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                  <text>Page B 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 31, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

IRIOGIE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
'

DRJtGOII.'

PHILLIP
ALDER ·

...

. ort

44 Hllhop .
46 Awkword
51 Exile
Greek"
54 Night
6 Check to&lt;
noloes
fraud
55 By word of
1t Diver"
mouth
t2 Threa1en 56 Raid
13 longhalred 57 $troll
cot
58 Board
14 Exotic
game
flower
DOWN
t5 Froc:tlt&gt;us
16 Hoodwink
17 Foloe
1 Writerwltneoo
Grey
19 Blissful
2 PTA and
spot
NEA
23 UK networi&lt; 3 Uprising
26 Manitoba
4 Aqua·
· triba
marine's
28 Tomahawk
mineral
29 Unwanted
5 Nabolcov
padding
novel
3t flavors the 6 Space
popcorn
preceder
33 Ia entitied to 7 Cousin's
34 Movie·
ded
awarda
8 LaiHII- 35 Emerald
9 Here, In
36 Govt.
Cannes
investigator 10 Tumor or
. fhyph.j
Koppel
39 Pablo's aunt 11 Dye
40 Minn.
conlllnar
neighbor 12 Roger 42 Sevvy aboul
who played
(2 wds.j
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Opening lead: • Q

More varied
BY PHIWP ALDER

t6 Dlotanl
18 I, lor
Wolfgang
20- Lama
2t llddltional
22 Lochmonster
23 Made like a
sheep
24· China's
neighbor
25 Newa
network
27 Double
curve
29 Cribbage
counters
30 Okla. time
32 Feign · I

Whale's
diet
43 Beethoven
oymphony
45 Map detail
47 Jot down
48 P.....,.olc
41

Mesozoic

49 Chell

muscles
50 "My, my!"

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BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

In the year ahead you may
have to shoulder a bit more
responsibililies 1han you have

GAHFIELD
Al-L. 1.,

~ t li;,fl

YOU !lNUCK
UPON ME
WIT;, 1~AT
ONE !

in the past, but with them also
comes more re wards and re-

.muneration. The bigger the
job. lhe bigger the compensation.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .
22)-- You. can save yourself a
lot of embarrassment today if
you take care of your obligalions now before · any neglec t

has to be called to your allenlion. Being reiponsible enha nces your status. Get a

. TilE GHIZZWELLS

NOT\C[
'iOU MUSi BE AT
lf.AST T\.\\&lt;i&gt; TALL -

10 ~l~'il TUIS

jump on li fe by underslanding
lhe influences thal'll govern
you in the year ahead. Send
for your Aslrograph predictions by mailin g $2 and an
SASE to Astmgraph. c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 167.
Wickliffe. OH 44092. Be sure

'to state your zodiac sign.

SAG ITTARI US (Nov. 23Dec. 21)-- Because _,,mpanio ns can have a considerabl e
intl uencF! on your atlitude to-

t)\@!

•

v.J\11\T 00!:'5
T\11\1 '1&gt;161'\
'01\Y ;;

day, avdid crepe hangers who
cause you 10 view lhe world
lhrough defeHii'i glasses.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Keep a dose eye on
I

I'

1

-----. ----~~~~----~~--~
Friday, Nov. I, 2002

l s;,ow If fO
L.Of!! OF PEOPL-E

.

.),;

facility designed to assist those
who have undergone intestinal
surgeries, he was home for
four days before being rushed
back to the.H unII.ngton, W"
. va.,
hosp1t
.. a1. .
.
"I would have died if the last
surgery hadn't been successful ," Thornton saip Thursday.
"It's been unbelievalbe.
Prayer is so powerful and that's
what got me through this. I'm .
back and ready to roll. I feel
great."

a

Thornton, Democrat, was
fi~t elected io' l996. He also is
· a former Racine Mayor.

'

~appp . lj~u~ttn.~ ·-.

'

High: sos, Low: 20s
• Detaiii.A2

'

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'

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·Trustees meet

-

. -

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l CARRo,&gt; A PICfUR6 OF
o,&gt;OU IN Mo,&gt; WAL-1-.E:f

..

N e bra s k a
re habili tation center
s e ver a I
times since.
Thornton
first underwent intestinat surgery
to repair .WI
existing
condition ,
~on
but has experienced a nuinber of complicalions, including kidney failure
and livc;r failure. .
, After his August release
from a Univer.;ity of Nebraska

'

1'oPAY

. .

.

"

soo

REED

POMEROY .
Meigs
County Commissioner Jeff
Thornton returned to his post
Thursday following a monthslong illness,
Thornton, president of tile
Boanl of · Commissioners,
came home to Racine . two
weeks' ago, after spending two
and a halfmonths in St. Mary's
Hospital. ·
·lbQmton first became ill in
Dec., 2001 , and has been in
and
. ' ~t of the hospiial and a

osu football, ·in

N

1'Hit-IGS

Program would ·
Commissioner returns
to work after long ill~ess aid those wanting
to start a business
BY BRIAN J.
Staff writer

and

The second inde51 Python
52 Rocker part
pendently published
53 Seize
monthly bridge maga54 Pouch
zine in England is .
BARNEY
34 Lennon's
Bridge Plus. It started
wife
in 1989 and is in a
. I'M GONNA BE
YOU WIN!!
THIS HOLLERWEEN
,......,.,....,,......,,......,'1'11""'1
small -page format.
I'M GONNA GIT TH'
Although the content
PRIZE FER -~"''''' 1
aims primarily at
SCARIE!!IT ~
tournament players,
COSTUME ! !~
there are articles on
all aspects .of the
game for those who
wish to improve.
·Freddie
North
writes excellent instructional articles,
and this deal comes
from 11rs explanation
of ... well, what? You
are in four spades .
West leads the club
~ 8~
queen. You duck the
:~
first club, cover
West' s club-jack con1"0
~h
-~
tinuation wuh dum~0 ·
~;,..g
-~ my's king, and ruff
•••
hz~
East's third club play.
-~~""""'
,l
~ ~n
............. .,... "'"" .~
You cash the aceCELEBRITY CIPHER
~
... ........ -~... ·..
king of spades, re. by Luis Campos
lieved to see that both
..--- ..... ·
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptog
rams are created from quotarions by fa mous
opponents follow
people, past and present. Eacl'llette r in ttl e cipher stands tor another.
throughout. But what
Todsy's clue: K equals N
·
THE BORN LOSER .
. . "! ~
p- ·
.... would you do now?
BW\OSI THrn:
1-Jf\H f\1\Vf.. '(()IJ C:OT t'{OW 7
North rightly upI f\P\IC. Wf-\EN YOU SKIM!? Of{
" v u N ~ J H S K D X suosvw
m..~WJQ:':
r---,........_ HIE. f-\N.LDWELN CAAC!t' graded his hand, calling it an IS· pointer.
p u
TLPYA , A L X K N p J
s
OR·TI':.E/\\US I&lt;-T
N-It&gt; 1-JE RU~ OUT
You
.
have
three
Tf{E DOOR I
e.NQ.'( ! - .,.--.,
black-suit losers and
L S B X
•.AP D X G V X B X" ALSA s
seem destined to con:'Y·~
cede a diamond trick
T L 'P Y A
XMVYA ,"
\C::::l
C S N
as well. However,
don't give up just yet. ··
VASKGXN
R J 0 0 V H ·R
Play off dummy' s
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Writing Is a job. Do il well, il's a
two top hearts, pitchgrealllfe. Mess around, its disappoinlments will kill you."
- James A. Michener
ing a diamond, and
\
ruff a heart in hand.
BIG NAtE
(If East ruffs in, I~AUTZZCLAIILRT d{r;j'O 41'\. ,( - f}
~s WORD '
!
GAMl
throw another diac
0~ ~QU ~ ~
'-!;)
'I"
ffiOild and claim.) Re- - - - , - - - - - Edltod by ClAY R. POLLA~N-n;;;:;:;
· ~;:;~
I
I
turri to dummy with a 0 Rea rrang e le tters o f the
f::u r scram bled words b&amp;·
.
d
\
/
\ I
Iamond, trump a low to form fo ur simple words.
second heart, and .----:~::-:-:-:::-7-;-::,..---,
_ p 0 NT U S
cross back to dummy
1
with a diamond.
2_,._. 3
Dummy retains the
. . . . .
heart nine and dia- L-L-L..L-.....1-..L.._.,..
mond five. East has · ~
MAF E R
the spade and dia. . ·.
·I I IS
mond queens left.
...
You
hofd
the
spade
'---'-'--..J.-.l..--'-PEANUTS
.-.-----......,-.., njne and diamond
I&lt;&gt;
Whil e
601N6 SOUTH FOR
eight. When you call
C A R E P .m._~ as ked
soldie r· what the
THE WINTER, HUH?
·I . 16· ·17 1 _ trme diffe re nce wa s between
for the heart nine,
. . . .
. where we we re and The States.
what does East do? If
he ruffs, you discard;
· Sm iling he said, "Oh, I'd say about
if he discards, you
sp0Gr5
ten - - • - •• - - -!"
'
ruff. You must score
18
19
Complete the ohuckle quoted
your spade nine with
. . . . .
by fil ling In the missing words
a coup1·~en l?assanL
· you develop frcm :step No. 3 beloW.
6 17
Then thank East for e~o PRINT NUMBE'RE D11 12 13 ... j'
j9
thaf third club. With- ~ LETTEiS
.
. . . . . . . . .
out it, you would
1 .·1 I I I I I I !:
have got one fewer ~ €) ~~~~~MBLE FORI
ruff and gone down.
· . . . · . . . .
SCRAM-LETS ANSVf~RS .
Full details can. be
Halves- Timid - Began- Limber- BEHIND ME
found at www.bridgeplus.co.uk.
Because of the number of spP.eding tickets she recei'led, my neigh bor had to a ttend driving school. "What
N~UCI&lt;.
NEWSPAPERS
I really need," she explained, "is a set of brakes that will
liM!&lt;.
Cover AN The
·stop th e ca r BEH IN D ME!" .
1\NC\'- !!
MaJor Subfeclll

....

Whafs inside

37 Senllmentol

:Ia Primate

someone whom you've asked
to do a critical task for you today. This person may not be
as qualified or dependable as
s/he was represented to be.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb.
. 19)-- Should you run into one
of your least favorite pt;rsons
at a social gatherin g toda y,

don' t let old ill feeli ngs delmct you from hav ing a good
ti me.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -· Allowing an issue 1hat
always creates fric tion between yo u' and your mat~ to

surface again 1 od ~y could be
used as a hook on which to
hang other comp laints. Keep
them.all under wraps.
ARIES (Mm-ch 21 -April 19)
-- Critici zing the good efforts
of anolher does nothing to
help perfor mance. It merely
causes ihe person to lose interest in ever wanting to work

'. for you again.

TAURUS (Apr il 20-May
20) -- Know going in that if
you overeKtend yourself fi nanciall y today, you won' t
have money .available to do
so methi ng. \un on another.
day. .
GEMI NI (May 21-June 20)
-- Don't stall blaming others

· experiencing today. Chances
are, !hey were generaled by a
lack of foresight and plannmg
on your part.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- Even if lhere is a dark sky
over your head at this time,
pon't dwell on its negative aspects. Whal appears to be a
big black cloud could i'n reality possess a silver lining if
you'll let it shine lhrough.
LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22) -How much you spend today is
like ly 10 depend upon the
company you keep. If you get
involved wilh h1gh rollers,
chances are you' ll shelt out
far more than you ever intended.·

PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Town~,h.ip Trustees will
meet in regular session at
6:30 p.m. Wednesday at
PagevilleTown Hall.

Taking
.applications
·•

POMEROY - Meigs
County Bikers Association
will take applications at
the Meigs County Health
Departll)e\1~· Nov. 14-15
for oe~y children. ·from
bl!llefits of the 17th An!Jual
Toy Run. Applic~ots must
provide proofof income 'or
a me~ical card.

vampires,· yes ...and ghos~~i witches,
cheerleaders · and cowboys, ' .all went
door-to-door last night during tne· com- ·
munlty's Trick or Treat. Hjlre, linda
campbell of Middleport's' south Second ·
Ailenue, greets one of mor~ ' then 500
. Trick or Treaters to vislt)i.l!r , Mme .
(Brian J. ~eed)
·
'·

• -I.

,;1Witch with .a bubbling CaUldron was
~ several 'stations" in .the Haunted

one Of
Dep6t.''

· (Brian J. Reed)

.

OHIO
Pick 3: 9-1-7
Pick 4: 2-3-0-2
Puckeye 5: 1-5-17-21-36Pick 3 night: 5-9-9
· Pick 4 nipt: 4-1 -1-2
W.VA.

.

D•ily 4: 8-6-3-7
Cllsli 25: 1-5-8-12-17-18

:Index
· 2 5edlonl - II ,_,..

· A4
BS-7
BS

A4

A6
A3
A3
Sports
81-5
A2
Weather
Q 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.
.
. .
Crites and Dpdger vaughan . . up this "decaptltatlon station" at thEl haunted
q~pot In Middleport, cciordinat~
the Freight Station Restoratian Committee a~d
members of the Feeney-Bennett
Post
128,
American Legion . (Brian J. Reed)
·
'
~

.

PORTLAND - So, what
do you do when someone very
soft-hearted passes away suddenly, with no fan1ily close by,
and leaves 32 cats?
You call others with soft
hearts and hope for the best. In
one local case, the best is the
Meigs County H)Jtnane
Society.
· Freda Carpenter of Portland
died recently arid left behind
· 32 cats in need of a home.
Family members drove to the
home to take care of the animals for awhile, but they lived
several hours away.
When the task became ioo
much, they called the Meigs
County Humane Society for
help.
The humane society stepped
in and got the cats the med1cal
attention they nc;:eded and have
· placed them in good homes -· ·
not an easy task for a commu,
nity with no cat shelter and a
humane society manned by
volunteers and limited funds.
"We've made several trips
to the home and took the cats
to the vets at ·the Meigs
Veterinary Clinic, who worked
with us wonderfully, by the
way, where they received
medicat.ions if needed, thetr
shots and were spayed or
neutered,'' . said
Vicky

Oregon program, and to lobby
for the placement of an enterprise facilitator . in Meigs
County.
While the program has
received a funding commitment, Fisher said the county
would be expected to join in
funding it if it proved success,
ful.
"If it works and is successful,
you'd buy into it ' as a vehicie
for economic development,"
Fisher said.
The county's economic
development ·program is now
funded through Temporary ·
Assistance to Needy Families ·
funds, and was the first to use
those funds for that purpose.
Commissioners also:
• Signed
proclamation
.• declaring Nov. 9 as Diabetes
Awareness Day;
· • Approved payment of bills
in the amount of$217.229.66;
• Accepted a bid for bituminous ·materials for November,
from Asphalt ·Materials of ·
· Marietta.
Present were Commissioners
Jeff Thornton, Mick Davenport
and Jim Sheets.

a

Peckham, Humane Society
president.
''We had to put six down
because they were severely ill
but the others are healthy,
friendly and made wonderful
pets," she added.
Peckham said the ordeal,
overall, was overwhelming.
"The ·other board members
work full-time jobs, have very
limited funding . through the
humane society and are not
equipped to handle cats, let
alone feed, scoop and find
hQj!!eSfor 26 cats and ki~tens.
' But what were we gomg to
do? Leave them there to starve
and upset neighbors? Of
course not," she said.
·
Peckham said that the society's mission is to prevent acts
of cruelty to animals, to
relieve suffering of animals
and the extension of human
education.
"A lot of people don't realize that we don"t have any
place for stray cats to be sheltered;: she said.
"The answer is easy enough,
but getting people to listen and
do the right thing sometimes
can be difficult," Peckham
added.
Humane society members
encourage anyone with a cat to
get them spayed or neutered
and to not take on more pets
than he/she can physically arid

Ple•n see C.ts, A3

Special Program ~ uNew Technologies in Diabetes Management" ·

Yll{Go (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- It's wonderful to set lofty
~oill s for yourself, but achievmg the m may require far
more effort Ihan you're prepared to exert. Know what
you're getting yourself into.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0 ct. 23) - Think everything through

Thursday, November 7 • 10 AM - 1 PM • Hospital's French 500 Room ·
Light Lunch • Door Prizes • Seating is limited - call .446-5080 to register!

d&amp;y. If you try lo do lhings
helter.ske ller. you could end
up using self-defeating methods.

Diabet&amp;s Education Classes • November 11, 12·and 13 from 6:00 - 9:00 pm
in the French 500 ROOI)l.

carefull y and plan ahead to-

ing services, using a model
from Oregon which.has proven
successful. ·
·
Fisher urged commissioner.;
to attend a seminar in Athens
next week with Emesto Sirolli,
who dev!!loped the successful

NoveMber Is American Diabetes Month -

Diabetes Support G,roup - Sunday, November 10
from 2:00 ~ 4:00 pm in the Hospital's French 500 Room.
In Meigs

County: Thunclay, November 21 at10:30 am · Meigs Senior Center

ME D I CAl. C E N T E R
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

•,'

'

For more information, or to register, ct;!ll (740) 446~5080

for res tri (.; ti ons you mar be

"

.

Bubblt~; bubble, toil and trouble ... This ugfj

Lotteries

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
· Obituaries

POMEROY -- A new prognun under development by a
group of non-profit agencies is
designed !O provide face-toface assistance to those who
wish to develop small busi· nesses in Meigs County and
surrounding counties.
At Thursday's' regular meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners, Larry Fisher,
director of ACENet, based in
Athens, discussed plans of the
Appalachian Ohio Regional
Investment Corp. to develop an
enterprise facilitator program
in Southeastern Ohio - specifically in Meigs, Morgan,
Athens or Gallia County - to
serve .residents in .the counties
who wish to start or expru~d a
small business.
· AORIC is made up of
COAD, a regional agency
composed of Community
Action
agencies,
The
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio, Preservation of Adams
County's Tomorrow, Nature
Conservancy and ACENet, and
has received a commitment for
three years' funding of the
Enterprise Facilitator.; program
from non-profit private corporations, according to Fisher.
The enterprise facilitation
would work JYith economic
development experts already in
place to assist small business

BY KRIS DOTSON
Staff writer

•')

Daily 3: 6-9-3

' owners with a range of consult-

REED

Humane Society
rescues 32 cats
when·owner dies

Set dinner
. CHESTER - Chester
United Methodist Church
will hold an Election Day
dinner from 4 to 7 p.m.,
Nov. 5. Chicken a·nd noodles, soups, sandwiches, ·
pies and cake will be
served, with carryout and
delivery available.

BY BRIAN J.
Staff writer

...

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�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2 .
Frld•y, November 1. 2002
.

'

Saturday, Nov. 2

LOGAN {AP ) - The famil y of a
soldier who has been missing from
the Guantanamu Bay Nava l Base in
Cl!ba since Sept. 24 was notified this
week that the U.S. Army has officially declared him dead, hts fathe r said.
But Carl Foraker of Logan said on
Thursday that he and · hi s wife and
.other re latives do n' t be lieve Staff Sgt.
Ryan Foraker is dead . .
"I think everybody in the family
still feels that he's ahve," he said .
Carl Foraker said an Army representative appeared at their door
Wednesday morn ing to notify the m of
their ·son' s death. Their many questions went unanswered , Foraker said.

.1 Columbus j27·1•1· I

"I always thou ght somebody had to
be missing for seven ~ ears before
they declare them dead ,' he said.
There has been no official confirmation from the military.
Ryan Fora ker's wife, Angela, and
their daughters, Olivia, 3, and Annie,
15 months, have been out of state visiting family, the fatl)er said. They are
expected to return home for Veterans
Day, when the community again will
hon or the lost soldier.
Foraker 's wallet, military ID and
c ivilian shorts and T-shirt were found
folded and stuck in a rock crevasse
outside the Camp America barracks,
just yards from Camp Delta where

detainees accused of Jinks to · the
Taliban or al-Qaida are being held.
Nearby, 20-foot cl iffs o verlook the
Caribbea n Sea.
Military officials inv estigating th~
case speculated that Foraker might
have climbed down the cliff and
drowned. But his fam ily says he was
scared of heights and the ocean.
Carl Foraker, said he and his wife;
Ann, still are waiting for the military
to locate their son or, in the worst
ca,se, his body.
"We still feel empty without him:
It's the roughest th ing I ever went
through in my life," he said .

· PHOENIX
(AP)
Soli tary action by the
United States against Iraq
could lead to World War III,
former CBS anchorman
.
Walter Cronkite says.
"I see a great danger if we
go it alone or with Great
Britain as . our only ally,"
Cronkite said at a news conference !h ursda y before an
annual award in his name
was presented to longtime
ABC · sportscaster
AI
Michaels . ·
Cronkite said he believes
if the United States fails to
unite world opinion before
going to war with Iraq, the
result will be an Arab world
united against the United
.States.
! One scenario could be an
:overthrow of the Paki~tani
;government by factions
•

Don't tickle me Elmo
KY. · ~~-W.VA
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•

· .Dow Jones
lndusb'lals

11 ,000
10,000

8,397.03

9,000

Pet. Gl1ango from peyloua
High

.0.36

Low

8,000

8,493.92 . 8,338.34
Rtcord high: 11,z22.9B
Jan. 14, 2000

OCT

7,000

Oc1. 31,2002

2,000

Nasdag
composite

1,800
1,800
1,400

Pd. changa from peyloua

+0.23

•

High
Low
1,323.09
1,347.58
Record high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000
•.

•

1.200
1,000
JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT
1,200

Oct. 31, 2002

Standard&amp;
Poor'sSOO
··~~

1,100
1,000

885.76

900

Pet change from previous

+0.56
High

800

Low

898.83

879.75
Record high: 1,527.46
March 24. 2000

700
JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

AP

Local·Stocks
•
•

AEP- 25.64
Arch Coal - 17.36
AAzo- 29.86
AmToch!SBC - 25.66
·Ashland Inc. - 26.25
AT&amp;T -13.04
Bank One·- 36.57
BLI-16.60
.
.. . Bob Evans- 24.87
• BorgWarner- 44.98
Champion - 2.55
• Channing Shops - 4.60
• Clly Holding - 28.11
• Col - 22.53
DG '- 13.96
DuPont - 41 .25

Federal Mogul- .55
USB-21 .09
Gannett - 75.93

Rockwell- 16.55
Rocky Bools- 4.95
RO Shell- 42.78
General Eloctrlc- 25.25 Sears - 26,26
GKNLY-3.30
Har1ay Davidson- 52.30 Wai-Mart - 53.55
Wendy's- 31 .68
Kmart- .62
Worthington- 18.64
Kroger - 14.84
Ltd. -15.67
Daily stock reports are
NSC-20.20
lhe 4 p.m. closing ·
Oek HI Frvlnclal - 21.74 quotes of 1he previous
OVB-20.89
day's transactions, proBBT - 36.25
vided by Smi1h Partners
Peoples - 29.71
at Advest Inc. of
Pepsico - 44.10
Premier- 7.10
Galllpoll~ .

Authorities in at least eight
states have checked for links
between unsolved crimes and
the suspects in the sniper
shootings - a daunting task
that has already led Louisiana
and Alabama officials to ftle
charges in recent local shootings.
State and local police have
checked crimes from shootings to stabbings to see if ballistics or other evidence can
link them to John Muhammad
and John~ Malvo, who had
already been charged with 10
killings in Washin~on. D.C..
Maryland and Vugmia.
Spurred by a national advisory from the Maryland-based
sniper task force, police' hav~
reopened old ftles to check for
elements common with the
sniper case. ·
· Officials in Baton Rooge,
I.a., said Thursday that ballisc
tic tests had linked the two to
the Sept. 23 murder of a beauty shop worker. Last week,
Muhammad and Malvo were
. charged in a Sept. 21 slaying in
Montgomery, Ala.

I

Association to

· Grange meets

meet

SALEM CENTER - Star
: Grange 778 and Star Junior
CHESTER Chester: Grange 878 will meet in reg: ular session at 6:30 p.m. on Shade Historical Association
: Saturday with a potluck din- · will hQld a meeting at 7 p.m.
: ner followed by the meeting Nov. 7 at the Chester
• at 7:30 'p.m. All members are Courthouse.
~ urged to attend.
Plans for 2003 are being
~
continued. Changes ·in the ·
Constitution and Christmas
plans will also be .discussed.
Th~ public is ,invited.
• RUTLAND ·- . Rutland
: Township Trustees will hold .
. a flood mitigation meeting
·with local residents involved
ALFRED
Orange
in the project at 2 p.m.
Township
Trustees
will
meet
Saturday at the Rutland Fire
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Station.
home of the clerk, Osie
Follrod.

Plan meeting

Trustees meet

Jessica Hook, 15-mo!'lths, cries· as Elmo pats her head at the Colony Square Mall in Zanesville. Elmo was there as part of
·
·
the Child Health Fair which offered free health screenings and taught saftey procedures to children. (AP) ·

Court·candidates condemn .last-minute negative-ad
COLUMBUS (AP) Less than a week before the
. election, two candidates for
· an open Ohio Supreme Court
seat found some common
ground - a negative TV ad
that both vi~wed as over the
line.
·
• With her husband by her
side at a hastily called news
conference Thursday, Ohio
Supreme Court Justice
Evelyn Lundber~ Stratton
blasted the ad, wh1ch attacks
a 1998 vote by her.
In a 4-3 decision, the court
· ruled in favor of companies
fighting lawsuits filed by
mothers and their children.
The women were trying to
collect money for damages
caused by a drug taken by
millions of pregnant women
for 23 years.
The ad, which began running Thursday in Cleveland,
Columbus, Dayton . and
Toledo, features a series of
shots of pregnant women and
women with children and
said Stratton "gave sanctuary
to the big drug .companies."
It also calls Stratton' s ruling
"a miscarriage of justice."
"This ad is despicable,"
Stration, a Republican, said
Thursday afternoon with her
husband, Jack Lundberg,
standing by her side. "It uses

this ad and view it as nega-"
tive," sai.d Jeff . Rusnak, a
Burnside spokesman. ' ··
In the ruling, the court said
people who claim they were
hurt by the drug d1ethylstilbestrol cannot sue unless
they know the s11ecific manufacturer and d1stributor of
the drug..
The drug is synthetic estrogen and was taken by nearly
S million pregnant women
from 1948 until it was
banned by the Food and
Drug Adirunistration in 1971
after being linked to cancer.
It was given to women to
prevent miscarriages and
premature births.
.
The 1998 opinion :was
written by fellow Repubhcan
justic~ Deborah Cook. Chief
Justice Thomas Moyer, also
a Republican, also ruled in
favor of the companies.
Two Republican justices,
Andy Douglas and Paul
Pfeifer, dissented.
The group runnin~ the ad,
Consumers for a Fa1r Court,
is an offshoot of Citi:rens for
an Independent Court, a registered political action committee running ads in favor
of·Burnside. That committee
includes the Ohio AFL-CIO,
the Ohio Academy of Trial
Lawyers and teachers' and

