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                  <text>Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

'
Monday, September 15.2003

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Buckeye Football Notebook

As far as Geiger knows, Clarett will still attend Ohio State
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press
COLUMBus·- Ohio State athletic
director Andy Geiger said Saturday
that he thinks Maurice Claietl still
plans on enrolling and anending class
this fall.
"I have no indication of anything dit~
ferent," Geiger said shortly before the
· stan of No.3 Ohio State's dramatic 4438 triple-overtime victory over No. 24
North Carolina State.
·
On Wednesday, Claret! was suspended by Ohio State for at lea~t one
Season for violating NCAA bylaws
concemin,g extra benefits for athletes
and for lymg to investigators.
Ohio State submitted its response to
the NCAA on Thursday to seveml
pages of allegations against Clarett, a
sophomore tailback who rushed for
1,23 7 yards and scored 18 touchdowns
last sea&lt;;On.
Still on the back burner is the probe

of academic
fraud involving studentathletes. A I0person Ohio
State panel is
investigating
charges that
athletes
received improper help in classes·.
Geiger said he wouldn't commem
on how the academic panel is progressing.
"What's happening when the door
closes. and the kinds of discussions
they're having, I can't characterize
them because frankly I do not know,"
Geiger said.
Clarett was not on the Ohio State
sideline on Saturday. It was unknown
if he attended the game.
Both Geiger and head football coach
Jim Tressel said earlier this week that
the NCAA had not uncovered anything
that might have &lt;m impact on Ohio
State's national championship in foot -

Reds finally g~t a
break, get to
Zambrano in 1-0 win
•

CHICAGO (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds tried for
eight innings to shake Carlos
Zambrano out of his groove,
with little success.
Then Zambrano had to wait
out a 13-minute delay when
an umpire became ill before
the ninth inning, and the Reds
got the opening they needed.
Ray Olmedo drew a leadoff
walk, and Russell Branyan
drove him home with a twoout sin~le as the Reds beat
the Chicago Cubs 1-0 on
Sunday.
"That's somethin~ that
couldn't be helped,' Cubs
manager Dusty Baker said.
"Zambrano wasn't as sharp
when he came out against
that first hitter. But we should
have won three or four times
earlier in the !lame. We had
plenty of sconng opportunities.H
The loss dropped the Cubs
two games behmd Houston in
the NL Central race. The
Astros beat St. Louis 4-1 ear-

Jier Sunday.
It was the Reds' 29th victory in their final at-bat.• most in
the maJors.
"It's a bump in the road ,"
Baker said. "There's 13, 14
games left. You can make up
two games in two days. It's
still ~_oing to go down to the
wire.
Zambrano (13-1 0) was
dazzling for most of the day,
allowing only three hits and
no walkS through the first
eight innings, and retiring 13
straight at one point. But after
he came out for the ninth
inning, home plate umpire
Steve Rippley left the game
with a headache.
Rippley had been hit in the
chin with a foul tip in the
sixth inning, and his
headache got progressively
worse. He was taken to an
area hospital for observation,
and Zambrano waited ) 3
minutes while second base
umpire Jerry Meals changed
to go behind the plate.

Reds fall
to Pirates, B6

Emb~u·rasscd

ball lasr season. On Saturday. Geiger
said the academic panel could yet
uncover things that might taint the
Buckeyes ' tirst title in 34 years.
"In the abstract, there 's always a possibility they could find wrongdoing.
and if there's institutional culpahility,
then there's an issue.'' Geiger said.
"But I absolutely do not know...
Claret!, who must make rest itution
for "thousands of dollars"' he re&lt;.:eived
in improper benetits, could have a portion of his schol;m;hip withheld to provide money for restitution, Geiger
said. Clarett could also come up with a
payment plan.
Clarett's suspension is open-ended
and wi II be reconsidered only when
Ohio Stale - or, should he transfer,
his new school - applies for his reinstatement.
Asked when Ohio State would
make that request to the NCAA.
Geiger said. "We would communicate
with the NCAA. We do this in l)aJ1nership. We're a member of the

NCAA and our etT011 would always to
be open in that communkation and to
consult with them. We ha ve all the
way alonu."
• NO-S'HOW MORRIS: Offensive
tackle Derek Manis was once one of
Ohio State's biggest recruits. Now a
transfer at Nonh Carolina State. he did
not make the trip to his old campus on
Saturday. Coad1 Clmck Amato made
the decision to leave Morris. a 6-tllOt6, 328-pound offensive lineman.
behind.
"I just don ' t wam to subject him to
what might occur.'' Amato ·said ~arlier
this week. "He's just a young kid."
This summer. he weighed in on the
Maurice Claren c(lntroversy, sayi ng
tl1e NCAA had ll,ked him about hi s
time at Ohio State and whether violations occurred while he was there.
Morris was never eligible at Ohio
State lmd tnmsferred to Nortl1 Carolina
State a year ago. He has not played in
any ~ames for the Wol fpack but IS academically eligible.

Browns, B1

''I'm sure Derek would probably like
to have a chance (to play)," North
Carolina Slate spons-infonnation
director Annabelle Vaughan said
Saturday. "He didn 't play against
Wake Forest last week. but then again
most pffensive linemen don 't .play
when they 're fl\·shmcn anyway."
• QUJCK-HirfERS:
Nonh
Carolina State is now 5-3 in ovenime
games .... Ohio State has won its last.
nine games decided by a touchdown or
less. ...· Buckeye quanerbU(;k Craig
KrenLel set cmrer highs in seveml
&lt;u-eas: 26 completions, 36 attempts.
273 passing yards. four touchdowns
and three interceptions .... NCSU quarterback Philip Rivers set Atlantic Coast
Conference career records for passing
yards. pass completions and touchdow.ns passing and running . ... Ohio
State h;ts won its last 34 home games
against non-confere nce opponents. ...
The Buckeyes host Mid-Americmt
Conference foe Bowling Green at
noon Saturday.

Ohio )Jmn:Iged to kee p the
game respectable early on.
The Bobcats finally got their
ground gmne in gear. moving
from Page 6
the ball on the following drive,
Khaliq was 9- for-14 with 146 but Greg DiMarino missed a
41-yard lield goal to keep the
yards.
Ohio
side of the scoreboard
Abdui -Khaliq was the st:U1b:u·e.
ing qua11erback for Minnesota
Ohio. though. would answer
as a freshman when Ohio
CLEVELAND (AP) - A out.
Minnesota's second score of
.painful bounce turned into a
"It was embarrassing more defeated the Golden Gophers the game later in the tirst quarlucky one for Minnesota as than anything." Ryan said. "I in 2000 at Minneapolis.
"Abdui-Khaliq has really ter as an eight play, 60 yard
the Twins remained tied for had three ball s hit my way
drive ended with Ray scoring
the AL Central lead.
and lost every nne m the developed into a very tine from two-yards out.
qua11erback." said Knorr.
Doug Mientkiewicz deli v- sun."
Ray ran in hi s secon9 touchThe Golden Gophers moved
ered a tiebreaking single in
Ryan had a large welt just
down
of the gan1e with 6:06
the eighth inninll and the above his left eye, and was the ball with ease on the open- left in the first half. this time
ing drive of the game.
1\vins overcame nght tielder replaced by Torii Hunter.
With the ball on the Ohio 3 ti·om eight-y&lt;u·ds out to make it
Michael Ryan being hit in
Ryan said he felt his eye
a 21-14 game.
the head with a tlyball to and thought he was bleeding came what would become a
But. Minnesota closed out
familiar sight for the Ohio
defeat the Cleveland Indians - but it was ju st sweat.
the
first half with a bang.
defense
as
Minnesota
quaJter5-3 Sunday.
" It felt like I was stung
With
one second left until
Mientkiewicz also hit a when I was hit ,'. he said. "I back Asad Abdul-Khaliq
two-run . homer for the wanted to stay in the game. pitched the ball to Marimt the half mtd a founh down on
Bw·her Ill on the option to the the Ohio 2. Abdul-Khaliq
Twins, who moved II games . but they wouldn'tlet me ."
pitched the ball to Barber to
right
side for the score.
over .500 for the first time
The Twins took the lead in
the
riuht side of the field for
On Ohio's tirst drive hum
this season and remained the eighth after Dany s Baez
tied with the Chicago White (2-9) hit the first two batters scrimmage. Fred Ray fumbled the sc(:fre and a Minnesota 28Sox for first place.
he faced . Hunter and the ball as Minnesota recov- 14 lead at the break.
Minnesota shut down Ohio's
It was 3-3 in the Cleveland Cristian Guzman,
with ered on the Ohio 28. Moments
offensive
it
was
again
an
option
scoring production
later,
seventh when Jhonny Peralta pitches.
led off with a fly ball to
Shannon Stewart sacri- tram Ahdul-Khaliq to Barber in the se'cond half &lt;md extendright-center.
ficed the r•mners over. but to give the Gophers a 14-0 lead ed that lead to 42- 14 by the
founh quaJter to take home the
Ryan shaded his eyes, then Hunter was thrown out at the early in the opening quaJter.
"I
think
I
could
have
nm
a
win.
•
lowered his glove and the plate when he tried to score
ball bounced off the side of on Lui s Rivas' grounder to lew of those in. but it took the
The Bobcats are off this
his face - but was caught second baseman Brandon team to get him in that posi- weekend before returning to
on the rebound by center Phillips. Mientkiewicz fol- tion ," said Minnesota head action at Peden Stadium Sept.
fielder Dustan Mohr for the lowed with his gv-ahead hit. coach Glen Mason.
27 against Western Michigan.

,' ~ \ '

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'

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"""

• Winless Bengals
praised. See Page 81

proceeds of
each warjlayton@ mydailysentinel .com
mnt goes lo
the state mtd
POMEROY -The Meigs to the counCounty Sheriff's Department ty's general
has not collected more than lund.
$445,789 in bench warrants
T h i s
that have been issued by the amount
Meigs Countr Court.
varies
The sherilf s department is based on
responsible for serving the the several
Trussell
bench warrants which order the factors that
guilty party to pay the fees, fmes include which law enforceand costs ordered by the Meigs ment agency made the arrest,
County Court. A portion of the
BY

amount of the fine and a
breakdown of other co urt
related costs. The Meigs
County Court office said the
$445.789 is an approximate
amount of what is currently
due to the county and state.
Meigs Cnunty Commissioner
Jim Sheets said se1ving these
warrants would help the cLlllnty's tiscal crisis. He said a percentage of these funds &lt;tre not
restmined by state or county
mandmed commitmems m1d
can be used in other ways.

J. MILES LAYTON

BY BRIAN

I

'

• Margaret Gloeckner, 86

'

• Community calendar.
See Page A3
• Time Out for Tips. See
Page A3
• Land transfers. See
Page A6

WEATHER
Sunny, HI: 70., Low: I50o

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on your home delivered subscription!

LO'I'l'ERIES

Pomeroy Pollee Chief Mark Proffitt and parking enforcement officer Sandra "Pebbles" Thorla
are replacing a "globe" on a parking meter on Court Street. Pomeroy Mayor Victor Young Ill
said the parking ordinance enforcement blitz has been successful. (J. Miles Layton)

Ohio
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Pick 3 day: 1-2-8
Pick 4 day: D-1-2-6
Pick 3 night: 8-6-5
Pick 4 night: 3-8-0-6
Buckeye 5: t-6·7-24-36

Parking enforcement blitz
nets space for merchants

West V'uginia
Dally 3: D-9-5
Dally 4: 0-1-5-5
Cash 25: 2-11-13-19-23-24

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( ~beau~· da~-aud-: ~ ro~.: ~hl~-end-:~~n,~y ;:r::::cpcrtl:\'q~;n,t\'ljl for

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StrcSII. But the ,pl~y ls11 't quii ~ · ds sweet when •it cos!)
•

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: ' ~- a;lJ! l,rt~.~,f.:,f. ~llat's ~hY . th~res·y~e~ Rober.~ Trl'!ll J~n~ OolfTpiii;I

You-g!\t2 ~··lllfti!dlbli! toui'Se$ d!I.Sign~-d by O.f\C
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f!111..."1}Htndl;l ll'agm 1•&gt;/Ji/e you're out thel'e.
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jlayton@ mydailysentlnel.com

~allipolii Jaail,~

~-

-

·-

---

·-·- . . .

800.949. 444-1 - n· n•llJ.-rtjgulf rom

·""'

J.

REED

breed@mydailysentinel.com

INSIDE
I

"We have $445.789 in
bench warrunts out there.'' he
said. "I'm sure this would
help the budget process if the
sheriff would just collect
these warrants."
Meigs County Sherifl' R&lt;~ph
Trussell said if he had more
deputies, he could serve the wm·rants. Earlier this year, Trussell
l&lt;tid oft' his entire department
because there was not any
money to pay his deputies.
"I don't have anybody to
serve the warrants," he said.

"We huve all kinds of warrant"'t" be served blll no one
to serve them .''
Trusse ll sa id he docsn' t
have time to serve the bencb
warrants himse lf because h;is Inn busy responding tr&gt;
emerge11cy t.:alls or other law
enforcement 'related matters
all over the count y.
" I answer emergency call s
only," he said. "I can't be in
but one place at one time
until I get some manpower
bad in the department.

Expo includes
entertainment, contests

Page AS

,

.

Uncollected fines make justice cheap in Meigs County

OBITUARIES
'.

'

SPORTS

Bobcats

Doug Mientkiewicz
single helps Twins
break tie with Tribe

.

POMEROY - A nickel
or dime can save a person
from a parking fine in time .
Pomeroy Mayor Victor
Young Ill said the parking
ordinance enforcement blitz
has been a success. Earlier
this year when Young
became mayor, he pledged
that the village would not tolemte repeat parking ticket
offenders who ignore the law.
Young said this is the law
just like any other and it
will be enforced equally for
Since
that
everyone.
pledge , a number of repeat
ticket holders who have
failed to pay their parking
tickets have come forward.
The mayor said at least one

car has been towed.
"Most people are paying
their tickets now," he said.
1 "The shoppers have a place
to park downtown now. A
few business people have
told me it has made a big,
big ditTerence."
TI1e meters used to take only
a penny or a nickel. Young
doesn't remember when. but
he said the village upgr.aded
the parking meters seveml
years ago to take nickels and
dimes. He said that compared
to what it costs to park elsewhere, parking in Pomeroy is
a bargain. In Athens, it is 25
cents tor every half hour of
downtown
parking . In
Columbus, it is 2'i cents tor
every 15 minutes of parking.
The parking meters arc in
the process of getting a face
lift . New "globes'' will

T.
R~ J.

replace the old faded ones
that currently could hide or
obscure the meter readings
taken by the parking
enforcement officer, Sandra
"Pebbles" Thorla. There are
more than 200 parking
meters in the downtown
area nf the village. Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark Proftitt
sa id the globes will . be
replaced street to street.
Parking meters on Mulberry
Street and Court Street have
alreaely had their ,g lobe s
changed .
Acouple of broken parking
meters have been completely
replaced hy digili7.l!d meters .
A hu·ge number of the parking meters came trom
Middlepon whkh killed its
pw'king ordimmce in 1998 mtd
sold the existing meters 10
Pomeroy.

••

rm
n1
11_g
for
• .
Real

•

ROCKSPRINGS - Singers
and dancers will take the stage
at this weekend's Big Bend
Town and Country Expo, to be
held Saturday m1d Sunday at
the Rocksprings Fairgrounds.
A number of contests will
also be conducted in conjunction with the Expo, which will
be open, at no charge, from I0
a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday &lt;md
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
The Rocksprings United
Methodist Church Choir will
sing at I:30 p.m. on Saturday, to
be followed by the Belles &lt;md
Beaus square dance club, with
Ro~er Steele &lt;LI caller, at 2:30.
Craig Harrison and Alison Rose
will sing at 3:30p.m.
The Big Bend Cloggers
will perforn1 at I p.m. on
Sunday, followed by the
Riverbcnd Community Band.
and Elvis Presley Tribute
Anist D~ht Icenhower.
Hm1d1 · quilt' will be displayed in the senior fair building,
and those attending the Expo will
have the opportunity to choose
their liivonle in a People's
Choice contest. First place wi II
win $50. second place. $40. third
piaL-e. $30, lourth place, $20, m1d
fifth place. $10.
"
Entries must be made from
4 to 6 p.m. on Friday or !UO
a.m. until 9:45 a.m. on
Saturday. Questions about the
contest may be directed to
Rosalie Johnson. at 696-1313.
Backyard gardeners &lt;tre invit-

ed to display general honicultuml products, as well as enoies
for the tallest stalk of com .
longest ear or corn. largest
diameter or sunllower, Jm-gesl
pumpkin and largest squash.
Other horticultural categories that can be shown
mcluding vegetables. nuts and
fruits. DISplay baskets of preserves, vegetables, tlnwers
and fruit are also encouraged.
Phmt specimens ma;v be rr,msponed to the Expo hum noon
until 7 p.m: on Fnday, or canied
in before I0 a.m. on Saturday.
Judging will take p_Jace at 10:45
a.m. lnlunnation is available
from Hal Kneen at 992-6696.
This year's Expo will also
include a pie- baking contest.
Each pan1cipant may enter
any two homemade fruit pies,
made of djfferent fruit s,
between 8:30 and II a.m . at
the junior fair buildin g.
Judging will take place at
II :.\0 a.m., with winners to
be announced after the tractor
parade, which begins at noon .
After the judging, pies will be
auctioned. and money raised
will be used to help detmy costs
of the Expo. The contest is
sp.msored by Bob's Market and
Greenhouses, &lt;Uld winners will
receive Bob's gift ceniticates.
hmr Wlllne·rs will he
awarded cash priles: $20 for
first place, $15 for second.
$10 ror third and $5 fo r
fourth place.
Questions &lt;~bout the contest
may be directed to Bunny
Kuhl at 992 -7'i.17.

Deteriorating classroom

Pomeroy Village Council will be meeting at 7:30 p.m .
Wednesday at the village hall to listen to Citizen concerns
about the fate of the old Pomeroy Jun1or High School. While no
official action has been taken on demolishing the school ,
Mayor Victor Young Ill has talked with Jeffers Excavation about
the cost of tak ing down the school. Pictured above is a deteri
orating classroom where water damage has warped the wooc.
en floor. (J. Miles Layton)

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 16, 2003

Ohio weather
Wednesday, Sept.

17

AccuWeather.com forecast lor daytime cond~oos towlhi&lt;lh temooratures
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Flurnes

Snow

left

VII 4stoclate&lt;l Pre»

Sunny and pleasant
cloudy with a chance of min.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with
a chance of min during the
day ...Then a chance of showers
at night. Highs in the mid 70s.
Saturday ... A slight chan~e
of showers in the morning ... Otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.
Sunday ... Mostly
clear.
Lows near 50 and highs in the
mid 70s.
Monday ... Mostly dear. Lows
near 50 ;md highs in the mid 70s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today ... Mostly sunny and
pleasant. Patchy dense fog
until mid-morning. Highs in
the upper 70s.
Tonight...Mostly
clear.
Patchy dense fog developing.
Lows in the lower 50s
Wednesday ... Mostly sunny.
Patchy dense fog in the morning. Highs in the upper 70s
Wednesday night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 50s:
Thursday... Sunshine fading
behind increasing and thickening cloudiness. Highs near 80.
Thursday tiight...Mostly

A DAY ON WALL STREET

D:wJC:res

9.000

jrdftrials

e.ooo

W'·,'···•.

~~r"'

9,448.81

chl:!t,.

Pet.
trom p!'l\l

JUN
High
9,490.9t

·0.24

:

JUL
Low
9,436.60

7,000

SEP
AUG
Rocord high: 11 .722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

Sept. 15, 2003

1,900

Nasdaq

1,100

wtp:site
~
. ,.

1,500

1,845.70

JUN
High
1.902.07

chi::.1: ·0.50

Pet.
trom p!'l\l

JUL

Low
1.843.79

1,300
SEP
AUG
ROO&lt;Ird high: !,048 .62
March 1o, 2000

Sept. 15, 2003

1,050

St:an::lai:d &amp;
Etxns 500

;so

:w,.,·
" ·;o.

q,.,

.....

8!10

'it~\

"

~

1.014.81

JUN

cho;L: ·0.38

Pet.
trom prov

High

1,019.79

JUL
Low
1,013.59

750

SEP
AUG
Roconl hillh: 1,527.46
March 24. 2000
AP

Local Stocks
ACI - 22.84
AEP-29.09
Al&lt;zo- 32.75

Ashlar&lt;! Inc. - 33.67
BBT - 36.81
BLI - 17.37

Bob Evans - 27.65
BorgWarMr-71 .06
City Hoking - 34.20
Champion -4.60
Charming Shops - 5.38
Col - 25.17
Du~ - 44 .07

DG - 21.12
Federal Mog.JI- .235

Gannett - 75.BE
General Eleclric - 31 .40
GKNLY-4.35
Harley Davidson - 47.10
KMRT - 27.00
Kroger - 18.65
Lld .-15.97
NSC-19.22
Qal&lt; HHI Financial- 29.37
Bank One - 38.50
OVB-24.20
Pooples - 28.31
l'llpslco- 45.15
Premier - 9.02
Rocky Boots- 11 .16

AD Shel- 45.32
Rod&lt;well- 27.28
SealS - 43.87
SBC-23.06
AT&amp;T - 22.26
USB - 23.71
W&amp;nf!o/s - 32.73
Wai-Man - 57.75
Worthington- 14.31

Daily stock reports .... 1te
4 p.m. closing quotes ot
1te piiMous day's transac-

tions, provided by Smltt:
Par1ners at Advost Inc. ot
Gallipolis.

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CINCINNATI (API - A
planned $160 million eKpan·
sion of the city's convention
L-enter is i!) douht again after the
breakdown of talks between
the city and the Cinergy Corp.
over naming rights.
Mayor Charlie Luken said
Monday that talks between
the city and the utility had
reached an impasse . The
mayor accused Cinergy of
trying to pay for its $12 million nammg rights commitment "on the backs of city
residents" - through higher
electric rates to the city government and city gas and
electric customers.
"I'm not going to allow
that." Luken .said. "We're not
going to agree to higher utility

nues to pay for naming rights.''
Cinergy executives seemed
surprised by the mayor's
remarks.
"It 's unfortunate that the
city believes we ' re at
impasse," said Greg Ficke.
president of Cinergy 's
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric.
"We think it 's a great deal for
the company and a great deal
for the city."
Cinergy and the city agreed
to a tentative deal to put
Cinergy's name on the expanded Alben B. Sabin Convention
Center a year ago, but the two
sides have been unable to
agree on specific terms and
Cinergy has not made the tirst
of four $3 million payments
due nine months ago.

The city and the' utility are
divided over the rate paid by
city government to heut and
power city facilities and u proposed municipal aggregation
system, which would allow
city voters to decide 10 form a
buying pool and have nil city
residents buy their electricity
from the lowest bidder.
Cinergy executives said
they agreed to the naming
rights partly because the city
and its residents have been
good customers . About 80
percent of commercial users
and 95 percent of residential
customers in the city get their
electricity from CG&amp;E. the
company said.
The agreement to lend
Cinergy's name to the con-

vention center was with the
understanding that "the city
would not slap us in the face
and go to anoth.:r supplier
after we put $12 million in
the facility," said Cinergy
spokesman Steve Brush.
"I have come to the conclusion that it was really all
about gas and electric rates,"
said Luken. "What they really wanted was a monopoly
on the city's business ."
If a deal (annot be worked
out. !he scale of the project
might huve to be reduced,
Luken said.
The remainder of the project ts being financed
through city and county contributions and increased
lodging taxes.

