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Wednesday, October 16, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 8 6 • The Dally Sentinel

ALLEYOOP

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

42 Touchdown
46 Coinpuo

1 -gllnl

6 Early lifo
11 - CI'IICktr

.

12 Chant
13 Inform
14 P.-ler·
mine
15 Sermon

li 4

•

·Ea1t

J

t

'AQJ074

•

K I '5

•

Q J 'I
t I I 5 3

t J

.....

. 18

.. 0 '

...
A

QJIOII

.

AK 9 1H

\\'~11

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J ¥
8 ..

Pus

Piss
P!ln

1•

l'au

1•

Pus

Nort h

t NT

Pau

E•~l

. 6 Fabric
measure
7 Walling
one's tum
(2wds.) .
a tonywinnerHagen·
9 Prefix lor
pod
10 Chinese
~nasty
40 Bangkok
11 Tony fly
native
12 Temper
41 Soldier In 16 Tidied up
18 Medicine

Pus

Another deal

ro

BARNEY
AN' THEN TH' SHERIFF
SAYS,"C'MON OUTTATHAR
OR I'M CALLI N' TH'

BLACKSMITH"

""''

•.

~

l Tf\INK II\'{ MA'{..(OVf..R 1:) IN
!'-lEW OF ~ MN.i..CNfli..!

BIG NATE
WE'VE NEvEl'.
EVEN SEEN
H 11'1 PL."'Y!
HE'~

PFJ:lSABLY
A TOTAL

I

SPAl! HE
PROBABLY

snNK'!&gt;!

v

.,PEANUTS

SEE I-lOW M'&lt; HANDS 51-lAKE.
. C14ARLE5? iT'S 8ECAUSE
OF ALL TI4E PRESSURE ...

one
down.
The
contract • is
ironclad unless hearts
are 5-0. South should
cash one lop heart,
then lead a low· heart
f
h d S
rom an · uppose

MV .PMENTS TI41NK I

5140ULD 6ET PERFECT 6AADES

IN EVERI{TIUN6 EVER'( DAV !

1ES, THAT IS ONE
HUNG PIC.TU~£.

I

iliANK ~OU,
HANDVMAN

I

~

iGJl

·~

•

RET\JRN ,
AU,. I ASK

('""

~~

I

I I

s. A K C N K
.
·

•'.... •

Thursday, Oct. 17. 2002

I

IIY BERNICE BEDE OsOL

· In the yeilr ahead your· am-

bitions and efforts can . yield
some of the l:.trges t fruits

areas and ways.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)-

- Before in.':mmtuneo usly
jumping in and accepting an

offer today that looks too
good to be true, you hlltl better take the time to check it
out to sec if it is worth the
price . You cou ld ·get duped.
Know Where to look for -ro·

TilE GHIZZWELLS
\l\1-1\-\rR \'o"\C,\.IT

r ' - ' -~.

'"~:,' .

L...o....J...._l_..L...-l--'

I.

I

L E C I T I

I. 6 I. I. ' I. I. 7
f9

Overhearo at lecture at our ·-lp• ~
cal college: "Wisdom is the reward
you get from life for listening when
you would rather be------ .;• :
•
A Ccmpleie the chuckle quooed. :
V by filling in the missing: words•~ ·
you·develop fro m ~tep No. 3 ,below.'!.:._-

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
lfJ THESE SQUARES

1

@) UNSCRAMBLE LEiTERS TO
__G::.·E:.;T..:A.::N.::S:.;W.;.:E; ;R_ _ _ _._...J..--iL...o....L.......J.-.1......1......1
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Vandal· Stung - Youth · Heckle • CHANGE

':',

Drivers are rude and generally unkind . I've always:
wondered why ~it's always the guy 4 cars behind you .
who IS the first to see the light CHANGE.
;:.

I 1\\\\-\1&lt; S\.\E'Ii AlRtADY
\!1.\TT£1&lt;.1\--\q ...,...--_../"-'
ME UP RR
C\\RI£&gt;TMA5

pushy.

today . If·you let your doubts
,.and apprehcnsi!Jn prevail, it'll

start · being so wi-th your

you.

CAP~ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
I9) ··Just ~ecause you understand the depth of the problems of another today is no
reason you should take them
upon yourself. If you follow

for granted today . .chances are

you will not fully capitalize
on your opponunities. At the

end of the day, when you re-.
ali zed what you missed, it'll
be too late.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23Dec . 21) -- Fear and doubt
could be your wors"t enemies
'·

GEMINI (May 21 ~ June 20)
-- Words ca ~ be used to show

~own previously may make
you some lavish promises to-

1ntcndcd for.nnother. ·•

yield unto you that

day that she or he has no intention of keepi ng. Rememon me."

44092.
· SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- If you take too much

wl11 be hurt if your genero!\ity
extends only to outside·rs
you're trying to impress.

appreciation or to scorn.
Whichever purpose yo u
choose to use them for will

sense. it'll be prelty costly.
. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Someone who let you

stantly rcvculs which signs
are romantically perfect ror
maker. c/o thi s newspaper.

•Rouse. His or her feelings .

emotion instead of common

ber, "Fool me once:, shaJlle on

I P.O. Box 167. Wickliffe, OH

~

....

. TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Be generous and giving
toward others today, but forst

cause you to fail at something.
that iLextremely important to

mance and you'll fi nd it. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker in-

you. Mltil $2.75 to Match-

·

you, but fool be twice, shame

PISCES (feb. 20-March
20) -- Your lack of tenacity
ami altenloon span could be
instrumental in a l os~ of pro·
ductivity wday. Excu:ses
won 't su ffice . nor will at-

tempting to bl uff vo ur way
out qf t~ings. You~ll have to
pay the piper.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
·-Be patient whi le waiting for
another It, do some.thing fur
you that you're unuble to do

for yourself. This person will
come thro.ugh if you don' l upset the apple cart by being

w~ich

you

CANCER (June 2t-July 22)
-- Sometimes you knowingly

place yourself in 1he posiuon
of hiiving to appease someone
You love. Toduy. howeverJ

you might allow your gener-

ous nature to become abused.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ·Rarely do you kid yourself
from seeing things· for what
they are. but today lhe illusion
might be so enticing that
yo u'll allow a fault y game
plan to go forward . You'll accomplish absolutely nothing.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Get your head screwed on
slrai~~ l today or you'll end up
catermg to those who use you,
while ignoring those reliable
pals who always come
through for you.

Middleport. Pomeroy. Ohio

No 4')

Staff w~~er

Chad and Randy meet, Bl ·

Deaths

W W\1\1'

m yll.uly ·. •·nluu ·llll lll

Judge mulls sheriWs Sl.&amp;M water
request for counsel project tops list .
8v BRIAN J. REED

POMEROY
Judge
Warren Lotz is expected to
rule by . week's end on
whelher
Meigs County
Sheriff ·Ralph .Trussell's case
for special legal counsel will
proceed.
Trussell has asked for the
appointment . of Athens

Attorney Herman Carson to
represenl him in his ongoil)g
budget dispute with Meigs
County · Commissioners. He
estimates the cosl of Carson's
services, which mighl include
litigation filed directly against
the
commissioners,
at
$15,000.
Lotz, a retired judge from
VINTON County, hearing the
case by assignment, conduct-

ed a hearing on Trussell's
application for special counsel Wednesday morning, and
is expected to return a decision lale'r lhis week as to.
whether the matter can pro·
ceed.
Yesterday,
Prosecuting
Attorney Pat Story told Lotz
Ohio law does not provide
authodty
for Trussell's

Please see Sheriff, AJ

Esther West, 92
John R. "Doc" Holiday, 73
James D. Gaultney, 57 ·
Cecil Atkinson, 24
o.t.lls. AJ

Weather

.Of Meigs projects
BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer
POMEROY- A $1.6 million water treatment project
in Racine tops the local Issue
1\vo prionties in Meigs
County. The county's · Issue
1\vo subcommittee has prioritized Meigs County's five
qualifying ·, projects and
awarded the water project
with 75 local priority points.
A combined county paving
project, a counly bridge
replacement project, the
replacement of a water lirie
on Pomeroy's Lincoln Hill
and
street . paving · in
l'yfiddleport round out the
Iot!ll projects to be submitted
to Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley
Regional
Develorment District for
.regiona consideralion.
Racine seeks $37,000 in
Issue 1\vo funds to supple·
men! $370,000 in ·grant funds
through the Ohio Water
Devdopmenl Authority and

$5,000 in local funds. The
village is also . seeking
$850,000 in addilional fund·
ing through the Community
Development' Block Grant
and Appalachian Regional
Commission programs.
:
The county seeks $159,244
for its bridge replacement
project and $185,617 for itil
paving project. The bridge
replacement projecl is a
$213,750
project,
and
includes $23,000 in local in·
kind consideration and
$3 I ,506 iri local funds. Th~
paving project, totaling
$249,150, also includes
$3,000 in lbcal in-kind wor)c
and $60,533 in local funding.
The Pomeroy water litre
replacement project, ranked
founh locally, is a $$208,650
project, and mcludes $23 ,000
m local cash. The village
seeks $I 85,650 through Issue
1\vo. Middleport has~pplied
for $189,367 in Issue 1\vo
• ·I

· Please see Issue. AJ · ,:

High: 50s, Low: 30s

Details. A2

Man trying
to..-cue fire
victims killed
COOLVILLE
A
Coolville
man . died
Wednesday when he entered
:a burning house in an ~pt
tO locate survivors.
, Cecil Atkinson, 24, of
Brim Stone Road, was pronounced dead ·arter his
arrival
at
O'Bleness
in
Memorial Hospital
Athens.
The Coolville Volunteer'
Ftre Department responded
to the fire. Chief Deputy A
L. Johnson of the Coolville
Marshal's office reponed that
Atkinson entered the resi·
dence to check for survivors.
Funeral arrangements an'!
being handled by White ·
Funeral Home in Coolville.

I'

ANDAC01;

energies in .very produqive

M( RA\-\CID

elbOw bOne · Singing
22 Pedro's
CowbOy"
coin
45 Reduced ·
24 Tokyo,
47 EncouraQ&lt;!
once
48 Baseball ·: ·
26 Soda faun·
family
tain order
name
27 Slangy no 49 Ego ending
(hyph.)
50 Utmost

i\iREE HOTS

&amp;il,\. IM'AM
f.
~l\
h'

Whafs inside

devourers
44 " The
•

.•

because you'll be highly disciplined and will channel your

~A 'D[W('i)

need
Wrlst·to-

IS fO~

you've ever harvested . This is

R:RI&lt; CASSBloLE Fc:Q

21

I

11

and return a trump.
No matter. Declarer
wins in the ·dummy,
ruffs 'a diamond In
hand , trumps a heart
in the dummy, ruffs
another diamond,
draws the last trump
if necessary, and runs
the hearts from the
top.

IN

./

20

chest item 41 Zany
.
(hyph.)
Marth•- ·
Dinghy's 43 People -

I

I

an opponent can win

I

50 (t.• nt \. Thur \ d .Jy, O d o tw r 1 J 20 02. Vo l '; }

Some people have
28 Fete
degree
30 Baby's bed 51 Ur.
been good at I?redicl·
31 "2001"
DIMegglo
ing fulure sc1entifi&lt;0.
computer 52 TV extr• ·
advancements. H. G ..
37 Cocktail
terrestrial ·
Wells comes to my
Ingredient
mind. bul you can
39 Wa.;.y_ou.,t,-.,......,.....,,.,....,
probably chink of
someone else. Here is
what Mark Twain
. said to the Associated
· , Press on September
· 18, 1906: "There are
only two forces that
·can carry light to all
ttie corners of the
·globe ... the sun in the
lleavens and · the As·
sociated ·Press down
here."
Understandably,
Twain hadn ' t anticipated Ihe Internet
, Today 's
deal,
which I got via the
Internet, was played
in Malta last April.
This is land was
awarded the George
Cross by George v1·
CELEBRITY CIPHER
for its :iCP~IIing of
by Luis Campos
Nazi forces during
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
World War II. It con·
people •.past and present. Each letter in the Cipher stands for another.
Today's clue: I equals . y '
tains 365 churches;
has anyone visited all
of them 'In exactly
"VYYRX
KMG ... VKDRGMX
.one year?
ln this deal, seven
y A
y A
L Z G · LMGKXJMGX
spades basically requires hearts to split
L Z G
CUDH ... ZJCKDULI
U D
3-2, but South drew
up in six spades. How
TMUDL ."
should he. have ·
VKMVKM .K 0 .
LJFZCKD
planned lhe play after
receiving a trump
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"Existence is a struggle."
lead?
- Harvey Keitel ·
"Lila shouldn't be printed on dollar bills." - Clifford Odels
North should have
· rebid two spades, not
one no-trump. For
TPHUATZZD~IILRT Q~"O ,fl.,.~- })"C 'h.C.~ warp-_
one thing, if three no,
01.!:::1 J:'"U ~~). ~ P &lt;r• &gt;:l GUll trump is right, South
!dltod by 'CLAY R. ~OLLAN - - - - . ; . . . ; should be the de- 0 RocrronQo lotion of tho
darer.
leur a&lt;romblod words bo·
. After wi'nning the lew to lorm four simple wordse
first trick in hand,
South cashed the ace
0 L 0 NUA
11 1 1 12 1
and king of hearts.
Disaster! West ruffed '
and returned his lasl
trump. East had two
I . G N· I C .
winning hearts, and
l
duminy held only one . . .
.
"
trump, so South went
o

fo/Ovl THAT ~~·s L~Ailfol~l&gt; tiOvl
TA'-1', ttt:r FOilGOTTtfol ~ow
\
TO PAY ATT~NTIOfol.

51&amp;1-1 ...

Grant

holder
29 Moat
32 TLC
providers
33 Gleeful
shout
34 La Scala
production
35 -Paulo
36 Calm
. 385-ot
green

Pus

Opening lead: • 3

THE BORN LOSER

2 lnalew
hours
3 Glazed
Iabrie
4 Blockheads
5 Singer-

vegetable
26 Coffee

Hotb

Melp County"s Hometown Newspaper

1 Savory
smell

Ualh proof

Brilliant
move
23 Greek "Z"
25 Lealy

01'!Aier- North
Soulh

DOWN

19

-

Vulnerc~ble :

46 Debate
49 Harm

abbr.

~

•

area

52 Warnings
53 Moe, e.g.
54 Also-rons
55 Yonder
56 Meticulous

enders
16 Knob
17 Dessert
pastry

.. '

Wnl

Prep football previews, B1

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BIUDGE

•

The Meigs County library is open while renovation work continues. Construction should be com·
. pleted by the beginning of the year.
·
•

Libra11. . ~opans.a~~~ cons~Ct.io~
BY KRIS DOTSON
Staff writer
.

=:::.:.::~:...._----._.:._

. .
The Metgs ,
County Ltbrary. reopens agam
today after bemg ~losed for
three days due to recent renovall~?s. ,
·
·
We II be open and re~y to
se':"e our patrons today, ~an
~111, Technology superv1sor
srud.
"We moved om entire colleclion to the basement so lhat renPOME~OY -

OHIO
Pick 3: 1·8·1
Pick 4: 7·3·2·9
Supellolto: 11·2Q-27·3o-44-46
Bonus Ball: 16 ·
Kicker: 4-7·8-9·9·9
Buckeye 5: 7-11·26·28·33
Pl~k 3 night: 9·8· 5
Pick 4 night: 0· 7·5·5
W.VA.
Daily 3: o-5-o
Dally 4: 5-0-8-4
Pllwerball: 8-11 -24· 31-37 (41)

'

Index
2 Sections- II Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A4
BS-7

88
A4
A6

A3
A3

Bl -5

A2

C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

inconveniehce now, when lhe
entire project is completed, the
new renovation will be a great
benefit to all."
The new addition will be
financed through the board's
building fitnd, and Will house
additional reading areas, a children's area, room for stacks, and
a computer laboratory.
Construction has
been
delayed several times but
should be completed by lhe
beginning of the new year.

•

Me1gs conservation .
distri(t elects officers
•

Lotteries

•

ovatloil can continue into the
existing ups(!lirs."
Wednesday evening the slaff
finished cleaning up and reconnecting their computers.
Patrons are asked to now
enter through the front basement door.
Although things have moved
around, Will said thai the aisles
are labeled clearly.
"We will be more than happy
·
h ·
bto ~~tst .anyone avmg a pro
lem, 'Y111 adde~.
.
"Wh1le th1s m1ght be a sltght

•

•

•

•

Staff Report

POMEROY
Pauline
Atkins, Rutland, was elecled
. the newest member of lhe
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District's Board
of Supervisors at the district's
59th animal meeting and bali·
quet held Tuesday night at
•
Meigs High School.
Atkins owns and operates a
300-acre farm in Rutland and
Scipio townships where she
raises and pastures beef cattle
and sheep, .and grows hay.
She is a member of the
Meigs ·County Farm Bureau
and Farm Bureau Board,
Harrisonville Grange, Meigs
County Extension .Advisory
Harrisonville Chris Hamm. left of Racine, was reelected as a Meigs SWCD
Committee,
Presbyterian Church, Masler supervisor while Pauline Atkins. Rutland, was elected as a new
Gardeners, 4-H leader for 58 ·supervisor at Tuesday night's Meigs SWCD annual meeting
and banqu,et. They are shown with Meigs SWCD Board of
P I - see SWCD, AJ
Supervisor's President Joe Bolin. Rutland. (Submitted)

Seniors leam about·.
life, career·choices ·
office for one class period or
more depending on · their
schedules,..
.
They work with individual
RACINE - Most high students, small groups or
school kids have a small clue whole classes, all under the
as lo what they "want to be constanl supervision of a
when they grow up" bul afler teacher. ·
having experienced college
Every nine weeks the
or life in the working world supervising teacher evaluates
lhey sometimes discover they the intern. and he or she
were on lhe wrong track.
· receives a grade thai is
Soulhem High School and reflected on rheir report cards
·Southern Elementary School and in rheir transcripts.
have teamed up lo offer high
Internships may be taken in
school seniors the opportuni- K-8 classrooms and in all
ty lo get some field ell:peri· subject areas.
,
"Sometimes they find a
eoce in the classroom and
hopefully some direction grade level or sub~ect isn't
toward making c·areer choic· what they like,' added
es.
l
Kucsma.
"The high school students
"We can always make
have a community service adjustments so there is a per·
aspecl to lheir educalion," feet fll for the intern, student
M1ckey Kucsma, SES princi • and teacher." ·
pal said.
.
This is the second year for
"Teachers in the spring rhe program and it averages
sign up indicating if they 20 high school participants
would like an intern and in per year.
whal subject area."
"The kids look up to the
. The interns, mostly seniors, high school sludents and
ha.fe the opportunity to work
in the classroom or in the
BY KRII DoTSON
Slaff wr~er

Please see Students, AJ

Southern Elementary School third graders Dylan Bass,
Natalie Marler, Emily Manuel, and Chase Graham listen
intently to their tutor Southern High School senior Tara
Pickens as they discuss counting money.

Together we can·change your body.
~d your .life.
.' .

ToLL FREE (866) 821-4541
•

www.cCWL.INFO

(

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Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

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Page A]

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1hunci11J, October 17, lCNU

Pabol investigates shootings on '1-71:

Ohio weather
Friday, Oct. 18

COLUMBUS (AP)
State
. Highway Patrol investigators haven't
ruled out the possibility that shots
fired at two vehicles ·on Interstate 71
could have been the work of a sniper
cogycat, a spokesman said.
'Nothing has 'been ruled out,"
including the prospect that the shooter is a copycat inspired by the recent
sniper killings in the Washington
area, Lt. Gary Lewis said Wednesday.
"We don't know if it was kids,
farmers, hunters or if it was intention. al."
The .shootings occurred Tuespay
evening on I-71 near the Ohio 95
interchange in Morrow County, about
50 miles north of Columbus.
A car and a tractor-trailer rig traveling northbound both had passenger

•I C~lumbuo ~·isr I

side windows shot out, but nobody
was hurt.
·
State and Morrow County investigators combed the area for clues on
Wednesday.
·
The driver of thtl car, Jeffrey
Vanloon, 50, of near West Salem in
Medina County, said when his window exploded he thought at first it
had been hit by a rock or deer.
But he said he quickly ruled that
out as he slowed down and passed a
truck with its passenger window shattered.
Truck driver Kathleen Roeland, 55,
and her passenger, Harry Bailey, 51,
both of Rochester, N.Y., were hit
first.
"It was pretty scary," Roeland said.
"Traffic is bad enough; you don't

need someone shooting at you."
. · Vanloon and the truckers found bul-l et holes in the doors of the semi arid
the car.
"I think he was shooting at our windows. One inch over onllhe truck, and
he would have hit the passenger in tfie
heads." Vanloon said.
'
Vanloon, who had . been drivlp'g
home after a staff meetmg at the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources"in
Columbus, arrived about thr~e hours
overdue . He had called his wife to tal
her he would be late - and why. , :
"She was · flabbergasted, as you
could imagine, and quite shook up."
he said. "She just grabbed me arid
said she was glad to see. me and have
me home."
-,
. '

'

ow. a•~-•••
~', 1 ''

'

- . T-""""

Sunny. " -Cb.dy, Cloudy

Aan

' f

*

Flullies

-&gt; H . _. • .,

Snow

y

•

•

k:e

Mostly cloudy and cool today

I

'

Weather Forecast
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday . night...Mostly
Today. :.Mostly cloudy and
cooL A chance of rain show- cloudy with a chance of
ers. Highs in the lower 50s. showers. Lows in the lower
West winds 5 to 10 mph. 40s. Chance of rain 50 per:
cent
Chance of rain 30 percent
Tonight. .. Becoming partly
Sunday... A _ chance of
cloudy. Lows in . the upper showers
in
· the
. 30s. West winds 5 to 10 mph. morning ... Otherwise partly
Extended Forecast
cloudy. Highs in the upper
sunny: 50s.
Friday ... Partly
Highs near 60. West winds
Monday ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s and
around 10 mph.
Friday night.. .Increasing · highs in the upper 50s.
clouds. A chance of rain
Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
showers afier midnight. Lows in the upper 30s and
Lows in ·the lower 40s. · highs in the upper 50s. .
·
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy
Safurday... Mostly cloudy with a slight chance of showwith a chance of showers. ers. Lows in the mid 30s and .
Highs in the upper 50s. highs in the mid 50s.
'

A roundup of the dally markets
Oct 16,2002

12,000

Dow Jones
Industrials

11,000
10,000

' •'"ilJl.8,036.03

9.000

Pet i:hange lrom pravloos

-2.66

. .

low

High

8,232.10
8,013.41
Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14,2000
,

8,000
JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

7,000
2,000
1,100
\,BOO

1,232.42

I'd. cl1lngl rn.m p!IYicM

-3.90

HIGh
U&amp;3.81

1,400

.,

1,200

Low

1,229.06
Rtoord high: S.048.8.'l
March 10, 2000

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

1,000

Oct 16,2002

1,200

Standard&amp;
Poor's500

1,100
1,000

860.02

900

Pet. cl1ange lrom pnMoos

·2.41
High

BOO

low
841.44

881.27
Record lilgh: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

700
JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT
' AP

Man found guilty of shooting friend in hostage standoff

The

.

'

'

MANSAELD (AP) - A for either charge. '
and his girlfriend, police said. . that Byerly did not deny shoOtjury
convicted a
man
The jury also convicted him
Byerly forced his way ·into ing Hayes, but did not go to die
Wednesday of aggravated mur- of aggravated burglary, four the home around 3:30a.m. and trailer with the intention : of
derfor shooting a family friend counts of kidnapping and -.:io- , shot Hayes, ~ho was a family killing him.
·
while holdmg four people labon of a temporary protec.hon friend for rune years. Byerly
Prosecutor Bambi Couch-refused to leave the trailer and
hostage after he became upset · order.
about the breakup of his marPolice said that in January, shot about 20 times at officers. Page: said prior calculalion W!15
riage.
. Byerly went to a trailer where
Byerly eventually let all the proven by the testimony of; a
Stephen W. Byerly, 53, of his estranged wife, Jamie, was hostages go except his three jailhouse infonnant who said
Mansfield, was found guilty in staying and shot Robert Hayes, · children, ages 10, 8 and 4, who Byerly told him that he plani!Cd
Richland County Common 49. ·
-were kept barricaded along to try to catch his wife
Pleas Court of aggravated mur- · Byerly's wife got a tempo- with bini in a back bedroom.
H
· · bed
th
der and aggravated murder rary restraining order against
Byerly · surrendered after . ayes 10
loge er and
:
with prior calculation and her husband days before the . about six hpurs of negotiations. ''blow them away." •
design. He will be sentenced on shooting. She and her three No one else was injured.
Pr9secutors. and defeme
one of the murder charges arid children were staying with her
Defense attorney Terry attorneys declined to commeJII
_could receive the death penalty son from a previous marriage Hitchman said during the trial . on the verdict.
;- _

and

Woman acquitted of charges she killed her husband - ~
DEFTANCE (AP) - A jury
acquitted a woman of murder
in the shooting of her estranged
husband, which her attorneys
said was done in self-defense.
Kimberly AnderSon, 38, and
her attorneys wept Wednesday
in Defiance County Common
Pleas Court when she learned
all charges were dropped. She
also had faced counts of·aggra-

vated murder and involuntary
manslaughter.
Anderson was accused of
shooting her husband, Brent,
on Sept. 2, 2001, in her rural
Wapakoneta house after ron"
fronting hirn. about allegations
that he molested their children.
Prosecutors said Anderson
kept a loaded handgun on her
bedroom floor and planned'the

Konop, said she feared fol' her
shooting.
Auglaize County Prosecutor · life and tiad no allerjlative. · ·,
Edwin Pierce said during clos"I'm just thrilled for Kini;"
ing arguments that the first of he said. "She finally had liet
eight shots Anderson fired opportunity to tell her s~jp
grazed her husband's back as court The jury made the rigbt ·
he was running away. He then decision."
·
jumped into a closet, and '- Pierce said he was disapAnderson shot him seven more pointed with the jury's dec!times.
sion, but said jurors had been
Anderson's attorney, Alan conscientious and attentive. : ·

Widening
1-75

not

useful ·.
CINCINNATI (AP) Adding a fourth lane to
Interstate 75 . through
southwestern Ohio would.
cost · $800 million and
wouldn't do much to
relieve traffic congestion in
30 years, officials who
studied the road said.
"We studied four lanes,
but four lanes may not be
enough to handle the traffic
in this area," said Erin
· Peterson, an engineer who
helped conduct the study
for the Ohio-KentuckyIndiana Regional Council
of Governments, a planning group that recommends transportation projects for possible federal
funding : "Under this proposal ... we wouldn't be
much better off than if we
did nothing."

r---------------VETERAN SALUTE

Major

C/0 The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Earl Jones .
1969-1971

I

a

In Honor of (name and rank)

·•

~~77~~~~----t

VietNam

Dates of Active Duty

1

Love, Your Family

:::-:---:--=---:-------''
Branch of Service
1.

Ad With Photo- $14.00

::::=::::-:":'~-------·f.
Conflict/War

t
:-L~(:::-:-N---------~ II_

(Shown actual size)

ova,

'

arne relationship to veteran)

:---~------------1

\

Photo of
Your
Veteran

I

AD DEADLINE FRIDAY, NOV. 1, 2002 I
Sentinel ads must be prepaid.
I
Photos may be picked up aiter Nov. 11th ~

r

Your Name:

••

---------tI

~b"uarles
Holldav

;y,fl'f

Esther West
Oct.-

SWCD

df

Corporal
BobJohnson
1991-1992

James D.
Gaultney

Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

.

ranked at the district level, .
and then referred to the Ohio
Public Works Commission
for a final award decision . At
each level, priority points,
based on factors including
readiness of the project,
need, and availability of other funding, are awarded in
order to determine rank at
eaclt level.

"I just really like kids and
helping out Nursin~ missionary is my goal and this will give
me great experience."
Third grade teacher, Tricia
McNickle is in her second year
of participating in the program.
''I'm very impressed with the
internship program." she said.
''The students have been very .
willing to do anything I've
wanted them to do and are so
eager to help. Especially with
22 students, the ex:tra set of eyes
_
and ears really helps."
McNickle also said that
Pickens assists her with dismissal time ~t the end of the day
and records her homework hotline message. "That," she said,
,
"is invaluable to me."
Natalie Marler a third grader
_ in McNickle's claSs and one of
Pickens's sbtdents, said that her
bltor helps her with counting
and in sc1ence.
"It's nice ha¥ing someone
.that can spend extra time helping me," Marler said.
''I get As and Bs on tests now.
She (Pickens) explains things to
me in a way I can understand."

-· The Daily Sentinel · : : ~J\~~~~ori~~p~~~~~
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"

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Pomeroy, OH 45769 . --·
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Providing personalized ·
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began last month in Iight of
the concern over the West
Nile Virus. Residents with
old tires on their properti es
after the curbside pic kup wi ll
be cited to Mayor's Court
and fined, Iannarelli said.
On · an emergency basis,
council approved a resol ution establishing guide]ines
for the res torati on of the
C&amp;O Depot in Dave Diles
Park.
'
_
The · Freight
Stat ion
Restoration Committee has
raised $3,400 for the project,
and plans a festival in the
park next weekend to rai se
additional fund s for the project.
·c ouncilman
Stephe n
Houchins voted against suspending council rule ~ and
conducting a third reading
last night, but voted in favor,
with other members of council, of adopting the resolution
as read.
Council also:
• Approved the mayor' s
report of fines collected, in
the amount of $2, 170;
• Approved the payment of
bills, with Councilman
Roger Manley voting m
opposition;
• Approved tran sfer s of
funds.
·Also present were Council
members Linda Haley, Kathy
Scott and Bob Robinson, and
Clerk Susie French.

Cedi Atkinson

' I

L-----------------~
.

Issue

students

Phone:----------1

In Honor Of

Sheriff

:Johb R.

I

·.