: Auxiliary meets

public employees' unions.
date.
.
The new ·group "is essenStratton leads the four cantially the same folks,'' said · didates in spending ·on TV
Dale Butland, a · veteran 'time, with $718,228 in ad
Democratic political consul- buys, the study found.
tant acting as the group's Stratton said her strategy is
spokesman.
to run pPSitive ads emphasizHowever,
because ing her-strengths.
Consumers for a Fair Court
Com_plaints have been
is running so-called issue filed m several Supreme
advocacy ads, it does not Court TV ads. Thursday, a
have to list its contributors. three-judge appeals court
Its ads cannot use words panel found enough evidence
such as "vote for" or "elect." to hold a hearing in a com·
"A:ll we have done is plaint filed against Judge
brou_ght to light her own Tim Black of Hamilton
opimon and own decision," Co11nty Municipal Court.
Butll,md said. "lfhercharacBlackisaccusedofusinga
ter is harmed by h~r own 1999
Cincinnati
Bar
opinion, it's not assassina- Association rating in a 'T V
tion, it's suici4e."
.
commercial without specifyButland sa1d the umon ing what the rating was -for.
~roup was forced to run an He is also accused of using
1ssue ad because corpora- the title "Judge" without
tions are rwining their own clearly identifying which
ads in favor of Burnside.
court.
Informed Citizens of Ohio,
Black, a Democrat, is chalan issue advocacy group that lenging Republican Lt. Gov. ·
also does not have to reveal · Maureen· O'Connor for an
its contributors, has · pur- open Supreme Court seat.
chased $410,510 in TV ads
supporting Stratton, accord- ..-~-------;,
ing ,to the New York-based
JCPenney
Brennan Center for Justice.
catalog .
The center released a
"''RCitANl srouuo!H
report Thursday that found
"" &gt;nd ......
spending · on TV ads for
~~~~'::tZ.~~~
Ohio's two Supreme Court
.........,.,..
race topped $2.6 million to a.;:::u.;;:_..=:.::;:::.:;:;:__J

cats

from Page AI
.. fmancially handle.
"People need to make pro.' visi&lt;ins for their pets in case of
· their death," Peckham said.
'This isn't a situation that the
. humane society normally han; dies. It's the resP.OOsibility of
. . the person's f~ly, but in this
,. case, there were no family
. members that lived close
. : enough in proximity o~. in
·. relation to Ms. Carpenter.
The humane society gives
. . out coupons three times a
. , month to families that meet
. ." their income guidelines in
which they pay half the cost
of having a cat spayed or
neutered. Peckham said there
currently is a long waiting list
.
for the coupons.
:
The humane society ~lies
• · solely on grants and donations
: for income. People can donate
· : good conditioned . items to
·• their thrift shop or make cash

LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees will meet
at 6 :30 p.m. Monday at the
office building.
donations.
The Humane Society Thrift
Shop is located at 305 N.
Second Ave., and is open from
9 a.m . . to 3 p.m. Monday
through Saturday. It does not
accept pet drop-offs of any
kind - it is not a pet shelter.
Monetary donations can be
mailed to P.O. Box 682,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. .
The society's cruelty officer
is Carol Lemley and she can
be reached by leaving a mes..~age at 9!!2-6060.
"We are also giving away
hay for dog houses again this
year the first Saturday of the
months of November through
March from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
in the Kroger parking lot,"
Peckham added.
"We encourage people in
the community to be responsible pet owners . and to get
'involved in whatever way
they feel they can - · whether
it's becoming a member for
$10 or patronizing our thrift
store, we could use the help."

•

WHAT Is THE TYPICAL DEMOCRAT
SOLUTION To A FUNDIN&amp; CRISIS?

•

The Daily Sentinel -

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Reader Services

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on November 5

Our main number 11

(740) 992-2156.

Department exten11on1 11e:

News

VOTE FOR A COMMISSIONER WHO WILL
•

Protect The Property Owners. of Meigs
County From the TAXING Democrats

•
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Paid

•tor

Advertising

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Outaldo Salea: Dave Harris, E&gt;Ct. 15
Outaldo Salee: Jeaalca Evens, Ext 1B
CloaaJCirc.: Judy Clark, E&gt;Ct. 10
CIIMJCirc.: Cynlhla Swisher, Ext 11

•

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. .••
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ChaMene Hoeflich, Ext 12

E-mail:
n-OmydallyMntlnel.oom

•

candidate

.,..-----.. ---------~---...---------------~--·

tum the Oct. 18 convictions
of Robert Messersmith, 53,
arid Gregory Neff, 54. .
In all, 10 white men were
charged in the murder of
Lillie Belle Allen more than
three .decades after she was
shot to death during race
riots that tore apart the city
of York. Six pleaded guilty,

Web:
www.mydallysenllnol.com

In Washington state, authorities say Muhammad and
Malvo are suspected in a fatal
shooting of a woman at her
door in Tacoma in February,
and a shooting that hurt no one
at a Tacoma synagogue in
May.
Attorney General John
Ashcroft said Thursday that
investigators were still exploring if other people helped
Muhammad and Malvo.
Investigating what other
crimes the men may have been
in'volved in could be difficult
because they have lived in or
. drifted t~Jrough many states
and . spent time in the

2001 and last summer. One
"You just kind of look at
woman was strangled, one everything to check if it really
stabbed and one had a slit fits," said Brooks Wilkins,
throat.
.who oversees criminal intelli, Authorities say they still · gence for the Tennessee
suspect the killer was a white
man. Muhammad and Malvo Bureau of Investigation.
are black.
Knowing Muhammad lived
In Michigan, Lansing police in Monterey. Calif., for about a
were following . up with the year while in the military, the
Districi of Columbia-area county sheriff's department
sniper task force looking for scanned for any likely matches
any connection to the shooting with all unsolved murders durdeath of Bernita White at a zoo ing that time. It came up
entrance in June 200 I. She
was shot by somecine hiding empty, Deputy Bill Cassara

behind a fence about 200 yards sa;~
Oregon,
when; ·
away.
It was unknown whether Muhammad once served in the
Muhammad
and Mal vo were national guard, state police
Caribbean.
Police have reported checks ever in Michigan. A friend of glanced back at several do:ren
for any related cases in Muhammad's, who helped· sniping cases over the last
Washington,
Oregon, buy tlie car allegedly used in decade or so, without fmding
Arizona, the sniper killings, was arrest- . any matches, spokesman Andy
.California,
Louisiana,
Alabama, ed in Michigan as a material Olsen said.
Tennessee and Michigan.
witness.
At the sniper command cenN.G. Benill, who teaches
Police in Baton Rouge,
ter
in
Montgomery
County,
about
criminal behavior at
where Muhammad grew up,
Jay
College in New York
Md.,
detectives
asked
police
John
are seeking DNA samples
from each man to check for agencies around the country to City, said investigators should
any links to the serial mtlrders scan for similar cases sooil · 'look into every place the men
of three women between fall after the sniper arrests:
went.

former
Mayor · Charlie
· Robertson .was acquitted,
and the final man has yet to
go to trial.
·
· Defense attorneys hope,
·through questioning of the
jurors, to show that the panel
that convicted Messersmith
and Neff was tainted by the
opinions of the juror who
compiled the notes.
Prosecutors oppose the
questioning of jurors, saying
that the panel did not violate
the judge's instructions.
Prosectors and defense
attorneys both say they were
aware of the existence of the
. notes during the trial.
York County Judge John
C. Uhler, who presided over
the 12-day trial, said in court
Thursday that he first wants
to review arguments about
whether jurors should take
the stand.
The juror who took the
notes, Charles Law, said the
judge had been aware of the
existence . of his and other

jurors' notes. During a brief brother, Arthur, was "very
· appearance in the jury's . unbelievable" while Allen's
waiting room between clos- sister, Hattie Dickson, was
ing arguments Oct. 17, Uhler "very believable," ~e notes
told the' panel not .to ''put said.
more weight'' on one set of
Another juror knew about
notes over another, Law said the criminal.record of a prosin an interview.
ecution wifiiess, and called
Law called the notes "a the man a "small time hood,"
chronological sequence of ·according to Law's notes.
events," and said "feelings
were kept out."
· The notes attempt to
describe, in ll. sentence or ·
para!P"aph, each of the 100 or
so Witnesses, often including
physical descriptions and a
. synopsis of individual testimony.
. .
Some ()f the notes mclud- ·
ed the perceived purpose for
which a witness was presented - in one case, the notes
said, the testimony "goes to
establish racial tension." The
notes also mention the credibility of witnesses - for
instance,
Messersmith's

MATINEES ARE SHOWN ON
SAT &amp; SUN ONLY
THE SANTA CLAUSE 2 (G)
7:15 &amp; 9:15

.

I will work with you to solve the problems. Hard
working for you, the people of MelliS County

~

Oulalde Melga C!lunty
113 Weeks .. . . ... ...... '50.05
26 Weeka . .. . . • ..• . ...'100.1 0
52 Weeks ....... . ..• .'200.20

Pd fpr,by candidate

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

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BOX OFFICE OPENS
8:30PM- MON- FRt
&amp; 12:30 PM SAT - SUN

Mall Subacrlpllon
lnl.lde Melga County
13 Weeks ........ ... ..'30.15
26 Weeks ..... .. . ... .. '60.00
52 Weeks .. . . . .. . •• . •'118.80

General Manager

•
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At one point the festivities were
marred by one man slashing anothe r in
the face. Two ambulances were stuck in
. the crowd trying to get to the victim.

Dally .......... .... ....50'
Subscribers · should remit In
advance direct 10 The Dally
Sentinel. No subscription by mall
permitted In areas where home
carrier service Is available.

Circulation

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Parade Inc., said the idea was to get the
city to slow down its frantiC pace and
have a good time.
Last year, for a parade held less than
two months after the Sept. 11 attack on
the World Trade Center, the theme was
a phoenix rising from .the ashes.
An estimated 300,000 people turned
out for one 0 ( the nation 's other major
celebrations, held in San Francisco's
Castro District.

Sub1crlptlon Rates
By carrier or motor rilute
One month .. .. .. . . ... .'9.95
One yur . .. ... ... .. .'119.40

Dtllrtct Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, Ex1. 17

•
•

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
A REAL LEADER FORA CHANGE! .
•

Ecllor: ChaMene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Aeporll1r: Brian Road, E&gt;Ct. 14
Reporter: Kris Ooston, Ext 13
Sporta: Deral&lt; Taylor, E&gt;Ct. 14

•
•

•

JOHN FISHER, JR.

ollection$, the attorneys
art~y want to put the jurors
on the stand in a bid to over-

Ohio Valley Publllhlng Co. .
Published
every
afternoon,
Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Socondetas&amp; postage paid a1 Pomeroy.
Member: The Assocla1ed Press
and
1he Ohio
Newspaper
Association .
Poatmaater: Send address oorroc·
lions 10 The DaUy Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 . ..

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VOTE FOR .

YORK, Pa. (AP) Attorneys for two men convicted in the 1969 race-riot
slaying of a young black
woman say a juror's trial
notes, distributed to the rest
of the jury with the judge's
approval, may have tainted
other jurors' recollections of
the case.
.
The II pages of typed
notes violated the spirit of
the state's rules of criminal
. procedure that are designed
to allow jurors to form opinions based on their own rec-

(USPs 213-960)

correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories 1s10 be
accurate. If you knoW of an error In a
story, caR the newsroom al (740) 992·
2156. ·
·

At some spots, the parade looked
more like a rollicking, moving concert,
with percussion bands marching up the
avenue alongside va ns that blared
music from disco to classic rock.
This year's parade theme was "play."
The main organizer, Village H. alloween

Defense attorneys ar ue juror's · notes
·during race riot mur er trial tainted case

·-• .....-------_;_-------'-~

the term attack
'miscarriage'
as a • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
political
that should
offend all women who have
attempted to bear children."
Stratton said she did not
believe her opponent, Judge
Janet B umside of Cuyahoga
. County Common . Pleas
Court, had anything ·to do .
with the ad. Burn side
demanded tl)e ad be stopped
immediately.
"We obvioysly condemn

I

To meet

POMEROY - Fraternal
Order of Eagles Auxiliary
.. will meet at 7:30 p.m.
, Tuesday.· A final reading of
· the by-laws is planned.

"I stole your 40l{k) money! How's
that fo r scaJtt?'' said one of them, Jason
Miet:rel, of Park Slope, Brooklyn.
The parade has grown from a small
house-to-house walk in 1973 to a spectacle billed as the nation's largest publie cele bration of Halloween. It proceeds from Spring Street in the ctty's
SoHo neighborhood up Sixth Avenue
to 23rd Street in the Village.
Spectators ·were lined up 10 deep on
either side of the avenue . as the
marchers strutted and danced past drag
queens on roller skates, astronauts ,
aliens, angels and all manner of goblins.
"People just get so creative with their
costumes here. You have to love it,"
said Nina Bogin, · who was dressed as
Uncle Sam and covered with red, white
and blue from head to toe.
Police said at the conclusion of the
three-hour parade that they had no
arrests or reports of trouble.

Police sniff for possible sniper ties; unsolved
killings investigated in at least eight states

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

12,000

already ange red about the
country ' s cooperation with
the United States in removing the Taliban from power
in Afghanistan, he said.
. Another possibility could
be China taking advantage
of the situation to strengthen
military and economic ties
to the Middle East at the
·
f
h
u · d
t e
ntte
expen se 0
States, according to the 85year-old Cronkite, who was
the anchor of the CBS
Evening News · from 196281.
Michaels was presented
with the 20th Walter
Cronkite Award, given to a
.national .journalism figure
through the Arizona State
University Walter Gronkite
School of Journalism and
Mass Communication.

:Local Briefs

.Sunny skies in Saturday forecast

Oct. 31,2002

NEW YORK {AP) - The spectacle
towere4, over Sixth Avenue -"- ' a 16foot, papier-mache likeness of
President Bush; clad only in a cowboy
hat and diaper and reaching for toy
missile launchers.
"You' re supposed to scare people for
Halloween, and nothing is scarier than
war," said Talia Braude, who rigged up
the mock president and marched with tt
in Greenwich Village's rollicking
parade. ·
The. Bush sendup was one of dozens
of floats and costumes that spoofed
current events at the parade, which
organizers say draws a million people a
year.
Several marchers wore Martha
Stewart masks - including one who
added handcuffs to poke fun at the
scandal swirling around her stock
deals; Two friends dressed in business
suits and put fake biQOd on their faces,
going as crooked CEOs.

•
•

Ice

Saturday · .night. .. Mostly
A cold front will' bring cold- clear. Lows in the upper 20s. .
Extended foruast:
er air to the area. Highs this
Sunday...Mostly · sunny.
afternoon will be in the upper
Highs in the lower 50s.
30s to lower 40s.
Sunday night...Increasing
Skies will clear during the
day as high pressure builds cloudiness with a slight
· into the area. Overnight will chance of rain. Lows in the
· bring even colder tempera- mid 30s. Chance of rain 20
tures as the high pressure percent. .
.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
builds into the region. This
will bring • clearing skies, with a chance of rain. Highs
·
which will allow temperatures in the mid 50s.
Election
Day .. .Mostly
to fall into. the mid 20s.
Highs Saturday will reach cloudy with a chance of rain.
Lows in the upper 30s and
into the 50s.
highs in the mid 50s.
Weather forec:ast:
.Free:re warning for tonight
Wednesday...Partly cloudy.
into saturday morning... ·
A chance of showers until
Tonight. .. Mostly clear and midnight. Lows in -the lower
colder. Lows in the upper 20s.. 40s and highs in the upper
40s.
West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday.;.Partly cloudy.
Saturday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 50s. West Lows in the inid 30s and
highs .in the upper 40s .
. winds around 10 mph.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Former CBS anchorQlan says In New York's Greenwich Village, Halloween
U.S. solitary action against ·· revelers - and a papier-mache president
Iraq could lead to war

Family told Army has declared soldier dead;

Ohio weather

'
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, November 1, 2002

J, ;.

'

.

..

�I

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PageA4 .

The Daily Sentinel

~rlday,

I talked to Eran last night

If your ·partner shows these
signs, it's time to get out
DEAR
READERS:
Yesterday I printed a letter
from a woman who is in
prison for killing her live-in
abuser, with the promise that
today I would print the warning signs of a potential
abuser. Read ·on:
The following signs of an
abusi ye partner have been
adapted with permi·s sion
from the Project for Victims
of Family Violence in
Fayetteville, Ark .:
(I) PUSHES FOR QUICK
INVOLVEMENT: Comes on
strong, claiming, "I've never
felt loved like this by anyone." An abuser pressures the
new partner for an exclusive
commitment almost immediate ly.
(2) JEALOUS : Excessively
possessive; calls constantly
· or visits unexpectedly; pre·vents you from going to work
because "you. migh~ meet
someone";
checks
the
mileage on your car.
(3)
CONTROLLING:
Interrogates you intensely
(esp.ecially if you're late)
about whom you talked to
and where you were; . keeps
all the money; insists you ask
·permission to go anywhere or
do anything.
(4)
. UNREALISTIC
EXPECTATIONS: Expects
you to be the perfect mate
and meet his or her every
need.
(5) ISOLATION: Tries to
cut you off from family and
friends; accuses people who
are your supporters of "causing trouble.".The abuser may
deprive you of a phone or car,
or try to prevent you from
holding a job.
· (6) BLAMES OTHERS
FOR PROBLEMS OR MIS~
TAKES: It's always someone
else's fault if something goes
·wrong.
(7) MAKES OTHERS
RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS
OR HER FEELINGS: The
abuser says, "You make me
angry,'.' instead of, "I am
angry.~' or says, "You're hurting me by not doing what I
tell you."
(8) HYPERSENSITIVITY:
Is easily insulted, claiming
hun feelings when he or she
is really mad. Rants about the
injustices of things that are
just a part of life.

Martin personal
MIDDLEPORT
.
Carolyn Rummell of Omaha,
Neb., and her son, Ricky
Rummell of Columbus visit. ed
Edna
Martin
of
Middleport Wednesday.

Dear
·Abby

Lance Stewart
birth

ADVICE
(9) CRUELTY TO ANIMALS AND CHILDREN;
Kills or punishes animals
brutally. Also,. may expect
children to do things that are
far beyond their ability
(whips a 3-year-old for wetting a diaper), or may tease
tliem until they cry. Sixtyfive percent of abusers who
beat their partner will also
abuse children.
(10) "PLAYFUL" USE OF
FORCE . DURING SEX:
Enjoys throwing you down or
holding you down against
your will during sex; . finds
the idea of rape exciting.
(II) VERBAL ABUSE:
Constantly criticizes or says
blatantly
cruel,
hurtful
things; degrades, curses, calls
you ugly names. This may
also involve sleep deprivation, waking you up with
relentless ve.rbal abuse.
(12) RIGID SEX ROLES:
Expects you to serve, obey,
remain at home.
(13) SUDDEN MOOD
SWINGS: Switches from
sweet to violent in minutes.
(14) PAST BATTERING:
Admits to hitting a mate in
the past, but says the person
"made" him (or her) do it.
(15) THREATS OF VIOLENCE: Says things like,
~'I' 11 break your neck," or
''I' II kill you," and then dismisses
them ·
with,
"Everybody talks that. way," ·
or "I didn't really mean it."
If the abuse has gone this ·
far, it's time to get out! The ·
toll-free number for the ·
domestic violence hot line is
(80Q) 799-7233.
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.

Other events

"It's good to be back there.
It's good for the morale of
people who work on the
show," said Mike Judge, the
voice of Hank and the show's
other co-creator, who was
previously known for creating MTV's "Beavis &amp; Butthead."
.
"King of the Hill" has
thrived in syndication, and
Judge said the multiple show,,.

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM,
stated meeting, 7:30 p.m., lodge
hall.

• Yu•ur a obu~t system witl1 aseeond retei'ltr lor S199.

1.

• President - Meigs County Council on Aging Board
of Trustees.
• Chairman - Meigs County Health Steering
Committee.
• Chairman - Meigs County Community Health Clinic
Board
·
·
• Member- local Emergency Planning Committee
• Member- Workforce Investment Board
• Member- Meigs County Extension Advisory
Committee
-·

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LOCAL:

• Vice President - Regional
Advisory Council to 8 County
Area Agencies on Aging.
• President- Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs, Vinton Solid Waste
District.
• Member- Buckeye Hills Regional ·
Development District.

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MOSCOW (AP) -Every
three months, the Rev. Emil~
Dumas goes through the same,
unsettling routine - applying
to the Russian government for
an extension of his entry visa.
It's by no means a formality
for Dumas, an American priest
who leads a small Roman
Catholic parish on Russia's Far
Eastern Sakhalin Island.
Five Catholic priests have
had their visas revoked this
year, with no warning. In
U.S.
September, · five
Protestants were refused permission to return to the central
Russian city of Kostroma,
where they ran a chilrch and
training courses for orphans.
The government also turned
down. visa extensions for 30
U.S. Peace Corps volunteers
midway through their two-year
tour - leaving just half the
current crop at their posts in
Russia.
·
. "I take it one day at a time,"
~umas said in a phone interVIew.
I : Religious activists, embassy
officers and tour agents all confirm a spike in the number of
Russian visa refusals over the
past two years.
: The Keston Institute, which
1;11onitors religious freedom,
has about 40 foreign religious
workers on its list of visa
· denials since 1998, with most
refused since 2000. Others
bave not publicized their cases
in hopes of . reversing the
refusal, -or for fear of endangering their Russian congregations.

A full time, committed, adive
Commissioner who represents Meigs
County at the Local, Regional, and State
levels in all the following capacities:

REGIONAL

.•

•

Friday, November. I, 1001

· Considering the future

./

the teaDL
Now, with that car accident
of his, he has made the ultimate adjustment.
And it leaves me with having to face adjushnent, too. It
is the hardest adjustment I
have ever had to make. •
But, bless his soul, he made
GUEST COWMN the adjustment when discipline
expected it. He made tlie
adjustment when I asked him
ciplinary concern. Though I to move. He made the adjustam not proud how I reciprocal- ment w~n his team asked him
ed, I don't regret it. According · to play quarterback.
to his own admission, the inci- . . He made the adjustment to
dent made him realize how Heaven because our God
necessary it was for him to required it of him.
make some personal adjustI thank God how He is helpBishop Wilton Gregory, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, talks with Pope
ments for himself and the sake ing me to adjust, and as I think
Paul II during their meeting at the Vatican. The Vatican's response to the U.S. bishops
John
of his family.
about Eran's capability to
sex abuse policy hilS raised questions about whether American democratic and legal tradiHe was good at making adjust, I find a new measure of
tions
are in conflict with the worldwide Roman Catholic Church. (AP)
adjustments.
comfort for my soul.
He was adamant about not
And, really, it is not hard to
wanting to move from St. make the adjustment just so
Marys where we had lived long I keep in mind that it is
fourteen years of his life, to merely making adjustment to
Mason in 1998, at which time his new living situation.
the Lord opened the door to
No, I really didn't talk perminister at Faith Baptist. It sonally to Eran. He was just on .
took him a while to accept it. my mind so much tonight.
He certainly growled about it.
Grieving · well for the
WAUPUN, Wis. (AP) - . appointment last December, nothing against Witch and
But, when he made up his Christian means refraining
The first Wiccan to serve as but the warden at Dodge Beyah "as perso ns, but it's a
mind that God was in it, he from being overly sentimental · a prison chaplain in Correctional Institution said matter of principle."
embraced it and made tlie best and from being overly conWisconsin and a Muslim " toe law prevented religious
Beyah said he respects
of it.
'cemed with what could have . chaplain were both ousted discrimination.
Witch as a professional and ·
He did not want to make the been. ·But more importantly,
from the Waupun Clergy
Members of the associa- equal even though Islam
change on offense frorri full- grieving well means trusting
Association, which now tion in this community 55 strongly opposes . pagan
back to quarterback for the the assurances of our Lord
allows · only Christians as miles
northwest
of views. "She's an excellent
Falcon's football team. But his Jesus Christ. "You believe in
members.
Milwaukee said it was chaplain," he said. "Her
team needed him to play the God, believe also in me," He
Muslim Imam Ronald founded for Christian min- religious faith ., or' tradition
· position, and he made the said.
Beyah said last week's isters,
but
ambiguous has nothing to do with her .
adjustment. He did it to the
After I finished writing, I
action included him so it bylaws meant Beyah was as a chaplain."
best of his ability, sacrificing went back to bed, · and God
wouldn't appear the &amp;roup included two years ago, folWiccans celebrate nature
personal goals for the sake of gave me sleep.
was targeting the p~rson lowed by Witch
last and worship various gods_
and goddesses. Follower&amp;
who caused concern, Jamyi December.
are sometimes called witchWitch,
the
Wiccan
chaplain.
Lutheran
pastor
Kenneth
..
Some state legislators and Spence~ who proposed the es, _though many prefer the
others
cr-iticized
her new policy, said . he had term Wiccan.

Ron

Branch

Protests follow ouster of Muslim and
Wiccan from Wiscon-sin clergy group

Russia, turning inv.yard, refuses visas to
foreign religious workers and volunteers Cincinnati Archdiocese ·criticizes Procter

MICK DAVENPORT

son.n

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.
,--------------------------.

$22 9!llmtJnlh. Add $4.99

' ~·

RE-ELECT

. Friday, Nov. 1
TUPPERS PLAINS - Be.thel
Worship Center will host ·a Harvest
Party, an atterna~ve to the classroom Halloween party, at 2 p.m.
Friday in the Eastern Elementary
School cafeterium. The party is
open to any school age children.
who wish to attend and will include
games, refreshments and treats. A
parent permission slip must be
sent in to their teacher on the day
of the party. Information is avail:
able from Laura Guthrie at 9854t48.

Friday, Nov. 1
HEMLOCK GROVE - Meigs
County Pomona Grange #46,
annual officers' conferej'lCe and
yearly planning meeting, 6:30p.m.,
Hemlock Grange Hall. Regular
meeting follows at 7:30 p.m,

Denny Runyon and Brynn.
Sutphin.
. .
Instructors . wl:re
J1m.
Freeman, Gilbert . Woods,
Greg McCall and Mickey _
. Bauer. The class was spon-.
sored by the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation . . .
Distri~t's
Wildhfe
Specialist Program and the.
Pomeroy
Gun
Club ..
Completion of the Ohio.
Hunter Education Course is
mandatory for people wishing to P.urchase their. first
hunting license. In addihon,,
many states require out-of-.
state hunters to provide proof
of completion of a hunter
education course.
T~o
hunter education courses will:
be held from 6 to 9 p.m. Nov.·
II, 12 and 13,9 a.m. to noon,.
Nov. 16, and 9 a.m. to noon
Nov. 18, 19 and 20,at Eastern
High School. Class size is
limited to 30 students per
session. Students may regis-.
ter by calling Gilbert WoOds
at 985-3914.

.t..

Clubs and
Organizations .

Saturday, Nov. 2
RACINE Racine Area
Community Organization.'s fall food
drive for Meigs Coooperative
Parish, at corner df Third and Peart
Streets. Accepting monetary donations, non·perishable food ~ems,
paper products, soap products, toiletries. Donations may be made
and picked up by calling Ann
Zirkle, 949-2031, or Kathryn Hart,

tion, hunting regulations, and
game care.
Successfully completirtg
the course were: Tyler Wolfe,
Tad Wolfe, Austin ·Hill,
Kelby Brown, Felicia See,
Kyle
Hoover,
Kodie
Ramage, Derek Young, Keith
Williams, Kayla Williams,
Charles Williams, Karen
Spencer, Colton Stewart,
Fi'ank Shamblin, Michael
Bailey. Matt Bailey, John
Grueser, DiJaun .Robinson,
Wesley
Riffle,
Ron11ld
Wilson, Ronald Wilson II,
Josh Smith, Chantel Bauer,
Tara Fisher, Steven Shepard,
Jesse
Hanson,
Ronnie
Haning, Breana Hemsley,
Jame&amp; Parso ns,
Darla
Haning,
Bobby
King,
Andrew
Davis,
Joey
Blackston,
J.T.
Evans,
Mandy Hannan, Kenneth
Barnett,. Sonya Barll·e u,
Deadra
Barnett,
John
Tenaglia, Cameron Bolin,
Travis Roseberry. Chris
Tenaglia, Tom Stewart,

I have certainly thought
about the issue of human grief
since August 9 when our third
son, Eran, was killed in a car
accident.
Grief is, undoubtedly a gift
from God to help us release
that inward pain of the soul
and spirit. "For by the sadness
of the countenance the heart is
made better," states the
Scripture. It is most appropri.ate to grieve when it is
required of us. .
But grieving well is the rub.
For Christians, . an important
facet of grieving well must be
the holding on to the truths of
God's Word. Grief under-girded with the preciousness of
sure hope stabilizes the soul.
I could bot sleep the night of
Eran's birthday, Sept. · 15,
because he consumed my
thoughts. During that early
morning hour, God's amazing
grace once again brought comfort as I wrote the following.
"I talked to Eran last night. I
don't know why I admit it,
\lecause I know .he really wasn'
. Ill t there.,Besides, I didn't verbalire anything; I just visualized about having a conversation with him. But I sure wish
I could talk to him right now: I
miss having my boy here.
It was such a good life with
him here. Oh, he was testy for
a couple of years, but it was
just ~tandard procedure for a
growmg young man.
I lost my temper very badly
with him one time when he
tried to stand up to me on dis-

.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - · ings each week may have
After years of moving around . helped rejuvenate its fan base.
the Fox prime-time schedule,
"It's .funnier when you get
the working-class. comedy t.o know the characters and
"King of the Hill" is back notice the subtle things," he
where it started. ·"!,
I · said, comparing the show to
The Fox cartoo11 series the low-key comedy of Bob
about a small-town Texas Newhart.
family stoic patriarch
While Homer Simpson is
Hank Hill, his Boggle cham- known for outrageous oafishpion wife, Peggy, and their ness, Hank Hill is the soft~
vaudeville-loving son, Bobby spoken opposite - furiny
