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                  <text>Page B 8 • The Dally Sentl~el

Thursday, October 24, 2002

www.mydallynntlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

BIUDOE
PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

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Oealer: South
Vu.lntrable: Elst·West
Soulh Wesl · Nafta. East
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From Japan

'•

BARNEY
PAW WILL NEVER
THINK TO
MERE f'ER
MY EGG
MONE.'&lt; !!

d•
!

'

•

;

I ~

\ •"•
•
•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST,

ToNIGHr&gt;
TOPIC.
&lt;:tiA(ZM$,
OMtN,$

AN.I&gt; TH~
$(/f&gt;,;~-

•..

NATVPAlTHE BORN LOSER

'Tf\CfRE C,;VIKG WIL..BEJ~F~?
Wf&gt;.-Y TOO MUC.f-1 1-\0ME WO~K
,--... FOR SC.HiJOL Tf\ IS YE.t\R I

0

College

45

::::li.
Fllry-tlle

46

quartm
word
50 Open a gill
Mom'a
53 Deep blue
mom
55 T·bones
12 Itemize
56 Flip-chart
13 Chlneee
temple
etands
57 Plantain
14 Lure
lily
15 Arrogant
person
58 Ceremon·
lolllre
18 !lap abbr •
18 Bead• on
DOWN
gr111
19 Dripping
1 Type of
wei
muffin
23 Legal
2 "Othello"
matter
28 Reporter's
heavy
query
3 Door
openers
27 Apprecla·
4 Ceau
live
5 Poetaounds
Jonson
30 Portllenon
goddell
6 LL.D.
holder
32 Trilled with
7 Plunder
34 Early New
Zealander 8 Good·
natured
35 Sm~ll wave
9 Old In the
36 Tum
37 Unlold
dragon
centuries 10 AMA
38 Dwarl
members
11 Honda rival
39 Holiday
'l"""'i-r.:--r.:--

.. Qt?!i
Wnl
• 10 I S 3
\' 10 I 1
t KQJt7

42

10

~·~·.
\' Kll t

&gt;

Giants lead W.lcl 5elles 3 pines to :J, 11

NEA Crouword Puzzle

Melp CountY's Hometown Newspaper '"
diver·
Ricky or
·gences
old TV
17 Boxing win 41 Like bubble
bath
20 Wllh lftle lo
21 Obaervlng 42 Shrub
22 Sticky atuff 43 Wild obout
44 Felli
23 Play
grateful
bumper·
47 Quay
cars
48 Look
• 24 Theta
rudely at
precedero
49 Calculator
25 Boutique
llge.
28 Hoopla
51 Squeal on
29 Market .
52 Wanted·
· 31 Huron.
poater
neighbor
abbr.
33. Phone lrlo
35 New cop 54 Rug texture ·
37 USN rank
40 Wide
12

Bridge -computer
programs are still -·
and will remain, in
my opinion •• a long
way short or chess
programs. (In chess,
i!"""""!r-'-"'!'l'--r.;"""r.,
all the information ·is·
. 'TAIN'T HARDLY
known all the. time,
FAIR,IS IT'?
which makes analyz·
ing a position much
easier.) The latest
bridge program I received is Micro
Bridge I 0 by Tomio
and Yumiko Uchida
from Japan. It is the
b!)sl I have seen. The
machine bids accepta·
bly and plays decently. The user has
lots of control over
SUP~ItS'TITIONS1
the bidding and card- .
play methods to be
employed.
·.
'NOT ll~AL£.Y •••
There is one strange
quirk: A dot appears
JVST llt6VLA/t
above one of your
.STITIONS.
cards when it is your
turn to play. Do not
CELEBRITY CIPHER
be swayed •• it is not
by Luis Campos
a hint.
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands lor another.
10·24
Here is a deal that
Today'sclue: V equals Y
the program defended
correctly. How did
"GEJEMV
NUUN
R
KYESUP
EastWest
collect
.
.
seven tricks against
s u ZRIUG'H
HAL U
RGM
I-llS MOTf\E..R. 1\NO t DON'\ ""' one no-trump 7
•
1-\!&gt;..VE Et-.IOU61-\ TIME. TO 00 ITI . South might have
HE
NU U
HRWUN
HAL U,
rebid two hearts, but
YAWU
HE
Z R I.U R
KPAUG. M.
4-3-3-3 hands tend to
be better in no-trump
H R W UN
HAL U."
!
unless partner's hand·
· is unbalanced.
:i
TUEPTAR
E' W U UK K .U
West led the dia·
~ •
~
mond king. First, East
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"Broadway's mountain. Tough sled·
00
~
din.~ .on the way up- a loboggan on lhe way down:
made .the· key play of
0
- vyalter Winchell
•
overtaking with the
ace. One must unWORD
block in these posiGAM I
tions. East returned
I
the. diamond eight,
and West carefully 0 Rearronil• !olton of
four scromblod words b..
· overtook with its low to form four slmplo ·words.
nine. When West
cashed the diamond
HA WT E R
queen, East accu- ·· ~~,.........--...,..-.,.,2,.....,-.,--1
rately discarded an
.
. . .
encouraging spade ~=:;~~~:;:=~__.
six; after the diamond .
T J.\ I N G
deluge, East wanted a 1--n--,--r--n:--i·
spade shift. not a club
1• 1 1
switch (in case South 1..-.J.-...L.--L.- ' - ·--'N
had the club jack). · 1. R U L Y. C ~ ~
Our son
away
The spade king .
... camp. We got a real laugh from
KfND OF Nl
5 1
needed to be estab·
1 1 . 1~ ~ one of his letters. He wrote that
LIVIN6 IN A
lished before the club
. . _ .
~ before he signed up he never
ace was dislodged.
knewthat4:30 came around---·
After taking his dia- ·~l---r-PTU_D..,....L-.-E_Hnr-11· a-· -1
·
mends, West trust- . .
I
B.
Complete Jho chuckle quoled
ingly shifted to a .
. . . .
i&gt;y fiiHng in the missing words
spade, and that gave
you develop from step No. 3 below.
1
the defenders seven
PRINT NUMBERED
3
tricks: one spade, five ·
LETTERS IN SQUARES
diamonds and one , A UNSCiAMBlE FORI ,. I
. club.
, ~ ANSWER
. .
The software is
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
$66.90 postpaid from
August- Ebony· Queen - Plaque -BLUES
Baron Barclay Bridge
"To do the wash properly," says the mom," you have
Suprlies.
Call
(800)
I~
274-2221 to order.
to separate the whites from the colors." "I know," replied
the coed. "I've done the whites and yellows, but. 1 still
have to finish the BLUES!" ·
..
~

'

I

:3

••

BIG NAT.!£
WAS.
SUI THEN
r !&gt;i'OPPEt&gt;
TO BEGoiN
LESSON!&gt; .

'

I

I

PEANUTS
1

MWORRIED ABOUT POOR

MARCIE .. llER PARENTS INSIST
l"fllAT SIIE 6ET 5TRAI61.1T /J:S •.

1

1 1 1

r

I

5
Bv BRIAN J. REED
Slaff writer

Weather
High: 60s, low: 405

Qetalls, Al

Deaths
Robert Lynn Riffle, 48

.

Details, Al

.

Fall ·~~

.back·.. :

GUeSS WHAT ri\Y
FAVORI'ffi MOVI~ OF
· ~002 IG\'

-

-l)'1bur.

'Birtllday

l'riday, 0&lt;:1. 25, 2002
BV BERNICE BIDE 0sOL

A nonvocational interest

could take center stage in
y11ur life in the year ahead. It
will be something you think
of as fun. but it could eventu·
ally evolve into a very sue-

GAIWII£LD

cessful

TI.IE GBIZZ\VELLS
D? 'ro Ml\-\0 1\' I

I'i'll JU5\

1~1\\F.

Ma:J:)To 8EI-IP
'-----.;n 5:&gt;fllt6CI;JY'E&gt; ~~

BrniJ YCU~ t.l&gt;.?..
\'OR A FEW
t&lt;\1\'\UTI.S

bu~iness

venture:

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .
22) ·· Even though you might
get involved today in a busi· ·
ness arrangement that won't
be conducled along conven·
tionallines, it will prove to be
· the successful one to follow.
Get a jump on life by under· ·
standing lhe influences lhat
will govern you in 'the. year
ahead. Send for your Astra·
graph predictions by mailing
$2 and an SASE lo Aslro·
graph. c/o this newspaper. ·
P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
44092. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dcc.21) ·· Something mutu·
· ally beneficial can develop today· from a partnership ar·
rangemenl wilh a person
whom you don't normally
deal with. The association is

apt to last only as long as it
takes to complete your busi-

ness.

- -------- -- ..----··
...

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) ·· If ynu have been sty·
mied by delays that are going

..J·
"' '"

-

....... "

.....

.. ..

·

nowhere, discard your normal
tactics today and use your in·
genuity and resourcefulness
to circumvent the roadblock.
You can do it.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) ·· A spur·of·the"moment
development could ensue to·
day; and . you'll want to be
able to take advantage of it.
Keep your calendar as ne~i­
blc as possible. because this
happen~ng could be rather exciting.

'

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) •• Through ihe good auspices of a friend. ·an unexpected bonus could be in the
making for you today. You
might get a piece of ihe pie
that's being ·served up in a
new and different way.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
.. .Stick to mental pursuits to·
day if it is at all possible.
You'll be far beuer equipped
lo handle them at thiS ltme
than you'll be able to cope
with physical ones. Deal in
the realm of ideas.

· TAURUS . (April 20-May ·
20) .. An unusual chain of
circumstances that pop out of
nowhere could tum out IO

he

very profitable for you in ihc
long .run. But it's the lype nf
arrangement lhat isn' t ltkely
. 10 be repeated.

. GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
.. h will be evident to every·
one you encounter today that
you're the one who possesses

the best leadership qualities,
as you demonstrate your abil·
ity to make quick, accurate

assessments.

'

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
.. Your best ideas can be formulated in environments that

are quiet and pose little
chance of being dis(upled. If
you have something to sort"

out mentally today, keep this
in mind.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
There is a possibility lhat you
mig,ht be hearing from a
friend today who has some- .
thing unusual but good going
on. Your pal appreciates your
talents and wants you to get

involved.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
·· Lady Luck IS hanging out
in your nei~hborhood today.
but she won t stay around too

long. Move swiftly when you
see her. and

mk.~

POMEROY_ "We've had
some setb acks, but we 're not
down, and we're not going to
step down, because we know
the need is really great.''
Tom Dooley, president of
the United Fund for Meigs
County, discussed the effect
of the closing of the Southern
Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Mines
and other economic down-.
turns on contributions to the
United Fund during the
fund's 2003 campaign kickoff
breakfast Thursday.
According to Dooley, giving to local charities through
UFMC has suffered in the

Officials say rubble to
be gone by year's end

Don't forget:

nmechanges
Sunday·morning
WASHINGTON (AP)With the back.Yard barbecue season wmding to a
close, it's . time to say
jlOOdbye to daylight-savmg lime.
Clocks shift back to
standard time at 2 a.m.
Sunday, local time, giving
an extra hour of sleep to
most people Saturday
nigh!--- · . an extra hour of
work to those who work
the overnight.
And the change means it
will be dark lin hour..t;arlieG , n~xt week , when
Halloween arrives, calling
for .extra caution on the
par.t of drivers and those
watching the children Ol)
their rounds.
·· Most people set their
clocks back before retiring
Saturday evening. Those
who don' t, need to remember to set · them . back
Sunday - or they'll be an
hour out of sync with the
rest of the community. ·
If they still haven't
remembered to do it by ·
Monday morning, they
could be an hour early for
work.

LoHeries
OHIO

Pick 3: 0·4·8
Pick 4: 2-9-6~8
Buckeye 5: 2·3-15·18-19
Pick 3 night: 4·7·1 f•
Pick 4 night: g.(). 1·0
W.VA.
Daily~: 2'4·7

Daily 4: o,G-6-1
Cash 25: 8-1()-12-17·19-23

Index
1 Sections - 111 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A4
86-7
88
A4
A6
A3
A3
81-5
A2

· C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Bv BRIAN J. REED

highway department 's heavy
equipment is occupied with
pending road and bridge .proPOMEROY ,.,.:: All that jects, but a trackhoe will be
remains of the Pomeroy made available to help clean up
Masonic Temple is a pile of the Mulberry Avenue site
bricks and lumber. But that pile before year's end.
of rubble has . become a
During the business session,
.headache for Meigs County commissioners .approved trans~
d
fer5 of funds for the county
· ·
CotrumssiOners
an an eyesore auditor, and tabled action on a
for neighbors and passersby.
Commissioner Jim Sheets $17,500 transfer request fium
said Thursday the debris will be the Meigs Board of ~ntal
removed as soon. as the coun- Retanlation and Developmental
ty's highway department can Disabilities fium its Workers'
Compensation line item into its
spare the equipment needed.
The historic temple building contract repair and other
was condemned years ago and expense line 1tems.
.;"'f#t:lonwliishl~ "M"llier-thiso yell{:' 10
Coll1Il)issioners also:
make
a courthouse
• Appro.v ed a resolution
parking
commissioners declaring November National
said,
.
SHo~e CMare .thand 'thHospicffe .
"We' ve had a lot of people erv~ces
on , WI
sta
inquire about the debris, and we members from Holzer Hospice
know it looks bad," Sheets said Meigs County, Holzer .Home
during Thursday 's regular com.· Care and Holzer Extra Care .
mission meeting. "We' re mak· participating·,
·
h 1·t ff"
• Approved payment of bills
~~=~gements to au 1 0 ' in the amount of $282, 153.4 1..
According to Sheets, the
Commissioner
Mick
· Davenport also attended.
Staff writer

Hundreds of potted plants and perennials came into the l)enior Citizens Center on Thursday
for the fall plant exchange, a project o.f the Meigs County Extension Office ·and the Master
Gardeners. Jim Deeter of Bedford Township, · a "regular" at bringing in and taking away
plants at the exchange, selects a spider plant. He is assisted by Colleen McCambrigge
Ridenour, a master gardener. (Charlene Hoeflich)
·

Students .track ·own .P.rogress,
given more·responsibilities
BY KRIS DllTSDN
Staff writer
RUTLAND - · Rutland
Elementary School boasts
I00 percent teacher/classin
room
participation
Baldrige this school year,
and according to Principal
Rusty Bookman, "It's a good
thing."
.
What is Baldrige?
"It's a comprehensive
school reform model ·that
puts an emphasis on student
responsibility with greater
communication between the
schools
and
parents,"
Bookman said.
Students track or chart
their progress in such areas
as dtscipline, turning in
homework and test scores.
That way they can tell if they
are meeting the goals that
they set for themselves, also

a part of
Baldrige.
Grades
are
no
longer surprises at
repon card
time. The
parents and
students
can easily
Bookman
tell
how
..
Ihey ' re
doing and why they deserve
Jhe grades they receive.
Baldrige began as a corpo- ·
rate iniuative to .help busi.nesses improve their bottom
lines by making their
employees more responsible
for their production.
It sbowed them how their
effons directly relate to the
end result. Because it was so
effective, educators adopted
the model for the classroom

Aging Council _hails
past year's efforts ·
committed and caring."
Mick Davenport, the coun·
cil president, recogni zed Gar
Haggy, building mainte·
POMEROY - More. than nance/vehicle
supervisor,
2.000 Meigs County senior who received the program of
citizens - that's nearly one the year award; Mary Hindy
out of every two in the coun- was named the outstanding
ty - received some service in-home . employee of the
through the Meigs County year; and Darla Hawley,
Council on Aging over the execulive assistant/human
past year.
. resource director, was named
Susan Oliver, execu1ive employee of the year.
.
director, gave that report at
It was reported that a speThursday 's annual meeting cial "march for meals"
held at the senior center. In brought in $9,000 for the
discussing the finance s of the home delivered meal pro-·
agency, Oliver described it as gram, and that Diana Coates
.
"tough."
She said cuts in federal and wrote a grain and received
$9,000 from the Corporation
state funding were made last for National and · Volunteer
year, and that additional cuts Service
for
Homeland
of I0 to 15 percent are Security to use with RSVP
expected in 2003 .
volunteers.
She attributed the ability of
Also noted was receipt of
the .center to continue its con- $26,000 through the Sisters of
stant level of services to the St. Joseph :s Foundation, used
dedication of employees.
Lo purchase a walk-in cool"This staff is the best," she er/freezer and do 'renovation
. said . "Every da y, they' re in ihe kitchen.
Oliver reported that the
coming up with innovative
ways to save money and still
provide the services. They are
Please see Aging. Al
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
tJews editor

with great success.
"Our entire staff went to a
two-day training seminar
June 2001 ," Bookman said.
"Ohio
Orientation
to
Performance
Excellence
gave the training through the
Region a!/ Profes s ion a I
Development Center. And
the enure thing was volun.tary for my teachers."
Bookman said the school
had follow-up activities prior
to school starting so they
could decide what . quality
tools needed to use that
school year. Four ·o f 13
teqchers practiced Baldrige
during the 2001 -02 school
year.
"As the year progressed,
tj10ugh, we had seven
involved in the process,"
Bookman said.
"They were seeing · Ihe

Please see School, A3

Together we've lost 252 pounds.
.
And we're. still losing.·

advantage of

her help financially or careerwise.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ·

• You have your own unique

way of handling delicate de-

velopments , and !Od uy you
will put these talents to work

TOLL FREE (866) 821-4541

In your favor, Other:s can only ·

watc_h and applaud.

•
~

Fund

past year, due in part to giving .
to Sept. II charities and other
organizations, and because of
the general downturn in ~he
economy.
United Fund ·for Meigs
County collects contributions
h
h
ll d d ·
t roug payro
e ucuons
and private and corporate
donattons on behalf of nine
1 1
h · bl
oca
c anta e groups:
Meigs United Methodist
Cooperative
Parish,
Riverbend Arts Council,
Meigs County Historical
.Society
and
Museum,
Serenity House and Meigs
County Men's Homeless
Shelter, .
Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency, Jan Knapp and Rachael Proffitt of Meigs County's Peoples Bank branches present a $750 con.
tribution toward the United Fund for Meigs County's 2003 fund-raising campaign. Campaign
Chairman Sue Maison and UFMC Treasurer Bruce Fisher accept the contribution. (Brian J.
Please see Kick oft, A3 · Reed)

'Spider' man

I I I I e

e

acks don't.deter un·

r

)

WWW.CCWL.INFO

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Saturday, Oct. 26

; Friday, October 25, 2002

Friday, October 25, 1001

.1Columbua ~r.w I

.,.

__
'

Wet weather may end.tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED -PRESS

.Wet weather i.s expected to
suck around torught.
Low · ~ressure over the
.lower Oh1o Valley y;as !Dovmg northeast an~ will bnng a
. large area .o f ram across. the
regmn. This ram should for
the mostJ.art move to the east
by Satur ay morning as high
pressure builds into the state
behind this system.
Drier air . will accompany
the high pressure into the stale
and should provide at least a
little sunshine for most areas
on Sunday.
Temperatures will range
through the 50s today with all
the cloud cover and . wet
weather. The same conditions
tonight will help to keep temperatures from dropping off
all that much. The mercury
.should pretty much stall out in
the 40s overnight.
With the lack of rain and
maybe a few peaks at the sun
Saturday, temperatures should
be comparable if not a few
degrees warmer than today's
readings.

Weather forecast:
Tonight...Rain. Lows in the
lower 50s. South winds 5 to
10 mph becoming west.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Saturday...Becoming partly
cloudy. Highs in the lower
60s. Northwest winds around
10 mph.
. Saturday
night. .. Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s.
.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the lower 60s . .
Sunday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows near 40.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
y;ith a chance of rain. Highs
Ill the upper 50s.
Tuesday... Partly
cloudy
with a chance of rain. Lows in
.the lower 40s and highs in the
mid 50s.
,Wedne~day... Mo~tly cloudy
w1th a chance of ram. Lows in
th~ upper 30s and highs in the
m1d 50s.
Thursday...Mostly cloudy
with a chance of rain. Lows in
the mid 30s and highs in the
lower 50s.
.

Aroundup of the dally markets .
12,000

Oct. 24, 2002

Dow Jones·
Industrials

11,000
10,000

.34

9,000

Pet dlangem~
High

·2.08

Low
8,577.87

8,000

8,558.63
l!ecord high: 11,722.98
Jan. 1_
4, 2000

OCT

1,800
1,600
1,&lt;400

• Pet dlange m previous
High

·1.63

1,200

Low

1,330.99 1,296.54
Record high: 5,048.62
Man:h 10, 2000

JUL

SEP

AUG

OCT

1,000
1,200
1,100
1,000

882.50

Pet change m

1.52

High

902.94

900

prev~ous

800

Low
879.00

1,527.46
Man:h 24, 2000

Record high:

700
JUL

SEP

AUG

OCT
AP
/

Local Stocks
AEP -21.87
Arch Coal- 17.60
Akzo- 29.44
AmJech/SBC- 25.65
Ashland Inc: - 26.85
AT&amp;T -13.11
Bank One - 38.45
BLI - 6.42
Bob Evans- 24.62
BorgWarner- 45.80
Champion - 2.5:::JO
Charming Shops 4.68
City Holding'- 26.49
Col- 22.44.
DG -14.25
DuPon1 - 40.70

'

Federal MOgul :_ .62
USB-20.90
Gannett- n .12
General Electric - 26
GKNLY-3.65
Harley Davidson- 53.67
K"!art - .~3
Kroger- 14.92
Ltd.-15.32
NSC -21.01
.Oak H11 Flnllr1Cial- 21.88
OVB-20.89
BBT~35.88

Peoples- 29.31
Pepsico - 44.58
Pr.....,~ 7.15

Rockwell- 16.74
Rocky Boots - 4. 75
RD Shell - 42.26
Sears- 25.54
Wai-Mart ~ 56.47
Wendy's - 32.94
Worthington- 18.83
Daily s1ock reports are
the 4 p.m. · closing
quoles of the previous

day's lransaelions, provided by Sini1h Partners
a1 Adves1 Inc. of
Gallipolis.

~

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• ,I

Mona Rutger from Back to the Wild, a wild animal rehabilation
center, holds two fox snakes, in Castallia, Ohio. At least five
of this same kind of snake were discovered in the Sandusky
City Hall, the police station, and the municipal courtroom. Ttie
. fox snakes are often mistaken for copperheads because of
their brown color, Rutger said. People also mistake fhem fQr
rattlesnakes because fox snakes will &amp;hake their tails against .
dry grass or leaves, creating a sound·similar to a rattler. (AP)

Jury convi,cts in conspiracy to kill pregnant woman
CANTON ·(AP) - A jury focus on the absence of the his intention was . clear, Tarver on the stand would
has convicted a man of shooter and the gun.
Hartnett said in her closing have opened the door for
scheming _to have his P.regA visibly upset Tarver mut- argument. She said: "Why questions about. past convicnant ex-girlfriend k1lled, tered to his attorney and ·else would he point the gun
rejecting a defense . lawyer's turned to glare at Lewis as only at Lewis and fire three tions for robbery and dnig
argument that there was no she sat in the back of the times into her belly from trafficking.
proof her shooting · was courtroom. A sheriff's deputy inches away?"
"It was a very, very diffiplanned,
·
warned him to stor.
When Tarver fled, the gun- cult case," Haupt said. "I
Sentencing is set for Nov. I
"It's not right It s not right. man fll'ed once at Tarver's obviously fell short in prefor Paul Nino Tarver II, 29, If you listen Ill the evidence leg. He was wounded.
senting the evidence to the
who prosecutors say arranged . you co!lld see that nothing
Tarver's 911 call ~·seemed jury."
to have Keisha Lewis, 23, was consistent," said Paulette convincing, but crimes across
Lewis uses a cane and said
shot so he could avoid Tarver, of Canton, Tarver's the nation show it can be an she still has pain and some
becoming the father of her sister.
act," Hartnett said.
loss of feeling. 1\vo bullets
child. Lewis survived the
Paul Tarver's attorney
Haupt said that putting remain inside her.
· ··
March
7
shooting,
but
her
3maintained
that
he
and
.month-old fetus did not.
Lewis were robbed, victinis r"'l~_..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
The jury, made up of six of a masked gunman who Pomeroy/Middleport
men and ~ix women, took surprised them as they 11at in
U
Club
less than four hours Thursday a truck in the parking lot' of a
OJiS
!O convict Tarver of complic- restaurant. . . .,
· . proudly nn•"~'"·"""""'
11y to aggravated murder and
Assistant Stark County
complicity to felonious Prosecutor Chryssa Hartnett
assault:
argued the robbery was a
'farver faces a prison sen- setup, and that Tarver's
tence of 20 years to life for renewed interest in Lewis.
the first charge, plus three was part of a lie. Hartnett
years for using a gun. Stark claimed that Tarver wanted IS1UNDJ~1, DE.CEMBER 8, 2002
County Common Pleas Judge Lewis to have an abortion so
PERFORMANCE: 3:00 P.M.
Sara Lioi could add another he could be with another
two to eight years for the sec- woman .
When
Lewis
ond charge.
refused, Tarver began threats
MEIGS COUNTY IUGH SCHOOL GYM
Defense attorney Jeff thal escalated to the staged
·
.
· Haupt called no w1tnesses, heist, Hartnett said.
Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio
· choosing instead to question
Although the masked gunTickets for chUd or adult. $6.00 In advance
the evidence gathered and man has not been identified, $9.00 Show day. For advance Tickets call800·824-6t39

992-2156 -.

An
undercover sting operation
resulted in the arrests of 13
men over the last six months
on charges of attempting to
use the Internet to lure
underage girls into a sexual
encounter.
City Police Chief Neil
Ferdelman announced the
arrests Thursday.
The men arrested as a
result of the investigation b,Y
the
departrilenl s
Pomogra,PhY And Child
Exploitabon Unit range in
age from 19to '65.
Seven of the men have
Cincinnati addresses, while
others came from cities
including Hamilton, the
Dayton suburb of Huber
Heildlts and Walton, Ky. .
The men's occupations
included carpenter, pilot,
painter, telemarketer and
engineer. All thought they
were going to meet girls
who were 14 or 15, police
said.
.
Ferdelrnan said Thursday ·
that the arrests show how
important it is that parents be
aware that strangers' access ·
tq children goes beyond the
school playground or nearby
park.
"We think this is an
important point for ~nts
to take to heart, that 1f their
teenage children are on the
Internet, they should position
the computer where there is
some parental monitoring,"
Ferdelrnan said.
HAMILlDN (AP) -

~~

BY KEviN Klu.Y
News editor

Citations
..
'

.

-"

• PORTLAND - Jason E.
koush', 21, New Haven,
'W.Va., was cited for failure
lo control by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol following a
;one-car accident Tuesday
[pn Ohio .Route 124.
: Troopers said Roush was
~westbound
in Lebanon
:rownship at 7 p.m. when he
Jost control of the car he
drove, went off the right
• 'Side of the road, struck a
: ditch and overturned.
: The car had disabling
: damage, troopers said. ·
•

can start out with five bed~
and continue to grow."
Johnson agreed, noting
that expansion is possible as
SOAR and the facility
·:bu!!d a positive reputation m the community.
SOAR is looking to inter~st surrounding counties in
lis · plans, and mel in
September with leaders and
health officials in Jackson
County. Its goals were outlined to Meigs County commissioners earlier this
month.
The group also voted to
authorize Family Addiction
Community
Treatment
Services (FACTS), which
will refer clients to the
home in the future , as its
temporary fiscal agent until
SOAR is incm:porated with
the . state.
· SOAR is also seeking a
tax identification number ·
and non-profit status from
the
Int.emal
Revenue
Service .
Incorporation
articles
have been submitted to the
Ohio secretary of state.
"I think it is the intention
of SOAR to relieve you of
that responsibility as soon
as it can ," Johnson ' told
FACTS Executive Director
Terrie Mathews, who co-chairs SOAR's treatment
committee with Larry
Burnett.
SOAR, which has a gener~l meeting every month,
Will tentatively meet again
at 6 p.m. Dec. 5 at Holzer
Medic.al Center's conference center.

scene and then transported
to Holzer Medical Center,
where he later died.
McCulley said the construction company is now
conducting its own investigation into the incident, and .
could not comment on any
details, includin~ whether
Nelson was weanng a safety harness at the time of the
· accid~nt. _., ", ,,,. . " . ,
The Occupational Safety
and Health Administration
was contacted and will be
conducting its own investigalion, authorities said.
OSHA could · not be
reached this morning for
comment.

