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                  <text>FLY YOUR FLAG JO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

•

a1

Melp County"s

Hometown

News,.per

cials respond to strange substance
'No need to twny,' says
health commissioner
BY

'

c - - HoiRJcH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

. 'POMEROY - Meigs County Heath
Commissioner Norma Torres assured the
public Thursday that "there is no need to
worry about the white crystal S\lbstance
which WdS found in an envelope received
l'uesday by a local couple."
: She ' said, however, that all pre~autions
have being taken and that the area where
the envelope had been placed was cleaned
with bleach - which is effective against
;mthrax sporeS.
: The material, she said, is in quarantine
for the next seven days as instructed by the
rtealth Alert Network.

Asked about testing to determine what the Meigs County Emergency Managethe substance is, she said that "This partie- ment Agency, a procedure set by the Ohio
ular specimen WdS not sent for testing Department of Health.
When the officials arrived, the deputy
because we were just told to quarantine for
seven days, and that's what we've done."
allegedly said he ''wasn't touching anyShe also said that treatment with C:ipro thing." according to a statement in a Health
WdS not recommended.
Department report .
However, as a precaution, she said Health
At that point, Health Department saniDeparnnent sanitarians, who retrieved the tarians took over. They double-gloved,
envelope, Mil be checking on the couple wore masks, and double zip-lock bagged
to be sure they don't develop cultaneous the envelope and material it contained as
(skin) Anthrax.
.
instructed by Scott Wolford of the Health
Torres ·explained that the most danger- Alert Network. They then cleaned the area
ous type of anthrax is the fine, powdery with bleacl\.
substance because it can become
"We're q1aking the best responses that
aerosolized.
we can based on the information we have
According to Torres, the envelope was and the direction we get fiom the Health
brought to the health department Tuesday. Alert Network;' said Torres." Again in this
The administrative as.'istant made conrad&gt; instance, I don't think we have anything to
with the police and Bob Byer, dire.cror of . worry about."

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ANTHRAX SCARE - This cartoon depicts how many Americans are feeling during the anthrax scare that is sweeping the
nation. (David Reddick/special to the Sentinel)

Leaders endorse
CDBG proposal

GETTIN' READY

which are · also considered
distressed counties.
Davenport said the commissionen will lobby for the
changes, and have already
been in discussion with the
Ohio Department of DevelBv BRIAN J. REED
opment's Office of Housing
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
and Community PartnerPOMEROY - Proposed ships.
"We think the changes
changes in the way formula
development funds are allo. would be very advantageous
cated would benefit Meigs . for small counties like ours,
County, and the County and would make for a more
• comrt;lissione{S
}.
, ' !eYel· playing
discussed their
.
field;' Davensupport of the
Last year, Mergs port said "since
proposals durreceived $169,000 most
the
ing their regu- in CDBG formula smaller counlar meeting on
funds, most .
ties also have a
o·• whr'ch ...~.
higher populaThursday.
Commis:J
,......,
tion oflow and
distributed to
moderate
sioner Mick
various villagu
income resiDavenport said
that two proand townships
dents."
posals
are
"The combefore a statefor public works missioners will
projects. ,
do whatever
level Community Developwe can to supment Block Grant advisory port any proposal which
committee for consideration, would provide a more equal
and would make special pro- footing for small counties
visions for counties consid- like ours," he added.
ered economically distressed.
In other business, the comLast year, Meigs received miSsioners
met · with
$169,000 in CDBG formula Pomeroy Mayor John Blaetfunds, most of which was tnar, Engineer Gene Triplett
distributed to various villages and Salisbury Township
and townships for public Trustee Ed Durst, who along
works projects.
with Commissioner Jeff
Under the two proposals, Thornton, serve on the.
the county could gain county's Issue II committee.
between
S25,000
and The members appointed
$30,000. The proposals Bedford Township Trustee
would award bonus points to Bob Hawk to serve as the
counties with proportionate- committee's fifth, at-large
ly larger low and moderateincome populations, many of
Pluse 1ft CDBG, A3

Commissioners
support fund
changes

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were up
mornil'€ preparing Pomeroy's
.
set to take
place on Saturday at 1 p.m. VIII~ employee Gary Simpson Is seen here mowing a 'portion of the one-acre par\1. (Tony M. Leach photo)
.

Pomeroy prepares for Saturday park dedication ,
BY TONY M. LEAcH

The new park, located near the junetion of East Main Street and Ohio 124, is
OMEROY -Village work- more than one acre in size and surers braved cold temperatures rounded by a rustic split-rail fence t~t
and foggy conditions Thurs- incorporates a 21-by-29 shelterhouse,
day morning while preparing numerous picnic tables and barbecue
Pomeroy's newest park for its grills, park benches, flag pole and several
official opening.
heavy duty trash cans.
The sound of lawn mowers and leaf
Councilman Victor Young Ill, co-coorblowers penetrated the early morning dinator of the project, said more than
silence as crews worked to enhance the $18,000 in lnoney and materials has been
appearance of Waterworks Park, which donated by both local businesses and res·officially opens during dedicatio~;~ cere- . idents since the park's inception last year
iqonies scheduled for Saturday at 1 p.m. and that a marble monument, conSENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Todlly's

Sentinel
2 Sedlolls - II ......

Calendar
Classjfieds
Comics
Editorials
· Objtyarjes
·· Sports
Weather

Mercury

a

PIUH 1ft Pllrk. A3

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HIJh: 70s
L-:401
Qetails, A7

Hope Taft to kick off local Red Ribbon campaign
URGIRGCC chosen
to host event

Lotteries

AS OHIO

84-6 Pick l: 8-9-4; Pick 4: 1-7-4-3

87

tributed by Legar Monument Co., has
recently been erected within the park to
honor those involved with the park's
development.
"I am truly amazed by the generosity
displayed by business owners and private
,individuals who took it upon themselves
to make sizable donations," said Young.
"The monument was constructed to
say 'thank you' for their support with
helping create Pomeroy's newest public
park;' he added.

lila¥ 5: 14-17·24-30-34

A4
A3 W.VA.
Dlllly
l: 6-8-3 Daily 4: G-2'9=4
Bl-3,5
A7 c 2001 Ohio Valley Pub~shing co.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

•

RIO GRANDE - Ohio First Lady
Hope Taft willl_ be on hand Monday at
the University of Rio Grande / Rio
Grande Community College for the start
of the 2001 Ohio Red Ribbon Cam-

patgn for Drug Prevention.
Gallia County was
chosen as one of four
kickoff sites for the
campaign , sponsored
by Ohio Parents for
Drug Free Youth, an
organization founded
by Mrs. Taft. ·
The group is the

statewide sponsor of the Red Ribbon
campaign, which encourages people and
communities to remain proactive against
substance abuse.
The lo cal event, staged in conjunction
with '" Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Retired
Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) and
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcqhol,
Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services, begins at I p.m.

Please see Ribbon, A3

October Is Breast Cancer Awll!reness
Month ancl October 19th. Is
National Ma111111ography Day

EXIT 132 RIPLEY, WV

(304) 372-fORD •.(800) 964·3673

Holzer Medical Center and the HMC Community
Health and Wellnes~ Department remind you that
early detection is the best prevention!
For more

,,

•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
.

information, call (7401 446·5679
I

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- PageAl

at War

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Oct. 19, 2001

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day fiom the Washington-based envoy for
the northern alliance, which calls itself the

BOSTON (AP) - Steam,
chemicah and even radiation
have been used for decades
to fight the dangerous gertns
that settle on everything
from chicken parts to sutgical instrument&gt;.
Now, anthrax attacks have
the "industrial sterili:ution"
industry scrambling to see if
its technology might work
on
something
new:
unopened mail.
Several companies say
they're fielding calls asking
whether their machines
could be used in mail rooms
to :up or steam away dangerous bacteria, such as anthrax.
At least one says it's lining ·up
deals to run mail through an
irradiator.
Some insist the technology
could be an effective way to
make mail safer. But others
see huge practical challenges.
"Anthrax is easy to kill,"
said ArthurTrapotsis, a scientist at Consolidated Machine
Corp., a small Boston com-

United Front.
"We don't see any merit in the delay;'
envoy Huon Amin said."Our ground commanders are ready; and they w:mt to make
the lliOYe, and theres no coordination:'
Th~ Taliban and ..,beJs, meanwhile, are
fighting back and forth for a major city in
the north. And no one knows if Taliban
fighters are defecting in the pivotal southern
areas, fiom where most Taliban support
emanateS.

"WhatAfghaniswt might look like politically. economically. diplomatically after the
military phase ... is very much a work in
pmgxess," said John Negroponte, dte U.S.
ambass;&gt;dor to the United Nations.
Among possible scenarios, should the Taliban be ousted:
-The United Nations could·lead efforts
to create a broa~based government, as the
United StateS Ius suggested, perhaps a loose
federation of tribes built around the 87year-old fornier king, Zahir Shah. Turkey
Ius ofl'md peacekeeping troops. The northern rebels and Zahir Shah have agret.-d to a
traditional Afghan assembly to choose leaders.

HOLY WAR - Relatives and friends
adorn a Tallb, sln&amp;le form of Tallban, during a graduation ceremony at the Darul
Aloom Haqqanla Islamic school In . the
town of Akora Khattak, some 55 kilometers (37 miles) east of Peshawar, Pakistan. The majority of the graduates said
~hey will try to go to Afghanistan to join
the Taliban and fight their Jihad, or holy
war. (AP)

Ground troops move into Afghanistan
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
handfol of US. special forces
are operating in southern
Afghanistan, a government
official said Friday, opening a
significant new phase in
America's military response to
terrorist attacks.
Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld had said Thursday that airstrikes alone will
ndt be enough to rid
Afghanistan of the al-Qaida
tetrorist network. Ground
forces will be needed to root
out Osama bin · Laden and
other terrorists and the Taliban
that sbeltet-them, the secretary
said, though he made no
explicit reference to U.S.
ground f0 rces.
' A senior go\lernment official
said Friday that a small number of U.S. forces were supporting efforts by the intelligence community to undermine the Taliban regime. The
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said military action in Afghanistan
could increase sign'ificandy in
coming days though there will
never be ·a conventional force
the size of that used m the
Persian GulfWar.

Its

alties."

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Bush says -'China is a partner in terrorism war

,

has bedeviled ties betWeen
Washington and Beijing, off
and on, for more than SO years.
Bush began his first full day
in China in 26 years by heading in midmorning..Jiom his
downtown hotel to a guest

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: New•
:

DuPont -

0

.co~

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Will-Mart - St ~
Wervt(a - 2e'.
Wollhington - 13
Da1ly atoc:k tepor~s are
the • p.m. closing

Oak Hil Financial - 16

quolaa ol lhe previous
day'a tranaaetionl, ~~to­
llided by Smith Part·

hoples-18\

nero at Adve8t Inc. of
Gallipolis.

OVB-24~
88T-32~

Park
frum .... A1

time and the public's input
concerning its progress is
greatly appreciated," added
Young.
"The park is for the people
of Pomeroy and it's only fitting that they have a. say in its
growth," he said.
Refreshments
will
be
served ' during the ceremony,
following , a ribbon cutting
and speech, and the public is
urged to attend.

bridge replacement and a
Pomeroy water treatment
plan project.
The commissioners rejected a bid submitted for the sale
of a 1990 ambulance from
Meigs County Emergency
Services, and agreed to readvertise for bids, because the
$1,247 bid did not meet the
minimum bid set at S1,500.
The boatd also:
• Approved funds transfers
for the sheriff's department;
• Approved the reappointment of Don Cotner to the
four-county boatd of trustees
of Rio Grande Community
College;
• Tabled action on closin(!
the courthouse on Nov. 6, for
Election Day.
·
• Approved payment of bills
in
the
amount
of
$264,101.02.

balloon launch. AI Hartson
and Mayor Sandy lannarelll
were among the others who
spoke at the celebration.
(Brian J. Reed photo)

Datachanpd

POMEROY Units of
the Meigs emergency Service
amwered seven calls for assistance on Thursd:!y. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
5:16a.m., Veterans Memorial Hospital, Jewel Welch,
Holzer Medical Center;
6:27 a.m., Overbrook
Nursing Center, Helen Karr,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
10:14 a.m., Ohio 124, Mike
OUBryan, HMC;
5:07 p.m ., Overbrook
Nursing Center, Francis
Kearns, PVH;
10:04 p.m., CreiJleans
Road, Benton Phillips, PVH.
POMEROY
11 :22 p.m ., Collins, Road,
Steven Searles, treated.
Tl:JPPERS PLAINS
2:38 p.m ., Arbaugh Addition, David Corbin, St. Mary's
Hospital.

POMEROY Pomeroy
Village Council has re&lt;cheduled its Nov. 5 meeting to
Nov. 1. The meeting will niU
begin at 7 p.m.

RACINE -Trick or Treat
on Bashan and Eagle Ridge
roads will be held on Oct. 30
from 6-7:30 p.m.

Fall meeting
GALLIPOLIS Region
11 's fall meeting of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs,
consisting of Athens, GaUia,
Meigs, Vinton and Washington · counties, is Oct. 27 :it
Grace United Methodist
Church.
Hostesses are GaUia County
garden dubs, who will prepare the coffee· hour set for
8:30 a.m. Sales tables will also
be open at 8:30.
Speakers for the day are Hal
Kneen, Meigs County Extension agent, in the morning,
and Faye Collins, Ohio Association of Garden Clubs
accredited flower show judge,
who will .use angels .in the
flower arrangements she will
design after lunch.

Divorce filed
POMEROY - An action
for divorce has been filed in
meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Evalene Sue
Fetty, . Middleport, against
Harold William Fetty Jr.,
Langsville.
Divorces have been granted
to Glen,da K. Willis from
Larry Eugene Willis, and to
Rachael D. Speelman from

Ribbon
ftyPageA1
Pre-program events start at
noon.
''The kickoff will mark a
weeklong celebration in.
October of alcohol and drug
free Jiving," said Marissa
Fulk, community educator
with Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
ADAMHS Board. "Supporten of this commitment to a
drug free lifestyle will be
wearing red ribboru to show
their
positive
lifestyle
choice."
Mrs. Taft, accompanied by
Ohio National Guatd Commander Maj. John Smith and
Lucille Fleming, director of
the Ohio Depaxtment of
Alcohol and Drug Addiction
SerVices, is expected to arrive
at Rio Grande by Blackhawk
helicopter.
Students
from
Gallia
County Local Schools' On
the Right Track program, and
fifth and sixth grade students
from Gallipolis City Schools
will be in attendance.
Students are participating
in an essay contest, "What's
My Anti-Drug'/" and the ·

wmner will be presented a
one-year ;cholarship at Rio
Grande during the cerenionies.
A quilt, designed by On
the Right Track students and
created by RSVP memben,
will be presented to Mrs. Taft.
The Grande Chorale,
under the direction of Dr.
Merv Murdock, and the
combined Gallia Academy/RiverValley/South Gallia
PRIDE Team, directed by
Christian Scott, will perform.
Rio Grande athletes will
be on hand to lead drug free
energizers and tell their stories of their own "antidtugs."
•
Lunch will be provided by
Sodexho Campus Services,
Project
CHAMP/Ohio
Appalachian Consortium for
Higher
E&lt;!ucation,
and
Heartland ofJackson.
The committee organizing
the event received a cash
award of $500 from Ohio
Parents fot Drug Free Youth
to stage the kickoff The 'public is invited to attend.

fljW

postage pBid at' Pomaroy.
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Poetm11tw: Send address cortectloMIO 11le Dolly Sentlna/, 111 Court
St, PontillO)', Ohio 45789.

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Discover Department 56 • November 2 • December 24

All stJies of earpet are ineluded:
BIHBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET,
TRACJCLF.SS CARPEt; SBAG CARPET,
LIVIL LOOP CARPET
and SCt1LPTURID CARPET.

(Special evenl pieces for Dickens, Snoo.; Village and Nollh Pole will be available)

Fontanini Nativity Weekend· November 17·18
(Special avanl piece wllh free gift) .. , ' ·

Snowbaby Event· December ,-24 ,. ·
(Special Event plices available) .

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Stahl's~s~

Rt. 50 &amp; 7 and SR 555, Little Hocldng~:OH
(740) 989·2271

No ema eMrlt for movint furniture or

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News Departments

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Deadline for Entry:
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Pictures will run:
Wednesday,
October31

Pomeroy, OH 45769

City Hol&lt;ling - 9~.

Lid. -11~

AD She¥- 51 ',

the Daily Sentinel

: Our main concem in au •toriee is
• to be accurote. If' yoU know Of an
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'The Dally Sentinel• 111 Court Street

.Kroger- 24~
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Overbrook Center Day

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In The Sentinel

----~------~--------------------~
Allach Thl$ Coupon To Your Child'! PICture alld
1

Bol) Evans -18'·

.contracts anthrax ·

f Reader Services

Show Off Your

Paige WiD
Daughter of John
Will &amp; Cassie Nease

-48\

BU-7~

Young said that future plans
for the J1ark include the addition of children's playground
• ."MIDDLEPORT -Wanda Faye Findling, 75, Middleport,
equipment, horseshoe pits,
·died Thursday, Oct 18, 2001 in Overbrook Center, Middlewater fountains, exua trees for
'•port.
!
the green space, and a boat
.• Born May 6, 1926 in Gallia County (Story's Run), daughter · docking facility.
1of the late Isaac and Anna Reeves Mohler, she was a home"The park's development
_maker. .
will continue to evolve over
She was a member of. the Community Church in Middle(f!Ort.
.·· .Surviving are a son, Carl M. (Nancy) Findling of Galion; four
~ grandchildren, _three stepgrandchildren, five great-grandchil, dren and six step-great-grandchildren; and a brother, Jim
· (Wanda) Lou Mohler of Middleport.
·
framPapA1
., ·She was also preceded in death in 1991 by her husband, Carl
' 1)4. Findling Sr., whom she married Oct. 20, 1944; and a sister
member.
~nd four brothers.
The local committee will
~, ; Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in Fishei-Acree Funeral
!'lome, Middleport, with Sam Anderson officiating. Burial will meet on Oct. 25 to rank local
11/State
Capital
be in Mound Cemetery. Friends max call at the funeral home Issue
Improvement Program pro2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Saturday.
jects before sendin~~; them on
to the B"ckeye Hills/Hocking Valley Regional D~velop­
ment District.
A $200,000 paving project
submitted by Middleport is
now the highest-ranked project from Meigs, placing 17th
of72 projects -in the I 0-county District 18.
Other projects from Meigs
: WASHINGTON (AP) have come from her route.
The Post also said a worker include a water project in the
Federal investigators are trying
to track anthrax-laden letters at a Washington facility that Tuppers Plains/ Chester Water
back to their point of origin as delivers mail to Congress had District, a sewer project for
a ·•N ewoJersey postal carrier tested positive for anthrax Rutland Village, a county
who may have handled the exposure, the first case off the
envelopes tested positive for grounds of the Capitol that
appeared associated with the
the disease.
,. ,Authorities offered $1 mil- letter to Daschle, officials said.
Officials were almost certain
liqn for information leading
1q the arrest of those who sent that a maintenance worker
who serViced mail-sorting
t~e anthrax.
,.J,h,e female .letter .carri~r machines at the T1&lt;0nton post
who may have handled the office's regional distribution
envelopes sent to NBC News center in Hamilton, N J., has
inchon:nan Tom Brokaw in anthrax, the Postal Inspection
New York City and Senate Service reported.
Another postal worker at
¥ajority Leader Tom Daschle
iri'Washington worked out of the Hamilton facility was
th'e West Trenton, N.J., local being tested for possible expojjost office facility. She and a sure to anthrax. The two
CBS News employee who employees ~ere being treated
Opens Dan Rather's mail in and talting antibiotics, Acting
New York brought to. six the Gov. Donald DiFrancesco
number of people infected said. Customers who visited
with the disease since Oct. 4, the West Trenton post office in
illcluding a Florida man who the past three weeks were
urged to see a doctor if they
t\ed.
The
Washington
Post had any symptoms of illness or Joey Dalley, a mEmiber of Boy
reported in Friday's editions a rash.
Scout Troop 235, spoke on
As reports of .new anthrax the American flag and led the
that FBI agents were tracing
the mail .route of the fentale exposures came in, Bush Pledge of Allegiance at Thurs!titer carfier, who had con-. administration officials tried day's ·overbrook Center Day'
ti;cted £utaneous, oi the skin to assure a jittery nation that observance. The facility celetbrm, of , anthrax, suggesting authorities were on the alert brated its 13th anniversary
with a patriotic service and
clie anthr -laced letters . may for' terrorist acts.
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Tessa

Harloy Dallid1011

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·Per All
1One Subject Per Pumpkin)

s.... -37~

aann.n-83~

LOCAL BRIEFS

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house in western Sh:mglui.
Security was ·unusually tight.
No other traffic was permitted
. ~long th'-!'Qlotorcade route.
Groups 'of ped~s. most of
them expressionless, . st&lt;&gt;od
along the intersections.

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a.n-1 Electric- 37\
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Bini&lt; One - 32\

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NEW YORK (AP)
pay $33 million in restittfFour Osama bin Laden dis- tion: $7 million to the vicciples convicted in the tims' families, and ~26 mil1998 bombings of two U.S. lion· to the U.S . •govertllembassies in Africa were ment.
,.,_.
.sentenced to life wi~h91,1t
At a pre-sentencing heat:•
.. parole Thur~day \n ·,i · cicy iitg · Wednesday, , Sand 5aid
.. still reeling • from l;!n ''llle · defendants were indr+
month's terrorist attacks. . gent. But he also suggested·
· .Khalfan
.Kham1s that frozen assets might ~
Mohamed, 28, was the. first used for victims, thanks -to
to be sentenced at_· the fed- : recent a~tempts by th~
. era! cou~thouse . m l?wer ' Bush ' adm1lrli5tration tll
Manhattan ·under he•ght- choke off the furltling i:Jf
..eM,d ., secunty. .He and allQaida nd ''other terror
Mohamed. Rashed AI- ,
.
f
, 1 • h;; ·
'0 h I. 24
. groups.
• were . sen- ' Th
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'trt I
.. u~'
' w a I,
u taneo
.
e 11 e.r-sl
tence d tior di rept tnvo1ve, ..
' '·
ment in the bombings.
_A1.1g. 7 • '9?8, _bol\tbmgs ,?f
~harned Sadeek Odeh the emb.aSSies m Kenya an~
36, Qr-jordaq, and Wadih !~~u~ia killed ~31 : p~opt51
,El-Hage, ,41, .ot; Arlington, ·~~~u~•.ng 1~ .. Am~ncan,~l
Texas, were, convicted .o f , T~~y were quockly blameS\
conspir:tcy and h~d , been ?n . bin Laden, }V~O Yo!~
eligible for lesser senten~es. md1cted·m the ,ca1e.;and b.\1
.El-Hage, a former personal ,ai-Q~ida ter):orist _o,rgani~
secretary to .bin Laden, was tjoq.
, ,,
"H
the lone U.S. citizen conEl.-Hage . cond~~ed tlt.c;
victed in -the attacks.
. Sept.. 1 1 ter{orist attaclr;s
Judge Leonard B. Sand and the embassy bombi~
ordered each of the men to in a 30-minute address. ·

lfllrolcl Smith

Fecllt'al M&lt;1Qul-~

USS -- 17\

Wanda Faye Findling

•

Defense officials say some
special forces are on the USS
Kitty Hawk, an aircraft carrier
in the region being used as a
secure, floating base.
Air Force Gen. Richard
Myers, chairman of the Joint ·
Chiefs of StafF, alluded to
moving beyond the air phase
of the military campaigtt in
Afg)1~nistan,_ w)tich
began
' dct. 7, Twice on 'Thursday he
GROUND TROOPS - Members of 40 Commando Marines said the United States was preBravo Company arrive by amphibious lal'!.dil)g craft on a .~!il~lt. __ pare~ to ~e _th~ fi!U spec~m
In Oman as part of the exercise Saif Sareea 2, a bi-lateral mil- ol its military capabilities. · •
ltary eKerclse with British and Omanl forces. (AP)
.
"Obviously, · that's not just
,\.
-- bombers, that's just not drri-1
President Bush xefused to feld said.
er-based aircralj;; that'&amp; other
confirm the report of ground ' Warplanes "can't crawl assets as weD;' .he said. "We
forces, first published by The' around on the ground and talked earlier about special.
Washington Post, but he said, find people," he told reporters forces. So that's one piece."
"We will use what~ver means in an apparent reference to
Rumsfeld said U.S. officials
are necessary to achieve our U.S. special operations forces would .not discuss ground
objective."
trained to conduct clandestine operations "until we have an
Speaking at a Pentagon warfa1&lt;0.
activity that is significant and'
news conference, Rumsfeld
Bush, in China for an eco- noticeable." Later, in an
said "there are things you can nomic summit, said he was appearance with his Italian
find from the air," including confident that Beijing stood counterpart, Rumsfeld said
clusters of enemy troops and "side .by side with the Ameri• disclosing the present or future
weapo,nry. "But you cannot c'an people" , jn the Afghan role of ,special operati.ons
really do sufficient dam~ge" military campaign, though forces woul~ aid the Taliban
with air power alone, Rums.- ChiW!Se" _ Presideqt,, ~Jiang and al-Qaida.

·'

SHANGHAI, China {AP)
- President Bush and Chinese
President Jiang Zemin declared
themselves partners in the war
on terrorism Friday, although
Jiang cautioned that the U.S.
air war in Mghanistan must be
aimed at clearly defined targets
to uavoid innocent casualties.''
"President Jiang and the
govermnent stand side by side
with the American people as
we fight this evil force," Bush
said after his first face-to-face
meeting with his Chinese
counterpart.
Bush came here at a time
when the sometimes volatile
Sino-American relations are on
the upswing, but both leaders,
alluded in a joint news conference to lingering differences.
"The war on terrorism must
never be an ·excuse to persecute minorities," Bush said, an
apparent reference to China's
treatment of the restive Uighur
population in China's northwest Xinjiang region.
Bush said he also stressed the
need "to combat the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction and tnissile technology:• On Sept. 1, the State
Depattinent imppsed sanctions
on ''a Cltines.e arrhs ' produ~jlr
for allegedly selling missile
technology to Pakistan in violation of a U.S.-Chinese agreement signed last November.
Jjan!l predicted a "bright
f1.1ture'•' for ·u.s.-Chinesc: relatio~s so long as the t)n!ted
St:ites nicks' to bilateral agreements on Tai..yan, an issue that

~

19\

AmTochSBC - 431,
Alhlooncl Inc. - 39~

;REEOSVILLE Harold Smith, 58, R«dsville, died
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2001 at his residence. ·
;:He was born July 17,1943 in Reedsville, son ofRichanl and
L'buise Green Smith. H~ was a riverbo~t ~dchand.
Surviving in addition to his parents are a son, Harold Smith
·' Jr. of Parkersburg, W.Va.; two daughten, Tammy Newberry and
·Anita Thompson, both of Belpre; four brothen and four sisters;
. eight ~randchildren: two stepgrandsons and a great-grand' dllughter.
~ " .He was preceded in death by~ son, Rick Smith.
, 1 • Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Carl Lemley officiating. Burial will be
in Reedsville Cemetery. Friends ,may call at the funeral home
' 1111 Saturday from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.

