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Pllp ae • T1MI 01111y Sentinel

~.

lllddlaport, Ohio

FLY -YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

Wedt 21 I r.ley Oct. 24, 2001

•

I•

•

Bv TONY M. lEAcH
SENTiNEL NEWS STAFF

BY BRIAN J. RI!ED
POMEROY The
. ~eig. County Board of
. Revision removed nearly
· $200,000 in personal property taxes, along with trailer taxes and taxes on coal
and minerals from the
county's tax duplicate on
Wednesday.
. Meig. County Treasurer
· l::loward Frank and Commissioner Jim Sheets, both
members of the Board of
Kevision, voted to remove
tlie "uncollectable" taxes at
~ lneeting Wednesday. ProseCutor Pat Story also
. a~ended the meeting as
tlje board's legal advisor.
:;The taxes, according to
frank, have been consid~red uncollectable for at
l!X.st five years, and in most
~ases, for considerably
l~nger. Removing the taxes
~ serve to "clean up" the
~hplicate and give local .
ajlicials a better picture of
· anticipated revelllll!.·
will help 'clean up ·
the duplicate, and provide
local subdivisions, including villages arid townships,
with a clearer picture of
what they can expect in
terms of tax revenue,"
Frank said. "As it stands
ftbw, this duplicate results
iq a false certification to
tqose local governments."
The remission of the
taxes, F.Pink said, will not
result in a loss of revenue
for these subdivisions,
because the taxes in qnestlon will never be paid.
Owners of record have
died without heirs, ilisappeared, gone bankrupt, or
simply no longer exist, as is
tile case with many . coal
companies listed as owners
of coal and mineral rights.
Remitting the taxes,
instead, might result in a
slight increase in revenue
for some entities, incluiling
~ocal
school districts,
whose funding from the
state is determined, in part,

'·

Pomeroy 992-3381

Flsher-Acrce

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Carol Ann Stewart takes a well-deserved break with her "friend" after putting up Halloween decorations Wednesday afternoon at the home of her grandparents. Carof and Kenneth McCullougt)
on Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy. Carol Ann, like many other ci]II\Jren, througho11t the community, will be out and about this evening collecting goodies While tiick-or-treatlng. (Tqny M. Leach
photo)

.,

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:Sentinel
2 SectiDRJ - II

Plipl

J•

: .calendar
: Classifieds

&amp;
•

·· Comics

1

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
:- Weather

Gallipolis

446..:.2265

Tuppers Plains

""

,.

..
M.O-

0

Bv KEVIN Ka.tv
OVP NEWS EDITOR

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II

ALL! POLIS
-Just in time
for Halloween,
the
world's
most famous
vampire
IS
making
a.

return ap~rance.
On.tl!e stage, that is.
· Ariel Players' first two performances of"Dracula''under the
direction ofPhil Luckeydno are
Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. at
the Ariel Theatre. Two additional shows are Nov. 2 and 3, also
at 8. ·
"We did 'Dracula' because

.

we wanted to do a 'classic,"' MOMENT OF TERROR - Count Dracula (Rob Sanders) menLuckeydoo' said. "It hasn't been aces Lucy (Lynne Hopkins) in a key moment in the Ariel Playdone for quite some time. The ers' production of the classic vampire play "Dracula," which
timing felt good for it.
will be produced Friday and Saturday, and Nov. 2 and 3, at 8
" 'Dracula" is a pretty well- p.m. at Gallipolis' Ariel Theatre. The show Is under the direcknown story and everyone is tion of Phil Luckeydoo, who also plays Renfleld. (Kevin Kelly
excited to be a part of it;' he photo)

added.
Adapted from Bram Stoker's
1897 novel, the play describes
how the arrival of Count Dracula, a suave, enigmatic Central
European .nobleman, strikes
terror in the residents of Dr.
Seward's insane asylum near
London.
Seward's daughter Lucy suffers an unknown malady, and
his most intriguing patient,
Ren6eld, exhibilll a curious link
with the count.
The mystery of Dracula is
solved by Dr. Van Helsing, an
occult expert who undertakes
the job of destroying the
"undead" visitor before he
drains the countryside of its life
blood to sustain hi&lt; own existence.
Cast as Dracula is Rob
Sanders, while Van Helsing is
enacted by Tim Hall. Other

PIRH- DI'ICU.., .U

Anthrax mystery growing

Low: JOa

Details, A6

Lotteries

WASHINGTON (AP) The first two letters went to
media organi~ations with
instructions to counteract the
deadly anthrax inside. Three
weeks later, a third letter to
Senate Majority Leader Tom
Daschle contained only a message of death.
That diffetence, says retired

Kldcer:286464

A3 W.VA.
81-:Z. 8 I'Uwelball: 6-15·24-24-27-42
c 2001 Ohio Valley PubLishing Co.

..'

985-3161

.......
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Pla•H -

lo•rd,. Al

'Dracula' offers a Halloween treat Stonns

OHIO
.
84·6 Pick 3: 1-1-4; Pick 4:3.0.7-6
87 ~ LaiiD: 7-12-1H2-3&amp;42

A6

.;. -· -·

Mary freeman and Traci
Houdashelt as substitute secretaries/aides.
The resignation of Joyce
Thoren as food services
supervisor was accepted by
the board, and Tim Thoren
was approved to fill the position for the remainder of the
2001-02 school year.
Kim
Romines • was
approved for a one-year supplemental contract as CIP
coordinator for the 2001-02
school year. The position will
be paid out of continuous
improvement grant funds .
While atteniling to business
issues, the board approved the
purchase of bus radios, hand
radios and a repeater antenna
fiom Lloyd's Electronics of
Millwood, W.Va. The new
equipment
will
cost
$22,281.65 and will be covered by FY 2002 parity
money.
An abstinence program
provided by the Meig. County Wellness Program was
approved for use in the
Southern Local Schools. Earlier, Brenda Curfinan had discussed the program with

.... .,. ' ' q;

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HJah: 40a

'lbdl(s

lburBank~4t···

992-2136

992-6611

••
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Middleport 992-3345

Pomeroy

Middleport

992-5627

Stay Alert ... Stay Safe!

Brogan-W111ner
Insurance
Pomeroy 992...;2121 '

RACINE - The resignation of Southern Loa! Board
of Education President Bob
Collins topped the agenda
during the organization's regular meeting.
Treasurer Dennie Hill said
the board accepted Collins'
resignation as both president
and member of the board
because of time constraints
induced by Collins' work
schedule.
Hill said a search for a
replacement is already under
way and the issue should be
finalized during the board's
next meeting.
In personnel matters,
Melinda Patterson was granted a one year contract as a
handicap aide for the 2001-02
school year. The contract is
effective Nov. 2 and is contingent upon Sally Caldwell not
returning to the position by
Nov. I.
The board approved the
fOllowing substitute teachers
fur the 2001-02 school year:
Brian Allen, Steve Presley,
Ryan Akers, KeUy Swisher,
Vicki Griffin, Melissa Waybright and Hillery Hi\f;"is; and

SENTiNEL NEWS STAFF

l

Middleport
Pomeroy

Southem
president
steps down

· 'Uncollectable'
.amounts
removed

"·This

DowNING CHILDS
MuLLEN MussER
INSURANCE

buddies

taxes

Parents and kids:
follow these simple tips
and you'll be sure to
enjoy a spooky and safe
night oj.trick or treating!

'

Hallcw~een

County
remits ·
property

•••
•

FBI profiler Clint Van Zandt,
suggests that th e identical
media letters, with their misspelled admonition to "Take
Penacilin Now," may have
been intended as announcements, or press releases, of the
even deadlier attack still to
come.
The Daschle letter offered

Holzer Hospice sponsors

·no advice dn counteracting
the anthrax, which appears to
have been far more lethal than
that sent to media outlets in
New York. Two postal workers
at the Washington facility that
first handled the Daschle letter
died from inhalation anthrax,
and more than a dozen· others

PIHH -

AntllntX. Al

II

damage

paris Of

(

'

state

I

BY THE ASSOCiATED PRESS

Summerlike temperatures
that gave way to summerlike
storms around Ohio caused
some property damage but
no injuries in the state.
There were reports of
downed trees and power
lines, damaged roo&amp;, standing water and wind gusts
50-60
mph
reaching
Wednesday night.
At its peak, at least 25,000.
customers were without
power, mainly in northwest
and southwest Ohio. Crews
continued to restore service
· early Thursday.
In Putnam County, the
storms forced the county's
largest employer, Philips
Display Component'l, to
· send home about 300 thirdshift workers, Sheriff Jim
Beutler said. Part of the
plant's roof was torn off, he
said. The plant, in Ottawa,
about 50 miles southwest of
Toledo, makes television
picture tubes.
Tornado warnings were
issued for · Williams, Van
Wert, Paulding, Pumam,
Ashtabula, Geauga and
[)arke counties by the
National Weather Service.

'

I

a·

Holiday Grief Workshop
in Gallia County
Monday, October 29
1 PM
Wyngate of Gallipolis

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Cha.rles Riffle, R. Ph.
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.bolzer.org

· All are welcome. Refreshmenls will be served.
For more information coli (740) 446-5074.

\

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America at

The Daily Sentinel

1h.......,. 0

ct••• 25,. 2101

may have been aboUt anthrax
. WASHINGTON (AP) -An infOrmant
whose tip prompted the FBI to wm1 of an
impending terror attack may have been
speaking of tbe subsequent anlbax att&gt;da
dw t - kept the nation on edge. the FBI
~

director says.
•
Director Robert Mueller told the U.S.
cOnfe..,nce of Mayors he has no han! evidence linking the Oct. 11 W2111ing to

anthrax. Still, be raised the possibility
Wednesday while defending the alert, a
sudden decision that was second-guessed
by some locol officials because of its vagueness.
Attorney Genenl Jolm Ashcroft was to
address the mayon' confe=ce Thunday.
As the nation struggled to keep its mail
• S}'SteJV. safe fiom antluax, Mueller also
warned the government would ~nd
seve..,ly to hoaxes.
That message was felt in Kentucky, we..,

·.
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college students were arrated for a
hoax that halted posal service in the toWil
of Murray after white powder !pilled fiom
an envelope.
Ptdinlinary tests indicated the substance
was powdered sugar, Murray postmaster
Mark Kennedy said Wednesday.
Amy Wood, 22, pf Benton, Ky., and Erin
Creighton, 21, of Morganfield, Ky., both
srudents at Murray State University, were
arrested Tuesday. They intended to send the
letter to friends, Murray police Capt. Eddie
Rollins said.
The FBI's Oct. 11 warning said ~
bul&lt;'au had l&lt;'ceived infOrmation of the
possibility of additional terror attacks
against Americans inside the United States
or abroad in the next several .:by!.
The bul&lt;'au said its infOrmation did not
identifY !pecifiC targets, but it asked local
.police to be on the highest alert and for all
two

'

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Economic stimulus
· likely to undergo
significant change

I

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WASHINGTON (AP) The $100 billion economic
stimulus package passed by
the House is likely to undergo significant change in the
Democratic-led
Senate,
where far greater support
exists for additional spending
and far less for cuts in business taxes.
More aid. for the unemployed, including federal help
with laid-off workers' health
insurance premiums, and up
to $20 billion in spending on
homeland security and infrastructure ·items are among
J'roposals gaining ground in
the Senate.
The House bill, passed
Wednesday by a wafer-thin
216-214 vote, comprises
almost entirely tax cuts. President Bush says he is willing
to negotiate with Democrats
but does not want a stimulus
plan composed mosdy of
new spending.
And he wants the package
quickly.
"We need a stimulus, and
we need it now:• Treasury
Secretary Paul O'Neill said.
Nevertheless, the Senate is
extremely unlikely to take up
• its version of a stimulus pack: age before next week at the
• earliest. The majority leader,

Sen. Tom Daschle, D-S.D.,
has said he expects to have a
bill to the president by
Thanksgiving.
Bush praised four main
elements in the House bill,
which costs $99.5 billion in
2002 and S159 billion over
10 years. They include a new
round of tax rebates for people who didn't get a check
earlier this year; repeal of the
corporate alternative minimum tax; enhanced expensing write-offs fo.r business
capital assets; and acceleration of the cut in the 27 percent individual income tax
rate so it falls to 25 percent in
2002, four years earlier than
under current law.
The trick to coming up
with an acceptable formula
will be to find middle
ground, said Sen. John
Breaux, a Louisiana Democrat who co-chairs a pivotal
band of Senate moderates.
Breaux said Republicans will
oppose broad new entidement spending, and Democrats don't favor th~ House tilt
toward corporate tax cuts.
"Unleu we have a bipartisan package, we won·' t be able
to get a bill out o(the Sen- ·
ate,"B reaux sa1'd .

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Anthrax

•
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••
••
•••

l•wnPI&amp;eA1
.
.
are either hO!pitalized with

UNKED? - FBI Director Robert Mueller leaves the podium
after addressing the U.S. Conference of Mayors in W.ashing.
ton. Mueller said there Is no link between the Sept. 11 hijack·
lngs and anthrax attacks that were meant to terrorize the
nation. (AP Photo)

Disease Control and Prevention and other
nrganizations. They're calling information
hotlines and reading guides on how to
distinguish the disease fiom influenza,
which typically peaks between January
and March and kills as many as: 20,000
Americans each year.
·
"The level of concern and suspicion is
relatively high in the medical community;' said Dr. Timothy Aaherty, cbainrum of
the American Medical Association and a
NO FLU - Marte Dodd of Speake, Ala., diagnostic radiologist in Wisconsin."But it
raceives a flu shot from Susan Alexan- depends on what area of the country you
der of the Lawrence Baptist Medical
=m.
Center during a Multi County Health Fair
Aaherty said the critical question for
in Moulton, Ala. As flu season approachdoctors is whether a patient bas been
es, hospitals and clinics are bracing for
patients complaining of symptoms com- exposed to anthnx. Odter questions that
need asking, he said, are: Has the patient
mon to both anthrax and the ftu. (AP)
been around other people who have the
a computer analyst:'a t the World Bank, to flu? Have !hey been anywhere where they
!he hospital to be tested. She'll get !he could have been exposed to anthr;.x? Did
results in a few days.
they get a flu shot this year?
'
As it does every year, the J\M4 is rec- ·
Family doctors in the few cities where
anthrax bas been discovel&lt;'d ..., getting OIIUDending flu shots, which could help
the brunt of calls fiom skittish patients, yet doctors rule out the virus as the cause of
physicians across !he nation are learning flu-like symptoms. Conversely, flu test kits,
about the disease too.
now available in some doctor's offi~es. can
· Medical workers are tuning in to Web- be used to quickly confirm a fl'l.lliagnosis
castS 'produced by the federal Centen. for i!!d allevia\e i\1\Y...fe.an,~f \111~, ,,., ...

