
The Belpre boys ' te;~m
however 1;:aptured the team
championship edging out
Alexander.
· The Southern boys' team
finished fourth thanks to a
ninth-place finish by Aaron ·
Sellers. Sellers was named
second-team All-TV C.
· The Meigs boys team of
.Ross Well ; Grant Arnold,
Ryan Stobart, Sebastian
j(aiser, Gary Moore, Chris
Fields and Matt O'Bryant
finished fifth in the team
standings.
.
Meadows, with a time of
22:56, finished ahead of
~ammate Jennifer Liming in
leading Alexander to the girls
team title. Haley Matheny
gave the host Spartans three ·
runners in the top five with a
fifth-place finish. ·
Shannon Soulsby led . a
strong effort by the Meigs
girls, capturing first-team
All-TVC honors with a
fourth - place finisb. Emily
Story and Andrea Burdette
both earned second team
awards finishing sixth and
eighth, respectively.
Heather Hysell finished
17th and freshman Ashl!:y
Savage placed 21st . for
Meigs.
.
The Marauder girls placed
second as a team.
The Southern girls' team
finished in sixth. place with
Christina Williams earning
second-team All-TVC honors
by finishing lOth.

Parents night
today-et Meigs

Eagles fall ~to South, Warren in tri-matc;h
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

VINCENT - Dropping two nonleague games against tough opponents, Eastern fell to Warren Local
and Parkersburg South in a Tri-Match
that featured three of the area's'
toughest teams.
Although Eastern (15-3) dropped
both games, 15-13, 15-10, to
Parkersburg South and 15-8, 15-8, to
Warren, the Eagles gained some valuable e11:pe~ence for the tournament on
Oct. 19.
Against Parkersburg South, the
Patriots went up 2-0, then EHS came
back to .lead 4-2 behind Alyssa
Holter. After a side out, Eastern went
up 6-2 before South called time but
Eastern continued on a string of six
Kass Lodwick serves to lead 10-2.
South then made a calculated comeback, c1,1tting the score to 10-6 and

10-9, before EHS
went up 13-9. Five
points from Southfs
Amanda McCrady
gave tile Patriots a
14- I 3 lead . ii!W
South went on to
win 13-15.
After falling 3-0.
to start the second
game, Eastern led
Holter
4-3 on a quartet of
Lodwick scores.
South went up 7-5 and edged ahead
13-10 and 14-10 around two Eastern
time outs. South then went on to the
10-15 win in the game ;~nd the match.
For Eastern Holter and Katie
Robertson :had seven points each,
while Lodwick had three, Tiffeny
Bissell two, Stacy Smith two and
Morgan Weber two.
.
Holter was I 0-of-11 serving with
two aces, while going 22-for-27 passing and 6-for-6 spiking with two

.

I

I

. I '

I

'·

Holter ahd Bissell each had four
points with Holter _g_oing 7-of-8 serv'"tl· 25-for-30 passmg and 8-for"II
sptking with two kills. Bissell was 7of-8 serving, 36-for-36 setting with
seven sets for kills, and was 1-for-2
passing.
•
.
Lodwick was 5-for-6 serving, 2128 passing, and ·20-23 spiking with
five kills and t~o blocks. Robertson
was 5-for-5 servin~, 14-of-!5 passing
and 11-for-16 spiking with three kills
and four blocks. Nicole Phillips was
6-for-6 serving and 15-for-21 passing .
.
Stacy Smith was 3-of-4 serving,
30-for-30 with si11: sets · for. kills.
Morgan Weber was 6-for-8 passing
and !3"for-14 spiking with two kills.
Hljyman was 6-for-1 0 passing, 3-of-5
spiking night with one kill and three
blocks. C. Smith was 9-for-9 passing
with a kill. Krystal Baker was 2-for-2
passing and Brandy Bissell 3-for-3
passing.

Bonds~ Giants

bump Braves
ATLANTA (AP)
Could it be? Barry Bonds
wasn't sure.
One of the greatest playc
ers in baseball history had
never celebrated in the
postseason. So, when the
·San Francisco Giants
turned an unusual double
play to end the NL division series, he was taught
off guard.
"I didn't know!" Bonds
said. "I didn't know there
were three outs!"
Relax, Barry, you're a
postseason winner at.lasl. '
Homering and scoring
the first two runs, Bonds
came through when it mattered most as the Giants
held off the Atlanta Braves
3-1 in the decisive Game 5
Monday night.
"I' 111 shocked, to be honest with you," .he said.
"I've never been. past the
first round. I don't kn·ow
how to respond. Should I
be happy or just sit here?"
San Francisco won the
final two games against

\iLL

Atlanta, though it got
dicey at the end. The
Braves, no strangers to
postseason misery, put ·
runners on first· and third
with no outs in the ninth.
But Robb Nen struck out
Gary Sheffield and th.en ·
got Chipper Jones to
ground into a double play
to end it.
J.T. Snow fielded Jones'
grounder along the line,
stepped on first and threw
to shortstop Rich Aurilia,
who put the series-ending
tag on Julio Franco.
In•teft field, Bonds stood
briefly with a bewildered
look, then pointed toward
the sky and trotted ~lowly
toward his teammates,
who already were celebrating near second base.
The wild-card Giants
moved on to face St. Louis
in the NL championship
series.
Game
I
is
Wednesday night at Busch
Stadium.
San Francisco Giants' Barry Bonds is congratulated at home by David Bell as Bonds scores on
Bonds, whose teams had a hit by Reggie Sanders in the second inning against the Atlanta Braves during game 5 of the
National League East Division Series Monday in Atlanta. (AP)
Ple•se see NLDS, Bl

NFL

Packers ·knock off Bears
Green Bay's Brett
Favre eclipses
40,0.00-yard.mark

Green Bay Packer running back Ahman Green, heads downfield for a gain against the Chicago Bears d~ring the fir?t
quarter of their NFC game Monday at Memonal Stad1um tn
. Champaign, Ill. Blocked out of the play ·for Chicago is line·
backer Mike Caldwell. (AP)
'
I

kills. Lodwick was 7-for-7 whh an
ace, 26-of-32 passing and 14-for-14
spiking with three kills. Robertson
was 10-of-11 servin~, 12-of-13 passing and 8-for-13 sp1king with a kill
and three blocks.
Nicole Phillips was 4-for-4 serving
and 8-for-13 passing. Smith was 6-for6\erving, 26-for-26 setting with four
sets for kills. Bissell was 6-of-8 serving with an ace, 24-for-29 setting with
six sets for kills. Morgan Weber was
8-for-8 passing and 15-of-21 spiking
with three kills. Jennifer Hayman was
7-of-10 spiking with two kills. Casey
Smith. was 3-for-3 spiking. Brandy
Bissell was 7-for-14 passing.
In the· Warren match, Eastern went
up 5-0 but Warren steadily gained
momentum and came back for the
win, 15-8. The second game was
close until the .fifth exchange when
Warren broke it open for a 9-6 advantage and never looked back. Eastern
lost !5-8.

NL Division Series

Division II
volleyball
sectional set

QUALITY
FURNITURE
PLUS
42123 State Rt. 7 • Tuppers Pla•ns, OH 45783

I

•

· Tuesday. October a. 1001

; ALBANY - The undefeated Meigs Marauders, 16IJ, earned top seed in the
Division II volleyballtournainent drawing Sunday at
Alexander High School, and
will play River Valley, the
humber four seed. Warren
Local earned the number two
seed and will play number
three Athens.
The Meigs-River Valley
match will begin at 4 p.m.
Saturday, October 19 at
Alexander High School ~ith
die Warren-Athens match following at 5:15.
·
: The two winners will
square off at 6:45 p.m.

New frqntier' in random drug testing:
checking high schoolers for tobacco
VESTAVIA HILLS, Ala. (AP)
-. Breath mint~ won'tcut itanymore for students who have been
smoking in the bathroom some schools around the country
are administering urine tests to
teenage!li to find out whether
tl1ey have been using tobacco.
Opponents say such testing
violates students' rights and can
keep them out of the extmcumcular activi~e s they need to stay
on track. But some advO!:ates
"'Ysmoking i1.1 the boys'room is

Page 81

••

"HIS"

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page B2
~ouch won't back down, Page B3
.Bengals upbeat despite loss, Page B3

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs High School athletic
department will observe
Parents Night today between
the junior varsity and varsity
volleyball matches against
Vi.nton County.
.. :Seniors to be honored during the night will be Kayte
Davis, Mindy Chancey, Katie
Jeffers, Maria Drenner, and
Allison Williamson .
:·Meigs (16,0) already owns
a: share of the Tri-Valley
(J&gt;nfer,:nce Ohio Division.
championshi~ . and can clinch ·
1he title outnght with a win
today.
· Match time is 5 p.m. begin(l~ng with the freshman game.
•...

'$.599
11

Inside:

•

His only longer TD pass
for this long, I never dreamed
any of this."
was a 99-yarder to Robert
Needing just 262 yards Brooks in 1995 against the
coming in to reach 40,000 Bears.
yards, Favre got there by half"That's the thing about
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) _ time. He threw al) 85-yard TD Brett, you keep running and
pass to Donald Driver in the get open ahd he 'll find you,''
Brett Favre can improvise first quarter _ the longest Driver said.
with the best quarterbacks in play from scrimmage in the
Green Bay took control in
NFL history. Sometimes, it NFL this season _ and the
the third quarter when Kabeer ·
d~~~:· ~pe Packers (4-1) took a 24-14 Gbaja-Biamila . intercepted ·
halftime lead.
Chicago's Jim Miller and
~:~rs in;~~ "I would never in a million lumbered 72 yards for a
then .'makes · years think we'd have a first touchdown as the Bears (2-3)
them work. ' quarter like we did today, but lost their third straight
Durab.le? you never know. in this
"It surprised me . I looked
league. This one ranks near up on the screen and saw no
That, too. the top," Favre said. "Yo.u
one was near me," GbajaHe's started
2
· h1 have (287) 300 yards at half- Biamila said.
6
time and three touchdowns,
l stralg
regular-sea"I was trying to get rid of it
something is working."
Favre
son games
and obviously I didn' t get rid
and endured
Whatever Favre does of it quick enough," said
.
his share of hits for the Green against the 8ears, it works. Miller, who was hit by Joe
Bay Packers. .
He's 17-4 against Chicago Johnson on the play.
..
And give him too much and won nine straight on the
Miller also threw thra TD
time to throw and scope out road .
passes, hitting John Davis
the defense, as the Chicago
"He gets rid of the ball so with a 21-yarder with 6:50
Bears did Monday night, and quick, it's hard to get any kind left to make it 34-21 .
he'll find an open receiver of good read on · him," said
Chicago made one last
and pile up the yards. and Chicago defensive back R.W.
when Miller hit David
thrust
point~.
·
McQuarters, playing for the
Terrell
with a 52-yard pass to
"In all the success I've had, ·first time since spraining his
the Green Bay 7. But Nate
I never imagined any 9f it. 1 knee in the season opener.
Wayne
intercepted Miller 's
a! ways wanted the opportuni"He' II pick you apart with
pass
in
the
eild zone with just
ty to play and 1 got that," the !2- to-15'-yard throws and
Favre said after throwing that opens up the deep pat- more· than 2 minutes left.
three touchdown passes and tern."
·
"It wasn 'I a good decision.
surpassing 40,000 yards passOn the first play of Green The roule was designed to g?,
ing as the Packers beat the Bay's second series, Favre to the hack of the end zone,
Bears 34.21.
· rolled to hi s left, motioned . Milkr&gt;a id .
"To have accomplished with his hand and then heaved .Chicago lost starting left
what I have takes a lot of luck the ball to a streaking Driver, guard Rex Tucker, who disloand determination and com- who was behind Bears safety cated his left ankle and was
p~ftitivenes s ," Favre said. Mike Green and McQuarters, taken off the field on a cart in
"But as far as playing like this for a 7,0 lead.
the third quarter.

.•

�J

-.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, o.:tober 8, 2002

San Fr11ncisco at St. Louis, 4:20p.m., if

New York va. Anahllm

- . y, Oc:t.1

Pro FoOtball

New Vorl&lt; 8, Anohoim s
Oct. 2
Anaheim 8, New Vorl&lt; 6
Frtc18r, Oct. 4
Anaheim 9, New Vorl&lt; 6
Sotunlay, Oct. 5
Anaheim .g, New 'rbrk 5, Anaheim wins
series 3-1

-cloy.

National Football Lngue
AFC

e..t
WLTPctPFPA
Miami ............ .4 t o .800 156 98
New Engtand ..3 2 0 .600 142 106

Mlm•- ¥S. Ooldond

Blittalo . "" .....2
N.Y. Jets ......... t

-.y,Oc:t.l

Mimesota 7. Dakklnd 5
w.dnlldly, OCt. 2
Oakland 9, Minnesota 1
.
Frkl0y,cot. 4
Oakland 6, Minnesota 3
.
SaturdaY, cot. s
Mimesota 11, Qakland 2

Siondly, Oct. I
Minnesota 5, Oakland 4, Minnesota
wins series 3·2

National League Dlv. Serlel
va. Sen Fr.nclaco
W.dl•sdly, OcL 2

Atlllnta

San Francisco 8, AUama 5
Ttlursdly, Oct 3
Allanta 7, San Francisoo a
SotiJidOY, Oct. 5
Atlanta 1o. san Francisco 2

Su...-y, Oct. 6

San Francisco 8, Atlanta 3, series tied
2·2
-.y,Oct.7

San Francisco 3, Atlanl' 1, San
Francisco wins series 3·2
Arizona ¥S. St Loulo
Tuoodoy, Oct. 1
St. Louis 12. Arizona 2
. Thursdly, Oct. 3
St. Louis 2, Arizona 1
Sotuodoy, cot. 5
St. Lcx,is 6, Arizona 3, Sl louis wins
series 3-0

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP

.

SERIES

A-~

-.y,Octe

Anaheim (Appier 14·12) II MIMIOOII
(Mays 4-8), 8:19 p.m. (Fox) Wedntldly,
Oct. 9
Anaheim (Ortiz 15·9) ot Mlnn•ot.o
(Reed 15-7), 8:19p.m. (Fox or Fox Sporta
Net)
'
Frtc18r, Oct.l1
Minneaola (Rodke 9-S) 11 Anlllelm
(Wasltlum 1IHI), 8:1V p.m. (Fox)
Slluodoy, Oct 12
Minnooota (Milton 13-V) It Anlllelm
(laci&lt;ey 9-&lt;1), 7:50p.m (Fox)
Sunday, Oct. 13

WM1
WLTPCIPFPA
Son Froncisco a 1 o .750 87 60

ArtzDna ...........a 2
Soollle ............ t a
St. Louis ......... 0 . 5

wednooday, Oct. I
San FrancisCo (Rueter 14-8) at St. Louis
(Morris t7-9), 8:19p.m. (Fox or Fox Spoils
Net)
Thursday, Ocl10
San Francisco (Sctvnidt 13-8) II St.
Louis (Williams 9-4), 8:19p.m. (Fox)
· Saturday, Oct. 12 ·
St. Louis (Finley 11 ·16) at Son
Frar&lt;:isco (Ortiz 14-10), 4:20p.m. (Fox)
Su...-y, Oct. 13
St. Louis (Benet 5-4) at Son Francisco
(Hernandez 12·18), 7:50p.m. (Fox)
-y.Oct.14

St. Louis at San Francisco, 8:20p.m., It
necessary (Fox)
Wodnosdliy, Oct. 11.