Four bin Laden discipl~
get life terms in prison =

Zetnin cautioned the United
·~a.tes I~ avoid innocent c:lift1

AEP-43~

Alth Cae1 AkZO- 42~

••

pany that has been tumittg
out steam sterilizen -.&gt;:essentially giant pressure
cookers -for 50 yean. "lfs
not difficult to lti1l a spore on
paper.
when it's ·in your
system that it's difficult." . •
For all the fear they've
provoked, anthrax bacteria
are vulnerable to the same
weapons out&gt;ide the body as
other kinds of germs namely wet heat and gamma
rays. One expert has even
said ironing a letter would
kill anthrax spores inside,
though others say it could
talce 20 minutes of solid,
intense heat.
Last week, Trapotsis tried
smearing bacteria on a stack
of letters and putting them
into one of the compartfs
oven-sized u:tits. He shut the
door, infused 250-degree
steam for a few minutes, ~nd
filtered out the air. The letters emerged undamaged
and, according to tests, bacu!. .c..
i
rta-uee.

The O.lly Sentinel • hge A 3

LOCAL STOCKS

. ''. . ...

-.-.arios for ~-Taliban gove111ment give Companies inv~gate
little guara11tee of great improvement . . use of steam, irradiatio"·
to killletter-bome germ~

WASHINGTON (AP) - If the Talib:m
lose · power in Afghanistan. there is little
guanntee that the cowttry wouldn't once
again, fal;e.. civil war, peri)aps among edmic
groOps :md warlords who might lwbor terrorists themselves.
The· United Staces says a post-Talib:m
govmunent must be broad-based. not protect tet'I'Orists and be acceptable to it&gt; neighbors, especially Palcistan, Iran and Russia. It
wants to create a situation in which the
Mgharu can choose a government themselves.
The United Nations envoy to Atghanistm
warns that achieving that would be dillicult
in a place with r=pant poverty, mistrustful
ethnic groups, decades of war and many
weapons. "We cannot produce a solution
out of a hac;· said envoy Lakhdar Brahimi,
who already quit the job once in frustration.
The immediate future remains unclear:
The Uruted States is bombing Talib:m siteS
in an effort to defeat the J;Uling militia and
end Osama bin Laden's terrorist network.
But at least so far, the U.S. military Ius not
bombed Taliban fiont lines near K.Wul,
which would help the rebel anti-Taliban
northern alliance capture the capital.
That U.S. stra:tegy led to criticism Thurs-

Pomeroy, lllddleport, Ohio

I

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0p1n1on

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Ftldwy. Odoblr ... 2011

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DEAR ABBY: My wifr, "Delia,"
is normally a very caring person, but
she has a volatile temper. When she
loses it, she shoua, curses, slams
doon, etc. Even as a child, Delia had
a reputation for being a hothead. But
she's no longer a little girl. We're
both over SO. Recently her temper
has escalated to hitting in addition to
vetbal outbunts.
· While I was driving · during our
vacation, I made the mistake of
laughinS"It something Delia considered serious. In fUll view of our children in the backseat, she hauled off
and hit me across the face. This was
no love tap; my jaw was stiff the
entire next day. Even more troubling, now that the vacation · is over
and she has cooled down, she sees no
need to apologize. She claims I
deserved it.
I have my faults, but violent
behavior is not one of them. I've
1uggested anger management to

no 182·2158• FIJI: 112-2111

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
R.BMwnL.ewla

....,..lnQ Editor
01-. Key Hill
Controller

NATIONAL'VIEW

Ris
• The Palm Beach Po1t, Welt Palm Beach, Fla., on
Arrifat~ rfipome to the battle agaimt tmorlsm: With Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon now saying his country will take a "lowprofile" approach toward the United States-led fight against
terrorism. attention shifts to Vasser Arafat. Events showed dramatically that of all the worldwide leaden with a decision to
make, he has the most important choice.
.
Since he signed the Oslo Accords eight yean ago, Mr. Arafat
has frustrated Israeli and American politicians and negotiators
with his inconsistent attitude toward terrorism ....
While some Islamic countries criticized the attacks on
Afghanistan, a top Palestinian official did not. Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Nabil Shaath said, "We do
not need anyone using Palestine as a pretext for their own purposes." ...
Predictably, terrorist groups Hamas; HezboUah and Islamic
Jihad criticized the campaign against the Taliban and called for
retaliation against the United States and brae!. For Mr. Arafat,
the alternatives are clear. He can give in to those organizations
for whom violence is the only answer, or he finally can act like
the statesman he has claimed he wants to be. Recent history ·
offers two reminders - Anwar Sadat and Yitzhak Rabin that the right choice carries personal risk. But Mr. Arafat has
insisted it is the option he prefers, and this is the chance to
prove it.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Oct. 19, the 292nd day of 2001. There are
73 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 19, 1781, British troops under Lord Cornwallis
surrendered at Yorktown, Va., as the American Revolution
neared its end.
On this date:
In i765, the Stamp Act Congress, meeting in New York,
drew up a declaration of rights and liberties.
In 1812, French forces under Napoleon Bonaparte began
their retreat from Moscow.
·
In 1864, Confederate Gen. Jubal A. Early attacked Union
forces at Cedar Creek, Va.: the Union troops were able to
rally and defeat the Confederates.
In 1944, the Navy announced that black women would be
aUowed into Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (the WAVES).
In 1950, United Nations forces 'entered the North Korean
capital of Pyongyang.
In 1951, President Truman signed an act formally ending
the state of war with Germany.
In 1960, the United States imposed an embargo on exports
to Cuba covering all commodities except medical supplies
and certain food products.
In 1977, the body of West German industrialist Hanns
Martin Schleyer, who had been kidnapped by left-wing
extremists, was found in ·Mulhouse, ·France.
In 1977, the supersonic Concorde made its first landing in
New York City.
In 1987, the stock market crashed as the Dow Jones industrial average plunged 508 points, or 22.6 percent in value.
Ten years ago: In Louisiana, former Gov. Edwin Edwards
and former Ku Klux Klansman David Duke won runoff slots
in the state's gubernatorial primary.
Five years ago: Preoident Clinton said in his radio address
that states would lose a percentage of federal highway aid if
they did not bar young people from drinking and driving. In
the Republican radio address, Bob Dole claimed credit lor
putting Democrats on the defensive over their acceptance of
foreign political contributions.
One year ago: A government advisory panel of scientists
declared that PPA (phenylpropanolamine), an ingredient ·
used in dozens of popular over-the-counter medicines, could
not be classified as safe, saying it could be the cause of several hundred hemorrhagic strokes suffered annually by peQple
under 50.
·
Today's Birthdays: Former ambassador to Russia Robert S.
Strauss is 83. Actress LaWanda Page is 81. Actor George
Nader is 80. Columnist )ack Anderson is 79. Author Jt&gt;hn le
Carre is 70.Artist Peter Max Is 64.Actor Michael Gambon is
61. Actor John Lithgow is 56. Former National Organization
for Women President Patricia Ireland is 56. SingerJea~nie C.
Riley is 56. TaUt show hose Charlie Chase is 49. .Rock singermusician Karl Wallinger (World Party) is 44. Singer Jennifer
HoUiday is 41. Rock singer-musi~ian Todd Park Mohr (Big
Head Todd and the Mon'sters) is 36.Amy Carter is 34."South
Park" co-creator Trey Parker is 32. Comedian Chris Kattan is
31. Rock singer Pras Michel (The Fugees) is 29.Actor Omar
Gooding is 25. Country singer Cyndi Thomson is 25. Actqr
Benjamin Salisbury i~, 21. ·

_,;;;;;;;_By the

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

In 1858, it was reported that the Virgin Mary had appeared to a peasant girl
named Bernadette Soubirous in a grotto
near the little French town of Lourdes.
As word of her visions spread (there
were 17 subsequent appearances), thousands of people were drawn to the tiny
village at the foot of the Pyrenees in
southwest France.
It is now 143 years later, and stiU they
come, a steady, never-ending stream of
pilgrims. An article in the Washington
Post stated that 6 million people wiU
flock to the sacred shrine this year.
Many come seeking a miracle. Only
one in 40,000 experiences a cure. But if
there is·a chance you might be that one,
it is worth the journey:
The Post story says that more than
2 1000 sick or crippled people have
reported being cured after drinking or
bathing in the water ill the grotto. Sixtysix of those •recoveries have been certified as miracles by. .a medical board.
Doctors are generally skeptical 9f stories about miracles, . but a few have
changed their minds after corning ·to
Lourdes. Alexis Carrel was one.
Carrel was a young physician of 30
and a member of the medical school faculty in Lyo11, France, when he accepted
an invitation from a priest to travel with
the "sick train" to the little town of
18,000.
As he was making the rounds of the
patients on the train, Carrel saw a 17-

her room, Bailly was sitting up in bed.
Her recovery. Carrel saw for himself, was
real.
• ·
Later that year, Marie entered the reli~
· gious order of the Daughters of Charity,
where she lived until her death 34 years
later at the age of 51.
From that rime on - as W Sterling ·
Edwards recounts in his biography of
Carrel, "Visionary Surgeon" (Charles C,
Thomas, 1974) -Carrel would make a
COLUMNIST
pilgrimage to Lourdes every August.
In 1912, he won the Nobel Prize in
Physiology
and Medicine. In 1933, he
year-old girl named Marie BaiUy lying
prone on a mattress stretched across two wrote "Man the Unknown" (Pion,
seats. She seemed to be te~minally · ill, 1997), a book that revealed him to be a
and the necessary preparations had been doctor, philosopher and mystic. The
made in the event that she died before book was a best-seller and was translate4
into 19 languages.
.
the train reached Lourdes.
In 1941, in a Reader's Digest article
"There is an incredible power of sugtitled "Prayer Is Power," Carrel wrote, "If
gestion at a pilgrimage," Carrel
you make a habit· of sincere prayer, your
a~knowledged. "But it can have
life will be very noticeably and pro:
absolutely no effect on an organic dis- foundly altered."
·
ease like Marie's."
In prayer, this. renowned man of sciAt nc;&gt;on the next day, Carrel saw Bail- ence wrote, "we seek to augment our
ly being carried on a stretcher to the finite energy by addressing the lnfinit¢
pool at Lourdes. She was unconscious Source of all energy. Even in asking, our
and near death. But at 2:30 p.m., a great human deficiencies are fiUed and we rise
change began to take place.
strengthened and repaired."
Suddenly, as Carrel watched from
And, Carrel might have added from
beside Bailly's hospital bed, the blanket his own experience, we may. sometimes
covering her distended abdomen began wimess a miracle.
·
to flatten. In a few minutes, her stomach
was completely flat.
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
That evening, when Carrel went to Ni!Wspaper Enterprise Association.)
·

George
Plagenz

This religious opinion carries some larger ramifications
DIANA WElT

OK, so this fatw~ doesn't have teeth. rather sulfurous splash at a recent Mus-

Is this the sound of a coalition coa- But as far as Muslim hearts and minds lim-Christian conference in Rome by
lescing?
go, it's progress, right? "The fatwa
"Muslim Ruling Endorses U.S. could have a broad impact beyond the
. Action," reports the Associated Press. United States," declared The New York
"Cleric trumps Osama with a reverse Times, echoing the Western consensus,
fatwa," explains The New York Post. "by providing religious justification for
"'Swing' Cleric in lj:latar Shows How Muslim nations to cooperate with the
Middle Road Can Still Be Taken," American military effort." In other
elaborate~ The Wall Street.Journal.
words; this could be just what we're
Certainly, the swirl of headlines waiting for to put the final (or even
around the "fatwa," ·o r religious opin- first) touches ·o n that international
ion, issued by five Muslim scholars in coalition we keep hearing about. Why,
the Middle East last week seems to Saudi Arabia might even let us use that
promise to heal the rupture between airfield we built someday.
many Islamic nations and the West on
What a blow, then, to discover that
' Islamist terrorism. In response to an even after this fatwa was written, its
inquiry by a Muslim chaplain in the most
prominent
author, Yusef
U,S. Army, some bona fide Muslim Qaradawi, was back in Qatar calling for
authorities were actuaUy saying it was "negotiations," and exhorting Muslim
all right for the roughly 15,000 Amer- worshippers to remember that "Musican Muslims in our armed forces to lims cannot be used as tools to kill
serve the country by making war on brother Muslims." What happened to
Muslims in other countries. "To sum all the "religious justification for Musup," the clerics wrote, ''it's acceptable lim cooperation" with the U.S. military
- God willing - for the Muslim- his fatwa was supposed to generate?
American military personnel to par- Are we back to Square One, or did we
take in the fighting in the upcoming just never leave it?
battles, against whomever their country
While Qaradawi has not offered any
deddes has perpetrated terrorism explanations, it's worth noting that this
against them."
leading lslamist theologian and spirituA smallish point, p&amp;rhaps, but one al adviser to the militant Muslim
with potentially larger ramifications. Brotherhood is not quite the budding
Sure, the clerics said that American middle-of-the-roader some of his
Muslims - sorry, "Muslim-Ameri- recent clippings say he is. "A Muslim 'is
cans"- should "serve in back lines" if forbidden from entering into an
possible, but only if by doing so it was- alliance with a non- Muslim," he said
n't a detriment to them or their Amer- on Sept. 16 on the Arabic-language
ican co-religionists. And sure, they network AI Jazeera. He also called on
were adamant that the "true perpetra- Muslims to "fight the American militors" (never actuaUy named) of the tary if we can, and if we cannot, we
"terrorist acts that took place in the should fight th e U.S. economically and
United,States" be "brought to justice in politically."
an impartial court," as if the colossal
There's more. As someone who saneacts of war we have suffered are mere- tions suicide bombings as "heroic marly infractions of'the law.
· tyrdom operations," Qaradawi made a
I

ADVICE
Delia- she even went for a few sessions - but now this. How can we
help her to change? - NEVER
BEEN HIT BEFORE IN TINSELTOWN
DEAR NEVER BEEN HIT
BEFORE: Violence, whether vetbal
or physical, cannot be tolerated.Your
wife's out-of-control anger must be
harnessed before she inflicts serious
injury on someone.
Everyone f&lt;:.els angry at some
point. It can be triggered by many
things, including feeling fearful and

denouncing the Sept. 11 attacks with a
slanderous swipe at Israel. "We Arabs
are among the most sensitive to this
because of the evil inflicted on us by
arrogant Zionists. We go· to sleep at
night and get up in the morning in a
Palestine transformed into a continuous funeral. We refuse terrorism, but
don't consider . it terrorism to defend
one's home."
This language, harsh as it is, was actually gussied up for Western ears. Before
Muslim audiences, Qaradawi is, shall
we say, more himself. "On the hour of
judgment," he said in 1989 at an
Islamist conference in, of all places,
Kansas City, "Muslims will fight the
Jews and kill them ." Or take his 1997
assessment of Arab- Israeli relations:
"There is no dialogue between us
other than in one language - the language of the sword and force."
Such talk may have earned him the
oxymoronic moniker of the "moderate
Islamist" from The Wall Street Journal
news department, but Qaradawi is anything but. And at least one of his fellow
fatwa authors, Egyptian journalist
Fahmi Houaydi, is perhaps even more
extreme. Following the Palestinian suicide bombing of a crowded Israeli
pizzeria in August, he penned an op-ed
for the Egyptian government daily AlAhram with ·a title that says it all: "I
Cannot Hide My Happiness about the
Martyrdom Operation that Took Place
in Jerusalem."
Nice. Makes you wondet whether
this fatwa is really good new s - or just
1
good propaganda.
(Diana l#st is a columnist a"d editorial
writer for TI1e Washington Tim&lt;s. She can
be
cotllacted
via
dwestwashington ti mes.co1n.)

Methodi.Sfs

celebrate

Community C1l1nd1r 11
published •• a free 11rv101 to
non·prollt group• wllhlng to
announce mtlltlngs and spe.clal events. The cillendar Is
not ·designed to promota
aales or fund-ralllrs of any
type. ltsma 1111 printed only
... apace permltl 1nd cannot
ba guar•n~ to ba printed a
apeclflc number of dllys.

miSSiOnS
POMEROY _
Meigs
County churches, as part of
an Athens District United
Methodist Church Mission
Celebration, have scheduled
special services over the next

FRIDAY

several days.
In the Northeast Cluster,
special services wiU be held
at the Reedsville Church on
Sunday at 6 p.m., with
George Jensen talking about
the local project of getting
potatoes into the hands of
hungry people.
That wiU foUowed\ by •
hymn sing, with David Morris reporting on the National
.Missionary for General
Board of Global Ministries at
7 p.m.
On Monday night, the
Rev. Roger Grace and his
., Sue, w h o have worked
wue
.
·
in Mexico and assisting with
building a church there, will
speak at the St. Paul Church
in Tuppers Plains.
A Bible study will be held
at that church on Tuesday
night; with the Rev. Merlin
Pratt and his wife Kay speaking on Cuba.
.
At the Racine Church on
Monday night at 7:30, Jane
Vaughn will speak to the
United Methodist Women,
and that same night Linda
Neal will attend a luncheon
at .the Asbury church at 1:30
p.m. 9eorge Jensen wiU talk
about the potato project at
the
Middleport-Pomeroy

POMEROY - "Fun, Food
and Fellowship" at God's NET,
6 to 10:30 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday. Nutritional meals,
video games, computer games,
board games, pool lables avail·
able lo teens.
SATURDAY

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778, Halloween party
lmd polluck supper at the
grange hall. County Road 1
near Salem Center, Saturday.
Costume judging, 5:30 p.m.,
followed by potluck supper,
6:30p.m. and games and cami·
val foods to follow.
· POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers ·Association.
.Saturday, noon at Trinity
Church. Carol Adams to speak
on health Issues lor seniors.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
First Church of God, Sasturday,
free food and clothing give·a·
·way, 11 a.m to 1 p.m. Nothing
distributed before 11 a.m.
SUNDAY

CARPENTER - Homecom·
ing at lhe Carpenter Baptist
Church, Ohio 143, 10:30 a.m.
Sunday.
Bob Thompson,
preaching; Paul and Mary
Nichols, singing. Dinner at
noon. Alternoon services, 2
p.m. leaturlng Jimmy McKnight,
the BujlderUs Quartet, and
Paul and Mary Nichols. Paslor
is John Elswick.
CLIFTON, W.Va. - Home·
ooming at Clllton Tabernacle,
with lunch at 1 p.m. and gospel
'sing featuring Family Circle at2
·p.m.
"

, RACINE - Homecoming at
Morning Star UnHed Methodist
Church, Sunday. Church ser·
vice, 10 a.m.; Sunday school,
.11 a.m., dinner at 12:30 p.m.
~Song service In alternoon.

helples.. Many people h•w never
learned to expl't'&lt;! that anger in
acceptable ways.
Suppressing her anger until it
erupts is one cause of the violent
outbursa. Venting is like releasing
steam from ~ pressure cooker.
Explain to Delia that the chaUenge is
not to deqy her anger, but to understand what is making her angry and
to express it in ways that will be
more effective and constructive.
Rather than flaring up, a fc-w wellchosen wOrds that malte the point
are more likely to achieve the
desired resula.
There are more proven methods
for coping with anger without lashing out or hurting those around us. I
have incorporated some of them in
my booklet, "The Atlger in A1I of
Us, and How to Deal With It." To
ord~r a copy of this booklet, send a
business-sized, self-addressed enw· lope, plus check or money order for

•

S5 (U.S. funds) to: Dea.r Abby
~nger Booklet, P.O. Box _447 ,
Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447 .
(Postage is included in the price.)
DEAR ABBY: After reading a
recent column of yours, I feel compelled to write. One of your lenerwriten included "massage parlon"
with vices such as lap dancing and
strip clubs.
I realize there are some businesses
that call themselves massage parlors
and are no more than fronts for
prostitution. However, therapeutic
massage is a growing field that is
doing weU at getting past certiin
unsavory stereotypes.
As a massage therapist, I implore
you to remind your readen that
therapeutic massage is a valid means
of enhancing one's personal wellbeing. M.'ssage can increase circulation, improve musde tone, •relieve
pain, and improve a range of motion
in stiff joints. Some large companies

actually contract on-site massage
therapists in an effort to reduce
repetitive-motion or sutic-positioning injuries and aho to improve
employee morale. JOY IN
FORT COUlNS, COLO.
DEAR JOY: You're absolutely
right, and you'U get no argument
from me. I enjoy massages . myself
from time to rime. I consider them
to be the ultimate luxury.
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY:
Be careful of your thoughts, for
your thoughts become your words.
Be careful of your words, for your
words become your actions.
Be careful of your actions, for your
actions become your habits.
Be careful of your habits, for your ·
habits become your character.
· Be careful of your character, for
your character become• your destiny.- AUTHOR UNKNOWN
O.ar Abby is written by PduliM
Phillips at1d daughter Jearm• Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

EVENTS.

WEST'S VIEW

BY

Abigail
Van
Buren

LOCAL

Lourdes provides evidence that miracles still happen

Bend

Wife's outbursts of temper escalate to physical assault

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111 Court St., ' - o y , Ohio

Arafat needs to prove he's the
statesman he wants to be

_The_Da_ny_Se_ntin..._er_ _

Page AS
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Rotary Club at 6 p.m. on
Monday.
Several services have been
scheduled at Rock Springs
Enterprise Church. On Sunday there will be a special
service with Lineal Mutjliah
at 7 p.m ., and on Monday
with Russell King, who has
served at the Red Bird Mission and been to the Philippines and India, will talk.
Tuesday night 7, services
will feature John Lipphardt
on hunger and poverty along
with communities in rransition. On Wednesday, Robert
Schnarre, also· of the Red
Bird Mission, will speak at 7

blankets have been sent to will present it from Ohio to
the Festival of Sharing, it was the Red Cross.
reported. Plans were made to
It was noted during the
serve ~ luncheon on election meeting that the Grange still
day at the church and to pur- has cookbooks for sale at S12
chase dolls for a Christmas . each . The Grange quilters
proJ~Ct.
.
purchased a new refrigerator
Rita Radford p~Slded. at for the hall. As part of comthe meenng openmg wtth munity service the Grange
PSalm 25 with the Lord's
'
'
will put three bird houses
Prayer and the purpose fold b w ·tl·
R ~~ rd .
Iowing m
. umson.
.
Th
rna e y 1 tam amo m
e group h
sane "In the Service of the t e cemetery.
.
King" and "It is well With
The county officers conMy Soul."
. ference was announced for
Officers' reports were pre- Nov. 2 at Sur Grange, 6:30
sented by Pandora Collins p.m. wllh the Pomona meetand Radford, and Hazel Ball ing to follow at 7:30 p.m.
reported on cards sent to the
Rosalie Johnson. lecturer,
sick and shu tins of the com- used Halloween as the theme
p.m.
munity.
of the literary pro~ram.
A pin for recogriition of Readings included 'Halservice was awarded to loween" by Barbara Fry;
D orothy Jeflien d unng
.
.
a "Night of Enchantment" by
h
h
·
· was Helen Quivey: "Old Folks
recent c urc servtce, 11
MASON - M~on Fi~ noted. There were special are Worth a Fortune" by
Depart".'ent Auxllta~ will · concerns prayen and a read· Johnson. There was quiz on
hold its1 annual Chnstmas . ing,_:· Asking for Miracles;• by animal phrases, and a poem
bazaar 'on Nov. 3 al the Ball. Virginia Wears read
M ason F'1re D epartrnent.
"Those Who Bting Sun- written by Deloris Will titled
Those · wishing 10 rent · shine."
"Changing Times" was read.
space may call 304-773Thanks were extended to
9103. There will be door
Tony Hawk for cutting the
prizes and the auxiliary will .
.
grass at the hall. The NovemseU vegetable soup, chili, hot
ber meeting will be preceded
dogs, coffee and pop. The
,u
by a potluck dinner at 6:30
bazaar will start at 9 a.m.
p.m.
5

ChrisbnaS

baza
· ar planned

G

range

lllllrtld•...nc· in
rvlctl-mr- fund

UMW plans

proJects
POMEROY Several
projects were planned during
a recent meeting of the
Rock
Springs
United
Methodist Women held at
the church.
School kits and money for

.

PEOPLE IN
THE NEWS.
Britney Spears
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Britney Spears has
recovered from a case of
flu that forced a five- day
delay in the start of her
tour.
Tour preparations were
slowed after a doctor prescribed a week of rest for
the ailing 19-year-old pop
star. A publicist with Concerts West said Wednesday
that Spears has recovered
and started rehearsals in
Los Angeles.
The new starting point
for the tour is MCI Center in Washington, D.C .,
on Oct. 31. Spears is
scheduled to perform 29
concerts in 28 cities over
50 days.
Concert dates in Miami
and Tampa, Fla., have been
· rescheduled foe midDecember and six additional performances have
been added in Salt Lake
City, Las .Vegas, East
Rutherford, N.J., Raleigh,
N.C., Atlanta and New
Orleans.

POMEROY - . Memben
of the Hemlock Grange participated in' the Ohio State
Grange's "Sept. 11 R.e lief
Victims' Fund" to· be Sl!nt to
the Red Cross at a recent
meeting held at the haU.
Their contribution consisted of sending the
evening's money march proceeds to the state master who

.·./'·'\,·./'Air".../'••".../'.'\,·J·'\,·
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MEIGS COUNTY TUBERCUWSIS CLINIC
PROVIDES FREE SERVICES

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The Meigs County '1\Jberculosls Omce has worked dlllg~ntly tor •
.J years toward the irradication of tuberculosis (TB) in Meigs County. "L
GALLIPOLIS - Church of
Since 19S2 the facility bas been operated solely by a local tax levy. At
God of Prophecy, 380 White •
Road. Gallipolis, Southern tnl this time the '1\Jberculosls Clinic irradicatlon on a .SO mill levy. This .J
gospel quartet, Forgiven 4,
· ~ amounts to SO cents per one, thousand valuation. The '1\Jberculosls levy •
· Sunday. 6 p.m.
~ust be passed in Novemb~rof this year.
. •
SYRACUSE - Mission Cele- ;
bration at the Forest Run , Mln· ersvllia and Asbury United
·Methodist Churches, with Jane
Schnarre of Alaska, and lhe
Red Bird Mission In Kentucky
as guest speaker.
MONDAY

• SYRACUSE - luncheon at
Asbury United
Methodist
;church with the Rev. Lola Neal,
·missionary from -Shawnee,
Okla., 1:30 p.m. Monday. Ail
women invited.

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MIDDLEPORT - OH-KAN
·Coin Club regular meeting,
Mon., 7 p.m., Trolley Station.
-Drawings,
coin
auction,
relreshmehts.

~

, RACINE - Soulhem Band
Boosters meeting. Monday,
'Ej,:3Q- p.m. adt the high school
!Sand room .

• Thberculin Skin 'Thsting
"
• Chest x·rays for all positive reactors
• Laboratory procedures
Medical evaluation by a qualified chest cllnlcian
.
• All T~ drugs as ordered by our chest clinician or the patient's
private physician
• Monitoring procedures, at least monthly or more frequently to
detect possible adverse reactions for patient's on TB medications
-Education and Uterature on TB for patient's, their families and
the community
.
.

1tn1 .