...

I.

·

Mary Sue Dowell, 59, Chesru..,, died

·. Home.

Answen: Is it flu, or anthrax?
WASHINGTON (AP) - Overheated
with fever and a case of anthrax jitters,
Monica Reeves took a b=k fiom her
hour-long wait in an emergency room to
fan her face with some fi'esh air,
Nine days ago, she stood in line more
than an hour.to mail certified letters at a
post office later found to be contaminated
with anthrax. Since !hen, she's felt like she
bas the Ill!.
"My fever is 100.4 degrees today."
Reeves, 26, of Upper Marlboro, Md.,
~rted Wednesday as she stood in the
ambulance bay at George Washington
University Medical Center. "My chest is
..,ally sore and I have !he sweats. 1 never
sweat and I've been sweating for !he past
three days."
Is it the flu or anthrax?
Since bodt illnesses start with similar
symptoms -· fever, cough, headache,
vomiting, chills, weakness, abdominal pain
- medical officials around !he nation are
gearing up for a confusing influenza season.
Reeves' doctor wasn't sui&lt;' whether she
had contracted inhalation anthrax at !he
Brentwood post office in Washington, so
he p=cribed antibiotics and sent Reeves,

CHESHIRE -

'

:: Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2001, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
! A.rrangemena will be announced by Fisher-Acree Funeral

ty.

"It is conceivable, although thete is no
evidence necessarily to support it, that !he
advent of the anlbax attacks is what thio
source was talking about;• Mueller said in
~nse to a COIIUDent by a participant.gt
the 1113)10r's confe=ce.
"I must emphasize, dtete is no evidence
... that the anlbax attacks wei&lt;' a =ult of
0~ terrorism!'
Mueller was told the lllli}'Ors heard
strong Jeaetions fiom constituents after !he
alert, because schools and emergency officials were unsUI&lt;' bow to ~&lt;'act to the 5C2tY
but nonspecific threat.
The di=tor said the FBI could have
dbne a better job of providing advince
notice to locol bureau directors, who could
!hen have contacted state and local officials
before the alert was made public.

Miry Sue Dowel
•

AmeriCans to be wary of SU!picious activi-

.High Court gives
Gallia judge r~primand

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Lottery Attitude.

•'

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the disease or have symptoms
that lead officials to suspect
they have it.
:
"You cannot stop us. We
have !his anthrax. You die now.
. Are )UU a&amp;.id?" Van Zandt
- said, quoting the Dascble letter.
· "That's a message delivered not
n~essarily to Tom Dascble !he
person. ... It's as tepresentative
of the American people."
The letters, released this
: week by an FBI looking for
public help in identifYing the
sender, offer the best evidence
available for unraveling this
frightening new who-done-it.
Handwriting experts say all
three appear to have been
• · written by !he same penon
. and the two media letters
• .. appear to be identical copies.
· " Susan Abbey, a handwriting
analyst in Dallas, said slight dif' · fetences between tile two let• ten-- such as the double:- crossedTS and A's in !he media
• letter - suggest they were
• written at diffe=t times by
... someone ·atllempting. to disguise his writing.
All bo.., the date "09-11. .. 01," !he day of the attacks on
.' Washington and New York.
But even with !hose clues,
.
· ·. , authorities say !hey still have
no idea who's behind the
... anthrax att&gt;ck.
·
. "This really is an attack
widtout a dear return address:'
, said Daniel Benjamin, a former
National Security Council terrorism specialist for .the Clin. · ton administration. "That's !he
·:· essence of a biological attack
•· - you have somedting that
essentiolly manifests itself many
• days after the actual act of
: releasing the pathogen."
'
After .the attacks on the
World Trade Center and !he
Penagon, !he government was
quick to finger Osama bin
Laden as the prime suspect. In
the case of anthrax, investigaton still don't know whether
those to blame are international or domestic.
Rusty Capps, p=ident of
the Centre for Counterintelligence and Security Studies in
Alexandria, Va., said !he .silence
; . from bin Laden since the
anthrax mailin~ began suggest
he's not the one "'5ponsible.
"Terrorism is all about
expanding the feeling of terror;• said Capps, a former FBI

a

agent. "He was pretty quick to
talk ~bout the World Trade

Center and aboUt the fear that
that sp,.,w:·
Mark Potok, who monitors
domestic hate groups for !he
Southern Poverty Law Center,
said be's seen no· evidence that
any domestic hate group or
individual has the capability to
produce inhalable anthrax. But
he said "very tar right hard line
groups" would be likely suspects because of their animosity toward the media and New
York. ·
Looking abroad, bodt Iran
and lr:aq ..., believed to hold
stocks of biological weapons
and ..., -king to expand their
capabilities. North Kol&lt;'a,
Libya and Syria ..., said to be
working on such weapons as
well.
While Timothy McVeigh
was arrested on a firearms
charge widtin 90 minutes of
the Oklahotna City bombing,
and c\13rged in connection
widt the blast two days later,
some cases take years to crack.
It was 18 years after the lirlt
Unabomber attack in 1978
officials
found
before
Theodore Kaczynski, and !hen
ol)ly after his brother turned
him in. And 19 years after
seven people in the Chicago
area died fiom cyanide-tainted ·
1)rlenol, !he killer still bas not
been identified.
The unprecedented natul&lt;'
of the anthrax awcks makes
the case particularly difficult.
Even putting together a profile
ofthe att&gt;cker is tough because
!here ..., no past cases to draw
fiom. And there's no distinct
behavioral clue that jumps out
this time, like !he Oklahoma
City bombing on !he anniversary of !he government assault
on the Branch Davidian com~
pound near Waco, Texas.
Van Zandt said the case
could suggest a domestic militia-type group that hates !he
government and .i~ trying to
establish a connection to the
Sept. 11 att&gt;cks to provide .
cover, or it could suggest a foreign-based attack ·as !he. fol·
low-up to the hijackinp,1.
Either W.y, he said, the
anthrax attacks =n't likely to
stop.
"This person, by extl&lt;'melY.
limited effort, bas terrorized
the nation and gotten the
attention ofthe world;' he said.
"If this guy is still alive, 1 don't
thinlc he's going to quit. This 4
emotional heroin like he's
never had."

•
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The Daily Sentinel

•

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Reader Services

•

Correction Polley

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•

Ouf main coneem In allllorleala
to be accurate. If you knoW of on

"

ei!Of In a 11ory, call the new•oorn

at (740) 982·2158 .

Newa Department.
The main number Ia 982·2158.
Oeportrnantaldlntionl 1118:

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Ext. 13

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STAND STRONG - In a speech to promote his business stimulus agenda, President Bush tells employees of Dixie Printing
and Packaging Corp. in Glen Burnie, Md., that America's economy will not be crippled by terrorists. Standing with Bush at
right is General Manager Ray Bedell. (AP Photo)

•

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It takes a certain attitude to be a winner. We've added the "attitude"
to the Ohio lottery with our Super lotto Plus"'.
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Play Super lotto Plus•M Wednesday ·and Saturday evenings.

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carrier aervtce Ia available.

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127.30
$53.82
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13 - - Molgo Couftty
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26$58.88

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$109.72

Board
ftom Page Al
.Southern Elementary Principle Mickey Kucsma and
Southern High School Principal Gordon Fisher.
Bodt approved !he program's
use. The board also:
• approved the iransfer of the
Letart Falls Elementary pro]&gt;"
erty to the Letart Township
Trustees at a cost of$1, and the

Taxes
fHHII PapAl
by the revenue generated
from !he local tax bas:e.
"The greater !he value certified to the state, the less the
school districts get fiom the
state;' Frank said. .
Frank said his office spent a
year traveling the county in :in
attempt to locate many of !he
mobile homes liSted on the
duplicate, to no avail, but to
great expense.
"Trying to loc:'ate these trailers, many of )Vhich no longer
..., titled, was more expensive

Dracula
fnNn Page AI
players are Luckeydoo as Renfield, Lynne Hopkins as: Lucy,
Ty Johnson as Jonathan Harker, Jeff Patrick as Seward,
Audrey Warner as Wells, and
G..,g Shrader as Butterworth.
Jason Wills is stage manager
and in charge of sound, Lisa
Wachs is doing lighting and
wardrobe is in the hands of
Joan Krambeck.
''The technical side to it
wasn't too daunting," said
Luckeydoo, a veteran Ariel
Player and director, who's
helmed several Shakespeare
revivals he.., in recent years.
"A lot of the play is diaIogue dtiven, with several very
good special effects scattered
here and the.., for good meaS\1~&lt;';• he added.
The script Was: originally
adapted by British stock company actor-manager Hamilton
Deane in 1924. Although crit·
ical response was hostile, this
version was so wildly successful
with audiences American producer
Hor:ace
Liveright
imported it to Broadway dtree
years later, with ..,Wions by
Jolm L. Balderston.
Starring a little-known
Hungarian actor, Bela Lugosi,
this production copied the
British success, running for
almost dtree years in New York

signing of the transfer agreement;
• approved the budget
"'5erve to be !eli: as is for the
2001-02 school year;
· • agreed to allow the Soudtern Local Insurance Committee to review insurance brokers
and make recommendations to
!he hoard;
• spolc~ with Bob Wingett
and Jeff Thornton about the
disposition of !he remaining
school buildings in Syracuse
and Portland.

note .w ith the children to
their teacher by Friday morning in order to be dismissed
fiom class for the party. For
POMEROY - More than ' more information, contact60 American Electric Power Terri Bartee at 985-3743 or
(AEP) customers in the T~mmi Barber at 378-9807.
Pomeroy area lost power
overnight after a severe thunderstorm passed dtrough the
area, disrupting circuits, dropPOMEROY - Computer
ping power lines, uprooting Performance Upgrades and
trees, and breaking ~e limbs God's NET will off'er a com·
across power lines.
, purer class today, and dates in
According to AEP, crews !November and December to
we.., dispatched i~ediately 'be announced, fiom 6-8 p.m.
to begm restoratiOn efforts · at God's NET in Pomeroy. A
and are currently workmg to recommended donation of 12
restore power to affected cus- per session will be accepted.
tomers as safely and quickly as
possible.
Information on the crews'
progress was unavailable at
POMEROY Divorce
press time.
actions hat-e been filed iri
Meigs C~unty Common
Pleas Court by Faith Jeanna
POMEROY _ U .
f Wells, Reedsville, against
.
mts . 0
~n S. Well&lt;, Long Bottom;
. the Me1gs
Emergency
Serv1ce
Mary P. Shuler, Pomerov,
d .
all ,
..
,,
answere mne c s .or asSis- against Dennis R. Shuler,
tance on Wednesday. Umts Pomeroy; and Joseph L.
Anderson, Lan~ville, against
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Donna
Sue
Anderson,
8:23 a.m ., Painter Ridge, . Lan~ville .
Hazel Nottingham, Holzer
Actions for dissolution of
Medical Center;
marriage have been filed by
2:08 p.m., Laurel Cliff, Barbara J. Stewart, Athens, and
Clarence Lee, Pleasant Valley Robert T. Stewart, Lan~ville;
· Hospital;
and by Russell Thomas
3:56 p.m., Bash an Road, Hogan, Pomeroy, and Carolyn
Hogan, Pomeroy.
Angela Denny, HMC;
4:39 p.m., Sheriff's Office,
Penny Smith, treated;
6:09 p.m ., HMC Clinic,
Penny Smith, PVH.
POMEROY Delbert
POMEROY
Smith of Racine has been
2: 16 p.m., HMC Clinic, appoined to serve as a memTheron Johnson, HMC;
ber of Mei~ County Veterans
4:29 p.m., Rocksprings Service Commission . by
Rehabilitation
Center, CoiiUDim Pleas Court Judge
Richard Hanning, O'Blen,ess Fred W. Crow 111.
Memorial Hospital.
SYRACUSE
2:20 p.m., Condor Street,
Letha Laudermilt, HM C.
POMEROY - Marion P.

Stuliii kr.ocb

out.power

OHerdass

File divorcis

EMS nans

On commission

than any tax we could collect
on them," Frank said.
Parcel numbers and ownen
of record We~&lt;' l&lt;'ad at !he
meeting, and lists of remitted
TIJPPERS PLAINS
Snider Jr., Racine. was sentaxes will be on record . with
3:13 p.m ., Gibson Road, tenced. to a .s uspended fivethe county audit6r. The ownJohn Dollison, OMH.
year sentence in Meigs Coun- ·
ership of !he properties will
ty Common Pleas Court on
not be affected, but valuation
char~~· of breaking and
will be adjusted' to zero on
entenng.
each of those parcels remitted.
POMEROY Pomeroy · Judge FredW. Crow lll senNo real estate taxes we..,
· 'remitted. Frank said that delin- Church of Christ will host a tenced Snider to five consecfree soup, supper on Friday utive one-year sentences on
quent real estate tax~ have
been referred to ,Story for col- fiom 5:30 to 7 p.m. The pub- · five couna of B&amp;E,. ea~h a
felony of the fifth degree.
lections, and Story said that lie is invited.
As a ·condition of his sustitle work and other preparaseJttence, Snider was
pended
tions 'for foreclosu.., ..., still
ord~red to participate in the
under way on the largest delinTUPPERS PLAINS
Community
Cor..,ctions pro·
quent tax accounts.
Eastern Music Boosters will gram and to complete 500
sponsor the 14th annual craft hours of community serVice.
fair on Nov. 10 fiom 9 a.m. to
and on tour.
4
p.m., at the elementary
Univenal's 1931 film verschool.
Table spaces are still
sion, also starring Lugosi and
heavily influenced by the play, avail~ble and may be reserved
was !he first American film to by calling 985-4339.
fully embrace the supernatural
outside of !he traditional gho~t
story and launched what is
TUPPERS PLAINS · widely viewed as the "golden
age" ofhorror films in the '30s Sevetalarea churches are jointhat produced "Frankenstein;" ing together to host a Christ- ·
"The Mummy" and other ian "alternative to Halloween" party for Eastern
classics.
The stage version of"Drac· Elementary School children
· ula," produced many times in grades K-6.
The party will be held on
since its debut (a late 1970s
Friday
from 2-2:45 p.m. in
Broadway revival with Frank
· Langella proved its popularity the library conference room.
all over. again), actually created The event includes . ,games,
some conventions of Dr:acula prizes, goodie bags and
lore, including !he cloak with refreshments for all the chi!"
upturned collar worn by the dren. Parents are welcome and
encouraged to attend .
· count.
.
Parents · need to send in a
The costume alloWs f.;r one
of the special effects described
by Luckeydoo - when Drac- .
ula "disappears" in a flash in the
second act, leaving his wouldbe captors holding the empty
cloak.
The production marks Ariel
Players' second staging of
"Dracula" in recent years. A
1993 version under the dil&lt;'ction of Brad Painter, with
Mark. Slosser, Doug Adkins,
Kim Painter, Rob Lynch, Jeff
Icard and Tim Snow in the
major roles also trod the Ariel's
boards that Halloween season.
Tickets for the new presentation are $5 each, and are
available at the door.