NLDS

from PageB1
been 0-for-5 in the postseason, said he's not content
wit.h winning one playoff

99

0 .000

74 125

o .250 . 84

e1

87

Sunday'o Gamoo

Anlheim at Minnesota, 8:20 p.m., W
necessary (Fox)
wednlldly,Oct11

NoUonollo~guo

o .600

N.Y Giants 21, Dalias17
Olkland 49. Buffalo 31
Tompa Ba1 20, AUinla 6
Arlzonal6, C.rotina 13
Walliington a1, Tennessee 14
lndlonopotls 26, Cincinnoti 21
Mlaml26, New Envtand 13 ·
Now Orteona 32, Pittsburgh '2 9
Kanaao City 29, N . Y Jots 25

TuoldoJ,Oct 15

necessary (Fox)

COLUMBUS (AP) - The fifth weeldy
OOio High School Volleyball Coaches
Association poQ for 2002, with school,
record and total points (first~ votes in
parentheses)
DIVISION 1

College Football

1. Cin Sl Ursula (38) ......... 16-1
2. Cin. Ursuline Aead.......... 18-2
3. Tot. St U•suia ( t) ............ 14·2
4. Vandalia Butter ................ 16-4

Aa•oclated
Press Top 25
.

Dlvl•lon I·AA Poll
PHILAOELPHIPt. (~P) - The top 25
tea. . In the Spo~ Networt&lt; OMslon 1-M
tootball 'poll , with first-place votes in parentheses, roc:ords through Oct. 6, points and
previous ranking:

W-1. Points P¥1
1. Montana (97) ......... 5-o
3. McNeese St. (2) .....4-t
4. Appalachian St.. .....4-1
5. Furman, ..................4-1

2.497
2,273
2,252
2,196
2,081

6. ViUanova ... ,............. S-1

1,905

2. Maine (1) ...............6-0

o.-

you can lose."
Sheffield, a close friends
of Bonds, is rooting for the
Giants to win it all.
"I'm glad he's getting his
opportunity,"
Sheffield
said. "I hate · it's at the
expense of me."
Giants second baseman

1
3
2
4

5
7

1,768

9

1,594
1.~5

12

1,376
1,326
1,163
1,)16
1,086
930
906
851
744
735
724
687

509
431
414
403

402
353
279 .
181

13
14
15
6
8
16
19
18
17
20
21
tt .
10
22
24
23

7. Cin. Mother ot Mercy ...... 16--4
8 Whitehouse Wayne ......... 17~2
9. Lancaster ....................... ,18-2
10 Amherst Steete .............. 18-2
DIVISION It

136
86·
84

W-1.

I'll

1. Cin. Roger Baoon (35) .... 18-t
2 Hutlba«l (7) .................... ~
3. MitlefsOOrg W. Hohnes .... 17 -0
4. KeHering AHer ................. 15-3
5. Day Cham.-Julienne ....... 16-3
G. Bell BenLogan(tl ........ .t9·1
.7. Mehtor ·L:ake Gath... .. 18-1
8. canal W1nchester ........... ~
9. Tallmadge ....................... 16·1
1o. Manstield Madison ......... l s.-2
DIVISION tit

404
349

69

306
234
222
184
164
159
121
91

W-L . I'll

1. Plain City Aider (251 ....... 19-()
2. Frankfort Adena (3) ,...... .19-1
3. Huron (4) .. .......................14-2
4. Zoa&lt;\Oiie Tusc. Valley (4) .... 20-1
5. Wheetersburg ................ 17..()
6. Archllold ........................ 16·3
7. Girard (2) ....... . . ...... 17-2
8. Bucyrus Wynt&lt;i«L .......... t5-2
9. 5U1ey l&amp;'man Cath. (1 ) ..... t 5-6
10. ROCky Ri\101' Luth. W...... 18-1
OtVISIONtV
t . N""'aik St. Paul (17) ...... 19.0
lMiri&gt;Stei1Maro1Loc(14) ... 18·1
3. Centerburg (1) .............. 16-1
4. St. Henry ......................... 16·2
5. Old Fort .......................... 16-1
fl. Kidron Cent . Christian .... 17·1
7. Minster ............................ 14-4
8. Beaver Eastern ............... 14-Q
9. Fort Loramie ................... 15-5 .
10. Kalida .......
...14-2

23S
179

127 .
114

100
87
76
296

291

230

o

-lOCIo.a...-

1'uoadoy's

Oetmil at Toronto, 7

p.m.

San Antonio ""· Phit.idelp!Jia at· State
Coltego, Pa., 1 p.m.
·
Orlando at AU.ma, 7:30 p.m.

Boston vs. New 'lbrl&lt; at Uniondale, N.Y.,
7:30p.m.
Saaamento at Dallas, 7:30p.m.
Hoostoo at Merr1Jhia. 8 p.m .
Miwaukee YS. Mi""""""' at Fa'VO. N.D..
·ap.m
Golden State vs. Beattie at Missoula,
Mont., 9 p.m.
Utah at - n d . 10 p.m.
L.A. C1ippers vs. L.A. Lakers at
Bakmsfield, C.t~.• 10:30 p.m.
Wodnellday. Oct. 1
Ctevetand vs. New Jon;ey at Allany, N.Y.,
7:30p.m.
New Orleans at Indiana, Bp.m.
Miami at Memphis, 8 p.m.

Soccer
(SMdlng In poront-1)
Ouorltt1tnoio
· (First to 11ft points. ThrM polnll
lor victory, point for Uo.)
Colorodo (S) n . Ollla (4)
. Wodnlldly, Slpl. 25
Dallas 4, ColomdO 2
Sotunlly, SopL 26
Colooulo 1, Dallas
WodnoldoJ,Oct.2
Colorado 1, Dallas 1, tie, Colorado wins
tiebfeakar 1~ and series 7-4

o

Klnlll Cl1y (8) n. loa Angello (I)
iVednlldly, B!f&gt;t 25
Los Angeles 3, Kansas City 2, OT
. Sotuodoy, Slpl. 26
Kansas City 4, Los Angeles 1
Wodneodoy, Oct. 2
Loa Anl!eles 5, Kansaa City 2, Los
Angeles Wins series 6-3
COiumbuo (8) vo. Son Jooo (3)
Wodnosdoy, Sopt 25
Coiumllus 2, San Jose 1

Sotuldoy, Sept 26

series 6.0

E111

l

Boston ................ 0
Miami.. ........ ......... o
New Jersey ..........

o

Pet.

0

.000

0

.000
.000

o

New York .......... a

0

.000

Orlanclo ............... 0
Philadelphia .........
washington ......... 0

0

.000

0

.000

o
.

o

GB

000

Centr•l Olvlllon
WLPctGB
Atlanta ................. 0
0 .000

Chicago ....... ... ... o
o .000
Cie,.,iand ...... .......
0
.000
DetroL ... ........... .
.000
lndlana .................
.000
Mii\Naukee .......... 0
0 .000
New Orleans ....... 0
0 .000
Toronto ................ 0
0 .000
WESTERN CONFERENCE

o
o .o
o o

Mldwe11 Dlvl1lon
WLPctGB
Utah ... .................. t
0 1.000
~
Dallas ..................0
0 .000
~
Denver ................. o
0 .000
~
Houston .............. 0
0 .000
:&amp;
Memphis .... ,......... o
a .000
~

Minnesota ............ o

o

San Antonio ......... O

0·

•

.ooo .
.OOQ.. .

P•clflc Dlvlalon

.

Coiumllls 2, Sin Jose I, Columllla wins

N•tlon•l ltllgUI

~·

'I,

Transactions
BASEBALL
Amorieanl.elgUI
BALTIMORE ORIOLEs-Anoounced
RHP Calvin Ma&lt;llro has cleared waivBfs
and has e~ tree agency, and RHP Kiis
Foster has deared waivers and has been
sent outright to ~ olthe PCL
Notionl1 L.elguo
CINCINNATI
REDs-Named . Doc
Rodge&lt;&gt; special ~ssistant to the genet'jll .

manager.
FLORIDA MARLINS-Assigned RHP
Jason GriiH outright to Cotgary olthe !'a..
BASKETBALL
Notlonol Baokatboll AnociOtion .
MEMPHIS GRt=iEs-Waived C
Dryden and F Marl&lt; \'ershaw. ·
NEW JERSEY NETs-Waived C Lonnie
Jones and F Mark Sanford.
NEW \'OAK KNtCKs-fined G-F Latrelt
Sp&lt;-t $250,000 and banished indefi·

A-

nitely.

. Major League Soccer

NBA Preseason
W

..

Monday's

No vamos

•

AtFoxboro,udl.
Semifinal wiooers. 1:30 p.m.

1 .000
Sunday'w Gamo
Utah 89, 5ealllo 82

147
100

Basketball

Sunday, Oct 20

o .ooo

Saaamento .........
5eatli0 .................0

179
178
99
50
40

IlLS Cup 2002

.000
.000
.000

o o .ooo

367
281
275

0
0
0

Pon~and ...............

I'll

5 ROCky River Magnificat...14-5
. 174
6 . Elyria................ ,....... 17-3 · 166

.

o .ooo

owen ........

LA.
O
LA. 1..-s .......... 0
"'-'ix ...............0

OHSVCA State Polls

W-1.

Cleveland's Couch doesn't back doWn

WLPctGB

Golden Slate ....... o

Oakland at St. Louis, 4:t5 p.m.
JaCksonville at Tennessee, 4.:15 p m
Kansas City at San Diego, 4:15p.m
Miami at Denver, 8 .30 p.m.
Open: N.Y. Jets. Arizona, Philadelphia,
Chicago
Mondly, Oct. 14
San Francisco at Seattle, 9 p.m.

7. Nortl1westernSt.. .. .4-t
8. N. Arizona ... .. ......... 4-1
, .9. Eastern lllinois .......:;J~2
10. lehlgh .......... ....... ..4·t
Denver 26,,Son Diego 9
·
11 . GramDiing St... ...... 5· 1
JaclcsonviUo 26, Phllodefphia 25
12 ..N. Iowa ....... ..... ...... 3~2
Sin Froncllco 37, St. Louia 1a
13. W. illinois ,........ ...... 4·1
BoHimoro 26, CIOY81and 21
14. Portland St. ........... a-2
Open: Se1Hie, Detroit, Minnesota, 15.1lettln&gt;Cookrna .. .6·0
HOUlton
•
16. Ga. SOuthern ......... 3-2
• • Monday'o
f7. William &amp; MaF)' .....,2·2
18. WoltorcL .. .. .......... .4· 1
Green Boy 3&gt;1, Chicago 21
19. Eastern Ky.............4 ~2
SUnday, Oct. 13
20. Northeastem ........ .4-1
Buffalo II Houston, 1 p.m.
21. Florida A&amp;M .......... 4-2
Corollno at DaHu, 1 p.m .
22. Youngstown St. ..... 3-2
Atlants II N.Y. Olanta, 1 p.m.
23. Nicholls 51... ........ .. 5-1
· Baltlmono at lndianopolls, 1 p .m.
24. Pennsytvania ......... 3-0
New Orleanut Wuhington, 1 p.m.
25. s. C. State .. ......... .. 4-1
.Green Boy 11 Now England, 1 p.m.

se!.~e!on't be satisfied until Jeff Kent, who has feuded

Chicago (7)n. Now Englond (2)
Thurodoy, SopL 26 ·.. · ·
New .England 2, Chicago 0
Sund8y, Sept 29
Chicago 2, Now England 1
Wodnolday, Oct. 2

.

ORLANDO MAGIG-Waived G Corey
Benjamin and F..C Jabari Smith.
SACRAMENTO KINGS- Released ,F
Nakiea Miner. F Jean-Pau4 Atir and C Sean
Daugherty.
FOOTBALL
NoUonol Footbol Loaguo
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARs-signed DE
Rob Meier 10 a three-year contract extensOn.
•
TAMP4 BAY BUCCANEERs-Released
DE Ron warner.
HOCKEY
NatiOnal HacMy loaguo
CHICAGO BLACKHAI'IK5-Reassigled
G Michael Leighton and C Brett Mclean to
Nortolk oJ the AHL
.
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKET5-Sigled
LW Rtck Nash to a three-year contract.
DALLAS STARs-Assigned 0 Jofjn
Erskine and RW Jon Sim to Utah of the
AHL
FLORIDA PANTHER5-Agfoed to terms
with 0 Jay Bouwmeester on a three-year ·
contract.
LOS ANGELES KING5-Aaslgned C
Derek Armstrong, LW Ryan Flinn and FfoN
Steve Heinze to Manchester of the AHL.
MONTREAL CANADIENs-Asslgn~d
LW Marcel Hossa, 0 Mike Komisarek, C
Benot Gratton, D Matt O'Ootte, F Eric
Chouinard to Haininon of the AHL.

NASHVILlE PREDATOR5-Signed . F
Now England 2, Chicago 0, Now England · Scottie Upshati.
'
·
wins series 6-a
NEW YORK RANGERS-Signa~ F
Gartn Murray. Assigned 0 Tomas Kioucek,
SomHinoio .
F Rico Fata, F Roman Lyashenko and F
(Flrot to
points)
Ted
Donato to Hartlord of the AHL Placed
Cotorodo (5) vo. L.,. Angoloo (I)
0 Dave Karpa on injured reserve. .
Soturdoy, Oct. 5
Los Angeles 4, COlorado 0 , Los Angeles · SAN JOSE SHARKs-Assigned G
leads 3-0
Seamus Kotyl&lt;, 0 Jesse FiDiger, Fffl Scott
~netda~Ckrt-9
Thomas, LW Yuri Moscevsky and F Ch~d LoS Angeles at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Wiseman to Cleveland ot the AHL. • .
Soturdoy, Oct. 12
TORONTO MAPLE LEAF5-Signea 0
Colorado at Los Angeles. 1o p.m .. If nee·
cano
Colai3covo to a three-year contract
essary
WASHINGTON CAPITAL5-!\cqulred F
COiumboJO (8) vo. Now Eng1ond (2)
Mike Grier from Edmonton tor their secSu'*Y,Oct8
ond· and third·roui:K! picks in the 2003
Columbus 0, New England 0, tie, series draft. Signed D Steve Eminger. Reassigned
tied 1-1
F Chris Ferraro, F Peter Ferraro, 0 Jason
Wodnesdoy, Oct. B
Doig and D Nolan Yonkman to Portland of
New England at Coiuml&gt;us, 7:30p.m.
the AHL. Recalled C COlin Forbes from
·
Saturday, Oct. 12
Columl&gt;us ~~ Now ~ngiand, 4 p.m.
Portland.

a..