Council adopts refuse contract

enough money,"' Story said
yesterday. "It would open a
floOdgate
for other county BY BRIAN J. REED
11
Do(" Tennessee; and three close
officials to ask for counsel Staff writer
frorn Pap A1
friends: John and Wilbur
for the same reason ."
---------Gesell, both of Manchester,
''This," · Story said, "would
'J
'Tenn., and Harold Cremear;s request, except under specific
MIDDLEPORT
.;,•Loaned · to us: May 10, of Middleport.
conditions which do not exist markedly increase costs to Middleport Village Council
ol929
Besides his parents, he was in this c~e.
the county and turn a political approved a 25-ceqt increase
Taken home by Jesus, Sept. preceded in death by his
"The prosecuting attorney budgetary fi~ht , into a in refuse service for 2003
- ~~. 2002
.
brothers, Jeny and Randall represents all county offi- lawyer's battle m court."
during _ its regular meeting
cials, boards and township
. , )'OMEROY -- "Doc" as he Gaultney.
Carson, on the other hand, Monday evening.
known by all he loved
There will be no calling offices," Story said. '"I'here is said recent case law, estabCouncil met with Mark
and who loved liim, blessed hours and no service. an exception which allows lished since Trussell filed his Ramey, operations manager,
'i~ . with his presence for 73 Memorial contributions may . officials to employ other application with the court, and others from Rumpke of
" ears but even that was too · be made toward funeral counsel at county expense, sets a precedent allowing Wellston, and approved a
', liott.•.. . .
expenses,
c/o
Elaine -but a joint application by the Trussell to proceed with hir- new contract with the firm
1
' ' ·As an avid race car fan, for
Gaultney, 1296 Mill St., official and ·county commis- ing special counsel. .
for next year's curbside
' )'ears he could be found any Middleport, Ohio 45760.
- sioners is required."
''This decision in the Ohio refuse collection.
I Saturday night at Caion · Arrangements are under · "No such application has
The new contract includes
Speedway as Crash Crew the direction . of Fisher been ·filed, and the law does Supreme Court makes it clear increases to $8 per month for
:.chief. He was always sought Funeral Home in Middleport. not allow any county official that this is an appropriate full service and $7.50 for
''a(ter to· help problem solve
- Paid Notie~ to hire outside counsel with- procedure," Carson said.
senior citizens.
tfor many mechanics and driout an application, and a writ
While council has disLotz, who said he was
-vcrs.
of mandamus to the court...
unfamiliar with the recent cussed imposing a bag limit
"Doc" proudly served his
According
to
Story, Supreme Court c·ase, said he for residents, it was not
country for 27 years in the
RACINE
Esther · Trussell would · also be would make a decision by included in the one-year conU.S. Navy, WWll, Korea and Longsworth West, 92, of 107 req~.ired to pro~ide f!T&lt;X?,f of. week's end, to he filed no tract, based on Ramets rec\'ietnam. He retired July 2, Elm St. , Racine
di6d an abuse of dtscretton on later than Monday, . on ommendation. Council hopes
11974;
• E-7;
Machinery 1\tesday
15 2002 'a~ · Story's part, S'uch as ill will whether the case will proceed imposing the bag limit in an
1Repairman Chief. After Rocksprlngs R.eh~bilitatlontt: o~ an !n'ational abuse of his
-- not as to whether Trussell attempt to -discourage out-of· dtscretton as prosecutor.
rebrement he .then preceded Center in Po~y. ·
, will be permitted to hire town trash.
:to 32nd St. Naval Station,
She was born March 15, . "~y allowing (Trussell) to Carson at county expense,
Ramey sug~ested, howev~ ~rving 18 years and then 1910 in Wilt Counly, w.va,~ retam counsel · at county but whether the debate of the er, that the vtllage consider
, ~etiring as Supervisor of the daughter of 'thC late John 18. ~xpense, you would be oustan increase.
Mayor Sandy Jannarelli
''Machine Shop at NPWC. .
and _ Jeanette
Morgaii tng. the p~~secutor on !he merits of Trussell's request.
· vt'I lage em~;~toyees will
can
continue.
"Doc" was a trustee and Longsworth. · She was ll · basts of I m not gettmg
satd
•!ctivt 'member for many homemaker a(ld attend~
conduct a ·tire ptckup in the
~.years at Calvary Southern Dorcas-Bethany
United
village on Oct. 23,
,,Baptist.Church, a member of · Methodist Church. She wai a
A limit of five tires will be
scoring urban team consistbthe Zoqlogical Society, D_AV, lon11-time Iilelllber ·of ~ ·
picked
up at curbside, but
ing of Southern FFA mem~ Pleet ~esetve B9 and The ~e.tgs · Count~
Sen!df.-);.
bers Tim Cogar, John Bentz, rims will not be accepted,
i=!'imeri~an Legion Post 461.
Ctttzens, Women s Sonshin¢ -~·fro Pa- A1
The pickup will be the last
Angel Nitz and Maria
~r_. ..~..- is survived by his Circle, and Oardeii Club.
'
In e- .
phase
of the village's tire
Schaefer. Special recognition
'Wife· and soul mate of SI
Surviving ate her daughtillf
·
collection
program, which
was given to Southern and
years Marilyn A. Holliday; Benfah West C~II
years, president of the Meigs FFA teachers Butch
-Children, Leslea and husband Racine; her daugh ·n-law, Rutland Garden Club, and Mitchell and Tim Simpson,
matron
of
the
1Pbil Hayes, John C. Holiday, Margaret West of Ra · e; a . past
respectively. for allowing
Suzanne and husband, John brother and sister-in~law, " Harrisonville Chapter, 'Order thetr
students to participate in
Arnold. Grandchidren, Nara Thome
W.
and
Sue of the Eastern SW.
the contests.
-Lynn Hayes, Elissa and hus- Longsworth of Wichita,
Chris Hamm, Racine, was
· Jordan Wood, Chester,
frorn Page A1
band Christopher Hanington, Kan., two sisters-in-Jaw, reelected as a district super- winner of the annual big tree
Phill_ip , ~oy Hay~s: Great- Marjorie Longsworth of 'visor. He and his wife, Anita, contest, received a certificate money for a $225,467 total
grandciilldren; Philbp Scott Rocky River; and Mary Ellen.-• operate a dairy farm in con- for a $50 savings bond. This project. The village has comHayesr lames -Jack Hayes, West of SouthingtOn; grind. junction with his parents, year's · tree was the black mitted $36,100 in local
,Christopher Steven Ellis, and children: Charles W. Cornell Tom and Linda Hamm, in cherry tree. Wood nominated . funds .
"Micah Robert Raymond Dl, Debra Kay West, Rhonda Sutton Township. They farm a black cherry tree located on
The projects will be further
.Harrin~otn. · Sister, Norma West Roberts, John Keith a total. of 440 acres and milk College Road in-Syracuse on
~
Gail · arid ·husband, Kenneth West, and Melody West 130 Holstein cattle.
.the property of Ruth Holman.
'Wilcox, ·brother, Robert and Jewell; gteat grandchildren:
Atkins and Hamm will The tree has a circumference
•lind wife Maxine Holliday. Jennifer Cornell Walker, officially take office on Jan. of 84 ·inches, height of 78
11!1e was preceded in death by Kimberly Cornell Huber, 1, 2003.
feet, and an average crown
his parents, John T. and Joseph Cornell, Abby West;
Supervisor Tom Theiss, spread of 49.75 feet.
1'3uhne
M.
Holliday. Tyler
Roberts,
Weston Racine, was not reelected. He ·
Blair and Diana Windon,
from Page A1
.Although he was an excep- Robe!tS, Dalton Jewell and will be replaced on the board Pomeroy, were named 2002
f,ional hpsband, father, grand- McKenzie Jewell; and a by Atkins.
Outstanding
'father, mechanic and sailor great:great granddaughter,
Fo~lowing pre.sentations
Cooperators . They own benefit from the one-&lt;&gt;n-&lt;&gt;ne
·&lt;
by Mtke Duhl, Metgs County and operate al'prox,tmately attention;" Kucsma said. '"Ibe
' he was" also our friend. He · Natahe Walker.
' ~ill be missed by all that
Besides her parents, she District
·
149 · acres m Chester male high school sbtdents have
~~,h b~,'t:.s..•se'!,. to__ ~ro~s his was preceded in death b(het
Conservationist with the Township and raise beef cat- really become role•models for
p
,, .
'husband, Gle-n West;-··a -s'l&gt;n-;· Natural
Resource tle, corn, soybeans, wheat, our little boys as most of our
teaching staff is female."
1 Funeral services were held
Harold West; three brothers· Conservation Service, and pumpkins and hay.
'1be 120 hours our interns
Oct. 2 at the El Camino and two sisters.
Jim Freeman, Mei~s SWCD
They have been SWCD
Services will be held at 2 wildlife
specialist
and cooperators since March, earn can often be credited
:Memorial Park. Donations
imay be made in his memory p.m. on Friday, Oct.ol 8, 2002 Leading Creek Improvement 1990, and have installed sev- toward or. replace field experito Calvary Southern Baptist at Ewing Funeral Home in project coordinator, winners eral conservation practices ence that a college may
Church; 6866 Linda Vista Pomeroy with Rev. Dewayhe of the hay show, land judging on their farm, practice rota- fe9Uire," Gordon Fisher, SHS
.
Road, San Diego. Ca. 921 H · Stutler officiating~ Burial will and big tree contests were tional grazing, and farm pnncipal added.
Tara
Pickens
is
a
senior
and
in U . . S.Navy Memorial follow at Letart Falls announced.
using conservation tillage
an
internship
participant
that
foundation Dept. WETC 701 Cemetery.
For the Hay Show, ftrst- measures to reduce erosion.
•P ennsylvania Ave., N.W.
Friends may · call at the: place plaques were presented
Approximately I HI people hopes this experience in the
~$tate 123, Washington, D. C. funeral home from 7 to 9 to David King, Alan _Holter attended the meeting and classroom will give her impor~004-2608.
p.m. on Thursday.
and Patricia Holter.
banquet, which was served tant ex~rience in how to connect wtth young people.
Memorial contributions
Each year the Meigs by Star Grange.
"I'm interested in workin*
-Paid Notice may be made to Holzer SWCD sponsors. a county'·
with people, maybe in nursing, '
Hospice of Meigs County, wide land judging contest for
Pick~ns said.
11 S E. Memorial Dr., vocational agriculture students in conjunction with
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
.
•
Paid
notie~
Athens, Vinton and Jackson
' ·.
SWCD's, This year's contest
:MIDDLEPORT -- James
was held at the Lawson Bison_
D; Gaultney, 57, Middleport,
Fann in Columbia Township
-%lied Tuesday Oct. 15, 2002
·! with students fro_
m Meigs
1
at St. Mary s Hospital in
and Southern looal schools
:Inmtington, W.Va., following
participating.
art extended illness.
·
High scoring individuals
: He was born June 16, 1945
in the agricultural judging
contest were, in order from
iri Coffee County, Tenn., son
of the tate E.E. and Ollie
first place: Adam Lee,
Duncan Gaultney. .He was a
Southern FFA:, $25; Casey
COOLVILLE Cecil McClelland, Meigs FFA,
lfcinner truck driver.
:_ :Surviving ~e his wife, Atkinson, 24, of Coolvi,llo, SIS; Nathan Becker, Meig~
E\aine Hams Gaultney, · died WedneWy·morning i4 't •· FFA. $10. High scoring iodi:t'
viduals in the urban judging
Middleport; three sisters: fire in Coolville. Funeral services will be contest were, in order starting
Maxine Smithson, Betty
(Wayne) Caldwell and Dean announced by White Funeral with first place: Tim Cogar,
~Charles) Brandon, all of Hf\me.
Southern FFA, $25; John
·
Bentz, Southern FFA, $15;
r-:---...,------,-------..,....--:"'""-~·~
Justin Gilkey, Meigs FFA,

Address: - - - - - - - - - 1

.

'

'

Deaths·

t

Army

hoi!! a news conference in .
Cleveland on Thursday
morning.
"We certainly believe this
is not what the legislature
intended to happen with our
tax dollars," said Tom
Mooney, president of the
Ohio
Federation
of
Teachers,_which is part -o f a
coalition suing the state
over ·its charter school program. "I think people will
be mad as hell when they
find out about this."
About a dozen Akron publie school students transferred 10 Akron Community
School in late Se i
b
P em er
and early October, satd
Akro~ .
_ Educ~t10n
Assoc1at1on Y1ce Prestdent
Net I Qmrk.
Ohio has about 100 charter schools, which are state
funded but privat~)y run.

,,
•·
'

On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousanda
of men and women who hoPe proudly served their country during times
crises and peace.
.
This Veteran's Day, th1 DaUy S1nttn•l wUl publish a v1ry sp1cilll trlbut~
honoring ar1a v1t1ranr. You can Join in our salute by Including tht
.veteran In your life, living or d1c11ased, who have 11rved or is cumntly
serving In any branch ofth• U.S. Arm•d Forc11.
Your choice of Two Styles ... .
Ad Only $7.00
P/ease F/1/ Out And Return With
(shown actual size)
Your Payment to:
, .

In Honor Of

The Dally Sentinel • Pl!.Qe A 3

www.mydallvaentlnel.com

...

==""Honor
Heroes

State wams charter school to stop
giving parents-cash incentives- . ·
AKRON (AP) . - State a Sept. 26 letter.
education officials have
School Principal Kevin
warned a local charter McCraney said the offer was
school to stop offering $200 simply a waiver of the $250
incentives to parents for activity fee, which helps pay
enrolling their children .
for field trips and special
Akron
Community events.
..
.
S c hoo I, a pu bl tcly funded
"People have found it ·to
ch a rter school, promised be helpful," he said. "I have
pare nts the cas h in a q9 t received any comSeptember
newspaper plaints. It's been misintera dverti sement and a flier preted as an award."
which was mailed and disBut the-school ' s advertisetributed in Akron neighbor- " ment in the Sept. 8 Akron
.
Beacon Journal said the
hoods .
. " Offering cash incentives school would pay parents "a '
to parents for enrolling their ~200 cash award" . with
ktd s ~~. charter schools 1s $100 pay~ble on 12/20102
dle gal , Oh10 Department and remammg · $100 wtll be
of Edu cat1on spokesman patd on the last day of
J.C . · Benton told The school."
(Cleveland) Plain ·Dealer on
flier offered a $200
We dn esday. "We strongly "enrollment incentive" if
urged them to change_their ., students signed up before
marketing strategy."
_ . Sept. 30.
State cltarter schools chief
The cash-back award outSteve Burigana urged. the raged critics of charter
sc hool to stop the practice in schools, who planned to

.

.

.

~Thuraday,~ober17,2002

'

I .

••

�'

_Th_eo_a_ily_s_en_tin_ei_~_B_y the Bend
Pastor is the ultimate source
of damaging church gossip

PageA4

I

.;The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 17. 2002

lbe dangers of lead to children

Dear
Abby

Post-Ally, 'girls club' has new take.on women lawyers

Page AS
Thursday, October 17, 1002

ln~estigators: There were multiple witnesses to latest

~sntper attack,

'

~

BY JoANNE Eworr
sure. Young children are more stomachaches, constipation, 36 and 72 months of age mijSt
DEAR ABBY: ''Mystified
Lead is a naturally occurring at risk from the effects of the - vomiting, diarrhea. tiredness, have a blood lead screeilipg
in the Midwest" · wrote that
element in our environment. It accumulation as their bodies anemia, sleeplessness, learning test if there is no documentaher pastor's wife has a big
is commonly used for the man- absorb 50 percent of lead problems, and a lowered I.Q. tion that the child previously
mouth and confides things
ufacturing of many of the prod- ingestion while adults absorb Children who are anemic, have had a blood lead test
about people who see her ·
ucts used around the world only 10 percent.
learriing dr behavioral probhusband for counseling.
The Gallia County Health
today.
It
can
be
found
in
paints,
Lead
poisoning
is
dangerous
!ems,
have
a
sibling
identified
You advised that the wife
Department Well Child Clinic
chemicals, and ceramics. Lead if not treated. It can damage . with an elevated lead level, and offers age appropriate lead testbe to.ld that her gossip could
shields protect against radia• . internal organs incluiling the tive in or regularly visit a house ing as part of the well child
end her husband's car~r -lion. Its variedc uses . can be kidney, nervous system, and w.ith peeling or chipping paint, check-up. All children, regaidand that if it continues the
ADVICE
quite
beneficial to our .lives. the brain. Because of the poslii,- built before 1960, should be Jess of income can attend the
pastor should be told.
·
Unfortunately,
it is poison to bility of permanent damage, it tested. for elevated lead levels. Well Child Clinic and recei\le
Abby, you failed to address
human beings if it is ingested is particularly dangerous dur- Children who live with an an age appropriate lead test. If
the person who bears the pri- told to his gossiping wife, just
into our bodies.
ing the developmental periods adult whose job or hobby your child has not been
mary responsibility for 'the as my prayer partner had no
In
1998,
more
than
7,800
of
infants and young children involves exposure to lead or
breach of confidentiality in nght to . blab my sin to her
Ohio
children
had
confirmed
less than seven years of age. who live near lead industries screened for lead poisoning
pastoral counseling, the pas- husband. The church I attendelevated blood lead levels.
Children under the age of three should also be tested for elevat- you can call the Health
tor. He should not discuss the ed di ssolved. - STILL
Depart111ent to schedule an
Lead can accumulate in our are at special risk because they ed lead levels.
contents of hi s counseling HURTING IN HOLLIappointment.
Call 740-44'6bodies from the environment in crawl or play at ground level.
The federal government
sessions with anyone in the. DAYSBURG, PA.
congregation, including his
DEAR STILL HURT• . which we live. Lead poisoning They also put everything into ~uires the following for all 8538 for more information. .
(Joanne Elliott, R.N., is a
occurs when too much lead their mouths.
children covered by Medicaid:
wife.
lNG: I .don't blame you for
public
health nurse for the
accumulates in our body. It can
Common symptolliS of lead · a blood lead test at 12 and 24
He might, under some cir- feeling traumatized. Your
County
Health
accumulate slowly in · bones poisoning in children can months of age. In addition, Gallia
cumstances, · appropriately confidence was violated, and
Department.)
and tissue after repeated expo- include decreased appetite, children between the ages of
.discuss this content with a then you were publjcly
colleague for purposes of . shamed. I'm not surprised
supervision or consultation. •"that the church eventually
In such cases, however, he dissolved, By the time they
can take steps to protect the were finished evicting "sinprivacy of the counselee.
ners," there was no one left to
LOS ANGELES (AP) episode, spend their time at ·
Instead of confronting the attend.
David
E.
Kelley
knew
what
he
work actually woridng, not planpastor's wife, "Mystified"
DEAR ABBY: One quick
didn't
want
"girls
club"
to
be
ning
their next date.
·
should confront the pei'Son question: What are the telltale
like.
It
.wouldn't
·
mimic
"Ally
So
what's
the
hook?
As ·
ultimately responsible for the · signs of a cheating spouse?
McBeal,"
his
fanciful
legal
Kelley
explains
it,
it's
a
subtle
leaks - the pastor! If his -SUSPICIOUS TEXAN
drama. It wouldn't parallel "The one. The show intends to find its
behavior does not change, the
DEAR SUSPICIOUS: A
Pr.tetice," his dark series about draina in the emotional life of its
writer should discuss the mat- few to ponder:
hard-bitten
veteran attorneys characterS as they build careers;
ter with whomever bears
I. Secretiveness.
tackling
the
thorniest
of cases.
nurture their friendships and
responsibility for overseeing
2. A sudden change in mao. And "pirls club," the writer- search for love.
the pastor's ministry.- THE ner of dress and grooming.
producer s new Fox series about
The title's play on "old hoys
REV. KATHERINE F.
3. Unexplained absences.
three
young
lawyers,
certainly
club"
signifies the women's bid
LONG, FIRST UNITED
4. Less affectionate.
wouldn't
mirror.
Fox:s
summerto
succeed
in a male-dominatMETHODIST CHURCH,
5. Unfamiliar charges on
time promotion!~ spots leaning ed San Francisco law frrm on
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS
credit card bills.
toward images of its main char- their own tenns. (The lowerDEAR
REVEREND
6. Strange phone numbers
acters
at play and 'away from case forinat, for the record,
LONG:
You're
right. on phone bill.
them
in
court.
was simply graphically
Doctors, psych1ltherapists,
7. Hang-ups on your home
"I'd watch those promos and pleasing,
according
to
physicians, social workers, phone.
think
'I'd
never
watch
lh&lt;it
show'
Kelley.)
8. More business trips than
lawyers and members of the
-and I'd see it was mine," said
Unlike "Ally McBeal," ·
clergy all have a professional usual.
Kelley,
registering
surprise
again
Kelley
doesn't intend 'girls
While one or two of these
responsibility to protect their
at the memory. "It was promo!- club' to use colorful cases to
p;~tients' , clients' and parish- cPuld be innocent, if there ·are
ed, really, as 'Charlie's Angels in · echo . pers·onal dilemmas The stars of Fox's 'girls club,· from left, ·Kathleen Rober.tson,
ioners' confidenti_ality. (The four or more -- look out!
a law firm."'
faced.by the attorneys. In fact, Gretchen Mol and Chyler Leigh pose togel'her in this undated·
exception to this is if the per- Readers, care to add any?
It's
definitely
not
that
Series
the
new series will depict hOw publicity photo. The shOw, about three young attorneys and
{)ear Abby is written by
son is suicidal or a danger to
stars ·Gretchen Mol, Kathleen "dry and boring" the work done longtime friends trying to adjust to life in a San Francisco law
himself or others.
Abigail Van Buren, also
Robertson and Chyler Leigh byassociatesinafinncanbe,he firm, premiers Monday, Oct. 21 at 9 p.m" EDT. (AP) ·
DEAR . ABBY: Fifteen known as Jeanne Phillips,
skip
sexpot garb and, in the first said.
·
years ago, at our pastor's urg- and was founded by her
ing, we were to confess our mother; Pauline Phillips.
· si ns during a church service Write
Dear Abby
at
to our designated prayer part- www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
ner. My sin, I confessed, was Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
that I was having "out-of- 90069.
men! rep for Edward ones, to offering. Pastor Glenn Rowe
RACINE - Morning Stat '
wedlock sex." (I was a 40For an eJ~cellent guide to
talk on "Weathering a Bear
invites public.
United Methodist ChurcH,
year-old divorcee at the time.) becoming a better conversaMarket." Emphasis.will be on
homecoming, 10 a_m. worship
My prayer partner quickly tionalist and a more attractive
mvestments for seruors.
Sunday, Oct. 20
service, lla_m. Sunday school;
. told her husband, who told person, order "How · to Be
Thursday, OcL 17 · Reservations not necessary.
. CARPENTER - Carpenter 12:30 p.m. basket dinner folthe pastor, who told his wife. Popular." Send · a business. POMEROY
Meigs "
·
Baptist Church on Route 43, lowed · by song service. Rev.
The latter two paid me a visit size, self-addressed ~nvelope,
Co1,1nty Democratic Executive
POMEROY - Rock
and .I was put out of the plus check or money orderfor
Committee, 7 p.m., Carpenters Spririgs Better Health Club, I homecoming Schedule, 9:30 Dewayne Stutler invites public.
church. The emotional trau- $5 (U.S. funds only) to: Dear
Hall.
p.m. home of Nancy Grueser. a.m. Sunday school; 10:30 a_m.
worship service with Junior
rna of this action was devas- ' Abby Popularity Booklet,
·Preston speaking; noon"carryeating.
P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris,
MIDDLEPORT - Skate
in dinner; I :30 p.m. afternoon
Park of Meigs ·County
"Mystified's" pastor had no IL 61054-0447. (Postage is
'
Saturday, Oct.l9
Committee,
6
· p.m.,
right to disclose what he was included.)
program with The Builders and
Thursday, Oct. 17
TUPPERS PLAINS
Middleport Village Council
Claudette Harbin.
MIDDLEPORT - ·
Harvest
moon festival, 6 to 10
Chambers.
Revival 7 p.m. at the Ash
p.m. at Eastern Elementiu-y
· Streer Church, Middleport,
WILKESVILLE
Thursday, OcL i7
through Thursday. Rev. Gene Wilkesville United Methodist .under sponsorship of PTO.
GALLIPOLIS- Meigs
Armstrong, preaching. Guest Church homecoming 2 p.m. Variety of activities including
County Retired Teachers
singers, Earthen Vessels of
with Cecil Carpenter guest an auction, country store,
Association, noon luncheon in Gallipolis, Wednesqay; Mt.
dance, bingo, cake walks. All
speaker. Special singing.
Golden Corral meeting room. Carmel Choir of Bidwell,
proceeds will be used to beneAmy Bowman-Moore, invest- Thursday. Nursery. Love
fit studentS.
·
NEW YORK (AP) - No
Organizers say it's the ftrst
campaign coverage could .. be such large-sc&lt;!le study of local
found on more than than half of campaign coverage, so the
1
local newscasts around the level of coverage can't be comcountry even though Election pared with past years.
Day was barely a month away,
Less than 20 percent of the
a survey released
on C3I)lpaign stories studied had
Wednesday found.
any sound bites from candiOf 2,454 local news pro- dates running for election, the
grams in the country's 50 survey found. The average ·
largest media markets, 1,311 length of a.candidate quote was .
SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (AP) to a computer system and nine
contained nothing at all on 9.5 seconds. ·
.
A former Lucasfilm counts of grand theft, and
campaigns between Sept. 18
Even though the . period
employee faces 13 . felony could face up to seven years
1 Pound
and Oct. 4, according to the examined was early in the camcounts of theft for allegedly and four months in prison if
Complete Stock
'Lear Center Local . News paign, TV stations are missing
Reg
• .,.
stealing sound eftects record- convicted. ·
Archive.
an opportunity to educate
ings, images, video files and
Lucasfilm began investigat8 4
The project, a collaboration viewers about their future leadthe musical scbre to the movie ing after a bootlegged copy of
'
between the University of ers, said Ken Goldstein, a polit"Star Wars: Episode II - "Episode II" was reviewed on ·
Southern
California's ical science professor at
Attack of the Clones."
the movie · Web. site Aint-11Annenberg
School
for Wisconsin.
Shea O'Brien Foley, 30, was Cool-News.com in March,
Communications and the
"If we're not getting issues
arrested Oct. 8 in Burbank, about two months before the
University of Wisconsin's stories now ... we're not going
.where he 'worked at the facili- movie's May 16 theatrical
political science department, to get them during the fury of
ties department of NBC stu- release.
will continue throughout elec- the last two weeks of the camdios, according to a report in
Foley was fired from
. tion season.
·
paign," Goldstein said.
the
Marin
Independent
Lucasfilm
last spring after
Journal.
He is accused of taking the comp\Uiy investigaton; discov"Star . Wars" items while ered he had downloaded comemployed as a . production puter files from the film proassistant at George Lucas' duction to his laptop computer,
company, Malin County and removed concept drawDeputy District Attorney Paul ings and other collectibles. He
LOS ANGELES (AP) - three years ago, has said he
could not immediately . be
Haakenson said.
With a deadly sniper terrorizing wouldn't mind if the studio
for
comment
Foley was released from located
the suburbs of the nation's cap- delayed release. of the filrri in
Wednesday.
Los Angeles County jail after
ital, 20th r ·ntury Fox has which the shooter lures victims
posting
$200,000
bail,
Lynne Hale, spokeswoman
decided to detay the release of a inside a phone booth then
Haakenson added. He faces for Lucas film, said the compathriller about people being threatens to· kill them if they
four counts of unlawful access ny had no ofticial comment.
pinned down in a phone booth hang up.
by a gunman they can't see.
Another movie with a similar
· "Phone Booth," starring theme, "Interview ·with the
Colin Farrell as the shooter's Assassin," will open as scheduled Nov. 15 in New York and
target, was to open Nov. 15.
But the studio decided to Los Angeles, said Eamonn
delay its release after a sniper Bowles, president of Magnolia
killed nine people in suburban Pictures, which is distributing
This Friday and
Washington, D.C., said Flo the film .
The movie, about an exGrace, a 20th Centuf){ Fox
8 pm - 12 midnight
spokeswoman.
,
·· Marine who · claims he shot
A new opening date has not/ President Kennedy, opens in
been set. ·
more cities Nov. 22 - the 39th
Members
and Guests Welcome
Screenwriter Larry Cohen, anniversary of the assassi na'
who wrote "Phqne Booth" tion. ·

Nation • World

•

..

but not el)ough to create composite sketch

r------.----------------------------,--,

. ROCKVll.LE, Md. (AP) ~ For
In Maryland, Montgomery County
, the first time since the WashingtonPolice Chief Charles Moose, the
, area sniper shootings began, more
head of the investigation, emphathan one witness saw a man fire and
sized that Franklin was not working
flee in a white van, but investigators
on the sniper case.
~aid Wednesday that the accounts
With the terrifying spree 2 weeks
. from the latest slaying weren't clear
old, Defense Secretary Donald H.
. enough to produce a sketch.
Rumsfeld agreed Tuesday evening
..
''There are a couple of people
to provide military surveillance airwho believe they saw a man shoot,
craft in the hunt for the killer, a
· unfortunately distance and darkness
Pentagon spokesman said. Sources
~ and perhaps adrenaline have made
said federal agents on ihe plane will
·them unable to give a clear composrelay any information they collect to
1te that we can disseminate," said
authorities ·on the ground.
·
Montgomery County Police Capt.
The Army also is searching its
Nancy Demme.
records for people with sniper train· Demme said one witness told
mg.
•
; police the shooter used an AK-74 .
Homeland Security Director Tom
rifle to kill 47-year-old FBI analyst
Ridge said investi'gators are hesitant
Linda Franklin on : Monday night
to rule out the possibility ' that the
outside a Falls Church, Va., Home
· slayings are the work of a terrorist
Depot store. Police said the weapon
because there is no hard evidence
can fire the .223-caliber round
about motive.
recovered from some of the shooting
Each victim was cut down with a
. }Cenes.
single bullet fired from a distance by :_~ ''The witness fiTlii]y believes this'
a high-powered rifle. All were going
·: o~s the weapon," Dernme said. "But
about everyday tasks.
; we have to keep in mind that
Last week, police found a tarot
• weapons are · interchangable, like
death card at a crime scene
: vehicles."
inscribed, "Dear Policeman, I am
·:. Investigators said the latest shootGod.'.'
: · :ing has yielded the most detailed.
In a continuing appeal for the pub: :Clues yet in the search for the killer,
lic's help, Moose released a compos,
: jncluding . license plate . information
ite image of a white Astro with a lad·:-and a description of a man seen leav- Montgomery County Executive Douglas Duncan, left, addresses the media as Police Capt. Nancy Demme looks on der ra"" that witnesses saw after
.: -ing the scene in a white, Chevy during a noon news conference Wednesday in Rockville, Md. (AP)
Friday's slaying of a man at a gas
·· Astro van with a burned-out or brostation near Fredericksburg, Va. He
•
.
. ken left tail li~ht.
also released a similar image of a
With police unable to release more who returned to ·the shopping center got a good look at the guy," he said. Ford Econovan.
But the witness reports of the
specific
infonnation, Demme gave a Tuesday to talk with police. He said
shooter- some of which described
Moose said there appeared to be
The driver "seemed to be exces: :th~ susptlct as tlark,skinned .or "how-to" list of tips for potential he heard a muffled gunshot and saw sively irritated because he couldn't . similarities between the van seen at
pull into my lane," he said. "I Friday's shooting and the ·van from
: :Mtddle Eastern - were not consts- witnesses in case the sniper strikes a white van.
again.
Among
them:
commit
to
Youn~
said
as
he
backed
his
truck
thought this fool was going to want Monday niglit's attack. Fairfax
.
: ,tent.
; ''The only common denominator memory what you see. c~ around out of hts parking spot, a white Astro to get ?Ut of the v.an ,and duke or County Police Chief Tom Manger
: thus far is male," Dernme said. "We a pen to m(!ke notes and, tf neces- van with two men inside tried to tum sometJ;l,mg. But he d1dn t. He kept on would not say whether witnesses to
• don't have. a refined description to sary, write down descriptions and into his lane. He said the driver gomg.
the latest attack were able to give
Law. enforcement sources told.Th.e co.mplete license plate numbers to
,go by. I know that's .not what the details on your hand. She also appeared very agitated to find his
warned witnesses not to "contami- way blocked and instead drove by a As~ociated P~ess ,there was no m~I- investigators.
public wants to hear." ·
''Each shooting has revealed more
- The latest setback came two nate" their remembrances by talking neighboring restaurant and out of catmn the smper targeted Frankhn;
to
other
people
or
reporters.
·
sight.
47, becau~e ofh~r ~o~ with the FBI's to this investigation. We're encour- weeks into the investigation into II
Robert Young, a Washington conYoung described the driver as a Cyber-Cnmes DIVISion, crea~ed last aged every day," said Michael .
· 'shootings in Maryland, Virginia ani!
·Washington that have killed nine struction worker, was among wit- short man of slight build who year to ~ocus on computer cnmes as Bouchard, an agent with the Bureau :
nesses to Monday night's shooting appealed to be Middle Eastern. "I well as mtellectual property cases.
of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
people and wounded two_

Community Calendar

Clubs and
Organizations

Other events

Church services

Study: Sound bites from
candidates ·not shown much
.in ·1oeal TV campaign coverage

Downloading Star Wars'
·movies gets former
employee arrested

~

@~ 95~ ·~ Jr~...

Greeting
Cards
1/2

PRICE

Man's
Colognae

8

Russell
Stov•r Candy

~-Committee expand~
~ ATLANTA (AP) -A fed. -era! · committee
voted
. -Wednesday to recommend
·vaccinating about 510,000
hospital workers against
·smallpox, bringing its earlier
proposal closer to the Bush
administration's suggestion.
The Centers for Disease
: Control and Prevention's
' Advisory · Committee on
·. '.Immunization Practices vo~ed
'8-1 for the plan, whtch
: ·amounts to vaccinating about
· ,I 00 workers at all hospitals in
• the nation that could handle
· .smallpox patients. .
.
Those receiving shots at the
hospitals with "negative pressure rooms" would include ·
emergency. room d~t!'rs,
nurses, radtology techntctans
and selected security and
housekeeping workers.

