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Page D6 • 6tWq 1tbnal·6mtind

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Ir rWr: Ir rw: Itil

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2001 Chevy Siilleraoo Ex 96 Dodge G"'n Ca•a.,.n.
Cab. Quad Cab, loaded, $3495; 99 Dodge Caravan,
red, new tires, 27,000 miles. $4495; 95 Ford Windstar
must sael $19 ,500 OBO. Van, $2595; 96 Fon:l Explor{740}441-1547
er. $5495; 98 CheVy S- 10
Biazer, $7295; 95 Mitsubishi
Montero suv. $4595; 89
Toyota Ex Cab 4114 auto
$2595. B&amp;O Auto 'sales:
----. - - Highway 160N. (740)-44692 Dodge ConverstOO Van, 6865
, owner, lots 01 ~ parts

$2,500.304~75-66

93

Sunday, October 13, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • G.allipolis, OH • Pt.. Pleasant, WV

It AA~:

MmulcrlUS

99 Jeep Saha•a. 33.000 2000 400EX. •uns g•eat. LoiS ol ch"'""', smaU l&gt;od&lt;
miles- new tires, lots of lOOks great. $3500 080. ChiN. intake carb, scoop, &amp;
chrome. Hard &amp; sofr top. (740)441-1716
more, (740)742-3805 eveGarage kapt, excallent connings.

r

r

IMI'IIOVDitNJ!!
BASEMENT

WA~R~
dition. $17,0CXl negotlat»e.
Uncooditionallifetime guar2001 . Harley De~ Su{740)256-1021
CMous &amp;
antee. Local references furperglide, .2,500 !lllies, some
rtloJuR lbDS
nished. Established 1975.
extras, l1ke new. $12,500. ...._
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446(7..0)446-3854 or. (?40)339- ~ 1984 Camper Coachman: .. 0870, Rogers BaSement
1913
32 ft. perfect for perment Waterproofing.
campln site. , Priced reason2002 Kawasaki Prairie V- able good condition!
650 4x4. 1200 miles. Ex· (7.0) 985-4293
e&amp;C Geneml Home Mainla·
tended warranty ~ntil 4·
nence- Painting, vinyt ski2005. 20001b wam·wtnch at·
inn carpen~n~ dOOrS winrl&lt;el · 57 500
1989 Jaco Designed Series ~-~~ ·
''"1•
•
ter ma
t1res
.
. new 3Sft.,Sth.Wheei,Goose
dowS, baths, mobile home
will selt for $5,900. Call
.
repair and more For free
·
( 304 uu:~., 3622 0 (304)6 74 camper, new awn1ng, new
,...._r
- retrigator, 8 lot of extras, e)(- estimate call Chet, 740--9923566
cetlent QOndition.
6323..
(740) 591-6055 o• 367-7221
98 Honda Valkyrie, 1700

I

neck

miles. Lots of extras. $9500.
•
Gatage kept, like new, Deer Hunters Special!
(740)256-1021

I,..,

o~ ··:rs &amp; M~

v•~

DUA

··

FOR SAu:

I

2000 Wive Yamaha Wave
runner, GP 1200R, 155hp,
40 hours, like new/ trailer.
$6500. (740)367:0012 .

1971 Cobra 21 Ft. Trailer
..
'
g~ cond1t1on, no leaks
$1,750.00 Leaw Message
(740) ~

94 2063

,.,-------

Su~rior Home •
Malf'lten~nce
We do au .repairs on homes
. .d &amp; . u1 C
try
ms• e_ a . arpen •

r

global news, sales,
jobs, national, community news, advertising, stocks, sports,
entertainment, travel,
real estate, automotive, weather, classlfleds ...

Gallia Soccer Club's
' BASKET BINGO,
Featuring
Longaberge~ Baskets
Saturday,
November 2, 2002
6:30 pm at the
Elks' Lodge
408 1/2 Second Ave. Gallipolis.
Tickets available at Wood
Realty
.
.
32 Locust Street
Or by calling 740·379·2932
Cost $20 tor 20 games.
Not Sponsore~ ~.the Lo~geb~rg_er Co.

· Gallia County Republican
FALL RALLY
Thursday, October 17th
6:00pm
Gallia County Fairgrounds
Free to the public

OPEN HOUSE
To celebrate ·BOth Birthday ·
Glendon "Cap" Evans
Gallipolis Shrine Club
· October 19, 2002
2 to 5 pm
No gifts please

Afraid to open .
the statement on
r.,
your stock market
· account?
Invest with us.
We've never lost a penny
lor our clients.

I·

Euo1ucAIJ
RD1uGERA11oN .

. Residential or commercial
wiring, new service or repairs. MaS1er Licensed etectrician. Ridenour Elittrlcat,
WV000306, 304-675-1786.

MLB playoffs, Bl

426 Second Ave.
Oct 19 7:30pm •
$10 advance
$12 at the door
Info: 740-446-2787
Looking for a
·better interest rate
on your savings
without risking your

Raffle Tickets

principal?
Fully insured by
A rated insurance
I
•
compan1es
Ronnie Lynch

We Are Moving!

Places To Go
Travel Agency

is lor you.
Berber Carpet

is moving to

$5.95 .
Vinyl flooring $4.95
. 446-7444
starting at

Bv

·

Weather

Plaza

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

1-800-447-8235

For More Info...

Agency!

seeking waitress/bartl'!nder
lor day shift.

Watch For Us!

(10:30 am· 5:00pm)
Must be reliable, honest and
have prior waitress experience . .
Great pay and good tips.
Call 441·9371
or apply in person at
42 Court St, Gallipolis ·

446-8235
1·800~447·8235

Scenic Hills will be having our
ALZHEIMER'S
SUPPORT GROUP
meeting on
October 21st at 6:00pm
here at Scenic Hills. Light
refreshments will be .s~;~rved. ·
Anyone who is interested in
attending please call
Mary ~rrdwood or Kelly Bryant
at 740.446· 7150
l;lershey Kisses tor sale

AKC CHOC. LABS
6-male 3-lemale
Parents on premises W/pedigrees
Born 9/9/02
· $400.00
740· 742·3802

.ATTENTION .
FARMERS
We now have Ag
Lime
CALDWELL&amp;
SONS

High: 60s, Low: 40s
Detlills,Al

Family Insurance

Local Bar and Grill

Outreach

dinner planned

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT

POMEROY - There' will
be a mission outreach dinner
at the Poq~eroy United
Methodist
· -.j;hurch
Wednesday. Serving will be.
from·4:30 to 6 p.m. The public is invited to attend.

Are the rates getting too
expensive on your
Plan C or Plan F?
Check out the rates
on our Plan D.

Open on
election d,ay

Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
will be open regular hours, 8
· a.m. to 4 p.m. on Election
Day Thesday, Nov. 5.

446-8235
1·800·447•8235

Republicans to
have dinner

245-5316

GUN SHOOT

POMERO¥ - The Meigs
County Republican Party
will have its annual bean
dinner 6 p.m. Oct. 21 at the
Senior Citizens Center.
Donations will be'.taken.

Sunday, October 13
Rutland Gun Club .··
3 Money Matches
Pattern Slug x $100.00
on ·each match. Plus
regular matches.
Everyone welcome.

all

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick.l: 0·5·4
Pick 4: o-9·9·9
Buckeye 5: 6·14·15·20·25
Pick l nigl!t: 1·4·4 ·
Pick 4 night: 1·7·5·8

446·2342 •.992·2156 • 675·1333

on sale now

W.VA.
Daily l: 4·9-5
Daily 4: 0-1-2·6
Cash 25: 3·7·15·16·18·24

Index
2 Sections - 12 Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
Co mit's
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

II

AS
B3·4

BS
AS
A4
A3
A3
Bl ·3
A2

c 2002 Ohio Valley Publ~hing Co.

•

I' O I N I l.Llhlt. ,\L

Immerse yourself in all the pleasures of a
European Spa. Experience the latest in spa
thf'rapies and treatments. A llow trained hands
to m~ssage away the remnants of a hard day of
goH or just the cares of the- world, as you relax
in luxury. Experience the popular Hot Rocks
treatment1 Vichy shower,. anti-aging facials or
give yours~lf a work-out in the cardiovascular
workout room. Give yourself over to all the

•

luxury offered in the new 20,000 square foot
spa at MARRI0rr'S GRAND HOTELGou::
RESORT AND SPA, part of the Resort Division
of tbe ROBERT TRENT }ONES GOLF TRAIL.
Enjoy golf at the resort Lakewood Courses or at
nearby championsbip Magnolia Grove courses.
For Spa .reservations call251.990.6385. For · '
g~lf and bote! packages at The Grand or any•
wbere on the Trail, call800.257.3465.

.

'

Plans for the Meigs County
homecoming, a part of the
observance of Ohio's bicentennial, was announced for .
May 10 at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Margaret
Parker, president, noted that a
marker honoring the late
General James Hartinger, a:
native of Middleport, purchased with legacy funds
from the Ohio Bicentennial
Commission, will be dedicat·
ed at I p.m. on Nov. 11, in the
American Legion Park local·
ed on Mill Street in
Middleport.
A second marker to be ded·
icated this year will honor Dr.
George Huntington who is
credited with discovering
Huntington's Chorea while,
practicing in Meigs. County.
A date or location for !hat
monument
,JNas··
not
announced
. Members discussed a pas·
sible expansion of the muse·
urn building and Parker noted
that an architect is being con·
tacted to . develop· plans.
Efforts are being made to get
a grant through Rep. John
Carey, she said.
A !lag was presented to the
Society by Anna Cleland on
behalf of Retum Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of .
the American Revolution.
Trustees re-elected for
three-year tcnns were Joyce
Davis, Howard
Frarik,
Charlene Hoeflich, Rae
-Reynolds Moore, Robert
Wingett, and Marilyn Wolfe.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor

1128 Spring Valley

The Lynch Agency

446-8235

Galli a County Council on Aging
ATIENTION
REGISTERED NURSE
Style Station Hair Salon
Registered Nurse needed with
305 Upper ·River Rd . Gallipolis, OH
valid state credentials and mini·
mum of two years applicable
NEEOS!
"""' experience. Full time, flexible 40
hours per week. Must be willing to
Nail Technician
travel within county to provide
Call or Stop in
assessment of homecare con·
sumer and supervision of agency
4.46-2753 • 446·2754
personnel.
Deadline lor applications to be
submitted: October 16, 2002
Annual Turkey Shoot
Equal opportunity employer
Gallia County
'Gun Club
Sunday, Nov. 3, 2002

MOLLOHAN
·cARPET

made .
The search was called off when a
search. dog was unable to find any
trace of Lewis in the area surrounding the lake.
At press time, Trussell said he did
not yet know the circumstances surrounding Lewis ' disappearance. He
said deputies would be talking to
him later today to determine what
happened.

Historical Society
holds 12oth . ,
annual ·meeting ·

Seats inspected

Alic;e Flanagan, 89
Sandra Lances, 47 ·
Detlills~ A3 ·

Next to American

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

Trussell said deputies and firefight ·
ers searched the area near
Reedsville until 4 a.m. today.
Authorities were planning to drag
Forked Run Lake today in search of
Lewis, who was camping at Fork ed
Run park while deer hunting,
Trussell said.
Authorities began .searching the
lake area with a dog shortly after
the missing person report was

For Giant Savings

ARIEL Theatre

Ronnie Lynch

•

Deaths

Insurance Plus Agency
will be closed Oct. 18th and
will reopen at previous
location 417 Second Ave.
Oct. 21.

· Real Band-Real theatre

,

• •
ISSIn man
Run. State Park over the weekend
was found alive Monday morning.
Deputies aild firefighters with the
Olive Township Volunteer Fire
Department conducted a night-long
search late Sunday and early today
Bv BRIAN J. REED
for Michael K. Lewi s of the
StaH writer
Cleveland area.
Lewis hl!d been reported missing
REEDSVILLE - A Cleveland by a female companion.
man reported missing at Forked
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph

Nice pop-up camper. Excel· 11--::"-.....-.~

ELVIS

You winterize your car...
Don't forget to winterize
your trees.
Call
Tree Care Specialist
at 446-2015 or
1-866-4DR-TREE

\Nhars inside

Deputies searched
East Fork State Park
until 4 a,m. today

BULLETIN BOARD

..

Meigs County's Hometown Newspaper

plumbtng. yard work. etc.
(740)441.!)113.

lent coMition. Sleeps Si)(,
$700 060. (740)441.()694 ~

foot fishing boat, EUleellent
condition, motor &amp; trailer in·
eluded. S2000 OBO. Call
(740)441-8299
be for~
11am.

Amateur (Ham)
Radio Classes .
Leam 5· wpm Morse Coqe
Class Begins October 15
Tuesday Evenings
7:00·9:00 pm
Basement Meeting Room
Gallia County 911 Center
Call 446·4193 or 245·9432
Sponsored by the Mid·Ohio
Valley Amateur Radio Club

NASCAR: Rookie wins at Concord, 81

I~

POMEROY ·The story of
the · tri·
"umph and
tragedie s
in the 125year history of the
University
of
Rio
Grande
was presented by
Dr. Ivan
Tribe
Tribe at last
week's
I 20th annual meeting of the
Meigs County Historical
Society.
Tribe talked about the
.founding of the cqllege· by
Trooper Shawn Cunningham and Sgt. Chad Neai" of the 'Gallla-Melgs Post of the Ohio State
· Baptists· in 1·876 and its pro,
Highway Patrol inspect a car seat during a voluntary child restraint inspection at Don Tate . gression .over more than a
Motors in P.omeroy Saturday. Troopers assisted inspectors certified by the federal government
century into the educational
in inspecting child restraints and identifying possible safety problems. (Brian. J. Reed)
institution it is today. He
along with Abby Gail
Goodnite wrote a book titled
"Rio Grande from Baptists to
Bevo to the Bell Tower"
which was displayed at the
meeting.
Reports were given on various activities over the past
year including a day camp
for children and Heritage
Day, Ohio Bicentennial activBALl, Indonesia (AP) Many of the victims were school in Jakarta closed as a
ities, and the annual reenact·
Indonesia's defense minister tourists from Australia, as well precaution.
ment of the.. battle of
In Washington, President
blamed al-Qaida and its as
from
Britain,
the
Buffington Island.
extremist allies on Monday Netherlands,
· France, Bush condemned the attack
as
"a
cowardly
act
designed
Keith Ashley reported that
for the massive bomb attack Germany
and Ecuador.
a bill is in the U.S . House of
that killed more than I 80 pe'o- Indonesians were also among to create terror and chaos"
and offered U.S . help in
Representatives which if
pie at a nightclub on the resort the dead.
passed could provide funding
1sland of Bali.
. Two Americans were killed, findi~g the .perpetrators ..
Fearing that terronsts·
for the preservation of endan"We are sure al-Qaida is the U.S. State Department
gered battle!ields such as
here," Matori Abdul Djalil · said, and three others were could str.ike again, thou Buffington Island. ·
. said after a Cabinet meeting in among more than 300 people sands of stunned tourists ·
Jakarta. ''The Bali bomb blast injured. Dozens of foreigners thronged Bali's airport, des.perately looking for flights .
. is linked to al-Qaida with the remained unaccounted for.
cooperation of local terrorAmong the · missing was Many vacationers camped
· ists."
Jake Young , a former overnight-on beaches, shunThe leader of Jemaah University of Nebraska foot· ning built-up areas in case
lslamiyah, a group linked to ball player who had been of more attacks.
"We just want to go back
Osama bin Laden's terror net- workmg as an attorney in
to
our families," said
work, denied involvement and Hong Kon g for a. London·
implicated the United States. based firm. The 34,year-old Carima Sebba, 26, from the
• The defense minister 's was traveling in Bali with Netherlands. "I' m scared, I
statement was the first time his rugby team, and .had not won't be back for a long
that a top government official contacted hi s family since time."
As stocks tumbled .in
had implicated al-Qaida in the blast.
Jakarta
by more than 9 ·perSaturday's attack, the worst of
"We're clil)ging to a thin
ce
nt
Monday
and the
its kind worldwide since the ray .o f hope that he' s going
Indonesian
rupi
ah
also took
Sept. 11 attacks in America. to be found alive," hi s
Until now, police investiga- father, Jacob Young,. said a dive .against the U.S. dol·
tors have said they had few Sunday
night
from lar, many worried about a ·
long-term
decline
in ~
clues and no suspects in the Midland, Texas.
tourism,
one
of
Indonesia's
blasts that tore through the
The U.S. ·Embassy in
Kuta Beach nightclub district. Jakarta, often the target of top industries.
More than 5 million forFBI and Australian detec- bomb threats, ordered all
eigners
visited lndones.ia in.
tives joined the hunt for the nonessential
staff and
2001.
They
inject about $5
killers while forensic experts dependents
to
leave
painstakingly tried to identify Indonesia, the world's most billion into th e economy
Anna Cleland on behalf of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
bodies. Indonesian govern- populous Muslim country. each year.
Daughters of the American Revolution, presents a flag to
No
one
claimed
responsiment officials said 181 people
A bomb threat shut down
Margaret Parker, president. at the 120th annual meeting of
had died, though hospital the embassy's club for a
the
Meigs County Historical Society. (Charlene Hoeflich)
workers put the tlgure at 188. second day. The .Australian
Pleue SH Bill, Al

Bali official blames bombing on
ai-Qaida; US embassy evacuated

Allen

Men

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i&gt;limited to the liroi 100

men .

deadline is 10/17/02 at 4 PM.
•

.!.,._

-'·

.,

'

•'

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, Oct. 15

I Monoflold

135"/58"

I•

~
~...
. KY.