HARRISONVILLE - Her·
risonvllle Senior Citizens, Mon·
day, 11:30 a.m . Scipio lira·
"house. potluck dinner. Blood
·pressures will be taken.

, RACINE - Racine Council.
in recessed session Monday at
1 p.m. at the municipal building.

Because the residents of Meigs County have continued to vo~e yes ~or the
1\Jberculosis levy, the facility" can provble .n'!~erous semces wuhout
additional cost to County residents. These serv1ces mclude:

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The public needs to be made aware. that TB is out there and on the '
,.... increase worldwide. If you have questions about TB call us at 740-992- 't
3722. Our office hours are 8 am to 4 pm, Monday thru Friday. The Meigs
tnl County TB Office looks forward to talking with you. 1
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Pold for by Mei91 County TubereuiOIIIII.evy

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Comm~,
. ~r llyHII, TNOI.

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We. Are. Located On State. Route. 7
At Chester, Ohio • (740) 985-3902
Nut To Our Comploto food

a FCII'III SUpply St~

�. Pt'lneroy, Mldd~port, Ohio

Pege A I • The o.ily Sentinel

.

Frldlly, Oct. 1t, 2001

.~c•ssi-.n~ season

begins N~ . 1

more than siJr members, add $1,530 for
CHE,$HIRE - Gallia-Meigs Com- each individual member.
,
munity Action Agency's Emergency
Written proof of income must be pruHEAP (Home Energy Assistance Pro- vided for me current three or 12 month&lt;
. gram) for me 2001-02 heating ~n prior to me date of applk31ion. Exam! begins Nov. I and will continue through pies of t!Qcum~nts that p!OIIide proof of
• March 31, 2002, said Sandra Edw:uds, income are payroll stubs; Statement fiom
CM's emergency services director.
employer; public asisbnce payment his! The program was created to provide tories or a benefit statemerK from Social
financial heating assistance to low- Security. workers compensation, etc.
· income households threatened with disA SQciaJ Security number for each
connection of !heir heating source, have ,. household member is also required.
' already had service disconnected or .have Social Secilriry 'disab3ity and VA. disabili-less than a 10-day supply of bulk fuel.
ty will be exempt fiom gross income eliEmergency HEAP funds can be paid gi~ility. Medical proof must be rrovided.
on behalf of an eligible household once
A copy of the applicant's fue . bill or a
per heating season. The total payment of document verifying the primary fuel supup to $175 ($250 for fuel oil/propane plier must l&gt;e provided. Applicants are also
:users) must be sufficient to restore 'or asked to pn;&gt;vide a copy of !heir electric
·. continue home heating services.
bill, even if they do not have electric heat.
: To be eligible for !he program, both the
A household with heat supplied by
income guidelines and the emergency PUCO regulated utilities must be
requirements must be met. Household enrolled on the Perc~ntage of Income
· income is defined as gross income for Payment ·Plan {PIP) · to be eligible for
• everyone living in the home, except emergency benefits. This can be done
•earned income of dependent minors lhrough the local CAA HEAP officrs.
·under 18.
· Applications are also available for the
' AUowablelncomeforsizeofhousehold regular HEAP. Program, which is addi·,is $12,88S, for one person; two persons, tiona! funding assistance of a non-emerv$17,41S; three people, 121,945; four peo- gency nature. Regular HEAP is a federalpie, $26,475; five people, S31,00S; six ly funded program, designed to help elipeople, $35,535. For households wilh gible Ohioans meet the rising cost of

home beating !his wjnter.
Tow household income must be ~t or
below 150 pen:ent of the federal ~rry
levd. HEAP helpo the area's neediest citizens who may be on fixrd incomt'S or
•monr the working poor.
HEAP helps senior citizem and families with children IIYOid the choice of
"heating or eating" this winter. Regular
HEAP .applications can be completed at
the Meigs CAA HEAP office at 18()
· Mulberry Ave. (old license bureau building), Pomeroy, · or · GaUia CM HEAP
office at 420 Silver Bridge Plaza, GaUipolis.
.
Applications will be taken tiom 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m ., Monday through
Thursday.
CAA i&gt; implementing the appointment
syst~m to apply for Emergency HEAP.To
scho:dule an appointment, contact 3677341 in Gallia County or 992-6629 in
Meigs County any time on or after Oct.
29.
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F'-!rther information, is available by calling CM at 367-7341 or 446-1018 in
GaUia County. In Meigs County, call9926629 or992-2222.
The State HEAP office phone number
is 1- 800-282-0880 . The TTD phone
number for the hearing impaired is 1800-686-IS57.

FIIOM STAFFJIEPORTS

COLLEGE NEWS
••

ATHENS Nicholas
Avis of Coolville, Amity
Cauthorn of Long Bottom,
Natalie
Morehead
of
Pomeroy and I )orothy Sayre
of ~cine were named to
the dean's list at Ohio University for !he summer quarter.

Gl'lduates Ou
ATHENS Stephanie
Stewart of Middleport graduated wilh high honors from
Ohio University following
the summer quarter.
. Other local gr~duates
mduded Kelly Ephng of
Long :Sottom, and Paul
Chadwell of Mtddleport.
Howard Lockhart
of
. d hi
.
PomePOy rece1ve
s
master
.
d
.
.
.
o f bus mess a mmtstraaon.

Named to

fratemity

MARIETTA -Washington State Community College chapter of Phi Theta
Kappa inducted 33 new
members durihg its fall initi-

:Pomeroy woman is ou;s ·Employee.of the Month
•· ATHENS - Ohio Uni- at Ohio Univorsity for '10
•·versity'&lt; Classified Senate has years, is accounting assistant
General
announced that Texanna Well m
Wehrung of Pomeroy has Accounting/Financial
been named• the non-bar- Reporting• in the,Vice Presigaining daisified '"'Employee ' dent's Finance Offite.
Joni Tate, , administrative
1 of the Month (or September.
r
The Classified Senate, her assistant in the office of the
supervisor, Tanya Bibler, and president, nominated her.
. her family an&lt;! friends hon- · "She is always very pleas: ored her ~t the Senate's Sep- ant, always · speaks with a
··tember meeting.
smile in her voice, and alWays
.. Te:pnna, who has worked helpful. and she's never .too
,I

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busy to stop and help solve or university community for any
researeh an inquiry for our non-bargaining' unit, classioffice," said-Tate.
fied employee who is setting
· Well's photo and award standards for e&lt;ecellence and
inforniation is posted on the innovation by promoting
Classified Senate website at
unity, community, contin!lity
http:/ /cscwww.cats.ohiou.ed
and visibility.
u/ cseri/ eothni.htm and will
be sent to her planning unit . Award winnen show outhead for display.
standing individual a_chieve- .
This monthly award is met;~t, contnbuuon, mnovamade
'o!l.:nominatiom::'ti,pn·and .perforniJtJce of their
submitt'ed by members of the jobs, said Tate.

ation, and an additional
member wac accepted by
transfer.
The ceremony was held
on Oct. 12 at Graham Auditorium, followed by a short
reception .
Students in Phi Theta
Kappa must complete 12
credit hours twoard a degree
and maintain a grade· point
average of 3.5.
Inducted were: Melody
Attaway, Joshua Berlin, Jan
Berry, Dedra Cernus, James
Chambers, Sabrina Congo,
Mike Crites,Jennifer Downing, Sarah Drake, Amy Flowers, Janet Greathouse, Kristin
Haynes, Kimberly .Hoff,
Sondra Holbert, Rodna
Hooper, Karen Kelley, Lori
Kress, Stephen Lipscomb,
Jessica
Marshalf, Kathy
Miller, Elizabeth Mishler,
Lonnne
·
p oyn t er, 11ony
p nc
. hard , Jeanne R 1·ce, '
Matt h ew R 1'ley, T tuany
...,
Shaw, Bernita Smith, Darrell
Smith, Deanna Starkey, Linda
Warren, Christina Wilden,
Robert Wilson and James
Wines. '
Lorraine Kelby was awarded a transfer membership
from Muskingum Area Technical College•

.

'Training Day' rules box
office for second weekend,
takes in $13.4 million
week.
4.. "Serendipity," Miramax,
$8.8 million, 2,603 locations,
$3,368 average, $26.4 million,
two weeks.
5. "Don't Say a Word," Fox,
$6.7 million, 2,729 locations,
$2,460 average, $41.7 million,
Q1iee Mek&gt;. ' .' .
6. "Iron M~" Mir.nnax,
$6 million, 1,225 locations,
$4,910 average,$6 million, one

l:iasea

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AT THE M 'O VIES

:Waking lJfE{

Nilme
cleans list

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week.
. 7. "Zoolander,'' Paramount,
$5 million, 2,S22 loc~tic;ms,
S1,99S ~verage; $35.8 million,
~weeks.
•
.8. '1oy Ride.'' Fox, $4.9 million, 2,522 locations, $1,94S
average, $14.7 million, two

weeks.
9."Max Keeble's Big Move,''
Dimey, $4 million, 2,045 locations, $1,975 average, $10.9
million, two weeks.
10. "Hearts in Atlantis,"
Warner Bros., $2.7 million,
2,010 locations,. $1,349 average, $20.7 million,' three weeks.

The Daily Sentinel is looking for the
~ozen best photos of Meigs County,
people, places, or events to be·used in
a spec~al '.'Year 2002" calendar. ·
, Winning photos will be included in
?. . the .calendar, along with the
photographer's name and town.

Saturday, Oct. 20

•-ta.

•-IIIIi
pu.._..

photel, other 11\an tho photognophor'o l m - family.
All tlocltlono ol tho Jud!IIO will bo ftnol.
e. ,..,.5.fltntinol
, . _ tho rlglll to rtjlcl ony photo.

Wrltt Mme. eddrty end Qbpot nymbtr on thl Wk qf pbatp tnldee and Dill! to:

The Daliy Sentinel Photo Contest
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
HURRY I Deadline Is Frida , November 9, at 4:00

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o . . . . . . . . ...

&amp;.my Pl. C~ouoty

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Sunny, mild weekend in sight
BY TliE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A pleasant faD weekend is in
store for the tri-county area,
with plenty of sunshine .and
mild temperatures.
The National Wealher Service said high temperatures will
be in !he 60s and lows in !he

40s.
Sunset tQnight will be at
6:47,and sunrise on Saturday is
at 7:47a.m.
·
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 40s. Southwest wind
. S to 10 mph.
Saturday... Mosdy
sunny.
Highs near 70. West wind 10 to
15 mph.

Saturday night... Ciear. Lows
43 to 48.
Extended forecast:
Sunday...Mostly sunny. Highs
in the mid 70s.
Sunday night ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s.
'
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy wilh
scattered shm.vers. I.ows near
SO. Highs in the lower 70s.
Wednesday:.. Partly cloudy
with scattered showers. Lows
near 50. Highs in the upper 60s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy with
scattered shm.ven. Lows in the
upper 40s and highs in me
lower 60s.

DOJ l~wyers back In Clncy
CINCINNATI (AP) - Justice Department lawyers are
. continuing to talk with police officials, fine-tuning their rec. omrnendations for changes in police division procedures.
Chief Thomas Streicher and Gteg Baker, the acting safety
. directbr; inet Wednesday and 'I'hursday with their attorneys
.
. and Justice Department officials.
, Streicher said the discussions focused on cooperation
between federal and local officials.
·
Mayor Charlie Luken asked U.S. Attorney General John
. Ashcroft to review the police division after the April 7 fatal
: shooting of an unarmed black man sparked the city's worst
riots in more than 30 years.

Items removed from auction
CLEVELAND (AP) -

A box of Marilyn Sheppard's

Pf! EASED - Anthony Michael Green
gets a hug from his sister, Sharon Pascol, right, and long time friend Patricia
Everson after the rape conviction against
him was vacated by a Cuyahoga County
judge in Cleveland. DNA testing of 13year-old evidence proved Green could
not have committed the crime. In the left
background Is attorney Barry Scheck.
(AP)
anc\ sentenced to 20 to SO years in
prison. He had been freed on S10,000
bond earlier this month, pending Thursday'• hearing.
. .,.
The nurse was being treated for liver

Detective foils robbery try

cancer at Cleveland Clinic Hospital,
where Green had once worked. She died
after testifying at Green's trial that he was
the attacker.
Green's stepfather Robert Mandell
tracked down a piece of forensic evidence - a dirty washdolh used by the
assailant and found at !he crime scene.
The washclolh had been storetil in 11 dusty
storage room in !he courthouse basement.
Tests done by !he defense - and later
the prosecution - showed d10t DNA
fi"om the washcloth· was not Green's.
The U.S. judicial system is me greatest
in the world, "but nobody is going to say
it's error-proof," county Prosecutor Bill
Mason said Thursday. "We have corrected a wrong by releasing him."
The defense DNA reoults were
obtained with !he help of lawyer Barry
Scheck anll me Innocence Project at
Cardozo Law School in New York City.
The nonprofit organization helps obtain
analysis of DNA evidence on behalf of
people who may have been wrongfully
convicted.

Judith Hunter and county Prosecutor Sherri Bevan Walsh.
Stitt called 911 on March 28 and told police that .he had
shot his. sleeping father, Dennis Floyd Stitt, 48. The boy was
13 at the time.
·
Because Stitt was under 14, the harshest penalty that
Hunter can impose is to put him in a detention facility until
his 2 ht birthday.

Freighter blocking river
TOLEDO (AP) -Crews began unloading grain Thursday
from a freighter stuck in the Maumee River that had
blocked ship traffic for more than 24 hours.
U.S. Coast Guard officials were hoping that reducing the
ship's load would allow tug boats to shove it back Into the
shipping channel, ChiefWarrant Officer Rick Minnich' said.
Crews were going to try to shift the last ·of me load from
the rear to forward holds and attempt one more push
overnight Thunday, personnel at the Toledo station reported.
The 100-foot freighter got turned sideways in a strong
current and got stuck Wednesday morning.

DAYTON (AP) - A would-be robber was critically
wounded when he tried to hold up a pawn shop while a
plainclothes detective was there conducting an interview,
officials said.
The man was hospitalized Thursday night, but police did
not release his name.
•
Detective Gary Dunsky was interviewing an employee at
Ohio Loan Co. when a man entered the building, said AssisLIMA (AP) - Retired Marine Corps Lt. Col . .Oliver
tant City Manager John Thomas.
North.says
he doem't believe.Osalna ,l)in Laden ouny.other
The man, who was wearing a -scarf or bandanna over part
of his face, pulled a handgun, announced he ·was robbing the foreign terrorist is behind' the recent wave of anthrax scares.
"A nutcase- with a remembered .frozen petri clish of the
store, afflt'ordered everyone to the-.grot.tnd, Thomas said.
•
disease here at home is more likely,'' North said Thursday
night.
·j,,,
··~ ··~
North, who was at the center of the lran-Cona. Scandal
AKRON (AP) - A boy will plead guilty tq a lesser during the Reagan administration, spoke to a Lima business
offense rather than use battered child syndrome as a defense group.
against a charge that he shot his father in the head.
North criticized the news media for creatin~ a h)rpe an~
Aaron Stitt, 14, is charged with delinquency by reason of frenzy around the anthrax story. He says the media has
aggravated murder. He will enter his plea Friday and be sen- focused on "Chicken Littles" telling stories about the sky
tenced Monday, according to Summit County Juvel)ile Judge falling and scaring the p11blic.

North: scare Is homegrown
h

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Boy tO plead In shoOting

•••••••••••••

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State·to settle suit over closing
business because of mine.,

