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'

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Woald Sea ies shifts to San

Bl

'

Meigs County's Hometown Newspaper
50 cents· Tuesda 1 October n

Whafs inside

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

lOOl · Vol 51. No . 48

Forked Run part of ODNR's reorganization
Local park merging
with Strouds Run,

Burr Oak
. BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Staff writer

REEDSVILLE - Reorganization
at the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources will result in consolidation
of management of state parks across
Ohio, including Forked Run State

Park.
Budget cuts at the state level have

Steelers run over Colts, B1

www.mydailysentinel.&lt;om

led ·to the consolidation of management of Strouds Run .in Athens
County and Forked Run, located in
eastern Meigs Co)lnty, with Burr Oak
.
.State Park in Athens County.
, The two smaller parks will operate
as satellite parks of Burr Oak, according to Burr Oak manager Chris
Hardman who will "serve as a regional
manager for the three state par"ks.
State parks were subject to severe
funding cuts in 1991 , and several
positions have been eliminated since
then through attrition, including that
of a maintenance employee and park
ranger at Forked Run.

The Meigs County park now has a
full-lime ranger, a full -time mainte· nance employee and a part-time
campground coordinalor on staff.
Two · Natural Resources seasonal
workers win remain on staff during
busy summer months.
The park manager at Strouds Run
recently retired and will not be
replaced, Hardman said.
Statewide layoffs in the parks
department might come as early as
next month.
. Hardman said Forked Run manager
Randy Wachter and other staff al the
local park will remain on the job, but

'Bikers with a mission'

the consolidation will allow each park
to access staJf and equipment from the
other two when needed.
Hardman said equipment and staff
from Burr Oak were recently used to
replace waterlines at Forked Run
under the new arrangement.
The changes will not affect day,oto·day operations as it relates to park visitors.
"The visilor to the park won' t notice
anything, really," Hardman said.
"If anylhing, someone who is there
on a regular basis might see some new
faces."

New_Vo-Ag
teacher at SHS
.plans changes

'

Earlene Ke.nnedy, 68
.Donna Bissell, 65
Kenard Lee Prunty, 45
Details, A3 ·

Bv

KRIS DoTSoN

Staff writer

RACINE _

High: 60s, Low: 40s
· Details, Al

Too cool to ·do drugs!
Remember when you were little and
played with toys &amp; Lego's?
You can have fun and learn at the same
tiDJe just like these pre-school students of
Mrs. Bettie Bow at Pomeroy Elementary.
Find something that you enjoy with
friends; perhaps a sport, 4~H club, scouting troop, etc. and enjoy your lif~, not
.,... ·
drugs!

Election letter
deadline ·
: 'The deadline for submitting · letters regarding the
Nov. 5 generalelection is 5
p.m. Friday, Oct. 25. No
letters regarding election
issues .will be accepted
after that date.
Letters must be 300
words or less and address
campaign issues, not personalities. Letters that
exceed the 300-word limit
will not be printed. ·
'Fhe last day that letters
regarding the election will
be printed in the paper is
Sunday," Nov. 3.

Lotteries
OHIO .
Pkk 3: 2-4-4
Pick 4: 5-2-3-7
Buc;keye 5:4-15-23-24-25
Pkk 3 night: 0·4·1
Pick 4 nijht: 8-9-5-2

e got better things
·'

do than drugs!!

Summertime for some students means
time for learning, but not just in the
classroom.
These students- were part of . the
enrichment class that participated in
an outdoor activity at Forked Run
State Park. The students had fun
while learning about the outdoors.

W.VA.
Daily 3: 9·8·3

Daily 4: 5-8-7-2
Casli 25:1-4-10-14-19-25

Index
2

Sections - 12 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorjals
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
Q

Follow Your Dreams
Don't Do Drugs!!
·Latisha Klein, Kay Ia Stiffler, and·
Cayetlyn Smith enjoy some good oldfashioned fun of racing while learning
how to compete with their classmates.

AS

83-5
86
AS

A4
A3
A3

Bl-3
A2

2002 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

Santa Claus, also known as Arnold Priddy, leads the led tl]e Meigs County Bikers Association's
annual toy run. (Charlene Hoeflich) .

Bikers, Santa roll for needy kids
Staff report

. POMEROY - · Santa led
the vack as about a hundred
cychsts roared off the
Pomeroy parking lot as a pari
of their effort to raise money
to go into Christmas gifts for
nee,dy children.
It was the 17th annual toy

run ' of the Meigs County
Bikers Club, which collected
money and Christmas gifts
for many Meigs County
youngsters who mighl otherwise have a bleak holiday.
Last year, numerou s toy s
and more than $4,000 were
collected at the parly which
followed the run.

Led by a Pomeroy police
cruiser, the bikers moved
down Main , Street to
Middleport
where
they
stopped , at Wayne's Place.
They then traveled to the
Legion Post at Rutland, and
on to the Mizway Tavern in
Harrisonville for the parly. ·

tiona~ agriculture department at Southern High
School can expect a lot of
changes.
· Butch Mitchell; the new
vocational
agriculture
teacher at Southern High
School; plans to re-vamp the
school's current program.
Currently, his SHS students are remodeling and reequipping the agriculture
classroom, laboratories and
greenhouse. The -labs will
include a· metal shop, wood
shop and two bays for
mechanics.
"Our big project is . to
update our greenhouse so it
meets
the · technology
demands in modern horti.culture and production," he
said.
'
"We need to upgrade the
old greenhouse so that we
can teach the appropriate
and applied technology so
that these kids can work and
do business in the areas of

Please see SHS, A:S

Seniors being offered flu shots
BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH

News editor

POMEROY - A combined
community information and
weliness daytnu shot clinic
will be held at the Senior
Citizens Center Friday. 1
The event, which is geared
to encourage residentsJ o take
chargt: of their own health, is
sponsored by the Meigs
County Council on Aging and
the Meigs County Health
Department.
It will be conducted from 9
to 11 a;m. and I to 3 p.m.·
It is the first of three flu
shot clinics to be offered by
the health deparlment.
On Friday, the shots will be
given only to residents 65
years of age and older. There
ts no charge to senior citizens

who have a Medicare or
Medicaid card. The cards are
to be presented at the time the
shots are administered.
There is some limitation on
the number of ·shots to be
avwlable Friday, said Connie
Little, acting director of nursmg.
The total number requested
has not come in from the Ohio
Deparlment of Health . The
injections will be. given on a
ftrst come, first served basis.
However, when the rest of
the vaccine comes in, they
will be available .to seniors on
the same basis as at Friday's
clinic, Little said.
Shots will be offered to the
general public from 9 to 11
a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. Oct. 2830 at the health deparlment.
The vaccines for the general public have been purchl!sed

by the health deparlnient and
will be given at a charge of
·$15 each for persons under 65
years and without either
Medicare or M~dicaid cards.
· Insurance cards cannot be
accepted, according to Little,
altholl,gh individual s can send
re ceipls 10 their insurance
compa,nies for possible reimburserrient.
Cholesterol and blood surgar screenings will be offered .
Friday at no charge by the
Holzer
Medical
Cenier ·
Community Health and
Wellness. Department. No
appointment is necessary.
There also will be screening
fo~ overactive bladder and leg
pam by Pharmacta!U pjohn
. and pulse oxymetry prov1ded
by Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal

Please see Flu shots, Al

Adam Lee and Alan Moore listen inteotly to new Vo/Ag
teacher Butch Mitchell as he describes pl-ans for renovating
the old greenh·ouse at Southern High School. (Staff)

lfx&gt;k for the Holzer Medical Cenler Cammunily Health and Wellness Deportment at the

Co111111unlly
and
Wellriess Day/Flu
Shot Clinic
.
.
.

.Friday, October 25 .

I

9·11 AMand 1·3PM

Melga Multlpurpoae Senior Center In Pomeroy
Public invited! For .more information, call
(740) 992·21 61

,

The voca-

horticulture and truck farm ·
industry."
Mitchell plans to run his
classes with the FFA motto,
" learning to do, doing to
learn; earning to live, living
to serve."
"You have to use all· of
your senses to learn," he
said. ~'My job is to take all
of the academic learning
these kids come to me with
·and show them how to apply
it in the work place."
Recently, the local FFA
chapter ·voted to set aside
$2,000 toward the greenhouse construction but
another $10,700 is needed.
The groups hopes hope raise
the money through activities
such as its annual fruit sale,
which is·going on now, and
selling surplus and outdated
shop equipment.
FuiUre plans for Southern
also include developing a
multitude of learning labs. .
"For example , to teach
forestry, 1 need a wood lot
available ," Mit.chell said .
"We had studenis that did
'

\~

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
(

�•
. 10
Oh

The.Daily Sentinel

PageAl
1Uescl.y. October 22. 2002

VVednesda~~-23

AKRON (AP) - Backers of a sales
talt that would raise an estimated $30
million a year for school construction in
Summit County will spen!l $500,000 in
their uphill campaign to pass the tax.
Supporters of the tax . hike have
launched an information blitz, attempting to win support for the frrst sales tax
increase in Ohio that would be used to
build and repair school buildings.
· Early pi&gt;lls showed the issue being
· soundly defeated, but supporters of the
sales tax hope the glitzy, intense campaign planned between now and Nov. S
will change that sentiment. .
''Our message, which we hope to send
all over the county, to all of the different
comers, will resonate with people," said
Joel Bailey, who.is chairing the Citizens
to Improve Summit Schools campaign.
The campaign will include three or

I Monellelcl Imw I •

four mailings to targeted voters, 25 billboards around the county, 75,000 to
125,000 phone calls and 10,000 yard
signs.
' ·
Three television commercials will air
on Cleveland and cable stations. Closer
to the election, radio spots and newspaper ads will run.
The issue would · increase Summit
County's sales tax from 5.75 percent to
6.25 percent for 30 years.
Money from the increase would be
divided, based on student. population,
among the county's 17 school districts.
As the largest district, Akron would get
the biggest share of the proceeds.
"It's unique because it doesn't just
affect Summit County property owners," said Donna Loomis, Akron Public
Schools deputy superintendent. ''This is
the first time all 17 schooldistricts have

worked together for one issue for all of
their students."
The issue is particularly urgent for
Akron Public Schools, which wants to
begin a F74 million. sc~ool construction project. The dtstnct first must
secure $284 million in local money to
get the remaining money from the state.
Akron is counting on the sales lalt
approval to get the ~onstruction plan
under way and to avoid re!yiJ?g on p!Qpeity taxes for the local matching money.
"If this loses, we lose out on the sales
tax money, but we also lose out ori the ·
matching money for the state funds as
well," Loomis said.
The only organized opposition to the
sales tax hike doesn't have n~y as
much money to spend as the pro-lalt
group.

02002~.

__

Clouds will return to region
cloudy. A slight chance of rain
. . Clear skies are on tap foc after midnight Lows n.ear 40.
tonight. Lows will range front\ Chance of rain 20 percent.
30 to 40.
Extended forecast: ·
Oouds
try to decrease to
Thursday...Mostly cloudy
the north Wednesday as high with a cliance of rain. Highs in
pressure builds towards the the mid 50s. Chance ofrain 50
lower Great Lakes Region. The percent
rest of the region will remain Thursday
night ...Mostly
· mostly cloudy. Highs will be in Cloudy with a chance of rain.
: the mid to upper 50s in the Lows in the lower 40s. Chmce
south.
of rain 40 percent·
A trough of low pres:;ure will
Friday...Mostly cloudy with a
develop towanl the regton from chance of rain. Highs in the
the Gulf Coast states Thursday ·
SOs
and Frida'! and cause a chance upper · • .
Saturday... ~ shght chance of
of rain. Highs will be in the 50s
central and south.
s~owers dUQJlg the day, otherWeather forecast:
Wise ~y cl.oudy. L9ws 34 to
Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows 41 and highs m the lower 50s.
in .the lower 40s. Light and variSunday...Panly cloudy. Lows
able winds.
in the upper 30s and highs in the
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. lower 50s.
: 'Highs near 60. Northeast winds
Monday...Partly
cloudy.
: 5 to I 0 mph.
Lows in the upper 30s and highs
Wednesday night...Partly in the lower 50s.
BY lliE ASSOCIATED PRESS

will

A roundup of the dally markets
Oct, 21, 2002

12,000

Dow Jones
Industrials

11,000
10,000
0,000
8,000

High
"""
8,547.83
8.230.50
Roconl high; 11,722.118

Jan. 14,2000

7,000

OCT

2,000
1,800
1,800

1,309.67

,,400

Pd.lillngofromLow

.... .+1.69

1,312.53

1.200

1,287.76

Record high: 5,048.82
March 10, 2000

1,000

OCT

Oct 21, 2002

1,200

standard&amp;

1,100

Poor's500

1,000

899.72
Pd. chlngo"""'+1 .73
High

Low'

900.69

873:06

900
900

Roaord high: 1,5,n46
AUG

SEP

OCT

.

I

Local Stocks .

With the Washington area sniper still at large, young football players ·came to the Army's Fort Belvoir, Va., grounds to scrimmage as military police provide security, Saturday. MPs Spe. Dave Fielding, left, from Youngston, Ohio and PVt. James McGee
of Toledo, Ohio, watch over the Manassas Sharks, 7 and 8 year o/ds In the M,anassas Youth Football League. (AP)

Tests show West Nile probably caused bird deaths
. AKRON (AP)- West Nile .that killed off the mosquitoes
virus likely caused the unprece- that carry the virus, Sllld Pat
dented die-off of thousands of Ruble of the state's Division of
birds of prey in Ohio and other. Wildlife.
states in July, federal wildlife
Raptors - mostly great
officials have concluded.
· homed owls and red-tailed
But the National Wtldlife . hawks -died from Maryland
Health Center in Madison, to lowa; but Ohio had more
Wis., is calling its results ''pre- dead birds of prey than any
sumptive" because the active other state.
virus was not found in the
The Centers for Disease
· blood of all owls and hawks Control and Prevention has ·
tested, the Akron Beacon confirmed West Nile as the
Journal reported Tuesday. Tests cause of death in at laast 176
found the active virus in both
of the hawks but oruy iwo of
the five great homed ·owls
submitted by Ohio.
Reports of dead and sick
birds have diminished in
recent weeks, and wildlife
officials believe the disease is
reaching.the end of its run for
the year.
Much of Ohio has had frosts

people nationwide this year.
Ohio wildlife officials say it's
impossible to detennine how
many thousands of birds died
in the state.
Tests ruled out the presence
of bacteria, other Viruses and
microbes, and there was not
evidence the birds died from
exposilre to toxic chemicals
sprayed to kill mosquitoes,
Ohio wildlife biologist Mark:
Shieldcastle said. Earlier blood
tests had shown that the birds

were exposed to the virus
th\)Ugh those tests could not
determine the cause of death,
he said
Not all stricken birds died.
Man'! recovered on their oWII
or wtth treatment
·
The birds a~ emaciated and lethargic. These symptoms were followed by head
tremors, mental dullness,
blindness, unawareness of ilurroundings and sometimes
seizures.

HOLZER CLINIC
MEIGS

•

,.---~

would signal the regime
has changed," Bush said
after a Monday meeting
with NATO SecretaryGeneral George Robertson.
U.S. policy, approved by
Congress and backed by
t!te Clinton and Bush
administrations, demands
"regime change" in Iraq a phrase widely interpreted
to require the ouster of
Saddam.
·
In a rapidly changing
diplomatic
landscape ,
Bush and his top advisers
have strategically sent
mixed
signals
about
whether .Saddam could
remain in powe.r by changing . the nature of the
regtme.
·..

President Bush, right, gestures as. he' answers question fro m
members of the media during his meeting with NATO Secretary
General Lord Robertson, left, in the Oval Office of the White
House in Washington. Bush said he does not think Saddam
Hussein will disarm, ~ven if doing so would allow the Iraqi
leader to remain in power.(AP)

Local.Briefs
'

Gospel sing

be by Ne:w Horizon and special session at.7 p.m. on
Cross Creek. John Elswick, Monday, Oct. 28, to discuss
pastor, invites the public.
'an aerator problem, possible
pl~nned
litigation and other general
GALLIPOLIS
A
purposes.
gospel sing will be held at 7
p.in. Saturday at Poplar
Ridge Freewill Baptist TUPPERS PLAINS Church, Ohio Route 554 in Tuppers Plains Regional
Gallia County. Singing will Sewer District will meet in
MIDDLEPORT - The

·

Plan meeting

Tire pickup

Village of Middlepon will
conduct a curbside tire pickup on Wednesday.
Residents with scrap tires
on their properties are ·asked
to leave them at curbside for
pickup. There is no charge
for the seryice. Up to five.
tires, without rims, will be
collected at each residence.

·eMS runs

.

..
POMEROY - Units of
· 'Meigs Emergency Services
:.:answered the following
"calls for assistance on
.Monday:
, 1 CENTRAL DIS~ATCH
2:40 a.m., Mtddleport
· ,Police Department, Ricky
,Bain, Holzer Medical
,_Center;
.· 3:04 a.m., Riggscrest
•Manor; Bill .Call', treated.
·. 8: 13 a.m., Rocksprings
. Rehabilitation Center, John
'

Il Reader
Services
cusPs 213-96!1)
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
main concern In all stories is to
Published
afternoon,
I Our
accura1e. If·
of error In a Monday lhrough Fnday, 111 Court
slory, calllhe newsroom a1 (740)
S1reet, Pomeroy, Ohio., Second·
an

992·

2158.

Our main number Is
(740) 892 2156
.
'

l

Department extensions are:

· l

•

News

l

Ecltor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, E&gt;11. 13
Reporter: Agnes Hapke, E&gt;11. 14

:
1

Sporta: Derek Taylor,

j

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•

·•

..
•'
••
•
I
I

I

E&gt;11. 14

class pos1age peld 111 PomMoy.
Member: The Assocla1ed Press
and 1he Ohio Newspaper
Association.
PolltrnaoiM: Send address correc·
lions 1o The Dally Sen11nel, 111
Court Stree1, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 '
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j

SHS
from PageA1
very wei! at equine con-

tests, cow-calf farms and
dairy farms but we don 't
have a facility on campus ·
to teach animal science
with real live animals. We
also want to have demonstration plots to raise dif-

fer~nt

crops." ·
Mitchell
previously
worked at the Athens
Meigs Educational Service
Ce~ter as . coordinator of
the1r readmess program.
Before that, he was with'

Frontier High School in
Washington Cou nty, and
worked in agriculture sa les
· and owned an equipment
· business for 18 years .

· MORELOCAL NEWS.
MORELOCAL'FOLKS. ·

Impaired, Holzer Medical
Center Community Healt!t ~,
''¥c
.,
and Wellness Department,
from Page AI
Kinship
Navigator . ~"~ S.~bscrlbe rQday. 992·2156
Program, Meigs County
Home
Medical
and Cancer Initiative, Meigs
Continuity of Care.
County Health Department,
Information from a vari- Pharmacia/Upjohn ,
ety of agencies will be
available as a pan of the Pleasant Valley Hospital
wellness program. They Home Medical Continuity
BOX OFFICE OPENS
include the Bureau of of Care, and RSVP6:30 PM • MON • FRI
Services for the Visually Homeland Security.
&amp; 12:30 PM SAT · SUN

Flu shots·

llfii!J----

·~·

.:...~;

MATINEES ARE SHOWN ON
SAT SUN ONLY
'

C:LY*-

t

SA*. - - - - - - - .

It'$ a GREAT idea to
COMPARE! Brir)g your
policies to us for a FREE.
. POLICY EXAMINATION!
Downing Childs Insurance Agency
196 Easl Second St. • Pomeroy

(~)~~3381

TAAN A \;11\oliioOI.

,7,.

lllU. TOMORlO~I

E.:~0

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

'

! ~~~--~~~--~~~~~~~--~~~

The Importance 01 Familiar Faces

1
;

. Pleasant Valley Hospital knoWs the importan~e qff~ar fac~ and
surroundings when faced with an illness or chrome medical condioon.
1
Pleasant Vallev Private DUIV Home Care provides:

·!

!•

Please Don't 'Forget Your
Insurance Card!

88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH
Medical Excellence.
Lbcal
Caring.~. .
.

'
I

ever~

be

you know

:
'

reported
bus collision

Students James Davisson, Dale Teaford, Timmy Sands, Ben Lee, Nick Nottingham and Ben Lee gather around new Vo/Ag
teacher Butch Mitchell as he explains how to ·use their new planer.

i

I
1

Minor
• • •

Bolin, HOlzer;
11:52a.m., Ohio Route 7,
Douglas Harbar, Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
I: 29 p.m., Holzer Meigs
Clinic,
Paul
Wilson,
Holzer;
5:17 p.Jll., High · Street,
Lisa.Hisj,;.Holzer; ·
8:02 p.m., Happy Hollow
Road,
Sam
Williams,
Pleasant Valley;
8:50 p.m., Cole . Street,
Ben Harris, Pleasant Valley.

,.
I ~------------------~--------~--------,
! The .Daily Sentinel

'
:'

'

....