BOSTON (AP) - Twenty
Mastectomy, or removal of
years of follow-up research on the breast, was the surgery of
women with bieast cancer has choice for most of the 20th
offered powerfully reassUring century. Then, in the 1980s,
confirmation that cutting out largely on the strength of early
just the Jumps can save as data from these two studies,
: many lives as mastectomies.
manx doctors began to suspect
'Dr. Monica Morrow, a that m women whose tumors
· Northwestern
University have not spread, mastectO!IlY
breast-cancer specialist, ~aid · works no be~ter than. cutting
the fmdings should convmce out only the diseased tissue..
· ''even · the most determined
The two landmark studies
: skeptics."
· changed tlie way many sur; "It is time to declare the case geons treated breast cancer. By
· against breast-conserving ther- the end !'f L~ 1980s, .the lessapy closed," she proclaimed.
disfigunng procedure, often
- Her editorial was published called a lumpectomy, was
· Thursday with two studies in widely accepted on an equal
The New England Journal of footing with mastectomy for
Medicine. The studies. - one cancer that has n~t yet spread:
Italian and one American Still; breast-savmg surgery IS
showed similar death rates not always offered to women
after 20 years for large groups who are potential .candidates
of women who underwent for the operation. The
- either mastectomies or breast- re~he~ behind the latest
savillfSurgery.
. .
findmgs hope to change that.

m1 Y

•···· • •-··•

Cold

Music

2&amp;•/a OFF 1/2 PRICE

Sniper attacks prompt Fox to
delay thriller 'Phone Booth'

Pop~~~
21c can

The vaccine can cause danThe committee chose the
gerous side effects, even plan over two other proposdeath, in a fraction of als: ·
patients. Smallpox has been
• Its original recommendadeclared eradicated from the tion. which was to establish
globe, but some expens fear regional hospitals that would
that terrorists have samples of handle all smallpox cases and
the virus and could use it as a vaccinate emergency workers
devastating
biological and select staff - about
weapon.
20,000 people.
The recommendation is no!
• Vaccinating all of the
binding, and the final dei:i- . nation's first responders sion on vaccines will be made firefighters, paramedics and
by the CDC, the Department police officers who could
of Health and Human come in contact with smallServices and the White pox cases. · That wquld
House.
mvolve inoculating up to 10
Under the recommenda- million people. This plan is
tion, the 510.•000 hospital similar to one suggested by
employees would get the Bush administration · officials
shots first, then it 'would be earlier this month.
made available to other health
Committee members said
care and emergency workers, they changed their earlier recand finally to the public.
ommendation after more

20•1, OFF

, STO~!!n'f!EE'1~

Saturda''~{?

'POMEROY EAGLES CLUB

study and feedback, not said. "If there's nota. case of
· because of political pressure. smallpox, we will be doing
"Many hospitals, particu- more harm than good."
larly those with negative
Offit suggested not vaccipressure rooms need to be nating anyone until a case of
prepared, because you can't smallpox is found .
·
say where smallpox patients
Routine smallpox vaccinawill arrive," said Dr. Guthrie lions in the United States
Birkhead.
ended in 1972 when health
Birkhead said the regional officials noticed the vaccine' s
plan had some weaknesses, complications were hurting
mcluding hospitals not wanti- more people than the virus.
ng the stigma of being the Expens say 15 out of every
''regional smallpox hospital." million vaccinated for the
Dr. Paul Offit of '·the first time will face life-threatChildren's
Hospital
of ening complications .and one
Philadelphia was the only or two will die. Reactions are
dissenting board member.
less common for those being
"We're thinking about revaccinated.
immunizing 500,000 people
Some experts say that the
in a country for a disease that virus - which can kill about
is still theoretical. We haven't 30 percent of non-vaccinated,
seen a case of smallpox on . infected people - can cause
this planet for 25 years," he much more hann today than
1

The researchers · at the
European
Institute
of
Oncology in Milan split 701
women into two groups: one
got mastectomies, the other got
l!lmpectomies with radiation
treatments. In the end, about a
quarter of each group died of
breast cancer over 20 years.
The American study of 1,851
women, backed by the govern•
ment and run at the University
of Pittsburgh, also found little
survival differences between
two similar groups. A th.ird
group of women who underwent lumpectomy without
radiation. also survived as well
as others, though they developed recurrent cancer on · the
same side more often than
women who got radiation.
About 90 percent of women
with stage I disease - the earliest stage - are reasonable
candidates for lumpectomy,
.

HEALTHCARE

according to Morrow. Yet only
68 percent chose it in a 1998
survey by the American
College of Surgeons.
lead
author at
The
Pittsburgh, Dr. Bemaid Fisher,
said many women who could
have undergone more narrow
surgery have chosen mastectomies on the theory that you
"get it out, and you're not
going to i)ave any.trouble." But
he said the evidence clearly
.shows no survival advantage
for them.
A shadow spread over the
American study in 1994 when
a small fraction of data provided by a researcher in Canada
was exposed as fake. The
National Cancer Institute later
cleared Fisher of misconduct
and determined that the bact
data did not change the overall
flpdings.

.

In The Sentinel

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the vaccine, especially if used
as a weapon by terrorists. But
others. fear that the smallpox
shot may be useless if terrorists alter the virus.
The Bush administration's
top smallpox ewert - Dr.
D.A. Henderson, who was
instrumental in its eradication
- has said the administration ·
is "very worried" about the
possibility that Iraq may have
smallpox samples.
.
.
The advtsory committee
also will discu.ss other immunization concerns, including
whether to give children ages
.6 months to 2 years flu shots
and .how children ean "catchup" and receive any childhood immunizations they
may have missed during the
childhoo.fl
immuni zation
shortage of the last few years.

··:Research ·shows masectomy no better than lump removal/.

Only &amp;
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plan for sm~llpox vaccine recommendations ·

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Thur~•~October17,2002

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A 7

Atlantis dep~rts space station as \rocket problems abound.on Earth
I

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. American and two Russi&lt;)Ils to release the bolts holding
(AP) After a tearful - expect more guests in two down the space shuttle. at
.farewell,
space
shuttle weeks, but a deadly launch liftoff. Each bolt has two
Atlantis and its astronauts accident in Russia could .charges, only one of which is
undocked Wednesday from delay the visit.
needed for release. The Qther
f!!e inte~ational space sta·
A three-man Soyuz rocket charge is there as a backup.
· tton, leavmg tt a b1gger and · is scheduled to lift off Oct. 28
"Half of them fired and half
more elaborate outpost.
from Kazakhstan to deliver a of them didn't. We know that
Shouts of "We want to new space station lifeboat. On for a fact. We just don't know
stay!" came from Atlantis just Tuesday, a slightly different what caused that second combefore the two spacec~aft type of Soyuz exploded short- mand not to get through,"
parted company 250 mJies ly after liftoff, killing a sol- Leinbach said. "We're doing
above the ~usstan-Ukrainian dier on the ground and a lot. of tests on the ground
border, ending one week of destroying the satellite on here, obviously, and so far we
joint flight.
board.
•
· haven't found any smoking
' Du~ng their . · mi~sion,
Bob Castle, deputy chief gun;"
NASA wants to understand
Atlantis' astronau!s delivered flight director, said it is too
a $39(} milhon gtrder to the soon to know whether the what went wrong before ·
space statio~ and made three accident will postpone t¥ launching shuttle Endeavour
spacew~ks to mstalltt.
next flight. Two Russians and&gt; on Nov. 10.
·
The stx shuttle crew mem- a Belgian will be aboard; 'N
Leinbach would not specu: bers, who .are due. back on . Sync singer Lance Bass was late on what could have hapEarth on Fnday, admired _their bumped from the crew after pened if the second set of
work from afat. "It was won- he failed to come up with the charges had not fired, and
stressed that ''redundancy erederful to pull !\Way from the reported $20 million fare.
station and .see the visible
NASA .has its own prob- ated a safe liftoff."
_
s~gns of our success," said ~ems, meanwhile, investigat- \ Endeavour will . deliver
ptlot Pamela Melroy.
·mg the launch-day failure another girder to \he space
· The space station's three Oct. 7 of some of the explo- station, along with replace- .
crew members
an sive charges that are supposed men[&amp; for the station crew.

· The Daily Sentinel
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NATIONAL VIEW

New confession from inmate clouds 1989 Central Park 'wil.ding' rape· case

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Privatizing electric industry
.. may remove rate ·hike prot~ction

I

Democrats confront risk in supporting Bush policy
8v MORTON .KONDRACKE

F)fty-one percent of Democrats - verBut even Lieberman - and, certainly
Polls show that Democratic voters are sus 14 percent of Republicans - think Edwards - also has indulged in "yes,
deeply skeptical of President Bush's Iraq that Bush is ''moving too quickly," but ... " rhetoric, criticizing the approach
• The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, on privatizing the electri·
policy, which means that the three poten' according to the poll.
Bush has uSed in getting to his policy.
cal industry: Shame will never slow the corporate high-flyers
tial 2004 Democratic presidential candiSixty-one
percem
of
Democrats
-.
·
Edwards told me he became convinced
·who want to wring ~uge sums 'of money from·America's elecdates
supporting
Bush
do
so
at
some
risk
versus
40
percent
of
Republicans
(ear
through
his work on . the Intelligence
. tricity users. Surely, though, the federal government ought to . - and deserve credit.
that war Will increase the threat of terror- Committee that "for Saddam Hllslll:in to
· yell, ''Stop." ·
If Bush's policy turns out badly - ist attacks on the United .States. Sixty- . acquire nuclear weapons is unaccept:· Despite the continuing robbery of Western ratepayers, the
which could happen in any number of two percent - versus 41 percent in the able" and that "there is too much uncer·
:· push to privatize the nation's electrical service marches forways
- Democratic primary voters GOP - expect a "long and costly tainty" about when that could happen to
. ward.
could well wreak vengeance on House involvement."
risk inaction.
. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is leading the
Minority Leader Richard Gephardt (Mo.)
Sixty-three percent of Democrats Still, Edwards on Monday made a
.. charge for further deregulation. But Republican and
and
Sens.
Joe
Lieberman
(Conn.)
and
compared
with
30
percent
of
ik
. Demo9ratic .senators from the West last week began to
Republkans _ said Congress was "not speech blasting Bush in almost Gore-r . e
John
Edw&lt;U"ds
(N.C.).
demand answers about FERC's plans for a huge new step in
Edwards' aides say his mail is running asking enot~gh questions" about ~ush's terms, accusing him of "arrogance withits attempts to create a more market-based electrical system.
"overwhelmingly" against war with Iraq. policy, and 55 percent _ versus 17 per. out purpose" toward potential allies and
! ...
Party activists are equally hostile, reflect- cent in . the GOP _ doubted that Bush likening Attorney General John
•· Many states view the proposal as atremendous erosion of
ing their visceral distrust of Bush - . and, really wants to work through the United Ashcroft's detention. of terror suspects to
.. their ability to protect consumers from unjustifiably high electhe policies of "dictatorships like Syria
probably, an aversion to using military Natt.ons.
.
; tric prices. The commission's plan also carries a complexity .
force that still lingers since the Vietnam
On other . questions, the poll showed and Burma"
· .
,
that reminds some utility experts of the unwieldy rules
that
72
percent
of
Democrats
think
Bush
Edwards
evidently
felt
the
need
to reasWar.
" Califoniia had in place when energy crisis .struck the West
Gephardt has btlen subjected to intense is "too quick" to resort to military force sure Democratic activists, among others,
·· with catastrophic rate increas.es last year....
motive
questioning by members .of his to solve world problems, and 75 percent that he wasn't wholly in Bush's camp.
. FERC and the Justice Department have started investij!aown
Democratic
Caucus, with · some doubt he has a "clear plan" for Iraq poliHe · and other Democrats also are
twns mto the activities of Enron and other energy-tradmg
charging he has "sold OUt"· to Bush to cy.
claiming credit for "pushing" ·Bush to
· companies during the 2000-2001 crisis. But those investigahelp
his
2004
chances
·even
though
also
are
opposed
to
Bush's
.
consult the United Nations and Congress
Democrats
tions are only in progress. ...
·
dovish
primary
voters
likely
will
oppose
doctrine
of
pre-emptive
action
against
before acting against Iraq - though
. Just months after Congress and the Bush administration .
his
stance.
enemies. By 59 percent to 37 percent, Edwards gave Bush no credit for adoptunited in their group hug of corporate reform, it would be
The other possible c&lt;)Ildidates - for- . voters said the United States should not ing that stance.
·
unseemly - or worse - for them to move forward with the
mer
Vice
President
AI
Gore,
.Senate
attack another country unless attacked
By contrast, Lieberman has been much
· · energy privatization agenda promoted by the poster child of
Majority Leader Thomas Daschle (S.D.), first.
·
milder and constructive in criticizing
··, corporate abuse, Enron.
Sen. John Kerry (Mass.) and Vermont
A majority of Democrats in the House Bush. In a speech Monday he said Bush
Gov. Howar~ Dean - are all hewing and Senate are expected to support is not doing enough to secure peace in "
. closer to mainstream opinion in the party. authorizing Bush to go to war with Iraq, Afghanistan and plan for a post-Hussein
. this is most strikingly true in the case possibly reflecting the fact that 67 per-. 1r
of Gore, who was an Iraq policy hawk in cent of all voters support the policy, ~era!!, though, Lieberman's stance
the Clinton White House but last month including 65 .percent of indepenc;!ents.
•·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .
. ·has be en more ''yes, and ..." than ''yes,
But• a) sore fl ect.mg the atil' tude s f thCIT
delivered
a harsh attack on-Bush, accusToday is Thursday, Oct. 17, the 290th day of 2002. There .
but ...."He was ahead of Bush in calling
ing him of practicing a "go-it-alone, cow· party base, most also are expected to sup- for Hussein's ouster and is the author of
. are 75 days left in the year. .
.
boy-type approach to foreign affairs." · port resolutions limiting presidential measures to expand aid to Afghanistan
· . Today 's Highlight in History: ·
. .
The latest CBS/New York Tunes poll authority - either by requinng Bush to
·• · On OcU 7, 1777, British forces under Gen. John Burgoyne
shows that a ·majority of Democrats - return for a final war authorization after and build democracy in the Muslim
surrendered to American troops in Saratoga, N.Y:, in a turning
57 percent to 38 percent - favor taking seeking U.N. support or authorizing only world.
point of the Revolutionary War.
Lieberman, Gephardt and Edwards
'military action to remove Saddam working .through the United Nations.
On this date:
Many
may
vote
for
more
than
one
deserve
credit for risking their presiden.
Hussein
from
power,
but
also
strongly
In 1919, the Radio Corp. of America was created.
optiori;
which
represents
a
"yes,
but
...
"
tial
hopes
to support Bush. And, if Bush's
favor waiting longer to do so.
In 1931 , mobster AI Capone was convicted ofincome tax
Seventy-four percent of Democrats - stance that seems to encapsulate rank- Iraq policy succeeds, they should get
evasion and sentenced to II years in prison. (He was released
credit from fellow Democrats for leading
versus
54 percent of Republicans - and-file Democratic thinking.
in 1939.-)
believe that Bush . should give United
Daschle and Kerry, among the presi- their party in the right direction.
. In 1933, Alben Einstein arrived in the United States as a
Nations weapons inspectors an opportu- dentia] contenders, have been the most . (Morton Kondracke is executive editor
refugee from Nazi Germany.
.
nity to retutn to Iraq and get support from weddedlo "yes, but ... " statements. Gore of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol
:· . ln 1941 ; the U.S. destroyer Kearney was torpedoed by a
allied nations before acting.
:berman submarine off the coast of Iceland. Eleven people
coul.~ ~ put in that-category, too.
Hill.)
:died.
: · In-l-945, Col. Juan ·Peron staged a coup, becoming absolute
:ruler of Argentina . .
· In 1977, West German commandos stormed a hijacked
RYAN'S VIEW
Lufthansa jetliner on the ground in Mogadishu, Somalia, freeing all ~6 hostages and killing three of the fOur hijackers. .
In 1978, President Carter signed a bill ·restoring U.S. citizenship to Confederate President Jefferson Davis.
: In 1979, Mother Teresa. of India was awarded the Nobel
: Peace Prize.
_
BY JOAN RYAN
article. The busier we are, the more
The specter of war against Iraq runs ·
: In 1989, an earthquake measuring 7 .I on the Richter scale
Now that I'm opening and closing the loose ends we unleash, and the busier as an undercurrent through this latest
: struck northern California, killing 67 people and causing $7
drawers of the refrigerator, I can see I . still we become. Gopnik illustrates the spasm, forcing our heads out of the
: bill ion worth of damage.
don't have nearly enough of the proper point with the story of his 3-year-old endless reminders and appointments in
In 1991. entertainer Tennessee Ernie Ford died in Reston,
elements with which to create the criti- daughter's imaginary friend, a charac- our Day Runners to reconsider what is
Virginia, at age 72.
cal mass of dinner. There's mustard and ter she calls Charlie Ravioli. Charlie truly worth worrying about.
· Ten years ago: :Japanese exchange student Yoshi Hattori, 16, • pes to, eggs and .raspberries, · potato Ravioli is always too busy to play.
"Greek Wedding" found a huge audiwasshot ·and killed by Rodney Peairs in Center, La. , after
bread and low-fat milk and two small Eventually, the 3-yeat-old invents ence, because it so bluntly and
. Hattori and his American host mi stakenly knocked on Peairs'
grilled lamb chops from Friday's din- Laurie, an assistant to Ravioli, who · unabashedly embraces the notion that
:door while looking for a Halloween party. (Peairs was acquit·
·
passes along Ravioli's regrets. Ravioli nearly everything of real value is
ner sealed in a Ziploc ba~.
:ted of manslaughter. but in a ·civil trial was ordered to pay
"What are we having?' my son asks. apparently is too busy 'even to say he is already right in front of you.:- family,
: more than $650,000 in dmnages to Hattori's family.) The
H.e 's standing at the stop of the stairs. · too busy.
tradition, loyalty, love. (So what .if you
Atlanta B.raves defeated the Toronto Blue Jays in game one of
"I haven't decided," I say, by which I
"Busyness is our art form, our civic have to put up with a barbecue on the
the World Series, 3-·I.
·
mean, "I have no idea yet again."
ritual, our way of being us," Gopnik front )awn in fropt of all the neighbors
Five years ago: The remains of revolutionary Emesto '"Che"
It's not that I didn't go grocery shop- writes.
now and then?)
.
_Guevara were laid to rest in his adopted Cuba, 30 years after
ping. It's that I did it between signing . There's a part of us, I think, that loves
Th
·
· his execution in Bolivia.
.
.
refinance papers and carpooling to hurtling thrql!gh the day at a million ·
e movie ts about, in part, knowing
: One year ago: With the threat of anthrax hovering over
baseball practice. Like my fellow shop· miles. an. hour, We feel relevant, as if that completeness is a matter of per: Capitol Hill , congressional leaders closed six House and
pers, I flew down the aisles like a con- we 're going places. Being busy is a spective. You can never .catch up, _so
: Senate office buildings for decont;munation; the U.S. House
testant grabb_ing as much loot as she way of creating a stage-set of success contentment ~eans makmg do wtth
· of Representatives· shut down for several days. Israel's
can before the buzzer goes off. So now, -· . the cell phone, the laptop, the fax what you have mstead of always reachtourism minister, Rehavam Zeevi was shot to death in the
standing in front of the incomplete machine, the Palm Pilot. But the obvi- · mg for, .and feelmg anxtous about,
first-ever assassination of a· serving Cabinet minister by
.
.
offerings of my fridge, I gel the · ner· ous question is alway·s just below the what s mtsst~g. .
: Palestinians. Oscar-winning songwriter Jay Livingston died in
vous, twitchy feeling that .has become cluttered surface, trying to push its way
I pull out the brea~, milk and an egg
· Los Ange les at age 86.
· .
.
. familiar lo 21sH:entury citizens: the through: What.are we hurtling toward? and close the refnge~ator door. We
: . Today 's Birthdays; Playwright Arthur Miller is 87. Actress
feeling that y·ou can't ever .possibly, no
This is the question, I think; that has have Frenc~ toast for dmner ~d watch
: Marsha Hunt is 85 . Actress Beverly Garland is 76. Actress
matter how hard you work, keep up. · ..made "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" a Mon~ay Ntght Football, pu~hmg aside
· Julie Adams is 76. Actor Tom Poston is 75. Newspaper columEvery task requires a follow -up. runaway hit. Maybe it would have been · ~he btlls,_ the phone messages and ·the
nist Jimmy Breslin is' 72. Daredevil Eve! Knievel is 64.
Every e-mail demands a. response. a hit in any year. But I wonder if, with tnformauve articles I really ought to
Country singer Earl Thomas Conley is 61 : Singer Jim Seals
Every phone message, a reply. Every the fallout of Sept. II and the slumping. read. They'll be there tomorro\1(, and
: (Seals &amp; Crofts) is 60. Singer Gary Pucktltl is 60. Actor
.
.
appointment. . a confirmation. Every economy, we 're in one of those spasms, tomorrow..
: Michael Mc Kean is 55 . Actress Margot Kidder is 54. Actor
lamb chop, a side di h.
which we go through with some n:gu(loan Ryan is acol~mnistfor the San
·'George Wendt is 54 . .Actor Bill Hudson is 53. Actor Sam
So we ricochet from task to task only larity, when we're dissatisfied with the Francisco Chronicle. Send comments
:-Bottoms is 47. Astronaut Mae Jemison is 46. Country singer.
to face, at the end of the day, an "oyer- hamster-wheel "good life," when we to her in care of this newspaper or send
· Alan Jackson is 44. An imator Mike Judge is 40. ActoHome·whelming incompleteness," as Adam try to recapture lost simplicity and val- her
·
e-mail
at
"dian Norm Macdonald is 39. Singer Rene' Dif is 35.
Gopnik recently put it in a New Yorker ues.
·
joanryan@sjchroliicle.com.)
'·

., TO ·DAY IN HISTORY ·

°

,f

Being simply too busy becomes our normal routine

. r

-

-·----..----· ..

~ -- --- ~··· -·· ··-- -

..... __..... ....... --. .. ,.. ........ ...
~,·

~''" ' "' ' "''''

...... ......... . .
_

,,, _. _~- ~· · ·~-

.. ,..,.., ~

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

In t,his image from television NASA Astronauts Peggy Whitson, right, hugs Piers Sellers, center,
while Cosmonauts valery Korzun, far left, and Fyodor Yurchikhin, second on the left, wait to say
goodbye on Wednesday aboard the international space station. The space shuttle Atlantis
undocked from the international space station later in the day. (AP)

""

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

'•

.....

-~

~-

NEW YORK (AP) - More years.
began in January, when Reyes tions about an episode flTIDly . Developer Donald Trump lone attacker.
than a decade • ago, Antron
"A grave injustice ·has found religion and broke his etched .in urban lore.
took out newspaper ads sayIn a new report, police said
McCray sat in a police station occurred," defense attorney long silence, The jailed Reyes
On April 19, 1989, dozens ing the attack was worthy of they re-examined forensic
and recounted a vicious gang Michael Warren said.
had never before been linked of black teenagers from the death penalty.
evidence used at the origimil
rape of a woman jogging in
A growing chorus of to the case.
Harlem descended on the park
The atmosphere "was high- trials, including the blond
Central Park.
defense lawyers, civil rights
Reyes, 31, is serving a life to mug runners and bicyclists ly coercive;" said Ronald hair, and found it "useless" in
"We all took turns getting activists and politicians has sentence for murdering a - a crime spree . dubbed Kuby, an attorney for Salaam.
on top of her," the 15-year-old urged a judge to set aside the pregnant woman and raping "wi(ding." The jogger, a "People were calling for conclusively linking the five
youths to the crime.
told police in a videotaped 1990 convictions. At protest three others in a rampage on white, 28-year-old investment' blood."
Though now certain Reyes
· confession that, authorities rallies and news conferences; Manhattan's Upper East Side. banker, was found comatose · Inv~stigators said blond
· said, left no doubt he and.four they claim authorities mishan- He told· investigators that in a pool of blOod. She would hair found on one of the teens took part in tlie attack, inves· other Harlem teenagers com- died evidence and coerced abolit three months before his recover, but had no memory matched -that of the victim. tigators have~not ruled out the
mitted the 1989 "wilding" confessions from McCray and arrest, he raped the jogger, of her ordeal.
But there was no match on the possjbility that he was a sixth
that shocked the nation. . the others.
crushed her skull with a rock
Police quickly rounded up semen, or other compelling assailant, or that he and the
five youths struck separately:
Now, a convicted rapist
District Attorney Robert and left her. for dead - and several suspects. Within 4~ physical evidence.
.
McCray, .Kevin
Prosecutors .instead relied
named ·Matias Reyes has Morgenthau said that his that he followed his usual pat· hours,
The case may tum on pure· come forward to say he alone office needs more . time to tern of acting alone. ·
Richardson,
Raym\:ind on the youth.s ' own incrimi- ly legal grounds: A judse
. attacked the jogger- a claim reinvestigate but that" if the
"I was a monster," he said Santana and Kharey \l(ise had nating statements to win con- could throw out the convicbacked in part by DNA evi- facts warrant it, he may agree in a recent television inter- confessed on videotape to· victions at two trials in 1990. tions because defense attor· dence.
·to the defense request to set view. "I did some real bad beating and raping the woman
Since confessing, Reyes neys were not informed of the
The confession has forced aside the verdict. A hearing is · things to so many people and one called the "jogging lady." aP.peared to bolster his credi- similar attack in Central Park
. prosecutors to reopen the case set for Monday.
harmed them in so many A fifth teen, Yusef Salaam, btlity by taking responsibility that week.
. and fueled allegations that the
The
five
defendants ways."
had made admissions as well, for another unsolved sexual
The convicted rapists seek
five defendants, all 16 or declined comment through
Test results returned in May detectives said. ·
assault on a woman exercis·
total
exoneration.
younger at the time, were rail- their lawyers. .
confirmed . Reyes' DNA
The case involving black' ing in Central Park only two
"They want to be able to
The dramatic turnabout in matched semen collected defendants and a white victim days before the jogger attack.
roaded. All five have since
down the street and not
walk
· completed their prison sen- · what became known as the frpm the j~gger's body.
dominated headlines · 'and His· account matched that of
The findings renewed ques- stoked. . racial· tensions. the viCtim, who described a feel ashamed," Warren said.
tences of more than five Central Park jogger case
.. --l.o-~..:....,;..,..--~---,------------'-----+----,..-------------,-,..-----

: Einhorn attorney says mummified corpse of ex-girlfriend is just circumstantial evipence'
1

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - the evidence of Einhorn's
Ira Einhorn's attorney told a guilt is overwhelming.
. jury Wednesday that the dis- · Einhorn, 62, is accused with
. covery of the mummified killing Holly Maddux 25
: corpse of Einhorn's ex·§irl- yetlrs ago .because she wanted
friend in his apartment is 'just to end their turbulent five. a piece of circumstantial evi- year relationship. Her remains
. dence" that doesn't prove the were found in a steamer trunk
in the closet of . their
former hippie guru's guilt.
; "It doesn't mean at all that Philadelphia apartment in
: Ira Einhorn is responsible for 1979, 18 months after she dis· .
~ her murder," Wilham Cannon appeared.
·
said . in closing arguments at
He could get life in prison if
Einhorn's murder trial.
· convicted.
Prosecutor Joel Rosen said
Cannon said that th~re is a

lack of physical evid~nce
tying Einhorn to the crime,
and that Maddux's bludgeon,
ing death would have left
bloodstains in the apartment.
The lack of blood suggests
she was killed somewhere
else and rater placed in the
trunk, Cannon said.
Einhorn has denied killing
Maddux and maintains the
body was put there to frame
him. He has accused the CIA
of setting him up l:!ec:ause of
his, res_earch into the agency's

before his trial was set to
"psychic warfare" experi- almost laugh at it."
ments.
Prosecutors. had Einho~n begin in 1981, and lived in
"There were people who read to the )Ury fro!~~ h~s Europe under assumed names
simply didn't like Ira Einhorn, JXll:ms and diary ent,nes, 111 until he was found in France
. . .
people who were capable of whtch he wrote "to kill what .
rou
love
when
you
can't
have
m
.199?·
~e
was
convtcted
_m
doing something about it and, ·
I suggest, did something 11 seems so natural" and "vio· . absentia m 1993, a verdtct
.lence always marks the end of · that was set aside to clear the
about it," Cannon said.
Rosen called those allega- a relationship."
·
way for his · extradition in
·
·
/'"
tions ridiculous.
Prosecutors also called the 2001.
"It is so laughable and so former.ow~er of a bookstore
Cannon said Einhorn fled
.
ludicrous, it is so outrageous, who smd Emhorn once asked
for
a
"how-to"
book
on
mum·
the
country
because
-lie
you should be offended," he
·
believed he would not get a.
said. ~'If a woman wasn't bru- mification.
Einhorn jumped bail weeks fair trial.
tally murdered, ·you would

Study: No experien~e is necessary to use heart defibrilators
.BOSTON (AP) --: Even
ordinary I;&gt;COple with no spe·
cia! traimng can save lives
· with the heart-jolting defibrlltators that are being put in
public places around the
country, · a first-of-its-kind
airport study found.
·
Many heart specialists and
· all th
others want to mst
ese
silnplified,
automated
, devices in airports, shopping
·
·stad'turns,·
; rna II s, casmos,
- schools and even homes to
. save victims of sudden car. diac arrest.
. h· severa I stu.d.tes
. Thoug
have examined the effective. ness of automated defibrilla· tors in the hands of trained
. and designa!ed staff membe~s
at Casl.nos and o_ther pubhc

r~athce:•J~~ :~~~~~~i~~~~

use by untrained passers-by
in real medical crises.
. "I think there's enough evi_ dence that these devices
should be in every public
place, and ultimately ther,
ought to be in every home,
, said Dr. W. Douglas Weaver
of the Henry Ford Heart
Institute in Detroit.
· · The study, sponsored by the
r city of Chicago, was pub• lished Thursday in The New
.. England Journal of Medicine.
· Sudden cardiac arrest ·. from heart' attacks, heart disease, accidents or other caus" es 1 strikes about 250,000
American adults evecy year
~ . outside hospitals. About _'}5
. percent die before reachmg
· the hospital.

People stand-a much better machines.
ing the Chicago airport study.
chance of surviving if they
However, three were doc·
However, one of the 53
undergo defibrillation, which tors. Also, in each case, defibrillators was stolen.
restores a normal beat to a someone helped by applying They typically cost about
helplessly quivering heart, cardiopulmonary resuscita- $2,500 each.
Actress and moti vationill
within the first few minutes tion, a manual technique for
of cardiac arrest. Ambulances temporarily restoring some speaker Tracey Conway, 46,
often fail to arrive with their blood flow.
k
Of Seattle, said the devices
rescue equipment within 10 . Patricef Duhketi, a SP&lt;? esal· . are well worth spreading
mt' nutes. .
woman or t e nternatmn
C
'I f Sh · c t
around. Her brother died
Small,
easy-to-operate ounc• ,0
oppmg en ers,
defibrillators that automati- said many shopping centers when his heart gave out at
cally dete~t
the heart's are rolling out such programs home in 1989, and help
~
rhythm and decide whether it - · but with designated opera- arrived too late. Six years
needs a shock have been tors, usually security staffers. · later, she went into arrest in
developed over the . past .20 "The biggest issue is· liability front of an audience, and
years.
and inh aking_ sure pekople wh ho emergency personnel arrived
The Chicago study's four· use t e equtpment now ow in time with an automated
pound defibrillators were dis- to do it properly," she said,
defibrillator.
tributed like fire extinguishIlltnots and many other
"I made it because my perers in labeled glass cabinets states · have adopt~d good · sonal heart event happened
at O'Hare; Midway and Samantan, laws_. whtch offer I. t 't
. bl.
tt'
Meigs Field airports . .About.. vR!'Ymg protection fr~m law- a er, I was a pu IC se mg,
the size of a toaster, they car- SUitS for well-meamng reS- the technology was avail n'ed both written and record- cuers. No one was sued dur- able," she said.
ed instructions.
·
·During the two-year study,
some&lt;ine tried to use one in
each of I 8 witnessed cases of
fibrillating cardiac arrest.
Eleven people were revived. .
"It was extraordinary," said
Sherry Caffrey, . the para,
medic who ran the proJeCt
6:00p.m.
with help from the University
·of Chicago. "We never imagined we were going Jo have
the results we had."
Though some airport per·
sonnel · were trained on the
defibrillators, six of the primary rescuers in the II sue·cessful ef{orts were passersby, largely travelers, with no
connection to the program or
experience
with
the

meigs CduttiiJ 1lepu6lican ParliJ

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Page AS • The

Daily Sentinel

lnsicle:

Thursday, October 17, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The DailrSentinel

'

·The Extra Point, Page 82

Prep football, Page 83
NASCAR WHkly, Page B4
World Series notebook, Page 85

Page 81

'

lhurscl_,, October 17, 2002

Spotlight: Chad &amp; Randy
Blues at·
the Grill
• Greg Schaber and
High Street, a blues group,
will perform at the Court
Street Grill at 9 p.m.
Saturday.
On Thursday, Oct. 24,
Rick ~edinwood will perform at 9 p.in. There will
be a $5 cover charge at
both events. For more
information call (740)
992-6524. .
.
· Every Thesday there is
an open jam session with ·
Justin Diddle from 9 p.m.
to2am.