LONG BOITOM - A
hymn sing will be held at
the Mount Olive Church at
7 p.m. Saturday. There will

Aging
from Page AI
Sisters have awarded another
grant to the center for
$26,000 over a two-year period to fund operation of the
fitness room .
New memben; elected for
three year terms to the ·board
of trustees were Francis
Reed, Melanie Weese and

John Lentes. Re-elected to
the board were Jennifer
Sheets, a two- year term, and
Davenport, Becky Baer and
Paul Reed, three-year teniiS.
In the ·- board meeting,
which followed the annual
open session, officers for
2003 were elected. They are
· Davenport, president;. Baer,
first vice president; Joann
May, second vice president;
Judy Williams, secretary; and
Gina Pines, treasurer.

the routine."
~II of the_information gathered for tfie student is communicated through their own
from Page AI
PDF (l'ersonal Data Folder).
results the other teachers had · "It sure makes parenl/teacher
conferences go easier,"
with Baldrige."
How can you measure the Bookman said. "Parents can
actually see their child's perprogram's success?
.
formance
on a daily basis.''
"That's what Baldrige is all
'The building, as well as
about,'' Bookman explained.
each
class, developed indi"It's 'in-your-face' data-drividual mission statements.
ven facts."
''The students were asked
So how does this affect the
to write down two areas that
classroom?
they
felt were important to
''There's a huge shift from
their
learning, then the
learning being a teacher's
responsibility to it being the answers were grouped and
· student's responsibility," he developed into a mission
statement," Bookman said.
said.
.
''They set goals and chart "We have everyone on the
their progress," he added. same page. ·We have a com"Some of the teachers use a mon goal and we're tracking
readiness . or preparation · our progress with hard data."
Bookman said 'they've
rubric which is a series of
steps each student goes learned a lot about themthrough to prepare for the selves, their school, their
day's learning. The younger · goals · and the learning
children really benefit from process itself.

School

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Local Briefs
Hymn sing

Susa~ Oliver, executive direC1or of the Meigs County Council
on Aging, and M1ck Davenport, board of trustees . president,
reported on problems and progress of the agency's operation
over the past year. (Charlene Hoeflich)
.

be special singers. Pastor County District Public
Lawrence Bush invites the Library Board of Trustees
will hold its regular monthpublic.
ly meeting at the Eastern
Library Branch at 3 P·l1,1·
Monday. The meeting 1s
open
to the public.
POMEROY Meigs

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992-2156

JCPenney
· catalog
MERCHANT STORE 115!·5
338 2nd Avenue
'

Gallipolis. OH 45631

(740) 446-3525
Mon·s.t 1H

Library trustees

z --------------------------------~---------------

; KiCk off

~~.off the new fund-raising ""'

:

UFMC has set a goal of
:
from Pap AI
$18,000, and Peoples Bank
•
N.A. w.'as the frrst local busi~ Meigs County Council on ne~s to c~trlbute to the cam• Aging, God's NET, Meigs . pa1gn, \V1th a $750 check pre: County Humane Society and sented
to
Campaign
: Holzer Hospice of Meigs Chainnan Sue Maison.
.
Since its founding in 1993, ,
: County.
- Representatives of those UFMC has collected almost
; local charities attended $200,000 for local agencies
!
: Thursday's breakfast to help and charities, Dooley said.

Meet Edna Weber Farmers Bank's
Record Keeping Supervisor.
''The best thing for me about working at Farmers Bank
. is the great people I am privileged to work with. The
girls hi my department are terrific, and I have to give ail
the credit to them. They know their jobs thoroughly, and
I can depend on them to always get things .done to the
best of their abiUty. It really makes for 'a great environ·
menl when people enjoy what they do and It shows."

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Correction Polley
Our main concem In all stories Is to be
accurale. If you knoW of an error In a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 9922158.

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:.•

Edna resides in Ruiland and is married to Duane Weber,
own~r of the Quality Print Shop. She has one daughler, Sarah, ·
who 1s a senior at Ohio University, and one son, Jake, who is a
freshman, there as well. Edna is a
· graduate of Eastern High School. She worked in public debt
and stayed home and raised her children before coming to
work for the Farmers Bank team.

(740) 992-2156.
Department extenalons are:

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Ed""'' Charlene Hoefllctl,

Ex!. 12
Brian
Reed,
Ex!.
14
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,,•• Sporta: Derek Taylor, Ext. 14
Ae~:
Ae~:

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·'••

. She and her family a!tend the Middlepon Church of Christ.
In her spare time Edna stays super busy. Both her kids ate in
Christian rock bands, which she loves going to hear.perform.
Jake's band is called Autopilot 12, while Sarah's calls iiSelf the
180 Band. Her husband is a amate11r drag racer, and Edna is an .
importanl pan of his pit crew. Most Saturday nights you can
find ·1hem at the Kanawha Valley
-,..-~~:.;.;;.;;;;,;;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;._,.
Dragway geuing their racing truck
ready to beat out the competition.

Advertising

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Outoldo Slllu: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Outoldo Sllleo: Jessica Evans, Ext. 16

Clou./CI..,.: Judy Clark, Exl. 10
.Clou./CI..,.: Cynthia Swisher, Ext. 11

Circulation
,.•',, , Dlotllct Mgr.:
Mike Jenkins, Ext. 17
,. '
Manager",.~ .' General
Charlene Hoefllctl, Ext. 12
· .,
·-'...
e.....u:

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.(F'JJ) Farmers Bank
~ We'.re Your Bank for Cije...

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www.mydaDysan11nel.com

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before 9 a.m.
He was a resident of 204
Cozy Glen Road, Oak Hill.
CHESHIRE-Aday-lhat
Sharyn Mc&lt;i:ulley, a
was to be full of joy will Babcock
and
Wilcox
instead be a day of mourn· spokesman, said Nelson
ing for an Oak Hill family was assisting in the installaafter the death of 20-year- tion of structural steel for
old Joshua R. Nelson, who pollution contrOl and nitrowas to . be married this gen mdde reduction equipSaturday, authorities said. · ment at the plant
Nelson was working ill . According . to .. -a. G:allia
the Kyger Creek Power County ~heriff' s Office
Plant m Cheshire, along report, .a bolt is believed to
with more than 250 of his have broken loose from a
fellow ' erilployees ·from steel beain, causing the
Babcock · and Wilcox other end of the beam to
Construction
Co., come up, pinning Nelson
Barberton, when he fell to · between two steel beams.
Nelson was treated at the
his death Oct. 19, just

•

.,

.Member FDIC

BY MIWSSIA RussELl

Staff Writer

- Paid notice

•
•

will be beneficial when
SOAR seeks donations and
presents its goals to funding
sources, said Ron Adkins,
executive director of the
Gallia .Jackson-Meigs
Board of ADAMHS.
. Attention was turned to
the need to find an existing
building for the treatment
home, modeled on a Sidney
facility in which recovering
abusers live ~bile undergomg comrnumty treatment
programs.
The home's residents will
contribute to its upkeep by
remaining employed and
paymg a fee dunng their
stay.
.
"Would it be beneficial to
have a group of people look
at property, or have a committee to research code
standards and what is
required?" asked SOAR
President DJ:nnis Johnson.
Adkins
recommended
that the search for a home
fall under the duties of the
treatment committee, which
originally suggested the
treatment home concept,
and interested individuals.
Adkins believes the home
can start on a small scale,
serving up to. five residents
at a time. As the number of
clients referred to the home
by local treatment programs
and the courts grow, it's
possible a second home
could be opened.
''I'm not convinced we
have to have just one facility in Gallia County,'.' he
said. "Our ideal target is 10
beds and it doesn' t have to
be in one place. Maybe we

Probe continues into Kyger Creek Plant death .

~ Home.

Your Friends
&amp; Neighbors
Edna ha_s been with the Farmers Bank for over II years. She
started out m the R~cord Keeping Depanmen~ and was quickly
promoted to supervisor of the department. In this capacity she
also works as the bank's Accounts Payable and Security Officer.

MIDDLEPORT
Establishing a budget and
then seeking a location for a
residential treatment house
are goals Southeastern Ohio
Advocates for Recovery are
addressing in the near
future.
T.he group, meeting in
Mc:1gs County Thursday as
part of its regional outreach
agreed it must decide on ~
estimated spending plan
~d a procedure for operatmg a home for recovering
substance abuse victims
before seeking conlmunity
backing.
.
SOAR was established
earlier this year as a community response to prob_lems caused by addiction to
the painkiller OxyContin. It
has since broadened its
scope to all forms of drug or
alcohol abuse.
Its treatment and legislative/finance committees
will meet at 3:30 p.m. Nov.
7 at the Gallia-JacksonMeigs Board of AlcohoL
Drug Addiction and Mental
Health Services office to
craft a budget proposal and
discuss procedures for the
home.
· "It will be a joint meeting
to develop a budget, to see
what kind of dollars are
needed for an overall program," said Pat Pletcher,
who co-chairs the legislative/finance committee with
Celestine Skinner.
Having a plan in place

•. Memorial contributions
·-Jilay be made toward the
funeral expenses.

ehrtatmaa

Internet
sting a
success

Recovel)' advocates ponder budget Aging and grace

:: POMEROY Robert
;J.ynn Riffltl,. 48, of 1739
·$:.hester Road, Pomeroy,
·Jhed Wednesday, October
. ~3, 2002, at Pleasant Valley
' :Hospital in Point Pleasant;
: ~est Virginia.
: He was born September
: 25, 1954, in Pomeroy, son
·l&gt;f Donna Smalley Riffle
·!Young, and the late Robert
:j_.ee Riffle,
:.: Surviving, besides his
:mot~er, are a daughter,
:~am1ko
Dawn Riffle·• broth•
:.ers,
Monte Rifne of
::Caldwell, Dennis Riffle of
J'omeroy, Robert W. Riffle
:pf Siler City, North
: ~arolina, Randy
(Tina)
:~iffle of Pomeroy, Dale
JElly) Riffle of Pomeroy,
;:And 1\.llen (Jennifer) Young
:l&gt;f Upper Sandusky; four
·~tepbrothers; a sister, Susie
'_Riffle of Racine; a stepsis. ter; nieces and nephews,
·'Brianna Riffle, Valerie
Lilley, Michelle Simpson,
Tealla Young, Desiree
Young, Amber Brown and
Erin Moore, Adam, Joseph,
._and· Isiah Riffe, Zickeus
· Young and Ray Klein; and
several
aunts,
uncles, ·
cousins and friends. ·
Besides his father, he was
,preceded in death by his
:father, Robert Riffle; stepfather, Frank E. Young;
:.grandparents, Hobart and
-. Gaye Smalley, Kenneth and
,Vermont Markins. and
.:'Margaret Freeman; and his
stepmother, Sybil Riffle.
- Services
will
be
; announced at a later date.
Burial will be in Chester
_Cemetery. Arrangements
are by Ewing Funeral

7,000
2,000

1,298.71

Falun Gong combines
Taoist and Buddhist ideas
with exercise and meditation,
and claims millions of followers. Li Hongzhi, who
.now lives in the United
States, started tl)e·movement
in 1992.
Practitioners describe it as
an ancient, peaceful practice
that improves physical and
mental health. Critics call if a
cult and portray its leader as
an extremist. The Chinese
government has outlawed the
movement
Wellspring · founder and
director Paul Martin, a psychologist who is a former
cult member, said what some ·
view as a religion, others call
a cult
.
"What we deal with here
are groups that are destructive, that are very, ve~
pathological. It's a con, '
Martin said.
He called the visit by the
Cbiftese a "significant opportumty to advance the field of
cu1t awareness."

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

·Obituaries
Robert Lynn
:,••
Riffle

ALBANY (AP) -A team about how to do our job better, .. he said.
.

of · Chinese professionals
traveled to a residential treatment center in southeast
Ohio to learn treatment techniques for dealing with Falun
Gong, a controversial spiritual movement.
Five members from the
Bejing-based Chinese AntiCult Association visited the
Wellspring Retreat
&amp;
Resource Center this week.
The center, 80 miles southeast of Columbus, is promoted as the only accredited residential-treatment center in
the counby for former cult
members.
''We are very eager to learn
from their exPerience in the
transition of cult members.
We feel that cults are a Jdobal problem," · said Wang
Yusheng, director general of
the China Science and
'Technology Museum . and
vice preSident of the anti-cult
association, whicn helps
rehabilitate former cult members.
"I'm. sure I will return
home wi'th a lot of new ideas

www.mydallysehtlneJ.com

•

Slithering visitors

Chinese team
dealing with·Falun
Gong .visits cult rehab

Ohio weather

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The Daily Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: Of course.
you make your living giving your know-everything
advice to needy deficients,
but that does not excuse
patronizing error.
You were wrong in telling
"A Survivor in Florida" ..:...
who was raped by her stepfather when she was II to harpoon her elderly, sick
mother who didn't protect
her, in order to exorcize
what she should . have
resolved for herself, with
psychiatric aid if necessary.
Better for her to have said
to her mother, "I love you,"
than rehash her childhood
sexual abuse. ·
What do you know aboiit
what .a woman has to do to
maintain support for five
children, and . then, to justify her errors to herself?
(And live with them .)

not "deficient." They are unchallenged. Sex with an woman the way you did.
people less hostile than 11 -year-old is RAPE . Read From ages II to 16, I was
you, who have problems q n ;
also an incest victim of my
they would like an outside
DEAR ABBY: I, too, was natural father. I went
· raped by my stepfather through the same behavior,
opinion in dealing with.
The elderly mother in this when I was 7. For y,ears it fears and mbre. At 19, once
case sacrificed her II - year- haunted me, and I turned to at college, !took myself to
old daughter in order to alcohol and . drugs at 13 . counseling -- against my
continue to live with the Finally, at 15, my mother family's wishes. Please tell
monster she had rnarried and I had a big fight and I . this woman to calmly conADVICE
and who had raped .her little told her what happened. It · front her mother. She probgirl! That mother has lived was a huge reljef for me ably knew anyway and is
Furthermore, do you have her entire adult life in bliss- even though the stinute· of blocking it. I found that out
any assurance that harpoon- ful denial while the victim . limitations had run out. at 24 . -VETERAN SURing the sick, elderly mother
with the writer's ideas of had to carry not only the "Survivor" should tell her VIVOR, GAINESVILLE,
"the truth" would result in burden of the crime that morn before it's too late. If FLA.
DEAR SURVIVOR: I'm
"exorcizing" for either was committed against her, the woman refuses to
but
the
accusation
that
she
believe
her,
then
God
will
pleased
you had the wi sdom
party? You have .. more
responsibilit{ to folk than had been "trying to steal her help her see the "real him" to seek help as early as y'ou
when the time comes . did . And now, I would like
that, even i that is "what mother 's husband ."
I feel it is more important RELIEVED IN S.C.
to quote from a letter I
you are there for. " that
"Survivor"
live
out
her
DEAR
RELIEVED:
I
received
from
Marge
ANGRY IN PORTLAND,
remaining
years
with
her
hope
so.
Harrison
of
Eutawville,
ORE.
S.C. She is a wise lady:
DEAR ANGRY: The ' head up · and the truth off
DEAR ABBY: You were
"Abby, in dealing with
people who write to me are her chest than for her mother to die with ·the big lie terrific to respond to that. .the horror of rape, such as.,

'Dear

Abby

RACO refurbishes banners in
preparation for the hoi idays

Community Calendar
Public Meetings

..

Church services

Friday, Qct. 25
Monday, Oct. 28
SYRACUSE- Harvest
POMEROY - Veterans Service
Gathering at Syracuse First
Commi ss ion, 9 a.m., 117 E.
Church of God, corner of Second
Memorial Dr.
and Apple Streets, through Oct.
27. Speakers Rev. Robert Rauch·
and R~,: ~. Sieve Roush. Services,
Friday and Saturday, 6:30 p.m.
with Earthen Vessels and Gabriel
Quartet respectively. Sunday se rMonday, Oct. 28
· vices, 10 a.m . with Pastor Cavid
MIDDLEPORT -,- Oh · Kan · F. Russe ll. speaking; 1:30 afterCo in Club, 7 p .m. at the Trolley noon service with "Released."
Hou se. Meeting and auction.
Saturday, Oct. 26
· Thesday, Oct. 29
CLIFTON
Clifton
. POMEROY - Meigs County Tabernacle gospel sing, 7 p.m. fea 4-H Advi sory Committee, 7 p.m., tUring Delivered.
Meigs
County Ex: ten sion Office ~
GALLIPOLIS -Gospel si ng, 7
p.m. at the Poplar Ridge Freewill
MIDDLEPORT -' Middleport Baptist Church off State Route
Board of Pub Iic Affairs, I p.m. 554. New Horizons and Cross
in vill age coujcil chambers.
Creek to sing. Jolin Elswick, pastor.

Clubs and
Organizations

this woman was, · it is
important to remember that
the reason mothers were
quick to blame the victim
years ago is that there was:
so much denial and stigllJa·
at the time. The belief was
that the victims 'got themselves into the situation,'
and 'were therefore respon- .
sible. The belief ·was so ·.
prevalent that even the ·vic- . ·
tims believed this lie. It is.
only in recent years that:
society puts blame for rape ·
on the aggressor- where it.
belongs ."
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, ·
and was founded by her.
mother, Pauline Phillips. ·
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles,
CA 90069.

DEXTER O ld Dexter
Church. o ld: ras hioned wiener
roast. 6:30 p.m . Fellowship and

singing around the fire.
Sunday, Oct. 27
RACINE Moiunt Moriah
Church of God. Mile Hill, Raci,ne.
6 p.m. 'Sunday; 7 p .m. Mo nday
through Wednesday. Rev. Don
Stacy. speaker.

Seniors Groups
Monday, Oct. 28
HARRISONVILLE

Harrisonville Senior

Citizens~

II a.m .

at the firehouse . Potluck dinner, blood ·

pressures taken, everyone welcome.
POMEROY - Yoga class, 6 to 8
p.m. at lhe Senior Citizens Center.
Emphasis will be on back care. Call
992·2681, Ext. 233, for more ·infor-

RACINE - in preparation for the holiday season,
Christmas decorations have
been
refurbished
and
bicentennial banners have
been ordered by the Racine
Area
Community
Organization (RACO).
Meeting at Star Mill
Park, it was reported that
the final payment on the
deconllions has been made.
The group will be doing
treats · for children for
Christmas in the Park to be
held on Dec. 12, and will
also wi II be spon soring a
. Christmas decorating contest in December with
prizes of $30 for first, $30

for second and $20 for
third.
The group agreed to purchase two new band uni·
forms at a cost of $800 and
presented a check to
Jeannine Oldaker, band
dtrector.
It . was
rAeported that servt.ng the
dams aucuon br~ught tn
$500·for the groups scholarship fund.
A food drive was
planned for Nov. 2 from 8
a.m. to noon at the corner
of Third and Pearl Sireets.
Members reported hours
of yolunteet service to the
Retired Senior Volunteer
Program.

.,

The group voted to .
retain the same officers for~
the
upcoming
year, ..
Kathryn· Hart, president;
Melanie Weese, vice president; secretary, Lillian·
Weese; Ann Zirkle, treasur-er, and Jennifer Hoback,.
reporter:
.
Hart read a letter from
h
H lth D
t · t
t e
~a
epar m~n
concc:rmng the upcommg .
eleetion and renewal of the :
levy.
Ne.xt meeting . will be '
Nov. 26 .at the park build- ·
ing .
A potluck dinner preceded the meeting.

..

marion or 10 regisrer:

Two men arrested
in •connection with
sn1per case

Page AS
Frid•y. Odober 15, 1001

Professor researchinglartles for 15 years: 'There's
got to be an element of crazy in any passion'

POTTER'S MARSH, Ill. (AP)- Fred
Janzen kneels down on his knee pads and
lies flat.on the grass. He gently pu~hes at
the earth, feeling for the nest of yellow,
red and green striped baby turtles that lie
FREDERICK, Md. (AP)
"There's a s1rong feeling
inches beneath the surface.
- A'41-yeat-old Army vet- these people are rel11-ted to
"Bingo, right there," Janzen said of the
eran
and a
teenager the sniper shootings," said
silver-dollar sized hatchlinfs. "See the
movement? This is great. love these.
described as · his stepson Douglas Gansler, state's
Every
nest is a little surprise."
·
were arrested at a roadside attorney in Maryland's
Janzen's turtle camp is a patch of grass
rest stop Thursday for ques- Montgomery County, where
tioning in the three-week
next to a lime-colored marsh brimni.ing
wave of deadly sniper the sniper task force is
with perhaps 1,000 painted turtles on an
attacks that have terrorized based. Asked If he believed
island in the Mississippi River.
·
• the was h'mg ton, D .c·., area.. the
sniper
was
still
at
large,
.
,
The turtles at south Potter's Marsh
A law enforcement source he said "no."
have been Janzen's passion and the focus
said a gun found in their car
The arrests came hours
of his research the last 15 years. An assoappeared to have the same after authorities descended
ciate professor of zoology and genetics at
caliber as the one used in on a home in . Tacoma,
Iowa State University, Janzen is trying lo
'find oul if the mothe~ transfer, thrOugh
the shootings. The official Wash., believed to hold
their DNA, a package ofpreferences that
said police also found a clues to the investigation.
tells their offspring good places to nest
scope and a tripod in the They then issued a nation-.
when they reach adulthood. In a way, it's
car, and were awaiting bal- wide alert for the car, spotthe
nature vs. nurture argument.
listics tests on the gun.
ted by · a motorist and an
Since
the mother turtles don't raise
"We're positive it's these attendant at the rest stop.
their young, and probably wouldn't
guys," the official told The
Charles
Moose,
the
know them if they bumped into each
Associated Press, speaking
on condition of anonymity. Montgomery County police
other in the marsh, they're good test subThe arrests - linked to a chief leading the investigajects, Janzen says ..
telephoned boast about a lion, had said John Allen
By taking tissue samples from the.
mother and her babies, Janzen can see,
deadly Alabama robbery - Muhammad was being
· from one generation to the next, if the
raised hopes of a conclusion sought for questioning in
to the intensive and often the slayings and called him .. young· nest in locales similar to their
·
mothers.
frustrating · investigation of "armed and dangerous."
If
they
do,
this
could
show
evoluti.on at
the shootings that have Authorities
said
work
smce.
scientists
.know
that where
killed 10 people and criti· Muhammad was traveling
turtles nest - such as shady areas cally wounded three others with John Lee Malvo, 17.
influences the sex of the offspring ·and
since Oct. 2.
h
Muhammad served in t e
The men taken into cusother traits, such as body size.
tody were not immediately Army as a machinist and
It's not clear what implications
charged in the sniper had no training as sniper, .
Janzen's work on turtles would have for
attacks, but authorities according . to a senior
humans since the two are very different
made it clear the arrests Defense Department offiBut he says it could help improve the
. were considered pivotal. A · cia!. Another official said
general understanding of how behavior
newspaper report said the Muhammad was discharged·
often associated with a mother's care-·
such as nursing a baby - could be
men · were motivated by from lhe Army in the mid!
anti-American bias; police 1990s.
transmitted genetically.
Every May, Janzen troops out with
in Washington state, wliere . The key break, authorities
about
10 of his students to the marsh.
the men recently lived, said said, was ·a phone call to the.
During about six weeks of 18-hour
they. were noi part of any sniper task force tip lin.e
work days, they watch the mother tur.
·
·
organized group.
Presfdent Bush was told suggesting
mvesllgators
ties lay their eggs and then tag the nests
that federal authorities were check out a liquor slore robwith numbered orange flags.
·
reasonably sure the case had bery in "Montgomery." The
·Janzen and his students return to the
been solved, a senior caller claimed responsibility
·camp in September to unearth the nests.
administration official told for the robbery and the
They take the hatchlings back to the
labs at Iowa State to measure them and
The Associated Press, also sniper shootings, officials
to create genetic fingerprints of each
on condition of anonymity. said.

a

Associate professor of zoology and genetics at Iowa State University Fred Janzen
points to the underside of a recently hatched baby painted turtle from a campground at the Thompson Conservation Area in South Potters Marsh, Ill ., during a
turtle round-up. Janzen and his Environmental Biology class, extracted the newly
hatched turtles to study and kept careful records of 1\)cation, temperature and
number of eggs in each nest dead or alive. This is all part ofan ongoing study on
the habitats of turtles. (AP)
onThere ·can be some surprises. In one
nest, a student finds two hatchlings with
white skin, pink eyes and fluorescent
otange-colored shells on the t,mderside
of their bellies- better known as albinos.
The .findin~ - the first of its kind at
the camp _ 1s extraordinary.
"I've seen hundreds, maybe thou-.
sands of nests and certainly thousands
of hatchlings, and seen some pretty
bizarre stuff," Janzen says, "~ut · this
about tops it"
The work can be trying.
. "Every single year there's some
weather anomaly that I really believe
ll!ost people would just never subject

themselves to in a•tent."
This year, it was flash floods and
storms. Last year, three windstorms flattened 'the camp and a tree branch
slammed into,a student's car. That doesn' t include background annoyances lots of mosquitoes, hot and humid
weather. and camp food.
, "It's getting old, so last year I gave in.
I actually sleep on a cot now," the 40year-old researcher says.
There are those who might .think
Janzen and his students are crazy to
return to such camp life year 11fter year.
"I'm sure we are," he says. "But
there's got to be an element of crazy in
any passion ... if you love this stuff, then
'
you' II tolerate a lot."

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I

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

•

Page A&amp;

Friday, October 25, 2002

Friday, October 25. 2002

•

161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992~5898
Pastor. Rt\'. Walter E. Hei112
Sal. Con. 4:45·5:15p.m.; Mus- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass -9:30a.m.
Dailey Mus - 8:30a.m.

Chun:b of J - Cbrlll ApooiOlk
VomZandt and Ward Rd
Pastor: James Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
"£\·enins - 7:30p.m.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

RlverVaUey
Apostolic Worship Center

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Services: Sun 10:00 a ~m . &amp; 7:30p.m.
Thu~. 7:00p.m.
Pastor Matty R. Hutton

Publisher

.Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. Md 7 p.m.

signed and incJu(}e address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Lerrers should l&gt;r in good
taste, addressing i.uues, nor personnfities.
The opinions expressed in the column below are the consensus of rh e Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s editorial board,
w1./ess othen1·ise noted.

Ba pi i.,t

NATIONAL VIEW

nness
• Chicago Tribune, mr attacking legal secrecy: In Boston,
the Roman Catholic archdiocese secretly settled case after
case of priests accused of child molestation and judges sealed
many of the files. That freed some priests to move .elsewhere
and molest again ....
For decades, coutts ·across the country have routinely sealed
legal files, and ignored the potential public health perils that
come from dangerous products, incompetent doctors, and others who have benefited from secret settlements.
Now South Carolina's federal district coun has voted to ban
secret settlements filed with the coun.- sending a clear message to the nation's legal community....
, ·. The South Carolina ban would be limited to that district,. but ·
proponents hope it inay galvanize federal and state effons to
pass new anti-secrecy laws. Those laws need to be carefully
crafted to demolish unwarranted secrecy but allow judges
enough room to maneuver....
In Illinois, coun files must rt;main oren unless lawyers
demonstrate a compel.Iing reason to sea them. In practice,
·however, most judges rarely challenge secret settlement
agreements, many of which are settled on the co ndition that .
the details not be disclosed.
Some lawyers argue that anti-secrecy measures would discourage settlements and clog the couns with more trials; they
say future plaintiffs would take advantage of knowin~ how
much the last claim was settled for. That's hard to dtspute.
More openness means more knowledge for plaintiffs'lawyers
to exploit. Still, that's a byproduct of openness, not a reason .to
thwan it. :..
·
.
In the meantime, the Illinois· Supreme Coun could also help
s~nd a message ~ncouraging OJX:~ness by issuing a rule to provtde clear dtrecuon to slate tnal Judges - no secrecy, with a
·few rare exceptions. The rule would help jud~es canie out
~hat ' exceptions they could make, and force JUdges to ask
some tough que'stions before sealing filed coun documents,
including settlements. The first question should be: If I seal
this file, could others be harmed?
·

IF M UN. RAN AIR~ SOCURITY
SAINTS AND SINNERS

Grandmothers: Our families' most valuable .resource
Her name was Velma Jones; but she
was "Aunt Bertha" to hundreds of children in her nei ghborhood who called
her on the telephone whenever they had
a problem or just wanted someone to
talk to.
·
Aunt Benha got an average · of 20
calls a weekend and four or five every
weekday.· A lot of her callers were
latchkey kids who came home to an
empty house every day after school.
"Sometimes I can't ~et them to hang
up,'' she said. Many chtldren came from
hqmes ~here both parents worked and ·
didn't have the time -or didn't take
the time - to spend with their children.
. Churches in the area where Aunt
Bertha lived put her telephone number
on their bulletin boards.
Grandmothers (or grandmotherly
types) like Aunt Benha may be the
resource we take for granted the most.
With so many mothers of school children working, grandmothers may be
doing more than anyone else to hold
families together as surrogate mothers.
Do we appreciate them? . Well, can
you think of a more touching tribute
than this one delivered by an 8-year-old
girl at her school's Grandmother's Day
observance?
"A grandmother is a lady who has no
children of her own, so she likes other
people's children. A grandfather is a
man grandmother. He goes for walks
with the boys and talks about fishing
and tractors and things like that.
"Grandmothers don't have to do anything but be there. They are old _and
shouldn't play hard or run. It is enough
if they drive us to the store where the

George
Plagenz
COLUMNIST
pretend horse is and have lots of quarters ready. Or if they take us for walks
and slow down past things like pretty
leaves and caterpillars.
·
"They should never hurry up.
Usually, they are fat, but not too fat to
tie kids' shoes. They wear glasses and
funny underwear. They can take their
teeth and gums off.- They don't have to
be smart, only . answer q!)estions like
why dogs hate cats and how God isn't
married.
"When they read to us, they don't
mind if it's the same story again.
Everybody stwuld have one, especially
if ymi don't have a TV, because grandmas are the only grownups who have
got time."
I have been reading quite a bit recently about grandparents. There was an
anicle by a columnist commenting on a
repon that said one-third of the freshmen in Ohio's state colleges need to
learn the basic math and English courses they should have learned in high
school.