WASillNGTON (AP)President Bush says he'll
try diplomacy "one more
time," but he does not
think Saddam Hussein will
disarm - even if doing so
would allow the Iraqi president to remain in power.
"We don' t believe he's
going to change," Bush
said as skeptical allies
debated his proposed U.N.
resolution that would force
Saddam to rid Iraq of
weapons of mass destruction or face consequences,
possibly military action.
"However, if he were to
meet all the conditions of
the United Nations - the
I've
conditions
that
described very cl~arly ·in
terms that everybody can
understand - that in itself

t:

: Painting-pumpkins ·

•·

" SYRACUSE - Kenard
L:e Prunty, 45, of Syracuse,
died' Sunday, OCtober 20,
2002, at his residence.
·· He was born Mari:h 17,
·1957, in Massillon, son of
·the. late' Kenard A. and
.Shirl~y Riedenbach Prunty.
. He
was
formerly
.employed as a tow boat
. engineer by the Kanawha
.. River Towing Com{'any.
. Surviving are hts wife,
· Rosemary Ulrich ·Prunty of
Syracuse; children, Joshua
'and Jennifer Larsen, Kerry,
'Tina, Nicole and Kenard
·Prunty, all of Syracuse, and
Kenard, Kendra and Kyler
Prunty, all of Iowa; an
uncle, Charles Prunty of
. Jackson; two aunts, Maxine
'=&lt;Jen'y) Buck of Sunbury,
::and Carol Prunty of
j:Charlestoli, West Virginia;
.:;and special friends, Mike,
!:Debbie, and Michael Sharp,
: ~all of Racine.
·: Graveside services will
:zbe held at 2:30 p.m.
:; wednesday, October 23,
!-2002, at Grav.e l Hill
t:Cemetery, with Pastor Mike
•!Adkins officiating. Friends
- Paid notice
!:may call at Fisher Funeral .
)..Home in Middleport from
t:l)oon until 2 p.m. on
;tw"edt;tesdf.Y· October 23,
·•2002 ·
~: · M~~orial contributions
;~ay be made in Mr.
!Prunty's name to the
(;!Syracuse Church of the
PITTSBURGH, Pa. i:Nazarene, Ohio Route 124,
Donna Fae Bissell, 65, for~:Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
•~
- Paid notice merly of Meigs County,
died Sunday, Oct. 20, 2002,
~:
at the home of her twin sister, Rhea Mae Henrie, in
.,~.;
Pittsburgh .
'·
!.
· Services will be I p,m.
'·:• POMEROY-EarleneA. Wednesday at ·the Leavitt
Home,
:~ennedy, 68, of Pomeroy, Funeral
Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Caling
·~ied Monday, October 21,
6 to
hours
will
be
held
from
:-2002, at:. Holzer Medical
8
p.m.
Tuesday
(today).
::Center in Gallipolis.
~She was born July 31, Burial will be in Mount
Cemetery
in
_1934, in New Orleans, Olive
Parkersburg.
J. ouisiana, daughter of the

Earlene
.. Kennedy

MASON (AP) - A
school bus rear ended a
second bus as the vehicles
were taking students home
' on Monday near this southwest Ohio city, injuring 10
people, police said.
One bus hit the bus in
front of it when the vehicles that serve Mason ·
Middle School. had to stop
quickly in traffic, according to initial repons.
Eight children and both
drivers were taken to hospitals to be examined for
injuries that consisting
mostly of bumps and bruises, said Shelly Hausman, a
·school district spokeswoman. None of the
injuries was believed to be
" life-threatening.
One bus carried 42 children and the other had 20,
she said.
The accident occurred in
Melissa Spickler, 18, left, and Erin Firestine; 16, use modeling
Deerfield Township near
clay, and p~int as they work on their turkey pumpkin, in Fred
Mason, about 20 miles
northeast of Cincinnati.
Farschman's art classroom at Elyria High School. (AP)

·- ---- .

late Emmett and Leola
Vient Thomas.
She was a homemaker,
and a member of the
Rutland Church of God.
Survivinll are her husband, Wtlliam Edward
Kenendy of Pomeroy; a
son,
William
Everett
Kennedy, his wife, Tana,
and
their · daughters ,
Mietielle and Lacey, all of
Pomeroy; a daughter,
Eileen Kennedy, her husband, Timothy Graham, and
their son, Jan, from
Worthington;
a
son,
Thomas R. Kennedy, his
wife, Anita, and their children, Julie, Joshua and
Jacob, from Pomeroy; and a
sister, Leola Legaux from
·New Orleans, Louisiana.
· Besides her parents, she
was preceded m death by
two infant sons .
Services will be 11 a.m.
on Wednesday, October 23,
2002, at Fisher Funeral
Home in Pomeroy, with
Ronald Heath officiating.
Burial will follow at
Rocksprings Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 8
p.m. on Tuesday, October
22, 2002.

Bush says Saddam won't change,
even if it would ke p him in power

••

InJUrieS

Federal Mogul- .55
Rockwell- 17.45
USB- 20.66
Rocky Boo1s- 4.88
Gannett-79.20
AD Shell- 44.87
General Electrlc-27.15 Sears~ 24.74
GKNLY- 3.75
Wai·Mart- 5B.40
Hatl6y Davldaon- 54.45
Kmart - .53
Wen&lt;IY's - 34.18 .
Kroger- 13.01 ·
Wortnlnglon-19.34
L1d. -15.22
Dally stock repor1s are
NSC- 21 .40
1pe 4 p.m. closing
OakHIFhanclal-21'.78 . quo1es of 1he previous
OVB-20.58
BBT _ 36.08
day's 1ransactlons, proPeoples- 29.75
vlded by Smilh Partners
Pepsico- 44.90
a1 Adves1 Inc. of
Premier- 7.20
Gallipolis.

Kenard Lee
Prunty

The Daily Sentinel• Pas:~e A 3

Donna Bissell

'

""

AEP- 20.15
Ateh Coal-17.13
Akzo- 32.11
AmTech/SBC- 25.75
Ashland Inc. - 27.23
AT&amp;T -12.53
,. ·Bank One ~ 39.06
BLI- 15.70
Bob Evans- 25.25
: BorgWarner- 49.36
. Champion - 2.40 ·
· Charming Shops- 5.11
Cl1y Holding - 26.41
.
COl- 22.25
OG -14.40
DuPont - 42.20

Obituaries

Deaths

• 700

JUL

March 24, 2000

www.mvdailysentlnel.com

•

Backers of sales tax face tough sell

Ohio weather

..,

:Tuesday, October 22,2002

"

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�Oplnl.-n

The Daily Sentinel

By the Bend

Page A4.

_Th_eD_ail_y_se_ntin_e_I_____

1\lesd.y, Odober 22, 2002.

Simpson new 'Family
Medicine' columnist

The· Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
•

BY MARTHA A.

Managing Editor

D.O., M.B.A. hereditary, so screening of family mem. cycles occur.

Question: About six years ago, at age
28, I was diagnosed with Hashimoto's
disease. I understand this disease causes
the bodr to attack its own thyroid, which
results m lack of production of nonnal
hormones. Can early detection stop or
reverse the effects of this disease? Is it
hereditary?
Answer: Hashimoto's thyroiditis is the
number one cause of low thyroid hormone levels, a condition called hypothyroidism. It is very common in women
between the ages of 25 and 50. Vou are
correct in stating that the body atta~:ks its
own thyroid gland in Hashimoto's thyroiditis. Let me explain what happens.
First, the body develops antibodies to
the thyroid gland. Then, the immune
system reacts to the thyroid tissue as
though it were a foreign mvader such as
a bacteria or virus.
j\lo one knows why this happens.
Recognizing and developing antibodies
to foreign substances is a normal
defense mechanism. This same defense
mechanism helps the body overcome
colds and minor infections. But, because
the immune system is attacking its own
body, this. type :of ailment is called an
"autoimmune disorder."
Hashimoto's thyroidi,tis is not curable,
but is easily treatable with thyroid hormone replacement. It does appear to be

•

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

•

Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
J OO "·o~s. All le/lers are subject to ~diting and must be
si!(lled and include address a11d telephone number. No
unsigned /etten ...ill he published. ut/ers should be in good
wsre~ addressing issftes, not persmwlities.
... The opinions expressed in the oolumn below are the con·
se11sus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s editorial boam,
rmfe.ss othendse noted.
· ·

SERI~
.

/

NATIONAL VIEW .
~·-

-;::::::z

Temorism

'

United States can't
t;Vin war alone
The News Tribune, Tacoma, Wa., on Indonesia
and terrorism: As the devastating expl,osion
Saturday on the Indonesian island of Bali shows, the
United States can lead the war against international
terrorism- but can't win it alone.
Indonesia - the most populous Muslim nation is rapidly becoming a haven for dpmestic and foreign Islamic terrorists, who hope to use it as a new
I:Jll:se of operations. However, President Mega-wati
Sukarnoputri has chosen not to bear the political risk
. of tackling this enormous security problem head-on
·- and her nation has just paid a steep price for her
_
timid, ineffective leadership.
Despite pressure from the United States and
Indonesia's neighbor.s, Megawati has failed to
aggressively push for the passage of a strong antiterrorism law that has been stalled in the Indonesian
pari iament ....
... Any hope of defeating terrorism requires a high
level of international cooperation which '
Megawati has unwisely chosen to withhold.The
tragic folly of that approach should be obvious to
Megawati and other Indonesian political leaders~
The terrorists responsible for the Bali attack cared
only about wreaking havoc against the West, and
nothing about the serious harm· they caused
Indonesia. .
·

.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW
.

,

•••

Will Dem support help Bush with Iraq?
Polls show that Democratic voters are
deeply skeptical of President Bush's Iraq
policy, which means that the three potential 2004 Democratic presidential candidates supporting Bush do so at some risk
- and deserve credit .
· ·
If Bush's policy turns out badly -·
which could happen in any number of
ways - Democratic primary voters could
well wreak vengeance on House Minority
Leader Richard Gephardt (Mo.) and Sens.
Joe Liebennan (Conn.) and John Edwards
(N.c.).

••
••

•

stance that seems to encapsulate rank"and- ~
file Democratic thinking.
·
. ~
Daschle and Kerry, among the,presiden- ~
tial contenders, have been the most wed- ! .
ded to "yes, but ..."statements. Gore could:
be put in that category, too.
•
But even Liebennan - and, certainly
Edwards - also has indulged in ''yes, but
..." rhetOric, Criticizing the awroach Bush
has used in getting to his policy.
Edwards told me he became convinced
through his work on the Intelligence
COLUMNIST
Committee that ''for Saddam Hussein tO
acquire nuclear weapons is unacceptable"
to the poll;
.
and that ''there is too much uncertainty"
Sixty-one percent of Democrats _ ver- about when thafcould happen to risk inacsus 40 ~rcent of Republicans- fear that tiosim, Edwards on Monday made ,
war will increase the threat of terrorist
·
attacks on the United States. Sixty-two speech blasting Bush in almost Gore-like 1
percent _ versus 4.1 percent in the GOP terms, accusing him of "arrogance without ;.
"I
d tl · .
.. purpose" toward potential aJJies aJ)d liken- ,.
-expect a ong an cos Ymvo1vement. mg Attorney. General John Ashcroft's,
Sixty-three percent of Democrats ,
compared with 30 percent of Republicans detention of ~nu~ sus~ts to the policies ;
_ said Congress was "not asking enough of "dictatorships like Syria and Burma." ·"
· .. bo B sh'
Edwards evulently felt the need to reas- ·
questiOns a · ut u s policy, and 55 sure Democratic activists, among others, '
percent - versus 17 percent in the GOP th
, ···'
- doubted that Bush really wants to work
at he wasn't wholly in Bush's ~.'ImP.· ·. :
He and other Democrats also are'ctamJ! '
through the United Nations.
,., h · .... '.. ·•
On other questions, the poll showed that ing credit for "pushing" ous to corisWt ~
72 percent of Democrats think Bush is "too the United Nations and Congress before~
quick" to resort to military force to solve acting against Iraq - though Edwards :
world problems, and 75 percent doubt he gave Bush · no credit for ailopting ·th,at ;
has a "clear plan" for Iraq policy.
stance.
.
,
~
Democrats also are ·opposed to Bush's, By contrast, L1e~rman ha~ tx;en much,)
d~e of pre-emptive action against ene- . nulder and constructive m cntJcizmg !3 ush. ,
nues. By 59 percent to 37 percent, voters In a speech Monday he swd Bush IS n?t ,; .
said the United Stares should not attack domg .enough to secure peace !n ;
another country unless attacked first.
Afgharustan and plan for a post-Hussem !
A majority of Democrats in the House Iraq.
.
,
and Senate are expected to support autho- . Overall, ~ough, Lie~rmill,l, s stance ha;: ,
rizing Bush to go to war with Iraq, possibly been mo.re 'yes, and... th31! yes, but... . ,
reflecting the fact that 67 percent of all vot- He _v:lN_ ahead of ~ush m callm~ fo~. ,
ers suppOrt the policy, mcludmg 65 percent Hus""""" ouster an.d IS the author of mea , .
of independents.
. sures to expand aid to Afg,harustan and ,
But, also reflecting the attitudes of their buil~ democracy m the Muslim world. . _
party base, most also are expected to supLteber~an, Geph~rdt and E~war?s : .
port resolutions limiting presidential deserve credit for ns\Qng the!! presl~ential •
authority _ either by requinng Bush to ho~s to support Bush. And, 1f Bush s ~ ,
return for a fmal war authorization after ~!icy succeeds, they should g~ cred!t '
seeking U.N. support or authorizing only
m fellow .Dem?Cra~ for leadmg therr ,
Working through the United Nations.
party 10 the nght direction .
. I . ,;
Many may vote for more than one
IMorton Kondracke 1s executtve ed1~or
option, which represents a "yes, but .. ." 1m~o/l Call, the newspaper of Capitol ~

Mmon
Kondndre

Edwards' aides say his mail is running
"overwhelmingly" against war with Iraq.
Party activists are equally hostile, reflect"
ing their visceral distrust of Bush - and,
probably, an· aversion to using military
force that still lingers since the Vietnam
War.
·
Gephardt has been subjected to intense
motive questioning by members of his
own Democratic Caucus, ·with some
charging he has "sold out" to Bush to help
his 2004 chances - even !hough dovish
primary voters likely will oppose his
stance.
The other possible candidates ·- former
Vice President AI Gore, Senate Majority
Leader Thomas Daschle (S.D.), Sen. John
Keriy (Mass.) and Vermont Gov. Howard
Dean - are all hewing closer to mainstream opinion in the party.
This is most strikingly true in the case of
Gore, who was an Iraq policy hawk in the
Clinton White House but last month delivered a harsh attack on Bush, accusing him
of practicing a "go-it-alone, cowboy-type
approach to foreign affairs."
, The latest CBS/New York Tunes poll
shows that a majority of Democrats - 57
percent
to 38 percent- favor taking miliBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
tary · action to remove Saddam Hussein
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 22, the 295th day of 2002. There are
from power, but also strongly favor wait70 days left in the year.
. ing longer to do so .
. Today's Highlight in History:
Seventy-four percent of Democrats : Forty years ago, on Oct. 22, 1962, President Kennedy
versus 54 percent of Republicans ~nnounced an air and naval blockade of Cuba, following the
believe that Bush should give ·United
discovery of Soviet missile bases on the island.
Nations weapons inspectors an opponuni·
: On this date:
ty to return to Iraq and get support from
: In 1746, Princeton University in New Jersey received its
charter.
·
, allied!nations before acting.
Fifty-one percent of Democrats - verIn ~797, French balloonist Andre-Jacques Garnerin made
sus
14 percent of Republicans -- think that
the first parachute descent, landing safely from a height of .
. Bush is "moving too quickly," aq:ording
about 3,000 feet.
'
; In 1836, Sam Houston was inaugurated as the first constitu"
fionally elected president of the Republic of Texas. ·
~--------------------~----~----------------~~----- ·
· In 1883. the original Metropolitan Opera House in New
n
York held its grand opening with a performance of Gounod's
RYAN'S VIE.W
"Faust.''
"
In 1928, Republican presidential nominee Herbert Hoover
spoke of the. ''American system of rugged individualism" in a
,,
speech at New York's Madison Square Garden.
•
: In 1954, West Germany joined the North Atlantic Treaty
••
Organization.
Bv JoAN RYAN
Gopnik recently put it in a New Yorker to recapture lost simplicity and valu.es. · ~
: In 1968, Apollo 7 returned safely, splashing down. in the
. Now that I'm opening and closing the article. The busier we are, the more
The specter of war against Iraq runs :
Atlantic Ocean,
drawers of. the refrigerator, I can see I loose ends we unleash, and the . busier as an undercurrent through this latest ;
· In 1973, Spanish ·cellist, conductor and co~poser Pablo
don't have nearly enough of the proper still we become. Gopnik illustrates the spasm, forcmg our heads out of the end- ·
Casals died in Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico, at age 96. ·
elements
with which to create the criti- point with the story of his 3-yeilr-old less reminders and appointments in our
In 1979, the U.S. government allowed the deposed Shah of
cal mass of dinner. There's mustard and daugljter's imaginary friend; a character DayRunners to reconsider what is truly :
Iran to travel to New York for medical treatment- a decision
'
pes to, eggs ·and raspberries, potato she calls Charlie RaviOli . Charlie worth worrying about.
that precipitated the Iran hostage crisis. ·
·
bread
and
low-fat
milk
and
two
small
Ravioli
is
always
too
busy
to
play.
"Greek Wedding" found a huge audi- :
: In 1991, the European Community and the European Free
grilled lamb chops from Friday's dinner Eventually, the , 3-year-old invents ence, because it so bluntly and'
Trade Association concluded a landmark accord to create a
Laurie, an assistant to Ravioli, who unabashedly embraces the notion th,at '
sealed in a Ziploc bag.
tree trade zone of 19 nations by 1993.
"What
are
we
having?"
my
son
asks.
passes along Ravioli's regrets. Ravioli nearly everything of real value is '
· · Ten years ago: The space shuttle Columbia was launched on
He's standing at the stop of the stairs.
apparently is too busy even to say he is already right in front of you: family, tra- '
a I0-day mission that included deployment of an Italian satel"I haven't decided," I say, by which I . too busy.
dition. loyalty, love. (So_ what if you :
lite. The Atlanta Braves beat the Toronto Blue Jays, 7-2. in
mean, "I have no idea .Yet again."
"Busyness is our art form , our civic have to put up with a barbecue on the :
game five of the World Series.
It's not that I didn't go grocery shop- ritual, our way of being us," Gopnik front lawn in front of all the neighbors ;
: Five years ago: For the· first time, U.S. inspectors discovping. It's that I did it between signing writes.
. '
now and then ?)
', "
ored E. coli bacteria in imported Canadian beef, halting shipThere 's a part ·or us,.I think, that loves
refinance papers and carpooling to
U!ents of 34,000 pounds. President Clinton presented a modThe movie is about, in part, knowing :
baseball pracuce. Like my fellow shop- hurtling through the day at a million that completeness is a matter of perest .strategy to combat global warming by gradually reducing
pers, I flew down the aisles like a con- miles an hour. We feel relevant, as if spective. You can never catch up, so :·
greenhouse gases over the next two decades. The Cleveland
testant grabbing as much loot as she can we're going places. Being busy is a way contentment means making do with •
Indi ans tied the World Series at two games apiece as they beat
before the buzzer goes off. So now, of creating a stage-set of success - the what you have instead of always reachthe Florida Marlins, I0-3, in ga111e four.
·
standing in front of the incomplete . cell phone, the laptop, the fax machine, .ing for, and feeling anxious about, '
. One year ago: A second Washmgton postal worker, Joseph
offerings of my fridge, I get the ner- the Palm Pilot.. But the obvious question what's missing.
P, Curseen, died of inhalation anthrax. On Capitol Hill, the
votls, twitchy feeling that has become is always just below the cluttered surHouse and Senate reopened while their office buildings
I pull out the bread, milk and an egg .,
fami liar to 21st-century citizens: the face, trying to push its way through : and close the refrigerator door. We have '
re mained closed. Sinn Fe,in leader Gerry Adams urged the
feeling that you can't ever possibly, no What are we hun ling toward?
lrish Republican Army 19 begin disarming to save Northern
French toast for dinner and watch '
matter how hard you work, keep up.
This is the question, I think, that has · Monday Night Football, pushing aside .
Ireland's peace process. The New York Yankees routed Seattle
.12-3 in game five'lo win the Americ·an League pennant for the
Every task requires a follow-up . ' made "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" a the bills, the phone messages and the :
38th time.
Every e-mai l 'demands a response. runaway hit. Maybe it would have been informative articles I really ought to ·
: Today 's Birthdays: Actress Joan Fontaine is 85. Ac.tor
Every phone message, a reply. Every a hit in any year. But I wonder if, with read. They'll be there tomorrow, and !
Ci:hri stopher Lloyd is 64. Actor Derek Jacobi is 64. Actor Tony
appointment , a confirmation. Every the fallout of Sept. .II and the slumping tomorrow,
·
~
Roberts is 63, Actress Annette Funicello is 60. Movie. director
lamb chop, a side dish.
economy, we're in one of those spasms,
Joan Ryan is a columnist for the San '
Jan de Boot is 59. Actress Catherine Deneuve is 59, Former
S9 we ricochet from task to task only which we go through with some regu- Francisco Chronicle. Send comments to ·'
Republican national chairman Haley Barbour is 55. Actor Jeff
to face, at the end of the day, an "over- larity, when we're dissatisfied with the her in care of this newspaper or send'
Goldblum is 50,
_
Whelming incompleteness," as Adam hamster-wheel "good life," when we try her e·mail(at jaanryansfchronicle.com. '
.