·- is moving to 8:30 p.m. because of his blandness.
Hank is a frustrated man's
EST on· Sundays - tl)e slot
after "The Simpsons" that it man. He loves football, beer,
first occupied when it strong- barbe.cue and trucks, but his
ly debuted in 1997. (Most feet are too chubby for cowrecently the show has aired at boy boots, the whole neigh7:30 p.m. on Sundays.)
borhood knows· about his
"I'm on it and I could never bowel problems and other
find it," said Kathy Najimy, health woes-· and he regards Mike Judge, co-creator of the Fox cartoon series "King of the
who provides the voice of pop culture with a restrained Hill," poses in front of an illustration of the animated charPeggy, an award-winning disdain.
·
acter he voices, Hank Hill in Los Angeles. After toiling for
s.ubstitute teacher and pseudo"The show is definitely years in obscure time slois·, the working-class comedy
intellectual with a penchant about masculinity," Daniels returns to prime-time on Sunday. (AP)
for "Fat Albert" impressions. · said. "Hank's eying ·to take
"I'd tell people I was his son, who's sort of a couch embarrassing situation at the
Hank often displays bull- ·
Bobby on 'King of the Hill'... potato, and . turn kim into a girl's coed sleepover.
·
,headed chauvinism. second- ·
and they'd say to ine, 'I saw man."
"It's not a political show guessing his wife even when
that show years ago," said
Hank has a lot of love for but it has a lot of sympathy lie suspects she's right and
Pamela S. Adlon, who won an the boy, but expressing it isn't for unhip regular people," giving the cold shoulder to .
Einmy this year for supplying easy. In a moment of over- Judge said. ·
live-in niece Luanne (Brittany ·
the scratchy voice of the 13- whelming fatherly pride, he
The family is surrounded Murphy).
.
year-old character. "And I once said: ·"Bobby, if you by oddball neighbors like bug
Meanwhile, Bobby seems :
wou ld say, .'Yiesss ... we ' re weren't my son, I'd hug you." extermir,mtor and _conspiracy- determined to take sloth to
still on."'
Although the show pokes theonst Dale .Gnbble (voice new levels. In one episode, he
Just as Hank Hill suppress- fun at Hank and Peggy's lack of Johnny Hardwick); Bill develops gout from inactivity
es all emotion except his pas- .of sophistication, it generally Dauterive (Stephen Root), an and poor eating habits and is
sion for selling propane and favors their orthodoxy. In Army barber and sloppy
·gh d
·
propane accessones, the mak- Sunday's season premier~;, bachelor, and mushmouthed deh te to travel around on ·
a Rascal, the kind of slow- :
ers of "King of the Hill" are the couple faces down the stud Boomhauer (Judge).
tight-lipped abol,lt the show's overly permissive parents of "King of the Hill" also isn't moving scooter used by the .
noinadic past.
Bobby's new girlfriend and afraid to show its characters' elderly and infirm.
ugly
sides.
"Fewer people out in the rescue the boy from an
world would come up to y o u r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
and talk about it," shrugged
Greg Daniels, "King of the
Hill" co-creator. "This (new
time slot) .feels like a little bit
of an acknowledgment that
we did a good job last sea-

CHESTER- Friendship meeting of District 13, Daughters of
Saturday, Nov. 2
•.
America, at Chester _lodge mill.
POMEROY - · Lebanon Potluck at noon, meet1ng follows.
Township Trustees, ·7 ·p.m., at the · Officers·urged to attend.
township building.

Wednesday, Nov. 8
RUTLAND- Rutland Township
Trustees to hold Nov. meeting at 5
p.m., Rutland firehouse.
ROCKSPRINGS - Salisbury
T&lt;iwnship Trustees regular monthly
meeting, 6:30 p.m., township
garage on Rocksprings Ad.

Complete class

,

Comically unhip 'King of the Hill' reclaims old time slot

Publl·c Meetl'ngs
.

Tuesday, Nov. 5
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees regular meeting, 7:30
p.m., at the home of the dark, Osie
Foil rod.

mother is Freda Turley of
Hartford, W.Va.
Paternal grandparents are
Steve and Kelly Stewart of
Mason, W.Va. Paternal great
grandparents are Bud and
Trudy Stewart of Pomeroy,
the late Wanda Stewart,
Larry and Fona Smith and
Janet
Smith,
all
of
Middleport.

RACINE -.-,- Jason and
POMEROY - Forty-six
Brandi Stewart announce tile prospective and current
birth of a son, Lance Andrew hunters successfully comStewart, Sept. II ; 2002, at pleted . an Ohio Hunter
Camden-Clark
Memorial Education Class, which
Hospital in Parkersburg, · ended Tuesday night at the
W.Va.
Pomeroy Gun Club.
. He weighed seven pounds
The
Ohio
Hunter
and six ounces.
Education Class consists of
Maternal grandparents are I 0 hours of classroom
Lynh and Becky Mallory of instruction in numerous subRacine. Maternal great jects including rifles, shotgrandparents · are the late guns, handguns , muzzleJanice Turley and Charles loaders and archery, gun hanand
Mayme
Mallory. dling, survival, hunter ethics
Maternal great-great grand- and respons~bility, conserva-

Community Calendar

. Monday, Nov. 4
RACINE - Racine Village
Council to meet in regular session
at 7 p.m., municipal building.
Council to open bids on a 1993
Ford Crown Victoria and a 1984
Dempster trash truck, and bids lor
the purchase of a new fire truck.
LETART FALLS Letart
Township Trustees to meet at 6:30
p.m. at the office building.
·.
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township Trustees will. hold their
regular monthly fl'll!eling at 7:30
p.m. at Syracuse Village HaiL

·Faith &amp; Values

The Daily sentinel

November 1, 1001

Page·As

I

'"

&amp; Gamble on human embryo research

The refusals are one measure eign policy concerns- such as
of the Russian government's Russia's close relationship with
attempts, after a .decade of China - determine whether a
CINCINNATI (AP) -·
Stanford
University cells from eggs fertilized in
openness to the West, to tum visa will be issued.
The
Roman
Catholic research questions their laboratories might someday
the nation inward by keeping
This past summer, for examrepair damaged organs and
Archdiocese of Cincinnati usefulness for therapy.
foreigners out.
pie, Russia refused to admit the
is criticizing a new Procter
Researchers hope stem cure chronic diseases.
The freedom that many Dalai Lama- the second time
&amp; Gamble Co. research .------.....;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"':'""1
Russians had thirsted for after it denied entrance to the spiritupolicy that does not ban
the 1991 collapse of the Soviet ai leader for Russia's 1 miUion
use of stem cells from
Union brought a flood of for- Buddhists, and for Tibetans
human embryos.
eign cultural and religious who resist Chinese rule. Russia · The archdiOcese's newsinfluences that some welcomed appears to have little interest in
PI\Per published a ~tate­
but others perceived as crowd- risking its burgeoning econommen! from Archbishop
Daniel Pilarczy.Jc on the
ing out Russia's own values.
ic and political relationship
policy, which went into
''The doors seemed pretty with Beijing to satisfy its
effect
in October.
·
open when we came, and our Buddhists' desire to personally
Pilarczyk said the apparassistance seemed to be very receive the Dalai Lama's teachmuch appreciated," said Jeffrey ings.
ent decision to use
embrros to develor "prodWollman.
a
53-year-old
"Buddhists have become
ucts judged usefu by the
humanitarian worker from hostages to Russia's foreign
company" is "a misuse of
Dallas, Texas. He set up life policy interests," said Maya
human 'I ife - no matter
skills and computer training Malygina, spokeswoman for
how praiseworthy its intent
classes for orphans in the Moscow Buddhist center.
might
be."
Kostroma in 1999, and was
The new aScendancy of the ·
The church does not
among the five Protestants FSB, President Vladimir
object
to research on stem
refused re-entry to Russia in Putin's professional alma
cells
from consenting .
·th
September.
d · d' -~
"Now it looks like the door is mater, an ItS tSCOuuort WI
adults but believes using
shutting." ·
foreigners also play a key role:
embryo or fetal tissue is
morally wrong.
Visa authorities appear some- The only explanation .catholic
P&amp;G does not currently
times to be working hand-in- leaders ever got for the decision
use
human embryo cells
hand with Russian Orthodox to kick out Bishop Jerzy Mazur .
and has no plans to do so,
prelates who fear the spread of was that the ruling carne from
but its new policy does not
Catholicism and evangelical "competent organs" - the
rule
out their use, a compachurches in regions where code word for the FSB - in
ny
spokesman
said .
Orthodox influence was wiped connection with a law prohibitStem
cells
form
in the
out during 70 years of ing the entry of.people con~idfirst days of embryonic
Communism.
ered a threat to state security.
development and later difIn meetings with Orthodox
"We have the feeling that we
ferentiate into the many
prelates, the Federal S~uritr ~- being p~sh~ _for sometypes of cells needed .to
Service or FSB, the mam sue- thing, or they re _hinbng ~~t ~e
form organs and other tiscessor to tbe Soviet-era KGB, · should behave differently, said
sues. The unspecia!ized
has pronounced its mission to . Viktor Khrul, a Catholic
stem cells are also are
protect Russia's "spiritual secu- spokesman in Moscow. "But
found in some adult tisrity."
how, for what, why? This is not
sues,
though
recent
In other cases, broader for- clear."

·. Re-Elect

Robert E. Buck
Probate/Juvenile Judge

Ajudge and staff serving the people
with OVER 100 YEARS of combined
experience to the courts of Meigs County.

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..•.•..•••.......•..•......•....•..•••.....•...••.••.•.•.•...
~

~

•

EXPERIENCED
EFFECTIVE
EFFICIENT
Penonal CommunitY lnvoivement:

SPpreme Court Appoiatattnta:

Trinity Church, Pomeroy
MeiSs County Senior Citizens
Meigs County Chamber of 'Commfl'(e
Meigs County Farm Bureau
Pomeroy-Racine Masonic Lodae
Ohio TownShip Trustees Assoc .
Meigs County Bluea &amp; Jw Society
Cllester-Shade Historical AJsoc .
Rivcrbcnd Community Theatre

Meiss Common Pleas Coun
Meigs County Court
Athens Juvenile Coun
Gallia Problle Coun
Gallia Common Pleas Court
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Wa1hington Probate Court
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�The Daily Sentinel

Page A&amp; .·

Opinion

FfiUy, NavHiber 1, 1001
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The D~y Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

••

c~f U.N. UAS

Bette Pearce

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

·
~rl ~lS ~VON,
SO ~CAN i;XftLT

':AAA~""!

Den Dickerson
Publisher
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·: ABOARD THE USS eagle filing its talons calls
'CONSTELLATION (AP)- the ship a "Terrorist
j\s he prep;tred again for a Cancellatton Unit."
. voyage · that would put his
Iraq is on everyone's
· aircraft unit within striking mind.
distance of Iraq, Capt. Mark
"Everybody's talking 2 1/2
. Fox wrote a letter to the wife months down the road:
'of a shipmate from the Gulf .What's going to be going
War.
· on?" said Lt. Spence Savoy,
~·: On the first night of Desert a 32-year-old intelligence
• Storm nearly 12 years ago, officer from New Iberia, La.
' Fox's friend and fellow "We have to be ready to go
· :Nav_y pilot, Michael Scott to Iraq or support operations
Spetcher, became the first in Afghanistan."
Iohn Lambert, 28, is
American lo~t in t~e war.
Today, Spetcher ts the only responsible for assembling
Americ~n still unaccounted weapons .that could help
for. Thts month, the Navy force Saddam Hussein from
declared he was captured by power.
"That government over
Iraq after his plane went
down. Intelligence reeorts there has to be taken out," he
suggest Speicher may sttll be said.
Since the last Gulf War,
alive.
"I just pray that Scott will technology has made the
·e ither come home to live bombs Lambert assembles ·
among friends or to rest more accurate and more
among them," Fox wrote to deadly. Strike plannefll talk
Speicher's wife, Ioanne. · about the number of targets a
· Nearly 9,000 sailors and single plane can hit instead
aviators on the USS of the number of planes
Constellation and 'its battle · required to 'hit a single targroup are set to depart
.
Saturday on a six-month geifany Navy aviators have
·
deployment to · the Persian flown over Iraq while Airman Simon Kanyora relays plane locations as planes prepare to launch from the flight deck on the USS Constellation dunng
. Gulf that commanders say ts enforcing the no-fly zone, training exercises in the waters off of Southern California. The USS .Constellation and its battle group w1 ll leave San D1ego later
likely to put them in harm's where U.S. warplanes are this week for a six-month Persian Gulf deployment. (AP)

ANOU.tg( S\X

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USS Constellation crew prepares for Iraq

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(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

~-_.Th_e_D_ail_•..:t..y_s_en_ttn_·_et_ _ _=-N-=a.=.:::ti=·:..;;:o:::;..;n=-=-_•_W-=-=:....;O~rl-=-=d;:.._____Fri_d~. :.;.·_Nov_~_C:._~e. . ;. l.~_o!

IRAQ.
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Letters to the editor are 'welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be
signed and include address and telephone ·number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good
taste, addressing issues. not personalities.
·The opinions expressed irr the l'olumn below are the con·
sen.ws of the Ohio Valley Publishing C!'. s editorial board,
unless orhenvise noted.

NATIONAL VIEW
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Trust

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It's what we need if we have
any relationship .with N K&lt;?rea
• The Findlay (Ohio) Courier: J,ust what is North
.
.
Korea after? ..
Since last week's revelation that North Korea has
never halted its nuclear weapons program as
· promised . in the Framework Agreement of 1994,
almost daily reports indicate that Klm Jong Il .wants
us to reward him in some way.
The Bush administration 's response so far has
been "coql." Why should we offer him anything for
finally !!dmitting he's been violating the 1994 agreement all along?
Well, violating its intent, anyway. He may have
stopJ?ed processing plutonium, but he's now trying
to produce enriched uranium, instead:
If Kim is truly interested in helping his country,
not just consolidating his own power, he could
become an economic ally at least. But given Kim's
record as a dictator responsible for the deaths of millions of his people, it would be foolish to trust him
yet.
The United States should proceed cautiously and
skeptically as North Korea seeks our help to move
into the modem world. Above all, we must be certain that any reforms are genuine and insist that
. promises of disarmament are verified by international inspectors.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Today is Friday, Nov. I, the 305th day of 2002. There are 60
days left in the year. This is All Saints Day.
. Today's Highlight in History :
Fifty years ago, on Nov. 1, 1952, the United States exploded thil first hydrogen bomb at ·Eniwetok in the Marshall
Islands.
On this date:
In 1512, Michelangelo's paintings ori the ceiling of the
Sistine Chapel were first exhibited to the public.
In 1765, the Stamp Act went into effect, ,prompting stiff
resistance from American colonists.
In 1861, Gen. George B. McClellan was made General-inChief of the Union armies.
In 1870, the U.S . Weather Bureau made its ftrst meteorological observations.
In 1950, two Puerto Rican nationalists tried to force their
way into Blair House in Washington to assas~inate P~sident
. Truman. The anempt failed, and one of the patr was killed.
· In 1954, the Western African nation · of Algeria began its.
..
rebellion against French rule.
In 1973, following the "Saturday Night Massacre," Acting
Auornev General Robert H. Bork appointed Leon Jaworski to
b,e the' new Watergate special prosecutor, succeeding
Archibald Cox.
In 1979, former first lady Mamie Eisenhower died in
Washington D.C. at age 82.
·
ln 1989. East Germany reopened its border with
Czechoslovakia, prompting tens of thousands of refugees to
flee to the West.
In 19'1 I, Clarence Thomas took his place as the newesi jus·
tice on the Supreme Court.
Ten years ago: The space shullle Columbia landed at Cape
Canaveral, Fla. , ending a I0-day mission that included the
deployment of an Italian satellite.
Five years ago: Chinese President Jiang Zemin defended his
government during an appearance at Harvard University, but
conceded that China had made mistakes. Meanwhile, about
2,000 people ·demonstrated outside both for and against the
Chinese government.
One year ago: President Bush issued an order allowing past
presidents, beginning with Ronald Reagan, to have as much
say as incumbent presidents )v keeping some of their White
House papers private. The New York Yankees took a 3-2
games lead over the Arizona Diamondbacks as they won
game five of the World Series, 3-2, in a contest that ended
after midnig ht.
,
Today's Birthdays: Newspaper columnist James J.
Kilpatrick is 82: Golfer Gary Player i'S 67.. Country singer Bill
Anderson is 65. Actress Barbara Bosson is 63. Actor Robert
Foxworth is 61. Actress Marcia Wallace is 60. Magazine publisher Larry Flynt is 60 . Actress Jeannie Berlin is 53 . Pop
·singer-musician Dan Peek is 52 . Rhythm-and-blues musician
Ronald Bell (Kool and the Gang) is 51. Country singer-song·
writer-producer Keith Stegall is 48. Country singer Lyle
. Lovett is 45 . Actress Rachel Ticotin is 44. Rock musician
Eddie . MacDonaldi (The Alarm) is 43. Rock singer Anthony
, Kiedis (Red Hot Chi li Peppers) is 40. Pop si nger-musician
Mags Furuholmen (a-ha) is 40.

SAINTS AND SINNERS

It's almost impossible to resist those church suppers~
The handwritten sign on the church
lawn said, "Pancake Breakfast - 7 to
I 0 a.m. - Tuesday a'nd Thursday."
It was Tuesday. l ·was in luck.
Pancake breakfasts and church suppers are familiar territory for me. I
have attended Wednesday-evening
church suppers at the United
Methodist Church in Ogunquit,
Maine, since the 1970s, when my
family and I first took our summer
vacations at a. picturesque r.esort on
the rocky shores of the Atlantic
Ocean.
Thirty years later, you will still find
me patronizing church suppers wherever I can find them.
The service at a church supper is the
best in the world. The waitresses can't
~ do enough for you, your coffee cup is
never empty, and going back for .seconds is the nicest compliment you can
bestow upon the cook. A church basement parish hall where supper is
being served can be the friendliest
place on God's earth - friendlier
oftentimes, than it is upstairs!
Should you ever find yourself alone
in a strange city, proceed to the nearest church supper. If you are looking
for a place to hve and everybody else
has told you that there isn't a single
room available in the whole city,
chances are the person sittin~ next to
you at a church supper wtll know
somebody who knows where there is
·
a good apartment.
You wtll forget that you were ever
lonely. And of course, you ·' will be
·
well fed.
When I' was a newscaster in Boston,
I used to .end my noon broadcasts by
reading the froduce market report per order o the program director. I
complained about this once to Lew

women, who typically were respon&amp;i- .
ble for all the work that went . in!o
church suppers, work today a11d do~'t
have the time or energy to prepare
dishes for the church community.
Well, then, how about enlisting t~e
men of the church? The men of the
United Methodist Church in Ogunquit
serve up some of the most sumptuous
"All You Can Eat" feasts that I ha','e
ever enjoyed. They do everything 111
those Wednesday-evening church supCOLUMNIST
pers - from peeling the potatoes,
pre£aring the beans and setting t~e
Brewster, the station's farm editor.
· tab e to cookin!l, serving the meals,
·
and then cleanng away the empty
"This is costing me listeners," I plates .and doing the dishes.
. :
Their cooking is superb, but that is
groused. "Nobody wants to hear the
produce report."
not too surprising. Men are often goqd
"I think you're wrong," Lew cooks and ttis a ra_re man w,~o 4oesn,'t
replied. "People like to· hear words brag .about some dtsh that he can whtp
like corn; eggs, green beans and up. In fact, many of us like to cook
peas."
,
because we enjoy the flattery th~t
Lew made a convert out of me. comes from a well-prepared dish. •
Later, when I edited the religion pages
Chances are, cooking your specialiy .
of a daily newspaper in Cleveland, I will get you compliments from yoiir
published mouth-watering menus of guests, blit that is not so if you are on
cleanup detaiL ,One might say the .real
church suppers in the area:
ROAST BEEF DINNER with kitchen heroes are not the cooks, but
mashed potatoes and gravy, green those who willingly help with the
beans, cucumber salad and homemade menial chores around ·the kitchen clearing the table, carrying out the
apple pie wilh Cheddar cheese;
SAUSAGE AND SAUERKRAUT . garbage and sweeging the floor. You
DINNER with parsley potatoes, do that out of love' - love for tlie
creamed corn, rye bread, homemade church in the case of the . Ogunquit
kuchen and peach cobbler;
Methodist Men's Club, and out of
SMORGASBORD - Herring, cold Jove for the cook if you clean up at
salmon, shrimp•, sauerkraut balls, home.
.
Swedish meatballs; baked ham and
In either case, a home-cooked me~!
cold roast beef .. .
can't be beat when you know how
Next in line to ejlting these wonder- . much love went into its preparation.:
ful dishes was reading about them.
But it seems to me that there are fewer
(George R. Plagenz 1s a columni'st
church suppers than there used to be. for . _Newspaper
· Enterpri~e
This may be because many more Assoc1a11on.)

George
Plagenz

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wthe 46-lear-old Fox, com- often fired upon. Still, Fox
mander 0 the carrier's 72 said, many wonder how they
aircraft and the ship's top will perform in war.
Twelve
hours
after
pilot, said the mission is a syeicher left the carrier deck
personal one.
"I've never had closure o the USS ~aratoga, Fox
from his loss," said Fox, his took off in his F/A-18
eyes brimming with tears. "I Hornet. ·He returned a hero
· keep him in my' prayers."
- the first Navy pilot to
c •
President Bush has not shoot down an Iraqi MIG-21 ·
ordered an attack on Jrag, and one of two Navy pilots
ibut the USS Constellation 1s to do so in the Gulf War. But
·preparing for the possibility · questions about Speicher's
"that he · will. The ship fate sapped his happiness.
"Ev!m wben we are superireturned Tuesday from war
games off the coast of or and well-prepared, we
· Southern California.
lost Scott Speicher as a pris: On the flight deck, .$38 oner of war," Fox said.
·million fighters are shot into
As
he
remembers
· the night skies by steam- Speicher, .whose children
. powered catapults that take played in the same Florida
·them to 150 mph in three playground as his own, Fox
seconds. The planes, trailing ts reminded of the Biblical
twin cones of burning red story of Joseph, the forsaken
l fuel, fly in squadrons with slave who rose to power in
; n;unes like Bounty Hunters Egypt and became a force
':and Death Rattlers.
for good.
'· Marines practice martial
"It's the only way I can · A F/A·1S Hornet launches from the flight deck on the USS Constellation as other planes wait for take-off, during training exer·
'arts in a hangar packed with handle that," he sa:id. "God cises In the wateril off of Southern California. The USS Constellation and its battle group will leave San Diego later this week
F-14 Tomcats and F/A-18 will use this for good. I don't for a six-month Persian Gulf deployment. (AP)
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·Hornets. A mural with .an know how. I really don't."

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~· .Man leaves tree-home of 12 .years, Martha Stewart living Omnimedia
t•.:..._ The tree home on San
. Bruno Mountain that attract- ·
' s:d national attention when
· two squatters refu~ed to
leave after 12 years ts now
just a tree again.
, Besh
Serdahely,
58,
Cleared out of'the tree house
Tuesday and park officials
dismantled his meager huts,
two months after San Mateo
County officials stapled a
notice to the 300-year-old
oak saying Serdahely and his
wife, The I rna Caballero,
were no longer were weicome.
; "I spoke to him Sund_ay,
. and he was ackno\vledgmg

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Bv GEORGE GEDDA
shot in Kuwait, a suicide bomber in
"We used to think two oceans could
WASHINGTON - President Bush Indonesia left. almost• 200 dead and pro~ct us from hann," Bush told :a
has been sounding optimistic about how . Chechen rebels seized hundreds in a· polilical rally last Thursday in Alabama.
American will and determination will Moscow theater. In all cases, ai-Qaida "For a long time, our country felt like
prevail in the war on terrorism, yet or affiliates of the terror organization oceans could keep us immune from per- ·
given the headlines over the past month, are believed to have been responsible. ' sonal attack. We learned a horrible lesrosy predicti~ns. of victory seem to
In between the events came word that son."
·
some hard to JUSttfy.
·
Nonh Korea had started a uranium
The Jesson is not exactly new. Since
His ortimism was on display during enrichment program to develop nuclear the advent of ICBMs and long-range
politica campaign stops in five states weapons. Pyongyang may already have bombers during the Cold War, neighover the past few days in the run-up to a a bomb or two stashed away from an boring oceans have been Jess of a secunext week's midterm elections.
earlier plutonium-based program, the rity buffer than before. Now they count
"We're making progress at disman- CIA says.
. for even Jess.
tling the terrorist organization. We've
All this is 'unrelated to what the
Indeed, terrorist groups pose a greater
hauled in a couple of thousand. One by administration believes. is the most threat to the American homeland than'
one we're finiling them and bringing imminent threat of terrorism with the German Luftwaffe did in 1940, a
them to justice," Bush said Monday in weapons of mass destruction threat, time when oceans on either side really
Denver.
Iraq. Bush vows to disann Iraq with or did provide a measure of security.
But the president's confidence is dif- . without U.N. Security Council support.
Not to worry, Bush says. "You ,got to ·
ficult to square with alarmist predicAnd if Bush's we' re-going-to-be~all- know the manhunt is on and it doesn't
lions of the intelligence commumty and right .· optimism
is
contagious, 111atter how long it takes. I. \ike our
a decided uptick in the number ·of ter- Republicans should do well next chances better than theirs," he says of
rorist incidents.
Tuesday.
the terrorists.
"They are coming after us," CIA
He acknowledg(l4 to his Denver audi"We ·g ot a fabulous military. And we
[)irector George Tenet told Congress · ence on Monday that the struggi\J .got a great resolve. I can't imagine what
two weeks ago, contending that a!- against terrorists "is not an easy lift. It's was going through their minds. They
Qaida is now "reconstituted" despite going to take a while·. This isn' t one of must have thought our religion . was
efforts by the United States and others these instant gratificatiOn deals .
materialism. They must have thought
to "root them out"
"The best way to make sure we we were so self-centered, so absorbed
Last Thursday, the FBI warned about defend our freedoms and fulfill our with our ... shallow materialism that all
possible terrorist attacks on the U.S. obligations to our children is to. hunt we would do after September the lith
transportation network, especially rail- these killers down one at a time and was file a lawsuit.
roads. '&gt; The warning was based on bring them to justice, which is exactly
"They just didn't understand. And
debrielings.by al-Qaida prisoners.
what we're going to do."
they're going to pay a.-dear price for
Terrorists have been increasingly
Bush recognizes that events have con- doing what they did to ;o\merica.'' ·
active elsewhere~ Between Oct 6 and spired to make the world smaller, and in
(George Gedda has covered foreign
Oct . 23, a French oil tanker was so doing, have made America more vul- affairs for The Associated Press since
bo~J;~bed in Yemen, two Americans were nerable.
· 1968.)
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~, BRISBANE, Calif. (AP) that this chapter · was end- of. theirs built it and offered

Despite portents,.Bush optimistic Cibout winning war :
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reports 42 percent drop in profits

months after ordered eviction
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WASHINGTON TODAY

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ing," said Bill Iohnston, a
lawyer and family friend
who has been counseling
Serdahely since the ordeal
began.
Caballero left the tree earlier this month and is now
liviJJg at a board and care
facili_ty. Serdah_ely apparen_lly wtn· star wtth fnends" m
San Franctsco, said David
Sch'?"ley,. a naturalist who
befnended the couple.
Serdahely has said he and
Caballero moved into the
tree house after they mel at a
soup
kitche11 . in
San
F~ancisco ~nd got married at
Ctty Hall m 1990. A fnend

it ·!o them after he got married and left. ,.
San ~eo County officials - who knew about the
couple but didn't realize they
were on county land until
recently - issued an eviction notice in August.
The couple lived in the
tree for a dozen years, tending to the area and educating
school children who took
field trips to see a different
way of life. But county officials ordered them to leave
because they said there was
no clean drinking water and
hurnan waste was being handled improperly.
·

NEW YORK (AP) - Martha Stewart
Living Omnimedia, struggling with an
insider trading scandal that has embroiled
its chief executive officer, reported a 42
percent drop in earnings in the third quarter. ·
The results, announced Thursday, met
Wall Street's reduced expectations. The
company warned that ·fourth-quarter earnings would fall far short of analysts'
expectations ..
Stewart's multimedia empire, which
markets magazines, books and merchandise under the Martha Stewart brand,
reported a profit of $2.76 million, or 6
cents per share , (or the three months that
ended Sept. 30. That compares with $4 .77
million, or 10 cents per share, in the same
period a year ago.
.
The company said it expects fourth-

quarter earnings to be approximat~ly 3
cents per share. Analysts polled by
Thomson First Call expected 10 cents per
share.
Martha Stewart Living's . ~tock has
plunged more than .60 percent since early
June when news broke that Stewart's
name was being linked to an insider trad·
ing scandal. In morning trading Thursday,
the shares fell an additional 62 cents, or
7:3 percent. to $7.84, a drop of 7.3 percent, on the New York Stock Exchange.
Federal investigators are probing
whether Stewart .had insider knowledge
when she sold her shares of ImCione
Systems on Dec. 27, the day before the
Food and Drug Administration announced
it would deny the biotech company ' s
application to market a promising cancer
drug.
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PROBATE/JUVENILE JUDGE
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"For many years, John Lentes· has been an advocate for
seniors and the issues they face on a daily basis. As my friend,
I believe John Lentes will continue to go the extr;. mile to be a
strong voice for the aging residents of Meigs County.
On Novembe~ 5th, I urge you to vote Jor John Lentes, the best
