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                  <text>FLY YOUR FLAG .FULL STAFF TO SU

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Melp County's

RT YOUR COUNIRY!

Hotnetown Newspaper

Bush targets airport secu
~

BY CHRISTOPHER NEWTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LINCOLN
A.WEAICAN

WASHINGTON - · President
Bush· plans. fO push for sweeping
changes in airport security, including armed officers on almost every
flight, as the Justice Department
warns that terrorists may be plotting more destruction .
With that in mind, the House
voted to divert money from Bush's
missile defense program to counterterrorism efforts.

LUX"B· RY

Do you have a loved one
deployed in Operation Enduring
Justice? Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
wants to salute these heroes by
publishing an occasional list featurIng their names, a brief bio, and a
photograph. Drop off these materials at the offices of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
·
Reg1ster or The Daily Sentinel.

Evenas the U.S. military continued to mobilize for a strike at terrorists and a U.S. envoy briefed
NATO officials in Brussels, Belgium, the Bush administration sent
last-chance
overtures
toward
Afghanistan's Taliban militia.
.
Secretary · of State Colin Powell
said in an Associated Press interview that the Taliban rulers could
avert a war with America by turning over Saudi exile Osama bin
Laden, the No. 1 suspect in the

Sept. 11 terror attacks, and ripping
up the al-Qaida terrorism network .
Bush suggested that Afghanis rise
up against the Taliban. He said th e
best way to fi ght terrorism "is to
ask for the cooperation of citizens
within Afghanistan who may be
tired of having the Taliban in place
or tired of having Osama bin
Laden.."
In Kabul. thousands of demonstrators responded by attacking the
abandoned U .S. Embassy com-

MEIGS SCHOOL
APR
interest

60
Months
on most 200 I motllels'

ermits
inders
progress

For

for)r?J- \
\

'

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

I

\' .'

~~·~l1J~t~o~c~alj1J~~~~~~~!~

,13,995 14,995

projects and explain how the
delay in getting building permits from the Department of
Industrial Co\npliance is
affecting progress.
. Engram said site work at the
elementary school has been
completed, but that actual .
construction of the building
cannot move forward untifthe
permit is issued.
·"We really don't ~&gt;now what
to do. Anything we ·do could
put things at risk and we don't .
want to jump the gun," he
said.
Engram explained that bids
are only good for 60 days and
that time is about to expire. He
said that letters have gone out
to the contractors asking them
to extend the bids and he's
hopeful of having those letters
back this week.
Meanwhile, he said, Wesam
Construction is moving ahead
with site work for the middle
school located near M eigs
Hi gh School.

Bankruptcy?
Credit Problems?

"We Can Help "II
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Fi~t

Or We 8oth Lose!

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1-800-272-5179 or 446-9800

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3 Sections - 13 hps
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

BED RAILS

L-:401
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OHIO

82-4 Pick 3: 448; Pick 4: 1.().9'0

85

'

WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S. poverty rate dipped
last year to its lowest level in
over a quarter-century, driven
down by a healthy economy
that helped a broad range of
workers.
Overall, many analysts said
the Census Bureau report
released Tuesday offered a
positive picture of the Ameriat least
can economy before the financial unrest
· from the terrorist attacks.
The year 2000 could prove
10 be the high-water mark of
the econom ic expansion that

Sentinel·
I

I

goingStemwheel Riverfest
centers around the parking
lot in downtown Pomeroy.
Festivities will kick-off on
Thursday with an opening
ceremony by Pomeroy
American Legion at 6 p.m.,
followed by a fire truck
parade at 6:30. p.m. and a
performance by Dee and
Dallas near the riverfront
at 7 p.m . .

National poverty rate
lowest in over 25 years

Procress, AJ

Todlly's

t'l

~

POMEROY Sternwheelers of all shapes and
sizes, live music, contests,
food , parades, a historical
walking tour. and an explosive
fireworks display are just a few
of the activities to be enjoyed
at Sternwheel Riverfest 2001,
"Rally by the River," Thurs. day through Saturday.
The event, formerly known
as the Big Bend Sternwhee!er
Festival, was re-formed under
the supervision of a new
committee last year and is
dedicated to continuing with
the traditions that have made
it so popular over the years.
"We're anticipati ng yet
another successful festival and

•
ily has been slated and we
encourage eyeryone to attend ·
and join in on the fun," he
added.
F~tivities will · kick-off on
-+--I- exp~ct~m\Y.ds_to_sUt:pass-:r-hui'S&lt;jay-with an op.«~nirlg---t
those of last year," said John ceremony by Pomeroy AmerMusser, chair~an of the ican Legion at 6 p.m., folSternwheel Riverfest com- lowed by a fire truck parade at
mittee.
6:30 p.m. and a perfiormance
"A full schedule of exciting
PIHie IH Feltlv•l. AJ
events geared toward the fam -

met with
the
Board
of ·Ecfuca~on

SPECIAL FINANCE
DEPARTMENT ·

lfyOiire

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

: POMEROY -While work
o n renovation of M eigs High ·
School. is two weeks ahead of
s~hedule, work on the new
ejementary is at a standstill, and
r.rogress at the middle.school is
being hindered by the lack of
building permits.
: Jeff Engram, project manager for Quandel Group Inc. ,

'

PIMA- Attacb, AJ

Bv ToNY M. lEAcH

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Toyot84X4

pound in the Afghan capital, burning cars and tearing down the U.S.
seaLThe compound was abandoned
in 1988.
Elsewhere in Afghanistan, heavy
new fighting was reported in
northern Afghanistan as an opposition alliance pressed on with its bid
to seize t erritory from fighters of
the Taliban.
·
In neighboring Pakistan, mean-

Riverfest kicks
off lburSday

lack of

Choice•••
Ford
Lincoln

reform

llndwje 5: 4-741 ().12

A4
A3 W.VA
BL3.6 ~ 3: 6-8-6 Deily 4: 7·7-2·9
A3 Q 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

began in the early I 990s, said
Tim Smeeding, professor of
economics and public policy
at Syracuse University:
"The economy continued
to do good things in 2000;'
Smeeding said. Speaking of
the poverty rate, he added,
"Unfortunately, I'm afraid
that what goes down will
come back up, particularly
after" the terror attacks.
Several advocacy groups
said the report highlighted
troubling trends that existed
even before th~ suicide
hijackin gs of Sept.

CI

Racine looks for ways to ·cut trash costs
cil.
RACINE - Officials here are stressing
Earlier this year, council increased the
recycling as ~ means of saving the village refuse collection rate with the intent of
money.
building a ba)ance to be used for payment
"Recycle as much as you can and make · on a new compactor truck.
use of the curbside recycling program," said
At that time, the village. paid a set weekM ayor Scott Hill. "What you recycle will .ly fee for a. dump con tamer. However,. a
not have to. be taken to,the landfill, thus new company h as taken over and th e VIIsaVIng the v1llage money, he added.
lage IS now bemg charged a weekly rental
T he state of Racine's refuse fund is an fee on the contain er, as well as paying a fee
ongoing concern of Racine Village Coun- for each ton of refuse dumped at the landFROM STAFF REPORTS

Gallla Fall

fill.
In other business, council discussed a letter from Solicitor Doug Little, which
informed members that the operation of
golf carts on village streets is illegal. ·
The letter stipulated that there could be
. a question of liability if the village were to
ignore ot condone this illegal operation.
In the letter Little suggested that if any
'
Pluse IH R•clne, A:S

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Look for the Holzer Medical Center Communily Health
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140-446-9800 •1-800-212-5119

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The Daily Sentinel

America at war

Ashcauft wams about other
WASHINGTON (AP) Attorney
General
John
Ashcroft warned Tuesday there
was a "clear and present dan"
ger" of additional terrorist
attacks that could include
trucks carrying hazardous
chemical\. About 20 people
have been charged with trying
to obt:\in fraudulent licenses to
drive tankers, officials said.
Some of those arrested in
connec tion with the hazardous tanker licenses may
have connecnons to the
hijackers, the justice Department said.
The new warning came as
the investigation into the Sept.
II suicide hijackings made
progress across the globe.
French ·authorities detained
sewral people in connection
with an alleged plot against
the U.S. Embassy in Paris.
U.S. authorities detained
three Middle Eastern men in
California as material witnesses - meaning they could have
information useful in the case
- and also released a Saudi
doctor living in Texas who had
been taken into custody and
brought to New York for
questioning earlier in the
investigation.
Al-Badr AI- Hazmi, a radiol . ogist whose name was similar
to two of the 19 hijackers,
returned to San Antonio after
nearly two weeks in custody ,as
a material witness.
A law enforcement source,
who spoke only on condition
of anonymity, said authorities
questioned the doctor about
whether his credit card may
have bee n stolen by the
hijackers or their associates.

In Washington, Asncrofi told
Congress that there is continuing danger &amp;om terrorism,
and that one threat the FBI is
examining is whether trucks
that carry toxic chemicals may
be targets.
"Terrorism is a dear and
present danger to Americans
today," Ashcroft told senators.
" Intelligence
information
available to the FBI indicates a
potential for additional terrorist incidents."
Ashcroft said some of those
detained
had
unlawfully
obtained or tried to ·obtain
licenses that would enable
them to drive trucks hauling
chemicalS or other hazardous
materials.
Some of those seeking
licenses "may have links to the
hijackers" of the four planes
on Sept. 11 , Ashcroft testified.
A Justice Department official, speaklng on condition of
anonymity, said the total number of people being detained
in connection with hazardous
licenses was around 20. The
official declined to specifY
how many have connections
to the terrorists.
One man who has been
arrested, Nabil Al-Marabh, 34,
a former Boston cab driver
taken in~o custody in Chicago
last week, holds a commercial
driver's license and is certified
to transport hazardous materials, records show.
Al-Marabh has been moved
to New York for questioning.
The FBI has warned oil and
gas companies, hazardous
waste haulers and local police
to be on the alert' for suspicious activities around chemi-

who destroyed the World
Trade Center practiced their
approaches by renting small
planes at New Jersey flight
schools and flying along the
Hudson River toward the
twin · towers, an FBI spokeswoman said Tuesday.
Agents are pursuing tips that
hijackers mounted test runs in
small planes, but- FBI Special
Agent Sandra Carroll said
investigators have neither confirmed nor ·ruled out "that
they could have rented planes
and rehearsed."
In France, anti-terrorist
police detained at least four
people early&gt;Tuesday in connection with a planned attack
on the U.S. Embassy in Paris
and other U.S. interests in
France. Seven people already
were, in custody in France in
connection with the alleged
plot.

Rumsfeld-says campaign will ·be long
'

WASHINGTON (AP) In its latest preparations for
the war on terrorism, the
Pentagon . nas ca lled up
- National Cuarcl ancl~eserve
soldiers who secure ports and
military bases, gather information about enemies and
identifY human remains.
Military officials on Thesday
brought nearly 2,000 more
reservists from the Air Force,
Army and Navy to active
duty. They include 190 members of an Army Reserve
mortuary unit from Puerto
Rico that will help recover
remains of the more than
6,000 missing from the attack
on the World Trade Center.
Many of the soldiers will
help beef up security inside
the United States while others wil!(!;O overseas, Pentagon
officials say. Which troops and
equipment are going where is
a closely guarded secret.
Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld prepared for a
breakfast meeting Wednesday
with top congressional leaders. On Tuesday, he continued
Bush administration efforts to
prepare the public for a long,
perhaps bloody, campaign.
" It will not be an antiseptic
war, I regret to say," Rumsfeld
said at a Pentagon news conference. "It will be difficult. It
will be dangerous. And ... the
likelihood is that more people
may be lost."
Rumsfeld said the new war
will not start with a massive
offensive such. ·as D-Day, the
final allied push in Europe'
during World War II.
"It is by its very nature
so met hing that ca nnot be

dealt with by some sort of
massive attack or invasion," he
said. "It is a much more subtle, nuanced, difficult, shadpredicted the ·
campaign wo.uld last "not five
minutes or five months," but
years.
The Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks against the United
States left nearly 7,000 people
dead or missing in New York
City, at the Pentagon and in
Pennsylvania.
The Pentagon announced
that an additional 1,940
reservis.ts from I 6 states,
Puerto Rico and the District
of Columbia were called to
active duty. They bring to
14,318 the number of
Reserve and National Guard
members called so far under a
partial mobilization order
President Bush signed after
the Sept. 11 · attacks. Bush
authorized the. Pentagon to
call as many as 50,000 to
·
active duty.
Also, about 200 soldiers
from the lOlst Airborne
Division at Fort Campbell,
Ky., were sent to each of two
chemical weapons storage
facilities in Kentucky and
Indiana to augment security,
according to officials at those
sites. A spokeswoman said
there had been no specific
threat against either place.
The military campaign separate from the financial,
diplomatic and law enforcement tools being mobilized
against terrorism -· has been
code-named "Enduring Freedom," Rumsfeld said.
. The name first chosen,

Now acceptlno
·
artisans &amp; crofters
for our nei.v bulldlno at
112 West Main Street, Pomeroy
(OidSofVIceUupply•cl) .

all this week.
For mar• Information an laliiiiiCJ ar Mlll119 your
product, colt

LlzRoush992-1100

ISLAMABAD,
Pakistan
(AP) - Thousands protested
at the abandoned U.S.
Embissy compound in the
Mghan capital of Kabul on
Wednesday, bunting cars and
tearing down the U.S. seal. In
neighboring Pakistan, sources
said they reached broad accord
with U.S. officials on a plan for
attacks on bases inside
Mghanistan.
Heavy new fighting was
reported
in
northern
Afghanistan as an oppositi.o n
alliance pressed on with its bid
to seize territory from 6ghters
of the Taliban, the hard-line
Islamic movement that govems the country.
The demonstration . in
Kabul \vas the largest antiAmerican protest since the
crisis sparked by the Sept 11
terror attacks in New York and
Washington. The . United
States' chief suspect in the
attacks is Osama bin Laden,
the Saudi exile who has she!tered for the past five years by
the Taliban.
Shouting
"Long
Live
Osama!" and '·'Death to America!" the protesters burned a
U.S. Oags And an effigy of President Bush befOre storming
the old embassy compound.
The buil&lt;)ing has been abandoned since 1988.
Gray smoke billowed into
the sky after vehicles were set
afire in the embassy compound, and several men used
hammers to remove the large
circular U.S. seal above the
front entrance. Taliban author-

•
..

Deaths

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

LOCAL
STOCKS
'
AEP-44'.

1

Federal Mogul - •
Premier - 8 .
wheeler was taken &amp;om her Arch Coal - 15
USB- 21 ',
ROCkweH - 13
yard. The four-wheeler is red Alczo-39
Gannett - 57'1
Rocky B!&gt;ots - 4'
AmTeci\SBC - 47'•
~ral Electric- 35·,
RD Shell - 46
POMEROY. - Units of in fO)or;
Ashland Inc. - 36',
GKNLY- 3',
Sears - 34
the Meigs Emergency Service
• Russell Bookman report- AT&amp;T-18
Shoney's _,
Hartey DaVIdson - 40
. NEW HAVEN, W:Va. -Wyllis f Davis, Jr., 70, New Haven, answered nine calls for assis- ed that his mailbox and post Bank One- 31
Kma~ -1·.
Wai- Mart - 48
·BU-8\:..
died
Tuesday,
Aug.
25,
2001
at
his
residence.
Kroger- 25\
Wendy s- 26.
tance
on
Tuesday.
Units
were
missing
&amp;om
his
resiities evenrually dispersed the
Bell
Evans
16'.
Lands
End31
Worthongton
- 10 •
He was born on june 17,1931 in Lancaster, son ofthe late responded as foUows:
dence; .
protesters above the door, and
BorgWamer- 39'.
Ud. -9',
Datly stock reports are
Wyllis f 'Davis Sr., and Grace Mooney Berk Davis.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
NSC -14'1
• Angie Bass of Syracuse Champion - 2'.
the 4 p.m clostng
the vehicle fires were put our.
Channing
Shops
5
Oak
Hill
Financial16
· He is survived by his \vife, Eleanor Weaver Davis of New
quotes
of the prevtous
1:51
a.m.,
Mulberry reported that someone stole a
In Paki~tan's capital of
City Holding - 9',
OVB - 24',
day's transactions. pro·
Haven; three daughters and two sons-in-law, Marsha K. and Avenue, Tristen Garnes, treat- purse &amp;om her car that was Col-14\.
BBT - 34'.
Islamabad, senior Pakistani
vided by Sm~h PartRichard Smith of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,and Lisa M . and Kelvin ed;
DuPonl- 35~
Peoples
18',
ners at Advest Inc.
parked
at
her
residence;
sources said Pakistani and .U.S.
-Honaker and Wendy Davis, all of New Haven; three sons and · 3 :47 a.m., -Rocksprings
• Teresa Stout of Albany
defense and intelligence offi· daughters-in-law, Timothy S. and Connie . Qavis of Mason, Rehabilitation Center, Dora reported that her mailbox had ·
cials had reached broad agree- W.Va., and Nathan F. and Tanya Davis and Bart A. a.nd Teresa Hooper, O ' Bieness Memorial been torn down.
ment on an anti-terror pro!=&gt;avis, all of New Haven; a broth.e r and sister-in-law, Jerry 1\6. Hospital;
Anyone \vith information is
gram that included a plan to
and Rita Davts of Sumter, S.C.; an uncle, nine grandchldren
10:08
a.m
.,
Rocksprings
'
8Y THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
asked
to call the Sheriff's
Lows in the uppe r -W s. ~omh ­
attack bases in Mghanistin, but
and rwo great grandsons.
Rehabilitation
Center,
Alice
Increasing
sunshine
will
office
at
992337
L
wcst wind 5 to I 0 mph .
· that some; sticking points
He \YaS also preceded in death by his sister, Marilyn S. Davis. Miller, Pleasant Valley Hospibring
a
gradual
\varmup
across
Thursd ay.. . Pan ly d &lt;&gt;u dy.
remained.
Services will be 11 a.m. Friday in Fogelso~:~g-Tucker Funeral tal;
the
region
,
hut
high
temperaHighs in th e mid (,(Js. \Vc&lt;t
Speaking on condition of
· Home, Mason, with Pastor Glen Lambert and the Rev. Dave
II :32 a.m. , Third Street,
tures still will be unseasonably wind 1n to IS mph .
anonymity, the officials said
. Fields officiating.
a.'co;isted by Syracuse as First
POMEROY - Two peo- cool through Friday, th~
both sides want to minimize
Thursday
ni;;h t. .. l'.nrly
Burial will be in .Sunrise Memorial- Garden.;, Letart, W.Va. Responder, Leola Enoch, pie were recently arrested by National Weather Service said.
cloudy. Lows in the mid 411,.
the use of ground forces in
Military graveside rites will be conducted by the Smith-Cape- PVH;
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Near
normal
readings
any strike. They also said some
Extended forecast:
bart American Legion Post 140, and Stewart-Johnson VFW
7:14 p.m., Powell Street, Department.
should be back by the we ekdifferences had emerged durFriday
and
Fri,i.Jy
Post 9926. Friends may call at the funeral home on &amp;om 7-9 Shirley Long, dead on arrival;
According
to
reports,
·
.
end.
ing talks that began Monday
night. .,Partly clou dy. Lmv 42
p.m. Thursday.
10:40 p.m., Rocksprings Shawn
Whittekind
of
Highs on Thursday and Fri·between high-ranking Paleto ·44 and high 66 to 68.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Can- Rehabilitation Center, BerPomeroy was arrested and day will be in the 60s, up &amp;om
istani officials and an Amencer Society, in care of Grace Somerville, Rt. 1, Box 726, Point nice jeffers, Holzer Medical
Saturday.. . M os tl y
ckor.
placed in the Meigs County . the 40s and 50s earlier in the
can delegation including
Pleasant, WVa_ 25550.
Highs
in
the
uppe
r
611s.
Center.
Jail for failing to register :is a week. Normal highs are in the
sel'lior defense and intelligence
Sunday... M ostly ck .u. Lows
OUVE TOWNSHIP
sex offender.
low to mid-70s_
representatives.
in the lower -lOs and hi;;hs
9:05 p.m., Eden Ridge,
Danny Pendleton of MidNo rain is in the forecast.
The points of disagreement
• plete with guides in Victorian structure fire, Harvey Bardleport was arrested for · Sunset Wednesday night will near 70.
include whether or not to
costume, will commence at the nmus, owner, no inJuries.
Monday
.md
domestic violence and is cur- be at 7:22, and sunrise on
lend support to the opposition
Meigs County Courthouse
POMEROY
Tuesday... Mmdy clear. Lo\, m
rently in the Meigs Counry Thursday is at 7:24 a.m.
alliance, something that Pakf1omPageAl
and continue to the Pomeroy
10:56 a.m., Bar 30 R oa d , jail.
the mid 40s and hi~h in th &lt;·
Weather forecast:
istan has expressed public misUnited Methodist Church, Barbara Roush, HMC.
Tonight .. . Partly
cloudy. lower 70s ..
by Dee and Dallas near the Trinity Church and Sacred
TUPPERS PLAINS
givings over. Other points of
river&amp;ont at 7 p.m.
Heart Catholic Church.
10 :55 a.m., R 1ce
. R un, Terecontention: what action is
warranted against PakistariOn Friday, Meigs High
A 20-minute musical inter- sa Lacolmb, St. Joseph's Hosworks in the schools and llotcd
School
Band
and
Flag
Corps
lude
will take place at each ~·tal .
POMEROY
The
based militant groups; and
that letter; had b&lt;·rn SL' Ilt to
. wiII pe rfcorm at 1 p.m., and at church during the tour.
Pomeroy Church of Christ
whether or not the United
parents. Videos, placard&lt;. work 5:30
p.m.,
musical
entertainPomeroy
Merchants
Associa·
will
host its free community
Nations should approve any
PageAl
books and group ani,·ities
111ent will round out the cion will once again sponsor
dinner on Friday from 5:30 to
operation against Mghanistan.
would be used in the d1ssevening .with Paul Doeffinger, the Ducky Derby, with a vari7 p.m . The public is invited.
"We've issued the contracts,
Some differences were
rooms to teach about ab&lt;ti!he Midnight Cloggers, High ety of prizes to be given away
we've asked for extensions
resolved Tuesday when the
Country and Liquid Crystal.
at 4 p.m., and a Captain's DinPOMEROY -A number
nence and per;oru l choice.
some U.S. delegation mem•
will
f
h
ft
from
the
bidders,
all
wheels
are
Personnel h1·r··d &lt;illrl.ll•' til"
Saturday s events
open ner, sponsored by the Eagles o t e ts and other incidents
in motion to move forward
'
"
'
bers held a 40-nunute meet_
with
a
parade
at
10
a.m.,
folClub
and
hosted
each
year
to
are
currently
under
investigameeting
included
Catherine
ing with Pakistan's president,
.
.
by th e M e1gs
.
C ounty
once the building permits are Hart, tutor ror t\vo ,,,.,.,Jtll
Iowe d by a pe rfcormance by th e h onor vanous
sternw h eeI cap- . t1on
Gen. Pervez Musharraf, the
Swin.nn'
· will begm
· at 5:3·0 p.m. at Sh en·ff•s D epartment.
issued;'
Engram. .
0 .5 .,,,
.,. Seniors at 10:30 a.m. tatns,
On said
recommendation
of handicapped studc1m, •t
sources said without specify.
At
11
a.ril.,
Myron
Duffield,
a
location
to
be
annoUI\Ced
Sheriff
R
alph
E.
)'russell
·
hour
not
to
exceed
fi
ve
hour&lt;
ing which . points had been
fth
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Mark ~honemus, treasurer, the
the"King o e Calliope;' will during the festival. ·
said Tom Wolfe reported that
a week per stmkm ; Dav1 d
resolved.
h
h
County will observe Women's board approved revised tempo:~~r~:\~t~;rayino;:~~~~ 'n~~e S~~ty. t~:~~gg,B~~~ ~'l:cin~~~~~i~~:n ~~~~;in:: Health Month Thursday at rary appropriations for 2001- ~;icoxen,lgirll~
v;~sit(y. b.tskctthe Family Life Center in 02 fiscal year in the amount of
a coac 1; ' 1r
· l.ln cey,
a! organ music.
Clo"ggers, "Elvis" Impersonator and that several items were
boys' r"s
fc tb II
1
·
Mi.ddleport, 9 a.m to 2 p.m.
$38,737,497. It was pointed
' · ervc 00 " coac 1;
A line-throwing contest, Dwight Icenhower, Blitzkrieg missing, including a 25~inch
D 0 roth F ulk
-r0 ' 1G
·
Attending will be girls in out that the amount i11cludes
Y a ncr, ' "' r;lC&lt;',
sponsored by American Elec- Unplugged, and a fireworks Zenith television and $300 in
L
N d
J 1w· k
k.
h
the 11 tJ! and 12th grades &amp;om the building fund.
aura a eau, oe
It ""'' 1
tric Power, will begin at 11 show, sponsored by R.iepen- c ange.
all three high schools in the
Meeting with board mem- and jan1es M. Yerian, 1ub~titutc ·
a.m., as will a chili cookoff, hoff Distributing, will conOther in cidents
being
h
investigated are:
county. Theme · of the fourth bers to discuss an abstinence teac ers.
sponsored by the VFW of elude the river festival.
annual event ·is "A Women's program 1·n tile schools, grades
Debra Shuler was hired as a
Mason, W.Va. Ch ili· jud ging •is
Other planned activities
• G rant Young of · Success
of the Road in Reedsville reported Outing on Wellness" (WOW). 5-8, were Brenda Curfinan and bus driver for t.he current
scheduled 10 take place at 4 include the
p.m.
R.iverfest Queen; a
that his 1999 Honda TRX
· The program will provide a Jaclyn Sheets of the Meigs school years; and Am1 a Darst,
~ ~---- ~---'--noll-em'lmffiiStnvill-rurvelne:iitl&gt;eoplesBarut;'fi!dpaiiiling;-'30·trfmrA&gt;rhe;ele'f\ffis~olen-~e•r-m~~-ll?r-·terla~~ girls-to gain-E:01.mty--Health~E&gt;epartment's -·
· ·
.
knowledge
in1prove
their
Wellness
program
.
Young
were
hired
as
subsritme
opportunity to view a large sponsored by the University of from his residence. The fourTitled Responsible Social cooks. The resignation of Celia
collection from noon to 4 p.m. Rio Grande; a mini towboat wheeler is green in color with decision malting skills regarding health and risk-taking Values Program (RSVP), it is a McCoy as senior class advisor
in the upstairs • portion of giveaway; land bicycle/tricy- camouflage stickers;
• Columbia Chapel Church behaviors, enhance person five-day life skills program was accepted.
Clark's Jewelry Store, located cle decorating contest, sponAttending were Supnintenon Court Street, and at 1 p.m., sored by the Meigs County in Albany reported that a wellness, discuss eating disor- geared to delay sexual activiry,
communion table was taken ders, self-esteem and sexuality and encourage responsible dent Bill Buckl ey, Rhonemus,
a historical walking tour, com- Chapter Gold Wing Club.
Issues.
behavior when it comes to and board members Scott Waifrom the church;
They will also be given an alcohol, tobacco and drug use. ton, Wayne Davis, Nornun
• Roger Jeffers reported
Curfman
and
Sheets . Humphreys, Roger Abbott :md
state.
that a storage unit on High- oppourtunity explore a variland Road had the latch bro- ety of health issues, especially explained how the program John Hood.
Council~:
• purchased a "tray" for the ken off. Nothing was missing as they pertain to wellness and
health
maintenance, self
fire department's dwnp tank on from the storage unit;
A1
Engine 21;
• Sheila Warner of Forrest esteem, self-image, interpercitations are made, violators
• approved the mayor's report, · Run Road in Racine sonal relationships, sexuality
should be cited to Me~ Coun- which totaled $504 .for the vil- informed deputies that her and reproductive health, and
son's Honda 400 EX four- violence against women.
ty Court.
lage and $260 for the state.
In other matters, David
Attending the meeting were
Spencer was appointed to the. councilmen Robert Beegle, Joe
MEDINA (AP) - Metal · withstand the prc·ssur&lt;·," he
position of clerk-treasurer fol- EVllllS, Greg Taylor, Fred Wolre,
Ashcroft on Thesday told
fatigue
may have contributed said. "Eventually, it wou ld
lowing the resignation of the Larry Wolfe; Clerk Karen Lyons;
Congress that terrorists may
be planning an attack using.a to the steam tractor explo- have blown up Jny way. It was
village's current clerk, Karen and Street Conunissioner John
truck carrying hazardous sion that killed fi.ve people at j ust a matter of time."
Lyons, who is moving out of Holman.
A1
chemicals. Twenty people the Medina County Fair in
The tractor's crown , heel
while, sources said the gov- have been charged with try- July, according to a sheriff's
originally was 5- 1(i 111ch in
ernment there has reached ing · to obtain fraudulent department investigation.
The lead investigator, Lt. thickness, but erod ed over
broad accord with U.S. offi- licenses · to drive tanker
cials on a plan for attacks on ttucks, officials said. Some of John Detchon, said a combi- tim e to less than 1-1 I&gt; in c h.
(USPS 213-IMIO)
those· arrested in connection na.tion of a low water in the
bases inside Afghanistan.
Ohio Volley Publllhlng Co.
PubBshed every attamoon, Monday
The increasing press ure on with the tanker licenses may engine's boiler and a worn
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
the Taliban comes as federal have connections to the crown sheet caused the
Correction Polley
Pomeroy, · Ohio.
Second-class
Our main concern in all stories is postage paid at Pomeroy.
investigators find more evi- hijackers, the Justice Depart- explosion.
U.mblr: The Associated Press and
to be accurate. If you know of an
"Even if it had proper
dence of an international ment said.
the Ohkl Newspaper Association .
error in a slory, call the newsroom
"Terrorism is a cle.ar and water level, the boiler was in
Poltmuter: Send address correc·
terrorist network which may
at (740) 992-2156.
lklns to The Dolly sentinel, 111 Court.
present danger to Americans such bad shape it couldn't
Sl. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
. still be operating.
News Departments
In New York, emergency today," Ashcroft told a Senate
Subscription rates
The main number le 992-2156.
By carrier or motor route
crews worked through the hearing.
Department eldentlons are:
one-k
.
$.2
. night to dismantle a sevenOne man1h
$8.70
General manager
Ext. 12
111 ESIII.IE 'i'
6:5G.9;15
Oney•r
$104
story fragment of metal
"U fwal IJUCiil, pl«w AU.pfXJtl it!" -Ju
Dally
.
50 cenrs
Ext. 13
Newa
facade, all that rema'ined
Subsorlbera nol deslrlng lo pay the
RATRAa
9:20
carrier
may
remit
In
advance
direct
to
Ext. 14
standing of the World Trade
MEIGS COUNTY
or
The Dally Senllnel. Credit will be given
'
carrier each week. No subscription by
Center,
as the area was
KARATE CLUB
Other 'Services
mail permitted In areas where home
Fall Quarter
declared
a
crime
sce
ne
off
carrier service is available.
Advertlalng
Ext. 3
beginning
claesaa
limits to cameras.
etartlng
Thureday,
MallsubscriDiion
Also, Mayor Rudolph
Ext. 4
Clrculallon
tnlldo Melgo eol.iiYSetpember 27, at
.
Giuliani
issued the order
13 Week&amp;
·
$27.30
6:00 p.m. at Carelton
Eld. 5
Claaanled Ada
26 Weeks
$53.82
Tuesday barring single7:40,9:55
School, Syracuse.
52 Week&amp;
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To eend e-mail
occupant ca rs from entering
For more
RotH outeldo Melgo County
7:40,10:00
· nawsilmydallyser1tinel.com
Information,
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Attorney General John
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