The state, he says, is going to respond
in the only way it knows .how: Issue
new standards and ship the sc hools
more money.
"But. what needs to be done," he says,
"is something the state can't -do: e9uip
every home with a caring grandma' or somebody like Aunt Benha.
This columnist learned the multiplication table, he says, while doing dtshes in the kitchen with his grandmother, ·
who also w.ould read to him every
eveningafter supper.
"It never occurred to me that this was
a reading class," he Sl!YS. "I figured sbe
was as interested as .I was to learn
whether Bert Bobbsey would come ·
along in time to pull his little brother
Freddie out of the creek."
Another article on grandparenting
that I have been reading is by family
psychiatrist Dr. Arthur Kornhaber,
known as the "Dr. Spack of grandparenting" and a grandfather himself.
"All older people," he says, "need the
feeling of being grandparents, · and all
children need somebody like a grandparent who is crazy about them."
In a culture like ours that worships
youth, that gears its entertainment
toward the 18.- to 40-year-old group_,
that judges usefulness .by how much one
contributes to the economy, the elderly
must often take a back seat.
We· should not forgei that by serene
example they also serve who only stand
and wait.
.
Aunt Benha, step to the front of the
line.
· (George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

t

Rudond Cbun:b ol Christ
Sunday School· 9:30 Lm.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p:m.

·

•

Old Belhel r..., Will Baptist Cbun:h
28601 St. Rt 7, Middleport
,Sunday School • 10 a.m. ,
Evening· 7:00p.m.
Thul'iday Services - 7:00
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified SeJ"IIice
Worship- 10:30 a . m., ~ p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Victory B•pU.tlndepcnde'nt ·
!!25 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship · \Oa .m.,' 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servic~s • 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Church.
Railroad St., Maw'n
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · !!a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedn esd~y Service~ - 7 p.m.

Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdneflday Senoices • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Worship Sel"llice: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wtdne!jda.y, 6:30p.m.

Our Savio•r Lutheran Cbul'l'h
Walnut and Henry Sts., RavenJwood,
W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School - I0:00a.m.
.Worship - II a.m.

linter Chun:h ot Chrlll
Pastor: Bill Eshelman
Sunday schoo19:30 a.m.
Norman WiU , auperintendent
Sunday worship· 1.0:30 a.m.

Pastor·: Arius Hun
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wors hip - II a.m.

WEST'S VIEW

Here's a case when speaking out is not allowable
Bv

ML Morhth Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middlepon
Pastor: Re-.;. Gilben Craig, Jr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

price. One can kill with a word. have bypassed a coun trial, but for
In a time of more controlled chaos, Freedom of e~pression Stops at th'e exerci~ing his right of free speech he
linking the Rev. Jerry Falwell to pomt at whrch 11 does damage and the ). now fmds himself sentenced to death
French author Michel Houellebecq Muslim community feels insulted."
- to death! - by an Iranian cleric
In . B~uba~eur 's world view, "co!fl- described in news accounts' as a perwould be unthinkable. After all, what
could the founder of the Moral !flUntty fe~lmgs_trump persona.! opm- . sonal representative of Iran's Supreme
Majority possibly have in common !on, ev~ry ume : m the event thts ca~e Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. (Also
with uh Franch authair known for nov- rsn I dtsmtssed, the future of pubhc slapped with death sentences for critiels of emotional desolation and sexual dtscourse ts none t~?o go?d. What we. cizing Islam are the Rev s. Donald
explicitness? Not much- until lately. have here In Pans ts a_httle '":ave of Graham and Pat Robertson.)
Now, let's be serious: Given their
Just as politics makes strange bed- shan a law lappmg at Western JUstlce .
fellows, religion has paired thi s In t~e case agamst Houellebecq, many official, if futile, attempts to.
unlikely duo - but not on the topic of there s no comp~ehenswn of what free cobble together a working ·definition
religion. That would be impossible speech means \tnsults. mcl~ded), nor of terrorism that excludes explosivegiven the celebrated Houellebecq .any understandmg of tt bemg a key- strapped humans bent on self-detona_trejects monotheism al_together, and stone of civilization. Instead, there is ing in crowds of people, HezbollahFalwelltsa famou.s Chnstran preacher o,nly the .dnve to censor. Me_anwhtle. • supporting-Iranians and other Islamics
of the Rehgwus Rtght. And whrle both 1 m cunous: Where exactly ts ll that are hardly the people to· resol.ve
men share an unfavorable view of can one "kill with a word?" Iran ?
·
whether Mohammed was a terrorist. ·
Islam (Houellebecq · is no fan of (More on that below.)
To be sure, history · iells us
Christianity or Judatsm, either), that
Maybe no one ever. th.ought French
·
h
h 1
ld
·
·
Mohammed, at the very least, terror1
d
a one oesn t team t em up. What sc oo s wou go mulu-culu to the ized his rivals and opponents, many of
really unites the man of God with the point of eliminatin~ old Voltaire and whom were killed at his behest. But
man of letters, whether t,hey know it or his quotable chestnut - the one that
not, is the international furor they says, " I disapprove of what you say, that's neither here nor there. Surely,
have kicked up simply by expressing but I will defend to the death your Falwell's contention is debatable themselves . In voicing bluntly critical right to say it" ..:. but it look s as they and without chopping off his head.
opinions of Islam, they have inadver- have consigned thi s all-important les- And surely Falwell's right. to express
tently revealed the shocking extent to son to the dead (white and male) file . himself is one well worth defending,
which our freedom of speech has been But it's not just MusMm s who have particularly when weighed against
curtailed, and the sti\I more shocking missed out. According to the censorship and threats of murder. .
exten.t that Western society is willing Telegraph, ·~Mr. Houellebecq has won
You 'd never know it. As in
to accommodate itself to the new liin- the backing only of diehard free Houellebecq's case, Falwell has had to
itations.
speech activists and a handful of fel- . stand virtually alone, even apologize,
In Houell ebecq's case, spoken can- low writers." Two questions: What are having heen castigated, repudiated and
dor and a new novel that includes the members of th e French intelli- bl amed for everything from the resurMuslim-terrorist characters .has landed gentsia afraid of? What aren't they gence of lslami sts in the Pakistani
him in a Pari sian courtroom where he afraid of? .
elections, to Muslim-Hindu violence
now sta nd s trial for having called . Then there 's Falwell. Earlier thi s in India . But how much easier it is for
Islam a name : "the stupidest religion ." month, the good revere nd had the the trul~ enlightened among us to
While this schoolyard-level charge is audacity to speak his mind about dump on Falwell, a man who threatens
aii)'_IOSt laug_hable, the case is no joke: . Mohammed, the Islamic prophet. " I no one, than to stand up against a I
If found gutlty, he co uld spend a year think Mohammed was a terrori st," he repressive movement that threatens us
in pri son and pay a heavy fine. Why? told CBS. " I read enou gh by both all.
(Diana West is a columnist for Th e
Dalil Boubakeur of,.the Paris mosque,· Muslims aRd non-Muslims to decide
. one of four plaintiffs; put it this way to he ·was a violent man , a man of war." . W(rshington Times. She can be conthe Londo'n Telegraph: "Words have a With these komments, Falwf;!ll may /acted via dianaw@wattglobal.net.)
DIANA WEST

·&gt;

·-

Anllqully Baptist

·~tfnday School - 9:30a.m.
Wornhip - 10:45a.m.
Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m.
Pas10r: Mark McComas

- ......

Rutbtnd Frte Will Baptl!lt
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.
Second Baptbt Churth
Ravenswood, WV
Pastor: David W. McClain
Sunday SchooiiO amMorning worship II am Evening - 7 p~
Wednesday 7 p.m.

( 'alltolir
· Sacred Heart CathoUe Chun:h

Hartford. Ourch of Clulstln
CbrlatWt Union

MI. Oll" United Molbodlsl

&lt; h " rr h or

"·

&lt; ; 011

Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Re\'. Ralph Spire8
Sunday School - 9:30a.m .
Worship - I0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Meigs Cooperadve Pa!'lsh
Nonheast Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beattie

ML Moriah Chul'l'b ot God
Mile Hill Rd , Racine
Pastor: James Slllterfield
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Worship- II n.m., 6:30p.m.

- IWdand Chun:h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - \0
6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Timrsday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

a.m ..

Syrac:"" Flnt Cb"f"' ol God
Apple and Secoitd Sts.

Joppa
Pastor: Doh Randolph
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday S&lt;lhool - 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. David RusseU
Sunday School and Wor1hi~ 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 6:30 p.m
Wedne sday Services· 6:30p.m.
Churdl of God of Propbeey
O.J . White Rd. off St. Rt. 160

1\eal ~tate
216 E. Second Pomeroy
740·992-3325

Bill
d. J' C
t
1.,.aae.e
S arpe

I

169 N 2nd Ave.
MlddIeport , OH

Brog..n-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES _

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

214 E. Main ·
992·5130
Pomeroy

Fl · t

':Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your
good works and glorify your
Father in Heave11. "

OrtS
Meigs County's Oldest Aorist

East Main
Pomeroy, Oh. ·

Syr~Kuse

Church of the Nazarene
Pnstor Mike Adkins ,
Sunda y School , 9:3P a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser~ices - 1 p.m.

l 'nitl'd Brdhn·n
Mt. Hermon l.l nltcd Brethren
in Christ Church
Tcus Commun it y 3641 1 Wid;huul Rd
Pastor: Robcn Sand~: rs
Su nday Sl·huol - 9:30a.m.
Worship - IO JO a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Serv i ce ~ · 7:011 p.m.

Faith Gospel Churth
Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30 u.m.
Wors-hip - 10:45 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesduy 7:30p.m

F.den United BrethNn in Christ
Stole Route 124, Reedsv ille
Pastor: Rev. Bill Duty
Su nday School - 11 a.m.
Sunday \vor.;hip - 10:00 a. m. &amp; 7:01) p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7: 011 p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:lX} p.m.

Mt. Olive Community Chul'l'h

'\a 1a rl' rw

Reedsville Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Ad,·entist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

Morse Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 ll.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Ser\'ice - 7 p.m.

·

M&amp;ddleport Chun:h or tlw Nar.arene
· Pastor: All en Midcap
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcilp

Middleport Pre~byterhm .
Pastor: Rober Crow.
Worship- 10 a.m.

i&gt;yesvllle Community Chun:h
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:3011.111.,7 p.m.

Torch Chun:h
Co. Rd . 63
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Woohip • 10:30 a.m.

LongBottom
Sunday School · 9:30 a.ll.l .
WOrship. 10:30 a.m. .
RHdsvllle

HanisonviUt Presbyterian Chlirth
Pastor: Robert Crow
Wor~hip - 9 a.m.

Hazel Community Church
OtTRt. I24 Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunda~ School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • II a.m.
Wednesday Ser~ices - 8 p.m.

Hartford, W.Va.

Pa.stor.David Greer
Swlday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
. .Wednesdlly Services - 7:00 p .~ .

Syracuse Finl United Pmibykrlln
Pastor: Roben Crow
Worship - 11 a.m.

Syracu!le Mlsslon
141 J Bridgeman St.. Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
·Sunday s~hool - 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd ., 468C
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worshjp - 10 P.m.
Wednesday Ser~ic:es - 10 a.m.

Graham United Mtthodlst
Worship · 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

l'rl'~h\ h'rian

Faith Valley Tabernacle .Churth
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service. - 7 p.tn.

Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolvill~ Church
Main·&amp; Fifth,St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
1\ae5day Services- 1 p.m.

' ..
l nitl·d \ldhodist

Pentec:ostal A~Rmbly
St. Rt . 124, Racine
Pastor: Wi,liam Hoback
·Sunday School - 10 a.m.
E~ening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Churth
575 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Eve ni ng ~ 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sef\lice - 7:30p.m.

Coolville Ualted MethOdist Parish

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
WorShip - I I a.m.

J'l'llll'l'OSI:tl

Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

. .Racine
Pastor: Brjan Hadcne s~
Sunday School· fo a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

St. P•u1 Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore ~ Second St., Pomeroy

Ourth of Cbrtst
Intersection 7 and 124W
Evangelist: Dennil Sargent
Sunday Bible Study ~ 9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Restoration Christian Fi:llowship
9365 Hooper Road. Athens
Pastor: Lonnie Coats
Sunday Worship 10:30 lim
W:d !ida 7 ' n

Harrisonville CommanJty Church

Eutl.eUrt
Pastor: Brian Hark.ness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Worship - 9:00 a.m.
Sunday Schoql - 10:00 a.m.

Hobson Christian Fellowship Chun:h
Pstor: Herschel White
Sunday School- 10 am
Sunday' Chun;h service-6:30 pm
Wednesday 7 pm

The BeHeven• Fellow!lhlp Ministry
New Lime Rd .. Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Sen' ice s: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
·
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

MonUn1 Sllr
PastOr: Dewayne Stutler
SUnday School· It a.m.
Wo11ihip - lOa.m.

St. Jobn Lulberan Church
· Pine Grove

, Reedt.W. Cbn:h ol Christ

Salem Community Churth
tieving Road, West Columbia , W.Va.
"'
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday School 9:30 1!-IU
Sunday evening se n ·ice 6 pm
Wednesday"s-ervice 7 pm

Pastor: Ste ve Re~d
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p:m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

*

l .ulhl'r:tn

FuJI G05pel Churth of the Llvin1 Sa\'l(!r
Rt.338. An1i4uity
PaslOr: Jesse Morris
Sen.·ices: Saturday 2:00p.m .

Long DoHom

Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds'.
Racine, OhiO
Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday s..tool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • l 0:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

The Church of Jes111
Cbrist of Llltte.-.Day SaJotl
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486·
Sunday School 10:20- JI ·a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood II :05·12:00
noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakina qletting, lst Thu~. • 7 p.m.

Hkkory llllb Cburdl of Chrld

Rtjokln&amp; Uf'e Chun:b
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

Faith fo'ull Gospel Church

Bedlany
Pastor: Dcwayne Stuth:r
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Sel"llices -. 10 a.m

l.attl'r-1&gt;:1\ Sainls

Forest Run Baptist

.

Snowville

Sunday Sc:hool - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

Thursday - 7:00p.m.

Ahundanl Gnce R.F. I.
923 S. Third St .. Middlcpon
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wedllt!sday service, 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: W\llio.m K. Marshall
Sunday School - 10:" a.m.
Worship · 9: I 5 a.m.
Bible Study: Monday 7:00 pm

Rev. Mark: Michael
Sunday School" 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m. , 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible ~tudy and Youth - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday·School - 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.

. Full Gospel Llahthoust
33045 Hiland Road , Pomero)·
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tu esday &amp; Thursday - 7:30 p.m.
South Bethel Cuntmunlty Church
Si lver Ridge
'
Bible Study 9 a.m. Sunday
Carleton Interdenominational Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo r.;hip Service 10:30 a.m.
Evening Service 6 p.m.
Frtedom Gospel Mi!l'lion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. J i
Pastnr: Rev. Roger Willford
School - 9:30 a. in .

White Funeral Home
'
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
7
11
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

FLOWER SHOP Blessed are tlie pure
in heart; for they
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We Fill Doctors'
PO~EROY,OH 992-6454
shall see God.
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992·2955
Pomeroy
';tt-t~&lt;elf,a,/ ~tJ'*'e
174 Layne Street
New Haven, WV 25265

~~

, ... ..._

itnouflu'•
.:firr,.;:!:fetp
•-·-•
~

My grace is sufficient for
thee; for my strength is
made perfect in'
k
wea ness

l....:g:~~2:·:7~0~2::8~...J~~-~~':'~'":"!~!~:"':~":~i":·"~':·~~··:~~~·~...........:M:a:tfu:e:w::5:~1:6~~~H-~Ande~~~oin~~~~~LP~·:~:'':'~'"'~;;;'~· ;;::::;::JL.
100
740-992·2844

•

•

Pot'neroy Pike, Co. Rd .
Pastor. Rev. Bl•ck~
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m.
Worship 10;30 a.m., 7:30 p.tn .
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Sdve:nriDe Commu.alty Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.

~Ful l -G ospe l Church"
Pastors John &amp; Pauy Wade
603 Second Ave, Mason
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
W~doesda y 7 pm

Rudund

HyseU Run Holiness Church

' ltllrrlw~

Calvary Bible Chuftb

Pastor: Mike Foreman
Bethel Worship Cenltr
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence FORman
Tuppers Plains Grade School
Worship- I 0:00am
Pastor: Rob Barber
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Assistant Pastor: Karen Davis
Sunday Won&gt;hip: 10 llDI
CUfton Tabemade Chul'l'h
Evening Worship: 6 pm
Clil'lon. W.Va.
Youth group 6 pm
Sunday
School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday: Power in Prayer
Worship · 7 p.m.
and Bible Study - 7 pm
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
A.sh Street C~un:h
Ash St., Middlepon- Pastor: Glenn Rowe
New Uf'e Victory Ceoler
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
3773
Georges
Creek Road. Gallipol is, OH
Sumlay Servke - 7:00p.m.
Paslor:'Bill Staten
WedneSday Service- 7:00p.m.
Sunday Serv i ce .~ - 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youlh 7 p.m.
AKapt Life Center

Sunday S~,:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship- !0:30a.m.
Thursday Servic:es - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Servltes ·7:00p.m.

Pastor: ~obert Musser
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.
,

. Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: Keilh Rader
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:15a.m.
Worship · IOa.m.
Youth Fellowship. Sunday ~ 6 p.m.

Rev. Les Strandt and Myr~ L. Stnmdt
Sunday School -9: 30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel"llice ·7:00p.m.

~le Cbrt.tlan Church

Hillside Bopllsl Churtb

Mlaenvllle
Pastor. Bob Robinsoo
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship ~ 10 a.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Chunh

Bradlord Chun:• of Chrllt
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp;: Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Miniskr: Bill Amberger
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.

ML UrUon Baplilt
: David Wiseman
· Sunday ~chool-9:4.5 a.m.
Evening -.6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serviceli - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Chul't'h
Oreal Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Wors hip.- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00p.m.

Waleyan Blblt Hotiness Church
75 Pearl St, Midd.lepon.•
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship - 9:30 p.m .. 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Bradbury c•ufth of Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon
39558 Bradbury R04d, Middleport
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · IQ:30 a.,. ~

P~tor

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Oct. 25, the 298th day -of 2002. There are
67 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
Fony years ago. on Oct. 25, 19?2, U.S. Ambassador Adlai
E. Stevenson demanded before the UN Security Council that
Soviet delegate Valerian A. Zorin confirm or deny the existence of Soviet missile bases in Cuba, saying he was "prepared to wait for my answer until hell freezes over."
Stevenson then presented reconnaissance photos of the bases
to the council.
On this date:
In 1400, author Geoffrey Chaucer died in-London.
In 1760, Britain 's King George lll succeeded his late grandfather, George II.
In 1854, the "Charge of the Light Brigade" took place during the Crimean War.
In 1918, the Canadian steamship Princess Sophia f&lt;;mndered
off the coast of Alaska; nearly 400 people perished.
In 1929, former Interior Secretary Alben B. Fall was con·
victed of accepting a $100,000 bribe in connection with the
Elk Hill s Naval Oil Reserve in California.
In 1951 , peace talks aimed at endin g the Korean Conflict
·
resumed in Panmunjom after 63 day s.
In 1962. American author John Steinbeck was awarded the
Nobel Prize in literature.
In 1971. the UN General Assembly voted to admit mainland
.
.
China and expel Taiwan.
In 1983. a U.S.·led force invaded Grenada at the order of
' President Reagan, who said the action was needed to protect
: U.S. citizens there.
: In 1999. golfer Payne, Stewan and five others were killed
: when their Learjet flew uncontrolled for four hours before
cras hin g in South Dakota; Stewan was 42.
·
t
Ten years ago: Independent presidential candidate Ross
Perot, explaining why he had abandoned hi s White House bid
: ,in July, publicly accused the Republican Party of plotting to
: disrupt his business operations and his daughter 's wedding.
: (White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater called the charges
"crazy.'")" Singercsongwriter Roger Miller died .in Los Angeles
at age 56.
_ F(ve ye~rs ago: Hundreds of thousands of black women
·joined the Million Woman March in Philadelphia. The
: Cleve land Indians avoided elim ination in the World Series by
: defeating the Florida Marlins, 4-1 , in game six.
~ . P ne year ago: A day after the House signed on, the Senate
• sen t President Bush a package of anti-terror measures giving
police sweeping new powers to search people's homes and
business records secretly an~ to eavesdrop on teleppone and
: computer conversat ions . Ford Motor Co. settled one of the .
: industry 's biggest auto defect cases. agreeing to pay· for
: repairs on millions of cars and trucks with an 'ignition-system
• flaw that could cause the veh·icles to stall iri traffi c.

lnstrument.al
Wonhip Service - 9 a.m.
Communion- 10 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.
Youth-5:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

SUver Ru1t Bapdst
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School- IOa.m. ,
Worship - llll.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne~y Services- 7:00 p.m.

U..lh (Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
, Worship· H :00 11.m.

Pastor: Rcxl Brower
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

· Pine Grove Bible Holine.'i!i Chu!"l=h
112 mileoffR t. 315
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Otltl'r (

-'

Commu.alt)' of Chris I
Portland-1\Jeine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
· . Wednesday ~rvk:es ·7:00p.m.

Pomeroy

Tappen Ploln Chun:h of Christ

Racl'ne First Baptist
Pastor: Rkk: Rule
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wtmhip • I 0:40 a.m., HJO p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

1

r ..rl Chapel
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wo.-M\ip • 10 a.ni.

Rost of Sharon HoUnas Churth
Lcadina Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday won;hip -7 p._m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

· Zion Chun:b ot Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville·Rd. (R.tl43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday ~chool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m. .

Flnl Baptl~t Churt:h
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th nnd Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship " 10: 15 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

FortSt Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

Hanisonville Road
Pastor. Charles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wotihip. II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1:00 p.m.

Pastor: Bruce TeiT)'
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wedne~y ~ervices - 6:30p.m.

Flnt Southem Baplkt
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pas1or: E. LamarO'Bryant
Su~day School-9:30a.m.
Worship-8:15a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:~ p.m.

Fl•t'""*

COilllbualty ChurCh
Pastor: Steve Tomek
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Wornhip-1 0:00a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Faith FeUowshlp Crusade for Cbrist
Pastor: Re\'. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Portland Fl~ Chul'l'h of lhe NuartM
Pastor: William Justis
Sunday Scbool -10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:30p.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.

Colvory Pilgrim Chopel

BnrwaUow Ridp Church of Christ

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
WoBhip' - 10:30 a.m.,6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pb tor. Keith Rader
Sunday Sc hool ~ 10 a.m.

llolim·.,.,

fairview Biblt Church
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Womtip - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible St\.ldy • 7;tll p.m.

Rulland Church of the Naurmr
P~JStor : Rev. Samuel W. Basye

Enttrprist

Danville Holinas Chu.rth
310.57 State Route 325, L:angsvlle
Pastor-: Oary Jackson
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship'· 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service- 7 p.m.

Keno Chllftb ot Cbrilt
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-JeffRy Wallace
ht and 3rd Sunday

Pomeroy -F int Bapdst
Pastor Jon Brockert
Ellst Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Central Clusler
Asbury (Syracuse )
-.-,.
Pastor: Bob Robin50n
Sunday School - 9 : 4~ a.m!
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Serv i c e~· 7:}0 p.m.

Pastor: Keith Rackr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

White'§ Chapel WHieyan
Cooh'ille Road
Pas1or. Rev. Philhp Ridenour
Sunday Sctwol - 9:30 a.m.
Woniliip - I0:30 a.n't .
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

ChHtrr C hu~h of the NlllftM
Pastor: Rev. Herben Gl'lle
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · II ll.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service! - 7 p.m.

Tuesday Services - 7::m p.m.

Sunday School lllld
Holy E!Jcharist 11 :00 a.m.

Pastor: Al Hanson
Youth Minister: BiU Frazier
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.rii.', 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servic~ - 7 p.m.

Hope Baptist Cburcll (Soull!onz)
570 Grant St. Middlepon
PastOr: Rev. oavid Bryan
Sunday school • 9:30 a.m.

TupfJ'('n Plalu SL Paul
Pa.~tor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Grace Episcopal Chun:h
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bemaclci, Rev. Katharin Foster

Mlddloport Cbun:h of Christ
S!h and Main

Worship · 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel"llice - 7 p.m.
Rutland Flnt Bapti1t Chul't'h
Sunday Schoo,! - 9:30a.m.
Worship , 10:45 a.m.

Limi,ting legal secrecy·cqn only
make system more accessible

•

Worship- 7 p. m .

Pomeroy Churth or the Nuaftot
Pwor: Jan lavender
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday S(:n.·ice.'l • 7 p.m.

Fifit Sunday of Month - 7:00p.m. servtce

1-.pi~rupal

33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m. ·
Worship- IOun., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Uborty A•mbly of God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane

Worsh ip - 9:30a.m.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

l'rlnJty Churth
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev, Jack Noble
Worship 10:25 a.m.
Sunday School 9: 15 a.m.

Po'"'"'Y W..ulclo Cbun:h of Cbrlll

Lerrus ro rhe edirnr are welcome. They should be less than
JOO •ronls. All lerrers are s11bjecr to editing and m11st be

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Po~rvy Chutth of Christ
212 W. Main St.
Minister: Anthony Morris
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- I 0:30a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services --7 p.m.

Emmanud Apostolic Tabernacle lac.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland

Den Dickerson

Pastnr. P.J . Chapman
SundaySchooi - !Oa.ril .
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Servk-es - 7 p.m.

Hemlock Gro.. Clorlodoa Clnon:h
Minister: Larry Brown
~hip • 9;30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study - 7 p.m.

873 S. Jrd Ave., Middlepon
KeYin Konkle . Pastor
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6:00·p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.: Youth Fri. 7:30 p.m.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

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~1~1~C~o:r~.~1~2~:=9~....J

....

. ,.. ,

..

'

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Page AS •

The Daily Sentinel

Searching the past

News and Notes
Benefit dinner
LONG BOTIOM - A
baked steak dinner and auction
will be ·held at the Long
Bottom community building
on Nov. 9 for the benefit of
Mer! Swain who suffered a
stroke.
Serving of the dinner will
begin at 4 p.m. at a cost of $6,
while the auction will be held
at 7 p.m. A Lloyd Middleton
doll will be given away for
donations.· Those with items.
for the auction are asked to
contact Michelle Holsinger.
378-6522 or Crystal Bailey,
985-4354.

·Beverly Schumacher, Southeast District Director, DAR, right,
talked on genealogy at a meeting of Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, DAR, chaired by Abbie Stratton, regent. (Submitted)

Southeast District Director
addresses Meigs DAR
CHESTER - Genealogy Outstanding
History
and ways of seeking confir- Teacher, DAR History
mation pa~rs of family Award and Outstanding
Iines reaching back to the Community Leader Award
RevolUtiOnary War were were made and will be
explained ~y Mrs .. Beverly . announced ~I a later date.
Schumacher,
Southeast
Stratton announced a flag
D1stnct Director, DAR, at a h d b
nt d
th
meeting of Return Jonathan a . een p~ese e. 1o . e
Meigs Chapter helcl at the Me1_gs County H1stoncal
Society.
Chester Court.
She said "the laws of
June Ashley provided the
in
the following
information
membership
Daughters .of the American regarding the folding of a
Revolution are democratic, flag as used by the National
for it requires no test except Flag Foundation's Flag
proven Revolutionary War, Folding Ceremony. The
Patnot.descent;_ 11 IS not a folds stand for liberty, unity,
social orgam~allon although justice, peserverance , hatdiIt embrac~s m Its honr~d ness, . valor, purity, in nomembership wome~ o all cence sacrifice honor
'
'
'
walks of hfe, but It IS patn- .
otic,
historical
and mdependence, and tr~th ..
genealogical order."
Guests we.re Uda W1ggms,
The National Society, she Dawn Ruh1nen, and Cleo
. noted, is a national organi- Smith ,_ The .. Hostess
zation for women not less Commmee Patnc1a Holter,
Powell,
.Betty
than 18 years of age who are Mary
in harmony with the objects Milhoan, Peggy Moore and
of the society and who can the ladies of the Chesterprove eligibility.
Shade Historical Society
The importance of keep- who served the luncheon.
ing_ a journal or diary and
Next meeting of the
hstmg Important and. umm- Chapter will be held at the .
portant aspects· of their hves Grace E iscopal Church on
was stressed by the speakq,
P
as a way of tracing far back Nov. 9 with Roberta Roush,
into life and remembering a member of the French
events.
Colony , DAR Chapter,
. ~-~· Abbie Stratton, regent , Gallipolis and .the Ohio
presided with nominations DAR Historian will be the
for
Meigs
County guest speaker.

