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Amenca at war
•
Officials p. 1ng more people·for

The Daily Sentinel

WA:sHINGTON (AP) - U.S. law
enforcement officials investigating
last week's terrorist attacks are pulling
in more people ·for questioning, statinning armed g-o.~ards on commercial
jets and asking Congress for new
laws to clamp down on terrorism.
··· Attorney Gener~l John Ashc roft
stressed the urgency of the moment
Monday by saying that associates of
the hijackers "may be a continuing
presence in the United States."
"It's 'very likely there was significant ground support and reinforce 7
ment assistance fiom collaborators"
for last Tuesday's four teams of terrorists, Ashcroft said on CNN's "Larry
King Live" program.
As of Monday, the FBI _ had
detained 49 people for questioning,
holding them on immigration violations, double the number of several
days ago: Some have asked for
lawyers, and none have been charged
in the attack,s that may have kilkd
more than 5,000 people.

-

In adoitton, aurhonties are lookmg
for nearly 200 other people to question in last Tuesd.y's attacks on New
York Ciry's World Trade Center and
the P¢ntagon.
· The FBI is keeping a tight hold on
its witnesses, jailing an unsp~cified
number·of them because :hey might
otherwise flee. The Justice Department previously confirmed two peopie were arrested on surh warrants.
Courts have sealed all information
about those arrested.
Asked to characterize ' whether
those in custody were talking. FBI
Director Robert Mueller sa!i that
"there are individuals cooperating,
yes," while adding that others were
not.
Feder•! agencies were being asked
to _contribute armed plainclothes
sccuriry officials while the Federal ·
Aviation Administration begins to
traitfa new generation of marshals to
provide security on airplanes. Four
jetline r&gt; were hijacked in last week's

attacks. Two were -craShed ii11o the
World Trade Center, a third into the
Pentagon and a fourth crashed in
sc;&gt;uthwestern pennsylvania ati:er passengers · appar~ntly struggled with
hijackers.
U.S. official' have said Saudi Arabian exile Osama bin Laden and his alQaeda organization are the prime
suspects in the attacks. Bin Laden has
denied any responsibility.
Ashcroft outlined the sky marshals
plan along with additional details of
the legislative package he asked Con- ·
gress to pass immediately. It would
include use of the money~ laundering
statutes to prosecute people who
provide resources to a terrorist organization. The package also included
nationwide wiretap authorization so
that when a suspected terrorist
moved around the country, · law
enforcement agencies wouldn't have
to get additional court approval for a
wiretap in a different jurisdiction.
Additional detail emerged about

Taliban leaders discuss conditions
Jfor release of Osama bin Laden
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP)
- Afghanistan 's Taliban rulers
discussed conditions for possibly extraditing Osama bin
. Laden to a country other than
the United States, a Pakistan
government so urce" said Tuesday, hours after the Taliban
urged Afghans to prepare for a
holy war.
The conditions, including
international recognition of
the Taliban government and
the lifting of UN. sanctions,
were discussed Monday in
Kandahar, headquarters of the
-fslamic' militia that rules most
of Afghanistan, the official said
on condition of anonymity.
No final agreement was
reached. The Pakistani team
had delivered a blunt message

to the Taliban: hand over bin
Laden or face certain attack
by a multinational force led by
the United States.
The Pakistan delegation,
which is currently in the
Afghan capi tal of Kabul, was
to return to Pakistan later
Tuesday, the official said.
. A grand council of Islamic
clerics was gathering Tuesday
in Kabul to discuss the · ultimatum. The ruling· Taliban
have said bin Laden was
wrongly implicated in last
week's terror attacks on the
United States.
Warning ·of a possible U.S.led attack, · Taliban 's leaders
urged Afghans to prepare for a
jihad, or holy war, against
America, the official Bakhtar

AMERICA AT WAR

SUSPECTED - FBI agents searched
the home of Dr. Albader Alhazmi, in
this undated photo from the University of Texas Health Science Center,
San Antonio. Alhazmi, a San Antonl6
doctor believed to be related to at
least one of the alleged hijackers·,
and held. him on an immigration vi()lation. (AP Photo)

i':s . "~' h.· COUf1Cil

includes clerics from across the country
and is summoned whenever
.the Taliban government want•
help in making key decisions.
Bin Laden and his network
of Islamic militants are the
prime suspects in last week's
airborne assaults on New

•
York's World Trade Center
twin towers and the Pentagon
. near Washington. The United
States believes bin Laden has
played a role in a number of
attacks, including the 199S
bombings of two U.S:
Einbassies in East Africa.

t er

Ch

A WIRED WORLD COM~ANY

Our Phone# Has Changed!!!

Bush
W

ASHINGTON
(AP)
Bush
·
administration officials are intensifYing
.
efforts to gain concrete support for a
war on global terrorism, meeting
with allies and making overtures
toward nations that shelter some of
the world's most notorious terrorist
masterminds.
For countries with tenuous relationships with the United States, the
meS.o;age was clear: Supporr a crackdown on terrorism or face U.S. retal-

GROUND BROKEN - ODOT Director Gordon
Proctor, Gov. Bob Taft, U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, ODOT District 10 Deputy Director
George Collins and Steve Story, chairman of
the SEORC U.S. Route 33 Committee, and
Pomer9y attorney, broke ground on the U.S.
33 project. (Brian J. Reed photo)

.Ground
broken
on U.S.
33
•
proJed

·iation.

- At the same time, the administration is moving to get the money to
pursue its effort. President Bush
signed into law Tuesday a $40 billion
package, most of which will go to
.recovery efforts in New York Ciry,
:Washington and southwestern Penn:sylvania - where four hijacked
·planes crashed last week, killing
thousands of people - and to battle
terrorism.
The president also put his signature to the congressional resolution
authorizing him to use military force
against the terrorists responsible for
the attacks, the worst iit U.S. history.
These efforts came as the exhausting search for victims and the
cleanup continued at New York's
World Trade Center, at the P~nt:tgun
and near Shanksville, Pa., and as federal authorities ratcheted up theirhunt for collaborators to the terrorists who killed themselves and thousands others in the Sept. 11 attacks.
Authorities expected the total death
count to exceed 5,400.

••

For new service, upgrade or downgrade current service,

were paid for through grants from the U.S. Department of
Justice.

Administration officials on Tuesday
made contact with leaders from
Sudan and Cuba - - nations on the
State_Department's terrorism warning list. Bush was planning to meet
with Indonesian President Megawati
Sukarnoputri and the foreign ministers of Russia and Germany on
Wednesday.
Russian Foreign Minister Igor
Ivanov said late Tuesday after arriving

Please DO NOT call (304) 675-3398 in the Point Pleasant
area or 800-766-~5$3 in the Jackson County area.
These phone numbers will soon be disconnected.

.1

WORKING OUT- Jlrri Fry of Pomeroy performs his daily worl&lt;out on the
Meigs senior well ness Center's new exercise rowing machine. Along with the
new rower, the cenfer.also contains treadmills, stationary bicycles, a cardiovascular fitness flyer, CJ1(l a number of assorted fre&amp;Welghts that area seniors
can use to improve ~ir overall physical fitness. (Tony M. Leach photo)

l'DM(•

Sentinel

Due to the tragedies in New York and
Washington D.C., the nations blood·
supply is drastically low.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
·is having a blood drive.

2 Sedlanl- 12 ...... .

'

Calendar
Classjfieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Wednesday, Septemb~r 19th
lOam .- 2pm+ E~t~!..

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Please see Allies, A3 .

BY BRIAN

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

DARWIN - "This is an $80 million
investment in this communiry, and will bring
more jobs and a better standard of living for
the people of Athens and Meigs counties." ·
Gov. Bob Tafi joined Ohio Department of
Transportation Director Gordon Proctor,
ODOT Depury Director George Collins,
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville, and
Stfve Story, Pomeroy attorney and chairman
of the Southeastern Ohio
Coun-

Hlp: 70s
lOs

BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -The addition of
a new exercise rowing machine at
the Meigs Senior Wellness Center
is presenting yet another opporrunity for area seniors to embrace a
healthier lifesryles.
The neWly purchased machine is
being added to the center's current
arsenal of treadmills, stationary
bi cycles and free weights so that
'both cardia-rehabilitation patients
and exercise conscious individuals
can ·improve their ov~rall physical
fitness.
The wellness facility, located
inside the Meigs Senior Center,
has attracted a large number of
local seniors who want to keep
active, and at the same time, keep
abreast of the day's events.
Joy Bentley, fitness coordinator,
said the center's enrollment has
steadily increased over the last seve
era! months and that plans to

·s~rvice

Details, A2

lEAcH
SENJINEL NEWS STAFF

A3
OHIO
82-4 Pick 3: 4-5·3; Pick 4: 6-8-9-3
85 llndreoye 5: 1-7-11·32-37
A4
A3 W.VA.

81.3.6 Dally 3: o-~ 1 Daily 4: 1-6-5-2
A2 c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Please sH U.S. n, A3

TAFT HONORED - Steve Story of Pomero~.
chairman of the Southeastern Ohio Reglonal
Council's Highway Users' Committee, presented a plaque to Gov.-Bob Taft in appreciation for
his and ODOT's support of the U.S. 33 project.

brings out ~tudents' views on attack

Bv TONY M.

Lotteries

expand the faciliry are being discussed. Nothing has been finalized
as of yet.
•
"During the wintertime, -it can
get pretty hectic in here and sometimes it's shoulder to shoulder;'
said Bentley, as slie assisted a curious wellness center member with
the rower's operation. uHowever,
no one ever really complains and
everyone seems co enjoy the exer. programs."
ctse
Bentley ai:lded that \he wellness
center has recently adopted a new
"donation program" for those
interested in becoming physical)y
fit. Individuals can pay $10 per
month, couples $15. per month and
the occasional guest S1 per visit to
use the exercise equipment.
"The c;lonations are helpful but
not required," said Bentley. "Those
wanting to exercise can pay whatever they can."
For more information, contact
Bentley at 992-2161.

The groundbreaking ceremony was held
at the end of the four-lane section of 33 at
Darwin. and marks a watershed moment in
the history of a project involving 40 years of
urging, an outpouring of public support, and

RACINE - In conjunction with President Bush's national day of prayer ~nd
remembrance declaration for victims oflast
Tuesdal' attack on the World Trade Cen~
ter and [&gt;entagon, several Southern 1 :igh
School · s(udents gathered Friday at first
Baptist Church of Racine to pray for those
whose lives were touched by the greatest
tragedy in the nation's history.

The noontime memorial service was just
one of many obsenlances held throughout
the colintry to remember the victims, their
families and a nation momentarily caught
in the grip of terrorism.
Those attending the remembrance serl(ice are part of a fellowship Christian student organization that meets every week to
discuss what's going on in the world.
According to the group, even though they
live in difficult times, attacks on New York

and Washington came as a complete_surpnse.
Tmn Theiss, junior, ·said that terrorist
attacks were "very shockin g" and a "definite wake-up call for our generation."
"I couldn 't believe what I was seeing on
the television screen," said Theiss. "It has
been a number of years sin ce the United
States was attacked and I feel 'that peopl_e

Please see VIews, A3

Rehabilitation
·week

10\~*~~ ~ ~Ji:tol&gt; ~ ~ho ..,....,
yj&gt;\1 """"to "fft&lt;h. Wl!h

36759 ROCK SPRINGS ~OAD, POMEROY • 992-66,.06

l

"- &lt;Jis~.. ti'M ...,.;d diG~t.t dellVOI': \Ilion\

Rogm

Walk-Ins or Call Debbie Wayland at
(740) 992-6606 For An Appointment

' ;(

•

and misuse of visas. Court records
said the FBI seized documents suggesting the men worked in food
preparation for airlines at Detroit
Metropolitan Airport and collected .
information about an American military base in Turkey, a U.S. "foreign
minister;' an airport in Jordan and
diagrams of aircrafi locations and

- Rowi.ng.eXefCiSef enflanCeS WellneSS Cente-r'-~i::l~u~:~~~~f~:r~!!~mAthenstoDar-

Call 800-800-CABLE

URGENT

in Washingtpn: " It is becoming an
· imperative - unification of efforts of
all the international cornmuniry in
the fight against the terrorist thre-•t:'
As the administration shored up
support and drew battle lines, the
massive investigation continued to
find evidence of other plots against
America.
.
Three Detroit men were arrested
Thesday ·on charges of identiry fraud
-.

•

All counties have public
buildings for governrnent,_-...........................~~~~. .~. .;.~~~~~::~::::~. . . .
schools, utilities and other
uses, and each one represents
a possible terrorist target,
Kimmins said. Terrorism
brings unique problems that
don't occur in other county
emergencies, he said.
"The fact that it would be
a crime scene certainly is one
of them ..The other- unfortunately, we've seen it in
New York and Washington - ·
is massive casuaities. There's a
whole different set of stress
that comes to bear when.
there are hundreds of people
involved," Kimmins said.

Tcift: project will bring
jobs, better lifo

A G"EAT LOSS - Ladder 4 truck Is surrounded by ma~eshlft memorials as it returns to its mid-town New
York firehouse after a call one week after the terrorist attacks against the World Trade Center. This single
firehouse lost 15 men when the twin towers collapsed. (AP)

"• I

_ _ CalLtolLfree-8-1-1·9~8-J4~7-----~

'

•

to gather allies

If you are calling for cable service or billing questions,

and terrorism experts conducted the training. They

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs County's

COMMUNJCArs·

State fielps counties p~pa~
COLUMBUS (AP)
cies maintain order and clean
Lessons to help counties pre- up after disasters from tornapare for terrorism - made does to train wrecks. After
necessary after the Oklahoma April 19, 1995, the federal
City bombing
were · government added terrorism
pounded home by the attacks to the agencies' agenda.
,
on the World Trade Center
The explosion that blew
and the Pentagon.
apart the Alfred P. Murrah
One of the primary points building in Oklahoma City,
of workshops conducted by killing 168 people, led federthe Ohio Emergency Man- al authorities to make sure
agement Agency was to edu~ the nation's counties had
cate counry and local officials response plans in place, Kimon the possibility of terrorist mins said.
· Over the last 1 1/2 years,
jlttacks on U.S. soil.
"If there was any skepti- the Ohio EMA has conductcism, I think it certainly has ed nine terrorism workshops
evaporated. _We have seen · for all 88 county agencies.
hate groups that know no The workshops ended in
boundaries and certainly June, and c_o unties have until
don't differentiate between the end of October . to file
urban and rural," Dick Kim- their response plans with the
mins, OEMA spokesman, said state and federal · governMonday.
ments.
County emergency agenState emergency specialists

Tuesday. September 11. 1001

one of the hijacker; and possil&gt;i~
associates.
Hani Hanjour, suspected of crashing American Airlines Right 77 into
the 11entagon, trained at a flight
school in Bowie, Md., flying small
planes over the Washingron area at
least three times in the six weeks
prior to last Tuesday's attack.
Chief flight instructor Marcel
Bernard said Monday that _Ha.Uour
wanted to demonstrate his flying
competency. But the airport used by
the flight school wouldn't rent planes
to Hanjour for solo flights because of
doubts about his flying skills and his
refusal to provide an address and
phone number.
FBI agents pressed to learn
whether any of those already in custody may have assisted the hijackings,
were thwarted in -their own efforts to
hijack other planes or planned to
carry out other attacks against AmerIcans.

were converging on Kabul.
"About 300 ulema (clerics)
have already arrived: We
expect about 700, and we
hope we can start later this
afternoon," said Mullah HamNews Agency reported Tues- dullah Nomani , the Kabul
day.
mayor and convener of the
"If America attacks our grand cou~cil of Islamic clerhomes, it is necessary for all
Muslims ,
especially
for
Afghans, to wage a holy war,"
Mullah Mohammed Hasan
Akhund, the deputy Taliban
leader, said Monday, according
to the state-run Radio Shariat. "God is on our side, and if
the world's people try to set
fire to Afghanistan, God yvill
protect us and help us."
Since taking control of most
of Afghanistan in 1996, the
Taliban have declared holy
wars against the northern-based anti-Taliban alliance,
Russia and Iran, but never the
United States.
Hundreds of Islamic clerics

FLY YOUR FLAG TODAY TO SUPPORT AMERICA

Page AI

•

1

Is September 16·22
Holzer Medical Center salutes our Inpatient· Rehab Unit
during this.special week. For more information on the
•
serviees the Rehab Unit provides, please coli
'

MEDICAL CENTER
_Discover the Holzer Differencf!

www .hQlzer.org

.

(740) 446-5070

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.

The Daily Sentinel

AccuWeathe,. forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures

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and fleeing p.olice. .
Thomas scaled at least two terices
before Roach shot him once in ~lie
chest, prosecution witnesses testified. :
Police witnesse~ also say they are having trouble remembering details of th e
lfatal shooting.
Officer Robert Kidd Jr. acknowledged
in court Tuesday that he has told different accounts of what Roach said just
before and after the shooting.
Kidd testified that Roach said to
another·officer just after the shooting, "I
don't know what happened, it just went
a:'"
ou.
But under defense questioning, Kidd
said he previously told police investigators that he didn 't remember Roach saying anything at the scene.

\ ·•'

!

"It's a classic conflict between a victim who made a positive
(identification) of her attacker ahd scientific evidence that says it's
probably not him," said assistant Cuyahoga County Prosecutor
Carmen Marino.
"Thirteen years is a long time to spend in prison. If he's innocent, what a tragedy;· Marino said Tuesday after meeting privately-with defen~e attorneys and the judge in the case.
DNA tests of a soiled washcloth used by the attacker to clean
BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
up
and found at the crime scene didn't match the DNA of
Stormy conditions will taper Highs in the mid 70s. West
Anthony.Michael Green, 35, of Cleveland.
off across the region tonight, wind 5 to I 0 mph.
although some showers may
ThUrsday
night ... Partly
linger in the east on Thursday, cloudy. Lows in the riud 50s.
the National Weather Service
Extended forecast: ·
CANTON (AP) - ·The terrorist attacks in New York and
Friday... Partly cloudy with a
said.
Lows tonight will be around chance of afternoon showers. Washington have prompted young men to consider whether
·
they may face a renewed military draft.
60. Highs on Thursday will be Highs in the mid 70s.
"I'd like to think I would go;' said Darren Holbrook, 22, a Mal70-75.
Friday
night...Mostly
CoUege senior."It'd be hard either way, to stay or go, because
one
More showers and thunder- cloudy with a chance of showI want to fight for my country, but I don't want to die just yet."
storms are likely to occur ers. Lows in ~he mid 50s.
No draft has been announced, but the Pentagon announced
intermittently through the
Saturday.. .Partly
cloudy.
callup of35,000 National Guard and Reserve troops as a first
the
weekend, the weather service Highs in the mid 70s.
Sunday.. .Most!y
cloudy step to reinforce the armed forces.
said.
"It's scary," said Nick Sharpe, 19, a Malone freshman, "because
Sunset tonight · will be at with a chance .of showers.
7:34, and sunrise on Thursday Morning lows in the mid 50s. if I'm drafted, I could die. But it's also p~triotic because there was
no reason to fly aircraft into a building, knowing people were
is at 7:17 a.m.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Weather forecast:
Mopday.. .Partly
cloudy. there and killing them for no reason."
Toni ght ... Cloudy with a Morning lows in .the mid 50s.
chance of showers and thun- Highs in the lower 70s.
Tuesday... Mostly
clear.
derstorms. Lows in the lower
AKRON (AP) - University of Akron enrollment has
60s. Southwest wind 5 to 10 Morning lows near 50. Highs
increased 6.5 percent to 24,358, representing an additional $4.7
mph. C han ce of rain 50 per- 70 to 75.
1
million.in tuition.
cent .
"Obviously, we're excited about the numbers," university president Luis Proenza.
The increase was a relief to university officials after last year's
enrollment decline to '22,878, the lowest in more than a decade.
Proenza said new buildings, campus improvements and more
DELAWARE (AP) -The 3-year-old grandson of television
evangelist Leroy Jenkins was killed Tuesday in an elevator acci- aggressive marketing have made the university more attractive.
dent on the grounds ofjenkins' Healing Waters Cathedral, police · "It's clear that whatever we have been doing is reaDy drawing
the-appropTi'ate~trenti011thannetlmvemty ofl'i:Rron- has !mig
said.
.deserved,"
Proenza said.
·
Police Detective Mark Leatherman said Shelby Jenkins got

Storms tapering off tonight

Youths ponder renewed draft

Akron enrollment up 6.5%

Evangelisfs grandson killed

caught in the elevator shaft; but details of what happened were
not available.
Leatherman said the death appeared to have been an accident.
PAINESVILLE (AP)- A young man convicted of blasting his
The body was taken to the Franklin County morgue, where a
.
car
stereo was sentenced to three hours of the sound of silence.
autopsy was to be performed.
Kenyata Reid, 2~. served the sentence Tuesday when a park
ranger dropped him off more than 1 mile inside a forested stretch
of Lake County parkland 25 miles northeast of Cleveland.
Municipal Judge Michael Cicconetti found Reid guilty of disCLEVELAND (AP) - Prosecutors won't challenge DNA
genetic evidence that has cleared a man convicted of rape who orderly conduct for blasting his car stereo il) front of a police officer. He offered Reid a choice: two days in jail or three hours
has spent 13 years in prison.

Silence for stereo blaster

Man dearecl by DNA

alone in the woods.
"I asked Kenyata if he has ever spent time in the woods alone,"
Cicconetti said. ''He said he had not. He's not a bad kid. I realized ·that he, like a lot of city kids, only know asphalt and concrete."

Charges dropped against official
WAVERLY (AP) - Charges have been dropped against the
director of a domestic violence operation who had refused to tell
authorities the whereabouts of a shelter client accused of abusing
her children
Bonnie Newsome, director of Partnership Against Dc;&gt;mestic
Violence, was to go on trial Tuesday on misdemeanor charges of
obstructing official business.
..
"While we don't agree with what she did and she does not
agree with we did, we dpn't need to get involvedi':' a trial with
each other,"·Pike County Prosecutor Rob Junk said.
He said he also dropped the charge because the client, Debbie
Rhodes, had been charged and that her children have been
moved to Kentucky.
, .

Worker cnashed by concrete
DAYTON (AP) -An accident at Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base on Tuesday evening kiUed one person, a base official said.
The victim was crushed by a slab of concrete while working
on the construction of a new ai.rfield at the base, spokesman Will
Daniel said. The base was not releasing the name of the victim
pending notification of the next of kin.
The victim worked for Kokosing Construction Co., which is
contracted to build the runway, Daniel said. A message was left
with the Fredricktown-based company Tuesday evening. Other
details of the accident were not immediately available.

Lawyen appeal conviction
COLUMBUS..(AP)
An.inmate..convicted.of.killing a
in the 1993 Lucasville prison riot was improperly deitied a
ing on his competency to stand trial, his lawyer told the Ohi?
Supreme Court on Thesday.
James Were, 44, is appealing his conviction and death sentence
for the death of prison guard Robert VaUandingham.
The judge in Were's 1995 trial should have held a proper hearing before ruling on his competency, attorney Elizabeth Agar
said. Instead, the judge ruled after questioning Were's attorneys
.about their client's refusal to aUow a formal hearing, she said.
"There was discussion on the record, but there was no evidence ever presented,': Agar said. "Even the documents that the
judge claimed to base his decision on were never marked or
introduced into evidence."
I

Error means retirement system
election
· to be voided
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
board overseeing the. $50 billion retirement fund for more
than 500,000 public employees
likely will void this year's board
member election Wednesday
because of an error by the
company hired to run the contest, a Public Employees
Retirement System official said.
The Garden City, N.Y., company, election.com, failed to
include voter identification
numbers on paper ballots that it

mailed out for the election of
the·board's two open seats.
"It made it impossible to
determine if someone voted
twice;· said Laurie Hacking,
ex&lt;ecutive director of PERS.
The board has nine members
six .elected and three ·
required by law - who are
responsible for, among other
duties, deciding where to invest
the contributions paid into the
fund.
About 160,000 PERS mem-

bers were eligible to vote for
the two open seats, one representing "COunty employees and
the other representing Y.~rious
employees, including library,
sanitary, township and cemetery
workers.
In the past, the board operatedits own elections, at a cost of
about $75,000. This year, the
board decided to hire election.com for about $112,000 so
voters 'could cast their ballots by
either telephone or mail.

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

Settlement talks break down
over child support lawsuit
.•.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Settl ement talks broke down
Tuesday between the Obio
Departm ent of Job and Family Services and an advo cacy
group that had sued the state
ove r its troubled child support system.
The Association for Children for the Enforcement of
Support. a na tio nal child support advo cacy group based in
Toledo, wal ked away· from
th e disc ussions, which began
last month .
The gro up said it ended
tal ks beca use the state
reneged on several promtses

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-47~

Federal Mogul -~

M:hCoel-17
Alczo-38~ .

USB-23

it had made in its plan to pay
back poor families whose
.mqney it improperly withheld. The Job and Family
Services Department. saud
talks were disrupted after
ACES presented the state
with a list of new · demands
that the grd_up refused to
negotiate.
ACES sued the state in the
I Oth Ohio District Court of
Appeals in February after the
state admitted it illegallv
withheld millions of dollars
in c;&gt;verdue child support pay-

recipients.
The group demanded that ·
the state immediately fix the
system and refund the
money, which had been used
to pay back the state and federal governments for public
assistance used.
In August, Gov. Bob Taft
issued an executive order saying the state would pay back
$38 million . The Job " and
Fam ily Services Department
then released a plan requiring
counties to audit as many as
165,000 cases to determine
nlents and state in come tax which families are owed
refunds from former welfare money.

•

Get The Facts
At This FREE
', Easy To
Understand
Educational
Seminar
Kevin L. Pottmeyer

AmTemsec - 45\

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hom Page AI

the .resolution of two lawsuits
• filed by opponents.
The upgrade, in two sec1 tions, involves the construe,
tion of about 13 · miles of
highway on a new alignment,
to connect the four-lane section of U.S. 33 at Athens with
the four-lane section at Darwin.
The project will begin later
this month, and is expected to
be completed in 2004.
Proctor said that Taft "has
followed the project through ·
.every turn and every pitfaU
that it has encountered along
·the way, and Taft said Tuesday
.Jthat the project will create
. employment opportumues
. and help develop the tourism
potential of Meigs County.
"This project will turn
V.S. Route 33 into a major
thoroughfare," Taft told the
crowd. "It will make it safer
·and easier to travel and wiU
·help stimulate economic
&lt;!evelopment in the region."
"It means the completion
of
a
corridor
from
Ravenswood to Lancaster
·which · represents an investment in the community," Taft
!old reporters foUowing the
' ceremony. "It also stands as a
.tribute to the citizens of the
-,community who were com' mitted to seeing it finished."
Community leaders have
supported a new highway to
Athens and beyond to
Columbus for four decades.
Years ago, a wagon train to
Columbus was organized to
attention to the need for
· a new
ani!- m ilie
past five years, petition drives,
coundess meetings, and dis-

Allies
hum PapAl
Detroit Metropolitan Airport
and collected information
.about an American military
base in Thrkey, a U.S. "foreign
minister;' an airport in Jordan
:and diagrams of aircraft locations and runways.
. Authorities have grown
-::!increasingly certain - from
: intelligence intercepts, wit; ness interviews and evi.dence
: gathered in hijackers' cars and

Correction Polley

New1 Departments
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extentlona ara:

Presented for any family who would like to:
Keep control of their money and keep others from deciding theic wishes.
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This seminar is directed not only at the multi-millionaire, but also toward the
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Intended for educational purposes only.

Harley Devidlon- 38:0

Our main concem In all stories Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a 81ory, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

First City Estate Planning, Inc.

Call 740-373·7784 or 800-745-6441

Pearl Grace Adams

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Reader Services

sponsored by:

Reservations requested but not required
Our office is located at 407 Second St., Marietta

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Road to close

putes with opponents over
environmental issues have
helped drive that point home
to transportation and state
officials.
"Today's event helps to celebrate the · unprecedented
progress in completing an
important corridor from Lancaster to the Ohio River,"
Proctor said, referring to the
important
relationship.
between the Athens to Darwin
project
and · the
Ravenswood Connector project, the three phases of which
are now underway.
"This will result in the saving of lives;· Strickland said.
"We should aU rejoice in that
fact."
Strickland also praised
Story, who has worked for a
number of years - since rhe
inception of the Meigs
County Chamber ·of Commerce some 10 years agoon promoting the need for
this new highway and other
highways in the region.
Story, as chairman of the
SEORC highway committee,
has been an outspoken ad*&gt;cate on behalf of highway
projects, working closely with
ODOT officials and ODOT's
Transportation Review and
Advisory Council, and with
economic development officials and elected leaden from
other counties in Southeastern Ohio .
"(Story) has been tenacious
in his support of this highway
and other highways throughout southeastern Ohio, and
we should be grateful,"
Strickland said.
The .Meigs High School .
Marching Band performed at
the groundbreakif!g ceremony, and Drew Webster Post
American Legion led the
Pledge of Allegiance.
homes - that a second wave
of violence was planned by
collaborators. They said Sept.
22 has emerged as an impor~
tant date in the evidence, but
declined to be more specific.
The Sept. II attacks were
"part of a larger plan with
other terrorism acts, not necessarily hijacking of airplanes;• said Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla., chairman of the
Senate Intellige e Co~­
tee. "Those acts ere ~oin~
to occur in the Unit S tes
and elsewhere in the world."

The Daily Sentinel

Gregory A. Gentry

Monday, Sept. 24
7 ·8:50pm

HolldaJ Inn • 450 Pllllst.
Gallipolis, Ohio ·
'

.

b

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Gannett-eo~

Ashland Inc. - 39

CII')ICINNATI (AP) - Prosecutors . Tuesday that they are trained:. not to
are u;ing testimony
pollee officers" place . their fingers on the triggers of
to support their allegation that a Cincin- their firearms unless they perceive a
nati officer failed to follow proper pro- threat to themselves or other officers and
cedure when he fatally shot an unarmed expect to immediately open fire.
black man in April.
Prosecutors contend that Roach
The April 7 shooting of Timothy should have tried other means of stopThomas, 19, prompted three nights of ping Thomas before shooting him. The
rioting that didn't end until a dusk-to- prosecution · also contends that Roach
dawn curfew was imposed. Officer violated procedure by· having his finger
Stephen Roach, who is white, is on trial on the trigger of his 9mm service
this week on misdemeanor charges of revolver before it was necessary to shoot.
Roach says, however, that he felt
negligent homicide and obstructing officia! business.
threatened and . fired because he saw
He has pleaded innocent. If convicted Thomas reach toward his own waistband
of both charges, he could get anything in a dark aUey. Police found no weapon
from probation to up to nine months in .on Thomas, who was wanted on 14 misjail.
,
demeanor charges including driving
Two other Cincinnati officers testified without a license, other traffic violations

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

Prosecution relying on &lt;?fficers' testimony

Thursday, Sept. 20

I
'
I

VVedne&amp;da~Sept. 19,2001

Wednesday, September 19, 2001

Ohio weather

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the Ohio Newspopar Aaocla ,
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1109.72

tETART FALLS .- Pearl Gr.; e AJams, 94, Let:1rr Falls,
diedTuesday, Sept. 18, 2001 at Overbrook Nursing Center in
Middleport.
She was born in Dorcas on Nov. 22, 1907, daughter of the
late Charles E. and Mary Margaret Wilbarger Weaver. She was .
a homemaker and attended the Racine First Baptist Church. ·
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Clarence J. "Boone"
and Carolyn Adatru of Racine; a sister, Edison Johnson of
Pomeroy; and four grandchildren, 11 great- grandchildren and
nine great-great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded in !lea~ by her hw!land, Jack Henry
Adams; a son, Bobpy Joe Adams; a daughter-in-law, Betry
Adams; a grandson, Roger Adams; a great-grandson, Travis
Adams; a sister, Roxie Cozan; and three brothers, Melvin
Weaver, Emerson Weaver and Ernest Weaver.
Services Will be 1 p.m. Friday in Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine; with the Rev. Rick Rule officiating. Burial will be in
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may caU at the funeral home
·
from 6-8 p.m. Thursday.

Geofle J. Kalatta
SYRACUSE- George J. Kalatta, Syracuse, died Wednesday,
Sept. 19, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
Arran~ments will be announced by Ewing FJ.meral Home.

Charles Manuel
RACINE· Charles Manuel, Racine, died Tuesday, Sept. 18,
2001 at Ohio State UniVersity Hospital, Columbus.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home in.Pomeroy.

Robert L Shook

C hap el Wes leya n C hurch
will hold a rev ival Sept . 26
to
30 with Dr. John F. Hay,
POMEROY County
Road 28 (Bashan) will be evangel is t . Servi ces will be
closed oetw'een ' Crt 30 held at· 7- each evening and
(Morning Star) and CR 29 ' Sunday at 10: 30 a.m. The
(Bowman's Run) beginning public is invited.
Sept. 24 through Sept. 28,
for bridge repair, weather
permitting.
The detour is CR 30 and
CR 29.
CHESTf, R National
A section of CR 3 (New
Lima) in Rutland Township, Hunting and Fishing Day
2.2 miles north of Rutland , will be observed on Saturwill also be closed. The old day · from 8:30 a.m . to 3
county road known to resi- p.m. at the IKES · Farm on
denu as McMurray Road Scout Camp Road.
Th e free even't is open to
(T-369) will serve as the
all youth, aged six to 16, and
detour.
Motorists should reduce includes demonstrations,
speed and drive carefully instruction and participawhen making the detour, tion in hunter safety and
said Meigs County. High- ethics, archery, canoeing, fly
way SuperintenMnt Randy fishing and fly tying, fish filPyles.
leting, shot shell reloading,
.22 rifle shooting, coon dog
demonstrations, turkey calling and trapping.
POMEROY - Tuppers
Lunch will be provided
Plains-Chester Water Dis- and door prizes awarded.
trict has issued a boil adviInformation is available
sory for residents on
from Brian Morris at 985Chester Road (7 -A) from ·
3948.
Forest Run Road to Good
Times, Johnson Road, Will
Hill Road, Forest Run from

Hunting,
fishing day

Issue advisory

Deadline nears

7-A to and including Block
Plant Road.
Residents are asked to
boil all water for cooking
and drinking for at least
three minutes. Samples will
. be
taken
and
results
announced.

POMEROY
. _

Deadline

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Robert Leroy Shook, 7.,0, New
for applications (or the
Haven, died on Monday, Sept. 17,2001 at PleasantVaUey HosMeigs County Retired
pital.
Teachers' scholarship is
He was the son of the late George A. and Elizabeth Shook
Sept. 25.
and was employed by the city of Akron for 27 years.
Applicants must be a resident of Meigs County, and a
Surviving are his wife, Nora M. Shook; three daughters and
junior or senior currently
sons-in-law, Tracey and Bill Hardman of Stow, Donna and John
Soros of Cuyahoga PaDs, and Peggy and Frank Foley ofAkron;
enrolled in a college, majornine sons and a daughter-in-law, Scott and Deb Shook and
ing in education with at
John Shook, all of Cuyahoga Falls, and Tim, Ray, George, GerPOMEROY - Marriage least a 2. 5 grade point averaid, Kenny, Rex and Bob Shook, all of Akron; stepchildren, licenses have been issued in age.
Darrin, Carrin, Rusty (Shelia) and Mark Bolin, all of Akron, . Meigs County Probate
Applications rbust include
J-isa and Randy . Russell of Gallipolis Perry, W.Va., Mike and · Court to Clayton Michael a current college transcript
Kathy Bolin of Racine, and Janet and Toby Oldaker of New Williams Sr., 19, and Amber showing the two previous
Haven; a sister, Virginia Southers of Akron; and 36 grandchil- Kendalia Hoskins, 19, both years of credits and grades, a
dren and 10 great~grandc:hlldren.
.
. · of Middleport, and Samuel resume of activities and
He was also preceded in death by two sisters and a brother.
Leonard Greene, 32, and career objectives listing at
The Rev. Greg Blair will conduct services at New Haven- Angela Jane Powers, 27, least three references, with
Anderson Funeral Home in New Ha~n on Thursday at 1 p.m. both of Pomeroy.
Burial will be in Sunrise Cemetery. Friends may caU at the
.
one being an instructor, a
funeral home from 7-9 tonight.
current photograph for
publicity, and the name and
POMEROY _ An Ohio address of c_ollege att~nded.
Hunter Education class will
All applicants Will be
P-DMEROY ~Roger L. Spencer, 81, U.S. 33, Pomeroy, died- be- offered at th·e~Pomeroy-ev:aluated-~n G.PA-~nd-Gom, --~
Monday, Sept. 17,2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
Gun Club, Sept. 24 ·to 26 phance ~1th r~qutrements,
He was born July 12, 1920 in Pomeroy, son of the late Albert from 6-9 p.m. and Sept. 29 wtth constderatton of extraand Myrtle Heaton Spencer. He was the owner of Spencer's from 9 a.m. until noon.
curricular activities and
Market, and was a member of Drew Webster Post 39, AmeriPre-registration is sug- career objectives.
can Legion, Meigs County Fair Board and the United States gested by calling 992-4282.
Applications should be
Trotting Association.
·
mailed to MCRT ScholarHe is survived by his wife of 54 years, Phyllis Brown Spencer
ship Committee, in care of
of Pomeroy; a daughter, Debra SpencerofPomeroy;a sister-inJoan Corder, 297 Wright
law, Betty Spencer ofPomero)i; a brother-in-law and sister-inCOOLVILLE - White's St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
law, Harry Lew and Jo Brown of Orange, Texas; and several
nieces, nephews, great nieces and great nephews.
He was preceded in death by his brothers, Sydney, Eldred,
Clair and Ralph Spencer; and a nephew. Marvin Spence·r. .
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday in Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Keith Rader officiating. Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) Texas, where a record 40
home from 7-9 tonight.
- A paroled robber from inmates were executed last year.
Alabama· was executed Tuesday
Asked if he had a final statenight for gunning down a ment, he replied, ''No, I'm
pharmacist who refused to sur- ready. I'm ready."
POM~ROY -- Memorial services for Harley Sralnaker of render drugs during a holdup
Knox nodded and smiled to
Pomeroy, who died Friday, Sept. 7, 2001, are at 2:30p.m. Sun- at his store nearly 19 years ago. five friends he selected as witday, Sept. 23, 2001 at" Trinity Congregational Church in
James Roy Knox, 50, was the nesses. He was pronounced
Po~eroy. .
13th condemned prisoner to dead at 6:28 p.m. ·
The Rev. Richard Nease will officiate. Burial will be private. die by injection this year m
Knox was condemned for
Those attending may bring refreshments for a time of felthe 1982 shooting death ofJoe
lowship following the service, if they lilce.
Sanchez, 39. He was arrested
two years after the slaying and
was
tried twice for capital murTurning to God can help
der after his initial conviction
teenagers better understand the
\vas thrown out on appeal
problems of our sOciety.
.fromPapAI .
because o( an improper jury
"Our generation has experiinstruction
from a judge.
enced numerous tragedies,
.degree exists in our world!'
namely Columbine, the Oklault's really scary;• he added. "I homa City bombing and now
just wonder what Is going to these terrorist attacks;' said
IPRIIIG Vloi lfY CJIII '.lA happen next."
1 1
"a ,_ - · ,.,_. ..,.,.... it!'' - ,..
Pickens. "These incidents
446·4524 .. /'~~" ',,1 .~ '
''I'm shocked, disgusted and directly affect. our future, and AIIERICAII PIE 2 ":'
7:00, 9:15
scared aJI at the same time;' said with God's help, I think we can
JAYAIIISWID 7
7:00,9:20
junior Brittany Fortune. "How- get through them successfully."
liE WI
ever, these acts of terrorism have
"I'm really proud ofthese stubtUught the country together dents for taking the time to
and I truly feel that this unifica- ~ttend Friday's prayer service;'
tion means there's hope for our ·said Pastor Rick Rule.
future:'
. "They're genuinely conliiE.mEIS o
Tara Pickens, junior, said she cerned about the welfare of our
RUSH HOUI2
believes today's youth ponders nation and it is a joy to have
lOCI SIAl
much deeper issues than just people like them in our comALL
AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00
clothes, television and music. rnunity;'.said Rule.

Issued licenses

Class pIanned ..

. Roger L Spencer

Plan revival

Man executed in Texas

.. Harley Stalnaker

Views

�..

.

The Daily Sentinel

AccuWeathe,. forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures

!rom

I Mansfield

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C 2001 AccuWeather, Inc.

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W. VA..