Officials to suggest shorter work weeks to avoid layoffs
CLEVELAND (AP) - In
an effon to wipe out a $13.6
million budget deficit and
avoid layoffs. city officials
are planning to ask llibor
unions this week if some city
workers would shifl to 32hour work weeks.
The workers would take
pay cuts but retain medical
coverage, Finance Director
Robert Baker told City
Council Monday.
"If we can't do it because
there isn't a willingness from
the workers or the unions, then
I fear layoffs are inevitable for
this year," Baker said.
Baker gave the council
details of the deficit projected
for this year and . Mayor Jane

Campbell's recommendations
tor how to handle the problem.
The city discovered an
accounting error that will help
pay oil' a large ponion of the
debt. Cleveland had set aside
$8.8 million in an account
used to pay for items such as
workers' compensation claims
and retirement plans but paid
the sum again out of its general fund, Baker said.
The city will also cut a
$2. 1 million payment it
makes to subsidize cityowned cemeteries that are
losing money. The city maintains the cemeteries but
makes little money from
them because most are full.
The city will ask its depan-

ments this week for phms to
cut $2.7 million in spending .
Alon~ with possibly implemenung four-day work weeks.
the city is continuing a hiring
freeze and eliminating travel.
Cleveland is expected to
receive $10.5 million less in
!axes, fees and state aid than
expected and spend $3.1 million more than planned .
Baker said. The projected
$13.6 million deficit is 3 per·
cent of the city's $450 million
general fund, which pays for
police, trash collection, snow
plowing and other services.
"We all made the assump·
tion that the economy would
get better in 2003," Baker
said. "Unfonunalely, in the

city of Cleveland. we see no
signs of economic recovery."
The Department of Public
Safely, which includes EMS
and the fire and police
departments. has also spent
about $8 million more than
budgeted, Baker said .
The Police Department is
on pace to spend $6 million
over its budget. including
$1.5 million in ovenime and
$634,000 in legal senlemenls . The Fire Department
is on pace to exceed its overlime budget bv $1.6 million .
If
spending
remains
unchanged and the economy
does not improve. the cit~
faces a $51.4 million deficn
next year. Baker said .

Disabled students score well on assessment

10,000

Sept. 15. 2003

,.

OHIO
Mayor says deal for convention.
center naming rights stalled

Mall Subscription
tnalde Meigs County
13 weeks .............'30.15
26 Weeks . . . . . . . . ...'60.00
. 52 Weeks
...'118.80
Fllotea Outalde Melga County
13 Weeks . .
. . . . . . '50.05
26 Weeks ........ .. . !'1 00.10
52 Weeks ..... ....... '200.20

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
state policy allowing assessment techniques other than
proficiency tests may have
boosted scores for disabled
students on the Cleveland
district's annual report card
compared with Ohio's
other urban districts·, the
Plain Dealer reported:
In resulis submitted 10
the Ohio Department of
Education, scores for
Cleveland's disabled students were higher than for
disabled students in several
other districts - and in
some categories as good as
or better than Cleveland
students without disabilities, the newsl?aper said in
Monday's editiOns.
Because of new federal
education requirements,
this is the first year that districts had to include scores
from students with disabili·
ties and those whose first
language is not English.
In Cleveland, alternate
assessments allowed by the
slate were used 8.8 percent
of the time when testing
students with severe disabilities. Akron, Cincinnati
and Columbus used the
alternated methods in I
percent of cases.
The 58 percent passage rate
for Cleveland students with
disabilities on the fourth·
grdde math test was nearIy I0
percentage points higher than
tor non-disabled students. ·
Districtwide. about 63 percent of Cleveland's disabled
students were proficient in·
reading. compared with 22
percent in Cincinnati and 25
percent in Columbus.
An alternate assessment
gauges a student's abilities
with measurements ranging
from written assignments
to the achievement of goals
contained in his or her
Individual Education Plan.
An IEP for a severely disabled studeRt might include
a goal of increased eye
movement, said Lisa Marie
Ruda, chief of staff for
Cleveland schools . If the
child masters that ski ll, he
or she would pass the
assessment.
The U.S. Department of
Education had proposed
limiting alternate assessments to I percent of a
school' s severely disabled
enrollment.
But in a July II e-mail to
'district superintendents, Ohio
state schools Superintendent
Susan Tave Zelman said the
cap would not apply in the
state thi s year.
Disagreements on ' the
definition of a severe dis·

ability also mean that not all Joe Nathan, director of the
school districts are giving Center for School Change at
alternate assessments to the the University of Minnesota.
same kin&lt;i of students, said
"I wish the testing of spe-

cial educ,ation student s was
as cleur as whether the
Cleveland Indians would win
or lose a game," Nathan said.

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
AGRICUL TURf:

MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.Jimsfarmequlpment.com
AUTOMOTIVE

Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org
Pleasant Valley Hospital

Norris Northup Dodge
www.norrisnorth~pdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.pvalley.org

BUSINESS TRAINING

www.turnpikeflm.com

Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

CHURCHES

•

lighthouse Assembly of God · Gallipolis

www.LighthouseAssembly.info
NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

ENTERTAINMENT

www.mydailytribune.com
Charter Communications

www.charter.com

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Quality Window Systems, Inc.

wWw.qualitywindowsystems.com

Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.coin

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!
Take your business into the homes
of over 40,000 consumers in
Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties
EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web address in our

WEBSITE
DIRECTORY

• • 00

~

Community calendar
Public meetings
Tueaday, Sept.16

ROCKSPRINGS- Salisbury
Twp. Trustees will meet at 6:30
p.m. at the Township Hall on
Rocksprings Road.

Clubs and
Organizations
16
SHADE - Special meebng
of the Shade River Lodge 453
at7 p.m. at the Hall. Past Master
night work in the E.A. degree.
MIDDLEPORT --Middleport
Chapter of Taking off Pounds
Sensibly (1DPS), a non-profit
weight-loss support group with
240,000 members worldwide,
will host an open house from
Tuesday, Sept.

5:45 to 7 p.m. at Rejoicing Life
Church. Women, men, teens
and pre-teens interested in los·
ing weight are Invited.
Members will have exhibits and
tables set up to provide infor·
mation. Information Is available
from Kay Graham at 992·7735
from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 17
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Athletic Boosters
meet at 7 p.m. at the conces·
sion stand .

Association . Guests wetcome. Reservations by call·
ing 992·3214.

Reunion
S11nday, Sept. 21

RACINE - Oscar Reed
and Charles Hysell reunion,
12:30 p.m. Star Mill Park .
Racine. Take item for white
elephant sale.

Birthdays

Thursday, Sept. 18

MASON, W.Va. - Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association will meet at noon
at Riverside Golf Course,
Mason. Buffet luncheon will
be followed by a speaker,
Dale Van Tine, president of
the Ohio Retired Teachers

Tueaday, Sept. 16

West Columbia, W.Va.
Gay Nell Macabee of Route
1. Box 40, West Columbia,
W.Va. 25287 will celebrate
her 85th birthday on Sept. 16.
Cards are welcomed.

Time Out for Tips

Paying bills can be challenging
Paying bills can be a challenge . Bills seem to come in
the mail every day, and they
may be due ;my time
throughout the month. What
can be done to simplify the
bill-p&lt;tying process and
assure that they are paid?
Be organized. Have a
"financial calendar" to write
when bills are due and their
amounts. Note when they
must be mailed in order to
arrive before the due date.
Have one person pay all the
bills. This job may be traded
every few months. Both
spouses should be familiar
with the bills and how they
are paid .
Set aside time each week or
two to write and mail checks.
Have a specific place for
check writmg where bills are
kept in a file. Use boxes that
have sections for "Bills to be
paid" and "Paid bills and
receiP.ts" with categories for
spectfic expenses.
Have
needed items on hand • li calculator. home account book,
financial calendar, checks,

taxes. ·mortgage interest,
charitable contributions and
other allowable items . Keep
accurate records 10 help
determine if the itemization
will be larger than the stanBecky
dard deduction. By filing and
Baer
retaining these receipts . proof
will be evident in the event of
an audit.
(Becky Bc1er is the Mei11s
Cotmty Extensilm Agent.
pens , envelopes, stamps, Fami/1' and
Corwuner
address labels, etc .
Communitr
Look over the bills before Scien~·es/
De1•e/opmertt)
paying. Are all items report ·
References:
ed correctly? If not, contact
"Are Due D&lt;ttes of Bills
the creditor immediately by
You?"
Money
Bugging
phone, then by a letter, to rec 2000+.
Ohio
State
University
tify the problem.
Write the date paid and Extension, Columbus, OH,
check number on the rrson- February 2000.
"Bill-Paying Tips," Money
al copy of the bil stub.
Record information in the 2000+, Ohio State University
home account book . File Extension, Columbus. OH,
receipts according to the April 2000.
"Financial Records You
appropriate category for easy
access during income tax May Need for Your Tax
time. Deductible expenses Return," Money 20001&gt;, Ohio
may include some medical State University Extension,
and dental bills, state and Columbus, OH, February,
local income 1axes, property 1999.

Local folks
Rheumatologist
joins Holzer
Clinic
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic announces the addition
of
rheumatologist,
Mehmoodur Rasheed, MD,
' .
FACR
Rasheed brings
almost I0 years of experience
10 the Holzer Clinic team.
Rasheed graduated from
Dow Medical College in
Karachi, Pakistan and he completed his residency in Internal
Medicine at Flushing Hospital
Medical Center, Flushing,
N.Y. His fellowship in
rheumatology was completed
al
Thomas
Jefferson
University in Philadelphia, Pa.
Rasheed is a diplomate of
the American Board of
and
Internal
Medicine
Rheumatology.
He has professional memberships in the American
College of Physicians and
the American College of
Rheumatology. He has also
done numerous papers and
presentations related to
rheumatology.
Rasheed currently resides
in Gallipolis with his wife
Neclma and their daughter
Hadiyah .

Councilors meet
CHESTER
- Past
Councilors Club of Chester
'

8 a.m. and .5 p.m. Monday
through Friday at 593-9629.
The Family Practice Clinic
opened more !hun 15 years
ago and offers comprehensive family medical care for
patients of all ages. Care is
provided by family practice
residents who are physicians
participating in graduate
medical education . training
through O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital's Family Practice
Residency Program.
"These physician s a(e
available to see their patients
on a regular basis in the clinic in order to provide wnti·
nuity of care, or in the hospi·
tal if needed," said Lenard
Presutti, D.O., director of the
residency program and direc·
tor of medical education at
O'Bleness. "They provide
comprehensive medical care
under the direct supervision
of physicians who are faculty
members in the Department
ATHENS O'Bleness of Family Medicine at OUMemorial Hospital is now COM ." Presutti is an associoperating the Family Practice ate professor of family mediClinic at. Parks Hall in Athens cine at OU -COM.
formerly managed by the
The family practice resiOhio University College of
Osteopathk Medicine (OU - dents who staff the Family
Practice Clinic include and
COM) .
see
patients by appointment.
The clinic has relocated
near the lobby on the third Patients have the option of
floor of Parks
Hall. choosing to be seen by a
Registration for the clinic is female or nmle physidan .
The program is approved
located in Room 335.
by
the American Osteopathio.:
Appointments tan be- made
by calling the clinic between Association.

Tucsduy, Septt·mbcr t6, 2003

Man's Internet masquerade
lures teen into romance
DEAR ABBY : I am til&lt;'
mother of a 15-ycar-old gi rl
who is in ninth gntdc . Siw
has been chatting with a man
on the lm~rnet for the last I0
months. He said h~ Wits a
teenager. However. w~ havt•
re&lt;.:e ntly learned that he is
JO-plus, married. and the
fnther of a 4-year-old c·hiltl.
He says he is going tn
divorce his wife and murrv
my daughter.
·
We have tried to make her
understand thai this rdalion ship won' t work . Sh~ insi st.s
they are both waiting for lwr
to turn IX sn they can bt•
· married. '
My husband ami I arc dev astated. Can you plea'~
make her understand lht•
pros and cons'? I'm hq:ging
with tears in my c·ycs. She
won't listen 1o us . -- llROKENHEARTED MOM IN
VIRGINIA
DEAR BROKENHEARTED : Pick up . tht• phone itnd
inform the police that your
undemge daughter " lwin g
st;tlked hy an Internet preda tor. He belongs in jail. Ami
lhcy can help In ensure that
he winds up lhere. Pronto .
DEAR ABBY: I am 20 and
used lobe an uutgoing, smart
and attractive female . I
planned to attend college, hut
I put it oil because uf a tight
money situmion at home.
After I tumed I X, I bcg;m
to have what I think arc
· panic anacks. I don't sleep
well and wake up during th ~

\'t'ar -t,ld hu:-.band i . .

;1 ~-.·; 1 :-.h

~· ln\ fnr ~o: haritil'' · h)r \l'. ar . . .
h,· ha' ~i 1 ~~~ aw;11 .til ;,f lti'
St)~o: i ; d

Dear
Abby

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III'RF IN INIJIA NA
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DEi\R (i .ll . Talk I&lt;' an

law vl'r
whal'-.. guin g ~Ill .
Your 111olhl'T Lila\' ha,·t· ,Pl'rhap\ if Ill' hL·ap., ir fnun .a
assumed that sinu· V11 11 did - pruk· ...... i~uwl. ynnr hu -.. hand
n ' tnll·.ntl~_ m it a ~;1111 -ll~at )'Oll will ht.• llUli'C l't'l'L'pll\'t.' to !Ill'
" "''" '~··· It that Ltils. he 111a1
w~rl' kd1n g h~lltT II ~ t1nu.·

til pid llf' 01 pl1&lt;111e 0111d
sdlt'dull· a t'OibL Lhatl,lll with
vour do\.·tor. l'Pu llt't' d ;1 tlh u·~n1gh physit·al t'X;Imination

and ;t psychnlPg. il'i. ll ;ts., r .. slllt-'ll\. Pk·a:-.r dnn ' t wa it.

If yo u ar~ not ~ntplo y ,·,l or
do not have health insurilllt'C, yllu may qualify for
Mt•dicaid . Cun ta t't vnur :.. tall'
or t'OUtll y mt•dit·al ltss islallt't'

office tti sec if you lllt'L'I tlw
e Ii~ i hi Itt y rc·q" ircmt•nl'. ·
OFAR ABBY My X~ -

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Kautz honored by Hemlock Grange
HEMLOCK GROVE Dale Kautz w;ts presented
with a 60-year membership
award during the recenl
meeting of Hemlock Grange ,
held at the Grange Hall.
Rosalie Story. muster,
presided nt the meeting .
Members approved a resolution to be sent to the Ohio
Grange concerning relocution of the Grange Home .
Roy Grueser, legislative
chairman, reported on &lt;In
article concerning eyegluss-

es. and B iII R;t&lt;lfurd rq,ot'IL'd
ul!lltc cleanup of the ' l:rt" ~'·
to be done in th e· sprin): .
Oflkers ckL"t~d 011 tftt•
August
meeting
Wt.'fl'
installed.
Members were invited to
unend Town and Coun try
Expn on Sert. 20 and 21 at
the Ro,·ksprings Fairgounds .
Four members of Hcmlo&lt;·k

II cit•n " nd II i llw r ()" i "''l'
11 til St'l'l't' ;~, janit11rs for
( lctulwr.
.lo;~n K;~utl . sllhstitutc lecttll't'r. preSt'tltcd the program .
whirh indudt•d a reading,
"The Bihlc Salesnllllt," presented by Helen Qttivey, and
a skit by Bill Radford and
Dale Kautt. A reading, "Old
Age," t&gt;y Muriel Radford ,
Grange arc m:tivc m~mbcrs .
the pmgram .
wncluded
The death of Hel en Stout.
The October meeting will
friend il!ld member of Albany
Grunge, was reported .
he pre,·eded hy u ham dinner.

Lodge 323, Daughters of
America, met recently at the
lodge hall.
.
Esther Smith, president,
15:10-15.
read
John
Members recited the Pledge
to the American Flag and the
Lord's Prayer, &lt;\Pd answered
roll call with a show and tell .
Thelma White gave the
secretary's report and Opal
Hollon, treasurer pro tern,
gave the treasurer's report.
Smith, Mary Holter, Sandy
White and Goldie Frederick
wori door prizes.
Also attending were Mary
Jo Barringer. Erma Cleland.
Mary K. Holter, lnzy Newell
and Jean Welsh. Smith was
recognized as a guest.

O'Bieness now
operating
relocated family
practice clinic

. Ever,¥ 'rtlu.r$day in the Sentinel ...
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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallyaenllnel.com

Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-lntenm Publtsher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Edttor

NATIONAL

VIEW

Education
Diversifying Americas teachers
The Dmver Post. 011 dil·ersifyi11g America'! teachers:
Amenca's cl,lssJooms are g rO\\ tng mcre,p;;J ngly dl\erse. blll

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PageA4:

the teachers who he.td them .ue not
Only two out ol 10 te.tchers 111 US classrooms dre m.tle.
and JUSt one ol 10 are ethmc mtnont1es .•Kconhng to a recent
Na\Jonal Educ.ltJOn AssoCJ,JtJon stnVe) The tmd1ngs are troubhng on man} fronts
For much ot the 1960s. "70s and ·~os. men made up about
one-thtrd of all teachers In the 1990s. the1r numbers sltd to
about 21 percent, the NEA found
Part of that could be financ1al, as college graduates m the
1990s flocked to htgh-tech fields where paychecks were much
fatter Startmg salanes for teachers have JUmped over the past
few years - the NEA sun ey found the average contract
salary for teachers 10 200 I was $43.262 - but 11 can take
years to earn enough money to support a tamtly. some teachers lament. And college graduates who don' t want to wait too
long to own a home or a car seek other optwns
And whtle the number of male teachers has dropped, the
number of ethmc mmonty teachers has remamed ternbly low
and stagnant for the past three decades
Almost 40 percent ot Amenca ·s students are constdered ethmc mtnonues. accordtng to government figures. bur only I0
percent of the1r teachers are mmonty
Teachers serve as role models. \\ hether mtendtng to or not,
and tt's tmportant for mtnonty students to see teachers \\ho
look ltke them and share thetr cultural backgrounds.
UmversJtJes should CJe,tte and act1vely fund more programs
ltke Cumbres at the Umverstty of Northern Colorado It was
sraned by Htspantc alumnt concerned about poor graduation
rates among Latmo htgh schoolers and thetr even poorer col·
lege graduat1on rates
Cumbres recruits and tr,uns young teachers-to-be who are
commttted to workmg with Htspamc chtldren 111 pubhc
schools The 1de.1 IS 11 the number of teachers who .tre bthn·
gual or are certtlted to te.1ch English as a second language
tncreases. Colorado "s Htspamc school chtldren wtll have
more role models and teachers whose profictency m Spamsh
and Engltsh \\111 en.tble them to better meet thetr educatiOnal
needs, says Cumbres mtenm dtrector Lmda CarbaJal
Yet Pres Montoy.t. one ot Cumbres' founders. says UNC
has been slow to embrace the program. despue its successes
He 's confident, however, that UNC's new leaders understand
Cumbres' tmportance 111 recruJtmg, retatmng and graduatmg
mmonty teachers
Until more programs hke Cumbres are started. the number
of mtnont) teachers wtll remam low, ,dong wtth the chances
of success for many mmonty students

Bush~
Somethmg my brother said
to me long ago about the ebb
and !low of the war on
lslamtc terronsm not
bet ore 9/11. but well bel ore a
coalttton ol wtlhng Amencan
and Bnttsh forces hberated
Iraq from Saddam Hussein
- comes back to me from
time to tune To be prectse.
h1s comment comes back to
me not so much on the ··ebb
of om nuhrar) and pohtJc.ll
progre" "h1ch. w11h
patience ,md torbearunce
wtll pre' at! - as on the
·now"' ol the forces .mayed
dgams t that progress
The Umted St.nes w.u on
barbansm (for \\h.tt else .tre
terromts. hut b.Jrban.ms ').
wluch George W Bush "
lktenmned t&lt;' \\Ill " nut
only a mthtary and mtelhge nce etlort agamst desperate Ba"athtst remn.mts 111
lmq. nMd Jth.tdJSt terror cells
the world O\ er. ,md the hosttie n.tuon-states that support
them It " .tlso ,, great politi cal struggle agamst tntern.ttJOnal and domestic lorces trom the Untted N.tttuns.
where plans dre atloar to
expand the Security Counctl.
to the Democratic Party.
whtch tinally found tn the
preSident's $87 btllton budget for Iraq a federal spendmg program too nch tor us
blood - that act to restrmn
and ltmtt Amenca's executton of and, therefore, vtctory
in that war.
In some ways, th1s political
battle may be tnckter than
the mthtary campatgn It may
even be more costly tn terms
ot loss of hfe- tf. that ts. we

Tuesday, September 16, 2003

vision and the Democratic abyss
Diana

West

are defeated. or 1f we deteat
ourselves Whtch bnngs me
h.tck to what my brother smd
one cru mm y d.1y, n1.1 yhe
when the humamtart.Jns ol
Europe "ere gtvmg then-dtcrator Saddam Hussem somerhmg to cheer ,tbout by
marchtng bchmd h.mners
proclatmmg ·· BushHJtler"'
.tnd the !tke Or lll.IVbe 11 was
dunng one ot those pettodll
Democ:r.Jilc Jdbs .11 the preSIdent's ue&lt;hbliJt) tor
Jnst,ml t'".
Sen
Hlil.n'
Cltnton s short·ll\ed wh,it
clld the prestdent KilO\\ .1 t"lout
9/11 and \\hen dtd he KilO\\
tt T' campatgn Or nMybe hts
remark c,tme dunng ,1 d.1y tor
a week. or a month. or l\1 o
months) of poltttcal purgatory dt the Untted N.ttlOJls
Secunty Counctl Whene&gt;er
11 Wds ex.1ctly. the ptessure
was mountmg on the ptestdent to be "'moderate·· to !alter. that is. to pull back to a
supposedly safer. more senstble position Only he didn't
So my brother was moved to
note. somewhat dramnllcally
but stnctly on the level, "All
that stands between us and
the abyss ts George W
Bush ..
Tht s took me aback at ftrst.

the nollon that such a man.my man - could fend off
the fnghtenmg chaos of the
v01d, metaphonc or otherwtse Bur there's somethmg
about Mr Bush. somethmg
we had ltttle reason to expect
upon ele&lt;:tmg htm. that ts smgular. namely. hts see nungl y
unshakeable deterrnmallon to
do w!Mt tt t.tkes to defe,lt
glob.1! terronsm msptred by,,
21 si-L·entul) ph.td ag.unst the
West
People s,1y hts mettle
c·omes lrom sttong lmth A
doctor-tnend ol nunc wonders whether hts ts the stubborn steel of the succe"tu lly
reformed
.tlcoholtc
Wh.tte\ er Iuses Ius b.JCkbone. the t.JLI "· George W
Bush gels tl

F1eedom ''

umkr .l".lllft. .md II IS left Ill
the U mt~d St.Jtes anu liS lew
true .tlhc•s to do wh.1t It t.IKes
It' tkknd u
&lt;\JmJntstt.llllln ntftct.lis
snund .1 sunli.u note About
the J11L'Side nt "s ICljUCS! ilJI
$87 bli!Jon to hold .md
tebu tld !Jaq. natlon.tl seumtv
.td\ '"'' Condoleeza Rtce
tecentl y satJ . ""Yes. the pm·e
t.tg ts ve ry htgh."' But. she
.tdded
percepttvely.
··Freedom " pnceless '" And
m an .tppe.tr.mce before the
Senate Armed SerHces
Committee thts week. Atr
Force Gen. Rtchurd B
Myers. the chatrrnan of the
Jmnt Chtefs of Staff. engaged
111 what The Washmgton Post
descnbed as "'an unusual btt
of rhetoncul escalatwn"'
about what ts m stake. ··You
may have to go back to the
Ctvtl War to lind a ume when

the vt~ues we hold dear have
been threutened like they've
been threatened today:· Gen
Myers said '"We· ve got I\'
have the wtll to wm Thts ts a
battle of wtlls.""
Thts ts something the prestdenl understands Bush's
bJg· plcture perspectl\ e ts the
smgle most vttal asset he h.ls,
And It ts somethmg no
Democmtlc prestdenttal con,
tender hns, '" w.ts pamlull)
revealed by the l.nesl
Democr.tttc debate There.
George W Bush - not. s,ty.
lslamJ c terrori sm - \1 ·"
un.tmmously tdentJIIed as the
100! ol all evt! !J.1q It ll'.ts
largely .tgreed. was .t mJst.tke
only the U111ted N.tuon,
could cotrect - .lithougb
how th.tt could he . ~t&gt;e n th~
U N ·, spect.tntl,tr lewrd ot
.td lllllll sICIIII ~
p ,J k stin I.111
retugee t:dtnPs th.1t IU!Il out
genenlt Jon dfter genct.Hton
ol lliUitie l lllllldCd lt'IIOIISh.

no one expl.unc•d Not th.1t
mutder-nHnded tenllllsts ,ue,
,1 problem As Democt atl~
trontrunnet Ho\\,trd Dc,m
put tt. ··we need to be.u
George Bush so \1 e c.tn h.tve
pe.tce 111 the Middle E.tst ·· :
Bush-obsessed, Democt at.;
don't see .mythmg beymlll
the
preSJdent
Bush·
obsessed&lt; they ha\e no
tnk!Jng as Ill wh,Jt may ltC
ahe.td wtthout hun. the fear·
ful chaos of .t prematurely
ended war on tenonsm And
that may be what 1s most
fnghtemng of all
(Duma West is a coltmti/IST
{01 The Wmhmgton 1ime1
She can be contaued vw
duma11 e11® 1 en: ml.lleT)

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aLiVe!