SWCD receives grant
RUTLAND
Meigs
County Soil and Water
· Conservation District has
received a $34,750 grant to
hire a coordinator to produce a watershed plan for
Leading Creek.
The award was announced
by the Ohi.o Department of
Natural 'Resources. ·
Six watershed groups
. were awarded more than
$234,000 in grants to help

support local . stream and
river protection. Funds will
come from the ODNR and
Ohio .
Environmental
Protection Agency.
The local coordinator wiH
produce a plan designed to
abate acid mine drainage .
along the creek and address
other factors harming water
quality in the area, such as
sedimentation from logging
and farming.

Friday, October 25, 2002 , ....

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Hospitalized
REEDSVILLE - Kiana
Osborne, 7, daughter of Jim
and Connie Osborne of
Reedsville underwent open
heart surgery Thursday at
Cleveland
Clinic
the
foundation . Cards may be
sent to her there c/o the
Pediatric
Cardiology
Department, One Clinic
Euclid
Center,
90500
Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio
44195-5066.

Seniors to meet
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will ·meet at II a.m. Monday
at the firehouse. Potluck din-ner will be served. Blood
pressures will be taken. All
seniors welcome.

projects and ask questions of !he
District 18 liaison.
The meeting is not that at
which the final project package
is selected and vOied upon to
send to the OPWC faa pproval,
which will be held Nov. 20.

Members donate
District meeting to shelter

MARIETTA -· District 18.
Executive Committee will meet
at 10 am. on Nov. 6 at Damon's
Restaurant in Marietta, to rate
Round 17 combined subdivision applications and review all

POMEROY·- Supjllies for
the Pomeroy Men's Homeless
Shelter were donated by members of the Rock Springs Better
Health Club at a recent meeting
at the home of Nancy Grueser.

. The Daily Sentinel

--Inside:
MAC football notes, Page 82
Herron leads Buick event, Page 82
Life without Dale Sr., Page _8 3
· Scoreboard, Page 84
NFL news &amp; notes, Page 85

Page 81
Friday. October 15, 1001
'

Prep Football
TVC

Prep Volleyball

World Series

Bonds, Giants
can taste
Series trophy

Ohio Division

IBm

IYC

All

4-0

7-2
7-2
4-5
2-7
4-5

Wellston
Belpre
Nelsonvlle-Vorl&lt;
Vinton County

3-1
2·2
2·2
1·3

Meigs

().4
Alexander
Hocking Division .
Illllm
IYC
Waterford
4-0
Trimble
3-1
Federal Hod&lt;irig
3-1
Eastern
1·3
Miller
1-3
().4
Southam
. Fltday'a GameS
Belpre at Meigs
Alexander at Nelsoovlle-York
Vinton County at Wellston
Waterford at Filderal Hod&lt;ing
Trimble at Miller
Saturday's Game ·
Southern at Eastern

'tm!m

3-6

All
6-3
6-3
3-6
3-6

1-8
0-9

ovc

!M.

ChiJsapeake
Rod&lt; Hill
River Valley

4-0

3-1
2·2
2·2
1·3

Fai~and

South Point ,_
Coal GI"0\/9

().4

All
6-3
6-3
4-5
3-6
2-7
3-6

Friday's Gamaa

• · Fai~and at River Valley

Chesapeake at Rod&lt; Hill
Sooth Point at Coal GI"0\/9

SEOAL

,.

THin
Marietta
~allia Academy
~ogan

Athens
Point Pleasant
-!3ckson
lf&gt;larren

.

All

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

8-1
7-2
6-3
6-3
3-5
3-6

0:9

Friday's Gamaa

logan at Gallia Academy

Athens at Point Pleasant
Warren at Jackson
Marietta at Parkersburg South

Non-league·
All
8-0
7-2
6-2
3-6
3-6

1·6 ·

Friday's Gamaa

Sooth Gallia at Guyan Valley

Hannan at Bishop Donahue
BeHry, Ky. at Ironton
Ginn. Country Dey at Oak Hill
New Miami at Symmes Valley
Saturday's Game.
Wahama at ~ar1&lt;ersburg Catholic

Piniella signs ·
with Tampa Bay
: NEW YO~ ,(.(\P) - Lou
l'iniella .has agreed to a $13
million; four-year contract to
manage the Tampa Bay Devil
Rays, a source with· knowledge of the negotiations told
The Associated Press.

Mets sign

Eastem wastes no
•
•
•
bme 1n moVIng on
•

•

SEQ

THin
Wah11ma
·Symmes Valley
Ironton
Oak Hill
South Gallia
Hannan

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- Barry Bonds is so close
to the World Series trophy,
he can almost touch it.
And with one more win,
the San Francisco Giants
might even let him take it
home.
Bonds put the Giants on
the brink of the championship, lining an RBI dou-·
ble that sent them hunting
. toward a 16-4 romp over the
Anaheim
Angels
on
Thursday . night and a 3-2
Eastern's volleyball team will play in the Division IV. district tournament following its sweep
edge.
of New Boston Thursday at McDermott Northwest High School. Front row, from left, Tiffeny
"I won't feel anything
Bissell, Stacy"smith, Nicole Phillips, Alyssa Holter, Rachel Elliott and Brandy Bissell. Back
until it's over," Bonds said.
row, from left, Tia Pratt, Becky Taylor, Krystal Baker, Jennifer Hayman, Katie Robertson, Kass
"It's been difficult to sleep
Lodwick, Casey Smith and Morgan Weber. (Sentinel)
ever since I've been in these
playoffs. Playing every atbat, every pitch in my head."
The trophy will be at
Edison Field on Saturday
night when Russ Oniz tries
to clinch San Francisco's
first title. He' II stan against
Ke';in Appier in Game 6.
"I want to be the guy,"
·Oniz said.
After the Angels cut an
early six-run deficit to 6-4,
the Giants blew it·open.
Robertson and a pair . of in the other semifinal, with
Slumping Jeff Kept sealed
assists from Stacy Smith to the two winners advancing to
it with a pair of two-run
homers, 'fuanaging a rare
go up 10-0. Lodwick then regional play Wednesday,
delivered two aces which Oct. 30 at Lancaster.
smile in the process. That
flanked an unforced Tigers
New Boston got out to a 1- ·
got the party going full force
etTor to make it 13-0 and 0 lead in game two before
at Pac Bell Park and put the
Smith set up Holter for two " the Eagles went on a 10-0
Giants' franchise one victomore kills to complete the tear, large! y on the strength
ry from its first ·crown since
BY DEREK TAYLOR
shutout.
.
of
Tiffeny
Bissell
assists
-and
Willie
Mays &amp; Co . .won it
Siaff writer
The second game was· little a pair of' kills by · Jen
for New York in 1954.
· Rich Aurilia added the
different, .though · Eagles f:layman . . ~...
.:•
McDERMOTI - It didO,:t coa\:h , Ho\Yif 47Fo!Y&lt;~/l:"§U~ ..• -t...~'lolter, wl~, soped first m
exclamation point, a three; take l01ig, that was fof sure . stitilted several reserves It\ · the second game, closed out
. run homer in the eighth that
Eastern (19-3) needed less for his regular starters. soon the match with four straight
let the Giants tie for the secthan a half hour to dispose of after the opening serve. Tia points, as Stacy Smith a~ain
ond-highest run total ever in
Glenwood New Boston Pratt, Becky Taylor, Rachel picked up a pair of assists,
a Series game. The New
Thursday night, 15-0; 15-5, Elliot and Brandy Bissell all the final one of her gameYork Yankees scored 18 in
to earn a berth in the saw significant playing time high eight going to set up
1936 and had 16 in 1960.
Division IV.
Southeast along with the usual cast of Robertson to send New
"Everybody did a great
District Tournament held ·at Eagles to close out the win.. Boston packing.
job, up and down our line, Nonhwest High School.
· "We practice as ateam and
up," Giants manager Dusty
Lodwick was the leading
The Eagles stuttered to a 2- we play ll$ a ;1e&lt;!ffi and we scorer for the Eagl~s with II
Baker said .
0 lead from Tiffeny Lynn win as a te(ijil," Caldwell service pomts while Holter,
Aurilia 's drive set off a
· Bissell's opening serve, then said following the win. "We Rober ,oon and Hayman each
. fog horn blast and shots
cruised to ·an opening game don't do jUIYthing as individ- collected four kills to pace
from water cannons on top
shutout when junior Kass' uals."
of the right-field wall beside
the team.
Lodwick took over with the
the Bay. The Giants tied a
The collective unit will
Freshman Tiffany Hosey
Eagles up 5-0.
Series record with their 12th
take on Beaver Eastern from led the Ti~ers with four
After the first substitutions Pike County in one district points, while sophomore . home run, and the total of 17
of the match, Lodwick and semifipal at 4:30 ·p.m. Abbey Marshall was the only
by the teams matched anoth-.
er mark.
the Eagles benefitted from Saturday,
again
at New Boston r.tayer with
"You look at the final
kills from Casey Smith, Northwest. Portsmouth Clay inore than one kill, collecting
score, and .it was a whuppin'
Alyssa Holter and Katie and South Webster will meet three on the evening.

Howe

NEW YORK (AP) - Art
Howe has agreed to a ·$9 .4
million, four-year contract to
manage the New York Mets, a
baseball source, speaking on
condition of anonymity, confirmed to The Associated Press.

: Expos playing
in Puerto Rica?
· SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- As many as 20 Montreal
Expos home games could be
moved to Puerto Rico next
year under a plan baseball
officials discussed before
Game 5 of the World Series . .

Eagles make
short work of
New Boston.

- no doubt about that,"
Angels manager Mike
Sciascia said.
And once again, it took
just one big swing by Bonds
- Mays' . godson - to
swing the momentum in this
Series. But, really, the
Angels were caught in a ·
lose-lose squeeze from the
start.
They pitched to Bonds in
the first inning, and the •
Giants got three runs. They
intentionally walked him in
the second, and San
Francisco scored three
more.
Halloween was still .a
week away, but the big guy
in orange and black had
plenty of tricks and few
treats for Anaheim.
Now, Bonds is within
reach of the only prize he
really wants. He's got everything else - the home run
record, a batting title, MVP
trophies, a sure spot in the
Hall of Fame.
A sellout crowd of 42,713,
tense when the Angels
·c.limbed back and brought
the tying run to the plate in
the middle innings. erupted
when Kent connected in the
sixth and again in the seventh.
Kent began the day in a 3for-16 rut and wound Up
scoring four runs, tying a
Series record. Often surly,
he smiled as he rounded first
base .after his first homer.
"l have to admit that's
probably the fitst time I've
done that," he said.
Bonds added another double and a single and Kenny
Lofton sprinkled in a tworun triple as the Giants
scored four times in the seventh and four in the eighth to
pull away to delirious chants
of "Beat L.AL Beat L.A.!"
The fans ' geography may
have been a bit off, but their
math was right on.
Everyone got in on the act,
too. Bat boy Darren Baker,
the 3 1/2-year-old son of the
Giants manager, got so
excited while retrieving a
bat that he nearly got run
Please see Series, 85 ·

·Ohio State-Penn State previe~

Nittany Lions seek redemption against OSU
COLUMBUS (AP) - · No.
18 Penn State has lost two
games, but not the feeling
that it has a date with destiny.
"I don't think anyone on
the team has forsaken having
a special season," Nittany
Lions center Joe Iorio said.
"Beating Ohio State would
get us right back up to where
we could and should have
been "
Pe~n State remains · tbrmented by two overtime losses - a 42-35 loss to Iowa
and 27-24 defeat to Michigan
-as it heads into Saturday's
ganle with No:. 4 'Ohio State.
. "We are playing good football," Nittany Lions coach
Joe Paterno said. "1 don't
know how much better we
can get, exceptwith develop-

gauge himself against the 75year·old Paterno - . although
he did take a light jab at
Paterno " chasing officials
.
after the Iowa game .
"1. heard he ran fast on TV
but 1 might have more speed
at this point," Tressel said
with a laugh. "I don't know if
my team does."
·
The Buckeyes (8-0, 3-0)
have escaped tough situations
· with wins where the Nittany
· ment. 1 could sit here and Lions (5-2, 2-2) have not.
moan.again about a couple of
Cincinnati
. rec~ivers
calls · and a couple of over- droppe~ two t~uctidown
time plays. Then we're fight- pas.ses m the final mm~te of
.
. .
. Oh10 State's 23-19 wm at
mg fo~. a nauonal champ!- Paul Brown Stadium. And
onship.
Northwestern
had
the
. Ohio State coach Jim Buckeyes on the ropes in
Tressel said he wouldn' t Evanston before Ohio State
come into the game trying to ground out a 27- 16 win that

was closer than the score
indicated. Last · week, the
Buckeyes needed a fourthquarter interception by wide
recei veri cornerback Chris
·Gamble to preserve a 19-14
win .
Asked about the latesl
close call, Tressel said,
"What did we do well? We ·
hung in there . . We kept
believing."
Up to now, Ohio State's
players have been fed a
tead diet of focus-on-the~ext-~pponent and forgetabout-the-polls. Tressel says
that's the only way that the
Buckeyes can win a Big Ten
title or keep alive their hopes
of moving up from sixth in
the first BCS standings.
"Every week is a big game ,

every week is a national
championship," defensive
lineman Kenny Peterson
said. "That's what we're
playing for. We can't take a.
week off."
Penn State must find a way
to rein in Ohio State fresh-.
man
tailback
Maurice
Clarett, who IS averagmg 149
yards a game. He comes im~
the . game 147 yards away
from ' breakmg
Robert
Smith s school record for
rushmg yards by a freshman.
"The only thin$ I'm reaHy
womed about nght.. now IS
beatm~. Penn State, Ctru:ett
said. The yards, . they re
gomg to be there. ,U we lose
this ':"eek, nobody s gomg to
be talk,mg about the 1.47
Please see OSU, 85

SO
RN JACKS N CO TY
REHABILITATI N CENTER
• Occupational Therapy
It is the mission of the so•rn JICklll CIUIIIJ
le!IIM11111111C8ntlr to restore each individual we serve • Physical Therapy
to the fullest. possible level of physical, mental, social,
•
• Speech Therapy ·.
avocational, sepsory and spiritual function.

.

. .
.
628 SGUih Church Streit • RIPI8V, WI 25m ei304J 312-1424
I.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

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Page B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel.corn

Friday, October 25, 2002

The Daily Sentinel• Page B 3

·- --~~~~~--------------------~~~~~~~------~------~~~~~~~

College Football

NASCAR Winston Cup Series

•

No. 24 Bowling Green just another unbeaten in MAC
BY RUSTY Mlu.ER

best game of the season, a 42- very uncharacteristic and
17 rout of Eastern Michigan. we're living on a nne line."
The Falcons, looking for
Ball State won' t bow befo~
The Bowling Green Falcons
their first 7-0 start since the the Falcons because of their
ate the nation's most volatile
1985 team won its first II ranking, that's for sure.
offensive team and have
j:3mes,lead the nation in sc~r"It 's not going to-take anysoared to No. 24 in the AP
mg with 49.3 points per game. thipg to get our kids ' attenpoll. .
.
The MAC record is 37.8 lion,'' Lynch said.
Yet in the Mid-American
Northern Illinois coach Joe
points per game set in 1997
Conference's West Division, .
by the Randy Moss-led Novak said lte might'have had
..
the Falcons aren't in 'first and
· Marshall offense. No MAC doubts about his team, but his
aren' t even alone in second.
·team has ever led the nation in players haven' t.
They find themselves tied
scoring.
"Honestly, kids usually
with archrival Toledo and a
The Bowlins Green attack think they're better than they
half-game behind Northern
is driven by Junior quarter- are," he said. "It's the coaches
Illinois
heading
into
hack Josh Harris who leads who get nervous."
Saturday's games; with all
the country in scoring at 15.3 . The Huskies are averaging
three teams taking important
points a game. He has run or 46 points a game over the last
midterm exams on the·field.
weeks.
Western
passed for 25.7 points a $arne. three
.'There's something people
In addition, he's eighth m the Michigan has the · seconddon't undersiand about our
nation in total offense at a rated defense in the MAC.
conference," Ball State coach
shade under 300 yards a
Toledo puts its · schoolBill Lynch said. "You cannot
g~~ons coach Urban Meyer record tying 17-game home
compete for a championship
said
his learn is dependent on winning streak on the line
in our conference and not be a
Harris
_ maybe too depen- against the RedHawks, who
top 25 team. That's how good
dent.
are 4-1 on the road this year
our conference is." .
"I some11me
· 5 ge1 concern ed including a win -at North
Right now, Bowling Green
we're
living
in that Josh Carolina.
is the onJ.y ranked team from
Harris world too much,'' he .As has been the case around
the MAC, although Marshall
·
the MAC this season, the
said.
is knocking on the door on the
The
option,
however,
is
game
could become a shoot10
fringes of that elite group.
not utilize your best weapon, out.
The problem lies in the
Meyer
conceded.
·
Miami has quarterback Ben
.
depth and parity in the MAC. .
"When
you've
got
a
horse,
·Roethlisberger,
who has
·· ·
Bowling Green (6-0 overall,
you
throw
a
saddle
on
him
already
passed
for
2.173
yards
3-0 in the MAC) host,s danand you go,'' he said.
·and 16 TDs with eight mtergerous Ball SUite (3-4, 1-2
Bowling
Green
has
shown
ceptions. Toledo has first-year
West) on Saturday, while
remarkable
balance:
250.2
starter Brian Jones who has
Northern Illinois (5-3. 4-0)
yards a game rushing and quietly p&lt;~ssed for 1,435 yards
.travels to Western Michigan
249.2
passing.
and 10 TDs with just three
(2-5, 1-2 West). Ask the
Still,
the
Falcons
are
only
interceptions.
Falcons how difficult it is to
one slip away from watching
A week ago against Central
beat Western - they had to
all
their
accomplishments
Florida,
the Rockets had two ·
go to overtime at home last
drift
away
in
an
autumn
·
freshmenAstin Martin and
weekend to pull out a 48-45
victory. They trailed by two Bowling Green 'quarterback Jd'sti' Harris (5) is brought down by Western Michigan players dur- breeze. They have given up a Trinity Dawson - each top
lot of points - 80 points in 100 yards rushing.
touchdowns three different ing the first quarter Saturday, Oct. 19, 2002, in Bowling Green, Ohio. (AP)
the last two ganies, 101 in the
In other MAC games
times in the game.
How
good
is
the
MAC?
football
game
that
either
team note when it failed to score an last three- facts that further Saturday, Marshall (5-l, 3-0
Toledo (5-2, 3-0) remains in Every one of the contenders could have one that came offensive touchdo~ btit got worry Meyer.
East) is at Central ·Michigan
lock step with Bowling
has
survived
at
least
one
close
down
to
one
or
two
breaks
at
by
Kent
State
13-6.
.
'The
last
two
games,
we've
(3-4,
l-2 West), Kent State (2Green, a rung below Northern
Bowling Green could use a not played characteristic 5, 0-4 East) visits Buffalo (!IHinois. The Rockets host call. Toledo got by Central the end of the game," Toledo
Florida
28-251ast
week.
coach
Tom
AmsMz
said.
.
breather
but probably won't . defense," he said. "We have 7, 0-4 East) and Akton (l-6,
Miami of Ohio (5-3, 3-1 East)
''That
was
one
of
those
Northern
Illinois'
season
get
one
ag~inst
a. Ball S~te always played go«;ld defet:Ise 0-3 East) is at Central Florida
Saturday.
games, just a close college nearly started off on a down team that IS coDUng off tts here and always w1ll. Bunt's (2-4, 1-2 East).
•
Associated Press

.

~.

Golf

Lumpy is on a roll at Buick
Challenge
.
.

Herron grabs
2-shot lead
at Pine
Mountain

www.rnydailysentinel.com

Tour event sirice a 10-under
62 in the first round of the
1996 Honda Classic. He
went on to a wire-to-wire
victory, his first on tour.
Herron ·hasn't . won since
1999, although he wasn't
· surprised by his score. The
man known as "Lumpy" for
PINE MOUNTAIN, Ga. his roundish phy.sique is
coming off a tie for fourth in
(AP) - Tim Herron figured the Disney World Golf
he was on the verge of a Classic after rounds of 66-.
great round. He just didn' t 65 _66_65 .
..1 knew it was coming. I
know it would be his lowest
score 10 three yea!s• a 9- ' didn't know it was going to
under 63, or th~t 11 would be today," he said.
come Thursday m the first
The course
certainly
rou~d of the Bmck helped him out, and not just
Cha/enge.. . .
.
because Herron says he grew
('&lt; t~.r wa~~ng up m the up playing in mud when· the
ram , Lumpy got on a roll snow in Minnesota finally
by takmg only 23 putts on melted.
•
the soft greens of Callaway
Overnight rains lingered
Gardens fo~ a. two-stroke iqto the early part of the first
!~ad over Ph1l M1ckelson and round. and officials allowed
stx others.
.
players to lift, clean and
~hckelson, playmg the . replace their balls in the fairBulc~ Challenge for the first way. With .perfect lies in the
lime m 10 years, also had a short ua:ss and soft greens,
good day on the greens, but that turned the first round
most of the focus was on .the into target practice.
club m h1s hands - ~ new
Only 14 players in the 132pulle~ th.a t looked hke a man field failed to shoot par
or better.
brandmg 1ron.
It was. de~1gned to get the
One of thc;m was David
ball rolhng !mmed1ately, and Duval, who is playing his
tt helped Mickelson to a 65. final PGA Tour event of the
'He ·~as tied with Roc~o year. A winner at Callaway
:Med1ate. Bob May, Dav1d Gardens two years ago,
;Gosseu, Ben Crane and Duval was 3 over after his
•Michael Long, an alternate first five holes and rallied for
:who didn't know he was a 73.
:playing until 20 minutes
This also is the final PGA
'before_ he teed off. .
Tour event at Callaway
. Dav1d Toms was among · Gardens, which .hasn't been
:those at 66.
able to find a replacement
; Herron started on No. 10 title sponsor. While it's a
-and played the back nine in
'only 2 under, but an eagle on
the 508-yard second hole he hit a 6-iron to 4 feet ;got him going. He played his
·final nine holes in 29, tying
:the record on the Mountain
View Course.
"It was a ·great ~!retch, and
1 knew the cylinders were
:starting to run," Herron said.
·''To play like that is why we
:play golf. I wasn't even
~
thi'1king 29. 1 just tried to

favorite among players, the
gallery is sparse and corpo:rate entertainment is minimal.
That much was clear when
Cameron Beckman holed out
from 129 yards with a 9-iron
on the third hole. The only
witness - other thai) the
players, ca!f~ies and scoring
.officials - was the woman
behind the green using a
laser to measure the shots.
She held up her hands to signal touchdown.
Mickelson is the highestranked player in the field
(No. 2). When he finished
his round of65, nine people
were following him.
Lefty was playing for the
first time since the Ryder
Cup, where he lost a crucial·
singles match to Phillip Price
on the final day.
He has a busy offseason in
front of him, and a ·new toy
- the putter from Scotty
Cameron which is a modified version of the "Futura."
It has a small bar that wraps
around the bac,~ of the blade
from one end to the other.
"We've been working on it ·

for two years," Mickelson
said. "Granted, the cosmetics
. I haven't spent much time ·
on. There's a lot of improvement that can be done."
.
The rest of his game seems
to be in good shape.
·
Divots: On the day Curtis
Strange relinquished his
..
three-year term as U.S.
Ryder Cup captain, he shot
his best round of the year, a
4-under 68. "You think that
..
was a coincidence?" he said.
Strange, playing on a spanI:
sor's exemption, has made
~·
the cut in only one of 10
tournament this year. ... The r-----f~;~i~~~~:--:7,::"::1
Mountain View course was ·
the first one all year in which
every hole was mapped for
the Shotlink scoring system,
which tracks e~ery shot by
every player on . every hole.
... Beckman played his . first
PGA Tour event as a father.
His wife, Jennifer, gave birth
to a girl Oct. 16. They named
her Hannah .. :. Stewart Cink
is the latest convert to the
belly putter. He started using
it last week at Disney
because "I wasn't making
anything." Cink had a 69. ·
~~

weekend
the tri-state

: starting over difficult\for Childress team
' : BY MIKE HARRIS
.. -MA~ss~oa~·~m~ed~P~m~§~--------

Childress as a team engineer, lot better than the fi rst half.
became general manager in But I still don 't think we' re on
1998 and got his current posi- the level that we need to be
tion in 2001. He also led the at."
development of the Hutchens. Hutchens,
though,
is
Device, a driver head-and- buoyed by the second half
neck restraint system widely improvement and the fact that
used in NASCAR ·since next year the team will have
Earnhardt's death from head · an all-new Monte Carlo, a car
RCR helped develop.
injuries. .
Now Hutchens is playinj: a
"We're trying to hire better
·big part in trying to bnng people every day, we' re," trying
RCR back to prominence.
to build better race cars and
The frrst thing the team had we' re trying to put a better
to do was J?UI Earnhardt's product out there every
death behind 1t.
Sunday," he said. "It's just a
"I think for the company it matter of getting all that headwas a big adjustment," ed in the right direction. I
Hutchens said. "We had to do think this new 2003 Monte
things that we hadn't done Carlo will be a big plus."
before. We had to look at our
At least one parr of the
company differently as a ·team's previous success will
whole to make sure that we never return, though .
were doing the right things.
In the midst of all the work
"Not that we didn't do that and all the turmoil, Hutchens
before, but I think we proba- remains keenly aware o{
bly did it a little more critical- ·Earnhardt's absence.
ly just trying to make sure that
"I miss him grabbing me by
we didn't have a lapse in per- the neck and doing crazy
formance."
things 4n the garage someHutchens said the perfor- times more than · I miss any·
mance has been disappointing thing/' he said. ''On the race
because he believes the team track, he always knew where
has the equipment, the talent he was and how he stood and
and the people to get the job what he was about.
"I've worked here 14 years
done.
"We haven't been as sue- and, up until Dale died, he'd
cessful as we have been in the been here the whole time too.
past," he said. "We took on a Him not being , around here,
pretty big creature here in · there '.s a big void."
putting these three teams
Hutchens figures the best
together under one roof. 1- memorial he could give his
think we probably, in the first old friend is a return to the_top
part of this year, suffered a lit- of the standings.
tie bit from the growing pains,
"It's hard sometimes. but he
trying· to understand the day- would want.us to do that, and.
to-day problems.
hopefully, we're going to win
"By midseason,' we had a him a championship here
good handle on it and our per~ pretty soon with one of these
formance level the second cars and we can feel good
half of the season has been a about that."

· Bobby Hutchens thinks
. , about Dale Earnhardt all the .

time.

"I don't think it will ever be
, the same," said . Hutchens,
•, · director of competition for
· :. Richard Childress Racing.
Earnhardt
drove
for
, :Childress from 1984 until his
; death in a crash at the 2001
.. Daytona 500. The Intimidator
won six of his seven Wmston
Cup championships in RCR
' · Chevrolets, and Hutchens was
, • an integral part of the team for
. the last 14 years.
Little has been the Same for
. Hutchens since Earnhardt's
. · death.
. · "It is a hard thing for me to
'·even accept today," Hutchens
' . said. "We carry on because
, · that's what we've done
· before."
. Kevin
A:arvick,
who
· stepped into Earnhardt's ride
· the week after he died, had
· one of the best rookie seasons
··. in NASCAR history, winning
. two races and fmishing ninth
: in the 2001 points standings.
· That has been the one bright
· spot for Childress since the
· _death of his longtime driver
and close friend.
.. The team's second car last
· • season, driven most of the
. . year by Mike Skinner, was
·. 40th in the points and didn't
· · win until the final race, with
• : Robby Gordon at the wheel.
· · This season, RCR's first as
a three-car team, has been a
: · struggle. With just four of 36
· races remaining, starting with
· · Sunday's NAPA 500 at
· Atlanta Motor Speedway, the
' team's only victory of 2002
: was Harvick's win in July at
' · Chicagoland Speedway.
Jeff Green is 18th, Gordon
20th and Harvick 22nd in the
.standings. Among them, they
have 10 top-five finishes and
13top-10s. Earnhardt, driving
his famed No. 3, often heat
those numbers himself:
Childress, a former Winston
Cup driver himself, is .being
. patient. .
· .

·

Driver Dale Earnhar~t. center, team owner Richard Childress, left, and Bobby Hutchens pose in ·
victory lane after Earnhardt's victory in one of the 125 qualifying races at Daytona International
Speedway in Daytona Beach, Aa., in this Feb. 1999 photo. Hutchens thinks about · Dale
Earnhardt all the time. "I don't think _it will ever be the same," said Hutchens, director of competition for Richard Childress Racing. (AP)
"We knew after Dale was ny was built on that race team working on getting three
gone, the first thing we had to ·and we had to get it back and teams going. It's not somedo was take care of our foun- get~~ going. ·
·
thing that happens overnight."
dation," he said.' 'The compa"We did that and now we're
Hutchens, who SlaJ1ed with

:··....................................................·,·..... ·,:\ ... :

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,
Friday, October 25, 2002

www.mydallysentinel.com

Page B 4 • The Dallv Sentinel

Arizona ...........4

san Ffancilc:o 4

Division IV Southeast District
Tournament
E11tem def. GMnwood New Bo.ton,

1!HJ, 15-5
Eastem : Sconng Kilss L.odiiOck 11 (2
aces), Tottony Lynn Bissen 5 (2 sees) , Alyssa
Holter 5 (2 aces). Kane Robertson 5, Stacy
Smn113. N;oote Phiips 1 (1 ace); ,4.ss;sts: 5 .
Sm11h B. T Bissell 4; K~l s: Hotter 4,
Robertson 4, JeMitel Hayman 4 , Morgan
Webber 3, Lodwd&lt; 1. casey Sm&lt;h 1.
Glenwood New BostOn: Scoring: T;rtany
HOsev 4, Aimee Taylof 1, Assists: Betty
Adams 1, Hosey 1, Arrber ~ike 1: Kills:
Abbey Marshal! 3, Dasha Wtite 1 .