Razing starts
at Cincinnati
Reds ballpark

with Bonds; refused to get
·I get a World Series ring," · all sentimental about his
'he said.
teammate winning a · postWith Atlanta's departure, season series for the first
. CINCINNATI (AP)
three 100-win teams during time . .
Wrecking crews on Monday
the regular season - . the.
"I know I' 11 take a hit for
began demolishing the stadi"
Braves, New York Yankees
urn that was home to . the
this, but we're not pl3¥ing
and Oa.kland Athletics ._
Cincinnati
Reds for 32 years.
for Barry," Kent said. "I'm
A crane from O'Rourke
all were sent packing in the sorry. This is a total team
first round.
effort."
Wrecking Co. began tearing
down the northeast comer of
This has become the
At 38 and in his .17th
the parking garage undernorm for the Braves. -major league season, Bonds
neath
the stadium. Workers
Despite wmning II slraight was running out of postseainside
the stadium were
division titles, they have son chances . .In his five
removing seats and lighting
managed , only one World previous trips to the postfixtures.
Series cham!lionship. For season, the four-time NL
The stadium itself is to be
· the second · time in three MVP bit just .196 with one
toppled on Dec. 29 to ~ake
years, they .c ouldn't even homer and six RBis.
room for the Great Amencan
get out o( the opening
Two of those los~es were .
Ball Park, which is being
round.
·
to the Brave~. incl'uding a
built next door. The new sta"We're at the point in this gut-wrenching . de fear in
dium opens for the 2003 seaclubhouse where it doesn't Game 7 of the '92 NLCS at
son in April
matter what you do in lhe old Atlanta-Fulton County
Opened
as Riverfront
regular season," Chipper Stadium, now the site of a
Stadium, the old, circular
Jones said.
parking lot just across Ihe
ballpark was known in recent
After winning the NL · street from Turner Field.
East by 19 games, Atlanta The Braves scored three ·
faces an uncerlain future . . runs in the ninth, with
Greg Maddux and Tom slow-footed Sid Bream
Glavine, the anchors of the barely beating
Bonds'
pitching staff, are both at throw •from left field to
the end of their contracts. score the winning run.
With declining attendance,
"The Braves have been San Francisco Giants' J. . T. Snow celebrates defeating the
CINCINNATI (AP)
heavy financial losses and my fiemesis for years," Atlanta Braves. 3-1 in game 5 of the .National League East
University
of Cincinnati basbelt-tightening ownership, Bonds said.
Division Series Monday in Atlanta. (AP)
ketball
coach
Bob Huggins
the Braves. could be forced
Because of his October
was released from a hospital
to take a stzable chunk .out failures, Bonds became
•
Monday,
nine days after sufi'
n
nings.
Aaron
Fultz
gave
el&amp;e.
I'm
glad
they
motivat?f pa~roll fo~ the first ume 1 known as a player who
beart
attack while on
fering
a
ed
me
6n
this
one
today.
"
up Mark DeRosa's runm}het~ amaztng_ streak ..
couldn't come through in
a
recruiting
trip.
Leading off the fourth, scoring hit in the sixth, but
. We re reelmg nght .the biggesl games. But in
University officials said
Bonds
worked the count Tim Worrell and Nen shut
now," general ma;na~er Jess than a week, he did his
Huggins,
49, plans to be on hand.
!.oh~ Schuerholz, S8ld . best to purge all those full, then · sent a fastball down the Brave.s over the
Saturday
when his Bearcats
soaring into the crisp final three innings . .
We 11 re-tool later. ,
unpleasant memories.
From the fourth on, the C1Je11 practice fer lhe season.
The. Braves dtdn. t get
Bonds homered lhree Georgia night. Outfielders
Tests · done at Christ
muc~ _h~lp fro~ thetr 'key iimes in the series. The first Andruw Jones and Chipper Braves squandered all sorts Hospital showed that lhe caracqutsttlon dunn~· the last two didn't have mucb . Jones barely had time to of chances, leaving the diac attack caused significant
1
offseason. Sheffteld ' was impact in blowout games, move before the 417-foot bases loaded once and two damage to Huggins' heart,
supposed lo bolster to but the third came off drive settled midway up in runners on in three other said his cardiologist, Dr.
innings. In all, Atlanla Dean Kereiakes. But the
shaky_ Atla~ta offense Kevin Millwood in Game the lefhcenter seats.
Bonds
also
scored
San
stranded
12.
espec1all~ 1~ the playoffs 5, providing a crucial run
coach is expected to recover
Francisco'
s
first
run
,
startNow,
they
get all winter further with the help of reha·- but dui.n t do anythmg in the tig.h test matchup of
ing the second with a sing le to think about their missed -bilitation and medtcation to
after a Game I homer.
the series
to
left. He came home on opportunities.
. "I f::Jt w~en we _got .two
"I was· just a little bit
strengthen
his
heart,
Reggie
Sanders' two-o ut
"We 're certainly not Kereiakes. said.
runners on !n th~ ~!nih , we more aggressive," Bonds
•
going to enjoy watching
"Bob is making tremendous
woul~ wm 11,
satd said. "They say 1bey come si ngle.
Russ
Ortiz
earned
his
fo ur other teams play," progress, and 1tests show that
Sheffteld, w~o was 1-for· at me more than anyone
. second win, going 5 1-3 John Smaltz said.
16. "In the bhnk of an eye,
he will rec()ver funher,"

years as Cinergy Field after
the energy company ·Cinergy
Corp. bought the naming
rights. Reds star Pete Rose
gave the bali,Park an immediate identity m the 1970 AllStar Game by bowling over
catcher Ray Fosse in a collision at home plate.
Riverfront was the first stadium with wall-to~wall turf
and sliding pits when it
opened in June 1970. Three
Rivers Stadium opened in
Pittsburgh later that teason,
and Veterans Stadium opened
in Philadelphia in 1971, giving baseball three "coolciecutter" ballparks.
The Pittsburgh stadium has
since .been razed and the·
Philadelphia stadium is to be
leveled after next season.

Hug;ins released_from :

....

.

Prep Volleybalt

a.

Minnesota at Anaheim, 4:50 p.m., If

Anaheim at Minnesota; 8:20 p.m.·, I

3 0 .400 163 180
4 . 0 .200 75 162
SOuth

Detroit at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Pitt:stJurlt1 al Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Cielleland at Tampa Bay. 1 p.nt.

The Top Twenty Five teams in The
WLTPCIPFPA
Associated Press CQti8ge tootbali poll, with
indianapolis ....3 1 0 .750 92 70
first.place wles in parentheses, records
ttvough Oct. 6, total points based on 25
Jacbofwiile " ..3 1 0 .750 104 72
points tor a first place vote through one
Houston ......... t a o .250 42 92
point tor a 25th place vote and, previous
Tennessee ...... ! 4 o .200 107 159 •
rantmg:
North
W-1. Points Pvo
WLTPctPFPA
t. Miami 173) ..
...s-o (849
1
Battimore ........ 2 2 o .500 67 79
2. 01dahoma ...
. ... s-o 1,707
3
Cleveland . ..2 3 0 400 124 117
a. Toxas (1) ............. .s-o · 1,698
2
4
4. Vwgim. Tech .......... s-o 1,632
- r g t \ ....... 1 3 0 .250 76 105
5. Ohio SL .................6·0 1.552
5
Cincinnati ....... 0 5 0 .000 '" 147
6. Georg~ .... .... s-o 1,485
7
W..t
.
7. Oregon ................... s-o t ,390
8
WLTPctPFPA
8. Notre Dame ........... s-o t ,349
9
Oakland........... 0 01 .000 162 90
9. FiofidaSt.. ............. 5· 1 · 1,182
11
~r .. .. ..4 1 · o .800 124 96
tO .Tennessee ............. 4-f 1,132
tO
son Diego ..... 4 1 o .800 11 t 64
11 . 1owaSt... ............... 5-1
1,000
15
Kansas City .... 3 2 0 .800 t7t 158
12. Washington St.. ..... 5·''
998
17
13. Michigan .............. 4-1
986
14
NFC
14. N.C. State .............. 6·0
877.
16
Ellt
~5. Penn St. ., ............. 4·1
710
20
W L T . Pot PF PA'
16. Florida ................... 4·2
687
. 6 .
N.Y. Giants ..... 3 2 0 .600 ·76 81
17. towa ...... .... ... .. .. 5-t
582
24
Phiia~ia .... 3 2 a· .600 tSS 92
18. tSU ..................... ..4·1
569
21
Washington .... 2 2 · o .500 79 94
19. Kansas St. ............ 4-1
435
13
Datias ............. 2 3 o .400 74 107
20. Southern Cal... ..... 3-2
301 . 18
SOUth
· 21 . Air Force ............... 5-0
298
WLTPotPFPA
22. Washington .......... 3-2
293
12
23. Wisoonsin .............. 5-1
223
19
New0r1eans ..4 1 0 ~ 800 ,43118
24. Aubu rn .... . ....... ~ .. ~1
222
Tampa Boy ..... 4 1 0 .800 126 53
25. MississippL .......... 4-1
173
Garolina ..........
2 0 .800 ·89 61
Othoro ,_lvlng volas: Alabama 150,
Atlanla ............ 1 3 0 .250 63 74
UCLA 123, Colorado 97, California 80,
Narth
Texas Tech 50, Kontucl&lt;y 43, Bowling
W ·l T Pel Pf PA
Green 39, Marshall 39, Louisville 23,
a.... Bay ...... 4 1 o .1100 145 135 Pi1111&gt;urgh 21, Ar'&lt;lnsas 15, Nebraska 9,
Booton COIIeg•o7, Colorado St. 7, Oregon
Clllcogo .......... 2 3 0 .400 112 132
St. 8, Michigan St. 4, Texas A&amp;M 3,
. Ootrolt ............. 1 3 0 .250 8S 138
Clemson 2, Boise St. 1, Southern MiSs. I .
Mlnnoooto ...... o 4 o .000 89 141

necessary (Fox)

Cincinnati hospital

'

.l

..

•

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8 3

'

necessary (F'&lt;M)
Thiii'Sday, Oct 11
San Francisco at St Louis, 8:20p.m., if
-ry(Fox)

ArMrlCIIn League DIY. Seriea

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Browns Notebook·

Scoreboard
Baseball

.Tuesday, October 8, 2002

I

I

I

Kereiakes said. "He wiU
begin cardiac rehabilitation
and was prescribed heart
medication · designed
to
improve heart muscle and
reduce his risk of future
atiacks." - ' .
Huggins suffered the heart
attack on Sept. 28 at the
Pittsburgh airport while on a
recruiting trip.
He was the third-youngest
coach . to get 500 wins in
Di:vision I. His career record
is 3'00-172, including a 332·
I 00 record at Cincinnati.
The Bearcats have been
ranked 'No. I several times
during his 13-year tenure but
have made the Final Four ju~t
once. Cincinnati went 31-4
last season, losing to .UCLA
105-101 in double ovenime
in the second. round of the
NCAA tournament.
·

BEJU!A, 'Ohio (AP)- Tim well with me. It's embarrass- l'rantic fourth-quarter comeCouch didn't duck and he did- ing for me, and it's tough for back, throwin,g two TO passes
n' t scramble.
my family to sit in the stands and barely 1111ssing on a third
One day after tearfully and waleh that."
in the closing seconds that
assailing Clevelafld fans for
Couch said the rough treat- would have given the Browns
booing him and then cheering ment from the crowd has for- a remarkable win.
as he staggered to the sideline ever changed him.
Asked if Couch. would start
with a concussion, the
'Now I can expect whal's this Sunday at Tampa Bay,
Browns quarterback refused going to happen every time I Davis said, "If he's healthy
to take back a single word.
walk into the stadium," he enough, absolutely he is."
' "If fans don't hke the way said. "I 11uess I'll treat every
Davis remains Couch's
I'm playing or the way_we're ·game hke a road game biggest · supporter. Nothing
pj.a.ymg, they have a nght to ·because yesterday was like has changed his belief that
bOCV us or boo me," he said. playing on the road."
.
Couch is the quarterback who
"But to cheer when I gill hurt,
While Couch was being will eventually gel Cleveland
. that's a whole other level with helped, several of his offen- a Super Bowl title.
ine. I don 'l agree with that at sive teammates huddled over
Davis said he has no plans
·all."
him in support.
to switch quarterbacks Following Sunday night's
'That's our ~uy," tight end unless
Couch · suddenly
· 26-21 loss to Baltimore, Mark Campbell said. "He's becomes a different person.
Couch choked back tears as the backbone of the offense. If
"If I thought he was selfish
.be recounted the moment in we don'l have him we're and just playing for himself,
lhe fourth q.uarter whet:t missing a lot more than just and he was just. playing for
Browns fans some of our quarterback. Tim's our . stats and uncooperative and
whom think backup Kelly leader. He's going to take us didn't want to il!am the
Holcomb should be starting to the.Sqper Bowl."
offense and was just free- · turned on him.
Before that can happen, lancing and using Sundays as ,
· ··While recovering a fumble Couch is going to have lo play his own format, absolutely I'd'
near Cleveland's goal line, much better than he did consider changing," Davis
Couch . was hit by four against the Ravens.
said .
Ravens, including linebacker
In just more than three quar"But that kid is a hell of a
Peter Boulware, whose hel- ters, the former No. 1 ove~ll kid, and he wants to win ·s o
1met appeared to slam into the draft choice, went 16-of-26 bad. He wants to win for the
. back of Couch's head.
for 216 yards with one TO team and for the city and for
Wobbled by the blows, and two mten:eptions. Couch all · the right reasons. He
: Couch was dazed as he said ,the picks were a direct stands .in there and gets hit
attempted lo walk back result of trying to will. over a right in the face and delivers
,toward Cleveland's huddle. crowd that seemed to target throws and battles." .
Seco11ds later, he dropped to a him early.
,
' knee hoping his head would
"I kind of got caught up in
· clear.
trying to do that and I hurt the
As medical personnel team," Couch said. "I threw a
Cleveland
: rushed onto the field to assist couple of inlerceptions trying
Browns quarCouch, some fans started to to do stuff like that and thai's
terback Tim
· cheer knowing that Holcomb, not the way I've been playing
Couch sits on
.who started the first . lwo this r.ear."
the
bench after .
Shit, Browns coach B uleh
games this season while
leaving the
Couch nursed an elbow Davis said Couch played betgame in the
injury, would be coming into ter than his slats showed.
fourth quarter
"I though! he played well,'~
ther,ame.
against the
· .....I II remember bemg on· the · Davis said. "There's one or
Baltimore
.ground, a little dazed and two things that I wish · he
hearing cheers," Couch said. wouldn' t have done."
·
Ravens Sunday
•"It's tough. To have the rest of
Davis again diffused any
in Cleveland.
' lhe country walching as home notion of lhe Browns having a
. \ The Ravens
fans cheered wheh I ~ot hurt, quarterback
controversrwon 26-21.
is somelhing that dtdn't set Holcomb led Cleveland s
(AP)

..