.
and fleeing p.olice. .
Thomas scaled at least two terices
before Roach shot him once in ~lie
chest, prosecution witnesses testified. :
Police witnesse~ also say they are having trouble remembering details of th e
lfatal shooting.
Officer Robert Kidd Jr. acknowledged
in court Tuesday that he has told different accounts of what Roach said just
before and after the shooting.
Kidd testified that Roach said to
another·officer just after the shooting, "I
don't know what happened, it just went
a:'"
ou.
But under defense questioning, Kidd
said he previously told police investigators that he didn 't remember Roach saying anything at the scene.

\ ·•'

!

"It's a classic conflict between a victim who made a positive
(identification) of her attacker ahd scientific evidence that says it's
probably not him," said assistant Cuyahoga County Prosecutor
Carmen Marino.
"Thirteen years is a long time to spend in prison. If he's innocent, what a tragedy;· Marino said Tuesday after meeting privately-with defen~e attorneys and the judge in the case.
DNA tests of a soiled washcloth used by the attacker to clean
BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
up
and found at the crime scene didn't match the DNA of
Stormy conditions will taper Highs in the mid 70s. West
Anthony.Michael Green, 35, of Cleveland.
off across the region tonight, wind 5 to I 0 mph.
although some showers may
ThUrsday
night ... Partly
linger in the east on Thursday, cloudy. Lows in the riud 50s.
the National Weather Service
Extended forecast: ·
CANTON (AP) - ·The terrorist attacks in New York and
Friday... Partly cloudy with a
said.
Lows tonight will be around chance of afternoon showers. Washington have prompted young men to consider whether
·
they may face a renewed military draft.
60. Highs on Thursday will be Highs in the mid 70s.
"I'd like to think I would go;' said Darren Holbrook, 22, a Mal70-75.
Friday
night...Mostly
CoUege senior."It'd be hard either way, to stay or go, because
one
More showers and thunder- cloudy with a chance of showI want to fight for my country, but I don't want to die just yet."
storms are likely to occur ers. Lows in ~he mid 50s.
No draft has been announced, but the Pentagon announced
intermittently through the
Saturday.. .Partly
cloudy.
callup of35,000 National Guard and Reserve troops as a first
the
weekend, the weather service Highs in the mid 70s.
Sunday.. .Most!y
cloudy step to reinforce the armed forces.
said.
"It's scary," said Nick Sharpe, 19, a Malone freshman, "because
Sunset tonight · will be at with a chance .of showers.
7:34, and sunrise on Thursday Morning lows in the mid 50s. if I'm drafted, I could die. But it's also p~triotic because there was
no reason to fly aircraft into a building, knowing people were
is at 7:17 a.m.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Weather forecast:
Mopday.. .Partly
cloudy. there and killing them for no reason."
Toni ght ... Cloudy with a Morning lows in .the mid 50s.
chance of showers and thun- Highs in the lower 70s.
Tuesday... Mostly
clear.
derstorms. Lows in the lower
AKRON (AP) - University of Akron enrollment has
60s. Southwest wind 5 to 10 Morning lows near 50. Highs
increased 6.5 percent to 24,358, representing an additional $4.7
mph. C han ce of rain 50 per- 70 to 75.
1
million.in tuition.
cent .
"Obviously, we're excited about the numbers," university president Luis Proenza.
The increase was a relief to university officials after last year's
enrollment decline to '22,878, the lowest in more than a decade.
Proenza said new buildings, campus improvements and more
DELAWARE (AP) -The 3-year-old grandson of television
evangelist Leroy Jenkins was killed Tuesday in an elevator acci- aggressive marketing have made the university more attractive.
dent on the grounds ofjenkins' Healing Waters Cathedral, police · "It's clear that whatever we have been doing is reaDy drawing
the-appropTi'ate~trenti011thannetlmvemty ofl'i:Rron- has !mig
said.
.deserved,"
Proenza said.
·
Police Detective Mark Leatherman said Shelby Jenkins got

Storms tapering off tonight

Youths ponder renewed draft

Akron enrollment up 6.5%

Evangelisfs grandson killed

caught in the elevator shaft; but details of what happened were
not available.
Leatherman said the death appeared to have been an accident.
PAINESVILLE (AP)- A young man convicted of blasting his
The body was taken to the Franklin County morgue, where a
.
car
stereo was sentenced to three hours of the sound of silence.
autopsy was to be performed.
Kenyata Reid, 2~. served the sentence Tuesday when a park
ranger dropped him off more than 1 mile inside a forested stretch
of Lake County parkland 25 miles northeast of Cleveland.
Municipal Judge Michael Cicconetti found Reid guilty of disCLEVELAND (AP) - Prosecutors won't challenge DNA
genetic evidence that has cleared a man convicted of rape who orderly conduct for blasting his car stereo il) front of a police officer. He offered Reid a choice: two days in jail or three hours
has spent 13 years in prison.

Silence for stereo blaster

Man dearecl by DNA

alone in the woods.
"I asked Kenyata if he has ever spent time in the woods alone,"
Cicconetti said. ''He said he had not. He's not a bad kid. I realized ·that he, like a lot of city kids, only know asphalt and concrete."

Charges dropped against official
WAVERLY (AP) - Charges have been dropped against the
director of a domestic violence operation who had refused to tell
authorities the whereabouts of a shelter client accused of abusing
her children
Bonnie Newsome, director of Partnership Against Dc;&gt;mestic
Violence, was to go on trial Tuesday on misdemeanor charges of
obstructing official business.
..
"While we don't agree with what she did and she does not
agree with we did, we dpn't need to get involvedi':' a trial with
each other,"·Pike County Prosecutor Rob Junk said.
He said he also dropped the charge because the client, Debbie
Rhodes, had been charged and that her children have been
moved to Kentucky.
, .

Worker cnashed by concrete
DAYTON (AP) -An accident at Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base on Tuesday evening kiUed one person, a base official said.
The victim was crushed by a slab of concrete while working
on the construction of a new ai.rfield at the base, spokesman Will
Daniel said. The base was not releasing the name of the victim
pending notification of the next of kin.
The victim worked for Kokosing Construction Co., which is
contracted to build the runway, Daniel said. A message was left
with the Fredricktown-based company Tuesday evening. Other
details of the accident were not immediately available.

Lawyen appeal conviction
COLUMBUS..(AP)
An.inmate..convicted.of.killing a
in the 1993 Lucasville prison riot was improperly deitied a
ing on his competency to stand trial, his lawyer told the Ohi?
Supreme Court on Thesday.
James Were, 44, is appealing his conviction and death sentence
for the death of prison guard Robert VaUandingham.
The judge in Were's 1995 trial should have held a proper hearing before ruling on his competency, attorney Elizabeth Agar
said. Instead, the judge ruled after questioning Were's attorneys
.about their client's refusal to aUow a formal hearing, she said.
"There was discussion on the record, but there was no evidence ever presented,': Agar said. "Even the documents that the
judge claimed to base his decision on were never marked or
introduced into evidence."
I

Error means retirement system
election
· to be voided
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
board overseeing the. $50 billion retirement fund for more
than 500,000 public employees
likely will void this year's board
member election Wednesday
because of an error by the
company hired to run the contest, a Public Employees
Retirement System official said.
The Garden City, N.Y., company, election.com, failed to
include voter identification
numbers on paper ballots that it

mailed out for the election of
the·board's two open seats.
"It made it impossible to
determine if someone voted
twice;· said Laurie Hacking,
ex&lt;ecutive director of PERS.
The board has nine members
six .elected and three ·
required by law - who are
responsible for, among other
duties, deciding where to invest
the contributions paid into the
fund.
About 160,000 PERS mem-

bers were eligible to vote for
the two open seats, one representing "COunty employees and
the other representing Y.~rious
employees, including library,
sanitary, township and cemetery
workers.
In the past, the board operatedits own elections, at a cost of
about $75,000. This year, the
board decided to hire election.com for about $112,000 so
voters 'could cast their ballots by
either telephone or mail.

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

Settlement talks break down
over child support lawsuit
.•.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Settl ement talks broke down
Tuesday between the Obio
Departm ent of Job and Family Services and an advo cacy
group that had sued the state
ove r its troubled child support system.
The Association for Children for the Enforcement of
Support. a na tio nal child support advo cacy group based in
Toledo, wal ked away· from
th e disc ussions, which began
last month .
The gro up said it ended
tal ks beca use the state
reneged on several promtses

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-47~

Federal Mogul -~

M:hCoel-17
Alczo-38~ .

USB-23

it had made in its plan to pay
back poor families whose
.mqney it improperly withheld. The Job and Family
Services Department. saud
talks were disrupted after
ACES presented the state
with a list of new · demands
that the grd_up refused to
negotiate.
ACES sued the state in the
I Oth Ohio District Court of
Appeals in February after the
state admitted it illegallv
withheld millions of dollars
in c;&gt;verdue child support pay-

recipients.
The group demanded that ·
the state immediately fix the
system and refund the
money, which had been used
to pay back the state and federal governments for public
assistance used.
In August, Gov. Bob Taft
issued an executive order saying the state would pay back
$38 million . The Job " and
Fam ily Services Department
then released a plan requiring
counties to audit as many as
165,000 cases to determine
nlents and state in come tax which families are owed
refunds from former welfare money.

•

Get The Facts
At This FREE
', Easy To
Understand
Educational
Seminar
Kevin L. Pottmeyer

AmTemsec - 45\

Gene&lt;al Elodric- 33:0

-

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Bob E111111S- 18~
BorgWamer- 40).

Lands End- 31 ~

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BBT -34),

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u.s. 33
hom Page AI

the .resolution of two lawsuits
• filed by opponents.
The upgrade, in two sec1 tions, involves the construe,
tion of about 13 · miles of
highway on a new alignment,
to connect the four-lane section of U.S. 33 at Athens with
the four-lane section at Darwin.
The project will begin later
this month, and is expected to
be completed in 2004.
Proctor said that Taft "has
followed the project through ·
.every turn and every pitfaU
that it has encountered along
·the way, and Taft said Tuesday
.Jthat the project will create
. employment opportumues
. and help develop the tourism
potential of Meigs County.
"This project will turn
V.S. Route 33 into a major
thoroughfare," Taft told the
crowd. "It will make it safer
·and easier to travel and wiU
·help stimulate economic
&lt;!evelopment in the region."
"It means the completion
of
a
corridor
from
Ravenswood to Lancaster
·which · represents an investment in the community," Taft
!old reporters foUowing the
' ceremony. "It also stands as a
.tribute to the citizens of the
-,community who were com' mitted to seeing it finished."
Community leaders have
supported a new highway to
Athens and beyond to
Columbus for four decades.
Years ago, a wagon train to
Columbus was organized to
attention to the need for
· a new
ani!- m ilie
past five years, petition drives,
coundess meetings, and dis-

Allies
hum PapAl
Detroit Metropolitan Airport
and collected information
.about an American military
base in Thrkey, a U.S. "foreign
minister;' an airport in Jordan
:and diagrams of aircraft locations and runways.
. Authorities have grown
-::!increasingly certain - from
: intelligence intercepts, wit; ness interviews and evi.dence
: gathered in hijackers' cars and

Correction Polley

New1 Departments
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extentlona ara:

Presented for any family who would like to:
Keep control of their money and keep others from deciding theic wishes.
Avoid the expense, delay and publicity of probate.
Avoid court control of their estate.
Protect their money and family if they should become disable&lt;l.

Stop procrastinating .•. Learn how to protect your assets! ;
This seminar is directed not only at the multi-millionaire, but also toward the
AVERAGE FAMILY- people who sincerely care about how their hard-earned
money and valuables will be handled in the'future.

Intended for educational purposes only.

Harley Devidlon- 38:0

Our main concem In all stories Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a 81ory, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

First City Estate Planning, Inc.

Call 740-373·7784 or 800-745-6441

Pearl Grace Adams

GKNLV-n

Reader Services

sponsored by:

Reservations requested but not required
Our office is located at 407 Second St., Marietta

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Bll-8~

Road to close

putes with opponents over
environmental issues have
helped drive that point home
to transportation and state
officials.
"Today's event helps to celebrate the · unprecedented
progress in completing an
important corridor from Lancaster to the Ohio River,"
Proctor said, referring to the
important
relationship.
between the Athens to Darwin
project
and · the
Ravenswood Connector project, the three phases of which
are now underway.
"This will result in the saving of lives;· Strickland said.
"We should aU rejoice in that
fact."
Strickland also praised
Story, who has worked for a
number of years - since rhe
inception of the Meigs
County Chamber ·of Commerce some 10 years agoon promoting the need for
this new highway and other
highways in the region.
Story, as chairman of the
SEORC highway committee,
has been an outspoken ad*&gt;cate on behalf of highway
projects, working closely with
ODOT officials and ODOT's
Transportation Review and
Advisory Council, and with
economic development officials and elected leaden from
other counties in Southeastern Ohio .
"(Story) has been tenacious
in his support of this highway
and other highways throughout southeastern Ohio, and
we should be grateful,"
Strickland said.
The .Meigs High School .
Marching Band performed at
the groundbreakif!g ceremony, and Drew Webster Post
American Legion led the
Pledge of Allegiance.
homes - that a second wave
of violence was planned by
collaborators. They said Sept.
22 has emerged as an impor~
tant date in the evidence, but
declined to be more specific.
The Sept. II attacks were
"part of a larger plan with
other terrorism acts, not necessarily hijacking of airplanes;• said Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla., chairman of the
Senate Intellige e Co~­
tee. "Those acts ere ~oin~
to occur in the Unit S tes
and elsewhere in the world."

The Daily Sentinel

Gregory A. Gentry

Monday, Sept. 24
7 ·8:50pm

HolldaJ Inn • 450 Pllllst.
Gallipolis, Ohio ·
'

.

b

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Gannett-eo~

Ashland Inc. - 39

CII')ICINNATI (AP) - Prosecutors . Tuesday that they are trained:. not to
are u;ing testimony
pollee officers" place . their fingers on the triggers of
to support their allegation that a Cincin- their firearms unless they perceive a
nati officer failed to follow proper pro- threat to themselves or other officers and
cedure when he fatally shot an unarmed expect to immediately open fire.
black man in April.
Prosecutors contend that Roach
The April 7 shooting of Timothy should have tried other means of stopThomas, 19, prompted three nights of ping Thomas before shooting him. The
rioting that didn't end until a dusk-to- prosecution · also contends that Roach
dawn curfew was imposed. Officer violated procedure by· having his finger
Stephen Roach, who is white, is on trial on the trigger of his 9mm service
this week on misdemeanor charges of revolver before it was necessary to shoot.
Roach says, however, that he felt
negligent homicide and obstructing officia! business.
threatened and . fired because he saw
He has pleaded innocent. If convicted Thomas reach toward his own waistband
of both charges, he could get anything in a dark aUey. Police found no weapon
from probation to up to nine months in .on Thomas, who was wanted on 14 misjail.
,
demeanor charges including driving
Two other Cincinnati officers testified without a license, other traffic violations

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

Prosecution relying on &lt;?fficers' testimony

Thursday, Sept. 20

I
'
I

VVedne&amp;da~Sept. 19,2001

Wednesday, September 19, 2001

Ohio weather

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the Ohio Newspopar Aaocla ,
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1109.72

tETART FALLS .- Pearl Gr.; e AJams, 94, Let:1rr Falls,
diedTuesday, Sept. 18, 2001 at Overbrook Nursing Center in
Middleport.
She was born in Dorcas on Nov. 22, 1907, daughter of the
late Charles E. and Mary Margaret Wilbarger Weaver. She was .
a homemaker and attended the Racine First Baptist Church. ·
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Clarence J. "Boone"
and Carolyn Adatru of Racine; a sister, Edison Johnson of
Pomeroy; and four grandchildren, 11 great- grandchildren and
nine great-great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded in !lea~ by her hw!land, Jack Henry
Adams; a son, Bobpy Joe Adams; a daughter-in-law, Betry
Adams; a grandson, Roger Adams; a great-grandson, Travis
Adams; a sister, Roxie Cozan; and three brothers, Melvin
Weaver, Emerson Weaver and Ernest Weaver.
Services Will be 1 p.m. Friday in Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine; with the Rev. Rick Rule officiating. Burial will be in
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may caU at the funeral home
·
from 6-8 p.m. Thursday.

Geofle J. Kalatta
SYRACUSE- George J. Kalatta, Syracuse, died Wednesday,
Sept. 19, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
Arran~ments will be announced by Ewing FJ.meral Home.

Charles Manuel
RACINE· Charles Manuel, Racine, died Tuesday, Sept. 18,
2001 at Ohio State UniVersity Hospital, Columbus.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home in.Pomeroy.

Robert L Shook

C hap el Wes leya n C hurch
will hold a rev ival Sept . 26
to
30 with Dr. John F. Hay,
POMEROY County
Road 28 (Bashan) will be evangel is t . Servi ces will be
closed oetw'een ' Crt 30 held at· 7- each evening and
(Morning Star) and CR 29 ' Sunday at 10: 30 a.m. The
(Bowman's Run) beginning public is invited.
Sept. 24 through Sept. 28,
for bridge repair, weather
permitting.
The detour is CR 30 and
CR 29.
CHESTf, R National
A section of CR 3 (New
Lima) in Rutland Township, Hunting and Fishing Day
2.2 miles north of Rutland , will be observed on Saturwill also be closed. The old day · from 8:30 a.m . to 3
county road known to resi- p.m. at the IKES · Farm on
denu as McMurray Road Scout Camp Road.
Th e free even't is open to
(T-369) will serve as the
all youth, aged six to 16, and
detour.
Motorists should reduce includes demonstrations,
speed and drive carefully instruction and participawhen making the detour, tion in hunter safety and
said Meigs County. High- ethics, archery, canoeing, fly
way SuperintenMnt Randy fishing and fly tying, fish filPyles.
leting, shot shell reloading,
.22 rifle shooting, coon dog
demonstrations, turkey calling and trapping.
POMEROY - Tuppers
Lunch will be provided
Plains-Chester Water Dis- and door prizes awarded.
trict has issued a boil adviInformation is available
sory for residents on
from Brian Morris at 985Chester Road (7 -A) from ·
3948.
Forest Run Road to Good
Times, Johnson Road, Will
Hill Road, Forest Run from

Hunting,
fishing day

Issue advisory

Deadline nears

7-A to and including Block
Plant Road.
Residents are asked to
boil all water for cooking
and drinking for at least
three minutes. Samples will
. be
taken
and
results
announced.

POMEROY
. _

Deadline

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Robert Leroy Shook, 7.,0, New
for applications (or the
Haven, died on Monday, Sept. 17,2001 at PleasantVaUey HosMeigs County Retired
pital.
Teachers' scholarship is
He was the son of the late George A. and Elizabeth Shook
Sept. 25.
and was employed by the city of Akron for 27 years.
Applicants must be a resident of Meigs County, and a
Surviving are his wife, Nora M. Shook; three daughters and
junior or senior currently
sons-in-law, Tracey and Bill Hardman of Stow, Donna and John
Soros of Cuyahoga PaDs, and Peggy and Frank Foley ofAkron;
enrolled in a college, majornine sons and a daughter-in-law, Scott and Deb Shook and
ing in education with at
John Shook, all of Cuyahoga Falls, and Tim, Ray, George, GerPOMEROY - Marriage least a 2. 5 grade point averaid, Kenny, Rex and Bob Shook, all of Akron; stepchildren, licenses have been issued in age.
Darrin, Carrin, Rusty (Shelia) and Mark Bolin, all of Akron, . Meigs County Probate
Applications rbust include
J-isa and Randy . Russell of Gallipolis Perry, W.Va., Mike and · Court to Clayton Michael a current college transcript
Kathy Bolin of Racine, and Janet and Toby Oldaker of New Williams Sr., 19, and Amber showing the two previous
Haven; a sister, Virginia Southers of Akron; and 36 grandchil- Kendalia Hoskins, 19, both years of credits and grades, a
dren and 10 great~grandc:hlldren.
.
. · of Middleport, and Samuel resume of activities and
He was also preceded in death by two sisters and a brother.
Leonard Greene, 32, and career objectives listing at
The Rev. Greg Blair will conduct services at New Haven- Angela Jane Powers, 27, least three references, with
Anderson Funeral Home in New Ha~n on Thursday at 1 p.m. both of Pomeroy.
Burial will be in Sunrise Cemetery. Friends may caU at the
.
one being an instructor, a
funeral home from 7-9 tonight.
current photograph for
publicity, and the name and
POMEROY _ An Ohio address of c_ollege att~nded.
Hunter Education class will
All applicants Will be
P-DMEROY ~Roger L. Spencer, 81, U.S. 33, Pomeroy, died- be- offered at th·e~Pomeroy-ev:aluated-~n G.PA-~nd-Gom, --~
Monday, Sept. 17,2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
Gun Club, Sept. 24 ·to 26 phance ~1th r~qutrements,
He was born July 12, 1920 in Pomeroy, son of the late Albert from 6-9 p.m. and Sept. 29 wtth constderatton of extraand Myrtle Heaton Spencer. He was the owner of Spencer's from 9 a.m. until noon.
curricular activities and
Market, and was a member of Drew Webster Post 39, AmeriPre-registration is sug- career objectives.
can Legion, Meigs County Fair Board and the United States gested by calling 992-4282.
Applications should be
Trotting Association.
·
mailed to MCRT ScholarHe is survived by his wife of 54 years, Phyllis Brown Spencer
ship Committee, in care of
of Pomeroy; a daughter, Debra SpencerofPomeroy;a sister-inJoan Corder, 297 Wright
law, Betty Spencer ofPomero)i; a brother-in-law and sister-inCOOLVILLE - White's St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
law, Harry Lew and Jo Brown of Orange, Texas; and several
nieces, nephews, great nieces and great nephews.
He was preceded in death by his brothers, Sydney, Eldred,
Clair and Ralph Spencer; and a nephew. Marvin Spence·r. .
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday in Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Keith Rader officiating. Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) Texas, where a record 40
home from 7-9 tonight.
- A paroled robber from inmates were executed last year.
Alabama· was executed Tuesday
Asked if he had a final statenight for gunning down a ment, he replied, ''No, I'm
pharmacist who refused to sur- ready. I'm ready."
POM~ROY -- Memorial services for Harley Sralnaker of render drugs during a holdup
Knox nodded and smiled to
Pomeroy, who died Friday, Sept. 7, 2001, are at 2:30p.m. Sun- at his store nearly 19 years ago. five friends he selected as witday, Sept. 23, 2001 at" Trinity Congregational Church in
James Roy Knox, 50, was the nesses. He was pronounced
Po~eroy. .
13th condemned prisoner to dead at 6:28 p.m. ·
The Rev. Richard Nease will officiate. Burial will be private. die by injection this year m
Knox was condemned for
Those attending may bring refreshments for a time of felthe 1982 shooting death ofJoe
lowship following the service, if they lilce.
Sanchez, 39. He was arrested
two years after the slaying and
was
tried twice for capital murTurning to God can help
der after his initial conviction
teenagers better understand the
\vas thrown out on appeal
problems of our sOciety.
.fromPapAI .
because o( an improper jury
"Our generation has experiinstruction
from a judge.
enced numerous tragedies,
.degree exists in our world!'
namely Columbine, the Oklault's really scary;• he added. "I homa City bombing and now
just wonder what Is going to these terrorist attacks;' said
IPRIIIG Vloi lfY CJIII '.lA happen next."
1 1
"a ,_ - · ,.,_. ..,.,.... it!'' - ,..
Pickens. "These incidents
446·4524 .. /'~~" ',,1 .~ '
''I'm shocked, disgusted and directly affect. our future, and AIIERICAII PIE 2 ":'
7:00, 9:15
scared aJI at the same time;' said with God's help, I think we can
JAYAIIISWID 7
7:00,9:20
junior Brittany Fortune. "How- get through them successfully."
liE WI
ever, these acts of terrorism have
"I'm really proud ofthese stubtUught the country together dents for taking the time to
and I truly feel that this unifica- ~ttend Friday's prayer service;'
tion means there's hope for our ·said Pastor Rick Rule.
future:'
. "They're genuinely conliiE.mEIS o
Tara Pickens, junior, said she cerned about the welfare of our
RUSH HOUI2
believes today's youth ponders nation and it is a joy to have
lOCI SIAl
much deeper issues than just people like them in our comALL
AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00
clothes, television and music. rnunity;'.said Rule.

Issued licenses

Class pIanned ..

. Roger L Spencer

Plan revival

Man executed in Texas

.. Harley Stalnaker

Views

�·inion

The Daily Sentinel

-~e_oa_ny_se_noo_ei____~By~eBe~d

PageA4
Wednesd•y. September 1t, 2001

•·

74D-992·2156 • FIX: 992·2157

DEAR ABBY: I am a 16-yeuthey should. Unfortunately. the
old girl - a sophomore in a wonsnobs who look down on fellow
derful high school . We have some of
students usually don't act that way
the best test scores in the state. Our
in front of their parents .
teachers go the extra mile to help
I Tecently read an article about a
us. Our teams excel in almost every
terrific middle school music teacher
sport. However, there's something
wbg opened her music room at
about my high school that is not so
lunch hour to first-year students
terrific. I'm talking about how the
who were being teased and excludADVICE
" popuIar crowd" treats others.
ed. It provided young people a safe,
Everyone knows who the popular
· inviting refuge where they wouldn't
kids are. They are the ones who get the popular kids like going to a 1:-e hazed. The studenrs who lunched
· place where they are tormented for
drunk and smoke weed over the
in ~er room were welcoming,
wearing th~ same pants they wore
weekend. They think they are supedemocrati
c, well-behaved and
last week?
will the popular
rior because they wear nice clothes
Ct:&lt;JWd act after they graduate? appr~c iate d the nurturing surroundand their parents buy them whatev- Employers won't hire them just ings. iMore schools, including high
er they want. They piCk on kids because they have nice clothes!
scho~ls, should consider something
who aren 't up to their level. It's dissimilar.
Parents who suspect their children
gusting.
DEAR ABBY: I ,agree with
treat others this way should watch ,
Abby, please inform these kids them closely and u_rge them to be " Whistler in Jenks, Okla." that they really aren't better than nicer to their classmates. whistling IS a beautiful art form.
anyone else. They hurt o~hers in KNOWS THE REAL DEAL
How can anyone forget the rendiways you can't imagine. How would
DEAR KNOWS: You're right, tion of" The Whistler and His Dog"

-·

Abigail

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

R. Shawn Lewis

~ea;AT

Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Van
Buren

,

WALmartof ·

Diane Key Hill
Controller

CWINA '.

/_,.~_ uus tn ,,., ~ditor IJJ'~

wtk omt. Tll ty llwuld lit ltfl tlul11 300 worth. AIJ kttrn
.,, subjtcr to editing tmd m ust bt sfgnt d and indiUit tuhlrtu snd lekph011t nwakr.
No utuigt~td lttttrs will bt p11.blUh.td. l~rt":r should hot in good ttiJtt, tuldrtnlnr

How

•'u,ts, 1101 pmtmalirits.
·
T1rt oJHnium t.rp~ss~ in tht ..-olumn btlow art lht constn:rus of tht Ohio Vallty
Pllbli.sltillf Co. :r t ditorial lkKlrd, unlt u orhtr-·iu noted.

NATIONAL YIE\V

adness

'

Reason for terrorists' attack
elusive, but energizes US.

The Community Calender Ia
publlahed aa a tree aervlce to
non-profit groupe wlahlng to
announce meetlnga and ape-Cial eventa. The calender Ia not
designed to promoll ulea or
fund relaera of any type. llama
are printed only aa apace permlta and cannot be guaranteed
to be printed a apeclflc number.of daya.

•

•

RUSHER'S VIEW

...

• Clarksburg Exponent-Telegram: What is it thes e people want? Whoever is ~espon sibl e for the series of terrorist
attacks on the United States on Tuesday has managed to kill
tens of thousands of innocent people and caused fear and chaos .
across the nation . Some unknown, faceless entity has declared
full-scale war on th e U.S., but why?
Most of the things that ne ed to be said
well · as bin Laden ~nd his hundreds of
It's madness. How can we reason with madmen?
about the events of September 11th are
agents, must feel the wrath of the Unitpainfully obvious and have already been
ed States. And it must not be in the forlj)
We've answered our own qu estion , really. You cannot reason
with people who are mad, deranged, homicidal.
said a thousand times.
of a pinprick, or a series of pinpricks. lf
For sane, decent, thoughtful people, figuring out what these
Thus, if 19 men with Arab names and
Afgh anistan, say, is identifi ed as bin
terrorists want is an impossible task.
exotic passports can waltz aboard four
Laden's chief protector, th en retaliatio_!?
Certainly they don't expect us to bow down to them . They
transcontinental airliners, produce knives
against Afghanistan must be terminal. !J,
should bducid enough to !~:now that we would not throw up
and hijack all four planes,then our pre·
need not take the form of a grou11d
our hands and cry Uncle.
sent "security sysiem" (if that's the right
invasion. But low- level precision bom!JT
Far be it for a small-town daily newspaper to suggest what
name for it) isn't worth the powder to
ing of command centers, supply depot!;
the government's reaction should be ... lt should be swift and
blow it to hell. And because the whole
COLUMNIST
transportation factlities, military concede
decisive; that's all we'll offer at this point.
proj~ct took years t~ plan and execute
trations, key roads and bridges and thl!:
The biggest task before us is to restore the shaken confidence
and mvolved scores, tf not hundreds, of
like can over a period of months a; .
of the m?st powerful _nati?n o.n Earth. We are a free society,
agents here and abr~ad , a number of ly effective. Arguably, they might, o~er years, m~ke Afghanistan, if not unlivabl~.
whtch pndes Itself on tts dtvemty, tts exchange of tdeas and tts
whom had to be tramed to fly planes tune, sap our morale and our wtll, then certainly ungovernable by the Ta{~
willingness to tolerate dissent.
(and apparent!)( re ce1ved that trammg though that would be far more likely in .b
h
&amp;· dl
.
'
1
Last Tuesday's terror will likely strengthen our ideals rather
right here in the United States) , the the case of a smaller target such as Israel
aMn or anhy. ot er u~ ten.ky regime. b.''
c
·
II d
•
·
eanw 11e, surpnse stn es agamst m
b
d
than shatter them .
same must e sat 10r our so- ca e Meanwhile, th ey serve to dehght and L d ,
d
h r .1 .
b
.
•
u·
ll"
"
. .
.
.
a en S camps an Ot Ct IaCtltleS,
y
When the bombs dropped on Pearl Harbor a generation ago,
mte 1gen_ce sources.
. .
msptre mtllions of people, 111 the Arab hi hi - trained forces that would b'e
the United States did not buckle under and in fact emerged
The pohttcal consequences of this dts- world and elsewhere who hate the . g Yd
d h ·
Ud
· ' ., ,
.. '
h
·
b ·
•
mserte an t en pu e out agat."'
·'
from the carnage more powerful and more mfluenttal.
aster are per aps not qutte so o VJous, Umted States.
u1&gt; 'k
.:h
·
..
·
•
b
h
·
h.
'bl _
·
- - - -- - _wo u... eep- mm- on--t e...-run.,.-Gr-even- - - - - -V.'e -may- never- understand why Tuesdays attacks-were-exe~ - ut-t ere-1s-not mg rem Y mystenous """How can th ese novel forms ofaggresh'
1 · h dl l'k 1 h
cured. But we are certain that the American people and our
about them. Just for one thing, the sion be countered? First we must to a cQapdtudrefi tm. t ts bar y tbel y tk at
·
·
·
D
• 1
· h
1
·
•
•
a a or any ot er trou ema er
way of hfe wtll endure.
emocrats P an to entertam t emse ves reasonable certainty identify the perpeuld b
ffi · 1·
a1 ·
B h
di
•
wo
e eager too er 11m an ternah. fall b £ · p ·d
t IS
Y orcmg rest ent us to P trators - and that means not just the ·
J
S' 'I
·
ld b''
into the Social Security surplus then
. .
.. ·
.
tJVe asy um. 11111 ar tactics _cou . ii
d
.
h.
f,
b k" ' h. smctdal hiJackers, but the whole support employed against other terrorist leader!
eno?ncmg dim ' ~rd. rdeaMmgB h1.s apparatus that sh elters and finances· and th eir agents wherever they can b.e
.
. f:
'
prom1se not to o so, 1s ea . r. us s
·
hi · d .
f
them, provtdes th em wtth a1se passports found.
exception to s p1~ ge m case o war
h
·
fl
· . ·d
.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
fits the present situation like a glove.
and let al weapons, cares or thetr wt Un9uestwnably, there \\'Ould be
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 19, the 262nd day of 2001. There
What may not h« so obvious is the ows and ?rphans, and so on. No doubt Amenc~n casualties. Worse yet, from the
are 103 days left in the year.
way in which war is likely to be waged Osama bm Laden plays a large role 111 standpom~ . of s entt_menta!~sts, there
Today's Highlight in History:
in the 21st century - at least as long as this whole process ~nd richly deserves :-v~uld be mnocent CIVthans killed and
On Sept. 19, 1777, during the Revolutionary War, American
America remains the only superpower hts place on the FBI s Ten Most Wanted mJured too. B~t that ts the pnce of any
soldiers won the first Battle of Saratoga.
· - and how the new forms of aggression hst. But he could not surv1.ve a day w1th- war. And th~t IS what we ~lust wage . a
On this date:
are going to have to be countered. Our out the tacit approval of one or more ne"':' war, w1th new strategtes and new
In 1796, President Washl~gron's farewell address was pubenemies are relatively weak, and, hence, rogue states like Afghanistan, Sudan, iraq tacttcs, destgned for the new challenges
lished.
must resort to unusual forms of attack, and Iran, who quietly give him tnOI'ley, of the 21st century.
In 1881, the 20th president of the United States, James A.
We can denounce the perpetrators as diplomatic cover, and (above · all) places
(William Rusher is a Distinguished PelGarfield, died of wounds inflicted by an assassin. ·
" terrorists" and "fanatics" and their act' to hide.
low of the Clarem.n1t Imtitute for the Study
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann was arrested in New York and
as "cowardly," but they can be diabolicalSo one or more of these states, too, as of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy.) .
charged with the kidnap-murder of the Lindbergh infant.
'.
In 1945, Nazi propagandist William Joyce, known as "Lord
,. '
Haw~ Haw," was sentenced to death by a British court.
V&lt;
In 1955, President Juan Peron of Argentina was ousted after
a revolt by the army and navy.
"'
In 1957, the United States conducted its first underground
nuclear test, in the Nevada desert.
In 1959, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev reacted angrily
..
during a visit to Los Angeles upon being told that, for security
'1
• "Sexy won 1an " and "yes."
BY RED GREEN
mail yesterday. lt was a pamphlet on
reasons, he wouldn 't be allowed to visit Disneyland.
"'
• " Drink" and "another."
,.
I had a guy come and do some cemen t some vacation spa somewhere. It wasn't
In 1960, C uban leader Fidel Castro, in New York to~
work at tpy house. I hired him becaliSe very cleat abollt where it was or specifiI.Jnited N ati ons, angrily checked out of the Shelburne'Hotelm
Making a pass
'"
his
estimate
was
the
lowest.
After
two
cally
what
it
provided.
No
prices
were
I was on the highway yesterday, and
a dispute with the management.
weeks of all of his junk lying around the mentioned. At first I thought it was pret- there was a car traveling in the passing
In 1985, the Mexico City area was struck by the first of two
place and him showing up sporadically, I ty useless, but then I realized th at this lane, but not passing anybody. l followed
devastatin~ quakes th at claimed some 6,000 lives.
told him I-'d had enough and I needed was a piece of mail from a stranger that him for a while. I flashed my lights. t
In 1986 , federal ·health offi cials announc ed that the experithe job finished in the next two days. He wasn't :tsking me to do any thin g. I didn't tooted my horn, but in a fri endly way. As
mental drug AZT would be made available to thousands &lt;lf
said it , could be ·done, but he'd need have to . go anywhere or compare the if to say, "It would be great if you'd go~
AIDS patients,
twice the money to do it that qui ckly. I price to so methin g else, or eve11 make a in to th e other lane for a sec to let m e by.
Ten years ago: Israeli Prime MinistcrYitzhak Shamir accused
.was
so fed up, I agreed.
decision about whethe.r or not I was There's no need to show me your
the United States of tiltin ~; toward the Arabs in its eagerness to
· . And that got me thinking about busi- ever interested in using_wh atever it was firearm ." None of th at worked, so fin alw
organize a Mideast peace conference.
ness transactions in general and wonder- th ey were advertising at whatever price ly I had to pass . him on the right ·and
Five years •go: Am erican astronallt Shannon Lu cid, 011 board
ing bow ma ny of them turn out like they were. offering it. What a grea t feelth e Russian M ir space station since March, eagerly greeted th e
then pull bacll in , in front of him. A~ .
mine, wh ere at some poin t you're paying ing. I could throw the pamphlet away
crew of Atlantis hours afte r their arrival and docking. IBM
soon as I did "that, he sped up. If he had
a person wh atever th ey want, j ust so with no guilt. I fel t happy and younger.
announ ced it would extend health benefits to the partn ers of
done that in th e first place, none of th~
they'll go away. Tha t has to be the bas is Just because 1 didn 't have to do anythin g.
its hqmosexual employees.
of most divorce settlements. Almost aU This is th e best vacation spa I've never would have been necessary. Then I reat~
One year ago: The Senate approved permanent normal trade
sales are inade that way. You buy the gone to. I hope they're in business a ized that these people who spend all da)l
status for C hina. The R omanian women's gymnastics team
in the passing lane without passing any•
product j ust so th e salesman will stop ·long, long time.
·
won th e gold medal anhe Sydney Olympics; Russia won th e
one are actually prepared to go a lot
pestering you. And the same thing with
Hoof-in-mouth
sil ver, C hina took th e bron ze, and th e U.S. placed fourth .
panhandlers. The more offensive they
After 50 years of puttin g my foot in faster, th ey just don't want to go first: .
Today 's Birthdays ~Auth or R oger Angell is 81. R&amp;B musician
"!
are, the quicker I make a contribution to my mouth, I have concluded that th ere They'd make great vi ce presidents.
Billy Ward is 80. Former Defense Secretary Harold Brown is
QUOTE OF THE DAY: "To have a
their favori\e charity. I was told a long are cer tain words that should .never
74. Actress Rosem ary Harris is 71. Actor Adam West is 71.
t\me ago that there are only two moti - appear in ' the same .sentence. Here's a happy life, never be the only one iaughActor Dav id McCallum is 68. Singer-songwriter Paul Williams
ing ot not laughing." - Red Green :
vating forces for people - hope for gain partial list:
· is 61. Sin ger Bill M edley is 61. Singer Sylvja Tyson (Ian and
.
(Red Green is the star of"The Red Grtb1 •
and fear of loss. I think there 's another
• ".Chubby'~d "wife.'~
Sylvia) is 61. Golfer Jane Blalock is 56. Singer David Bromberg
Sftou;" a televisiou series seen itJ the
one - getting away from people who
• " My'' ;utd ' ult."
is 56. Actor Randolph Mantooth is 56. Singer Freda Payne is
Stales 011 PBS aud in Canada on m e,. '-" U'
bug you. I'd pay a fortun e for a cheap
• "Moron " a " boss."
56. R;,ck singer- musician Lol C reme (1Occ) is 54. Actor JereNetwork,
m1d lite author 'oj" T11e
w
ay
to
do
that.
•
"
Anniversary
di
nner"
and
my Irons is 53. Actress Twiggy Lawson is 52. TV personality
&amp;ok" and ."Rei/ Grcm Talks Cars: A
The best mail
"upchuck."
Joan Lunden is 51. Singer-producer Daniel Lanois is 50. Actor
I
received
a
pleasant
surprise
m
the
.
•
"Politician"
and
"forthright."
Story. ") •
Scott Colomby is 49. Musician- producer Nile Rodgers is 49.
Singer- actor Rex Smith is 45.Actor Kevin Hooks is 43. Actress
Carolyn McCormick is ~2 . Country singer Trisha Yearwood is
I
1125 Third Ave., Golllpolla, Ohio
111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
37. R&amp;B singer Espraronza Griffin is 32. Comedian Jimmy
200 Moln St., Pakol Ploount, W.~o. ~
740-912-2150
740-4411-2342
.
304-t7S-1333
'
Fallon is 27.