Baseball
Franosco ieads series Hl
Tuesdov,Ocl22
Anaheim 10, San Hancisoo -4, Anaheim
leads series 2·1
Wednesday, Oct 23
San FrarOsai 4, Anal'ooWn 3, series lied 2-2
Thursday, Oct 24
San Franci sco 16, Anaheim -4, San
arosco leads series·3·2
·
S.turday, Oct 26
San Francisco (Ru. Ortiz 1-4· 10) at

r·

Anaheim (Appier 14-12), 7:58 p_m.

· Sunday, Oct "L1
San Francisco at Anaheim, 8:02 p.m., if
nece ssary

Pro Football
, N•tional Football League
. AFC

s

Miami .. ............
Buffalo .......... 4
New England .. 3
N.Y. Jets ... ..... .2

w
lndianapolis .... 4
Jacksonville .... 3
Tennessee ...... 2
Houston .. .... .... 1

w

Baltimore ... ... .. 3
p;nsburgh ., .... 3

Cleveland .. ____ 3
Cincinnati ....... 0

Eut
L T' Pet PF PA
2 0 .714 190 143
3 0 .571 217 214
3 0 .500 152 134
4 0 .333 95 169
South
LTPciPFPA
2 0 .667 124 118
3 0 .500 128 112
4 0 .333 130 173
5 0 .167 83 157
Nor111
LTPctPFPA
3 0 .500 104 111
3 0 .500 138 122
4 0 .429 161 151

6

0 .OOJ

51 18,

w..,

WLTPoiPFPA
San o;ego ..... 6 1 0 .857 173 119
Denver .......... 5 2 o .714 183 154
Oakland .. .: ...... 4 2 0 .667 196 145
Kansas c;ty .... 3 4 0 .429 239 230
NAtiONAL CONFERENCE

w

Eut

L T' Pet PF PA
2 0 .667 185 102
3 a· .500 86 ·98
4 0 .429 94 129
Washington .. .. 2 4 0 .333 115 167
SoUth
WLTPotPFPA
New Orleans ..6 1 0 .857 221 172
Tampa Bay ..... 5 , 2 -0 .714 153 76
Atlanta ............ 3 3 0 .500 130 64
Carolina ... .. _3 4 0 .429 102 105
Ph lladelphia ....4
N v. Giants .... .3
Da llas ............ .3

w

Gree n Bay ... ,.6
Chicago .......... 2

Delroit. .... ........ 2
M inne sota ... .... 1

o .667

93

va. (Kurt Bulehl

Clay (6-3) 13.1944.

Region 7-1 . Avon Lake (8·1) 2244«. 2.
Sl.louis .... .....2 5 0 .286 139 156
Green 18- t) 22.1166. 3. Grafton loAidvlew
N.C.
Seattle ........... 1 5 0 .167 125 152
(9.Q) 18.3666. 4. EaS1 Liverpool (6·3)
Nov. 10 - ~ Au10 Parts 500K, 16.2008. 5. Mar;etta (8· 1) 16.0901 . 6 .
Sundly'IAvondale, Ariz.
.
Seattlo at O..llas, 1 p.m.
MacedonOI NO&lt;donia (8-1) 15.9055. 7.
Nov. 17 - Homestead 400, Homestead, Mans MadOioo (6-3) 14.6555. 8. Copley (6Detroit at 5&lt;1tfato. 1 p.m.
Fla.
.
CIINetard at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m .
3) 14.2500. 9 . Rochfield A.....,re (5-4)
Oakland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Drtifer Slandlnga
14.0611 . 10. Alhens (6-3) 12.7666.
Tampa Bay al carolina, 1 p.m.
1. Tony s-rt ............................. ..4,263
Region &amp;-1 . Kings MUis K~ (9-&lt;l)
Atlanta at New Orleans, I p .m.
2. Jinvn;e Johnson .........................4,181
26.1458. 2. Day. Cham-Julienne (9-&lt;l)
TeMesaee at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
3. Mark Manin ................... ... ..........4.140
25.7422. 3. Vandalia Buller (8-1) 23.7500.
ChiCago at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
4. Austy waoace... . ........ ... ..........4,089
4. Trenton Edgewood (8-1) 20.1666. 5.
Pilllllofllllat Ballimoto, 1 p.m.
5 . Ryan Newman .....................•......4 ,006
Loveland (8·1 ) 19.0243. 6. Trotwood·
Arizona at San Francisco, 4 :05 p.m.
6. Jell Gordon .............................. :.. 3,9n
Madison (7·2) 18.8833. 7. Day. Garroll (7-2)
OorMf at New England, 4:15p.m.
7. Kurt Buleh ..................................3,846
17.8055. 8. Cin. WOOdward (8-1) 15.5458.
Houston al ~• .t:15 p.m.
B. Man Kenselh ............................3,929
9. c;n. MI. Heallhy (7·2) 15.4266. 10. Gin.
Indianapolis II WaiNngton, 8:30 p.m.
9. AK;ky Rudd ............................... ..3,923
McN&lt;:holas (6-3) 14.6333. .
()pen&lt; Miami, San Diogo. GrNn Bay, St 10. O..le .Jonett ...................... ..........3,862
DIVISION IN
Louis
11 . Bill Elk&gt;tt ......... ........................... 3,824 · . Rllgion 9-1 . Oello. Elenedctine (8-1)
12. Dale Earnhardt Jr......... ........ ,.... 3,784
24.9277. 2. Hunt. VaMey Unlv. School (7-2)
IICifiMI''o 13. Sterling M,rtin ............. ............. 3,703
N.Y. Giar&lt;s at Philadolphia, 9 p.m.
22.4690. 3.
BeMr (8-1) 20.6132. 4.
14. JeN Burton ........ ... .......... ... ......... 3,660
SleuberlYille (8-1) 20.3295. 5. A;tnmoud
15. Mir;hael Waltrip .......................... 3,601
Ed; son (8-1) 19.5954. 6. Hubbord (8-1)
16. Aidcy Craven ......................... .... 3.498
182055. 7. Chesleflard W. Geauga (7·2)
11. Bollby Labonte .... ........ .............M13
15.4846. 8. Parma Hta Holy Name (6-3)
18. Jeff Green ............ ......... ............ 3,367
14.5611 . 9. f'l&gt;land Seminary (6-3) 14.4888.
Winston
Series
19. ll;lw Bloney .......•......................3,267
10. Warrensvlla&amp; His. (6-3) 13.0753.
20. Robby Gordon ····· ............ .......... 3,232
Region 1D-1 . Qak HarbOr {8·1_)
The 2002 NASCAA W.,ston CUp rro:lled- ·
25.o4000. 2. (tie) Akron Buttllel (9.Q), Akron
Ute (winners in parenlhe....) and dffler
Hoban (8· 1) 23.7555. 4. Wollard (8-ll"
po;nt slandKlgo:
21 .4277. 5. Cuya . Falls Walsh Jesu~ (6-3
Feb. 17- Daytona 500, Qaylona Beacll.
20.0208. 6 . Canal Fufton N.W. (8·1
Fla. (Ward Bunon)
18.5944. 7. Medina Bucl&lt;eye (8-1) 18.0611 .
Feb. 24 - Subway 400, Roc:ldngham.
8. Napoleon (8-1) 17.9333. 9. Wooster
N.C. (Matt Kensethl
COlUMBUS (AP)- Here are the ~xlh Tnway (7-2) 14.9944. 10. Clyde (6-3)
March 3 - UAW-oa;mlenChryster 400,
weekly foolball computer ratings from the 13.8m ·
Las Vegaa (StM;ng Ma~in)
March 10 MBNA America 500, Ohio H;gh SChoOl Athletic Association.. . Region 11-1. Newark Licking Valley (9·
are .., dhrision and """"n -M1t1 0) 26.5222. 2. Cols. DeSales (7 -2) 23.8266.
Hampton, Ga. (Tony Stewart)
Ra"ngs
u
""'
.....,...
3. Cols. Watterson (6-3) 20.7000 . 4 .
March 11 - Garolina Dodge Dealers record and average bl--1 po;nts E"" Ci~-•tle
game
(top
e~t
taams
;n
each
regoon
·~• 18-1)19.2666. 5. GaiHpolisGama
400, Dart;ngton, S.C. (Sterling Ma~;n)
Acad . (7-2) 17.9607. 6. Cols. Ham;~on Twp.
MarCh 24- Food C~ 500, BriS101, Tenn. advance 10 regoonal quarterfinals):
DIVISION I
(7-2) 16.5000. 7. Cots. Beechcrofi (7·2l
(Kurt Busch)
Region 1-1 . Solon (9-&lt;l) 32.7166. 2. 16.2833. 8 . Sunbu'Y. Big Walnu1 (6·3
Apr;t 8 - Samsu~dioShack 500,
W
H d"
(9 O) 29 4416
3
15.5500. 9. Thorm1111e Sheridan (7·2
Fort WOrth, Texas. (Matt Kensell1)
arren
ar on3,
•
· .·
·
· 14.4833. 10. WhUehaii-Yearling (7 -2)
April 1-4 - Virginia soo, Martinsville.
51
8
333
(8
14.1166.
.
.
·
(Bobby
• Strongsville
·
· (7·2)
·
Region 12-1 . Urbana (9.Q) 21 .5055. 2.
20.1
. •7. Ge
April 21 - Aaron's 499, Talladega. Ala. -21 .3275. 6.
North Olmsted (7-2) 17.9222. 8. CleYe. St.
rmantown Valley VMiw (9.()) 21 .2777. 3.
(Date Earnhardt Jr.)
April 28 NAPA Auto Parts 500, Ignatius (6-3) 17.5294. 9. Parma His. Yalley Topp C~ T;ppecanoe (8·1) 18.9000. 4.
F"orge (7-2) . 17.1777.
10. Young. BellbrOOk (6-3)14.9555. 5. New Rk:hmond
Fontana, Galif. (Jimmie JohnSOn}
(8·1) 13.5697. 6. Day. Dunbar (6·3)
May 4 Pontiac Excitement 400, Aust;ntown-Frtcn (6-3) 17.1277. ·
Region 2-1. Brunswk;l&lt; (9-&lt;l) 24.1833. 2. 13.5348. 7. St Paris Graham (7·2)
Ak:hmond. (Tony 5111W11rf)
May 26- Coca-Cola lliiO, Concord. N.C. Flncby (8-1) 23.4m. 3 Tol StJohn's (6' 13.2833. 8. 51. Mao:ys Memorial (6-3)
3) 170244. 4 Hudson (9-&lt;l) 16.8111 . 5. 13.0388. 9. On. Wyom;ng (6-3) 12.6111 .·
(Mark Martin)
June 2 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dc:Mtr, wadsw0r1h (6-3) 16 0666 6 Spring Sou1h 10. 8ellelonta;ne \6-3) 12.2333.
(6-3) 15 7000. 7. Mar;on Hardong (6-3)
.
D VISION IV
Del. (Jimmie Johnson)
June 9 - Pooono 500, Long Pond, Pa. 15.0666. 8. Akron Garfield (7·2) 14.3722. 9. • Aegoon 13--'1 . Akron Manchester (9-&lt;&gt;)
WOOster (5-4) 13.6666. 10. Elyria (5-4) 20.1120. 2. C -. IIA-St. Joseph (j-2)
(Date .Jomtl1)
·
1B.6388. 3. Gkard (8·1) 18.0055. 4 .
June 16- Mk:h;gan 400, Brooklyn. (Matt 13.6333.
Region 3-1. Dublin Coffman (8· 1) Sulhvan Blacl&lt; River (8-1) 17.2944. 5.
Kenseth)
June 23 Dodge/Save Marl 350, 26.6111 . 2. Dublin Sck&gt;lo (9-&lt;l) 25.6666. 3. Chagnn Falls (7 -2) 15.0650. 6. East
N. Canton Hoover (7-2) 24.4500. 4. PaleSI;ne (8·1) 14.5388. 7. Perry (7·2)
Sonoma, GaiW. (Rk:ky Rudd)
Juty 6- Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla. Pickerington (8-1) 23.6222. 5. Mass. Perry 14.5050. 8. Akron 51 v;nceni·St.Mary (5-4)
(8·1) 22.2000 6. Gahanna Uncotn (7·2) 13.6555 . 9. \bung . Mooney (5.-4) 13.2000.
(MK:haot Waltrip)
July 14-Trop;cana 400, Jolie1, Ill. (Kevin · 19.8000. 7. Mass. Washington (7·2) 10. Young•..Ursullne (4-5)11.4838.
.17.4611 . 8. Upper Arli(!gton (6-3) 17.1444.
Reg;on 14-1 . Kenlan (7· 2) 21 .7500. 2.
Harvick)
(8·1)
18.3944 . 3 .
July 21 - New England 300, Loudon, 9. Xenia (6-3)14.8000.1RGrove C~ (7·2) Ottawa-Glandorf
14.7000.
Rossford (7-2) 18.0666. 4. Archbold (8·1)
N.H. (Ward Burton)
Region 4-1 . Gin. Elder (8-1) 28.4646. 2, . 17.4944. 5. Lipper Sandusky (7-2) 16.6555.
July 26- PennoylvanOI 500, Long Pond.
c;n . Anderson (9·0) 25.6833. 3. Cln . 6. Pembervollo Eastwood (B-1) 14.6722. 7.
(B;ttl:'ttk&gt;n)
.
Aug. 4 -Brickyard 400, tnd;anapoUs. (BUt Colerain (8·1) 23.7333. 4. Huber Hts. Marion River Valley (7 ·2) 14.4833. 8. Huron
Wayne (7-2) 22.8111 . 5. c;n. Sl. Xavier (6- (6·3) 14.1666. 9. bella (8-1) 13.9366. 10.
Ellioll)
·
Aug. 11 - Sinus Salellne Rad;o 111 The 3) 22.0892. 6. COii!on Northmonl (7-2) Wetlnjl!on (6-3) 13.2277.
21 .3000. 7. c;n. Princeton (7·2) 20.7666. B.
Aegoon 15-1 . Portsmouth (8·1) 25.0543.
Glen, Wallc;ns Glen, N.V. (Tony Stewart)
Aug. 18 - Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Moen. Lebanon (8-1) 20.3868. 9. c;n _Moeller (6· 2. New Lex;nglon (9·0) 24.5500. 3.
3) 19.6413. 10. Miamisburg (B-3) 17.9055.
Portsmouth WeS1 (B-1) 20.6104. 4 .
(Dale .Joroett)
DIVISION II
•
Cost-octon (9·0) 20.2000. 5. Lane. Fa_lrfMIId
Aug. 24 - Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn.
A"'Jion 5-1 . Lou;sv;ue (9.Q) 24.5333: 2. Union (8·1) 19.5055. 6. Martins FerrY (9-&lt;l)
(Jeff Gordon)
5epl. 1 -Southern 500, Oart;nglon, S.C. Ganloeld (9·0)216722. 3. un;ontown Lake · 17.5800. 7. Wellston (7-2) 16.6944. 8
(6·3) 20.0777. 4. Mad;son (8·1) 18.2388. 5. Ironton (6·2) 16.4770. 9. Waverly (7·21
(JeH Gordon)
Sept 7 - Chevy Monte Car!o 400, Olmsted Falls (7-2) 17.6666. 6. Warren 16.4000. 10. Witt;amsporl Westlall (7-2)
Mowland (6-3) 17.0647. 7. Young . Chaney 13.8277.
Richmond, va . (Man Kenseth)
Region 16-1 . Archbishop Aller {8·1)
Sept. 15- New Hampshire 300, loudon. (6·3) 15 .4~. 8. Chagrin Falls Kenston (6·
3) 15.0000. 9. GarHeld Helghls (7- 2) 24 1602. 2. Read;ng (9-0) 21.4611. 3.
(Ryan Newman)
Coldwater (9·0) 20.6833. 4. Pta;n c;ty
Sept. 22 - MBNA America 400, Dover, 13.6444. 10. Maple HIS. (6-3) 13.2277. .
"Region &amp;-1 . Tot DeSales (8--1) 24.6777. JonathOn Alder (8--1) 19.0888. 5. Clarksville
Del. (J;mmie Johnson)
SeJt. 29 - Protection One 400, Kan... 2. Cols. Brookhaven (6-1) 23.5444. 3. Ct;nlan-Massie (8-1) 15.4084. 6. W. M;lton
Mau111ee (7-2) 20.1333. 4. Tiffin Columbian Milton-Union (6-3) 11 .8500. · 7. Dayton
~. Kan . (Jell Gordon)
OCL 6 - EJ, Sporls 500, Talladega, Ala. B-1) 19.9500. 5. Tot Cent. Gath. (8·1) Oakwood (7·2) 11 .7388. 8. Spr;ng
·
9.:1777. 6. COis. Walnut Ridge (8~ 1) Northeastern(6·3) 11 .4111.9. Ham. Badin
(O..Ie Eamhardl Jr.)
Ocl. 13 - UAW-GM Quality 500; · 18.2572. 7. Cola. M;ttt;n (6-3) 17.2055. B. (3-6) 10.1833. 10. Brootovme (5-4) 9.5500.
Cols. St. Cha~es (6-3) 16.1396. 9. Cots.
DIVISIONV
Goncord, N.C. (JamMI McMurray)
Reg;on 17-1 . S(Jl;lhville (9-&lt;l) 2tj.5055.
Oct. 20 - Martinsville 500, Martinsville, Independence (B-1) 14.0197 . 10. Oregon

OCL 27 - NAPA 500, Hornpton, G4.
Nov. 3 - Pop Socrol 400, Aod&lt;ongham,

142 116

Nor111
LTPciPFPA

1 0 .857 203 154

4
4
5

NASCAR

Cup

Sunday, Oct20
Arlahjn 11, Sal Fran::isOO 10, series lied 1·1

w

2 0 .667 108

2

u_,

WORLD SERIES
S.turday, Oct19
San Francisco 4, Anaheim 3, San

0 .333 132 155
0 .333 132 189
0 .167 137 1B5

Well
WLTPctPFPA

Prep Football

OHSAA Computer Ratings

Labonte)

Frldav. October 2S, 2002

www.mvdailysentinel.com .

·

~-ntor 1 ) 2~ ~ ~ ·1.\,~,;,!,:\s[· ~)-

.

I

2. - - Clodnol (9-0) 16.5666. 3. 11 . Pickerington 28. 12. Findlay 24. 13. Cln.
Aod&lt;y Luth. W. (8-1) 15.8111 . 4. Colerain 21 . 14. HudiOn 14.
Bedford Chanol (7-2) 15.5666. 5. Dalton (8DMSIONN
1) 15.1611 . 6. New Middletown Spolnolield
Wol. P1o
(6·3} 12.3611 . 7. Gates Mills Gilmour kid.
I . Dir;~~ ---··8-0
335
(8-3) 11 .9166. 8. Newlon Falls (6-3)
2. Louisvito (11) .......................8-0 301
11 .4833. 9. warren Kennedy (54) 11 .3425.
3. Tol. Cent. Galh. (2) ...............8-0
237 •
10 Gates Mils Hawken (7-2) 10.8881 .
4. Kings Mls Kings (1 ) •........... 8-0 231 ~
Aeg;on 16-1. Oef. Tino&lt;a (B-0) 16.2950.
5. Ganlield .............. ..................
218 •
2. Bucyrus Wynford (8-1) 18.2555. 3.
6. Tol. st Francis (2) ........ ....... .7-1
164 :
Hamler Pa!OO&lt; Henry (8·1) 17.7111 . • .
7. Loveland ..............................8-0
152 •
Delphos St. John's (7· 2) 15.3970. 5.
castalia Ma~reHa (7 -2) 14.7611 . 6. 8. Cots. llrookhaveo .. ............. ..7-1
116 •
Columllia Station Colurrbia (7·2) 14.2722. 9. Macedonia Nontonia (1) ......8-0 106
7. Lorain Clearview (7-2) 13.2866. B. 10. Trotwood-Madison .............. .7-1
35
Calms WOS1em Resorvo (8-1 ) 12.4500. 9.
011wn u calving 12 or mDM polnta: 11 . · .
~'fl::,' Jefferson (7·2) 11 .6055. 10.
Vandalia Buler 31 . 12. Grallon 21 .
.
Bl .
(7·2) 11 .0944.
Region 19-1 . Woodsfield Monroe 13. Gmen20. 14. Madioon18. 15.~
Cen1ral (9-&lt;l) 21 .0400. 2. Amand;i· South 15. 16. T~ Columbian 12.
.DIVISION at
Clear&lt;:feek (7·2) 15.5944. 3 ?8arnesvitte (8·
1) 15.3168. 4. SarahsvUie Shenandoah (6·
W-L Plo
3) 13.1555. 5. Johns1own-Monroe (7·2)
1. Akr. Buchtel (18) ..................8-0
332 '
12.961l6. 6. 51eub. Ga1h. Ganl. (7-2)
2. Newark Llctdng Valley (5) .... .8-0
298 , .
12.1661 . 7. Wheelersbufil (5.-4) 11 .9334. 8.
3-ValeyVoew(S)
....
210
Jolvlstown Northridge (6-3) 11 .8666. 9.
4. Hubbard ..........: .................... 8-&lt;l
224
Crooksville (6-3) 11.7166. 10. Chesapeake
5. oak Harlxlr (3) ..................... 8-0
181
(6-3) 11 .6128.
6. Cle. 8enedk:llno (1) ............. 7·1
156
20-1 . Marion Pleasant (9-&lt;ll
7. Urbana .... :.......................... .. 8-0 . 127
18.6117. 2. Lees Creek E. et;nton /9-&lt;l
14.4833. 3. Morral Ridgedale 7-2
8. Akr. Hoban (1) ...............•......7 -1
121 •
14.2833. 4. Cin. Hills Clvletlan Aoad. (9-&lt;l~
9. 51euber1Yille (1) .................... 7·1
"82
14.1408. 5. GahaMa Cola. Aoad. (8-1
10. Cols. DeSates .... ......•. ........ 8-2
49 •
13.7611 . 6. Bainbridge Paint Valley (8-1
Olflltli FICII\.Wig 12 Ottnen palnla: 11 .'
13.5388. 1. Cola. Aeady (7-2) 12.9m.
34. 1~ Napoleon 31 . 13.VOrsaUtes (6-3) 11 .9055. 9. Arcanum (7-2)
· 21. 14.
Fulon NW 1B. 15. ~ - .
10.8388. 10. 51 Henry (5-4) 9.9611 .
Fals Walsh Je9UI15. 10. (lie)
Galla
DIVISION VI
· Region 21-1. Mogadore (8-1) 18.2000. Academy, Cots wa~~eooon 1~
2. Lowellville (9-&lt;l) 16.7388. 3. Eas1 Ganton
DIVISION IV
(7·2) 11 .9000. 4. w;ndham (8-1) 11 .6057.
W-L Plo
5. Monroeville (7-2) 10.7000. 6. C-.
1. Coldwater (21) ..................... 8-0 . 345
Guys. His. (6-3) 10.4846. 7. Leetonia (6-3)
2. New Le&gt;dngton (5) ................8-0
267
10.4500. 8. StMary central Galhollc (5-4)
3. Al&lt;r. ManclleS1er (3) ..... ........ 8-0
264
10.1833. 9. Kirtland (5-4) B.0403. 10.
4. Coahoclon ...... •....... .............. 8-0 235
Noowalk St. Paul (5.-4) 8.0111 .
185
5. Ottawa-Glandorf (2) .............8-0
Region 22-1 . Colunt&gt;us Grove (9-&lt;l)
173 ··
6. Martins Feory (3) .................. 8-0
16.9222. 2. TH!in Colvert (7-2) 16.2333c 3.
7. Pllrtsmouth .......................... 7-1
117
Edon (9-&lt;l) 15.8590. 4. NorthWOOd (~-&lt;&gt;
15.6500. 5. Rawson Gory-Rawson (8-1
105
8. Kettering Aller (1) ................. 7·1
14.0222. 6. Sycamore Mohawk (7·2
9. lronton .................................. &amp;-1
68
12.6833. 7. Anica seneca East (6-3
10: Reading (1) ......... ............. .. .8-0
51
10.7888. 8. HQPeweii -Loudon (7·2
Qlhoq
,_Mng
12
or
more
polntl:
11 . •
10.4866. 9. Mc:Comb (6-3) 9 .9388. 10.
.
Kenton 27. 12 Plain c~ Jonathan Alder 25.•
Ayersvtlle (6-3) 9.5654.
Aeoion 23-:1 . Sttasburg-FrankHn (9-&lt;l) 13. (lie) Arc:tmld, Clarksville Clln1on-Massio
14.7277. 2. Danville (8-1) 12.2723. 3. 20. 15. EaS1 Palestine 16. 16. (tle) Roealood,'
Sha&lt;Jys;de 17·2) 11 .7388. 4. w;How Wood SuiiMtn Black River 15. 18. Girard 14.
Symmes valley (7-2) 10.5603. 5. Mllentp.Ort
DIVISIONV
(6-3) 10.0111 . 6. Newark Galh. (5.-4) 8.8427.
Wol. Plo
7. Waterford (6-3) 8.1458. 8. Beallsville (5.-4)
1. Marion Pleasant (26) .. ...... ...8-&lt;l
337
7.0555. 9. GklusterTrimble (6-3) 6.7611. 10.
~-Mim&gt;eC(5) .. ...c•• •• 8-0
305 •
Bellaire 51. John (4-5) 6.7131.
3. Smithville (2) ........... .......... ... 8-0
292 ·
Region 24--1 . Marla Stein Marion Local
4. Middlefiefd Cardinal (1) ........ 8·0
226 ''
(8·1) 18.1000. 2. Oola Hard;n Northern (9·
0) 16.9055. 3. Mechanicsburg (8-0)
5. Amanda-Ciearoreek (1) .... ...6-1
178 ·
"14.7555. 4. Covington (9-&lt;&gt;) 14.4833. 5.
6. Gin. Hills ...................... ..... .. 8·0
126
Troy Christian (8·1) 12.9092. 6. ·s .
7. Delphos 51. John's ...............6-2
124
CharleS1on SE (7-2) 12.2111 . 7. Anna (7·2)
8. Dalton ............................ ...... 7·1 114
10.4866. 8. Cln. Country Day (7·2) 9.6660.
9. Barnesville ...........................-7·1
fiT ·
9. N. Lewisburg Triad (6-3) 8.4277. 10.
,0. Defiance r~nora ....., ........... .. 7-o
39 •
DeGraH RM!rskle (6·3) 8.0658.
01hoN racolvlng 12 or m - polnlw:.,
Associated
State Polls 11 . Ba;rj)ridge Paint Valley 32. 12.
Creek E. Clinton 31 . 13. Hamler Patrick'
COI.UMBUS (AP)- How a state panel ol Henry 25. ·14. castalia Margaretta 17. 15•. • •
~rts writers and broadCasters rates Ohio Gahanna Cols. Academy 12.
h;gh school foolball teams in the sbcth week·
DIVISION VI
ty Associated Press poll ol2002, by OHSM
W-L
P1o
divisions. with won-lost reoord and total
1.MariaSieilMW&gt;LDcal(24) .......7-1
328 :·
points (first-place votes in parentheses]:
2. Danville (B) ........................ ... B-0
287 ·
DIVISION I
3.
Columbus
Grove
(2)
............
8-0
262
W-L P1o
4. Strasburg-Franklln ...: ...... ... ... 8-0
202
1. Warren Harding (30) ....... ,.... 8-Q
359
5. MOgadore (1) .... .................. 7·1
187 ·:
2. Solon (5) ......._..... ........... ...... 8·0 · 306
3. Dublin Scioto (1 1.................. 8·0
261
6. Lowellville................ ... ;..... 8-0
167 ,
4. Cin. Elder (1) ....... ..•..............7-1 . 225
7. Dola Hardin Northern ..... .....8-&lt;l
166
5. Brunswick.. ......... .. .............. ..8.() 170
8. Covlng1on ......... .......... :......... 8-&lt;l
112 ' •
6. MassUionWashlngton ........ ..7-1
1'48
9. Cory-Aawson (1) ..•..... .......... 8-0
93 • ·
7. Cle. 51. tgnadus : ...................ll-2 122
81 '
10. Mecllanlcaburg ... ............. ....
8. Cin. Anderson .... ..................8-0 117
-vlng 12 or,... polnta: 11.9. Dublin Cofiman .....•........... ... 7·1
97
Syc:amore Mohawk 16. 12. Northwood 15.:
10. LakewriodSt.Edward .... ....7-1
79
OltleN .....tvtng 12 or moN po;n111: 13. Shadyalde 13. 14. 5. Charleston SE 12.. ·

s-o

s-o

e. Usbon-

cana

r.._.....

