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

••

at

HoiiHitown News,.per .

Melp County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50 cents· October 8, 2001 ·Vol . 51 , No 37

www.mydailysentinel .com

OPERATION

"I gave them
· fair warning~
- President Bush
to White House

spokesman Ari
Fleischer.

·. "It is more

than two
weeks since
an ultimatum was .
delivered to
the Taliban
to yield up

;

the terronsts
or face the

. .

ANG AMILY
L-R:. Beau, John, Bra~ &amp; Brian- '(Not Pict1:1red) Brent
~

..._

., . ..

• ..;..«

"

)-

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Be Happy... Buy~ Turnpike.•. Buy American,! ·

- British Prime

· Minister Tony ·
. Blair.

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, *

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PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Ocbllr•l.2001

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
United State&lt; and Britain answered
the terror attacks on U.S. soil with an
a&lt;o;ault that President Bush vows will
be idendess. British officials, offering
the first damage assessment, said Monday that 30 targetS had been hit and
furth er operations were imminent.
The strikes will last days or longer
before a significant letup. a Pentagon
official said. The first wave Sunday was
soon followed by airdrops of food and
medicine to Nghanistan 's beleaguered
people.

The chief of Britain's defense staff,
Adm. Michael Boyce, said tht! initial
offensive knocked out Taliban anti-aircraft defeoses and .Afgh;lnistan's tiny air
force. British Defense Secretary Geoff
Hoon said 30 targets had been hit and
that damage was inflicted.
Firepower struck military command
centers of the Taliban regime in Kandahar, Pentagon officials said, and
Mghan sources said smoke billowed
&amp;om the high-walled compound of
Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed
Omar, who was believed to have fled.

Explosions also rockt!d Kabul, the
capital, and were heard coming &amp;om
or near some of the aaining camps of
Osama bin Laden, the West's most
hunted man, as scores of bombers and
cruist!
missiles
arced
across
Afghanistan's night sky. .
"The battle is now joined oh many
fronts;' Bush said. "We will not waver,
we will not tift!, we will not falter, and
we will not fail."
The Taliban's ambassador to neighboring Palcistan said 20 civilians in the
Kabul area were killed by missiles. Tal-

iban officials also said three people
were killt!d and three or four were
injured in Kandahar. A Pentagon
5J&gt;Okesman said a damage assessment
was taking pia« and that it was too
early to szy if tht!ft! Wt!fC civilian casualties.A check ofKab(l!'s fuur hospitals
turned up no rt!ports of casualties.
Although officials stressed for weeks
tbat conventional warfare will be only
one element of the anti-terror campaign, and probably not the main element, the opening act came with the
f.uniliar th':"'der of falling munitions.

Local officials remain ·cautious
FROM-STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY Because
Sunday 's
attacks
on
Afghanistan will likely raise
concerns of terrorist activity
here, some local authorities
are taking extra precautions
to heighten security, but the
mood is primarily "wait and
see.
Sheriff Ralph Trussell said
there have been no local incidents, but his department will
remain alert.
"As of Sunday evening, no
reports have come in," said
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph
E. Trussell. "We are keeping
abreast of the situation and
will be watching all roadways
within the county for any
strange :vehicles."
"Security ~t all local power
plants and locks and dams has·
been increased and traffic on
the Ohio River . is being
monitored for any unusual
activity."
Other Meigs County officials are not especially conarned about the attacks, but
said they will remain "oo,
alert."
Commissioner Mick ~ Davenport said the board has
been working closely with
the Meigs County Emer-

..

gency Man·
agement
Agency a(ld
the
Local
Emergency
Planning
Commission, which
met
last
~'---' week,
to
·review the
county's civil defense preparedness.
"The county has been
working on a new risk assessment plan, and we're going to
take a close look at that when
it's completed," ·Davenport
said. "We'll look at some of
the situations we might be
faced with, and decide what
needs to be done at that
time."
Robert Byer, EMA director, said his agency and those
who work with him have not
taken any special precautions
in light of the military
attacks.
"We're gping to monitor
the situation, of course, and
stay alert to what's happening,
but this was expected," Byer
said. "We'll just have to keep
an eye on things."
PatriotiS!" seems more
prevalent than fear. One local

veteran said
"I don't
he expects a
doubt that
positive
things are
outcome
going
to
from
the
happen
coun!fY's
here now, ·
new war.
and proba"This
bly the least
nation has
expected
pulled
place
IS
together
where it IS
before, and we'll do it again. going to happen."
We need to remember that
Struble, past commander of
out of bad things, even war, Drew Webster American
some good will come," said Legion Post 39, said he has
Korean War veteran joe Stru- great confidence in the
ble.
younger generation when it
s time for the armelT" come"t to fighting the war
for s to 'do something but I against terrorism.
re y didn't expect it this
"Some people say they
soon."
can't take 'it, but r think they
. Struble said he has great can. Our parents and their
confidence in America's abili- friends probably said the same
ty but he also recognizes about us when we went off to
we're faced with a "new kind war.
of war, new·to everybody, not
"When ' America
was
like a . situation where you attacked it turned :my insides
identify a nation or an enemy upside down, I experienced
who wears ~. uniform.
something like nothing else
"I think the attack has been in my lifetime. It think it's
well planned, and I also think caused many of us to reexamthis is probably the first of a ine ourselves, to change our
number of attacks which will priorities.
occur. I look for other places
"But what we have to
besides Afghanistan to be remember is we've overcome
attacked - other countries bad times before at;~~ we'D do
harboring terrorisu groupS'. · . it agatn.' 1
....
,__

Wise: Security in W.Va. to be substantially tighter
FROM STAFF, WIRE A!PORTI
Th~ Unlt~d S~te1' flnt atep
111 l'l!tali~tlon for the Sept. 11
terrorist macks was welcomed
by Gov.l3ob Wise's call Sunday
for a new state plan that will
take se1=urity measu~es to an
unprecedented level in West
Virginia.
As U.S. and British armed
forces
began
bombing
· Afghanistan, Wise convened
his top-level Cabinet members, law enforcement experts
and emergency officials to put
the finishing touches on a
comprehensive security plan
that will put the state on a
higher level of alert.
"Today is the beginning of a
new era for the country and
for West Virginia;• Wise said at
a Stmday evening press conference at the state Capitol.
Th e
measures
include
putting the state's Office of
Emergency Services on 24hour alert until further notice
and shutting down the state
Capitol to only state employe
ees who have a reason to be

mind on that," an unidentified
Well Virginia Division of
Highwayt worker said in a
phone interview Sunday
night.
"We can't really make any
statements on that. But. I think
you can figure it out."
The trucks were placed at
·che bridges at '•2 p.m., the
worker said. The · attacks on
Afghanistan began at 12:30
· p.m.
A , Mason County sheriff's
deputy said the bridge patrol
there Monday, a state holiday. was a preventive measure in
They also include greater response
to
the
allied
police and National Guard airstrikes, and the deputy
presence at public buildings expects the trucks co be in
and other potential targets of place fur the next 72 hours. ·
The moves are part of a
terrorism, Wise said.
Trucks with flashing yellow . security plan developed by
lights were positioned at each state officials in the weeks
end of the Bartow . Jones since the Sept. 11 attacks and
Bridge leading into Point tim.e d for unveiling as PresiPleasant and at the end of the dent Bush began the first part
Silver Bridge spanning the of what is expeciea to be a
Ohio River shordy ·after the long-term campaign.
attacks.
Although many measures
''I'm going to just let you wiU be noticeable, Wise said
kind of make UJ? your own some precautions won't be

.

Emmy Awards are called off due to
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Workers showed up considering .what happened
hurr iedl y rolled up the red carpet, this morning:• said a jeans-clad Melissa
rem oved floral displays and carted off Rivers, who was to be the host of E!
ove rsized decorative statuettes outside Entertainment Television's post-show
. the Shrine Auditorium after the Ernmy coverage. "I don't think anyone wants ~
Awards telecast was callecl off Sunday.
get here and say, 'Gee, I'm happy I
The show, already delayed three weeks won."'
because of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
Her mother, Joan, dectded after Sept.
was halted hours before it was to be tele- 11 to forgo her role as E!'s fashion com. vised because of the U.S.-Ied military mentator.
' "We live in strange times," said Maria
strikes in Afghanistan.
. "We don:t feel good," said CBS Tele- Stasi, publicist for NBC's White House
Vl"O il PreSident leslie · Moonves, who drama "The West Wing," which had 18
rduse d to say whether the 53rd annual nominations. "It's not the same world we
show wmdd be held ' on som·e future were living in pn September lOth."
d It&lt;' .. TI"' ;, .1 terrible day."
Dennis Franz, a best dramatic nomi1_'"· I ' '' wh ippnl nut ceil phones to nee for "NYPD Blue," agreed with Sunmtornl tl1eir celebrity clients not to day's decision.
"He was surprised they didn't just give
show up. Limos were called off and
" Access Hollywood" quickly dismantled out the awards and let it go by the wayits stage in the scaled-down arrivals area. side" after the first postponement, said
" I don't think anyone would have Franz' publicist, Cynthia Snyder.

apparent or talked about to
fully en1ure public llfety.
"! anticipate that lOmewhere In this country there i1
going to ·be retall,tion," Wile
said. "We've been. preparing
for that since September 11."
Wise asked ,for public
patience as inconvenience
grows and information dries
up. He also pledged that many
.state employees ·would work
longer hours at "whatever
cost" to make security the top
priority.
Wise said the state supports
President Bush's decision to
fight back, even if it means a
change oflife for WestVirginians.
"Those actions mean that in
every corner of this state business will not be done as usual,"
Wise said.
Wis~ spokesman Bill Case
said Wise would not rul~ out
asking for more resources &amp;om
state lawmakers when they
convene for a special session
Oct. 21 to discuss medical ·
malpractice issues.

WASHINGTON (AP)
military
From nuclear labs to OPERATION sites and
ocean ports, Americans are
camps
tightening security to guard
belonging
against revenge attacks by .
to Osama _
terrorists in the aftermath
bin
of the U.S. military strikes
Laden.
on Afghanistan.
Within
The Coast Guard mobihours of
lized its largest security
the
first
force since World War II
strikes by
while the FBI on Sunday ENDURING American
urged local law enforce- FREEDOM and
ment agencies nationwide
British
to move to their highest warplanes, Missouri shut
level of alert.
the doors at its state Capitol
"The current operating to visitors, Utah state
instructions are based on troopers were shifted from ·
the possibility of additional their desks to the highways
terrorist activity occurring and airport officials in
somewhere in the world" Chicago, Detroit, Kansas
the FBI said.
' City and Florida further
Local police were urged 'itightened security.
to "be at the highest level ' The . Ener~. Dep~rtment
of vigilance · and be pre- !'laced tts facJbtlfs, mdudpared to respond to any act mg nuclear weapons !aboof terrorism or violence ratones and nuclear matenshould it become neces- als storage areas, on a
heightened level of securisary."
Orlandella, ty, spokeswoman jeanne
Phil
·Lopato said, ·
spokesman for Logan Airport· in Boston, said there
The State Department
were no threats at the facil- issued a warning to Ameriity wheft! tertorim boarded cans overseas of the possitwo tlightt on Sept. 11 , bility of" strong anti-Am.er"Everythins's
. going ican sentiment an.d retaliasmoothlv" he laid.
t~r.y actions aga1~1t U.S.
''
k
citizens
and
mterelt!
JuIie Wons, •po . elwoman ·throughout the world," and
for Los Angelel Ma~or urged them to monitor
James K. Hahn, laid pohce local news, limit their
were wo~kins.. extra h~urs movement! ·and stay in
but ~cetv~d no ~redtble touch with " U.S. embassies
threat aga~nst t~e c1ty.
and consulates.
FBI o!fimlsmd they had
Meanwhile, the Coast
!lo sp~ctfic threats,.but U.S. Guard increased from 51 to
mtell~gence officials and 72 the number of special
Attorney General John security zones surrounding
Ashcroft had been warnmg such facilities as nuclear
for ~ays there ~~s a high power plants and piers
hkehhood .of additional ter- where oil is loaded and
rorism activity, particularly unloaded,
Cmdr.
Jim
after the United States took McPherson said.
its firs.t military action.
Together, the changes
The bureau issued the added up to the largest
advisory
through
its Coast Guard mobilization
National Threat Warning to defend U.S. ports 'in
System after Sunday's U.S.- more than 50 years, he .said.
British air assault on Afghan

"Pumpkin"
In The Sentinel

"PUmpkin Patch"
Pictures will run:

Wednesday,
October31

air assault

•

,

SIDNEY -Walter L. Brown, 69, of Sidney died Saturday,
October 6, 2001, at his home.
Born May 21, 19;32,in Union Furnace, he was the son of the
late Andrew and Bertha Gillum Brown. He was a U.S. Navy
veteran of the Korean War.
He was a retift!d welder. ·
Survivors include his wife, Delores J. Graham Stahl Brown; a
daughter, Jennifer Dennis of Troy; two stepsons, Roger Stahl
and Robert Stahl, both of Piqua; two stepdaughters, Elizabeth
Saunders and Coral Ward, both of Piqua; one grandchild; nine
stepgrandchildren; four great-stepgrandchildren; sisters and
brothers, Betty Auings of Tucson, Ariz., Mr. and Mrs. George
Stanley of Patriot, Nell Sparks ofBaltimore, Md., Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Harmon of Coal Grove, and Clyde Brown of Patriot.
Funeral services will be at I 0 a.m. Wednesday at Adams
Funeral Home, Sidney, with the Rev. Michael Milthaler officiating. Burial will be in Fletcher Cemetery.
friends may call from 2 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.

'lfacy 5. Kitchen Jr.

Brock Loukas Livingston

"' .... "' "' Ati'~hThie-~~ To "'v~.;ch1id·; Pic~u~ ~nd "' "' • - ..
MaU or Bring With Your Payment Too

The Daily Sentinel • 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Embassy;•. said AI Habib
Muhaminad Riziq Syihab, the
chairman of a small but vocal
militant Islamic group in
Indonesia, the world's most
populow Mwlim country. "We
call on the Indonesian government to freeze diplomatic relations with America. By attacking Afghanistan, the America11s
have become terrorists.''
In Pakistan, Afghanistan's
neighbor, several influential
Muslim Clerics denounced the
military attacks, calling them an
assault on Islam and grounds
for a holy war.
There were scattered antiAmerican ·protests in major
cities of Pakistan, but no vialence was rt!ported there or
anywhere else Monday.
· In the Philippines, about 30
left-wing activists from the
New Nationalist Alliance
burnt!d pictures of Pte1ident
Bush in a briet:protest in front
of the U.S. Embassy. One
activist, dressed like Uncle Sam,
burn~ a mock rocket symbolizing U.S. aggression. ·

airdrops of food, medicine

WASHINGTON (AP) "humanitarian daily rations,"
The U.S. military strikt!s Sun- plastic pouches of food
day in Afghanistan included enriched with vitamins and
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Barron D. Nelson, 84, of
airdrops offood, medicine and minerals to boost refugees
, Point Pleasant, died Sunday, October 7, 2001, at St. Mary's
other humanitarian supplies, weakened by hunger and traY'Hospital .
defense officials said.
el. The drops will be focused
Born Sept. 1 1.. 1917 in Winifrede, he wa.&lt; a member of Point
Defense Secretary Donald on areas inside Afghanistan,
Pleasant Nazarene Church, was a retired coal yard foreman at
H.
Rumsfeld two C-17 cargn not refugee camps in Pakistan
Kyger Creek Plant and a U.S. Army veteran serving World War
planes dropped 37,500 food and other border countries,
II.
He was preceded in death by a son, Gary Nelson; and four packets to starving Afghans on Pentagon officials have said.
The food, wrappt!d so that
the first day of airstr.ikes to
sisters.
Survivors include his wife, Evelyn Qones) Nelson of Point underscore the message that one packefhas enough for one
Pleasant; two daughiers and sons-in-law, Betky and Tom Epling the strikes are meant to harm person for one day, does not
not
ordinary contain any animal products so
of Point Pleasant and Jean and Bill Dowell of Nashville, Tenn.; terrorists,
as not to violate any religious
a son and daughter-in-law, Lynn and JoY.ce Nelso.n of Lake Afghans.
"To
say
that
these
attacks
are
or
cultural practices. Muslims,
Park, Fla.; eight grandchildren; and several great-grandchildren.
Service will be 1 .p.m. Wednesday at Point Pleasant Nazarene in any way against Afghanistan for example, do not eat pork.
The yellow plastic packets
Church with the Rev. Charles Marker officiating. Burial will or the Afghan people is flat
wrong,"
Rumsfeld
said.
aft!
about the size and weight
follow in Sun crest Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Military graveside
The military also dropped of a hardcover book. They
rites will be presented by American Legion Post 23, Point
leaflets
and ·made radio broad- ' have.a picture of a smiling perPleasant.
friends may call at Wilcoxen funeral Home. Point Pleasant, casts into Afghanistan to son eating &amp;om .a pouch, a
on Tuesday from 7 until 9 p.m. or at the church one hour prior explain the U.S. action, he said. stencil of an American flag, a
Rumsfeld did not elaborate on notation that they were made
to Wednesday's service.
what kinds of medicine or by Rightaway Foods of
supplies other than food pack- McAllen, Texas, and this greeters were being dropped into ing in English: "This food is a
gift from the United States of
the country.
The airdrops ate delivering America."