For a new century, US. faces a new kind of war i

TODAY IN HISTORY

CHESTER Chester
Council No. 323, Daughters of America, met recently with Gary Holter, coun, cilor, presiding.
The Lord's Prayer and
pledges to the Christian
and American Flag were
given, and Julie Curtis read
Psalm 23.
Practice was held for
inspection, to be held at the
Sept. 18 meeting, at which
time birthdays for the quarrer will also be observed .
Th e death of Ronald
· Osborne, husband of memher Ella Osborne, was
reported. Seventeen memhers visited the funeral
home . Kathryn . Baum is
recovenng.
Those attending the state
session
m
Springfield
recently
were :
Esther
Smith,Jo Ann Ritchie, Jean
Welsh, .~ary Jo Barringer,
OparHo on, Dons Grueser
and .B etty ¥oung.
Young was nominated
and installed as State Outside Sentinel from District
13.
i
Appointed as officers
were:
JoAnn
Ritchie,
National Finance Committee, Doris Grueser, National Representative Commit.tee, Mary Jo Barringer,
State Registration Committee.
Betty Young, alternate
representative to state. sessian, gave her report.
Jo Ann Ritchie read the
poem, "Grandparents Day.''
Erma Gleland conducted
a game after the meeting.
Attending were &lt;;;ary
Haler, Goldie Frederick,
Opal Hollon, Ruth Smith,
Sandra White, Thelma
White, Laura Mae Nice,
Delores Wolfe, Julie Curtis,
Charlotte VanMeter Mary
K. Holter, Helen' Wolf,
Erma Cleland, Jean Welsh,
Mary Jo Barringer, Betty
Young and JoAnn Ritchie.

IMiltle ayl

chants who will sell Colonial
clothing, t0)'1 1 food and acces·
1 · POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. sories. Craft demonstrations
-::1- Allen W. Eckert, author of
"The Frontienmen" and "That will include candle making by ·
Dark And Bloqdy River," will ~ane byCol~ • sp!nn~g a~d ~v­
be at Tu~Endie-Wei Battle mg
ona ous ' as et
· making by Becky Young and
1
Monument State Park during broom making by John Haer..
A lantern tour will be held at
. . the 2001 . Point Pleasant Battle
Days Celebration.
.
the park on Friday at 7:~0 p.m.
Eckert will do a .book 'sign- featuring men 'and women
ing on the Mansion Howe who shared in the settlement
porch Oct. 6 at 2 p.m. and will of the area during the 1770s
be on the park . grounds both and fought in the battle.
The parade will begiJ! a~ 11
. Friday and Saturday. Some
·other books written by Eckert a.m. featuring floats, bands, and
include "Wilderness Empire" costumed groups of the era. An
and "The Conqueron." He ox roast and bean dinner will
also wrote the outdoor drama begin at 11 a.m. at the Senior
~ "Tecu~h."
.
·Citizens parking lot. Crafts and
.[ The Battle Days Celebration activities for all ages will be on
~to be held Oct. 5, 6, and 7 Main Street fiom 11 a.m. to 4
commemorates the Battle of p.m. sponsored by the Main
Point Pleasant historically rec- Street Merchants Committee.
An art show will be held at
' ognized as the Fint Battle of
the · American Revolution the Fort Randolph Terrace on
\ fought Oct. 10, 1774.
Main Street, Friday, Saturday .
' An encampment featuring ' and Sunday. A photo exhibit
I Scott Sarver and Company will be o.n display at the Mason
.fiom Roanoke, Va., will be in County Library. The annual
residence at the park all week- Colonial Ball win be held at 8
end, much as our ancestors p.m. at the American . Legion
would have been mqre than Hall. This year, the ball is free
200 years ago. The group will and everyone is, invited to
11
·provide living history lessons · attend.

1

.

Price of happiness increasingly subject to iriflation·.'

I
I

•

only reader who was thankful to be
reminded about the fin e art of
whistling. Read on: .
DEAR ABBY: I love to whistle,
despite my mother's warning that "a
whistling woman and a crowing hen
come to no good."
·
Has there ever been a whistling
choir? Someone needs to organize
work~d ?
And let's not forget the tradition- one! - A FAN OFWHISTLING
DEAR
FAN
OF
al " wolf whistle." I'll bet there are
WHISTUNG: You 're about to get
few females alive who haven't
your wish. Whistling fans - and
· secretly been flattered to receive one
whistlers' mothers - get ready. A
of those! There is also "whistling in three-day whistling festival the dark ," and "whistling a happy " Pucqrama 2001 " - is being held
tune" whenever you are afraid, and in the cities of Tulsa and Jenks,
so on and so on.
Okla., Oct. 18- 21 , 2001. For more
The gentleman from Jenks wasn't information, check the Web site:
whistling "Dixie" when he lauded www.thewhistler.com. Pucker up
this beautiful art forrn. - ANITA and have a great time!
HAMILTON,
SUN
CITY
Dear Abby is written by Pauline
WEST, ARIZ.
DEAR ANITA: You weren't rhe Phillips and daughter Jeanne Phillips..

Birth
announced · '
COOLVILLE -Jennifer
and Chad Clingenpeel of
Coolville, announce ihe
birth of a son, · Sept. 2, at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospita!. The infant has been
named Matthew Lucas.
·
·

Medicare;
who
are
un/underinsured; who have
a household income below
the following guidelines :
$17 ,18()\ for one person;
$23,220 for two persons;
$29,260 for three persons;
$35,300 for four persons.

Ebersbach
reuniOn held

h

Mammograp Y PORTLAND _ DescenServiCeS
dants of the late Howard
and Ruth Ebersbach of the
diSCOntinued Portland area gathered at

Harroff of Milford, N .H.
Sam and P~~l Ebersbach
of Newark; Mike and Debhie Ebersbach, Melissa
Ebersbach, Baltimore;. Teri
Ebersbach, Alissa Ebers- ·
bach, and Amber Ebers bach
of Lancaster; Athena and
Sbandra
Ebersbach · of
Logan, Terry Lee Stoneburner of Nelsonville, a
guest, and Keith Ebersbach
of Columbus.
Tom and Phyllis Ebersbach of Orchard Lake,
Mich. ; Randy Ebersbach of
Bruce Township,
Mich.;
K atrma
· an d M ark sc h warz
of Sy1van La ke, Mic h . ;
D eanna an d B nan
· M.mne b o
and Paulina and Eden Min.
M.tc h .; an d
ne b o o fW 1xon,
Larry an d saJly Eb ers b ac h ·
of Syracuse; D av1.d Eb ersbac h o f H anover, 1n d ., an d
KeII y C arPent er o f H 1'll'tard ,
a guest.
----------· MQRELQCALNEWS

the Dawes Arboretum in
POMEROY
Newark recently for a
Grant/Riverside
mobile reunion.
mammography unit will no
Attending were George
longer be providing services and Kathleen Dossot, and
to Meigs County.
James Dossot, of Union,
The
Meigs
County C onn.; p arty an d D avi d
Health
Department . Labowsky,
Daniel
announced discontinuance Labowsky,
and
Karen
of the services today.
Lo b ows ky o f Ch es h tre,
'
According
to
Stacy Conn.; Donald Loos and
Welch, MSA, manager of Deborah Wilcox- Loos of
Riv~rside Methodist Hos- East Hampton, Conn.;
' pttals Mo.btle Mammo~~a- Mary and Noel Harroff,
IN'
Q .'
phy Servtces, 'olthe fMac:l.uy Dustin--MaHo£1;-and Katelyn--MORE-W~.Al.F
cannot constuer
etgs
Cou~ty as an underser~ed
area m regards to scree~mg
mammography
serv1ces '
because Holzer Clinic
(Meigs
Branch)
offers
screening and diagnostic
mamm~gr~ms.
.
At th11 time, the hospital
intends to focus its interest
and resour~es upon renderSEPTE~'Bf'R
mg contmued care t_o
women currently expertencing identified breast
pro_blems.
.
C~urtney. C. S1m,. BSC,
ad~mutratlve
asmtant,
1-iffTS @ POI-if'ROY, PA'R'KlNG LOT
advJSes women who have
had mammog~ams via the
12:00
Grant/Rtvemde Mobtle
LfA\1£5@ 1:00
Mammography U~it i~ the
fNVS @ 1-iiZWAY
past ~o. contact then pnvate
phystc1ans or the Health
ADMISSION: $10.00 EACH OR $15.00 COUPLE
Department at 992-6626 to
!til
Dooli
make arrangements for thts
~
~~s
year's screening.
Funding is available, she
said, via the Ohio Department of Health's Breast and
Cervical Cancer Project for
women who are aged 50 or
older; who do not have
NEED INFO. CALL 740·742·t513 OR 742·3050

bKS.

f.AciGS CO. 'BI1&lt;.t:RS'

16tJ\; ANN.UAL .

TOY 'RUN

22, 2001

Holzer Clinic
Announces the Newest
Addition to the
Regional Orthopedic Center

HOLZER
CLINIC

•

Gerald Shute, MD

'

Regional
Orthopedic Center

His Interests:
Gene111l Orthopedlca
Lower Exbemlty SUrgery
Joint Rtplac:emtnt

Orthopedic Excellence for all .
the Mid-Ohio Valley.

..

..

RUTLAND - Rutland Pack
240 fall roundup, Thursday, 7
p.m. Rutland Fire Station, Rut-.
.land and Harrisonville boys
grades one through live Invited to
join Cub Scouts.

'

performed by the world-famous
C owboy Band of Hardin Simmons
University in Abilene, Texas? Or the
sexy whistling lesson Lauren Bacall
gave to Humphrey Bogart in the
classic film "To Have and Have
Not"? Or the Seven Dwaru who
found joy in whistling while they

.

Chester D
of A meets

· NEWS AND NOTES
Point Pleasant for
school children on friday
and throughout the weekend.
nreparlz
for feature
The encampment will also
r• ·
sutlen, colonial mer-

I

SOCIETY
NEWS. AND NOTES
.

THURSDAY
RACINE - Pomeroy-Racine
Lo&lt;!ge 164, Free and Accepted
Masons. Refreshments.

WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY
. MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
MIDDLEPORT - lnterdenom·
Village Council, special meeting, inatlonal pastor's prayer at 8:30
Wednesday, 5:30p.m. regarding a .m. at the Middleport First Bap·
Issue II.
tlst Church. Rear entrance to the
church to be used. All pastors
. POMEROY .:.... American Red Invited. ·
Cross Bloodmobile will be at the
Rocksprings Rehabilitation CenPOMEROY - Fun, Food and
ter, 36759 Rocksprings Road, Fellowship at God's NET In
Pomeroy, Wednesday from 10 pomeroy. Video games, computa.m to 2 p.m. At the same time a er programs, board games, pool,
health lair will be, held offering relreshments, 6 to 10:30 p.m.
blood
pressure
checks, Friday and Saturday.
pulse/oxygen checks, hand mas·
""'$ages, . stress testing with
SATURDAY
RACINE Thomas and
· biodots, and more. Every Friday
this monlh at 6 p.m. In the main Isabel Weaver Stobart family
dining hall, a Bible study will be reu.nlon, Saturday noon, Star Mill
held with Andrew KHchen.
Park In Racine. Take covered
dish and famlly_photographs.
GALLIPOLIS - Revival ser·
vices, Church of God of PropheCHESTER - Chester Town~
cy, 380 White Road, Gallipolis, ship Trustees, regular meeting, 8
lhrough Saturday, 7 p.m. each a.m. · Saturday at Chester town
evening. Revc-Joe-Gwlnn-speak--:hall . .
lng, special singing nightly.
SUNDAY
.CARPENTER - Carpenter
TUPPERS PLAINS -Eastern
Board of Educallon, Wednesday, Baptist Church, Sunday, 2 p.m.
regular seulon, 7 p.m. al the with the New Horizon, Claudette
Harkin, and Sarah Full. John
administrative office.
Elswick to apeak.

William
Rusher

RED GREEN'S VIEW

.

;

LOCAL EVENTS

DROP US ALINE.

WVednesda~Septernber1t,2001

High school. in-crowd~ behavior is out of bounds

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. · · •-

Page AS

Dr. Shute joins orthopedic surgeons

f

Wayne Amendt, MD, Russell Clarke, MD,
Kenneth Hanington, MD, and Arnold Penix, MD.
•

~- -

.....

. . ..

_ ~·

�·inion

The Daily Sentinel

-~e_oa_ny_se_noo_ei____~By~eBe~d

PageA4
Wednesd•y. September 1t, 2001

•·

74D-992·2156 • FIX: 992·2157

DEAR ABBY: I am a 16-yeuthey should. Unfortunately. the
old girl - a sophomore in a wonsnobs who look down on fellow
derful high school . We have some of
students usually don't act that way
the best test scores in the state. Our
in front of their parents .
teachers go the extra mile to help
I Tecently read an article about a
us. Our teams excel in almost every
terrific middle school music teacher
sport. However, there's something
wbg opened her music room at
about my high school that is not so
lunch hour to first-year students
terrific. I'm talking about how the
who were being teased and excludADVICE
" popuIar crowd" treats others.
ed. It provided young people a safe,
Everyone knows who the popular
· inviting refuge where they wouldn't
kids are. They are the ones who get the popular kids like going to a 1:-e hazed. The studenrs who lunched
· place where they are tormented for
drunk and smoke weed over the
in ~er room were welcoming,
wearing th~ same pants they wore
weekend. They think they are supedemocrati
c, well-behaved and
last week?
will the popular
rior because they wear nice clothes
Ct:&lt;JWd act after they graduate? appr~c iate d the nurturing surroundand their parents buy them whatev- Employers won't hire them just ings. iMore schools, including high
er they want. They piCk on kids because they have nice clothes!
scho~ls, should consider something
who aren 't up to their level. It's dissimilar.
Parents who suspect their children
gusting.
DEAR ABBY: I ,agree with
treat others this way should watch ,
Abby, please inform these kids them closely and u_rge them to be " Whistler in Jenks, Okla." that they really aren't better than nicer to their classmates. whistling IS a beautiful art form.
anyone else. They hurt o~hers in KNOWS THE REAL DEAL
How can anyone forget the rendiways you can't imagine. How would
DEAR KNOWS: You're right, tion of" The Whistler and His Dog"

-·

Abigail

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

R. Shawn Lewis

~ea;AT

Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Van
Buren

,

WALmartof ·

Diane Key Hill
Controller

CWINA '.

/_,.~_ uus tn ,,., ~ditor IJJ'~

wtk omt. Tll ty llwuld lit ltfl tlul11 300 worth. AIJ kttrn
.,, subjtcr to editing tmd m ust bt sfgnt d and indiUit tuhlrtu snd lekph011t nwakr.
No utuigt~td lttttrs will bt p11.blUh.td. l~rt":r should hot in good ttiJtt, tuldrtnlnr

How

•'u,ts, 1101 pmtmalirits.
·
T1rt oJHnium t.rp~ss~ in tht ..-olumn btlow art lht constn:rus of tht Ohio Vallty
Pllbli.sltillf Co. :r t ditorial lkKlrd, unlt u orhtr-·iu noted.

NATIONAL YIE\V

adness

'

Reason for terrorists' attack
elusive, but energizes US.

The Community Calender Ia
publlahed aa a tree aervlce to
non-profit groupe wlahlng to
announce meetlnga and ape-Cial eventa. The calender Ia not
designed to promoll ulea or
fund relaera of any type. llama
are printed only aa apace permlta and cannot be guaranteed
to be printed a apeclflc number.of daya.

•

•

RUSHER'S VIEW

...

• Clarksburg Exponent-Telegram: What is it thes e people want? Whoever is ~espon sibl e for the series of terrorist
attacks on the United States on Tuesday has managed to kill
tens of thousands of innocent people and caused fear and chaos .
across the nation . Some unknown, faceless entity has declared
full-scale war on th e U.S., but why?
Most of the things that ne ed to be said
well · as bin Laden ~nd his hundreds of
It's madness. How can we reason with madmen?
about the events of September 11th are
agents, must feel the wrath of the Unitpainfully obvious and have already been
ed States. And it must not be in the forlj)
We've answered our own qu estion , really. You cannot reason
with people who are mad, deranged, homicidal.
said a thousand times.
of a pinprick, or a series of pinpricks. lf
For sane, decent, thoughtful people, figuring out what these
Thus, if 19 men with Arab names and
Afgh anistan, say, is identifi ed as bin
terrorists want is an impossible task.
exotic passports can waltz aboard four
Laden's chief protector, th en retaliatio_!?
Certainly they don't expect us to bow down to them . They
transcontinental airliners, produce knives
against Afghanistan must be terminal. !J,
should bducid enough to !~:now that we would not throw up
and hijack all four planes,then our pre·
need not take the form of a grou11d
our hands and cry Uncle.
sent "security sysiem" (if that's the right
invasion. But low- level precision bom!JT
Far be it for a small-town daily newspaper to suggest what
name for it) isn't worth the powder to
ing of command centers, supply depot!;
the government's reaction should be ... lt should be swift and
blow it to hell. And because the whole
COLUMNIST
transportation factlities, military concede
decisive; that's all we'll offer at this point.
proj~ct took years t~ plan and execute
trations, key roads and bridges and thl!:
The biggest task before us is to restore the shaken confidence
and mvolved scores, tf not hundreds, of
like can over a period of months a; .
of the m?st powerful _nati?n o.n Earth. We are a free society,
agents here and abr~ad , a number of ly effective. Arguably, they might, o~er years, m~ke Afghanistan, if not unlivabl~.
whtch pndes Itself on tts dtvemty, tts exchange of tdeas and tts
whom had to be tramed to fly planes tune, sap our morale and our wtll, then certainly ungovernable by the Ta{~
willingness to tolerate dissent.
(and apparent!)( re ce1ved that trammg though that would be far more likely in .b
h
&amp;· dl
.
'
1
Last Tuesday's terror will likely strengthen our ideals rather
right here in the United States) , the the case of a smaller target such as Israel
aMn or anhy. ot er u~ ten.ky regime. b.''
c
·
II d
•
·
eanw 11e, surpnse stn es agamst m
b
d
than shatter them .
same must e sat 10r our so- ca e Meanwhile, th ey serve to dehght and L d ,
d
h r .1 .
b
.
•
u·
ll"
"
. .
.
.
a en S camps an Ot Ct IaCtltleS,
y
When the bombs dropped on Pearl Harbor a generation ago,
mte 1gen_ce sources.
. .
msptre mtllions of people, 111 the Arab hi hi - trained forces that would b'e
the United States did not buckle under and in fact emerged
The pohttcal consequences of this dts- world and elsewhere who hate the . g Yd
d h ·
Ud
· ' ., ,
.. '
h
·
b ·
•
mserte an t en pu e out agat."'
·'
from the carnage more powerful and more mfluenttal.
aster are per aps not qutte so o VJous, Umted States.
u1&gt; 'k
.:h
·
..
·
•
b
h
·
h.
'bl _
·
- - - -- - _wo u... eep- mm- on--t e...-run.,.-Gr-even- - - - - -V.'e -may- never- understand why Tuesdays attacks-were-exe~ - ut-t ere-1s-not mg rem Y mystenous """How can th ese novel forms ofaggresh'
1 · h dl l'k 1 h
cured. But we are certain that the American people and our
about them. Just for one thing, the sion be countered? First we must to a cQapdtudrefi tm. t ts bar y tbel y tk at
·
·
·
D
• 1
· h
1
·
•
•
a a or any ot er trou ema er
way of hfe wtll endure.
emocrats P an to entertam t emse ves reasonable certainty identify the perpeuld b
ffi · 1·
a1 ·
B h
di
•
wo
e eager too er 11m an ternah. fall b £ · p ·d
t IS
Y orcmg rest ent us to P trators - and that means not just the ·
J
S' 'I
·
ld b''
into the Social Security surplus then
. .
.. ·
.
tJVe asy um. 11111 ar tactics _cou . ii
d
.
h.
f,
b k" ' h. smctdal hiJackers, but the whole support employed against other terrorist leader!
eno?ncmg dim ' ~rd. rdeaMmgB h1.s apparatus that sh elters and finances· and th eir agents wherever they can b.e
.
. f:
'
prom1se not to o so, 1s ea . r. us s
·
hi · d .
f
them, provtdes th em wtth a1se passports found.
exception to s p1~ ge m case o war
h
·
fl
· . ·d
.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
fits the present situation like a glove.
and let al weapons, cares or thetr wt Un9uestwnably, there \\'Ould be
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 19, the 262nd day of 2001. There
What may not h« so obvious is the ows and ?rphans, and so on. No doubt Amenc~n casualties. Worse yet, from the
are 103 days left in the year.
way in which war is likely to be waged Osama bm Laden plays a large role 111 standpom~ . of s entt_menta!~sts, there
Today's Highlight in History:
in the 21st century - at least as long as this whole process ~nd richly deserves :-v~uld be mnocent CIVthans killed and
On Sept. 19, 1777, during the Revolutionary War, American
America remains the only superpower hts place on the FBI s Ten Most Wanted mJured too. B~t that ts the pnce of any
soldiers won the first Battle of Saratoga.
· - and how the new forms of aggression hst. But he could not surv1.ve a day w1th- war. And th~t IS what we ~lust wage . a
On this date:
are going to have to be countered. Our out the tacit approval of one or more ne"':' war, w1th new strategtes and new
In 1796, President Washl~gron's farewell address was pubenemies are relatively weak, and, hence, rogue states like Afghanistan, Sudan, iraq tacttcs, destgned for the new challenges
lished.
must resort to unusual forms of attack, and Iran, who quietly give him tnOI'ley, of the 21st century.
In 1881, the 20th president of the United States, James A.
We can denounce the perpetrators as diplomatic cover, and (above · all) places
(William Rusher is a Distinguished PelGarfield, died of wounds inflicted by an assassin. ·
" terrorists" and "fanatics" and their act' to hide.
low of the Clarem.n1t Imtitute for the Study
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann was arrested in New York and
as "cowardly," but they can be diabolicalSo one or more of these states, too, as of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy.) .
charged with the kidnap-murder of the Lindbergh infant.
'.
In 1945, Nazi propagandist William Joyce, known as "Lord
,. '
Haw~ Haw," was sentenced to death by a British court.
V&lt;
In 1955, President Juan Peron of Argentina was ousted after
a revolt by the army and navy.
"'
In 1957, the United States conducted its first underground
nuclear test, in the Nevada desert.
In 1959, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev reacted angrily
..
during a visit to Los Angeles upon being told that, for security
'1
• "Sexy won 1an " and "yes."
BY RED GREEN
mail yesterday. lt was a pamphlet on
reasons, he wouldn 't be allowed to visit Disneyland.
"'
• " Drink" and "another."
,.
I had a guy come and do some cemen t some vacation spa somewhere. It wasn't
In 1960, C uban leader Fidel Castro, in New York to~
work at tpy house. I hired him becaliSe very cleat abollt where it was or specifiI.Jnited N ati ons, angrily checked out of the Shelburne'Hotelm
Making a pass
'"
his
estimate
was
the
lowest.
After
two
cally
what
it
provided.
No
prices
were
I was on the highway yesterday, and
a dispute with the management.
weeks of all of his junk lying around the mentioned. At first I thought it was pret- there was a car traveling in the passing
In 1985, the Mexico City area was struck by the first of two
place and him showing up sporadically, I ty useless, but then I realized th at this lane, but not passing anybody. l followed
devastatin~ quakes th at claimed some 6,000 lives.
told him I-'d had enough and I needed was a piece of mail from a stranger that him for a while. I flashed my lights. t
In 1986 , federal ·health offi cials announc ed that the experithe job finished in the next two days. He wasn't :tsking me to do any thin g. I didn't tooted my horn, but in a fri endly way. As
mental drug AZT would be made available to thousands &lt;lf
said it , could be ·done, but he'd need have to . go anywhere or compare the if to say, "It would be great if you'd go~
AIDS patients,
twice the money to do it that qui ckly. I price to so methin g else, or eve11 make a in to th e other lane for a sec to let m e by.
Ten years ago: Israeli Prime MinistcrYitzhak Shamir accused
.was
so fed up, I agreed.
decision about whethe.r or not I was There's no need to show me your
the United States of tiltin ~; toward the Arabs in its eagerness to
· . And that got me thinking about busi- ever interested in using_wh atever it was firearm ." None of th at worked, so fin alw
organize a Mideast peace conference.
ness transactions in general and wonder- th ey were advertising at whatever price ly I had to pass . him on the right ·and
Five years •go: Am erican astronallt Shannon Lu cid, 011 board
ing bow ma ny of them turn out like they were. offering it. What a grea t feelth e Russian M ir space station since March, eagerly greeted th e
then pull bacll in , in front of him. A~ .
mine, wh ere at some poin t you're paying ing. I could throw the pamphlet away
crew of Atlantis hours afte r their arrival and docking. IBM
soon as I did "that, he sped up. If he had
a person wh atever th ey want, j ust so with no guilt. I fel t happy and younger.
announ ced it would extend health benefits to the partn ers of
done that in th e first place, none of th~
they'll go away. Tha t has to be the bas is Just because 1 didn 't have to do anythin g.
its hqmosexual employees.
of most divorce settlements. Almost aU This is th e best vacation spa I've never would have been necessary. Then I reat~
One year ago: The Senate approved permanent normal trade
sales are inade that way. You buy the gone to. I hope they're in business a ized that these people who spend all da)l
status for C hina. The R omanian women's gymnastics team
in the passing lane without passing any•
product j ust so th e salesman will stop ·long, long time.
·
won th e gold medal anhe Sydney Olympics; Russia won th e
one are actually prepared to go a lot
pestering you. And the same thing with
Hoof-in-mouth
sil ver, C hina took th e bron ze, and th e U.S. placed fourth .
panhandlers. The more offensive they
After 50 years of puttin g my foot in faster, th ey just don't want to go first: .
Today 's Birthdays ~Auth or R oger Angell is 81. R&amp;B musician
"!
are, the quicker I make a contribution to my mouth, I have concluded that th ere They'd make great vi ce presidents.
Billy Ward is 80. Former Defense Secretary Harold Brown is
QUOTE OF THE DAY: "To have a
their favori\e charity. I was told a long are cer tain words that should .never
74. Actress Rosem ary Harris is 71. Actor Adam West is 71.
t\me ago that there are only two moti - appear in ' the same .sentence. Here's a happy life, never be the only one iaughActor Dav id McCallum is 68. Singer-songwriter Paul Williams
ing ot not laughing." - Red Green :
vating forces for people - hope for gain partial list:
· is 61. Sin ger Bill M edley is 61. Singer Sylvja Tyson (Ian and
.
(Red Green is the star of"The Red Grtb1 •
and fear of loss. I think there 's another
• ".Chubby'~d "wife.'~
Sylvia) is 61. Golfer Jane Blalock is 56. Singer David Bromberg
Sftou;" a televisiou series seen itJ the
one - getting away from people who
• " My'' ;utd ' ult."
is 56. Actor Randolph Mantooth is 56. Singer Freda Payne is
Stales 011 PBS aud in Canada on m e,. '-" U'
bug you. I'd pay a fortun e for a cheap
• "Moron " a " boss."
56. R;,ck singer- musician Lol C reme (1Occ) is 54. Actor JereNetwork,
m1d lite author 'oj" T11e
w
ay
to
do
that.
•
"
Anniversary
di
nner"
and
my Irons is 53. Actress Twiggy Lawson is 52. TV personality
&amp;ok" and ."Rei/ Grcm Talks Cars: A
The best mail
"upchuck."
Joan Lunden is 51. Singer-producer Daniel Lanois is 50. Actor
I
received
a
pleasant
surprise
m
the
.
•
"Politician"
and
"forthright."
Story. ") •
Scott Colomby is 49. Musician- producer Nile Rodgers is 49.
Singer- actor Rex Smith is 45.Actor Kevin Hooks is 43. Actress
Carolyn McCormick is ~2 . Country singer Trisha Yearwood is
I
1125 Third Ave., Golllpolla, Ohio
111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
37. R&amp;B singer Espraronza Griffin is 32. Comedian Jimmy
200 Moln St., Pakol Ploount, W.~o. ~
740-912-2150
740-4411-2342
.
304-t7S-1333
'
Fallon is 27.

For a new century, US. faces a new kind of war i

TODAY IN HISTORY

CHESTER Chester
Council No. 323, Daughters of America, met recently with Gary Holter, coun, cilor, presiding.
The Lord's Prayer and
pledges to the Christian
and American Flag were
given, and Julie Curtis read
Psalm 23.
Practice was held for
inspection, to be held at the
Sept. 18 meeting, at which
time birthdays for the quarrer will also be observed .
Th e death of Ronald
· Osborne, husband of memher Ella Osborne, was
reported. Seventeen memhers visited the funeral
home . Kathryn . Baum is
recovenng.
Those attending the state
session
m
Springfield
recently
were :
Esther
Smith,Jo Ann Ritchie, Jean
Welsh, .~ary Jo Barringer,
OparHo on, Dons Grueser
and .B etty ¥oung.
Young was nominated
and installed as State Outside Sentinel from District
13.
i
Appointed as officers
were:
JoAnn
Ritchie,
National Finance Committee, Doris Grueser, National Representative Commit.tee, Mary Jo Barringer,
State Registration Committee.
Betty Young, alternate
representative to state. sessian, gave her report.
Jo Ann Ritchie read the
poem, "Grandparents Day.''
Erma Gleland conducted
a game after the meeting.
Attending were &lt;;;ary
Haler, Goldie Frederick,
Opal Hollon, Ruth Smith,
Sandra White, Thelma
White, Laura Mae Nice,
Delores Wolfe, Julie Curtis,
Charlotte VanMeter Mary
K. Holter, Helen' Wolf,
Erma Cleland, Jean Welsh,
Mary Jo Barringer, Betty
Young and JoAnn Ritchie.

IMiltle ayl

chants who will sell Colonial
clothing, t0)'1 1 food and acces·
1 · POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. sories. Craft demonstrations
-::1- Allen W. Eckert, author of
"The Frontienmen" and "That will include candle making by ·
Dark And Bloqdy River," will ~ane byCol~ • sp!nn~g a~d ~v­
be at Tu~Endie-Wei Battle mg
ona ous ' as et
· making by Becky Young and
1
Monument State Park during broom making by John Haer..
A lantern tour will be held at
. . the 2001 . Point Pleasant Battle
Days Celebration.
.
the park on Friday at 7:~0 p.m.
Eckert will do a .book 'sign- featuring men 'and women
ing on the Mansion Howe who shared in the settlement
porch Oct. 6 at 2 p.m. and will of the area during the 1770s
be on the park . grounds both and fought in the battle.
The parade will begiJ! a~ 11
. Friday and Saturday. Some
·other books written by Eckert a.m. featuring floats, bands, and
include "Wilderness Empire" costumed groups of the era. An
and "The Conqueron." He ox roast and bean dinner will
also wrote the outdoor drama begin at 11 a.m. at the Senior
~ "Tecu~h."
.
·Citizens parking lot. Crafts and
.[ The Battle Days Celebration activities for all ages will be on
~to be held Oct. 5, 6, and 7 Main Street fiom 11 a.m. to 4
commemorates the Battle of p.m. sponsored by the Main
Point Pleasant historically rec- Street Merchants Committee.
An art show will be held at
' ognized as the Fint Battle of
the · American Revolution the Fort Randolph Terrace on
\ fought Oct. 10, 1774.
Main Street, Friday, Saturday .
' An encampment featuring ' and Sunday. A photo exhibit
I Scott Sarver and Company will be o.n display at the Mason
.fiom Roanoke, Va., will be in County Library. The annual
residence at the park all week- Colonial Ball win be held at 8
end, much as our ancestors p.m. at the American . Legion
would have been mqre than Hall. This year, the ball is free
200 years ago. The group will and everyone is, invited to
11
·provide living history lessons · attend.

1

.

Price of happiness increasingly subject to iriflation·.'

I
I

•

only reader who was thankful to be
reminded about the fin e art of
whistling. Read on: .
DEAR ABBY: I love to whistle,
despite my mother's warning that "a
whistling woman and a crowing hen
come to no good."
·
Has there ever been a whistling
choir? Someone needs to organize
work~d ?
And let's not forget the tradition- one! - A FAN OFWHISTLING
DEAR
FAN
OF
al " wolf whistle." I'll bet there are
WHISTUNG: You 're about to get
few females alive who haven't
your wish. Whistling fans - and
· secretly been flattered to receive one
whistlers' mothers - get ready. A
of those! There is also "whistling in three-day whistling festival the dark ," and "whistling a happy " Pucqrama 2001 " - is being held
tune" whenever you are afraid, and in the cities of Tulsa and Jenks,
so on and so on.
Okla., Oct. 18- 21 , 2001. For more
The gentleman from Jenks wasn't information, check the Web site:
whistling "Dixie" when he lauded www.thewhistler.com. Pucker up
this beautiful art forrn. - ANITA and have a great time!
HAMILTON,
SUN
CITY
Dear Abby is written by Pauline
WEST, ARIZ.
DEAR ANITA: You weren't rhe Phillips and daughter Jeanne Phillips..

Birth
announced · '
COOLVILLE -Jennifer
and Chad Clingenpeel of
Coolville, announce ihe
birth of a son, · Sept. 2, at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospita!. The infant has been
named Matthew Lucas.
·
·

Medicare;
who
are
un/underinsured; who have
a household income below
the following guidelines :
$17 ,18()\ for one person;
$23,220 for two persons;
$29,260 for three persons;
$35,300 for four persons.

Ebersbach
reuniOn held

h

Mammograp Y PORTLAND _ DescenServiCeS
dants of the late Howard
and Ruth Ebersbach of the
diSCOntinued Portland area gathered at

Harroff of Milford, N .H.
Sam and P~~l Ebersbach
of Newark; Mike and Debhie Ebersbach, Melissa
Ebersbach, Baltimore;. Teri
Ebersbach, Alissa Ebers- ·
bach, and Amber Ebers bach
of Lancaster; Athena and
Sbandra
Ebersbach · of
Logan, Terry Lee Stoneburner of Nelsonville, a
guest, and Keith Ebersbach
of Columbus.
Tom and Phyllis Ebersbach of Orchard Lake,
Mich. ; Randy Ebersbach of
Bruce Township,
Mich.;
K atrma
· an d M ark sc h warz
of Sy1van La ke, Mic h . ;
D eanna an d B nan
· M.mne b o
and Paulina and Eden Min.
M.tc h .; an d
ne b o o fW 1xon,
Larry an d saJly Eb ers b ac h ·
of Syracuse; D av1.d Eb ersbac h o f H anover, 1n d ., an d
KeII y C arPent er o f H 1'll'tard ,
a guest.
----------· MQRELQCALNEWS

the Dawes Arboretum in
POMEROY
Newark recently for a
Grant/Riverside
mobile reunion.
mammography unit will no
Attending were George
longer be providing services and Kathleen Dossot, and
to Meigs County.
James Dossot, of Union,
The
Meigs
County C onn.; p arty an d D avi d
Health
Department . Labowsky,
Daniel
announced discontinuance Labowsky,
and
Karen
of the services today.
Lo b ows ky o f Ch es h tre,
'
According
to
Stacy Conn.; Donald Loos and
Welch, MSA, manager of Deborah Wilcox- Loos of
Riv~rside Methodist Hos- East Hampton, Conn.;
' pttals Mo.btle Mammo~~a- Mary and Noel Harroff,
IN'
Q .'
phy Servtces, 'olthe fMac:l.uy Dustin--MaHo£1;-and Katelyn--MORE-W~.Al.F
cannot constuer
etgs
Cou~ty as an underser~ed
area m regards to scree~mg
mammography
serv1ces '
because Holzer Clinic
(Meigs
Branch)
offers
screening and diagnostic
mamm~gr~ms.
.
At th11 time, the hospital
intends to focus its interest
and resour~es upon renderSEPTE~'Bf'R
mg contmued care t_o
women currently expertencing identified breast
pro_blems.
.
C~urtney. C. S1m,. BSC,
ad~mutratlve
asmtant,
1-iffTS @ POI-if'ROY, PA'R'KlNG LOT
advJSes women who have
had mammog~ams via the
12:00
Grant/Rtvemde Mobtle
LfA\1£5@ 1:00
Mammography U~it i~ the
fNVS @ 1-iiZWAY
past ~o. contact then pnvate
phystc1ans or the Health
ADMISSION: $10.00 EACH OR $15.00 COUPLE
Department at 992-6626 to
!til
Dooli
make arrangements for thts
~
~~s
year's screening.
Funding is available, she
said, via the Ohio Department of Health's Breast and
Cervical Cancer Project for
women who are aged 50 or
older; who do not have
NEED INFO. CALL 740·742·t513 OR 742·3050

bKS.

f.AciGS CO. 'BI1&lt;.t:RS'

16tJ\; ANN.UAL .

TOY 'RUN

22, 2001

Holzer Clinic
Announces the Newest
Addition to the
Regional Orthopedic Center

HOLZER
CLINIC

•

Gerald Shute, MD

'

Regional
Orthopedic Center

His Interests:
Gene111l Orthopedlca
Lower Exbemlty SUrgery
Joint Rtplac:emtnt

Orthopedic Excellence for all .
the Mid-Ohio Valley.

..

..

RUTLAND - Rutland Pack
240 fall roundup, Thursday, 7
p.m. Rutland Fire Station, Rut-.
.land and Harrisonville boys
grades one through live Invited to
join Cub Scouts.

'

performed by the world-famous
C owboy Band of Hardin Simmons
University in Abilene, Texas? Or the
sexy whistling lesson Lauren Bacall
gave to Humphrey Bogart in the
classic film "To Have and Have
Not"? Or the Seven Dwaru who
found joy in whistling while they

.

Chester D
of A meets

· NEWS AND NOTES
Point Pleasant for
school children on friday
and throughout the weekend.
nreparlz
for feature
The encampment will also
r• ·
sutlen, colonial mer-

I

SOCIETY
NEWS. AND NOTES
.

THURSDAY
RACINE - Pomeroy-Racine
Lo&lt;!ge 164, Free and Accepted
Masons. Refreshments.

WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY
. MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
MIDDLEPORT - lnterdenom·
Village Council, special meeting, inatlonal pastor's prayer at 8:30
Wednesday, 5:30p.m. regarding a .m. at the Middleport First Bap·
Issue II.
tlst Church. Rear entrance to the
church to be used. All pastors
. POMEROY .:.... American Red Invited. ·
Cross Bloodmobile will be at the
Rocksprings Rehabilitation CenPOMEROY - Fun, Food and
ter, 36759 Rocksprings Road, Fellowship at God's NET In
Pomeroy, Wednesday from 10 pomeroy. Video games, computa.m to 2 p.m. At the same time a er programs, board games, pool,
health lair will be, held offering relreshments, 6 to 10:30 p.m.
blood
pressure
checks, Friday and Saturday.
pulse/oxygen checks, hand mas·
""'$ages, . stress testing with
SATURDAY
RACINE Thomas and
· biodots, and more. Every Friday
this monlh at 6 p.m. In the main Isabel Weaver Stobart family
dining hall, a Bible study will be reu.nlon, Saturday noon, Star Mill
held with Andrew KHchen.
Park In Racine. Take covered
dish and famlly_photographs.
GALLIPOLIS - Revival ser·
vices, Church of God of PropheCHESTER - Chester Town~
cy, 380 White Road, Gallipolis, ship Trustees, regular meeting, 8
lhrough Saturday, 7 p.m. each a.m. · Saturday at Chester town
evening. Revc-Joe-Gwlnn-speak--:hall . .
lng, special singing nightly.
SUNDAY
.CARPENTER - Carpenter
TUPPERS PLAINS -Eastern
Board of Educallon, Wednesday, Baptist Church, Sunday, 2 p.m.
regular seulon, 7 p.m. al the with the New Horizon, Claudette
Harkin, and Sarah Full. John
administrative office.
Elswick to apeak.

William
Rusher

RED GREEN'S VIEW

.

;

LOCAL EVENTS

DROP US ALINE.

WVednesda~Septernber1t,2001

High school. in-crowd~ behavior is out of bounds

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. · · •-

Page AS

Dr. Shute joins orthopedic surgeons

f

Wayne Amendt, MD, Russell Clarke, MD,
Kenneth Hanington, MD, and Arnold Penix, MD.
•

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.....