choice for Juvenile/Probate Judge."
1
.. ;~ .. ~Collgressman Ted Strickland

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. A FULL TIME JUDGE WITH NEW IDEAS AND OLD TIME VALUES
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Paid for by the committee to elect Lentes.

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Page AS • The Dally Sentinel

Ch....to. of J""' Christ Apoololk
VanZandt and Wud Rd.

I

PuiOr. pJ . &lt;llapman

Wonhi.p · 9:30a.m.
Sll!!day Scllool - 10:30 a.m.
F"rnt Slllldlly ~ Montb • 7:00p.m. ICIVice

SunOay School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II un.
Wednesday Servicn - 7 P- ~ -

Sun. Mass - 9:30a.m.

Pastor: hmes Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Dailey M!W - 8:30a.m.

Eveninz- 7:30p.m.

( 'hurl'h ol ( hri,l

Ri"er Valley

Ht.lodl. Grave Cli.rU:Iiul Ch•rdl
Minister: l,.arty Brown

AposiO\iC Worship Center
K73 S. 3rd Av~ .• Middleport
Kevin Kooklc , Pasl(W
Sllhda)o. 10 a.m. and 6:00p.m.
Wcdntsday, 7 ~30. p.m.: Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

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Cnlnl Ch!oler

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J·. pi'l'OJI&lt;il

\~~l·mhl ,\

Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

of' ( ,od

Po~roy

Ba pi i~l

Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pll!itor-Jetlrey Wallace
I st and 3rd Sunday

Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor Jou Bn.ckert.
East Main Sl.
Sunday School · 1.,1 :]0 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Burwallow Rid&amp;t Churtb of Christ
Pastor: Bruce Terry
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
~ednesday Services. 6:30 p.m.

tlrst Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike

Zioo Churt• ol Christ
Pomeroy, Harri sonviUe Rd.. (RL 143)
. Pa.stor. Roger Wal800
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Plfilor: E. LamarO' Bryant

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WOOihip · 8:15a.m.. Q:45 am &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00 p.m.
First Baptisl Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middlepon
Sunday S(,;hool • 9: IS a.m
Wonhip · 10: 15 a m., 7:{X) p.m.
Wednesday Srn•ice- 7:00p.m.

Tuppen; Plain Churtb of Christ

lns1fUrilental
Worship Service· 9·a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday Scllool - 10:15 a.m.
Youth-5:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesd'!y 1 pm

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Pasror: Rick Rule
Sunday Scho91- 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
WedneSday St:rvir.:es . 7:00 p.m.
Sllnr Hun Haptist
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School· IOa.m.
Worship · l )a.m.. 7:00 p.m.
WednesdAy Services- 7:00 p.m.'
Mt Union Baptist
Pastor : David WiseJilan
Sunday SchOOI-9:45 a.m. ·
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Wednc~day Scn·ices- 6:3dp.m.

Btthle•rm Bapdst Churcll
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mece.a
Sunday Sr.:hool - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship · I0:30 a.m.
Wednesda)' Bible Study - ~:00 p.m.

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

Old.Btlhtl Flft WIU Bapllsc Chlll&lt;h
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School- 10 a.m. .
Evening. 7:00 p,m.
Thursday Services. 7:00

LanpYIUe Cbristlan Church
Pastor: Roben Musser
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednt:!lday Service 7:30p.m.

Hllhlde Baptid Churth
St. Rt. 14] just off Rt. 1
Plstor: Rev. James R. Acree. Sr.
·Sunday Unified Service
Worship . 10:30 a.m. , 6 p.m.
Wef.!rtCsday Services -7 p.m.

Pinr Grove Bible Holilldl Cburcb
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pasror: Rev. O 'DrU Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.• 7:30 p.m.·
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

WontUp - IOa.m.

Viclor')· Baptist Independent
525 N'. 2nd St. Middlcpon .
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship · Hla.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7

p:m.

Churth of Christ
lm erse(.:tion 7 110d 124 W
Evangdist: Dennis Sargem
Sunday Dible Study · 9 :30 •.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m: and 6:30p.m.
Wedne ~ay Hible Study· .7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St .. Maso n
Sunday Sr.:hool · \0 a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv _i c~s - 1 p.m. ,
Foresl Run Baptist
Pastor : ~ ri lls Hurt
Sunda)' School · I0 a.m.
Worship - ! I a.m.

( ' hri~lian l niou
Hartford Church ol Christ In
Chrislian Union
Hartford. W.Va.
Pastor: David Greer
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1:~ p.m.

ML Morh1h Baptisl
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middh:port
Pastor: Rev. Gilhcrt Craig. Jr.
Sunda y School · 9:30a.m
Worship . I0:45a.m.

Anrlquily Baptist
Sunda y School · 9:30 a.m.
Wu~h ip . 10:45 a.m .
Sunda y E\·eni ng . 6:00p.m.
·Pa stor: Mark McComas

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy
992-3785

·J

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.

I

INSURANCE

Full line of
Insurance
· Products+
·
Financial
ENCIES Inc·. Services

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
.~ Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

meafotb
l\eal lf~tate
216 E. Second Pom~roy
74Q-992-3325 .
Marketing Property
.Since. 1971

9u.t~ef.a.t ~(J.~N-e
174 Layne Street
New Haven , WV 25265
•~•lm•ss

H. Anderson

Mo....in,Star

\ll'llwdi~l

l 'nill·d

Gnhun United Methodlst
Worihip · 9:30 a.m.'( lst &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p. m.

ML Olive Unikd Mdhodht
\ Off 124 behind Wilkesville_
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires •

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo~hip . 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Thursday ServiCes- 7 p.m.

Meigs Coopend"e Parish
Northe!t!it Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beanie .
Sunday Sahool.· 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Chester
Pw.10r: Jane Beanie

WOC!ihip . 9 a.m.
SWiday School - 10 11.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

Main &amp; Fifth SL
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worehip · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Sefvices • 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9'a.m:
Worship - 10 a.m: ·
Wednesday Services - tOa.m ;

ReedsviUe Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School· 9:30 a'.m.
Wors!Jip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

.._a..,.._
MIIIHIII

• Jlllttt

INSURANCE
SERVICES.
214 E. Main

992-5130
Pomeroy
"Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your
good works and glorify your
Father in Heaven."

M,althew

(
(

'

Ingel's Carpet
169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-7028

Edtn United Breth~n In Christ

Slate Route 124, Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Bill Duty
Sunday School· II a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sen&gt;ices - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service . 7:00p.m.

FuU Gospel LlahtboUie
33045 Hiland Road, POmeroy
Pas\or: Roy Hunter
tSunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday - 7:30p.m. ··

South Bethel Community Church
Silver Ridge
Bible Study 9 a.m. Sunday
Car~ lnterdenomlutlonal Church
King sbury Road .
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday Scl\ool - 9:30a. m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.

Evening Service 6 p.m.

Freedom Gospel 'Mission .
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Rev. Roger Willford

P~or:

"Fealurtngh'J:,~~ky Fried

w. Main St., Pomeroy
992-5432
FLOWER
106 BU1TERNUT AVE.

POM(ROY,OH 992-6454
"Flowers for all occasions'
6naalrrr'•
:tlrr &amp;. 6afetp

....•.•.,
'I'OIL&amp;EA

7-3

3-2

3-7
3-6

1-3
1-4

1-9

·OVC
a&amp;

All

5-0

7-3
6-4
5-5
3-7
3-7
3-7

3-2
River Valley
3-2
Fairland
2-3
Soulh Point
2-3
Coal GIOII9
0.5
• wins league championship

Frldlly'a Game

chesapiaka a1 Steulienvile c.c..

f

\

·SEOAL
Illm
SEQ
Gallia Academy" · 5-1
Marietta'

5-1

logan
Alhens

4-2

Point Pleasant

2-4
2-4

3-3

All
8-2
8-2

6-4
6-4
4-5.

Jackson
4-6
WatTell ·
0-6 ().1 0
; share league championship
Frldlly'a Game
Marietta at Easl Lillerpool
.
Saluldly'a Game
Girdeville at Galla Academy

Non-league
l'lllm

All

Wahama

8-0

Ironton

Soulh GaUia

7·2
8-2
3-7
3-7

Hannan

1-8

Symmes Valley
Oak Hill

: Frldlly'a GlmM
Wirt County at Wahama .
Gauley Bridge al Hannan
Ironton al Fairllekl Union

Symmes Valley at Newark Calh.

No. 1·Reclmen
still unbeaten
WILDER, Ky. .- I Rio
Grande continued to roll with
a 3- I win over Union College
in soccer action at the Town
\llld Country Sports Complex
on Wednesday afternoon..
Rio Grande
(15-0-1)
played well in the regular
season finale. Sophomore
'Simon Carey notched his
1Oth goal of the season to get
the scoring started · for the
Redmen in the 3rd minute.
Jon Leonard was credited
with an assi'st on the play.
: Michael Swarbrick upped
lhe lead to 2-0 with his first
marker of the season in the
12th minute. The Redmen
karried the 2-0 lead to half-

time.

ICn,w's Family Restaurant

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

Brogan-Warner

.

In Christ Church
TeJUl8 Community 36411 Wickham Rd
Pastor: Robert S~ders
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m·.

ML OU\'e Communily Churtb
Pa.cnor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Evening- 1 p.m.
Wedneday Service' · 7 p.m.

Middleport Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunlllay School-9:30a.m.
Worihip ·- !0:30a.m., 6:30p.m._
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m. ·
Pastor: Allen Midcap

3.

Mt. Hermon Unlttcl Brethren

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wotship- 10:45 K".m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.

To,.b Cburcll
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. ,

.

l u ill'd Brl'lhn·n

Long Bouom

Orand Street
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday ServiW- 8 p.m.

Pastor Mlkc Adkins
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
. Worsh.ip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.

..
----·· ....

W.hi

Folth Gospel Chu1&lt;b

HocldDMporl Chun:b

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Mauhew

Sevea'-"·lhy AdwentiJt
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pa5tor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School •· 2 p.m.

Mone Chapel Churth
Sunday sc-hOOl · ·10 a.m.
Worship · II a.rl1.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Lena Bottom
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

tz

St'll'lllh - lhl\ \d~t · nli ' l

Co-.munlty c•urch
Sunday ~ool - 9:30.a.m.
. Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Syntue Cburcll of tbe Nazareae

j'tqer j'aneral.,omt

Pastor: Rober Crow.
Worthip . 10 ~. m.

Dy~lle

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship · 9:30 11. m.
Sunday School - I0:30 a.m.

............. zn

MlddltJN&gt;rl I'Nbytertu

Haztl Community Cburd
Off Rt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Halt
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WurShip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Coolville Church

&amp; Second SL, Pomeroy

Syracuae ~issloa

14lfarld&amp;cman Sf. S)'lacuse
Rev. Mike Thompson.Pa&amp;tor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
EveninJ! ~ 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 P·!l'·

CoolvUie United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline' .

St Pllul Lutheran Church
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Worship - II a.m. . _

.&gt;l'&gt;·

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday S(;hool · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m .
Wednesday 7 p.m,

W.Va.

HorrtooaviUe I'Nbylertu Chu...,
Paslor:· Robert Crow
Worship • 9 a.m.

Thursday Service· 7 p.m.

Racine

Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Worship-· 11 a.m.

Co~ner Sycamore

FoJIII\tollty l'lheraaclt: Chuldl
Bailey Run Road
Pastor. Rev. Emmett RawSQil
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.

Putor: Brian Haitneu
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Won.hip- 9 a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Our Sariour Lutheran Chun:h
Walnul and Henry Sts., Ravenfiwood, •

Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship - t I a.m. ,

4-1

Federal Hocking
Easlem

Rock Hill

'-!--

St. Rt. 124, R~ine
Pastor: William Hoback

Sy....,.. Flnt Unltodl'roobytertaa

7-3

lritmle

""-·-·"·'

PonlmlllaiA.utmbly

Sund,lly School - 10 a.m .
Evening - 7 p.m.
We&lt;l.riesday Services- 7 p.m.

5-0

· ~~

l'l'llll'l'tl'&gt;lal

Mlddltport CommuiUty Church
515 Pearl St.. MiddJepon
Paswr: Sam Anderson
Sunday SChool tO a.m.
Evening · 7:30 p,m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Putor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School · II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Worship - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.

ReedniUe . ·

Mill Work
Cabinet Making

Bible Study .Wed. 7:00p.m.

St John Lutheran. Cbui-cb ·
Pine Grove

Sacm:l Heart Ca tholic Chun:h

K&amp; C ·JEWELERS

Wo!Uip- l0:4S a.m.

I ullll'r ;Jil

· Syracust First Church or Ged
·Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship-- 10 a.m.
Evening Services-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.- m.

( 'allwlk

Pastot: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

All

:ran

.

HarrtionviUe Community Cburt:h
Pastor: Theron Durham
SWl~Y · 9:30a.m. and .7 p.m.
Wednesday. 7 p.m.

;r.n

3-7

.
Saturday'a Game
Waterford at Danville

9365 Hooper Road, Athens
Pastor: Lonnie Coats
Sunday Worship 10:30 am
Wcdnc5da 7

New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margmt J. Robinson
· Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
· Sunday, 2:30 p,m.

4-6

M

Meigs Counly's Oldesl Florist
352 East

Main

Pomeroy, Oh

•w u1 und yor.n ffl01.1&amp;htt •lth lf*!lel eert•
740-1192·2644

740-992-6298

MY trace Is

for thee: for my
strenath Is made
Per~ect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9

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

992-6376

: Marc Berry closed out the
scoring for Rio Grande when
he found the back of the net
for the first time in his college
career.
Kevin
McCloskey tallied the assist
on the goal.
Rio Grande had · a fourth
~oal denied on a disputed offsides call.
The Redmen shutout was
spoiled in the game's waning
moments wheri the Bulldogs
scored their lone goal with II
seconds remaining. .
· Rio Grande out shol Union
i 4-9, including9-4 in shots on ·
goal. The tandem of Oliver
Sanders and Tristan Charles
combined for five saves.
Union goalkeeper Rafael f:orti
stopped eight Redmen shots.
Sanders was forced . to
leave the game for the
Redmen, in the 75th ininute,
with a knee injury. The status .,
of the injury is unknown.
. Rio Grande now prepares 1
(or the NAIA Region IX
Tournament, Nov. 9. They
will host either Walsh or St.
Vincent at Evan Davis Field
at I p.m.
I ·-

·•.

ingto
work a-deal

2-8

Meigs
1-4
Alexander
().5
Hoc:ldng Dlvl8lon

Miller

Restoration Christian Fellowsllip

The BeUevrn• Fellowship Mlalstry

Racine, Ohio

,.

RuUaad Churth of God
Paslo r: Ro n Heath
Sunday Worship · 10 8. m .• 6 p.m.
Weil'nesday Services· 7 p.m. ·

David W. McClain
Sunday School I0 amMorning won;hip II am Evening- 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

BttliiDy

· Cannei..Sutton
&amp; Bashan Rds.

Sacrament Service 9-10: I.S a.m.

Evening · 6 p.m.
'
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

R:l\leM\Io"OOd, WV

Worship . 9 Lm.

Homemaking meetinj, ht Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:45a.m.

Pa ~ t or:

s....mn.

Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Tribe.. "dlome

All
8-2
8-2
5-5

' SOuthern
().4
().9
: wins division championship

Hobson Chrtsdaa f•lloW!Idp Churcll
Pslor: Herschel White
Sunday School- I 0 am
Sunday Otun:h service • 6:30 pm
Wednesday 1 pm

Foldo FuU ~ Churcll
·
Loog Bottom
Pastor. Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship. 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 1 p..m.
Friday. fellowship service 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m. ~
Wednesday Services - 10 a. m.

noon

Mt. Moriab Churdl of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
ra~ tor: James Satterfield

S«ond Baptist Chun:h

Sunday School· 10:15 a.m. ,
, Worship- ·9:t.S a.m.
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm

The Church of Jesus
Chrbt of Latter-Day Sainb
St. Rt 160, 446--6247 or446- 7486
Sunday School I 0:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood li :O.S-12:00

( 'hurrh ol' Cod

Rutland Frtt WiD Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev·. Paul Tay lor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - ip.m.
Wedneslla)' Sen·ic eS- 7 p.m.

Slleta Ceoter
Pastor: WiUiam K. Marshall

l.atll'J'- Da\ Saiuh

..
•

•

Salem Community Cburdl
Lieving Road, West Coluinbia, W.Va.
, Pastor. Clyde Ferrell
Sunday School 9:30 am
Sunday e:vening service 6 pm
Wednesday service 7 pm

923 S.'Third St., Middleport
Pastor Teresa Davis ·
SuOOay service. 10 a.m .
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

3-2
2-3

Wale!fonj'

. .
RL338. Anllqutty
Paslor: Jesse Morris
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.

. Abundant Gnae R.F. I.

Cann~l

Reedsville Church or Christ
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a. m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.
Dexter Churth of Christ
Pa~ lor: Bill Eshelman
Sunday school 9:]0 a.m.
Nonnan Will , superintendent
Sunday won.h ip - 10:30 a.m. •.

Rutbad

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m .
lluinday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 am.
Worship c 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

.,

. '
Full Goopd Cbun:b of the I.J..._ Sovlor

603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service lime: Sunday 10:30 a. m.
Wednesday 7 pm

· You~ Fellowship, Sunday · 6 p.m.

Laurel Cliff Fm Mttbodbt Churdl
Rev. L.es Strand! and Myra L. Strandt

•.

IUJoidotl ur, Clturdl

"fuii-Gospci,Chureh"
Paston John &amp;. Patty Wade

4-1

Nelsonvil~'\trt

.,

IIA&lt;kSprinp .
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:15 LID.

s.o

Vinton CQunty

Paslor: Wayne R. Jewell
"
Sunday Services • I0:00a.m. &amp;. 7:00p.m,.
Thumday • 7:00 p.m.
:

500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport
Pastor: Mike foreman
Pastor: Emerirus Lawrence foceman
Worship-- I0:00 am
~ednc!iday Services • 1 p.m.

M

Wellston'
. Belpre

Sunday Worship: lOam
Cllfton 'hbel"ftade Gurtb
Evenin"g '9/orship: 6 pm
•
'
C lifton. W.Va.
Youth group 6 pm
Sunday School - I 0 a. m.
Wednesday: Power in Prayer
Worship · 7 p.m.
and Bible Study - 1 pm
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
AsbS&lt;rttiChurth
Ash SL, Middlepon- Pas1or, Glenn Rowe
•
.
New Lite Vidorr Center
Sunday Scbool • 10:00 a.m.
3773 Geo'lies Creek Road. Gallipolis, 01(
Sunday Se-rvice · 7:00p.m.
Pastor: Bill Staten
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.
Sunday.Servicefi- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. ~
Wednesday • 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 1 p . m . ~
Appt Ufe Center ·

Pastor: Dcwayne Shltler

Bnldlord Chun:h of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Mini ster: Bill Amberger ·
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 il.m., 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

HickOI'} HUJs Chun:h or Christ
. Evangdisc Mike Moore

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

TV.C
T11m

SthenriUe Commu.aky- Claurd

Indians Notebook

Ohio Dlvlllon

Cah·•ry Bible Churth
Pomeroy,Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rt:v. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Senk:e · 7:JO.p.m.

Tuppers Plains Onlde School
Pastor: Rob Suber
AJsistarJI Pastor: ~n Oavis

HoliMN Church.
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor. Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday wor&amp;hip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetiog· 7 p.m.

Prep Fooiball

Faitll F.uomJp c...,....rorCitrist
Patitoc Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday,? p.m.

• Ieibei Wonltlp Center

.........,

Rev. Mark Micllael
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOI'lihip · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Th ~ rsday B ible _ S~y and Youth - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip . I0:30 a. m.• 7 p.m.

Commualty of Cbrtst
Portland-Racine Rd .
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday-School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · to:JO·a.m.
wcdnesciay Services . 7:00p.m.

l'alrtCbapol
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Hysell Run Holhess Churtb

RUdand Chun:b or Cbrisl

PaSIOi: Bob RobiMoo
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Won.hip - 9.a.m.

~'war. Bob Robinson
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churth
75 Pearl sT., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship· 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Bntdbury c•u"". of Christ
Ministe"r: Tom Ru11yon
39558 Bradbury Road, MiddJc-pun
Sunday School - 9:-30a.m.
Wnrship · I0:30 a.m.

( lthn ( 'hurr hl''

.Miaenvlllo

Re~tofSbaro•

Worship • 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday B~k: Study · 7:00p.m.

. s..,...,

Hootll (Middleport)
Paslor: Rob Brower
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - II :00 a.m.

Colvory PIJ&amp;rin! Cbapol
Harrisonville Road
Pastor. Charles McKcnl.ic:
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m.. 1':00 p.m.Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Friday, Nove111ber I, 2001

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

William JUU

Forest Rull

Page 81

Foimew Bible a. ....
Lecut. W.Va. RL I
Puwr: Brian May

Sunday Scllool - 10:00 a..m.
Morning WOI'Sbip · 10:4.5 a.m.
S.JVice - 6:30p.m.

Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

Danville Hoi- Ch•rdl
31057 Slate Rou~ 325. LanpvUe
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.
Wednesday prayer servil--e· 1 p.m.

PasifJr. Rev. PhiUip Riclcllour
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - IO:JO a.m.

PordaDd First Cburdl of the Namrnt
Pas~

Comm•Dity Oaurdl
Pastor: SieVe Tomek
Main Strm. Rutland
Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Scrvicc-7 p.m.

Keno Cbul't'b of Quill
Worship - 9:30 a.m.

Eo........

Pastor: Ktilh Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

· College football, Page 82
NFL bec:omlng a video game, Page 83
.Scoreboard, Page B4
NBA: Wizards beat Celtlca, Page 85

w..,..

Wloht'• Qapol
Coolville Ro.d

W~y~·Jp~

SI.IOday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30a.m.,6:30p.m .
Wednesday Senlices.- 1 p.m.

l'llltwoodo

II ol i Ill' '~

Pastor. AI Hazuoo
Youth Minis!«. Bill Fruier
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Woi-shir:- 8:15. 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
W«&lt;nesday ServK:es- 1 p.m.

S70Grant St. , Middleport
Pastor: Rev. David Bryan
Su!llb.y sdwul · 9:30a.m.
Worship . II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\·icc · 1 p:m.
Rutland Finl Baptist Churdl
Sunday School - 9:30 ~ . m .
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

.]

Wntskle Church of O.ril•

Mlcldleport Cbu... of Cbrist
Sili .and Main

Hope Bapllsc Chu"b (Soutbeno}

Radne Fii'SI Baptist

Sun4ay School and
Holy Eucharist J I:00 a.m.

332260rild«n'li Home Rd.
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Worship . IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Liberty A"""'bly of God
P.O. Bo~ 467. Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: N~i l Tennant
Sunday Services· 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

I

G!'l!l'O Episcopal Cluudt
316 E. Main St .• Pomeroy
Rev. J ~ Bernacki. Rev. Katharin Fostet

2 12 W. Main St.
Minister: Anthony Morrj~
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

...

R•tlud (luud ol tlw: N:uare.e
Pastor: ReY. Samuel W. Buye

Worship . ll a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:30p.m.

Pomtroy Church ol Chrkt

· Emnaanud Apos&amp;otic Tabtnaadt IDe.
Loop Rd off New Uma Rd. Rutland
Sen:ices: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.
Thun. 7:00p.m.
Pastor Many R, Hutton

N

Wonbip- 1 p.m.

Wednesday Sttvicea • 7 p.m.

A&gt;bwy (S)'11!Cuse}
Putor. Bob Robimon
Sunday Sd)OOI - 9:4.5 un..

Bible'Study - 7 p.m,

Chid., u.e

_,Rev. -&lt;lrlle
Sunday Sdmoi - 9:30 LDL
Won.h:ip. II •.m., 6 p.m.

'!locsdayServica - 7:30p.m.

Worship 10:~ a.m.
Sunday School 9: 15 a.m.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Clw:*r

~ -I Oa.m.

Trilllty Cloud!
Second .t Ll'JIII, Pt&gt;mcroy
Pastor. Rev. Jack Noble

Worship - 9:30a.m.

Sl-"""'

1'llppenPastor: Jane Bean:ie
SUDday School · 9 &amp;.Ill.

Po.e:roy CHrdlel lk Nen tW
Pulor: Jan Lavender
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Friday, Nove~1.2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992:5898
Pastor. Rev. Wal~ E. Heinz
Sat. t:on. 4:45-5: 1.5p.m.: Mass-5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m..

CLEVELAND (AP)- Jim
Thome took the Cleveland·
Indians' first pitch on
Thursday, meeting with club
official s who made a presen- :
talion lo the free agent first
basenian.
Thome, the Indians' career
home run leader, arrived at
Jacobs Field around I p.m. , ·
. accompanied by his wife ,
Andrea , and · agenl, Pal
Rooney.
The group left about two
hours later. Thome depaned
withoul saying a word while
waving from his SUV 10
reporters and photogrdphers.
''They were very cordial,"
Rooney said. "They presented
us with differenl things ancillary lo the contract. It went
well, and we're gong to talk
Thome
to them at some point in .lhe
free-agency process."
and Rooney to take offers
Thome is the mosl coveled from other teams before
slugger in lhis winter's free approaching the Indians with ·
agent market, and the lnd•ans a counterproposal .
hoped !heir . initial package
One of those teams will
would be enough to re-sign likely be the Philadelphia
the 32-year-old.
Phillies. Rooney confirmed
Indians owner L;rrry Dolan, lhat the Phillies have contactgeneral
manager Mark ed Thome , who has spent his
Shapiro, and vice presidents entire 10-year career with
Paul · Dolan and Denms Cleveland, and the Phillies
Ohio State coach Ji·m Tressel talks with quarterback Craig Krenzel (16) during the second
Lehman
all panicipaled in the plan to have him visit the cone
quarter of their 1S.7 victory over Penn State last Saturday in Columbus. Krenzel leads the
presentation as well as vari- strucliori site of their new
Buckeyes against Minnesota this week as OSU continues its quest for the Big Ten title. (AP)
ous members of the club's ballpark next week.
Thome, who can't talk
front office.
Shapiro refused to talk money with teams other than
about the team's offer what the Indians until Nov. 13, is
took place &lt;Juring the first of comin~ off a career season.
many potential meetings in He h11 a club record 52
the negotiations .
homers with 118 RBis despite
"I'm not going lo violate the lack of protection in
ihe process . by making. an~ Cleveland's lineup.
He batted .304, scored 101
' · comments on our meetmg,
Shapiro said. "ll's our feeling runs and led the AL in walks
that any comment could (122) and slugging percentpotentially jeopurdize the age (.677). He has hit at least
negolialions, and we don 'I 30 homers in each of the past
want IO take any chances wilh seven seasons and had I00 or
more RB!s in six of the past
Jim Thome."
Cleveland was expected to seven.
COLUMBUS (AP) -As
end.up missing ou1 on a shot
offer a four- to six-year deal
the number of games melt
al the conference title . Iowa
AROUND THE MAJORS
for Thome, which could
away, the pressure mounts
(8- I, 5-0) leads the way
Fonner two-time AL MVP
include two option years that
for · most colle!\e football
heading inlo ils game wilh
cou.ld become guaranleed Frank Thomas exercised his
teams. No. 6 Oh10 State and
Wisconsin on Saturday.
based on his performance. righl to leave the Chicago
No. 18 Minne'sota are prime
"Oclober is for pre- . Shapiro has . said the · club White Sox.
examples. · ·
lenders. November is for · would be creative wilh its Thomas was among· II
There is no wiggle room
contenders,"' Ohio Stale
· proposal and hinted that il players who filed for free
if either team wams to keep
coach Jim Tressel said,
may 'COntain some incentives agency Thursday, raising the
alive its championship
quoting former Ohio State
based on p~ rformance and lotal to ·130 among the
inlo
hopes
heading
head coach Earle Bruce . · attendance.
approximately 180 who are
Saturday's showdown at
"That's the trulh. We underShapiro said earlier lhis
Ohio Stadium.
stand in November, thai's
Please see lbome, B:S
week thai he expects Thome
"Yoil don't wan1 to be
when lhe deci sions · are
walking
around
on play not to lose, you're made."
eggshells," Ohio State tight going to get beat."
Minnesota leads the Big
However, both sides Ten in rushing with almost
end Ben Hartsock said.
"You've got to take a mind- know what's riding on the 300 yards a game on the
set that this is just another outcome.
ground. Terry Jackson and
Mirinesola (7~ I, 3- 1) will Thomas Tapeh have each
game . .We can'.t allow ourselves to think, 'Oh, we're be etfectively el iminated topped I 00 yards ru shing .in
walking a tightrope and from lhe Big Ten race wilh the lasl three Gophers
each week we get a victory anolher loss. Ohio State (9- games.
.
that tightrope gels a little bit 0, 4-0) would certai nly drop
In his first season as a
oul of the nalional champismaller.'
Please see OSU, BS
"It's when you go out and onship picture and could

Gophen.. Bu~keyf!s

fighting to stay
in title contention·

NFL

·committee forms.to
increase minority.
hiring around league

MAC Football

Roethlisber er: More
•
1garm
than just
a
.
.
.

BY TIM PUET
Associated Press

There's more to Ben
Roethlisberger than just an
arm that doesn 't seem to get
lired.
- ., ·
The Miami of · Ohio
sophomore also has shown
this year that he possesse~ a
talented toe.
Qhio coach Brian Knorr
said Roethlisberger's punting was one more thing to
worry about as the Bobcats
prepare to return after a
wf ek off and play the
RedHawks on Saturday in
Oxford in a Mid-American
Conference game. ·

.

"Usually on Monday
mornings, I'm hearing that
Roelhlisberger is the conference offensive player of
the week," Knorr said.
"Now I'm hearing that he 's
special learns player of the
week. He can do it all."
Indeed, Roethlisberger
was selected as the week's
top MAC East Division
special teams player for his
punting in the RedHawks'
27- 13 victory last Saturday
over Toledo.
He punled three timc;s for
Miami in that game and
.averaged 43 yards per kick,
with regular punter Mike
Wafzig kicking lwice.

Roelhlisllerger' s
punts
pinned Toledo al its 9-, 4and 3-yard lines.
For
the
season,
Roelhl isberger is slightly
outkicking Wafzig, averaging 42.8 yards in nine punts
10 Wafzig's 41 yards in 30
attempls . Roethlisberger
also is 2. 11-of-323 for 2.472
passing ' yards and has
lhrown for 16 touchdowns.
His : punling average
would rank first in the
MAC and 15th in the nation
if he 1 had the · necessary
number of punls.
Despile the stati stics,
Miami
coach
Terry
Please see MAC, as

NEW YORK. (AP)
Pittsburgh Steelers owner
ban Rooney will head a new
committee designed to ensure
thai more blacks are interviewed and hired for NFL
coaching and front-office
positions.
"I though! over a way to
solve the problem , and I came
up wilh this," said commissioner J&gt;aul Tagliabue, who
has been searching for new