EMS log cal's

Wyllis F. Davis. Jr.

.

Gradual warmup in forecast

Aiaests anacle

Festival

· Free dinner

Progress

I •d t5

from

na en

probed

Women•s Health
MOnth to
be observed ·

"

1

a

A FIGHTING MACHINE - A maintenance crew leaves a KC135 tanker on the flight line at the Grand Forks Air Force Base
In Grand Forks, N.D., after readlntng It for deployment. The Air
Force announced that troops and planes ffom the Grand Forks
Air Force Base were being deployed to fight terrorism. (AP
Photo)
"Infinite
Justice,"
was
scrapped after the administration recognized that in the
Islamic faith such finality is
considered something provided only by Allah, the Arabic
word for God.
The U.S. is assembling a
large force in the Persian Gulf
and Arabian Sea - including
at least two aircraft carriers,
with two more reportedly
headed in that direction. Each
ship carries about · 5,000
sailors and 75 aircraft and is
accompanied by about a
dozen warships, generally
including attack submarines
and destroyers capable of firing cruise missiles.
The United States also has
warplanes at land bases in
Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in
.the Persian Gulf region, and it

__,

plans to put Air Force B-52
bombers on the Indian
Ocean island of Diego G•rcJa.
A key element of the military campaign is expected to ·
be U.S. special operations
forces, the clandestine warriors who operate behind
enemy lines, sometimes in
heJicopter-delivered raids to
kill, kidnap or sabotage.
Rumsfeld was asked about
remarks by Russian President
Vladimir Putin that Central
Asian nations· such as Uzbekistan and Tajiki~tan have not
ruled out allowing the use of
their air bases for anti-terror
strikes into
neighboring
Afghanistan, whose Taliban
militia is accused of harboring
alleged terrorist mastermind
Osama bin Laden.

Racine
ffolli Pap

Metal weakness contributed
to steam tractor explosion

Attacks
from Page

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

&lt;

Car Problems?•••
.No Problem
COME TO

to~~w

w.dnesd.y. SepteMber 21. 2001

Thousands protest at
abandoned Embassy

INVESTIGATING - FBI Director Robert Mueller gestures during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington to discuss the investigation of the terrorist attacks. (AP
Photo)
cal plants or storage grounds.
They also •have warned
owners of farm crop-dusters
to .protect the small aircraft
from being commandeered
and used to spray chemical or
biological agents. On that
front, a convicted terrorist collaborator testified just two
months ago in an unrelated
trial in New York that he
trained for a chemical attack at
a camp inside Afghanistan
where poison was unleashed
to kill dogs.
"In regard to targets in general ... we were speaking abou.t
America," Ahmed Ressam told
the court in July. Ressam testified terrorist trainers discussed
dispensing poison through the
air intake vents of buildings to
ensure the maximum amount
of casualties.
The FBI is investigating
whether some of the hijackers

PageA2

'

Wednesday, Septemb!H' 26, 2001

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The Daily Sentinel

America at war

Ashcauft wams about other
WASHINGTON (AP) Attorney
General
John
Ashcroft warned Tuesday there
was a "clear and present dan"
ger" of additional terrorist
attacks that could include
trucks carrying hazardous
chemical\. About 20 people
have been charged with trying
to obt:\in fraudulent licenses to
drive tankers, officials said.
Some of those arrested in
connec tion with the hazardous tanker licenses may
have connecnons to the
hijackers, the justice Department said.
The new warning came as
the investigation into the Sept.
II suicide hijackings made
progress across the globe.
French ·authorities detained
sewral people in connection
with an alleged plot against
the U.S. Embassy in Paris.
U.S. authorities detained
three Middle Eastern men in
California as material witnesses - meaning they could have
information useful in the case
- and also released a Saudi
doctor living in Texas who had
been taken into custody and
brought to New York for
questioning earlier in the
investigation.
Al-Badr AI- Hazmi, a radiol . ogist whose name was similar
to two of the 19 hijackers,
returned to San Antonio after
nearly two weeks in custody ,as
a material witness.
A law enforcement source,
who spoke only on condition
of anonymity, said authorities
questioned the doctor about
whether his credit card may
have bee n stolen by the
hijackers or their associates.

In Washington, Asncrofi told
Congress that there is continuing danger &amp;om terrorism,
and that one threat the FBI is
examining is whether trucks
that carry toxic chemicals may
be targets.
"Terrorism is a dear and
present danger to Americans
today," Ashcroft told senators.
" Intelligence
information
available to the FBI indicates a
potential for additional terrorist incidents."
Ashcroft said some of those
detained
had
unlawfully
obtained or tried to ·obtain
licenses that would enable
them to drive trucks hauling
chemicalS or other hazardous
materials.
Some of those seeking
licenses "may have links to the
hijackers" of the four planes
on Sept. 11 , Ashcroft testified.
A Justice Department official, speaklng on condition of
anonymity, said the total number of people being detained
in connection with hazardous
licenses was around 20. The
official declined to specifY
how many have connections
to the terrorists.
One man who has been
arrested, Nabil Al-Marabh, 34,
a former Boston cab driver
taken in~o custody in Chicago
last week, holds a commercial
driver's license and is certified
to transport hazardous materials, records show.
Al-Marabh has been moved
to New York for questioning.
The FBI has warned oil and
gas companies, hazardous
waste haulers and local police
to be on the alert' for suspicious activities around chemi-

who destroyed the World
Trade Center practiced their
approaches by renting small
planes at New Jersey flight
schools and flying along the
Hudson River toward the
twin · towers, an FBI spokeswoman said Tuesday.
Agents are pursuing tips that
hijackers mounted test runs in
small planes, but- FBI Special
Agent Sandra Carroll said
investigators have neither confirmed nor ·ruled out "that
they could have rented planes
and rehearsed."
In France, anti-terrorist
police detained at least four
people early&gt;Tuesday in connection with a planned attack
on the U.S. Embassy in Paris
and other U.S. interests in
France. Seven people already
were, in custody in France in
connection with the alleged
plot.

Rumsfeld-says campaign will ·be long
'

WASHINGTON (AP) In its latest preparations for
the war on terrorism, the
Pentagon . nas ca lled up
- National Cuarcl ancl~eserve
soldiers who secure ports and
military bases, gather information about enemies and
identifY human remains.
Military officials on Thesday
brought nearly 2,000 more
reservists from the Air Force,
Army and Navy to active
duty. They include 190 members of an Army Reserve
mortuary unit from Puerto
Rico that will help recover
remains of the more than
6,000 missing from the attack
on the World Trade Center.
Many of the soldiers will
help beef up security inside
the United States while others wil!(!;O overseas, Pentagon
officials say. Which troops and
equipment are going where is
a closely guarded secret.
Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld prepared for a
breakfast meeting Wednesday
with top congressional leaders. On Tuesday, he continued
Bush administration efforts to
prepare the public for a long,
perhaps bloody, campaign.
" It will not be an antiseptic
war, I regret to say," Rumsfeld
said at a Pentagon news conference. "It will be difficult. It
will be dangerous. And ... the
likelihood is that more people
may be lost."
Rumsfeld said the new war
will not start with a massive
offensive such. ·as D-Day, the
final allied push in Europe'
during World War II.
"It is by its very nature
so met hing that ca nnot be

dealt with by some sort of
massive attack or invasion," he
said. "It is a much more subtle, nuanced, difficult, shadpredicted the ·
campaign wo.uld last "not five
minutes or five months," but
years.
The Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks against the United
States left nearly 7,000 people
dead or missing in New York
City, at the Pentagon and in
Pennsylvania.
The Pentagon announced
that an additional 1,940
reservis.ts from I 6 states,
Puerto Rico and the District
of Columbia were called to
active duty. They bring to
14,318 the number of
Reserve and National Guard
members called so far under a
partial mobilization order
President Bush signed after
the Sept. 11 · attacks. Bush
authorized the. Pentagon to
call as many as 50,000 to
·
active duty.
Also, about 200 soldiers
from the lOlst Airborne
Division at Fort Campbell,
Ky., were sent to each of two
chemical weapons storage
facilities in Kentucky and
Indiana to augment security,
according to officials at those
sites. A spokeswoman said
there had been no specific
threat against either place.
The military campaign separate from the financial,
diplomatic and law enforcement tools being mobilized
against terrorism -· has been
code-named "Enduring Freedom," Rumsfeld said.
. The name first chosen,

Now acceptlno
·
artisans &amp; crofters
for our nei.v bulldlno at
112 West Main Street, Pomeroy
(OidSofVIceUupply•cl) .

all this week.
For mar• Information an laliiiiiCJ ar Mlll119 your
product, colt

LlzRoush992-1100

ISLAMABAD,
Pakistan
(AP) - Thousands protested
at the abandoned U.S.
Embissy compound in the
Mghan capital of Kabul on
Wednesday, bunting cars and
tearing down the U.S. seal. In
neighboring Pakistan, sources
said they reached broad accord
with U.S. officials on a plan for
attacks on bases inside
Mghanistan.
Heavy new fighting was
reported
in
northern
Afghanistan as an oppositi.o n
alliance pressed on with its bid
to seize territory from 6ghters
of the Taliban, the hard-line
Islamic movement that govems the country.
The demonstration . in
Kabul \vas the largest antiAmerican protest since the
crisis sparked by the Sept 11
terror attacks in New York and
Washington. The . United
States' chief suspect in the
attacks is Osama bin Laden,
the Saudi exile who has she!tered for the past five years by
the Taliban.
Shouting
"Long
Live
Osama!" and '·'Death to America!" the protesters burned a
U.S. Oags And an effigy of President Bush befOre storming
the old embassy compound.
The buil&lt;)ing has been abandoned since 1988.
Gray smoke billowed into
the sky after vehicles were set
afire in the embassy compound, and several men used
hammers to remove the large
circular U.S. seal above the
front entrance. Taliban author-

•
..

Deaths

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

LOCAL
STOCKS
'
AEP-44'.

1

Federal Mogul - •
Premier - 8 .
wheeler was taken &amp;om her Arch Coal - 15
USB- 21 ',
ROCkweH - 13
yard. The four-wheeler is red Alczo-39
Gannett - 57'1
Rocky B!&gt;ots - 4'
AmTeci\SBC - 47'•
~ral Electric- 35·,
RD Shell - 46
POMEROY. - Units of in fO)or;
Ashland Inc. - 36',
GKNLY- 3',
Sears - 34
the Meigs Emergency Service
• Russell Bookman report- AT&amp;T-18
Shoney's _,
Hartey DaVIdson - 40
. NEW HAVEN, W:Va. -Wyllis f Davis, Jr., 70, New Haven, answered nine calls for assis- ed that his mailbox and post Bank One- 31
Kma~ -1·.
Wai- Mart - 48
·BU-8\:..
died
Tuesday,
Aug.
25,
2001
at
his
residence.
Kroger- 25\
Wendy s- 26.
tance
on
Tuesday.
Units
were
missing
&amp;om
his
resiities evenrually dispersed the
Bell
Evans
16'.
Lands
End31
Worthongton
- 10 •
He was born on june 17,1931 in Lancaster, son ofthe late responded as foUows:
dence; .
protesters above the door, and
BorgWamer- 39'.
Ud. -9',
Datly stock reports are
Wyllis f 'Davis Sr., and Grace Mooney Berk Davis.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
NSC -14'1
• Angie Bass of Syracuse Champion - 2'.
the 4 p.m clostng
the vehicle fires were put our.
Channing
Shops
5
Oak
Hill
Financial16
· He is survived by his \vife, Eleanor Weaver Davis of New
quotes
of the prevtous
1:51
a.m.,
Mulberry reported that someone stole a
In Paki~tan's capital of
City Holding - 9',
OVB - 24',
day's transactions. pro·
Haven; three daughters and two sons-in-law, Marsha K. and Avenue, Tristen Garnes, treat- purse &amp;om her car that was Col-14\.
BBT - 34'.
Islamabad, senior Pakistani
vided by Sm~h PartRichard Smith of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,and Lisa M . and Kelvin ed;
DuPonl- 35~
Peoples
18',
ners at Advest Inc.
parked
at
her
residence;
sources said Pakistani and .U.S.
-Honaker and Wendy Davis, all of New Haven; three sons and · 3 :47 a.m., -Rocksprings
• Teresa Stout of Albany
defense and intelligence offi· daughters-in-law, Timothy S. and Connie . Qavis of Mason, Rehabilitation Center, Dora reported that her mailbox had ·
cials had reached broad agree- W.Va., and Nathan F. and Tanya Davis and Bart A. a.nd Teresa Hooper, O ' Bieness Memorial been torn down.
ment on an anti-terror pro!=&gt;avis, all of New Haven; a broth.e r and sister-in-law, Jerry 1\6. Hospital;
Anyone \vith information is
gram that included a plan to
and Rita Davts of Sumter, S.C.; an uncle, nine grandchldren
10:08
a.m
.,
Rocksprings
'
8Y THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
asked
to call the Sheriff's
Lows in the uppe r -W s. ~omh ­
attack bases in Mghanistin, but
and rwo great grandsons.
Rehabilitation
Center,
Alice
Increasing
sunshine
will
office
at
992337
L
wcst wind 5 to I 0 mph .
· that some; sticking points
He \YaS also preceded in death by his sister, Marilyn S. Davis. Miller, Pleasant Valley Hospibring
a
gradual
\varmup
across
Thursd ay.. . Pan ly d &lt;&gt;u dy.
remained.
Services will be 11 a.m. Friday in Fogelso~:~g-Tucker Funeral tal;
the
region
,
hut
high
temperaHighs in th e mid (,(Js. \Vc&lt;t
Speaking on condition of
· Home, Mason, with Pastor Glen Lambert and the Rev. Dave
II :32 a.m. , Third Street,
tures still will be unseasonably wind 1n to IS mph .
anonymity, the officials said
. Fields officiating.
a.'co;isted by Syracuse as First
POMEROY - Two peo- cool through Friday, th~
both sides want to minimize
Thursday
ni;;h t. .. l'.nrly
Burial will be in .Sunrise Memorial- Garden.;, Letart, W.Va. Responder, Leola Enoch, pie were recently arrested by National Weather Service said.
cloudy. Lows in the mid 411,.
the use of ground forces in
Military graveside rites will be conducted by the Smith-Cape- PVH;
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Near
normal
readings
any strike. They also said some
Extended forecast:
bart American Legion Post 140, and Stewart-Johnson VFW
7:14 p.m., Powell Street, Department.
should be back by the we ekdifferences had emerged durFriday
and
Fri,i.Jy
Post 9926. Friends may call at the funeral home on &amp;om 7-9 Shirley Long, dead on arrival;
According
to
reports,
·
.
end.
ing talks that began Monday
night. .,Partly clou dy. Lmv 42
p.m. Thursday.
10:40 p.m., Rocksprings Shawn
Whittekind
of
Highs on Thursday and Fri·between high-ranking Paleto ·44 and high 66 to 68.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Can- Rehabilitation Center, BerPomeroy was arrested and day will be in the 60s, up &amp;om
istani officials and an Amencer Society, in care of Grace Somerville, Rt. 1, Box 726, Point nice jeffers, Holzer Medical
Saturday.. . M os tl y
ckor.
placed in the Meigs County . the 40s and 50s earlier in the
can delegation including
Pleasant, WVa_ 25550.
Highs
in
the
uppe
r
611s.
Center.
Jail for failing to register :is a week. Normal highs are in the
sel'lior defense and intelligence
Sunday... M ostly ck .u. Lows
OUVE TOWNSHIP
sex offender.
low to mid-70s_
representatives.
in the lower -lOs and hi;;hs
9:05 p.m., Eden Ridge,
Danny Pendleton of MidNo rain is in the forecast.
The points of disagreement
• plete with guides in Victorian structure fire, Harvey Bardleport was arrested for · Sunset Wednesday night will near 70.
include whether or not to
costume, will commence at the nmus, owner, no inJuries.
Monday
.md
domestic violence and is cur- be at 7:22, and sunrise on
lend support to the opposition
Meigs County Courthouse
POMEROY
Tuesday... Mmdy clear. Lo\, m
rently in the Meigs Counry Thursday is at 7:24 a.m.
alliance, something that Pakf1omPageAl
and continue to the Pomeroy
10:56 a.m., Bar 30 R oa d , jail.
the mid 40s and hi~h in th &lt;·
Weather forecast:
istan has expressed public misUnited Methodist Church, Barbara Roush, HMC.
Tonight .. . Partly
cloudy. lower 70s ..
by Dee and Dallas near the Trinity Church and Sacred
TUPPERS PLAINS
givings over. Other points of
river&amp;ont at 7 p.m.
Heart Catholic Church.
10 :55 a.m., R 1ce
. R un, Terecontention: what action is
warranted against PakistariOn Friday, Meigs High
A 20-minute musical inter- sa Lacolmb, St. Joseph's Hosworks in the schools and llotcd
School
Band
and
Flag
Corps
lude
will take place at each ~·tal .
POMEROY
The
based militant groups; and
that letter; had b&lt;·rn SL' Ilt to
. wiII pe rfcorm at 1 p.m., and at church during the tour.
Pomeroy Church of Christ
whether or not the United
parents. Videos, placard&lt;. work 5:30
p.m.,
musical
entertainPomeroy
Merchants
Associa·
will
host its free community
Nations should approve any
PageAl
books and group ani,·ities
111ent will round out the cion will once again sponsor
dinner on Friday from 5:30 to
operation against Mghanistan.
would be used in the d1ssevening .with Paul Doeffinger, the Ducky Derby, with a vari7 p.m . The public is invited.
"We've issued the contracts,
Some differences were
rooms to teach about ab&lt;ti!he Midnight Cloggers, High ety of prizes to be given away
we've asked for extensions
resolved Tuesday when the
Country and Liquid Crystal.
at 4 p.m., and a Captain's DinPOMEROY -A number
nence and per;oru l choice.
some U.S. delegation mem•
will
f
h
ft
from
the
bidders,
all
wheels
are
Personnel h1·r··d &lt;illrl.ll•' til"
Saturday s events
open ner, sponsored by the Eagles o t e ts and other incidents
in motion to move forward
'
"
'
bers held a 40-nunute meet_
with
a
parade
at
10
a.m.,
folClub
and
hosted
each
year
to
are
currently
under
investigameeting
included
Catherine
ing with Pakistan's president,
.
.
by th e M e1gs
.
C ounty
once the building permits are Hart, tutor ror t\vo ,,,.,.,Jtll
Iowe d by a pe rfcormance by th e h onor vanous
sternw h eeI cap- . t1on
Gen. Pervez Musharraf, the
Swin.nn'
· will begm
· at 5:3·0 p.m. at Sh en·ff•s D epartment.
issued;'
Engram. .
0 .5 .,,,
.,. Seniors at 10:30 a.m. tatns,
On said
recommendation
of handicapped studc1m, •t
sources said without specify.
At
11
a.ril.,
Myron
Duffield,
a
location
to
be
annoUI\Ced
Sheriff
R
alph
E.
)'russell
·
hour
not
to
exceed
fi
ve
hour&lt;
ing which . points had been
fth
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Mark ~honemus, treasurer, the
the"King o e Calliope;' will during the festival. ·
said Tom Wolfe reported that
a week per stmkm ; Dav1 d
resolved.
h
h
County will observe Women's board approved revised tempo:~~r~:\~t~;rayino;:~~~~ 'n~~e S~~ty. t~:~~gg,B~~~ ~'l:cin~~~~~i~~:n ~~~~;in:: Health Month Thursday at rary appropriations for 2001- ~;icoxen,lgirll~
v;~sit(y. b.tskctthe Family Life Center in 02 fiscal year in the amount of
a coac 1; ' 1r
· l.ln cey,
a! organ music.
Clo"ggers, "Elvis" Impersonator and that several items were
boys' r"s
fc tb II
1
·
Mi.ddleport, 9 a.m to 2 p.m.
$38,737,497. It was pointed
' · ervc 00 " coac 1;
A line-throwing contest, Dwight Icenhower, Blitzkrieg missing, including a 25~inch
D 0 roth F ulk
-r0 ' 1G
·
Attending will be girls in out that the amount i11cludes
Y a ncr, ' "' r;lC&lt;',
sponsored by American Elec- Unplugged, and a fireworks Zenith television and $300 in
L
N d
J 1w· k
k.
h
the 11 tJ! and 12th grades &amp;om the building fund.
aura a eau, oe
It ""'' 1
tric Power, will begin at 11 show, sponsored by R.iepen- c ange.
all three high schools in the
Meeting with board mem- and jan1es M. Yerian, 1ub~titutc ·
a.m., as will a chili cookoff, hoff Distributing, will conOther in cidents
being
h
investigated are:
county. Theme · of the fourth bers to discuss an abstinence teac ers.
sponsored by the VFW of elude the river festival.
annual event ·is "A Women's program 1·n tile schools, grades
Debra Shuler was hired as a
Mason, W.Va. Ch ili· jud ging •is
Other planned activities
• G rant Young of · Success
of the Road in Reedsville reported Outing on Wellness" (WOW). 5-8, were Brenda Curfinan and bus driver for t.he current
scheduled 10 take place at 4 include the
p.m.
R.iverfest Queen; a
that his 1999 Honda TRX
· The program will provide a Jaclyn Sheets of the Meigs school years; and Am1 a Darst,
~ ~---- ~---'--noll-em'lmffiiStnvill-rurvelne:iitl&gt;eoplesBarut;'fi!dpaiiiling;-'30·trfmrA&gt;rhe;ele'f\ffis~olen-~e•r-m~~-ll?r-·terla~~ girls-to gain-E:01.mty--Health~E&gt;epartment's -·
· ·
.
knowledge
in1prove
their
Wellness
program
.
Young
were
hired
as
subsritme
opportunity to view a large sponsored by the University of from his residence. The fourTitled Responsible Social cooks. The resignation of Celia
collection from noon to 4 p.m. Rio Grande; a mini towboat wheeler is green in color with decision malting skills regarding health and risk-taking Values Program (RSVP), it is a McCoy as senior class advisor
in the upstairs • portion of giveaway; land bicycle/tricy- camouflage stickers;
• Columbia Chapel Church behaviors, enhance person five-day life skills program was accepted.
Clark's Jewelry Store, located cle decorating contest, sponAttending were Supnintenon Court Street, and at 1 p.m., sored by the Meigs County in Albany reported that a wellness, discuss eating disor- geared to delay sexual activiry,
communion table was taken ders, self-esteem and sexuality and encourage responsible dent Bill Buckl ey, Rhonemus,
a historical walking tour, com- Chapter Gold Wing Club.
Issues.
behavior when it comes to and board members Scott Waifrom the church;
They will also be given an alcohol, tobacco and drug use. ton, Wayne Davis, Nornun
• Roger Jeffers reported
Curfman
and
Sheets . Humphreys, Roger Abbott :md
state.
that a storage unit on High- oppourtunity explore a variland Road had the latch bro- ety of health issues, especially explained how the program John Hood.
Council~:
• purchased a "tray" for the ken off. Nothing was missing as they pertain to wellness and
health
maintenance, self
fire department's dwnp tank on from the storage unit;
A1
Engine 21;
• Sheila Warner of Forrest esteem, self-image, interpercitations are made, violators
• approved the mayor's report, · Run Road in Racine sonal relationships, sexuality
should be cited to Me~ Coun- which totaled $504 .for the vil- informed deputies that her and reproductive health, and
son's Honda 400 EX four- violence against women.
ty Court.
lage and $260 for the state.
In other matters, David
Attending the meeting were
Spencer was appointed to the. councilmen Robert Beegle, Joe
MEDINA (AP) - Metal · withstand the prc·ssur&lt;·," he
position of clerk-treasurer fol- EVllllS, Greg Taylor, Fred Wolre,
Ashcroft on Thesday told
fatigue
may have contributed said. "Eventually, it wou ld
lowing the resignation of the Larry Wolfe; Clerk Karen Lyons;
Congress that terrorists may
be planning an attack using.a to the steam tractor explo- have blown up Jny way. It was
village's current clerk, Karen and Street Conunissioner John
truck carrying hazardous sion that killed fi.ve people at j ust a matter of time."
Lyons, who is moving out of Holman.
A1
chemicals. Twenty people the Medina County Fair in
The tractor's crown , heel
while, sources said the gov- have been charged with try- July, according to a sheriff's
originally was 5- 1(i 111ch in
ernment there has reached ing · to obtain fraudulent department investigation.
The lead investigator, Lt. thickness, but erod ed over
broad accord with U.S. offi- licenses · to drive tanker
cials on a plan for attacks on ttucks, officials said. Some of John Detchon, said a combi- tim e to less than 1-1 I&gt; in c h.
(USPS 213-IMIO)
those· arrested in connection na.tion of a low water in the
bases inside Afghanistan.
Ohio Volley Publllhlng Co.
PubBshed every attamoon, Monday
The increasing press ure on with the tanker licenses may engine's boiler and a worn
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
the Taliban comes as federal have connections to the crown sheet caused the
Correction Polley
Pomeroy, · Ohio.
Second-class
Our main concern in all stories is postage paid at Pomeroy.
investigators find more evi- hijackers, the Justice Depart- explosion.
U.mblr: The Associated Press and
to be accurate. If you know of an
"Even if it had proper
dence of an international ment said.
the Ohkl Newspaper Association .
error in a slory, call the newsroom
"Terrorism is a cle.ar and water level, the boiler was in
Poltmuter: Send address correc·
terrorist network which may
at (740) 992-2156.
lklns to The Dolly sentinel, 111 Court.
present danger to Americans such bad shape it couldn't
Sl. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
. still be operating.
News Departments
In New York, emergency today," Ashcroft told a Senate
Subscription rates
The main number le 992-2156.
By carrier or motor route
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Department eldentlons are:
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General manager
Ext. 12
111 ESIII.IE 'i'
6:5G.9;15
Oney•r
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"U fwal IJUCiil, pl«w AU.pfXJtl it!" -Ju
Dally
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Subsorlbera nol deslrlng lo pay the
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remit
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direct
to
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MEIGS COUNTY
or
The Dally Senllnel. Credit will be given
'
carrier each week. No subscription by
Center,
as the area was
KARATE CLUB
Other 'Services
mail permitted In areas where home
Fall Quarter
declared
a
crime
sce
ne
off
carrier service is available.
Advertlalng
Ext. 3
beginning
claesaa
limits to cameras.
etartlng
Thureday,
MallsubscriDiion
Also, Mayor Rudolph
Ext. 4
Clrculallon
tnlldo Melgo eol.iiYSetpember 27, at
.
Giuliani
issued the order
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Tuesday barring single7:40,9:55
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ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