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Weclnesd.y, September 19,1001

First criminal ch~rges filed by FBI.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal authOrifies filed the first criminal
charges arisi'!g from the terrorism
investigation after finding three
men in Michigan with airport diagrams and phony immigration documents. Armed with new legal
powers, agents expanded their
efforts to find possible terrorist collaborators.
·
The arrests in Detroit occurred
after FBI agents raided a residence
looking for one of the nearly 200
witnesses being sought in the investigation . Instead, they found the
three men and a ciche of documents. The trio was charged Tuesday in Detroit with fraud and misuse of visas, passports and other

immigration documents.
Attorney General John Ashcroft
expanded the terrorism investigation Tuesday to include U.S. attorneys in every city, vowing to wage a
"concerted national assault."
Aided by a federal grand jury in
White Plains, N.Y., the investigation
has detained 75 people for questioning and has four people under
.arrest as material witnesses.
The government also announced
a new policy giving investigators
wide latitude in detaining the nonU.S. citizens whom it takes into
custody on possible immigration
violations in the terrorist probe,
including allowing authorities 48
hours, or longer in emergencies, to

decide whether to charge an alien
with status violations, up from 24
hours. The Justice Department also
has drafted legislation that would
allow the attorney general to arrest.
and deport suspected terrorists
without presenting evidence in a
court, The Washington Post reported in Wednesday's editions.
In the criminal case against the
three men in Detroit, an affidavit
filed in court provided a glimpse of
the FBI's massive investigation . But
the court papers ~ave no indication
that the FBI be1feved the three men
had anything to do with last week's
terrorist attacks that led to the
destruction of New York's World
Trade Center and heavy damage to

the Pentagon .
In a five-page document. FBI special agent Robert Pertuso said that
he and agents on the Joint Terrorism Task Force in the Detroit FBI
recovered "handwritten sketches of
what appeared to be a diagram of an
airport flight line, to include aircraft
and runways" when they went to a
residence as part of the probe ·o f ~he
World Trade Center mack. They
were looking for a man on "a list of
suspects, potential associates of. the
suspects and potential witnesses,"
Pertuso wrote.
They found the name of the man
they were looking for on the mailbox outside, but the three men in
the residence denied knowing him.

The agents spotted Detroit Metropolitan
Airport
identification
badges for food service workers ·and
the men said they were previously
employed at the airport.
In addition to the false papers arnt
the sketches, the agents observed a
day planner containing notations an
" .
the "American base in Turkey," .tile
" American foreign minister" agi;!
"Alia Airport," Jordan, the FBI atr~r
davit said. The affidavit did not
explain the reference to "U.S. foreign minister." The three men ar~
Karim Koubriti , 23; Ahmed Hartnan, 33; and Farouk Ali-Haimoud,
21. The man the FBI ~as hunting
for was Nabil Al-Marabh.
•

New York mayor holds out little U.S. using carrot and sticks to linti
up nations for anti-terrorism fight:
hope of unearthing survivors
WASHINGTON (AP) The United States is ready
to reward friends and punish
nations that don't sign up
for a fierce new war on terrorism. Some countries will
be lure'd to help with tasty
carrots, others pummeled
with hard sticks.
"In different uations the
carrot may be bigger; in
other nations, the stick may
·be bigger," White House
spokesman Ari Fleischer said
Tuesday.
Afghanistan is clearly the
main recipient of the stick
so far: the Bush administration has warned the_ ruling
Taliban militia in Kabul that
it faces military attacks for
harboring 'suspected terrorist Osama bin Laden.
Pakistan, Indonesia and
Jordan - . perhaps even
Sudan or Cuba - may get
carrots.
,
Sen. Sam Brownback, RKan.; said Pakistan should be
rewarded · for assisting the
United States in pressuring

NEW YORK (AP) - As
hopes dimmed for finding survivors entombed in the still.Jsmoldering rubble of the
World Trade Center, a city in
mourning drew solace that
prosecutors had already begun
seeking those responsible for
so much bloodshed.
Authorities said Tuesday that
a federal grand jury had been
meeting since last week to
investigate the suicide hijackings that destroyed the rwin·,
11 0-story towers on Sept. 1 1.
The grand jury, which
would
typically
include
between 16 and 23 jurors, has ·
been meeting. in White Plains.
a northerOJ suburb. The community is part of the federal
-]COUrt system's Southern District of New York, which has
historically led investigations
related to Osama bin Laden,
the prime suspect in the
attacks.
The disclosure came as the
number of confirmed dead
·ing 5,422 missing in the sevenstory heap of rubble .at the
southern tip of Manhattan.
The bodies of rwo police
officers were pulled early
Wednesday from the wreckage, police detective Bobby
Bell said. Police officers, firefighters, sanitation workers and
volunteers at the site saluted.

OLD GLORY - A fireman carries an American flag to the highest point he could find as Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and other
officials watch during a press tour of the site of the World
Trade Center, the area known as Ground Zero. (AP) ·

Airliner·cOckpHs: 'Last-ditch
_jof defense to be held at all costs'
BY MARCIA DuNN

was . not op~ned. Now, post-

/IP AEROSPACE WRITER
Sept. 11, we'll have to re-evaluThe cockpit ·of America's ate that."
not-so-distant iUture may be
During a teleconference
barricaded behind a bulletproof Monday, airline employees and
and grenade-proof door. No representatives of the airlines
one would open it, not even the and air industries discussed pasarmed pilots, until the plane sible short-term solutions to the
lands.
security issue. Suggestions
"For us, it's obvious right up ranged from putting webbing
front that the cockpit now has behind the cockpit door to
to become a last-ditch line of entangle an intruder, giving
defense to .be held at all costs;' pilots time to use a stun gun or
said John Mazor, an Air Line other weapon, to leaving hot
Pilots Association representative. coffee on the burner' during
"Nothing is off the table;· he takeoff for use against hijackers.
said, "not even guns:'
A flight attendant proposed the
_ The pilots' association is lead- latter idea.
1mg the charge to improve cockPrest said some options come
pit security after last week's ter- down to deciding which risk i&lt;
rorist hijackings that ended in worse having passengers
attacks on the World Trade · slipping on coffee during an
. Center and the Pentagon. The evacuation, or having coffee
group's No. 1 priority is to ready to fling at a hijacker;
replace the airliners • flimsy allowing a cockpit door to open
cockpit doors.
· automatically when an air presA! Prest, vice presideht of sure differential occurs or
operations for the Air Transport installing ·deadbolts that would
Association, is a member of a keep the door closed in a
cockpit security panel that is decompression with damaging
part of a larger airliner task force results.
created this week by TransMost experts agree stronger
portation Secretary Norman cockpit doors and armed pilots
Mineta. The cockpit panel could have made · a difference
· hopes to submit preliminary Sept. 11.
recommendations· to the Feder"I've heard fiom a lot of pilots
a! Aviation Administration this who would ·strongly say they
week.
would like to be able to have
Prest said that before last arms in there, guns. so if someweek's carnage, airline officials one does break through, they're
believed. society would not tol- not defenseless," said Dav,d
erate allowing a hijacker to kill Stempler, president of the · Air
"a hostage a minute if an air- Travelers Association. ·
plane weren't put down at a
The bullets could be similar
particular airport o~ if the door to those used by federal sky

·----- - - - - - -

marshals. breakable and capable
of piercing a body but not the
hull of a plane, Stempler said
Current U.S. cockpit doors
were designed for privacy, not
security. The FAA requires the
doors to be closed and locked
from . takeoff until landing,
unless a crew member needs to
exit, and to be breakable from
inside the cockpit in an emergency. Cockpits are equipped
with a crash ax, just in case.

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Phone: 773·5583

agreeing to provide airspace
rights for possible U.S. military
action
against
Afghanistan.
"The United States is
going to have to ·show the
people in Pakistan that it's
good to be in a good relationship with the United

FOREIGN RELATIONS- Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov
speaks during a news conference at the Russian E:mbassy·ln
Washington. (AP)
·
·~ '

States," Brown back · said,
who is a member of the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.
Pakistan has been under
U.S. sanctions because of its
nuclear weapons program
and the ouster of its democratic government two years
Gen. Pervez Mushar~
current
Indonesia and Jordan, both
Islamic countries that have
spoken strongly against the
Sept. 11 terror attacks in the
United States, 'may find
heightened Bush administration interest in concluding proposed trade agreements.

For Indonesia, there ' also
may be the possibility of· a
renewal of military ties, suspended at the time of the
upheaval in East Timor.
Those issues were on t~e
agenda Wednesday for the
visit of Indonesian President
Megawati
Sukarnoputri.
was to meet with
Robert Zoellick after seeing
President Bush and haviiJg
lunch with him. ·
"That's an important symbol for the rest of the world
of
whether
President
Megawati will be successful
with democracy and tolerance," Zoellick said.

.

The Daily Sentinel

Diamond ,Roundup, Page 83
Prep grid ra~:~kings posted, Page 86

'

~ge. Bl
Wednesday. September 19,1001

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
P. Martinez out

for.season

BOSTON (AP) - Boston
· Red Sox ace Pedro Martinez
said he will miss the rest of
the year with inflammation in
his right shoulder.
Martinez, placed on the 15day disabled list, will begin
rehabilitation as soon as the
season is over, general manag'er Dan Duquette said. Martinez was 7-3 with a 2.39
ERA ihis s~:ason .

NFL .will play 16; playoffs unkn
NEW YORK (AP) - Imagine a
doubleheader at the N ew Orleans
Superdome on what was supposed to
be Super Bowl Sunday - both conference championships in one stadium
in one day.
· · Or imagine the regular season rnding Jan. 6 and playoffs beginning Jan .
9, with some teams potentially playing
thrre games in eight days.
Those are rwo scenarios put forth
by the NFL when it announced Tuesday. that it will play a full 16-game
schedule while still trying to cram the
usual 12 teams into the playoffs
instead of reducing the fi eld to eight
teams.

"I'll be mrious' to see 111h,u
jollofi1S after this. fJJ lwte to
dismpt the playC!IJ's in that
sitr~ation"
Andy Reid al Philadelphia

"Hopefully. they can find a way to '
get all the games in;' said New
Orleans general. manager Randy
Mueller, whose team· is one of many
contenders that could miss an eightteam playoff.
·
"It would not come without some
hardships. It might require playing the
games in 14 days or 10 days. It's hard,

but the Canadian league does it. I
don't know if the players would support that, but I know our players want
to go to the playoffs.''
· ''J'Il ·bc curious to see what follows
after this," added Andy Reid of
Philadelphia, another team that might
be affected. ''I'd hate to disrupt the
playoffs in that situation ... . I'm sure
they'll come up with an answer for it.
They" understand the importance of
the playoffs."
Co!llrriissioner Paul Tagliabue said
the league's competition committee .
voted unanimously to keep the 16ganle format, switching the games
called off last weekend to the week-

Zanarcli faces
more surgery
BERLIN (AP) Alex
Zanardi faced another operation as he recovers from 'the
crash that forced the amputation of his legs.
J;loctors have said . the !tal- ·
ian driver's life is no longer
immediately
· threatened,
although he remains in an
"induced coma." The biggest
danger remains delayed kidney or heart failure.
Zanardi, the two-time
CART champion, was to have
a third operation Wednesday
to cbeck for fragments and
infection.
His legs were amputated at ·
· the knees following the crash
Saturday in the American
Memorial ·500.

Wyoming driver
charg~ . ·
LARAMIE, Wyo. (AP)
The lone ~urvivor of a wreck
that killed eight University of
charged with vehicular homicide and being drun_k at the
time of the crash.
Clinton Haskins, a member
of the university's rodeo team.
was charged with eight counts
of aggravated vehicular homicide. The complaint . also
charged Haskins ·was drunk
but provided no specifics.
Haskins' pickup collided
head-on early Sunday with a
sport-utility vehicle carrying
eight, members of the cross
country team returning from
a non-school trip to Colorado.

Grizzlies sir
Pau Caso
MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP) The Memphis Grizzlies and
Spanish forward Pau Gasol
agreed to a deal that could be
· w~rth nearly $14 million, but
some of it will go to his Spanish league team.

Jumper
suspended over
Ritalin test
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. (AP) -A University of
South Carolina long jumper
was suspended and stripped of
her fourth-place finish in a
national event after testing
positive for a banned sub•
stance.
Antoinette Wilks tested
positive for methylphenidate
in March at the USA Indoor
Track and Field Championships in Atlanta, sai.;l Ricl:t
Wanninger. spokesman for the
U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.
She was suspended for rwo
years, but the ban will be
reduced .to 10 months
because she takes the substance - known by its brand
name Ritalin - for medical
·reasons. She will be granted a
medical .exemption to use the
drug
. at the end of the suspenston.

•••••

Follow all your favorite
prep sports in The Sentinel.

end ofJan. 5-7, when wild card games
had been scheduled.
But he said the committee is still
looking at ways to keep three division
winner.i and three wild card teams in
each conference rather than the three
winners and just one wild card.
When the teams return, they are
likely to have the regular officials
back.
As for the playoffs, Tagliabue said:
"We continue to work on keeping
six division winners, six wild cards
and our entite postseason format
intact. Several options have been pre-

Please see NFL II

Emotional Reds
pun off rare rally

to beat the Cubs
CINCINNATI (AP) - All
of the televisions were turned
off in the clubhouse. Subdued
Cincinnati Reds players kept
to themselves, bracing for an
emotional moment.
They wondered how they
would respond when they
took the field Tuesday night
and heard the national anthem.
They weren't sure how they
could get through a game that
seemed trivial in light of the ·
terrorist attacks.
However, Brady Clark's twoout, two- run single in the
ninth left the Reds celebrating
a 6-5 victory over the Chicago
Cubs, a comeback that was
·overshadowed by baseball's
comeback to Cincinnati. ·
was a
emotion," first baseman Sean Casey
said. "Baseball's been on the
back burner for so long. I got
really emotional when the fans
were chanting 'USA! USA!' I
wapted to be in the stand&lt;
chanting with them."
When the crowd of 21 ,304
slowly and rhythmically waved
American flags and sang "God
Bless America" during the seventh-inning stre tch , players
stopped in place and swallowed
hard.
"When they sang 'God Bless
America; there was a big, big
emotion right there," Sammy
Sosa
said, pounding his chest
I DID IT- Cincinnati's Brady Clark, left, is congratulated by' coach Bill Doran after Clark
for emphasis. "That was some"
drove in two runs In the bottom of the ninth inning to defeat Chicago Tuesday. (AP)

thing. that brings you back, that
(jfis you up."

The Cubs blew a 5-3 lead in
the ninth in part because their
closer is out indefinitely.
Tom Gordon's tender right
elbow got so bad during workouts over the weekend that he
decided to get it checked.
Baylor didn 't reveal his,,doser's problem until after the
game. It became apparent
something · was amiss when
Gordon didn't warm up for the
ninth.
Sosa's RBI single completed
a three-run seventh that put
the Cubs up 4-3. and Ron
Coomer added a run-scoring
single in the ninth off Danny
Graves
not gotten a save
season and hasn't saved a game
since July 29 last year, pitched
out of an eighth-inning threat
and ·was kept in the game.
Farnsworth (4-5) immediately got in trouble by walking
Casey, giving up a single to
Aaron Boone and.then an RBI
single to Dmitri Young. After a
sacrifice left runnerS on second
and third, Farnsworth got Jason
LaRue on a called third strike
for the second out.
Clark, a pinch hitter, slapped
a single into the right-field
corn~r for only th e Reds' third
win this season when they've
trailed after the eighth inning.

Tribe
pounds
KC
in
retum·
Meigs v-·ball- posts
PREP ROUNDUP

win over V. County
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

The Meigs Marauder volleyball team continued their
march toward another TVC championship Tuesday
evening by running its record to. 7-0 after defeating Vinton County 15-0, 15-4.
Corrie Hopver Led Meigs with 16 points on ,I B~of-18
serving and one kilL Jaynee Davis added seven points
with 7- of-7 serving and three kills and three blocks,
Mindy Chancey added four points on 6-of-6 serving and
· rwo assists and Nikki Butcher added three points on 5of-5 serving. Katie Jeffers and Kayte Davis each had four
kills and Chrissy Miller added three.
'
As a teain Meigs was 36-of-36 serving.
The Marauders will put their perfect record on the line
on Thursday when they play Eastern.

Belpre holds TVC GoH lead
Belpre continued to dominate the TVC's Ohio Division G()lf standings after posting a win We\lnesday
evening at Pine Hills Golf Course outside of Pomeroy.
Belpre carded a 154, followed by Wellston with a 164.
Meigs posted a 172, Vinton County a 17 3, Alexander a
174 and Nelsonville-York had a 206.
Justin Applebaum of Belpre was match medalist with a
rwo ovet par 36. Jeremy Banks and Josh Napper led
Meigs wit~ 40's, Ben Bookman added a 43 and Josh Ray
a 49.
The lastTVC match of the season will be Wednesday at
Oxbow.
·
TVC OHIO DIVI8KlN GOLF fi!ANOINGS
8 motcl!oo)

c-

1.Belpre 40 pclnta: 2. Meigs 27: 3. Alexander 20; 4. Vinton Counly 9; 5. Nelaonll.llle-York o.

I

CLEVELAND (AP)
Once Travis Fryman took his
spot at third b:lse, he paused
for a moment and soaked it all

10.

American
flags
waved
everywhere. Fans decked out
in red , ~flite and blue
cheered. And for the first time
in a week, there was some
laughter and smiles.
"I thought the fans might be
a. little subdued," Fryman said
before hittin g a grand slam in
Cleveland's. 11 -2 win over the
Kansas City Royals Tuesday
night. ·
"But there was a lot of hollering. With the fans yelling
'U-S-A' you really sensed the
magnitude of the events of the
last week.
"I think everybody feels a
great sense of togetherness. I'll
remember this game and the
events leading up to it forever...
Fryman hit a grand slam
during Cleveland's seven-run
fifth, Kenny Lofton homered
twice and the Indians returned
from a weeklong layoff following . the terrorist attacks
with a lopsided win .
They may have been briefly
delayed in line, but Cleveland's
fans didn't have ro wait long to
cheer as Loftorf homered lead-

SUPPORTIVE - Indians
Sabathia, left, sports a
Cleveland Poll'ce cap in the dugout prior to the game Tuesday
in Cleveland. At right, pitcher Ryan Drese'.s uniform sports the
American flag. (AP)
ing off the first.
third, but scored just one Lofton homered again in on a 'passed ball with rwo outs
the third, driving a 3-2 pitch - when Finley struck out the
.
{
from Chad Durbin (7-15) side. ·
. over the wall m nght-center · Chuck Finley (7-6) !lad his
second straight impressive
for h1s 14th homer.
The Royals loaded the bases outing, allowing one run and
on three straight singles in the five hits in six innings.
I

..

�The Daily Sentinel

•

Amenca at War

'

Inside:

Page A&amp;

•

'

Weclnesd.y, September 19,1001

First criminal ch~rges filed by FBI.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal authOrifies filed the first criminal
charges arisi'!g from the terrorism
investigation after finding three
men in Michigan with airport diagrams and phony immigration documents. Armed with new legal
powers, agents expanded their
efforts to find possible terrorist collaborators.
·
The arrests in Detroit occurred
after FBI agents raided a residence
looking for one of the nearly 200
witnesses being sought in the investigation . Instead, they found the
three men and a ciche of documents. The trio was charged Tuesday in Detroit with fraud and misuse of visas, passports and other

immigration documents.
Attorney General John Ashcroft
expanded the terrorism investigation Tuesday to include U.S. attorneys in every city, vowing to wage a
"concerted national assault."
Aided by a federal grand jury in
White Plains, N.Y., the investigation
has detained 75 people for questioning and has four people under
.arrest as material witnesses.
The government also announced
a new policy giving investigators
wide latitude in detaining the nonU.S. citizens whom it takes into
custody on possible immigration
violations in the terrorist probe,
including allowing authorities 48
hours, or longer in emergencies, to

decide whether to charge an alien
with status violations, up from 24
hours. The Justice Department also
has drafted legislation that would
allow the attorney general to arrest.
and deport suspected terrorists
without presenting evidence in a
court, The Washington Post reported in Wednesday's editions.
In the criminal case against the
three men in Detroit, an affidavit
filed in court provided a glimpse of
the FBI's massive investigation . But
the court papers ~ave no indication
that the FBI be1feved the three men
had anything to do with last week's
terrorist attacks that led to the
destruction of New York's World
Trade Center and heavy damage to

the Pentagon .
In a five-page document. FBI special agent Robert Pertuso said that
he and agents on the Joint Terrorism Task Force in the Detroit FBI
recovered "handwritten sketches of
what appeared to be a diagram of an
airport flight line, to include aircraft
and runways" when they went to a
residence as part of the probe ·o f ~he
World Trade Center mack. They
were looking for a man on "a list of
suspects, potential associates of. the
suspects and potential witnesses,"
Pertuso wrote.
They found the name of the man
they were looking for on the mailbox outside, but the three men in
the residence denied knowing him.

The agents spotted Detroit Metropolitan
Airport
identification
badges for food service workers ·and
the men said they were previously
employed at the airport.
In addition to the false papers arnt
the sketches, the agents observed a
day planner containing notations an
" .
the "American base in Turkey," .tile
" American foreign minister" agi;!
"Alia Airport," Jordan, the FBI atr~r
davit said. The affidavit did not
explain the reference to "U.S. foreign minister." The three men ar~
Karim Koubriti , 23; Ahmed Hartnan, 33; and Farouk Ali-Haimoud,
21. The man the FBI ~as hunting
for was Nabil Al-Marabh.
•

New York mayor holds out little U.S. using carrot and sticks to linti
up nations for anti-terrorism fight:
hope of unearthing survivors
WASHINGTON (AP) The United States is ready
to reward friends and punish
nations that don't sign up
for a fierce new war on terrorism. Some countries will
be lure'd to help with tasty
carrots, others pummeled
with hard sticks.
"In different uations the
carrot may be bigger; in
other nations, the stick may
·be bigger," White House
spokesman Ari Fleischer said
Tuesday.
Afghanistan is clearly the
main recipient of the stick
so far: the Bush administration has warned the_ ruling
Taliban militia in Kabul that
it faces military attacks for
harboring 'suspected terrorist Osama bin Laden.
Pakistan, Indonesia and
Jordan - . perhaps even
Sudan or Cuba - may get
carrots.
,
Sen. Sam Brownback, RKan.; said Pakistan should be
rewarded · for assisting the
United States in pressuring

NEW YORK (AP) - As
hopes dimmed for finding survivors entombed in the still.Jsmoldering rubble of the
World Trade Center, a city in
mourning drew solace that
prosecutors had already begun
seeking those responsible for
so much bloodshed.
Authorities said Tuesday that
a federal grand jury had been
meeting since last week to
investigate the suicide hijackings that destroyed the rwin·,
11 0-story towers on Sept. 1 1.
The grand jury, which
would
typically
include
between 16 and 23 jurors, has ·
been meeting. in White Plains.
a northerOJ suburb. The community is part of the federal
-]COUrt system's Southern District of New York, which has
historically led investigations
related to Osama bin Laden,
the prime suspect in the
attacks.
The disclosure came as the
number of confirmed dead
·ing 5,422 missing in the sevenstory heap of rubble .at the
southern tip of Manhattan.
The bodies of rwo police
officers were pulled early
Wednesday from the wreckage, police detective Bobby
Bell said. Police officers, firefighters, sanitation workers and
volunteers at the site saluted.

OLD GLORY - A fireman carries an American flag to the highest point he could find as Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and other
officials watch during a press tour of the site of the World
Trade Center, the area known as Ground Zero. (AP) ·

Airliner·cOckpHs: 'Last-ditch
_jof defense to be held at all costs'
BY MARCIA DuNN

was . not op~ned. Now, post-

/IP AEROSPACE WRITER
Sept. 11, we'll have to re-evaluThe cockpit ·of America's ate that."
not-so-distant iUture may be
During a teleconference
barricaded behind a bulletproof Monday, airline employees and
and grenade-proof door. No representatives of the airlines
one would open it, not even the and air industries discussed pasarmed pilots, until the plane sible short-term solutions to the
lands.
security issue. Suggestions
"For us, it's obvious right up ranged from putting webbing
front that the cockpit now has behind the cockpit door to
to become a last-ditch line of entangle an intruder, giving
defense to .be held at all costs;' pilots time to use a stun gun or
said John Mazor, an Air Line other weapon, to leaving hot
Pilots Association representative. coffee on the burner' during
"Nothing is off the table;· he takeoff for use against hijackers.
said, "not even guns:'
A flight attendant proposed the
_ The pilots' association is lead- latter idea.
1mg the charge to improve cockPrest said some options come
pit security after last week's ter- down to deciding which risk i&lt;
rorist hijackings that ended in worse having passengers
attacks on the World Trade · slipping on coffee during an
. Center and the Pentagon. The evacuation, or having coffee
group's No. 1 priority is to ready to fling at a hijacker;
replace the airliners • flimsy allowing a cockpit door to open
cockpit doors.
· automatically when an air presA! Prest, vice presideht of sure differential occurs or
operations for the Air Transport installing ·deadbolts that would
Association, is a member of a keep the door closed in a
cockpit security panel that is decompression with damaging
part of a larger airliner task force results.
created this week by TransMost experts agree stronger
portation Secretary Norman cockpit doors and armed pilots
Mineta. The cockpit panel could have made · a difference
· hopes to submit preliminary Sept. 11.
recommendations· to the Feder"I've heard fiom a lot of pilots
a! Aviation Administration this who would ·strongly say they
week.
would like to be able to have
Prest said that before last arms in there, guns. so if someweek's carnage, airline officials one does break through, they're
believed. society would not tol- not defenseless," said Dav,d
erate allowing a hijacker to kill Stempler, president of the · Air
"a hostage a minute if an air- Travelers Association. ·
plane weren't put down at a
The bullets could be similar
particular airport o~ if the door to those used by federal sky

·----- - - - - - -

marshals. breakable and capable
of piercing a body but not the
hull of a plane, Stempler said
Current U.S. cockpit doors
were designed for privacy, not
security. The FAA requires the
doors to be closed and locked
from . takeoff until landing,
unless a crew member needs to
exit, and to be breakable from
inside the cockpit in an emergency. Cockpits are equipped
with a crash ax, just in case.

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agreeing to provide airspace
rights for possible U.S. military
action
against
Afghanistan.
"The United States is
going to have to ·show the
people in Pakistan that it's
good to be in a good relationship with the United

FOREIGN RELATIONS- Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov
speaks during a news conference at the Russian E:mbassy·ln
Washington. (AP)
·
·~ '

States," Brown back · said,
who is a member of the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.
Pakistan has been under
U.S. sanctions because of its
nuclear weapons program
and the ouster of its democratic government two years
Gen. Pervez Mushar~
current
Indonesia and Jordan, both
Islamic countries that have
spoken strongly against the
Sept. 11 terror attacks in the
United States, 'may find
heightened Bush administration interest in concluding proposed trade agreements.

For Indonesia, there ' also
may be the possibility of· a
renewal of military ties, suspended at the time of the
upheaval in East Timor.
Those issues were on t~e
agenda Wednesday for the
visit of Indonesian President
Megawati
Sukarnoputri.
was to meet with
Robert Zoellick after seeing
President Bush and haviiJg
lunch with him. ·
"That's an important symbol for the rest of the world
of
whether
President
Megawati will be successful
with democracy and tolerance," Zoellick said.

.

The Daily Sentinel

Diamond ,Roundup, Page 83
Prep grid ra~:~kings posted, Page 86

'

~ge. Bl
Wednesday. September 19,1001

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
P. Martinez out

for.season

BOSTON (AP) - Boston
· Red Sox ace Pedro Martinez
said he will miss the rest of
the year with inflammation in
his right shoulder.
Martinez, placed on the 15day disabled list, will begin
rehabilitation as soon as the
season is over, general manag'er Dan Duquette said. Martinez was 7-3 with a 2.39
ERA ihis s~:ason .

NFL .will play 16; playoffs unkn
NEW YORK (AP) - Imagine a
doubleheader at the N ew Orleans
Superdome on what was supposed to
be Super Bowl Sunday - both conference championships in one stadium
in one day.
· · Or imagine the regular season rnding Jan. 6 and playoffs beginning Jan .
9, with some teams potentially playing
thrre games in eight days.
Those are rwo scenarios put forth
by the NFL when it announced Tuesday. that it will play a full 16-game
schedule while still trying to cram the
usual 12 teams into the playoffs
instead of reducing the fi eld to eight
teams.

"I'll be mrious' to see 111h,u
jollofi1S after this. fJJ lwte to
dismpt the playC!IJ's in that
sitr~ation"
Andy Reid al Philadelphia

"Hopefully. they can find a way to '
get all the games in;' said New
Orleans general. manager Randy
Mueller, whose team· is one of many
contenders that could miss an eightteam playoff.
·
"It would not come without some
hardships. It might require playing the
games in 14 days or 10 days. It's hard,

but the Canadian league does it. I
don't know if the players would support that, but I know our players want
to go to the playoffs.''
· ''J'Il ·bc curious to see what follows
after this," added Andy Reid of
Philadelphia, another team that might
be affected. ''I'd hate to disrupt the
playoffs in that situation ... . I'm sure
they'll come up with an answer for it.
They" understand the importance of
the playoffs."
Co!llrriissioner Paul Tagliabue said
the league's competition committee .
voted unanimously to keep the 16ganle format, switching the games
called off last weekend to the week-

Zanarcli faces
more surgery
BERLIN (AP) Alex
Zanardi faced another operation as he recovers from 'the
crash that forced the amputation of his legs.
J;loctors have said . the !tal- ·
ian driver's life is no longer
immediately
· threatened,
although he remains in an
"induced coma." The biggest
danger remains delayed kidney or heart failure.
Zanardi, the two-time
CART champion, was to have
a third operation Wednesday
to cbeck for fragments and
infection.
His legs were amputated at ·
· the knees following the crash
Saturday in the American
Memorial ·500.

Wyoming driver
charg~ . ·
LARAMIE, Wyo. (AP)
The lone ~urvivor of a wreck
that killed eight University of
charged with vehicular homicide and being drun_k at the
time of the crash.
Clinton Haskins, a member
of the university's rodeo team.
was charged with eight counts
of aggravated vehicular homicide. The complaint . also
charged Haskins ·was drunk
but provided no specifics.
Haskins' pickup collided
head-on early Sunday with a
sport-utility vehicle carrying
eight, members of the cross
country team returning from
a non-school trip to Colorado.

Grizzlies sir
Pau Caso
MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP) The Memphis Grizzlies and
Spanish forward Pau Gasol
agreed to a deal that could be
· w~rth nearly $14 million, but
some of it will go to his Spanish league team.

Jumper
suspended over
Ritalin test
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. (AP) -A University of
South Carolina long jumper
was suspended and stripped of
her fourth-place finish in a
national event after testing
positive for a banned sub•
stance.
Antoinette Wilks tested
positive for methylphenidate
in March at the USA Indoor
Track and Field Championships in Atlanta, sai.;l Ricl:t
Wanninger. spokesman for the
U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.
She was suspended for rwo
years, but the ban will be
reduced .to 10 months
because she takes the substance - known by its brand
name Ritalin - for medical
·reasons. She will be granted a
medical .exemption to use the
drug
. at the end of the suspenston.

•••••

Follow all your favorite
prep sports in The Sentinel.

end ofJan. 5-7, when wild card games
had been scheduled.
But he said the committee is still
looking at ways to keep three division
winner.i and three wild card teams in
each conference rather than the three
winners and just one wild card.
When the teams return, they are
likely to have the regular officials
back.
As for the playoffs, Tagliabue said:
"We continue to work on keeping
six division winners, six wild cards
and our entite postseason format
intact. Several options have been pre-

Please see NFL II

Emotional Reds
pun off rare rally

to beat the Cubs
CINCINNATI (AP) - All
of the televisions were turned
off in the clubhouse. Subdued
Cincinnati Reds players kept
to themselves, bracing for an
emotional moment.
They wondered how they
would respond when they
took the field Tuesday night
and heard the national anthem.
They weren't sure how they
could get through a game that
seemed trivial in light of the ·
terrorist attacks.
However, Brady Clark's twoout, two- run single in the
ninth left the Reds celebrating
a 6-5 victory over the Chicago
Cubs, a comeback that was
·overshadowed by baseball's
comeback to Cincinnati. ·
was a
emotion," first baseman Sean Casey
said. "Baseball's been on the
back burner for so long. I got
really emotional when the fans
were chanting 'USA! USA!' I
wapted to be in the stand&lt;
chanting with them."
When the crowd of 21 ,304
slowly and rhythmically waved
American flags and sang "God
Bless America" during the seventh-inning stre tch , players
stopped in place and swallowed
hard.
"When they sang 'God Bless
America; there was a big, big
emotion right there," Sammy
Sosa
said, pounding his chest
I DID IT- Cincinnati's Brady Clark, left, is congratulated by' coach Bill Doran after Clark
for emphasis. "That was some"
drove in two runs In the bottom of the ninth inning to defeat Chicago Tuesday. (AP)

thing. that brings you back, that
(jfis you up."

The Cubs blew a 5-3 lead in
the ninth in part because their
closer is out indefinitely.
Tom Gordon's tender right
elbow got so bad during workouts over the weekend that he
decided to get it checked.
Baylor didn 't reveal his,,doser's problem until after the
game. It became apparent
something · was amiss when
Gordon didn't warm up for the
ninth.
Sosa's RBI single completed
a three-run seventh that put
the Cubs up 4-3. and Ron
Coomer added a run-scoring
single in the ninth off Danny
Graves
not gotten a save
season and hasn't saved a game
since July 29 last year, pitched
out of an eighth-inning threat
and ·was kept in the game.
Farnsworth (4-5) immediately got in trouble by walking
Casey, giving up a single to
Aaron Boone and.then an RBI
single to Dmitri Young. After a
sacrifice left runnerS on second
and third, Farnsworth got Jason
LaRue on a called third strike
for the second out.
Clark, a pinch hitter, slapped
a single into the right-field
corn~r for only th e Reds' third
win this season when they've
trailed after the eighth inning.

Tribe
pounds
KC
in
retum·
Meigs v-·ball- posts
PREP ROUNDUP

win over V. County
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

The Meigs Marauder volleyball team continued their
march toward another TVC championship Tuesday
evening by running its record to. 7-0 after defeating Vinton County 15-0, 15-4.
Corrie Hopver Led Meigs with 16 points on ,I B~of-18
serving and one kilL Jaynee Davis added seven points
with 7- of-7 serving and three kills and three blocks,
Mindy Chancey added four points on 6-of-6 serving and
· rwo assists and Nikki Butcher added three points on 5of-5 serving. Katie Jeffers and Kayte Davis each had four
kills and Chrissy Miller added three.
'
As a teain Meigs was 36-of-36 serving.
The Marauders will put their perfect record on the line
on Thursday when they play Eastern.

Belpre holds TVC GoH lead
Belpre continued to dominate the TVC's Ohio Division G()lf standings after posting a win We\lnesday
evening at Pine Hills Golf Course outside of Pomeroy.
Belpre carded a 154, followed by Wellston with a 164.
Meigs posted a 172, Vinton County a 17 3, Alexander a
174 and Nelsonville-York had a 206.
Justin Applebaum of Belpre was match medalist with a
rwo ovet par 36. Jeremy Banks and Josh Napper led
Meigs wit~ 40's, Ben Bookman added a 43 and Josh Ray
a 49.
The lastTVC match of the season will be Wednesday at
Oxbow.
·
TVC OHIO DIVI8KlN GOLF fi!ANOINGS
8 motcl!oo)

c-

1.Belpre 40 pclnta: 2. Meigs 27: 3. Alexander 20; 4. Vinton Counly 9; 5. Nelaonll.llle-York o.

I

CLEVELAND (AP)
Once Travis Fryman took his
spot at third b:lse, he paused
for a moment and soaked it all

10.

American
flags
waved
everywhere. Fans decked out
in red , ~flite and blue
cheered. And for the first time
in a week, there was some
laughter and smiles.
"I thought the fans might be
a. little subdued," Fryman said
before hittin g a grand slam in
Cleveland's. 11 -2 win over the
Kansas City Royals Tuesday
night. ·
"But there was a lot of hollering. With the fans yelling
'U-S-A' you really sensed the
magnitude of the events of the
last week.
"I think everybody feels a
great sense of togetherness. I'll
remember this game and the
events leading up to it forever...
Fryman hit a grand slam
during Cleveland's seven-run
fifth, Kenny Lofton homered
twice and the Indians returned
from a weeklong layoff following . the terrorist attacks
with a lopsided win .
They may have been briefly
delayed in line, but Cleveland's
fans didn't have ro wait long to
cheer as Loftorf homered lead-

SUPPORTIVE - Indians
Sabathia, left, sports a
Cleveland Poll'ce cap in the dugout prior to the game Tuesday
in Cleveland. At right, pitcher Ryan Drese'.s uniform sports the
American flag. (AP)
ing off the first.
third, but scored just one Lofton homered again in on a 'passed ball with rwo outs
the third, driving a 3-2 pitch - when Finley struck out the
.
{
from Chad Durbin (7-15) side. ·
. over the wall m nght-center · Chuck Finley (7-6) !lad his
second straight impressive
for h1s 14th homer.
The Royals loaded the bases outing, allowing one run and
on three straight singles in the five hits in six innings.
I

..

�Wednesday,

~~B2•T~~~~~~~~~---------~-~P~o;m;e;ro;;y,~M~I;~;I~~~rt~,~O~h~l~o~--~------~

..

~ribune -

~pt

19, 2001

Sentinel- l\~~-J

CLASSIFIED

;

•
•

.

.

NATlONAL LEAGUE

.

Wasted chances in
the wild Nl West

We Co,ve

Meigs, Gallla, .
And Mason
Counties Lll&lt;e
N:o One
Else Can1

'•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
: The Arizona Diamond lncks built a big lead for 20game winner Curt Schilling.
· The San Francisco Giants
called on closer Robb Nen
in the ninth.
; And streaking starter Terry
*dams was shutting down
~an Diego at Do?ger Stadi-

CalUaCINftly,OH

'·.

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1'888- 562•3345
Rate. WHh AJr And Un· end FREE mop• contact lrom $297 to $363. Walk to Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4..
derplnnlng 1-888-928-3426 Anthony und Co., Lid. •hoi&gt;
&amp; movlea.
74o- eveninga.
for $10. Open
sat. 8-5pm.
&amp;•
446-2568.
Equal Call
Housing
DIJWhurst
Green·
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1982 14x58 Clakbrook Mo- IJ00.213-8388.
Opportunity.
house MI. Alto. (304)895· :
r10
HoMEll
bile
Home.
Good
.
Condition.
www.alcland.com
.
Ch"'
'
F
mil
ll
.
3740
leave massage.
or.
FOR SAlE
$5.000 (304)882-3693
ua)Y 1 a y v1ng, ,(.304::::::!):::89::5::::·3::7:::89:_
___
33140 New Uma Rd., Rul- 1982 .t4x70 Falnnonl Hapland, Ohio, 740-742-7403. Independent Harbalife Dis'
1100 sq. ft. House. New wir- pyhouse mobile homo, 3 IJ'11!""-~----, "4'8rtmenl, home ond trailer tributor, Coil For Product Or
ing, plumbing, furnace. 8x24 bedroom"s, $10.000. Call r10
Hols;;s
renlala. Commercial store- Opponunlty. (740,441-1982
treated
wood
deck. {740)441-8959. leave mas- t.,._..;FPRi:liiiiRENrlilili.-rl tronta available lor lease.
E

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~

I

A~n·GE

8

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lsBaid~a"bo"; d~~

G~od ri~uaii ~mtyenlal ,a,::

~j;hed

j

NbeaEAuRIIIui~IOacreQIRractAN:StedA

PR~

?n':;

I

CN~s.

Baseball

":file Daily Sentinel

Philadelp1111
NowYo&lt;tt
Florlde
MonlrMI
Hooston
'St. LOOII
Ch~go

Mllwaukos •
Clnolnnstl
Pittsburgh

hom.'

Found· 2 dogs on State
Route 143, young male
Beagle. young lemale Re·
triever mix, (740)698,4031 .