, Man sentenced

Plan supper

Plan fair

Altemative set

.~

C.ll as •r stop.iJt. We'll eonat to
,our hom. •n4 miaurt f• • ·

InGELS

'"' no oiJI,.tfon 4Uff.

CHRPET
'7028

CAIPETPADD

•'.
•

..

Here's the d~l ... Buy your carpet from us
and we'll give ou the ad FREEl!

Please Play Responsibly.

•

'
COLUMBUS (AP) - A woman y.oould be subject to
judge who gave a woman a special treatment, he said.
n'de h orne &lt;uum jail' and 1ater
The court's decision agreed
p=ided over her drunken drj. with earlier ~&lt;'COIIUDendations
ving trial was publicly repri· by the court's Board of Commanded in an Ohio Supreme missioners on Grie\12Dces and
Court ruling Wednesday.
Discipline.
The court voted 7-fJ !hat
The case dates to Sept. 27,
Gallipolis judge William S. 1998, when Gallipolis police
Medley violated three rules of arreste!i Tracy Grate on a
the state's judicial code of con· drunken driving charge. Grate,
duct regarding impartiality and who knew Medley because she
tile appearance of impropriety. had w:tited on him at a restau·
The fact the judge and the rant and previ 0 usly had
woman did not discuss the case appeared in tourt before him,
does not matter, Francis called him and asked him for a
Sweeney wrote.
ride home.
"The sight or thought of a
Later, ·Grate's criminal case
judge providing a ride home to · was assign~d to Medley. Grate
a person who has just been pleaded to a reduced charge of
detained for breaking the law reckless operation on Dec. 9,
surely gives the impression of 1998.She..,ceivedasix-month
bias on !he judge\ part when it suspended jail sentence and
comes time to hear mat case;• . five . yean' probation, was
he wrote.
. requ,..,d to attend a drunken
The ges'"re
also
-"ves
an
driving scboo! and was o rd ered
,_
.,.
impression of impropriety by to complete work on a high
making it appear that the school equivalency diploma.

LOCAL BRIEFS

I'

"'

OH • 992·3671
'

�• •

~geM

Op1n1on

The Daily sentinel

•

111ursday, Cktober zs, 1001

_......:a=., the Bend
Rude users of cell phones inspire.creative response

_r.n_eo_ail_y_Se_ntin_e_l_ _
•

The Daily Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: I had to laugh
when I read the letter fiom the
cashier who got even with rude customers using cell phones by "mispfacing" their merchandise. Her
actions were wrong, of course, but I
understand her frustration.
I manage a store and frequently
·work behind the cash register.
Believe me, the cell phone problem
is epidemic. When my employees
complain about rude customen, I
advise them to pretend the phone
doesn't exist. Lirde did I know that
one of my employ~ would come
up with a solution to the problem:
One Sunday morning when the
employee was in church, somebody's
cell phone rang. Every h~ad in
church turned to see "whodunit."

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.I

Chai'IM w. Govey
P~llhlr

••

... INwrl L.IIN
lbnqlng l!dHor
DIM» Kay Hill
Control!«

~Hoeflich

General llenagu

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•

NATIONAL VIEW

Chill
Don't allow anthrax anxiety
to disrnpt daily existence
• Albuquerque (N.M.) Journal, on anthrax anxiety: News
that an anthrax-contaminated letter was sent to the office of
the Senate majority leader, coupled with reports that the child
of an ABC News employre had contracted the disease, cranked
public anxiety a notch higher Monday night.
But a healthy do!e of perspective is' in order, along with reasonable doses of caution and prudence.
The first piece of good news is that. the disease is highly
treatable with early diagnosis.
Such a diagnosis in a timely manner is far more likely now
that doctors and health agencies are on alert for what had been
such a rare disease.
'
ln New Mexico, state health officials have distributed fact
sheets on signs and symptoms of and treatmen1 for anthrax. The
state was already getting grant money to prepare for public
health disasters; more will be coming in response to the Sept.
11 attacks.
The anthrax incidents have not been linked to al-Qaida or
other terrorist organizations, but like the attacks. on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon they seem designed to generate maximum publicity. Accordingly, the contaminated letters
have been~ent to news media offices and the office of Sen. Tom
Daschle in Washington, D.C.There have been no indications of
a mass mailing or some other method of widely dispersing the . ·
bacteria.
· ·
In short, don't worry about "you rnay already be a winner"
junk mail. And don't lay in a supply of antibiotics to selfadminister after a paranoid self-diagnosis of anthrax. Th:e drugs
are not going to be in short supply, according to officials. They
do have side effecu and shouldn't be taken except under a doctor's supervision after a medical diagnosis. ·
Judging by the currently known cases, postal employres and
mail room workers are the most likely to be exposed and the
fint line of defense. Training in what to look for, how to handle suspicious mail and general precautions will gO a long way
toward blunting this n~w threat.
The rest of us would do well to keep caution this side of
paranoia. Until further information emerges, we cannot let a
· few cases of anthrax lead us to live in fear of every unopened
letter.

TODAY IN HISTORY
8Y THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I
, I

'!

f

I:I

Today is Thursday, Oct. 25, the 298th day of 2001. There are
· 6 7 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 25, 1929,, former Interior Secretary Albert B. Fall
was convicted of accepting a 1100,000 bribe in connec~on
with the Elk Hills Naval Oil Reserve in California.
On this date:
In· 1400, author Geof&amp;ey Chaucer died in London.
· In 1760, Britain's King George Ill succeeded his late grandfather, Qeorge II.
.
In 1812, the U.S. frigate United States captured the British
vessel Macedonian during the War of 1812.
In 1854, the "Charge of !he Light Brigade'' took place during the Crimean War.
In 1918. the Canadian steamship Princess Sophia foundered
off the coast of Alaska; nearly 400 people perished.
In 1951, peace talk! aimed at ending the Korean conflict
resumed in Panmunjom after 63 days.
In 1962, U.S. ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson presented photographic evidence ofSciviet missile bases in Cuba to the U.N.
Security Council.
.
.
In 1971, the U.N. Gemera! Assembly voted to admit mainland
China and expel Taiwan.
In 1983, a U.S.-led force i11Vaded Grcmada at the order of
President Reagan, who said the actiort was needed to protect
U.S. citizens there.
..
In 1999, golfer Payne Stewart and five others were killed
when their Learjet flew uncontrolled for four hours before
crashing in South Dakota; Stewart was 42.
Ten years ago: hrael named a hard-line delegation to the
Middle East peace conference. Rock-and- roll impresario Bill
Graham was killed in a helicopter crash in Sonoma County,
Calif.
Five years ago: Federal judge Richard Matscli granted Oklahoma City bombing defendants Timothy McVeigh and Terry
Nichols separate .trials.
One year ago: Laboring in the frigid murk of the Barenu
Sea, divers found and removed the first bodies fiom the wreckage of the nuclear submarine Kurs~, which sank on Aug. 12
with the loss of aU 118 sailors aboard.
Today's Birthdays: Jazz musician Chubby Jackson is 83. Former baseball player Bobby Thomson is 78. Former Nnerican
League president Dr. Bobby Brown is 77 .Actress Jeanne Cooper is 73.Actress Mar.ion Ross is 73.ActorTony Franciosa is 73.
Country singer Jeanne Black is '64. Singer Helen Reddy is 60.

Page AS

11lundllr· Odobw 25, 2001 ·

And not one person has ever come
into the store a second tirhe babbling
away on the airwavrs. - FOUND
A
BETIER
WAY
IN
NASHVILLE
.

Abigail
Van
Buren

DEAR FOUND A DEI IER

WAY: Wbich proves you get better
results with humor than with rancor.
Bravo. Read on:
ADVICE
DEAR ABBY: I suspect that
some people use cell phones as a pryThe pastor stopped in the middle of chological barrier to help them avoid
his sermon and announced, "Go interacting with strangen. After all,
ahead. We'll wait - who is it?" The interrupting people while they're on
pastor's expression showed he wasn't · a cell phone is something most of us
angry - nevertheless, his point was instinc:tjvely avoid. My theory is that
clearly - made. The congregation while immersed in private conversahowled with laughter.
tion, the callen feel shielded fiom the
Now, when one of my employees outside world.
uses this tactic, the result is the same. . · I've heard snippets of chatter so

in Los Angeles that was frequented
years ago by celebrities.The reservation list in the famous "lounge" wa
a veritable Who's Who of acton.
directors. producers and agena. This
was long before the invention of cell
phones. People who wanted to draw
attention to themselves would
arrange to be paged. A uniformed
who had previously
bellman swred in the "Call for Philip Morris" cigarette commercials- would
stride through the hotel lobby and
restaurant calling out, "Telephone
call for Mister (blank)!" I suspect it
was done more often by . people
berween jobs than people who actually had urgent business.

inant I can't believe my em. Don't
get me wrong; I'm not eaVfidropping. Howevor. sometimes it's impossible not to listen when somrone
brushes past me or talks incessantly
while waiting in line behind me.
Sometimes I suspect that people
only pretend to be on their cell
phone. They think · it makes them
appear more important than they
really are. It's a snobbish affectation,
but they actually believe they're
somehow earning respect fiom those
who observe them .
Thanks for letting me vent. Sign
me ... FINGERS IN MY EARS
DEAR FINGERS: Those are
interesting theories. Technologies
may change, but people remain the
same. There, was a famous hotol here

· Dear Abby is writttn by PrluliM
Phillips a•d daughter jta•ne Phillips:.

LOCAL EVENTS
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

There~

still no protection against weapon of choice

This month's terrorism focus is on
anthrax, but the government still hasn't
ensured that terrorists can't return to
last month's weapon of choice - airplanes.
Instead of squabbling about whether
the people who scan carry-on bags at
airports should be federal employees,
Congress ought to be worried about
what one expert calls "the soft underbelly" of ·airline security - the cargo
holds of airliners.
Tire probability of other Sept. 11style suicide hijackings is low- thanks
as much to passenger vigilance as to
gov~rnment actio~ -but it's still all .too
!loSSlble for terronsts to plant expl~st~es
m checked baggage and blow up atrlmers m fltght.
,
. ..
Desptte . Congress appropttatton. of
·$440 rrulhon for explostve-detecllon
devices, only a small percentage of bags
·~.actually checked.
. I ~ ~~nned at how low the percen~ge IS, satd Rep. John Mtca, R-Fla.,
cha~rman of the House Transl'ortanon
an~ ~nfrastructu~e Subcommmee . 9n
Avtanon. One Wlt~ess before the panel
put the number at JUSt 5 percent.
.
.Planes have already. bee'! blown up m
fltght. In 1988, terrorists ~ed 270 peopie aboard Pan Am i Fhght 103 ~ver
Lockerb1e, Scotland,, With exploSives
stowed in checked luiS"ge. .
That case caused bag matchmg to be
orde~d on all mt~rnattonal fltghts -.
that IS, a passengers bags ar; automat!c~y removed If he doesn t board hts
flight.
.
But, as the Los Angeles Ttmes reported on Oct. 16,twe&gt;years ago, the Federal Av1at10n Admmmrauo,n reJeCted a
Whtte House commtsston s proposal for
bag checking on domestic flights, bowmg to 21rhne mdustry objections that

devices.

Morton
Kondracke
COLUMNIST

"In today\. world," she said, "we must
accelerate the program. The goal for all
of us must be I 00- percent screening of.
every checked bag.
"The great challenge is how rapidiy
the screening equipment can be produced. I can tell you that every machine
that is produced will be deployed·
immediately."
·
According to Mica, House debate on•
the airline security bill is likely to be
held up, as was Senate action, by a partisan quarrel over making some 28,000
screeners federal employees.
Mica argues that screeners should
meet strict federal standards, but that if
more people are put on the federal payroll, they ought to be FBI agents, U.S.
marshals, Coast Guard personnel and
Border Patrol agents.
President Bush favors tight federal
oversight and reminds us - and this is
the clincher for me - that it's almost
impossible to fire civil servants, even if
they are incompetent.
It ought to be urgent business to close
the door as firmly as possible on terror. ists' use of airplanes. Bin Laden's
spokesman, Sulaiman Abu ·Ghaith, has
been threatening that we'll see a continuing "storm of airplanes."lt may be propaganda. It may not ,be.
I'm troubled by what MIT aviation
expert Arnold Barnett told the L.A.
Times: "Terrorism is forever changing
its form. The question is, What is the
next one going to be like? We're doing
so much to secure the cockpit. It would
be terrible if we left the cargo compartc
ment a~ the soft underbelly."
Congress. should be troubled, too.

the procedure would be too costly and
inconvenient.
· Bag matching is in force for all flights
Je.aving fiom Reagan National Airport.
An extensive 1997 study by the FAA
found that using the procedure for all
domestic flights would delay flights by
an average of seven minutes and cost 40
cents per passenger.
According to Mica, after the 1995
Oklahoma City bombing, Congress
appropriated $440 million to purchase
explosive-detection equipment for airports,·at a cost of $1 million each.
Six years later, however, only 140 such
machines have been deployed at 50 U.S.
airports, and not all of them are being
used, according to testimony by the
FKA's inspector general, Kenneth Mead.
Mead told Mica's subcommittee that
airlines have not , used their baggage
scanners to full capacity, even since Sept.
11, because doing so might delay flights.
The Senate-passed airline security bill
called for the scanning of 100 percent of
checked baggage. This tequirement is
also likely to be in the House version.
The FAA's administrator, jane Garvey,
implicitly acknowledged in a speech to
the National Press Club ·last week that
her agency had been slow to implement
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of
Congress' last mandate on explosive Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)
•