EMS log cal's

Wyllis F. Davis. Jr.

.

Gradual warmup in forecast

Aiaests anacle

Festival

· Free dinner

Progress

I •d t5

from

na en

probed

Women•s Health
MOnth to
be observed ·

"

1

a

A FIGHTING MACHINE - A maintenance crew leaves a KC135 tanker on the flight line at the Grand Forks Air Force Base
In Grand Forks, N.D., after readlntng It for deployment. The Air
Force announced that troops and planes ffom the Grand Forks
Air Force Base were being deployed to fight terrorism. (AP
Photo)
"Infinite
Justice,"
was
scrapped after the administration recognized that in the
Islamic faith such finality is
considered something provided only by Allah, the Arabic
word for God.
The U.S. is assembling a
large force in the Persian Gulf
and Arabian Sea - including
at least two aircraft carriers,
with two more reportedly
headed in that direction. Each
ship carries about · 5,000
sailors and 75 aircraft and is
accompanied by about a
dozen warships, generally
including attack submarines
and destroyers capable of firing cruise missiles.
The United States also has
warplanes at land bases in
Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in
.the Persian Gulf region, and it

__,

plans to put Air Force B-52
bombers on the Indian
Ocean island of Diego G•rcJa.
A key element of the military campaign is expected to ·
be U.S. special operations
forces, the clandestine warriors who operate behind
enemy lines, sometimes in
heJicopter-delivered raids to
kill, kidnap or sabotage.
Rumsfeld was asked about
remarks by Russian President
Vladimir Putin that Central
Asian nations· such as Uzbekistan and Tajiki~tan have not
ruled out allowing the use of
their air bases for anti-terror
strikes into
neighboring
Afghanistan, whose Taliban
militia is accused of harboring
alleged terrorist mastermind
Osama bin Laden.

Racine
ffolli Pap

Metal weakness contributed
to steam tractor explosion

Attacks
from Page

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

&lt;

Car Problems?•••
.No Problem
COME TO

to~~w

w.dnesd.y. SepteMber 21. 2001

Thousands protest at
abandoned Embassy

INVESTIGATING - FBI Director Robert Mueller gestures during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington to discuss the investigation of the terrorist attacks. (AP
Photo)
cal plants or storage grounds.
They also •have warned
owners of farm crop-dusters
to .protect the small aircraft
from being commandeered
and used to spray chemical or
biological agents. On that
front, a convicted terrorist collaborator testified just two
months ago in an unrelated
trial in New York that he
trained for a chemical attack at
a camp inside Afghanistan
where poison was unleashed
to kill dogs.
"In regard to targets in general ... we were speaking abou.t
America," Ahmed Ressam told
the court in July. Ressam testified terrorist trainers discussed
dispensing poison through the
air intake vents of buildings to
ensure the maximum amount
of casualties.
The FBI is investigating
whether some of the hijackers

PageA2

'

Wednesday, Septemb!H' 26, 2001

Orv-e /}octo~~ /;1/0.

"Good Honest People''
Brakes, Shocks, Struts
Engine Diagnosis, Tune-ups, 011 Changes
We sell all major tire brands,
185·70·14, 185-75-14,195-70-14, 195-75-14
' Then slzea this week Special . . . .
each Includes mounting and computer balance

CAR CARE DOCTORS, INC.
1/4 mile down river from Pomeroy Bridge

992·4484 or 992·3011

~--~\\

G( :

OHIO ----·
Ftiii:
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�•1n1on
•

The Daily Sentinel

P~geA4
Wednesday, September 26, 2001

DEAR ABBY: I'm going to be
65 soon . Yesterday I got a call from
my. daughter telling me : "Sorry, I'm
; going to be late with your birthday
; card again this year. I don't have
' time to get one. I'm really busy.
· We're working on the house, and I
got a new job. I'll send you one in
a few weeks." My daughter knows
. how much I love getting cards and
being remembered. However, she
thinks it's funny when she says, "I
·got your card, but I can't find a
stamp. Maybe you'll receive it
sometime next year."
Are there other daughters ·like
mine. or is she the only one? I'd
like other daughters and sons to
know that when your mother is
gone, she's not coming back. Take a
little time now, while she's alive, to

111 Court St., Po11'1411'0Y, Ohio
740-982·21 !18.• Fu: 982·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn 1Aw11
Mlneglng Editor
Diane Key Hill
Controller

Charlene tto.fllch
Genenl Manager

w,...,

. Ulan ..... - - . . -. n.., ....., .. ,.,. """'11111-.lr.All .......
..,.. . . ., h llpflfl ,.,~ ........ .a
....Nr.
No ..,....,,.,., &gt;rill H pob/IIW L111m tA..U H U. ,..M lui•, ollnttU.,

llA , ...}«1 to

&amp;u.n, . ,,_.
''t'a
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J'h ~ Ul'ftlflfl U.IM to1MM1t

&amp;dow.,.,_ Co.u,.,.., 11/rt. DIU H11MJ

l"'ddirlliar Co.\' Hliorlal ~ 111tlaJ Ofllfnl'll# IIDiftl.

·

NATIONAL VIEW
.

Wednesday, September 16, 1001

Mom awaits unhappy birthday because of daughter's late card

Th~ Daily Sentinel

Charles W. GoYey
Publlaller

Page AS

.. The Daily Sentinel

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
show her you love her. ·Thanks,
Abby. SAD MOTHER IN
TEXAS
DEAR SAD MOTHER: Yes,
there are other daughters and sons
like yours. And you're .right, life
isn't a dress rehearsal. Every
moment is precious.
Knowing how you feel, your
daughter appears to have a warped

does? ·Jf yo u saw someone walk
sense of humor and to enjoy with - can occasionally be checked on.
Abby, please let me know your into a bank with a 'tot;kmg pulled
holding what makes you happy.You
over his head, what would you
have described a person who thinks opinion . - NOT UPSET YET
DEAR NOT UPSET YET: I . think? How abou t when you see
the world revolves around her.
DEAR ABBY: My husband and agree with you. There is less temp- someone wearing a · business sult?"
I ha~e a 15-year-old daughter I'll tation when everything is out m etc. Finally, I ask, "What are you
trying to say to people when you
call An\}a . She's a good girl and has the open.
DEAR ABBY: With regard to dress?"
a very casual boyfriend, wbo is also
What we wear is. a statetn ent to
15. Occasionally they get together the column you printed about the
wotnan who wore a tongue stud ' the people around us. H ow .we
at our house to talk.
dress, tanoo, pierce, sryle our hair
Anna and her dad. think she while being interviewed ·for a job:
and present ourselves is an expresAs
a
teac
her,
I
talk
to
classrooms
should be able to visit with her
boyfriend upstairs in her bedroom. of students about how they dre ss sion of who we are, and a message
I feel that even though their rela- and what their attire co nveys to th e to the people we encounter. Do
not be defensive if th ey react to the
tionship is innocent, eventually people who see them.
message
yo u are sending. - LEA
I ask these students: " Whe n you
Anna will become more inte{ested
in boys. Therefore, it's a good idea see someone dressed like a police- IN MINNESOTA
DEAR LEA: You make your
that all visitors of the opposite sex man, what do you think that perpoint
·Very well.
son
does?
When
you
see
someone
be entertained .in a common living
Dear Abby is ovrittm by Pmtlinc
' area- like the living room, family dressed like a nurse or a doctor,
Pltillips
aud dau.~lucr Jeanne Plrillips.
what
do
you
think
that
perso
n
.
room or kitchen. Then these kids

\

Response
Show the world democracy is
still vital by going to the polls

I

RUSHER'S VIEW

This is what should be done·with bin Laden~· crew

• Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 011 tile importa11ce of voting: The
cover of one weekly Seatde newspaper carries a small headline:
In recent days, there has been a lot of
"We still have to vote Tuesday."
talk about catching Osama bin Laden
To cast one's ballot in a free and open exercise of representaand punishing the Taliban government
tive democrac-y hardly feels like a chore - especially when
of Afghanistan, which is harboring him.
Washington's Primary Election Day comes exacdy one week
For the first objective, landing highly
after the horrific assaults on freedom in New York and Washtrained special forces near bin Laden's
known hideouts, finding him, if possible,
ington, D.C.
Those who thought they might begin to topple this icon of
and, at a minimum, destroying his camps
democracy with Tuesday's dastardly deeds need to be shown
and then withdrawing our forces when
just how wrong they were. We recognize voting as a right, a
they have done all they can is undoubtprivilege, an obligation. Tomorrow we should recognize it as a
edly the way to go. At th' very least, a
joy, ~nd as an affirmative, unmistakable act of defiance.
year or two of this treatment will keep
There are precious few places on this planet where the conhim on the run and severely hamper his
sent of the governed is a prerequisite....
operations. And no ongoing ground
No gaggle of generals dictates who will serve in office.
invasion of that notoriously difficult
No cabal of bearded clerics decides for us.
country would be necessary.
Neither the question of who votes nor who is allowed to run
As for the second objective, once
for office is predetermined by accident of class, race or caste.
again, a ground invasion should be
We are not herded to the polling places by armed soldiers to
avoided::But low-level p,recision bombensure high but meaningless voter 'turnouts. ...
ing of the Taliban's cotiunand centers;
If ever the whole world were watching us in the United
supply depots, troop concentrations, key
States, i,t's right now. The world is watching to see how we'll
bridges, etc., if carried out remorselessly
over a period of years, would make
respond, where we'll strike militarily, diplomatically and economically. ...
Afghanistan ungovernable and the Talprayers, wave your flags and light your
iban's situation well-nigh unendurable.
all means,,say
---~CaJadles ..-Btlt-to-!;end-friends and-f~s-the---boldes!,clearest-mes- -~n-addition,-assistanee-ro-the--T-aliban's
Afghan enemies, who still control subsage of all-Vote.
stantihl areas in the northeastern part .of
the country, should be prompt and generous.
But these m'easures; while indispensable, do not address the larger question:
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
How shaD we go about destroying bin
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 26, the 269th day of 2001. There
Laden's entire organization, which is
are 96 days left in the year. The Jewish Day o'f Atonement, Yom
called al Qaeda? Let us assume (because
Kippur, begins at sunset.
we' don't know the real number, and, for
Today's Highlight in History:
purposes of this analysis, it dpesn't matOn Sept. 26, 1960, the first televised debate between presi- ·
ter) that it consists, outside of
dential candidates Richard M. Nixon and John F. Kennedy
Mghanistan, of perhaps 2,000 people of
took place in Chicago.
. varying nationalities, scattered among a
· On this date:
score of countries. These people are bin
In 1777, British troops occupied Philadelphia during the
LadeO:s secret ·agents, living quietly and,
American Revolution.
to all appearances, innocendy, but proIn 1789, Thomas Jefferson was appointed America's first secretary of state.
In 1898, American composer George G~rshwin was born in
Brooklyn, N.Y.
In 1914, the Federal Trade Commission was established.
In 1950, United Nations troops recaptured the South Korean capital of Seoul from the North Koreans. In 1957, the musical"West Side Story" opened on Broadway. ·
In 1969, the family comedy series "The Brady Bunch" preBv UWRENCE L. KNUTSON
miered on ABC Tv.
WASHINGTON - Grover Cleve,I n 1986, Williain H. Rehnquist was SWPrn in as the 16th
land was president, gaslight brightened
chief justice of the United States, while Antonin Scalia joined
Pennsylvania Avenue and horse-drawn
the Supreme Court as its 103rd ·member.
cabs crowded the street. lr was the early
In 1990, the Motion Picture Association of America
1880s and a young newspaper columnist
announced it bad created a new rating, "NC-17," to replace the
out to describe all the world he
set
old "X" rating.
.
could see from the Capitol dome.
, In 1997, an Indonesian Airbus A-300 crashed while
His name was Frank G. Carpenter and
approaching Medan Airport in 'north Sumatra, killing aU 234
he wrote under the byline "Carp."
people aboard.
Carp found Washington in the early
Ten years ago:.Four men and four women began a two-year
1880s
"like. no other city in the world,"
stay inside a sealed-off structure in Oracle, Ariz., caUed Biosa "living curiosity;' full of inflated egos
phere Two. (They emerged on this date in 1993.) AIDS patient
and a rhythm all its own.
Kimberly Bergalis pleaded with Congress to enact mandatory
The capital was a place where it was
AIDS testing for health care workers. ·
·
possible at the end of a winter's day to
Five years ago: Astronaut Shannon Lucid returned to Earth
share a streetcar with a half-dozen
in the shuttle Atlantis after six months aboard the Russian Mir
Court justices in overcoats and
Supreme
space. station. President Clinton signed a biU ensuring two-day
mufflers." As jolly a lot of fellows as you
hospital stays for new mothers and their babies.ValuJet received
could
meet anywhere," Carp profederal permission to fly again three months after it was
nounced them.
~
grounded following a deadly crash. Richard Allen Davis~ the
In Carp's columns, President Clevekiller of 12-year-old Polly Klaas, was formally sentenced to
land
takes a young bride and Gilded Age
death in San Jose, Calif.
millionaires build mansions next to the
One year ago: Slobodan Milosevic conceded tll.at his chalshacks of former slaves. Carp wonders if
lenger,Vojislav Kostunica; had finished first in Yugoslavia's pres~
the newly completed Washington Monidential election and declared a runoff- a move that promptument can long endure and records
ed mass protests leading to Milosevic's ouster. At the Sydney
with admiration the determined efforts
Olympics, the U.S. softball team completed a stunning comeof early suffragists.
back by edging Japan 2-to-1 in extra innings to win its second
Carpenter was 27 in 1882. Despite
straight gold medal. Actor Richard Mulligan died at age 67.
the
passing of more than a century,
Today's Birthdays: Fitness expert Jack LaLanne is 87. Actor
much of what he had to say has a famil Philip Bosco is 71. Country singer David Frizzell is 60. Actor
iar ring.
Kent McCord is 59. Singer Bryan Ferry is 56. Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Christie Whitman is 55.
"Washington City is the poorest place
in the United States from which to
Singer Lynn Anderson is 54. Singer Olivia Newton-John is 53.
Actress Mary Beth Hurt is 53. Actor James Keane is 49. Rock
judge the temper of the nation," Carp
singer-musician Cesar Rosas (Los Lobos) is 47. Country singer
wrote on a visit to busding, moneyCarlene Carter is 46. Actress Linda Hamilton is 45.
chasing New York City. "Its citizens

TODAY IN HISTORY

William
Rusher
COLUMNIST

if not killed o utri ght whil e reststin~,
would be captured and interned in a
prisoner-of- war camp until the war \Vas
over. H e bad no right to a trial by jury
or any other civil hberty. And only sim- ·
ilar treatment- including a speedy trip
to paradise if they resist - will deter the
soldiers of a] Qaeda. (If the war never
ends, they will remain interned· until
they die.)
I realize that this strategy will present
problems aplenty. Friendly governn1ents
- Uritain, for example, and even Egypt
- would probably cooperate in arresting bin Laden's agents and turning them
over to us. But other countries (Iraq is
one) would almost certainly refuse, an d
that lack of coo peration would require
the insertion into those countries uf
secret American agents scores of
James Bonds, if you will, "licensed to
kill." If Iraq insisted on thwarting th em
- well then, so mu ch the worse · tor
· lra,q 1 if you get my drift. .
.'
I would consider only one concession
o the dehlleranve process:·
would be possible to create a small commission iii Washington to hear the evidence establishing the identity of alleged
bin Laden operatives and decide
whether it is convincin g enough, in each
case, to authorize capturing or killing
the man. There would be no appeal from
its decisions.
Nothing else - nothing whatever will stop these terrorists. And the old
Roman dictum applies: Salus populi
suprema lex. The safety. of the people i~
the supreme law.

viding his suicidal operatives with any
help they may require: money, weapons,
diplomatic cover, f.1lse (or genuine) passpons, special training, communications
facilities, assistance to ·th eir families, and
anything else they need.
In an otdinary war, id entifYing th e
enemy is relativel y easy. After Pearl Harbor, we knew exacrtly who our enemies
were and where to find them. To make
matters still easier, they usually wore
identifYing uniforms. Our ·ob was simply to fina them and kill or capture
them.
That is our job in this war too, but bin
Laden's soldiers are not nearly so cooperative. How shall we go about it?
Finding them will be the job of our
intelligence age'ncies, who will have
massive help from the intelligence agencies of our allies, plus important assistance from our own numerous friends in
every country on the globe. But once a
bin Laden agent is identified and located, what then? What· if he is living quietly in Cairo or London or Baghdad,
(Willia111 R~&lt;sher is a Distinguished Felsimply manufacturi'n g false passports?
. The key is to treat these nien for what low of the Claremom h1stitutc for tile St11rly
'they really are: not criminals, but sol- of·Statesma11sltip m1d Polilica) Pllih&gt;sophy.)
diers. A Japanese soldier in World War II,

WASHINGTON YESTERDAY

Gaslight columnist counted diamonds, egos in D. C.
have a different omlook on life than Cleveland. And there was much to
those of the individual states and its observe.
atmosphere is artificial ...."
"He must weil&gt;h nearly 300 pounds,
In certain circles, the ca pital was also a. and a line drawn through the center of
place of glamor and wealth, a place his 1tomach to the small of bis ba ck
where at a White Home rece ption "a would measure at least three feet."
In foraging among the great, C arp
thousand · bare backs and bare necks
gleamed under the gaslight of the East also counted noses, perhaps in a parody
Room 's magnificent chand eli ers."
of the popular pseudoscien ce of
"There are pearls by the bushel, and phrehology, which claimed to be able to
. detect chara cter from the bumps on
diamonds by the peck," Carp wrote."
In the working \vorld, typewriters o.ne's head.
were the new technology and Carp had
The extent and shape of the nose, sa id
no doubt it wouldn't be long before Carp, "gives th e measure of the statesevery government clerk would have to man and the fool."
learn to use one. There were 20 clicki1Jg
H ere's just one of many nose reports,
away at the Justi ce Department alone, this one on the pugnacious nose of Sen.
be reported.
John J. Ingalls of Kamas.
·1 he Treasury Departmem employed· a
"There'n fighting nose for you. That
mammoth wooden spittoon, "as big as a nose might be the nose of a pirate. h
bed," at the foot of a ·four-story spiral might be .the nose of a reformer, of a
staircase. Many staff members used it for writer, of a poet. The nose of an or,\tor
target practice, Carp reponed.
or a genius, it is the great and only nose
From a distance, Carp wrote, the · of the great and o'nly Ingalls.
Capitol was like a great illuminated
"And it is a nose which sume scna- ·
tem ple, a "spiral flam e of burning gas tors, I know, would like to pull, but dare
jets" circling the dome.
not."
Noting the widespread corruption of
•••
the Gilded Age, Carp figures that only
Frank Carpenter's Washington mLJS"
25 of the 325 House members were ings, written for the Cleveland Leader,
worth their $5,000-a-year salaries.
were collected in scrapbooks by his
"How did these men get here'" he wife,Joan.na. He died in 1924. In 1960;
asks, and answers with the cynicism hi ~ daughter, Frances, publi shed many of
characteristic of his times: "Some ' his pieces in "Carp 's Washington ," pLib·
bought their seats and some hold them Jished by McGraw-Hill.
through their friendship with the great · (Lawrence, L. K11utso11 has covered the
corporations."
'
Wlzite House, Cougress mzd JM-tshiugton 's
Carp was a close observer of President history for 34 years.)

