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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
••

·-- -~- -·----- ·--·--

�\

PageAl

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 20, 2001

.Friday, Sept. 21

lhursct.y, Seplelllber 10,2001

~:,

-~ ~

CINCINNATI (AP) - A white
police officer whose fatal shooting of an
unarmed black man sparked the dry's
April rio" gets a chance to make his case
Thursday.
The defense expects to call chancter
wimesses for Officer Stephen Roach
and present expert testimony about the
effects of lear on the body and the effects
of poor lighting on visual perception .
Roach shot Timothy Thomas, 19, after
chasing him down a d!.rk alley with
other police officers. Thomas was wanted on 14 charges including rraffic offenses and previous fleeing of police.
The April 7 sh:&gt;oting touched off the
city's worst racial viol~nce since the Rev.
Mar\in Luther King Jr.'s assassination in
1968, and prompted a citywide dusk-to-

dawn curfew. · Dozens of people were
injured during three nights of rioting
and more than 800 were arrested.
Prosecutors expect to conclude their
case Thursday, the fourth day of Roach's
trial on misdemeanor charges of negligent homicide and obstructing official
business.
Roach has pleaded innocent. If convicted of both charges, he could get anything from probation to up to nine
mpnth&gt; in jail.
Homicide ·investigators testified
Wednesday that they doubted Roach's
initial explanation of the shooting and
called him back for a second interview.
Investigator Charles Beaver testified
that evidence found at the scene and on
a police cruiser videotape· contradicted

statements Roach made about five hours
after the shooting.
"Our conclusion was that he realized
that he had made a mistake and was trying to justifY his actions," Beaver told
Judge Ralph E. Winkler, hearing the case
in Hamilton · County Municipal Court
without a jury.
In the raped statement played by prosecutors, Roach told investigators that
when he confronted Thomas in a chrk
alley, he said; "Show me your hands."
"He appeared to reach deep_er:.into his
pants, appeared to grab something, and
made an aggressive move toward me step toward me," Roach sajd. "I thought
he !tad a gun in his hand:' .
Beaver said ·he concluded Roach 's
statement to' investigators was scripted.

Deaths

· Obituaries

Mary C. FoWle~

Charles Manuel

· COOLVILLE - Mary C. Fowler, 72, Coolville, died·
RACINE- Charles Raymond Manuel, 81, of Racine, died
Wednesday, Sept. 19,2001 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospi- on Tuesday, September 18,2001 at Ohio State University Hos,-tal, Parkersburg, W.Va.
pital in Columbus.
·
· Arrangements will be announced by White Funeral Home,
He was born on May 20, 1920 in Racine, son of the late Max
~ Coolville.
Manuel and Effie Beaver Manuel.
He served 44 months active duty in World War II from
'
November 12, 1941 to July 30, 1945, as an artillery gunner man
1IM·m·l ·
in the U.S. Army. He was wounded at Anzio Beachhead and
.. PORTLAND - Clair louise Gluesencamp, 75, Portland, was awarded the American Defense Service Medal, the Good
, died Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2001 in Jackson General Hospital, Conduct Medal, Distinguished Unit Badge and the European
:,Ripley, WVa.
African Middle Eastern Service Medal, with one Silver Service
· Arrangements will be announced br, Cremeens Funeral Star.
. Home, Racine.
He was a member of American Legion Post 602, Racine,
.1 '
VFW 9252, Tuppers Plains, and Chapter 2 of the DAV in
)"
Huntington, West Virginia.
Surviving are his wife, Evelyn Snyder Manuel of Racine;
'' POMEROY - Genevieve "Jennie" Well, 87, 129 Laurel St., seven daughters, Charlotte Skender of Moundsville, West VirPomeroy, died Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2001 ·in Pleasant Valley ginia, Joyce Manuel Wolfe (Morris) of Bidwell, Carolyn
Hospital.
·
Robinson (Carl) of Racine, Joan Manuel of Racine, Carmen
was
born
on
Oct.
19,
1913
at
Hemlock
Grove,
daughter
·
She
Manuel of Racine, Jenny Manuel of Racine, and Jane Graham
KY.
of the late Delbert and Eula Wright Welker. She was a retired (David) of Racine; a son, Charles Manuel Jr. (Brenda) of
02001 AccuWealher, Inc.
Kroger employee. She attended Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Racine; . three granddaughters, Jennifer Skender of
Excluding the one-time charge, earnings were 32 cents a arrested after ·a chase, a detective said.
Surviving are her sister, Eileen Welker of Pomeroy; and sev- Moundsville, West Virginia, .Nikki Robinson of Racine, and
share, matching the consensus forecast of analysts surveyed by . The chase began Tuesday in Ironton when Von T. Blevins, 20,
. ·era! nieces and nephews.
·
·
Shauna Manuel of Racine; three grandsons, James Skender of
Sunny Pl Cloudy ' Cloudy
_ , T·Rain
f1ooW
Snow
leo
Thomson Financial/ First Call.
oflronton, wa5 seen driving a station wagon owned by the vic· She was also preceded in death by her husband, Orville Well; Moundsville, Chase Graham of Racine, and Cole Graham of
Kroger shares closed down $1.51 at · $24.53 in trading tim, 49-year-old Francisco Alberto "Tico" Lara. ·
and three brothers, Gerald, Ralph and William Welker.
Racine; and several nieces and nephews;
Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in Ewing Funeral Home in
It lasted for about 30 miles at speeds that reached 100 mph,
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by an infant
Pomeroy. Burial will be in'Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends may daughter and three brothers.
said Ironton police Detective Chris Bowman.
call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, September 22,
He said the pursuit ended when Blevins ran the car into a
BY THE .4SSOCIATED PRESS
70s. Wind becoming south2001
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating
ditch, Police found Lara's wallet in the car, Bowman said.
CINCINNATI (AP) -The National Underground RailMore showers and thunder- west 10 to 15 mph by midday.
will be Dr. Robert Fulton and the Rev. Gene Harmon.
road Freedom Center on Wednesday appmnted Spencer Crew
storms are forecast for Friday, Chance of rain 30 percent.
Burial will follow in Plants Cemetery.
Spaun; Scipio trustee, Philip L
Friday 'night...A chance of ' as executiVe director and chief executiVe officer. .
.
~
Erwin Sr., Robert L. Jewell,
but the weather improves for
Graveside military services will be conducted by Ameri c~ n
light showers until midnight,
Crew will begm work Nov. 5. He has been director of the
~
'
Kevin Payne, Bobby W. Vance; Legion Post 602, Racine.
Jthe weekend.
Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American His:•
from Page AI
Sutton trustee, Kenneth R.
A low pressure system drop- Lows in the upper 50s.
Friends may call at· the funeral home on Fric\ay, September
Extended
forecast:
tory
since
1992
and
has
.studied
and
written
about
black
histo&amp;
Guinther, Grover Salser Jr:, 21, 2001 from 6-8:30 p.m .
ping out of the Upper Mid~ are: Greg Hanning, Sc,ipio Roy F. VanMeter.
·
Saturday... Mostly
sunny. ry.
west tonight will produce the
.
.
. .
He will complete the design of pro~rams and exhibits for the
• Township trustee; Lawrence
Meigs local School Board,
stormy
conditions, · the Highs in the mid 70s.
Saturday
night
...
Clear.
Lows
center
and
be
m
charge
of
day-to-day
operattons.
•
. : Johnston, Lebanon Township Wayne E. Davis, Ron Logan,
National Weather Service said.
rather who should have the
The $110 million center is to open in 2004 along the Ohio
: trustee; Cecil Stacy, Salem Cathy Morris, James Soulsby,
Overnight lows will be in the 50 to 55.
authority to enact such' reguSunday... Mosdy sunny diu- River.
~.Township trustee; Richard Scott.Walton; Southern Local
50s.
lations .
•
Fetty Jr., Rudand n~ayor; Paul School Board, T Ron Cam~
But dry weather will be ing the day. Highs in the upper
Stat~n. Mike Shoemaker,
from Page AI
~ Life, Olive Township trustee;. marata, Don P. Smith; Eastern
returning by Friday night and 70s. A chance of showers dur.:
a
Boufilreville
Democrat, said
;,
'
•
'.'.'
• ••
" ' " ..
,,..,.
into Saturday as high pressure ing the night.
Richard
Hill,
Southern
Local
Local
School
Board,
].
Greg
Taft
said.
"I
understand
the
he supports the measure,
tl
•.
1;
• • • " ..&lt;·&gt;&gt;:.·~,.,.
COLUMBUS (AP) -A nonprofit group will explore ways
builds, forecasters said.
Monday... Mostly
cloudy
'
School
District;
Robert
Bailey,
Howard
Caldwell,
effects
of
smoking
and
sec•
he withdrew his coalthough
'. I I 1\
"&gt;,1
6 •
Sunset tonight will be at with scattered showers. Morn- for farmers to earn more from their crops by processing them
"
; Dutcher, Scipio Township Roger Willford; Athens-Meigs ond-hand smoke, and I sponsorship after an amend7.32, and sunrise on Friday is ing lows in the mid 50s. Highs for uses other than food.
~ trustee; and William Ayres, Educational Service Center, oppose it, also."
ment he proposed from the
Heartland AgVenture Association will develop business plans
~ffTS@ PO~'EROYPARKJNG LOT
in the lower 70s.
at 7:18a.m.
~ Olive Township trustee. ·
at-large meinber,John Depoy;
"! stand with Dr. (Nick) Senate floor was rejected.
Weather forecast:
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy and for farmers to own processing plants that will convert crops .i!'lto.
12:00
Woodrow Jackson Richard Athens-Meigs ESC, Southern Baird on the issue, and will
State Rep. John Carey said
Tonight ... Mostly clear with cooler with a chance of show- useful products, said Jeff Layman, an Ohio State University
~
also
filed
as
a
write-in
candiLocal,
Michael
T
Struble;
not
sign
the
bill
if
it
crosses
he
has not decided for certain
L'EA V'ES @ l :00
areas of late night dense fog. ers. Morning lows in the mid extension agent.
~ date for Lebanon Township Alexander Local School Dis- my desk," Taft said, noting that how he y;ill vote when the
'£NOS@ ~IZ:WAY
The idea is to provide more markets for farmers and to give·
Lows in the mid 50s. Near 50s. Highs 65 to 70.
:,rustee.
trict, Keith C. Andrews, Mabel he rejected a similar measure bill hits the House, but th e
Wedne~day... Partly cloudy. them investment opportunities, said Tom Sporleder, chairman of
· lcalm wind.
'
•
Candidates
appearing
on
the
R.
Burton, Fred Davis, Charles during the last legislative ses- Wellston Republican "generADMISSION: $10.00 fACii OR $15.00 COUPLE
Friday... Partly cloudy. A Morning lows near 50. Highs. Ohio State University's Farm Income Enhancement Program.
ballot are: Bedford trustee, H. Mansfield, C. Dale ~im:lair ston.
ally supports" legislation
"The days of $5 corn and beam in the teens ... we don't see
OOoFl
chance of light showers in the in the upper 60s.
Robert F. Hawk, Ronald L' and Stephen W. Thomas.
Last week, Meigs County which gives authority in passr,o1&amp;0
PF!JZ~:s
them on the .horizon;' Layman said, referring to falling crop
afternoon. Highs in the upper
Wood; Chester Trustee, Alan
Middleport Village Council, Board of Health passed a ban ing public policy to local legpnces.
Holter, Blai~ Windon; Colum- Roger L. Manley Sr., Robert on smoking in public places, islative bodies rather than
bia trustee, Don Cheadle, M. Pooler, Kathy Scott; Mid- including pr·ivately-owned administrative bodies.
C~tjs A,, Jqhnson, Granville ' dleport Board . of Public 9\;sinesses.
''
Shoemaker and Carey rep.
.
IRONTON (AP) -A man charged with killi~g~~a~n~~~~-~-~
C. Stout; _Lebanon trustee; Affairs •. none; P~meroy Village
.Similar regulations are now resent Meigs County as part
..
ATHENS
(AI!)
Authorities
s:ry
a-husband
ancLwtfe
..
whose
1-11-':-.1\.•etul'
Fttch,.Lawrence-H.Counctl,ToddNorton,--Qon-beino---rhallengedin-courts ~ of their~legislative districts .
.·
- ~
.
· ~ .
. - ·
·
· - Ky-.- re-siaent was wearing the v1ctim's jewelry
" bodtes were found m separate locatiOns m Athens County
'
·
·
•---~N~EE~D~IN~F~O~.~C~ALL~~740~-7~42~·~15~1~3~0~R~.;:~:__ _ _
John R. Krider, aid Todd . Smith, Larry across the state, said WatchTaft said he believes lo.cal
apparently were murdered.
'"'&lt;::ha!rles'R. Lawrence, Timothy Wehrung, Jackie R. Welker, mann's spokesman, Bethany boards of health are "best
J;D. Lawr~nce; Letart trustee, George L. Wright; Rutland Rhodes, who said that smok- qualified" to determine the
Sheriff's Sgt. Allen Flickenger said both David Malcolm, 32,
and Ruth. Malcolm, 35, of Glouster, appeared to have died from
Dave Graham, Bob Morris; Village Council, Ralph Bales, ing regulations themselves are merits of smoking-related
blows to the head. Autopsies were to be performe.d by the
Olive trustee, Brian Ke'ith Dai~ Marie L. Birchfield, Danny not the legislative issue, but regulations.
.- ley, Garry Bowman Jr., Davis, Ralph E. Searls; SyraFranklin County coroner in Columbus to determine the cause
ofdeath.
.
: Michael Hayman, Jerry L. cuseVillage Councii,Jeffrey L.
A hunter found David Malcolm's body Wednesday in the
,
Larkins, William R. Osborne, Bable, Eric D. Cunningham,
Trimble Wildlife area. While deputies were at that scene, the
Jackie L. Westfall; Orange Donna Peterson, Eber Pickens
' trustee,JohnA.Rankin,Roger Jr., Michael R. VanMeter;
body of Ruth Malcolm was found outside the couple's mobile
home a couple of miles away.
Ritchie.
Syracuse Board of Public
Rutland tt:ustee, Charles D. Affairs, no candidate; Racine
Flkkenger said investigators have ruled out murder-suicide.
; Barrett Jr., Steve Lambert, Village Council, Robert W.
;: Charles Williamson; · Salem Beegle, Henry W Bentz,
WASHINGTON (AP) chairman of the panel's subCOLUMBUS (AP) ' trustee, .)ack L. Ervin, Keith Joseph L. Evans, David H. Ohio _lawmakers on Wednesday committee on economic develSupporters and ·opponents
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ohio's most populous county has
' Hypes, H. Dannie Lambert; Spencer, Charlotte L. Wams· urged rapid action to provide opment, public buildings and
of legislation that would
sued Go&lt;. Bob Taft and the state over the alleged ,diversion of
jialisbury trustee, Edward W. ley; Racine Board of Public financial aid to airlines and the emergency management.
allow Ohioans to carry conS260 million in federal welfare aid to balance the state budget. .
: Durst, Bernard D. Gilkey, Bill Affairs, Lee S. Layne.
service industries that support
Ohio has four international
cealed weapons sharpened
J "Congress didn't say, 'Here Ohio, take this pot of money and
them. nose businesses have airports and 19,000 registered
do whatever. you want with it'," said Commissioner Jimmy the debate- on Wednesday as
suffered dramatic financial ·dam- pilots and is served by nearly
· a House subcommittee conDiM ora of Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland.
age
as a result of last week's ter- every major airline.
The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in Cuyahoga County Common ducted its first hearing since
~rist attacks.
·
Continental Airlines, Delta
Pleas Court, said Taft and other top state _oflicials were "turning last week's terrorist attacks
"Our major airlines have and America West have hubs at
in New York and Washingtheir back on ,the neediest citizens of Ohio."
• AEP-~.
Federal Mogui-'Premier- 8\1
slashed
flight schedules and the main airports serving in
.,
· ' Arch Coal- 15\1
Rockwell .;.. 14
USB-21\1
The suit' alleged the state has "engaged in an elaborate and ton.employment rolls and still teeter Cleveland, Cincinnati and
Gannett- 60~.
Rocky Boots - 5
' Akzo- 37\
The
Ohio Coalition
illegal funding scheme ... to balance the state budget."
: AmTechSBC- 45),
General Electric- 32\1 RDShell-48
on the brink of bankniptcy;• . Columbus respectively. Delta's
Against Gun Violence and
GKNLV-3,,
·:. Ashland Inc.- an,
Sears- 33
Rep. Steven LaTourette, R- regional subsidiary, Comair, is
the Ohio Million Mom
Ha~ey Davidson - 38'- · Shoney's -i.
; AT&amp;T-18
'. Bank One - 29'.1 ·
Kmart-7Y.
Wai-Mart- 45\1
Ohio, said at a House Trans- based at the pncinnati airport,
March Chapters asked subKroger- 24\1
: BLI-8,,
Wendy's- 26~
portation Committee ·hearing which is in Hebron, Ky.
WARRENSVILLE HEIGHTS (AP) -An aggravated mur- committee members to. skiJ?
Lands End- 31\1
Worthington - 11 ),
~ Bob Evans - 1~.
on
the airline Industry.
"No airline with a hub in
Ltd. -10\1
Dally stock reports are
· BorgWamer -, 39\1
der charge in the beating death ·of an aspiring model has been the hearing beca~se it Caf11e
NSC15,,
the 4 p.m. closing
~ Champion - 2\1
"The government ordered Ohio would be a different
dropped, but the same man remains a suspect, authorities said. too soon after the attacks.
' Charming Shops - 5\1
Oak Hill Financial - 16 quotes of ll)e previous
During the hearing, some
Gregory L. Jackson, 36, of Cleveland Heights, was released
OVB-24,,
day's transactions, pro- the planes out of the sky last Ohio;· Sen. Mike DeWine, RCity Holding - t 0
BBT-34,,
: COI-13Y.
vided by Smith Partners Tuesday, and failure to act on Ohio, said Wednesday. "The
from the Cuyahoga County jail Wednesday night after the mur- of the bill's proponents said
at Ad'lest Inc.
·
Peoples- 19\1
:
DuPont-35
our part will take our domestic bottom line is it is important for
der charge was dropped in the death of Maria Floyd, 27, ofWar- that in light of the attacks,
airline industry to its collective us to have a viable airline indus ~
it's become more important
rensville Heights.
knees:' said LaTourette, who is try."
than ever to ensure one's
Jackson had been scheduled to go on trial Monday.1 Jackson and Floyd had ·dated for five years. She was killed own safety.
Aug. 24, 2000, the day before she was to fly to California to
The House Commercial
\
meet with modeling agencies.
and Civil Law subcommito ,
(USPS 213-980)
Rea
Ohio Volley Publishing Co.
tee ~as been conducting
.
Published every anemoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
hearin~s on the bill all sumC!)rrectlon Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Secon'd·class
mer. The· hearing Wednesday
.
Our main concern In all stories is postage paid at Pomeroy.
'·
AKRON (AP) -The Akron Art Muse4m has selected an hac\ been postpO'ned from
to be accurate. If you .kr\ow of an Mtmblr: The Associated Press and
error In a story, call the newsroom the Ohio Newopapar Association.
Austrian architectui'ai firm to design a $23 million expansion. the same day one week earPoetmlister: Send address correcAre your investments
at (740) 992-2t56.
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court.
· :rhe firm of Coop Himmelb(l)au of Vienna was selected lier - the day after the
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
spread among
., .
Wednesday to design the 50,000-square-foot expansion. attacks.
News Departments
Subscription rates
The malo number Is 992·21 56.
Groundbreaking is pla'nned for 2003.
multiple firms witlr 110
"We call for a time of sinBy carrier or motor route
•
Department
extentions
are:
The project will triple gallery space to 25,000 square feet and cere soul searching al)d
One week ·
$2
o11e really knowing
One month
$8.70
Ext. 12
include classrooms, a children's gallery, amuseum gift shop and healing," coalition director
One yoor
$104
wlro you are?
·
dining areas.
John C. MiUer, CFP
Angela Ward
Ext 13 Dolly
50 cents
Toby Hoover said in an eNewa
Branch
~anager
Client S"erviee Manager
Subscnbers not desiring to pay the
Outdoor space for public events and sculpture will increase mail to members. "We
Ext. 14 · carrier may remll In ad./ance direct tp
or
AI our Raymond James office we make It a point to get to know
from 14,000 square feet to 63,000 squ~re. feet.
·
The Dally Sentinel. Credll will be given
should not be holding hearcarrier each week. No subscription by
our clients and for them to get to know us. We have over 3S
Other services
ings on a highly contentious
mail permitted In areas where home
years of combined experience in the investment business. Let us
issue such as the carrying of
Ext. 3 carrier service Is available.
Advertlalng
share our experience with you as we get to know you.
hidden handguns."
·
Mall subscitptlon
Ext. 4
Circulation
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Kroger Co., the nation's largest
lnelde Melgl County
Last week's cancellation
Call today for your free consultation witll no obligation.
13 Weet&lt;s
$27.30
supermarket op,erator, said Wednesday .that second-quarter
Ext.
5
Clettllled
Adt
gave committee memhers .
26 Weeks
$53.82
311 Fourth 51 .. Manella, OH 45750
earnings increased 19 percent, exclu.ding one-iime expenses.
52 Weeks
$105.56
and
interested
parties
740-376-9186
To 111nd •mall
• Kroger earned $255.7 million, or 31 cents per diluted share
Roteo outlldt Melgo County
fNMPA' SE8Y'CfS ~
,enough time to reflect and
· newt 0 my(lllllysentin~l.com
800-726-8412
13 Weel&lt;s
$29.25
for the quarter, which ended Aug. 18, compared with $208 mil' On the Web
mourn, said the subcommit26 ·weeks
$56.68
John.Miller@AJFS com
lion , or 25 cents a share, during the second quarter a year ago.
www.raymondjames .com/JohnCMiller
www.mydallysentlnel.com
52 Weeks
$109.72
AWard@ RJFS.com
~
tee's
chairwoman,
RepubliSales were up 4.2 percent at $11.48 billion, comp:tred with
Cmntndtr&gt;d tn yout fm ,1 nnal futut()
can Rep. Ann Womer BenS11 .02 billion for the previous second quarter.
·
j,min o.&gt;f'Aurora .
AccuWealhere

Clair Gluesencamp

Genevieve Well

o • a l t .. • • • •

Chance of rain returns Friday Center appoints chief executive

. Ballot

~fiGS CO. 'BLKF:'RS'

. . 16tlv ANNUAL . . .

TOY RUN

Taft

SEPTEMBER 22, 2001

Group seeks other uses

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Husband, wife were murdered

•
I
Po ICe arrest .Ironton man

J

Attacks .
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·

s. arpen
debate on
weapo_ns b'llI

Lane"'

Siren

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Leaders say airline financial

;

woes could cost Ohio jobs

Cuyahoga sues over funds

LOCAL STOCKS

Murder charce·dropped

The Daily Sentinel
.

~er Services

Museum selects archited

The Dally Sentinel·• Page A 3

.--~------------------~~~~~=-----------~~~~~~

Officer said.he thought ma·n he shot had gun

Ohio weather

Pomeroy, Ml'ddleport, Ohio

LOCAL B.RIEFS
Plan sing
MIDDLEPORT Ash
Street Church in Middleport
will h'old a hymn sing o.n
Sunday at 6 p.m., with Tammy
Taylor, the Millers, and
Gabriel Quartet.

Commission
meets
POMEROY
Meigs
County Veterans Service
Commission will meet o'n
Monday at 7:30p.m.

Plan benefit
POMEROY - A benefit
bake sale and craft sale will be
held in the skilled nursing
unit at Veterans MemG&gt;rial
Hospital to beneift the crisis
relief fund. The sale will . be
held in the sun room from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sept, 28.
Donations are welcome.

Tap class set
MIDDLEPORT- A sixweek class ,for boys and girls
aged five through 12, "Introduction to Tap Dance for
Children," will be held beginnin g O ct. 4 for six consecutive Thursdays at the Ri verbend Arts Council.
Classes for ages five through
·eight will be held from 4 to
4:45 ·p.m., · and ages mne
through 12 from 5 to 5:45
p.m.
Tom Dooley and Rae
Gwiazdowsky are instru ctors
for the class, wh ich will promote rhythm and coordination through basic tap dance

class.
Class is limited to 10 students, and the course fee is
$30. Information and registration are available by calling
992-5458.

Sing slated
DANVILLE Danville
Church of Christ will hold
gospel meetings on Saturday
at 7 p.m. and Sunday, at 6
p.m., with Denver Hill as
speaker.

No units called
POMEROY - The Ohio
Adjutant General reported
Wednesday that no Ohio
National Guard units have
been mobilized for Operation
Noble Eagle/Infinite Justice
at this time.
"This office will take every
measure to notify the public,
through the med1a, of any
Ohio National Guard. mobilization," · said Capt. Neal
OUDrien.

EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emerge~cy Service
answered three calls for assistance. Units r~sponded as fol lows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:15 a. m., Ohio 124,
Claudia Springer, Holzer
Medical Center;
4:21 p.m ., Ohio 248 , Darlene Chadwell, HMC
REEDSVILLE
12 :58 p.m., Coolville Road,
Charles Blake, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.

that evidence shows that the
terrorists suspected ''are harbored, supported, sustained
and protected by a variety of
from Page AI
forei gn governments."
The Pentagon has given the
The economic fallout from
coming struggle a name the terrorist attacks sem stocks
"Operation Infinite Justice." plummeting again Wednesday.
The military action began in Only a late burst of buying
earnest Wednesday as the Air saved the Dow from its worst
Force dispatche'd dozens of three-day point loss ever.
The Dow Jones
was
warplanes to the Persiarl Gulf
area~ -·
- -d•own-as-rrluch-as-4:&lt;!Jcpoi.nts.cat- - - to
The aircraft carrier USS midafternoon but
Theodore Roosevelt also was · finish with a loss of 144 points
se'nt' toward the Mediter- following news reports that
ranean to join two aircraft car- the military was beginning a
riers already in the region near buildup in the Persian Gulf
Afghanistan. Din Laden is area.
The ~ttacks and a two-day.
believed to be hiding there.
federally
ordered shutdown of
The pursuit of bin Laden
and his elusive, loose-knit the air travel system also have
group of terrorists continued set in motion a crisis for airline companies - American
on several fronts.
· United
airlines
The FBI enlisted banks to and
follow the money trail in last announced 40,000 layoffs
week's terrorist attacks, where Wednesday.
The parent company of
two planes were crashed into
the World Trade Center, American, the world's largest
another into the Pentagon and airline, said it will lay off at
a fourth into the southwestern least 20,000 of its 138,350
Pennsylvania
countryside, workers. The cuts by AMR
More than 5,400 people were Corp. will affect American,
TWA and American Eagle.
believed killed.
Attorney General John
Ashcroft and FBI Director
Robert Mueller planned to
visit the Pennsylvania crash
site of United Flight 93 on
Thursd~y. Just before the
crash, several of the passengers
on the tlight made cell phone
calls saying they planned to
attack their captors.
With the numb of people
detained on i
igration
charges for esuoning rising
to 115, the FBI sent a list of
the alleged hijackers to banks ·
asking them to search for any
transactions involving 21 people wanted in connection
with the attacks.
Agents also were investigating the possibility that sotne of
the suspected suicide hijackers
used fake identities of .people
who may still be alive.
Ashcroft said Wednesday

Bush

SPRIN GVAI LFYClllFMA
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Kroger eamings up 190/o

RAYMOND JAMES

EEPERS CREEPERS (R) 7:20 I &amp;:20

AMER!Ci(N PIE 2 (R) 7:15 &amp; 9:30

HE OTHERS (PG13) 7:10 &amp; 9:20

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All AGES, ALL TIM ES $ 4 .00

·,

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PageAl

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 20, 2001

.Friday, Sept. 21

lhursct.y, Seplelllber 10,2001

~:,

-~ ~

CINCINNATI (AP) - A white
police officer whose fatal shooting of an
unarmed black man sparked the dry's
April rio" gets a chance to make his case
Thursday.
The defense expects to call chancter
wimesses for Officer Stephen Roach
and present expert testimony about the
effects of lear on the body and the effects
of poor lighting on visual perception .
Roach shot Timothy Thomas, 19, after
chasing him down a d!.rk alley with
other police officers. Thomas was wanted on 14 charges including rraffic offenses and previous fleeing of police.
The April 7 sh:&gt;oting touched off the
city's worst racial viol~nce since the Rev.
Mar\in Luther King Jr.'s assassination in
1968, and prompted a citywide dusk-to-

dawn curfew. · Dozens of people were
injured during three nights of rioting
and more than 800 were arrested.
Prosecutors expect to conclude their
case Thursday, the fourth day of Roach's
trial on misdemeanor charges of negligent homicide and obstructing official
business.
Roach has pleaded innocent. If convicted of both charges, he could get anything from probation to up to nine
mpnth&gt; in jail.
Homicide ·investigators testified
Wednesday that they doubted Roach's
initial explanation of the shooting and
called him back for a second interview.
Investigator Charles Beaver testified
that evidence found at the scene and on
a police cruiser videotape· contradicted

statements Roach made about five hours
after the shooting.
"Our conclusion was that he realized
that he had made a mistake and was trying to justifY his actions," Beaver told
Judge Ralph E. Winkler, hearing the case
in Hamilton · County Municipal Court
without a jury.
In the raped statement played by prosecutors, Roach told investigators that
when he confronted Thomas in a chrk
alley, he said; "Show me your hands."
"He appeared to reach deep_er:.into his
pants, appeared to grab something, and
made an aggressive move toward me step toward me," Roach sajd. "I thought
he !tad a gun in his hand:' .
Beaver said ·he concluded Roach 's
statement to' investigators was scripted.