· wASHINGTON TODAY

Obstacles abound in reaching victory inAjghanistan·
BY TOM llwM
WASHINGTON -The road to Kabul
is lined with obstacles, both political and
military ones.
Ragtag northern alliance rebels niay be
unable to seize and hold the Afghan capital
even with U.S. help, Pakistani allies want
the city declared a neutral zone and antiAmeriCan sentiment is building across the
Muslim world.
Time and weather could be problenis1
too: A long religiouS holiday and winter
snows are approaching.
The United States has entered a new
stage of the fighting in Mghanistan, bombing Taliban forces to help rebels capture the
northern crossroads city of Mazar-e-Sharif
and then push on toward Kabul.
More nighttime commando raids on Taliban sites like the one staged over the
weekend are expected.
The new strategy may be designed to
produce a military victory - but it is
fraught with danger.
Slow-flying American helicopters that
carry special forces are easy targets for
shoulder-launched missiles. The conunandos,lighdy armed,to increase their mobility, are vulnerable to ambushes on the
ground.
··
A helicopter during the weekend commando raid had its wheels torn off. And
two other U.S. helicopter.; came under fire
in Pakistan.
.
Taliban leaders give no sign they're n&lt;ady
to yield to U.S. demands that they tum
over suspetted terror mastermind Osama

bin Laden and his al-Qaida lieutenants.
Taliban soldier.; are known for fading
into Afghanistan's mountains and villages.
And PentagOn officials say up to 15,000 of
them appear to be entrenched in a
labyrinth-like complex of caves, trenches
and bunket:S just north of Kabul.
Even if the Taliban is driven fium the
capital, occupying Kabul will still be hazardom, with snipers and booby-trapped
explosives likely to be lefi behind.
Muslim allies w.mt the United States to
·score a inajor victory before the Islamic
holy month of Ramadan begins around
Nov. 17 - or agree to a lengthy delay in
the Afghan operation.
Pakistani President Gen. Pervez. Musharraf, a key supporter of the U.S. attacks,
warned of a Muslim backlash if intense
lighting continues during R:iinadan. He
also has proposed that Kabul be declared a
"neutial zone"•rather than be allowed to
fall under the control of the northern
alliance.
Pakistani,, suspicious of the alliance's ties
to India and lt:m.
Musharrafhas been struggling to contain
Muslim anger in his own country over the
U.S. campaign as well as his decision to·
allow the United States to use three military bases in Pakistan.
Beyond having a common enemy in the
Taliban, the northern alliance is a loose
coalition with little organization, made up
of rival factions with a long record of violence, human-rights abuses and mutual
mistrust. It represents only a few of

Afghanistan's ethnic minorities.
Pakistani Foreign Minister Abdul Sattar
warned that a proxy or puppet regime
would not be tolerated in Kabul. "Those
who tried to do so in the past had to pay a
heavy price for such blunder.;;' Sattar said
recently.
"One of th e challenges right now is for
the milita1y opcrJtion not to get ahead of
the diplomatic operation," said former
Defense Dcparm1ent strategist Michele
Flournoy.
The Bush administration has called upon
the United Nations to fonn a new government fium representatives of a half-dozen
armed factions and ethnic groups. SecreL1ry of State Colin Powell has suggested ii
even include some members of tl1e Taliban;
But international response has been slow;
Many in the international communicy
are promoting Afghanistan's former king, .
Mohammed Zaher Shah. who was
deposed in 1973, as a possible unifying fig~
ure for Alghanistan.
·
'The point I think a\ this point is tci
organize these various efforts," Stat6 .
Depar011ent spokesman Richard Boucher ·
said Tuesday.
Underscoring the urgency to organize d
new government to take over iri
Afghanistan soon should the Taliban be
muted from Kabul , Boucher emphasized
that talks were ongoing even as he spoke.
(fo111 Raw11 l~as rovered tJatiollal aJtd inter· .
11arional qfjitirs .fi&gt;r Tiw Associated Press si~
1973.)

Community Calendar II publllhed u a free eervlce to nonprofit groups wlahlng to
announc:e meetings and apeclllw.nts. The calen~r II not
dallgnecl to promote 1IIIH or
funckiiiMrl ol any type. 1t11ma
are prlntad only as space perm!U and cannot be guarantaed
. to be printed a specific number
of clays.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Trick or Treat
in Middleport, 6 to 7 p.m. Siren
will sound to begin and end.
POMEROY - Children In the
. Pomeroy community are invited
to Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments on
Union Avenue on Thursday for
trick or treat night. Tenants and
complex management plan spe·
cial activities. including a haunted

ghost-ride, a bonfire and refresh· p.m. DJnner and special drawing
menta. All Pomeroy children are at 6:30 p.m. ·
lnvlled to visit.
REEDSVILLE Riverview
RUTLAND ;_ Trick or Treat in Garden Club to meet at River City
Rutland, Thursday from 6-7 p.m. Restaurant, Parkeraliurg, W.Va.
Members will carpool at WhilePOMEROY - Preceptor Beta head residence in Reedsville,
Beta Sorority. 6:30 p.m., St. Paul Thursday 5:30 p.m.
Lutheran Church. Regular meet·
POMEROY- Annual meeting,
lng followed by Halloween perty.
Martha McPhail, Margaret Slew· Meigs Counly Council on Aging
Inc., Thursday, 10:30 a.m., Meigs
art as hostesses.
Multipurpose Senior Center.
BRADBURY - Meigs Counly Open to public. Individuals with
Church of Christ Women's Fel· peld memberships will elect memlowship, 7 p.m. Thursday at Brad· bership to the Board of Trustees.
ford Church of Chrtst. Bradford to
COOLVILLE ~ Revival ser·
have devotions, program on food
demonstration and election of ofli· vices atlhe Carthage Community
Church through Sunday, 7 p.m.
cers.
Owlght Davis ol Belpre on Thurs·
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW day, and KeHh Kapple of Marietta
Post 9053 to meet at hall, 7:30 on Friday allQ Saturday. Special

.

COLLEGE NEWS
Named to list
POMEROY - The following local students have
been named to the National
Dean's List, recognizing high
achievement among college
students:
Sonya !{rumme and Jessica
Robinson, .Albany, Ohio U niversity; Christopher W. Cross.
Langsville, West Virginia U niversit-Parkersburg; Patrick
Martin, Middleport, Hocking
College; Shane Phillips and
Carrie
Smith, Pomeroy,
Hocking College; Julie Spaun,
Pomeroy, University of Rio

Grande; Kristi M. Shouldis,
Portland, Ohio Valley College;
Josh Ervin, Racine, Ohio State
University; Kristin Brown,
Rutland, Hocking College;
Shannon Enright, Rutl~nd,
University ofRio Grande; and
Michelle D. Stobatt, Tuppers
Plains, Washington State
Community College.
Studenu are selected by cole
lege deans, registran or honor
society advisors and are in the
upper 10 percent of their class,
on the school dean's list, or
have earned a· comparable
honor.

music each evening.

SATURDAY
POMEROY
Return
SUNDAY
FRIDAY
Jonathan Meigs Chapter DAR to
MIDDLEPOR1 - Gospel sing
POMEROY - Fun, Food and meet al Pomeroy Ubr&amp;IY on Sat· al Middleport Church of the
FeHowahlp at God's NET in urday at 10:45 a.m. to mark Nazarene featuring Pine Rldga
Pomeroy. 61o 10:30 p.m.
graves.
· Boys, Sunday, 6:30 p.m.

POMEROY - Sacrad Heart
PORTLAND - l.el!anon Town·
POMEROY - Pomeroy nelive
Church, rosary and benediction, ship Trustees, Saturday, 7 a.m.,
Bruce
Stone will perlorm a goapel
Friday 7 p.m.
township building .
sing at the Hemlock Grove ChrisPOMEROY - Free soup sup·
POMEROY - Autumn Cele· tian Church at 9:30 a.m. on Sun·
per, open to .public, Pomeroy bration sponsored by the Hem· day, and at Trinity Church In
Church of Christ, Friday, 5:30 to 7 lock Grove Christian Church, Sat· Pomeroy at 7 p.m. on Sunday.
p.m.
urday. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m·. at the
MIDDLEPORT- An Ohio VelHemlock Grove grange hall. Fam·
MIDDLEPORT - An lnterde· lly affair, take a favorite treat. For ley ·Crusede for Christ mulli'lg
nomlnatlonal pastors' prayer is mora information call Rev. will take- place at. 7 p.m. at the
scheduled to. taka place at the Richard Nease at 985-3942.
Heath United Methodist Church.
First Baptist Church In Middleport

at8:30 a.m.
Those attending are asked to
use the rear entrance.

E.agte's HaUowee~t Partv

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. LEWISVILLE, Texas (AP)
,.- The · Lewisville Fire
Department got a personal
"thank you" fiom John Travolta for its fund-raising campaign to help victims of the
Sept. II terrorist attacks in
New York.
"What happened in New
York represented what every
single fireman goes through
every day. They're willing to
put their lives before everybody else, and they're the
bravest individuals in the
world. To raise the money
these guys have raised for the
wives and children of the rescue workers in New York is
just an unbelievable thing,"
Travolta said Tuesday.

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He donned a red firefighter's hat and held both thumbs
up, to cheers fiom · the firefighters and dozens of others
who gathered at the main fire
station in Lewisville.

golf and hotel reservations

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FOR RESERVAIIONS &amp; TEE liMES

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is acctpting patients at his
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For 1 comp~te ttlte VKitlon guide cell
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�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather

Page AI
lhund.y. 0 II br 25; 21D1

Coroner says someone cut off man's oxygen

•

Frtcllly, Oct. 21

CINCINNATI (AP) - An autopsy said the death could have resulted from a
could not confirm that a black man who choke hold or from the weight of oBidied in police custody was killed in a cers who pulled Owensby to the
choke hold, but it did show that he died ground.
.
from someone cutting off his oxygen, a
"My autopsy doesn't point at anybody,
deputy coroner testified.
but his death was a homicide;' Schultz
"He didn't choke himself," Dr. Daniel said.
L. Schultz of the Hamilton County The deputy coroner said he found a
coroner's office said of Roger Owensby deep bruise in a muscle in Owensby's
back that would indicate a strong presJr.
Schultz te&lt;titied Wednesday in the trial '' sure was applied to ·his back.
of Robert Jorg. a white police officer
Schultz said he did not find any bruiswho prosecutors say caused Owensby's e&lt; on Owensby's neck, but he adde~ that
death with a choke hold Nov. 7.
choke holds do not always leave vlSible
Schultz said autopsy findings, includ- signs.
ing ruptured capillaries in the eyes and
The autopsy indi c;~tes Owensby died.
bloody fluid in the lungs, showed that as he was struggling on the grou!)d With
Owensby, 29, died from asphyxia caused Jorg and other officers, who were trying
by compression of the neck or chest. l-Ie to handcuff him, Schultz said. Defense

-

Memben honored

attorney R . Scott CrosweU lw implied
that Owensby was alive when he was
placed in a police cruiser after the struggle.
.
Owensby was in the cruiSer when
officers realized he· needed medical
attention. They tried to revive. him, then
took him to a hospital where he was
pronounced dead.
.
. .
Croswell has told jurors m the tnal m
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Court that Jorg never used excessive
force and did not choke Owensby.
Jorg, who is charged with fe.l ony
involuntary manslaughter and misdemeanor assault in Owensby's death, is the
first on-duty city police officer ever
charged with a felony offense in a
killing.

••

t

•

·~The Daily Sentinel
•
••

Nation • World

N• mining niles planned

PapA7
lh•ll.,.. Ochbw 25, 21D1

Fears threaten to pull back living improvements·

.. WASHINGTON- (AP) - The Interior Department will
·: issue n - mining regulations Thursday moming some Clinton-era plOVisions but keeping a requirement that mining
• operators post bonds to guarantee they will clean up after
themselves, senior department officials said.
.' · Among provisions being removed is one giving the interior
secretary authority to prohibit new mine sites on federal land
' · where they could cause lasting harm to communities and the
1
environment, the officials said Wednesday, speaking on condition of anonymity.
•·. Interior's Bureau of Land Management, which manages 264
· million acres of federal land, mostly in 12 Western states,
0
· planned to announce the new regulations Thursday. They are
to be published as a final rule next Thesday, taking effect 60
: days later.
.
·
Separately, Interior Secretary Gale Norton intends to ask
· Congress to join with the Bush administration in an effort to
overhaul mining laws dating to 1872, the officials said.

Greenspan: Living
standards will
be set back

'

has pushed companies to innovate and
offer better products at cheaper prices.
This push to greater productivity, he
said, has been a major source for rising
living standards. ·
But Greenspan warned that the drive
to bring down barriers to freer trade
could be jeopardized by the Sept. I 1
attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon.
"Terrorism poses a challenge to the
remarkable record of globalization,"
Greenspan said. "A global society
reflects an ever more open economic
environment in which participants are
free to engage in commerce and
finance wherever in the world the possibilities of increased value-added

WASHINGTON (AP) - Globalization has been a major force that
raised living standards around the
world, but it could be set back dramatically by new fears of terrorism, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
said Wednesday.
Greenspan, in a speech to the Institute for International Economics,
mounted a spirited defense of global-.
ization, the increasingly closf economic and industrial ties linking countries.
He said this increased competition arise:·

King memorial move stalls

11IE MAN -

Federal Reserve Board
chairman Alan Greenspan waws to Sen.
Jon Corzine, 0-N.J. In washington, dur·
ing a hearing on Capitol Hill. (AP)
Greenspan said " fear of terrorist acts,
however, has the potential to induce
disengagement" from such activities.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Efforts to build a national memo- l - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - rial honoring the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. have stalle~
because the civil rights leader's family wants money to use his
A driver was killed in a minivan rollover on 1-29.
name and likeness in the marketing campaign.
"They're asking for something in regards to a licensing fee;'
HONOLULU (AP) -Navy divers located a seventh body
t:'~said Harry Johnson, president of the memorial foundation.
Wednesday inside the sunken Japanese fishing vessel that was
' ; " 'We're just trying to walk a fine, thin line."
rammed by a U.S. submarine earlier this year. . .
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Two college students were arrest!: ! Last week Johnson called representatives of the King family Divers planfted to recover the body from the Ehime Ma.ru ed for an anthrax hoax that halted postal service in the town
',: to ask about• a dollar figure, but he says they haven•t returne d
later Wednesday night. The remains wiH be taken to the ctty of Murray after white powder spilled from an envelope.
.
.. ~his call.
medical examiner's office for identification, officials said .
Preliminary tests indicated the substance was powdered
In a statement released Wednesday evening by the AtlantaThe discovery came on a day when families of five of the sugar, Murray Postmaster Mark Kennedy said Wednesday. .
based King Center for Nonviolent Social Change, the family nine Japanese men and teen-age boys killed in the. collision
The post office in the southwestern Kentucky commumty
denied seeking a license fee. However, the release acknowl- viewed the remains of their loved ones for the first tune.
was closed Tuesday after the powder spilled onto ~postal clerks
Kjedges ongoing discussions for a "permissions agreement,"
Hawaii Gov. Ben Cayetano met Wednesday ·with Moriyuki shirt.
~ which could have a fee attached. The f'lmily pledges that any Kato, governor of Ehime prefecture in Japan, to discuss buildAmy Wood, 22, of Benton, Ky., and Erin Creighton, 21, of
;rmoney derived would go back to the King Center's charitable ing a waterfront memorial to the five men an~ four boys fiom
Morganfield, Ky., both students at Murray State University,
efforts.
··
'
Uwajima Fish.eries High School. The Ehime Maru was were arrested Tuesday. They allegedly intended to send the letrammed by the USS Greeneville dunn!J ,a rap1d surfacmg drill ter to friends as a hoax, Murray police Capt. Eddie Rollins
on Feb. 9.
said.