Pomeroy
CrafterS tO
•• t
pa rtICipa e
at Bob Evans

H all of Fame Parade and the
Kentucky Horse Park.
More than 150 traditional
craftspeople and demonstrators will be at the festival to
demonstrate and sell a wide
.J
variety of items, many made
POMEROY - Two local· with tools and techniques
crafters will again this year nearly forgot,t en today.
be demonstrating, displaying
Crafts on display will
and selling their unique ere- include weaving, bandations at the 31st annual poured candles, wooden
Bob Evans Farm Festival in toys, leaded and stained
Rio Grande Oct. 12-14.
glass, spinning, leatherwork,
Terri Haynes of" Always &amp; blacksmithing, basketry and
Forever" will exhibit origi- · other demonstrations and
nal hand painted mailboxes, items.
buckets; birdhouses and
With
40,000
people
other items. This is her expected to visit during the
fourth year at the festival.
three-day festival, the Bob
Eloise Drenner of "Weav Evans Farm Festival in addiing Stitches," at the festiv I tion to the crafts, will feafor the fifth year, will featu
ture musical entertainment,
band sewn animals, Santas farm demonstrations, .conand snowmen. Both women tests and children's activities.
·:..,Pave gift shops in Pomeroy. Tractor dancing, feed sack
• H.O.P.E. Equine Mounted races, corn shelling contests,
Drill Team of Pomeroy will and other unique events will
perform at the festival. The be included in activities.
team performs precision
Open from 9 am. to 5
- dances
on
horseback. · p.m. daily, admission is $3
Among the places it has per- per person. Primitive tent
formed is the NFL Football and RV camping for the

,.

OU~

TIME

•

"

weekend is available ~t the
farm. For information about
the festival, visitors may call
1-800- 994-FARM or .v isit
the web site at www.bobevans.con

Quilts on
display at ·
Peoples Bank
POMEROY

Old

quilts, new quilts, be'r itage
quilts and holiday quilts are
featured in a display in the
lobby of Peoples Bank for
tbe enjoyment of those
coming to Pomeroy for the
Sternwheel Riverfest.
Using the people's choice
method, one of the quilts
will be selected for a prize.
· Visitors will be given a slip
of paper after viewing the
quilts on which to mark the
number of the quilt they
like best.
The bank is open Thursday and Friday from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. and 8:30 to
noon on~.':':.'~L-----~

· Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is
not designed to promote
ulas or fund-raisers of any
type. Items are printed only as
space permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Schools parenVteacher conferences for the first nine weeks
period, Wednesday, 4 to 7 p.m.
Parents may call their child's
school it they need more information than was sent home with
students.

Pomeroy , Thursday, 7 p.m. ton Bluegrass.
Those attending are asked to
MIDDLEPORT- Homecomtake a candle. Pastor Mark
ing, Hobson Christian Fellow·
Michael invites public.
ship Church, Sunday, 1:30 p.m.
FRIDAY
The Hoskins Family to sing.
POMEROY - Fun, Food . Potluck dinner at noon at the old
and Fellowship at God's NET in Legion hall in Middleport.
Pomeroy. Nutritional meals,
MONDAY
non·violent video games, com·
RUTLAND - Rutland Town· .
puler programs, board games,
lor teens. 6 to 10:30 p.m. Friday ship Trustee, Monday, 5 p.m.
Rutland Fire Station. ·
and Saturday.
CARPENTER -The Colum·
· POMEROY - Free commu·
nity dinner at Pomeroy Church bia Township Trustees, Monday,
of Christ, Friday 5:30 to 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. at the fire station.

POMEROY- Meigs County
SATURDAY
NEW HAVEN - American Church of Christ WornenUs Fel·
Legion cook·out lor members lowship, Thursday, 7 p.ni. Brad·
ford Church of Christ. Program
and guests, Saturday, 4 p.m.
on CPR to be presented. Zion
THURSDAY
PORTLAND Lebanon Church to give devotions. Nom·
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053 to meet Thurs., 7:30 Township Trustees, Saturday, 7 ination of officers.
p.m. Fish fry for members, 6:30 a:m., township building.
----------p.m. Special drawing.
POMEROY ..Town and country
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Eagle Ridge
EXPO meeting, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Fair- Community Church, homecoming, Sunday. Morning seJVice.
grounds.
10 a.m., carry-in dinner at noon,
Subscribe today.
POMEROY - Hysell Run afternoon seJVice, 1 p.m., with
Church on Hysell Run Road, special singing by Carmei·Sut·
992-2156

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

FOR TIPS

Keep nutrition in mind UJith hot dogs, beif

BY BICKY BAa
,.
Cooking hot dogs and ham. burgers on the grill is fun, but
is it inexpensive and nutritious?
Read nutrition labels to find
T out' which is the best buy for
your family. Things to keep in
mind are:
One hot dog is a serving size,
· . .Jbut the weight may vary from
1.2 ounces per .hot dog to 2.0
ounces per hot dog.
Regular hot dogs can be various prices, depending on the
brand. House brands are the
least expensive (approximately
$.89 per 12-ounce package · • 7.42 cents per ounce), but they
may also have the smallest hot
·' ·dogs. Name brands may cost as
I· much as $3.29 per 16-ounce
package or 20.6 cents per
ounce. Calories may range
" from 110 to 150 per hot dog.
All beef wieners may be
' more expensive than regular
hot dogs. Their costs may vary
.. between 15.6 and 22.4 cents
-fer ounce. Chicken franks are
L very inexpensive (9.94 cents
.. ~ per ounce), but are much higher in cholesterol and sodium.
. They may have the largest hot
dogs. Both kinds have about
140 ~alories per hot dog.
:.
Light beef franks are expen; : sive, (20.6 to 26.4 cents per
ounce) but they are lower in
1
calories (90 to 100 calories per
hot dog), fat an}:t; cholesterol.
Low-fat hot dogs made of
· turkey, pork and beef may cost
.. between 17.9 and 25.6 cents
per ounce, but are low in calories (60 calories per hot dog),
fat, saturated fat, cholesterol
and sodium.
Fat-free hot dogs are expensive (23.5 to 26.4 cents per
' ounce) with very few calories
. (40-50 calories per hot dog),
no fat and low cholesterol.
Their sodium content is aver. age.
All . versions are similar in
amounts of protein except for
j,

"

,_

LOCAL EVENTS

SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES

----~----------------------------BIN LArn-Js LAMP

•

L

Becky
Baer
ADVICE
the store brand hot dogs, which
are slighdy less.
Different grades ofhambi.trger are comparable in amounts
of cholesterol, sodium and protein. However, they are quite
different in calories, fat and
price. Hamburger will usually
provide four servings per .
pound.
Ground beef has the most fat
and calories (260 calories per
serving), but is tbe least expen-

sive ($1.79 per pound). Keep in
mind the extra fat fries away.
Ground chuck is fairly inexpensive ($1.99 to $2.39 per
pound), butsupplies a lot offat
and calories (220 calories per
serving) .
Ground round is more
expensive ($2.59 to $2.79 per
pound), . but has less fat and
c.alories than ground beef and
ground chuck (200 calories per
serving).
Ground sirloin is expensive
($2.79 per pound), but has the
least fat and calories of aU the
different types of hamburger
(150 calories per serving).

(Becky Baer is Meigs County~
Extension agent for .family and
consumer
sciences/community
development, Ohio State University.)

n

October 12-13 ·14
A one time opportunity to
advertise your business.

·

• Over 40,000 Copies
Will Be Distributed
e

Access Over 120,000
Potential Customers

Funds are now being collected to establish a

Scholarship in Honor of Dr. Paul W. Ambrose,
Marshall University graduate killed in terrorist crash at The Pentagon.
Those wishing to contribute may send checks to:
Linda Holmes
Marshall University School of Medicine
1600 Medical Center Drive
Huntington, WV 25701
.
Checks sh o uld be made p~yable to Marshall University Foundation.
~

�•1n1on
•

The Daily Sentinel

P~geA4
Wednesday, September 26, 2001

DEAR ABBY: I'm going to be
65 soon . Yesterday I got a call from
my. daughter telling me : "Sorry, I'm
; going to be late with your birthday
; card again this year. I don't have
' time to get one. I'm really busy.
· We're working on the house, and I
got a new job. I'll send you one in
a few weeks." My daughter knows
. how much I love getting cards and
being remembered. However, she
thinks it's funny when she says, "I
·got your card, but I can't find a
stamp. Maybe you'll receive it
sometime next year."
Are there other daughters ·like
mine. or is she the only one? I'd
like other daughters and sons to
know that when your mother is
gone, she's not coming back. Take a
little time now, while she's alive, to

111 Court St., Po11'1411'0Y, Ohio
740-982·21 !18.• Fu: 982·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn 1Aw11
Mlneglng Editor
Diane Key Hill
Controller

Charlene tto.fllch
Genenl Manager

w,...,

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·

NATIONAL VIEW
.

Wednesday, September 16, 1001

Mom awaits unhappy birthday because of daughter's late card

Th~ Daily Sentinel

Charles W. GoYey
Publlaller

Page AS

.. The Daily Sentinel

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
show her you love her. ·Thanks,
Abby. SAD MOTHER IN
TEXAS
DEAR SAD MOTHER: Yes,
there are other daughters and sons
like yours. And you're .right, life
isn't a dress rehearsal. Every
moment is precious.
Knowing how you feel, your
daughter appears to have a warped

does? ·Jf yo u saw someone walk
sense of humor and to enjoy with - can occasionally be checked on.
Abby, please let me know your into a bank with a 'tot;kmg pulled
holding what makes you happy.You
over his head, what would you
have described a person who thinks opinion . - NOT UPSET YET
DEAR NOT UPSET YET: I . think? How abou t when you see
the world revolves around her.
DEAR ABBY: My husband and agree with you. There is less temp- someone wearing a · business sult?"
I ha~e a 15-year-old daughter I'll tation when everything is out m etc. Finally, I ask, "What are you
trying to say to people when you
call An\}a . She's a good girl and has the open.
DEAR ABBY: With regard to dress?"
a very casual boyfriend, wbo is also
What we wear is. a statetn ent to
15. Occasionally they get together the column you printed about the
wotnan who wore a tongue stud ' the people around us. H ow .we
at our house to talk.
dress, tanoo, pierce, sryle our hair
Anna and her dad. think she while being interviewed ·for a job:
and present ourselves is an expresAs
a
teac
her,
I
talk
to
classrooms
should be able to visit with her
boyfriend upstairs in her bedroom. of students about how they dre ss sion of who we are, and a message
I feel that even though their rela- and what their attire co nveys to th e to the people we encounter. Do
not be defensive if th ey react to the
tionship is innocent, eventually people who see them.
message
yo u are sending. - LEA
I ask these students: " Whe n you
Anna will become more inte{ested
in boys. Therefore, it's a good idea see someone dressed like a police- IN MINNESOTA
DEAR LEA: You make your
that all visitors of the opposite sex man, what do you think that perpoint
·Very well.
son
does?
When
you
see
someone
be entertained .in a common living
Dear Abby is ovrittm by Pmtlinc
' area- like the living room, family dressed like a nurse or a doctor,
Pltillips
aud dau.~lucr Jeanne Plrillips.
what
do
you
think
that
perso
n
.
room or kitchen. Then these kids

\

Response
Show the world democracy is
still vital by going to the polls

I

RUSHER'S VIEW

This is what should be done·with bin Laden~· crew

• Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 011 tile importa11ce of voting: The
cover of one weekly Seatde newspaper carries a small headline:
In recent days, there has been a lot of
"We still have to vote Tuesday."
talk about catching Osama bin Laden
To cast one's ballot in a free and open exercise of representaand punishing the Taliban government
tive democrac-y hardly feels like a chore - especially when
of Afghanistan, which is harboring him.
Washington's Primary Election Day comes exacdy one week
For the first objective, landing highly
after the horrific assaults on freedom in New York and Washtrained special forces near bin Laden's
known hideouts, finding him, if possible,
ington, D.C.
Those who thought they might begin to topple this icon of
and, at a minimum, destroying his camps
democracy with Tuesday's dastardly deeds need to be shown
and then withdrawing our forces when
just how wrong they were. We recognize voting as a right, a
they have done all they can is undoubtprivilege, an obligation. Tomorrow we should recognize it as a
edly the way to go. At th' very least, a
joy, ~nd as an affirmative, unmistakable act of defiance.
year or two of this treatment will keep
There are precious few places on this planet where the conhim on the run and severely hamper his
sent of the governed is a prerequisite....
operations. And no ongoing ground
No gaggle of generals dictates who will serve in office.
invasion of that notoriously difficult
No cabal of bearded clerics decides for us.
country would be necessary.
Neither the question of who votes nor who is allowed to run
As for the second objective, once
for office is predetermined by accident of class, race or caste.
again, a ground invasion should be
We are not herded to the polling places by armed soldiers to
avoided::But low-level p,recision bombensure high but meaningless voter 'turnouts. ...
ing of the Taliban's cotiunand centers;
If ever the whole world were watching us in the United
supply depots, troop concentrations, key
States, i,t's right now. The world is watching to see how we'll
bridges, etc., if carried out remorselessly
over a period of years, would make
respond, where we'll strike militarily, diplomatically and economically. ...
Afghanistan ungovernable and the Talprayers, wave your flags and light your
iban's situation well-nigh unendurable.
all means,,say
---~CaJadles ..-Btlt-to-!;end-friends and-f~s-the---boldes!,clearest-mes- -~n-addition,-assistanee-ro-the--T-aliban's
Afghan enemies, who still control subsage of all-Vote.
stantihl areas in the northeastern part .of
the country, should be prompt and generous.
But these m'easures; while indispensable, do not address the larger question:
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
How shaD we go about destroying bin
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 26, the 269th day of 2001. There
Laden's entire organization, which is
are 96 days left in the year. The Jewish Day o'f Atonement, Yom
called al Qaeda? Let us assume (because
Kippur, begins at sunset.
we' don't know the real number, and, for
Today's Highlight in History:
purposes of this analysis, it dpesn't matOn Sept. 26, 1960, the first televised debate between presi- ·
ter) that it consists, outside of
dential candidates Richard M. Nixon and John F. Kennedy
Mghanistan, of perhaps 2,000 people of
took place in Chicago.
. varying nationalities, scattered among a
· On this date:
score of countries. These people are bin
In 1777, British troops occupied Philadelphia during the
LadeO:s secret ·agents, living quietly and,
American Revolution.
to all appearances, innocendy, but proIn 1789, Thomas Jefferson was appointed America's first secretary of state.
In 1898, American composer George G~rshwin was born in
Brooklyn, N.Y.
In 1914, the Federal Trade Commission was established.
In 1950, United Nations troops recaptured the South Korean capital of Seoul from the North Koreans. In 1957, the musical"West Side Story" opened on Broadway. ·
In 1969, the family comedy series "The Brady Bunch" preBv UWRENCE L. KNUTSON
miered on ABC Tv.
WASHINGTON - Grover Cleve,I n 1986, Williain H. Rehnquist was SWPrn in as the 16th
land was president, gaslight brightened
chief justice of the United States, while Antonin Scalia joined
Pennsylvania Avenue and horse-drawn
the Supreme Court as its 103rd ·member.
cabs crowded the street. lr was the early
In 1990, the Motion Picture Association of America
1880s and a young newspaper columnist
announced it bad created a new rating, "NC-17," to replace the
out to describe all the world he
set
old "X" rating.
.
could see from the Capitol dome.
, In 1997, an Indonesian Airbus A-300 crashed while
His name was Frank G. Carpenter and
approaching Medan Airport in 'north Sumatra, killing aU 234
he wrote under the byline "Carp."
people aboard.
Carp found Washington in the early
Ten years ago:.Four men and four women began a two-year
1880s
"like. no other city in the world,"
stay inside a sealed-off structure in Oracle, Ariz., caUed Biosa "living curiosity;' full of inflated egos
phere Two. (They emerged on this date in 1993.) AIDS patient
and a rhythm all its own.
Kimberly Bergalis pleaded with Congress to enact mandatory
The capital was a place where it was
AIDS testing for health care workers. ·
·
possible at the end of a winter's day to
Five years ago: Astronaut Shannon Lucid returned to Earth
share a streetcar with a half-dozen
in the shuttle Atlantis after six months aboard the Russian Mir
Court justices in overcoats and
Supreme
space. station. President Clinton signed a biU ensuring two-day
mufflers." As jolly a lot of fellows as you
hospital stays for new mothers and their babies.ValuJet received
could
meet anywhere," Carp profederal permission to fly again three months after it was
nounced them.
~
grounded following a deadly crash. Richard Allen Davis~ the
In Carp's columns, President Clevekiller of 12-year-old Polly Klaas, was formally sentenced to
land
takes a young bride and Gilded Age
death in San Jose, Calif.
millionaires build mansions next to the
One year ago: Slobodan Milosevic conceded tll.at his chalshacks of former slaves. Carp wonders if
lenger,Vojislav Kostunica; had finished first in Yugoslavia's pres~
the newly completed Washington Monidential election and declared a runoff- a move that promptument can long endure and records
ed mass protests leading to Milosevic's ouster. At the Sydney
with admiration the determined efforts
Olympics, the U.S. softball team completed a stunning comeof early suffragists.
back by edging Japan 2-to-1 in extra innings to win its second
Carpenter was 27 in 1882. Despite
straight gold medal. Actor Richard Mulligan died at age 67.
the
passing of more than a century,
Today's Birthdays: Fitness expert Jack LaLanne is 87. Actor
much of what he had to say has a famil Philip Bosco is 71. Country singer David Frizzell is 60. Actor
iar ring.
Kent McCord is 59. Singer Bryan Ferry is 56. Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Christie Whitman is 55.
"Washington City is the poorest place
in the United States from which to
Singer Lynn Anderson is 54. Singer Olivia Newton-John is 53.
Actress Mary Beth Hurt is 53. Actor James Keane is 49. Rock
judge the temper of the nation," Carp
singer-musician Cesar Rosas (Los Lobos) is 47. Country singer
wrote on a visit to busding, moneyCarlene Carter is 46. Actress Linda Hamilton is 45.
chasing New York City. "Its citizens

TODAY IN HISTORY

William
Rusher
COLUMNIST

if not killed o utri ght whil e reststin~,
would be captured and interned in a
prisoner-of- war camp until the war \Vas
over. H e bad no right to a trial by jury
or any other civil hberty. And only sim- ·
ilar treatment- including a speedy trip
to paradise if they resist - will deter the
soldiers of a] Qaeda. (If the war never
ends, they will remain interned· until
they die.)
I realize that this strategy will present
problems aplenty. Friendly governn1ents
- Uritain, for example, and even Egypt
- would probably cooperate in arresting bin Laden's agents and turning them
over to us. But other countries (Iraq is
one) would almost certainly refuse, an d
that lack of coo peration would require
the insertion into those countries uf
secret American agents scores of
James Bonds, if you will, "licensed to
kill." If Iraq insisted on thwarting th em
- well then, so mu ch the worse · tor
· lra,q 1 if you get my drift. .
.'
I would consider only one concession
o the dehlleranve process:·
would be possible to create a small commission iii Washington to hear the evidence establishing the identity of alleged
bin Laden operatives and decide
whether it is convincin g enough, in each
case, to authorize capturing or killing
the man. There would be no appeal from
its decisions.
Nothing else - nothing whatever will stop these terrorists. And the old
Roman dictum applies: Salus populi
suprema lex. The safety. of the people i~
the supreme law.

viding his suicidal operatives with any
help they may require: money, weapons,
diplomatic cover, f.1lse (or genuine) passpons, special training, communications
facilities, assistance to ·th eir families, and
anything else they need.
In an otdinary war, id entifYing th e
enemy is relativel y easy. After Pearl Harbor, we knew exacrtly who our enemies
were and where to find them. To make
matters still easier, they usually wore
identifYing uniforms. Our ·ob was simply to fina them and kill or capture
them.
That is our job in this war too, but bin
Laden's soldiers are not nearly so cooperative. How shall we go about it?
Finding them will be the job of our
intelligence age'ncies, who will have
massive help from the intelligence agencies of our allies, plus important assistance from our own numerous friends in
every country on the globe. But once a
bin Laden agent is identified and located, what then? What· if he is living quietly in Cairo or London or Baghdad,
(Willia111 R~&lt;sher is a Distinguished Felsimply manufacturi'n g false passports?
. The key is to treat these nien for what low of the Claremom h1stitutc for tile St11rly
'they really are: not criminals, but sol- of·Statesma11sltip m1d Polilica) Pllih&gt;sophy.)
diers. A Japanese soldier in World War II,

WASHINGTON YESTERDAY

Gaslight columnist counted diamonds, egos in D. C.
have a different omlook on life than Cleveland. And there was much to
those of the individual states and its observe.
atmosphere is artificial ...."
"He must weil&gt;h nearly 300 pounds,
In certain circles, the ca pital was also a. and a line drawn through the center of
place of glamor and wealth, a place his 1tomach to the small of bis ba ck
where at a White Home rece ption "a would measure at least three feet."
In foraging among the great, C arp
thousand · bare backs and bare necks
gleamed under the gaslight of the East also counted noses, perhaps in a parody
Room 's magnificent chand eli ers."
of the popular pseudoscien ce of
"There are pearls by the bushel, and phrehology, which claimed to be able to
. detect chara cter from the bumps on
diamonds by the peck," Carp wrote."
In the working \vorld, typewriters o.ne's head.
were the new technology and Carp had
The extent and shape of the nose, sa id
no doubt it wouldn't be long before Carp, "gives th e measure of the statesevery government clerk would have to man and the fool."
learn to use one. There were 20 clicki1Jg
H ere's just one of many nose reports,
away at the Justi ce Department alone, this one on the pugnacious nose of Sen.
be reported.
John J. Ingalls of Kamas.
·1 he Treasury Departmem employed· a
"There'n fighting nose for you. That
mammoth wooden spittoon, "as big as a nose might be the nose of a pirate. h
bed," at the foot of a ·four-story spiral might be .the nose of a reformer, of a
staircase. Many staff members used it for writer, of a poet. The nose of an or,\tor
target practice, Carp reponed.
or a genius, it is the great and only nose
From a distance, Carp wrote, the · of the great and o'nly Ingalls.
Capitol was like a great illuminated
"And it is a nose which sume scna- ·
tem ple, a "spiral flam e of burning gas tors, I know, would like to pull, but dare
jets" circling the dome.
not."
Noting the widespread corruption of
•••
the Gilded Age, Carp figures that only
Frank Carpenter's Washington mLJS"
25 of the 325 House members were ings, written for the Cleveland Leader,
worth their $5,000-a-year salaries.
were collected in scrapbooks by his
"How did these men get here'" he wife,Joan.na. He died in 1924. In 1960;
asks, and answers with the cynicism hi ~ daughter, Frances, publi shed many of
characteristic of his times: "Some ' his pieces in "Carp 's Washington ," pLib·
bought their seats and some hold them Jished by McGraw-Hill.
through their friendship with the great · (Lawrence, L. K11utso11 has covered the
corporations."
'
Wlzite House, Cougress mzd JM-tshiugton 's
Carp was a close observer of President history for 34 years.)