FOUND· Great Dane on o1
R
oute 160 near Vinton, Call
(740P88·8248 and identity.
Lost·
between
BaileySt.Run
Rd., Hilltop
Grocery
Rt
124, Boston Terrier, be·
longs lo Leo &amp; Sheryl
Gibbs, (740)9a2-7774.
Reward- 2 lost male Labs,
adult black wlknot on left
hind leg &amp; small yellow Lab,

call (740)698-4031 .

r

YARDSALE

Rax's taking applicetlonslor
day &amp; nightonly.
shifts.Apply
S8noos
ap"'lcants
at
,..
1540 Eastem Avenue.
HHis Nursing Center
sand resume to Special Is p~eparing to hold a NuiO·
Care S8"'i""s, 1743 cent• lng Assistant Traintng clau
nary Road,
'"~ Gallipolis. OH beginning s eptembor t7 ,
45631 or tail 10 (740,446- 2001. Anyone interested
6354 phone (740,446-9565 needs to apply In person at
311 Buckrldge Rood Bid·
ATTENTION
well, Ohio 45614 Thbetween
WE NEED HELPI
9am and 4:30pm. e cIass
$500·$1500 PT
Is free of charge.
$2.000·56,000
Free TrainingFT ·
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
t-866·807·RICH . is now accepting appllcawww.comaworkwithme.com tlons lor COrtlfiod Nursong
- - - - - - - - Aos11tan1s lor the lollowlng
Attn: Work trom home, pceltions: 2 lull-time 6·2, 3
$500· $7,000/mo. in your fuil·llme 2-10, and .t lullspare lime. Fres booklet.
lime t 0-l!. Please apply in
www.loeloeno-ngeiNes.com . person at 311 Buckridge
h666·70t-3660.
Rood Bidwell. Ohio 45614
or cell Slephanie Kemper at
(7'\0)+18-7160.
Scenic Hilla Nursing Cont.,
Is looking lor 21ull·time IIconsed preotlcal nurses,
one for t 1-7 and one for 311 . II Interested, please call
Stephanie Kemper at
(740,446-7150 or como In
and fill out an application In
at 311 Buckridge
personBldwall,
Road,
Ohio 45614.
We have an
Scenic Hills Is an squai Of&gt;"
pcrtunily employer.
immediate
Someone to otay wtth elderfull·time
ly women in her home Mon.
Momlng till Fri. Morning.
customer
(304,675-3523
service 'position
Tha Athens-Meigs Educa-

Custonll'r

YARDSAUl-

GAWI'OUs

20th, 21st, 22nd. 209 Glen
Drive (across from Medical
Plaza, Good gins &amp; boya
school · clothes &amp; coats,
homecoming

dresses,

sweepers, gas weed eater.

Big Garage SOla- proceeds
to SCenic Hill Strikers, 21st

&amp; 22nd, 9am-5pm, 4918 Bulavllle Pike.

Fnday and Saturdey, 21st
and 22nd, 8:30am·?. NAS-

Sl'nit"l'

open in our
CA A, Little likes, Name
main office .
Brand clothing, tools, misc.
Successful
7 South Gallipolis, 1.5 milas
to Clipper Mills on Orchard
applicant must
Hill, Watch Signs.
be people
Thursday- Friday &amp; Saturoriented, enjoy
day, 9am-6pm, 3679 State
~oute 3255. Household
using tlie
Items, nice clothing, 3 tamuy
and CORA WSCW.
. phone,
computer
Yard Sate- Thursday 9120Fnday 9121. 9am·5pm. 1~3
literate,
and
Second Avenue.
enjoy working
YARDSA!b
: l'oMF.ROY/Mmvu;: 1 with numbers.
Position offers
5 Points area, Sept. 21 &amp;
all company
22, clolhlng, toys, . tools,
benefits
doors, auto parts, Honda
cycle .
including
Moving yard sale· 9/16, 19.
health and life
20th, 1~14 lincoln Heights,
401 k,
insurance,
(740,992·7321 .
paid vacation~
and personal
days. For
Rick F'eanJon Auction ComBmployment
pany, full time auctlonf8r,
complete auction IIIVIce.
considerBtion,
Licensed •66,0hio &amp; West send resume to:
VIrginia, 304-773-5785 Or

r

r~1

304-773·5447.

r

WJ\N'IID
roBuv

AbsolUte Top Dollar: u.s.

Sliver, Gold Coins, Prool·
aeta,

Diamonds,

Rings,

U~ S -

Need 7 Ledles to san Avon.

Gold

Currency,~

M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sse-

and Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·

446-2642.
wa nted 10 buy used 'mobile

homes. Call (740,446·0175

t ·3 """'"""ns

M~

www.megabucks4you ·not
Applk:atlons being taken lor
Counter Clerk lor local dry

LosrAND

r

I Business

1
ag·ement ..... m,· nursingman·
staff
... with .xc.ll.nl
d Iac IItty
an
,00 Iatory compliance 0ppo~unlly tor prolenlonal
growth, benalita, pey commensursto with experience.
Interested
candidates
ahould app1Y to.· Rock·
springs Rehabilitation Codnler, 36759 Rocksprings R .,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Equel Opportunity Employer
Enccurag Ing Workpiaoe 01varsity.
B~

I'"'

'fRAooNG

Golllpollt C.I'MI College
(Coree111 Close To Home)
CaM Today I 740-446-43117,
1-800·214-0452,
Rep 190-o5-t274B.

1116

WJ\N'IID
""o
•• Do

I

All Make Mowllrs, Lawn
Tractors, Tlllera Repaired.
Free pick-up, Delivery Avail·
able. 21 Yaare E•penence.
Coli Mike. (740
7604
David's General Contracting
Plumbing,
electrical,
ing,
docka.
roofe. paintCall
(740,256·9373 (304,6336265

,448-

lie

WJ\N'IID
To Do

I

Georges Portable Sawmill,

to the
mill jusl call304-675-1957.

tional Service Center has a don't haul yOur logs

opening lor a Partlime (15 houre per week)
Custodian, lo wor11 al tho
Rome Canaan Learning
Conlar. Submit 1et1er of interaattc John D. Coatanzo.
poo~lon

30 08
1
7 roo
. m &amp; batt .. with
&amp; pm.
r&lt;r
• or uy.
a11nga,
- st•)ve
-~~Rn,F
rs 800
" ·31 93323 E~ · 1709 ·
rolngorator•(740,992·9064.
522 Grant St ·• 1st 1i•me Buyers· Coli o ak• ·
••
Middleport,
wood, Gallipolis todayl 1 bedroom, AIC, 1 belh,
Affordable new. home, 3 Gov't backed program- buy kitchen
has
~gr=;.LRba~~tc~tt~~~
looal (740,446-3093
2$350/nd:;•(7n~,).:.:Jlt&gt;'!e,
'
•
28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom On·
gorego,
in tha 70nice
,s Coli
level
torlot,
more
Prioed
de· · ly $345.00 Per Monlh
'
1 level, 3'bedroom, t &amp; 112
tills (740)446•2601
6.99% Fixed Interest Rate, beth, centrllllr, 2 cor 00•
·
·
t-666-828-3426
rege. In Middleport, $425
Count,Y Farm House Charm
plus depoSit &amp; relorencea,
without the farm. 3 bed- 3 112 acres W/3br. mobile (740)992 •-.
rooms 2 112 baths newly homo. Old Farm hoose 210
·
-··
remodeled. Soulh;.eslern of e mile on . Shlney Rd. 2 bedroom horilo close lo
School District· (740)379- $35,000
Dead end
gravel and
rd. $4251
town, besernont.
River vtaw,
or $10,000
month; 3 bedroom
In
8887
·
toke over paymenta. t-877- town, t-112 baths. Good toFor Sale brick ranch ety1e 230-3256
calion. $5001 month. Aelerhome. just oul of New He•
encos end dapcllt required.
von- bjlslde sun Rise me- 94 14x70 Oakwood, must (740)446-3844.
monll Gardens on Rt 33,
moved, 2 bedroom, 2 lull
·
1 t/4 acres, 3 br. 2 fire pia- bathe, comes with eldres, 3 bedroom home Minorevilla
cas: (beaemont includes an $15,000. (740,448-9337 • aros, river vlow, relorences
extra kitchen, TV room, Abend ed 0 bl wide- required. dopceit required,
bedroom, beth) 2 car go- tree ~~P &amp; de~~.~- Hur· ~ peta, 740·992-em afttr
rage, pnvato
rural31l4·662setUng. ry- 1 only· (740,446-309~5pm
50x60
ehed call
·~
-·::;:.;;.·-----·
Ashland FleetwOOd 2oo2 3 bedroom house In town,
2050 or 304-862.3665.
Doublewlde 528 ,228.- ,.:Toll (740)441·9216.
For sale by owner. Nice bi- Free 868-805-5819 IOtmin 3 Bedroom House in Syl8level home on 1 acre near flOm HunUngton
.' ..
cueo 01110 . $460/ Monlh
Cheater. Three bodloom,
HUD' An roved (304)87S·
two baths, one-car garage, Asllland Flaetwood Sa~em~ends only
lemil1 room with fireplace, ber special. 2002 t4x70 5332 ,
sun room. New central heala 3bd/2ba.: $19,990 Free Del. 3 bedroOm newer home
Ing &amp; we
_,
satup. lioII Froe 1....,..
DI!Ul
systo7,m.butOn
m-I 805-6619
&amp;
near
Porter,
$425/mo.
Denute off Route
stilla prJ.
. ·
·
post &amp;
reference
required.
vale. (740)985·3981
(740)446-2601attor 5pm.
Deluxe horile, seve $5,446,
new 2000 model Sk)'Dne, 3 3 bedroom, 2-112 beth, 1
bedroom. 2 bath, total eleo- bedroom on 11111oor, family
trio, vinyl &amp; shingle. low room. In town. $525/mo. No
monthly payments, dellv- smoking. no lnllde pets.
.,ed &amp; oetup Includes alcirt- (740)448·1945, II no aning &amp; stops, Colee MQblle awer. leave massego.
Homes, US 50 Eest, Atheno. Oh, 740-592·1972
Pilot Program, Renters
All retl ntate advenlalng ::::::..:.:.::..:.::..:=.::.:.:...._
Needed, 304-736·7295. .
In thla newapaper 11
Final Days, Nallonwide In·
.
• •

Quality housecleal"'ing, lm·
maculate, natlculoua, detailed cleanl~. The a.bao-

IUbjecllO the fedll'lll
Fair Houalng Act of 1111
which m~~kH II Illegal to
lldvwtl• ....,,

ventory

Red~ctlonl

20 hours a week. Sand re-

port, Ohio 45760 by·Sept. (740)441-4236 .or (740)446-

- ~th.

Trained and Employed In

14·16 days. Full benoflta.
35-40K tat YR. No Coli
Tuition to Qualified "pplicenta. No up front money.
Cali Now 1·877·63TRAIN

0151 ask for Ron. lr no

answer, leave message.

Wllleot wllh the eldeny In
their home, will do cooking,
houae cleaning ect .. Mon .·

Fri.

304~75-7721

11 \\"\1 1\1

Dollar Plus, Ohio Rlvar Pia·

.c.:.=.:.;;.;===..:....-

j

Lend-home peckegos- all
areaa. Prequlllfy by phone.
(740,448·3563
llmiled Or No .Credit? Gov·
emment Bank Finance Only
AI Oakwood In .Barbours·
ville, wv 31l4·736-3409.

Syracuse··

ne~

iftr;~H~OliSEHOID;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;1 We

house on
(,.304::.:.-,..:736-340=.:..:.::.9- -·- - river, 2 . bedroom, beth &amp;

I

j

b!:t p;;

have two, only nee&lt;:!

one. For sole 1994 Pace .
eo
Trail ""~ white
rgo
or. wovr.
·
~~)!"J.~: ,200. Phone
.
·
Window Air Conditioner
(304,675-5049
·
BUILDING

garage, big
Gooos
deok, $660 a month plua
·
$650 dapoalt. (740)385- Appliances: Roccndltioned
11 59.
Wosllertl, Dryers, Ranges,
Taking a~J~&gt;Icetlone lor a 2 Rol~gretora, Up To 90 Oaya
bedroome in a quiet neigh- Guarenteedl Wo Sail New
borhood. (740)448-6939 Maylag Appliances, French
leave messego.
City Ma1Jag, 740-446-7795.
halt, 2 oar

Now 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
M0BJu: HOMES
Only $19,860. Free Delivery
FORRENr
&amp; Set Up. 1·888·928·2426 ~
·
New 18&gt;&lt;60, 3 bedroom, 2 1995 , 3 bedroom, 2 beth
advertl•ment• tor rul
beth, only $600 down. call mobile homo in Gr-.Tor·
Hllte Which II In
Nikki (740)385-43117.
raoo trlller coun. $450 per
violation ot tht .faw. Our
,...,. .........by
.N 2002 Fleelwood I month. Depooll end Reltr•
ow
on Y onooa
required.
Cali
Informed 11111111
$n5
per .:.....:....
(740)446-7486.
-llingo edwrtiood In
month,down and
call $150.85
Cheryl,
_ _ _ _:-:-'lhll MIW. .per ll'e
&lt;740)365-4367
'
2 bedroom troller in Mleon
lvt!la~le on an equal
N be k
1• 70 3 neld to W•lmart CIA, ocv·
opportunity bUll.
.,:'room~ 2
s-499 orad corpor1, roferonces,
&amp; move-in Oakwood- Qalllp- coli
lor
oPpolntmont
1•• (740'448 ~3
.
(740)992·31161
o• ·
' w•
For sole or lease lg. ranch
2 bedroom lroilar In tho

dlecrlmlnatlon."
Will haul away, clean out,
clean up, move almost any·
The VIllage of Middleport lh~. Other odd jobs. CaU · This newapaper will not
needs a Bulldng Inspector, (7 ,448-7504
knowingly accept

sume to vmage of Middle- Will· power wash houses,
port, 237 Race St., Middle- • trailers, anything. Call

-- waterbad
- - -tor
-sole
-,
Gracious living. 1 and 2 Kingsiza
$50
)
bedroom apartmenls at lnl·
. (304 675-3776
.
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
From $278·$346. Call 740D
.
•
. Equal Housing· Huge Inventory, Iacount
992
5064
Opportunllieo.
p•,,cea, on Viny1 Skl"l
"ng, .•
.
Dool!l, Windows, A~hors,
Now Taking Applications- Water Heaters. Plumbing &amp;
35 Wost 2 Bedroom Town· Electrical Parts, Fumaceo &amp; .
oouoe •"·rtmenla, Includes Heat Pumps. BannaiiB MD'
Water """Sewage, Trash, bita Home s upply, 7•"
~
•••
$350/Mo., 740-446-ooo&amp;.
9416 www.oNb.com/bennett _ __.:._ _ _ .
Tara Townhouse Aps~- :.:::::_
menta, Very Spacious, 2 NEW AND USED FUR·
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 NANCES FOR SALE1 We ·
112· &amp;elh. Fully Carpeted, Install, Free Estimates, 11
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, pa· ycu doni Call us, We bolh
tlo. Start $38M.1o. No Peta, Lcosel (740)448-ll308, 1·
1.eue Plus Sacurity Deposit 800-29t-o098.
Required, Days: 740-448RESIDENTIAL HOME
3461; Evenings: 740·367OWNERS
0502,740-446.0101.
• -...·,_,
-.. A·~llb'•Tappan HI Efficiency 90% .
...,...
•• •
COli
Gaa Furnaces, Oil Fuma- ..
1WinRI..,T_.
cos, 12 'Saer Heat Pump&amp; • ·
, (304,a75-6679.
Air Condllionlng Systems :
lor application. HUD au bel· Free 8 Year Warranty Ban- •
dlzed apt.tor alderty and noHa Heating &amp; CooHng, 1-•
disabled. EHO.
800· 872-5967
·
www.oNb.oom/bennett
Very nice, 2-3 bedroom
apanmant,
town, large
carport 12x20 1yr.
kitchen, LA, in$600/mc.
Rei· Single
old. $550.
(304,674-4820
e"'"""" &amp; daposll required. WATER WELLS oRILLED.
(740)446-3644
{740)8887311
SI'Ao:
Watenino Speolat: 314 200
1 PSI $21.95 Per tOO; t' 200 .· ·
FORRiiNr
~
PSI $37.00 Per tOO; All :
lor rent in Brass Compression Fillings .
th In Stock.
per mon RON EVANS ENTERPRIB.
EB Jackeon. Ohio, 1-800·
537 8
:;::..:·9::5:::2:__ _ _ __

Gl

lute beat CaU or a lree estiSuperlntendenl, Athens~ msta. (740,256-1131 or 1pNfe~nce. Umttatlon 01
Meigs Educational Sarvlce 666·781-2412.
baed on
Center, 507 Richland Ave- Wanted to care for etder1y in dlacrlmlnatlon
nue, Sullo 1108. Alhens. their home. Call al race, eolor, religion, MX
Ohio 45701 . Application (740,258·6503 If no answer. f1mlllel aratua or national
deadline: September 24. l,.eave message on voice origin, or 1ny Intention to
INikl lfty IUCh
2001. The AMESC IS an mall.
prole-, llmltltlon or
Equal "Opportunity Employ·
ar/Prov~er.

£~~~~-=-~=

In ·

Phlllles 4, Braves :s
Scott Rolen singled home
the winning run off John
Smoltz
(2-3)
as . host
Philadelphia scored twice in
the ninth inning to rally past
Atlanta and pull within I 112
games of the first- place
Braves in the ,NL East.

r

~

For Silo: Reoondi11onod
wasllers, dryere end ralngotatora. Thomplions "4'PII·
once. 3407 Jackeon Avanuo, (31l4)875-7:)88. ·
Main Slretlt Fumlture
(304,a75- 1422
515 Main Slreet, Point
Pleasant

Suma:s

Blook, briok. 118W8r pipe•, •
windows, lintels, eto. Claude .
Winters, Rio Grande. OH .
Call740-245·5121.
Engl- -lllullcllng .
SyiiOmo, Low Rise Com'
merclal and Industrial a..v .
custom lizo, Inc'~·.
·~ A·~a·•.
., •

Now &amp; Uaed Furniture . tlon Warehouse and Agri- :
Ne.w 2 Place Uvlngroom cultural. COl lor OIICOUntl
·Sulteo, S39U. Buy, Sell, AB Contracting, Inc. (304) .
Trade. .
.
874-0100
.
Now And Uted Furniture
__l'Dnt .
Store Below Holldey Inn, L--•~iiiii!ll;liiii._.j

i

j·.

~rytr Kenauga. We Sell Grave -

za, now hiring management

style home, 4 br., 3 ba., w/

Apply In person or lex reaume to (304)738-3092.

ocreenod in polio porch, 2 Naw Doubla Wldo. $1115 hoo
. kup, Iorge . yord. $300 Monuments And VOMo.
AKC Mlriaturo Poodlot, vo1 .
car garage $78,000.
Par Monthl 3 Bedroom, 2 ron! pluo utilities, $200 do•
.
·
chooked, ahota current, vory ..
Selh.
Free Delivery &amp; Sot- , poolt.
(740)258-8202
adore~. (740,379-2638
Commerioal lola lor solo or up.
1·866·a28·3426
bedroom
mobile home In
Am1Quls .
:•
3
leeoa, in Pt. Pleasant 304.
.
Mlddlopo~ no pslt ~
• AKC Regletorod Bellon .
(
727·3318 call btt'!'Oon
E
40)m-5858
'
Ttrrlar Pupptea. (740,258: ..
7
Spm-12.
·
· F"
ARMS
·
Buy or sol. Riverine AnU· · tog§
• ·,
13 bedroom wllh txpendo &amp; ~n. 1124 Eut Main on Blrdt. Lovingly hand railed . ;
mR SAu!
~:,~r r'rJ'Y~~er.lg3
Ctnlrll Air, wator &amp; lralh U821~eE. ~omo"t 740- quackor green a Bluoo,
llvlngroo;.,
dlningrOom: 132 acrea With pond, loll of peld, 740·992·2187 fer ap•
. Ull oore, $200. a up. Gold Cap Con.
kitchen, fenced beck yartl, standing timber. lovely 4 pclntmant.
uro. (304)875-4787
eloctior heat pump attach· bedroom, 2·112 beth home,

Eam Cash by losing 2·81ba.
per wesk: Limited Spaces.
Apply
today.
www.haallhy4u.net
Ex nenced Timber Cutter
(7:,882-7318 call aile;
8pm.

Ful~tlme wor!l, Illes axpen·

INOncEI
.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG co. rocornmonda lhat
you do business wllh peopls
you know, and NOT to send
money through the mall until
you have lnvaotlgaled the
offering.

country,

j

L

ence neceanry. Cont .. ct Frae Software! Amazing ed garage, aettlng On over 1 2 bema•. garage 1nd cellar·

Rick at (740)448-6700
URGENTLY
NEEDEOplasma donoro, earn $45 to
$60 lor 2 or 3 hou111 weekly.
Call. Sola-Toe, 740·597·
6651·:

Web Sltt will allow You
260 .00 Shareware Pro·
grams Freel 1.900 . 329.
6670 Ext . 3933, $2.99 per
min. Must be t8yr8, Serv-U
(619, 645.6434.

How To Download Over

walherf

acre ofl•nd on Rt.t 24 close
"
to Now School, (740)9923911 alter 3:00pm, Muot
Sell.

houoe, moblltl homo renlal
)446 Spot, call (740 . · -1 or
(740)285·8593 after 4pm lor
mere information.

I

.

.4

ace Javier Vazquez
the rest of the sea
WI
ISS
son with a fractured eye
socket ac.ter
he was hit on the
"
helmet by a pitch from Ryan
d ·
h
Dempster on Mon ay nig t.

w

85
81
78
63

L

Pet

so

.590
.559

&amp;4

.542

68

Gil
4~

7
23

-~
30~

Gl
2

4
10
. 18\1.

Behimore
Tampa Bay

0-4,.

:r.

Cl-nd

Minne.ata

Chk:ago
Detroit
Konsas City

x-.Saettle
Oakland
Anehelm
TeXas

TI\Ufldllr't .
Ch!CIIfO CUba (lora 1()4) II Clnclnnotl
( - - o-4), 12!31 p.m.
Houoton (Millar t&amp;-n al San Frencisoc
(RUiter t3-t1), 3:35p.m.
Colorado (Chacon 8-9, at Montreal
(Armaa Jr. 9-12), 7:05p.m.
Allantl (MillwOOd
at Phlledeiphia
(Wolf7·10), 7:05p.m.
St. Lculo (W.WIIIamo 12·9) at Plltaburgh
(J.Anderaon 7·16,, 7:05p.m.
Arizona (Win 3-1) at Los Angelos (Park
13-11), 10:10 p.m.

H,

69

r

83

Oakland (Hudson 16-7) at Texas {D~vts

37

9·8,, 8:05p.m.

N.Y. Yankees (Clemens 19-1, at Chicago

GB

White SOx (Gk&gt;'18r 4-2), 8:05 p.m.

Anahalm (Schoeneweis to-9, at seattle
(Moyer 17·5,, 10:05 p.m.

.572

12

77 66
74 71
57 87
57 87
Well
w L
105 40
66 57
73 72
66 79

31 '/l

.531
.510
.396
.396

6

9

25'!

ThurQv'• Game•

25~

Pet
.724
.ll()7
.503

Detroit (lima 4-7) at.Mlnnesota (Mays 15·

131. 1&lt;05 p.m.

GB

Anahe!m (Washburn 11·8) at 5aanle

(SOle t 3·5,, 6:35 p.m.

17
32 .
39

.. 455

Baltimore (Towers 8·10) at Toronto (CarpAntor 10-11 ), 7:05p.m .
Tampa Bay (Aupe 5- 11) at Boston

(F.Castillo 8-8,. 7:05 p.m.
Kllnoaa City (George
at Clavotand
(Droso 1.0), 7:05p.m.

3-5,

x-&lt;linched pla10fl opot
M.-y'aGame
N.Y. Yankeoo.at Tampa Bay. ppd.

Oakland (Zito 13-8) at Texas (Oliver 11 -

9L 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pottitto 15·9, at Chk:ago
While Sox (K.Wells 9-9), 8:05p.m.

Tundey'a Gamet
Toronto 8. Baltimore 5
Boston 7, Tllmpa Bay 2
Ctevotond 11 , Konss1 Clly 2
Minnescta 8, Dotroil 3
Oa~land

6, Te~aa 5

N.Y. Yankess 11 , Chicago White Sox 3
Saenle 4. Ahahalm o
WRn1ad1y'a Gamea

Athletics I, Rlnpn 5 ..
Mark Mulder earned his 19th win,

'

r

I

White

r

Indians 11, Royals l
Travis Fryman thanked fans for their
support in a pregame message on the
scoreboard, then hit a grand slam to lead
Cleveland over Kansas City.
Kenny Loftd n homered twice and
Chuck Finley had his second straight
strong outing for the Indians.
The ceremonies at Jafobs Field featured members of the city's police, fire '
~nd emergency response departments
throwing out first balls to Cleveland
catcher Eddie Taubensee, who wore a
firefighter's helmet.

Red Sox 7, l)evil Rays l .
Manny Ramirez . hit his 40th home
run and Hideo Nomo struck out 1 1 as
Boston beat Tampa Bay at Fenway Park.
Trot Nixon, whose wife gave birth to
their first child on the day of the. attacks,
had three hits for the Red Sox.
--Boston won-for-the ·se&lt;:o~rc:i-t:imeiJ~-t5~--­
games. The Devil Rays lost their fifth in

a row.

Blue Jays 8, Orioles 5

~:;;;;:;1~1~0~H~e~lp~W;a;;n;te;d;;;~

I

:J":'.:,.rn::;,z oope:

j

did not allow a runner until third base"
man Corey Koskie's throwing error let
Damion Easley reach with one out in
the seventh.
·
· Shane Halter homered leading off the ·
Tigers' eighth.

Alex Gonzalez homered twice, and
Toronto handed Baltimore its nintK
straight loss.
Gonzalez hit a tiebreaking, three-rim
shot in the eighth inning.
· Cal Ripken hit his 13th home run and
and stayed six games behind Cleveland drew a standing ovation at Sky Dome.
in·the AL Central.
In his first game since Sept. 6, Radke

~w..;IMPRo-8·~--....1 · ~I

MaroRcrtus

riO

I

r

*8/HR
Light

Indoor
Work

1-888974-

I

13
16

.514

Baltimore (Maduro 3·5, at Toronto (Halla·

I

r

GB

71 73 .493
55 66 •.365
50 94 .347
COnlrll
w l Pet

1997 Saturn, 4 door. auio, 1983 Dodge Ram 6 cyl. 225 1987 Honda 260X, good
_
loot C&amp;C Genoral Homo Malnte- wiring,
Realdential
commercial
For Sale Silver &amp;67Gcllden
new orservk:e
or re1545 llr, power sun rool, excel- Auto low mRos. very good oondltlon, many extras, 2000 Sprinter, c•· 112
Queen Com. (304) 5lent condHion. $4,500. condHion. $1 ooo. OBO $1900 080. (740)44 1'1718 ce mper, puiJ.out ,. oa"~ trimi nenct- Pelnling, vinyl lido pslra, Master Licensed elecI \ H \ 1 ..., I 1'1'1 II ...,
1lks now, 118•000•
,(1.=
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orao lng, oorpentry, doQro. win- lricien. Ridenour Eloctncel.
,\II\ l ...,l!li h.
- - - - - - - - 1999 Yamaha · Bantheo River, 27 foot, $8,000; 89.- . , baths, molllle home WV000306. 31l4·675·1786. ·
1998 Ford Contour LX, 4
,.,...... R Floorehift 350 exoellont condition, Nomad W - camper, -~ end more. For tree
cyllndilr, 78,000 mlea, dar!l 6cy198t ;,~• G= Sllape 1 n1,; tlreo, $3600 OBO. 30 toot, $4,800. Call lltlrnate coli CheJ,..740,992HAY &amp;
· green, 4 door, NADA
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·
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·
(740,~48 8554
8323.
GRAIN
$7 000 aalclng S6 700 Ra- owner, 87'000
.
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L~;:_ _ _ _.__ _.~ duced $5200. _(740)448· (304)875-2642 or (304,a7s- 2000 Kawasaki Boyou 300
" I I ~ \ I ( I -...
2624.
nos
·
· 4x4, $4,300. Call (740)441· ji;p;;;;;;;~~;;;.;;;;o;;;.-,
Buck a bela Bale, squere
·
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boles $1.00 other hay up to 2000 Hyuncla Elentre, lui~ 1989 Ford XLT Lanat, 5'
.
.
JloME..
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brick
Bulk Oats tor solo lbed 9r1 entry. 110.800 OSO 2075. · ·
.
your vehicle. (31l4,675·1807 (740)448-6962
1969 S-10 2.8,V-8 4x4,
ntnet
tree ttlimate,
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.
• robulft e~ne/body,
BoA1S &amp; l'd&lt;n'oRs
.
(304)1'73-9550
s~raw, Year 'Round Delivery up or psrtad out $260., 78 new pelnl!black.
.50 tires,
FOR SALE .
..
. &amp; • Volume Diacount Avalla- Pontiac Bonneville good lor on 16.8 wheell. (1104}156·
IAIIMINT
ble.
Herllage
Farm. p.ning out. $100. (304,a75- 1817 ·
trod anything of
WAT1!RPIIOOP1NG
0
(304)875·5724.
7962
87 Ford F160 n,OOO mllao
hOUIOboat ~~.::!:J'l:~
I H \ \ \ l'! 11&lt;1 \II( 1'\
89 Omnl, ' t35,000 milat, aeking $1000. 304·876·
Call ·nithtd. Eltabllthed. 197~
runs groat, $700 OBC. 2787
Call 24 Hra. (740) 4-48.io FORAIJ!f!!(740)256-1233
Ford
!ruck
&amp;
OJdomo.
0870,
t-600·287·0578.
87
815
""""'
92 cema10, V-8. standertl, bitt Cutlass, call (740)742·
Rogers Wotarproollng.
'--OO:.iliil--rl 1-topo,
uklng S2SOO, · 2220·
110 tttlp Wlmld
742 2357
11i1U Mercury Qrand Mar· (740 ) '
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I)Ji
VANS &amp;
llluelflll l'llnomls' &lt;~owns
· alorle All 'IWOS, To
cao 39,600 actu~ mlleo. 93 BuiCk &amp;abro. Run and
4dr. auto; air, am/fm Clls- rides good. Slight body •
· Ovor 10,000 Tr1111mlttionl,
aotta. V-8 Garage Kept. damage. $1400. (304)875. · Tronelor Casso, 740-2&lt;18·
$3500. (304,a75449 .
o.829~1- -·---:--·:-- 1992 Ford XLT, oxlendtd- :85::n:_:•_:C::t11::_;33=:9-3::7~815:.:·_ _
oob, 8 toot bed, ·302 outo1992 comaro,. \1-8, auto, Grand Am Splolal, 5 to malic, toe,eoo mll11. ONYX . Black Flbarglut
21lth Anniversary Edllion, choolt rrom. Two 1885 (740)367·7tt•
A.R.E. Cap lor 6-112" 11199 ·
QT'a loaded, o~nt con•
:
General Moton1 Piok-up. Ex·
llt600, (740)742-2357.
·
dillon, $3,895 and $5,485. 1988 Cl1ellrolol4x4, -..ci·. oottant Condition. (740,2851993 Unooln Town Car, low 1993 Splolol Spo~ Edition, ed cob losded, oxotiltnt 8239 L.eeve message.
mileage; lallhar, losded, $2,495; 2 roor dOllrs, 1992 CC!ndltlol., 5.7 v.a, AMII'M .
.
(1:40)448·3108· evtnlngo/ &amp; 1993, ,1,785 tech, co,
114,200
080.
-ends.
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COOK 11010111 (740)448- (740)448-4880
.
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1808
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318, 5
s...,..,., 4 door, Red EJda- Like new 1H9 COdlltld IIJ)8ed, 85,0004x4,
mllol, llkt
rllor, Black Interior, FW, PL,
DevMio, Prlcedbalow whole- now ·urea &amp; rima, ohorp 197 J
Cam ' 21ft
PO, AIC, $2600 OBO. sate
Also 1964 Chevy 8-10
k
s
OBO
1 ayco
per
.
Permanent Part· Time Position
000
13
(7110)446-9236
truck and 1963 Ford !ruck, •,;~)3·79.2374
pull behind $3500. , 1990 ·
Rotating Shifts
all in great ahape. Call
.
beyllntr Capn 90 hp.
1893 Pontiac Sunbird, 3.1 (740)441-o279altlr8,00.
1998
Jeep
Chorokoo
4X4
_u_,ooo_._&lt;304_;)882
__
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__
'1\!m'porary
Full· Time Position
v.e, liuto, alr;-new tires &amp;
57 000 mil... New ttr• and
brekee, call (740)517-5360.
Available In October
'I'RucKs
wheola. (304)875·5815 or 1997 Mallard, ~·. air, mi·
1997 Dodge Noon, Sporll
ma Sill!
. -(1,304~)8:!!7::!5-832;:::~5::-:::::-::::·:::- crowavo,
tleoQo e. exoollent
For more inrormatlon, please contact:
condition, $Q,(X)(), (740)085Peckego, 61,000 mllae, au97
Aotro
Van,
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miles,
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tomatic, dark blue, great 1879 Ford F•250, 4x4 . .,.W air, cruise, tilt, PW, .PL, ~::::_:-----­
condition. (740)4-41-9803 motor. good body, mony NUI'M C81101lt, dual air 20!l'l Gullttrssm lnnlbruck
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J~.
niw pans, mull tall. bago ABS oeeta 7. like 26 FSH now cond. aleepa
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• (740) 592·9227
'
EOE
(740,388-0436
new.' (740i379-21~ loavo eight 304-675-7711

JOBS

m81Ugl.

•

17~

~~

Boston

Toronto

Pet.
.504

l

57

'IWins 8, naers 3

·uExpos
m·

t~.,.. ..v,;,~:;:s.,l\.~-_.11 ~.,r'._.FO_A_~.~-~-_..II'SJ ~~

10'1.

(McKnighl2·3). 1:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (D'""'Ico 1·2) at St. Louis
(MorrltiD-7), 1:40 p.m.
F1orlda.(Bock0111.0, at Montraai (Pavano
7:05 p.m.
Arizons (l.opoz 3-5) al Colorado (Hampton 13-11). 7:05p.m.
Chloego Cuba (Wood 1H) 11 Cine Innot! (Hom!- 0.0), 7:05 P·'!t·
Allontt (Burkett 11-10, ot Phlledelphia
(Coggin 4-5), 7:05 p.m.
San
~berg 7-4) II LOS Angeloo
(BaldWin -4 , 10:10 p.m.
Houlton (MIIckl fl.-1) at san Fronciaco
(LHtrnendeZ12·t3,, 10:15 p.m.

Yankees

sta·rts after getting off to a 7 1 start.

0

6

-~N.Y. u.ta
(Rulch 7•t0, It Piftsbu&lt;71.

New Vork

BY THE ASSOCI,..TED PRESS
and Oakland rallied for its riinth straight
The sellout crowd at Safeco Field got vict9ry.
a chance to pay tribute. Now, Seatde fans The Athletics lead the wild card race
hope to cheer the Mariners to a title. . by II games over ·Minnesota.
The Mariners clinched at least a tie {or
Mulder waited out a 68-minute rain
the AL West championship, beating_Ana~ delay at the start in-Texas before winniQg
heim 4-0 Tuesday night on Freddy Gar- for the lith time in 12 decisions. A 's
cia's three-hitter.
.
starters are 13-0 in the last 16 games.
U.S. Marines present.e d the colon, and
Alex Rodriguez hit his 45th home
fans waved American ·flags during a run, the most by a major league shortpregame ceremony to remember last stop since Ernie Banks had that many for
Tuesday's attacks in New York and Wash- the Cubs in 1959.
ington.
"What a great way to~n;' Seattle
11,
Sox 3
second baseman Bret· B&amp;s'ne stld. "It was
Jorge Posada hit his third grand slam of
nice to have people yelling 'USA.' The the season and drove in five runs as New
' chants kind of gives you goose bumps." York won at Comiskey Park.
The Mariners returned from a weekChicago fans cheered the Yankees
long layoff and posted their 1 OS,th victo- when they ·were introduced. Managers
ry. Seattle can ·win the division Wednes- Joe Torre and Jerry Manuel held candles
day night with a win over the Angels or during the pregame ceremonies and
.'a n Oakland loss at Texas.
New York native arid first-base coach
. In other AL games, Oakland ·beat Texas Lee Mazzilli saluted the flag for the
6-5, New York · defeated Chicago 11-3, national anthem.
Cleveland downed Kansas City 11-2,
Posada, Alfonso Soriano and Shane
Minnesota defeated Detroit 8-3, Toronto · Spencer all homered in the seventh
beat Baltimore: 8-5 and Boston topp~d inning.
,Tampa Bay 7-2.
,
•·
Orlando Hernandez pitched seven
· Garcia (1 7 -5) improved to 5-0 against scoreless innings, allowing only two hits.
Anaheim this season and lowered his Me-won-his-third~traight-start.
.
league-leading ERA to .2 ..85. •
On Wednesday night, Yankees ace
Garcia allowed three singles and struck Roger Clemens tries for his 20th vic toout a season-high nine.
.
ry.
"Right now, what people need is baseball," he said. "They need a distraction.
They need to come to the ballpark and
Brad· Radke took a perfect game into
watch a game."
the seventh inning and carried his no- hit
Ichiro Suzuki had three hits for Seat- · bid into' the eighth as Minnesota defeattie. He leads the AL in batting at .350 ed Detroit at the Metrodome.
and tops the majors with 220 hits.
. The 1\vins won their fourth in a row

cardinals 9, Brewers

..

~~

Esll

w

day 3·2,. 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bey (P.Wilson 6·8) at Boston
(Cone 8·5,, 7:05p.m.
Kontot Clly (Su-n 9-11) II Cionlone! (Colon 12-11,, 7:05p.m.
Detroit (Spar!ls 1o-9, at Minnesota (Milton 14-5,, 8:05p.m.