~Fe
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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
"be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be Jigned and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
ve published. Letters should be in good taste,
pddressing issue.\, not penonalitie~.
· The opinions eipre55~d in the column pejow
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.
•

Margaret
N
(Norris)
Gloeckner, 86, ot East Letart.
Ohio, went home to be with
the Lord at II : 19 a m
Monday. Sept. 15. 2003, in the
Rocksprtngs Rehabthtallon
Center .
Pomeroy
She was
born Au~
31,1917,111
East Letart
to Clyde
and
Ada
( Rtpley)
Norns. She
graduated
f r 0 m
Gloeckner
Racme Htgh
School m 1937. She married
Erwtn B. Gloeckner March 7,
1942. tn Gallipohs. Ohio, at
Grace Untted Methodtst
Church by the Rev W Scott
Westermen She was a homemaker
In addtUon to her parents.
she was preceded tn death by
her ststers. Goldie Mane

Sylvanta Defense Plant 111
Pomt Pleasant
Margaret was conce1 ned
wtth school issues throughout
her hie Margaret was nc11ve
in the Letart F.tl!s and
Southern PTA She was
mstrumental m ratsing funds
for the kttchen addtt ton to the
Letart Falls Elementary .md
mstttutmg the lunch program
tn the mid- 1950s before government programs In later
years, she was a volunteer at
the elementary school tutoring students 111 readmg
She was a member ot the
Umted Brethren Church of
Letart F,tlls and attended the
Letart Untted Methodtst
Church and the Racme
Pentecostal Assembly
Funeral servtces wtll be m
I p.m. Thursday, Sept IR,
2003, wtth the Rev Btll
Hoback offictuttng. Bunal
wtl! follow tn the Letart F.tlls
Cemetery
Vtsltatton wtll be trom 6-8
p.m Wednesday. Sept. 17 .
2003, at Cremeens Funeral
Home m Racme

Music le end Johnny Cash
mourne at private funeral
HENDERSONVILLE.
Tenn (AP) - American
mustc legend Johnny Cash
was remembered at his funeral as a man who kept his dtgmty wht!e struggling with
demons, and who made tt a
habit to help others
"He was so modest ,md humble, and so wilhng to hve wtth
his pam and not make anybody
else pay tor tt," satd daughter
Rosanne Cash dunng the 2 112hour servtce Monday
The pnvate event at Ftrst
Baptist Church will be followed by a public memorial
sttll bem~ planned. A servtce
for Cash s wtfe June Carter
Cash was held at the same
church after her death m May.
Cash, 71, died Friday of
respiratory failure caused by
comphcattons from dtabetes.
His death followed years of
precarious health.
More than I ,000 mourners
listened to tributes from
Rosanne
Cash,
Kris
Kristofferson,
preacher
Frankhn Graham, former Vice
President AI Gore, and other
famtly members and friends
Hams and
Emmy!ou
Shery I Crow performed two

songs. ;The Old Rugged
Cross"' and Bob Dylan's
"'Every Gram ot Sand ..
"Cowboy" Jack Clement. an
engmeer and producer who had
been friends wtth Cash since
the 1950s, read a poem about
Cash that satd m part "'It takes
a good tnatl tO take SUL"CeSS,
and not mtsplace hts soul "
Cash's career stretched
trom rockabtlly htts hke "Cry.
Cry. Cry'" and "Get Rhythm"'
m the 1950s to his renditions
of rock son~s in recent years
like "Hurt,' by Ntne Inch
Na1ls. In between, he was one
of country music's btggest
stars, scoring dozens of htts
hke "A Boy Named Sue,"
"Man m Black" and "It Am' t
Me Babe," a duet w1th Carter
Cash on a Dylan song .
"There was somethmg
about Johnny Cash that went
beyond the mus1c," Gore
said. "There were hundreds
of milhons all over the world
who felt a connection with
Johnny Cash . . . He felt
deeply for people, those who
didn't have jobs or were suffenng many way."
Cash, known as "The Man
m Black" for hts preferred

atttre, satd m a htt song th.tt
he wore the color 1n honor of
the poor and oppressed.
Famous and not-so-famous
members of the Cash .md
Carter clans wept. wuh Cash·,
body set in a bhck collin at
the front of the churc:.
MaJlY mustcwns who tmed
thetr start to Cush attended,
the
Statler
mcludmg
Brothers. Larry Gathn and
the Oak Rtdge Boys. Also
paying their respects were
Vmce Gill, Hank Wtlliams
Jr, Travis Tritt, Dwtght
Yoakam, George Jones,
Rtcky Skaggs, Ronme Dunn
and actress Jane Seymour.
As the servtce came to end,
country
stnger
Gathn
addressed hts own son, Joshua
Cash Gathn, from the pulpit:
"Son, this man fed your mama
and me when we couldn't
afford food. He paid rent for us
when we couldn't pay rent."
After the death of Carter
Cash, Cash spent most of his
tune recording, leavmg more
than 30 songs yet to be released.
He had planned to attend the
MTV Video Mustc Awards
shortly before his death, but
couldn't because of illness

East Coast residents bracing·
for arrival of Hurricane Isabel
Unveiling the Patriot Act

IJNFORTUNATELY,

Gloeckner

Story, Mtldred LeGoullon,
Mary Ellen Kelly: and brother. Rtchard Clyde Norris
Along wtth her husband,
Erwm, she ts survived by
son, Davtd E (Sally)
Gloeckner, daughter. Joyce
Arlene (Larry) Badgley ,
grandchildren.
Dante!
(Nitnoy) Badgley, Margaret
Chnstme Badgley, Andrew
(Amber) Badgley. Carne Ann
Wood. Davtd E. Gloeckner
II; great grandchildren, Cat
Maynard, Madalyn Wood,
Ntcholas and Juha Badgley;
(Lilla)
brother,
Alonzo
Noms, sister. Elste Davis,
spectal ntece and nephew,
Rosalie Dawn Story and
Clarence Edward Moran,
other meces and nephews
Pnor to marnage. Margaret
was a governess for a famtly
m Balttmore, Md Once she
marned, she traveled extensively to meet Erwm at vanous posts dunng World War
II while he was in the Navy.
She has been to Norfolk.
Washmgton, DC , Mtamt
and other ports She also
worked dunng the war m the

On hts '"vtctory" tour, John
Ashcroft - exr,Iatmng the
"mtsmformatton ' spread by
cnttcs of the USA Patnot Act
- appeared only before law
enforcement audtences He
avoided the 158 towns and
cities m 28 states that have
passed deep!~ concerned resolutions cla11111ng constJIU IIOna! vJo!attons m the act
AI several stops 111 hts lessthan-dauntless defense of hts
prized legtslatton. Ashcroft
has barred the pnnt press
from press conferences.
speakmg only to teleHsion
reporters Is he afraid of us'
Why?
Ashcroft has supporters m
the med1a, as evtdenced 111 an
Aug 26 Wushmgton Ttmes
ed llonal (on whose op-ed
page I am g1ven space every
Monday, often to decode the
revJ stons of the Btll ol Rtghts
m the Patriot Act that were
rushed through Congress
wtthout pubhc heanngs)
The ed ttonal ("' Hype.
Hy stena and the P.11not
Act") focuses on Sect Jon 215
ol the Act, whtch hds
alarmed !tbranans and many
who use the hbranes It
.tut hon zes the FBI to get a
ltst of book borrowers that
mtght mdtcate any ttes toterrorist actt Vlltes Readers
under susptcton are not told
they've been put 111 FB l files,
and the law lorbtds the
ilbranan s to tell anyone .
mcludmg the press, ol the
FBI's vtstt ~
But The Washmgton Ttmes
editonal assures us that the
FBI has to face many hurdles

Nat
Hentof

cou ld demand from the publtc
hbrary the names of all ol
those who had borrowed
books on " part1cular subject
- for ex.t mple. the construction .md vul nerabtltttes ot
electnctty power gnds The
FB l can potenttally scoop up
cmzens who h.tvc n't even the
Jcmotest connectton to ten·orJSI11

before they can go to the
secret Fore1gn lntelhgence
Survet!lance Court (.tlso
called FISA cou1t) - where
only gove1 mnent entlltes
may appears And there the
government.
says
The
Washtngton Tunes, m order
to mvestlgate an Amenc.m
ctttzen under the Forc1gn
lntelhgence Survetllance Act
( FISA) '·must show lh.tt he "
knowmgly engaged 111 te1rot ISm nr espmnage '
In tact, the gove rnment
only has Ill present the FISA
court w1th the attorney generul's ccrlllt c.tttOn that the
sea rch ol the !tbr.try"s
records turthers ''.m mv~stt ­
~a tJon to protect ag .t~nst
tnternattonal lenonsm or
tntelilgence
clandesttnc
acttvtties" 13ut thJS cm1rt IMs
no .JUthon ty to quest1on tl1e
bas" tor the allot ney ~encr­
al 's ceri Jit c.tt Jon Wtthout
thJS essential uuthonty. 11
cannot reJect the certtftc.ltlon
as unfounded So where"s the
JUdtcialtcview I
Thts st.md.trd "much lnwcr
th.m the Fow1h Amendment's
prob,Jble-c.tuse requtremenl
lor .t search Moreover. on the
basts of a hazy up. the FBI

/

• .
I

In us cdttona l. The
W,tshmgton Ttmes pomts out
that the FISA cowl st&lt;~ndaJds
are

more

res tncllve thdn

gr.md tllfY subpoenas lor
Jecmds Those ··me tssucd
Without prtOI JUdtct,li tevteW
01 app10val ·· Those arc
dd mtntstr,ltJ VC subpoen.ls .
but when tssued by gr.md
JUnes. they .tre hm1led tn
Cfl ll111MI lllVCSIJgattons , .ue
public .•md .u e .thout ,, JMrttLui.Jr CdSC ,llld p.tlllCUJ,ll
people Sectwn 21'i ol the
P.Jtllot Act . howcve1 . h.ts no
such IJmJtatums. smce the
JUdtcJal supcrvtsJon by the
FISA court ts cssentt.tlly perlunctory
Regardmg the unsuperVIsed admimstrdiJVC subpoenas that .tre so cotwen1ent lor
government
\ searchers,
Ashcroft dunng ~'te l eVISIOn

hets ol Cong1ess s"y tiMl thJS
tot al Jemov.JI ol JUdte~al
rev1 ew ts g01ng too tar''
As lor the huge gag tule
1mposed on ltbr.tt J&lt;ltls. The
Washmgton Tunes empha•
stzes that secrecy " ··umquely tmpottant 111 antHenonsm
lllVe Sitg,IIIOils ..
But when such llll tnvestt-.
gdtlon t:s h.1sed on mechlllll cal. tUdJCt.ll supClVISIOil. ,md
" conducted on unsubstantiated suspt~Jons. the rcsultmg
nnpervmus secre~y Cl cates
e\c n more apprehenston
,unong Amencans who u'e
publtc hh1.Jnes il1.1t they sunpl y be~.1use of the hook~
they 1c.td - m.Jy he embedded 111 the records ul the FBI
It"s no "onder th.tl .unong
the most v 1gorous cntu:s ot

Asht:rolt"s .nlklll 1educttons
ol tnd JvJdu.tl hhel!tes .nc
such conse1 v.ttl\e hbert.tn.m
org,ull z.J ttons .ts the Free
Co ngress Found.JtJon. the
Amencdn

Cnn~erv.1t1ve

Umon . •md the E.tg le Forum
Actu.tlly, tile .tllotney gener.JI. unwJttJngly. h.ts been
educ,Jttng .t w1de spectrum ol
Amenc.tns on how lundamental our constJtutlonal ltbertles arc to our freedom that
1ntet v1ew on '"Fox. News we arc ltghttng to sec ure
Su nd.ty."" cited a pn&gt;VtSJon m The ACLU m.ty yet g1ve hun
Ius new Justtce Dep.trtment a Ltbcny Med.11
··vtctory Act'" lcgtslatlon th,tt
(Nut Ht' !llo/f 11 11 l/llllontil wou ld ,lllow prosecutors to (, 1eno11'11ed authm "' 011 rh~
use dChntlllstr.tltve subpoen.ts F1n1 Amendment t!J)d l)w 11111
111 letTollsm c.tscs The sep.l- 11/ Righi' 1111(/ tll llil l ll· oj 1&lt;'1"·
r.ttlpn ol powers, v1tal to our nal hook\ mdudmg h11 t 111 constJtttttlliJ.ll democ1acy. JS /e!ll ll "ol k, The 1¥tu 011 tlw
aJre.tdy mcreasm~ly we.tk- Bill oj Rtght1 1111d tl1e
ened by lhts admnustratJon. Gallrt) nn~
RtJ\tHwu (~
but Will the mkCillllg 111Cill· (Snm-s.u_,_""' P"' " 200 l)

-.

MANTEO, N.C (AP) - As work Tuesday or to end thetr
Hurricane Isabel's 120-mph · day after servtng lunch.
winds swtrled toward his
All 921 restdents of
coastal home, all Charles Ocracoke Island, south of
Qutdley could do was hope Manteo along the state's vulthat lruldfull, expected later thts 11erable Outer Banks, were
ordered to begm evacuatmg
week, would be uneventful
"'I've seen storms come and Monday afternoon A ltne
go and I've always been quickly formed at the ferry
thankful to God I've never dock .
In other tslands on the
been hurt,"' satd QUJdley, 59
Wht!e restdents up and outer banks, residents started
down the East Coast serum- boardmg wmdows, movmg
bled to ready themselves and thetr vessels mland and
volunt.Jry evacuations were checkmg up on thetr genera·
tssued. Qutd!ey. his wife and tors
son, Charles Jr., planned to
Kay Burros and Anne
watt out the storm m thetr Troutman decided it was ttme
mobtle home because a motel to check the1r 5,000-watt
room on the mamland was home ~enerator at Surf Ctty
JUSt too expenstve.
'"We ve had tl about 3
"It doesn't look good, but years. but haven' t cranked tt
not everybody can afford to up tn a whtle. It's been so
leave," QUJdley said Monday. long, we have to read the
Forecasters stud Isabel mstructions," Burros satd
could hit anywhere from
Isabel weakened Monday
North Carolina to New Jersey to a Category 3 storm, the
·Thursday or early Fnday
Natwnal Hurncane Center
Mtlttary installations were satd At II p.m EDT
also takmg precauttons.
Monday. Isabel's fastest susIn Vtrgmta, 40 shtps based tamed wind had slowed to
m the Nortolk area were near 120 mph, down from
ordered to head to sea about 125 mph at 5 p m On
Tuesday to avotd bemg bat- Sunday, Isabel's top wind htt
tered agamst piers by htgh 160 mph, makmg it a
wtnds Also Tuesday, the Air Category 5 storm
The storm was movmg
Force planned to fly about 60
planes from Langley Atr northwest at around 7 mph
Force Base tn Hampton to and was about 710 miles
Grissom Air Force Base tn south-southeast of Cape
the
Nat tonal
Indtana, officta!s said.
Hatteras,
About 74 F- 15E Strike Hurrtcane Center m Mtamt
Eagles at Seymour Johnson repo!"led.
Atr Force Base tn Goldsboro,
Enc Blake. a mereorologtst
N C., were expected to leuve w1th the center, said people
Tuesday for Tinker AFB tn on the East Coast should not
Oklahoma Ctty, the Atr Force let thetr guard down even tf
satd
the storm ts weakemng
School systems along the . '"Hut:n~anes are notonous
North Caroltna 's barner lor gatntng strength as they
tslands etther planned for cross the Gulfstream."' he
only teachers to report to satd "Even tf tt weakens to a

The Datly Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
MargaretN.

Moderately Confused
I 5PENT IT ALL ON

Tuesday, September 16, 2003

Category 2 hurrtcanc. there's
sllll a lot of potenti.ll for danger. People need to be prepared'"
At Taylor's Do-lt Center
hardware store 111 Norfolk.
Vu ,
asSistant
manager
George Wolt satd he was
swamped wtth customers .Js
soon as the doors opened at 8
a m , and !.trge battenes and
flashltghts were sold out
'"You would have thought
we were gtvtng stutt away,''
Wolt satd "I JUSt sold my l.tst
30 sheets of plywood."'
Virgtnia Gov Mark R
Warner declared .1 state ol
emergency, puttmg NatiOnal
Guardsmen , state poltce and
transportation crews on full
alert.
Up the coast m Do vet, Del ,
B J. Whittaker snapped up 10
sheets of plywood .11 a
Lowe 's home tmprovement
store. '"I can't do anythtng tf
the roof blows off. but I can
keep my windows trom geltmg broken," he smd.
Isabel is the ftrst maJor hurricane to threaten the mJdAtlanttc smce Floyd wteaked
havoc on the East Coast 111
September llJ9lJ, leadmg to
56 deaths.
a
storm
Meanwhtle,
swirling over the Pactftc
Ocean south of Mextco 's
Baja Caltfornia penmsula
reached hurricane strength
Monday
afternoon, the
NM,tonal Hurncane Center 111
Miarm reported.
/
Hurncane Lmda's maxt·
mum
sustained
wmds
reached 75 mph, w1th the
storm centered 2lJO mt!cs
southwest ol the southern _t1p
of BaJa Cahtornta. The humcane was movmg northwest
at 12 mph

Federal court panel orders California
recall balloting put off until March
SAN FRANCISCO (APl
Three feder,tl judges
thre\\ &lt;1 monkey \\relll'h 111
Cahfnrma ·, guheJJI.IItll t,JI
recall ttmet.th!e , pnstponm~
next month's ballot ,md le.tvmg open the posstbtltty th,u ,1
vote could be more than t" c
months away
"I thought I was runmng .1
spnnt, and II looks hk.e I m.ty
have to run a marathon."' s,ud
Steve Smuh. an .tdv~&gt;er to
Gov Gmy D,Jvts. the t.trget
of the recall ··A nd I don ' t
even hke runmng thut much ..
A three-judge panel ol the
9th U.S Ctrcutt Court ol
Appeals ruled Mnnd.Jy that
C.thfornm "s ·pl.mned use ot
punch-c,ud h,tllots - the
same ktnd used 111 the contested 2000 prestdemml clcl"non - would dtsentr,mchtsc
thousands of Cahlornt.Jns
"'The mherent detects m the
system are such th.Jt .tpprox 1m.Jtely 40.000 voters who
tr.tvel lo the rolls .md c.lst
thctr b.tllot wtl not have thetr
vote l'ounted at all,"" the
JUdges wrme.
The court dtd not set .1new
date lor the recall. but b,ICked
a suggestl(&gt;n trnm the
Amencan Cl\ d LJbcJtll's
Umon th.tl b.tllntmg be held
dunng the M,uch 2 prestdenttal pnmary
One ot the groups behmd
the effort to y.mk D.tvts Irom
office planned to appe.J! to
the U S. Supreme Court to
keep the rec,tll date Oct 7
The cJrcutt court's dectston
was st.1yed lor a week to
allow tor such uppea!s
'Thts rec.tll h.ts been ltke u
roller l"Oaster There are mmc
surprises th.m ynu c.m posst·
bly tmagtne,'" D.JvJS s.11d
"'I'll conlmue to make my
c.tse to the people tll.lt .t
recall ts not good tor them '"
Independent
c,mdtd,tte
Ananna Huffmgton prmsed
the dectslon, calhng voter
dtsenfranchisement "'the d1rty
httle secret of Amencan pohttcs." Repubhcan state Sen
Tom McC!mtock culled tt an
"outrageous dectston"' by a
court that ts the "laughing·

stnc k·· ul the lcder.J! JUdJLI.Il)
be1..~lllse

11

1s lht!' nlltllln·~

most -reversed
federal
.tppeals ~ourt
Lt Gov Cru z Busranumte.
the nnly m.ttor Democrat
' ytng to sm;ceed Davts tl he
ts tecalled . .tnd Republtl.llt
c.tndidale
Arnold
Schwarzenegge1 pr01msed to
l'nnttnue l:ampmgmng ,,, the
courts del"tde when to hold
the election
Scan W,tlsh . .t spokesman
lor Schw,lrzenegget. s,ud the
dec:• ston thre.ttened to tob
voters who h.1d SJgned recall
petl!tons ··w,th th" rulmg.
)Oll rn.;k Lhsenlr~u}dli"'lllg
voters Do~:s tlus serve the
tnterests ol democral"Y 01 the
gener.tl publtc ,..
The
p.mel
repe.ttedly
referred to Bush v Gore the ~.1se th.tt de.:tded the 2t)()()
preSJdentJ.tl elect1un - .ts 1ts
ptlllldt} ldtHlJMII!' In tlldt r,lst\
the Suptemc Comt slopped
Flonda"s recount on the
gtounds thm ull votes \l~tc
not bt•mg tredted equ,tlly
The .tppc.tls wutt un.tntmously ruled tt ts un.tlcept.thle tl1.1t "x C.thlm 111.1 umnt tes would he usmg outd.Jted
pun~ h-c,u d h.tlluts
Those
lounucs ~u~ alreudy under
court ot"Cicr to repla&lt;:e punc·h
c.ttds wllh more modetn sys·
tems such .ts touc·h-screen
ballots h~ the M.1rch pnm.try
The SIX counties mcludc
the st.ttc's most populous.
Los Angeles, '" well as
S.tcramento .tnd San Otego
counties Altogether they
t:Ot\t:uned 44 percent ol
Culttorma's tegt&lt;tcrcd voters
dunng the 2000 elecllon
D,l\ ts would plllh,thly benefit the most ltum the JU!tng
11 the eleLtwn we1e held 111
M,ut:h, bec.tlJSt' the pt esJdcntt.tl pmmu y ts expel·tcd tu
bnng .1 !.uge number ol
Demomtts to the polls It
could .tlso gtve Davts more
tune to address the stale's
budget cnsts
Observers say a potential
postponement could have the
sharpest
unpact
on
McChntock, who has shown

momentum m the polls tn
1ec·ent weeks M•·C!tntock
lhts 1,used mu.:h less money
tlt.m the other maJOr candtllates ,md would ltkely lose
the lugh level of medt.t covcrdgc that h." largel y buoyed
hts ,·,mdJd,JC)'
"'The pohttc.tl tmpa~l ot the
lllimg ts the !.tw of unmtendcd nmsequeuces,'" sutd
Rcpuhltc.tn athtlyst Allun
Hottenhlum "' It could mund.tte opemng up the lihng
proLe" .tg,nn, so we'll huve
more c,mdtdates People who
dropped out could drop back
111 Tom Ml·Cimtock would
he scnously unpucted ..
D,lvts planned to c·onttnue
hJs tou1 Tuesd.ty With nation,J! Demol"tats, l\lmputgnmg
\\ tth plestdenttal candidate
Sen Bob Gr.th.tm of Florid.t
,md the Re' Jesse J,tckson
Schwatteneggcr
and
McChnttK"K were to seek the
hl esSi n ~
ol
lellnw
Rcpullhc·,m Pctc1 Uebcrroth,
who droppt'd mH of the runmng l.tst week
Th~
C.l hllHnJ.t olltcml
JcsponsJhlc !01 electtons.
Scctel,try ol St.tte Kevm
Shcllcv. told cuunty electtnn
nlltu.tls to plep.trc lor the
Oct 7 elec·uon and s,ud he
\\lHtld .umounce Tue,(l.ty
\\ hether he would ask the
enure uppeals court to tevtew
the tuhng or .tppe.tl dtrectly
to the Supreme Court
Voters re.tcted wtth mtxed
leeltngs :tbour the dec1sion
··1 don't hke thmgs when
they are rushed It's udtCulous. the wtde 11eld ol .:andtd.lte s. the shot t elect ton,..
s,ud Van,t Meyd.tg, 50, ol
Whllttt'r ··M,Iybe postpontng
""good thmg to gtvc people
lillie tn refleli on wh,Jt 's
gomg on
St:ntt Fox, 47, ot San
Dtego, w.ts tnsulted "'I ihtnk
the 9th C1rcutt Court ol·
Appe.tls has JUst told us that
the last 25 ye&lt;~rs of elections
are madequate to support the
election of any cundtdates,"
he said.

..