Deaths

· Obituaries

Mary C. FoWle~

Charles Manuel

· COOLVILLE - Mary C. Fowler, 72, Coolville, died·
RACINE- Charles Raymond Manuel, 81, of Racine, died
Wednesday, Sept. 19,2001 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospi- on Tuesday, September 18,2001 at Ohio State University Hos,-tal, Parkersburg, W.Va.
pital in Columbus.
·
· Arrangements will be announced by White Funeral Home,
He was born on May 20, 1920 in Racine, son of the late Max
~ Coolville.
Manuel and Effie Beaver Manuel.
He served 44 months active duty in World War II from
'
November 12, 1941 to July 30, 1945, as an artillery gunner man
1IM·m·l ·
in the U.S. Army. He was wounded at Anzio Beachhead and
.. PORTLAND - Clair louise Gluesencamp, 75, Portland, was awarded the American Defense Service Medal, the Good
, died Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2001 in Jackson General Hospital, Conduct Medal, Distinguished Unit Badge and the European
:,Ripley, WVa.
African Middle Eastern Service Medal, with one Silver Service
· Arrangements will be announced br, Cremeens Funeral Star.
. Home, Racine.
He was a member of American Legion Post 602, Racine,
.1 '
VFW 9252, Tuppers Plains, and Chapter 2 of the DAV in
)"
Huntington, West Virginia.
Surviving are his wife, Evelyn Snyder Manuel of Racine;
'' POMEROY - Genevieve "Jennie" Well, 87, 129 Laurel St., seven daughters, Charlotte Skender of Moundsville, West VirPomeroy, died Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2001 ·in Pleasant Valley ginia, Joyce Manuel Wolfe (Morris) of Bidwell, Carolyn
Hospital.
·
Robinson (Carl) of Racine, Joan Manuel of Racine, Carmen
was
born
on
Oct.
19,
1913
at
Hemlock
Grove,
daughter
·
She
Manuel of Racine, Jenny Manuel of Racine, and Jane Graham
KY.
of the late Delbert and Eula Wright Welker. She was a retired (David) of Racine; a son, Charles Manuel Jr. (Brenda) of
02001 AccuWealher, Inc.
Kroger employee. She attended Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Racine; . three granddaughters, Jennifer Skender of
Excluding the one-time charge, earnings were 32 cents a arrested after ·a chase, a detective said.
Surviving are her sister, Eileen Welker of Pomeroy; and sev- Moundsville, West Virginia, .Nikki Robinson of Racine, and
share, matching the consensus forecast of analysts surveyed by . The chase began Tuesday in Ironton when Von T. Blevins, 20,
. ·era! nieces and nephews.
·
·
Shauna Manuel of Racine; three grandsons, James Skender of
Sunny Pl Cloudy ' Cloudy
_ , T·Rain
f1ooW
Snow
leo
Thomson Financial/ First Call.
oflronton, wa5 seen driving a station wagon owned by the vic· She was also preceded in death by her husband, Orville Well; Moundsville, Chase Graham of Racine, and Cole Graham of
Kroger shares closed down $1.51 at · $24.53 in trading tim, 49-year-old Francisco Alberto "Tico" Lara. ·
and three brothers, Gerald, Ralph and William Welker.
Racine; and several nieces and nephews;
Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in Ewing Funeral Home in
It lasted for about 30 miles at speeds that reached 100 mph,
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by an infant
Pomeroy. Burial will be in'Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends may daughter and three brothers.
said Ironton police Detective Chris Bowman.
call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, September 22,
He said the pursuit ended when Blevins ran the car into a
BY THE .4SSOCIATED PRESS
70s. Wind becoming south2001
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating
ditch, Police found Lara's wallet in the car, Bowman said.
CINCINNATI (AP) -The National Underground RailMore showers and thunder- west 10 to 15 mph by midday.
will be Dr. Robert Fulton and the Rev. Gene Harmon.
road Freedom Center on Wednesday appmnted Spencer Crew
storms are forecast for Friday, Chance of rain 30 percent.
Burial will follow in Plants Cemetery.
Spaun; Scipio trustee, Philip L
Friday 'night...A chance of ' as executiVe director and chief executiVe officer. .
.
~
Erwin Sr., Robert L. Jewell,
but the weather improves for
Graveside military services will be conducted by Ameri c~ n
light showers until midnight,
Crew will begm work Nov. 5. He has been director of the
~
'
Kevin Payne, Bobby W. Vance; Legion Post 602, Racine.
Jthe weekend.
Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American His:•
from Page AI
Sutton trustee, Kenneth R.
A low pressure system drop- Lows in the upper 50s.
Friends may call at· the funeral home on Fric\ay, September
Extended
forecast:
tory
since
1992
and
has
.studied
and
written
about
black
histo&amp;
Guinther, Grover Salser Jr:, 21, 2001 from 6-8:30 p.m .
ping out of the Upper Mid~ are: Greg Hanning, Sc,ipio Roy F. VanMeter.
·
Saturday... Mostly
sunny. ry.
west tonight will produce the
.
.
. .
He will complete the design of pro~rams and exhibits for the
• Township trustee; Lawrence
Meigs local School Board,
stormy
conditions, · the Highs in the mid 70s.
Saturday
night
...
Clear.
Lows
center
and
be
m
charge
of
day-to-day
operattons.
•
. : Johnston, Lebanon Township Wayne E. Davis, Ron Logan,
National Weather Service said.
rather who should have the
The $110 million center is to open in 2004 along the Ohio
: trustee; Cecil Stacy, Salem Cathy Morris, James Soulsby,
Overnight lows will be in the 50 to 55.
authority to enact such' reguSunday... Mosdy sunny diu- River.
~.Township trustee; Richard Scott.Walton; Southern Local
50s.
lations .
•
Fetty Jr., Rudand n~ayor; Paul School Board, T Ron Cam~
But dry weather will be ing the day. Highs in the upper
Stat~n. Mike Shoemaker,
from Page AI
~ Life, Olive Township trustee;. marata, Don P. Smith; Eastern
returning by Friday night and 70s. A chance of showers dur.:
a
Boufilreville
Democrat, said
;,
'
•
'.'.'
• ••
" ' " ..
,,..,.
into Saturday as high pressure ing the night.
Richard
Hill,
Southern
Local
Local
School
Board,
].
Greg
Taft
said.
"I
understand
the
he supports the measure,
tl
•.
1;
• • • " ..&lt;·&gt;&gt;:.·~,.,.
COLUMBUS (AP) -A nonprofit group will explore ways
builds, forecasters said.
Monday... Mostly
cloudy
'
School
District;
Robert
Bailey,
Howard
Caldwell,
effects
of
smoking
and
sec•
he withdrew his coalthough
'. I I 1\
"&gt;,1
6 •
Sunset tonight will be at with scattered showers. Morn- for farmers to earn more from their crops by processing them
"
; Dutcher, Scipio Township Roger Willford; Athens-Meigs ond-hand smoke, and I sponsorship after an amend7.32, and sunrise on Friday is ing lows in the mid 50s. Highs for uses other than food.
~ trustee; and William Ayres, Educational Service Center, oppose it, also."
ment he proposed from the
Heartland AgVenture Association will develop business plans
~ffTS@ PO~'EROYPARKJNG LOT
in the lower 70s.
at 7:18a.m.
~ Olive Township trustee. ·
at-large meinber,John Depoy;
"! stand with Dr. (Nick) Senate floor was rejected.
Weather forecast:
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy and for farmers to own processing plants that will convert crops .i!'lto.
12:00
Woodrow Jackson Richard Athens-Meigs ESC, Southern Baird on the issue, and will
State Rep. John Carey said
Tonight ... Mostly clear with cooler with a chance of show- useful products, said Jeff Layman, an Ohio State University
~
also
filed
as
a
write-in
candiLocal,
Michael
T
Struble;
not
sign
the
bill
if
it
crosses
he
has not decided for certain
L'EA V'ES @ l :00
areas of late night dense fog. ers. Morning lows in the mid extension agent.
~ date for Lebanon Township Alexander Local School Dis- my desk," Taft said, noting that how he y;ill vote when the
'£NOS@ ~IZ:WAY
The idea is to provide more markets for farmers and to give·
Lows in the mid 50s. Near 50s. Highs 65 to 70.
:,rustee.
trict, Keith C. Andrews, Mabel he rejected a similar measure bill hits the House, but th e
Wedne~day... Partly cloudy. them investment opportunities, said Tom Sporleder, chairman of
· lcalm wind.
'
•
Candidates
appearing
on
the
R.
Burton, Fred Davis, Charles during the last legislative ses- Wellston Republican "generADMISSION: $10.00 fACii OR $15.00 COUPLE
Friday... Partly cloudy. A Morning lows near 50. Highs. Ohio State University's Farm Income Enhancement Program.
ballot are: Bedford trustee, H. Mansfield, C. Dale ~im:lair ston.
ally supports" legislation
"The days of $5 corn and beam in the teens ... we don't see
OOoFl
chance of light showers in the in the upper 60s.
Robert F. Hawk, Ronald L' and Stephen W. Thomas.
Last week, Meigs County which gives authority in passr,o1&amp;0
PF!JZ~:s
them on the .horizon;' Layman said, referring to falling crop
afternoon. Highs in the upper
Wood; Chester Trustee, Alan
Middleport Village Council, Board of Health passed a ban ing public policy to local legpnces.
Holter, Blai~ Windon; Colum- Roger L. Manley Sr., Robert on smoking in public places, islative bodies rather than
bia trustee, Don Cheadle, M. Pooler, Kathy Scott; Mid- including pr·ivately-owned administrative bodies.
C~tjs A,, Jqhnson, Granville ' dleport Board . of Public 9\;sinesses.
''
Shoemaker and Carey rep.
.
IRONTON (AP) -A man charged with killi~g~~a~n~~~~-~-~
C. Stout; _Lebanon trustee; Affairs •. none; P~meroy Village
.Similar regulations are now resent Meigs County as part
..
ATHENS
(AI!)
Authorities
s:ry
a-husband
ancLwtfe
..
whose
1-11-':-.1\.•etul'
Fttch,.Lawrence-H.Counctl,ToddNorton,--Qon-beino---rhallengedin-courts ~ of their~legislative districts .
.·
- ~
.
· ~ .
. - ·
·
· - Ky-.- re-siaent was wearing the v1ctim's jewelry
" bodtes were found m separate locatiOns m Athens County
'
·
·
•---~N~EE~D~IN~F~O~.~C~ALL~~740~-7~42~·~15~1~3~0~R~.;:~:__ _ _
John R. Krider, aid Todd . Smith, Larry across the state, said WatchTaft said he believes lo.cal
apparently were murdered.
'"'&lt;::ha!rles'R. Lawrence, Timothy Wehrung, Jackie R. Welker, mann's spokesman, Bethany boards of health are "best
J;D. Lawr~nce; Letart trustee, George L. Wright; Rutland Rhodes, who said that smok- qualified" to determine the
Sheriff's Sgt. Allen Flickenger said both David Malcolm, 32,
and Ruth. Malcolm, 35, of Glouster, appeared to have died from
Dave Graham, Bob Morris; Village Council, Ralph Bales, ing regulations themselves are merits of smoking-related
blows to the head. Autopsies were to be performe.d by the
Olive trustee, Brian Ke'ith Dai~ Marie L. Birchfield, Danny not the legislative issue, but regulations.
.- ley, Garry Bowman Jr., Davis, Ralph E. Searls; SyraFranklin County coroner in Columbus to determine the cause
ofdeath.
.
: Michael Hayman, Jerry L. cuseVillage Councii,Jeffrey L.
A hunter found David Malcolm's body Wednesday in the
,
Larkins, William R. Osborne, Bable, Eric D. Cunningham,
Trimble Wildlife area. While deputies were at that scene, the
Jackie L. Westfall; Orange Donna Peterson, Eber Pickens
' trustee,JohnA.Rankin,Roger Jr., Michael R. VanMeter;
body of Ruth Malcolm was found outside the couple's mobile
home a couple of miles away.
Ritchie.
Syracuse Board of Public
Rutland tt:ustee, Charles D. Affairs, no candidate; Racine
Flkkenger said investigators have ruled out murder-suicide.
; Barrett Jr., Steve Lambert, Village Council, Robert W.
;: Charles Williamson; · Salem Beegle, Henry W Bentz,
WASHINGTON (AP) chairman of the panel's subCOLUMBUS (AP) ' trustee, .)ack L. Ervin, Keith Joseph L. Evans, David H. Ohio _lawmakers on Wednesday committee on economic develSupporters and ·opponents
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ohio's most populous county has
' Hypes, H. Dannie Lambert; Spencer, Charlotte L. Wams· urged rapid action to provide opment, public buildings and
of legislation that would
sued Go&lt;. Bob Taft and the state over the alleged ,diversion of
jialisbury trustee, Edward W. ley; Racine Board of Public financial aid to airlines and the emergency management.
allow Ohioans to carry conS260 million in federal welfare aid to balance the state budget. .
: Durst, Bernard D. Gilkey, Bill Affairs, Lee S. Layne.
service industries that support
Ohio has four international
cealed weapons sharpened
J "Congress didn't say, 'Here Ohio, take this pot of money and
them. nose businesses have airports and 19,000 registered
do whatever. you want with it'," said Commissioner Jimmy the debate- on Wednesday as
suffered dramatic financial ·dam- pilots and is served by nearly
· a House subcommittee conDiM ora of Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland.
age
as a result of last week's ter- every major airline.
The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in Cuyahoga County Common ducted its first hearing since
~rist attacks.
·
Continental Airlines, Delta
Pleas Court, said Taft and other top state _oflicials were "turning last week's terrorist attacks
"Our major airlines have and America West have hubs at
in New York and Washingtheir back on ,the neediest citizens of Ohio."
• AEP-~.
Federal Mogui-'Premier- 8\1
slashed
flight schedules and the main airports serving in
.,
· ' Arch Coal- 15\1
Rockwell .;.. 14
USB-21\1
The suit' alleged the state has "engaged in an elaborate and ton.employment rolls and still teeter Cleveland, Cincinnati and
Gannett- 60~.
Rocky Boots - 5
' Akzo- 37\
The
Ohio Coalition
illegal funding scheme ... to balance the state budget."
: AmTechSBC- 45),
General Electric- 32\1 RDShell-48
on the brink of bankniptcy;• . Columbus respectively. Delta's
Against Gun Violence and
GKNLV-3,,
·:. Ashland Inc.- an,
Sears- 33
Rep. Steven LaTourette, R- regional subsidiary, Comair, is
the Ohio Million Mom
Ha~ey Davidson - 38'- · Shoney's -i.
; AT&amp;T-18
'. Bank One - 29'.1 ·
Kmart-7Y.
Wai-Mart- 45\1
Ohio, said at a House Trans- based at the pncinnati airport,
March Chapters asked subKroger- 24\1
: BLI-8,,
Wendy's- 26~
portation Committee ·hearing which is in Hebron, Ky.
WARRENSVILLE HEIGHTS (AP) -An aggravated mur- committee members to. skiJ?
Lands End- 31\1
Worthington - 11 ),
~ Bob Evans - 1~.
on
the airline Industry.
"No airline with a hub in
Ltd. -10\1
Dally stock reports are
· BorgWamer -, 39\1
der charge in the beating death ·of an aspiring model has been the hearing beca~se it Caf11e
NSC15,,
the 4 p.m. closing
~ Champion - 2\1
"The government ordered Ohio would be a different
dropped, but the same man remains a suspect, authorities said. too soon after the attacks.
' Charming Shops - 5\1
Oak Hill Financial - 16 quotes of ll)e previous
During the hearing, some
Gregory L. Jackson, 36, of Cleveland Heights, was released
OVB-24,,
day's transactions, pro- the planes out of the sky last Ohio;· Sen. Mike DeWine, RCity Holding - t 0
BBT-34,,
: COI-13Y.
vided by Smith Partners Tuesday, and failure to act on Ohio, said Wednesday. "The
from the Cuyahoga County jail Wednesday night after the mur- of the bill's proponents said
at Ad'lest Inc.
·
Peoples- 19\1
:
DuPont-35
our part will take our domestic bottom line is it is important for
der charge was dropped in the death of Maria Floyd, 27, ofWar- that in light of the attacks,
airline industry to its collective us to have a viable airline indus ~
it's become more important
rensville Heights.
knees:' said LaTourette, who is try."
than ever to ensure one's
Jackson had been scheduled to go on trial Monday.1 Jackson and Floyd had ·dated for five years. She was killed own safety.
Aug. 24, 2000, the day before she was to fly to California to
The House Commercial
\
meet with modeling agencies.
and Civil Law subcommito ,
(USPS 213-980)
Rea
Ohio Volley Publishing Co.
tee ~as been conducting
.
Published every anemoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
hearin~s on the bill all sumC!)rrectlon Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Secon'd·class
mer. The· hearing Wednesday
.
Our main concern In all stories is postage paid at Pomeroy.
'·
AKRON (AP) -The Akron Art Muse4m has selected an hac\ been postpO'ned from
to be accurate. If you .kr\ow of an Mtmblr: The Associated Press and
error In a story, call the newsroom the Ohio Newopapar Association.
Austrian architectui'ai firm to design a $23 million expansion. the same day one week earPoetmlister: Send address correcAre your investments
at (740) 992-2t56.
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court.
· :rhe firm of Coop Himmelb(l)au of Vienna was selected lier - the day after the
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
spread among
., .
Wednesday to design the 50,000-square-foot expansion. attacks.
News Departments
Subscription rates
The malo number Is 992·21 56.
Groundbreaking is pla'nned for 2003.
multiple firms witlr 110
"We call for a time of sinBy carrier or motor route
•
Department
extentions
are:
The project will triple gallery space to 25,000 square feet and cere soul searching al)d
One week ·
$2
o11e really knowing
One month
$8.70
Ext. 12
include classrooms, a children's gallery, amuseum gift shop and healing," coalition director
One yoor
$104
wlro you are?
·
dining areas.
John C. MiUer, CFP
Angela Ward
Ext 13 Dolly
50 cents
Toby Hoover said in an eNewa
Branch
~anager
Client S"erviee Manager
Subscnbers not desiring to pay the
Outdoor space for public events and sculpture will increase mail to members. "We
Ext. 14 · carrier may remll In ad./ance direct tp
or
AI our Raymond James office we make It a point to get to know
from 14,000 square feet to 63,000 squ~re. feet.
·
The Dally Sentinel. Credll will be given
should not be holding hearcarrier each week. No subscription by
our clients and for them to get to know us. We have over 3S
Other services
ings on a highly contentious
mail permitted In areas where home
years of combined experience in the investment business. Let us
issue such as the carrying of
Ext. 3 carrier service Is available.
Advertlalng
share our experience with you as we get to know you.
hidden handguns."
·
Mall subscitptlon
Ext. 4
Circulation
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Kroger Co., the nation's largest
lnelde Melgl County
Last week's cancellation
Call today for your free consultation witll no obligation.
13 Weet&lt;s
$27.30
supermarket op,erator, said Wednesday .that second-quarter
Ext.
5
Clettllled
Adt
gave committee memhers .
26 Weeks
$53.82
311 Fourth 51 .. Manella, OH 45750
earnings increased 19 percent, exclu.ding one-iime expenses.
52 Weeks
$105.56
and
interested
parties
740-376-9186
To 111nd •mall
• Kroger earned $255.7 million, or 31 cents per diluted share
Roteo outlldt Melgo County
fNMPA' SE8Y'CfS ~
,enough time to reflect and
· newt 0 my(lllllysentin~l.com
800-726-8412
13 Weel&lt;s
$29.25
for the quarter, which ended Aug. 18, compared with $208 mil' On the Web
mourn, said the subcommit26 ·weeks
$56.68
John.Miller@AJFS com
lion , or 25 cents a share, during the second quarter a year ago.
www.raymondjames .com/JohnCMiller
www.mydallysentlnel.com
52 Weeks
$109.72
AWard@ RJFS.com
~
tee's
chairwoman,
RepubliSales were up 4.2 percent at $11.48 billion, comp:tred with
Cmntndtr&gt;d tn yout fm ,1 nnal futut()
can Rep. Ann Womer BenS11 .02 billion for the previous second quarter.
·
j,min o.&gt;f'Aurora .
AccuWealhere

Clair Gluesencamp

Genevieve Well

o • a l t .. • • • •

Chance of rain returns Friday Center appoints chief executive

. Ballot

~fiGS CO. 'BLKF:'RS'

. . 16tlv ANNUAL . . .

TOY RUN

Taft

SEPTEMBER 22, 2001

Group seeks other uses

If!!
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Husband, wife were murdered

•
I
Po ICe arrest .Ironton man

J

Attacks .
h
·

s. arpen
debate on
weapo_ns b'llI

Lane"'

Siren

· 499

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Leaders say airline financial

;

woes could cost Ohio jobs

Cuyahoga sues over funds

LOCAL STOCKS

Murder charce·dropped

The Daily Sentinel
.

~er Services

Museum selects archited

The Dally Sentinel·• Page A 3

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Officer said.he thought ma·n he shot had gun

Ohio weather

Pomeroy, Ml'ddleport, Ohio

LOCAL B.RIEFS
Plan sing
MIDDLEPORT Ash
Street Church in Middleport
will h'old a hymn sing o.n
Sunday at 6 p.m., with Tammy
Taylor, the Millers, and
Gabriel Quartet.

Commission
meets
POMEROY
Meigs
County Veterans Service
Commission will meet o'n
Monday at 7:30p.m.

Plan benefit
POMEROY - A benefit
bake sale and craft sale will be
held in the skilled nursing
unit at Veterans MemG&gt;rial
Hospital to beneift the crisis
relief fund. The sale will . be
held in the sun room from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sept, 28.
Donations are welcome.

Tap class set
MIDDLEPORT- A sixweek class ,for boys and girls
aged five through 12, "Introduction to Tap Dance for
Children," will be held beginnin g O ct. 4 for six consecutive Thursdays at the Ri verbend Arts Council.
Classes for ages five through
·eight will be held from 4 to
4:45 ·p.m., · and ages mne
through 12 from 5 to 5:45
p.m.
Tom Dooley and Rae
Gwiazdowsky are instru ctors
for the class, wh ich will promote rhythm and coordination through basic tap dance

class.
Class is limited to 10 students, and the course fee is
$30. Information and registration are available by calling
992-5458.

Sing slated
DANVILLE Danville
Church of Christ will hold
gospel meetings on Saturday
at 7 p.m. and Sunday, at 6
p.m., with Denver Hill as
speaker.

No units called
POMEROY - The Ohio
Adjutant General reported
Wednesday that no Ohio
National Guard units have
been mobilized for Operation
Noble Eagle/Infinite Justice
at this time.
"This office will take every
measure to notify the public,
through the med1a, of any
Ohio National Guard. mobilization," · said Capt. Neal
OUDrien.

EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emerge~cy Service
answered three calls for assistance. Units r~sponded as fol lows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:15 a. m., Ohio 124,
Claudia Springer, Holzer
Medical Center;
4:21 p.m ., Ohio 248 , Darlene Chadwell, HMC
REEDSVILLE
12 :58 p.m., Coolville Road,
Charles Blake, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.

that evidence shows that the
terrorists suspected ''are harbored, supported, sustained
and protected by a variety of
from Page AI
forei gn governments."
The Pentagon has given the
The economic fallout from
coming struggle a name the terrorist attacks sem stocks
"Operation Infinite Justice." plummeting again Wednesday.
The military action began in Only a late burst of buying
earnest Wednesday as the Air saved the Dow from its worst
Force dispatche'd dozens of three-day point loss ever.
The Dow Jones
was
warplanes to the Persiarl Gulf
area~ -·
- -d•own-as-rrluch-as-4:&lt;!Jcpoi.nts.cat- - - to
The aircraft carrier USS midafternoon but
Theodore Roosevelt also was · finish with a loss of 144 points
se'nt' toward the Mediter- following news reports that
ranean to join two aircraft car- the military was beginning a
riers already in the region near buildup in the Persian Gulf
Afghanistan. Din Laden is area.
The ~ttacks and a two-day.
believed to be hiding there.
federally
ordered shutdown of
The pursuit of bin Laden
and his elusive, loose-knit the air travel system also have
group of terrorists continued set in motion a crisis for airline companies - American
on several fronts.
· United
airlines
The FBI enlisted banks to and
follow the money trail in last announced 40,000 layoffs
week's terrorist attacks, where Wednesday.
The parent company of
two planes were crashed into
the World Trade Center, American, the world's largest
another into the Pentagon and airline, said it will lay off at
a fourth into the southwestern least 20,000 of its 138,350
Pennsylvania
countryside, workers. The cuts by AMR
More than 5,400 people were Corp. will affect American,
TWA and American Eagle.
believed killed.
Attorney General John
Ashcroft and FBI Director
Robert Mueller planned to
visit the Pennsylvania crash
site of United Flight 93 on
Thursd~y. Just before the
crash, several of the passengers
on the tlight made cell phone
calls saying they planned to
attack their captors.
With the numb of people
detained on i
igration
charges for esuoning rising
to 115, the FBI sent a list of
the alleged hijackers to banks ·
asking them to search for any
transactions involving 21 people wanted in connection
with the attacks.
Agents also were investigating the possibility that sotne of
the suspected suicide hijackers
used fake identities of .people
who may still be alive.
Ashcroft said Wednesday

Bush

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RAYMOND JAMES

EEPERS CREEPERS (R) 7:20 I &amp;:20

AMER!Ci(N PIE 2 (R) 7:15 &amp; 9:30

HE OTHERS (PG13) 7:10 &amp; 9:20

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

•1n1on
•

PageA4
Thursday, September lO, 1001

. WHILE 'IOU 00 MEET ·
OUR DRESS CODE, WE

EXPSCT 6TVDEN1510 SHOW

. SOME CCMNION SENSf •••
STAN.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey

Publisher
Charlene HOeflich
General Manager

R. Shewn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

rditor are .-rJt:ome. ThrJ .1lwuld b1 Ins tho~t JOO words. Alllenm
are 111•bjrct to t{/itint a11d m1ut be li1111d ud lndud• llddrtll rued r~lephone numbfr.
No u,f,HIItd ll'IIUS will be pub/UIIft. Litten slttulld b# ;,. good ltult, Gddnuiltg
is.futs. flU/ ptr.fona/itlts.
Tl1e t•pilfimu upreurd in the columtt &amp;erow an ''" COMIIIJUI of the Olrin HtU1y
Publishing Co. :f tdirorial ~rd. unWn otlltrWfJI 1101H.
l.ettm to

tl•~

•.

OUR VIEW

Stirred
Bush faces major test in how to wage war on terror

Page AS

_Th_eo_ai_Iy_se_nti_ne_I

DEAR ABBY: I am 53 and
happily divorced. The reason: My
wife cheated on me for years.
My question concerns a much
younger woman with whom I've
become involved. She is 20 years
my junior, and lo and behold my ex-wife is hopping mad. She's
accusing me of being out of my
mind to be involved with a "kid"
who's not that much older than our
20-something daughter.
Abby, this younger woman and I
are getting serious. We have even
discussed marriage. Is my ex-wife
right? Am I being foolish? You
know what they say - there's no
fool like an old fool. CONFUSED IN WEST SACRAMENTO
I
DEAR CONFUSED: What I
say is this: .Happiness is where you

Thursday, September 20, 1001

Abigail
Van
Buren
.ADVICE
find it; age is a state of mind.
DEAR ABBY: I have . once
again consulted you• wonderful
"How to Write · Letters for All
Occasions" booklet in order to
write a letter of sympathy. In it you
wrote, "When a baby is stillborn, it
is a traumatic experience for the
parents. When friends and relatives
ignore this tragedy (as many do,
because 'we didn't want to bring it

LOCAL · EVENTS
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Attack 5 aftermath leaves no
doubt that action is inevitable

....._____;,----=1=-y the Bend
Man corifused by tx-wife's anger at his dating a 'kid'
1

The Community Calendar Is
published as a tree nrvlce lo
non-profll .groups wishing lo
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is not
designed to promole sales or
Jund ralnrs of any type. !lema
are printed only aa space per·
mils and cannot be guaranteed
10 be printed a apeclflc number of daya.

SATURDAY
RACINE Thomas and
Isabel Weaver Stotiart family
reunion, Saturday noon, Star Mill
Park in Racine. Take covered
dish and family photographs.

up for fear of making them sad'),
the grieving parents feel hurt and
abandoned."
Abby, this is also true when a
child is placed for adoption. The
decision is agonizing and the Joss is
profound. The mother experiences
the pregnancy and birth and often
bonds with her child in the limited
time after birth that she has with
him or her. Virtually every birth
mother wants her child.
It takes co urage for a woman to
go through the often humiliatinjl:
experience of placing her child for
adoption. We mothe'rs are not copping out or neglecting our children. We are trying to do what we
think is best for our children.
I could name five families in our
neighborhood who did not have
the courage · to do right by their

children and let them go. Their
children are berated and ignored
and left alone to raise themselves.
In the case of the more fortunate of
these children, the neighbors guide
the young people and show them
the respect, encouragement and
affection they so desperately need,
and more i!llportant, deserve.
So, please, Abby, tell your readers
that if they know someone who has
been through the horrendous
experience of losing a child,
whether it be through death or
adoption, they should offer their
sympathy. It is a loss like no other.
- MARYLOU IN HOUSTON
. DEAR MARYLOU: Please
accept my deepest sympathy for the
pain and loss you feel because of
the sacrifice you made for the benefit of your child's future. Allowing

your child to be raised by other$
took not only courage, but also a
brutally realistic appraisal of your
ability to provide for it. I salute
you. Thank you for pointing out
that women who choose to allow a
family to adopt their children need
special support; however, for somr
women, the decision is a private
one, a11d not all of thefn may weicome such a letter.
Readers, to purchase the booklet
Marylou found helpful in writing a
letter of sympathy, send a businesssized, self-addressed envelope, plus
check or money order for S5 (U.S.
funds) to : Dear Abby - - Letters
Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount
, Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is
included in the price.)

Dear Abby is written by Pauline
Phillips and da.,ghter Jeanne Phillips.

Program hails senior volunteers
Bv CiwuNE HOERJCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Recognition of volunteers highlighted
the 28th annive~ observance
of the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program at the Senior Citizens
Center on Friday. ·
Theme ofthe event was "Volunteers Are Shining Stars;• with
stars and other decorations carrymg out a red, white and blue
color scheme.
Special recognition was given
to Josephine Smith, 92, who has
volunteered for the past 25 years

in the

program,esta~hffi

in 10 years.

1973. She was presented a corsage, a check for $25, and a
commendation from the Ohio
Senate.
Others recognized were Nettie Boyer, Goldie Graham and
Kethei Hatfield, 20 years;

rive for Rep. Ted Strickland;
John C05tanzO, superinten- Rhonda Dailey, RN, Veterans

dent of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center, spoke
on the contributions which
senior volunteers make to the
schools through the STAR and
,
other prOgra:ms.
Rep. John Carey congratulated the velunteers for tl1eir years
of service' and commented on
the important role they play in
the community.
Others speaking briefly were
Christi Lynch, field representa-

Memorial Hospital administrator; and Anita Moore, volunteer
coordinator for Holzer Hospice.
Susan Oliver, executive director, Meigs County Council on
Aging, Diana Coates, RSVP
director; and Patty Pickens,
activity director, participated in
the observance with vocalist
Willie Church providing entertainment. Numerous door
prizes were awarded.

the United States prepare for an attack
The people and the government of the
CHESTER - Chester Townon the Osama bin Laden terror network
United States, along with its allies, are
ship
Trustees regular meeting, 8
magnificently united around the idea
Americans are by nature a peace~loving people. But once
ami perhaps on the Taliban government
a.m.
Saturday at Chester town
stirred, as last week's events proved, they will pursue a military
that we are "at war" with "terrorism," but
of Afghanistan that harbors it.
hall.
option against attackers. The American public will not be satisbig decisions lie ahead as to how to wage
A'nd yet, there are decisions ahead that
lied until the perpetrators of the attack that has left thousands
·lt. .
THURSDAY
could be so urces of disunity.
DANVILLE- Gospel meeting,
Frances Alkire, Mary Bise and
RACINE
- Pomeroy-Racine Danville Church of Christ, Satur·
Which groups and countries to attack,
dead are tracked down and· taken out.
Last week, for instance, Powell twice.
Sylvia
Wolfe for IS years; and
Lodge 164, Free and Accepted day, 7 p.m., with Denver Hill.
The unity of purpose here is unmistakable. There are few, if
how to attack them, and on what schedcalled Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon .
Masons. Refreshments.
Mildred Arnold, Ethel Bentt,
ule is one category of debate. Another is
any doubts, as there may have been in past engagements, if
Peres to ask that he meet with Palestin-'
SUNDAY
Jane Brown, Geraldine Cleland,
we're doing the right thing. Not when so many of our counwhether to stand fast with Israel or sacriian leader Vasser Arafat, indicating that
RUTLAND - Rutland Pack
CARPENTER - Carpenter
Goldie Frederick, Helen Hill,
trynl en were killed so cold-bloodedly, trapped in commercial
fice its interests to maintain a broad .
Powell believes that accommodation by
·240 fall roundup, Thursday, 7 Baptist Church, Sunday, 2 p.m.
Vinas Lee, Edith Sisson, Harry
COLUMNIST
P.m. Rutland Fire Station, Rut- Wit· h the New Hor1zon, Cl au de11 e
coalition that includes moderate Arabs. A
aircraft turned into missiles of destruction by fanatics.
Israel Is nec essary to hold together an ·
hind
and
Harrisonville
boys
5
h
F
11
J
h
Stobart and Mary Belle Warner,
· Think about that for awhile and then wonder if a diplomatthird point of debate is the measures that
h
h f' , 't d 1 Harkin, and ara
u · o n
antl.·terrorl.st coalition that includes Arab
grades
one
t
roug
lve
•nv•
e
o
Elswick
to
speak.
ic so lution is desirable, or do nothing, as Saddam Hussein sugneed to be taken to maintain homeland
"When we're through with that net- nations.
join Cub Scouts.
gested -we think- in his more-incoherent-than-usual open
security.
Some friends of fsrael in the United
FRIDAY
DANVILLE- Gospel meeting,
work," he said, "we will continue with a
letter to the U.S. and its allies issued last weekend.
.
Amid broad national unity, unfortuMIDDLEPORT_ lnterdenom- Danville Church of Christ, Sunglobal assault ·against terrorism in gener" States are calling on the Bush administra~
Think about the images of people jumping to their deaths
nately, there also have been examples of a!."
tion to immediately move the U.S, .
inatlonlil pastorUs prayer at 8:30 day,· a p.m., with Denver Hill.
from the World Trade Center, the collapse of the towers and the
ideological irresponsibility, notably the
Judging by polls and an outpouring of Embassy from Tel Av1v to Jerusalem as a
a.m. at the Middleport First BapMONDAY
number of victims it took with it to street level. These images
Rev. Jerry Falwell's attempt · to link U.S.
That action would be
list Church. Rear entrance to the
POMEROY _ Ohio Hunter
POMEROY _ An employee of the junction with the Meig, County Family borhood Escape for Teen and organizes
Patriotic feeling, the American peopl e sign of solidarity.
are as indelible on the American psyche as the films of the Pearl
liberals to last week's terrorist attacks.
·
1
·
h'
h
13
h
d
·
·
·
ihurch
to
be
used.
All
pastors
seem ready to support such a war; much controvema Wit m t e us . a uums~
nvlted.
Education class, Pomeroy Gun
Meigs County Health Department was and Children First Council.
the Tobacco Compliance Checks with the
Harbor nttack.
And there may be pressure to "profile"
as they did after Japan attacked Pearl tration.
Club, Sept. 24 to 26, 6 to 9 p.m.
one of six Ohio women honored at the
Skidmore is the chairperson for the · assistance of the Meigs County ProsecuOur enemies are fooling themselves if they think this nation
Arab-Americans and Muslims as an
Harbor in 1941.
"Everybody hates bin Laden, and
POMEROY-:- Fun, Food and and Sept. 29 from 9 a.m. until
"Women Making ~ Difference" conferwill back away from a strike. But they existed in a fool's parineernal security measure when these
One can imagine - in fact, 1 know of nobody likes Afghanistan," observed ·
Fellowship at God's NET in noon. Pre-register by calling 992ence held recently at K.ileawley Center at Meigs County Consortium; she is an tor's Office.
groups also serve as a potential pool of such a case - young people who had Middle East expert Geoffrey Kemp of
adise of self-delusion and zeal to their cause if they honestly
active member of the Family and ChilTorres co~mended her for organizaPomeroy. VIdeo games, comput- 4282. ~
Youngstown State University.
believed this attack would send us cowering off the world
effective intelligence agents for the strugC
c
·
p
·
d
F
··
er
programs,
board
games,
pool,
.
k
ffc
.
dren First Council, Meigs County Tobac- tiona! ability and service to the cornmubeen deeply critical of the United States th e N 1xon enter 10r eace an
reerefreshments, 6 to 10:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Honored during the official kic -o .or
gJe to come.
stage.
.
considering joining the CIA the way dom. "But it gets more complicated if
Frtday and Saturday.
Veterans Service Commission,
the 16th annual celebration of Women's co Prevention Coalition, Immunization nity as well as her positive influence on
Th e US. and its people are often accused of cultural misunSo far, signs of strength and resolve
young men crowded into recruiting sta- you want to go after Iraq and Iran . Some
7:30p.m., Monday.
Hehlth Month was Margie Skidmore, Action Plan Consortium, and the Meigs colleagues in establishing a work ethic
overwhelmingly predominate in Washderstanding. The same is true of the attack's perpetrators; be it
conducive to making difference in
tionsafter Pearl Harbor.
of our allies will get nervous about that:' --L--=======================-I~di~·rector of nursing at the health depart- County Cardiovascular Coalition.
Osama bin Laden and his forces , or the select few merchants ...o.-f--1---'i""n~on, across the nation and overseas.
Cong.n:ss-Scenu-to--ha.ve--n@aclv.y--T-'-he_a.dminimation .seem~ de.terq':_ined_
enr.She-wanromirrate'd-for
Skidmore- volunteerrar6dd's- Neigh----worrren's-h-ealth.
, --'---a- dastardly-op-era:tio ·
Day by day since the mass murder of.
dropped partisan differences in the face to topple Saddam Hussei n, but serious
the award by Norma Torres,
They have grossly underestimated how righteous the wrath of
Americans last Tuesday, the Bush adminthc American people can be.
·
istration has become steadily more com- of the common threat, though rough questions have to be answered about
Meigs County health comSenate questioning of United Natiotis whether this move involves ground
missioner.
They are about to find out.
mitted to waging a sustained, broadly tarAccording to Torres, she .
ambassador John Negroponte by troops, air attacks, or merely support for
geted war against all states and groups Democrats indicates that old tensions internal dissidents.
was chosen to receive · the
that support the international terrorist aren't dead.
· There is also likely to be a debate
award in recognition of her
network.
More remarkably, in an unptecedcntcd about whether preparing for war requires
leadership role in promoting
President Bush declared that defeating move, America's NATO allies invoked firing heads of agencies - the CIA, the
women's health within Meigs
terrorism "is now the focus of my
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Federal
Aviation
Administration
that
Countv,
.
•
, .
.,, including planning
Article 5, declaring that if foreigners are
administration." He also said with confi. Today is Thursday, Sept. 20, the 263rd day of 2001. There are
. sure Iy f.1 iled to prevent Tuesday's
attacks.
activities for the Women's
responsi bl e c10r t h e attac k s - as ts
,
dence, "Now that war has been declared
102 days left in the year.
· in · The president seems. to have made the
Outing on Wellness (for
the case - the entire alliance will join
on us, we will lead the world to victory."
Today's Highlight in History:
Meigs High School junior
right strategic decision. That's a mark of
Secretary of State Colin Powell said a response, including military action.
leadership. Now he'll be tested on tactics
and senior . female students)
On Sept. 20, 1519, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan
A
·
bl
·
·
And rival countries, such as Russia and
the first task is to "rip up" the immediate
set out from Spain on a voyage to find a western passage to the
and his ability to sustain support.
maJOr pro em m many
for the past four years in con(Mortau Kandracke is execruivc editor '!f
relationships is a lack of comnetwork responsible for last week's China, have expressed support. Pakistan
Spice Islands in Indonesia. (Magellan was killed en route, but .
evidently has been pressured into helping Roll ,Call, the IICtvspaper of Capitol Hill.)
munication.
attacks.
one of' his ships eventually circled the world.)
On this date:
This is true in the employthe task or need additionIn 1H70, Italian troops took control of the Papal States, lead_jer/ employee association as
Name: Shelley Thomas ~
al help from the superviBlrthday:1ot.V94
·
ing to the unification of Italy.
well. In order to overcome a
sor. Communication does
Throw:
Right
\
In 1881, Chester A. Arthur was sworn in as the 21st president
lack of understanding and for
not end until the action
Bale: Righi
of the United States, succeeding the assassinated James A.
action to take place, the manhas been accomplished.
Teem:
Garfidd.
ager should think about how
Feedback on the compleADVICE
In 1947, former New York City Mayor Fiorello La Guardia
communication occurs.
tion of the assignment will
died.
·
·
·
The first component that
allow
the communication
Bv SIJSANNE M. ScHAFER
"At the tactical level, the answer is pret- asked Congress to approve $329 billion in
Jn 1962, black student James Meredith was blocked from
supervisors need to· foster is by the response given and
process to come full circle.
WASHINGTON- During his cam- ty straightforward. We have all ... the guns defense spending for the budget year startenrolling at the University of Mississippi by Gov. Ross R . Barpaying close attention. If a through nonverbal cues.
Only then has communipaign for the White House, George Bush and boats and bullets and bombs we need, ing Oct 1. Defense Secretary Donald H.
Finally, action . must take
nett. (Meredith was later admitted.)
list~ner doesn',t give full
cation transpired.
warned that the next president "will especially regarding fixed targets," said Air Rumsfeld had said even that would not be
In 1963, President Kennedy proposed a joint U.S. -Soviet
attention to the speaker, be place in order for the cominherit a militaty in decline." Now Bush Force Gen. Merrill McPeak, the top Air enough · to solve all the military's prob,
expedition to the moon.
or she may not be able to munication process to be
(Becky Baer is a Meigs
Deadline for th~aseball
must rely on that same military force to Force general during the Persian GuJfWar. lems.
In 1973, in their so-called "battle of the sexes," tennis star Biltotally comprehend what the complete. The worker may
County
extension
agent.)
fight hi.' new war against terrorism.
lie Jean King d&amp;ated Bobby Riggs in straight sets, 6-4, 6-3, 6It may be easy to "level Kabul,"
Hall of Fame Is
speaker is trying to say. The run into difficulties finishing
Since the attacks, Congress has
Is America's military up to the job?
3, at the Houston Astrodome.
Afghanistan's capital, with tactical strikes bestowed $40 billion on !:lush, bidding
worker may be doing many
. FRIDAY, SEPT. 21
!he armed forces are seen by many as and cruise 1nissiles. It would be much him to help rebuild
In 1973. singer-songwriter Jim Croce died in a plane crash
activities and tasks at the
the terrori.~t
5:00p.m.
overworked, underpaid, lacking spare parts harder to insert forces that WOllld be able attacks and use the military against
near Natchitoches, La.; he was 30.
.
same time. Minds may wan•
Cost $10.00 per picture
and ammunition, hemorrhaging experi- to track down an elusive target such as the whomever sponsored, helped or harbored
In 1976, PJ.yboy magazine released an interview in which
der and other thoughts may
enced pilots and lacking IQng-term invest- suspected terrorist mastermind, Osama the people responsible. More than half the .
Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter admitted he'd .
compete with the speaker's
ments for new planes, ships and guns. Yet bin Laden.
"looked on a lot of women with lust."
'message. The ·one conversing
money is supposed to go to the reconthey are still hailed as the best in the
\
In I 984, a sui cide car bomber attacked the U.S. Embassy
"We have the firepower to,do it, but I'm stnlction efforts in New York, Washington
must conquer the "message
world.
annex in north Beirut, kiUing a dozen people.
not sure we have the intelligence (infor- and Pe11nsylvania.
c.;n:tpetition" in order for
· In 1989, F.W. de Klerk was sworn in as president of South
"Make no mistake about it, your armed mation) to do it,'' McPeak said.
true communication to hapWill the additional biUions do the trick?
forces are ready,'' a griln-faced Gen. Henry · The post-Cold War military has shrunk
Afri ca . .
Fill out the form below and drop It off along with photo or mall
pen.
"To · deal with the threat at home, we
H.
Shelton,
chairman
of
the
Joint
Chie6
Ten years ago: U.N. weapons inspectors left Bahrain for Iraq
to 1.4 million troops from a high during wiU have to incre:lse the size of our
Once the message has been
with payment to the Dally Sentinel "Baseball"
to renew thei r search for Iraqi weapons of mass destruction: On
of Staff, told the nation just hours after last the mid-1980s of 2 million. The Pentagon domestic air defense network - that means
heard, it needs io be 'underP.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ,
Capitol Hill, Senate heari ngs on the nomination of Clarence
week's terror attacks, even as the Pentagon must turn to its 1.3 million reservis.ts to fewer base closures, more and newer airstood. Administrators may
Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court concluded.
burned.
shoulder part of any military campaign, craft and additional use of reservist'' to fly
ask employees if they underFive years ago: President Clinton announced his signing of a
Since the end of the Cold War; the size and Bush has Initiated a call- up of up to protective air caps, said Loren Thompson,
stand what they just said.
I
·
I
bill mttlawing homosexual marriages, but said it should not be
of the military, and its bu'dget, have shrunk 50,000.
Workers will say "yes" to preof the Lexington InStitute, a military think
used as an exc use for discrimination, violence or intimidation
considerably. In the wake of the twin terAt present, the Army has 10 divisions; tank in Arlington, Va.
vent embarrassment. A better .
against gays and lesbians. (The actual signing came a little past
ror attacks, Washington's constant debate the Navy 12 ~ircrafi: carrier battle groups;
way to see if the employee
Since the attack, 26 bases have combat
___c_ _ _ __
midtlight.)
"
over military money suddenly evaporated and the Air Force I ,200 fighter aircraft and aircraft. on . high alert, which hasn't
comprehends is to ask him or
I
One ·ye•r ago: Independent Counsel Robert !'lay announced
and Congress voted billions more to help 125 bombers in active duty ranks.
her to rep eat what was said in
occurred since the Cold War.
the end of the Whitewater investigation, .saying there was insufBush unleash the armed forces against
)'he end of the Cold War also brought a
their own words . If there is a
Sen. Carl Leviil', chairman of the Senate'
ficient evidence t.o warrant charges against President Clinton
those responsible and the people who smaller defense budget, a slide that had its Armed Services Committee, queried
I
.
misconception, the opportuand lim lady Hill ary Rodham Clinton. For.mer Soviet cosmohelped them ,
roots in 1986 during the second Reagan Gen. Richard Myers, Bush's choice as his
nity is there to correct it.
naut Ghcrman Titov died at age 65.
,
Bm to take on terrorism, experts warn administration. Through the last two years top military· adviser, last week on whether
" Just because
someone
I
.
Today\ lltrthdays: Basketball Hall of Fame coach R ed Auerthe nation must increase the size of its of Reagan tenure and the administration the military will be able to respond to the
understands the commubach is 84 . Actress Peg Phillips is 83. Singer Gogi Grant is 77.
29,000 special operations forces, hire and of the elder George Bush, defense spend- terrorist strikes.
nique, ·there is no assurance
Psychologist Joyce Brothers i!.,. 73. Actress-comedian Anne
·train additional spies to gather on- the- ing as a percentage of gross national prodthe person will follow it.
that
" I think we are able to respond today;' ·
1
Meara is 72. Actress Sophia Lore1P is 67. Rock .musician Chuck
ground intelligence and improve covert uct declined- from 6.3 percent of GOP Myers said. "But let me just reiterate: We
· . The manager may need to
Panozzo (Styx) is 54. Former hockey player Guy LaFleur is 50.
surveillance capabilities.
in 1986 to 4.7 percent in 1992.The fiscal have what we need today to do what we
contend with a lack of
Jazz musician Peter White is 47. Actress Betsy Brantley is 46.
M~ney is not the only answer. It may 1989 defense budget was $295 billion in need to do."
acceptance. The employer
Actor Gary Cole is 45. Actress Kristen Johnston is 34. Rock
depend upon just what the military is outlays.
$hould be able to tell if the
Make checks payable lo; The Daily Senlinel
(Susan11e M. Scluifer reports outlte Pclllagon
singers Matthew Nelson and Gunnar Nelson are 34.
asked to do.
employee
will
accept
the
idea
• Before the terrorist strikes, Bush had m11i111ilitary affairs.forTlJe Assodatcd Press.)