C2002

Inc.

,• •
SuM)' Pl. CJou11t

Cloudy

PageAl•

.

· Mond•Y· October 14, 2002 · .

•• •

M~nitor of Cincinnati police settlement begins job

Ohio weather

~.· ···11!:~ ·
Shower!

T~

Rarl

Snow

• A.lrriell

Wednesday
night.. .A
slight chance of rain in the
evening ... Otherwise partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
30s. Chance of rain 20 percent
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Friday... A slight chance of
rain
during
the
day. :.Otherwise
partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
30s arid highs in the mid
50s.
Saturday ... Partly · cloudy.
LQws in the \!pper 30s and
highs in the lower 60s.
Sunday... Partly
cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the lower 40s and
highs in the lower 60s.

School board panel puts
fina·l touches on.standards
COLUMBUS (AP)- The
debate over what Ohio's
schoolchildren should be
taught about the origin and
development of life on Earth
remains unresolved as a
state school board panel polishes a new science curnculum.
On Monday, the state·
Board of Education's academic standards committee,
which is. creating benchmarks for all subjects, was
to decide whether to recommend that the full board
approve
the science guideI
.
! mes.
.
·
The 19-member board will
hold a public hearing on the
standards in November and
will not formally adopt them
until December. However, it
will vote Tuesday on
whether it intends to accept
them.
A final draft of the standards takes an evolution. only approach, despite
efforts by some board members to add a concept called
"intelligent design," the
idea that a higher power
must have designed life
because it is so complex.
Critics say the concept is a
version of. divine creation,
which the U.S. Supreme
Court has barred from being
taught in public schools.
Teachers will not be
required to follow the standards, but will be strongly
encouraged to given that
new student achievement

touching off three
nights of rioting last
year.
Kalmanoff
will
mediate any disputes
that arise as the agreements are put into
effect.
Unresolved
issues would be settied by Dlott.
On Saturday afterKalmanoff noon,
Kalmanoff
·
·
·talked with police
Chief Tom StreicheF, then met With Lt.
CoL Ron Twitty, the black assistant
police chief who agreed to retire after
pleading no contest last month to
charges that he lied about wrecking a
city-owned vehicle.
"I have no allegiance to anybody,"
Kalmanoff said.
Dlott selected Kalmanoff after she
became convinced that parties in the
settlement ~ the city, police union,
black activists and Justice Department
- would not agree on any of 11 appli-

cants for the job.
.
Kalmanoff is now attempting to get
to know the people involved in the settlement. He has attended a dinner sponsored by the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People
and has met with police union officials,
city solicitors, other city officials arid
members of the mayor's race relations
task force.
Kalmanoff, who has led reforms and
investigations of more than 13 police
departments and other state agencies
nationwide, won't comment on his initial impressions.
"It is too early," he said. "I have
never · been here before. If I. tell you
something today, it could change
tomorrow."
Kalmanoff will be in charge of a team
of 20 lawyers, retired police chiefs and
former officers, researchers· and scholars during his five-year term. .
"I am here to do a job," he said.
"Obviously, if people don't cooperate
with me, I will do somet~ing about it."

'

Two injured in emergency landing of small plane
SPRINGFIELD (AP) - An apparent
power failure forced a small plane to land
m a soybean field outside Springfield,
injuring the pilot and passenger, authorities said
DaVid and Pam Campbell of South
Charleston were in serii&gt;us but stable condition Sunday night at Community
Hospital, a nursing supervisor said.
Pilot David Campbell, 53, and Mrs.
Campbell, 49, took off Saturday from Mad
River Airport in Clark County and headed
for Madison Airport in London, the State
Hilrl!way Patrol said
·
Campbell told tf90pers the 1976 Cessna
Cardinal's only engine lost power, forcing
the emeq:ency landing about 8:30 p.m. in
Harmony Township. The plane's nose was .
damaged, patrol Sgt. Douglas Eck said.
Bruce Gothard, who lives nearby, said
be saw the plane land on its belly.
"It came m real low over the trees ... and
just barri, right into the field," he said.
Gothard told his wife to call 911 and
drove to the field on his tractor, he said.
A man was standing outside the plane
with blood on his face, and his wife was on
. the ground nearby with blood on her arm
Ohio State Highway Patrol trooper Jason Hodge takes photos of an air~raft that
and hand, Gothard said.
Spriitgfield is about 25 miles northeast crash landed in a field near Springfield, Ohio, Saturday. Two people in the plane
suffered minor injuries. (AP)
of Dayton.

tests will be based on them.
Board members agree that
it is unlikely tliat intelligent
design will be added to the ·
standards at the last minute.
OAK HARBOR (AP) - As repairs reopen next yeJr.
&gt;
.
The nearly transparent, whitish
But they note that there .. is
were under way on ~damaged reactor
Such leaks are "h1ghly unhke.ly,'' streaks containing boric acid along .
strong support for language
head at the Dav1s-Besse nuclear co.mpany spokesman Todd Schneider the sides and bottom of the reactor ·
to b~ added to encourage the
power plant, a contractor found ac1d sa1d Saturday.
1
d' .
d· J
examination of views about . stains on the reactor's bottom when it ."We believe these stains we saw at vesse w~re IScovere m une.
life that are counter to .·evowas inspected . for the first time, the bottom of the reactor are related
The streaks could have b~en an
lution, . the long-standing
·to washing the reactor head over the eiii'IY · clue that a~1d . was. poolmg ~ on .
FirstEnergy Corp. said.
theory based on Charles
The ·.Akron-based utility is testing last several years," Schneider said. · th~ .head, Schneider sa~ d. Workers
Darwin's research that life
the stams to ensure that tubes through "This is the first time we've looked at ongmally thought the ac1d was com,
evolved by natural processthe bottom of the. reactor vessel the bottom of the reactor because the ing from equipment above the head.
es.
weren't leaking, which would mean bottom has been covered in insulaDavis-Besse shut down for routine
A June poll by The
maintenance in February.
more repairs before the plant could tion."
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer
found that three in five
Ohioans favor that practice,
called "teach the controversy."
The standards committee
was to consider last-minute
AKRON (AP) - A firefighter who
The 14 pills a day Derrig needs to
Derrig doesn't 'know when or how he
revisions on Monday.
says he contracted AIDS on the job is suppress the virus cost $1,500 a month. was exposed. He came into contact
One of the proposals by a
working on behalf of a law that would They now are covered by workers' with the blood and body fluids of peotrio of intelligent design
automatically grant workers' compen- compensation, along with the medical ple he was called to help several times. ·
supporters on the board,
sation benefits to firefighters whq con- bill.s related to his AIDS treatment.
His doctors say he may have been
tract any of several diseases.
Derrig is trying to help pass legisla- infected by AIDS for several years
Michael
Co.c hran
of
Stephen Derrig, 35, .learned he had tion that would cover firefighters who before his positive test - he started
Blacklick, James Turner of
AIDS
in March 2000 when trying to get certain types of cancers, Hepatitis
Cini:innati .and Deborah
figure
out
what was leaving him breath- C, HIV and AIDS. Studies show fire- with the department in 1992 - yet neiOwens Fink of Richfield,
fighters contract these diseases at a ther his wife nor his children contracted
woqld add language to . less and without energy.
it.
Derrig said he knew he didn't fit any · higher rate than average . . ·
broaden the standards so
known risk factors for AIDS. He was
.Nationwide,
the
International . "Without question, the scenario could
that alternatives to evolution'
certain the immune deficiency disorder Association of Fire Fighters is pushing have been unbelievably worse. We .
could be examined.
could have been looking at a family of
came from his work as a paramedic.
for similar legislation.
The committee's co-chairfour,
all with AIDS.''· Derrig said.
"When you come on the job, you are
The union says the law would ease
men, Joe
Roman
of
told that you will be taken care of if you the difficulty firefighters face when
Derrig has been back at work since
Fairview Park and Tom
become mjured or sick .from .the job," they find out they have one of the dis- September 2000. He staffs a firetruck
McClain
·of
Upper
Derrig told the Akron Beacon Journal. eases listed but cannot trace its origin to only and does not work as a paramedic.
Arlington, proposed restor"When you are in r,our most vulnerable a single call.
.
He and his wife have taught their
ing the orig~nal reference to
state, you shouldn t have to fight."
Twenty states have the law, but bills children to take precautions - washing
Earth's age as approximateAlthough he filed for workers' com- for its adoption have stalled in the Ohio their hands. carefully because their
ly 4 billion years.
pensaiion almost immediately after Senate and House.
father can get sick easily - but other
The union also wants fire departlearning he had AIDS, the case was not
resolved until July. That's when the city ments to provide confidential, volun- than that, their life hasn't changed.
"I'm not dead and I have two arms,
' - following up on its pledge to re- tary testing for HIV and appropriate
·
~wo
legs and can see and I can play ball
evaluate its aggressive stance on counseling when needed.
appealing awards to employees An earlier test in Derrig's case would with my kids," Derrig said. "We remind
dropped a court challenge .it had filed. have prevented his disease from pro- each other all the time how lucky we
City officials, citing confidentiality, gressing from HIV to AIDS - meaning are and how much worse it could be.
declined to comment on the reason for he'd have a better prognosis and would People deal with struggles every day.
Our hardships are no worse."
initially challenging Derrig's .award.
be taking lower doses of medication.

Acid stains found during nuclear reactor inspection •

Obituaries

'It's not over 'til. the fat

Alice Flanagan '

lady floats': Astronauts
begin final spacewalk

- Paid Notice

.

.[Deaths
j • • '

··· Sandra Landes .
COOLVll.LE -- Sandra S.
· .. Landes, 47, Coolville, died
unexpectedly on Sunday,
Oct. )3, 2002 at her resi.-dence. Arrangements are
under the direction of White
Funeral Home in Cool ville
and will be announced.

Firefighter with AIDS pushes for workers camp law

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Pomeroy Magistrate L.
Scott Powell processed the
following cases in Pomeroy
Magistrate Court:
Fined were Donald J.
Smith,
Racine,
DUI,
Amend to Operating after
Underage Consumption,
$25 plus cost, . three days
jail suspended, must comv.lete DIP school within 90
days, Marked Lanes, dismiss with plea, Illumination
of License Plate Light, dismis.~. with · plea, · Open
Container in Motor Veh1cle
$50 plus cost, Contributing
to Delinquency of Minor,
di~miss
with
plea,
Underage
Consumption
dismiss upon · payment of
court cost.
Tony
Collingswo{th,
Pomeroy, ACDA $50 with
$25 suspended plus cost.
Jeffrey Hysell, Racine,
Disorderly Conduct by
.Intox cost only.
Michael
Laudermilt,
Pomeroy · DUS, dismiss
upon payment of court cost.
James A. Jones Jr.,
Racine,
Underage
Possession of Alcohol $200

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three radiators.
The astronaut s huddled
around windows Sunday a s
they watched the folded -up
radiators 'swing bacJ&lt; and
forth in uni son on th eir
rotating beam, under the
command of ground. controllers. It's part of a massive, elaborate air condi tioning system that will be
activated next year.
"It looks like it' s moving
pretty fast, guys - but not
out of control ," shuttle
astronaut Sandra Magnus
told Mission Control. She
was informed the radiator
beam wa s moving 45
deg.rees per minute; it's
destgned to rotate 105
degrees in eaclt direction.
"It's··a great sight," she
said..
The extension of the middle radiator was meant as a
test · to make sure all the
moving parts work. Once
all three are deployed, the
radiating surface will be
about the size of a tennis
court.
• NASA will aim the radiators at deep space, to keep
the ammonia coolant in the
lines a·~ cold as possible.

Court News·

The Daily·Sentinel

PRE-TRICK·OR TREAT CELEBRATION
'

ing more pressure-relief
clamps to the coolant lines.
During spacewalks on
Thursday and Saturday,
Sellers and Wolf encountered a slew of stiff bolts
and pipes in hooking up the
14-ton girder and had to
CAPE
CANAVERAL, install one of two TV camFla. (AP) -With just a lit- eras without the use of the
tie more construction work station ' s robot arm as a
remaining, a pair of shuttle work platform.
Atlantis astronauts floated
All nine space . travelers
outside Monday on their got to see the results of their
third and final spacewalk at handiwork earlier Monday
t!Je international space sta- . morning, with the smooth
lion.
unfolding of one of the
Spacewalker Piers Sellers three exterior radiators on
said he expected Monday's the girder. As SOQJl as the
excursion to be ·:a walk in panel reached its full 75 feet
the park" compared with m length, the shuttle crew
last week's difficult yet sue- played a recording· of
cessful outings.
Handel' s
"Hallelujah
"But it's not over 'til the Chorus ."
fat lady floats,'' he told
''That's very appropriate
reporters Sunday.
. ' music," Mission Control
Sellers and David Wolf said, noting that there were
go~n early start 250 miles big smiles do·wn in the conup. They had to finish . trol room.
installing the $390 million · The radiator · was sup.space station girder that was posed to be extended
delivered by Atlantis almost Sunday, but was delayed
one week ago. Their chores because of a minor electriincluded connecting the last . cal problem. Flight conbit of plumbing and attach- trollers proceeded, though,
with the rotation of the

Astronauts
wrap up work
on international
space station

I

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

.

SYRACUSE - Alice Jane
Flanagan, 89, Syracuse, died
.. Sunday. Oct. 13, 2002 in The
,Arbors, Gallipolis.
. Born in Pomeroy on Dec.
.?. 1912, she was the daughter
. of the late Delbert and Mary
Magdalene
· Cook
Schwartzwalder. She was a
; 1930 graduate of Pomeroy
. High School and was a grad- uate of Holzer. Hospital
School of 'Nursing. She also
. attended
. Washington
:University in St. Louis. Mo.
.. .She was a registered nurse
and began her nursing career
, at the former Ohio Hospital
: for. Epileptics in Gallipolis,
·and ·later went to the Barnes
Hospital in St. Louis, where ·
:she was on the nursing staff
. and taught at the hospital's
school of nursing.
She hiler returned to Ohio
and was the surgical nurse
supervisor at the old Holzer
Hospital, under the direction
of the late Dr. Charles E.
Holzer Sr: and Dr. Charles E.
• Holzer, Jr., both well-known
.: surgeons. She also taught at
:; Holzer School of Nursing. In
:•!he late 1930's, she joined the
::: :tnirsing staff at Camden·: Clark Memorial Hospital in
; Parkersburg, W.Va., and also
; !aught at their nursing school
~for nearly 40 years. She
:retired in 197 8. She attended
.: 8yracuse
Presbyterian
·· l::hurch.
·'·••• B es1'des her parents; she ·
•: ).vas preceded in death by her
: h1.1sband,
Ambrose
L.
: l'Ianagan, in 1966; her stepfa; fher, William Diddle; and a
'•Sister, Anna Grace Oiler.
:: : Surviving · are .a son,
·-;Ambrose L. Flllllagan III, and
;..~is wife, Jill, of &amp;lumbus; a
::4ister, Della Starkey of
;:~yracuse; a niece, Mary
·'Margaret Brown of Mineral
:~Wells , W.Va.; and a nephew,
:.fames William Oiler, of Rio
·!.tJrande.
.. Services will be ~eld at I
ji.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 16,
2002 at Cremeens Funeral
Home in Racine. Interment
will be at Letart Falls
Cemetery.
Friends. may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 8
p.m. Tuesday. ·· •

Ice

More rain expected this week
Weather. Forecast
'Today ... Sunny. Highs in
· the lower 60s. East winds 5
to IOmph.
.
· ..
Toni g hI. .. I ncre as in g
clouds late. Lows in the
lower 40s. Light southeast
winds.
Extended Forecast
Tuesday ... C.Ioudy.
A
chance of rain ... Mainly in
the afternoon. Highs in the
uppe~ 50s. Southeast winds
around I 0 mph. Chance of
rain 50 percenl.
Tuesday night...Rain likely . .Lows in the mid 40s.
Chance of rain 60 percenl.
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
rain. Highs in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.