COLUMBUS (AP) -The covered building.
On Tuesday,1 Gov. Bob Taft
state, already struggling with
The building was appraised ordered a 6 percent budget cut
across-me-board budget cuts, at $1.8 million in 1987. The for most state agencies. That
is about to pay S4.7 million to settlement is based on mat amounts·to about $5.2 million
settle a lawsuit over the closing amount plus interest.
out of the Department of
of a bowling,alley 16 years ago
Telephone messages seeking Natural Resources' $123 milthat sat atop . an abandoned comment on the settlement lion budget !his year.
coal mine..
were left_Thursday f~r Michael " The expense is "very
The settlement was pro- and his attorney, Michael Sha- painful" at a time of overall
posed Wednesday to the for- been.
budget cuts, Beo11gher said. ·
mer _owners · of me Riviera
"The main purpose of
Natural Resources is rrying
Bowlmg aUey m. Bellaue and doing me setdement is !hat to .figure out how to pay for
accepte~ m pnnctple, satd · the state has fought for several the settlement, spokesman
Stephame Beougher, spokes- years on this issue and unfor- Andy Ware said Thursday.
woman for Ohio Attorney tunately the courts have not
"Taking the funds from the
seen it our way." Beougher mjne lands program would
General Betty Montgomery.
An official filing in Belmont said. "We're ro' the point essentially put a halt to such
C?unty Common Pleas ~ou~t where we're saying, 'Let's all important projects, and our
Wtth settlement de!a~ls ts be mature about this and get budget for managing our
expected
satd. Bel~ )i
Oh'sheRi
·ty thts. taken care of so we can oth er 1aci
·ties sueh as state ·
. . soop,
Iatre xs an
10
· parks is a1rea
' dy · ·extreme1y
.1 · vert c1 f move on and do olher bust120
b
mt es eas o ness ,or
, t b e state....
a ou~
IJ'ghr,"W:
.are sa1'd.
C oIumbus.
The Bellaire fire chief closed
. ~·~~
the business in March 1985
because methane from the

~~~in;;hl:aPeJ~ra1i~~ve~~~ ~
~:~~:~~n stepped in to stop Jl
Pleas

Judge

Charles Knapp ruled in June
1986 !hat because the state
prevented the owners from
getting into !he building, the
state had illegally closed the
business.
Dale Michael of Bellaire
sued, saying the state effectively took over his business when
a fire chief ordered its closing
19851
State courts said the dosing
· was illegal, clearing the way
for Michael and co-owner
Harry Mowder to be com-

~

Fti • ..,.Gclt .. •1t.2tl1

embroidered handkerchiefs has been removed from an auction of Shepf,ard family items after complaints from her son.
"I'm great y relieved and gratified," Sam Reese Sheppard
said. "Personal items are not for sale. It was just an inadvertent m~ake."
·
A small collection that belonged to Dr. Sam and Marilyn
Sheppard were to be included among thousands of family
heirlooms. The sale Saturday is from the estate of Dorothy
Sheppard, wife of Sam's late brother Richard. She died in
January.
Dorothy_ Shepparll'~ daug~ters have agreed to give the
handkerchtefs to thetr cousm, Sam Reese Sheppard. He
hopes to include them in an archival exhibit he wants to
establish in April to honor his parents.

.

pensated for the loss of !heir
now decaying and ·graffiti-

'.'

CLEVELAND (AP) - · A man imprisoned for 13 years for rape was exoner:tted Thursday bawd on DNA evidence
from a dirry washclolh his stepfather
found in a government storage room.
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Judge Anthony 0. Calabrese Jr. overturned the conviction of Anthony
Michael Green and said the case sh"""
that the judicial ·system is imperfect but
can fix its mistakes.
. "How do you restore thnse yean that
you spent in prison?" Calabrese asked
· from me bench. "Maybe only God can
answer !hat question."
The judge later sought out Green in
the corridor outside the courtroom,
shook his hand and wished him good
luck.
Green said he holds no molice toward
!hose who convicted him. "Anger is a
hindering block,''IGreen said. "I have no
room for it."
"People make mistakes, and this was a
big mistake," he said.
Green, who turned 36 on Thursday,
was convicted of raping a nurse in i 988

W. VA.

..

Page~7

"

DNA evidence exon'erates imprisoned man

·Ohio weather

Common
.
. •
OFFICIAL 111/LES
·
1. All photo• m111t t be t.ken by .,.._,.teur photogr1ptw, 1e YMFI or Older,
,
,
who,ourrentty ,....._ In Meigs County.
2. Photoo muallncludo either Melgo Coonty pooplo p i - Of
3. Winning and runnera-u=oa will bHoriMt the proptlrty 01 the Point Plelunt At-gltttr. ·
PhOioQnl..... ol,wlnntna
IUn,.,...up pholoa w~ bo
.alii" a,. ..... to 0\*&gt; Yollt~
Pubtla Ina for nawo and promotional
4. Pllotographaro of winning pho\Ot will bo liked to Obtain a photo rataoM 11om ony oubJICI In

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

OPEN HOUSE
AA • _jJ ./J j

· _ . ._ ./.

./Yfia4uJnCJIU
~}nJt•e•Jt c')l
9

V~~ ~~

Saturday, October 20, 2001
9:00AM - 2:00PM
Door Prisell • Refretbmente
New OWnu. • Ray It: Mandy Jle!dm•u Invite
Yo11 To 8~ By And Loot Around

im

Houn
ectlft New. 1, 2001)
M·F 9-IJ. Ezcept Thun 9-Noon, Sat 9-Noon

145 N. Second Avenue
Mlddleprt, Ohio

(740)
992-31il33
•
~

~'*··*'·*"'••

Trick or Treat
Friday, October 23rd
5:30-8:30
Ages0-12

GAMES. PRlZES. COSTUME JUDGING
Games Start at 5:30p.m.
Costume Judging at 6:30p.m.
TrickorTreatfrom 7:00-8:00 p.m.
Tickets for oames on sate at the door.
•All pra CHell to to l'llkttniiCbrlltmu FUid

j

t/lhtJp '

·/---;.

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center's
Annual ·

•

•

KSPRINGS

---!!i~C R~HABILITATlON CE~hR.
36759 Rocksprings Rd. 992·6606
Pomeroy, Ohio
'

�Pe, A I • J1w Dt!IV Sentinel

Pol!!t!'O'i. Mldd!tport. Ohio

Sunday Schout 10 am-

\ I ''''I I d It

Mwnina woohip I lam. Evtftinl - '1 pm

e..-.. - 7,l0p.m.

.._v...,

,._lc

-ipCcnla

17! S. 3nl 'Ave., MO!dlopon
lenin Kookle. Su.lay, 10a.&amp;md6:00p.m.
Woe'
:ky, 7:10p.m.; Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.
Coord!~~- Cloriol

..._.I&lt;Foidl
-UmaRood
Sundly,IOa. ... and7:30p.m.
Wedneldly. 7:30p.m.

\ " l ' lllhh "I ( .ud
Ubody - J I l l God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding l...anc:

Price Hollow Rd., Rutlllfld

Hope lopllot Churoh (Soutbem)
510 Gl'lll'll St., Midd&amp;erort

•

Sunday ~~ehool - 9:30 t .m.
WOf1b.ip-lla.m. and6p.m.

'

••

•

Pastor: E. LllmarO'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonh.ip • 10:43 a.m., 7:00p.m .
Wednesdly Services- 7:00p.m.

first Bopllot c.,n:h
Paslor. Mart Morrow
6th and Palmer St, Middleport
Sunday School- 9: l.S a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
WedDe!day Sen-ice- 7:00 p.m.
Radne Flnl Baptkt
Paslor: Rick Rule
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service!! - 7:00 p.m.

SIJver Ruo .. ptkl
Pasl('r: Juhn Swanson
SundJ.y School - !Oa.m.
"Wol'llhip- II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednellday S~rvict!l· 7:00p.m.

ML UDion Bapdsl
Pasror : Joe N. Sayre
SUDday School-9:4.5 a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wedneiday Services- 6:3dp.m.
Bedlldlem Bapdll Cllurdl
Grem Bend, .Rourc 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecca
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:30'a.m.
Wodne...y Bible Study · 6:00p.m.

Old Btlhd F,.. Will Boptiol Clou .. h .
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday SchOol • 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:00p.m.
Thursday Service! - 7:00

"'- Sondly mMantn -7:&lt;10 p.tll~eMoc

\

-Rev.CnoiJc-

326 E. Main St, Pomeroy
Rt:v. James Bemad:i, Rev. Katharin Potter

r-roy W- Cbwdl eiCioriol

Sunday School bad
Holy Euchariat II :00 a.m.

K- Ch ..... Ill Chriol
· Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Putor-Jeffrey Wallace
ltl and 3rd Sunday

Tlop.,... Plolo Chord&gt; ot Chriot
Instrumental
· Worship Service - 9 a.nl.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School - IO:I.S a.m.
Yoolh- .S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Pastor: Jim Ealon
J9.S.4i8 Bradbury Road, Middlepon
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m.

Pomeny
Pastor. Rod Brower
Wondrlp - 9:30 a.m.
Surxlay School- 10:3S a.m.

Plae Grove Bible HoUDm~ Clmrcb

- S p......
Pastor: Keidl Rader
Sundtty School - 9:1~ a.m.
Worship ~ 10 a.m.
YO&amp;llh Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

w....,.7S..PearlBibleSt.,nonCburdo
Middleport.

Rulla,..
Sundty School - 9:30a.m.
WOdhip . 10:30 a.m.
Th1111day Service&amp;- 7 p.m.

l.&lt;llllT-1 );II
Hkkol')' Hills Cburtb of Chrlsl
Evangelise Mike Moore
SundBy School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m .. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sertices- 7 p.m.

Vktol')' Boptlol ..............
'lS N. lad St. Middleport
Paslor. James E.. Kee~ee
Worahip • !Oa.m., 7 p.m.
We&lt;lnuday Service! . 7 p.m.

O..n:h ot Cbrllt
lnler5eCtion 7 and 124 W
Evangelist: DenniJ Slf&amp;Cnl
Sunday Bible Study - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study ." 7 p.m.

Worship- 9:00a.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Our S.Yiuur L...,raa Cburda

Worship· 10:4!1 a.m.
Sunda)i Evening- 6:00p.m.
• Pastor: Mark McComas
b - ,._WID Bopdot

Salem St.
PuiOr: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

EveninJ:-7 p.m.
Wednesday Service! - 7 p.m.

SocoodllopdotCburn ·
Raven1wood, WV
Plmtor: David W. McClain

'

Hartford, W.Va.

Worship -9:30a.m. (lsi &amp; 2nd Sun),

Putur:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednaday Sel'\lices-7:30 p.m.

7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)

St. Rt 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Senoic~ - 7 p.m.

l'n·-.IJ\ tnia11
SyratU~e Flnt

United Pmbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - I I a.m.

r.lolp ~Uve 'Pujoh
Northeast Cluster
Alrrod
Pltlor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonbip- II l.m., 6:30p.m.

Mune Chapel Churdl
Sunday tchool- 10 a.m.
Worship · I J a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

ThldoChurdl
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.

Filth GGOpel Cbun:b
L.ona Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:4~ a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Joppo
.....,., Bob Randolph

Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening . 1 p.m.
Wcdneday Service - 1 p.m.

Unlled Fallb Cbun:h
Rt. 7 oo Pomeroy By-Pass
Putor: Rev. Robert E. Smilh, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonh.ip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
We:dne.lday Sertlce. 7 p.m.
FuU Coopel Llobtho33045 Hiland Road, fumeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter

H~.

Rd., Pomeroy

Pastor. Roy lawinsk:y

Middleport Chun:kt&gt;f lhe NUimH
PAllor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · I0:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Pastor. Allen Midcap
Rtalsvillt fello...Wp
Church of the Nazarene
Pl.!ltor. Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:-4!1a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdne!iday Sertice!- 1 p.m.

"''"'11111 - D:ll \d~t · 111i'l
Seventh-Day Adveadsl

MI. Ollvt ConunnUy Cbun:b
Pastor: Lawrence Bush

Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

I uill'd Brl'tlm·u
ML Hermo• United Brtdn'!n

Jn Christ Churth
Texas Community off CR 82
Pa.Hor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 t .m.. 7:30 p.m.
Wedne!ld.ay Services- 7:30 p.R_t.
Eden United Brethrm In Chrilst
2 lf2 miles rrorth of Reedaville
on Stale RoulC 124
Pasror: Rev. Robert Mtrkley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
W«lne!day Services • ?:30 p.m.
Wednclday Youth Service- 7 ~30 p.m.

Syracuse ChiU'dl of the Nuarenc

•

All

S£0.

Logan

G1111ia Academy
Jackson '
M.arietta
Athens
Warren
Poinl Pleasant
River Valley

5.()
5.()

8-0

3-2
2-3
2-3
2-3
1-4
0-5

5-3
5-3

7-1

4-4
3-5

2-6
o-e

•:
Today'• Garnn
Point Pleasant at Athens
Gallia Academy at Logan
Marietta at River Valley
Jackson at Warren Local

TvC

Ohio Dlvl1lon

JMm

Wellston
Belpre
Nelsonville-York
Meigs
Yinton Counly
Alexander

M

3-0
2·1
2-1
1-2
1-2
0-3

992-3785
Brogan·Warner

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

Bill

ANDERSON

EwmG FUNERAL

HOME

FUNERAL HOME
"We accept Preneed Transfers'
(304) 682·8200

Lundy Brown, Jamss Anderson

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

Ingel's Carpet

Dignity and S.tV/ce Alwaya
E...bll1hed 1913

169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-2121

992-7028

Directors

Ave.

'

Olde&amp;t Flori.Jt

Main
Pomeroy, Oh
•tAt Yt tetJ4 !iO!.It thoythtt with tjlleltl ca/'1•

740--992-2644

740.992-11298

FLOWER SHOP! always &amp; 'Forever
106 BUTI'ERNUT AVE. ,

PoMmROY,OH 992-6454
"Flowers for all occasions'
6nellfftr's

;tlrr B. 611fdp

-·

tiM ' f '

I

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[J

518 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH ·

ss2-11e1

(J Office Service &amp; Supply

·
,,., 1 ,~. t:~

-w-• •

........
O'IIUU
lnt

Sift Sfiop

....... .

137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992•6376

EAST MEIGS - The top-seeded
Eastern Eagles (18-3) will square off
Saturday against the winner of the 6
p.m. ·Crooksville-Waterford game for
the Division IV Sectional C hampionship.
The title tilt is slated for 7:30p.m. at
Alexander High School.
Eastern is no stranger to champi·
onship competition. The Eagles have
cl;limed the last four sectional crowns
and the last five Tri-Valley Hocking
Division Championships.
Three of those banners came under

the late Don Jackson,
one
under
Paul
Brannon and this
year's TVC crown
came under Pam
Douthitt.
" I think we will
have to play a really
good game for either
team
we
play,"
Douthitt said . " We've
Calaway
had some injuries
and several girls have been sick on and
off. We have to get healthy in the next
couple days and play like we did
againsr Meigs.

"I told our girls the same thing I
told our softball girls in the spring 'you can go as far as you want to go.'
If we put forth a good effort, we can
wm.

On the injured list is Tiffany Hensley. who was hurt in a car accident last
week, and part-time senior starter
Kayla Gibbs, among others. Whitney
Karr, one of the league's premier
front-tine players has been out this
week, but returned to practice Thursday.
Eastern boasts nine seniors - Janet
Calaway, Ashley Hager, Tiffany
Spencer. Tammy Bissell. Janet Ride-

Tiger's.back - way back

4-4
4-4
2-6
1-7
2-6

Hocking Division

IBm

Tlimble
Easlem
Walerford
Southern
Miller
Federal Hocking

M
3-0
2·1
2-1
2-1
0-3

4-4

1-7
o-e

Today'a Game•
Waterford at Eastern
Southern at Trimble
VInton County at Meigs
Wellston at Alexander
Miller at Federal Hocking
Belpre at Nelsonville-York

Non-league
Team
Ravenswood
Oak Hill
Wahama
Ripley
Soulh Gallia
Hannan

All

8-0
5-3
5-3
4--4
1·7
0--8

Today'• Galllft
Wahama al St. Marys
South Gallia at Hannan
Green at Oak Hill
Ripley at Logan (W.Va.)
Ravenswood at Calhoun Co.

Baseball

ALCS

Wednesday, Oct. 17
~w York 4, Seattle 2
"fbursday, Oct. 18
N'ew York 3 at Seattle 2,
New York leads series 2-0
S!Hurday,Oct.20
S!i!attle (Moyer 20-6) at
New York (Hernandez 47), 4:20 p.m. (Fox) ·
Sund•y. Oct. 21
Seattle (Abbott 17·4) at
New York (Clemens 20·3),
7:50 p.m. (F~ or Fox ·
Sports Net)
Monday, Oct. 22
Seattle at New York, 8:20
p.m .• if necessary (Fox)
Wednesday, Oct. 24
New York at Seattle, 4:20
p:m., if necessary (Fox)
Thursday, Oct. 25
New York at Seattle, 8:20
p.m., if necessary (Fox)

Atlanta 8, Arizona 1, series
tied 1-1
Friday, Oct. 19
Arizona (Schilling 22-6) at
Atlanta (Burkett 12-12),
8:20p.m. (Fox)
Saturday, Oct. 20
·
Arizona at Atlanta, 7:50
p.m. (Fox)
Sunday, Oct. 21
Arizona at Atlanta, \ 7:50
p.m. (Fox or Fox Sports
Net)
Tuesday, Oct. 23
Atlanta at Arizona, 8:20
p.m., if necessary (Fox)
Wednesday, Oct. 24
Atlanta at Arizona, 8:20
p.m., if necessary (Fox)
·'

I .

PIMseseeEHS.IS

Banged-u SHS
hopes 3r time
charm vs. Trimble
the
net,
while Pullins
RACINE - The Souihern
is a great
Tornadoes (seeded fourth at
passer, server,
7-13) travel to Alexander Satand setter.
urday for a first-round match
Hill
has
come a long
and shot at the Division IV
Sectional Title.
way
in
The Tornadoes will meet
becoming a
the Trimble Tomcats (seeded
good spiker
· third at 9- 10) at 3 p.m. The.
PuiHna
and front·
winner face~ No. 2 Miller at
line player.
4:30 for the championship.
Jeri Hill contributes a
Southern has been ham- steady floor game as a junior,
pered by injuries and the flu . while sophomore Codi Davis
bug, two things that have has stepped up her game in
allowed the Tornadoes to slip several areas to bolster the
below .500. Brandi Lane is on SHS
line-up. · Freshman
injured reserved list with a Brooke Kiser has done a great
sprained ankle, and freshman job after coming up from the
impact player Brooke Kiser reserve team, adding depth to
rolled an ankle Thursday the floor . game and serving
night.
game.
"We've got to get as healthy
Another freshman, Susan
as we can for Saturday," said Brauer, has added some more
Coach Roma Sayre, "then, depth with a deceiving serve
they have to go out and play and good front-line play.
the way we are capable of
Coach Sayre said a team
playing. We will have to play a strength was in the chemistry .
little bit out of position, but of the team - the girls aU
we will be ready to play."
compliment one another.
"They have really gelled as a
Southern is a young dub
with no senior members. team. They are a really good
Starters include juniors Amy bunch of kids.''
Le~ and Rachel Chapman,
Southern lost both times to
two talented servers and Trimble. As the old saying
passers and good front-line goes, it is hard to beat someplayers, and sophomores Katie one three times in a row.
Sayre, Deana Pullins and
Sayre hopes this saying
Emily HiU.
comes true, adding, "We will
Sayre can play the floor
well, serve well, and is good at
Plu1111tSHS,IS
SENnNEL CORRESPONDENT

7-1
7-1
6-2

0-3

nol!r, Amanda Yeager, Tiffany Hensley,
Whitney Karr and Kayla Gibbs. Nikki
Phillips and Tiffeny Bissell are the
junior players, while sophomores K.ass
Lodwick, Katie R,obertson and Alyssa
Holter round out the line-up.
The work ethic instilled by
Douthitt and the teamwork the team
possess on its best nights make this a
truly great team, Douthitt said.
" I think the strong point about this
team is how much better we are when
we play as a team. When we don 't play
together we are sometimes not very

BY ScoTT WoLFE

All

Tiger Woods reacts after missing a birdie putt Thursday on his first hole of play
the
opening round of the National Car Rental Golf Classic In Lake Buena Vista, Fla. Story, 82
(AP Photo/Peter Cosgrove)

IT'S A FUMBLE

Yankees of old
are back on top
• BY RoNAlD BwM
AP SPORTS WRITER

SEATTLE- Everything
has changed for the New
York Yankees.
After six
days and
four crosscountry
flights,
they've
gone from
the verge
of firstw:__ _ _.;....J round
Rivera
elimination to a
streak leading to a possible
fourth straight World Series
trip.
Everything has changed
for Seattle, too. Those
' 116
regular-season wins have
become a tightening noose
·around their necks, no
longer a mighty accom• plishment, now merely a
burden.
· · "We just have to keep
doing whatever we'r!!
doing," Mar iano Rivera
said
after
completing
Thursday's 3-2 win over

the Mariners.
Slumping Scott Brosius ·
sparked a three-run second
inning, Mike Mussina slid
by without his best stuff
and Rivera got his 22nd
straight postseason save.
Freddy Garcia, who · got
the Mariners' only two
wins over New York in last
year's ALCS, pitched on
three days' rest for just the
second time in his career.
He allowed five of his first
I 0 batters to reach and
couldn't escape a secondinningjam.
Seattle couldn't get out
of a 3-0 hole and headed to
New York faced with the
formidable task of having
to win two of l;hree just to
send the· series ba ck to
Safeco Field. The series
resumes Saturday at Yankee
Stadium, where Orlando
Hernandez (9- t in the
postseason) faces Seattle's
Jamie Moyer.
"We're going to be back
here to play Game 6,"
Mariners manager Lou

Please see Yankees, 85
J

•

BY ScoTT WOLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

straight

All

Wednesda~Oct.17
Cowaty~

Eagles seek

6-2

Arizona 2, Atlanta 0

· MY grace Is suffleient
for thee: for mY
strensth Is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992-3978

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio
740·667·3110

JMm

SEOAL

NLCS
Tuesday, Oct 16

RACINE PLANING MILl
Mill Work
cabinel Making
Syracuse

: . Prep Football

Middleport Pnobyleotan '
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Mulbeny

'\a ta l'l' Ill'

HIGHLIGIITS

Harrlooavlle Pnobyleriu C......,
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:4~ a.m.

'

Orand Street
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.
Wednelday Services- 8 p.m.

WoiBhlp- 10:30 a.m.

Cbooter
Pastor: Jane B_eattie
Wor5bip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

'

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

Hoc~otChurdl

Mt. OUvt Unilftl Mttbodl!rt
Off 124 behind Wilketville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7p.m.
Thul'lday Services- 1 p.m.

Sy.._ F1nt Churth of God
AwJo and Sccood S~ .
Putor: Rev. David RLaSell
Sunday School and Wonh.ip- 10 a.m.
Evening Sel'\'ices- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

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

Dyt~vlllr Com~nDII)' Churth

Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wedne!lday Service-7:30p.m.

Pastor; Ron Heath
Sunday Worihip - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Salem c.mmunlty O..rdl
Licving Road. West Columbia. W.Va.
PallOr: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday School 9:30am
Sunday evening liCrvil:c 6 pm
Wednesday 5ervice 1 pm

Hutl Community Chun:h
OffRtl24
Putor: Edlel Hart
Sunday School- 9:30'a,m
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Bet.llel Qurdo
Township Rd.. 468C
Sundly School- 9 a.m.
Worship - I0 a.m.
Wpjnesda:y Servieel- 10 a.m.

Chri6n Ublon

ot Gvd

McQuire Rd. Pumeroy, Ohio
Pulor: Wayae Balcolm
Services: Thun. Nites 7:00 pm
New chureh No Sundty .ervice
established.

1411 Bridgeman SL, Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 1 p.m.

Tuesday Se~ice.l - ~p.m.

Hartford Cburdl of Cbrialln

Rutland Church

3166~

Faith Valley Tabe..-.cle Churth
Bailey Run Road
· Pasror: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday E\·en.Jns ? p.m.
Thunday Sertlce - 7 p.m.

Cooi.W. Unll&lt;d Melbodlot Porlob
Putor: Helen Kline
Coolville Olurcll
Main &amp; Fifth SL
Sunday Scttool- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship·- II a.m.

ML Morilb Chan:b el God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
P11tor: Brice Utt
Sunday School- 9:4!1 a.m.
Evenlna - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sertices- 7 p.m.

God's Temple of Prailt

Syracll!e Mt.ion

St. Plul Luthei'IID C'llureh
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second Sl., Pomeroy

( 'lwrrh ol ( .od

Servk:es: Saturday 2:00 p.m.

Middleport C...•ualty ChardJ
~7.4i Pearl Sr., Middleport
Pastor. Sam Anderson
Sunday Sthool!Oa.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Wedne!ld.ay 7 p.m.

W.Va.

Putor. David RusseU
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
WMhip - 11 a.m.

M•MortoiiBoptiol

,',

Rodoe
Pmtor: Brian Harknes•
Sunday ·ScOOol- 10 1.m.
Won.hip - II a.m.

Walnut and HeiU')' Sta., Raven.1wood,

Sa•5or
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pulor: Jesse Morris

Wedne!day- 7 p.m.

Pastor; Brian HadJieu
Sunday Sc::hool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

SL Joha Lutbenn O.urda
Pine Grove

FuU Coopel Cburch Ill lhe Living

lfarrlooa.W. eu..auaity Cburdl
Pastor: 11teroo Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Moral. Star
Past.or. Dewayoe Stutler
SuhdayS&lt;\illot • II a.m.
Wonbip.-_' 10 a.m.

..

c.... R.F. L

The Btlleven' Followlltlp Mlnlslly
New Lime Rd .. Rutla.nd
Pastor: Rev. Margarel J. Robin50n
Services: WcdllCiday, 7:30p.m.
SundBy, 2:30p.m.

Bible Study Wed. 7,00 p.m.

I uthl'ran

FoiiiiBoptiol Chon:h

Aodqulty Bopdol
Sunday .khool -9:30a.m.

Canaei·Suttoa
ClKIDCI &amp; Baaban Rd&amp;.
Racine. Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School • 9:30 IUD.
WOflhip- 10:4.5 a.m.

110011
~4.nt~l.5a.m.

New ure Vklory Center
3773 Georges Creek 'Road. Gallipolis. OH
Pastor: Bill Stalen
Sunday Services - I0 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.
Wednt!sday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Faith FuU Goopol c.. n:b
Long Bottom
Paslor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednc&amp;day - 7 p.m.
Friday • fellowship service 7 p.m.

Worship- 9 a.m.
Wedne!iday Service~- 10 a.m.

S.Jillh

Cliflon, W.V1t.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m. ·

923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pa.ltor Teresa Davi~
Sundtne:rviCe, Uh.m.
Wednesday 5ervice, 7 p.m.

Sunday School - IOa.m.

Homemaking ~na, l.f. Thurs. - 1 p.m.

Reedtrille Cliureh _. Chrbt
P~&amp;stur; Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:~0 a.m.
Worship Sel'\'ice: I0:30a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.RL

Abuadut

Bethauy
Putor. Dewayne Stuller

160, 446-6247or~7486

sacramem

faU.b FeUowlb.lp Crusade tor Chrilt
Petor: Rev. Frar*.lin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Calnry Bible Clundl
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. BIKkwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sertice- 7:30p.m.

Appe Life Cellltr
"PuU.Ooapel Church"
P"kxllohn 8t P•ty Wode
603 Second Ave. Muon
173-.5017
Service lime: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

RellerSOciotyiPriesthood u,M-!l,oo

Pastor; Robert Musser
Sunday Sd1ool - 9:30·Lm.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WednC!lday Service 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Bible Study • 7:00p.m.

H...-o..._.M..,.,.....

Sao"~

Sundl.ySchoollO:l0-11 a.m.

· Lonpvllle Chrlatlu Cburch

Wonhip - 7:00p.m.

Alb-Cio .....
Alb St. Middlepott- Putor:: Glenn Rowe Sunday Se:~a- 10:00 a.m. &amp;: 7:00p.m.
Thursday - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service -6:00p.m.
RoJoldaa Llle Cburch
Wednelday Service- 7:00p.m.
~ N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pnslor: Mike Foreman
Paslor: Emerilu&amp; Lawrence Foreman
47439 Reibel Rd, Che.ller
Wonibip- 10:00 am ,
Paston: ~v. Mary and Harold Cook
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednosday Services - 7 p.m.

!lololaC..I•
Putor: Ron f"~en:e
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip • 10: 1~ a.m.

1'he Cllurdl of JtiUI
Cloriot otLotter-Doy Solats
Sl. Rt.

Pastor. Brian May
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Clifton Tabernacle Churth

Lounl ClllrFree Mdbodlot Chardo
Pnstor: Donald BaliJ
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Senoice - 7:00p.m.

Bradford Chun:h ol Cbrllt
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minisu:r: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minitler: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Woahip- 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Falnitw Bible Cburdl ·

StinnYih Commallltr CIJ.urdl
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell

1n mile offRr. 32.S
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sertice - 7:30p.m.

Rev. Mart Michael
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

IJ,.,

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhlp - 10 a.m.

Hyoell R'"' H - Crnordl

RutlaM. Churtb ot CbNt

Coolville Road