Founder's
Day

Doll show

r.

• There will be a free ·
doll show, Oct. 19-20
arid Oct. 26-27 at the Our
House Museum. On
Saturdays, the show will
be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
and on Sunctars from 1
p.m. to 4 p.m.
'

•

Fun with purpose
POW WOW raising funds to help children.
'
BY SANDI
SAMMON
Staff writer

GALLIPOLIS - The
Harvest Moon POWWOW next weekend at
the Gallia County
Fairgrqpnds isn't onl,y
going to be a lot of fun,
it's also going to hel{:l
raise funds for a good
· cause.
.
The Native American
·Education
and
Development
Association will use

the funds raised at the
Harvest Moon POWWOW to modernize
Native
American
Reservation schools.
Friday, Oct. 18, will
be children's day with
drummers,
dancers,
storytellers and flint
knaepers to educate
and entertain.
On Saturday and
Sunday, Oct. 19-20,
Native American culture will be on full display with dancers performing in traditional

regalia. The nationally
acclaimed
. Native
American drummers,
Thunde~ Boys, will be
performmg.
John Becket, executi ve
director
of
NAEDA, says reservation schools receiye
very little federal funding.
"The. difference in
education at reservation schools compared
to · mainstream schools
is vast," Becket said.
He described a current

classroom being taught
with textbooks from'
the 1960s. ·•
The organization col"" ·
lects books, com~ters
and school matena!s to
donate to the schools in
need of supplies.
In addition to raising
funds the POW-WOW
is wiii provide Gallia
.
.
·
counuans wtth a t~e
account of Nauve
American Culture, said
Becket. ·

Illlm
0\IC
'F,Iock Hill
J:.O
Chesapeake
w
River Valley
1·2
Fairland
1·2
South Point
1·2
()..3
Coal Grove
Frlday'a Gartl§
South Point at River Valley ·
Coal Grove at Chesapeake
Fairland at Rock Hill

Blenko Glass
• A fund-raiser featuring Blenko Glass will be
at the Alex Franklin
Limited. For more infomation, call (304) 453-1387.

Herb walks .
• United Plant Savers
sponsors "Lost in the
Woods" Friday-Monday,
.Oct. ll-14, at the UPS
BotaniCal
Sanctuary,
Rutland. The cost is $375
for members and $425 for
non-members. For more
information . call (740) ·
662..(X)4l.

• Beginners' classes
are offered at the Tri-State
Ice Arena, 610 28th St.
Ages 3·5 may attend ~t
5:15 p.m. Tuesdays, ages
6 and up and adult stD:
dents, 6:15p.m. Thesdays.
Contact Heidi Hartley,
figure skating director,
(304) 697-4ICE.

Haunted
..
Park

Jilm

.: 1

SEQ

All
7·1
6-'2
7-1
5-3
3-5
2·5

Gallla Academy
4-0
Logan
4-0
4-1
Marietta
2-2
Athens
Jackson
14
Point Pleasant
0-4
().4
()..8
Warren
Frlc,tay'a Gamea
Athens at Gallia Academy
Warren at Point Pleasant
Logan at Marietta
S.B. Roger Bacon at Jad&lt;son

TVC

• Camden Park will ·
have
Spooktacular
Saturdays Oct. 18 and 25.
The park will open at 3 .
p.m. Admission · varies
from $9.99 to $14.99.
· For more information
call, (304) 429-4321.

Barbizon
Display
•
The Huntington
Museum of Art's coli~
lion of Barbizon paintin~
remain on display through
March 23'. For more information call (304) 529270 I
or
visit
www.hmoa.org.
1

Artist
lecturer
•

All
6-2
5-3
3-5.
2-6
2-6
3·5

· SEOAL

Ice skating:

• Our House Museum
will celebl'l!!e Founder's
Day Oct. 19 from 10 a.m.
to4p.m.
For more in(ormation
contact Janice Layne at
(740) 446-0586.

.

ovc

Ohio Division
ntC

Illlm
Wellston
J:.O
Belpre
2-1
Nelsonville-York
2·1
. Meigs
1-2
Vinton County
i-2
()..3
Alexander
Hocking Division ·
Illlm
M
Waterford
J:.O
Trimble
2-1
Federal Hocking
2-1
Eastern
1-2
1-2
Miiler
()..3 ·
Soothem '
._
Friday's Gartl§
Meigs at Vinton County
Eastern at Waterford
Trimble at Southern
Alexander at Wellston
Nelsonville-York at Belpre
· Federal Hocking at Miller

A!l

6·2
6·2
4-4
4-4
1-7

3-5
All
5-3
5-3
2'6
3-5
1-7

l .. ,

0:8

•

•
The .Huntington
Museum of Art presents
an exhibit of Jeff
Oestreich's work through
Sunday, Nov. 3, as the
Walter Gropius Master
Artist. For more information call (304) S29-270 I,
Ext. 46.

All

~ahama

7.1J

Ironton

6·1
6-2
2-6
2-6

for troubled -Moss
Former Marshall
teammates
face each other
· this Sunday
EAST · RUTHE'RFORD,
N.J. · (AP)
Chad
Pennington to Randy Moss
formed one of the most
dynamic passing combina. tions in college football and
helped lift M~shall into the
·
national spotlight.
Both have gone on to·NFL
careers. Moss becarHe an
· instant star in 1998, die
offensive rookie of the year,
leading the Minnesota
Vikings to the NFC title
game that year and again in
2000. He got to 5,000 yards
. receiving faster than anyone,
his 5,396 y&lt;U"ds the most for
any player through four pro
seasons.
·.';
Pennington was a .firytround pick in 2000, one of a
record four for the New York
Jets. He sat for two years and
four games behind Vinny
Testaverde, but now is the
..team's starting quarterback
. and comes off a strong outing against Kansas City. .
On Sunday, Pennington
will guide the \New York
offense against the Vikings,

.

challe~tging

Norris Northup Dodge
25.2 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio

~--~(7_40~&gt;~
44~6·"08Tii4RE2RmMmffi
OIL CHANGE (4&amp;)TBAIREL,ANCINC
Oil I

Filter • Lube ChOssls
Check All Fluids • Check Chellis

S

11 95

s2 2

•• Mloct . . -

1/4 mile nCII'Ih of
Pomeroy ·Meeon Bridge
Maeon, Weet Virginia
·Phone (304) n:l-5721
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK

2400 Eeatern Avenue
Galttp(.tle, Ohio

Clarett

5ml Montr llld
Keep Your Femlly 5Ift

·draf

.. fj0

·I

Phft1.0(740)446-1711

7DAYSAWEEK

i
•

'

the NFL's
rule that
prevents a
true ,fr~sh­
man , Jtom
entering the
'

.

1 think about 'i t?''
Clarett said about challenging
the NFJ,.'s rule. "It's go~,t9 go
through your he&amp;l, miiQ&amp;
•lt's
got to go throu~ your) J!:j!d.
I'm not saying 1~s shrtjet)l~n.g
1 will do. I'm· not saymg Its
something I won't do."

95

---·-

~--

ROCK SPRINGS - After
reaching the .500 mark on . \llntft'n (',.. Hlllu
~"'
·
the season with a resound'mg ', -~~~!
(;SO p.m.,
38-0 win . at Alexander a i ,. YlniOr!, Co.~
week ago, Meigs looks to " ,., _
..
vault into the mre air of win.
. ·
·
ff
ning teams Friday night as whtle Meigs IS conung o a
the Marauders (4-4, 1-2 shut~ut , . the Vlkmgs are
TVC) . t el to Vinton . ~onung mto the week havh mg· been shut out, 20-0, by
. ra v k
C~l!nty to ta e on t e Belpre last Friday night. ·
V1k!ngs (1-7! 1·2),
"They're a young football
It ~ a reu,mon of sorts for team," Chancey said of the
Marauders coach M1ke Vikings. "Their kids play
Chancey, smce Vmton co.ach hard and they've only won
Joe Hensley 1s a !ong-llme one football game. · but we
fn.~nd of thf? Meigs top rna~ . feel like it's going to be a
One thmg a!Jout thts ood football game and we
game IS thelf head COJ Ch, ·tave to be mentally and
me and m~. brother grew up physically ready to play."
~nh. him, Chancey sa1d.
Chancey realizes the
. He s from Syracuse and opportunity presented his
went to S,outhern H1gh team to · get over .the .500
School, so I ~e known h1m mark and further distance
for a !on~ lime an.d !fat itself from a . di~pointi.ng
makes tt kind of .spectal.
3-7 season of a.yeat i!.go, hut
Th~ game, which fe~tures at the same time wants to
the .h1gh-p~wered ~nmng of stay away from making this
Metgs semor runnmg back game the end-all be-ail of
Jeremy Roush, will likely be
'
Pluse see Melp, BJ
a test to ihat friendship,

Eagles to face off
with Waterford , .
BY DEREK TAYLOR
Staff writer •

Randy MOl&amp;

who get much of their offensive spllfk from Moss.
While Moss refused to
speak about Pennington or any other su!Jjects ·-· with
the media . this week,
Pennington recalled his days
as a teammate with the
Thundering
Herd
in

encountered,
including
recently being charged with
several misdemeanors for
pushing a traffic officer with
his car, and a misdemeanor
· for possession of a small
amount of marijuana. .
"He's part of our family at
Marshall," Pennington said.
"He's a brother, a football
Huntington, W.Va. He also brother. · we used to sweat
spoke frankly about the offfield problems Moss . has
Pluse SH Moss, BS

Ma azine: Clarett may
cha lenge NFL rule
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State freshman tailback
Maurice Clarett said in this·
week's
ESPN· The
M,.a~~ine
thllt ' he IS
co n·lfl mp r·au n g

, L IN TOWN

n rooting

Ohio State Football

Illlm
Symmes Valley
Oak Hill
South Gallla ·

Pennin

•

Non-league

........

•rn

New York Jets quarterback Chad Penningtoo, shown in action against Kansas City earlier this
year, and former Marshall University teammate Randy Moss, below, formed one of the most
pritent offimsive coinbjnations in college fOotball. (AP)
•

Prep Football

• The Ohio Smoked
Meat and BBQ Festival
will be Oct. 19 at
Hocking College.
.
The event is Ohio's
Kansas
City ·
only
BarlJeque Society sanctioned cook.:off.
For additional informa.lion or to register, contacit
Stilten at (740) 753-3531,
ext 170.

Marauders take
aim at Vikings~·
at

To be eligible lor 'The CNP 10,
- a 181m rnuet either: a.) be
· from the Maaon.&lt;Jallla: Melghllldraon ansa; b.) be a
local canfanloo:e member; or
c4 play at 1eaet one game
. against local or conference
18111'11.

liM

Prep Football

BY DEREK TAYLOR
Staff writer •

Others receiving vote1:
C olumbus DeSales 9,
Wellston 6, Parkersburg 5,
Logan 4, Belpre 2.

cook-off

• Perfoming witlrhis
live band at . the Ariel
Theatre, Oct. 19 at 7:30
p.m. Advance tickets are
$10 and $12 at the door.
1icl5:ets may be purchased
at
Tawney
Jewlers, Oak Hill Banks,
The Purple Turtle,
. Country Store, Parkfront
Diner, · and Farmers
Bank. For more information call, (740) 4462787.

.

·

BBQ

Elvis in
the house

'

• "Let the Good
Times Roll," is coming
to Athens Oct. 19.
Billed as a · music
reunion, it will feature
performers from vintage bands that played
1n Athens cl,ubs and
other music venues dur~
ing the 60s - 80s.
For more information
contact events planner,
Marcia Shubert at (740)
448-7231.

A look at the region's top
· football teams, as 110ted by
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports staffers. (First-place
110les in parentheses)
T•m
.Prev. Votes
1. Parkersburg So. 2 56 (3)
2. New Lexington 3 47 (2)
3. Galli a Academy s 44 (1)
: 4. Ironton
7
· 35
· 5. Portsmouth
1
34
. S, Marietta
8
28
7. Wahama
4
25
· 8. Park. Catholic nr
15
9. (lie) Athens
nr
10
Portsmouth West 10
10

.

Clarett has rushed for 847
yards and scored 15 touchdowns for the No. 4
Buckeyes, · who play at
Wisconsin on Saturday.
Ohio State spokesman
Steve Snapp said Clarett
would not comment this
week and would not speak
with the media until after
Saturday' s game. Head
coach Jim Tressel was
unaware of.the report.
NFL rules prevent a true
freshman, sophomore or
junior from m~ing them·selves eligible for the draft.
In the Oct. 28th issue,
Clarell says he knows the
contract figures for firstround draft picks such as
Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb .
"You can always come

back to school. .I don't
think there's a job in the
world where you're ~onna
make $113 million m 12
years," Clarett said. "I
don' t t!link there's one joll
coming out of college paying that."
According to the article,
Clarett's mother, who is the.
chief deputy clerk for the
Municipal
Court
of
Youngstown, is researching
the process of challenging
the NFL in court.
Told that an NFL personnel director doesn't believe
he's ready to jump to the
pros, Clarett chuckled as he.
said, "Do I think it's possible? After the season I
could tell you if it's possible. I have some kind of
feelin~. but I'm not real
sure nght row." .

"

I

'.•

TUPPERS PLAINS After its most impressive
offensive output of the sea,,
· • son, Eastern gets an interesting reward: Facing perhaps
the most imP,ressive running season in a 42-0 win over
· back . in the Tri-Valley hapless Miller a week ago.
· Conference's · · Hocking
Eastern · · coach
Pat
Division.
. Newland's decision to move
The Eagles travel to · sophomore fullback Darren
Waterford Friday to tackle Scarbrough
to
center
. the Wildcats and senior tail- enabled upstart freshman
back Dan Doebereiner, who Terry Durst to serve as
has tortured opposing sophomor~ Bryan Minear's
defenses with a hard-nosed lead blocker and ball-carryrunning style for three sea- ing relief. The result was
sons. The .runner is coming nothing short of impressive,
off a game against Southern as Minear ran for a careera week ago in which he high 209 yards and five
rushed the bill! 15 times for touchdowns of his own;
202 yards and three touch- while Durst carried the ball
downs, ·while returning a 10 times for 43 yards.
punt 62 yards for a score and. The total was more than
running back a kickoff 78 Scarbrough has had in a sinyards for another six points. gle game since the early
Luckily for the Eagles, weeks of the season, and
they may have just found the . Scarbrough's presence on
offensive combination they
•
·
have been searching for all
Pluse see b&amp;les, BJ

Southern hosts
tough Trimble
on senior night
. BY ScoTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent
•

RACINE - This week
Southern (0-8, 0-3 TVC)
closes out its home football
season against Trimble (5·3,
2-1 TVC) as the Tornadoes
·. celebrate senior night.
,The yo1,1ng So\lthem club
hopes to salvage some
respect and send the senior
members of the fall sports
teams off on a high note.
Last week Southern
Tornadoes lost to a very
tough Waterford team, 58-8.
On the bright side of things,
Southern had its best ground
game of the year, gaining
much of its yardage against
the Waterford first-learners .
The team improved so much
tha't Coach Barr has thought
about revitalizing his J.L.
Express offense from his
championship days at
Eastern.
· DefensivelY., however,
Southern still ~s some
holes to patch. Combine that
with a potential all-state run-

nin,g back, Dan Doebereiner,
and the game turned nasty
early last week. Defensively,
Andrew Philson had a sack
and several othe~ key defen~
sive stops.
Offensively, Southern's
Matt Thomas scored the
,Tornadoes' only touchdown
and rushed 16 times for 56
yards. A.J. Simpson, a fresh~
man and potential' future star
for the Southerners, led the
le3UJ with 21 'c¥fies wr 67
yards.
· Kyle McKeever caught
the lone Southern completion as back-up quarterback
Derek Teaford tossed just
two passes, but did a great
job running the • SHS
Pl..se s• Southem, BJ.

�.

•
Thursday, October 17, 2002

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

:Thursday, October 17, 2002

-

www.mydailysenHnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

.

Prep Football

:Prep Football

Raiders take aim
at .soo campaign

Road to the pia .. gets Blue Devils hope to

BY BUTCH COOPER
Staff writer

Sfltlb Point
l at

CHESHIRE - Winning
the final two games of the
s.eason agai nst South Point
7:~ p.m., Friday
and Fairland would be a good
River Valley Sladium ·
thing for a couple of reasons ·
.
\
for Ri ver Valley.
play well and execute."
Not only would the Raiders
South Point is hoping to
fini sh third in the Ohio Valley return to earlier season form
Conference. but the Raiders in which the Pointers were 2would also finish with their 2 and coming off a 13-12
best record in school history lea~ue win against Fairland in
ill .500.
whtch they ran over the
River Valley has had a cou- Dragons as Caleb Copley had
ple of four.-win seasons, but 98 yards on . 12 carries and a ·
never a five-win season that touchdown.
would give the Raiqers their
The Pointers have had to
first non-losing campaign.
.face the top two teams in the
"Right now, we're playing league the past couple of
for pride," said River Valley weeks with lopsided losses
head coach Greg Dee! whose coming against Chesapeake
team is in the middle of a (44-0) last week and Rock
three game home stand to end Hill (46-7) two weeks ago.
the season.
The
Raiders
showed
For ~ of t~at to happen, improvement against the
thougH, River Valley (3-5, 1-2 Redmen as Burley Geiger
OVC) needs to defeat South rushed for 74 yards and Allan
Point this weekend. ,
Brown had 53.
"After watching the (game)
Dee! wants to see a more
film and stuff, we told the balanced game with his team
kids we thought we had a passin~ ~he ball a little more.
chance," said Deel. ''They're . "We ve . got to be a more
some good football teams. balanced team," said Dee!.
We're not saying we're going "We're going to have to
to win, but we feel we can throw the football a little bit
beat these two teams if we and I think we can."

River Valley

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OUR ~EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN. NEXT WEEK'S MATC.HUPS

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field is the teams leading

:;;:;,..="' ~~~J ~~~ st.mg·g.ling Bu.lldog·s

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•of an '*!defeated.2002

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Marys at 7:30p.m. on Friday. senioc Jeff Sole and Junia: Cody
The Blue Devils are also 'Vtnderlic with senioc Craig Bills
=~~et:S~ fighting to stay alive in the
· the tigk m1 pa;itioo.
:three w,teks of the regular sea- pfayoff picture with the
fimt line shoold be a
!SOD .~withahomecoo- Pleasants County team cur- senior laden crew coosi&lt;lin~&gt; of
1
n.::.:
Keith-i"Er,_,
!!f:sl
nlWly ight against visit- rently holdin~down the 18th ~y Dickson,.
UICD
JYWJ&lt;:&lt;
mg.
Sl,
Marys.
Coach
Ed
.
spot
among
Class
A
postPem
Hashman
and
Bobby
Loar.
1
(CrOnik.y's Mason County 11 · season hojlefuls. St. Marys,
Wahamil continues 10 spread
, ~ ridjng a seven game win- (4-3) has faced four ranked thewealtharoundasfarasstatislnmg streak on the year and wiU foes already this year with tics go throughout die fintseven
fbe seeking 10 eQUal the Bend WHS being the fifth. 1'he games with 13 playm scaing
~,ad with a Blue Devils have defeated poinls and six of those scoring at
I•Area team's 1981 511
·-'-""IS
j,besI evet start of ei victories Ritchie COIDI_ty (30-28), Notre least 330 ....,;....,
r-~- Gabe'.~.....
mua • .
won 13 Dame (33-0), Valley Wetzel tre team scaing I~ with 68
1m a row. Wahama
:sttaight regular season contests (34-13) ~ l9tb rated W"ut points on 11 toociKiowns and a
•during the past two gridiron County (IU). The losllll two-point conversion. Lambert
Icmnpaigns.
. have come to Class · AA has also rushed fa: 413 yanls in
! The White Falcons, for the ranked foes in 15th ranked 71 carries w.hiJe completing two
:second time in as many Braxton County (43-29), 9th oftm:epassesforlo3yanlsand
:weeks, saw its position rated Calhoun County (19-0) a touchdown.
•amoog , the Class A rankings and 2nd !~ted Class A oPPD:"
Senior Justin Jordan is the
:decline despite WHS rolling a nent ~!Iiams
. town (54-14). . team rushing leader with 562
:Frida~ night 48-Q homecom~
!odl Mote took ove~ ·~ yanls in 56 canies with senior
ling v1ctory over South Gallia. reJ~ of the head CO!lchilig Ryan MitcheU picking up 435
, Wahama advanced 10 the fifth duties at St. Mary~ w1th the yards on the ground in only 38
: slot amOng Class A playoff ftrSt year coach ·hopm~ to tum tries. Sophomore O!ad Zerkle .
:contenders through five around the Blue Devds piO- has connected on 14 of28 pass: weeks of the high school foot- gram t~a.t has •sufferecl a es this season fa: 286 yanls and
, ball campaign before tum- steady dlstn,tegration over the five touchdowns. Anthony
: bling to seventh and its cur- past several Y~· Wahalila MitcheU is the top receiver with
: rent eighth position during hql~ a ~-I edge m the overall eight receptions for 217 yards
: each of the past two weeks.
senes WI~ St Ma~Y.s but die and two touchdowns. Junior
· \ _ The reason for the Falcons• loc~ gnd~en will su_rely Aaron Faulk has caught three
rating descent is due to the rece1ve a ltlff _test_. especially Zerkle aerials on the year with
,poor showing of the' WHS under the positive m~~ of ail three going for six points.
opponents on the 2002 season. Mote. 1be Blue ~v1ls trailed
Defensively Faulk and
Currently only two of the Bend number two Willi~town by Anthony Mitchell are the
Area team's grid adversaries a mere 12-8. margm at~ half Bend Area teams tackle lead. .sport a winning record in before fallmg a_part m the ers with Aaron Davis and R. T.
Waterford and Duval. The · games final24 mmutes.
Roush
following
close
•R!maining five opponents have
Sophomo.-e Scott Maston behind. The WHS defensive
. obtairied a paltry 8-30 reconi ·~as ~ll'!JC 0!1 to replace re~~ secondary has intercepted 14 .
this year, which ultimately mg Juruor SJpal caller Robb1e . enemy passes on the season
means a less than desirable Pascarella (3-11 155) ~~;t , the )Vith Brandon Gagnon pick·amount of bonus points being quarterback
pos1t1on. ing off fol!f, Faulk three,
'4warded the MaSon County ?ascarella '!IS replaced early Jeshua Branch and Perry Ellis
~uad and a drop in the ratings. ~ the openmg game and ~ two each in addition to one
, • llowever, the filial thtee s~ce movecf to a s~~g apiece
from · Anthony
:2002 WHS opponents, with a WJngbac~ . Expected to Jotn Mitchell,· Ryan Mitchell and
.combined 14.:JJ slate going Maston m the SMHS back- Justin Jordan.

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HOQWr Dllclcly

The Maslrecl Picker .
Recoid: 48-32
Last week: 7·3
(winners In .lll!ld) ··
Au.. at