ways lo diversify•the league.
Two-thirds of players are
black, bul !hose in managemen! posilions are overwhelmingly white. ·
The NFL has been trying
for years to increase minority
presence at its· highest levels.
II has intensified ils atlack on
the problem since advocates
called a news conference last
month to announce they
might sue if the league didn 't
hire more black coaches.
' Rooney has long been tlle
owner that Tagliabue - and
Pete Rozelle .before him selied on 10 solve problems.

He said the group would meet
soon, so it can come up with
proposals in time for the hiring season that begins in
January.
"We want.to do what is the
righl thing," Rooney said.
"And the right thing is to get
more minorilies involved."
Other members of lhe commiltee .will include owners
Arthur Blank of Atlanta,
Jeffery Lurie of Philadelphia,
Pat Bowlen of Denver and
Stan Kroenke, a pan-owner
of the St. Loui s Rams.
The club execulives in the
group will include two of the
league's
highest-ranking
black executives: Ozzie
Newsome, the vice presidenl
for foolball operations of the
Ballimore Ravens and Ray
Anderson, chief administralive officer of the FalCons.
The others include Bill
Polian, presidenl of the Colts;
Rich McKay, general manager of the Buccaneers; and
Terry Bradway,, general manager of the New York Jets.

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. Friday, November 1, 2002

Friday, November 1, 2002

www.myd~ilysentlnel . com

Page 8 2 • The Dally . Sentinel

•

Oklahoma
hopes to .end
losing skid
to Colorado
8Y HAL BocK
Associated

Press

The last time Oklahoma
. beat Colorado, ·nobody had
of
the · Bowl
heard
Championship Series. Games
ended in ties, and computer
. rankings were a thing of the
future. College football was
simpler in 1988.
Smce then; the Buffalos are
8-0-1 against the Sooners in a
series that resumes Saturday
when the Big 12 division
· leaders meet in Norman.
Oklahoma isn't concerned
about all the losses to
Colorado, because they were
accumulated against previous
Sooner teatns.
"Our history there for a peri·
od of time wasn't real strong
against anybody," coach Bob
Stoops said, putting it mildly.
"I thtnk it's fair to assume that
we're a little bit different-team
right now in the last couple of
years than we were through

I
'
'I'

osu

from Page Bl
starter, Jackson is the top
rusher in the conference with
171 yards a game- over 50
yards more per league game
than second-place Antoineo
Harris of Illinois (118.5).
.Tapeh is fifth in the Big Ten
in . rushing at 115 yards per
game.
"I don't know if we're a
great rushing team, but I'm
very pleased with the way
we've beqn rushing the football," Minnesota coach Glen
·Mason sajd.
Mason, . a former Ohio
State player and assistant
under Woody Hayes, also
served under Bruce in the
early 1980s on the same staff
with Tressel. They were the
two finalists for the job when
Tressel was hired two. years
ago.
The last time Mason
brought a team to Columbus,
the Buckeyes were 5-0 and
ranked No. 5 early in the
2000 season. The Gophers

Oklahoma defenders Derrick Strait (2) and Brandon Everage (7) pressure Iowa State quar·
terback Seneca Wallace (lS) two weeks ago during the second half of a Big 12 Conference
·
·
game in Norman, Okla. (AP)
that time."
Two years after.winning the
national championship; the
Sooners (7 ~) are ranked No.
2 in the Associated Press poll
and are No. 1 in the BCS
standings. Against Colorado,
their main challen~e figures
to come from Chris ijrown,
the nation's .leading rusher,
who is averaging 163 yards a
game and has he! ped the
Buffs to five straight wins

after a 1-2 start.
Colorado coach Gary
Barnett believes Oklahoma
raises its game based on the
teams it plays.
"The better the teams they
play, the better they play," he
said. "They are a team that .
has the mind of a compe~itor.
We are gomg to play arguably
the best defense m college
football, and arlluably the
fastest defense m college

pulled off a stunning 29·17
upset.
That victory was considered an open audition in front
of 100,000 at Ohio Stadium
for the Ohio State job, which
was vacated later that season
when John Cooper was fired.
Tressel . moved in. from
Youngstown State, though,
· and Mason returned to the
Twin Cities to mend fences.
Ohio State's players sti'll
vividly recall the sting of that .
defeat, although quarterback
Craig Krenzel downplays lts
importance two years later.
"That's the kind-of stuff that's
irrelevant right now," he said
· Ohio State win be close to
full strength. Freshman sensation Maurice Claret! should
be back at tailback after miss·
ing all but six plays of
Saturday's win over Penn
State because of a nerve
.injury in his left shoulder.
Clarett said earlier this
w~k that he's ~etting hate
rruul - from Ohto State fans
- in the wake of a magazine
article in which he said he
would consider jumping to
the pros early..
Claret! needs just 108 rush·

ing yards to break Robert
Smith's freshman record at
Ohio State of 1,126 yards.
Cie Grant, who rrussed -the
last game with an ankle
sprain, is expected back for
the Buckeyesc
The Gophers had last week
off to heal ' and hone their
game for the Buckeyes.
"It's going to be a huge
game for us," Minnesota
offensive tackle Jeremiah
Carter said. "I think everybody
on our team was hoping they'd
beat Penn State and beat
Wisconsin two weeks ago so
we could go in there and play '
against an undefeated team."
With a loss to .Purdue
already, the Gophers can ' t
afford another slip.
"This game is very pivotal
fcir us," said ~uarterback
Asad Abdul-Khahz, who has
completed 54 percent of his
passes for 14 touchdowns
with four interceptions. "We
understand what type of a11
environment we ' re going
into. You jusi have to understand it's going to be rough
and1he only way to slow that
down is to put points on those
guys an'd quiet the crowd."

·~But one thing the loss to choose between us and
Northern Illinois did is Miami, so there's a lot of
removed any margin of error feeling there that goes back
from Page Bl
for us. Until you've got that to high school days," Knorr
second loss, you're still a said.
viable contender for the diviMiami has a rivalry with
Hoeppner
said sion championship.
Cincinnati that goes back 20
Roethlisberger won't be
"The Northern Illinois years longer than the one
asked to do double duty on a game was going to either with the Bobcats, and
regular basis .
wear on us or motivate its Hoeppner said he couldn't
"Ben's not really a punter, and fortunately, it's motivat- classify one rivalry as bigger
· although sometimes it's a . ed us."
. than the other.. .
temptation to tell our regular . Ohio (3-5) started the sea"This is always a fun footpunter I'm leaving him at son 0-4, but has won three of · ball game, always an emohome for road trips," he said. its last four games and two in tiona! one," he said. "It's a
"Ben throws right and a row. Knorr said tbat despite division battle, and the fact ·
punts left, and he'.s very 'the team's turnaround, he that we've played so long
handy and effective in spe- was happy to be off last against each other makes it a
cial situations. He punts . week.
big one every year."
every day in practice and
"At this juncture of the
El sewhere in the conferwarms up with the punters, season, an off week is always ence · Saturday, . No. 21
and it's just good to have him good," he said. "I'm hoping Bowling Green travels to
it can heal up a few guys. I Kent State in an attempt to
as an extra weapon."
Both teams need a victory think we' ll be able to main- remain unbeaten and to tie
to stay within range of East tain . our momentum, and idle Northern Illinois for.the
Division leader' Marshall, playing a rival like Miami Western Division lead.
which is 4-0 in the confer- certainly helps."
Marshall tries to hold on to
ence. Miami is 4-1 and Ohio
The game Saturday will be the East Division lead at
the 79th between the teams, Akron. Western Michigan is
3-1 .
"We have everything to with Miami holding a 47-29· at Ball State and Central
play for," Hoeppner said of 2 edge.
Michigan
at · Eastern
"Miami obviously is our Michigan in other confer•
the RedHawks (6-3 overall),
who have won two straight biggest rival and it's always ence games, with Syracuse at
since losing to Northern a big week on our campus. Central Florida in nonleague
Illinois.
Many of our players had to play.

football. They obviously ereate an extreme challenge for
our offense."
The Sooners, who were off
last week, are ranked second
nationally in total defense,
allowing 252.3 yards per
game, and second in sconng
defense, allowing 13.1 points
per game.
In other games involving
ranked teams, No. 1 Miami is
at Rutgers, No. 3 Virginia

lfUt_ this . season . ~od .
Rutherford 1s at the posttlon.
Rutherford leads th~ Big East
m total offense wtth 259.9
yards per game.
.
.
Notre Dame (8-0) 1s one of
seven undefeated tea~ s
crowding the Top 10, whtch
complicates things f?r ~he
BCS computers. The Ftghtmg
Irish ;u-e No. 4 in The AP poll
and No. 3 in the BCS standings and off to their best start
since 1993. Notre Dame has
started 8-0 in 18 seasons, and
it went on to go undefeated 11
times, with nine national ·
titles.
The Irish, with the nation's
seventh-best rushing defense
(81.8 yards per game) must
stop Derrick Knight, who h~s
five 100-yard games and ts ·
averaging 105.1 yards per
game ru~hing for B.C. (4-3).
Georgta (8~). N?· 5 m The
AP poll and No. 4 m the BCS,
has lost 11 of its la~t 12 meetings with Florida and given up
30 or more points in nine of
the last 12. But that was when
Steve Spurrier was coaching
the Gators. Things have been
more difficult for successor
Ron Zook, whose team is 5-3 .•
The Bulldogs ;u-e the SEC's
last undefeated team and can
clinch a spot in the conference
championship game with a .
victory.
.Y

·CONGRATULATIONS
to the .

EASTERN LADY EAGLES
on a great volleyball seas~n!

, MADISON, Miss. (AP) .Tommy Tolles had one of
those rare rounds when everything seemed to go his way.
. He made a 40-foot chip for
.par, holed out twice from · a
: bunker and made a 25cfoot
· birdie from the fringe in a 6. under 66 that left him one
·: stroke behind first-round
. ·leader Brad Elder at the
. -Southern
Farm · Bureau
.Classic.
. "Players al:ways complain
that breaks never go their
:·way. I'm no different from
anybody else," Tolles said
·Thursday. "But todar, I got
·. multiple good breaks. '
• Tolles was one of eight
.. players tied for second, along
. with defending champion

. : Associated

.

·111ome

•
•

..

·.

•

Thanks for the,memories!

•

.·

•.

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'*':t ,''

~-

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•

-~.

L:i~-

·i;

·);•.··

· 1, "-

·r

~x

...,..

•

~

...
·.t,

v~.

after the All-Star break led
the major leagues. He fillished 5-4 with a 2.78 ERA.
Boston declined a $7.5 million option on right-hander
Dustin Hermanson, who
missed most of the . season.
The pitcher gets a $200,000
buyout.
"Due to . injuries, . Dustin
had a difficult and disappointing season," Red Sox
mterim general manager
Mike Port said. "However,
no one worked harder to try
to retuni from his injuries
than Dustin did."
Hennanson was 1-1 with a
7.77 ERA in 12 games, pitching 22 innings.
He strained a groin during
his first start of the season on
April 3, returned to pitch one
inning of relief July 20
against New York, then went
back on the disabled list the
next day with a staph infection in his left · elbow.
Hermanson didn't return
untiiAu,g. 22.
Jimmy Haynes declined his
$1.5 million option the Reds
andfiledforfreeagency..The
right-hander went 15- 10 with
a 4.12 ERA in 34 starLs for
Cincinnati.

.

)~

Vfelcom~...

MICK DAVENPORT
VOTE FOR NOT MORE THAN ONE

.

•
•

For County
Commissioner

•
•
•

••
•

PLEASANT
HOSPITAL

....

2FIHDCIETS
SPBIII IIllEY
CIIEMI7
FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED

SECTION AND WIN!

u;;Tor~~~~;Ot'OUr'iii'OviU...J ~~

lil"...l_lliili______

CANDIDATE FOR ·COMMISSIONER .

iff ~

••

214 Colonlii.Piaza • 2415 Jackson
Avenue. Polm
Pleasant, WI 25550
.
.

•WIN•

.

•

~ALLEY

-and sometimes, worse.
.. . My son plays in the
On Aug . 12, 1978, Arena League, and I still
Stingley was a promising love the game.
receiver with the New
" And I know what hapEngland Patriots, running a pens between the lines pass patiern across the mid- the talking, the intimidation
die in an exhibition game. and so on. And even know Jack Tatum was a comer- ing all that, you're still not
back with the Oakland expecting the guy on other
Raiders who played with so side wants to destroy you to
little remorse he titled his elevate himself.
autobiography, "They Call
"So if you ' re asking me
Me Assassin."
what do I think has
Their fateful collision changed, it's this: We came
made Stingley a quadri- from a generation with no
plegic. It wasn't until he 'SportsCenter' or video
read "Assassin" years later games. Today, the NFL is
that Stingley learned the hit becoming more like a .video
was Tatum's sick way of game every week.
·
trying to show his Raiders
"Guys- think, 'This hit
bosses he deserved more will . get me on. TV.' Or
than they were paying.
they're so used to the blood
"But he was the excep- and gore of those games
tion, and I believe, always that they've forgotten, there .
will be," said the 51-year- are flesh-and-blood conseold Stingley, who runs the quen~es,'' Stingley said.
Darryl
Stingley Youth "I'm just praying it won't
Foundation in . this city take another .guy shoved
where lie grew up.
into a ,wheelchair for them
"Look, debatin'g the role to remember."
of violence in football is
(Jim Litke is the national
like arguing over religion. sports columnist for The
But I played at the highest Associated Press. . Write to
level, I watch it all the time · him at jlitke(at)ap.org.)

'
•

Jl,~~ ::.:..1:.;~.~-~--

304-675-6090

.Even
Jackson ,
who
returned to the Seattle locker room Wednesday, said :
"This is the . game of foot·
ball and things like this
happen . I put myself in a
place out there for things
like this to happen. You
take it all in stride."
The league , thankfully,
isn't doing that. It's spoken
forcefully and fined players
heavily.
But behind closed doors,
~he rash of vicious hits so
close together are being
described as an " aberration," a "cluster," _.bad timing" - · nothing more.
Around this time two
years ago, someone asked
commissioner
Paul
Tagliabue to explain the
runaway success of his
protluct.
.
"Strategy, action t reaction," he said. "In some
ways, it's · the thinking
inan's game. It's cont11-ct
ballet."
It's also a dance, we are
being. reminded again, that
uses up lots of bodies.
People get hurt all the time

•••

;Pf~P foqt~.al~ ~overagf.fc~T!{I~··s·a~Urtt~~4\1
"'
il.#

makes for a stressful week for
some golfers.
Triplett did his best to break
the tension when he donned a
rubber mask for . Halloween
while walking to 18th green.
With a toothy, grinning golf
ball covering his head,
Triplett stood cross-legged
and leaned on his putter as his
playing partners putted. When
it came time for him to hit his
4-footer for birdie, he took the
mask off - then made the
putt.
"If I was a couple over I
w.ould have putted with the
mask," he said. ·'Tm going to
have some fun you know, but
I'm still here to win the tournament."

..•
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FOR THE ONLY D
C ENDORSED
..••~;:. VOTE

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.

a

I hear they're up · and through this . one: Denver 's
around, it' s almost a per- Kenoy Kennedy and San
sonal victory. It's like I Diego's Rodney Harrison,
need to know those guys Two others have received
.won't have to go · through heavy fines.
. Philadelphia ' s
Brian
what I did.:'
The NFL has never been Dawkjns was fined $50,000
more popular nor, by some . for a late hit that sidelined
accounts, in greater danger Giants receiver Ike Hilliard
of losing its conscience.
for the rest of the season
Check out the highlight with a separated shoulder.
reels on Sunday · night
Dallas' Darren Woodson
sports shows. Watch how hit
Seattle' s
'Darrell
the best hits get replayed in J acksgn with an even more
slow motion, then again at devastating blow. Jackson
full speed with the volume had a seizure in the locker
cranked . Pick up an NFL- room after Sunday' s game
licensed video game : body and spent .the night in the
parts twist and break as hospital, and Woodson was
breathless ·
announcers fined $75 ,000, avoiding
scream to be heard above suspension only because he
the buzz of a bloodthirsty had·n 't been in trouble
crowd.
before.
Violence never goes out
But here's the really scary
of fashion. But for the first part: None of the principals
time in a while, the league seems to have learned anyis having to tote up the thing.
Despite
being
cited
costs.
. After handing out just o1_1e repeatedly for questionable
suspen's ion .the previous · hits, Harrison said he won't
two seasons, c.ommissioner change the way he · plays.
Paul Tagliabue's discipli" Kennedy's teammates took
narians have . already sus- up a collection to cover the
pended two players midway salary he lost to suspension.

103 RBis, becomes eligible
for free agency.
First
baseman
Scott
•''
Hatteberg's
$1.75
million
from Page II
option
was
exercised
•• •
Thursday by the Oakland
.
•
Athletics, who declined $1.2
~;eligible. Under, an unusual million options on infielder
!provision in his Chicago con- Olmedo Saenz and reliever
~:tract, Thomas has until Dec. Jeff Tam. . Saenz · gets a
·: . 7 to sign with another club or $50,000 buyout. ·
• ;keep 'his White Sox deal,
Reliever Tim Worrell's• $2
:· ~which calls for annual million option was exercised
·.' · salaries in the next four sea- Thursday !D' the San
:~~sons of $250,000 plus · Francisciiii"'Uiants,
who
• .$10,125,000 deferred over 10 declined a $3.5 million
:: ;years without interest.
option on right fielder Reggie
·;. Originally, Thomas was to Sanders. Sanders, who had a
:&lt; get annual salaries of mutual option, gets a
including $500,000 buyout.
:; :$9,927,000, .
:; :$3,827,000 deferre~ with
.In addition, third baseman
·: ·interest, but the Whtte Sox David Bell declined his $3.5
: ·:exercised a clause that million option. Because Bell
:~ : allowed the team to change turned down the mutual
-~· the salary because he didn't option, he doesn't get a buy::~make the All-Star team and out.
:O: isn 't going to finish among
St. Louis declined a $6 mil: ~ :the top 10 in MVP voting or lion option on Andy Benes
;:~ ~ win a Silver Slugger this sea- . and the 35 -year-old right•: •son.
hander gets a $1.5 million
::: Fred McGriff's $8.5 mil- buyout, ail deferred without
:-- Jion option was declined by interest. Benes nearly retired
~ ; ~the Chicago Cubs, who will inApril,whenhehada 10.80
•.: :give him a $500,000 buyout. ERA after three starts. He
; ·· ~McGriff, . who hit .273 this returned from a · knee injury
! ~ :season with 30 homers and in July, and his 1.86 ERA
"•

WOuld
Like To
.

)

Press

..· CHICAGO (AP) -A few
· ·. minutes on the phone might
' be enough.
·
· An hour conversation
would .be better, and an
afternoon spent listening to
: ·Darryl Stingley as he navi;: gates the downtown streets
:. in his wheelchair would be
·~ best of all .
:: If the NFL wants to prove
: :it is serious about stopping
• ! :,all of the headhunting this
: .season, fines and suspen: 7sions are a good start. But
: ~he most effective way to
: :get the message across is to
: 'have it delivered by the
; "man whose _life changed
: :forever with a single hit.
-: "No one calls, but every
: :time a guy is laid out, my
: :name is the one people
; "think of. And you know
:~what I think of? I think, 'He
~~.: to be ·as · afraid as ·'I
· ~~was,'"
Stingley · said
..•Thur~day: .
.
•: "I relive the emotion each
• :and every time. Later, when

•·...

.

he was 2 over after three birdied No. 4 from 25 feet.
Elder is No. 173 and Tolles
holes.
then eagled No. 5 with a 25- is 177th on the money list.
"I didn't .hit my first green foo t shot out of a bunker.
Both would need a win to
until the fourth hole," he said.
"Stuff like that happens earn their cards.
"But I hung in there and once a round, once a week, · "Well, one round doesn't do
played well." .
maybe once a mqnth. I did it much for me," Tolles said.
Elder's ninth. birdie of the three times in one day," he "It's ~oing · to take four
round gave him the lead on said. "I had a lot of good for- rounds. '
the par-5 18th. He was about · tune out there."
·
None of th~ players on the
70 feet from the hole when he
Kirk Triplett, Luke Donald, bubble made a strong firstchipped onto the green with a Eduardo Herrera, Deane round move.
wedge, then made a 6-footer Pappas and Jonathan Kaye
Craig Barlow, who is I 24th,
were also tied for second.
sbota 3-under69 and was tied
for a 7-under 65 .
Tolles, who made the field
The final stop on the PGA for 25th. No. 121 Andrew
as an alternate, began the day Tour marks the last shot for Magee shot a 70, while
by holing a wedge from the players to earn playing privi- Kaname Yokoo (127), Jay
bunker for birdie on tbe par-4 leges for next season. The top Don Blake (129) and Bob
lOth. It wasjust.the beginning 125 on the money list are May (137) all shot 71.
of weird round.
fully exempt in 2003. Those
No. 125 David Frost could
On his second nine, Tolles outside the top 125 . have to he in trouble after shooting a
. ·
.
chipped in from 40 yards to earn their tour cards in Q 72.
save par on No. 2, a par-3. He . School.
All the number crunching

•

..BY JIM LITKE

MAC

m

Cameron Beckman and ·rookie Jonathan . Byrd, who won
his ftrSt PGA tournament last
week.
The weather was c.ool, clear
and breezy, but the 7,199-yard.
Annandale Golf Club course
was still showing the effects
of about 13 inches ofrain that
fell · in the area over the last
.five weeks.
Conditions were so soggy
that players were allowed to
lift, clean and place balls in
the fairway. The rule allows
players to wipe mud off the
ball and find a dry spot from
which to hit. Often players
refer to the rule as "lift, clean
and cheat'' as it tends to make
scores plunge.
.
It didn't help Elder early as

:NFL becoming nothing more than a video·game

•

£ASTERN ATHLETIC BOOSTERS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8 3

Fortunate Tolles a stroke behind Elder
at Southem Fann Bureau Classic

College Football

Tech plays Pittsburgh, No. 4
Notre Dame faces Boston
College, No. 5 Geo~ia plays
Florida, No. 6 Ohto State
takes on No. 2J Minnesota,·
No. 7 Texas is at Nebraska,
No. 8 Washington State plays
No. 16 Arizona State, No. 9
Iowa goes against Wisconsin,
No. 10 North Carolina State
takes on GeoQ'lia Tech, No. 12
Alabama vistts · Vanderbilt,
No. 14 Kansas State is at
Kansas, and No. 15 Michigan
pla;r.s Michigan State.
Also, No. 18_Florida State
is at Wake Forest, No. 19
Oregon faces Stanford, No.
20 Penn 'State takes on
Illinois, No. 21 Bowling
Green is at Kent State, No. 22
Iowa State plays Missouri,
arid No. 25 Tennessee visits
South Carolina.
Vrrginia Tech (8-0), which is
No. 3 in The AP poll and No. 6
in the BCS standin$s, will try
to move up by playmg Pitt (62). This would have been a
pushover once, but · tl)e
Panthers are much-improved.
After beating Boston Colle~e
19-16 last week, Pitt is 3-0m
the Big East for the first time in
school history, and its two losses are by a combined 10 points.
The Hokies are 8-0 for the
third time in the last four
years. The ftrst two came with
Michael Vick at quarterback,

www.mydailysentlnel.com

(Full Term Commencing 1- 1-02)
(Vole for not more than ONE)

•

• Lifelong Resident of Meigs County
• Served as Law Clerk for Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
• Former Assistant Prosecutor for Meigs County•
• Serves as Magistrate for VIllage of Pomeroy.
• Has served.in Juvenile/Probate eou~ in Athens County,
Vinton County, Jackson County, Gallll!l County, as well as,
..,elgs County.
• ~rv~JI as Volunteer Teacher/Speaker In the Meigs,
S'outllem and Eastem School Districts.
"TIMt~ 1'' 01\ A Cll t\NCJ[, A Cll r\N(il': 1'01\ TtW I"UTUI\t:"

. I.~Pia~ld~~~~~~~i]~~~!i~~~~~T~re:aisu~r=er~.P~.~O~.]s~ox~~~~~O~H~ L--------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~':=::J
",,.

-

•

-- --

-

-

---

'•

�. Page B 4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 1, 2002

www.mydailysentinel.com

Scoreboard

(5) M as~llon Perry (9-1) at (4) Dublin
Scioto (9-1)
(7) Upper Arlinglon (7-3) at (2)
Pickerington (9·,) ·
(6) Gahanna l incoln (8·2) at (3) Dublin
COttman (8--2)
Region.
(8) Cln. St. Xavier (7-3) at (1) Cin. Elder
(9· t)
.
(5) Huber Hts. wayn~e (8-2) al (4) Cin.
Moeller {7 -3 ) at Lockland
(7) Lebanon (9· t) at (2) Cin. Anderson
(10-0)
(6) Clayton Northmont (8·2) at (3) Cin.
Colerain (9-1)
DIVISION II .
All gimes 11 7:30p.m. Frid1y
Region 5
(8) Youngs: Chaney (7·3) at (1) Louisville
(10.0)
(5) Olmsted Falls (6-2) at (4) Uniontown
Lake (7-3)
(71 Maple Heights (7-3) at (2) Canfield
(10.0)
(6) Warren Howland (1-3) at (3) Madison
(9-1)
Region 6
.
(8) Cols. StCharles (6-4) at (1) Tel. St

(8) Lllbon Be- Local (8-2) at (3)
Richmond Edison (9·t I
Aoglon tO
(8) Napo~ (9·1) at (1) Alcr.Buchtel (tQ.
0), 2 p.m. Saturday
.
(5) Medina BudriJye (9-t) a1 (4) Willanl
(9-1)
(7) Cuyahoga Falls walsh Jesuk (6-4) at
(2) Akr. Hoban (9-1)
(6) Canal Fulton N.W (9-t) at (3) Oak
Harl&gt;or (9- t)
Roglon tt
(8) Thornville Sheridan (8-2) at (1)
Newart&lt; L.icklng Valley (10.0)
(5) Cols. Hamilton Twp. (8-2) at (4) Colo.
Watterson (6-4)
·
(7) Cols. Beechcrott (8·2) at (2) Cols.
DeSales (7 -3)
(6) Circleville (8·2) at (3) Gallipolis Gallia
Acad. (8·2)
R~lon 12
(6) St. Paris Graham (8·2) at (t ) Urbana
(10.0), 7:30p.m. Friday
(5) St. Marys Memorial (7-3) at (4)
Bellbrook (7 -3)
(71 Cln. Wyoming (7-3) at (2)
Ge!mantown Valley View (1 O-o) ·
(6) Cay. Ounbar (1-3) at (31 TIPP Ckr
nppecanoe 18·2)
DIVISION IV
Allgo111011 117:30 p.m. Fridoy
Roglon t3
(8) Young. Ursuli ne (5·5) at (1) Akr.
Manchester(1Q.O)
•
· (5) Sullivan Blad&lt; R...,r (8·2) at 141 E.
Palestine (9·1)
(7) Perry (8·2) at (2) Giranl (9·1) .
· (6) Alcr. SL Vinceni-St Mary (6-4) vs. Cle.
VASJ (7-3) at Euclid
Region 1•·
(8) Marion River YaNey (8:2) at (1) Kenlon
(B-2) .
(5) Upper Sandusky (8·21 at (4)
Pemberville Eastwood (9-1)
(7) Delta (9-1) at (2) Rossford (8-2)
(6) Archbold (B-2)at (3) Ottawa-Giandort
(9·1)
Region 15
(8) Waverly (B-2) at (1) Portsmo&lt;Jih (9-1)
(5) lronlon (7·2) al (4) Lancaster Fairfield
Union (9·1)
(7) Porlsm&lt;luth W. (B·2) at (2) New
Lexington (10.0)
(6) Martins Ferry 11 0-0) al (3) Coshocton
(10.0)
Region 16

Fr,ancis (9·.1) at Oregon .a ay

· (8) Hamifton Badin (4-6) vs (1) Kettering

Prep Football
1,

Ohio High School Athletic AsaoclaUon
State Football Pairings
Regional Ouarter11Mis

DIVISION I

All games at 7 p.m. S.turdly
un'*11 noted
Aegion 1

(8) Strongsville (7·3) at (1) Solon (tO-o)
(5) Ashtabula .Lakeside (8·2) at (4)
Mentor (9·1 )
(7) Cle. St. Ignatius (7-3) at (2) warren

Harding (tO-Q)
(6) Parma Hts. Valley Forge (B-2) at (3)

l akewood St. Edward (9· 1)
A~lon2

(8) Marion Harding (7·3) at (1) Brunswick

(10-0)
(S)

Spring. South (7-3) at (4) Tol. Sl

John's Jesuit (7·3) at Tol. Rogers
(7) .Mansfield Senior (7 ·3) at (2) Findlay
(9· 1), 7:30 Friday

(6) Wadsworth (7-3) al (3) Hudson [1Q.O)
Region 3

(8) Massillon Washington (8-2) at (1) N.
Canton Hoover (8-2)

I

(5) Tiffin Columbian (9-t) at (4) Tol. Cent. Alter (9·1) at Kettering Fairmont High ;
School
(7) Cols. Mifflin (7-3) al (2) Cols. (5) Clarksville Clinton-Massie (9-t) at (4)
Brookhaven (9-1)
F'laln City Jonathan Alder (9-1)
(6) Maurr~ee (8·2) at (3) Cols. Walnut (7) w. Milton Milton-Union (7·3) al (2)
Ridge (9-1)
Reading (10.0)
Region 7
(8) Spring. Nonhoastern (7-3) at (3)
(B) Richfield Revere (5·5) al (1) Green (9· Coldwaler (1Q.O)
1)
DIVISION V
Cath. (9-1)

(5) Grafton Midview (9·1) at . (4)
Macedonia Nordonia (9-1)

i
•

All game• at 7 p,m_. S.turday
Region 17

.(

Aman&lt;la-Ctearcreek (B-2)
(6) Sarahsville Shenandoah (7-3) at (3)
Baroesville (8-2)
Region 20
(B) Arcanum (B-2) al (t) Marion Pleasant
(tQ.O)
(5) Lees Creek E. Clinlon (9-1) at (4)
Morral Ridgedale (8-2)
(7) Cols. Ready (7·3) at (2) Gahanfl'l
Cols. Acad. (9·1)
(6) Cin. Hills Christian Acad. (10-0) at (3)
Bainbridgle Painl Valley (9-t I
DIVISION VI

Memphis at Detroit, 8 p.m.
Philadelphla....5 2 o .714 202 105
New Vert&lt; at Philadelphia, Bp.m.
N.Y.Giants .....3 4 0 .429 89 t1 5
15-7,15-4
. TOI'Onto at San Antonio, 8:30 P.m.
Washington .... 3 4 0 .429 141 188
Mentor Lake beat Hubbard 15-5, 12·15, Oanas ............. 3 5 o .375 108 t46
New Ckleans at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
15-tO .
Houston at Denver, 9 p.m.
SO..th
At-r High ScWLTPctPFPA
Oeveland at PhoeniM, 9 p.m.
Millersborg w. Holmes beat Tallmadge New Ckleans .. 6 2 o .750 256 209
seattle at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
15-t2, 15·10
Tampa Bay ..... 6 2 0 .750 165 85
L.A. Lakers at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
Gana l Fulton Northwest beat Sunbury A~anta ............ 4 3 0 .571 167 119
S.turdlly'• Game•
Big Walnut t5-3, 15-7
Carolina .......... 3 5 o .375 111 1H
Chicago at Atlanta , 1 p.m.
St1te
toumament
pelrtnga :
North
New Jersey at Washington, 7 p.m.
Wilmington va. Liberty--Benton; Woo1ter
WLTPctPFPA
Minnesota at indiana, 1 p.m.
VI. Slow-Munroa Falla
Green Bay ...... 6 1 o .857 203 154
Boston at New Yolk, 7:30 p.m.
All games at 7:30 p.m. Friday
DIVISION Ill
Chlcago .......... 2 5 0 .286 139 180
Saaamento at Memphis, 8 p,m,
Aeglon 21
Fln111 Saturday at 2 p.m.
Detron... .......... 2 5 0 .286 149 213
Toronto at Houston, 8:30p.m.
(8) SanduSky St. Mary's (5-5) at (1)
At Ontario High SchOol
Minnesota .. .. ... 2 5 0 .286 162 192
Orlando at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.
Mogadore (9· t)
Huron det. Genoa Area 15-8, 15-10·
We at
Miami at New Orleans, 8:30p.m.
. (5) E. Can. (7-3) at (4) Monroeville (B-2)
Fredericktown del. Archbold 15-10, tS-8
WLTPctPFPA
Phoenix at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
(7) Leetonia (7·3) at (2) lowellville (10.0)
San Francsco5 2 0 .7t4 180 144
At By01vllle M1odawbrvok High
Golden State at Utah, 9 p.m.
(6) Cle. Cuyahoga HIS. (7·3) at (3)
Arlzona ........... 4 3 0 .571 136 131
School
Denver at Portl and, 10 p.m.
Windham(9· t)
Zoar\lille
Tuscarawas
Vall. del. Seattle ............ 2 5 o .286 142 166
Sooday'a Game•
Region 22
St. Louis ........ 2 5 0 .286 139 15B
WiHiamsport Westfall15-10, 15· 10
Detroit at L.A. Clippers, 3:30p.m.
(8) Bascom Hopeweti-L06d0n (8·2) at (1)
SUnday, Nov. 3
Coshocton def. Frankfort Adena t5-12,
Sacramento at Miami, 6 p.m.
Columbus Grove (10.0)
Dallas at Detroit. 1 p.m .·
16-14
Utah at seattle, 9 p.m.
Baltimore at Atlanta, 1 p.m
(5) Sycamore Mohawk (8-2) at (4)
At Wilmington High Sc.hool
Portland at L.A, Lakers, 9:30 l?.m.
Northwood (tQ.O)
Plain Ckr Jonathan Alder del. Cln. N. Te"nnessee at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Houston, 1 p.m.
(7) McComb (7-3) at (2) Tiffin Calven (8- COllege Hi1115-8, 15--4
~
.
PhiladeJpnia at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Transactions
At Barberton High School .
New England at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
(6) Rawson Cory-RawSOfl (8·2) at (3)
Rocky River Lutheran del. Smithville 17MimesOta at TarJ¥»8. Bay, 1 p.m.
Edon (9.0)
llASEBAL~
15, 15-13
Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Aoglon 23
Girard def. Streetsboro 15--3, ~5-0
(B) New Matamoras Frontier (5-5) at (1) Stale tournament pairings: OntariO vS. N.Y Jets at San Diego, 4:05p.m.
BOSTON~~~~~ lo -.-Jse
St. l.,ouis at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
Strasburg-Franklin (1Q-O)
.
their 2003 option on RHP Dustin Hermanson. .
Meadowbrook;
Wilmington
v1.
Washington at Seattle, 4:15 p.m.
(5) Willow Wood Symmes Valley (8-2) at Barberton
OAKLAND ATHLETIC5-Exerci5ed lhielr