Putor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 uu.
WurWp • 10:30 t.m.
Wedncsdly Service - 7 p.m.

Letart, W.Va. RL I

Pea.tO..pol

R""'otSJoaron- Ch .....
l...etding: Creek Rd .. Rudand
ras.or: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday !!Chool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday wonh.ip -7 p.m:
Wednesday pn11yer mcetina- 7 p.m.

FRIDAv:s

Wldte'J Cllopol W....,.an

Portland-Racine Rd.
Pa,tor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WordUp - 10:30 a.m.
W~y Strtices - 7:00p.m.

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wcxsltip - 10 a.m.

Pas10r. Rev. Doua: Cox
Sunday Worship - 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
"WedneJday Service· 7:30p.m.

B......,. Clourdl of Christ

W~ 7p. m .

c...-•nltJ .r Cbrill

MJnem1lle
Pasw: Bob Robin1100

frld.,, Odohr II, 1001

O..l'dli

Bald Knob, oa Co. Rd. 31
Puaor: Rev. Roaer Willford
Sundly School-9:30a.m

lltDllodl GI'V\'c t1uildu Church
Putor. JUchard Neue
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Bible Study- 7 p.m.
Community of Cbrist

Hath (Middleport)
Putot: Rob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II ;00 a.m.

I

"'-!.. c-1 M..._

PartlaM J1nt CllurdJ el tiM N~
Pastor. William Justis
Sunday School-10:00 a.m.
Mornin.a Wonhip - 10:4.S t.m.
Suaday Service · 6'30 p.m.

Pastor. Bob Roblnsoo
Sunday School - 10 t.m.
·
Worship - 9 a.m.

d

Page 81

No Sunday or Wedneldly NiJbl Service~

Sunday School - 9:30 a.fll
Wonblp~ 10:30a.m.,6:30 p.m.
WedneBday ServiCCII - 7 p.m.

( )lill'r ( illll'l

· College football previews, Page B3

......., ....... v-

Puc.or: Rev. Samuel W. B111yt

FOI'ftl Run

'f.ger four back at Disney, Page B2

Suaday School-9:30a.m.
Wor.hip Sav¥e 10:30 a.m.

WOI'Ihip • II a.m.

Cal"'ry Pllpim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Putor: Charh~6 McKenzie
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonbip - 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnc!day Service - 7:00 p.m.

Zion Cburdl of Chrilt
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pa.~or: Roger Wlhorl
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10;30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneiday Services - 1 p.m.

I

btlu4Cinuafll . . _

flaPao&lt;or. Keilh R.der
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Dao.W.Hoi!M.Ciou,..,
31~7 Stale Route 32~. L.angsvlle
Pntor. Gary Jackson
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- 10:30 t.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wcdntlsday prty/rvice - 7 p.m.

Wedae.d.y Services- 1 p.m.

CarleiM laltt ,
IUopbuoy Rood

.. _
-Rov. HorbettGno:
&amp;.dly School- ~30 a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneldlly Service~ - 7 p.a

Ealorprioe
Pastor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 t.m.

The Daily Sentinel

.......,RobertB-

~Chnlofll

Wednesdiy SeNicc&amp;- 7:30 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Sttt.et, Rullaod
Sunday Wonl\ip-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Youth Minister. Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:1.4i, lfr.30un., 7 p.m.

Dexter Cllurtb ol Cllrllt
Pastor: Nllthan Robinson
Sunday school 9:30a.m.
Nonnan Will, superint~ndent
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m.

Fourth 4: Main St., Middleport
Pulor: Rev. Gilbert Cn.iJ. Jr.
hnday lk:hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.

Sunday School • 9 L • .
S110. Wonhip - 10:10a.m., 6p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Wedaesday Sef"o'ica - 7 p.m.

Mbury (S"""""J
Pallor: Doh Robii\IOJI
Stlrlday Scbool • 9:43 1.m.
worship - 11 a.m.

c,_E.........,.Cborn

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Won.hip- 10:30 a.m., t.i p.m.
Wedneldly Servicet • 7 p.m.

St Rt. 143jusloffRt. 7
Pastor: Rev. Jamc:s R. ,\ace, Sr.
Suaday Unified Service
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday ServiceA-7 p.m.

Foral Ran S.ptlll
Paslor .: Ariu~ Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

s.. .....

Swxlly Sehool - 9 a.m.
WOI'Ship · 10 1.m.
l'ueJdlly Service~ • 7:30 p.DL

Wonhip 10::15 a.m.

HIIWde BaptiJt Churth

Rallroad St, MalOn
'Sunday SchoOl- ~0 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

---

Tlo_. ......

1'riolty "'•rn

S«on&lt;&lt; A Ly""l'lloaoroy

CoordlfiQriol

Rutlut flnt llpdst Cllu~h

Fino Soulhon Boptiol
41872 Pomeroy Pike

Swadly Scbool- I 0:10 a.-.

212W.MoloS..
Minister: o4.ftlboay Morris

Putor.Terry Saewan
Sunday School -9:30 t .m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Setvict!l - 6:30 p.m.

Worship- !0:30a.m.

•
•

••

-

BearwtUow Ridae Cllun:b ol Chrltl

-yFintllopllot
East Maln St.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

,....,. Cltwdl tltllie p• I eM
Pulor: Jm Law:..C
Sulliily Sdlool - 9:30 Lm.
Wtnhip - IO:l0a.m.and6p.m.

I••

C.tnl~

Wednesday Servil.:e - 7 p.m.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4S a.m.

Suodaiy School· 10 a.:IIL
E¥itlliq; 7:30p.m.
,.,.,., "''lbunday -7,3() p.m.
SMd:k BMW New n.....t
Silver lbdae

'Nodi....,

Wonhip - 9:30a.m.

s...y School 9: Is a.m.

Llnle Cnok ........ Ch• ....

Puaor: John Swanson
Sunday Sebool- 10:00 a.m.
MominJ Service 11:00 a.m.
Evenina Service - 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

....

--c.-a.-a

Mlddkport Cloumo el Cloriot
51hand M.ain
Pastor. AI Hatuoo

•

R

Wtdaetday s.crvm - 7 p.m.

161 Mu.lbcrry ltivc_ Pomr:roy, 992-5198
Pallor. Rev. Walter E. Hdrtt.
S. Con. 4 : •.5-~: 1.5p.m.; Mau· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
SIML w... 9:30 LID.
Dailey MUll - 8:10a.m.

Pastor. Neil Teruaant
Sundlly Services- 1();00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

•

Worship - II a.m.

( .111111111

J3226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday Sc::bool· II a.m.
Wonhip. I()a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdnesdiy Services - 7 p.m.

Muon, W.Va.

SwdaJa-7'
" ·"'30Lm.
W . • IO:JOa.ni.

,_Mibktiol
Suaday S&lt;hool · ~lO a.m.
Wonhip ~ 10:30 LIIL, 6 p.m.
.5cnicu • 1 p.m.

s.-~ScboQl-IOU&gt;.

v..z.- ... wwR.t

_ , . Sdoool • 10:30LM.

Frldly. Oct. 19. 2001

....._...._

OJ. Whilolt4olllio. lL 160
Pllror: PJ. Cllapmaa

~7p.m .

0.....6 ~ Orlll•r • •~

-1-t.tm...

a..m.fllc..t.tr. zl '

- Jacksonville
Jaguars' Chris
Hanson (2) and
Buffalo Bills'
·Antoine Winfield
(26) scramble
for the ball
Thursday after
the snap on a
field goal
attempt went
through the
hands of Han·
son ..who was
the holder, in
the fourth quarter. (AP
Photo/Florida
Times·Union,
Stuart Tannehill)

•

Bills add to Jags' woes
BY EDDIE PELLS
AP SPORTS WRITER

tory over sinking Jacksonville.
"How mindboggling is ·it for
me?" Jaguars coach Tom
Coughlin said. "1 don't know
how to describe. it. It's a low
point for me personally, professionally and every other
way.
Bills coach Gregg Williams
felt quite the opposite. He
earned his first victory as a
head coach and got the game
ball. in part because he gave

JACKSONVILLI;, Fla.
The Ja cksonville Jaguars
thought the bad times were
behind them. The Buffalo Bills
taught them that things can
always get worse.
Rob Johnson gu ided the
Bills into scoring position, and
Jake Arians made a 46-yard
field goal with I :03 leftThursday night to put Buffalo in the
win column with a t 3- I 0 vic- Arians a chance .at the game-

..

winner on fourth-and-inches,
even though the kicker missed
from 41 and 39 yards.
'1ake came back," Williams
said. "We talked about it at
halftime. I said, 'Jake, you 're
going to win this ballgame for
us." '

Three plays after. Arians '
kick, Travares Tillman intercepted a pass that bounded
Stacey Mack's ·hands, and the

off

Please see Blll1, IS

•

�.l'he Daily Sentinel

Friday, Oct. 18, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

PageB3
Ftldnt. 0 1 • • 11. 2W1

•

Cink. four others share lead after 1·at Disney
8Y

0oue FEMIISOH
N' GOLF WRITER

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla.
Tiger Woods is back on the PGA Tour,
bur a 69 in the land of Disney wasn't
nearly enough to put him back among
the leaders Thul'$day.
Despite blustery conditions, Ryder
Cup member Stewart Cink had a 7under 65 for a share of the lead with
four others in the National Car Rental
Classic.
Cink and two other leaders, Steve
Lowery and Scott McCarron, could all
use a good week to secure their spots
in the Tour Championship for the top

30 on the mohey list. Sh:.un Micheel
has much more at sl2ke - a job next
year - so his 65 was even more
important.
The other 65 belonged to Len Mat!Uce. who has bittenweet memories of
Disney. He has done well two of the
past four yean, but the dose cliUs only
remind him of the fact he has not won
on the PGA Tour.
"I definitely feel like I'm ready to
go;' Mat!Uce said.
There is still a ,long way to go, and
plenty of players right behind.
PGA champion David Toms, Vijay
Singh and Mike Weir of Canada were

among seven players who posted 66s
on rwo cour~es located across the
st:rt:et from the Magic Kingdom. Davis
Love Ill. Robert AUenby and Bernhard Langer wl're another s.troke back.
Woods, coming off a five-week layoff, might have been in that group if
not for two holes on the Palm course.
He was 3-under until pulling his
drive into the hazard Ji.&gt;wn the leti
side of the 18th fairway. His approach
was short of the green, his chip was
indifferent and two pullS fiom about
10 feet gave him a double-bogey.
His 2-iron on No. 9 was near the
bank of the water, and Woods tried to

ANTHRAX &amp; SPORTS

~e~gues~

players being more
cautious with mail nowadays
Br HAL BocK
• AP SPORTS WRITER

I

Concerned by the wave of ahthrax cases surfacing around the country, wary professional
sports teams and leagues are warning playen to
handle mail with care, if they handle it at all.
And many athletes are being extra cautious
about what once was a routine matter of
answering correspondence from fans.
Each week, Tiger Woods gets stacks of mail
sent either through the PGA Tour or to his
agent's offices. They eventually work their way
down to a )}u&lt;iness office he has in Orlando,
Ra., a.n d are now handled more carefully than
ever.
"My assistant has definitely talked about
using gloves," Woods said. "It is a danger right
now, the way things are gl&gt;ing. But it's one of
those things where a lot of fans write in, and
you have to anSwer."
Jackie Sutherland, the mailroom manager for
the PGA 'Tour, ·said. ·a couple of playen have
called and said they don't want their mail and
to stamp it return to ·sender.
Effective Monday, mailroom workers began
wearin~urgical gloves. If mail has no return
address and looks suspicious, Sutherland said he
sends the worker out of the room, doses the

door, shuts off the air conditioning and operis it
himself or calls the head of PGA Tour security.
Joe Corless, a retired FBI agent.
"We're really been watching Tiger's stufflateJy, because he's the big dog," Sutherland said.
Golfer Davis Love Ill gel&gt; a postal bin full of
mail every week.
·
"We just talked to our local postmaster and
said that for things that we don't know where
it comes from, we're going to stamp it retitse. or
return to sender;' he said. "If I get a name I
don't know that is not a bill, we're just going to
send it back."
.
The NFL, NBA, NHL and major league
baseball all alerted teams to the danger.
"So much is sent to athletes, we want them
to be on alert," said Kevin Hallinan, baseball's
head of security. "There's a list of precautions to
take, some instructions, and recommendations
for dealing with suspicious items:'
Pitcher Steve Reed of the.Atlanta Braves said
team officials and security examine all mail
before it is dis.tributed to players.
"It's definitely a concern," he said. "Someone
could open a letter, and the whole team's ·
infected. You don't want to open some crazy
guy's mail who's trying to get the Atlanta
Braves sick."

keep the weight on his right side so as
not to rumble into the pon!l He
stayed dry. but his ball shot to the right
and led ro a bogey.
Still, he had few compbints.
"For my first tournament back in a
while, to be able to shoot a halfway
decent score is not bad," Woods said. "I
didn't hit the ball very well, but I
putted good. I just could never get to
the green fast enough, or close
enough!'
He got around just fine with college
pal Jerry Chang, who is filling in this
week for regular caddie Steve
Williams.

"He was great at raking bunkers and
doing the Pythago~ theorem to get
(yardage) numbers," Woods said. .
"Good thing we both went to Stanford."
It didn't take a Rhodes Scholar to
figure out the way to get into the hunt
at Disney- post low numbers on the
Magoolia and Palm courses, where th~ ·
turways are wide and the tough is
moderate, although still a nuisapce. ·
A score of at leas.t 20-under has won
seven of the last 10 Disney tourna,.
ments that went.72 holes.lbis one &gt;'4'
. headed in the same direction, with SO
of the 144 playen able to break 70.

NCAA will discuss DI·A
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) When the NCAA Management Council meets next week
to discuss new Division 1-A
standards, Mid-American Conference commissioner Rick
Chryst will be-monitoring the
discussions closely.
That's because the proposal,
which includes a stipulation
that all schools draw a~ average
attendance of 15,000 to its
home football games, could
endanger the Division 1-A starus of many of Chryst~ conference schools.
"That's something that's been
out there a while, but it's still
early in the process," Chryst
said. "As this package here is
being d~loped, I see the standards broadeni1;1g as an encour- '
,
aging sign fur us."
The council, which is to
meet in Indianapolis on Monday and Tuesday, i~ expected to
send the proPosal to its full
membership for comment. No
final dec.ision is expected until
at least nexJ spring.

The proposal would change
current standards by eliminating a conference exemption
that allows leagues with at least
six schools to maintain Division
1-A status if half of the league
members meet either of the
tWo requirements - averaging
17,000 fans over a four-year
period or having a stadium that
seats at leas.t 30,000.
The changes would require
schools to award 90 percent of
the 85-scholarship limit in
football and 200 scholanhips in
all sports totaling at least S4
million, sponsor a minimum of
16 varsity spOrts - eight of
which are women's sports play host to at least five Division 1-A foot~all 'games and
average at least 15,000 in attendance.
The changes· would put
almost half of the MAC's 13
teams in jeopardy of losing
their status.
Council chairman Charles
Harris, commissioner of the
Mid-Eastern Athletic Confer-

.....

I
•

f

•

'(

The San Jose Sharks knew it
was only. a matter of time
before New Jersey started winning :!gain.
They just wish it didn't come
at their expense.
"We knew we were runl)ing
into a hornet's nest," Sharks
coach Darryl Sutter said.
The Devils beat San Jose 6-1
on Thursday night for their first
win of the season.
Islanders 2, Hurricanes 1
R.adek Martinek scored his
first NHL goal 3:43 into overtime as New York beat Carolina for their first home win of
the season.
.
Mark Parrish scored his
league-leading ninth goal for
New York (6-0-0-1 ), which has
won all five of i!S road games,
still has not lost in regulation
and has earned a point in all
seven games.
Penguins 3, Senators 0
Johan· Hedberg made 28
saves for his first regular-season
•h u tout as Pittsburgh beat
Ottawa for the Penguins' second straight victory under new
coach Rick Kehoe.
Martin Straka, Stephane
Richer and Robert Lang
scored as the visiting Penguins
beat the Senators for the second straight game.
Red W'mgs 3, Flyers 2
Sergei . Fedorov, and Brett
H uU scored within 22 seconds
of each other in the final
minute of the Detroit's come. back victory over Philadelphia.
Luc Robitaille scored his
fourth goal in as many games
for the Red Wings, who are 6-

1-1.
Blackhawkt 5, Predators 3
Eric Daze and Steve Thomas
scored in the last two minutes
of the third period as Chicago
won at Nashville.
Daze snapped a 3-all tie at
18:08 of the third, and Thomas
scored his second goal int&lt;;&gt; an

•

empty net. Kyle Calder and
Igor· Korolev also scored for
Chicago.
Stars 3, Coyotes 1
Pierre Turgeon scored IWO
eower-play goals in a span of
just over a minute i,n the second period to lead Dallas past
Phoenix.
Shaun Van Allen added an
empty-net goal for Dallas with
19.2 seconds lett.
Oilers 4, Avalanche 1
Anson Carter had two goals
and an assist, and Tommy Salo .
made 28 saves in Edmonton's
win at Colorado.
The Oilers erased a 1-0
deficit with three go&lt;!ls in the·
second, including two by
Carter. Mike Comrie and Sean
Brown also scored for Edmonton.
Flames 3, Panthers 1
Jarome lginla ~cored twice,
and Jukka Hentunen got his
first NHL goal in Calgary's :victory.
All three Aames goals came
in the first ·period as they
improved to 5-1-0-1.
.
Ivan Novosei~Sev spoiled
Roman Turek's bid for a third
shutout with a goal late in the
third for visiting Rorida.
Maple Leafi 6, Canuckt 5
Shayne Corson had two
goals and an assist as Toronto
built a three-goal lead and
hung on to beat Vancouver.
Hoglund,
Alyn
Jonas
McCauley, Aki Berg and Gary
Roberts also scored for visiting
Toronto.
Markus Naslund scored three
goals, including one on a penalc
ty shot, and Trent Klatt and
Mattias Ohlund also scored for
the Canucks.
Kings 4, Mighty Duckt 1
Glen Murray scored twice,
including the go-ahead goal on
a power play with 7.:50 remaining, and Los Angel&lt;:~ survived a.
pair of four-minute Anaheim
·
power plays.

•

ence, could not be reached for
comment.
But Chryst views some of
the broader standards as a good
sign for his schools.
,
"The MAC has historically
sponsored a lot oi sports:' he
said. "We sponsor 23 charnpi~
onships now and we scholar':.
ship a lot of kids. That's what
encouraging!'
•
The problem for the MAC
always has been football.
Six of the 13 conference
schools averaged fewer tha~
15,000 in attendance last season
and a seventh, Northern Illi:
nois, averaged 15,757. Of
10 schools averaging fewer than
15,000 this season, five
MAC schools includin\;
Northern Illinois at 14·,752.
Still, Chryst said, there are
signs of progress. Marshall haS
been one of the nation's most
successful football programs
since joining the MAC and
Toledo is ranked No. 25 this
week. Chryst hopes that will
benefit his schools.

you've got to find a way to hold yourself together."
Ned had gained at lea&lt;t In yards in
each of·the last three games before
beinghdd to 46 on 17 attempts in the
desert last week.
He doesn't mind that oddsmakers
peg . the Buckeyes as 22-point
favorites.
"Tlur's kind of in advantage for us,
10 have people thinking we're underdogs;' he said. "I low. being underdogs.
When you're the undM!og. you ~
nothing to lose.You have everything to
prove and everything to gain."
If San Diego has been shaky, then

' Oregi:&gt;n's offense has been
fine, thanks to quarterback
foey Harrington. Now the
defense is picking up the pace,
and the Ducks hope they are
rounding into championship
form.
Not that No.5 Oregon (6-0)
is the only Pacific-1 0 Confer.ence team in pursuit of a
pational championship, which
,\Yould he its fine and the
le3gue's first since USC won
\he title in 1972.
, No. 4 UCLA (5-0) and No.
'l9 Washington State (6-0) are
also in the tide chase entering
'the weekend. Overall, there :ire
still t 1 teams without. a loss as .
ihe second half of the season

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State, Arizona and California
'by a combined 149-56 w~re not against topcgrade
competition.
That's about to change. Oregon brings its 23-game home
winning streak into Saturday's
game against Stanford (3-1) at
Autzen Stadium. Then the~;e's
Washing1on . Stat!!, Arizona.
State, i U.t LA and Oregon
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I
·
"We'v{ pla}.ed weU the last
three w~eks and come together," said Harrington, who has
thrown for 1,408 yards and 13
touchdowns. "And it's time to
see if we can rake this into the
heart of the Pac-t 0."
Oregon's defense had five
turnovers in each of the last
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SMIUNG DUCK - Oregon's quarterback Joey Harrington
smiles Oct. 6 as he leads his team over Arizona In the second
quarter at Arizona Stadium In Tucson, Ariz. ·(AP Photo/John
Mlller)
game, the defense allows just
93
. 1 The Cardinal lost 10 Wash45 39 las
k
ington State t wee .
In other Top 25 games, it's
Baylor at No. 2 Oklahoma,
Texas Tech at No.3 Nebraska,
California at No.4 UCLA, No.
14 Colorado at No. 9 Texas,
No. 1 1 Tennessee at Alabama,
Duke at No. 12 Maryland,
North Carolina at No. 13
Clemson, Arizona at No. 15
Washington, Vanderbilt at No.
16 South Carolina, Kentucky

at No. 17 Georgia, Air Force ~t
No. 18 BYU, Louisiana Tech at
No. 20 Auburn, No. 21 Florida
State at Virginia, Penn State at
No. 22 Northwestern, North
CarOlina State at No. 23 Georgia Tech, and No. 25 Toledo at
Ball State.
Montana Stare is at No. 19
Washington State on Thunday
night, while Boise State is at
No. 8 Fresno State on Friday
night.
No. 1 Miami, No. 6 Virginia
Tech, No. 7 Florida, No. 10

Sp.ikes returns with·heavy heart
CINciNNATI (AP) Takeo Spikes didn't have any
of his usual spunk as he
dressed ifor afternoon practice
Thursday. His family was still
on his mind.
The Cincinnati Bengals
linebacker missed last Sunday's
game against Cleveland to be
with his family alter his father
died in Sandersville, Ga. Jimmie Spikes was buried Tuesday, less than a year a(i:er he
.was diagnosed with brain cancer.
·
Spikes, the emotional leader
of the &lt;!efense, was still-working through his grief when he
rejoined the team Thursday.

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\.

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•

•

Michigan and No. 24 Purdue
do not play this weekend.
·On Monday, the Bowl
Championship Series releases
its first set of standings that
eventually will determine
which teams play for the
national title in the Rose Bawl
on Jan. 3. The AP media poll
and the coaches . poll, eight
computer ranking., strength of ·
schedule and won-loss tecords
are used in compiling the BCS
standings.
Among one of the more
intriguing matchups has Color·ado (5-1) at Texas (5-1) in a
Big 12 Conference game.
The surprising Buffaloes try
to keep pace with Nebraska in
the Big 12 Noith before the
two meet on Nov. 23.A second
league loss for the Longhorns
all but knocks them out of the
Big 12 ride race.
Colorado's defense allows
just 1b points per game, while
Longhorns quarterback Chris
Simms directs· an offense averaging 38 points.
"This team has a great deal
of chemistry right now;• Colorado coach Gary Barnett said
after last week's fifth straight
win, 31-21 over Texas A&amp;M.
When the Soonen play Baylor, Jason White steps in at
quarterback for Nate Hybl,
who wa5 ineffective last week.
"He'll be the starter and
til en we 'II take it from there,"
OU coach Bob Stoops said.
"We have proven we can win
with both of these quarterbacks and we feel we can be a
good team with either of them
playi~g."
·
Oklahoma has the longest
winning streak at 19 games.

Lon Sheriff and Adam I-bll, and arm 't
happy with either of them. Ohio State
has a ~year swter, ScleYe Bellisari,
who IOU&lt;Iy booed as he left the
field alter the oll'ense ttumbled and
bumbled in the &gt;eCOnd half.
"In my opinion, our loss to WISCOnsin was our problem,'' Tressel said. "It
wasn't what WJSCOnsin did!' .
Bellisari, however, will again get the
call as the stoner.
"If }'Oil look at every game, there=
five or six plays that get ·me into aouble," BeUisari said. "It's because I try 10
do too much. I'm a competitift per-

son.n

MAC's divisional
races crowded
at halfway mark
BY RUSTY MIUER
loP SPORTS WRITER

Five teams are still unbeaten
in their division. Another five
have only one loss.
Through the early part of
the Mid-American Conference season, almost everyone
remains a ~ontender.
'lake Ohio University. for
example. The Bobcats are just
1-4 but find themselves just
'One game back in the loss column of the MAC's East Division heading into Saturday's
game against Miami.
"We certainly are" still in
the hunt, coach Brian Knorr
said. "The enthusiasm and the
attitude certainly aren't that of
a 1-4 team."
In the East, four-time
defending conference champion Marshall (4- 1 overall, 20 in the division) shares the
. lead with Miami (4-2, 2-0).
Bowling G~;een (4-2, 2-1) and
Akron (2-4, 2-1) are right
behind - with Akron separated . from the outright lead
only by Miami's 1niraculous
70-yard touchdown pass on
the final play last week. Ohio
(1-4,,Q-1) still isn't out of the
race.
Toledo (5-0, 2-Q West)
holds a slim margin over
Western Michigan (4-2, 1-0)
and Ball State (1-4, 1-0) heading into its showdown with
the Cardinals on Saturday in
Muncie, Ind. Central Michigan (2-3,' 0-1) and Northern
Illinois (;2.4, 0-1) have ~t to
be eliminated.
Along with the Miami at
Ohio and Toledo at Ball State

·gami!S, Western is at Northern, Bowling Green travels to
Akron and Buffalo (1-5, 0-3)
is at Kent State (2-4, 0-2) in
other diVisional games. Marshall plays host to Central
Michigan in a cross-division
matchup.
Under the format adopted
by the MAC before the 2000
season, champions are determined 6nt based on their
record within their division.
In other words, a team can
win it5 division despite losing
all of it5 non-conference and
non.:.division games.
Since 10 of the conference's
13 schools still have a strong
shot at winning their division,
there is incentive for almost
everyone.
"We've got three of our
next four games at home,"
Northern coach Joe Novak
said. "All of those are Western
Division teams and we have
to get those people!'
Centtal's three losses have
coine by an average score of
40-17, but . Man~ll coach
Bob Pruett is still expecting a
dogfight Saturday in Huntington,W.Va.
"I think they're like a whole
bunch of MAC teams;• Pruett ·
said. "You can tum around
and go into any arena this
weekend and nobody really
has any idea of who's going to
win until it's done. That's
because everybody's evenly
· matched. Nobody's olit in
front of everybody else.lf they
are, then it's not a big enough
margin that the other team
can't play well and win!'

•

He was thinking about his
mother, Lillie, and how the
rest of the family was getting
along back in Georgia as he
started preparing for a game
against th·e Chicago Bears.
"It's tough, real tough," he
said. 11 There isn't a minute,
isn't a step I can take where I
don't think about it."
Spikes went to Georgia after
his father died Friday, but
intenqed to get back in time
for the game against the
Browns. He. couldn't bear to
leave his family.
Instead,.Adrian RosS-Started
in his place and the team dedicated a 24-14 win to Spikes,

saving a game ball for him.
Spikes watched the game at
home and could tell that his
teammates were playing hard
in his honor. He shouted
encouragement at the television set, just as he would on
the sideline.
"One thing my mom told
me was, 'Quit making all that
noise. They can't hear you,"'
Spikes "lid. "I was, 'Yeah, they
can hear me.' When Adrian
went- down, I &lt;aid, 'Adrian,
you can't go down now. Get
up!' A couple of seconds later,
I saw hilll running off the
field. I said, 'Mom, .I told you
he can hear me."~

Roush getting some run at OU

•fl~ Volue -Add

Ohio State isn't exactly a block of
granite, either.The Buckeyes led Wnconsin 17-0 late in the first half last
week at Ohi&lt;&gt; Stadium and oeemed on
the cusp of staying unbeatm in the Big
Tm. Then the Badgm ron off the last
