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""* 8 I • The o.lly Sa illnel

I

Pomeroy, llkt , port, Ohio

Wadnudliy, Oct. 10, 2001

FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

Mllp Ceuftty"s

•

~.

Big bombs
•

FIRE PREVENTION

see action
•

.Firefighters
promote
scifety to
.younger set

•

in attacks
~

· BY MAn KEUEY

tics helps clear the way for
commando raids or the
WASHINGTON
possible use of ground
One month after the ter- troops.
rorist attacks on
Although the
the World Trade
Pentagon publicly
· Center and Penta- OPERATION was silent about
gon, U.S. airstrikes
Wednesday's
on Afghanistan are
attacks, officials
focusing more on
speaking on conleaders of Osama
dition
of
bin Laden's aianonymity said the
Qaida
network
5,000-pound,
and the Taliban
laser-guided
· regime that shields
bombs would be
them.
used
against
Now tl)at most
"leadership tarof Afghanistan's
gets."
Those
air defenses are
include command
gone, the military ·•One month
and control cenis working to later, America
ters believed to be
intimidate, if not still l!ying to
in underground
i11jure or kill, Tal- heai,Al
bunkers
near
iban and terrorist
Kandahar, the Talleaders with the • President
i ban's seat of
latest
bombing retumsto
power in southruns. The United Pentagon to
ern Afghanistan.
States has added salute viclims,
A U.S. official
military. A2
5,000-pound
speaking on con"bunker-buster"
dition
of
a$!&lt;$
bombs that can
European police anonymity said
pierce reinforced
to pursue 8 . Wednesday that
strongholds, and it
two adult male
.
'
·
ts us1ng more ~
relatives ofTaliban
terrorists, Al
anti-pet::Sonnel
, eader
MUllah
bombs · to target • Air strikes
· Mohatnlitad
Taliban
troops trigger civilian
and equipment . . flight from
The shift in tac- Kandahar, A2
Aitacb.A3
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

l!lY TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY- In
conjunction with
National Fire Prevention
Week,
which
runs
:through Friday, members of
·the Pomeroy Fire Department
:visited with students from
:Pomeroy
Elementary
·Wednesday to educate them
·:about 1the :importance of fire
· ~afety and prevention.
This· year's thenie, "Cover
Your Bases and Strike Out
Fire;• incorporates safety messages structured around a classic baseball diamond: cooking
safety at first base; heating
safety at second; and electriciLI
safety at third. Smoke alarms
and home fire escape planning and practice can be
found at home plate.
"In .2QOO, Ohioans experienced 15,350 residential fires
that killed 125 people, injur- E®IPMENT CHECK - F!tefighters Todd Smith and Joe Anthony demonstrate the proper use
ing 1,048 and causing over Of ~IJI11-0irt· jle8[ duling a .~re :safety presentatlo~ for kindergarten students at Pomeroy Etertlehtary. The pre~tatlon Wllli' 'held ln·cenjuhctlon with National Are ·Pre~l(on Week, w!lich
runs tiii9U&amp;h ~·~·
ftld8Y,
· •·• • .....,. •• •·
. .,.,. .....(Tony
-. ... t.9. L&lt;each
., ~ photo)
., .......~ ~. ·

•us.

PI•••-

Residents do their part Tor disaster relief
BY CHARLENE HoERJCii
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY - "It
made the residents
feel good to be a
part of helping vic~
.
tims of the (terrorist) attack," said Lisa Pauley
about a fund-raiser held at Vet.erans Memorial Skilled Nursing Facility.
Last week, residents staged a
bake and craft sale which
:b rought in $661.76 for the
New York Firefighters Relief
Fund.
The check was presented to
:Todd Smith, who is coordinat-1ng relief efforts of the Meigs
:County Emerge11cy Medical
Service and Peoples Bank for
'the New York victims.
Pauley said that soon after
the attack on America, a meet1ng of the facility's Emergency
Resident Council was called

and craft safe was suggested by
one resident and that's all it
took to get the ball rolling.
She said they wanted to
make some things themselves,
but they also wanted .to invite
family members and friends,
and their churches to donate.
"It was an exciting time for
the residents as they worked
on crafts, and watched the
donations come in and the
tables fill up," said Pauley. "It
gave them a good feeling to be
_ Mary Wingett, Charles Kiser, . able to help."
. .
Makmg ~rafts and asstmng
Dolores Kruskamp and Elizabeth Davis, left to right, were four of
14 residents at the VMH Skilled Nursing. Facility who helped wtth the sale were Emma
raise $661.76 to go to the New York Areflghters Relief Fund. Adams,
Margaret
Ehas,
Todd Smith who Is chairman 'of Meigs County's EMS/Peoples Dorothy Long, Charles Kiser,
Bank Fund, accepted the check from Kiser.
Mary Wingett, Shirley Harless,
Nola
Bradshaw,
Beulah
to give the residents an oppor- about the attack, but they Autherson,
Dolores
tunity to discuss their feelings wanted to do something to Kruskamp, Harriette Sinclair,
'about what had happened.
help, said Pauley, activities Elizabeth
Davis,
Clara
It was soon apparent that director.
.
Criswell, Jewel Welch and
not only did they want to talk
The idea of having a bake Meadie Long.

Today's

Hip: 70s

Sentinel

Details. A7

2 Sections- 11 ......

Calendar
Classjfieds

COmics
Editorials
Objtuarjes

Sports
Weather

AS

84=6
87

Candidates for Southern High School homecoming queen
are, front row, from left, Amanda Ashworth, Kim
McDaniel, Rachel Marshal, Carolyn Bentz and Lindsey
Smith. Also pictured, second row, are Brooke Kiser,
freshman attendant; Stephanie Bradford, sophmore
attendant; and Candlse Barber, junior attendant. The
queen will be crowned during halftime ceremonies at Frl·
day night's football game between the Soutbern Torn~
does and Waterford Wildcats. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Strickland introduces airport safety

Lo!r. 501

.

..

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick :S: 1-9-3; Pick 4: 4-6-Hi

Super Lctao: 6-17-20-37-43"'14
A4 ICidllr. 5-().2-3-2·5
A3 W.VA.
81-2. 5 .,..,. :S: 2·2-4 Dally 4: 9-2-1.0

A7

SHS hopefuls

C&gt; 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Bill would require
scanning of all luggage
•

BY IRIAN J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

WASHINGTON- Legislation intro. duced in the U.S. House of Representatives by U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland would
require that all bags checked at airports

be
scanned
by
advanced bomb detection nuichines.
Strickland,
DLucasville, is joined by
U.S. Rep. jay lnslee, a
Democrat from Washington, in sponsoring
the bill .
The legislation was
introduced last week,

and would require that all luggage
checked for airline flights be screened
before being loaded onto the plane.
"It is intolerable for airports to check
all carry-on luggage, but neglect to make
sure that all other baggage loaded onto
domestic flights is thoroughly screened;'
Strickland said. "This legislation will create a nationwide standard for all airports
PleiH -

8111, A3

Holzer Medical Cenhlr Respirolory Therapy and Educalion Depar1ments announce their First Annual

Respiratory Fall Symposium
407 Pearl Street
Middleport, OR

(740) "1·3471
ROUNIJYS. MaUer Store

•
•
•
•
•
•

UPS
Westera Ualoa
PUblic Faz
Fecleral bprea
VIdeo Beata!
Caterl~~t~ SerVice

Tuesdoy, October 23 • 8:00am-4:30pm
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
A one-day event that gives respiratory care professionals
the opportunity to learn and review different aspects
•
and concepts in the respiratory field.

MEDICAL CENTER

-Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

For more information, or to register, call Sandy Moore at

(740) 446·5919

...

.

�'

--Page---

/

: Thul'8day,

Oct. 11 , 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Odllb• 11, ,Nn

One month later America still

·to

IRON CROSSThis undated
photo of two
metal beams,
center, that form
a cross that rises
out of the
destruction at the
World Trade Center, was made
available In New
York. The cast
iron .~~cross,"
which fell Intact
from Tower One
into nearby Building Six on Sept.
11., was blessed
on Thursday by
Rev. Brian Jordan,
a Franciscan
priest. (AP)

a hockey stick. You can take
one carryon bag along witli a
briefcase - no exceptions instead of two bags, or three, or
whatever you could get away
with before.
No more turning the ot~er
cheek in the air - the old passive hijack policy. When a disturbed passenger stormed th s
cockpit of an American Ajrlines flight, . thinking it was
going into Chicago's Se ~rs
Tower,
other
passengers
stormed him.
'
On the ground, the Pentagon stands dreadfully gashed,
soot staining its limest6ne, b.ut
very much in business. It pr~s­
ecutes a war bro11ght on by tj&gt;c
four hijacked airliners· of Sept.
II, one of which plowed in,to
it from six feet up, killing all 64
on the plane and; it's believed,
125 in the building.

WASHINGTON (AP) One month later, Americans
have removed 260,000 tons of
rubble from the World Trade
Center and created unknown
tons in Afghanistan , Smoke
spires from ruins in both lands.
Everywhere there is an
accounting, in numbers and by
othet means. It's one month
now into a journey from
American ground zero to
Mghan ground zero, from dust
to dust.
On Oct. 11, the United
State$ has a still-uncertain terror death toll, a war, a new civil
defense . agency with a quaint
name, a popular president, a
recession pressing in, a, run on
car-borne flags that have
begun to fray in the wind, a
canonized New York mayor,
better manners here and there,
a score to settle and touchy

The toll there: 4,815 people musing at the W11rld
Trade Center and an additi11rtal 422 c11njirmed
dead. As well, 157 are dead from the airlinen that
went int11 the t11wers.
nerves .
.
Pollsters who used to ask
people about Social Security
ask how they are sleeping. Not
well, comes the answer, but
better as time goes on.
A schoolboy spoke for many
Americans when he went back
to class this wee~ at a school
that was near the twin towers
'
until Sept. 11.
"I've paid my emotional
dues," said Stuyvesant high
school freshman·' Max Bernstein. "But it still . ·r
hothers
me."
..
One month later, innocent
powder spooks people. Could
that be anthrax, the would-be
biological weapo(l' of terror-

".'"

ists?
"I could probably drop a
package of Sweet'N Low and
evacuate this building," said
Ken Pi11eau, Collier County,
Fla:, emergency director, after
one anthrax death, a second
case and a few false scares
emptied buildings in several
parts of the state.
At drugstores, customers are
demanding anthrax treatment
as a pr~caution and Bayer~ the
aspirin company, is reopemng a
German plant to spur production of its anthrax antibiotic.
In the air, the rules have
changed. You can bring an
umbrella on an airliner but not

•

WASHINGTON (AP) -A
his Cabinet for an update on
month after the attacks on
the broad range of governNew York and Washington,
ment activities related to the
President Bush was returning
terrorist strike.
Near the top of the agenda
to the Pentagon to honor both
'those who died there and the
·was how to revive the suffermilitary personnel now carrying American economy.
ing out his campaign against
Under one plan floated by
terrorism.
the White House, taxpayers
Thousands of people. were
who did not qualifY for
expected at the memorial serrebates earlier in the year
would receive checks for $300
vice outside the Pentagon,
which was hit by a hijacked
or $600, according to .officials
jediner on Sept. II, killing all
who spoke on condition of
64 on the plane and probably
anonymity. Many of those
would be low-income earn125 inside. The service was on
the opposite side of building
ers. Those who already
from the crash site, where a
received a rebate could benefit
blackened g_ash remains.
administration described as from accelerated rate cuts,
In a message emphasizing substantial progress in block- though it was unclear whether
renew;ll, Bush- was reminding ing funds of terrorists and they would ~ee a · check
·
_.
reflecting that', : ,one pfficial
listeners that construction of h ·
t e1r assoctates. - ~
.d ..
'f !1(,~\ •
.
the Pentagon began''predsely
"We're
halting
their sal ·
60 years before the crash, on . money," Bush said. "We've got
Bush's trip t6· the Pentagon
allies around the world help- was his first since the U. S.-led
Sept. 11, 194I.
bombing
campaign
on
Americans will never forget, ing us close the net."
Bush was assuring victims' reiLast month Bush moved to Afghanistan began Sunday. He
atives and friends and Defense freeze assets of alleged terrorist · toured the Pentagon ~mage
Department employees.
mastermind
Osama . bin the day after hiJackers
And he was pledging not to Laden an exiled Saudi multi- slammed the jet into the
relent in his effort to eradicate millio~aire, and 26 other peo- building an~ two !Uore in
terrorism.
pie and organizations with New York Ctty's World Trade
"They try to hide, but we're suspected links to terrorism. Center.
.
going to shine the light ofjus- The
administration
said
Though one stde of the
tice on them," Bush said recently that $6 million has Pentagon was badly damaged,
Wednesday.
been blocked and SO bank and military personnel deeply
Bush was re~emphasizing accounts frozen, 30 in this shaken, the building has taken
that his campaign has multiple country and ·20 oveneas.
center stage since the strikes
fronts, releasing what the
Bush also was meeting with began Sunday.

Airstrikes bigger
fli~ from
Kandahar; U.S. granted use of
· U.S. KABUL, Afghanistan
(AP) Civilians fled the
Afghan city of Kandahar on
Thursday as airstrikes targeted a compound where followers of Osama bin Laden
had lived, the latest in a' series
ofU.S.-led raids in retaliation
for terror atracks in New
York and Washington exactly
qne month ago.
Afgha"nistan's ruling Tali ban
militia said at least 115 people had been killed nationwide in overnight strikes late
Wednesday and · early Thursday, including I 00 who died
around Jalalabad and another
IS who were killed when a
missile struck a mosque in
that northeastern city.
The claims could not be
independently confirmed.
In neighboring Pakistan,
government officials said U.S.
military
personnel , have
arrived and the Americans
have been granted use of several Pakistani air bases. More
than 15 u.s. milirary aircraft,
including C-130 transport
planes, arrived over the past
two days at a base at Jacobabad, 300 miles northeast of
the port city of Karachi.
.
The Taliban envoy to Pakista n, Abdul Salam Zaeef,
when asked about the reports
of arriving U.S. personnel,
replied: " When the Americans enter Afghanistan, here
will start the real war - not
now."

U.S. rasks European police to
pursue eight suspected.terrorists
'.

WASHII':.ibTON (AP) While the White House
warns 'of coaed messages that
could launch new terrorist
attacks, inveStigators are seeking law enforcement help
abroad in a race to catch suspects before they might strike

Cody Pugh

camp slaJed

Juryacquib

!tor

again.
As U.S. bombs rained down
on AfghaniStan, European
police were ·:alerted to hunt
for eight susJ¥cted terrorists '
linked to OSama bin Laden,
u.s. officials said Wednesday.
The Bush ' administration
warned Americans to be vig..:
ilant against ri~w attacks.
In Washington, a capital on
the highest alert, FBI agents
met with authorities from
Germany wll~te aspects of
the Sept. 11 atbcks may have
been planned ·and where at
least three of tile 19 suspected
hijackers worked and studied. MOST WANTED - "Wanted' posters line the wall at FBI
Concern about new attacks headquarters. In Washlnaton Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2001 as
rose Wednesday when 'the the media covered while President Bush spoke In Issuing the
White House asked television new posters of the new • Most wanted Terrorists • list. (AP
Photo/Oo.ul Mills)
•
networks to be careful about
broadcasting videotaped meA- into the World Trade Center military . schools, Three
sages from bin Laden and his towers and the Pentagon.
hijackers have names similar
organization.
'.
..
In Florida, federal authori- to those who attended the
"At best, this is a forum for ties said Wednesday that a schools, but a review of bioprerecorded, pretaped protJi third penon - a 35-year-old graphical data indicates th~y
ganda inciting people to · woman - has been exposed are not the same peopte,
' Americans,'' . White House to anthrax and the case has ·Army. Lt. Col. Catherine
~ sec~tai"Y., A,fi Fleischer become the subject of a crim- Abbott said.
sat d.
inal investigation.
At worst, the broadcasts
While anthrax could be
could contain signals to used ,i n a terrorist attack, FBI
A Salute to
"sleeper" agents, he added. agent . Hector Pesquera said
RUTLAND FIRE
"The concern here is not authorities had no evidence it
allowing terrorists to receive was caused or created by a
DEPARTMENT
what might be a message terrorist group and cautioned
during
from Osama bin Laden call- thar"this is not a time for preing on them to take any mature conclusions and inac- fire Prevention Weeki
actions."
curate reporting."
On Thesday, a top aide to
At the Pentagon, the
bin Laden said in a video- Defense Department said
Joe's Country
taped Q1essage: "The Ameri- none of the suspected hijackMarket
cans must know that by com. ers received training at U.S
ing to Afghanistan they have
opened a new page of animo~ity between us :ind the
forces of the unbelievers. We
will fight them with every
material. we have, and with
all our faith in Allah. We shall
be victorious."
Following a conference
call with Bush's national
Pictures wiD run: ·
security adviser, CondoleezWednesday,
za Rice, ·ABC, CBS, CNN,
October31
NBC and Fox agreed they
would not broadcast transDeadline for Entry:
missions from bin Laden's aiWednesday,
Qaida group without first
October24
screewng and possibly editing them.
As the White House was
seeking currailment of bin
· Laden~ televised messages,
President Bush released pictures of 22 "most-wanted"
PerA4
terrqrlsts, hopin~ television
i
oae Subject Per I'UIDpklnl
vieW,~rs and ne4paper readTessa Paige Will ' ,,
ers lll'Ound the world would
DaughteJ: of John .
see ' them·. The government
was "otrering a reward ofup
Will &amp; Cassie Nease
to $5' million for the capljlre
~ . . ~ ...... - Alta;h ;,;15·c;.Po~ To y;u;ch1id·; Piclu~c ~od- .. -- - ..
of anyone on the list.
Mall or Dring Wllh Your Pflyment To:
"We list their names, we
The
Dally Sentinel • lll Court Street
pu\&gt;licize their pictut;es, we
Pomeroy, OH 45769
rob them of their secrecy,"
the president said at FBI
headquarters. The list included bin Laden and seveial
people linked to the 19
hijackers who crashed planes

In The Sentinel

"Pumpkin Patch'~'

-------=-.;,.

'

Set revival

i

Show Off Your "Pumpkin"

Zaeef also made the Tal- isran that Afghanistan's Cur
iban's latest casualty claims, province, including the capiand told reporters that bin tal, Chaghcharan, fell to
Laden is restricted from using opposition fighters shortly
Afghan terri~ory as a base for after · midnight Thursday.
attacks. A day . earlier, the Heavy fighting continued
BBC had quoted a Taliban into the morning in several
spokesman as saying restric- provincial areas, Abil said.
The claim could not be
tions on bin Laden's activities
independently verified.
had been lifted.
Meanwhile; the rebels
h
all
h
.
l"b
The
nort
ern
iance con1
11
fi1ghtmdg tTohtoppd e t eh a !hand siders the province important
·C a1me
urs ay t ey a •
f .
· I
.
because o Its strateg1c ocala ken a key centra I provmce
.
after heavy fighting with Tal- tion: It
borders , etght
iban forces during the night. provmces - 1ncludmg four
Mohammed
Abil,
a that the oppos1110n COJ!Siders
spokesman for the northern crucial to efforts .to unseat
alliance of opposition groups, the Tahban ' m1htta, wh1ch
said by telephone from Pak- co!l,trols most of Afghanistan.

EMS nans

Elrt Jades

From

RUINS - .Residents look" at the damage caused by a U.S.
airstrlke In the Afghanistan capital Kabul. Heavy alrstrlkes also
hit the southern Afghan city of Kandahar Thursday morning, the
latest of a series of U:S.-Ied raids. (AP)