Barron D. Nelson

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u.s.

U.S. airstrikes also include

Correction Polley

Tessa Paige Will
Daughter of John
Will &amp; Cassie Neave

' .

Allies quick to back
U.S. ·action, anti-war
groups oppose it

TOKYO (AP) - U.S. allies
around the world strongly supported the American-led attack
on Afghanistan and Osama bin
Laden's terrorist network, wilh
some agft!Cing to contribute
forces. But the Muslim world
was dividt!d, with three countries voicing protest and others
taking no position.
As securi. PROCTORVILLE -Tracy S. Kitchen Jr., 85, Proctorville,
was
ty
died Saturday, Oct. 6, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
stepped up
He was preceded in death by his wife, Ruby Gem Kitchen.
around U.S.
Surviving . are two sons, Tracy (Nancy) Kitchen of Proc- ·
embassies in
torville, and Rodney (Maxine) Kitchen of New Haven, W.Va.;
many couna daughter, Celia Ward of Alexandria,Va.; six grandchildren; five
tries
and
great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
Americans
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. today at Hall Funeral
weft! urged
Home, Proctorville.
to stay off
the streets,
ENDURING small antiFREEDOM U.S. protests
were held
COOLVILLE - Brock Loukas Livingston, 6-month-old
across
the
Islamic
world.
son ofJohn and April Lynn Brower Livingston Jr., died unexMany denounced Sunday's
pectedly Friday, Oct. 5, 2001, at Camden Clark Memorial Hosmissile
attacks and air nidi on .
pit:tl in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Afghanistan and its Tiliban
He was born on March 22, 2001, in Athens .Besides his parents, he is survived by a sister, Harmony Jor- leadership as an act of war
dan Livingston of the home; two brothers, John Wesley (frey) against Arabs and Muslims.
"We're going to surround the
Livingston III of the home, and Jason Matthew Gheen of New
Martinsville; paternal grandparents, John and Sylvia Livingston
of Coolville; and maternal grandpart!nts, Leonard and Sherri
Brower of Zanesville.
Funeral services Will be today at 1 p.m. at White Funeral
Home in Coolville with the Rev. George Horner officiating.
. Burial will be Lyndon Cemetery, Coolville.
Friends were received at the funeral home Sunday night.

Our main concern ·in all stories is
to be accurate, If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

$6.50

•

Born August 8,1924, in Point Pleasant. she wau dau¢uer of
the late Robert Leroy and Ivy Denny Thomas. She was a member of Grace Baptist Temple, the JoUy 60! and the Ladies Auxiliary of East Liverpool Beagle Club.
In addition to hn puma, she was prect!ded in death by ht!r
husband, RileyW."Rod"Taylor; a son, Thomas M. "Tank"Taylor; four sisten, Helen Vicun, Betty Woodall, Dorothy
Woodall, and Roberta Ann Johnson; and a brother, William
Thomas.
Survivon include a son and daughter-in-law, William A. and
Renet! Taylor of East Liverpool, Ohio; two gnndchildren; a
great-grandson; three sisters, Virginia Smith of Cedar Grove,
Mrs. Aoyd (Phyllis) Meadows of Buckhannon, and Rosemary
Thatcher of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; and two brothen, Ralph
Thomas of Point Pleasant and Richard Thomas of Gallipolis.
St!rvice will be at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at Dawson Funeral
Home, 215 West Fifth St., East Liverpool, with the Rev. Gaylord Cox officiating. Burial will follow in the New Matamoras
Cemetery in New Matamoras, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funeral home today &amp;om 2 to 4 p.m.
. and 7 to 9 p.m. .

Walter L Brown

Reader Services

ONLY

~

day, October 5, 2001, at the East LiverpooJ ·City Hospital.

ROBERTSBURG,W.Va. - Dellis W. Bail~. 83. ofRobemburg died Friday, October 5, 2001, at Scenic Hills Nuning
Home, Gallipolis, Ohio, following a long illness.
He was a retired vehicle operator for Conrail with 25 years
service, attended Manilla Chapel Church, Robt!rtsburg, and
was a member ofB.M.W.E. Local 76.
He wa&lt; preceded in death by his wife, Goldie M . Bailes; and·
his parents. George W. and Enith (rucker) Bailes.
Survivors include sons, DeUis Lee Bailes of Leon, Clinton D.
Bailes of Point Pleasant, Thomas E. Bailes of Roberts burg, and
James C. Bailes of Robertsburg; brother, Donald G. Bail~ of
Grimms Landing; sisters, Irene Tucker .,f Point Pleasant and
Ernestine Hill of Eleanor; 10 grandchildren; and 11 ~t­
grandchildren.
Service was held at 1 p.m. today at Raynes Funeral Homt!,
Buffalo with Pastor Carl Bailes and Pastor Herbert Buck officiating. Burial was in Manilla Chapel Cemetery.

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Sunny and a bit warmer
FROM STAff REPORTS

Sunday's brisk temperatures
will give way to milder conditions early this week, the
National Weather Service said.
However, this evening will
still be chilly, with the mercury expected to drop below
30 degrees again. Tuesday,
sunny skies continue and temperatures are forecast to reach
near 70.
Forecut
Today: Sunny. High 59, low
29.
Tuesday: Sunny. High 68,
low 39.
Wednesday: Sunny. High 71,
low 45 .

The Dally Sentinel• Page A3

Ohio

The,Daily Sentinel

Deadline for Entry:
Wednesday,
October24

The arrivals a(ea, usually populated
with bleachers of screaming fans and
celebrities decked out in splashy gowns
and jewels, was oddly quiet before word
of the postponement filtered through
publicists, reporters and camera crews
gathered on the red carpet.
Attendees were asked to tone down
their wardrobe this year in favor of tasteful business attire. American flags
attached to cameras and a TV platform
waved in the breeze.
Jim Chabin, president of the Academy
ofTelevisiop Arts and Sciences, said safety was not a factor in calling off Sunday's
show.
"This was about whether it was
appropriate," Chabin said.
Florist-Amy Child said the 221 centerpieces of flowers and fresh fruit that
were to adorn tables at a post-show dinner would be donated to hospitals.

Mldcl~

NQra a. Tllylor
WELLSVILLE - Nora B. Taylor. n. ofWdbville died Fri-

Dellis W. laDes

In all. Afghan targets Wt!fC pounded
by 15 land-based bombers, including
B-2 Stealths &amp;om Missouri, and 50
U.S. and British cruise missiles 6ft!d
fiom surface ships and submarines in
the Arabian "'"• said Air Force Gen.
Richard M~rs. chairman of the joint
ChiefS of Staff.
They -were supported by 25 other
strike aircraft flying fiom carrier batde
groups. One B-52 in the raid had its
nose section . repainted with the legend, "NYPD, we remember," in honor
of the New York Police Department.

FBI asking law
.enforcement to
be on highest alert

Pomeroy,

Deaths

to letup for days

Attacks not ex

•

Monday, Oct. 8, 2001

Thursday: Mostly cloudy.
'
High 69,low 52.
Friday: Partly cloudy. High
74,low 52.
Saturday: Partly cloudy.
High 74,low 50.

Mick's
Barber
&amp; Style
Center
NEW SAT. HOURS

8:00-1:00

Bin Laden
praises God fo~
Sept 11 attack
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -As
U.S. missiles rained on
Afghanistan, prime target
Osama bin Laden was shown
on international television
wearing fatigues and with a
rifle at his side, telling America that it will never "dream of
security" until its armies leave
holy Arab lands.
Bin Laden. the Saudi exile
who the United States
believes orchestrated the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks, also
heaped praise on those
responsible 'for the World
Trade Center and Pentagon
strikes. However, he did not
claim- responsibility for the
attacks th~ killed thousands.
Qatar's Al-jazeera television
station first aired bin Laden's
comments Sunday in an
undated videotape, excerpts of
which continued' to be broadcast Monday. The Al-Jazeera
video was also aired by CNN.
The interview appeared to
be made· in daylight, which
would mean that it was
recorded
before
Sunday
night's attack on Afghanistan.
It was the first time bin Laden
had spoken publicly about the
Sept. 1 1 attacks, although he
had issued denials of responsibility through intermediaries.
"I swear by God ... neither
America nor the people who
live in it will dream of security before we live it in Palestine, and not before all the
intldel armies leave the land of
Muliammad, peace be upon
him," bin Laden said in Sunday:s video.
Bin Laden said "God" had
hit America "in one of its softest spots. Its greatest buildings
were destroyed, thank God for
that.''
Bin Laden's war on America
has· been fUeled i11 part by

anger over U.S. support for
Israel in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict and the presence of
U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia,
home to Islam's holiest
shrines, including the tomb of
the prophet Muhammad.
In his address, he said America is "tasting now ... something insignificant" compared
to what the Islamic world has
experienced for 80 years.
Bin Laden did not elaborate, but a.pparendy was referring to European powers
carving up Arab lands after
World War I when the
Ottoman Empire collapsed.
Britain began its rule of preIsrael Palestine under the 1922
League of Nations mandate.
During the same period,
princes from the Arabian
Peninsula were installed to
rule desert kingdoms that
evolved into the nations of
Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Iraq.
After the Sunday military
action began, an official &amp;om
Afghanistan's ruling Taliban
militia said that both bin
Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar survived the initial wave of the
attack. Theft! was no way to
verify ~he statement.

'

LOCAL BRIEFS
CCMH.

EMS nans
posted

To meet

POMEROY Units of
CHESTER Chester
the Meigs Emergency Service Township trustees will meet
answeft!d I 0 calls for assistance Tues&lt;by at 7 p.m. for their regover Friday and Saturday. Units ular meeting. Bids for trucks
responded as follows:
will be opened at 7:30p.m.
CENTRAL·DISPATCH
Friday, 10:02 a.m., Ohio
124,Maty Lynn Watson, Holzer Medical Center;
RUTLAND -A Rutland4:34 p.m., HMC Clinic, area woman was injured in a
Mary Rogue, HMC;
two-vehicle accident Saturday
9:37 p,m., Ohio 681, assisted on Ohio 124, the .Gallia-Meigs
by Pomeroy, motor vehicle Post of the State Highway
accident, Hannah Marcinko, Patrol reported.
Skyler
Todd
Marcinko,
Sonya L. Barnett, 39, 33405
Marcinko,
Camden-Clark
Crouser Road, was transportMemorial Hospital;
ed to Holzer Medical Center
Sal\lrday, 4:16 a.m., Speedfmm the scene of the 12:05
way, Brian Simms, Pleao;antValp.m. crash by the Rutland
ley Hospital;
EMS unit.
1;!:33 p.m., Condor Street,
Troopers said Barnett was
Charles Eakins, refused treatwestbound when she slowed
ment;
2:22 p.m., Rice Run, Patri- for chickens in the road. A
cia Putnam, refused treatment; northbound vehicle driven by ,
7:36 p.m., County Road 2, Daniel W. Lambert, 16, 26264
assisted by Rucland, truck roll Price Strong Road, Vinton,
over, Eric Bulnem, Brent was unable to slow in time and
struck the rear of Barnett's car.
Shupe, treated.
Both vehicles were moderPOMEROY
·
ately
damaged, and Lambert
friday, 4:54 p.m., HMC
was cited for assured cleat disClinic, Earl Jacks, HMC.
tance,
RUTLAND
Saturday, 12:08 p.m., Ohio
124, motor vehicle accident,
Sonja Barnet!. HMC.

Driver injured

TUPPERS PLAINS
Friday, 8:45 p.m., Eastern
High School, Tydis Jarvis,

lrRIIIGVAIIIYWIIIM
446-4524

1 /., ,' ',d':,.·

,..,
'

FR11015101 • THURS 10/11/01
TUES IS .. BARGAIN NIGHT ..
$3.75 ADMISSION
(CiffTAIN PUTU .. EI MAY lSI! PCLUDID)

OOLANDER (P013) 7:30 &amp; t:30
DON'T lAY A WOFID jA) 7:00 I 1:)0
JOY RIDE (R)7:15 &amp; 9:15
SUMMER CATCH PG13 7:00. i :15

AX KEEBLE'S BIG MOVE (POl
7:00 &amp; 9:15
TRAINING DAY R 7:00 &amp;1:30
ER!NOIPITV (P013) 7:10 &amp; 9:10

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Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

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M.eii='~-------:::.:MOI:.:.:.:-;d~IIJ•:...:;,Oct,;;,;;,;;IO,;;;.;;,bll';....;.;l•;.;;;.lOO..;...I

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Mondey. 0 ct obw I. 2001

Seniors' special
project helps
grieving p1ocess

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.,~Ohio
740 IIN111 • Fu:
2117

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

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

BY CHARI.N ltoEFucH

1111111111'11 lcMor
Clwtene Hc*llott
o.ner.IMenlglr

Dillie.=
Ca1

Hill
tr

OUR VIHW

.

'

. ..

Justice
Taliban, bin LAden, terrorists
must pay the price
-."

H E N T 0 F F ' S V IE W

hb'
b
l'b t '
1errors cy ,ermat nngs concerns 'a out our l. er le~

Operation Enduring Freedom began shortly after noon Sunday with a series of strikes against terrorist targets in

"T"!

A~:"i;:::n~ J~ct:;g.!~~~n~~air~e!~~st~~rorist kingpin.