20 pPin~&gt; while Ohio State's offense
looked lost and the defense appeared
confused and ti!'lld.
"There :ue a lot of thing. that have
to get better;' head coach Jim Tressel
said. "Sometimes people might think
they are easily seMble."
Both teams share a problem: a lack
of steady productivity at quarterback.
The Aztecs have two quarterlxlcks,

GHTYDUCKS
N' FOOTBALL WRITER

the

~all is the right time •to
•

. COLUMBUS - Ted tollner says
his tem1 is "fragile." He also says that's
·no way to come into a game at Ohio
State.
·· "I know they're not happy at 3-2;'
me San Diego State coach says of the
Buckeyes. "We're going to be coming
in there with their unhappiness:•
• There is a lot of unhappiness to go
around when the Buckeyes (3-2, 2-1
Big Ten) and Ames (2-4, 1-2 MQ\111·iain We.t) get around 10 playing ~
game that was originally scheduled for
four days alter the Sept 11 terrorist

attacks.
San Diego State was shelled 31-3
last week at UNLV and has obviously
not lived up to its billing as a league
contender. The Aztecs had 19 stoners
returning - and that doesn't include
running back Larry Ned, who missed
most 'oflast ~ar due to injuries.
"We're fragile right now;' said Tollner, who was die coach at Southern
Cal when the Trojans upended Ohio
Sr le 20-17 in the 1985 Rose Bowl. "I
think that happens when }'Oil lose and
you become fragile because of confidence and morale. It's a real test for
~rybody.lt's not easy. It's not fun. But

8Y ~ ROSEIIIIATT

,

I

N&gt; SPORTS WAfTER

Oregon starting to peak as tough part of schedule arrives .

'

Devils get first win
I
I of young season

Br Ruin Mlwlt

~

•-•

standards next week

NHL ROUNDUP

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Buckeyes

ATHENS - Former Meigs
Marauder standout Justin
Roush
is
starting
to
earn playing
time with the
Ohio University Bobcats.
Roush, a
redshirt freshman walk-on,
has been playRoulh
mg
special
teams since
the second game of the season

as a up back on the kickoff
team.
The 5-1 1, 208-pound fullback had a kickoff return for 11
yards in a loss to Toledo, and last
week he had his first collegiate
carry, a six-yard run early in the
fourth period of the Bobcats'
34-3 win over Central Michi-

TWo other area TVC players
are also earning playing time.
Former · Nelsonville- York
Bucli.eye Ben Robey is a
sophomore defensive · back.
Robey has played in three
games and had two tackles,
Robey was a standout quarterback and defensive back for the
·
Buckeyes.
ga~oush was Ohio's Division Chris Hutchinson, a redshirt
III state co-player of the year in freshman from Wellston, had his
1999 after he led the state in first carry last week for eight
.
rushing with 2,313 yards. He . yards.
was a four-time TVC selec~
The. Bobcats host a~h nval
tion for Mike Chancey s M1am1 tins Saturday. Kickoff IS
Marauders.
3:05 p.m. from Peden Stadium.

AJ!

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.--....., ....,...,,_

Hugo yard sale &amp; cralta, union moclianlcal crs111mon
34820 Stale Aoule 7, Pont· "Grlevano&lt;~
dloouulonl
oroy, ICIOII lrom Skate-a· 'llally.W'IIkly lot&gt; planning

way, 10112·10/IS.
-:::--:::-::--:---Ool. 20·21. 9·5, 4335~
Pomeroy Pike, watch fo•
..._
-v ... Antique clocks, anti~.110M Jar~!, gla•ware,
- . 10y1, meno&amp;womona

clatha &amp; misc. {7•0~992·
Ge5
Thu ada Frida Selullll
y,
y,
r y,

calion tkJMa In ...........,.
111. time yard oole. 3 - and group lltUotlorio. , .
South Rl 2 bllort R&amp;L forrod - - tncluelt:
Trucking. ..LOOk lor otgno. "RHUIIO ~h
LOla ol OVtrylhlng. Friday &amp; 10 worto ~menlO Ftmll·
tar with Mlcooaolt 0111co -~
a.tuM·• "-?

=•

·'

--

oill-

!?J:!::olmJNrrr

work with an e.ceptlonal
teem, I)(OIIIent benefltl ana
otart lata with o1gnon bo-

''
•

j

'

••~-·
\•"";'"..":~.
10'""""

~. 2 -ooma. 1 nary Road. Water and _131
_ 7_.;..-_ _ _ __

67

•

I

I

URGENTLY

NEEDED·

plasma donora, oom·$4510
$80 lor 2 "'3 ltourt -~·

Call Str&amp;·Too, 740-5e2·
6651.

Wanted Truckdrivtr 8yro.

:;;

CREDIT PROBLEM? CALL
THE CRECIT EXPERTS.
LICENSED/80NDEC COR·
AECTIREMOVE
BAC
CAECIT, BANKRUPTCY,

----::---7-"

wi!Nn.

r .•n·--.......

1..o1s &amp;

··

··

CLASSIFIED$!

_for eldelty and disabled.

EOH.
13041675-6879.

u~~R

~
Gooos

eluded, $289 Pluolleplsll &amp;

::...-;

Road, Oan\11118- Meigs
County.
(?•0)7• 2.aoo•.
Ryan ot Ami Holden.
MOBILE HOMfS
·FOR SALE
.

r:

I

Road 14 70
1-., "Itch
8 11
lVI
'
K
with
bedroom,
bath expando,
traMsr ~II 2olotlrlc
CIA2
·
• •

(7401245-57•7 .
LAND WANTED &amp; FOR
SALE Wa buy ar)d sail land
aU other Southam Ohl~
Contact ua for mora details.

Anl';".;&amp;,_~f~ Ltd.
www.a

tel111d.

com

•

$200 deposit, $340/mo, all Looking To Buy A New
utilities paid, e~~:oept elec:lriC. Home? Ooo't Hava Land?
(740)448..0118
We Doll! Hurry Only 10 Lots
Loll, 304-736·7295. ·

a mon. no pets, please call
30&lt;t-675-4900 for mora into.
3 Rooms and Bath . .te Olive
Street. UtiUtles Paid. Stove
and Refrigerator No Pats.

electric, bulldlr"g on-located on quiet
road, aecluded area, out·
side of city limits tn Spring95 Clayton 14x65 exc tteld Township. Asking
cond., t\as new heat pump, $17,500. Call for mot'S Info.
underpinning
Included (740)~46·45~4 Days; or
$12,000. 304-675·3805 or (7-40}446-3248 E\lenings.
sale,
total
(740)992·5858.

304-675-7565.

poo:kage.
BENNETT'S HEATING.
COOLIN~ (740)446-1416,
or1-.r2·51167.
,
www.OIVb.comA&gt;an-

1oillt. 17401446-3583.

(304)862·2988

r;j ....,,.__......."" I

m:eiver Jimmy Smith said.
Mer dropping " win11.1ble"
games to Clrvebnd, S....ttle and
Buffialo,Jacksonville's next two
gantc:-. are at &amp;ltimo~ and
Tennessee- a pair most"'"''""
r- pie expect them to lose.
Unlike the Jaguars, who
~ thinking Super Bowl, the

a 27-yani field goal, but h"""r
go1 a dwlce to kick it bec.\u...
snap~r Joe Zelenb sent the
ball Oying llVI!r holder Chris
Hanson's ht!Od.
A few · minutes later, Jacksonville rtgaincd field position
after a bad Buffalo punt went
out &gt;t the Bills 29. TheJ•"'""
managed only 6 yards andohad
to settle for a 41-""rd field goal
,by HoOis and a 10-10 tie with
3:i4 left.
From there,Johnseln ·led the
Dills on a 10-play drh·c, making liberal use ofCenten to set
up the winning score.

........ liotck. pipes. 78 Oltvy ~.4. Auto. 48.000
:;,;;..s. tlnlolo. etc. Claude original mllea. $32110.
.wtntlfS, Rio Grande, OH (740)258-6215
'Call740-245-5t2t.
68 c
~
·
- . ~ Ca~~· n'::
paint. S450. Finn aa Ia.
7s-~2~88
1 -:--:-:...,_
..
~iiiiiiiiiiiiii-.,1.1
~::304~)6~
~
,
98 Joap Ch«oocoo span.
AKC Mlnlaluro Ptnctoorpup- 4x4 40 High Output fie.
ploo, ~t'":t"· t
8 buili titio $Sl!OO. 87 ciodgo
:""
.~,
••
~.
10!l~
lin,
AamcliatJIIr, 4K4, $2500.
' 7- 7~~ 10 ·
(740)«8-1682
: - - - - - - - - ;:;,_:;...:_:...;.;::;;.____
Blue - · males .&amp; to- 99 Pontiac Grond Prix GT.
males, collaftar3PM ploaoo V-&lt;1, Auto, CD Player, Sun00
1740l742- 1103
'
11
Cocker Spaniol Pupplu. (740)256-e160
Full Blooded. Parento on
...,.~oea . $150. 1740)446- FOUR DOOR SA~ 1992
2986
g::ane:~~~991
Full Blooded Biuehoatar. $1895. ,gg. Buick Century,
$75 each. l740)379-2836 $2895. 1993 Buick Century,
Lab Pupa. AKC, Black $2485. 19971.11mins $4795.
Males, Sholl and Wormed. COOKMOTORI(740)418Mull Salt. 1150. (740)245· ~Oiat03;;-~=---...,

r -

I

&amp;""·

::'8 !:'

5358

I'"'

•

BETTER THAN FREEIU
Get Dish ••-..-rk ..
·-•wu
.No equipment to own or
buy. Sa able to view Dlgllli'
Satollllo TV In 4 dlffe,..nt
""'"'s ~AEE lllndard - :
fe&lt;J&lt;II\"onal·
-~
Inatallatlon. Amari·.•··

I

• cas Top 100 our most popu·

1740)245-5047

tar P&lt;O,Cmlng. Hallie:

:i.~~~=~~~·~:.: :~::~~'::::?a.:~~~:

Clly Maytag, 740-448-7795.
•
Coueli 84 E•cellent S50.
Compuhfr Desk, WOOd. like
now. $35.. Twin Bod $20.
Mlsc.llsma. l304)875-1504
Mollohan Carpal, 202 Clark
Ch 1 Road P rt ON

P&lt;ogrammlng services•
that yoo choose. 12 Month
commltmant and prool ol a.
ma)ar cred~ card or debit·
card ~utrecf.
ly

·~

Or uk about our "Chaoter
Cat&gt;o Bounty' and I Like tr:

{7.~ 46 ..7444 ~.:.f,. 83 g:

Promotions. Afnerlcas Top-

financing, 90 days &amp;arne aa
cash. Vlaal Mll8ter Card.
Drtve- a- tittle eave alot.
New and Used Furniture
Store below Holida~ Inn,

year.
Call PRO DIGITAL todayll - •
Your Local Autho~Jed DISH C
Network Retailer 740-669· · -,.

9162. Free Estimates. Eaoy ~::.'oo/mtn~~~~~ tho ~i~~

cas Required. (740)M6· monuments and vaaea.
3945
Hours: Monday thru Satur·
da Y 11 am· 3Pm. 17401448·
Tara Townhouse Apart· 4782
mants, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 Nice used tumlturel appllan·
112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, cea. (740)446·1004 or
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· 1740)446·2680.
tio Stan $385/Mo No p 0 ts
• Pluo Security
· Deposit• aueen ..ma ttresa Set · Sit ght•
Laass
Required, Days: 740••46• ly Used Still In Plastic,
3l81" Evenings: 740 .387 . $150 !740)388·0126 aHer
Walher and Dryer. WOfQ
Now Taking Applications- GOOd. S150 or Washer
35 West 2 Bedroom Town· $100, Dryer $60 Vent less
house Apartments, tndudes 6 Brick Natural Gas Heater,
Water
Sewage, Trash, Uke New $125. Brand New

checkusoutonllne 0
www.diat\retallers.comtpro·

digital _ _ _ _ __:
'"".!!::::..

•
Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4lor $10. Open Sat 8·5pm. &amp;
evenings. Dewhurst Graa~.

houoe MI. Alto. 1304)885-·
3740 leave massage. or
13041895·3789
FireWOOd tor uta. Price dapendo
on
location.
1304)875-5292 .
.

For sale by owner ('}
spaces, (2) vautts. (1) rne-morlal marker, veterans.
section In Meigs Memory
Natural Gas Vented Stove Gardena . . value appt'ox. .
Type
Heater,
$150. $4500, will Mil for $3000 ·

Very nice, 2·3 bed&lt;oom (740)448-8844

caah. call 17401949-2063, ·

1740)«6·3844

8133.

(740)448-1171 .

TR

liCKS

t~~~~j·~~~n~:a: 1985 DodOI Rom t/2 Ton,
Wot1 Run Road. Fifo! Place ~Bi(14o~&lt;;:"!:;
on Right.
&amp;pm.

snow-·

r

I

I

C.

;,p.ndsblo

rio

Ran Terrier pups. Taira

BASEMENT

Docked. $100.00 (304)675- 1989 Ford 1 Ton dump
WATERPROOFING
7948
lrutk, OKC&amp;IIonl COnditiOn. Uncondlllonal Hfetlmo ouar·
11,434 actuet muos. antoo. Local ,..,0 ,.......~~;r.
UKC Rat Terrier pups. $11,000. Call 17401258· nillhod. Establlllhod 1975.
$150. Cooh Finn. tails 6890
Cell 24 Hrs. (7401 446:,:'!!."'(:.)7~ on 87 GMC Sonoma SLS. 0870, 1·800·287·0578.
16,000 mlloo. king cab, Rogers Wllelproolong.
FRum&amp;.
$7500. 1740)992-4100 or
•· ·
VEGE001Lii8
(7401 541-8532.
C&amp;~ Ganarot Homo Malnte~
Prico - · 111117 Dodge none• Painting, vinyl old·
Rlcharda Brothars Fruit tntropki ve. power locka &amp; tng, carpentry, decrt, win·
. Farm. A~PLES AND mirrors, groat condition, -._ ~. mobiiFo homo
MUCH MORE. 24 miles $5895, 1993 Chevy 1500 repair and .~•· or ,,..
North., GaNpollo on Coun- pickup tong bad, Sihroratlo, astlmato . . Chat, 740-992·
..
;
power, auto, lowing pack· 8323.
age, ........., condition,
F.ucrrucAIJ
J \ J\\: '&gt;I 1'1 I II "
$5800. (740)985-4182
REHtJG
•
.\ I I\ I "II 11 ._,

I

r

~.

r

.

rI

~mr;.;.;;~;;;;;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;

.io
r·--F.ot-iii'MFNI"iiiii-.;..,.J.
FARM

VfJ\6 &amp;
4-Wils

I

I

ERo\TION

Residential "' commercial

northweet

t~a

comer

N - - "•• .,..,... 10"
Waot 11 olong
Hid road, tho p i of beginning lor tlllo
daacrlpllon; thanca
SouthU.._
lltl'
_,._
Welt 403.7 ,..lllong
• ••• llna, thlnce
Nortll 14 dqrooe
wost 105 1w1: thonco
N - I' lilt 211.1

wifing, new service

or re-

776-9.35 www.maynardi·
qulprnent.com

304~85·3319

';'capt

~lnlalure

Donkey,

Gentle. (740)418-1158

Very

Registered Slack Angua
Bulls all ages 10 18 month&amp;.

of

NEEDED NOW.
WILL TRAIN •

r.r"''tl Opening
Sue's Selectables on the
. "T" In Middleport
Saturday Oct. 20 10 am • 2 pm
Door prizes,
10% off glassware

.!CALL NOW

1 ·888·974·JOBS

Out of N·Bar EXT. Wide

spread BOCC Traveler &amp;

Eclipse. Gentle, atarilng al
1800. 1304)372·2389

Buck a bile sale, square
bales $1.00 other hay up to

Eagles Club 2171
Dance Oct. 19 &amp; 20
8-12
Music by Sudden inpact

$2.00, round bales $15.00
· each 304-675-48e9
Large Round Bales of Hay.

$12.0017401245-5047

Round hay bales lor sale,

1740)896·9211

Hay &amp; Bright · Wire Tie
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery
&amp;' Volume Olacount Avalla·
ble.
Heritage
Farm.

13041675-6724.

I H \ '\ " l 't lit I \ I 14 1\

$3995 Md Less, 94 Grand
Am, 92 Grand Am, 91 Cut
laaa, 93 Splash truck, 92
4

Ranoer, 93 Cavalier Wagon, 98 Neon, 91 Cavalier,
94 Cavalier, many more, all
wl!h 8 month 7,600 miles
warranty, Mark's Pomeroy,

1740)992·3011 .
191M Nlaaan Senlra, • dr.,

std. ehtfl. 30+ rnpg.,
740-949-2045.

$3200.

1gag Bonnt\lillt , high mites,
runs &amp; lOoks great . AC, AT,
3.8, $1750, 740·992· 1•90
or 7-t0-949-2045 .
1990 Pontiac Grand Am, •
door. Aula. Cruise, Whl1e

$2500. 17401368-0126 alter
Spm

DISGUST -

Seattle Mariners' Mike Cameron reacts lifter
striking out to end the sixth Inning of Game 2 of the·American
League Championship Series Thu~ay against the New York
Yankees at Safeco Field In Seattle. (AP Pttoto/Eiaine Thomp-

son)
bull~n.

"This looks like this guy

:J:.

BENI.ITS AVAILABU
· MANY SHIIITS
AVAILABLE.

Charolala

"' 304-675.

01

C:polal

Bulls. 1304)675-65S1

3498.

,_

.....!.!

or
:0~:' !:c!d~:~~~: CLASSIFIEDSI

•

8ldo of Huntovlllo, /il 1256)

end yeariings, also colt and
ADrl8 breaking· training

-

~ tho Trulurer

110)11,2t,2G01
11) 2, 2001
31c

An~

RUTLAND ·
AMERICAN
LEGION·
I

aI

1100!

Pinie!U said in a MacArthurIk
.
i e ~ol;tgame profidnouncement. ve got con ence in
my baseball club. We've gone
to New York and beaten this
baseball team five of six times
and we're going to do it
again."
Seattle's playe" weren't sure
' d ecIarnt"ton ofde fi an~e
a publtc

was necessary.
"Tha • good Th •
tS
•
atS great.
H ~----' ha
11
h "

e UUOIJ t veto W us t at,
Mark McLemore said.
Mtwina, who saved New
York's sea1on with seven
shutout innin~ that beat Oakland 1-0 in Game 3 of the first
round, showed why the Yankee5 gave him $88.5 million
for six yean.
Other than a two- run
homer to Stan Javier in the
fourth- the only earned runs
off Mussina in his last 22 post-

Every Sunday . season innin~ -

he gave up
just three singles de!pire strug:
gling without his best stuff.
"It speaks volumes the
-C:-,-d:--f~T=h:-a-n'"'=ke- ability not to lose your cool,"
Yankees manager Joe. Torre
......
said.
m.,lflllgtfCeciiY.
Seattle is in danger of
=~ matching 'the I 906 Chicago
frllllllllllnlf~Mrs
Cubs, who also won 116
flrllle arfl,lllwen game!, then lost in the postsea1111 fW .... tills son 4-2 to the crosstown
tlllkllllltlt.
White Sox in the World Series.
I ..... tMIIIs It
Ramiro Mendoza escaped
1111 f I
u!TIICIJir trouble in the seventh when
fuMnlliiiM,I'Istlr McLemore hit an inning-end.._ Mtlttr, CUIIM ing grounder with two on.
UltlletiMIIId
Derek Jeter again saved the
Yankee! in the eighth when he
Clll[lterllSl.
calmly stretched to get a low'-IMIIIII!II'agen and-wide throw byTino MarwiU -lie
tinez for a forceout at second.
foriGtlen. 8t01ess
"He never looses his cool:'
.. Ill.
Torre said. "Yeah, I did swallow
1be J1~nsm f..
a bit.""
Rivern completed the sixhitter with five straight outs striking out three. Piniella was
angry that after Rivera was
told to come in, he got three
extra w,ormup pitches in the

1 QO

p.m.

1 0

available. Lotated just out·

Registered

·-~ lit ~ -

-

Falrlana FRANKl
"
Subdl•lolon. In WOOLDRIDGI!CO.,
Middleport VIllage, L.P.A., Gregory D.
•ld pin baln' North Wooldrklfla 11\d D. L
50 degra11 415 W. 313 Mlllna, Jr,
lost from 1 point In Attoml!la for ·
tho Bono ·c Hollow ., PIIIntii(,IOOioulh
Road; than.. North PIMis-,
15 Hgraae 28' WHI Cclun\~, Ohio
253 1••1 along aald .t:llOI; Tela: 11'"221 "
road: thancl North 35 1M2.
deg,...l 0' Wa11t12•
fHI along ..,d rOid; 110) 12, 11, 28, 2001
tttenca North 10 (11) 2, I, 2001
dagiiH :10' Walt i1D · - - - - - - . . . .
- along aold rOid;
lhonca North 77' 05' Buy, ~I
Trlde

. YANMAA YM 1500 Tractor.
dioaet, 3 point hitch, $2.150.
~Ito, 4' finish mower,
still In eratt. $850. Sl&gt;pplng

3

Soporata, aaaled
propoaola will be

I a
Board · ol
liducatlon
ol
Southern
Local
lcllool Dlllrlct,
RIICino, Ohio 45771,
llalg• eou-. unlit
••••
2:00 P.lt. M-Ilar
to .... ol 23 2001 For '2) B...
Bona HOllow R-;
'
·
'
thonce Iouth 14 Chaale end Bodr,
dagrHa · Eaat 441.3 ~!.!.!:!
ttta
loat along lha •ld ....-;;;;;;;t,';n to
road, to 1M p._ cl 111 d d a 1 1 ,
an d
baglnnlng,
lor mo ma•
containing 1,___
. 31
abtolnad at tha•
• .._, mora or...... olllca · ol
the
llllagalrllhta .,_.,.,, Dannla E.
o way.
Hll.
Parmanont patcal
Sold, Boord ol
numlllr: ·14-01412 · Education reaervo
Pwopony ldclreal:
31427 Taylors Drlva, lha riOhllo lljec1ony
111
Middleport, Ollie :,ncl..:=l
41&gt;710
By ordor of Board
Prior ln1trumant of Education ol
••lwrenco: Vol..,.
Southern Local
l2,pagam
School Dlatrlct,
~p alead It:
Dannie E. . Hill,
$8T,OOOEII.IIOOS OF S
,.,_..,.,..
ALE.
TollaiOkllornotaaa DannlaE.HIII
than 1Wo-lhlm of 1M Southern
Local
IPfi'IIIHCI va1111, Tho School Dlatrlct,
purolloear(•l alllll ....... eou-.
dapoau .u,.~oo.oo ....,....
"''
whll tha IMI'11f altha Dannla 1!. Hill, ·
llmaol•kl•ta.
:.:-~71
lllclno,OH41771
Ralph
E.
T....-1,
(740)
84..2213
Sllorllf

"
iiitiiilliiioil
t987 Dodue 4x4 runs pat ... Master Ucensod o~oc- -----~----..,----110 Help Wlnted
6 N Ford Tracto&lt;, Ptowo, QOOd, toob gcoooi, call trlctan. Ridenour Elec:trlcal,
7 1788
897
40
2
Dislcs, Brush Hog and Pota· f1 l 58-8
•
WVD00306, 3!l4-e s· ;~;;;~~~~;:;::;:::::;
10 Plow,. Good Condition.
1740)258-8574

NBC ,CBS,ABC &amp; FOX
available in most areas.

Appliances: Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ao7¥,as, $49.99 Activation Fee lor 2.
Relrlgraloos, Lip To 90 aya Rocolvors. add S4W.OO pot

Spm
·

SHERIFF'S ••LE OF
""
IlEAL ESTATE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS
malnlalnod. Supolb oondJ.
COUNTY, OHIO
lion. Optional
c.MNumbar:
Mnch. wlndohleld. Troller
Ol~
has 5oo8 til bad, diamond
plata floor. no rus1, VGC. Banalk:lal Ohio Inc.,
$4.000. (740)288-51127
- Beolaflolol
~Co. ol
Oltlo, alco
IIIII!'""'!"'-~-'!"".,
A1110 &lt;'ARJ'S,...
D
...
Hou- A-,
Au "'"'"m&gt;
~ 1'1111111111
va.
300 Sholght 8. like New
and Rebuilt TranamJOIIon, Jano R. Wllllom8, at
Con - r Aun. 15,000
al., lit 11.,
mlos. I74C)251' 6950 .
In
_
an
lkldgot· Pric:IKi pursuan- 01
aJona All Typee. AocHS To ~~=~ ol ~Ia
Over 10,000 Transmllalont,
ld
to mo ~m
Translor CaMs. 740-245- •• court, 1n 1 .,e
5677. Celt: 339-3785.
aboVe •ntHJad IICIIon,
1 will o11ar lor ao1a It
CAMPERs &amp;
public aucdon lit tho
MoroR.IIoMJ!s door ol tlla Malga
.County Courtllou•,
1898 Prowte&lt; 295, Flblr· Pomeroy, Ohio on
Bides. 0uooo Bod, 2 Thursdly, Nova· Looded. f140)245- 1 5, 2001, at 11:00
0710
.
. a.m. lito following
2001 17Ft KoyOIOno Cabo· daacSIIrtbadd....l~
no wllh 1
ends,
uola
n Ina
fut~ sell contained, used Townelllp
ol
very tittle 304-675-5802
Sollobury, County of
Molga, and Stlltl ol
Ohio, and In Soctlon
211, and -crlbad ••
lollowa:
IJoME
Blglnnlng 11 an
IMPtiovEMENrs
Iron pin In lha center
ol
tho Ioiii
Road,
on Hollow
tha
ATV • liiAIL£11 COMIO
Polarla ToaM Booa ••4 350
lkPtl cooled. Garaged, low
miles. one owner. always

r
S!l·':.,::

FOR S.W:

Pu,... bred Norwoion Etk
Hound Puppies. Born Au·

' - - l1111ago, 1740)441·
0592

AQHA and APHA woanllnga

Sltollfto S~atom

Commerieal Iota ror tale or
Property on St.' Rt. 143; In apanment, In lc;&gt;wn, large
no 808 er lea\le mas98 ge
l&amp;aM, in Pl. Pleaunt 304· Aaaumabit lolnt· Many ()hk), 314 mile on left hand kitchen, LR, $500/ma. Aef· Whirlpool Washer and Dry·
w ·
..
727·3318 call belwHn types, available. Ctll for cte- sicte. Serious calls only. erences &amp; deposit required. ar. Leather Rocker Recliner. Oak lirewood. (740)667·

5pm·12.

I

$475 plus deposit. Roloron· Kanauga. we Sell grave 9211 or 888·31 0·2495 AI"'

$350/Mo., 740·446-D008.

*·

Pumps, featur1ng Tappans:

1 bedroom apartmont, (740)448-0380
.
TwlnR-Toweranowal)o
ceptlng apj)llcationalor
1BA. HUD aubsldlzed apt.

rio

11

18lliJMpGrsnda- B"lls(l ')fc'-··-~.L..
1
300-e75-- I
-. uuuu u"'mse "'"' on
501100 orior..omo •111
~e Wlth·~ning side f01 rhe lim
H s.to- - - · nme os yrar.
0(11·. 4"" - .. v.e. loalior
"Unbelievable;•
Johnson
·
\lory QOOd"d
"
(
'
L-lion. 1 ownor, $8300. sat . ts uc-cr• six weeks and
1304)67S-4tll0
we 6rudly got a win. It W3S a
·
6
·
115 Dodgo.Oaloco.. 4K4.
k&gt;m wm. The nt one IS
::1100" : : 12 ~a:: aiw.lys the toughest."
l1o!OI256-I 233
Mark Brunell th~ for ISO
.
u - · - ~ ,yards and W2S showered With
boos by Jaguars fans, who
. w.ltched Jacksonville (2-3) 1051:
111115 VZ250 ......,. cross
dirt bioo •
r • OOIIIIilioo
S1.800. '(740)418-0789 '•

' Free incredible warranty

Modom

•
1 Bedroom Apartment, Ralrfgarator, Range, /IJC In- ..,

ACREAGE

paid

I

Per Monlhl 3 Bed"""", 2
Bath. Free Delivery &amp; SOl· 1 and 2 lltdroom apart·
up. l-888·928·3426 .
manta. lumtahed and unfur·
.
nlllhod. oecurtty depoe~ ,..
.
qulrecf. no pall. 740.982·
2218

r

utilities

( 7~)992-ot&amp;5.

New Double Wide, $185

14x70 Hotog_Park with a
8xt 4 Stldo· 1·, 7•15 Cock. G
Nice111 114 aero tract 1 noer
Very Nice. $4500 Firn1. a po S· easy
erma,
(740)688.Q302
1740)448·3583
HouH 1250. Mor\lh • $200.
. .
·
.. .QIOt
Oopoall. 1304)727·3318 3 bedroom mobile homo far Pnmo 2· 112 ocro lot 10' 0502 •740·~8

Wal Mart 0o Cart •Ingle lrom &amp;pm·t1Pm.
eeat ro1 bar: .... belt, big
1lres' aame ~. new p,ld F
S1t.Oo
asking · 5700 hor ••Ia lg. ranct\ style
(740)a92-o&amp;32 aHer Spm. ' ome, 4 br., .3 be.., wl
ecreened In patiO porch, 2
car GIIIIOt $78,000.
11

Gallipolis
&amp;S01Up. 1-688-92Jl.2426 CioH to Downtown and
NeW 14• 70 3 badroom 2 G"""'Y. Roloreoco and Dobath onty'$ 895 down. &amp; poal1.(740)448-11611
onth call
518 962
. par m .
,.~
Harold 740·385-4367.
FOR RI!Nr

glaBSOd In back porch, largo call 1600)563-3753. Leave 1 bedroom lumiohed apart·
front porch, foncad tn back name and numbar
mont, upotalro. 1740)446·
yard,l740)892·2571 .
6518 or 1740)«8-4827 ·
I badroom upolalr1 apart·
Rant~ ~ly:....
~
Almool -•ani· Mason
mont In Gallipolis, $250
~~Vt~G~UOGMENTS. ~r~rara, ck,H to h~ Cou'\t,Weal Vi.Vnla. Pre month. Call (7ol0)418-2488.
1·888-567-7345.
achool. 8 Oakwcod C • Civil r House. 1683
1 Sldroom, Rolrigorator
Galt. !ltl.cett bltween 6:00. Aore.
and Range. IVC, $300/
TURNED DOWN ON
11 :00 pm, In QOOd cond. w 11.8 Million. For mora lnlor· month. Utilities Paid. 01 •
SOCIAL SECURITY IBSI? cenkal air &amp; heal $78,000 malton Call Dovls &amp; Aasocl· poott, No pall. 258 Slate
No F" Unlou Wa Wlnl 11Kiuc:ed 304-727.3318
olootnc. RoaJiors MLS
Strut 17 ••,....,••• 7
1-688-&amp;112-3315
Wilma Cavlo Broke•.
· -,.......·~,!:' 3 ~~•.R:'\"~
!304!778·1340
2 Bod.....,. Wallherl Dryer
Bel~s 2 Car Garage. COY• Indian Creek Equostrlan Es· Hookup. 7 mlleo lrom Hos·
ered Deck. 1 Acre Lot. Asl!:· tatll, 3-8 acre 1011, west of pltal. (740}441.0117
llollm;
ling $75.000. 31134 A.. Hill Rio Grande, from $25,900. 2 br. lnPotnl Pleasant $275.

=..-•

91011
""'II Or liradt
.. ~

arances

t88, LOS ANGELES, CAU· ·room, fireplace, all new
.
Referance. HUO Approved. 25 cu ft. Imperial Heavy Ou· free In·
Service Plan.
FORNIA90010
range, micro, air condiUoner 2.7 aci"8S, uneven terraJn,ln ~740)441 -1519
ty Commercial type freezer. Packages stan at only
&amp; heat, root &amp; carpel, Walchlown, 52700, ploaaa
Stoo: Good Condition. $ 3 5 . 9 9 I m o n 1 h .

riU
I

lNG COMPANY hoa ·.I...... ?285
· dlale Opao\lnga lor Pocplo
to PtoctH Clllmt. It'·
$45hlr. PottRtlal. Will rratn.
PC Requlntd. caR NOwt 7
Days 1·800·i35·3971 EKt
t2l9
.
Meiindat Restaurant 509

011 1

Chester. Thrw bedroom,
ble 1180
·
two baths, one-car garage, New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
·
lornlly room with fireplace, Only $! 9,650. FI1IO Dolt..ry Small Trailer In

I

j

-•tons

Ablolute Top Dollar. U.S.
Sflwr, Gold Coins. Proof·
uta, Diamonds, Gold
Flinga,
U.S. Currency,·
M.T.S. COin Shop, 151 S.C..
• ond Avenue. Gallipolis. 740- Moln Stroot Point Ploaoant
4.t8-2842 .
Ia ICCIPtlng appbtlona for
-,-all poaiUona, ·ex,.,.lenNd
Wlr"ted to Buy; Standfng Grill Cook NMded. Apply

Tlmbtr.l740)378-2758.

_ ..

aunroom.Now.-alheal·
Slat.- Nulling - .
lng &amp; tic - · One ml·
tantontlldod.Dool,..,pro- -.rlOLOAN,AUTO, nuleolfRouto7,butstlllpri·
vide •v 'ont .,.,. 10 our DIBTCONIOLIOATION, vtto. (740)985-3981
- · ba part of. gtllt .. CALL 1401)110-74111
taam and proud 10 oomo 1o 24 HOUR RIII'ONSE Nice, 2 BR homo 1 milo
wort~;.
_
from GalllpPIII on State
lntoruted
candldltH
I'Ron:!llloNAL
Route 141. Goa Hoot, CIA,
t1oould apply In paraon 10,
SEIMCiill
Largo ScrNnod In Back
Flockoprtnga Rahabillotlon ~
. Pon:h. 2 Car Garage, Car·
Center, 38750 Rocltopl1nga
·
pon, Aaklng $55,000, ApRoad, Pomor~, Ohio $ FREE .CASH NOW$ lrom praised 81 $7~.000. Call
••
woollhy tamllot 11110ading 1740 ~.... 1272
457811 · Equal opportunity
lllionl ol dOl
~
.......,.
Empl-r
. ~ncouraglng mmtnlmtzt lholr ~~·
· 10. wn''"""te rl.ll'"'
~--"'f all ~~ric
w
-,... N.-~to..
...,. H
....,.., ""ck
u.1

:'flnlt·

r

1hlo 0100 I p

....._.., .. _

r

cer-

tols

10 8IJy

.. .......,

:!,

IQI

ow

.

.....':::;=..::...,
r..
-

I

I

r•a ----- .

ta~

1

WANTED

· - 011110 low. our

r

gara'i:.,

and equipment lao- rJgglng 1 ~ul Pay 11 baled
Ptuunt. .
:hh =;--,;,:::~~ on ekllla &amp; iKP. ~00.)344,
plantl. PINie send re•une 5125
.
. FOR SALE
.
-~~A_..;.,_.,.._ and COVIIr lener ta M&amp;G
lkRNmi
lJCI10N AJ'e
Pofymel'l USA LLC, State
3 Bedroom on Route 2.
Ft..F..It. MARKET Route :i!, Apple Growl, 'Nil,
TRAINING
~304)875·5332
25502 Attention: Malnte·
Auction Friday. Oot.tllth. 81 no nco and Engineering Clllllpoila
Collogo 311f. Large Kl1chen &amp; U'lfng
S·OOprn
Horton st Manager.
(C.....,.CioMToHornt} Room. 314Baumant,totally
M..on,iw,
of box loti McCiu~·a Rtlleuranl ......... can TOdayl7~7, rtfTIOdttld at 211 7th Street
•~21• ••••
N.., Havon. 1~,_· 3722
&amp; ,_lloma (304)773-8100 hlnng ••
all 3
full·~w
or · f ~
~.
·
R=t90-06-~274B.
.
.
part-time, pick up appiiCI·
· 3br. Aanch anachtd 1 car
Rick'P&amp;arton Auction Com· UOn allocation &amp;-bring baCk 111111 .. ..,__ ................. ·1 D'fllga. Excellent Condition.
pany, full time auct!Onter, betwMn
8:30am
&amp;
JnR'OJ.AIV.UU~ Srlck lront New VInyl tid·
complete ouction atrvlco. 1O:ooam, Monday lhru SAt·
ing new rob!. Mill CrHI&lt; Rd.
Utonatd 1168,0hlo &amp; WHI urday.
.
Gaill~la. Cell alter &amp;pm.
~·
O.k flrowood, 1311
•••• 75·••••
~ 773-e785 Or
1 ••a toad,
$30 ,_
~
n:J-5447.
·
two or more oa-.
IAEOICALIDENTAL BILL· 1740)7~2-2897 or 1740)992· For Alnl or Sola. Small

i

dorplnntng 1-888.JI28.3426
1981 Nuhua- Home
comptOtoly reptumbad, ttoorlng &amp;carpet 21&gt;&lt;. 1 ba.
din. nn.&amp; 1it01 pump . lninl
=~~ng ••c. cond.

ArM. S5l5l month plul de- ckldld. Tenant paya e4ec· -""-~-""-·--,.,..---poon and Rotoronc.. No ~~ ~8111!Elocbtcs~·0 HaotF"''; &amp;Hi'a sotec:..- on tho ...,.
Poto. (740)«8-41128
"--·
• Pols.
w• • .... In ~·~ Dolll ,.,
Included.
Non
.........,....
• ......
2 bod"""" homo ciON to Smokers Only. $300depoa- wa,.., Ala-...,._ and
town, buamont. Rlvarvlew, h, •••• month. (7'")"" moro. I740)992-G288
•-•
- ~
$4251 month; 3 -room ... - o r·(740)418-2205 Aak
MlscEu.ANrous
town, 1·112 balha. Good b- lorVi.Vnla.
·
!lnOJIANWUS ;
cation. $&amp;001 month. Reier·
MERc:lfANillsE ;
onoos and dopoait requl111d. Appllca11ona bolng tal&lt;on lor
(740)418-35«.
;;:.,~n~=..:~~ 98 Honda S&lt;:oolor Good .
233 2nd Avo. Conwnionllo c1o1e 10 town. 1743 Conte- Condition. S1500. 1304)675-

riO

Fldl 11, . Yard SOlo. l-4
.;.:::~!".".:r~
~~~~·:::
Thurt/Fri/Sal. Oct. 18-20 ty. 'Famlllor !Mth took out, donal 1111111 llka -ng &amp;
2327 LinDDin Ava. Point