CINCINNATI (AP) -The federally
appointed monitor overseeing reforms
in the city 's police department stressed
that everyone would be treated the
. .
·
same as he began his job.
"I don 't play favorites," Alan
Kalmanoff, a lawyer from Berkeley,
Calif., said Saturday in his second day
on the job.
Kalmanoff rode in a police patrol
. cruiser Saturday night to get an idea of
patrol duties. He didn't let police officials select the car or the officer.
Kalmanoff was appointed Thursday
by l.!.S. Distr,ict Judge Susan Dlott to
mom tor the settlement of a lawsuit filed
by activists . who accused police of
decades of harassment of blacks. He
also will supervise the city's agreement
with the Justice Department on changes ·
in police operations, including recordkeeping and control of use of force.
Mayor Charlie Lukc:n asked the
Justice Department to review pi&gt;lice
operations after a white police officer
shot and killed an unarmed black man,

'

•; Monday, October 14 2002

plus cost, three days jail
suspended, probation of
good behavior.
· ·
Janis .1. Neece, Pomeroy,
DUS $150 plus cost ten
days jail suspended, two
years probation of good
behavior, no more. · violations.
Darla Griffith,
New
Haven, W.Va . DUI $700
plus cost, ten days jail
seven days suspended, $300
and 'jail · suspended if DIP
school complete within 90
days, 180 day license suspension, probation of gooli
behavior
two
years,
Expired Tags $63 plus cost,
Seat Belt Driver $30 plus
cost, Expired Operators
$100 plus cost.
George Kincaid, New
Haven, W.Va. DUI amended to Reckless Operation,
$100 plus cost, $600 forfei ture to Pomeroy Police
Department
Law
·Enforcement Trust Fund,
Expired Tags dismiss with
plea agreement.
Todd Zeiner, Syracuse
Fictitious Tags $63 plus
cost.

Rhonda Craig, Pomeroy,
Speed $45 plus cost, Seat
Belt $30 plus cost.
· Robert
· Northup,
Pomeroy, Speed $48 plus
cost.
Gail Bush, Middleport,
Unlawful Entrustment $150
plus cost.
•
Risa Sayre, Pomeroy,
Persistent Disorderly $150
plus cost, $50 suspended on
·condition of good behavior.
Patricia
Taylor,
Gallipolis, Speed $50 plus
cost,' DUS amend to No
Operators, $150 plus cost
five days jail suspended , 90
days to show va.lid operators, Fictitious Tags dismiss
with warning.
Arica
Blackwell,
Pomeroy, Leash · Law cost
only. .
Michael Pierce, Pomeroy,
Possession of Controlled
Substance dismiss with
warning, Disorderly by
Fighting $63 plus cost.
.
Michael
Pierce,
Possession of Controlled
Substance $100 plus cost,
Littering dismiss with other
plea.

bombings coul~n't yet be
pinned on al-Qaida, there is
evidence that it is operating
in Indonesia and rea~hing
from PageA1
.. out to local extremists.
Abu . Bakar Bashir, a
bility for the bombing.
Muslim
cleric accused of
Suspicion
immediately
turned to al-Qaida and .a n leading Jemaah Ishimiyah,
affiliated group, Jemaah denied involvement and
Islamiyah , which is said to biamed the blast on the
want a . pan -Islamic state United States.
"I suspect that the bombacross Malaysia, Indonesia
and
the
southern ing was engineered by the
United States and its allies
Philippines .
justify allegations that
to
Jemaah Islamiyah has
already been implicated in Indonesia is a base for tera plot at the beginning of rorists ," he told t.he AP in
this year to bomb foreign telephone interview from
embassies in the region, Solo, a city in central Java,
and Australia says it is a where he runs an Islamic
prime suspect in the Bali boarding school.
Indonesian police refused
attack.
to
say whether Bashir
"The attack bears the
be . questioned
hallmarks of JJ," said an would
despite
repeated
calls by'
expert on al-Qaida, Rohan
Gunaratna. " On! y the JI has neighboring countries that
both,· the intention and he be arrested .
Pr~sident
Megawati
capability to conduct a· profe ssional terrori st attack Suk&lt;ji'noputri, who wept as
she toured the wreckage
like the Bali operation."
U.S . Ambassador Ralph Sunday, promised to coopBoyce told The AssoCiated c;:rate with other nations in
'
Press that while the Bali · the investigation.

Bali

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Another puzzle piece in
shooting spree: sniper
takes weekend off, again
BALTIMORE (AP) The Was hington-area sniper
again took the weekend off,
addin.g a tiny trait to the personahty profile of an assassi n wh o · has killed e ig ht
people in 12 days.
" He's a weekday warri or.
Even snipers ha ve jobs,"
said criminologist Ja mes
Alan Fox of Northeastern
University in Boston. ' 'They
have to make time to kill,
and obviously he does n' t
have time on the weekends."
" Everything that · helps a
little helps a lot in terms of
. finding someone,'' Fox said
Sunday. Other criminologists have sugge sted the
shooter lives in the area and
may have a job and work
schedule that accounts for
the timing and location of
the attacks.
Monday's morning rush
hour passed with no reports
of shootings, and students
went back to class. "People
. are keeping their kids in
school. It's been a very good
turnout," said Briim Porter
of the Montgomery County
school district.
. Investigators hunting the
increasingly brazen killer
have logged some consistencies: the killer favors
suburban gas stations; fires
a single round; as ide from
weekends, has not let two
days pass without opening
fire again and, judging from
a tarot card left at one of the
shootings, appears to enjoy
taunting J.lOlice.
.
Authonties have refused
,.to release investigative
details, saying they don't
want the killer to know what
they know.
·
"We don ' t want to release
anything that may cause .. .
anyone to think they're a
suspect,"
said
Mike ·
Bouchard, an agent with the
federal Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms.
Montgomery
County
police
Chief · Charles
Moose, meanwhile, has cut

back on his news brie fi ngs
while saying he wi shes
there was more he could
reveal.
'"! wis h we could give you
a name. a mug shot and an
address but we' re not at th at
point," he said in one of fo ur
appearances
he
made
Sunday on national T V talk
shows.
Moose has ·· become the
public face of a massive
task force investi gating a
rando m s hooter who has
fired a single. shot into eac h
of 10 victims, killing eight,
since Oct. 2.
On Oct. 7, after a weekend without str ikin g, the
killer opened fire just after 8
a.m., seriously wounding a
13-yea,r-old boy. The teen
remains in critical but stable
condition, hospital officials
said Monday morning. ·
"Frustration comes from
not knowing whe re he' ll
strike
ne xt," ·
said
Montgomery Co unt~ police
officer Derek J. Bahles.
The last killing occurred
Friday .morning . when a5 3year-old father of six was
shot while fueling his sedan
in a gas station ju st south of
Fredericksburg, Va. At the
time, a state trooper stood
just 50 yards away, investi gating a traffi c accident.
Al!thorities desc ribed the
serial sniper as not just a
local threat, but an attempt
to terrorize already anxious
Americans:
''This reminds us that people iii our past havl( tried to
mtimidate and put fear into
American s," Moose said .
''This a strong nation ... and
we will not be intimidated."
In Landover, Md., police
on horseback and bicycles.
ringed parking areas before
Sunday's
Washington
Redskms football game ·
against the New Orleans
Saints. Fans grilling burgers
at tailgate parties said tljey
appreciated being enciccled
by .patrol cars and rifle-toting officers.

Local Briefs
journalists
representing
newspapers and the Ohio
Public Radio Television
Statehouse News Bureau.
This will be the first of
three gubernatorial debates
ATHENS - In less tlian a and the only debate, at this
month, Ohioans will go to the time. having provisions for
polls to cast their vote for the statewide
state's next chief executive.
broadcast on radio and tele.tt WOUB TV will air a spe- vision.
cial program, "Debating Ohio
The debate will aic live on
"The Race for Governor," . the WOUB-FM
Radio
between Governor Bob Taft Network on Tuesday at 7
and Democratic challenger · p.m., and will also be availTun Hagan on Thesday 10 able at www.woub.org
p.m. OJYo's public television
and rad10 stations, and the
state's leading newspapers,
The
Plain Dealer, The Dayton
TUPPERS PLAINS - . A
Daily News, and · The
Columbus Dispatch, orga- soup supper will be held at
nized the debate.
·
the Tuppers Plains Fire
Candidates will answer Department. Proceeds will
questions from a panel of benefit the department.

WOUB

Radi»/l'elevision
toairckhale

Soup supper
planned

�•

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The Daily sentinel .

B=-f the Bend

Page~

·'_Th_eo_ail....;..,y_se_ntin_ei_ ____,:
·

Mond.y, October 14, 2002

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

Tlie Daily Sentinel
'1tlUR

MOVE.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dear

Oen Dickerson

Abby

Publisher
Bette .Pearce
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

Leiters to the editor are welcome. 111e.v should be less than
10 editing and must be
sif&lt;ned and inrlude address and telephone number. No
umigned lei/us will be published. Leiters should be in good

JOO words. All leuus are :wbject

fa .'lie.

addressing i~·.wes.

IWI

personalities.

The ofJinions expressed in the column below are the con·'·ensus ()(th e Ohio Vallev Publishing Co. s editorial board,
unless othendse ·noted.

NATIONAL VIEW

•

Tesbng
•

Bush sambitious plan for stee[
·industry undergoes analysis
• The Cincinnati Post, on the steel industry: At a
meeting of 39 indu strial nations in Pari s last month,
the Bush administration is proposing an ambitious
plan ·to e nd subs idies, tariffs and preferences for the
world s teel industry.
The idea Is to wring out about 200 million tons in
g lobal capacity to make the industry leaner and less
in need of protec tion . While direct govermnent subsidies seem few, many · countries provide, through
various protective measures, indirec t subsidies to
their steel industries out of national pride and a
des ire to keep employment up. ·
. In addition to•ending trade barriers for steel, coun• tries would be given incentives to phase out noncompetitive plants and international lending organizations like the World Bank would be discouraged
from making loans for new stee .l plants. The idea is
consi ste nt with the Bush administration 's professed
free-trade principles.
Bush has backpedaled on free trade in other areas,
notably lumber, textiles and agriculture, so this
·round of talks on abolishing steel subsidies will be a
· c riti.cal test for him.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Oct. 14, the 287th day of 2002 ..There are
78 days left in the year. This is the Columbus Day observance
in the United States, as well as Thanksgiving Day in Canada.
Today's Highlight in Hi story: .
.
. On Oct. 14, 1947, Air Force test pilot Charles E. ("Chuck")
' Yeager broke the sound barrier as he flew the experimental
: Bell X-I rocket plane over Edwards Air Force Base in
: California. .
·
On this date:
In 1066, Ni1rmans under William the Conqueror defeated
the English at the Battle of Hastings.
.
In 1890, Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34th president of the
United States, wa's born in Denison, Texas.
.,
In 1912, Theodore Roosevelt, campaigning for the presi. dency, was shot in the chest in Milwaukee. Despite the
: wound, he went ahead with a scheduled speech.
: In 1933, Nazi Germany announced irwas withdrawing from
· the League of Nations.
In 1944, German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel committed
suicide rather than face execution for allegedly conspiring
against Adolf Hitler.
.
In 1960, the iqea of a Peace Corps was first suggested by
Democratic presidenti al candidate John F. Kennedy to an
audience of students at the University of Michigan . ·
In 1964, civi l ri ghts leader Martin Luther King Jr. was
' named winner of the Nobel. Peace Prize.
: In 1968, the tirst live telecast from a manned U.S. spacecraft was transmitted from Apollo 7.
In 1977. singer Bing Crosby died outside Madrid, Spain, at
age 73.
·
In 1990. composer-conductor Leonard Bernstein died in
New York at age 72.
.
Ten years ago: Russia's worst serial killer, Andrei Chikatilo,
was convicted of mutilating and killing 52 women and children (he was executed in 1994). The Nobel Prize for chemistry went to American Rudolph. A. Marcus; the prize t'or
physics went to George Charpak of France.
Five years ago: The Nobel Pri ze in economics went to
Americans Robert C. Menon and Myron S. Scholes for their
work on derivatives. Novelist Harold Robbins died in Palm
, Springs, Calif. , at age 8 1. The Florida Marlins won the
· National League championsh ip, defeating the Atlanta Braves
.
7-4 in game six .
One year ago: As U.S. jets opened a second week of raids in
. Afghanistan, President Geor~e W. Bu sh sternly rejected a
Taliban offer to disc uss han(hng over Osama bin Laden -to a
. third country, saying, "They mu st have not heard. There's no
: negotiations."
. Today's Birthdays: Former Surgeon General C. Everett
· Koop is 86. Actor Roger Moore is 75 . Movie director Carroll
Ballard is 65 . Former White House counsel John W. Dean III
(s 64. Country si nger Melba Montgomery is 64. Fashion
designer Ral ph Lauren is 63. Singer Cliff Richard is 62: Actor
: Udo Kier is 58. Si nger-musician Justin Hayward (The Moody
: Blues) is 56. Actor Harry Anderson is 50. Actor Greg Evigan
is 49. TV personality Arleen Sorkin is 46. Golf Hall-of-Farner
Beth Daniel is 46. Singer-musician Thomas Dolby is 44.
Singer Karyn Wh1te is 37. Actor Jon Seda is 32. Country
musician Doug Virden (Sons of the Desert) is 32. Country
singer Natalie Maines (Dix ie Chicks) is 28. Singer Shaznay
.Lewis (All Saints) is 27. Singer Usher is 24. Actor Jordao
Brower is 21.
"''
r

OUR READ·ERS' .VIEWS
Offers opposition

The former Soviet Union is probably over the individual. That's the game
the prime example of creating an oppos- plan. And America is, and has been, the
Dear Editor:
ing force and nurturing it, while "con- driving force behi~;~d this plan.
J eft' Fields
I offer an alternative perspective to taining" it until it has served its pur-Middleport
the views expressed by Bette Pearce in pose. In my Sept. 2 I letter, I strongly
regard to the significance of Sept. 11 . · suggested that the ..governtneni has
Yes, bells rang, children sang; preach- given Iraq a wide variety of biological
·
weapons. As always, my statements
ers proclaimed God bless us everyone, have been confumed. A letter from the
Dear Editor:
About eight years ago I was
and people waved their Made-in-China CDC to Sen. Donald Reigle admits that
flags. All this quite naturally makes the the U.S. has given Saddam West Nile approached aboui helping to organize a
eyes a bit moist. But there is another, far Virus, E. Coli, anthrax and botulism. steam/antique equipment show. My
more sinister, lesson to be learned. It The letter is postedmn. the web. Thus response was to do it, but have more
involves a discussion of how U.S . far, the only government that has used than just antique equipment, so thar the
. power elites operate across the board in biological weapons. against Americans whole family could enjoy the evjlnt. We
matters foreign and domestic.
is the u .S. government. ·
named it Town &amp; Country Expo.
And how do they operate? By ritual
For decades, it has poisoned and disWe have just completed our seventh
magic. I don' t mean the kind of hocus- eased its own citizens, injecting African Expo. The event has grown andGod has
pocus where one mutters an incantation Americans with syphilis just to see how blessed. Because of the generous moneand pulls a white bunny from a hat. I long it would take them. to die. It has tary gifts of businesses and individuals
refer to political alchemy, the neutral- dumped all kinds of viruses and infec- over the years, we've be.en able to offer
ization and fusion of opposing forces to tious agents in the air and on the free activities for all ages, monster tru~;k
create a desired political synthesis. ground, just to study the patterns of rides, rock wall climbing, bungee
Events like Sept. 11 are part of 'this contradiction. Consider how the gov- tramp, miniature golf and many others.
From the beginning, I said l'd lead
process. In the parlance of our con- ernmenfhas lied in regard to the anthrax
trollers, Sept. ll is considered a magi- attacks. At first, it blamed the attacks on the Expo five years and then .see what
cal self-abuse ritual, inflicting a series one of the militias. When it had to face happens. After the seventh Expo, I've
of severe emotional traumas to produce the truth that the anthrax came straight decided it's time to move on. My resigniass psychological change.
out of the Biological Warfare Center at nation will be effective Dec. 31, 2002.
Political alchemy means funding and .Fort Detrick, Md. (I pointed this out . To those committee members who
controlling both domestic and foreign months ago) it chose ,a n employee as a .. have supported seven years, I wish to ·
opposition. In addition to creating and suitable scapegoat and has been hound- thank you from my . heart. To all who
participated in the Expo, one year or
funding radical dissident groups on ing him ever since.
both sides of the political spectrum, and
How will all this result in synthesis? perhaps seven, thanks for your su11port.
controlling them .with deep cover More "attacks"' will provide the excuse I encourage all to support the Expo with
agents, it means giving t!Jugs like for suspension of all Constitutional your talents, products and time.
Dallas Weber
Saddam weapons to aid him in func- rights, America will be integrated into a
tioning as an adversary.
global police state with absolute control
Rutland

Resigns position

HENTOFF.' S VIEW

More
. evidence of unfree speech·on college campuses
.