· Osama bin Laden and the Taliban, the rogue government that
harbors this despicable mutderer and his disciples,
Evidence distinctly shows these individuals are the cowatds
behind the dreadful Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
.
In the. weeks since 9-11, President Bush has given the Taliban
several ultimatums and rightfully demanded the clerics meet
them immediately. The Taliban ·brashly ignored Bush; instead
choosing to thumb its nose at America by offering absutd compronuses. ·
·
.
Now, as Bush so eloquently said Sunday, they are "paying the
Price." And a heavy price it shollld be.
More than 6,000 innocents were slaughtered Sept. 11. No
amount of money or blood payment can' replace their lives, yet
prudence demands swift and definitive justice for those whll
inflicted this mighty pain on our great nation.
.
The United States has gone above and beyond in pleading its
case to the world. The international community, by and large,
supports our actions as just.
. · · .
As you read this, America's fighting men and women are m
harm's way, but we know t'h·ese C!Jurigeous soldi"
. Ff'.
·· ~re. !'•y~
· Au to exact jrutice' and defehd our country's liberty.
. . · ·· ,
We stand behind our armed forces, and ~e. trust they will fol- ·
low their orders precisely and efficiently. . · · ·
· . . .·
We strongly utge Bush and all of ourleaders to give our mil~
.
· b d oJ\e .. • · · ·
1tary
to tooIs and th e go-ah ead to get t h e JO
Leave no stone untumed in the search for bin Laden. He
must be brought to justice, and any country that hides him is
an enemy of freedom and should be tteated jusdy.
·
We encourage you to pray for America and to fly your flag ·
proudly thtoughout this otdeal. Together, we will overcome this
dark time and rise above the ashes as a united nation that stands ·
for truth, liberty and justice for all.
. God bless America!
~

J

..,.{f ·

Soon after the ruthleSs terrorism of
Sept. ll,Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
told New York University law students
and faculty, "We're likely to experience
more restrictions. on our personal freedom than has ever been the case in our
country."
But she took care to add -- quoting
former British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher - "Where law ends, tyranny
begins:•
As we see the beginnings of government restrictions on our ~eedom in the
indeterminate war against a largely invisible enemy, I thought of ·a familiar
description ohyranny- in history and
sciertce fiction. Tyranny is when the state
can - whenever it wants - know
where you are, what you're doing; and
· .;=Ill
l!.....
• collatera! 1
rmauon,
·
w hat ,yo\l'te
1 'nfu

•

Nat.
Hentoff
COLUMNIST
puters without having to go to in~ividual courts to get multiple search war-

., _
of mandating that everyone carry a
Nationali.D. card as a shield against terrorist attacks not only by the Irish
Republican Army but also by this new
conspiracy of fanatical terrorism with
roots around the world.
John Wadham, director of Liberty, a
civil liberties organization in England,
has told The . New York Times that the
advent of a National I.D. card "means
you have to we the police to stop ~t
numbers o f peop1e on t he street, tp
detain large numbers who aren't carrying a card or in some way are deemed to
arouse suspicion:• In this country, that
may mean Sikhs or people of mixed
ancestry, or scmffy anu-governmen
.
t
demonstrators in public parks.
.
Since England does not have a writtep
Constitution, ,.a government. w.•.~r,h
.n .,,···.a_,
strong majority in Parliament - as 1s
presently the case -:--- can institute a
National I.D. card, whatever courts ma}'
say. The British, after all, have been COl);ditioned to certain incursions into their
liberties as a result of the killings by IRA
"freedom fighters."
..
We do have a written Constirution,
but now when we are told by the
administration that the terrorists may
well strike again in unexpected plac~s
and ways, I expect that a majority M
}\,merii:ans would not resist being intimately and continually c.o nnected to the
government by this powerflll tribute to
information technolagy.
·
· I know that this is decidedly ,unlike
any other way we have had to fight. But
I also know, as Judge Learned Hand said,
"Liberty lies in the hearts of men and
women,· when it dies there, no constirution, no court, can·even do m
. uch to help
it."
·
(Nat. Hent1J is a nationally renowned

- The
· government will now be able to
access suspects' bank records, credit catd
purchases and whatever information
they ·search for on the Internet. Also,
thln)dn:g.
through the attachment of its Carnivore
Justice Louis Brandeis warned of that computer to Internet servers, investiga'. kind of government· omniscience in his tors will be able to search e-mails for sus. dissent in the first wiretapping case to picious contents. In view of the broad
reach th e Supreme Court - 01mstead definitions of terrorism in likely legislavs. United States (1928).
tion _ particularly "support of terrorThe majority ofhis brethren ruled that ism"- the number of suspects ·may well
the Fourth Amendment was not violated be huge.
by this new surveillance technology
And if certain kinds of. denunciations
becawe no government agent had actu- of government tactics in this war are
ally trespassed "upon any property of the regarded as "support" .of terrorism, the
· defendant:'The "insertions were made in range of suspects could include libertarthe basement of a large office building" i3,11 conservatives and pacifists who wete
elsewhere.
.
. "persons under suspicion" in previous
Brandeis, a· deep thinker, predicted, American wars.
:
"Ways may someday be developed by
Moreover, as J. ustified fear of the murw hich the govetn111ent; W1'thou t .rem ov- derous self-appointed defenders of the
inf! P.•l'ers ·from secret drawers, can one truth faith increases, we may find
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
.
• .
.
re~roduce
.t hem in court, and by which ourselves ordered to carry a National
. Today is Monday, Oct. 8, the 281st day of 2~1. Th~ are.M ·
days left in the year. This is Col1J1I!bus Day, as well IIi~~ · :it will be enabledto expose t() a jury ~he I. D. card, equipped with the ability to
-most m~,M
· "'-·te o._Acurrences ofth. e home"
· provide the government with extensive
ing Day in Canada.
·
·
.,.._..:
ru''""ts
-"-cr
the
terror
attack
the
•wu &amp;" an
•
information on you and where you go.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
Ser\ate,
.
after
a
mere
30
minutes
of
·
In .England, the initial source ~ after
On Oct. 8,1871, the Great Chi~ Fire erupted while anothdebate, attached ·an amendment to an much struggle _ of some of our liberer deadly bbze broke O)lt in Peshtigo, Wis.
appJ:Opria'tions bill making it much easi" ties guaranteed by the Bill of Rights, the authority on the First Amendment and the
On this date:
et for the goyernment to wiretap com" Labor Government is thinking seriously . Bill if Rights.)
In 1869, the 14th pmident of the United S~.,. Franklin
. '
.
did
' ConcotdNH.
Pierc:;e,
e m
,· .'. .
.·· ,
· .. ,···. ·:, ,· ..., ·, :, '·.· . · ) :.·-. ,';, .~ ' • ',
In 1892, Sergei Rachmanlnofl' lint p~lll\cly: p~tm~ ·his -· ·'-:_. ".

TODAY IN HISTORY

piano "Prelude in C-sllarp Minor".in ~O!coW: .,;:;,: . · . : ·.' \ · ·. : .
In 1918, Sgt. Alvirl C:York almost smgle-hari(ledly killed ~5.
Gennan .50ldiers and caprured 132 in the Argoi)Jie fomt m
France.
·
...
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann was indicted for murder in the
death of the infant son of Charles A. Lindbergh.
In 1945, President truman announced that the secrtt of the ·
atomic bomb would be sh:ired only with Britain and Canada. '
In 1956, Don Larsen pitched the only perfect game in a World
Series to date as the New York Yankees beat the Brooklyn
Dodgers, 2-0.
In 1970, Soviet author Alexander Sokhenitsyn was named
winner of the Nobel Prize for literat\lre.
In 1981, at the White Howe, President Reagan greeted furmer
presidents Carter, Ford and Nixon, who were preparing to travel
to Egypt fur the funeral of Anwar Sadat.
In 1982, all labor organizations. in Poland, including Solidarity,
were banned.
In 1.985, the hijackers of the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro
kille4 f,rnerican p'ISSCnger Leon Klinghotfer.
Thn years ago: The US. Senate postponed its vote on Clarence
Thomas' Supreme Court nomination to investigate allegations .
' that he'd sexually harassed a former aide, Anita Hill.
Five years ago: Pope John Paul II underwent a successful operation to remove his inflamed appendix. American economist
William Vickrey and British professor jan1es Mirrlees were named
co-winners of the Nobel economics prize. (The 82-year-old
·
Vickrey died three days later.)
One year ago: Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski won a
second five-year term. ·
Today's Birthdays: Entertainment reporter Rona Barrett is 65.
Actor Paul Hogan is 62. Rhythm-and-blues singer Fred Cash
(The Impressions) is 61. The Rev. Jesse Jackson is 60. Comedian
Chevy Chase is 58. Author R.L . Stine is 58. Country singer Susan
Raye is 57. TV personality Sarah Purcell is 53. Actress Sigourney
Weaver is 52. Rhythm-and-blues singer Robert "Kool" Bell
(Kool &amp; the Gang) is 51. Rock musician johnny Ramone is 50.
Producer-direcror Edward Zwick is 49.

"but then after thinking about
it, I realized there was a need .
POMEROY - Not every No one can be prepared for
woman who goes to the hos- that."
pita! to have a baby has the
Coates took the project
privilege of taking her new- . back to the volunteers who
born hpme.
sew at the center, and making
It is for those grieving par- the tiny gowm was added to
ents of infants stillborn or another ongoing hospital
who die shortly after birth project.
that a special. project has been . for several yean, volunteers
undertaken by the Retired have knitted and crocheted
Senior Volunteers (RSVP) of hats for newborns for both
the Meigs County Senior Holzer · and
O'Bleness
Citizens Ce'nter. They make Memorial Hospital in Athens.
tiny burial gowns for area
The group gathers on
hospicils.
Wednesdays at the center to
It may seem like ·a morbid sew, and many continue their
task to some, but the seniors work at home. For the gowns,
say it is "neither morbid .nor they took newborn patterns
something we shouldn't talk and cut them down in size.
Most are made of white or
about. It is our way of showmg
we
care." pastel
colored
flannel,
To those who have never although a few are of polished
lost a baby, coming up with cotton. Each one is individudothing in which to bury alized some have emtheir child may seem such an cheted edging on the collar
insignificant thing at the time. and sleeves, others are accentBut to emotionally devas- ed with lace or dainty
tated parents who face the sit- embroidered roses. Some have
matching bonnets and blan1 uation, the gowns fulfill not
only a very practical need but kets. Most are sack-style with
one which gives great com- a drawstring at the bottom.
fort at a very trying time.
One of the volunteers,
Several months ago the Nancy Shaw, says ·when she
need for burial gowns was works on the tiny burial
brought to the attention of gowns, she likes to reflect on
Diana Coates, RSVP director, her daughter's comment
by Holzer Medical Center.
about the project - "Just
"At first I thought it was a remember, you are making
straf1ge request;' said Coates, them for angels:·
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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'HARDBALL'

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'Americanizing' war on .terrorism could cost u~ dearlr
BY CHRIS MATTHIWI
. NEW YORK -The ")" train headed .
uptown in relative sil~nce. The only sound
on the crowded Manhattan subway was
the solitary moan of a sax some guy was
playing near the middle doors.
I had just come from Ground Zero,
. where the barricades north of the demo!ished World Trade Center squeeze this
skinny limb of an island like a tourniquet.
Yes, it's as if the city's bloodllow has
been blocked. People mill in cof\gested
streets t\lrned back on themselves by the
barricades, the gawkers, and beyond them,
a specter as rare as it is immense: war
rums.
For the · first time in our collective
national memory, Antericans know the
sight, smell, sound and tremble of what it's
like to be on the punishing end of battle.
We have been hit, hurt and, say what we
will, humbled. The snap left in our ·strut
after Dallas and Saigon has vanished.
Remember how we loved Muhan1mad
Ali bragging that he could "float like a
butterfly and sting like a bee"?
Today, nearly a month after Sept. 11 , we
are like Ali in the weeks after that first1 losingfight with Joe Frazer 30 years ago. Like
Ali we know what it's like to have taken
a beating. It hurts just to breathe. And it .
shows in our collective face! .
"We're going through a very difficult

•

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)

time with so many funerals and so mal}y to save a country from Communist
people affected;' Mayor Rudolph Guiliani takeover. The result was to convert a civil
told me later. "There probably isn't any- war into a war against US. "imperialism."
one in the city that hasn't been directly · Today, Vietnam recalls that horror as the
affected by this."
"A!nerican War."
The question now is how to carry out ' We made the same mistake in 1983
justice toward· those who attacked us when we entered Beirut under the selfiwithout stirring further spin-offi of deluding banner of "peacekeeping." The
hatred, terrorism and death.
enemy saw us as something more. After a
New York's Cardinal Edward Egan says . car-bomber exploded our Marine barwe Americans need to "examine our con- racks, leaving 300 dead, we left as somesciences." Was there something we did to thing less.
stir the conspirat&lt;,m and killers of Sept. 11?
. We made the same mistake a dec~~
That examinatiori could be a useful later on the horn of Afr1ca. Entermg
exercise, not because it shifts blame to the Somalia as food-bearers, we left carrying
victim, but because it lights the way to the our fallen, after we watched from home as
right sort of retaliation. If our attack on the locals dragged a body of our soldier
Osama bin Laden incites more Islamic through the streets.
hatred against the United States and the
Mullah Omar,the leader of the Taliba,q,
West, we will be doing his work for him. has warned us this could easily happ&lt;;n
The greatest danger in the days and again. We enter Mghanistan to catch a terc
weeks ahead is that we "Americanize" this rorist and destroy his network. We depose
war. Led by the best intentions, we could the Taliban, install an 86-year-old ex-king,
find ourselves making enemies we never then spend years propping up his gover~­
sought, stirring a grand nationalism where ment. We morph, in the minds and heali!S
we sought to punish a particular evil: ter- of the Afghans and their neighbors, into a
ronsm. ·
crusading army come to invade and deseThe death this week of former South crate the land of Islam.
Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu
If we Americanize the war against
reminds us we have made thiS nustake Islamic terrorism, we'lllose ir.
before.
(Chris Matt!rrws, a sy,dicated col11mnist for
In 1965, ":'e sent 100,000 combat troops tile Sa" Fraircisco Chronicle, is lrosr if "Harrlto Saigon.We did it for the best of reasons, ball" 011 CNBC a11d MSNBC.)

MEDICAL USES OF 'WEEI)S' ,..- Michael Duhl, district conser- Gr!jde Field Day Thursday. Duhl is showing the students a comvationist for the Natural Resource Conservation Service, gives mon plant, mullein,·which Is SO!Tletimes used for cough remea presentation on medicinal herbs at the Meigs SWCD's Fifth- dies. (Jim Freeman photo)

Changes in.landscape is field day topic
FROM STAFF REPORTS

.'. REEDSVILLE - Fifth-graders from
schools throughout the county had the
opportunity recently to learn about
changes in the Meigs County landscape
. from pre-settlement ·days to the present.
"Now and Then - How Our Land has
·Changed" was the theme of the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District's Fifth
Grade Field Day. the field day - actually
twO days was held Sept. 27 and more
recendy Thursday at Forked Run State
Park near Reedsville.

About 135 st\ldents from Southern,
Rudand and Salisbury elementary schools
·and MidValley Christian School participated in the field day, which included piesenc
tations on medicinal herbs, farming,
fOrestry, flintknapping, wildlife and streams.
Speakers included Park Manager Randy
Wachter; Mike Duhi, Natural Resource
Conservation Service, Medicinal Uses of
"Weeds"; Hal Kneen, Ohio State University Extension Service, Changes in Farming; Ann Bonner, Ohio Department of
Natllral Resources' Division of Forestry,

Changes in our Forest; Danny Roush,
tlintknapping; Keith Wood and Ken
Ritchie, Ohio Division ofWildlife, Wildlife
Changes; Jim Freeman, Meigs SWCD,
Changes in Streams.
The event was organized by Vicki Mar· row, education coordinator for the Meigs
SWCD.
"This wa.• an opporrunity for studentS to
learn about changes in their environment
over the last 200 years;• said Morrow. " All
elementary schools were invited to participate."

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at lh$ Carmel Educational Service Center Gov·
·
building of·the Carmei-Sotton · · ernlng t!loaro atheduled for
Thursday
at
7
p.m.
will
be
held
at
Unltld"Methodlet
Church.
All
MIDDLEPORT - Revival ltr•
· the Malga·County Alternative
·
vlcla at thl Weal~an Bible Holl· women Invited to attend.
School, 108 Mechanic St.,
nHI Church, 711 Peart 91., Mid·
Pomeroy.
dleport, through Oct. 14. Rev.
THUAIDAY
.
TUPPEFIS PLAINS- VFW 80113
Noel Soott, mngelllt. Don
FRIDAY
QuaiH Family, lfngera. 7:30p.m. mtatlng, Tuppera Plllnl hall,
MIDDLEPORT- Wldow'l Fll·
Thuradly, meeting 11 7:SO p.m.,
nightly, 8:30 a.m. anc:t 7:30 p.m.
lowlhl~. F~day, noon, potluck,
following dinner It G:30 p;m,
Sundiy.
lunch, Middleport Church of
POMEROY - Bldlord TDwnahlp
Chrl1t.
POMEROY- Athlni·MIIQI
Truattal, TuHday, 7 p.m. at town RACINI!- l"rlenc:tlhlp Circle,

TUESDAY
.
''POMEROY :...! Melgii County . .
·Health Department, child lmmu·
nlzatlon clinic, Tueaday, 8 to 11
and 1 to 3 p.m., al oltlce on
Memorial Drive. Take chlldrtn'l
lhot recorda. Children muet be
·aocompanled by parent or legal
guardian.

hall.
I

•I

•

.

IA8Y THINGI - Nancy Shew, Dorothy Downie, Ruth Moore,
Allee wolfe, Leone Cleland enc:t Tine Lee St. Merle, from the left
around the llblt, work on Infant
end hltl to be lint to
ll'tl hOII)Itale. senior Center etlff member Diane Coltll,
atendi!'W, coorcllnltll the project. Lorna Slth 1110 perijclpatla.

aown•

Syracuse, school officials to meet.Oct. 22
· · School building
to be pursued
BY I&lt;An! C11ow

SENTINEL CO~RESPONDENT

A bid from Pickens
Construction Co. for
repairs to the parking area in the
tennis courts u1as
approved,for
concrete and labor,
"P to $4,000.