Changing times mean new roles
for reserves; part-time soldiers
make up half of U.S. military
NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y
(AP) -1\vo months after the
Sept
II attacks, Tun
Szymanskt left hts JOb as "
suburban Buffalo pohce ot1tcer to help ftght the war on
terror
Nearly two years later. the
Cheektowaga pohce sttll JUggle to cover the A11 Force
reservtst's shtfts
In August, Tech Sgt Don
Millet enjoyed .1 welcome
home parade .1lter &lt;1 tour·
month deplnymetll 111 !r.u.J
wtth the 914ih Auhlt Wmg
Two days later. the sell employed comr.1cror lc.uncd
he was leavmg &lt;tg.un
Mtller recalled the .lppe.tlmg "'one weekend .1 month
two weeks 111 the summe1"'
commitment the reserves
touted when he bec,tme :1 clt'zen soldier 1!1 1988
··1 JUst told my wtle th,tt
they ch,mged 1h.1t now A
weekend a month .tnd two
weeks 111 the summer JS how
much wc'te home,'' the
Vtetnam veter.m Joked "' he
prep.tred agam to shtp out
F01 the 174,401 JeseJVtsls
.md N.JtJOIMI Gu.ml memhets
on acttve duty as ol Sept 10,
the tde.t ot bemg ll pdl Hlll\C
soldter no longer m.nches
with re,tlity. Whtle past
reserviSts
could
serve
decades-long c.treer~ Without
ever bemg lllltvatcll, toduy 's
troops lllce lengthy. often dtl ftcult and d.mgerous duty
"'We 're not weekend w.trnors,'" Sdtd Lt Col Ma1 k
Murph y, who ,J!so redeployed w1th the 914th on
Aug. 2~. about two months
alter arriving home from a
four-month deployment.
The war 111 Iraq and broad·
er war on terror has thrust a
heavy burden on the nation's
parHtme soldters, who make
up about half u1 the U S nul ·
itary. and they don't beat u
alone. There are famtltes and
ctvtlian employers left to fdl
unexpected gaps at home
Smce the Sept II &lt;~IWLks ,
llbout 300,(}()() ol the 1.2 nul ·
!ton members ol the N.ttmnal
Guard .md reserve' h.tvc

been called on for a host of
duues from cleanmg up the
World Trade Center stte and
patrolltn~ atrports at home to
distnbutmg food to lraqt
ctvtltans, guarding government detamees 111 Cub.1 and
putrolhng 111 Bughd.td ,md
other world hot spots.
It has not ,liwdys gone
smoothly An August 1eport
by the GcneJdl Anuuntmg
Olltcc hl,uncd mcompatlble
compute! system s lor the
Pent.tgon's lnstng tr.tck nl
snml! resc1v 1sls .md keep1ng
them on ,tc!Jve duty lnnget
than HUthOIIZCd
Then ~.nne word l.tst week
lrom the Atmy lh,lt troops
wuld be 111 h.1q .t lull 12
months. to the sut puse ol
some who had thought the
clock siMted t1ckmg on one·
yem tours once they 1C.1ched
moblitz.tllon st.tttons t11 the
Unlled St.ttes The Arm) sutd
the poltcy. though perhaps
misunderstood, ts not new
But the h eyuent .md long
deployments .tre ultunately
not stoppmg rcservtsls trom
JOtlllllg, Ddensc Dep.trlment
numbers thrtlllgh the end ol
June mdtc.tlc The NdttmMI
Gu&lt;~rd ts on target to meet
recnutlng goals for the f.tscal
yeat endtn g Sept
30.
spokesmau Mm k Allen sa1d
The same ts true lor Armv
Reserves and othe1 hl.tllchc·,
of the reserves
Til.tt \ tli1'- good news The
bad news" CllllCeJn th.tt t.uge
numhers ot curre nt Jese tvlSts

could drop out of the mtlitary
the first chance they get
In the works are pohctes to
gtve reservtsts a better tdea of
how often and how long
the} 'II
be
deployed,
Strmmal! smd Officials also
.tre workmg on a restructurmg to shtft the burden trom
overused umls
Wh1le such changes should
help tetentton. the nature of
the mtsSJon will also mtluencc the numbet s, satd nuhl:uy unulyst Marcus Corbtn
Szymanskt s,ud hts twoyedr acttvallon - mcludtng
n1ne months Ill S.JUdJ ArabJU
- cemented Ius denston to
tetlre from the resetves when
he htts hts 20-ye.u .umtvers,try Ill a ye.u.
'"I'm tust not w1l hng to leave
my JOb ,md t,umly 101 two
ye.1rs .1g.un."' Szymanskt satd

OFFICE OPENS

6:30 PM MON - FRI.
&amp; 12.30 PM SAT · SUN
FREDDY VS JASON (R,

MEXICO (R)
7 00 &amp; 9•00

1:00 7 00 &amp; 9•20

MEN (P013,

7·00 . 9:20
FREAKY FRIDAY (PO)
7:000NLY

CHILD STAR (P013,

7:00 .. 9:10
MATINEES 1:00 I 3:10

�PageA6

STATE. LOCAL
Flood damage to national
park at least $4 million

The Daily Sentinel

Land transfers
Transfers posted

I

Meigs
POMERO.Y
County Recorder Judy King
reponed the following transrers in real estate:
Renee Stone to Beneifkal
Ohio.
Inc ..
Benefi.:ial
Mortgage Co. of Ohio, sheriff 's deed. Village of
Middleport.
Virginia Pullins. Olga
Virginia Pullins. to Roger
Pullins. deed, Chester.
Marty L Morarity, Debra
L.. Moranty. _to Dante N.
Ohven,_ ~and• . M. Ohven .
deed, Vtllage of Syracus~.
Orland Staats, F. Dtana
Staat~, to Gary Lee Cooper.
Jesstca Renee Cooper. deed,
Lebanon.
.
Randall H. Adkms, Mary
L. Adkms, to Becky K.
Adkms, deed, S~tton. .
Chen A. Smnh, Odts S.
Smith. to Y. Le_roy Sauters,
Joyc~ Sauters. nght of way.
Bedford.
.
James A. Hew !II, Lena M.
Hewttt. to Roger W. Barnett,
deed, Salem.
Tri County Asphalt to
Metgs County Dtstnct Pubhc
Library, ..Lou
Morgan
Butiders, afttdavn for clatm.
NatiOnal Ctty Bank to
Donald L. Freed, ri ght of
way.
Nathan K. Arnold to
Nathan K. Arnold. Mary A.
Grim, deed. Ordllge.
Susan M. Baum to Ste~en
H. Dunfee, Teresa R. Dunfee,
deed, Sahsbury.
James W. Hayman, Jean L.
Hayman.
to
Dennis
Anderson,
Dorothy
E.
Anderson, deed, Lebanon.
Luther L. Lovejoy, Drema
Lovejoy, to Ellen J. Garling.
deed, S~lem.
.
Mmme L. Wilcoxen,
Donald Powell, Donald E.
Powell, to Chad Smeeks,
Chnstma Smeeks, deed,
Olive.
Mary E. Newell to Larry P.
Donner, deed, ~hester.
,
Jeffrey A. Gmther, Cynthta
L. Ginther, to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way,
Lebanon.
Shirley Bumgardner Trust
to
David
Bumgardner.
Shirley Bumgardner, affidavit.
David Bumgardner Trust to
David Bumgardner,. Shirley
Bumgardner. affidavtt.
David Bumgardner Trust,
Shirley Bumgardner Trust,
David Bumgardner, Shirley
Bumgardner, to Jack E.
Fruth, Frances R. Fruth, Don
G. Pullin, Connie Pullin ,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Dorothy M. Vance to Jack
Vance, Randy Butcher, Robin
Butcher, deed, Scipio.
C. Thomas Hamm, Linda
Hamm, to Christopher T.
Hamm, Anita G. Hamm,
deed, Sutton.
Lawrence Hayman, Jennie
Hayman, to Lynette White,
Jack Myers, deed, Lebanon.
Mark McCoy, Rebecca
McCoy. Eldon McCoy.
Loretta McCoy, to Howard
W. Brewer, Jr., Carolyn S.
Brewer, deed, Salisbury.
Joshua R. Bright to Rosalee
Harrison, deed.
Enoch Judson Staats, Mary
Jane Staats. to James Alan
Pickens, deed, Sutton.
Donald F. Johnson, Shirley
A. Johnson, to Tuppers
Plains-Chester
Water
District, right of way, Sutton.
Jack L. Duffy to TP-CWD,
right of way, Sutton.
Eldon McCoy, Loretta
McCoy,
Mark
McCoy.
Rebecca P. McCoy. to Jack
Hess , Betty , Hess, deed,
Salisbury.
• . J.

Rio G111nde soccer wlna, Page 82
Reds, Indians loae, Page 86

TUesday, September 16, 2003

Hagarty and Mitcheli, .Ltd.,
to Phillip Simms, Sr.,
Roberta
Simms,
deed,
Columbia.
Phillip Simms. Sr.. Roberta
Simms. to Gary L. Hoffman.
deed, Columbia.
Nelli.: M. Brown to
Thomas Brown. Frederick
Brown. deed. Salisbury.
E.S . Villanueva, Lydia
Villanueva. to Donald E.
Vaughan.
Pamela
L.
Vaughan. deed, Village of
Pomerov.
Clark· D. Baker, Bonnie J.
Baker to David Bumgardner
. Trust. Shirley Bugardner
Trust. deed, Village of
Middleport.
Margaret Clark Menzie~ to
William Edmund Menztes.
deed.
Wilbur A. Dean. deceased,
to Nora L. Dean Eiselstein,
Harlis Dean, Edna R. Dean.
Genevieve A. Dean. affidavit.
Orange.
Nora L. Dean Eiselstein 10
Dean Eisel. Joe Eisel, John
Eisel. aftidavit, .Orange.
John Eisel , Clara Eisel, to
Kirk D. Chevalier. deed.
Orange.
·
Dean Eisel. deceased. to
Jacob Eisel, Dorothy Hoy.
affidavit, Orange.
Jacob Eisel, Peggv Eisel.
Peter Hoy, Doroth"y Hoy.
Peter N. Hoy, to Kirk D.
Chevalier, deed, Orange.
Joe Eisel deceased to Joe
Eisel, Da~id Eisel,' Mary
Eisel McCloud, affidavit ,
Orange.
Joe Eisel. David Eisel.
Tamera Eisel. to Kirk D.
Chevalier, deed, Orange.
Mary Eisel McCloud,
deceased, to Beth Megan
McCloud
Scott Tanner
McCloud.' affidavit, Orange.
Beth Megan McCloud,
Scott Tanner McCloud, to
Kirk D. Chevalier, deed,
Orange.
Harlis Dean, deceased, to
Woodrow L. Dean, Lloyd E.
Dean, Bob L. Dean, Clarence
Dean, Earl H. Dean, Betty L.
Dean Chevalier, affidavit,
Orange.
Woodrow
L.
Dean.
Marabel Dean, Bob L. Dean,
Elaine Dean. Lloyd E. Dean,
to Kirk D. Chevalier, deed,
Orange.
Betty L Dean Chevalier to
Kirk D. Chevalier. deed,
Omnge.
Clarence Dean, deceased,
to Jacque Galdas, affidavit,
Orange.
Jacque
Galdas.
Sam
Galdas, to Kirk D. Chevalier,
deed, Orange.
Earl H. Dean, deceased, to
Jennifer Machir, ' '-Melanie
Stethem, Denise Payne, aftidavit, Orange.
Jennifer Machir. Dale
Machir, Melanie Stethem,
Terry Stethem, Denise Payne.
John L. Payne, to Kirk D.
Chevalier, deed, Orange.
Kenneth S. Brown to
Roben W. Brown, Barbara J.
Smith, deed. Village of
Pomeroy.
Heather N. Savoy, Shaun
M. Savoy, to Larry H. Farley.
Louise Farley, deed, Chester.
Nancy Holsinger to Gary
B.
Evans.
Debra
K.
.Meadows. deed. Letart.
Stephen Q. Arnold, Valarie
A. Arnold, to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way.
Orange.
Hubert W. Johnson Ill ,
Krista M. Johnson. to
Columbus Southern Power.
right of way, Orange .
Warren
VanMeter,
Charlotte Van Meter, to
Columbus Southern Power.
right of way, Orange.
Howard Wess. Jody L.
Howard,
to
Columbus

Southern Power. right of way.
Scipio.
First Union National Bank
to Citifinancial MortgagtJ,
affidavit of missing assignment.
Royal Oak Resort Club.
Inc. to Horace Karr. agreement.
Bruner Land Co. to Diane
Rector, deed. Salem.
Craig T. Chapman to Craig
T. Chapman, Ralph E.
Hamilton. Jr.. deed. Village
of Pomeroy.
Tamara L. Mash to Robert
L. Mash, deed. Village of
Middleport.
Tamara L Mash to Robert
L. Mash. deed. Village of
Middleport.
Tamara L. Mash to Robert
L Mash. deed, Salisbury.
Tamara L. Mash to Robert
L. Mash, deed, Salisbury.
Randall
E.
Zeisler,
Katherine M. Zeisler, to
Dolphus Burke, Jr.. Wanda C.
Burke. deed. Columbia.
Cynthia D. Jones, Gary
Allen Jones, to Larry W.
Parsons, Cynthia D. Jones
Parsons. deed, Rutland.
Larry
Bartlett,
Kelly
Bartlett. Kelly Wright, to
Bradley J. Reese, Cheryl C.
Reese. deed. Columbia.
Cheryl Wright. Cheryl C.
Reese, Bradley J. Reese, to
Cheryl C. Reese, Bradley J.
Reese, deed, Columbia.
Theodore P. Sauber, Carol
J. Sauber, to Kelly P. Sauber,
deed, Bedford.
Robert Stevens, April
Roach. Cindy Robie, Roben
Robie, Raben E. Robie, to
Kim
Hayman,
Kelly
Hayman, deed, Letart.
Harriet Elizabeth Evans to
Vernon J. Evans, affidavit.
Salisbury.
Dale Caner. Dale P. Carter,
Patsy A. Caner. to David W.
Teters, Cindy D. Teters, deed,
Olive.
Brian K. Conde, Melissa S.
Conde,
to
Judith
A.
McGuigan, deed, Village of
Middleport.
June A. Bearhs. Donald D.
Combs, Richard L. Bearhs ,
Jr., Kenneth E. Combs,
Wayne Woolard. George
Wolfe. Julie A. Combs,
Cassandra K. Combs, Jan
Woolard , to Ryan Combs,
Stefani
Combs,
deed,
Chester.
Ryan Combs. Stefani
Combs, to Kenneth Combs,
Cassandra K. Combs, agreement.
Martha R. Holter, Martha
R. ' Rose, Jeremy M. Rose,
Martha R. Holter, to Gordon
W. Holter. Jeremy M. Rose.
deed, Lebanon.
Sally
Donaldson
to
Columbus Southern Power.
right of way. Lebanon.
Jean L. Hayman, James W.
Hayman , to Columbus
Southern Power. right of way,
Lebanon.
·
Alicia C. Council, Alicia C.
Rou sh Council, to Columbus
Southern Power. right of way.
Columbia.
Anthony Land Co., Ltd., to
Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, right of way,
Salem.
Floyd H. Cleland, Elberta
Cleland. to BREC, right of
way, Rutland.
Donald Casey, Donald 0.
Casey, to BREC. right of
way, Rutland.
Rosalie G. Sayre to BREC,
right of way, Scipio.
David G. Banks to BREC,
right of way, Bedford.
A.
Hagerty,
Richard
Dorothy Hagerty, to BREC.
right of way, Columbia.
Anhur Carroll to Mary E.
Carroll. deed. Olive.

.,

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,- The Daily Sentinel
.Subscribe today¥ 14Q-992~2156

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\ ' ...

BRECKSVILLE (AP) The summer's wild weather
caused at least $4 million
worth of damage to the
Cuyahoga Valley National
Park. a 33.000-acre preserve
located between Cleveland
and Akron.
July's heavy r.tins and tloooing buckled pans of the
Cuyahoga Valley Scenic
Railroad and wiped out porttons
of tr.llls. P.ark crews are still
working to repair the damage.
The railroad, which officials said sutfered more than
$1 million damage, hasn't
provided excursion service
south of Peninsula since the
July 21 storm . The national
park must pay for all railroad
maintenance and repairs.
lt will be mid-October
before train service is
restored and most of the
flood damage is repaired.
park ofticials said Monday.
··we wanted to return to
normal as quickly as possible, that was our goal,'' said
Bill Carroll. the park's

deputy
superintendent.
"Now we ' re seeing the light
at the end of tunnel."
The
Towpath
Trai I
between the Botzum sewage
treatment plant and Portage
Path opened last Friday. the
last stretch of the trail to
remain closed he tween
Cleveland and Akron. saiu
Susan Fairweather, spokeswoman for Metropark s
Serving Summit County.
The park closed 15.6 miles
of hiking trails after the
storm. though nearly II
miles have now reopened.
park spokeswoman Mary Pat
Doorley said.
The park's 17 .5 miles of
bridle trail s remain closed as
officials assess them for
repmrs.
The scenic railroad. whicl1
runs
excursions
from
Independence to Peninsula.
is down 10.000 riders and
has lost about $30,000 in
gross revenue. said Doug
Cooper. president of the private, nonprofit railroad.

Tuesday, September 16, 2003

.. A lot of people don't
understand we &lt;tre up and
running. and are hesitant 10
call." Cooper ' aid.
Carroil exp..x·ts that 'ervice
between Independence and
Akron will be restored by midOctober, a month before the
railroad stans its popular Polar
7
Express excursion on Nov. I .
The railroad will also

Marauders host
PP&amp;K Saturday
at Bob Roberts
POMEROY - The Meil1s
Marauder Sideliners Club wtll
host a Pepsi NFL Punt Pass
and Kick competition on
Saturday, Sept. 20 at I0 am at
Bob Roberts Field in
Pomeroy.
The competition is open to
boys and girls ages 8 to 15 and
is free. Winners will advance
to sectional competition. Each
contestant must provide a
birth. certificate to participate.
Contestants may register the
day of the competition, registration will start at 9:15 a.m.
For int"ormation contact
Jimmer Soulsby at 992-6728.

resume service between
Akron and Canton for three
we"ekends
tn
October.
Cooper said.
Volunreers have donated
2.059 hours to help restore the
park. Doorley said. The
Cuyahoga Valley National
Pmk Associatinti has collect·
ed $15 J50 rorthe Restore the
Towpath campaign 4nd sever·
al local restaurants have held
fund-raisers for the railroad.
"We're going to take hits
like this." Carroll said. "We
don't like it. But we're down
in the flood plain. and all
water runs downhill."

-Pruett says Hill
out against
Kansas State

.Teen declared competent to
stand trial in slaying of 17-year-old
MEDINA (AP) - A 16year-old boy accused of
killing a 17-year-old girl
who had befriended him has
been declared mentally competent to stand trial.
Dustin Lynch. charged with
murdering JoLynn Mishne,
on Monday also withdrew his
insanity plea and chose a
local lawyer to represent him.
rejecting the free legal counsel of Florida attorney Jack
Thompson. a national critic
of violence in video games.
Mishne's father, Mickey
Mishne, said he had hoped
Lynch
would
choose
Thompson, who planned to
argue that Lynch wa5 intluenced to kill by his chronic
playing of'violent video games.
"I wanted the story of violent

other parents," Mis~ne said.
JoLynn Mishne was tound
by her father in her secondfloor bedroom on Nov. 2. Her
skull was crushed rn1d her body
had been stabbed .numerous
times. Lynch was found hours
later in Mishne's stolen car. ·
The teen invited Lynch into
her Montville Township
home about a week before the
killing. according to court testimony. He had run away
from his mother's house following his release from a
juvenile facility. Lynch's probation officer said. In memos to the court,
Thompson suggested. Lynch
was affected by Grand Theft
Auto Ill, a game that awards
points for carjackings and
killings, and by an anti-depres-

HUNTINGTON.
W.Va.
(AP) - · Marshall quarterback
Stan Hill will miss Saturday's
game at No. 6 Kansas State
with a sprained left knee,
coach Bob Pruett said Monday.
Hill sat out Friday's 24-17
home loss to Toledo after hurt·
ing his knee the previous game
against Tennessee.
.
Backup Graham Gochneaur
will get his second straight
start. Against Toledo, he completed 31-of-39 passes for 289
yards with two interceptions.
Hill practiced with the team
Monday night, doing some
light jogging, stretching imd
throwmg.
."As of right now. he's out,"
Pruett suid. "He's moving
around nicely, but he's not running around nicely."

Although she had previously demanded that Judge
Christopher Collier appoint
Thompson to defend her son,
Lynch 's mother, Jerrilyn
Thomas. said she h:1d a
change of heart after visi ting
her son in jail.
"It has nothing to do with
video games or Paxil. and
my son's no murderer."
Thomas said.
Lvnch. 15 at the time of
Mishne 's death. was transferred to adult court by Medina
County Juvenile Court Judge
John Lohn, who described the
boy as "angry. asocial. brutal
and self-absorbed."
If convicted of aggravated
murder, Lynch wuuld not be
eligible for pllfOie until age 46.
The !rial is scheduled for

.,

video games to be told to spare - san
llllllt•dru..;g;.h•e•t•oo•k-in•d•e•te•n•ti•o•n•
. •J•:•111•.•'.2•. --~---. .

Man who
robbed bank,
stabbed
himself
sentenced
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
man who lost his money
while gambling. robbed a
bank, was shot while tleeing
and then stabbed himself
repeatedly before police subdued him has been sentenced
to nine years in prison.
George Lind, 37. of
Detroit, told Cuyahoga
County Common Pleas
Judge Peggy Foley Jones on
Monday his behavior was
"like a suicide mission.'"
Lind pleaded guilty last
month to attempted murder, aggravated robbery
and felonious assault. A
psychiatrist Sftid Lind is a
gambling addict suffering
from a major depressive
disorder, but sane and
competent to stand trial.
Lind lost all his money
while gambling in Atlantic
City in May. He concocted a
plan to rob a b&lt;mk at the
Cedar Point amusement park,
and got on a btL' to Sandusky.
During a layover in
Clevehind on May 20, he
changed his plan. put on a
woman's wig and robbed a
Charter One bank. He then
ran to a Greyhound Bus
Stat ion where he st;tbbed a
security guard.
Another security guard
shot Lind in the leg. Lind then
stabbed himself several times
before police stopped him.

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r''

Coach saves
runner choking
on stone
BOWLING GREEN (AP)
- A college cross country
coach likely saved ;m opposing
runner's life when he dislodged
a stone that got stuck in her
throat during a weekend meet.
"I knew she was in trouble
because she turned pure
white," said Mark McClure, a
lirst year coach at John Carroll.
The runner, Jamie Luketic of
Baldwin-Wallace. was behind
a pack of runners Saturday
when one of the runners kicked
up a stone. It flew right into her
mouth.
She ran a few steps, then
dropped to her knees.
McClure ran over to help, but
he had no idea what was
wrong. Luketic stammered out
in a whisper the word "rock"
and pointed at her throat,
McClure said.
"It was so strange," he said.
"I was trying to think how a
rock would get in her throat."
McClure pushed on her back
and her stomach and the stone
"flew about 8 feet."
Luketic, a junior from
Rootstown, was shaken but
fine.
"She had a higher power
watching over her," McClure
said.

AOL announces
new deal to sell
Atlanta teams
ATLANTA (AP) - AOL
Time Warner has agreed to sell
the Atlanta Hawks, the Atlanta
Thrashers and operating rights
to Philips Arena to an invest·
ment group that doesn't
include Texas businessman
David McDavid, who had
been negotiating a deal since
April.
AOL Time Warner would
not divulge who made up the
investment grour, saying only
it includes "loca panners."
The deal is to be announced
Thesday.
"We have reached a binding
agreement for the sale of the
Atlanta Hawks and Atlanta
Thrashers franchises and oper·
ating rights to Philips Arena to
an investment group, including
local partners, whtch will be
introduced to the press at an
event tomorrow," said a statement
released
Monday
evenirtg by Thrner Sports
spokesman Greg Hughes.

____ ··--·-- -------....

..