.

av·NAT HENTOFF
ble the dialogue, which the university
Earlier this year, I spoke at the II th claims to value so highly."
Annual Hugo Bl ac k Lecture 9n
In my experience -- buttressed by
Freedom of Expression at Wesleyan reports from the Student Press Law
University. During my lecture, "The Center and The Foundation for
1\vilight of Free Speech," I told stu- Individual Rights in Education - a
dents that it was Justice Hugo Black similar survey administered at other
who expanded the scope and range of college campuses would result in an
the First Amendment to include local even· higher percentage of students
and state governments, as well as the intimidated by the chilling climate of
federal government.
political correctness.
Part of my lecture concerned the disI was quoted in the editorial as saying
maying attacks on freedom of expres- (in my Hugo Black lecture) that too
sion for more than a decade by students many students across the nation believe
at many college campuses. Student they "have a constitutional right not to
newspapers, usually of a .conser.vative be offended."
. ·
bent, have been stolen in large quantiThe Argus editorial ended: " In our
ties, sometimes burned. And studeqts attempts to foster discussion and wreswith dissenting viewpoints have told tle w1th issues, we have forgotten the
me they have learned to censor them- basic liberal tenet of promoting freeselves in and out of class.
dom of expression. The booming voice
Wesleyan is a justly well-regarded of the left has almost . completely
university. One of my sons went there . drowned . out a considerable portion of
in· the 1980s and was editor of the stu- the campus's population."
·'
dent paper, The Argus . . He has fond
But "when liberals and progressi\les
memories of the place and had resisted are silenced, they decry it as ignorant
this plague of political correctness on and unjust."
c.ampuses that was just starting then.
The editor of The Argus, Bobby
The extent that expressions of indepen- Zeliger- a. true upholder of the spirit
dent views, in public, have diminished of Hugo Black - sent me a copy of the
since the I 980s at Wesleyan and other , survey. Freddye Hill, the dean of the
colleges was illustrated in an editoriQl in college, was quoted saying that she
The Argus soon after my last lectu~e';\
thinks "we need to provide more spaces
The newspaper surveyed students where people can be honest with each
about the campus culture of Wesleyan. other."
Most troubling, the editorial said, was
Michelle Rabinowitz, the chair of the
that 3l. percent of · the students "feel Ame rican Cixil Liberties Union on
~ncomrortab}e ~peaking their ~pinion. campus, noted, "Wes leyan ,and most
... Debate IS hmited to a d1alogue Wesleyan students thmk that Wesleyan
between liberal a nd progressive, which is a lot more open than it really is. I'm
has the effect of silencing any and all not sure that the . students are open to
conservative views. When the rare con- diverse viewpoints other than saying
servative stance is taken , a shouting that they are.'
match usually tesults, making impossi"Diversity" is a much-valued goal at

colleges and universities, but its meaning is too often limited to ensuring sufficient representation of race and gender in the student body. The concept of
diversity of IDEAS, however, is often
far less valued.
Hill understands the wider and deeper
definition of diversity, "As a community (we) need to support groups that have
diverse viewpoints, viewpoints that are
not commonly heard on campus, and
encourage new organizations with new
voices." Maybe a Hugo Black Club. ; ·
The need for that kind of diversity
was inadvertently revealed in the sut,vey by Elizabeth King of the Wesley3.ll
Democrats. "The question is how toler:
ant we are of intolerance," she -says.
"Personally, I'm not very supportive at
homophobic, racist and xenophobil:
opinions. Nor do I feel necessaril~
inclined to provide those people with a
ven11e for their opinions."
:
In The Argus editorial;l·was quote(!
as having said in my lecture that "th~
ultimate test of a belief in free speech
· should be whether it can be extended t@
people you hate." I, in tum, was quoting
Ju stice Oli ver Wendell Holmes, wh6
also said that this principle of tlie Fir~
Amendment "calls for attachment mor~
than any other."
•
And if freedo m of thought is not hon~
ored at college campuses, how devote~
to this source of all our other freedoms
will its graduates be as they become
influential in America's future?
;
At Wesleyan, however, voic~~ riS:.
ing to keep the spirit of Hu!:f"\"lacl
alive..·
. .
:
•
(Nat He~toff is a nationally renowne1_
wlfhority on the First Amendment anii
the Bill of Rights.)
;

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DROP US ALINE.

825 Third Avo., Galllpollo, Ohio
74G-44e-2342

"

j

111 Court 51., Pomoruy, Ohio
7411-992-2158

••
•
'
200 Main St., Point Plallapt, W.Vol
I

304-675-1333

;I

•

DEAR ABBY: I am recently divorced from my husband
of 17 years. There is someone
special in my life now, and
my ex.- husband is trying to
cause problems where my
kids are concerned. I have
tried to talk to him about
keeping his distorted thoughts
and opinions about my
ADVICE
boyfriend to himself; however, he can't seem to do it.
My daughter is 13 and has a could possibly do .to spark
'mind of her own. My soil is 6, ramance, to no avail. He
and he acts according to .would give me wonderful ,
'things he has leard my ex- long massages.. my favorite
husband say. This is affecting prelude to sex m the past my relationship with my son and I would just fall asleep. ·
because I have tried to teach
One night a fe.w months
him to be respectful to all ago, my husband and I were
_'adults, no matter who they out on a "date." We had just
are. I keep reminding my son finished dinner, and the next
that my boyfriend has done showing of the movie we
nothing to him and deserves wanted to see was in two
to be treated nicely.
hOurs. My husband joked that
Please help. I love this man we should go somewhere and
and want my kids to be a part park - and I got a sudden
of our lives. - HOPEFUL urge I hadn't felt for some
IN N.C.
time. We found a secluded
DEAR HOPEFUL: Since spot and· parked. It was the
your husband refuses to coop- first time either of us had ever
erate, the only other choice is gotten completely naked anyto try to make the children Where outstde of a bedroom,
less susceptible to his brain" and it was the best sex I have
washing. The next time your had in years. Abby, we had so
son acts out, take him aside much fun I didn't want to go
and ask him why he's doing it. to the mOvie. ·
If he repeats something that
We have had some great sex
his father told him, say, "You since then, but only when we
know, ,your daddy is very park somewhere or do it out-'
: angry right now- and some- side our house. I still can't get
times we all say things we turned on at home. What is
don't mean when we're wrong with me? Have you
· angry." Point out that the ever heard of this? -J.D; IN
boyfriend has always been CALIFORNIA
good to you and to him.
DEAR J.D.: There fs nothYou say at I 3 your daughter ing "wrong" with you. It
has a mind of her own. If that
pears you are one of those
·means she likes your
o need an element of "dan" (for instance, the possi.boyfi:ie~d, enlist her help in
convmcmg her brother that · 'ty of getting caught) . to
the ml)ll is not as bad as their s k your libido. Warning:
father"§ays he is. ·
.
ving sex in public is most
- . If that doesn't work, make likely against local, state or
an appointment with a child federal statutes, so I wge you
·psychologist, and good luck. · to be very careful. I have
DEAR ABBY: I am 48 and always subscribed to the
have. been married 21 years. adage that what goes on
My husband is the only per- between two consenting
·son I have ever had sex with. adults and hurts neither one is .
·For most of our married life, OK with me.
Dear Abby is written by
-we have had sex three to
seven times a week. We had Abigail Van Buren, also
our share of minor sexual known as Jeanne Phillips, and
· problems, but lack of desire was founded by her mother;
:was never one of them until a Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
few years ago. I just lost inter- Abby at www.DearAbby.com
est. My husband would do or P.O. Box .69440, Los
everything a loving husband Angeles; ·cA 90069.
~

.,- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

·People in the news

· ----~---------------------------

' Sanaa Lathan

a performer. It was in niy
blood or something."
A 1995 graduate of the
_ .BOSTON (AP) -Sanaa
Lathan says the thrill of · Yale School of Drama,
being in an empty theater Lathan won small parts in ·
helped her decide to the . films "Life," "The
become an actress .
Wood," and ." The Best
Lathan, 31, said she got Man" · before her breakhooked on 'sho.w biz when through role in 2000's
she clambered onto the "Love &amp; Basketball."
stage after her mom, dancer
This month, she's in the
and actress Eleanor McCoy, romantic comedy ."Brown
- finished performances in Sugar," playing a Los
- the odginal Broadway pro- Angeles Times writer who
: duction of "The Wiz."
"There's something so returns to New York City as
powerfu! abou_t standin~ the top editor of a hip-hop
· onstage m a qmet theater, magazine. The job reunites
Lathan told The Boston her with her childhood
· Globe on Sunday. "I think friend Ore (Taye Diggs) and
· unconsciously I was always sparks fly.

Mond.y. October 14, 2002

Foothills Art Festival to .be held In ·Jackson

Dad kindles son's dislike
of ex-wife's new flame

111 ·c ourt Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page AS

JACKSON -- More than a hundred
tri-state artists have registered for the
upcoming Foothills Art Festival to be
held October 18 to 20 in the Lodge at
Canter's Cave 4-H Camp, 5 miles north
of Jackson, off Route 35.
Organized by Southern Hills Arts
Council the Festival will showcase
more than 500 pieces. The Sands Hill
Coal Company and OSCO Industries
have provided $1,210 in cash prizes to
be awarded. In addition to the visual
arts, children can exercise their creativity with five hours of free arts activities
on Saturday and Sunday in a program

sponsored by National ~ity Bank. Oak
Hill Banks and the Oh10 Arts Council
are sponsoring live ·classical music.
Sean Ferguson will play acoustic guitar
from 2 to 4 p.m. on Saturday and The
Brighton Trio will play chamber music
on Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. Other sponsors are Adena Health System, Cotner
&amp; Cooley, CPA, and Waugh Insurance.
The festival offers work in oils,
acrylics, pastels, drawing, prints, mixed
media, photography, watercolors, and a
broad range of three dimensional pursuits. Visitors will want to stop by the
photography section and visit with six

working anists in their booths. Connie
Barrett of Hillsboro, Joan Arnold of
Greenfield, Evelyn Pierson of Sabina,
Elaine Bal sley of New Vienna, Debbie·
Hook of Martinsville, and Joycjl Steele
of Catlettsburg, Ky. are offering additional wares for sale and a chance for
the public to watch them work.
The festival is open to the public from
10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday. On Sunday it is open from
noon until 5 p.m. There is no admission
charge. For more information, call
Southern Hills at 740-286-6355 or email. at shac(jZwomnet.net

Gardeners hear about fall gardening secr~ts
POMEROY
"Just
because you've harvested all
your veggies and flowers,
doesn't mean it's time to forget about gardening, " said
Joy Combs, who .described
autunm as a terrific time to
garden.
Combs was speaking at a
meeting of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners. She said
that fall is the best time to
plant everything from bulbs
to perenmals to trees and
shrubs because it allow them
to get climatized to the area.
"The . roots can become
established and then when
spring comes the plants can
grow consistently because
they are on scheduled with
mother nature.

Communi~

She also · suggested that
now is the time to divide
perennials, including shasta
daisies, mums, cone flowers
and blackeyed Susans. She
sail! if the flowers keep getting smaller and fewer that's
~ sign the bulbs need dividmg.
As for bulbs, she said this
is absolutely the best time for
planting new ones and suggested checking to be sure
the soil has plenty of organic
·
·
material.
· She said that by putting
moth balls in holes before
planting bulbs wjll deter the
attractions which chipmunks
and rabbits have for digging
them up. Another solution
suggested was putting the

.

. bulbs into a bag with on
tablespoon of turpentine,
shaking it up and lettmg it set
before planting the bulbs.
Tree problems were discussed by Marjorie Rice who
said they are easy to find if
you know what to look for.
"A hallowed out trunk is an
indication it may be physiologically functional ·but a
hazard m waiting to happen.
A strong wind or a heavy
snow could cause it to blow
over, as the tree is suffering
from root stress, insect and
disease damage. '
Splits and cracks where
branches meet or where the
trunk diverge post tile most
serious hazards, she said.
Tilting trees are a sign that

the root stability has been
severely damaged.
Pauline. Atkins, pr~sidel)t ,
gave devotions. /'i. dahlia
arrangement was displayed '
and merribers named their
favorite garden flower in ·
response to roll call. Debbie
.Bullington was a guest.
The fall regional meeting
was announced for Oct. 26 at
the St. Ambrose church.
Registrations are to be sent to
Betty Well. A report was
given on the. flower show
held l;lt EXPO and civic beautification projects were
noted.
Next meeting will be Oct.
28 at the home of Joy Combs.

Calendar

Public Meetings
'l'uesday, Oct. 15
TUPPERS PLAINS .

Easte~ Local Board of

Educatton, 6:30 p.m. at the
library conference room at
Eastern Elementary School.

dubs and
Organizations
Monday, Oct. 14
POMEROY -: Meigs
County Republic&amp;~~ Party to
·meet at . 7:30 p.m. at the
Republican headquarters.
POMEROY -·
Meigs
County Association of
Garden Clubs, 7 p.m. at the
Laurel
Cliff
Church.
Regional meeting plans will

cnhereven5

be discussed.
WecJnesd~ty, Oct.

16

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club, 2
p.m. at hte Long Bottom
· residence
of
Phyllis
Hackett. Leah Ord to
review "The Lord of hte
Rings" by J.R.R. Tolkien.
Thursday, Oct. 17
GALLIPOLIS - Meigs
County Retired Teachers
·Association, noon luncheon
in Golden Corral meeting
room. Amy BowmanMoore, investment rep for
Edward ones, to talk on
. "Weathering
a
Bear
Market." Emphasis will be
on investments for seniors.
Reservations not necessary.

Monday, Oct. 14
RACINE - First practice for Racine alumni band
members who want to play
with the band at the last
home game on Oct. 18 to be
held 6 to 8 p.m. at Southern
High School. Music will be ·
provided, reeds will be
available.

POMEROY
- .
lmmWlization clinic, Meigs
County Health Department,
9 to II am and I to 3 p.m.
Take chid's shot records.
Children must be accompanied
by
parent/legal
guardian. A $5 fee per child
per visit for it:Jlinunization
administration is requested.
No one will be denied services because of inability to
pay.

Thesday, Oct. 15
POMEROY
Five
week beginner computer
classes available at Gods
N.E.T. Suggested fee is $2
per session. To arrange
enrollment call the N.E.T.
992-0261 or C.P.U. 992-

1135.

Saturday, Oct. 19
TUPPERS PLAINS . Harvest moon festival, 6 to
10 p.m. at Eastern
Elementary under sponsorship ofPID. Variety of activities including an auction,
COWltry store, dance, bingo,
cake walks. All proceeds to
be used to benefit students.