SYRACUSE Syracuse
will continue to pursue own~ ership of the Syracuse Elementary School building, but
Mayor Larry Lavender assured
village counCil last week that It the tennis courts and $300 for
·will not be~ome a village hall. a new timer control for the
Robert Wingett; grants court lights, repair to the
administrator, announced at breaker box and installation
Thursday's regular council and labor," Wingett's letter
meeting that he was asked by states. "These . additional
Superintendent
James expenditures will bring us
Lawrence to meet with the within $350 of the $28,000
Southern Local Board ofEdu- total project."
'cation on Oct. 22 to discuss
"With the remaining $350,
the disposition of the building. we intend to purchase picnic
· ' Wingett and Lavender met tables for placement at courtearlier with the board, ~king side."
'that the school ·and property
Wingett received a letter
be turned over to the village. from ODNR approving the
Lavender advised that if the additional work.
village does acqui!'l' the build~
Wingett said that crews have
ing in no way will the clerks begun painting fencing at the
offi~!, mayor's office or coun- courts, and sandblasting and
cil chambers be moved from painting of the posts.
their present location.
A bid fi:om Pickens Con' "All village offices will struction Co. for repairs to the
remain as they are," Lavender parking area in the tennis
·said.
courts was approved, for con' In other business, Wingett crete and labor, qp to $4,000.
noted ·that a title to the vilLavender repor\ed . that he
!'age's 197 5 fire truck has been has received comf1laints about
'transferred to Orange Td\vn- refuse and junk ~ehicles su~­
ship trustees.
. rounding properties. He sa1d
· Wingett discussed improve- that warrants will be issued to
·ments at the tennis courts, those in violation. He also
sharing with council a letter to noted that it is the responsibil'the Ohio Department of Nat- ity of the property owners to
'ural Resources, the sou rce of keep their properties clean.
the NatureWorks grant used
Those needing assistance
to fund the project:
from police officers should call
· "The additions requested the sheriff's department,
are $4,000 for a concrete which will dispatch the police,
'parking area on the east side of Lavender said.

'

.

The mayor also noted that answered six complaints.
Attending, in addition to
the water department asked
Syracuse police officers to Lavender, Cottrill and Roush,
deliver termination notices to were council members Mony
residents with delinquent Wood, Tucker Williams and
Katie Crow.
accounts.
Council approved the purchase of winter shirts and ties
for police officers.
In other business, it was
noted that the pool has been
winterized.
Re•. Dr. Da•ld T. Rahamut
Council also discussed A Powerful Tfstlmony of Connrshm
building stalls to house sand .
and gravel and other materials.
Councilman Bill Roush said
street lights are out on Seventh
Street and Church Street, Carleton Street, Dusky Street and
Karr Street.
"The electric company
needs better directions on the
electric poles," Romh said,
"because we . are unable to
read the pole numbers."
Trick or treat was set for
Oct. 30 from 6-7 p.m. The
siren will signal the start and
end of the event. Village officials will hand out candy.
Sharon
Cottrill
Clerk
reported fund balances as fol- ·
lows: General, $19,379.58;
LOOKING FOR ANSWERS?
street construction, maintenance and repair, 19,877.58;
state highway, 2,370.57; cemeRev. Dr. David 1. Rahamut
tery, 264.03; fire department,
Evangelist From Trinidad
9,069.39; NatureWorks grant,
53.24;
watet
operating,
First Baptist Church
68,269.38; swinm1ing pool,
of Middleport
2.821.82; Enterprise deposit
fund, 4,184.37; total in all
6th &amp; Palmer St.
accounts, 126,289.96.
Date
Council also:
'
October 7 thru
• Approved the mayor's
report of fees and fines colOctober 13
lected in September, in the
Time
amount of $972.00.
~ Approved the ,police
7:00PM Nightly
report, showing that officers
Special Singing Each fYight
issued eight citations and

From Islam
To Jesus-Christ

With
Picture

With Much
Appreciation

•

.J{t)l.

From Yom
Copgregatlcftii

Putor John Smith
With Much ApJ~reciatilon I
FromYour Congregation

' $5

Only

•

Without

Cfieoioal Crusade

Fill out coupon below
The
Ill Court

--------

:Pastor's Name'- - - - - - - - - -1Church::_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _;___ _
IMessage: _ _~--'-----------1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __
1Your

Name: _______ _ _ __ _

---t-----------'*Ksa &amp; MIIS~.Card Accopted

.

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f

lf

1 ••

'

�Pllge A6 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, Oct. ~· 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio

DRW13Dft.~RO~RUDMUPMWftURdR~RM _ _ _ d _ t l

Fly your floJI to

•

The Daily Sentinel

support th1s
great country

Page 81
Monday. October a. 1001

MONDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

Boyles winner at Ri~ XC Invite
Bv MARK WIW*MI

Marlin wins
quality 500
CC(NCORD, N.C. (AP) -.
Sterlmg Marlin won the
UAW-GM Quality 500 in a
somber race Sunday in which
the drivers watched images of
the
U.S.
attacks
on
Afghanistan •hinutes before
the start.
Marlin beat Tony Stewart to
the finish line at Lowe's
Motor Speedway by more
than six seconds, about a
quarter of the track.
Ward Burton, the other
Dodge 'driver to. win a ·race
this season, finished third and
was followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr. in a Chevrolet and
Jeff Burton in a Ford.

RIO GRANDE SID

RIO GRANDE - Saturday W2S a
big day for the University of Rio
Grande Cross Country team. They
hosted the 31st annual Rio Invitational, the men's teams won its third meet
of the season and sophomore Matt
Boyles our-legged the field to win the
men's race by 16 seconds.
Boyles (Tuppers Plain) won his second meet this season with a time
26:21.09. Pikeville College's Alex
Chemwolo was second (26:37 .41 ).
The Redmen also got top 10 finishes
· from sophomore Marc Littrell, (Baltimore, OH) who was third (26:45.92)

and sophomore David Kerns (West
Libeny, OH) finished 8th (27:26.22).
Senior Josh Fogle (Macksburg, OH)
ran weD in his first n)eet of the season,
crossing the line 11th (27:35.65).
Other Rio Grande results: Derek
Baker (Gallipolis, 0 H) was 12th
(27::17.04), Scott Littrell (Baltimore,
OH), 13th (27:38.87), Jim Robinson
(Lakeview, OH), 20th (28:07.83),
Michael Hendershott (Baltimore,
OH), 22nd (28:18.99), Scott McNutt,
(Harrison, OH) 23rd (28:28.52),
Bryan Jones, (E.St Palestine, OH) 45th
(29:22.92) , and Brian Hill (Caldwell,
OH) running his first collegiate race
finished .53rd (30:33.65).

CINCINNATI (AP) - .
The Philadelphia Phillies put .
their disappointment aside ,
and finished with a flourish.
Randy Wolf took a shutout
into the ninth inning Sunday
as the Phillies beat the Reds
4-1 for their first three-game
sweep in Cincinnati since
1989.
The Reds completed one
of the worst seasons in their
133-year history with a loss
befitting their year. They finished 27-54 at Cinergy Field,
setting a team record for
home losses.

.Y"

·HERE•s

•

TO YOU

•

nibe finishes
with win
•.

The following businesses·
are proud to salute the many boys and girls throughout
Meigs county who are working hard through 4-H to
become·our future leaders of tomorro.wllf·
•

TORONTO (AP) - C. C.
Sabathia is going into the
postseason on a high.
Sabathia allowed one hit
over five innings in a playoff
tuneup ancf the Cleveland
Indians ended the regular sea-·
son with a 3-2 victory over
the Toronto Blue Jays on Sunday.
The Indians, who clinched
the AL Central last Sunday,
start their first-round series
against Seattle on Tuesday.
Sabathia (17 - 5) allowed one
run and won for the seventh
time in eight decisions. He
struck out five and walked

tw6..

•••••
SCOREBOARD

caster, OH) was the top Redwomen
finisher. She was 1Oth (20:28.05) overall. Redshirt freshman Heather Mace
(Logan, OH) was three spots behind
Wolfe (13th) with a time of20:41.37.
Sophomore Tiffany · Fogle (Macks-·
burg, OH) finished 54th (23:28.97)
and freshman Kristin Darnell (South ·
Webster, OH) was 56th (23:47.55).
·
Kim Cipura of Roberts Wesleyan
was the overall women's winner with a
time of 19:04.20.
Roberts won the \~Onlen 's event
with 43 points. Centre College was.
2nd (52), University of Charleston .
(WV) was third (100), Shawnee State, ·
4th (111).
.

Dawgs bury San
Diego to go 3-1

Reels' season

ends, finally

Rio won the meet with 30 points,
followed American Mideast Conference foes Roberts Wesleyan (NY), 2nd
(65) and Shawnee State, 3rd (70). Centre (KY) · College was 4th (109),
Pikeville '(KY) College was 5th (119),
Glenville (WV) State, 6th (183),
Columbus (OH) State, 7th (205),
Davis &amp; Elkins (WV), 8th (213), Ohio
Valley College, 9th (26 1) and Kentucky Christian, 10th (275).
The Redwomeq got solid performances from their .four runners and
some former Redwomen put together
a team for the race and ran well, finishing 5th overall with 114 points.
Sophomore Amanda Wolfe (Lan-

CLEVELAND (AP)
Couch went to work.
Butch Davis doesn't care if it's
He completed a 14-yard
· ano~her 17 years before he pass to Dennis Northcutt,
sees Doug Flutie again.
whose first catch of the season
Davis, who' coached Miami's was a big one. Then on thirddefensive line in 1984 when and-1 0, Couch made his best
Flutie completed his "Hail throw, hitting Johnson for 13
Mary" for Doston College, yards on a perfectly timed out
had to sweat out the .final sec- pattern.
onds Sunday before the
The duo hooked up again
Cleveland Browns defeated two plays later as Couch
the San Diego Chargers 20- lobbed his TD pass to John16.
son, who made contact as he
Flutie nearly rallied the went over cornerback.. Alex
Chargers (3-1 ), throwing two Molden for the catch.
loqg passes that fell incomFlutie got the ball back-with
plete into crowds in the end I: 10 left at his own 17 with
zone, and the Browns (3-1) one more chance.
hung on.
Davis admitted to suffering
"I'm glad we don't have to flashbacks of Nov. 23, 1984,
when standing on the sideline
play him again," Davis said.
Flutie was upstaged by Tim in the Orange Bowl, he
Couch and the Browns, who watched Flutie complete his
came up with some early sea- famous "Hail Mary" pais in .
son magic of their own.
BC's 47-45 win.
Couch threw a 19-yard TD
On fourth-and-! 0, Flu tie
pass to Kevin Johnson with scrambl'ed for 1I yards and
1:1_5 left, giving the Browns then made two completions
their first three-game winning for 27 yards, getting the ball to
streak since returning to the Cleveland's 45 and getting
Davis' heart racing.
league in 1999.
The Browns' swarming
Flutie's first shot at the end
defense made it tough on Flu- zone was tipped by safety
tie, who when he wasn't Percy Ellsworth but almost
rolling out of the pocket to went to Chargers receiver
avoid the rush, was running, Curtis Conway, who had gotfor cover.
ten behind Cleveland's secSan Diego's quarterback got ondary.
Flutie finished 17-of-37 for
roughed up all afternoon and
was clothes-lined on a run 149 yards, and rookie LaDainnear the goal line in the ian Tomlinson rushed for 102
fourth quarter by cornerback yards, including a 54-yardcr,
Corey Fuller.
on 19 carries and one TD.
Trailing 16-13, the Browns
Couch went 14-of-27 for:
HANG HIM ON A LINE -Cleveland's Corey Fuller, left, clotheslines San Diego Chargers
got
the
ball
with
3:52
left,
and
.
203
yards.
quarterback Doug Flutle during the fourth quarter Sunday In Cleveland. (AP)

National Football League
Sunday's Gan;tea

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Ingels ·
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Middleport . 992-2635

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112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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Chicago 31, Atlanta 3
Miaml30, New England 10
N.Y. Giants 23, Washington 9
Arizona 21, Philadelphia 20
Pittsburgh 16, Cincinnati 7
New Orleans 28, Minnesota
15
.
Cleveland 20, San Diego 16
Baltimore 26, Tennessee 7
Seattle 24, Jacksonville 15
Denver 20, Kansas City 6 ·
Tampa Bay 14, Green Bay 10
Oakland 28, Dallas 21
·
N.Y. Jets 42, Buffalo 36
San Francisco 24, Carolina
14
Open: Indianapolis

Monday's Game
St. Louis at Detroit, 9 p.m.
Major League Baseball
National League

Florida 4, Atlanta 2
Montreal 5, N.Y. Mats 0
Philadelphia 4, Cincinnati 1
Milwaukee 15, Arizona 5
Houston 9, St. Louis 2
Pittsburgh 4, Chicago Cubs 3
San Francisco 2, Los Angeles 1
Colorado 14, San Diego 5

American League
Cleveland 3, Toronto 2
Kansas City 10, Detroit 4
N.Y. Yankees 1, Tampa Bay 0
Minnesota 8, Chicago White
Sox 5
Oakland 6, Anaheim 2
Texas 4, Seattle 3

Firin· s come
quic ly for Reds
C INCINNATI (AP) - Standing in the tunnel outside
the Cincinnati Reds clubhouse, coach Ron Oester got
one hug after another from departing players.
Manager Bob Boone had just informed Oester that he
was fired, the first change brought aboU't by a 96-loss season.
"Nothing surprises me anymore with this organization.
. "0ester sat"d . "I ts' not as hoc k"
N athmg,
.
Oester, 44, a third base coach who has spent 27 years
with his hometown team, lost his job Sunday as part of a
staff shake-up. The Reds decided not to renew the contracts of Oester and first- base coach Bill Doran.
Boone wanted the freedom to pick 1 · ' staff. The only
one he got to bring in this season was fim Foli, who .will
become one of the base coaches net season.
Oester was offered the managing J" b ahead of Boone
last November, but balked at the salary. He insisted that
general manager Jim Bowden told him privately to reject
the offer because the club was willing to make a better
one.
Instead, the Reds turned to Boone, and Oester publicly
called Bowden a liar. Oester agreed to stay as a coach at
the urging of owner Carl Lindner.
He wrestled with Foli in the coaches' office following
one game in June and wasn't surprised when Boone
informed him Sunday of the decision to let him go.
" It was·n't my decision, but the way the organization is
now, l didn't want to come back, so they probably did me
a favor," Oester said. "I've said I wouldn't come back if
things were the same here - and I'm not talking about
the players."
Batting coach Ken Griffey Sr., who had to leave the
team twice this season because of health problems, will
move to bench coach.

I WASFIRSTSteelers quarter-:
back Kardell
Stewart, left,
dives past Bengals defensive
tackle Tony
Williams, right,
for the first regu-:
lar season
touchdown in
Heinz Field in
the second quar- :
ter In Pittsburgh
on Sunday. (AP) .

Steelers trample Bengals:
PITTSBURGH (AP) stadium opener delayed three
New stadium, same old Steel- weeks by the terrorist attacks.
ers. They 'opened Heinz Field
It was the Bengals (2-2) who
the same way they did Three were supposed to be new,
Rivers Stadium in 1970 ·improved and on the upswing,
running the ball, then running with a chance to be 3-1 for the
it some more, all the while . first time since 1990. Instead,
hoping their passing comes they. looked just like the Benaround sooner or later.
gals who won only sporadicalJerome Bettis broke the ly during Three Rivers' three
10,000-yard career mark with decades of existence.
\53 yards in Pittsburgh's most
They couldn't move the ball
produ ctive ground game in t:\ , consistently - nothing new
years. and the Steek·r~ beat there and rarely offered
Cincinnati 16-7 Sunday in a resistdnce as the Stcelers (2•1)

~1trushed them 274-65. The
reelers hadn't run for that
many yards since gaining 307:
in a me~ningless season-end-:
ing game against Miami in:
t988.
·
The Bengals trailed 13-0
and appeared to be headed for:
their second consecutive:
shutout loss in Pittsburgh - :
they lost 15-0 a year ago in'
Three Rivers - until Kitna
threw a !-yard scoring pass to
Lorenzo Neal late in the game.

.

'

,.