Pomeroy
CrafterS tO
•• t
pa rtICipa e
at Bob Evans

H all of Fame Parade and the
Kentucky Horse Park.
More than 150 traditional
craftspeople and demonstrators will be at the festival to
demonstrate and sell a wide
.J
variety of items, many made
POMEROY - Two local· with tools and techniques
crafters will again this year nearly forgot,t en today.
be demonstrating, displaying
Crafts on display will
and selling their unique ere- include weaving, bandations at the 31st annual poured candles, wooden
Bob Evans Farm Festival in toys, leaded and stained
Rio Grande Oct. 12-14.
glass, spinning, leatherwork,
Terri Haynes of" Always &amp; blacksmithing, basketry and
Forever" will exhibit origi- · other demonstrations and
nal hand painted mailboxes, items.
buckets; birdhouses and
With
40,000
people
other items. This is her expected to visit during the
fourth year at the festival.
three-day festival, the Bob
Eloise Drenner of "Weav Evans Farm Festival in addiing Stitches," at the festiv I tion to the crafts, will feafor the fifth year, will featu
ture musical entertainment,
band sewn animals, Santas farm demonstrations, .conand snowmen. Both women tests and children's activities.
·:..,Pave gift shops in Pomeroy. Tractor dancing, feed sack
• H.O.P.E. Equine Mounted races, corn shelling contests,
Drill Team of Pomeroy will and other unique events will
perform at the festival. The be included in activities.
team performs precision
Open from 9 am. to 5
- dances
on
horseback. · p.m. daily, admission is $3
Among the places it has per- per person. Primitive tent
formed is the NFL Football and RV camping for the

,.

OU~

TIME

•

"

weekend is available ~t the
farm. For information about
the festival, visitors may call
1-800- 994-FARM or .v isit
the web site at www.bobevans.con

Quilts on
display at ·
Peoples Bank
POMEROY

Old

quilts, new quilts, be'r itage
quilts and holiday quilts are
featured in a display in the
lobby of Peoples Bank for
tbe enjoyment of those
coming to Pomeroy for the
Sternwheel Riverfest.
Using the people's choice
method, one of the quilts
will be selected for a prize.
· Visitors will be given a slip
of paper after viewing the
quilts on which to mark the
number of the quilt they
like best.
The bank is open Thursday and Friday from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. and 8:30 to
noon on~.':':.'~L-----~

· Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is
not designed to promote
ulas or fund-raisers of any
type. Items are printed only as
space permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Schools parenVteacher conferences for the first nine weeks
period, Wednesday, 4 to 7 p.m.
Parents may call their child's
school it they need more information than was sent home with
students.

Pomeroy , Thursday, 7 p.m. ton Bluegrass.
Those attending are asked to
MIDDLEPORT- Homecomtake a candle. Pastor Mark
ing, Hobson Christian Fellow·
Michael invites public.
ship Church, Sunday, 1:30 p.m.
FRIDAY
The Hoskins Family to sing.
POMEROY - Fun, Food . Potluck dinner at noon at the old
and Fellowship at God's NET in Legion hall in Middleport.
Pomeroy. Nutritional meals,
MONDAY
non·violent video games, com·
RUTLAND - Rutland Town· .
puler programs, board games,
lor teens. 6 to 10:30 p.m. Friday ship Trustee, Monday, 5 p.m.
Rutland Fire Station. ·
and Saturday.
CARPENTER -The Colum·
· POMEROY - Free commu·
nity dinner at Pomeroy Church bia Township Trustees, Monday,
of Christ, Friday 5:30 to 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. at the fire station.

POMEROY- Meigs County
SATURDAY
NEW HAVEN - American Church of Christ WornenUs Fel·
Legion cook·out lor members lowship, Thursday, 7 p.ni. Brad·
ford Church of Christ. Program
and guests, Saturday, 4 p.m.
on CPR to be presented. Zion
THURSDAY
PORTLAND Lebanon Church to give devotions. Nom·
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053 to meet Thurs., 7:30 Township Trustees, Saturday, 7 ination of officers.
p.m. Fish fry for members, 6:30 a:m., township building.
----------p.m. Special drawing.
POMEROY ..Town and country
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Eagle Ridge
EXPO meeting, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Fair- Community Church, homecoming, Sunday. Morning seJVice.
grounds.
10 a.m., carry-in dinner at noon,
Subscribe today.
POMEROY - Hysell Run afternoon seJVice, 1 p.m., with
Church on Hysell Run Road, special singing by Carmei·Sut·
992-2156

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

FOR TIPS

Keep nutrition in mind UJith hot dogs, beif

BY BICKY BAa
,.
Cooking hot dogs and ham. burgers on the grill is fun, but
is it inexpensive and nutritious?
Read nutrition labels to find
T out' which is the best buy for
your family. Things to keep in
mind are:
One hot dog is a serving size,
· . .Jbut the weight may vary from
1.2 ounces per .hot dog to 2.0
ounces per hot dog.
Regular hot dogs can be various prices, depending on the
brand. House brands are the
least expensive (approximately
$.89 per 12-ounce package · • 7.42 cents per ounce), but they
may also have the smallest hot
·' ·dogs. Name brands may cost as
I· much as $3.29 per 16-ounce
package or 20.6 cents per
ounce. Calories may range
" from 110 to 150 per hot dog.
All beef wieners may be
' more expensive than regular
hot dogs. Their costs may vary
.. between 15.6 and 22.4 cents
-fer ounce. Chicken franks are
L very inexpensive (9.94 cents
.. ~ per ounce), but are much higher in cholesterol and sodium.
. They may have the largest hot
dogs. Both kinds have about
140 ~alories per hot dog.
:.
Light beef franks are expen; : sive, (20.6 to 26.4 cents per
ounce) but they are lower in
1
calories (90 to 100 calories per
hot dog), fat an}:t; cholesterol.
Low-fat hot dogs made of
· turkey, pork and beef may cost
.. between 17.9 and 25.6 cents
per ounce, but are low in calories (60 calories per hot dog),
fat, saturated fat, cholesterol
and sodium.
Fat-free hot dogs are expensive (23.5 to 26.4 cents per
' ounce) with very few calories
. (40-50 calories per hot dog),
no fat and low cholesterol.
Their sodium content is aver. age.
All . versions are similar in
amounts of protein except for
j,

"

,_

LOCAL EVENTS

SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES

----~----------------------------BIN LArn-Js LAMP

•

L

Becky
Baer
ADVICE
the store brand hot dogs, which
are slighdy less.
Different grades ofhambi.trger are comparable in amounts
of cholesterol, sodium and protein. However, they are quite
different in calories, fat and
price. Hamburger will usually
provide four servings per .
pound.
Ground beef has the most fat
and calories (260 calories per
serving), but is tbe least expen-

sive ($1.79 per pound). Keep in
mind the extra fat fries away.
Ground chuck is fairly inexpensive ($1.99 to $2.39 per
pound), butsupplies a lot offat
and calories (220 calories per
serving) .
Ground round is more
expensive ($2.59 to $2.79 per
pound), . but has less fat and
c.alories than ground beef and
ground chuck (200 calories per
serving).
Ground sirloin is expensive
($2.79 per pound), but has the
least fat and calories of aU the
different types of hamburger
(150 calories per serving).

(Becky Baer is Meigs County~
Extension agent for .family and
consumer
sciences/community
development, Ohio State University.)

n

October 12-13 ·14
A one time opportunity to
advertise your business.

·

• Over 40,000 Copies
Will Be Distributed
e

Access Over 120,000
Potential Customers

Funds are now being collected to establish a

Scholarship in Honor of Dr. Paul W. Ambrose,
Marshall University graduate killed in terrorist crash at The Pentagon.
Those wishing to contribute may send checks to:
Linda Holmes
Marshall University School of Medicine
1600 Medical Center Drive
Huntington, WV 25701
.
Checks sh o uld be made p~yable to Marshall University Foundation.
~

�The Daily Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

2001

Inside:

Daughters of the American Revolution celebrates Constitution Week

The Daily Sentinel

Diamond Roundup, Page B6

I

P0!':1EROY - The· oragins of the onstitution of
the United States and the Bill
of Rights were discussed by
Steve Story. Meigs County
Court judgr, at the recent
meeting of Return Jonath an
Meigs C hapter. Daughters of
the Am erican Revolution. in
observance of Constitution
Week.
A resolution designating
Constitution Werk Sept. 1723 was adopted on July ~3.
1956. and signed into law on
Aug. 2, 1956.
The purpose of the observance is to emphasize the
responsibility of protecting
and defending the Consti tution and preserving it for posterity, to und ers t ~nd the Constim tion is our great heritage

and the foundation of our
lives, and to study the histori cal events which occurred
during Sep tember 1787.
Story said the Constitution
was the product of seven centuries of development in
England and the United
States. and the Magna Carta
(tht· Great Charter) is as
much the heritage of Americans as it is th e English.
He said that froin their
experience in living under
charters in some of the
colonies. Americans learned
the value of written documents that specified th e rights
of the pt•ople and the powers
·of govern ment.
In May 1775. three weeks
after th e Revolutio nary War
began at Lexington and Con-

Medicare and Medicaid
agency reorganized
BY VALREA THOMPSON
SOCIAL SECURITY
MANAGER IN ATHENS

To increase responsiv~nt!SS to
beneficiaries and providers and
improve customer service. the
Health Care Financing Administration will be reorganized
and renamed the "Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Ser- .
vices."
The agency is emphasizing
quality service as its number
one priority. Their sweeping
reforms will strengthen their
programs and enable their
employees to better serve
Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries, as well as health care
providers. They're · going to
encourage innovation , better
educate consumers about their
options and be more responsive
to th e health care needs of
Americans.

Three new business centers
are being established as part of
the reform: the Center for
B~neficiary Choices, the Center for Medicare Management,
and the Center for Medicaid
and State Options.
The new Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Ser- .
vices \vill launch a national
media campaign to educate
seniors and other Medicare
beneficiaries
about
their
options.
The M edicare 800-number
(1-800-633-4227) is being
enhanced to provide service to
beneficiaries 24 hours a day,
seven days a week.
More changes are on the
way. Th ey're going to keep
finetuning the agency so Americans are receiving the highest
quality health care possible.

Rev. Jar:nes Baker to speak

cord, the Second Continental
Congress met in Philadelphia.
It adopted the Declaration of
Independence, which Story
said "powerfully stimulated
the patriots' cause."
The speaker introduced the
Bill of Rights, the first 10
amendments of the Constitution. and gave each member a
copy. Story defined the Bill
of Rights as protecting all' of
us. He concluded by saying
the Bill of Rights is perhaps
the most remarkable state
document of this period.
Abbie Stratton presided at
the meeting.
The
national
defense
report. titl ed Missile Defense
Imperatives was given by
Pauline Atkins. She reported
that according to a March

CBS Mews/New York Timesmany adulcs incorrectly believe America has a missile defense system lo protect
against nuclear attacks.
The president's ballistic
missile proposal, she said, is
designed to protect against
nuclear attacks. She spoke of
the DAR resolution supporting the immediate development and deployment of
land-based, sea-based missile
defense systems to protect the
country and troops abroad
from the threat of nuclear, ·
biological, chemical warfare.
N ext meeting will be at 10
a.m . Oct. 13 at Meigs Cou nty
Public Library. Speaker will
be June Ashley on the proper
use of parliamentary procedure.

Wednesday, September 21, 1001

WEDNESDAY's

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - " Nothing
is n1ore ·important to our
future than helping out children grow up to be healthy,
caring, confident and productive adults."
That's what Julie Wandling,
prevention specialist for
Health Recovery Servi ces,
wrote about Parents' Week,
which is being observed over
the state this week.
Theme is "You Gatta Love
Parents."
uwe need . to co mm en d
and encourage the many parents who work hard to provide food, clothing, shelter,
health care an(i emo tio nal
support for their children and

JUDGE SPEAKS - Steve Story, Meigs County Court judge,
spoke on the Constitution and the Bill of Rights at a recent
meeting of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution. Pictured here with him is-Abby Stratton.
regent.

PEOPLE

.

.

IN THE
NEWS

'

who reinforce education, set
values and model health
lifestyles," said Wandling in a
news release about the obser- .
vance.
She called on communities
to form a strong voi ce of support for parents so they can
support
their
children 's
developm ent.
"Thank a parent, plan and
promote events which focus
on practical parenting, promote
education,
and
resources for developin g parentin g skill s and draw allention to th e critical role parents have in creating the next
generati o n of productive and
·healthy adults."
Wandling sa id thatWednesday has been designated ·

locally as Family Day - a
day to eat dinner with your
children . Encouraging famili es to cat togc; th er is a
national effort which symbolizes. the importance of .
"hands-on parenting," said
the prevention specialist.
She cited a survey conductc·d by th e N ational Center on
Addi cti on and Substan ce
Abuse at Colum bia University w hich has shown that
teens whose parents practice
hands-on parenting, which
includes eating dinner as a
family six or seven times a
week, are four times less like•
ly to smoke marijuana and
two times. less likely to drink
alcohol.

Michael
Sku pin
C ITY,
TRAVERSE
Mi ch. (AP) M ichael
Skupin, w ho suffered
severe burns as a contestant on "Survivor II : The
· Australian Outback,'' is a
survivor once again.
Sk upin , his pregnant
wife, Penny, and 3-yearold
d aught e r, Emily,
escaped serio us 111JUry
Sunday when their twinengine plane made a crash
landing alo ng the rocky
Lake Mi chigan shoreline.
"It really is an act of
God that we just walked
away," Skupin said Monday.

,.
l

'
- The Rev.
James Baker wiU be evangelist
for revival services at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church,
Laurel Cliff Road, Sunday
through Oct. 3.
Services wiU be at 10:30
Sunday morning, 6 p.m . Sunday night, and 7 p.m . Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday..
Baker is an ordained minister from Hurricane, W.Va., and .
has pastored churches in several states. He became an
evangelist in 1999. He and his
wife, N e ttie, have been on five
Rev. JamH Baker
work-and-witness
mission
trips to th e Dominican England.
Republic, Guatemala, New
Evangelistic singers will be
Guinea / Australia,
and John and Ruth Brisoce of
Venezuela. He prtached on Canadian, Okla. The public is
those missions as well as in invited.

Rev. Don
Bock

to speak
RUTLAND - Rev. Don
Bock will b.e speaker at
revival services at Rutland
C hurc h of the Nazarene
Wednesday through Sunday.
The services will be at 7 p.m.
each evening an d I 0:30 and
6:30 p.m. on Su nday. Special
. music will be presented by
The Sissons and local talent.
The public is invited.

·•. .

.' . .... .. .

"l'n1 very sorry · not to
be there to celebrate the
premiere of 'Enigma,' of
which I'm very proud, and
also to pay my respects to
those lives lost in the
re cent tragedy in New
York," she said in a statement.

and IS-yard lines. Yet the Bdlisari-led
offense never scored a point.
Bellisari was recognized as the Big
Ten's player of the week after 'Ohio
State (1- 1) opened the season with a
28-14 victory over Akron on Sept. 8.
After the loss on national television,
h owever, most f:ans were scathing in
1 · ···
f h
· 1 c.
t ICtr crlttctsm o t e semor crt-hand_er in calls to radio talk shows and 1·n
letters to the edt' tor.
" It's amazing what a week does."
Tressel said Tuesday, shaking his head.
It was also amazing how ineffect 1··~
"
· Ohio State's offense was: eight first
downs, 166 total yards and a 1- for- 14

success rate on third-down piays.
Harassed all day by UCLA's defense,
· Bellisar i, who dropped to 14- 10 as the
sta rtin g quarterback, completed just
5-of-23 passes for 45 yards with two
interceptions.
" It's tough ro hear people badmouth Steve," center LeCharJes
· Bentley said. " He works very hard. I think
he's a great player. We all make bad
d ··
ectsaons so me times and we all have
bd
"
a games.
Bellisari certainly wasn't alone . in
that regard. Even though the defense
played valiantly _ forcing seven

· Air Jordan

comeback is
official

Eastem
•

Wins
aga

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONOENT

Bv ScoTT WOLFI

UNDATED Meigs
Marauder sophomore Jeremy Banks has advanced to
the Division II District
GolfTournament after fir. ing an 83 in Sectional
Tournament play Thesday
at the Shawnee State Park
Golf Course.
.
The top four teams
advance to district play,
along with the top four
individual. Banks finished
fourth in the 74 player
fi eld.
Portsmouth West won
the tournament with a
310, other teams advancing

WASHINGTON (AP) The worst-kept secret in
sports is out:' Michael Jordan
will play again in the NBA and not just for one .season,
but two.
After months of hints,
smiles and winks that kept his
fans on edge. the 38-year-old
Jordan finally announced his
comeback, saying he would
play for the Washington Wizards through 2003 and donate
his first year's salary - $1
million - to victims of the
Sept. II terrorist attacks.
The five-time league MVP,

322, Ironton
a 325
and Fairland with a 333.
Other teams and their
scores were West Union
and Waverly (35 1), South
Point and Portsmouth
(355), Scioto Northwest
(370), River Valley (373),
Rock Hill (376), Meigs
(379), Minford (401), Eastern Brown (402) and Piketon (407) .
Josh
Graham
. of
Portsmouth West was
match medalist with a one
under par 71. Top -individual advancing were Matt
Mcintosh of West Union
(76), Tyler Stapleton of
South . Point (80), Scott
Lightle ofWavedy (81) and
Banks with his 83 .

• BOSTON (AP) Drew
Bledsoe's doctors determined
his organs were not damaged
on a tackle that caused internal bleeding in his chest, New
England coach Bill Belichick
said.
The Patriots quarterba ck
still was expected to miss at
least two games, but he could
be released from the hospital
as soon as Wednesday.

·oHSAA

Football

r~nkings

_inside,

Ryder team,
PGA to donate
to relief

Page 83

OVP CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS
Blistering the nets with great
se rving
and hammering
spikes, the Eastern Eagles
blitzed B elpre 15- 1, 15-6
Tuesday night in an interdivisional volleyball match at
Eastern High School.
Eastern is now 13-2 overall
and 10-0 in the league.
" We served well tonight;•
said an excited Coach Pam
Douthitt, "Everyone placed
the ball well and all the players coming .. off the bench
played well tonight. This is a

LOOK AT WHAT I DID -Cincinnati's Ken Griffey Jr. runs the bases as he watches his
solo home run against Phlllies' pitcher David Coggin, right. Tuesday In Philadelphia. (AP)

Reds beat Phillies
PHILADELPHI!). (AP) - Larry Bowa didn't want to watch the scoreboaro. He turned to
it for comfort.
Ken Griffey Jr. had three hi1:1 and two RBis, ·
and Joey Hamilton pit~hed five shutout inningo;,.
leading the Cincinnati Reds to an 8-1 victoty
over the Philadelphia Phillies on Tuesday night.
The Phillies dropped a game behind the
Atlanta Braves for first place in the NL East.
Atlanta beat Florida 5-2 in 11 irulingo;.
Once the Reds took a 6-0 lead in the sixth,
Bowa found himself peeking at the Atlanta's
score a lot more than ·he'd like.
Hamilton (1-1) allowed two hi1:1 and won for
the fi~t time since beating the Phillies 4-2 on
July 14 when he pitched fur Toronto.
David Coggin (5-6) allowed four runs and
four hi1:1 in five innings.
"Didn"t he get released by Toronto?" Bowa
said of Hamilton, who was let go by the Blue
Jays on Aug. 3 after compiling a 5-8 record with
a 5.89 ERA. "Maybe he just throws good
against us.''
Griffey, who had fOur hi1:1 in his last 26 at-bal:l, .

was 3-for-4, missing the cycle by a triple. H e also
scored three runs.
The Red1 took a 1-0 lead in the first on an
RBI groundout by Dmitri Young. Adam Dunn
walked with one out, moved all the way to third
on an infield single to third by Griffey and
scored on Young's bouncer.
Griffey made it 2-0 in the fourth with his 21st
homer - his finlt against the Phillies. He now
ha1 hit a homer against every tean1 except the
two he has played for- Seattle and Cincinnati.
CDgb&gt;in left after Griffey walked . and Young
singled to start tJ:te sixth. The Reds then scored ·
four times off reliever.; Dennis Cook and Cliff
Politte to make it 6-0.
·
Pinch-hitter Brady Clark hit an RBI double,
Corky Miller added a sacrifice fly and pinchhitter D.T. Cromer and Todd Walker had RBI
singles.
Bobby Abreu hit his 28th homer offJose Rijo
in the sixth for Philadelphia's only run.
Griffey and Sean Casey had RBI doubles in ·
the St'Venth.

There's Never Been A Better Time
To Beat Prostate Cancer.
Most people probably don't kno~ it, but prostate cancer is th'e second
leading cause of cancer death among' American men. However, there are
new detection methods and treatment options that give patients the best
chance of be~r ing this highly curable form of cancer. If you're a man over
40, you should be checked for prostate cancer once a year. It's one thing
a man's gotta do.

Skinner to miss
season

O'BLENESS ,
Memorial Ho•pital
www.obleness.org

Excellence In Communit;y Healthcare
O I!I'J'JTMT

NASCAR · driver Mike
Skinner will undergo reconstru.ctive knee surgery that
will keep him out of a race
car for th e rest of the season.
Skinner, who drives the
No. 31 C hevrolet for Ri chard
Ghildre ss Racing, will be
replaced by Robby Gordon,
who filled in for four races
after Skinner was injured July
15 in a crash during the Winston Cup race at Chicagoland
Speedway.\

EASTERN (5-0)
The Eagles
remain the only unbeaten team in the
·tri-councy region. Unfortunately, their
wins have been. against teams with .500
records or worse.
·
South Gallia (0-5), Fort Frye (1-4),
Wahama (2-3), Parkersburg Catholic
(2-2) and Hannan (0-5) have a com· bined record of 5-19, which doem 't
help matters in the Ohio High School
· Ass
Athi enc
ociation computer ratings.
The good news is Eastern enters

Please see Cooper, BJ

PIMH HI Pl'lpl. Ill

Division title.

Butch
Cooper
THE BUTCHMEISTER

Eastern also has a win over Catholic
and' Wahama, who could both ·make
runs at tire West Virginia C lass A playof!S.
If Eastern wins out, another home
playoff game could b e in its future.
Key Games - 'Jhe Eagles travel to
Trimble this weekend ip what should
be Eastern's toughest test this season.
TVC Ohio Division play this weekend, The Eagles also play host to Waterford
where schools like Trimble (3-2) and · Oct. 19 in what could be for th e Ohio
Waterford (4-1) have winning records.

ace.

GALLIA ACADEMY (4-1) Th e Blue D evils may. be one of th e best
teams in aU of southeastern O hio. Their
only loss was to Ironton (27 -7) a coupie of weeks ago.
The good news, as ratingo; go, is that
th e SEOAL is a whol e lot stronger than
it was last year. Points will be aplenty
here as Gallia Academy finishes with a
strong league spowing.
Another playoff game in Gallipolis is
likely, even with one league loss down
th e road. An unbeaten league mark
could mean a No. 1 spot in the region.
Key Games - A trip to Logan (5-0)
. on Oct. 19 against a Division I fo e that
could be unbeaten by the tim e they
face the Blue Devils. This is where the
'

J!Vho 5 still standing in prep play&lt;?if races?
Halfway through the high school
foo!baU season, there is a clearer picture
of who are the contenders and who are
the pretenders. ·
Among area schools, quite a few contenders remain .

Eastern took early command and never looked back
in posting a huge one-sided
win in the first game. Coach
Douthitt emptied her bench
early and the subs did a good
job of continuing the victory
drive.
Alyssa Holter led the
Eagles with a ten- point night,
hitting 12-of- 13 serves and
three aces, while also posting
a great spiking game with
three kills on a 4-of- 5 spiking
night. Holter's multi-faceted
game was a big boost to the
Eastern rout.
Janet Calaway, who has
enjoyed a great year. saw limited action but still managed
to post an 18-of- 24 setting
game with five ass ists for ·
. scores, whil e posting a 3-of-3
spiking night with one kill.
Calaway also added . three
points with a perfect serving
night and three points with an
Tiffany Spencer was 4-of-5
serving with four points in a
comeback effort from an early
season ankle sprain . Kass
Lodwick was 7-of-7 serving
with three points and an ace,
while leading the spiking
corps with 8-of-9 spikes and
four booming kills. Tammy
Bissell was 5- of- 5 serving
with three points and an ace,
going 5-of-6 sp iking with
two kills, 7-of-R setting and
two assists. Janet Ridenour
was 4-of-4 serving with three
points, and Tiffeny Bissell was
4-of-4 serving with two
points, and 7-of-8 setting
with two assists. ·
Nikki Phillips had four
assists while Whitney Karr
posted another good game at
the net with two kills in a 6of-7 night, while also posting
two blocks. Katie Robertson
had two kills, and Kass Lodwick a block.
The
Eastern
reserves
boosted their record to 10-0
with 15-3 and 1-7 wins over
Belpre. .
.,
Brandy Bissell led with
eight points, Stacy Smith had
six points, Krystal Baker five,

-·

SAN ANTONIO (AP) U.S. Ryder Cup captain Curtis Stratige said his team will
donat e $520,000 to the
National Disaster Relief
Fund, while the PGA of
America S:tid it would give ·
$500,000.

Ple.lse see Buckeyes. BJ

PREP
RNDP

Banks
advances
in district
golf meet

Bledsoe's
organs not
llannecl

Kate Winslet

Rev. Don Bock

COLUMBUS - The Eastern football team is currently
ranked no. 13 in the latest
Ohio Associated Press f6otball
poll.
The 5-0 Eagles received 29
points, including one first
place vote.
In the latest OHSAA computer rankings, Eastern is fifth
in Division VI, Region 23
behind Dalton, Danville,
Newark Catholic, and Strasburg-Franklin.
The Eagles will take on the
seventh-ranked Trimble Tomcats (4-1) in Glouster on Friday.
TVC foe Waterford is cur~
rently 1Oth.
For complete rankings, see
Page B3 .
·

in 1999 after leading the
C hicago Bulls to their sixth
title of the decade, made it
official after clearing up a
licensing issue with one of his
sponsors - a disagreement
that delayed the announcement by a day. NBA rules also
required Jordan to sell his
ownership stake in the Wizards.