Mariners move close to clinching Al West

back in the against St. Louis on ·Sept. 27,
ay aternoon game
_The Dodg.ers couldn't
Cliff .Floyd hit his 30th
·
·h
· ~or the Marl1'ns
"'
muster much 0 a:ense aga1' nst b orne
k · run "
1 ,
Kevin Jarvis (12- 10) in a 3-2
ac mg
seven
score ess
loss to the Padres, wasting innings by Brad Penny (8-9).
another strong OUtl'ng from Penny was 0-8 his last I 1

(1 2-7) gave up · st two runs
and two hits _ a areer low
as a starter
n . et"ght
.nnt'n171l.
o1
In other news, · 'fony

73 .1500
77 .4811
&amp;4 .421

01

American Leag1,68

San Dlogq 3, Loa Angelos 2
. Houlton 3. san FranciiCO 2

AMERICAN LEAGUE

~

ictory, Adams

.531

Tuosday'a GlFlolfda 3, Montreel 1
N.Y. Matl ·7, Pittsburgh 5
Ctnclnno11 e, Chicago Cube I
Philae!Oiphla 4, Atlanta 3
Sl. Lcuit 9, Milwaukee 4

MarlinS •· Expo
· S1

c¢nsecuti

68

81

.542

68
68

Moncloy'IGIFlorlde 10, Monlreel 8
Phlia'c!elpllla 5, Atfanla 2
N.Y. u.ta 4, Plltlburgh 1
St. Lcuit 2, Milwaukee I
Arizona 7, Colorado 3
san Diego 8, Loa Angalos 4

Albert Pujols homered,
doubled and drove in five
runs, setting two team rookie
records in the process, as host
St. Louis won for the eighth
can't lose a 6-0 lead. I didn't time in nine ganies to take
domyj'ob"
sole possession of the wild
· ·
Andres Galarraga hit the card lead'.
longest home run in the
f p 'fi
two-year history 0
act IC
~~~
,13~11 Park, but Nen (4-4) gave In front of the smallest
up a game-tying triple to Jeff Olympic Stadium crowdI in
Bagwell and a sacrifice fly to 17 years, · Preston Wi son
M"ot' ses Alou ,· n the ninth as homered twice for Florida.
the Houston Astros .stunned
The announced crowd of
·
M
t I' mallest
San Francisco 3-2.
on rea s s.
2 , 917 was
:'fhe Giants remained tWo since drawing 2,803 for a
kd
ti
·

. Ada
In p

73

L Pel.

63 .431
n 88 .407
65 90 .379
Weot
w L Pol
Arizona
82 83 .568
San Franclaco 80 85 .552
Loa Angelos
79 67 .538
72 73 .497
san Diogo
Colorado
63 81 .438

\)ly feel the same i.vay, even
Mets 7, Pirates 5
Mike Piazza hit a two- run
c;tiough Los Angeles is in the
most precarious position homer in the eighth inning
. A:lur games behind first-place for the streaking Mets, who
Arizona and three back of St.
(ouis in the wild card race.
wore caps in tribute to New
York's. firefighters, police and .
: ;Todd H~lton andJeffCiril- . emergency rescu·e workers .
(0' opened the ninih with
The Mets came back for
"~~ck-to-back
H
K'homers
( ) off the!' r 10th Vt.ctory l· n 11 road
yyung- yun lffi 5 - 6 as games. At 73- 73, the defend14-.e Colorado Rock!'es came
v•
1'ng NL champl·ons . reac'hed
.back from a six-run deficit the _500 mark for the first
for a I 0-9 win over Arizona
time since the opening Week
at Coors Field.
of the season.
.Schilling, who wrote a
Armando Benitez pitched
h ear t~te It lett e r to Amert'ca· the ninth for his 40th ·save.
after last week's terrorist
attacks, had a 6-0 lead and
was in position to win his
21st game. But he was
knocked out after five
·v ·ng up s 'x runs
· · gs
mnm • g 1 1
1
and 10 hits .
I h
b k · h
J'l et t em get ac m t e
game," Schilling said. "You

-

c:-edo .10, Arizona 9

COntrol

Gwynn's alma mater, San
Diego State, is exp~d to
announce at a news confer~
ence Thursday that h ~ will
replace baseball coach Jim
Dietz after the 2002 season .

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1

Atlanta

y, September 19,1001

AROUND THE DIAMOND

_._.,.
w
78
n

Page Bl

-MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIST
·MEDICAL
LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN

Qualified
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Sell Both New &amp; Used
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1616 Eastern Ave.
Gal

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�Wednesday,

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..

~ribune -

~pt

19, 2001

Sentinel- l\~~-J

CLASSIFIED

;

•
•

.

.

NATlONAL LEAGUE

.

Wasted chances in
the wild Nl West

We Co,ve

Meigs, Gallla, .
And Mason
Counties Lll&lt;e
N:o One
Else Can1

'•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
: The Arizona Diamond lncks built a big lead for 20game winner Curt Schilling.
· The San Francisco Giants
called on closer Robb Nen
in the ninth.
; And streaking starter Terry
*dams was shutting down
~an Diego at Do?ger Stadi-

CalUaCINftly,OH

'·.

In one week With us

\

REACH OVE'R 285,000 PROSPECTS
·PLUS YOUR AD NOW

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· ·All the contenders in the
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ojght. One by one, they wast~d them .
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An
cu.&lt;.

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AVONI All Aroasl To Buy or
FUNDRAISING
Wanted- Black Batty Beanie
S811 . Slliney .Spears, 304·
·Buddy, reasonable price,
':'rCTOR
:.67:.;5:...-1:.;4::29:;.._ _ _ _ _
Why wait? Start mooting cell (740,992-7242.
%~ork ,!:[~":,~ Be Your Own Bossi
Ohio singles tonight, call toll
·
PTA's and coaches.Est. Co. From Homel
free 1·800·766·2623 ext
Avg. tst yr. sso-teOK
Eam S600·S8000!MO
tS2t.
• 5409486540
PTIFT
No Expenence Noce,..ry
ANNouNCEMENTS 1110
General llborer/roofer.lem- t-888-270-0064
.
.......- ~"~
pcrary
position.
call www.Never9To5Again.com
(740)742-3411 5pm·8pm
New To You Thrift Shoppe
CNA'I
9 West Stimson. Athens
100 WORKERS NEEDED only.
COOK'S
740-592·1942
·
Assemble crafts, wood
Help wanted canng for the
DIETARY AIDES
Quality clothing and house- ltE!ms. Material provided.
oideriy. Darlll Group Homo,
LAUNDRY AIDES
hold Items. $1 .00 bag sale
To $480+ wk.
now paying minimum wags,
ACnYmES AIDES
every Thursday. Monday Free Information pkg. 24 Hr.
new slllfto: 7am-3pm, 7an\- Excellent benefits. · For
tflru Saturday 9:00·6:00.
1·801-284-5625
5pm, 3pm-ttpm, ttpm- promptocnslderatlon.apply
7em, call740-992-5023.
In person at Scenic Hlllo
- . , . - - - - - - - ACCOUNTING DEPART- Local retailer looking lor ox· Nu -'ng
·~
Center, 311 BuckSELtiNG VOUR nMBER? MENT S81i·starter. w•lh at· penenced !oss 'prevontion 456ridgo14.RTohaer.do,
IT PAYS TO GET PROFES· tent10n lo d_etall processing ··-late lor in store loss
SIONAL
ASSISTANCE I pape:o~ •n,;: ~ceo= ;;;.tion position. Pleass ~~~tt-:::::.":~C:P'~r~
Contact IIIII Maxey, MSF. paya e epe an :
send resume to: Loss Pre1
1 pi
Consulting
Forester.
RR
1
racy
and
accounlabllity
im·
vention
Supervisor
6027
::r':v~tv:c~n
o,h:mla;z;
Box 458 Loon, WV 25123. portant. Duties will lean Kyle Moore Rood· Hunting(31l4,458·1656. or emaillur- heav•ty loward data entry. ton wv 25702
dispute. EOE. MIFIH.
aymax@ezwv.com.
"For·
::::·:..:..:.:..::==---HHA's
Certified
malty" 24yr. Wood Industry p ys1ca ex o requ r . McCiure•s Restaurant now homemakers
needed
10 proForester. ttyr. WVU For· Compuiar experience using hiring all 3 localions, full or vide In home services for
estry Professor &amp; 6yr Direc- excel spreadsheet required. part·tlmo, pick up appllca· olderiyldlsabled in Mason &amp;
tor ol WV Division of Forest· sand Resume to JR14., 200 tlon at location &amp;bring back Putnam county areas. Coli
ry.
Main Street Point Pleasant, between
9:30am
&amp; l-898 -453-4992
WV 25550
10:00am, Monday thru Sat·
I'ERsuNAL'i

i.

I

1 t t Sec 1 1L
How
ro s Ofoam
ton omo
Take Control
Another
Computer Over The Internatl
· t-900·329·8670,
Ext.3934, .$2.99 per min.,
~~.8yrs sarv-u (619,

189
1 1e1y 7 1 and 2 bedooom apart- AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
Newly 1800
constructed,
slngla room,acresepprox
ma bem
· ~ta. fuml-"ed
and unlurTANNING
BEI)S .
story
sq. loot horile.
1 beth
house,
...,;;'rity depost
re- WOLFF
Buy Factory
Direct
Located 10 minutes from and outbuildings .. Willowed'
o- _
Excellonl sarvtce
.
Holzer HosplleJ 2Q mlriutes wo&lt;!d, Ohio. Flrol Federal ~~1 • no pe11• 74 992 Flexible Financing Available .
from Ploosant Valley Hospl· Savings Bank (740)S32·
·
Home /Commercial Units
tal, olf SA 160 on a private 6845
1 ·Bedroom Apartment, R~r . FREE Color Cotalog
·
Hl2 ecrelot. 3 bedroom,
LoJs&amp;
fngerator, Range, AIC In- Co11Todayt-800-7tt-ot58 :
Proven $1 ,000,000 True 2· 112 bethJ, big kitchen
cludOd, $289 Plus Deposit &amp;
www.np.etstan.com
Weallh System. 1·888-688- w/oak cabinets, DR, LR
'""""'
• Roforenco. HUD Approved.
. •.
7906
wlgas log fireplace; cantril
(740)441-1519
:.:::::.__ _ _ _ _ _ air. laundry room, lronl lndianCreekEquootnanEs- ::...;;::..:.:.:....:.;;.;..:...._ _ _ Brother sowing machine:
Stort Your Business To· perch &amp; 2-112 car garage. taiH, 3-8 acre Iota, - • of 1&amp;2 bedroom, near Holzer, $75; 1 year old recline~ .
day... Prime Sho~J~&gt;ng Con- Immediate possaaalon. Ap- R~ Grande, Iran $25.900. eooncmk:al uUIIUos, $279 to $200; Size 6 Wedding ring
tor Spaoe Available At AI· praised at $125,600, 1111\lng ·(740)245-5747
$379 pe1 monlh plus utilities set $200. 1740,446 88 42
lo(tfable Rate. Spring Valley $125,500. COli (740,448·
(740)448-2957
·
Plaza, Caii740-446-010t . 4514 lrom 8·5pm, M-F, or Looking To Buy A Now
Evenflo on my way infant ·
;.:,;;;:,.;;;;;..;.;;;;;.;;,;;,;;.;~,;_, (740)446-3248 after 5pm. Home? Dan~ Hove Lend? 2 bedroom apa~ment, jusl car seat. excellent oondl·
~
l r M~RnH~~ . ~weDaiiiHurryOntyt. OLota past Holzer's on Stata 11on,StO.FtshorPncebeby 1
. "--~
~ ~ Loll -·738-7295
Routetso, (740~1·9216. bath With loom inse~ $2.
""""' ·. ·
"""'••~
.·
·FOR"··'~
·
BEAUTIFUL
APART· (740)379-9211
. .
MENTS AT BUDGET
Firewood for seta, Si5n .:
TURNED DOWN ON ? 16 w~· 0 iy $195 00 Per
"
CES AT JACKSON ES.
d ( )441 9476
~~~~~~~~~We=: Month":B~s~ Fixed iptareet ~ m~~o~dmo~
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive . i:oa=·..::7~40;::..:.;.:...':.:.:..:___ .
1'888- 562•3345
Rate. WHh AJr And Un· end FREE mop• contact lrom $297 to $363. Walk to Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4..
derplnnlng 1-888-928-3426 Anthony und Co., Lid. •hoi&gt;
&amp; movlea.
74o- eveninga.
for $10. Open
sat. 8-5pm.
&amp;•
446-2568.
Equal Call
Housing
DIJWhurst
Green·
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1982 14x58 Clakbrook Mo- IJ00.213-8388.
Opportunity.
house MI. Alto. (304)895· :
r10
HoMEll
bile
Home.
Good
.
Condition.
www.alcland.com
.
Ch"'
'
F
mil
ll
.
3740
leave massage.
or.
FOR SAlE
$5.000 (304)882-3693
ua)Y 1 a y v1ng, ,(.304::::::!):::89::5::::·3::7:::89:_
___
33140 New Uma Rd., Rul- 1982 .t4x70 Falnnonl Hapland, Ohio, 740-742-7403. Independent Harbalife Dis'
1100 sq. ft. House. New wir- pyhouse mobile homo, 3 IJ'11!""-~----, "4'8rtmenl, home ond trailer tributor, Coil For Product Or
ing, plumbing, furnace. 8x24 bedroom"s, $10.000. Call r10
Hols;;s
renlala. Commercial store- Opponunlty. (740,441-1982
treated
wood
deck. {740)441-8959. leave mas- t.,._..;FPRi:liiiiRENrlilili.-rl tronta available lor lease.
E

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8

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lsBaid~a"bo"; d~~

G~od ri~uaii ~mtyenlal ,a,::

~j;hed

j

NbeaEAuRIIIui~IOacreQIRractAN:StedA

PR~

?n':;

I

CN~s.

Baseball

":file Daily Sentinel

Philadelp1111
NowYo&lt;tt
Florlde
MonlrMI
Hooston
'St. LOOII
Ch~go

Mllwaukos •
Clnolnnstl
Pittsburgh

hom.'

Found· 2 dogs on State
Route 143, young male
Beagle. young lemale Re·
triever mix, (740)698,4031 .

FOUND· Great Dane on o1
R
oute 160 near Vinton, Call
(740P88·8248 and identity.
Lost·
between
BaileySt.Run
Rd., Hilltop
Grocery
Rt
124, Boston Terrier, be·
longs lo Leo &amp; Sheryl
Gibbs, (740)9a2-7774.
Reward- 2 lost male Labs,
adult black wlknot on left
hind leg &amp; small yellow Lab,

call (740)698-4031 .

r

YARDSALE

Rax's taking applicetlonslor
day &amp; nightonly.
shifts.Apply
S8noos
ap"'lcants
at
,..
1540 Eastem Avenue.
HHis Nursing Center
sand resume to Special Is p~eparing to hold a NuiO·
Care S8"'i""s, 1743 cent• lng Assistant Traintng clau
nary Road,
'"~ Gallipolis. OH beginning s eptembor t7 ,
45631 or tail 10 (740,446- 2001. Anyone interested
6354 phone (740,446-9565 needs to apply In person at
311 Buckrldge Rood Bid·
ATTENTION
well, Ohio 45614 Thbetween
WE NEED HELPI
9am and 4:30pm. e cIass
$500·$1500 PT
Is free of charge.
$2.000·56,000
Free TrainingFT ·
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
t-866·807·RICH . is now accepting appllcawww.comaworkwithme.com tlons lor COrtlfiod Nursong
- - - - - - - - Aos11tan1s lor the lollowlng
Attn: Work trom home, pceltions: 2 lull-time 6·2, 3
$500· $7,000/mo. in your fuil·llme 2-10, and .t lullspare lime. Fres booklet.
lime t 0-l!. Please apply in
www.loeloeno-ngeiNes.com . person at 311 Buckridge
h666·70t-3660.
Rood Bidwell. Ohio 45614
or cell Slephanie Kemper at
(7'\0)+18-7160.
Scenic Hilla Nursing Cont.,
Is looking lor 21ull·time IIconsed preotlcal nurses,
one for t 1-7 and one for 311 . II Interested, please call
Stephanie Kemper at
(740,446-7150 or como In
and fill out an application In
at 311 Buckridge
personBldwall,
Road,
Ohio 45614.
We have an
Scenic Hills Is an squai Of&gt;"
pcrtunily employer.
immediate
Someone to otay wtth elderfull·time
ly women in her home Mon.
Momlng till Fri. Morning.
customer
(304,675-3523
service 'position
Tha Athens-Meigs Educa-

Custonll'r

YARDSAUl-

GAWI'OUs

20th, 21st, 22nd. 209 Glen
Drive (across from Medical
Plaza, Good gins &amp; boya
school · clothes &amp; coats,
homecoming

dresses,

sweepers, gas weed eater.

Big Garage SOla- proceeds
to SCenic Hill Strikers, 21st

&amp; 22nd, 9am-5pm, 4918 Bulavllle Pike.

Fnday and Saturdey, 21st
and 22nd, 8:30am·?. NAS-

Sl'nit"l'

open in our
CA A, Little likes, Name
main office .
Brand clothing, tools, misc.
Successful
7 South Gallipolis, 1.5 milas
to Clipper Mills on Orchard
applicant must
Hill, Watch Signs.
be people
Thursday- Friday &amp; Saturoriented, enjoy
day, 9am-6pm, 3679 State
~oute 3255. Household
using tlie
Items, nice clothing, 3 tamuy
and CORA WSCW.
. phone,
computer
Yard Sate- Thursday 9120Fnday 9121. 9am·5pm. 1~3
literate,
and
Second Avenue.
enjoy working
YARDSA!b
: l'oMF.ROY/Mmvu;: 1 with numbers.
Position offers
5 Points area, Sept. 21 &amp;
all company
22, clolhlng, toys, . tools,
benefits
doors, auto parts, Honda
cycle .
including
Moving yard sale· 9/16, 19.
health and life
20th, 1~14 lincoln Heights,
401 k,
insurance,
(740,992·7321 .
paid vacation~
and personal
days. For
Rick F'eanJon Auction ComBmployment
pany, full time auctlonf8r,
complete auction IIIVIce.
considerBtion,
Licensed •66,0hio &amp; West send resume to:
VIrginia, 304-773-5785 Or

r

r~1

304-773·5447.

r

WJ\N'IID
roBuv

AbsolUte Top Dollar: u.s.

Sliver, Gold Coins, Prool·
aeta,

Diamonds,

Rings,

U~ S -

Need 7 Ledles to san Avon.

Gold

Currency,~

M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sse-

and Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·

446-2642.
wa nted 10 buy used 'mobile

homes. Call (740,446·0175

t ·3 """'"""ns

M~

www.megabucks4you ·not
Applk:atlons being taken lor
Counter Clerk lor local dry

LosrAND

r

I Business

1
ag·ement ..... m,· nursingman·
staff
... with .xc.ll.nl
d Iac IItty
an
,00 Iatory compliance 0ppo~unlly tor prolenlonal
growth, benalita, pey commensursto with experience.
Interested
candidates
ahould app1Y to.· Rock·
springs Rehabilitation Codnler, 36759 Rocksprings R .,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Equel Opportunity Employer
Enccurag Ing Workpiaoe 01varsity.
B~

I'"'

'fRAooNG

Golllpollt C.I'MI College
(Coree111 Close To Home)
CaM Today I 740-446-43117,
1-800·214-0452,
Rep 190-o5-t274B.

1116

WJ\N'IID
""o
•• Do

I

All Make Mowllrs, Lawn
Tractors, Tlllera Repaired.
Free pick-up, Delivery Avail·
able. 21 Yaare E•penence.
Coli Mike. (740
7604
David's General Contracting
Plumbing,
electrical,
ing,
docka.
roofe. paintCall
(740,256·9373 (304,6336265

,448-

lie

WJ\N'IID
To Do

I

Georges Portable Sawmill,

to the
mill jusl call304-675-1957.

tional Service Center has a don't haul yOur logs

opening lor a Partlime (15 houre per week)
Custodian, lo wor11 al tho
Rome Canaan Learning
Conlar. Submit 1et1er of interaattc John D. Coatanzo.
poo~lon

30 08
1
7 roo
. m &amp; batt .. with
&amp; pm.
r&lt;r
• or uy.
a11nga,
- st•)ve
-~~Rn,F
rs 800
" ·31 93323 E~ · 1709 ·
rolngorator•(740,992·9064.
522 Grant St ·• 1st 1i•me Buyers· Coli o ak• ·
••
Middleport,
wood, Gallipolis todayl 1 bedroom, AIC, 1 belh,
Affordable new. home, 3 Gov't backed program- buy kitchen
has
~gr=;.LRba~~tc~tt~~~
looal (740,446-3093
2$350/nd:;•(7n~,).:.:Jlt&gt;'!e,
'
•
28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom On·
gorego,
in tha 70nice
,s Coli
level
torlot,
more
Prioed
de· · ly $345.00 Per Monlh
'
1 level, 3'bedroom, t &amp; 112
tills (740)446•2601
6.99% Fixed Interest Rate, beth, centrllllr, 2 cor 00•
·
·
t-666-828-3426
rege. In Middleport, $425
Count,Y Farm House Charm
plus depoSit &amp; relorencea,
without the farm. 3 bed- 3 112 acres W/3br. mobile (740)992 •-.
rooms 2 112 baths newly homo. Old Farm hoose 210
·
-··
remodeled. Soulh;.eslern of e mile on . Shlney Rd. 2 bedroom horilo close lo
School District· (740)379- $35,000
Dead end
gravel and
rd. $4251
town, besernont.
River vtaw,
or $10,000
month; 3 bedroom
In
8887
·
toke over paymenta. t-877- town, t-112 baths. Good toFor Sale brick ranch ety1e 230-3256
calion. $5001 month. Aelerhome. just oul of New He•
encos end dapcllt required.
von- bjlslde sun Rise me- 94 14x70 Oakwood, must (740)446-3844.
monll Gardens on Rt 33,
moved, 2 bedroom, 2 lull
·
1 t/4 acres, 3 br. 2 fire pia- bathe, comes with eldres, 3 bedroom home Minorevilla
cas: (beaemont includes an $15,000. (740,448-9337 • aros, river vlow, relorences
extra kitchen, TV room, Abend ed 0 bl wide- required. dopceit required,
bedroom, beth) 2 car go- tree ~~P &amp; de~~.~- Hur· ~ peta, 740·992-em afttr
rage, pnvato
rural31l4·662setUng. ry- 1 only· (740,446-309~5pm
50x60
ehed call
·~
-·::;:.;;.·-----·
Ashland FleetwOOd 2oo2 3 bedroom house In town,
2050 or 304-862.3665.
Doublewlde 528 ,228.- ,.:Toll (740)441·9216.
For sale by owner. Nice bi- Free 868-805-5819 IOtmin 3 Bedroom House in Syl8level home on 1 acre near flOm HunUngton
.' ..
cueo 01110 . $460/ Monlh
Cheater. Three bodloom,
HUD' An roved (304)87S·
two baths, one-car garage, Asllland Flaetwood Sa~em~ends only
lemil1 room with fireplace, ber special. 2002 t4x70 5332 ,
sun room. New central heala 3bd/2ba.: $19,990 Free Del. 3 bedroOm newer home
Ing &amp; we
_,
satup. lioII Froe 1....,..
DI!Ul
systo7,m.butOn
m-I 805-6619
&amp;
near
Porter,
$425/mo.
Denute off Route
stilla prJ.
. ·
·
post &amp;
reference
required.
vale. (740)985·3981
(740)446-2601attor 5pm.
Deluxe horile, seve $5,446,
new 2000 model Sk)'Dne, 3 3 bedroom, 2-112 beth, 1
bedroom. 2 bath, total eleo- bedroom on 11111oor, family
trio, vinyl &amp; shingle. low room. In town. $525/mo. No
monthly payments, dellv- smoking. no lnllde pets.
.,ed &amp; oetup Includes alcirt- (740)448·1945, II no aning &amp; stops, Colee MQblle awer. leave massego.
Homes, US 50 Eest, Atheno. Oh, 740-592·1972
Pilot Program, Renters
All retl ntate advenlalng ::::::..:.:.::..:.::..:=.::.:.:...._
Needed, 304-736·7295. .
In thla newapaper 11
Final Days, Nallonwide In·
.
• •

Quality housecleal"'ing, lm·
maculate, natlculoua, detailed cleanl~. The a.bao-

IUbjecllO the fedll'lll
Fair Houalng Act of 1111
which m~~kH II Illegal to
lldvwtl• ....,,

ventory

Red~ctlonl

20 hours a week. Sand re-

port, Ohio 45760 by·Sept. (740)441-4236 .or (740)446-

- ~th.

Trained and Employed In

14·16 days. Full benoflta.
35-40K tat YR. No Coli
Tuition to Qualified "pplicenta. No up front money.
Cali Now 1·877·63TRAIN

0151 ask for Ron. lr no

answer, leave message.

Wllleot wllh the eldeny In
their home, will do cooking,
houae cleaning ect .. Mon .·

Fri.

304~75-7721

11 \\"\1 1\1

Dollar Plus, Ohio Rlvar Pia·

.c.:.=.:.;;.;===..:....-

j

Lend-home peckegos- all
areaa. Prequlllfy by phone.
(740,448·3563
llmiled Or No .Credit? Gov·
emment Bank Finance Only
AI Oakwood In .Barbours·
ville, wv 31l4·736-3409.

Syracuse··

ne~

iftr;~H~OliSEHOID;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;1 We

house on
(,.304::.:.-,..:736-340=.:..:.::.9- -·- - river, 2 . bedroom, beth &amp;

I

j

b!:t p;;

have two, only nee&lt;:!

one. For sole 1994 Pace .
eo
Trail ""~ white
rgo
or. wovr.
·
~~)!"J.~: ,200. Phone
.
·
Window Air Conditioner
(304,675-5049
·
BUILDING

garage, big
Gooos
deok, $660 a month plua
·
$650 dapoalt. (740)385- Appliances: Roccndltioned
11 59.
Wosllertl, Dryers, Ranges,
Taking a~J~&gt;Icetlone lor a 2 Rol~gretora, Up To 90 Oaya
bedroome in a quiet neigh- Guarenteedl Wo Sail New
borhood. (740)448-6939 Maylag Appliances, French
leave messego.
City Ma1Jag, 740-446-7795.
halt, 2 oar

Now 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
M0BJu: HOMES
Only $19,860. Free Delivery
FORRENr
&amp; Set Up. 1·888·928·2426 ~
·
New 18&gt;&lt;60, 3 bedroom, 2 1995 , 3 bedroom, 2 beth
advertl•ment• tor rul
beth, only $600 down. call mobile homo in Gr-.Tor·
Hllte Which II In
Nikki (740)385-43117.
raoo trlller coun. $450 per
violation ot tht .faw. Our
,...,. .........by
.N 2002 Fleelwood I month. Depooll end Reltr•
ow
on Y onooa
required.
Cali
Informed 11111111
$n5
per .:.....:....
(740)446-7486.
-llingo edwrtiood In
month,down and
call $150.85
Cheryl,
_ _ _ _:-:-'lhll MIW. .per ll'e
&lt;740)365-4367
'
2 bedroom troller in Mleon
lvt!la~le on an equal
N be k
1• 70 3 neld to W•lmart CIA, ocv·
opportunity bUll.
.,:'room~ 2
s-499 orad corpor1, roferonces,
&amp; move-in Oakwood- Qalllp- coli
lor
oPpolntmont
1•• (740'448 ~3
.
(740)992·31161
o• ·
' w•
For sole or lease lg. ranch
2 bedroom lroilar In tho

dlecrlmlnatlon."
Will haul away, clean out,
clean up, move almost any·
The VIllage of Middleport lh~. Other odd jobs. CaU · This newapaper will not
needs a Bulldng Inspector, (7 ,448-7504
knowingly accept

sume to vmage of Middle- Will· power wash houses,
port, 237 Race St., Middle- • trailers, anything. Call

-- waterbad
- - -tor
-sole
-,
Gracious living. 1 and 2 Kingsiza
$50
)
bedroom apartmenls at lnl·
. (304 675-3776
.
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
From $278·$346. Call 740D
.
•
. Equal Housing· Huge Inventory, Iacount
992
5064
Opportunllieo.
p•,,cea, on Viny1 Skl"l
"ng, .•
.
Dool!l, Windows, A~hors,
Now Taking Applications- Water Heaters. Plumbing &amp;
35 Wost 2 Bedroom Town· Electrical Parts, Fumaceo &amp; .
oouoe •"·rtmenla, Includes Heat Pumps. BannaiiB MD'
Water """Sewage, Trash, bita Home s upply, 7•"
~
•••
$350/Mo., 740-446-ooo&amp;.
9416 www.oNb.com/bennett _ __.:._ _ _ .
Tara Townhouse Aps~- :.:::::_
menta, Very Spacious, 2 NEW AND USED FUR·
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 NANCES FOR SALE1 We ·
112· &amp;elh. Fully Carpeted, Install, Free Estimates, 11
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, pa· ycu doni Call us, We bolh
tlo. Start $38M.1o. No Peta, Lcosel (740)448-ll308, 1·
1.eue Plus Sacurity Deposit 800-29t-o098.
Required, Days: 740-448RESIDENTIAL HOME
3461; Evenings: 740·367OWNERS
0502,740-446.0101.
• -...·,_,
-.. A·~llb'•Tappan HI Efficiency 90% .
...,...
•• •
COli
Gaa Furnaces, Oil Fuma- ..
1WinRI..,T_.
cos, 12 'Saer Heat Pump&amp; • ·
, (304,a75-6679.
Air Condllionlng Systems :
lor application. HUD au bel· Free 8 Year Warranty Ban- •
dlzed apt.tor alderty and noHa Heating &amp; CooHng, 1-•
disabled. EHO.
800· 872-5967
·
www.oNb.oom/bennett
Very nice, 2-3 bedroom
apanmant,
town, large
carport 12x20 1yr.
kitchen, LA, in$600/mc.
Rei· Single
old. $550.
(304,674-4820
e"'"""" &amp; daposll required. WATER WELLS oRILLED.
(740)446-3644
{740)8887311
SI'Ao:
Watenino Speolat: 314 200
1 PSI $21.95 Per tOO; t' 200 .· ·
FORRiiNr
~
PSI $37.00 Per tOO; All :
lor rent in Brass Compression Fillings .
th In Stock.
per mon RON EVANS ENTERPRIB.
EB Jackeon. Ohio, 1-800·
537 8
:;::..:·9::5:::2:__ _ _ __

Gl

lute beat CaU or a lree estiSuperlntendenl, Athens~ msta. (740,256-1131 or 1pNfe~nce. Umttatlon 01
Meigs Educational Sarvlce 666·781-2412.
baed on
Center, 507 Richland Ave- Wanted to care for etder1y in dlacrlmlnatlon
nue, Sullo 1108. Alhens. their home. Call al race, eolor, religion, MX
Ohio 45701 . Application (740,258·6503 If no answer. f1mlllel aratua or national
deadline: September 24. l,.eave message on voice origin, or 1ny Intention to
INikl lfty IUCh
2001. The AMESC IS an mall.
prole-, llmltltlon or
Equal "Opportunity Employ·
ar/Prov~er.

£~~~~-=-~=

In ·

Phlllles 4, Braves :s
Scott Rolen singled home
the winning run off John
Smoltz
(2-3)
as . host
Philadelphia scored twice in
the ninth inning to rally past
Atlanta and pull within I 112
games of the first- place
Braves in the ,NL East.

r

~

For Silo: Reoondi11onod
wasllers, dryere end ralngotatora. Thomplions "4'PII·
once. 3407 Jackeon Avanuo, (31l4)875-7:)88. ·
Main Slretlt Fumlture
(304,a75- 1422
515 Main Slreet, Point
Pleasant

Suma:s

Blook, briok. 118W8r pipe•, •
windows, lintels, eto. Claude .
Winters, Rio Grande. OH .
Call740-245·5121.
Engl- -lllullcllng .
SyiiOmo, Low Rise Com'
merclal and Industrial a..v .
custom lizo, Inc'~·.
·~ A·~a·•.
., •

Now &amp; Uaed Furniture . tlon Warehouse and Agri- :
Ne.w 2 Place Uvlngroom cultural. COl lor OIICOUntl
·Sulteo, S39U. Buy, Sell, AB Contracting, Inc. (304) .
Trade. .
.
874-0100
.
Now And Uted Furniture
__l'Dnt .
Store Below Holldey Inn, L--•~iiiii!ll;liiii._.j

i

j·.

~rytr Kenauga. We Sell Grave -

za, now hiring management

style home, 4 br., 3 ba., w/

Apply In person or lex reaume to (304)738-3092.

ocreenod in polio porch, 2 Naw Doubla Wldo. $1115 hoo
. kup, Iorge . yord. $300 Monuments And VOMo.
AKC Mlriaturo Poodlot, vo1 .
car garage $78,000.
Par Monthl 3 Bedroom, 2 ron! pluo utilities, $200 do•
.
·
chooked, ahota current, vory ..
Selh.
Free Delivery &amp; Sot- , poolt.
(740)258-8202
adore~. (740,379-2638
Commerioal lola lor solo or up.
1·866·a28·3426
bedroom
mobile home In
Am1Quls .
:•
3
leeoa, in Pt. Pleasant 304.
.
Mlddlopo~ no pslt ~
• AKC Regletorod Bellon .
(
727·3318 call btt'!'Oon
E
40)m-5858
'
Ttrrlar Pupptea. (740,258: ..
7
Spm-12.
·
· F"
ARMS
·
Buy or sol. Riverine AnU· · tog§
• ·,
13 bedroom wllh txpendo &amp; ~n. 1124 Eut Main on Blrdt. Lovingly hand railed . ;
mR SAu!
~:,~r r'rJ'Y~~er.lg3
Ctnlrll Air, wator &amp; lralh U821~eE. ~omo"t 740- quackor green a Bluoo,
llvlngroo;.,
dlningrOom: 132 acrea With pond, loll of peld, 740·992·2187 fer ap•
. Ull oore, $200. a up. Gold Cap Con.
kitchen, fenced beck yartl, standing timber. lovely 4 pclntmant.
uro. (304)875-4787
eloctior heat pump attach· bedroom, 2·112 beth home,

Eam Cash by losing 2·81ba.
per wesk: Limited Spaces.
Apply
today.
www.haallhy4u.net
Ex nenced Timber Cutter
(7:,882-7318 call aile;
8pm.

Ful~tlme wor!l, Illes axpen·

INOncEI
.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG co. rocornmonda lhat
you do business wllh peopls
you know, and NOT to send
money through the mall until
you have lnvaotlgaled the
offering.

country,

j

L

ence neceanry. Cont .. ct Frae Software! Amazing ed garage, aettlng On over 1 2 bema•. garage 1nd cellar·

Rick at (740)448-6700
URGENTLY
NEEDEOplasma donoro, earn $45 to
$60 lor 2 or 3 hou111 weekly.
Call. Sola-Toe, 740·597·
6651·:

Web Sltt will allow You
260 .00 Shareware Pro·
grams Freel 1.900 . 329.
6670 Ext . 3933, $2.99 per
min. Must be t8yr8, Serv-U
(619, 645.6434.

How To Download Over

walherf

acre ofl•nd on Rt.t 24 close
"
to Now School, (740)9923911 alter 3:00pm, Muot
Sell.

houoe, moblltl homo renlal
)446 Spot, call (740 . · -1 or
(740)285·8593 after 4pm lor
mere information.

I

.

.4

ace Javier Vazquez
the rest of the sea
WI
ISS
son with a fractured eye
socket ac.ter
he was hit on the
"
helmet by a pitch from Ryan
d ·
h
Dempster on Mon ay nig t.

w

85
81
78
63

L

Pet

so

.590
.559

&amp;4

.542

68

Gil
4~

7
23

-~
30~

Gl
2

4
10
. 18\1.

Behimore
Tampa Bay

0-4,.

:r.

Cl-nd

Minne.ata

Chk:ago
Detroit
Konsas City

x-.Saettle
Oakland
Anehelm
TeXas

TI\Ufldllr't .
Ch!CIIfO CUba (lora 1()4) II Clnclnnotl
( - - o-4), 12!31 p.m.
Houoton (Millar t&amp;-n al San Frencisoc
(RUiter t3-t1), 3:35p.m.
Colorado (Chacon 8-9, at Montreal
(Armaa Jr. 9-12), 7:05p.m.
Allantl (MillwOOd
at Phlledeiphia
(Wolf7·10), 7:05p.m.
St. Lculo (W.WIIIamo 12·9) at Plltaburgh
(J.Anderaon 7·16,, 7:05p.m.
Arizona (Win 3-1) at Los Angelos (Park
13-11), 10:10 p.m.

H,

69

r

83

Oakland (Hudson 16-7) at Texas {D~vts

37

9·8,, 8:05p.m.

N.Y. Yankees (Clemens 19-1, at Chicago

GB

White SOx (Gk&gt;'18r 4-2), 8:05 p.m.

Anahalm (Schoeneweis to-9, at seattle
(Moyer 17·5,, 10:05 p.m.

.572

12

77 66
74 71
57 87
57 87
Well
w L
105 40
66 57
73 72
66 79

31 '/l

.531
.510
.396
.396

6

9

25'!

ThurQv'• Game•

25~

Pet
.724
.ll()7
.503

Detroit (lima 4-7) at.Mlnnesota (Mays 15·

131. 1&lt;05 p.m.

GB

Anahe!m (Washburn 11·8) at 5aanle

(SOle t 3·5,, 6:35 p.m.

17
32 .
39

.. 455

Baltimore (Towers 8·10) at Toronto (CarpAntor 10-11 ), 7:05p.m .
Tampa Bay (Aupe 5- 11) at Boston

(F.Castillo 8-8,. 7:05 p.m.
Kllnoaa City (George
at Clavotand
(Droso 1.0), 7:05p.m.

3-5,

x-&lt;linched pla10fl opot
M.-y'aGame
N.Y. Yankeoo.at Tampa Bay. ppd.

Oakland (Zito 13-8) at Texas (Oliver 11 -

9L 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pottitto 15·9, at Chk:ago
While Sox (K.Wells 9-9), 8:05p.m.

Tundey'a Gamet
Toronto 8. Baltimore 5
Boston 7, Tllmpa Bay 2
Ctevotond 11 , Konss1 Clly 2
Minnescta 8, Dotroil 3
Oa~land

6, Te~aa 5

N.Y. Yankess 11 , Chicago White Sox 3
Saenle 4. Ahahalm o
WRn1ad1y'a Gamea

Athletics I, Rlnpn 5 ..
Mark Mulder earned his 19th win,

'

r

I

White

r

Indians 11, Royals l
Travis Fryman thanked fans for their
support in a pregame message on the
scoreboard, then hit a grand slam to lead
Cleveland over Kansas City.
Kenny Loftd n homered twice and
Chuck Finley had his second straight
strong outing for the Indians.
The ceremonies at Jafobs Field featured members of the city's police, fire '
~nd emergency response departments
throwing out first balls to Cleveland
catcher Eddie Taubensee, who wore a
firefighter's helmet.

Red Sox 7, l)evil Rays l .
Manny Ramirez . hit his 40th home
run and Hideo Nomo struck out 1 1 as
Boston beat Tampa Bay at Fenway Park.
Trot Nixon, whose wife gave birth to
their first child on the day of the. attacks,
had three hits for the Red Sox.
--Boston won-for-the ·se&lt;:o~rc:i-t:imeiJ~-t5~--­
games. The Devil Rays lost their fifth in

a row.

Blue Jays 8, Orioles 5

~:;;;;:;1~1~0~H~e~lp~W;a;;n;te;d;;;~

I

:J":'.:,.rn::;,z oope:

j

did not allow a runner until third base"
man Corey Koskie's throwing error let
Damion Easley reach with one out in
the seventh.
·
· Shane Halter homered leading off the ·
Tigers' eighth.

Alex Gonzalez homered twice, and
Toronto handed Baltimore its nintK
straight loss.
Gonzalez hit a tiebreaking, three-rim
shot in the eighth inning.
· Cal Ripken hit his 13th home run and
and stayed six games behind Cleveland drew a standing ovation at Sky Dome.
in·the AL Central.
In his first game since Sept. 6, Radke

~w..;IMPRo-8·~--....1 · ~I

MaroRcrtus

riO

I

r

*8/HR
Light

Indoor
Work

1-888974-

I

13
16

.514

Baltimore (Maduro 3·5, at Toronto (Halla·

I

r

GB

71 73 .493
55 66 •.365
50 94 .347
COnlrll
w l Pet

1997 Saturn, 4 door. auio, 1983 Dodge Ram 6 cyl. 225 1987 Honda 260X, good
_
loot C&amp;C Genoral Homo Malnte- wiring,
Realdential
commercial
For Sale Silver &amp;67Gcllden
new orservk:e
or re1545 llr, power sun rool, excel- Auto low mRos. very good oondltlon, many extras, 2000 Sprinter, c•· 112
Queen Com. (304) 5lent condHion. $4,500. condHion. $1 ooo. OBO $1900 080. (740)44 1'1718 ce mper, puiJ.out ,. oa"~ trimi nenct- Pelnling, vinyl lido pslra, Master Licensed elecI \ H \ 1 ..., I 1'1'1 II ...,
1lks now, 118•000•
,(1.=
.40::!)4-44:::::6:::4:;.7;:82:__ _ _ (304,675-8832
orao lng, oorpentry, doQro. win- lricien. Ridenour Eloctncel.
,\II\ l ...,l!li h.
- - - - - - - - 1999 Yamaha · Bantheo River, 27 foot, $8,000; 89.- . , baths, molllle home WV000306. 31l4·675·1786. ·
1998 Ford Contour LX, 4
,.,...... R Floorehift 350 exoellont condition, Nomad W - camper, -~ end more. For tree
cyllndilr, 78,000 mlea, dar!l 6cy198t ;,~• G= Sllape 1 n1,; tlreo, $3600 OBO. 30 toot, $4,800. Call lltlrnate coli CheJ,..740,992HAY &amp;
· green, 4 door, NADA
·
·
mllto . (740,441-1718
·
(740,~48 8554
8323.
GRAIN
$7 000 aalclng S6 700 Ra- owner, 87'000
.
. .
L~;:_ _ _ _.__ _.~ duced $5200. _(740)448· (304)875-2642 or (304,a7s- 2000 Kawasaki Boyou 300
" I I ~ \ I ( I -...
2624.
nos
·
· 4x4, $4,300. Call (740)441· ji;p;;;;;;;~~;;;.;;;;o;;;.-,
Buck a bela Bale, squere
·
8859 111ve llltiSAQO
boles $1.00 other hay up to 2000 Hyuncla Elentre, lui~ 1989 Ford XLT Lanat, 5'
.
.
JloME..
$2.00, round 'boles $15.00 loaded, llr, tift, crutea, PW, epeed, Over-drive, eir, FW. 2000 Sukl Caiana GFX
IMPROvl!MJll'll
PL
powl( moonrool, PL. PO, new psrla, prioe r&amp;· 600F. 5,800 mllel. Like L,,-otiiiiilliiiiiiiiiioo,l
880 h 304-ll75-4869
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ AWFM caasstto. keyloes ducod, $3,400. (740)339· Now. $3,900 (304)578-2888
brick
Bulk Oats tor solo lbed 9r1 entry. 110.800 OSO 2075. · ·
.
your vehicle. (31l4,675·1807 (740)448-6962
1969 S-10 2.8,V-8 4x4,
ntnet
tree ttlimate,
-Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie · 98 Grand am, oculd ba flxed 5speod
.
• robulft e~ne/body,
BoA1S &amp; l'd&lt;n'oRs
.
(304)1'73-9550
s~raw, Year 'Round Delivery up or psrtad out $260., 78 new pelnl!black.
.50 tires,
FOR SALE .
..
. &amp; • Volume Diacount Avalla- Pontiac Bonneville good lor on 16.8 wheell. (1104}156·
IAIIMINT
ble.
Herllage
Farm. p.ning out. $100. (304,a75- 1817 ·
trod anything of
WAT1!RPIIOOP1NG
0
(304)875·5724.
7962
87 Ford F160 n,OOO mllao
hOUIOboat ~~.::!:J'l:~
I H \ \ \ l'! 11&lt;1 \II( 1'\
89 Omnl, ' t35,000 milat, aeking $1000. 304·876·
Call ·nithtd. Eltabllthed. 197~
runs groat, $700 OBC. 2787
Call 24 Hra. (740) 4-48.io FORAIJ!f!!(740)256-1233
Ford
!ruck
&amp;
OJdomo.
0870,
t-600·287·0578.
87
815
""""'
92 cema10, V-8. standertl, bitt Cutlass, call (740)742·
Rogers Wotarproollng.
'--OO:.iliil--rl 1-topo,
uklng S2SOO, · 2220·
110 tttlp Wlmld
742 2357
11i1U Mercury Qrand Mar· (740 ) '
·
I)Ji
VANS &amp;
llluelflll l'llnomls' &lt;~owns
· alorle All 'IWOS, To
cao 39,600 actu~ mlleo. 93 BuiCk &amp;abro. Run and
4dr. auto; air, am/fm Clls- rides good. Slight body •
· Ovor 10,000 Tr1111mlttionl,
aotta. V-8 Garage Kept. damage. $1400. (304)875. · Tronelor Casso, 740-2&lt;18·
$3500. (304,a75449 .
o.829~1- -·---:--·:-- 1992 Ford XLT, oxlendtd- :85::n:_:•_:C::t11::_;33=:9-3::7~815:.:·_ _
oob, 8 toot bed, ·302 outo1992 comaro,. \1-8, auto, Grand Am Splolal, 5 to malic, toe,eoo mll11. ONYX . Black Flbarglut
21lth Anniversary Edllion, choolt rrom. Two 1885 (740)367·7tt•
A.R.E. Cap lor 6-112" 11199 ·
QT'a loaded, o~nt con•
:
General Moton1 Piok-up. Ex·
llt600, (740)742-2357.
·
dillon, $3,895 and $5,485. 1988 Cl1ellrolol4x4, -..ci·. oottant Condition. (740,2851993 Unooln Town Car, low 1993 Splolol Spo~ Edition, ed cob losded, oxotiltnt 8239 L.eeve message.
mileage; lallhar, losded, $2,495; 2 roor dOllrs, 1992 CC!ndltlol., 5.7 v.a, AMII'M .
.
(1:40)448·3108· evtnlngo/ &amp; 1993, ,1,785 tech, co,
114,200
080.
-ends.
·
COOK 11010111 (740)448- (740)448-4880
.
· 1993 Oldamobile Cut1111 0103
1808
Dodge
318, 5
s...,..,., 4 door, Red EJda- Like new 1H9 COdlltld IIJ)8ed, 85,0004x4,
mllol, llkt
rllor, Black Interior, FW, PL,
DevMio, Prlcedbalow whole- now ·urea &amp; rima, ohorp 197 J
Cam ' 21ft
PO, AIC, $2600 OBO. sate
Also 1964 Chevy 8-10
k
s
OBO
1 ayco
per
.
Permanent Part· Time Position
000
13
(7110)446-9236
truck and 1963 Ford !ruck, •,;~)3·79.2374
pull behind $3500. , 1990 ·
Rotating Shifts
all in great ahape. Call
.
beyllntr Capn 90 hp.
1893 Pontiac Sunbird, 3.1 (740)441-o279altlr8,00.
1998
Jeep
Chorokoo
4X4
_u_,ooo_._&lt;304_;)882
__
-350_7
__
'1\!m'porary
Full· Time Position
v.e, liuto, alr;-new tires &amp;
57 000 mil... New ttr• and
brekee, call (740)517-5360.
Available In October
'I'RucKs
wheola. (304)875·5815 or 1997 Mallard, ~·. air, mi·
1997 Dodge Noon, Sporll
ma Sill!
. -(1,304~)8:!!7::!5-832;:::~5::-:::::-::::·:::- crowavo,
tleoQo e. exoollent
For more inrormatlon, please contact:
condition, $Q,(X)(), (740)085Peckego, 61,000 mllae, au97
Aotro
Van,
5S,OOO
miles,
3413.
O'BLENFSS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
tomatic, dark blue, great 1879 Ford F•250, 4x4 . .,.W air, cruise, tilt, PW, .PL, ~::::_:-----­
condition. (740)4-41-9803 motor. good body, mony NUI'M C81101lt, dual air 20!l'l Gullttrssm lnnlbruck
SS Hospital Drive • Athens, OH 45701
J~.
niw pans, mull tall. bago ABS oeeta 7. like 26 FSH now cond. aleepa
c1Q Monqo_,, LLC
• (740) 592·9227
'
EOE
(740,388-0436
new.' (740i379-21~ loavo eight 304-675-7711

JOBS

m81Ugl.