�Pac•e

82. The Dallysentlne~t_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;P.;o~me~ro~y;;.,Mllllllldd.;..le;.port~,•O•h•to------------~

Monday, Oct. B, 2001

Qtribune Sentinel- Register
•

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Call Today... orFaxTo 446-3008
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·
eded I
iir;,.:;.;;:;;;;;_.;,;;;;.;__., woark Ywlthpar::;,.n:wr,.r ~

M&lt;llllu;FORSAI.Eibwi

12x8S with 8x18 expando. 2
2 Bath. Newly

~-~

In the Mason Counly ExtonOtflct·
·
rt·per.wH pos. •
tion wiU be retpanalble for
program planning of mett·

Thl~

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~b a~a.J::

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;c,..) t.

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Rtiads,

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plication packet to the Department of Human Reaour088 Employment Unit PO
Box 8840 Morgantown' wv
26505-81140 by 4:45pm.
Wednesday, OCtol)ar 10,
2001 West VIrginia Unlver·
slty li an Equal Opportunity/
AffiMI "".."11estlve Action Em1PIhovdelr.
non
• parsons w 1 •·
abiiiUes, females, and other
prolacted class members
are encouraged 10 apply.
8TATE TESTED NUR81

ASSISTA~
THIS IS YOUR HANCE

WFN.

.
TO SHIN II
Holzer Senior Care Center,

McClure's Restaurant' now
hlrtng all 3 locations, full or
part..flme, pick up appllca·
tlon atlocaUon &amp; bring·back
between
9:30am
&amp;
1D:ooam Monday thru Sat·
urday '

the only Long- tarm heaHhcare facility Jn Gallil County
that has a five star ratlng
from Healthgredes, Inc. Is
looking for STNA'a that
Shine above the rest. A carlng hean compassion and
dedlcatlofi are some of the

MEDICAL CLAIMS
BILLING
· Drtve axle for 1987 Ford
F
Y.
Home!
I
Taurus front wheel drive, N E r~ our N
(740)742·1080.
F~ ~~~Wanted to Buy: Srandlng
Data ~nt for Local
~
Tlm "-r. 1740)379 _2758 _
""'
ora
full Training &amp; Certiflcltlon
I \ 1 1' 1 ~"'11 \I
Provided.
"' I In II I "
Computer Required.

qualities thai were looking
for. We have~ limited num·
bar ol lull· ttme and parttime openings on all3 thlfts
ancf~agas are basec:l upon
expenence.lf you would Mke
to be a pa,rt of a winning
team, coma see us at 380
COlonial Drive, Bidwell, Of
call (740)446-5001 and ask
fct Eula or Mortie.

TO BUY

Absolute Top Dollar. u.s .
Sliver. Golc:l Coins, Proof·
. . seta,
Diamonds,
Gold
Rln s
u s Currency.
Mls' Coin Shop 151
. ·A·
G 111' 11 740
nd
o
venue, a po &amp;,
•
446·2842.

see.

·

=ry

°

I

110

~r:~'~~
. 1Fr:"1·

,

P:..

SUBSTITUTE TEACHER
JIFLp WANrnJ
800·518·i328 Ol:PT. 760 AIDE FOR CHILD CARE
1
1,- - - - - - - p l Need 7 Lldlel .to Sell Avon. CENTER. Must ha~e an ln·
Coil 1740)446-:!358
toroot and doll,. lo work
ARCADIA
With young children. Raply
NURSING CENTER
NEW EPHEDRA FREE
to: Mag~ Yea,. Coy ca ..
II now ICOtpUng ANI, Looa 401bo in 2 montholll Clntor 201 High StrOll.
LPNo and STNA applloa·
Guorontood Anulto.
Point Plouant WV 25550
llonl, Avallabll po1IUan1
~
tdll
'
aro Parl·Tlmo 2nd lnd 3111 .
C:..':totkln
Vllllgo ol
llrando olrlng
ohllt. Wo offor oxoallont
1-1011-387·3845
Watorl Sanitary Sowar
blnollto lhat lnoludt HooHo
h Mh
Tralnn. AppUootlon • job
lniUianol 401K Lilt lnou•
WYM.II ea y.oom
dooor\DIIan may bo plokod
'
11
IICUAITY CIUAAOI
ur at lho Munlolpallulldlng
anoo. oompll 11I vo wagol
a &lt;4CI I CGUogo Av1nuo
Ttmportry -Urlly guttdt ltlwtan • lim to 4pm:
. lurn player who onjay' tot up lo I montht. Mull Ooadtlnt 10111/Ct "lqutl
working with ·iho lldorly htvt 0111n polloo rtoofd, opportunity tmployll'
PIIIIO apply In pareon
good work hiiiOI)I, rotlablo
IWoon 8•4 or olll, Kalhryn franopoilltlon, -.lid dnv1ro
ltiVI
SomiMIIO AN. Dlrootor ot llotnN, hOmt poono and
Nurelng.
mUll oavo blaak otool tao
.,,
HIIIIW

o

F~

~~~

~~~o:~~~ru?l ~u lo:,r~

ba:

A,::, ~:1t~nttr
Coolville Ohio
(740-0117:31111)
EOE

ltll Or .._..

l:'PI~;a'wttk
:,O:;.tU.:011:U~
Call (7&lt;4C)III8·
1174 Moricto~-~~day lim·
4pm lor appoontmonl.

.

In 1111

,,.

Ralerance. HUD Approved.

-?

.

I

~000 304-773-5885 aner

ar

rypea available. Call for de- poall required. (740)446·

To Bottom Cleaners,
P feulonat, and aftorda·
b homea, offices, rentals,
trucllon and remodeling
cl nlng. Can do al~t
.t
lng (740)992-1391 or
(740)992-2979
·
TAt-cOUNTY CONSTRUCTlON.
Naw
Conatrucllon/Remodellng.
·sldlng, "Roofing •Drywall
"'We
it AI•
Estl~
mates. 874-46231674·3855
T&lt;

o;,

Fr&amp;a

Will care for elderly and or
children. Monday-Friday.
some weekenc:ls. (304)675n21 or (304)675-4108
Will haul away, clean out,
clean up or move almost
anylhlng. Call (740)446·

7

6().4.

Will power wash houoll,
tralltr1,
anything.
Call
(740)441-4238 or (740)448.·
0151 Uk '"' Ron. It no
anower.loovo mtteago.

oh

~':..~~~::"~ 11~

ground pool, otorago buildlng, Smtth'l cablnttll trim.
t;l40)448-014i

Nowly bonotruelod, olnglo
1800 oq. loci homo.
Locatod 10 mlnutoo lrom
Holzer Holpltal, :20 mlnutM
i'O
llrom Plouant VI!loy Holp&gt;
OftroRI\INITY
101, off SA 100 on I prlvato
~
' 1·112 aare lot. 3 bedroom,
OTICI
2•112 balho, big kltohon
tN
I
wlook oablneto D", L"
OHIO VALLIV FUILIIH• wlllll log tlrtplaoo oonlral
lNG CO. rtGGmmondl that atr, ltundry
Iron\
youdabualntllwllhpaaplt IIOroh I 1•112 oor lllrtGI·
you knoW, tnd NlhOT to und )mmodlato _ ...ion. At&gt;
monay through • mall Until pralood II 1121,100. Mlkl
you havl tnvottiiiiiiG thl olttr. Call (740)441•4114
oftonng.
lrom
l·:t~• M·F, or
To (1~)thar lpm.
1 11 1
1
:::
can: Thrtt y11r old, 1100 oq.
tor . _ Avotltblt At AI•
II Ll~n WV. 3 bf.,
tordlblo "-11. lp~ng Vlllay 2 be. htat pump, otnUll&amp;lr
Plua. Call 740-441.0101.
:ID4-n3·51??

IIOtV

B1Js1N11118

room,

do~~.

1~ ~

1104 01 (740)2-.

o.Muxe home, uve $5,445,
new 2000 model Skyline, 3
bedroom, 2 batt!, total alectrio, vinyl &amp; ahlngle. low
monthfy payments, dellvered a setup lncluc:leslklrt·
atn';·
le:l lots 522g, Grant Sl ens·
740-592•197
'
·•
'
'
~Jgd=&amp;,g 40 l 992 • 9084 · Final Days, Nationwide In·
•
ventor;
Reduction!
For Aent or Sale. Srilall (304)736-3409
.
HOuse $250. Month+ S200.
Deposit.
(304)727-3318 For Sale By Owner· 3 bod·
from A"'"' 11 pm
room, 1 1/2 baths, Nice
vt"""
•
Schult mobile home. Fi·
For sale by O'M1Ir: Nice bl- nanclng
available.
level home on 1 acre near (740)441·1 498 or (740)448Cheottr. Thrse bedroom. :!583.
two bathl, one-car garage,
family room with fireplace, Umlted Or No Credit? GoY·
sun room. New central heal:- emment Bank Fl~~_?ntY
Ina &amp; aJC syatem. One ml- A!- Oakwood In ~:~UtuuUrs·
nuta off Route 7 but still pn. vrlle, WV 304-736-3409.
vate (740)985-3981
N
14 Wide 3 Bed
·
aw
'
room.
Only $19,850. Free Delivery
&amp;SetUp.1·888-£1i28..2426
For sale lg. ranch sryle
home, 4 br., 3 ba., w/ New 14x70, 3 bedroom. 2
screenec:l In patio porch, :i! bath, only $995 down &amp;
car garage $78,000.
$169.82 per month, call
, HarokJ 740-385·4367.
Commericallots for sale Of N
Oo bl Wid .
lease, In f)! . Pleasant 304- ew
u e
e. 1195
727·3318 call between Per Monthl 3 Bedroom, 2
5pm-12.
Bilth. Fraa Delivery &amp; Setup. 1-888·928·3428

::'tro:ulp~~:";:~ ~~ ne~~ldl~ln~~w:OU~ ~

Openings In a daycare,
county certified or private
pay. Monday·Frlday, Bailey
Run
Rd.,
Pomeroy,
740)992-3509

ft.-

(740)448·3644.

3 bedroom, 3 bath houle
with 2 car garage. City
Assumable loans· Many Schools. fleference &amp; cleo

4 bedroom house .nth 2 loll
David's General Contrae11ng on S1ate St. In Pomeroy,
Plumbing, electrical, paint· needs
minor
repairs
lng, decks, roofs. Call 514 000 (740)949 _1806 '
(740)258·9373 (304)833·
'
•
·
6265
7 rooms &amp; bath. stove &amp; re·
frlgerator, new vinyl lldlng,

mlili just call 304-675·1957.

tJedroof11

2
home ciOBe to
I
town, basement. Rlvervew,
1
$4251 month; 3 bedroom n
town. 1·112 betha. GoOd location. $6001 month. Referenceo and depoalt required.

:asa.928-

tailS. (740)446-:!583.

Brick home ln city, newly
ctecoraltd, 3 bedroom, bath

and hatr. Basement with rec

room. central air.

gao haot,
1107 Teodora Ave .. $550
per month plut aecutity. de·
please.

~:~~~~~ ~:J~~57~ets

2

Pilot Program, Renters
Needed, 304·736-7295.

r

electric range, 30" nice,
$150; G.E. retngeralor, troet .
~- 51 VI S~
,...._nces, "' ne •vv••
Galllpolla. (740)446·7398
Hours 10am-4pm. Monday~':Y· Saturday by appolnt-

~D~
.. Vft .~U~.At

90p92po·5·06unl4t..,..Equal HouSing
·

5

5!'.;

j

:u:

r

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) - It w.un't all that long ago that Pak faltettd, Delasin won the World Championship on Sunday by
David Toms was a sttuJ!81ing pro, going toumllltknt to tourna- four strok~. much to the delight of her hometown fam.
97 Land Rover, 7.-,soo ment, hoping to get that payday that justified the pursuit.
"It was cool. I heard people cheering out n1y name," the 21mllao. lOaded, 2 aunroots.
'"Nineteen ninety-four might ha~ been the wont year of my year-old second-year pro said.
2820
'.w4, heated 888t, 6 disc CO
Nine c0w. bred to biiiCil An- changer. ""Iller 10118. ex· life;· Toms said Sunday after winning the
Michelob"
"It was the best feeling. I wish I could record it and play it again.
.
cellent oondition, blue axtt-gus due lo cal'l!e around riot wltan interior. (740)109· Championship for the second consecutive year.
I'll
always remember it."
March 304-575-2812
0327
'"Everybody took care of you while you were young; all of a
With birdies on the first and last holes - and IS pars between
HAG\1 &amp;
11::885=._C_h_evy-S--1-0_BI_az_or_, sudden you had to take care of younelf and I wasn't doing a very
- Delasin shot a. 3-under 69 in the final round for a 277 total.
~-----RAINiiiiii.-_.1. 4x4,
asking
$1800 good job of it."
Pak and Webb both carded even-par 72s, finishing at 281.
t;l40)11112·2167
BUck a bala sale. aquare ::.::::::::..:.:.::._ _ __
That year, Toms missed the cut in half of the 32 tournament! he
bales $1 .00 other hay up to 1994 3/41on. • - cab. played, earned just 187,607 and a demotion to the Buy.com Tour.
$2.00. round baloo S1 5.00 4114. St.E. tully loodod, good
Irwin continues Hawaii run wltll win
each 304-675--4869
condition, bucker aaatl,
But times ha~ changed for Toms, who 1125 gone from being a
: - : - - : - : - - - - - - 82.000 mila&amp;. $12 .000. wannabe on tour to a player the others w.mt to be like.
KAHUKU, Hawaii (AP;)- Hale Irwin's success in Hawaii isn't
Hay a Bright Wire Tie t;I40J448- 1066
limited
to one island.
Toms showed why again Sunday, starting the final round with
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery 1894 Dodge Ram 1500,
&amp; Volume DIICOUnt Avalla· 4114, blad&lt;, a1ur1 bod. good the lead, adding to it immediately, and then making the shots he
Irwin fi~ a 4-under-par 68 for a three-stroke victory over
ble.
Heritage
Farm. condition, 103K, asking
John Jacobs in the inaugural Turtle Bay Championship on Sunday.
(304)675-5724.
19,500 080. (7~)245- needed to hold off a ch:arging Kirk Thplett.
94M
Irwin had a 54-hole total of 11 -under 205 on the Palmer
Toms'
3-undeP.par
68
gave
him
a
269
total,
15
under
for
four
I U \ ' " 1'111( I \Ill 1\
m;r:=;;;;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;::; 1999 Ford Wlndllar, moblll· · trips around the River Course at King11nill, and kept his star ris- Course at Turtle Bay Resort for his seventh victory in the islands . .
I
. "It's been a wonderful run in Hawaii," the lei-dr:apped Irwin
FlO FOR
A~
~~~:".:0::':\i ing.
SAl.£
. (740)~-2838.
The victory w::u his third this year, and seventh of his career. It said. "It's a new venue, but not terribly new as conditions go. It
-~
also was his fifih in seven tries when he led entering the final wasn't easy."
round.
The win, his tour-recoid 32nd, wa5 worth $225,000 and vaulted Irwin into third place in· the Charles Schwab Cup standings.
Jacobs shot a 69, finishing at 208.
Deluln ends sbonc. wins Slmsunc
. Allen Doyle, the poinl!leader in the Schwab competition, shot
·VALLEJO. Calif. (AP) -Whenever she finds herself in a tight a closing 68 to share thiid place with first-round co-leader Terry
spot later in her career, Dorothy Delasin plans to think back on Mauney at 21Q. Hubert Green and Mike McCullough finished at
the confidence and comfort she felt at the Samsung World S-under 211.
Championship.
Bruce Summerhays, lsao Aoki and Wait;r Hall were grouped at
Playing steadily and confidently while !Urrie Webb and Se Ri 212 with jay Sigel at 212.
Nica 8 yeat old Sorrel Cli"·
ing Ouanar Horst. 15·3.
Good Blood Une. Aegi s·
lerod. $1500. (740)379·

Cal&gt;. Lariat. 1304)633 8804
Of (140)886.7602

r

I:..,

Games go on as military strikes in Afghanistan
••

Tappan HI Efficiency 90%
Gas Fumaces, 011 Fumaces, 12 seer Heat Pump &amp;
Air Conditioning Systems
Free 8 Vear Warranty Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·
600 ·8 72-596 7
WWN.orvb.comlbenne«
Wedding dress, size 7/B,
$150: 112 karat diamond
ring , slz9 6, $200. Call
(740)379·2266

pso-

HUIIJlii"G
SuPI'LIE'i

ANnQUiili

Boaters Anrlques Now
Open. Antiques/ Amish Furnlture 202 41h s ..... (Behind Criminal Records) Wa
Buy&amp; Sell {304)675-1246
Buy or sell. Riverine Anti-

14x70, ttne bedroom. $300
a month &amp; $150 depoolt. no
pets, (740)142·2714.

STEEL PRIDE - Pittsburgh Steelers fans react Sunday to President Bush's address to the
nation shown on the Hlanz Aeld Jumbotron during halftime In Pittsburgh. The Stealers and the
Cincinnati Bengals faced off to open the Steelers home season in front of the largest football
crowd In Stealers history, 62.335.(AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

quos. 1124 East Main on
SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740992·2526. Ausa Mdore,

owner,

:;;;=-----New Buslnesa Opening Oc·

Stadium about the attack, but
the t~am learned of the news
before the kickoff of il! game
with New England.
"We talked about it a little
bit, thought about it and said a
prayer," said Miami defensj,ye
end Jason Taylor, standing at his
locker in red, white and blue
shorb. "We have a job to do,
and we had to go do it. Now,
we can obviously focus more
on what's going on in the
world."
No announcement was
made at Giants Stadium, where
New York played Washington. '
"There were so many other
Ways for fans to learn of it," said
Jim DiEieuterio, president and
CEO of the New Jersey Sports
and Exposition Authority.
'"There are literally hundreds of
TV sets in the stadium and fans
have radios and portable TVs."
' At Lowe's Motor Speedway
in Concord, N.C., news of the
attack w::u shown on big screen
televisions in the infield prior
to the race. Fans cheered when
the screen showed images- from
!Ubul, in full view of the drivers, and a fiyover of twQ fight-

tober 181. Sua's Selectables

~~~h(e74;;...!!'~8ddltport
·
'~'~•

r ..._. ··--·- I
~

I
•

Adorable AKC Golden Ae·
triever Pups, 7 week~ old
Shots currenl. Parents on
premises. (740)379·2639
(740):J79-9263

,....,._.......,..'-UU&gt;
L.-Oitiililiiii:::;::;;o..J

wi'tl

I

j

WantEtd: Breeders of ~ R ag·
!stared Sleffordshlre Bul l
Terrier" dogs. I am ·looking
lo• a pup. (740)446-3277
MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS .'