GaHia Academy

'South Feint .,
Atyer Y.1111f

Eaotem at

Yfllli1grd

Hannan at

AotOCIIIIII

Logon at

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Cqly"*" :
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Scoreboa[d
19.8250. 2.Toi.,Cont.Cath. (8.0)17.6875. 2)12.2530.8.Bollefontaine(6-2)12.2000. Weatern Reoerve (7·1) 11.7000. 8. OoGraff River11de (11-2) ' 7.9995. 10. N.
3. Tol. DeSalel (7·1) 17.5000. 4. Tiffin 7. Now Richmond (7·1) 11 .8500. e. St. Caatatla Margarena (8·2) 10.4875. 9.. t.ewlllllurgTrild(ll-2)7.9750.
Prep Football
· Colurnbion (7·1) 18.2375. 5. Colo. Mifflin Paris Graham (6·2) 11 .2875. 9. Cin. Delphos Jefferaon (6-2) 10.4000 10.
OHSAA ComputBr Ratlnga
(5-3) 15.3625. 8. Colo. Walnut Ridge (7·1) Wyoming (5-3) 10.1500. tO. St. Marys Bluffton (6-2) 8.6250.
AP State Footbltll Polla
14.8895. 7·. Colo.St.Chlrtea (6·2)14.8090. Memorial (5-3) 9.7250. .
Region · 19-1. Woodollotd Monroe
COLUMBUS (AP) - Here are the llfth B.Maumea (6-2) 14.8125. 9. Oregon Clay
DIVISION IV
Central (8.0) 17.3785. 2. Amanda· COLUMBUS (AP)- How I alate panel
weekly lootoall oomputor raUnge from tho. (B-2) 12.4875. 10.Sylvania ~twlew (5-3) Region J3-l . Akron Manchester (6.0) Ciea""'"'k (7·1} 14.5750.3.Barnesvlllo (7· o1 aporia writers and broadcaatera ratea
Ohio High School Athletic Asooclatlon. 11.7625.
18.1730. 2. CioYe. VA-st. Joseph (6·2) . I) 12.0265. 4. Sarahoville Shenandoah (5· Ohlohlghschoolfoolbanlaamllnthelixth
Ratings are by division and region with Region 7- t. Green (7·1) 19.9825. 2. 15.9250. 3. Chagrin Falls (7·1 ) 13.6845. 4. 3) 10.9750. ' 5. WHEELERSBURG (54) ~ly AsiOCiated Preas poll ol 2002, by
record and avorago bi-lovel points per Grafton Midview (8.0) I7.8000. 3. Avan Sullivan Black River (7·I) I3.2825. 5. 10.1130. e. Johnolown·Monroe (6·2) OHSAA divislona, with won-toot nt()()t&lt;l and
~amo (top eight teams In eaell region Lake (7·1) 16.9750. 4. Macedonia Girard (7·1) 12.6875. e. East Palestine (7· 10.6750. 7. LUCASVIUE VALLEY (11-2) ~points (flrsti)laeo 110tes In parenthe·
advance to regional qua~erllnals) :
Nordonia (6-0) I5.3375. 5. East liverpool I} 12.3250. 7. Perry (6-2) I I.2805. 8.. 40.5250. 8. Jol&gt;nstown,.l!orthridge (5-3) ses):
DIVISION 1
(5·3) I I.9790. t. MARIETTA (7·1) 'mung. Ursuline (4-4) I1.1445. 9. Young. 10.2000.9. Steub.Cath.Cont.(6-2) 8.9925.
DIVISION I
Region, t-t. Solon (6-0) 24.6875. 2. 11.3245. 7.AmhorotSteeto(6·2)10.1375. Mooney (4-!) 9.7825. tO. Akron St. tO.Crooksville(s-3)8.5875.
W-1. P1l
Warren Harding (B-0) 22.9200. 3. Montor ·8. COpley (5-3) 9.7125. 9. Mans. Madison Vinco.!JI·Si.Mary (4-4) 8:1500.
' Region 20-t . Marion Pleasant (8·0) 1. Warren Harding (30) .... ......... 6-0 · 359
(7·1) 17.9500. 4. LokewoocfSt. Edward (7· (5-3) 9.4500. 10. Richfield R...,re (4-4) · • Regloo 14-;1 . Rossford (7·1) te.9B75. 2. 13.9625. 2. Morral Rldgodato (7·1) 2. Solon (5) .............................. 6-0 308
t) 17.7185. 5. Lakeside (6-2) 17.208(). 6. 9.3500.
Ottawa·Giandoff (B-0) 16.8500. 3. Keilton 13.3500. 3. Cin. Hills Christian Acad. (8.0) 3. Dublin Scioto (I) ..................8.0 281
Strongsville. (6·2) t 7.075Cl. 7, CioYe. St. Region 9-1 . Day. Cham-Julienne (8.0) (6·2) 16.0875.4.11rchbold (7·1) t5.o750.5. 13.0785. 4. Leoo Creek E. Clinton (8.0) 4. Cln. Elder (I )........................ 7·1 225
Ignatius (6·2) 16.3585. 6. North Olmsted 20.8500. 2. Vandalia Butler (7·1) 19.3375. Upper Sandusky (8·2) 12.6250. 6. Marion It .6500. 5. Bainbridge Paint Valley (7·1) 5. Brunswidc.............................tl-0 170
(6'2) 14.5750. 9. CieiiO. Glenville (6·2} 3. Kings Mills Kings (6-0) 19.2130. 4. RiwrValley (8-2) 12.7125. 7. Pemberville 11 .5750. e. Gahanna Cola. Acad. (7·1) 6.MassillonWashington .......... 7·1 148
13.9660. 10. Voting. Austintown-F~ell (5·3) Trotwood·Madiaon (7·1) · 18.2750. 5. Eastwood (7·1) 11 .7375. 8. Ontario (7·1) 11 .5375. 7. Cots. Ready (6·2) 10.3250. 8, 7. Cle. St. tgnatiua ....................ll-2 122
13.1500.
·
Loveland (8·0) 17.6595. 6. Trenton 10.6750. 9. Tontogany Otsego (6·2) St Henry (5·3) 9.4750. 9. Arcanum (6·2) · ,8 Cin.Anderson ......................tl-0 117
Region Z--1 . Findlay (7-1} 20.4875. 2 Edgewood (7·1) 18.6125.7. Day.Corroll (6· 10.5500. 10.- Della (7·1) 10.2750.
9.3000. 10. Yersalles (5-3) 9.0250.
9. Dublin Coffman .................. ..7·1
97
.Brunswictc (8.0} 19.5625. 3. Spring South 2) 14.3250. 8. Cin. Mt. Healthy (6·2} Region 15-1. PORTSMOUTH (7,1)
DIVISION VI
IO.LokewoodSt.Edward .........7·1 79
(6·2) 15.0000.4.Wadsworth (6-2) 14.3250. 13.1910. 9. Cin. McNicholas (5·3) 12.3500. 21.11895. 2. NEW LEXINGTON (11-0) Region 21-t. LoweiMUe (B-0) 14.6250. Olhera '"""lYing 12 or rnorw polnla:
5.Hudson (fl.O) 13.9750.6.Marloo Hardi!111 10. Cin.Woodwar&lt;l (7·1) 12.0815.
21.5000; 3. PORTSMOUTH WEST.(7·1) 2. Mogadore (7·1) 14.3250. 3. East Canton 1I. Pickerington 28. 12. Findlay 24. 13.Cin.
DIVISION Ill
16.9675. 4. IRONTON (8-1) 16.2517. 5. (6·2) 10.5875. 4. Monroeville (8·2) 9.0250. Colerain 21 . 14. Hudson 14.
(6·2) 13.3250. 7. Tot. St. John's (s'31
13.1815. 8. Wooster (5·3) 12.6825. 9. Region 9-1 . Clove. Benodlc11ne (7·1) Coshocton (B-0) 16.1376. 6. Lone. Fairfield 5. Cleve. Cuya. Hts. (5·3) 8.5600. 6. St
DIVISION II
Mansfield 18·2) 12.7625. tO. Cuy~ 20.6375. 2.Usbon Beawr (7·1) 18.1775.3. Union (7·1) 16.1000.7, Martins Forry (8.0) Mary Contra! Catholic (4-4) 8.0000. 7,
W-1. P1l
Falls (4·4) t t .6250.
Hunt. Valley Univ. School (6-2) 17.6815, 4. 15.5750, 8. Waverly (6·2) 14.5750. I .· Windham (7·1) 7.9055. a: Leetonia (5·3) I, Day. Cham..Julienne (20) .... 6-0 335
Region J-1 . Dublin Coffman (7·1) Hubbard (6-0) 16.6825. 5. Richmond WELLSTON (8-21 14.1125. 10. 7.4625. 9. Kirtland (4-4) 7.3270. 10. 2. Louisville (11) ............. .......... 6-0 301
20.2000. 2. Dublin SCioto (B-0) 19.9750. 3. Edison (7·1) 16.0410. 6. Sleubeovillo (7·1) ~lliamsport WesHall (8·2) 10.9375.
Fairport Harbor Harding (6·2) 7.1715.
3. Tol. Cent. Coth. (2) ............... 6-0 237
N. Canton Hoo""r (6·2) 19.t 625. 4. 14 . 9~1·5 . 7. Poland Seminary (6·2) Region 16-1. Coldwater (B-0) 18.3250. Region 22-1 , Columbus Grove (6·0) 4. Kings Mills Kings (1) ..... ,...... 6-0 · 231
Gahanna lincoln (7·1) 18.6125. 5. 13.5625. 8. Chesterland W. Geauga (6·2) 2. Reading (8.0) 18.0625. 3. Arci'Oishop 14.9750. 2. Edon (8.0) 13.9730. · 3. 5. Conlleld ............................... 6-0 218
Pictcering&lt;on (7·1) 18.3750. 6. Mass. Perry 12.2995.9. Warrensville His. (5-3) 12.2485. Aller (7·1) I7.8250. 4. Plain City Jooathon Northwood (6-0) 13.6625. 4. Tllfln Calvo~ 6. Tot: St. Francia (2) ................ 7·1 164
. (7-t) t8.0250. 7. Mass. Washington (7·1) IU. Parma Hts. Holy Name (5-3) t 1.6500. Alder (7·1) 15.2250. 5. Clarlcsvllle Clinton· (6·2) 13.2000.5.Rawson Cory-Rowson (8· 7. Loveland .. ........................... 6-0 152
15.6675. 6. Upper Arlington (6·2) 15.2875. Region 1~1 . Qak Hart&gt;cr (fHi) 23.6000. · Massie (7·1} 13.3430. 6. W.Mibon Millon· 0) 12.9750. e. Sycamore Mohawk (7·1) 8. Cots. Brootchavon ................. 7·1 I16
9 Xenia (6-2) 13.5500. tO. Grove City (7·1} 2. Akron Hoban (7·1) 19.6000. 3. Akron Union (S-3)' 9.4825. 7. Spring Northeastern t t .5375.- 7. Hopewet~Loudon (6·2) 8.8125. 9. Macedonia Nordonla (t) ...... 6-0 106
12.9625.
Buchtel (8.0} · 19.4825. 4. Willard (7-1) (5·3) 8.6500. 6. Dayton Oakwood (6·2) a. McComb (5·3) 8.3500. 9. Dol. Ayersvilte IO.Trotwood·Madison ...............7·1 35
Region 4-1 . Cin. Elder (7·1) 22.5470. 2. 18.2875. 5. Cuya. Falls Walsh Jesu~ (5-3) 8.5375. 9. Cin. Door Park (4-4) 8.3250. 10. (5·3} 7.8155. 10. Allica Seneca East (5·3) · Olhera '"""lvlng 12 or morw polnta:
Cin 1\nderson (8·0) 22.3250. 3. Cin. 16.2205. 6. Medina Buckeye (7·1) 14.8625. Broolcville (4-4) 7.1125.
7.3500.
11, Vandalia Buller 31 , 12. Grafton Midvlew
Princeton (7·1) 19.5500. 4. Huber HIS. 7. Conal FuHon N.W.·(7·1) 14.6250. 8.
DIVISIONV
,
Region 23-1 . Danville (8.0ftt.4'/70. 2. 2t . 13. Green 20. 14. Madloon 18, 15.
wayne (6·2) 19.3375.5. Cin. Colerain (7·1) Wooster Triway (7·1) 1'4.5750.9. Napoleon Region 17-1 . SmithvUie (8.0) I7.6500. Strasbwg·Franklln (8.0) I1.2375. 3. WMioughby Soutll 15. 18. Tiffin Columbian
17.6Soo. 6. Lebanon (7·1} 17.0000. 7. Cln. - (7·1) 13.8500. tO. Clyde (6·2) 12.2375.
2. M~lelield Cardinal (11-01 14.1375.' 3. Shadyside (6·2) 10.5625. 4. Millersport (6· 12.
DIVISION Ill
Moeller (S·3) 16.5415. 8. Harrison (7·1) Region tt-1, Newark Licking Valley (8- DaHon(7·1) 13.5625.4. Bedford Chane! (8· 2) 9.1375. 5. WILLOW WOOD SYMMES
W-1. Pta
16.3625. 9. Cin. St. Xavier (5·3) 15.9375. 0) 19.6875. 2. Col~ DeSalel (6-2) 18.2130. 2) 12.9500. 5. Roctcy River luth. W. (7·1) VALUY (8-2) 7.0420. 6. Newark Coth. (4·
,10. Clayton Nortllmont (6·21 15.8125.
3. GALL GALLIA ACAD. (7·1) 18.8520. 4. 1I.71 25. 6. Now Middletown Springfield (S- 4) 6.8480. 7. Beallsville (5-3) 6.4125. 8. t, Akr. Buchtel (18) .................. 8.0 332
DIVISION II
Cols.Wanerson (5-3)15.6000.5. Circleville 3) 10.1000. 7. Gates Mills Gilmour 1\cad. GLOUSTER TR..BLE (S-3) &amp;.3000. 9. 2. Newark Licking Valley (5) .....6-0 298
Region 5-1 . Louisville (6.0) 22.5250. 2. (7·1) 14.2875. 6. Sunbury Big Walnut (6-2) (5·3) 9.4875. 8. Lisbon David AAderson (6· WATERFORD (5·3) 8.1690. 10. 3.Germantown Vall.View (5) .... 8.0 270
Canlield (8.0) 17.0500. 3. Uniontown lake 14.2375. 7. .Cola. Hamilton ·Twp. (6·2) 2) 9.0375. 9. Gates MHis Hawken (6·2) SCiarDVILLE COMMUNrrY (11-2) 6.0495. · 4, Hubbard ...............................8·0 224
(5-3) 16.t 625. 4. Olmsted falls (6·2) 14.2125.8 Cola. Beechcroft (6·2} 13.4875. 8.8705. 10. Newton Fall' (5·3)8.6125.
Region 24-1 . Marla Stein Marion Local 5. Oak Harbqr (3) .....................6-0 tat
15.4125 5. Madison (7·1} 15.0625 6. 9. Thornville Sheridan (6-2) 13.2875. 10. Region 16-1. Del. Tinora (7.0) 15.3268, (1·1) 15.0375. 2. Mechanicsburg (8.0) 6. Cle. Benedlc1ine (I) .............7-1 t56
Warren How1and (S-3) 13.1635. 7. Young. Whrtehaii·Yearlng (7·1) 13.0375.
2. Bucyrus Wynlord (7-t) 14.1375. 3. 12.7500. 3. Dola Hardin Northem (8.0) 7. Urbana .................................8.0 t 27
Chaney (5·3) 130000.8. Gartield Heights Region 12-t . Urbana (8.0) 16.7125. 2. Hamler Patrick Henry (7-1) 13.9250. 4. 12.1625. 4. S. Charleston SE (7·1) 8. Akr. Hoban (1} ......................7·1 121
(7-I I I 2.8000. 9. Bedford (6-2) t t .8000. Germantown Valley View (8.0) 16.3000. 3. Columbia Station Columbia (7·1) I2.9750. II.8000, 5. CovingtQfl (B-0) II.6625. 6. 9. Steubenville (1} ....................7·1 62
49
10. Chagrin Falls Kenston (5·3) 1H500._. Tipp City TiPIIOCI!noe (7·1) 15.9875. 4. . 5. Delphos St. John's (6·2) 11 .9675. 6. Troy Christian (7·tf 11.0515. 7. Alina (6·2) tO. Cols. DeSalel ..................... 6·2
Region 6-t. Cots. Brookhaven (7-1) Bellbrook (6·2) 13.9875. 5.. Day. Dunbar (6· Lorain Clearv... (7·1) I1.7415. 7. Collins 8.6125.8. Cin.Country Day (6-2) 8.0280.9 . Other~ receiving 12 or more pointt:

tt .LitbonBeavor34.12.Nopoteon31.13.
Wlllor&lt;l 27. 14. Canal FuHon NW 18.
t5.CUyahogl Falls 1'/ailll JOIUII 15. !~·
(tie) GALLIPOLIS OALLIA, Cats.
. wanoraon 12.
Dl'iiSION IV
W-1. "I , Coldwalllr (21) ................~.... 11-0 31$
2. N"" Lexington (5) ................ 11-0 287 .
3. Akr.Monct- (3) ............. 6-0 284
4. Coshoclon .......................:.... e-o 235
5: Ottawa-Glandorf (2) ............. 6-0 185 ·
6. Martins Ferry (3) ..... :............ 6-0 173
7, l'orlarno&lt;lth .......................... 7·I
8. Konerlng Alter (I ).......... ....... 7·1

S.lronton .................................. ll-1

1f7

105
68
51

I 0. R...-ng (I) .................... .'.... 6-0
Olhora rwcoMng 12 or morw polnta:
t t. Kenton 27. 12. Plain G!ly Jonothan
Alder 25. I3. (tie) ~. Ctarlcsvllle

Cllnton·M'assie 20. 15. East Pilesllne 16.
I6. (tie) Rossford, Sullivan Black River I5.
t 8. Girard 14.
DIVISION¥
•
W-1. P1l
1. Marton Pleasant (26) ........... il-0
Jar
2. Woodslleld Monroe C. (5) .... 6-0
3. Sllitlwllle (2) ...................... , 8-o

305

292
4. Middlefield Car&lt;linal (1) ........ 11-0 ~
5. 1\manda·Ciearcreolc (I) .... :.. 6-t 178
6. Cln. Hllla ............................... S.O 126
7. Deiphoa St. John's .............. -.6-2 124
8. DaMon ........ :......................... 7·1 114
9. Bamii8Yille ................,.......... 7·1 67
10. Defiance nnora ................... 7.() 39
OU... '-vlng 12 or - . pointa:
II. Balrllridge Paint Valley 32. 12. Lies
Crook E. Cinton 31. 13. Hamler Patric:lc
Henry 25. 14. Castalia Margarotta 17. 15.
Gahanna Cots. Academy 12. '
DIVISION VI
W-L

Pili

I.Mita SlsilMIIDt La:. (24) ......... 7· I

329

2. Danville (8) .......................... ,6-0 287
3. Colu!llbus Grove (2) ............ B-0 262
4, Strasburg·Franklln.......:........ B-0 ·:
5. Mogadore (1) ....................... 7-t
6. LCMeliYIIIe.......................... .8.0 1~7
7. Dola Hardin Northern ....... .- .. B-0 1l&gt;6
a. Covington.. :.. ... ,................... e-o 112
9. Cory·Rawson (1} .................. 6-0 ~3
to. Mecllank:sburg ....................a.o 81
Otltera rwcelvlng 12 o r - . potnto:
11 . Sycamore Mohawlc 16. 12. Northwood
15. 13. Shadyside 13. 14.S.Charleston-6E
12,

..

'.

~~ . :~-~Meigs
..

way we've prepared for ev«y
,
After being down with a 23 record at the midway point
' · flam Page 11
of tbe season, Chancey said
it's a credit to.the personality
· die year.
·
and work ethic of his players
; ; ''Well,. yoq know really we that the Marauders are in
;would
to end the year on a
- 'th love
500 to end ..up,..._at__least position
note.
The
t WI
a.
season, ""''"cey winning
•said. "But really, we talk to the Marauders' season finale i.t a
~ pels about Wcing them one at a week away. at home aga~st
then reflect about the year Belpre. ~
· .
,fitter on when it's over. We're . "Well I think it's a comple.going after this one the same ment to our kids in that they

one of them."

:time

Eagles

.,..

from Pap II

'-

.,''
•

~ ~e offensive line improved
·,that unit's productivity, as
-. we
' 11.
.
.
~ ~ While ;Minear al.'pears to be
•Doeberemer's herr apparent
··in the Hocking Divis1on, the
•" stress will be more on the ·
': Eastetit defense this week in
trying to corral the back one

••

feum Pap II

t: ~
1,._ • . . .

~ 6ffense,

to

'

POINT CLEAR , AL

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spaat MARRIOTT'S GRAND HOTEL GOLF
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Enjoy self at the re•ort Lakewood Cour~e• or at
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For Spa remvation• call 2!51.990.6385.· For
· golf and hotel package• at
Grand or anywhere on the Trail, call800.257.3465.

The

.
I

I

•

,.

ALAJIAMA'S

.

Teaford suffered
I·~vere bums to pans of his
t: hands earlier in tlie week, but
1:•ut fOI'th a gutsr, effort.
1• ~ Southern will have its
•:bands; full with the Trimble
f-effeose, which aired it out
· last week against Federal
I Hocking, 34-14. Trimble has
a duel thieat attack in that
. I!Jeir first• three touchdowns
t:from last wi:ek were passes
d rom
quarterback A.J.
::lenkint ~ho passed for 165
. yards. " Overall, Trimble
~amassed 3~9 yards.
·
f: : Thi&amp;,, ,brings an especially
, glooqJy omen to Friday's out; come as Federal Hocking
claimed a 52-0 shut out win
over Southern. Cody Ball ran
for four touchdowns and rushed
fa: nearly 300 yanls as Fedmll
Hocking rolled over the
Tornadoes 52-o in gaux: six;
Coach · Dave Barr . cites
some positive ip the statistics
though as Federal has had a
more eiplosive offense
across the three league games '
thus far. Trimble is nearly
, even in the offensi ve-defen: sive spread - 60 points
: scored, 62 given up. Barr
- reels that. if Southern can

l

•

ball game. It wasn't because recent struggles, Bokovitz
who they are or we showed sees a real threat this week·
up. It's because we played end.
GALLIPOUS ·- The past smart football, hard football . "They' re . lurking in the
two weeks have not been We took it at them.
shadows," said · Bokovitz.
"Our kids know if you play "I'm not just saying that to
very kind to Athens.
Nor has the Bulldogs' hard, you'll get a big return ." try and get the kids ftred up.
schedule been kind.
While Gregory has strug- They are ·a good football
The Bulldogs offense, gled the past couple of team. They beat Warren
which has been touted as one weeks, he only had 78 yards Local worse than we did. ·
of the best in the area led by on 7-of-28 passing against They beat Meigs worse than
quarterback Grant Gregory; Logan, he's still a very real we did. They're .physicaL
has been shut out in their threat to any opposing They've got a nice running
past two outings to defense.
game. They 're quarterback is
Portsmouth (22-0) · two
And he's not just a threat such a dangerous passer."
weeks ago and at Logan (6- in the air, but on the ground These next two games will
0) last week.
as well.
seem like playoff contests
So, Frida~ game at
"He's going to be the ~sr 'Yith not only playoff posiMemorial Field between quarterback we've seen this !ton on the !me, but a shot aiAthens and Gallia Academy year," said Bol(ovitz. "He the outright league title.
COtj,l.d be another shutout of can run. He's a strong runner. "We wani to keep ·some
the··ltulldogs offense.
He's just physically strong. momentum generated," said
Or could be a breakout You don't bring him down Bokovit2. ''We want to win
game for Gregory, who at with BrJI tackles. You've got the league out right. We want
one point this season had led to put the tneat to him and to be Athens because we•
Athens · to a 5: 1 record and wraphimup. He'sprettyelu- don't like them. I can give
looking like a playoff team. sive. He's quick. He might you a million excuses why
"They' re a very dangerous be faster than some of our we want to keep playing
team," sat'd Gall'Ja Acade my defiensJ·ve lt'n'emen' chast'ng these things like playoff
head coach Matt Bokovitz of him. We haven't had that sit· games.
this Athens squad. "They uation yet this year where the "We'd really like the fan s
played Lorcan to 6-0 last quarterback's faster than our 10 treat this Friday nights ball
def.ens1·v·e lm' emen.
game as if it' was a playoff
week an d ost a tough one.
h
bee
·
. fkid swho
''The other thing that aist.m
,, osp ere game,
ause tt
They •vegota·Ioto
. .,
·
like to play.''
makes him scary to us is that
For the Blue Devils (7-1, he's got great vision of the · And _It s ~trong ~an support
4-0 SEOAL), it's a return to field when he's on the scram- B.okovltz Is seeking Fnday
league play after stuMing ble. He can. throw the foot- mght and next .week wtth
•
II
two key games remammg on
Portsmouth · at · Spartan ball , and he s rea Y accu- the Blue Devils' schedule. ~
Stadium last week; 28-12.
rate.
"I' h · th r
'II
.
.
.
ff
.That'
h
th
B·
l
De
'I
m
opmg
e
.ans
wt
Ty S unmons IS commg o
s w Y e . ue .v1 s . remember all the years
another big game for the have been w~king a h~e Athens got on us and kind Qf
Blue Devils with a pair of extra on .passmg .attack thJs have a grudge against Athens
rushing touchdowns and 196 week while showmg respect and. make some noise," said
yards on the ground as he for run.
·
·
Bokovit2. "Our fans haven't
broke a school rushing
Also on the ground is made much noise at our
record.
Chris Hewett, who will be home gamesthis year and I'd
"Our confidence level is · seeking to break the 1,000 like them to get fired up for a ~
going to be high, there's no yard mark this weekend.
home game because we' ve
doubt about is," said
While being shutout on the got two really important
Bokovitz coming off last ground against Portsmouth, games coming up."
week's win. "Our kids know he had 39 .yards against
''We're going to go and try
· the reason they won down Logan and now stands at 964 to take care of business
there at Portsmouth is how yards on the season.
.
Friday night. Our kids know ·
hard they played in the foot·
Overall, despite Athens' what's at stake."

inler Sauings

•I ' .

~ (lJ

last time before he grabs a ·
diploma.
·
Again, the Eagles' defense
will attempt to set up the
team's offense until the squad
gets an opening to mark ·a
mark on the scoreboard. That
stop corps has been success- '
ful in recent losses as well liS
the blowout shutout win over
Miller.
,
It's just now that both
offense and defense seem to
be J:VOrking to compliment
one another. Eagles' so~hO:

more
quarterback Ken
Arnsbary seemed to find his
confidence as well as liis
receivers against Mill~r. and
the soph stayed away from
forcing the ball and making
mistakes. Eastern turned the
ball over only once against ,
·Miller, lowenng the team's
average of four turnovers per
contest.
Newland was unavailable
for comment Wednesday.
Kickoff is set for 7:30 in
Waterford.
. -·z w