:aengals Notebook

:.Winless Ben · als
encouraged
latest loss to
•

CINCINNATI (AP) - In
most NFL cities; a close loss
·set up by silly mistakes is
. followed by a case of
. Monday morning blues. The
·exception is Cincinnati.
: The winless Bengals were
. upbeat Monday foi_Iowing
' their latest defeat, whtch rep. resented a breakthrough for a
team accustomed to getting
blown out.
· . The offense tripled its
:touchdown total dunng a 28, !21 loss in . Indianapolis and
had a chance to tie near the
end of regulation. Jon
. Kitna' s third interception
. .ended the comeback but not
the optimism.
They're winless, but no
, .longer hopeless. ,
.
· . "Oh, yes mdeed, runmng
: back Corey Dillon said. "We
· fought for four quarters.
That's the team I know."
· The Bengals (0-5) are
heading down a path they
know well.
They've gone 53-128 since
1991 . the worst mark in the
league and haven't had a
winning season over that
··span. They lose badly in
. August and September, Jose
; closer games in October,
. then become a threat for an
, upset as the season winds
down .
· Since 1991 , they 've gone
. 9-36
in
Au~ust
and
. September, 8-36 t.n Oclober,
. 15-31 in November and 2125 in December and Januarr·
,, Coach Dick LeBeau s
,,quarterback .rotation set up
, this year's slow start - 0·5

•
for the fifth time in the last
12 years. Now that Kitna is
running the offense again,
the Bengals are rounding
into their customary form.
They're still not winniil~.
but they've become competttive.
"After that (touchdown)
drive at the end of the second
quarter got us going, we
were a pretty good football
team,'' LeBeau said Monday.
''There were still too many
' negatives, too many things
that kept.us from winning.
"We had a lot of positives
in there, too. The biggest
thing was corning back from
a 21-0 spread and proving
that there's a lot of football
left in us and a lot of football
left in the season."
1 The
main thing;' they
proved Sunday , wlts that
Kitna should have been the
q\larterback all along .
LeBeau tried Gus Frerotte
and Akili Smith before
returning to Kitna, who was
the lowest-ranked passer in
the NFL last season as he led
the Bengals to a 6-10 record.
. · The Bengals simplified the
offense, stayed with their
running game and got their

best results yet. Dillon ran
for 164 yards, and an ·offense
that scored only one touchdown in the fliSt four games
tripled its total.
"I think we showed some
signs yesterday of getting
back to where we were at the
end of last year," said Kitna,
who was 31-of-43 for 244
yards. "That's what we need
to do."
.Kitna passed for 751 yards
Bengals
beat
. as
the
Pittsburgh and Tennessee to
finish . last Season. His
propensity to throw interceptions - .he had 22 last year'
- prompted the Bengals to
conduct· quarterback tryouts
well into the season:
Kitna got the offense moving in Indianapolis bl!t threw
three inlerceptions that kept
the Bengals at the! bottom of
the NFL's heap along with 05 St. Louis and 0-4
Minnesota.
After getting blown out
119-23 in the first four
games, the Bengals were
encouraged heading into a
home, game Sunday against
Pittsburgh, then their bye
week.
Why, Kiln!J was t:;ven
alluding to the playoffs.
"It's a big week in that
sense," he said Monday. "We
can't afford to go 0-6. At 0·5,
you've,dug a hole that's very
hard to get out or. There's no
margin for error. Getting a
win right before the bye
gives us a chance."

NFL NOlES

s~~~te;sJdeiLto ,appeal fine -· ...

'·.. •·.. ,,,I
!~~.KIRn~. Wash. (AP) ..}'seattle Seahawks linebacker Marcus Bell plans to api&gt;eal a
~!,:$~5;!)00 fine frOm' tlie ~ office for knocking down umpire Carl Madsen during a Sept.

~~;~9, ~~~;~~~~s~ t:he ~imeson~;roongs.
·-~.

,&gt;J,

.

. '

,,

t.~

.

.

..

.. ,., ORCHARD PARI( N.Y. (AP)- Bills tight end Dave· Moore broke his left hand and ·is
.~estionable liOr Buffalo's_game at Houston this weekend.
.
·

·'

S &lt;:~vc Thnus;111Li s while Becoming
Dcbl Free

Addressee Stamped Envelope!
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claim&amp;! Michael Frumin placed tt1ese ads
nationally He was pros&amp;euted in
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existed and qentenced

Stop Late Fees
Aeduce 111121!11

"

lltll.l"'

II .,\.. KS1

' AFFORDABLE LEGAL SERVICES"
Divorce $150
Adoption $225

Ke~l'ens:3Co~ . \lacahoo cor&lt;los
directly on !he Gulf
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No Co!lectorCaiio

Recorded Message
Mailing Our Sales Brochures!
Free Supplies, Postage!
Start Immediately!
Genuine Opportunity I
For Free Information,
·Call Toll Free:
t ·800·357 -1170

''"""' hn ghtnm:n:dit cl)rn

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(toll-free)

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FORT MY.ERS BEACH
vacatiOn re ntals on white sand beaches
fr om SSOOiwk
1-800.237·8285
www.ftmyersbeai::hvacatlona.net

The D.1il\' SL'ntitwl
·---·---.... -

..•.

t~r :·' Bills~- Moore questionable·for Houston

Prep football pre2vivws
coming Thursday

..

.

.

'·

�,
Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesda~~etober8,2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

mrtbune - Sentinel - 3ae tster
CLASSIFI-ED

:tuesday, October 8, 2002

• SHERIFF'S SALE,
~
REAL ESTATE
~CASE NUMBER 01·
:
CV-1178

we cove,.,_..,
Meigs, Gallla,

paint In the weot line
of Lincoln Road at

the corner between

.

And Mason

Lots 52 and 53, as
shown In said map;
thence with the said
line of Lincoln Road,
south 27 degreeo 36
minutes east so feet:
thence with the line
between Lots 53 and
54, south 62 degrees
24 minutes west 200
feet; thence north 27
degrees 36 mlnuies :
west 50 feet; thence
with the line belw"''n
oald Lots 52 and 53,
north 62 degrees 24
mlnutet east 200 feet
to the point of
beginning.
Current Owner(s):
VIrgil B. Hudson and
Johanna
Renee
Hudson aka Johanna
R Hudson
Property at: 1620
Lincoln
Heights,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PP# : 16-00558.000
Prior
Deed
Reference: Volume
88, Page 22t
APPRAISED AT:
$6,000.00
TERMS OF SALE:
Cannot be sold far
less than 2/3rda ol
the appraised value.
10% down on day ol
sale, cash or certlflad
check, balance on
confirmation oloale.

"CONSECO FINANCE
: SERVICING CORP.
" IIUI GREEN TREE
:
FINANCIAL
•
SERVICING
~ CORPORATION
· "'
Plaintiff

Counties Like'
, No One ,..,
Else Can!'

.....,..

C•Uia Cmanly, OH

·Vs-

: VIRGIL B. HUDSON,

In one week With us

M·onday thru Friday

8:• oo a. rn. toS:OO p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Oeys

Successful Ads
Should Include The'se Items
To Help Get Response ...

I

I
r
L--------'

1'10 IIELPWAN1ID

Pf:RSUNAI.S

Commun1ty Action is seek- Truck · Orlver1, . Immediate

ing temporary Intake Clerk
Froggy4418 Call Travis@ AidetoworkwithEmergen(304)674-0578 for smiles.
cy Prbgrams. Organization·
aJ skills. .computer a&gt;Cperl·
Why wait? Start meeting ence, and ability lo deal with

hire, class A COL required,
e~ece!lent . pay, experience
required, Earn up to $1 ,000,
per week.Call304-675-4005
County Corner
Cafe in . Letart 9·1pm. Serl·
ous Inquires Only.
·
URGENTLY
NEEDED1
d .
$50 1
pasma onors, earn2 - 0
$SO per week for
or . 3
hours weekly._Call Blo L•fe
Plasma SeNICB, 740-592·

Ohio singles toniyht, call toll persons of various socloe- Apply at

free 1-800· 766·2623
1621 .

ext conomic backgrounds. Valid
Drivers license. high school
graduate or equivalenJ.
'•
•·· ·~
Send resume with th-e
MJ,..1~UNCEMENTS
,.. (3)
references to Mrs. Edwards,
~~--------' Gallia Meigs C.A.A., 8010 N
· State Route 7, Cheshire,
C- 1 Beer. Carry Out per'!llt OH 45620 by 10/18102

r

Gl
=

IIELPWANIED

I

A.llruiH~Mivenlelng

In lhlo - p o r io ·
aubfKI: ta thl Ftdll"ll
F•lr HOUIIng A;t of 1HI
which lNik• tt Illegal to
actveraM "•ny
pr11r.r.nce, llmlttltlon or
CflacrtmlnMion biMd on
r~~ee, cokw, r1Uglonl HI
remlllllletltue or netlonel
ortgln, or•ny Intention to
meke •ny euch
p.....,.na.,llmlllltlonor

Inc1udes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m .
Thursday for Sundays

In purauance of an
~rder ol Sale to me
[l;llrected from said
;court In the above
'Wntltled action, I will

:fxpose to ••le at
~bile auction on the
:Jront steps of the
.._.elga
County
~ourthouse
on
1Thuraday, November
:l', 2002, attO:OO a.m.,
15&gt;1 said day, the lol·
jlowlng described real
t'-lllte:
~ Situated In the

Free Yard Sale Sign!
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

:~~~; ~I ,l'e~~~~"r!.i

POLICIES: Ohlq Valley Publllhtng IWMFW'S the right to edH, rt~ject, or ctl~ In~ ttd 1t 1ny ttrM. l!rrvR must be rwported on the flrwl
Trlbu~Unel·f\egiiW will be rupon1lbll tor no mOta tMn the co•1 or thl epace occupied bV the error •nd onlv the flretln..Uon.
•ny lOu or upen• tNt reeuH• from the publlcetlon or omlulon of In lldvertleemtnt. Correcllon will be m~ In the ftrtt ~v1llablt lldltlan. •
conllder!tlal. •C~,~tTenl ,,.., card eppltn. • All rHI "tide edvertlaem•ntt 1111 SUbl.ct to tt. Federal Fair Houalng Artt or 1HL • Thl•
acceph only hefp wtn1tc1 Ide meeting EOE a11ncl1rdL We Will not
In vlolltlall of the ....

,,. •twav•

t M~s~ I~,r.io-·fOR·"-~.REN'r___.l r ~~

Manager's Special, Clean 3 bedroom house 'In 3 bedroom apartment, $375 Corner fire place, automatic AKC Blue Tick Beagle pup;t
new 16~~:80, 3 bedroom, 2 country. No pets, Water fur.,. month, appliances furnish- control, electric logs, 220 py's and started dog's, Oia· ~
New

bath, reduced to only nlshed. $450 month, $400 ed· Centenary Road. Call " volts. just like new. $250, mond bloodline: excellent.
$27,900 delivered and set deposit (740)245·5064
(740)446·9442
(740)378·6258
gun dogs, St 00 10 $t7S, ·
up. You save over $6,000
·
2
inciUSJing underpinning, an- House at 512 4th A~nue, Twin River• ToWer for eld· Diamond engagement 'ririg- ( 740) 742· 728
chors, vapor barrier, 1 set II· $550 month &amp; depos11, no erly/ disabled.

berglass steps, 20' of utility
lines under home, all instal·
:ect, One only, Coles's Mo·
bil~. Homes, U.S. 50 East,
Athens, Ohio 45701 '

matching wedding ring 1/5 Maltese pups- Purebr&amp;d,·

pets, (740)441-1519
· Now accepting application~ car~t, size 6, $250 negot~S.- AKC registered. A\lailable
House for rent in Syr~cuse for 1 br, all utilities paid b!e, Compound bow w1th October ~S. 3 males. Makes
Ohi 0 475 00
HUD assisted carpeted s1ghts &amp; arrows, $50. , the pe"-t pet ,_. al·l. CaU.'
·
mon.
.
''""'
""
$475.00 dep:
noapets
304·+ apartment.
rent ' Is 30% of (740)379·2360·
(740)446·7454
leave
mas-