Research funds are
critical in curing
alzheimer's disease
DEAR READERS: Twenty·
· two years ago today, Oct 22,
1980, my mother, · Pauline
fbillips, published a letter in her
column from a woman signed
"Desperate." Desperate's 60year-old · husband had been
diagnosed with Alzheimtir's &lt;lisease. She asked if Mother had
ever heard of it, and how other
·' spouses of Alzheimer's patients

a:

TODAY IN HISTORY

~~~~in her reply that

.

.,

·•

,,

.

.

Q

Garden Club, meet 5:30 p.m. at the in concen at the chorch at 6:30p.m.
home of Maxine Whitehead for a trip Sunday. Rev. David Wiseman
to Parkersburg's River City invires -public.
Tuesday. Oct. 22
ReSUiurant for dinner.
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepon
Friday, Oct. 25
Board of Public Affairs, 5:30p.m. at
SYRACUSE- Harvest
390,,0.sh SlieeL Meeting open to pub· Gathering al Syr•cuse First Church
lic.
of God, comer of Second and Apple
Streets, through Oct. 27. Speaken;
RACINE - Racine Board of
1\Jesday, Oct. 22
Rev: Raben Rauch and Rev. Steve
Public Affairs, regular session, to
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Area
Roush. Services, Friday and
a.m. at Racine .Village Municipal Holiness Association October rally.
Saturday, 6:30p.m. with Earthen
building.
·
Middiepon Church of the Nazarene, Vessels and Gabriel Quartet respe&lt;:7 p.m. Speaker will be the Rev.
· tivety. Sunday services, tO a.m. with
RUTLAND - Special meeting of Herb Grate. President Rev. Allen
Pastor Cavid F. Russell, speaking; ·
Rutland Village Council, 6:30 p.m., Midcap invites public:
t :30 afternoon setvice with
to discuss community crime .watch,
''Released."
delinquent water and sewer accounts
MIDDLEPOIU- Revival serand land slippage behind the Grueser 'vices continuing through Thur.;day,
Saturday, Oct. 26
propeny.
.
7 p.m. at the Hobson Christian
CLWI'ON- Clifton Tabernacle
Fellowship. Joe Quinn. evangelist.
gospel sing, 7 p.m. featuring
RACINE Racine Area
Delivered.
Community Organization (RACO) ·
Wednesday, Od. 23 .
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
POMEROY - Tom Shelton in
DEXTER - Old Dexter Church,
Part. Potluck diMer will be served. concen. 7 p.m. Zion Chun:h of
old-fashioned wiener roast. 6:30
New members welcome.
Christ.
p.m. Fellowship and singing around
the fire.
Wednesday, Oct. 23
Thunday, Oct. l4
MIDDLEPORT •• Middlepon
CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Village Council finance meeting, 2 Baptist Church near Ca!pcnter.
p.m: in council chambers. Meeting revival services, 6:30p.m. Thursday
llllsday, Oc:l. 22
open to the public.
POMEROY ,.;,. Meigs IA!Jnty
through Saturday. Rev. Milrk
.. Morrow evangelist; singers, Earthen Senior Citizens Center to participate in
Vessels, Thur&gt;day; Rev. and Mrs.
'MakiHJ-Oitfere DaY' with lllllJhasls on pn:Mcing Christmas tor seniors
Steve Unle, Friday, and local specials, Saturday."The Gabriels will be v.f1o ll'e alone and hiM! little or no flrn.

Public Meetings

Church services

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
DEAR ABBY: In July of last

year, my niece left her . 1month-old daughter with me,
saying it would be for only a
week. It is now well over a year
later, and I ~ still taking care of
her.
The baby's mother has seen
her only three times in the year
she's bee~ ~th me,. I've gro~
to love this little gtrl and think
- Wlth that column, a little- her mother's absence is unfair to
known disease received interna· her.
tiona! attention. Within weeks,
I have made the decision to
the Alzheimer's Association try to gain ~ega! custody of the
received more than 25,000 child. Abby, do you think I'm
pieces of mail requesting infor- wrong in doing so? - LOV•
·
1
·
·
lNG AUNT IN THE BRONX
mauon, vo unteenng semces
DEAR LOVING AUNT:
and donating money.
Over the years, Mother and I Not at all. The child has been
devoted a steady stream of abandoned in your custody. By
colllliliiS to raising awareness of all means, c;onsult a lawyer as
Alzheimer's disease, publiciz- soon as possible. It will be better
in the association's programs for the child, and for you. Since
g
·
d
·
you are acting as a parent, you
·and servJces, an supportmg should have the legal authority
-them financially. We watched in c3se it becomes necessary.
with satisfaction as they grew
Dear Abby is · written by
'into the largest private funder of Abigail Van Buflln. also known
Alzheimer research and.the premier' source of information and as Jeanne Phillips, and was
&amp;
hed b . fourukd .by her mother. Pauline
~-everyone touc
Y Phillips. Write Dear Abby at
How ironic that this disease www.DearAbby.com or P. 0.
should .eventually strike my 'Box 6944(), Los Angeles, CA
own dear mother - a woman 90069·
··
·!
known for her sharp intellect
and quick wit. Her diagnosis
. reinforces our sense of stewa(d,
ship in the success of the
Alzheimer's Association.
.
Research offers the only hope
of discovering the answer to
Alzheimer's disease. Through
· the association's efforts, federal
funding
for Alzheimer's
research has grown from $13
million in 1980 to almost $600
million today. The association's
goal is to increase that comrtlitment to $1 billion. Unless a cure
is found, an estimated 14 million more people will have this
disease by the year 2050.
I will work more closely than
·ever with the . Alzheimer's
Association to achieve our
shared goals - to eliminate this
thief of the mind through
research, and to enhance the
quality of life for individuals, .
-caregivers and families like our
own.
Jen. Ann William•
.If you or someone yo~ lo~e
Manager
needs
the · Alzheimer s
. Athens Office
'\ ;)AI gj s' Cll!•ltelp -callor w(ants).
800
"to· ' , this cause27f-'3900. Someone will be
Call for 11 Frflfl
there to receive yoilr call 24 .
hours a day, seven days a week. I Comparison Quote for 1111
your lneursnce needs/
Or visit the Alzheimer's
. · Association
online
at

-

Seniors Groups

Clubs and
Organizations

Thursday, Oct 24
TIJPPERS PLAINS - VFW
9053 7 p.m. at the hall in 1\Jpjperli ·
Plains.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi,
6:30 p.m. at Our House, Gallipolis,
for dinner.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Church of. Christ Women's
Fellowship. 7 p,m. at Zion Church
.of Christ Pomeroy Church to have
devotipns; new officers to be elect·
ed.
REEDSVILLE -

,

I

J ' I h

•

Riverview

•

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA 7

•

www.alz.org.

•

•
. . . . , ....... . •-••.,.,r-·"'4""W-

.

bers is recommended.
Some people will have only one
Regulating thyroid honnone is a com- symptom, but others will have several,
plex process. The thyroid gland -locat- in different combinations. In the earliest
ed in the front of the neck - produces stages of hypothyroidism, there may be
thyroid hormone (thyroxin) .that regu- no recognizable symptoms at all.reatlates our metabolism. However, it's the ment of hypothyroidism is generally
pituitary gland in the brain that polices straightforward: A thyroid hormone pill
this process by sending thyroid siimuhd- taken once a day usually does the trick.
ing hormone (TSH) to the thyroid gland. Most people resp&lt;ind readily to tteatThe amount of TSH secreted into the ·ment imd live a long, normal life.
blood detennines the amount of thymx- Hypothyroidism is not currently "curi'n the thyroid gland produces.
able" and will require treatment for the
As the thyroid is destroyed by the rest of your life.
immune system, the gland produces less
You should never stop your medicahormone. This se'nds a message back to tion unless directed to by your physithe brain to send more TSH to the gland. cian. If left untreated, hypothyroidism
The resultant elevation in TSH level is can progress to severe depression, heart
detectable by a simple blood test. A high failure or coma.
TSH level . indicates that the thyroid is
So here it is in a nutshell: Know your
not responding to the "signals" sent by
the pituitary. This is one of the first signs family medical history. Promptly and
of hypothyroidism. Other studies that properly report your symptoms. If
might be done include a thyroid profile hypothyroidism is diagnosed, learn
aboui the disease. TAKE YOUR MEDand a thyroid antibody test.
A TSH level should be part of routine ICATION as prescribed. Once your conscreening in people with a family histo- dition stabilizc;s, make sure to have your
ry of hypothyroidism, during and after TSH levels checked at least onc.e a year.
pregnancy, and when the very firs.t (Family Medicine is a weekly column.
symptoms of pending menopause To submit questions, write to Martha A .
appear. Hypothyroidism should also be Simpson, D.O., Ohio University College
considered as a possible underlying dis- of Osteopathic Medicine, P.O. Box JJO,
ease process when symptoms such as Athrms, Ohio 45701. Or. e-mail Dr.
unexplained fatigue, coarse, dry hair, Simpson at simpsonm@ahio.edu. Past
hair loss. cold intolerance, depression, columns are available online at
memory loss, and abnonnal menstrual www.jhradio.org/fm.)

Community Calendar

approximately 1 million people
h&amp;d Alzheimer's disease, and
that families and friends of
,Alzheimer's sufferers had handc
·ed together to fonn an associalion to provide support, develop
and disseminate helpful informalion and to encourage muchneeded research to fight the &lt;Jisc

Too busy to live

I

SIMPSON,

Associate Professor of Family Medicine

Den Dickerson
Publisher

Bette Pearce

-Thyroid disease can't be cured, but.
reader can live normal life

'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Tuesday, Odober ll, 1001

FAMILY MEDICINE

I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page AS

WILLIAMS
INSURANCE
122 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 992-3985
OF

I005 E. Stai~ St.. Suite G
Athens. OH 594-0660

. AUTO - HOMEBUSINESS- LIFE IRA'S - HEALTH
An Independent

Agency rl!presenting
ERIE Insurance
Group.

ily and are on a lim~ed income,
PIOOOOOs and donations to go into that
fund.
Thursday, Oct. 24
POMEROY - Anrua1 meetirg ol
the Meigs County Cou1cil 00 Agi1g
EloaJd, 11 a.m. at the ·Center. Open
meeting,

POMEROY - Caring and Shamg
Support Gf04l, 1 p.m. at the Meigs
Senior Center. Laura Horslej cA the .
Health Department to speak on car·
diovas:ulat ooaJth and tobacco use.

Support Groups :
. Jhtll'ldly, Oct. 24
ATHENS - SurvM&gt;rs cl Slicide
Support Gf04l, 7 p.m. Athens Church
ol Christ, 785 ~ Union St.. Athens.
For additional inmnation ca1 5937414.

Other events
.. 'fueldly, Oct. 22
· POMEROY - Meigs Courty Health

Department childhood imrnm~
clinic, 1oto noon and t to 3 p.m. Take
chitdrens shot records. Must be
aaxxnpanied by parent or legal
guat!ian. $5 fee pet' child pet' visit tor
imrrunizalion. No one will be denied ·
services because of inabiity to pay.

�•

Nation •World

The Daily Sentinel

SEC enforcers recommend civil

charges against Martha Stewart

~Inside:

· Page A&amp;:

_Prep coach lends a hand, Page B2
Scoreboard, Page B2
.
Crla Carter Joins Miami, Page 83
Browns bounce back, Page B3

Tuesday. october 22. 2001

1Uesda~October22.l002

Meigs 8th ·
graders play
Wellston
, POMEROY · Meigs
eij!hth-grade football team
wtll play host to Wellston at
5:30 p.m. Wednesday at Bob
Roberts Memorial Field.

Smithr Head
named MAC
_players of week
HUNTINGTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - Marshall linebacker
Duran Smith was named the
Mid{American Conference
East Division defensive player of the week Monday, while
kicker Curtis Head was
named the special teams
player of the week.
Smith had 27 tackles in a
24-7 victory over. Troy. State.
It was the most tackles for
any player in the MAC this
season.
· Head averaged 43.2 yards
on six punts while placing all
five kickoffs inside the 2yard line. He also made 25yard field goal and was 3-of3 o.n extra-p!!ini 'kicks.

Heather Wight, 12, and her brother Robbie Glbbner. 6, of Streetsboro, Ohio, pick pumpkins at Stahl's Farm Market in Edinburg Township, Ohio. Stahl's Farm Market has 12
acres of pupkins on two farms. (AP)

,,

Memorial proposed at
New York City landfill where
remains were recovered
NEW YORK (AP)- Some
families of those killed at the
World Trade Center . want a
national memorial put atop
the landfill where debris was
painstakingly combed for the
remains of their loved ones.
Gloria Hagis, whose husband, Steven Hagis, was
)tilled in the attack. said the
vast landfill - ·now mostly
covered in grasses and wetlands - could be the perfect
spot for a peaceful memorial.
"You want to go somewhere away from people, and
it'll be quiet like that," she
said.
Rep. Vito Fossella plans to
introduce a bill next month
that would designate a portion of the Staten Island landfill as a memorial to the nearA worker wearing a protective
jumpsuit and a
respirator sifts
through debris
from the World
Trade Center
site at the
Fresh Kills ·
landfill on New
York's Staten
Island.
Officials
announced that
families want
to place a
national memorial atop the
wind-whipped
landfill where
World Trade
Center depris
was painstak'
ingly combed
for the remains
of their. loved
ones. (AP)

to~ s:. ~ct. 8

ruling, U.S. Magistrate
.F-fP·
·
. , . · H. Kenneth · Schroeder Jr. credited
na statement, U.S. Attorner Mtchael' AI wan with extricating· himself from.
Battle emphasized that '~the mvestigation has failed to establish any immedi- the camp and distancing himself from
ate threat to the western New York its activities after just 10 days by feign.
area."
ing an ankle injury.
"I was happy that Mr. Battle chose to But the government brought ''clear
include that statement," said William and convincing" evidence that the five
Clauss, the federal public defender in others attended the camp for up to six
wes\ern New York who is representing weeks .and heard bin Laden's message,
Goba. "It corroborates what we believe the judge ruled. He called the men a
we know, which is that our clients are "danger to the community" and a flight
not dangerous to the community."
. risk.
.... •.
·

' Council on American-Islamic
Relatiops: http:l/cair-net.org/

.·

or

Probate/Juvenile J"'"A

\

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn.
(AP) - Minnesota Vikings
running
back
Doug
Chapp1an,
formerly
of ·
Marshall University, was
hospitalized Monday with
abdominal pain and mternal
bleeding, and he was to be ·
kept overnight for observation.
Chapman woke up Monday
in pain, and coach Mike Tice
said he believed the soreness
cam~ from a hit Chapman
took on a kickoff return during Sunday's 20-7 loss to the
New York Jets.
· Tice said during;'·.his afternoon news conference that
·Chapman was scheduled to .
see a doctor, but Tice later
issued a statement through
ihe team briefly detailing
Chapman's condition.
: "Doug has undergone diagnostic testing that determined
ihe bleediltg has stopped,"
the statement read. "He will
be kept in the hospital for
observation. We hope to get
him back with the team as
~oon as possible."
: Chapman, in his third sea$On 'o ut of Marshall, has 89
yards rushing on 12 carries
and has returned II kickoffs
for 225 yards - a 20.5-yard
average.
· The Vikings fell to 1-5 with
Sunday 's loss.

0 Senior Programs
0 Mock Trial
0 Parent/Community
· Leader
0 Abstinence Education
0 ' Free Legal Seminars

Softball Coach
0 Cub Scout Leader
QHead Start
0 Carleton School
0 Family Fun Fest

"A FULL TIME JUDGE WITH NEW IDEAS AND OW TIME VALUESn
I

I

. not much of one. So r don' t
think we 'II see 21 runs
scored," he said.
J.T. Snow, who has one of
the Giants' seven homers,
agreed.
Today, 8:27p.m. •
"We'd like to get back to
TV: Fox
11
our
park, play our style of
'11·. .
,.
·game , keep some of those
ballgame to watch," short- balls in the ballpark and see
stop Rich Aurilia said. "It's what happens," he said .
not the typical type of game
Right after Hall of Farner
you want to be involved in. Willie Mays throws out the
We'd rather see a lower-scor- first·pitch, the rules change as
ing game."
Pac Bell hosts its first Series
"People who have never g~me .. No more designated
been to our park probably httter m the NL park, and the
will be in for a surprise at the Giants like that a lot as the
kind of hitter's park it is. It's emphasis goes from longballs

Anaheim
'itt

San Francisco

Steelers 28, Colts 10

to small ball.
Minus DH Brad Fullmer,
the Angels could be at a big
disadvantage - the same
scenario AL teams face each
other when they go on the
road in the World Series.
San Francisco figures to
enjoy an edge on the mound
and at the plate when Livan
Hernandez pitches against
Ramon Ortiz iri Game 3.
Along with being 6-0 lifetime in the postseason,
Hernandez swings a pretty
good bat.
Hernandez is at .242 with
Pleue see Series, Bl

ers

PITTSBURGH (AP) The Pittsburgh Steelers won't
say they're back , The
Indianapolis Colts are more
than willing to say it for them.
The Steelerl; finally ·played
like the team that was expected to win the AFC this season, tiding another strong
game by quarterback Tommy
Maddox to a 28-10 victory
over Indianapolis on M~&gt;mday
· · night.
Maddox, quickly becoming
one of the unexpected success
· stories of the NFL season,
wasn' t awed by his first prime
time start as he was a Denver
rookie in 1992. The one-time
XFL star drove the Steelers to
· touchdowns on their first
three possessions and a 21-0
lead,
"These are fun games to
play
quarterback,"
said
Maddox, who was out of the
league for six years before
signing with Pittsburgh last
iyear.
The Fun 'N' Gun? Maybe
not. Bu~ the offense has made
a dramatic turnaround since
Maddox replaced Kardell
Stewart with the Steelers
apparently headed for a Sept.

charman
. hospitalized ·

FBI investigates leaflets thrown at Islamic center:

••• •
On the Net:

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- Just mention Pacific Bell
Park and what's the first
image that comes to mind?
Barry Bonds plopping balls
into the water, of course.
Funny thing about that picture: It's out of focus.
· Believe it or not, there were
fewer home runs hit at Pac
Bell'this year than any ball-

park in the majors, And that's
fine with the Giants as the
World Series shifts to San
Francisco for Game 3
Tuesday night.
The Anaheim Angels and
Giants already have combined to hit 11 homers, by far
a record for the first two
games of any World Series.
After Tim Salmon connected
twice Sunday night and sent
the Giants to an II- 10 loss
that left them with a split at
Edison Field, they were eager
to return home.
"For all the fans who like to
see teams scoring runs and
stuff, yeah, it was a great

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) - West Virginia defensive back Angel Estrada and
Temple tackle Dan Klecko
.were named Monday the Big
East defensive co-players of
the week, respectively.
Estrada, a senior from The
Bronx, N.Y., had a careerhigh 14 tackles, including
two sacks, in, a 34-7 victory
over
Syracuse.
The
Mountaineers held Syracuse
to a season-low 24 2 yatds of
offense. '
·
Kleck.o; a senior from Colts
Neck, N.l, tied a Temple
record with four sacks in the
Owls'
38-24
win
at
Connecticut. He finished
with a career-high 12 tackles,
including six for losses.

In spring 2001, the men traveled t.o ·
Pakistan, ostensibly to pursue up to two
months of religious studies. But prose~
cutors say Alwan and al-Bakri told
authorities the men instead attended a · "
military camp near Kandahar where
they were trained in the use of weapons
and explosives.
According to prosecutors, the men
went to the AI Farooq training camp ~
few months before the Sept. 11 terror
attacks. There, "bin Laden told them in
unequivocal terms.that there 'is going to
be a fight against Americans,"' pro,sec
.... u~

incidents.
"We believe . the small minority of
bigots in our society are being encouraged to .take such actions by the antiMuslim rhetoric coming from right•
wing and evangelical leaders;" Awad
said in a news release.
Dzwilewski said the leaflets were the
first such anti-Muslim act in Hawaii.
"We're looking into it right now," he
said. ";we do not tolerate JIC!S of reli"
gious discrimination or violence or ha.t e
crimes like this."

Will small ball
replace the
longball?

. Big Easfs top ·
defensive player

.

HONOLULU (AP) - Hundreds of about Muslims and warned that patriotleaflets containing threats and disparag- ic resid~nts of Hawaii will be keeping a
ing remarks toward Muslims were watch on them.
"Every curry fund-raiser will be
found in the yard of an Islamic center in
Honolulu, authorities said.
checked to ensure that funds are not
The leaflets were thrown into the · being funneled to support terrorist
fenced yard of the mosque of the groups," the council quoted ihe leaflets
Muslim Association of Hawaii on as saying. "Anyone found in violation
Monday · morning,
said
Daniel will be strapped with explosives and
Dzwilewski, special agent in charge at shipped to Iraq."
the FBI's Honolulu division. He said
There are about . 3,000 Muslims in
officials were investigating the act as a Hawaii, the Council said.
·
·
hate crirne.