I

~~~ Southem

I, •

7mmerse yourself in all. the pleasures of a
European Spa. Experience the lateat in spa ·
therapie• and treatments. Allow trained handa
ma11age away the remnant. of a hard day of,
golf or ju1t the care• of the world, 111 you relax
in luxury. Experience the popular Hot Rock•
treatment, Vichy 1hower, anti- aging facial• or
give younelf a work- out in the cardiava•cular
workout' room·. Give your~elf over to all the

continue to work hard every
week and stick together as a
team and I think that's a good
reason football is a good lesson in life,"Chancey said.
"Because times are going to
be tough and when they are
tough you cant point fingers
· and you have to stick together
as a family and as a team and
circle the wagons, knock the
dust off and keep fighting.
''That's what they've done
· and .that's .what I am proud
of."
;J

BY BUTCH COOPER
Staff writer

"

F! ..

\ ''

•
•

slow the air game that
Southern can play with the
Tomcals.
· Besides the air attack that
saw R.J. Andrews, Travis
McElfresh, . ZilCh. Sliust,
Robby Jellkinsr and Rya4
Nagucki grab, seven pas~~ot.,.
24 yards or more, Trim1ilf
has great talent in the bllctcl
fit;ld. Nagucki hammered O!il
83 yards last week and Justltl
Jenkins added 56.
The Tomcats' 41-0 shellacking of Southern (then 4~
5) last year was another h~­
'dle the Tomcats overcame m
not only securing a playoff
berth, but a home playoff
berth. The Tomcat win, cou·
pled with a come· from- .,
behind Nelsonville win over
Belpre, secured valuable
points toward solidifying at
least a founh place computer
ranking in the region and the

play-off bid.
Like Southern, Trimble is
young, but more experienced
than Southern. Most of its
championship team from last
year is gone. Jenkins is one of
the returnees; he rushed for
186 yards on 15 carries and
scored three touchdowns.
Top that with the Trimble tradibon and state-playoff experience, and Coach Faires has
been able to get the most
from his youth. .
·
Last week, Trimble felt it
would. reach the pre-season
goal of 7-3, which means the
'Cats have all but chalked up
a victory in their mind
against Southern.
Barr hopes to use this to
fire up his troops. for what
fans hope to · be Southern's
best game of the season.
Game time is 7:30 in
Racine.

.·

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- - ·-- • - ...... ---''--,-~-'' , _ _':t%.·.1!•:.......

.,

'•

�October 17 2002 ·

B4•The

rt-ursday, October 17,2002

~World

,washbum: An els' big game
:hunter to pitch Game 1 .

252 Upper
River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

992-2825
Place Your Business's Ad here
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Dave.or Jessica·
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,, 'A-' ~ •

Back to Martinsville

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chlclf'n

The Winston Cup series returns tO Martnsville
Speedway this week. Bobby Labonte won the lradls
spring "'""· the Virginia 500 on Ap&lt;il14.

"

.

228 Main St.

UPCOMING ON THE TRACKS
'
WINSTON
CUP

Wmston Cup: .Martinsville
pre-race coverage noon

5((),

E!Yf Sundllyon NBC.

I

Craftsman Truck:

American Racing.Wheels 200,
5 p.m. EDT Nov. 2on ESPN.

Stewart 'racing to win'
as season winds down
·By RICK MINTER
Cox News Service

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

I
I

BUSCH SERIES

Storyline: Wilh five lllces remaining in lhe 2002
Winslon Cup season, lour drivers are within 1B2
pOiniS of staridings leader Tony Stewart.

1
I

1 Storyline: With live lllOOS remaining on lhe
Busch Senes schedule, Greg Birile has a 166I pOint lead over Jason Kel"" in lhe slandings.·

Conoonl, N.C.
ony Stewart fmished third in Sunday's .UAWGM Quality 500 and increased his points lead
from 72 to 97 and moved a few notches closer
to his first Winston Ctip championship. He didn't
do it by racing conservatively:'
·· ~ was racing to win," he said. "I was nmnuig
them down, but I just ran it too

Kcnseth said. "1 think he's going to be real tough to

beat."
· .
Stewart seems relaxed and confident et1tering the
final five races of the season. He remains on probation for puriching a photographer at Indianapolis in
August, but appears to have put his ofi·track trou.
bles behind him. He says he hAsn't been·paying a
lot of attention to the points or the standings.
"The only reason I know is because all the media
is wearing me out about.it;" Stewart said. "I've not
lost an ounce of sleep over it. I'm happy we're
there. but I'm a realist and 'I've run fdr enough
championships that I know we've still got a lot of
work left to do. ·•
· But he agni!es that he's heading into a stretch of
races where he should shine.
"If you tOok at the last three years of my career
in Winston Cup:now is the time or the year when
we get hot," he said. "Phoenix and Homestead are
two really good tracks to me. I really_enjoy racing at
Rockingham. and I won the ftrst race at Atlanta
this year.
.
"There's not a track left on ti)e schedule that J
dislike in any form or fashion." .

A LOOK AHEAD
Oct. 27 - NAPA 500,
Atlanla Motor Speedway

Nov. 3 - Pop Secret 400, ·
North Carolina SpeeQway
Nov. 10 - Checker Auto Parts 500

presented by Pennzoil,
Phoenix International Raceway
Nov. 17 -- Ford &lt;100,
Homestead-Miami Speedway

.

1. Tony Stewart, 4, 128.

2. Jimmie John son,. 4,031 .
3: Mark Martin, 4,006.
4 Ryan Newman, 3,963
5. Ru sty W~llace, 3,946.

6. Jeff Gordon, 3,917.

7. Matt'Kenseth, 3,823.
a. Bill Ellion, 3.787.

9. Kurt Busch, 3,766.
10. Ricky Rudd, 3,758.
11 . Dale Jarren, 3, 720.

12. Sterling Marlin, 3,703.

t

·oave or
·Jessica
992-2155

T

Rultlan;d Bottle Gas)

Main Street,
Ohio
740-742-2289
Rutland~

the grass. As he tried to go

back onto the track he slid
into Burton and the wreck
was on.
. Car owner Richard

menace.

""

.

.

:&lt;-·: '"~- .·

• "That's about the-eighth carThdd Bodine has
totaled for m:y team this year,'plus he hurt one o(
my drivers," Childress said. "It's time NASCAR
reviews some of these drivers whu are constantly

causing all the crashes.
"Tod.ct"does something stupid every week," he

added.

%ij'~*(:?{\

.· McM
' u·r.ray
p.t'cks'· u·p Vl'ctory·
Therewerestjllseverlllla.Pv!lll:~bel't!- .. :
·
·
·
.. McMur~ altd tlleOnishiitlliblillieWofud' y·• .
in second Winston Cup race another
htswaythrougbwithou\lricldent·andJetwt
"Whooo!" whell be w..._
still ~NBid$ ·

'Bodine said he's not strrpriSed at the criticism.
. "I'm usually the scapegoat," he said. "When

they slowed up, I 'had no choice: I tried to go
around 'them It was either that or hit them."

shy of the checkefllli !lag. · . \ •• ,.. . ' .
'Tmgomgto'sbbwthen)the~n ·• • ·
More Ford defections
Cox News'Sej'vice
burnout they&lt;ve ever seen;: he ,bOuteq over the
Ford·racing officials say they will rerflain com'
'
radtO: . " • .·•:i. J
y{, . '_': i ·. \ '
petitive despite the ~ent departure of three ·
·•·
Concord, N.C.
After his &lt;;ol~brato'ry spin, he dt&lt;!l!• !he No, ,.
asflnonth when Chlp Ganassi announcEd 40.0odge to victory lane lind tOOk a phQtj~ call '''' high-prome teams..,..'
The Pcnske Racing teams of Ryan Newman
hew"" hiring Jamt. McMurray as a
from Marlin, \\110 helped tho ream deveJoQ.the"
and
Rusty Wallace, who are foui"th and rlflh in
WblstonCupdriverfornextseason, · set:up\hatMcMur~usedto\vili, ' · :, .. the Winston
Cup standings, contirmed Sunday
IDSl\Y thoUght the car owner bad experienced a
"I knew J~tie was going wlie ajp&gt;Od dri\'ei'
they're
switching
from Ford Tauruses to Dodge
lapse injudgnient.
.
for us," Marlin said from his home Itt ,
Intrepids next ·season. Earlier this fall. Ricky
The critics - many iii NASCAR's gamge
·Tennessee. 'Tm tickled to death rofhfm,"
Craven's PPI team annoWtced its switch to
area~ said McMurray, who bas pos_
Wd only
. McMur~ led four tba
. os for961aPS, .ll\olud··
Pontiac.
three top-tlve Ontshes iii 64 Busch Series starts
ilig the tl!jal at, and his margjn of victory was
· Dan Davis, director of Ford Raclltg Technology,
and waS .winless In two BellSODS In the ·
'. .35-~, Labonte firiished ~ QV!!!;,'' ·
said the addition of current Busch Series points
Cniftsmali Truck Series, wasn't even r8ady for
Stewilrt. Jeff Gordon and Rusty Wallatei
·
leader Greg Diffie next season Will give Ford 11
~~d~ BI)Sch cat. ~Uch less a Wmston , Stewart ~id McMurray.is li!&gt;OX8n1Ple dt
full,tinie teams in its Winston Cup lineup.
we hate losing teams of this stature, we ·
Bqt on Sunda)l McMuriay made Ganassi
·N~~~~~s~~~i11 aie:a Jot~ ~e~!ild~Y.&amp; l, still"While
feel
that
our remaining teams are strong and
lOOk I~ a genitl!.
wl!9 can go.out aJtd produce t~t awa:)\" ·• •. ·
·will
continue
to compete for race wins and chamDriVing in NASCAll's el!te dtvistoli for just
SteWart said. "Jamie's not goiljf(to be the~~~ ··
!he secotld!lnteln hiii1lfe. McMurray held olt a fillY that wins In hls·flnl two Of tiro!e !)101111." · ~ p~nships on a regular basis," Davif said.
tast&lt;:los!ng Bobby Labonte and Tony Stewart to
McMur~ acknowl!&lt;l!lo&lt;\ tbat.GilD~ W.. !e
win the UAW-GM Qu.aliiy 50,J.at IAwe's Motor
taking abig chanee in hiring hint fot bi81il&amp;hBurton wins by a nile
Speedw~ It wast~e qulclaistwtn for a driver
profile ride. But be. defended his tracl!'~- . ·" ·
Jeff Burton ran away with theLittle Trees 000
bt NASCM's modern era, bettering the record
"In the Truck ;lerles and)ruch SOI'ios 1dldll't
-Busch Grand National Series race clt Lowe's
of Kevili Hariick, who W()Jt In hiS third start In
;rt'»' longenough to win," Mcjlturray saML .
Mo'tor Speedway oil Saturday tOr his tilth Busch
·the car 00011 dr)ven by the late Dele F,arnlj!trdt.
'When I stat:ted running uP ll'Ont, 1.g0\ '811
win of tht! season and hiS sec·
Preesed.tniD serv.lce last wvek as a replace- . opportunity 1D mcive up:
· ' ·' it
ond in a ro...:~
inent fOr the lnjured Sterling MarUn,
"I was willing to stay llt the Busch Series for·
Burton led 130 of 200 laps
McMU1'111!l.a 26-year-Qid former short-track
another year- unless an oppOrtunity ClilUe
and was a mile ahead of sec-

. By RICK

MINTER

.

Place Your
Business's
Ad here
Caii·The
Daily
Sentinel for
details

L

:racilrthlmlllbanOJI;Mo,•took.th¢carthat
· alongllkl!tbe.one,ll!lll-''
'" ··.
·r, , ,
Madlll
. wOO
.. il. tw
tw"*
. IVilh
. . eatlier thiS Season and.
Rain delayed the ~'~art Of SUnday's raciJ fOr.·; .?,
1!11"$ tt an allnoeftla\vl9S'I ~
·
· more than three hOurs, b~t once its~; li!h\1'.
~ Qll)8t of,the race. McMuri'!IY was calm
str:aigh1laps w
.ere l'1in wl.thout ".PIIJI !If.18)( ''. !\ 1
·aJtdJoktng with his crew. But as the taps wound
Bill Elliott wllS·the flnt driver to.bayt.ll'oU·
down; he was mostlysilent- until the lasflap. ble..His No.9~ ~lew a rl;illtl'eaf tlnl and
As be. S!l'ld ~ tha backstretch jmrt two carthe ~bris ripped away !be'sheet llietaJ I!'"! T
leng!hsiiOO!d of LabOnte, he let out aloud
wtndowfrom hiS.cer. . •· . ' "' " , ,,····• " • •
·~on ltls radio oit!y Ill hear his crew
His crew made repairs aiw he relluirtea ti):"i''
'CIItef LOO·Mccau $CI'Oam'back that i)&gt;e race
the track, but he wolll\d up Slii:IU.II but el~·
WBSn't aver yet. , ·
'·
nating him in the potl\111 race.

13. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 3,624.

t4.Jeff Burfon, 3,568.
t5. Michael Waltrip, 3,492.
16. Ricky Craven, 3,347.
17.Jeff Green, 3,300.
18. Bobby Labonte, 3,286.
19. Dave Blaney, 3,159.
20. Robby Gordon, 3,136.
21. Kyle ~tty•.3, 113.
22. Kevin Harvick, 3,088.
23. TerryLabonte, 3,001.
~24. JeremyMay1klld, 2.896.
• 25. Ellion Sadler,-2.861. 26.Ward Burton, 2,826.

t. Greg Biffle, 4,t 73.
- 22. Kerry Eanrhardt, 2,664.
23. Casey M~ars 1 2,654.
3. Soon Wimmer, 3,?07.
24. Kllliln Lepage; 2,517.
4. Jack Sprague, 3,699.
25. Kevin GrubO, 2,502.
5. Mike Mclaughlin, 3,640.
26. Ricky Hendrick, 2, 125.
6. Kenny Wallace, 3.561.
27. Jimmy Spencer, 2, 113.
7. Scott Riggs, 3,539.
28. Michael Waltrip, t,9t5.
B. Bobby Kamillon ~r., 3,537. 29. Shane Hall, 1,613.
9. Jamie McMurray, 3.452.
30. Jeff Burton, 1,795.
31 ..Mark Green, ~ ,468.
32. Kasey Kahne, 1,463.

By RICK MINTER

33, Joe Nemechek, 1.453.
34.Chad Chalftn, 1,393.
35. Brian VIckers, 1,367.
36. Mike Wallace, 1,315.
37. Jeff Purvis, 1,309.
36.Jay Sauter, 1,295.
39. Mike Harmon, 1,174.
40. Brad Teague, 1,032.

Ken Schrader, 2,601.
30. Mike Skiniler, .2,441.

L

31. Johnny Benson, 2.439.
32. Bobby Hamilton , 2,427.
33. Casey Atwood, 2,344.
34. Jerry Nadeau, 2,250.

·

3;i. Steve Park, 2 , ~58 .

36. Joe Nemechek, 2,1 44.

37. Brett Bodine, 2,111.
38. Hut Stricklin, 1,781.
39. Todd Bodine, 1,735.
40.
Stacy Compton, 1.,527.
.
1 TRUCK SERIES STANDINGS ..
1 1. Mike Bliss, 2,922.
I . 2. Rick Crawford, 2,837.
1 3. Ted Musgrave. 2.773.
4. David Starr, 2,753.
1 5.
Jason Leffl9r, 2, 701
I 6. Dennis Setzer, 2,698.
I
7. Robert Pressley, 2,660.
I 8.Terry Cook, 2,647.
1 9. Travis Kvapll, 2,591.
1
tO.Coy Gibbs, 2.583.
1~ . Brendan Gaughan, 2,469.
12. Jon Wood, 2,407.

Concord, N.C.
ess than a week after the

death of ARCA driver
Eric Martin at Lowe's
Motor SPeedway, NASCAR offi.
cials announ-ced that teams now
must have a spotter in the spotters' stand any time their driver
is on the track.
Martin's staUed car was
struck by Deborah Renshaw,
who apparenU'y did not know

Bitlle fought an oijy wilidshield anda loose-handling
car to finish sixth and

BURTON
fmished 18th.

Starr outduels Bliss
avid Starr broke a65·
race winless streak
Sunday, outdueting
NASCAR Craftsman Truck
Series points leader Mike
Bliss In theLas Vegas 360.
Starr took the lead on the
t42nd of 146 \aps when Ted
Musgrdve's Dodge cut a
right front tire ·
Starr won S4.'l,200, plus a
$lp,ooo Craftsman-sponsored
bQnus for winning fro.m the
pole position.

D

above the track and use two-way
radios to serve as an extra set of
eyes for drivers.
·

ARCA already required aspot-

ter, but Renshaw's Was atop the
team hauler in the infield and
apparently did not see Martin'S
car in time to warn her:
ReDshaw, who was hurt in the
cras.h .that killed Martin, was

released froma.hospital Friday.

icky Hendrick, the 22-year-old son' of
Winston Cup car owner Rick Hendrick, ·
says he is ending his career as a full-time
stock car driver.

R

Hendrick, who had been runnilig NASCAR's

Busch Grand National Series ln one of his
father 's Chevi'olets, cited lingering effects of a
shoulder injury suffered in a crash March 2 at
,

.

make," said Hendrick, who underwent extensive shoulder surgery after his .crash; 'Mer a
lot of soul searching, I've decided to step away .
rrom the driver's seat to pursue other opportu.
nities within Hendrick Motorsports."
- Rick Minter

MARJINSVILU SPEED'MY
Track: .526-mile oval; banking in turns
1-4, 12 degrees;'banking in straighls,
flOI')e; length of frontstretch, 800 feet;
length of backstretch, aoo feet
Where: Martinsville, Va.
Date opened: 1947
Firat Wlnaton Cup race: Virginia 500,
May 20, 1956.
Grandltltnd -ling: 91,000.
On the Web: www.martlnsvllle
speedway.com

DistribUted by Universal Press Syndicate for Cox News Service. {800) 255-6734 . •For release the week of October 14, 2002.

-.-----·- - - - - - - - -- - -

' .

increase his points lead from 127 to 168 over runner-up Jason Keller, who ran out of gasoline and

Speedway.
Spotters typically stand high

"T,his was an incredlbly hard decision to

'

Dave or
Jessica
992·2155

p.m.

i

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
:736 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-5009
uirry W. Banks,
Owner/Operator

.!Baseball
Business
'

Newlplpt~

:Discussions but no deals for Piniella

or more members of

the society who are
realdents of Meigs
County, at 1e11t 7 days
before the annual
·
"
·
'ded
·ted
f ·
ei~~Ctfon of directors Is
. SEATTLE :(AP) - The contract, but the N.s have told bringmg the total to .our te;uns. VJ
teams interes in hiring held. Only regularly
:seattle Mariners failed to the Mets they WO!Jid not seek
The Post, calling Mariners him agree to "appropriate and nominated candidates
Meigs Co. Bikers
:reach a deal with any of the compensation for releasillg general manager Pat Gillick's fCi!Sonable compensation."
who have met the Ill·
·suitors for manager Lou him. Oakland bench coach comments semi-serious, quot- · Hevly denied reports that lng requirements will
:Piniella, and Oakland's Art Ken Macha could be in line to ed him as saying, "I don't Piniella was close to complet- · :::I:::.~~~. for ei~~Ctfon
:Howe emerged as another replace Howe and also is a know if it would hurt George ing a deal with the Mets. (10) 17 24
Saturday,
:possible candidate for the candidate for the Chicago (Yankees
jowner · "Lou's under contract with - ' - - ' - - - - - ;New York Mets.
. Cubs' jobc
Steinbrenner) more . if the us," he said. · "If he or his
Pub[[c Notice
October 19th
: Seattle president Chuck The Mets have interviewed Mets or Boston got Lou.
~~gent has been speaking with
OHIO
Armstrong spoke Wednesday Macha, Willie Randolph,
The newspaper said Gillick the Mets, that's tampering.''
ENVIRONMENTAL
at the
Piniella'sagent,AianNero,
PROTECTION
MIZWAYTAVERN
:withMetsownerFredWilpon Terry Francona and Chris was more serious when he
:and Tampa Bay managing Cbambliss in their bid to said,• 'There
might
be a club didn't return
PUBLIC
'
fi
ki telephone mes- AGENCY
NOTICE
Rt. ?Pomeroy, Ohio
hat s gomg to 1re a manag~r sages see _ng commen.t.
;general
.partner
Vince rep Iace· . the . fi. ue d Bobb
y
t
Upper
Raccoon
creek
·
h' L "
Th D 1 N
d talks
Line up @ 12:00 noon at the
·Naimoli, but made no deaIs V:aIentme.
to 1re ou
e aJ Y ews sat
watershed Total
~involving compensation for The Mets, Devils Rays and a · Grady Little is currently with the Mets hit a snag when Maximum Dally Load
Pomeroy.Parking Lot
.Piniella.
third team have expressed inter- Boston's manager. .
Seattle asked for players New Report
Pomeroy, Ohio
.: "No agreements were est in interv1ewmg
- .
p·mte
' IIa,
'Th'mgs cou ld be happemng
' . "10r.k ha
'd
.
ot
'I
bl
Public
notice
Is
L
, s sai are !I avru a e. hereby given that the
eave @ 1:00 prn
'reached,"
Mariners according to ihe Mariners. They above me," Red Sox interim
Gillick. overseemg the search Ohio Environmental
Last bike in at 3:00 pm.
-spokesman Tim Hevly said.
haven't identified the third club, general manager Mike P_ort for Seattle's next manager, said Protection Agency
Free food, live band,
, The N.ew York Daily News at that team's request, and told the Post. "But ... I have he doesn't plan to pursue W)y (Ohio EP,t.) Dlvlalon of
door prt'zes
,
fr
('
'd
h
dida
til
k
Surface
Waler
(OSW)
~d
Newsday
reported Hevly declined to say if there heard nothmg om ms1 e t e can
tes un next wee 11 providing for public §,.:,l======z::ma:::::::::::::::~
:;Thursday that the Mets also have been talks with that org11- organization abOut it)."
Teams cannot make man· review and comment
:have received permission from nization,
Seattle officials have agreed agerial announcements during thit Upper Raccoon
:Oakland to speak to Howe. .
The: New )'ork Post said to release Piniella. from the the World Series, which starts Creek Waterahed Total
· • fiinal year of his contract, pro- Saturday t'n Anahet' m·
Maximum Daily
Load
: Howe has a year Ieft on hIS Boston also mt··ght be ·m the.nux
Rep·ort
(TMDL)
·~-----------------------------------------------------~----------------------------------~
Document. Ohio the
EPA
developed
· Rand, W.Va., is. He recalls fired up?"' Pennington said. Division I-A. Every game, Document In fulfillpractice sessions aod work- "Randy said that nobody has I'd have. like nine carries for ment of Section 303(d)
the Cl!lan
~ater
Act
which
requl.
rea the
Outs at Marsha ll where Moss to fire him up, that 'I play 120 yards, Randy would have of
outworked everyone.
when I want to riay.'
.
like 200 yards receiving ·and Identification of
frOI,n Page B1
"He was the most competi·
"Just like he s alluded to Chad would throw for like Impaired waterbodles
tive person on our team," before, the spotljght is on 350."
tor Which t~~Chnology
Pennmgton
·
said.
"At
him.
We,
as:
athletes,
have
to
The Hen! went 1G-3thilt sea-. based effluent ilmlta: and bleed with each other."
all, he was the frrst in · realize that and minimize son scored 484 points and won ·tfons are not stringent
.
th 'Mi
· . ·
.
C fi
enough to ach lave
Pennington said he has not Marsh
I1ze
line
to
do"drills.
He
brought
a
that.
We
have
to
rea
.otir
e
d-Amencan
on
erence
applicable water quat·
kept in contact with Moss
Pom~roy Eagles Ciub
great
work
-ethic
with
his
talboundaries
and
what
we
can
before
losin~ to Mississippi in fly atandarda and to
recently. "The bond . comes ent." .
dobecauseofwhoweare."
theMotorCuyBowl.
develop
Total
BINGO
from playing ball together, . But Moss' work ethic is
Another . Marshall team"We realized we had the Maximum Daily Loadl
· but we have separate lives,"
Free Fish Fry
one ~f the thin~s ~ost often mate of Pennington's was talent," Chapman said. "I just ~~c~~:n:":~•J:e.!~:
· he said.
·
quesl!Oned.
Thts
ts
the
guy
Vikings
running
back
Doug
knew
a
lot
of
guys
on
that
the
atse11ment
and
October 17
· "You get frustrated because whose most famous quote i~; Chapman.
Although Marshall team would take recommended mea•·
; you know he's smarter than ."Inlay
when I want to play,
Chapman has bad only mini· their game to.the next leveL" u.rea for ' thre.e
that and he knows better.
~ch
was
taken
to
mean
he
impact in the pros, he .,.. Only
at that aheda
Impairedwithin·
.IUb\Yaler. Bingo
· Moss is'&amp;roven
·
the
Whi give a full effort all mal
Randy has spent most of hjs doesn't
•
was
a
star
in
col~, rushing level, so far. . nfortunately, upper Raccoon CrHk
Oct 19, 2002
life in the sr.otlight. Things · the time. • . ·
·
for
more
than
1,
yards
in
many
of
his
achievements
waterahed
that
appear
people don t know about
All packs $5 each
first three seasons, a first have been overshadowed by on the Ohio 1998
. most of us they know about · Pennin~ton haS a different his
&lt; th
h 1
h' beh-1 ·
303(d) list . ·The
Starburst $1,000
view of at statement.
oor e sc oo ·
~~. , avtor. ·
·
impaired water.s are
· · Randy.''
.
. I .~e never/ been ~OW?, ?n located In the counttel
: : What Pennington also . "I believe the question . uour offense was totally
asked
was
along
the
lines
of
unstoppable,"
Chapman
said.
hun,
Penmngton satd. I m of Hocking, Athens,
· : : knows about Moss is how
'Does
Cris
Carter
get
you
.
"It
was
our
first
yeat
in
rooting
for him:"
VInton, Meigs and
·- ' campetitive the wideout from

TOY RUN -

Pomeroy
·Eagles 2171.
"Stone Street"
· Friday 18th
. Saturday 19th

(

--~---~--~--~--~---.~~~------~----~------------_:--~~~~--~----~----------------~----~
-~·--~--------------------------~--------~~~--~~----~~--~------~-L..
I

\

l

· ANAHEIM.. Calif. (AP) - league
seasons. · When
: Jamxi Washburn made a big . Anaheim played Cleveland in
: postseason decision last year. the major league season open: "I finally got a dish so I er March 31, the left-bander
co~ld .. watch, ~e Worl~ became the Angels' sixth dif·
Senes, he .w d. 'We don t ferent opening-day starter in
: have Fox where I'm from."
six seasons.
: Nothing to think about_this
He gave up a two-run single
. year. ~me Saturday mght, .to Milton Bradley in his very
: he' ll JUSt walk out to the first inning of the season and
: mound, pick up the ball and lost the opener 6-0 but went
' throw the ~t pitch of the on to go 18-6 . wlth a 3.15
World. Senes
between ERA, the most victories .·for
Anaheim and San Francisco. an Angels fitcher in 11 years.
: ''I c~'t wait _for Saturday to Fro.m Apri 19 to July 21, he
· come, he satd Wednesday, wen~ unbeaten in 17 starts
'
: standing by his locker . at~ going 12·0.
: Edisot! Field, a long way from
"He '.s ·a hard throwe~
· home m Danbury, Wis.
Giants' Kenny Lofton said.
. ~na~eim manager ~ike "He has really good stuff and .
Sctoscta and San . Franctsco good command. But if we do
manager Dusty Baker have what we should, we can beat
• announced oilly their Game 1 anybody on any given.
: starters, preferring to wait on
San Francisco had better
· setting their filii rotations. success against left-banders,
• Wash~~. 1.() with a 2.84 batting .279 with a home run
· ERA m three postseason starts per 21.6 at-bats. Against
for the Angels, will face Jason ri~hties, the Giants hit .263
Schmidt, 1-1 with a 3.46 ERA wtth a homer per 30.6 at-bats.
in two starts.
Jeff Kent batted . 366
: Washburn,- 28, is from a against lefties, .297 against
place so small the population righties. BIIITY Bonds hit .284
-1,855, according to its Web against left-banders with 21
site- could fit into Edison's homers in 125 at-bats, and
left-field bleachers with room .363 against righties with 25
to spare. There's not much to homers in 278 at·bats.
.
ilo.
.
"You face guys like tbat all
: "You hunt six days a week," . season long," Washburn said. Anaheim Angels pitcher Jarrod Washbum throws the ball
· he said, "and watch . the "The Rangers have A-Rod Wednesday· during practice at Edison International · Reid of
Packers on Sunday."
(Alex Rodriguez). Oakland Anaheim, Calif. Washburn is scheduled to start when the
: He loves to take his bow has Miguel Tejada, the Angels host the San Francisco Giants for Game 1 of the Major
and arrow out during the off-. Yankees have (Jason) Giambi. League Baseball World Series on Saturday. (AP) .
Public NoUm In
season and go after deer, even I'm going to be smart about it.
Y.ur Rlabl to K1101i!-, Dtll~md Rt&amp;h1 to Y.vrt:JG-r.
goes to North Dakota to hunt The situations in the game are they're impressed by San because it was his turn.
with his dad. Even if the tern- going to dictate whether I Francisco batters.
Now the manager must fig!MJrature is 40 degrees below attack him or pitch around
"They make pretty good ure out how to align Kirk · The annual election1 Gattla.
Protection Agency
' p:ro.
- · him."
adjustments, the right-han- Rueter, Livan Hernandez
t~e B~ard 1 ~ All Interested per· (USEPA) for approval.
Scioscia said he wanted to ders against right"handers, and Russ Ortiz:
rec ors County
or
e son•
wishing to subTo obtain a copy of
.• "As long as there's no
Meigs
mit comments
for the'documentorother
wind," he said.
see how his pitchers came out and left-banders against
"Maybe we'll put Rueter· Agricultural Society Ohlo .EPA's consldera- Information, or to
·. Teammate Kevin Appier, of bullpen sessions before left-banders," Appier said. · in · between the two hard will be held al the lion may do so In writ- arrange to Inspect
listening in from the next stall making his other rotation
Schmidt, a 29-year-old throwers," Baker said.
Coon
Hunter~ lng to Ohio EPA, Agency Illes . or
pver,
didn't
believe decisions. He must decide ri.,ht-hander
acJuired
from
.
With
the
Giants
seeking
Bulldldng
at
records
pertaining
p
groun •.• on tMheonldair·
ay, Southeaot
Office, 2195District
Front the
Document,
or to
to
Washburn's story about hav- whether he' d . rather have Pittsburgh in uly 2001, their first World Series title November4,2002. The street, Logan, Ohio request notice of ·
lng to buy a satellite dish to Ramon Ortiz (15-8) in took a shutout into the since 1954 - when theY pools will be open 43138, Attn : Dan when Ohio EPA .sub- ·
watch Arizona's seven-game Game 2 or at · Pacific Bell eighth inning against St. played in New York's Polo from 5 00 p.m. 10 9 Imhoff or by einall to mlts the Document to
.win
over the New
Park in Game 3 - which Louis; getting the first post- Grounds - : and the Anftels p..The
m. onelection
EI~~Ctlonshall
Day.be dan.lmholl@epa.state.·
USEPA,Imhoff
please at
contact
"
. York
.
oh.us by lhe close of Dan
the
;•a1,1kees last year. Appter would sl_ot him .c~o · start season victory of his career. try in~ to win it for the trst by ballot. Ballota .must busine11 November address above or by
.lllSlstc;d Washburn . was ·Game 7 1f the series goes
"I never expected it," he time m their 42-season his· be marked with an "X" 20, 2002: commenll calling (740) 385-5232.
focJ~se4.. 9P.I!~r,. npt Fox. .
that far.
·
said Wednesday after .a tory, players figure to be opposite the name or rece!Jted after thts ' Also the Document
• ""o"p
Based on their postsea'son late·afternoon workout t'n pumped up when Wash·burn The
It wtllcasting
not be counted.
date as
maytime
be and
conoidbe ·posted
'' ~ elbows are dripping
ol .votes ered
clr- will
before
·october(on 2lor
ilown blood," Appier said, performances, it wouldn't San Francisco, the Giants' throws that first pitch.
for directors by prox- cumstances permit. 2002 ) 10 the Oblo EPA
2aughing.
. . be surprising if he moved first since winning the pen·
"I think you dream .tes· Is not 1 to be A~:ij,onsfderatlon of Division of Surface
: Washburn admitted he djd- rookie John. Lackey (9-4), nant Monday. ·
· about the World Series parmmed. ·
. ,co ents, Ohio EPA water Web site
n't watch all of the games.
who turns 24 the day of
"You .never know what and the dog .pile at the on.:r, Melgo County wilt · submit the http://www.cpa:state.o
to do at the pitcher's mound, ' but I membership
rBII ents holding
to the (10)17
h.usldswllmdl.
,
tickets Document
United ·States
. "Usually, I'd fall asleep Game 4,, up ahead of Appier Dusty is going
. ;before the end," he said.
(14·12), who kept pitching last minute," Schmidt said. don't think you dream lor el leaat 15 days Environmental
Now he'll be pitching the in an out of trouble against · "I just found out 10 minutes about what'_it takes to get before the cfate or
big game instead of h_unting · Minn. esota lastS. unday· and ago. I was .t hrowing bullpen there"
may vote.·
· .said · "I'm election
Members
of the
. ' Kent
~t. . ·
•
.
remains winless in five today and nobody evel) told ~omg _to keep my e~o- .society must declare
: He never had more than 11 postseason appearances.
me. I think it's an honor."
tLOns m check and enJOY lhelrcondldacylorthe
.wins iii parts of four major Anaheim pitchers say
Baker picked Schmidt it."
·
office
of Director
ot
the Society
by filing.
with the Secretary,,
Debbie Watson, 42455
Woods
Road,
Coolville, Ohio 45723:
a peUtlon signed by 10

·Moss

Younger H~ndrick retires· ,...TRACK PROFILE ....

Las Vegas.

13. Lance Norlck, 2,280.
14. Bobby Dotter, 2,186.
1
15. Matt Crafton, ·2,036.
I 16.Carlos Conlreras. 2.028.
I 17. Bill Lester, 1,972.
I t8. Lance Hooper, 1,935.
1 19. Steve Porlenga, 1,879.
1 20. Brian Rose, f,B70.
·

~·· 1

third·fmishing Joe Nemechek
fmished on the same lap with
Burton. Points leader Greg

the car was in her 'path during
ARCA pracUce at Lowe's Motor

Co&gt;: News Service

29.

1
1

the finish. Onjy Waltrip and

Fatality brings spotter requirement

27. Jimmy Spencer, 2,822.
·28. John Andretti, 2,727.

l

and-place Michael Waltrip at ·

·

....,-.,., f:J:IU4

=

Childress, who had three of
BODINE
his cars damaged in the wreck, said Bodine was a

h"

13-8) at.

g:

evasive action by rwming into

•.t. s~ecly succt$1~

I

PUBLIC NOTICES

l.:oncord, N.C.
be big wreCk: that everYone expected last ·
week at Talladega occurred during
Sund,ay's race as Todd Bodine and Ward

Greenslowed and Bodlne1ook

2. Jason Keller, 4,005.

12. Stacy Comp1on, 3,288.
t3.Tim Sauter, 3,137:
14. Hank Parker Jr., 2,959.
15. Johnny Sauter, 2:928.
t6. Shane Hmlel, 2,886.
17.Todd Bodine, 2,837. .
16:Jeff Green, 2. 723.
t9. Larry Foyt, 2,71 B.

details

and Jeff Green dov.n the
fmntstretch, Burton and

-----------------------------------------BUSCH SERIES
· 20. Ashton Lewis, 2,706.
STANDINGS •
21 . Ron Hornaday, 2, 705.

10. -Rand~ LaJoie, 3,~ 1 5.
11. Tony alnes, a,352.

here Call The
Daily Sentinel for ·

Burton collided on a lap 230 restart and took out
eight other drivers with them.
·
As Bodine followed Burtoo

DRIVER STANDINGS
WINSTON CUP
STANDINGS

week break belole resuming Nov. 2 at .
California Speedway. Three drivers are within
169 points of standings klader Mike Biss.

By RICK MINTER

back.

Martin, who fin ished 16th in the race, fell to third
in the standings and saw his points deficit grow
from 72 to 122.
Defending Winston Cup champioQ Jeff Gordon
linished fourth 3.nd moved from seventh to sixth in
points, but he is 211 points behind SteWart, JO
worse than last week.
"We couldn't gain on 1bny;•· Gordon said .. "He did
a great job."
Gordon Said he believes the points race is
Stewart's to lose.
"It's no different than any other championship in
a wa:,.: where the guy that has the lead and is competitive and.doesn't have any problems is the one
who's going to win the championship," tie said.
, Matt Kenseth, who has a series-leading four wins
this season but is seventh in JX)intS. says that even
though his teammate Martin is in third place, .
Stewart is the one to beat.
"lf he doesn't have a mechanical failure or an
accident or something like that, all of the rest of
the tracks are reall~ really good tracks fOr him,"

Business's Ad

. Cox News Service

Mm;t of Stewart's cballenger.;

tiut lost ground in the standingS.
Jimmie Johnson fmlshed
sixth and took second place in the stcmdings from
Mark Martin but fell from 82 behind the leader to 00

Place Your

• VII eck pr orupts Childress
to ~last Bodine's driving

hard.
"I was gaining a tenth to a
tenth and a half [of a second] a
lap, but I was doing the math,
and I didn't have enough laps t
was about1eigh_t laps short just
to catch them. let alone try to
get b~:·

STEWART

992-5432

NASCAR NOTES

T

rmished in the top 10 in the race

CRAETSMANTBUCK

Race: Amencan Racing Wheels 200
I Race: Sam's Town 250
I Where: California Speedway, Fontana, CaiH.
I Where: Memphis Molorsports Park,
~ length: 2-mile ovat
Millington, Tenn.
1 When: Nov. 2, 5 p.m. EDT
1 Track length: .75-mile oval.
Delendlng ctiamplon: Ted Musgrave
Track: .526-mile oval
When: Oct. 19, 2 p.m.EDT.·
.I Race record: Kurt Busch, 144.260 mph,
Defending champion: Ricky Cll!ven
I Delendlng chaniplon: Randy LaJOie
Oct. 28, 2000.
Race record: Jeff &lt;:Jordon, 82 .223 mph, Sept
Race record: Kevin Harvick, 92.352 mph, Oct.
I Qualifying record: Kurt Busch, 177.3BB
22. 1996.
I .29, 2000.
.
mph, Oct. 27, 2000.
Qualifying record: Tony Slewart, 95.371 mph, I Qualifying record: Jeff Green, 120.267 mph,
I Storylne: The Truck series takes a lhreeSept. 29, 2000.
Oct. 26, 2000.
Race: Martinsville 500
Whete: Mar1lnsville Speedway, Mar1lnsville, Va.
When: Sunday, 12:30 p.m. EDT.
Rae. dl-: 500 ~; 263 mii!!S

Busch: Sam's ToiWl 250. 2
p.m. EIYI' Siaturday on NBC.

Series

'

'

ON THE TUBE

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

www.mydallysentinel.com

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.Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday,October17,2002

www.mydailysentlnel.com

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- Sentinel - ,!\.........
CLASSIFIED
~ribune

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www.mydallysentlnel.com
Public Notice

Chevy SIIYerado E&gt;
Cab. Quad Cab, loaded,
rid, new tires, 27,000 miles,
must soel $19,500 OBO.
f740)441-1547

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
· No One
Else Can!
"

96 ChOYy BlaZ014&gt;4

1989 Jaco Oes1gned Series,
35ft.,5th.Wheef,Goose neck
camper. new awning, new
rafrlg&amp;tor, a lot ot extras, OM·
cellent condition.
(7401591-6055 or 367-7221

2-Doors,V6Aulo, E~~:cellent
condition, While, Power ·
Windows, Doors, Steering
i Cruise AM &amp; FM cass.
Over Head Console, TJe
Carrier, ABS Brakea,Running BoardS. $69,000 miles
one
owner,
garage
kept.$6,950.00
(740) 949-2490

1994 Dutchman camper, 32
foot long, self contained, refrlgeralor, tre.ezer, micro·
wa~e &amp; stereo systems all
built in. _Queen size bed,
sleeps 6. Spare tire has
never been on the ground.
Excellent condition, $8500
(7401386·6743.

«&lt;

Heldt Andoraon
74G-992-4017
•
Congratuletlonal You have
won 2 free movie Uck&amp;ts to
tho Spr;og V~lley 7 Gattipo·
'":Call lhe Sentinel for de·
ta1ts. 17401992-21551 .

1M'

Euic'nuCAI}
R~.l'liiGIIRATION

Re.sidentjal or commercial
wiring, new service or re·
pairs, Master licensed alec·
tr iCian. Ridenour Eleclricctl,
WV000306, 304-675-1786.

Deer Hunters Special!
1971 Cobr~ .21 Ft. Trarler.
1
1
good cond1t1on, no teaks
~
$1,750.00 Leave Message
2000 Suzuki Katana 5,000 17 40 1 949 · 2063
miles, b4ue pertect Condi· NICe pop-up camper. Exceltlon: New Urea &amp; plugs lent condition. Sleeps six,
priced at $3,800. (304)576· $700 OBO (740)441 -0694
2666
.

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'MOJURCYa..F.S

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.200;;g1 1dHie".~ey Davidson Su-

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mrtbune

To Place

Your Ad,

Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304)
Or Fax

Of{tee 11o~~
Monday . thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE 8H A.Q.

...,,_.;...,,...;_ __;,.;,;;;;ro

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•PE•:•HSO-•N•AL'l""'!_,.ll A;e you inte•estod in be·
coming a State Tested
Why wait? St~rt meeting Nurse Aide? If you would
Oh1o singles tonight, .can .toll like an e~cil,ng, rewarding
free 1·800-766-2623 ext career in heallh care, we
1621 .
ha~e the answer for you.
Scenic Hil l~ Nursing Center
·ANNOUNCF.J\rtENTS
rs ollering a nurse aide
.
class. It will begin October
.
. .
21 sl. You must apply thla
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit w~ 1n person at Scenic
lor sale, Chester Townsh•p. H1lls. Contact Am~~' CampMeigs County, send letters bell or Jayne Darlrng.
of mterest to The Daily
Sentinel PO Box 729•20 AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
'
45769 • • Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
Pomeroy. OhiO
675·1429.

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70 '

YARD SAI~E
Be Your Own Boss, Great
~_ _ _ _ _ _ __.~.Income. C"IIJanetJackson,
Home &amp; Gad
·
. r 80 ParI y, D.Ia·
mond Destgner. (740)866·
YARD SAlE6359

GALLIPOLIS

Nursing Assistanl Classes,
evening hours, beginning .
October 28, 2002. If you
enjoy elderly people and
want to become a member.
of our health care team, call
Judy Hart, Instructor at 740742·2370 or stop by Rock·
springs Rehabilitation Canter and f~l out an applrcation
for the class~. Exte~lcare
Health Servrces, Inc. 1s an .
equal opportunity employer
that encourages wo,rkplace
diversity M/F ON

URGENTLY
NEEDEDL,.--iliiiiiili.liiliil-,.1 Community Action is see~- ~plasma donors earn $50 to
ing a . la~orer tor th.e $60 per .week' for 2 or 3
143 Second Av:nu~. Octo· Weather•zatton crew. This hoUrs weekly. Call Bio Life
bSehrl·ne'. 79-5a.nd 1 . am or olsr "deful,.!~elrlmerespoum'eitiaondn, rSeefenrd- 6P61a5s1m
. a Service, 740·592"2 family yard sale at Trents
,Pr~uce on Jac~son Pike rn
.Spnng Valley, k1ds clothes.
·adult clothes, toys, handles,
M1sc . Items. 9·4, Friday.
Salurday &amp; Sunday
.
33 Nerl Avenue, Saturday
~:mly., 9·4. crafts, candl~s.
Jewelry boxes. etc Chnst·
mas Ideas
.
G
5 1 224 1· 1 A
arage a.e·
s venue, Saturday, October
19th, 8:00·3:00. Rain or
shine. furnrture , baby items.
toddl ers clothes, girls and
,b oys clothes, mens and
.wornens clothes, toys and
misc. Park on street and
watk up dnve

ences to GMCAA attention
Sandra Edwards,' 8010 N.
St~te Route 7, Cheshire,
Ohio, 45620 by 10·22·02
GMCAA is an EOE.
.
Database Coordinator. Job
requ1res the ma1ntenance of
~ategories of reta!l pr~~uct
lr_nes for correct •d.enlilica·
Iron. and correct pnce. En·
ters s1gnifrcant amounts of
daily changes and updates
Into the database. Ability to
quickly become fa iliar witll
prOduct lines Ablli~ to work
·
c&lt;X?peratrvely for buyers en·
te.nng new products and
wrth otl,lers on relaled mal·
ters, Yery. good comput~r
Skills reqwred. Aoouracy 1s
a must. Send re~ume t~
Fruth Corporate Off1ce, Attn.
Database Coordinator, P.O.
Box 392. Point Pleasant,
WV 25550
EASY WORK! EXCELLENT

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Temporary help, $5 hr. to f!!
care for my mother in
HOMES
Cheshire, 7 days a week,
I'UR SALE
6am-1 1am,
5pm-9pm, --,
(740)367.0302
·
3br. Ranch, Gallipolis, Mill
Creek Road· BriCk Front
1140
Bu~
new vlnyl siding, new roof:
TRAINING
$79,000. Call after 5pm.
•
, (304 )675-5038

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rib

Must Sell· factory mistake,
~002 3 BA· 2 BA WUI sa_crlf•c~. many extras, very n~ce.
Save $8,900.00. (304)736·
3888, 1-886-736·3332.

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•,•.•cg,.le
equipped kitchen, large
bedroom, den, bath, cov·
ered deck· front &amp; back, no
pets, ready November 1,
$475 month plus deposit.
Phone (740)446-0205 days:·
(740)44~4254 evenings.
Large, two story, three bedroorfl house at 653 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis (near Li·
brary) $800 per month with
$800 deposit required . No
pets. Water Included in rent
(no other utilities). Six
months tease required.
(740)446-7323 (Library) lor '
more information.
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4 br lr &amp; dr 2 baths 112 1 9 7 1 F 1a~ 1" g 0 • M 0 b II e
bas9~9nt, ~g.' 'kitchen ~llots Homel 2X6 2 Bedrooms, 1 and 2 bedroom apartof cupboards, a/c-lan &amp; refrigator, sto~e. underpin- ments, furnished and unfurheat, water sohener, new nln_g, wheelson, ready to nished, securit" deposit remove. $2,500.00
.,
windows, lg. front porch (740) 843 _5128
quired, no pets, 740·992·
overlooking river. will con2218.
l\1tscEu...ANE. sidertrade, (740)992·9012 We ha~e approxini8.tely 10
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,
used homes for under 1 lumished.,.. 1 unfurnished
Beaut1ful custo~ b'-'1lt home $2,000, call1 ~soo-837-3238 apt, close to grocery in
=~c..::=----~
Baby Items, hutch, full size .w1th 3 large B&amp;dr~ms, 2· for rnfo.
downtown
Gallipolis.
Garage Sale- 9·5, Saturday,
bed, large dresser wl mirror 11.2 b~ths, large tamr_ly room
(740)446·t t58
October 19, corner of Bur·
304 7s- 2ao 1
w1th llrep5ace. All brrck with 95 Century, 3 BR, 14x70, BEAUTIFUL
APART
khart "Lane and State Route
wrap aro~nd porches. 3,200 excellent condition, $8,500 MEN1'S AT BUDGET PRI:
588. Antique tools, ox yoke,
Doug (Point Service)
·- sq:fl. ~ h~ing area. Cu~to m (740)256-1249
CES AT JACKSON ES·
old wooden pulleys, kn1ves,
Congratulatrons!_ You haV'ff burl! krtchen &amp; ~alh cabrnets
TATES 52 Westwood Drive
prom dresses, clothes, vacwon 2 free mov1e tiCkets to lrom Smiths. Stts on 5· 1/2
Lo18 &amp;
'
297 10 .S383 . W~lk to
uum sweepers, ~nd more
PAY!
the S rin Vall
7 in Gal· acres with pond .with 30x40
Arn~•cE
1· from $
Assemble products
. . P g · ey
detached garage 4 m'1tes
'-'RrJ'
shop &amp; movres. Call 740·
1m.4
at home.
lrP.OirS. Call the Register to• •
446 2568 Equal Houstng
1"''
YARIJ SALE·
d8.y lor details (304)675· 1rom Holzer Hosp•tal on
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Pf.lMERO\'Il\1IDDLE
Call Toll Free
·
160. A real buy at $289,000. H2 acre lol on Tycoon Lake Opportunrty.
1333
1-800·467·5566 Exl-12170
Call to ._e. (740)446·2927
wi12X60Trailer$16,500.00
Furnished
and
Wanted- someone to cut &amp; --.:.....::.:.::.:...:.....:::_:...:.:.:..._ n-·
"" $ 13,500.00
B th u
·2 Rooms
Cl
A
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l arge Garage Sale lor ben- e P wanted carrng ' or the hull paperwood, for info call Country Home with 11·1/2 (74.Q) 247·1100
a · .Pstarrs, ean. e ·
efit of MissiOns Ocl . 18 &amp; 19 elderly, Dl arst Gl,roup Home, (740)742·0528 leave mas- acres 3J4br. 2ba, 2 Car- :....::.:....,..._.:.:__...;,._ _ erences and Deposit Reappro)(imately 4 miles on now pa¥ ng m n mu_m wage, sa
Garage, above ground pool, 15 acres more or less. Lo- qulred. No Pets. (740)446·
143. New ilems wrll be add- new Shills: 7am·3pm, 7amge.
Handcrafted kitchen cabi- cated on Green \l&amp;lley c1:.51:.:9:__ _ _ _..:.._
ed darly (books, dishes, 5pm, 3pm-11pm, Hpm · 118D
w.--~
nets. 011 Leon Baden Rd. D 1
Sl 1 R t 160 5
n.r., •r.u
r ve,
a e ou e
'
Gracious living. t and 2
glassware. clothes. etc.). 7jlm. caII 740 ·992 ·5023
To
Do
(30
. 41458-1580
minutes from Holzer W!ll b d
t
1 1 V'l
.
·
e room apar mens a 1time 9 am to 4 pm
Hrring an experienced copk,
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre selltn part or whole. Callier !age Manor and Riverside
1076'
Y•RD SAl.'.'·
even1ngs &amp; weekends Ap· c
$
.
details. (740)446-01 1B
Apartmenls· in Middleport
It
.,
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h
te . ChiJdcare a\lailable in down- tract, 500 down to qualrfled
L.,_.;P•Iii:O,PI,;;·;:;"'~'SA:
' ;:;NT;,;..,JaP1Y11nhperuson all ,e ca, teAr~ lawn Pomeroy, private pay buyers: Call (740)446-3570 2-1/2 to 12 acre lots. City From $278·$346. Call 7~0·
G de Fnl\lersl Y . of
IO only providmg 24 hr serv· for a quick sale.
water on Tribble Ad. Mason 992·5064. Equal Housmg
ran e. or more '" orma· . 1
Co · Pnce,s starting at =O~ppo:::::_rt:
un:::ll.:;l•::•:::·- - . . , - 740
5827
992
Yard Sa!e 6os· 4th St•eel, lion call (740)245·5660.
rce, c.all -( )
·
tor House for sale ·,n Porler,
mora mlormatton.
$15,000. (304)541-0759
Now Taking Applications' New Haven wv Frr tBih &amp; =c:::::.:.:~::.:::.::::::._
1800 sq·. ft . 3 BR, 2 balh.
H
H
k
35 West 2. Bedroom •.own·
Sat.
19th,
9am-4pm
weathorne
eallh
Agency
see
.
,
(740)441-4705Pricedtosell
REAi.EYI'ATE
, :er permitting. Lots 01 small- ing Full T11ne AN. Competi· Ge~rges Portable. Sawmrll,
W."'wn;'l"
house Apartments, Includes
.er hand. tools, hous8hold live wages with benufils. NQ d~n ~ haul your logs to the LancJ home packages. No 1 • ..,;_.:,;,::••:;.:,"~~-_.1- Water
Sewage, Trash,
·items, complete new ·bath- home health · e&gt;cperience mill Just call 304-675-1957. payments whrle under con· ~
$350/Mo., 740-446-0008.
t
· ·1
· 1 necessary Apply at 3084
struction
little
or no w ·tl
1 dh~:
11 1o~~[~~~ One bedroom, upstairs
,~~~t~esurn. mrsc. I ems, Qlr s State Aouie 160, Gallrpohs Wi~l pressure wash houses, down payment required . la~cJ~a~eO:
Gallipolis career COllege
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today/740 446 4367
.
1·800-214--0452
,
A 190 05 1274·8
eg
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1170

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AocnoN ANIJ
FU~\ MAKK&gt;::l' .
AUCTION
,
E~ery Friday @6:30.Angle's
Flea Market 333 Mechanic
Street Pomeroy, Ohio Call
For lnformalron: 992-9734

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WANTEIJ

mBuv

Absplute Top Dollar U.S.
Silver. Gold Coins. Proof·
sets.
Diamonds.
Gold
A1ngs.
US. Currency,·
M.T.S Corn Shop1 151 Second Avenue. Gallipolis, 740·
446-2642.
Web TV Plus Unil Should
be compatrble with HP 670
TV Printer. (304)576-3364

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Sl/(\ 11 1·S

HI:LI' WANllD
.
&lt;Arcadia Nurs1ng Center·.
Is now accept in~ AN 's, or
LPNs, applications Availa·
ble positrons are Part-T1me
: 3-11 sh1ft We ·have new
sIarImg wages Ior our RNs.
We otter excellent benefits
. that mclude Health lnsur·
ance, 401K, Li fe Insurance.
compe11~e wages and opportun ities lor
ment. If you are a team
Play• • who enJoys working
'
wrth the
elderly. pleasR ap..., 9 4
111
ply
person between "
or catl. Susan Winland , RN ,
Drrector of Nursing
Arcadia Nursrng Cen ter
East Maln ·Street
Coolville. Oh•o
(740·667·3156)
EOE·MIFIH/DV f

1_866. trarlers, ~nd decks Call
441·4238 ask for Ron or
le~ye message.
H~me Supervisor
Minimum
Qualifications: ~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
BA/BS rn. ~usin_ess, health
B~ '
care admrn•stratron or a social science oc equivate~t
job-related expenence of .,
three years. One. year .of reINOTICE!
latedwork
.
expenencemhuOHIO
VALLEY
PUBLISH·
man servlces:.exper Ience In lNG CO. recommends
that
Provid
nd
~~ ~~rvlces a sup- you do business with people
port to rndlvrduals With men- you know, and NOT to send
tal retarda! 10n a.ndlor devel- money through the mail until
opment d•sabrtlt1es prefer- you have investrgated the
red. i nterested ca ndidates offering
should submit their letter ol
.
Intent to
Rho nda Ball
Team Leader, 8404 Carl~
Mlk~ Blazer
Drrve, Gallipolis, OH 45631 Congratulalronsl ~ou have
or laMto (740)446·:3987 A won 2 free moV48 lickets
E 10
1 · E ·, n to the Sprmg Valley 7 rn
e~~~~~~rf~or unity mp oy- Galhpolrs Call the Tribune
·
for d~tails. (740)446·2342
l awn Care Helper, must be Start Your Business ,:g.
~pendable and hard work· day... Prime Shoppmg Cenrng (740)388·9416
I
S c A I •• AI AI
. er pa e val aU1e
·
1
Local Bar &amp; Grrll seekrng ordablf3 Rate. 2 N'rce Exec·
warlressJ bartender for day· ulive Offices. Newly Re·
shift (10:30-5pm) Must be · modeled. Spnng Valley Pia·
retr'able, honest and have za. Call (740) 44 6·3481.
RriOr wa itress experience.
PRo~ONAL
great pay and good tips.
Call (740}441·9371 or apply
SERVJCFS
in person at4? Court Street ,
.
Gallipolis
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?·
McClure's
Restaurant now
.
No Fee.Unless We Win!
hrring all 3 locations. lull or
1 688 582 3345
part-time, pick up applica· ·
• ·
- ·
I100 I
. &amp;b
b ..
at ocatlon
ring acr~
belween
9·'30am'
&amp;
or phone toll free
441 ·1393.

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L.,_.O_PPO_RTUNfJY
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ad~ance- ~~~~~rtl, Monday thru Sat·

_.:..;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _
T
•8)(
Preparers needed .
M
ust have good sol1d bas1c
knowledge
Ap"plicahons
and rnterviews on Tuesd;3.y
&amp; Wednesday, 10 to 3.
DanTa)( Inc .• 1828 Eastern
Avenue. Gallipolis, OH

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~--.:;FO;,::;R.S;;;A:;I.F.;:;•..,.,.I.1

(740 )446 _32 t 8

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Neyv 2000 sq n home, 10
rhinutes · from
Hosprtal.
Complete · above ground
pool with porch, driveway
and garage foundation .
Price below appraisal .
~1724~01::;44:::ff-::.33B:::::::4:...- - - PRICE REDUCED. 3 bed·
2 bath
k R h
room,
on
1 51tat ace 9 nc
neweranc
car
·
r '
·
pet, doors an appliances,
full basement (partially tin·
rshedl 2 car garage At 33
abo '
N
Ha en
~e
ew
v .
(304)662-3897
Rent. 3 Br house in Pamer·
oy, 4 sale or rent $375. per
month plus deposit (740)
698·6783
Two Story House, needs
work, prime lot In Aacme.
$12,000.00
9_4..;9..;·2:.:6.:52=-- - -- , Wanted! GOOd credit cus·
tomers to purchase new
home w/land $0 down to
qualified customers. 1·5
acre
tracts
available
(740)446·;tQ93

3 Bedroom with garage on
approximately 1 at:re On
Route 2, Gallipolis Ferry.
(304)675·5332
3 Bedrooms, 1 bath, carport, newer roor, storm windows, t 35 Kineon Dr.
(7 '0)446·2776
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apartment (parlialty furnished) at 651 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis. $350 per month
:;::::;::::::::.;plus $350 deposit. Water &amp;
trash Included (no other utllH&lt;KJSES
ities .included In rent). No
FOR Rmr
· pets. Six month lease requlred. Call (7401446-7323
(Library) for more informa1
1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed tlon.
Homes From
St99/Mo
4%.,..ara Townhouse
·
Down,
30 Years
at 6, 5%
. Apart·

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APR For L'1st1'ngs 800·319· menta, Very 5 pacrous, 2
3323 Ext 1709 '
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
·
·
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
A
Poo ' B b Poo p
1&amp; a Y
141 ' Second Avenue. A\lall· .du ll
I, 8 •
able No\/Eimber ., sl. 2 bed· t•o. 5 tart 5315/Mo. No Pets,
rooms, basement, yard, Lease Plus Security Deposit
new heat! AC. relerences, Required, ~ays: 740~446·
deposit. Call (740)446-1161 3481 : Evemngs: 740·36 7•
after October 20th.
o
=5::0=2.:..- - - - - - 2, 3, and 4 Bedrooms ~mites
availabl6 . Pomeroy/Midc;lle· Twin fUver• Tower lor eld·
port/Racme area Immediate erly/ dlsabt~.
. .
occupancy. Hud approved Now acceptlnlg a~pl.rcat1ons
immediale occupancy pets ~~d br, ~I utilities paid
allow, no deposit option.
-ass•stE!d, , carp,eted
apartment rent 11 30 Yo0 ot
1-800-340-8614
·
·
your adjusted
rncome ca ll
3 bedroom home . . Miners~ 304-675·6679 between 8·
ville, Ohio, river vrew, no 4:30pm weekdays.EHO
pets, referenc~s required ,
S"•CE
.$450 month, call (740)992·
nit."""....
6777 alter 5pm.
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MOBILE HoM&amp;'i
S
fUR ALE

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3br. House located In Mason, WV. $495 + Utilities.
No PolS. 13041713·5681
5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Oli·- St,
••
$325 mo. (740)446·3945
.
6 room &amp; bath, central air 7
heal. WID hook-up, $400,
Kanauga, (740)367·7015

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1985 Pontiac Perisian~e
305
Automatic
motQr
w/overdrlve, corvette rally
wheels has Jensen CO
pi e ' po er seats ~
'r
1~7 Pontiac'
tarl Sl:atlonwagon 307 aut
malic motor w/overdrlv ,
n.-power windows &amp; seat, lett
~~~
tront fender has dent ~~
tXJ~
runs good., 1986 Chevy c./eb II 4d v 6
1
d 1r Y ~ • Wi 8~ ~·I ~
9sldan
Bloclf, briCk, sewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude Runs good,
new front
2oeo F
w;,,.,. Rio
Ot1
$
1/res.
1,000.
· or ,"'•a11
3.(304)895·34b8
Waterline Special: 3/4 200
PSI $21 .00 F'er lOO, 1" 200
PSI $35.00 Per 100; All
Brass COmpressron F•ttrngs
In Stock.
RON EVANS Et4TERPRI8ES _Jackson, OhiO, 1·800·
537·9528