s

your adjusted Income .call DIRECTV, SO two TV hook· :sa:!g!::e:..- - - - - - -'
304·675-6679 between 8·
Repo's and Used homes. One bedroom house; Ra- 4;30 pm weekdays.EHO
up, order here and earn Walker pups for sale, UKC ~
Company
Liquidation cine, Ohio. (740) 992·5039 '
$$$, 800"263"2640 ·
PKC registered. Super
6
5
GMCAA is EOE.
·
dltcrlmlnatlon."
across the nation. $500 1i ki
lie 1.
OR Trimmer, used one time,· stakes qualified. (740)446·
11 1
of interest to: The Daily
.
.
.
r:l14)
B~
down and take over pay- ~ ng a~ a •o~.:a
$200. (740)441-8299
0689
1
Sentinel. PO Box' 729.·20. CommunitY. Acllons seek!ng
Tn • .,..,.. ,,...
Thle newepeper will not
ments. (740)446·3570.
rpom ome
~port,
ROOM'i
._.-....
temporary Intake Clerk Aide
.&amp;~~
references &amp; depoSit re- ~.oo-------,.1 Fishar" .Price Harley Motor· rro
'
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769·.
k 'th E ·
knowlngl'f accept
Wa_nled· No Credit Custom· qulr&amp;d, $300 · per..-- month,
·cycle, good condition, only
MUSICAL
to wor WI
mergency
.c~wnteement 1 tor rul
p
ho
Shl~
LosT AND
Progr.ams. Organizational Gallipolis Career Colli,.•
••tate which leln
ers to urchase New
rna (740)992·6154
.. ney mllh
$75,
battery
includ,ed~ Lw--~-.iiiiliiiioiiiio_.l ,
•
under ,Government !Inane740-992·5989
Please call (740)256·6407 ..,
1 s. com Pu1er experi 9 nee (Gareers Cfose To Home)
FOUND
5 k"ll
vlolilllon olthlllw. Our
ing program . $1200 Income 5 rooms &amp; bath, so Olive St, Congr•tulatlonsl You have
·
and ability to deal wllh per- Call Todayl740·448·4367,
rHdlre •re hlreby
required. Call to pre-qualify. $325 mo. (740)446·3945
won 2 free movie tickets to leave message.
314 size Violin In Wooden-'
FOUND 2 I
.
4 sons of various soclo-eco·
1·800-214-D452
Informed thet Ill . .
(740)446·3384.
the Spring Valley 7 Gallipo~ GE Cabinet Stereo $50., case, $150; full slz~ Vlqlln in,
· ~e
• nomic backgrounds. Valid
Reg M90·05·12748.
~ling advtniHd 1
7 roomS, 2 bath, Gallipolis. lis. Call the Sentinel tor de~ folding exercise bike. $25. case, $150. (740)446.()893.
01 pu~~·
1
·6 months.
den Drivers license, high school
•
n
Wanted: Local company No pets, water paid, $550
il .
Phone (304)882·2755
·
• on
1
I \ In ! "' t 1' 1'1 II "'
Valley dnve,
·Brown &amp; graduate or equivalent. Ae- ~llU
thl• new•~Pir .,.
wants Ia purchase 1· . 10 month, deposit &amp; reference.
Black. 1 Brown &amp; White. sumo with three 131 referon·
MlscEu.ANEous
•v•ll•bll on'•n equ11
.\ I I\ I "' II H "acre sites for new hor:nes. (740)388·1100
Grubb's Piano· Tuning &amp;
1740)44 1· 18 19
ces to Mrs. Edwards, Gallla
opportunity bl ... .Call (740)446-3093.
M
Repairs. Problems? Need
CAA., 8010 N. State
.
OIIILE HoMES
Tuned? Call The Prano Or..
Aecovered · I~st a•r' tank _at Meigs
Route" 7, Cheshire, Ohio, Doug Marti~
Ho~
We have approximately 10
ro 1bNr
740·446-4525
·LivEstocK
oonom ol Middleport H1ll, 45620 by 10118/02 GMCAA CongratulaiiOnsl You have
used homes tor under
2 trailer lots, $125 month :..:::.::::_::::::__ _ _ _
10·4·02, call ·Wes Gilkey is EOE
·
won 2 free movie ticl&lt;ets to L,---fOiililRiiiSAu:ilii;;._,J $2,000, call1 -800-837·3238
plus, utilities, (740)256·1015 HD Utility trailer, $275 OBQ.. ~
(740)992·3966
·
the Spring Valley 7 in Galfor into.
12x60, 2 bedroom, 1 balh,
leave message if-not home .. 20--70 pound !l'gs. $20~$25
Domino's Now Hiring alllo- lipolls. Call the. Register to- 3 bedroom, 2 bath, ranch
on a rent~ IOt. _RWef view, Camper.-&amp; Boat ·Storage , {740)446·9794 ' ,
each. (740)643-0508
·
~
YARD SALE
cations Pl. Pleasant, -Gamp- day for detaiiS.(304)675- style, open floor house plan, MUst S&amp;ll· factory mistake, $1500 OBO. (740)446·7695 Rental. Mason Co. Fair
L~-------·· olis, Eleanor. Safe drivers, 1333 ·
covered front porch. Side 2002 3 BR· 2 BA. Will sacri- (740)645·0151 (cell)
GroundS Wed &amp; Sat.
Independent Herbalife Dis· Fair calves- A-1 sired, Heat•
..,
must be 18. Apply in per.son lui)
W.•~
sundeck, appro11. 1 m. ne from lice, .many extras, very nice.
· 5PM. (304)675·5463. At 62 tributor, Call For PrQduct Or Seeker plus Who Made
""',..._ _ _ _ _ _., at locations,
rrtll.,Do
•...,
town on State Route 588. Save $8,900.00. (304)736· Accepting applications-- 1 North Point Pleasant
· Opportunity. (740)44 1- 1982 Who, black &amp; halter broken,
YARD SALE·
•0
BuUt In 1998 on 1.2 acres. 3888, Hl88-736-3332.
112 bedroom trailer for rer\1,·
JET
(740)667-6637
GALLIPOLIS
Driver wanted, local cornpa·
(740)9~3-07:JQ or (740)446·
$300 deposit, $300 a
AERATION MOTORS
L.-..;;~;:,::~;:,_.1 ny seeks deliver~ driver. All types of masonry brick, 6161 .
B!JSINEX'l
month, references, no pets, ·'ll~~~----., Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt ln .
H.w &amp;
. Must be familiar with sur- bk&gt;ck &amp; stone 20 yrs. Expo·
. AND BulwiNGS
(740)992AP.
·OOI\R11'vltNTS78
riO
H~w
Slock. Cali Ron Evans, I· L.---·G~RAIN~
·-·. -· '
1 mile out 5~8 trom town, rounding counties. Experi- rience free estimate.
U\..IUlJO
8~537·9528.
1
Wednesday 9th.
Baby ence preferred, but not re- 1·304-773·9550
2 bedroom, 1 bath on 1 acre
~.._
,.~
clothes, toys, household , quired. Non· COL. Hours _ __:_:.:.:__ _ _ _ on blacktop road near Rio Building for rent, located at ·
FOR RENt
'
- - - - - - - - - Excellent com silage Stand-~
misc.
. Monday· Friday 8·5pm . Georges Portable Sawm~l. Grande. (740)4A6-D689
28 Cedar Street, can be
Appliances: Reconditioned Martin MOdel U40G Unvent- lng, delivered or' storedJ
Send resumes to Sparkle don't haul your logs to the
used for office or small res·
Washers, Dryers, ·Ranges, ed gas heater with .blower.· (740)379-2181
41 Olfa8m9ity4y3a0rd b satde, 1on- Supply .Company, P.O. Box mill just call 304-675-1957. Country Home with 11·112 laurant. 740 256·666.1
1 and 2 bedroom apart· '3&amp;frigrators, Up To 90 Days $350. (304)675-6951
· . , ran ~arne 278, Gallipolis, OH 4553 1
acres. 3'4br. 2ba., 2 Car·
ments, furnished and uilfur~ Guaranteed! We Sell New ===.::.:.:.::..:::.:...__
clothes, Home lntenor &amp;
Housecleaning,
reliable; Garage, above ground pool,
nlshed, security deposit re· Maytag Appliances, French Maytag .washer, $55; Uplit\ \"' 1'01~ I \ 110\
something for everyone. Gallipolis located home honest and have references Handcrafted kitchen cabi·
quired. no pets, 740·992· City Maytag, 7-40-44-6-7795. right freezer, $50. Wooden
·
4371 Cherry Ridge Road, health agency seeking a with 20 years of experience. netS. Off Leon Baden Rd. L.,--.iiiliiiiiiliilo-.,1
. 2218 ·
dining room table with 6
Rio Grande.
qualified Individual to. per· Call after 5:00pm. (740)4A6· (304)458-1580
1/2 acre lot on T~coon Lake - - - - - - - - - Electric ghiss top cook chairs and 2 leaves, $200;
Auros
form chart audits. Apply at 2506
F
,.,
BA 1
•
1 Bedroom Apartment, .stove, Table &amp; ·4 chairs. Older maple cabinet sewing
fO SALE
1
2
1
00
Big Yard Sale· Clay Town· 3084
State Reule 160
or sae ur owner
.,lv· w 12Ko0 Trailer 16,500. . Kitchen Furnished,
,All (740)256-6251
machine, $35; 2 Kerosene
..,l'
hOuse on Lover~ ~:-ana, Gallipolis, or phQne toll lre8 M&amp;M Pressure · WBshlng &amp; lng room, kll, dining room, (740) 247·1100
Electric, $300 Month, oa~
heaters, $10 each. Older ..,
.
Wednesday 9th, Fnday 11th 1·866·441·1 393.
Painting . Decks, Trailers, bath and utility, partial baseposit Required. Near High For Sale: Recondi11Dned electric range $20· Bundy '·1966 Lincoln Continental, 4
and Saturday 12th.
HouseS, Boats. Lots, Etc. ment, P&amp;.Uo and front" porch, 2 &amp; 5 acres · home sites, School. (304)675-3100 Or washers, dryers and refrlg~ Trombone s'~25;, Barbie ' door, project car, $900~
. .
Help wanted caring for the Call · ·for
Estimates. li111e o~r 112 acre, 3 car ga· Eastern .Local School Dis· (304)675 ,5509
erators. Thompsons Appll· house
. , jeep, car, 525 tor all; (740 )446 •1240
.
Garage Sale· 583 Ge_o~ges elderly. Darst Group Home. 1740)388 _1532
rage, In Baahan close to trict, utilities available, ·apance. 3407 Jackson Ave~
Gr~ek Ad. T~ursday- rnday now paymg minimum wage,
new highWay going In, proved road, sorry no trail· 1 Bedroom Apartments nue, (304)675~7388.
Brown sleeper sofa, $SO. 1984 Mercedes ~90E, 94KI
' Ra1n or shme. antiques, ne·.w shifts: 7am-3pm 7am- Private duty home care. Will $38,000.00
·ers, _(740) 985-3595
Starting at $289/mo, Wash·
(740&gt;367-06 67
miles,
good condition,
er/ Dryer Hookup Stove GoodUsedAppllances,Re- NEW AND USED STEEL$
, bl ·
jars, milk bottles, 78 ra- spm 3pm-11pm '11pm- carefortheelderlyandrun (740) 949·2252 call eve2
cords, Silver Bridge News· 7am: call 740-992·5023.
errands.
Call
Patsy. nlngs or leave message
30
$Cres,
$55,000. and Retrigerator. {740)441· conditioned and Guaran~ Steel Beams, Pipe ~ebar ( ~0~~ .
,- Negotla 9 •
paper. misc.
(740)245-0339
.
·
(740)379-9257
1519.
teed. Washers, Dryers, For Concrete; Angle, Chan- ~::.r:.:::..:.:::~---..;
,__ _ _ _ _ _...., Jewelry Salesperson FT/PT.
For Sale By Owner Ranch M
C0 73
Ranges, and Refrigerators, net, Flat . Ber, ,Steel Grating 1988 Chrysler 5th. Avenue
•i'\7,;
Must be dependalje, outgo- Top to Boltom. Cleanin~ Style Home 3 BR .1.5 Baths ason . ·
+ acr~s. 1 br. apt for rent $100. sec . .Some start at $95. Skaggs
1"'' 4
YARD SALEing, ent'rrv working with the Serv.lce, P.rotess
. ron.al, res1· Ex c e II en I · L o c a I ion . Pond, ~ 11 Y water,. electnc. dep.&amp;$300. a mon. all util Appliances, 76 Vine St., For Drains,- Driveways &amp; Loaded.
-,
de
$6
Very
n1ce
trailer
1ncluded · Included 304·675·3654
Walk.ways. L&amp;L Scrap Met~ 1990 OLOS Touring SadPoMEROYtrviiOOI.E public &amp; have e•cellent
nllat, office clean1ng, also
9 900 .00
· (740)446-7398
L.,.;,iiiiliiiiillirilliiiiiiililipl math skills. Apply al Acquis- yard~ guHer, at an afforda· (740) 446-7825
Great Hunting, limber. Nice
als Open Monday, Tuesday, , den Loaded .
.
itions 151 2nd AvenUe ble priCe. (740)992·2979
:...::.::.._:_:.::.::.._ _ _ _ development for homo site. 2 bedi-oom, water &amp; trash Like new w,asher &amp; dryer Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bam- :992:::_·0::6::2:.2_ _ _ _ __
Mov1ng sale· Sat, Oct. 12 G II' · I" No h
Land Contact· deposit re- $150,000. (304)882-3131
Included. Deposit $275; set. Delivery option. $390. 4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
C
LS
11 ·
98
5
only, 9am-3pm 1 1 mile out pl:a·~: IS.
P one ca s .Wlll presSure wash houses, qui red. 3 bedroom, 2·112
rent $275. (740)441 -0583; (304}674-0711
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. f~on~ wh~~~~riv:.~~m:t an: ·
St. ~t. ,43
·
trailers, and decks. Call bath, farm house··in Patriot. Must sale immediately 35 (740)446·7620 after · 7
(740)446-7300
gina and transaxte, many
- - - - - - - - - McClure's Restaurant now 441-4238 ask for Ron or Asking $79,900. (740)379· acres on Sandhill Ad call Saturday· Sunday.
Mollohan Carpet, ·202 Clark ::..;.:::.;.:.::..:.::.:::._ _ __
Yard sale- Sat. October hirihg all 3 locations. fuH or leave message.
9887
304-895-3807
::':=::""-==""--:--:-- Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. Pool tatJie, slate top, red new parts, have receipts;
12th 9 4pm SA 7 at 5
::.::;:.:________
· 2 BR garage, stove/ refrlg~ (740)446-7444 1•877-830- cloth, excellent condition; converted to R134A ·air, au~
' ·
' · ·
part-time, pick up applies· ·
·
PRICE REDUCED. 3 bed. Wen~ Holley
.
t C 1 a1 A N
t
Pool b
to overdrive, ·power everyPaints, Chadwell residence, !ion at tocatioh &amp; bring back Will wo!"k for elderly mghts, _ .... _
••th Brick Ranch Congrat.ulatlonsl You have eRra or; eein r
tr. opes. 9162. Free Estimates, Easy
ta le Plng Pong tabla, h'
. .d
nd
2 """
0 eposil re- financing, 90 days sallie as with net included, $600; at· t mg. exce 11ent 1ns1 a a
:
lots of toys (some like new), between
0am
&amp;
tweekends.
Exp.
and
refer•uuo
..
,
eferenc
93
h"ld" b
4
ences (304)675 7961
on 1.5 11at acres, newer car· won 2 fr_ee movie tickets qulred. (740)446-4336 leave . cash . VIsa/ Master Card. so stationary bike, $50. Call out,
asking
$2200.00 1
c I s attery-operated
10:00am Monday thru Sat·
.
•
pet, doors an apPliances. to t~e -~prlng Valley . 7 In message.
Drive· a-little save alot.
(740)446·2016.
(740)992~3078
urday. '
full basement (partially fin·
Call the Tnbune
Waterline ·special: 3'4 200 . 1994 Black Cavalier AS;
ished), '2 car garage, Rl 33 tor details. (740)446· 2342
APART- Used furniture store, 130
mals, breadmaker, ca-n Need 7 ladies to sell Avon.
BEAUTIFUL
New
Haven.
B"~~
opener, RCA video c·amora, (740)446· 3~58
vo11.,~
above ·
MENTS AT · BUDGET PAl· Buia"'
• 'iie Pike· We sell mat · PSI $21 ·00 Per tOO·· 1' 200 V·6, "excellent condition•,
304)882
3897
CES
A
JACKSON
ES
tresses,
bunk beds, dress· PSI $35.00 Per tOO: Ali 93K, 53495: 1991 Jeep
(
0 PPORTliNITY
pitcher &amp; mirror
stand, Overbrook Rehablhtat •on
.
Compression Fittings Comanche Truck, 4.0 liter
Kenmore
sewingwith
machine.
M•
H
,. :~==~===:: TATE S, T52 Westwood
Drive• ers, couc has. app I'lances. Brass
in Stock,
much more. Grave monuHO auto AJC
1 t 3K
OBILE OMES
Harley jacket. clothes, !&gt;as· Center is currently accept~
!NOTICE!
.
fOR SALE
U{)(W;
'!rom $297 to $383. Walk to ments. (740)446-4782 Gal· RON EVANS ENTERPAIS- $21,95; 1997 Ra~ger xn: •
ketball backboard,
lots ing applications for ·a part- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· ·
.
shop &amp; movies. Call 740-- llpotls, OH
ES Jackson, OhiO·, 1-800- a to A/C 71 K 54295 '
more.
time (8 hours a week) Acliv·
FOR RFNr
446·2568. _
Equal HouSing ~iF·~----.,
u '
'
'
··
lNG CO. recommends that 12x2411. add on room for
Opportunity.
:5:.37:.·9:.5::2::
8_ _ _ _ _ _ 1994 S-1 0, 1986 Silverado'
.1 A . 1 t A r 11.
Yard sale· Tues.- Fri.. 18.1 'myY besslspiac~e·d uppp rcaat 3 3
eted,
ANTIQ• n::ic
4x4, , 998 Achieva, 1998
n3s you do busil1ess with peopfe Mobile Home. carp_
t
you know. and NOT to send
1d
M 1
1 -3 Bedrooms Foredosed Furnished 2 Rooms and
vc.;J
Watkins Products: double Malibu 1995 Grand Am GT·
'ddl
Be h Sl M1
ec
··
epor ··
Page Street, Middleport, Oh money through lhe mail until pane
·
us 87,4move. Homes From 199!Mo., 4% Bath, Upstairs, Clean, Ref- ~----.--strength whr'lo &amp; dark •"anr'i· ~wo
tra'de·ine 1988 E·~$3 oooe (:JQ4)675
~
,,
-.uu .·
WANID&gt;
1 45760 or phone Mike Crites, ~ou have investigated the
'
·
•
Down, 30 Years at 8.5% erences and Deposit Re·
Ia .. spices, salves, liniments ~ $350; 1988 Cougar, $595.'
~
m HUY
A9'9c2U~6it4y72Dflorec,m'oo',.',· 'nfol7,m40a~ offering.
12x60 3 ' bedroom w/cla, APR. For Listings, 800-319· qutred. No Pets. (740)446- Buy or sell. Riverine Anti· and other products. call 10 others In stock. COOK
~
washer &amp; dryar, stove, 3323 Extt709.
.
1519
quos, 1124 East Main on (740)949·3027
MOTORS (740)446·0103
tlon .
- - - - - - - - - .,.c"'-------- SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740495
74
5
7
s F' . AN
Start
Your Shopp'ng
Business Cen
To· $ •
• 0·992·2!8
·
I'1ving. 1 ~nd 2 992·2526, Ruos Moore, c
. OOL DOWN, Cenlral Air 1998 Neon, 65,000 mileS,
Ab so Iute T•OP 0ollar ; U..
. ..
day Prime
2br. References &amp; Deposit. Grac1ous
1 VISIIm~
Silver. Gold Coins, Proof· a_rl-tlme .
ony~
A
bt'
At
AI.
14x50
1994
Fairmont,
2
No
Ftets.
(304)675·5162
bedroom
apartmentS
at
Vii·
Q'Mler.
Conditioners
8.nd Heat AJC, till, $2350, . OBO.
·s
·
·
1
11
sets.
Diamoilds,
Gold Children Wlth . specl~l . m~t- Bf pace va a e
. bedroom,.smoothtoprange,
lage Manor and .Riverslde
~·---·
Pumps. II you don't call us (740)256-1875
2
Rin gs.
U.S. Currency. · .cal neetts, paid by "181Vmlle· tordable- Rate. Nice Exec- slde·by·slde . refrigerator 3 bedroom, 2·112 bath, Apartments in Middleport.
~ JY~'EOUS -~ we both lose. Free est!- ~~~:.:::_:::_ _ __ _
M T S Coin Shop 151 Sec· age, phone &lt;740 l 992· 6626 utlve Oflices. Newly Re- .w/d, cia, small front porch &amp; 2 cat garage, furnished, From $278·$348. Call 740MERCHANDISE
mates. (7~0)446-6308 and 1997 Seabrlng JXI .converti· \
modeled Spnng Valley PiaK
M b'i H
~
· 1 800 291 0098
ble, leather interior, nee&lt;t
· · ·
·
ond Avenu~. Gallipolis. 740- PT Tax pr~parers needed za. Call (740)446 .3481 .
deck $6§1!0 (740)696·0105 anauga
o 1e
omes. 992-5064. Equal Housing
·
·
·
.
payoff. excellent condition~
7
1
441
446·2842.
lor busy tax office. Pomeroy
'
'
( 40)
·03 0
Opportunilies.
1 stoker stove, $500; ~ pel· ft~-~----., $9,000. (740)446· 1225
,
~ 1 1989 Spruce Ridge 14 • 70 •
let stove, $700. plus 6 bags
BIJIIJliNG
I
location. We will train; com·
I '11'1 0\\11 '\I
S•RI'Jr&lt;t:'C"
3 bedroom, 2 bath, 12x40 3 bedroc:m brick house on Modern 1 BR apartment. I
II
.
&amp;
d
200 1 Mr't.aublshr· Eclipse A9·
Pul.r , skr'its req ur'red. Send '"---iiiiLIIiiii~iiiio~--'·
Sl H\ (( I S
.porch wtroof, must be Mercerville Road. $500 (740)446·0390
o pe ets, pipe
pa '
SUPPLI~
=,;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; resurne to : The Daily Sen· .
moved
.
month,
(740)256·1417
or
(740)379
..
9380
16k mi., alloy whls, thof(
17401742 2713
"lttO
ltinel, P:O. Box 729·13 Pom"'fUR EO
leave nlessage.
(740)256-6226
North 3rd Ave .. Middleport,
rec ,. 5spd, cdltilt. (304)773..
HELP '\'ANTED
eroy, Ohio 45769
SOCIA~ secDJ:'~ C:S~?
3 bedroom brick. carport. 1 bedroom furnished apart· ~j~. 8:gj~~~~oader, :~~~w:r;f~lel~:~ &amp;!~~ 5235 or (304)675-0226
2000 14 X 7 Clayton 3BA. basement,
STNA
·
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
excellent condi· ment, no pets, deposit &amp; reiWlnt8rs, Rio Grande, OH 65 Chevy Impala Convert!·
28th. AppHances, Perches, lion, · recently remodeled. erences,( 740&gt;992 -o 165
Would you like to join our ._
t-888·582-3345
1987 Grand Am, 1985 Caii74D-245·512 1.
ble. Mechanically excellent
'
ACCESS TO A PCI
dedicated team or care-giv·
skirting, tlka new, must go 1092 Sunset Drive, Galllpo- Now Taking Appl icatl,ons- Dodge Arles for "parts, can
Complete car. Great driver.
$1 .000- $4.500 PT/Ff.
ers ? It you are a nurse aide,
$19,995,00, 740·992·0076 lis, OH. $550 + $550 depos· 35 West 2 Bedroom Town· here run: Whirlpool washer,
Good to restqre. $5,000
Online Training
and WC?Uid like an opportun lHOMF.S
2000 sq. ft. home on 1 acre, il. (740)446-4116
house Apartments, includes (740)446·7556 aher 6:00.
~ ~
(740)256·6936
.
www.betterlifetoday.com ty to work at the area's pre·
10 mihutes from .hos'pital. - ' - - ' - - - - - - - Water
Sewage, Trash , 1997 FOrd F: 150, 4K4, 5 ___
FOR~
· 77 Chevy 4K4: 86 Dodge''
Fooree88Re4p4o9rt65
miere AlzhelmBf's care fa·
FOR SAIL
~till under constr.uctlon. 4 3 bedroom home, Miners· $350/Mo., 740-446·0008.
speed, 6 cylinder, elCceltent
Ram van, 360 motor, tlntArf
1·8 ·
·
cllily, please call Scenic
Bedrooms/ 2 Bath with ville, Ohio, river view, no
.
,
S
....,
1io n; 1976 Wilderness
One
Bedroom
Apartment
in
concJI
.
Windows,
750 080: 89.:
ets,
references
required
,
.
Hills Nursing Genter today $69 000 3 bedroom 1·112 swimming pool. (740)446· P
p
Pi
F 1
camper, excellent condl,tlon, Labrador&amp;· 2 yea·r old, yel- Dodge Dynasty, $1500·
Po' Pi ·
1 (740)446 7150 and ask
'
'
'
3570
$450 month, can (740)992· t.
eaaant.
urn shed.
A"~N
' ,: . l~t,. easCalntks/
',o J ne o.arting Or stop balh, 2' car garage. 10 ml· ::::.:cc·____ .:___ 6777 after 5pm.
Very clean and nice. Ng awning) furnace, air; 1991 tow, male, neutered. $200; 060. (740)256·6333
Posta
pos••ons. · er car· r ay
·
nutes from Holzers Ohio.
·
Pe Ph
(304)675 38
Olds Cutlass Supreme, 5-1!2 year otd, yellow, male,
d ,k
·
98 Clayton . 4br. t6x80 on
ts. one
·1 6
95 F d A 1
AIC 5
b ·
riers/sorters. No exp. re· Y In pe:rson an PIC up an (304)675-236-4
rented lot In Gallipolis Ferry "3 bedroom, Middleport,
good condition. Call be· nPutered, $200. 4 year old,
or
sp re,
' •
qu ired. Benefits. For exam, applicatiOn. We are located
"
304~675·3689 . Nice14x60 $375 per month plus depos· Small tumlshed apt. All ulil- tween 2:00pm and.,5:30pm. chocolate, female , not speed, 51 mpg, $1,000
1 d
salary. .and testing informa- 1n Gallipolis, {behind the 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 1 car
Illes paid except Electric. No (740)446·9954
spayed, $275 . . (740)245· (740)446-1225
~
c
s · v 11 C"
1
2b r. In Crown City, Ohio 11 , run1 nc1u as wa 1er, sew·
liOn ca .. lv30)3~3d·3032 1-JCI: pnng a ey lnema
garage. Fenced back yard. area. We trade for anything er &amp; trash, (740)992...0175
Pets, Security Deposit Ressn .
96 Camara, T·lops, $6,895 . •
782. 8am·8pm. ays. ,
Temporary help,· $5 hr. to Cedool, tree,0·7shBad~ lotDtocal· of value\ (740}256·93,5
3·br, House located In Ma· quintet
$275 .
Month . 6500 BTU LP gas heating
(740)388·0189
- - -- - - - - - care for my mother in
at
asllani rive.
(304)675·1365
AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or Chesh ire, 7 days a week. Call (740)446·0123
GOOd used 1995 14x70. 2 ·son, WV. $495. + Utilities. ' - - - ' - - - ' - -- - stove, warms 5 rooms, $295 Rat T&amp;rrler puppya Swka old 99 Fireblrd, silver, v. e, 5br., vinyl-siding/shingle roof, No Pels. (304)773·5881
/ Tara Townhouse Apart· (740)247-3373
tails docked wormed,
speed, litVcruise, Air, CD,
"
Sell. Shirley• Spears, 304· 6am·1 1 am,
5pm-9pm, 3 Bedroom newly rMlod· call Harold 740-385·9948
. menta, Very Spacious. 2 Antique roCking Chair, $1 00; $100. (304)675·7946
PS, ABS·brakes, dual alr&amp;75-1429.
(740)367-0302
eled, in Middleport, call Tom
4 BR unfurnished, free gas Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
bags, 40k miles, 2 yea.ra left.
EASY WORt&lt;! EXCELLENT Tobacco Grant· see~lng u~ :~~~= aher 5 p.m.
New 2003 14~0. 3 brl2bth. t0. he~! andR ·c'Gk ~th. 4 112 Bath, Newly Carpeted, ~~~~:.r s\r~~efu!r~:r~~:; ~~~io~~er gQ~PiS:~re~~~ on extended warranty. New ·
1
PAY!
censedlcertified/degraed in·
Only $995 down &amp; only ~~ es Mrom IO ~ e o~ Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· for furnace gun type, $~. (not registered) tall docked 80,000 M. radlali. '12,000. '
Assemble products
divldual with excellent com~ 3 Bedroom with~ garage on $195.65 per month. Call ora 111Road
mont tlo, Start $375/Mo. No Pete, (740)367-n2a.
d.ewctaws
remo"od', (304)895·3682
Karena 740·685·767t.
plus $400 deposit In ad· Lease Plus Security Deposit
•
at home.
munication
skllls, approximately 1 acre On : -:.=:.:..:.:.::::...:.:._;;_~ vance. Must have releren- Required, Days: . 740·446- Blackberry syrup, $3 pint, ~· GXcellent,tem~ra- Cars from $500 police im
Call Toll Free
20hours/wk. no benet its. Route 2, Gallipolis Farry. '
•
•
_
.(304)
New Home on 5 acres in cos and no pets, (140)245· 3481: Evanings: 740·367- (304)89&amp;·3408 (304)895- mont
males, $tOO· 150, pounds for salol For listing
1.800 .467. 5566 Ext 12170 17401992. 6626
675 5332
the country. (740)446·321 8. _ 5622
·
0502.
:JQ79.
(740)992·0932
1·800·719·3001 ext 3901