•

17~

~~

Boston

Toronto

Pet.
.504

l

57

'IWins 8, naers 3

·uExpos
m·

t~.,.. ..v,;,~:;:s.,l\.~-_.11 ~.,r'._.FO_A_~.~-~-_..II'SJ ~~

10'1.

(McKnighl2·3). 1:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (D'""'Ico 1·2) at St. Louis
(MorrltiD-7), 1:40 p.m.
F1orlda.(Bock0111.0, at Montraai (Pavano
7:05 p.m.
Arizons (l.opoz 3-5) al Colorado (Hampton 13-11). 7:05p.m.
Chloego Cuba (Wood 1H) 11 Cine Innot! (Hom!- 0.0), 7:05 P·'!t·
Allontt (Burkett 11-10, ot Phlledelphia
(Coggin 4-5), 7:05 p.m.
San
~berg 7-4) II LOS Angeloo
(BaldWin -4 , 10:10 p.m.
Houlton (MIIckl fl.-1) at san Fronciaco
(LHtrnendeZ12·t3,, 10:15 p.m.

Yankees

sta·rts after getting off to a 7 1 start.

0

6

-~N.Y. u.ta
(Rulch 7•t0, It Piftsbu&lt;71.

New Vork

BY THE ASSOCI,..TED PRESS
and Oakland rallied for its riinth straight
The sellout crowd at Safeco Field got vict9ry.
a chance to pay tribute. Now, Seatde fans The Athletics lead the wild card race
hope to cheer the Mariners to a title. . by II games over ·Minnesota.
The Mariners clinched at least a tie {or
Mulder waited out a 68-minute rain
the AL West championship, beating_Ana~ delay at the start in-Texas before winniQg
heim 4-0 Tuesday night on Freddy Gar- for the lith time in 12 decisions. A 's
cia's three-hitter.
.
starters are 13-0 in the last 16 games.
U.S. Marines present.e d the colon, and
Alex Rodriguez hit his 45th home
fans waved American ·flags during a run, the most by a major league shortpregame ceremony to remember last stop since Ernie Banks had that many for
Tuesday's attacks in New York and Wash- the Cubs in 1959.
ington.
"What a great way to~n;' Seattle
11,
Sox 3
second baseman Bret· B&amp;s'ne stld. "It was
Jorge Posada hit his third grand slam of
nice to have people yelling 'USA.' The the season and drove in five runs as New
' chants kind of gives you goose bumps." York won at Comiskey Park.
The Mariners returned from a weekChicago fans cheered the Yankees
long layoff and posted their 1 OS,th victo- when they ·were introduced. Managers
ry. Seattle can ·win the division Wednes- Joe Torre and Jerry Manuel held candles
day night with a win over the Angels or during the pregame ceremonies and
.'a n Oakland loss at Texas.
New York native arid first-base coach
. In other AL games, Oakland ·beat Texas Lee Mazzilli saluted the flag for the
6-5, New York · defeated Chicago 11-3, national anthem.
Cleveland downed Kansas City 11-2,
Posada, Alfonso Soriano and Shane
Minnesota defeated Detroit 8-3, Toronto · Spencer all homered in the seventh
beat Baltimore: 8-5 and Boston topp~d inning.
,Tampa Bay 7-2.
,
•·
Orlando Hernandez pitched seven
· Garcia (1 7 -5) improved to 5-0 against scoreless innings, allowing only two hits.
Anaheim this season and lowered his Me-won-his-third~traight-start.
.
league-leading ERA to .2 ..85. •
On Wednesday night, Yankees ace
Garcia allowed three singles and struck Roger Clemens tries for his 20th vic toout a season-high nine.
.
ry.
"Right now, what people need is baseball," he said. "They need a distraction.
They need to come to the ballpark and
Brad· Radke took a perfect game into
watch a game."
the seventh inning and carried his no- hit
Ichiro Suzuki had three hits for Seat- · bid into' the eighth as Minnesota defeattie. He leads the AL in batting at .350 ed Detroit at the Metrodome.
and tops the majors with 220 hits.
. The 1\vins won their fourth in a row

cardinals 9, Brewers

..

~~

Esll

w

day 3·2,. 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bey (P.Wilson 6·8) at Boston
(Cone 8·5,, 7:05p.m.
Kontot Clly (Su-n 9-11) II Cionlone! (Colon 12-11,, 7:05p.m.
Detroit (Spar!ls 1o-9, at Minnesota (Milton 14-5,, 8:05p.m.

Mariners move close to clinching Al West

back in the against St. Louis on ·Sept. 27,
ay aternoon game
_The Dodg.ers couldn't
Cliff .Floyd hit his 30th
·
·h
· ~or the Marl1'ns
"'
muster much 0 a:ense aga1' nst b orne
k · run "
1 ,
Kevin Jarvis (12- 10) in a 3-2
ac mg
seven
score ess
loss to the Padres, wasting innings by Brad Penny (8-9).
another strong OUtl'ng from Penny was 0-8 his last I 1

(1 2-7) gave up · st two runs
and two hits _ a areer low
as a starter
n . et"ght
.nnt'n171l.
o1
In other news, · 'fony

73 .1500
77 .4811
&amp;4 .421

01

American Leag1,68

San Dlogq 3, Loa Angelos 2
. Houlton 3. san FranciiCO 2

AMERICAN LEAGUE

~

ictory, Adams

.531

Tuosday'a GlFlolfda 3, Montreel 1
N.Y. Matl ·7, Pittsburgh 5
Ctnclnno11 e, Chicago Cube I
Philae!Oiphla 4, Atlanta 3
Sl. Lcuit 9, Milwaukee 4

MarlinS •· Expo
· S1

c¢nsecuti

68

81

.542

68
68

Moncloy'IGIFlorlde 10, Monlreel 8
Phlia'c!elpllla 5, Atfanla 2
N.Y. u.ta 4, Plltlburgh 1
St. Lcuit 2, Milwaukee I
Arizona 7, Colorado 3
san Diego 8, Loa Angalos 4

Albert Pujols homered,
doubled and drove in five
runs, setting two team rookie
records in the process, as host
St. Louis won for the eighth
can't lose a 6-0 lead. I didn't time in nine ganies to take
domyj'ob"
sole possession of the wild
· ·
Andres Galarraga hit the card lead'.
longest home run in the
f p 'fi
two-year history 0
act IC
~~~
,13~11 Park, but Nen (4-4) gave In front of the smallest
up a game-tying triple to Jeff Olympic Stadium crowdI in
Bagwell and a sacrifice fly to 17 years, · Preston Wi son
M"ot' ses Alou ,· n the ninth as homered twice for Florida.
the Houston Astros .stunned
The announced crowd of
·
M
t I' mallest
San Francisco 3-2.
on rea s s.
2 , 917 was
:'fhe Giants remained tWo since drawing 2,803 for a
kd
ti
·

. Ada
In p

73

L Pel.

63 .431
n 88 .407
65 90 .379
Weot
w L Pol
Arizona
82 83 .568
San Franclaco 80 85 .552
Loa Angelos
79 67 .538
72 73 .497
san Diogo
Colorado
63 81 .438

\)ly feel the same i.vay, even
Mets 7, Pirates 5
Mike Piazza hit a two- run
c;tiough Los Angeles is in the
most precarious position homer in the eighth inning
. A:lur games behind first-place for the streaking Mets, who
Arizona and three back of St.
(ouis in the wild card race.
wore caps in tribute to New
York's. firefighters, police and .
: ;Todd H~lton andJeffCiril- . emergency rescu·e workers .
(0' opened the ninih with
The Mets came back for
"~~ck-to-back
H
K'homers
( ) off the!' r 10th Vt.ctory l· n 11 road
yyung- yun lffi 5 - 6 as games. At 73- 73, the defend14-.e Colorado Rock!'es came
v•
1'ng NL champl·ons . reac'hed
.back from a six-run deficit the _500 mark for the first
for a I 0-9 win over Arizona
time since the opening Week
at Coors Field.
of the season.
.Schilling, who wrote a
Armando Benitez pitched
h ear t~te It lett e r to Amert'ca· the ninth for his 40th ·save.
after last week's terrorist
attacks, had a 6-0 lead and
was in position to win his
21st game. But he was
knocked out after five
·v ·ng up s 'x runs
· · gs
mnm • g 1 1
1
and 10 hits .
I h
b k · h
J'l et t em get ac m t e
game," Schilling said. "You

-

c:-edo .10, Arizona 9

COntrol

Gwynn's alma mater, San
Diego State, is exp~d to
announce at a news confer~
ence Thursday that h ~ will
replace baseball coach Jim
Dietz after the 2002 season .

:_
____
·
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.

1

Atlanta

y, September 19,1001

AROUND THE DIAMOND

_._.,.
w
78
n

Page Bl

-MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIST
·MEDICAL
LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN

Qualified
Salesperson
Sell Both New &amp; Used
. Vehicles • 5 Day Week

Qualified
Mechanic
GM Training A Plus
Flat Rate Pay Plan

Send resume to:
Gene Johnson
Chevrolet-Oids
1616 Eastern Ave.
Gal

OH 45631

�'
Wednesday,, Sept. 19, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

• Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OOP

-·

The Dally Sentinel •

P/8

Hill's Self
Storage

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

Ci~

..........

CONTRACTORS. INC.
Racine, Ohio &lt;15771

29670 Bashan Roa
Racine, Ohio

740-985-3948

Ill '&amp;11.11 ....
1. . . . .

CONCRElf./BLOCKIIRKX

45771
740-949-2217

Hauling • limestone
• Gn•el Sand •
Topsoil • Fill pirl
• Mulch ·
Bulldozer Services

CDIIIFS
CllliCUE

• Foolen,Walls, Steps•
Flat Work,
Repla..,.ents,•Walks
and Drives • Stendl ·
CrdeFretEIII.,.tea
Servlna Oblo and w. v.
WVI0317U

Min.
II. ILl

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

-

Self-Storage

Dozer and

Backhoe
Septic Systems
UtWtles
New Homes

•

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions &amp; decks
Free eetlmates
1o yrs. experience
In the business
References
available. Owner:
Terry Lamm
740-992·0739

lnsurld
Specialize Jn new
construction,

remodeling, plumbing,
ei~K:trical, home main·
teiiance, and repair
porches, &amp; de&lt;ks.

Owner
Charles R. Dill

Phone 997-7445
Call hone 591·9254

992-7943

•lllli.. ...... fnll
$24.811
•1.11111&amp; Ill $1JJI•II' II Will
.................. ltlcl$11.15
·
lur lll'llln W

LAMM'S
CONSTRUCTION

Free eetlmatea,

-

Contracting
Excavating •

740-992-5232
CONSTRUCTlON

'

General

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

3-D

66Hi329

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

~~~
High &amp; Dry

JONES'

r.••nPIIIII

·

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Howordl.
'

Rocky R. Hupp . Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Oh•o 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Suppl e ment ~ Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expen ses~ Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement.
Pe nsio n &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Majo r Medica l
· ~
• Nursing Ho me
Ttl! ~ Ufl COMI"iWf'

Writesel

Roofing • Home
Malntlflllnce-

'

Gutters- Down
Spout
FrH Eslflllllfl

949·1405
591·5011

ill

VI

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7 SoUlh

Meip County Flirp'o!mds

September 15th &amp; 16th

f'vr lnfvnnauvn cvnta«:t

Uallas Webe.-

Coolville, OH 45723

740117.0-

74()·74~·:JOl()

WINTER STORAGE

·Call Us For All Your Lawn

And

Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrlva1:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
l 0:00 a.m. • 4:00 p.m.
Release:
April 27, 2002
A fee uf $20.00 will be cha11:ed for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late
removal, or anytime access is wanted to
fairgrounds other than stated dates.
Building space is first come first serve.
Inside Storage: $4.00/lf
Open Space: $2.00/lf ·
lnside Fence: $1.00/lf

Needs!

N·12 DOUBLE WAll
PLASTIC

FREE ESTIMATES

7'l0·992·1671 .

on repalrea,

(740) 742-2925

In-home service
available 24 houra,
used ayatama 386
and up, uaed
hardware and

Your Replacement Parts Source

Llcenae •53009580

on
aa
recorded In Plat
Cabinet, Pago 48, In
the Office of the U.lga
County Recorder.
Property alao known
11: 141 Covert Lane,
Middleport, OH 45710
end that Deftndanla,
all Htlra, Dtvlaeea,
Lagateea, Executora,
ExtcU1rlxea,
Admlnlatratora,
Admlnlatratrlxea end
AaalgnMa of Rebecca
E. Tyr11, Dectaaad be
required to 111 up any
lnteraat they may have
In aald premtaaa or be
lorever berred, that
upon failure of 11ld
Dofendenta to pay or
Ia ceu11 to be paid
uld Judgment wllhln
lhrea daya from Ita
randHion1hat en Order
of Sele be laaued to
the Shariff of Melga
County, Ohio, to
eppralaa, advartlaa In
the Dally Sllntlnal and
aell aald reel eallte,
the I the preml••• -be
aold fr11 and clear of
all clelma, Ilene and
lntareat of any of the
partial heraln, thet the
proc11da from tht
aale of aald premlaea
be applied to the
Plaln11H'a Judgment
and for auch other
relief to wl'llch USDA
Rural Development Ia

. ...;

.

.......

61D'x20')

Due to lht leek of
funding ceuaad by
the failure of tha levy,
·

P2000
1acegar.~t.~~~!1,;
no longer be gerbage
PIc~ uP
II lite
Townahlp Garage on
the and end 4th
Saturdey of each
month.

.

FER
· OUR

ltfLA)C, WIL~

You1-- -oo~.

NOIOI&gt;Y'$

~

INTflltsTfl&gt;
IN YOlJ/l
ITfM
(fLI.-5!

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
KEEPS THE
SUMMERnME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 89.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

' .TlllfBORN LOStlC
'

.

&amp;&lt;..~t&gt;Y5, Tf\i::£ ~ ~t-"" r::=-:::r -.Jru., ~~ BlN'\f.. ~

"''

NO, I 1'&lt;\EJ'.N REALL't .

' I"'

'

l'

.

(Ot-t&gt;l

IFYOO OON~T
.--.- tJ\T OOIOl.'t ·

I

C.CX..D-TI-\EY'~
~TilL

FIWZEf\1!

(N()U(,t\!

.I

1

TRUCKING • TIINOUHG

i't ,'

•

Wllkeavllle Townahlp
Trua1111

7411-887-11800

;,~;;~~~~~ll~;S~O~M;E:-;PAR;;;E~II;T!:o HI\1/E.
(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827

.TB!:!eT.N
.. BHUTOW
n

I'RE• WE
SUPPOSED

TOO VIOLENT.

~l&gt;~~
DON'T

Roofing .• GuHers • Siding
Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring

.,

Decks •

IS SO
U~ll"l'llt.!

ILIMLI'f~
tA
~ • •·

WEIT,IUDE
WBEIIHIP

LIKE ·

Pomero1, Ohio

I

....

992-o908

1H:JI'-fll
IMI:H-12:111

.........

'{OV J.IOLD TJ.IE BALL, MARCIE,
AND I'LL COME RliNNIN6 VP
AND KICK.:_IT_:...,.-

llllrll .........

-v-r

80NK!

with either

W~ILE

1 WAS WAITING,
SIR, 1 TJ.IOU6J.IT ~ PRACTICE
A FEW PASSt:S ..

~PQC
·-

A+.
C'.DmpnA C.l

'•
WHY DRIYE ANYWHERE ELSE?

3to

• Now Homea
• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
•GaregH
• Addition•
• Dackli
• Home Repelra

.. ;t

Free Estimates

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

Shade River AG Servi~e
"Ahead In Service"
~Ot:nplo~to Una llf Sulllvan'a Gloomlng'Supplloa
Urea, bulk only, $128.00 por tan
Prlo.ierl Horae and Llvoatack Equip.
Fertilizer $4.50/501

p..,._

..
I~:~=~~~~~ $19.50/Bo
$21.50/BIIo

llaadellnr lg IIIVIce, lac
35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45169

.

Ulllillonel

mumptelDad
Discounts

TREE SERVICE
T•P ~ TriM • Removal
Bucllet Setr¥1c:e

'

• Room AddHfono &amp;
Romndo\fng
• NIW G1r1ge1

• Elocltfcal &amp; Plumbing
Raollng &amp; Quttoro
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pallo and ~OfCit Dockl
Free Eslil'nlltes
'·

'•

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.

'

by Luis Campos
people. paat and praaent. Each_letter in the cipher stands lor anotntr.

Today's clue: Z equals J

'SW

CONSTRUCTION ·
PROJECT?
WE CAN HELP

fr ~

@.•:

N·

GRAVEL~I

SFBVI\

EY

SNEVF.'

SW

TFBLR

ZWYFOA

ZWIKFLS

O F

zW D

E R

T F

S A I S

S .w

aLR

E S

a F B y A , •

-

E Y

E R P

F R I KT F Y

y F R Fy B

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A prayer Is not hQIY chAwlng gum

ai\d you don't have to see how far you cart stretch it.'.:.. 'Rabbi

ll. I.

1-·

I

I

L-....L.,.....L-L-...L-....L;,....,J

4.2- 1-6

and East's king. He
returned a club to the
jack and queen, but
after W es~ Cllshed the
spade queen and club
ace,
Eisenberg
claimed nine tricks:
three spades,
hearts, three
monds and one

: Refrigeration
$2,500 (change out old syst:em)
$1,700 (add AIC to gas furnace)

(8) , •• 28, 2001
(10) 3, 2001

galt
48 Llwyer'a
org.
50 Web abbr.
51 Paature
aound
52 Lagendary
• bird

.I--r-T:""-,---.--.-.
E S E D1BI -1·
. I·

or 4-1-2-6 distribution, declarer cashed
c;luminy ' s diamond ·
ace, played a diamond
to his ' queen, and
took the ace-king of
spades. Now came a
heart to dummy'sJ'ack

Air
~

dlapen~

46 Steady

o ·Roarrongo lettors of tho
aeromblod
words
·b.
1 fourform
f
1
d
ow 10
our olm~ 0 wor 1·

contract.
Eisenberg did much
better. Placing West

fiii/WIIWIHn ·
217 East Second Slreet

21 Work
gang
22 Shlp'a
bottom
24 Mop abbr.
28 Kermit, e.g.
27 Uetlow ·
28 "- place or
mine?"
30 Algerian
port

C+lobrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quo1allons by tarnoua

0 B LS TD

mond) to defeat the

"Hilp"" Y011 ro Recovtr Yowln&gt;ftnnmt"

20 Tiny bH

31 And ao
forth
37 Bit of glitter
39 Overactlld
41 Wacky
43 Ludk:roua
44 Honor.d
45 Dancer
Allaire
47 CoHee

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•G D

to the club five . West
would have won
cheaply and exited
with- a spade (or ·dia-

Pressure

Snodgrass' Upholstery

750 East State s,reet Phone (740)593-6671
·
Athens, Ohio
·

A.ll pua

crossed to his spade
ace and taken the
heart finesse, East
would have won with
the king and switched

WH'-T?

us. NOT n&gt; PLAV
t&gt;oNtx.Y~Oa...RELLTIHEN YI'HT'tSH. ~~~
"'
'.
'
.. ~
IT'S TOO ~tO-ES!.tVE,
ASKED

'

Pau

11 Soma
vampire•
12 "Preaentl"
16 Like
anlmala
Ulld to a
~ poat
·
11 Perauade

~'l~::~lj~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~fi~v~e~,~fu~u~r~
~
~::~r--;~~L~Io~n~ei~B~Iu~e~~~~~~~~[·
~
~~~J;~~---~

'

1.t

·-

his ninth trick, West
decided to start with
. iack
th
e. spade two · -. . •-- ·

'

~.

PIW ' 3 NT

had no chance. But
worried that : this
might give declarer

SINCE 1964

'We'll fix It or elsel'

Senlon Dlaeounts

l

BIRD"~

SHOP? IN

Custom Computers
Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

TRI-COUDTY
TRIIDSPORT

"•

NOWI DON'T
HAFTA GO

IACIHOI• OOZING •IND lOADER •

... ·

z• :•

Eut

PHIWP
We ' ve all heard
about leading fourthhighest from one's
longest and strongest
against no-trump. But
if your lead against a
suit contract is from a
side suit headed by
· one or two nontouching honors, you
should · still select
fourth-highest . 'yet
occasionally an expert
thinks he knows better.
This deal occurred '
during the 1980 Sunday Times Invitational Pair Championship, played in
London. Sitting Souih
was Billy Eisenberg, a
five-time bridge and
one-time backgam. mon world champion.
Eisenberg did well
to rebid in no-trump
instead of supporting
hearts. Four hearts
can be defeated by
any opening le~d ex~
cept the heart king!
If West had just Jed
the club eight, fourthhighest from his longest and strongesi,
Eisenberg would have

Wllkeavllle Townahlp
Reakllnl8

•
"

.

BISSELL

e. .

... ,.1.; • 1

FAITH FULL GOSPIL CHURCH
ROUTE 124, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

L------..1

. J

, !;.

•

97 Beech st.
~lddlepert, OH

to lht
complaint wherein
notice under the fair lliiiiLl!!:!!i~e!.J
deb!
co lit c t1 on
practice act 11 given.
Said Defendanta will
18ke notice that 11 be
required to anawtr
BUILDERS INC.
aald Complaint an or
New Homes • VInyl
beforatha 17th day of
October, 2001 or
Siding • New Ganoges
Judgment will ba
• R&lt;fllacement
rendered IICCordlngly.
' Windows • Room
. USDA Rural
Additions • Rooftog
Development
Plaintiff
· COMMEIOAL and KESIDENTIAI.
S18phen D. MIIM:
; FREE ESTIMATES
Attorney
(B) 15, 22, 28, (9) 5, 12,
740·99~·7599
18
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
------Public Notice
_ _ _ __;_.;.,:__

'idver:1
•

JUGHAID JE.ST

BUSTEJ) OUR ·
WINbER,
L.UKE"V
.__
II

Sunday 9:30- Sunday Sehool;
10:30 ·Preaching .
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

-..
..

NWUI

So
clever
8Y
AlDER'

1-3114-675-71124
1-800-250-9077
Resideulial Commercial New C o~truction
Sales S.nice l~tallation
Specializintc in Sheet Metal Dw:twork
"Trane•• Sales &amp; Senice For
Gallia, Ma.•on, a'nd llleig.• Counties
Licensed and ln.•ured
WV 005176

software.

w..t

Openlnc lead: • 2

FIRST COME.
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

J E RRV "S
U SED
COMPUTERS

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

Attorney at Law
11 W. Monument Ave.
Deyton, Ohio 45402
All helra, davlaees,
legateea, executora,
extcutrlxea,
admlnlatralora, .
admlnlatralrlxea and
ualgneea of Rebecca
·E. Tryee, Decaeaed
whoae addreasea are
unknown, will hereby
18ke notice that on the
Auguat 1, 2001 , USDA
Rural Development,
Iliad tta Complaint' In
Forocloaure and
Morahollng of Llena In
the common Pleaa
Court of Malga
County, Ohio, being
Cue No. 01-CV-124
agelnal Rebecca E.
Tyree, Deceaaed
praying lor Judgment
In the amount ol
$71,558,21
wHh
lntereat
thereon
according to thettrma
of the note from May
28, 2001 until paid and
for forecloaure of ulll
Mortgege Dlltd on tha
following deacrlbed
real eatall, of which
Uld , Defendanta,
Rebacca E. TryM,
Dace11ed are the
ownere of:
Situated In the
VIII111Je of Mlddlaport,
County of Melga end
S1lta of Ohio:

It

t NT

• N~arly
years experience.
• Works on Sundays•
• Always Avallsble.
For more information, come to our church silt.

24'1

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Free eallmatea

Public Notice

SI..U.

NEPMEW

· •New Homes

K .I 7

Defier: East
Vulncr..ble. Neither

•'

992-9158

DREHEL'S

t Q I 42

•

brown

Arlhur'a

· 52 Takolums
14 Whlrtpoola 53 Smart
15 Subway·
54 Unwrappad
rl&lt;ltr'a need 55 S.,..._d
16 Elm or
and Arkin
map..
56 Grantlld
17 Glance ovor
18 Average
DOWN
grade
1 Wldaapreld
18 Eat a
.daa1ructlon
lolllpd!l
23 HaneagaH 2~~neH
25 Time long
3 Quiet
put
28 Cook In all 4 Bualneaa
aubJ.
28 Nevlldl
reaortafll 5 t-diP,H ID
32 C..~lllop I Spy a
commu33-de
nique
Janeiro
7 Impolitely
34 Put forth
I "Do-effort
uy"
35 Cobb.....
I Final letter
tool
38 Grutwork 10 Begley and
Marinaro
38 Marathon ·

"a n

'ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTION

441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

Goc)(l Dealsl

.e venln s

'1$

6 A K4

eff Warner In
992-5479

46 c.mpua

living
.,..
-""" for 46 lt.rmH
13 King ,
48 Rllddlsh-

K II I I
. J II I l

_,

Wom1n"

1~ Provldlld

.. ..
•
•

.. A Q 1t 1 41

ILli:tiE"

• Complete

2121 1 mopd

Cellular

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

• Garages

Tire Barn

..• •.

40 "Pretty

1 Wtta - n
alar
s Flld
41 Buddhlat
11 Fu,.._
prectlce
..........
42 Irk

....

6 Q ID T I

.

DIPOYSU
PIRft

ACROSS

• ·IHI

w...

B5

NEA Cronword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

WICK~S

Pa~

I

P L UT I
2 I I I
1. .

M I R E P ~~

13 ;.
L=~~;:;:~-:;:·!:'...,

I
r-

H UT G0 B
I~
I~

I. I.

.

.

"'

I.

Aaco(CCI

ltjl(CC)
(CCI

I
.

0

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I

ift UNSCRAMBlE ABOIIE lETTERS
W
TO GET ANSWER

4

S

II I

SCRAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
Sorely- Doubt· Petty· Votive •

LOUDEST

"Have you ever noticed,' a friend inquired, "that the
person who knows the least, usually knows it the LOUD-

EST?"

qDgr
{Pifl3cl

Real estate prices are out of
sight. A neighbor divulged thatthe
only thing of greater value than
himself, was his_ . . . ..
Complete tho chuckle quotad
by filling In tho mluing wordo
you develop from stop No. 3 below,

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

'Birthday·

·· Penons you link. up with in
the yCar ahead will tend to be
quite lucky for you. You r wiU
have good forrunc whether
these people are involved in

your business gr social aff:ain.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
~-

It's to your advant:.ge to

play to an audience today. In
fact, the larger the group, the
more f'tfi~ctive you're likely to

be. and·the bmer things will
work out. Know where to

look for romance and you 'II
find it, The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker instantly reveab
whiCh, signs are romantically
perfett for you . Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper, P.O. BoK 167, WicklilT~, OH 44092-0!b7,
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) •
- Make- accompli11hments a ~­
rious priority today, and re ..
wards and compensations will
automatically .follow . If you
do everything you need to do
. well, you'D be amply provided
for.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.
22) •• Even if olhen are capable of hamUing some thinss
for you rhat dirrctly affect
your self-interests. there is no

way they will do as well as
you. would. Pur outstanding
~~ul~.

go ir alone.
\

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21) -· The""'' people
who may have been reluctant

to shart ·with you in the palit
will now '4o an about- fa.ce and
give you both tangible a1ld i~­
langible thing&gt; today. Go figure .

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22jan. 19) - Good ncw5 is on
the \\'ay conce rning your e·xpectations. So mething you've

been hoping for is now developing along positive lines and
c:ould become a reality very
•hottly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Especially in career-related mailers today, you'll
have a pft for takirig •mall opportunities and expanding

them into something far larger
and improiSive than anybody
thought would be po•dble.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Owing to your positive,

philosophical attitude that
tends to inspire anybody i.n
your path tod:ay, your popularity coUld soar beyond be-

lief. Enjoy.
A.RJES (March 21 - April 19)
-- If there is any kind of ma·
jor adjustment you've been
anxiou1 to make, this might

•

be the da y to do ~o . AnY
change you make toda y
should prove to be very lucky
• for you in the long mn.

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - - ·You'll operate b~§t today when you deal individually w ith people. Thus, get
that key pe rson alone -- with out his or her ~idck ic ks -- and
go hcad- to-hend on the issues.

GEMINI (May 2t -Jure 20)
-- Whether yo u're an entrepreneur or an e m ployee ,
compensn tion fo r work well

done \,\'111 yield large r th:m
usual rewards today. Do your
Very be5t regardle~s of your

position . It will pay off.
CANCER Uune 21-July
22) • • Decall!e you're not
likely to think of. things as being too difficult to manage,
nor are you apt to be inti-

mated by anyone, everything
you tackle today will be done
with unusual ease.
LEO Quly 23- Aug. 22) -·
Lady Luck i• •itting squarely
in your comer today, so don 't

try to push things. Let manen .
run their coune , and thingt

will work out quite , succenfuUy for you,

�'
Wednesday,, Sept. 19, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

• Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OOP

-·

The Dally Sentinel •

P/8

Hill's Self
Storage

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

Ci~

..........

CONTRACTORS. INC.
Racine, Ohio &lt;15771

29670 Bashan Roa
Racine, Ohio

740-985-3948

Ill '&amp;11.11 ....
1. . . . .

CONCRElf./BLOCKIIRKX

45771
740-949-2217

Hauling • limestone
• Gn•el Sand •
Topsoil • Fill pirl
• Mulch ·
Bulldozer Services

CDIIIFS
CllliCUE

• Foolen,Walls, Steps•
Flat Work,
Repla..,.ents,•Walks
and Drives • Stendl ·
CrdeFretEIII.,.tea
Servlna Oblo and w. v.
WVI0317U

Min.
II. ILl

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

-

Self-Storage

Dozer and

Backhoe
Septic Systems
UtWtles
New Homes

•

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions &amp; decks
Free eetlmates
1o yrs. experience
In the business
References
available. Owner:
Terry Lamm
740-992·0739

lnsurld
Specialize Jn new
construction,

remodeling, plumbing,
ei~K:trical, home main·
teiiance, and repair
porches, &amp; de&lt;ks.

Owner
Charles R. Dill

Phone 997-7445
Call hone 591·9254

992-7943

•lllli.. ...... fnll
$24.811
•1.11111&amp; Ill $1JJI•II' II Will
.................. ltlcl$11.15
·
lur lll'llln W

LAMM'S
CONSTRUCTION

Free eetlmatea,

-

Contracting
Excavating •

740-992-5232
CONSTRUCTlON

'

General

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

3-D

66Hi329

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

~~~
High &amp; Dry

JONES'

r.••nPIIIII

·

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Howordl.
'

Rocky R. Hupp . Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Oh•o 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Suppl e ment ~ Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expen ses~ Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement.
Pe nsio n &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Majo r Medica l
· ~
• Nursing Ho me
Ttl! ~ Ufl COMI"iWf'

Writesel

Roofing • Home
Malntlflllnce-

'

Gutters- Down
Spout
FrH Eslflllllfl

949·1405
591·5011

ill

VI

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7 SoUlh

Meip County Flirp'o!mds

September 15th &amp; 16th

f'vr lnfvnnauvn cvnta«:t

Uallas Webe.-

Coolville, OH 45723

740117.0-

74()·74~·:JOl()

WINTER STORAGE

·Call Us For All Your Lawn

And

Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrlva1:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
l 0:00 a.m. • 4:00 p.m.
Release:
April 27, 2002
A fee uf $20.00 will be cha11:ed for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late
removal, or anytime access is wanted to
fairgrounds other than stated dates.
Building space is first come first serve.
Inside Storage: $4.00/lf
Open Space: $2.00/lf ·
lnside Fence: $1.00/lf

Needs!

N·12 DOUBLE WAll
PLASTIC

FREE ESTIMATES

7'l0·992·1671 .

on repalrea,

(740) 742-2925

In-home service
available 24 houra,
used ayatama 386
and up, uaed
hardware and

Your Replacement Parts Source

Llcenae •53009580

on
aa
recorded In Plat
Cabinet, Pago 48, In
the Office of the U.lga
County Recorder.
Property alao known
11: 141 Covert Lane,
Middleport, OH 45710
end that Deftndanla,
all Htlra, Dtvlaeea,
Lagateea, Executora,
ExtcU1rlxea,
Admlnlatratora,
Admlnlatratrlxea end
AaalgnMa of Rebecca
E. Tyr11, Dectaaad be
required to 111 up any
lnteraat they may have
In aald premtaaa or be
lorever berred, that
upon failure of 11ld
Dofendenta to pay or
Ia ceu11 to be paid
uld Judgment wllhln
lhrea daya from Ita
randHion1hat en Order
of Sele be laaued to
the Shariff of Melga
County, Ohio, to
eppralaa, advartlaa In
the Dally Sllntlnal and
aell aald reel eallte,
the I the preml••• -be
aold fr11 and clear of
all clelma, Ilene and
lntareat of any of the
partial heraln, thet the
proc11da from tht
aale of aald premlaea
be applied to the
Plaln11H'a Judgment
and for auch other
relief to wl'llch USDA
Rural Development Ia

. ...;

.

.......

61D'x20')

Due to lht leek of
funding ceuaad by
the failure of tha levy,
·

P2000
1acegar.~t.~~~!1,;
no longer be gerbage
PIc~ uP
II lite
Townahlp Garage on
the and end 4th
Saturdey of each
month.

.

FER
· OUR

ltfLA)C, WIL~

You1-- -oo~.

NOIOI&gt;Y'$

~

INTflltsTfl&gt;
IN YOlJ/l
ITfM
(fLI.-5!

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
KEEPS THE
SUMMERnME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 89.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

' .TlllfBORN LOStlC
'

.

&amp;&lt;..~t&gt;Y5, Tf\i::£ ~ ~t-"" r::=-:::r -.Jru., ~~ BlN'\f.. ~

"''

NO, I 1'&lt;\EJ'.N REALL't .

' I"'

'

l'

.

(Ot-t&gt;l

IFYOO OON~T
.--.- tJ\T OOIOl.'t ·

I

C.CX..D-TI-\EY'~
~TilL

FIWZEf\1!

(N()U(,t\!

.I

1

TRUCKING • TIINOUHG

i't ,'

•

Wllkeavllle Townahlp
Trua1111

7411-887-11800

;,~;;~~~~~ll~;S~O~M;E:-;PAR;;;E~II;T!:o HI\1/E.
(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827

.TB!:!eT.N
.. BHUTOW
n

I'RE• WE
SUPPOSED

TOO VIOLENT.

~l&gt;~~
DON'T

Roofing .• GuHers • Siding
Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring

.,

Decks •

IS SO
U~ll"l'llt.!

ILIMLI'f~
tA
~ • •·

WEIT,IUDE
WBEIIHIP

LIKE ·

Pomero1, Ohio

I

....

992-o908

1H:JI'-fll
IMI:H-12:111

.........

'{OV J.IOLD TJ.IE BALL, MARCIE,
AND I'LL COME RliNNIN6 VP
AND KICK.:_IT_:...,.-

llllrll .........

-v-r

80NK!

with either

W~ILE

1 WAS WAITING,
SIR, 1 TJ.IOU6J.IT ~ PRACTICE
A FEW PASSt:S ..

~PQC
·-

A+.
C'.DmpnA C.l

'•
WHY DRIYE ANYWHERE ELSE?

3to

• Now Homea
• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
•GaregH
• Addition•
• Dackli
• Home Repelra

.. ;t

Free Estimates

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

Shade River AG Servi~e
"Ahead In Service"
~Ot:nplo~to Una llf Sulllvan'a Gloomlng'Supplloa
Urea, bulk only, $128.00 por tan
Prlo.ierl Horae and Llvoatack Equip.
Fertilizer $4.50/501

p..,._

..
I~:~=~~~~~ $19.50/Bo
$21.50/BIIo

llaadellnr lg IIIVIce, lac
35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45169

.

Ulllillonel

mumptelDad
Discounts

TREE SERVICE
T•P ~ TriM • Removal
Bucllet Setr¥1c:e

'

• Room AddHfono &amp;
Romndo\fng
• NIW G1r1ge1

• Elocltfcal &amp; Plumbing
Raollng &amp; Quttoro
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pallo and ~OfCit Dockl
Free Eslil'nlltes
'·

'•

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.