-

'Enoure tho ..,.11'
training and prsclloaa o1 dl·
reel repona •tntortaco with
olotllonlo WOrk Order tam. Qualification• .,_
In·
elude: "Minimum 6 ~tlfl , orkpliloe ...,.....,DI,,.
Immediately: WINDFALLS. home,
bedroom, 2 balh,
exparlonce direct~ oupar. Solly Btouty Supply trl QaJ. 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD. dining, kllchon &amp; living

I
r"~--iioiiiiiiiiiiiiiti.,.t. ::;:-.=....-:· ::..n:.:
·-,. r

•
·
16 Wide. Oily $195.00 Per
.,__ 6 119'4 Fix_. I _
~·-··. AI ·~ U
~
r -~
""

=""'Moo'

tty_
~~'t::.~~ !:.Ba~=""~h= ~·\.:or~~+= Baby bad. dreaslng table.
"Wo 0o 11 Atr Free Eati·l740)441·1498
monthpluodopolllondRof· payi oleclric. Stove, FIIQ., antiquo badroom suite 3012801
. malta. 874-46231874-3855
lloMJ!s
"I
·
No Poll. (740)418- WUhor Dryer Oiltlwa5..
-~--• Center 1o our·
"··- . Home
1987 14x80
Mobile 49211·
1!Itt··•-~
Ov~wFOR .....u.
Ga1 Clayton
H08, ~~
~. No' p~·~· Non Compaq. Computer. Load-•
1
ronlly hiring LPN'S lor lui Wanted ID do boibysi1tlng In
•
.
Smokofs On~. $400 oapoo. ~ 98 Windows with How·,
' ~••a
time and part poo111ona. my - · Have ro!""'"!*!·
· · Air, 2 Bodo"""'· 1.5 Bath, 4 Room and Bath, Fumloh- it $450 month 17401446- iii
P kard 122 1 ed
we oiler- and -.c1 17ol0)992-4478 .
houoe tOr "ilaio ~n .~otter $8900.·1740)36lo7187
·' ... CINII, Role- 22os or 1740)446.9585. Ask 11 1 ac.$250 Fl co':; II·:
&lt;l1leranttll a..,. - - Crnk Rd.call ovoa 304- 1 ~ 1 ·~ ·~to ~- Dopoatt
R.t&lt;tu1111d. lor V i &lt; V n l e p1!.".)6°r75 7495 nn. a •
'"'"'"
-~ \WI dO _.Iaing In my 675-7652
~ ,_,, ~ ·~·~· 1740)418-1518
·
·
•
pay. NoW pa~ _.. homo Ha """" f
1~x70, 2 bedrooms, 2
BEAUTII'UL
APART·
Is avalloblo. For monilnlor·
. WI ...- reoron- New home 3 -oomo 1 bathe. very QOOd condition, 5 Room Houaa with Bath MENTS AT BUDGET PAl- Fl"""""'lor Sale. $150 pa&lt;.
malion ploaaa contact Krl.- ceo. Cll (740)440-6578 . bath living. room ~ $17,000. Call for appoint· plua Double Garage. C!S AT JACKSON EB- truck Lood. (740)441·9476
lie Madden al (7ol0)992· WIN hiUI away. ctlon out.
'
'
• mont I740)44H768
1740)418-1518
6472. E.O.E.
Clttn up Or m&lt;MI , ~moat dining, a~to~ched
1+
•
TATES, 52 Wealwood Drive NEW AND USEO FUR··
Ovo~r~ Conttr lo H•~ a"""'ing. Call 1740)440• ICIOI. :&lt;Ill level. ond. 1993 Clayton 16x80 mobile Pilot Prottram, Rontera 1rom 1287 10 $383. Walk 10 NANCES FOR SALEI We"
'"-·· .. ,...
174,800. (740)418-21101
home. 3 I&gt;&lt;., 2. ba. Uklng - · 304-736-7295.
shop &amp; rnoviea. Call 740- Install, Free 'Estimates. u:
renlly hiring STNA'S tor lull 71104
StU 000 304-773-5885 after
448·2568. Equal Housing you doni Call us We both11m0 and part time pootllonl,
Newly conatruclll&lt;i, single Spni.
Why rant? govomn101nt Oppootunity.
Looaet 1740)«8.·63011. 1. •
12 and 8 hours .,.
. story 1800 sq. loot homo.
backed loan&amp; lrom $490
81J0.29Hi098
avallablt. We ... oflorlng a
Located 10 minutes from 1897 Fleetwood SUn PtorU down. (740)446-30i3
Christy's Family Living,
.
pay IICtiO and tnour·
_,....,.
Holzor Hoopltal, 20 mlnutoa 3 br. 2 bl. 122,000 on rent·
33140 New Uma Ad., Aut·
RESIDENTIAL AND
ance baneflll. llhllt and
lrom P..._ Valley Hoopl- _.lot heal pump porct\304- 2 Br, 1 112 bath. '14 wide land, Ohio. 7~0.742·7403.
COMMERCIAL
:
wHI&lt;and
along ,
tst, oil SA 160 on a private 773-5164
with large expando &amp; ...,. Apanment, homO and traoler AMANA· HI Elflo:iency 92 +with_....,. poy and tt·
JNOTICEI
1·112 ..,. .tot. 3 badroom,
.
1ra1 air,l740)992·2187
rantala. Commefdal _.. gea lumacea, Super HI Elli·
tand&amp;IICO bonut 11 avel ... OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- 2·112 baths, big kitchen 1st """' buyers· Govom·
tronll avalleble lor lease. clancy Hall Pumps and ~ir:
ble. For mo&lt;o lnlomiation. lNG CO. rwoommOnds that w/oak cablltell; OR, LA mont loans- buy 10a1i1 &amp; 2 BR, All Eloclrlc, Largo LR Vacancoos now.
Conditioners. 10 year parts
pleall contact K~ Mad- you do bUal.- with people :1,!1""1e~d~~ ~~~:
~~=~3 Oak· ~lcoGa~g"~ Ve ~4o)~· Gracious living. 1 and 2 a00
nd laMboFOrRTwazan'
1R YHL~:nludNGed ...
don 11!740)992-Mo •·
you
knpw
and
NOT
10
&amp;end
'
.1,
·
•
•
·
badroom
apartmonta
at
~I·
"
~
2
moooy llliOIIIIh ttto mall until porch &amp; · /2 cor garo: 2 bodn&gt;om mobile homo IOO" 20031 740l«6-l409
lege Mano• and Alvollldo
AND COOLING
AVON! All A1111ialll&gt; Buy ar you hoWi lnvaollgalod lha ~':'.= 1;•,:,toni.tako ula,l740)992-5071 p i - 3 bad"""" mobile homo In Apartmanls In Middleport.
=\~:~
Sell. Si&gt;rley Spears, :lo4- olloling.
offer. Call 1740,44 &amp;... 514 call alter 4pm.
Middleport, no pats, From $278-$348. Cell 740· - -1 - - - - - 875-1428.
.
.
.
liom . 8 •5pm, M·F. or 260&lt;60 3 Or 4 Bedroom On· (740)992·5858. .
992·5064. Equal Housing Rnldonflal Ownero ,
Port ·~ RN and LPN I Stan Your Bualnoss To· 1740)448-3248 after ,._
I •••5 00 P
M'onth
Opporlunltlll.
.
Tappan HI efficiency 90 plus.
·w•..
or day... PJ1tnt Shopping ten·
..,...... 1y ..- ·
ar
3 bedroom, central air,
f
ludl
100 bod lklllod ntnlng fo- tot Spaca. Avelleblt AI AI·
·
8.119% Fixed 1 - Aoloi, waahar/dryor, $300 par Mld&lt;toport, Straol, 2 gas umacos 1nc ng 0 11 •
ditty. Eacollonl opportunity fitto Spring Valley For aalo by owner. Nice bl- 1-888·928·3428
mo&lt;tlh plus doposll oall bedroom lum•shad apart· and olotlrlc ges luma· •
lor the rJWo1 candldalea 10 Piau Call7~101
lovol homo on 1 acre near
(740)992·2167 Lola ~valle· menl, no pala, dopoelt &amp; lol· cea. HI Elliclency Heat·

vising .maintenance craft~ Upollt, Now Hiring Store
*Thorougt\ knowtldQI . of Manlgtr. Management Ell:·
mechanical oyatema, t.o., po!ioiiCO f'IOII...... Eltpori·
undorttands and t:all 1rotJ. once 1n bMu1y tnclullry a
SIICCftl Rd., Reedavlllo, and -'&lt; - · ptut. PltaM mai-IO:
loyo. clolhoolor everyone
comprnsora, moahanlcat M. Mulloy. Dilltlct Manoll'
y
S.W:,
seal&amp; and IOikll hondlng 1&lt;, PO Box 12117, ~
Pr~
ton, WV 25302.

-

viUe WV 304-~

- - ·•

--lOin

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

EOEMIFIOIV

-.-com

35 Grape Street 9:0Q- 7. 800o052·8728 E•l. 2070, ,...
Jowoiry.

In_,..

,_,,. 0 lllllf-1101
la10a~...........
-""-

homo&amp;,-·

L,~------_.1.

......, 1 112 - · -'""" 11p111mon1. ecun- Buy or 11011. Riverine Anti··
UmllodOrNo~Gov- wllh-lndrolrljjoo-. 1';-.gyetcloootolown. quoo, 1124 Eul Main on
...---On~ Schoolo
OIIStrwot Part&lt;tna. Qooe to 1 43 ConloiowyTR-d. wal. :2.~~E.
7:.:
At Ookwocd
and llown1own Ia" 8111! laoh omovat n·

,.,.. . . ., IA'R at a 'or

'
pro!HIIonll. and a«oma·
bit,
(8111ais,
oonotruc:llonond ramodollng
-..tog. Con do olmosl
anything f/40)992·1391 or
1740)992·297V
TRI.COUN"TY CONSTRUCTION.
Now

AN11QuEs

1304)73&amp;-3409

I '"'

-·-

~. Ohlo4S831.

·rr-----...,

¥81110!)'

_...,_

·

For Sale: Reconditioned .
- · dtyefa and relrfg- · Thompsonl Appll·
ance. 3407 Jackoon AvoRMume with rel111111l011S ID nue, I3Q4)675-73M.
~. 553 2nd Avenue,

Anll Olyl, NaliorrMde In- 3323 ~- 1709.
Appk:aticll• being taken lor
- I 15 Court Stroot. 2 11«1- ...... but Y«y clean one

•

Ill 1- II 1-011
- ....,, ........., - -.. -

........ or...,~

R.-Monagorlo&lt;apart·
mont complex. Manalll"
mont oxpollence a plua.
5sJory and Apor1monl. Sind

I·

·- -

I

;;:~~~~~~· 1821

\

':~ ::ria

Pi...

FOienten
Gtoton Portablll SlwmHI.
•Weeldy pay a - • • • don, hlul )'0111 10g1 10 the
•TOII9h
Job- GrHt · mill luM ca113Q4.675-1957
. ,___
_,.,..,,.
Top To 8otlom Ctoanars

~ 41hhe.j~401sa)742·7243, ·J·J:~

''

............. _
F*Hol.alogAetolt..
- - • ..... 10

~~·-;.:

~

r
~ lr ~
I

Molile-

All--llhortlolng
In 1hlo caw I I lo

•lllrlna~Crew

the same u the nut guy

~

r

Mall To : Ohio Valley Publishing. 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Btu 15' wlda, 3 bodloom2
balh, oave $5.155,FOR......,,
•
&amp;1181upon101!Jiol._
lng Hilling &amp; ftborVIIII 1 -3 Bedn&gt;oml Foollfapl, Coloo
HOinM F.,.. $ 1 -., 4%
U.S. 110 E a l l , - Oh, Down 30 Yooro II 85%
7- -1972·
APR. For'l.lollngl,aoo-3ts-

11
1101111

toon. $3800. 1740)441-1!195
17
151
"' -

Bills did11"1 dpect much. They
took their lalary ap lumps in
the ollieason, trying ro sha~
thtngs up for the furu~.
Midwov through the third
..•,
qu:m~r. Johnson hit Eric
Mould.. for • 27-yard touchdown paiS and a 10-7 lead.
Johruon, who backed up
Brunell in Jacksonville befo~
h.Mn~ traded to the Bills in
~"'&amp;
1998, finished 23-of-30 for
238 yards. He improved to 914 as Buffillo~ starter.
Tr.riling 10-7 early in the
fourth quarter, Jacksonville
. kicker Mi~ Hollis lined up for

w-.

s-.

20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • l.lmlt 3 Per Person

_OOiy..., ____ _

OUTI)OOA CAREERS . 9360

•-

Private Party Ads Under $100

at • 11e
,.. ,. . . .
or
........................ cw...~: .............

(!)
r
~=-1
=.
riO

:0.!~~/l."=

lOr the third stnight tim~ aud
r.akr part in an inqX dispby
nobody could """' expect&lt;.-d
liom a team with 10 much sup~-A talmt.
r--y
'"The bad pJrt about it is that
gam&lt;S we should win. we"re
just giving them JIW"I'fi' j.lgum

;,;;..:.~~ ·~

[740)367-7891
altof Senaar, CO Ployer. Good
l:OOpm.
li180, Extra Clean. Ewa·
;:::::::::::...__~.- - - lent Condition. 57,1100
WAI8f11ne St&gt;oclal: 314 200 ..Call l7o!O)ol46·8178
. PSI $21.95 Per 100: t" 200 9am-4pm.
PSI $37.00 Per 100; All -....:.---., ..--bruo Compression 'Fottinga 2000 Moocury SOble, LoadIn
ed, 11 ~·000 · f140)418-288ll
RON EVANS ENTE- -y.fridly8:00.,5:00.
ES Jackson. Ohio. · 1-800- 2000 Ponlloc Su fl
·8528
n ra, 2
~ Red. All.lllinum
.
llmJliNG
s, 5- apd. 18,000
.
Surr!mi
miles, co Ployor, $8850
~._ _ _ _ __. 080, (740)245-8753

_, ...................... .._ . . , 'T •

tonight, col loll dlaloly1 No ""'"""'"' noc- II Kipling - l o r lull Shift . nogotiable YExperi:
1reo t-8oo-'7e6=21123 ext ~· Wonc ttllomo. Colt c1t11c at Pt. PIMUnl onood,
~lorwnon.
1821.
.
10111-.t-~708. lOCation.
(740)2611-3144, 1740)256~

I

JbuWoom

= ,._ Alae

T,_ ~

FOU&lt; COon with eulo ...... 2001 Hortoy Oavidoon DY·
or1y tor small coal mine. or. ~ Enry, Nr, Pow· NA, Wolle g1111o ec.-.1.
atrlp or undofWourol. 10 or
L.oclos, Soato, Purple. 2300 milool, Uka
make lump and stroker. Rear Air, Rear e.:k Up New, 88 cu. •na,ooo.

DND.....,, ................... ....

=

11

18

:.:':

ivonlod 10 lease Coal prop-

'l'tbll• . ...,.., n

NEW EPHEDRA FREE AI Komuno- Instal•
• LoN 40ibo In 2 ....,.,.111 led; ...,..lug lorood air kor·
STARTPATINGTONIGHTI
- -·
_,. healefo;.lawn ,_.
Ha.. tun ..-Jnu olAl&gt;tOiullll' F... tnfol
Or. Approvod!l
..; amoll onvJnoa. Mlka
llngloa In your 0r1111. 'roll·
Ean\1--4781 PTIFT
F- ~
(7&lt;10)448o71104
- t~E. U1.
WoricF...,._
1-387·3845
9735
- .bRicht23.com
....,;,.ox.-y.oom· Chlldcore: Nowborn thru

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.

To

Sundily ln· C:O.umn: 1:00 p.m.
~f' Sundeyt Paper

1••

I H \ II I "

Includes Free Yard Sail!! Sign!$ •
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

2

Oncrtptlon • Include A Prtet • Alt014 Abb,.VIIUOnl
• Jndude PftOM Nuft\ber And Adctreu When Neadact
• Adl Should Run 1 Days

I '1''111\\\1 \ I

11

Dallr ln.Cotumn: 1: 00 p.m.
NOndly·Prtday tor Insertion
Jn Ne•t O.y't ,,,.,

• St1rt Your Adt With A Ktyward • Include Complete

· Successful Ads
Sttould Include Tttese Items
To Help Get.

\'\.'\IH '\1

.

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE Ati

, _ _....-oiOII

(740) 446~2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333

caV:ur

.,

1\.egtster

Sentinel

11118 Goo

~~::::..!. ~ U495. 1304)675oystomo. W. carry a
_....... line o1 Mobile 1995 .....,... Grand Am,
toome poria &amp;
: 1oa. .......,t condition, only
IIENNETT'I HEATING 1 54.3011 - . $8,200. Cel
COOl.»&gt;Q (740)448-1411 (740)441 ·9381
2000 Reoon. Glut
ar 1-.r2-5NI'
~ .$2800. 1304)875-

\

Ta

The Dally Sentinel ~ Page B 5

r~l.r·----·~-&amp;u--~l~r___r~~&amp;~l---------------~--~----------------------------------

ster

Qtribune - Sentinel -

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ANNUAL MEETING

Tt:tes. Oct. 23

7:09 pm
at Meigs Senior Citizen C11n1er
AduHs $5.50
Child $3.50
Entertainment· Under Const.uctlon,
Door Prizes

SUNSHINE
VIDEO &amp;
TANNING
3rd Street

Racine, Ohio
After hours drop box now
· · . available for your convenience.

Hours: M-Th 2-8
F-Sat 12-9
(Closed Sunday)

DUE TO OUR
CONTINUED GROWTH, .
TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS
OPENINGS IN THE
FQLLOWING AREAS:
, "lltOIIITIVi ~
J,

.,,p

..

:.:s:e:

· ' '•'•'UCIIfiCIUS
· :,~~'',.'".-!:.
'.
.
'

SHS

~ ~~~.

· .• SIIVICE 0111811 ·" ··

Previous experience helpful
but not necessary.
We will train the right person.
We seek aggressive, self-starting
professionals with the desire to earn
well above average income.
We offer a benefil package,
including 40lk, medical and
relirement benefits, a five day
work week and no Sundays.

No Phone Calls Please·.

Set- f4.e4
7'""4"
for service

'Pat 7ld1 or ~ ~DU
for Salas

Between

tO a.m.
EOE

a 7 p.m.

"""Papin
do rhe things we have to do
to win. It will take teamwork,
good hustle, and playing like

nuke! his own rules:' Piniella
said.
"Nobody told me. I kept
throwing," Rivern responded.
"I don't know if there's different rule! for myself. But if
there is, it's good, I guess."
Brosius, 35, was 1-for-20 in
the postseason before his sec- .
ond-inning double - which
followed a single by Martinez
and a walk by Jorge Posada gave the Yankee! a 2-0 lead.
"Whew! Finally! It's been a
long time since I rnn the
bases:' said Brosius. the 1998
World Series MVP.
His drive off a 96-mph fastball hit low in the left-field
corner on the concrete
under the wall's padding and skipped by Javier, allowing
the slow-footed Posada to
!Core fiom fi"t.
Chuck Knoblauch. 5-for-8
in the serie5, scored Brosius
with a sinking liner to center
that feU just in li:ont of Mike
Cameron, who tr~pped the
ball after barely missing on his
try for a diving grab.
"I thought I caught it,"
Cameron said.
That ·was enough for the
Yankees. who have won five
straight after falling in an 0 -2
hole against Oakland in th
division series.
New York, . seeking to
become the fim team to win
four straight pennants since the
Yankee! of 1960-64, also got
another backhand Oip play,
bringing back memories of
Jeter's game-saving flip in
. Game 3 at Oakland.
After fouling off seven
straight pitches, Dan Wilson
put one into the right-center
field gap in the second, sending Javier fiom first to third .
Paul O ' Neill, the 38-year-old
right fielder whose rwo-run
homer carried the Yankees to a
4-2 win Wednesday. ran down
the ball and Oipped it ro center
fielder Bernie Williams, whose
quick throw prevented further
advances.

we are capable of playing to
win. That is the big key- playing like we are capable."
In the first meeting at
Southern, the Tornadoes lost
in two sets, then lost a dose
match at Trimble in three sets
two weeks ago.

Help W1nted

DATA ,

ENTRY
OPERATOR
WANTED
Stnd "'YIDM lp;
olo Dilly hnUMI
P.O. 8017211-13
P - y , OH 45788

EHS
fromPageBI
good . That is when we are
vulnerable . The last week we
have played, we'vt done .really
well we have played
togethe r, our spikers had hard

hits. and our servers served
well.
"When our spikers hit the
ball, rather tha!' dink, we are

so much better. We us,:,ally
win in two games rather than
in three. Also, we have to. have
good serving. Janet Calaway
has to have a good setting
night and a good serving
night for us. When the spiking
and serving are there we can
be hard to beat."
Eastern defeated Wate rford, the ti'fth seed, both times
this season, bur has not
en.c ountered Crooksville, the
sixth seed.

•

�Fridlly, Oct. 11, 2001

•..

NEA CroiSword Pua•l•
PHILLIP
ALDER

JOID'

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

Tr. . Service

lf lttt

• Tap • Ra1110val • Trim
· s~ Wiftdlng
• Jluclcet Truck

•Gwipi
•Cat $1 I

111.
StaplCIHapn .

• If 74
J ltl
•••

.. ... ,

DR

(~40)

.7411 112-1m

., ...... -...""'.....,.

......111..

•'S

...

...........

. _ ... ,

7 ·---

F-MIIIMIM,
lnaured

COf,1PUTE f~S

Spedollzo .. MW

Mlclc:lleport, OH

WINTER STORAGE

Melp Cliuuly Fa~J'arouds
Arril'lll:
Sept. l9 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
10:00 LID. • 4:80 p.m.
AprU27,2002

A f• ol $28.00 wiD lie cbalpd for early
arrl..... ~~. arrival, eafly renewal, late
...-yaf, ar anytime attess II wanted to
other tlwlslatecl data.
pace llflnl come ftnt Rrve.
toraae: $4.0MI

,;

(740 911Ht54

Wdcllns &amp; BI"IIIIDI

Clllt8m Furlcadall

RMFfNJt'''

Free•tl-

on rep~~lraa

·In-home ..,ice
aVIII18ble 24 hourw.
ueecl ayatema 3110
and up, uiHCI

740 949-2657

. 1-il77-6d4-7350

-......CIIIIn.

lllliCIIE

••

N•H-•VJaJI

Turl.ey's
· attres
Sales
-"".,.,,.

Slclt.. ,.... (;o._
aazt'

Meigs Courity.
Dump Truck Delivery.
Meigs and Mason
County

llnt·IEPIIC=MIIIWS

nt

-_,., llll"

w....... , ......

Bob Ball
1-740-992-6142

COifTUCTORS, INC.
RICIM, Ohio 45771

740-985-3948

CONCIElf/BLOCK/IIICK

35537 SL Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-385

a~~ao~r
44
V111W
41 0.0 •

'

·-

• Doenetn
47llopalre

r1v111
23 lei•-

=

2 -"IJtila"- bll
3 WIIJUn
24 Ultl.
4 Gall flitter
B
571~
- 21 ~
I IV limn Xli
ll1llJMton

7 7IIU

UM, I'LL
GIT BACK

._

51 TlamlFUfiiO

31 Mongol
Niar'

•

•

4t ematlan .
50 Give forth

27 Goofo
21 ' oceUon

Chlftlhld
I Onlor from

BARNEY

41 lOCI!
AVW8JII

M C•rlllc
llull

10 '(OU
II

5

740-992-7599

. ot

(IQO S.UNDAY CALLS)

•ntJ!E·INm'ALLATION
. • FRQ: IN HOME FSTIMATE
i FULLY WELDED
• !OYEAR WARRAN1Y

D

DIPOYIU
WIC~'I
11.\ULINGaad
Pllft
•·'
~
.
EXCAVATING All Makes Tractor &amp; Qt:JALITY
WINDOWSYSTEMS
ottaullng ~....
Equlpmeoll'arta
· oG...wi•Sind•Topaoll
992-411~ . 1-800-291-5600
Factory Aulborlzed

-

c.R-IH Parta

Villi Our Sllowroom Oa Sllte Route 33
61\11., Nertb &lt;J! l'ooleroy, Oblo, AI Cwaly Rood II .
TNo Dealen or Coalndors Pleaa
·· vt.IM d ani~
. WVf023477

Dealers

11100 8t !"·

7....,;,

Male Shut In

Home visit

.;A~LllB

Custom Computers

HQ!rcuts

Repairs, and

Available

24'120'

1-12 IDIBlE WAll
PI.ISTIC

FIRSTDD•E.
FIRSTS&amp;VED
$200.00 Pa IIIII
. IEIIURLY
$321.00 PER JDIIT

•

•

•

0

•

•

,,•

•
•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lilla campoa

.