Morton
Kondracke

Health Department honors six employees

T IM E Q U T

FQ R T Ip s

~~-----~..;--------------:===========:!;,

Stens
r to im'Tnrove.
communtcattons

TODAY IN HISTORY

Becky
Baer

.WASHINGTON TODAY

President looks to a military once labeled 'in decline'

• A Ball and B Ball
• Little League
• Pony League
• Softball

from

ClOSEOUT

PRICES ON SELECT

&amp;ZENITH

0 UCTSI
..

lnuelsFurn

Middleport, Ohio

r-------------------------------------,

1Child's Name:

(

I

I Blrthday: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I Throws: Right or Left
I Bats: Right or Left

ITeam=------------------~----------I Phone::______________________________

L--------------~----------------------~

�0

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

•1n1on
•

PageA4
Thursday, September lO, 1001

. WHILE 'IOU 00 MEET ·
OUR DRESS CODE, WE

EXPSCT 6TVDEN1510 SHOW

. SOME CCMNION SENSf •••
STAN.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey

Publisher
Charlene HOeflich
General Manager

R. Shewn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

rditor are .-rJt:ome. ThrJ .1lwuld b1 Ins tho~t JOO words. Alllenm
are 111•bjrct to t{/itint a11d m1ut be li1111d ud lndud• llddrtll rued r~lephone numbfr.
No u,f,HIItd ll'IIUS will be pub/UIIft. Litten slttulld b# ;,. good ltult, Gddnuiltg
is.futs. flU/ ptr.fona/itlts.
Tl1e t•pilfimu upreurd in the columtt &amp;erow an ''" COMIIIJUI of the Olrin HtU1y
Publishing Co. :f tdirorial ~rd. unWn otlltrWfJI 1101H.
l.ettm to

tl•~

•.

OUR VIEW

Stirred
Bush faces major test in how to wage war on terror

Page AS

_Th_eo_ai_Iy_se_nti_ne_I

DEAR ABBY: I am 53 and
happily divorced. The reason: My
wife cheated on me for years.
My question concerns a much
younger woman with whom I've
become involved. She is 20 years
my junior, and lo and behold my ex-wife is hopping mad. She's
accusing me of being out of my
mind to be involved with a "kid"
who's not that much older than our
20-something daughter.
Abby, this younger woman and I
are getting serious. We have even
discussed marriage. Is my ex-wife
right? Am I being foolish? You
know what they say - there's no
fool like an old fool. CONFUSED IN WEST SACRAMENTO
I
DEAR CONFUSED: What I
say is this: .Happiness is where you

Thursday, September 20, 1001

Abigail
Van
Buren
.ADVICE
find it; age is a state of mind.
DEAR ABBY: I have . once
again consulted you• wonderful
"How to Write · Letters for All
Occasions" booklet in order to
write a letter of sympathy. In it you
wrote, "When a baby is stillborn, it
is a traumatic experience for the
parents. When friends and relatives
ignore this tragedy (as many do,
because 'we didn't want to bring it

LOCAL · EVENTS
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Attack 5 aftermath leaves no
doubt that action is inevitable

....._____;,----=1=-y the Bend
Man corifused by tx-wife's anger at his dating a 'kid'
1

The Community Calendar Is
published as a tree nrvlce lo
non-profll .groups wishing lo
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is not
designed to promole sales or
Jund ralnrs of any type. !lema
are printed only aa space per·
mils and cannot be guaranteed
10 be printed a apeclflc number of daya.

SATURDAY
RACINE Thomas and
Isabel Weaver Stotiart family
reunion, Saturday noon, Star Mill
Park in Racine. Take covered
dish and family photographs.

up for fear of making them sad'),
the grieving parents feel hurt and
abandoned."
Abby, this is also true when a
child is placed for adoption. The
decision is agonizing and the Joss is
profound. The mother experiences
the pregnancy and birth and often
bonds with her child in the limited
time after birth that she has with
him or her. Virtually every birth
mother wants her child.
It takes co urage for a woman to
go through the often humiliatinjl:
experience of placing her child for
adoption. We mothe'rs are not copping out or neglecting our children. We are trying to do what we
think is best for our children.
I could name five families in our
neighborhood who did not have
the courage · to do right by their

children and let them go. Their
children are berated and ignored
and left alone to raise themselves.
In the case of the more fortunate of
these children, the neighbors guide
the young people and show them
the respect, encouragement and
affection they so desperately need,
and more i!llportant, deserve.
So, please, Abby, tell your readers
that if they know someone who has
been through the horrendous
experience of losing a child,
whether it be through death or
adoption, they should offer their
sympathy. It is a loss like no other.
- MARYLOU IN HOUSTON
. DEAR MARYLOU: Please
accept my deepest sympathy for the
pain and loss you feel because of
the sacrifice you made for the benefit of your child's future. Allowing

your child to be raised by other$
took not only courage, but also a
brutally realistic appraisal of your
ability to provide for it. I salute
you. Thank you for pointing out
that women who choose to allow a
family to adopt their children need
special support; however, for somr
women, the decision is a private
one, a11d not all of thefn may weicome such a letter.
Readers, to purchase the booklet
Marylou found helpful in writing a
letter of sympathy, send a businesssized, self-addressed envelope, plus
check or money order for S5 (U.S.
funds) to : Dear Abby - - Letters
Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount
, Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is
included in the price.)

Dear Abby is written by Pauline
Phillips and da.,ghter Jeanne Phillips.

Program hails senior volunteers
Bv CiwuNE HOERJCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Recognition of volunteers highlighted
the 28th annive~ observance
of the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program at the Senior Citizens
Center on Friday. ·
Theme ofthe event was "Volunteers Are Shining Stars;• with
stars and other decorations carrymg out a red, white and blue
color scheme.
Special recognition was given
to Josephine Smith, 92, who has
volunteered for the past 25 years

in the

program,esta~hffi

in 10 years.

1973. She was presented a corsage, a check for $25, and a
commendation from the Ohio
Senate.
Others recognized were Nettie Boyer, Goldie Graham and
Kethei Hatfield, 20 years;

rive for Rep. Ted Strickland;
John C05tanzO, superinten- Rhonda Dailey, RN, Veterans

dent of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center, spoke
on the contributions which
senior volunteers make to the
schools through the STAR and
,
other prOgra:ms.
Rep. John Carey congratulated the velunteers for tl1eir years
of service' and commented on
the important role they play in
the community.
Others speaking briefly were
Christi Lynch, field representa-

Memorial Hospital administrator; and Anita Moore, volunteer
coordinator for Holzer Hospice.
Susan Oliver, executive director, Meigs County Council on
Aging, Diana Coates, RSVP
director; and Patty Pickens,
activity director, participated in
the observance with vocalist
Willie Church providing entertainment. Numerous door
prizes were awarded.

the United States prepare for an attack
The people and the government of the
CHESTER - Chester Townon the Osama bin Laden terror network
United States, along with its allies, are
ship
Trustees regular meeting, 8
magnificently united around the idea
Americans are by nature a peace~loving people. But once
ami perhaps on the Taliban government
a.m.
Saturday at Chester town
stirred, as last week's events proved, they will pursue a military
that we are "at war" with "terrorism," but
of Afghanistan that harbors it.
hall.
option against attackers. The American public will not be satisbig decisions lie ahead as to how to wage
A'nd yet, there are decisions ahead that
lied until the perpetrators of the attack that has left thousands
·lt. .
THURSDAY
could be so urces of disunity.
DANVILLE- Gospel meeting,
Frances Alkire, Mary Bise and
RACINE
- Pomeroy-Racine Danville Church of Christ, Satur·
Which groups and countries to attack,
dead are tracked down and· taken out.
Last week, for instance, Powell twice.
Sylvia
Wolfe for IS years; and
Lodge 164, Free and Accepted day, 7 p.m., with Denver Hill.
The unity of purpose here is unmistakable. There are few, if
how to attack them, and on what schedcalled Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon .
Masons. Refreshments.
Mildred Arnold, Ethel Bentt,
ule is one category of debate. Another is
any doubts, as there may have been in past engagements, if
Peres to ask that he meet with Palestin-'
SUNDAY
Jane Brown, Geraldine Cleland,
we're doing the right thing. Not when so many of our counwhether to stand fast with Israel or sacriian leader Vasser Arafat, indicating that
RUTLAND - Rutland Pack
CARPENTER - Carpenter
Goldie Frederick, Helen Hill,
trynl en were killed so cold-bloodedly, trapped in commercial
fice its interests to maintain a broad .
Powell believes that accommodation by
·240 fall roundup, Thursday, 7 Baptist Church, Sunday, 2 p.m.
Vinas Lee, Edith Sisson, Harry
COLUMNIST
P.m. Rutland Fire Station, Rut- Wit· h the New Hor1zon, Cl au de11 e
coalition that includes moderate Arabs. A
aircraft turned into missiles of destruction by fanatics.
Israel Is nec essary to hold together an ·
hind
and
Harrisonville
boys
5
h
F
11
J
h
Stobart and Mary Belle Warner,
· Think about that for awhile and then wonder if a diplomatthird point of debate is the measures that
h
h f' , 't d 1 Harkin, and ara
u · o n
antl.·terrorl.st coalition that includes Arab
grades
one
t
roug
lve
•nv•
e
o
Elswick
to
speak.
ic so lution is desirable, or do nothing, as Saddam Hussein sugneed to be taken to maintain homeland
"When we're through with that net- nations.
join Cub Scouts.
gested -we think- in his more-incoherent-than-usual open
security.
Some friends of fsrael in the United
FRIDAY
DANVILLE- Gospel meeting,
work," he said, "we will continue with a
letter to the U.S. and its allies issued last weekend.
.
Amid broad national unity, unfortuMIDDLEPORT_ lnterdenom- Danville Church of Christ, Sunglobal assault ·against terrorism in gener" States are calling on the Bush administra~
Think about the images of people jumping to their deaths
nately, there also have been examples of a!."
tion to immediately move the U.S, .
inatlonlil pastorUs prayer at 8:30 day,· a p.m., with Denver Hill.
from the World Trade Center, the collapse of the towers and the
ideological irresponsibility, notably the
Judging by polls and an outpouring of Embassy from Tel Av1v to Jerusalem as a
a.m. at the Middleport First BapMONDAY
number of victims it took with it to street level. These images
Rev. Jerry Falwell's attempt · to link U.S.
That action would be
list Church. Rear entrance to the
POMEROY _ Ohio Hunter
POMEROY _ An employee of the junction with the Meig, County Family borhood Escape for Teen and organizes
Patriotic feeling, the American peopl e sign of solidarity.
are as indelible on the American psyche as the films of the Pearl
liberals to last week's terrorist attacks.
·
1
·
h'
h
13
h
d
·
·
·
ihurch
to
be
used.
All
pastors
seem ready to support such a war; much controvema Wit m t e us . a uums~
nvlted.
Education class, Pomeroy Gun
Meigs County Health Department was and Children First Council.
the Tobacco Compliance Checks with the
Harbor nttack.
And there may be pressure to "profile"
as they did after Japan attacked Pearl tration.
Club, Sept. 24 to 26, 6 to 9 p.m.
one of six Ohio women honored at the
Skidmore is the chairperson for the · assistance of the Meigs County ProsecuOur enemies are fooling themselves if they think this nation
Arab-Americans and Muslims as an
Harbor in 1941.
"Everybody hates bin Laden, and
POMEROY-:- Fun, Food and and Sept. 29 from 9 a.m. until
"Women Making ~ Difference" conferwill back away from a strike. But they existed in a fool's parineernal security measure when these
One can imagine - in fact, 1 know of nobody likes Afghanistan," observed ·
Fellowship at God's NET in noon. Pre-register by calling 992ence held recently at K.ileawley Center at Meigs County Consortium; she is an tor's Office.
groups also serve as a potential pool of such a case - young people who had Middle East expert Geoffrey Kemp of
adise of self-delusion and zeal to their cause if they honestly
active member of the Family and ChilTorres co~mended her for organizaPomeroy. VIdeo games, comput- 4282. ~
Youngstown State University.
believed this attack would send us cowering off the world
effective intelligence agents for the strugC
c
·
p
·
d
F
··
er
programs,
board
games,
pool,
.
k
ffc
.
dren First Council, Meigs County Tobac- tiona! ability and service to the cornmubeen deeply critical of the United States th e N 1xon enter 10r eace an
reerefreshments, 6 to 10:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Honored during the official kic -o .or
gJe to come.
stage.
.
considering joining the CIA the way dom. "But it gets more complicated if
Frtday and Saturday.
Veterans Service Commission,
the 16th annual celebration of Women's co Prevention Coalition, Immunization nity as well as her positive influence on
Th e US. and its people are often accused of cultural misunSo far, signs of strength and resolve
young men crowded into recruiting sta- you want to go after Iraq and Iran . Some
7:30p.m., Monday.
Hehlth Month was Margie Skidmore, Action Plan Consortium, and the Meigs colleagues in establishing a work ethic
overwhelmingly predominate in Washderstanding. The same is true of the attack's perpetrators; be it
conducive to making difference in
tionsafter Pearl Harbor.
of our allies will get nervous about that:' --L--=======================-I~di~·rector of nursing at the health depart- County Cardiovascular Coalition.
Osama bin Laden and his forces , or the select few merchants ...o.-f--1---'i""n~on, across the nation and overseas.
Cong.n:ss-Scenu-to--ha.ve--n@aclv.y--T-'-he_a.dminimation .seem~ de.terq':_ined_
enr.She-wanromirrate'd-for
Skidmore- volunteerrar6dd's- Neigh----worrren's-h-ealth.
, --'---a- dastardly-op-era:tio ·
Day by day since the mass murder of.
dropped partisan differences in the face to topple Saddam Hussei n, but serious
the award by Norma Torres,
They have grossly underestimated how righteous the wrath of
Americans last Tuesday, the Bush adminthc American people can be.
·
istration has become steadily more com- of the common threat, though rough questions have to be answered about
Meigs County health comSenate questioning of United Natiotis whether this move involves ground
missioner.
They are about to find out.
mitted to waging a sustained, broadly tarAccording to Torres, she .
ambassador John Negroponte by troops, air attacks, or merely support for
geted war against all states and groups Democrats indicates that old tensions internal dissidents.
was chosen to receive · the
that support the international terrorist aren't dead.
· There is also likely to be a debate
award in recognition of her
network.
More remarkably, in an unptecedcntcd about whether preparing for war requires
leadership role in promoting
President Bush declared that defeating move, America's NATO allies invoked firing heads of agencies - the CIA, the
women's health within Meigs
terrorism "is now the focus of my
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Federal
Aviation
Administration
that
Countv,
.
•
, .
.,, including planning
Article 5, declaring that if foreigners are
administration." He also said with confi. Today is Thursday, Sept. 20, the 263rd day of 2001. There are
. sure Iy f.1 iled to prevent Tuesday's
attacks.
activities for the Women's
responsi bl e c10r t h e attac k s - as ts
,
dence, "Now that war has been declared
102 days left in the year.
· in · The president seems. to have made the
Outing on Wellness (for
the case - the entire alliance will join
on us, we will lead the world to victory."
Today's Highlight in History:
Meigs High School junior
right strategic decision. That's a mark of
Secretary of State Colin Powell said a response, including military action.
leadership. Now he'll be tested on tactics
and senior . female students)
On Sept. 20, 1519, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan
A
·
bl
·
·
And rival countries, such as Russia and
the first task is to "rip up" the immediate
set out from Spain on a voyage to find a western passage to the
and his ability to sustain support.
maJOr pro em m many
for the past four years in con(Mortau Kandracke is execruivc editor '!f
relationships is a lack of comnetwork responsible for last week's China, have expressed support. Pakistan
Spice Islands in Indonesia. (Magellan was killed en route, but .
evidently has been pressured into helping Roll ,Call, the IICtvspaper of Capitol Hill.)
munication.
attacks.
one of' his ships eventually circled the world.)
On this date:
This is true in the employthe task or need additionIn 1H70, Italian troops took control of the Papal States, lead_jer/ employee association as
Name: Shelley Thomas ~
al help from the superviBlrthday:1ot.V94
·
ing to the unification of Italy.
well. In order to overcome a
sor. Communication does
Throw:
Right
\
In 1881, Chester A. Arthur was sworn in as the 21st president
lack of understanding and for
not end until the action
Bale: Righi
of the United States, succeeding the assassinated James A.
action to take place, the manhas been accomplished.
Teem:
Garfidd.
ager should think about how
Feedback on the compleADVICE
In 1947, former New York City Mayor Fiorello La Guardia
communication occurs.
tion of the assignment will
died.
·
·
·
The first component that
allow
the communication
Bv SIJSANNE M. ScHAFER
"At the tactical level, the answer is pret- asked Congress to approve $329 billion in
Jn 1962, black student James Meredith was blocked from
supervisors need to· foster is by the response given and
process to come full circle.
WASHINGTON- During his cam- ty straightforward. We have all ... the guns defense spending for the budget year startenrolling at the University of Mississippi by Gov. Ross R . Barpaying close attention. If a through nonverbal cues.
Only then has communipaign for the White House, George Bush and boats and bullets and bombs we need, ing Oct 1. Defense Secretary Donald H.
Finally, action . must take
nett. (Meredith was later admitted.)
list~ner doesn',t give full
cation transpired.
warned that the next president "will especially regarding fixed targets," said Air Rumsfeld had said even that would not be
In 1963, President Kennedy proposed a joint U.S. -Soviet
attention to the speaker, be place in order for the cominherit a militaty in decline." Now Bush Force Gen. Merrill McPeak, the top Air enough · to solve all the military's prob,
expedition to the moon.
or she may not be able to munication process to be
(Becky Baer is a Meigs
Deadline for th~aseball
must rely on that same military force to Force general during the Persian GuJfWar. lems.
In 1973, in their so-called "battle of the sexes," tennis star Biltotally comprehend what the complete. The worker may
County
extension
agent.)
fight hi.' new war against terrorism.
lie Jean King d&amp;ated Bobby Riggs in straight sets, 6-4, 6-3, 6It may be easy to "level Kabul,"
Hall of Fame Is
speaker is trying to say. The run into difficulties finishing
Since the attacks, Congress has
Is America's military up to the job?
3, at the Houston Astrodome.
Afghanistan's capital, with tactical strikes bestowed $40 billion on !:lush, bidding
worker may be doing many
. FRIDAY, SEPT. 21
!he armed forces are seen by many as and cruise 1nissiles. It would be much him to help rebuild
In 1973. singer-songwriter Jim Croce died in a plane crash
activities and tasks at the
the terrori.~t
5:00p.m.
overworked, underpaid, lacking spare parts harder to insert forces that WOllld be able attacks and use the military against
near Natchitoches, La.; he was 30.
.
same time. Minds may wan•
Cost $10.00 per picture
and ammunition, hemorrhaging experi- to track down an elusive target such as the whomever sponsored, helped or harbored
In 1976, PJ.yboy magazine released an interview in which
der and other thoughts may
enced pilots and lacking IQng-term invest- suspected terrorist mastermind, Osama the people responsible. More than half the .
Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter admitted he'd .
compete with the speaker's
ments for new planes, ships and guns. Yet bin Laden.
"looked on a lot of women with lust."
'message. The ·one conversing
money is supposed to go to the reconthey are still hailed as the best in the
\
In I 984, a sui cide car bomber attacked the U.S. Embassy
"We have the firepower to,do it, but I'm stnlction efforts in New York, Washington
must conquer the "message
world.
annex in north Beirut, kiUing a dozen people.
not sure we have the intelligence (infor- and Pe11nsylvania.
c.;n:tpetition" in order for
· In 1989, F.W. de Klerk was sworn in as president of South
"Make no mistake about it, your armed mation) to do it,'' McPeak said.
true communication to hapWill the additional biUions do the trick?
forces are ready,'' a griln-faced Gen. Henry · The post-Cold War military has shrunk
Afri ca . .
Fill out the form below and drop It off along with photo or mall
pen.
"To · deal with the threat at home, we
H.
Shelton,
chairman
of
the
Joint
Chie6
Ten years ago: U.N. weapons inspectors left Bahrain for Iraq
to 1.4 million troops from a high during wiU have to incre:lse the size of our
Once the message has been
with payment to the Dally Sentinel "Baseball"
to renew thei r search for Iraqi weapons of mass destruction: On
of Staff, told the nation just hours after last the mid-1980s of 2 million. The Pentagon domestic air defense network - that means
heard, it needs io be 'underP.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ,
Capitol Hill, Senate heari ngs on the nomination of Clarence
week's terror attacks, even as the Pentagon must turn to its 1.3 million reservis.ts to fewer base closures, more and newer airstood. Administrators may
Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court concluded.
burned.
shoulder part of any military campaign, craft and additional use of reservist'' to fly
ask employees if they underFive years ago: President Clinton announced his signing of a
Since the end of the Cold War; the size and Bush has Initiated a call- up of up to protective air caps, said Loren Thompson,
stand what they just said.
I
·
I
bill mttlawing homosexual marriages, but said it should not be
of the military, and its bu'dget, have shrunk 50,000.
Workers will say "yes" to preof the Lexington InStitute, a military think
used as an exc use for discrimination, violence or intimidation
considerably. In the wake of the twin terAt present, the Army has 10 divisions; tank in Arlington, Va.
vent embarrassment. A better .
against gays and lesbians. (The actual signing came a little past
ror attacks, Washington's constant debate the Navy 12 ~ircrafi: carrier battle groups;
way to see if the employee
Since the attack, 26 bases have combat
___c_ _ _ __
midtlight.)
"
over military money suddenly evaporated and the Air Force I ,200 fighter aircraft and aircraft. on . high alert, which hasn't
comprehends is to ask him or
I
One ·ye•r ago: Independent Counsel Robert !'lay announced
and Congress voted billions more to help 125 bombers in active duty ranks.
her to rep eat what was said in
occurred since the Cold War.
the end of the Whitewater investigation, .saying there was insufBush unleash the armed forces against
)'he end of the Cold War also brought a
their own words . If there is a
Sen. Carl Leviil', chairman of the Senate'
ficient evidence t.o warrant charges against President Clinton
those responsible and the people who smaller defense budget, a slide that had its Armed Services Committee, queried
I
.
misconception, the opportuand lim lady Hill ary Rodham Clinton. For.mer Soviet cosmohelped them ,
roots in 1986 during the second Reagan Gen. Richard Myers, Bush's choice as his
nity is there to correct it.
naut Ghcrman Titov died at age 65.
,
Bm to take on terrorism, experts warn administration. Through the last two years top military· adviser, last week on whether
" Just because
someone
I
.
Today\ lltrthdays: Basketball Hall of Fame coach R ed Auerthe nation must increase the size of its of Reagan tenure and the administration the military will be able to respond to the
understands the commubach is 84 . Actress Peg Phillips is 83. Singer Gogi Grant is 77.
29,000 special operations forces, hire and of the elder George Bush, defense spend- terrorist strikes.
nique, ·there is no assurance
Psychologist Joyce Brothers i!.,. 73. Actress-comedian Anne
·train additional spies to gather on- the- ing as a percentage of gross national prodthe person will follow it.
that
" I think we are able to respond today;' ·
1
Meara is 72. Actress Sophia Lore1P is 67. Rock .musician Chuck
ground intelligence and improve covert uct declined- from 6.3 percent of GOP Myers said. "But let me just reiterate: We
· . The manager may need to
Panozzo (Styx) is 54. Former hockey player Guy LaFleur is 50.
surveillance capabilities.
in 1986 to 4.7 percent in 1992.The fiscal have what we need today to do what we
contend with a lack of
Jazz musician Peter White is 47. Actress Betsy Brantley is 46.
M~ney is not the only answer. It may 1989 defense budget was $295 billion in need to do."
acceptance. The employer
Actor Gary Cole is 45. Actress Kristen Johnston is 34. Rock
depend upon just what the military is outlays.
$hould be able to tell if the
Make checks payable lo; The Daily Senlinel
(Susan11e M. Scluifer reports outlte Pclllagon
singers Matthew Nelson and Gunnar Nelson are 34.
asked to do.
employee
will
accept
the
idea
• Before the terrorist strikes, Bush had m11i111ilitary affairs.forTlJe Assodatcd Press.)

Morton
Kondracke

Health Department honors six employees

T IM E Q U T

FQ R T Ip s

~~-----~..;--------------:===========:!;,

Stens
r to im'Tnrove.
communtcattons

TODAY IN HISTORY

Becky
Baer

.WASHINGTON TODAY

President looks to a military once labeled 'in decline'

• A Ball and B Ball
• Little League
• Pony League
• Softball

from

ClOSEOUT

PRICES ON SELECT

&amp;ZENITH

0 UCTSI
..

lnuelsFurn

Middleport, Ohio

r-------------------------------------,

1Child's Name:

(

I

I Blrthday: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I Throws: Right or Left
I Bats: Right or Left

ITeam=------------------~----------I Phone::______________________________

L--------------~----------------------~

�•

•
Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Finding cause cf night sweats
Question: Do you know of
a solution to my problem of
heavy night sweats? They are
so severe that at times I have
to change my pajamas as
many as three times a night.
I've had this trouble for the
past three years, and Qther
than the night sweats I have
been fine. My doctor has
given me Noroxin, Sumycin
arid ampiciUin, and I have also
taken aspirin and Tylenol.
None of these have helped.
I'm sure I'm not the first person to be troubled by night
sweats that disturb my rest.
What should I do?
Answer: Nighttime sweating is a general symptom that
can be produced by many different conditions. From other
information in your letter I
know you are not a woman in
her 40s or 50s. This is impor-

tant because the fluctuation
of hormone levels near the
time of menopause may cause
night sweats for some
women, but that certainly is
not the cause of your sweats.
One common cause of
night sweats tha~ at one time
or another affects most adults
is emotional stress. This can
occur in women and men of
any age. The individual is usually aware that they are worrying over a matter of importance to them when they
awaken sweating in the middle of the night. As the period
of stress subsides, normal sleep
patterns return. It is unusual
for stress levels to remain sufficiently high to disturb sleep
for three years, so I am concerned that you may have
another problem.
There are a number of

·

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

-

infectious illnesses that cause
night sweats. Malaria is a classic cause of this complaint,
but individuals with malaria
usually feel sick during the
rest of the day, too. Even
though you said you feel fine
except for the night sweats, it
would still be a good idea to
ask your doctor to check for
malaria.
Chronic infection in the

•

identify the specific type of
organism that may be causing
the condition and its location
before you take more antibiotics.
More serious -causes of
night sweats include some
life- threatening
diseases.
These include severe heart
disease and severe kidney disease. I don't think you are
afflicted by either of these
problems because you would
have other symptoms produced by the failing organ
and wouldn't report that you
otherwise feel fine.
. Another serious disease
that can produce the symptoms you describe is cancer.
For instance, stomach, bowel
and lung cancer can all produce night sweats before
other symptoms are apparent.
While I think that cancer may

...,, l

r"'a:
....:...

si nuses, urinary tract, lungs -or
teeth can ca us e !light. sweats,
so have your doctor and dentist check for these as well.
The · medications N oroxin,
Sumycin and ampicillin you
have taken are antibiotics that
are effective at cleariryg some
- but not all - infections. If
your doctor still suspects an
infection , I would recommend that you have tests to

be a relatively ·likely cause of
your night sweats, you
shouldn't paniC. Even though
you have had three years of
night swea_ts, it'~ entirely possible that any cancer you may
have is still curable.
It is important for you to
see your doctor again very
soon for a thorough physical
examination. Your doctor will
help you ide~tify the specific
cause of the night sweats you
experience, and then re commend the proper treatment
for your condition.
To submit questions, write
to Family Medicine, in care of
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio
45701 . Past columns are available
online
at
www.fhradio.org/fm.

COUNTY COURT CASES PROCESSED
POMEROY- A number of and costs, 10 days jail suspended to
three, ore year probation, jail suspenQ• • cases were recently processed by ed upon proof of a valid license, $25 and
Meigs County Court Judge costs, expired plates; Nancy McNabb,
Steven L. Story.
Long Bottom, $850 and costs, 10 days
jail suspended to three, six month
• __J Those fined were:
license suspension, ore year probation,
David R. Jones, Ravenswood, jail and $500 suspended upon comple-W.Va., $25 and costs. dsordarly con· lion of RTP School, driving under the
duct; Mrnael Grey, Wingett, $100 and influence, $25 and costs, left of center.
cosls,possession,$1(l()concurrentand Timothy S. Long, Gallipolis, $20 and
ccsts, drlg paraphernalia; Tony Bar- costs, seat ben; Marion E. Snider, $850
nnger, ReedsviUe, $100andcosts, three and costs, six months jail suspended to
days jail suspended, no operators 26 days, six mooth license suspension,
license, costs only, failure to display; two years probation; driving under the
Jason Childress, Racine, $200 and infiuence, $100 and costs, six \OO"ths
costs, five days jail suspended, one jail suspended to 26 days concurrent,
year probation, contriluting; Timothy H. two years probation, driving under susGray. Goshen, $100 and costs, ore pension, $100 and costs, six months jail
year probation, reckless operation; suspended to 26 days concurent, two
William E. Johhson, M~. $30 years probation, assaun; Terry M.
""""""'
and costs, seat ben; Palrick
D. Wdllams, Reynold s, Wate .. ord, $1 ,000 an d
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, failure to dis· oosts,six months jail suspended to 30
play valid "'9islrat10n; Jason Smith, days, three year licenoe suspension, six
Middleport. $100 and costs, no opera· moolh vehicle Immobilization, five years
tors license; Ronald P. Reeb, probation, drhiilg under lhe influence,
Gainesville, Aa .. $50 and costs. speed; $250 and costs, sfJc monlhs jail susKelly M. Gilkey, Pomeroy, $100 and ponded to 30 days concunen~ five
costs. 30 days jail suspended to three years probation, driving under suspendays, one year probation, restraining slon, $25 and costs, marl&lt;ed lanes.
order, ctomestK: violence; lina L. GardCharles A. Mulholland, Wilkesville,
,-&lt;lllr, Cheshire, $850 and costs, 10 days •$500 and costs, overload; Hobert Cun,'a'1·1 suspended to three, six m~th diff,Midcieport,$50andcosls,faUureto
, ..
' lk:ense suspension, one year Probatidn,
display front plate; Dawn Hawley' Syra·
jail and $500 suspended upon ccmp1e- cuse, $100 ~nd costs, restitution, two
lion of RTP School, driving under the years probation, attempted forgery; Levi
lnftuence, $25 and costs, failure to s1g- McGrath, Rutland, $30 and costs, seat
nai; -Cassandra F. Owens, Middleport, beH, $25 and costs, fall$ure to control;
$25 and costs, three days jail suspend- Kelly Daniels, Racine, 100 and costs,
, ed;oneyearprobation, reatllution, peas- 30 daye jail suspendedtlon tosi.!'!!,ht days,
' lng bad checks; James E. Taylor, two yea'~! proba . re -~.., arrest,
Po(neroy, ~ and costs, speed; Hank $50 and costs, 30 days jail suspended
Rood, Reedsville, $25 and costs, dlsor"""""""n~ two years probation,
J

America a War

The Daily Sentinel
•

days, three year license suspension, conditions; Andrew R. Packer, Athens, days jail suspended on each count, Hart, Vinton, $30 and costs, speed;
forfeiture of the ll&lt;lhicle, ore year pro- $30 and costs, speed; William F. McFar- restitution, two counts passing bad MatthewS. Caldwell, Cheshire, $35 and
batlon, driving under the influence, $100 land, Bidwell, $30 and costs, seat belt checks; Timothy R. Erwin, Jr.. Shade, cosls, open container; Brandon R.
andcosls,sixmoothsjailssuspendedto Charles A. Frazier, Ripley W.Va., $30 $100 and costs, reckless operation; Bobb, Raclne,$30andcosls,seatbelt;
30 days cdlcurrent, ore year probation, and costs, seat bell; Leota Wolfe, David Napper, Middleport, $40 and Matthew J. Wheeler, Toledo, $250 and
driving under suspension.
· Racine, $50 and costs, 10 days jail sus· costs, possession; Christopher Basch, costs, three days jail suspended upon
Scott M. Barrett, Vinton, $30 and pended, ore eyar probation, conlribut- Clevelenad, $60 and costs. disorderly proof of a valid license within 90 days,
costs, speed; Joseph D. Ashby, ing; Molly A. Toban, Pomeroy, $100 and conduct; Robert L. Imboden, Rutalnd, driving under suspension, $25 and
Langsville, $20 and costs, failure to con· costs, three days jails supet'lded upon $20 and costs, seal ben: Diana lmbo- costs.. window tint; 'Keith A. Arix,
trol;Michael T. Wolfe, Pomeroy, $30 and proof of a valid license within 90 days, den, Rutland, $20 and cosls, seat belt;· . Coolville, $30 and costs, speed; Oonald
costs,seatben.$20andccsts.re&lt;:kless · one year probation, driving under sus- Nathan Blackwood, Rutland, $20 and E. Nitz, Middleport, $30 and costs,
operation, $20 and costs, left of center, pension, $30 and costs, seat belt; costs, failure to control; Michael P. Lam- speed.
·.
$60 and costs, disorde~y conduct; Stephanie A. Lyons, Portland, $30 and be ~ . Rutland, $20 and costs, failure lo
Scott w. Zlmmrman, Fleming, $30
Cinda Clifford, l.ol)g Bottom, $30 and costs, seat belt; David G. Bing, centre&gt;; Robin P. McDade, Pomeroy, and cosls, seat belt; William Capehart
costs, speed; Lesla J. Kerwood, Gal· Pomeroy, costs only, 10 days jail restifu· $30 and costs, speed; Ronald Reeb, 111, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, sP!*'d:
lipolis, $100 and costs, 10 days jail sus· tion, one year probation, receiving Gainesville, Fla., $50 and costs, speed; Joyce P. Sisson, Syracuse, $30 and
pended to three, one year probation, jail stolen property, costs only, 10 days jail George C. Oldaker, H;lrtlord, W.Va., costs, speed; Michael o. Hobbs,
suspended upon proof of a valid license concurrent, one eyar probation, assault $30 and costs, Tanya M. Miller, Rutland, Albany, $30 and costs, seat ben; Cecilia
within 90 days, driving under suspen·
Jesse G. Hull, New Haven, W.Va., $20 and costs, tmffrc control; Harry J. A Sc'
w teJord , $30 and costs,
da · ·
ded , Young, Jr., Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speed;
. ranee,
sfon; Gary L Durst, Reedsville, $30 and $25 and costs, 10 ys JBI 1 suspen
Karen aM. "Baja,
Ravenswood,
costs, speed; Charles E. Rathburn, $30 ,ore year probation, criminal trespass, seat belt;Anna Farley, Rutland, $30 and w.. $30 d Is
ben K
f ..,...,-.
'"""" for cond'"""
· ·1su spended . costs, speed; David Hardwrck,
· syra- neth
.va.,c. Steele
an Ill,cos
• sea1 $30
; and
en·
and costs, unsae
•~·•· $25 and costs , 10 days JB'
Columbus,
$30 and costs, seat belt; Michelle ore year probation, theft; Gerald E. cuse, $30 and costs, seat belt; Martin L. costs, Ronald L. Miller, Pomeroy, $20
French, Middleport, $30 and costs,· Curry, Pomeroy, $26 and costs, speed; Spangler, Rutland, $30 and costs, and costs, failure to control; Wiliam
speed; Kelly Klein, Mason, W.Va., $25 Carol Southern, Middleport, $50 and speed; Tanya Samar, Middleport, $30 WoWe, Pomeroy, $20 and costs, window
and costs, thrse days jail suspended, costs, 10 days jail suspended, one eyar and costs, speed; Elmer J. Wright, tint; Cha~ie D. Harmon, New Haven,
reslltution, one year probation, passing probation, ccnlributing; Men Kems, 'Aid- Albany, $30 and costs, seat belt; James W"a $30 and costs ......... James H
bad checks; Ronald B. Harris, Mason, dleport, $50 and cosls, 10 days jail sus- G. Charles, Athens, $30 and costs,
.v "
· """""'
·
w.va, $25 and costs, 10 days jail sus- pended, ore eyar probation, conlribut- speed; Ronald E. Lutz, Lancaster, 430 Nassie, Bndgevllle, Pa, $50 and costs,
per)dad, ore eyar probation, criminal lng; Charles F. Donohue, Gallipolis, $74 and costs, seat belt.
.
speed; Harry J. Josenberger, Rich·
trespass, $25 ends costs, 10 days jail and cosls, speed; Sherri L. Keelan,
w. L. Wise, Cheshire, $30 and costs, mend, Va., $30 and costs, speed;
suspended concurrent, one year proba- Chesapeake, $100 and costs, thrse seat belt; Gary E. Freeman, Pomeroy, Charles E. Farren, Fort Wayne, Ind.,
lion, theft; Joseph W. Jonas, Mason, days jail suspended upon proof of a $30andccsts,seatbelt, $20andcosts, $30 and costs, seat belt: ·Darlene J.
·
W.Va., $20 and costs, .speed; Enc· A. valld license
WI'thin 90 days, one year failure to display; Jeffrey M. Tys, New Ashby' Langsv'lle
' . $30 and costs'
Quails, Middleport, $22 and cosls, probation, drivirig under suspension; Haven, W.Va., $30 and costs, speed, speed, $20 and costs, expired r119istraspeed; Ethel Adkins ..Racine, $100 and Gary R. Reitmire, Pomeroy, $100 and $30 and costs, seat bett; Dennis D. Hon; Duana Barber, Reedsville, $30 and
costs, three. days J81l suspended, one costs, forfeiture, reckless operation, $25 Boothe, Racine, $200 and costs, 1o ccsts, seat belt; David W. Reed II,
year probation .. wrongful entrustment; and costs, failure to control; Jeffrey P. days jail suspended to two served, 011 Mason; W.Va., $20 and costs, seat beH;
Jeffrey K. Hams, Mason. W.Va., $25 Chaney, Washington Courthouse, $50 eyar probation driving under suspen· James 0 . Childers Ill, Rutland, $30 and
and costs, 10 days jail suspended, one and oosts, ,~possession,$100 and costs, Sion; ·0onald Store, Middleport, $25 costs, speed; Monty Proffitt, Portland,
eyer probation, t:r1mlnal lrespass, $25 10 days jad su .
to one served, ~d ccsts, public intoxication; Kimberly $30 and costs, seat blat; Timothy S.
and costs, 10 days jail suspended, ore ··two eyars
tion, drug perapllema· ·'·o: Holliday, Pomeroy, $100 and costs,' Lewis, ·Pomeroy, $30 anc1 costs, 1seat
year probation, theft.
lla, Daniel F. Brungo, Washington Cour- . '30 days jail suspended to
one ben, $20 and costs, stop sign; ·Keith Nit&gt;-

N·urses, doctors train in Ohio for attacks
·•

• FINDLAY (AP) - Inside
', · an old gymnasium at the Uni• .versiry of Findlay, the hard. wood floors are obscured with
what looks like a child's jungl~

gym.
There are ropes, platforms,
stretchers and bright-yellow
. . barrels marked with hazardous
;:: waste signs. This is where
,,.. emergehcy workers are training for the next time terrorism
'k
''
1 ... stn es.. .
" Emergency -room ·nqrses
, learn to spot symptoms ofbio,. . logical agents, firefighters are
shown the safest ways to move
victims, and sheriff's deputies
srudy how to respond to a
chemical attack.
The school is home to the
Center (or Terrorism Preparedness,.which is slated to be
part of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's
nationwide network of 14
bioterrorism centers.
The center in Findlay, about
50 miles south of Toledo,
opened a year ago. The private
school of more than 4,500 srudents was chosen as one of the
· sites primarily because of its
--l:nvironmental management
program . .
"Before last week people
paid lip ., service to this," Paul
Rega, who helps train doctors
. in recognizing the symptoms
of a biological attack, said
Wednesday. "Now their attention is more focused."