LOCAL BRIEFS

Todd Patrick Verdill, 26, and
•
JeniJifer Leah McCarter, 23,
POMEROY ' - Units of Harrisburg, Pa.
Vincent Lance Reiber, 23,
lhe Mei8,' Emergency Service
. RUTLAND - Earl Til don Jacks, 6 7, died Wednesday, Oct. answered 10 calls for assis- and
Tonia
Nicole
10, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
ranee on Wednesday. Uniu Nazarewycz, 22. Racine.
He was born March 8, 1934 in Rutland. son of the late Vir- responded as follows :
Charles Edward Parsley Jr.,
. gil Jacks and Doris Ellen Jordan Brown. He was employed as a
CENTRAL DISPATCH
42. and Deborah Jeanne Hat. truck driver.
10:55 a.m., Rutland Ele- field, 40, Middleport.
He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during the Korean Con- mentary, Lori Barnes, treated;
tlict, and was a member of Feeney-Bennett Poft 128,American
12:21 . p.m., Portland, John,
Legion and VFW Post 9252, Tuppers Plains. He was a member . Callinan, treate~;
of Racine Apostolic Church.
I :09 p.m., Ohio 7 ,Joe ConPOMEROY Athens
Inc.,
against
. . Surviving are his wife, Nell jean Gray Jacks; a son, Larry IGng · nelly, Camden-Clark Memor- Landmark
,of Muskegon, Mich.; four daughters and three sons-in-law, ial Hospital;
Charles E. Yost, and others,
4:25p.m., Flatwoods Road, and Terry S. Sharp, against
, Linda and Francis Riley ofSalt Lake City, Utah,Jackie and joey
. · Grose of Clay, W.Va.,Janet and Ross Hunt of Orem, Utah, and Rochelle Cummins, Sherry Edward Simnu, and others,
, ' Sandy Edensword of Washington State; 10 grandchildren and Selbee, jennifer Norman, have been dismissed in Meigs
· ·five great-grandchildren; I 0 sisters and brothers-in-law,Virginia refused treatment;
.
County Common . Pleas
and Leroy Kessinger of Rutland, Margaret and Chester John9;16 p.m., Broadway, IGm . Court.
. ron of Langsville, Bertina an4 Russell Mozingo of Rutland, Sm1th, Holzer Medical Cen. , W:mda and Bud Thorpe ofWoodbridge, Va., Doris Pooler_ of ter;
,
Louisville, Ky., Rachel and Mickey Hutton ofRudand, Lucille
10:23 p.m., Happy Hollow,
,)acks of Cottageville, W.Va., Denna Jacks of Kentucky, Anne Carrie Walleen, Holzer MedPOMEROY - The Rev.
Jacks of Gallipolis, and Judy and Danny Walker ofRutland; and ical Center.
Doug Carpenter will be the
' t:hree brothers and a sister-in-law, Tim Jacks of Columbus, VtrCOLUMBIA TWP.
evangelist for revival services
'KiJ and Sharon Jacks of Pomeroy, and joey Jacks of Kentucky.
12:08 p.m., Woodyard at the Mount Hermon Unit. . He was also preceded in death by his sister, Linda Kay Jacks. Road, truck fire, Marco Jef- ed Brethren in Christ Church
on Wickham Road, just off
Services will be 1 p.m. Sunday in ~isher-~c~e Fune~ fers, owner, no injuries.
Horne, Middleport, with Herschel White officrabng; Burial
REEDSVILLE
Texas Road, near Pomeroy.
will be in Miles ~emetety. Friends may call at the funeral
6:36
a.m.,
Butternut Services will be held Oct. 15home from 6-9 p.m. Saturday.
Avenue, Melisoa
B~ley, 19 at 7:30p.m. each evening.
Special singing will ,be held
HMC.
nighdy.
IWTI..AND
(\_,
2:27 p.m., Bailey Run
• SYRACUSE -Word has been received here of the death of Road, Albert Roush, HMC;
.~ody Edward Pugh, 6, of Dart, on Fr~day, Oct. 5, 200_1 , ~m
9:58 p.m;, Main Street,
injuries recieved in an automobile acctdent near Martmsvtlle, Melissa Snowden, Cabell
REEDSVII!LE - ' Eastern
.. m.
High School cheerleaders will
Huntington Hospital.
hold a camp on Oct. 20 from
: :; He was born on Sept. 25, 1995, to Charles E. Pugh Jr.• ~ho
9 a.m to noon.
::&amp;!so died in the accident, and Shawnee Salser Pugh of ManetIt is open to girls first
::ia. He was a member of the kindergarten class at Lawrence Ele;inentary School.
.
POMEROY- A Pomeroy lhrough sixth grades. Cost for
•• ~ Besides his molher, he is survived by two halfbmthers, Ke,th man has been acquitted on !hose who pre-register is S 15,
; :ind Jason Greene both oflhe home; a half-sister, Ashley Nicole nine countl of robbery and and for those who sign up on
Marietta; a hair-brother, Kyle Andrew of Waterford; grand- robbery-related charges in the day of the camp, $20. The
::parents, Ruth Ann and Charles Pugh Sr. ofWaverly, W.Va., Mr. Meigs County Common fee includes a T-shirt and
snack. To pre-register, girls are
;: Ond Mrs. Robert Felty of Syracwe, and Charles Salser of Pleas ~ourt..
-fomeroy; great-grandfather, Clarence Sauderman ofWaterford;
Davtd Tob1as May, 38, was to call 985-3738 Monday or
~s.tep-great-grandmoth~r, Lucy Sunderman of 11;1arie~;. great- . charged with aggravated rob- Tuesday, 5 to 9 p.m.
: great grandmother,Avts Sunderman of St. Marys, W.Va., great- bery, robbery, aggravated bur,: pndfather, Oris Hubbard ofSY,tacuse; and many aunts, uncles glary. burglary, grand theft,
. and cousins.
havtng a weapon under dis:: Joint services for Cody Pugh, his father, Chari~ Edward ability, carrying . a con~e~ed
i: Pugh Jr., and his uncle, Eddie Lee Pugh, who also dted m lhe weapon, pos~m~ cnrmn;aJ
MIDDLEPORT
' accident were held today, Thursday, Oct. 11, 2001 at I 0:30 tools and disrup11ng pubhc
Revi~
continues at Wesleyan
·=a.m. at 'the McCiure-Schafer-Lankford Funeral Home, 314 services, at;\Q appeared before
Bible Holiness Church, 75
~Fourth St., Marietta, with Melvin Adams officiating. Burial will . a jury l~t week..
Pearl
St., Middleport, at 7:30
·-G:&gt;llow at Hubbs Cemetety in Pleasants County, W.Va.
The JUry deliberated for
:•
about 20 mj'!utes before find- p.m., , through ~unday. The
Rev. Noel 'scott' is the evan{
~~~- .
~:
"I was shocked to learn that
May was accused of robbing gelist, and the Don Quale
'• :
a small island nation had supe- jane Englisq of High Street in Family will $ing. The Rev.
rior airport security sranda,ids · Pomeroy at gunpoint on July Doug Cox, pastor, invites the
to America;' Strickland said. 8. He was represented by public. ,
~

'

President returns to Pentagon to salute
victims, and those carrying out·campaign

•

ONLY

$6.50

Revival

continues

&amp;o,nPqeA1 '

"Until evety precaution is
. ' which will pmtect American taken to ensure that explosive
passengers from the threat of devices are not placed onboard
•explosive devices
aboard airliners, it will be impossible
for American passengers' to feel
domeStic air carriers."
• · Strickland said the issue was completely safe."
-brought to his attention a few
In September, Strickland
-years ago, when a Meigs voted against an airline bailout
' County woman was detained bill.
"It did too little to provide
·in a Jamaican jail, after a hand•gun was found in her luggage. for increased security in air"It turned out she had bor- ports and on flights," Strickland
rowed the bag liom a relative said. "Airlines need .to do more
.who had placed tlte gun in lhe · to attract passengers if the
'bag a year earlier during a expect to become solvent
'Camping trip, but had forgotten agam.
"One of the key hurdles in
io tell her about it," Strickland
:Said.
getting Americans back into
:: After inqurring why the gun the air is convincing them that
found when the woman it is safe to fly in and out of any
:~ leaving Jamaica to come airport in the U.S.;' Strickland
'home, but not when she orig- said. "The best way to do that
inally left Columbus for lhe is to establish and enforce uni:island, Strickland discovered form safety procedures, includ'that non-carry-on luggage ing the screening of all baggage
checked at the ticket counter at U.S. airports:' .
"I believe lives will be saved
for domestic flighu is · rarely
if
we pass this legislation, and
icreened for weapons or
lives will be lost if we do not."
explosive devices.

...

:was

INSIDE SPORJS
· Previews of Meigs County's
prep .football action this Friday, 81

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The Dally Sentl.,.l • Page A 3

'

Pomeroy attorney Charles H.
Knight .

Lodge meets

Posts transfen

CHESTER -Shade River
Lodge 453 will have its regular stated meeting on Thursday at 7:30p.m. Refreshments
will be served.

POMEROY
Meigs
County Recorder Judy IGng
reported the following transfers of real estate:
S,c ott M. Barrett to Grant
G.
Reynolds, Jody
E.
Reynolds, deed, Salem.
' Barbara L. Bertram to John
M. Ross, deed, Olive.
Lloyd E. Blackwood, Anna
Margaret Blackwood, to jay
Anthony Blackwood, deed, ·
Orange.
Robert C. Hill, Etra Mae
Hill, Billy C. Hill, Ruth Ann
Hill, Shelba J. Foster, Waid
Foster, to Allen .L. Pape, deed,
Village of Racine.
Sherry L. Atherton to Mary
Luong, Carol Lawless, deed,
Olive.
·
Shirley Ables, · deceased, to
Kermit E. Stalnaker, Brenda J.
Stalnaker, deed, Letart.
Richard Russell, deceased,
Edna Russell, deceased, to
Edna Russell, affidavit, Village
of Middleport.
Richard
R.
Cramlet,
deceased, to Richard C.
Cramlet, Sue Ellen Johnson,
Jeffrey L. Cramlet, certificate,
Lebanon.
.
Wayne Bayha to C~rma ].
Trout, deed, Columbia.

Conference set
COOLVILLE - Women
of the Word of Bethel Worship Ceqter will have a fall
conference Saturday from 9
a.m to 4 p.m. at the Coolville
Elementary.
Registration is $12 at the
door and includes lunch. Patty
Spaeth will be guest speaker.
For more information residents may call ·378-9807.

Harvest party
PORTLAND - Portland
Church of the Nazarene will
have a harvest party Saturday
at the church. There will be a
hayride at 4 p.m. Information
is available by c""ing 8431244 or 992-3762.

UFESTYLES
Read
Dear Abby, AS

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-U~

1""
Nan-.42l.
Altll Cool -

AmTect:SBC- 46l.

AIHand 1nc. - • n
AT&amp;T- 19~
Bonk One - 29l.

BU-7\

Bd!E..,.-18~

fll1ogWamer- "~

Faderll~-\

usa-1n

Gamet!- 6t,
Grooral E1ect11c - 37\
GKNI.Y- :Jl.'
Hal1ey Davidson - 47l
Kmatt-7~

Kmgor- 241.

t..ndiEnd-~

Ltd. -12

Chon1ion- 2~

NSC-16\

Charming Shope - 5
City Holding - 9l.
Col- 15~

Clak Hil Fln8ncial - 16

DG-13~
DuPont-39~

OVB-24~

BBT -33~.

Peoples 17\
Pll!na- 8~

Attacks
f•omPipA1
Omar were killed in bombing
strikes on the leader's home in
Kandahar.
Officials said U.S. warplanes
also would begin dropping
cluster munitions - anti-personnel bombs that dispense
snuller bomblets - on mobile
targets such as armored vehicles and troop convoys.
•
The attacks are meant to
help persuade Taliban commanders to switch sides and
either join the anti-Taliban
northern alliance or fight their
former comrades on their

own.
In southern and eastern portions ofAfghanistan, U.S. intelligence opera\ives likely will
tty to incite .a revolt among
!hose elhnic Pashtun leaders
who lost power when the Taliban took over, said Michael
Vicken, a retired Green Beret
and CIA officer in South Asia
who's now with lhe Center for
Strategic and Budgerary
Assessments, a Washington
think tank. Pashtuns are the
largest ethnic group ·in
Mghanistan and are the dominant ethnicity among the 1aliban.
About I ,000 members of the
Army's 1Oth Mountain Division are at an air base in

Deily stock repcJf1s are
the 4 p.m. clooing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, prOIIided
by SmHh Paflnerl at
Advesllnc. of 6 '1ipnh.

Uzbekistan, about 90. miles
from lhe former Soviet republic's border wilh Afghanistan.
Although Uzbek leaders have
said the soldiers at the base
would only participate in
humanitarian or search-and7
rescue operations, the base also
could be a staging area for
combat raids.
The USS IGrty Hawk aircraft carrier also could provide
at least a jumping~off point for
special forces, since it left Japan
for the region without its full
complement of fighter planes.
That clears the decks for use by
lhe Black Hawk or Pave Low
helicopters that carry special
forces on their missions.
President Bush, meanwhile,
was addressing a Pentagon
memorial service Thursday
honoring lhe 189 killed there
and lhe thousands more killed
in New York and Pennsylvania
during the Sept. 11 airliner
hijackings. Defense Secrerary
Donald H. Runufeld also was
to speak at the service.
Rumsfeld made no public
statements Wednesday, and lhe
Pentagon released a brief statement with a few details of
Tuesday's bombing raids.
Those raids were the smallest
since U.S. and British forces
began lhe airstrikes Sunday,
hitting six Afghan targets with
between five and eight
bombers and eight to 10 carrier-based Navy stri~ planes..

The history of National
Fire Prevention Week has it's
roots in the Great Chicago
Fire of Oct. 9, 1871. In all,
fnNnPipA1
more than 250 people died,
$170 million in property 100,000 were left homeless,
structures
were
damage," said Gary C. 17,000
Suhadolnik, director of the destroyed, and 2,000 acres
Ohio Department of Com- burned in 27 hours.
The origin of the fire ryas
merce.
"The number of injuries never been officially deterancl deaths would significant- mined.
. ly decrease if more families
On the 40th anniversary of
knew the dangers of cooking, the fire, the International Fire
electrical and home heating Marshals, Association sponfires; practiced a home fire sored the first National Fire
escape plan; and had working Prevention Day. advocating an
smoke detectors present on annual observation as a way to
keep the public · informed
every floor," he added.
Todd Smith, Pomeroy about the importance of fire
squad chief and member of prevention. l n 1922, National
the Pomeroy Fire Depart- Fire Prevention Week was
ment, said safety presenrations observed on the Sunday
play a vital role in raising through Saturday period in
public awarenoss about .the which October 9th falls.
Last year's campaign, "Fire
dangers of fire and how to
Drills: The Great Bscape," was
prevent it from occurring.
"It is very important that credited with saving 74 lives;
we start teaching chil,d ren half of them under the age of
· about fire prevention at an 12.
early age. The more information they retain, the safer they
will be;· said Smith.
"They remember specific
things tha~ could possibly save
their life or their family's lives
during an emergency:• he
added,
During the presentation,
students were shown various
pieces of firefighting gear and ·--·~!!'!~~
extraction equipment while
touring one of lhe department's fire engines.

Fire

DELinQUEnT REHL ESTHTE PROPERTY nOTICE

Issued licenses

ln. compllon~e with provisions of Section ~721.03 of
POMEROY - Marriage the Revised Code of ihe Stole of Ohio, there will be
licenses have been issued in publlllhed on November 14th oncl November 21, 2001,
Meigs .County Probate Court In this newspaper, a delinquent lond list contolnlnQ the
to:
description of the property as It oppeors on the tax list,
the nome of the penon In whose nome the property Is
listed, the amount of toxes ond penalties due ond
unpaid.
Eoch person charqed with reol property toxes ond
penoltles moy pay the full clmount of toxe1 at the Melvs
County Tr.osurer's Office by 4:00p.m. on November 5,
2001, IOilVOid publication.
To ovoid additional Interest chorqed on December
1sl, a taxpayer moy enter Into o wriHen ovreement with
the county Tr4!osurer to poy one-fifth (1 /S) of the
Delinquent toxes.
Nancv·Porker Campbell
Melvs County Auditor

'

ALL AGES, All TIMES $4.00

'

••

�•

•

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

'lh•der.

The Daily Sentinel

=tr ..... ' ",.

Od•••n. 2001

'

DEAR. ABBY: I just fuiished the
letter from ."Wanting to Be a Star,"
the 12-)'QI-old girl who wano to be
famous instead of being a "no one." I
felt exactly d)e same w.ry when I was
her age. Living my whole life without
making my mark on the world
weighed heavily on my mind My
biggest fear was that I would have the
same sort of ordinary life my parents
had. However, something happened
when I 'MS 15 that fo~r changed
my view of the purpose of my life:
My father died suddenly of a brain
aneurysm.
~ My parents were regubr people.
Mom was a housewife who wlun·Jeered at our school, in Girl Scouts
, ~nd church. She also coached my
sofi:ball team. Dad worked five, sometimes six days a week as a salesman for
a company most people never beam
of. He volunteered his time helping

A. Shawn Lewis
Editor

Ma~~~~glng

l*neK8yHHI
Couboller

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NATIONAL VIEW

Action
It was better to launch strikes
on Taliban than do nothing
• The Atlanta Constitution, on the rillty but neces.~ary strike1:
If the lslamist terrorists who struck Washington and New York
nearly a month ago had hoped to provoke the United States
into a quick and clumsy retaliation, they badly misjodged.After
President Bush spent weeks rounding up allie! around the
world and planning a careful but wide-ranging auault, U.S. and
British forces launched the first military strikes in the war on
terrorism on Sunday at around 12:30 p.m. Eastern time. :..
Still, it may prove impossible to avoid chaos among the civilian population or civilian deaths. It is likely, as well, that U.S.
forces will sustain casualties eventually. In the days ahead, as
special forces are deployed to search for Osama bin Laden and
his minions, the campaign will grow more treacherous and
·
unpredictable.
But the Bush administration was left with no choice but to
pursue military action. After the Taliban was given weeks to
surrender bin Laden and allow inspection of terrorist training
qmps, i~ lead~rship first used debying tactics and, finally, grew
defiant. With the Taliban's refusal to surrender their ally, there
was simply no other reasonable option.
·
Many Americans are understandably anxious that the U.S.
retaliation will lead to another terrorist attack, sparking waves
of terror and reprisal that are all too familiar in the Middle East.
As frightening as that is to contempbte, the sight of Osama bin
Laden on television, apparendy thanking Allah, in a pre-raped
harangue, for the horrific deaths of thousands of Americans on
Sept. 11 , is still more unsetding.
Given bin Laden's pledge to destroy the United States, the
dangers of inaction were greater than the risks of military
action.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today isThursday,Oct.11,the 284th day of2001.There are
81 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On O ct.ll, 1968,Apollo 7, the first manned Apollo mission,
was launched with astronauts Wally Schirra, Donn Fulton Eisele arid R. Walter Cunningham aboard.
On this date:
In 1779, Polish nobleman Casimir Pulaski was killed while
. fighting for American independence during the Revolutionary
War Battle of Savannah, Ga.
In 1811 , the first steam-powered ferryboat, the Juliana, was
put into operation between New York City and Hoboken, NJ.
In 1890, the Daughters of the American Revolution was
founded in Washington, D.C.
In 1942, the World War II Batde of Cape Esperance began in
the Solomons, resulting in an American victory over the Japan-

ese.
In 1958, the lunar probe Pioneer I was bunched; it failed to
go as far out as planned, fell back to Earth, and burned up in
the atmosphere.
In 1962, Pope John XXIII convened the first session of the ·
R oman Catholic Church's 21st Ecumenical Council, also
known as .. Vatican II."

,In 1975, "NBC Saturday Night" made its debut with guest
host George Carlin.
In 1984, space shuttle Challenger asaonaut Kathy Sullivan
became the first American woman to walk in space.
In 1985, Afab-American activist Alex Odeh was killed by a
bomb blast in Santa Ana, Calif.
In 1998, Pope John Paul II decreed the first Jewish-born saint
of the modern era: Edith Stein, a nun k\lled in the gas chambers of Auschwitz.
. Ten years ago: TestifYing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, law professor Anita Hill accused Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas of sexually harassing her; Thomas reappeared before the panel to denounce the proceedings as a
"high-tech lynching." Comedian Red.:! Foxx died in Los
Angeles at age 68.
Five years ago: Roman Catholic Bishop Carlos · Filipe
Xinienes Bela and Jose Ramos-Horta of East Timor won the
Nobel Peace Prize for their pro-democracy efforts ,in troubled
East Timor.
One year ago: Texas Governor George W. Bush and Vice
President AI Gore met in their second debate, in which they
spent the first half politely discussing foreign policy, and the
second half clashing over domestic issues. Americans James J.
Heckman and Daniel L. Mcfadden won the Nobel Memorial
Prize in Economic Sciences.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Ron Leibman is 64. Country singer
Gene Watson is 58. Singer-musician Daryl Hall is 52. Senator
Patty Murray, D-Was h., is 51. Rhythm-and-blues ·musician
Andrew Woolfolk (Earth, Wind·and Fire) is 51. Actress-director
Catlin Adams is 51. Actor David Morse is 48. Country singer
Paulette Carlsof\ is 48. Football player Steve Young is 40.Actress
Joan Cusack is 39. Comedy writer and TV host Michael]. Nelson is 37. Actor Sea11. Patrick Aanery is 36.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Anti-terror tactics fall for short of 'police state'
Morton
Kondr.lcke .
COWMNIST

into custody because his credit card number wa5 stolen by one of the Sept. 11 terrorists. The authorities thought - and the
media speculated - that he had given
them financial support.
He was taken to New York and questioned, then released. Last week, upon
returning home, he said, "Let us be tolerant of each other and worlc together and
be united and learn not to hate. What ·
happened on Sept. 11 has nothing to do
with any religion, and it has nothing to do
with lsbm."
The San Antonio Express-News quoted
Al-Hazmi as saying. "For anybody who
accused me without knowing the facts, I
forgive them because they did not know:•
Similarly, Mohsen Jouini of the ArabAmerican Anti-Discrimination Committee said the attacks required authorities "to
be more vigibnt than ever before."
"If Al-Hazmi was questioned and
inconvenienced, I'm sorry about that," he
said, "but the authorities must do everything possible to find out who committed
these acts:'
This .attitude is mmarked contrast to
that of the director of the Texas ACLU,
who said that Al-Hazmi is "not the first,
and will not be the last, victim of an
aggressive, irrational bw enforcement pattern that's developed."
More than 110,000 Japanese-Americans were held for two years after Pearl
Harbor under an executive o~er signed
by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and
upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Nothing of the kind will ever happen
again. Look around: This is a different
country, and we're all in this fight together.

intrusions, but they. are hung up on the
grand jury issue.
It stands to .reason that if a grand jury
develops information about a plot to carry
out a terrorist act, it should be transmitted
to the FBI fotthWith - with court
app~.
.
In t:lle meantime, there have been intolerable incideno ofhace crimes- including at least two murders - against Sikhs
and Arab-f.mericans, and other innocent
people, such jiS Al-Hazmi, have been
wrongly detained.
.
But the media, civil libertarians and
some' inmiigrant communities have treated such incidents as part of a national program of hate and reprisal. Nothing of the
kind is going on.
From President Bush on down, every
effort has been made to assure ·ArabAmericans and Muslims that "war: has not
been declareq on them.
.AI-Hamzi, a!). immipt fiom Saudi
Ar,lbia, interp~ted the ·message correcdy,
as did the spokesman for the Arab-American Anti-D~rimination Committee in
San Antonio. This cannot be said of Jesse
Jackson or the American Civil Liberties
Union.
(Morton Kondracke is t:ucunve editor
The FBI apparendy took Al-Hamzi RoU Call, 1M ntWSpaptr of Capitol Hill.)

Community Cll1ndar II publllhld .. I he ur.1cl to 110ftprofit group1 wl1hlng to
1nnounce I'IIIIIIIIQI lllld IJIIctal-.. The cMindlr 11 not
dMJQI'IICI to promote ..... or
fUnd-nil..,. ol1ny
llilml
ars prtnlld onlr • .,_ permn. and cannot be QllllrllntMd
to bl prlnl8d a IJMICiftc numbsr or c~~y-.

cr....

DEAR. KEII :V: That's terrific
After 20 years, I am still a secretary.
DEAR. KAREN: You ARE a star advice, and it applies to every career a I would like to urge "W.iting" to sit
- a shining example of your pareno' penon could aspire to - not just down and make a pbn. And she
should follow that pbn until she
Ul)conditi9nal love. Read on:
show biz. Read on:
DEAR. ABBY: I am 16 and have
DEAR. ABBY: I, too, come from reaches her goal - regardless of what
been wurking on my acting and humble beginnings, and like "Wait- anyone says. Breaking into the entertainment industry may be &amp;fficult,
dancing skills for years. It's finally ing" I also had dreams.
beginning to pay off. I have some
I enroUed in my first ballet cbss at but waking up each day to go to a job
advice for "Wanting to Be a Star":
18. I was a " natural" and was chosen you hate is even harder. ADVICE
(1) Don't be intimidated by those to participate in a 10-week program REGRETFUL IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR REGRETFUL: While it
taught by • well-known choreOgraothers, serving on the school board, with more experience.
may
be roo bee for you to have a
(2) Don't expect jobs to come pher. My parents were not pleased.
and always made time for his wife
dance career, it's not too late to vollooking for you; worlt hard and don't Their philosophy was founded in the
and children.
unteer some of your free time to a ·
post-World War II mentality that
My pareno taught me by example give up your dream.
dance company. O r, if the urge to
(3) Always have a backup job yo.; men went to work and women were perform is roo strong for that, you
how tO trust and be trustworthy, to be
kind to strangers and generous to can enjoy while waiting for your homemakers. In an effort to compro- may find a creative outlet in folk
mise, I worlced full time as a secretary dancing or square dancing where the
.
those less fortunate. They worked break.
(4)
And
always
be
yourself.
It's
betand went to college in the evenings. accent on youth and agility is less
hard to give us kids an education and
a strong work ethic. Because of them ter to be a real nobody than a fake Because the dance course was held · than it is in ballet. Trust me - you 'II
I learned that it is more important to sOmebody.You were born an original. during working house, I had no have a ball!
choice but to decline the opportunibe loved by the people you know Don't become a copy.
than adored by the ones·youdon't.Good luck- arid "break a leg!"- ty that was offered to me. I was heartDear Abby is written · by Ptluline
KAREN
THOMPSON, KEU:Y IN DELAWARE
broken.
Phillips and dauglrtaJeanne Phillip~
MARYSVILLE, PENN.

Abigail
Van
-Buren

BY DIANA WUT

ed the immediate dispatch of top American officials, no doubt specially outfitted with fans and glasses of water, to the
government buildings of Saudi Arabia,
O~an and Uzbekistan to coax these
not-quite-stalwarts into granting us permission to fly out of such bases as
Prince Sultan air base, a state-of-the-art
command center the United States finished building for Sau.d i Arabia earlier
this year. ·
And we're only talking permission to
strike 'at Osama bin Laden in
Mgha!listan. For all the rhetorical bell·tqnes sounding fiom the peaks of power
about the crusade -sorry, campaign against global terrorism, the scope of
our target on the ground has seemed to
11arrow before our eyes. It seems to have
swung its sights away from the terror
networks and the nation-states that
sponsor them to zoom in on Osama bin
Laden and AI Qaeda - with even the
Talibjlll; perhaps, now out of the picture.
This il cold comfort to those who
belie:ve that the forces making war on
our way of life are not confined to a single man and his gang.
.
Then again, we could be entering
Phase I of a methodical, long-term plan
to eliminate anti-Western terrorism
" root and branch," as the · saying goes.
Maybe there is a Phase II that will finally, belatedly neutralize Iraq; a bona fide
root and branch of global terror if ever
there was one. After all, the White
Hous7 quickly contradicted reports that

LONG BOTTOM - Hymn
sing, tsllh Full Gospel church,
Long Bonom, Friday, 7 p.m. leaturing Jim Blair and the
Goepelaires.

CHESTER - Shade River
SUNDAY
Lodge 11453, ragul!lr stated
REEDSVILLE- Homecoming
-meeting, Thurs., 7:30 p.m., with at the Reedavllle Fellowehip
mrashments.
Church of