Nihad Awad, executive director of the
The Council on American-Islamic Council, said comments over the past
Relations, a Washington, D.C.-based year by conservative religious leaders
Islamic civil rights 'group, said the are evidence of a rise in anti-Islamic
leaflets included vulgar references hate speech that contributes to such

Series-shifts to San Francisco

'WVU's Estrada

ai-Qaida training to be arraigned.
money, weapons or other tangible support to foreign groups deemed terronst
organizations by the government.
Only Sahim Alwan, 29, was granted
bond of $600,000 at a hearing · two
weeks ago. Arrangements for his
release were still being worked out.
Lawyers for the other five - Yahya
Goba, 25; Yasein Taher, 25; Faysal
Galab, 26; Shafal Mosed, 24; Mukhtar
ai-Bakri, 22 - filed notice last week
that they intend to appeal the denial of
bail.
All of the men have declared their
innocencli; four of ~he six denied ever
going to Afghanistan or to the training

...

a

Six men suspected rif receiving '

ly 2,800 people killed in last
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) Six
year's attack.
•
American-born
men
of
Yemeni
descent
Under the proposal, the
have been indicted on charges they supland would be transferred to
port~;d foreign terrorists after allegedly
the federal government and
training at an ai-Qaida camp in
managed by the National
Afghanistan attended by Osama bin
Park Service.
f:.aden.
Workers sifted through 1.62
The defendants, from the Buffalo
million tons of debris for 10
suburb of Lackawanna, were scheduled
months at the 160-acre site. "
to be arraigned Tuesday. Authorities say
The Fresh Kills landfill was
the charges are largely based on allegareopened the day after the
tions that they attended the terror camp,
attack as the final stop in the
where bin Laden declared that there "is
massive excavation project.
. goi~ tO be aJight agl!inst Ame!i!&gt;8.J!S·"
The suspects·· have professed their
. Of the nearly 20,000 pieces
of human remains· recovered . innocence, but l'rosecutors maintain
after the attacks, more than
~~W.:~.~wllibn~_t~~~~rs fW~~~
La n s gro p to cauy out' an a c 1
1,400 were plucked from the
the United States.
landfill rubble, according to
However, they acknowledged there
Ellen Borakove, spokeswas no evidence of an imminent threat
woman for the city medical
: posed by the men, who were arrested
examiner.
JUSt days after the Sel't. 1t anniversary.
A federal grand JUry indicted the
defen~ts on Monday on two counts of
providing material support to a foreign
terrorist organization. The charges carry
a penalty of up to 15 years in prison
under a 1996 law that prohibits giving

·o Basketball/Soccer/

Page 81

Pumpkin pickin'

'

NEW YORK (AP) -· fractured her multibillion-doUar nology company's cancer drug,
Securities
and
Exchange ·media empire. Her company's Erbitux.ImClone's stock subseCommission lawyers have told stock has tumbled 60 percent quently plummeted.
. Martha Stewart that they are since she was linked to the scanStewart has maintained that
ready to file civil securities dal, and Stewart resigned earlier she and her broker Peter
fraud charges against her for her this month from the board of the Bacanovic had a standing order
aUeged involvement in an insid- New York Stock Exchange.
to seU the shares if the stock ·
er trading scandal, a source
Stewart's lawyers referred dropped below $60.
close to the investigation .said calls to her public relations repStewart is friends With Sam
Tuesday.
resentative, Allyn Magrino, who Waksal, founder and former
The SEC recently gave declined to comment on the chief executive of ImClone,
Stewart a formal notice of its development. Martha Stewart who pleaded guilty last week to
·intent to file civil charges, the Living Omnimedia Inc., where several counts of bank fraud,
source told The Associated Stewart is chief executive and securities fr-.IUd, conspiracy to
Press, speaking on condition of chairman, also declined to com- obstruct justice and peljmy.
.
anonymity.
inent, as did an SEC
Waksal did not implicate
Stewart's lawyers reportedly spokesman.
Stewart, and his plea was not
have filed a response with the
Shares .of Martha Stewart part of an agreement to cooperSEC.
Living Omnimedia plunged ate with prosecutors- rare in a
In most cases, such a notice more than 14 percent, or $1.10, criminal plea.
leads to filing of a civil lawsuit in · extended-hours trading
Douglas Faneuil, Bacanovic's
by the SEC. .
Monday.
as~istant, initially suppo~ ·
The possibility . of civil . Stewart is already · under Stewart's and Bacanovtc's
charges is a potentially devastat- investigation by the Justice account, but later admitted he
ing scenario·for Stewart, who is Department, which is probing withheld information when first
accused of selling shares of whether she lied to lawmakers imerviewed by investigators
ImClone Systems after getting about her sale of ImCione from the SEC and the FBI.
tipped off about negative news shares.
Earlier this month, Faneuil
surrounding one ·of its promisSh,e sold nearly 4,000 shares pleaded guilty as part of a deal
ing new cancer drugs.
of lroCione on Dec. 27 - one to testify against Stewart artd
Stewart has denied . any day before the Food and Drug others who might be charged in
wrongdoing and has not been Administration announced it · connection with sales of
charged, but the scandal has would not review the biotech- ImClone shares.

.The Daily Sentinel

those guys to try to beat them
on the rush,' coach Bill
291oss to Cleveland and an 0- Cowher said. "It was 3 great
3 start.
'd ..
1
Maddox rallied the Steelers
~he· Steelers also adjusted
Pittsburgh Steelers running back Jerome Bettis (36) leaps past an Indianapolis Colts defend- (3-3) to an overtime victory their defense to respond to
er, not pictured, as teammate Dan Kreider (35) blocks the Colts ' Jason Doering for a first .that day, and they have since
quarter Steelers touchdown Monday night in Pittsburgh. (AP)
·
Please see Steelers, Bl
won three of four. They have

/

'

College Football

Miami
·
second-best
in
BCS
standings
--

NEW YORK (AP) - Miami is No.
I just about everywhere but where it
counts most in the Bowl
Champiol)ship&lt;Series standings.
The Hurricanes, No. 1 since the
preseason in The Associated Press
media and coaches' polls, were second behind Oklahoma in the first
BCS standings released Monday. And
look who's third- Notre Dame!
Thanks to friendly computer ratings and a schedule rated toughest in
the nation, the Fighting Irish are in
position to make a run at the national
championship.
The BCS standings are used to
determine which teams play in a
national title game. The teams that
finish 1-2 in the final BCS standings
on Dec. 8 will play for the title in
Tempe, Ariz., at the Fiesta Bowl on
Jan. 3.
"If we take care of our own business and win, things will work out,"
Miami coach Larry Coker said. "The
system is designed to have the top
two teams meet at the end of the year,
and I am confident that will be the
case."
1
Notre Dame may be No, 6 in the
AP poll , but the Fighting Irish were
ranked first by four of the seven com-

~

•

it~

'&gt;"&lt;'

'

,,· ·Bowl Ch8!"17Jon~hlp''Serl~,
. '"IIIN!IIb '""'"""' ~ ,.
.
.. BCI:slll~lnp UJt
~f.; f ..Okla~a .... A••••• i.,·...... ~ .......... 3.92

lit
• .

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•&gt;, ~~ .l!l«ri DI!ITit ....:..... ·-'····· ...........?.07

, ,4. Vl!lllnla Tecl).::...:....................8.63 '

5. Geo!llla ......:......... ........,.....-. ..:8.69
S: OHIO 8TAtE ..........................8.89
. 7.. Washington St. .... ........ ...... .,.19.44
k·•&gt;B. Mklhigan .......:.......................19.83
9, LSU., ..................,. .. ..;....,,........20. 71
•1$1. rex-. ....... ,............ !:... :.:.:,.....21.37
U. N.C. Stlite ;':. .................... .....2~.52
12. Florida St.•.:..... " ..:.... .....,.....26.79
13. Iowa .....................................29,09
14. Southern Cal.,... .........:..... ...31.16 .
1s: o~ ~ ~,
, . ~ ss:02 .,

.. ..... .............. ;.. ..

.\('11

10 I

p!Jters used by the BCS. Only the top
six rankings are used in the BCS calculations.
The best the Hurricanes could do in
the computers was one second-place
ranking. Mia~i 's strength of schedule was rated 27th, but it will get
stronger · with upcoming games
against Tennessee and Virginia Tech. ·
The Hokies were fourth , followed
by Georgia, Ohio State, Washington
State, Michigan, LSU and Texas. The
first six teams are undefeated.

'.

'

scored at least 28 points in
each of Maddox' s .three starts
.after scoring only 37 points in
three games with Stewart.
Wide receiver Hines Ward
said Maddox's impact· has
been dramatic.
"When he's throwing the
ball the way he is and we're
running it, we're a hard
offense to stop. Now you're
seeing the Steelers," Ward
said.
·
Even if it wasn ' t the
Steelers the out-of-rhythm
Colts (4-2) expected to see.
The Steelers' special teams,
a disaster late last season and
early this season, surprised
Indianapolis . by sneaking
defensive starters Joey Porter
and Jason Gildon onto their
punt return team.
Porter partially blocked
Hunter Smith's punt on the
Colts' first possession, resulting in a 3-yard punt that led{o
Maddox 's first touchdown
pass to Ward six plays later.
"(Special teams coach)
Kevin Spencer came to me
and said the punter was a littie slow and he wanted to use

Notre Dame visits. Florida State - · Miami had 6.41 points - I for poll
12th in standings - on Saturday.
average, 4.33 for computer average,
"All of our focus · right now is on 1.08 for strength of schedule, zero for
the florida State game this week," losses and no bonus-point deduction.
Notre
Dame
coach
Tyrone
Notre Dame had 7.07 points - 6
Willingham said. " However, it's cer- for poll average, 1.33 for computer
tainly better to be ranked than not average, 0.04 for strength of schedule
ranked."
and three-tenths of a point bonus
The BCS formula uses the AP deduction for a win over Michigan,
media and coaches' polls, the comVirginia Tech was at 8.63, Georgia
puter poll s, strength of schedule, at 8.69 and Ohio St~te at 8.89,
,
won-loss record and a bonus-point . The bonus award 1s ~ased on a si,Idsystem, New this year is the elimina- ·,, mg scale from I .0 pomts for beatmg
tion of margin of victory from the . a flrst-place team down to .I for a
computer ranking process.
wm over the. IOth-place team. Last
"There's still a long way to go," year, the shdmg scale started at 1.5
new BCS coordinator Michael pomts.
Tranghese said. "The , 5trenglh-ofOklahoma coac,h Bob Stoops says
schedule component wi II come into th~ s!andmgs tlon t matter - yet.
play, and so.· will the bonus points.
It s tou early nght now r,or us to
The biggest surprise is there are still c a~e ~ne way or the other, St~ps
so many undefeated teams at this said . ~at we_do care about ts wmstage, halfway through the season ."
mng . We re gomg to keep our focus
For the second straight year, and total conce ntrall~~ on wmmng
Oklahoma starts out in first place. the Btg 12 Southftrst. .
The Sooners 6-0 after a 49-3 win
The BCS standmgs will be released
over Iowa St~te, had 3.92 points - . 2 each Monday throughout the season.
for poll average, 1.50 for computer:
The BCS was staf':ed four years ago
rank average, 0.52 for strength-of- to create a national IItle game without
,
.
schedule, zero for losses and a one- playoffs. .
ChampiOns qf SIX conferences tenth of a point bonus deduction for a
Please SH BCS, Bl
victory over Texas.

.,

�.

......,_

Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

,

•

Prep coach has donated ·

kidney, bone marrow
MIDDLETOWN (AP) Pat Kreke, a high school baseball and basketball coach for
more than 20 years, says his
priority is making a difference
m the lives of children.
He has given that new
meaning by donating bone
marrow to a leukemia victim
two years ago and a kidney to
a former student this month.
Kreke, 45, coached the
Fenwick High School baseball team to a 1981 state
championship and has led the
Middletown school 's boys
basketball team to league
titles. But he doesn't hesitate
when asked what the kidney
donation means to him in
comparison with his sports
achievements.
"There is no comparison to
sports," he said. "Nothing compares to the feeling I have inside
right now. I've given this kid .a
chance for a better life."
Marc El\glish, 24, of
-Middletown,
received
Kreke "s kidney in a transplant
operation Oct. 4 at University
Hospital
in
Cincinnati.
English left the hospi tal last
week to continue his recovery
at home. He hopes to return to
work at Precision Strip Inc., a
Middletown steel rrocessing
company, in severa weeks.
"He saved my life," English
said of Kreke.
English's father, John, said
Kreke's donation was "the
most unselfish act I've seen in
my life."
Two years ago, Kreke
donated bone marrow to a !year-old boy suffering from
leukemia.
English W'!S born with one

.

Fenwick Basketball coach Pat Kreke is seen courtside, Mar:ch 15, 2001, in during a Division
4 boys tournament at Wright State University in Fairborn. Kreke recentky donated a kidney to
former student. (AP)
malfunctionin~

kidney. He
had been on dtalysis for several weeks before receiving
Kreke's kidney.
Margi Bryant, transplant
coordinator . at University
Hospital, said English "was
luc~r to find a friend like
Pat.
·
.
Kreke learned of English's
health problems when he had
dinner with Englis1J's parents
earlier this year.
John and Pat English told
Kreke that their son was suffering renal failure and needed a kidney transplant. When

Kreke learned that English's
immediate family - parents,
brother and sister- had been
tested, but weren't viable
donor candidates, he volunleered to be tested as a possible donor. Kreke and a moth·
er of one of English's friends
were matches, but since a
male's kidney normally is
larger, Kreke was selected.
Kreke said he wanted to
donate the kidney early enough
so. he could be back in tiljle to
coach his basketball team.
"1 didn't want to let the kids
down," he said.

Kreke left the hospital
almost two weeks ago to cornplete his recovery at horne.
When he is coaching, he
paces the sidelines and doesn't
hesitate to criticize one of his
players if he thinks it is needed.
"That's what people see
when they're sitting in the
stands," he said.
Kreke said, however, that he
knows where the priorities are.
. ·"Sports is a very minute
part of life," he said. "You
have to put sports in perspective and understand what's
really important in life."

Scoreboard
Open: Miami, San Diego; Green Bay, St.
LOUIS
'
Monday, Oct. 28
N.Y Giants at Ph1 l adelp~ia , 9 p.m.

Baseball

28·13.
5. Canfield (9..()) beat Poland Seminary
20..15.
6. Tol. St. Francis (8·t) beat Tot. Central
WORLD SERIES .
Catholic 15·3.
Salurday, Ocl. 19
7. Loveland (8-1) lost to Kings Mills Kings
San Francisco 4, Anaheim 3
28·13.
·
Su-y, Oct. 20
8. Cola. Brookhaven (8-1) beat Cols.
Anaheim 11, San Francisco 10, series
Briggs 35·14.
'
tied 1·1
Bowl Champlorlshlp Series
9. Macedonia Nordonia (8-1 ) lost to Solon
Tuesday, Oct. 22
__
21 7
Anahe1m (Ra.Ortiz 15-9) at San
Through gam81 of Oct 19
10
Trotwood-Madison (7·2) lost to Troy
Francisco (Hernandez 12-16), 8:27p.m.
·
BCS Stondlnga Llat
28 . 14.
Wednesday, Oct. 23
1. Oklahoma ...... .................... ........ 3.92
DIVISION Ill
Anaheim (Lackey 9·4) at San Francisco
2. Miami. ..... .............. .... ..... ....... 6.41
1.
Akr.
Buchtel
(9-0) beEit Akr. Central(Rueter 14·8), 8:35 p.m.
3. Notre Oame ... .. ................... ..........7.07
Hower 49·22.
Thursday, Oct. 2•
4. V1rglma Tech ......... .. ........... .......8.63
2. Newark Licking Valley (9-0) beat
Anaheim at San Francisco, 8:22p.m.
5. Georgia ........ .... ... .... ... ... .. .......... . .8.69
Whitehall-Yearling 35·0.
Saturday, Oct. 26
6. Ohio State ...... ....... ...................8.89
3. Germantown Valley View (9-0) beat
San Francisco at Anaheim, 7 58 p m., if
7. Washington St. ...... .... .. ........ 19.44
Bellbrook 38·14.
necessary
8. Michigan .... ........ ... ........... .: ........ 19.83
4. Hubbard (8·1)1ost to Girard 27·7.
Sunday, Oct. 27
9. LSU .. ...... ...... .
.. .......... 20.71.
5. Oak Harbor (8·1) lost to Castalia
Sari Francisco at Anaheim, 8:02 p.m .. if 10.TeKas .........................................21 .37
Margaretta 14·0.
necessary
11 . N.C. State .................................22.52
6. Cle. Benedictine (8-1 ) beat Canton
12. Florida St ............. . ."..... ...... ....... 26.79
Cent. Cath . 24-7.
13. 1owa ....... .. ................................ 29.09
7. Urbana (9·0) beat Bellefontaine 36·7.
14. Southem Cal ......... :................ 31 .16
B. Akr. Hoban (8-1) beat Akr Coventry 3515. Oregon ................. ...................... 35.02
13.
National Football Laague
9. Steubenville (8-1) beat Baltimore Mt.
As·s oclated Press Top 25 ·
AFC
St. Joseph 34·21 .
10 Cols. DeSaJes (7-2) beat Ironton 21-14.
East
The Top Twenty Fn.1e teams in Tpe
DIVISION IV
WLTPctPFPA
Associated Press college football poll, with
1. Coldwater (9-0) beat Fort Recovery 48-3.
Miami .......... .-..s 2 o .714 190 143
first-place
votes
In
parentheses,
records
Buffalo ........... 4 3 0 .571 217 214
2. New Lexington (9-0) beat Dresden Trl·
through Oct. 19, total point~ based on 25 Valley 42·6.
Now England .. 3 3 0 .500 152 134
points for a ffrst place vote through one
NY. Jets ....... 2 4 0 .333 95 169
3. Akr. Manchester (9-0) beat Navarre ·
p01nt for a 25th .place vote end previous Fairless 48-0.
South
rank1ng: ·
WLTPctPFPA
4. Coshocton (9·0) beat New Philadelphia
W·L Pointe PVI
lndlanapolis ....4 2 0 .667 124 118
20.0.
1. Miami (61) ............. 6·0 1,837
1
Jackson..,.ille ... 3 3 o .soo 128 112
5. Ot1awa·Giandort (8-1)1ost to Kenton
2.0klahoma (13) ....... 7·0 1.787
2
Tennessee .... .2 4 . ·o .333 130 173
33-32.
3. Virginia Tech .......... 7·0 1,675
3
Houston .......... 1 5 0 .167 83 157
6. Martins Ferry {9·0) beat Wheeling
4.0hio St .. ... ..........B-0 1,604
4
North
(W.Va.) Llnsly 31-7.
.
..
....
7-0
1,584
5
5.Georgia
............
WLTPctPFPA
7. Portsmouth (8·1) beat Minford 52-13.
S: Notre Dame ........... 7·0 1,479
7
Baltlmore ........ 3 3 o· .500 104 11~
8. Kettering Alter (8-1) beat Clarksburg
7. TaKas ..... .... ............ 6-1 1,325
8
Pittsburgh .. 3 3 0 .500 138 122
(W.Va.} Byrd 41·0
8.
Michigan
.....
...
....
B·t
1,217
11
·
Cleveland ....... 3 4 0 .429 t6t t51
9. 1ronton (6-2) lost to Cols. DeSales 21·14.
9. Washington St ....... 6·1 1,211
10
Cinc1nnati .... .o 6 o .000 51 181
10. Reading (9-{)) beet N BendTaytor42·21 .
tO. LSU .................... 6·1 1,110 14
DtVtSIONV
Woat
11 . FiorldaSt ............. 5·2 1,105 12
WLTPctPFPA
1. Marion Pleasant (9·0) beat Morral
San Diego ...... 6 1
.857 173 119
13
Ridgedale 35·3.
12. N.C. State ............. 8·0 1,028
Denver ........ ... 5 2 0 .714 183 154
13. 1owa ..... ....... .. ..... 7·1
977
15
2. Woodsfield Monroe Cent. (9·0) beat
Oe.klend .... . .. 4 2 0 .667 196 145
14. Oregon ............ .. .... 6· 1
968
6 , New Matamoras Frontier 40·0.
Kansas City ... 3 4 0 .429 239 230
3. Smithville (9·0) beat Apple Creek
15. Southern Cal.. ... .... 5-2
751
19
NATIONAL CONFERENCE .
681
16 . Waynedale 35-21.
16. Tennessee ............ .4·2
Easl
4. Mlddlelield Cardinal (9·0) beat Orwell
17. Iowa St. .............. 6-2
626
9
WLTPctPFPA
Grand Valley 49·6.
18. Penn St. ............... 5·2
614
20
· Philadelphia. ... 4 2 o .667 185 102
5. Amanda·Ciearcreek (6·2) lost to
19. Alabama ....... ........ 5·2
459
24
N.Y. Giants ..... 3 3 0 .500 86 98
Circleville 13-6.
·
20. Kansas St. .. ..... .... .5·2
-428
17
Dalles ............ 3 4 o .429 94 129
' 6. Cln. Hills (9..0.} beat Lockland 44·7
21 ..Colorado ..............5·2
419
23
Washington ... 2 4 0 .333 115 167
7. Delphos St. John's (7-21 beat Now
22. Air Force ............... 6·1
360 18
e·remeli 16-8.
Sou1h
23. Arizona 51. .........6·2
169
WLTPctPFPA
8 Dalton (8-1) beat Jeromesv nle ·
24. Bowling Green ......6-Q
167
25
New Orleans .. 6 1 0 .857 221 172
Hillsdale
37·8.
;
25. Minnesota ...... .....7-1
11 B
Tampa Bay . ... 5 2· o .714 153 76
9. Barnesv1Me (8·1) beat St. Clairsville '21 ·7.
Oth1,. receiving vo111: Florida 85,
Atlanta ............ 3 3 0 .500 130 84
10. Defiance Tinora (8·0) beat' Antwerp
Marshall 66, Colorado St. 38, Washington
Carolina .......... 3 4 o .429 102 105
27, California 26, Te,.;as Tech 21, Virginia 26-0
North
DIVISION VI
21. Mississippi 17, Boise St. 13, Boston
WLTPctPFPA
1. Marla Stein Marion Local (8·1) beat
College 12, Texas A&amp;M 10, Kentucky 7,
Green Bay .. .. 6 1 o .857 203 154
:
Maryland 6, Pittsburgh 3, TCU 2, Sidney Lehman Cath. 33-32.
Chicago .... . ... 2 4 0 .333 132 155
2. Danville (8·11 lost to Utica 33·25.
Wisconsin ~ .
Detroit.. .......... 2 4 0 .333 132 189
3. Columbus Grove (9·0) beat Paulding
Minnesota . 1 5 o 167 137 185
42·0.
Wool
4. Strasburg-Franklin (9·0) beat Magnolia
WLTPctPFPA
Sandy Valley 35·0.
Anzona ....... 4 2 0 .667 108 93
5. Mogadore (8·1 ) beat Ravenna SE 17·
San Francisco 4 2 0 .667 142 116