'

by Luis Campos
people. paat and praaent. Each_letter in the cipher stands lor anotntr.

Today's clue: Z equals J

'SW

CONSTRUCTION ·
PROJECT?
WE CAN HELP

fr ~

@.•:

N·

GRAVEL~I

SFBVI\

EY

SNEVF.'

SW

TFBLR

ZWYFOA

ZWIKFLS

O F

zW D

E R

T F

S A I S

S .w

aLR

E S

a F B y A , •

-

E Y

E R P

F R I KT F Y

y F R Fy B

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A prayer Is not hQIY chAwlng gum

ai\d you don't have to see how far you cart stretch it.'.:.. 'Rabbi

ll. I.

1-·

I

I

L-....L.,.....L-L-...L-....L;,....,J

4.2- 1-6

and East's king. He
returned a club to the
jack and queen, but
after W es~ Cllshed the
spade queen and club
ace,
Eisenberg
claimed nine tricks:
three spades,
hearts, three
monds and one

: Refrigeration
$2,500 (change out old syst:em)
$1,700 (add AIC to gas furnace)

(8) , •• 28, 2001
(10) 3, 2001

galt
48 Llwyer'a
org.
50 Web abbr.
51 Paature
aound
52 Lagendary
• bird

.I--r-T:""-,---.--.-.
E S E D1BI -1·
. I·

or 4-1-2-6 distribution, declarer cashed
c;luminy ' s diamond ·
ace, played a diamond
to his ' queen, and
took the ace-king of
spades. Now came a
heart to dummy'sJ'ack

Air
~

dlapen~

46 Steady

o ·Roarrongo lettors of tho
aeromblod
words
·b.
1 fourform
f
1
d
ow 10
our olm~ 0 wor 1·

contract.
Eisenberg did much
better. Placing West

fiii/WIIWIHn ·
217 East Second Slreet

21 Work
gang
22 Shlp'a
bottom
24 Mop abbr.
28 Kermit, e.g.
27 Uetlow ·
28 "- place or
mine?"
30 Algerian
port

C+lobrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quo1allons by tarnoua

0 B LS TD

mond) to defeat the

"Hilp"" Y011 ro Recovtr Yowln&gt;ftnnmt"

20 Tiny bH

31 And ao
forth
37 Bit of glitter
39 Overactlld
41 Wacky
43 Ludk:roua
44 Honor.d
45 Dancer
Allaire
47 CoHee

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•G D

to the club five . West
would have won
cheaply and exited
with- a spade (or ·dia-

Pressure

Snodgrass' Upholstery

750 East State s,reet Phone (740)593-6671
·
Athens, Ohio
·

A.ll pua

crossed to his spade
ace and taken the
heart finesse, East
would have won with
the king and switched

WH'-T?

us. NOT n&gt; PLAV
t&gt;oNtx.Y~Oa...RELLTIHEN YI'HT'tSH. ~~~
"'
'.
'
.. ~
IT'S TOO ~tO-ES!.tVE,
ASKED

'

Pau

11 Soma
vampire•
12 "Preaentl"
16 Like
anlmala
Ulld to a
~ poat
·
11 Perauade

~'l~::~lj~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~fi~v~e~,~fu~u~r~
~
~::~r--;~~L~Io~n~ei~B~Iu~e~~~~~~~~[·
~
~~~J;~~---~

'

1.t

·-

his ninth trick, West
decided to start with
. iack
th
e. spade two · -. . •-- ·

'

~.

PIW ' 3 NT

had no chance. But
worried that : this
might give declarer

SINCE 1964

'We'll fix It or elsel'

Senlon Dlaeounts

l

BIRD"~

SHOP? IN

Custom Computers
Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

TRI-COUDTY
TRIIDSPORT

"•

NOWI DON'T
HAFTA GO

IACIHOI• OOZING •IND lOADER •

... ·

z• :•

Eut

PHIWP
We ' ve all heard
about leading fourthhighest from one's
longest and strongest
against no-trump. But
if your lead against a
suit contract is from a
side suit headed by
· one or two nontouching honors, you
should · still select
fourth-highest . 'yet
occasionally an expert
thinks he knows better.
This deal occurred '
during the 1980 Sunday Times Invitational Pair Championship, played in
London. Sitting Souih
was Billy Eisenberg, a
five-time bridge and
one-time backgam. mon world champion.
Eisenberg did well
to rebid in no-trump
instead of supporting
hearts. Four hearts
can be defeated by
any opening le~d ex~
cept the heart king!
If West had just Jed
the club eight, fourthhighest from his longest and strongesi,
Eisenberg would have

Wllkeavllle Townahlp
Reakllnl8

•
"

.

BISSELL

e. .

... ,.1.; • 1

FAITH FULL GOSPIL CHURCH
ROUTE 124, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

L------..1

. J

, !;.

•

97 Beech st.
~lddlepert, OH

to lht
complaint wherein
notice under the fair lliiiiLl!!:!!i~e!.J
deb!
co lit c t1 on
practice act 11 given.
Said Defendanta will
18ke notice that 11 be
required to anawtr
BUILDERS INC.
aald Complaint an or
New Homes • VInyl
beforatha 17th day of
October, 2001 or
Siding • New Ganoges
Judgment will ba
• R&lt;fllacement
rendered IICCordlngly.
' Windows • Room
. USDA Rural
Additions • Rooftog
Development
Plaintiff
· COMMEIOAL and KESIDENTIAI.
S18phen D. MIIM:
; FREE ESTIMATES
Attorney
(B) 15, 22, 28, (9) 5, 12,
740·99~·7599
18
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
------Public Notice
_ _ _ __;_.;.,:__

'idver:1
•

JUGHAID JE.ST

BUSTEJ) OUR ·
WINbER,
L.UKE"V
.__
II

Sunday 9:30- Sunday Sehool;
10:30 ·Preaching .
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

-..
..

NWUI

So
clever
8Y
AlDER'

1-3114-675-71124
1-800-250-9077
Resideulial Commercial New C o~truction
Sales S.nice l~tallation
Specializintc in Sheet Metal Dw:twork
"Trane•• Sales &amp; Senice For
Gallia, Ma.•on, a'nd llleig.• Counties
Licensed and ln.•ured
WV 005176

software.

w..t

Openlnc lead: • 2

FIRST COME.
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

J E RRV "S
U SED
COMPUTERS

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

Attorney at Law
11 W. Monument Ave.
Deyton, Ohio 45402
All helra, davlaees,
legateea, executora,
extcutrlxea,
admlnlatralora, .
admlnlatralrlxea and
ualgneea of Rebecca
·E. Tryee, Decaeaed
whoae addreasea are
unknown, will hereby
18ke notice that on the
Auguat 1, 2001 , USDA
Rural Development,
Iliad tta Complaint' In
Forocloaure and
Morahollng of Llena In
the common Pleaa
Court of Malga
County, Ohio, being
Cue No. 01-CV-124
agelnal Rebecca E.
Tyree, Deceaaed
praying lor Judgment
In the amount ol
$71,558,21
wHh
lntereat
thereon
according to thettrma
of the note from May
28, 2001 until paid and
for forecloaure of ulll
Mortgege Dlltd on tha
following deacrlbed
real eatall, of which
Uld , Defendanta,
Rebacca E. TryM,
Dace11ed are the
ownere of:
Situated In the
VIII111Je of Mlddlaport,
County of Melga end
S1lta of Ohio:

It

t NT

• N~arly
years experience.
• Works on Sundays•
• Always Avallsble.
For more information, come to our church silt.

24'1

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Free eallmatea

Public Notice

SI..U.

NEPMEW

· •New Homes

K .I 7

Defier: East
Vulncr..ble. Neither

•'

992-9158

DREHEL'S

t Q I 42

•

brown

Arlhur'a

· 52 Takolums
14 Whlrtpoola 53 Smart
15 Subway·
54 Unwrappad
rl&lt;ltr'a need 55 S.,..._d
16 Elm or
and Arkin
map..
56 Grantlld
17 Glance ovor
18 Average
DOWN
grade
1 Wldaapreld
18 Eat a
.daa1ructlon
lolllpd!l
23 HaneagaH 2~~neH
25 Time long
3 Quiet
put
28 Cook In all 4 Bualneaa
aubJ.
28 Nevlldl
reaortafll 5 t-diP,H ID
32 C..~lllop I Spy a
commu33-de
nique
Janeiro
7 Impolitely
34 Put forth
I "Do-effort
uy"
35 Cobb.....
I Final letter
tool
38 Grutwork 10 Begley and
Marinaro
38 Marathon ·

"a n

'ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTION

441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

Goc)(l Dealsl

.e venln s

'1$

6 A K4

eff Warner In
992-5479

46 c.mpua

living
.,..
-""" for 46 lt.rmH
13 King ,
48 Rllddlsh-

K II I I
. J II I l

_,

Wom1n"

1~ Provldlld

.. ..
•
•

.. A Q 1t 1 41

ILli:tiE"

• Complete

2121 1 mopd

Cellular

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

• Garages

Tire Barn

..• •.

40 "Pretty

1 Wtta - n
alar
s Flld
41 Buddhlat
11 Fu,.._
prectlce
..........
42 Irk

....

6 Q ID T I

.

DIPOYSU
PIRft

ACROSS

• ·IHI

w...

B5

NEA Cronword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

WICK~S

Pa~

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PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I

ift UNSCRAMBlE ABOIIE lETTERS
W
TO GET ANSWER

4

S

II I

SCRAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
Sorely- Doubt· Petty· Votive •

LOUDEST

"Have you ever noticed,' a friend inquired, "that the
person who knows the least, usually knows it the LOUD-

EST?"

qDgr
{Pifl3cl

Real estate prices are out of
sight. A neighbor divulged thatthe
only thing of greater value than
himself, was his_ . . . ..
Complete tho chuckle quotad
by filling In tho mluing wordo
you develop from stop No. 3 below,

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

'Birthday·

·· Penons you link. up with in
the yCar ahead will tend to be
quite lucky for you. You r wiU
have good forrunc whether
these people are involved in

your business gr social aff:ain.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
~-

It's to your advant:.ge to

play to an audience today. In
fact, the larger the group, the
more f'tfi~ctive you're likely to

be. and·the bmer things will
work out. Know where to

look for romance and you 'II
find it, The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker instantly reveab
whiCh, signs are romantically
perfett for you . Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper, P.O. BoK 167, WicklilT~, OH 44092-0!b7,
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) •
- Make- accompli11hments a ~­
rious priority today, and re ..
wards and compensations will
automatically .follow . If you
do everything you need to do
. well, you'D be amply provided
for.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.
22) •• Even if olhen are capable of hamUing some thinss
for you rhat dirrctly affect
your self-interests. there is no

way they will do as well as
you. would. Pur outstanding
~~ul~.

go ir alone.
\

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21) -· The""'' people
who may have been reluctant

to shart ·with you in the palit
will now '4o an about- fa.ce and
give you both tangible a1ld i~­
langible thing&gt; today. Go figure .

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22jan. 19) - Good ncw5 is on
the \\'ay conce rning your e·xpectations. So mething you've

been hoping for is now developing along positive lines and
c:ould become a reality very
•hottly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Especially in career-related mailers today, you'll
have a pft for takirig •mall opportunities and expanding

them into something far larger
and improiSive than anybody
thought would be po•dble.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Owing to your positive,

philosophical attitude that
tends to inspire anybody i.n
your path tod:ay, your popularity coUld soar beyond be-

lief. Enjoy.
A.RJES (March 21 - April 19)
-- If there is any kind of ma·
jor adjustment you've been
anxiou1 to make, this might

•

be the da y to do ~o . AnY
change you make toda y
should prove to be very lucky
• for you in the long mn.

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - - ·You'll operate b~§t today when you deal individually w ith people. Thus, get
that key pe rson alone -- with out his or her ~idck ic ks -- and
go hcad- to-hend on the issues.

GEMINI (May 2t -Jure 20)
-- Whether yo u're an entrepreneur or an e m ployee ,
compensn tion fo r work well

done \,\'111 yield large r th:m
usual rewards today. Do your
Very be5t regardle~s of your

position . It will pay off.
CANCER Uune 21-July
22) • • Decall!e you're not
likely to think of. things as being too difficult to manage,
nor are you apt to be inti-

mated by anyone, everything
you tackle today will be done
with unusual ease.
LEO Quly 23- Aug. 22) -·
Lady Luck i• •itting squarely
in your comer today, so don 't

try to push things. Let manen .
run their coune , and thingt

will work out quite , succenfuUy for you,

�)

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OHSM releases.first
computer rankings
COLUMBUS, Otlo (liP) - Hom ara flo first
~ CXliTWI8r ratings from lho
Ohio H91 SchoolRatllgs ""' t)\1 and logiJn witt! recool
and ~ polnls par giiToO (klp
tlltllolwToo in_, r&amp;glon- 11) IOQional QUBI18Ifinalo):

_tfoo_

DIVISION I
Region t-t, Cleve. St Ignatius (4-0)
11.0500. 2, Lakewood St. Edward (4-0)
10.4750. 3, Wamln Harding (4{)) 8.8500. 4,
Mayfield (3-t) 7.6910. 5, Solon (3-t) 7.3540.
6, Strongs-.;~e 13-t) 1.2no. 1. Lakeside (4-0J
7.1750. 8, Olmsted (3-f) 6.8230. 9,
Berua (3-t) 6.5750. tO. Shaker His. (3-t)
6.3250.
Region 2- t, N. Canton Hoover (4-0)
tt .5750. 2. llnJnswick (4-0) 9.0250. 3,
WfK1sWYtb (4-0l 8 1250 4 Cant h'd&lt;jnley
(3-0) 8.0656. 5, Mass. IYasl'oingloo (3-t )
7.9840. 6, Manstield(4-0) 7.7250. 7, Marion
Ha10ilc;(4-0) 7.592C. 8, Mass. Jack&amp;ol1(3-1)
72530. 9, Elyria (3- t)7.2250. tO, Hudson (3t ) 6.7250.
Region 3-1, WonlingiDn Killoome (4-0)
10.9520. 2, Hiltiald Davidson (4{)) 9.7250. 3,
Grove Cey (4-0I 9.4t00. 4, Xenia (4-0)
8.7500. 5, Reynoldsburg (3-1) 8.t750. 6 (tie),
~ SCiolo (3-1), Newar1&lt; (4{)) 8 .1250. B,
~ (4-0) 75000. 9, Dut;in Collman 12·1)
6.8013. tO, Lewis COnf8r &lt;lWlntarw (3-1)
6.5000.
Region4-t, Cin. Elder(4-0) t0.0160. 2, Cin.
St X.Yior (4-0) 9.5530. 3. Cin. Colerain (4-0)
9.5350. 4, Cn. Prlnoe!on (4{)) 9.0000. 5,
Clayton Northmonl (4-0) .8.5500. .8, Cin.
Anderson (4-0) 8.:1000. 7, lebanon (4-0)
8.2no. 8, Cin. Cal&lt; Hins (3- t) 8.8970. 9, Cin.
Sycamore (3-f) 8.2500. 10, ......,_,rg (3-f)
6.0000.
DIVISION I
Region 5 - 1, E&amp;1 Uwlpool (4{)) 7.3250. 2,
-Howland (4{)) 7.2000. 3, Madison (40) 8.9750. 4, Yo&lt;.ng. Chaney (3- t ) 6.6250. 5,
CUya. Falls Wolsll Jesuil (2·2) 6.5500. 6,
Willougtby 5c&gt;u1h (3-t) 6.4000. 7, G"'"" (31) 6.t500. 8, AkrOn Springfield (3-t) 6.Ql50.
9, Cl1aldon (2·2) 5.:1000. t O, lolisvilkl (3-1)
5.0000.
.
Region 6-t,AnnerstS- (4{)) 8.1500. 2,
~ L.aka (3-t) 7.3750. 3, Ooliance (3-f)
6.8000. 4, Tal. Cant Cath. (3-t ) 6.7480. 5,
WNiei"®Se Anthony Wayne (4-0) 6 .3t 70. 8,
f'BITTIII P.W. (3- t) 6.1250. 7, MaLrniiO (3- t)
5.4460. 6, Tol. Rogers (2•t) 5.4366. 9, Holland Springfield 13- t) 5.4350. to, Bedfaro (3115.4000.
.
Region 7-l, Cols. Beactauft (4-Q} 7.72!/J.
2, Mal)'svilkl (3- t) 6.9000. 3, Mlrielto (~
4, laJdngton (3- t) 6.4000. 5, Mans.
Madi8on (3- t) 6.200J. 6, Cols. St Challos (3t) 6.0970. 7, Cols. lndepondonce (3-1)
5.8500. 8,. New C8111sle TectJrnseh (3-1)
5.5000. 9, Cols. !Mfllin (3-t) 5.2250. 10,
Athenl 1•1) 4.8750.
Region 8-1, Cln. ~.\-:Nicholas (4-0) t0.8250.
2, Day. Cham.Julieme (3-1) 7.4250. 3, St
Bemald Roger Bacon (3-1) 6.9340. 4, Piqua
(3-1) 6.3500. 5, Day. Carroll (3-t) 5.9750. 8,
Cin. Wopdwald (4{)) 5.11430. 7, COlina (3- t)
5.4250. 8, Trenton Edgewood (2·2) 5.3250. 9,
\lar&lt;lalia Butler (2-2) 5.1750. 10, Cin. Turpin
(3-1) 4,8050,
DIVISION II
Region 9-1, WamlflSIIille His. (4{)) 9.9750.
2, AAron Hoban (4-0) 9.0500. 3, Chesterland
Geauga (4{)) 7.5250. 4, Rocky ~ (4-0)
7.4750. 5, Mogadore Field (4-0) 7.:..;oo. 6,
(4-0) 7.2250. 7. Polar&gt;:l Serrinary
-i4{)) 7.2000. 8, Clove. Benedlctina (3-1)
'7.0000. 9, Copley (4-0) 8.3000. tO, Panna
His. Holy Name (3-1) 5.7250.
Aogioo tC)- 1, St. MaJys Memorial (4-0)
8.9000. 2, Surlluoy Big Walrut (4{)) 8.2500.
3, Oak Harbor (4-0) 8.2000. 4, Medins HlghMd
7.8250. 5, Fostoria (3-1) 6.7500. 6,
6.6250. 7, Bellefonlalna (3-t)
.
5.5250. 9,
'lina Bath

""' (2·2) 3.2000. to, w. 'llnl!y Hill&lt;lp (2-2)
26210.
Region 23-t ,
Cath. (3-t) 5.6760. 2,
Dalton (3-1) 5.8250. 3, Strasi&gt;Jfg-Fronkln (31) 5.3010. 4, OBIWitie (4-0) 5:1000. 5,

-11&lt;

_

... -(4-0)4.7360. 6, -

(3-1) 4.6500. 7, Shadyside (3-t) 4.2t«l. 8,
~ (3-t) 4.0500. 9, WaterlO&lt;d (3-t)
3.8500. tO, lanes- Rosectans (3- t) 3.8000.
Region 24-1 , CedaiVille (4-0) 7.1450. 2, s.
Chaftesfcn SE (4-0) 6.:1000. 3 (tie), CoYilgton (4-0) 5.9250. 4, Maria Stein Marion local
(3-1) 5.6750. 5 (tie),- (3-1) 5.2990. 6,
TOtJP Cily Bothoi(4-0) 5.t500. 7, Wiliamsl&gt;urg
(3-1) 4.7t 70. 8, Mecl&gt;arlcsbtMg (3- t) 3.9500.
9, Anna (3- t) 3.6750. to, SCiotcwille COnmunily School(3-t)3.5tOO. .

Wednesday, Sepl19, '2001

SJHS v-ball keeps winning
BvSconWou:r

15- 12 and 1!&gt;-5. Amber Hill had

OVP CORRESPONOENT

thirteen points and Darcy Winebrenner 13 to lead Southern to the

RACINE - The Southern
Whirlwinds have been blowing the
competition out of the w.tter lately,
posting seve?~ big wins at both the
seventh and eighth grade levels,
n&lt;cendy posting wins over Kyger
Creek, Southwestern, and Trimble.
The Southern seventh grade
defeated Kyger Creek 15-5 and 1510. Bethany Vance ted Southern
with' nine points, while Amber Hill
added seven.
So~thern also defeated Trimble

wm.

In eighth grade action, Southern
defeated Southwestern 15-11 and
18- 16. Kristina Williams had 18
points io lead Southern.
Southern came back to defeated ·
Trimble 6-15,15-12,and 16-14 in
three sets. Selena Spencer led the
way with 13 points,
Southern defeated Kyger Creek
15-8 and 15-6 led by Williams
with eleven and Bethany Rif!le ten.

NFL
from Page 81
sen~ed to us in recent days
that would help us accomplish
that. If we cannot resolve our
entire postseason lineup in a
satisfactory fashion, we then
will go to a system of six division winners and two wild
card teams for this one season
0 nl y."
One option would be to
move the Super Bowl, to be
played in New Orleans, from

Jan. 27 to Feb. 3.There is only
a one-week break this year
after the championship games.
Another option would be to
schedule most of the potent:W
playoff teams for Sarurday,Jan.
5, then play the wild can!
games on Wednesday Jan. 9.
A tltird would be to play the
conference title games on
Super Bowl Sunday, Jan. 27; as
a doubleheader at the Superdome. The Super Bowl would
be played the next week at
another site, with New
Orleans promised another
game in the furure.
•

252 Upper River Road

Gallipolis, Ohio

Jeep

~~Different.

··•* Over 40 •200 1 Models in Stock and ready for immediate delivery
ALL UNITS PRICED ·UNDER INVOICE!!
THERE 'S ONLY ONE

Some •2001 Models Priced Thousands BELOW INVOICE!!

(5) 2001
Dodl&amp;e ll\trepid's
left II\ stock
$2000 I!.ELOW
~ INVOICE! ·

Don't ttlss This
Huge.Selection
Of SOY's, ttlnl

fill On Salel ·
flU PRICED
BELOW BOOK .
VfiLOEI

. 7:f',Oi-iii,t;

op Alter (3-t) 6.3250. 8, Balbrook (3-1)
8.:1000. 9, Ham. Roaa (3-1t5.5500' ·tO,·Gir· ·
deville Logan 8m (3-1) 5.2250.
DIVISION N

WE HAVE 29 PRE-OWNE·D SUV'S

· fill pN own.cl
units priced below
book VCIIucrl
Some Tllousands
Belvwl

IN.$TOCK AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
Jeep Cherokees, Ford Explorers, S-10 Blazers, Durango's, and MORE!
11 PRE-OWNED MINI VANS
.
18 PRE-OWNED PICKUPS

Region t3-t , louisville Aquinas (4-0)
7.t250. 2, Psny (4{)) 6.6750. 3, CUya. Fais
CUya. Valley CMstian (3-1) 6.6250. 4, Chagm Falls (4-0) 6.4750. 5, Cant. Cant Cath.
(3-t) 6.3500. 6, Beachwood(~ 6.2t70. 7,
. Wk:l&lt;liHe (3-t) ~.9750. 8, Cleve. VA·St.
Joseph (3-1) 5.7750. 9, Fairview Par1&lt;
Fairview (3-t) 5.1500. tO, AkrOn St Vilcont·
St.Maoy (3-1) 5.1000.
Region t4-1, Kenton (4-0) 10.6750. 2,
Coslalla Margaretta (4-0) 7.9500. 3, Ontario
(4-0) 6.9750. 4, Della (4-0).5.7000. 5, t.tian
~ (3-1) 5.:1000. 6. Pembe!vilkl East- . l (3-t) 5.0000. 7, Hig1iand (3-t) 4.8000,
8, Tontogany Ol8o!go (3-1) 4.4750. 9, Elyria
Caltdc (3- t) 4.4000. 10, HUIOO (2·2) 4.0000.
Region 15-1, Ironton (4-0) 9.2250. 2,
Newall&lt; L~klng Valley (4-0) 8.8500. 3,
(~ 8.8000. 4, Zoarville Tusc.
V!Oiey (4-0) 7.8000. 5, Lane. Fairfield Union
(3-1) 6.0750. 6, Coshocton (4{)) 8 .0000. 7,
New laidnglon (3-t). 5.7250 .• (fie~-·
Volley (3-1), w.-ty (3-1) 5.35011.
10, ........ Feny (3-1) 5.3000.
Region 16--t, Cin. Madeira (4{)) 7.3300. 2,
Canal Winchest"' (4-0) 6.7750. 3, Germa.,.
IOWn V.ley VIew (4-0) 6.7250. 4, Dayton
Oakwood (4-0) 8.5250. S, Cln. Flnneytown
(3-1) 6.2030. 6, Coldwater (3-t) 5.5500. 7,
"-!bile (3- t) 5.0250-J!, Cin. Wyanlng (3- tl
4.9000. 9, Ham. Bado (2-2) 4.7480. 10, Plain
Cily Jonathon Alder (3-t) 4.0750.

IN S'I'OCK AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DEIJVIRYI
Town Bl Country, Caravans, Windatars1 Astra's And Morel

DIVISION V

· THE KEY- Steve Story, center, chairman of the u.s. Route
33 Committee of the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council,
Gordon · Proctor, left, ODOT director, antJ George Collins,
deputy director for ODOT District 10, were honored for their
leadership in transportation advocacy at a reception on
Wednesday sponsored by Meigs County CIC. Story was presented with a signed banner bearing the slogan which
became a mantra for highway proponents. (Brian J. Reed
photo)

Ctc·thanks
u~s. 33 leaders
Supporters
honored at
reception

~=
t6-t, Morral , A&lt;tgedale (4-0)
7.4250. 2, Delphos St. Jom's (4{)) 7.1500. 3,

SMfwood Fairview (4-0) 7.0750. 4, Marion
Pleuan1 (4-0) 6.9000. 5, Uberty Ctr. (4{))
6.5750. 6, Delpl1os Je«erson (3-0) 6.4480. 7,
Ashland ere.Mow (4-0) 5.9500. 8, Elmore
(4-0) 5.4 t «1. 9, De!. Tilora (3-1)
4.7460. tO, Hamler Patrick Henry (3-t)
3.9660.
Region 19-t, Woodstield Monroe Central
(4-0) 6.7000. 2. Smithville (4{)) 6.0500. 3,
Sarahsville Shenar&lt;loah (3-t) 5.8500. 4,
&amp;.mmit Sta. llcklng His. (4-0) 5.8000. 5, Nel. oonville-Yorl&lt; (2·2) 4.5500. 6, AmandaCieaiCil!Ok 12- t l 4.0963. 7, Hannbal Rr.er (a1) 3.9660. 8, Bamesvilkl (3-1) 3.9250. 9,
Cmol!svilkl (2·2) 3.8500. t 0, Clll61on Norwayne (3-t) 3.7500.
Rogicin 20--1, Cols. Flklady (4-0) 8.Sooo. 2,
~ (3-1) 6.8750. 3,, Gahama
Cols. Acad. (4{)) 6.4160. 4, Rlct•nond Dolo
IE (4-0) 8.1250. 5, Chill. Zane TI8CII (4-0)
5.8000. 6, Weal Llle!ty-Salem (4-0) 5.8450.
7, v....Jkla (3-1) 5.5000. 8, Balnblidgo Palm
Valley (3-1) 5.0250. 9, Sidney L.anman (3-t)
4.6750. 10, lucMvllle Volley (3-1) 4.8260. '

New legislation draws .raft's opposition
Proposed law would
revoke health
board authority
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

-

2000
200 1

DIVISION VI

Region 2t -1' MogaWre (4-0) 8.0500. 2, Tlfin Caivan (~ 8.5000. 3, Glbaonburg (4-0)
8.1500. 4, Cleve. CUya, Hta. (4-0) 5.3750. 5,
FaltpOrt Harbor Halding (3-1 ) 4.2000. 8, Nor·
Sl. Paul (3-t) 3.7750. 7, lowollvllle(3-t)
3.5580. 8, A111ca Seneca Easl (3-1) 3.5500. 9,
Southington Chalker (2-t) 3.0348. tO,
Thampoon Ledgemont (2·2) 2.9250
Region 22-1 , ~"' (4-0) 5.8420. 2.·
S;&lt;:amont Mollawk (4{)) 5.1250. 3, Columbus Grove (4-0) 5.1190. 4, Dola Haldin Northom (4-0) 5.0890. 5, Carey .(4-0) 6.0750. 8,
McComb(4-0)4.9000. 7, Oregon Stt1tch (3-1)
4.1500. 8, Van Buran (3-t) 3.4500. e, Arllng-

.

~~~~:;::::om

.

...

Please see Tllft. Al

Hllh: 701

Today's

Sentinel ·
2 s.ctlau- II Pllpa

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials ·
Obituaries
Sports .
Weather

Low: 501 ·
Details, A3

Lotteries

A3
OHIO
85·7 Pick 3: 9--&lt;HI; Pick 4: 3·11-6-4
86 s..- ~ 3-14-17-31·37-38

A4 l!kMr. *5-3-0-2

•.
A3 W.VA.
Dally
3:
8+6
Dally
4: 1-5-4-6
81·2.6

A2

C 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

J.

REED·

began efforts to halt the project based on environmental
concerns.
That opposition, Proctor
sai.d, along with two lawsuits
which were filed by the
Coalition Against Superfluous Highways and the Buckeye Forest Council, "were an
effort to subvert progress for
southeastern Ohio," and ultimately were a turning point
in the state's decision to fully
fund the project.
"33 is the Key" has long
been the war cry for · high-

POMEROY- Leaders in
the fight for U.S. 33 from
Darwin to Athens were honored with a reception following Tu esday's ·groundbreaking ceremony.
Meigs County Communj~ty- - Improve-ment CorporaThe highway is · cates, and the
tJon hosted the
to
seen as necessary campaign
rece ption
at
complete the
to economic
th e Pomeroy
"capital corGun Club to
ridor"
development in
recogmze
Meigs, Athens and between
Pomeroy attorColumbus
other counties in
ney · Steve
and
southeastern ()hio Charleston,
Story, whose
work in proW.Va.,
has
moting highway projec ts in become a ca mpaigo involv- .
Meigs Co unty has spanned ing officials from both sides
more than 10 years; George of the Ohio River, and from
,Collins, a Tuppers Plains res- communmes
from
ident who serves the Ohio Ravenswood to Columbus.
Department of TransportaThe highway is seeri as
tion as deputy dire ctor for necessary to economic
District 10; and Gordon development in Meigs,
Pro ctor, ODOT director, Athens and other counties in
under whose leadership the southeastern Ohio, and a.s a
project beca me reality.
solution to a high accident
Prior to serving as ODOT rate along the roadway.
director, Proctor served on
The ".;apital co~ridor,"
the Transportation R eview which
includes
the
and Advisory Council, the Ravenswood
Connector,
state-level panel which rtow under construction, and
approves
transportation bypasses of Lancaster and
funding. TRAC was th e cen- Nelsonville, under constructer of controversy when tion and in the planning
opponents of the project stages, respectively.

·"~'

'

Board reinstates three candidates to ballot·. :
BY BRI~N

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

P'O MEROY -Three candidates previ(lt:Wy disqualified from running in th e
Noy,. 6 general election have been r~instatcid as candidates, and eight others have
filed as write-ill candidates.
· Monday was . the filing deadline for
write-in candidates, and a number of
those who were ~isqualified by the bpard
last month due to imp"? per _and incom-

plete petitions filed as write-ins.
Metgs Counry Board of Elections reinstated Charlotte Wamsley as a candidate
· for Racin e Village Council, Lee Layne as
a candidate for th e Racine Board of Publie Affairs, and Grover Salser Jr. as a candidate for Sutton Township trustee.
Elections Directo r Rita' Smi th said the
petitions, of those 'three c~ndidates were
disqualified because of improper addresses, but_were reinstate.d after an opinion

from the Secretary of State directed the :
board to do so.
'
House numbers were rece ntly assigned
, to homes in Racine, and the Secretary of ,
State's office advised the board to reinstate ·.
the candidates because .those _who signe~.
the pennons m q~esnon d1d not have,, :
adequate opporrumty to change thet~ ·
addre"es with the board. . .
.
'
Those who ftled as wnte-m candidates • ·
. Please see Ballot. Al ..
,_

·National Surgical
TechnolOgist Week

II t i l 11111111111 II l l l l l l l l l l l i l l 1111111111 II I I l l 1111111111111 II II 11111111 II I l l II II

~;;!!:

while attending Wednesday's U.S. 33
groundbreaking ceremony in Darwin.
The bill is sponsored by Sen. Lyhn,
Watchmann, a Napoleon Republican,
and passed the Senate e~rlier this s um~
mer. The bill's supporters in the House
expect it to pa.~s easily there, but Taft said
Wednesday that he will not ?ign it.
"! look to the director of the Ohio
Department of Heal th on public health
issues, and he qpposes this legislation,"

.'

.................................••.....•.......•••....•...•...•.....•••...•........ $429/mo.
- Ltather, Loqded ................ ~ .......... ~ .... $17,850-

Owner Mike Northup

---, tive au.thorities.
Specifically, Taft said
he. opposes Senate Bill
1281,)·· which would
reqpire · local health
boa'fi!S to seek approval
frorit elected officials in
the ·Gommunity before
smoking legislatiqn,
including public smok~
ing &amp;ans, · could be

POMEROY- Gov. Bob Taf\ said this ·
week that he will not sign any legislation
:which takes, authority away from local enacted.
Taft commented on· the legislation
boards of health in favor of local legisla-

1111 Plfm.,uth vovoaer ..... .................................... ~ ...................... ~:......._.... ............... s199/ma.

(J) ZOO

BY BRIAN

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

evening, honoring victims of •last week's terrorist attacks in New York City and Washington.
(Debra Call photo)

'

IN STOCK AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
Big Ones, Uttle Ones, 4x4's, 4d's, We Have Them Alii

s

·· ·'

ASHINGTON .
(AP) President
Bush will not seek
a declaration of war Thursday
in a ·high -stakes address to
CQngress, instead imploring ·
&lt; • • • tic;ws: to
have&gt;. patience
for a long, painful hunt for
terrorists.
The words are meant to
build resolve as soldiers, ships
and aircraft head across the sea
for conflict. Bush is also
expected to warn that some of
tho~e heading out may not
rerurn.
In the speech, set for 9 p.m. '
EDT, Bush will make the case
against No. 1 suspect Osama
bin Laden and his al-Qaida
:network, officials saidWednes:day. .
"I look forward to th e
opportunity to explain to the
American people who would
do this to our great country,"
Bush said. "And why."
Bush officials wouldn't say
when the U.S. plaJ)ned to
strike the president continued to ll)ake overtures to foreign leaders to join the effort
against terrorism, nor did they
expect Bush to do so Thursday l)ight.
Bush planned to ineet
Prince Saud al-Faisal, the foreign minister of Saudi Arabia,
on Thursday. AI ~ Faisal has
expressed support for the war
on terrorism .
_.The !'resident also was
mindfut-1'). Ji.e lmpacf on the '
. ecot'lomy of last week'! _
attacks,' promising that the
government would respond,
pledging to help the hard-hit
airline industry in particular.
But Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan was
expected to tell Congress on
Thursday to take a go-slow
approach before enacting ·,any REMEMBERING VICTIMS- Local emergency workers and the Meigs County Ministerial Association conducted a candlelight service at Po·meroy's Riverfront Amphitheater on Tuesday
massive stimulus package.

PluM su Bush. AS

2001 Ram 1!500 4X4 #5891- Like Brand New, 23K miles ........................... ~.$18,900 ...... $340/mo:
2001 Chrvtler SebrlnQ #5898 - Like New 6K miles, Must See! ...... ,............... $15,500 .. ;... $279/mo.
2001 Ram 1500Q1,1adCab 4X2#5990 -11Kmlles, Llkenew ....................... $18,900 ...... $340/mo.
2000DodQt Neon#5576A- Red, 34Kmlltt, GatSaver................................. $8,400 ...... $171/mo.
2000 JHp Grand Cherokee Laredo#5861 -6 Cyl., Golc:l .............................. $22,000.;.,,$388/mo.
·2000 JHp ChtrokH 4X4 #5481 TA- Sltnna, 12K mlln, Extra Cltan ............ $18,000 ...... $325/mo.
2000 DodQt Stratus #57 31 -White, 281&lt; miles, Like New ............................. $11 ,900 ...... $21 S/mo. .
2000 Dodotlntrapld #5859 - PW&amp;L, Prown, Like New ..... ,......................... $14,500 ...... $262/mo.
2000 Rom 1500 Quad Cab 4X4 #5876- Sup4u Truck, Loaded! ..................... $21,500 ...... $381/mo.
2000 Dod;e AvtnQtr #5885- A-1 Condition, Like new, 23K mlltl ............... S13,100 ...... $251/mo.
2000 Chrvtltr 300M #5886- No. 1 In ltl cla11, 16K mllll "'·" ""'""""'""""' $22,500 ...... $405/mo.
1999 FordTauru• #5529TB- Tan, 48K mlllt, Extra Cltanl..;......................... $1 0,500 ...... $204/mo.
1~eChrvtftrConcorde #5747- Luxury at ltS"best! .......... :: ............. ;.......... $14,800 ...... $286/mo.
1fieFord ExplortrXI.T #56878 ~ R~nnlnQ boards, VeryClean! ................... $18,000 ...... $347/mo.
1~~ ChryJter 300M #57 45 -Completely Loaded ...................................... $16,200 ...... $313/mo.
1999 Chrvaltr LHS 15800- Black, 31K mllu, Nice Carl ............................... $ 17,800 ...... $343/mo.
1989 JHp CherokH Sport #5877A-If• a Looker133K mll11 ...................... 13,800 ...... $248/mo.
1998 Dodo• Duron;o 4X4 #5631TA - 3rd Stat, Leather, Loadtd ................. S18,800 ...... $315/mo.
I HI Ford
04X4#5784- Red,43Kmlles, GreatBuy!. ............................ $13,800 ...... $291/mo.
IH D 1 Rom 1500 4x4Sport#5855- A-1..Truck, Blue,MustSee! .......... $16,000 ...... $337/mo.
IH8 ryaler Concordt #5586A- Pwr Seats, Local Owner ........................ $11,500 ...... $243/mo.
· 1998JHpCherokH 4X4#5818- White, 6cyt., 48Kmllta.:......................... S13,ooo ...... S274/mo.
I 68 J11p Grand ChtrokH #5100 - 4X4 ottht year.~"" :.:.' "'"" ................... S14,000 ...... $288/mo.
168 JHp CherokH Sport #5103 - Nlct, Super Cltanl, ................................ $ 13,750 ...... $217/mo.
1997 Ford Ranqer Pickup #S522A .., Blue, S~K miles, Gas Saver! .................... $7,500 ...... $173/mo.
168 Chrytler LHS #5361 8 -Red, Leather, Load .... ":'. . .. ....................... $9,500 ...... $241 /mo.
1HI Monte Carlo #58608- Sporty!....................... .... .. ........................... $8,800 .....~ $229/mo.
1996 JHp Grand Cheroktt Llmlttd #8000 • .Loadtd, L ther Bl. All .............. $11 ,000 ...... $285/mo.
1994 Plymouth Sundanct #5907 - Gal Saver, Spetlal Dtal, Nlct ................... $3,500 ...... S11 8/mo.
1994 GMC 1500 #5768..·..................................................... ~ .. $7,500,,.,,, $250/mo.
1H4 ChryJler Town $t
. 759 - Leather, Loaded, 69K miles ............. $8,500 ...... U-15/mo.

Region 17- t , Bedford Cl1anel (4{)) 8.3280.
2, WBrron Kennedy (4-0) 7.3300. 3, N. Uma
S. Range (4{)) 6.9500. 4, Wirdlam (4-0)
8.0970. 5, &amp;Alvan Black ~ (4{)) 5.3000.
6, Masa. Tuslaw (3-t) 5. tOOO. 7. Cc;umblana
CrllsMew (3-t ) • .7750. 8, HanoVerton Ullled
(4{)) 4.7500. 9, Cc;umbia Station Columbia
(3-t) 4.0000. to, M - Caldinal(3-1)

'

AMERICA AT WAR

as

tan ·

'

Hometown Newspaper

W

w.

Marian (3-1)

Melp County's

Bush asks for patience

uooo.

Cin. -

FLY YOUR FLAG TODAY TO SUPPORT AMERICA!

MEDICAL CENTER

Is September 16·22

Manager Pete SomerVIlle

Sales Team: AI Durst. Nell Plefer John Saunders Joe Tillis Larry Pierce
Jamie Adamson Sherman Green Jimmy Hamilton
~~::;.::-;: :: 1

1

Discover the . flolzer Difference

Holzer Medical Center salutes our
Surgical Technologists during their special week.

www.holzer.org
••

·-- -~- -·----- ·--·--

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