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Firid what
you need,
close to
home!

shcidi.,

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GENERAL&amp; ADMINISTRATI\'E
(GS-3351 Computtr (lir1d~
(GS-JOS) MaiiUikCkrk
(GS·9!61 Mt&lt;licaL'llfll Clok
(GS·318) Srtrcluy IR!trptioni~
(GS-1201 Food Srrvitr W«ko
iGS·I861 So&lt;~aiSr~i«Aist
(05·21231 M0101 Vrh&lt;k Opoator

b~~~· i:J~I~r

!m~owr.

W1th ~tarting Pay of $14 • $20/hr.
Enlry I..nf&amp; F1lll TIIJod l'&lt;i!i1ioto •A!": 171o 65

MwiBt US Cii~Un, Com;mtl Ftlo1u May Nfll 14pply
For NaJitJrral Homtlrmd Strtlrit\' Po.tiliOIIJ

H"'

!llldM S1 P" O~tl
iftr~l11 Bi.IJ 111 lfllrridll
lob Eli!ililil) For,.Wh&gt;:Co"l'letc Cllttr !Xv&lt;lopmnl Propam
Ill MINU!ECLASSORIENT!TION
Atl-md By: Silk NttloaiiTrlltln! s.,kt, loo
(NoC~k to tile Collqr! lolorm&gt;im will be ~r•nl&lt;d io-pmon
Only~ lOOse lbkio "''nd Cl~• OricniJiionl
A~ GALLIPOLIS CAREER COLLEGE

.

1176 lrl!OD P~e. G~lipolis

S!Xing Valley Plaza: Su1~ 312
Friday, Odobcr 18th ONLY!
2:00pm or 6:00pm

co.

Not.lel&lt;rivoo

AiooiAjy ~ Plone Cals
UmioiSeotNI&lt;j llringP.,

r

t

i

1

2

I

s 0; .· '

Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp;
Repairs. Problems? Need
Tuned? Call The Piano Or.
_7..;40..;-4_4_.6_
' 4.:5;:,25::...._ _ _ _
Independent Herbal"e Dl's"
tributor, Call For Product Or
Opportunity (740) 44 1-1982
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt lri
Stodt Call Ron E~ans, 1800 _537 _9528 .

~

L

LIVOOOCK

FOR SALE
1.._---:,;i:;;:.,~,J

L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,J
.,
-,
Registered Angus Bulls, ,.1 ~6 F-350 Welding Rig
l7•:,;4::,o~;;2BB::;,·,:,:14:l;6:I;:O_ _ __, Lmcoln Welder. $4,oq&gt;.
1:'
(304)675 4975
u ·
nAY

&amp;

·

~:~rf 0f 2~e~B~nga~~~~~~~~

·---UUUU&gt;·----

r•o

FOR SALE

•

-~

96 Ford Bronco X:t: (1111
size)
77,000
mllala,
$9,500. days(7401367-02~
or {740)367·7558 WJaninga.

rJO

I

•
t992 Chrysler ·lmpe'rial ,
-good condition , $1500;
1993 Dodge Dynasty, good
condition, $1400. (740)3792366

'

1993 Rangel Auto, arr, go4cf
tires, 96 road mile( extert·
ed·cab. bed -liner, e&gt;ccellelt,
condition $35.00 1·740-66f·
6944

GRAIN

V4-ANSWDs&amp;

, ·:

va~.

1990 Mark Ill Chevy"
raised roof, seats 7, aeafs
1
fold down into bed, 2 a/'i,
ice cooler, much mora,~cellent condition, $4,800, 3B
Hudson St , Middleport, 0~,
(740)992·4103, 740·99,·
_
0709

e ar
For Conearns,
t A 1pe
1 Cha
cree. nge,
n·
net, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
FO( Drains, Driveways &amp;
Walkways. L&amp;L' Scrap Metals Q~n Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Frkte.y. Bam- 1995 Pontiac Grand Prix - - -- ----:!4:30pm. Closed Thursday, SE. 3.1l. 4 door, auto. AC, 92 Oodga Conversion
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday, PW, PL, 98K, $2900. 1 owner, lots of new ·pare
(7401446-7300
(
-4
$ ,
.30 .
_
2 500 4 675 6693
17401446 279

vai.

'

t~ .,...

~- ~
1.....a e-..1
&amp;1'r x1 Aater'Y"'· ~lh49 &amp; ~
Scott I,. Swain
·Gallipolis, Ohio • (740) 446-2015
/SA Certified Arborist
-;..(t(t,.(/4 •.

J-866-4DR-TREE

middleport, OH

(10) 18, 17, 18,2002

(10'1110' 611'1120')

1066 Second Street

304-773-5800

Paonia •flaw

'1

·

lransplanter.
·
MISOEI:.LANEOUS SUPPLIES lr TOOLS:
scales: (Fairbanks &amp; U.S.
sevenil hand trucks (lifts), 5
heavy plastic growing trays,
carriers, wood lomato
stapler, lots of buck·
wheal barrows, 1 00·
of Insulation, 30-potalo crates,
Impact frill, electric metal cutter, Central
Michigan drill
body
grtndeiS,
grease guns, reddy
stacks of acrap metal,
windows &amp; storms, and
or 'chtok w/poaltlvl

10.

000 not known to the auc·
bank authorization of
rt~pcnalblt for ion or

bl IYIIilbit,

CaroiAdlmt
AUCTION SERVICE
Pit lhtrldln
Chrla

Haning's Construction
Owner:
Foreman: Larty
Ronald "Mick" Haning
7 40·367·0 181
7 40-992·0780
Christina "Chris" Haning
Cell: 591-8393
Cell# 740-591-0919

LOWELL C. SHINN
4359 St. Rt. 160
·-.1 Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-1044
Monday-Friday 8-5PM • Saturday 8-2pm

MANlEYS
SElf STORAGE
97 Beech St.

[740) 992-3194
992-6635
Hre you stressed?
Call now for yaur
appL

fflfiGS mfiSSIIGE
THERIIPY
·. m n. Second Hue.

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING &amp; HEATING

Ausrett(ea,

·• Heating

• Air CondHionera
$~
• ServiCe On All Branda
• Residential &amp; Light Commercial
• 1D yr. Plfrls &amp; Labor
• Heating &amp; Air Conditioning

Advertise

In this
space
for
.$75
per
month

"SALES AND SERVICE"

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING
4 -1 21
in this
ROOI1n1. Sldln1
l'lrliltlna, Gutten, Decka,
space for $25
FmEo11matetl
(740) 992-1189
per month.
(Afl'ordable Prices)

Tonia Reiber

Phone ('740)593·66~111
Athens, Ohio

750 East·State Street

Dean Hill .
New&amp;Used

Longaberger/Dresden ·

475 South Church St.

Bus Trip
Sat., November 30, 2002
$65 .()(). Space Limited
Deadline: Oct 20, 2002
Everyone receives a
bask.er!!! Call:
f

Pontiac, Buick,

Olds

Dealer"

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

7.w;&amp;49-;!217

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

TFN

992·6215

. Your
flu/1/y
C01&lt;ntt fioldln&amp; old lton!

~~~

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 446-1812

740-992-5232

Asi' us nllout owr
Strvlrt Plrvul

11a81171ba.
~Jt~d

STUDIO 37

3dr•••
llulln

31 days.

lues. - S 11
10 nm · Cl pn1
llrrd
!H;r:;onal-

Jl&lt;UtlllllUS,
llOLIS!'S,

1/l't! :;l.!tt:-:; \\·.llcr -

Call jeanie
and ask hQw.
740-992-7996
Halballle lndependen1
Dlo1rlbutor

FDIIOIIl
IIFUIIIIIDI Clll

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Lire Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
flJ
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
~

Free Eslimates

oncrett Connet:lioo,L

..,u Laid anP
wwk

rrK tn lxlnc IJI'lup
Call 111 ror all rour roft1)111a' ~ocdl

1-877 102 U62

Jim Ruark
Eleatrto, Plumbing,
and Small Home
· M•lnten•nce Joba
(340 773·5412
Cell 304 874-3082

·1-800-822·0417

Ylu Clllllllllllllbll . . filE 111111
ltnlllllllck II

~Weal! muleS.

Free

JliS ElfCJRIC 1i
PlUmBinG

Ripley, WV 25271

Art

Open 9am-5pm

Toll

7122/TFN

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION

Advertise

Ucensed bg ae Ohio
Stat' medical Board

V. C. YOUNG Ill

W\'t11256

740 742 -2750

740.992·1671

,(7401992-1705

• Room Addlllono &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garege1
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gunera ·
• Vlnyf Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decka

Call for fTIOI'C infor J ITet otimatt

hum pers. f l' nder~.
li~hh . hn()(h,
J.:ld..,., , e t c

FREE ESTIMATES

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(817-353-7Gil)

New auto dnd truck
el: t erior replacement
body pdrts, door.-.,

•Newttcmas
•Gingaa
•Con 11111111 Fla 110dellg

YOUNG'S

740-742-8015

R&amp;S Quality
Replacement
Auto
Body Parts

CONSTRUCTION

' middleport; OH

Pomeroy, Otllo
Year Local

Best Ser~~ice at
the Best Price

ROBERT
BISSELL

Stop &amp; Compare

www.amerlcan•tandardelr.ccim

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Faclory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
.~alers
I000 St. Rt. 7South
Coolw'ffe, OH 45723

15' bell, TEW rotaty
'~~~r!:erie~~~~~~~:machine
I
old iron
wheal
seed

Dtywall, Painting

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

New Chefs Taste
FIOd

No,Chid,..

Selling personal
from Adams Farm
of Carol Adams and
lala Jim Adams.
Farming Ohio River tomatOQs, cabbages, bell
peppers &amp; other vegetables for many years.
DIRECTIONS: Route 33 soulh to · P~meroy,
tum on Rt. 124 to Racine, larm loc ted on
left on Adams Road (TR 623), w tch lor
sigos.
TRUCKS: 1985 lnlernational Tractor (350
· diesel motor. twin screw drive, 9 speed road
ranger), 1977 double axle MACK cabover,
Tractor w/sleeper (rebuilt), 1978 International
· w/22' Load Star 1700 refrigerated box van,
45' relrigerated van.
TRACTORS &amp; EQUIPMENT: 1948 Allis
Chalmers WD w/cultivators, 1959 Allis
Charmers D-10, 1990 Case lnlernational995
(less than 1700 hours), Baker Fork Lift &amp; bill·
tety (MAC 220 battety charged), AC tnp
bucket end loader, Case #30·3 pt. Hitch back
blade
Farmall
back
blade,
Case
lntern'ational 30 hydraulic blade, single culti·
valor, AC 2-boltom plow, 3-b~ttom plow, Fred
Cain rem tiler, subsoiler, spnng looth culttva·
tor, 1993 cultipac~er w/rollers, 1-gang diSC,
Caron 4ft rotoliiii!J', fa rm wagons, luel tank~.
irrigation pipa &amp; supplies, Vandans electrtc
plant seeder w/attachmants.. Old field pump
&amp; 1 000' 4' irrigation line, 1992 one rem
mechanical transplanter &amp; parts, 1987 Kiffco
.lr:r,,;,.;ri PTO pump D3/65, DMR PTO driven
·'
1
pump generator, t 10·240
TEW produce washer/packer
belt, 1976-24 TEW produce

Hdd-Ons, El~ctrlcal,
Plumbing, Decks, Remodeling,

uh CadeC &amp; Gravely

740•667

TRUCKS

TlJJ

~~~
~
We 9-'re For Your Trees~

Roo~ng, Siding,

whera Ia", with na

expreaaed or Implied
warranty given. ·
For ·rurther Information, or lor an
appointment
·to
ln•pect collateral,
prior to . .1. date
contact
Cyndle
Rodriguez at 1192·
2138.

Business Services
lf4ft
t\lfCitff4

ANTIQUF..S

Macltese pups- Purebred, 2000 Chevy Cavalier oWly
AK registered. Available 29,000 miles. 2 door, whle
October 16. 3 males. Ma~es 5-speed . and AJC, $4,9~.
the perfect pet for all Call (740)446 2927
Buy or sell R1verrne Ant1·
•
·
·
.
(740)446·7454 leave mesques, 1124 East Ma1n on .sag::!!::e::..
.-..,--~--~ 67 Camero, 327, 68,0 0
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· original miles. All origlnel.
992·2526 , Russ Moore, Purebred 'CoCker Spaniel very solid, interior e&gt;ccolle•t.
~=j~~~~;~ Puppys,
,Males, 2 Black, 1 $10,500. Call · after 5p~.
Blonde,
Vet
Checked, (740)388·8972
•
Wormed, 8 weeks Ld, very
nicell $130. each, calll-740·· 77 Chevy 4x4; 8G Oodvu
441·4462 6 to 5 p.m.
Ram van, 360 motor, llnttd
_:_:_:...:.:.=,.:..::..:..!:::::..."-"windows, $750 OBO·,
2 L
b
1
9
·
azy. oy rec iners. ur- RaV Fox Terner pups, 8 Dodge Dynasty, . $15
gundy. Uke New. (304)675- weeks old, $50; Beagle OBO. (740)256-6333
.~
1329 After 6pin.
m· od
Fr 1 8 ·
k
---..,--'---:--::-I)( pup5 ' ee
wee s 65 Dod
O'pl
I $5t
old. (740)645-2599
ge . 1 oma •
3 lots in Mound Hllf Came080. New !Ires, everyth!
lery. Must sell, best price. Rolweiler puppies for sale;· works
Can be seen at
Call (7401446·2158 e\le- Mother and Father on pram 2910 B.rch Avenue Cf/1 ·
nlngs.
•
·
-'-'-"::----:--:--:-- lses. Will be ready Novem- (304)675·7682
,
-:-8100
K
1$10000
ber7.(740)288·1636
92
Camaro
cold
air,
g·'"
x
og . anne
.
UlfU
304-937·3348 after 6 pm.
"Apltweiler male, pupPIJ, born heat, good Sl$reo, V-6, t 5
8/11/02, tail docked, dew· speed, rat ty sport, ruts
COOL DOWN, Central Air claws removed &amp; first shots, gooq $2,000.00 304·578·
Conditioners and Heat purebred but not registered, 2999
.t
Pumps. If you don't call us :$::
.::40~.:99::2:..09
:=3.:2 __
25::0::.·!:
17
we both lose. Free esti·
92 Z-24 Chevy Caval! r,
mates. (740)446-6308 and Tri-color Rabbit Beagle pup· good condition, 135,ot0
1·800·291 ·0098.
pies.·6wks. old.
on ~m:::,lle:.:•::.·-"(7 4~0):::36:;;7:::-0::;3::::9::;4_,_
-D-'-IR_E_CTV--,-SO-two_TV
_ hoo
-k· Premises.
Corvette Coupe, while
94
up, order here and earn
with red leather, glass t&lt;I:J,
SSS, 800_263 _2640 .
loaded, COl cassette red.,,
;::;::.:.:.:.=:.:::.:::___
$ ,
OBO, (
81&gt;.
Electric Base Board Heat- ~iF";;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 12 500
. 74016 T
7512
ers, Eiectrrc range &amp; refrig.,
FARM
Hot water heater, breaker ~--.:"';m~-:;:-~-,:..,J
99 Firebird, silVer, V-6, ·
.I.!A,Jl.l~ •
box w/breakers, well tank,
speed, lilt/cruise, Air,
PS, ABS·brakes, dual · ,.
well pump, windows. Much 970 Case Tractor with cab,
More. (304)675·3686
HP
bags, 40k miles, 2 years ltfl
86 '
good
condJiion, on extended warranty ~
Firewood lor s81e, $40 a $7000.(140)379-2366
80,000 M. radials. 1
load, (740)388-9143.
(304)895·3682
-'-"~-.:...--'-.:....- International Cub Low '-''-"C.:..:.:::.=._ _,_;;..
Floral shop closed all sup· Boy. 5 foot belly mower, Cars !rom $500, police i~nplies &amp; Silk arrangemerts &amp; last hitch, $1850, (740)858· pounds for salet For Nsti~g
coolers for sale call 304- 6016
1·800·719-~001 ext. 390't
458-1049 or 304-674·0120. ,j~~-----...,

7ue &amp;u S•/J.ee4:aet4Ul

478TE1504WA9208B4
The Farmer• · Bank .
and Savings ·
Company, Pomeroy,
.Ohio, reserves the
'
right to bid at this
Specializing li:i:
ule, and 10 withdraw
Roofing, Decks,
the above collateral , :
' Remodeling,
prior to sale. Furtller,
The Farmera Bank
Siding, 11nd
and -Sovlngs
Additions
Company reaervea
the rtght 10 rejtct any
Owner:
or all bldll aubmltted.
Terry Lamm
· The
above
described ·collateral
{740) 992-0739
·
1 mo.
will be •old "•• la-

*

r
L.,-------.,1

· lim . 12pm

Release April 28, 2003
AIM of $20 wl11 be
Savlngl Cori1pany.
charge• tor earty arriThe Farniera Bank ·
val. tate arrival, early
and
Savlnga
removal, late removal,
Company Ia selling
or anytime accus11
lor cash In hand or
wanted to falrgrounda
certified check the other than stated dates.
Building ap{lce 11 first
following cotlatet'lll:
come first serve.
1995 '
tnalde
Storage: $4.00/H
FREIGHTLINER
.
Open Span: $2.00/R
IFV6HFBAOSL.852723
Inside Fence: 1.00/lf
1.998
HONDA

No tricks...
all treats
In the ,
Classlfleds!