Nazaren1 In
Rledtvldle Sunday. Revival Oct.
r TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW 18-21 with Pete Oeochl, evange. '9053 meeUng, Tuppers Plains llal.
' hall, Thursday, Mrllllng 11 7:30
·p.m. following dinner slll:30 p.m.
RUTLAND - Rutland Church
.,
of Christ homecoming, Sunday.
POMERoY - Athena-Meigs Socill hour 8:30 s.m.. worship
,. Educational SefVIce Canter Gov· 1nd communion, 10:30 1.m., with
amlng Board scheduled for · Earl Slack, former putor; u
'Thursday at 7 p.m. will bl held at epeaker, mUiic by Jane WIH.
'the Meigs County Alternative Carry-In dlnn1r at noon, with
-School, 108 Mechanic St.. 111111. drlnkl and llbll estvlce
.Pomeroy.
PfOVId.td. Slaok to epeak 11 1
p.m. Dwight Icenhower, IOCII
.
FRIDAY
Elvis Pratley Impersonator, to
MIDDLEPORT - Widow's alng gospel music.
.Fellowship,
Friday,
noon,
,polluck, lunch,
Middleport
POMEFIOY - Mtlga County
, Church of Christ.
Humane Society, g~naral rnembsrshlp mestlng, P01111roy Public
POMEROY - Fun, Food and Library, Sunday, 3 p.m.
· Fallowahlp at God's NET. Nutrl·
·Uonal meals, non-vlolanl vldiO
MONDAY
games, computer programa,
LETART - Letart Township
boald games and pool tables are Trullae8, Monclly 5 p.m. at the
available from II to 10:30 p.m. on olllce building.

of

Coping with post-stress disorder in a d!fferent world
Something is different. You can feel
the adrenaline offear and fury subsiding
as a sense of resignation prevails, cooling
heads and quieting the bang ·of runaway
pulses.
The question is, are we resigned to
our cause, or resigned to our fate 1 I
sometimes wonder if, in the end, we
will just get used to a more perilous
world. Let's hope not. Let's hope that it's
just the jitters of a limbo period before
America's course of action becomes
clear.
·
Still, there is something disquieting
about certain developments large and
small. Maybe it's in the sudden emphasis on "evidence" of Osama bin Laden's
role in the attack of Sept. 11 , as though
we were preparing to bring someone to
book, not to batde. Maybe it's in the
necessarily dispassionate, and consequently numbing, process of assessing
the . damage to, say, lower-Manha~
subway lines. Or maybe it's in the jarring, fleeting note of celebration
orchestrated to accompany a security
decision to station National Guard
troops at the nation's airports. Life does
go on. But is there some vital edge lost
in rhe "return to normalcy"?
· It's not just at home where the first
surge of outrage is abatirtg. Already, air
strikes on Afghanistan have been
"pushed back" ~s key regional "allies"
succumb to mass vapors - brought on
.J&gt;y nerves, not nerve gas.This necessitat-

Fridly and Saturday.

SATURDAY
POMEROY
Retum
Jonathan Meigs .Chapter, Daughters of the American Re1101utlon,
Saturday, 10 1.m., Pomeroy
THURSDAY
RACINE - Bethany Darou Ubrsry. June Ashley to apeak.
Sonahina Circle, Thursday, 7
.. p.m., at the churCh. Ann Boao,
POMEROY- Modem Wood- Peggy Hill have program, men of America, Burlingham,
Saturday, 5:30 p.m. Hailowesn
refreshments.
themad party. Come costumed,
POMEROY - Praceptor Beta prizes. Cider, donuts 1nd pizza
'Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi lumilhld. Take covered dish.
-Sorority, Thursday night, Lutheran Church. Program by Hsl
CHESHIRE - Reunion of
t Knaen on herbs. Hostesses, deecendants of Val and Audllh
:Jean Powell, Roes Sisson. and Well S1turday, Kyger Creak
.Vera Crow. ·
Clubhoues, noon polluck.

NEWS AND NOTES

WEST'S VIEW

Jordan's King Abdullah said that George
W. Bush personally assured him the
United States wouldn't strike ·Iraq. Even
so, a disappointing air of plausibility to
this notion lingers. ·
But what is "terrorism"? This may
sound like a preposterous question, but
there are sanity~defYing discussions
underway - so far largely confined to
the t\rab world - in search of a new
meaning. Abdelouhed Belkaziz, head of
the world's largest Muslim organization,
the Saudi-based Organization of Islamic Conference, has offered to devise a
working definition of terrorism that
includes suicide attacks on the United
States, but excludes suicide attacks on
Israel - which, he says, constitute
"national resistance." At an Arab-Muslim conference in Beirut this week,
"activists" and clerics, a~ong them the
leaders of Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah,
went further still, defining the United
States itself as a "sponsor of terrorism"
for its support of Israel.
It's hard to say what success so
obscene · a movement to corrupt
thought and language might actually
enjoy. It shows, however, particularly as
those first stabbirtg pains fiom the attack
begin to dull, that there is an urgent
need to keep our resolve firm and sharp,
hone&lt;) by both a strategic and moral
clarity.
(Diana l-ltst is a·columnist and editorial
writer for The Washington Times. She can be
contacted via dianawwattglobal.llet.)

Lydia Coundl
meets at church
('.

POMEROY - Bradford
· Church of Christ Lydia
·Council met recently at the
' church with Paula Pickens
'and Diane Maxwell as host- esses.

Pickens opened the meeting
_.with prayer requests, with
. prayer being given by Sherry
Shamblin. Officers' reports
, were given. Thank you note
..,was read from Jackie Reed for
the September sunshine bag.
'Sunshine bags .for October
- will go to Vera Richardson,
' Douglas Shamblin, Jodi Saun. ,ders and Suzie will.
' Marjorie Davis and Pickens
';will/Ike c2re of communion
~

for October and November.
Devotions by Pickens dealt
with prayer· for the nation.
Maxwell gave scripture from
Timothy and Chronicles and ·
read a poem, "In America and
Free" and the group sang
"God Bless America."
Members were·asked to take
finger foods to the November
meeting. Shamblin will have
devotions.
Pickens ·had the dosing
prayer and refreshments were
served to Tracy and Amber
Davidson, Suzie, Darren and
Christi Will, Charlotte VanMeter, Diane Maxwell, Paula
Pickens, · Sherry Shambhn ,
Madeline Painter, C• rry
Lightfoot, Cherie and Catdin
Williamson.

PEOPLE
Christopher vices
and other information
aimed to improve the lives of
Reeve

WASHINGTON (AP) _.
: Christopher Reeve accepted
" $2 million in federal funds to
• establish
an
education
. resource center for _people
, with paralysis and the1r families.
The Christopher and Dana
· Reeve Paralysis Resource
·· Center will provide educationa! m~terials, referral ser-

'

'

LOCAL EVENTS

A San Antonio radiologist, Dr. Al-Badr
Al-Hazmi, 'MS held incommunicado as a
material wimess for two weeks by the federal government after the Sept 11 terrorist attacks. Did he compbin that America
is a "police sbte?"
No, but the Rev. Jesse Jackson did. And
some civil libertarians and. media oudets
have compared the government's detention of some 500 persons since Sept. 11
with the World War II internment of
Japanese-Americans.
·It's time to get real. The country is
under attack from a worldwide terrorist
networlc that authorities must prevent
from killing thousanqs of other people.
There must be a11 upgraded security
response, and with !hat some mistaken
detentions are inevitable. Some ethnic
profiling (offici2.1 or not) .will occur, and
the FBI must question persons in ArabAmetican and Islamic communities.
The government temporarily needs
broader authority to wiretap phones,
monitor computers, track and detain
immigrants, conaol the nation's borders
and obtain intelligence - even from
secret grand jury proceedings.
The Bush administration undoubtedly
went too far with io initial counterterrorist proposal to CongresS, but .its agreement
to alter the legislation proves that the government is not out to twist the Constitution out of shape.
After 'bipartisa.n compbints, Reps. Jim
Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., and John Conyen, D-Mich., worked out a compromise
that woUld. sunset new provisions at two
years and limit detention of immigrano
for seven days before formal charges must
be leveled.
The Senate and the White Howe are
worid.ng on a package that relies on court
supervision of most new government

'lhund.y. CktHer 11. 1101

Craving for fame disappears after girl~ life _c~anges focus

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

tue n~bj«t to ftiUU., . - . . , k

._The_o_any_Se_ntm_·e_l

5 • _.,.,.,

111 Court at., Pomeror, 0111o
7~·21M• Fu: 812-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

----=-By the Bend

Page AS

the more than 2 million
Americans with paralysis.
"One of the . gre&gt;test fears
that people with disabilities
have is that we will be
pushed to the margins of
society," said Reeve, star of
the "Superman" movies who
1 d fr
th
h b
as een para ~ze
om e
neck down smce a horseriding accident in 1995. .,.

i
•I
'

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

ab

Middleport
Uterary aub·

made the country feel united, Michael Y. Hammon of Charlotte Grant.
even though his health, Glouster. Shirley Thcker of
already weakened by the Glouster is a great-grand- .
U giVeS .
polio that wasted his legs, mother.
gradually deteriorated. He of
1..
course died In April 1945 as
8 D Na!11rH
tc;
the war was winding down
on both fronts. But the city of
POMEROY - A report
Washington had come out of CHESTER _ A letter on school supplies taken to
the war changed forever, said fiom the state councilor of the Meigs County Cooperathe author.
Ohio noting Erma Cleland's tive Parish was given at a
Leah Ord, president, led in commission as deputy of recent meeting of the Rock
the dub collect, and thanked Chester Council323 was read Springs Better Health Club.
Hunnel and Sara Owen for at a recent meeting of the
Hosted by Dorothy Jeffers
at her home, the meeting was
work ln planning the pro- council.
gram, and Jeanne Bowen for
Gary Holter presided at' the conducted by 'Barbara Fry,
creating the program book- session, which opened in rit- who led ·in the Lord's Prayer
lets.
ualistic form with the pledge and the pledge to the flag. For
· Ord noted that the year's to the American and Christ- roll call hy Nancy Morris,
program will Include hosting . ian flags, scripture, the Lord's members responded with
the author Irene Brand at a prayer in unison, and singing things for which they are
meeting. Martha Hoover and of the national anthem.
thankful.
G~ Petrin gave the tre.asurer
Officers' reports were
Fry gave devotions on the
given, and the ways and theme "Autumn Days," offiand secretaryUs reports.
Members answered roll call means announced an auction cers' reports were given, and
by :telling of parents' lessons to be held at the next meet- the sick committee reported.
that welong remembered. mg.
·
Pbns were made to take sup·~
Rcifreshments were served by
It was noted that Ella plies to the October meeting
the hostess. The next meeting Osborne was injured in a fall. to be given to the Pomeroy
will be on Oct. 17 at the A thank you card was read Homeless Shelter..
.
Pomeroy Library.
from Cleland, along with a . A P"?grarn on osteoporosiS
le!ler from the restoration of :-vas g1ven ~y ~o~m a~d
. the courthouse committee mcl~~ed readings, Silent disasking for help with a fund ~ase b~ I?,orothy Jeffers,
raising project. The commit- . Prevention.. . by Frances
tee will hold a dinner at the Goeglem;.. Dtagno~IS and
Senior Citizens Center on Treatment by Phyllu SkinNov. 13.
ner, "Facts about ~rthritis". by ,
Mary Jo Barringer read Barbara Fry; a~d Prevention
"Things the Dog Should and Tre~trnent by Morm ...
Remember."
Wmmn~ a contest presentOthers attending were Julie ed by Skinner -:vas Fry :l!ld
Curtis, Ruth Smith, Thelma Goeglem. Fry Will be ~ostess ·
White, lnzy Newell, Sandy for the October meeting at
White, Jo Ann Ritchie, her home wtth Jeffers to. have
Deloris Wolfe, Mary Holter, th~ program, ~nd Morns t.he
Shirley Beegle, Laura Nice, contest. Me~tmg closed w1th
Helen Wolf, Jean Welsh, the benediction. RefreshGoldie frederick, · Esther menu were served. }1m Fry
Smith, Opal Hollon and 'MS a guest.
HIY•
MIDDLEPORT - April
L. Milhoan and Michael
Hammon of . Middleport
announce the birth of a
daughter, Jennifer Lynn
Hammon, born Sept. 11. at
the O'Ble.ness Memorial
Hospital in Athens.
Grandparents of the infant
are Mikel . and Bonnie Milhoan of Long Bottom, Cathy
Hammon of Middleport, and

a Ia

•

school s:lies
pa
·

d

· MIDDLEPORT
"Washington Goes to War" by
David Brinkley was reviewed
by Faye Wallace at WI week's
meeting held at the home of
Frankie Hunnell.
~ce described·the book
as the true story of the
almost-overnight transformation of the sleepy, rather
provincial capital ofWashington D.C., into a dynamic
world center of action and
power With ~e coming of
World.War II.
She said that the author was
a White House correspondent
In the 1950s, and later
appeared in everyone's living
room with the HuntleyBrinkle}r newscasts.
For this book, he talked to
many who lived through the
days of preparation for and
living lhr:;ough the war.
Brinkley began the account
by telling of the dislike many
In Washington had for
Franklin Roosevelt. His New
Deal' programs had been
pushed through by sheer
force of will. Pacifist groups
accused him of pushing the
nation toward war. Meanwhile, the Imperial Japanese
and Hider's troops were
relendessly invading new territories. Tile attack on Pearl
Harbor catapulted the country into war.
·Wallace told how Roosevelt ordered office buildings
to be built along the Mall on
a temporary basis for the
defense agencies. Fortunately,
there was a great pool of both
men to serve in the military
and women to fill In as office
worlcers and factory laborers.
The government decided
to build a new war department building so enormous it
would have to be built across
the Potomac. This mammoth
five-sided maze of corridors
and offices 'came to be known
as the Pentagon, and was finished by early 1943.
Walbce spoke of her firsthand experiences as a federal_--------------~------~~-------~
government worker, a ~-girl,

comllllssion

NeW a....L·al

DGELS

CHRPET

as they
then
called.from
one
of
manywere
young
women
all over the country
·
to fill needed jobs In
ington during the war.
She spoke of their dormitory living quarters near the
Pentagon, of the hard work
that they did during
hours, but also of the socliaiJ·
life that they . enjoyed
going to parties and dattce1s I
for the military men,
of them on their way oveor- 1
· seas. ·
In a strange twist of fate,
Wallace's son Alan would be
outside the Pentagon near
where the airliner crashed
into the building at the time
of the recent terrorist attack.
In concluding her review,
Wallace spoke of the enormous cooperation in Washington and the entire country
during
shortages,
rationing, and worry
loved ones overseas lighting.
. Through it all, Roosevelt, :
with his flair for lea&lt;lership, ·

's 'Gireenllo
. us~e·

Woth..ol

1'1!.-~~-.-.'
UIII'UI:Jl

c.·e~·Ar
Jil,.l,ll;.
,A V
I

MA"'NNG
1
Dn

OS:~ I=

All D-a\t,
a ....... urd-a\t,
ov. . vv. . . ber 13, 2001
""'J vc=l v
""'J
"Homemade apple butter made the old-fashioned way"

• Petting Zoo

(Some slrNdy mat» up)

• Free Hay Maze
• Amish Cheese, Jams &amp;
Jellies
• Stoneware Pottery
Spoon Jars .

··

• Apples &amp; Cider
• 2 Aoor Craft Sections
(Check

U. out for Christmas Gifts)

• Free hayride every Friday,
Saturday to the "Pumpkin Patch:
and "Spooky Trail"

(moallocallol"n• available)

~====~~~~~~~~~--~~~--J

•

�•

P.- A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

..

•

Thursday, Oct 11,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-'The Daily Sentinel

Eanvax removal without injury

•

(Note: To p4r•phrast M•rk
Twain, "tk II&amp;'&gt; of my dtmist as
""thor of rk Family Mrdid"" column has hem pmnafwrt. "Though
my health pm.mts mr .from amtinoing my ttiJChing lfSJlOtiSibilities, 1
am ablr to continue to write. Kup
those questions coming!)
Question: I have a terrible
problem with wax buildup in
my .
ean. Everyone says that I
shouldn't use Q-tips, bobby
pms or
, similar things to dig in my
ears, but what can I do to get
rid
of,the wax?
.
Answer: Earwax 1s referred
to by those of us. in the medical
professions as cerumen, but
everyone knows what that
brown
"stuff" looks like. It is produced by specialized oil glands
within the skin lining the
outer segment of the ear canals.
As

John C. Wc;&gt;lf,
APociate Plafc 11or

of family Medicine

wax bloc king their ears.

becoming blocked by wax, a
condition we doctors call
impacted cerumen (gosh, but
we do love those important
sounding terms!). This can
occur because of a high rate of
cerumen
production
or
because it becomes hard and
doesn't migrate out of the
canal. People of aU ages can
have either problem; however,
childr:rn more often have an
know as ..swimmer's ear."
overproduction of wax and
Some individuals have diffi- older individuals are more likeculty with their ear canals ly to have trouble with hard

.New pastor

Glenn Rowe is the new pastor at Ash Street Church In Middleport. Originally from Kentucky, he and his wife, linda •. now live
In Vinton. He has served as a pastor for 10 years In Kentucky,
Ohio and West Virginia. The Rowes have .three children and
two grandchildren.

PEO C
P LE IN
THE NEWS
11naWesson
~ KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)

- Fame isn't fleeting enough
(br "Survivor 2" winner Tina
Wesson.

.A blocked ear canal is a
health com:em for several reasons.The blockage can produce
an annoying or uncomfortable
sensation. Impacted cerumen
also makes it mor:r likely that
smaU amount:s of water will be
ti-apped within· the ear canal,
and thereby, cause irritation.
One of the most common but
subde disorders is a decrease in
hearing. A blocked ear canal
produces the same degr:re of
hearing loss as is produced by

plugging your ear with your
finger. Fortunately this, as
opposed to other causes of
hearing deficit, is easily corr:rcted.
So, how should you get the
wax out of your ears since you
shouldn't "dig" in them with
fingers or objects? A spray of
water fiom an •ear syringe" ·is
the best choice. The5e simple
and inexpensive devices are
available at any drug store. A
gentle stream of body temperatur:r water should be dir:rcted
down the ear canal. UsuaUy six
ounces or so wiU clean out
most "blocked" ear canals. It
may be necessary, if the wax is
particularly hard and dry, to
soften it overnight with the
application of a few drops of
mineral oil or a speciaUy formulated wax-softening product
before irrigation, You should
see your family doctor or ·an
ENT specialist if the blockage
is not removed after two

,....

CAPE CANAVERAL,
NASA is about
Fla. (AP) - When a Russto jump on the
ian spaceship flew to the
space-for-sale
international space station
last spring, a millionaire
bandwagon.
tourist wasn't the only
within the agency before
commercial payll)ad.
businessman
The Russians also deliv- California
ered a crispy-crust salami Dennis Tito became the
pizza on behalf of Pizza world's first paying space
Hut. And a pair ·of talking tourist, thanks to the Ruspicture frames personally sians.
dedicated to the rwo dads ......,
on board, courtesy of
RadioShack. And a March
Mt. Hennon
2001 issue of Popular
Un!ted Brethren in
Mechanics •. compliments of
the magazine.
Now, NASA is about to
jump on the space-for-sale
bandwag6n:.
Evangelist '
A draft document issued
(of North caroUna)
by NASA is circulating
Specl.al Singing Nightly
among space-exploration
Everyone Welcome
advocacy groups and industry
insiders .
Titled The chureh Is located on
Wickham Road, just oft
"Enhanced Str~tegy for the
Texas Road, In the Texas
Development of Space
Community
Commerce," the report
Robert Sanders,
proposes what would have
Pastor
been anathema to many -

_____.

could send California to the
forefront of fisheries management. But the regulations also mean that at least
in the short term, fishermen
and consumers will have to
cope with g~tting fewer
fish .
One measure, the Marine
Life Management Act, aims
to end the pattern of overfishing one-~ species after
another by making sustainability a primary goal. The
other, the Marine Life Protection Act, will set llP an
unprecedented string of nofishing zones along the California coast to · prOtect
marine ecosystems.
"This is· a new way of
doing business," said John
Ugoretz, a marine biologist
with the state Department
of Fish and Game. "We are
being watched quite closely
by the rest of the country
and tho rest of the world."

...

__
• ,......,,ur .••
. -...... ..
.........
-Home Plan.

...

• IIWIIW.....,

whether requiring a contractor to rip up work on a new 9,000- through a roof vent and ignited it, officials said.
.
foot runway will delay its opening in June.
"This was a strike out at w." Detective Bob Mack said. "They ·
The dry has ordered Anthony AUega Inc. to tear up work on did it deliberate."
" &amp;nor Pl"""" """" T_..... Slaw
..
the runway at Cleveland Hopkins lntematiOI)al Airport because
Richbnd County Commissioners said the 6re early Thesday
crushed slag is poUuting a nearby stream.
caused smoke damage to the entir:r building and more sewoeR
Cleveland Port Control Dir:rctor Reuben Sheperd in a letter damage to two rooms where the gasoline had been poured.
told company President John Allega that the ciry and the Ohio
"Fortunately, no r:rcords were destroyed that could not be
=
Environmental
Protection
Agency
ar:r
convinced
the
slag
is
the
r:rplacec!," Commissioner Bob Ashbrook said.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
percent.
Showers wer:r for:rcast tor
Friday night... Partly cloudy source of a milky white, sulfuric runoff that has·entered Abram
the r:rgion tonight and Friday, with a chance of showers. Cr:rek and the Rocky River.
Shepard's letter demands that the slag be r:rplaced with cleaner
the National Weather Service Lows in the mid 50s.
•
·
material.
SPRINGFIElD (AP) - Investigaton are trying to determine
.12id.
,
Extended forecast:
the cause of an apartment fire that killed two childr:rn.
4 Lows tonight wiU be in the
Saturday... Mosdy
cloudy
'
Eight-month old Na'shee Wallace and 20-month-old Shane
50s.
with a chance of showers.
Mild temperatures wiU con- Windy. Highs in the mid 70s.
Wallace Jr. died Wednesday in the fire at their home, authorities
.
.
CANTON (AP) -A doctor believes a gray membrane cav- said.
tinue into the weekend. Highs
Saturday night ... Rain likely.
ering a 47-year-old patient's throat points to diphtheria, a bacte1Wo adults who lived with the childr:rn in the two-story unit
on Friday wiU be in the mid to Lows in the lower 50s.
rial
infection
that
has
almost
disappeared
fiom
the
United
States.
at Sherman Court Apartments in Springfield were not homt
upper 60S and, on Saturday, in
Sunday... Rain .likely; mainly
"It
was
the
wont
thing
you
ever
Dr.
William
Hoppes
said.
the upper 60s to mid-70s.
during the day. Highs in the
when the 6re occurred. The relationship of the adults to the chilurve only seen it in pictures."
. Sunset tonight wiU be at upper 60s.
drm was not immediately known, authorities said.
~
The
Plain
Township
man,
whose
name
has
not
been
released,
6:58, and sunrise on Friday is
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Assistant File ChiefNick Heimlich said an adult r:rlative WliS in
•. at 7:39 a.m.
Lows in the upper 40s and has been hospitali2ed in Aultman Hospital since last Thursday. He c~ of watching the childr:rn, but Heimlich didn't know the
has tested negative for diphtheria, but was alr:rady on antibiotics, identity of that person or where the r:rlative was when the 6re
~
Weather forecast:
highs 61 to 66.
',' Tonight ... Showers likely.
Tuesday... Partly
cloudy. officials said.
started.
If
the
man
has
the
disease,
it
would
only
be
the
country's
third
: Lows ·in the upper 50s. South .Lows 35 to 40 and highs in the
diphtheria case th4 year. Hoppes said he expects his patient to
: wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of IQwer 60s.
.
.rain 60 percent.
.
Werlnesday... Partly cloudy. fuDy recover.
Friday... Showers · likely. Lows 35 to 40 and highs in the
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mayoral candidate jarie CampbeD
. Highs near 70. South wind 5 upper 60s.
·
. took a shot at opponent Raymond Pierce's political inexperience
during a televised debate Wednesday night at Cleveland State
!to 10 mph. Chance of rain 60
~INCINNATI (AP) -A judge has_denied a requ_est to dis- University.
,,:~----.........:---------- rruss gross abwe of a corpse charges agamst a pathologut accused Asked whether she would vote for Pierce if she were not runof letting another ~ into .the Hamilton County morgue to ning. Campbell praised Pierce's energy and enthwiasm, but
take photos of autopsied bodies.
.
added, "The mayor of Cleveland is not the place for on-the-job
A lawyer for former deputy co~ner.Jonathan Tobw tt&gt;d asked training."
:~ CLEVELAND (AP) -After removing.George Forbes as presPierce's expecience as
appointee in the C5nton administra~ ident of the NAACP's Cleveland chapter, the national organiza- judge No~~ Nadel 0 f H~ton Coun~ &lt;;:ommon Pleas
Court
to
disnuss
the
ch~rges
agam_st
Tobw.
Tobt_as
lawyer
told
the
tion
W2S
not
equivalent
to
being an elected official, Campbell
~: lion is now removing nine members of its executive board.
judge that th_e prosecutton had failed to prove 111 case.
.
said.
:;: The national leaders said the dismissals result fiom a failure to
Nadel derued the request Wednesday but reserved the nght to
Pierce responded by saying he would bring innOYation to the
·::complete a training course caUed !'Executive Leadership Mandare-examine the issue at the end of trial, which also involves pho- fli
" tory Certification 'Thlining."
0
tognpher Thomas Condon.
.
ce.
,! The Baltimore-based national organization of the _J:'lational Condon, 29, is accused of illegaUy pho!Qgnphing 14 bodies in
•rAssociation for the Advancement of Colored People removed the Hamilton County morgue 6-om Auawt 2000 throuah
;i:Forbes as chapter president last month becawe he failed to attend ary, positioning them with Qbjects to create what be called art
AKRON (AP) - A man pleaded guilty to involuntary
':· the coune.
photography Images. Tobias, 31, is accwed of allowing Condon
· Forbes said he already had taken the coune once and could not
mintlaughter
Wedneaday in the lhaking death of his 8-montbaccess to the morgue to take the photos.
take it aa;ain. because he was undergoing .radiation therapy for
old son.
Zebdee McDoweU, 39, also pleaded guilty in Summit County
prostlte cancer.
Common Plea Court to child endangering.
MANSFIELD (AP) -A fire at the Richland County sherifF's · Sentencing is scheduled fo~ N~- S. ~cDoweU could be send ctt. bu
5tarted by someone who poured """'line tenced to three to I 0 yrars tn pr110n m the death of his son,
..-Jaicynth, said Prosecutor Sherri Bevan Walsh.
.
,::' CLEVELAND (AP) ~ City and airport officials won't say ete ve reau was

·Possible diplatlwria piobed
uw;·

M17oral candidates square off

Judge denies dismissal request

.

"'
~.

Chapter drops board membe1s

an

•

JanU-

:f/Jbc~ lrt••l(

:·•,!Advocates criticize proposed worker compensation rules
,

With
Picture

With Much

Appreciation

•: WASHINGTON (AP) ; Nuclear weapons workers are
'l complaining that rules pro:~ posed by the Bush adminis;~ tration to faCilitate payment
:: of workers' compensation for
:: on-the-job illnesses would do
::·more harm than good.
: ~ "Instead of setting up pro:1· cedures that will actually
:' make it easier for these work:[·I ers to file their workman's
;, camp claims the DOE has
proposed rul~s that just set up
•~ another
••
layer of bureaucracy,
, Gaylon Hanson, an employee
: at the Idaho· National Engi:1neering and Environ111ental
: Lab, said at a Department of
1
:1 Energy hearing Wedn,sday.

'I

Putor John Smith
. . With Much Appreciation

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The administration said the file claims under state workrules were designed to help ers' compensation systems,
compensate thousands of which would reverse a
workers, or their survivors, decades-old policy in which
for exposure to toxic sub- the
agency
aggressively
stances at Energy Depart- fought such claims.