Fann

Navy locates 7th body

Hou suspects anested

Cold and windy in area Friday
BY THE ASSOCIAT£0 PRESS

· Cold, brisk westerly winds
will continpe to fan the region
tonight and Friday as the area
remains under the influence of
a low ·pre.sure system, the
National Weather Service said.
Overnight -lows
were
expected to be in the low to
mid-30s and temperatures on
Friday won't get much
warmer than that, forecasters
said:
Sunset tonight will be at
6:38, and sunrise on Friday is
at 7:54a.m.
~Weather forecut:
Tonight... Mosdy clear, blus-·
tery and chilly. Lows in the
mid 30s. Gusty west wind 10
to 20mph.
Friday...Windy and much
cooler with increasing clouds.

Highs in the mid 40s. Gusty
west wind 15 to 25 mph.
Friday
night .. . Mostly
cloudy with a chance of.snow
or rain showers. Lows in the
lower 30s.
Extended forecast: ·
Saturday... Partly
cloudy
with a chance of snow or rain
sho'l'iers. Highs in the •)ower
40s.
Saturday
night .. .Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s.
Sunday... Mostly dear. Highs
in the lower 50s.
.
Monday... Mostly clear. Lows
near 30 and highs near 60.
Tuesday... Mostly clear. Lows
in the upper 30s and highs in
the mid 60s.
Wednesday... Mostly clear.
Lows in the lower 40s and
highs in the mid 60s ..

candidate defends debt

:.·

~

These Meigs County Farm Bureau members were honored for
their mtlmbershlp milestones at Tuesday evening's annual
meeting. From left are Harold and BettY Newell, new members;
and members with 40 years of membership or more: Harry
and Grace Holter, Geoge Holter, Mary Easterday, Howard
Frank, Pauline Atkins, Howard Nolan, Nellie Parker, of Poole &amp;
Parker Farm, Virgil Hamm, Joan Wolfe. representing Peoples
Bank, N.A., Delbert Smith, Carl and Janet Morris, and Wayne
and Claudia Roush. (Brian J. Reed photo)

assault and child endangering in the alleged shaking death of
his daughter, ShaunTeria Edwards, on Jan. 12 to stop her crying.
Defense lawyer Robert Meeker said that Funcht;s had considered taking a plea agreement he was offered before the trial

began.
· t h e en d , h e sat·d , 'I can 't 1·tve wtt
· h myseIf
. I d .d ' d
"But m
_. t n t o
TOLEDO (AP) - Mayoral candidate Ray Kest defended it and I can't do 10 years for something I didn't do,"' Meeker
his high credit-card debt Wednesday night, saying much of It said.
was related to his three children and two grandchildren.
The Blade reported last week .that Kest ·owes .'70:2~2 · on . ..
eight credit cards. Coupled with the balances on his w1fe s two
,,
.credit cards, the debt comes to $81,810.
· r· " CLEVELAND (AP) - The trial of a Japanese scientist
Kest has declined to release details o~ his credit-car~ spe~d- accused of helping to steal research materials from the Cleveing, but lias said $25,000 to $30,000 IS from chargmg h1gh land Clinic has been postponed until the spring. ·
·
school and college tuition eipenses.
. ,
District Judge David Dowd Jr. rescheduled Hiroaki
"The point is thad've got three kids and two grand!1ds a~d 5erizawa's trial from Nov. 5 to May 13, 2002. Serizawa, a
seven years ago I had no credit-card debt whatsoever, he wd researcher at the Oniversity of Kansas Medical Center, and his
on a radio talk show. "But, as I think a lot of people under- friend and former Cleveland Clinic scientist Takashi Okamostand, at o~e time I had three kids in Catholic schools at th~ to are accwed· of plolting to steal research from Okamoto's
Clinic lab.
same ttme.
Defense lawyers havf asked for more time to prepare for the
case and prosecutors h 0 pe the delay might allow 0 kamoto 's
extradition from Japan, so he and Serizawa can be tried
WILLARD (AP) - Authorities are treating the death of
together.
woman found in a car submerged in a pond as suspicious,
according to a Huron County prosecutor.
Prosecutor Russell Leffler said authorities are investigating
the death of Regina Rowe Hicks, 25, whose body was found
COLUMBUS (AP). - Gas-station operators who partici• ·
Monday in the passenger seat of her car, which was subpated in price gouging after the Sept 11 terrorist attacks will
merged in a farm pond.
contribute $1,000 to the American Red Cross and pay back
Huron County Cornorer Jeffrey Harwood said an autopsy
overcharged customers under legal agreements being worked
report states the cause of death appears to be drowning.
out by the state.
"The car was situated in such a manner that it didn't just.
The office of Attorney General Betty Montgomery has
accidentally get there," Harwood said.
reached consent agreements with stations in Oxford in Butler
'County and in McArthur in Vinton County to 111ake the
-donations and reimbursements.
Montgomery's spokesman, Joe Case, said he expects lawsuits
AKRON (AP) - A man accused of shaking to death his
against seven other stations will also be·settled. The civil lawthree-month-old daughter .was acquitted Wednesday.
suits charged station owner-operators with violating the Ohio
Charles L. Funches, 20, was charged with ·murder, felonious
Consumer Sales Practices Act.
Other stations were cited in Alliance,4fchbold, BournevUle,
Columbus, Norwalk and Warren, Case said.
,

Economic s'py trial delayed

u.s:.

I

Scaffold collapse kills 5

Members of 5o years or more were honored by the Meigs County Farm Bureau at Tuesday evening's annual meeting: Leodell
and Mary Davidson, 56 years; Starling and Sandra Massar, 61
years; Zlba and Sylvia Midkiff, 63 years; Howard and Wilma
Parker, '59 years; Roy and Pat Holter, 57 years; Raymond and
Grace Furbee, 62 years; w.s. and Nellie Michael, 66 years;.and
Don and Barbara Mora, 65 years, (Brian J. Reed photo)

lions of dollars worth of repairs. Estimates range from $;!.4
million at Hannah Gibbons Elementary to $35 million .for
Collinwood High School.
·
.
Public meetings will take place at each school to get opmions on individual construction projects. A priority list is
expected by ·next spring.

DAYTON (AP)- His son was nearly run off the t;pa~.,And
one of his ex-students was threatened with being .Shot ~bile
he dined in a restaurant .
Khurshid Ahmad, an · American Muslim and professor at ·
Wright State University, said .the incidents stemr_ned from
anti-Muslim sentiment following the Sept. 11 terronst attacks.
On Wednesday, Ahmad and other members of the Muslim
community asked the City Commission to adopt a resolution
~;;;~harassment based on a person's heritage

young
join us
in food, fun, plays and praise.

\-vi,ere: Langsville O,ristian O,urch
Come dressed a$ your favor;+• B;ble choractor and roce;vo a pr;ze.

let -the JOY of -the lORD be yoor streng-th
liiiiiiiiiiiii

The journey of a letter from mailbox to mailbox was the lesson
of the day for students of Carleton SchOol's pre-school class
on Monday, as they toured the Pomeroy Post Office. U.S.
Postal Service employee Dale Thoene conducted the tour.
(Brian J. Reed photo)

We honor most third party prescription ·

,,'

DETROIT (AP) -Approaching thunderstorms forced the
Coast Guard to call off efforts Wednesday to raise a mail delivery boat that capsized in the Detroit River.
1\vo crew members were rescued after the ). W Westcott II
sank Tuesda}- morning, and two others remained missing
Wednesday.
·
Salvage operations had been planned Wednes~y for the vessel which delivered mail and crew to passmg shtps 10 the Great
takes. The boat, an official U.S. marine post office, is believed
to be the only one with its own ZIP code.
.
The. search for deckhand Dave Lewis, 50, and Cathenne
Nasiatka, 48, who was at the wheel of the Westcott, was postponed Thesday when they had not been located by dark.

Honor Our·
Heroes

f V•'

WASHINGTON (AP) p;l-loping to avert guoline
~jprice spikes next summer,
/"'federal regulaton suggested
~-1cutting down on the number
!of specialty fuels designed to
;meet the nation's dizzying
{array of local anti~pollution
' !requirements.
In recommendations made
: to the White House Wednes: •da)l the Environmental Proi!tec~ion Agency also said the
transition from winter to
::.:summer fuel blends should be
:1 accelerated. Storage facilities
3 Hnking pipelines and gas sta-

tions should be required to
stop accepting winter blends
after April 15, instead of after
May 1, the EPA said.
The proposals were made in
response to President Bush's
energy plan, which asked the
. agency to address the issue
administratively.
"We want to ensure that
using summer blend fuel is
not a contributor to price
hikes," EPA Administrator
Christie Whitman said.
Whitman gasoline prices
appear to increase dramatically, as during this past summer,

when supplies fall short due
to hiSher demand or pipeline
disruptions. ·
Each year, fuel producen
make the April-to-June transition from winter to summer
grade reformulated gasoline.
Whitman said the proposed
administrative and regulatory
actions would help refiners,
particularly those in the Midwest, in advance of next year's
spring transition season.
The EPA proposed reducing the more than a dozen
boutique blends in various
states.

~

On No••rnh• lJ, our IMidon ..UZ , . _ lo pay IPU»MIO 10 1M llacNuoadl
-n and ••-n t11lto lsaH proudly ••rwd their corml1"7 """"' In•
c.V•• and poaco.
.
77NI
Day,.llso
Dally Sentinel
..UZ pubU.Ia • .,.,. •p•c'-l
rrUturo 11oM,.,.. .,..li .,.~,.."'· You c011 jol.ll Ill our
br lAc...,., lAo
Hloran 1.11 .yoiiU' lifo, U.U., or docOGiod, ulao lsa11o ••r~~ocl or u ourrondy

'f•••ran•

•~
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Your choice Of '!~No Styles... r--------~----------,
Please Fill Out And Retum With I
Ad Only $7.00
Your Payment to:
(shown:Actual size)
VETERAN SALUTE

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.M.Yor
Earl Jones

Ad With Photo- $14.00
(Shown actual size)

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to fill your prescription needs.

:

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any prescription
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Photo of
Your Veteran

In Honor of (name and rank)

1
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Branch of Service

Conflict/War

Love. (Name relationship to veteran)
AD DEADLINE TUES., NOV. 6, 2001
Tributes must be pr19pald.
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11111.

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~~~-=

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In Honor Of

Corporal Bob

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
XDI~es

C/0 The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45789

In Honor Of

Love, Your Family

Pharmacists, Chuck &amp; Ken, are here

•alul•

••"""Bill Gllf branch of lito U.S. Annod FoNJ••·

1969-1971
Army
VietNam

•'
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plans. Your Swisher &amp; Lohse

Teen admits to threats·

CLEVELAND (AP) -At least $1 .1 billion will be l)eeded
to ·repair or replace dilapidated city schools, according to
inspectors who found 92 of 1~0 schools meeting state standards for demolition.
The final cost could go higher, said Michael 'E ugene, the
district's chief operating officer. The district has $800 million
to spend on repairs, with the money from a bond issue, a levy
and state matching funds.
The inspectors said every school in the district needs mil-

FARGO, N.D. (AP) -A freakishly early blizzard piled snow
in drifts up to 2 feet high in North Dakota ~n Wednesday, closing schools and stranding hundreds of drtvers several weeks
before people expected to break out the shovels and snowmobiles.
·
The storm dumped a record 11 inches of snow on Grand
Forks, where the previous record for any. day in Octobe~ was
8.2 inches in 1926. Devils.Lake and Cavaber reported 10 mches each the National Weather Service said.
The blizzard also left nearly a foo;&gt;t of snow in some parts of
Minnesota.
Authorities said 400 vehicles were stuck on Interstate 29
north of Fargo, and at least two snowplows were hit by trucks.

r,d

.......

Dad acquitted in death

School repair bill ~its S1B

Stonns delay salvage effort

: ;· EPA recommends speeding
:.;transition from winter fuels

1:!

\-A,en: October 2b, 2001 a+ 6:00p.m.

.· State setdies over gouging

DEFIANCE (AP) - A teen-ager admitted making bomb
threats against two local schools and was sentenced to a minimum of two years in a youth prison.
Ned Kubica, 17, of Defiance, entered "true" pleas Thesday
.morning to five counts of delin.quency by means of inducing
panic.
.
·
·
.
Juvenile Court Judge Stephen Ruyle sentenced KubiCa to a
minimum of two years in a Depar~n~,ent of Youth Servtces
facility, with a maximum term extending to age 21. He ~lso
ordered Kubica to pay $8,000 for the cost of overtime
incurred by local police and firefighters investigating the
threats.
Kubica was arrested on Sept. 19 by Defiance County sheriff's deputies after he made five bomb threats that resulted in
the evacuation of Defiance City Schools and Ayer~ville Local
Schools on Sept. 14, Sept. 17, Sept. 18 and Sept. 19. Safety personnel searched the schools after each call and found no
bombs.

NEW YORK (AP) - Stopping only to listen for survivors'
" screams, firefighters cut through the twisted planks and poles
· ·left when a building facade and adjoining scaffold collapsed,
;... "leaving five construction workers dead.
' ' Eleven others were injured in the collapse at the 20-story
1:. 'Manhattan office building Wednesday, city officials said.
Rescue workers armed with flashlights worked late into the
• night to clear debris fiom the 20-foot pile of rubble. The loose
bricks broken wooden planks and bent metal poles were
' .pulled from the pile and spread along neighboring streets with·: ·in hours.
Crews had to be called from the World Trade Center disaster
· : ·site about 2 miles south, said Fire Commissioner Thomas Von
' ' :Ess~n, who spoke at the scene with Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
on Wednesday.

Muslims seek resolution

Body found ·in vehlde

Tour office

r

Johnson

1
Dr. Meeks, Dr. Mendieta
and Dr. Sherrill

'

1991-1992
Marines

Desert Storm

I

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

Qtbe 1\ailp ~entinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45669
(740) 992-2156

�•

. . . . . . . The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy,

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Oct. 25, 2001

1ndians making changes, Page B2
NFL News, Pagt 83
~rid &amp;ries news, Page 85

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

'lllundlly, Odell1r 25, 2001

THuRsoAv's

HIGHLIGHTS

BY ScoTT WotR

Prep Foolball
T11m
SEQ
Logan ·
6-0
Qallia Academy 5·1
Jackson
4-2
Marietta
3-3
Athens
3·3
Warren
2--4
Point Pleasant 1·5
River Valley
0·6

-"""--L--.
IIAICMTIIIII

r--.,.