Associated Press State Polls 7.
St Louis ..... 2 5 o .286 139 158
6. Lowellvil le (9·0) beat Berlin Ctr.
Seattle .. .... .... 1 5 0 .167 125 152 ·/
How They Fared
Western Reserve 42-0.
Sunday'a G•m••
COLUMBUS (AP) -How the top teams
7. Dol a Hardin Northern (9·0) beat Cory·
Detroit 23 , Chicago 20, OT
in the weekly Associated Press state high Rawson 24- 17.
BuHalo 23, Miami 10
school football did this weekend:
8. Covington (9·0) beat lewisburg Tri·
Atlanta 30, Carolina 0
DIVISION I
Cout1ty North 21-7.
N.Y. Jets 20 , Min11esota 7
1. Warren Harding (9-Q) beat Massillon
9. Cory-Aawson (8· 1) lost to Dota Hardin
St. Louis 37. Seattle 20
Wash ington 31'-27.
Northern 24·17.
Denver 37, Kansas Crty 34, OT
·
2. Solon (9-0) beat Macedonia Nordonia
10. Mechank:sburg (9-0) beat Jamestown
New Orleans 35, San Francisco 27
21 ·7.
Greenevlew 44-0.
Baltimore 17. Jacksonville 10
3. Dublin Scioto (9·0) beat Upper
Cleveland 34, Houston 17
Arlington 35·12.
San Diego 27, OaKland 21 . OT
4. Cin. Elder (8·1) beat Indianapolis
Arizona 9, Dallas 6, OT
Cathedral 45·30.
Green Bay 30, Washlhgton 9
· 5. Brunswick (9-0) beat BrecksvilleNBA
Philadelphia 20, Tampa Bay 10
Broadview Hts. 2Q-7
Qpen: New England, Cincinnati, N.Y.
6. . Massillon Washington (7 ·2) lost to
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Giants, Tennessee
We.rren Harding 31-27
Alllnllc Dtvl•lon
Mondty'l G1me
7. Cle St Ignatius (6·3) loet to Cln St.
W L PeL
GB
Pittsburgh 28, Indianapolis tO
Xavier 18·17.
0 1.000
Sundty1 Oct. 27
8. Cin Anderson {9-0) beat Cln. Turpin New Jersey .... .:.... 5
Washington ......... 5
1 .833
.5
Seattle at Dallas, 1 p m.
46·7.
2 .667
1.5
Detroit at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
9. Dublin Coffman (8·1 ) beat Gahanna New York ............. 4
Boston .. .. .. ........... 3
3 .500
2.5
Cleveland at N.Y Jets, 1 p.m.
Llncoln /13·7.
4 .333
3.5
Oakland at Kanaas City, t p.m.
10. ul~ewood St. Edward (8·11 beat Tol. Mlaml ..... ..............2
Orlando ........... .... 2
4 .333
3.5
Tampa Bay at Carolina, 1 p.m.
Whitmer 68·14.
Phlladolphla......... t
4 .200
4
Atlanta at New Oi'leans, 1 p.m.
• DIVISION II
Central Division
Tennessee at Cincinnati. t p m.
1. Day. Chaminade·Jullenne (9-0) beat
W
L · Pct
GB
Chicago at Minnesota , 1 p m.
Blenheim, Canada 43·20.
0 1.000
Pittsburgh at Baltimore , 1 p.m.
2. Louisville (9·0) boat Alliance Detroit.. ............... 6
Arizona at San Francisco, 4 05 p m.
Marllngton 35·3.
Indiana................ 4
2 .667
2
Denver at New England, 4.15 p.m.
3. Tol. Cent. Ca,th. (8·1) lost to Tot. St. MilWaukee ., ........ 2
2 .500
3
Houston at Jacksonville. 4:15p.m.
Chicago ............ 3 ' 4 429
3.5
Francl' 15·3
lndlanapolla at Washington, 8:30p.m.
4. Klnge Mille Kings (9·0) beat Loveland Atlanta ................2
3 .400
3.5

College Football

Pro Football

o

Prep Football

Pro Basketball

'I

New Orleans ....... 2
4
333
Toronto ............... 2 · 4 .333
Cleveland ....... .. .. 1
3 .250
WESTERN CONFERENCE
· Midwest Dlvlalon
w L Pet
Houston ............... 4
1 .800
D8 11
3
3
sao
as ··· ............
· '
3 .500
Minnesota ...... ... ... 3
San Antonio ........ 3
3 .500
Memphts ....... ..... .. 3
4 .429
Utah ............. .......2
4 .333
Denver .... ...... .......1
5 .167
Pacific Division

W
Portland .... .. ...... ... 5

L
1

Pet
.833
600

4
4
4

GB
15
·
1.5
1.5

2
2.5
3.5
GB

Phoenix .......... ... 3
2
1.5
Sacramento ......... 3
2 .600
1.5
L.A. Clippers ... ... 3
4 429
2.5
Golden State ....... 2
3 .400
2.5
L.A. La~ors .......... 2
3 ,400
2.5
Seanle ................ 2
5
286
3.5
Monday's Gamet
Ch1cago 95, Minnesota 89
Washington 96, Oe011er 73
Tuesday's Games
New Jersey vs. Philadelphia at Trenton,
N.J.. 7 p.m.
Memphis at Orlando, 7 p.m.
· Detroit at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Utah at Now York, 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
Phoenix vs. Seattle at Casper, Wyo., 9
p.m
GOlden State vs. Toronto at El Paso,
Texas, 9:30p.m.
Portland at Sa~ento, 10 p.m.
Cleveland vs. ~ - Lakers at San D1ego,
10:30 p.m.
•
Wedneadey'l Gamet
Dallas at Boston, 7 p.m.
Washington at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
Houston at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Indiana at Denver. 9 p.m
Chicago at Phoenix, 10 p.m .
Milwaukee at L. A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.

Transadions
BASEBALL
American League
CLEVELAND INOIAN$-Announced the
resignation of Fernando Montes, strength
and conditioning coach .
TEXAS RANGERS-Named Fernando
Montes strength and conditioning coach,
and Greg Harrell assistant trainer.
'·''
BASKETBALL
National B1sk1tball Asaociatlon
BOSTON CELTIC$-Walved F Frantz
Pierre-Louis.
CHICAGO BULLS- Waived G Ocug
Overton and G David Graves.
,
GOLDEN STATE WARRIOR5--oSigned G
Phil Handy.
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS- Waived C
Jason Lawson.
NEW YORK KNICK5-Suspended G·F
Latrell Sprewell for one game for not following the team's Instructions for rehabilitating his broken right hand. Waived C Todd
Lindeman.
ORLANDO MAGIC-Waived F Jermaine
Walker.
FOOTBALL
Nttlonal Football League
CLEVELAND BROWN$-Reloased DT
Mark Smith
MIAMI DOLPHINS-51gned WR Crls
Carter to a one-year contract.
NEW YORK GlANT8-Signed S Johnnie
Harris. Waived S Ryan Cl&amp;.rk.
OAKLAND RAIDERs-Placed RB Terry
Kirby on Injured reserve. Signed RB Madre
Hill from the practice squad.
PHILADELPHIA EAClLE5-Ciaimod LB
Keith Adams off waivers from Dallas.
Released LB Quinton Caver.
HOCKEY
National Hockty Loag""
NHL-Suspended Florida 0 Lance Ward
tor one game without pay for his actions In
a game on Saturday.
·
CHICAGO BLACKHAWK5-Signed rwY
Matt Keith and LW Travis Moen.
•
NASHVILLE PREDATORS- Placed C
Greg Johnson and Rw Scott Walker on the
Injured reserve list. Recalled 0 Mark Eaton
I rom Milwaukee o1 the AHL.

Series
from Page B1
99 career hits, including
four home runs and,. 39
RBls. Plus he's put down 34
sacrifice bunts, W of them
this season. ·
Ortiz is another story.
He's O-for-14lifetime, with
five strikeouts and no successful bunts.
· "We do have a bit of an
advantage with the pitchers.
Our pitchers are used to hitting and bunting," Giants
manager Dusty Baker said.
"Now we're goipg back to
play National League ball ."
"I don't really anticipate
Il - l 0 in our ballpark,' he
said.
Oh, there was thai game
at Pac Bell last Aug. 6:
Giants II, Cubs I 0.
But Baker's point was
made. Other than that CubsGiants affair, there weren't
any games in San Francisco
this year when the teams
totaled more than 17 runs.
That's OK with Anaheim
manager Mike Sciascia,
who learned his strategy in
the NL while catching 13
seasons for Los Angeles.
The Angels reflected that
style in the first two games.
They a~gressively ran the
bases, mcluding Fullmer
stealing home, tried to hitand-run and bunted.
"We're not always going
to pound the ball," Scioscia
said. "We have to have
those little balls .. Those
guys at the top of the lineup,
· they worked counts, got on
base and definitely set a

Steelers
from Page B1
nearly every change quarterback Peyton Manning
made at the line of scrimmage. Manning's slats
looked OK - 32-of-48 for
304 yards - but he never
seemed to figure out where
the pass rush was coming
from.
Pittsburgh gave up 807
yards and 60 points in season-starting losses to New
England and Oakland, but
has allowed its last two
opponents only a touchdown apiece.
''I'd say they are back,"
Colts receiver Qadry Ismail
said. "Teams still haven 'I
figured out their defense.
Those earlier games, they
got behind and people were
spreading the field on
them.'!
"You know Pittsburgh is
going to blitz," center Jeff
Saturday said. "And they
did. But you can only pick
up so many guys. With
Pittsburgh, they keep coming from everywhere."
Pittsburgh's defense got a
big lift from the return of
last year's defensive rookie
of the year, Kendrell Bell,
who constantly pressured
Manning into hurrying his
throws. Bell was out for
four games with a sprained
ankle.
"I think teams get edgy
when they see No. 97 in

BCS
from Page B1
the ACC, Big East, Big Ten,
Big 12, Pac- 10 and SECqualify for a BCS game,
and two at-large teams are
selected to fill out the field.
Notre Dame, an independent, automatically qualifies for a BCS game with
nine wins and a top-six finish in the final standings.
Last year, the BCS system
was sharply criticized when

www.mydailysentlnel.com •

·:·Tuesday, October 22,2002

Tuesday, October 22, .2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

National Football League

tone."
Many of the Angels have
played at Pac Bell in interleague games, though they
did not visit this year. So
they won't be deceived by
the seemingly short distances - 309 feet to right
field and 399 feet center.
Odd angles and high
walls make it a tough place
t\) · hit horne runs. There
were only 114 at .. Pac Bell
this year, down about 33
percent from other major
league ballparks.
Bonds hit 19 of his 46
regular-season homers at
Pac Bell, and added a splash
shot into McCovey Cove
against St. Louis in the
NLCS.
Bonds · homered in, the
first two games against
Anaheim. He and Troy
Glaus, who connected twice
for Anaheim, have J!latched
a record shared by several
others with sill home runs in
a postseason.
Boosted by Bonds, Glaus
and Salmon, the teams easily
set a mark for most homers
in the first two ' games of a
Series. There previously had
been seven. but nothing close
to the current 11 .
The overall record for
home runs in a Series is 17,
with the Dodgers and New
York Yankees doing it in
1953, 1955 and 1977.
After Sunday's loss,
Baker didn't care to play
any more home-run derby.
"This is the kind of game
we see on TV with the DH.
This is more of an American
League game," he said.
"The ball doesn't carry and
go out of the park in our
park like it does here."

:.carter ends retirement,
_'signs with Dolphins
.

'
•••

:-Dolphins lured Cris Carter out
of the broadcast studio and out
c'of retirement thanks to some ·
1 ·ami-twisting by one of their
,. biggest fans: Dan Marino.
·- · 'Fhe former quarterback
' 'persuaded HBO colleague
Carter to {lUI his"TV career on
· : hold and JOin the Dolphins to
: ' bolster their injury-plagued
; · receiving corps.
~
Carter, who ranks second to
: ' Jeny Rice in career receptions
' : and touchdown catches, signed
· ' a one-r,ear contract Monday
. that Will pay him $550,000,
'· with another $700,000 possible
~ ' through incentives.
: · When the Dolphins first
· contacted
Carter
last
' , Wednesday, he was relucl!lnt
' to return. Marino sway¢ hun.
"Marino·•s crazy," said
&lt; Carter, who turns 3 7 next
·. month. "I had squashed the
, whole idea- 'I'm not going
· to do it'. Danny and I were
getting ready to go into the
· studio, and I tell him, and he
• · just goes ballistic - 'You've
. got to do it. You can still play.
· It's a. great situation for you."'
.. · By Saturday, Carter had a
~ tentative deal
with the
: , Dolphins, and their 23-10 loss
~ . Sunday to Buffalo underscored the need to upgrade the
passing game. Ray Lucas
threw four interceptions in his
. . first start since 1999, and
Dedric Ward and James
, -~ Mcj(night - pressed into
•· starting roles because of
injuries - combined for just
four catches.
The Dolphins (5-2) still
~ · lead the AFC East, and Carter
~ . believes they can help him
: . win a Super Bowl ring, one of
. · the few accomplishments to
· · elude him during a 15-year
' NFL career.
"Besides · championships,
there's nothing· I could do that

riess."
Despite having three big
stars m Manning, running
back Edgerrin James (62
yards) and receiver Marvin
Harrison (eight catches), the·
Colts' offense has looked
tentative and not very confident in scoring only two
touchdowns in its last two
games.
"We're still feeling where
we are with our personnel,"
Manning said. "But we
don't have any consistency.
There's been no consistency. We need to figure out
what works best and try to
make some plays."
The Colts threatened to
get back into it only once,
after Mannipg's 41-yard
touchdown pass to Marcus
Pollard early in the third
quarter made it 21-10. They .
were driving again when
Mike Logan ,stepped in
front of a pass and returned
it 46 yards, setting up
Maddoll 's second touchdown pass to Ward.
"We were aggressive and
made plays," Bell said.
The Steelers may learn
Tuesday if running back
Jerome Bettis and center
Jeff Hartings will miss any
time with knee injuries.
Bettis said afterward he felt
fine, but Hartings may miss
Sunday's
game
at
Baltimore.

'

Ralph E. Trussell,
Sher i ff of Meigs
County, OH

Daily Sentinel
992-2155

a

.Browns et bounce
. back wit victory
.

Proud to be.a part or
your ~fe: ·

' Subscribe today

East, 70 . 89 feel
thence with the line
between said Lois 6

•

:,.·: Cleveland overcomes sluggish first half

c;:oming·lhu~ay in the

.

...

Beneficial Ohio, Inc.
dba
Beneliclal Mortgage
Co. of Ohio
Plaintiff

Brew Up

;.•
BEREA (AP) - For long
expected much more.
• stretches
Sunday,
the
Davis spent the week leading UJ? to the Houston game
Cleveland Browns looked
more like the expansion
pumpmg up his players. He
team. And it wasn't just
said his pregame speech as
because of the snazzy; new
well as hts halftime talk had
orange_jerseys. ·
a central theme - confi -.
J. •
At ljalftime, they were
dence.
being outgained, outplayed
"I thought the most impor1. and outclassed by Houston.
tant thing diat our team needCleveland regrouped and
ed was confidence," he said.
turned it around in the sec- that· we're still in it," said "They needed reassurance
ond half, thanks to some help safety
Earl
Little. that they were talented
from the first-year Texans, "Hor,efully, we can build off enough to play well, thai they
; who made far too many rook- this. '
were capable enough t()' make
Last week, following a plays. Nothing builds y~ur
ie mistakes.
"We needed to win this humiliating loss to Tampa confidence -more than Will·
. game," Browns ti~ht end Bay, Davis had referred to ning. Now, we have to build
' Mark Campbell sat d. "We the fourth-year Browns as an on it."
· didn't want an expansion "expansion team" while they
Little said Davis' message
· team to come in and beat us." prepared for the Texans.
got through.
·
It nearly happened.
Davis wasn't referring to
"I could tell the difference
•'
But Tim Couch made nice his team's talent level. He in the whole organization
~ . with Cleveland fans by was speaking in broader. yesterday," Little said . "I
·throwing a TD. pass in the terms about the difficulty of could see the energy, the
second half, and the Browns building a winner from , the enthusiasm and the fire and.
' ' (3-4) sacked Houston quar· · ground. up in a condensed desire in everybody, before
•' terback David Carr nine time frame. .
the game, at halftime. That's
times en route to a critical
Davis wouldn't admit to it, what we ·needed to do, get
·
but by comparing the current our swagger back."
· .
·
· · 34By
- 17 snapping
wm.
h
T
h
Th
B
a three-game Browns to t e exans, e
Notes:
e
rowns
losing streak, the Browns found a subtle way of moti· · released defensive tackle
· ' may have salvaged their sea- vating his players.
Mark Smith to make room
son. They certainly saved
"Sure, that ticked me off;" for a defensive back.
some face. A loss to the Campbell said . "I've been Cleveland's secondary isTexans would have been dev· busting my butt here for four banged up. CB Corey Fuller
ears and I don't want to be tore the tendon behind his
astating.
be
f
"We're supposed to beat coked at like an expansion right knee and may
out or
that team," wide receiver team. I'm sure he used it as a few weeks. S Robert
Kevin Johnson said. "We're motivation for us tp come out Griffith is already out with a
h
and play harder. And if that broken right shoulder and
supposed to beat up t at team .was the case, it wor.ked, I' II CB Daylon McCutcheon has
badiy.'We didn't play a world
DE
beater team. We still have tell you that.
a sprained left e1bow....
some things we need to work
"He can't use that every Courtney Brown hyperexon, but the bottom line is that week, thQugh."
tended his elbow making a
•
Davt's knew his team need· tackle Sunday but Davis said
we got a win.'
.
.ng to get them he "should be fime." Brown
Just in time, too. The will ed Somethl
didn't
record
any
of
tough stretch.
·
k
b
allowed the B rowns to stay through a
sac s, ut
Couch Was reeling after Cleveland's nme
within one· half game offitrs If
N 1
·
(3
3)
·
th
bet'ng
booed
at
home
two
DaVis
said
the
ormer
o.
11
· k d · t d
lace Ba Iumore - m e
P
AFC North. It also gave them weeks ago, and the Browns overa
pte
omma e
some momentum going into were · manhandled last week against the run. ... The
· t the by "''
•'-e Buccaneers. I"J'uries Browns and Buffalo Bills
· are
h
this week •s game agams
New York Jets.
were piling up. an .. the the only two teams m t e
"That's the ·great thing Browns were bemg cntJctzed league with. five P.layers with
· new d'tVJston
· ·
· by t'rnpatt'ent flans who 20 or more recept10ns.
about thts
ts
I

t

Your plcle to

The State of Ohio,
Meigs County.

$23,000.00 and can·
not be sold for less
than two-thirds of
thai amount.
TERMS OF SALE :
$5 , 000 . 00
down ,
remainder upon ten·
der of deed .

...... J

Nebraska was chosen to play
first-place and unbeaten
Miami. The Comhuskers lost
their last game of the regular
season to Colorado, 62:-36,
and didn't ·even earn a
chance to play in the Big 12
title game. With one big loss,
Nebraska finished second
ahead of once-beaten OreJ!on
and twice-beaten Colorado.
The seven computer p&lt;ills
· are operated by Anderson &amp;
Hester, Richard Billingsley,
Colley Matrix. Kenneth
Massey, The New York
Times, Jeff Sagarin's USA
Today, and Peter Wolfe ..

'fJ~(5~.- :~:
~Jit

CASE NO.
01CV026

and 7, South 10
degrees 9 minut.es
west 324.34 feet to
the polnl ol begin·
nlng, reserving , how·
ever, the coal and all
other minerals in and
underlying the above
described properly,
together. with the
right to mine the
same without encum·

and miles apart," Dolphins
brance to the surface.
Reference Is made
senior vice president Rick
to deed recorded in FRANK
&amp;
Spielman said.
Volume 3t5 page 503 WOOLDRIDGE CO.;
vs.
Gadsden was placed on
Meigs County Deed LP.A.
injured reserve Monday and Jerry E. Day, et. al.
Records.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
PARCEL NUMBER : 600 South Pearl
Defendants.
becomes a free agent this win16-01741.00
Street
ter, meaning he has likely
PROPERTY
Columbus,
Ohio
In pursuance or an
played his final game for Order of Sate In the ADDRESS: 1681 43206
Miami. But he expressed no abOve enlltled action, Lincoln Hetghts (614) 221-1662
bitterness
about
being I will olfer for ·sale at Pomeroy, OH 45769
Said
Premises (10) 22, 24, 2002
public auction, at the
replaced by Carter.
Appraised
at (11) 5, 12, 19, 2002
Courthouse
In
"Statistically, he's the best Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
receiver ever to play the game,'' above named County,
Gadsden said. "I can't be upset. on the 23rd day of
~_003 ,
a~
I'm happy he's hery. It's an January,
10:30 a.m . the follow·
honor that he replaced me. ·I· lng described real
hope everything works out and estate, to wit:
Situated In the
he takes us to the Super Bowl." VIllage
of Pomeroy,
Some Extra Cash...
The Dolphins tried to reach County of Meigs and
a deal with Carter when he State of Ohio ,
Sell your wares
and
was a free agent last spring. bounded
described as follows:
in the
Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Cris Carter races for a 68- Negotiations stalled, so he Being known and
yard gain on a reception as Chicago Bears linebacker Sean retired and went to work for designated on a map
of Lincoln Heights,
tiarris gives chase in this Nov. .14, 1999 file photo, in Chicago . HBO's "Inside the NFL."
made by Breece and
Carter came out of retirement and out of the broadcast booth
Vikings receiver Randy Carper, Registered
Classifieds!
Monday to join the Miami Dolphins, signing a one-year contract Moss applauded his ex-team- Civil Engineers of
Hunllnglon, West
.. · -d 1 t d
..
(AP)
mate's return to the league .
..1 love it!" Moss said. "And VIrginia,
to bo Ister t hetr InJUry ep e e recetvmg corps.
dated
October
17,
1942
, a
would quench my thirst,'' welcome Carter's input and I think lot of football teams
copy of which map
Carter .said. ''This is not an expenence.
he's been making comments was filed In the cifflce
individual thing. It's more
"Even if he's just on the about will love it, too."
of the Recorder of
about the opportunity with sideline hanging out, he'll be
Carter said he'll still do Meigs County, Ohio ,
this team .... If they were 3-4, a big plus," linebacker Zach some · work for HBO, but on December 17,
1942, and recorded In
I wouldn't be here.''
Thomas said. "He'll bring mostly he'll work on improv- Plat Book ·N.o. 3 at
Following a news confer- some leadership and teach our ing his impressive career sta- Pages 43 and 44, as
ence to announce the signing, guys some things."
tistics: 1,093 catches for Lot No. 6 and being·
Carter reported for his first