San Ffandsco at Oakland, 4:15p.m.
(4) Newart&lt; Calh. (6-4)
·
2003 option on 18 ScoH Hatteberg.:··
DIVISION IV
Jacksonville at N.Y. Giants, 8:30p.m.
(7) waterlonl (7-3) at 121oanvne (9-1)
Declined to exercise their 2003 optK&gt;ns on. ·
Flnall SAturday at 2 p.m. Llnc811er and
Open: Denver, Kansas City, caroHna, RHP Jeff Ta!fl and INF ~medo Saenz.
(6) Millersport (6-4) at (3) Shadyside (8·
Elldo; 4 p.m. Butler and Hucllon
New Or1eans
2)
Named Randy Johnson spedal assistant
. AI L•ncaater Hi$Ph SChool
MOnday, Nov. 4
Region 24
Wellsville beat Reedsville Eastern 15·10,
to the general manager.
Miami at Green Bay, 9 p.m.
(8) Cin. Country Day (7-3) at (1) Maria 15-13
NatlonaiLeag~
Stein Marion Local (9·1 ) ·
Centerburg beatS. Webster 15-0, 15-2
CHICAGO CUB5-Declined to exercise
(5) Mechanicsburg (9-1) at (4) S.
At Buller High School
their 2003 option on 1B Fred McGriff.
·
Pro Basketball
Charleston Southeastern (B-2)
Maria Stein Marion Local beat Botkins
CINCINNATI RED5-Announced RHP
(7) Anna (7-3) at (2) Oola Hardirl 15-o,-t5-2
Jimmy Haynes declined his 2000 option.
Northern (10·0)
Fort Loramie beat Jackson center '15-4, National Basketball Association
COLORADO ROCKIES-Named Bob
EASTERN CONFERENCE
(6) Troy Christian (9· 1) at (3) Covington
15-10
Apodaca pitching coach.
.
AtlenUc
Division
(1Q.O)
.
AI Elida High School
.
PITTSBURGH PIRATEs-Named John
W
L.
Pet.
GB
.. PeHisvllle beat Mt. Blanchard Riverdale
Russell third base coach.
O~and o ............... 2
0 1.00
t2-15, 15-9, 15-1 .
ST. LOUIS CARDINAL5-0ecHned to

At Hudson High School

at

West

Region 18
(B) Delphos Jefferson (8-2) at (1)

(6) Day. Carroll (B-2) at (3) Vandalia Bucyrus Wynlonl (9-t)
Buller (9-1)
(5) Columbia Stalion Columbia (6-2) at
(4) Castalia Margaretta (8·2)
DIVISION Ill
(7) Lorain Clearvlew (8-2) at (2) Defiance
All gamea at7 p.i'n. Saturday
Tinora (9.0) ·
unle11 noted
Region 9
· (6) Delphos St. John"s (7-3) at (3) Hamler
(8) Poland Seminary (7·3) vs. (t) C~ . . Patrick Henry (9·1)
...._
Benedictine (8-2) al Bedfond
Region n11
(5) Hubbard (9·1) at (4) Stetiben~lle (8- (8) JohnstoWn-Monroe (7·3) at (1)
2), 7:30p.m. Frklay
Woodslield Mooroe Cent. (1 Q.O)
(7) Chesterland W. Geauga (8·2) vs.
(5) Chesapeake (7-3) at (4) Steubenville
Hunting Valley Univ. (7·3) at lyndhurst Calh. Cent. (8·2)
(7) Johnstown Northridge (1-3) at (2)
Brush

o

1
1
1

1.00

.5

.500
.500
.000

1

OHSAA R 1 1,.
1
Norwalk St. Paul beat Ashtabula Sts.
eg ona •OUrnaments John&amp;
1.5
Paul15·2, 15·2
NewYork .. ........... O 1 .000 1.5
COLUMBUS (AP) - Regional pairings . Kidron Cent. Cath. beat Windham 10-15, Boston
................. 0
2 .000
2
15·9,
15-6
tor the girls state high school volleyball State tournament P81rlngs: L•nceater
Central Division
tournament :
'
WLPctGB
va. BuUer; Elida VI. Hudaon
DIVISION I
Chicago ..,....... ... -1
0 1,00
Finale Slturda~ at 2 p.m.
Detroit ..... .......... ,.. 1.
0 1.00
AI Hudson High School
Jndiana ................. 1
0 1.00
Pro
Football
Mentor det. Youngs. Austintown F=itch 15New Orleans ..... 1
o 1.00
12, 15-9
Toronto ............. ... 1
0 1.00
National Football League
Solon def. Wooster t5-12, 6-15,1 5-11
Atlanta .... ............ 1
1 .500
.5
AFC
At Vandalia Butler High School
Cieveland ............. 1 1 .500
.5
East
. Cin. Ursuline del. Cin. Mother of Mercy 8MilwauKee .. ... ... ... 0
1 .000
1
15, t 5-4, 15-5
w LTPctPFPA
WESTERN CONFERENCE .
Cin. Notre Dame del. Cin. Seton 15-13, Mlaml. .............5 2 0 .714 190 143
Midwest Division
Buffalo ............5 3 0 .625 241 231
15·3
WLPctGB
New England .. 3 4 0 .429 168 158
At Hilliard Davidson High School
Oallas .................. 1 0 1.00
Cols. Watterson det. Dublin Coffman 11 - N.Y. Jets .. ...... 2 5 0 .266 116 193 Minnesota ........ .... 1 0 A 00
South ..
15, t6-14, 15-9
San Antonio ...... ... 1
1 .500
.5

(7) Copley (7-3) at (2) Avon Lake (9-t)
(8) N0\&gt;1on Falls (7-3) at (1) Smithville
(6) Marietta (8-2) at (3) E. Liverpool (7-3) (tO-o)
Reglon8
(5) Bedlord Chanel (8-2) at (4) Rocky
(8) Cin. MI. Healthy (8-2) at {1) Kings RiverLulheranW. (9·1)
Cin. St Ursula def.Lancaster 12·15, 15·
Mills Kings (10-Q)
(7) Gates Mills Gilmour (6-4) at (2) 4, tS-13
(5} Trotwood-Madison (0.2) at (4) Trenton Middlefield cardinal (10.0)
At Norwalk High SChool
Edgewood (9-t)
(6) New Middletown Springfield (6-4) at Rocky River Magnilical del. Whitehouse
(7) Loveland (B-2) vs. (2) Cay (3) Calton (9-1)
Anlhony Wayne t0-1 5, tS-11, 15-13
Chaminade-Julienne (9·1)
Carrol lton Jr. High School

New Jersey .......... 1
Philadelphia ......... 1
Washington ......... 1
Miami. ....., ............ o

Old Fort beat Kalida 15-11 , 15·5

WLTPctPFPA
Indianapolis .... 4 3 0 .571 145 144
Jacksonville .... 3 4 o .429 147 133 .
Tennessee ...... 3 4 0 .429 160 197
Houston ......... 2 5 0 .286 1{)4 176

. North
WLTPctPFPA
PiMsburgh ...... .4 3 0 .57t 169 140

Tol. St. Ursula clef. Elyria 15--3, 15-4
State tournament pairings: Hilliard vs.

Norwalk, Hudson vs. Vandalia
DIVISION 11

Cleveland .... ... 4
Ballimore .. ...... 3
Cin::lnnati ....... 0

Flnal1 Saturday at 2 p.m., except
Wilmington at 4' p.m.

At Wilmington High School
St. Bernard Roger Bacoo beat Dayton

0 500 185 172
0 .429 122 142
o .000

75 211

w•••

w LTPctPFPA

Chaminade.Julienne 15-9, 15~9
.
Kettering Al1er beat The Plains Athens

15·8, 16-14
At Findlay Liberty-Benton High School
Pemberville Eastwood tM!at Canal
Winchester t5-11 , 13-15, 15-3
Norwalk beat Celina 7-15, 15-9, 18-16

4
4
7

San Diego ...... 6
Oenver ............ 6
Oakland .. ........ 4

·Kansas City ....4

1 0 .857
2 0 .750
3 0 ..57t
4 0 .500
NFC

173
207
206
259

119
170
165
•240

e••,,

WLTPctPFPA

Denver ................ 0
Houston ............... o
Memphis .............. o

Utah...

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

1
1

1

2

.000
.000

.000

.000

1
1

1

1.5

Pacific Dlvl1lon

WLPciGB

Sacramento ......... 2
GoldenState : ...... 1

SeaMie ....... .......... 1
Por11and .... ...... ..... 1
L.A. Clippers .... .... o

0 1.000
o 1.000

o 1.000

1 .500
1 .000 .

PhoeniJC ..... ..... ..... 0
1 .000
LA. Lakers .......... 0
2 .000
Thulldlly'a Gamel
Atlanta 105, Utah 98
Washington 114, Boston 69
Sacramento 100, Portland 72
Friday'• Gemea .
Indiana at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Or1ando at Minnesota, 8 p.m.

.5

.5
1
1.5
1.5
2

e~eercfse

their 2003 option on the contract

ol RHP Andy Benes.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTs-Agreed to:
terms v.itt1 Brian Sabean, ....., vice Jiesldenl.
and ger-..al· manager. Exerdsed their 2003option on RHP nm l'.lxrell. Declined ro - cise lf"eir 2003 option on RF Reggio 5anders.
BASKETBALL .
National Basketball Aaaoclatlon

ATLANTA HAWK5-Signed F-C Amal
McCaskill. Placed C Nazr Mohammed on
the injured list.
•
INDIANA~ G Ron Aries! · .
and F JQ1athan Bender to contr3d exlell!lb IS. ;

FOOTBALL

National Football ~eague
NFL-Fined Philadelphia S Brian · •
Dawkins $50,000 .for his hit on the New
York Giants WR Ike Hilliard in a game on •

Oct. 28 and fined Pittsbu!gh WR PlaKico

Burress $5,000 for an on-field tantrum •
caused when Baltimore's James Trapp . ·
yanked off his helmet in a game on Oct. 27. •

HOUSTON TeXANS-waived WR

Milton Wynn from practice squad. Signed ;·
DT Howard Green _to practice squad.
•
OAIVl&lt;D RAJ!lERS--WaM!d UB Mle.Jooes. •

WASHINGTON REDSKIN&amp;--Signed WR· . •
.
HOCKEY
Natlonol Hockoy loeguo
FLORIDA PANTHERS-Assigned 0 •

Willie Jad&lt;son. Released WR Kevin L.odett.

Mathieu Biron to San Antonio of the AHL.

MINNESOTA WILD-Traded LW Sylvain

Blouin to ·Montreal tor a 2003 seventh·
round draft pick.
,

NASHVILLE PREDATOR5-Recalled D. .

Mark Eaton, F Vern Fiddl&amp;r and F Wyatt·
Smith from Milwaukee of the AHL.~
Reassigned C Greg Classen to MilwaukeeK,

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

rds roll over punchless Celtics

AI Slow-Munroe Felli High SChool
Redly Rivet" beat Chagrin Falls Ken61on

Prep Volleyball

•

Friday; November 1, 2002

WASHINGTON (AP) Credit Michael Jordan for
handing the Boston Celtics
their worst loss in franchise
history.
After all, not only did
Jordan score 21 points in 21
minutes in Washington' s ll469 rout Wednesday night, he just . in every phase · of the
also assembled the players game," coach Doug Collins
that did the rest of the dam- said.
·age.
.. The Wizar(ls were a disor'"ln tenns of what we all ganized mess the night before,
envisioned, in putting this with Jordan looking all of his
team ·together, tonight it 39 years and no one shooting
· worked perfectly," Jordan well in an opening loss in
Toronto. Things can chanoe
sat·.d .
., a
All the parts clicked. Jordan lot in 24 hours, and Jordan
found chemistry with Jell)' . was so emotionally involved
Stackhouse, who had 22 that he was vehementi;Y argopOints and 10 assists. Kwame ing a foul call with hts team
BroMI, a bust as a rookie a up 27 points late in the third

NBA

BEAT

year ago, scored 20 points and
blocked sill shots in his sec. ond solid game in a row. The
Wizards shot 52 percent and
· outrebounded Boston 59-3 L
'That's as good as I think
I've ever had a team play -

qui:~~~

and the Wizards

never 1·e1· up, even as th e

Celtics seemed to be trying to
run out the clock by taking
bad Jong·range shots that kept
the ball in play.

. 'Tonight we got it handed
to us," said Antoine Walker,
who had seven turnovers,
scored 12 points and was 5of-16 from the field.
In the only other games
Thursday night, Sacramento
beat Portland 100· 72, and
Atlanta defeated Utah 105-98.
The 45.-point margin topped
Boston's previous worst reguJar-season loss, 44 points in a
128-84 defeat at Portland on
Jan. 4, . 1977. It was also the
third-largest margin of victory
in Wizards history.
.,..._~
Cel ·
02 h ·
""'
tics are - , avmg
lost at home to Chicago on
Wednesday night.
"We're net panicking," said
Paul Pierce, who scored 12
points en 3-for-16 shooting.
'"We're just out of the gates a
bit slow."
Jordan scored just eight
points and missed a · dunk in
the second half of the Toronto
game. Against the Celtics, he
was 8-of-15 from the field, 5-

of-5 from the free-throw line
and had four rebounds and
five .assists.
At the end of the fust half,
Jordan made two free throws,
raced to his right to steal the
inbounds pass, pumped ·and
made a 21-foot jumper complete with a little kick just before the halftime
buzzer. The Wizards had an
18-point lead as he left the
court with a big smile to thunderous applause.
The four-point sequence put
the Wizards ahead 58-40. The
Celtt"cs never threatened t"n the
second half, when several of
the big moments belonged to
Brown.
The 20-year-old forward
made a three-point play,
dunkecj off a feed from Jordan
and had a stellar sequence i.n
which he blocked Walker at
one end and made a jumper at
. the other to put the Wizards
ahead by 20.
Jordan had another of his

Wild tops league standings

old flourishes at the end ofthe
t~ird quarter, making three
straight tough jumpers in a
13-4 run.
After that, it was just a mat·
ter of finishing the worst
game in the Celtics' 56-year
history in the NBA
'Trust me, I never in a million years dreamed that this
would
have
happened
tonight," Collins said. '"I had
breakfast with lily wife and I
said, '1 hope we score 70
points tonight Riwo more
than last night
at least
show some imp ement."'
A moment o silence was
held before the game for RunDMC rapper Jam Master Jay,
who was shot to death in New
York on Wednesday. RunDMC had been scheduled to
· perfonn at hll!ftime.

KINGS 100, TRAIL BlAZERS 72
At Sacramento, Calif.• Peja
Stojakovic scored 26 points,
and Bobby Jackson had 20
points and 10 rebounds as

Sacramento overcame the
absence of three starters to
beat Portland.
Star forward Chris Webber
was held out after he turned
up at the shootaround with
strained lower abdominal
muscles, Doug Christie finishtd his two-game suspension for a preseason fight with
Rick Foll, and Mike Bibby is
sidelined by a foot injury.
Rasheed Wallace scored 24
points for Portland.
HAWKS 105, JAZZ 98
At Atlanta, Glenn Robinson
scored 30 points and Jason
Terry added 21 points and 13
assists in the Hawks' home
opener.
· Shareef Alxlur-Rahim, who
missed the opener because of
a sore back, scored I 0 of
Atlanta's points in a 15-6 run
at the start of the third period
for a 65 ~52 lead. He finished
with 17 points. ·
Karl Malone led Utah with
20 points.

Publk Nodrtt ·;.. :~::':'~:
'Voor Rl&amp;ht to KM.,., o.livend RJtbt 10

NOTICE: 11 hereby The
property baaed upon • field
given
the
I
on
eought
to
be appro• survey performed by
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Slturdey,
November
2,
prlated
11
more
ape· Balke Engln••" In
Sergei Zhoitok made sure the
2002. at 10:00 a.m., a clllcelly deocrlbed aa 2000 under the diracMinnesota Wild ftnished the
public sale will be he.ld followo:
lion and aupervlalon
ftrst month· of the season bet11 211 Weal Second
of Joseph D.
Street, Pomeroy, OhiO
PARCEL 46-WD
Kuhlmann,
ter than anyone ellpected In
the
parking
lot
of
MEG
33-15.70
Reglatered
Surveyor
and better than any other team
The Farmera Bank and ALL RIGHT, nTLE
Number 6823.
in the lr_ague.
Saving a Company. AND INT~REST IN
All Iron plna set are
Zholtok scored his second ~ I.EAP.; 3, Titus as 3,
The Farmer• Bank and
FEE SIMPLE
to
be
Savlngo
company
Is
IN
THE
FOLLOWING
19.1mm(314")x0.75m(
At
Toronto,
backup
goalie
goal with 9 .I seconds left in
aelllng for caoh In
DESCRIBED
30") lopped by a
overtime to give the Wild a 2- Pasi Nurminen made 32 saves
PROPERTY
38.1 mm(t-1/2") alu·
hand or certllled
1 victory Thursday night over as winless Atlanta avoided its
check the following
mlnum cap, atamped
.
collateral:
.
Situated In the "ODOT,
BALKE
the San Jose Sharks, one of lOth straight loss.
1999
Honda
XRBO
Village
of
Pomeroy,
ENGINEERS,
Patrik
Stefan
.
scored
the
the Western Conference's best
twice in Colorado's victory JH2HEOt07XK803476 ·county of Melga, J 0 S E PH
D.
ty ing goal at 15:26 of the th.i rd games. ·
teams htst season.
over the Canucks.
2000 . Honda XOR .Stete of Ohio, and KUHLMANN, REG..
Tyler
Amason
period
for
Thrashers
(0-8-1Rookie
"It's an awesome feelingbeing In 160 Acril Lot NO. 6823".
Dan Hinote, Adam Foote JH2DE0208YK307228
this year is different. We hope 1), who are in the throes of a scored for Chicago with 35
Points listed with
2000 Honda TRX Number 1225 or the
Company (Iron pin set) are to
to continue this way," Zholtok 19-game winless streak dating seconds left to force the over- and Rob Blake also scored for 478TE2545YA000368 Ohio
Kawasaki Purchase
and beaetbythecontrac- ·
to March 23.
time. Jaroslav Madry scored the Avalanche, and Patrick 1999
said.
.
KVF400
bounded
and tor as Indicated aNhtr
To
shake
things
up,
Atlanta
for
the
Kings.
.
Roy
stopped
23
shots.
• At 8-1 -2, the Wild are better
JKAVFKC11XB502951 deocrlbed as followo: termination of the
FLAMES 3, SABRES 0
, Rookie defenseman ~ryan 1989 Ford F25 1
than even the defending coach Curt Fraser benched
Being 1 parcel ol construction project
At Calgary. Alberta, Roman Allen scored for the Canucks, FTHF26G5KNA91158 land lying on the left
The baols of bear•
Stanley
Cup
champion star winger Ilya Kovalchuk'
The
Farmers
Bank
and
right
aide
ol
the
lng
In lhla deacriP.because
of
poor
defensive
'
Turek
made
30
saves
and
who
have
one
win
in
their
last
Detroit Red Wings, the only
and
sa v 1rig s centerllpe ol a aur· tlon Ia ba ..d upon
pl~y
and
started
Nurminen
Jarome
Iginla
had
a
goal
and
·
nin~
games.
team to have beaten them so
. Company, Pomeroy, vey, made by the control provided by
far.
Ohio reserve• the Department
of the Ohio Department
right' to bid at this Transportation and ol Transportltlon,
: The Wild are a . diffe~t
oele, and to withdraw baing IOc1ted within District 10 and are
team in overtime this season
the obove collalerll I he
I o II ow In II derived I rom NAD
....._ one of.tlie .main differences
prior to sale. Further: described polnto In 13(1995), Ohio South
tietween this team and the one
The Farmera Bank and the boundary thereof: Zone (3402).
that still looked like an ellpan- ·
Savings Company BEGINNING at the
Said station• b•lng
reaerves
the
right
to
Intersection
ol
the
the
Slltlon numbers
sli:m team last season,
reject
any
or
all
bids
exlstln~ easterly right · as otipulated In the
• The Wild were 0-9-12 in
Sl!bmltled.
ol way line ol West hereinbefore men·
~enime last season, but after
The
above Main Street (S.R. 7) tloneclaurvey and aa
, :lholtok' s goal Thursday
collateral and the exlatlng ahown by plans on ·
On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands described
will be sold "es Is· westerly right ol way lila In the ·Ohio
riight, they're 3-0-2 after regwhere Is"', with no line of Railroad Department
of
ulation.
of men -and women who have proudiy served their country during times of expressed
or Implied Street, aald point Transportation,
"He had a determination in
warranty given. .
being owner's moat Marietta, Ohio.
crise~ and peace.
overtime," coach Jacques
For further lnforma- northerly property
Being all that real
. This Veteran's Day, the Daily Sentinel wiU publish a very special tribute lion, or for an appoint- corner and baing 0.78 property conveyed to
Lemaire said. "He had the
ment to Inspect coital· feet right of center- Jamea 0. Lakin by
look and confidence we needhonoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by including the oral,
prior to sale dale line of survey of deed recorded 11
ed."
contact
Cyndle Relocated U.S. Route Deed Book 204, Page
veteran
in
your
life,
living
or
deceas~d,
who
have
served
or
is
cu"fntly
: Other teams are starting to
Rodriguez al992·2136. 33 station 50+52.38;
609, In the records ol
serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.
(10) 30, 31, (11) 1
thence .South 10 Melga County, Ohio,
take notice of the new-and·
_;_.;_.;,__;_..;,.._ _ degrees 06 minutes attached hereto.
improved Wild. Sharks coach
Public Notice
06 second• Wast
It Is underotood
Your choice of Two Styles ...
Darryl Sutter spoke as though
- - - - - - - along owner'• eaat· thallhe _otrlp of land
they're already a~ elite teain.
erly property line and above described conAd Only $7.00
MANLEY'S
SELF along said ex 1II1ng talna 0.016 acres (712
: '"We got one pomt out of the
Pleas~ Fill Out And Return With
STORAGE
RENTALS
(shown actmil size) ·
A · weaterly right of w1y oq.ft.), more or leu.
building, which is better than
WI LL H0 L0
Your Payment to:
Being 111 of Meigs
line a dlatance of
most teams," Sutter said. '"We
PUBLIC AUCTION AT 96.451eet to owner'a County Auditor's
In Honor Of
better be thankful for that and
VETERAN SALUTE
1T 'S·
FACILITY aouthea1terly p"rop· Permanent Parcel No.
LOCATED
AT 97
~996 000
move on."
I
COTTAGE DRIVE
IN erty corner, sa id 1au-vv
.
.
C/0
The
Dally
Se.
n
tlnel
Marco Sturm scored a secMIDDLEPORT, OHIO point being 8.47 feet
Prior Instrument .
left ol centerline ol Reference: D.B. 204,
111 Court Street
ond-period · goal for the
ON
THURSDAY survey of Reloc1ted Page 609, County
Sharks, who lost their third
NOVEMBER 7,2002. u.s. Route 33 otatlon flecorder'o Office.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
TO SELL THE 49+56.38;
Pursuant to Civil
s.traight. All of those losse~
PERSONAL ITEMS
thence North 75 Rule 12(A)(1), s~ld
have come since Evgem
OF MR BEN WRIGHT degrees 37 mlnutea persons mentioned
In Honor of (name and rank)
Nabokov returned to the goal
LAST
t&lt;NOWN 48 seconds Weal above shall take fur·
!
after ending his holdout ~d
ADDRESS OF 6 along ownor'a south• ther notice that they
PARK erly properly line a have 28 days alter
signing a two-year, $7.15 nulDates of Active Duty .
1 G A AND
AVENUE
ATHENS,
distance of 14.90 feel the completion of the
lion contract Oct. 22.
OHIO
45701
HELD
AS
to owner'l south• ServIce
by
l=s-ra-nc~h-o~f~Se-N~ic_e
____________
_
Dwayne Roloson made 19
Love, Your Family
SECURITY
F 0 R woaterly property Publication within
saves for the' Wild.
UNPAID STORAGE corner, said point which to answer or
Mighty Ducks 4, .Bruins I
RENTAL •9. ·
being In the exlallng otherwise defend
Conflici/War
Ad
With
Photo$14.00
easterly
right of way against Plaintiff's
At Boston, Paul Kariya
(10) 25, 2002
line
ol
West Main petition.
scored three goals and set up ·
(Shown actual size)
(11) 1, 201!2
The original ol any
Street (S.R. 7) and
•
Love,
(Name
relationship
to
veteran)
the other as Anaheim halted .
being 23.15 feet left such answer or other
Boston's ei~ht-game unbeatof Stotlon 49+58.91 In pleading defending
Public Notice
the centerline ol aur- against Plaintiff's
en streak m front of the
LEGAL NOTICE FOR vey of Relocated U.S. petition must ba Iliad
·Bruins' smallest FleetCenter
AD DEADLINE FRIDAY, NOV. 1, 2002
Route 33;
wllh the Clerk ol the
PUBLICATION
crowd ever..
Sentinel ads must be prepaid:
PURSUANT To R.C. · thence along Common Pleao Court
The announced attendance•
owner"• weolerly of Melga County,
163.Q7
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th
was 9,491, the fewest on a
[Two (2) Insertional property .line and Ohio, 11 Melga
along laid exlallng ~ ounty. Courthouoe,
non-snowstorm night since
right of way 100 Eut . Second
easterly
Your Name: _____,...,.______;...__
The Unknown
Oct. 14, 1982. The Bruins had
line lor the following Slrasl, Pomeroy, Ohio
Tranafereea,
Aoalgns,
two crowds under 8,000; one
two cour1e and 45769; and, a copy or
Executors,
Address:-----------any such answer or
in 1987 and the other 1984.
Admlnlalratora; Helro distances:
North 19 degreea o.ther
pludlng
end Devisees of
But both were played on what
01
mlnutea
19
sec·
defending
agllnll
Phone:· J1me1 o. Lakin,
the team called "blizzard"
Deceased, 1nd all onds East 1 dlttlnce · Plaintiff's petition
days. !
peraona claiming by, of 79.03 feet to a mutt be 1erved upon
Anaheim won for the third
through, . or under point 3.47 feet left ol Mark E. Hay1, E1q.,
I
them,
Addreoses centerline of aurvey Aulstlnt Attorney
time in ll games and spoiled
In Honor Of
Unknown, will toke of Relocated u.s. General, 11 14o Eaat
Boston's attempt to equal its
notice that they have Route 33 1tallon Town Street, 12th
best start in club hislory.
Corporal.
Floor,
Columbu1,
been n1med •• 50+35.44,
along 1 circular arc Ohio 43215-6001 .
J ozef Stumpe! scored in the
defendants
by
A failure to anower
Bob Johnson
Gordon Proctor, ol 17.48 leal to the
frrst J~eriod for Boston.
left,
having
1
r1dlu1
or
otherwise defend
Director
Ohio
FLYERS 6, COYOTES 2 .·
of 1472.50 fltt 1nd within Uld 28 daya
Dep~rtment
O
·f
· At Philadelphia, Michal .
Trlnlporlltlon, who being aubt.ended by 1 will reault In Plolntlll,
Handzus and Kim Johnsson
Marines Desert Storm
lnatllutad C111 No. chord beerlng North pursuant to Civil Rule
scored 2:05 apart in ihe sec02-cV.075
now pend· 18 d~gren 40 min· 55, liking the court
Love, Your Family
lng In thl Common utea 58 aeconda Eaat to gr1nt a judgment
ond period for the Flyers.
Pills Court ol Melga lor 1 dl1t1nce ol by delauu against
The Flyers are off to a 7 -I·
COunty, Ohio, which 17.46 lett to the any auch peraon who
2 start under new coach Ken
0 F lalla to anawer or oth·
11 1n action to eppro· P 0 1NT
. erwlae defend.
Hitchcock, and extended theii'
prl1t1 certain prop· BEGINNING.
Thla daacrlptlon
arty lor highway pur·
&lt; unbeaten streak at home to
poll,, n,mely t)le Wll prepared and Gordon 1Proctor
ft ve games (4-0-1 ). Phoenix
Ohio
mlklng, conatruct· reviewed on October Director
has lost four of five.
of
lng, or Improving ol 19, 2001 by Joaeph Dep1rtm1nl
Kuhlm1nn, . Tr•nsportatlon/
Eric Desjardin~. Mark
U.S. Route 33, D.
Section 15.70 and to Ret~latered Surveyor
Recchi, Dennis Seidenberg .
(11) 1, 8
fiX the VIIUe Of llld Number 6823.
and Jeremy Roenick also
This deacrlption 1_1
properly.
scored for Philadelphia. .

or

instead of a struggling Milan ·
Hnilicka.
.
BLACKHAWK$ 2, KINGS 1, OT
At Chicago, Phil Housley
scored a power-play goall:35
into overtime to lift the
Blackhawks
past
Los
Angeles.
Housley beat Felix Potvin
on a screened shot from the
top ofthe slot as Chicago won
its third straight and extended
its unbeaten streak to four

an assist as the Flames beat
Buffalo for their ftrst home
win of the season.
Toni Lydman also had a
goal and an assist as the
Flames won for the first time
in six home games. Turek got
his ftrst shutout of the year
and 21st of his career.
AVALANCHE 5, CANUCKS 1
At Vancouver, British
Cohunbia, Joe Sakic scored

--=::::::;1~Nil5~o1[1;:=""Honor Our

·Heroes .

OIJilBilJlVEWiti

,----------·---------,

tome And see Why!
· Brand New 2003 Pontiac Grand
• Power sunroor
Prix GT Sedan

:~~~:~~~!':
• Koylesa·Entry

$2
. .,

Chertr rruck Defllerl
Pontiac Dealerl
GMDealerl

Pre·Dwned 4 Wheel Drires

In Stoek NDWI

• co System
• Power Seat

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam

I

·------------------

1

Photo of

•16" Altrn. Wheels •Cruise Control
• P-r Windows • CD Systam
• Keyleli Entry • Onotar

• Vortoc V-8 Power • AMIFM Stlreo '
• Automatic

• Smooth Ride

• Air Conditioning Suspension

• 350 V-8 Power • 4 Captain's
• Rear Air Cond.
Chairs
• Color TV &amp; VCP • Fully Power
• Rear Sofa
Equipped!

• Third Seat
• Power Locks
• CD System
• Front &amp;.Rear
• Keyless Entry Air &amp; Heat
• Power Window•

Your
Veteran

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

• 53110 V-6Power
• Aluminum Whlet1

The Daily Sentinel

•.CD_System

650*

• Power Windows

• Keyloll Entry
• Cruise Control

....

1991-1992

• Taxes, Tags, Tille Fe~es .extra. Rebate Included I~ sale price ol new vehicle listed where applicable. ••on approved credit. On selected models. Nol responsible for lypographlcal arrors.
Prices Good October 30th Thmugh Novomb&lt;lr 3rd.
·
·
CHIYROLit

·aulck

@

tt's alt

goOa

•

GZ&gt; Oldsmobile.
-~-

Take 1-77 to Ripley ~AIR PLAIN Interchange
(exit f32) Turn North on Rt. 21 ,
Deal~rship is 3 miles on left

) ,•

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH .45769
(740) 992-2155

!

·•

•

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--·- . __...;_:,___

__,;._

�~ · Friday, November 1, 2002
.-

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

-

\lrribune- SentinelCLASSIFIED

••

ster

•· ;ol'

1

I

...

-

•
:

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•

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Your Ad,

Or Fax To

Mi'u~···KiJ,ANF.Otl'&gt;

I

Rlr &amp;ate. Round Bolos of
Hay, Stored Inside. t-74069&amp;-a211

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

/-)

' ,.

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~egister

ontr~nce

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
"FT.,or;;;;;;~~~=;;:; Uncouditiolll.l 11fetime guarAli'IUS
antee local references fur. FOR&amp;u:
nished. Ealab'ished 1975.
•--iiiiiiiiiii.-,.1 Call 24 Hrs. (7401 446·
,
C
0870, Rogers Basemenl
1960·90 s
ars/ Trucks Waterproofing.
from $500, Pol~ Impounds
lor sale. For listing 1-aoo71 9-3CIJ1 ext. 3901
C&amp;C General Home Maint&amp;1986 Volke. wagon Jetta, 2 nonce· Painting, vinyl sidcars Included: t runs other Ing, carpentry, dOOrs, windows, balhs, mobile home
lor parts $400.00 call 992 - repair and more. For free
2191
: : : : : : - : : - - - - -- - estimate call Chet, 7«J·9921969 Corvette, red, S.' poed 6323 .
transmission, 17• wheels, .:-Cu-,--~-B-ulldl_ng_&amp;-:-R-emod--::new tires, all original. Elocef- eling lor all your hOmO retent condit•on (3Cl')675- pa•" needs. over 18 -ars
33&amp;4
rw

doors 32" 3

, . , .•

I

'

t •stonn doors, 32"; 2 ctosel
. • doors, 5 interior doors, 32" t
!fireplace door and screen;
:f.(7o40)245-5695
. nng, ask•
• t ~ karaI SOI'tI a1re

' •31.

992·2157

::'::~::-::--:---:-:--- experience, Free ESIImates•.
1992 Pontiac Grand Am, 2 (7&gt;40)992·1119

: -!:lng $1500 080. Would
• •make goo&lt;t Chnstmas pres.
~ ent. (740)388-8414
·t, ·• 4·10 ·D John Deero Rubber
tire Backhoe,
Sto,ooo;
~ 9-55- K Caterpillar track
~ loadar, $12,000. Both tn
goo&lt;t conditiOn. (740)368·

r

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:.00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN A!2

e~~v~lto

•PERso--N•AIS--_.1~

RENOVATION PROJECT
Shattered soul seeks hanest handyman Please write
soon Send replies to CLA
565, clo - Gallipolis Daily

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior TO
Publication
Sunday Display : 1: 0()
Thursday for Sundavs

In NeKt Day's Paper
Su•nd'ov In - Column : 1:00 p . m .
For Sundays Paper

---

• Starf'l Your Ads Wi th A. Keyword • Include Complete
Des criP t ion • Include A Price • AVo id Abb r eviations
·~Pn'£J ude Phone Number And Addrus When Needed
'
! Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To
Ge t

r..,
__

Display Ads

Dally In - Column : 1 : 00 p . m .
Monda.y-frlday for Insert i on

lbuWANJW

Iro lbuW~ Iro

i

ANNOUNCEMENTS

I
.

:

C-1 Beer c arry Out permit
for sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters

I

lfw&gt;WANm&gt;

Hannan Public Ltbrary Llbranan min. wage, 25 hour
a week position, with Hmited
benefits Apply by date: November 7, 2002. Position requlred, but is not limited to:
good people skills, good

•-•PR•D•D•UCT-•IO_N_ _.J
DEPARTMENT ·
We have Part-time openings in our production, packaging &amp; ctstrlbution area
•Must be dependable
•At least 18 years ot age

Wanted lmmedlalely· Roof.
ers and carpenters Labor
Leader. Pay based on experience . Lots of freedom
(740)448-3541 (740)339
3818
---'------

trunks, old quihs, old glassware, old toys, old furnitu re,
stone jars &amp; jugs, oil lamps
t -740-992-7599

in appearance, previous II·
brary experience not needed. Likes 10 read Apply to:
Director. Mason County
Public Library, 508 Viand
St., Pt. Pleasant, WV
25550 (304)675-0894 Mason County Pubfic Library is
and Equal Opportunity Employer.
- - - - - -- - H 1
eel
e P wal')t
car1ng 1or the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
· m1n1mum wage,
now paying
new shifts· 7am-3pm, 7am·
5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm7 am, ca11740-992•5023 ·
IMMEDIATE NEED: Li·
censed Practical Nurses
(LPN) tor tun-time and p
' art·
time work in 114 Bed Long

·Must be flexible with regard
to work hOurs
·Must be able to lift 50 lbs
Apply between 7 00-9·6oam
Monday.· Friday to Don
Coleman at The Gallipolis
oa1ry Tribune or send your
resume to his attentiOn cJo
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
P.O Box 469, Gallipolis,
OH 45631
.

ENVIRONMENT 50 POSITIONS AVAILABLE 1· 888~97;._4-J_;_OB:.::.:S_;______
WORK FROM HOME
Potential $1500/mo/pt
S50001moltt. Free Info.
1-800-921-4412
www acuquirefreedom.com

of mterestPOto·Box
The Da1ly
Sentinel,
729 _20,
F!omerov. Ohio 45769

~~..._:;;;;;:;.;;;~;:;......., --------~
Outback yard sate, flit-a-

'Mn
,- ·-

$

GIVEAWAY
..__ _ _ _ _ _•
•
2 maMe
I k1tt en,•. ,. •uheau t'lI u1,·
part ilntJI,
IQ I gray
dark gray stripes, stubta1t; 1
whltel gray wtth tail Call
(7 40)441 -01 45

bag· 2, Nov t ·2, 9-3, At.
33 , Peach Fork, watch lor
Signs
Refrigator, Microwave,
Hobart Meat Saw, Antiques,

Term Care State Facihty
Misc., Hog Hollow East of Full-time e{1lployment olfors
Racine, Ohk&gt; oH SR 124
and extensrve benet it pack~~-~-----, .:Sii:at:_;;urd.;;;;ay~9-:--_4 "'!::'_ __, age, Including State civil
AND
serv1ce ret~rement, eam up
FOUND
YARDSAJ..Jt:·
to 15 days vacation, 18
~~-------·
Pr. P'LEAsANT
days s1ck leave, and 13 plus
paid hoWdays, health/life inFOUND- small brown &amp;
surance is available Salary
13
Ridgewood
Drive
Sat.
white dog with broken
Nov
2
9-3 waterbeds, is commensurate with expechain Corner of State
rience. Contact Kim Billups,
Route 218 &amp; Neighborhood desk. vanity labia, clothes, DON at Lakin Hospital, Labarb1
e
doll
stuff
galore
Ad (740)446-7685
kin, WV at (304)675-0860,
- - - - - - - - - Garage Sale, Hbilday Crafts ext. 126, Monday thru FriLOST· 2 year Chocolate Nov 1st &amp; 2nd, a·30am- day from 8:00am-4:00pm.
· Lau• Iost 1n th e Nor lhup area 6pm 3 miles Crab Creek Lakin Hosp1tal is and

r.

Losr

Ii