Clarett's attorneys file innocent plea
Franklin
County
COLUMBUS (AP) - Attorneys
·Municipal Court.
for suspended Ohio State tailback
Maurice Claret! entered an innocent
The pol ice report
was among factors
plea on his behalf Monday on a mis·
demeanor falsification charge.
that led to investigations by the NCAA
Claret! is charged with filing an .
and university. which
exaggerated theft repon with campus
has suspended the
police in April after a dealership's car
sophomore for at
he was borrowing was broken into.
least this season after
The police report said cash and stereo
accusations he broke
equipment wonh thousands of dollars
Clarett
NCAA bylaws by
was taken.
receiving extra beneProsecutors and Ohio State .
fits
and
lying
to investigators.
University police last Tuesday tiled
the charge, which carries a maximum Separately. Ohio State is investigatpenalty of six months in jail and a ing charges that athletes recetved
$1,000 fine. The case was to be improper help in classes.
Messages were left Monday at the
assigned Tuesday to a judge in

Columbus office of the uttorneys who
entered the plea, Percy Squire and
Lloyd Pierre-Louis.
Claret! family attorney Alan C.
Milstein said Monday the family
hired Squire to handle the criminal
case .
Through another attorney, Clarett
had apologized in July over "emb;tr·
rassment" from ·the report. Milstein.
however. said Clarett did not
m:knowledge exaggerating the items.
Milstein dedined to elaborate on
his re4ues1 sent last week tn the NFL
asking the league to change its rules
lo make Claret! eligible for the 2004
NFL draft. He also wouldn't say if
Clarett intends to register and attend

classes. which sturt Sept. 2~ .
"We're still · wnsidering all the
options he has avuilahle to him." he
said.
Under NFL rules . he would not be
eligible fnr the drHft until his third
year out of high school. which would
he 2005 .
NFL commissioner f'aul Tagliabue
said Sunday that attorneys from his
oflke would meet with Milstein soon
to dis,·uss the case, but uddcd the
league opposes •·hanl?ing the rule.
Despite missing several. games
with injuries, Clarett rushed lor 1.2:11
yards and 18 touchdowns last season
as Ohio State won the national championship.

Embarrassed Browns
Browns can't
forget Lewis
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

BEREA - The lights
darkened. and suddenly
Jamal Lewis was breaking
tackles. flattening line,
backers and slamming
through safeties with ease.
Lewis ran all over the
Cleveland Browns again.
One day after allowing
Lewis to set an NFL rushing record with 295 yards,
the Browns had to endure
watching the tape of the
Baltimore back's stunning
performance.
Seeing it on the big
screen Monday was so
painful, Kem1rd Lang
swore he would never do
it again.
"It's over,'' the defensive end said. "That was
one of those games where
you get the tape, you burn
11 and you don't look at it
anymore."
Too bad, but that's
impossible since there's
historical documentation
o' Lewis' rampage, which
he predicted last week in a
phone call to Browns linebacker Andra Davis.
¥)' m going to be on
NFL films for the rest of
my life,'' Lang said with a
sigh.
Forgetting their trip to
Baltimore is a No. I priority for the Browns (0-2),
who were outplayed in
every facet of a 33-13 loss

Please see Browns, Bl

Baltimore Ravens running back Jamal Lewis (31) runs past Cleveland Browns defender Ben
Taylor (58) during the fourth quarter in Baltimore Sunday. Lewis rambled for 295 yards on
30 carries, shattering the record of Corey Dillon of Ctncmnatl. who collected 278 yards on
Oct. 22, 2000. (AP)

Winless
Bengals praised
for near-miss
BY JoE KAY
Associated Press

· CINCINNATI - Save thedity.
A near-upset in Oaklan got the Cincinnati
Bengals pats on the back from their opponent and
rave reviews back home, where fans were delighted
by a a solid performance against a top team.
Coach Marvin Lewis will have none of it. ·
"We don't get satisfaction in the fact that we
played close," Lewis said Monday, reflecting on a
23-20 loss that left the Bengals winless.
The NFL's worst team of the past 12 years thoroughly outplayed the Raiders, but couldn't shake its
legacy of losing. Afterward, some Ratders stdled up
to Bengals players and praised them for a good
showing.
If the intent was to make them feel good, it didn't
work.
"Nobody feels good about this," quarterback Jon~
Kitna said Monday. "It's not somethin~ where·
you're like. 'Wow, we played really well. There's
no feeling like that in here. The feeling is, 'OK ,
we're 0-2."'
But the feeling around the team is a lot different
than at 0-1 , Fans began jumping ship after Den~er
rolled to a 30-10 victory in the home opener.J?espne
all of the behind-the-scenes changes 111 Lewts ' first
eight months, they were the same old Bcngals in
their debut.
On second glance. they were much better.
"After the game. some Rutder players came over Cincinnati Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis, center, watches his
team as they play against the Oakland Raiders in the second quarPlease see Ben11ls. Bl
ter in Oakland. Calif. The Raide·rs won. 23-20 .
I

-- ,--··---

Prep
Football

Columbus
bids for
state grid
finals
COLUMBUS (API - The
Greater Columbus Sports
Commission submitted a proposal Monday to the Ohio
High
School
·Athletic
Association to host swte foot·
ball championship games next
yew·.
The OHSAA i111nounced this
summer that it would be
reviewiniJ bids for upcoming
football tmals. TI1e association
held its football state· champi·
onship football games in Ohio
Stadium from 1983 to I'18'1.
The games have been held in
the Massillon and Canton area
in northeast Ohio since 1990.
Coaches and administrators
from around the stme have
long complained that the foot ·
ball 1\nals. are not centrally
located. Cincinnati teams and
their fans must travel two
hours longer than some opponents . from the Canton and
Massillon areH.
Under the Columbus proposal, the six state-championship games would be played
at Columbus Crew Stadium
and Dublin Coffman High
School. Each site would host
three state championship
games per year between 200l
and 2007.
The propo~al was drutiedby
the COmmiSSIOn 111 COnJUnction
with Columbus Crew Stadium ,
Dublin Cit y Schools . the
Dublin Convention &amp; Visitors
Bureau. District I0 of the Ohio
High School Football Coaches
Associmion and The Ohio
State University.
The OHSAA is scheduled l1&gt;
hear site proposals Oct. 15.

Singh wins
Deere
Classic
SILVIS. Ill. (APJ - Vijay
Singh won the rain-delayed
John Deere Classic by tour
strokes Monday. his third title
of the year that sent him to the
top of this season's PGA
money Iist.
Singh clused with a 6-underpar 65 for a total of 16.. under
268. He had six birdies in a
bogey-free tina I round that was
held over a day after durknc~ s
suspended play Sunday niEht.
Chris Riley (71 ), J.L. Lewis
(71) and Jonathan Byrd (6S)
shared semnd at 12- uuder 272.
The $630,000 first prize
boosted Singh's earniugs for
the year to more than $5 .6 mil lion. edging him past Davis
Love Ill . Love. nursing a sore
back, finished tied l(&gt;r 27th at
the Quad City PGA stop.
S.ingh. in his first Deere
Classic appeanmce. also is in
the running for player of the
year honors, But he said the
mnn~y list is more im1xn1ant to
him.

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

College Soccer

Browns

Redmen soccer continues to roll
i&gt;TAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

ROCHESTER. N.Y. - The Unive rsity of
Rio Grande Red men soccer team, ranked No.
3 in the latest NAIA Top 25 poll, continued
thei: early season dominance with a pair of
victories over the weekend at the Roberts
Wesleyan Soccer Classic.
The Redmen defeated NAIA No. 18 Roberts
Wesleyan 2- 1 on Friday ni ght and then scored
a 4-0 shutout win over LeMoyne College on
Saturday.
Ri o Grande (6-0 ) scored first against the
Raiders with an unassisted goal by freshman
Be n Hunter in the 57th minute. Roberts
Wesleyan (3-2) was the lirst team to score on
Rio Grande this season when Julio Moreno
Raynald-Franco scored in the 60th minute;
moments later Rio junior Simon Carey put the
Redmen up for good with a goal. Jason
Harvey was credited with the assist.
The game was not as close as the score indicated as Rio Grande tired off 15 shots to only
two for Roberts .

from Page 81

on Sunday.
Senior Oli:ver Sanders recorded one save.
Despite coach Butch Davis positive spin
The Redmen had little difficulty with
during
his weekly news conferen ce. little
LeMoyne College on Saturday. They bro k~ up
a scoreless tie in the 47th minute when Hupter went ri ght for the Browns.
Cleveland 's offense, which was supposed
notched his I Oth goal of the season after
to
be o ne of the AFC's most dangerous units.
receiving a pass from freshman Co urtney
managed
just 175 yards and has scored one
Rimmer.
Carey would add a goal in the 54th minute touchdown in two games.
Quarterback Kelly Holcomb looked horri as John Carroll and Ben Hughes assisted with
ble.
He was indecisive and forced several
the score.
passes
into double and triple coverage. linConor baw son made the score 3-0 with ·a
tshing
17-for-37
for 11 5 yards with two intergoal in the 64th minute on an assist from
•
ceptions.
Hughes.
The
Browns'
special
teams were anything
Senior Nils Hacke closed out the scoring in
but
special.
Normally
automatic
punter Chris
the 83rd minute assisted by Carey.
10-yarder.
and ki cker
Gardocki
shanked
a
Sanders was stellar in goal recording a
Phil Dawson sliced a kickoff out of bounds.
shutout with one save.
And although the defense prepared for the
Rio outshot LeMoyne.l7-3.
Ravens
to give Lewis the ball 30 times, the
The Redmen likely could ascend to No. I in
Browns
still couldn ' t stop him .
the poll as both Lmdsey Wilson (Ky.) and ·
"All
we
can do now is put it behind us,"
Mobile (Ala.), who were ranked ahead of
safety Earl Little said. "It's in the history
them, lost.
books."
·
.
Rio Grande returns home this weekend with
in
the
re
cord
book.
as Lewi s' day was
And.
games ·versus King College on Friday at 3
in more
the
greatest
rushing
performance
p.m. and Virginia Intermont on Saturday at 2
than 80 years of the NFL.
p.m.
Still , Davis attempted to put a happy face
on things. He said Lang (two sacks) and
defensive tackle Gerard Warren "may have
had their best games since I've been here."
and that linebacker Davis "was outstanding."
Butch Davis then pointed out the Browns
did a good of stopping Lewis most of the
time.
"We obviously did not play the run well,"

College Cross Country

Redwomen cross.country team
runner-up in first meet of season
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

I

SPRINGFIELD - The University of Rio
Grande Red women cross country team began the
2003 season with a second-place finish, at the
four-team Wittenberg University Invitational, on
Saturday at John Bryan State Park.
Sophomore Dawn Nagle paced the
Redwomen with a 9th place finish and a time of
20: 16. She averdged a 6:31 pace per mile.
Nagle's effort was followed by Heather Mace,
who was lith (20:33) and Amanda Wolfe finished 12th (20:39).
Freshman Hope Jagodzinski produced a 17th
place linish (21 :39) in her first collegiate mce.
Jana Marshall fini shed 24th (23:06) and Beatrice

Morgan was 32nd (24:49).
There were 37 runners in the race.
Sarah Mark of Cedarville was the overall winner with a time of 18:22.
Cedarville won the meet with a perfect score of
15. Rio scored 65 points, Wittenberg was third
(70) and Capital Uruversity was fourth (91 ).
Rio had only one runner in the men's meet.
Sophomore Brad Gilders, in his frrst year running cross country, finished 25th with a time of
33:46.
There were 29 runners in the men's race.
Dan Campbell of Cedarville was the winner
with a time of26:47. The Yellow J.ackets perfect
scored the meet.
Rio Grande will travel to Marietta College next
Saturday to compete in the C. L. Broughton
Invitational.

Dayton marathon will be 1OOth for runner
AUBURN, Maine (AP)- A
retired Auburn firefighter is in
training to run what will be his
I OOth marathon next weekend
in Ohio.
Mike Brooks. who once was

a two-pack-a-day smoker, has
run marathons in all 50 states.
Next Saturday, he will run his
1OOth marathon in Dayton,
Ohio: the following day he will
run the Lewis and Clark

mamthon in St. Charles, Mo.
This fall he has marathons
planned in V~inia, Texas, New
York and Mame. along . with a
race around Lake Tahoe on the
Nevada-California border.

Bengals
from Page 81
to us and told us how much we've improved
out there, that we really gave them a run for
their money," said receiver Chad Johnson,
who had eight catches for 131 yards.
The Bengals had more than twice as many
first downs (27 to 12) and held the ball for
almost twice as long as Oakland. They had a
chance to take the lead late in the game, but
cornerback Phillip Buchanon returned one of
Kitna's passes 83 yards for a 20-13 lead with
3:46 to play.
"The Bengals of old would have folded up
after a play like that," Johnson said. "It shows
some character that we came back."
Kitna threw a tyin~ 8-yard touchdown pass
to Peter Warrick wnh I: 18 to go. but the
Raiders drove for Sebastian Janikowski's 39yard field goal with 9 seconds left.
Lewis' predecessors would have lavishly
praised the Hengals for playing well in a loss.
Lewis, who won a Super Bowl as Baltimore's
defensive coordinator, stuck to the bottom
line on Monday : It's a loss.
"We've got to win," he said. "Our guys
worked hard. They've worked hard this entire

3HERIFF'S
SALE
~EAL ESTATE
CASE
NUMBER
12CV095
DEUTSCHE BANK
~ATIONAL
TRUST
~OMPANY
lka
gANKERS
TRUST
~0. OF CALIFORNIA,

'f.A.,
'-• Trustee tor the
llorgan Stanley ABS
~apltat I Trust 2000-1
'lalntlll
·V8·

NANDA JOHNSON, at
11., Defendants
~OURT OF COMMON
&gt;LEAS,
MEIGS
~OUNTY, OHIO

In pursuance of an
::lrdar of Sale to ma
jlrected from said
: ourt In the above
1ntltled action, I will
IXpose to sale at pubIc auction on the
'ront steps ot the
vtalgs County Court

-touse on Thursday,
Jctober 9, 2003 at
10:00 A .M., of said
jay, the following
jescrtbed real estate:
Parcel One :
Situated
In the
~ounty of Meigs, In
:he State of Ohio, and
n the VIllage of
lllddteport,
and
)OUnded
and
jescrlbed as lollowo:
Baing Lot No. t54

n lower Pomeroy,
lllddlaport,
Ohio,
oold lot being 1111y
laet by one hundred

md eleven leal, and
:&gt;elng ona of tha Iota
:onveyad by J.M.
9rechtel, et. AI, to
John R. Veith by deed
·ecorded
In Deed
3ook No. 170, Page
180 of the Recorda of
~eeda
In
the
~•corder's
Office,
llelga County, Ohio.
Parcel TWo:
The
following
aacrlbed real eehlte·,
situate In Satlabury
rownahlp, In Matga
:ounty, and State of
:&gt;hlo, to-wit:
The
following
aacrlbed r•l estate
situate In Marcus
8oaworth's Addition
lo Lower Pomeroy,
10w
incorporated

Into the VIllage of
Thence along the
Middleport, Ohio, and
East line of Lot 155
marked and known
South 03 dag. 02' 24"
on the said plot of
West a distance of
Lower Pomeroy as
t3.00 laet to an Iron
Lot
Number 155,
pin set by this surbeing tha same promvey; thence leaving
lsea conveyed by
the aest line of Lot
deed from John R.
t55 along a line craatVetth and Dorothy
ed by this survey
Veith, husband and
North 86 dag. 57' 36" .
wile, to Paul E. Taylor
West a distance of
and Arlana M. Taylor,
111.00 laet to an Iron
dated January 14,
pin sat by this survey
I 953, and recorded In
on the wast line of
Book No. 175, Page
Lot 155; thence along
517 of the Deed
the Weal line of Lot
Recorda of Meigs
t55 North 03 dag. 02 '
County, Ohio.
24" East a distance of
Excepting theralrom:
13. 00 feet to on iron
The
following
pin ut by this aurvey
described real estate
at the
oouthwaat
situated In tha VIllage
comer of lot 151;
of
Middleport,
thence along tha
Salisbury Township,
south tine of lot 158
Meigs County, In the
South 86 dag. 57' 36"
State of Ohio, Section
East a distance of
29,
Township
t,
111.00 feet to the
Ranget3, a portion of
point of beginning,
Lot 155 of the Marcus
conhllntng
0.0331
Bosworth
Addition
acres, more or laea.
(Meigs County ~pins ora sot,
Records Vol. 2, Page
518 ln. x ·3 0 ln. rebar
t2 and being a new
with plaatlc I. d. cap
parcel created out of
atomped "E. Trtplen
the Burdell and/or
5-6786,
Kathryn
McKinney
Subject to all legal
property
(Malga
euementa.
County
Daed
Tha above deacrtpRecords Vol. 187, Pg.
tton waa made In
277) bounded and
accordance with an
deacrlbed 11 follows:
actual aurvay conCommencing lor
dueled under the
reference at an iron
auparvtoton
of
pin sat by this aurvey
Eugene TrlpleH, Sat the northeaat cor6788,
conducted
ner of lot 158 of the
September 3, 8, and
Marcus
Boaworth
10, t989.
Bearings
Addition from which
ore asaumad and ore
an Iron pin found by
used
to
expraas
thlo survey at the
angular
maaoure-

northeaat comer

or

ment onty.

Sycamore Strut and
Curront Owner:
General
Hartinger
Wanda Johnaon
Parkway bears North
Property at :
12 dag. 46' 03" Feat 1
477 Syamora StrMI,
dlatanca ot 355.11
Middleport, '
Ohio
feet; thence along the 45780
eaat lill4 of Lot t56 of
PP 115-00928.000
the Mareua Boaworth
and t5-00930.000
Addition South 03
Prior
Dead
dag . 02' 24" Well a Reference:
dlatance of 50.00 tut
Volume t04, Page
to an Iron pin lot by
819
this survey at the
APPRAISED
AT:
aouthaall comer of
$211,000.00
Lot t56, said Iron pin •
TERMS OF SALE:
being the true point
Cannot be aold lor
of beginning lor the
teaa than 2/3rda of
parcel of real Illata
the appralud value.
herein deacrlbed:
10% down on day of

Public NoUcel!ll In

offseason . They played their tails off yesterday, and you want to have that four-hour
plane ride be one of satisfaction rather than
the disappointment. "
Some of his players were encouraged by the
way they played the defending AFC c hampions on their home tield. They rallied from an
early 10-poi-nt detlcit and again after Kitna
threw the costly interception.
In the past, the Bengals would have imploded.
.
"Look, I think we ' re the real deal." cornerback Jeff Burris said.
Kitna, who is tied for the conference lead
with four interceptions, wished they could
have won it to prove it.
'There's just not enough games in the NFL
where you dominate people like that," Kitna
said. "And when you have them, you have to
get victories. That was disappointmg.
·•At the same time. we went on the road and
we almost snuck . it out of there. We almost
stole one from them. So there's confidence
there." Notes : RB Corey Dillon had tests on
his strained right knee. but nothing serious
was detected. Dillon hyperextended the knee
late in the first half and played sporadically,
getting 84 yards on 19 carries. "Corey should
be fine," Lewis said . ''We' ll be day-to-day
with him thi s week, and see how his knee is
and how he feels. "

North with the public
road 50 feet to the
place o beginning,
containing
8,000
equere feet, being a
part ot the onHialf 01
the t DO-acre lot deeded by Florence Miller
and others to Edgar
M.
Chapman,
aa

James C. Wrentmore

15, t986, Vol. 81 ,
pogas 259-260, and
being the sama proparty conveyed by
John Quillin
and
Florence Quillin, his
wile, to Harold Quillin
and Russell Quillin,
by deed doted May
14, 1831, and recorded In Book t42, Page
87, Meigs County
Deed Recorda, and
the Interest of Russell
Quillin therein having
been conveyed to
Herold Quillin
by
deed dated June 13,
t936, and recorded tn
Book t42, Page 90,
Meigs County Deed
Recorda. Subjecr to
all lags! highways.

(Reg. 10046779)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
2450 Edison Blvd.
P.O. Box 968
Twinsburg,
Ohio

44087
(330) 425-420t
(9) 09, 16, 23

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S
SALE
REAL ESTATE
Can Number
02.CV-G20
Mortgage Electronic
Registration
Syllems, Inc.
Plaintiff

VB

·ro;~~:.-;•~;~::.:

Rlyht t.o K n o -.. Delivered A.laht t .o

sale, cash or certHied
check, balance on
confirmation of sale.
RALPH E. TRUSSELL
Sheriff, Malga County
Ohio
REIMER &amp; LORBER
Co., L.P.A.
By:
D a n n I a
Reimer
(Reg.
t003t109)

recorded December

Herbert L Miller, et al
Delendanta
Current
Owners:
COURT OF
Herbert L . Miller and
PLEAS,
Frances M. Miller
COMMON
COUNTY,
Property at: 49290
MEIGS
State
Route
338,
OHIO
In pursuance of an
Racine, Ohio 4677t
pp • 08-00452.000
Order of Sate to me
Prior
Deed
dtractad from said
Reference: Volume
Court In the above
28t , Page 413
entitled octlon, I will
axpoeeto sata at pubAppralaail
at :
lic auction on 1ha
$11,000.00
front atapo of the
Termo of Sele:Connot
Melgo County Court
be oold for leu than
2/3rds
of
the
Houoe on Thuradsy,
October t8, 2003, at
appraised value. t Oo/o
10:00 a .m ., of said
down on day of aala,
day, the following
caoh
or
certified
check, balance on
deacrlbed real eatate:
confirmation of sate.
Situated In Letart
Ralph E . Truooell,
Townahip,
Melga
SheriH,
Metgo
County, OhiO, com·
County, Ohio
menclng at 1 atake at
Raimer &amp; Lorber Co.,
the aouth- corner
of Ed Sergent'• land, L .P.A.
tying E811 of the pubDennla Raimer (Reg.
lic t'Oid runntilg trom - t0031109)
Attomeya for PtatntiH
Letart
Falla
to
2450 Edtoon Blvd .,
Pomeroy,
Ohio;
lhlncl Eall with the P.O. Box 968
Twinsburg,
· Ohio
lOUth Una of Ed
Sargent's land t20
44087
(330-) 425-4201
IM1 to 1 atakl; thence
South 50 feet to a
(~ 18, 23, 30
otaka; thence West
t20 taetto the middle
of the road ; thence

'Otrihune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

he said. "And the sad thing about it is th at on ·
25 of the runs. they averaged 2.4 yards per
carry. But you can't have tlve carries th at
make 200 or so yards."
No kidding.
Davi s bla med the Browns· inability to pick
up yardage on fi rst ~own as the primarr reason for Cleve land s offens1ve meplllude.
He 's surprised the unit ha s~ ' t played better. .
.
but Davis said Holcomb tsn t at fault. .
"He kno ws exactly what do," said Davis, ·
wh o picked Holcomb as hi s starter over Tim
Couch. "He's making the ri ght reads. He's
certainly been a victim of situations in the
ballga me. It 's never easy battlin g from
behind. It's to ugh when you get behind 16-3 .
and you ' re fi ghting uphill." . .
Davis scoffed when asked tf the loss was
the low point of his three- year tenure in
Cleveland.
"No, God , no ," he said. "Yo u can't imagine how low pre vious times were. A lot
lower."
Davis also bri stled when as ked if a change
at quarterback might be warranted.
"Nope." he said .
The Bro wn s. though, need to regroup
quickly. If the defense had trouble with the
one-dimensional Rave ns, who had ju st 50
yards passing , they could be in for a nother
long day at San Francisco on Sunday trying
to stop Jeff Garcia, Terrell Owens and
Garrison Hearst.
Offensive tackle Ryan Tucker said it' s
time to di g deep. There 's plenty of blame on
both sides of the ball, he said, and now isn 't
the time for anyone to be pointing fingers.
"We ' re all in thi s together," he said.
"We' re going to sink or swim together."
Tackling might be ni ce. too .

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Yc::~our

2003

Tuesday, September 16,2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
Sentinel
m:rtbune

To
-Place
Your
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Offtee llo(UI'~
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HOW IO WRITE AM AD

r

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale, Chester Township,
Metgs County, send letters
of Interest to· The Dally
Sentinel. PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
-------Say good bye to high phone
bills! New local phone service with FREE unlimited
nation wide long Distance
1· 800·635·2908
or
WW~A~. FreedomMovle comlttp
aysyou. Local Agents wanted.
Say good bye to htgh phone
bills! New focal pt1Qne serv~
Ice with FREE unlimited
nation wide long Otstance
1·800·635·2908
or
www.FreedomMovle.com/ltp
aysyou . Local Agents wanted.

Athena-Melga
Educational Ser'llce
Center, 320 tl2 E.
Main St. Pomeroy, OH
45768 is accepting
seated bide for thrae
(3) t993 Chevrolet
Head Start buns. The
buses are surplus
and
Information
regarding the condition can be obtained
by calling 985-4468 or
992-4202. Bids will be
opened at t2:00 noon
on October t, 2003 at
320 112 East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45788.
The Heart of the
Vlllley Polley Councu
Governing
Board
reeervea the right to
reject any or any part
of the bid . Blda
ahould be labeled
"Bid lor School Bus"
and mailed to:
Athans Meigs ESC

Traaaurar's Office
320 tl2 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(9) 18, 23

~•ring

People...