Lees- '

Preas

ou.r.

s-o

..

Cardinals aim for Why can't Bengals get
QB thing right?
this
NFC West lead
Cincinnati's

BY DAVE GOLDBERG
Associated Press

RAIDERS, 42-30
'

Denver (plus 3)
at New England

back.
BUCS, 17-3

Indianapolis
(pick •em) at
Washington

Believe it or nol, the
Arizona Cardinals are about
to play a midseason game
with the division lead at stake.
Is there any reason the
Perhaps it most has to do with Patriots will play better after a
being moved into the -new bye?
NFCWest
Steve Spurrier goes back to
__BRONCOS, 24-18
At 4-2, Arizona is tied for
one of his Florida QBs, Shane
first place with San Francisco
Matthews. Indy has Peyton
and can move ahead by beatManning.
ing the 49ers on the road
COLTS, 22-17
Sunday. The oddsmakers
don't think much of Arizona's
chances - it's an 8-point
underdog.
Michael Vick runs rings
The oddsmakers are right.
Arizona's game last week around.the Saints. His cousin,
was hardly a work of art. It Aaron Brooks, can't match The Jets are wearing all
·
Ween again. Will the Browns
was a 9-6 overtime victory him.
wear orange again for
FALCONS, 24-23
over Dallas in which the
Halloween?
.
Cowboys botched an extra
JETS. 17-16
point and Quincy Carter
threw enough horrible passes
to get himself benched.
The Cardinals weren't. parlicularly artistic either, as Bill
Gramatica missed three fieldgoal attempts. But it was a
The Vikings are favored,
win, so coach Dave McGinnis
which tells you what's hapwill take it.
.• The Giants aren't as bad as pened to the banged-up Bears.
"Everything else will come some people think. Nor as Chicago won the first meeting
to us if we do what we're sup- good as they think.
on a TD with 28 seconds left.
posed to do, and that means
EAGLES, 16-10
VIKINGS, 23-20 (OT)
winning games however we
have to win them," he says.
"But there are things we have
to do better. We have to score
touchdowns."
The Cardinals pulled into a
Are the Bills contenders? ,
tie with the 49ers because San
For this day at least.
Francisco · lost in Ne~
The Steelers seem to have BILLS, 37-29
Orleans. .You really can t their act together under .
blame the 49er~ - they ran .Tommy_Maddox. Ray Lewis
out of steam 1~ the fourth or no Ray Lewis, it's ... .
quarter a~ter leadmg 24-13. In STEELERS 17_7
part, that s the result of·play- J
.
'
.
·ing a Monday night game in
·
·
Seattle, traveling back home, ·
then playing an early game
/ ~
(10 a.m. Pacific time) on the .
The Bengals are the NFL's
road.
Chad . utchinson will start most consistent team.
This week, they sleep in at quarterback for Dallas. Oh TITANS, 33-5
their,own.heds for the start of yes, and Emmitt Smith·tries to
their new division rivalry. pass Walter Payton's record.
Terrell Owens (sans pen) will
COWBOYS, 20--13 .·
tte ready.
49ERS, 27-10

AUanta (plus 3
1/2) at New
.Orleans
Cleveland (plus
3) at NY Jets

New York Giants
(plus 7) at
Chicago (plus ·1)
Philadelphia
at Minnesota
(Monday night)

Pittsburgh
(minus 2 1/2)
at Baltimore

Seattle (plus 2
1 2 at DaIIas

Oakland (minus
3) at Kansas City

Tampa-Bay
.. (minus 7)
at Carolina

Detroit (plus 7)
at Buffalo

Tennessee
(minus 5 1/2)
at Cincinnati

dance of
quarterbacks
hurting team
CINCINNATI (AP) Kurt Warne"r takes over and
leads the lowly Rams to the
Super Bowl. Tom Brady
does the same thing with the
Patriots, filling in after Drew
Bledsoe goes down.
Other NFL teams can
change quarterbacks and
win. Some of them even win
· championships. Why can't
.the Cincinnati Bengals do
the same?
Short answer: They
change all too often and for
aJI ·the wrong reasons.
"The quarterback position
is the one position that you
can't- play musical chairs
with," . quarterback Akili
Smith said. "We've been
doing that. and there's been
no success."
The Bengals treat the
quarterback position like a
slot machine. Insert money,
pull lever. see what pops up.
If they don'.t hit the jackpot,
they just give it another try.
Cincinnati (0-6) already
has used three different
starters !his season - 'Gus
Frerotte, Smith and Jon
Kitna, who currently has the
job. Smith is on deck in case
Kitna continues to struggle,
and Joe Germaine- signed
to the practice squad last
week ·_ is probably going to
get a chance somewhere
down the iine.
The quarterback-du-j&lt;iur

•
nes
5e
from Page 11

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ZERO PAYMENTS UNTii DJI
ZERGDOWNI

• TIU &amp; Crulae

~rand

New 2003 Silverado
Extended Cab 4 Door.

850'

they wanted to see.
.:-After Bonds drew nine
walks, five of-them intentional , in the first four ga:mes,-he
at last got something to hit in
the first inning. And the
over at the plate in the sev- Giants slugger did not miss.
«Dth inning. · •
"I felt good with Jarrod
· J.T. Snow scored and going after Barry, giving him
quickly scooped up Darren the freedom to pitch to him,"
by his oversized Giants jack- Sciascia said. "Obviously, he
et to get him out of David didn't want to give in to
Bell's way.
·
'
him."
:"You OK, buddy?... Snow
Lofton led off the first with
a$ked. Darren nodded yes.
a single and Washburn made
,_.All in all, it was a dramatic his first critical · mislake,
turnaround in the Series. Just walking Kent on a full count
a _ few days ·. ago, with with one out.
Anaheim's hmers going wild.
Up stepperl Bonds and just like
some thought they would run in Garre I, when he gave up a
aivay with the IItle. But by home run to the slugger,
tlie time this one ended, tt WashbumdecidedtopiiChtohim
~as the Giants who had the
Bad choice.
Angels on the run.
The count went to 2-1 and
·Chad Zerbe got the win, Washburn backed off the
relieving
when
Jason , mound, taking a moment to
S~hmidt was pulled in ,the compose himself as the
fifth, one out short of quahfy- crowd chanted, "Barry!
irig for his second win of the Barry!" When Washburn
SI:ries. Schmidt struck out took something off a fastball
eight, yet · Baker took no arid left it out over the pla!e.
cliances after Troy Glaus' Bonds lined an RBI double
~I double made it 6-3.
that rolled to the wall in right
•Jarrod Washburn, who lost field, and the rout" was on.
te Schmidt in the opener,
Bonds even let out a rare
absorbed another defeat.
smile, and playfully whacked
:At least Washburn gave the Angels shortstop David
fans at the park- and every- • Eckstein on the backside.
where else, no doupt - what
Benilo Santiago followed

osu

·Taxes, Tags, Title Faee tXIra. Rtbalelncludet:l WI Nil p~~ ol new vehicltllaltd where applicable: "On approved credit. On stltcled modele. Nol \eaponalbltlor lypographlcalorro11.
Prices Good Oclober 23td Tlwough October 271h.
.
.
·
.
.
.

....

CMIYaOLIT

@
It's all anM

· Buick

fromPipBI
•

GZ;) OldSmobile.
-

~rds,

8CIC!IOGOOOCr

Monday- Saturday 9 am - 9 pm • Sunday 1 pm - 8 pm
.

',J

--------

·· ·--

Take 1-n lo Ripley FAIRPLAIN lntercha~ge
(exil132) Turn North on Rt. 21,
Dealership Is 3 miles on left

they' II be talking
about the Buckeyes' loss."
· Clarett's ability to pick up
yiuds opens thmgs up for
qUarterback Craig Krenzel to
IQOk for receivers Michael
Jenkins and Gamble. The
Buckeyes are averaging 229
rushing yards and 197
through the air.

"

The home team has won
eight of the nine meetings
between the teams since Penn
State joined the Big Ten. Th~t
trend held a ye11r ago tn
Happy Valley as Ohio State
led 27-9 in the third quarter
only !D have the Nittany
Lions counter with an 18-0
run to win 29-27.
"What we're th inkin g
about is what we've got
going right now," Ohio State
strong safety Mike Doss sai4.
·
"Last year is gone."
Penn State quarterback Zach
~

.

philosophy comes from the terbacks.to succeed. Instead.
top. While all of his passers they throw them in unpr,· argue for patience, own er pared . leading to anoth er
Mike Brown prefers to lry calamity.
someone else as soon as They've. done it with fir slsomething bad happens: round draft picks like Smith
hoping to finally hit the . and . David Klingler. and
jackpot.
1hey' ve done . it wi th thei r
"lfil isn'l working, I guess long li st of journey man. The
one option is to keep on hop- more they fail , the more the
ing lhat il will work.'' Brown impatience·grow s.
said. "Another option is 10
In 1998. the Bengal s
try something el se and see if signed Neil O'Donnell a1 the ·
it Will work. You can argue start of training ca mp. put
both sides of that.
.
him in charge of an offense
"I Hind to the opinion thai that he was still lea rning.
you ought to try and see if then ditcl1ed him after 1-1
something else can't get it games.
going."
They've essentia II y done
The argument for the the
same
1hing
10
patient approach is that it O' Donnell' s
suc:cessors, ·
works. Kitna pointed out ru shing them up the depth ·
that other leams have won chart and 1hen dropping
with backups because of the them back to 1he bottom if
circumstances; they're not things don't work out righl
changing just to change.
away.
_"When you look at other The inslability at such an ·.
situations, you have to real- important position leaves the '
ize that a quaf1erback going locker room without a
down with an injury is dif- leader.
ferent thari simply making a "It's like 1he Neil
quarterback change," Kitna O'Donnell thing," offen sive
said. "When a quarterback lineman Willie Anderson .
goes down, a change is made said . "He came in after miniout of necessily, and guys camp. He had to learn a new
just kind of rally around .
offense. He was in a position
"When you stan making where you have leaders, bu1
quarterback changes, guys he couldn'tlead us."
don't know. Hopefully,
Undeterred , Brown will
we've seen the end of that ." plod along the same route
No, they haven't. The once again next year, taking
Bengals have . changed yet another quarterback in
passers so often that it's the first round. while expectbecome a team tradition. ing instant results.
·
They' ve had 12 in the last 12 "There is no assurance for
years; it's no coincidence first-round picks at any posithat they' ve had no winnings . tion, but that's especially
true with quarterbacks,"
seasons during lhat span.
Brown's impatience is Brown said. "Quarterback s
only half of the problem. pop up in the slrangest
The Betigals also do a poor. ways."
job of preparing their quarEspecially in Cincinnati.

Houston (plus
10) at
Jacksonville

Heroes

Houston's consistent, too.
JAGUARS~ 31-10

011 November 11, our 11atio11 wili pause to pay tribute to the·flrousands
of men a11d wome11 who have proudly served their country d11riug times of
crises and peace.
·This Veteran's flay, the Daily Sentinel will publish a very special trib11te
ho11ori11g area vetera11s. You can joi11 in our salute by inciudi11g tire
vetera11 ill your life, living or deceased, who have served or is cr~rrelltl_v
servi11g in a11y branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.

With Rodney Peete's injury,
LAST
WEEK:
9-5
. The over-under on this
the Panthers have slopped (spread), 11·3 (straight up)
. game is 55 1/2. .
SEASON:
48-53-l
· Rich Gannon won't let the growling. Rookie Randy
Fas~ni might stan at quarter- (spread) 63-39 (straight up) ,
Raiders lose three straight.

• ""'

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

National -Football League

Scoreboard
Prep Volleyball

•

with a sacrifice fly and
SciQscia played lhe percentages, intentionally walking
Reggie
Sanders.
But
Washburn couldn't take
advantage of the lefty vs.
lefty matchup 11nd walked
Snow to load the bases,
·prompting a visit from pitch~ng coach Bud Black.
That didn't help as
Washburn also walked Bell,
the Game 4 star, to force
home another run that made
it 3-0.
San.Francisco kept pouring
it on in the second after
another leadoff single by
Lofton. Kent doubled off the
right-field wall and the
Angels took no chances with
Bonds this time, throwing
four wide ones while Giants
fans razzed Washburn by
waving rubber chickens'.
Santiago spoiled the strategy
wilh a two-run single. Notes:
It was the fourth time a team
has scored at least I 0 runs in
this series, the second time
that's happened in World
Series history. The New York
Yapkees and Pittsburgh
Pirates did it in 1960 . ...
Washburn had a rough outing
on his fourth wedding
anniversary. He tied Series
records with three straight
walks and four in an inning.
Mills shredded the Buckeyes
with his running and passing in
tbe second half of that game.
This time around, running
back Larry Johnson is coming off a Penn State-record
257
yards
agains-t
Northwestern.
With two losses already.
the Lions know they can't
afford another slip.
"It's the biggest game
we've played so. far, 'the
bi~gest game of. my career,"
M11ls said. "Emotions are
going to be high."

Your choice of Two Styles ...
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Ad Only $7.00
(shown actual size)
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In Honor Of

. Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Arrny
VietNam

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(740) 992-2155

�•

•
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www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 25, 2002

.'.

W:ribune - s ·e ntinel - l\ft,..
CLASSIFIED

• Friday, October 25, 2002

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

•

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.. - ~~

'

Reg

Blet'k Anou• buill, 93 Park Avenue, loaded,
yearll~a &amp; older bloodlines $3,000, 92 Park Avenue,
~~=~~d ~~~ul~=:. $2,000 (740)4&gt;46.07«
teed $1000 304-372-2369 84 Corvene Coupe, while
Wllh rod leather, glaoo top,
Fair calves- slllers &amp; he!· loaded, CD/ cassette radio,
fers, 2nd &amp; 3rd generation SJ ~.500 OBO, (740)882A L calves (740)4&gt;46-6566 7512
i740)33!J.2622

--·

SHERIFF'S SALE OF Sr1'8CUae, Ohio 45779
REAL ESTATE
End
of
Legal
CASE NO.: 02 CV 011 Deecrlptlon
Crown lank, 1 Fedenll Permanent Parcel
Savlnga Bank, Pllllntlll Numbera 20-00354.000
va.
•~
TRUCKS
RuaHII E. Po-.,
Property addre11: 1
Female Donkey W1th baby,
FOR SALI!
aka, Rua1ell Powera, 10 1 College Road ,
also one small Jack. "-----i~i::,..,.,J.1 It al., Delendanll
SV1'8CUM, OH 45779
; (740)446-1158
COURTOFCQMMON
APPRAISED
AT!
• Horses, paints and bays, 1983 Chevy S-10, 4K4 p&lt;:kPLEAS, MEIGS
-sts,ooo.oo 1nd cannot
• i740)992-3276
up. now rebUilt eng,no
COUNTY OHIO.
be aold lor loaa than
Needs transmission work 1
• M1niature Horse, 2 saddles, $750 (740)319-2427
n pursuance of an two·th lrda ol that
: oogov. buggy harne.. &amp; 2
Order of Sale to me amount. Terma of
• b•idles. Phone (304)675- 1984 Chevy C10 pickup, directed from aald Sale: II purchaaed br
3264
auto, 6 cyl $900. 1304)675- Court In lhe above a party other than
8893
Poliad Herelo•d Bulls 16
entitled action, I will plalntlll, the llrat
months, 12 months Call al· 2000 Chevy s"1o. 5-lrpOed, oller lor aale at public mortgage holder, Ten
tor 5 oo (304)862-2426
air condlllon, co player, auction to be held on percent (1 0%) down at
bodl1ner, Tonneau COl/Or lor the Fronl Stepa ol the the time lhe bid Ia
,
$7.000. (740)258-1709
Melga
County accepted. Balance to
:
86 112 ton Chevrolet 4M4, Courthouu on Friday, be peld within thirty
:
350 engino, 4-opeed, very January 10, 2003, at (30) daya. Any oum
• • Ears ol Corn lor Sale. good cond•tlon, $3600. 10:30 a.m. of oakl clay, not paid within llld
• : ~ (7401245-9652 OYOnlngs
the
fOllowing thirty (30) daya shall
•• . . . . . . .
deacrlbed premloes:
bear lntereat at the
VAN'l &amp;
I
rate ol 12.99% per
AlJroii '
4- WDs
EXIIBIT A
annum front the date
.:
FOR SALI!
LEGAL DESCRIPTION ohale.
1986 Jeep Cherokee 4K4, Sltuatad In lhe City of
••
: . lS80·90's Carsl Trucks rebu1lt transmission, rebUtft Syracuu,
Meigs RALPH TRUSSELL,
• flom $500 Pollee lm unds lront end, good body end County, Ohlo:
Sherlll
• for sale For listin ~800- t~res, needs engine or re· Parcel No. 1: The Melga County, Ohio
: 719-:lOIJI .., 3oof
buift. 11200 (740&gt;446· 7928 following real estata
• 1992 Ch--let
L . 98 314 ton Chevy 4• 4 pick· attuated In tht State of Herbert J. Knlmer
""'"
umlna
aluminum wheels bed Ohio,
County
ol Attorney lor Plaintiff
4
1
$4,000 (7.0)446- Meigs, Township of 44755 Chagrin Blvd.,
5pmne
a or 0744
Sutton, and being In Suite 200
·
100 acre Lot No. 297, Clevelalnd, 01·144122
1992 Cadillac Sedan Dov· 92 Dodge Conversion Van, Town No. 2 Range No. (216) 380-7200
• 1lle, 87K mlkls, excellent
~·;o,.~ ~!~; pariS 12 and beginning at a (10) 25 (11) 1, 6
: condltlon,asklng $6,000 .
'
atake 51 leet Weal of _ _;__ _ _ __
i740)441 ·1475
97 Plymoulh Grand V&lt;Tyag· the n~l comer
Public Notice
1995 Skylark, 2 door, or, V-5, aura. AIC, crulsa, of Lot No.1 In Crook'a - - - - - - - • $2,695, 1996 Cavalier low miles, extra clean, Addition to SyracuH,
NOTICE TO
- $3 195
1998 C II ' $8,000 080 (740)288: ,,
,
•
ava er, 9896"' i740)266-8095
It being 280 feet aouth
CONTRACTORS
- $3,895, 1997 Ranger XLT,
of
lhe
aoulhuat
; aulomallc,
$4,295. 10
I comer of Lot No. 1 In
Sealed propoaalo
oth&amp;ro m stock COOK
MOTORCVURI
Clrteton'a AddiiiOn to
MOTORS (740)446-0103
Syracun,
thence lor the Grimm Road
Bridge Replacement
1996 Chii'IY Lumina w1th 95
Boa north about 17 feet Prolect will
350
be
Cruloe &amp; Air, 4dr., while 4• 4
r along College Street
1
rocelved by the
(304)675·4014
to lha aouthuaL Melga
Countr
1997 Ford Th~ndorbl rd, V·
comer
of
Marton Commlaalonera at
Aulo, pw, pb AIC 78000
Wood'a lot; thence their office at The
Milot,
good
condition
West 100 feet along Melga
County
55000.00 9112·7584
lhe aoulh line to the Courthouae, second
19fl!l Lincoln Towncar Slg·
aoulh-t comer of Street,
Pomeror.
naturo Sento bnght
New rolor with drum lor Hid Mlrlon Wood'e Ohio 45768 until 1 :30
•
' 19110 Dodge Dakola Rolor, 1 ,
~-outh
sharp, loaded, one owner 520
call
mornings ot,
m•n~
I
P.M. Local Time,
(retired). Always malntolned
•
about
17
feet;
thence
448 9429
November 7, 2002.
on lime, e•tra clean .
Eaat 100 feet to the and then II 1 :30 P.M.
(740)44&amp;.1000 Leave masCAMPERS &amp;
P'- of beginning aald olllce opened
sago.
,•
MO'IUR HOMES containing 20/100 acnt at
and read aloud.
1999 Monlt Corio Z34,
Alao 1 atrlp of land 51
Thla project pro·
ooupe, blaci&lt;, cuolom stereo Hunter's Special· 2001 feet long lying Wilt of vlna 1 replacement
syolem, !esther lnlonor, Horne 24'. loaded. like now, lhe George A. Jenklna
of a alngle apan ateel
power sunrool &amp; more OM· used 1 time, $9999 Firm, lot and aouth of the
lru (740)379·2721
French Clly Homes, Inc. above.cleacrlbed
lot bum bridge with •
alngle
apan
2001 Dodge Slralus, 4 cyl- Gallipolis, Ohio (740&gt;448- end extending to the
preatreaaed
box
9340
lnder. auto, 4 door, cruise,
St.te Road.
bum bridge lnclud·
1111. 818 mllao, SIO.OOO
Parcel No. 20· lng 1butmenta and
(740)« H J 3 3 7 I O
00354.000
approachea.
2001 Dodga Stralua, load·
HOME
I
Parcel No. 2: The
DOMESTIC STEEL
ed, 17,000 mlloo, $9500
IMPRoVF.MEHJ'S lollowlng deacrlbed USE
OBO (740)25~-6169
r•l Illata, altuatecl In REQUIREMENTS AS
2002 Black Pontiac Grand
BASEMENT
lhe County of melga SPECIFIED
IN
PriM llnted wl,_ power
WATERPROOFING
and Sr.te of OhiO to SECTION 163.011 -0F
aoaio, windows, ~rs. co, Unoond1tional lllellme guar· Wit; In 100 acre lot THE REVISED CODE
moonroof, cruise control, el antae Local references fur. number 297, In Town APPLY
TO THIS
wheels, air Only 8,200. nlshed. Established 1975, Number Two (2),
PROFECT. COPIES
miles Toke over payments_ Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446- Range Number Twelve
OF SECTION 163.011
$337 monlh or $23 500. 0670, Rogers Bssomenl (12)
I th
Ohl
OF THE REVISED
~')875-"754
'
Waterproollng.
o
e
o
1~
"
Compu~y'a Purch. .e, CAN BE OBTAINED
92 Z-24 Chevy Cavallo•. - - - - - - - - and bounded and FROM ANY OF THE
good condition, 135,000 C&amp;C Gen&amp;fal Home Malnle· daocrlbld 11 lollowa· OFFICES OF THE
miles, (740)387.0384
nenc~r Painting, vinyl old· Commencing at ~ DEPARTMENT OF
lng, carpentry, doors, winClassic Car· 1975 Mer· dows, balhll, mobile homo stake (fifty) 50 leet ADMINISTRATIVE
• cedes 2400L, OKcollent repair and more For !reo West all the northweat SERVICES.
condition,
never been estimate call Chet. 74Q-992· corner of lot number
Bid document•
wrecked. $4,000 OBO 6323.
one (1) In Crooke maybe aecurad at the
(740)44! ·8299
Eu.cnucAil I Addition to Syracuae. office of The Melga
The/PomoroyiPol,ceiDpartn~-·G~n•~
It being two hundred County Engineer,
men! Will be selling lhetol·
........... ·~"~'
and eighty (210) feet 34110 Fairground•
lowing vah~les by sealed
south of the aouthust Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
- bids
Residential or commercial cori1er of lot number 45769;
Phone
1987Chevy/Converalon Van wiring, new sorv1co or ••- one (1) In carleton Number 740-992·2911
Minimum Bid $500 00
pa1rs Master Llcenoad olec· Addltl
S
1987Ford1Tarus • Mmtmum trlclan Ridenour Electrical,
On to yr1cuaa, lor a $10.00 nonBid $300 oo
wvooo306 304.a75_1766 thence weal forty-nine relundlblelee.
1992Ford/EconollneloneTo
'
(49) feet, lhenca aouth
Each bid muat be
n, Work/Ven,Minlmum Bid
One Hundred (t 00) accompanied
by
1100000
feet, thence Eaatlorty· ellher a bid bond In
Contacr parson· Chlel Mark
nine (49). feet, thence lh8 amount ol10% of
E Proff!H (Pomercy Pollee
north one hundred lh8 bid amount with •
Department)
Monday Threw Fnday 8 oo
(100) feet to the place aurety allllalactory to
AM to 400PM
of
beginning the aloreaald Melga
Deadline lor Bids. Oclober
conllllnlng twelve one County
30th
hundredth• (121100) Commlaaloner or br
acrea of land, mora or certllllld check, caoh·
leas, being the 1ame lera chock, or letter
land aold by Isaac of credit upon 1 solCarleton and-Nancy L vent bank In lhe
Carlelon to aald amount ol not le11
Reorganized Church lhan 10% of the bid
on the 11th dar of amount In the favor
March 1112, and of the aloruald
Seeking locaf &amp;
racorded In Volume Melga
County
55,
Page 19, Record of Commlaaloner. Bid
experienced SemiDeeda
of
Melga bond• shall be
Tractor Trailer
County Ohio.
accompanied
by
driver. Excellent
Parcel
No. 20· Prool ol Authority of
00355.000
lhe olllclai or agent
Pay. Experienced
Pramealo commonlr algnlng the bond.
Drivers Only.
known
u:
1101
Bide shall be
College
Road, 111led and marked
ao Bid lor: Grimm
Road
Bridge
Replacemenl Project
IIFLP WAm'ID
and mailed or dellv·
ered to:

It

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t

• RENOVATION PROJECT
Shanered soul see~s honest handyman Please wnte
ooon Send rep11es tc CLA
ass, c/o Gallipolis D'a•ly
Trtbune PO Box 469 GallipoiiS, OH 45631

Wante d to buy a used
dresser or chester drawers
in very good cond1t1on at a
reasonable prtce
(740) 949·2543
-------Wanted to buy- border collie
pup or adult dog Call
(740)446-9632

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110

IIFHWANIID

I

Needed Respite Provider
Individual needed to work
w1th 9 year old male 1n h1s
Pomt Pleasan t home Hours
between 3pm-9pm and
we8~ends w111 be llex1ble
Pay rate $9 20hr Contact
Mehssa at REM Op110ns
(304)768-5575

Why wa1t ? Start meehng
Part-t1me Teacher's A1d
wanted for Childcare Cen·
Oh
I I
hi Ill II
ontg , ca ext
c ;;;;;;;...-----...., ter Requirements HS 01·
free10 Singes
~-800·766·2623
1621
1110
I plcma (GED) and 18 years
HEL1• WANI'El&gt;
ot age Expenence a plus
.
, Ma1l cover Letter, Resume,
ANNOUNCEMfNTS I
·
and References lo Laura
L
w
,
.
1
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22
--,
Are you 1ntereste 1n a re· 111 eton, 1 Jefferson St,
warding and 81CCII1ng career PI Pleasant, WV 25550, or
C· 1 Beer Carry Out perm11 as a dedtcated care-g1ver? Fax to (304)675·6575
lor sale. Chester Townshtp, Scenic Hills Nurs.ng Center :..::::..:::c:::_:c::_:..::.::::.:_:___
Me1gs County, send IaMers has the JOb lor you If you
PRODUCTION
of mterest to The Oa1ly area a state tested nurs1ng
DEPARTMENT
Sentmel PO Box 729-20, aJde and would like to JOin We have Par1-t1me open·
Pomerov, Ohl045769 ...
our 'team, please call and •ngs •n curproduct•on, pack•
1 &amp;d 1b t
I talk lc Dianna Thompson cr ag n~ t ~ld u IOn :r~la
8
GIVEAWAY
stop~
1n person
us 18 years
epen o1age
Be
sureand
to apply
ask about
our •A.t 1east
new starlmg wage! Our
·Clean dnv•ng record
' Mec han•ca I apI1tude hI
Adorable, kittens and moth- number IS (740}446-7, 50
e PII
u
er cal 4 black &amp; 2 grey &amp;
·Must be lkmble With regard
ATTN Po PI
to work hours
mother, black long half
mt easant.
(740)367-7 152
Postal pos111ons Clerks/car~ ·Must be able tc llh 50 lbs
ne rs/ sorIers No elCp, re- Apply between 7 oo -9 OOam

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~.,I'.Sl_ _'t.~-Do--.,J' riO ~~~
Will Set with elderly any
shift $7 00 hour Phone
(304)882 ·3753
Cell
(304)593·1796
--------W1Upressure wash houses,
trailers, and decks Call
441-4238 ask tor Ron or
leave message