ment facilities run by conThe Energy Department is
· supposed to use independent
tractors.
Those ,workers were not medical panels to lielp detercompensated under legisla- mine whether workers' sicklion passed last year that pro- nesses resulted from their
vides medi~al care and jobs. The proposal says claims
$150,000 to sick Cold War- will be forwarded to the panera nuclear weapons workers els only if they meet criteria
exposed to cancer-causing established by state workers'
radiation or silica and berylli- compensation laws, which
urn. Those two metals cause vary and often have high burlung diseases.
den's of proof and strict
Congress told the Energy statutes oflimitations.
Department to help workers
jeanne Cisco, a worker at

,- - - - - - - -

:Information
,,it security
:·concerns
! spur hiring
•I~

the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Piketon,
Ohio, says the department's
proposal is an indication that
it's business as usual.
"The proposed physician
rule angers me but certainly
doesn't surprise me," she said.
"Since I worked at the plant
for 27 years, I am well aware
of the self-regulating practices of the Department of
Energy and its contractors."

n.shoe Place
219 N. Second

is accepting patients at his
following offices:

.

:1 CLEVELAND, (AP)
:• TRW Inc. has been advertis:! ing for information systems
:1' ~pecialists nationwide follow.
·'',, ·ing last month's terronst
l attacks.
·: Jay McCaffrey. a spokesman
: for Cleveland-based TRW,
: said there has been increased
'
: interest in the company s
t computer systems services,
;: especially those dealing with
' information security.
'
t'

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Point Pleasant, WV

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(Mmulilyt &amp; 'Iius4y1)

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"Ther:r were a lot of people involved
in the retooling of this bill .... It is the
product of many inter:rsts," she said.

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

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·Runway work set for tear-up

MORE1V,
'LESS MONEY.

- Prohibits citizens fiom carrying
concealed weapons where alcohol is
sold, except in r:rstaurants whose income
fiom food exceeds 60 petcent. Ban in
those r:rstaurants would be off-limits to
those carrying weapons.
Womer Benjamin, an Aurora Republisaid she worked with gun-rights and
police groups and others to build a con-

Aparll1te11l• bl•ze ldls 2

REVNAL

Edgar

ages.

Rain to last into the weekend

, . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _

FISHING TIME "-

_,....... ,.

ties.
- AUows law-enforcement and corrections officers who ar:r off-duty to
carry weapons in bars, provided the officers ar:r not drinking alcoholic bever-

__

1

Chavez of Qualy Pak Inc.,
fills a container of sardines
with water In San Pedro,
Calif. The fishing industry in
the Los Angeles•Harbor has
currently 22 boats based in
its water, far from the days
when a fleet of •300 boats
routinely came home heavy
with fish. (AP)

COLUMBUS (AP) -A retooled bill original bill. For Ohioans who have
that would aUow most Ohioans to carry lived in the state at least four yrars, applihidden guns still faced opposition cants would not have to undergo elecWednesday, despite attempts by its back- tronic fingerprint checks if a sheriff or
ers to make it more attractive to those police chief gave the applicant a certifiwho- have criticized the idea.
cate of identiry.
Residents who have lived in the state
Rep. Ann Woiner Benjamin, chairwoman of ,the House Civil and Com- less than four years would have to submit
mercial Law subcommittee that is hold- to the ~lectronic fingerprinting. AU
ing hearings on the bill, introduced a applicants would be subject to a criminal
substitute venion. The subcommittee . background check.
Among other changes, the substitute
will have at least one more hearing
befor:r sending it to the full committee. bill:
Speaker Larry Howeholder, a Glen- Waives the $35 permit fee and
ford Republican, said the full House firearms training certification for most
likely would vote · on the bill, but he retired law-enforcement and corr:rctions
declined to say when that would occur. officers.
The substitute bill makes it easier for
- Prohibits the carrying of concealed
some to apply for a permit than the weapons in public colleges and universi-

·oa.a•~••••
..,

(SFamily MedicineS is a
weekly column. To submit
questions, write to John C.
Wolf, D.O., at PO. Box 110,
Athens, Ohio 45701 .)

NASA venturing
into new frontier

Fishermen worry about
conservation measures
LOS ANGELES (AP) The commercial fishermen
on the docks at San Pedro
aren't hauling in the catches
they used to.
The 22 boats based there
still bring in tons of sardines, mackerel and squid.
But Cliff Harvey, who grew
up around the harbor and
worked there for most of
hi$ 81 years, remembers the
days when a· fleet of 300
boats routinely came home
heavy with tuna, barracuda,
yellowtail and Mexican sea
bass.
' .
Many commercial• fishermen attribute the d~amatic
drop-off to. regulations that
keep them from going after
marihe $p~ci~s' 1 they know
have rebounded. ·
"Everybody's trying to
run us out ,of business, but
we fed the world," fishing
boat captain Sal Russo said
as his crew unloaded a 65, ton catch of sardines.
Harvey, who has owned a
seafood proces~ing and distributing company since
1946, agreed that fishermen
are frustrated by the ~·guesswork" that goes into governll!ent fisheries manageinent. But he sees a bigger
problem.
"Most of it is the fish just
not being there," he said.
"Eventually, we'll end up
with · just fish farms. It's a
case of tqo many people,
and the ocean is the same
size."
·
California is trying to
recover from the collapse of
its rockfish and abalone
fisheries, and prevent future
problems by implementing
a pair of sweeping, conservation-minded measures
passed by the Legislature in
1998.
State officials, environmentalists and some fishermen say the new rules

'

attempts, the second of which
is pr:rceded by an attempt to
soften the wax.
And, I almost forgot an
important point. You shouldn't
use cotton-tipped applicators
to clean inside your ear canals
because there is some risk of
irritlting the skin there or of
irritlting the !'ardrum itself.
The m&lt;;~&lt;t common complication, however, is that the applicator acts as a "ramrod" and
pU!hes hardened bits of wax
further into the ear, thereby
converting it into. a s!&gt;lld
"chunk" that can't faU out on
its own. Often this type of
.cerumen impaction can't be
corr:rcted without a doctor
visit.

n:...411J" Ckbl••n. 2111

Opposition to concealed weapons bill remains

Ohio weather
Frtday, Oct. 12

the wax is produced, it slowly migrates outward. Under
ideal
conditions, as the wax
migrates outward toward the
opening of
the ear canal, it dries and
Oakes away without ever producing a
·
buildup.
Many people be5eve cerumen has no value. These folks
may think its an evolutionary
oddiry, 5ke the appendix, that
appears to serve no useful function for us humans. WeU, this
just isn't the case. Cerumen
coats and waterproofS the outer
portion of the ear canal. It also
has antibacterial properties.
Because of these quilities, its
presence significantly reduces
the risk of infection within the
ear canal - wliat we doctors
caU otitis ex:tema or you may

PageA7

I

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••

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Hunkane survivors back houae

WASHINGTON (AP) - The White
House is expressing initial opposition to
Senate legislation that would explicitly
aUow limited, federally financed stem cell
.-arch fur the lint time.
The Senate Appropriations Commiltee
planned to vote Thursday on ·a routine
spending bill that includes the provi&lt;inn. A
subcommittee of that panel approved the
overall measure Wednesday.
The language. written by Sen. Arlen
Specter, R-Pa., would let President Bush
follow through on his proposal to restrict
rhe research to the 64 stem cell lines that he
said already exist.
.
It also would permit him to go further, as
long as the embryos used for rhe research
otherwise would be destroyed and permission for their use had been granted by the
people whose fertility lreaanents created

McCiellaJt said the White Howe prefen a
House ~rsion of the measu~ which
makes no change to current bw.
The House plans to vote Thursday on its
version of the spending biD.
Specter's language was included in a
measure providing $123.1 billion for federal edUcation, labor and healrh programs fur
rhe 6scal year that began I 0 days ago. The
provision is supported by Sen. Tom Harkin,
D-IOM, who chairs the Senate Appropriations subcommittee that approved the legislation.
Some lawmakers and othen believe
Rush went toO tar in allowing the research,
while orhen felt the presidents plan was
too restrictive.E~n befOre last monrh's terrorist attacks put the stem cell issue onto
Washington's hack burners, h~. neirher side sensed it had rhe votes to fOrce
rhem.
changes in Bush's policy.
1
White House spokesman Scott McClelAfter weeks of deliberation, Bush
lan said Bush would stand by his earlier announced in August that he would permit
decision on stem cell research policy. research only on stem ceU lines that he said
'

Pelosi wins race for whip

Finn ~lis mini·bicydes·

111und.y. Ol:tUer n. 2001

Christie's got the book from the non-Mormon grandchildren
of a New York book collector who bought it at an auction in
1930, said Chris Coover, senior specialist in books and manuscripts at Christie's. The auction is scheduled for Oct. 29 in
New York.

Rescuers seek q~issing hiker
CRAWFORD NOTCH, N.H. (AP) - Rescuers. fought
mountain snow drifts up to 5 feet while searching for a missing
man who set off on a hike wearing only shorts.
Mark Friedman, 46, of Mount Kisco, N.Y., hasn't be.e n seen
or heard from since he hiked out Tuesday into New Hampshire's White Mountains, officials said. Overnight temperatures
dropped below freezing.
.
"I don't know what he had in his pack, but he left in shorts;'
said Fish and Game Col. Ron Alie. "That's about 15 miles, a
two-day trip for somebody in good condition and with. good
weather conditions."
Alie said well-prepared hikers in the mountains who might
have passed Friedman had not reported seeing him.

WASHINGTON (AP) -A California company is recalling
about 95,000 "Runt" brand mini-bicycles because they don't
have brakes or chain guards that keep fingen, toes and clothing
away from rhe gears.
Wysi:o Inc., of Baldwiri Park, Calif., has not received any
reports of incidents or injuries, the Consumer Product Safety
. Commission said Wednesday. Federal rules requires brakes and
chain guards on this type of bicycle.
The mini-bicycles are about 24 inches long and 26 inches
high with 6-inch wheels. They have adjustable seats and hanNEW YORK (AP) - Democratic mayoral hopefuls Mark
dleban. The bicycles are red, blue, black or chrome in color
Green and Fernando Ferrer made last-minute appeals to voters
wirh black seats and handle grips.
as they headed into New York City's fint mayoral runoff in 24
The word "RUNT" and the Runt logo of a dog's face are on
years, a race that took a drastic shift after the terrorist attacks.
the front of the steering column.
Polls indicated a virtu~ dead heat between Green, the city's
public advocate, and Ferrer, the Bronx borough president. The
winner advances to the November election to take on billionaire
media magnate Michael Bloomberg in the rae~ ta replace
WASHINGTON (AP) - Supreme Court justices used the
popular Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.
case of a kitchen worker, fired after a seizure. on the job, to
Manhattan resident Matthew Segall, 77, was one of the first
. argue with each other Wednesday about the government's role
vote Thunday morning. He picked Ferrer - as a protest
in combating discrimination when workers sign away their to
vote.
•
right to sue. .
Lawyers forWaffie House Inc. and the federal Equal·Employ- . ''I'm voting against Green," Segall said. "As public advocate,
he's done nothing."
ment Opportunity Commission didn't do much of the talking
during an hourlong oral argument. Instead, justices who are
typicaUy ideological opposites argued among themselves over
the ramifications ofletting the EEOC do for an employee what
ATLANTA (AP) -The state Court ofAppeals has upheld a
the employee could or would not do for himself.
judge's .ruling that Richard Jewell was a public figure when a
The case involves the intersection of arbitration agreements,
newspaper identified him as a suspect in the 1996 bombing at
an increasingly common condition of employment, and the traCentennial Olympic Park.
.
ditional role of the EEOC in rooting out workplace discrimiThe decision Wednesday was a setback for Jewell, who filed a
nation.
libel suit against The Adanta Journal-Constitution after the FBI
The agency takes a small number of cases to federal court,
·cleared him of wrongdoing three months after the bombing.
where it tries to make an example of discriminators by winning
The appeals court also threw out a lower court's order that
money or other damages. The government maintains it has a
reporten for the Journal-Constitution must identify their
duty to do that even if an alleged victim is among the 10 per- sources of information about Jewell.
cent ofAmerican worken covered by binding arbitration agree-·
Jewell, who was working as a park security guard during the
ments.
1996 Olympics, spotted the backpack that held the bomb that
exploded on July 27, 1996, killing one woman and injuring 111
people.

candidates face runoff

Justices debate workers' ripts .

Court rules for newspaper

Rare document on block

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -The New York auction house
Christie's plans t~ auction olf a rare, complete copy of an early
Mormon doc~ent this month, one of only about two dozen
known to exist.
The document, the Book of Commandments, is an early version of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' Doctrine and Covenants.
An incomplete venion sold last year for about $350,000, said
Curt Bench, a Salt Lake City rare-book and document dealer.
Christie's estimate for the complete volume is $400,000 tt·

The Daily Sentinel

·Ohio's Brinker out, Page B2
&amp;seball play&lt;!lfs, Page B5

Page 11
Thuncllry. Od1ahr 11.1001

already existed. Critics said they belie.ocd
Bush o.mtated the number oflines, or cdi
.colonies, and said many of rhem 'WuJ61
}'10\"' unsuitable fur use by scientists.
!
learn to use them to create healrhy celk
that can heal ailing hearts, li~ and othl'"

organs.
:
Federal law bans rhe use oflaX dollan

r..-

research that destroy1 embryos, whic~
oc:culs when srem cells are rentOIIM fiotj)
anembl)&lt;&gt;.
!
The Clinton administration got arounll
rhis by saying that as long as private doila6
paid for rhe extraction of the stem celll,
federal money could be used for research:
Meanwhile, House-Senate b..-gaine.O
signed olf on the. first compromise ~
ing bill fur fiscal 2002, which began Oct.
Lea4ers hope to finish aU 13 spending bilf
fur this year by late October or ~
November so CongreM can go home f&lt;t
theyear.
:

t.
•

•
•
••
•

Alaska crash kills 9

A ·weekly look at the
region's top lootbal teams,
as voted by Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. sports
staffers. (First-place votes
In p81l!nlheseS)

Prev.v-

T•m
1. Ironton

2. Logan •
3. Gallipolis

4. Portsmou1h
5. Ravenswood
6. SE Ross
7. Wellston

8. Marie11a
9. Trimble
10. (tie) Oak Hill
Par1&lt;ersburg

1
2

50 (5)
44
3 .
38
4
35

4

33

7

20

10
6

14
12
9
5
5

8

•

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - Federal investigators· sen1
teams to the remote corner of southwestern Alaska to search for
cl!l~ about how a Cessna plung~d into the tundra moment&lt;
after takeoff, leaving nine people dead and the sole survivor
critically injured.
.
•
S~es were dear and the wind was calm when the single;
engme commuter plane operated by PenAir crashed Wednesda}'
near Dillingham, about 330 miles southwest ofAnchorage. . :
At least eight passengers were affiliated with the Bristol Bay
Native Association, a nonprofit social services agency, said Terry
Hoefferle, the association's chief operating officer. The plane
was beginning a 75-mile trip to King Salmon when it took a
nose-dive.
"It just whammed into the ground and it was over," said wit~
ness Cheryl Hinkes.
•

-=

Othen Neelvlng
Eutem 4. Wahama 3, Waverly 2, Athens 1.
To be eligible far The OVP
10, I tllm 1111181 either: 1.) be
from 1he Maon-GIItll1111111-l.... _,_;b.) be a
IOcel cooltel•w:e n.nbeo, cw
C.) play 81 .... game

llglinlt local-

ThuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Football

Poundstone won't perfonn
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) - Paula Poundstone can't
resume her comedy career until she completes 180 days in an
alcohol rehabilitation center, a judge ruled Wednesday.
~
Defense attorney Steven Cron argued that she should ~
allowed to return for limited appearances, but Superior Court
Judge Bernard Kamins said the comedian - who pleaded
conten Sept. 12 to child endangerment - would benefit from
focusmg on her problems.
.,
•,
Poundstone, 41, has already served 125 days in rehabi)itation, •
for . whici) she volunteered even before her pie:., and hai
received good progress reports.
.
•
, Kamins, who presided over the sentencing .hearing, said hi
doubted a delay in returning to work would hurt Poundstonet

mi

t

NaipaUI winS literature pnz•e

£

Illm

AU

SEQ

-o

4-0 7
4-o 6-1
2-2 5-2
2-2 4-3
2-2· 4-3
1-3 2-5
1-3 2-5
0-4 .. _o-L

Logan
Gallia Academy
Marietta
Athens
Jackson
Point Pleasant
Warren
River ValleY ·

Frldey'eGemee

Point Pleasant at Warren
Gallla Academy at Athens
River Valley at Jackson
Marietta at Logan

1

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - V.S. Naipaul won th{
Nobel Prize in literature on Thunday for "incorruptible scruti '
ny in works that compel us to see the pr~:Sence of suppresse4
histories;• including critical assessments of colonial rule and
Muslim fundamentalism in non-Arab lands.
•
Naipaul, a British citizen who was born in l'rinidad to par~
ents of Indian descent, has fashioned his novels and journalisttf
from rhe cultural chaos of the postcolonial world.
.
;
The Swedish Academy singled out the masterpiece "Th~
Enigma of Arrival," (1987) saying that in it the author create4
an "unrelenting image of the placid collapse of the old colonial
ruling culture and the demise of European neighborhoods." :
The 69-year-old novelist and short story writer, who left
Trinidad at the age of 18, presents impressions of the countrY.
of his ancestors, India, and critical assessments of Muslim fun;
damentalism in non-Arab countries like Indonesia, !rant
Malaysia ~nd Pakistan in his works, according to the citation. :

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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)
. .;.. Unable to play any longer
With a painful shoulder injury,
Jaguars All-Pro left tackle
Tony · Boselli opted for
surgery that will sideline him
for an indefinite period.

Ca\\
today\

Coming on
Friday...

Gallipolis

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1\appers Plains (740) 667-3161

Ohio
and
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announce a new partnership
in the "Battle for the Bell."

Member FDIC

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take on
Alexander

PHOENIX (AP) - Two
months ago, the St. Louis
Cardinals' acquisition of
Woody Williams was greeted
with a ho-hum.
The Cardinals were no sure
thing for rhe playoffi, and
Williams W2S 8-8 with a 4. 97
ERA at San Diego.
Yet his feisty competitiveness injected energy into the
Cardinals, and Williams went
7-1 with a 2.28 ERA after
the Aug. 2 trade.
Then in his fint playoff
appearance, the 35-year-old
right-hander beat Randy
Johnson and the Arizona Diamondbacks 4-1 Wednesday to
tie their NL playoff series t-t .

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauders return from
a long three-game road trip to
host the Alexander Spartans
Friday evening for the
Marauders homecoming.
· The Spartans head into the
contest wirh a 2-7 mark overall and a 2-0 mark in the
TVC. Alexander has picked
up wins this season over
Sou.thern (21 -7) and Federal
Hocking (39-21). In theTVC
the Spartans have lost to Belpre by a score of 4 t -7 and last
week at Vinton County they
dropped a heartbreaker, 2120, in triple overtime.
Alexander is in its fifth year
in the Ohio Division and is
srilllooking (or its first win in
the conference. The Spartans
are 0-22 in "the Ohio Div&gt;smn.
Alexander coach Greg Holbert is in his third season at
the helm of the Spartans.
Alexander has 14 letterwinners back from last year's team
that finished 0-10.
. Leading the returnees is
quarterback L. C. Grigsby, and
he likes to throw to three-year
starter Ryan Lawson at split
end. Another key player back
for the Spartans is tailback
Michael Hawk, who hasn't
played since the sixth contest
of 1999 with a knee injury.
In last Y&lt;eek's game against
the Vikings, the Spartans had
only fuur first downs and 151
total yards. Grigsby W2S 4-of20 for 97 yards with an interception. Hawk was their leading receiver with one . catch
for 35 yards.

.. It's such an emotional
roller coaster, going from not
having that much in San
Diego to being, in my mind,
in one of the best organizations in baseball," Williams
said. "As-a pitcher who's been
through what I've been
through, I couldn't ask for
anything better or more:•
Except maybe a trip to the ·
World Series.
The Cardinals split against
Arizona's dominating duo of
Curt· Schilling and Johnson
and can win the series at
home with victories in Game
3 Friday night and Game 4
on Saturday.
"After yesterday's game, we
kind of sensed the urgency to
make sure we did everything
we could to 'win this game;•
Williams said. "By no means
was Randy Johnson horrible.
They have two of the best
pitchers I've ever seen and
prob"2bly· ever will ·see, We'revery fortunate to get out of
here with a split."
Despite his collection of Cy

PluH-NLDS,Bl

' l

'

t

ROUGH START - Arizona starter Randy J(lhnson looks to the plate after giving up a first
Inning, two-run home run to the Cardinals' Albert Pujols Wednesday. (AP)

PIIIH-MIIp,l2

TVC

Non-league
Subscribe today.
992-2156

Meigs to

Unit

s

Embryonic stem cells de\oelop into the
body's various organs. Researchers hope .~

Eastern at Miller
Waterford at Southern
Alexander at Meigs
Nelson.-York at Wellston
Vinton County at Belpre
Trimble at Fed Hocking

$500,000.

..,

Inside:

Panel would legalize limited stem cell researcH

NORFOLK:,Va. (AP) -Three &lt;liven who survived a devastating accident in Belize have returned home, mourning the
loss of 17 friends who were killed when their boat capsized in
a hurricane.
"Why are we here and they're not?" asked Mary Lou Hayden, who huddled in a life raft with other surviving memben
of the Richmond Dive Club expedition for 45 minutes, shielding each other from the wind and rain and calling out to their
colleagues.
.
"I W2S praying for our friends;' Hayden said.
Of the 20 dive club memben who were on board the 120foot Wave Dancer, only Hayden, David DeBarger and Richard
Pattenon survived when Hurricane Iris attacked Belize with
140 mph winds Monday night. The survivon, plus 10 more
memben of the dive group who safely rode out the storm
aboard a neighboring boat, arrived at Norfolk International
Airport on Wednesday.

WASHINGTON (AP) ~California Rep. Nancy Pelosi won
the race Wednesday for the No. 2 Hous~ Democratic leader and
will become the top-ranking woman ever in Congress. Her
election sparked debate over whether she will help or hinder
her party.
'
·
Pelosi, a liberal eight-term veteran from San Francisco, outpolled rival Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland by 118-95 in a
closed-door, secret baUot vote. She will take the post of Democratic whip on Jan. 15 when Rep. David Bonior steps down
from that job and concentrates on running for governor of
Michigan.
Both candidates claimed to be best positioned to lead their
party back to the House majority it last held in 1994. Pelosi, 61,
said she sought no votes on the basis of her gender, but clearly
many of her colleagues felt it was time for a woman to enter
the leadenhip circle.
·
"This is diffi.c ult turf to win on for anyone, but for a woman
breaking ground here it. was a tough battle," Pelosi said after the
vote. "We made history. Now we have to make progress." ·

Page AI

t

.

Newcomers make a difference for Eagles
BY BuTcH CooPER

els to Miller (t-6) Friday.
Take Ross Holter for example.
· TUPPERS PLAINS . Going .
Not only has the 5-foot-9, 190
into the season, those 'in the know' pound frosh filled in nicely at ofl"enknew Eastern was going to have sive guard, he's also the team's kicker.
another solid year of high school
He was 5-for-6 booting PAT's
footbaJJ.
·
against Parkersburg Catholic earlier
With a crop of experience returnthis year.
.
ing at many key positions, another
"(Ross Holter's) done a real good
playoff trip was expected prior to the
job
for us," said Eastern head coach
season.
This left little room for incoming Scott Christman. "He got his ankle.
hurt in the second game (against Fort
freshman to make an impact, right?
Frye) and he missed a couple of
Think again.
A small group of freshmen have games. He's stepped back in and has
played an · important part in the done a great job, especially for a
Eagles' 6-1 season so far, and could freshman."
continue to do so when Eastern travDarren Scarbrough· (6-0, 190) is
OVP SPORTS STAFF

another fine example of someone
who has made the best of his situation at linebacker.
"After losing Cody Faulk for a

couple games, we wei-e worried," said
Christman.
"But
(Scarbrough)
stepped in and done a great job."
His first start was in the Eagles'loss
at Trimble, who are now No.2 in the
latest OHSAA Division VI Region
·23 computer ratings. Eastern is No.9
in the region.
"That's a lot to ask of a freshman,
but he did what he was supposed to
do," said Christman. "He played physical. We were wondering if he can do
that against a good team and he did."

Meanwhile, Bryan Minear has
played both sides of the ball for Eastern, serving well at tailback with two
touchdowns last week in Eastern's
45-6 win over Federal Hocking,
while Ken Amsbary and Cody Dill
have also received substantial playing
time.
According to Christman, Dill
should "play alot at tight end this

week."
Miller might be struggling this season, but the Falcons shouldn't be
taken for granted. After all, they've
been one of the top teams in the
TVC Hocking Division the last cou-

P..... IHFrolh.l2

PREP VOLLEYBALL

Southem
hosts
Lady Eagles keep on winning
5·1 Waterford .
BY ScoTT Wou:E

OVP CORRESPONDENT

EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern Eagles got a scare
from the Trimble Tomcats in
the first game (15-9), but
completed the housekeeping
chores with tWo decisive wins
(15-2, 15-1) in claiming their
17th victory of the year. Earc
lier the Eagles, now 14- 1 in
the Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking
Division,
had
clinched the division tide.
"We did not play well' and
did not communicate in the
first game. We just 'd id not
play together as a team. We
did however, come back to
play well in the second and
third games, and the girls
played together like they" are
capable," said · coach Pam
Douthitt.
Janet Calaway led the Eastern charges with a perfect 21 of-21 serving, three aces and
18 points, while also handling
.37-of-42 sets with a teamhigh mne assists. Calaway's

presence was felt aU over the
court as a result of her great
floor game.
Alyssa Holter also had a
good game with 10-of-11
serves for eight points and·
three aces, while Kass Lodwick was I 0-of-11 serving
with two aces and eight
points. Lodwick was 6-of-7
· spiking with three kills and
also had a block. The versatile