.,.,,

I

Di_tftrtrtu

RN's and LPN's
Holzer Senior Care Cenrer has I RN , 2 LPN
f/1imc and I RN p/ti me posit ions availa ble.
If y·ou are a nurse who 1s committed to providing
quality care, you may be just the person we're
looking for. We are a 70 bed long-term care

nursing faci lity located in Rural Gallia County.
Benents In&lt;lude:

• Competitive Wages
• Experience Credit
• Health Insurance - FuJI-time
• Li fe Insurance- Full-rime
• 40 1K (after I year)
If working In a friendly, ''team oriented''

facility appeals to you. please come see us at:
380 C olonial Drive
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
or call 740-446-5001
(E.O . Emplo)tr!

I

Jn Next D•y•e P•p•r

In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
sund•v• P•P•r

RACO Scholarahlp yard
sale- Sept. 17-18th 9-4,
Sept 19th, 8· 12 Slar MIH
Park, clothing, shoes, PURl·
as. bicycles, desk, swing,
recliners, bassinets, Infant
seats, car seat, exercise
equipment, luggage, wicker
baskets, dishes, pans, ski!·
lela, Christmas decarallons,
linens,
toddler
bed,
linoleum, toys, baby clothes
&amp; misc. New Items each day,
Friday· all clothing $1 a bag,
mise will be 112 price,
Thanks for your support,
740·949·2658 or 740·949-

2031 .

lnfoCIIIon

WA~ 1"+1€ 0~1--'1 WAy
1 couL-0 6t!"T" HeR.

\"f

10

Responsibilities Include:
•Managing a team of 10 to
20 people
•Running team meetings
a
n
d
Ot51t85301511853con·
teats
"Monitoring calls for quality
"Employee coun!leling
"Knowledge at client and
call center programs
"Report writing

6Af J..VNCI4 •

Qualified candidates liWll
have B Bachelors degree.
L---roiiloiiBiiUVIia-.-J strong Interpersonal, com~
munication, and leadership
Absolute Top Dollar: U S.
skills.
Silver,
Gold
Coins,
Prootsats. Diamonds, Gold lnloCislon offers monthly
Rings,
U.S. Currency,bonuses and excellent benThe Montgomery Fam11y
M.T.S. Coi n Shop, t5t
efits lndudlng health, 401 K,
reumon
will be held
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
paid holidays and vacation.
September 14, 2003, 0.0.
740·446-2842.
Mcintyre Park. Shelter Kill·
Deer, 1Oam-dusk
Pawpaw fruit $1 to $2 per It you would like to can·
tribute 10 our success In
We Alfred A. Plants Jr and pound, walnuts $10 per hunGallipolis, send 'your resume
740
698
Loretta A. Plants will not be dred pounds, (
)
"
2124 _ __ _-'-.._ to:
responsible tor any debts :.:::..:.._

~.,t__G_JVFA_w.~.v_.,.~Jina

Or email resumes to:
HAOirectorOinfoclsion.com
Visit our web sUe at·
www !nJoci:J!QD com

Kittens, pretty eUver and AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
black stripped with pale blue Sell. Shl1loy Spear~. 304· Insurance Agency now hlr·
eyes. Call 740·441 -0145.
675·1 429.
lng: Local Admlnlstrath;e
Assistant, must have clerl·
Male and female pupptes, AWESOME CAREER
cal, secretarial , buelness
bland encl black. Hall collie $14.60.$36.00+/hr,
skllls, and knowledge of
half chow. Has 1st shots and Postal Positions. Hiring for
computers. Good people
wormed .
2003 Full Benefits, No exp. sktlls a plus FuH-tlme postreq ., Call Now 1..eoo-87!1· lion available Send resume
1071 Ext. 2072
'
to: CLA -574 c/o Gal~polls
Be your own boss. no Inven- Dally Tribune. P.O.Box 469
tory, earn $30·$40 per hour, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
y A.RD S,w,;.
ground floor opportunity, no
Llcens~ Ins. Agenls to help
quotas, no territory, work
G.Ul.IPOI.IS
families own funeral prod·
when you want, have lun,
ucts, call Ken, (740)992·
Sepl t 8· t 9 9:00·4:00 SA see lor yourself, call today, 7440 or 740·593-5245
279 1/2 mile out of Home &amp; Garden Par1y
designer. Maintenance
Poaltlon
CentervUie In sharp curve, lndepend&amp;nt
Kathleen
Roell
.
(740)992·
Available
grav
house. Antiques .
Must have Refrigerati on and
Curtains . spreads, crafts. 0657 leave message
clothing, dolls. bears. fabric Busy Physician Office needs Electrical Experience Other
dulles Include
gene ral
2 sewing machines. home
Int. lots of Furniture, and part time Ex-ray Tech, ultra- equipment and miscall a·
crafts. 74Q-682·7163. Rain sound experience preferred, neous repair. Excellent
but nat req uired LPN Benefits and wages. OhiO
dale Sept. 25·26
Cerlllled Medical A,.lslant. Va lley Supermarkets 740·
Tools, jacks, vise air com· Secretarv with Medical 446 _9312 Ext. 116 . EOE
pressors, manual/motorized Otllce experience, Secre1ary
wheelchairs ,
chalnsaw. wllh Medlcal COderSibllllng Medl Home Health Agency,
orga- Inc. seeking tull-tlme and
wrenchers, hedge trimmers. experience Good
mzatlonal skills. Fax resume PAN AN 's In the Gallipolis.
sockets. ratchets.
Fri. 9·2 p.m. 252 Whlte Rd. to: 677·588·3612 or send to Ohio are. Must be licensed
JA9. 200 Main Street, Point In both Ohio and Wes t
Gallipolis.
Pleasan t. WV 25550
Virginia. We offer a compel·
Toolsljackslvlse, air com· Busy Salon has grea1 oppor· ltlve salary benefits pack·
preesors, manuallmotorllzed tunlly for e•porlencod elyllol, ago, and 401K. Plaaoe sond
wheelchairs,
chain with managers llettnle 740. resumt to 352 Second
saws/wrenches ,
hed· 441-1880
Avenue. Galllpollo OH
getrlmenLiaockats, racheta.
4~631 .
Friday 9am·2pm, 252 Whllo Dockmaster
position, - - - - - - - -Rd. &lt;lalllpollo.
Qalllpolil Boat Club, pickup N1ed 7 l1dl11 to 1111 Avon ,
Call 74()..«8 3358
appl ~alIon at t h1 cIub. 11t
•
bedroom
Washtr/dryer,
Vine St. Gallipolis .
Nttd to earn Money? Leta
suite, reollntrt, go-cart,
talk lhl ~ A.von. Call
hOUIIhOld·ltems .
Wed. Help wanted oaring tor tht
Marilyn, 304·882·2&amp;4!S 10
elderly,
Oar1t
Qroup
Home,
Thuro. t7lh·t8th 444 Lariat
now paying minimum wage, lear, all tht wayalt can work
Or. booldo hoepllal 9-4.
new thlltl: 7am·3pm, 7am· lor 1QU.
Spm, 3pm·t tpm, 11 pm·
Nigh! dak rocoptlonlal fo r
7om, call 740·QQ2-5023.
&lt;la lllpollo Career Collogo
Hot tub lnetaUatlon and Hours art 8:00p.m. to 10:00
5 lamlly yard oolo· Friday, 9· rtpalr technician, altctrl· p.m.
Monday
through
4, rain cancels , houlthold,
cat/plumbing
exptrlanct Thursdlv. Must be able to
Christmas , cl othing , furnl·
nteded, contact Baum type, have mln!mal eomput·
tu re , chlldrtn'a clothing ,
Lumber, Chetler, Ohio
er skllle, answer telephone
Maln Street, Rutland.
WANTID·
Direct car'- and work with public. Pay 11
·
negotiable. Send r11ume to
Big
mu lll·lamlly
oalo, llllttant to
work with adults Qalllpolla Cartlr College,
Thurodoy 9·5, chlldro n·plul wlth mental ratardatlon In a P.O. Be• ,. , Ke rr Ohio
5 2
IIZOI, mltc., Bllloy Rd (Off pleasant, homelike enYiron· •
5643
Texu) slgne from Five ment. Houra: 9am-epm Sun; - - ·- - - - - Points , raln cancele.
2-tOpm M0ni111111Wod. !Ill No "'porlonce nOodod, hard
eKptr!enge nag11yrv. We working, work ahollc n81ded
Uaetul Items Sale: Four
offer paid tra ining along with direct In home aalel, call
· days , Sapl .17·20. 55440
an excellent benefits pack· Kin, (740)992 -7440 or 740Second Avonuo, f!ltdavlllo,
aga . No unitorms or certlfl· ~93-5245
Ohio 740-378·62118
cation requlrec:t
High p.~..;.
School Olploma/GED, va lid
driver's llctnse and three
yeare good drlvtng eMplrl·
ence requ ired .
Salary:
$7.00/hr. Send resume to
Buckeye
Commun ity
Servlcea, P.O BoiC 604.
Jackson,
OH
45640.
Deadli ne for applicants:
911 9/03. Equal Opportunity
Employe•.

_____

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

I

Moun.E Ho~ 11:'

IUR SALE

mRRtN I'

No Problem Sale- Wan t a
new sec tt onal home? No
Problem. Noed foundati on
All real otlale advertlelng
and septic? No Problem
In thlt newtpaper i1
Need utrhttes run or d11ve·
subject to the Federal
way ? No Problem Want b1g
Fair Houeing Act cit 1968
snv 1ngs on a 2003 modEtl.
which m•k .. It Illegal to ~ No Problem. Cole's Mobile
advartlaa "any
Horn es. u s 50 East.

::;,r;~;; 1:~:::; ;~

race, color. rellglon, eax
familial 1 tatu 1 or national
origin, or anv Intention to
make anu such
' itati on or
preference, lim
dlacrlmlnalion."

lnloCislon Management
Corp.
Ann: Sam Gaskel
250 N Cleveland·Mssslllon
Rd.
Akron, OH 44333

M&lt;MIILI: HOMK'

ranch home. PI Pleasant US 50 East. Athens. Ohto.
ph01os1 Information on line 45701. 740-592·1972
www.ORVB com code
Good useo t4 x70 Only
90903 call 740·441 ·9546
$9995 mcludes delivery, Call
38A , t 112 ba th, brick ra nch Harold. 740·385-9948
with auached garage, lull Land Home Packages avarlbasement. locat ed on one ablo. In your area, (740)446·
acre. at 1230 Georges 3364
Creek Ad askmg $79,900
740-367·02 44
New 2003 Daublewlde. 3 BA
- - - - - - - - &amp; 2 Ba!h. Only $ t695 down
8 Room Ranch on lull base· ond &amp; 2951 rna 1· 600 · 691 •
ment 3BA. 2 t/2 baths. 2 112 6777
acres. covered deck, FA
$107,900. 740-446-2 196
New 3 br/2 bath. Only $999
down and only $184.04 per
month. call N1kk1 740·3857671

WANtED

other than those made by us Will pav $20 each tor junk
personally 9-12-03
automobiles to haul awrry,
(740)992·0413 or 740.992·
West Virginia grown hardy 1071 if no ans. leave meamums for sale at Dewhurst
Greenhouse MI. Alto WV. sage.
I \1 1'11 l\ \ II '\ 1
open 9·6pm Sat &amp; Sun. 304'-, I 1, \ I t I '-.
895-3789

HOM~

tuRSA!.E

3 br. , 2 ba. new stick butll Cole ·s Mob1te Homes

Management

Corp. 11 seeking Individuals
for •nlrv-leyll management
to add to our team at the
OtUIDOIII location .

• ..,..-..,.,_----.

j

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

POUCIE8: OhiO IJII..y Publlthlng rMervat tht right to edit, reject, or canatlany ad at any tlma. Error a mual ba, reported on the flrat da~ ol
n-tbun..S.ntlnei·Rtgltt.f' will ba r. .pontltMt tor no mort than tht aolt altha IPICI occupi.O by tha auor and only the llrat ln•rtlon We ahall not ba
any 10111 or allpanH tha.t rHultt from It'll publlclllon or oml .. lon ot an tdvertiHmant. Cor,.ctlon will bt mad1 ln tht lirtt avtlltbla tdltlon • !ox
111'1 tlnya oonfldantlal. • Currtnt rata oard appU... • All raal aatala advertlaamtnll art tulijtct to tha Federal Fair Hou1 lng Aol OI1VSB. • Thlt ,,.,..,,..,.
110oept1; only help Wllnl.ci tdt meaUng E!OE 1tandtlrda Wa will not ltnowlngty accapl any adv.rtlaing In violation ollhaltw.

HEI.PW.oom

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

Help Wanted

All Dl•pl•y: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lnee• D•v• Prior To
Publlc•tlon
Sund•y Dl•pl•y ; 1;00 p.m .
Thurad•y far sund•v•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ® by Larry Wright

r~y~l

Help Wanted

Display Ads

D•lly ln-Column1 1:00 p.m.
Mond•v·Prld•y for lne•rtlon

DMCrlptlon • Include A ltrke • Avoid Abbrtntl•tlon•
• lnclud• Phone Number And Addre• When Needecl
• Acte lhoukl Run 7 D•Y•

-~~~~;;;;;;;;;;j ~y~ 1
r~mumsl
__

Word Ads

• •tart Your Adt With A ICeyword • Include Complete

Succe11fut Ada
Should Include Theel Item•
To Help Get Re•ponH •••

~rglstrr

Visit us at: 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Call us at: (740) 992·2155
Fax us at: (304) 675·5234
Fax us at: ·(740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@ myda llyreglster.com
classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Calf us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
E-mail us at:
clsssltled 0 mydallytrlbune.com

r
r

Public Notice

~e

WANIHI

Hut• WAN'Illl
Optometric
Technician·
State·of·lhe-ert optometric
practice Is seeklng an lndl·
vidual for a career m a
dynamic work environment
with a great team of profes-:.
slonals. Applicant must be
detall-orlented, committed to
excellence In patient care.
self -motivated and possess
good communication skills
App roximately
30hrs/wk ,
Includes same Satu rdays
and evenings . Beneflls
Include paid tultlon and
tuition and travel tor career
advancement, pald holidays .
vacati on and sick time ,
health msurance and pension
plan. Experi ence
desired but not necessary
Wage Is commensurate with
experience. EOE. Mall
resume to· The Dally
Sentinel, PO Box 729-12,
Pomeroy, Oh 75769
OYerbrook Center Ia currently accepting applications for
lis upcoming nursing as sls·
ta nt class. Applications will
b9
lhro ugh
acc epled
September 19. Classes will
begin Monday September
22, 2003. Contact Ca ssy
Lee , Staff Development
Coordina tor at (740)992 6472 or pick up an appllcatlon at 333 Page Street,

.To Oo

Therapllll Needed
AZ DlveraiUed Healthcare
1s looking lor lu ll• tim e
Licensed
Ph0elcal
Theraplltl
and
A11lstant1, Occupatlonal
Therapllll and A18letanta
and Speech Language
Pathologist lor rap tdly
811pand1ng Home Health
Age ncy m Pt. Pleasant, WV
and surrounding areas.
WE Offer
• Excellent Wages
"Comprehensive Insurance
Package
•Paid Vac ation, H'olidays.
Personal, and SiCk days
·Job Secunty
·Great worki ng enYironment
Please contact Stacy al .
HI00-577-4310
or fax your resume to :
t ·937-695· 1375

m~r--~....- - - ,
114)
BUSINfx&lt;i

..,...., ...,
..__......_KAlJ'OiiiiilliNGii'-.,.J

Gallipolis Career Col .. ge
~Career~ Close To Home)
cli11 TOda~l 740·446-4367,
t •BOO·214•045"or::
wwwgalllpollscll l reercollltl)llcom
Reg t90 -05-1274B.

I""

Ml~NEOIJS

EOE

c:

L._ _ _ _ _ _ __.J.
..,
20 Gallon Aquarium com-

Vented gat stove, heat• 4·5
roomt . 85 ,000 BTU. Oood
conditio n. (74 0)256·63&amp;3.

Babysitting In Sy rscuse
arta, county certified , or prl·
vate pay, days, nights &amp;
wookondo, (740)892·C31 6
Child care In rrtt hOme·
+ Gallla COunty school dis-

trict.
+ A clean, sate environment
+ 4 mlnulee from Addavllle
School
+ Care·glver has associates
We offer:
degree In early childhood
EXCELLENT WAClES
davelopmont
Comprehenalve In surance :c•:.:ll~7...:40.:....:·3::6...:7·.:
'0.6:0:.:7_ __
Package
Paid Vacation, Holldays,
Personal. and Sk:k ds)l8
Job Security
Great working environment
PleBse contact Stacy 111:
1·800·57H3t 0
or lax your resume to:
1·937·695·t 375

available on an equal
opportunity baaaa.

Christner Hill Tap Manor has
a opening personal uslst
wlth the elderly 304·675·
6183 WV facility 508648.
Siding roollng , sldew•'"•·
blocks, Ule, room addlllons.
remodeling , 'new homes,
tree e1 tlmatea, (7 40}992·
6190, 740·992·3934.

2 mobile homes IX:lth w(lh
.Jbr. Located 1n Glenwood

All
npplt ances
W/0(304)576-999 1

wllh

2 mobile homes both wtltl
3br. Locmod u1 Glenwood.
All
appliances
wt!h
W/0(304)576·9991

3 Bedroom Tratler on S! At 7.
south of Middleport No
mdoor Pets $300 month.
$300. deposl! 740·992·0542
3 br house trwler lo1 rent

$325 a man. $250. dep.
304·695·3665

&amp;::---,

Lot lot ~ale in Aac rne ,
(740)992·5858
t-Ji ce mob1ie home lots, QUiet
coun try setting. $ 11 5 per
month
u1cludos wa ter.
sewer lmsll. 740·332·2 167
Opening Morning
Deer Season
where will you be?

Al'·\lfll\ltN IS
1-llll KEr.T

t and 2 bedroom apartments. h,.nnished and unf ur·.
n1 shed. security depos1t•
required . no pets, 740-992-:
22 t6
t br apt lor ren t tn Pt.
Ptaasanl WV. no pe!s
740-446-2200.

Scou t ow property now and
1 &amp;2-bedroom apallmont lot
In Green School D1stri c1 3·4 mAke 11 yours by Hunting
tent 1 oedroom $250 00 2
bedrooms 2 bath, large Season Call lor hoc maps'
bedroom '$300 00 677 Oliver
kltchon. ltvmgroom. tan11ly
Street . Mtddleport 740-928·
800·213·8365
room w/ woodburnEtr 2 car
494
1
www countrylyme corn
garage. Call (304)675·3 127
MB Handyman Servtce
1br All utl li!les mcluded
ll i\1 \ I S
Haulin g. pai nt tng, power Letar t Falls. OH. 3 bedroom
S325. month (304)675-3654
washi ng. dnvewey repa ir, t10 use, t bath, detached ;;:=::;;====~
2 Bedroom apartmenl $250
se al caat tng, gutters. chtm· garage, new ro of, sid 1ng. a, 10
por month -+ ultlt!tes nntl
I·IOliSI•:S
nay, plumbtng Jack of all wl ndows, carpel , &amp; kitchen. '"
deposit
. 3rd S!iee!, Aacmu
$65.000
00
(740)247-2000
111M
Ri-:NI'
trade s. 30yr s. eKp. Senior
740·247-4292
Dtsco unt. Free Estimates.
(304)882·2t 96. (304)377· Nawly bUll! ranch , counlry 2 Bedroom house on St At 2 BA Qure! Loca!ton, Near
setting, 3000 sq teet. 3 br . 2 7. south ot Middleport No
8266
ba., 5 minules !rom Holzer mdoor Pets $300 month . Holzer CIA. WID Hookw.
No Pets, $399 Plus Ut1ilties
Trantmlselons, 111 types, oft 180. photos. 1ntormatton $300. dopostt 740·992·0542 (740)446-2957
on Ime www ORVB com
7..,_246-5671.
code 73 103 r.all 740-446· 4 room house. ready lor 2
BA.
unturn1shed.
occupanc y.
reference $300/mo,
Baby srttt ng. 0149.
Will
do
$300/tlOIJ fJ IUS
required. (740)446·0974
(304)675· 7844
ultl ilies, no pets 740-446·.
Nice older 4 br. 3000 sq.
6 Ro oms, 1 ba!h. ktlchen 43 13
Wtll pressure wash homes. feet, 1.5 baths, PomEtroy,
CIA. BEAUTIFUL
APART·
appliances.
photo/
1
nlormatr
on
on
line
trailers. decks. metal build·
AT
BUDGET
code washet/dryer hookup No MENTS
tngs and guuers. Call (740) www ORVB com
Pels Depos tl and reference PRICES AT JACKSON·
446-01 5t ask for Ron or 80603 call 740·992·3650.
required Call367·7553
ESTATES , 52 Westwood
leave a message
Pomoroy- 9 rooms, 2 baths,
For Rent - NICe 4 BA home Drive from $297 to $383
Will take care ot elderl y. ilrEtplace, two -ca r ga ra ge near R IO GJande $ 750 l)Q Wa lk to shop/!. mov1es Call
Nights, experience &amp; rater· wi th storage or workshop per month
Oepostt and 740·446·25GB
EquAl
space
overhead .
For
ences (304)675·7961
References required Call Houstng Opporhllllly
appomtm ent ca ll 740·992·
Wiseman Real Est ate a! Beech Slreet. Mlrtrlleport !
I I'\\\( 1\1
2828 or 740·992·3664
- - - - - - - - 740·446·3644
bed room turn1 shect apart ·
_:__:_:.__
BUSIN~
Price reduced, newly redec- Home from 5 ,-991month men!. uhhttes pa td. doposll &amp;.
OPPOKI\fNITY
orated 3BR wlth carport 135
references .
no
pe!s
"--oiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiili-.1 Kineon
740· 446·2776 forec losure homes 4&lt;&gt;~ (740 )992 .0165
down, 30 years at 8 5% apr
$59,000
!NOTICE!
- - - - - - - - 4 listings call 800·319·3323 For Lease Bea utiful. t600
Sq Ft res tored. second
OHIO VALLE Y ' UBL ISH· Priced reduced newly 3 br, ext 1709.
11om apartment tn HtSiorlc
INO CO. recommends th at 2ba., 5 acres, pond, 3 mile s
you do but ln11s with people from Holzer olf 160 HOUSE Brick ranch on Dlslrtc!. Ideal for proleulon·
81 couple au modern
you •now, and NOT lo aond $229,000.00 pholol inform a· Bulavll le PIKe.
APT: 84 Olive Street Call amenlt1es 2 bedrooms:
money th rough the mall until tlon an line www ORVB com
spacious Uvlng 'dlnlng: lots
you have lnvestlg ated the code 811 03 call 740·446· (740)441 ·1124.
If yo u like the though t of ol storace. , 1/2 beths. rear
ofteri n .
7143
sou thern plan tation living deck, HVAC $600/month
Rem odeled 3 bedroom 1 this Is tne home tor you plus utilities Security and
1/2 bath In coad 'neiQhbOt· This IIJvely specious south· key deposit. No pels
hOod In Middleport. (740) ern style home has paten· Reference&amp; required . 740·
TURNED DOW/'1 ON
992·7743 or view at tlal 3 bedrooms.
lull 446·4425 or 446 -3936
SOCIA~ SECURITY 1881? www.orvb.comH81503
ba tha, and a large kitchen ~F.::or:...:.Le::a~s.:e.:..:.O::ne:.:.:b::ed:.r-oo-m-.
No Fee Unleaa We ~In I
10 unfurnished. newly redeco 1·888-582·3345
renl to Own land Conlract Orlgmel wood stetrcase
fayer Upstairs balcony with rated . second floo1 Apt . al
or buy out right 3 bedroom
HI \ I I .., I ~ I I
a rive r view and large front corner ot Second and Ptne
'W~;;;~:----., houae ln Rutland neBr new
porch Access to a poet dur · A/C $300 00 per monlh,
HOMK'i
achool No Pets Inside
'
FOR SALE
house Thank you Call 740· lng the season Located In water Included. Secunly and
Addison at Tara apanments. key depos~ 011 street park·
742·2263
Gas heat. central ale $550 a tng Rererencee Required.
(31FHA &amp; VA homea oot up Riverfront wlth boat dock . month Please call day No pets 740·446:4425 or
and 446 _3936
tor Immediate possession all nice 3 l:lr.. 2 ba , t .5 acres (740)446·3481
with in 15 mln ot downtown Gelllpolts photo/ information evenings
Gall ipolis. Rate s as low as on llne www.OAVB com (740)3&amp;7-0502 No calls For rent 1 room apt wtlh
shAred bAth , ultt tncluded
6% (740)446·32 18.
code 90303 call 740·446· alter 9 00 p m
$200 stngle $250. couple
053 t .
Older 2 Story house 1n coun· 607 2nd 740· 446·8677
3 bdrm, FA, Lg LA. Cath
MORTI .E HoMt:"i
try 3br. 1ba . 2 shoWers. (d ays)
740·256·1972
ceilings , wood beams. lire·
fl)lt SALE
peaceful &amp; qu1e1 setting No (~ventncsl
place, hardwood floors .
" - - - - - - - - •lnstde pels Located 3 m1les " - ' - - - " ' ' - - - - more lnfo (740)441 -1724.
tro'tn Rro Grand Un1versrty Furmshed 3 rooms and bath
1980 Fairmont 3 bdrms, 2 (304)675·7624
upt.1 ~:urs apl, clean . no pets ..
3 BFt 1 bath, 2·story with bath $3.900. Call 367·0638
referance
&amp;
depos11
basement and 1 car garage.
!"20 Momu: 1-lOMfS
roqwed . 740·446·1519
Large bedrooms, surround· 1985 14x60 2 bedrooms,
mRRENT
New Haven, I bedroorn fur ·
ad by vacant lots, WOOds CIA, New Ooor e. Wtndow~ .
and back wa ter m rear Carpet and more . Porch 2 BA. perfect, au . porch, n1shed apartment also have
washer &amp; dryer. deposit &amp;
Nice
Homo.
Close to everythtnQ. Ask ing Included
very mce 740-446-2003 or
refe rences .
no
pets
$39 .900 Shown by appotnt- $8.500 OBO Call 256· 740·446· 1409
(740)992·0
165
9291
ment, cell (614)891 ·6763

i10

___

w'