PEOPLE
LONDON (AP)
Kate Winslet pulled out of
the premiere of her latest
film just hours before it
began, citing "recent personal events."
Monday 's premiere of
"Enigma," a World War II
thriller about British code
breakers,was to have been
Winslet's first official outing since she separated
from her husband earlier .
this m onth.
"I feel that, for the sake
of myself and my family, a
short time out of the spotlight would be beneficial,"
said
the
25-year- old
actress, best known for her
starring. role in 1997's
uTi tanic."
She apologized for her
absence.

COLUMBUS (AP)- Steve Bellispractice toni ght and
ari has been Ohio State's starting
call up th e first
quarterbac k the last 24 games.
offense and have
Whether he extends that streak wi.)l
people kind of waitbe decided in the next three days.
ing to see who goes
Afier an anemic performance by the
into the huddle,"
offense in Saturday's 13-6 loss to
Tressel said. "If I'm
UCLA, Ohio State coach Jim "'ressel
Steve Bellisari. I'd
!:
said Tuesday he would decide th. is
step into that huddle
until I'm told not
week whether to replace his two-year
Tressel
to.'~
starter with back- up Scott M cMullen.
BeUisari connected
Tressel said Bellisari is still working
1
f h. I
17
0
our with the No. I offense but that a on on y one
pass
IS ast
starter would be announced after attempts against UCLA. Four times
the Buckeyes defense forc ed turnovers
Thursday night's practice.
in Bruins territory, including at the 9"w~·re not going to walk out to

Eastem ranked
in state polls

celebrates parenting
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Belliasri may lose OSU QB job

HIGHLIGHTS

Statewide -observation
.

Page B1

'

survey~

\

1

l

'

�The Daily Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

2001

Inside:

Daughters of the American Revolution celebrates Constitution Week

The Daily Sentinel

Diamond Roundup, Page B6

I

P0!':1EROY - The· oragins of the onstitution of
the United States and the Bill
of Rights were discussed by
Steve Story. Meigs County
Court judgr, at the recent
meeting of Return Jonath an
Meigs C hapter. Daughters of
the Am erican Revolution. in
observance of Constitution
Week.
A resolution designating
Constitution Werk Sept. 1723 was adopted on July ~3.
1956. and signed into law on
Aug. 2, 1956.
The purpose of the observance is to emphasize the
responsibility of protecting
and defending the Consti tution and preserving it for posterity, to und ers t ~nd the Constim tion is our great heritage

and the foundation of our
lives, and to study the histori cal events which occurred
during Sep tember 1787.
Story said the Constitution
was the product of seven centuries of development in
England and the United
States. and the Magna Carta
(tht· Great Charter) is as
much the heritage of Americans as it is th e English.
He said that froin their
experience in living under
charters in some of the
colonies. Americans learned
the value of written documents that specified th e rights
of the pt•ople and the powers
·of govern ment.
In May 1775. three weeks
after th e Revolutio nary War
began at Lexington and Con-

Medicare and Medicaid
agency reorganized
BY VALREA THOMPSON
SOCIAL SECURITY
MANAGER IN ATHENS

To increase responsiv~nt!SS to
beneficiaries and providers and
improve customer service. the
Health Care Financing Administration will be reorganized
and renamed the "Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Ser- .
vices."
The agency is emphasizing
quality service as its number
one priority. Their sweeping
reforms will strengthen their
programs and enable their
employees to better serve
Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries, as well as health care
providers. They're · going to
encourage innovation , better
educate consumers about their
options and be more responsive
to th e health care needs of
Americans.

Three new business centers
are being established as part of
the reform: the Center for
B~neficiary Choices, the Center for Medicare Management,
and the Center for Medicaid
and State Options.
The new Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Ser- .
vices \vill launch a national
media campaign to educate
seniors and other Medicare
beneficiaries
about
their
options.
The M edicare 800-number
(1-800-633-4227) is being
enhanced to provide service to
beneficiaries 24 hours a day,
seven days a week.
More changes are on the
way. Th ey're going to keep
finetuning the agency so Americans are receiving the highest
quality health care possible.

Rev. Jar:nes Baker to speak

cord, the Second Continental
Congress met in Philadelphia.
It adopted the Declaration of
Independence, which Story
said "powerfully stimulated
the patriots' cause."
The speaker introduced the
Bill of Rights, the first 10
amendments of the Constitution. and gave each member a
copy. Story defined the Bill
of Rights as protecting all' of
us. He concluded by saying
the Bill of Rights is perhaps
the most remarkable state
document of this period.
Abbie Stratton presided at
the meeting.
The
national
defense
report. titl ed Missile Defense
Imperatives was given by
Pauline Atkins. She reported
that according to a March

CBS Mews/New York Timesmany adulcs incorrectly believe America has a missile defense system lo protect
against nuclear attacks.
The president's ballistic
missile proposal, she said, is
designed to protect against
nuclear attacks. She spoke of
the DAR resolution supporting the immediate development and deployment of
land-based, sea-based missile
defense systems to protect the
country and troops abroad
from the threat of nuclear, ·
biological, chemical warfare.
N ext meeting will be at 10
a.m . Oct. 13 at Meigs Cou nty
Public Library. Speaker will
be June Ashley on the proper
use of parliamentary procedure.

Wednesday, September 21, 1001

WEDNESDAY's

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - " Nothing
is n1ore ·important to our
future than helping out children grow up to be healthy,
caring, confident and productive adults."
That's what Julie Wandling,
prevention specialist for
Health Recovery Servi ces,
wrote about Parents' Week,
which is being observed over
the state this week.
Theme is "You Gatta Love
Parents."
uwe need . to co mm en d
and encourage the many parents who work hard to provide food, clothing, shelter,
health care an(i emo tio nal
support for their children and

JUDGE SPEAKS - Steve Story, Meigs County Court judge,
spoke on the Constitution and the Bill of Rights at a recent
meeting of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution. Pictured here with him is-Abby Stratton.
regent.

PEOPLE

.

.

IN THE
NEWS

'

who reinforce education, set
values and model health
lifestyles," said Wandling in a
news release about the obser- .
vance.
She called on communities
to form a strong voi ce of support for parents so they can
support
their
children 's
developm ent.
"Thank a parent, plan and
promote events which focus
on practical parenting, promote
education,
and
resources for developin g parentin g skill s and draw allention to th e critical role parents have in creating the next
generati o n of productive and
·healthy adults."
Wandling sa id thatWednesday has been designated ·

locally as Family Day - a
day to eat dinner with your
children . Encouraging famili es to cat togc; th er is a
national effort which symbolizes. the importance of .
"hands-on parenting," said
the prevention specialist.
She cited a survey conductc·d by th e N ational Center on
Addi cti on and Substan ce
Abuse at Colum bia University w hich has shown that
teens whose parents practice
hands-on parenting, which
includes eating dinner as a
family six or seven times a
week, are four times less like•
ly to smoke marijuana and
two times. less likely to drink
alcohol.

Michael
Sku pin
C ITY,
TRAVERSE
Mi ch. (AP) M ichael
Skupin, w ho suffered
severe burns as a contestant on "Survivor II : The
· Australian Outback,'' is a
survivor once again.
Sk upin , his pregnant
wife, Penny, and 3-yearold
d aught e r, Emily,
escaped serio us 111JUry
Sunday when their twinengine plane made a crash
landing alo ng the rocky
Lake Mi chigan shoreline.
"It really is an act of
God that we just walked
away," Skupin said Monday.

,.
l

'
- The Rev.
James Baker wiU be evangelist
for revival services at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church,
Laurel Cliff Road, Sunday
through Oct. 3.
Services wiU be at 10:30
Sunday morning, 6 p.m . Sunday night, and 7 p.m . Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday..
Baker is an ordained minister from Hurricane, W.Va., and .
has pastored churches in several states. He became an
evangelist in 1999. He and his
wife, N e ttie, have been on five
Rev. JamH Baker
work-and-witness
mission
trips to th e Dominican England.
Republic, Guatemala, New
Evangelistic singers will be
Guinea / Australia,
and John and Ruth Brisoce of
Venezuela. He prtached on Canadian, Okla. The public is
those missions as well as in invited.

Rev. Don
Bock

to speak
RUTLAND - Rev. Don
Bock will b.e speaker at
revival services at Rutland
C hurc h of the Nazarene
Wednesday through Sunday.
The services will be at 7 p.m.
each evening an d I 0:30 and
6:30 p.m. on Su nday. Special
. music will be presented by
The Sissons and local talent.
The public is invited.

·•. .

.' . .... .. .

"l'n1 very sorry · not to
be there to celebrate the
premiere of 'Enigma,' of
which I'm very proud, and
also to pay my respects to
those lives lost in the
re cent tragedy in New
York," she said in a statement.

and IS-yard lines. Yet the Bdlisari-led
offense never scored a point.
Bellisari was recognized as the Big
Ten's player of the week after 'Ohio
State (1- 1) opened the season with a
28-14 victory over Akron on Sept. 8.
After the loss on national television,
h owever, most f:ans were scathing in
1 · ···
f h
· 1 c.
t ICtr crlttctsm o t e semor crt-hand_er in calls to radio talk shows and 1·n
letters to the edt' tor.
" It's amazing what a week does."
Tressel said Tuesday, shaking his head.
It was also amazing how ineffect 1··~
"
· Ohio State's offense was: eight first
downs, 166 total yards and a 1- for- 14

success rate on third-down piays.
Harassed all day by UCLA's defense,
· Bellisar i, who dropped to 14- 10 as the
sta rtin g quarterback, completed just
5-of-23 passes for 45 yards with two
interceptions.
" It's tough ro hear people badmouth Steve," center LeCharJes
· Bentley said. " He works very hard. I think
he's a great player. We all make bad
d ··
ectsaons so me times and we all have
bd
"
a games.
Bellisari certainly wasn't alone . in
that regard. Even though the defense
played valiantly _ forcing seven

· Air Jordan

comeback is
official

Eastem
•

Wins
aga

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONOENT

Bv ScoTT WOLFI

UNDATED Meigs
Marauder sophomore Jeremy Banks has advanced to
the Division II District
GolfTournament after fir. ing an 83 in Sectional
Tournament play Thesday
at the Shawnee State Park
Golf Course.
.
The top four teams
advance to district play,
along with the top four
individual. Banks finished
fourth in the 74 player
fi eld.
Portsmouth West won
the tournament with a
310, other teams advancing

WASHINGTON (AP) The worst-kept secret in
sports is out:' Michael Jordan
will play again in the NBA and not just for one .season,
but two.
After months of hints,
smiles and winks that kept his
fans on edge. the 38-year-old
Jordan finally announced his
comeback, saying he would
play for the Washington Wizards through 2003 and donate
his first year's salary - $1
million - to victims of the
Sept. II terrorist attacks.
The five-time league MVP,

322, Ironton
a 325
and Fairland with a 333.
Other teams and their
scores were West Union
and Waverly (35 1), South
Point and Portsmouth
(355), Scioto Northwest
(370), River Valley (373),
Rock Hill (376), Meigs
(379), Minford (401), Eastern Brown (402) and Piketon (407) .
Josh
Graham
. of
Portsmouth West was
match medalist with a one
under par 71. Top -individual advancing were Matt
Mcintosh of West Union
(76), Tyler Stapleton of
South . Point (80), Scott
Lightle ofWavedy (81) and
Banks with his 83 .

• BOSTON (AP) Drew
Bledsoe's doctors determined
his organs were not damaged
on a tackle that caused internal bleeding in his chest, New
England coach Bill Belichick
said.
The Patriots quarterba ck
still was expected to miss at
least two games, but he could
be released from the hospital
as soon as Wednesday.

·oHSAA

Football

r~nkings

_inside,

Ryder team,
PGA to donate
to relief

Page 83

OVP CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS
Blistering the nets with great
se rving
and hammering
spikes, the Eastern Eagles
blitzed B elpre 15- 1, 15-6
Tuesday night in an interdivisional volleyball match at
Eastern High School.
Eastern is now 13-2 overall
and 10-0 in the league.
" We served well tonight;•
said an excited Coach Pam
Douthitt, "Everyone placed
the ball well and all the players coming .. off the bench
played well tonight. This is a

LOOK AT WHAT I DID -Cincinnati's Ken Griffey Jr. runs the bases as he watches his
solo home run against Phlllies' pitcher David Coggin, right. Tuesday In Philadelphia. (AP)

Reds beat Phillies
PHILADELPHI!). (AP) - Larry Bowa didn't want to watch the scoreboaro. He turned to
it for comfort.
Ken Griffey Jr. had three hi1:1 and two RBis, ·
and Joey Hamilton pit~hed five shutout inningo;,.
leading the Cincinnati Reds to an 8-1 victoty
over the Philadelphia Phillies on Tuesday night.
The Phillies dropped a game behind the
Atlanta Braves for first place in the NL East.
Atlanta beat Florida 5-2 in 11 irulingo;.
Once the Reds took a 6-0 lead in the sixth,
Bowa found himself peeking at the Atlanta's
score a lot more than ·he'd like.
Hamilton (1-1) allowed two hi1:1 and won for
the fi~t time since beating the Phillies 4-2 on
July 14 when he pitched fur Toronto.
David Coggin (5-6) allowed four runs and
four hi1:1 in five innings.
"Didn"t he get released by Toronto?" Bowa
said of Hamilton, who was let go by the Blue
Jays on Aug. 3 after compiling a 5-8 record with
a 5.89 ERA. "Maybe he just throws good
against us.''
Griffey, who had fOur hi1:1 in his last 26 at-bal:l, .

was 3-for-4, missing the cycle by a triple. H e also
scored three runs.
The Red1 took a 1-0 lead in the first on an
RBI groundout by Dmitri Young. Adam Dunn
walked with one out, moved all the way to third
on an infield single to third by Griffey and
scored on Young's bouncer.
Griffey made it 2-0 in the fourth with his 21st
homer - his finlt against the Phillies. He now
ha1 hit a homer against every tean1 except the
two he has played for- Seattle and Cincinnati.
CDgb&gt;in left after Griffey walked . and Young
singled to start tJ:te sixth. The Reds then scored ·
four times off reliever.; Dennis Cook and Cliff
Politte to make it 6-0.
·
Pinch-hitter Brady Clark hit an RBI double,
Corky Miller added a sacrifice fly and pinchhitter D.T. Cromer and Todd Walker had RBI
singles.
Bobby Abreu hit his 28th homer offJose Rijo
in the sixth for Philadelphia's only run.
Griffey and Sean Casey had RBI doubles in ·
the St'Venth.

There's Never Been A Better Time
To Beat Prostate Cancer.
Most people probably don't kno~ it, but prostate cancer is th'e second
leading cause of cancer death among' American men. However, there are
new detection methods and treatment options that give patients the best
chance of be~r ing this highly curable form of cancer. If you're a man over
40, you should be checked for prostate cancer once a year. It's one thing
a man's gotta do.

Skinner to miss
season

O'BLENESS ,
Memorial Ho•pital
www.obleness.org

Excellence In Communit;y Healthcare
O I!I'J'JTMT

NASCAR · driver Mike
Skinner will undergo reconstru.ctive knee surgery that
will keep him out of a race
car for th e rest of the season.
Skinner, who drives the
No. 31 C hevrolet for Ri chard
Ghildre ss Racing, will be
replaced by Robby Gordon,
who filled in for four races
after Skinner was injured July
15 in a crash during the Winston Cup race at Chicagoland
Speedway.\

EASTERN (5-0)
The Eagles
remain the only unbeaten team in the
·tri-councy region. Unfortunately, their
wins have been. against teams with .500
records or worse.
·
South Gallia (0-5), Fort Frye (1-4),
Wahama (2-3), Parkersburg Catholic
(2-2) and Hannan (0-5) have a com· bined record of 5-19, which doem 't
help matters in the Ohio High School
· Ass
Athi enc
ociation computer ratings.
The good news is Eastern enters

Please see Cooper, BJ

PIMH HI Pl'lpl. Ill

Division title.

Butch
Cooper
THE BUTCHMEISTER

Eastern also has a win over Catholic
and' Wahama, who could both ·make
runs at tire West Virginia C lass A playof!S.
If Eastern wins out, another home
playoff game could b e in its future.
Key Games - 'Jhe Eagles travel to
Trimble this weekend ip what should
be Eastern's toughest test this season.
TVC Ohio Division play this weekend, The Eagles also play host to Waterford
where schools like Trimble (3-2) and · Oct. 19 in what could be for th e Ohio
Waterford (4-1) have winning records.

ace.

GALLIA ACADEMY (4-1) Th e Blue D evils may. be one of th e best
teams in aU of southeastern O hio. Their
only loss was to Ironton (27 -7) a coupie of weeks ago.
The good news, as ratingo; go, is that
th e SEOAL is a whol e lot stronger than
it was last year. Points will be aplenty
here as Gallia Academy finishes with a
strong league spowing.
Another playoff game in Gallipolis is
likely, even with one league loss down
th e road. An unbeaten league mark
could mean a No. 1 spot in the region.
Key Games - A trip to Logan (5-0)
. on Oct. 19 against a Division I fo e that
could be unbeaten by the tim e they
face the Blue Devils. This is where the
'

J!Vho 5 still standing in prep play&lt;?if races?
Halfway through the high school
foo!baU season, there is a clearer picture
of who are the contenders and who are
the pretenders. ·
Among area schools, quite a few contenders remain .

Eastern took early command and never looked back
in posting a huge one-sided
win in the first game. Coach
Douthitt emptied her bench
early and the subs did a good
job of continuing the victory
drive.
Alyssa Holter led the
Eagles with a ten- point night,
hitting 12-of- 13 serves and
three aces, while also posting
a great spiking game with
three kills on a 4-of- 5 spiking
night. Holter's multi-faceted
game was a big boost to the
Eastern rout.
Janet Calaway, who has
enjoyed a great year. saw limited action but still managed
to post an 18-of- 24 setting
game with five ass ists for ·
. scores, whil e posting a 3-of-3
spiking night with one kill.
Calaway also added . three
points with a perfect serving
night and three points with an
Tiffany Spencer was 4-of-5
serving with four points in a
comeback effort from an early
season ankle sprain . Kass
Lodwick was 7-of-7 serving
with three points and an ace,
while leading the spiking
corps with 8-of-9 spikes and
four booming kills. Tammy
Bissell was 5- of- 5 serving
with three points and an ace,
going 5-of-6 sp iking with
two kills, 7-of-R setting and
two assists. Janet Ridenour
was 4-of-4 serving with three
points, and Tiffeny Bissell was
4-of-4 serving with two
points, and 7-of-8 setting
with two assists. ·
Nikki Phillips had four
assists while Whitney Karr
posted another good game at
the net with two kills in a 6of-7 night, while also posting
two blocks. Katie Robertson
had two kills, and Kass Lodwick a block.
The
Eastern
reserves
boosted their record to 10-0
with 15-3 and 1-7 wins over
Belpre. .
.,
Brandy Bissell led with
eight points, Stacy Smith had
six points, Krystal Baker five,

-·

SAN ANTONIO (AP) U.S. Ryder Cup captain Curtis Stratige said his team will
donat e $520,000 to the
National Disaster Relief
Fund, while the PGA of
America S:tid it would give ·
$500,000.

Ple.lse see Buckeyes. BJ

PREP
RNDP

Banks
advances
in district
golf meet

Bledsoe's
organs not
llannecl

Kate Winslet

Rev. Don Bock

COLUMBUS - The Eastern football team is currently
ranked no. 13 in the latest
Ohio Associated Press f6otball
poll.
The 5-0 Eagles received 29
points, including one first
place vote.
In the latest OHSAA computer rankings, Eastern is fifth
in Division VI, Region 23
behind Dalton, Danville,
Newark Catholic, and Strasburg-Franklin.
The Eagles will take on the
seventh-ranked Trimble Tomcats (4-1) in Glouster on Friday.
TVC foe Waterford is cur~
rently 1Oth.
For complete rankings, see
Page B3 .
·

in 1999 after leading the
C hicago Bulls to their sixth
title of the decade, made it
official after clearing up a
licensing issue with one of his
sponsors - a disagreement
that delayed the announcement by a day. NBA rules also
required Jordan to sell his
ownership stake in the Wizards.

PEOPLE
LONDON (AP)
Kate Winslet pulled out of
the premiere of her latest
film just hours before it
began, citing "recent personal events."
Monday 's premiere of
"Enigma," a World War II
thriller about British code
breakers,was to have been
Winslet's first official outing since she separated
from her husband earlier .
this m onth.
"I feel that, for the sake
of myself and my family, a
short time out of the spotlight would be beneficial,"
said
the
25-year- old
actress, best known for her
starring. role in 1997's
uTi tanic."
She apologized for her
absence.

COLUMBUS (AP)- Steve Bellispractice toni ght and
ari has been Ohio State's starting
call up th e first
quarterbac k the last 24 games.
offense and have
Whether he extends that streak wi.)l
people kind of waitbe decided in the next three days.
ing to see who goes
Afier an anemic performance by the
into the huddle,"
offense in Saturday's 13-6 loss to
Tressel said. "If I'm
UCLA, Ohio State coach Jim "'ressel
Steve Bellisari. I'd
!:
said Tuesday he would decide th. is
step into that huddle
until I'm told not
week whether to replace his two-year
Tressel
to.'~
starter with back- up Scott M cMullen.
BeUisari connected
Tressel said Bellisari is still working
1
f h. I
17
0
our with the No. I offense but that a on on y one
pass
IS ast
starter would be announced after attempts against UCLA. Four times
the Buckeyes defense forc ed turnovers
Thursday night's practice.
in Bruins territory, including at the 9"w~·re not going to walk out to

Eastem ranked
in state polls

celebrates parenting
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Belliasri may lose OSU QB job

HIGHLIGHTS

Statewide -observation
.

Page B1

'

survey~

\

1

l

'

���•

'
Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~ Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEYOOP
NEA

PHu.LIP

ALDER

. P/B

Clllln
CllliCUE

..........

COIIIUCTOIIS, UK.
RR~ne,

Haulin&amp; • Urr1est•~nc I
• Gra•el Slad •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
•Mukh
Bulldozer Services

(740) 992-3470

740-885-3848
CONCIEII/IlOCI(/IlKK

Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217

• F-n, Wolll, Slepo •
flat Work,

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Reploco...ato. • wetks
..d.Dri•n • Slendl ·
Crtlt Fret Elllllllel
S.nlna Oldo and W. V.
. WVI0317U

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump 6rinding
• Bucket Truck

CONSTRUC'T10N
Frn eltlmat••,
In au red

. DIPOYSII

Gener.i

All Makes Tra~tor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers

740-992-5232

992-7943

... frill
&amp;.. S1J.II• Frt

.........................
........ ...........
.'*

Haircuts
Available

•

tenance, and repair
pon:hes, &amp; decks.

Mon •

Solll·t

21211

JERRY 'S
US ED
COMPU TE RS
441 Beech St.
Mlddlapon, OH

7

992-9158
·Free . .llmat. .
on repalree,

Good Deals!

DREHEL'S
(740) 7 42-2925

Buy,
Se!l or Trade
. •·'

WIU
ACCEPT SEALED
BIDS FOR THE
FOLLOWING DUMP
TRUCKS:

)

SM.IlL 01 IIRGI 1011111

7

7

7

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding• New Garaaes
• Replacement
Windows • Room
Additions • Rooftna

•

COMMIICW. and llSIDOOIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

(1120, 28, 2001
(1013, 2001

Wnt
hss

1 I'(T

F... ~t .
Pul

PIWI

t •

AU

Nc..-1.11

1-l0U15·1824
R"'idential Commm:ial New CnMtrudion
Sales Senice Installation

Spedalllilll In Shoot Metal Du&lt;IWtlrk
"Tranc" Sal'" &amp; Seriice For

Gallia, M.....,, a'nd Meig• Counli'" ,
Licenstd and ln.•u~
WV 005176

WITHOUT

A.
HELMET!!

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 99.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

POttTIONS OF Ttlt FOLl-OwiNG

PttOG#fAM MAY ~
OfftNl&gt; SOMt -

. INTtLI.~GTVALS,
SVT Ttlt lttsT

Of YOV FOLICS
Alft IN FOil
A,tAL
Tilt AT!

BORN LOSF:If .