What worries these experts
about bioterrorism is that they
say it could be pulled off with
little expense and much more
easily than the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New York and
Washington.
Outbreaks of smallpox or
anthrax could kill thousands
and spread throughout entire
states or regions before being
detected.
" It's· not too hard to get it,
but you have to figure out
how to process it and disseminate it," said Kelly Burkholder-Allen, a registered' nurse
with the · center. "Somebody's
going to figure it out."
Skeptics, though, say most
terrprists don't nave the expertise.
"A worst-case · scenario is
unlikely;• Jonathan B. Tucker, a
nonproliferation· expert ~t the
Monterey lnstirute oflnternational Srudies in Washington,
said earlier this week.
Many of the first symptoms
of a biological attack show up
much like the fl\1. "With a biological event you don't have a
clue with what you're dealing
with," Burkholder-Allen said.
Rega. a medical doctor,
wrote a book that shows
health care workers how to
determine when there has
been a bioterrorist attack. It
·explains the symptoms and
treatments for 12 potential
biological agents.

BE PREPARED- John Mattmuller is lowered down a pipe by
Dan Hehr, director of Open Enrollment at The University of
Findlay. The two men were demonstrating confined entry and ·
rescue during a demonstration of the rescue;~ecovery and biDterrorism training equipment housed in the University of Findlay Center for Terrorism Preparedness. (AP)

.· Analysts exped strikes by ground troops
WASHINGTON (AP) -

Paul Wolfowitz, the No. 2
man at the Defense Depart'ment, said Wednesday that
any military action would be
coordinated with diplomatic,
law enforcement and economic efforts.

· America's mil,itary response
to last week's terrorist attacks
. is likely to be a series of .
. ·
~ '-J·rstrikes
and relatively small"
· scale raids by special forces,
analysts say.
-~

"-

Military officials also are
signaling that operations may
move beyond a prime poten-

PageA7 ·
Thursday, September 10, 1001

FBi investigates that
hijackers
have used
indentities o people still alive

mar

WASHINGTON (AP)- earlier this year in Europe.
The FBI on Wednesday
Iraq has denied involveinvestigated the possibility ment.
that some oflast week's susMeanwhile, law enforcepected suicide hijackers ment officials told The
used fake identities of peo- Associated Press that the
pie who may still be alive. FBI is investigating whether
Agents enlisted the help of some of the hijackers may
banks to track the trail of have used aliases of people
who may still be alive,
terrorist money:
The Bush administration including one that U.S.
pressed Congress for sweep- intelligence has linked to
ing new antiterrorism pro- Osama bin Laden's net- .,
posals, while the number of work.
people detained on immiOne problem, officials
gration violations or for said, is that the hijackers
questioning rose to 115.
names on the manifest are
Attorney General John common Arabic names.
Ashcroft left open the pos-- The FBI sent a li~t to
sibility that foreign govern- banks Wednesday asking
ments C\)uld have supported them to search for any
Tuesday's terrorists.
financial
transac tions
During a visit to the Pen- involving 21 people wanted
tagon, Ashcroft sidestepped in connection with the teranswering whether investi- rorist attacks.
T he list mostly included
gators had determined a
foreign state was involved the names of 19 Middle
by saying such terrorist net- Eastern men previously
works in general get back- identified by the FBI as the
ing from governments.
suspected hijackers. But the
"It is pretry clear that the list identified one of those,
networks that conduct these Khalid al-Midhar, as -possikind of events are harbored, bly alive.
S!Jpported, sustained and
"Al-Midhar, Khalid Alive
protected by a variety of ," the list said.
·foreign governments," he
In August, al-Midhar was
said.
placed on a watch list after
"It is time for those gov- U.S. intelligence received
ernments to understand information that a man
with crystal clariry that the with that name had been
United States of America seen meeting with associ. will not tolerate that kind ates of accused terrorist
of support."
Osama bin Laden in
Law enforcement officials Malaysia, officials have said.
By the time al-Midhar's
said the investigation has
not made a direct link name was added to the list,
between last week's attacks U.S. officials believed he
and a foreign state, although had already entered the
there is uncorroborated evi- country. His name was listdence that one of the sus- ed on the manifest of the
pected hijackers met with American Airlines jet that
an Iraqi intelligence officer crashed into the Pentagon.

tial target, Afghanistan, where
alleged terrorist . masrermind

;~L;ise:~;?sT~u~ppe~raH~;~harrnfu~~~;lntox~lcants~~~:iR~obe~rt~"~·--;;R~ona~ldf:~E.ORetzloff,
Pomeroy, $859 suspended
lhouse, $200to and
days
jail tent
yeardisordeiiY;
probation,·Debble
~~~~~~~~·~~~i~i~~~0!:::~~-~e~~~a~nd~eC:!~ilc~30~daZys~-~~-~~ls0~a om_LacJen,_ts...sair'"-1:&lt;&gt;-D.e__
-~~~:~~cond~~;uctr,~:
.day&amp;-jaiLsuspended-toore costs,
served,30two
yearsVincent King,
, $50 and
suspended to one
three, six month lcense suspenSIOn, probation, aggravated menacing; Ricky $20 and costs, failure to control; Anthosuspension, one eyar probation,
, _ hiding.
1

1 costs, drug paraphernalia; Juanita A. served, two years probation, restraining
.• Lane, Reedsville, $too and costs, 10 order, domestic vlole$nce; Kasey M.
, days Jail suspended to ore, ore year Williams, Pomeroy, 30 and costs,
:.1 probation, mailing false alanns, $25 and speed; Randy R. Slllelds, Coolville, $50
1 costs, expired tagss, $30 and costs, and costs, one yaar probation, &lt;iaordar·
' • 1188t belt; Rk:hard Comolly, Coolville, ly$ ccn&lt;kJct; James R. Blackwelmonthsl.,~na.
• 525 and costs for each oount, three tOO and cotlfl, 11x
,... susdays jail suspeuded on each count, one pendad to 30 days, two years probation,
year probation, two oooots peas1ng bad domestic violence, $100 and cot111, six
' checks; Joseph M. Prooe, Aal:lne, $tOO
~~~:n~
: ';':•= y s~
~: Bradley Burchfield, Athens, $1,000 and
mont: Christina M. Pricli, Aal:lne, $100 costs, six months jail suspended to 30

=

Adkln~, Rutland, $25 and costs, exprred
pended upon completion of RTP plates, Carrie M. Phall~, Pomeroy, $30
School, drMng under the tnnu_ence~.
$2 and costs, seat beH, Ryan Nelson!
and costs, falllft to control,
lie, $100 and costs, three days JBI
Lee Groves, Sandyville, W.Va., $30 . . uspended, one year proba~on .. no
costs, speed; David W. Reed II, Mason, operstorslicenoe, $25 and costs, farlure
W.Va., $20 and costs, seat belt; James to control, $25 and costs, eXJ)II'ed tags;
0. Clllldars II, Rutland, $30 and costa, Matthew Christopher, Coolville, $30 and
speed; Francisco J. Marcla-Farias, costs, seat beH; Jeremy King, Middle::::~ ~Ca:r.~u=9.;: portn!;..~~u~cOotville, $25
and costs, open oontainer, Dennis c. and costs, no tal lights; Sharon L.
Marcinko, Reedsville, $20 and ~· Davis, sen LeandroOonald' HCali!Ca
., II$50Middand
open container, Susan M. Retzlon, costs, speed;
.
•
lePomeroy, costs only, speed unsata lor port,$25andcostsoneachcount,thrse
one year probation, jail and $500 sus·

, SOCIAL SECURITY
?.J:ft.

._]Frequently asked questions
· now with online answers ·
Bv VAUIEA THOMPSON
How would you like to get
answers to your questions about
Social Security without having
to ask them?That's possible with
Social Security's new online service that provides the most fre' quently asked questions about
' the program. The questions can
be found on the Social Security
Internet website at www.ssa.gov.
We figure if a lot of people are
asking the· same question, -it's
information that most people
need to know. So now we make
i -:file answers available to every.. body.
There are 20 major categories
of questions divided into subcat: egories. A person seeking infer• mation can search the topic of
j interest by keywords or phrases
: and all the related questions and
answers will appear. In addition,
1
• the prcigram allows users to send
·' their evaluation of the answers to
Social Security · and receive emails automatically when new
information on their subject of
interest becomes aHilable.
This. is an alternative to our
800 telephone number or wait. ing in line at the office for people who just need basic information.
•
• · Once a person gets online,
! he/ she may find other Social
• Security services useful,- including our benefitl! planner, Social
• Security eNews, an electronic
newsletter, and our history

pages.
Some questions and answers:
Q. I have received too much

in benefits. How will Social
Security recover this overpayment?
A. Recovery of an overpayment from a beneficiary is made
by withholding the monthly
Social Security check until the
overpayment is paid in fuU.
Overpayments ·can also be withheld from faniily members entitled on the beneficiary's record.
Social Security can use severn]
different methods of recovery
includitlg a comprorhise settlement.
If the overpaid individual no
longer receives Social Security
payments, Social Security can
recover the ove,rpayment from
the individual's federal . tax
refund.
Q. My father died in July.
Social Securiry told my mother
that she had to return his July
benefit check even though he
was alive through most of the
month.Why is this?
A. Social Security benefits are
not pro-rated. To be entitled to a
Social Securiry benefit check for
a given month, the person must
be alive the entire month. No
benefit is payable for the month
of death.
On the other h~nd, when
people start receiving Social
Security, they get a benefit for
the first month they're eligible,
even if they don't meet all the
eligibiliry factors until late in the
month.
(l1zlrra 71wmpson is manager of
the Social Security oJfia in Athens.)

FIRE PREVENTIO
WEEK

ny w. Will, Rutland, $1 ,000 and costs, $500 suspended upon completion of
60 days jail suspended to 10, one eyar RTP School within 90 days,. drtvlng
license suspension, ore eyer probation, under the influence, $200 Md costs, 30

driving under the Influence, $250 and days jail suspended to three consecu·
costs, 60 days jail suspended to tO, one live, one year probation, driving· under
year probation driving under suspen· suspension, $25 and costs. left of cension $22 and ~ts speed· Randy w tar
'
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something like the Delta
Force, trying to go in covert- WARRIORS - Mujahedln rebels, or "holy warriors.· rest high
ly,, nas·l hl' m and then go out In the mountains In the Kunar province area In Afghanistan In
-this May 1980 file photo. Any U.S. forces entering Afghanistan
covertly .- hopefully without
; them knowing we were would face fierce fighters and a hostile land that has decimated some of the world's best armies . (AP Photo, flies) ·
: there," said retired Army Gen.
~ fred Woerner, former head of Laden without excellent the first deployments of fight, the
Southern Command. intelligence, analysts said.
ers and bombers to the PerIf ,T, d d
'd
" "I would ~nticipate our · "It's high-r.isk, and you may · sian Gu on we nes ay to aJ
:;, future actions to be on the get lucky, depending on intel- in what President Bush is
: small scale, not the large ligence, but the chances o( calling a new war on terror~ scale."
·failure are great," said Harlan ism. Pentagon officials have
~
While such tactics would Ullman; who teaches strategy been tightlipped about their
~ put fewer U.S. soldiers in at the National Defense Uni- plans and have indicated they ·
~arm's way, small raids would versity.
have not decided precisely
~ be unlikely to capture bin
Military officials ordered what strikes to make.

u.s:

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Finding cause cf night sweats
Question: Do you know of
a solution to my problem of
heavy night sweats? They are
so severe that at times I have
to change my pajamas as
many as three times a night.
I've had this trouble for the
past three years, and Qther
than the night sweats I have
been fine. My doctor has
given me Noroxin, Sumycin
arid ampiciUin, and I have also
taken aspirin and Tylenol.
None of these have helped.
I'm sure I'm not the first person to be troubled by night
sweats that disturb my rest.
What should I do?
Answer: Nighttime sweating is a general symptom that
can be produced by many different conditions. From other
information in your letter I
know you are not a woman in
her 40s or 50s. This is impor-

tant because the fluctuation
of hormone levels near the
time of menopause may cause
night sweats for some
women, but that certainly is
not the cause of your sweats.
One common cause of
night sweats tha~ at one time
or another affects most adults
is emotional stress. This can
occur in women and men of
any age. The individual is usually aware that they are worrying over a matter of importance to them when they
awaken sweating in the middle of the night. As the period
of stress subsides, normal sleep
patterns return. It is unusual
for stress levels to remain sufficiently high to disturb sleep
for three years, so I am concerned that you may have
another problem.
There are a number of

·

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

-

infectious illnesses that cause
night sweats. Malaria is a classic cause of this complaint,
but individuals with malaria
usually feel sick during the
rest of the day, too. Even
though you said you feel fine
except for the night sweats, it
would still be a good idea to
ask your doctor to check for
malaria.
Chronic infection in the

•

identify the specific type of
organism that may be causing
the condition and its location
before you take more antibiotics.
More serious -causes of
night sweats include some
life- threatening
diseases.
These include severe heart
disease and severe kidney disease. I don't think you are
afflicted by either of these
problems because you would
have other symptoms produced by the failing organ
and wouldn't report that you
otherwise feel fine.
. Another serious disease
that can produce the symptoms you describe is cancer.
For instance, stomach, bowel
and lung cancer can all produce night sweats before
other symptoms are apparent.
While I think that cancer may

...,, l

r"'a:
....:...

si nuses, urinary tract, lungs -or
teeth can ca us e !light. sweats,
so have your doctor and dentist check for these as well.
The · medications N oroxin,
Sumycin and ampicillin you
have taken are antibiotics that
are effective at cleariryg some
- but not all - infections. If
your doctor still suspects an
infection , I would recommend that you have tests to

be a relatively ·likely cause of
your night sweats, you
shouldn't paniC. Even though
you have had three years of
night swea_ts, it'~ entirely possible that any cancer you may
have is still curable.
It is important for you to
see your doctor again very
soon for a thorough physical
examination. Your doctor will
help you ide~tify the specific
cause of the night sweats you
experience, and then re commend the proper treatment
for your condition.
To submit questions, write
to Family Medicine, in care of
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio
45701 . Past columns are available
online
at
www.fhradio.org/fm.

COUNTY COURT CASES PROCESSED
POMEROY- A number of and costs, 10 days jail suspended to
three, ore year probation, jail suspenQ• • cases were recently processed by ed upon proof of a valid license, $25 and
Meigs County Court Judge costs, expired plates; Nancy McNabb,
Steven L. Story.
Long Bottom, $850 and costs, 10 days
jail suspended to three, six month
• __J Those fined were:
license suspension, ore year probation,
David R. Jones, Ravenswood, jail and $500 suspended upon comple-W.Va., $25 and costs. dsordarly con· lion of RTP School, driving under the
duct; Mrnael Grey, Wingett, $100 and influence, $25 and costs, left of center.
cosls,possession,$1(l()concurrentand Timothy S. Long, Gallipolis, $20 and
ccsts, drlg paraphernalia; Tony Bar- costs, seat ben; Marion E. Snider, $850
nnger, ReedsviUe, $100andcosts, three and costs, six months jail suspended to
days jail suspended, no operators 26 days, six mooth license suspension,
license, costs only, failure to display; two years probation; driving under the
Jason Childress, Racine, $200 and infiuence, $100 and costs, six \OO"ths
costs, five days jail suspended, one jail suspended to 26 days concurrent,
year probation, contriluting; Timothy H. two years probation, driving under susGray. Goshen, $100 and costs, ore pension, $100 and costs, six months jail
year probation, reckless operation; suspended to 26 days concurent, two
William E. Johhson, M~. $30 years probation, assaun; Terry M.
""""""'
and costs, seat ben; Palrick
D. Wdllams, Reynold s, Wate .. ord, $1 ,000 an d
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, failure to dis· oosts,six months jail suspended to 30
play valid "'9islrat10n; Jason Smith, days, three year licenoe suspension, six
Middleport. $100 and costs, no opera· moolh vehicle Immobilization, five years
tors license; Ronald P. Reeb, probation, drhiilg under lhe influence,
Gainesville, Aa .. $50 and costs. speed; $250 and costs, sfJc monlhs jail susKelly M. Gilkey, Pomeroy, $100 and ponded to 30 days concunen~ five
costs. 30 days jail suspended to three years probation, driving under suspendays, one year probation, restraining slon, $25 and costs, marl&lt;ed lanes.
order, ctomestK: violence; lina L. GardCharles A. Mulholland, Wilkesville,
,-&lt;lllr, Cheshire, $850 and costs, 10 days •$500 and costs, overload; Hobert Cun,'a'1·1 suspended to three, six m~th diff,Midcieport,$50andcosls,faUureto
, ..
' lk:ense suspension, one year Probatidn,
display front plate; Dawn Hawley' Syra·
jail and $500 suspended upon ccmp1e- cuse, $100 ~nd costs, restitution, two
lion of RTP School, driving under the years probation, attempted forgery; Levi
lnftuence, $25 and costs, failure to s1g- McGrath, Rutland, $30 and costs, seat
nai; -Cassandra F. Owens, Middleport, beH, $25 and costs, fall$ure to control;
$25 and costs, three days jail suspend- Kelly Daniels, Racine, 100 and costs,
, ed;oneyearprobation, reatllution, peas- 30 daye jail suspendedtlon tosi.!'!!,ht days,
' lng bad checks; James E. Taylor, two yea'~! proba . re -~.., arrest,
Po(neroy, ~ and costs, speed; Hank $50 and costs, 30 days jail suspended
Rood, Reedsville, $25 and costs, dlsor"""""""n~ two years probation,
J

America a War

The Daily Sentinel
•

days, three year license suspension, conditions; Andrew R. Packer, Athens, days jail suspended on each count, Hart, Vinton, $30 and costs, speed;
forfeiture of the ll&lt;lhicle, ore year pro- $30 and costs, speed; William F. McFar- restitution, two counts passing bad MatthewS. Caldwell, Cheshire, $35 and
batlon, driving under the influence, $100 land, Bidwell, $30 and costs, seat belt checks; Timothy R. Erwin, Jr.. Shade, cosls, open container; Brandon R.
andcosls,sixmoothsjailssuspendedto Charles A. Frazier, Ripley W.Va., $30 $100 and costs, reckless operation; Bobb, Raclne,$30andcosls,seatbelt;
30 days cdlcurrent, ore year probation, and costs, seat bell; Leota Wolfe, David Napper, Middleport, $40 and Matthew J. Wheeler, Toledo, $250 and
driving under suspension.
· Racine, $50 and costs, 10 days jail sus· costs, possession; Christopher Basch, costs, three days jail suspended upon
Scott M. Barrett, Vinton, $30 and pended, ore eyar probation, conlribut- Clevelenad, $60 and costs. disorderly proof of a valid license within 90 days,
costs, speed; Joseph D. Ashby, ing; Molly A. Toban, Pomeroy, $100 and conduct; Robert L. Imboden, Rutalnd, driving under suspension, $25 and
Langsville, $20 and costs, failure to con· costs, three days jails supet'lded upon $20 and costs, seal ben: Diana lmbo- costs.. window tint; 'Keith A. Arix,
trol;Michael T. Wolfe, Pomeroy, $30 and proof of a valid license within 90 days, den, Rutland, $20 and cosls, seat belt;· . Coolville, $30 and costs, speed; Oonald
costs,seatben.$20andccsts.re&lt;:kless · one year probation, driving under sus- Nathan Blackwood, Rutland, $20 and E. Nitz, Middleport, $30 and costs,
operation, $20 and costs, left of center, pension, $30 and costs, seat belt; costs, failure to control; Michael P. Lam- speed.
·.
$60 and costs, disorde~y conduct; Stephanie A. Lyons, Portland, $30 and be ~ . Rutland, $20 and costs, failure lo
Scott w. Zlmmrman, Fleming, $30
Cinda Clifford, l.ol)g Bottom, $30 and costs, seat belt; David G. Bing, centre&gt;; Robin P. McDade, Pomeroy, and cosls, seat belt; William Capehart
costs, speed; Lesla J. Kerwood, Gal· Pomeroy, costs only, 10 days jail restifu· $30 and costs, speed; Ronald Reeb, 111, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, sP!*'d:
lipolis, $100 and costs, 10 days jail sus· tion, one year probation, receiving Gainesville, Fla., $50 and costs, speed; Joyce P. Sisson, Syracuse, $30 and
pended to three, one year probation, jail stolen property, costs only, 10 days jail George C. Oldaker, H;lrtlord, W.Va., costs, speed; Michael o. Hobbs,
suspended upon proof of a valid license concurrent, one eyar probation, assault $30 and costs, Tanya M. Miller, Rutland, Albany, $30 and costs, seat ben; Cecilia
within 90 days, driving under suspen·
Jesse G. Hull, New Haven, W.Va., $20 and costs, tmffrc control; Harry J. A Sc'
w teJord , $30 and costs,
da · ·
ded , Young, Jr., Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speed;
. ranee,
sfon; Gary L Durst, Reedsville, $30 and $25 and costs, 10 ys JBI 1 suspen
Karen aM. "Baja,
Ravenswood,
costs, speed; Charles E. Rathburn, $30 ,ore year probation, criminal trespass, seat belt;Anna Farley, Rutland, $30 and w.. $30 d Is
ben K
f ..,...,-.
'"""" for cond'"""
· ·1su spended . costs, speed; David Hardwrck,
· syra- neth
.va.,c. Steele
an Ill,cos
• sea1 $30
; and
en·
and costs, unsae
•~·•· $25 and costs , 10 days JB'
Columbus,
$30 and costs, seat belt; Michelle ore year probation, theft; Gerald E. cuse, $30 and costs, seat belt; Martin L. costs, Ronald L. Miller, Pomeroy, $20
French, Middleport, $30 and costs,· Curry, Pomeroy, $26 and costs, speed; Spangler, Rutland, $30 and costs, and costs, failure to control; Wiliam
speed; Kelly Klein, Mason, W.Va., $25 Carol Southern, Middleport, $50 and speed; Tanya Samar, Middleport, $30 WoWe, Pomeroy, $20 and costs, window
and costs, thrse days jail suspended, costs, 10 days jail suspended, one eyar and costs, speed; Elmer J. Wright, tint; Cha~ie D. Harmon, New Haven,
reslltution, one year probation, passing probation, ccnlributing; Men Kems, 'Aid- Albany, $30 and costs, seat belt; James W"a $30 and costs ......... James H
bad checks; Ronald B. Harris, Mason, dleport, $50 and cosls, 10 days jail sus- G. Charles, Athens, $30 and costs,
.v "
· """""'
·
w.va, $25 and costs, 10 days jail sus- pended, ore eyar probation, conlribut- speed; Ronald E. Lutz, Lancaster, 430 Nassie, Bndgevllle, Pa, $50 and costs,
per)dad, ore eyar probation, criminal lng; Charles F. Donohue, Gallipolis, $74 and costs, seat belt.
.
speed; Harry J. Josenberger, Rich·
trespass, $25 ends costs, 10 days jail and cosls, speed; Sherri L. Keelan,
w. L. Wise, Cheshire, $30 and costs, mend, Va., $30 and costs, speed;
suspended concurrent, one year proba- Chesapeake, $100 and costs, thrse seat belt; Gary E. Freeman, Pomeroy, Charles E. Farren, Fort Wayne, Ind.,
lion, theft; Joseph W. Jonas, Mason, days jail suspended upon proof of a $30andccsts,seatbelt, $20andcosts, $30 and costs, seat belt: ·Darlene J.
·
W.Va., $20 and costs, .speed; Enc· A. valld license
WI'thin 90 days, one year failure to display; Jeffrey M. Tys, New Ashby' Langsv'lle
' . $30 and costs'
Quails, Middleport, $22 and cosls, probation, drivirig under suspension; Haven, W.Va., $30 and costs, speed, speed, $20 and costs, expired r119istraspeed; Ethel Adkins ..Racine, $100 and Gary R. Reitmire, Pomeroy, $100 and $30 and costs, seat bett; Dennis D. Hon; Duana Barber, Reedsville, $30 and
costs, three. days J81l suspended, one costs, forfeiture, reckless operation, $25 Boothe, Racine, $200 and costs, 1o ccsts, seat belt; David W. Reed II,
year probation .. wrongful entrustment; and costs, failure to control; Jeffrey P. days jail suspended to two served, 011 Mason; W.Va., $20 and costs, seat beH;
Jeffrey K. Hams, Mason. W.Va., $25 Chaney, Washington Courthouse, $50 eyar probation driving under suspen· James 0 . Childers Ill, Rutland, $30 and
and costs, 10 days jail suspended, one and oosts, ,~possession,$100 and costs, Sion; ·0onald Store, Middleport, $25 costs, speed; Monty Proffitt, Portland,
eyer probation, t:r1mlnal lrespass, $25 10 days jad su .
to one served, ~d ccsts, public intoxication; Kimberly $30 and costs, seat blat; Timothy S.
and costs, 10 days jail suspended, ore ··two eyars
tion, drug perapllema· ·'·o: Holliday, Pomeroy, $100 and costs,' Lewis, ·Pomeroy, $30 anc1 costs, 1seat
year probation, theft.
lla, Daniel F. Brungo, Washington Cour- . '30 days jail suspended to
one ben, $20 and costs, stop sign; ·Keith Nit&gt;-

N·urses, doctors train in Ohio for attacks
·•

• FINDLAY (AP) - Inside
', · an old gymnasium at the Uni• .versiry of Findlay, the hard. wood floors are obscured with
what looks like a child's jungl~

gym.
There are ropes, platforms,
stretchers and bright-yellow
. . barrels marked with hazardous
;:: waste signs. This is where
,,.. emergehcy workers are training for the next time terrorism
'k
''
1 ... stn es.. .
" Emergency -room ·nqrses
, learn to spot symptoms ofbio,. . logical agents, firefighters are
shown the safest ways to move
victims, and sheriff's deputies
srudy how to respond to a
chemical attack.
The school is home to the
Center (or Terrorism Preparedness,.which is slated to be
part of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's
nationwide network of 14
bioterrorism centers.
The center in Findlay, about
50 miles south of Toledo,
opened a year ago. The private
school of more than 4,500 srudents was chosen as one of the
· sites primarily because of its
--l:nvironmental management
program . .
"Before last week people
paid lip ., service to this," Paul
Rega, who helps train doctors
. in recognizing the symptoms
of a biological attack, said
Wednesday. "Now their attention is more focused."

What worries these experts
about bioterrorism is that they
say it could be pulled off with
little expense and much more
easily than the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New York and
Washington.
Outbreaks of smallpox or
anthrax could kill thousands
and spread throughout entire
states or regions before being
detected.
" It's· not too hard to get it,
but you have to figure out
how to process it and disseminate it," said Kelly Burkholder-Allen, a registered' nurse
with the · center. "Somebody's
going to figure it out."
Skeptics, though, say most
terrprists don't nave the expertise.
"A worst-case · scenario is
unlikely;• Jonathan B. Tucker, a
nonproliferation· expert ~t the
Monterey lnstirute oflnternational Srudies in Washington,
said earlier this week.
Many of the first symptoms
of a biological attack show up
much like the fl\1. "With a biological event you don't have a
clue with what you're dealing
with," Burkholder-Allen said.
Rega. a medical doctor,
wrote a book that shows
health care workers how to
determine when there has
been a bioterrorist attack. It
·explains the symptoms and
treatments for 12 potential
biological agents.

BE PREPARED- John Mattmuller is lowered down a pipe by
Dan Hehr, director of Open Enrollment at The University of
Findlay. The two men were demonstrating confined entry and ·
rescue during a demonstration of the rescue;~ecovery and biDterrorism training equipment housed in the University of Findlay Center for Terrorism Preparedness. (AP)

.· Analysts exped strikes by ground troops
WASHINGTON (AP) -

Paul Wolfowitz, the No. 2
man at the Defense Depart'ment, said Wednesday that
any military action would be
coordinated with diplomatic,
law enforcement and economic efforts.

· America's mil,itary response
to last week's terrorist attacks
. is likely to be a series of .
. ·
~ '-J·rstrikes
and relatively small"
· scale raids by special forces,
analysts say.
-~

"-

Military officials also are
signaling that operations may
move beyond a prime poten-

PageA7 ·
Thursday, September 10, 1001

FBi investigates that
hijackers
have used
indentities o people still alive

mar

WASHINGTON (AP)- earlier this year in Europe.
The FBI on Wednesday
Iraq has denied involveinvestigated the possibility ment.
that some oflast week's susMeanwhile, law enforcepected suicide hijackers ment officials told The
used fake identities of peo- Associated Press that the
pie who may still be alive. FBI is investigating whether
Agents enlisted the help of some of the hijackers may
banks to track the trail of have used aliases of people
who may still be alive,
terrorist money:
The Bush administration including one that U.S.
pressed Congress for sweep- intelligence has linked to
ing new antiterrorism pro- Osama bin Laden's net- .,
posals, while the number of work.
people detained on immiOne problem, officials
gration violations or for said, is that the hijackers
questioning rose to 115.
names on the manifest are
Attorney General John common Arabic names.
Ashcroft left open the pos-- The FBI sent a li~t to
sibility that foreign govern- banks Wednesday asking
ments C\)uld have supported them to search for any
Tuesday's terrorists.
financial
transac tions
During a visit to the Pen- involving 21 people wanted
tagon, Ashcroft sidestepped in connection with the teranswering whether investi- rorist attacks.
T he list mostly included
gators had determined a
foreign state was involved the names of 19 Middle
by saying such terrorist net- Eastern men previously
works in general get back- identified by the FBI as the
ing from governments.
suspected hijackers. But the
"It is pretry clear that the list identified one of those,
networks that conduct these Khalid al-Midhar, as -possikind of events are harbored, bly alive.
S!Jpported, sustained and
"Al-Midhar, Khalid Alive
protected by a variety of ," the list said.
·foreign governments," he
In August, al-Midhar was
said.
placed on a watch list after
"It is time for those gov- U.S. intelligence received
ernments to understand information that a man
with crystal clariry that the with that name had been
United States of America seen meeting with associ. will not tolerate that kind ates of accused terrorist
of support."
Osama bin Laden in
Law enforcement officials Malaysia, officials have said.
By the time al-Midhar's
said the investigation has
not made a direct link name was added to the list,
between last week's attacks U.S. officials believed he
and a foreign state, although had already entered the
there is uncorroborated evi- country. His name was listdence that one of the sus- ed on the manifest of the
pected hijackers met with American Airlines jet that
an Iraqi intelligence officer crashed into the Pentagon.

tial target, Afghanistan, where
alleged terrorist . masrermind

;~L;ise:~;?sT~u~ppe~raH~;~harrnfu~~~;lntox~lcants~~~:iR~obe~rt~"~·--;;R~ona~ldf:~E.ORetzloff,
Pomeroy, $859 suspended
lhouse, $200to and
days
jail tent
yeardisordeiiY;
probation,·Debble
~~~~~~~~·~~~i~i~~~0!:::~~-~e~~~a~nd~eC:!~ilc~30~daZys~-~~-~~ls0~a om_LacJen,_ts...sair'"-1:&lt;&gt;-D.e__
-~~~:~~cond~~;uctr,~:
.day&amp;-jaiLsuspended-toore costs,
served,30two
yearsVincent King,
, $50 and
suspended to one
three, six month lcense suspenSIOn, probation, aggravated menacing; Ricky $20 and costs, failure to control; Anthosuspension, one eyar probation,
, _ hiding.
1

1 costs, drug paraphernalia; Juanita A. served, two years probation, restraining
.• Lane, Reedsville, $too and costs, 10 order, domestic vlole$nce; Kasey M.
, days Jail suspended to ore, ore year Williams, Pomeroy, 30 and costs,
:.1 probation, mailing false alanns, $25 and speed; Randy R. Slllelds, Coolville, $50
1 costs, expired tagss, $30 and costs, and costs, one yaar probation, &lt;iaordar·
' • 1188t belt; Rk:hard Comolly, Coolville, ly$ ccn&lt;kJct; James R. Blackwelmonthsl.,~na.
• 525 and costs for each oount, three tOO and cotlfl, 11x
,... susdays jail suspeuded on each count, one pendad to 30 days, two years probation,
year probation, two oooots peas1ng bad domestic violence, $100 and cot111, six
' checks; Joseph M. Prooe, Aal:lne, $tOO
~~~:n~
: ';':•= y s~
~: Bradley Burchfield, Athens, $1,000 and
mont: Christina M. Pricli, Aal:lne, $100 costs, six months jail suspended to 30

=

Adkln~, Rutland, $25 and costs, exprred
pended upon completion of RTP plates, Carrie M. Phall~, Pomeroy, $30
School, drMng under the tnnu_ence~.
$2 and costs, seat beH, Ryan Nelson!
and costs, falllft to control,
lie, $100 and costs, three days JBI
Lee Groves, Sandyville, W.Va., $30 . . uspended, one year proba~on .. no
costs, speed; David W. Reed II, Mason, operstorslicenoe, $25 and costs, farlure
W.Va., $20 and costs, seat belt; James to control, $25 and costs, eXJ)II'ed tags;
0. Clllldars II, Rutland, $30 and costa, Matthew Christopher, Coolville, $30 and
speed; Francisco J. Marcla-Farias, costs, seat beH; Jeremy King, Middle::::~ ~Ca:r.~u=9.;: portn!;..~~u~cOotville, $25
and costs, open oontainer, Dennis c. and costs, no tal lights; Sharon L.
Marcinko, Reedsville, $20 and ~· Davis, sen LeandroOonald' HCali!Ca
., II$50Middand
open container, Susan M. Retzlon, costs, speed;
.
•
lePomeroy, costs only, speed unsata lor port,$25andcostsoneachcount,thrse
one year probation, jail and $500 sus·

, SOCIAL SECURITY
?.J:ft.