Tl1oraplola Nllldlld
AZ Dlvorollllld Hoalthoara
Ia looking for l ull tlmt
~ICINS!D
PHYSICAL
TH!IIAPISTS AND A8811•
TANT8, OCCUPATIONA~
THERAPISTS AND AS8111TANT8 AND SPEICH
LANOUAOE
Po\THOL001818 tor a rapklty e~ept (\d·
lng Home Health Age ncy In
Pt. Pleatan t, Wetl Virgin ia
and surroun ding areal .

thla newapaper are

10•60 28R mob1le home
$325/mo $200/dep. no pels,
references w11t sell tor
$4.000
740·388-0578,
leave message

3B A Mob1le Horne, wale r
and gas paid $400/dep.
Athens. Oh1o. 740-592- t 972 $400/renl ,
2Br Mobile
Since 1967, Where You Get Home 740-446·024 1
Vour Money's Worth
Fo1 re n! I br. tra1ler $300. a,
~'~JOO~.........;.:I:""A•J'..;IS•.
mon., water pa1d 49 Spruce
AL'HM&lt;ac
St 740·446·8677 (days)

I

-M-Id_d_l•-po-rt_o_h_lo_ E._o_.E_. __ -pl-•t_e_w_l_th-st-an_d_, -11-gh_
l _•_"_
d
~:e~~~~:~ , ~Iller $80.00
RNILPN (HOME HEALTH)
Part or Full lime, per villi or 25 Serious Peopla Wanted
hourly,401 k, calotorlo pia~. Who wont to LOSE we igh!
mileage, uniform
we Pay You Cash for the
allowancll, CEU relmpounde you LOSE I
buroomonl, Sam'l club,
N
Safe, Natural, o Drug•.
Heollh &amp; Lila Ina. PTO
8Q0-20t •0832
which aocumulatee from
:::::::::.:.:.:::::::-'-- - - flret work day. Top pay In Trl· Fretztr. Glbaon heavy duty
State. Sign on bOnue. aoo- commerctal. 740·992·3187
759-~383

O&amp;J Picky Painters
Free Estimates Interior an
exterior palnllng G1ve you r
home or garage a lresh
new look. We pain! homes,
garages, mobile homes,
buildings, barns and roofs
Licenced an d insured
(Call M-S, 6-61
(304)895·3074
20 Years experience
and references.

Thlt newapeper will not
knowingly accept
advertleements lor real
utete which Ia In
violation or the law. Our
r~~tdar t era hereby
Informed that all
· dwtlllnge •dvertised in

! br !ra rler complete turn
uttl pd rdea tor out of !OWn
worker $300 a man $300.
dop. 304·695·3665

lllr\o

�1\Jesday, September 16, 2003

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Gracious living, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
:From $278·$348 . Call 740.
-992·5064. Equal Housmg
't)pportunities.

AKC Miniature Plnchers.
ready to got Tails &amp; declaws
docKed.
Vet
checked!
Beautiful
2-females, 1·
black/rust, 1-redlblack for
information please 'call 74Qtable 4-chairs. S95 .. King- 256·1033
size
box-spring/mattress
Honeysuckle Hills Apts.
$100., chestldresser wl mir- AKC small Yorkies 2 males,
Located on Colon ial Or. ror $140.
Skaggs 740- 10 weeks old. $500 740.
245·1217
.
..behtnd Highway Patrol Post 446 -7398
"'[)n Jackson Pike 1 &amp; 2 br.
Thompsons Appl iance &amp; Beagle puppy's, full blooded,
fent starting $255. low &amp;
moderate income. Equal Aepair-675·7388. For sale, no papers, good hunting
re-conditio ned automatic stocK, $SO; AKC Bea"gle
Housing Opportunity. 740·
washers &amp; dryers, relrlgera- puppy's $100; 2 AKC trained
446·3344 roo 1-aoo-750·
to rs, gas and electric Beagle rabbit dogs, $200
0750
each, !740)742·2728
ranges, air cond itioners, and r,;:.;,;.;.;.~;.;.;;.;;;.;.;.__,
Nice 1BA apt, f_urnished. wringer washers. Will do
MUSICAL
appliances, no pets, Crown repairs on major brands in
ir6rRUMENTS
City, $250 and security shop or at your home.
L.-oiliililliiliiiiil.iillo.l
deposit, call740·256·1249.
used furniture ·store. 130 Upright plano $160.00 OBO
Nlce,clean 2 br with small Bulaville P1ke. mauresses. 0304;;;r·6;;;;7~5--7~630-.,_"'!"_'"'l
yard in town. Major appli- dressers.
couches.
fRUITS &amp;
ance provided. Secufity
bunkbeds. bedroom suites.
VF..GETABI...FS
deposit of one month r'ent recliners, grave monuments.
Gallipolis, Bell peppers Red/Green
and references requ ired 740·446-4762
Monthly rent $400. Utilities Ohio HAS 10·4pm. Stop By you pick $8.00 a busheL We
not Included. No pets. 441 ·
p~k $10.00 740-247-4292

r

North

Hill 's Self
Storage

RACO YARD SALE
SEPT. 17, 18, 19
STAR MILL PARK

Rent tn advance

... 9

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

&amp; deposit.

r

New Homes •

YIAGIIM.OWI!ST PIUCE
Rtlllo. Guarontotd $3.80 por1110mg.
Why f'll'f moro1 W. ho" tho , , _

Vloxx, C.ltbrox, L~ltol. rnortl
p~, lluytrt Gr014&gt;.

Frn lriDIIItltionl
IOI»J1- XNI:JIZ

EXT 1847

~--na

A TALkiNG S'ALt
/
ON,t, IUT T~t
~tF~IGt~ATO~ TOLl&gt; IT
TO S'~UT UP.

FREE ESTIMATES

...•r.,.,.... ,..,.,.,

MEDICAIIE DIA8eTlCfl. Froo Motorlll
No
!lupptlool
Join Olollotoo
Club
FRE.E-IJII

• l'laYe moN tntttY

Coltc.,_

~....,

'"'"'-

~ ""''

.

..

Con O.liv01. (256) 77&amp;.9435

f

.

'

•

'
!

.

'

.

'

•

-

.,...
~~
v

ffiANCIAl PROBLEMS1

"""'"Y riQhlaway?

Money aval\able lor bulinen,
"""" equity 01 consolidation
Mrt S5K. Clood 01 ba&lt;l cred~ .
NO FEES! 8ankrupll:y IICCIPIOcf.

Mailing Otl' SoiM ilrOCil&lt;lresl
FtM Supplies, Postlgol
Stan lmmodla1tlyl
Gonoilt Opponurityl

For Fr•lnlofmolion,
CoHo! Free:
HJl0·357·1170

ToM... 1-8110-5.,..7101

UVINQ PAY CII£CK
TO PAV CH£C1o:1
Wo con helo!
CIII1DI-1!tt

..,......

,

H00·217~717 .

•

'

-

FREE HOME DEUVERYI

wm 1 Houtt IIKf BuiiNta
In · Alaollo
e...
vCon1o11
Detail

wvtW.waliMIC00'-'1.oom
or S-'SE: Wa•ilo W.b Wlllld
113 W. Parl&lt;o Hwy. C-130
Wu11o , AK 99654$100'portnlrf

.

•·

Careleao
Sapphire•
Go foot
Blvd. kin
Wonder
13 Garr

1
4
8
11
12

of " Mr.

sehen
49 Man and

wilt
51 Dupe
54 Righi after
56 Stone Age
lool

57 Elevator
Mom"
pioneer
14 Junior ,
IS Golden
58 Oddball
F1ule word 59 Felt boot
60 Bear's
16 Soup
Ingredient
refuge
17 Falnls with 61 ~ow
heedllghls
pleasure
62 "My,myl"
19 JAMA
readers
DOWN
21 Disadvan·
I age
22 Parrotod
1 Bonny mlu
25 Aussle city 2 Declares
!rankly
29 Kipling
3 Elomenl54
novel
31 Bancroft
4 Dirty
5 Geological
of films
periods
34 Com serving
6 Picture
· 35 Say In lun
border
36 Cincinnati
7 lnvers·i on
ball club
problem '
37 Mll~ary addr.
a Alphabel
38 Requests
ender
39 Flight·
board Info
9 A Garshwin
10 Jewelry
40 Removed
item
chalk
42 Nonfat milk 13 Cookbook

qly.
manuocrlpi
18 Camel
43 Fleming
slops
and Smllh
20 Pony up
45 Modify
23 Makes ends 46 Border

meet

1t1te

24
26
27
28

Frlsbee
Darling
Wine valley
Aphrodl1o's
child
30 High pis .

48
49
50
51

Underwrllt
Floh boll
Knock flat
Whole
school
52 Hod for

31 " Where 32

33
35
40
41

dinner

you?"
53 Gollho
Beaulv·
champion·
salon 1tems
ahlp
Fargo's sl. 55 Namoln .
Burnt oul
archlloclurl
Grounded
bird
Fixes a

Alder

Adolph S. Ochs, who was the pub·
llsher of The New York Times from
IR96 tn l!t35, came up with lhe motto

m-1f---+-

Hands with l''il Should Uid Up. Look at
today's South han d. You open one
heart, your left-hand opponent over·
ca lls one spade, your partner raises to
two hearts, and your right-hand oppo nent competes with two sp:.1dcs. What

JONES'

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

would you do now?
Usually, 14 points are not enough to
consider game opposite a single raise,
but here lhe indications are good. Uow
many spades does partner hold '! At
most one. So, since you can ruff spade
losers in the dummy, ther e is a case
for jumping straight to four hearts.
However, if partn er's side-sui l values
are in clubs. 10 tricks might he unal·

BODACIOUS,
SILAS !!

tninable. H cautious. rebid three dia-

monds. This is a game-try, asking
to evaluate his hand based on

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Van

GR ING IN THIS AD
FOR ON LY ~. 13 00 rl:':l! l jlJ NDR[IJ

1
I ~INS'JJ:'A-CA$H~
. I
1

GEt Cash Today
Bring your

I
1

I
•Lasl checking statement
I
'Lasl pay check stub
I •Pholo I. D. •Phone Bill wllh name and address I
I
116 Main St.
I
Pom•roy; OH
I

ll'i/1 llold /-'or 30

Tfl.\~C:&gt;:S
Ju~T

~1'-lP...t&lt;\t: OOE:!

IN LIFE Tfi~T MOOEY

c.m'r euy

.

1

Dealer"

SMALL
ENGINE
REPAIR
Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

WE REPAIR

get the coverage you need.

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed EalerB
Tillers • Edgers
Go Kart&amp; • Mini
· Bikes

(740) 843-5264

3211~Welshlown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH

45769

Bonanza Get

r'o

HOME
IMPROVEMI'M'S

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gue.r·
antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

1998 Kawasaki 800 Vu lcan
Classic, 3700 miles , excel·
lent conc:IIUon , (740)992·
6879
-------2001 Honda Shadow Spirit,
General
Home
VT 1100, 7,400 miles , ask· C&amp;C
Maintenance· Palnling, vinyl
ing $5,900. 740·446-7688
siding, ca rpentry, doors,
85
Harley
Davidson windows. baths, mobile
Sportster XLH. 1000cc 4· home repair and more . For
speed. To many new parts to free estimate call Chat. 740·
list. Call 256· 1375.
992·6323.

SHOTOKAN KARATE
Beginner class ill
6 :00 to 7 :00 9/15/03
Eastern High
Cafeteria
Mm" info . QaJl
985-3994 ' ~.

~'R~
High 8l Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio
on
SAVINGS

740·992·5232
THE944
STORE
Salvage
County Rd. #35
Racine, Ohio

~. .

'

Shop
Ctasslfleds!

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

~~~~

--~--~--------J·

Let me doit for y oul

liNU1 PAINTING

(740) 517·9138
, or

(740) 949·0020

household today, so don·t do anything to
add more fuet lo the fire. Volatile issues
:..&gt;...---_.J"iii;;;;l must not be allowed to run the family.

~

LIBFIA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Strong opin-

you have on opposing issues.

• Room Addlllona &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garagei
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutter•
• VInyl Siding &amp; P1lntlng
• Patio and Porch Decke
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675-2457

Driveways t Tennis Courts
Parking Lots t Playgrounds
t Roads t Streets

Tl-lEN 11M
STILL ALIVE

WDID
GAM I

O Rearrange

·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992·1611
Stop &amp; Compare

tha

II

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IIII II I II

Get

Fast

GARFIELD

Results

THERE'S A G-REAT BICio
WONI'EP:FUI. \\ORL.l' OUT "!'HERE!

I

0

0

SOUl' TO NUTZ

COO\. ... DEAL~

(740) 992-3194
CONSTRICnDII
992-6635
• New Homes

of

Classifieds

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

ROBERT
BISSELL

leTters

fou r .crombled words be·
low to form four simple words.

I

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

"

-Gerald Ford

8

CARPENTER
SERVICE

8711-2487 or 448-2112

(1 O'x10' 6 1O'x20')

th e~!

XC I

F MV

PREVIOUS SOLUTiON - "I'm a groat fan ol baseball. I watch
a lot of games on the radio, er, I mean television ."

8

Henderson, WV

t
t

ow

such as politics. religion or lamity lauds,
"I remember when the term.
need to be kept under wraps today. Don't .
1
Introduce topics !hal anlagonlze others.
'melting· pot' used to mean The·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No,, 22)- Be e•lra
.
•
.
.
United States." the o l d gent
securlty-conscioL•s today with finances
o- sighed. ''Now it means you put the
and posse~sions, or even when around
A SHE E R
'wrong container in the---- ---individuals with que! tlonable reputalions.
•
'
·n
Complete the chuckle quoted
Keep ell thai is yours under a watchful
V by fillir~g in the miuing words
eye at this time.
'--'--'-...1..-1-..J.--l you de'(elop from 1tep No . 3 below.
SAGIT TAR IU S (Nov . 23-Dec . 21)Even it the opposition to a personal inter·
PRINT NUM~mo
lETTERS
est ol yours turns out 10 be rather strong
today, be careful not to vent your rAge on
UNSCRAM~lE
Innocent bystanders. Address the disANSWER
senters direc11y.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) - The
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
larger problems that you·u h av~ to con·
front today are api lo be of your own
Deface. Whisk. Beefy. Obtuse . WEEK OFF
makiny . Tcy not 1o be your own woes I
After susp"'nding a worker three days without pay ,
enemy by making mountains out of mole·
''t
hills.
he sh rugged and said, "C -,n you male it five days? 1 need
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- Be wise • ..;;a_;W,;;E;;;E;;;K,;.;;;O,;.F,;.F;..
." _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
today and avoid gatherings where you
know you might confront a few people
ClAar up an old obligation . Oon·t waste
who you don't feelloo friendly around.
lime grumbling - just do it.
The slightest infracliont:outd se t off a
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- Important
verbal baltle.
one- to-one relationships must be handled
PISCES (Feb . 20 · March 20) - Vou
with atlention and care today . When in
could have a te ndencv today to Assert
one ol your carefree moments. take care
some rather strong opinions to others, yet
not to blurt ou t anything that co uld be
you may be totally unprepared lor the
co nstrued as tactless.
reaction that comes from the qpposilion
CANC ER (June 21·J uly 22) - Those
to your beliefs.
protective instincts of yours might cause
ARIES (March 21 -April19) - You·re gill·
you to assume some burdens of another
ed with great crea tivity, but you must be
when you have enough on your plale
care ful today not to use It to Imagine all
loday handling your own duties. Let oltl·
ers tend for themselves.
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . types of negative happenings. Stop worrying about things that may never hapLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Resist temple·
1 HOPE IT 170E5N'T COl.l.IPE
pen .
l ions today to plunge good money Into
WITH THIS ONE
TAURUS (Aprii20·May 20)- It's not like
speculative ventures just because associ·
you to leave things until the last minute ,
ates do so. Expect returns only from pro·
but today there 's a posslbllily that you
ductlve work and nol somelhing for noth·
might be pressed Into a corner trying to
lng .

1-lAS TI-lE
BUS COME
'f'ET?

MYERS PAVING
Cell

~~~~~~~·'~

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)- The pressure cooker could be balling over in your

ions

YOUNG'S

740·992·2432
..., , 1n 11 , ...,

Ta~e

SFREE

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

GVWF-

'bor 'lllrlhday :

A bolder end more adventurous yo u
co uld ernerga m the year ahead . Your
dealings could lead you to ekplore other
facets of life Involving both personal and
business experiences that you have prevlously avoided.

BoK 189 Middleport

949-1405

.SEAMlESS
GUnEI

AstroGraph

Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2003

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

•Free Esdm1tes.

dOOFIIIG
•HOME
MIIIITEIIINCE

Today's clue.· E equals K
" MCHVWFP

G

uiTordable and easy it is to

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
.&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday or
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

JIOWARD l.
WRITESEL

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created fmm quotations by famous
people. pest and presen1. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

cz

/. ;' · · ~ Dun 'tleuve the deht uf
.~ : (::_' ~
· ·' . .
· burial and nnal expenses
'\.~ - J '~ Olli;for your ramil)' and
- , ·-~
I oved ones.
~'::
-:}"'-' .
, ·'
(/!( Let me show you how

/),rp

CELEBRITY CIPHER

OW
FMV
Against four hearts, West lends the
spade ace and shins to a trump. IJow
SCAORP
would you continue?
There should be little to the play.
You have nine top red -suit tricks, so
G V H
ZJOHEAOH
need only one spade ruiTin the dummy
ror number LO. Win trick two in hand,
MCHVWF
U 0 H
rurr a spade in the dummy, draw "0 H
trumps, and claim. Or, if you are feel·
ing greedy, after the (irst spade rurf, HCGAVWF
N C J E
cross back lo hand with a diamond,
trump n ~econd spade, return to hand
OAVYOHIVJ
scsv
with another diamond. draw trumps,
and register an overtrick.

j

1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo, 4x4, excellent con·
dllion, hl~h mllel, bul well
maintained.
$6,000.
(740)446-6981.

'

741J..992·CASH

'You K.KO'N, C.iJ,IC:.f, Tfi.Eii:E. m,~

inss .

"WV's # 1 Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds

Athens

I ·. .
1

THE BORN LOSER

both Its stnmgth and diamond holding.
(This bid is forcing t o three hearts,
making it safe on a three -ca rd !tuiU
Now North, despite his minimum highcard count. accepts the game in vita·
lion because of his great red-suit hold·

1-800-822-0417

IMPORTS

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

2·Motor slands used very lit·
$175. obo , 1-400
Transmission w/converter
worked good when pulled
out. $150. abo., 305 Motor
short block $150. obo., 8 &amp;
M Transmission
cooler
w/own fan brand new. $100.
1304)773-5054

44 Ravloll1111er

47 -Wit&lt;Mr·

partner

Parts &amp; Cars
•

ACROSS

"All the News That's Fit to Print." In
bridge, we could moi.IHy it to: All the

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

amlfm cass .. Reas hllch. V~
engine, askln~ ~2.500,
(740)949·2709

1994 Statos 17'6" bass boat
X25, fish finder . troll ing
motor, 120hp; Evlnrude,
black &amp; silver metallic:, white
boHom, trailer. $7000 firm,
740.742·0509

By Phillip

740-992·7599

r MaroRCY~ I
Llln'l how h lll\.dobon
PIIIV,_., Cll"l IWD yo~.~ :

East

~ ~AI&gt;

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Voyager,

"93" Cheivy Astro Van,
143,000 miles, runs good,
$3,000 or best oiler,
..
(7..
40.;.)9....9...
2·...
3;.35_7_ _ _..,

Nurth

Vinyl

• Replacement

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

Plymoulh

West

??

Windows • Roofing

96,000 miles, tilt, cruise. aJC,

Training!

Dealer; South

Siding • New Garages

1989 Che&gt;l)' G20 Van 3/4
ton, good cond, Blue &amp;
Gold color VNU logo $2500.
firm 304·675·2860
1995

7

BUILDERS lOt

1988 Chevy 4~e4 , 350. 5
speed, 1!2 ton, needs little
work, $1800, (740)742-4011

S,lft Protitol

+

BISSEll

r

START DATING
TONIGHT!
1·800-ROMANCE

.,. 9 6 12

.AK JH
• A Q5

South '

~~

Uoe II!VIII1'"' Monty!

+

.. '"' .. 2.

r

r

4!0QI07
• 8 7 3
• 9 6 2
A Q 8 4

Snuth

740·696·1227 Available Oct. 1st

r

r

:J 2

Vulnerable; East-West

I

j

s

East

• 52
• 7 4 ~
+K.J10

992-5479

$400 . 00 per month
2 bedrooms. 2 full baths

(i

Wrst
AAl&lt;.J85

Cellular

45771
740-949-2217

ANn~

r

mi· IO U3

"'
• 3Q 10 6
• K J lO 8

Jeff Warner Ins.