A bye this week gives the 13,833 yards and 129 touch- more particularly
as follows:
team · meeting. With two Dolphins extra time to tweak downs. He had 73 catches for described
Beginning at a
for Mt' anu· 's their offense, which was sent
Weeks to P•epare
'
d
·
b 871 yards and six touchdowns point In the North line
of Lincoln Road at
next game at Green Bay on into a downwar sptra 1 Y last season with Minnesota.
the corner between
Nov. 4, Carter said he's in injuries to quarterback Jay
SACRED HEART CHURCH
good shape and expects to Fiedler and receiv·ers . Chris
The Dolphins are apparent- Lots 6 and 7 as
on said map ; .
Chambers
and
Oronde ly done raiding the broadcast shown
BAZAAR
learn the offense quickly.
thence with the said
"In a pinch just tell me, Gadsden .
Chambers
is booth. Fiedler will likely be line of Lincoln Road,
Mulberry Avenue
Pomeroy
'Cris - down and in,"' he expected to return from a con- sidelined until at least Dec. I' North 79 degrees 51
.October 31,
said. "It's the same as Little cussion for Green Bay, but and Lucas ' poor performance minutes West 6.2
at 4:30pm
.
Beginning
thence contlnu·
League football."
Gadsden will miss the rest of Sunday inspired a fresh round feet;
lng with sold road
Baked goods, crafts , games,
With
the
Minnesota the season because of a tom of speculation that Miami tine, curving to, the.
Religious articles and more.
might try to coax Troy tell In a westerly
Vikings, the outspoken Carter ligament in his left wrist.
Attendance prize ·$25 every
direction with a
Gadsden decided to have Aikman out of retirement.
developed a reputation for
radius of 190 f.eet, a
half
hr. Beginning at 6:30 pm .
"That," Wann~tedt said, "is distance ol 43.9 -feet
being charming before a cam- surgery rather than play with
Raffle - 5 $1 00 prizes
era but selfish on the field and the injury when the Dolphins not a co~stderatJOn." .
thence I vv ll-t1 he
divisive in the locker room. rejected the .terms _he sought . ~ MannO' _comeback ts also tine Lots 5 and 6
DINNER MENU
But coach Dave ·wannstedt in a contract extensiOn.
unhkely, whtch Carterconstd- North 10 degrees 9
.
Adults
$6 · Children $3
minutes West, 278.65 ·
and h.is players said they'll
"We were worlds and miles ers unfortunate.
.C reamed Baked Chicken Or
feet to a point In'. the
South line of No~th .
Ham , Noodles , Mashed
Street; thence woth
------~--------~----~----------~Potatoes
&amp; Gravy, Green
1
.
.
said line of . North
Street, North · 54
Beans, Cole Slaw, Rolls ,
degrees 40 minutes
Coffee ; Dessert lnclud P.d.

l: MIAMI (AP)- The Miami

there," safety Lee Flowers
said. "They jumped offsides
four times, and it was
because they knew he was
coming on th~ blitz. He
brings so much ellplosive-

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CLASSIFIED

We Cover

..
:

Counties tike
No One

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.. wiring. new 59rvice 01 repairs. Muter Licensed alec·
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OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
y(lu do business with people
FARM'i
you know. and NOT to send
FOR Su r:o
~ M'NOUNCEMENIS
rwney through the·maiJ until
l'lLI:.
___
•
you - have investigated the New haven 3 large bed·
Make extra money tor offering.
room, 2 112 bath, large open JUDY GRIFATH :
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit Christmas. Sell
Avon.
kitchen/cJining area, over- Congratulations! You hav.8
for sate, Chester Township, (740)446-3358 ·
Start Your BusineSs To· sized 2 car garage, large won 2 free nicNie tickets 10
Meigs County, send letters McClure's Restaurant now day... Prime Shopping Cen· rear deck w/ 16x32 in the Spring Valley 7 in Gal·
of interest to: The Daily
ter Space Available At AI· ground pool, 20x20 building, llpolls. Call the. Register to·
Sentinel, PO Box 729~20,' hiring all 3 locikatiorls, lulu or fordable Rate. 2 Nice E•ec· .3 years old locatecton 4 112 day tor detcuts.(304)675part·time, P c up app 1CB, ·
0 flices Newly Re· acres 30'-.:· 882-2072
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
utive
1333
iiii~~~·;;;;;;:;..;;-;:.·, _.., tiOn atlocatmn &amp; bnng back
.·
betWeen
9:30am
&amp; modeled. Spnng Valley Pia- . PRICE REDUCED. 3 bed·
BUSINE9i
GIVEAWAY
I O:OOam. Monday thru Sat· za. GaU (740) 446-348!.
room, 2 bath Brick Ranch
B
.
1.,- - - - - - - · urday.
PROFlS'SIONAL
on 1.5 flat acres, newer car- ___ Ai~O UIWINGS •
pet, doors an appliances,
SERVICES
Adorable, kittenS and moth· Nui'sing Assistant Classes,
1 11 b
(
·
r Bu·lld'ng
lor sale 'th 0 r
1
u asement par1;1ally in·
~~
er cat. 4 black &amp; 2 grey &amp; ~ening hours, beginning
ished), 2 car garage, At 33 without stock at 62 Olive
mother, black .long ha ir.
Iober 28. 2002. If . you
TURNED DOWN ON
above
New
Haven. Street,
Gallipolis, · OH
'740)367·7152
enjoj elderly people and SOCIAL SECURITY IS"'? (304)882 3897
45631 '740'446 3159
~
want to become a member
No Fee Unless We Wl~
vr ·
t-88B-S82-3J45
Rents 3 Br house in Pamer- ~
Lars &amp;
-Elderly couple can no lon- ol our health care team, call
ay, 4 sale or rent $375. per
ACREAGE
'ger care for petite, two-year- Judy Hart, Instructor at ·740:otd, ·spayed l~male cat. All 742·23 70 or stop by Rock·
~
month pfus deposit. 1740)
shots up-to-date. Color springs Rehabilitauon Cen698-6783
1/2 acre lot on Tycoon Lake
while other than tan &amp; gray ler and fill out an application·
r$
·- State Route 692 Pomeroy, wl12x60Traile 1'6,500.00
calico late &amp; back Call 304- lor the classes. ·Extendicare
Health Services. Inc. Is an
15 miles to Pomeroy, 12 now $13,500.00
773·5166
·
miles to Athens, 5 acres, (740) 247-1100
eQual opportunity employer
~.
bedroom, 1 112
'Free Kiner.s-. 2 tamales, 3 that encourages wor1&lt;place Allret~l ..tllleadver11•1ng .......... 3
100
I
Jllales. 6 weeks old .
In thl• new•paper 11
bath , 2 porches, central air,
acres more or ess,
-&lt;(7401446_9582
diversity. M/F ON
bj
h ede
2 car garage, S t 19,500.00, county water, Leon area,
~-'-------- Part time cleaners needed
•u ect to I e F 1111
(740)698 9655
$125.000.304-456-1519
-Kitlens, various ages &amp; col· . G II ' I'
II w·
Fair Housing Ac:l of 1968
•
·ors. liter trained. Leave tn a lpo IS area. a
In· which m1kn h Illegal to
Two Story . House, needs 15 acres mOfe or less. lomessage it no answer ~~g . Services. (304 l697 ·
adYertl" ·:any
work, pnme lot In Racine, cated on Green valley
(740)446·9935
preterence,Umllltlonor
$t 2 ooooo
Drive; State Route 160, 5
Route Manager, 60-60 hour, diScrimination beMd on
949:2852
minutes from' Holzer. Will
70.
Sd
k
k 1
race, color,rellglon,ux
sellinpartorwhole.Callfor
YARD SALE
anday w~~tir~~ee~t nsur~~c~ familial atatua or natlon11 Wanted! Good credit cus- details. (740)446-0118
·
.r~==~=====~ $35 ooo
1
origin, or any Intention to tamers to purchase new .
1
make lny auc:h
home wltand. $0 down to
AucnON AND
(740)286·7366.
p,.ferenc:e, llmltlltlon or
qualified customers. 1·5 Co. Prices starting · at
v. .,. , ..... .
dltc,rlmlnatlon.':
acre
tracts
available. $
Tuppers Plains-Chaste&lt;
(740)446-3093·
15,000. (304)541·0759
...-..,;;'oiiii"'-"iilii"iiiiiAiiRKEfiiii;.r-1· The
Water District is aCcepting Thl• new•paper will not
·t
Mason County Seven 1
AUCTION
'
applications for a Chief Opknowlnglyacc:ept
MOBILE HOMm
acre lotS with easy access.
·Every Friday @6:30 Angi&amp;'s erator's Position. Requireadver11ument• for reel
co.
City water electric &amp; paved
-Flea Marto:.et 333 Mechanic menls .and Job Description
eatate which 111n
FOR ...,...u:
road. eros&amp; to Toyota. ~
: street Pomeroy, Ohio Call 10 ~ the position can ~e .o~vlolatlonofthelaw.Our
er .will Fjnaoce $18,000
For Information: 992-9734
talned at the Water Dlstncls
read:en•re hereb)'
12x60 3 bedroom w/c/a, each. (304)562·5840
main otlice localedat 3.956t
Informed that Ill
washer &amp; dryer, stove, 1'1:1::"~~-~---,
WANTFD
Bar 30 Road. Reedsville,
dwelllng•ldvertiHdln
$5,495, 740·99~·2167
REALEsrATE
.
10 BUY
Onio,
45772.
Our
main
ofhi
..,
_
_
,.,;"'.oii·~---,.1
r1ce .IS ·1oca1ed Ius1o11 Aou1e
1 • newspaper are
S
nt..
,
bl• on an equ•1
14x65 hultz w/Dishwasher
11
h.
lh
.
.
lh
a
&amp;
$
.
7
1ron! deck.
. Abso Iute TOP· Dol lar: . U.S . , whIC IS ree ml 1es sou
.
.
6,000.
opportunltv !»'"·....l (304)675-6295
w·I11 pay 1op dollar 1or pnme
·
Silver. Gold Coins. Proof- of the caulion light in Tup- r.....;;.:;:;;;,;;;.;;.;;•:.;;;.;;;;;
sets,
Diamonds, a·old pers Plains. Our Treatmenl
':--:'--...:..:--~-- land. New home builder.
U.S. Currency,- plant requ ires an Ohio
1971Fiam i ngo , Mobile (740)446·3093
Rings.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec· Class II Water Treatment UHome12x60 2 Bedrooms,
and Avenuer Gallipotis, 740- cense. All resume~ will be
HOt\U
retr1gator, stove, underpin·
. 446·2842.
·
accepted, but an application l
. FOR SALE
ning, wheelson, ready to
.
must be filled out. (740)985·
move. $2,500 00
I· \11'1 Ill \II· \ r
.
3315
(740) 843-5128
riO
HOL!SI8
Sl Ill I&lt;'I·.S
3 Bedroom newly remod·
.
FOR RENT
·
Truck Drlvar1 , Immediate eled in Middleport Call Tom 1988 mobile home, 14xS6, ...__ _ililiiiiiiiiioo-r-1·
r:110
2 bedroom, 1 bath. $3900, '
I hire,cJassACOLrequired, A d.
" 5 '
fiELp WANTFD
eltcellent pay, experience ~-~~~ a•• er p.m.
(740)992·4172 after 6pm :
1 ·3 BedroO:ms Foreclosed
1...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ required. Earn up to 9
. .
1995 Fleetwood, 14)(70, 2 Homes From $199/Mo. , 4%
'
$1,000. per wnk.Call 304· 3 Bedr!'Om w1th garage on BR,
2 full bath. , Must see DOwn, 30 Years at 8.5%
ATTN: Point Pleasant.
675·4005
approximately 1 acre On home. located 12 miles AI'A. For Listings, 8Q0-319·
Postal positions. Clerks.'car- URGENTLY
NEEDED• Roule 2, Galllpol•a Ferry south ol Gallipolis on Teens 3323 Ext. 1709.
• rlers/sorters. No e)lp, re7
plasma
donors,
earn
$50 to 1304 16 5-_5332
Run Ad, must sell I $18,000. -,.-,-Sec-o-nd-.-A-ve_n_u-e.-A-v~al-l· ~f:el', ~:.:&lt;:~~ D~~ lndepondent Horballfe Dis- J.D. 450 6 way blade
&amp;
. qUirecJ . Benefits. For exam,
tnbutor, Call For Product Or Winch &amp; canape 742·2880
4-~
~ salary, and lesting inlorma- $60 . per week for 2 or 3 3 Bedrooms, 1 bath, car· Call (304)736-7268 Land able November tat. 2 bed·
rooms, basement, yard, from $297 to $383. Walk to Opportunity. (740)441 - 1982
- ·
. __
. ·lion call (680)393·3032 Ext. hours weekly. Call Blo Llle port, newer roof, storm win- contract possible.
Pla'sma Service, 740-592· dows, 135 Kineon Dr. 1996 .Clayton l4x60 2br. new heat' AC. references, s4h4o6~25&amp;68m. oEvlqeusa.l C~lol u~~OgJET
.Troy built garden tiller, e
)82. 8am-Spm. 7 days.
6651 ·
17401 44 6' 2778
.
with glamour bath, all alec· deposit. Call (740)448·1181 Opporlunily.
AERATION MOTORS
hp.. used very little, paid !986 Jeep Cherokoe 4x4,
~
20
-===='-::-:--:--:-::--- AepaIred., New &amp; AebuIll In $2,000,
sell $500, (740)985-- rebuilt transmiSSion, rebuilt
~-------WORK FROM HOME
6 acres. 2 bedrooms In tric, central
air. Call after ""'tober lh.
4378
·r
d
bo
:AvON I All Areas! To Buy or
Potential $1500/mo/pt
country, $65 .000 . 1740)368 • (304)675·81 eo
.2 bedroom home, approxl· Furnished 1 BD In Middle· :~~ ;:~ :on Evans, 1·
,r~~. ~~~d:~glne d~r a;.~
~~~~, ~~irley Spears, 304 • 55o;'Z~~·t~~~~nfo. 9645
95 Century, 3 BR, 14x70, mately 1 mite from Gallipolis ~~~/d~~v;:• r:~:;:8d~e~~~
•
·
:a7!~~. ~~~e~~eant,o ;)(o.;~ b.JIIt. $1200. (740)446-7928
www.acuqulrelreedom.com Big 7 room larm house 1 excellent condition, $8,500 on State Route 588. ~00/ Pets (740) 354-4084 or 992· ---M-111-Io-To-bo_r___ trailer rent tor utilities paid
Can You Sell?
acre, fruit trees, ba'rn, (740)256-1249
month, S30o'l deposit, refer· 5314
C
ti
Yr
h
with salary, Gall (740)446- 2001 Chevy Silverado .Ex
1
Are you the best
(740)379·2697
Hu.rrlcane Creek Road, ences required. (740)446- ~..,--:-:-::----:
ongra1u1a ona 1 ou ave 1052
Cab. Quad Cab, loaded,
salesperson in the area?
3413 ,
· Furnished 2 Rooms and won 2 tree ·movie tickets ~;,;;..._,..,---.,.-,.--..,-: red, new tires, 27,000 miles,
Can you sell the Meigs,
ll'll!'""-~----.,
Rent-To-Own
gorgeous
Bath, Upstairs, Clean, Ref- to the Spring Valley 7 In Wanted to buy-Hamm~r Mill must seer $19,500 OBO.
· GalBt.SlNOO
Countrjja Home with 11·1/2 1998 Doubiewlde, 1 oWner. 2, 3, and 4 Bedrooms unltea erences and Deposit Ae· Gallipolla. Call the· Tribune Call (740)245·5492 if no an- (740)441·1547
lia &amp; Mason County areas?
TRAINING
acres .• 4br. 2ba., 2 Cars 3 bed/2 bath, great room, avellable. Pomeroy/Middle· qulred. No Pets. (740)446· lor details. (740)448~2342
swer. leave message.
lets Talk!
·---iiiiiiiiiO._.I Garage, abov&amp; ground pool, large eat·ln·kltchen, laundry port/R!clne area Immediate 151 9
92 DOdge Conversion Van,
-,
Handcralted kitchen cabl· room, 2. docka. Beauillul 18 occupancy. Hud approved
NEW AND USED STEEL
~ owner, Iota of new parts
Contacl .Brian Billings
G,_lllpolll ClrHr College nets. OH Loon Baden Ad. wooded ac_res. Close to Immediate occupancy pets Gracious living. 1 ancJ 2 Steel Beams, Pipe. Rebar
$2,500.304·675-6693
&lt;304Monday,Wednes1675 · 1333
0:30A.M.
~ Careers Close ••O HomeI (304)458·1580 •·
Toyota. $ t 10,000. Qwnw: aIIow, no deposit option. . bed room apartments at VII · For· Concrete, Angle, Chan·
·L rvF$10CK
Ga11Todayl740·446-4367,
Elnonce
$5,000 down. 1-800-340·8614
lage Manor and Riverside nel, ·Flat Bar, Steel Grating 1.~-------..-1 97 Plymouth Grand Voyag·
day, Friday
1·800-214·0452,
For Sale By Owner Ranch (304)562·5840
Apartments In Middleport. For Drains, Driveways &amp; - '
er, V-6, auto, · A/C, crulae,
:S.MT'!~· Work tor a great
Reg N90-05·1274B.
Style Home 3 BR 1.5 Baths
3 b~cJroom home, Miners· From $278-$348. Call 740· Walkwaya. L&amp;L Scrap Mat- , ten year old regl.stered low miles, B)(tra clean,
·organization!! !l lll Pinkerton
E)(cellent-Locatlon. Hurricane 9reek Road, vllle, Ohio, river view, no 992·5064. Equal Houslrig. als Open Monday, Tuesday, Quarter horse gelding , $8,000 060. (740)288·
Security Is now hiring tor ""'11!'""_":":':_ _ _..., 569,900.00
Rent~To·Own
gorgeous ·pets. rete(encea required, Opportunities.
Wednesday &amp; Friday, sam· 1.200 : 19 year old Regis· 9896 or (740)288-8095 •
the Buffalo, wv area. You
(740) 446·7825
1998 cloublewlde, t -owner. $450 month, call {740)992·
4'30pm Closed Thursday tered 0 a 1 H
ld
"~"~
• b d/2 b8 th
t
8777 11 5
Now Taking Applications- ·
·
·
u r er orse ge ·
·
musts have EMT-B quallfi·
'4'
e
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday ing $1 000 Will 11 t0 g th
• grea room, .:...:,-a:..,:•-r::P:;.m.:;·- - - - Ab
TO Do
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre large eal·ln-kltchen, laundry
,
35 West 2 Bedroom Town· (740) 44s-1aoo
·
' 1 • $2 ·
se
e ·
AAIJIOCON;OPARTSRIES&amp;
1
1
ca ons.
ova average
• tract, $500 d-n to qualllled room, 2·decka, new con- 3br. $425. Month. 2609 Lin· h
A rt
t I I d
er or
·000 · (740 12 56 ·
wages plus paid insurance.
"'"
~•• R 1 R
ouse pa mens, nc u es
6590
1 Ave. No rv.....
buyers.
Call
(740)446·3570
ere
.
te
driveway,
Beautilul
4·
con
e
·
e·
Water
Sewage,
Trast
•.
Sports
CarcJ
Collection
For
:
:
:------.Uniforms and traininn pro- Childeare a\lallabte In down·
1 d
' be- town Pomeroy, private pay for a qu•·ck sale.
112 •eros. $110,000.
n .. -... qu
re · Depo• It · (304)875 · $3""'Mo
740 •446 •0008 .
sale · All sports • Lols ol Rs•Vided. Please apply
u ..... :.....
$5,000 """"'down
2749
au~
.,
.....,. 2 Paint Tennessee Walker New rotor with drum for
'dl ng 24 hr. serv- Foreclosure! 4 bedroom, 4 """'"""
'--"'------......
(304)875·8991 cons, 2 &amp; 3 years old, full 1990 Dodge Dakota Rotor,
&lt;tween Ihe ho.urs oI 6:00am ~ .onIy, pr0111
(30 4)562 _5840
Twin Rivera Tower tor eld· klos.
0 )
'"11:00am and
1:00pm· ice, call (740)992·5827 tor Bath just $14,900. For list· =·..:.:.~~---~- 3Dr. House located In M
erlyl disabled.
·
(3 4 675·2473
brothers
$2,200 both . ~20 ,
call
mornings
) :OOpm, 1032 12th Street more Information.
ing call 1-800-719-3001 Ext. New 2003 14x70 3 Br t 26th son, WV. $495. + Utllltle .~ Now accepting applications waterline Special: 314 200 (304)562·5840
740 446-9429
.West ; Huntington, WV
F144
Only $995. down and only No Pets. (304)773·5881
for 1 br, .all utilities paid PSI $21.00 Per 100; 1• 200 Fair cal·-s- A·l ,,·red,· Heal
"25704 or call 1·800-241 · Economy Construction
$189.86 per month. Call
HUD ass· t 8d
led PSI $3500 Per 100· All
••
All
types
ot
construction,
Fraziers
Bottom.
5
bed·
5
rooms
&amp;
bath,
50
Olive
St,
·
IS • carpe ·
·
•
Seeker plus Who Made
7454 EOEIMI F/D/F
Nikki, (740) 385·7671
mo. 17401446•3945
apartment. rent Is 30% of Brass Compres~on Fittings Who black &amp; halter brokon
5325
- - - - - - - - - roofing/siding, remodeling , room, 2s1f2 bath, 2 kltch· - - ' - ' - - - ' - - - - - - .:.=..:..:;:;..:;.:;,:,:,_:...:;.:;.:,_ your adjusted Income crill lri Stock
. •
·
Full-lime RN
gutter cleaning, plumbing,
ens, mid entry on 314 acre, New Manager'a Spacial, 6 room &amp; bath, central air 7 304·6?5·6679 between 8· RON EVANS ENTERPRIS. (740)667·663~
Hunter's Special- 2001
SCenic Hill's Nursing Center painting, concrete.
,
Ojtiner Fioonco with 13% new 16x80, 3 bedroom, 2
S
ES J
is now accepting applica· (304)674-0118 or (304)674- down. Close to Toyota, Win-' bath, reduced to only heat. W10 hook·up,· 400, 4:30pm weekdays,EHO
ackson. Ohio. 1-800· Gray Quarter horse colt for Horne 24', ·toaded, 'like new,
537 •9528
. dons lor a lull lime AN for 4682
lleid schools, $150,000 $27,900 delivered and set Kanauga, (740)36 7•7015
sale . . Gentle &amp; pretty. used 1 lime, $9999 .Ffrm,
40)2 56 ·8146
French City Homes, Inc.
midnight Shift . We are the '
'
.· (304)562·5840
up. You sai}et over $6,000 House In country, big yard.
BUILDlNG
areas premier Alzheimer's Georges Portable Sawmill,
lnclucJing underpinning, an- quiet neighborhood, reler·r
1111l1Q!'""~H:---..;;;;;;;;~~.
SUPI'Irr.:o
Horse boarding, 3 miles Gallipolis, Ohio (740)446·
care facility. We offer \lery d~n'.t haul your logs to the Home bn 2 1/2 acres Ql chors, vapor barrier, 1 set fi· ·ence &amp; deposit. Phone
Ol.JSEHO())
~~--·-=-..-1 from GallijX)IIs, Indoor riding 9340
competilive pay and excel- mill JUSt call304·675·1957. land, full baseme'!t, 3 br., berglass steps, 20' ot utility (740)379-2209 alter Spm.
Block, brick. sewer pipes, area. (740)441·9531
lent benefits. If you' would W'll
D H
I
.
dln.lng room, lamlly room lines under hOme, all instal·
.
windows, lintels, efc. Claude
HAv &amp;
1
0
..,l in u 1...,
. like 1o 1·oin our dedicated
ouse c eanmg. Wllireplace, _ll_vlng rQOm, 2. led, One on·ly, Coles's Mo- Near Ordnance School 3 A
b
ppllances: Reconditioned ~inters, Rio GrancJe, OH .
. rto
(304)675 6837
: team of caregivers. you may
·
lull baths, utility room, 2 car bile Homes, U.S. 50 East, r., family room ,living. Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Call 740·245s5121 .
GRAIN
11-l'l·!'""-~~--....,
. apply in person at Scenic Will pressure was~ houses. garag~. . heat ~ump, 20x20 Athens. Ohio 45701
room., ref. required 304· Relflgtato rs, Up To 90 Days
HOME
6?_:5:..·3:.c5_1::.
2 - - - - - Guaranleedl We 'Sell New
· Hills or call Diane Thomp- trailer5, and decks. Call outbwldmg, 30 pool w/n~
.o
Pt.wnt
IMPROVEMENr.i
. son lor more inlorma1ion at 44t-4238 ask tor Ron or d~ . Eastern School O•s· P~lestine .Ad, 17 miles to Ml.yteg App ilaneH, Frenoh L _ _ _IUR_'l!_KL_E_ _.I Ears of Corn for Sale. 1,--iiiiiiiiiiii-iiil,..l
, . (740 )446·7 l SO. we are an leave message.
trict, _ on Flatwood.s Rd., Millon 8 m11es to Ats 2 &amp; ~5. ~:.a~!~ing n~:g ho~~m~ City M,aytag, 740 .4A6•7795 . ~(304-'),-6_
75-,·_15_06
_ _ _ __
10
740 992
· · equal opportunity employer.
;~~eroy. Oh , ( l · i~:; s-~~~~~~~ut•~~ kitchen, diriing room, quail- Good Used Appliances. Re· AKC Registered BeAgle Hay lor Sale: 2ncJ cuttings
wA~~::~~NG
Help wanted caring for the
model on totally level lot, fied persons only. {740)446· condltlonecJ and Guaran- puppies tor sale, 6 week -appr 1200 LB Sail• r;all Unconditional lifetime guarelderly. Darst Group Home.
Land hOme p~rckages. No solid block foundation, 2 2801
teed. Washers, Dryers, old. Mother &amp; Father on (14Q)g92·2143 or gg2·8373 antee. Local references furnow paying minimum wage, ~NEWSPAPERS paym~nts while under con- bed( 2 btilhs wllh too many a"·"ne__3_b_ed_r_oo_m_a-nd-O-ne-2 Ranges, and Relriger~lors, pre~ises. {740)388·8721
:Oal_te;:..r.:;5.::P;,.
·mc.c·.:;·..,
· -:--:::--c nishecl. Estabtlshed 1975.
new shilts: 7am-3pm, 7amCover All The
Slruct~n .
Little
or . no features to list. $45,000 Bedroom house for rent. Some start . ~I $95. Skaggs AKC Registered Black Lab Round Bale Hay, Orchard Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446~
: Spm, .3pm· 11 pm, 11pm_ . Malof Subjects! down payment reqwed. Owner EjQance wit2 $4,000. Somerville Realty (304)6'15· Appliances. 76 Vint:~ St.,
Grass &amp; clover, Tom Kessel 0870, Rogers Basement
- ' - - - - - - - ' (740)446 · 3218
down. 1304156 2·58 0
,.,pup, $250. Call (740)245· (740)446·7767
7am. call 740·992·5023.
'--3030 or (304)6753431
(740)446-7398
Waterproofing•
5342