._]Frequently asked questions
· now with online answers ·
Bv VAUIEA THOMPSON
How would you like to get
answers to your questions about
Social Security without having
to ask them?That's possible with
Social Security's new online service that provides the most fre' quently asked questions about
' the program. The questions can
be found on the Social Security
Internet website at www.ssa.gov.
We figure if a lot of people are
asking the· same question, -it's
information that most people
need to know. So now we make
i -:file answers available to every.. body.
There are 20 major categories
of questions divided into subcat: egories. A person seeking infer• mation can search the topic of
j interest by keywords or phrases
: and all the related questions and
answers will appear. In addition,
1
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Social Security · and receive emails automatically when new
information on their subject of
interest becomes aHilable.
This. is an alternative to our
800 telephone number or wait. ing in line at the office for people who just need basic information.
•
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! he/ she may find other Social
• Security services useful,- including our benefitl! planner, Social
• Security eNews, an electronic
newsletter, and our history

pages.
Some questions and answers:
Q. I have received too much

in benefits. How will Social
Security recover this overpayment?
A. Recovery of an overpayment from a beneficiary is made
by withholding the monthly
Social Security check until the
overpayment is paid in fuU.
Overpayments ·can also be withheld from faniily members entitled on the beneficiary's record.
Social Security can use severn]
different methods of recovery
includitlg a comprorhise settlement.
If the overpaid individual no
longer receives Social Security
payments, Social Security can
recover the ove,rpayment from
the individual's federal . tax
refund.
Q. My father died in July.
Social Securiry told my mother
that she had to return his July
benefit check even though he
was alive through most of the
month.Why is this?
A. Social Security benefits are
not pro-rated. To be entitled to a
Social Securiry benefit check for
a given month, the person must
be alive the entire month. No
benefit is payable for the month
of death.
On the other h~nd, when
people start receiving Social
Security, they get a benefit for
the first month they're eligible,
even if they don't meet all the
eligibiliry factors until late in the
month.
(l1zlrra 71wmpson is manager of
the Social Security oJfia in Athens.)

FIRE PREVENTIO
WEEK

ny w. Will, Rutland, $1 ,000 and costs, $500 suspended upon completion of
60 days jail suspended to 10, one eyar RTP School within 90 days,. drtvlng
license suspension, ore eyer probation, under the influence, $200 Md costs, 30

driving under the Influence, $250 and days jail suspended to three consecu·
costs, 60 days jail suspended to tO, one live, one year probation, driving· under
year probation driving under suspen· suspension, $25 and costs. left of cension $22 and ~ts speed· Randy w tar
'
'
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William Doe
Sun Valley Fire
Department

something like the Delta
Force, trying to go in covert- WARRIORS - Mujahedln rebels, or "holy warriors.· rest high
ly,, nas·l hl' m and then go out In the mountains In the Kunar province area In Afghanistan In
-this May 1980 file photo. Any U.S. forces entering Afghanistan
covertly .- hopefully without
; them knowing we were would face fierce fighters and a hostile land that has decimated some of the world's best armies . (AP Photo, flies) ·
: there," said retired Army Gen.
~ fred Woerner, former head of Laden without excellent the first deployments of fight, the
Southern Command. intelligence, analysts said.
ers and bombers to the PerIf ,T, d d
'd
" "I would ~nticipate our · "It's high-r.isk, and you may · sian Gu on we nes ay to aJ
:;, future actions to be on the get lucky, depending on intel- in what President Bush is
: small scale, not the large ligence, but the chances o( calling a new war on terror~ scale."
·failure are great," said Harlan ism. Pentagon officials have
~
While such tactics would Ullman; who teaches strategy been tightlipped about their
~ put fewer U.S. soldiers in at the National Defense Uni- plans and have indicated they ·
~arm's way, small raids would versity.
have not decided precisely
~ be unlikely to capture bin
Military officials ordered what strikes to make.

u.s:

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Show your support and
appreciation to
our brave firefighters.

. "If we were acting on good
.. intelligenc_e, it would be

Hi Val Cigarettes

~ ocTOBER 7·13
Salute your favorite Fireman
Fire Department with an
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Tl'ESDAY, OCTOBEH 9TH ,

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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�•
Page A 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Sept. 20, 200f

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel
•

Diamond Roundup, Page B2
Couch ready for Packers, Page B5
Prep golf, volleyball, .Page B8
'.

....

Page 81

'~

Thursd•y. September :zo. :ZOO I

SHS meets·Wahama in Bend ·battle
BY Seem WoLFE

IIJiJd Drug

OVP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - This week the long
running "Battle of the Bend" continues as the Southern Tornadoes swim
downstream to Mason for their annual clash with the Wahama White Falcons. Southern is 2-2 overall and
Wahama is 1- 3.
Southern is coming off a 21-7 loss
. to Alexander last week in which Mike
Hawk rolled for 193 of his team's
dominating 322 rushing yards.
Wahama is coming off .a loss to
Williamson last week, 27-20, but is
using the good effort as a stepping
stone coming into this week's game.
Williamson is touted as one of West

Please see store for details.
•

Private Selection
Hickory Smoked,
Brown IIIJflar, or

Team

Honey Ham

li Ill. /Jag

••
•

-·
•

•
•'

Ill.

Prev. Votes
1 50 (5)
3
39
2
36
8
30
7
28
10
26
6
19
8. Parkersburg
4
16
9. Waverly
5
12
10. Athens
7
1. Ironton
2. Logan
3. Portsmouth
4. Gallipolis
5. Ravenswood
6. Marietta
7. Eastern

with card ·

•

aga1n
BY Scon WoLFE

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Football
SEOAL

Binger Bold li Red Delicious

Btarkist Tuna leg

_..
•

Apples
•

All

1-0
1-0
1-0
1-0
0-1
0-.1
0-1
o-1
Friday's Games

4-0
4-0
3-1
3-1
2-2

1-3
1-3
0-4

Point Pleasant at River
Yalley
Save 40e
with card

,

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l/llit I fiRS

••
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111/t./lflr

R••

50 ct Kroger

3/b.
bag

Ill.

Wieners

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w~h

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Kroger Comp/BIB.

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witllurd

SAT

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Items &amp; Prices Clood Through September 22, 2001 In Clalllpolls :
and Pomeroy. Copyright 2001 Kroger Mid-Atlantic.
·
we reserve the right to limit quantities. None sold to dealers.

·-~~-------------

ta
....
Athens at Jackson
Logan at Warren Local

TVC
Ohio Division

Ium
Belpre
Nelsonville-York
Wellston
Alexander
Meigs
Vinton County

·Raisins

Ium

All

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0·0
0-0

2-2
2-2
2-2

1-3
1-3
0-4

lS oz. KrtJger

li

TIC

All

Eastern
0-0
Waterford
0-0
Southern
0-0
Trimble
0-0
Federal Hocking 0-0
Miller ·
· 0-0

4-0
3-1
2-2
2-2

0-4
0-4

'

Friday's Games

tor Regular Roll Errryllly
Paper Towels
rtlf}Br

c
•

.

Apple Juice

c

Saturday's Games
Waterford at World Harvest
Christian Academy

take on the road."
Kass Lodwick led Ea.'tern with a perfect 18-of-18
serving night with 13
· points and eight aces; Janet
Calaway was 11-of-13 with
eight points and an ace,
while Tiffeny Bissell (12-of13), Katie Robertson (7-of8), and Alyssa Holter (9-of10), added an ace each and
ten, six, and five points
respectively.
Lodwick also led in
spiking with five kills on a
10-of-12 night, while
Tammy Bissell continued
her dominance at the net
with nine kills . and a 14of-17 night.
Whitney
Karr was 10-of-15 with
four kills, Katie Robertson
6-of-7 with one kill, and
Holter 4-of-4.
. Lodwick, l,{arr, Bissell,
and Holter each had two
blocks, while Calaway was
35-of- 43 setting with 11
assists to lead the BHS set- ·
up game, and Tiffeny Bissell was l6-of-20 with five
ass ists.
Eastern won the reserve
match in three sets, 15-12,
14-16,and 15 -lJ.

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

POMEROY - Two teams
with identical 1-3 records will
clash this Friday evening when
tbe Meigs Marauders travel to
Fairland to take on the , Dragons.
The Dragons are coached by
Bryan Ward, who is in his thini
year at the helm. They are coming off a 4-6 season last year.
Fairland defeated Sheldon
Clark by a score of 27-15 r.m
weeks ago. Their losses have
come to Portsmouth West (370), Minford (34-6) and Tolsia
(26-20).
.
Drew Clark has the controls
of the
The senior
sea-~~

. SHUT THEM DOWN - Cubs pitcher Kerry Wood throws against the Reds Wednesday.
wood pitched seven shutout innings, giving up two hits and striking out nine batters. (AP)

Kerry Wood dominates in
10-0 P.ounding of Reds
C IN C INNATI (AP) - lf Kerry Wood
can keep this up, the Chicago Cubs just
might have a chance.
Wood provided a dose of encouragement
when the Cubs really needed it. He gave up
two hits in seven innings of a 10-0 victory
Wednesday night over the Cincin nati Reds ,
providing a glimpse of how he could affect
the playoff race if he's healthy. ·
"I have him down for three mor;e starts,"
manager Don Baylor said. " If he can give us
that ni·ce, fluid Kerry Wood approach like
tonight ..."
If he can do that, the f.1ding Cubs might
be able to do a last-minute about-face.
Th ey led the NL Central by 4 1/2 games
heading into August, then fell into a deep
rut. Th ey've gone 17-23 since Aug. 1, fa.lling
to third in the division and third in the NL
wild card race.

There's reason for hope: Seven of th eir last
17 games are against the first-place Astros.
The Cubs need to be on the upswing when
they go to Houston for a three-game series
this weekend.
"For the team, this is very encouraging,"
Wood said. "We should be able to do this
day-in, day-out. It's no secret that ifwe want
to make the playoffs, we've got to win a lot
of these games."
·
This one was' about as easy as they come.
The Cubs' offense go t rolling against Joey
Hamilton (0-1) and didn't ease off. R.ondell
White and Michael Tucker each drove in
four runs.
.
White
had
a
two-run
homer
and
Tucker
I
.
had a pair of two-run triples. Matt Stairs
homered for the second consecutive night.

Please see Reds, BB

Eastem cautious about Hannan
BY BurcH CoOPER

Ium

AU

Ravenswood
Ripley
Oak Hill
Wahama
Hannan
·South Gallia

4-0
3-1
2-2
1-2

0-4
0·4

Friday's ·Games
Southern at Wahama
Hannan at Eastern .
South Gallia at Miller
Symmes Valley at Oak Hill
Ripley' at Hurricane
Ravenswood at Chapmanville

•••••

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern Eagles faced
some stiff opposition, but
found a way to win in
defeating a stubborn Trimble team 10-15, 15"5, and
20-18 Tuesday night in girls
varsity volleyball action.
Eastern remains undefeated
at 8-0 in the league.
Coach Pam Douthitt
said, "We played better as
the ~ight progressed, but we
did not serve very well, nor ·
attack the ball in the first
game. The second gal)le we
played better, and the third
game was just a hard game
for both teams. Both teams
played extremdy well. It

.•

Non-league

w~can:l

B4 DZ.Iroger

Southern at Wahama
Hannan at Eastern
South Gallia at Miller
Meigs at Fairland
Wellston at Rock Hill
.
Wilmington at Vinton
County
' Nelsonville-York at Trimble
Federal Hocking at Alexan.der
Belpre at Chesapeake

Make sure to pick up your
copy of the Saturqay Sports

EXTRA.

· --· .

TIC

Hocking Division

Varieties 1/b. FMV Sliced

Mouthwash

THUR FRI'

•

will\ card

BZ. KrBger

12BZ. Meat

1/Juproten

Ssve$2.00

rea
for the
Dragons ·

OVP CORRESPONDENT

S.EQ

Please see Bend. B8

•1es

WinS

THuRsDAY'S

Logan
Marietta
Athens
Gallia Academy
Jackson ·
Point Pleasant
yYarren
River Valley

score off a fumbled pu'nt ;,_.hich he
also recovered to set up a short run ·
and ensuing score.
Offensively, Cromley the veteran
White Falcon coach said, "I feel like
we are pretty balanced offensively
right now. Adam Rickard has been
running and· catching the ball well
and running backs Hankinson,
(Gabe)Lamberr, and Mitchell have
been carrying the ball well. Everyone
was in the 40-60 yard range last'
week."
~
Richards reflected Cromley's statements, "We have to focu s on stopping ·
their run an.d we rnust tackle better.

Eastern
•

Others receiving votea~ Ripley 6, Jackson 2, SE Ross 1,
Waterford 1.

Ium

play better."
Only twice has Southern ever
defeated the White Falcon~ in a series
that dates back to 1964.
Southern ·coach Rusty Richards
said, "We. need to play a mistake free
game. We have been turning the ball
over too many tin1es."
·
Last week, Wahama's Brandon
Hankinson led the Falcons with 59
yards on 19 carries.
Quarterback Bradford C lark completed 2- of-8 passes for 28 yards and a
touchdown to R ickard.
Ryan Mitchell had two tou chdowns, a th~ee-yard run to tie the
game at 20-20, ahd the game's first

•

To be eligible for The OVP
10, a teem must either: a.) be
from the Maaon-GalllaMelglhlacliaon 111111; b.) be a
local conlllrance member; or
c;.) play at leal! one game
agalnll local taams.

Save S2.oo lb.

IIIIIIU IUI'i

A . weekly look at the
region's top football teams,
as voted by Ohio Vallay
Publishing Co. sports
staffers. (First-place votes
in parentheses)

Virginia's top ten teams, ranked last
week as number four.
"I think for us to win we will have
to continue to get better like we 've
done every game this season," said
Wahama mentor Ed C romley. "We
have to stop the experience Southern
has in their ten ·seniors."
When asked about the tradition of
Wahama's dominance over Southern,
Cromley responded, " I think it is
something that can be used as a confidence type of thing. The kids don't
have to go imo the game tight and
nervy. There is nothing han gin g over
our heads like if you haven 't won for
a while. If you are more relaxed you

OVP SPORTS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS - You 've just
gotta feel a little sympathy for the Hannan football team.
After starting out the season 0~3 . the
Wildcats are coming off their most
impressive showing, a 36-20 loss at
Marsh Fork.
Even though it was a loss, it still gave
evidence that things might be getting
better at the Mason County _Jchool,
which \vas outscored 139-12 in their
first three games. ·
Now, they have to travel to Eastern,
which is ranked No. 5 in its region and
No. 11 in the latest Ohio Division Vl
AP poll.
.
"They've got a real good team:' said
Hannan head coach Kent Price. "I
know last year they had a lot of sue. cess."

.

"Hann11n 's 2-1 (agaiust
. Eqstrr,n) sincr l'l'c /1cen here.
1ivo years ago; we were 3-1
going into tlte Hmmau game
at1d we ended up 3-2. We ~now
Hannan dorm 't fear us."
E11tern

head coach Scott Christman

With both teams going in completely different directions, and the Eagles at
undefeated Tl'imble next week, Eastern
head ·coach Scott Christman still sees
the Wildcats as a potentially formidable
foe.
"Hannan's 2-1 (against E~stern) since
I've been here," said Christman. "Two
years ago, we were 3- I going into the
Hannan game and we ended up 3-2.
We know Hannan doesn't fear us. 1
think our kids have stayed focused pret"

ty well."
"When we watch the film, the kids
and the coaches can both -see th at mistakes we're making that we need to fix,
so that alsQ helps to keep us focused."
Eastern (4-0), coming off a 32-17
win at Parkersburg Catholic Saturday,
has been concentrating on little goals,
one at a time.
"We've just gotta keep our heads on
and keep focu ~~d and try to accomplish
ou.r next step in_our goal, whi ch is to be
5-0.
The Eagles feature an ever-improving .
ground game that saw the breakout
performance of Brad Parker on Saturday, who carried the ball 14 times for
138 yards.'
Parker became the fourth Eastern
player to rush for over 70 yards in a

Please see Eagles, BB

son due to a knee injuty.At tailback is 6-1, 210 pound senior
Chris Hardy and at fullback is
5-11, 205 pounder Darin
Thomas.
·
The line for the Dragons is
very young but at tight end the ·
Dragons have 6-4, 265 pound
senic;&gt;r Glen Chapman. Chapman has reportedly received
college offers.
On defense, the Dragons
look to be solid up the middle, ·
bur· the backfield is untested.
The Marauders despite losing t,p Ravenswood 41-0 last
week, at times played well
ag:iinst West Virginia's secondr•nked team in C lass AA. Highly touted quarterback Brett.
Rector' seemed to take the :
wind out of the Mar.mders sails·
on a 69-yard scoring toss on .
the first play from scrimmage. :
The Red Devils held a 17-0 :
_lead at the half, and by taking:
advantage of an onside kick in
the third period, and a halfb'ack :
option touchdoWll pass on the :
final play of the game scored 14:
second' half points for the final ·
score.
Jeremy Roush lead£ the:
Marauder rushing attack with:
225 yards in 44 carries. Hard- :
running fullback Ross Stewart:
has also done a good job run- ·
ning the ball, along 1with Tyson
Lee .
. Buzzy Fackler leads the
Marauders in receptions. Dar- ·
rick Knapp is coming off
four-reception game last week.
"Fairland is a physical football team;' Mike Chancey said
of this weeks opponent. "They .
like to run the football, · and
have two very good running
backs. It should be a good football game:'
This is the first of three
straight road games, with the
Marauders traveling to Wellston
next week and NelsonVilleYork in twO weeks.

a

PARKING

NOTE:

According to some reports
from down Proctorville way.
parking is limiting due to construction at th'e school. Those
tr.tvelling to the game might
want to depart a few minutes
early.

�•
Page A 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Sept. 20, 200f

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel
•

Diamond Roundup, Page B2
Couch ready for Packers, Page B5
Prep golf, volleyball, .Page B8
'.

....

Page 81

'~

Thursd•y. September :zo. :ZOO I

SHS meets·Wahama in Bend ·battle
BY Seem WoLFE

IIJiJd Drug

OVP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - This week the long
running "Battle of the Bend" continues as the Southern Tornadoes swim
downstream to Mason for their annual clash with the Wahama White Falcons. Southern is 2-2 overall and
Wahama is 1- 3.
Southern is coming off a 21-7 loss
. to Alexander last week in which Mike
Hawk rolled for 193 of his team's
dominating 322 rushing yards.
Wahama is coming off .a loss to
Williamson last week, 27-20, but is
using the good effort as a stepping
stone coming into this week's game.
Williamson is touted as one of West

Please see store for details.
•

Private Selection
Hickory Smoked,
Brown IIIJflar, or

Team

Honey Ham

li Ill. /Jag

••
•

-·
•

•
•'

Ill.

Prev. Votes
1 50 (5)
3
39
2
36
8
30
7
28
10
26
6
19
8. Parkersburg
4
16
9. Waverly
5
12
10. Athens
7
1. Ironton
2. Logan
3. Portsmouth
4. Gallipolis
5. Ravenswood
6. Marietta
7. Eastern

with card ·

•

aga1n
BY Scon WoLFE

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Football
SEOAL

Binger Bold li Red Delicious

Btarkist Tuna leg

_..
•

Apples
•

All

1-0
1-0
1-0
1-0
0-1
0-.1
0-1
o-1
Friday's Games

4-0
4-0
3-1
3-1
2-2

1-3
1-3
0-4

Point Pleasant at River
Yalley
Save 40e
with card

,

II
l/llit I fiRS

••
,,..i

111/t./lflr

R••

50 ct Kroger

3/b.
bag

Ill.

Wieners

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BB

w~h

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500 ml Knger

c1!11

c

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w~h

ce1d

Ill

.B oz. Crisp N' Tasty

Kroger Comp/BIB.

Pizza

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119

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witllurd

SAT

20 ' 21

22

Items &amp; Prices Clood Through September 22, 2001 In Clalllpolls :
and Pomeroy. Copyright 2001 Kroger Mid-Atlantic.
·
we reserve the right to limit quantities. None sold to dealers.

·-~~-------------

ta
....
Athens at Jackson
Logan at Warren Local

TVC
Ohio Division

Ium
Belpre
Nelsonville-York
Wellston
Alexander
Meigs
Vinton County

·Raisins

Ium

All

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0·0
0-0

2-2
2-2
2-2

1-3
1-3
0-4

lS oz. KrtJger

li

TIC

All

Eastern
0-0
Waterford
0-0
Southern
0-0
Trimble
0-0
Federal Hocking 0-0
Miller ·
· 0-0

4-0
3-1
2-2
2-2

0-4
0-4

'

Friday's Games

tor Regular Roll Errryllly
Paper Towels
rtlf}Br

c
•

.

Apple Juice

c

Saturday's Games
Waterford at World Harvest
Christian Academy

take on the road."
Kass Lodwick led Ea.'tern with a perfect 18-of-18
serving night with 13
· points and eight aces; Janet
Calaway was 11-of-13 with
eight points and an ace,
while Tiffeny Bissell (12-of13), Katie Robertson (7-of8), and Alyssa Holter (9-of10), added an ace each and
ten, six, and five points
respectively.
Lodwick also led in
spiking with five kills on a
10-of-12 night, while
Tammy Bissell continued
her dominance at the net
with nine kills . and a 14of-17 night.
Whitney
Karr was 10-of-15 with
four kills, Katie Robertson
6-of-7 with one kill, and
Holter 4-of-4.
. Lodwick, l,{arr, Bissell,
and Holter each had two
blocks, while Calaway was
35-of- 43 setting with 11
assists to lead the BHS set- ·
up game, and Tiffeny Bissell was l6-of-20 with five
ass ists.
Eastern won the reserve
match in three sets, 15-12,
14-16,and 15 -lJ.

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

POMEROY - Two teams
with identical 1-3 records will
clash this Friday evening when
tbe Meigs Marauders travel to
Fairland to take on the , Dragons.
The Dragons are coached by
Bryan Ward, who is in his thini
year at the helm. They are coming off a 4-6 season last year.
Fairland defeated Sheldon
Clark by a score of 27-15 r.m
weeks ago. Their losses have
come to Portsmouth West (370), Minford (34-6) and Tolsia
(26-20).
.
Drew Clark has the controls
of the
The senior
sea-~~

. SHUT THEM DOWN - Cubs pitcher Kerry Wood throws against the Reds Wednesday.
wood pitched seven shutout innings, giving up two hits and striking out nine batters. (AP)

Kerry Wood dominates in
10-0 P.ounding of Reds
C IN C INNATI (AP) - lf Kerry Wood
can keep this up, the Chicago Cubs just
might have a chance.
Wood provided a dose of encouragement
when the Cubs really needed it. He gave up
two hits in seven innings of a 10-0 victory
Wednesday night over the Cincin nati Reds ,
providing a glimpse of how he could affect
the playoff race if he's healthy. ·
"I have him down for three mor;e starts,"
manager Don Baylor said. " If he can give us
that ni·ce, fluid Kerry Wood approach like
tonight ..."
If he can do that, the f.1ding Cubs might
be able to do a last-minute about-face.
Th ey led the NL Central by 4 1/2 games
heading into August, then fell into a deep
rut. Th ey've gone 17-23 since Aug. 1, fa.lling
to third in the division and third in the NL
wild card race.

There's reason for hope: Seven of th eir last
17 games are against the first-place Astros.
The Cubs need to be on the upswing when
they go to Houston for a three-game series
this weekend.
"For the team, this is very encouraging,"
Wood said. "We should be able to do this
day-in, day-out. It's no secret that ifwe want
to make the playoffs, we've got to win a lot
of these games."
·
This one was' about as easy as they come.
The Cubs' offense go t rolling against Joey
Hamilton (0-1) and didn't ease off. R.ondell
White and Michael Tucker each drove in
four runs.
.
White
had
a
two-run
homer
and
Tucker
I
.
had a pair of two-run triples. Matt Stairs
homered for the second consecutive night.

Please see Reds, BB

Eastem cautious about Hannan
BY BurcH CoOPER

Ium

AU

Ravenswood
Ripley
Oak Hill
Wahama
Hannan
·South Gallia

4-0
3-1
2-2
1-2

0-4
0·4

Friday's ·Games
Southern at Wahama
Hannan at Eastern .
South Gallia at Miller
Symmes Valley at Oak Hill
Ripley' at Hurricane
Ravenswood at Chapmanville

•••••

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern Eagles faced
some stiff opposition, but
found a way to win in
defeating a stubborn Trimble team 10-15, 15"5, and
20-18 Tuesday night in girls
varsity volleyball action.
Eastern remains undefeated
at 8-0 in the league.
Coach Pam Douthitt
said, "We played better as
the ~ight progressed, but we
did not serve very well, nor ·
attack the ball in the first
game. The second gal)le we
played better, and the third
game was just a hard game
for both teams. Both teams
played extremdy well. It

.•

Non-league

w~can:l

B4 DZ.Iroger

Southern at Wahama
Hannan at Eastern
South Gallia at Miller
Meigs at Fairland
Wellston at Rock Hill
.
Wilmington at Vinton
County
' Nelsonville-York at Trimble
Federal Hocking at Alexan.der
Belpre at Chesapeake

Make sure to pick up your
copy of the Saturqay Sports

EXTRA.

· --· .

TIC

Hocking Division

Varieties 1/b. FMV Sliced

Mouthwash

THUR FRI'

•

will\ card

BZ. KrBger

12BZ. Meat

1/Juproten

Ssve$2.00

rea
for the
Dragons ·

OVP CORRESPONDENT

S.EQ

Please see Bend. B8

•1es

WinS

THuRsDAY'S

Logan
Marietta
Athens
Gallia Academy
Jackson ·
Point Pleasant
yYarren
River Valley

score off a fumbled pu'nt ;,_.hich he
also recovered to set up a short run ·
and ensuing score.
Offensively, Cromley the veteran
White Falcon coach said, "I feel like
we are pretty balanced offensively
right now. Adam Rickard has been
running and· catching the ball well
and running backs Hankinson,
(Gabe)Lamberr, and Mitchell have
been carrying the ball well. Everyone
was in the 40-60 yard range last'
week."
~
Richards reflected Cromley's statements, "We have to focu s on stopping ·
their run an.d we rnust tackle better.

Eastern
•

Others receiving votea~ Ripley 6, Jackson 2, SE Ross 1,
Waterford 1.

Ium

play better."
Only twice has Southern ever
defeated the White Falcon~ in a series
that dates back to 1964.
Southern ·coach Rusty Richards
said, "We. need to play a mistake free
game. We have been turning the ball
over too many tin1es."
·
Last week, Wahama's Brandon
Hankinson led the Falcons with 59
yards on 19 carries.
Quarterback Bradford C lark completed 2- of-8 passes for 28 yards and a
touchdown to R ickard.
Ryan Mitchell had two tou chdowns, a th~ee-yard run to tie the
game at 20-20, ahd the game's first

•

To be eligible for The OVP
10, a teem must either: a.) be
from the Maaon-GalllaMelglhlacliaon 111111; b.) be a
local conlllrance member; or
c;.) play at leal! one game
agalnll local taams.

Save S2.oo lb.

IIIIIIU IUI'i

A . weekly look at the
region's top football teams,
as voted by Ohio Vallay
Publishing Co. sports
staffers. (First-place votes
in parentheses)

Virginia's top ten teams, ranked last
week as number four.
"I think for us to win we will have
to continue to get better like we 've
done every game this season," said
Wahama mentor Ed C romley. "We
have to stop the experience Southern
has in their ten ·seniors."
When asked about the tradition of
Wahama's dominance over Southern,
Cromley responded, " I think it is
something that can be used as a confidence type of thing. The kids don't
have to go imo the game tight and
nervy. There is nothing han gin g over
our heads like if you haven 't won for
a while. If you are more relaxed you

OVP SPORTS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS - You 've just
gotta feel a little sympathy for the Hannan football team.
After starting out the season 0~3 . the
Wildcats are coming off their most
impressive showing, a 36-20 loss at
Marsh Fork.
Even though it was a loss, it still gave
evidence that things might be getting
better at the Mason County _Jchool,
which \vas outscored 139-12 in their
first three games. ·
Now, they have to travel to Eastern,
which is ranked No. 5 in its region and
No. 11 in the latest Ohio Division Vl
AP poll.
.
"They've got a real good team:' said
Hannan head coach Kent Price. "I
know last year they had a lot of sue. cess."

.

"Hann11n 's 2-1 (agaiust
. Eqstrr,n) sincr l'l'c /1cen here.
1ivo years ago; we were 3-1
going into tlte Hmmau game
at1d we ended up 3-2. We ~now
Hannan dorm 't fear us."
E11tern

head coach Scott Christman

With both teams going in completely different directions, and the Eagles at
undefeated Tl'imble next week, Eastern
head ·coach Scott Christman still sees
the Wildcats as a potentially formidable
foe.
"Hannan's 2-1 (against E~stern) since
I've been here," said Christman. "Two
years ago, we were 3- I going into the
Hannan game and we ended up 3-2.
We know Hannan doesn't fear us. 1
think our kids have stayed focused pret"

ty well."
"When we watch the film, the kids
and the coaches can both -see th at mistakes we're making that we need to fix,
so that alsQ helps to keep us focused."
Eastern (4-0), coming off a 32-17
win at Parkersburg Catholic Saturday,
has been concentrating on little goals,
one at a time.
"We've just gotta keep our heads on
and keep focu ~~d and try to accomplish
ou.r next step in_our goal, whi ch is to be
5-0.
The Eagles feature an ever-improving .
ground game that saw the breakout
performance of Brad Parker on Saturday, who carried the ball 14 times for
138 yards.'
Parker became the fourth Eastern
player to rush for over 70 yards in a

Please see Eagles, BB

son due to a knee injuty.At tailback is 6-1, 210 pound senior
Chris Hardy and at fullback is
5-11, 205 pounder Darin
Thomas.
·
The line for the Dragons is
very young but at tight end the ·
Dragons have 6-4, 265 pound
senic;&gt;r Glen Chapman. Chapman has reportedly received
college offers.
On defense, the Dragons
look to be solid up the middle, ·
bur· the backfield is untested.
The Marauders despite losing t,p Ravenswood 41-0 last
week, at times played well
ag:iinst West Virginia's secondr•nked team in C lass AA. Highly touted quarterback Brett.
Rector' seemed to take the :
wind out of the Mar.mders sails·
on a 69-yard scoring toss on .
the first play from scrimmage. :
The Red Devils held a 17-0 :
_lead at the half, and by taking:
advantage of an onside kick in
the third period, and a halfb'ack :
option touchdoWll pass on the :
final play of the game scored 14:
second' half points for the final ·
score.
Jeremy Roush lead£ the:
Marauder rushing attack with:
225 yards in 44 carries. Hard- :
running fullback Ross Stewart:
has also done a good job run- ·
ning the ball, along 1with Tyson
Lee .
. Buzzy Fackler leads the
Marauders in receptions. Dar- ·
rick Knapp is coming off
four-reception game last week.
"Fairland is a physical football team;' Mike Chancey said
of this weeks opponent. "They .
like to run the football, · and
have two very good running
backs. It should be a good football game:'
This is the first of three
straight road games, with the
Marauders traveling to Wellston
next week and NelsonVilleYork in twO weeks.

a

PARKING

NOTE:

According to some reports
from down Proctorville way.
parking is limiting due to construction at th'e school. Those
tr.tvelling to the game might
want to depart a few minutes
early.

�\

PageBl

The Daily Sentinel

'lhund.y, Septem.,_ 2•, 2001

AROUND THE • DIAMOND

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Phillies still beating Braves
four in front of Los Angeles.
Luis Gonzalez hit his 52nd
homer. Albie Lopez (3-6) gave
up seven runs and nine hits in
2 2-3 innings.
Astros 10, Giants 3
Dave Mlicki (6-1) allowed
three hits. in seven shutout
innings, and Moises Alou hit a
three-run horner at San Fran-

Scott Rolen's series against
Atlanta seems a lot like Chipper Jones' against New York
two years ago.
Rolen delivered yet another
big h1t, and the Philadelphia
Phillics beat 'the Braves 3-2
Wedn esday night to move
within a half-game of firstp lace Atlanta in the NL East. .CISCO. ·
.. We're in a good spot right
Barry Bonds, who leads the
now, but I'd rather be halfmajors with 63 homers, was !game ahead," Rolen said. "We for- 3 with a walk and a single
still have a lot of work to do."
and needs seven homers in San
Rolen, who hit two homers
Francisco's last 16 games to tie
off Greg Maddux in Monday's the record Mark McGwire set
5-2 win and had the gamethree years ago.
winning hit offJohn Smoltz in
Padres 4, Dodgers 3
Tuesday's 4- 3 victory, gave the
Phillies a 3~2 lead with an RBI
Bubba Trammell hit a tying
single in the sixth off John homer in the ninth off Jeff
tlurkett (11-11) and made Shaw and a two-run single in
three outstanding plays at third the lOth off Mike Tn;&gt;mbley
base.
(0-:3), sending Los Angeles to
At Philadelphia, rookie its fifth straight loss. Sa~ Diego
David Coggin (5-5) allowed • ha~ won seven straight at
two runs and five hits in seven Dodger Stadium.
innings to stop his four-game
Tony Gwynn , triggered the
losing streak. Jose Mesa worked wmmng rally ~th a smgle off
the ninth for his 38th save.
Trombley, ending an 0-for-14
Mets 9 Pirates 2
skid as a pinch hitter.
J Todd Zeile ;nd Mike Piazza
Cardinals 8, Brewers 2
homered for the. second
Matt Morris (20-7) struck
straight game as the visiting out , a c,:reer-high 13 as St.
M~ts, again wearing hats in LoUis completed a three-game
tribute to New York's firefight- sweep. The Cardin~ have won
ers, police and rescue workers, mne of 10, opemng a twofinished a three-game sweep game lead over San Francisco
and closed within five games of m the wild card race.
Atlanta.
Albert Pujols drove in three
(3-2) runs at St. Louis to give him an
Dicky
Gonzalez
pitched 6 2-3 shutout inninRS NL rookie-record 120 RBis,
in relief as the Mets won for one more than Wally Berger
the 20th time in 25 games. had with the Boston Braves in
Zeile hit a go-ahead three-run 1930. Ted Williams set the
drive in the fourth off Tony major league record with 145
McKnight (3-4).
for the 1939 Red Sox. ,
Rockies 8, D-backl 2
Expos 5, Marlin• 2 • ..J
Mike Hampton !14-11) beat
Vladimir Guerrero hit his.
NL West-leading Arizona 34th homer, a fifth-inning
1lespite walking seven in five drive off Josh Beckett (1-1).
· innings.The visiting Diamond- With 101' RBis, Guerrero
backs remained two games topped 100 for the fou•th
ahead of San Francisco and straight season.

Wed..-y··~

Natlonall.oo&lt;tue

Eat

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Daily Sentinel

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78
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64

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Montreal 5. G:-•:18 2

Colorado 8. Arizona 2
Chicago Cubs 10, C•ndnnali 0
~ia 5, Atlanta 2
San Diogo 4, '-'!"Angeles 3310 iMings
HO&lt;Jstoo 10, San Frarosco

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Chlcogo Cubo (llofe 10.9) ot Clnclnnotl

(-7-9), 12:35 p.m.
Houston (Miller 16-7) at San Francisco

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Colorado (Chacon 6-9) al Monlreal (Ohka
1·4), 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta (MillWOOd 5-6) at Philadelphia
(Woll7·10). 7:05p.m .

27'1.

-

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N.Y. Mets 9. p;l1&gt;burgh 2
St. Louis 8. Milw:t•Jkee 2

17'b

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Kansas City

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your
sup.port of these area
businesses who make
this.page possible.
e~courages

'JBalllmonJ
J.'sdc•••r·• .._.

ca. .....t 11. tc.... City s

-

Deboit 6, Milo- 2
Ooldond 4
N.Y. Y - 6. Chicago Willie So. 3
Seellle Anohoim 0
TOl&lt;U I 0.

s.

..

~
Deboit (l.imt
+7) at Milo- (Mays 1S.