soph!'more flexed her muscle
at the net where her booming
spikes complimented the
alw•yscsteady performance of
Whitney Karr. Karr handled
12-of-15 spikes for a teamhigh five kills, while leading
the team with three blocks.
Tilfeny Bissell was 4-of-4
with an ace and three points,
and went 4-pf-6 setting with
one assist. Tan\my Bissell was
9-of-12 spiking ·with two kills
and one point serving.
The Eastern reserves won
again, 15-3, 15-11, to push
their undefeated mark to 150. Stacy Smith led with eight.

Metias v-ball
UJtnS agatn
~·

•

.

•

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

The TVC Ohio Division
volleyball champions Meigs
Marauders dropped the first
game to Nelsonville-York,
15-12 Wednesday evenmg,
before bouncing back m
impressive form to defeat the
Lady Buckeyes 15-8, 15- 2 .
Nikki Butcher and Katie
Jeffers led Meigs with 12
points each; Butcher was 19of-19 serving and Jeffers was
17-of-17 with 12 assists,
Corrie Hoover added· seven
poin!S on 11-of-13 serving
and four kills, Mindy
Chancey added six points on
12-of-12 serving, two kills
and 14 as.&lt;ists, .Jaynee Davis
added four points on 10-of10 serving with 13 kills,
P ...ie see Melp, B2

L---------_J
' I

Bv ScoTT WoLFE

Although Waterford has a
reliable line, Doebereiner
has made extra yardage flil'"
himself and is capable of
· breaking the "big play".
Todd McCutcheon is
the fullback, who averages
about 40 yards per game.
Ben Cunningham is the
quarterback, who on the
average completes 2-of-5
passes per game for short
yardage exclusively. Of its
398 yards against South
Gallia, 362 were on the
ground.
Waterford Slarted the
season at 5-1, but lost its
first league match to Trimble last week, 21-6, in a
· battle of the league's
unbeaten teams. Waierford
defeated Miller 40-0 and
Southern defeated Miller
last week in a driving rain
26-6. The other common

OVP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE -This week,
the Southern Tornadoes
will entertain the Waterford Wildcats during the
annual homecoming tilt in
Racine.
Although
stumbling
against · two foes who
Coach
Richards
had
hoped to put in the wm
column,
Southern
IS
enjoying one of its best
seasons in recent years.
Unfortunately, Waterford is
too, and is currently looking to pass the .500 mark
for only the second ·time in
school history. A win Friday would push rhe Wildcats over the hump.'
The key to Southern
defeating Waterford will
come in the form of stopping Dan Doberciner, who
has already surpassed the PIIIH I ,000
yard
mark.

.,

5olltiMm, 82 ,

�•

'

•
Thursday, Oct. 1h 200t •
.,'

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BOBCAT FOOTBALL

Leading rusher

Brinker is out
ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- Chad Brinker, Ohio's leading rusher t!Us season, will miss the rest of the season because an arachnoid cyst was discovered during an examination Monday.
The arachnoid is tile space between the inside of the skull
and the brain.
Brinker will undergo surgery on an undetermined date. The
operation will be performed by Dr. Julian Bailes, a neurosurgeon at West Virginia University.
Tile cyst poses no immediate danger and is. not footballrelated, said the university's head trainer, John Bowman.
Brinker's future as a player is uncertain, but a statement by
the university said his overall prognosis is excellent.
• Brinker has gained 393 yards for an average of98.2 yards per
game, ranking him fifth in the Mid-American Conference in
rushing this year. He averages 7.4 yards per carry and has scored
twice. He gained 124 yards against Akron and 140 against Iowa
State.
Brinker also has caught five passes for 40 yards and threw a
53-yard touchdown pass ·o n a halfback option.

Jordan will play in
preseason games

. '

I

WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) - Fans in Detroit and Miami
·
will get what they want.
· . Michael Jordan said Wednesday that he would' not play in the
Washington Wizards' first two preseason games, then changed
his mind a few hours later. Jordan originally said he would be
better off working on conditioning than playing, but said later
that he didn't want to disappoint fans who bought tickets to
the games.
Detroit sold more than 19,000 tickets for Thursday's game,
and Miami sold about 18,000 for the game there Saturday.
·
"After I made my first announcement earlier today, I realized
that many fans purchased tickets to these games to see me in .
my return," Jordan said.
"I didn't want the fans to be disappointed, therefore· I am
altering my original plan and will play in Detroit and Miami."
. Jordan is expected to start both games, but will likely play in
just the first few minutes of each, Wizards spokesman Nick
Brown said.
'
. Jordan retired from the NBA for a second time 'more than
three years ago, but started working toward a return this summer by playing pickup games with NBA players.

--··a-.

Tllulldly'aGomaa
Toronto at Cerollnl, 7 p.m.
·~"i-~.
Los Angelet 11 St. Loulto, 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. latandano at Now Jllflllly, 7:30p.m.

Ottawa 6, carolina :!
Montreal 3, Anaheim 1

Cdorado s. vancouver 4

Calgary at Nashvtlle, 8·p.m.
Phoenl&gt; 81 Chicago, 6:30 p.m.
Vancouver at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Colorado at Edmonton, 10 p.m.
lampe Bay .. san Jcae. 10:30 p.m.

Dallas 2, Los Angeles '
Edmonton 1• Chicago D
Wod.-oy'oO.IIIH
C.lgary 4, Detroit 2

Ottawa 2, Florida o
N.Y. Islanders 6, Pittaburgh 3

Frldoy'aO.moa .
Monlrealat COlumbus, 7 p.m. ·

euttalo 2, Ph,adelphla 1

eunato al Detroit. 7:30 p.m.

Washington 5, N.Y. Ranger&amp; 2
Minnesota 2, Boston 1

Chicago at Mini*Ota, 6 p.m.
.
,Waahinglon at Anoholm, 10:30 p.m.

Meigs
· fiWHP&amp;pBI
. Kayre Davis added one
point on 5-of-6 serving and
seven kills. Chrissy MiUer
had four kills and one block
and Tirzah Dodson added
one assist.
Meigs which is 15-3 overall and 15-1 in the TVC was
7 4 of77 serving.
The Marauder junior varsity which also won the

TVC crown won 15-3 and
15-4 to raise their recotd to
17-1 overall and 15-1 in the
TVC.
'
Meigs will play in a trimatch Tuesday at River Valley against the Raiden and
Southern.
On October 20th, Meigs
will start sectional play
when they play River Valley
at noon at the Univenity of
Rto Grande. Gallia Academy
will play Rock Hill at It :00

a.m.

NLDS
fnwnPapB1

run

notliliJJ
'1

run

.... .........,.......

...--.....
-··-•

Crow's
Family
Restaurant
Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chlcken
228M•In St.

Pomlf'OY1 OhiO

DJ'Ive.Thru Window

992·5432

!

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ALL

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• C.-1nlok,TIIe-HO
6 p.m. • S.nday • ESPN2

__..

.. Jefl' GoiUDr\, 4,223
2. llllctw' .... 31,1111
I. ~ ....... 3.833
4. s...trw.......,.,l,718
I. DU JaiNtt, 3.730
1. Rusty w.~t~~w, 3,e11

- -

'· D. EarMitdt Jr.. 3.658
L KMt Hlrvttk, 3,897
t. Bob~:~, utx~nte. 3.637
10. Jillff Burtoo, 3.984

MM'! HIINic.*. 4.281

.lac:k lpnrCue, 31,240
.II»AIItlrMn. 3.1111

JdGIMn,4,048

Sooq~.l.152

.-on Killer. 4.075
OIWIIH'IIe.l.eat

Elfin~. 3,852

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Ted ............ 3,01.2

A.lnn, 3,512

~&lt;.r~ny Will,_, 3..217

Flnl- :Lttll

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J..t c•'l•t.r alolr
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anrlotolr'o-

4.141 D. - J r . Anotheroooalltonlllnlab
I. (I) Dale Jarrett
RH.Ut btt lntah

fROM LAST WEEK

.c'\::1

:g. ...

Q)

-cn'~'-..C
0·-

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8. 171 Slo~lnl Mo~ln Hit DOtlll - llomlnont
7. 181 lla... Harvlok RHinC II MortlnavHII
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8. Ill . 8obbr Llllonlo ~~-' tap 10
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:lO. 1-1 Jtinlll)' I]Mnoor Won bla HContl POlO

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LX255 lawn Trador
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Jr.) to fourth and the first
Ford {Jeff Burton) to fifth.

WINSTON CUP
CONCORO, N.Q.- Tho
UAW-GM ·Quality 500 'wae
deeldea ajmost ekcluaively

between the Dodge of
Sterling Marlin and the
Pontiac of Tony Stewart, but
it was not, by any means, a
classic battle.
The race. begun amidst
the patriotic fervor of war,
settled Into a monotonous
rhythm that, based on the
basic statistics, seemed
competltl\le, it wasn't. There
Mre no dUels. no dices, no
· dogfights.

.

"

"It was a really smooth
day,• said Marlin, and that
~ust have been pleasant ·
for hlin 11r1d his team. "I've
been racine Winston Cup a
long time; and when you
know you've got a gooel car,
you just take your tllne anel
don't press the Issue .~
Ward Burton brought
another Dodge home In
third, relegating the fastest
Chevrolet (Dale hrnhardt

IUICH IR¥!D NATIONAL

CONCORO, N.C. - Matt
Kenseth seemed to be
sallln&amp; away to what would
have been his second
stral&amp;ht victory In the Little
Trees 300 when it all
slipped away Saturday
afternoon,
Grea Biffle's dogad
,P.ursult paid dividends on lap
U8 (of 200) when tho Ford
driver made a botd move to
ttie outside in turn four and,
when Kenteth moved to
. block, hll Chevrolet spun out
of control, By both drivers'
accounts, their cal'S never
touched.
CRAFTIMAN TIIUCK
JUSTIN, Tflla&amp; -Travis
Kvat:~il.

a rookie, won the

Silverado 3!)0 when Scott
Riggs, the victim of a flat
Ure. alowed with six laps
remaining.

fEUD Of THE WIIM

l.llwe'• Motor Sp II dttey V8. NBC/TNT
The major stink of the race weekend was the TV
networks' refusal to use the otnclat name of the track,
apparently because the track'a "title sponaor,~ LOwe's
Home Improvement WllrehOiJse, ~ld not ante up ror
• advertlslna. Tne s~dwly's president. H.A. "HU111PV"
Wheeler,.threatened to hiWI the satellite trucks towtd
off the property before fewrllh nqotlatiOill "'tulted In ,
a compromise thet allowed tnt lhOw to &amp;o on.

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740-446-2412

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740·593-3815

~

;'

the pote In this event last
year. ... Dale Jarrett won the
VIrginia 500 earlier this )'ear.

Groen fla&amp; drops II
12:30 p.m., Sunday
D f I. .C 111-Qtlon: Tony

IUICH-IIATIONAL

wt.t: Sam's roWn 250
-:Memphla
Motortports Pork, Mllll-.
!fim. (.7~Hotnock), 250
Tony · Pontiac, 95.371 llpt/187 .5 miles
"'""· Sept. 29, 2000
. -..:2:30p.m., Saturday
o.t.llll• cUmplon: Kevin
Chovrolot, 82.223 fiiP!1, S&lt;lpt, Harvlck
'

hit........,,

::r::::

.o

Q, "g
Q,

•

a: .!!

~~s.

=
s

f;t.i:.-

N·a::

•-.....a:

Kevin
Harvlck, Chevrolet, 92.352
mph, Oct. 29, 2000

__

--

second fn 2000.

WIIIC:Tneo-s350

WheN: Lit Veps Motor

Your1Um
lllltn,_ow...._.

Dear NASCAR This Wftk,
I would apJQ;;IIlc any in(urma·
liM you M'le fe1adi11Jthe nun1ber
of stan.' and wins for 1he follow ina:
Dlvld Peanon , Bobby Alli11001nd

Winston Cup Series

Ctle Varbomuah·

lt't not as If Mike
Skinner has newtr won at
tho Wlnoton Cuplewlt. No,
reeily, Ill hat. While
drtvtn&amp; for RIChlld
Chlldtell, Skinner won
eKhiDitlon races In .lapin
In 1997 end 11198.
Thou were not offlclel .
rKea, however, end en
official victory Ia whet
Skinrier seeks.
Neltt year hl'll pt.a
freah start, tekln&amp; over aa
driver or L8rry McClure's
No. 4 Ctttvrolet, recently
vacattd bY KIYin Lepaae,
ShiMer wat alto the
first c:hempton Of ttlt
Craftsman Truck series,
and he also won the flr'at
race ever held In that
series. That was I)&amp;Ck in
·199!. In 1997, his first
full year In Cup, Skinner
wn rookie of the year.
...t44
Cbt-: Jamie (231,
Dultln ~ 16-•

dro11~

N.lvt IIDkd tltst M II'III.M"'fr p11
n-rdit for Q ,.IICI . , W0/1 AIIJ. 6,
1971 , bt WflfSIOit.salfflf, N£.

X
DeuNASCA.R This Woet.
.
I've been hellli&amp;J this rumor for
a while rrom several sources. !1'1
been 1old thai Ri.:hard Petty had a
car CftJine wltb 10 c:ylinden wJMoa
M won his :WOCh r,ace, Would you
plebe ckar lhi5 up fur u.1
~ drid thor iJ hl~lrly J.n~bift~l.
An '"'~ly d/Jft"-"' tllflne 4'~111·

rotlf»t ~VIIIJJw tu1y 111 derccr. bodr
b)' fni[IICIDt:t and, If they wtrt nor
so i"dl11rd, by ori'lrr- tolflptrlrtws
tt·twtfn! lrt the ur~~~r lfllrtlllt_ IJJftl.

X

N)IIC-·

)Girl o.t,INUC'Ntlhll

Willi\

-~~·
..... . . . . . . . 1
.... a11s
...lllltlle a u ,lllllll...-.
.._ _
....
-•-lltlorJ.III'I
__
.. ..., ~~Vet

•~ No-

4 Cllevaal.t..·

1. Which driver holds the rttcord. for most
wins (15) at Martinsville Speedway?
2. Who won the first NASCAR·sanctloned race at
Martinsville In 1949?
3. What model of car did Chevrolet race prior to the
Monte Carlo?
BUtWnl 'I
uoJ,(g PIIH 'C AU8d PJ8lf:llij 'l
IMJMINY

•
••••••••••

__

AROUND THE GARAGE

.,Childress understands both sides of retiring the No. 3
miRil,lhaywouldlell.ll'-ecptheNo.

NASCAR Thts week

Richrlnl Childrns

Jend nolftltl it.
i~

all for !he

miremmt of the !ale Dale Earrihardt'~

No.3, but be undel'lllands NASCAR''
~lnJiflhtrulinJ bod)' coot~

It• policy mnnll'dir!na: number!~ .
Motonports hu no tradition of
l'etlring numben, but CNJdreu hopH

No.3 l:llll beson ot' unoftkiully mired
b)l mean~ of the number~~i•a in the
race ~tam.
,
"We've hid the No. lsifK.'I! 1973,"
Olikkn• said. "!10 111nksl10111etblna
di'II!IIM: ~ up. NASCAR leu lht
OV.IK!N relain tlte}lumbr!llhef'"'e
8'JI.In lhillllill.llllinn,lhe)''~thitv!naiO
mlke!he rightdKi~imu well . . . ..
po.ueMim of hb

HAPI'l' 10 HELP: When Larry dep in and help l..tuJy llOd Ch!: auys
Mcelun:abrupllyfimJ Kevin t..epase, nut."

"The ldul KeNrio i.l !hlllhey'il Mike Skinoo- wun'l thr only winner.
retire it.but that bail not~ !he polio
Skinner will pikt Mc:Oure·~ No.4
cy llvou,ghmll 1hc hilloty of Olmolet in 2002,but....tl!lc he rccov.
NASCAR.Irthcy would have mimi Cl'll from bee •urvery. Burdi Onmd
every number for diffmnl reasons ,· National driver Bobby Hamihnn lr.
we' d. bt runniiiJ 001 ol numbm.
look aver dw carfonbr: UIIOII'I ftnal
''Thdly.evcry:11ingle number in !he dJht aw;es.
•
Winston Cup ~~ i!l tllltn: No. I
"I re!llly do nol know what hap·
throuJh No. 99. Every number II pened between l.tuty and the other
11111ianed to lllmCOIIC, 110 if. you SCIII1 driver (Lepage)," Said Hamilton,
t1kina away the numbeD. we'd be whn5e fathc:r ur.ed ro drive for
llhortofnumben.

Md:h.n.

X
A. NEW CHEW FOR THE
CREW= A~ Conwqad bmuJht down

thc-cul'tilin on ibftpon!IOI'!ihip ofSUIC)'
No. 91 Dodae. II ai&amp;O

Compton'~

Dear NASCA A ihi1 Week.
lnMead of bavlni tbt !ROC
races 11 'the supc:npecdwayl Ill the
tim~ .

why don ' t they run them on
sllortlracb1 Then we coukl flnd
out who rhe beat race·~:ar driver 1~ .
Mark Drtnllanl
Mnftlle, All,
Wily 1101 pu1 tht strlrs em n •wrl·
d)' •iflffl&lt;:b?

X
Dear NASCAR Thlr Week ,

lam a l ~ffG ul\lon fan . l \l.ooltl
like to know if the r~ee..c:ar drlwcr
Tina O!Jfdun is Jeff'~ 5i~ ter.
Hernkr Pothow1kl

Wautotnl, Wl1.
111&lt;'.~ m~

mrtl'l!ltf'd.

•••••••••••

·Fan Tips
•Rick HoUston, who has
specialized In lte coverage,
hat written Second to None:
Th&amp; History of the NAS~R
Busch Serle$ (Oevid Bull
Publlshln&amp;. 524.951.
Houston's text Is, as
el!pected, Inspired, but he
muat share tha bllllfC with
the work of dozens of
photogtaphers in chronicllfC
the history of a &amp;erles that
has been much fnore than
Winston Cup's ct\lef provlni
&amp;round. "The Busch Series
has always been about
racing hard and having fun
doing It," Houston writes.
Available In many book
stOfes, Second to None may
also be purchased online at
www.bullpubllshi ... OOI'II •

X clEW OF
• For one., tllilt week'e
ONW of 1M WHk dlcl
not
tM . . .

r...,...nt

wtnnor.

ltoriiOC Moollntfla UAW4M Qtoallty
100, 1M tt Wll the
'unner-up't orew that

--co•tto
--konlllo

bm.lahr bllck an okt p~~int !lChcmr lll1d
product fot UAW.OM Quality 5CX)
and the Ckt. 21 WiMton !«! a1 fil.

tracklnllrtt~Hoe.

IUg11iAia.) SupmpDCdwa)':

hill Home

of Kodiak, Compton'•
lnutpid curried the gold, brown lnd
ln~telld

aaain I re~pcc:t what
"It i5 an opponunity for me 10 get whhe of Levi Oarmt. aocxhcr Con·
NASCAR isll}'in&amp;todo,andthey'rt inlllthc No.4car.lc~~r~~e~~rlmein woW produc1 that lll!il appearN on the
tryln1110 do thuiatx lhlnJabout retlr· WinNton Cup. lull}' and MOI'Jan· Winston Cup cinmil in I990 wilh
itlj naunben."
McCitwt hll\'e helped me llO much in Oeol'fcey Bodine at H~k Mocor·
ARCA. ~y lee me.bomlw pam lind !lpOits.
fully tho! deci~ion illlhll if they won'1
loaned out ensi~ to ~ .l am allld 10
~But

c

Gnh1111,N.C.

••••••••••••
Htlmln&amp;ly on ttle
doorstep of victory ev&amp;il

,

..

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

.,t

•1111'11 Tony $tewart Is

wlttiiiiiJ 8J

MIII/I~ oJfklafly rtf'OIIIIud iy ·
N.4SCAR, It diJINtf'd b; ~N~~y wlw

tone. It doesn't metter If
threat at Martinsville and
-·-:167
it't wtth your tnmmate or
ttaf11, 0 win~. 10 top-5
Rocklfllham and
not. 1always tnou.ht we
flnltllot. 38 101&gt;10
everywhere else we .o. A
flnilhtl, e POlel,
tnl&amp;ht neve had a smell part lot of thla thlni Ia chemistry.
In hatptna Da~ (Earnhardt)
$9',155,468 in earntna•
You keep on looktna: for the
win (the 500) that one year
Flma: Stare (Aprtl 27,
right chemistry until you
(1998). The nellt year, he
1988, at Martlnalfllle,
ttnellt. Hopefully, we've
Vo.), P!&gt;IO(Fob. 9, 1997,
pushed Jeff Gordon by me,
round it with Larry and
at o.,tona Beachj Fla.),
so I learned en awful lot.
everybody at Morgan.
win (none)
When I thought It was my
McClure Racln&amp; this lime."
turn to win, I found out that
wiillloo ... otolo
WNit It rour fl..t ...It
teammate&amp; are only g:ood
•the objecllve here Is to
ihtnp?-,..
lllrtctiJ • 11tHm ....,.• • until the last rive or aiJ.
competitive aaaln and
IIIOIIOnl CillfdNUIIoolnc? lapt. t really hate that the
to pt this race team
•in the Caytona 500 or any opportunity for Kevin
competitive. They have a
Harvlck and me to work
ot the reatrlctor-plate
bteuUful raclllty. There are
tolether Is gone, but it'a
races, vou erwaya went a
race cars slttin• there that
really not &amp;one. We can
budd)' ... somebody to
can be ready In no time at
work with yoU. But when It work together tn the '
ldl, aM there la.no reason
Daytona !500.
&amp;ets down 10 five or SIJl
why a teem with this much
•eut we want to De a
depth can 't run well.~
lapa, elf the deale are

WW.Noe

nf'llfJ,

IQJQI,

arew up In

WhnHot-

itt Jjp

f'fll'n Qlfd '1r1 ptWs. AfflltHI :.: wkrory

Born In

Euteston
C•: Bfe'nnln&amp;ln 2002,
No. 4 Kodak Chevrolet
Monte Carlo: owned by
l.erry McClure

-WI-

~Jo~tJ.-,Po.
dl'ti'M '" 514 tt'tniJ ,
wllllflrtr 10$ ructs aMI UJ polr~ .
.41/IMNJ Jn:n't ill '118 ~llfl, wirtllilll
&amp;f raC'tl utttl $9 fHJh•. KlriwYHIIII

l'tarson

Ontario, Calif.,
Susanville, Calif.

Crow oblll: Stott

Chevrolet, 130.601 mph, ·
Nov. 8,1998
........_: Fords end
Chevrolet have split tne four
r~t held here prevloust,-.

••••••••••••

~

~ometown:

-k-"rllll-:

Stacy Compton, Ood&amp;e,

Mike Skinner

NASCAR This

-...,..-,...,area

atme

· Chovrolets have
won
both Pft'Agua 8Y8ntl
181.603 mph, Sept. 23,
here, but Ford driver Etton
1~
Sawyer wet third In 1M end
.._I'MOftl: Jack Spreeue,

PWOfllE

.,

,M.C.MOI4

1

.... fiUlllbiRC ftiOM: Jeff S-(1.!&gt;ml10 track),
Green, Chevrolel, 120.267
167 laps/250.5 miles
mph, Oct. 28, 2000
Wlllln: 6 p.m., Sunday

--=JefiGorOon,

week.
•It was I &amp;rand meas, pteyed out In full public view. The
llngerint QuUUon Ia 'Why hare?' Does NBC refuse to use
· • NO'h Elliott sadter·a
the name.of othtf etldtuma when-It televises othtr
.l..t five nntlhes: 2~. 31,
tPQf'tl? While retllzln&amp; that butlness Is business, thle
.. 14, 23, 37.
Who"' tltultlon tHma to be aettln&amp; out of hand:

•·.

JS60 Walk-Belllnd Mower

wa..t: Old Dominion SOO
WMM: Martinsville {Va.)
Speedw.,, (.526-mile track),
500 Japs/283 miles

Cut Gllbt, 2.a&amp;T

TOP TEN

.

22,1996
Notlillte: Stewart won from

""- ~. 3,049

and STILl. lllnM polnla

UJ
Q)·-

WIIIITONCUP

- . . McUulbJin. 3.48801Mie Seller. 2;138
Jltnt!W .lllltlnMn, 3,444 T.rrw Ccloll. 2.007
Chad Utlle, 3.408
Rick en.fofd. :uto

I

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

Stewart
-•yooNf)IIM~.... -

2001 POINT\ \lA NDING\

1. 111 loll Qoldon

&gt;-CDQ

SEASONS

2:30 p.m. • Saturdao; • TNT
• Wlneton c., Old Dudulon 100
Noon • Sunday • NBC

• NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton ranlta the
top 10 drivers heedln&amp; ll'lto thl1 weekend'&amp; race. last
week's rankin&amp;• are tn perentheses.

from Pap

:wo ·

·--·-'1-210

·

AliT_.__

'

frosh

recov~~ies.

:

"AICAII--

i·

I

,

,..

two:

•13-hp engine
• 38-inch mowing deck ·
• 5·speed shift-on·the·go transmission

•1.05-hp 119.8 eel M-Series engine
•15-inch·cuttiflg-swath
• Only 8.51bs
• 2-y~ar consumer warranty

Ohio

onf;

Meigs

DEERE . FOR

Mldd~rt.

The Daily Senti'nel
encourages your
sup.port of these area
businesses who make
this page possible~

Young awards and strikeout
recordi,.Johnson ~ los! a major
Williams matched his =~;
league recoro seven JlOSIY"'SS" high with nine strikeouts anli:
games in a row.
walked one.
:1
JolniSOII was a career-best 21- . Johnson struek out nine ana;
6 this season. His 372 strikeouts walked one w,hile allowing~ !
\Wfe the lhitd-11105t .in baseball
runs on six hits in eight ~ j
history. and he led the majon Lack of
support is
wilh a 2.49 ERA.
new for lhe Big Unit. I.n four
Williams allowed one nm on his six I"""" this season,Arizo.»;
&lt;l o
four hit$ in seven-plus innings in scored just one.
"j
his ~ debut. He also douAfterJohnson gave up his
bled and scored a
in the walk of the game - to Edg:ii';
third irming and made a lunging Renteria in the tint inning - ;
~ offony Womack's line drive rookie sensation Albert Pujols' i
to lead of!' the sixth.
opposite-field homer with
Arizona scored once in the outs gave the Cardinals the only~

•

A

Pomeroy,

Craig Counsell and Greg Cot.;
brunn, but Luis Gonzalei!;
grounded out to end the innint;
Gonzalez, one of the best hi~ :
in lhe NL all season. is 0-for-8 iii:
the series.
~:

had big gainers in the initial drive in a bang-bangbang
groun,d
attack
thrown at. the Falcons.
f1'0ftl Pap Bl.
Cornell, Hill, Matt Ash,
;::::.:lh:..:afier=..!P.:in:.:ch:.-.:hi:.'t.:singl:.;:::es:.:..,:.by:_..:..runs:,;.;._..:..th...;ey:....n_eeded._-:-_.t..
'i _ _ J
opponent was ·South Anthony Coffman, and .eigh:::!.
.
'
Gallia, who · Waterford B.J. Marnhout all had conBuckeyes 261-231 last week,:
defeated 53-8, while the siderable gains. ·
Clifton Chandler carried four 'j
Tornadoes defeated SGHS
Hill scored the first of
times for 80 yards, Tyson Lee
in overtime 18-12.
his three touchdowns
on
a
f1omPqeBI
added 16 for 64 and· Jeremy :
-lf VI&gt;
The Waterford Wildcats 43-,rard pass
play at the
Roush 19 for 62. .
kept their title hopes alive 7:46 mark to cap an eightKyle Hannan was 8-of-22 i
Sophomore fullback Jason
last season with a surprisplay drive $tt up by runs Brandenberry carried· eight in the air for 39 y~. while;
ing 39-0 shellacking of the
by the aforementioned times for 33 yards and added Lee had three receptions for •
Tornadoes. during home1
25 yards.
· '
quintet. The .?rive amassed · one catch for 28.
coming
festivities
at
65 yards and was high"Alexander is i
very !
Alexander usually plays a 5Waterford High School,.
2
or
4-3
on
defense.
AllTVC
~
1
" ·
lighted b}i four first
improved .ootbal team, :
Southern Coach Rusty
coach
Mike :
Wes
Burrows selections Jason Schonauer Marauder
Richards summed up his downs.
and
Brandenberry
lead
the
team's play last year by added the' .• extra point defense. ·
Chancey said. "They have a:
kick,
his
first
of
two
for
saying "We never got off
Meigs .is 1_6 for the season good tailback and ·'Cjuarter-'l
. the bus." Since this is the the night.
and 0-2 in the TVC. The back, our kids are excited to
Hill had an 84-yard
SHS homecoming, SouthMarauders, despite dropping a return home. It shouJ.d be an,
ern hopes to turn the kickoff return and an 34-12 contest at Nelsonville- exciting football game."
eleven yard run for his York last week, seemed to
tables on the Wildcats. '
Home¢oming festivities get l
Brice Hill was the man other scores and Anthony really pick up the intensity in underway · around 7:00 with;
of the hour last week, Coffman had the other
the second half.
kickoff at 7:30 from Bob•
scoring three touchdowns score.
Meigs out-rushed die Roberts Field in Pomeroy.
in a romp that was slowed
Jake Nease, Andrew
only by a torrential second Philson, and Coffman had
"We've got a lot of kids l
half rain. Hill was follow- fumble
Philson
banged up right now," said •,
ing in the foot steps of his also had two key sacks.
Christman. "It seems like
father Jay, Who ironically
Again, Southern linemen Bl
everyday, we get a few more.
scored the Southern's only
Tim Cogar, ~hris CopThe injuries hit us two years
touchdown nearly 30 years
pick, Matt Thomas, Ruspie of yean.
ago and last year, we were
ago against Alexander dursell Krider, · Tyler Little,
"They've been banged up pretty fortunate. It's come
ing the 1972 SVAC chamand Justin A)l,e n -did an the past couple of weeks, but back to us this year. We just •
pionship season.
Behind Hill's three excellent job of punching they're probably be healthy keep asking kids to come in I
thi.s week;' said Christman. and take over positions, and I
touchdowns and
all- holes in the Miller line.. ·
Despite· the :driving rain "So they'll going to play bet- they've done that so far." ,
. purpose yards, the Southlast
weeJ:c, Southern was ter this week than they have
Miller runs their; ·usual!
ern Tornadoes (4-3, 2-0)
defeated the Miller Fal- not afraid to take to the in the last two or three. Stunt 4-3 defense th;t looks ;
cons (1-6, 0-2) 26-6 last air, an area where Brandon They're still a pretty solid like a 6-1, according to i
Friday :nig~t. Hill led 'a Pierce, when g~yen . ti111e, .. football team.Theyhave some . &lt;;:hristman.,But •. !hi,s yJ~.Jhr. yl
brigade of Southeln run- · can give the r,ornadries a ·· ··li:lds who haven't plliyed alot, · chahged to i"Wmg-T hffens.e.
"They play pretty solid l
ners who all expehenced huge advantage over the but they're older juniors and
.
.
senion:•
defense," said Christman. !
success m a surpn~ game Wildcats.
Christman knows what it's "Offensively, it's a new offense !
Friday's game starts at
attack set up py SHS 'men7:30,
however;
homecomlike
having players banged up. for them, so they make a few :
tor . Rusty
Rjchards.
Southern used seven dif- ing activities Will begin at He's going thrpugh the very mistakes."
Kickoff at Miller is set for :
ferent runners thro'u ghout 6:50 with the crowning of same problems as the season
i
the night, five of whom the queen set for halftime. winds down.
7:30 p.m.

Southem

Thursdliy, Oct. 11, 2001

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=·

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PI!RsoNALs
Gentleman Seeking White
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plv To: 553 2nd Avenue,
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Mall To: Ohio Volley Publishing, 825 Third
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R~ted
r, Po5m9erRoalcoytlpcl~
merchendlu
diiCO&lt;Inll,
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~,Equal ~ pion, PtoiH llhltlng, httlll1
nlty
Enoouraglng v
blnollll
caroor ad•
a -and
opportunlllol,
InAbeoluta Top Dalla~: U.S. Wor1&lt;ploca orllty.
oppiiC&amp;ntl ,_to
Sliver, GoldD'·moColndtno, PGotroold·
,,
tllop by lhe Wai·Min
~~~~ US Curronc • EASYWORKI EXCELLENT loyaway deportment ond
M.T.S: Coin Shop, 151
PAY! Mil ollltlproducll 11 · plok up"" oppiiC&amp;IIort
ond A......,, GIIINpollt, 740homO. Ctill'oll F1141 lluiiNI:ss
446-2842.
,
HIOIH87-IIIIIII Ext, 12170
"'-·---.homtjolra.oom/12170
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Wanted to Buy: Sllndlng
,
Timber. (740)379-271!1.
: : ,li.~C:::..:..~ Cltlilpollog:::r Col~
II COOKI, PAIIT Tllll, (eoTo Homo ,
PULL TIMI, ALL IHIPTI, Cal TOCIIyl740 HI 43117,
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l-800-2t4-04ll2,
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lolll,.;,t.-.2ll5-!70v
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Centenarv, Friday, OCiober Applications being IOCIPCid