OUALITY
WINDOW
·SYSTEMS

f\IOW T~t-..i~ W~l I (N.J.. ~
FI'\'::&gt;T E.LE.\/1'\TOR.I

I

~

. . ..,

~~~~~~-Jl'i'F.::...::._=~==-~-L_-_..1_..1_- _- ~-_.1._- _- ~..L_L --11--L--'-'

~Snodgrass' Upholslery
"HtlpU.,

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

AT. 7 PIZZA &amp; RACINE
PIZZA EXPRESS

:

i
0

~

• t......JJ.._..l..._J...L.._..JL_...___._,
_ _ _ a-.~ninimum,

Buy any Large
Pizza
Get Second

Reclnt,Ohlo

~t·~~·a

lt.IU.I:W
•twua._.ae
f/1,...,...

ll!iiiiJ- A+.

at least ace-kingqueen-sixth.)
'\
West cashes tw~
'top hearts, then exits

"QuAlity Work"
....... Cars, Tractora,
Lawn Furniture,
Boat Trallare,
Utility Trailers,
Car Haularo,
Anything Metal

PEANUTS

.-------~-------::: ~:;::'] · with a dub.
~--

M'i 6~AM~A A~P 6RAMMA
1-!A\/E BEE~ MARRIED FOR
~IFT'i '&lt;EARS ...

Declarer must play
the trump suit for at
most one loser. Here,

•New Hom••
• Siding
• Roollng
• Remodeling
• Garages
• Additions
•DitCks

• Hama Repairs

Free Es t1m at es

740-992-1101
or 992-2753
TRI-COUDTY
TRHOSPORT
UrnesiMel
Seniors Dlscounll
multiple l.ood
Olscounta

'·,

Air

: Refrigeration
. $49 Service gaa, fuel ,oil, and .
heat pumps for winter
Fee • Flat

w"d hi•

~""

ComhtiiJns th;lt atfccc your

in chi! ye:1r ahead
look likt: they will prndu..:c a
number of whulcsonll' fri endships. Good buddies you dt•vdop now wiU last fOr, the re~t
of vcmr life.

111811ellver If luvlce, lac

LIIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -

35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Phone: 74().985-3831 • Fax 740-985-3851

3 c4 4) (CC)

TREE SERVICE .
Tap • Trim •lemOVIII

- An illlportant relationship
yuu'rc presently involvnl in
on be sm: n~rhcncd roJay
thrnugh honest communicJ., tion. Lay all your cards un the
t:~.blc , Know where to look
for rom:tne.: and you'll find it.
The Astro-GrJ.ph Mu ch-

m:lkc:r instantly rc::ve:1l~ which
signs :~.rc romantically perfect.

Bucket Service

for you. Mail S2.75 to Match·
n~wspap~r.

441192-011&gt;7.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No~,
22) •• This is an ••p.ci31ly ·
good day for finaliz ing mottm

Room Addlllona 6

th:a arc of significanc~: to you,
part icululy flnanci;~J onts .

RemOdeling

• New GlriQH

Take the bull by the horn•

• Eloclrlcel • Plumbing

'

Outtoro

.·

and clean up the untidy

Advertise

pi..:Ct..'S.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23l&gt;cc . 21) •• Others will see

In this space

v.

the meriu of your decisions ·
today if you believe in thCm

for
1

younclf. Show thi• by 11king

24 per month
'

'

C T F X·
y

KANRS.'W K K W,X

(VTKMIXAES)
NTTCIYX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Failure has gone to his head." Wlls'on Mizner ·
·

-·

11

~\.!;:) 1-'QU ~). ~ 1,.:.1([";:,
- - - - - - ldhod ~Y CLAY a. 'OLLAN

I

WR A L D

I

.1 1
.
.
.

I

w,:::

~~~~~~f~5~

'12 1

13
.

I
.

;::1
1s 1~.
. .

GRUp E

1 1
.

.

I~
.

I

I.

"

j ur.l~:e -

mcnt call is th~ right o ne .
CAP RI CORN (De c. 22·
Jan . llJ) -- The rc:ason your
material aspiratiom look . so
g:nml today i~ bt.•taust! of your
willingness to do wlutcvcr it
takes ru.u~cr rht• job June .
H onest dYo n wi ll be rcward1!li .
AQUAI~IUS Uan . 20-Fcb.
1'J) -- Once you csrabl1sh the
example you want others to
follow, you , houldn't have
a'hy troub!CJP in rallying s.upportt:n to your c:uue. Show .
them you're a compct~ nt
. leader who knows how to orbramze.
. PISCES (Feb. 20-M~rch 20)
-- This may be one of thmc
days where yc.m'r..: likely to

perform bt&gt;ttcr if you c:1n b~
fn:c: from tic~ to othen. Don't
yield to cxtc:rior influences
thrcatcnins; your spact.
ARIES (Mmh 21-Aprill9)
.. .. Go En loyal l'ricndJ or auociatel you Ci1M trust if you
ntcd to diut.•ct an idea that fl.'quires fin~:-tun ing. lJrainstonning will work.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Succ:e~s in your finan-

cial aff.tin i1 liklly today if you

a firm lt:t.nce in situation!!

where you think your

.,

FASRTMS

VYDW

·-

~o.cial !it~·

maker, .;/o this

~r.

ELWKMXHAXN

KAH W

I've figured out why airports
make you walk so far to get to your

q•=•·~~~{hd~

P.O. llox In?, Wicklilfc , OH

..

AE

II II

;·

c+

I A XC

SWWXYNWG'E

y

y

AXST

'NWSSAXN

I: I I

Phone {740)593-667
Ohio
. ·

Complete Llna ol SuiiiVIn'io Grooming Suppllto
Sulfur Collld UrN, bulk only, lt28.tJO per ton
tO% ott III.Prltlert Hor11 and Livestock Equip.
t0.10..t0 All PurpMe Fert1Hlll'l4.50150t
1,000 8•1• Twlna l11.5018ole
•11,000 Baler Twlna 121.501811•

Today's clue: V equals C

whenever it is possiI
G) Co,;,ploto
1ho chuckle quolod
.
.
.
•
by filling In the missmg words
b!e to achieye the t.......l.-L-..J--..1-...__. you develop lrom Slop No. 8 below.
aim. South should
A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
3
start by playing a
'f;lll IN THESE SQUARES
spade to his ace.
A UNSCRAMBLE' LETTERS TO
When the jack drops,
V GE T ANSWER
he continues with the
SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS
spade queen . However, if only low
Harbor· Elude • Knife - Unless • USED to BE
spades appear under ·
Two old timers sat on a bench watching the people
go by. One replied to the other, "The future isn't what it
the ace, declarer goes
USED to BE."
into the dummy with
a club and leads to~~
·

..........

.Shade River AG Se,.vlce
"Ahead In Service"

by Lula Campos

~he~en~ a ts~:~ty'J~~k~~..-..,5,.....,A,.......T,...,.H,........T"""G-"'-,I~~~r~ -~~~:a_ ~ive a head start to

Culpd. . wltb
faUIIooka

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

DOWN

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands lor anolher.

1

............t

East Stale Street

58 Part ol .1.

0

-'RTUR~

"We'll fix It or el~'

7411-867..()800

101
55 Coral
lllanda
56 Withdrew
lonnall~
57 Rocont

an ace or ldng, or, in
Roorrongo
loHorswords
of tho
four
scromblod
be·
a pinch, a queen. low to form four simple words.
(The last, rare possibility is to rebid three 'I
N () G U R D
no-trump , which ·. i
1
l
promises a solid suit: .

THI\N

Pb. 949·1'714

1.t

992·9200 949·4900

Loi'IVO~E8LE
""

Octs·•
I,._Avalla.la

Custom Computers
Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

1/2 PRICE

Maplp'oodtake

41 Want
51 Knight's

With-a,-.,._..,;'N.;,ioiiomiiiaiiin;iilsi.i·a~l;iialiiluiireioiwioih~o;iiilsioiaiiin~loioylniiiigioi~Ke~.7~"":W::-II""IIa00m:-"Fe00a~lhe~r~
shows a
THPAUTZ. ZDL1 1~T C.~~ 4\'-.( _ fi'C ~~e

feature. He bids a side
suit in which he has

Roofing • Gutters • Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbhig • Paint • Flooring
Pressure

MARKET

46 Cuhlvttl

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Here is an example.
When the responder ·
uses ' the two~notrump inquirv, South- ·
·'
rebids in his suit with

Y01110 R~to~fl' Y011t ln~mmtnl"

81M-2202

pan

BY PIIIWP ALDER
We are looking at
weak two-bids: an
opening of two diamonds, two hearts or
two spades to show a
decent six-card suit
and 5-9 points non vulnerable and 6-10
vulnerable.
How does the re . sponder react? That
depends on both his
fit for partner's suit
and his high-card
power. With a good
fit, he should be raising, even when weak,
to increase the preemption. More on
that tomorrow.
If res ponder has
some fit and a decent
hand, he. adds his
points to partner' s to
· judge whether or not
to try for game. With
up to 14 points, he
will usually pass.
With, say, 18-22, he
will probably go·
straight to game. In
the middle, with
some 15- 17 points, he
needs
to
know
whether partner is
minimum or · maximum. He finds out by

I'IU'H

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

· n.EA

lmp~&lt;n

45

IAXWG'E

·5600 • 7 4(1-9912-4119

SINCE 1964

Puzzle

12 Floor model 35 Acloro'
13 Subslhute
plalformo
26 Garage-Ale 1 Steno'o
for
42 eart.ln
worda
need
18 Variety ol
unlv.
28 Actre..
2 Dandlr,
quartz
gredUIIteo
Boolnger
pluo
19 On terra
43 Tenderer ,
29 Tuaca3 llochlne
firma
45 Peper
looU'I lot.
Iouth
20 Prejudiced
money
30 Persian
4 Mounllln- 22 J • .,..... 47 Aploce
ruler
dweller of
dogs
48 Newac111tar
31 Type ot
Aela
23 ConcQCted
Rather
trading
5 Sly .,.
(2 wda.l
49 Jacques'
33 Moat
6 Min~
24 Polite word
v~~e~Uon
lu•urlous
chlckeno
25 Flower opol
time
36 Droplet • 7 Lemon peel 27 "Pipe
50 Plglet'o
37 Before, to • 8 Retlres'o
downl"
mom
poet
kitty
32 Corp.lnlto, 52 Earth (prof.)
38 - - lo8s
9 Model Carol 34 With
53 Weird
lor worda 10 Dell breed
onthuolaom 54 Bom

Interested

TRANE'

44 Pig'a dlfll

Approxl-

concern

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

IACIIHOI• OOZING •IND LOADIR •
TRUCKING • TR1NCHING

740-992-7599

31a

Due to tha .lack of
funding c1uaed by
the f1llure of tha levy,
pl1118d on November
2000 blllot, there w111
no longer be gubllge
plOkup II tht
t:ownthlp G1rage on
tha and 1rid 4th
Saturd1y of each
month.

Ill l

Openin&amp;lead: • A

1'1'\

188:3537.

Wilkesville Townahlp
Raaldanll

k. 7

v---"""'v"""i;c;:~--, maximum, he

7

NOnCE

•

4

Vulnl.'rabh!o: Hoth
~til

(10'K1D' 610'K20')

7

Public Notice

~ NlVICt iS,\IEy:r llME

.

.
TOWNSHIP I) 11, 28, 2001
P,
BOX · 48, 10)3,2001
CHESTER, OH 46720.. 31c
0048
CLEARLY MARK
"TRUCK BID" ON
ENVELOPE
FOR
MORE
INFORMATION,
PLEASE CONTACT
ALAN HOLTER AT
740 112 1010,' Blair
Windon 0 112 1111
or Elmer Newell 0
7

.,.

t.

QJ U~

Otaki" South

2 •
l t

!

1185 FORD 700
DUMP TRUCK
YELLOW • MINIMUM
BID OF $2,500.00
8.2 LITER MOTOR
SSPEED
TRANSMISSION
SNOWPLOW
EXTRA nPIES
1185 FORD 700
DUMP TRUCK· BLUE
• MINIMUM BID OF
$1,000.00
8.2 LITER MOTOR
ISPI!ED
TRANSMISSION
SNOWPLOW
I!XTRAnRES
NO HYDRAULIC
SYSTEM
THE CHESTER
TOWNSHIP SOARD
OF
TRUBTEES
RESERVE&amp;
THE
RIGHT
TO REFUSE ANY OR
AU BIDS. TRUCKS
WILL IE SOLO AS 18.
BIDS
WILL BE OPENED ON
OCTOBER I, .2001

¥

• J
l&gt;out)l
.AQ IIJI5 t

992-5479

FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGUlARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

RESIDENTIAL ·INDUSTRIAL
COMMERCIAL

t ' ./n

· Jeff Warner Ins.

• Nearly 2000 years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.
For more infornuJiion, come to our chllrch sitt.
Sunday 9:30· Sunday School;
I0:30 • Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 124, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

FREE ESTIMATES

"""

. . . 'f 5 4 3

0

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Public Notice
Townahlp

•

I Thorn

n11ttty
13 Equitably
t4 Beehllor'a,
e.g.
15 Notural
16 Flood
control
17 Inc. couoln
18 Nudge
2t Australian
crlttor
23 Car-buyar'o

. ..

A I( Ill 1

• J

¥
""

'

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

Oltlfl NnrJiqMfHr' AuuclalkJrr

PUBLIC NOnCE

Cellular

Wttit

t llakls •
111ectlon

39 Poet'o
Inspiration
40 Stop 1/gnal
4t Big breltha

11

tAQ Ltt$
... A K 1,1

J

License 153009580

Your Rlaht to Know,
Delivered Rlahtto Your Door.

Public Notice

•• 7 J

,.'

software.

Your Replacement Parte Source

NOTIC

Ad.v ertlse
In this space
for $25 per
month

. ln·home service
available 24 hours,
used systems 388
and up, used
hardware and

Public Nollees In Newspapers.

Public Notice

740-887-G383

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions &amp; decks
Free aatlmatea
to yrs. experience
In tha business
Reference•
available. OWner:
Terry Lamm
740.992.0739

740·992·1671

mo pd

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrival:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 200'1.
10:00 a.m. 4:00p.m.
Release:
April 27, 2002
A fee of $20.00 will be charged for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late
removal, or anytime acceu Is wanted to
fairgrounds other than stated dates.
BuDding "Space Is nnt come nnt serve.
Inside Storage: $4.00/lt
Open Space: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf

LAMM'S
. CONSTRUOION

FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy

740.992·5344

217E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Middleport 01110 45760
Loc:al843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Hqme

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

and

44087 Wlpple Road

Phone 992:7445
Cell hont 591:9254

Coolville, OH 45723

'

BoK 1B9

PIRft

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

...

~· · ·

Rocky R Hupp Agent

• New Homes

Tire Barn

Owner
Charles R. 0111

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Will

7

~.~

(740) 696-0757

remodelln11o plumbing,
ele&lt;tri&lt;a~ home main·

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
.. - -

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

by appointment

Specialize In new
constra1ctlon,

949·1405
591-5011

Self-Storage

...._

Roofing • Home
Malntenanc•
Gutters- Down
Frtt EsUmatH

Contracting
Ezcavatlni Dozer ana ·
Backhoe
Septic Systems
Utilltie1
New Homes

Male Shut rn
Home visit

Wrltesel

Spout

11-~~
High &amp; Dry

JONES'

3-0

Ohio 45771

Howardl.

ACROSS

Crouword

,,

operate: in areas t h.1t have

proven to b~ fru itful. This is
not a day to ex: pcr:iment ur
tak~o·

a flyer.

GEMINI (May 2 t -June :W)
-- Any sdf-doubts you nUght
have had about deali ng: with a
diiT!cult Situation should Vlnish today uncc you get your
teeth into it. You ' re nmtt:
than up to th!.! challenge .
C AN CE R Uun..: 2 1-july
22) -- Some()IIC you've aidt:J
in tht! past will step forwJrd
tl)day .1nd give yOu .a s h11uld~r
lean on. This p!!rson h :1.~
been waiting fo( .1 dunce _ro

to

n.:~ipm, :m:.

LEO Uuly 23-Aug. 22) ••
Your mmt ~ubstantial bcnetiu
are likely to be deriv~.:d from
pi\rtnenhips today. Even 1f
you prefer to opcrnte inde .. .
p~o•ndcntly, don't di~coum the::
:u.tvant:~ges of ta:amwurk.

VIRGO

(Au~ .

23-Scpt. 22) •

-· To others an obj~t:tive
you'r~

strivinH" for may appear

beyoml rtach. For you , however, it's your strong initiatiw
thilt ml!oka:s it feasible .

__

�•

'
Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~ Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEYOOP
NEA

PHu.LIP

ALDER

. P/B

Clllln
CllliCUE

..........

COIIIUCTOIIS, UK.
RR~ne,

Haulin&amp; • Urr1est•~nc I
• Gra•el Slad •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
•Mukh
Bulldozer Services

(740) 992-3470

740-885-3848
CONCIEII/IlOCI(/IlKK

Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217

• F-n, Wolll, Slepo •
flat Work,

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Reploco...ato. • wetks
..d.Dri•n • Slendl ·
Crtlt Fret Elllllllel
S.nlna Oldo and W. V.
. WVI0317U

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump 6rinding
• Bucket Truck

CONSTRUC'T10N
Frn eltlmat••,
In au red

. DIPOYSII

Gener.i

All Makes Tra~tor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers

740-992-5232

992-7943

... frill
&amp;.. S1J.II• Frt

.........................
........ ...........
.'*

Haircuts
Available

•

tenance, and repair
pon:hes, &amp; decks.

Mon •

Solll·t

21211

JERRY 'S
US ED
COMPU TE RS
441 Beech St.
Mlddlapon, OH

7

992-9158
·Free . .llmat. .
on repalree,

Good Deals!

DREHEL'S
(740) 7 42-2925

Buy,
Se!l or Trade
. •·'

WIU
ACCEPT SEALED
BIDS FOR THE
FOLLOWING DUMP
TRUCKS:

)

SM.IlL 01 IIRGI 1011111

7

7

7

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding• New Garaaes
• Replacement
Windows • Room
Additions • Rooftna

•

COMMIICW. and llSIDOOIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

(1120, 28, 2001
(1013, 2001

Wnt
hss

1 I'(T

F... ~t .
Pul

PIWI

t •

AU

Nc..-1.11

1-l0U15·1824
R"'idential Commm:ial New CnMtrudion
Sales Senice Installation

Spedalllilll In Shoot Metal Du&lt;IWtlrk
"Tranc" Sal'" &amp; Seriice For

Gallia, M.....,, a'nd Meig• Counli'" ,
Licenstd and ln.•u~
WV 005176

WITHOUT

A.
HELMET!!

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 99.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

POttTIONS OF Ttlt FOLl-OwiNG

PttOG#fAM MAY ~
OfftNl&gt; SOMt -

. INTtLI.~GTVALS,
SVT Ttlt lttsT

Of YOV FOLICS
Alft IN FOil
A,tAL
Tilt AT!

BORN LOSF:If .

OUALITY
WINDOW
·SYSTEMS

f\IOW T~t-..i~ W~l I (N.J.. ~
FI'\'::&gt;T E.LE.\/1'\TOR.I

I

~

. . ..,

~~~~~~-Jl'i'F.::...::._=~==-~-L_-_..1_..1_- _- ~-_.1._- _- ~..L_L --11--L--'-'

~Snodgrass' Upholslery
"HtlpU.,

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

AT. 7 PIZZA &amp; RACINE
PIZZA EXPRESS

:

i
0

~

• t......JJ.._..l..._J...L.._..JL_...___._,
_ _ _ a-.~ninimum,

Buy any Large
Pizza
Get Second

Reclnt,Ohlo

~t·~~·a

lt.IU.I:W
•twua._.ae
f/1,...,...

ll!iiiiJ- A+.

at least ace-kingqueen-sixth.)
'\
West cashes tw~
'top hearts, then exits

"QuAlity Work"
....... Cars, Tractora,
Lawn Furniture,
Boat Trallare,
Utility Trailers,
Car Haularo,
Anything Metal

PEANUTS

.-------~-------::: ~:;::'] · with a dub.
~--

M'i 6~AM~A A~P 6RAMMA
1-!A\/E BEE~ MARRIED FOR
~IFT'i '&lt;EARS ...

Declarer must play
the trump suit for at
most one loser. Here,

•New Hom••
• Siding
• Roollng
• Remodeling
• Garages
• Additions
•DitCks

• Hama Repairs

Free Es t1m at es

740-992-1101
or 992-2753
TRI-COUDTY
TRHOSPORT
UrnesiMel
Seniors Dlscounll
multiple l.ood
Olscounta

'·,

Air

: Refrigeration
. $49 Service gaa, fuel ,oil, and .
heat pumps for winter
Fee • Flat

w"d hi•

~""

ComhtiiJns th;lt atfccc your

in chi! ye:1r ahead
look likt: they will prndu..:c a
number of whulcsonll' fri endships. Good buddies you dt•vdop now wiU last fOr, the re~t
of vcmr life.

111811ellver If luvlce, lac

LIIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -

35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Phone: 74().985-3831 • Fax 740-985-3851

3 c4 4) (CC)

TREE SERVICE .
Tap • Trim •lemOVIII

- An illlportant relationship
yuu'rc presently involvnl in
on be sm: n~rhcncd roJay
thrnugh honest communicJ., tion. Lay all your cards un the
t:~.blc , Know where to look
for rom:tne.: and you'll find it.
The Astro-GrJ.ph Mu ch-

m:lkc:r instantly rc::ve:1l~ which
signs :~.rc romantically perfect.

Bucket Service

for you. Mail S2.75 to Match·
n~wspap~r.

441192-011&gt;7.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No~,
22) •• This is an ••p.ci31ly ·
good day for finaliz ing mottm

Room Addlllona 6

th:a arc of significanc~: to you,
part icululy flnanci;~J onts .

RemOdeling

• New GlriQH

Take the bull by the horn•

• Eloclrlcel • Plumbing

'

Outtoro

.·

and clean up the untidy

Advertise

pi..:Ct..'S.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23l&gt;cc . 21) •• Others will see

In this space

v.

the meriu of your decisions ·
today if you believe in thCm

for
1

younclf. Show thi• by 11king

24 per month
'

'

C T F X·
y

KANRS.'W K K W,X

(VTKMIXAES)
NTTCIYX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Failure has gone to his head." Wlls'on Mizner ·
·

-·

11

~\.!;:) 1-'QU ~). ~ 1,.:.1([";:,
- - - - - - ldhod ~Y CLAY a. 'OLLAN

I

WR A L D

I

.1 1
.
.
.

I

w,:::

~~~~~~f~5~

'12 1

13
.

I
.

;::1
1s 1~.
. .

GRUp E

1 1
.

.

I~
.

I

I.

"

j ur.l~:e -

mcnt call is th~ right o ne .
CAP RI CORN (De c. 22·
Jan . llJ) -- The rc:ason your
material aspiratiom look . so
g:nml today i~ bt.•taust! of your
willingness to do wlutcvcr it
takes ru.u~cr rht• job June .
H onest dYo n wi ll be rcward1!li .
AQUAI~IUS Uan . 20-Fcb.
1'J) -- Once you csrabl1sh the
example you want others to
follow, you , houldn't have
a'hy troub!CJP in rallying s.upportt:n to your c:uue. Show .
them you're a compct~ nt
. leader who knows how to orbramze.
. PISCES (Feb. 20-M~rch 20)
-- This may be one of thmc
days where yc.m'r..: likely to

perform bt&gt;ttcr if you c:1n b~
fn:c: from tic~ to othen. Don't
yield to cxtc:rior influences
thrcatcnins; your spact.
ARIES (Mmh 21-Aprill9)
.. .. Go En loyal l'ricndJ or auociatel you Ci1M trust if you
ntcd to diut.•ct an idea that fl.'quires fin~:-tun ing. lJrainstonning will work.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Succ:e~s in your finan-

cial aff.tin i1 liklly today if you

a firm lt:t.nce in situation!!

where you think your

.,

FASRTMS

VYDW

·-

~o.cial !it~·

maker, .;/o this

~r.

ELWKMXHAXN

KAH W

I've figured out why airports
make you walk so far to get to your

q•=•·~~~{hd~

P.O. llox In?, Wicklilfc , OH

..

AE

II II

;·

c+

I A XC

SWWXYNWG'E

y

y

AXST

'NWSSAXN

I: I I

Phone {740)593-667
Ohio
. ·

Complete Llna ol SuiiiVIn'io Grooming Suppllto
Sulfur Collld UrN, bulk only, lt28.tJO per ton
tO% ott III.Prltlert Hor11 and Livestock Equip.
t0.10..t0 All PurpMe Fert1Hlll'l4.50150t
1,000 8•1• Twlna l11.5018ole
•11,000 Baler Twlna 121.501811•

Today's clue: V equals C

whenever it is possiI
G) Co,;,ploto
1ho chuckle quolod
.
.
.
•
by filling In the missmg words
b!e to achieye the t.......l.-L-..J--..1-...__. you develop lrom Slop No. 8 below.
aim. South should
A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
3
start by playing a
'f;lll IN THESE SQUARES
spade to his ace.
A UNSCRAMBLE' LETTERS TO
When the jack drops,
V GE T ANSWER
he continues with the
SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS
spade queen . However, if only low
Harbor· Elude • Knife - Unless • USED to BE
spades appear under ·
Two old timers sat on a bench watching the people
go by. One replied to the other, "The future isn't what it
the ace, declarer goes
USED to BE."
into the dummy with
a club and leads to~~
·

..........

.Shade River AG Se,.vlce
"Ahead In Service"

by Lula Campos

~he~en~ a ts~:~ty'J~~k~~..-..,5,.....,A,.......T,...,.H,........T"""G-"'-,I~~~r~ -~~~:a_ ~ive a head start to

Culpd. . wltb
faUIIooka

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

DOWN

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands lor anolher.

1

............t

East Stale Street

58 Part ol .1.

0

-'RTUR~

"We'll fix It or el~'

7411-867..()800

101
55 Coral
lllanda
56 Withdrew
lonnall~
57 Rocont

an ace or ldng, or, in
Roorrongo
loHorswords
of tho
four
scromblod
be·
a pinch, a queen. low to form four simple words.
(The last, rare possibility is to rebid three 'I
N () G U R D
no-trump , which ·. i
1
l
promises a solid suit: .