(740) 698·0767

....

•.

$~'(~IT~

....

· • N H NIX

m k..C64iE!

I

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KRA

CDLftF .. DL

RDJJNL

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FZW~C."

FNICDLP

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'

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•1

•••milia.
and 1wiN llaallrom everywhere
llalanchinll

•

'·

.

r

·'

,: 1.1 •.a'l.

•

to dci n. '

.

•··

...

'·'
'

lAMS

Local 843-5284
IMedil:are Supplement; Life.lnsurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Der1lal, Reiiremenl, , · .&lt;..
li&gt;c,nsioJ~ &amp; 401K Rollovers;
IMortgage; Major M~ical
Nursing H!)me

Garages, Pole Buildings, Roots,
Siding,
Kitchens, Dnnlll'l
More •

"Qulity WW.."
Cera, Tractora,
Uwn FumHuN,
BootTr•lara,
Utility Tnlll-

carHauiW.,
Anything Metal

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

9711eechst.
ml4dleport, OH

IS IT TRUE THAT '(OlivE '
BEEN I'RACTICIN6 LAw WITH
D06 LICENSE '?

.._
,.---.·

IT'S •.IMPOL.ITE TO ASK AN
ATTOKNE'r' SOMETHIN6 TJ.lAT
MAKES HIS I-IAT RV OFF ..

(10'x10' 61fx201

[740)992-3194
992-6635
SHERIFF'S SALE OF

Elata diotanca of 12 WOOLDRIDGE co.,
rode to lila canter of LP.A., Gregory D.
c:o.oN PLEAS · the Townahlp road; Woiildrldgund D. L.
COUfiT, MEIGS
thence along the Malna, Jr.
:~ ,
COUNTY, OHIO .
center of Townlhlp
NlllnMI': ' .. road nllatanco of 18' Allorntiyo for
C»CV-100
Rode In•• Northerly Plaintiff, 800 South
Beneficial Monpge
dlraotlon; thence In a Paar18t_.,
Co. of Ohio, Pt.lntlll -tarly direction a Columbua, Ohio
vs.
dlllance o1 3 rode 10 4321111;
the
place
of Tela: 8~4-221·1862.
Daniel S. Black, et al., bfillnnlng,
CONTAINING 0. 75 (10) 12. 11, 26,2001
In pursuance of an ICru, more or leu.
(11) 2, 9, 2001 ·
Order of S.le
There I• reHrved,"~-, ,
-j
.•
dlreclad to mo from however, from the
..i
. '·
aald court, In the
aforaaald
tract
all
oil,
·,
-above 111111t1ec1 action, gu and other
I will ollor far aala at mlneralo underlying
Public Notice
pubNc auction et tho ·the p,.miMI with the
door ol tho Malga right • to to mlno,
County Caurthouae, remove and produce SHERIFF'S SALE OF
Pamaray, Ohio on the aama and for.thot
REAL ESTATE
Thuradey. November right, to have full
coMMON PLEAS
15, 2001, at 10:00 rtgllt ol lngraoa and
COUR'f, MEIGS
a.m. the following •tr•••
COUNTY, OHIO
to oald
dncrlbed raal-: property and all other
C.ot Number:
Situated In the rlghto pertaining to
01.CV.CJ88
County of Melga, aald ,...Millon.
State of Ohio,
Permanent parcel Benellct.l Ohio Inc.,
Townahlp
of number:
dba Beneficial
Leb1non, Section 070tHI05000
Mortgage Co. ol
O~lo, PlalnUff va. ·
118, Town 12 and
Poopwty addraao:
Range 112 of the 30511 Barringer
Ohio · Company'• R I d g a
R o a d , Dannla M. Lavender,
PurchaM:
Portllnd, Ohio 45770
al al .•
Beginning at the
Prior lnttrument
In purauance of .an
Northwell comer of ;tlwllllaoe: Volume
......... raol ...... 14pi91411
Order of Sal"
dlreclad to me ·from
•• that conveyed Appra'·sd at:
aold court, In tho
from Goldie Hartley .10,000.00
lo Eathar Dallay by
TERMS OF SALE: above entitled action,
doad dllad June a. To be 1101c1 for no leu I will ollor lor ule al
1141, and recorded than _.,,,.,, oltha public auction at the
Auguet 24, 1141, In appnllld value. The door ol the Molgo
doad book 1155 at purchaaar(a) ahall County Courthouav,
P~ge 275 of the deed
dapoalt U,ooo.oo Pomeroy, Ohio on
recorda Of Melgo wMh the ohartlf al the Thuracley, November
County, Ohio; thence -otMidula.
15 2001, at i0:30 o.m.
In a Soulhwaotarly
lha
fallowing
direction a dlatance
deocri-IHI"tata:
Sltualad In lha
of 18 rode along the
Nne ol llecllon 118 to
Village ol Racine, '
an Iron pin; thence
County of Mllga and
REAL ESTATE

.

I FRIDAY

en.

Air Conditioning : Refrigeration
$49 Service 1111, fuel oil, and
heat pumps lor winter
• Flat

CONSTR
PROJECT?
WE

umestonel
Sellars DIKtllllll

mullfJite LMd

~

Dl~

Ralph E. TruaMII.
Shariff

~R~

FRANK &amp;
WOOLDRIDGE CO.,
L.P:A., G..., D.
Wooldrldg. .nd D. L.
Maine, Jr. Allorneyo
for Plalnllll. 800
South Paarl SltH~
Columbua, Ohio
4320&amp;;Tala: 814-221-

HiQhll Dry
Self-Sto.qe
33795 HilanJ Rd.

~Snodgrass' Upholstery
"HIIplltf YOII to Rttc"' Y..,./o,.r/!111111"

Pomeroy, Olalo

tea.

740-992-5232

l'OI12, 18, 26,2001
11 2, 8, 2001

CAN HELP

B~

TRI-COUOTY
TRHOSPORT

OCTOBER 191

SCRAM-LETS .ANSWERS
Unless - Geese - Rouse - Soften - NO SENSE
I spent 30$. and no cents to fill my gas tank. Thirty
dollars is too much and it really makes NO SENSE.
•

invited. to participate in pro~

moting or lamtchinp:

:t

LIUII.A (S&lt;·pt. 23-0&lt;1. 23) -

LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC CULVERT
METAL CULVERT
REBAR &amp; RE\IVIRIEI

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB TOO· LARGE OR SMALL

Recine, Ohio

path tuday. You'll jump at the
chance to make your wish
come true.

very

unique projcrt in the year
abc.1d. Your iupm will help
make it the mccc.•s5 it's destined tD bt.
- If you 're toying with a new
ide.•a or conn·pt, i(Ct your head
cugcchcr with a couple of iunovarivr rritntl\ you know.
Together all the rieces could
fall into place. Trying to patch
up a broken romam:e? Tht&gt;
&amp;trQ-Graph Matchmaker can
help you undrnund wh:'ll to
do to tmke the rcliltiomhip
work. Mail $2 .75 to Match-.
maker. c/o th i ~ newspaper,

P.O . DoX'lh7. Wickliffe. OH
44092-0 I67.
·. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- The lll:'lrketplace .could
be filled with a number of
unique or 1musual prodUcts
today that'll lie just what
you've been looking for, ~vcn
if you didn't know it. h's a
good day ro ~hop .

ShGITIARIVS (Nov. 2381~2

I
I

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS •
10 GET ANSWER

Sltturd.ay. Oct. 211, 2UO I
Ch:ml"cs. arc you might be

.-=~~~ '

''j
:

•

•.

•'

wou

"R'riST" IF I CAN'T
THINK Of NIYTtiiNr. To ..
!! MEv! WHT
A I'll !lUTE !

Rorkv 11 Hupp l\qc111
Ben: 1 HY
Mlddlcroll Oh1o 4S.i60

New Homes, Room Addlllon1,

'

•
PREVIOUS $0LUTION: 11,da ~ot· cruta. qed:
. , ~=~

110W Al1 I SUPI'OSEP
ro IIi A ·~NG .

Bryan Reeves

V.
' .

JNODYNF

.

Home
Construction

Df

KID Y N.l

T I W FYI V Y N J.

•a" ~Warner.Jn
-?pit
992-5479

Flat Work,
RepiKemeDII, • Wolb
ond.Dii•oo • Stencil .
· Crete Free EadmolelSen!,. Ohio ood W.V.
WVI031712

-tar-·

~ c;p. Q)p!Dgollllll - - - " " ' " quamdOno bylornouo

people, poll"""~· fad!- in thocipllor
Todly'• ci~Je: X «/UUIa Y

.~f:ellular

by

• Footen, Wollo. S!tpl•

lfprlk.._ .. . lu.wke,IDc

• ••- .

•-

20 ,..._
22 1111W

FREE. ~SnMATES .

(740) 992-347
• Shade River·AG Service

.

~

AII4W •·~

••

P/B

o,.;... .....,••

DOWN

{;HILD
Advertise
{;ARE
In this space SEiftii{;E"'
24hourCCR IIC liM
for$25 per
locoled In fiQo:aJO,.
for .........
loal
month
(7&gt;10) 992·1127

_.,

·. IOIIWII

ilWIIooAL.115101111Ul

.,.. Dirt -Mulch

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

R0UT1 II.. LOIIG IIOTTOM,

FACtORY DIRECT
. PlUCIN'G

IKiiLDBRIINC.
Vouchers accepted in

10:30·..,......'•
Sunday E'e. 7:00 &amp; Wedaesday E~ 7:00
MITH •uLL GOIPIL CIIUIICII

bendlll

11 Scllll- J7 PMfJriiF •
II C...,.
40 01111 .... ,

AI_.

For,,., illf()("Tiioo, ••• Ill ou.cltatrlt
s.•y 9:30- Suuday SchoOl;

LlcenM: •5300ISIO

c;5J

••

• Wori&lt;l on Sunclaya.
• Always Avllleble•

month

BISSELL

,_

• Neilly 21100 yttr~expertence.

per

llardwll,. and
aoftw•N.

Prlur

4716tSUk..... IM

.

..... west,...
,....

••

in this
space
for $50

992-9158

Charles R. Dill

(--·d •. . . ,...

.1 Piela 111111 D1•u ,. ,
10- ........
..,..
'

vu~ner-= Easl

•

Advertise

OONSTRUCT10N

..... 992-7445
Cel
591-9254

I I 4

.. .I I I

LJ~FD

-.

.. Qt "

••

JEHflY S

.

J u •
"., J

t QJUI

lt.Jii . . . .

¥

Your Replacement Parta Source

.............
Owner

Inside Feace: $lAIII/II

•

742-2925

eledrk:al, home m•in·
ltDIIIC'tt 111d repair

Open Space:~

''
• • 4J

'S

-... plu•bbtc.
.
..-

:

•
•

9 o\ K I

FREE EITIIIATES

R'

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••

n

Ho\11 CHn.r.
E\ l I •&lt;I'RI'-1-"

...

"

Dcc. 21} -- Sonu:onc you've
been dying to get to know
could unexpectedly crou your

Clll'RICORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) -· Takt some time to
put your budget in order today. because you could be
rather ingenious at devising
W3YS to make or iOtVe money•
All yQu have to Llo is put your
1
mirid to it.

AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Fob.
I'J). - Not th:~t you're looking
for it, but you'll be the one
assodat~s turn to today for
g1.1idance should anything un.
expected develop. Your quick
responses keep everything

funning smoothly.
I'ISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
Thou~ who arc willing to
take ~hances could be the best

--

equipped

:rt helping you,

achieve your goah tod3y.
Tum to people you know arc
succftsful speculatOn .

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- You apprc:ciate the value of
infonua~ion that is so unique,
othcn ignore it. What you
)cam today could turn out to
be of comidcr~~ble worth.

T AVR US (II pril 20- May
20) --Something you've been
attempting to prumotc to no

avail might . suddenly be accepted today. It now favon
the intercsts of the powen
that be.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
-- Stick to situations today
thai require teamwork , because that's where you're
likely to ach1eve impreuive
results. Independent cndeav.
on aren' t apt to realize the
~;~me rew~rds.

CANCER (June 21 -July
22) •• While auociatrs may be
stiU uying to define a complicated financial sim.n ion, you'D

aln:.3dy have the solution. This
put5 you heads &lt;lml shoulden

abavc rh e fray today.
· LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) - Attend any 50f i~l functions
to(,iay where ym1 can get a
chance to mingle with and
meet uew pcoplt!. A fresh face
cou]d usher in some exciting
situations.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- This is .an excellent day to
divest yourself of routinc pf9 ..
ccdures and rxperiment with
new te c hniques you ' ve
wanted to try. You're cxcrpti0naUy ncative :ufd sh:.rp rri-

day.

•

�•

.
:The Oilly Sentinel

Nation • World

Mistrial soupt in OJ. case
: MIAMI (AP) - O.J. Simpson's defense team called for a
1nisuw in a road-rage case ag:oinst him, saying the jury had
'lliolated the judge's instructions. One attorney said the football
peat "wana to finish with this jury."
Afier Thursday's ·opening statements and testimo~ty, C.rcuit
)l•dge Dennis Murphy told jurors he noticed them talking in
Jhe jury box and asked them, with only one juror in the courtroom at a time, what they were talking about.
Jurors admitted talking among themselves about the testimony.
"We had questions about some of the things that were said
that may have been understood differently;• said juror. Jose
Pndo.Juror Ernesto Diaz said, "We didn't come to a verdict or
anything like that."

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - Two people were rescued
from the chilly waten of Cook Inlet, but three others remained
,missing after a helicopter carrying Federal Aviation Administration workers crashed during a snow storm.
An Alaska Air National Guard helicopter plucked two people from the water about three miles from the Ted Stevens
Anchorage International Airport, but heavy snow and poor
visibility forced searchers to return to base after about an hour.
"They stayed out there as long as they could, but conditions
.were getting pretty nasty," said Maj. Mike Haller, spokesman
:Cor the guard.
; The helicopter was traveling from Fire Island, a~out five
:OWes west of the Anchorage airport, when it went down
Thursday afternoon.

SAG dismisses 3 actors
~

LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Screen Acton Guild's board of
=mrecrors· has expelled three members it said either worked on
;,r auditioned for commercials during the union's strike last
'jear against the advertising industry.
.
~ The three were identified Th1mday as Southern California
:trea members Gerry Donato and Mario Barbieri Cecchini and
New York area member Robert Kalomeer. A call to Donato .
· was not imme d.~ateIY retumed Th urs da.Y mg
· h t. C ecc h.101· and
Kalomeer cpuld not tmm
·
ed'Iarely be located "~or comment ·
Each was kicked out foDowing a Trial Board hearing, said
SAG spokesman Greg Krizman.
"Our membenhip has been firm in its resolve to provide
member benefits only to those performers who stood in solidarity with the guild during the strike," Krizman said.
,.- ..

Torture suspect convicted

.
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - A woman faces up to life in
prison for torturing a 12-year-old girl who was severely dehydrated and malnourished when police found her shackled with
chains in a backyard.
~
J urors delibented more than four hours a'hursday be.ore
convicting Sandra Bearden of five counts of injury to a child,

Two accused of trying to hijack Greyhound bus

SIYLE

SPORIS

Two soldiers
killed in chopper
crash, A3

Pearls becoming
a girl's second
best friend, a

Highlights of Friday's
regional prep football
action, Bl

•

SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- Passensers
aboani a Greyhound bus ldi their seats and
ovcrpowere&lt;! ~nun who allegedly aied to
take control a.1d flip the whicle after ranting about hijackings, authorities said
Thursday.
No one wos injured in Wednesday
nights inCident and the driver wos able to
puB safely to the side of Interstate 80.
There were 44 passengers aboani the bus
bound from Portland, Ore., to Nashville,
Tenn.
The nun and a female accomplice nn
off the bus, flagged down a car and later
fled tO the truck stop where they were
arrested several hours later, Highwoy Patrol
spokesman Doug McCleve said.
Troy Matzek,34,and Becky Hyde,25,of
Wichita, Kan., were charged Thursday in
federal court with catjacking and aiding
d betting They face a possible maxisenten~ of 15 years in prison. They
were scheduled to appear Friday before

.
ATTEMPI'ED HUACKING- Passengers .of a Greyhound bus bound from Portland,
Ore., to Nashville, Tenn., stand on the Side of Interstate 80 east of Salt Lake City,
after an attempted hijacking of the bus. Passengers on the Greyhound bus overpowered a hijacker who grabbed the steering ~eel and threatened to flip the veh~
cle, authorities said. (AP)

U.S. Magistrate Samuel Alba.
Authorities said they believed the couple
was not acting as part of a terrorist plot.
"This is probably a person who is mentally unsuble," McCleve ~d.
Rose Matzek said her son thought
someone was after him. After talking to

him by phone after his a=st, she said he very fearful. He was a little paranoid about
had been affected by the terrorist attacks what has happened:'
Bus driver Gene Savage told KUTV
and might have had an emotional breaktelevision that Matzek gtabbed the steerdown on the bus.
ing wheel and said he wos going to flip the
"He called a couple of days ago. He bus. He had been ranting about hijackings.
wanted to come home," she said. "He wos

:w:

INSIDE

tmts·

one count of child abandonment arid one co~nt of aggravated
kidnapping of the Mexican girl, whose name was not released.
Bearden said she met the girl's parents while vacationing in
Vencruz, Mexico, last fall and they suggested that Bearden take
their only daughter to Laredo to live with her as a maid.
Bearden, a Mexican citizen, testified Wednesday that the abusive treatment came after the girl allegedly sexuaDy abused the
woman's 4-year- old son. She said she shackled the gt' rl for a
few hours over two days to prevent the girl from ,hurting herself and running away.

Fai

CA

SYMBOlS OF

•

1ssue •ra1ses
questions
•

BY KEviN KEUY
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

GALLIPOLIS The
campaign to pass a ballot
issue supporting the creation
of a new Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds and
exposition center has come
armed with answers to quesiions raised by citizens.
·
. Answers were developed
in the wake of May's defeat
of a one-quarter of 1 percent increase in the county
sales tax that would finance
the project, estimated at $6
million. The issue is back on
the ballot Nov. 6 ana will
appear in all 36 precincts.
"We've tried to address
those questions;• Fair Board
Director David Mills said. "It
was pretty much the consensus of the public that they

performed the procedure with surgeon Daniel Marelli and
cardiologist Jaime Morguchi.
The hospital's "quiet period" policy requires that no other
information be immediately released.

4

bod"

red fro

. leS, NCOYe

h"

m S 1p

HONOLULU (AP) - Divers have recOvered four bodies
· from the wreckage of a sunken Japanese fishing ship that was
rammed in February by an American military submarine.
The third and fourth bodies were brought to the surface
from the Ehime Maru on Thursday, the same day the body of
LOS ANGELES (AP) _The world's fourth recipient of a the first high school student puDed from the wreckage was
self-contained artificial heart was resting comfortably at UCLA identified through dental records.
Medical Center with the lightweight plastic and titanium
Naval authorities and the Japanese consulate notified the
device pumping inside his chest, the hospital said.
• family of Katsuya Nomoto, 17. that his body had been found
The patient, only described as a man in his 70s, underwent and removed from the fisheries mining vessel late Wednesday.
an 11-hour operation Wednesday to remove his heart and The city medical examiner said the cause of death was drownimplant the AbioCor replacement.
•
·
"Th
·
· nail
11 d th t"fi · 1 mg.
Y we an
e ar I eta
Akiko Nomoto, Kats'W"'s mother, told reporters at.her home
e operation went exceptio
heart is functioning beautifuDy;• said Dr. HiUel Laks, chief of in Japan that she had "mixed feelings" about the recovery and
di h
·
h UCL • S h 1 f M d' ·
h
car ot . oracle surgery at t e
n. c oo o .
e tcme,_w o· ,·dentification of her soil.

•

•

Artificial heart red p1eftt NSting

lesso~.

Bidwell-Porter Elementary first graders Brandon Cummings and Brycen Neal conducted an Impromptu geography
point·
ii1g out Ohio and West VIrginia, for their classmates Friday. The map and a flag of the U.S. was painted on the sct\ool playground
liy Bidwell's PTO volunteers. (Kevin Kelly ph~tps)
. ,;
· "".;.. 'v: · .
.
;e.

···

0 ••

•

...

· ·

BY KEVIN KEJ.LY

had questions or didn't get
the right facts the first time
around."
A rally a~d bonfire supporting passage of the
increase has been scheduled
by the pr&lt;;~ject's proponents
for Oct. 28 at the current
fairgrounds from 3-7 p.m.
. Daylight shuttle tours· of .
the new site and its proposed
use are planned, with a fair
board member on each
shuttle .aV:Iilable to answer
questions.
"All members of the fair
board wiD be available to
answer questions and give an
overvie.y of the project;'
Board Treasurer
Mike
McCalla said.
Some of the major questions focus on the scope of
,._H 111-, M

Dee·r on the
0

·
•

I

'"f

,.

•

·

o."

ca

ous

TIMES-SENTINEL .STAFF

IDWELL- "Are we .
being patriotic at Bidwell or what?" was
the question Bidwell.
Porter Elementary
Principal Shirley Doss posed
.humorously Friday.

Brine! New 2002 PonUac

Brand New 2001 Buick
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Sunflre Sun &amp; Sound

Brand New 2002 Chevy
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Sllvmdo ht. Cab 4 Doo1' 414

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q2,850* 122,950* q2,950* 824,350* 125,550 130,85
• Power Seltt, Keyleu Entry
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• CD Sylllm, nft $teerlng

• Vortec 5300 V-1 Engine
• CD System, Locllilg Dlflwtntlll
•n• Stltrlng, Crul• Control

But it's no joke. In the wake of last
month's terror attacks on America, the
school community has joined the revival
of national pride in a big way.
A 50-by-28 American flag has been
painted on the playground through the
efforts of Parent-Teacher Organization
volunteers, next to a map of the United
Smes. Both serve as a visual reminder to
.6-P students of where they live-and what
their country is all about, Doss said.
"We want kids to be familiar with
more symbols of the nation, be it the
eagle or the flag, even the states," she said.
. The map of the U.S., with states repre~ented in different colors, was a PTO
project launched last year that recently
came to fruition. An educational tool, it

BY MIWIIIA RUII'F' I
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

INSPECTING OLD GLORY - The 50by-28 flag painted by Bidwell-Porter Elementary
PTO volunteers on the school playground was Inspected Friday by first graders and
their teachers. Pa.lntlng of stars will be the final touch, PTO President Susie Cummings said.
fit in with the school's drive to familiarize students with patriotic symbols.
The flag . was a recent creation and is
mostly complete. PTO President Susie
CumminS', whose son is a first grader,
said all that's missing are the stars, to cbe
painted on when the weather is warm
enough.
"They wanted to do something patri-

Hllfa: 70s
L-:401
Details, A6

2001 Chevy

2001 Chevy

Cavalier Sedan

Lumina Sedan

2001 Oldsmobile
Alero GL Sedan

~0,950* ~2,850* ~2,9
• Autamatlc, CD SJillm
• Air CondHionlng
• Cnilll Con1rol, TIH Steering

• Power Wlndowl, Locks, Mirrors
• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Tilt S1eerlng, Cruise Control

• Automatic, Air Cor1dltlonll~
• PIIWII' Seal, Wlndowll
CD System, nit l CruiH

2001 Pontiac Grand AM
SESedan

~3,

Automatic, Atr Condltlonlng
• Power Wlndolll, LaCkJ, Mlrro~a
CD Sytt1111, nn &amp; CruiH

200~

Chevy Malibu
LS Sedan

2001 Buick Century
Custom Sedan

~3,850*

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• CD System, 111 l Crul11
• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• ~ Seat, Wlndowl, Locka

Comjcs

Editorials
Obituaries

PINH He Symbols, AI

M.

LEACH

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

C4
02-7
· insert
M
A6

;;!S~p~Q!Lrts!;L.____......JBil..I:l·:szB

Halloween fashion tips, Cll

i2.Stuo8cd!k'"'s____:__,.D:.o.l

c 2001 Oh;o Volley Publ;sh;ng Co.

• p_, Sell, Wlndowl, LockJ
• V-1 Power, Automatic
• Crul11, nn, c~ System

...

Buick

The patrol is advising the
following tips for motorists
this fall:
Drive with extreme caution, at or below the posted
speed limit, in areas with
deer crossing signs. If one
deer is seen on or near the
roadway, expect that others
may follow.
After dark, use highbeams when there is no
opposing traffic. High beams
will illuminate the eyes of
deer on or near a roadway
PluH -

Dftr, Ali

POMEROY - "Every gas mask we
had in stock is gone. We're completely
sold out and I'm not sure when we'll
receive another ~hipment."
Sheryl Wilson, owner of Wilson 's
Army Surplus on Pea~h Fork Road near
Pomeroy, stands bes.ide an empty con- t
tainer that was once overflowing with

surplus gas masks and explains why the · Wilson.
military breathing devices are rapidly
"Americans are extremely wary of
disappearing from her store, as well as retaliatory attacks and they're taking
every precaution to not be taken by surother stores, throughout the U,S.
"Evet since the terrorists attacks on prise again," she added.
.Wilson said the masks. which seD for
Sept. 11 and the recent bombing of
Afghanistan, we've had an influx of con- around $35-$50, are considered effeccerned customers \.vho are wanting tive when worn during brief encounters
some type of protection against a possible biochemical terrorist assault," said
PIHH see Saf.ty, Ali

To LEARN MoRE or to schedule an appointment,
call one of our rustomer service representatives
toll free at (866) 821 -4541
'

• Tax•. Togo, Tile F. . extra. Rebate Included In sale p!ice ol new vehlde llsled whora applicab~. "On approved CIIKit. On ,.lecled models. Nol rosponsible lor lypogllljlllicalerron~.
Pricoo Good Ocloller 171h Through Oc1ober 2181.
CHIYROLI1

occur."

War on ·terror creates demand for safety
BY TONY

(alendars
Classifieds

otic, and that's how the flag carne about,"
Doss said.
"It helps teD kids about patriotism, and
with everything going on·, ' it was the
appropriate thing to do," added Cum~
mmgs.
She was assisted in the project by her

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio's
deer are on the move, and
unfortunately ·that may spell
trouble for local motorists:
Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of
Wildlife estimates the state's
deer population at about
500,000, and more than
28,000 motor vehicle collisions with deer expected this
year, compared to 26,898 in
2000 and 27,425 in 1999.
Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State .Highway Pattol has
already handled 38 , deer
crashes this month, and
many more are expected.
ODNR· reports that most
deer-vehicle collisiOIIS occur
between
October
and
December, especially before
dawn and after · sunset, the
time that deer are most
active.

"Fall is the height of
Ohio's deer breeding season,
which means there will be a
dramatic increase in deer
movement," · said Vicki
· Mountz of ODNR's Division ofWildlife. "November
is when the highest number
of deer-vehicle collisions

@

tt'sallgoda

HOilll
For afore bnxhu ll on weight /n:;s "''&amp;f'J, call (866) 82J.i5il

I

'·

.,

.

•

•·

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