Hendy patOOn - with. homO -

to
on

mioOIIIanooUI priljooll -

lndoorlloutdoora,al ..,.,.,.,.. r.qulfiCl, caN
(740)1115-31118.

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1053 Vine- -

2 -mobllahomllor
1111, (140)1192:-6071 ....,_
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126,IIOO OBO, (740)192· 28&gt;t80 3 Or llodl
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7003.
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2 -Story, 3 BA -

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ntco 1111 LR. I&lt;I!Ghln l ) DldiGOIM mobllt homO lor
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total· tloctrlc,

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(740 1192-eea&amp;.

ronltd 101 , With 2.a walio, Allumoblt lOans· Many
lllermol pont wl- IYPit IVOIIatrle, Cllllor elf.
Prlcod to 1111. Paint Pl.,..: ...·, (7401'!*85113.
ont oru. (304)878·3180 , E!llt 18' wklo, 3 bedroom 2
Ilk lor ROIII!IIry. ,
, ~lh, ..,. $5,155, tflllvafiCl
3 B
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r:;~on Aauto • lng iltlrtlng &amp; llbarglau
lllopo, CoM Mollllo liomof,

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740-1592:-10'72,
Flnol Dayo, In-ry
Aoductlonl
(3114!736--3409
umlied Or N0 Credit? Gov•

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Olt'Q em~ Bank Finance Or,lty

one-etr
l loun
mflroom,
yblthtroOmNow
n~
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oontJ1I - · ville, WV 304-738-34011.
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7·lrullllll 11(1- OIJiy Ste,880. Froe Dollvory
,_of! vato. (740)-1
.&amp;Sol Up, 1-8111-928-2421
For Nil 'ig ronoh 11y1o
home, 4 ~-• 3 bo., WI -- 14x70, !bedroom. 2
In
pDIOh 2 •lra1!!'A an
ly SiltS. ~wn_~
• 000
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Hlrold74Q.385.4317,
CGm-llotllor Ilia or Now Ooubte Wldo. SIG5
1oue, In l't Plouanl 304- Per Monlhl 3 Bodroom, 2
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$40. Coli (740)441-ol2ll
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little. (740)245~92:-'-1.:.2_ _ _ _ __
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and

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$40, 3 pr;,;"'b:nto:
:'a~40i=e: oonGooos
21nx12inx121oot, $20, ~
111-, 1 Inch to 2 tncn,
3 Dldroorn moblla homO In Apflilanou: Rocondlllonod $10. (740)1192·2311

~"bedroom M/H, no poll,
.. 4almo lnoludH Wiler.
1100 dopooH. (740)-·
31117
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(740)379-2282

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·
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BAsE B A

HOUSTON (AP) - The
Atbnla Draws u. one victory
from advanclJ18 to the NL
Champiorubip Series for the
ninth time in 10 ~an.
Problem is, .!heir next twO
chance5 are at , 1\Jmer Field,
which might l&gt;e right where
the Houston ' Astros want
th
em.
The Braves took a 2.0 lead
in their fint-round NL series
with the Asaos with a 1.0 victory Wednesday. Tom Glavine
led the way with eight sharp
innings, and Atlanta scored its
·only run on another error by
Houston shortstop Julio Lugo.
"This
was b'tg," w 'd John
Smoltz, who pitched the ninth
for his second straight save.
"There is no undentating it.
Every year, SOltlebody says we
are on our way out. It's fun !0
begoinghome2.0."
There's the rub
•
The Braves had. the wont
home record a p~yoff team
has
had, going 40-41.
Houston was the NL's best
road team, winning a fran.
L'-·
_, 49 ' c1 di
Cuuc:-reCOtu
~ m u ng twO
of three games m Atlanla.
"There's no reason ta think
we can't make it interesting;'
Astros cleanup hitter Lance
Berkman said.
Shane Reynolds will slart
for Houston against john Bur·
kett, and he'll be trying to
reverse one of the bleakest
records in franchise history.
Not only have the Astros

ever

never won a playoff series,
they've lost all six games once
they've faced elimi~tion,
Should he pull it out, Houston will go with rookie sensa.
tion Roy Oswalt in Game 4
against Greg Maddux. A fifth
game back at Enron Field
would feature Wade Miller
1•
against Guvine.
"You hate to go 10 Atlanla
twO down," said Daw Mlicki,
who pitched five solid innings
.Wednesday, but was lifted for a
pinch· hitter in a crucial situa·
tion. "But we've got Shane,
Roy and Wade, three good
pitchen, going for us. So I like
our chances dawn there."
G~vine, who said he didn't
know about Cox's sister,limited Houston to six hits, striking
out duee and walking two,
Houston's best chance was
inrhefifthwhenBad.Ausmus
hit a ball that came so close to
being a IWOnrun hbmer that it
rip~:~ed th~ tqp af the padding
J'ust below the yellow stripe
across the top of the wall in
left field.
In t h e tlna! two weeu
Lof
the season, Moises Alou hit a
ball off the same wall that ric·
ocheted off the scoreboard
and into the stands for a
homer. The play reminded
Atlanta left fielder BJ Surhoff
of another weird one he wit·
nessed in the postseason.
"Fortunately,
nobody
reached over in a situation
like we had one year in New

w.

'

r

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I

CWTCH DUDE- Atlanta's Tom Glavlne pitched eight innings
of shutout baseball against the Astros Wednesday. (AP)
York," said Surhoff, who was
with Baltimore when 12·
year·old Jeff Maier created a
game-tying homer by Derek
Jeter in the !996 ALCS by
reaching aut to gnb a ball
that was about to be caught.
Surhoff played this one per·
fectly, keeping runners at first
and third. Glavine fought
back from a 3·0 count to
strike out pinch·hitter Chris
Truby, and Craig Biggio
bounced out.
Atlanla's only run scored in
the second when Surhoff
doubled and Andruw Janes
followed with a grounder up
the middle. Lugo dove and

stopped it, then threw to first.
His low throw got past Jeff
Bagwell, allowing Surhoff ta
go to third. Jones got a single
for the hit, and Lugo got an
error for ·the throw. Surhoff
scored on a double play
groundout by Rey Sanchez.
Lugo, who had a lintinning error on a high throw
to Bagwell, botched a
grounder Wednesday that
could've started an inning·
ending double play with the
score tied at 3 in the eighth.
Instead, Chipper Jones fol.
lowed with a three.run
homer and Atlanta won 7·4.

11.000.

NEW YORK (AP)- Mark Mulder
and the roung Oakland Athletics showed
off their Ill2turity from the fint inning all
~
the way to the postgame interviews.
L,~--iliiiilliiilr-.,1.
Playing with poise they lacked at times
Rule pius lllnd and llj)ltlr
during last year's playoffi, the A's rode
equipment. Excetllntlhopo.
Mulder's strong left arm and two homers
- !~::'5:~.17401446-7077
by Terrence· Long to beat the New York
"
Yankees 5·3 _in the opener af their tint·
~.:rw=:"'KI:O.~; :::.~~:,'~;:Ofl'~ lng. oarpontoy, win- round seriesWedne!lll:ly·nigltt:":"c' ,
,,__ (740)441-8147
112211
::"~or":: "We won Gam,e 1 last year and fltey
FRurrs &amp;
07 GMC Sonoma SLS, aoUI)Iato coli Chat, 740-1192· answered back with two in a row;' md
: l.t~-....iVOII!GEt:iiiiliii~iiNiii!Sii·_.l. !:i.~:=g;w;1\: 1323'
Jason Giambi, who homered for Oak·
or (740) 1141
,
land. "We can't let them ~nswer back like
~•Rlc:hanll
Brolllorl
.
F
NH
V.ve
&amp;
they did last' -ar."
Farm, APPLEI AND
A own.
,.
'
. MUCH 110111!. 24 mlln
..... ...,
R - 1 or ooinmorclll · The Yankees will turn to Andy Pet:titte
'NorlhoiGIIillpollaon~
~==.:.:in Game '2 of the best·of·five series
'
c":
~·IO
~~
trlclan.
Ridenour EltctiiCII, against Tim Hudson. Pettitte followed up
1
I \ In I ~I 1'1 I II ",\ I I \ I -.,II II I&gt;
(740)992:·~187
WV0003011, -5-t788. a Game 1loss by Roger Clemens in Oak·
::'liriiO~;;.,~~F.-~ARM;;;~;;;~
, land last year with a victory that helped
"""'"""""'
~ .. II home .
,
, :_, ; send NewYork to a fiw.game series win.
"":"!"· . ... ' ·
··
The Yankees need the same again this
2· 5' llrulh hogs, 1200 and
season.
CueCaoo
Baok Front
Hoo Bucl&lt;·
~J
. $300.
at, $450.
End
"We had . high hopes for this tlrst
loodlr Booker, $450. Con
g:ame;' Yankees manager Joe Torre said.
Tin
11 o' H8 IP ...
. CrusherCtno, $1500.Separalll
Comer ol888
•••nt.8 d
"We're going to have to dig down and
oond Addavllle Road.
even it up."
(740)245-5535
.------~~------, There was tight security and an
152 Coat DC with 5 n. dreg
increased police presence at Yankee Stadi- ~ "'1,'~;., ':;.,'':,';
urn in response to last month's terrorist
"$10150 lor troctor, 1300 lor
attacks, But _nothing could keep the
. brush hag 1aparal•ly.
.. (740)843-11217
56,697 fans away as New York began its
J.D. 41130 tractor: J.D.- 11100
run for a fourth World Series title.

I

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puts Astros in tight spot

1• ,
IIOIIS.W
Ill ChoY 112 I 2WO
·WATBIIPIIOOfiNG
113,000 Good
Urt001_11i_ guor·
r,~, '(3114)875-g:'llon· - - LocolotltlottcH lur·
F·t80 2wtl N Motor ~24ea:l':. 1 ~1
111 llcyl.
1·800·257·0878.
080 0870,
300
(304)1182·31211
RogeroWOitrproollng,
81 Nluan, 4 cytlnctor, C&amp;C llertoral Homo Mllnlaotandard: 1111 Dodgo 111m. Pointing, vinyl lid-

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_(7401448 0080

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

=r .....:=... IAthletics put away Yankees, 5-3, in opener

·~.;i~~~L....eor?__=_;;_~740

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Bu" from the Classifledst·

This;earcouldbetoughest,asOakland tohonorthecity'srescueworkers,theA's
offers the stiffest fint-round competition backed up =~ger Art Howe's bravado
for the AL East champion Yankees during with a run in the first. Howe caused a stir
their run.
when he said the Yankees would have _to
The A's went 58-17 after the All-Star play great "to have a shot to beat us."
break- the second-best record everDamon singled, stole second, went to
and won 102 games. Strong starting third on Miguel Tejada's groundout and
pitching like the performance Mulder scored on Giambi's sacrifice fly.
gave is the biggest reason why.
Damon, a disappointment in his first
· Oakland missed Mulder during ~st year in Oakland, showed why the A's
year's playoffi when he was sidelined with acquired him in the offieason from
a bad back. But he bounced back with 21 Kansas City. He went 4·for·4 with ·a
wins this season to earn the Game 1 slart. walk, two steili and i. run scored.
Mulder showed composure beyond his
Long led off the fourth with a homer,
VPars,
taking
control
early
in
his
poi!Seaand
Clemens left with • tight ri"ht
ham,.
~
son debut. The first two runners of the string after walking Giambi to lead off the
gamereachedbasefortheYankees-on.· fifth. He will be re·evaluatedThursday.
an error by second baseman Frank Clemens hurt himself fielding Damon's
Menechino and a single by Derek Jeter. infield hit in the fourth inning.
Last year, the young A's were undone
The Rocket allowed two runs arid four
by fielding blunders in .their first playoff hits in four-plus innings. It could have
game in New York. But Mulder wasn't been worse, but he held Oakland hidess
fazed, getting Bernie Williams to hit into in eight at·hats with runners in scoring
a double play and striking out Tino Mar- position an d rnade two nifry de fiensivc
tinez.
plays of his own to save at least three run·.
Mulder allowed seven hits and struck
Giambi and Long hi·t soIo homers i •
out five in 6 2·3 innings. The 6·foot..() the _seventh and eighth offSterling Hitcl
left-bander overpowered New York's cock, and Tejada added a sacrifice fly i t
dangerous lefty bats. Martinez, Paul the eighth to make it 5-1.
O'Neill and David Justice went Q.for·9
Martinez hit a two·run homer off J it• t
against Mul!ler and didn't get a ball out of Mecir in the eighth to make it 5·3. j a1ou
....r.
fi
the infield.
lsringhausen pitched a peuect ninth or
After an emotional pregame ceremony the save.

combine, 8 row hNd; HI
, 326 two row com pklker;

(740)11411-2072.
: YANMAR YM 1500 Troctor.
~-. 3 point nltch, $2,1150.
_~~In ';:16~~~s:;"~
avollablo. Loootod )Uit out·
ol Hu-. AI (2158)
771-1435 www.mtynaldoqulpmenf.aom