i

CIISTIICTIII

• AeKible scheduling • Mileage reimbursement
• Competitive pay
• Great work environment
2) Physlcallberapjst- Two positions-

I

I

"50th" Brrthdav!
Colr.ha. Teresa
Public Notice

•

• SHERIFF'S SALE.
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER

CONSECO FINANCE
SERVICING CORP.
fka GREEN TREE
FINANCIAL
SERVICING
CORPORATION
Plaintiff

UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Mlllllng Date:
1010712002

..y ....

SEMI-DRIVER
NEEDED
Seeking local &amp;
experienced Semi·
Tractor Trailer
driver. l:xcellent
Pay. Experienced
Drivers Only.

cJf'I0-682-7773

or

BOD-523-080'1

Business Services
jilf4ft

Sealed propoaale
will be accepted from
all pre-qualified bid·
·Defendant.
dera at the Ofllce of
COntntct. of the Ohio
COURT OF
Department
of
COMMON PLEAS,
Tranaporbtllon,
MEIGS COUNTY,
Columbue,
Ohio,
. OHIO
unlit 10:00 a.m.,
WednHdey,
In pureuence of en November 08, 2002,
Order of Sele to me FOR
IMPROVING
directed lrom llld SECTIONS ATH-32·
Court In the ebove 0.00 AND VARIOUS,
entiUed ICIIon. I Will STATE ROUTES 32
expoee to ••le 11 AND
VARIOUS,
public euctlon on the- ATHENS,
MEIGS,
front etepa of the VINTON
AND
Metga ·
County WASHINGTON
Courthouee
on COUNTIES, OHIO, IN
Thuredly, November ACCORDANCE WITH
7, 2002, II 10:00 l.m., PLANS
AND
of 11ld clly, the fol· SPECIFICATIONS BY
lowing deiCrlbed re~l THE REPLACEMENT
eelltll:
OF EXTRUSHEET
Sltueted In the SIGNS.
Vllllgl Qf Pomeroy,
'"The date oat lor
County 01 Melge, and completion of lhll
Still of Ohio:
;
work shall be 11 111
· Sttueted In the lorth In the bidding
· Vlllege ol Pomeroy, propoeat." Plane and
Ohto, being known Speclllcatlono are on
end deelgnlled on a llle In the Department
map of
Lincoln ol Tranaportatlon •.
Helghte mede by
Bretoee end Cerper, GORDON PROCTOR
Reglatered
Civil DIREctOR
OF
Englneera,
TRANSPORTAnON
Huntington, West
VIrginia,
deled (1 0) 15, 22,-2002
October 17, 1942,
rwcotded In Plat Book
Public Notice
No. 3, at Pege 43 and
WBaU 44 •• Lot No. 53, end
Gallla, Jackson,
Dump Truck
being In Lincoln
Meigs, VInton
Helghte,
lurther
1-74..182-6142
Counties SOLID
deliCtfbed •• follows:
WASTE
Leave a
Beginning 11 a
MANAGEMENT
point In the weat line
DISTRICT PLAN
of Lincoln Road at
APPROVAL
the corner betwee.n
Pursuant
to
ORC
Lote 52 end 53, •• Section 3734.55 AND
ehown In 11ld map; 3734.56,
notice
Ia
thence with the 11ld .
hereby given that on
nne of Lincoln Roed,
October 15, 2002, the
lOUth 27 degr- 36 director of Ohio EPA
mlnutu Nil 50 feet;
luued Final Finding•
thence with the line
and
Orders
which
between LOll 53 end
approvea the ratified,
114, lOUth 82 degr- draft, amended plan of
24 mlnutu weet 200
the Gall Ia, Jaekaon,
Do&lt;• 9om-'pm
feet; · !hence north 'rT Meigs,
Vl.nton Joint Fru atin'lllta. free in lloln!l p;;~~.~p
degrue 311 mlnutea Solid
waste Clllllllfor&amp;ll,..~rlllldl
wut 50 feet; thence MaiUigement District,
(740) 446-1812
with the line between 1056
South
New
Ask us nbo11i o11r
Stl"'lirt Plmul
eald Lola 52 end 53,
Hampahlie
Avenue, • • - • • • • - •
north 82 dagrHa 24 Wellston,
Ohio 45692mlnutH Hat 200 fut 2005. Thll . order lo
to the point ol 111blecl to all rulee,
bltlllnnlng.
.
regulation•,
and
Currant Owner(e): apecllled conditione.
VIrgil B. Hudson and Thll llnel action was
Johann•
Renee not preceded by a pro·
Hudeon aka Johenna poled ectlon and 11
R. Hudson
appeeleble
to
the
Property at: 1 820 Environmental Review
Lincoln
Helghte,
Appet~ta Comm1111on,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
at 236 E11t Town
PPI: 18-00558.000
Street,
Room
300,
P.rlor
Deed
Reference: Volume
88, Pige221
APPRAISED AT:
VIRGIL

B. HUDSON,
etal.

~rrCiiff4
1066 Second Street

304-773-5800

New Chars Taste
.Dellclous·Food

Get A Jump
on the·latest

..;000.00
TI!RM8 OF SALE: .
Cannot be aold for
Ia. . then 213rde ol
the epprelaed value.
tO% down on day of
1111, cuh or certified
ohuk, balance on
aonnrmatlon of aale.
RALPH
E .
TIIUiii!LL, Sherif!,
Melga COUnty, OhiO
RIIMI!R ' LORBER
CO., L.P.A.
By: Dennie llelmar
(Reg. 100417711),
Attorney•
tor
Plllntlfl, 2450 l!dleon
,1 ,

f.

. .··

A=s&amp;C"YM. ~

.f ~
Foreman: Larry

Owner:

740·367·0181
Ronald "Mick" Haning
Christina "Chris" Haning
740-992-0780
Cell# 740-591'0919
Cell: 591·8393

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

CIISDICnll

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; SerRi~

Specialiling In:
Roofing, Decks ,
• Remodeling,

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

Siding, and
Owner:

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Terry Lamm

(740) 446-1044

(740) 992-0739

Monday-Friday S:.SPM • Saturday 8-2pm

Additions

1 mo.

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(lO'xlO' 610'x201

[740) 992-3194
992-6635
Hre you stressed?
tall now for gour
'appt

mEIGS mHSSHGf
THERHPY
· m n. Second Rue.
·

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING &amp; HEATING
•
•
•
•
•
•

Healing
~
Air CondHioners
s~
Service On All Brands
Residential &amp; Light Commercial
10 yr. parts &amp; Labor
Heating &amp; Air Conditioning

•GIIages
•Ccxc;lala

Remodelug

Stop &amp;Compare

www.amertcanstandardalr.com

"SALES AND SERVICE"

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING

9..1521
Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month .

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
oNewHomes

FREE ESTIMATES

740.992-1671
7122/TfN

SEAL

IT

CONSTRUCTION
Rooftng, Sldln&amp;
PalnUna, Gutten,ll«ks,

Fm Estimates!

(740) 992·1189.
(Affordable Prices)

1Qiddle~,OH

(740).992-1705
Tonia Reiber
Ucensed bg the Ohio

st.l' medical Board

Dean Hill
New&amp;:Used

Longaberger/Dresden
Bus Trip
Sat., No\lember 30. 2002
$65.00- Space Limited
Deadline: Oct. 20, 2002

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

J6S flfCTRIC 6
PLUmBinG
. Jim Ru•rk
Electric. Plumbing.
and Small Home

1..800..822..0417
."W.Vs

#l Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
Van Dealer-

DEPOYSAG
PARtS

Hill 's Self
Storage

All Makes Tractor &amp;
&amp;juipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
]{){)()St. Rt. 7South
Coolville, OH 45723

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

....

45771
740-949-2217

F&gt;siiea s'x~o·

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

'·to 10'll30'

740-667-0363

Ire VDU Laid DHil
Room Addlllona &amp;
RotrnOdellng .
New
Electrlcol &amp; Plumbing
floc~l'!!l_l&amp; Guttoro
I Polin•ling I

Ylu Clllld be 11111blellrfftllbll··
I1Uint111Ck II
Wlrll

I

G•rave•

Your
(/II~

Coocotle nobllt~~•od -.1

740-742-8015
(177.JSJ.78ll)
Call for more inforJ fi'cc =timatc
WVIJI256

NOW DOING:

~'R~
High Bl.Dry_

Seff-Storage

All

' 'ertlcal

blinds are

mll4:1e to order at

• Tonneue Cover •
Ventvi sor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line of
Other Accessories

our locatiOn

• Verlicalo o Wood
144 Third Ave.

. ..... In
II daJI.

I

'.till

II I

l&lt;d

\ I d,Jkp111t (llilo

Toll Free 1-888·745-8847

(740) 992· 5822

Pomeroy Eagles
BIJI¥;02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
l&gt;oors Open 4:30
Early birds start

POMEROY
APPLIANCE
STORE

ODD JOBS

200 E . Main St.
Open 9am-6pm
Mon thru Sat
P~ane 992.0515
Washers, dryers
Like New
Freezer, Electric
Ranges, Dishwashers
Refrigerators, and

Painting, Power

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

Herballla Independent
OletriDutor .

• ~ \ ,[,1,

SMd, ~.Stone, (ut¥U't 4 CoMtrue'tlon

Weedeatlng

Washington counties,

You Need It
Done, We 'II Do It
(74Q) 9~9-4026

24 hours.
7 Days per week.
St. Rt. 7 Tuppers
Plains, OH
CALL 667·6329

(740) 591·9239

Open

sunset Home
Construction

New Homes • Vinyl

Bryan Reeves

Siding • New Garages

New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

RESIDENTIAL .

FREE ESTIMATES

.:s.,u..

Child CARE

Washing, Mowing,

or

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

446-8237. 67!H!516 or 1-8()()-730-4!53!5

Connie's
has openings, 15 yr.
experience, Certified
in Meigs, Athens-llntt

much 'more

• Replacement

YQ\:::,

me;

FREE DELIVERY

BUILDERS IRC.

•

MMILE liME SO IPS. IIU 11111111-111111
I:L£11111. IIIIZIIITiliiiiii-IIUJ IHIII.
1:1111 &amp; HBIIIIIIIIIII-1'11111

Gallipolis 446-4995

6:30

Cull jeanie
and ask how.
740-992-7996

740-992-2222 or
740-446-1018

~

(Faclory Outlet)

Pomeroy, Ohio

andldrn•

~

BLIND SPOT

• Minis • Etc

...... 171blo

ClllllllllllltJ Acllll

The CRAFTY,-

33795 Hiland Rd.

740-992-5232

...

au

IIIIIIIMIIIS

(!J

Mortgage; Major Medical
o Nursing Home

oitcn:te Coaaeclioa, L

FOIIDIE
IIFDIIITI.

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;

BISSEll

I.

.Haning's Construction
Qc.hadeC&amp; Gravely

n4tws.

The ...,"~~....,
Sentinel
992-2155

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

lAMM'S

Delivery

Best Service at
.the Best Price

th.Nt

ScdnL Swain

Email: bladesOzapllnk.com

New Peo11e • New minus

Ball Logging
&amp;Firewood

.4 tllihf

(740) 992-3320

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

OQ.CV~

Legal COpy Number:
020497

~, ........ ~

Eleclric, Plumbing

(304) 6754340

Blvd., P.O. Box 988, ColumbUI, OhiO 43215
Twlneburg,
Ohio · Peraono wlehtng to be
44017, (330) 425-4201 on Ohio EPA's Int.·
Htecl partiH mailing
(10) 8, 15, 22. 2002
llat lor. thle piolect
muat IUbmH a requHI
In wrlllnll to Ohio EPA,
Public Notice
Dlvtolon of Solid and
lnlecUOUI
Walle
NOTICE TO BIDDERS Management,
Attn:
STATE OF OHIO
Systeme Management
DEPARTMENT OF
Unit, P.O. Box 10411,
TRANSPOATAnON
ColumbUs,Ohio
4321&amp;-1049.
COiumbUI, Ohio
(10) 22 lTC
Ofllcl of COntriCta

&amp;r·rh..!Yer'. "'~'141'.

Building uvu 30 ytars
~ters. Foundation,

IIISIInJNt WOrt /ft('/uJ.td

·
Pleasant Valley Hospital Rehab Center is currently accepting
resumes for Speech Therapists for Outpatient/Inpatient.
Masters Degree from an approved college or school of speech
language pathology from an accredited institution . Current
West Virginia Speech Language Pathologist license.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
do Humao Resources
2520 Val~y Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Public Notice

~:cZ;:: Your Trees~

Add-Ons, New Homes,
Pok Barns, Concrete.

304-675-7400 for more information.