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Display Ads

:

.

To

All Display : . 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To .
Publication

et 11.

COURT OF
• COMMON PLEAS,
: MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
"

l\egister ·
To Place
t!Cribune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... · or Fax To 44&amp;-aoos
or Fax
992-2157
675-5234
Word Ads

.,

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REACH OVER 285,000 .PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Ol!IIIY In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
Monday - Friday for Insertion
In {'~~ext Day 's Pape r
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for S undays Paper

.I

r

1

7 749

I

•SIItte of Ohio:
"' Situated In the
.ffllllage .o f Pomeroy,
Ohio, being known
(lind dealgnated on a
vnap
of
Lincoln
l'Helgh" made by
;ereece and Carper,
Reglatered
Civil
!'nglneera,
·Huntington, West
l(lrglnla,
dat•d
October 17, 1942,
recorded In Plat Book
No. 3, at Page 43 and
44 •• Lot No. 53, and
being In Lincoln
Helghta,
further
dncrlbed ao· lollowo:
_ Beginning . at a

flo

(1 O)

'!'•

95 Dodge t 500, shortbed
pickup. 316 cu.in. 5-speed,
new dual exhaust, tires,
shocks. ball joints, clutch,
ruet
pump,
$5,300 .
(740)446·4316 alter 5pm,
,
95 Ford Ranger XLT. Ex·
tended cab, 4x4, 6 cylinder,
5-speed, t58K, $5.000.
7401710 ' 0066
&lt;
VANS &amp;
~

t 990 Dodge Ram Charger.
4 wheel drive. 318 Engine,
auto. Body in EKce!lent con·
dition. $3700. .(304)937·
3348
2000. Ford Ranger extendad cab, 4·WD., v .. 6, off road
package, step· Side, At, AC,
32,300
miles.
Pay-off
$17,500. Will • sell for
St6,900. (304)675·2790
'
,
92 Dodge ·Convers1on Van,
1 owner, lots ·of new. parts
$2,500.304·675·6693

lj140

M01URCYCLES

_
-

.

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING
949·1521

Are gou stressed?

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION

appt.

Roofing, Sldlna
Pllnlina, Gutters. Decks,

mEIGS mRSSRGE
THERRPV
· 213 n. Second Hue.

(740) 992·1189
(AITordable Prices)

HOME

e&amp;C General Home MeintS:.
nanca- Palnling, vlnyt aid·
lng, carpentry, doors, win·
dows, bll!l.thl, mobile home
repair and more. For free
estimate call Chat, 740·992·
8323.

stat' '.ffiedicallloird

Dean HiD
N~w&amp;:

(

Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, wv 25271
"W.V's

#I

CheVy.

JfiS flfCTIUC 6 •
PL.UmBtnG

Pontiac, Buick. Olds

&amp;

Van

DEPOYSAG
PinS.

Hill's Self
Storage

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

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

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

...

Ylll CIUIII Ill 81111llllflr Em helD
1111101 blcllll

•·Room Additions &amp;
R.-flng

• New G•ragea
•
•
•
•

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
PCimft!Oy, Ot*l

I

Your

Advertise

oacnte Coaaectioa, L

In this
space
for

Qrtllity
CGOtrdt ftohtd,. ood 1111n!