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leclibles, Men and ladles and ;;a'e drivers, Gaillpotla Polting Dlto: 1010&amp;101
F.. unrico- -.tng, Now brick on 2·112
'FAIIMS
(740)II92·5115l.
Rot~ Up -n, 110 Ooyt
Winter Clothes, Shoes, Lois and orneroy locatlono only,
lloc.-y I
S7.00 hour, vary honeot. _.. 3 000 oquare loot in·
FOR SAlE
3 bedroom, Middleport G....-1 WI Sell Now BETTER THAN FAEEIII
or household and mise, 9 to Apply In poracn,
looitl WGrk ,...m Rot.,.,.,.. avolltlblt. Call ground Pool, 11pntgt1 trutkl·
·
8375 per month piuo ~ Mltytag ~·· Foonoll
Spm.
Ovartlfoolc Center heo PI~ Tho Unlvarolly ol Rio (74014*2e77
lng, Smitll'o ooblnotal t~m.
H, rant lncludll wator, City MlyttG, 741H48-T/15. Got dllh Notwort&lt;..
Hugh Moving Sale. Satur- tlmoondluiiUmapooltlono :!,"':'~:t.~-- Porlablt llowmlll, (740)448-01411
'::C.-:;::',~~.=~ or&amp;truh,(740)1192.Q175 Country French Couch, No equipment to own or
day October t3th. 8·4, avolil;lrlt lor LPN'I and 1 In lho Cohgo of LIJorol tiDn'l haul your ' - to lho Nowly COitllnlolod, olnglo btdroorn, 2-!12 itottt homO, 3 Br, 2 batltl, 14x70 Newly W1fnu1 111m. CUllOm ~: ~ ~ ~~~=
Crown , City acron !rom STN"'• on lit lltlltl. Nfl· ArlO ond - - 1.,.. lite mill )UIIollll304-ef5-te57, .ay leDO oq. loot honol. 2 Olma, gorogo and oolllr - · (740)992·2117 ·modo. IIITLong, Lllto -- IGOIM. FREE lltntllnl PID"
Owsley' Grocery. St At 7 one lnlerootod lhould call SoclaiWDok fiiiiQIIIm
TRI.COUNTY CONSTRue;. ~ltd 10 mktutoo from hOull. mobllt homO rantlll .....~.1 River ••--- I~·• (304)875-48111. No calli ol· 1-11..-llon. "--'SOUIII Carpets HouHhold Krillle Maddtnll (740)1192·
,
Hollo/.....,.,, 20 min•~·• ,,
- ""
· - ~ tar ....
....,_
_,,..c
Tools · Holiday 'oacorationo' 11472 or orop by our Irani Of·
TION.
Now !rom PffUiitt-Vai
1(&gt;01.
_ _ ,.,1. on FO&lt; 1 Or 2 People, Roforon.
..,.,, ,......
ou nDP tOO our moot_.
Furnliure and Out Door' flee lor on application, eOE R pt nolbllltloo Of the 11011· Conotructlon/Romodollng, .,, ~ s• 1"" ioV ~· ~ 218, alidng I2150K. - · Otpooft, No Poll, Foa- For Solo: aocondlllonod tar programming. Hatlllo
.
E
•
Uon lnolutlo, but are not lm. 'Siding, "Aooll~ 'D""'"'Ii -· "" n ,.. on a ,.. ...to -1 (740)4411·21!11 or •·r Troitr Pork 741H41
•• dry
nd 1• !roe ln•Homa Sanrico Plan.
I
Somethlngfor very- Overbrook Center 11 ourw ltecl to, providing general 'WI o0 11 Alr...FM'E;t: 1·112 ICif'liiOt. 3 btdroom. {740)25e-1583der4pmfor"'
Msc.,
'
• wu...r1,
n a ~lriQPackllges ll.lrt at only
018
one.
rently ~ng a - " " oacratartal, clerical and motll 874-411231174-3155 2·112 lrathl,. big ~tchon mora Info.
1.
WIIOro34oTI~o':J!""~,"£"'1" S 3 &amp;, 9 e 1 m o n t h ,
Largo Sale at Johnoon to work port limo In lite fact~ ~~-P-M-=
,
. W/Oik catrlnltl, DR, LA
NIC&amp; .-n, 3 bedroom, In ::0(304)&amp;'15-;*
VI- NBC,CBS ..O.BC &amp; FOX
Greenhouse. Friday and lty'l treauty IliOn, Condl- ~~· -~-·wm hltul owoy, cl- 0111, wlgu fog flropiool, lluiiNB
cotrtby, (740)2111-11574
'
'
avalltblo In moot ......
oval- lOring -~~ and
. - uP or move Olmoot olr, laundry room, !toni
- - --.~.. ,.,~ 202 ~••
Sat urday, T. oys, Cl0 lheo, dallllltOuldkl monoglng coon- 111 lng aclvlooro: main- ony!hlng. Call (740)446- porch l 2·112 ell gorogo.
AND DU....,....
- - · - . - ..
- · · $4G.II9 Activation Feo lor 2
Shoes, Appliances, TVa. IIconIt .. woll .. llobiWt/ln- tall1lng trudgat"""""""' ond 7e04
lmmodlltl p cnmlon, Apo
AllUm.IENrs
~4~~:'77~: R--., add $411.00 par
Mulll Family Yard Sale, 9· ouranci. Salary It bUid lor tho Soclol Woo11 W1
pralttd 11 ;,25,500, Mike OffiCI building In MinoraIIOR RIM'
'l,eJ
Froa Eltlmalal Euy after Ind. l 4pm, Friday. OCtober 12th, on commtUIOn. tntll'lltld program, providing ,....rdt 1 ,~\,,:W'~nv;:n hou~~ offer. Call (740)448-4514 ,vttle, DOD eq. ft., ala., aovttrwnOino, ao days W.,. u flrtt month frH at all monlho
324 Third Avenue, next candldat.. ohoukl contact .-noa to lite Progrom 17401,u1_. 231 .,.. ~40)44e· from
M·F. . or irtd perking, ceiling lon, 1 ond 2 bedroom apan- colh. Vlool Maolor Can!. IV programming oorvlceo
door to French Clly Day the Dhoctor of Mollcellng of Dtrootor making on-oompuo o
ofllr 8pm. l27almo., 814-8'11-11111,
monll, lumlohod ond unlur- Drivl- a·llllil IIVI alot.
that you "'-· 12 Monll1
151 utc lor Ron. 11 no (740)448Care. Lots . ol name brand Admlnlmtor at {740)112- arraf'IDI'ITWitl for LA 10101, anawer, leave mea.ge.
Pomeroy. 111 tleolrlc briCk
Lars&amp;
.
nllhtd, NOurtty depolilt .,...
commitment and proof of a
clothes, choldrens. womena 11472. EOE
golhorfng and compiling II•
honol, 3 bltiiGOIM 2 l&gt;atl\
qulrod no poll, 740•1192• Moln Sltool Fumlluno
major Clldll cant or dtbll
&amp; mens. Formerly hekl at
tendonoo rconlt for LA
dining' kllchon · &amp; living.
Aau1AoB
(304)8'15-1422
can! r.qulfiCl.
2218 '
Dairy Queen.
Parolegol N -. EolaiJ. 10101 ond- - 1 UtJo
' II .,
Ill
'
1115 Main Strllt, Polrlt
lllt'ied Hunttngton Firm till u Uligild
room, re""act,
new ·
Pleuant
Or uk about
"Chh
October 12, 13. 2 KJng wa· Contact Ketley Sarvlooo:
u
,
riD
~
rongo, flllcro, lllr oontflllotltl ' 2 Actoo """" or 1111. City 1 BocfiOOIII ,t.porlment, RaCable Bounty':; 1Ulca
terbedo, rollaway. lrld, rt- (800)2115-11470
,t. nigh dlplonto or
OPtolmJNr:ry
&amp; heat, root 4 carpo~ Now Hoven atrovo Elom. l~llfll'o::,!!ango, !tiC In- New &amp; Uood Fumlluno Promotions. Amorteu liop
lrtgoralor houlthotd lttrnl.
• 111
~ •~- ,
~In- porch, larga 8chool, 892:-31110
cludod, .... PIUI Oopollt &amp; ••-.. p•-· ,..
100
"·
1
clothi{lg 't61 GrHnl
McClure's RMIIUronl now-· '"'
front porch, - I n · Rtlotlnoo. HUD Approved, ,..,.. 2 - ~flngroom
pac-go
only
•
orrtiCt ltlrtng 1111 3 locallonl, lui or Ill dltlt'M pralomid, PtaYIINOTICII
yard. (74Q)tm-287 ,_
2,7IOIII, u. . . ltnlln, In (740)441-t!te
SultH, 83119. Buy, Soli, IG.OD/monll1 lor tho llr11
Ytrd Sei•Adtlloon Town· pon·Ume plok up appllca· ouo omc. -lttroo hill&gt;' OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH·
WIIChtown 12700 piTredl.
yoor.
houoe Oclober 12&amp; 13 lion 11 ioC.uon r. bring lui.
lNG CO.
!hot Prloo Rtduotd. 3 Sldroorn. can (1801Sew753, 1.10'" 1 DldiGOIM UPitllro oport·
bunk 'be&lt;l• clothing and - n 1'30om
&amp;
you do bUIIn111- poopll 2 t/2 81111, 2 Car Qorago, 2 lllmllnd,.,..,..,
mont In Glllpollo. Con Nlct uooci
PRO DIGITAL lodayll
171:r""')448-'f~or Calt
mora uam-:;i,m .
O:OOom Monday lhN llat· All oppllclnto muotoutrmlt a you ltnow, onc1 NOT to 11nd Flropl-. PatiO DOore,
(740)4411-1!4111.
c17•!~~L-•n
Yaur ~~ Aulhorlred DlSH
1
:;:;:::.;::::;;.=:;::.·- - - ·
'
ot ln1trll1 ond
-lhroUglt tho mall until MUCh Morll CIOalto Hall·
HUNTING Oil
-......-•-·
Notwort&lt; Rilllltlr 74Q.eetl.
Yard Sale. 10111· 10/14, urdoy.
lnclucllng lho nont11olll1roe you hltVI inVHtlglltd 111o or't,
BllliiDotlo.
OH RICIIIATION LAND
1&amp;2 Dldroom, nMr Hotur,
9211 or 888·31D-24G5 Aloo
Ciotheo, Furniture, Grano, Naod 7 ~to Soli Avon. ,.,_on or OOioro Oc- offlllng.
(740)441-GIIIO
flanging In 5 oore to 100 tOOOtantiCIII
_
utllltloo. 1278 to
""""''"""
- uo out online 0
1·
9110 milol out of EVO'GI'IIn Coil (140)448 3351
~ II, iiXII ID:
101'1 trocll, """' ldjolnlng 83
(7 '• par month pfuo UIIIIIIH
Goooll
www.dlohoetolloro.com/proon HemlOck Rood.
Mo. Phylllo Start Your BuolniH To- Rio Gr1ndo ArlO, 2 fled. Putrllc hunting, .O.VIIIatrlt In 40)4411-21157
dlgltel
if
NEW EPHEDRA FREE
SPHfl, Dlrootor o1
day PrfnMI Shopping Con· rooms, I 112 Boll1, L.A., Athlno, Gillie, Jocklon, 2• I BodiOOIII Al&gt;ll localtd Allllll· ultd miliary, 1100. :2::::.-----YARD SAI.En
~ 40111 In 2 monthllll
Human Rooou,_
Ill 'jjp- Avolloblt At AI· Kitchen, largo lovol Lot. Pike, Scioto end Hooking ~looe to PVH &amp; Shopping 12150, AmO lnoludad, 101111 Dining room table "'rk
l'oMERoviMIDilu . Guarlnllttl RoOUIIa.
Unlvarllty or Alo Grandi loRialrll Rail. Spring VOlley lmmedllto Po111111on, COurtly, 11110 Ll'tllo Co., KY. aroao. (304)075-2117
1 wooer w/8 ohllre .,.,, oond.
Dr. Approvotlll
P.O. Sox 1500
PlaZa, Clll740-oi48.0101, 1127.1100. (740)44H801
For more lnlormauon end
11oown1ng Mtcro-Mdu FrH Conaulltllon
Rio Grendo, 0H 411174
1'1111 lnlpo coniiOI:
21&gt;&lt;. on Mt. vernon In Paint
1111% lot a~. :111 • tltaw 25 to
Oct 11th, (Thursday),
1-888·307--eoncudu
Plor£'i1110NA,L
Solnlc Collnt:y ~Inch
A~t..nc!CO.,Ud.
Pioolont.
(304)075-7833
45' with many tx1rao
42231 Coolville Ad.. Reed•
www.llhHithy.oom
lox 40)245-411011
SERVJaiS
• HouH, 3 Bodroonto, 1 ll2
1
21,_
p11on1 304-1175-1781 ofllr
ville, Oh, to much to man- URGENTLY
-NEED~D·
EE AA Employor
::"~':": =~ ~:
www.tiOIInd.-n
~~~:;1..11o~~id48
~5:;;;.3D;.;pm:;_._ _ _ __
lion, 1740 )&amp;3 7·6088·
plumo donore, 11m $45 to Somoono W oily wlll1 oldor
TUIINID OOWN ON ·lng S71,000. 31134 Rod Hll lndlotn C- Eq-rlan Ea- and Rolrtgorator No Pete.
Golda Wolghll!oooh, dumi&gt;Yard aala- Sat Oct 13th, $80 lor 2 or 3 houri -ty. gonllomon ovamlght and SOCIAL HCURITY /Ill? Rood, Danville· Molgo 11111, 3-11 oorf loll, _ , of $47&amp; pluo dopoth, lllloren·
bello, Olympia Bor and
284 Palmer St, Middleport, Call Sara·Too, 740·1112· holp wlll1 hlo rroonol 0111. No FH UniOH WI Wlnl County. (740~742-8004. Alo Grandt, lrom $25,GOO. en Required. (740)448· ware,
welghto, S100. (740)-'
11151.
r
(7ol0)448-431
1-888·582·3345 I' ~or Ami Holden.
(740)245-5747
.
30411
t
mora.
4245oher8pm, i):
I cheap.

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port, 3 - · 1111 -

chairs, Glassware and Cot- callona for. management Position Announcement

'

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buyelo-

..... laona- buy 1oon1 &amp;
1::;,g~s Oak·

• HouH12150. Mon111 + 1200.
Oopooft, (304)727-1131•
Olk
835 a lOad, !rom epm.tlpm,
two or more loado, 830
(740)742·211D7or(740)992' For11lobyownor, Nlcebl728&amp; ,
- homo on 1 ocroChelter. Tllroo bltfrOOnl.

I,.,

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FRitn I27W348 COli 1.W: lint 'OOndltlon. (304)895·
Down, 30 Yooro
I,S% 11111-11014 E...-1 Hauling 31211.
APA. ~or Llotlngo, 801).3!11- ()pportunlilo.
~~::-:==-==..,.
3323 Eld. 1109.
'
,
-ILE 11011! OWNIRS
2 bod100111 homo- to ~ruS.:ods.:::. ~~
town bUornent Rt.. view mom, no poll, dOpotll &amp; rot• eluding hi offlclonoy heat
S428/month· 3 ·bltiiOOIIII~ oroncot, utiiHioo. pokl, i&gt;Uft11tiYIIami.Wocanya
town, 1·112 bathe. Gqod lo- (740)1192:.0111S.
.
compltite line Of Mobile
~.. • - • month Rolw
·home Pll'tl &amp; loCCIIIO..iel.
~•- ,
• 1 bod100111 oporl· BENNITT'S HEATINCI l
. _ ond dlpollt noqulfiCl, mont, (740)441 03GO
COOUNQ (140)4411-MII
(740)U 8 3IIU,
or 1.aoo.e7MM7 '
li
~
hou
•••
211ot11oom Houoo, !tiC, R• ,:,::~~, ':;'y S::c~~ - -----•11111
lllgoralor lnctudld, Oopolll Bod....., 2 ,.. 1 NEW AND UIID FUR•
and lllloronctll, (304)882· 112 llllh' Fully ~ NANCI!8 I'OR IIALili We
2118 Ctllolltr 5:00
Adul Pooi &amp; Baby Pool, PO: lntlllfl, F- Elllmalel, II
3 llodloom HouH In Rio llo, lllort . - . N o Poll, you Coli uo, We both
Ofando, No 1'111. $3110/ Louo- Soourlty Oopoolt LOOIII (740)4411-1308, 1month pluo Dopoolt RequlfiCl, Ooyo: 740-44fl. fi00.211HXII8.
(740)243-5439
. 3481; Evonlngo: 740-3117·
R!81D!NT1ALAND.
II Room HouH wlltl 11111101102, 7-.otot.
~IICIAL
pluo Double Gorago, ~ Avollablo- AIIAII/I· HI Ellloloncy 92 +
(740)4115·1619
Call
gu lumacat, Supar HI Elfl·
'IWin l l l w r clency Hoot Pumpo and .O.Ir
Pilot Program. Rontoro
. (304)875-11179.
COnctlllonero. 10 yoor porta
N-. 304-738-7215.
lor applcotlon, HUD oubel· and ltbor waninly lncludad.
W""" rent? . government dlzod apt.lor~and COIII'OIITAIRHEATINQ
"1
EHO
AND COOliNG
trackld(710one from $4110 .
'
'
C140)441.0114
_,, 40)448-3093
Vo:y nice, 2·3 -.om
1-eod4111 0078
oplllmont, In town, Iorge
Moiii!J!JioMls ~-· LR, $5000no. Rof· Rool-llolllomoOWMro
,.__
.,.,.,.. &amp; dl!&gt;ooft r.qulfiCl, Tappan HI ollloionoy 110 piUI
fOR....,,
(740)448 31114
filii lumaceo Including oli
11

IFor1304-Rent or Bolo, smon u.s. 150 Eut,

12th8-12. Play. Station, tod- lor houilecloanlng poroon- Http -ltd coring lor ...
WAM'ID
dler bOys clothes, womens Fire and Water Dlmogo ~. Oorol Group Homo, •
To Do
clothes and mosc.
~:;':;1';\lel~~ g: ~ ~- '"::::
Garago Sale- Saturday lion and 111 Punctual. Spo- &amp;pm, 3p;.-u~'11 . All wlclca lnotlll13th, Sunday t4th on Route clal Care Clooning SaNice. 7am, can 740-1192·l5023,pm lid; ropalring lort:od lllr ktr·
7 South Ann Drive oH of 1743 een,_,..llood Qo~
_ , . - · lawn ,....
RaccoonAoad. Baby+glrlsllpolls,OH45631.(7.01'!* -H-orkero -oro; email onglnto. Mike
clothes, suppUes +toys.
9585
1835 Wttkly Pr-olng (740)44&amp;-7804
.
Mill Euyt No Expo~Garage Sale. t11h. 12th, AVONIAIIArouiToBuyor onc0 - · Ctll1· Davld'oGinoraiCGmroctlng
13th. 7t3 West College Sell. Shl~oy Spoonr, 304- 800-8152·1728 E•t 2070, Plumlrilg, oloalrloal, point·
Street. Roo Granda. State 675-1429,
.
24Hnt,
I~ do&lt;:lca, roolo. Call
~~~~ ~~d ~~~~~ •;:\~": Domino's now tilting l!lllll·
~2511·G373 (304)833-

'

,
111 tfmo

JloMls

I

BOX 720-01 POMIIIO~
101145718. •
•

==

~oeJ~~-=
1 -3--.. r~ooe.;;;i
Homo1 From $1G9/Mo., 4%

=r:'

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~:~;::~:::=::

~

1M bonolllt, ~
_ , ... ootions. ApprGal
38
houta per lnoludlng
...,. -""Do ond dip, Aooni for llf.

ltltor ond ..
oleverythlng FrH Stull! All oumo to Tho Dolly llontlnot,
Heme hill ...&lt;.... on.Satur· ~ ~7-728-12, """-·
,.._
~· - -

Free 112 Lab puppleo.
1740)388·9088
lnsrAND

.,.'•

pcofli•'"· PllvaltiRCifCtlnAihonl. l!x·
pol1onct ciHifiCl but not
"I
''Y· T1llt polltlon ol·

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1: I

121106-- e.te oxpondo. 2 Looking To Buy A Now Now Taking AppiiC&amp;lad.....,, 2 111111. Newly Homo? Don, Hove Lend? 85 Will a 1lociroom T_,.
Calpoted. High Efflcltncy Wt Dolll Huny Only 10 ~ houtt ,t.piJ1mtnll, lncludll
FUinaoo. Air Condl-. Loll, 304-738-128&amp;.
Wiler Sowogo, Truh,
Good COndition. P!lood to Nlct 4 10,. troct 83&amp;WMo., 7 - 0008.
Sell.(740)3117•7871 .
Gllllpolla- ooov tormt,
.
(740)4oll 31113
3 ....., .....,_ tr Wldo: Only $1111.00 Par
, pokl, 1280 pluo 't~~po~~t
Month, 8.- Fblotll- Prime 2·112 acre lot lor (74014*1:MO
llalt With loll And lJn. building on- an qUo1 •••UTJfUL
A•••T
&lt;Wrpjnoolug t·1111121342fl rood, .. · - - · out- MiNTa AT IUDOaTm
c:lty In Spotng1117 141t80, 2 Bl't, llall1. oklo
llotd of Towilthtp
AUt
Clil AT JAC- Is11/C, &amp;ooil Concflllan. ., 7 500 Coli lor'"""" mi:,G TATU, 152 W - Drive
..1100.
\740)317-7117, (740
· from 1217 to Q83, Wlfk to
14 Ooyo·
i317·70 e. 11113 141180 (740 . 48 Evonlnc or ohop " Coli 740Condition. 2 BA, Blllh
ngo, -·25811. Equlll Houlllng
, 12llll8, 2 BR, llall1. - t o buy. 5- ZO.I'Irll- Oppcxtunlty.
12
'
(740)4-CW/34,
001111 COunty.
(740)441·1337,
(740)317• lily-CoN alltr epm,
(140)4411- Chrltlty'o Femlly Uvlng,
7oti.
3l4l
33140 Now Llml Rd., Rut·
'
'
IOnCf. Ohio, 740-742•7403.
11191 Mollilo Homo,
~~~~ ~
14x70, 2. bodrooma, 2
·~·- _,, __ ·~~
Dllhl. V"'f good condlllan,
lfonll available lor loue.
t17,000, call lor appoint·
-.cill now.
mont, (740)448o07e8
Graciouo living, 1 ond 2
tm Clayton tiiX80 botllooon IPiflmtnll at vu-

-In •

I

·------""
COSTUMES' Rutland D• .
panment Store, Thu 01., Fri., day. Roln or Shine. 178 MilSat, noon-7pm, Oc:l 5th· ton fl4, ~ ~- 8omNov. 4th, (740)742-7243, 3pm, F~. &amp; Sat Oct. 12·13
ragdoiOhert&gt;alsago.com
Multi Fam. Yar&lt;l9aloDisney Beach VacaUons, 6 Hallfonl otore Fri,·Sat. Ull
noghls, nKlll holel, woll sa&lt;:ri· 12:00, prom gowno tlmlll
llce lor $199, (614)898- lizoo, storage unH, llnon,
2728
c:omloo1afo.

r
r

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I

&amp; croft.. OPTOIIETIIIC lEHII-

n

::a;:•:c.::r.s:;·

f

341120 State Route7. Porn- ClAN pooltlon IVII1Illtl 1or
oroy, ..,_ !rom Slcatt+ poroon ~ In wav. 10112·10118,
lng p i l - will oyo -

Octobor1211&gt;-141111romlom
until &lt;!pm 0111
Stole , ROute 143 off of
Royte 7, first - Y on
Why wall? Start meeting 111o 1tft post Ptn Ad.
Ohio singles tonight, catltotl
.
tree
v
" ..
1821, 1-600·766·2623 ext
IARD,.....
PJ',I'lJ!:A.sAHr

=:,

~

Prlvoto Party Ado Undor $100
20 Wordl 7 DIYI • eoch Item Priced

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lntluda Campleta
Ottcrlptlon • Indudt 1\ Mea • A¥old Abbrtvlltlona
• Include Ph(ll'lt Numblr.AnCI Addrttl Whtn Ntl4td
• Adl S,OUid Run 7 Dlyl

\ \ \ 01 '\ I I \ 11 \ h

*'

,:fl00.

(304) 675•1333

Includes Free Yard Sale Slgnl$ '
Up To 15, Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
, Ads M4st Be Prepaid

--llpm.

=;:; ':'

l\egister

Plsplay Ads

e:

::

Am..or::

. REACH OVER 185,000 PROSPECTS

Word Ads

Pomeroy, llldd~ Ohio

Thut8Cf8y, Oct. 11, 2001

~~

Wanted to buy: Uoed Mobllo
Homo. Coli (741))448-0175

E304w~

•

'

" 8- ttalf Boor Oooo, Expoaod
to ful blood buck ior Janar
a:y kldl. $275 HCh. Aogiotered Boer Buck, J40Q.
(740)258-1724 0\lonlngo.
Aeglltered Black Anau•

.. Buill

., Out

au agee to 18 months.

Of

N-Bor E)(T. Wldo

.. aprtad BOCC TravWar 6
: Ec;iplt. Glntto, ttartlng at

.r

" $1100.

(304)372·2389

w~

1

·: Buci&lt; a ~ 1011, lqUIII
- 00110 •• ,00- hoy uP lo
' 12.00, round 1&gt;1111 118.00

.• tteh 3114-1175-48119

Bulk Spring lttd 0110 lOad·
od on your vlhlclt. $4.0Dib.
par 100. (304~1 or
- (30401175-11507
Hoy &amp; BriOht Wtro Til
· 6trp, Year 'Aound Dtlivery

&amp; Volumo DltOOunl .O.valla·

ble.

}oferltagl

' (304)075-11724.

'

Farm.

I H \ '"l 't II\ I\ 1 111 \

:. rid

care.

POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
RN· PT/Per Diem
LPN· FI'IPT/Per Diem
CNA· FI'IPT/Per Diem
RATB WILL BE BASED ON EXPERIENCE
lleDelllllnclude:
• $5!)0,00 slsn-on Bonus for Licensed Nunes

• Flex schedulins (Incluclinsl2 hr. shifts)
• Shift Differcntiol
• Weekend Pooitlons
• Trolnina Progt'llll for
graduates
• Healib Insurance Sinale/Family Pion
APPLY IN PERSON OR CALL

nt"'

3 Roulolered Chorolllo
-Bulla. (!o4)&amp;75-IIS81

•

Center is a dynamic Lon1 term care facilil)'
that provides intcnnediate and skilled care
needs to residents. Come join our health care
orgonization where we provide excellence in

Auros

· FOR SALE

t978 Carvllll, White w1111
· Rod Interior, T·topl, Auto~~· $7500. (740)3111·

Anpla Cleland DON (304) 675·5236

AAJEOE

JOB SPECIALIST
The Buckeye Jobs for Ohla'a Graduates
(JOG) program hae an Immediate opening
for a full·tlms Job Spaclallsl. This position
reports to the Program Manager and Ia
locally responsible to the Principal at
Meigs High School. Aotlvltlae Include
classroom Instruction, academic coaching,
job development and placement, job
coaching and coordlnatlan wllh local
bualnesaes. The ~ght candidate may have
an Allaoclates or Bachelore Degree with s
good work hlalory and an aptllude for
working with youth. Exlenalve work
experience may be eccepted In lieu of a
degree and teaching/coaching ability Is
essential. The full-time ularled position
assumes a work year of approximately
1800 hours with reduced summer
activities. Base salary Is $15500 plus
retlremenl plan, medical, dental, &amp; life
Insurance benaflla. Qualified applicants
should sand resume with a cover letter by
5 days after appearance In paper to:
Buckeye Vocational SorvJcee
PO Box 735 •
t!IJJ1baro, OH 45133
or !'AX to : n7·313nll40ll

Chuck Finley makes retum to playoffs
opener 5·0 as Bartolo Colon
But for the second straight ,
pitched eight shutout innings year, he.finished strong and has,f I
and Seattle didn't play like the gone 9-2 the past two Septeam that won an AL·record tembers.
116 games in the regular seaAnd after 15 years, he's
son.
never been more reaay ' to
The Mariners, who will pitch in October.
start 20·game winner Jat:nie
"This is one of those things
Moyer, know they can't afford that you should cherish and
to fall behind 2·0 in the serie5, enjoy," he said, "because you
with Games 3 and 4 in Cleve. never know when it might
come again."
land this weekend.
"Everybody is going 10 have
Moyer, also 38, can certainly
to be hungry;' Seattle reliever relate.
Jeff Nelson said. "It's a must·
_T he journey=n missed the
playoffi last year after bre,aking
win gaine."
Seattle should concentrate his kneecap while pitching a
on scoring tint. The Mariners simulated game.
have been shut out in 22 con·
But this year, Mo~r went
secutive postseason innings 20-6 during the regular season
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - against Cleveland dating to the and twice beat the Indians,
fifth inning of Game 5 of the going 2·0 with a 0.64 ERA.
110 Help W1nted
1995 playoffi.
"That's, this year," said
Finley has owned the Moyer, who came into the
Mariners during his 16·year season 3·7 vs. Cleveland. "I
career, going 19·8 against . don't really have an answer to
Seattle, his second·most wins why that happened."
NEIDIDNOW~
· against any club.
· Cleveland has had its trou·
~ \!:1"
"He knows what he's doing hies against soft·throwing left·
OU!· there," Mariners shortstop ies like Moyer, preferring to
BINI.ITS AVAILABLI
Mark McLemore ~d.
swing hard against hard·
MANYIHinl
The Indians signed Finley to throwers like Game 1's losing
AVAILABLI.
a three-year, $27 million deal pitcher, Freddy Garcia.
before last season to pitch in
Ellis Burks said the key
games
like
this.
The
left.
against
Moyer is patience.
big
The Dally
bander spent two stints on the Burks plans to move up in the
Sentinel
disabled list this season, limit· batter's box to have a better
992·2155
chance of hitting his sinker.
L - - - - - - - . J ing him 10 22 starts.
SEATTLE (AP) - Chuck
Finley will make his fint post·
season start on IS years' rest.
Finley last pitched in the
' playoffs
in
1986 as a
rookie for the
California
Angels, and at
the time, the
left-handerthought trips
to the mound
in October
would · be
Finley
annual
events.
On Thunday, the 38.year·
old Finley's long wait will

finally end as he starts for the
Cleveland Indians in Game 2
of their AL playoff series
against the Seattle Mariners.
"This is wonderful," Finley
said. "I spent a lot of my time
in Anaheim battling with the
Mariners to get to this point,
and having to go over to the
Central Division with Cleve.
land and to end up here is special.
"A lot of guys in the league
playing in the playoffs don't
have 16 years in the big
leagues, much less waiting 16
years to gel back to the playoffi. It's been a big ride."
The Indians · won the series

TELEPHONE OPERATORS.
•

WILL TRAIN

wfCALL NOW

I•888•874•J085

J..-----------,.---...1 ..______________•

�Page B s • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, Ocl.11, 2001

Thuraday, Oct 11,2001

Pomeroy, Mldditpon, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page II 7

OOP

NJ:A Croa•word Pu••l•

If=•
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.......
........ ·=
ACROII

1 Cclllait,

ROIUTISSEU
CONSTIUCJION

JONES'

CARE DOCTORS
'r-------------L-10% Discount :

Tree Service

•NewHolnft
•GngN

• Top • Removal • Triin
• Stuinp il'incling
• Bucket Tl'ltk

'~PIIII

. Rlmodellflll

•

FREE ES'nMATES

•

~-

,,_..

• a: Ill

If I

t ll I
6 A tft

Your Repl-rnant Parts Source

·=
••=·• •::!nul
==
•• rae:

17

,

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

..

....a•m•·
•1111111 ....

HO\lE C!H'LK

E:\ fERI'RISES
Geaenl
Contnctme

EzcavatinaDoae:ranil
-.clrboe
Septic s,.tema

11

111 . . . . . .

Spedollze 1it -

•

.

C&lt;NIIIructlon,

,.modellaa. phtmblna.
elrctrial, home •aln·

DreBarn
44087 Wlpple Roed

992-7943

Pomeroy

.

74G-992-5344

Sit 1-t

ljelfase:
Aprll27, l002
A .fee of $20.00 will be charged for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, tate
removal, or anytime acceis Is wanted to
fairgrounds otber than staled dates.

BuDding space Is first come first serve.
Inside Stol'llle: $4.00/lf
op.o Space: $2.00/lr
Inside J'eoce: $1.00/lf

Hill's Self
Storage

47NfStog ..,.,,.

_...,on..,,
-

.

,...,.
(740) 949~2657

Uno of Sullivan••

lloiPf&gt;lleo

Vouchers accepted in
Meigs County.
Dump Truck Delivery.
Meigs and Maeon
County

Bob Ball
1-740·992·6142
. or
1-877-604-7350

JIIIJI,IIIIIl

Hauling • IJmestone

Min.

1bpsoil 1 Fill Dirt

• Granl Sand •
•Mut&lt;h

..

681-1329

(740) 992-3470

P/8

Home
Haircuts
Available

CONTUCTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45n1

'740-9115-3948

by

• Footen, Wallt, Stept •
l!laiWork,

3SS37 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-383 I •

Middleport, OH

992-9158
FreeHtlma-

on repalre•,

In-home oervlce
lVIII- 24 houn,.
uMdayetema38e
and up, uHc:t
hardwa,.ancl
eoftwa111.
UcenH H3001510

• Always Available.
FDr IIIDI'O ift/orlllldUHI, COIIU to IIIII' C61U'Ch IR.

Sunday 9:30- Su..tay School; .

10:30 - Preaching
Suodsy Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

MITH I'ULL GOIPIL CNUIICII

ROUTI 11•, LOIIC BOTTOM, OHIO

24'120'
1·12 DOlliE Will
·PUsnc

Wlodowo•lloom
Adtlltiono•lloollq

COMMilOAl ontlllliDIIIIW.

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992-7599
.(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

------

FIRST COME,
... FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGUlARlY ·
$321.00 PO JOINT

...,..

All Maketi '1\'actor &amp;

Equlpmeat 1'11111
Factory Authorized
Csse-IH 1'11111

..

KENSINGTON

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRIIOR 11CIUIDlOGY

. KUPI'IHI!
SUMMEATIME HEAT

OUT AND WIHT!II
1111! HEAT IN
BLOCKI OUT liB
OF DAIIAGINCJ
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS.
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Deelen
10110 St. Rt. 7 South

Custom Computers

Crete Free Eallmites'

f~

On
Saturday,
.October 13, 2001 at
1o:oo a.m. the Home
National Bank will
offer lor aalo at
public auction on the
Bank parking lot the
following vahlcleo:
·
1111 Oldornobllo
Yin
t2GALI54NXM232330
1989 Dodge 4X4
Pickup Yin
11B7KF23YI9XJ54938
1 .
1115 Pontiac G111nd
Prix Yin
12G2GK37H8F221972
5
1994
Harley
Davkfaon
Vln
11 HD1CAP18RY20117
2
The terma ol the
..........h.
The Home National
Bank reaervea the
right to 111)ect any or
all bids or to remove
any unit from the aale
at any time.
Arrangementa may
be made to lnaptcl
any of the above
named vehlclea prior
to the tale by calling ·
740-94..2210.

conotructlng dlatrlcl the aame, aa certllled
facllltlet, Including by the county auditor,
now athlatlc facllltieo, will be two and elxty·
site development, IlVlA hllndrtdlha
landacaplng,
(2.17) mlllo par dollar
tn
equipment
and ($1.00) . o1
1urnlohlnga, togather valuellon, which
with all neceaoary 1mounta to twenty·
appurtanancn and ol olx and nven Iantha
levying li tax to pay centa (S0.217) for
the principal and each one hundred
lnleteal of aald bonde doll era (S1 00.00) of
outelde of thetan...,lll tax valuation.
The polio Will be
conatllutlonal tax
limitation lmpoHCI by open from 8:30 .a.m.
Section 2 o1 Article to 7:30 p.m. on 11ld
XII,
Ohio date.
ConetHutlon.
The
maximum BY ORDER OF THE
OF
·number of yeara over BOARD
which principal of tho ELECTIONS
bonds may be paid lo OF THE COUNTY OF
twenty (20) yaaro .and MEIGS, OHIO
the
utlmatad
average additional Rita D. SmHh
annual proparty 1Arx Dlractor ol Elactlono
levy, outalde of the
tan·mlll llmHation, to (10) 11,2001
pay tha lntareat Ito
thereon and ·to 11111111

PUBLIC NOncE
Tha Araa Agency on
Aging at Buckeye
Hllla·Hocklng Valley
RtiiiiOnal Development
Dlatrlct, Route 1, Box
21tD, Marlelll, Ohio
45750 11 requeetlng
pnrpoaaia for Title Ill D
Dlataoa Prevention
and Health Promotion
Servlcea In Athene,
Hocking,
Malge,

Monro•,

Morg1n,

upon

r•quest .

'

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

YOUNG'S

•RaamAdd~lonol

[740) 992·3194
gg2-6635 .

i'

Romodollng

Free Estimates
:!
•
V. C. YOUNG Ill 750 East State Street

-·"""'

1101 11

-

• Deck•
• Home Repalre

Free Est1mates

740-992-1101
or 992-2753
Dinner &amp; Dance
Sacred Heart Church Hall
Saturday Night Oct. 13th
Dinner 6:30pm Dance 7·10 pm

Call 992-5898
6TH ANNUAL EASTERN
BOOSTERS GOLF
TOURNAMENT
Pine Hills Golf Course
Pomeroy
Saturday, October 20, 2001.
10:00 a.m.
$50.00 Entry Fee
Blind Draw
Any questions call
~nny Tolliver 985-3994

roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remadtrllng,
addldon• • decka
F-••dmalle

Wrltesel

Roofing • Home
MaIntenanceGutters· DoYin

10 yre. experience

Spout

In the bualneaa

Free EsUmates

References

available. Owner:
Terry Lamm
L..,£,:74~~~:
·11738

g 1
49· 405
591·5011

l/1

a =IV

4 IJ'I Abner

.e.:·,
-

ID

Gil_,.
~

•a I 1M
a14 .-,IDitill
11

............ ......
niantfi,

11 .teun1r !liP r7 XI I*'

D CMwlll

......

-.

•

~fu~s~~~

CAN HELP
GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL

DIRT

~Snodgrass' Upholstery
"Htlplnz Yov ro Rm"'' Yolllllll'tlllllllll"

~740_-9_92;....-5_2_32_, . L.:s.:. :.• ~.:. : •&amp;·:2.:0:.: 2_ _ _ _ _-rR=IId•:::::.•·O=h'::.Jo

OG N G I

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.

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1

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6

Sherman While
741J.112-7832

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

''

Discounts

I

tricks via one spade, 1-'-.--~ng!""'lr-"'lr-"'1'"?-1
Complo10 tho ehucklo quotod
two hearts, two dia- . . . . . _
by lllling In tho mlulng wordo
monds and four clubs.
you dovolop from llop No. 3 bolow.
Instead, you should
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES
switch to the spade
king, hoping panner
UN$CRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
has jack-nine-fourth.
(If declarer ducks
SCIIAM-I.ITS ANSWE!t$
twice, revert to
hearts.)
Embalm - Elder- Twang· Lawyer- WERE LATE
Did declarer play to
M11ny
people complain that the mail service is slow.
best advantage? Tune
But when was the last time your gas. phone, or eleclric
in tomorrow.
bill WERE LATE?

..'

~

j

I

Granny always said that lhe
secret to a happy marriage was
r~:sn~i:!lL-LA....JR'-E..L.N-.O.L.C...J,.,· ,.~~ ~i~someone you enjoy-·---

Friday, Oct. 12, 2001
On• of the 1hings you'U do

WE

•umpteloed

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

niii1M

•
•

II

$49 Service 911, full oil, and
heal pumps for winter

U111tslontl

Self-Storage

CGian••

1:"',

41 W I
-

iiilmiiii : Furnaces
Air Condl1lonlng : Refrigeration

Seniors Discounts

High&amp; Dry

110111 Tratlot'll,
UIIH!y Tratlera,
CarHeulera,
Any'tlllng Metal

I

best in

TRI-COUHTY
TRIIHSPORT