'

13). 1:DS p.m.
Anaheim (Waohbum 11-8) at Seallle
(Sale 13-5), 6 :35p.m. 1
Baltimore (Towers 11-10) at Toronto (Carpenler 10.11), 7:DS p.m.
Tampa Bay (A- 5-11) at Boslon
(F.CastiiiO 8-8). 7:05 p.m.
~..s City (Gou&lt;go 3-5) ot Clower. ill
(Drne HI~ 7:05 p.m.
OakiOnd (Zi1o 13-8) a1 TolUIS (Oliver 11·

•

•

9), 8:05p.m .
N.Y. Yank... (Pollina 1&amp;-9) al Chicago
White Sox (K.Wello 9-9), 8:05p.m. •

\
/
Jj
....:..j (..J Jj J
j _J_,.. '::.) ..:.J.r J J

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Terrorist attacks lead to muted celebrations; Tribe wins
The terrorist attacks that shut down the
sports world last w.eek muted its c~ lebra­
tions.
The Seattle Mariners decided on a
moment of silence on the pitcher's mound
instead of a champagne celebration in the
clubhouse after clinching the AL West on
Wednesday night.
And Roger Clemens was in no mood to
celebrate afte,r becoming the first pitcher in
major league history with a 20-1 record.
"It just doesn't take on as much meaning
as it would have because of the circum- ·
stances;' Clemens said after pitching the
NewYork Yankees to a 6-3 win over the
Chicago White Sox.
The Mariners clinched the division
when Oakland lost 10-4 at Texas, then won
two hours later behind Jamie Moyer's
career-high 18th win in a 5-0 win over
Anaheim.
After the game, the Seattle players gathered at the mound and knelt for a moment
o~ silence to pay tribute to victims of last
week's terrorist attacks.
Mark McLemore hoisted an American
flag into the air and Jed his teammates
around the base path as others raised their
arms in the air and tipped their hats.
"It was just something that came together," McLemore said. " It Wasn't choreographed. I don't think I could be any
prouder to be an American than I am
tonight:'

-

Oakland's game ended when the
Mariners were in the fourth inning. Manager Lou Piniella shook hands with players
and offered hugs in the dugout, while others slapped high-fives.
The sellout crowd of 45,459 at Safeco
Field gave the Mariners a standing ovation
and cheered maclly for several minutes
when "2001 AL West champions" flashed
across every scoreboard between the fourth
and fif.h innings.
· After the final out, a banner reading
"2001 A.L. WEST CHAMPIONS" was
unveiled in center field. Streamers shot into
the air. Fans waved flags and cheered.
The Mariners didn't spray champagne in
a"toned-down clubhouse celebration in the
wake of last week's events, choosil)g to sip
it quietly instead.

Yankees 6, White Sox 3

Derek Jeter homered twice, including a
two-run, go-ahead shot in the fifth, as the
visiting Yankees won their sixth straight
game.
Rangers lO,Athletics 4
Alex R~driguez hit his career-high 46th
homer in the first inning offTim Hudson
(16-8) to move within one of matching
Ernie Banks' 1958 big league record for
homers in a season by a shortstop.
Carlos Pena hit his first two home runs
in the majors, and Bill Hasebnan also connected for Texas. Doug Davis (1 0-:8) won
his fifth straight decision.

.

..,

Crow's
Family
Restaurant

Art TlmH hltMI
&amp;u.ch S.rt., MBNA.cem 200 ·
1 p.m. · Saturday • TNT

MBNA Col Rlpkon Jr. 400
12:30 p.m. • Sundey · NBC

• c,.ttaman Truck, Craft11111n .250

Kentucky
Fried Chicken

7 p.m. • Sept. 28 • ESPN2.

228 Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

1.

992-5432

'Bartolo Colon (13-11) pitched eight
strong innings, and Roberto Alomar and
Jim Thome each had three RBJs,
Cleveland extended its AL Central le:id
to seven games over Minnesota with 16
games remaining. The teams play six times,
including three in Minnesota this weekend.
Tigers 6, 1Wim 2
Bobby Higginson homered twice and
Steve Sparks pitched a six-hitter to lead visiting Detroit.
Devil Rays 12,Red Sox 2
Aubrey Huffhad three ofhis career-high
five RBis in Tampa Bay's season-high,
eight-run sixth inning at Fenway l!ark.

KeYin KaMel&lt;., 3,i31

1.

1.
I.
10.

Tllr:k quollfrlnc rocorrl:
Rusty Wallace, Ford,
159.964 mpn. Sept . 25.
1999

JD Spfw&amp;ue, 2,910

J11on l!.ellef, 3 ,657
Jeff Green , 3 ,554
Gfe&amp; Biffle, 3,529
EROI\ sawyer, 3.269
Torrt Raines, 3,159

Joe Rlltllnlnl2,883
Scan RiMS. 2 ,853
Tril'lis!Wepil, 2,771
Ted Musgroye, 2,758
Bobbv Labonte, 3 ,287
~ Henc!OCtl, 2. 757
D. Eamtlardt Jr., 3,2114 Mille Mclaughlin, 3.151 Terry Cook. 2 ,654
Kevin Ha1vicll, 3 .230
Jimmie Johnson. 3.133 Dennis setzer. 2,615
Rusty Wallace:, 3,225
Chad little . 3 .081
Rtck CutwfOfd. 2.5.49
JOMI'i'J' 6ei1SOrl, 3.096 KennyWBIIace . 2.912 CtlyGibbs, 2.284

·

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S alurdll)'
Sept. 29
Oc t . ~

Oct . 13
. Oct. :H

1 NOV. 3
Nov. 10

Dov8r Downs International Speedwl!y

pole (OCt. 5, 1994, at
Charlotte), win (Oc!t. 22.
1995, at Rockln&amp;nem, N.C.)

· Dover. Del.
l(anHJ City, l(en.

loWI!"s MC\Q! ~y
Memphis Motct'sportl Pert&lt;.

Concord.

PnoeniJ. lntematlomu Re&lt;:eway
North C.rollf\8 ~
Homesteaa·M!aml Spee(toyay

Avon&lt;tete, Ariz.

N.C.

M~llncfOn,

ltnn.

How cllllcull -tho
owttOII to Dotfp far ,..r
teem? "It's been a atruggle
at times, but ever~hint
thet poss ibly could have
cl'lanaed for tl'le 22 teem

Rocklnpm , N.C.
Homestead, FNI .

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Copies of this

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SPECIAL
TUESDAY EDITION

Waa chen&amp;ed other than

people. we chanaed the
aero, we chanaed the
motor, &amp;r~d Goodyear made

The feellnp of tJ:!e people who make a llvin&amp; in
NASCAR are no different from the overwhelmln&amp; majority
of Americans who ere united In a·co nectlve
determination to protect the country from the threat of
International terrorism. Jeff Burton spoke ror hll pee,:S
when he ~d: • It makes me mad. Part of my emotions
1n this thing Is that I want to make sure that the Idiots
that did this don't win . With au the pain that they've
to meketure they don't win end
caused, we've
that's part or me wantln&amp; to aet back to normetey. I
want to just ahove that beck Into the face of thtH
IdiOts and snow them that we are resilient.•

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a hu&amp;e change in the tire
deslan. Every variable that
could posalbly have been
chan&amp;ed, we hed tO start
oYer with. 1think, five or she

cot

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opinion: • These ara difficult times for everyone, and
everyone must be willlnl to make sacrifices to preaerve
our way of life. Wht~t Is atreedy evident, Jud&amp;ln&amp; from the
heroism beln&amp; displayed In New York b)' firemen, pollee
officers, doctort.and· other Yolunteers, Ia that we ere up
to the task. The world l'las cttan&amp;ed, and we are all
&amp;otna to have to be a little brav.,, a little more vt&amp;llant
and a little more wlllln&amp; to put our differences aalda:

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WhnHo&amp;WienNot

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Dale Ja~tt noled the increase in
inddents of roush di"Wing this year
and said he thinks NASCA R needs to
get tough.
"I think .....-c 're soins to have to do
something besides fino;," Jarrett 58id.
"I've ahYays looked at fines, whelhcr it
· N in out sport or other spons wher'e
the alhlctc:s, teams or what~er it may
be make quite a bit of money. E\·en
thollgh SIO,OIJJ or !i5.000 i&gt;still a !01
of mone-y. in lhe whole scheme of
things i don't know it" that :t~:nJ • the
rnes~l!~ thilt.,.,-c"rc QOIVlll have to Sl.'lld

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The D·aily Sentinel - Pomeroy

lren.:.
"' I th ink we need to look at

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..lohll Cl!rk!No\SCAf! lhltWM!Io.

---:c::-:':'
:-c:::---:---:- --;;;;;;;;;;;;~~=~=~~....Of w.d lwton'a tlwM-- Wll II M Cup Ylcte.....

two._ COllie . . Dw•etou• R

weeks ago, we hlt on
something and we buckled
down and really paid
attention to the race car.
The guys ere getting better
with the aero au the time.
The motor Is getting better
all the time. and I'm a;enln&amp;
the tires flaured out better,
too.
· we're heading ln the right
direction. We just heYen't
had any luck to prove It 11t
the places we hed a shot at
like Pocono and some of the
other races we were running
eooc:s. We''.ll been wrecked
and hit and had bad luck all
season :

It Mlflllllke every ~ar
th•re
rumora thlt you

a,.

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1 g.....

ml&amp;bl bo hoodld to
another team. Anythlnc to
them? · 1 ha11e not eYen
picked a phOne call up and
tal ked to another team .
We'ye got e three.year
deal. This is the second
year. There ·s nothing to
talk about . I'm not plann ing
on goi ng anywhere anywey.~
Two of your three
vlctorl•• hne brHn •t
DuUnaton. Wll~? "I don 't
know if I'm so good there. I
like the place. I feell.lke a
driver can make up a little
bit there . You're alwa~s
having to compromise ....
You're always having to
look around, trylnc stuff
every lap."

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

1. Who was the only driYer to win 10
consecutive races?
2. What former Winston Cup car owner was a fune ra l
dlrectqr?

In the last 10 races.

3. Whd was the first drl11er to win a race on Hoosier

•

ll8UU08 118N

818MlpSJ81iB UOQ

't

't L96l Ut

~ll8d PJBL\011:1

't

IHIMINY

••••••••••
~al illle!TIO!ehar1h. ~

Randy, Ryllll and Roman . But
X
that'l talun1 points away - that ·aecordinll to the olde!l brother,
IMG£mNGTOBEAORAC:
certainly takes a little ~ lhan the 44"year-old crew chid Robin. the
money - but from what I've S«"fl rutme!iofhiuiblingshadoothinstodo The New HllfT1)$hift race would ha\le
been the "27th of the season. and the
0\'t r lhc last few weeks anyway\ it with the lener R.
mi ~Jht be t i ~ for sorncllody to sit out
Judd Pemberton, the bo)ls' fill her. teams lwr.e been a~ om!.' at it ~i1M."t" t'IU"Iy
a week and mdize thai we're 1101 JOin&amp; had betn a "'~1 1 -known co llege July without a single weekend oft'. if
to put up "A"ith th.ls. Racing and basketbe.ll pla)&lt;r in Up!! lute New York. there IS 11 silver lininll,IOthe pcb"tpOnC·
rubbing 11 little bit 1111d ucr;1dents aft He and hiswift n.1flll!d thdr wns ftum 111l'llC. thal l'l il
··1 feel pn..'lty good. but the 11uys on
gonna happen ot times. bu t Mltne of §ports ~s.
1he thingli that 1\•e see n m totally
"Dad named me after Robin the ICllltr lii"C l he OIII..'S Who lin: g~'lting
uncmlled for. and o messai!e needs to Roberts. a great baseball plll)cr. and tin:d." Bill Ell1on s;,1id. "You set it in 11
be !JCnL"
Randy 's ful11111me is Randy Kyle ... lot of ~le'!r perf'on!UIJlCC at this time.
" You tear ur seveml cars in asll'Ctcl1
n:tnxd nfttr ~ports le~ nd Kyle Role.' '
like th is wu.lg~1 behind mK11t's 11oing
Robin said.
NAMED AFTER ATIILET[S: · 'vou n11cr brother.; Ry1111 :rnd R01non to he tough In m;untmn or cuKh up
NASCAR 's Pembenon · brothers. 1..-cre n tu~d niter mrler Jrm lll'lltl mht "ll1ts timt of yc:1r, monl'Y get!. tight.
proplc !!(!!tired t~'ll lfll!t S get short und
imolvrd 1nlttc sport rl5 meclulnics and qt&amp;artcrbltck Rom~ n Gabrtd ·
1.myth1 n~ can ILtppL·n .""
broadcasters, are named Robin.

x

992-2155

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•The 200 1 Rick Mast
Concert and Golf Classic
raised in excess of $80,000
for the Rockbridge Area (Va.)
Free Cli nic. The fu nd·raiser
featured a concert and

oc..
I» CD

1bttnoe of a

::::1"
CD
CD

=~

',III'Nl:
-....WUII.CM
See us for Your Stihl•
1 Power Tools &amp;
' Accessories

• Thll WHk'e ltOnor, In
the

a.

--·0 ...

autograph session Sept. 4 at
the Virginia Horse Center in
Lex ingto n. and was followed
by q golf tourn ament Sept. 5
at The .H omestead In Hot
Sprln!!,s. Va.
The concert and
autograph session drew oYer
5,000 fa ns. Tne autograph

heMh Insurance .

CD

tn
CD
tn
'C"
C " - U)
-· ·o
CD -. )&gt;

Fan Tips

sessio n featured Bobby
Labonte, Ken Schracter. Hut
Stricklin, Stacy Compton and
Rick Mast.
· we 're rea l tic~led with the
' turnout and the money we
raised for the clime," Mast
said.
The original focus of the
Rockbridge Area Free Clinic
Is to provide a · medical
home· for th ose who do n~t
hewe one 11nd cannot afford
to seek one . The target
population Is low·lncome
working people without

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c

•••••••••••

r~ee,

. aoe• to the two Racer
Pen1ke , . ttlftlt, wtlo .

~ Ridenour

Supply

lnHIIttd en effort to reiH
fundi tar re11111fforta In
New York City end
W•shlncton, D.C ., b~

pltd.ln&amp; $20 per l•p
completed by th~ c•rs of
Ru1ty Wllltce and Jcuemy
M.,.rlald at Dcwer. Andy

St. At. 248
Chester 985-3308

P•tr••'• two teams - the
drlv•rs .,. Joe Nemechtk

and

Bobb~

HamlHon ;-

.quickly Jol~ld the effort,
and 1everal more teamt
are upected to comt on
board thll weak.

5:

Place Your Business's Ad here

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CD

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Call The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Deb.bie Call

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&lt;
CD

. at .TaUadep.

Monte Dutton
N.a.SCAR This Week

-I
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l ha ve jllst one h~·p l~n a t ctl \\tm.l
for Jell Cimn: "IJOIJ·hoo!"' MHybeMr. Gft'en.shQ\lld go back and lnol.:
a t the tl pe s fro m Itis darnptonship
year. Pe rhap ~ he would t h~! n get 1
arip on realit y and maybe o.'ve n
apologize for a ll thos..• wmketl cars
Hnd drram~ . ...·ht n he sees his No
10 Nesq uik ~; n drop·k t~ king ~ars
right dnd lefl. Just remember. J ~ ft",
" l. 11 c h)' th e sword. (h e by the
1word.'' Tnke a l u~o n from St e,·e
Park . ... h~ Wll~ II perfet:t genllc:man.
aft er hi~ less·tha n-Pe rfect night at
Bmtol, sluttn", '"Oh, well , thot"~
mcing at Dri~tol:"--.
- - -1··1'1.;')--"UO·--...,..--•·Brl•n A. W•lkel
HunllnKtoa, l•d.

cI»

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r•I'CJ

0

Dear NASC'AR Tim W~ek,

tires? ·

B~

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Jarrett: It's tlmtp for NASCAR to get tough on rough drivers

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\tlch.

AROUNP THE GARAGE

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JJrk~IIIJ.

• HOTI Dale Earnhardt Jr.
has nine top-15 fi nishes
• tiOTI Bobby Hamilton
hasn't finished better
than 15th since wlnnini

i'

\lrbe iJBatlp \lertbune - Gallipolis
mbe l\egister - Point Pleasant

Dear NASC AR Tior' '"eel.
"'ear~ ex treme NA S(" AR fans
and buyer s of h o t ~ . shtrcs , ~~a l e ·
model can. o:-11.:. So llo'h.ut".t lip 1'o 1th
~ tht:" l! real c~ l ~r oc k ·c~r ~ h o w llll
eartl1" ha~· i ng prod uc t ~ llll$d l' in
Korea. Taiwan ancl other cou ntrie ~ ·.•
MMode in the US A" Ill the Woy!
De!)B)" IDd ConDit W11jtuslk

••••••••••••

N.UCAR This Wook'l M - Dutt•I!Mt hlo

~

Available while they last
at our offices:

FEUD OF THE WEEK

Pablotlllll

••
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••

f holl t tl l t"l"l &lt;;mHI {'oW f ll f,n ,./n
!tun ulflo•r '"" ' /o•o•( '

Wh: Tabitha

1994. at Richmond , Va .),

..,

McRrith&lt;
Kent. Ohkl

Ate: 39

~

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CD

( itni!

the ,1995 ·season, he has
drl11en for Bill Davis, and
his performance has
118rled from top--10
finishes In the 1999 end
2000 points standings to
a 33rd place in 1996.

Chlldrtn: Sarah {turns
15 on Oct. 4), Jeb {9)
HometoWn: Born in
2001 WINSTON &lt;UP S(HEOULE
Danville, Ye ., grew Ul? In
.,..
........
South Boston . Va.
Dover Downs International Speedwa)'
Dover. Del .
Crew chief: Tommy
1\ftnst\s Speedway
Keftses City. Kiln.
Baldwlrt' Jr.
~we ·s MOtol soeectway
Concord. N.C.
Clr: No. 22 Caterpillar
~artlnsvilte Speedwalj
Martlnsviila, V..
Dodge Intrepid, owned by
I
Superspttedway
TaUedep . -'Ia,_
. ~---"
Bill DaYIS
" " -- - -AYOfldala.-Artl.
CarMr ltat"lot;;o;;lc:=
o;-.
:2
' -4ii'o&lt;
North CeroUnai S~&amp;dway
Aoc,klnghem . N.C. ·
Homestead-Miami~
Homestead, Flll.
Starts, 3 wins, 18 to~5
Mlante Motor Speedway
Hemptl)ll, Gs.
finishes, 64 top-10
flnlsl'les, 6 poles, almost
$12 million In earnlni,s
2001 BUSCH GRANO NATIONAL SCHEDULE
Flrall: Start (March 6,

!(anna Speedwrf

" r~.· c ~ .

to ~h• IW 11 hal
not ju ~ t r"r mhng

11\ llll ll d

since moving up to
Winston Cup from the
Busch Series In 1994.
Since the letter pert of

held on Friday, Nov. 23, and
becomes the s~ason's flnat
eYent. The scheduled truck
race. the SiiYerado 350 at
Texas Motor Speedway, will
be made UR on Oct 5.

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k·d ur tfl ,,

' tlad his ups and downs

FROM LAST WEEK

c
3

I h e~

an o the r J:o mmercta l.

and ce rtainly has a well-

10.(101 Rusty Walloco SoaiiOII&amp;OttlnJI tou"'ot

r

~ h o u ld tm l:- lw u~i: d

deserved reputation for
honesty and loyalty as well
as drMn&amp; skill.
Bu rton, who recently
won the Southern 500 at
Darlington Raceway. has

8. (8) D. Earnhardt Jr. Much more contlatent In ' 01
9. (9) Ward Burton
Mulf: keep momentum up

Scheduled races in the
Winston Cup Se ries and
Craftsman Truck Seri es were
postponed due to the
national emergency. The
New Hampshire 300 wll! be

ju ~ l

respected by his peers

5. (5) Dolo Jarrett
~least he stopped tho fade
6. (6) Storlln&amp; Marlin Puttln&amp; to&amp;olller a ftne 1011on
7. ( 7) Bobby Labonte Late orrlval In tho polnto race

-

lkor NASCAR T l11 ~ W~-c k".
I 11- 11~ wtJndatnl! tf llll) l.lll &lt;: cbc
! l1 11l l. ~ NAS(" AR UH'!' the m -ca r
canwn1' wu m1 1 ~h . l th 111k rlte\1 un.-

Ward Burton Is well· ·

Whet 1 tenon
Will be a force at Dover

250 laps/100 miles'

Your
Turn
IAIIen Fri. Our Readtn

NASC.6.R This Week

3. (3) Kevin Hervlck
4. (4) Tony Stewart

Wh•t: Craftsman 250
·where : South Boston (Va ,)
Speedway (. 4·mlle tu~o c k ),

••••••••••••

' Winston Cup Series

2. (2) Ricky Rudd

CRARSMAN TRUCK

When : 7 p.m ., Sept. 28
Defe~dln• ch•m~lon: First
race
Tr•ck quallfYtnl record:
First ra ce
BUICH GRAND NATIONAL won a record three limes at
R1ce record: F1rst race
Dover. ... Che11rolets have won
Not•ble: South Boston
Wlllt: MBNA.com 200
Where: Dover (Del.) Downs· more than tnree time s as many hosted 35 Busch races but IS
races as any other make.
no longer a part of that se11es .
International Speedway (1·

ByM-Dutton

Roclnc In DuPont's
nol&amp;hboriiOGd
Can he mount a cher1e?

·

When: 1 p .m., Sa turday
Deftndlnl champion: Matt
Kenseth
·
RICe q..,.llfylftC racord:
M ike Skinner, Chevrolet,
155.932 mph, Sept . 22, 2000
Race record: Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet ,
130,152 mph , May 30 . 1 998
Notable: Todd Bodine has

Ward Burton

TOP TIN

1. (1) Jeff Gordon

mile track). 200 laps/mites

···-PROftlt-

• NASCA R Th is Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
to p 10 drivers hea ding into this weekend's race. Last
week's ra nkings are in parenth eses.

Clemens, 39, reached 20 wins for rpe
sixth time in his career and became the
oldest 20-game winner in the AL since
Early Wynn ;n t959.
The Rocket allowed three mns and five
hits in 6 1-3 innin~ and struck out a season-low one. It was his first start since Sept.
5, when he bea~ Toronto and joined Rube.
Marquard as the only pitchers since 1900
to go 19- 1.
Clemens has won 16 straight decisions,
his only loss coming May 20 at Seattle. His
Blue Jays 4, Orioles 1
career record improved to 280-143, and he
Roy Halladay (4-2) handed Baltimore its
is the favorite to win his record sixth Cy lOth straight loss, striking out a career-high
Young Award.
11 to lead host Toronto.

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

Stewart

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

1. Jtff Gorooo , 3.768
2.. R~ R\.IOd, 3,!4e
J . Dale Jarrett. 3,375 "
4. Tony Stewart, 3 ,J56
I. Sterling Me rlin, 3 ,302

2500 E. Ftan•dln Blvd.

Gootonlt, N.C. 21054

Dl-111 chomplon: Tony

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NASCAR Th.. WHk

Race rtcord : Mark Martin ;
Ford, 132.719 mph, Sept.
What: MBNA Cal Rlpken Jr. 21.1997
Notable: Stewart swept
400
WMre: Dover (Del.) Down~ the Dover [)owns events in
2000 but did not win the
International Speedwav (1·
race earlier this season.
mile track) , 400 lapsfmiles
When: Green flag drops at Rick)' Rueld and "Bil l Ell iott
are the active leaders with
1 p.m .• Sunday
four Dover Yictories each.

• Wlnatcm Cup,

queatlon

C/0 The o..ton Gazette

WINSTON CUP

•

F~&amp;aturlng

Indians 11, Royals 3

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or 1 comment, wrtte:

r

x-ctinched division tiUe

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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The Daily Sentinel

'lhund.y, Septem.,_ 2•, 2001

AROUND THE • DIAMOND

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Phillies still beating Braves
four in front of Los Angeles.
Luis Gonzalez hit his 52nd
homer. Albie Lopez (3-6) gave
up seven runs and nine hits in
2 2-3 innings.
Astros 10, Giants 3
Dave Mlicki (6-1) allowed
three hits. in seven shutout
innings, and Moises Alou hit a
three-run horner at San Fran-

Scott Rolen's series against
Atlanta seems a lot like Chipper Jones' against New York
two years ago.
Rolen delivered yet another
big h1t, and the Philadelphia
Phillics beat 'the Braves 3-2
Wedn esday night to move
within a half-game of firstp lace Atlanta in the NL East. .CISCO. ·
.. We're in a good spot right
Barry Bonds, who leads the
now, but I'd rather be halfmajors with 63 homers, was !game ahead," Rolen said. "We for- 3 with a walk and a single
still have a lot of work to do."
and needs seven homers in San
Rolen, who hit two homers
Francisco's last 16 games to tie
off Greg Maddux in Monday's the record Mark McGwire set
5-2 win and had the gamethree years ago.
winning hit offJohn Smoltz in
Padres 4, Dodgers 3
Tuesday's 4- 3 victory, gave the
Phillies a 3~2 lead with an RBI
Bubba Trammell hit a tying
single in the sixth off John homer in the ninth off Jeff
tlurkett (11-11) and made Shaw and a two-run single in
three outstanding plays at third the lOth off Mike Tn;&gt;mbley
base.
(0-:3), sending Los Angeles to
At Philadelphia, rookie its fifth straight loss. Sa~ Diego
David Coggin (5-5) allowed • ha~ won seven straight at
two runs and five hits in seven Dodger Stadium.
innings to stop his four-game
Tony Gwynn , triggered the
losing streak. Jose Mesa worked wmmng rally ~th a smgle off
the ninth for his 38th save.
Trombley, ending an 0-for-14
Mets 9 Pirates 2
skid as a pinch hitter.
J Todd Zeile ;nd Mike Piazza
Cardinals 8, Brewers 2
homered for the. second
Matt Morris (20-7) struck
straight game as the visiting out , a c,:reer-high 13 as St.
M~ts, again wearing hats in LoUis completed a three-game
tribute to New York's firefight- sweep. The Cardin~ have won
ers, police and rescue workers, mne of 10, opemng a twofinished a three-game sweep game lead over San Francisco
and closed within five games of m the wild card race.
Atlanta.
Albert Pujols drove in three
(3-2) runs at St. Louis to give him an
Dicky
Gonzalez
pitched 6 2-3 shutout inninRS NL rookie-record 120 RBis,
in relief as the Mets won for one more than Wally Berger
the 20th time in 25 games. had with the Boston Braves in
Zeile hit a go-ahead three-run 1930. Ted Williams set the
drive in the fourth off Tony major league record with 145
McKnight (3-4).
for the 1939 Red Sox. ,
Rockies 8, D-backl 2
Expos 5, Marlin• 2 • ..J
Mike Hampton !14-11) beat
Vladimir Guerrero hit his.
NL West-leading Arizona 34th homer, a fifth-inning
1lespite walking seven in five drive off Josh Beckett (1-1).
· innings.The visiting Diamond- With 101' RBis, Guerrero
backs remained two games topped 100 for the fou•th
ahead of San Francisco and straight season.

Wed..-y··~

Natlonall.oo&lt;tue

Eat

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Daily Sentinel

Atlanla
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78

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New VOIK

78
74

Florida

68

sa .
73
78

62
114
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Stlouis

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59

.593

82

64
66
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.545
.429

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Milwaukee
Clnclnn~~tl

59

Pittsburgh

55
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Arizona

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.425

66

79
63

San Francl:sco
Los Angeles

,538

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San Diego

78
73

68
73

Colorado

64

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Montreal 5. G:-•:18 2

Colorado 8. Arizona 2
Chicago Cubs 10, C•ndnnali 0
~ia 5, Atlanta 2
San Diogo 4, '-'!"Angeles 3310 iMings
HO&lt;Jstoo 10, San Frarosco

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Chlcogo Cubo (llofe 10.9) ot Clnclnnotl

(-7-9), 12:35 p.m.
Houston (Miller 16-7) at San Francisco

!Rueter 13-11). 3 :35p.m .

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L

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57

70
73

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55

89

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Minnesota

Chicago

Pet
.562

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Stlouis (W.Williams 12- 9) at 'Plttsburgh

.548
.5..'4

2
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(J.Anderson 7· 16), 7:05p.m.
Arizona (Witt 3-1) at Los Angeles (Park
1~11) , 10:10 p.m.

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Colorado (Chacon 6-9) al Monlreal (Ohka
1·4), 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta (MillWOOd 5-6) at Philadelphia
(Woll7·10). 7:05p.m .

27'1.

-

-~

N.Y. Mets 9. p;l1&gt;burgh 2
St. Louis 8. Milw:t•Jkee 2

17'b

Detroit

Kansas City

74
56
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your
sup.port of these area
businesses who make
this.page possible.
e~courages

'JBalllmonJ
J.'sdc•••r·• .._.

ca. .....t 11. tc.... City s

-

Deboit 6, Milo- 2
Ooldond 4
N.Y. Y - 6. Chicago Willie So. 3
Seellle Anohoim 0
TOl&lt;U I 0.

s.

..

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Deboit (l.imt
+7) at Milo- (Mays 1S.

'

13). 1:DS p.m.
Anaheim (Waohbum 11-8) at Seallle
(Sale 13-5), 6 :35p.m. 1
Baltimore (Towers 11-10) at Toronto (Carpenler 10.11), 7:DS p.m.
Tampa Bay (A- 5-11) at Boslon
(F.CastiiiO 8-8). 7:05 p.m.
~..s City (Gou&lt;go 3-5) ot Clower. ill
(Drne HI~ 7:05 p.m.
OakiOnd (Zi1o 13-8) a1 TolUIS (Oliver 11·

•

•

9), 8:05p.m .
N.Y. Yank... (Pollina 1&amp;-9) al Chicago
White Sox (K.Wello 9-9), 8:05p.m. •

\
/
Jj
....:..j (..J Jj J
j _J_,.. '::.) ..:.J.r J J

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Terrorist attacks lead to muted celebrations; Tribe wins
The terrorist attacks that shut down the
sports world last w.eek muted its c~ lebra­
tions.
The Seattle Mariners decided on a
moment of silence on the pitcher's mound
instead of a champagne celebration in the
clubhouse after clinching the AL West on
Wednesday night.
And Roger Clemens was in no mood to
celebrate afte,r becoming the first pitcher in
major league history with a 20-1 record.
"It just doesn't take on as much meaning
as it would have because of the circum- ·
stances;' Clemens said after pitching the
NewYork Yankees to a 6-3 win over the
Chicago White Sox.
The Mariners clinched the division
when Oakland lost 10-4 at Texas, then won
two hours later behind Jamie Moyer's
career-high 18th win in a 5-0 win over
Anaheim.
After the game, the Seattle players gathered at the mound and knelt for a moment
o~ silence to pay tribute to victims of last
week's terrorist attacks.
Mark McLemore hoisted an American
flag into the air and Jed his teammates
around the base path as others raised their
arms in the air and tipped their hats.
"It was just something that came together," McLemore said. " It Wasn't choreographed. I don't think I could be any
prouder to be an American than I am
tonight:'

-

Oakland's game ended when the
Mariners were in the fourth inning. Manager Lou Piniella shook hands with players
and offered hugs in the dugout, while others slapped high-fives.
The sellout crowd of 45,459 at Safeco
Field gave the Mariners a standing ovation
and cheered maclly for several minutes
when "2001 AL West champions" flashed
across every scoreboard between the fourth
and fif.h innings.
· After the final out, a banner reading
"2001 A.L. WEST CHAMPIONS" was
unveiled in center field. Streamers shot into
the air. Fans waved flags and cheered.
The Mariners didn't spray champagne in
a"toned-down clubhouse celebration in the
wake of last week's events, choosil)g to sip
it quietly instead.

Yankees 6, White Sox 3

Derek Jeter homered twice, including a
two-run, go-ahead shot in the fifth, as the
visiting Yankees won their sixth straight
game.
Rangers lO,Athletics 4
Alex R~driguez hit his career-high 46th
homer in the first inning offTim Hudson
(16-8) to move within one of matching
Ernie Banks' 1958 big league record for
homers in a season by a shortstop.
Carlos Pena hit his first two home runs
in the majors, and Bill Hasebnan also connected for Texas. Doug Davis (1 0-:8) won
his fifth straight decision.

.

..,

Crow's
Family
Restaurant

Art TlmH hltMI
&amp;u.ch S.rt., MBNA.cem 200 ·
1 p.m. · Saturday • TNT

MBNA Col Rlpkon Jr. 400
12:30 p.m. • Sundey · NBC

• c,.ttaman Truck, Craft11111n .250

Kentucky
Fried Chicken

7 p.m. • Sept. 28 • ESPN2.

228 Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

1.

992-5432

'Bartolo Colon (13-11) pitched eight
strong innings, and Roberto Alomar and
Jim Thome each had three RBJs,
Cleveland extended its AL Central le:id
to seven games over Minnesota with 16
games remaining. The teams play six times,
including three in Minnesota this weekend.
Tigers 6, 1Wim 2
Bobby Higginson homered twice and
Steve Sparks pitched a six-hitter to lead visiting Detroit.
Devil Rays 12,Red Sox 2
Aubrey Huffhad three ofhis career-high
five RBis in Tampa Bay's season-high,
eight-run sixth inning at Fenway l!ark.

KeYin KaMel&lt;., 3,i31

1.

1.
I.
10.

Tllr:k quollfrlnc rocorrl:
Rusty Wallace, Ford,
159.964 mpn. Sept . 25.
1999

JD Spfw&amp;ue, 2,910

J11on l!.ellef, 3 ,657
Jeff Green , 3 ,554
Gfe&amp; Biffle, 3,529
EROI\ sawyer, 3.269
Torrt Raines, 3,159

Joe Rlltllnlnl2,883
Scan RiMS. 2 ,853
Tril'lis!Wepil, 2,771
Ted Musgroye, 2,758
Bobbv Labonte, 3 ,287
~ Henc!OCtl, 2. 757
D. Eamtlardt Jr., 3,2114 Mille Mclaughlin, 3.151 Terry Cook. 2 ,654
Kevin Ha1vicll, 3 .230
Jimmie Johnson. 3.133 Dennis setzer. 2,615
Rusty Wallace:, 3,225
Chad little . 3 .081
Rtck CutwfOfd. 2.5.49
JOMI'i'J' 6ei1SOrl, 3.096 KennyWBIIace . 2.912 CtlyGibbs, 2.284

·

·

-

S alurdll)'
Sept. 29
Oc t . ~

Oct . 13
. Oct. :H

1 NOV. 3
Nov. 10

Dov8r Downs International Speedwl!y

pole (OCt. 5, 1994, at
Charlotte), win (Oc!t. 22.
1995, at Rockln&amp;nem, N.C.)

· Dover. Del.
l(anHJ City, l(en.

loWI!"s MC\Q! ~y
Memphis Motct'sportl Pert&lt;.

Concord.

PnoeniJ. lntematlomu Re&lt;:eway
North C.rollf\8 ~
Homesteaa·M!aml Spee(toyay

Avon&lt;tete, Ariz.

N.C.

M~llncfOn,

ltnn.

How cllllcull -tho
owttOII to Dotfp far ,..r
teem? "It's been a atruggle
at times, but ever~hint
thet poss ibly could have
cl'lanaed for tl'le 22 teem

Rocklnpm , N.C.
Homestead, FNI .

~

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••
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Copies of this

·

,.••

.
..

SPECIAL
TUESDAY EDITION

Waa chen&amp;ed other than

people. we chanaed the
aero, we chanaed the
motor, &amp;r~d Goodyear made

The feellnp of tJ:!e people who make a llvin&amp; in
NASCAR are no different from the overwhelmln&amp; majority
of Americans who ere united In a·co nectlve
determination to protect the country from the threat of
International terrorism. Jeff Burton spoke ror hll pee,:S
when he ~d: • It makes me mad. Part of my emotions
1n this thing Is that I want to make sure that the Idiots
that did this don't win . With au the pain that they've
to meketure they don't win end
caused, we've
that's part or me wantln&amp; to aet back to normetey. I
want to just ahove that beck Into the face of thtH
IdiOts and snow them that we are resilient.•

..

•

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••

",.,.
,.

a hu&amp;e change in the tire
deslan. Every variable that
could posalbly have been
chan&amp;ed, we hed tO start
oYer with. 1think, five or she

cot

;:,.

opinion: • These ara difficult times for everyone, and
everyone must be willlnl to make sacrifices to preaerve
our way of life. Wht~t Is atreedy evident, Jud&amp;ln&amp; from the
heroism beln&amp; displayed In New York b)' firemen, pollee
officers, doctort.and· other Yolunteers, Ia that we ere up
to the task. The world l'las cttan&amp;ed, and we are all
&amp;otna to have to be a little brav.,, a little more vt&amp;llant
and a little more wlllln&amp; to put our differences aalda:

:••
•'•',.•'

...•'
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.•'

WhnHo&amp;WienNot

,.•

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'

.

Dale Ja~tt noled the increase in
inddents of roush di"Wing this year
and said he thinks NASCA R needs to
get tough.
"I think .....-c 're soins to have to do
something besides fino;," Jarrett 58id.
"I've ahYays looked at fines, whelhcr it
· N in out sport or other spons wher'e
the alhlctc:s, teams or what~er it may
be make quite a bit of money. E\·en
thollgh SIO,OIJJ or !i5.000 i&gt;still a !01
of mone-y. in lhe whole scheme of
things i don't know it" that :t~:nJ • the
rnes~l!~ thilt.,.,-c"rc QOIVlll have to Sl.'lld

"I'••

,.,.
r.

,.''
'.'.
I'

,.•'
I'

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,.,.

The D·aily Sentinel - Pomeroy

lren.:.
"' I th ink we need to look at

,.,.,.
I'

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..lohll Cl!rk!No\SCAf! lhltWM!Io.