746-742..8015
(177.J~7tll)

Call ft:r RKI"C iniOrJ free cstilllllc
\WIJtl51

$75

.RIIIIITIII Clll

" 11111111111
CI-UIIIlJ ICIIID

AieACJ

74D-992-2222 or
74D-446-1018 .

The CRAFlY,

~'R~
High 8J. Dry
SeU-Storage

BLIND SPOT

(Factory OuUet)
All vertical blind• are
'
made to order al
our location

I

per
rnonth

FOUOil

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life .Insurance;
Burial and Final Ex!ienses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rolloversi
Mortgage; Major Medical
;jg
• Nursing Home
~

ElectriCIII &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Guttera
VInyl Siding 6 Pointing
P•tlo •nd P,orch Decka
Free Estimates

y

Vertical.

I

w~

33795 Hiland Rd.

• Mini1 • Etc

Pomeroy, Ohio

144 Third Ave.

Gallipolis 446-4995
Toll Free 1488-745-8847

740-992·5232

~BACI&lt;HC)E
1

Venrvisor 1 Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line of
Olher Accessories
I

• DOZING • END LO.ADii!RI
TRUCKING • TRENCHING

Tonneue Cover •

' ' \.

I

,I

IEPJIC liiiiii.IUIIII!IIIIIIlJWI,
WITIII-IIIIlCTIIC Ulll.
MHIIliOMIIITIPI.IUI

CIIUIII,

..., " " I I&lt;' I

\ l lddlljl•lll { l ill&lt;l

(740) 99 2- 5822

'

llnll7lbl.
andldrt11
llnaln
Udap.

Pomeroy Eagles
BlNG0217l
Every Thursday
&amp; 'S unday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

Call jeanie
and ask how.
7 40·992·7996

lsi Thursday of
every month All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy$5.00 ·
Bonanza Get
SFREE

6:30

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

YQ'\) ·

RESIDENTIAL

67~-7~16 or 1-800-730-4!13!1
· Sand, ~. 5tane., cuivut • Q~on ~lu

446-8237

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

POMEROY
. APPLIANCE
STORE
200 E. Main St
Open 9am·6pm
Man thru Sat
Phone 992-0515
Washers, dryers
Like Naw
Freezer, Electric
Ranges, Dishwashers
Refrigerators, and
much more
FREE DELIVERY

JONES'

BUILDERS InC.

pel I PNIIIIWJ

Tree Service
·

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

· • Bucket Truck

ODD JOBS

me.

(

Connie's
Child CARE

Washing, Mowing,

has openings, .15 yr.
experience, Certified
in Meigs. Athens and

Weedeatlng

Washington counties,

You Need It
Done, We'll Do It
(740} 949-4026
or
(740) 591·9239

Open 24 hours.
7 Days per week.
St. At 7 Tuppers

Painting,

~ower

Plains, OH
CALL 667·6329

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes; Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roots,
Siding, Decks, Kltchent. D.ry~all
&amp;More ~

FREE ESTIMATES! .

740-742-3411
(

•

TFN

Are JDII Lalli DU;J

BISSELL

L------...1

7122/TFN

CARPENTER
SERVICE

account will be eon-

992-2155

740.992·1671

YOUNG'S

'

Sentinel

&amp; Compare

FREE ESTIMATES

740-667·0363

said

· Subscribe
TodaY.
The Dally

ICalfll!le RIRIII"'m""IIXIelll,.,.,rgnl

' middleport, OH
(740) gg2-1705
Tonia Reiber ·
Ucen~ by Ute Ohio

/000 SJ. Rt. 7South
Coolville, Off 4,5723

'I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Ufetlme guaranlet. Local references fur·
nfshed. Established t 975.
Call 24 Hro, (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
WaterproolinQ.

IGngas

Free Estlmlta!

Herbalife Independent
Distributor

IMPROVEMENTS

.

"SALES AND SERVICE"

Dealers

"' IH\Ifl~

:IO

NewHomes

1-800-822-0417

New Cllefs Taste
flld

A viewing ol a road In
Cheater
Tawnohlp .__ _ _ _ _ _ __.
call.-~ .. New Crew
Road , will be held ,Ill
9:00a.m. on Thuraday,
october 17, 2002 at
the aile, followed by a
hearing .at 1:15 p.m.,
aiiO'On the third floor
of the Courthauae.
7eo A liTO PAlO'S &amp;
Everyone Interested In ·
ACCFN!ORU:S
this viewing ond
hearing Is encouraged
Rotor tor 1990 Dodge OakO· 10 attend.
Ia· New for $20, if no an· (10) 8, 15, 2TC
ewer,
leave
message.
(740)448·9429

~

1

~top

~.amerlcanalltndardalr.com

Naw Paopla •llaw Thlnus

1997 Marada MX- 1 sporl,
t7'10" with t35 Mercrulser;
covers. goodies! ln exceltent condition, garage kept
Trailer has spare ttre. All for
' s7,000. Call (740)446·2444.
Boss boat. loaded with ox·
·$4,000
OBO.
tras
(740)441-8299

r

CONSTRUCTION

Sta.uUwt

304-773-5800

Unleso exceptions

(10) 8, 2002
1990 Sylvan 25 foot Gruis· - - - - - - - - or, loaded, Ask lor Paul
Public Notice
(740)446·9177

Heeling
~
Air Conditioners
Service On All Brands
Realdentlal &amp; Light Commercial
10 yr. parts &amp; Labor
Heating &amp; Air Conditioning

1066 Second Street

are filed thereto, said
account will be set
!or. hearing before
said Court on the
November -S 2002 at

FORSAI.E

•
•
•
•
•
•

Call now for gour

~~---"!!IIP-

ROBERT
BISSELL

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING &amp; HEATING

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

lncompetenl

1989 Harley Oa'llidson cu's. of.
tom soft tail $1 t ,500.00
Any person Inter·
992·2209
nted may file written
,
exception to said
2000 400EX, runs great, account or to matter1
tooks great $3500 OBO. pertaining to the exe- ·
f7401441 " 17 t 6
cutlon ol the truat,
2002 Kawasaki Prairie V· not lass than five
650 4x~ . t ZOO miles•. Ex· days prior to the date
tended warrenty ~nlll 4- set for hearing.
2005. 20001b warn wmch alter market tireS $7,500. new ·
·
will sell for $5,900. Call Robert E. BuCk,
(304)882·3622 or (304)674· Judge
·
3566
Common
Pleaa
Court,
Probate
Division
BoATS &amp; MaroRS Meigs county, Ohio

Monday-Friday 8-SPM 1 Saturday 8-2pm

(10'x10' 610'11201

,sldered and contln·
ued Irani day to day
until finally disposed

~

(740) 446·1044

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Account•
and
vouchers ol the lol·
lowing named llducl·
ary has ~n flied Jn ·
the. Probate Court,
Meigs County, Ohio
lor approval and
setUement.
ESTATE NO. 24905
- 17th Account of
Jennifer L. Sheets,
Guardian of the per·
son and estate of
Oliver E. Bailey, an

I

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF ACCOUNJ'S,
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

1

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

1 mo.

OHIO,.,.,

time

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

(740} 992-0739

ELECI'RICMI

whiCh

Foreman: Larry
Owner:
740·367·01 81
Ronald "Mick" Haning
Chris1ina "Chris" Haning
740·992·0780
Cell# 740·591-0919
Cell: 591-8393

Owner:
Terry Lamm

I

flO

IL--..ii"-IIWDs
___.,

6 1U.c., Ptstr:-«·•· &amp;ttr&lt;'f &amp; ~
Scott L Swain ·
Gallipolis, Ohio • (740) 446-2015
/SA Certified Arborist
J-866-4DR-TREE

Additions ·

PROBATE DJYISJON
MEIGS co
· u•~

1995 Chevrolet Blazer. 4
$5 ,800.
door,
4x4,
(7401446.0425

Haning's Construction

?-a tf!...6rot

';tot'llf4W#-.

Siding, (!nd

Business..--------·
Services
# lNVt .
For~: :~ :yi nder, l;;;:c;~~~~ ~lfC1if.f4

4wo. '"ns good, $1,s5o.
1740)446-4999

We Care For Your Trees~
e.•••tA.••. J'fAr•ft•l..

Roofing, Decks,
' Remodeling,

sleeps 4 or .5, stts .In WV000306, 304-675·1786.
prckup. call (740)256-1631

s3

~

. Specializing In :

R•:FRIGERI\TION

~r for sale. Residential or commercial
.16
Ponuac
G~and
wiring,Master
new service
re·
Am,LTO,
83 87
Po~tlac
6000,
94 ·pairs.
Licensedore!ec·
Chevy Corsica,_also c_am~- trician. Ridenour EleCtrical,

~S.ttM...~

CllmiCTIIII

a, 15, 22, 2002

Parts or whole

Roofing, Siding, Hdd-Ons, Electrlca~
Plumbing, Decks, Remodeling,
Drywall, Painting

7Ute ~ s,~·'4«4-t4l

WINTER STORAGE
Melgo County
Fairgrounds
Arrlvof: Oct 5 &amp; Oct. 18
,I •m ·12pm
Releue April 26, 2003
A ' " of $20 will be
ch.rges for e•rly 1rrl·
v•t, l•te arrival, ear1y
removal, late removal,
or anytime access 11
Want~d to fairgrounds
other than •lated d•t...
Building 1pace 11 flrat
come flrst HM.
inside Storage: $-1.00/H
Open Sp1H1: S2.001H
ln1lde Fence: 1.001tf

Cu.hCJ:vkC &amp; Gravely

REIMER &amp; LORBER
Co., L .P.A.
By: Dennis Reimer
(Reg. 10048779),
Allorneyo
lor
Plaintiff, 2450 Edloon
Blvd., P.O. Box 868,
'TWinsburg,
Ohio
44087, (330) 425-4201

1f8otO

AIII05

foraslowas

RALPH
E.
TRUSSELL, Sheriff,
Meigs County, Ohio

L.L--·F-OR,;;S;;;A;;:LE;,;,·_,.~

'

, I

Advertise
your business
on this page

r.n~or '''*"'Ill ·" ""'''"II

,_ Motltl .......... l~i ....d ....... , ••

�Tuesday;October 8, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 8 6 • The _Dally Sentinel

ALLEY OOP

PHILLIP

THE
Q&gt;..Vf!!.!

...

Na'!,ll

• .K n

47 Rolnbow
band
1 -(lllng) 49 Dreued
4 Biller
51 Rouoe
8 To.-n
54 All-pUrpoae .
11 Ancient
truckl
.
Tol&lt;Yo
56 Blvd.
12 Grt&amp;
57 "There
13 Dorothy'•
oughta be

lUI 02

dog

9A 76 t 2

•
9
t
.

t:UI

10
AAQ H7 0
, QIOt
9J
KQJ 7t 4 t to~t
107)
. ,

2

...• •
•

K 8 LJ;

.. AQJ152

Otaler: &amp;ast
Vulnerilble: Eaat·West
Soulh

Wnt

North

5 ..~ ,

Pan

P•u

...