C1ner Dfl~opmenli'ropam
Prepttrt Now ISome PosldottS

I

(740)992·2143 or 992·6373
1•:::r.:.5::.p:::.m_.._ _ _·_ _ _
_a1..;
Mobile home lot, takes 12· - - - - - - - - - Round Bale Hay, Orchard
14· 16 widos. $100 dOP.OSII, Lincoln Pipliner welder, Grass &amp; clover, Tom Koso~
5125 month. (740)446-0175 $22.00. 304-675·4975
"'
1
,740)446·n87
desk 2 drawer &amp;
jj;j;p:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=::; Maple
bench storage $40.00 each
r10
u~.~ ..OUl
UUUM'-t1
or both lor $7•5.00 304·662·
ro.-..r..-,.__, '
AIJ'IU'l

N 0 pes,
"
1 wa 1er pa id · $550 ators, $75 each; White Kenmonth, deposit &amp;· relerern:::e
(740)388·1100
moD re w,asher, $G 5; Rapper
ryer, 60: Almond Whirl For rent or sate 2 BR house pool washer &amp; dryer set,
newer stove &amp; relrigerator: $150. Call after 6pm,
nice back yar~. rent $300. (740)446-9066
\
month, plus utililies, No w • " • - •
pets, References/Deposit auck frreplace rnserl , $400
992·5502
OBD (740)446-2323

1

. HELP WANIID

9·

.:;:::;:,;::;;..,.,J

2436
NEW AND USED STEEL
7 rooms, 2 bath, Gall,rpohs. 2 .Almond lrost Ieee reln'oer· Sleet B
p·
Ab

$69.000. 3 bedroom. 1·112
bath, 2 car garage, 10 mi·
nutes from Holzers. Ohio. 1994 Oakwood 14x7D, 2
(304)675·2364
SA, 2 full baths, newl~,
painted inlerror. Newer .LA "
3 B9droom newly rfjmod- carpet ~ ton AJG, sklrtrng,
eled. in Middleport. call Tom Musl
sell!
$15,000.
Me•gs Motel. needs House Anderson after 5 p.m
(740)388-0436 after 5pm, or
Keeper. 992 -5531
leave message.
992-3348
I

,(7401446 _3093

a·

:.::.:.:..:.=---'----

I

ge
T 440, $
( 40)245·5087

..,,ru

1

1'""7-4,0·,~12· 7773

Used furnitUre store, 130
Bula"ille
. . Pike· We sell mattresses, bunk beds, dress,
ers, couches, appliances,
198601daCutla88SuPreme
much more. Grave manu· L__
Broughan,
V-8,
$500.
ments. (740)446·4762 Gal·
(740)992-.19~
'
·..llpoo:
' :::
li:::s,..:O:::H.::_._ _ _ _ _ 55 gallon Aquarium with
cabinet stand. Complete 1991 Buick ReQat, low mllfAppllancesD: Aecon~ltloned with filter, fish &amp; nice deco- &amp;gill!, $2800. (740)388-9855
Washers, . ryers, anges, rations (74013677t15
Aehigrators, Up To 90 Days
·
·
1998 Grand Am, 4 do~r.
Guaranteed! We Sell New AdOrable, kittens and moth· $2995; 1995 Grand Am GJ,
Maytag Appliances'e:Ffench er cat. 4 black &amp; 2. grey &amp; 2 door, $3695; 1993 Bui~k
City Maytag, 740-44 '·7 795 · mother; black long hair. Century, $1295. 12 others
For Sale: Reconditioned .,~::~:::.:·c:.7:.:::2'--'--- in stock, we take tradeS.
washers, dryers and rel(!g· ...,
COOK !IIOTOAS (740)44$·
erators. Thompsons Appll- .AKC Registered Beagle 0103
.
puppies for sale, 6 week ,
.
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave· old Mother &amp; Father on 1998 Burck Century, V-6,
_n.;.ue.:.'.:.(30..:::.~:..16_75_·_73_6,6_.- - premises. (740}368·8721
liiVcr~ise,
and g.oad .
!::.:::=:::::_::_:::!.::::..:.:;:.:__ cond1tron, 71,000+ n:ule~.
Whirlpool washer, $95; Ken· Cute Long hair Chihuahua, $8500. (304)882-2640
,
more dryer, $95; Kenmore 1 year, male, AKC, $200.
eleclric range, $95; Caloric (740)256-1249 ·
1998 Chev. Caviler Blue a(l·
gas range, white. $150,
.
. to. Ale Cruise 4 dr. AM/FM
Kenmore frost free, white, Hershey Kisses For Sale Cass. new tires, new bat.
AKC Choc. Labs S-Male &amp; tery, 74,000~mllei $3,500.
refrigerator, $150; upright 3.Female Born
.
:
•
• •
9 9 02
frGfiZer,
$125;
Maytag s4oo.oo Both Parents also 992 5860
washer/ dryer set, $275; For sale wlpedigrees 2 yrs. 1999 Lincoln Towncar,
Sofa, $75; Dresser with old. (
)
_
nature Series, bright whl ,
740 742 3802
mirror, $75; Nic'e solid wood
sharp, loaded, one ,
0
bedside
stands
with Large breed Rottweiler, verY (retired). ~ways malntal .
drawers, $40 each. Skaggs good tempered, 7 weeks on ltme, extra cle . .
Appliances, 76 VIne Street, old, 2 males. 2 females (740)446• 1000 . leave !l'IW)·
(740)446-7398
$200.00 aach 304-773-5873 sage.
,.

,

BASEMENT
,
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. LOCal references fu-r·
nistted. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

driver. Excellent
i..U)av ExpEfrlenced
Drlv1~rs Only.

17 401 367 15

___.,

IMPROVFMENTS

l.,o-Oiiiitiiiiliiliiliiil-,.1

Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
parking lot of The
Farmers Bank and

WINTER STORAGE
Metga &lt;;ounty
Fairgrounds
Arrival: Oct 5 r..Pct, 19

'

=:..:!::::..::.=-:_:_____ -- - - - - - - -

Nice 4 drawer maple desk &amp;
::'h::":::."·:.:&lt;c:.74.:;0:!:13:.:8::8..:-6::9:.97:___

.

450 Foreman
s1 oo. 17401367·

public . . le will be
held at 211 Wetit
Second
Street,

CDIISTRUCTION

T".....tn• Trailer

Ch:;J'f-

t

paid $600. will take $4
{304)675·5344 ·

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, PoFier, Ohio.
(740)448-7444 1·877-830·
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. Vlsal Master Carel
Drive- a- little save alol.

FORRENT

.•
3 BR, 2 Bth, w/d, c/a . axe.
condition. References re·
qulred $400.00 I mth. w/ se·
curlty deposit caU (740) 992·
4017afler6p.m.

r

conditioned and Guaranteed. Washers, Dryers,
Ranges, and Refrigerators,
Some start at $95. Skaggs
Appliances. 76 Vine St.,
(740)446-7398

MOBILE HOMES

Two BR mobile home local·
ed on Old Burdette Lane
behind fox's Pizza In Point
Pleasant. $350./tno. Ret&amp;r".:
enoes
required .
Call
(304)675.3423
12x60 3 bedroom w/c/a, ~p:.;~;;;:;;;;.,.
washer &amp; dryer, stove,
AIIFOR~~ ·
$5,495, 140-992·2167
.~Ur&lt;~l

I

Go()!l Used Appliances, Re· New Troybill weed eat

I

"I 1~\ H I 'i

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

H't~ID

Ir10

, 2,500 miles, some

NEWSPAPERS

{304) 675-5234

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

~S.ta.te-A•oi uli tei .i 1i 4i 1i ,

1995 Ftee1w00d, 14&gt;70, 2
BR, 2 lull. bath, . Must see
home Located 12 miles
south of Gallipolis on Teens
Run Rd, must sell! $, 8,000.
Call (304)736-7268 Land
contract possible.

2 trailer lor sate on .1 acre
tot, $36,000. Nice rental .
(740)446-Q118 Call tor 11e·
tails.
::::::____ _ _ _ _ _ _
New 2003 14x70 3 Br /26th
Only $995. down and only
$189.86 per month. Call
diKrlminatlon."
Ntkkl, (740) 385·7671
,
Thl• new•paper wiH nat
New Managers Special,
knowingly accept
new 16x80, 3 bedroom, 2
bath · reduced to only
1d VIrtl•men11 r or ru1
11tetewhlch I• In
$27,900 delivered and set
vlola11onotthelaw.Our
up. You save over $6,000
r~ader• are hereby
including .underpinning, anInfOrmed that 111
,
chars, vapor barri~j 1 set .tidw•lllnneadvertiHCIIn
berglass steps, 20 ol utllrty
thl• ,;..paper are
lines under home, all, mstalavallabtt on an equal
led, One only, Coles s Moopport It ••,..
bile Homes.. U.S. 50 East,
~;::::;un;:r:-::::·~ Athens, Ohio 45701

Truck Drivers, lmmedie.te
hire, class A" COL required,
excellent pay, experience
required . Earn up 10
$1,000. per week.Can 304·
675 _4005

To

Bo•

r: M~~s~~~ I

All rulntate Mlvertlslng
In rhil Mwapiper Ia
eubject to the F. .r1l
Fair HouatngAct or 1161
whlch ·mak.. lt lllega,l to
• MlvertiM"any
preference, limitation or
dl•crlmlnation bated on
rece, color, religion, Hx
ramlllal •t.tue or nation•!
orlg5n, or any Intention to
milk• any •uch
·
preterena, llmll•tlon Of

67~-1333

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Pub'llahlng ruervea the
to edtt, re]«:t, or cancel any ad at any time.
on the first day of
Tribu,.s.ntiMI-Reglater will be reaponalbla for no morw than the coat ot the tpace occupied by
flrll lnHftlon. We lhlll not
any loee or axpenta that ruulte from the pubiiCJtlon or omltllon ol an ad;vertiMmenl. Conectlon wlll be made In
llrat avallabte edltloil. •
are alwaya conflclenllal. •'Current rate card appiJft. • All real eatete advartlaementa are eubltct to the F~ral Fair Housing Act of 1H8. • Thla 1
accepts onl';' help •nt«l ada
1 EOE 1tandard1. Wa will nc:rt ltnowlngly accept: an';' ld\lertl•lng In vtolltlon Of the llw.

~

IIELPWANIID

.

'

Display Ads
All Display~ 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
f:'ubllcatlon
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m .
Thur-sday for Sund.!lys

• Include Phone Number And Addres~ When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days
·

HarWANilD

·~r

Word Ads
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
Monday -Friday ror Insertion
In Next Day 's Paper
nday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Pcu&gt;er

• Start Your Ads With A. Keyword • Inclu de Co mpl ete
Descrlptian • I nclu de A Price • Avoid Abbr.ev latlons

Successful Ad s
Should' Include ,These Items
To Help Get Response ...

i1

1

Saturday, October 19,
2002, at 10: 00 •. m., •

TRX300FWW

~~~~1~ne~w~,
~$:12~,~500~. ·r,O
~r;,;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
or 17401339·
HOME

l\egtster

Sentine

P

NOTICE Ia hereby
given • that
on

r'rJinr·; ~ dldWO;t):,
ill pt.•t:·i;lr' pr•l:;.

tv!()f If I
r; 'd :-) : 'tl; If\''I ~ IH 1 ~ r·t
/.1()11'1:' •gu,\

lllliiH~:;
1

,1.',

·.l!ltiiii:L·,,,' IH • •.till

BISSELL

BUilDERS InC.

Homes • Vinyl
Sldlna • New Oara,e•
• Replacement
New

Window•• Rooflna
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES
740.892-75911

(

,

....

111111 MilliS
CI. . .RIIJ ICIIIR
74D-992·2222 or
74Q-446-1018

The CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

All vertical blinds are
Bedliners •

made to order at

Nerf Bar

• Tonneue Cover •
Venrvisor • Bug

our location

• Verticals • Wood

&amp; Full Line of
Other Accessories

Shield

• Minis • Etc

144 Third Ave.
Gallipolis 44~995

'I

ohl 11111111111 l{d

I~\

\ JrddiL'Itul! ( l illtt

Free 1-888-745-8847

(740) 992· 5822

Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
· &amp; , Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

POMEROY
APPLIANCE

Toll

Pomeroy

6:30

-

1st Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE .

STORE
200 E. Main St.
Open 9am-6pm
Mon thru Sa~
Phone 992.0515
Washers, drr.ers
~Ike New '
Freezer, Electric
Ranges, Dishwashers
Relrlgerators, and
· much more
FREE DEUVERY

lOIII'

Tree Service .
• Top.· Aemo.vol • Trim
• Stump Qrlndlng

• Bucket Truck

ODD JOBS

me.

Painting, .Power
Washing, Mowing,

Weedeatlng
You Need It
Done, We 'II Do It
(740) 949-4026

or
(740) 591·9239

Connie's

Child CARE
has openings, 15 yr,
. experience, Certified
in Meigs, Athens and
Washlnglon counties,

·Open 24 hours.
7 Days perweek,
St. At. 7 Tuppers
Plains, OH
CALL 667-8329

Sunset Home
Construction
'

Bryan Reeve•

'

New Homea, Room Addltlona,
&lt;iaragea, Pole llulldlnga, Roofl,
Siding, Decka, Kllchene, Drywall
• More
·

·fREE ESTIMATES!

740-742·3411

�Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

ALLEY OOP

Thursday, Ol;tober 17,2002.

www.mydllllyHntlnel.c:om

,.

Sectional volleyball previews, B1

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHILj:.IP

40 IRA lnvHt·

ACROSS

ALDER

meng

1 C.r11i1n

:-:c-

42 Good pllol
elapa
43 Rock'I I NUt"NrY
J~gger
myme girt 45 Uongrell
10 !Wiry·
47 Apple HOd
• chnttd?
so Mekel tt
12 Some
llllppr.
lrUnkl
52 Bring orth
14 Fr~l, IO· 54 T1keln
JWtn
oxygen
15 W•m color 58 P11llne
16 Quiet
nuta
16 Sock tip
59 Man'•
19 Unlv.
.accesaory
merche11 60 Imitated a
12 South ;,
vlewl
21 Geologic
c•nary
African
44 Snips off
dlvlolonl 8t Wheal and
oettlar
46 Wedding·
23 Earth, In
corn
13 Match a
party
combo•
w•g•r
member
24 Muoer'o
DOWN
17 Tall
47 Kind ol
· mumble
conifers
talk
28 Snout
1. Cavlir.
19 Tint ag1ln 46 Seine eltee
aclually
29 Woodwork·
20 Seeped
49 Typewriter
2 Purpoae
Ina toot
22 Bribe
type IIZt
30 Pamplona
3'-L•nu
51 Popular
cry
4 Two cubed 23 Chatter
oong
5 L.uybonee 25 Do yard
32 VaUc1n
· work
53 PrtHf¥1
6 Oead Sea
he•d
27 a.. onorvY
fruit
feeder
34 Toum•
55 Soldier'•
7 BOIII'III. 28 Sagll
menl
31 caaoe
addr.
p11111
6 LooM
38· Oulocored
lhrelde J33 Flre11edy7 56 Teacup rtm
37 uttm1nn ot 8 EnglnHr· 35 Yooemlte- 57 Coaat
39 Bogging
· Guard off.
tng toy
clntml
down
38 Mild
11 Mountain
41 Having fine
curve
ChHII

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lot~tll
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,.
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Openlna INd: • J

Extra chance

so cents • Friday, October 18, 2002 ·Vol. Sl, No. 46

. High: 60s, Low:· 50s
. Debtlls, A1

.Cecil Gene Atkinson, Jr~ 23
Details; A3

•Barbeque set
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport, Volunteer Fire
Department will , have a
chicken barbeque and bake ,
sale, beginning at I l a.m. on
Saturday.

Payments
available
POMEROY - Farmers
should apply at the Farm
Service Office, Hiland Road,
for payments under the
Livestock Compensation
Program. Producers will
need to report the number of
cattle
(beef,
dairy,
buffalolbeefalo) in classes of
\ldult, 500 pounds and over.
Sheep ·and goats are also
included. All livestock must
have been owned a minimum of 90. calendar days
before or after June I.
Questions may be directed to
\he Farm Service Agency at
.992-6646.

·I

I

I

I I I

.16 . I

0

Friday, Oct. 18,2002
Bv BERNICE BIDE OltOL

GAHFIELD

In the year.ahead the need
for newness in your life may
.take cenler stage and you w,ill
begin Jo develop many fresh
outlels to satisfy this refurbishment. Your effom for_
achieving !hem will produce
what you want. ,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Be prepared 10 take on a
strong-willed opponent today
. who is desperate to see you
toppled. If you don't feed !he
flames, you'll have an easier
oime of squelching his or her
onslaught. Get a jump on life
by understanding lhe influences I hal' II govern you in the
year ahead. Send for your Astro-Graph . predicoions by
mailing $2 to Amo-Graph,
c/o ohos newspaper, P.O. Box
167. Wickliffe, OH 44092. Be

'
l HAP A PRI!'f'TY
GOOC&gt; PAY TO C&gt;AY ·

.

.

THE GUIZZWELLS
llO{, ~'i "1'\M~

1 TU~
~l-ID. 1 'OE'EM 'To PUi
oN WE\GIIT, Al:I.D 1 ~·r
\&lt;.~ IM\I&gt;.T
\0 Do

sure to state your zodiac sign.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .•, No malter how hig the
load, if you allow yourself to
be overwhelmed by whao lconfronls you !oday. you will not
accomplish a thing. Relax,
lake a deep breath, und do one
job at" lime .
. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) ·' Ins lead of bealing ·
your head· up againsl a brick

A~T

\T

.. ."

.
·'-----· 1.----

-·- --·-

~---:

-

('

' .

time and efforl on trying to
change something you do not
· have the power 10 alter. Think
your way around it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) •• If you are thoughtless
today, you could resurrect an
old, volatile domestic issue
that you thought was re-

solved, only to watch it un ..

ravel before your eyes once
again. Let sleeping dogs lie.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -· If you think losing your
cool aQd getting angry aboul
somelhing you thought had.
been laken care of will resolve anytliing, think again.
All it will do is generate a
heated response. Be oolerant ·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
· 20) •· The opposile exlremes
of being too slingy or !oo exlravagant in handling your
money ·today will produce !he
sa me consequences: poor

value received for your dollars.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19)
-- Don'o allow oohers lo drag
you into somelhing loday 1ha1
you know does not serve your
besl inlereSis. The regrels you
end up wilh could be naSiier
than you thought.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) ·- Pu1 a lid on thai stub-

$BJS, no

to·traffic light

at.Bradbury
Pavement
markings, signs
to be upgraded
BY BRIAN

W.VA.
Daily 3: 3-2·4
Daily 4: 8·4-5-2
c;asli 25: 3-4-13·14-23-25

•

Index

born, harsh oullook you can
adopt loward others at times.
You can take bets that what·
ever you dlsh out (oday,
you'll be gening back twofold .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
•• Selecting the wrong types
of pals or associates to do
business with or to simply
hang out with ,can produce
grea1er consequences than
normal. Discordant situations

can arise.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- Without having a clear-cut ,
direction today, chances are
you will find yourself taking
one slep forward and two .
steps backward. Eilher define
your goals or impede your
progress.
LEO (July 23' Aug: 22) ··
The gossip could be so juicy
loday thai even though you
suspect it is unfounded, you
might be salivating at the btl
to get it out. You'll hale yourself tomorrow if you do

2 Sections -I 2 1'111••

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
'

Sports
Weather
~ 2002

A6
B2·4
85
A6
A4
A3
.A3

Bl-2,6
A2

Ohio Valley Publishing Co,

During their business
meeting yesterday, commissioners tabled a_ction on a
request from Sheriff Ralph
Trussell. for $1,052 in transfers from various line items
into his salaries line item.
Trussell requested . the
transfers from ures, contract
repairs, medical, food and
supplies line items, but said
earl'ier this month that he has
$80,000 in unpaid bills for
supplies, auto repairs . and
other expenses relating to the
housing of prisoners.
"If we have $80,000 in
unpaid bills waiting, there's
no reason to transfer out of
those
line
items,"
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said.
Commissioners also:
• Approved ·an appropriations adjustment for the juvenile court;
• Approved dedication of
roacJs in the Chestnut Rid$e
Estates
subdivision
10
,Columbia Township;
• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of

$380,752.57.

Also
present
were
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport and Clerk Gloria
Kloes.

Information at your fingertips ... ·

•

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

spread it around.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 2-2)
·· Acling oil bad informalion
passed on 10 you today could ·
prove 10 be extremely expensive . Any tips or advice re···
ceived shoulo be checked out
or sal on for a while to see
wh:it transpires.

District I0 will upgrade the
signage and pavement markings at the intersection in .the
near future. It's also likely
that rumble strips will be
installed on the County Road
5 approacljes to the intersection."

POMEROY
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation plans to
upgrade safety measures at
the intersection of Ohio 7
and Meigs County Road 5,
according to a leiter from
ODOT to Meigs County
Commissioners . ..
ODOT recently received
petitions, containing 265 signatures, asking ODOT to
consider placing a traffic
light at ·the Bradbury intersection, the site of at least
three fatal accidents - one a
·
month ago.
In a letter to the commissioners, ODOT's District
Studies Engineer, Thomas E.
Camden, said the state is
completing a safety study of
the intersection since the
most recent fatal crash, but
that a traffic light is not a
likely outcome.
.
"While your request for a
tratiic signal is not uncommon, please understand that
the installation of traffic signals can actually increase the
number of crashes, particularly when the signal is located at an isolated, high speed
intersection," Camden wrote.
"As an interim measure,

·~,·~

.

J. REED ·

Staff writer

OHIO
Pick 3: 9-5-4
Pick 4: 3·6' 3·6
Buckeye 5: 18-27-31-35-37
Pick l night: 2·3·4
Pick 4 night: 5·2·3-3
··

c'blr

- wallloday,'BirthdaJ'
don't waste your

•

Lotteries

e

---o-fh-eart_s._ _· ,

'

health ·education, counseled
women who require(j additional tests, and found. physiPOMEROY -Courtney Sim cians who would see patients
of
the for free or at a teduced cost. .
M e i g . s She also volunleers for ~he
C o u n t y American Cancer Society and
H e a 1 t h assisted with t~e Relay for
Department· Life · ·. and
Survivor
'
was
the Recognition Reception this
humble but year. ·
proud recip"It truly is an honor to be
ient .of the the recipient of the Fourth
Ohio Breast Annual Janet Voinovich
&amp; Cervicai Service Award," the Meigs
Volnovlch
c a n c e r County Local alumnus said.
Coalition (OBCCC) Janet "I realize that there are
Voinovich Service Award numerous deserving individu- .
Thursday which 'Voinovich . .als not only within our comherself presented.
· munity but also across the
State, community and state who are devoted the
he'!lthcare leaders joined rep- OBCCC's mission of reducresentati ves from OBCCC ing breast and cervical cancer
and'• students from Meigs morbidity and mortality and .
Local · High School on Ohio to enhance the quality of life
Mammography Day in a for survivors of these disreception. ,and ceremony to eases."
honor the many accomplishSim accepted the recognition on behalf of Meigs
ments of the young Sim.
Sim begail volunteering County ancl for "all those carher time and efforts Wjlile still ing people committed ~o proin college. She scheduled mating the health and well Ohio's former First Lady Janet Voinovich proudly stands next to Courtney Sim, this year's,recipient of the Ohio Breast &amp; Cervical Cancer Coalition (OBCCC) Janet Voinovich Service Award. ·
PI. .H cancer, A3
appointments, provided breast
(Staff)

LITTLE HOCKING -A
family seminar, "Turn Your
Heart Toward Home," will
be held at the Church of
Christ in Little Hocking.
Mike Cravens, a licensed
professional counselor and
licensed marriage and family
therapist in Tennessee, will
present the following programs: 5 to 7 p.m., Oct. 25,
:'God's Plan for Marria~e;" 5 ·
to 6 p.m., Oct. 26, "Building
Strong Families I;'" 6 to 7
p.m., "Building Strong
Families II," 9:30 to 10:15
a.m., Oct. 27, "Resolving
Conflict," II to 11:30 a.m.,
sermon, "Please Let Me
Know You Love Me."

1 1 .I.. I

I I:! I I'

KRtS DOTSON
Staff writer

. BY

Deaths

I

www.mydailysentinel.com.

Meigs woman gets Voinovich
award for work in breast cancer

:Weather
..

Today's deal features one of my favorite facets of play:
Declarer spots a faint
extra chance that maBARNEY
terializes, when a
I'M GONNA PIN
'I'OU
mundane approach
ON M'f COU&amp;lNS 50
ORGANIZIN'
fails.
I CAN 'MEMBER
How would you
A
•
(South)
try to land
WHO'S
WMO
!!
CONTEST~
four
·
hearts?
West
&amp;NUFF'f
leads the spade jack.
South's jump to
game was super-aggressive. Surely he
should have made a
game-try, which
North would have accepted.
Sitting South was
Jorge Castanheira,
who was en rol!te to
~'M A MI5S"IONAilY ••
victory in the PortuI 1&gt;0 YOV
guese Open TeamS'
Championship with
ttAVE ANY
partner Sofia Pessoa
(;Ofo1Vf~Tie£.ES1
and teammates Juli·
ano Barbosa and Rui
Pinto.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
When the dummy
by Luis Campos
came down, declarer
Cektbrlty
Cipher
cryptograms
are created from quotations by famous
saw one loser in each
people, past and present. EaCh leHer in the Cipher stands for another.
black suit. And since
Today's clue: K equals L
he
could ruff his diaTHE BORN LOSER
I
....
~
.
""! mond loser in the
G
y
"RNOPGRA
IWOOWH
"ir' :&gt;r-.'i~f\E~, if\E.I'{.'iTO ""!
r-.~t. OUI1:. ll'l'iC~ifolffiTS
WE 1-1"-~E. ·i'\0 0\IJ~)\T'I r-..1 "LL- dummy, apparently
success would requue
~U£:pru_ 11--1\/E.~TIW,
OIIJE~I V\eD?
Tf\c.'i'RE N.L LOS~!
OPCR
TLYGD ... GO
PCY
having only one
-~·- ~~ owe.R~\r\c.r-..110~!
trump loser. After
L y
XNRW
TN H W UNH
OPCR
ruffing the diamond
seven in the dummy,
H G A P'O
PCSW
OPW
0 N
zw
should declarer cash
the ·heart ace (wins
U N H • "
PNVW
when East has a singleton honor), or reRCXGC
INLKCRAWH
turn to han~ and play
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Books are ... bankers of lhe trea·
a low heart to dumsures of lhe mind ... humanlly In prtnt •- Barbara W. Tuchman
my's nine (wins when
BIG NATE
YOU'RE YEAH, YOU'r&lt;:E
I'M NOT .JEAL.OUS OF
r T+\OUG.HT
L.l KE
HE'S
East has a low single- n,"u'zzDLA tLY ~ t7'Q.,:, ,il..,. ' - f} -c ~C. 8 WOlD
so
50 06\IIOUIS.LY A~TUIII.! I JUST t&gt;ON'T
Mll.5.
SHE
SUPERMAN, c.oMPA1'1.1NC:. ton)? As these. two
11 0\.!o:l 1-'"U ~). c'.b Pt;~• -;:J GAM I
TP.A.N!&gt;•
JEALOU.Y
L.lt&lt;.E THE I&lt;.ID, THAT'!&gt; GODFREY
· IS!
. I HI'.VE · HIM5ELF TO
possibilities
are
ldltod by· CLAY R. POLLAN
PARENT. ·OF' ARTcrR!
ALL' HE's MY ARCH·
&gt;oiAS. 'I'OUP.
5HE
I
"'""'
Y
AN
IMMORTAL
. P.RCH·
equally likely, it ORoarrongo lotto" af tho
NATE!
ENEMY!
Atoll&gt;
ARCti·
BEIN6 .
ENEM'I'!
seemed to be a guess.
four scrambled words b..
AIO!.TUR!
ENEMIES'.
At the other table, . low to form four olmplo wordo.
after taking his dia- :
B y 0
I
0 N
mond ruff, the de- . 0
.
darer boringly cashed 1 11
dummy's heart ace:
. . . . .
one down.
~as.tanheira, after s D U J E G
wmmng w1th the
1
PEANUTS
spade ace, ducked a .
. . .
.
club. Winning the !
~
STRESSED
loll, CI(UCK ..
spade return m the ·1 0 0 N ·U H I;..
.
d
.
.
I
had
attended
a
political
rally
.
d
I
OUT
..
WI-IAT'S UP?
ummy,
ec arer •
·~
14
trumped a . club in
.
::: I overheard one politician say to
1
hand, took his top
another, "I certainly admire the
.straight forward manner in which
diamonds, ruff~d the
'dJamond seven m the ·. h·,......;E:....:.R;....:G+D_Y~·-;-:E;:.;··,.--1· all the issues were-'- --··-." '
dummy, and trumped ' 5
tho chuckle. quoted .
1 Complete
1
by fi lli ng in the missing words
another club. Won- .
you do•olop from stop No. 3 below. '
derful! Suddenly .
dummy's club queen
PRINT NUMBERED LtTTERS IN.
was high. Crossing to 1
THESE SQUARES
. .
the heart ace, Castan- ·
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE .LETTERS
heira discarded his '
· TO GET ANSWER
spade loser on .the
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
club queen. He los.t
Unload • Icing • Knack • Elicit • TALKING
two hearts and one
'1\1~1~ ·01&lt;1&gt;.'(,
I#:JM ,
1 CAN MAKE PO
Overheard at lecture at our local college: "Wisdom is
club •• as he would
t Nii:O
Win\ ~N~l.
have done if East had · · the reward you get from life for listening when you would .
AP~NCIL
held king-queen-third
ralher be TALKING ."

I

Meigs County's Hometown Newspaper
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

f

www.h~lzer.org

Diseove,. the Holze,. Diffe,.ence

www .holzer.org
- ._J

t.

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