Federal Consumer Protection has conlinned the aa:uracy of the fuel saving described in this·advertisement

Device may increase gas mileage by·22%
BOSTON- National Fuelsaver
Coq&gt;. has developed aloW cost
automotive accessory called
the Platinum Gas.Saver which
is guaranteed.to increase gas
'mileage by 22% while meeting
all emission standards.
With asimple connection to
a vacuum line, the Gas Saver
adds microscopic quantities
of platinum to the air·fuel
mixture entering the engine.
Sm plalinuhl has the unKple
ability to make noo-luning fuel
OOm, tbe Gas Saver's platinum
increases the percentage of
fuel ~luning in the engine from
68% of each gallon to 90% of
. each gallon, a 22% increase.
Smunl:umtfuel leaving an

engine is pollution, this 22%
of each gallon nonnally burns
when it reaches the platinum
of the catalytic converter.
Unfa1unalely, lbe converter's
platinum bums this fuel in the
tail-pipe, where the heat and
energy produced from this
fuel cannot be harnessed to
drive your vehicle.
But when the Gas Saver OOds
platinum to the air-fuel mixtlire,
22% more of each gallon
rums inside the engine so that
22% few~r gallons are~
to drive the same distance.
After \ five year study,
the government concluded:
"Independent testing shows
greater fuel savings with the

Gas Saver than the 22%
claimed by the developer."
In addition to the fuel
savings, the Gas Saver bas
received patents for cleaning
out carlxm and raising octane,
making higher ~es of fuel
unnecessary for most vehicles.
Joel RObinson, the developer,
commented: "We have sold a
half million Gas Savers. To
our suq)rise, as many people
buy the Gas Saver becaus~ it
extends engine life (by ~~!earring
out the abrasive carbon) as
buy it to increase gas mileage
or raise octane." ·
For further information call: ·
1·800-LESS-GAS
1·800·537 •7427

YET HE NEVER EATS A BITE.
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and Educa on

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The Daily Sentinel

L
Uanne
Bowman

University of Rio Grande news
RIO GRANDE Dr. already been nominated for
Ivan M. Tribe, Professor of Ohio Academy .of History
History at the University of Book Award for 2002.
Rio Grande received the
Masonically he is a memEdward
ber of Albany Lodge No
M. Selby' Award for 2001 723, the York Rite Bodies in
· at the banquet of
The Athens, and the Valley of
Grand Chapter of Royal Cambridge
Ancient
Arch Masons of Ohio on Accepted Scottish Rite,
October
2,
2002
in among others.
Columbus, Ohio.
In the past decade Tribe
, , ,
has written more that fifty
published articles on wellThe University of Rio
known Masons of the 20th Grande/Rio
Grande
century in such venues as Community College h11s
· Knight Templar Magazine begun the new school year
and The Scottish Rite with so me new leaders in
JournaL
key positions and others
According to the c.itation, about to.move into key slots
Tribe was honored " In in the next few weeks.
In addition to two new
recognition of his outstand ·
ing
contributi.o ns
to deans, whose appointments
Masonic research for the were announced earlier this
general
good
of year, Rio Grande also has a
Freemasonry and his fellow new Director of Business
seekers after truth."
and
Industry
Professor Tribe joined the Training/Director of the
Rio Grande faculty in 1976 Loren M. Berry Center for
and has written several · Economic Education; a new
books, as well as numerous Registrar/Director ·
of
articles in both academic Academic Planning and
and popular journals, with Development, and a new
his latest major work being Direcior of Admissions.
as co-author of Rio Grande: They will assume their new
From Baptists and Bevo to roles in early October.
the Bell Tower, 1876-2001, . Sherrie Lanier of Jackson is
published earlier this year taking on the du,ties of the
by
the
Jesse
Stuart Director of Business and
Foundation of Ashland, Industry Training/Director
Kentucky. This volume has of the Loren M . . Berry

Center . for
Economic
Education. Lanier has a
long title for her new job,
and plenty of important
duties to go with it.
Mark Abell has been part
of the Rio Grande team for
more· than 30 ye'2t
' rs , most
spent as · Direc Q!
of
Admissions .
Effective
Dctober I, he will become
Grande's
Rio
Reg.i strar/Director
of
Academic Planning and
Development,
working ·
directly with Provost Dr.
Greg Sojka and the academ·
ic deans on program devel·
opment as well as ensuring
that students meet the
requirements to graduate.
He has held several important positions at the college
over the years and now
moves from Directo.r of
Admissions to his new job
as Registrar/Di rector of
A d ·
PI
·
d
ca ernie
annmg an
Development Jake Bapst is
moving into Abell's former
position as the Director of
Admissions. Bapst has been
affiliated with R.io Grande
since he started as a student
at the college in 1971. Since
that time he has worked in
the community and · .in a
variety of positions at the
institution. of Admissions.

P ge 81
Monct.y, October 14, 1001

. Carol Mahr is chairman of
the project She said all 230
students at the school plan to
participate.
. "Box Tops for Education
actually appears on the product packaging, and that is
what is to be' clipped off,"
Mahr said.
"We' re asking the public
to get involved. You can
even send us the whole top;

we don't care, just get it to
us."

The fund-raiser will ·take
place through the end of the
school year.
People &lt;;an send their box;
tops to Rutland Elementary;
Box
Tops'
attention
Coordinator, P.O. Box 218,
Rutland, Ohio 45775. J\)1
questions can be referred to.
Mahr at 742-8200.

Gallipolis Career College achievement list
GALLIPOLIS
Jerry . Stephens,
Kathy
Jaime
Supple,
Gallipolis Career College Stump,
has released the list of stu- Deborah Whitlatch, Carol
dents named to the achieve- Whittington.
ment Jist for Summer • Students achieving a 3.5
Quarter 2002. Those · stu- or better grade point average
dents obtaining a perfect 4.0 were: Brenda Fuller, Brenda
grade point average were: Cook, Medina Angel, Sheila
Diana
Adams,
Donna Atha, Diana Beaver, Jill
Aleshire,
Tessa
Allen, Blake, Mark Bowen, Myla
Kennie Brown, Melissa Bush, Sheila Doss, Mary
Cain, Betty Collins, Tonia Evans, Pat Gay, Larry
Davis, Vicki Ellis, Cindy Greenlee, Debra Hatfield,
Hill,
Maranda
Everly, Sharon Fiala, Tonya Susan
Fuller; Sheryl Gibbs, Denise Holmes, Melissa Hooten,
Gibeaui, Christy. Gillispie, Delila Lantz, Lora Moore,
Leah Harrison, Angela Dawn
Myers ,
Eilene
Jeffers, · Carolyn Jordan, Nickels, Tara Oliver, . Ron
Vikki Lieving, Marie Martin, Parsons, Sh~?londa Petty,
Rae
Mash,
- Molly,,,J(ayla
Pullinsr .-·.. Nicole
McWilliams, Glen Parsons, Ramey, David Ross, Kelly
Ashley Pennington, Wanda Saunders, Amanda Saxon,
Rupe, Kim Seth, Jack Marilyn Shafer, · :reresa
Simpkins, Tony a:. Sin$llli'ti" '-Spencer, .&gt;.Shauna · &lt;Spires,

·Ganassi team.bounces back With win-

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- Barry Bonds is one win
away from walking right into
his first World Series.
With St. Louis manager
Tony La Russa unwilling to
Jet Bonds beat the Cardinals,
it was the , other San
Francisco Giants who came
through in the clutch.
Benito Santiago followed'. an unconventional intentional
walk to Bonds by hitting a
tiebreaking two-run. homer
with two outs in the eighth
inning, leading San Francisco
to a 4-3 victory Sunday night
in Game 4 of the NL championship series.
"I was so excited they
Barry
Bonds,"
walked
Santiago said. "I wanted
them to pay again."
Bonds scored the tying and
go-ahead runs - bdih after
walks. That 's been a common
theme this year. Bonds was ,
walked a record · I 98 times
this season, including 68
intentionally.
.
"If they walk him, then
they want to be beaten not by
the best but by someone
else," Giants shortstop Rich
Aurilia said. "Tonigh~ it was
Benito."
Bonds' brilliance has made
the unheard of routine inte.ntionally putting the tying
· or go-ahead run on base.
But . the move only succeeds . if the pitcher can get
the next hitter out.
"Strategy is judged on
whether it works. So it didn't
work. Bad strategy," La
Russa said.
' Robb Nen nearly blew it in
the ninth, throwing a thirdstrike wild pitch to the lead.off hitter and allowing a oneout RBI single by Jim
Edmonds.
Bur with runners on first
and third, Nen recovered to
strike •out Albert Pujols and
J.D. Drew for his third save
'
in the series.
The Giants ·can win their .
first NL·. pennant in 13 years
. with I! win at . ~orne tonight
a11d set up baseball's first all
wi~"-e'ard World " Series.
Ana)]eim won the AL championsHip earlier Sunday.

Paula Barthelmas , a second-grader at Rutland Elementary:
School, hands fifth-grader lan Bullington a box so he can cut:
out the box-top coupon for a fund-raising project. Third-grad-.
er Steven Mahr points to the coupon's location. (Kris Dotson)

Steve Spires, Linda Stover,
Florence
Tomlinson,
Candace Tuttle. ,
Those
students
who
achieved a 3.0 or better grade
point average were: David
Barnes, Amanda Buck,
Jaime
Doss,
Charle~
Flowers, Paul Gauze, Kami
Griffith, Heather Harless,
Regina
Harris,
Randy
Harrison, Diana Henson-,
Kimberly
Hively,
J.R:.
Martin, Carolyn McGuire,
Charles Miller, Tammy
. Moore, Jonathan O'Delli
Demetras Parsons, 'Greg
Devin
Radcliff,
Peck,
Elizabeth Robinson, Sharon
Rutherford, Kathy Sands.
Britany Settles,
Bessie
Simmons, Sherry Smith,
Crystal Spurlock, Larry
Stephens.

CONCORD, N.C. (AP)- won the UAW-GM Quality
Grown men cried the day 500 - his second Winston
they learned Sterling Marlin Cup race as Marlin's injury
was lost for the year because replacement. Marlin was
of an injury, certain the spec- knocke~ out for the final
tacular season was ruined for seven races by a fractured
the ·Chip Ganassi Racing vertebra.
team.
"Certainly it was a big
When the emotions wore blow to our race team to hear
off, they went back to work the news about Sterling and
and did evel)'thing ·possible we went for a day or two of
to salvage the yeat with rook- tryingJo get through it," crew
ie Jamie McMurray at the chief Lee McCall said. "But
wheel of their No. 40 Dodge we still had goafs and one
Intrepid,
was to get Jamie through it in
The tears of disappoint- the best equipment possible.
ment. turned to tears of joy
"So this shows a lot about
Sunday when McMurray . this race team, how strong it

is, A Jot of people might have
given up on this race team,
but we didn't."
McMurray, a Busch series
driver hired six weeks ago to
drive a third Winston Cup car
for Ganassi next season, won
his first-ever NASCAR race
and passed Kevin Harvick 's
mark for the fastest rookie to
Victory Lane. Harvick won in
his third career start when he
stepped in for the late Dale
Earnhardt.
· The 26-year-old driver
showed why Ganassi · hired
him- and trusted him on his
top team when Marlin was

American League Championshi~ Series

Eastem tops

, .Waterord an

: lvc volleyball

lmiiM l hllMa lid \Mtau'Mittad)' • • to 11aeiWI'Ouncll'11
lftd reh&amp;tt tM lafrll• of !Nhlduata. lmliflta h111 hll tid ~lt'e
.. ptllrilrftt to WW thlt It f'M I .MW lfttinlna to tht phrl• .

............
1

w·· .

Scoreboard, Page 82

Giants up 3-1
in NLCS ·

Training for teacher's certificate
in W~st Virginia offered
. Wlh*·"~""'""
v.lttftft~w -m O,lftlr
POMEROY -·
Anyone of undergraduate classes per person with checks or
holding a bachelor's degree which must have the raised. money orders payable to
who maintained a 2.0 grade seal.
·
RESA V. Participants will
point average in any field 111 The . training is scheduled register on the first night.
For additional information,
may qualify to become a sub- for Nov. II , 12, 13, and I:S.
stitute teacher in West The classes will be held from contact Iran Murphy at 304Virginia by completing a 5 to 8:30p.m. · at West 273 0892 after 5 p.m.
train ing course which is being Virginia Umversity at the Substitute Teachers who need
Parkersburg Campus', Room to renew their certificates
offered on Nov. I I.
may also attend the class. '
Interested persons with 2536.
those qualification may qualiThe registration fee is $100
fy for recommendation by a Ef:[llC:l:~:~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
co unty school superintendent
•·
to become a substitute
teacher.
2 RElliCIDS
Upon completion of 18
••
·
clock hours of orientation and
INIII IIllEY
a satisfactory criminal backCIIEMI7
ground check such individuals could qualify lfor a substi• tute teacher permit
·
Participants need to have an
up-to-date tuberculosis test
and first time attendees need ·
to order an official transcript

The Daily Sentinel

,

RUTLAND Rutland
Elementary School PTO
recently launched · its Box
Tops . for Education fund raiser.
The goal is to raise $2,000
so it can fund future equipment for the new school.
The program is sponsored
by General Mills, which has
gtven niore than $70 million
to America's schools since
1996. Schools can earn up to
$60,000 a year.
Rutland Elementary will
earn 10 cents for each box
top it submits.
The box tops must come
from participating General
Mills products, including
General Mills Big G cereals,
Betty Crocker products,
Pillsbury frozen and refri~erated products, Green Gtant
and many more.
"This is an easy way for
students, parents, grandparents and the whole community to get involved and help
out our school," Principal
Rusty Bookman said. "If
everyone· takes part, it will
make a big difference for the
·
students at Rutland."

programs that we have discussed will allow students
completing the programs to
qualify for 85% of the jobs
in today's market Now that
is a significant reason to get
an education.
It is important to weigh

and administrative · affairs
at Rio Grande ' Community
Co llege, PO. Box 326, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674, 740245-17236.) ·

""'day. oCtober 14. 1001

Staft writer

complete
a
bachelor"s
degree in four years of fulrtime study. After completing the bachelor's degree,
students can go on to comI
M
, d
pete a
asters egree or
even a Doctorate degree.
The amount of time needed
to complete these enhanced
degrees varies from program to program .
Now
that
we
have
reviewed the different types
of educational programs,
let's look at where the jobs
are. Aq;ording to a recent
study by Workforce 2020, a
bachelor's degree or higher
is r.e quircd for 20% of the
jobs and an Associat.e
d~gree or advance training
is required for 65%. This
means that the educational

all of your options when
choosing a .. program of
study. I hope that I have
helped you in making a better
decision.
Remember .... College is in
your future.
(Luanne Rase Bowman is
vice presideni for financial

Inside:

BY KRtS DOTSON

I

There are seve·ral different
types of institutions thai
offer educational services in
. the State of Ohio. Each
institution provides various
de~ree s . certificates and
tratning. programs. 1 will
describe the programs and
the benefits of each so that
ADVICE
you can make the decision
about which .is best for you.
Vocational
training
schools offer a wide variety ical laboratory technology,
of training programs and or information technology.
options. Most are short- An Associate degree proterm training courses last ~ gram can norma 1.1y be coming five to twelve months In pleted in two years of fullareas such as cosmetology, time study, making it a very
auto · mechanics, business, affordable college degree to
and other trades . Most of olnain.
Community
the educational programs Colleges also offer the
are concentrated on training opportunity for students to
an individual for immediate complete the first two years
of their degree at a smaller,
entry into the workforce.
Community and Technical less expensive, stoUdentColleges offer several dif- friendly institution before
ferent types of programs tr,ansferring to a larger
including
Associate school.
.
Degrees and Certificates .
Four-year colleges and
Certificate programs show universities offer a variety
that a student has completed of bachelor.'s degree procoursework in a concentr.at~ grams from which to
ed area ' of study such as choose. Depending on the
word processing , The cer- institution, students may
tificate program can usually choose from programs as
be completed in one full diverse as teaching, chemyear of study, allowing for istry, engineering, or archi the student to be employed lecture . A bac helor's degree
immediately.
· Associate program offers a broad
degree programs include a array of courses designed to
more intense curriculum produce a well-rounded
that is balanced with a individual at the co mpletion
heavy dose of , technical of tbe program. While stucourses and -a number of dents must ta.ke a · large
general
st udy
classes. number of classes in their
These degree programs are : field of study, they must
designed to prepare stu - also take a series of general
dents for a career in a tech- studies courses and a series
nical occupation such as of electives chosen by the
nursing, electronics, med- student Students usually

'

Students think fund~iser iS -mps;.

In which educational
program should I enroll?
.

PageA&amp;

.

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~-~-·~··4·of~
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~.... ...,..... Vi.
(it fttt~t Eft dilRi!M, ltJA•• .OIIfert.

H.V cnntc Hwt" ~d Ctnttr
·&lt;

(740) 446-5135 (Gallipolis)
(740) 395-88~1 (Jackson)

(
. --·- -----,.--------'-''-----~-----~. , _

.