---:c::-:':'
:-c:::---:---:- --;;;;;;;;;;;;~~=~=~~....Of w.d lwton'a tlwM-- Wll II M Cup Ylcte.....

two._ COllie . . Dw•etou• R

weeks ago, we hlt on
something and we buckled
down and really paid
attention to the race car.
The guys ere getting better
with the aero au the time.
The motor Is getting better
all the time. and I'm a;enln&amp;
the tires flaured out better,
too.
· we're heading ln the right
direction. We just heYen't
had any luck to prove It 11t
the places we hed a shot at
like Pocono and some of the
other races we were running
eooc:s. We''.ll been wrecked
and hit and had bad luck all
season :

It Mlflllllke every ~ar
th•re
rumora thlt you

a,.

,.

.~

1 g.....

ml&amp;bl bo hoodld to
another team. Anythlnc to
them? · 1 ha11e not eYen
picked a phOne call up and
tal ked to another team .
We'ye got e three.year
deal. This is the second
year. There ·s nothing to
talk about . I'm not plann ing
on goi ng anywhere anywey.~
Two of your three
vlctorl•• hne brHn •t
DuUnaton. Wll~? "I don 't
know if I'm so good there. I
like the place. I feell.lke a
driver can make up a little
bit there . You're alwa~s
having to compromise ....
You're always having to
look around, trylnc stuff
every lap."

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

1. Who was the only driYer to win 10
consecutive races?
2. What former Winston Cup car owner was a fune ra l
dlrectqr?

In the last 10 races.

3. Whd was the first drl11er to win a race on Hoosier

•

ll8UU08 118N

818MlpSJ81iB UOQ

't

't L96l Ut

~ll8d PJBL\011:1

't

IHIMINY

••••••••••
~al illle!TIO!ehar1h. ~

Randy, Ryllll and Roman . But
X
that'l talun1 points away - that ·aecordinll to the olde!l brother,
IMG£mNGTOBEAORAC:
certainly takes a little ~ lhan the 44"year-old crew chid Robin. the
money - but from what I've S«"fl rutme!iofhiuiblingshadoothinstodo The New HllfT1)$hift race would ha\le
been the "27th of the season. and the
0\'t r lhc last few weeks anyway\ it with the lener R.
mi ~Jht be t i ~ for sorncllody to sit out
Judd Pemberton, the bo)ls' fill her. teams lwr.e been a~ om!.' at it ~i1M."t" t'IU"Iy
a week and mdize thai we're 1101 JOin&amp; had betn a "'~1 1 -known co llege July without a single weekend oft'. if
to put up "A"ith th.ls. Racing and basketbe.ll pla)&lt;r in Up!! lute New York. there IS 11 silver lininll,IOthe pcb"tpOnC·
rubbing 11 little bit 1111d ucr;1dents aft He and hiswift n.1flll!d thdr wns ftum 111l'llC. thal l'l il
··1 feel pn..'lty good. but the 11uys on
gonna happen ot times. bu t Mltne of §ports ~s.
1he thingli that 1\•e see n m totally
"Dad named me after Robin the ICllltr lii"C l he OIII..'S Who lin: g~'lting
uncmlled for. and o messai!e needs to Roberts. a great baseball plll)cr. and tin:d." Bill Ell1on s;,1id. "You set it in 11
be !JCnL"
Randy 's ful11111me is Randy Kyle ... lot of ~le'!r perf'on!UIJlCC at this time.
" You tear ur seveml cars in asll'Ctcl1
n:tnxd nfttr ~ports le~ nd Kyle Role.' '
like th is wu.lg~1 behind mK11t's 11oing
Robin said.
NAMED AFTER ATIILET[S: · 'vou n11cr brother.; Ry1111 :rnd R01non to he tough In m;untmn or cuKh up
NASCAR 's Pembenon · brothers. 1..-cre n tu~d niter mrler Jrm lll'lltl mht "ll1ts timt of yc:1r, monl'Y get!. tight.
proplc !!(!!tired t~'ll lfll!t S get short und
imolvrd 1nlttc sport rl5 meclulnics and qt&amp;artcrbltck Rom~ n Gabrtd ·
1.myth1 n~ can ILtppL·n .""
broadcasters, are named Robin.

x

992-2155

•••

~
c

~

•The 200 1 Rick Mast
Concert and Golf Classic
raised in excess of $80,000
for the Rockbridge Area (Va.)
Free Cli nic. The fu nd·raiser
featured a concert and

oc..
I» CD

1bttnoe of a

::::1"
CD
CD

=~

',III'Nl:
-....WUII.CM
See us for Your Stihl•
1 Power Tools &amp;
' Accessories

• Thll WHk'e ltOnor, In
the

a.

--·0 ...

autograph session Sept. 4 at
the Virginia Horse Center in
Lex ingto n. and was followed
by q golf tourn ament Sept. 5
at The .H omestead In Hot
Sprln!!,s. Va.
The concert and
autograph session drew oYer
5,000 fa ns. Tne autograph

heMh Insurance .

CD

tn
CD
tn
'C"
C " - U)
-· ·o
CD -. )&gt;

Fan Tips

sessio n featured Bobby
Labonte, Ken Schracter. Hut
Stricklin, Stacy Compton and
Rick Mast.
· we 're rea l tic~led with the
' turnout and the money we
raised for the clime," Mast
said.
The original focus of the
Rockbridge Area Free Clinic
Is to provide a · medical
home· for th ose who do n~t
hewe one 11nd cannot afford
to seek one . The target
population Is low·lncome
working people without

- I--I- - -

::::::s

c

•••••••••••

r~ee,

. aoe• to the two Racer
Pen1ke , . ttlftlt, wtlo .

~ Ridenour

Supply

lnHIIttd en effort to reiH
fundi tar re11111fforta In
New York City end
W•shlncton, D.C ., b~

pltd.ln&amp; $20 per l•p
completed by th~ c•rs of
Ru1ty Wllltce and Jcuemy
M.,.rlald at Dcwer. Andy

St. At. 248
Chester 985-3308

P•tr••'• two teams - the
drlv•rs .,. Joe Nemechtk

and

Bobb~

HamlHon ;-

.quickly Jol~ld the effort,
and 1everal more teamt
are upected to comt on
board thll weak.

5:

Place Your Business's Ad here

.•

CD

...... ...
-·

Call The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Deb.bie Call

••
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•'•

fl'J

::r:
I»

...

•
·'' '

I»

&lt;
CD

. at .TaUadep.

Monte Dutton
N.a.SCAR This Week

-I
- n

l ha ve jllst one h~·p l~n a t ctl \\tm.l
for Jell Cimn: "IJOIJ·hoo!"' MHybeMr. Gft'en.shQ\lld go back and lnol.:
a t the tl pe s fro m Itis darnptonship
year. Pe rhap ~ he would t h~! n get 1
arip on realit y and maybe o.'ve n
apologize for a ll thos..• wmketl cars
Hnd drram~ . ...·ht n he sees his No
10 Nesq uik ~; n drop·k t~ king ~ars
right dnd lefl. Just remember. J ~ ft",
" l. 11 c h)' th e sword. (h e by the
1word.'' Tnke a l u~o n from St e,·e
Park . ... h~ Wll~ II perfet:t genllc:man.
aft er hi~ less·tha n-Pe rfect night at
Bmtol, sluttn", '"Oh, well , thot"~
mcing at Dri~tol:"--.
- - -1··1'1.;')--"UO·--...,..--•·Brl•n A. W•lkel
HunllnKtoa, l•d.

cI»

I

r•I'CJ

0

Dear NASC'AR Tim W~ek,

tires? ·

B~

•'

\

I

Jarrett: It's tlmtp for NASCAR to get tough on rough drivers

,.

..

\tlch.

AROUNP THE GARAGE

I I

\

JJrk~IIIJ.

• HOTI Dale Earnhardt Jr.
has nine top-15 fi nishes
• tiOTI Bobby Hamilton
hasn't finished better
than 15th since wlnnini

i'

\lrbe iJBatlp \lertbune - Gallipolis
mbe l\egister - Point Pleasant

Dear NASC AR Tior' '"eel.
"'ear~ ex treme NA S(" AR fans
and buyer s of h o t ~ . shtrcs , ~~a l e ·
model can. o:-11.:. So llo'h.ut".t lip 1'o 1th
~ tht:" l! real c~ l ~r oc k ·c~r ~ h o w llll
eartl1" ha~· i ng prod uc t ~ llll$d l' in
Korea. Taiwan ancl other cou ntrie ~ ·.•
MMode in the US A" Ill the Woy!
De!)B)" IDd ConDit W11jtuslk

••••••••••••

N.UCAR This Wook'l M - Dutt•I!Mt hlo

~

Available while they last
at our offices:

FEUD OF THE WEEK

Pablotlllll

••
••
••

f holl t tl l t"l"l &lt;;mHI {'oW f ll f,n ,./n
!tun ulflo•r '"" ' /o•o•( '

Wh: Tabitha

1994. at Richmond , Va .),

..,

McRrith&lt;
Kent. Ohkl

Ate: 39

~

C"
CD

( itni!

the ,1995 ·season, he has
drl11en for Bill Davis, and
his performance has
118rled from top--10
finishes In the 1999 end
2000 points standings to
a 33rd place in 1996.

Chlldrtn: Sarah {turns
15 on Oct. 4), Jeb {9)
HometoWn: Born in
2001 WINSTON &lt;UP S(HEOULE
Danville, Ye ., grew Ul? In
.,..
........
South Boston . Va.
Dover Downs International Speedwa)'
Dover. Del .
Crew chief: Tommy
1\ftnst\s Speedway
Keftses City. Kiln.
Baldwlrt' Jr.
~we ·s MOtol soeectway
Concord. N.C.
Clr: No. 22 Caterpillar
~artlnsvilte Speedwalj
Martlnsviila, V..
Dodge Intrepid, owned by
I
Superspttedway
TaUedep . -'Ia,_
. ~---"
Bill DaYIS
" " -- - -AYOfldala.-Artl.
CarMr ltat"lot;;o;;lc:=
o;-.
:2
' -4ii'o&lt;
North CeroUnai S~&amp;dway
Aoc,klnghem . N.C. ·
Homestead-Miami~
Homestead, Flll.
Starts, 3 wins, 18 to~5
Mlante Motor Speedway
Hemptl)ll, Gs.
finishes, 64 top-10
flnlsl'les, 6 poles, almost
$12 million In earnlni,s
2001 BUSCH GRANO NATIONAL SCHEDULE
Flrall: Start (March 6,

!(anna Speedwrf

" r~.· c ~ .

to ~h• IW 11 hal
not ju ~ t r"r mhng

11\ llll ll d

since moving up to
Winston Cup from the
Busch Series In 1994.
Since the letter pert of

held on Friday, Nov. 23, and
becomes the s~ason's flnat
eYent. The scheduled truck
race. the SiiYerado 350 at
Texas Motor Speedway, will
be made UR on Oct 5.

-·

k·d ur tfl ,,

' tlad his ups and downs

FROM LAST WEEK

c
3

I h e~

an o the r J:o mmercta l.

and ce rtainly has a well-

10.(101 Rusty Walloco SoaiiOII&amp;OttlnJI tou"'ot

r

~ h o u ld tm l:- lw u~i: d

deserved reputation for
honesty and loyalty as well
as drMn&amp; skill.
Bu rton, who recently
won the Southern 500 at
Darlington Raceway. has

8. (8) D. Earnhardt Jr. Much more contlatent In ' 01
9. (9) Ward Burton
Mulf: keep momentum up

Scheduled races in the
Winston Cup Se ries and
Craftsman Truck Seri es were
postponed due to the
national emergency. The
New Hampshire 300 wll! be

ju ~ l

respected by his peers

5. (5) Dolo Jarrett
~least he stopped tho fade
6. (6) Storlln&amp; Marlin Puttln&amp; to&amp;olller a ftne 1011on
7. ( 7) Bobby Labonte Late orrlval In tho polnto race

-

lkor NASCAR T l11 ~ W~-c k".
I 11- 11~ wtJndatnl! tf llll) l.lll &lt;: cbc
! l1 11l l. ~ NAS(" AR UH'!' the m -ca r
canwn1' wu m1 1 ~h . l th 111k rlte\1 un.-

Ward Burton Is well· ·

Whet 1 tenon
Will be a force at Dover

250 laps/100 miles'

Your
Turn
IAIIen Fri. Our Readtn

NASC.6.R This Week

3. (3) Kevin Hervlck
4. (4) Tony Stewart

Wh•t: Craftsman 250
·where : South Boston (Va ,)
Speedway (. 4·mlle tu~o c k ),

••••••••••••

' Winston Cup Series

2. (2) Ricky Rudd

CRARSMAN TRUCK

When : 7 p.m ., Sept. 28
Defe~dln• ch•m~lon: First
race
Tr•ck quallfYtnl record:
First ra ce
BUICH GRAND NATIONAL won a record three limes at
R1ce record: F1rst race
Dover. ... Che11rolets have won
Not•ble: South Boston
Wlllt: MBNA.com 200
Where: Dover (Del.) Downs· more than tnree time s as many hosted 35 Busch races but IS
races as any other make.
no longer a part of that se11es .
International Speedway (1·

ByM-Dutton

Roclnc In DuPont's
nol&amp;hboriiOGd
Can he mount a cher1e?

·

When: 1 p .m., Sa turday
Deftndlnl champion: Matt
Kenseth
·
RICe q..,.llfylftC racord:
M ike Skinner, Chevrolet,
155.932 mph, Sept . 22, 2000
Race record: Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet ,
130,152 mph , May 30 . 1 998
Notable: Todd Bodine has

Ward Burton

TOP TIN

1. (1) Jeff Gordon

mile track). 200 laps/mites

···-PROftlt-

• NASCA R Th is Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
to p 10 drivers hea ding into this weekend's race. Last
week's ra nkings are in parenth eses.

Clemens, 39, reached 20 wins for rpe
sixth time in his career and became the
oldest 20-game winner in the AL since
Early Wynn ;n t959.
The Rocket allowed three mns and five
hits in 6 1-3 innin~ and struck out a season-low one. It was his first start since Sept.
5, when he bea~ Toronto and joined Rube.
Marquard as the only pitchers since 1900
to go 19- 1.
Clemens has won 16 straight decisions,
his only loss coming May 20 at Seattle. His
Blue Jays 4, Orioles 1
career record improved to 280-143, and he
Roy Halladay (4-2) handed Baltimore its
is the favorite to win his record sixth Cy lOth straight loss, striking out a career-high
Young Award.
11 to lead host Toronto.

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

Stewart

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

1. Jtff Gorooo , 3.768
2.. R~ R\.IOd, 3,!4e
J . Dale Jarrett. 3,375 "
4. Tony Stewart, 3 ,J56
I. Sterling Me rlin, 3 ,302

2500 E. Ftan•dln Blvd.

Gootonlt, N.C. 21054

Dl-111 chomplon: Tony

--- - -

•

NASCAR Th.. WHk

Race rtcord : Mark Martin ;
Ford, 132.719 mph, Sept.
What: MBNA Cal Rlpken Jr. 21.1997
Notable: Stewart swept
400
WMre: Dover (Del.) Down~ the Dover [)owns events in
2000 but did not win the
International Speedwav (1·
race earlier this season.
mile track) , 400 lapsfmiles
When: Green flag drops at Rick)' Rueld and "Bil l Ell iott
are the active leaders with
1 p.m .• Sunday
four Dover Yictories each.

• Wlnatcm Cup,

queatlon

C/0 The o..ton Gazette

WINSTON CUP

•

F~&amp;aturlng

Indians 11, Royals 3

·

I

or 1 comment, wrtte:

r

x-ctinched division tiUe

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.If )'OU 'YI Cot

.

. ,.

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0

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8
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•
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•

���Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. Thursday, Sept. 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

EALLEYOOP

81UDOI:

~

~LI$T~
0~

EL.IGI&amp;.E SMALL
8Le1NE6SE.S. ..

WICK'S

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

41J~

Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • F111 Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Services

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Roa

Racine, Ohio
45771

.CINNin

P/B
CONlUCTOU, INC.
Recine, Ohio 45771
740-985-3948

COHCRETEIILOCK/BRICX

740-949-2217

• Footen, Wells, Steps •
Flat Work,

.........
,.,....
CIILDCUE

Ill

I

•••

Min.
a11.1

Repl1cements. • Walks
ind .Drives • Stendl
I

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

·

Crote Fne Eotlmot05
'Serviaa Ohio ond W.V.
WVIOJ171l

111111111.

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down

Spout
FrH E1t11111tes

T tunn•••

661-8321

949-1405
591·5011

Wl

Box 189
Moddlcport. Ohto 45760
Local843-5264
Mr.dicare Supplement: Life Insurance:
Burial and Final Expenses: Cancer &amp;
Dental. Retirement.
Pension &amp; 40\K Relievers:
Mortgage: Major Medical
• Nursing' Home

•,

I

JONES'

HOM E CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Top Removal Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

High &amp; Dry
·Self-Storage

DIPIYIAI
PARn

General
Contracting
ExcavatiDQ:-

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

I

lAMM'S

CONSTAUC110N

CONSTRUaiON

Free estimates,
Insured

Specialize In new

constractlon,
remodellna, plumbing,
eltctrlcal, home malnttnanee, and repair
porches, .&amp;. decks.

Owner
Charles R. Dill
Phone 992·7445
Cell hone 591·9254

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Backhoe
Septic Syetems
UtWtlea

740-992-5232

992-7943

• ...

3-0

Specializing In
rooting, plumbing,
drywall,
remodetlng,
additions &amp; decks
Fraentlmate•
10 yra. experience
In the bualnesa
References
available. Owner:
, Terry Lainm
74
2 7 9

DozeranCI

New Homes

1111111 fnlllltlllllllr

•111111&amp;11117.11• Etdla.a..,.
*llllliClSIUI

~llllllfllllru

[llllrlll $42.11

L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

Pomeroy

740.992·5344

HOURS:

Moil· Frl

;Sltll-1

21271

WINTER STORAGE ·
Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrival:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
10:00 a.m.· 4:00p.m.
Release:
Aprll27, 2002
A fee of $20.00 will be charged 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: $2.001If
Inside Fence: $1.001If

NOTICES
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
·Gordon Proctor,
Director
Ohio Depll'!l!llnt Ol
Tronaportatlon,
PlalnUH,

v.

•

'I

Weatvoco Corp., et el,
Delendant1.
Judge Frederick W.
Crow, Ill
CIH No. 01-CV-108
Legal Notice For
Publication
Unknown owner• of

eny· eatete, title, or
lntereat In or to the
1urlece ol, or In or to
the coel, oil, gia end
•~r and all other
mlnerele, altuated on
or In the pr111111111
deacrlbed In thla
Petition ee Percel 207·
WLR, will like noiiCI
thot they heve been
nemed 11 delendente
by Gordon Proctor,
Director
Ohio
Department
ol
Trenaportetlon, who
lnatltutad Ceu No. 01·
CV·108, now pending
In the common Ple11
Court of Melga
County, Ohio, which 11
en
aotlon
to
epproprlete certoln
property lor hlghwoy
purpoaea, nemely the
meklng, conatructlng,
or Improving ol Stela
Route 124, Section
31.57, end to llx the
volue or aald property.
The property sought
to be epproprlated Ia
more epecltlcelly
deacrlbtd ea follows:
PARCEL 207·WLR
MEG-124-31.57
ALL RIGHT, TITLE
AND INTEREST IN FEE
SIMPLE IN THE
FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED '
PROPERTY
INCLUBING .
UMITATION OF
ACCESS, AND
EXCLUDING COAL,
OIL AND GAS, AND
OTHER EXISTING
MINERAL RIGHTS
Situated In the
townohlp ol Lebanon,
County ol Melgo, State
ol Ohio, and In Section
34, 160 acre Lot1181,
Town 2N, Range 1t W,
end bounded and
deacrlbed a1 IOIIowa:
Being a parcel ol
land lying on the tell
aldae ol the centerline
ol a aurvey, mede by
the department ol
Tren1portat1on and
being located within
the boundary pointe of
Parcel 207-WLR ae
delineated upon the
Department
of
Tranaportetlon'a
Right-or -War plan
MEG-124·31 .57, Sheet
15 ol 42 end recorded

Public Notice

lnd

aaalgna forever, era
hereby divested ol any
end . ell eb~ttar'a
rlghta, Including
'!CCIII rlghta In, over
and ta the above
deocrlbed real eatote,
Including auch rlghta
wllh rupect to any
hlghwey leclllly
c.onatruclld.thereon.
All coal, oil and goa,
and other minerals
underlying the above
deacrtbad property,
end all exilllng rlghl•
to mine, ixtrect, and
remove lhe ••me,
ohell be, and !he 11me

Coolville, OH 46723

'1'40117. . .1

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·1671

992-9158
Free estimate•

DR
tiE'L'S
(740) 742-2925
Your Replacement Parte Source

Public Notices In Se,.Jpapers.
Your Rlaht 10 Know,
,
Delivered Right to Your Door.
Olt/11 f/fMI,.,.,. AuucMII011

Public Notice

on repalrea,

'Q .

~CCIUIIIy FllrJrouads

September 15th &amp; 16th
f()l" lnf()nnatl()n (;()ntact

· ()alias Webe..74 ·74~-:Jfl~fl evenln

24'120'

N-12 DOUBlE WAll

PlASTIC
FIRST COME,
RRSTSERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

. ..

.KIG7'
• Q l G$ 4
.. • , 2

•

AJ

4

~

. 111 7 ~

. ,. ...

Dealer Sou th

.....
...
•• .....
••
,.
,,'"'
..
Vulnerabl~
WH\

Holh

Nonlrl

Openln&amp;I~Jod:

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

MANlEYS
SElF STORAGE

SINCE 1964

IA(J(HOI• OOZING •IND LOADIR •
TRU&lt;KING • TRIN(HING

BISSELL

~Snodgrass' Upholstery

BY

1-800-250-9077
Residential Commtrrial New Comtrudion
Sales Seni.. Jnstatlalion
. / SpKializina In Sheet Metal Dudwark
'Trane' Sales &amp; Son lee For ,
Gallia, Mt.•on, o'nd Meigs Countlto
Li&lt;tnStd and lll•ured
WV 0051"
J-~75-78Z4

HE'S PLA'ftN'
TONIGHT

I

l•

• Nearly 200C years experh. .1ce.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.
For more informalion, come to our churth sile.
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School;
I 0:30 - Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve, 7:00
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 124, LONG
OHIO

:•

·o
-~

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

r-------.

1.t

S'OMfTIMef .l GALt,
/ •8V61Nes6e6 JV6T. TO
t4eAit Tt4eM SAY MY
. C:ALt, 16
IMPOitT ANT
TO T..EM.

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 119.5% .
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

-

•

THE BORN LOSER
P"'

. BUT

r~ ,

1-800-291 -5600 • 740-992-411 9
Pomerov, OH

• ''llEINfi IS IEUEY1NG" • WV102Mn .

(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827

space

Cera, Tr~ctora,
Lawn Furniture,
Boll Trelllrl, :
Utility Trellera 0:
Car Heulera, ''
Anything Metel'
•'

, PEANUTS

,,

,.. A ... .,.

PLA'I' I=OOT8ALL

TOOAi', SIR •• I.'M TAKIN6

,.

WATERCOLOR LESSONS ·

THAT'S 6REAT. MARCIE .. I f.lOPE
·i'OU SPILL COBALT BLUE ALL
OVER i'OUR SllOE S!

TI-IANK '1'0V, SIR •.
AND I ~OPE i'OU SACK
THE j:!ATCHBACK ...

•

7411-667.0600

jp9C·- A+.

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
Compllll Line o!Sulllvon'o Grooming Supplloo
1
Sulfur Cototld Urea, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
1.0% oil all Prlllart HorN end Livaotock Equip.
1 10.10.10 AN Purpoao fertlllar $4.5W5Qf
8,000 Belir TWine $11.50/llalt
18,000 Beier TWine $21.50/Bolo

• New l!omea
• Stdtna
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garegee
• Additions
• Oecke
• Home Repair~

Free Est1mates

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

TRI-COUOTY
TRfiDSPORT
UmestoneJ
Seniors Discounts
mutttpte Load
01~1

lblde River Ag Serllce, Inc
35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-985-3831 1 Fax 740-985- 38~ I

TREE SERVICE
Top • Trim· Removal
Buckel Sa1rv1~:e

YGUNG'S

CARPENTER ·
SERVICE
• Room Addlflono

Air Condltlonfng : Retrlgsratlon
$2,500 (change out old system)
, $1,700 (add A/C to gas furnace)

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
GRAVEL
. - SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC CULVERT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; flEWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

&amp;

Romodollng

AlDER
We all know abo ut
the simple finesse. It is
in theory a 50-50 shot
at an extra trick. And
in the real world, it is.
Yet in classes and
newspaper columns, it
is perhaps a five percent chance for an additional winner, To
make matters worse,
then there are deals
like this one, in
which . declarer is
faced with two finesses. Should he take
both, hoping one will
work? That is, after
all, a 76 percent approach. Or should he
reject one in favor of
the . other? What
would you do? West
leads a low heart
against six spades.
Trumps are not 4-0. ·
North's three notrump was a forcing
spade raise, guaranteeing at least four
trumps and the highcard values for game
or more. When South
showed no slam interest, perhaps North
should have passed,
However, he controlbid (cue-bid) his club
ace; and when South
control-bid in return ,
North jumped to the
slam,
This is the key
question: Suppose the
heart finesse · wins;
PtttWP

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

Even though mar~ri:d conditions will be favorable for
you in the year ahead, you're
likely to place your emph:~sis
in th is area. Your family will
take ccmer ~tagc i1i mon instances.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt 22)

-- It 's true th :1t you could
bungle a few t hings of small
. consequence today, but. fortunately,· when the stakes are
mea nin~ful , you ' ll perform .
like a champion . Get a jump
on life by undcrst.·mdi ng the
influences that will govern
you in the year ahead. Send
for your Auro-Guph predictions by mailing S2 to AstraGraph. c/o this newspaper,
P.O. !lox 167, WickJiffr, OH

44092-0167. .
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) •
· A few 111i11iles could be fared

in your direction today .by
someone who likes to take
' potshots at others. Howev~r.

if you pay no heed;lhis per-

• New G1r1gea

• EIICirlcal 1o Plumbing
• Roofing lo Gunora
· • VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Polio ond POfCh Dock•
Free Eslimates

-

son's

WEn IIIII
IIIIIIUIP

fiiiiWitdlr ....
11-11-.JI'-111.
IMI:II-12:11
011111 . . . . . .

..........

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-.6 2!5
hereby are, excepted ~~ifbitii~miiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiJ~~~
Pom ...o~, Ohio
end reaerved unto li
L_.WwJ.Wj__J L.-.III:.IIJI_.J

maliciousness

will

bounce ofT likr a popgun

211 E..t Secor~d Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-5908
M·F 1Cim·4pm

•w•y

35 Boby'o
ucond
word?
35 "The
Moming
Watch"
aulhor
37 Rellglou•

Ieedera
311 Cergo

Wtighll

40 Arthur of

Iennie
42 Shede ol
green

S-?·

41 Or1119Utan
50 BU of
whlakey
53 Condldotu
56 Schollorly
ebbr.
58 Condo, e.g.
59 Gardner of
"Mogombo"
60 Vtgll
cubes
61 Acquires
11 Mony um..
19 Robust
62 Limb
63 Wild guesa 23 Angry
. 24 Teom
DOWN
25 Uthlr'a
quaot
t Cre~lfallen 26 Theralora
2 Welter'•
27 "Ra111n9,
burden
Arlzone '
· 3 To be, to
director
Jocquoo
30 Roln
4 Chony bird
protector
5 Crue
31 Perimeler
6 Oroomo
32 Poet .
7 Stage
Angelou
ahows
34 Rolltop 8 Kilo or lb.
37 Where
9 Swerve
to taka
1b Two-color
tho El
cookie
38 What banko
11 Robin's
do
home
40 Charm

41 Garment
port
44 Britloh
ector
Cermlchlll
45 Nltwo&lt;tra
48 Llkle bug
In 1 rug?
47 Shorpen
48 Lot on.
(llum)
51 ••ton1 tloet
much?"
Floky
mlnerel
54 "-none ot
your
buolnua."
55 Droop
57 New
'aoclollto
52

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campo•
Celebrlly Cipher cryptograms oro croaled lrom quotltlono by lomoua

· people, paat1nd present Eacn letter in tne cipher atanda for 1nother.

Today's clue: V equals Y
' B E G M X B H E P N

NXTTUNHAIU
HZU

L X N H

EPBZUNHPA,
HE

RXMAUGBU.'
NFUYY

T A 1·u

NATGRYN

BZEPUETPACZV

HE

GEH
HZU

T U E P T U·

'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "To teach Is 10 leam twice.".- Jouph
Jouben
"My joy In learning Is panly that It enables me to ,leach."Seneca

Is

"We'll fix it or clscl"

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

All p.ns

• 3

Book"

author
46 "Ain1-

I I~ {/I i I
s
I 1I I I
~~
I I I I I~ ~ I

"Q!u&lt;Uty WOrk"

for
550 per
month

.....

otalk
5 Ever!!'""
8 aord a rtvor
12 Pretontiouo
13 " BlOck"
end
14 Juot
15 Fi&gt; • oock
18 Fane
18 "Yepl"
20 - Wltcllr·
uhen.
21 Go bad
22 Vlll1ge1
25 Wall St.
WltChdog
26 Hlghlond
girl
2S Article
33 Eaten

0

Roofing • Gutters • Siding
Decks • Concteta • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring
Pressure

in this

43 "The
Jungle

then_what?...Y ou_ha:v:e'-~t:MA:;I~DA:":iL::'T~(i=-:/1Q~-Q=""·.i'J~Iil~~:""'i.(~_--})r::':'C:::;""~:;::'':s~e:"'·":w::oi:::"D
a definite diamond
'IZZLII p~ ~"U ~L
&lt;4J pq•
IAMI
loser, so you still need
l~lood ~, CLAY 1. POUAN
the club finesse to
Reorrang1 !etten of th•
work. And if the club
lour ocramblod word• bo·
finesse is working, the
low 10 form lour simple words.
heart finesse is a red[
suit herring because
R
you can discard your
second heart on dummy's fourth club.
I N0 8
Win with dummy's
3
heart ace, draw
trumps ending in
hand, play a club to
USEAT
dummy's king, return
"Supermarkets are strange,' m
to' the diamond ace,
sister sighed , "You can find alma!
and run the club 10.
"'
anything 1here, but the items that ar·
When the finesse
L
advertised - - - - - -."
wins, play another
Q Complete the ehuckle quoted
N
club, capturing West's
by filling in the missing words
you develop from 1tep No. 3 below.
queen with dummy's
ace. Cash tb,e club
jack, discarding your
second heart, concede
a diamond trick to the
opponents, and table
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
your cards, announcBeside · Tulip ·Prime • Bought· HOUSE
ing that you will ruff
Real esta1e prices are out of sight. A neighbor divulged
your last diamond in
that the only thing of greater value than himself, was his
the dummy.
HOUSE

50 SOME PAREN'TS SI..Y

Advertise

1'1u

Finesse

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

L..-----....1

12 MONTHS FREE
FINANCING"
"WITH APPROVED CREDIT APPLICATION

.....

KI i 3

ROBO'fMAN

SEE1&gt;!!

37 Weat Broad Street,
Suite 3!5o
Columbua, Ohio
•
43215-4132
(614) 488-3038. FAX
. (814) 486·1758
Emell:
BUILDIRI INC.
wcoleOeg.otete.oh.ua
Now HomH • Vtn11
Attorney lor PlalnUH
Siding • New Garqes
A lellure to enewer
• Replacement
or otherwlae defend
wlthtn said 28 daya
Wlndowa' Room
will raouttln plelnttll, Addldoni'Rooftng
"HIIplllf You ro Rtco"r Yo•r /nmmotot"
purauent to Civil Rulo . COIIMIR&lt;IAL and RISIDEIIIIAl
55, asking the court to , FREE ESTIMATES
grant a judgment· by ·
deleult egatnat eny 740·992·7599
auch person who lalla
to
en ewer
or (NO SUNDAY CALLS) 814~48·220 2
RJCint,Ohlo
oth•rwiH dar.nd.
..•._ _ _ _ _ __. L.;.;..:.:.:..::::::________.:;::.:::::::.::;::.:J
Gordon Proctor,
Director
Ohio Department ol
· TrenSJIOrllllon
1120
Custom Computers
Service, Repairs, and
Upsrades

.

•

~

• ... Q J.

FER

sOftware.

(10'K10' 610'K20')

END OF SEASON
CLOSE OUT SALE
SAVE
UP TO 60%
.
AND MORE ON
SELECTED ITEMS
STARTS FRI. SEPT. 21

.,

• Q ~'

6MSS

License •53009580

WILLIAM J. COLE

446-1405

.. ..-

.. A K J t

• J • • ,

992-5479

available 24 hours,
uaed systems ;!86
and up, used
her&lt;twere and

Public Notice

842 Second Ave. Gallipolis, OH

tt 2UJ

Wnt

· Jeff Warner Ins.

Jn ..home eervlc'

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

EMPIRE · ,
FURNITURE ·

~·

.,

·Cellular

ACROSS
1 Flower

.. 10.'
'I' A Q 4

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

JERRY'S
USED
COMPUTERS
441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

In Plet Book 5, l'•g• Owners, end their
20, recorda ol lhe heirs, executors,
Recorder'• Olllce, adintnlatnnore,
Melga County, Ohlo~•uc-ce-n ora- en a
lila underatood that autgna forever;
the atrlp ot tond ebove provided, however, In
deecrtbed contelna eo mining, extracting,
0.120 ecrea, more or and removing eold
leaa.
coal, oil end gu, and
This d11crlpt1on 11 other mlnerala, the
bend on 1 survey proper preurvatlon ol
made by BALKE the hlghwey mey not
ENGINEER&amp; lor the bt lm.pelrad.
Ohio Department ol Purauent to Civil
Tronap!)r I• II on, In Rule 12~.A)(1), aeld
2000, By Joaeph D. pereona mentioned
Kuhtmenn,
P.S. ebove shall teke
Registered Surveyor Jurther notice that
No. S-t823 under the they have 21 deya
dIrectIon
• n d etter the compllllon of
aupervlelon of Ronald the Ser~llce by
F.
Rlur,
. P.B. pubtlcetlon within
Reglatered surveyor which to onawer or
No. 8-7013.
otherwl•e defend
All Iron pine ut are agel nil Plalntlll's
to bt (314") x (30") by I petition.
(1 112") llumlnum cap, The original of eny
atarnped "ODOT R/W euch answer or other
DISTRICT 10" and the pleedlng defending
surveyor'•
0 hI o a gal nat Plelntlll'a
Reglalratlon
or petition muot bt tiled
n • m•, with the Clerk ol the
aurvayor'a
number
end/or Common Pl111 Court
compeny nema.
of Meigs County, Ohio,
· Pointe lletad with at Malga . county
(Iron pin ut) 1111 to bt Courthouu, 100
111 by the contreotor second Street, P.O.
IS Indicated It the Box 151, Pomeroy,
termination ot the Ohio 45711; and, •
oonatructlon project. copy ol eny auoh
Seld lletlons being 1 newer or other
the Stetlon numberl pleedlng defending
•• etlpuleted In the egalnat Plelntltt'a
heralnbtlore
petition muot be
mllltloned aurvey end urvld upon:
•• shown by plana on
1111 In the Ohio
Oepertment
of
Tranaportetlon,
Merletta, Ohio.
Prior lnatrument.
Reference: D.B. 224,
Page 111 end D.B. 244,
Pege 131, In the
County Reoorder'a
OHice.
The
above
described 0.120 ecr11,
more or 1111, or ·whlch
the pi'ellnt t{&gt;Sd c
occupl11 0.000 acraa,
mora or 1111, ere to bt
deleted !rom Audttor'a
Parcel 07-GOI51.000.
Owner, his helra,
executors, .
admlnlatratora,
IUCCIIIOfl 1

1000 $t. Rt. 7 Soutll

~~Wf1~l
EXP~~oo 1 ti~

•New Homes
ond

. ~.4

PISS

~1{~

I

.

.

~

Tree Service

~ ALDER

,~

l.A.B.'

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

Wrltesel

NEA Crossword Puzzle

I PHILLIP

A. TIME·

~WINE

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Howardl.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

shooting at a tank.
SCORPIO (O&lt;t, 24-Nov,
22) -- Don't be relu ctant to
dig into your wallet today,
and you won't open yourself
to ridicule by others who
compuc your genermity to

thein.

I~ ;Tl r I

'four
'Birthday
'

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23Dec. 2 1) -- You'll attract the
goodwill of other~ today by
underplayin~ your importance
and magn ifying t hem. Being
too ~clf~involvcd will produce
·
the oppositt' effect.
CAPRICORN (D&lt;c 22-

J,n. 19) --

The ohoughtful
deed you do for another today
should be kept under wra ps so
as not to embarrass thls per-son. Tooting your own horh
would diminish .your noble
act.
AQUARIUS Uan , ~0-Fcb.

t9) •• You're likely robe briiHant and resourceful in most
of your undcrtakings today,

but not necessarily whe!re
money is concerned. Analyze
tr:anuctions thoroughly before

writing any checks.
PISCF-~ (Feb. 2li-March 20)
... Undue modeny could
prove to be- coun terproductive in a collective endeavor
tod;ty. lnHead of claiming an
inferior role, give 'equal credit
tO botlt your cohort and your·
&gt;elf.
.
ARIES

(Morch

21-April19)
-- De careful today not to at•

tempt to nugni{y your vinues

in ;~n effort to magnify the
faults of another. It wouldn'f
be honest, and it'~ hurtful :u

well.
TAURUS (April 20-M•y
20) -- Business ventures look
encouraging for you today,
provided you don' t mix ·
friend&amp; into your commerc1al
afTain . Practical. decisions

could br wllied by . obligations.
GEMINI (M•y

21-Junc

20)

-- Persons from out1ide your
house hold may find ·you charisnp\tjc today, bm your ~in

could see anothtr 5ide of you .
Treat your family with the

umc courtesy you give to
outsidcn.
C AN CER Uune 21-july

22) •• !u long as you're able

to do your work without anyone looking ovtr y'our shoul-

der ooday, you 'II be industri·
ous and productive, However,
critics could dimini5h your efficiency.
· LEO Uuly 23-Aus. 22) •·
Don't be too proud to accept
favors with gratitud~ todat-

Thme who treat you kindly
are doing so because they like
you, not to make you feel ~b­
ligated or dcme.antd.