~~~

31

deal. If you do return
a heart, declarer wins
and continues with . ~

: PEANUTS

·

r-..-,._....,.,..._
...------,
LAMM'S
Howard L.
. Specializing In

•New Hom..
• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
•Garag•
•Addltlona

"(buJJty ICfnW"
C1ra, Tractor•.
Lawn Furnttu ...

Phone (740)593-6671

Athens, Ohio

·CONSTRUCTION

. ...

31 l.ftVW*'

Ev

(10'111' 610'1120')

Completed propoaale
992-j)215
:,
deadline 5:00 P.M.
November 21, 2001.
Call (740) 374·8438 for
eltctronlc or hardcopy ,........~~.....
)lllcket.

Public Notice

Notice Ia hereby
given that purauant
to a r . . olutlon
adopted by the B011rd
ol Education ol the
Melga Local School
Dlatrlct, County ol
Malga, Ohio, on the
21at day ol Auguat,
2001, !hare will ba
aubmlttad to the
qualified elector• of
Mid achool dlalrlct at
the altctlon to be
held on the llh day of
November, 2001, at
the regular placet ol
voting therein, the
quaatlon of ltaulng
bonda ol aald board
ol education In the
aum of $4,250,000,
lor the purpooe of

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

Noble, Perry and
•Now~
Waehlngton countiea. • EIK)rlcll. I ~lumblng
Deta111 of urvlcea and ' • Rooting &amp; Oultoro
funding are Included • VInyl Siding I Pointing :
In the RFP. Technical 1 • Patio Md PDreh O.ck•
a1111iance available

(10) 2, 4, 9, 11, 2001
4tc

NOTICE OF
ELECnON

I Mled'iCiU'e Supplement: Life Insurance;
IB1"ri11l ·a11d Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
IDt•ntiil, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers:
MoiJgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

CARPENTER
SERVICE

u •ooe·•
II II II

• Comic
flU 11n1r
Qol:17ft$ 111
l.aM
AotDr
Rltnar
Ill 0111 Ill I

rI 1 I I

Pressure

FOR SALE

IIIII

2

21 01111
UNIItn •
II

.42 Ttalsll ...
41 1'1'1111
-IDI
=ltn
C7
Alan

r.....,,..

Roofing • Gutters • Siding
Decks • ConcrBte • EIBCtrlcBI
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring

I

•
rarn
D'lltlrl t'l

11 !lploter'l

O

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

I

*·

II........

....

Eric llacllbum

A+.

w. v.

7 =OFIIIlll :17 WlltlhlniiW
I IIMo'alllo 41 AIIDIIIIW'I
I L1t1M1r peot
...
10 Pllilt'a
42 Dlilell I

hlnDIIII"

"

Upgrades

74o-887-G600

and.DrlvH • St•ndl •

~

14 G:lllllllrl

_..--In ...

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

Service, Repairs, and

• --

In bridge, though,
,...;...;t~;.;;.......,...
-you must look and
listen. Look at the ex. posed hand1 and ·
watch all the carcb
coming out of the .
closed hands. Abo,
listen to the bidding
and draw conclusions
from it.
In this deal, you are
. sitting East, so scrutinize only your hand
and North's, the
dummy's. Against
three
no-trump,
West, your partner,
leads a fourth-highest
heart two. Declarer
wins with dummy's
king, then calls for the
CELEBRITY CIPHER
.
club three: four, king,
.
.
by Lull Clmpol
10. South continues
c 1 , I)· Cipher C!"JPttP''• • Dl'lltiCI froll'l QIQiratkratllolo111•. bv ......
10)1101111, putond
olphor-lai-.
with the club queen:
.
T&lt;lda~ ell»: D ~ )(
eight, spade three,
club ace. How would
'H ZKYHIIII IIXKOKMHI
you defend?
Three diamonds
IWUYIXHB
CPGAIHMI
YIIICI
was invitational but
IADAXII
KC ' I
IGiaiHXI
nonfon:ing.
Declare!' bid three
HLLGIXI.'
YHII'C
K
no-trump, announcing stoppen in the
· ZHNIGI ZKYHIIGI
Ul)bid major suits. If
,. PREIUOU8 iOL\ITION: 'Thera are no tree rldel on the
South had only th~ ...,
lntonnatlon llighwiY for ttatitre of child pornography.'.,...
Allllmey Gel1lial John Alhcroll
heart qu~en, he
would have run the
WOII
fint
trick to his hand.
111A1 lAilY
' .
So, South is (ahnost)
PUIIUI
certain to have the
THIS SOUNDS
• d .rom
~
locrrtOnge Ionon ol 1M
heart ace. n.n
lour tctOmblod word• beo
LIKE "
11AW..TEE
the heart-two lead, ·low 10 forttt four ~mple -.11.
WITH
you know West ,..........,,....,,....,,....,...,,....,-..,
HEI'&lt;RTI!oUR.N.
0..,E_N...,..R..,•.,u_E..,~
started with exactly
2
nt:01'1JIIiiii11 four hearts. Returning a heart will estab· - . . .
\=:::::!l..,;~
lish only four defen-~
G A R.
sive tricks: two hearts
.
1
and two clubs. ·
Look . at the full •L....J.;.,_J..,-L-..1...~"

, Jeff Warner Ins. ,·
992-5479

''II

.. .....

Ill - .....__.
:10 . . - •
- ;_..
0111or
II II' II II
Q link
14 ""'"'
PI tl II
·
:II D r 1'41a
DOWN
all
• 0r111111o
1 1w I tl

....

streetl."

'We'll fix it or elsel'

Repi•Cemenll, • Welkl

Senina Oblo aad.
\VV lllll111

NewHomeo•VIoyl
Slcll"l • New GlfiiOI
•RtplaCOIIItol

--··
........

Oscar Wilde wrote,
"Art is not to be
taught in Academies.
It is what one looks
at, not what one listens to, th.at makes
the artist. The real
schools should be the

• Workl on Su~ldiY11.

Bulldozer Services

' •COM(Jm/ILOCK/BRICK ·

lbadeiiiW ltltnlce, lac

.In this
•
$pace
f~r $50
per
month

IINYII8

4\Ex:i

T Lilli P11111

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ElsE?
Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

Advertise

BUILDERS INC,

e1111n
WI OK'
ClllDCIRE : Hauling &amp;
--~~~1111
I .. ...._
aaJ

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

.....92-7445
Ctl
591-9254

lift

BISSELL

.
1\t. r Iey ' S
Mattress
S3 IeS

~fool!! ~Z:::.O'

I

Cllartes R. Dill

Q

Meip County Fairgrounds

L....." ---!.!(7.;:40~99:!:l-6::;9::;54:.__ __.J

2m IITIIpd

pon:lt&lt;&amp;, &amp; dO&lt;ks.
Owner

JERRY S
USED
COMPUTERS

•

WINTER STORAGE

Welding &amp; Brazing
Custom Fabrlcstlon

FrMHII-,
l...r..t

teDIDct, IDd repair

UtWtles
·
'New Homes

mval:

....

3D
OONSTRUC110N

-

11 Grin

. . . . . . . ,..... &amp;.It

•'7

47 .......

- - ••• =
t1 "Que v..- a 1111w
......,
•JIIa
14 WI 7 'I Q In lhellr,

II

.All

(740) 742-2925

74.0-992-1671

.1111

• Q U11
• Q" t

DREHEL'S

Stop&amp;Compire

....
...., ..
••
.-,.. ,
-.,,,,
... ..
-N
. . .-...
,..... -........ ......
• Ill

: On New Tires
' With This Ad

Good DHIII

I

aeco.aeM•*W
4111SJ

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

~he

year ahe:ad, con-

. ting
your over:.ll Jucces!l, is to enablUh good relationship$ wi1h bu5iitcss associate~ and friends alike.
Llllll..A (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Your marvelous teadenhip

qualitin arc able to arouse and
instill optimism and enthusiasm in otht'n today. Ust this
ro atlract those you need to
rally to your cause. Get a
jump on life by undentanding
the inHuences that'll govern
you in the year ahead. Send
for your Allro· Graph predictions by mailing S2 to Asuo..
Graph, 'c/o this newspaper,
1'.0 . Box 167, Wi&lt;kliiTe, OH
44092-0167. Be oure to orale
your Zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) --Your friends would be
fbttered if they could hear
what you're sayin1 abo1.1t
thcan today. lnterestinaJy, it
isn•t only bad news that cnvcls, good new1 does as well.
They'U love you for it.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- What you inttinctively undenland today it lhe
boonterana effect of acting on

-

'I

.

your wants. If you Wij!.nt
friendo, be friendly. If you
want · help for a wonhy pro- · 4
jeet, be helpful.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jan. 19) -- Som&lt;lhins unuo ..l
might transpire today that may
be of small consequence to
othen . You 'll recognize its;
worth inun~diately and hitch
your wagon to that :star.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb .
19) - llecauoe you gr.&gt;nt your
con1panions and friends the
same ft·udoan of choice you
desirt today, 1hey will welcome your companionahip
:and WAnt to spend their free

20) ~~ A project you'v~ b~en
working on for wme time can
be concluded today to your .
satisfactjon. Your clever plan~
ning and bright .ideas produce
positive rrsults.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
~- Contact the pods you want
to spend your enning with
early in the day, because in
waiting until the last rninute
you could find everybody a.lready tied up.
CANCER (June 21-july
22) -- Through comparimn
shopping today. you're aoing
to be able to uve a little here
and a little there -- adding up
to a handsorne sun1 ~- whh

time with you.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

many purchases to show for it.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) --

-- Allhoush oonse of your
time may be allocated to the

The keys to yo1.1r succen ~re
your ideas and energy, of
which you hav~ an ample
supply . With this winning
com~ination, you'll "e able to
acromplish quite a bit today.
VIRGO (Aus. 23-Sept. 22)
..... You nUaht not make a killing today, but you could end
up with a larger harveu rhan
anticipated. It'll bt your instinctl that'll milT out whc~
the profits lie.

interests \of othen today,
you'll' do to freely and by
cholce. This stems from a

dC'ep undC'ntanding of their
llC'C'tb .
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Your 10cial acceptance will
be heiJhtened today, not jutt
~4

because of your keen .wit , but
becau•e you'll tay all 1he risJst
thinp to bolster the egos of
your pell!n.
TAURUS (April 20- May

i.

\

�'

'

••
••
••

.

.

••
••
•

FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS! .

•

a1

Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper

Bob Evans .Farm Festival opens today
FROM STAFF REPORTS

10 GRANDE It's
time to come "dOwn on
the farm" again as the
31st Bob Evans Farm
Festival opens its threeday stand today with a traditional mixture of crafts, activities, food and entertainment.
One of the area's largest tourist attractions, the festival exposes thousands of
visitors each year to how life was on a
working farm in pioneer days, and celebrates home-based crafts and goods with
a number of local and regional
exhibitors and demonstrators.

l'our
C"olee•••
Ford

APR

interest

60
Months
on •ost
For

The festival opens at 9 a.m.
and doses at 5 p.m. on the
!ann site off Oluo 588 at
Rio Grande. For details can
1-aoo-994-FARM (3276); or
visit IN'oW&lt;.bobevans.com.

interest

event a regular stop.
"It's a unique setting that offers guests
the opportunity to sample pioneer life as
it was decades ago, and at the same time
to join a farm harvest celebration of
today;' said Farm Manager Ray McKinmss.
Admission is $3 per person and parking is free .
The festival features work by more
than 150 traditional craftsmen, many
made with tools and techniques nearly
forgotten today. Demonstrations are set
m such crafts as spinning, weaving,

·US. getting itifo
from opposition
forces on ground

Pluse see Festlvel, A3

BY MAn KELLEY

RoAD

APR

Lincola

..,_

I yea'•

The festival
opens each day
at 9 a.m. and
doses at 5 p.m.
on the farm
site off Ohio
588 at Rio
Grande. Since
early this week,
fields across the
highway from
the festival site
have
hosted
campers and
RV
owners
who make the

Rumsfeld:
Air defense
still threat ,
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ORK

Flying feelS
Here are some I'8IUitl of an
Associated Presa poll of 1,008
randomly salactad adults lbout
flying on airplanes. The poll-

conductad Ocl. 5-10 and hn a
margin of error of plua or mlnua
3 pen:antage points.

WASHINGTON -Amer- Everybody ._ ,_.. llbout
ican bombers are increasingly dlthlnmt lhlng.. How do you
setting their sights on Taliban fNIIIboutllylng In M ..........?
troops in Afghanistan, part of Would you till IIIII whMhlr you
an effon to demolish the .,. llfrald of It, wtNIIher It
regime harboring terror sus- bolt•a you lllghlly ot Wwllhil...,lhlll'tl
you'no not .t •llllfrlld of It?
pect Osama bin Laden and his
ai-Qaida network .
Airstrikes early in the campaign have hit anti-aircraft
batteries, command centers,
airfields and other fixed targets. Now the strikes are moving toward more mobile targets, such as Taliban troops or
convoys, military otftcials say.
Not afraid at all
Men
Bombing Taliban troops is
Women
meant not only to kill the
Tolal
militia's fighters but also to
spread fear, confusion and Don1 knowlrefueed
desertion in the Taliban's ~ 3%
Min
ranks. Military planners hope1%
Women
that will weaken the Taliban ' _ 2%
. TCial .
enough for it tll . either c.ol- .
,---·· - · · · - - · · - lapse on its'tlwnot !all to tlie ·-·Ona·
w··c··-,::._--·~--·to::::_··
.
b
l
fi
.
'd
0 u•I'UponHI
u•
vanous re e orces ms1 e tllrrortlt lllllocb of 11ap1. 11 hal
Afghanistan.
liMn the move to ~)tao. armed
Without shelter from the m~tehala aboard CDRIIMn:..l
Tali ban, military officials say, alrplllna flights. Do you trior
bin Laden and· his al-Qaida or oppoH having ennec1
network will be much less of a manhala aboard COIIIIIMI'CIIII
threat and much easier to airplane flights?
track down.
In favor
That process of disruption is
already starting, officials said ,;O;ppo~se:::d::__ _ _ _ _..,
Thursday.
.l~-'7'-''!.,._,_ _ _ _ _ _.J
"We've got them on the Don't knowlrefueed
run," President Bush said of •1::.3%!!__ _ _ _ _ _--l
al-Qaida members during a ..............................................................
prime-time news conference.
. Do you favor or oppose giving
Although U.S. planes have the military the 1uthorjty to
begun daylight bombing runs •hoot down pa-nger plan••
over the Afghan capital, Kabul, thllt appe•r to have been
and the Tali ban home base of hljacl&lt;ad for a 18rrortlt purpou?
Kandahar, the airstrikes stili . In favor
60'·, have not eliminated all threats
to American planes, Defense
Secretary Donald H . Rums·
feld said.
" We have to acknowledge ILW
the reality that there is still an
air defense threat to the United States," Rumsfeld told
reporters.
Defense officials also have cials have said the current
not said whether the bombing fight was against terrorists, not
would let up today, the Mus- Islam.
lim day of prayer. Bush,
Rumsfeld and other top offiPIN• - Attedui, A3

200l•otllels~

I

•••

iM

0
.0

!IOAIHII:PAIRS- Traffic floWs alongside a section of West Main 'OOntlnue efforts to repair a slippage problem caused by a

APR
36months

BY TONY M. LEACH

SELECT
USED CARS TO
QUALiflED'
APPUCANTS .
J
'

'!'

WHEEL ALIGNMENT

\

2-wheel

$2495

4-Wheel

your IIIIIO&amp;biNnt to
just•nybady.••
"--y upon tt1e poaplo
tftllt"-!fOU'

veblcle-.t.
!FACTORY TRAINI!D
ftCHNICIANS

1

or loss • Olesel

:

I
I

:
1

of the ' road and immediately
decided that it 1 should be
repaired before ¢e onset of
winter," said Blaettnar.
Plans call for specific portions of the road to be
removed, the s,o,rm sewer
blacktop
repaired and ne
poured.
Blaettnar ad de 'that while
construction crews are on
site, a new line to channel
excess water from 'it\' adjacent
hill will also be instilled.

"The project is slated to be
finished by Nov. 23 ," said
·B laettnar.
"However, progress is moving along rapidly and I would
anticipate that the repair .
work will end long before the
.scheduled date of completion."
Blaettnar added that the .
project, which costs around
$90,000, will be funded by a
$70,000 grant and a $20,000
local match .

1

I
I

_

$44

formed on a section ofWest
Main Street that has undergone a significant amount of
slippage following the collapse of a storm sewer located
underneath the road.
"The collapsing of the
storm sewer has caused the
soil underneath the street to
wash away and settle, which,
in turn, has caused the road to
slip toward the river," he said.
"We· received several complaints about the unevenness

W.lu.ttn all mator brendl: Qoodvu.r, AI'Hione, GMfH'&amp;I,
Michelin, BridgutoM, ~. lJNIROYAL, 8F Goodrlctl.
Mounting •nd bt."'nclng may be Pita.

Motorcratt•
•
quarts~~!!ft~~~.~
WSt.,t. ER BLADES
Or Jng
lii:·L~u~oo~·~C~h~;k~a~nd;ll~ll~~~llu;ld~s~·A:II:In~29:m:l:nu:m:•_.'~------~t--------FORD MOTOR CO.
SPLASH GUARDS
FLOORMATS
I
I
Sto~ing
00
IICJJORCRAFT

• Servlcelncjf. up lo 5
Molorcraft oil filter • Perlorm Multi-Point Vohlclolnopectlon

Why trust

POMEROY - Motorists
should expect slow-moving
tratftc
near
the
Pomeroy/Middleport corporation line now that work has
gotten under way to repair a
portion of roadway that has
been slipping toward the
Ohio River.
.
• Pomeroy Mayor John
Blaettnar said Thursday repair
work is currendy being per-

We w111 mae~ or beat any tompalitor's
advertised price on the some tire.

be

$1 Q95

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

TIRES

$4995:

Check and adjust camber and toe. Ad&lt;lltlonil parts Bn&lt;l
labor

,,

_

Pomeroy launches Main St project

'

----- ---- --

co~

Street near the Pomeroy/Middleport corporation line as workers lapsed storm sewer underneath the road. (Tony M. Leach photo) ·

-sso4o

FORD FACTORY
BUG SHIELD
·Starting
Ot ·

$8150

Installed

BED RAILS

Sentinel
] s.ctlont - 11 ......

calendar
Classjfieds
Comics
Editorials

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

Good ~TART report addresses local assets

Hlp: 701
Low: 101

TOday's

Details, A6

BY BRIAN J.

Lotteries

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

AS
OHIO
84-6 PldlJ: 0-4-5; Pldl4: 7-5·2~

87

Bltdlll'l 5: 4-15-17-19-26

A4 W.VA.
A3 Dally 3: 2-5·2 Dllily 4: 3-5-5-2

81-3. 8

A6

REEO

c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishins Co.

MIDDLEPORT - "There seems to
be a pervasive attitude of singularity
within Middleport- that the community is on its own and alone."
That's one observation included in a
community report issued by the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development, in conj un ction with Middleport's
Good START program.

"With so me thought, residents could
see that this is not necessarily tru e;' said
Melody Sands, who helped Middleport
develop its Good START plan of action.
Long- and short-term objectives are
outlined in the report, developed using
results of a community-wide survey of
residents and business owners, and work
by committees that met earlier this year.
The Good START (Small Town
Assessment and Readiness Techniques)

program began in Middleport late last
year with a community survey, which
asked residents to rate village services, ·
businesses, and other aspects of the community.
Corpmittee members reviewed preliminary results of that survey and identified
goals for the community.
Identified as sh9rt-term priorities were:

Pleese see START, A3

Oclober is

Physical Therapy Month
nlhe Science of Heallng•••the
Art of Caring"
I

140-446-9800 •

HOURS:

I

Mon - Fr19·7:

sat.9-5
Prices

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

.DYAIITAII

• •

•

For more information on the physical therapy services Holzer Medical
Center provides, please call (740) 446·5121 in Gallic County, or
(740) 992·2104 in Meigs' County.

•

'

'

...

www.holzer.org
\•

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