~
8 weeks
" (740)446-9582

old

··~ and testmg lnforma- Coleman
~
salary,

~
GallipoliS

at The
t1on call (630)393·3032 EM!. Da1ly Tflbune or send your
782 Sam Spm 7 days
res ume to his attention c/o
• Free pupples, need room ~o
·
GallipoliS Dally Tribune,
: run
(740)388 8277 or - - - - - -- -- P:O Box 469, Gallipolis.
• (740)388·0867
I AVON I AU Areast Tc Buy or OH 45631
• Kittens. vancus ages &amp; eel- Sell Shtrley Spears, 304- .:c_c_:=.;.;__ _;____
ors liter tramed Leave6-:..75:..-_14_29
_ _ _~-- Route Manager 60-60 hour,
5 day work week Insurance
message 1I no answer CenYouSell?
and
ret trement
plan
1740)446 9935
.
Are you the best ?
$35,000 1st year salary
Three Rescued kntens need salesperson m the area
Please leave message
i740)286 ·7366
~ 1ov1ng,
compassionate Can you se 11 the Me1gs,
Galh
d
I L1II
orne, lnSI
e on Y
er ha &amp; Mason county areas? The Tuppers Pta1ns·Chester
, Trained
Call l740)446·3897
•
lets Talk'
Water D1stnct IS accepttrlg
J..nsT AND
Contpct Bnan 81ll1ngs
applications for a Chief Op·
•
F
(904)675·1333
erator's PositiOn Require·
OUND
e 30A M Monday Wednes- ments and Job Descnptlon
dav. Friday
lor the pos1t1cn can be obLost or possible stolen on
b
ta1ned at the Water O•stnct s
• · vance Road 2 year old Dependa le babysitter to mam office located at 39561
2
r · Golden ret never weannQ watch htlle Qlrls 5 days a Bar 30 Road, Reedsville,
t red nylon collar Answers to we~ Please call (740)245- Oh1o, 45772 Our matn cf53
1 name ·Magnum" Please ::
::3::0_ _ _ _ _ _ _ flee ts located just off Route
~ call (7 40)245· 741 5 or Dominos Now H1r1ng all lo- 7, which 1s three m•les south
(740)446-0885
cations Pt. Pleasant, Gaii•P· ol the caution light •n Tuf'
oils, Eleanor Sate drivers, pars Plains Our Treatment
• ,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ must be 18 Apply ·,n person plant req uues an Ohio
70
I
Class U Water Treatment Ll·
VAliD S,\LE
at locallons
censa All resumes Will be
L
Driver needed, benefits accepted, but an application
, . . - - - - - - - . COL class a reqwed. must bellllednut (740)985•
~n
YARD SALE· . (740)245-55143-_"-31. .:5_______
GALLlPOI.lli
Full•tlme RN
Truck Drivers, 1mmed1ate
Lw-..liiillii::.II-_.J Scenic Hills Nursrng Center htre, class A COL requ1red,
....,
11
IS now accepllng appllca· e)(ce ent pay, expenence
State Route 160, 7 11cns lor a full time AN lor requ~red IEirn up lo
I4367
am II Y yard sa Ie Startmg m1dn1ght shill We are the $1 ,000 per week.Call 304·
Fnday, 25th &amp; Saturday, areas premier Alzhelmers 675 ..4005
~6th · beside Sh•nns Tractor care faci lity We ofle r very :.:..:::...:.:::.:__ _ _ _ _ _
Sales Flea markel dealers
II
d
I · URGENTLY
NEEDEDcompe 11ve pay an exce welcome
lent benefits 11 you would plasma donors, earn $50 to
"•
like to 101n our dedicated $60 per week lor 2 or 3
Garage Sale 10·25 · 1111 A team ct ca reg1vers you ma hours weekly Call 810 Life
large amount Ol A.von cos· apply In person at Seem~ Plasma Serv1ce, 740-592·
meii1CSG reducecl for quick Hills or call D1ane Thcmp- :66::5::1:..__ _ _ _ _ _
sa e et your Avon nowl1 son fer more Information at Wanted child care for 2 yr
54 While Ad
1740)446-7,50 We are an
old boy Monday-Fnday
-Movmg Sale· Mlsc house· equal opportumty employer Full T•me 985-43!19
goods
and (womens
fu rniture. Gallta· Me 1gs Ccmmumly
•• hold
des•gner
clothes
WORK FROM HOME
s1zes 6 &amp;8) 16 cub•c foot Action Is saektng a Housing
Potential S, SOOJmo/pt
lreezer, books. microwave ASSIStant, Poslhon will pre·
$5000Jmo/ll Free Info
281 Lanat Dnve, Fnday v1de d1rect support to Hous·
1-800·92 1.44 12
.. 25th Saturday 26th 8_3pm lng D~rector Must be a h1gh· wwwacuqu~relreedom com
1
ly motivated person need1ng , - - - , - - - - - - •
Ra1n· sh1ne, •nside sale, 10- hm1ted supervision Must Part Time STN,6, Needed In
112 m1fes out 141 at Gage tn have eKcellent organization· Pomeroy _ Athens Area
.. · t&gt;tue and while trader from al sk•lls, computer skills, Send Resume to Medl
"' 9 5 Saturday
communication skills, able Home Health Anency 3oo
to wor k WIlh IImII ed •nccme Green Street, PO• Box 748,
Yard Sale, 10/26 from 8.30· mdlvlduals and contractors M I tt Ohl 4
0
I
1 30 corner of Reule 141 8 valid drivers license, and .,•.re_._.--o -5-75- .....
and Burkhart Lane
be bondable. Associate de· ll::aJ
BUSINESS
Yard Sale/ Flea Market gree In busi ness preferred ~--oil'RAINilii_.IN_Giroo,.J
Thursday· Sunday New &amp; with high school diploma or used clothes. toys, dolls, GED with two years office Galllpolll CarMr College
angels tools, Indians, han· experience required Appll· (Careers Clost To Home)
dies, !railers Trents Pro· cations With resumea will be Call Todayl 740·448-4387,
duce. Spring Valley
acceplod until 4 OOpm on
1-800-214-0452
October 25, 2002 at lha
Reg •90-05-1274B
YARD SALE·
Cheshire office GMCAA Ia
Pr. I'LEAsANT
Opportunity Em- IIIO
Do
.
,
Sat Oct 26, Q.5 129 Help wanted caring lor the
Pleasant St Pornt Pleasant elderly Darst Group Home, Chlldcara available In downnow paying mlnll'l'll.lm wage, town Pomeroy, private pay
AUcnON AM&gt; I new shills 7am-3pm, 7am· only, providing 24 hr. serv·
F'LEA MARKET
5pm, 3pm-ltpm 11pm- leo, call (740)992·5827 lor
7am, call 740-992·5023
more lnlormatlon

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AUCTION
Every Frlaay C6 30 Ang le's
Flea Market 333 Mechanic
Street Pomeroy Ohio Call
For Information 992·9734
WANTFD
Lw--•roiiiiriiBiOlN
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Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver, Gold Coins, Proof·
sets, Diamonds
Gold
Rings,
U S Currency,·
M TS Co1n ShOp 151 Second Avenue, Galhpohs, 740.
446jfl42

Home Health AQency seeklng Full Time AN . Compell·
tlve wages with benefits No
home health eMperlanca
necessary Apply at 3084
State Route 160, Gall ipolis
or phone toll free at 1·866·
44 1-1393

-'-'-'=------

Make e)(tra monay fo r
Chnstmas
Sell
Avon.
(740)446-3358

McClure's Restaurant new
hmng all 3 locations, full or
part-t1me, PIC~ up appllca11on at locatiOn &amp; bring back
between
9 30am
&amp;
Good USed Flute i304)675- 10 ooam, Monday lhru Sat
urday
3469

Home on 2 112 acres at
land, lull basement, 3 br,
dtnmg room, family room
wlf•replace, hv•ng room, 2
tull baths, utility room, 2 car
garage, heat pump, 20x20
outbulldmg, 30' pool w/new
deck, Eastern SChool DIS·
!net, on Flatwoods Ad ,
Pomeroy, Oh i740)992t641

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Mo~U:s~~MES

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cco•.,el"'".;ng~-----.,
For" Sale By Owner Ranch 112 acre tot en Tycoon Lake
PRonN;IONAL
Style Home 3 BR 1 5 Baths w/12x 60Traller$ 16,500 ()()

•

SERVII"'X'
'--"~

E)( c e 11en 1- L o c a t 1o n
$69,900 00
TURNED DOWN ON
'i740)446-7625
---'-------SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? PRICE REDUCED 3 bedNo Fee Unless We Wml room 2 bath Bnck Ranch
1-888-582-3345
on 1 5 flat acres, newer carpet, dOers an appliances,

::::==-="----:---All re1lt1t1te 1dver1J1 Ing
In thll new•peper II
•ubJrKt to the Federel
F1lr Housing Ac:t of 1968
WhiCh mlkel It llfanal tO
...
edvertiH "any
preference, UmUetlon or
dllc:rlmlnetlon band on
r~ce, color, religion, 11x
llmlllllllltul or netlonll
orlgln, or 1ny Intention to
meke lOY IUCh
preference, llmlt1tlon or
ctt 1 crlmln1tion."

now $13,500 00
(740) 247·1100
Mason Co 73 + acres,
Pond, Clly water, electnc
Very mce tra•ler Included
Great Huntinn, timber. Nice
development •for home Site

,. ·-· .... ,... ,. ,.,., ,
lshed) , 2 car garage At 33
above
New
Haven
(304)882 3897
Spac•ous. remode led home,
mce landscapmg, covered
pa ho, garage, basement .
Convenient Grape Street
(740)44S-31
08
•·_:::x_:::_:.:_:c:c_____
Wanted' Good credit cus·
tom ers to purchase new
.....A
hem"'
w/land SO down to
qua iM1ed customers 1-5
acre
trac ts
ava1table
(7401446 .3093

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Mo~~~MES lr~-,0-·H·~-SEII.IJS·OLD-_.JI r ~

12M60 3 bedroom w/cla, 2 bedroom, . localed on
washer &amp; dryer, stove, JackSOr'l Pike, $250 month,
$5,495, 740-992·2167
$250 depos1t. (740)4464051
14x65 Shultz w/Dishwasher - - - - - - - - &amp; front deck $6,000 2 bedroom, no pets, $245
(304)675·6295
month, includes water $100
r,~-"'"'!~----, depoSit (740)446·3617
BI..ISINE$
Mobile Home tor AenVSakl
AND n.- ~lNGS
D\.JILLI
Fraziers Bottom Rent·IO·
Own, 3 bed/1
bath,
Box Van for storage, allalu· $350 7month &amp; $2 ,000
m1num, 28ft long $400 00 down
cr
rent
only
or OBO 740-985-4409
$375 lmonth
Close to
Toyota (304 }562-5840
BU1Id1ng for sale w1th or
-:-------..,,
Withou t stock at 62 Olive rr:
" ..
MARlMENTS
Street,
Galhpohs,
OH
FOR n~·45631 (740)446-3159
..__..,;iiiiii.Uoliiii;;,;,', _ _.

Land home packages No
BUSIN~
payments while under con·
OPPoKIUNrrv
strucllon
L1ttle or no
Lw-oiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiioi-,.1 down payment reqwred
'
!NOTICE!
(740)446·3218
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- '---"--"-=_:_--~
~
C
h Country Home With 11-H2
lNG 0 recommends t al acres 314br 2ba, 2 Caryou do bus•ness With people Garage, above ground pool,
you know, and NOT to send Handcrafted kitchen cablLo'fs &amp;
money through the mall until nets 011 Leon Baden Ad
ACREAGE
you have Investigated the (304)458- 1580
..__ _iiliiiiiiiiiiioo~,.l

-· ,_ · -·· ·· -·· ........ · 1" r

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males

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Skaggs Appliances Whirl- Sports Card Collection For
drye r, $95, GE &amp;lectnc
range, $95, Sunray gas
range, $95, Whirlpool Aefngerator (while) $150, May·
tag washer &amp; dryer set,
$300,
Upnght freezer
(while) $250 (740)4467396
-------~

k•es
(304)675·6991
(304)675-2473
:.:_::_:.:__::_:::.,.:.__ _ __
Waterli ne Special 314 200
PSI $21 .00 Per 100, 1" 200
PSI $35 00 Per 100, All
Brass Compression Fittings
In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS.
ES Jackson Oh 0 1 800
Mapte Dining Room Table &amp; 537·9528
'
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6 cha1rs &amp; hutch. $700
4&gt;
:,:(3::0_::
:6.::75:...:.:
: 17_::6::5_ _ _ _ NEW AND USED STEEL
U ed 1
Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
5
urMure &amp; ant•ques F c ncl te A le Chan
Crocks, dishes and glass- or a re , ng ,
ware Call lor details, ne,I Fl at Ba r, Stee I Gra tlni
(740)
•
For Drains, Driveways
286 6522 ____ Walkways L&amp;L scrap Met~==~::::::.._
Used furniture store, 130 a~ Open Monday, Tuesday,
1 and 2 bedroom apart· Bulavllle Pike We sell mat- Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam·
ments fu rnished and unfur- tresses, bunk beds, dress· 4 30pm Closed ThurSday,
n1shed, secu~1 ty depos 1t re· ers. couches, appliances, Satutday
&amp;
Sunday.
qu1red, no pels, 740·992- ' much mere Grave monu· (740)446-7300
2218
ments (740)446·4782 Gal· Seasoned hrewood, $30 or
bedroom
·
apartment
In
llpoiiS,
OH
2-$25,
(740)992·3276
1
Middleport, (740)928·4941 . , , . . - - - - - - - .. weekends
" 7pm.
cc II eel a"er
Aa.nor...... lr.'L"
rt..~'lln.t'J~
BUIWING
1 Bedroom Apartments
·
S• _ w-~-_.J
~
Starting at $289/mo, Wash·
er/ Dryer Hookup, Steve Buy or sell A1Ver1ne Anll61ock, brick.- &amp;ewer , pipes
1519
S99A2 1
225426E APomeroyM, 740· Windows, lmtels, etc Claude
1 bedroom unfurnished
•
uss
oore, Wmters, Rio Grande OH
Call 740-245-5, 21
apartment. Probable client owner.
I

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Mason County Seven 1
acre lots w1th easy access
City water, electnc &amp; paved
road. Close to Toyota. Own: ci30
--'
4)'6
--75_-_15_5_o_ _ _.,-er will Finance $18,000 Apartment, CIA, 1 BR. 1
each. (304)562·5840
bath, kitchen w/appllances,
located at 133 2nd Avenue,
REAL EsfATE
water and trash paid, $325
w•~~
1740)446-4859

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I~ANJ'EJ)o

Carolina Antique &amp; Craft
Mall 312 6th St. Pt. Pfeasant, WV Antique &amp; Craft
Vendors Welcome
I
"'"~" , _ , _
"""'-u.L.'U"'-'1\JO
llM.' Rrou.a.a.m.IC'T."
l YJ..r.. '-'nRI"UJo:X.

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JSEAUTIFUL
APART~
Will pay top dollar for prime MENTS AT BUDGET PRtland New home builder CES AT JACKSON ES· 2 camper refngerators
(740}446·3093
TATES, 52 Westwood Dr1ve $25/$35· 2 camper stoves ·
from $297 to $3B 3 Walk to $30 each Call (740)256shop &amp; movies Call 74D- _:_81_30----~--MORII.E HOMES I
446·2568 Equa l Housing 4-10 -0 John Deere Rubber
fOR SALE
Opport nn
HOUSF1i
u y.
hre Backhoe,
$10,000,
·
Furn1shed 3 rooms + bath, 9·55- K Caterpillar track
Thl• newll)lper will not
12 used homes under
FUR REN'I'
upsta1rs, clean, no pets loader, $12,000 Both '"
knowingly •ccept
$3 000 W111 help w•th dellvReference &amp; deposit re· good ccnd1llon. (740)38893::2::7_ _ _ _ _ _ _
ttdvertlsement1 tor real
ery Call Harold, 740-385- 1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed QUtred (740)446·~ 51 9
::
..t•te wnlch lain
9948
Homes From $199/Mo 4% Gracious Uvlng 1 and 2 85 Dodge 4x4 truck, Queen
.violation of the 11w. our
Down, 30 Years at 8.5% bedroom apartments at VII· size waterbed, couch chair
re•def• are hereby
1 9 71 Flam' n go, Mob lie APR For Listings, 800-319· laga Manor and Atvarslde and loveseat {740)367Informed thltllt
Home 12)(60 2 Bedrooms, 3323 Ext 1709
Apartments '" Middleport?..2::7.:6:________
dwelling• •dvllr11nd In
1 t
1
nd
--------re r•ga or, s ove, u erp•n· 2 bedroom hofhe, approxi· From $278-$348 Call 740· Baby 1tems, hutch, lull SIZe
thll new•paper are
n•ng, wheelson, ready to
G
992·5064 Equa l Housing bed, large dresser w/ mirror
•vallable on en equal
m""·e $2 500 00
mately 1 mile from alllpolls 0
I II
v•
'
on
State
Aoute
$
00/
ppor unt es
304-675-2801
588 4
0
11;:.,;;Yba;;;M;;;;•_.I ~(7_:_4.:0):.;84:..:.:3..:·5:..1 ::
2 8:..__ _ _ month, $3001 depoSit,
L..;;:PI&gt;O:;:;;;,;rtu;;;";;;
refer::.:.:..::;.:::_:;::_:___ _ _
1984 Rllz era" t4 X 70 2
I ed (740)446 Just Remodeled I br apt Bunk BoO· lull SIZe on bot·
n
ences requ r .
. $~ a month $200 De· tom turns Into a futon. half
Br · 2 Baths, new Furnace, ~34_1_:3:-:-----,-- pos11 Uhl1hes mcluded. No on top $ 100 Swmg set
~r;;;IO;;;;;;;;;;;H~O;';IES;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
entry doors &amp; d•sh washer, ibr s325 . a month Secunly Pets (304)675-8872
$50, (74o}446-8627
'
appliances Included, center
1,.
FOR SALE
kitchen, oater~cal ce•hngs, Deposit required at 1, 12 Now Tak.ng Applicati ons- BURN Fat, BLOCK C•a"~--------' deck &amp; porch nice hom. HOQ g Siree1· '"•67"3458
~ ~
35 West 2 BoO&gt;oom Town· "I
~gs, and BOOST En-gy
·
•
"" •
central Blr $8,500 00 must 3 bedroom home, Miners- house Apartments Includes ( Ike You Have Never Ex·
$14,900,4 bedroom, 4 bath move 985-9831
Ville, Ohio, fiver v•ew, no Wate r
Sewage, Trash, penenced
home Won't lastt For list- --'..:.."'-'-"'.:._____ pels, •eteronces reqUt' rod, $350/Mc, 740-44S-0008.
WEIGHT· LOSS
1ng call 1·800·7 19·3001 E)(t ,988 mobile home, 14x56,
F144
bedroom,
bath,
$3
,
$450
month,
call
(740)992Small
furnished
apt
All
utll·
REVOLUTION
2
1
900
- - - - - - - -- i740)9Q2-4172 alter 6prn
6777 altar 5pm
111as paid e•cepl Electrk: No New product launch Octo·
3 Bedroom w1th garage on
Pets, Security Depos11 Re· ber 23, 2002 Call Tracy at
approximately 1 acre On 1996 Clayton 14xGO 2br 3311
Franklin
Ave qulred
$275
Month (740)441 ·1982
Route 2. Galhpol•s Ferry Wllh glamour bath, all elac· (304)675-1687 Ref &amp; de- (304)675· 1365
Burner molor w•th Irons·
(304)675-5332
Inc, cenlral air Call posit required No Pets
--------"'-'----''------- (304)675·8180
former and pump complete
3 bed
2 b h h
:..__;,._______ 3br. $425. MQnth 2609 Lm· Twin River• Tower for aid- for heating oil lurnace, $75,
HPICAr~wo' odbu"rn' ar, onma"w' Hurnc:ane Creek Aoad, coin Ave No Pets, Ref Re- erly/ dJsabled
Electnc bathroom heater.
dishwasher &amp; electnc range, Aent·To·Own
gorgeous quIred Dapes II i304)675 · Now accepung appllcauons $8 00 (740)367 •7729
2·112 car garage With 3 1998 Doublew1de. 1 owner :2_,_74'-'9'-- -- - - - for 1 br, all ullhtles paid Deer Rifles. 1998 Honda
rooms upstairs workshop, 3 bed/2 bath, great room, 3br House &amp; 3br Apart - HUD -ass•sted, carpeted 300 4·wheeler (304)675·
barn &amp; po61 on 4 75 acres large eaHn·kllchen,laundry ment tor rent 5300 per apartment rent Is 30% of 2040
2 2 m1tes from Rio Grande room, 2 decks Beautlfui 1S month each Deposit &amp; Ref your adJusted Income call :::,.::__ _ _ _ _ _ _
at 2212 Cherry Ridge Call wooded acres 1 Close to Raqulred
8 30 •5pm 304-675-6679 between 8- Firewood Cut your own .
(740)992·3241 $S5,000
Toyota $1,0,000 Q1taj£ (304)675 806
4 30 pm weekdays.EHO
(304)895·3287
I
$5 000 down
U
h
1
1
3 Bedroo ms, 1 bath, car· ·.:cc.:.:=="-~--- 3br. House located In Ma11 urnls ed apartment, a SO For Sale Quilt Tops
port, newer roof, storm wtn. son. WV $495 + Utilities ' small trailer close to down· (304)675·3539
d
Kl
Hurricane Creek Road, N p 1 (3041773 588 1
town Gallipolis Reference &amp;
ows, 135
neon 0 r. A
~
o es
•
deposit. (740 )446 _11• 8
For Sale Space Saver 4·
(740)446·2778
ent• ,o· 0 wn
gQrgeoua
w
~..:...'--;;.;:...;..:_ _ _ _ 1998 doublewlde, 1-owner 5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St.
I Wheel Scooter, has Turn
3 bedrocma, 1- 1/2 bath, 3 bed/2 bath, great room, $325 mo. (740)446-3945
SPACE
SBalgnals, Hea$d Lights &amp; New
living room, dlneno, &amp; ki!Ch- large oat-In-kitchen, laundry " - - - " - - ' - - ' - - - FOR RENT
llorloa 950 (304)875·
en. 2 decks, garage, tenced room, 2-decka, new con· One 3 bedroom and One 2 ·-ll'!iliiiiiiiii•-'7·.::79:,:1:___ _ _ _ __
In yard . 1116 Sunset Dr cre1e driveway Beautiful 4· Bedroom house fer rent.
Y
Phone (740)446•7794
112 acres $1 10,000 Qwnl( Somerville Realty (304)675- Mobile home lot, takes 12- Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
~ $5,000 down 3030 or (304)6753431
14·16 wldea. S100 deposit, Aep&amp;lra. Problems? Need
3 year old Brick Ranch, (304)582-5840
$125 month. (740).!446-0175 Tuned? Call The PlanQ Or.
3,000+Sq" 2·1/2 acres, In· =~=.:;_:.:...____
MoFOBILERD~ I
074;,;0:..·4_,_4:.:..·
6 4 ::52::5:.._____
grou~d pool, storage build.....,..,
ing excellent neighborhOOd, MUST SELL BY THE END
.'111"'"~~----., Heavy Equipment Trailer•
_ _ _ _ OF OCTOBER I COLE'S 2 bedroom trailer, no pels,
HOUSEHOW
I
8 ocrea 2 bedrooms In MOBILE
HOME,
Aiheno,
water
paid,
(740)446-9589
"'~---Gooosiiiiiiiii•-~·
brak es, wood lloor, 20T,
counlry, 185,000 (740)368· Ohio i 740 1592 -1972 · on OC·
'
Penta! hitch, &amp;MCollonl con·
9645
caslon we have a dlaplay 2 bedroom, t1 blth, large 7 2 Cubic toot chest freezer d•tion, $5,500, 1978 Ford
:::;:.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ home that doesn't sell We yard, no petit, rent $215 $75. (304)675·8861
HD 1115500 Backhoe- 4 eyllnBig 7 room larm house, 1 have one such home now. month+ utilities, $200 de·
der diesel· 24• &amp; 15• bucke
ai7c4re0),37f9r~81 971roes, barn, New t62 XB 16h0 hlhree bed- pool! (740)258-6202
Good Used Appliances, Ra- 81· forks lor end loader e•8
.,
room,
orne at a
conditioned and Guaran· cellent condition·
used home price oome sea 2 bedroom, all electric, teed. Washers, Dryers, Call (740)448·4514 8-Spm
Economy Conatructlon New 2000 sq ft home, 10 Lynn or Ernie today and Spring Valley area, bath &amp; Aanges, and Refrigerators, or (740)446•3248 alter &amp;pm.
All types of construction,
minutes from Hospital check out your aavlnga 1/2. S325 month. deposit Some start 11 $95. Skaggs
roofing/siding, remodeling, Complete above ground Remember, we must sell by $250 (740)441·6954 or Appliances 76 VIne St., Hillside ·Baptist Church,
gutter cleaning, plu mbing , pool with porch, driveway the end ct qct~erl
(304)675-2900
(740)44 7398
39724 St At 143 Pomeroy,
painting, concrete
and garage fou ndation
Tablea, Chalfs, Desks, Par·
(304)674·011 8 or (304)674· Price below appraisal New 2003 , 4 wide Only 2br Mobile Home In New
• 1.11·..:
lo-'ns:::.:9::92:.·6::7..:6::6____
5799
4682
(740)448·3364
down and only Haven . $300 Month + Se- Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark _.::..:_:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ .
$159 45 Call Nikki, 740· curlty deposit i304)882- Chapel Road, Poner, Ohio
JET
Georges Portable Sawmill, Foreclosed SW on 2 acre ::36::5:.·7:.:6::,7_:_1·c.__~--- c1_,_
AERATION MOTORS
10:..7_ _ _ _ _ _ _ (740)446·7444 1-677·63q·
don't haul your togs to the tract. $500 down to qualified
-=9162 Free Estimates, Easy Repaired, New &amp; Aebl,ult In
mlll just call304-675-1957 buyers Call (740)446·3570 Palestine Ad, 17 m•les 10 3 bedroom, 2 baths mobile fmanclng, 90 days same as Stock Call Ron Evans, 1·
8
35
2
"fo::.r.:
a..:q::u'::ck:..•::a:.:le::.____ Milton miles to All &amp; · home, excellent condition cash V1sa/ Master Card . 800·537~9528
House~aepmg serv~ce avail· -::
close to Toyota Beautiful on 218 $500 month Dr1~e- a- linle save alot
able For a tree consultatiOn Fraz1ers Bottom, 5 bad- 14x75 Sh1ngteN1nyl, 95 (740 }256. 1417 ( 740 )
256 ~ Oak table w1th 6 chairs (2
MlllltTobor
please
call
Amber room, 2·112 ba t ~ 2 kitctl. model on totally level lot. 6228
(740)245-7801
ena, mid entry on 314 acre, sohd block lo\Jndat•on, 2 :::-':;_--:-----:-::----:-- leaves) &amp; hutch, like new, Congratulalionsl You nave
Owner Finance With 13%
2 baths with too many 3 bedroom1, 1·1(2 beth, $650, Few Deport 56 Hous· won 2 tree movie tickets
Mom w111 babys1t 3-4 year down Close to Toyota, Win· l_ealur&lt;os to 11st $45 000 $450 month + deposit and es (D1ckers V•llage), make to the Sprlng Valley 7 In
old parHtme In my home, lletd schools, $150 000
with $4,000 rele rencea
Nc
pets offer, Call (740)992·5110 or Gallipolis Call lhe Tnbune
lol ot TLC i304)675·4027
(304)582-5840
(740)446-~824
i740)992-2882 alter 3pm
tor details i740)446-2342

r-

I

poot washer, $95, Kenmore sale All aJX)rts·lots or Re»

i

Penny Clerk
74Q-992--4411
Congrstuletlonll You have
won 2 !rea mov•e tickets to
the C
Spring
GaiUpoIs
lith Valley
s 117 II
d
I· a
e en ne or eta1ls (740)992·2155)

r

~

Lw---~--_.J
..,
AKC AegiSIBred Black Lab
pup, $250 Call (740)245·
5342
- - - -- - - At&lt;C • reg1stered Yorkle
males, parents 3 112·5 fbs,
shots started wormed,
S500 each hrm, serious
calls only purebred Beagle
pups, $50 each, shots start·
ed &amp; wormed (740)985·
4378
Beagle pupp1es, 1 male, 1
tamale, 12 wks old, f~tsl
hI
ed «n
h
s o s, warm , ~ eac or

$1pljJUlJ!, (749)~98-30 54

Choc Lab Pup 12 weeks
AKC Aeg $250 (304)6754386
Full stock Boston Terrier
puppies' lather AKC regis·
tared, mother full blooded
Both parents on premises
Shots, ~ormed &amp; tails
docked,
$100
each
740
388
8743
( &gt; HersheY K•sses , For Sale
AKC Choc Labs S-Male &amp;
3·Female Born 9-9·02
$400 00 Both Parente also
F
I I ed
or sa e w p •grees 2 yrs
old (740)142·3802
Purebred Norweg1an Elk
Hound pupp•es. $75 each
Make gOOd family pets for
children 4 m1les South of
R1o Grancla off 325 on
Wolfe Run Ad . 1st place on
right at A&amp;A WOOdcrafts
Rat
Tarrlor
(304)675-1506

,\ I I\ I \ I I U h.

a.

;m,,.

40

r

r

SEMI·DRIVER
NEEDED

Happy Aclf

TI

~40-682-7773
or

se5oo.

1) Realstered Nurses

,
•·
•

FARM
~

a.