.

.

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. Thursday, Sept. 20, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

EALLEYOOP

81UDOI:

~

~LI$T~
0~

EL.IGI&amp;.E SMALL
8Le1NE6SE.S. ..

WICK'S

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

41J~

Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • F111 Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Services

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Roa

Racine, Ohio
45771

.CINNin

P/B
CONlUCTOU, INC.
Recine, Ohio 45771
740-985-3948

COHCRETEIILOCK/BRICX

740-949-2217

• Footen, Wells, Steps •
Flat Work,

.........
,.,....
CIILDCUE

Ill

I

•••

Min.
a11.1

Repl1cements. • Walks
ind .Drives • Stendl
I

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

·

Crote Fne Eotlmot05
'Serviaa Ohio ond W.V.
WVIOJ171l

111111111.

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down

Spout
FrH E1t11111tes

T tunn•••

661-8321

949-1405
591·5011

Wl

Box 189
Moddlcport. Ohto 45760
Local843-5264
Mr.dicare Supplement: Life Insurance:
Burial and Final Expenses: Cancer &amp;
Dental. Retirement.
Pension &amp; 40\K Relievers:
Mortgage: Major Medical
• Nursing' Home

•,

I

JONES'

HOM E CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Top Removal Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

High &amp; Dry
·Self-Storage

DIPIYIAI
PARn

General
Contracting
ExcavatiDQ:-

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

I

lAMM'S

CONSTAUC110N

CONSTRUaiON

Free estimates,
Insured

Specialize In new

constractlon,
remodellna, plumbing,
eltctrlcal, home malnttnanee, and repair
porches, .&amp;. decks.

Owner
Charles R. Dill
Phone 992·7445
Cell hone 591·9254

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Backhoe
Septic Syetems
UtWtlea

740-992-5232

992-7943

• ...

3-0

Specializing In
rooting, plumbing,
drywall,
remodetlng,
additions &amp; decks
Fraentlmate•
10 yra. experience
In the bualnesa
References
available. Owner:
, Terry Lainm
74
2 7 9

DozeranCI

New Homes

1111111 fnlllltlllllllr

•111111&amp;11117.11• Etdla.a..,.
*llllliClSIUI

~llllllfllllru

[llllrlll $42.11

L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

Pomeroy

740.992·5344

HOURS:

Moil· Frl

;Sltll-1

21271

WINTER STORAGE ·
Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrival:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
10:00 a.m.· 4:00p.m.
Release:
Aprll27, 2002
A fee of $20.00 will be charged 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: $2.001If
Inside Fence: $1.001If

NOTICES
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
·Gordon Proctor,
Director
Ohio Depll'!l!llnt Ol
Tronaportatlon,
PlalnUH,

v.

•

'I

Weatvoco Corp., et el,
Delendant1.
Judge Frederick W.
Crow, Ill
CIH No. 01-CV-108
Legal Notice For
Publication
Unknown owner• of

eny· eatete, title, or
lntereat In or to the
1urlece ol, or In or to
the coel, oil, gia end
•~r and all other
mlnerele, altuated on
or In the pr111111111
deacrlbed In thla
Petition ee Percel 207·
WLR, will like noiiCI
thot they heve been
nemed 11 delendente
by Gordon Proctor,
Director
Ohio
Department
ol
Trenaportetlon, who
lnatltutad Ceu No. 01·
CV·108, now pending
In the common Ple11
Court of Melga
County, Ohio, which 11
en
aotlon
to
epproprlete certoln
property lor hlghwoy
purpoaea, nemely the
meklng, conatructlng,
or Improving ol Stela
Route 124, Section
31.57, end to llx the
volue or aald property.
The property sought
to be epproprlated Ia
more epecltlcelly
deacrlbtd ea follows:
PARCEL 207·WLR
MEG-124-31.57
ALL RIGHT, TITLE
AND INTEREST IN FEE
SIMPLE IN THE
FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED '
PROPERTY
INCLUBING .
UMITATION OF
ACCESS, AND
EXCLUDING COAL,
OIL AND GAS, AND
OTHER EXISTING
MINERAL RIGHTS
Situated In the
townohlp ol Lebanon,
County ol Melgo, State
ol Ohio, and In Section
34, 160 acre Lot1181,
Town 2N, Range 1t W,
end bounded and
deacrlbed a1 IOIIowa:
Being a parcel ol
land lying on the tell
aldae ol the centerline
ol a aurvey, mede by
the department ol
Tren1portat1on and
being located within
the boundary pointe of
Parcel 207-WLR ae
delineated upon the
Department
of
Tranaportetlon'a
Right-or -War plan
MEG-124·31 .57, Sheet
15 ol 42 end recorded

Public Notice

lnd

aaalgna forever, era
hereby divested ol any
end . ell eb~ttar'a
rlghta, Including
'!CCIII rlghta In, over
and ta the above
deocrlbed real eatote,
Including auch rlghta
wllh rupect to any
hlghwey leclllly
c.onatruclld.thereon.
All coal, oil and goa,
and other minerals
underlying the above
deacrtbad property,
end all exilllng rlghl•
to mine, ixtrect, and
remove lhe ••me,
ohell be, and !he 11me

Coolville, OH 46723

'1'40117. . .1

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·1671

992-9158
Free estimate•

DR
tiE'L'S
(740) 742-2925
Your Replacement Parte Source

Public Notices In Se,.Jpapers.
Your Rlaht 10 Know,
,
Delivered Right to Your Door.
Olt/11 f/fMI,.,.,. AuucMII011

Public Notice

on repalrea,

'Q .

~CCIUIIIy FllrJrouads

September 15th &amp; 16th
f()l" lnf()nnatl()n (;()ntact

· ()alias Webe..74 ·74~-:Jfl~fl evenln

24'120'

N-12 DOUBlE WAll

PlASTIC
FIRST COME,
RRSTSERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

. ..

.KIG7'
• Q l G$ 4
.. • , 2

•

AJ

4

~

. 111 7 ~

. ,. ...

Dealer Sou th

.....
...
•• .....
••
,.
,,'"'
..
Vulnerabl~
WH\

Holh

Nonlrl

Openln&amp;I~Jod:

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

MANlEYS
SElF STORAGE

SINCE 1964

IA(J(HOI• OOZING •IND LOADIR •
TRU&lt;KING • TRIN(HING

BISSELL

~Snodgrass' Upholstery

BY

1-800-250-9077
Residential Commtrrial New Comtrudion
Sales Seni.. Jnstatlalion
. / SpKializina In Sheet Metal Dudwark
'Trane' Sales &amp; Son lee For ,
Gallia, Mt.•on, o'nd Meigs Countlto
Li&lt;tnStd and lll•ured
WV 0051"
J-~75-78Z4

HE'S PLA'ftN'
TONIGHT

I

l•

• Nearly 200C years experh. .1ce.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.
For more informalion, come to our churth sile.
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School;
I 0:30 - Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve, 7:00
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 124, LONG
OHIO

:•

·o
-~

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

r-------.

1.t

S'OMfTIMef .l GALt,
/ •8V61Nes6e6 JV6T. TO
t4eAit Tt4eM SAY MY
. C:ALt, 16
IMPOitT ANT
TO T..EM.

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 119.5% .
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

-

•

THE BORN LOSER
P"'

. BUT

r~ ,

1-800-291 -5600 • 740-992-411 9
Pomerov, OH

• ''llEINfi IS IEUEY1NG" • WV102Mn .

(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827

space

Cera, Tr~ctora,
Lawn Furniture,
Boll Trelllrl, :
Utility Trellera 0:
Car Heulera, ''
Anything Metel'
•'

, PEANUTS

,,

,.. A ... .,.

PLA'I' I=OOT8ALL

TOOAi', SIR •• I.'M TAKIN6

,.

WATERCOLOR LESSONS ·

THAT'S 6REAT. MARCIE .. I f.lOPE
·i'OU SPILL COBALT BLUE ALL
OVER i'OUR SllOE S!

TI-IANK '1'0V, SIR •.
AND I ~OPE i'OU SACK
THE j:!ATCHBACK ...

•

7411-667.0600

jp9C·- A+.

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
Compllll Line o!Sulllvon'o Grooming Supplloo
1
Sulfur Cototld Urea, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
1.0% oil all Prlllart HorN end Livaotock Equip.
1 10.10.10 AN Purpoao fertlllar $4.5W5Qf
8,000 Belir TWine $11.50/llalt
18,000 Beier TWine $21.50/Bolo

• New l!omea
• Stdtna
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garegee
• Additions
• Oecke
• Home Repair~

Free Est1mates

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

TRI-COUOTY
TRfiDSPORT
UmestoneJ
Seniors Discounts
mutttpte Load
01~1

lblde River Ag Serllce, Inc
35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-985-3831 1 Fax 740-985- 38~ I

TREE SERVICE
Top • Trim· Removal
Buckel Sa1rv1~:e

YGUNG'S

CARPENTER ·
SERVICE
• Room Addlflono

Air Condltlonfng : Retrlgsratlon
$2,500 (change out old system)
, $1,700 (add A/C to gas furnace)

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
GRAVEL
. - SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC CULVERT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; flEWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

&amp;

Romodollng

AlDER
We all know abo ut
the simple finesse. It is
in theory a 50-50 shot
at an extra trick. And
in the real world, it is.
Yet in classes and
newspaper columns, it
is perhaps a five percent chance for an additional winner, To
make matters worse,
then there are deals
like this one, in
which . declarer is
faced with two finesses. Should he take
both, hoping one will
work? That is, after
all, a 76 percent approach. Or should he
reject one in favor of
the . other? What
would you do? West
leads a low heart
against six spades.
Trumps are not 4-0. ·
North's three notrump was a forcing
spade raise, guaranteeing at least four
trumps and the highcard values for game
or more. When South
showed no slam interest, perhaps North
should have passed,
However, he controlbid (cue-bid) his club
ace; and when South
control-bid in return ,
North jumped to the
slam,
This is the key
question: Suppose the
heart finesse · wins;
PtttWP

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

Even though mar~ri:d conditions will be favorable for
you in the year ahead, you're
likely to place your emph:~sis
in th is area. Your family will
take ccmer ~tagc i1i mon instances.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt 22)

-- It 's true th :1t you could
bungle a few t hings of small
. consequence today, but. fortunately,· when the stakes are
mea nin~ful , you ' ll perform .
like a champion . Get a jump
on life by undcrst.·mdi ng the
influences that will govern
you in the year ahead. Send
for your Auro-Guph predictions by mailing S2 to AstraGraph. c/o this newspaper,
P.O. !lox 167, WickJiffr, OH

44092-0167. .
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) •
· A few 111i11iles could be fared

in your direction today .by
someone who likes to take
' potshots at others. Howev~r.

if you pay no heed;lhis per-

• New G1r1gea

• EIICirlcal 1o Plumbing
• Roofing lo Gunora
· • VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Polio ond POfCh Dock•
Free Eslimates

-

son's

WEn IIIII
IIIIIIUIP

fiiiiWitdlr ....
11-11-.JI'-111.
IMI:II-12:11
011111 . . . . . .

..........

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-.6 2!5
hereby are, excepted ~~ifbitii~miiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiJ~~~
Pom ...o~, Ohio
end reaerved unto li
L_.WwJ.Wj__J L.-.III:.IIJI_.J

maliciousness

will

bounce ofT likr a popgun

211 E..t Secor~d Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-5908
M·F 1Cim·4pm

•w•y

35 Boby'o
ucond
word?
35 "The
Moming
Watch"
aulhor
37 Rellglou•

Ieedera
311 Cergo

Wtighll

40 Arthur of

Iennie
42 Shede ol
green

S-?·

41 Or1119Utan
50 BU of
whlakey
53 Condldotu
56 Schollorly
ebbr.
58 Condo, e.g.
59 Gardner of
"Mogombo"
60 Vtgll
cubes
61 Acquires
11 Mony um..
19 Robust
62 Limb
63 Wild guesa 23 Angry
. 24 Teom
DOWN
25 Uthlr'a
quaot
t Cre~lfallen 26 Theralora
2 Welter'•
27 "Ra111n9,
burden
Arlzone '
· 3 To be, to
director
Jocquoo
30 Roln
4 Chony bird
protector
5 Crue
31 Perimeler
6 Oroomo
32 Poet .
7 Stage
Angelou
ahows
34 Rolltop 8 Kilo or lb.
37 Where
9 Swerve
to taka
1b Two-color
tho El
cookie
38 What banko
11 Robin's
do
home
40 Charm

41 Garment
port
44 Britloh
ector
Cermlchlll
45 Nltwo&lt;tra
48 Llkle bug
In 1 rug?
47 Shorpen
48 Lot on.
(llum)
51 ••ton1 tloet
much?"
Floky
mlnerel
54 "-none ot
your
buolnua."
55 Droop
57 New
'aoclollto
52

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campo•
Celebrlly Cipher cryptograms oro croaled lrom quotltlono by lomoua

· people, paat1nd present Eacn letter in tne cipher atanda for 1nother.

Today's clue: V equals Y
' B E G M X B H E P N

NXTTUNHAIU
HZU

L X N H

EPBZUNHPA,
HE

RXMAUGBU.'
NFUYY

T A 1·u

NATGRYN

BZEPUETPACZV

HE

GEH
HZU

T U E P T U·

'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "To teach Is 10 leam twice.".- Jouph
Jouben
"My joy In learning Is panly that It enables me to ,leach."Seneca

Is

"We'll fix it or clscl"

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

All p.ns

• 3

Book"

author
46 "Ain1-

I I~ {/I i I
s
I 1I I I
~~
I I I I I~ ~ I

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for
550 per
month

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otalk
5 Ever!!'""
8 aord a rtvor
12 Pretontiouo
13 " BlOck"
end
14 Juot
15 Fi&gt; • oock
18 Fane
18 "Yepl"
20 - Wltcllr·
uhen.
21 Go bad
22 Vlll1ge1
25 Wall St.
WltChdog
26 Hlghlond
girl
2S Article
33 Eaten

0

Roofing • Gutters • Siding
Decks • Concteta • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring
Pressure

in this

43 "The
Jungle

then_what?...Y ou_ha:v:e'-~t:MA:;I~DA:":iL::'T~(i=-:/1Q~-Q=""·.i'J~Iil~~:""'i.(~_--})r::':'C:::;""~:;::'':s~e:"'·":w::oi:::"D
a definite diamond
'IZZLII p~ ~"U ~L
&lt;4J pq•
IAMI
loser, so you still need
l~lood ~, CLAY 1. POUAN
the club finesse to
Reorrang1 !etten of th•
work. And if the club
lour ocramblod word• bo·
finesse is working, the
low 10 form lour simple words.
heart finesse is a red[
suit herring because
R
you can discard your
second heart on dummy's fourth club.
I N0 8
Win with dummy's
3
heart ace, draw
trumps ending in
hand, play a club to
USEAT
dummy's king, return
"Supermarkets are strange,' m
to' the diamond ace,
sister sighed , "You can find alma!
and run the club 10.
"'
anything 1here, but the items that ar·
When the finesse
L
advertised - - - - - -."
wins, play another
Q Complete the ehuckle quoted
N
club, capturing West's
by filling in the missing words
you develop from 1tep No. 3 below.
queen with dummy's
ace. Cash tb,e club
jack, discarding your
second heart, concede
a diamond trick to the
opponents, and table
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
your cards, announcBeside · Tulip ·Prime • Bought· HOUSE
ing that you will ruff
Real esta1e prices are out of sight. A neighbor divulged
your last diamond in
that the only thing of greater value than himself, was his
the dummy.
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842 Second Ave. Gallipolis, OH

tt 2UJ

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Jn ..home eervlc'

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

EMPIRE · ,
FURNITURE ·

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CONSTRUOION

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USED
COMPUTERS
441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

In Plet Book 5, l'•g• Owners, end their
20, recorda ol lhe heirs, executors,
Recorder'• Olllce, adintnlatnnore,
Melga County, Ohlo~•uc-ce-n ora- en a
lila underatood that autgna forever;
the atrlp ot tond ebove provided, however, In
deecrtbed contelna eo mining, extracting,
0.120 ecrea, more or and removing eold
leaa.
coal, oil end gu, and
This d11crlpt1on 11 other mlnerala, the
bend on 1 survey proper preurvatlon ol
made by BALKE the hlghwey mey not
ENGINEER&amp; lor the bt lm.pelrad.
Ohio Department ol Purauent to Civil
Tronap!)r I• II on, In Rule 12~.A)(1), aeld
2000, By Joaeph D. pereona mentioned
Kuhtmenn,
P.S. ebove shall teke
Registered Surveyor Jurther notice that
No. S-t823 under the they have 21 deya
dIrectIon
• n d etter the compllllon of
aupervlelon of Ronald the Ser~llce by
F.
Rlur,
. P.B. pubtlcetlon within
Reglatered surveyor which to onawer or
No. 8-7013.
otherwl•e defend
All Iron pine ut are agel nil Plalntlll's
to bt (314") x (30") by I petition.
(1 112") llumlnum cap, The original of eny
atarnped "ODOT R/W euch answer or other
DISTRICT 10" and the pleedlng defending
surveyor'•
0 hI o a gal nat Plelntlll'a
Reglalratlon
or petition muot bt tiled
n • m•, with the Clerk ol the
aurvayor'a
number
end/or Common Pl111 Court
compeny nema.
of Meigs County, Ohio,
· Pointe lletad with at Malga . county
(Iron pin ut) 1111 to bt Courthouu, 100
111 by the contreotor second Street, P.O.
IS Indicated It the Box 151, Pomeroy,
termination ot the Ohio 45711; and, •
oonatructlon project. copy ol eny auoh
Seld lletlons being 1 newer or other
the Stetlon numberl pleedlng defending
•• etlpuleted In the egalnat Plelntltt'a
heralnbtlore
petition muot be
mllltloned aurvey end urvld upon:
•• shown by plana on
1111 In the Ohio
Oepertment
of
Tranaportetlon,
Merletta, Ohio.
Prior lnatrument.
Reference: D.B. 224,
Page 111 end D.B. 244,
Pege 131, In the
County Reoorder'a
OHice.
The
above
described 0.120 ecr11,
more or 1111, or ·whlch
the pi'ellnt t{&gt;Sd c
occupl11 0.000 acraa,
mora or 1111, ere to bt
deleted !rom Audttor'a
Parcel 07-GOI51.000.
Owner, his helra,
executors, .
admlnlatratora,
IUCCIIIOfl 1

1000 $t. Rt. 7 Soutll

~~Wf1~l
EXP~~oo 1 ti~

•New Homes
ond

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PISS

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Wrltesel

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A. TIME·

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Howardl.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

shooting at a tank.
SCORPIO (O&lt;t, 24-Nov,
22) -- Don't be relu ctant to
dig into your wallet today,
and you won't open yourself
to ridicule by others who
compuc your genermity to

thein.

I~ ;Tl r I

'four
'Birthday
'

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23Dec. 2 1) -- You'll attract the
goodwill of other~ today by
underplayin~ your importance
and magn ifying t hem. Being
too ~clf~involvcd will produce
·
the oppositt' effect.
CAPRICORN (D&lt;c 22-

J,n. 19) --

The ohoughtful
deed you do for another today
should be kept under wra ps so
as not to embarrass thls per-son. Tooting your own horh
would diminish .your noble
act.
AQUARIUS Uan , ~0-Fcb.

t9) •• You're likely robe briiHant and resourceful in most
of your undcrtakings today,

but not necessarily whe!re
money is concerned. Analyze
tr:anuctions thoroughly before

writing any checks.
PISCF-~ (Feb. 2li-March 20)
... Undue modeny could
prove to be- coun terproductive in a collective endeavor
tod;ty. lnHead of claiming an
inferior role, give 'equal credit
tO botlt your cohort and your·
&gt;elf.
.
ARIES

(Morch

21-April19)
-- De careful today not to at•

tempt to nugni{y your vinues

in ;~n effort to magnify the
faults of another. It wouldn'f
be honest, and it'~ hurtful :u

well.
TAURUS (April 20-M•y
20) -- Business ventures look
encouraging for you today,
provided you don' t mix ·
friend&amp; into your commerc1al
afTain . Practical. decisions

could br wllied by . obligations.
GEMINI (M•y

21-Junc

20)

-- Persons from out1ide your
house hold may find ·you charisnp\tjc today, bm your ~in

could see anothtr 5ide of you .
Treat your family with the

umc courtesy you give to
outsidcn.
C AN CER Uune 21-july

22) •• !u long as you're able

to do your work without anyone looking ovtr y'our shoul-

der ooday, you 'II be industri·
ous and productive, However,
critics could dimini5h your efficiency.
· LEO Uuly 23-Aus. 22) •·
Don't be too proud to accept
favors with gratitud~ todat-

Thme who treat you kindly
are doing so because they like
you, not to make you feel ~b­
ligated or dcme.antd.

.

.

�.•
•

Page 88 •

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

PREP VOLLEYBALL

Southern drops match Meigs finishes second
to Federal Hocking · .in final TV~ sta~Jdings
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
STEWART - It \\'JS j u' t about as dml' as o ne· cou ld g~ t .
but in the end F~dera l H oc kin g p revJil ~d in th e thm: g• me set
over th e Southern Tornadoes Tuesddy mght in gi rb Tn - Valley
C onfe rence' vo ll eyball ac ti o n . Southern won th e ope ning
match 15- 3, but Federal H ocking can1c back to w in the second 16- 14 a11d th e fi nal e 15- 11 . Southern is now 2-7.
Emily Hill led Southern with nin e pninrs, Dea na Pullins
added eight points, Katie Say re had eight, R ac hl·l C hapman
five, and T iflany Williams fo ur.
Pullins had a good setting nighr go ing 44- for- 44. w h ik
going 11 -l l 'serviog with rwo act's. and also enJ OYi ng a good
passing night. Hill was 12-for- 12 serving with th rc·e aces and
went 16- for-2 1 spiking; Sayre WJS 2 1- for-2&amp; spikin g with two ·
kills and a dig, whil e going I J - tnr- 13 '&lt;'rvi ng; C hapman was
15- for- 16 spikin g with two kills and 10-for- 11 s~rvi n g w ith a
block
lil
Tiffany William s was 9- 1 I servin g and had a good night at
the net with 16- fo r- 17 spikes and fi ve kills; Amy Lee was X- for9 st'Tvin g with an ace and 30-for-3 2 se tting. while Brandi l ane
was 12- fo r- 13 setting with a dig.
Federal Hockin g won the reserve gam e 15- 13 and 15- 4.
So uth ern was led by Susan l.l rauer with tive points, C odi Davis
had fi ve points. while Mirinda· Davis .md Jordan Neigler each
had three.
Southern plays at Wellnon Thurstt 1y.

FLY YOUR FLAG TODAY - SPECIAL FLAG PAGE INSIDE

Regular NFL refs to return

PREP GOLF

NEW YORK (AP) - Th,e
NPL officials will
be back on the field Sunday
when play resumes following
the postpon em ent oflast weekend's games because of the terrorist attacks.
NFL spokesman Joe Browne
said the league was told by Bill
Carollo, the Lmion's e&gt;.-ecutive
director, that a majority of the
119 officials ratifi ed a contract
that had been agreed to Sunday
night.
Tom Condon , the negotiator
locked~ut

BY DAVE HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

September 20, 2001

OVP CORRESPONDENT

With WL·dncsday's rain-out cancellation at the Tri-Valley
Co nte n·nce Golf match at O xbow, the final TVC Ohio
Division s ta ndin ~,'' h.IVe been estabJi,hed.
The 2001 M eigs golf tt'am fini shed second in the si.x,.team
Ohio Division race. Playing with to ur players, Josh Napper,
Ben Boo kman , Jeremy B ank ~ and Josh Kay, the Marauders
fini shed behind champi on Belpre.
·
The Marauder golf team will beg in tournament play on
Thu rsday w ith the T VC Interdivisio nal Tourname nt at the
Brass Rin g Golf C lub in Loga n.
O n Tu esday. September 25th, M eigs will play in the Division II sectio nal tournam ent at Shawnee State Park Golf
Course near Portsmomh .

-

for the union, said the vote was
about 2-to- 1 to accept the
contract.
The deal is the same in toc:;d;
mon etary value as the package
proposed by the league Sept. 4,
although the specifics are different. It would increase salaries
by 50 percent in the tint year
and by 100 percent in the
fourth year of a six-Yl'ar deal .
Replacement
officials.
worked the final week of the,
preseason and the first week of
the regular sea~on.

Meigs County's

.Terrorists,
cults are
eerily
similar'

A'ME RI.CA AT WAR

•
•
our 1s com1n

I

FINAL TVC OHIO DIVISION
GOLF STANDINGS

Hometown Newspaper

President puts
Taliban on notice,
prepares nation
for war campaign

Counselors cffer
insight into
· attacks

I. Belpre 40; 2. Meigs 27; 3 . Wellston 24; 4. Alexander 20;
5. Vinton C ounty 9; 6. Nelsonville- York U. ·

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Reds

Wood sa id . " I was abl e to
work on it and try to get that
pitch ove r for strikes. It got
·
bett
~ r as th e game went on. I
from
felt I could have gone anothEric Young wa lked, singled er inning-or two, at least."
three 'times and scored fom
ThC' way he was pitching,
th
e
Reds w eren't about to
runs.
.Tu cker, who was traded score off of him .
from the Reds on July 20,
"He's pretty impressive,"
became the first Cub to hit said Adam Dunn. who struck
two triples in a game since
out on a 93 mph fastball to
Ryne Sandberg clid it on beco me Wood's first victim.
April 25, 1994 in C incinnati.
" It's not just a 98 mph f.1stball
."That's nut one of those - it 'i nks, it cuts. With a guy
things that you have control like him. you know you're
over," Tucker said. "When you going to get maybe one pitch .
play against th e team th at to hit and if yo u miss it, you 're
traded yo u, you just try to do in trouble." ·
. .
.
woot you normally do."
Hamilton. who was released
Wood (11- 6) looked like: h e by Toronto in August and is
did before his latest arm prob- auditioning for next year's
!ems. He was on the disabled rotation, gaw up five runs in
list from Aug. 4 ro Sept. 7 ollly · three innings. Manager
with tendinitis in hi s right Bob Boone was ·noncommitshoulder.
tal about whether he'll get
In his second start sm ce another start.
returning, he gave up only
" I'm not the type to make
two singles, walked on e ·and L'XCL1ses, but the layoff didn't
struck out nine. G iven th e big help," Hamilton said. " It start1-~--iead . he was--able-ro--u~t&gt;-tlle-ed off ba&lt;J-a,nd-eot-· W&lt;)rs•l'o-,1outin g to fix. his breaking was n ervous, to be honest
pitch.
w ith you. I hadn't pitched in a
" I started throwi ng it ' early big league game in a month
and wasn't consistent with it," and a half."

PageBI

Bend
from Page Bl
They are pretty balanced,
but right now defensively we
are nowhere we ·need to be to
b e winning football games.
W e have to put pres&gt;ure on
the quamrback and put their
b acks against the wall : '
Offensively, in last week's
loss, Southern could not get
the ground game going, as
M att Ash was held to 19 yards
on just nine carries.
Passi ng-w ise
Brand on
Pierce was 8-of- 19 for 100
yards, and two interceptions,
while. Ash was 1- 1. and Brice
Hill 0-1. Southern's Marn hout had an interception and
a fumble recovery.
Ohlin ger, who was injured
late in the game has a tender

Eagles
from PageBI

ankle but is expected to play.
Southern's offense will be
up ag.ainst what at times is a
tough Falcon defens e. Defensive tac kle Scott J o hnson leads
the way.
In conclusion , Richards
added. "We have to sustain
our blocks: We've been m aking good initial con tact but
haven't sustained. We have to
hang onto the ball and the
backs have to run harder, and
sti ck it up in the hole. Mistakes have killed us ."
" We don't fe el we have put
a good game togeth er yet, one
w here ·we have played all four
yuarters. We have to sta rt
coming out from the get go
and m aintai n that same level
of intensity ' to the fina l
buzzer. Maybe this will be
th e week we can do it."
Gam e tim e is 7:30 at
· W;1hama High School.
qu arterba ck with Sh annon
Gay as hi s tight end.
"Their running backs nm
hard;' said C hri stman. "Their ·
fi1llback looks like a pretty
strong kid . l~uns hard. Their
quarterback throws the ball
well ti nd he 's got a pretty
good recei ver in Shannon
Gay." ·
· ·
·'*"

game this season.
Quarterback · Gam·tt Karr
remains the Eagles' leading
runner with "36 carries fo r
339 yards and li ve rushiug
touchdowns. H e's a l s8 2 ~-for44 passing for 360 yards with ·
Gay had only, on e reception
a pair of touc hdowns by way
of the air and no intercep- last week at Marsh Fork, but it
was for a 55- yard touchdown .
tions.
"Their quarterback (Karr) H e p lays both receiver • and
'is rea l good and their fullback running back .
(RJ. Gibbs) and li ne make
" (Gay) does a good job in
them a solid team." said Pri ce.
both positions,' said ChristKirk Murray leads H annan
rushing with 339 yards on 48 man . " I think he's one of their
carries, wpile Stacey Cooper weapons we're going ·to have
·
·
has . some ·strong games ac · co stop." ·

MORE LOCAL SPORTS. YOUR LOCAL TEAMS.
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'

i"

OIJ Model A'i PfOiiide/1 ~y:
. Souther'! 'A' Mo'def~, Chlb ofGaUipolis
'

........
.
...
r:·-···
.......
cll.. ....
..... - ..........
•

ALBANY - Expert• at a
local facility specializing in
the treatment of former cult
members say the mindset of
terrorists and those of cult
members are nearly identical.
In ·
the
wake of last
week's terrorist attacks
on the World
Trade Center
and the Pentagon,
Dr.
Paul Martin,
...__...,.., Larry
Pile
Martin
and
Ron
r--.::::;:-::---, Burks of the
Wellspring
Retreat and
R eso urce
Center
in
'rural M eigs
County say
the similarities between
the
· two
Pile
groups
are

BY SONYA

~~~-'--,

striking, ,and
WE WILL NOT FORGET - President Bush holds .\;!~ the'
shield o{J\(ew York Pollee Officer George Howard
that experts
who died willie trytng , ~p sa~e others lh thl! '',\'(itrd' :)')Pde Cen~~r, d~r,ing 'his address Thursdl!y ,~o·;il. ?f!int ~f;l~Sion
llci :nouiitei'=Clilthfe_ _.__,,. Cgngress on Cagitol Hill. :(AP Photo/ Win McNamee, Pool) · ··; ·
. · ·····', , '·: :._; •. ·. ·~ . _
1

and counterterrorism
fields
can
learn from
one another.
Wellspring
is the nation's ·
Burks
only residential mental health facility specializing in the treatment of
former cult members.
Pile, a cult researcher with
the facility, said the most chilling similarity is · that both
types of groups claim the
right to say who is allowed to
exist.
·
"Typically, in cults, this dispensing of existence is only
figurative," Pile said. "Individuals outside of the group may
be labeled with derogatory
terms · and group members
may be forbidden to socialize
with them ."
That attitude is more literal
with terrorist organizations,
.said Marrin, a psychologist,
former cult member. and

PI••• ... Anelysl1, A!

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•••

Americans have known
surprise attacks, but never
before on thousands of
ciVilians.
All of this was brought
upon us In a single day,
and night fell on a different
world, a world where free·
dom itself Is under attack.

•••

AI-Qaida is to terror what

•••

BY BRIAN J. REED SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

. POMEROY- "A Year in the Life
of Meigs County" is both thenie. and
title for a six-hour video produced by
Roger Gilmore of Rock Springs.
Gilmore previewed portions of the
documentary production for Meigs
County commissioners during their

Low: 501
Details, A3

Lotteries
OHIO

BliCk¥ 5:8-!J-16-17-29

A3 W.VA.

81-3. 6 Dally :S: B-4-8 Daily 4: 4-3-6-6

A3

•••

stopped and defeated.

to.make: Either you are
with us, or you are with the
terrorists.

•••

We will starve terrorists
of funding, tum them one
against another, drive them
from place to place until
there is no refuge or no
rest.
And we will pursue
nations that provide aid or
safe haven to terrorism.
Every nation in every .
region now has a decision

•••

And tonight a few miles
from the damaged Pentagon, I have a message for
our military: Be ready. I
have called the armed
forces to alert. and there is
a reason .
The hour is coming
when America will act. and

•

A4

' .

The enemy of America is
not our many Muslim
friends. It is not our many
Arab friends. Our enemy is
a radical networl&lt; of terrorists and every government
that supports them.
The Taliban must act
Our war on terror begins
and act immediately. They wHh ai,Qaida, but it does
will hand over the terrorists, not end there .
or they will share In their
· It will 'not end until every
fate.
terrorist group of global ·
reach has been found,

.hI

84-6 Pick :S: 6-B-3; Pkk4: 6-5-1-1

87

the Mafia is to crime. But
its goal is not making
money. Its goal is remaking
the world and imposing its
radical beliefs on people
everywhere.

you will make us proud.
This is not. however, just
America's fight. And whlit is
at stake is not just Amen·
ca's freedom.
This is the wo~d's fight.
This is civilization's fight.
This is the fight of all who
believe in progress and
pluralism, tolerance and
freedom .
We ask every nation to
join us .

Commissioners ·preview Meigs. documentary

Hlp: 70s

A5

PIHse IH Bush, A!

EXCERPTS FRO'M PRESIDENt BUSH'S ADDRE.SS

Sentinel
calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
•
0'b'rtuanes
Sports
Weather

WASHINGTON President Bush
warned Afghanistan's ruling Taliban that it
must hand over Osama bin laden and
other suspected terrorists or "share in their
fate" when the United States strikes.
Addressing a united Congress and a
large TV audience, Bush braced the nation
for bloodshed in a protracted quest for
vengeance as the Taliban remained defiant.
Bush presented a rough outline T hursday night of how he planned to unravel
the terrorist conspiracy in which hijacked
j ets became flying bombs that destroyed
New York's World Trad e Center and
severely damaged the Pentagon on Sept.
11 , with ·a death toll now expected to
exceed 6,000.
At the heart of Bush's plan is a nonnegotiable demand for th e Taliban to lead
U.S. authorities to the masterminds of bin
Laden's al-Qaida network, free imprisoned
foreigners and "immediately and permanently" close terrorist training camps in
the rugged Afghan hills.
"Th~ Taliban must act and act immediately. They w ill hand over the terrorists, or

1

lbday's

2 Sedlons - It P11ps

Ross

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

regular meeting on Thursday.
Gilmore and his wife, Mary, spent
. most of2000 at events large and small
throughout M eigs, compiling video
footage ~ for the project, which
Gilmore hopes will serve as a historical record of the turn of the century
· and the turn of the millennium.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. under-

'

wrote the project, and assistance was
also provided by M e ig~ County
C hamber of Commerce, Meigs
C ounty Tourism, Mei gs Co unty
Council on Aging and The Daily Seutinel.
.
.
G ilmore said . the pr&lt;IJect . \Vas
inspired by various "Day in the life"
projects from the National Geograph-

ic Society, and home movies from the
mid-1950s belonging to N orman Will
of Rutland.
" I thought it would be nice to
freeze a moment in time," Gilmore
said, "and to give ge nerations to come
an accurate portrayal of every aspect

PI•••• see Vlcfeo, A!

Capw-Karr scholarship winners named
PO~F.ROY -

Winners of the CrowKarr llfemori&lt;tl Scholarship s given in
m emo!of Fred W C row Jr. and Eleanor
Karr
w by the three Crow children,
Linda,' ' ick and Carson, have been
annou ~d.
'
·
The ;;&gt;'-ch olar*ips .are avaibl,l_le to .
descen~ts of members of the six Meigs
County \lilitary service organizations.
Recei 'ng scholarships were:
Billy JO'e Kennedy II, who 'f'lans on

attending O hio University. His father,
Billy J oe Kennedy, served in the U.S.
armed forces during · the Vietnam War,
received an \ 'Expert M 16" rating, the
National Defense Service Medal, Good
Conduct Medal, Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, Vietnam Service Medal,
Vietnam Cam paign Medal, and Bronze
Star Medal.
· Amy M arie Frecker, who plans em
attending Hocking College, and whose

grandfather, Ead· Edward Frecker, served
in th e U.S. armed forces during Wo.rld
War I at Camp Robinson, Ark., before
receiving an honorabl e discharge for
medical reasons.
'
James Wesley Crow, who plans on
atte nding Ohio University. His greatgrandfather, leRoy H o lmes, fought in
France during World War I and received
the Croix deGuerre M edal (the highest

Ple•se see Four, A3

Holzer Medical Center and the HMC Community Health and Wellness Department presents

11

Minlmal~y Invasive Approaches
···
to ~Breast Ccinc:er''
·
Friday, q\:tober 5, 2001 • 9:00am · 1:00pm
HMC Conference Rooms A-B-C

MEplCAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

Spetiikers: Allee Grlcoskl, MD
••• ·Michael Covelli, MD

www.holzer.org

. FREE and open to n~rses in the community.
•.
For more informatipn or to
call (740)446·5313.

•

, ..

.

--·-···~

·-·---+-- -------·. .--·----··--··.·.

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