THI\N

Pb. 949·1'714

1.t

992·9200 949·4900

Loi'IVO~E8LE
""

Octs·•
I,._Avalla.la

Custom Computers
Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

1/2 PRICE

Maplp'oodtake

41 Want
51 Knight's

With-a,-.,._..,;'N.;,ioiiomiiiaiiin;iilsi.i·a~l;iialiiluiireioiwioih~o;iiilsioiaiiin~loioylniiiigioi~Ke~.7~"":W::-II""IIa00m:-"Fe00a~lhe~r~
shows a
THPAUTZ. ZDL1 1~T C.~~ 4\'-.( _ fi'C ~~e

feature. He bids a side
suit in which he has

Roofing • Gutters • Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbhig • Paint • Flooring
Pressure

MARKET

46 Cuhlvttl

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Here is an example.
When the responder ·
uses ' the two~notrump inquirv, South- ·
·'
rebids in his suit with

Y01110 R~to~fl' Y011t ln~mmtnl"

81M-2202

pan

BY PIIIWP ALDER
We are looking at
weak two-bids: an
opening of two diamonds, two hearts or
two spades to show a
decent six-card suit
and 5-9 points non vulnerable and 6-10
vulnerable.
How does the re . sponder react? That
depends on both his
fit for partner's suit
and his high-card
power. With a good
fit, he should be raising, even when weak,
to increase the preemption. More on
that tomorrow.
If res ponder has
some fit and a decent
hand, he. adds his
points to partner' s to
· judge whether or not
to try for game. With
up to 14 points, he
will usually pass.
With, say, 18-22, he
will probably go·
straight to game. In
the middle, with
some 15- 17 points, he
needs
to
know
whether partner is
minimum or · maximum. He finds out by

I'IU'H

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

· n.EA

lmp~&lt;n

45

IAXWG'E

·5600 • 7 4(1-9912-4119

SINCE 1964

Puzzle

12 Floor model 35 Acloro'
13 Subslhute
plalformo
26 Garage-Ale 1 Steno'o
for
42 eart.ln
worda
need
18 Variety ol
unlv.
28 Actre..
2 Dandlr,
quartz
gredUIIteo
Boolnger
pluo
19 On terra
43 Tenderer ,
29 Tuaca3 llochlne
firma
45 Peper
looU'I lot.
Iouth
20 Prejudiced
money
30 Persian
4 Mounllln- 22 J • .,..... 47 Aploce
ruler
dweller of
dogs
48 Newac111tar
31 Type ot
Aela
23 ConcQCted
Rather
trading
5 Sly .,.
(2 wda.l
49 Jacques'
33 Moat
6 Min~
24 Polite word
v~~e~Uon
lu•urlous
chlckeno
25 Flower opol
time
36 Droplet • 7 Lemon peel 27 "Pipe
50 Plglet'o
37 Before, to • 8 Retlres'o
downl"
mom
poet
kitty
32 Corp.lnlto, 52 Earth (prof.)
38 - - lo8s
9 Model Carol 34 With
53 Weird
lor worda 10 Dell breed
onthuolaom 54 Bom

Interested

TRANE'

44 Pig'a dlfll

Approxl-

concern

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

IACIIHOI• OOZING •IND LOADIR •
TRUCKING • TR1NCHING

740-992-7599

31a

Due to tha .lack of
funding c1uaed by
the f1llure of tha levy,
pl1118d on November
2000 blllot, there w111
no longer be gubllge
plOkup II tht
t:ownthlp G1rage on
tha and 1rid 4th
Saturd1y of each
month.

Ill l

Openin&amp;lead: • A

1'1'\

188:3537.

Wilkesville Townahlp
Raaldanll

k. 7

v---"""'v"""i;c;:~--, maximum, he

7

NOnCE

•

4

Vulnl.'rabh!o: Hoth
~til

(10'K1D' 610'K20')

7

Public Notice

~ NlVICt iS,\IEy:r llME

.

.
TOWNSHIP I) 11, 28, 2001
P,
BOX · 48, 10)3,2001
CHESTER, OH 46720.. 31c
0048
CLEARLY MARK
"TRUCK BID" ON
ENVELOPE
FOR
MORE
INFORMATION,
PLEASE CONTACT
ALAN HOLTER AT
740 112 1010,' Blair
Windon 0 112 1111
or Elmer Newell 0
7

.,.

t.

QJ U~

Otaki" South

2 •
l t

!

1185 FORD 700
DUMP TRUCK
YELLOW • MINIMUM
BID OF $2,500.00
8.2 LITER MOTOR
SSPEED
TRANSMISSION
SNOWPLOW
EXTRA nPIES
1185 FORD 700
DUMP TRUCK· BLUE
• MINIMUM BID OF
$1,000.00
8.2 LITER MOTOR
ISPI!ED
TRANSMISSION
SNOWPLOW
I!XTRAnRES
NO HYDRAULIC
SYSTEM
THE CHESTER
TOWNSHIP SOARD
OF
TRUBTEES
RESERVE&amp;
THE
RIGHT
TO REFUSE ANY OR
AU BIDS. TRUCKS
WILL IE SOLO AS 18.
BIDS
WILL BE OPENED ON
OCTOBER I, .2001

¥

• J
l&gt;out)l
.AQ IIJI5 t

992-5479

FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGUlARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

RESIDENTIAL ·INDUSTRIAL
COMMERCIAL

t ' ./n

· Jeff Warner Ins.

• Nearly 2000 years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.
For more infornuJiion, come to our chllrch sitt.
Sunday 9:30· Sunday School;
I0:30 • Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 124, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

FREE ESTIMATES

"""

. . . 'f 5 4 3

0

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Public Notice
Townahlp

•

I Thorn

n11ttty
13 Equitably
t4 Beehllor'a,
e.g.
15 Notural
16 Flood
control
17 Inc. couoln
18 Nudge
2t Australian
crlttor
23 Car-buyar'o

. ..

A I( Ill 1

• J

¥
""

'

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

Oltlfl NnrJiqMfHr' AuuclalkJrr

PUBLIC NOnCE

Cellular

Wttit

t llakls •
111ectlon

39 Poet'o
Inspiration
40 Stop 1/gnal
4t Big breltha

11

tAQ Ltt$
... A K 1,1

J

License 153009580

Your Rlaht to Know,
Delivered Rlahtto Your Door.

Public Notice

•• 7 J

,.'

software.

Your Replacement Parte Source

NOTIC

Ad.v ertlse
In this space
for $25 per
month

. ln·home service
available 24 hours,
used systems 388
and up, used
hardware and

Public Nollees In Newspapers.

Public Notice

740-887-G383

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions &amp; decks
Free aatlmatea
to yrs. experience
In tha business
Reference•
available. OWner:
Terry Lamm
740.992.0739

740·992·1671

mo pd

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrival:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 200'1.
10:00 a.m. 4:00p.m.
Release:
April 27, 2002
A fee of $20.00 will be charged for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late
removal, or anytime acceu Is wanted to
fairgrounds other than stated dates.
BuDding "Space Is nnt come nnt serve.
Inside Storage: $4.00/lt
Open Space: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf

LAMM'S
. CONSTRUOION

FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy

740.992·5344

217E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Middleport 01110 45760
Loc:al843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Hqme

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

and

44087 Wlpple Road

Phone 992:7445
Cell hont 591:9254

Coolville, OH 45723

'

BoK 1B9

PIRft

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

...

~· · ·

Rocky R Hupp Agent

• New Homes

Tire Barn

Owner
Charles R. 0111

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Will

7

~.~

(740) 696-0757

remodelln11o plumbing,
ele&lt;tri&lt;a~ home main·

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
.. - -

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

by appointment

Specialize In new
constra1ctlon,

949·1405
591-5011

Self-Storage

...._

Roofing • Home
Malntenanc•
Gutters- Down
Frtt EsUmatH

Contracting
Ezcavatlni Dozer ana ·
Backhoe
Septic Systems
Utilltie1
New Homes

Male Shut rn
Home visit

Wrltesel

Spout

11-~~
High &amp; Dry

JONES'

3-0

Ohio 45771

Howardl.

ACROSS

Crouword

,,

operate: in areas t h.1t have

proven to b~ fru itful. This is
not a day to ex: pcr:iment ur
tak~o·

a flyer.

GEMINI (May 2 t -June :W)
-- Any sdf-doubts you nUght
have had about deali ng: with a
diiT!cult Situation should Vlnish today uncc you get your
teeth into it. You ' re nmtt:
than up to th!.! challenge .
C AN CE R Uun..: 2 1-july
22) -- Some()IIC you've aidt:J
in tht! past will step forwJrd
tl)day .1nd give yOu .a s h11uld~r
lean on. This p!!rson h :1.~
been waiting fo( .1 dunce _ro

to

n.:~ipm, :m:.

LEO Uuly 23-Aug. 22) ••
Your mmt ~ubstantial bcnetiu
are likely to be deriv~.:d from
pi\rtnenhips today. Even 1f
you prefer to opcrnte inde .. .
p~o•ndcntly, don't di~coum the::
:u.tvant:~ges of ta:amwurk.

VIRGO

(Au~ .

23-Scpt. 22) •

-· To others an obj~t:tive
you'r~

strivinH" for may appear

beyoml rtach. For you , however, it's your strong initiatiw
thilt ml!oka:s it feasible .

__

�•
•••••

•

Page 86

Baseball
Yankees win fourth straight
AL East title via Boston loss
The New York Yankees
were at their best before and
after their tim home game
since the terroriSl attacks.
The Yankees' 4-o· loss to
Tampa Uay hardly mattered
Tuesday night as the storied
franchise honored the victims
and rescue workers and
wrapped up its fourth straight
AL East title.
By the rime Boston's 12- 7
home lo~s to B_altiri1ore gave
New York the division championship, few cared that
Tanyon
Sturtze
spoiled
Roger Clemens' bid for his
21st victory of the season.
" We came out flat," manager Joe Torre said. " We were
sloppy in the first inning. We
were distracted, but you can't
help but get distracted with
all the heroes on the field."
In other American League
games, it was Cleveland 1 I,
Toronto 7; Seattle 13, Texas ,2;
Detroit 6, Kansas City 4;
Minnesota 4, Chicago 2; and
Oakland 9, Anaheim 3.
In the pregame ceremony
at Yankee Stadium, players
from both teams ·lined the
baselines side-by-side with
city rescue workers during
patriotic
songs.
Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani, the city's
most public Yankees fan, got a
loud ovation before joining
the players on the pitcher's
mound.
Clemens (20-2) lost for the
first time since May 20 at
Seattle, ending a 16-game
winning streak. He did strike
out nine batters to move into
third place on . the career
strikeout list.
He gave up a one-out single to Brent Abernathy in the
first inning then threw wildly
into the stands on a pickoff

attempt. Ben Grieve and
Toby Hall hit RBI singles in
the inning to give Sturtze a
2-0 lead he wouldn't relinquish .
Sturtze (9-12) allowed four
hits in seven scoreless innings,
arid Victor Zambrano finishe~ Tampa Uay's second
straight shutout.
Orioles 12, .Red Sox 7
Tony
Batista,
C hris
Richard and Luis Matos
homered for Baltimore, with
Batista hitting a grand slam in
the ninth .
Mariners 13, Rangers 2
Bret Boone was 3-for-4
wi th four RBis as Seattle
. won at Texas to set an AL
record with its 56th road vi ctory.
John
Olerud,
Carlos
Guillen and AI Martin homered for Seattle, and lchiro
Suzuki stole his 49th and
50th bases.
Indians 11, Blue Jays 7
Kenny Lofton's three-run
single capped a five - run
eighth as host Cleveland beat
Toronto, just hours after Indians manager Charlie Manuel ·
was hospitalized.
Manuel, who had his third
colon surgery in 19 months
on Aug. 28, was admitted to
Cleveland Clinic with stomach inflamrilation and infection and will undergo further
tests.
Russell Branyan had three
hits and two RBis for Cleveland, which maintained a 6
1/ 2- game lead over Minnesota in the AL Central.
David Riske ·.(2-0) worked
a scoreless eighth for the win,
and Dan Plesac (4-6) took
the loss.
Athletics 9, Angels 3
Jeremy Giambi hit a threerun , pinch-hit double in an

•

AROUND THE DIAMON -D

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FLY YOUR FLAG FULL STAFF TO SUPPORJ" YOUR COUNTRY!

Wednesdey; September lfi. 1001

N.Y. Meta 2, _

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(Chacon 6-9). 9:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Sheels 1Q-9) al Arizona {Wilt
3-1), 9:35p.m.
San Francisco (Schmidt 12·7) at los
Angeles (Mulholland t-1). 10:10 p.m.

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eight-run seventh inning as
Oakland beat Anaheim.
Tim
Hudson
(17-8)
pitched seven strong inni.ngs
for his fourth victory over the
Angels this season. Oakland,
which clinched the Al wild
card Sunday. has won five
straight and 13 in a tow at
·
home.
Shigetoshi Hasegawa (5-5)
was the loser.
1Wins 4, White Sox 2
Doug Mientkiewicz hit a
go-ahead single to cap a
three-run eighth as Minnesota won in C hicago.
Joe Mays (17 -13) improved
to 6-0 in his career against
the White Sox, allowing two
runs on four hits in seven
innings. Eddie Guardado
pitched the ninth for his
eighth save.
Tigers 6, Royals 4
Bobby Higginson hit a
three-run homer for visiting
Detroit, and Jose Lima beat
Kansas City for the third time
since joining the Tigers in a
June trade with Houston.
· Higginson hit his 15th .
homer in the first inning off
C hris George (4-6). Lima (58) held the Royals to one run
and eight hits in 7 1-3
mmngs.

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Seattle 13, Texas 2
Detroit 6, Kansas City 4
Minnesola 4, Chicago White SOx 2
Oaklard 9, Analleim 3
- . c i o y'l GotMO
Seattle (Abbot! 1~) at Texas (Bell !&gt;4),
3:05p.m.
Baltimo&lt;e (Bauer D-2) al Boston (Fossum
2-1 ). 7:05 p.m.
Clevel•nd
Toronto (Lyan !HI)
(Sttbtttltla 15-5), 7:05p.m .
Ta"""' Bay (P.Wilson Hl) 81 N. V. Yonkoes (Pettitte15-10), 7:05P-mOelroit (Murray 1-5) 81 Kansas City (Siein
5-B). 8:05 p.m.
Minll8S01a (Reed 4·3) at Chicago White
Sox (K.Wells 9-9), 8:05p.m.
Anaheim (Washburn 11-8) at Oakland
(Zfto 14-8), 10:05 p m.

Melp County's

AMERICA AT WAR

to .plan strike on bin Laden camps

x-clinched division
y-clinched .,;1&lt;1 card spot
1\JeadOy'a Gomea

Henderson moves within one run of Cobb
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Despite the horn~rs by BurThe next time Rickey H en- nitz and Sexson , the Dia.derson steps to the plate, he mondbacks stayed I I 12
could tie Ty.
games ahead of San Francisco
Henderson, w ho already in the NL West.
holds baseball's career record
llurnitz hit solo shots in the
for stolen bases and walks, secon d, fourth and six th
scored twi ce Tuesday night to innings. It was his second
move within one run of three-run homer game of the
matching Ty Cobb's mark.
season.
~
" It's more of a team record
lluniitz ca me to the plate
than an individual record, and rWo more tim es. H e stru ck out
1 co uld never score as many looking in the seventh and,
·runs as I haw· without my after Sexson homered in the
teammates," Henderson said ni1ith, drew a walk .
after leading the San Diego
Sexson drove in five runs
Padres over the· Colorado with the first three-homer
Rockies 8-7.
game of his career.
Henderson increased his
Dodgers 9, Giants 5
runs total to 2,244. He also
Shawn Green hit his 48th
nl
got two h its, an d nee ds o y homer d uring a seven-run
five for No. 3,000.
sixth inning and Los Angeles
While Barry Bonds did not · stopped San Francisco at
go deep -he stayed at 67- Dodger Stadium .
in San Francisco's 9-5 loss to
Bonds, who'd hit seven
Los Angeles, Milwaukee's home runs in his past eight
Jeromy Burnitz and Richie g•mes, went O-for-3 with rwci
Sexson made home-run histo- walks. He has 10 games leti to
ry.
break Mark McGwire's record
Brewers 9, D-backs 4
of 70 home runs.
Arizona allowed a teamThe Dodgers moved wi_thin
re(:ord six home runs and lost 3 1/2 gam es of Arizona in the
th e opener of a nine-galJle • NL West.
homestand.
Braves 5, Marlins 2

Atlanta made a great escape
in the ninth inning, then got a
go-ahead · single from BJ· Surhoff in the 1 I th to take the
NL East lead.
The Braves moved a game
ahead of Philadelphia. New
York stayed four games back.
Cardinals 3, Astros 2
Woody Williams pitched a
· paguet hree- h'mer; an d c rarg
tte singled home the tiebreaking run in the eighth inning as
St. Louis won at Enron Field.
Mets 2, Expos 0
Kevin Appi er pitched a
four-hitter, Mike Piazza hit his
35th home run and New York
won at Montreal .
Appier pitched his first
complete g•me since Jurye I 1,
2000, when he beat Los Angeles 6- 0 while with Oakland.
Pirates 13, Cubs 1
Cr•ig Wilson extended his
unusual hit streak and drove in
runs as Pittsburgh romped past
Chicago at PNC Park.
After getting hits in each of
the final three innings of
Monday night's game, Wilson
got hits in each of the first
three innings.

•
Copies of this

·SPECIAL
TUESDAY EDITION
Available while they last
at our offices:

mbe 1!lailp mrihune - Gallipolis
UI:be l\egister - Point Pleasant
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Delta
Air Lines announced thousands of
layofE Wednesday in jarring prelude
to a new administration bid to restore
cqnfidence in air travel foUowing the
terrorist attacks. Pakistan reported
broad agreement with the U.S. military on a plan to strike Osama bin
Laden's camps in Afghanistan.
. With an Ameri can armed forces
..buildup in motion, a crowd of thousands stormed the abandoned U.S.
Embassy compound in Afghanistan's

Today's

HJp:IOs

Sentinel

Details, /13

L-:

•os

Lotteries

AS
OHIO
84-6 Pick l: 4-8-6; Pick 4: 4-5-6-5
87 ~ Lollo: 48-1~16-32-49
A4 ICidrer. 7 g 4 8 6 2
A3 W.VA
Bl-3.5 Dally S: 2·1-8 o.lly 4: ~9-0-3
C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - Despite a
census report that shows
Pomeroy's population has
fallen over the last decade,
officials remain optimistic
about the village's future.
Mayor John Blaettnar said
Wednesday that recently
obtained results from the
2000 U.S. Census indicates
Pomeroy's
population
clmnnecl- by 293 during the

compared to 2,259 in 1990.
Blaettnar said Pomeroy
isn't the only community
whose
population
has
dropped. Middleport's population fell by 500 and Meigs
County as a whole experienced a decrease in population.
"I assure you, the drop in
population will not have a
catastrophic effect on the villages or the county," Blaettnar said.
"There is no cause for
alarm at the present time.

Columbia Gas
proposes 20 percent
cut in rates this winter
COLUMBUS (AP) Columbia Gas of Ohio is
proposing a 20 percent Cut in
its natural gas rates this winter.
The company applied to
the Public Utility Commission of Ohio on Wednesday
to reduc e the rates for
November through January.
It estimated the average
monthly savings for its 1.3
million customers in 64
Ohio counties 'Would be

supplies are plentiful this year
beca use of increased drilling,
a mild summer that reduced
gas consumption by electricity providers and decreased
demand in a struggling
economy.
"The combination of
greater supply and lower
demand has shown the
workings of the marketplace,
bringing prices down," said
Michael Anderson, director
of supply planning for
Columbia Gas.
$40.
"I think market prices for
The PUCO is expected to
· routinely.
approve
the natural gas have surprised
everybody in this industry
request.
Company

officials

said

PleiH •• Judp, Al

Govemor wams of deepeni~g shortfalls
' . COLUMBUS (AP) - Some state parks
could restrict access or increase service fees
because of another round of looming budget cuts.
The Department of Mental Health will
debate whether to close state psychiatric
hospitals, while the prisons department
may lay off additional workers and dos6
prison housing units.
Gov. Bob Taft on Wednesday warn ed
that the. state will have to make further

cuts because of th e worsening economy..
The state cut more than $1 RO million last
year beca use' of th~ economy.
Tom Johnson, the state budget director,
is predictin g a $500 million revenue shortfall this budget year and next if the ~con­
a my doesn't improve, Taft said.
R evenue :-vas· down S100 million below
es tim ates in July and August.
"We are prepared to take tough management decisions to . balance. the budget

this year," Taft said. "There is of course a
limit to how much more we can cut
before ;ye jeopardize critical state functions ."
The financial effect of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks have made a difficult budgei
situation even worse, th e governor said.
Micha~l Hogan, director of the Department of M ental Health, said his department is reviewing what institutions could
be close.\! with the least effect on patients.

Galli a ·Fall Business Expo
look for the Holzer Medical Center.Community Health
and Wellness Department at the Expo

.

l,

Please see Strike, Al

TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

:: POMEROY -The rub~cir ducky derby will be a
~atured activity Saturday at
~iern wheel Riverfest m
~owntown Pomeroy.
·:Several hundred ducks will
bl! dumped into the Ohio
R)ver upriver from the levee,
at)d the winn ers will be
hQiders of certificates ~ith
nqmbers co rresponding to
those of the first 10 ducks
•
floating across the finish line
near- the -levee.~..._., - . ~ Top prizes are
bonds, $200 to the fir~~:~~-::
winner from the Ohio Vallev
Bank; $100 for second place
from Peoples Bank; and $75
for third place from Fariners
Bank.
Other prizes will include
gift certificates from the
Court Street Grill and
Crows Restaurant, and five
$1 0 cash prizes from George
Wright.
"Adoption" certificates for
each of the numbered ducks
are on sale at Clarks Jewelry
Store, Farmers Bank, the
Court Street Grill, Sonny's,
· Ohio Valley Bank, Always
and Forever, Andersons,
Hartwell House, Weaving
Stitches, Swisher and Lohse,
and McDonalds.
They also can be pur~
chased from George Wright
and john Musser, or at a
b&lt;?oth on the parking lot all
day Friday and on Saturday
until 2:30 p.m. The derby.
will begins about 4 p.m. or
WANNA BUY A DUCK?- Peggy Barton's office at the Farmers Bank is the temporary home
just after the Sternwreel race
for a thousand or so ducks which she hopes will be "adopted" before the ducky derby Saturday at Sternwheel Rlverfest. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
Pleese see Ducky. AJ

A3

be well into the future.
" 1 think it can't be stressed enough
that everybody who's waiting for military action ... needs .io rethink this
thing," Deputy Defense Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz told reporters in
Brussels, Belgium, where he appealed
to th e NATO alli es for inteUigence~ ·
gathering assistance.
"We don't believe in just demonstrating that our military is capable of
bo111bing. The whole world kr1ows

BY

CaD Rachel at the - ~ibune (140J' 446-2342.
.
Call Ellza~th at the Register (304) 675-1333
CaU Judy at the·Sentinel (740) 992-2155
'

By design or not, there was strikingly little talk of military action fi-om
the administration during the·day. and
an evident ea.,ing in the near-warlike
atmosphere that took hpld 15 days
earlier when hijackers flew planes
into the World Trade Center twin
towers and the Pentagon.
Bush bantered with reporters at
one point, and the second- in-command at the Pentagon w~ nt so far as
to say that military strikes against the
ai-Qaida network in Afghanistan may

;- BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF .

P. wjtb ~·~ news - get ti~~~ · .,u ·~~

•

of fraudulently obtaining licenses to
transport hazardous materials. The
arrests in Mis., ouri , Michigan and
Washington state foUowed FBI warnings that terroriSts may strike next
usmg chemical or biologi cal
weapons.
Also, a f~deral magistrate ordered a
Virginia man, Mohamed Abdi, held
without bail. Prosecutors said Abdi's
name and phone number were fo und
in a car registered to one of the 19
suspected hij ac kers.

are you the one? Pomeroy mayor
upbeat about·
population drop

Lucky derby
.winner will take
home $200
,·

calendar
Classjfieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
·Weather

'

capital, burning President Bush in
effigy and chanting words of support
for bin Laden.
"I consider bin Laden an evil man,"
Bush said at the White House, referring to the person the administration
has named the leading suspect behind
the Sept. 1 I attacks in New York and
Washington .A man "so dominated by
evil," he added.
The largest investigation in FBI history led to the arrest of nine people
in three states Wednesday on charges

Rubber ducky

1 Sections - 11 Pllps

The Daily Sentinel - Pomeroy

~

Hometown Newspaper

.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

-

a1

Baltimo&lt;o 12. Booton 7

~

N.Y. Me1s (Ausdl 7-tO) at (Ohl&lt;a 1_.), 7:05p.m.
l.llanla (Marquis 3-6) 81 Florida (Bumen
9-11), 7:05p.m.
Chicago Ct.t&gt;o (Cruz 2-1) 81 Pittsburgh
(Arroyo 4-6), 7:05p.m.

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_...._..

Saturday, September 29 • I 0 am • 5 pm
Sunday, September 30 • I pm • 5 pm

Gallla County Fairgrounds
FREE Blood Pressure screenings, Body Fat Analysis screenings and
health information will be provided .' For more information, call

.

446-5679
I

_.

M ED I CAL"' CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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

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