Pan

Help opponent
Eric Hoffer, a U.S.
P.hilosopher, wrote:
' Propaganda docs not
deceive people; it
merely helps them to
HARNEY
decci ve themselves."
At the bridge table,
HERE COME'O "YORE
DON'T LOOK NOW,
ELVINE"Y SEZ TO
finding
a play that deVENTRILOQUIST!! .
LUKEY, BUT •••
TELL LOWEEZY .••
ceives your opponent"
DANG-- I
will he! p your score.
FEEL LIKE
How would . you,
A DUMMY
South. plan th e~' play
in rive clubs . on this
DOIN' THIS
deal? West leads the
spade 10 in answer to
. hi s partner's four·
spade opening.
.
This deal occurred
during the CavendishTeams Ch;unpionship, held in Las Vegas last May . After
East opens with a
textbook four spades,
promising a good
eight-card ·suit with
some 6-10 high-card
points, South's five ,
c Iub overcall looks
automatic.
Silli ng South was
Paul Soloway , a mul ..
tiple world champion
and the top ·masterpoint holder in the
known universe. He
could see that if the
opponcnl's hearts
were 2-2. he had
.missed a slam. If
hearts were 4-0, he
had no dmncc. And if
they were 3- 1, a dia·
~
mend shift at trick ·
&lt;
two would be lethaL
•z
~
How could he dis·
~
courage that shift?
~~~--ll-~~-L--~·~~~--~--~~~~
At trick one, · he
covered the spade 10
with dummy s king.
Now East, after winning with the ace,
thought there was no
harm in trying for a
trump promotion: He
led another spade.
However, Soloway
ruffed high, drew
trumps, conceded a
heart, and "claimed,
' his diamond loser dist...L..JUJu.o:.oz..::;_..il:l.....ma....Lil appearing on dumPEANUTS
my's fifth heart.
· If Soloway had
played low from lhe
dummy at· trick one,
East would have
overtaken with the
jack. Then, he might
have returned a low
sp~de, but a diamond
shift would have had
a lot of appeaL
Soloway made the
spade continuation
1!1...~~-----------------------------.....;.::&gt;Z;.;~=·;.;..:;;;:-L;..~ easy , and East naively
BETTY
. ' fell for it.
!

(301" INTO

CWT\lltJG

GROWN
CAN PlAY
• DRESS UP "

Htgen
10 Early jazz
13 The other
guya
1B Fictional
-DOWN
20 German
1 Rookie
m1e ttart
ooclol"ea
23 SeH·Imagea
2 Wyoming
24 llele out
neighbor
26 WeaHhy, In
3 Treaaure
Madrid
hunter'a aid
27 Chemlll'l
4 Pony pad
weight
s Cautious
6 Dog breed- 28 Tombstone
deputy
er'• org.
30 Piece ol
7 Senor's
. furniture
coin
8 "The Bells" 31 Locker
locale
poet
9 Actren- . 32 "Stir Wars"

dell

29 Dollop
31 Insincere •
34 Retl,.'o
kitty
35 BH part
36 Hlmtltyan
humanoid
37 Surface
trtnoport
38 Employed
39
1002
40 Frolicked
42 ActOrDevine
44 ConouHa

f:ul

••

Ope ni n11lead: • 10

·-

. Meigs .County's Hometown Newspaper

pathl
-·
Stack
60 Fomlly
Wom f;IUt
room
Pinder forte 6.1 Edible
Word ol .
root•
mouth
62 North
~ 22 Stared ot
Woods
25 Bualne11
roamer
16
17
t9
21

Souah

·MONTY

,;__, ..

56 Spare lte111
59 lnvoluritary

14 Prohibit
15 Fly ball

.. K I 4
\VI'sl

•

ACROSS

A LDER

~NO

Prep Volleyball: Meigs, Eastem crowned TVC champs

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

t ~f.O
lT WlTM SOME
1-i!:RM
I

c....,.•

book

Dl'inctll
33 •Don't rub

·Laid-off deputies picket at . courthouse

--1"
35 Leu poiHe
40 Dell bread
41 Wlpa1 Oull ·
43
45
46
48
49
50
51

li!IPPV

Sketched

Leuan
Imp
Obllglllon
flu bug
Knock flat
Crumple up
52 Stein IIIIer
53 Okla.
nelghbDI'
55 Pablo't
aunl

~er
High: 70s, Low: 60s
Details, A2

BY BRIAN

,.......,,.......,,.,.....,

It' s more common tha n not

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

i

Wl-lO ARE &lt;,JOO

"fAt-KIN&amp; 1'0'&gt;

I

l

M~AN.

that we can profit from things
we trul y CI1JOY doing. In tlie
year oheod yo u may turn o~
to be one of those people w,.,.
wi ll have fun in the process of

15 TH!ORE

ANt,.l"fHIN!&lt; YOU DON'T WANT?
RAISINS

m akin g money.

li

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 et. 23) ·
- It"s possible you may have a
tough tj rn e kcLpi ng s~c rel s today. Be aware ot th is weakness and pay p&lt;trticular i.ltlention to an y lh mg. you' d nor-

·mall y bl urt out. Think· before
yo u speak. Libra . .trent your- ·

self to a birt hday gift. Send
fo r you r As tro-G ra ph predic ti ons for the year ti hcad b y

TilE G!:IZZWELLS

mai l1ng $2 ond an SASE to
Astro-G raph. c/o this

FAU~~ l .
'tlt il£ '(ctl
'0\.tU&gt;\\-\q
\\l, !'&lt;\'/
C\.~'1'8?

D
1---/-",ll}...

1\l,'i'.l'\ I?\.~~ 1£\.L
\\\~ C\.t..SS'tJ\.If\1 1.
'{111;.5 \ruST \ t-.L\&lt;..It\q

I&gt;·.'BOllT?

t;\:l\-\'1 \tLl M~ 'leAl ~
\)OZE:.I/ 0\'F l'oo"" !. ~

I

ne w s pa~

per. P.O. Box 167. Wickliffe,
OH 44092. lle sure 10 state
yo ur zodi ac sign. ·

SCORPI O (Oc t. 24-No.v.
22) -- Av11 id giving an y qd- ,
v ice 10 o the rs today. solicit ed
o r un':o;o lit: itcd. Sho uld yo ur
su ~gcstiom.

bt: fo ll owe d and
fai l. you might have to d eal
with an angry indi vidual.

SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 23Dec. 21) ·- Us ua lly yo u're
ve ry careful in"how yo u deal
·wi th othe rs. hut tmjay yuu

Pauline M. Reuter, 64

POMEROY -. "Criminals
doh 't ~et laid off' and "Three
commissioners plus one sheriff equal · layoffs" were two
sentiments expressed on picket' signs held by laid-off sheriff's deputies Tuesday .
The deputies began an

doghouses

informational picket in front and olher employees, Sheri ff
of the
Meigs County Ralph Trussell laid off most of
Courthouse
Monday, his staff last Friday, leaving
designed to make the public six deputies on the payroll to
aware ofthe financial difficul· provide law enforcement cov-·
· ties in the sheriff's depart· erage in the county.
me~t, which thel:' an(! ,many of
Tru ssell has closed the
thetr hand-pamte"d • Signs county jail, and will operate a
b!ame on the county commts· . day and evening shift and
'd · h h'f
s1oners.
The picket will continue for on 1Y some mt n!g t s t ts,
a week, according to Bill throug~ the end of the year.
Gilkey, president of the local
Trussell hopes that funds set
chapter
of
the
Ohio astde tor compensated leave,
Patrolmen's
Benevolent not claimed by some officers
Association, the union· repre- laid off, and funds anticipated
from an overtime grant, will
senting local deputies.
Citing insufficent funds in help keep a skeleton staff on
his salaries line item to pay the payroll until the end of
the salaries of all 17 deputies October.

POMEROY Meigs
County Humane Society. is
seeking unused dog houses
for distribution to needy
dog owners.
. Local residents who have
dog~ houses they no longer
need are asked to call 9492219 to arrange for pickup.

by Luis Campos
Todlly's clue: U equals W
WT

VR

WHVBWRWRB

CLWRB.''
·BVTZDR

"Z Y L

CVJYLKVX!i

WHVBWRVZWDR

ADULX

H V R 'T

RVZGXL . " .
UVKKVJL

PUZHU

TZf,.OLRT

WORD
GA.Itl

- - - - - - Edited by CLAY R. POLLAN
letter~

cf

the

four sc:rombled wo rds below to form four simple words.

I

12N 1\ Ll

B

1°

I

E C N F E I=-~•
I
I \

A friend of mine is a dentist. He
also has a great sense of humor:
=·==·==·==·=::_-:~He hung a sign in his office that
,
read "Welcome To My ·- ..• ·
KE P C L I
statton."
5. \-

\ ·

-

I

L...

l--,1"'·6,.!:.~-~,-!=-.!ri-!::"TI~7-TI-i ()

I

.

.

.

L..L..;..JL_l_---L-.._....1

@

Comp lete th .. chuckle quoted
by Hl ling 1n the m1ss 1n g words

you d e~Jelo p

•

from step No. 3 befOw.

Lotteries

PRINT NUMBER ED LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUA RES

_€)__-~: :.~:.:i-'cA: :R~.:;~;:.:~.:.;~:.: ER_l_ET--ER-s_T_o-~.i_·.~.\_J..!_·..J!.._...L!_...Li_.~.\-lfi'
SCRAM-lETS .ANSWERS .

Abrupt· Leech • Amuse ·Rumple • REMEMBER
We had watched a man act very foolishly at a party.
My husband commented that when a man forgets him- ·
self he usually does something everyone else will RE· ~

'

might throw away your g11od
manners and leave an imp'res-

sion you won't like. Get back
in character.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) -- Even in operat ion s
where you usually follow ex. plicit procedures to the lcller.
today you may have a tendency to stray from this exactne ss and do so methi ng

,·oolish. ··
AQUARIUS (J an. 20- Feb.
19) ·- Avo id gelling into anything risky wi th anolher today. especial ly if the control
isn't in your hands. If you
have any dubious or un ~.:e rt ai n

feelings concerning the endea vor. back off quickly.
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch
20) -- There is ·a possibility
th nt both you and your spouse
could be a bit more touchy
th i.ifl. usua l 'today :.:tbmH dome~I IC

issues . Try to pu ll to-

ge th er in stead of tugg ing
apart.

ARIES (Mnrch 21-April 19)
-- Your dc!' irc . may be co n!' truc ti vc to d :..~y. but un l e~~
you get org an ized fi rst. yo ur

methods and proce dures

m n~

be so hclte r- skcltc r lhcy wo n 't
be effecti ve.

TAU RUS (Apri l 20-May
20) '-- Usuall y you r taste is

preuy good, but today some
rose-colored ~la ss e s could
blur a purchase you ' 11 make.
Unfonunalely, once you live
with it for a while. you could
end up hating

it.

GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20)
-- What may appear clever to
you mi ght not play well with
your associ ates ioday. If
yo_u' re not careful you could
come off as being either tact·
less or cold hearted. so guard
yo ur words.
CANCER (Ju ne 21-July 22)
. -- Rather than try to recti fy a
mi sunderstanding you m1 e ~t
have with another today, ) ""
are more Iikel y to remain si·
lent and brood about the al·
\cgcd injustice. Make

&lt;~mends.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)-- If

fur some slrailge reason you
1hink yo u have to buy n

frie ndship, dismis s thi s
thought Immediately from
your mind. Purchasing popu·
larit y is always a bad invest·
ITICilt.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
·· To you. a remark you make
today may appear harmless.
but to your listener,;, it may
be extremel y offensive. If this
occurs. apologize and e•plain
yoursel f.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Mayor Sandy
Iannarelli processed the following cases in ,Mayor's
Court Tuesday:
Fint:d were: Raymond E.
Klein, Middleport, $JOO and
cos.ts, underage consumption, $200, underage con. sumption, $100, open container, $100 public intoxication; Kenneth R Smith,
Pomeroy, $500 and costs,
three days in jail, DWI, $15,
speed; Joseph · Conley,
Middleport, $300 and costs;
· contributing to the delinquency of a minor, $300,
· contributing; Michael Taylor,
Pomeroy, $200 and costs,
assault.
. Forfeiiing bonds were:
Susan Scott, Bidwell, $63,
speed; Lisa Smith, Pomeroy,
$75, expired registration;
Ryan J. Lemley, $67 speed.

OHIO
Pick 3: 8·5·6
Pick 4: 8·3·1·0
Buckeye 5: 11-14-25-27·32
Mep MIUons: I 0.34-43-47·50
Mesa Ball: 25
Pick 3 nlpt: 4·1 ·6
Pick 4 night: 9·5.!6-9

News Editor
POMEROY
A
$600,000 maintenance and
bus garage to be built
behind the new Meigs
Elementary School building
at Rutland was discussed at
Tuesday night's meeting· of
the Meigs Local Board -o f
Education.
The dis~ussion · ~entered
on what kmd of butldmg to
construct , pole type or
block, and whether to hire
·an architect to design it or
h_ave_the bo_ar~ set up spect·
ftcattons, b1d tt out~ and let
the . contractor hire the
archllect.
Before making any further
deci sipn s on the 60-by-120
building, it was decided that
1he transportation supervisor, Paul McElroy, and per·
har.s
Superintendent
William Buckley would
check out bus garages in
several other school districts.
to.
The proposed garage will
have three bays. one for
routine repairs, .one. where
major breakdown repair can
take place, and a third as a
wash bay or a place to do

·Index
2 Sections ..; 12 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
··
Obituaries
· Sports
Weather

JORDAN HIU

Southern golfer goes to state
BY DEREK TAYLOR

·Staff writer

=::.:..:=::.:..:_ ___ _ _

RACINE - Most athletes
entering their senior year in
their chosen sport don't take
very kindly to having a new
varsity coach.
In the case of Southern's
Jordan Hill, however, a
changing of the guard turned
out to be just what the doctor
ordered.The arrival of first-year
Tornadoes head coach Ike
Speitcer was the first event

.· AS
B4-S

BG
AS

A4

A
A3
Bl-3
A2

in what turned out to be a
banner year for Hill, Who
will culminate his senior
campaign
beginning
Thursday in the Ohio Slate
High
School
Golf
Championship Tournament
on the Grey Course at Ohio
State
University ~ in
Columbus.
It marks the first time in
lhe history of the school a
Tornado has qualified for the
state toumament.
"It was easy," Hill said of
the transition to golf the

Spencer way. ''He wanted to
do it and he came in and has
done a good job. I thou ght he
was about ready to have a
heart anack when I qualified
for state, though.'"
Spencer said Hill has all
the tools to take his game to
the next level.
"Jordan's a very focused
golfer," Spencer said. "He's
an outstanding kid, a good
student and he doesn't say
much of anything.

Please see Golfer, AJ

Statehouse candidates outline agendas
Republican
J i m m y
Stewart,
both
of
Athen
s
BY BRIAN J. REED
County,
StaH writer
outlined
their ecoPOMEROY - Two strate- · nomic poligies for improving the eco- cy agendas
nomic climate of Meigs ~I the meet·
PANCAKE
County and three other coun- mg, hosted
ties in Ohio 's new 92nd by Overbrook Center in
House District were outlined Middleport.
by candidates for the new
Pancake, a Nelsonville
. house seat, during Tuesday's native, said his union back·
· Meigs . County Chamber of ground does not preclude him
Commerce monthly member- from an understanding of the
ship luncheon .
needs of small business ownDemocrat Jim Pancake and ers, and said his platform

Chamber hosts
Pancake, Stewart

W.VA.
Daily 3: 7-3·9
Daily 4: 0-9· 3-()
Cash 25: 2-7·8-10-19-25

minor repairs:
There will also be an
office, conference room for
the drivers. rest room and
storage space .
The construction is being
financed with state money.
Buckley stressed that the
project needs to go to bid
not later than January so
·that the work can begin in
February or early March.
- " Timing- s ·-- important
because the building needs
to be complered before the
contractors on the school
job start the extensive
paving around the new
school," he said.
The fini sh date on the
h 1 · J 1 18 · h
sc 00 . ts u Y . wtt · sludents to move mto the new
bUilding for the 2003 -04
school year.
· It was noted that a $9 ,993
state grant to be handled
through Washington State
Community College has
been awarded · to the tech
prep program at Meigs
High .
Michelle Miller was hired
as a first · grade teacher at
Rutland Elementary School
for the remainder of the
school year.

BY CHARLENE HOEFIJCII

WT

'O(g'\l~j}li-~b~'S*

O Rearrange

new garage

DOLJI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"In spite of my age and what people
may aay, wish, hope or pray lor, l'm.sllll good at what! do.•
-Boxer Larry Holmes
.
·
.
I nAI U'AILJ

Meigs Local .
.Board discusses

RACINE
Dorc;~s
Bethany Sqnshine Circle
will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday
at the church. Ann Boso and
Peggy Hill will have the program and refreshments. All
women are invi\ed.

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are creal~ from quo18tions by famous
people, pas1 and present. Each leHer In the cipher stands lor anolher.

"HVR

Laid-&lt;Jff Meigs County sheriff's deputies held signs outlining their
grievances with Meigs County commissioners Tuesday, during an
informational picket in front of the Meigs County Courthouse.
(Biian J. Reed)

arde meets

CELEBRITY CIPHER

- -----~~....._----,.,Bv BERNICE BEDE .O soL

Deaths
Seeking

'

GAHFlELIJ

J. REED

writer

Slaff

Details, AJ

MEMBER!

Wedn esday. Oct. 9, 2002

Informational
picket to last
through Friday

includes tax
incentives
and access
to start-up
and expansion funding
through
a
district-wide
r·e v o I v i n g
loan
pro,
gram .
S
" S m a -1 I
TEWART
businesses. new businesses
and bu sinesses looking to
expand need tax incentives,"
Pancake said . "I've ber.:n lead·
ing the charge, with others, in
Athens County to promote
new business."
Athens County offers a

revolving loan program for
business start-ups and expansion .. as does Meigs County,
and Pancake said a similar
district-wide program would
be beneficial in improving the
retail and industrial climates.
"! want to create a revolving loan for all the counties in
this district," Pancake said. "It
would offer start up funding
and make it possible for busi· nesses to add new employees
to their payroll s."
Pancake said he al so favors
changes in the formula""' and
point system used to award
Issue 2 mfrastructure grant~ to
counties, villages and townships, and. favors measures to

eliminate the 30 percent
match required for village
participation in the program.
Stewart, who serves as
Athens City Auditor, said his
goal in seeking the statehouse
seat was "to get the economy
· in Southeastern Ohio started
again."
.
To do that, Stewart said, the
area, and Meigs County in
particular, must take advantage of the new infrastructure
now under con struction,
including the county's new
school
facilities,
the;
Ravenswood Connector · and
improvemehts 10 U.S . ·33, to .
I
d
Pease see Agen as, A3

-

.... .

C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Holzer Medical Center Respiratory Therapy Department's 2nd Annual

Respiratory Fall Symposium
Friday, October 25 • 7:30 am - 4:00 pm
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

--~--~----~-------- .
M\;f
D IC A L C E NT E-R

A one·day event that gives ·respiratory care professionals

Discover the Holzer Difference

the opportunify to }earn and review different aspects.
..,_ and concepts in the respiratory field.
For more information, or to register, call Sandy'Moore -at

(740) 446-5919

www.holzer.org
J
I

I

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