Audiologists
Loretta L. Lauder, MA,
CCC/A
Kimberly Swisher, MS,
CCC/A

,
•

I

---· '

., WATERFORD
Overcoming an early scare,
Eastern rallied to defeat
:Waterford 15-17, 15-5 and
15-S
in
Tri- Valley
&lt;lonfe~rtce ., ¥olleyball play
Thursday.
. .
·
.i•·Kass ' t:odwic'k scored ·.II
'points, going ' 15-for-I!i ·serv.ing, 44-for-44 - passing and
·II-for-19 spiking with . five
.kills. Tiffeny Bissell added
!;nine points, going 13-for-13,
-and 58-of-62 setting with II
:sets for kills.
· Katie Robertson was 10-of'JJ serving witll six· points,
.29-for-35 passing and 14-for,17 spiking with five kills.
, Stacy Smith ad(!ed five
poipts on 7 -of-8 serving,
while contributing a 63-for- ·
64 setting game with II sets
for kills. Nicole Phillips was
12-for- 12 serving with eight
key points. Alyssa Holter
added six points on 11-of-11
serving She was 53-for-60
passing and had nine kills.
Morgan Weber was 12-for14 passing and 17-for-21
spiking with four . kills.
Jennifer Hayman was 7 -of-8 ·
passing and had three kills.
Casey Smith, Krystal Baker
and Brandy .Bissell added
nice support roles.
Eastern
dropped
the
reserve game in two close
bouts, 11 - 15 and ·13- 15.
Tiffany Smith had five and
Jessica Kehl had seven to
· lead Eastern .
Eastern (16-3, 15-1 TVC),
the No. I seed in the section, a! tournament, is .i dle until
next Saturday when it plays
the winner of the TrimbleCrooksville
match
at
• Alexander High School.
----,- -

--.:..- --

--'c.__

___:__

Anaheim's Adam Kennedy watches the flight ofhis third hom'j run against the Minnesota
Twins in the seventh Inning qf Gii!me 5 of the American League Championship Series Sunday
In Anaheim , Calif. (AP) ·

hurt - by holding off 2000
WInston Cup champion
Bobby Labonte on two
restarts and pulling away
from him over the final 30
laps.
•
He did it with encouragement over ·the radio from his
entire team , which . was desperate to validate a season in
which Marlin Jed the points
standings for 25 straight
weeks before he was injured
two weeks ago in a wreck at
Kansas.
"They told me I was driving .like a girl. I wasn't,"
McMurray said. "I think I am

going to cry and it's not
funny.
"They took a chance on
me . I hadn't won in trucks or
Busch·. They put me in first- "
class equipment and I made
the most of it."
Labonte finished second
and Tony Stewart, his Joe , ,
Gibbs Racing teammate, was
third and padded his lead in
the Winston Cup standings.
Stewart, battling for his
first ·ever title, leads rookie
Jimmie Johnson by 97 points.
"I'm going to be upset if
Please see NASCAR, 81

Anaheim
headed to
World Series·
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) Sixteen years later, the
Anaheim Angels got that last
out.
So now, after 41 years of
.heartbreak and losing, they'll
be playing in their first World
Series.
Gene Autry, Hollywood's
"Singing Cowboy" and the
team's founding owner, won't
be around to enjoy what he
wanted so much.
But he's certainly on the
minds of those whq will,
including his widow, Jackie..
"He would be very pleased
about this team " an emotional Mrs. Autry 'said after the
Angels beat the Minnesota
Twins 13-5 on Sunday to win
the AL championship series
in five games. "This was a
goal of Gene 's all of his life in
baseball , and the fact that he's
not here to see .it personally, 1
know he's watching it from
somewhere." ·
If that's true, Autry would
have a difficult time believing
how it came about ·
Oh, the 13 runs the wildcard Angels scored were no
major surprise, considering
the way they manhandled the
New York Yankees in the
division series, hitting a postseason-record J76.
But ninth-place batter
Adam Kennedy hitting three
home runs?
A !0-run rally in the seventh inning?
And 20 ,year-old Francisco
hadn't
Rodriguez,
who
pitched in a big league game
before Sept 18; earning his
fourth . postseason victory

without a loss?
They all happened.
"I can't really explain it,"
said Kennedy, who ·has 23
homers in 1,652 at-bats over
470 regular-season games.
"Oppprtunity came, and it
was big today,
"This will go down as one
of the best days of my life."
, The ,Twins took a 5-3 lead
10
the seve nth against
Rodriguez, who relieved
Brendan Donnelly with the
bases loaded and one out and
allowed all three baserunners
to score before retiring the
stde.
The Angels made him a
, wmner wtth thetr I 0-run outburst 111 the bottom of the
inning.
"Oh, man. This is tremendous," said Kennedy, the
series MVP despite going 1for- I 0 without an RBI 'in the
series' first four games. "We
worked hard the last few
years to bring it all together
and we finally got it done."
Born as an expansion team
in 1961, the Angels blew past
the Yankees to win their firstround series 3-1, then beat
Minnesota four straight times
after a series-opening loss.
They humbled the Twins in
the seventh inning of the
finale.• se nding 15 batters to
the plate against Johan
Santana,
J.C.
Romero,
LaTroy Hawkins and Bob
Wells.
Kennedy got it started with
his third homer - a three-run
shot on an 0-2 pitch from
Santana_. to give the Angels
Please see ALCS, 81

Bucs, 17, Browns 3

Tampa Bay runs
over Cleveland
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -The
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
insist they don't have a running back controversy, just
two .guys who can punish a
defense and help the team
win.
Mike Alstott and Michael
Pittman demonstr!!ted as
much Sunday in a 17-3 victory over the Cleveland
Browns, who couldn't stop
either of them on a hot,
muggy afternoon,
Alsott .1 for 126 yards
and · two
touchdown s,
Pittman caught tive passes
for 95 yards and added 53
yards on .the ground as the
Bucs (5- I) won their fifth
strai,ght to match the team's
best start after six games.
"There's no other way to
win than we did ," cornerbac k Ron de ., B~r ber ·sm' d
after the, Bucs defense
extended tts streak o~ consecut~ve quarters wtthout .
allowmg a touchdown to 12.
"It's a lot better than a
__

- - -i - - ·

shootout and putting up big
numbers," added Barber,
who had his first interception. "We controlled the
whole game the way that we
·
like to." ,
, That . means stout run
defense and a relentle ~s pass
rush Jed by Warren Sapp,
who sacked Tim 'Couch
twice. And, it ·means moving
the ball on the ground, particularly late in the game.
A lstott ran for 121 yards
in the final 17 minutes,
including 83 in the fourth
quarter. The five-time Pro
Bowl fullback has been frus~
!rated by the dJminished role
he's assumed in coach Jon
Gruden's offense, and hopes
his workload will increase
after delivering against the
Browns . .
"I'm not trying to be egotistic · or . anything. I think
every athlete would say the
same thing ., Alstott said. "I
' ·
Please see Browns, 81

J

'

Tampa Bay 's Anthony McFarland, right,. ancrwa!ren Sapp, partially obscured at bottom center,
team up to sack Cleveland Browns quarterback lim/ Couch cluring. ·the third quarter Sunday
·
.
afternoo·n in Tampa·, Aa . (AP)

__··-~-- ·- - - ---- ---

·- -·-----. ·-·'-

·-·-- · --~-·--....&lt;1-~---~-.. ·I
&lt;

"

��•

Monday, October 14, 2002

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

· www.mydallysentinel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page 85

NEA

BRIDOE
Publit Notires in

N~::.·~:::ll

PHILUP
ALDER

Your Right to Kno•,·, Delit&lt;ered Righllo ·

NOTICE OF
.
ELECTION
ON TAX
2001 Chevy Sihterado Ex
LEVY IN EXCESS
Cab. Quad Cab, loaded,
OF THE TEN MILL
red . new tires , 27,000 m1tes.
must se91 $19, 500 080.
LIMITATION
(740)441 -1547

92 Dodge Cot1Y&amp;rsion Van.
, owner. tots of new parts

$2,500 304·675·6693

Revised Code,
Secllons 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25

99 Jeep Sahara. 33.000

NOTICE Is here.by

miles- new 1ires, tors of
chrome. Hard &amp; solt top. given that In pursuGarage kept, exce IIent con- .nee Of a Re.olullon

the

dilion. S17,000 negotiable. of

Board

of

(740)256·1021
Township Trualees of
---~---- the Township of
96 Dodge Gran Cara11an. Salisbury, Pomeroy,
$3495: 99 Dodge Cara11an. Ohl
d
th 8
0 • passe on
$4495 ; 95 Ford Wit1dstar
van . $2595: 96 Ford El!plor- 6th day of August,

e•. $5495; 9a Chevy s-10 2002, there will be
Blazer. $7295: 'g s Mitsubishi

submitted to a vote

Montero suv, $4595; 89 of lhe people of said
Toyora Ex Gab, 4x4. auto, subdivision

at

$2595. B&amp;D Aula Sales: General Eleellon 10
Highway 160N. (740)446· be held In lhe
6B65
Township
of
Salisbury Ohio, at lhe
regular places of votM \YIURCYCU:S
1 ing therein, on the
51h day of November,
2000 400EX. runs greal, 2002, lhe question of
looks great . $3500 0 80 . levying a tax, In
(740)441-1716
excen of the ten mill
llmflallon ; for the
200i Harley Davidson Su· bene fl t
, ~ Of

r«&lt;

perglide. 2,500 miles, some

exrras, like new. $12 ,500. Unincorporated areas

1740)446·3654 or (740)339· o I
Sa Ill b ·u r y
1913
Township, excluding
98 Honda Valkyrie. 1700 - Middleport
and
miles. Lots of extras, $9500. Pomeroy Village lor
Garage · kept, like new, the purpose of oper-

(7401256· 1021 ·
...,.
~·-llo~TS &amp; MomRs

atlng eemelerles.
Said lax being: an
addlllonal tax of 0.5
fl)R SAJ .F
mill at a rate not
exceeding 0.5 mills
2000 Wave Yamaha Wave lor each one dollar of
runner; GP 1200R, 155hp, val~atlon,
40 hours, like new/ trailer.

which

amounts lo five cenls
$6500. (740)367·0012
($0.05) lor each one
foo t fishing boat, excellent hundred dollars of
condition , motor &amp; trailer in· valuation, lor live (5)
eluded. $2000 080. Call years.
(740)441 · 8299
before
The Polio lor said.
11 am
Election will open at
60 AUI'O PAKill &amp;
6:30 ():clock a.m. and
remain open until
ACCF.SSORIF$
7:30 o'clock p.m. of
said day.
lots of chrome. Small block

of I rrilll al a rale not
exceeding I (one)
mills lor each one John
N.
lhle, dollar of valuation,
Chlllrperaon
which amoun111o ten
eenla ($0.1 0) tor each
Rlla
D. Smllh , one hundred dollars
of valuation, lor five
Director
(5) yeara.
The Polio lor aald
Dated Seplember
Election will open at
18,2002.
6:30 o'clock a.m. and
.
remain open until
October
7,
14,
21,
28,
00
7:30 o'clock p.m. of
2 2
uldday
..
--..,....---Public Notice ·
By order of lhe Board
of Elecllona of Meigs
NOTICE OF ·
Counly, Ohio ·
ELECTION ON TAX
LEVY IN EXCESS
John
N.
lhle ,
OF THE TEN MILL
Chairperson
LIMITATION
' RIIa
D.
Smith,
Revised Code,
Director
!flocllons 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
Dated September
NOTICE Is .hereby
given \hal In pursu·
ance or .a Resolutll;m
of ihe Board of
Counly
Commissioners of
lhe Counly of Meigs,
0 h Io ,
Pomeroy,
passed on the tat
diy of August, 2002,
lhere will be submit·
led .t o a vole of the
people of said subdl·
vlilon at General
Elecllon 10 be held In
lhe Counly of Meigs,
Ohio, al lhe regular
places of vollng
therein, on lhe 5th
day of November,
2002, lhe queallon of
levying a tax, In
exeeaa of lhe ten mill
limitation, lor the
benefit
of. Melga
County
General
Health District for the
purpose of current
ex pen sea.
Said lax being: a
replacement or a t1x

CAMPERS &amp;

l'lO

MmnltHOMK~
1984 Camper Coachman:

32 II. perfect for perment

Rita
D.
Director

Smith,

Oaled September

camper site. Priced reason- 18,
.t . able, good condition!

2002.

1740) 9B5·4293
Oelober 7, 14, 21, 28,
- - - - - - - 2002
1989 Jaco Designed Series, - - - - - - - 35ft .. 5th.Wheei.Goose neck
camper, new awning, new
Public Noti&lt;:e
relriOator, a tot of extras, ex- -~:..:...~---­
cellent condition.

NOnCE OF
ELECnON ON TAX
Deer Hunters Special!
LEVY IN EXCESS
1971 Cobra 21 Ft: Trailer,
OF THE TEN MILL
good. condition, no leaks
LIMITATION
$1,750.00 Lea11e Message
F40) 949·2063
Revised Code,
Nice pop-up camper. Excel- Seellons 3501.11 (G),
lent. condition. Sleeps Six,
5705.19, 5705.25
1700 080. (740)441 ,0694.
(740) 591-6055 or 367·7221

SIIHH IS

i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

!8tO

HOME
IMPROvt:Mmrs

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

NOTICE Is hereby
given lhat In pursuanee of a Resolution
of lhe Board of
Township Trustees of
the
County
of
Township of Rulland,

guar· Ohio, pa••ed on

Unconditional lifetime

~he

antee. Local relerenCEts.lur- 1st day of July, 2002,
nished. Established 1975. there will be submit·

Call

24 H&lt;S. (740) 446·

0870, Rogers Basement ted to a vote of the

Walerprooling.

people Of IBid IUbdl·
vision at General
Election 10 be held In
C&amp;C General Home Mainle· the Township ol
. nence- Painllng. vinyl s!d· Rutland, Ohio, at the

6323.

·

Superior Home
Maintenance
We do all repairs on homes
inside &amp; out. Carpentry,
plumbing, yard work, etc.

(740)441 ·0113

1840

ELEcrnJCAii
RF.fliM;F.ItATION

Residential or commercial
wiri ng, new service or repairs. Master Licensed electrician. Ridenour EkK;trical,

WV000306, 304·675·1&lt;86.
Newspapers
cover a wide
variety of sub·
jects, From
headlines, to sports,
to classifieds , we've
got it

all!

2002, lhe question of
levying il tax, In
excess of lhe ten mill
limitation, lor the
benefit of Rutland
Township for the pur·
pose of malnlalnlng
and
operulng
eemelerlea .
Said tax being: a
renewal of a tu of
0.3 mill at a rale not
exceeding 0.3 mills
for each·one dollar of
valua.llon , which
amount• ··-to three

cents ($0.03) for each
one hundred dollar•
of valuation, lor live
(5) years.
the Polls lor said
Eleellon will open at
6:30 o'clock a.m. and
remain open until
7:30 o'clock p.m. of
said day.
By order of lhe Board

jno

!

v•l, llte arrtnl, earty
removal, late removal,
Or •nytiiM ·ICCBI .. II
wanted lo falrgroundl
other than 1t1ted dataa.

Pnparo Now ISomt Pmidons
LAW ENFORCEMENT
(GS· 1897) Airporl Sc•een~!Cuswm.
(FV-1!01) Air M•shllnmmipllioo
(GS~8l) Stc.ri~~rison Gum
(GS~J) Pol&lt;t!Trooper~heriff

(GS072) Fin!'cpriniK:oi!UiioM
(GS~lll Pot ROI!aiBailiff F&lt;dcr;
Ai&lt;nl&amp; Mo•

GENIIt\L&amp;ADMINISIRATIVE
iGS-lll) Comp,la ()p&lt;rawr
iGS-J()l) Mail &amp; File Ck1k
iGS-916) Medkall.t1o Cieri
(GS·l 18) Sct!ei"J IR«cpl~ni•
(GS-110) Food Sc"ict W01ko
(GS-1861 Social Scn&lt;e A!!1 ,
iGS-1113) Molnr Veh&lt;k ()p&lt;ra"'

With Starting Pay of S14 • $20/ hr.

·

&amp; · t'stffrtf; ."Wttttct,
1n~·«:w. ~t!.eut

Scon L Swain

Specializing In:
Roofing , Decks,
•· Remodeling ,
Siding, Qnd
Additions . ·

•

t

I

97 Beech St.
mld~leport, OH
[10'1110' 610'11201

[740) 992-3194
992-6635 .

J

Job EliribiliryFor Those WOO C11m~e1t Creer Devdopmur Propam
911 MINl/I'E CLASS ORIENTATION
~d,;nislt"" Bj: Sial! Nollto~ Tninln1 Sc"l&lt;t, In&lt;.
(NCI Calls roltM! College!Information will be presenred in·ptl"ion
Only to those illr to artend Class Orimtalion)
'

'

'
AI GALLIPOLIS CAREER COLLEGE
1176!:dso' Pike. Gallil"lis
Spri'! VallryPlaza, Suite Jll
Friday, Octnbtr 18111 ONLY!

No Lare Amwals

...

ROBERT
BISSELL

--

CONSTRUCTION

••

•Newlbnes
•Grnges

•

.
~

w

•Conlfllete RRIII..,.na-sl!d
' lol11eliJg"l

·····

_____
•

BARNEY

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671
7122/TFN

(Affordable Prices)

' 213 n. Second Hue.
•. middleport,

on

(740) 992-1705
Tonia Reiber

THE BORN LOSER. ......
~

Ucensed i1!J the Ohio
Stat' medical Board

Wf\'&lt; THIS OO~E.~:&gt;ION \o-1\''ffi ,1'-.
~1-..lst:., Tf\ORNfo,l'l'L( '? f\I'..VEN'I

DeanHW

•
Longaberger/Dresden
Bus Trip
Sal., November 30, 2002
$65 .00· Space Limiled
Deadlin"' Oct 20, 2002

WHITE GLOUE HOmt
CLEHnlnG SfRUICE

.J6S ELECTRIC 6
PlUmB¥J6

1-800-822-0417

SpnnD Cifl~llliiVJ
lnt·~nor P.w111nr1

Jim Au•rk
El~rJc, Plumbing,

"W.V's #I Chevy, Pontiac; Buick, Olds

Van

DEPOYSAG
·PARTS

,..· S~f/E~A-::lOt:~;·. ,

All

- p'

'

I'

'

:

~~'

&lt;

.'