Buing paw. paw fruit $1 .00·
Auros
2.00 lb buying walnuts
mRSALE
Buy or sell
Riverine $10.00 100 lbs.
Antiques. 1124 East Main Call 74o-698·2124
1986 Ford Escort. 4 dr., 4
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740·
cyl., auto. great little car, lots
992 -2526. Russ Moore .
Potatoes
for
sale new parts. $1400. (740)742·
owner
(Ken nebec. Red Pontiac), 0509
Man-Sat.. 65002 State
MISCELLANEOUS
'Pleasant Valley Apartment
Route 124, Reedsville, Oh,
:Are now taking Applications ~ MERCHANDISE •
50# $10
·lor 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR ..
:Applications
are take n 1-1 OIC 12', insulated. metal
-Monday thru Friday, from siding tan &amp; bro wn , roUup
FOR SALE
~:00 A.M.·4 P.M. Office is door, was $1750 now
OR'fRADE
located at 1151 Evergreen $1400; 1· 10x15, insulated .
Drl"e Po1·n1 Pleasant WV metal sidinn tan &amp; green ,
...
·
•
85" Flora sora- $75.00. Blue
Phone No is (304)675 5806 rollup door, was $2100 now
·
"Lane" recliner- $50.00.
E H0
51700; (740)742·4011
·=·-_·----,:---- - - - - - - - - Antique roses painted chest:rara
Townhouse Coal &amp; wood burner. Good $65.00. Cream occasional
chair- $75.00. All in good
.Apartments, Very Spac: 1ous, Condition. 862·2790
'2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 - - - - - - - - condition. Phone (740)256:112 Bath, Newly Carpeted, Cockatiel bird cage w/stand 6445.
for sale, S20, (740)949-2547
'Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool , or call 304 -773-5246 .
I \tnt o.., t 1'1'1 II o..,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
.\11\I O.., IIU~
Pets , Lease Plus Security Cool Oown!!
Central
Deposit Required . Days: Cooling Systems, New and
?40-446·3481 ; Evenings· Used Installed. (740)446·
1993 Dodge Dakota super·
.740-367-0502.
6308
cab 4x4, VB, auto, $5,995.,
JET
A commercial 3 door refrlg·
Jwin Rivers Tower is accept·
1995 Dodge Ram supercab
AERATION MOTORS
-ing applications tor waiting
e.rator. (304)675·9726 ask - - - - - - - - - 4x4 VB auto $8,995. 1996
1999 Pontiac Grand Prix Dodge Ram 4x4 360 VB
list for Hud·subsized, 1· br, Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In for Carolyn
apartment, call 675·6679 StOck. Call Ron Evans, 1- - - - ' - - - - - - - 2dr, GT, Red, $8,995. 1997 auto, 1996 Dodge Dakota
Older Pin ball machine in Chrysler Sebring Black 2dr, supercab 4x4 VB auto
800·537·9528
EHO
working order or not. V6 $7,495 , 2000 Dodge $6,995. 1988 Chevy 1500
:..13.,04,.;).42•9-·3·3-33_ _ ___, Neon ES 4dr. black $5,995. 4x4, VB auto, $3,995. 1997
Upstairs apt. for rent . 2
2000 Ford Focus 4dr. Red.
bdrm., 1 bath, Kitchen wJ Kolcrafl double stroller, ~
Kie Sephia 4dr. Sspeed, air
LIVESTOCK
$5,995. Riverview Motora $1 ,995. Riverview Motora
appliances. Gas heat, water, Greco play pen 304675 (740)992·3490
trash paid. $350 a month. _88_6_2______ ~
(740)992-3490
(740)446·3481 .
Day
NEW AND USED STEEL For Sale A.l. reg. Angus 2000 Plymouth Neon LX.
Evening (740)446·1567. No Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
35,000 m1
'1 es $4,300. "all
heifers, cows &amp; calves ,also;
.....
1995 Chtwy CK 1500
calls after 9:00p.m
For
Concrete.
Angle ,
441·0370.
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel reg, black Limousine open - - - - - - - - e.dended cab pickup truck.
hailers 7 bulls.
Upstairs apt. for rent. 3
Gratin g
For
Drains,
2001 Mazda Millenia-S 4·wheet drive. Rhino bedlin·
bdrm, 1 bath, kitchen w/ Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L New digital livestock scales Loaded
31 ,000
miles- er. 304·675·5470
appliances
Gas"
he~t .
weighs
up
lo
3,4001bs
740·
Excellent conditition. Call
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
_
256 1352
Window ale. Water trash·
Tuesday, Wed nesc:lay &amp;
446-3838, leave massage if 1995 FORD E350 CUBE
paid. $375 month. Day
BOX
TRUCK .
CALL
Fric:lay, Bam-4:30pm. Closed Jersey cow, freshened 9/7, _n_o_an_s_w_a_r.- - - - (740)446-3581. . Evening
(740)446·9416. M·F 9·5
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; $850.
.
(7'40)446-1567. No calls
1391
Safford
85 Olds Cutlass. Runs good, Located
Sunday. (740)446- 7300
2-stall
horse-trailer,
straight
after 9:00p.m.
looks good, new rims. School. Gallipolis .
,oad.
good
condition.
Office Furniture
$1,500call367-7134
-------\ II W II \\Dio..,f
$1.250. Call (740)256·1724.
2002 Dakota needs painted,
New, scratch &amp; Dent.
91 T·Bird, grey, V-6. auto. 2 wheel drive. V-8. automatHOUSEIIOW
J Sa'e 70%. 1·800·527·4662 Polled Hereford Bull cal""s
cold air. new inspection ic, lOaded . $5,500 or best
-,
GooDs
Argonaut 5 1 ~ Bric:tge Street, For sale cal1256·1385.
sti cker. Runs &amp; looks good . offer. (740)256·1233
$1,200.
ObO (304)675-3304 - - - - - - - I,G•o•ld•M•a•y1•aiiigiii
, iiiWiiiaiiish• e•r•a,..J
nd Guyandott:::.::;,n MIF
or (304)593·032 1
89 Dodge Ma~ei van $800.00
97 Dodge Dakota extended
dryer $150 Whirlpool washer "---iiSiii
uiiti'I'UiiiiiiiiE'&gt;;;.._.I ~~-------.,J
92 Corsica, 6 cyl.. auto, 4
7
cab $3,000.00 740-742·
~~~Ow~~~~~~~: ~ft~~r6 $p ~
Wrap round or big square dr., new !Ires. paint. many
446-9066
Block, brick, sewer pipes. bales ot wet hav. McHale other new parts. $2200, 2451
windows. lintels. etc. Claude bale wrapper. Call Hartsock (740)742·0509
"94" Chevy Silverado e~et.
Winters. Rio Grande. OH
Good Used Appliances, Call740-245·5121.
95 Berella 3.1 V6 auto. cab, 5-speed, runs good,
Reconditioned
and i!~:.;;::.:;;;~,;:;.:;..._'"'l
118,000 miles, runs good, $3,500 or best offer,
Guaranteed.
Washers.
PETI;
very clean. $3,500 obo. Call (740)992·3357
Drvers.
Ranges.
and ~~---m·R-SiiiAU:iiOI._.,J
256·1375.
Refrigerators, Some start at 96 . · Ford
Ranger
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 AKC 6 week old labs 1 yel Used Car, 1995 Saturn 4 Ot51 1856Ex cab
4X4
Vine St .. (740)446·7398
low male $250 .. 1 black $500 POLICE IMPOUNDS. door: Excellent Condi tion , $5,90Q; 96 Ford Explorer
male, 2 black females $200. Hondas.
chevys,
etc! $2,495. 2903 Parrish Ave. 4X4 $4,200: 97 lsuzu Rodeo
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark each. 1st shots &amp; wormed . cars/trucks from $500, For Point Pleasant. (304)675· 4X4 $3,200: 95 GMC Pickup
Chapel Aoac:l. Porter, Ohio. (304)773·5103
listings 1-800-719-300 1 e~et 3275
2 WO $2,400: 68 Chevy
(740)446-7444 1·877-8303901
Silverado $2,500; 98 Ranger
9162. Free Estimates, Easy CKC Cocker Spaniel pups
Estate sale of 1998 Ford E&gt; Cab 2 WD $4,500; 93
financing. 90 days same as for sale. buff. buff &amp; white &amp; 1985
ToyOta
Camry Tau rus and 1994 Dodge Chevy S-1 0 Blazer 4X4
cash. VisaJ Master Card. cream. shots &amp; wormed . Hatchback. Sl ,000. Call Caravan . Call 740-388· $1.750.
Drive· a- little save alot.
$200. (740)992·7371
740-992·7580
0480.
B&amp;D Auto Sales Hwy 160 N.
446-6865.

Now TakinQ Applications. 35 West 2 Bedroom
Townhouse
Apartments.
Inc ludes Water Sewage.
Trash , $350JMo., 740-446·
0008

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER.

Refrigerator $75., Whirlpool

i

_11_~-------------

BRIDGE

Washer $95., Kenmore
dryer $125 .. G.E. refrigerator,
liKe new. $195.,
Kenmore Washer /dryer set
S300 .. 3-couchs- S50. each.

r70

iO

The Dally Sentinel • Par 85

ALLEY

APAlrrMFNr\i

I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

'E:M

OUT~

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 16,

www.mydailysentineJ.com

2003 .
'

Women's soccer Stairs helps Pirates clim.b over Reds~
league suspends
oper~tions

I

&lt;'
'

I

I '
I

I

'

I

j

f

A1l.ANTA (AP) - The
cash-strapped WUSA called
it quits Monday just five days
before the Women's World
Cup, bringing an abrupt end
to a soccer league built on the
success of the 1999 tournament.
The decision was made by
the league's board of governors at a meeting in New
York.
The ei~ht-team WUSA was
filled wtth the world's best
female players, including
U.S. stars Mta Hamm, Brandi
Chastain and Julie Foudy.
Chastain provided the signature moment in the '99 tournament when she ripped off
her shirt after scoring the
championship-winning goal
against China.
But the attention the
Women's
World
Cup
received faded over the years,
leaving the WUSA foundering. TV ratings were almost
nonexistent and the league
had trouble tlnding fans who
weren't under 18 and play on
a soccer team. Average attendance slipped from more than
8,000 the first season to about
6,700 a game last season.
The WUSA hoped another
World Cup this fall would
bring last-minute corporate
sponsorships to save the
league, but that hasn't happened, said John Hendricks,
chairman of the WUSA board
of governors.
Hendricks blamed weak
corporate support for the
league's failure.
"I was intoxicated by what
I witnessed in 1999, and I
mistakerily believed that level
of support would flow over
into the league," Hendricks
said.
The WUSA's owners have
invested more than $100 million to fund the league, and
some of the top players took
pay cuts this season to help
keep it afloat. Even after cutting cost~. the league was
about $16 million in the red.
Hendricks said the league
needed eight sponsors to
spend $2'.5 million each per

year. The WUSA recruited
only two sponsors wjlling to
spend that much, Hyundai
and Johnson &amp; Johnson.
"If we only had six or
seven CEOs in America that
had stepped forward in the
past year," Hendricks said.
."An independent women's
professional league can survive - if it has corporate
support."
The league conceded the
timing of the announcement
was awkward but said the
WUSA had to consider all its
employees and players who
aren't tn the World Cup.
"We couldn't keep the
doors open even another 24
hours without jeopardizing a
decent and fair severance
package for our employees,"
Hendricks said.
The league employed 375
people, including players,
and had franchises in Boston,
Atlanta,
San
Diego,
Washington, New York, San
Jose, North Carolina and
Philadelphia.
The
Washington Freedom won
the title last month.
The Women's World Cup
be~ins
Saturday
in
Phtladelphia, and the U.S.
team opens the next day
against
Sweden
in
Washington, D.C. Fifty-six
WUSA players ane to compete, representing 1l of 16
counbies in the tournament.
WUSA players took an
active role in the league's
management and were
involved in the decision to
close the league.
'The impact of the WUSA
on women's sports and millions of fans has been ex traordinary," said Foudy, captain
of the San Diego Spirit and
U.S. team, and a member of
the WUSA board of governors.
The lea~ue will not dissolve entirely until next
spring, Hendricks said.
"There is a glimmer of
hope that a few months down
the road the phone will ring"
from a deep-IJ?Ckets sponsor,
Hendricks srud.

PITISBURGH (AP)
Ryan
Vogelsong was starting to wonder if he'd
ever earn his first major league victory.
The Pittsburgh Pirates ri~ht -bander
scattered three hits over five mnin~s for
his first win in the bigs·, a 6-3 vtctory
over the Cincinnati Reds on Monday
night.
"It's been a long time coming, I' ll tell
you that," said Vogelsong, who struck
out two, walked three and allowed just
one hit over his final 4 1-3 innings.
"Everyone dreams of winning their
first g;~me in the big leagues, so it's a
very special night," he said.
·
Vogelsong ( 1-1) debuted as a reliever
with San Francisco in 2000, and was 0-6
in 22 previous major league appearances, including four starts.
Vogelsong. out of minor league
options after this season, had won five of
hts last eight starts at Triple-A Nashville.
He spent most of last season on the disabled list recovering frorn right elbow
surgery in September 200 I.
Matt Stairs hif a three-run homer in the
lirst inning to back Vogelsong.
"I was teasing him before the game,"
Stairs said. "I said, 'You're 0-6 and it 's
about time you win one.' I know he's
going to sleep a lot better tonight."
Not many Pitt'Sburgh fans were there to
witness it, as the paid crowd of 8,565
was the smallest in PNC Park history.
Due to a ticket exchange program for
season-ticket holders, the Pirates said
there were approximately 15,000 in the

ballpark.
They were
treated to a
memorable
home
run.
too.
After
Abraham

N u n e z

reached on a
fielder's
choice and Reggie Sanders was walked
by Todd Van Poppe! (0-1 ), Stairs' 18th
homer cleared the right-lield seats and
rolled into the Allegheny River.
"That was a big , big lift," Vogelsong
sajd. "That took a lot of pressure off my
shoulders. When you go out there with a
3-0 lead, it certainly relaxes you.
"I'm the type of pitcher where, if I can
minimize the damage the first couple
innings, I'll be all right."
The Reds had runners in scoring position in each of the first three innings,
· loading the bases in the second before
Vogelsong got Eric Valent to fly out to
center.
"We definitely helped him out, chased
some pitches out of the strike zone,"
Reds manager Dave Miley sa id . "If we
~et. a bi,g hit in the first co~ple of
mmngs, II could have been a dtfferent
game. We had opportunities there early
in the game and just couldn't capitalize."
Julian Tavarez pitched a perfect ninth
for hi s eighth save in II chances as the
Pirates won for the fifth time in eight

games.
Pirates manager Lloyd McClendon
was especially happy for Vogelsong.
"He's worked really hard the last couple of years to come back from that
surgery, and tt has to be a lift mentally to
have something positive to s ho.~ for tl at
this le vel," McClendon satd. Thts has
got to be relaxing for him."
Van Poppe!, making his third start of
the season and second for Cincinnati,
allowed five run s- all with two outsin six innings.
" I felt good and I made some good
pitches. But mentally, I had a couple
lapses," Van Poppel said. "Stairs is a
good hitter, an? I laid one in there and
he did what he s supposed to do wuh tt.
He hit it a long way. · •
.
After Van Poppe! walked Stairs and
hit Craig Wil son with a pitch in the
sixth , Jack Wilson drove a two-out double over Dernell Stenson's head in left
field to make it 5-0.
The Reds cut it to 5-1 in the seventh
when pinch-hitter Tim Hummel singled
and scored on D' Angelo Jimenez 's
groundout.
The Pirate s committed two of their
four errors in the eighth, leading to two
Cincinnati runs. Stenson reached on a
fielder's choice and later scored on
shortstop Wilson 's throwing error.
Corky Miller scored on a throwing error
by third baseman Rob Mackowiak.
Jack Wil son added a sacrifice ny in
the eighth.

Reds blow out
Pirates, 12-4, Bt

improved to 7-0 in nine
starts since July 29 as the
Twins won for the lOth time
in 13 games. He gave up four
runs - three earned - and
four hits in five-plus innings .
Jason Davis (8-11) allowed
seven runs and six hits in 5
2-3 innings , dropping to 1-4
in II starts since June 29.
Shannon Stewart's RBI ·
double put Minnesota ahead
in the third, but the Indians
tied it in the bottom half
when Chris Magruder hit his
first homer since July 21 last
year.
Cleveland made it 2-1 in
the fo~rth on a two-out RBI
double by Victor Martinez.
A. fielding play on an
infield single led to the

eight-run sixth.
Stewart drew a one-out
walk and Luis Rivas, in an 0for-22 slump, chopped a ball
to the side of the mound.
Davis stretched out his full
6-foot-6 frame to snare it
with a backhand dive but hit
Rivas with his throw to firs~
for ao error.
That play left runners on
second and third, Doug
Mientkiewicz walked and
Jacque Jones followed with a
sharp single to right. Rivas
was thrown out at the plate
by right fielder Alex
Escobar.
Corey Koskie was intentionally walked to reload the
bases, and Hunter grounded
a two-run double just inside

the third-base line for a 4-2
lead. A.J . Pierzynski then
singled home Mientkiewicz.
Ryan added a two-run single and Guzman a two-run
homer - both off reliever
Rafael Betancourt.
Ryan, hit in the head by a
fly ball the previous day,
made a leaping catch at the
wall in right to rob
Martinez's bid for a threerun homer in the sixth. Ben
Broussard had a sacrifice fly
and another run scored on an
error by Koskie at third.
Koskie's RBI single made
it I 0-4 in the seventh, but
Cleveland got a pair of runs
in the bottom half on Travis
Hafner 's RBI ilroundout and
Escobar's sacnfice fly .

Meigs girls earn win
over Trimble, Bt

•

•

could save seniors, .underinsured up to 40 percent

SPORTS
• Krenzel still hurt. See
Page 81

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
tentative
deal
reached
between drug makers and a
coalition of seniors and
unions should save up to 40
percent off prescription drug
prices without any help from
taxpayers, a spokesman for
the coalition says.
The agreement will be presented Thursday to the two
groups' governing boards ,

with details to be announced
afterward, said Dale Butland,
spokesman for the Coalition
for Affordable Drug Prices.
"It is a historic and groundbreaking agreement that will
be the most far-reaching in the
nation," Butland said. "There
is not a state in America now
that will have a plan covering
as many uninsured people and
senior citizens than Ohio."

Jenny C~per, spokeswoman for the Pharmaceutical
Research and Manufacturers
of America, or PhRMA, confirmed a deal had been
reached. Both Camper and
Butland described the deal as
unprecedented.
"We expect it (discounts)
will
range
somewhere
between 25 (percent) and 40
percent off the retail price,"

Butland said. "We expect all
the major drug manufacturers
to participate as well as all
the major drugstore chains."
The coalition represents
unions, the Ohio chapter of
AARP, the Ohio Council of
Churches. the Ohio Nurses'
Association and the League
of Women Voters. PhRMA
represents about 40 drug
manufacturers.

"It's a real breakthrough
agreement and pretty sweep·
ing in the package that it
offers," Camper said.
Butland and Camper said they
could not say how many manufacturers would take part or how
many of those lacking adequate
insurance would be covered . .
The coalition was formed

Please see Deal, AS

Drop-off recycling subject of study , Pomeroy

Hunter turns Tribe into the hunted
CLEVELAND (AP) Torii Hunter tied his career
high with five RBls as the
Minnesota Twins defeated
the Cleveland Indians 13-6
Monday night and took sole
possession of the AL Central
lead for the first time since
June 30.
Hunter. Michael Ryan and
Cristian Guzman each drove
in two runs in an eight-run
sixth inning. Hunter added a
three-run homer in the ninth
off Terry Mulholland, giving
him 99 RBis, a career high.
Minnesota (81-69) moved
a half-game ahead of idle
Chicago
(80-69).
The
defending AL Central champions, 37-20 since ihe AllStar break, begin a threegame series Tuesday against
the White Sox, the start of an
eight-game homestand.
Johan Santana ( 11-3)

f

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@ mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY Meigs
County residents recycled
over 400 tons of materials
last year, through drop-off
poiniS and curbside recycling programs, according to
Recycling
and
Litter
Prevention
Coordinator
Paula Wood.
The county's eight dropoff points provide a convenient method for recycling
of aluminum and steel caris,
newsprint and magazine
paper, glass bottles, #I and
#2 plastic, and cardboard.
The facilities are located at
Chester, Forked Run State
Park near Reedsville, Hiland
Road in Pomeroy, Syracuse, ·
Racine, Salem Center,
Rutland, and at Manley 's
Recyling in Middll;port.
Such drop-off facilities
will be the subject of a study
to be conducted by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency, to determine their
effectiveness and to help
local agencies improve program designs. The EPA
announced their plans for

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Nina Boston, 77
• A. Orman Mays, 80
• Cecilia Mitch, 81
• Helen Smith, 81
• Eli White, 82

WEATHER
Sunny, HI: 70., Low: 50s

'

BY J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY - Three bids
on a project to upgrade
Pomeroy'~ water treatment
plant were received and have
been rejected because they
were too high.
John Anderson, Pomeroy
village administrator, said the
bids were outside the I 0 percent margin of the estimated
cost for design and construction of the project.
Anderson said any interested parties will now have to
rebid for the $1.5 million
upgrade which will take
approximately a year to build
and last 50 years.
The current water treatment
plant was built in 1974 and
provides water to more than
2000 connections. Anderson
said the upgrade will provide
better water quality by eliminating manganese and softening the water.
'This is a very big plus for
Pomeroy by having an abun"dance of good quality water,"
said Anderson . .
Funding for the project will
be from a combination of state
and federal grants and a
$198,000 loan from the Ohio
Water Development Authority.
Anderson said the planning
process for applying for grants
and designing lhe upgrade
began four years ago.
The
Environmental
Protection Agency reviewed
designs and worked closely
with engineers and the village. Anderson said once bids
come in and are approved by
village council, construction
could begin. '
Mayor Victor Young Ill
said breaking ground on the
upgrade is something he
wants to see happen during
the remainder of his term
which ends in December. He
said the water treatment
upgrade would be pan of former mayor John Blaettnar'5
legacy once it is complete .

David Collingsworth loads recyclable newsprint onto the Meigs County Recycling and Litter
Prevention's collection trailer. The .collection service also gathers cans, bottles, paper and
other recyclable items from community drop-off locations throughout the county. (Brian J. Reed)
the year-long study of the Prevention Week, which will usually the most inexpenprograms in connection with continue through Saturday.
Piease see Study. A5
"Drop-off programs are
tts observance of Pollution

Detalll on Po.. A2

Sounthern band marches to Jackson
LO'I'I'ERIES

BY

~

Pick 3 day: 3-3-7
Pick 4 day: 3-1-1-3
Pick 3 night: 4-o- t
Pick 4 night: 7-6-1-3
Buckeye 5': 6-7-19-25-30

West Vuginia
Dally 3: o-9-3
Dally 4: 3-6-Hl
Cash 25: 11-14-15-16-17-21

INDEX
Calendar
Classifieds

-

ta

PAGES

A3
B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4
As
As

Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

MILES LAYTON

jtayton@mydailysentinet.com

Ohio

a SECI10NS

J.

BI·2,6

A2

© 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

rejects
water
treatment
plant
upgrade
bids

RACINE- The Southern
High School band will be
marching all over southern
Ohio in the next few weeks.
Saturday. the band in their
brand new uniforms took
part in their first parade. It
was a part of the Racine Fall
Festival. Racine Village
Council member Charlotte
Teaford-Wamsley, riding in
a 1947Jeep driven by Paul
Marr, said for her the
marching band "made the
parade special."
''!' m really proud of the
Southern band," she said.
"The band director (Jeanette
Oldaker) has done a wonderful job. The kids played
Since getting new uniforms, the Southern High School marching band is keeping busy. Here
great this morning."
For a number of years the they play in their new uniforms for their school's first football game. Last Saturday they
band has been marching in marched in their first parade in uniform, and this Saturday they will perform at the Tow~
little more than T-shirts and and Country Expo on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds , and then go to Jackson where they will
trousers. The Southern High march In the Apple Festival. (J. Miles Layton)
School Band Boosters and a
Oldaker said the band has
number of alumni came Oldaker said. "They enjoyed and Country Expo on the played at several football
together for a fundraising performing for their first Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
At 7:45 p.m. that day they games already and the
drive to get together the parade in the new uniforms.
will travel to Jackson and members are looking fornecessary $22,000 to cover It was a very big deal ."
Saturday wi II be another march down Main Street in ward to taking part in the
the purchase of unifc;&gt;rms.
busy day for the marching the Jackson County Apple Expo and Apple Festival
They came in last spring.
events Saturday.
"The kids are really get- band. At 10:30 a.m. they Festival parade which is annu"We're ready." she said.
ting used to wearing them," will be playing at the .Town ally attended by thousands.

In celebration of Women's Health Month, Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Well ness is proud to pres~nt their 6th Annual

•Iris T•lme
. ' .I
0U

An IIYIIIif fa&lt; molilers, rloughfers, grandmolhen, wnts,
and all ol""' imporlunr women in""' livest

sunday, September 2s • 12 Noon- 4 PM
12 Noon - 1 PM - Health Fair in French 500 Room
I.Jvl&gt;t, IMiot"""" willloo W&gt;Od. Heolllo m

,..,.,., a.on. density and much more.

r.....

10
sawni"!!l fo, non-ltn~llfl ,,.,.,...., and g~uco,., blOod ·
Girl• 00" JO. 18 mull flaw pare:nlol &lt;'OnMflf lo porljcipolt in sc,...,irvt.

•

1 PM • 3 PM - Program Begins in Education &amp; Conference Center

sisfers,
'

3 PM - 4 PM - Health Fair Re-Opens

Featuring National Speaker Rebecca ·RadcliHe - "Dreams Grow In Every Heart"
Information on heart diseqse and nutrition will be available as well • For more information, call (740/446-5679
Jhis pt"OgrMl is ~by ,n. Women'J Heo/111 Secti011, Bureau of Heohh Promorion tmd Rilit Redlldion, Ohio Dwpartm.nf of H.o/th,
AHEC,
BP'w, A1'"'Uneco, anti ~he Gollio Coon!)' Medico/ Sociely

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