Public Notice

II vou see

IH\\\I'IJIU \l it I\

AKC Registered Shetland ...___••U_R_SW_
•. _ ii_,fl':l
Sheepdog (Alias- Sheltie) '
$250 each. (740)379-2836
1991 Pontiac Grand AM,
- . , . - - - - - - - - New Jasper Engine 1999
AKC registered Yorkie .$800.00 (304) n3-5697
males, parents 3 1/2-5 lbs,
shots started, wormed. 1992. Chevrolet. . Lumina
$500 each firm , serious Euro, 4 door sedan, $1,500.
Used furniture store, 130 calls only; purebred Beagle Phone (740)448·3479 after
MOBD..E HOMES
Butaville Pike. We sell mats pups, $50 each, shots stari- Spm.
tresses, bunk beds, cJress- ed &amp; wormed, (740)985__
FOR Rmr
ers, couches, appliances, 4378
1994 Ford Taurus, auto,
.
much more. Grave monu- - - - - - - - - - cold air, 4 dr., $350 dOwn,
14x60, 2 bedroom, spa· . mehts. (740)446-4782 Gal- Beagle puppies. 1 male~ 1 M&amp;J Auto, 740.992-1460 or
ci-·s, cen1ral air, 1 acre lot, lipolis, OH.
female, 12 wkS old, hrsl 740-388-9693
~
shots wormed $60 each or
12x12 oul bu1'id1·ng, $350
•"mQ•~o
$100 pair, (740)696·3054
199 5 Skylark, 2 door,
month. (740)379-2351
n.J'I
v~
$2.695; 1996 Cavalier,
Cute long hair Ch1huahua, $3,195; 1998 Cavalier,
2 bedroom
I AKC . $200 . $3·895 ; 1997 Range r XLT
. trailer, no pets, Buy 'or sell Riverine ,1\nti· 1 year; mae,
·••
water paid, (740)446-9569
quos, 1124.· East Main on (740)256-1249_
automatic,
$4,295.
10
others in •lock COOK
2 bedroom, 1 bath, large SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· Hershey Kisses For Salo
· "
·
yard no pets, rent $275 992·2526. Russ Moore. AKC Choc. Labs 6-Male &amp; MOTORS (740)446.0103
moniht utilities, $200 de- owner.
3.Female Born 9_9_02 1998 Chev. Caviler Blue auposit. (740)256·6206
$40Q.OO Bolh Parents also to. Nc Cruise 4 dr, .AWFM
~ For sale w/pedigrees 2 yrs. Cass. new tires, new bat·
2 bedroom, no pets, 245 ~ll~ge 1 ~~neware
month, includes· water. $100
a tzg·ra · lnnerware a
old. (740)742-3802
tery, 74.000-mifes $3,500.
large selection of unusual =::'""-=:"'=::..:C,-,-- ~2-5860
""
deposit. (740)446-3617
serving pieces such as: Mother- Golden Retriever,
F
h
Ch
·
Lab
3 bedroom, 2 balhs mobil~. Soup Tureen, Punch Bowl at erocolate
Towncar. Sig•
1
r · dl , 'II5 1999 Lincoln
s
home, e~ecellent condition &amp; Cups, PecJestal Cake rna es, very nan y, w1 nature eries, brighf white,
on . 218. $500 month, Plate, Lazy Susan, CoHee make O)(Ceilent pets. Has sharp, loaded, one oWner
(740)256-1417 (740)256- &amp;
Tea Pots and Lots had first shots &amp; wOrmed, (retired). Alway s maintalne(j
more. Call (740)446-2522 vet checked. $25 each · on time, extra dean.
6228
PI
II II
600
daytime;
(740)319~2789
ea~ ca . a er : pm , (740)446· 1000. LeaYe mes3 BA. 2 Bth, wid, cia · exc . evening.
(740}245·0347 ·
sage.
conclilion. References . re=::::...----,-'-.,..qulred s.~o.oo I m.th. w/ S8·
MISCFJJ.ANF.Ol.5 Purebred Norwegian Elk 67 Camaro, 327; 68.000,
curity deposit call (740) 992• .
MERCHANDISE
Hound puppies,. $75 each original miles. All original,
4017 after 6 p.m.
_
• Make good fam1ly pets for very solid, interior 81Ccelent.
children. 4 mites South of $10,500. Call afte.r 5pm.
1 .Barcaloun9Br rocker &amp; r~· Rio Grande off 325 on (740)388·8972
1
bedroom, 1·112balh,S450 d.lner.,
Wmg ba~k ch~lr. WolleRunAd. 1stplace on"-'===-=---'--92 Camara cold air, good
month + deposit and refer- Like new. Appomtme~t . right at A&amp;A Woodcrafts
ences. No pets. (740)446· (304)675-2045
·
heat, good stereo, V-6, 5
4824
.
2 Lazy·boy recliners. Burspeed, rally sport, runs
52 000 00
576
Mobile Home tor RenVSale. gundy. Like New. (304)675- on Premises. · $75. Each.
'
'
· 3Q4·
.
R ·
1329 After 6pm.
(304)"" 2.3340
·
enHooo
0Fraziers 3 Bottom
b d/1 b- th
92 Z-24 C..._ ..., Cavalier,
a ·. 55 ga11 on Aquanum
·
·-·• 135,000
$3wn,
SO.Imonth e&amp; $2,000
wu· h Rpttweiler male puppy, born good condition,
down
or
rent
only cabinet ~ stand . Complete 8/11102, tail docked, dew· miles, (740)367-0394
with Ulter, fish &amp; nice deco· claws removed &amp; first shots,
~~~(:C~rSs .~~~e · to rations. (740}367·7115
purebred but not registered, 94 Corvette Coupe, white
$250 (740)992.09;32
with red leather, glass top.
Two BR mobile home loc~t- Baby Items, hulch, full size
,
' loadwd, ·CDI cassette •radio,
ad on Old Burdette Lane· bed, largedresserwlmirror Toagoodhome, p~rtWalk· $12,500 OBO, (740)682·
behind FoX's Pizza in Point 304-675·2601
er, 6 weeks old puppies. 75 12
. (''~
Pleasant. 5350 _/mo. Refer· COOL.. DOWN, Central
·
2F/4M,
wormed
·and
well
C
$
1
0
Air care·d lor. Call alter Bpm, . ars r01:n so , police lmences
requ ·r
Call Con d111oners an d Heat
1·ed.
pou nd s 1or sa1e 1 For 11 s1·1ng
1740)446 •4706
(304)675·3423
II
1·800 -719-3001 8)(t. 3901
Pumps. you don't call us
APARTMEN'IS
we both lose. Free eslis Tri-color Rabbit Beagle pupFORn ..... ...,
mates. (740)446·6308 and pies. 6wks. old. Parents on
TRUCI(§
IU.I'~'l
1-6.00-291-0098.
Premises. (304)675·7462
FOR SALE
Firewood for sale, .$40 a
...__ _ililiOiliiiiiioo-r-1
1 and 2 bedroom apart- load, (740)388-9143.
'
ments, furnished and unlur1993 Rangel Auto, aii, goqd
nlshed, security deposit res Floral shop closed all suptires. 96 road miles, Bxtend·
quired, no pets, 74 0· 992 · plies &amp; silk .arrangements &amp; 111!1"--~----, ed·cab, becl·llner, excellent,
2218 ·
coolers lor sale call 304- r10
FARM
condition S35.00 1-740·6674581049or3046740120
5944
1 bedroom apartment in · ·
·
·
&amp;:A...o!UIPMENT
Middleport, (740)928-494f Grubb's Piano· Tuning &amp; "--..iiiiiliiiiiiiiii--r-1 . 2000 Chevy S-10, 5-speed,
collect after 7pm.
· 'Repairs. Problems? Need Case 580C Backhoe w/Cab, air condition, co , pla:yer,
BEAUTIFUL
APART· Tuned? Call The Piano Or. 1995 Terrlmlte TSC Back- bedliner, Tonneau - ~0\ler tor
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI· 740-446;4525
hoe. (304)675-3773
$7,000. (740)256·1709
Stale Route 141 , large
equipped kilchen, large
bedroom, den, bath, covered deck· front &amp; back, no
pets, ready November 1 ~
$475 montt'\ plus deposit.
Phone (740}446.0205 days:
(740)446·4254 evenings.

Valley Hospital Home Care Agency is accepting
appltcat10ns for Registered Nurses on a Per Diem · basis.
Contact lia Wooten at

AAIEOE

...

,;...,,..,,1

0

Plea~ant.

Happy
Birthday!

POUCIE$: Oh&amp;o V.,ley Publlahlng reservu the rig hi to .tit, rejict. or u~ •ny .cl 11 any Urne. Em:ws
be reparted on thll ftrst
Trtbu~.._ wll be l'ftpOn*ibte lew no mar. lhlln tt• co.t of the~ occupted by the .rror ltOd only thl.flrst In ...-lion.
I
1
lrtr 10M Or expenM ttwt rMulil frOm tht publcatton or omiiSion of.,. ~..,.,L· eon.ouon Will bt mlde In the ftl'lt eYeUi:ble edition. • Bo• ••
.,. atweys conn.nu.l. •Cun.nt r11t. card •PC&gt;IIH. • All real ..Ute .w.rtiMtMnta ere aubjecl to the Filderel F•lr Housing Act of 1tu. • ThJI - .......
KCIIPtS only help wllnted . . meeting EOE atandardL We will not knoMngly ~ MIV Mhwdslng In
....

\\\01\1 1· \ll \IS

FllllY

Recjstem! Nurses

3) Speec:b Therapist- Two positions available

You.r Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday...
Fax
446-3008
Fax
992-2157
675-5234
or

llllS

. I) Home Health 2) Outpatient Rehab
.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Health and PVH Rehabilitation
Center is currently accepting resumes for Physical Therapists.
Fullttme. Current state PT licensure, graduate of an approved
school of PT or graduate of accredited college or university
wtth a certificate in PT. Current BCLS (CPR) certification.
Current WV license.

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

'(!Crlbune

e

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Posidons i\vailable
Il

RFJi1lKfloltA110N

. wvoooooo. 300-675-1786.

In one week With us

lfo.rWANOD

ICII'"'"'"=F..u.cntlcA.-· '"'!"tJ- ,

• Residential or commercial

Else Can!

www.mydailysentinel.com

1

C &amp; C - Home MalmoPllnllng, "'nyl old·
. lng, carpentry, dooow. win·
. bolhl, mobile home
· ~ir and more. For ' ' "
·, Mlimlle cal Chat, 740-992·
6323.

Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason

To Place

I

n..ct.y, October 22, 2002

740.992•7599

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. owner: Ronnie ~ones
Estimates

FREE ESTIMATES!

740~7 42-3411

�.. .
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

.

ALLEYOOP

PHILLIP

~"""''
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ACROSS
1 111et

ALDER

-

.•

1\'0~11 -

4 TWOIIOIIIe

•'K Jl07• '4
F.1K

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• A K J 10 g ;

• •

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QI 4 3 Z

t A Q l Otl 1

.,•

511Uib
• A K Q ~

•

$01 -5~MU/JP.. IJIUAT'!;

.. A9113l2

GOIN' ON I.IIITI-I
~ r JOE rn~&lt;r&lt;e.?

.

Soutll

Dt•!d !!r: Ea ~ t
Vulnl!rab lp· Ne ilhC'r

Wnt

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~or lh

Eau

1• ,. s•
s•
Pass

6 t

Pass

P• n

~ •

&amp;A

Ubl.

Pu s

Answer to PNvlous Puzzle

1111ftr

TOP''"'' 44 Young
1 1 Outbeck
hOriH
bird
· 47 Throbbed
12 Gluck of · 51 Not bu1y
oper1
52 Dill ordert
13 Arm bone 55 Puckl1er
15 Zero
Bobby 16 Ponytlll llle 56 PoiOI
17 Hertz rival 57 McKellen
11 lieu
and Holm
20 AAA or EEE 58 Hindu Mr.
21 Quip
59 Cheer
23 Hoedown · 60 Memory_
honey
unit 14 Fire residue 39 Pause
24 Green
61 Psychic
19 Screenfillers
.
vegetable
power
writer
41. Body tissue ·
21 Stan ofa
Jam01 43 Out of atyle ·
Bard title . · · DOWN
20 Isn't any
44 Fragrant
29 "Ben· -"
more
tree
32 Theater
1 Knows, to
22 · Irksome
45 Skunk' I
award
Burns
one
defense
33 Batman and 2 Radiate
23 Worldwide 46 "II"A"S"H''
Robin
3 Festive log 24 Zen riddle
actor
34 PCB
4 Teddy bear 25 Skilled
48 Wot down
regulator
look-alike 26 Committed 49 Goofs up
35 Frothy brew 5 Dixie 11.
.perjury
50 Plumbing
36 Untruth
6 Little devil
28 Tlant ol
. problem '
37 Pasta
7 Actress baseball 52 Type of
38 Btltty or
Dawn
29 lagatee
overall•
Buntllne · Chong
30 Game lor
53 Sat
39 Hostess 8 Game bird
(2 wda.)
54 Miner's
Maxwell
9 Wide st. · 31 Shower
need
40 VItamin
10 Agitated
37 Trace
1upp1ement state
mineral

10 1l·U2

WHI

41 Cook up
bacon
42 Ho1p.

I

A J I 0 94 3

.

Opening lci d: ¥ A

Bid instruction

In competitive auc- .
tions, do you sell out
·. too soon, or bid too
high and suffer a
pamful penalty? If so,
there is a good book
AN' COMIN' INIO
MY MONE'r' ' '5 ON .
that offers sound ad~!"""T.--r,"18-r."""'110
IH' STREICH 11" '
JUGHAID !!
vice to improve your
JUGHAID B'r'
judgl)lent: "UnderA LENGIH !!
standing the Contested Aucti on" by
Ron Klinger and Andrew Kambites (Cassell ). In 120 jlages ,
you gain useful insights into overcalls,
takeout doubles, twosuited bids. defei)Se
ag ainsl pre -empts ,
and -- my favorite -fit-showing bids.
Here is a dramatic
I&gt;ON'T F~~L
deal from the book,
TOO
which occurred durCOMPLIMfi"'TEP··
ing a pair tournament
in Brilain.
T~AT'S Tt4t
On the first round.
ANA~'t41ST
North might have responded one spade,
CELEBRITY CIPHER
SOCiftY.
but decided to make
by Luis Campos
life as difficult asCelebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famoUs
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.
E·maii:BoblhaVesi!Jiaol.com
possible for East.
OZOOZ Tha11es I Oist . by NEA, Inc.
Today's clue: R equals P
However, that player
found a thoughtful
"LBKGNYP
NHGZX
KMOXCZO
five-diamond bid.
~
- ~~
~
Tl-\~1 I~/&gt;.. :£LF- i\C&gt;f.I£~1VE.
Since East had not
MZY
0 B A Z."
MN WZ Y
pre-empted
as
dealer.
eNVELOPE - You '~E. 1'10\
"G M Z Y Z·
OYZ
this could not signify
AZHZOGO
SUPPO!&gt;EO TO
- just a lon-g diamonl\
UCX II!
W NY Z
GYBSWRMOXG
GMOX
suit; it described heart ·
support and a diaLBKGNYBZD."
mond suit: a fit-show- .
ing bid. (Please don't
· .W B K M Z T
A Z
WNXGOBCXZ
write in to point out ·
that if East had bid an
PREVIOUS SOlUTION -"The secrel of my success was
clean living and a fasl·moving oulfleld." .
'-&lt;
agricultural
six
-Hall
of
Fame
pitcher
Lefty
Gomez
hearts, he probably
would have done
much better!)
THATDAILY C.fi'il"'() ~'\. .( . . J) "f: ~a_ .. WORD
South decided that · . ~uum ~~ 1-'QU ~,_-~ pq•-;:; GAM I
he was willing to sac- - - - - - - - , - Edited by CLAY 1. ~OlLAN
rifice in six clubs, -but
Reorronge letters of the
showed his spades en
four Y.rombled word• be·
route. This indicated low ro form four •lmple word•.
what rated to be the
GE L GwI
best lead by North
r:. -f
against six hearts, if
. . . . .
that proved to be the ":~:;:~;;:~:;-_.
final contract. Also, rl
0 8 RRA I
here it uncovered the
-r--,:--"1r-"Ti:'--i
double fit; so, when
1- 14
PEANUTS
West did bid higher, ~=;:·;::;~-:;:~·~"'
1
it was easy fot: Nor!h rl
p 0 R F 0 !::::
. IT'.s VOUR MOM .. SI-IE
1 KNEW 511E D CALL ...
to sacnftce 1n stx .
.
My two sons entered a local
WANTS TO KNOW WI-lEN
SOMETIMES I FEEL LIKE
spades.
.
5
department
store's poster contest.:
'{OU'RE COMING I-lOME ...
11M ON A LEASH ..
West led the heart ~~-:;_:::~-:::;~·~-~~~The eldest son won first prize. The
ace, shifted to the dia- r
youngest boy sighed, "Yea,and 1:
mond four, and reS H E 0 C 0 ~only won •••• -. - . mention I"
ceived a club ruff for
17
18
Complete the chuckle quoted .
two down, plus 300. . . . . . .
bv fHiing in tho miuing word• ·
However, at many Iayou develop from step No. 3 below.
bles, the ·final COntract 8 PRINT NUMBERED
I
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was six and
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red suit, ;~~LE~T~TE~R~
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;J'!IO. DAVf'&gt; 10-Zt -v-......--·
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·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
. Stvfus- Clang· Doubt · Atomic · CUTTING to US

:

·o·,Je to big government bMget cuts the state college ·:
11ad to eliminate many courses. The students held a rally.:
2nd one student's banner read: ' Leave the class CUTTiNG to US!"
.

today has wonder f ul chances
Bv BERNICE BEDE OsoL
for success.
You'll have the chance in
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
the year ahead to experience a
19) -,.Organization and mangreal period of fu lfillmen t if
agement are your 1wo best
you base your hopes upon
qualities today. so tack.le any
practical prenuscs and drrect
project or venture thai has
your er1ergics toward realistic
bee'n faltering and staggering.
opportunrtres.
Once you slurt to sys1ema1ize
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23).
things. ihe jobs will become
- Wilhoul realizing the va lue
easier.
of your gesiUre yo u may do
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
somelh ing kind for another
19) .. The reservoir of
today thai will be greally apstrength J.ou ha ve to draw
. The recrp ·1ent ,,-111
Pre"J',IIed
...
upon to ay ·ts ·tmprc .ss 1·ve .
nol readily forgel you r kind
However, to be effective. you
deed. Libra. '!real yourself 10 a
first need to tap it and apply it
birthday gift. Send for your
,loward something really imAslrograph predictions fo r the . portant.
year ahead by mailing $2 and
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
a~ SASE to Astrogmp~ . clo
. 20) .:· In you r commercial
this newspaper. P.O. Bo• 167.
dealings today bullies will_be
Wickliffe. OH 44092. Be sure
no matc h for your wrts . · ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .
2 2) -- Others will knock
them sCI ves out for you todo:1y

You'll realize the Mrong may

. take from lhe weak. but the
·smart always take from the
strong: .

.

ARIES (March 21-Aprt I 19)

li on lhat you're will ing to ·do

--TaKe the positi ve measures•

tion i .~ I he key wor(t.hc-rc.

a situatiOn that has become a
bit shaky lntcly. If you wait

ihe same for them. Coopcra-

t=~~:::~=-:::J~~t.b~ I

@) ~~~~:RMBLE

W~dnesdny, Oct. 23. 2002

ir you gi I'C them some. indica-

!

e

I I I

----------------------{~ ~------v•a-nc-·in-g-j,o_t_Jr_pe_-rs-o-na_l· _in-te-r---

·to state your zodiac sign.
YOU WfRf
IN 1'HE
REFRI G-ERATOR •

-

Easles rudy for.playoffs, B1

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~

.

Tuesday, October 22, 2002 :

SAGITTAR IUS (Nov. 23Dec .21) ·· This is an excellenl
day to embark on that self-impruvemenl program thai
you 've been contemplating
for some lime. What you starl

necessary loday 10 teslructure

on others to take the bull by
the horns. nolhing will be accompli.&lt;hcd.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- When il comes lo ad-

'

est•,
" you 1ave the ability to be .·
both bold and asserti ve with- :
out offendi ng those you have
to deal with . Use this lalent
well today.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- Arrange your schedule today so that you will be able lo
operale free from oulside innuence. Withoul rcstri&lt;tions
pblalced on you, you. Wilt be
n e to use your trme '"a productive manner.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22) ·
-- ln order lo feel gralified to- ,
day. you need lo parlicipate in
aclivilies Ihat will provide
you wilh a sense of accomplishrnenl. wheiher whm you
do is for you rself or for· another.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- '
You are the person today who

Meigs County's Hometown Newspaper

What's inside

Qualls named in
wrongful death suit
Case filed on
behalf of
minor child
BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer

Angels win Game 3, Bl

Deaths
Robert Warner Riggs, 94
DeiJIIIs, A:S

MIDDLEPORT - The
brother of a murdered woman
has filed a wrongful death suit
against the .man convicted in
her death.
Todd · Ackerman
of
Middleport, brother of
Rebecca Ackerman, filed the
civil suit in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against
· Eric Qualls.
Qualls' mother,' Mary Kay
Blanks, is listed as a co-.
defendant. .
The suit demands the return
of items allegedly belonging

Weather
High: 50s, Low: 40s

·DeiJIIIs,Al

Election letter
-.___, d-.dllne ,;;&lt;~,~•'li
'

The deadline for submitting letters regarding the
Nov. 5 general election is 5
p.m. Friday, · Oct. 25. No
letters re~arding election
issues Will be accepted
· after that date.
Letters must be 300
.words or less and address
campai$n issues, not personalities. .Letters that
exceed the 3()().. word limit
will not be printed. ·
The last day that letters
regarding the election will
be printed in tl)e paper is
Sunday, Nov. 3.
,

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 5-6·3
Pick 4: B-0--4·9
Buckeye 5: 3-6·26·29·34
Mep Millions: 1&amp;-20-2&amp;-36-48
Mep 111111: 32

Pick 3 nlsht: 0-6-5
Pick 4 nlsht: 3+8·0
W.VA..

Dally 3:4-1-2
Dally 4: O: l-0-3
. Cash 25: 1-5-11 -18-23-25

Index
1 Sections- 11Pt1Jes
C~lendar

AS
84-S

'&lt;;las~ifieds

Com1cs
Dear Abby
Editorials
Mo~es

Obituaries
Sports
weather

•

86 .

AS
A4
A3
A3

81-3
A2

~ b2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

".

·

·

I

CIIARLENE HOEFLICH
News editor

BY

POMEROY - Projection
of a positive cash flow for
operating schools in the
Meigs Local District over the
next five years was given by
Treasurer Mark .Rhonemus to
the Board of Education
Tuesday night.
Rhonemu s presented the
district's five-year financial
forecast , which must be submitted
to
the
Ohio
Department of Education by
Oct. 31.
Figures in the October 2002
forecast show the district
moving from a projected
deficit of $2 I 8,639 in 2006 as
of last June, to a positive cash
balance of $576,512 in 2006
this month.
It further shows the district
remaining positive through
2007 with a projected balance
of$166,192 .
The figures did show a
steady decline over the next
· five years from the 2003 projected cash balance of
$1,013,425.
The treasurer credited the
turnaround from a deficit balance to a positive cash flow in
the required state forecasts to
"~etting a correct count on the
k1ds."
"
He explained that the
increase in ·money on which
to operate the schools is coming primarily from correcting
a default in student count "because the numbers weren't
accurate, the income from the
state and other sources, based
on the number of students
served by the district, was
inaccurate."
With
that correction,
Rhonemus said the district's
projection of overall funding
tmproved dramatically.
In figures released earlier
thi s year the count was
2,157students. At the end of
June it stood at 2,243.
According to Rhonemus,
that was difference of 86
" students receiving state aid at
$4,814 per pupil for a total of
$414,000 in basic aid only.
Weighted funding is given
for special education and
vocational students, which
brings in additional money,
according to the treasurer,
further contributing to the
overall increase in funding

a

Charles Barrett, right, Meigs County Republican Party chairman, greets th~ candidates, from
left, Scott PoWell and Robert Buck, juvenile/probate judge; John Fisher, commissioner, Nancy
Campbell, auditor, and Jimmy Stewart, state representative. (Charlene Hoetnch)

POMEROY - A "no"
vote on Issue I was encouraged by Dr. Joe Gay, executive director for Health
in
Recovery
Services
Southeaste rn Ohio, when he
spoke at the annual bean
dinner of the Meigs County
Republican Party.
Gay said he believes the
model which would require
judges to offer treatment
instead of jail time to certain
dru g . offenders wi II not
work.
Passi ng the issue, he said,
would require judges to give
non-violent, first and second
time drug offenders the
option of treatment instead
of jaiL
People who failed treatment would then be limited

Board
coachinc •
'...
slot$
. "•
•

(',

•

Bv CHARLENE HOEFUCII . '~
•
News edHor

..

.POMEROY
_,~
Coaching positions were .
filled and sul!stitute "
teachers hired by tbe ·
Meigs Local Board of '
Education
Tuesday .
night.
Hired were Brian ::
, Allen as eighth grad~ - ~
girls' basketball coaoh, ~
a11d Troy Bauer and'' .
• Danny Davis as head ,
wrestling coach " and.;:t·
ltssistant
wresUlng i
coacJi, respectively. The ;
board also approved _
Jenod Douglas ·as a vol~ ,
unteer assistant seventh
grade boys~ basketball
coach.
•
· ' The .board · appraved .~
hiring substitute teach· \·
ers, Michael · Childs, ~~
Kevin ,
&lt;;.ompston, .';;
Patricia Ercolino. Clark •ii
Hazen, ~on Klabunde, ~
Nathan .· · · Libecap/l}
Jonathan · Little, Sieve.;~\
Madden', .Seth McCord, ~
Tiffany · Pennock an.d 1
·Rebecca Stump. Hired as {~
substitute bus drivers ,'
were Darla· Boggs and :
. Tonya Spencer,
:f
,The resignation for ,. ·
retirement purposes of 7
Doilald Kaxt. cus!QdiaQ a
, Mei~s High ~choOI, was . .

~~1UAWat, ~~;_. ·

tll'igpatioJl: 'f'~'ilf .

· .l3fit9 ,

lkJY1;~l{Jiig~t.,M ·B ~~S .d#Vf( :,

~
di.l~ :tO hi}l,,movll)g
~J.,·- ra._..:
.. , · , pu~
'·"-'-' Of.,,
-- •
' S L9•
- ,
!!"

,I

. , A ... memorandum,/ of ·
' · understillldiilg w~ added ' .·
"t9 the ' Meigs ~~al ,:
· Teachers' ' Assoctatton
contJ:act on the cre;ttjon ~:
of a mentoring program
for first year teachers.
The board approved
granting Adrian D. '
Howard a Meigs High
School diploma as a part •
of th!l program for veter- '
ans, with documented
military service require~;!
to leave high school to
'"

Making a difference

Passing the issue would require judges to give
non-violent, first and second time drug offenders
the option of treatment instead of jail.
-Dr. Joe Gay
to 90 days in jail, Gay
explained.
"It's just not workable,"
he said.
Meigs is one of the six
counties under the supervision of Gay, who has years
of experience in dealing
with alcohol_and dru g problems.
Republi can · candidates
recognized and sp·eaking
briefly included incumbent
Robert Buck, juvenile/probate judge; John Fisher,
commi ss ioner;
Nancy

Campbell , unopposed for
auditpr ; and JimiJly Stewart, ·
candidate for state representative.
Also recog nized were
Republi can officeholders
and central committee members.
·
American !lags were presented by · the party, to all
Meigs County fire departments, and a donation was
made to the Meigs County
Council on Aging for the
"Made a Difference Day"
program held Tuesday.

More. than 100 res idents turned out-Tuesday for the "Make a
Difference Day" luncheon served at the Senior Citizens
Center. Proceeds from the luncheon; a bake sale and extra
donations came to more than $600, which will be used to
make the holidays brighter for seniors who live alone. have few
relatives and friends; and li mited income. (C harlene Hoeflich)

Oclober 20·26 is

N
_·. ational ••spiratory Care Week
·

·
1

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) ,

-- Your common sense will be

your greatest asset loday in
handling challenging developme nts that occur. Because ·
you' ll approach mauers in a
praclical fashion . the results .
will be excellent

\
and
Oclober 21-27 Is
National Phaa 111acy Week
Holzer Medical Center salutes our Respiratory and
Pharmacy Departments during their special week.

I

·I.

'I

••

MEDICAL CENTER
, Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer .org
I

'

~----~- .

Please sH Melp, A:s

Annual bean dinner speaker
urges ·nof vote on Issue 1

success in an important in·volvement thai has been too
tunity.

sentence of 33 years to life in
pnson.
"Todd Ackerman brings
this action for injuries, pain
and suffering experienced by
· Rebecca Ackerman prior to
her death and for the benefit
of her estate," the complaint. ·
filed late Monday, reads.
"Rebecca Ackerman was
deprived of the pleasures of
being alive and experiencing
life, and as a result, her minor
child s uffers from the loss
(and for) support."
The lawsuit demands
unspecified damages in
excess of $25,000, representing the victim's lost earnings
and damages for mental
anguish incurred to the child
and the victim's estate.
Pomeroy attorney L. Scott
Powell, who represents
Ackerman's estate, has
requested a jury trial.

Meigs Republicans gather

. lw s what it takes to achieve ,
touch for others to hand le .
Ma~c the m'ost of this oppbr-

to Rebecca
Ackerman
and , in
Bl anks '
possession.
.Todd
Ackerman
is
the
administrator of his
sister ' s
Qualls
estate and
I e g a I
guardian of Quails' and
Ackerman's minor son. Todd
Ackerman filed the lawsuit
on the child's behalf.
Qualls
shot Rebecca
Ackerman, 23, on March 7,
while she was working at the
Corner
' Restaurant · in
Middleport.
He was convicted in August
on a charge of aggravated
murder and a charge of kidnapping. He is now serving a

•ocal
cash flow

~

.

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