·

3 p.m. · ~ • TNT
• WlilliDn a., CMallw AuiiD,.,. 300
3 p.m. • SulctEr! • NBC

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

_ _.

228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
DrJve..Tbru Window

.........m Harvk;to:, ~ . 43 1

:L )etl Gookln, 4,512
Z. ~ Rudd, 4,11.7
J. ~ Stewan, 4,043

Jell' then, 4,228
Jason ll.ellel', 4.221
Ores Billie, 4,032

International Raceway.
AvorlGale, Ariz. {1-mile track),
312 lapS/miles
Whcll: Green nag drops et
3:30 p.m., Sunday

Burtoo

,...

._..,IIC~Rusty

Jack SQf~. 3.420

.1M RIJltm«&lt;, 3,323

Wallace, Ford, 134.178 mpn,
Nov. 3, 2000

Soon RiCIS. 3.312

•. !Merllnf Mwtln, A,D&amp;O
T!WIIt Kwipll, 3,M3
1. Dale J1rren, 3,998
Elton Saw/er. 3,73;7
Ted .\l!SifM, 3.362
•· D. ~ Jr., J,Q25 l'onj Ralne1, 3,&amp;42
Rlcty ~. 3,1M
1. RUity w.llac. , 3,904 Mike McLau&amp;l\lln, 3,600Dennls SlUM. 3,0 70
a. ~&lt;e~M Hv~~c~ . 3.806 Jimmie John100, 3.585
3.031
•· BobtJw Labonte, 3.799 Ctlad Little, 3.523
Rlcll Crawforcl. :.uno
Jell' awton. 3,1589
~ Wlllete, 3,397 Cot GibtM, 2,88-4

992-5432

What: Checker Auto Parts
500
Whtrco: Phoetlix

a r &amp;c ........: Jeff

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

r.,. eo.:..

.._. NCOftl: Tony Stewart,
Pontile, 118.132 mPh, NoY•

o.......... chemplon: Jeff

Burton

7, 1999
Notlllalr. The late Davey
Amson ·ts the only twMime
winner of this race .

Track qullllt)hC record:

-=

lnternatiooal Raceway,
Avondate, Ariz. (1-mlle track),
150 laps/miles
6:30 p.m .. FriMy
oa•suiii•C GUmt~Jan: Joe

-- -=

•

· Jason Leffler. Ponliac,
130.957 mph, NOll. 3, 2000
ReM NIOOf"'l: Jeff Burton,
Fon:l, 115.145, Nov. 4, 2000
Nolllllltc: Winstoo Cup
lUSCH 4IIWIO NATIOIW.
Ruttman, Dodge, 129.204 Joe
drivers named Jeff (Gordon
What: ClutbeeM SteakhOIJse and Burton) have won the two mph, March 17, 2000
boe record: Jack Sorag~, o1
200
previous BGN races there,
CheYIOiet, 103.053 mpil,
WheN: PMenhc
Aoril 20, 1997
International Raceway,
CRAFI'IMANTIIUCK
Avondale. Ariz. (1-mlle tra(:k),
Notllllc: sprague has won
200 laps/ mile!
Milt: Chevy Silverado 150 four poles and three races
PIR.
WheN: Pnoenlx
3 p.m., Saturday

-=

Title otmool wropped up
Tonr ltowort Chllrp cMM up Juot lhort
D. lomhllnlt Jr. IAokotl • lot like Dod
RlckJ Rudel
Sun Httlnc on'tltlo hopn
Dole Jo...tt
lot • .,.,,,. the iiiC wreck
ltortlllll Mortln HIIOO the pillet
Kovln Horvlck Aureulve ond IUIIJ

Your

N.UCAR. Ht

no

' *"t

==Wl~N~nG~N~C~U~P==
TALLADEGA. Ala. - like
father, like son.
Whose pOst-race
comments do these sound
like?
"We got to beating aM
banging there at the end. 1
had to run Into the side of
the No. 18 (Bobby Labonte)

and the No. 20 (Tony
Stewart), but they would

Clone the same thine. I
feel like. And we're sitting In
the Winner's Circle, so It

don't matter:
It sounded like the Dale

I Eoornt1ardt who won the race

race soliloquies rang poetic
In his tate father's memory:
"When 1 was a little kid, I
would look back through all
the books anct old racing
magaiines, and I'd look at
the winners and all the
statistics of the races my
dad had raced,• he said.

"Now every time I win, I feel
lUre it's a mark In the book&amp;
of the sport forever. If I'm
.lucky, I kno~ it will be ,many,
many years before I come
close to (matching) wttat ITl'l
father has done, but each
thin&amp; I do Is a s.tep toward

that. It's not a p i of mine,

but It's just a step In that
Talladega Superspeedway direction to be known 111
In October 2000, but it
one of those good drivers.·
wasn't That Earnhardt Is
In 1999, NASCAR
aone forever. The words
publiShed a list of 50
belonged to his son, -who
drivers alleged to be Its allsounds more like the
time best. Earnhardt Jr.'s
Intimidator e11ery day.
father and grandfather were
The Second Coming of
both in it.
Oale won the EA Sports 500
"I want to be one of those
Sunday In heroic fashion.
50 Clrivers In the next book,"
I fiKI&gt;tina off Tony Stewart and Junior said . "I want to go
on the last lap
down as m9Ybe one of the
flipped and smoke best; and then maybe one
l•&lt;&gt;eW&lt;!d in his wake. A 17-car day when 1 have a son. he
accident on the final lap
can look back In the books
eliminated all the opposition and see what his daddy has
e1tcep1 Stewart and Burton.
done in 2001."
Another of Junior's post·

..·liar brond

500.

me:

"This is the second time •Kavln't dOne that to
&amp;akl Bodine, the first beln&amp; a Butch Grand Nltlooal
race at Daytona. ·we hid a lflOt at the top five, and
we lost It beeeute of one bonehead move. Kevin
(Horvlck) Ita &amp;00&lt;1 kid, but 1don't know what we've &amp;ot
to do to calm him down:

-'a--

IIAICAII 1'1llo
&amp;Melito
Oltlnlon:
"Harvlck Is a rernarklbie talel'lt, J)el'hlps this
season's drlwer of the year, but he sure wfnds up In
this space an awful lOll

IH/1 unJ

sugt.JI - l d

J«m

X

-.

lilt,~--

_.,....,u_llewlllle

.....,,_. JM..tlltileulni'PPT

..........
It -

Dear NASCAR This W~~~~:k ,
I 'fa!
if All;ly
wu Joina to be revlaud .:.-" -· 1
utbc:rdriveror OOI. Aiso, can 1
~ideo of Dille Earnhardt't hut
Does ESPN seltlt? "'

I

up

• .....,Mq"F:

u ··-. 't tot&gt;ftvo llrlllll, e 101&gt;100', 0. ootet, '&lt;Ner

NASCAR This Week

$2.8 million In eamlnp
Clr: No. 12 MObil 1 Ford Taurus, owned

Ill'cR-_
i'ensko
_ soo...,..,

The middle of U.nte racine brothers,
Mike Wlllaca has had hit shares of ups.

----........ ..

-=con.

and cbma.
Not that there ha\len't been areat
moments. Mike wot1 the flrs:t Craftsman

Truck Series race ever held et oavtona
1-natlcnol Speedway. He flnl- fourth
in the 2000 trUck points race. He ftnlshed
tbtth In hit BuSCh Grand National debut
He won l)eytona'l ARCA 200. He won a
Wlnaton Redn&amp; series recion t(Ue. ,
He his had
aUckln&amp; In Winston

trou.,._

Cup, however.
Until the end af the )'Nf, at least, Mike
is serving as Interim driver or the No. 12
Ford VIICllted recently when Roter Penske
fired Jerem; Mayfteld. h COUld be his Delt
opportunity ever; It could also be just a
short-term 111. tlme wiU tell.

- . : "ndosey (16), Christina (13).
Matthew (tums 8 on Oct. 24)

,..

_ . . . . . , 'Charlotte was a IIIHt
start for us. We had a good cer. ,•. The
guys did an Incredible job with the pit
stops. And we were able to shOw what we
could do. Thin&amp;s didn't end qutte the WI
we had hoped they woukl, but you're colna
to haYe ·stuff like that from time to tlmo In
this sport;

to 1111 rtolol ........ IIIIo _ , 'K

somebody does run Into you and roots you
out of the way, you hope you can pt beCk
to them and root them right out of the ~­
It's kind of touchy. 'You hit me: I'm 10nna
llctlaelow10: st. Louts, Mo.
hit you. You hit me eptn: I'm aqnna hll you
AI0:42
twic, as hard as you're aonna hit rr141.' Then
Flrott: Slllrt ''""'· 3, 1991, at A11011da/e, It enda up In a bit wreck and tr: doeen't &lt;10
Ariz.), pole (ncnoJ, win (none)
~Ina any aooo, but that't the Wfli ~
C...ltltl t1 : 102 races, 0 victories, _ . onclo up
there.'

••••••••••••
wtiO'aHo&amp;wtN'sNot

•HOI': Jeff Burton haa
posted rive top.10
finishes In the past
seven races.
• NOT: Terry Labonte
1'\as one top-10 finish In
the last 25 races.

1. In the 1950s, on which Arizona racetrack
dld NASCAR drivers race?
2. Why ere most Winston Cup cars painted gray on
the Inside?

3. What NASCAR series had its first race at Phoenix
International Raceway?
SICIIJI1S \j3nJl Utwt::U&amp;JO 'E 'IUIPIEtM il'"'l Ul
tlj09JO IMOlfS heJ9 't SPI.lnOJIJii:J X!UeD'«! 'J:

IIIIJMINY

"" of lite

1/lllt

awart of Q
l'idtvtopes

11tttm.r

NASCAR mandates use of head-and-neck restraints
will k«p bolt! with his team fa' the
n:AI thme aiOIIS.
"I'm lookln1 bwaRI to a ~
dlallen&amp;e," said Blaney. who 15 fmm
Hartfool.C.W. "I think~ is a kcoi
pt*lltial • Jo.~ Moonp:Jns. The
chlnz 1u WOfk 'with Ryan and !IE
whole l115per !elllll ... makn me
confidem lblut lhe fwm:.' '
Juper Engines &amp; 1\arr.mi!ll&gt;i~n&gt; lw;
been lhr: ~Jimary ll(lOiliOI' mthe No. n
f\Td IU' lhc pa'it !&gt;ix scmms !rid ha!i

Team
Ravenswood
Oak Hill
Wahama
Bipley
South Galli a
Hannan

:;;I

jDr fom to

of individual rocts,

perhaps tlvrt art otlrLr /IJJU
thc!n "'ho bww of SIKh a s/"

ctln providt somt infiJ17t16t/{)ll ,

•••••••••••

Fan Tips

X
11IE lDI'IF..RY: The belt driver
does ootaiwii)'J win • rxie •l'IIID:p

:: scheduled at
&gt; grid reunion

purse.

Jeff Burton's ClfNi IS the
defendln&amp; cnamplon. The No.
99 team won lest year with a
pit stop "' 18.355 seconds.

See us for Your Stih,.
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

~y.

The bell Clr Wet 1101
aiWKys win. It's ri'IM a n.atr ~

,.,_,_.,

Atlea.it lhat'a the way the reiplina
Winstoo Cup champion, Bobby
l..alxJnle ' IIOel ~ '
"It's 1101 1511)' racina .'' labonte laid.
"It'• a crapi1nJt OJ ~ cheu mDII:tl,
eilta way you WliJit to looll at il. Yw
~ not have to hll\lt the be!it '*or the
renewed il5 oommitment 10 spoosu the hesl ITlOior 10 win this ra;c:, Yw )ill
car in 2002. The learn l&lt;l kding for have 10 be in the right po!lilioft on lhole
Jldditional s~p. OOwevcr.
WI COlljlk lllpl and you~ wink. It's
Pre!!:sley. by the way, Ill.\ not 1'101 tht: rnQIIt ph)"ically dm1aJdinil
announad hisfurore J*ns.
race, tu )'00 IW 'rrau.lly chined
when yoo are Wnc with !his OOC;~

Ridenour

•t

wlttt I
Ill 4 to
..... Dell . .
Jr.
......... wblctw
7

tho-.
--tho

plltor . . OIIIJ - l'l.,..tt--ln

OIIIJ -

Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985·3308

.,.... - · &amp; .., pit

to tlnllll In
ol

1M 10!1 :ulln -

tho-~­
~racM,

He won the 100 m..
- I n lilly~~-·
fnttmlitiDnll I; Ja.,.

...

i
z0

Place Your Business's Ad here

Call The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

::1

co
~

NI
N

co
N

c.n

992-2155'

:so

fa
~
CD
•
•

-

:r:
Q.
Q.

II

II

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•

0

'

II

•

. RACINE - The 1972
SVAC Football Champion
Southern Tornadoes and the
1973 SVAC Co-Champions,
who shared one the best
tecords in school history at 73, are ·being honored the
weekend of the Southern vs.
Eastern Game during Prescription Oxygen Night,
Octol'&gt;er 26 - , 2001.
'
· To start the weekend off,
there will be a parade Friday
evening, October 26, starting
at 7:00 p.m. from the high
school parking lot followed
by a bonfire at the high
schooL The pep rally hopes
to cheer the 2001 Southern
Tornadoes football team to
victoi-y in defeating the Eastern Eagles. The honorees
from 1972- 1973 are asked to
oome and participate in the
parade and to stay for the
bonfire.
. Starting at 4:30p.m. on Saturday, October 27, there will
be a tailgateparty in the high
school parking lot. The meat
and drinks will be provided
for the honorees and their
families. The honored fami·
ties are being askedto bring an
el)tree or a dessert.

I

::z:
'1

0·9

Events

seven men must empty two
cans of gas (14 gallons) and
change all four tires In as
Short a time as possible.
Pet'\Bitlea will be applied for
loose tug nuts, fuel spills and
fuel left In the can. Only those
crews In the top· 25 In car·
owner points after the Oct. 28
race In Phoenix are eligible to
compete for the $76,000

---·
... _...,_to

9.0
6·3
6·3
5--4
2·7

Wirt County at Wahama
Hannan at Gauley Brid9e
Guyan Valley at S. Gallla
Oak Hill at Summit C. Day
Ravenswood at Ripley

'"""·Each OYer·the-wall crew of

8 Wllol II 1M Olllt7
TOIIJ..., 1M 1110

AU

Friday's Games

• Fans attending the Nov. 2-4
events at North Carolina
S~ In Rockingham will
get an &amp;ddec;i treat. The
annual Wortd Pit Crew
Competit!Ofi wm be held
SaturdaV. Nov. 3, Immediately
following the Busch ·Serles

4ROUND THE GARAGE

0.MI his sipd Blaney and MW

Non-league

Foo t~kets, call (910) 582·
28131 .