Makes Tractor &amp;

1\llur:liihlc f&lt;. 11&lt; ''
c,-lll St1orrr .Jt

17 -till 'J-ll). 7H

Case-IH Parts

.Buv one/Bet one ,
50% 011 Eveodav ·

'

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Raei~e. Ohio
45771
7401949-2217

Equipment Parts
Factory Au'thorized

·Bullet 1Ell-In·£:

I ~

~

TI-\ORNI'-.I'l'LE., \H~,._Pf'LE.,
~1::£ II&gt;\ l'l8S'
11-\0~I'IN'Pl..E., I~ Tf\~ NO
'"''wN-iem\Efl: ! 51'\\I~FYIN&amp; 'tOll"!'
or.IE IN
19971

I000 Sl. Rt. 7South
Coolville, OH 45723

(340 773-5412
Cell 304 B74-3082

DIDN'T YOU

YOUNG'S

Remodeling

Local 843-5264

• VInyl Siding &amp; Polnllng
• P•tlo and Porch Decka

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 ·

Your
ootrot• Conatctiou, L
l}ollftoy
C01c111t f•ishincantl .lore!
740-742-8015
(!77,Jl.J.10ll)
Call lOr nm: iriforJ free es1ima1e
W\'IJIZ!'i6

·~~~

High&amp; Dry

Self·Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

'NOW DOING:

(740) 446-1812

740-992·5232

Ad: u1 (Jbtour our

• 11inis • Etc

74()..992~2222 or
7411-446"1018

Gallipolis 446-4995
Toll Free 1-888-74H847

and3 dra•
llulln

31daJ1.
Call Jeanie'
and ask how.

74.0-992·7996
Herballlti lndeper&lt;lenl
Oletributor

LETART CORPORA TI:ON
SAND &amp; t#RAVEL

·. BISSELL

~w~,

BUILDERS IRC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Sidi.~g • New Garages
• Replacemenl
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIOENTIAL

~eSc~

'146-8237.• 67!5-7!516 or 1-soo: no;4!535
Sand. Gravel, Stone, Culv.M &amp; CoMtruction SUJ!P.IIu

.

..

~

..

.

SeE THII.i PIL6 OF

tWAI&gt;IT

~Y. t'M IWIOYMAN!

HOM~ IMPilOV€MtNT

NE£0S DOIN'?

\'llOJECTS \lit eouGiiT
SUi HAVEN'T SfAIIT'ED

WIIAT Al10UND ~

GIIE ME

YOJ 'It&gt; 1iAU1.
1HEM10

iiiE llUMf

YET'?

ACW.Nc.&lt;,
1 ii&lt;AU.Y
11M KAI&gt;IIII'!

BY BERNICE BEDE OsDL

ODD JOBS

me.

Oone,

(740) 591·9239

Connie's
Child CARE

: GARFIELD
,.
•
•
"

has openings, 15 yr.
experience, Certified
in Meigs, Athens and
Washington counties,
Open 24 hours.

CiOOP 1'0 HEAR .
I-lAVE A NICE
PAl,&gt;

might be more in evidence.

7 Days par weak.
St. At. 7 Tuppers

luckier now than uSual in

Plains, OH ·

CALL 667·632.9
~·nu:

GIUZZWELLS
:wNE 'ltl\J

Sunset Home
Construction

~F.VE~

• Stump Grinding

New Homes, Room AddiHons, ,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,'
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall.
:
&amp; More

FREE ESTIMATES!

740·992-7599

740-742-3411

!'D \\!liE 'lb bPEHO A~L DA'i o\TTif.l~ '"
~Ro\11-lP ~~ ~t: Of \\-lOSE lE~h\\1-\lll'il!

~li.ittl

Bryan Reeves

FREE ESTIMATES

The yea!.,altead is shaping
up to be-a niOre active o~e for
you than usuaL. The mftuences wi II increase your social involvements and enable
you 10 do a fair amount of
traveling if you choose.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) · There is a bit of a gambler in
you, and today lhis urge
Don' l lake any unreasonable
risks, bul you could b'e a bit

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Bucket Truck

A!! IF
YOU CARE'

.ron.Y?
'

;

harmless siluations. Trying to
patch up a broken romance?
The Astro·Graph Malchmaker
can help you understand whal
to do 10 make lhe relationship
work . Mail $2.75 to Malch·
maker. c/o this newspaper.
P.O. Bm&lt;£67, Wickliffe, OH

44092.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- .Simply being in the
company of your loved ones
or persons with wttom you
have close, personal lies will
go a long wuy toward contribUiing .to your fee lings of welt
.
being toduy.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dcc. 2 1.) -- h may no1 be by

accident that someone you ' ve
had connecli ons wilh previ·
au sty is on your mind 1oday.

(

,.

..

Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2002

200 E. Main $1.
Painting, Power
Open 9am·6pm
· Washing, Mowing,
Mon lhru Sat. .
Phone 992.0515
Weedutlng
Washers, dryers
You Need It
Like New
Freezer, Eleclrle
We'll Oo It
Ranges, Dishwashers
(740) 949-4026
Refrigerators, and
much more
or
FREE DELIVERY

Tree Service

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famQus
peopte, past and present. Each letter in the cipher standS lor another.

Today's clue: M equals V

.. p Fl

p I

ADA

DE R

ODYR ;

TDKPAX

s

R WU

C E R

RWSR

p A'

VURUYKPAUI
DH

XD P AX

RWU

RWU

IETTUII

MDNSXU."

WUAYN .

CUUTWUY

LSYV

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Here lies my P.ast. Goodbye, I
have kissed lt. I Thank you kids. I wouldn 1have missed II."
-Ogden Nash
WORD
GAM I

S1 B RK

1
I. I· I·
·
4

5

I

13

I
.

"' ·

· ~ ~=,'

e

1:

Ia

I I /

I

(74 0) 992· 5822

JONES'

38 ~~a lever
39 Aclress-

I' I

dummy's jack. As- . 1ft PRINT NUMBERED 11
~~ 13 1•
1•
suming it won, South
'::1 LETTERS
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
would have cashed
the club ace. Or, if
€) ~~~~~MBLE FORI I ·
I
East dropped the club
.
.
.
.
.
.
· nine under dummy's
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
. jack, SoutQ would
Trough ·Novel- Mercy- Hockey ~ CURRENCY
·have returned to hand
While going over the credit. card bills from a trip we
with a heart and run
had taken, I heard my husband mutter, "Peop le want a
the club I 0. change on their vacation along with a lot of CURRENCY.'

·'

( lilltl

piiiiiiOiii MII

waapon

47 -avis
48 Job
opening
50 Marvy
51 Crimson
Tide st.
52 Teachers'
org.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1--rl..;_:;:.l

I·' 1

POMEROY
APPLIANCE
STORE

oz.

II

'.

Shield &amp; Full line of
Other Accessories
\ ] H'tik['rl ll

12 Hankers for

maker

43 Think
poslllve
44 "11--a
Hammer"
46 Fencing

27 Enlreals
28 Jackel
slyle
29 Mince
31 Execs
33 Food fish
. 35 PC key
36 POrtuguese

Is

•'•

• Tonnelie Cover •
Ventvisor • Bug

..,,, r ,,, r

• ME 7• ''

111111111111

•

r,,

STOP SAI(ING,

cem•ni1J lc1lln
.. AIIICV

•

\

--cou•ln

Dawbar
41 Hard roll
42 Rhyme

led the club six. And [
T U S Q .~
when the queen ap- _
"One true conviction that a man
peared , Kwie~ien had
16 1
I' 1
sh ould have in h1s life ;" ·o ne old
10 tricks: one spade,
.
.
.
.
timer confided to his old friend, "is
three hearts and six
t_h_a_t _no_ t_h_•.ing is to be_taken too--·
clubs. If West had ~
AL S Y I E .
played a low club,
"'a--ri-TI-:'9.:.,.1--1
Complete ' the chuckle quoted
though,
declarer. L--L.- L
. _l..-l..-.1..--l1
by filling in the missing word• ·
would have finessEd
you develop lrom •lep No, 3 below.

llflll.nll Clll

.._,,,

144 Third Ave.

~

Leon
Trotsky
wrote, ''Technique is
noticed most markedly in the case
those who have
mastered it. " r."!!. - I-'
would like lo .t hink
that that is true, but I
am not convinced.
.. Today's declarer
, exhibited excellent &lt;
' technique, and because he was "lucky,"
·the deal has been
written up around the
· globe.
Look at only the
North-South hands.
How would you try lo
land three no-trump?
west leads the spai:le
six :
three, jack,
queen.
West's spade leQd,
into declarer's bid
suit, was .ominous;
. clearly West ha4 a .
long and strong suit':
The declarer, Michal Kwiecien from
Poland, had six top
tricks : one spade
(given trick one),
three hearts and two
clubs . Playing a. diamond was surely tantamoul)t to conces- ·
sion; instead, declarer ·
needed to run the club
suit. That meant he
had to assume West
held the queen. (Play- ·
ing to drop
single- .
ton or doubleton
queen in the East
hand is al!ainst the
odds .) So, some play. ers would lead the

19 Roden!
20 Some, In
Paris
22 Assuage
23 Contorde
24· Workoul
.locale
25 Coarnlllt
26 Top. and

Puzz.. -

O

GOALIE .

'I'ES, AND PLEASE

VES, I NEED
TO TALK
TO 'I'OU ...

CHARLES, I'M
TO SEEVO\J..

(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blinds are

• Ver1icaJ. • ·wood

Pan
Pan

~

COMIN60VER

BLIND SPOT

Pomeroy Eagles
BIN_GO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
. 6:30
lsi Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE .

lint 171b8.

A GOO!&gt;
QUALITY IN A

. PEANUTS

·. lJETTY

our location

1¥
Pau

ton queen? .
AI trick two, South

The CRAFTY. ·
made lo Order at

hn
P111

Pr.v~u•

nesse. This works
.
Edll•d by CLAY R. ,oLLAN
whenever clubs are 3Reorronge leltero of the
,---...~-"""2 with West holdin~four ocrombi..O words be·
.
low to form four Simple word• .
th e queen, or .4 - I wit . - - - - -·; .,.__.-_.-.....,
East ~av.ing a sing!~-~ ·
G y T z ·0 E
- t~n mne . (You wont .
I
pick up queen-mne.
.
.
.
. .
fourth · in the West

ALWAY~

I: G.UE$$ I \riA$N'T
REALLY PAYING
ATTENTION TO
THE GAME .

TFN

RIIIIIIE

Medicare Supplement; Life lnsurnnce;
Burial and Final Expenses;
·
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 40lK Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
iJ1
• Nursing Home
~

10 e

I

Wlrll

• Roofing &amp; Gutter•

Q .. 3

hand.) However~ what
If West has a smgie- .

Y• Clllld 118 IJitllbllltr filii- .
.IIIRI ..CIIll

• Room Additions &amp;

•

•

II ·j 12

In IOU llld on;a

. CARPENTER
SERVICE
• New G.r11ge1
• Electrical &amp; Plwnblng

SEE rr:&gt;