I

Moving· Piano for Sli.le·
Cherr; Wood, Kimball. like
new. (740)448·6 147

r

FRIJI1li&amp;
VEG!;J"ABLF.S

Richards Brother• Fruit
AP~LES • AND
Farm.
MUCH MORE. Z4 · miles
North ol Gaiiii)OIIs on CounIY Road 46. (740)266-4!;84.
t \ U \ 1 ..., . 1' 1' 1 II -.
.\ II\ I "i f ( )( 1,

er jets drew more cheers . and
salutes tiom the crowd.
In the Braves' clubhouse at
Turner Field, pitcher Tom
Glavirie stepped off a treadmill
and saw his teammates milling
in front of the TV sets.
"We're all interested in
what's going on and the outcome of it," he said. ~'We're a
heck of a lot more concerned
about what's going on than we
usually are."
Milwaukee players getting
ready for their baseball game
against Arizona watched Bush's
speech in ·silence on a TV in
the clubhouse.
"We all knew it was going ~o
hapl:en," Brewers pitcher Mike
De ean said. "Baseball has been
sec ndary since Sept. 11. I
think we all want to get home
and be with our families in
times like this."
Outfielder Geoff Jenkins
echoed his teammate's comments: "I think the whole
country has ~een on edge,
waiting for our response."
After Houston beat St. Louis
to win the NL Central title at
Busch Stadium, there was no

on-field celebration by the
Astros out of respect for tho&lt;•
iiwolved in Sunday's attacks.
uThose men and wom•:l
fighting for us are the n·.
heroes today," Craig Bigv "
"We appreciate what they
doing to ensure that Am·
remains the greatest coun

the world."
Houston
catcher Brad
Ausmus asked everybody in
the clubhouse to bow their
heads for a moment of silence.
"Although we're very excited about what we've accomplished, we would like to let
those who are fighting for our
country know were thinking
about them," he said.
At the PGA Tour's Michelob
Championship
in
Williamsburg, Va., a l:ttgescreen television . in "a public
hospitality tent remained tuned
to news of the U.S. attacks even
after TV coverage of the tournament began at 4 p.m .
Within an hour of. news of
the first strikes, the PGA Tour
added a message to its electronic scoreboard telling of the
air attacks.

$!

1740
:::.:::·.::..:.:::·.::..:.::!:::...::::::.....
~=':·cP~oblema?

' .
-44e.??t

r="'

e"# :: 0~:;,g·~::ll~ ro~,

I

Toms repeats at Michelob tourney

L.-------'
• ,

Modem I .,...,.I'OQm
~
•
apa1,.
1 (740)•••·
00 90
men ,
~...........
MERcuANI&gt;ISE
-------Now Taking Applications-·
:15 West 2 Bedroom Town- Bed with Box Spnng and
house Apartments, Includes Manresa. Chest Drawers,
Water
Sewage, Trash, Chair, Table and Chairs, Mi$350/Mo., 740-448-oooa.
crowave, Baby Car Seat,
Stroller. (740~9742
Tara Townhouse Apart- .:........:...:.....:.:...:.:~_:_menta, Very Spacious, 2 CBblnet Stereo $50. 3 LaBedrooms. 2 Floors. CA, 1 dlea Jackola. $5.00 each.
112 Bath. Ful~ Carpaled. (740)448·9429
.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pauo, Start $366/Mo. No Pal&amp;, Carpet Shampooer $30.
Lease Plus Securlf9 Deposit ~Y Canister Set, $50.
Raqulrod. Days: 740-446· (740)446·9429.
3481 ; Evenings: 740-367· Cookware- We stopped
0502, 740-446-Q101 .
giving dinner parttest We
Apartment AYIIIIIbll Now have Gorgeous New 11·pc.
Call
satsl Heavy-Gauge, surgical
Twin Rrwr Tower•
stainless steell 100% wa. (304)875-6679.
ter1essl Was $1,700. Now
for application. HUD subsl· $395.! Hurry! 1-600-434dizad apLfor elderly and .:.46=2=8:..1- , - - - - - , - disabled. EHO.
Couch &amp;
chairs
OO.
2
t h ~
h 51
Ia
Very nice, 2·3 bedroom ac n s stereo wit
rga
apartment. In town. large speakers 5100. Klndl~wood
kitchen, LR, $500/mo. Aef· wood burner $400. Ra1nbow
erences &amp; deposit required. sweeper
rug shampoo(740~-3844
er 5300. Twm ~ze bed .nih
box springs/ maHress $100.
SPACE
Lowrey Organ with magic
FOR RENT
Genie keys$~. many oth__
• er household rtems, rugs,
curtains, crahs, etc 1984
Mobile Home lot for rent in aaub. excellenl condition
Middleport, $125 per month $1800. (304)875·3123
~40
'992-3194
·
Dining Set, Black &amp; Brass,
ckltll chairs, glass table,
$199 good condition Fujitsu
r10
HOl5EHOW
., cash
register
internet
GooDs
reacty, valued 'at
53 .000.
$399 or otter. Complete
Queen Waterbed
$100.
2 White Whirlpool washers F 11 h dboard wh'881 ' b nd '
$75 ·each. 1 GE Washer n~w
)~:~
5
185. 1 Whirlpool Dryer $60.
Call after 6pm. (740)448· Grubb•o Plano· Tuning &amp;

io o

houoi

GOLF ROUNDUP

nF-·-----~

1994 Nice Clean Mobile
Hr?rna for rant. No Pets.
$4001 month plua depoall
and utilities. {740)286-8122
attet ?pm
·
·2 bedroom M/H no pets
$245/mo lnclud~s water:
d
It (7 )
5100
40 448
epos ·
3817
.
.
2 bedroom trailer on 143, no
peta, no calls after 9pm,
(740)992-3743
·
2 Br, 1 112 beth, 14 wide
wHh la'l!" expando &amp; canP.X:. Reduced. 3 Bedroom, tral air, (?40)992·2167
9000
.
Need
2 1/2 Bath. 2 CBt Garage, 2 3 bedroom mobile home In Appliances: Rscondltlonod
-446 __: Tho Piano Or.
25
Flriplacea, Patio Doora, Middleport,
na
petl, Wllhel'l Orye!'l Rang~~ 740
Much Morel Cl- to Holz· (740)Ge2-5858.
RolrignttOro Up
90 1y8 Hondmode solid woOd era·
or•o.
Galllpollo,
OH
GuorantOidi Wo Soli New dlo Uoolor newbom "' be· .
(740)441.0310
3 Br, 2 batho, 14x70 Nowly Moytag -'t&gt;PIIaneat Fronoh by. dollo. Nloo Chrlotmao :
..modllod, (740)11112·2107 Cll)' Maytag
gllt.I 100 1740)448·0ia6
740
5
8 year old Ranch ttyle For Sale: Aeoondltlontd
.....i\RMS
roR Sr\LE
- · 3 bedroom, 2 btllh, wuhtrs dryers and rtlrlg· NIW AND UUD 'U"·
~quill 100fllon. orators. 'Thompoono Appll· NANCII '0~ lALII Wo
05 Aoro 'inn Wator 111
mo. or mort nlor· 1001 34D7 Jaakean · Avo· lnltoll Froo Eotlmatoo II
,,., Clll old' Farm
Nli91' oall. (740)448·2731 nut. i304)071J.?311.
rou dont Call uo Wo both
•
, ....
1ilr.• :10 aaroo
puturo, ID ltautHui "lvor Vio'jl !dell 'Kitohln oablnttt Arlllok· OOIII 17401I -··•
'
1
oJoromM:=o,
-.1
IWttvo, 800·IM08 •
1030'•~•~7
• ltf 'Trallor ~trlt 7~0.....1· ohtoti1ut brown wood. In·
pm.
'
oludu oounttnop and link. • " 00 ~ worl&lt;t bOoto
11
0111
1111
l.arl &amp;
1~00. Call alter 5 prn .. 140, 3 plno 'bolfdl:
ACIIIAGE
~11 Homo lor"''" In "lo (30-\)e?0-4-438
lln.lllnxta lool, uo, Plpa
, Clrtndl. I ltclroom, oam1 "Kitohtn oablnoto Anotok· toreador, I lnoh to I lnah,
utllltloa, Cloaa to oolloj•· ~ OOnditloi. lwalvt 110. (740)H2-23et
740
Wlnlod to buy: 5· 20+ Panl·
month. 1 )1 5" oh
t bro
w®dnd . 1nk: Uood 2300 Ditoh Wlioo
lily Woodod. llallla ~·
01u-• ooun11•..,. a a1n • T,.noher and B5 H~ VI~
Call alttr lpm. (740
NIOO olttn • S bedroom, In 1400. CJIII llttr I pm., moor tlump grlndtr oall
1
31145
oountry. (7'111)25H574
(»1)075·443i
(740)084·1851

c "'

•it.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

s

Furnace. Alr. Conditioned. (7-40)448-3583
' BEAUTIFUL
APART·
GoOd Cond111on. Prk:od to Pnmt 2·112 acre lot lor IIENnl AT BUDGET PR~
Sail. (740)387·7871 .
building on-located on quiet CEI AT JACKSON ES·
road HCiuded area out~ TATE~ 52 W8Blwood Drive
12&gt;&lt;66 Norris trailer. 2 btc1- lllde •ol ell)' llmlls I
n
trom $297 to $383. Walk 10
.roorr), 1 beth. good COndl• tletd .Township n -~kl~ .shop &amp; movies. Call 740tlon, central air, $6,000. 17,500• Cell lor 'more Info. 448·2568. Equal Housing
(740)387.0120
(740)448·4514 Daya; or Opportunlly.
16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per (740)448·3246 Evenlnge.
Chnoly•s Family Living.
Month. 8.99% Fixed l-UI
'33140 Lima Rd .. Rut·
Rate With Air And Unland, .Ohio, 74Q-742-7403.
derplnnlng 1-888-928-3428
Apartment, home and trailer
rentals Commercial store1987 14x50, 2 BR. Bath.
•IJol&amp;s
fronts 'available tor lease.
A/C.
GQOII
Condlllon.
FOR lbNr
. vacancies now.
$8900.
(740)367·7187,
(740)367-7015. 1983 14x50
Furnished atliclency, all utll·
$8Good900Cond1~1on.22B~R,8aBalhlh ~.:!_BedFromrooms't!.~~.
4% mltleoo_g_a,ld9. 1aha92'".J"Aihv.eSn1u2e5.·
·
•
•
· ·~··~""'
·~
$2900.
·(740~-4734, Down. 30 Yea" at 8.5% t;l40)446-3945.
·
(740)441-1337. (740)387· APR. Fct Uotlnge. 800-3197015
3323 Elrt. 1709.
Gracloua living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at VIIWhy rant? government lage Manor and Rlverslc:le
1993 Claytanl 8K80 mobile backed toani from $490 Apartments In Middleport
home. 3 b'r., 2. be. alking down. (740)448-3093
From $218-$348. can 740·

1st time buuersGovarn·
'
ment loans· buy lo8118 &amp;
)«B-3093 0 k
oale· (740
a •
wood Suparcenter
28, 60 3
4 Bedroom Only 5345 .00 Per Month
8 9S% Fbced lnt rest A 1
a e,
1
34 20 e

3 Regular etlamla!s Butta. Si17 MCro van, 55,000 milel;,
(304}675·6581
CIUIH, tift, PW, PL.
~M Cauane, dUal 11it
6- holl Boor Coot. E"PPOBd bags. ASS. onto 7. like
to full blood buck lor Janu. new (740)379-2134 leeve
ary kids. $275 aaeh RegiS- mesSage
.
teted Boer BLtCk, $4WC. - - -·- - - - (7~)256-1724 ovelllnge.
97 F150 4x4. Extendod

e"~

1 and 2 bedroom apart· .Matching Kenmo,. waoher
....,... tumllhod and unlur· &amp; dryer. $100. (740)441·
r:tllhed, HCUrlty depollt re- 0182 after 5:30pm.
qulred, no pets, 7.W.992·
2218.
Maln Street Furniture
(304)675-14221 Bedroom Apartment, Ra·
515 Main Srreet, Point

._contact

r•o

I

Homeworkera
NMded
Oct · 8th-9th 1Dam-2pm $835 Weekly Processing
No Experl·
SalSer Road' Racine ori Mall. Eaayt
124 and Plno.Grove
once Needed. ca11 1·
Smith's.
800·852·8726 Ext. 2070,
·
24Hrs.
AUCI10N Al'll 'Ingram Barga Company will
L_.;,F'LEAtliiiiiitMAIIKETiiiiiiiiiiii_.l be acc8ptlng applications
-,
tor Oeckhanc:la at the DeRick Pearson Auction Com· partment lor Employment
pany full tinie auctioneer Security, 225 Sixth Streal,
comPiete auction service: Point Pleaaanl, Welt VirginLicensed tee Ohio &amp; Weat Ia, 255500039 on 10-8.01 &amp;
Virginia 304:773-5785 Or 10-12.01 lrom 8:00a.m. tlll
304-n3-5447
3:00 p m You mull have
·
valid pia~re 10 and Social
WANrnJ
Security card to apPy. EOE,

1

s

-ks appl~ntolor 1l1e pooltlon ot Program Alalstant 1

Lw-it·tliiliiiiiiiiiiiliii.o.,J.

L_,.-,itii........,iiiiliii~ii"iiti•,..,.,...,.ii_.