••••••••••
chiefRyan~10~1hat

Eastern at South!)rn

.ll.w~-~::.:e:l

wrltttn , lht No . 915
Ho~o~Jton drove this yr_w
gtH'Ig tlJ bl on t#ltdrruil in 200,
/U¥ yo~o~r othtr qJWsllolf, ..., arr:

.

Saturday's Game

WO!Ideri"'

~~Thlt. ........

8·1
8·1
6·3
4·5
1-8
1r8

. Wellston at Vinton County
· Miller at Trimble
' Nelson.·York at Alexander
Fed. Hocking at Waterford

lu

U'f!St .

Todd ...... ,.. Kftln IWvlck
A U.p from behind sent Bodloe Into the nil and set
off the first of two multlcar ctlahet In the EA Sporta

11ocd
mandDtt

cO'f!/pral/011 can bt loiSed.
yaM

btl"'"'"'*"

FEUD OF THE WEEK

11or

Trimble
4·0
Eastern
3·1
Waterford
2-2
Southern
2·2
Federal Hocking 1·3
Miller
•
0--4
Frlday'a Games
Meigs at Belpre

~try

of

7·2
5--4
4-5
3-6
1·8
2·7

All

•••
. Send your winter sports
Sl:hedules to the Sentinel at
992-2157
(fax)
or
n6ws@mydailysentinel.com
(e-mail).
l '

Ill

·

...... -IEI!at.n; a:a

WVU looking to
upset top-ranked
Hurricanes

All

~

Team

- u 1"'1

IOflltr

8. (8) lobby Labonte Th.,klullr, ho'a OK

Yo.11 lfttl/ct o
NASC!Jl dots

4-0
3·1
2-2
2·2
1-3
0·4

with one ace and three points, while
netting B· of-16 sets wtth four assists.
Nikki Phillips was 4-of-4 wit an ace
and three points, Tammy Bissell was 5of- 7 with two points and one kill,
while Katie Robertson was 4- of-6
serving with two points, a 6- of- 7
spiking night with one kill and three
blocks.
Eastern standout Janet Calaway was
10- of-27 setting with two ~ssists and
4-of- 7 spiking with three kills.
"This is a great group- of athletes.
We were bound to have an off- night

1

Hocking Division

!hal CVII!pUIIJ'.

FROM lAST WEEH

~

Wellston
Nelsonville--York
Belpre
Meigs
Vinton County
Alexander

8. H Jolll&amp;urton
Ployed hit cordo
10. (I) RutiJ w.tteco Could UM onothtr win
f•

Friday's Games

Tum

...hal ;, no,..
Mar/wing Ctwp.,
(U11Ion, Urwcal, 76)

Jofl Gordon

9·0
7·2
6·3
6-3
5--4
3·6
2·7
0·9

Ohio Division

Winston Cup Series

NASCAR This Week writer Monte DuHon ranks the
10 drivers heading Into this weekend's race . Last
• ..,,., . , ranklngs are In parentheses.

All

TVC

•••••••••••

Mike Wallace

championships over the five year peri - tuniries. You have to have better numod is a great feat. We lost tonight, but bers to win at the district."
McDERMOTI - A great season I am very proud of this group of
In the first game of the night,
came to an end Tuesday night in the girls."
North Adams claimed a 15-7 win as
Division IV District Volleyball semiEastern was not its usual self when Eastern miscues rook their roll early.
final at Northwest High School it hit the floor in its last two games. Down one game, the Eagles were
where North Adams defeated Eastern Serving and spiking were what put forced to come· from- behind, and
15-7 and 15-10. Eastern's glorious them in championship ·form, and although still not playing their usual
19-4 season came to an end, but not Tuesday both were off from what is game, the Eastern desire to win
before the club had secured its fifth usually their normal game.
allowed them to sl3y in the game until
straight Tri-Valley Conference divi"The girls had a good set of the th e bitter end, 15-10.
sional tide and fifth straight Sectional nerves," added Douthitt. "North
Sophomore Kass Lodwick led
tide.
Adams was very heatable. We just did Eastern with seven points on a 9-of'We've had a great season," said not have a good night in all areas. We 11 serving night, while also piciUng
Coach Pam Douthitt, " No one can missed eight serves again and we up a kill on a 2-of-4 night with two
take . that away. The back-to-back missed 25 sets, and 26 spiking oppor- blocks. Tiffeny Bissell was 5-of-6

Gallia Acad. at P. Pleasant
Warren at River Valley
1.9gan at Jackson
Athens at Marietta

·-•1•""'....
.,.,

PIWfllt

lOP liN

1. (11
2. (21
3. (41
4. (31
1. (II
8. (81
7. (71

Jt.O, . . .

7

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

-1!0 :=:::!W'~INI!!!jTON~CUP~==

AB
• C.&amp;':ai&amp;l- a..,
6:30 p.m. · fridaPt • ESPN2
·
• e..c:tt ....... 011t1a1c.* I' iliU n 20lt

j'

Eastem v-ball falls at distrid
OVP CORRESPONDENT

SEOAL

Crow's
Family
Restaurant

Page 81

TOP GUNS - Miami's Ethenic Sands, right, makes a catch against Aorida State. Sands is
part of a high-powered offense the Mountaineers must contain Thur5day. (AP file)

Meigs readies for
game w/Belpre
BY

MIAMI (AP) - West Virginia coach Rich Rodriguez
has watched plenty of videotape on the top-ranked Miami
Hurricanes, and he hasn't
found a weakness.
"We're a few bullets shy,"
Rodriguez said. "We might be
going into a gunfight with a
.
pen knife~"
The Mountaineers (2-4, 0-2
Big East) will try to upset the
Hurricanes (5-0, 2-0) Thursday night at the Orange Bowl,
where Miami has won 12
consecutive
games. The
'Canes hope to make the task
even tougher by playing with
a confidence level higher than
it has been in recent years.
"We are not intimidated. We
look at it as a challenge,"West
Virginia quarterback Brad
Lewis said. "This is the best
team in America, maybe the
best team we Will play. It's on
national television, and they
will be looking to make a
statemen~ just like we are."
M1am1 s statement IS sunple:
Win every _game convincingly.
The Humcanes were. four~h
In the Bowl Champ10nsh1p
Series standings released
Monday, behind Oklahoma,
Nebraska and UCLA. They
might need two of those
teams to lose, or else they
might be left out of the
national championship, picture
again.

"We've got to go undefeated," running back Clinton
Portis said.
The 'Canes bear Florida
State 27-24 last year and finished the regular season 10-1,
but they dropped below the
Seminoles in the final BCS
rankings and didn't get a
chance to play Oklahoma in ·
the Orange Bowl for the
national tide.
"You use different things to
motivate your team," Miami
coach Larry Coker said. "I
hope our team wants · to go
out and play well and get the
respect they deserve throughout the country. The onlx ytay
you do that is. you go oil(\ be
an excellent, dominant foot- ·
ball team."
The
Hurricanes
have
outscored their opponents
224-62, including a 49-27 win
over Florida State on Oct. 13
that snapped the Seminoles'
54-game home unbeaten
· streak.
That game re-emphasized
Miami's fearlessness.
. "If we play like we're capable of playing, we'll beat anybody,'' linebacker Jonathan
Vilma said.'
Rodriguez knows that, too.
It has been evident in the
game tapes.
"You watch film, you look
for a weakness and you don't

....... -wvu.s:a

PREP CROSS COUNTRY

DAVE HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs and Belpre will battle it
out for third place in the TVC's Ohio Division Friday
evening at Belpre.
The Golden Eagles head into the contest wit]) a 4-5
mark overall, and a 2-2 record in the TV C. Belpre has
lost non-conference games to Warren Local (47-22) ,
Steubenville Catholic (35- 6) and Chesapeake (23-22).
The have win over Fort Frye (47- 27)
and Federal Hocking (69- 14). In the
conference, Belpre opened up with a 417 win over Alexander, they dropped a
53-22 contest to Wellston, beat Vinton
County 34·0 and then last week lost a
heart breaker 28-22 contest at Nelsonville-York.
In last week's game, the Eagles held a
22- 6 lead at halftime, but the second half
L....~C-:-h-anc_a_y__. was all Buckeyes as Nelsonville-York
scored eight points in the third period
and 14 in the fourth to post the come.from·behind win.
Belpre dominated the statistics against the Buckeyes;
they had a 22-9 edge in first downs, and 369 total yards
to 170 to the Buckeyes. But the Golden Eagles had several cosdy turnovers in the game losing three fumbles and
throwing a interception.
Nick Hamilton led the Eagles with 103 yards in 25 carries, speedster Jeremiah R eams added 42 in 16 cracks and
Guy Earley 11 for 29. Quarterback Brain Adams had his
beast game of the season completing 11-of -14 for 159
yards. Earley had five receptions for 68 yards and Reams
PleaH see Melp, 8:2

TOP • MEIGS GIRLS ADVANCE - The Meigs Marauder girls
cross country team completed In the District Meet at Logan
last Saturday and qualified for the Regional meet this Saturday
at Lancaster. Pictured from left to right with the finish position
are: Jessica Priest (Injured), Andrea Burdette, (11) Shannon
Soulsby (21), Mindy O'Dell (39), Heather Hysell (27) and Bran-·
di Thomas (29). (OVP photos)
'

WIWAMSON ADVANCES- Meigs Marauder Matt Williamson
adllanced to the Regional Cross Country Meet this Saturday at
lani;aster after finishing 15th in the District at Logan.
'I

I

'--

�••

: Pege B 2 • The o.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Oct. 25, 2001 _

/

:Jribe won't re-sign Juan Gonzalez, Dave Burba
CLEVELAND (AP} - Retooling a division-winner that had its se~n end once again
in disappoinnnent, the Cleveland Indians have
• declined to renew the options on sluggt"r Juan
Gonulez and pitcher Dave Burba.
·• Incoming gemral manager Mark Shapiro also
. indicated on 'Wednesday the club's future will
. probably not include reliever John Rocker or
· centedielder Kenny Lofton. Manager Charlie
, Manuel was officially retained, but three mem.• ben of his staff, including pitching coach Dick
. Pole, were let go.
·
Gonulez signed a one-year contract last year
for $10 million and his rights could have been
retained for 2002 for $14 million.
"The magnitude of a Juan Gonzalez contract
. - or any other high-dollar tree-agent- is not
a realistic acquisition for the Cleveland lndi. ans;· Shapiro said.
Instead, the outfielder - who hit 35 horne
runs and drove in 140 runs while batting .325
this season - will become a tree agent. The
, club and Gonzalez had the option to back out
; of the second year of the contract.
_ Gonzalez, 32, signed to replace Manny
· Ramirez after he left for Boston, came to
· Cleveland after one year in Detroit and 11 with
Texa~. With 397 career homers, he provided a
- power-hitting strongman in the middle of the
· lineup.
"Very clearly, the lineage of Alben Belle,
_ Manny Ramirez, Juan Gonzalez is over,"
. Shapiro said, referring to three sluggt"rs who
, have roamed the Indians outfield over the past
decade.
Owner Larry Dolan said Cleveland's cost-

cutting moYeS return the Indians to the strategy
of maintaining a balance between veterans and
homegrown players moving up 6:orn the farm
system.
That stategy built a perennial contender after
decades of futility. The Indians have not won a
World Series since 1948.
"But by the end of the 2000 season, it was
clear the team had moved &amp;om its successful
strategy by assembling a team composed almost
entirely of vetetan players;' he said.
Dolan and Shapiro said the team's new strategy is to reduce reliance on high-priced veterans and homerun hitters, invest heavily in the
farm system and emphasize strong pitching and
fundamentals.
Manuel said he is ready for the challenge of
fielding a team that has to manufacture runs
through strategy rather than wait for home
runs.
"If we have to play small ball, little ball, whatever you call it - hit-and-run, steal bases, take
more chances- that's what we'll have to do,"
Manuel said.
"I'm excited abOut it, really. and if we win
enough games, I think that can be real exciting
for the fans, too."
Lofton, who hit a career-low .261 in his lOth
year with the team, will likely also become a
tree agent during the offieason.
"It's unlikely we'D be able to retain Kenny
Lofton here;' said Shapiro, who takes over the
Indians GM job 6:om John Hart.
Lofton, 34, has been the team's starting centertielder since 1992, except for one year he
spent with the Atlanta Braves in 1997.

COLLEGE HOOPS

Eagles, _Hoyas picked to win Big East
J

I

•i

NEW YORK (AP)- Boston College, last· the 23rd time in coach Jim Boeheim's 25
season's surprise Big East champion, and seasons, had two first-place votes and 78
Georgetown, which returned to the NCAA points to follow Georgetown in the West.
tournament for the first time since 1997,
"We have a chance to be very good if we
were picked can keep that chemistry fro~ last year,"
to win their
"~have a chance to divisons in a Georgetown coach Craig Esherick said. "We
be_very good we can poll of · the might not have the depth we had last year,
but I just think we'll be more comfortable
keep that chemistry conference
with each other."
•
coaches .
from last year. ~
Notre Dame was third, while Seton Hall
The Eagles,
might not have the the only team and West Virginia tied for fourth. Pittsburgh
depth we llad last year, in league his- and Rutgers rounded out the division.
but I just tllink we'll tory to go Boston College's Troy Bell, the league's
from worst to co-player of the year last season, was chosen
be more comfortable first,
were the the preseason player of the year.
•
with
each
other.
"
choice
to
•
The 6-foot-1junior averaged 20.4 points
Georaelown
co.ch
repeat
as
East
•
last season and ·was a second-team AllCnolg Eah•lck
Division
America pick.
•
.
,
champions.
He and Syracuse's Preston Shumpert were
They received six first-place votes and 81
,. points in the voting, which was released the only unanimous choices on the six-man
: Wednesday at the league's annual preseason preseason first team, and were joined by
John Linehan of Providence, Kevin Braswell
:. media day.
• The Hoyas, who lost to Maryland in the of Georgetown, Caron Butler of Connecti- ·
-: round of 16, had 12 first-place voies and 90 cut and Darius Rice of Miami.
: points as favorites in the West.
.
The second team was Mike Sweetney of
;
"The approach' is always the same for me," Georgetown, John Salmons of Miami, Ryan
•; said Boston College's AI Skinner, the con- Humphrey of Notre Dame, Darius Lane of
: ference's coach of the year last season. "It's Seton Hall and Gary Buchanan ofVillanova.
: all other people's attitudes toward us and
The preseason rookie of the yeu was
-~ maybe they have changed, but mine certainpoi11t guard Jonathan Hargett of West Vir,.~ Iy hasn 't."
'
Connecticut, which won 20 games 'but ginia.
The conference will have three new
, failed to make the NCAA tournament last
. season, was s~cond behind Boston College. coaches this season - Jay Wright replaces
: The Huskies had four No. 1 votes and 78 Steve Lappas at Villanova, Louis Orr suc· points, and were followed by Miami, Provi- ceeds Tommy Amaker .at Seton Hall and
. dence, St. John's,Villanova and Virginia Tech. Gary Waters follows Kevin Bannon at Rut:
Syracuse, which won at least 20 games for gers.

if

...