~~~~et~~~·:;~j~~~~
ff

4p

~a:'e'::r~m':"-----'~
LOST- Cockapoo, medium
size dog, mostly gray with
some black/ white. UBuddy~.
Potecat Road, Gallipolis

~(7_4,;c01'--4-'46'-·6cc09
=6-~--

r

Ad off AI 2

A

UCflONAND

I

EEOIAA Employer.

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
FLF..A. MARKirr
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
675-1429
Angie's Flea Marto;et9-5 has Looking tor experienced
I
items at 25 each HVAC TechniciaN Installer,
Pornenoy Ohio Call For In- must have 2 or more years
experience In this field This

Mlaalng Dog name IS S1s,
~~~;--,
Lost on Sand Ridge Rd., if
f
d 11
0)
85
34 7
oun ~a &lt;74 9 · 1
Reward tor the arrest &amp; con- ..__ _ _ _ _ _. . .

is a full tirne position with
good safary lf IntereSted
call (740)441~1238 if no answer, leave messaQe

·
AN's &amp; LPN's
Are you look1ng for. a .challange? Would you like the
challenge 10 usa your nu ......
••
lng skills to "make a do·~,.
""
ence?"lf so, consider what
the new leadership at Rocksprings Reha"'litatlon ,...,.,
U1
'-'C'nter has to offef'.
Competitive Salary
..
Flexible Scheduling
Educational assistance
Job satislactlon
For a limited time only,
Rocksprings Rehabilitatton
Center Is offering a $2000
SIQn-on bonus for LPN's
and AN's
For
more
informatl~n.
please contact" Debbie
Stewart, Assistant Director.
01Nurs1ng, (740)992-6606
Equal Opportunity Employer
Encouraging Workplace Oi·
verso'ty MIF ON

.
-

Social Service Workers
needed lor Mason Co.
Headalart Program Quahfi·
cations incluc:Je High School
Diploma. SOme experience
in Social Ser.:ice agents
preferred A val•d WV Dnvers License. COL within 6
montns of employment.

-wanted
- ---=---------Ellperlenced;
Carpenter 1-740-378..S349
•
11411 ~:~J
BuslNE&amp;4i

1'RAINING

"-•ooiiiiioiiiiii_...
G I
It !polio Coroor College
(Cireers Close To Home)
Call Todayt 740-446-4367,
14100-214-0452,
Reg ,90.()5-12748
1170

'MiscEu..ANF.ol

•

Childca

•

W
AN'JD)
TO Do
11 bl ·

re ava a e. In dOwntown providing
Pomeroy, 24
pnvale
pay
only,
ht. aerv-

ice, call (740)992-5827 tor
more information
Georges Portabkt Sawmill,
~n't haul yQur logs to the
mill just call304-675-1957
Housekeeping service available. For a free consultation
please
call
Amber.

5end Resume, cover 18 tter ' (740)245-7801

position desired &amp; rereren- ::...;.::;:.:.:..:..::.;_____
ces too. SCAC Director of Will pressure wash houses,
Human Resources 540 5th trailers, and decks. Gall

Make extra mona
I
A25ve701 PoHunlt~ington, ti!IWIVI 41 41-4238 ask for Ron or
h Y or
s .an open
I· eave message.
c nstmas Sell Avon. led. EOE
(740)446-3358 .
;;:_:ccc:.;c:__ _ _ _ _ _ Would like a jOb senlng with
an elderly person in the Gal1
McClure's Restaurant now Taking Applications for C.r- lipOIIS area or babys1Hing
hiring all 3 locations, full or llfltd Weldtr. Must have during the day tf 1nterested
pari•o·me· p'~
up appl'"•
~
·-· verifiable Experience. Must call (740)446-7t5t
·on
at
locati
'
on
&amp;
bn'ng back Hive Certificate (304)675·
0
YARD SAIE
WANTED TO BUY. 3 bed·· between
9·30am
&amp; 4005
''
;=;:;=;:::=~ room mobile horne In good I O:OOam , Monday thru Sat-:;:~-"::'.......- - . ,
• · cond'l'
~•eacher A'"~~.~e nei:NV\,,
·"·" part - riO
BUSINESS
110n, on t to 2 acres o1 urda y.
2
YARDSAu
land 1n the TUppers Plains,
,
ltmo 900·1200 Monday
OPfoKruNrry
Chester area. Send mfo to: Needing a trustworthy lady through Friday to work with
G ALLIPOLIS
Lee's, 311 TR Rd 1031, to shtay whtth an oldendrly lalhdy children with special noods
INOTICEI
Nova, Ohio 44859·9762
In er ome, rou
. e Apply 'tn person or send re
clock care. For more onto.
- OHIO VALLEY .PUBLISH10 00-4300, November 1st
please call (304)713-5128 if ! .uOm.eBotox: 3COa7n,e,to3ntO~Cah~e-' lNG CO. re&lt;:ommeotla that
&amp; 2nd, lots of Items, 194 Hilr-.
11
1
eta Dnve (Spnng Valley) no answer Pease
leave ton Street Syracuse Oh VOU do business with people
~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ message.
45779 EEO
'
you know, and NOT to send
3 fa m11y sale ,' November 1110
money through the maU until
1&amp;2, Clay Townhouse, LovHELPWAN'DD Pari-lime
Aide needed for The Mason County Com- you have Investigated the
ers Lane 8-4pm
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,1 100 bed skilled nursing fa - mission IS now accepting ottenng
::';:::"':::-'-":':"---,--:-- '
Cillty. Interested applicants applications for the position ::---::-----,--------4367 State Route 160, 7 Auto body man- expen- sh~uld applY . . to.: Rock- or a· part-lime emplow.. for Small concession trailer
'IV yard sale Startrng enced in metal fabncating, spnngs Rehabtlttatton Cen
Iam1
. • the Mason County ,__
Animal equipment with cotton can Friday, 1st &amp; Saturday, 2nd- bodywork, wek:llng &amp; paint- ter, 36759 Rockspnngs Sheller Applicants must be dy machine and funnel
beside Shinn's Tractor ing, call Hilt's Classic Cars Road,
Pomeroy,
0~10 able to work weekends and cake, fryer &amp; fridge . ComSates Flea market dealers Restoration s 7am-10pm 45 769, Mary Hoffman, Diet- some holidays. This will be plate water system $3500
_we':l'co_m..:______
e
(740)949-221.7
' ary Manager
.
a minimum wage position. or trade tor small car.
~~
- - - ' - - - - - - - - - '·- Extendcare Health Serv- Appllcat•on forms can •be (304)675-3630 or (304)593843 2nd Avenue. OCtober
•ces, Inc. IS an equal oppor- obtained in the Mason 2244
31st- November 4th Lots of
BURGER KING
tunity employer that encour·
h
County Commission office
n..-...~........,
1
c ol es
Management Opportunities. ~~~so;orkplace diverSity. on the ground fkJor or the
nn.n-~AL
Garage Sale- 1328 L1ncotn ~e see k career ?rlent.ed incourthouse betwe&amp;n the
SERVICES
Pike, Patriot, OH Across diVI~uals who. Will. •.tnve II? ruGES- No ·"ucat'1onal re- hours of 8.30 and 4 30 Man- - acn 1ev th B I 10 C
.-"'
V\1
street fro m Northup 8apt1st t
e s"tl' l es .
usd· qUirement Minimum 18 day through Frida~. The
TURNED DOWN ON
an
M
Co
Com 1 1
Church. Friday Evening 5·7, .,.,omer rk a • aclion
" h
years of age Energetic
ason
unty
m sson SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
11
Saturday 9 00-dark.
d,ea~wot
youd a~teh a worker enthusiastic learn- Is an equal opportunity emeslre o succee w1
a
:.
player and does not discrlmNo Fee Unless We W1nl
November 1-2, 9-5pm, Four goal driven, team oriented, ers, .ability to work accurat~· lnate due to race sex
1-888-582-3345
fam ily 1ns1de Garage Sale. growing company we offer ly filing books, videos, COl, creed, religion, or n8tlonai
V1ne Street Video Building health , dental &amp; life insur- ~agazlnes, and other male- origin. John 0. Gerlach Adacross tram O'Dell Lumber ance, prescription card, tl~ls on library regu• and mlnlstralor, Mason County riO
Ho·~
1n Gallipolis
401K, bonus program, paid dlspllay shelving Must have Commission
FOR s.w;'~
b•• C keyboarding and
vaca11ons, Management Ap.
4
YARD SAu:·
parel, advancement from searching SkillS to use auto- The Town of Maaon Police
PoMEROYiMIDrnE within Apply in person at mated catalog 10 Identity Deportment will be accept· $14,900,4 bedroom, 4 bath
L~.,;ioiiiiiiiiiiiii,;;;,iiiiiiiiiPI the Burger King Aesta'urant matenals. Must be able to lng applications for the post- hOme won't lull For tlstreach , stoop, and bend to t'
I Poll Off'
Appl'
·
Back porch Chnstmas sale- locate d at Upper AI ver put materials away n iOn o
ce
Iter.
I· ing call1-800·719·3001 Ext.
at 692 Arl Lewis St by Mid· Road or mall resume . to. stlelves which are on the cations may be picked up at F144
118
dleport Park, F.O Angels, 'Surger Kin~. ~ 5 Upper River ground or as high as six . the Mason .Town Hall
45631
porce1a1n doll s, kmves and Road, Galhpo IS, OH
feet Must be aware of nu- ~~ .:veco:rl~:~~g~:; 3 b~room House, 1 batl'i,
toys and much more, Nov. 1 DominO'S Now Hiring all lo- merlcal and ·alphabetical fil· business hours. Completed full IIZI basement w/ahowlhru N o~ 9ttl
cations PI Pleasant, GaiUp- i!'g systems and be able to appllcatlona must be re- er, 2 car garage, 1211:22,
oils Eleanor sate drivers file matenals with complete celved befOre close of busl- glasa patio room, heat
Craft, Bake, Garago Sale:
must be t 8. Apply In person 'accuracy, Minimum wage. noaa ~ov 29 2002 Appll- pump w/ac, 2 112 (31x31)
Nov 1st and 2nd Danville at locations.
EOE Bossard Library, ap- cants must be, of good char· c~r garager new dOOrs &amp;
across tram Danville Church ::;....:::== - - - - - ply at the Circulation Desk. acter and slate certification Windows, vent free llrepface
Raln or Shine I
EASY WOAKI
Rocksprings Rehabilitation is preferred.
in UR, vent free heater In
·
S 1
7-':--'------:: glass room &amp; base mont,
!nsld ,e Huge Movmg
a e.
EXCELLENT PAY!
Center Is aeet&lt;lng applicants Truck Drl~er wanted, call corner lot 100lC100, Wilking
Oct. 31st. - No~. 2nd Rain Assemble products at home for an exper~enClld Recep- (7401662 6402
dt' sta~• to school ~at 01
I'10 1
' 1
P
II/A
t
.
·~
' ~
.
11 24 Coli
Sh
2,rd s'"e. 9· 5· 1 t 1 ft "ttge
Call Toll Free
n 8 • c ayroPo clclounls ' -= '----'--'-'------- flee, community center. Ask·
·n . yracuse. s . e a er 1_800 -46 7-ss• •Ewt . 12170 Payable
terk.
stan s Truck Drtvera, Immediate lng 56,000 shown by appt.
~
IuII t'1me wu"h excelle nt bene- hire , c1 us A COL requ1rvu,
~ ontY.'' No antwer leave mft·
par k, mov1ng ever yt.hmg
must go. $5.00 tor a large MGR Personal tor local taBI filS package (401 K). Eipert- oxcellenl pay, experlenco sage·. (3041682 _2817
t h ba f 11 Yo 111
lood
·
tood enced app 11cants 1nou ld required . E1m up to ·
ras
g u
a 1 your
operatiOn. 2 years
·
own bag more mercha ndiSe serv1ce experience &amp; good send resumes or apply' In 11 ,000. per week.Call 304· a Bedroom newly remod·
added dally Toys , clothes pe ople sk1Ua Must be a self person to Patti Wallck 675-4005
eled, In Middleport, call Tom
lor the whole fa m1ly, dolls, starter Very good starting Lance, Rocksprings Aeha- URGENTLY
NEEDED· A n de_ r!~~ aner 5 p.m
housewares. books, much wages Pa1d vacat1on and blhtatlon Center 36759
~
mlsC Halloween decora - oth er benefits, msurance Rodl:sprmgs Ad., Pomeroy, plasma donorQ, earn $50 to
lions ariel party supplies, available Send resume to Oh10 45769
$80 per week fOf' 2 or · 3 3 Bedroom with garage on
plates pencilS etc. for sale CLA 566, c/o Gallipolis Dai· Equal Opportunity employer hours weekly. Call Blo Life approximately 1 acre On
at reduced pnces also 4 ly Tribune, PO Box 469 , that encourages workplace Ptaama Service, 740-592- /Route 2, Gallipolis Ferry
pieces Iron tractor we•gh ts _ Gallipof•s. OH 45631 .
diver.sily M/F ON
6651 ·
(304)675·5332

vi ction of person or persons 'Absolute Top Dollar· US
whO stole my camoflog Lad- Sliver, Gold Colns .ProOr ~
, • der tree stand, on creek beI
o·
d . G td
. hind Eden U B Church or se s,
tamon s,
o
Rings,
U.S Curtency, no questions asked if re- M T.S. Co1n Shop, 151 Secturned to Panny Barber ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740446•2842·
1740) 378-6365

r~
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"1:1"'"-:------,

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992 3

.

EM~~

G:t

; bar 23, 2002 Coil Tracy at
' (740)441-1982

I

' Complete coMoclfon 1500
•,DI cUI care. 1164 acalo.
• Naocar hoi -~~ al&amp;o winnero drclo. Dole Earnhardt.
(304)675-1314

1997 Pontiac Flreblrd ExceltoniCondlllon power brakloa
1oc1oo winc:towo oct $7200 oc)
SharP 69~-2364 .
'

---"-~-·-~1 t
~~

(30~n)trac3- ~~~ t:ar!:f =~:

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;;~S~nth';'::~68=·

New 2003 14 wide. Only 3br. Hou&amp;e located In Mo$799 down and only
3 or 4 beclrooms, 2 .balhs, $159.45. Call Nikki, 740· son, WV. $495 +Utilities
basement. New windows, 385-7871
No Pets. (304)773·5881
siding, roof HVAC, plumb M
H
ing, wiring. Garaga, covered Nice 14x65 1972 SchultZ
~RENrOMES
patio, large yard. Conven- mobile home. 2br. 1-bath, ,
lent Grape Street. (740)446· ntce size kitchenllivinepoom.
3108 after s·oopm.
All electric, heats with gas. 14x70 2 bedroom, nice,
Central air, has 65foot.unw3 .year old Brick Aanch, lng Vinyl underpinning. clean, near ~lay School No
pets, $350 month + deposit.
3'iJOO+ sq tt 2•112 acres, !n· Steps,
railing.
Asking (740)256-1664
'
rround pool, storage build- $5,500 OBO. Gall anytime

i

~~r=~r!~elg!"bbrhOOd, ~::J674-0122 or (304)895-

M2t' nBeerdsvro,.lolem aMreoablle$2H50o.mOOe

j

FOR

I

RDfr

Mobile Home tot lor rent.
Extra large. Very private,
Gallipolis, Ohio. $115 per
:9o2~h. Phone (304)576- '
Mobile home lot, takes 12·
14-16 wldes $100 deposit,
$125 month. (740)446.0175
\111 ~1 II \\Ill..., I

rib

H~ID
uuuuo

8 acres , 2 bedrooms in
FARMS
month, WI deposit, reteren-. ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,.,
count!)', $65,000. (740)388ces required, No Pets 992- . .
FOR SAlE
6777 after 5:00p.m
'
2 Almond frost-free relriger9645
.:.:..7~-------c: ~
All Brick house on 2 112
2 bedroom 2 bath River ators, S7S each, Kenmore
Valley School' d'tslr'ict'. $275 washer &amp; "'"•r,
acros otlanc:t . 4-Bedrooms, DIANE SAUNDERS
-•" $150,· Late
Congratulations!
You
have
month
Re~rence
&amp;
••posmodel
Wh1rlnnot
washer,
family room &amp; fireplace liv•~:
U'ICI
,.. ..
ing room. 2112 baths, 2 car won 2 troo movio tickets to it. (740)367.0632
. $tOO; Kenmore dryer, $75.
no rage Heat pumn, central the Spring Valley 7 In GalCaQ after 6:00pm. (740)446~ 2 barns, lnground
"~
air,
pool u~us.
..,..... Call the Registor to- 2 bedroom, Sprinn• valley 9066
wllhgazabo. Localedat 316 day . tor details.(304)675- area, $325month,$250de ·~r-.
. ------McCally Rd. Gallipolis, 1333
posit, no pets, (304)675·
seat Lazy Boy couch,
Ohio. Phone (740)446-7104
BIJSINES'i
12900 or (740)44f.6954
ual redlner, $275; White
a•er 5'30pm
·
couch, hardly used, $350.
3
"
AND BunnJNGS
badroom, 2 full bath, wtlh (740)446-6137
_bed_ro_o_m_,,_2_b_a_th-.-o-,~-.s-lz_e_d - expandp lot rent m Vmton
......
Available November 2nd. Downsizing! Selling furnikitchen, CIA, covered front Building fOf sale with or
8 91:.:9:.:2_-,--_ _ ture &amp; other Items. Reason- .
perch, outside building, ap, without stock at 62 Olive "(7;...40
=138
.::.-.:
ably priced, good condition,
prox 5 acres in country set- Street,
Gallipolis,
OH Beautiful River View Ideal CBI (740)245-9448
ling, but just minutes from ~4iii56r3:.:,1;.~
· ,:;740~;;::;:;;;·3~1.::;59::......., For1 br2Peopfe, Aeleren·
town and hospital,. $110,000 -=
,..,....,.. &amp;
ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos- For Sale Reconditioned
1
{740)446-3275
.LA.II~
ter Trailer Park, 740·441- washers, drYers and refrigACREAGE
0161
orators. Thompsons Appt '.
Brt'ck 'Ranch, 2 """room,
2 L--ooiiiliiiiliiliiiiiiooo_.l ...:.:=
· - - - - - - - ance 3407 Jackson Ave-1
~
-:
bath, garage, on ri~er, 5
Clean 3 Bedroom Mobile nue, (304)675 -7388
miles South of Gallipolis. 112 acre lot on TYcoon lake Home in the Country ..::.:;:_::::;..::::.;.::..:_:::::_ _
112
16
00
(740)441-8817
W
X60Trailer$ •500·
(740)256-6574
Good Used Appliances, Re' - - ' - - - - - ' - - - - - - now $13•500 ·00
George Road, near Eno, off conditiOned and Guaran(7401 247 •1100
554. $275 per month, $200 ' teed. Washer&amp;, , Dryers,
F
Mod
H
Ranges and Ref
t
1
400
1
q. t.
u ar orne, Mason Co. 73 + acres, deposit. (740)388-9326
'
ngera ors,
3 BED, 2 Full Bath, Garden Pond, city water, electric
So~ start at $95 . Skaggs
Tub, Deck w/Above ground Very nice trailer Included.
APAR'IMEN'IS
Appliances, 76 Vme St .
pool, 25x29 2 car garage w/ Great Hunting, timber. Nice
FOR RENf
(740)446-7398
overhead storage, Racine, d
eve 1opmen 1 for horne '''te.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
OH. (740) 949-1353
$150 000 (304)882 3131
Ch
I A d Po
O
'
·
1 and 2 bedroom apartape oa ,
rler,
hlo
(740)446 7444
8
1800 sq.h 3 bedroom, 2
REALEsrA'IE
ments, furnished and unfur•
1· 77-830balh in Po.rter on 314 acre
.. ,_.lUTE'.,.
nished, Security deposit re- 9162. Free Estimates, Easy
wllh large build1ng on tol L~---niili'~ii.ii"~iiilo-· quired, no pets, 740·992· financing, 90 days same as
New siding and roof. -:-'
2218.
cash. V1saJ Master Card
$60,000 (740)441 -4705
wanted 10 Buy· Small tot in -:--'--=-~--,------ Drive- a- lltlle ~ave alot.
Gallia Count~ with mobile 1 Bedroom Apartments Moving . Maytag washer,
home se 1-up. (740)446 · Starting at $289/mo, Wash- drvar, like new, $500 pair, 2
Country Home wlth 11-112 9209
er/ Dryer Hookup, Stove
'"'
acres. 314br. 2ba., 2 Car- - - - - - - - - - - - and Refngerator. (740)441- baratools; 2 end tables;
Gorllge, above ground pool, Will pay top dollar lor prime 1519
(7401446 ·9209 aHer 4Pm.
Handcrafted kitchen cabi- land. New home builder '-=b':.-.,-o-om--u-n-lu-rn-'ts_h_e_d Oak table with 6 cf1a1- (2
1
t Off L
B d
A
3
~
'"
ne s.
eon a en d (740)448-309
apartment Probable Client leaves} &amp; hutch, hke new,
(304)458·1580
(304)875- 1550
~; ,Few Dep.art. 58 HousForeclosed sw on 2 acre :~=~~===~
ea (Dickens VIllage), make
tract, $500 oown to qualllled
· 2 bedroom apartment, otter: can (740)992·5110 Of
:-bu-ye~"'=·':ca-'1"1..:(7;,.40")_44_6_-35_7_0
HCJUQS
stove, retngerator, water, {7&lt;40)992-2662 after 3prn
tor a quick sale.
FOR lbNT
trash furnished, rent $275, Skaggs Appliances Whirl..__ _iiiiiiiiiito-r' deposh required . (740)441· pool waaher, $Q5; Kenmore
Land home packa~s No ·
0563 (740)446-7620 after 7. dryer, $95; GE electric
paym~nti while un r con- 1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed 3 bedroom apartment up· range, $95; Sunray gas
:~~~~o~aymL~~~e re~~lrend~ Homes From $199/Mo., 4% stairs, LR, OR, kitChen, range, $95; Whirlpool Ae(740)446·3218
Down, '3o Years at 8.5% bath, washer &amp; dryer room, frll1fJrator {white) $160; MayAPR For Listings, 800·31 9· $400. (740)367-7015. No t
h &amp;
ag was er
dryer set,'
3323 Ext 1709
pets. •
$300,
Upr~ht freezer
'-'-"--~----- (whito) ' $250· (740)446New 2000 sq ft hOme, 10 2 bedroom house In Kanau- Apartment, CIA, 1 BR, 1 7398
minutes from Hospital
bath k'l1 he
:-"-0~-,..~---1
c n W1applarus,
Complete above grountl ga. $350/mo. $3501 depo-'t
a~ 1oca ·
133
2
h nd Ave$3nue, UCsocked turn1ture &amp; antiques
pool with ~rch, driveway No pets, Call (740)446-4107
tednc:tat
1
,..,
before 10.00am.
wa1er a tras pad,
25. r a, d1shea and glass·
and garage foundation. :.:;=.;..:.==--~- 740)446-4 859
ware. Call for delalls
Price below appraisal. 2
b d
h
D(740)
'
288 -6 522
(740)446·3384.
( 40)~-;:.;n
ouse, BEAUTIFUL
APART,;

r

r

s

i

r·O '

I

I

(

7

Wanted! Good credtt cus- '-'=:.:;:.::.;,;__ _ __,
2 story, 4 bedroom house, 3
tomeri to purchase new car garage, living room,
home wllancl $0 down to famil~ room. and oxtraa,
qualified customers. 1-5 $550 a month, $250 deposacre
tracts
available. It, .1 year lease, pets alaid,
(740)446·3093
(740)368·8699

MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
CES AT JACKSON ES·
TATES. 52 Westwood Drive
from $297 to $383. Walk to
&amp;hop &amp; movies Call 740·
446-2568. Equal Housing
opportunity

9~

il! 5x7 uUhty trailer, 4 new
~ tlree, new paint, with fold up
~ • ramp. Asking $250 OBO.

SUn

~Qall (740)441·1238 leave

~~·~-p
~· ' IIURN Fat, BLOCK Crav~ ', lngs, and BOOST Energy
~: ' Uke 'mu Haw Never Ex·

BENEFIT
GUN SHOOT

'1 perlonced.
·•
r..

WEIGHT· LOSS

'

REVOLunDN

Forked Run··

~ New product launch Octo-

t"'-1·0

12 uaed homes under
$3,000. Wil ~ with deiiV·
ery. catt Harold, 740-3859948.

1

•' -~

3brh0uae $425. Month. No Now Taking ApplicationsPets, Ref. &amp; Deposit 35 West 2 Bedroom TownAll real 11t111e advertising
(3Q4)67S..2749
house Apartm&amp;nts, Jndudes
In this newspaper 11
- - - - - - , . - - - Water
Sewage, Trash,
5 rooms &amp; batb, 50 Olive St, $3501Mo., 740-446-0008.
IUbject 10 the Federal
12x80 3 bedroom w/c/a, $325 mo. (740)446-3945
Fair Hou11ng Act of 1tu
washer &amp; dryer, stove,
whiCh m1111e1 H 111eg11 to
For Rent 6 room fumlshed One bedroom, upstairs
$5,495, 740-992-2167
aclvertlte ... ny
Mason
preference, limitation or
14x65 Shultz w/Oishwashor rouse
77 · Gallipolis. $350 per month
ors
we
come.
dtleflmlnatton baled on
&amp; tronl deck
$6,000 5764
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_ plus $350 deposit. water &amp;
rKI, COlor, rwUglon, HI
(304)675-6295
Large, two story, three bed- trash included (no other utilflmlllal atltus Of' nation11
19114 SchuR t6x72 Mobile room house al 653 Second rues included in rent). No
origin, or any tn•ntton to
Home Priced to sell Quick Avenue, Gallipolis (near U- pets. Six month lease remake any auch
Gall (740) 385·2434
brary) $800 per month wUh qulled. Call (740)446·7323
preference, limitation or
$800 deposit required No (Library) for more lnformadl~erlmln~tlon. "
pets Water included in rent tion.
t 995 Claytoo 141!60 house (no other utilities). Six
TNa newspaper Wll not
trailer on rented lot tor months lease required ·
knowingly accept
(7401446 _7• 23 (U"rary) lor Twin Rl¥11'11 Tower for elcl$12,000. (304)675·2457
.:~
u
advertisementa ror real
erly/ disabled.
more intormation.
1Now
tlllte whtch II In
accepting applications
2br. 2 full bath, ftreplace.
vlolaUon of the laW. Our
(304)773-5713
, Two year old 2 bedroom du· for 1 br, all utilities paid
Nidi,. are hereby
plex wlkitchen appliances. HUD -assisted, carpeted
MUST SELL BY THE END Harrisonville area on Kings- apartment rent Is 30% of
lnfonned that Ill
...
A
ff SA
OF
OCTOBER!
COLE'S
dwlllnga ICIYertiMd In
~ry d. o
143. No your adjusted Income call
·
~O.!JILE HOME , Athens,
t h t o _ ...
smokong, oo pets. $400 per 304-675-6679 belwoon 8Ollio (740)592-1972, on oc- month or $375 with 'If. lease 4.30 pm weekdays EHO
•vaUabll on an equal
casion we have a display plus utilities 16 m11es Ath- ---~----opportuntry bases.
home that doesn't sell. We ens, 10 miles Pomeroy. De· Fumlshed 3 rooms + bath,
haY« one such home now posits and references re- upstairs, clean, no pets.
10
H~
New 16 X 80 three bed- quired, (740)742-3033
Reference &amp; deposit reFOR"··room, 2 Bath homo al a - - - - - - - - - quired . (740)446-1519
..___iiiiii""'""iiii.-pl ueed home price come see 2br. hOuse tor rent 1505
Lynn or Ernie tOday and Ohio Street, Pt. Pleasant. Furnished Efticienctea, 811
3 bedroom, 2 bath home, ehttk out your savings. (740)441.0720
uti1i1ies paid, .share bath,
HP/CA- WOOd burner, new Remember we must sell by ':-:-..-':---------:-c-c-- $135 month, 91g; 2nd AVedishwasher &amp; electric range the end of bctoberl
3 bedroom house In Bidwell. nue, (740)446-3945
2 112 car garage, with 3
References required. · No OraoiOut Uvln". 1 and 12
rooms upstairs, workshop, Must sell! Owner moved, pets, $550. month, $559 de- bedroom apartment• at VII·
barn &amp; pool oi1 4.75 acres 2001 Oakwood 14x70, 389. posit, tak1ng applications. !age Manor 'and Riverside ·
2.2 miles from Rio Grande 2 bath, all appliances, (740)246-1411
Apartments In MiddfeiVlrt.
at 2212 Cherry Ridge Call washer &amp; dryer Included,
1"'3 bedroom, 1-112 baths In From $278·$348. Call 740·
(740) 992·0309 $85.000 · central air with deCk, Make Point Pleasant, wv. $600 992-5064. Equal Housing
down payment &amp; take over month+ dennc:.if. Garbage &amp; Opportunities
3 bedroom, Garfield Ave- $370 month mortage pay_...
~i""-~~--""""1
.
1 (216)351 •7086
water
no pot&amp;.
nue, 0 wner t'1nancmg,
mens.
(740 )446paid,
~ACE
924

r
I

Needed· used Boyscout,
Cubscout uniforms for
Scout Troop Cub Pack, call
40 992-6073

1

sa

the right to lldtl, Nfld, tM' c.nc.1 •ny .s.t •nv time. Errors mu.t be NpDrtltd on the·"-· ·-:&lt; -·
rwponslbla tor no more than the cost ol the! apeo1 occupied by the error 1nd onlf h nr.t "'--ion.
Mutt~ frOm thl pub41Htktn or omt.a~ott of.., ~ eorr.ct1on wHI t. m8de ln 1M nrwt llvalllblt edition. • lox
• Cwrent m. c.rd app!IH.. • All I'MI Mtlle .rv.tl.....,_ . .
the Fedlral Filii' ttOu.ing Act ol 1811. • Tbla , _ _ , . .
_. ..Ung I!OE ...,.,._ W.
wloWion of the ....

Large Garage Sale. One
day only Nov 2nd Sat Rain
or Sh1ne 7.00 a.m-' Just off
Oh10 Slate AT 7 &amp; 5 m1tes
North of Pomeroy turn on
Eagle Ridge Ad .2nd.
House on left at 1st Inter-

Nov 4 &amp; 5 Skate-A-Way (inside) 995-9996 time 9.00 •
5'00, Eastern Star Jewelry,
Troy Bill RotoUIIer, Riding
Mower, RCA DISh, Couches, relngeralo'r, furniture,
Sh 110
W 11
p
a w
e
ump,
Clothes, G1rls B1ke, Mim
Bl'1nds. Lotso1M'ISC

Free Yard Sale Sign!
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

lftiii'Vel

~~~~ecJ~~s:3o: 469, Gal· f;'i~fn,old~~q~~~tt.G~ra~~ ~r::~:~~:&amp;rtS::: ::; .~~~rz~'tte:o~ptut ~~?K~NH~S ~sorT! ~F~~~

,--------- - , - - - - Why wa1!? Start meeting
Ohio singles ton 1ght. call toll
lree 1 -B00-766-2623 e~et
c..
·t 6:;:2;,;';.
· ------,

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

Used furniture slore 130
Buta~ille Pike. We seli mattresses. bunk beds dressers , cou ches app'llances
much more. Grave manu~
ments (l40)446 _4782 Gal·
lipolls, OH.