~

S

PROGRAM A8818TANT t
' '
Weat Vlrglnl~ Univeralty

I
I

r

r

-.otollnd.com

I

Badrooma,

members. ReeruiV locate
Potential adult leadn for
the 4-H youth dtvtlopment GalllpollaC.retr COIItge
program Work With IChool (CBreersCioseTofiome)
·
~-·
'"•••
S)'stom to recruit lnd pro- -1 Today 17~-4387. 3 bedroom. 1-112 bath. heal
mote after· school, out-of·
1-800·214-0452,
pump, 8Creenecl In porch,
SChool. weekend, and sumR~J90o05-12748.
fenced In back·yard, new
YARD SALE
- miscellaneous projects both mer ICiivltlea for youth. As·· 1176 \
'siding, buildings, $65,000.
Indoors &amp; outdoors, person- soclate degree required,
MtscF:IJ.ANE(')l5
(740)441-1033 (740)367al references raqulred, call bachelor degree preferred •
• 0514
7
yG.uJ SAW1 40)986-36B6.
'·,no dltwelrecUy ralatodth a.........Sllx
3 bedrooms 2 5 baths Juet
A1JJP0L1S
Help wanted caring for the
ve mon s ..,...r- Oak firewoOO, $35 a load,
modeled •F1· •-- ' N1~
ld • Caret G
Home ence In plannlnn' conduct· 1w
108ds $'~~""' re
· rep-.ootr, ""e
..,
e el.y, In I Iroup
' lng educat lo n wprograms (740)742
0 or more
'
.nl view 15mlnuleslromtown
2897
'"'40)992
·
Saturdav1 October 13th 211 now pay g m n mum wage,
·
'
·
or'' ·
· Must see · to appreciate·•
•
new ah!ftl· 7am·3Pm ?am· commumcaUng
(written, or· 7285
Campbell Rd. Rio Grande. 1 5
~- 11
•11 • al. lonnaV lnlonnel) w1 vari·
Electric Range and dl&amp;h·
mile up Cherry Ridge. 7:· call740·~~5o23 pm tty of audiences. Valid drl~· 1115
WAN11D
washer Included. {740)379(740)245-1111.
Massie
•
·
era l~enae required. wvu
To Do
9887
Tractor, New Kerosene Home Health Agency Mek· Salary Schedule, benefits
3br Ranch attached 1 car
·
Heater, New Ventlaas Fire- lng Part-time/ Per Diem/ eligible For more lntorma·
place logs, Eftanbee and CNA/ STNA. Competitive tlon cOntact ROOney Wall· All Kerosene wk:ks Instal· r~~g~. Exce:nt ~~It:
ront.
w n,.
Madam Alexander Dolls, IBiar; wtlh benefits. Apply brown a1 (304)675..Q888 or lad: repairing forcecl air ker·
Clothes, Misc.
at 750 First Avenue, Gal· visit
our
web
site: osene heatlf'S; &amp;awn mow·
~ar Ga:::4
YARD SAL&amp;
Hpolls or phone 1-866-441- http://www.wvu.edul~extenl. era: small engines. Mlke
·
67 5038a er
1
n...~ ...._
_ 1393 (tolllroe).
To apply subm~ a WVU at&gt;' (740)448·7804

r
r

2 Story, 3 BR ilouoo on

Scout Clmp Rd., Chtlttr,
n~ olzo lR, Kl1chln a
bd'l, for !'nON Information

r·

llta, seniors welcome, 1-

;~~ ~Ice

1

Pleasant
New &amp; Uaact Furniture
- . Lond Co., Ltd. t;l~)«t-1519.
New 2 Piece U'lingroom
1-e6o-21s.&amp;sl5
Suites, $399. Buy, Sell,
1&amp;2 bedroom. near Holzer. Trade.
ICOOOmloal utllhias, $279 to .:.;;:.:_::._ _ _ _ __
Indian Creek Equellrfan &amp;- $379 par month plus utilities New and Used Furniture
tatoo, 3-a acra Iota, wool ot t;l40)446-2957
store below Holklay Inn. KaAlo Grande, from '$26,800.
nauga. We sell grave monut;I40)2 1i2· 1 Bedroom Apts. located menta and vases. Houra
4 5747
Cl- to PVH &amp; Shopping Monday thru Saturday 11·
Largo lot on Stole areas. (304)875·2117
:lpm. (740)446-4762
Roult
588.
$14,000.· 2br
M1 Verno&lt;l In Point
(740)245-!1448
·on ·
Nlcausedlumlturalawllan·
Pleuanl (304}675·7833
cas. (740)«6-1004 or
Looking To Buy A New 3 Rooms and Bath 46 Olive (740)446-2680.
OOnl Have Land?
·
Utll"'- p ·ld
We Doll! Hu Only 10 Lata 51ntet~
".... a · tove Whirlpool washer, white,
Left, 304-?S:VJ295.
. and Refrigerator No Pets. heavy duty- 195; Wflir1pool
.
$495 .,._deposit. Reloren- dryer. almond. heavy duly,
Nice
4 acre tract near cas Required. ~740)446- $95; ·orver, heavy duty,
GIIUipolis· easv terms', 3945
whl1&amp;- like new. $150; G.E.

I'IIEI!

Priced to Sell. Point PIIUant area. (304)675·3889
UkiOtRooomary.

--

I -·

w; AND

~~

~~'1.=~·· ~ =~1'28~~=·~:~

catl (304)878-

lining on
'28x80
"thermal
"lid Doubltwlde
lot With 2x6 wallo.
pane windows.

DriVBfs wanted- no COL, Health, 740-446-3880 RNa·
23yrs and up. good driving PAN naodedalso.
record. drug screen. bene8CJ0.531-6553.
EASY WORKI EXCELLENT
PAVI Aaaembla producta at
Call Toll Free
f.SOQ-467-5588 E•t. 12170
WYM homejoba com/12170
·
'
E~rlanced OJ needed for
Weekend
work.
Call
(7-40)258-1266
Garbage Serv~ Needs Dependeble dnverlloader wMh
COL. Experience drl~lng
top·tlaavy trucks a plus.
(7.ro)3811-11886

t

1

(740)986-3922

..

I

GIVEAWAY

rid .=
8od~m,

TUAHED
ON
2
Unllnlahod up- ·
HUNTING OR
SOCIAL II!CURITY 1111? 1181... New haoUng &amp; coolRECIII!ATION LAND
No Fu Unl... We Win!
lng Unit, New watlll' line, RanQina In 15 _.. to 100
1-888-582·3345
New gas line, Chain Unk acre tractl, tomt ldjatnlng
Fence, large deck, New · PubliC tlundng. Available In
IIOrm windows, large lot, Athena, Galfi1, Jackton,
t 99 Burdette. Priced upon Plkt, Scklto and Hocking

Tho WIII·MIIrt Suparoonto&lt;

:'

1

lyqu~thi"rf"'ghl~~:~~~

L~-------pl.

i__

11

HluWANJm 1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

t ~ 1~.,.r_LIVfSIOCK
__.,~I ~.,.t_..r~
....."' ~

Meigs, Gallta,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

TO Place

•

Monday, Ocl8, 2001

aond~iall.

0

~~:'

11

~~

W.::.,

OSU athletes' graduation rates.still lagging behind

.

•aoo ,.

·
YANMAR YM 1500 Tractor,
diesel, 3 point hitch. $2, 150.
Alto, new 4' finish mower,
still In .crate, $650. Shipping
a~allable. Located · just outside of Huntsville, AI ['?56)
ne.9435 ww~. may n:· '"
quipment.com

r

WiiNfEil
roBUY

Wanled to buy: Used Mobile
or
(304)675·594!5
Horha.
Call (740)446·0175

NEEDED

•

NOW~

WILL TRAIN ·~ ~

BENEFITS AVA.LABLE
MANY SHIFTS
AVAILABLE.

vfCALL NOW
'•888•974•JoBS

~~---·----------..1

COLUMBUS (AP) - More Ohio
Low graduation rates and academic
State athletes are getting their degrees, but problerru were among the reasons cited for
the university's graduation rates for stu- the dismi~ of former football coach John
denl! who play sporu still rank near the Cooper last January:
bottom of the Big "len.
The improved figures released Friday all
A new NCAA report shows 62 percent related to Cooper's tenure as h~ad of the
of OSU athletes on scholarship graduated . football prograffi.
in six yeats -the common time frame for
"We will never be at 100 percent
tracking graduation - . compared with 50 because this is a human endeavor ... but we
percent in last year's report.
will !trive to I 00 percent and we will do it
It's the first time since 1996 that athletes one ltep at a time," athletic director Andy
graduated at a highe~ rate than OSU stu- Geiger told the school's board of tntstees.
Leading the Big Ten's graduation rates list
dents as a whole, whose graduation rate in
six yean or less is 55 percent.
is Northwestern, with 90 percent pf athThe rate of football players graduating is · letes and 92 percent of "studenl• getting
50 percent, up tiom 14 percent in 1999.
degrees, the NCAA report showed.
.'

.,

At 86 percent, Indiana graduated more
football players than any other university in
the 11-member Big Ten.
Ohio State is tied for ninth with
Michigan State among athletes who graduate and is 1Oth in the overall student graduation rate.
. Michigan State, Minnesota and Penn
State graduated fewer football players than
the Buckeyes.
New Ohio State football coach Jim
Tressel has academic incentives in his contract that will pay him as much asS 175,000
for higher graduation rates, improved
grade-point averages and GPAs above 3.0
for his players.

�-

Monday, Oct. 8, 2001

Page 84 • The o.lly Sentinel

Monday, Oct.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

a, 2001

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle

•

=.

ACROSS

PHILLIP

41 tloblly-

~'!'--

ALDER

1
43
5 Do lllor:tlg
-

.-

P/1

Howardl.

.......

COI1WI'Ois, IIC.

Rooting • Homt

-

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

Fllf fllllllillll

949-1405
91·5011

•••hc'*-_.w.v.
WVt1Ul7U
.)

•

'

High&amp;Dry
Self..Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio
7~-992-5232

OOICJIRUCIION
p,_ ..._ ,

I

\ I J·

HI'HISES

·Oeaeral
Coatractlq

Bacafttbul -

Do-aa

Backhoe
lleptlc Syatema
OtWtlu
New Home•

. 992-7943

.

In

Haircuts

~

.... 992-7445

c.l

AU MakaTnctOr.t
Equlpmeat l'u1l
Factory Aathorbed
CIM·IHParu

AUTO REPAIR

740·667-6133
I If no answer,
l~nve

message I

lbcJI.'• Pocket
. . . t C:ollecltlblooj

1000 St Rt. Tlklllfll

Coolvt/M, OH 4IIm

for$25 per

•. ....

, .,

591-9254

•Compllta
RIIIIOdellng

Tire
Barn
440117 Wlpple Allld
.

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESnMATES

Pomeroy

740-992·5344
HOUIII: -··~

217E. 2nd, Pomeroy

992-11908

7'*992·1871

WINTER STORAGE Call Us For All Your Lawn
And

Melp Couaty F'llrp-oundl
Arrival:
Sept. 29 .t Oct, 20, 2001
111':00 a.m. • 4:00p.m.
Releao:
Apr1U7, 2002
A fee of $20.00 will be dl8l'Jtd for early
arrival, late arrlvlll, early naewal, late
nmoval, or anytime acceu Ia wanted to
other thAn lllated dates.
B
l)lltee Is ftnt come lint IN!rve.

... A f 11

month

r-------------L-10% Discount •

r

On New Tires
WithThisAd
A

TWIS111U!

• N11rly 2000 yeara experience.
• Wol'ka on Sundaya.
• Alway$ Available.
For mort llifol'lllllllon, com• to our &lt;hon:h

JERF~Y

S

USED
COMPUlTRS
'
.
Middleport, OH

Needsl

'

992-9158

faJE

frMHII-

on repalrea1 _
In-home MrYrce
IVIIIIble 24 houre,
uMCI llfallma 3118

Inside tonae: S4.oom

Open Space: Sl.OOM
lllllde Ftlltll!: $1.0flllf
.
40 992-6!154

24'120'

1..12 IDUILE Will

PLAine

Sunday 9:30- Sullday Sehool;
10:30·
Sunday Eve. 7:00 .t
Eve. 7:00

llfVISfl&gt;

MITH •ULL GOIPIL
ROUTIIIC, 'LOfiG

FIRST COME.
FIRST SERVED

ti15TO~Y•
COLcJMicJ$
~fGfiVf$
APP~OVAL
FO~ l'tl$

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECINli.OOY
KEEPS TNE

$200.00 PER JIINT

REIUlUlY
$321.00 PER JOINT

-MEATIME HEAT

VOYAGf

OUT AND WWTER
11ME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 11.5%

OFDAMAOINO

,

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS •
FACTORY DIRECT

anclup,uMCI

PRICING

hardware and
IIOftwllre.
UcenMII~

THE BORN LOSER.

nil~ 1-lEIJ i!'f(.lpt

I ,.

P"

~~rr

~~ ~l'ro!W 10

r cm'T

&amp;. OO..ICJOU!l!

~N\10

1-lW\'1' 1&gt;\t&gt; '(00 W\1/E. 10 (,()
mt&gt; IWIN l T FClli!:. ?'

' ooq

Malg• County.

Dump Truck Dellv•ry.
Melga and Muon
County

Bob Ball
1-740·992·6142

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

Turley's
Mattress
Sales,,.
............

97 Beech st.

-

(18'11r 611'11201

(740) 992-3194
992-6635
..

BUILDERS INC.
_New Homes • Vlayl
Public Notice

PubliC No1lce

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE Of
NOTICE OF
NOTICE OF
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
ILICTION ON TAX
ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF ELECTION ON TAX
LEVY IN IXCEU 01' LIVY IN !XCIII OF
LEVY IN EXCElS 01'
TNIT!N MILL
THITIN MILL
THIT!N MILL
THET!N MILL
UMITATfON
LIMITATION
UMITATfON
LIMITATION
Aavlaed Coda,
fllvll4dCode,
Aevllld Code,
RavlaldCoda,
8eotiona 3501.11(G),
laotlone 3501.11 {G), lecttonl 350t.11{G),
' s.ca- 3501.11{G),
5701.11, 5705.21
11701., .. J701,11
170&amp;.1t, 1701.21 .
1701.18, 1705.21
•
NOTICE II hertlly
NOTfCI II ~rtllly· . NOTICI! Ia hereby
NOTICI! II hereby given that In
given thU In pur~uance of a given -l hll In given thet In
purauance of • llllolutlon ol the purauance ot a purauuce of a
lleaolutlon of the aoard ol Townelllp Reeolutlon of .tha ·Reeolutlon ot tha
VIII• of Pomeroy, Tru1111a ot the VIllage Councn of the YIIIJI CouncH of lhl
'-oy,
Ohio, Townlhlp of AU11ancl, VIllage of Rutland, Ylllqa ol llaolne,
Ohio, Rutland, · Ohfo, OhiO, .fiHHd on lhe
paaMCI on the 1lth Rutland,
day at _Juno, 2001, palled on thl eth Pllled on the ·t·Oth lth day ot Augual,
there will
ba City ot Allfluet, 2001, day of July, 1001, 1001, there will be
eubmlltlclto a - a t thara will be there. '1!1111 •. -.111.. aubllllt11d -to a vole
t~ people of 1ald IUIIInltWdiO a ol lubmlttld·, 10 ll' VOW . atlllllilaPII at llld
aubdlvlalon at a thl PIOPII ol laid · at the peo~llot lillcl , l~ildlvii!On 'a t I
QINIIIAL ELICTION eulldlvlelon at I IUbdtvlllon II. I • GINIRAL ILICTION
to be halll In tha QINEIIAL ILICTION GINIIIAL ILICTfON to be hald In tha
Vllla~t .of Pomeroy, to be held In tha 1o be held In tha VIllage of Recine,
Ohio, 11 the regular TDWnthlp.ol Rutland, VIllage of llutland, Ohio, et the regular
place• of voting Ohio, at the regullr Ohio, 11 the rtlgular plaoaa of voting
t~reln, on the Jill· plaoee ol voting plaoee of voting thareln, on 1ha lth
day ol November, thlrtlln, on the 11~ thartln, on 1hl 1111 day of November,
1001, the q!lllllon at day ol Novembar, day ol Novamber 1001, the q-tlon of
levying 1 tax, In 1001, the quHtlon at 1001, the qulltton ol · levying a tn, In
ex- at the "" mill levying 1 tax, · In levying 1 tax, In 111-a atlhlten mill
llmltlllon, lor tha • - at the ten mill ex1111 at the ten miU llmllatlon, lor the
lltnilflt of Pomaroy llmllatlon, tor tha limitation, tor the benefit of l11o1ne
VIllage lor lhe benlflt of Rutland berieflt of llulland VIllage lor tha
p11rp011
of Townehlp for thl Vlll1ge for the purpqea ol current
of purpoll ol current
maintaining and pur poe e
llldtexbelng:
opartUng Dlmlllrl11. maintaining and expanaaa.
Iaiii 111 being:
1 raplacemen1 of a
laid lax being: an operating ·c-rfll.
a renenl of a lax or 111 ol 2 mille Ill • rate
laid tax being:
addlllonal tax of 1
mill at a rate nat a roplaoement of a 2 milia 11 a rate not nol excaodlng a.o
IXCIIdlng lin Olntl tax ell mill 11 1 rete IIOIIdlng a (two) mille lor aaoh one
(tcJ, tO) mllll for IIOh not exCMdlng 1 {OIII) mille for 11ch one doller of valuation,
ona dollar ot milia lor each one dollar ol valuation, which a_mountt to
valuation, , which dollar of veluetlon, which emounte to lwenly oenta (10.20)
amounts 1o ten ctnte which amounts to tan lwenl!f oenta (10.20) tor Hch 0111 hyndrld
(to. tO) tor uch ona ctnte (to. I D) for uch lor Hc.h ana hundred dollar• of valuation
hu.n drtd dollar• ol one hundrtld dollara dollera of Vllultlon tor llva {I) yura.
The Poll• for eald
valuation for !Iva (5) of veluatlon tor five lor ftva (I) ye~~ra.
{I) yura.
Tha Palla lor aald elaollon will open at
yaere.
Tho Polio tor 11ld alactlon will open et 1:30 o'clock A.M. end
Tha Polio tor Nld
will opan el 1:30 o'olock A.M. and remain · open until
alaollon
alecUon will open 11
8:30 o'clock A.M. end lt30 o'clock A.M. and . ramaln open un111 7:30 o'clock P.M .. of
remain open unlll remain open unlll 7:30 o'olock P.M. of uld dly.
7:30 o'clock P.M. ol 7:311 o'clock P.M. of Nld day.
8y order ollhe Board
Nldday.
.
' Midday.
of Elacllanl, of Malga
order
olthe8ot1rcl
By order ot the Board
County, Ohio.
Eleotlone,
of
malge
of
Ellctlona;
of
Melga
ordar of the Board
County,
Ohio.
o Eleetlona, of Mllga County, Ohio.
Deled Septamber 7,
County, Ohio.
Datld S.ptembar 7, Dated September 7, 1001.
2001.
Deted S.plambar 7, 2001.
2001.
,,
John N.lhle
Chalrmaln
John N.lhla
John N.lhle
Chalrmaln
Jo.hn N. lhle
Chll!nneln
Alta D. Smith
Chalnn~~ln
Director
Alii
D.
Smith
Alii D. Smith
Olraetor
Alta D. Smith
'i!INCtor
flO) I, II, 22, 21,
Dlraelor
(10) 8, IS, f&amp;l, 21, {10) I, 11, 22, 21, 2001
4tc
2001
(10) a, 15, 22, 21, 2001 2001
4tc
4tc
4tc