Cellular

740-667-0363

10 I 1
10 t 2
t • J a

Answet" to

~~~~ni~~ [~0t~keh!n~~ r:~;:~~Y S©1\ilN\-~£ZNS"

~u.t&amp;L
992-5479

•
•

a

•nd Small Home
Maintenance J~

.,

FreetsltiO\Itt•, Fr.. m hom&amp; pic~~
CalltU n-.. 111 ~0111' ~- ~

~

Jeff Warner Ins.

Dealers

Pomeroy, Ohio
rs L.ocal

Open 9am-5pm

r
. 'l't:"'!-1, ~l&lt;o&gt;l-\'1' ! 1'-. rlfl''t·oct-\1

Wt: "OORE:~E() \HI:&gt; ll&gt;\ Tt'.t. P~T 7

New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

&amp;

~

I •'

Delicious Food .

Best Service at
the Best Price

_.

Fret Estimates!

I

2:00pm or 6:00pm
No Chlfdret1

~

(740) 992-1189

THERIIPY

Everyone receives a
basket!!! Call:

AbsoUely Ill Pi"one CisJis
_Bnng Peo

.'

Rooflna, SldlaK
hlntlna, Gulten, Decks,

appt.

YO~

Urn'rOO Saet1ng

!

lire gou slressed7

Call DOW for !JOUr

.JI

·=
··'
• J

~~

Not lucky

-'

Stop &amp; Compare

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING
949-1521

K 1

AKJ1i5

Vulnerable : Both
S•ut•
\Vest North East
L.
Pu1

Monday-Friday 8-SPM • Saturday 8-2pm

www.amerteenslandardalr.com

t

.

Dealer: North

(740) 446·1044

. "SALES AND SERVICE"

10 14 n

'A.S42

Opening lead: A &amp; •

Eolr)' Ltvd &amp; Fllll Ulltd Posllions · Ates: 17 11165
Mu.uBt US (iri~m. Ca~1·irltd Ft/mu Mo.vNm Apply
For National Hmntland Stcurir\' P111ili1111.1
T•W" $2 ptr Cl~ti Hlllr,intbldtl BOo!J tmd M111tNU

SA\\l t1' COUWI-l'i % ~&amp;!

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

• Heating
~
• Air Conditioners
s~
• Service On All Brands
• Resldenllal &amp; Light Commercial
• 10 yr. parts &amp; Labor
• Helling &amp; Air CondiUonlng

41 ·- -relief
42 DonlhUe o1
1 Cleaning
TV
tool
45 Fo11ll
4 Of thai kind
resins
8 Trotted
49 Cry of
11 Float
dellghl
13 Baby
50 Toolh
buggy, In 53 WhHish
London
gem
14 Airport Into 54 Clean·alr
15 Complellon
org.
problem
55 Naullcal
16 Kal Kan
poelllon
rival
56 Agr!pplna'o
17 Mutt
son
18 Cllpuhoep 57 Koppel of
20 Pull on
lhe newo
21 Smaoh
58 Phoenician
22 Flight dlr.
dolly ·
24 Give
59 Faasl
27 Talked back
30 Orange
DOWN
vegetabln
31 H11 10
I Execs'
32 X-and-0
degreeo
game olart 2 "Owl"
34 Sanll Fe
3 Corn hra.
4 Pang
35 Se....,·
5 Web addr.
6 Lid
wrller
James7 Patlenl-care
36 Loony
gp.
37 Church
8 .Try again
· readlngio
9 Like - 39 Athad for
of brlcko
40 Mortlcle'o 10 Old horns

• Q' 1 4
¥ K Qe

16
J NT

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING &amp; HEATING

n

ACROSS

South

.•

mo.

t 3
AJ

.. Q

MONTY

I

(7 40) 992-0739

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

New Chefs Taste

per
month

¥

Weal
A AK10fl51

Massey ·Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

CDNSTRICDIN

·

New People • New Things

$75

.

Nortll

·'·'
·'

Cub CackC &amp; Gravely

· Terry Lamm

304-773-5800

for

Painting

Haning's Construction

Owner:

1066 Second Street

in this
space

Drywal~

Foreman: Larry
Owner:
740·367·0181
Ronald "Mick: Haning
740·992·0780
hrislina "Chris" Haning
Cell# 740·591·0919
Cell: 591·8393

Gallipolis, Ohio • (740) 446-2015
ISA Certified Arborist
1-866-4DR·TREE

. lnolde Slorogo: S4.0Mt
Open Span: $2.00/H
lnolde Fence: S1 ,00/H

2002

Business Services
. Jilf4Jt
f\lfCittf4

Advertise

Roofing, Siding, lldd-Ons,
Plumbing, Decks, Remodeling, • ·

o,k .., ~-- ~ &amp; '8ufh1

come flrat serve.

HF.LP WOO'Eil

.Camr D"do~oll'nllram

~:c;;;;: Your Dees~

· Building opace lo first

October 7, 14, 21 , 28,

Strvirt P/(lfu.'

NOTICE TO THE CENERAL PUBLIC
FEDERAL JOB ELIGIBILITY

7ue ~ S~mt4r41

mEIGS mHSSIIGE

----=----

lng, carpentry, do?rs. Win- regular places of VOl·
dows, baths, mob1le home
re pair and more . For tree lng therein, an the
estimate call Chet, 740-992- 5th day ol November,

Fairground•

Arrlvol: Oct 5 &amp; Oct. 11
9om-12pm
Rtleale April 28, 2003
A fM of 120 will be
chllrgea for earty •rrt·

18, 2002.

Che11. intake carb. scoop &amp;

more, (7401742·3B05 eve· By order of lhe Board
nings.
of Elections of Melga
--..,....--..,........, Counly, Ohio

WII'ITER STORAGE
Melgo Counly

ol Elections of Melga
Counly, Ohio

Puzzle

Crossword

Make an effort to communicate with him or her; something good is meant to come
of it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun .
19) •• You're likely lo fare
better in your financial dealings loday 1han usual. so see
what needs doing. and don· t
dally in Inki ng care 0f il .
S1rike while lhe iron is hot.
AQUARIU S (J an. 20-Feb.
19) ·- There' s a poss ibili) y
you could be exposed 10 some
lype of. inspirational message
loday 1ha1 wilt fu el your inner
being with a plethora of posi ti ve lhinking. It could have a
profound affecl on your af·
fatrs.
.
PISCES (Feb: 20.March
20) -- Somelhing mighl be
brought ou1 inlo the open to·
· day ubout. developments 1ha1
have been lakin~ place behind
lhe scenes. You It be pleased
by the news. because it will
affect you.
.
ARI ES (March 21·April19)
-- The cooperoti ve mood
you're in loday wilt serve you
well. It ' ll encournge fri ends
and associnles alike Ia suppon
and apprecinle your aims and

desires.
TAURUS (A pril 20- May
20) •· Era se bad hi &lt;lory from
your mind today and regroup

I

to make a second effort toward reaching a goal that was
prev ious ly unal tai nabl e. The

c:onditions have changed in
your favOr.
"

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
.. If there is somelhing lhal i s
near and dear 10 you lh al

hasn't

been

runni ng

as

smoolhly as you'd like. loday

is the dav m take mmters 'in
your owri hands and reorgan ize them to your sntisfaction .
Ci\NCER (June 2 1-July 22)

-- Something advantageous is
developing for you 1oday
'

from a si tuation another has
· i nih aled. Yourll be gellin g 1he
opporlunily 10 run it, and will
do so more erfec livel y than
the other person has.
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
Should you find lhe need lo-

day to brainstorm an idea or
seek advice from a person

whose judgment you respecl.
d'o n'l hesil ate to do so. Thi s
person will be an enormous
help.
V IRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-· Your possibili ties for personal gain are e•ceplionnll )'
promis mg loday. particularly

in any arrange ment where
you ' re performing ·a service
for another. Roll up your
sle'eves and go to wurk.

'

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I

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Monctay, October 14,2002

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Davis defensive after Browns loss, 81

Land of the Free
People say America is a free
country. Does it mean that
everything is free? Does. it mean
you can do whatever you want
to do? What does ''a free
country" mean?
Deadline: Nov. I0, 2002
Publ6hed: Week of Dec. 8, 2002

If you could ask a giraffe any questions you wanted, what would you ask?

Q: How does a

What's inside

Den Dickerson

hopping around your·body?

· ~allipolis 19all!' QJ:ribunt

A long, deep sleep is

That little bird is called an oxpecker and it is a

825 Third Avenue, Callipolis, OH 45631 ·

good friend to a gi,raffe. We don't hav~ arms
and hands to flick away pesky ti~ks. fleas
and flies. Ox peekers piclc them off of us.
They eat the. little pests and also help
keep us clean.

Please Include your school and grade.

During the day, we doze
on and o{f:for a few
minutes af,a time.
Quietly and gently we
relax our necks and let
our heads hang
downward: ·

·.u u•nh • lu"'"·'V· O&lt;tub~• 1s. 100 2 • Vol. Sl, No. 41

..Send your story to:

Q: Why Is there a bird

giraffe sleep?
very dangerous for
giraffes •. We might not
sense when; a predator
comes nt;ar.

Melp COunty's Hometown NewsPoJiper

Q: How tall Is a
giraffe? ·

·-

Catch that flea!
A flea is tickling the

a ceremony to take place at ll
a.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 6.
Mayor John ·Blaettnar
announced the ribbon cutting
and dedication program.of.the
dock at Monday night's meeting of Pomeroy VillaJle
Council.
The dock which extends
from the amphitheater to the
c;nd of the p~king lot wall

Ainertun Elecbk Power - c.vln Pl•nt

Cheshire. OH

giraffe. Follow the
flea's path.

Sponsors of: Ms. Crum's 3rd grade class

Addaville Elementary
Addison, OH

Toler&amp;Toa.r ·
lilsur•M41 S.rvlces
Gallipolis, OH
..
Sponsors of: Mrs. Peny's 3rd grade dass

Male giraffes can grow to be _ _
meters tall. That is the size of 3-4 grown
men standing on each other's shoulders!

At night; we
Butex~n then, · .
take eat naps.
wake
up every few minutes
and look around.

HDEFUCH

· POMEROY - The riverfront boal dock completed in
late September just in time for
use at the· Slernwheel
Ri verfesl will be dedicated in

......_ NMiorYI S.nk
Racine, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. McNic~le' s,3rd grade .dass
· Scuthern Elementary
Racinl!, OH

· Giraffes are the tallest land
animals. Find the missing
number to find out how tall a
giraffe grows.

Rio Grande Eleinentary

· Garnts win NLCS, 81

Rio Grande, OH

www.mydaily•entinel.&lt;om

Boat dock dedication set Blood trail.
for Pomeroy's riverfront used to track
• •
m1ss1ng man

BY CHARL£NE
News editor

Ty SonMI'VIIIe
·state Farm lntur•na
Point Pleasant,. Wtl
Sponsors of: Mrs. Ooeffinge(s 3rd grade class
North Point Elementary
Point Pleasant. wv

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

was built with a grant from
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources:
Discussed by the mayor
"for clarificattoil of some
· misunderstandings" was the
deed from the Meigs Loc;iJ
School District for the former
Pomeroy Junior Hikli School
building and I adjacent land to
Pomeroy Village.
·
A portion of the deed was
read by Clerk Kathy Hysell in
which it states that the area
behind the building · is not io
have any permanent fixtures
erected which would limit
parking for school events at
the adjacent football field. A.
baseball field has been devel-

oped in part of the restricted
area, it was noted.
Marie Young and her
daughter, Janice, met with
Council to discuss a yard
cleanup
incident
with
involvement by the police
chief who threatened fines.
She contended that her
daughter's residence was singled out from among 44 as
bad or worse in the village.
While there was no resolution
of the complaint, the mayor
explained that "the village is
working to get places cleaned
. up."
Plans were made to do
Ple~se

see Dock. Al

Slcyllne a..n..
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Sandra Walker's 3rd grade class

Female giraffes can grow to be _ _
meters tall.

Budriep ltut•l Electric: Co-op
Rio Grande, OH

Standards Link: Algebra: Solve problems involving numeric
equations; express simple unit conversions.

·11 !H = a1ewa::l "11 8 ~

,

Council, chief
look to cut cost·
'
of new truck

.

Sponsors of: Phyllis .Brandenbeny's 3rd grade dass
Washington Elee'W!ntary
GallipOlis, OH

Holler Clinic
Gallipoli5, OH
Sponsors of: Sheila Bevins' 3rd grade class
Middleport Elementary
Middleport. OH

1--_;__:...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,.._
HoiJ:ei Clinic ·•
Gallipolis. OH
Sponsors of: Mrs . Ours' 3rd grade class
Washington Elementary
•
Gallipolis,. OH

.·

Middleport, OH
Sponsors of: Sandy Needs' 3rd srade class

•

Qfter. semin•

Eastern Elemenhuy
Middleport, OH

V.u&amp;tJan'l supermarket
Middleport, OH
Sponsors of: Mn. . Struble's 3rd srade' dass

bones are in a

Southern Elementary
Middleport, OH

giraffe's rieck7

Crossroeds G.-....housu
Letart Falls, Ohio
Sponsors of: Ms. Hoher's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Middleport, OH

-.. .f.

Add the numbers tQ find ·
out!

. ''

~·

Gallipolis, hierl. .
Sponsors 1: Sandra Mock'• --; rd grade class
Ohio Vall
Christian School
Gallipolis. OH
.

2+3+1+1= - - Do you know how many
bones are in your neck?
Subtract these numbers
for the answer.

Pr. • Mrs.

-..r..d Sh....

1"

Gallipolis, Ohio
.,
Sponsors of: Jerry Howell's 3rd grade class
Green Elementary
Gallipolis. OH

Jivld4ln's Power Equipment

1g..534=

C.llipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Davenport's 3rd grade dnss
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

Standaida Link: Number Sense:
SolVe problems using add~ion and
subtraction.

MIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy Attorney · John
I.fntes will presen~ "You
and the Law: Know Your
Rights," from 7 to 9 p.m.
on Wednesday at the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College Meigs
Center, Mill Street in
Pomeroy. The discussion
will include landlord 'ani:!
tenant issues. child suppon,
tru sts and wills, senior citize·n issues and more. There
is no charge for the seminar.

,.,

This Brown's Contracting worker has a bird's eye view of Pomeroy as he paints the dome of the
Meigs County Courthouse. Workers are completing the exterior phase of a $50,000 courthouse
renovation project, funded by a grant through the State of Ohio. (Brian J. Reed)

Something old ...

Lotteries

Equipment

come up with a lisl of things
which can be changed · to
make it mo)-e manageable
POMEROY - . Two bids financially without affecting
received on a new firetruck the integrity of the vehicle,"
the f1re chief said.
for the Pomeroy Fire
Those recommendations,
Department were rejected bY.
.
Pomeroy Village Counctl arrived at with the advice of
Monday night and a decision the . Lafrance· representative,
was made to rebid the pro- included reducing the size of
· t
the engine, cutting options
~.
The bids came in well
out o fth e cab, downscaling
above the $350,000 which the phone system, reducing
Council and the Fire · the generator size, changing
Department had agreed to the cord drills, and reducing
spend on the new customized the light package_.
.
frrelpumper truck. American
Blaettnar satd mak~ng
LaFrance bid $453,752 while those changes would bnng
the ·bid from Central States the cost down to a"out
Fire
Apparatus
· was · $364,000 and he was hopeful .
$426,368.
that by working with the
Rick Blaettnar, fire chief, company representative · it
meet with Council and made could be brought down to the
the recommendalion for $350,000 range.
"That's what we're workrejecting both bids. He
reported that the department ing for," said the frre chief.
He will return to Coun~il in
was looking at ways of
reducing the cost and had a month wtth new spectficaalready met with a represen· lions for the equipment so
tative of American Lafrance. that the rebidding process can
"What we're trying to do is be started in late November.
CHARLENE HoEFUCH

News editor

High: 60s, Low: 50s
·
Debllls. Al

vaucts•n'l Superna.dtet

'

Bv

Weather

Hola•r Clink
Gallipolis, OH.
Sponsors of; Mrs. Little's 3rd grade d.ass
Central Elementary
Point Pleasant. WV

Q: How many

.,

Details, A3

Rio ....

=a1er-~ =1:13MSN\f

REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township volunteer fire·f ighters located a miss,ing
Cleveland man by followmg
a trail of deer blood, Sheriff
Ralph Trussell said Tuesday.
Deputies planned to drag
Forked ~un Lake in search
of Michael K. Lewis when
he was found yeslerday
morning. He had been
reponed missing on Sunday
by a female companion who
had joined him on a hunting
and camping trip at Forked
Run State Park .

A search for Lewis
Sunday · night and ·early
Monday morning, using a
scare~ dog from Washington
County, was unsuccessful,
and Trussell said this morning searchers had planned to
drag the·river because a fishing . line from Lewis' boat
was in. the water.
"We don't know if he got .
lost or if it got dark and he
decided to stay where he
was for the night," Trussell
said. "Firefighters searching
for him fou.nd a trail of
blood from freshly-~illed
deer and used it to locate
him in the woods."

Otilla Romine, 92

Southwestern Elementary
Rio Grande, OH

Rio Grande, OH

J. REED

Slaff wriler

Sandra Landes,-47

Sponsors of: Becky' Woodyard's 3rd srade dass

Baby giraffes are about 2 meters tall
. when they are born . That is more
tflan 6 feet tall! If one meter equals
about 3 feet, approximately how many
feet tall are adult giraffes?

Bird's eye view

Deaths

Pomeroy Elementary
Pomeroy, Ohio

BY BRIAN

,.

OHIO

a

The patterns on giraffe's bQdy are not just for looks .
They camouflage us. We can blend in with the shadows
and shafts of light that filter around trees and bushes.
Color all of the giraffes you see in the grove of. trees.

BLEND
TONGUES
PAITERNS .
TICKS

SLEEP
HANG
SPOTS
PREDATOR
BONES
NECK.
GROWS
OXPECKER
PATH
NAPS

Edward Jo~es Investments
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of : Mrs. Sara Spurlock's 3rd grade dass
Vinton Elementary
·
Vinton, OH

Find the words in the puzzle,
then in this we'e k's Kid Scoop
stories and activities.

GIRAFFES

J R Morrl10n a
Gallipolis, Ohio

Sponsors of: MIS. Fellure'S 3rd
Hannan Trace Elementary
Mercerville, OH

0 H N A p s N T X s
s s A p E E 0 I s R
N T

c

T
T

s
s

p B R

s

·

I

Rutland, OH

l S.tlan - 1l l'llps

Calendar
: ·classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials

Women 's . .aketbell THm
Untv.nlty' of Rio Gr•nd•
Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Price's 3rd grade dess
Washington Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

E F F A R I G E
L E E p T s I p

Movies

Ohio V.ll•y Tech Prep · .

A X B p L E R H K X
"
p R 0 T A D E R. p 0

Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. sau_n ders' 3rd srade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

Obituaries
: Sports
Weather

Ohio Vllll•y Tech PNp
Gallipolis, OH ·
Spo nsors of: Mrs. Short's 3rd grade class

. .
·Standerdo Link: Letter sequencing. RecogniZing identical
.

words. Skim and scan reading._Recall spelling paHems .

Addaville Elementary
Addaville, OH

,.

!;
v1

~

"""

._===I

Pomeroy, OH
·
Sponso'rs of: Marge Gibbs' ;Jrd grade class
Sitlisbury Elementary
'
Pomeroy, OH

Sponso.s "''
Juila Vaughan's 3rd grade
Mindy Vounl(!li 3rd grade
Marge Gibbs' 3rd grade
Plus 9 additional
J_rd grade class~

A3
A3

B1-4
A2

In observance of Archives Month in Ohio, a display of business and labor artifacts on businesses of
the past and ·longtlme businesses still operating is on display at the Meigs Museum. Numerous pictures, records and ledger books, along with pieces of equipment long out of use are included ~ The
exhibit, prepared by Mary Grace Cowdery, left, and Maxine Whitehead, Is accented with a home scene
of Mr. and Mrs. Farmer in tribute to agriculture, the county's largest industry. The display will remain
In place for public viewing until Nov. 15. (Cha~ene Hoeflich)

Pomeroy Fire Chief Rick Blaettnar discusses changes which
can be made in the firetruck specifications to bring the cost ·
down to the $350,000 which Pomeroy Village Council and
the Pomeroy Fire Department agree they can afford. With
him here are Councilmen Jackie Welker, left, and Larry
Wehrung. (Charlene Hoeflich)

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer D(fference

A one·day event that gives respiratory care professionals

G•lll• Reads
Gallipolis, OH

A4

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

Melp County Economic Development Office

W

AS

·. Respiratory Fall. Sy..-posiulll

Green Elememaey
Gallipolis, OH

a:

B6

Holzer Medical Center Respiratory Therapy Department's 2nd Annual

Spo nsors of : lou Ann Shawver's 3rd grade dass

&lt;(

AS
B4-S

. C&gt; 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Ohio Valley Tec:h Prep
GallipOlis, OH

I. Write a short subject-verb sentence.
.
Example: Maria laughed.
2. Look through the newspaper for words to add
to the sentence.
1
Example: The' talented Maria caught a
tl.,;nn baseball and laughed aloud.

W.VA.
Daily 3: 8-4-1
Daily 4: 8-0-5-7
Clsh 25: 4·13-14-15-19-24

Index

IA.. rt torporatlon
Letart. OH
Sponsors pf: A 3rd grade classSeale El•mentary
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

c

R

class

Rutland Elementary

N C N K C WE

u

gra~

Jlvld•n's POWer Equipment
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Juila Vauahan's 3rd grade class

R 0 D K G 0 E K 0 K
E p N

Pick 3: 7-3-8
Pick 4: 6-2-1-1
Buckeye 5:4-11-13-21-37
Pick 3 night: 4-5-4
Pick 4 night: 2-8-0-1

&lt;

•

the"opportunity t6 learn and review different aspects
and concepts in the respiratory field.
·

www .holzer.org

For more information, or to r99ister, call Sandy Moore al

•
•'

.

(740) 446·5919·

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