I

door, rebuilt engine, new
ti res, $ 1900. (740)245-9307
Eu:cnucAIJ
1993 Toyota Pasoo, silver,
RF.J0111GJiliATION
5-speed, CD player, sun- - root, reduced 10 $3,350. Residential or commercial
Call anytime. (740)441 · wiring, new servtee or re00=2~1~~-~-c:--~ Po1lits. Master Licensed elec~
I 995 Eagle "lllton, Auto, Air, trician Ridenour Electrical,
Power Windows, MlrrOf'. WV000306, 304-675-1786
Root, AM/FM CusoRo,
CO P ' -• Cruise Control
992-ooos
~~~~~~
I 995 Grand Am GT, 20,
$3895, 1898 Grllnd Am, 40,
$2995; 1998 Contour, 4-11001, $2495; 1698 Clvllltr,
$3895. 1991 Probe, 20,
$ t 295; COOK MOTORS,
(740)446-Qt03
Sportman Club
1996 Ford Contour $4 500
(740)388-8547
' '
'

~
Word Ads

riO
HOME
IMI'IIOVEMJ&gt;Ml&gt;
-...;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.i-r'
'

I I&lt; \ \..,J•t II&lt;!\ I H 1\

: 1997 Chevy Ex!- Cab,
., 4•4, 52,000 mites- Gladiator
~ COnversion
package,
$16.000 080, 1968 Chevy
: Pick-up, gOOd COndit1on,
~ $2,000; 1999 Foreman 450
1i E S., red, $3,500; 14x70
~ trailer with 2 car garage on
•' 3/4 aero
BlaCk topped
~ road, 8 miles from town,
, $32,000; Three horses
4 (740)387·7087

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

Call Today•••

!:

•

In one week With us

Sentinel

~C___,.~iiJWNii}'ii&amp;;;,_.-J

;

GaU .. Cwnty, OH

\lrribune

Buy 0&lt; sell. ino Anti· · Young Indian Blue Pelfowl MellaaeBiaMII
quos, 1124 Eaot Main on Call after 6pm, (304)456- 740-tt2·7581
SR 124 E. Pornefoy, 740- 1817
Congratutatlonat You ha\1118
992-2526. Ruu Moore, liZ'--:'!"~::---, won 2 tree movie tickets to
the Spting Valley 7 Gallf)OIis. Col the Sontinel lor de·
: :·na Antique a cran
oalll. (740)992·2155)
Mall 3 t 2 6th. St Pt. Pleas- '
ant, WV. Antique &amp; Craft Ears of Corn fot' Sate
Vendors Wolcomo.
(304)675-1506

~

-¥Je Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
.. · No One
··Else ,Can'!
-~

To Place

r

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~~ M~wc!:~ 1

;
;

REACH OVER 285,DDD PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sat. Nov. 2

For Dave Walls and
family who lost

1897 Red Plymouth B"'"'"·
92 000
miles
$4 500
,.(7.::4o::!i:::44::::6.::1::630::_'_ _·_
.:.:..;_:_:.:...:;=~---'- 1999 Monte C&amp;rlo Z34,
' Hillside Baptist Church, coupe, black, custom olereo
~ 39124 St. Rt. 143 Pomerov. ayatem, leather Interior,
•·Tables, Chalra, Desks, Par- power &amp;unroof &amp; more ex" titlons. 992-6768
tras (7&gt;10)379·2721
2001 Dodge Stratus, 4 cytinder, auto, 4 door, etulse,
tiR, 816 miles, $10,000
(740)44t.Q337.
2001 Dodge Stratua, loaded, 17,000 mltoo, $9500
OBO. (740)256-6169
2001 Ford Muotong Coupe
Powor
2dr.
steoriOWwfndOWICIOOr locka,
: M~sublehl 4 wl Drive, 5 R. 32,000 miles. Excellont
Finishing Mower and Snow Condition.
$13,000.
Btllde. (740) 742-3706
· (304)882·2159

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; RebuiR In
Stock Gall Ron Evans, t800-537·9526.
::::-:---:-:--:----:--, Kitchen cabineto, gaB stove
l' with wall oven, grandfather
1 clock, oak table &amp; chatrll•
·· (304)675-2 535

' Mortar Mixer, Troweling machino, Moaonory Sow,
. watlcer Compactor, Pipe La·
_aer, (7o40)44e·:IH3
' NIW AND US!D STEE~
''Sisti
ms, Pipe Rebar
' Fa1 Concratt, Angle, Chonnel, Flat B1r, Stool Grating
For Dralno, Drlvewayo &amp;
, Walkwaye. L•L Scrap Mol·
•.ate Open Monday, Tuo&amp;day,
• Wtclnelday &amp; Friday, Bam•• :30pm. Closed Thursd&amp;y,
' Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)446-7300
; ROCK BOTTOM PRICES
, Stool buildings, lluy dtrect &amp;
•· •ave big, 20x24, $2400;
. 25x24,
$2950;
30x30,
• $3950; 40x48, $5975;' Gall
. t -fl!Xl-334-6411 .

a..

. Stainless steel cabinets,
_heal &amp; AIC unit, root fan,
· storm door, siding &amp; acces' sorles, 115 Volt tuel pump,
bolt cutters, numerous other
• Items. (740)446-3563

,•=..:..."--"----·~Waterline Special: 3/4 200

; PSI S2t .oo Per too, t• 200
PSI $35 00 Per 100; All
Brass Compression F1ttings
~ In Stock.
- RON EVANS ENTERPRIS.
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1·600-

i

BUIUliNG
SUPI'LIF.S

All proceed&amp; will go
to the Wells Famlly

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
CASE NO.: 02 CV 081
Crown Bank, 1 F....,.l
S.vtnga Bank, Plalntln
VI.
Ru11111 E. Powers,
aka, Ruaeell Powere,
et al., Der.ndlnll
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY.OHIO •
In purauance or an

o,

I

FORS.W:

100 acre Lot No, 297,
Town No. 2 Range No.
12 and beginning at a
t933 Chevy $8,000; 1996 llake 56 leet Wile! ol
FLO 120, Single axle 11 .1
Snyd
the northwest earner
D.O., 512 •000 ; 1995
or ol Lot No.1 In Crook's
Flat
Tratler, .
$5,00. Addlll
S
(7401446 •1425
on 10 yracuae,
It being 210 1•1 south
1994 F· t50 112 ton 2 whool ol the southelll
drive .
$4,200.
080. corner ol Lot No. 1 In
(304)675·1571
Cas rleton'a Addtlhtlon to
86 112 ton Chevrolet ' 4x4,
yrfiCUII,
ence
350 engine, 4-spood, very north about 87 leet
good condition, $3600 along College Street
(740)245-9652 evenings.
to the IOUiheut.
corner ol Marion
VANS &amp;
Wood'l lot; thence

I

~ i53ii:7i:-·;.;952;;;;;.8~----,

_.

everything In lire.

10
73 WI Beetle, rolluiK on- ~[r~~~~~ ~!~ 1 :.:
glne, newer porto throughout, call lor dolalla, $3500 or Court In the above
oao, (740)59Q.2496
entitled action, I will
ofter lor aale II publiC
89 Otdsmoblto Delta 68, auction to be held on
good condition 4 door
59,000 actual mlies, oomber the Front Stepe ol tl)e
t shape (740)446-4385
Mel II I
C 0 Un t Y
CourthOUM on FrldiiY,
'92 Otds Achlevo, 2 dr , au· January 1
2003, at
to, $800 · or best offer, 10:30 a.m. ol uld day,
(740)591-7075
the
1a II ow 1n 11
Uvely's Auto Sales 1992 dncrl~ p...nlaM:
Olds Achteva, St200; 1987
Dodge Dynasty, $650; 1990
EXHIBIT A
Ponliac Grand Am, $900; LEGAL DESCRIPTION
1993 Ford Taurus, $1600; Situated In the City ol
1992 Plymouth Sundance, Syncuaa
Melga
$1000, 1990 Chevy Cava- County Ohio·
lier S750' 1968 Chryaler
•
•
LeBaron, $eoo, 1985 tsuzu Parcel No. 1: The
Pup, $600 Call (740)386- following real eetate
9303 Open Monday thru altuated In the State ol
Saturday 9am-Spm, Clo.&amp;ed Ohio,
County
Ol
Sunday's.
Melge, Townahlp of
TRUCKS
Sutton, and being In

j

--

.
: Btock, brick, sewer pipes,
.wtnc:tow&amp;, h~lels, etc Claude
Winton~, Rto Grande, OH
- Call740-245-5121 .

r
-r """" I"'--•""•WDs·--

Well 100 reel along
the eoulh line to the
·
1989 Ford Club Wagon aouthwnl corner or
' 4 Cocker Spaniel puppoes 6 XLT, lull handicap accesst· aald Marion Wood'l
wks old asking $225.00 dew ble. (740)2~5-9212
lot; thence eouth
~,claws and tails docked,
abbut 87 feet; thence
' 'Shots
and
wormed. 1996 Ford Windstar van, Ellt 100 feet to the
" (740)742·2525
auto, air, rear, air, bucket piece ol beglnnlnl
.:.__;_~-----,..c: seats, excellent condition,
AKC Beagle pups, 4 1/2 beautiful yan, one owner, canbllnlng 201100 IICI'e
months old, goo&lt;t gun dogs, $7,000, (740)742·2697
Aleo 1 etrlp ol land 51
l•llong lying weal or
. mother &amp; father good rabbit
·dogs $100 (740)742-2728 94 Joep Cherokee Sport, the George A. Jenklnl
•
,
,
.
4x4. Aqua with blaCk trim, lot and south ol the
-AKC Lab pups, chocolate, 4 0· 116•000 miles, PS, PB, above·detcrlbed lot
:..ready 10/28. F&gt;arents on tilt, cruise, air, $4900 OBO.
premlsa&amp;, Daddy Is proven (740)386.0343 or (740)386- end extending to. the
hunter. Wormed, first shots 8349
State Roed.
, IndOor homes only~ Males 95 Dodge Caravan, slight
Parcel No. 20·
FOR"lfALE

.

1

'. r5a5~19~e95~~~; ~~ (30!f;i.t: ~::'8~~~ :~~~ r~~ f=:: oo~::~c:o No.

.·=,.,..--:----:-::-:-:--::-

(740)245 5569

-

·.Ar&lt;c Registered Goldon Re-

2: The
following deecrlbed

;~:I ~:~~~tY •:~·~-.::~~

Ford 1983 small oos, 1964
trievers, approx 9 weeks Chevy small bus, good conold, $200 each. (740)387· dltlon,runs good, elate In· end Stale ot Ohio to
., 7391
spected 992-6768
Wit; In 100 acre lot
number 297, In Town
Rottwe11ers, 8/weeks, 2 F411
J Number
Two (2),
' malos, $150. a piece 2 fe.
· MO'IORCYC!ES
Range Number Twelve
- males $200 a piece dew ,
·
·
1 th
Ohl
·ctowos and tails docked
(12) o
t
. o
(jood tempered, large brood "61" H D. FXS Lowrldor Company'l Purchaee,
•773-5573
New
motor.
$9,000. and bounded and

.r70

Mll'liCAL

I

(304)882-2516
INsnl
86 Yamaha 350 4-whooler,
_
~
runs &amp; looks good, garage
kept, high/ tow &amp; roverae',
, Antique Holbart M-cobte $1200 (740)446·7165
,Rollor plano. (740)446-0325
CAMPERs &amp;
• after 4:30pm.
MoroR Hm.u;:s
I \ I! \1 -. t 1'1 '1 II ...,
,\ 11\1 " 1411 1,
r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..., 2 campero 73-30ft. $2,500.
And 79·20tt. $2,200. Both
LivESToCK
. Remodeled (304)662-2608

ducrlbed •,• rouo,we:
1
Cammenc ng 1
·Slake (filly) 50 lett
Weef ell the nor1hwnt
corner of lot number
one (1) In Crooke
Addition to Syracuae,
11 being two hundred
and eighty (280) IHI
lOUth of thl IOUihUII
comer or rat number
one (1) In Carleton

-

Addition to Syracuee,
thence wut lorty•nlna
(41) feet, thence aouth
One Hundred (100)
feet, thence ~at lartynine (411), tHI, thence
north one hundred
(1 DO) fHI to the place
ol
beginning

j

r
ii

I

4 Registered Black Angus
Holloro·
Buohwocker &amp;
Slugahatchto bloodllnoa
pD
$650
each.
•(:104)743-6470; aHor 3:30
·'(304)743-8505
·
.-Reg . Black Anguo bulls,
·•yurllngl &amp; older bloodlines
-·N Bar EXT., Rill Fullbacl&lt; &amp;
Wldellfllead gentle guarontold $1000. 304-372·2369

e

\•

2000 Oamen Compllto, 14',
atoepo 6, 3 quoon, t twin,
gao otovo, 2 way furnace, 3
way rotrlgerator, 2 dining·
araao, large storage, awnlng, electric brakea, ,Invertor,
111 ~ 10 pull, groat oonc:tKion,
$8,300, 17 o40\St2· 7779

~NEWSPAPEnS
"
Cover All The

~, Maror.Sub(eclll

L:-...;.:f-_;_.;.....-,.-.1

RACO FOOD DRIVE
November2
8:00 ·Noon
Racine

containing twelve one
hundredth• (121100)

Firewood
for Sale

Cu1:JCadeC &amp; Gravely
Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

BALL
LOGGING &amp;
FIREWOOD LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
f'rw CIIIINtiCI

ri'M Ill bum! pocbp

CMiw I« all )QIJ~ ..:k

(740) 446-1812
AsliiJ ~~,

4359 St. Rt. 160

Dump TruCk

()pen 9;w-Spm

M fYirr /'Uw!

Delivery Call &amp;
Leave message

Gallipolis, OH 45631

74Q-992-6142

Monday-Friday 8-SPM •.Saturday 8-2pm

Forked Run
Sportman Club

('740) 446-1044

JONES'

Tree Service

Sat. Nov. 2
at 12:00 p.m ~

Removal • Trim
• Stunp Grinding

Top •

Bucket Truck

For Dave Wells and family
who lost everything in fire.
All proceeds will go to the
Wells Family

WALLEYE FISH FRY
Sunday, No~3,2002
11 :00 am. 6:00pm
RUTLAND
AMERICAN LEGION
: All you can eat
Fish, cole slaw, baked beans
&amp; drink $6.00
Hot Dogs Also Available
Meals .

at 12:00 p.m.

Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
Repairs Problems? Need
.TUned? cail Tho Piano Dr.
740-446-4525
•

,

Best Service at
the Best Price

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Ownl!r: Ron nil! Jont!s

Estimates

llllS

fllllY
CIISTIICTIII

For all your Home

Improvement needs
"No Job To Smalr

B. D. COOSTRUCTIOO

-992"29

Building ov~r 30 ytars
Footers, Foundation,
Add-Ons, New Homes.
Pole Barns, Concrete ,
l!lcctric, Plumbing

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Ganrgea
•Car' I ' Ren1Cdei1g

Stop &amp;Compare

htJIIJWW't litJTl htc/JUirtJ

(740) 992-3320

FREE ESTIMATES

Em161: bladMezlplink com

74!1-992·1671
7122/TFN

NOTICE

- 1 '

to AERIE 21 1'1
F.O.E.
Membership
Voting on
AERIE by laws
on
November 4, 2002

7:30pm
Racine American
Legion 602 will be
having a .
Ham and Turkey
Dinner
Nov. 3 at 11 pm.
Cost $6.00.
The public is welcome.

R-., Add- &amp;
-lng

-GOO'IOfl
EIICt:rtCII &amp; Plumbing
Raoflng&amp;VInyl Siding &amp;,P,olntilngl
Polio ond Pon:h Docila
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·621

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 BeechSt
Rl!.ddl~port~ 0~.

LARRY SCHEY

~~""'
High 8l Dry

East State Street Phone
1unens, Ohio

(740)593-jj67

"A

Seff-Storage

JliS flfCTRIC &amp; .
flUIDBIDG

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Electric, Plumbing,
and Small Home
M•lntenance Jobe

740·992·5232

(340 773-5412
Cell 304 674·30B2

(10'1110' 610'11201
JUST launchodll!

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

BLOCKS Cravings!

LongabergeriOresden

All Natural/Doctor

LOSE WEIGHT
NOW! Burns FAT!
BOOST Energy I

Bus Trip

Sao., November 30. 2002
S65.00- Space Limited
Deadline: Oct. .20, 2002

Recommended
Get this AWESOME

6pm
IIELPWAMW

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

product TODAY
Call; Jeanie .

Everyone receives a
basket! t! Call:

American Legion Hall Middleporl

lcHiVROk~'

740-992-7996
or visit website:
www.herbsndlot.com

992-5479

TFN

For more info 992-4055
A Bear in every basket

American Legion
·· Post 128

Middleport

BINGO
Nov. 2 at 6:30
All pkgs. $5.00 each
Star Burst 11 00
MIZWAY TAVERN
Karaoke Wed. &amp; Fri.
Halloween Party Sat
Costume Prizes
Public Notice

Public Notice

ac~ ot lend, moro or
fell, being the 11m1
rand sold by laue
Carleton Md Nancy L.
Carleton to uld
Reorganized Church
on the 11th day ol
March 1882, and
recorded In Volume
55, Page 89, Record ol
Ooede
ot
Melge
County Ohio .
Porcel
No.
20·
00355.000
Premnle commonly
known
ae:
1101
College
Road,
Syracuee, Ohio 457711
End
or
Legal
Delcrlptlon
Permanent Parcel
Numbera 20-00354.000
• :Z0.00351i.OOO •
Property addrne:
1101 College Road,
Syracuae, OH 45771
APPRAISED
AT:
•15,000.00 ond connot
bt oold lor leas than
two-third• of that
amount. Terma or
Sale: II purchaaed by
1 party other than
plalntlll, the llrat
mortgage holder, Ten

percent (1 0%) down at
the time the bid Ia
accepted. Balance to
be paid within thirty
(30) days. Any sum
not paid within uld
thirty (30) day• ohall
boar Interest at the
rate ol 12.99% per
annum front the dele
ot 11le.
RALPH TRUSSELL,
Sherin
Melga County, OhiO
Hlt'bertJ. Kramer
Anomey lor PlelntHI
44755 Chagrin ·Blvd.,
Suite 200
Cleveland, 01·144122
(218) 310·7200
(tO) 25 (11\1,

a

Public Notice
--------The Meigs County
Board or Revlalon hat
.complttad 111 work of
equalization, The tax
returna tor tax year
2002
have
been
revlatd and the v!iluationa completed and
are open lor public

0

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
REGISTERED
NURSES
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital Home Care
Agency i s acceptmg
applications
for
Regjstered Nyrses on

a Per Dienl basis.
Contact Tia Wooten
at 304-675.· 7400 for

more information.
• Flexible scheduling
• Compe11ti ve pay
• Mileage

reimbursement
-Great work

environmem
ANEOE

Public Notice
lnepectlon In the
olllce ol the Melga
County
. Auditor,
Second - Floor,
Courthouse, Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH.
Complaints against
the valuations, 11
established lor tax
year 2002 musl be
made In accordance
with Section 5715.19 '
or the Ohio Revised
Code. Theil complaints muet be tiled ,
on lorme which will be ·
lurnlahed by the
county • Auditor ond ·
muet be lllod In the
Co u n I y
Audllor'e
Office on or belort the
3111 day or M1rch
2003. All complaint•
tiled with the County
Auditor will bt hHrd
by the Board or
Revlalon In the man·
n'er
provided by
Section 5715.11 or the
Ohio Atvloed Code.
Nancy
Parker
Campbell
Meigs County Auditor
(10) 30,. 31, (11) 1, 4, 5,
6, 7, 8, 11, 12

• Tonneue Cover •
Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line o f

Other Accessories
I

,

\

I•

".

'II 11 11

1•',1

\lhl•il ~j 'l I( ()jl 'd

(7 40) 992-5822
Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

6:30
1st Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5FREE

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
. Burial and Fmal Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension

&amp;

40IK Roliovers;

Mortgage; Major Medical
· • Nursing Home

;;g

~~

,..,...,,_IIIII TF N

DEPOYSAG
PARTS
All Makes Trac(or &amp;

Equipment Parts
Fac(ory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1()()() St. Rt. 7Soutlt
Coolville. OH 45723

740-667-0363
Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
7.D-114t-2217

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417
"W. V"s #I C hevy. Pontiac, Burek, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dea ler"

An vou Laid on;t
, . ntlld blllflf,.

blellr fBEE IIIID
Jenqblcllll
Wlrll
Jtii.E
IIJIIIIIIHII Clll

11111111111

Houri
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

C•••IIIIJ
leu.
IIIIICV
740-992·2222 or
7 41&gt;-446-1 018

BISSEll

BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes • Viny l
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE

ESTIMATES

740·992-7599

�,f ,

ALLEYOOP

PHILLIP

«.·

,+

&amp;ut

15 Freez•o-

A QTJ
• Kt

• " ' 'tl4
.JIO
~

.

.......

•tz
.KQ1

..th

t~

· '·

Wnt

NM'Ui

)•

• •

SIHiero'
59 Zip
60 Put up
cl1~1
81 Jellyflah

m.oroh

25 Young wolf 113 Appllea
26 Bill of r..
genUy
28 Aougll file

Opening lead: • J

32 Auguat
llgn
33 Put one's
loot down
34 Netller
Al'lhur-

Down !Jnder
•

8Y PHIWP AlDER

country

36 Skinny
38 Gruey

mlfkl
44 lmendtd
48 ROM pill

BY DAN HERMES
Staff writers

Spenlth
Mllea
noblemen
. ~ Aak about 48 WldetpNid
23 · Kllpltan'o 49 Earthen jllr •
eommand

1 Tlre-pra•

auremeaa.
Checkout
ID

50 Port nur

.U.una Loa

(hyph.)

:

53 "Care-· ·
55 Ms. Luplno ·

24 Frallld

trnt
At the North
25 B•h
56 Kon.
35
Euraollin
·
3
"Wowl"
American · Bridge
neighbor
4 Diver's soar 27 c.llgule'a
range
Championships, one
nephew
57 Newapeper
37
Circle
porto
5 Movie pig
FRANK &amp; EARNEST
29 "Quaking"
VIPI
II Gloating
can play four sessions
39 Duller'•
ery
tree
a day: morning, after·
30 Famod orca
7 Loulollino
40 r.:~t bill
noon, evening, .and
~· 'T~E TltOlJrJ,f viiTtf OU#t
nearly midnight.
,.
..Jr_
FLOvl tttA~tT IS
There are social
events after the eve--... '
'Ttlf LI'TTL~ I&gt;IUP
ning sessions, but the
AT Ttt~ 'TOP.
American Contract
Bridge League uses
them primarily as
sources of revenue.
•,
'·
In Australia, there
are two cutthroat ses·
sions of bridge a day,
but afterwards, the
players let their hair
down
and party. That
NAPPIN'
I DO IT ALL.
relaxed
side comes.
AIN'T A
DAY LONG- .!!
over
in
Australian
PROBLEM,
Bridge magazine. AI·
DOC!!
though the content of
this monthly is primarily for tournament
.players, there are arti·
cles and interviews
CELEBRITY CIPHER
that will interest eveby Luis Campos
ryone.
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms ar~ created from quotations by famous
Aussies like to pre·
people, past and present. EaCh letter In the clphtr srands for another.
Todsy's clue: /equals M
empt the spots off the
THE BORN LOSER
cards, but sometimes
"RTKKOFTTC
AE
KAHW
I""
'
...
~
.
~ this helps the oppo:&gt;O, YOU n\1!-IK. II'~ Till\( 10
!&gt;.NO JUS\ W~I-J 1~ WI':ONG
£1/f..R'( TIME: I P~ 1\ :£RIJIC£
nents · to place the
PWAXN
XTFAWGW
YXC
BUY 1\ 1\\E.W C.I&gt;-.R., (I-\?
W1\f-\ T\\E. CI'R WE: t'-.1\Vt. ?'
S\1'1.T1 or-:., l ~t-1/E. TO ~lOP ,.._~0 . missing cards -- as in
. P..":&gt;K T~ TO I= ILL UP
this deal from a comS Y K H A X N.
S T
X T P T C 0
petition in Cairns,
T1-\( OIL ,1\.N() CHfLK.
Queensland. Sitting
VPTMS
XTSRAXN . "
'ffiE:G~I
South, how would
. IAVAWKYXNWKT ·
you try to make six
diamonds after a club
YXSTXATXA
lead to your ace?
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'If you can be afraid of a ghost
East claimed that he
then
you have to believe that a ghost rriay exist" ' · ·
traded on the favor- Stanley Kubrick
rable vulnerability for
WORD
his opening bid; but I
r:~~:~~Y
\\.~1A
tpr~/
GAM
I
am sure he would
ldllod by CLAY R. POLLAN
.
have made the same
bid even when vul- Q Rearrange ·· letters. cf the
"rom bled words benerable against not! low·four
to form four simple words.
Also, North's jump to
A R F; B T y
six diamonds was
' \ '
2
led a dia· .
I
I ·· 1
mond· to dummy's ~=;:=:::==:;--'
queen .and a diamond . rl
.C N E I E I
back to hand. After ,
,
3
winning with the ace,
~
West exited safely ~=-:;:~·;::;;:·;:~-~
PEANUTS
with his last trump. 1- N
Now declarer needed
AVEVL
Our local candy' store owner
VOU K~Oiil. "1'00 DON'T I-lAVE
JUST BECAUSE EVERVONE
both to play the
1
15
1
16 _.!. claimed his candy was almost like
ELSE 15 DOIN6 IT, DOESN'T
FLV SOUTH FOR TilE WINTER
spades without loss .
. . .
'home made. He says that it
MEAN VOU ~-lAVE TO ..
IF '(OU DON'T WANT TO ...
and to have the heart
comes straight from the factory
finesse work. So, he [··_Fj--:E;.,...:L:.__rT-:;-D:.,.;Y~-1 and then -- .. • · .. to us.
continued with a . r7
0 Complete
lno &lt;hu&lt;klo quolod
heart to dummy's
. . . . .
by filli•g '" rno m•.,;,g word•
queen and cashed 'the
you do,olop from orep No, 3 bolow,
heart ace. Ta~ing
@ PRINT NUMBERED . 1
West's heart king at
LETTERS IN SQUARES
face value, South now
·knew that East had
€) ~~~~:RMBLE FOR
j
started with .four
hearts, two diamonds
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .
and at least six clubs.
Unstop- Frame-· Pacer- Gossip- CENTURIES
So, the spade finesse
While
stationed overseas, I asked another soldier
ALtx!
through West was • what the time difference was between where we were :
'(OURTIAA~
marked.
·, and The States. Smiling he said. "Glh,.l'd say about ten
OIDM'TGO
. Full details can be · CENTURIES!"
~
O'ff!
found at www .austra·
lianbridge.com,

A perfect season, 81
'

Deaths
Marjorie E. Carhart; 74
Lois Jean Monroe, 68
Judy Holley, 64
·
Jack Leon Clark, 50

o.t.lli. AJ

-[t £

S©

brD~larer

I

II

1I I I

·j!

I

I I I 'I I

Landmark of faith restored

BY BRIAN J.
·Staff writer

High: 40s, low: 30s
Details, Al

Lotteries

I I I II

I I

OHIO
Pick l day: 5-8-7
Pick 4 day: 7-9-6-6
Pick l: 4·7·6
Pick 4: 5-5-3·0
Buck.eye 5: 2-9-22-24-35
W.VA.

Deily 3: 5·5·3
Deily 4: 6-6·5-8
Cash 25: 7-9-10-12-13-21

Index
2 s.ctlons - 11 Pllps

cally for you and be fortunate
for all involved,
,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- .Money matters that person-

ally aff~ct .you will be where
you are likely to be the most
lucky and effective today .
You'll instinctively know
how to generate wbat you
want
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) • You can be extremely lucky
today in achieving your hopes

which you may have to deal
today and you should have
plenty of time left for fun and
games. Everything will go
smoother than you think.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You'll create your own

"
.

·

~

-

·

·

-

-

-

-

-

-

~

.

_

.

.

.

.

.

.

.....

.

-

-

ther benefit by pulling all of
them together to make for one
big success.

·

.. ..·- ·--

· and desires, and you can fur- ·

-

,

, Calendars
.Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS-6
B4-5
B6
AS
A4
A3.
A3
Bl-3
A2

C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

The interior of Pine Grove Church has been fully restored thanks to the hard work of its mem·
bers and residents of the surrounding communities. The church will conduct rededication services at 1 p.m. today with regular services set to resume at 7 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 8. (Staff)

•

Destroyed church .rebuilt
BY KANDY BOYCE

Staff writer

P

ine Grove Churcl\ is finally
finished. The saga of the church started
in late May of this year, when the
church burned to the ground. With no insurance, the future .of the church looked pretty
, bleak. But church members refused to be
beaten, and rallied toget)ler to raise money to
rebuild.
,
Letters were sent out , a benefit and auction
was held and donations came in. People volunteered 'their time and resources to rebuild
and the walls went slowly up. Now, a short
five months later, they are ready· to open the
doors and welcome everyone back to the little Jog church that sits nestled in the midst of
a grove of pine trees on a little country road
near Leon.
,
A rededication ceremony will be held at l ·
p.m. on Saturday. Nov. 2 to christen·the new
building. The chur~h will be dedicated by
Rev. Winnie Durst, the oldest living former
pastor and Dencil Matheny will lead services. Speaker will be former pastor John
Hayman, and there will be special singing by
Raymond and Deloris Cundiff, Rex Harmon
arid "Mercy."

Please see Church, Al

Members of Pine Grove Ch"urch stand outside
the newly restored house of worship. (Staff)

completed by engineers at
Burgess and Niple, suggest·
ed the construction of &amp; wetland system to treat the contaminated waters. But the
issue of how to finance the
repairs is the main obstacle
preventing action, the commissioners have said.
The commissioners, at the
time of the study, said they
would seek grant funding
through
Reclamation,
Conservation
and ·
Development to help offset
the cost of the wetland system, .but have not done so. ·'
The Jandfil~ dosed. in the•
mid-1980s, is located off
Howell Road near Pomeroy.
It was ope~ated by the commissioners.
..,; Burgess and Niple, in · its
study, noted that the conPlease see Landfill, AJ

.Fund-raising project
.has people seeing pink
BY JYIIWSSIA
Staff writer

RUSSELL

GALLIPOLIS. Ohio
Instead of pink eleph a nJ.
some residents are reporting they're see ing strange
pink birds popping up in
yards · all over Gallia
County.
The birds are ;tctually
pink plastic , Flamingos
sporting
handsome
Hawaiian lei s, and are
part of a church-sponsored fund-raiser to help
youth who are plaiming a
mi ss ion trip in )uly of
next year, according to
Barbara Jean Carriere,
associate at Grace United
Methodist · Church
in
Gallipolis .
"They're just standing
there in their pinkness for
all ·the world to see, "
Carriere said, laughing .
"It' s just a fun way to do
something silly."
.,
Basically, those who
chose to parti cipate in the
fund-raiser . were given an

Please see Pink. A3

This plastic Pink Flamingo
was discovered on First
Avenue. The homeowner will
now have to call In the "Pink
Flamingo
Removal
Company" to have the tropi·
cal bird removed and sent
on its way. The birds are
part of a fund-raiser for the
Grace United Methodist
Church youth group. (Jessica
Wickline)

situations will come auiomnti-

·

_____________________________ __,____________

more funds and get better ·
mileage out of them.
·
LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) -The good leadership qualities
you possess wiil ~e put into :
play today in several in· •
stances. Taking charge of '

tasks or assignments with

~

'5TI\I'IDA~Ot&gt; ...

structive ways to generate

-

Cf

-

'0'1 A 6£1'\~RAL

~

SAGITI ARIUS (Nov, 23De&lt;;. 21) -- You have something going for you today that
will make friends want to get
together with you for all their
activities. It's a big plus, .
called optimism,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) --This is an exceptionally
propitious day. for expanding
your enterprise to benef1t
yourself •s well as the others
with whom you might get in-

-

44092,

111£. roLLO/JII'Io
~tltv\ WA'O
MA'V£ '?~IBL£

affairs are concerned and you .;
will come up with some con-

render may be more generous
than usual. .Drawing a bonus
can be a blessing for you ·at
this time:
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
-- Try to spend time today
with someone who is near and
dear to your heart. because
things look e•tremely favor- ·
able for you in the romance
department in ways that make
for happiness.
TAURUS (April 20-Mny
20) -· Get an early start on

'

THE GRIZZWELLS

•· Get more imaginative and
creative where your financiaJ ..

day, because compensation
for any work or services you

"

COW PAeTURE

-

E!IAREF'OOT THROUC.H THe

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

important factors or details.
The conclusions you .draw at
this time·are likely to result in
auspicious and fortunate happemngs ,
PI~CES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Perform at your best to·

-

! REMEMeEFII FIIUNNINGr

time .

are not apt to overlook any

~

GARFIELD

-

BY BERNICE 8EDE OsoL
In the year ahead you are
likely to better figure out how
to use many small parts to
create one massive whole.
What you piece together will
be of considerable benefit.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) ·· What you do for others
today will be done in such a
fashion that you do not call
attention to yourself but to the
persons who are in need of
your help. In the end it'll earn
you .the spotlight. Trying to
patch up a brol&lt;en romance?
The Astrograph Matchmaker
can help you understand· what
to do to make the relationship
work. Mail $2 ,75 to Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH

good fortune today if you are
now willing and equipped to .
see the positive side of things:
Your thinking is what can
make you a winner at this

volved, Think big and take
the lead.
.
·
AQUARIUS (Jan. '0-Feb:
19) ·· Because your judgment
is remarkably keen today, you

~

Saturday, Nov, 2, 2002

REED

POMEROY, Ohio
Meigs
County
Commissioners plan to ask
the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency to test
ground water and leachate at
the county's abandoned
landfill site to determine if
water from the landfilt is
contaminating the area.
As early as 1998, when the
County Health
. Meigs
Department issued a violations notice to the.,county
relating to the site, the commissioners have been f11ced
with an obligation to address
the problems of suspected
contaminated lpachate from
the landfill, but have not yet
taken action.
A 1998 feasibility study,

Brownies·plan
food drive
POMEROY, Ohio
Brownie Troop 1271 will
meet at Trinity Church at 10
a.m. Saturday to receive
materials for the countywide food drive on Nov. 9.
, ~on-perishable food will
~- be ~oUected and given t9
the Meigs County United
Methodist
Cooperative
Parish.
· Anyone wishiqg to donate
food for the Girl Scout
· Comrimnity Service Proje~t
is. asked to set the food outside in a bag which will be
picked up by the scouts
before noon on Nov. 9.
If . residents prefer, ther
can bring their contributions ·
to a van at Pomeroy
Municipal Building from
noon until 2 p.m. on Nov. 9.

"passive" drug ·detection dog additional two dogs, · which
in Mason County school s cost $8,500 each . The cost
full-time.
includes training for the dog
When a passive dog alerts handle rs as welL
on a drug find, the animal
With three dogs, Simms
will sit down. Aggressive said he would, "Guarantee,
dru g detection dogs will bite the best we can, that we'd
or scratch at the smell detect- get as close to a drug-free
ed .
schoo l as you can . We'd
, ...We're · not looking to have a passive drug dog at
makin g drug busts in the . Point Pleasant High School
schoo ls,"
Simms said. every day.
"We're trying to keep drugs
"This way, the old adage of
out. "
'I'll keep the dope on myself
The program will rotate and not in the locker' goes
schools and times for the right out the window,"
Simms said . ."We can cover
anti-drug patrols.
, " If we have a fresh dog all the students and teacher:s."
_
available, that will make it
easier,'' Simms said. ·
, :rhe initial plan is to train
Simms said he will ask the Deputy Robbie Fruth and
School Resource Officer
Mason County Board of
Education and the Jackson Dave Downing at Augusta
Foundation for funding the
PluM IH Drup, AJ

County will ask EPA to
test l·andfill leachate.

Weather

a'

\_O.,flt~\t\6

Sgt. Carl Peterson of the
Mason County Sheriff's
Department and his dog,
".Bono, " show off a bag of
marijuana
found
during
"Operation K-9 Alert" at Point
Pleasan~
High
SchooL ·
(Contributed)

POINT · PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Pot smokers and
other. drug users beware. If
Mason County Sheriff Scott
Simms has his way, drugs
will be a thing of the past in
Mason County schools .
"Operation K-9 Alert"
started this week and Mason
County
Sheriff's
Department's · Sgt. Carl
Peterson and hi s dog,
"Bono" found more than one
ounce of marijuana at Point
Pleasant High SchooL
The incident remains
under investigation and
charges are pending, according to Simms.
"It was the first day of
Operation K-9 Alert at Point

Pl easa nt High School ,"
Simms said . "I know it 's
(dru gs) ther~ and that's why
we're doing' it."
PPHS · Principal Rick
Northup welcomes the dogs
into his schooL
" I invite them to come
everyday," Northup said
about Operation K-9 Alert .
"I'm not excited about the
fact that they found something, but it' s a sign of the
times . If students .are aware
there are passive drug dogs
in the school and that they
can smell the drugs on them,
the program should help."
Simms is in the. process of
finding funding for two more
drug detection K-9 dogs for
·Mason County, With the
additional dogs und handlers, Simms hopes to have a

'

I

Vol. 1, No. 11

Program aimed at stopping school drugs

21 ACiran- 47

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31 AndH

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9 Fiery gem
10 Openfngo
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North·South

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Hometown News for Gallla, Mason

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Friday, November 1, 2002·

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

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