1995 Torrlmlle T5C Bact&lt;·
hoe. i304)e75-3773

LIVESTOCK

2 Paint Tennessee Walker
colts, 2 &amp; 3 years old, full
brothers
$2,200 both .
i304)562·5840
Black Racking mare, tra1l
rode, $1500 Paint mara,
shown 4·H, $1200.. AQHA
mare, barrel prospect,
$2000, others available
304-895-3319
:::.:..:::;.::.::.:::.__ __
Fair calves· A-1 sired, Heat
Sae~et plus Who Made
Who, black &amp; halter broken.
(740)667-6637

IIUIUtJitet

~,.1:

lttrludnJ

(740) 992·3320
Em•l

bladnOztp~,nk

com

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

•Newo.....
•
•
•
•

Electrical&amp; Plumbing
ROOfing a Guttera
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Petla 1nd Porch Decka.
Free Eslimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·62t5

"""-·"""I

Best Service at
the Best Price

97 Beech St.

middleport, OH
(10'x10' 610'x201

(740] 992-3194
992-6635

Open 9am-5pm
F'nl &lt;~~IIIYIII*, frw 1n hornl peclalp
CaU111for~I )'OIII"~~

(740) 446-1812
A.lk IU abour our
Sf',...,,~ Pl"rul

,,

,

DulliP Truck

Delivery Call &amp;
leave message

74()..992·6142
Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
lsi Thursday of
every month
All pack $s.ooBring Ibis coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

i

Qlh Cade.C &amp; Gravely
Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446·1044
Monday-Frldap 8-5PM • Saturday 8-2pm

ROBERT
BISSELL

Longaberger!Dresde'
BusTnp
Sat . November 30, 2002
$65 00- Space Lmmcd
Deadline Oct 20, 2002
Everyone rece1ves a

CONSTRUCTION
•NIJ.v lbnes

basket!!' Call.

•Galayes
Development'• Ofllca
of
Community
Services.
The Gallla·Melga
C.A.A. admlnlatara
the block grant lor
Gallla and Melga
Counties. The grant
provldn lundlng lor

numerou• aervlcu ta
low
Income
raaldente.
(10) 25, 30, 2002

Notice '

Public

MANLEY'S SELF
STORAGE RENTALS
WILL
HOLD
A
PUBLIC AUCTION AT
IT'S
FACIUTY
LOCATED AT
97
COTTAGE DRIVE IN
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•Calfl I Rti11odalng

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-1671
7122/TFN

ON
THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 7,20'02.
TO
SELL
THE
PERSONAL ITEMS
OF MR BEN WRIGHT
LAST
KNOWN
ADDRESS OF 8
GRAND
PARK
AVENUE
ATHENS,
0110 45701 HELD AS
SECURITY
F0 R
UNPAID STORAGE
RENTALH.
'

LARRY SCHEY

lcH;vRok~TI

Pbone (740)593-667
Ohio

(1 0) 25, 2002
(11) 1, 2002

Public Sale and Auction·
ABIOLUTE AUCTION
As Agents fOJ
Alberta c
Uhrig, Mary
A. Leasure,
Ally. In Fact,
we will sell
the
following on
the premtses

ML

OCTOBER 26 2002 1OAM
BE ON TIME Ill THERE ARE NO SMALL
ITEMS... DURATION OF AUCTION APPROX.
:4 h• Localed from Chillicothe, Ohio lake US
Route 50 East 6 miles: tum right at Freeman
Subdivision
onto
Terrace
Cr. then left on
Maple Rd. to
107 Maple Rd ,
Londonderry,
Ohio
REAL
Sharp
1125
Model T FORD
T curing 3 dr 4 cyt w/starter option; black ext.
&amp; Int. Great shape In &amp; ou1110 #t1884568
1837 Buick Sed•n repainted steel blue 4 dr.
straight 8 gas motor, 3 spd, Vs/ve-N-Hesd,
showing 26.137 mllos Slyle #374419, Body
#25687 (Nolo: somo peeling paint) 103091292
11M Buick LoS•bro 400 4 dr hard lop 375
V8 W1ldcat motor, auto trans power steering &amp;
brakes, origmal car w/82,211 mUes; Shop
made tandem axle bumper pull trailer. riding
mower, push mower &amp; wheelcha i~ ramps
Only 7 Items to auction so please be on lime
This auction Will be short &amp; sweet! REMOVAL
Is day of aucUon. Cars have alwaya been garaged, for . further Info Call Larry Leasure
740 887 4471
TERMS Cash or ll8shlefs
check; everything sold as-is to highest bidder.
no warranties express or Implies, all sates
flnal. STANLEY &amp; SON, INC. (7ol0)775.,330
HIIY)I

For all your Home
improvemenl needs
"No Job To Smalr

B. D. CODSTRUCTIOD
992·297

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

.ALLtiL
Cellular

45771
7~9-2217

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

TFN

~~~
High&amp; Dry

SeH-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232

BISSEll

Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Care Agency is accepting
applications for Registered Nurses on a Per Diem basrs .
Contact Tia Wooten at
304-675-7400 for more information.
• Aexible scheduling • Mileage reimbursement
• Com~titive pay • Great work environment
2) Physical Therapist- Two positions·
I) Home Health 2) Outpatienl Rehab
Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Health and PVH Rehabililation
Center is currently accepting resumes for Phys1cal Therapisls.
Full time. Current slate PT licensure, graduate of an approved
school of PT or graduate of accredited college or university
with a certificate m PT. Current BCLS (CPR) certification.
Current WV license.
•
3) Speech Tbenp!st· Two positions available
.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Rehab Center IS currently acceptmg
resumes for Speech Therapisls for Outpahentllnpatient.
Masters Degree from an approved college or school of s~ech
language pathology from an accredited in~titution. Current
West Virginia S~ech Language Pathologist hcense.
Pleasant Valley Hospllal
do Human Resoun:es
2520 Valley Drive
Point l:'leasant, WV 25550
(304) 6754340
' AA/EOE

New Homes • Vinyl

Ylll c•ld Ill ellllllltllrf.BHIIII•
ltllllllllac:lk II

Sidmg • New Garages
• Replacement

FIIIIIE

Windows • Roofing

11111111181 Clll

BUILDERS IOC.

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740..992·7599

..n

....

IIHIIIIIII
CI. . .IIIIJ lcdll
740.992·2222 or
740-446-1018

www .at.nlev~~ndaon . com

M Stanlly, 111~CA1, ~E AUctiOnMr &amp; RE

Melga
Countr
Commlsalonm
The Meigs Counly
courthou1e, Sacond
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
(t 0) 26, 21, 2002
(tt) 4, 2002
Public Notice
GRANT
APPUCATION
AVAILABLE FOR
REVIEW
CHESHIRE • The
Communltr Service•
Block Grant application lor 2003, pre·
pared br the Gallla·
Melga Communlly
Action Agency, will
be available lor
review
between
Monday, October 21,
2002 through Friday,
November I, 2002.
A copy Ollha application
can
be
reviewed at the
C. A .A. ofllce In
Cheahlre. The C.A.A.
ohould receive commenta on lhe appllca·
tlon no Iller than
November I, 2002 .
The comment• will
be forwarded to the
Ohio Department of

• Tonneue Cover •
Ventv1sor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line
Other Accessories
'

\I" 1\II ' I II II

I .1
(

llll• I

(740) 992-5822

GUN SHOOT
OCTOBER 27th
Rulland Gun Club
3 Money Matches
Pattern, Slug
$1 flO.OO on ~ach Ma1tcn,
All regular matches will
be shot.
Everyone Welcome

GOODTIMES
Oct. 30' 2002
Halloween Party Costumer."""''" '
OJ-Jared K1ng
9·1

JUSTI
I
LOSE WEIGHT
NOWI Burns FAT!
BLOCKS Crav1ngsl

BOOST Energyl

New&amp;: Used

Recommended

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Get lhis AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie

1-800-822-0417

740-992-7996
or visit webs1te:
www.htrblndlet.com

"WVs #I

Chevy, Pontiac, Buick,

Olds

&amp; Custom Van Dealer·

DEPOYSAG
PARtS
All Makes Tractor &amp;

For more info 992·4055

Equipment Parts
fllflory Authorized
ff - Case·IH Parts
Dealers
I{)()() St. Rt. 7South

A Bear in every basket '

Coolvtlle, OH 45723

BASKET&amp;
November 12th
6 pm
American Legion Hall Middleport

Dean Hill

All Naturai/ Doclor

740-667-0363

Local 843·5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and F'lnal Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
111
• Nurslng·Home
~

.'
I

lrl JIU laid IIIP

. Sentinel

e

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

r

BUIIdmg O"ll~r 30 ytars
Footers, Foundation.
Add·Ons, New Homes,
Pole Barns. ConcJ&lt;te,
Electric, Plumbmg

• Room AddHiono &amp;
llemodeflng

Firewood
for Sale
BALL
LOGGING &amp;
FIREWOOD

Dai~

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Positions Available

•

Troy bull! garden tllltt,r, 8
hp , used very little paid
$2,000, oalll500, (740)985·
4378

ee•m•m••

CARPENTER
SERVICE

800·523·0804

~~: .~~n~~~m~~a~~:~rc ca•• 580C Backhoe w/Cab,

riO

7

rc;

Puppies

Tc a good home, part Walker, 8 weeks Old puppies
2F/4M, wormed and well
cared lor. Call after 8pm,
(740)446·4706
1 \ lnl .... tl't'lll ,

riO

II'N

YOUNG'S

llllS
FllllY

�.
r

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

ALLEYOOP
ON 't"'U 'TO ~VE
PE11FU:.T AIM .SO OINNY
~T

PHILLIP
ALDER

HUflT.'

,

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BIIIDOI:
IH WE' A£ COON TIN '

C'JOe,SN'T

Ri:ver .valley wins again, B1

Friday, October 25, 2002

www.mydailysentlnel.com

ACROSS

42 Squirrel

I

food
44 Fruity

1 SupermM'I 43 Dtly before

ottlre

5 Tick oil
de11ert
I Pet lovero' 46 Singer Bob
~·~

~
49 a-ssol
13 - vlvont
victory
14 Sign !PI
50 Okl15 Blunt end 52 Prophet
18 ,Soull54 Be an
M..-te
aoc:Compnce
17 P1rla air- 55 Yvu' vacaport ·
lion time
18 Ham por- 56 Chocolate
lion
cookie
20 Roughly
57 Bunks
l1 "Have you
horbors
22 Cloistered 58 Family man
- wool?" . 40 Leafy
woman
59 Benchmark 19 Prompt
climber
23 Baker's ·
21 Oaring
41 Wrestling
meas.
DOWN
24 Adhold
24 Living
·25 Ferber ol
43 Made a
1 PC media
"Show
border
.fence
27 Brawls
2 Sculpture
Boat"
44 Agree
30 Shelley
and music 26 Caves, ol- 45 -out
offering
3 One of the
ten
(scraped
31 Tack on
Butlel
27 Travel
byl
32 Ring thing
4 Waning
guides
47 Space
34 TV news
5 "Ghasl&amp;"
28 "Good
praceder
source
writer
grief!"
48 Not e'en
35 Rose fruit
6 Compost
29 Turnpike
once
37 Jacques'
7 Made bread
rumbler
49 Collar
pal
8 Nod off
33 Woody's ex 51 - - glance
38 Most
9 Inca
35 Butglar'a
53 RAM
Hindus
Empire,
take
counterpart
40 Tibet neighonce
36 Chanted
bor
10 Foal
39 Small

It-~

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wnt
•

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t

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.....

•

QJ 4

•

A 10 I 7

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t'AK '71
t K I 7

."

Dealer: South
Vu lner1ble: £list-West
S.utla
I+

\tlqt

N~

~It

P111

Pus

Pau

Openln&amp; ~acl 4 K

On Internet

A couple of years
ago, Pamela and Mat- .
thew Granovetter
started Bridge Today
Digest -- Online, a
magazine sent to subFRANK &amp; EARNEST
scribers by e-maiL To
celebrate one year
.......,,__,.IVT If ~ LtAilN ALl, TtUS
and 100 issues, lhe
Granovetters have
fTuFf, tiOvJ 'AN ~ BE
compiled "Bridge To~+1=
1.~
t')(PtCTtl&gt; TO
day Digest" (Master
/ APP!lOAC:tl T.,INGS
'1+2=
Point l'ress). The
book is a "besl of,"
vJITtl AN OPtN
5tf=
aimed
at serious play~·
~
.
MINI&gt;1
'l,.
.
.
ers.
In this deal, Warren
·Buffett took advantage of some inferior
defense during .the
1994 World Mixed.
Pairs Championship
in Albuquerque. (He
YO'RE WRONG,
and his partner, world
JU.I-'IK BUN, 1'\/E
champion Sharon OsHEARD
I
_berg, qualified for the
final, but unfortuEVER'C
I! JCj
~--~Iii,.(1;1;!&gt;-;:r'
nately had to with~
~
draw because Buffett
was called away on
'
CELEBRITY CIPHER
business.)
by Luis Campos
Buffett opened one
..J'fVU"'Y11r! r
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created ftom quotations by famous
diamond, hoping that
E
people, past and present Each letter in the cipher stands for anolher.
Today's clue: G equals M
his partner would re....._ ....L_-!!i:;l.!W spond in a major.
" G B R 0
J E L F Y S W L . Y·
B L F
West had an auto- .
"
. "'1
matic one-spade overZ I YS
OFJFYSLEBR
NWLHGFR
\HERE f&gt;,fi:£. 11-Wff.
e,ur THE'&lt;'RE N.l..""" call, but passed. And
North opted to pass,
ES\1 rN&gt;..T£::&gt; TI-IE.l&lt;i.. 1
F~OM \1-\E SNI\E
NAW
YWITJR'S
JELFYS
when some would
have bid one heart
·
OWl . SW
B
YAFBO
After winning the
first trick with his
JFTEVBSFYYFR."
spade ace, Buffelt led .
the club jack, which
ZBGFY
YB P R F D
East incorrectly won.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Nobody-sees a flower .. . we
(West's club two
haven't time -and lo see takes time, like to have a friend takes
time."- Georgia O'Keeffe
promised an odd
number of clubs, so
East
should have ',"AuT oLAt~T C. frll-o B'l'- ,( .- .fr 'C ~Q.e WOlD
BIG NATE
11 1 • \:)~· I:""U ~i. ~ D&lt;!" 0 GAMI
~!r.i!'!-----1 ,.,,....;..--"""'&lt;'----, known tohold up for
wio~L, WE~~, WE~L!
U:OK!o Ll KE MISTER "I'M
one round.) . Easl - - - - - - - - - ldllocl ~Y CLAY R. POIJ.AN ::;;;;;:;~;;;;;,_
, THE BIG GAME AGAINST
GOOD AT EVEFlYTHING"
JEfFERSON IS lbMOI'.ROW, CAN'T BE A HEFlO
shifted to the heart QRoarrange le11ers cf !he
lour scrambled .words be·
.
'
AND 1\RTUP. IS STARTTHIS TIME 1 JEFFERq Ueen : k tng,.
mne,
d
IN&lt;; At HALFBACK!
~N'S (oOIN(; TO CRUSH
three. Declarer took low to form four simp1• wor s.
AND HE CAN'T EVEN
US LIKE A SAC. OF
1 T-HIS IS ~RE1&gt;.1!
ICE
dummy's . two top
wE R N 0 N
~
PLP..Y! ltJ
·.·.· . , - .
c
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bs,
.
throwing
a
f--~-,r-_;,
r.1_;_;_,l,..:....:.r.,..
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2 --1
' spade from hand. .
_ .
_
Now came the heart ~===~==~-l
~acr 10: jack, ace, eighl.
L I GUT
South had won five .
.
tricks. Next, he inno- t--.---,,n§~,T.~~,---i
~..ll..L-.L--"'-"-' cently led the heart '-----'---1...--J.I.-..t.----' ....
,PEANUTS
two from hand. West, r~---M-Y--....., "_:•
Gran
always said that a
0
... politician was someone with a
confident his partner
could win the trick,
1 Is 1
wagging tongue and that a statesI TI-!INK IT ALL
VES,
MAAM?
RATS!
WRON6
A6AIN!
discarded
a
spade.
'----'------'·'---'·--'-----'
man was an ex-politician who had
DEPENDS ON I-lOW
WELL, LET'S SEE ...
However,
dummy's
learned
the art of----- -- his
•VOU LOOK AT
I'LL SAV•''~IFTEEN"
five beat East's four!
S
H
A
T
G
A
tongue.
YOURSELF, MARCIE ..
And in the fullness of
Q Complete the chuckle quoted
6
7
time, Buffett scored -a
_ . .
by filling in the m;,.;ng words
trump trick for plus
you develop from &gt;top No. 3 below.
70 and a cold top.
'
PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS I
Most Soulhs opened
IN THESE SQUARES
and closed lhe aucUNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
tion with one noG ET ANSWER
. trump, going two
down after the spade- ·
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
. . . . ·.
...
king lead.
•
Wreath - Giant - Curly- Upheld - TWICE a OA Y
The
book
is
$17
.95
I GIJi;SS '116
Our son was away at boot camp. We got a real laugh
NOW
postpaid from Baron
SHOUI.D'VS
from
one of his letters. ·He wrote that before he signed
CARPET """''".,._' WAITED TO
Barclay Bridge Sup1 .,., ""WITH THE PiCKi\\E NE\11
up
he
neverknewthat4:30camearoundTWICE a DAY!
plies. Call 888-274N~W PAINT...
C0\.0~ ...
2221 to order.
~···.t

Hometown News for Ciallia. Mason a Meigs counties
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

What's inside

3+
3+0'"

HERMES
.
Slaff wriler

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The
flu vaccine has arrived at the Mason
County Health Department and clinics
have been scheduled.
People al high risk should receive
the vacci'ne first and Diana Riddle,
administrator and nurse director at lhe
health department, advises those people to call for an appointment in
advance.
"By making an· appoinlment m
advance, you will be assured of

-;;_ ) )I .

receiving a flu shot and hopefully will
avoid long lines," Riddle said.
The Center for Disease Control
(CDC) says the following groups of
persons are at increased risk for complications from innuenza:
• Persons aged .65 years or older.
• Residents of nursing homes and
other chronic-care facilities thai house
persons of any age who have chronic
medical conditions.
• Adults and children who have
chronic disorders of the pulmonary or
cardiovascular systems, including
asthma.

• Adults and children who have - infection_
required regular medical follow-up or
• Women who will be in the second ·
hospitalization during the preceding or third trimester of pregnancy during
year because of chronic metabolic dis- the influenza season.
.
eases (including diabetes mellitus),
The vaccination is offered at no cost
renal
dysfunction.
hemoglo- to the public .
Dates, times and locations of vacCibinopathies, or immunosuppression,
including immunosuppression caused nations include: Oct. 29, I :30 to 3:30
by medications or by human immun- at the Mason County · Health
Department; Nov. I, 12:30 to 3:30
odeficiency virus (HIV).
· ·Children and adolescents (aged 6 p.m. at -the New Haven Library; Nqol
monihs to 18 years) who are receiving 4, 2 to 5:30 p.m. at the Mason Coi.t~
long-term aspirin therapy and, there- Health Department; Nov. 7, I to 3
fore, might be at risk for developing p.m. ..at the Mason County Health
Reye's syndrome after influenza
Please see Flu, A3

•

Injury reported

New homeownerS

GAHS gets big win, 81

face iude surprise

Deaths

Sewage line break in Gallia
County floods 2 basements

Margaret E. Brown, 82
Detlllls, A3

\._ ,,..._, . . . . . . . I

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.;

Saiurday, Oct. 26, 2002

unproductive associates who

OsoL
There· s u good chance you ·
could be more restless and adventurous than usual in the
year ahead. These inclinalions
may send you off in an enlire!~ new direclion that will
BY BERNICE BEDE

GAUFIELD
ANP 1"HI&amp; 1&amp; A
1"IN&lt;,J MAC.AZINEOI

aid m enhancing

y~ur

sue·

cess.

SCORPI.O (Oct. 24-Nov .
22) -- Don't acl on impulses
1oo hnslily 1oday, no mailer
how in spirational you lhink
your brighl idcas.are. When
used to light up your life. they
could lurn &lt;lui lo be burned- ·
out bulbs. Trying lo patch up
a broken rom::mce'! The As·.

TilE f;mzzwm.Ls

1rograph Matchmaker can
help you undcmand whal lo
do lo make the relmionship
work. Mail $2:75 lo Matchmaker, r;Jo lhis newspaper,
P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
44092 .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-"
Dec.2 1) -- If you ·allow yourself lo let somclhing of malerial value become an issue

are a hindrance to what you

hope lo accomplish today, but
do so diplomalically. You
don'l nced .io make any enemies .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb.,
19) -- While oul on ihe lown
today, you could run into
someone whose politics or

philosophy severely clashes
wilh yours. If you don'l handle il properly, il could become a volatile situation.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- A join! endeavor in
which you are invested is not
ap1 lo work out too wellioday
if ihe arrangement isn'l equttable. Each parly must make
an equivalent contribulion 10
ihe c"use.
ARIES (March 21-April19)
-- You could quickly turn a
good day inlo a bad one if
you air an·· unresolved differ-

you're doing at all rimes.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
-- Should you go oul on ihe
town ioday , main1ain your
S&lt;&gt;if-discipline or overindulgence c.ould become a strong
probabilily . Put sensible limlis on allihat you cal or drink.
CANCER (June 21-July 221
-· Keep domestic frustrations

under conirol iodny or ygur
temper could easily get oul of
hand and cause an e.plosion.
Healed words from you
would have the entire house·

hold boiling over.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) --A
person who likes 10 stir things
up mighl be at il again today
by distorting so me comments
another made about yoti re-

ence with your mate in fronl

cenlly. Don'! believe every' 1hing you hear.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
-- II might behoove you 10
keep a sharper eye on your
possessions today. espec1ally

of olhers. II would be embarrassing 10 boih your panner

cation. An ounce of preven·

and your audience.

Weather
High: 60s, .Low: 40s
Detlllls, Al

Library open

house
. .l)I&amp;W HA~. W:V -. o:;_
New Haven Public L(trary
will host an open house
from 4 to 8 p.nt!', Monday.
Refreshments will be
served.
The public is invited to
attend.

Special

I

00 1

t'
..

•

1

1

.

TAURUS (April 20-May
wilh a good pal today. The re20) -- There's a chance you
lali onship could suffer. Rc- · could gel a little careless lomember rh:u money 'has its
day if you fail lo be mindful
value, but fticnds arc price·
· of proper safely procedures.
less.
when wor king with sharp ob- ·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jnn.
Je...:ts . Pay attention to what
19) -- Libcralc yourself from

H you're in an unfamiliar .lo-·

lion is wor1h a pound of cure.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ci. 23) • An enterprise in which

. you're involved today does
ha ve. good chances for success, provided your procedures are properly timed .. If
you push premalurely. thi~gs
could misfire.

·

tern serving Debbie Driv~.
operated by Gallia Co~mty. .
While details about what
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio _ caused the break remain
T.J. and Kelli Pasquale were unclear, the affecled families
in tlie process of moving into are coping with cleanup,
their new home at 636 debris .in their backyards
Debbie Drive this week laken from the basements,
.and for those who came intQ
when they encountered a contact with lhe material,
rude surprise.
additional shots to wafd off ·
About 3 p.m. Wednesday,
·
Kelli Pasquale, a nurse at the possibility of disease.
"My 3-year-old lost all of
Holzer Clinic, was in the
house preparing to pick up her toys," said Kelli
· her 8-year-old daughter from Pasquale, who said the toys
Green Elementary School were in a playroom in the
when she heard a "moo" basement. "A 3-year-ol(l
sound, like that of a cow.
doesn't understand why she
The noise continued and can't have her toys any·
sc:emed. to be coming from more."
the basement or the one- . Worse, most homeowner~· :
slory, ranch-style home.
· msurance pohctes don t
When Kelli :w~r down"'' cover mstances pf damage
stairs, she found one of her cau~ed by a s.e:ovage flow,
children's toys, a battery- f?rcm~ the fa~mhes to nego~perated toy cow, floating in ttat~ w1th the m~urance comraw sewage along with pames representing the counnumerous olher possessions. ty .~nd th,e comractor. .
She laughed when she
I d.on t ,have a problem a.~
recalled thai part of Ihe inci- long as tt .s taken care of~
dent.
satd T.J. Pasquale, an Oh~~
"It saved us, in a sense," Lottery representa11v.~. I
Kelli said.
JUSt want. tt to be nght.
An apparent . break in a
Hobtem owner Tom
sewer line caused sewage to Holstern was · not avaJiable
flow through a drain in the for comment
house'.s utility ro.om, eventuGalha .
. Coun~y
ally rising to about 2 feet, the C?mm~ss10ner B1ll Davts
· Pasquales' estimaled.
satd he s talked to the homeSewage also went into the owners aboul their problem
basement of their neighbors, and has cons.ulted wtth .the
Jeff and Cindy Ginther, at Count~
Rtsk
Shanng
654 Debbie Dnve.
Authonty (CORSA), a conHolstein Construclion of sortmm that handles msu,rBidwell is working down the ance. and hab1hty -Issues for
street from the Pasquale and G~,lha.
Ginlher residences on an
They suggested the
upgrade of the sewage _.§ys- Please see Surprise, A3

BY KEvtN KELLY
News ednor

woRn.

I

•

'

.

l

Flu vaccine arrives .iii Mason County
Br. DAN

Zt2 = /.. .

1-+t=

50 CENTS • Vol. 1 . No. 10

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • pt_ Pleasant • October 26, 2002

speakers
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Calvary Christian Center
Inc., 553 Jackson Pike, will
host Ev;mgelisl and Mrs .
Chris Iddings of Piqua, who
will minister at the church
at 6 p.m. Sunday.

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 8-8·8
Pick 4: 7-7-7-0
Buckeye 5: 3-5-27-36-37
Pick 3 night: 9-3-8
Pick 4 night: 7-2-0-2

W.VA.

Daily 3: 0-4-9
Daily 4: 1-3-8-8
Casli 15: 1-7-10-21-24-25

Index
:z Sections Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

1:1 Plips

AS
B3-5
B6

A3
A4

A3
A3
Bl-3
A2

C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.

.

The driver of a Ford Bronco was transported to Holzer Medical Center for treatment of injuries
suffered in a collision between the Bronco and e,.t~yc,k~auling a backhoe around 11:30 a.m.
Friday on Ohio Route 735 at .the interSection with Burnett Road in Kanauga. Gallia-Melgs Post
of t~.State Higtlway Patrol. Gallia County, EMS and Gallipolip, Volunteer Fire Departrn&amp;ht
responded to the crasH. The driver of ttiiHruck was not injured. ~0 reboH ft&lt;:lm the patrol was
avaiiabie .by. (Sandi Sammon)

Maryland to become first state to
·charge sniper suspects with murder
ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) As federal and state officials
wrangled over who would get
first crack at prosecuting the
sniper suspects, Maryland
authorities said Friday lhey
would charge each with six
counts of ftrst-degree murder
and seek the death penalty
against
John
Allen
Muhammad.
Earlier in the day, Alabama
officials filed murder charges
against the menofor the fatal
shooting of a woman during a
liquor store robbery Sept. 21
in Montgomery, Ala., and plan
to seek the death penalty.
State's. Attorney Douglas
.Gansler said prosecutors in Spotsylvania County Sheriff's Deputy D.J. Schmidt goes for a
Maryland· where the major- high-five with a student departing on a school bus from Lee Hill
ity of deadlY. shootings took Elementary School in Spotsylvania, Va., a day after the capture
place - w11l not pursue a of two suspects in the sniper attacks that had been terrorizing
death sentence for his the region and keeping children indoors. (AP)
Muhammad's alleged accomplice, John Lee Malvo, if his Maryland, lhree in Virginia the documenls penaining to
age is confirmed. ¥alva, and one in Washington, D.C. the warrant, Vizi said.
believed to be 17, would be Three others were wounded. ·
Gansler announced the niurloo young to be eligible for the
Meanwhile, a material wit- der charges after a meeting
death penalty under Maryland . ness warranl was issued for a wilh prosecutors from jurislaw, which sets a minimum New Jersey man who co- dictions where the killings
age of 18.
owned a car with Muhammad took place. He said each of the
"Obviously we have differ- that authorities say was used jurisdictions has a vital inter-.
ent views in Maryland and in the sniper shootings. est in the case, but
Virginia on whether to apply Authorities have not been able Montgomery Coumy was the
the death penalty to a juve- lo find Nathanel 0. Osbourne, "community most affected
nile," Ganster said. "We don't 26, FBI spokeswoll)an Linda and mosl impacted by lhe
shootings."
feel the death penally is appro- Vizi said in Philadelphia.
The FBI stressed that
But Gansler acknowledged
priate for juveniles."
The string of sniper attacks Osbourne was not a subjecl of no agreemenl was reached at
that began Oct. 2 left 10 pea- the investigation in the shootpie dead, including six in ings. A federal judge sealed
Please see Sniper. Al

Kelli Pasquale reviews some of the debris removed from the
basement of her new home on Debbie Drive, Gallipolis, after
raw sewage from a Jine break inundated her basement and
that of her neighbor this week. (Kevin Kelly)

Information at your fingertips ...
. .

.

.

For the latest healthcare information and to
learn more about the programs cmd services
Holzer Medical Center provides,
log onto our website:

Discover the Hol~l}r Difference

www.holzer.or!J ·

I

.'

(

www.holzer.org'

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