••PI-·

Sl &gt;IC.E SHE AND I

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Raclnt, Ohio

You can · guess
whot's coming in today's quotation. But it
is well hidden.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
wrote,
"Raphael paine. wisdom; Handel sinil' it,
Phidiasv carves it,
Shakespeare writes it,
Wren builds it, Columbus sails it, Luther
preaches it, Washington arms it, Watt
1nechanizcs it."
· How would you try
to sail this three-notrump .contract, like
Columbus, safely into
Watling's Island, Bahamas? West leads his
fourth-highest spade
to dummy's singleton
king.
Note West's spadefive start. With only
two honors, it is normal against no-trump
to lead fourth-highest
(unless you are certain
partner is also long in
the suit). However,
against a suit contract,
one should (almost always) attack with the
queen: top of touching honors.

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Phone: 740-985-3831 • F.. 740-985-3851

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PROJECT?

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Oct. IJ. 2UO!

Lady Lm.·k could open mme
doors · for you in th(' yea r
ahead t·hat woldd (;.~rthcr your
:~mbit i oltS , When you sec
your chances, be prepared to
· util ize them to the full est
LIDRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - Merely rclym g on your assc rtivc n cs~ aml force of wiU to
accomplish your ,objective~
today won't work. The harder

you push, the harde r you're

apt to be pushed back. Trying

LIMESTONE '
TOPSOIL

Umtltenel
Senlon DIICOIIIIb
mutUplei.Hd
Dlicounta

Rocof!na &amp; Quttoro

_ 11 ~

37 lloa
31 Ultimate

4 Conoeq5 Oregon! ••

35 Plunge
31 ~

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A+.

• Room AddRiona &amp;
llomodl!lng

3

"Nau!IIIIY.
noughlyl"

Possibilities, but the
can use ~ In the direction ol
helping
people.'
aboul
being
alltOVIe
wise line is to call for
~c:t:::b~!::x:itii~I::::::::li:U. , au m.11w:,t .•. Ai~ n.d, ..
king at trick 'two, -~~~~~~
squashing your own
queen. Let's suppose O Rearrange letters of tht
four scrambled word; b•·
East ducks. Continue
low lo form four limple words.
with the di~niond· I0. '
East wins with the
A MD A l
jack, but what can he ~-r-'-,..,,_,.;...;.,...;;.,~
1
do next? If he shifts to
the club queen (or an ::::~;::~:::==~-'
unexpected heart l 0),
S CU RH
you win with dum- ,
3
my's king, drive out .
.. .
.
.
the diamonq ace, get .....-~~~~-=--,
back to the dummy I
NEHN A
with its remaining
I~
The light company -has a
1 king, and take 10 . . . .
slrange way of telling you that
tricks: two spades, ~:~~;~.J.;-:-~J.._:-_--=J.~--:"'-..., your bill is overdo They mail you
I two "'carts, four _diaDA YL E D
some · ·- ·- - ·.
n1onds and two clubs.
Complete the chuckle quoted
Instead, if East returns 1 .;!'..ili:....l:J.I..-..J.......IL......I.-...J
by fill in~ in the milling wordo
you develop from step No. 3 below.
the spade eight, you
put in the '10 (or
A PRINT. NUMBERED LETTERS t·
W IN THESE SQUARES
nine). West wins with
the j~ck, but cannot ' A UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
V GET ANSWER
continue spades with
effect. Again, you finSCUM-LETS ANS)YERS .
10/&amp;101
ish with an overtrick.
Today, w_o uld EmCiph,e r • Slant -Batch - Tricky . ~ARA TE
erson add Armstrong ·
My sister JUSt passed a course so she could be a
flies it?
substitute teacher. She's now an erert 1n KARATE!

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First, count your
top tricks. You have
six: two spades, two
hearts and two clubs.
There ·are various

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12Two-.

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL .

to patch up a broken romance ? ·The Astro-Graph
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the rclationshJp work , Mail

$2.75 to MatchnJ&gt;ker, c/o this
ne\vtpaper. 1'.0. Box 167,
WicklifTe, OH 44092-0167.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) •• In your hasle to get ilaut:a on the tabl11 tud~y. you
might be tompted Into bclns
nrw;umentMive . lt won't uvc
time; it'll end up compllc•tlng
che n\ntu•r,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) •• Fiuouci•l conditiom 11ppcar to be a bit 1110rf
tr0~1l&gt;IC8011\C than US\111 totf01y.
Don't do anythins th:~t &lt;ould

further jeopardize your holdings :md resources.

a dither today over someone
wlwse vicw:s dtametrically oppose yours. Keep "a cool head
so· that things won 't get
heated.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan , 19) "- Be careful with
whom you lock horns today.

GEMINI (May 2l-June 20)

If you get a bit too pushy for
your own good and attempt
to dominate Qne who won't
be ordered about• .you won't

-- With the discovery that a
bminess transa ction isn't good
for either the buyer or the

seller today, don't waste time
trying to make a bad deal bet-

like the results.

AQUARIUS Qan.

2~-Feb .

ter. llite the bullet

19) -- If you don't ~now
what you're doing today
when .attempting a job you've
never done before, don't try
to wing it, especially when
working with unf.11niliar tools.
Be safe-, not ~orry .

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
•• Should you get involved in
a competitive sport today and
someone begins to take things
a bit too seriously. tempers
could fly. Don't let thinRI gee
out or hnnd,
AR.l.ES (Mnrch 2l •Aprlll9)
·- The reoaona why It rnny be
difficult ror you to ochlevc "'
lmpomnt objective today io
becoule or the ill-pret!Ored
methods :~-nd procrdures.
Sheer force alone won't cut it.
TAUltUS (April 20-Mny
20) -- h isn't wmth kectting i_n

nnd

pull

out.

CANCER Qune 21-July
22) -- You must take measures to m:1kc certain that any
disagreement lictwecn you
and your nute isn't air~d in

..
\'

public t&lt;&gt;day. Uoth parties'
images will be tnmished.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ·•
Although you've g~t plcray of
industriousnru goins for you
coday, 1r you Attempno ~per­
o.ce obow your skill lovrl.
there iln't nuiCh ch•nco ynu'll
produce onyrhin11 of worth .
Vll\00 (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-· Jr you cxercll• little tolerance today for thou· who, in·
your opinion, aren't polilic•lly ·
correct, be prcp;m.•d for othC!rs
10 stort groding your bchovior
"well.

�.- "VVI DO • IM LMtly 5entllltll

FLY YOUR FLAG
•

FUL~

.

STAFF TO SUPPORT YOUR COUNTRY!
"'

•

•

a1
.....

~.

AMERICA AT WAR
j&lt;..

Is assess bomb damage

u.s.

l•creased
. .:formance
Quieter

W~SHINGTON (AP) - Pentagon. officials are reviewing the
results
of
bombing
over
Afghanistan, now into a third day, at
the same time a jittery American
public confronts the fear of fresh
strikes by terrorists on U.S. soil.
"The best defense against terror is
· .a global offensive against terror
:Whenever it might be found," Pres·ident Bush declared Monday, juggling his roles as commander in
·chief and comforter in chief to a
nervous nation.

L.Oa:·-

•

"On all efforts, on all fronts, we're
going to be ongoing and relentless
as we tighten the net of justice," the
president said.
Early Tuesday jets bombed the
Taliba1,1 stronghold of Kandahar in
southern Afghanistan, Taliban officials said, Taliban soldiers replied
with heavy anti-aircraft fire. There
was no immediate confirmation
from the Pentagon that the attacks
were from the U.S.-led coalition
that be~n bombing Afghanistan .o n
Sunday, although they likely were.

Pentagon. officials said five longrange bombers and 10 sea-launched
warplanes took part in' Monday's
strikes against military and terrorist
targets at selected locations inside
Afghanistan, and all returned safely.
AIJ:hough smaller than Sunday
night's bombardment, the attack
included the launch of 15 cruise
missiles, launched from ships.
At least three bomb explosions
reverberated through the Afghan
capital of Kabul. Taliban gunners
responded to the attack ~ith a

crackle of fire into the skies over
the city.
Targets in Monday's raids included areas around the capital, the Taliban's · home base of Kandahar, and
Afghanistan's north, where · an
opposition northern alliance is battling the Taliban, the Islamic movement · that controls most of
Afghanistan.
A spokeswoman for the United
Nation• in Pakistan, Stephanie
Bunker, said four workers for the
Afghan Technical Consultants,

which had an office in a village two
miles east of Kabul, were killed iri
Monday night's attack&lt;. Their office
was not far from a Taliban communications tower that may have been
a target.
Also in Islamabad, Abdul Salam
Zaeef, the Taliban envoy to Pakistan, told reporters the United
States "is aiming firstly to hunt the
sitting Islamic government in
Afghanistan and then every committed Muslim, in the name of terrorism."

HOSESYSTEM

ODNR updates

on

•
•
t
·m1ne proJec s
.I

FROM STAFF REPORTS

.

~

..
;:,

'

RUTLAND - At one
time, the coal industry
thrived throushout the
western half of Meigs
County, but today, mostly all
that remains of the oncethriving industry is abandoned strip and underground mines that continue
to have a negative impact on
the environment and the
lives of Meigs countians ..
Barbara Flowers of the
~ib Department of Natural Resources' Division of
Mineral Resource Management, formerly the Division

. .-.-lei'=
~

~·

-s2o~~U.In

of Mines and Reclamation,
discussed Ohio's Abandoned
Mine Land and Acid Mine
Drainage programs at a
meeting Thursday night at
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department.
As part of her presentation, she gave a brief
overview of the impacts of
old mining throughout the
watershed. A state inventory
of the Leading Creek watershed shows 2,009 acres of
abandoned stdp"'lttine! with ·
3,272 acres atop underground mining, she said.

PleMe ... ODNI.AJ

IIAFlTY PRECAUTION- Mark Asher, equipment operator for the west Vlrglnlli Department of Highways, keeps watch on' tfie
Ohio side of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge following Sunday's U.S military strikes on Afghanistan. Bridges are being watched as a
safety precaution In case of retaliatory terrorist attacks. (Tony M. Leach photo)

W.Va ..keeps vigil over state bridges
'
BY TONY
M. lEAcH

After Mail-In Rebate*

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OMEROY In the
wake of Sunday's U.S.
military . strikes
on
Mghanistan, West Virginia · Department of
RouRo..h
Highwa.ys is keeping vigil over all
bridges within the state, including WVDOH, said as a safety precaution,
those spanning into Ohio, in case personnel have been positioned at both
of possible retaliatory terrorist ends of area bndges to ensure that the
. . ty
. structures will not be targeted by vengetl
ac Y1 •
fuJ terrorist cells.
Ross Roush, crew chief supervisor for
",Following the recent military strikes
the Mason County Division of on the Taliban, concerns over retaliatory

SJ9· s59

Hlp: 701
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Lotteries

1 Section - 10 ......

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Comics

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terrorist attacks in the U.S. have increased
dramatically;• said Roush.
"Our. crews are keeping their eyes open
for any strange vehicles or unusual activity around or near the bridges," he said.
"Basically, the lookoutS are being used as
a visual deterrent in case of possible terrorist activity."

"It is clearly evident that terrorism can
occur anywhere and we want to be prepared for any sifUation that could arise,"
he added.
Ross said the watches are scheduled to
continue for the next 72 hours and that
meetings will be held soon after to determine if the surveillance will resume.

ABANDONED MINE PROJECTS - Elarbara Rowers of the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources' Division of Mineral
Resource Management gave a brief presentation Thursday
· In Rutland outlining ODNR's projects within the Leading
Creek watershed.
·

QSP Sarles

.sgg

574

"Following the recmf
military Jtrileu on the Talillan,
concerm over retaliatory
te"orist attacles in the US.
have increased dramatlcally.,t

SEI'ITiNEL NEWS STAFF

10 Gallon
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1164455

Editorials
O~jtyarjes

Sports

Weather

86-8 Pick 3: 1-3-Q; Pldl4: 9-2-4-3
89 lluclw,. 5: 4-7-15-27·35

A4
A3 W.VA.
BSJ o.lly ]: 9-5-5 IWy 4: 8-2-9.1
C&gt;

BY BRIAN J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS 'STAFF

AS OHIO

A3

Middleport. seeks renewal of levy

2001 Ohio V.lloy' Publishing Co.

MIDDLEPORT - Mayor Sandy
Iannarelli asked for the support of Middleport residents in renewing a levy for
operating expenses next month, and
asked Village Council to help in the
campaign when council met in regular
session·'bn Monday evening.
·
lannarelli emphasized that the renew-

al of the three-mill, five-year levy is
"vital" to the continued operation of
the village government and village services for residents .
"We need to be su re that the residents
understand that this is a renewal, not a
new tax, and that it's very important to
the village that it be passed," Iannarelli
said.
In other business, Council hired

Randy Mullins as the new building
inspector. Mullins met with council last
night to discuss the position and his.
new duties.
. lannarelli said that department heads
have been supplied with a new form to
track vehi.cle maintenance, which will
be completed and turned in on a .
month!)' basis.
PIHH . . . Levy, A3

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The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, October 14 from 2:00 - 4:00 pm in lhe Hospilal's French 500 Room.
· ·This monlh's topic: •oiabetes Meal Planning"
Presenter: Jennifer Stallings, RD, LD

Oclubir 15, 16 ancl17 from 6:00:9:00 pm in lhe
Hospilal's Fiflh Floor Classroom.
All are welcome! For more informotian, call

1740) 446·5080
•,

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ME D I CAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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