--------------

.,'•
••

•
•
•

..•

Eastem
frumPapBl

wvu

really see one," · he said.
"Their strength offensively is
they're very efficient."
Miami quarterback Ken
Dorsey is 19-1 as a starter and
has thrown 11 touchdown
passes and three interceptions
this season. He needs just
three more TO passes to break
Steve Walsh and Vinny Testavetde's school record of 48.
Portis is averaging 6.2 yards
per carry and nearly 100 yards
per ,game despite sitting out
much of the second half in
blowouts against Rutgers and

Troy State.
Miami's gffensive line,
anchored by tackles Bryant
McKinnie and Joaquin Gonzalez, has yet to give up a sack
this season.
"It might be the best
(offensive line) I've seen in
college football in 17 years of
coaching," Rodriguez said.
"And not just because of the
talent, but they've got a lot of
experience."
Miami might be even
stronger on defense, where it
has 18 sacks.10 fumble recoveries and ·nine interceptions.
The defense has shut down
three spread offenses already
this season - Rutgers, Pittsburgh and Troy State.

win over Vinton County last
Friday evening. After struggling early in the season the
Marauders have got their
offense in gear.
The Marauders rolled up
240 yards on the ground and
90 in the •air, Jeremy Roush
led the Marauder ground
attack with 128 yatds giving
him 724 for the season in 156
carries. 'IYson Lee added 93
~ardl giving him 337 in 83
tries,
• Junior quarterback Kyle
Hannan il 58-of-148 for 658
yards. Buzzy Fackler lead• the .
way with 23 ca«:hes for "239
yards; freshman Ryan Frazier
has eight for 175 yard.!.

Meigs held the Vikings to
166 yard.! last week, 125 coming on the ground in 33 carries.
"The kids have worked
ha!d," Marauder coach Mike
Chancey said. "It's the seniors
last game, I hate to see it
come to an end, But we are
going to go out, play hard and
·s end the senion out on . a
good note."
Senion playing . their l.,t
game Friday for tho maroon
and gold will be Travis Lee,
Darrick Knapp, Brandon
Bobb, Evan Shaw, Nick
McLaughlin and P. Varian.
Kickoff l• 7:30 from Belpre
High School.

fromPapBI

•

-••

sooner or later. ' I'm not

-; making excuses, but all year

•

: long we have been a much
•
: better team."

•
•

:

Eastern

seniors

playing

: theit last game were
• Calaway,

Ashley

Janet
Hager,

: Tiffany Spencer, Tammy Bis•

• sell, Janet Ridenour, Amanda
Yeager, Tiffany Hensley, Whitney Karr, and Kayla Gibbs.

Meigs
fromP'apBl

..

four for 71, including a 66
scoring play.
The Marauders will be trying to keep a couple of streaks
alive, Marauder coach Mike
Chancey has a seven game
winning otreak agaimt the
Waahington County neighbon, and owns a 7-1 mark.
Plus, the ~arnuden lave won
their last two contelts and
take a 3-6 mark into the contest and two and two in the

TVC.
Meigs is coming off a 26-6

J.

Shapiro said he hopes the team can sign a
new deal with closer Bob Wickman, which
would make conrroyenial closer Rocker
expendable·.
Rocker was one of the top reliev.:rs in the
National League when the Indians got him in a
trade with Atlanta in july. However, he pitched
poorly for the Indians and was involved in several conflicts with fans and teammates.
He had just four saves in a Cleveland uniform, to go with ~-7 record and a 5.45 ERA.
Burba, 35, who was in double figures in wins
each of his four seasons in Cleveland, began the
2001 season in the statting rotation but struggled all season and was moved to the bullpen
late in the ~ummer. He finished the yeu with a
10-10 recotd and 6.21 ERA.
Also released was veteran reliever Scott
Radinsky.
The club did pick up the option on reliever
Ricardo Rincon, who appeared in a careerhigh 67 games and posted a 2.83 ERA.
The Indians picked up Manuel's coillract
option and .also announced that bench coach
Grady Little, thitd base coach Joel Skinner and
bullpen coach Luis Isaac had been asked back.
Pole, along with hitting coach Clarence Jones
and first base-outfield coach Ted Uhlaender,

were all dismissed.
The Indians blew a 2-1 lead and lPsl their
best-of-five AL playoff series against the Seattle
Mariners.
.--

a

WATCHIN' THE BOnOM LINE - Indians
owner Larry Dolan answers questions during a
news conference Wednesday. The Indians said
they will not bring back outfielder Juan Gonzalez next season in a moneysaving move. (AP)

Rio Grande h·oops faces
big challenge in exhibition
RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio
Grande Redmen basketball team will have a
huge
challenge facing
IT-r""Mr-...,..., them, when they tak.e the
floor, on Sunday versus the
Charleston Bombers. It
will be the final tune-up
before the Redmen tip-off,
for real, November 2-3 at
the St. Francis (IN} Tournament.
Coach Earl Thomas'
Redmen defeated Edison
State Community College
in its first exhibition, 11989 last Satorday (October 20):
The Bombers are a collection of players
who factored in on some outstanding hoops
teams in the recent past. Members of the
Bombers who will suit up on Sunday include
former standouts from Virginia Tech Shawn
Good and Travis Jackson. The pair was an
integral part of the Hokie tea~ that won the
National Invitation Tournament.

Also on the squad are Greg Dennis and
Adrian Meeks (East Tennessee State). Dennis
played · in the NCAA Tournament. Deon
Dobbs has played against Rio Grande in the
past as .a member of Greg White,s Marshall
Thundering Hetd. Dobbs has also played in
Brazil, the Los Angeles Summer Leaj:Ue and
in China.
The Bombers also have three former memben of the University of Charleston basketball progran1, Dwayne Price, Ajum ·Gaines
and Tommy Orcutt. Gaines was a former
NCAA Division, II All-,~mericaq ah~ Player
of the Year candidate and has played in the
United States Basketball League (USBL).
•Orcutt has played profcssidriilly in ·BmZil.
Riq Grande will counter with ·a ·• strong
inside game that was a major factoe ,in the
Edison scrimmage. The backcourt will get a
baptism of fire. but should also gain valuable
experience &amp;om the task at lulnd.
., ,
Game time is set for 3 p.m. Sunday.at the ·
Newt Oliver Arena.

Follow your
teams into the
playoffi with
The Daily
Sentinel

Pagel]

The Daily Sentinel

~

.......,.,.Oct +• ·u .

Steelen not ~~to .
in the
-towel on Korclell Stewart's passing
PITI'SBURGH (AP) - So fat the
: Pittlburgh Steelen have had num~us
; long drMf and long runs. What's missing
• are long passes - and, for the most part
~ short ones, too.
'
: In a league where defenses traditional: ly catch up very qtsickly to teams that
: become ov.:rly reliant on· a single element
• fur success, coach Bill Cowher cautions
; the Steelen can't expect to k.eep winning
just by running the ball.
! That's why Cowher strongly hinted
: Kordell Stewart needs to stan dtrowing
; the way he did in his fint s~n- and,
: by far, his best s~n -as an NFL stan: ing quarterback in 1997.
: Stewart, who threw 21 touchdown
• paaes in 1997 but hasn't come close to
• ~tching ~t since, passed for 100 y2l'ds
: m Sundays 17-10 victory at Tampa Bay.
: He has only one 200-yard game in two
: seasor:", tha~ m a loss to the Giants last
: year m which he was force? to throW
• aftet the Steelers fell way behind.
: The Steelm are getting by with a
: Jerome Bettis-led running game that
: avenges nearly 200 yards per game, or
: nearly 40 yards more than any team in
: the league. Pan of that success is due to
: offensive coordinator Mike Mularkey's
• decision to allow Stewart to scramble
: more often, rather than forcing passes that
' probably wouldn't be completed.
The Steelen (4-1) begin an important
five-week stretch of games against AFC
Central teams Monday night when they
face Tennessee (2-3), and Cowhet can't
think of a better time for Stewart to
begin getting the ball downtield consistently.
"We missed a couple of big plays the
other day;• Cowher said. "We are _going to
.. have to be able to throw the ball. We have
· io be more efficient.~'

There is cenainly room for improvermnt. The Steelen are first in the NFL in
rushing by a wide margin but are 30th in
passing, leading only Dallas. And~ while
many NFL teams average I 00 or more
yards passing than rushing. the Steelen
gain more than 50 yards more per game
on the ground than through the air.
And with one touchdown pass in five
games, Stewart is tied for the team lead
with Bettis, who passed for a touchdown
on his only throw of the season Sunday.
Of course, Stewart is only part of the
problem. Neither of the Steelers' two
tint-round receivers, Plaxico Burress nor
Troy Edwards, has made much of an
impact despite the millions of dollars
invested in them. Edwards doesn't start
and Burress doesn't have an NFL touchdown 'catch.
Cowher faulted Burress for not coming
"back to the ball on a pass that Stewart
underthrew Sunday, resulting in an inter.
ception.
Still," Stewart said his modest statistics
- 76-of-124 for 680 yards, one touchdown and four interceptions - aren't a

r---·-_,....,.,.,

worry because of a more important number: his record. The Steelen have won
eight of the last 10 games he has started
and, over the last two seasons, they are
11-5 when he starts.
"I'm working within the scheme of
thin~!:', trying to get my groove back after
not having much success in the past,"
Stewart said Wednesday. 'Tm just enjoying this right now and trying to ride this
horse the best way I possibly can."
The Steelers hired a quarterbacks
coach this season for 1he first time in
more than 30 years, and Stewart credits
To~ Clements with being a calming
influence who has greatly aided his confidence, even though the passing game
has yet to develop.
"He's keeping me relaxed," Stewart
said. "With the cootdinators in the past, it
was always trying to understand what we
were doing as a whole rnther than your
individual position.
"He can pinpoint those little things
that affect a quarterback and keep me
focused, keep me within the framework
of how I need to approach it."

" FAST GETAWAY - Stealers QB Kardell
·· Stewart (10) scrambles ffNBY from the
• Buccaneers Nate Webster (52) last Sunday. Despite his success running the ball,
the Stealers would like to Improve upon
Stewart's passing. (AP)

2•1 ·

Bengals kicker doesn't
like being so popular
hands:'
Neil Rackm Mnt out with
That's the Yn1f coach Dick
his wile to relax on 'lberdly LeBeau sees it, too.
·
night and soon realized he was
Although Racken bas
the ropic of discussion among misled six of his bit nine field
the other panons.
goal attempts. he has done a
What he Olletheard wasn't good job getting his lrickodi
very nice.
deep. Six ofhis 20 kickol&amp; ~
It wasn't long before the gone for touchbacks, and the
embaaled Cincinnati Bengals Bengals are ~ in the
CINCINNATI

(AP) -

kicker got up and headed AFC at bottling up opponena
horne with his wife. It's no fun on kicknf!S.
being the tallc of the town.
"He's going to have to fight
"I've been better:' Rackeri his Ynlf through it," LeBeau
said Wednesday. walking off the said "We'D do everything o,w
practice field after a near-per- can ro help him. That is the
feet session, "I used ro be able ideal solution for us. But at the
to go out and get a beer with same tiine, we will look around
my wife, but I can't really do fur other options:'
that in peace any more:'
Rackers replaced Doug PelThat's what happens when a . trey last season, but made only
kicker misses half his field goal 12 of21 field goal atternpl!. In
attempts and the team is con- two seasons, Rackers is lll-ofducting tryouts for his. replace- 33 overall. From 30 yards and
ment. The Bengals invited beyond, he's 11-of-25.
kickers Jaret Hobnes, Vitaly
Sev=l factors figure into
Pisetsk.y and Jon Hilbert fur those numbers. The chewl:dtryouts Tuesday, but wound up up grass at Paul Brown Stadisigning a cornerback instead.
urn rntde it tough fur any
That doesn't mean Rackers kicker to make a field goal last
is safe. After a game mxt Sun- season. This year, the Bengals
day in Detroit, the Benga1s changed holders at the end of
have their bye week· usually training camp. replacing punter
the tiine that ~ team changes Daniel Pope with Nick Harris.
quarterbacks or kickers, if it's so
Some ofBrad St. Louis' snaps
inclined.
have been off-target, and it's
Rackers, :i sixth-round draft been difficult for Harris to get
pick last year, wasn't surprised the ball down quickly and
that the team brought in other cleanly. Rackers has taken the
kickers fur a look. He doesn't bmnt ofit, getting booed lo\1(1-know h~ much time he has ly in his horite stadium.
left to get himself straightened
Harris is trying to help
out
Rackers relax.
"It depends on how thin~!:'
"There's a lot of pressure on
go;' he said. "1 don't know. I him now;· Harris said."You try
don't have an answer.for that. If to just get him not to worry
I go out and do my job, I'm abOut it. We go golfing. hang
here. If I don't, probably not. out and tallc a little bit here and
The way !look at it is it's in my there:'

:.Grbac questionable against Jaguars on Sunday
'

.

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) banged up every Sunday.
.First a concussion, then Everyone gets bumps and
. bruised ribs. After getting bruises, but mine are a little'
banged around on successive different because it hinders my
weekends, Baltimore Ravens ability to throw a little bit."
Cunningham
performed
quarterback Elvis Grbac might
· be forced to give his battered -u in mop-up roles against
body a rest Sunday.
Green Bay and Cleveland.
Backup Randall Curming- Now in his 16th s~n. the
ham ran the tint-team offense 38-year-old veteran was hard: Wednesday and could get his ly overwhelmed about the
: fint start with Baltimore possibility of making his !34th
: against Jacksonville on Sunday. NFL start.
"I'm always prepared to do
· : Grbac did not practice and
; is listed as questionab~e, mean- whatever it takes. You can't be
~ ing there's a 50 percent chance caught by surprise," he sajd. ''I
just really believe that any
: he will play.
· · · · th I
b ·
: "'r:ell you what, it will all pomt m tlnle at can e m
; depend on how I feel today, the lineup. It's tough being a
: tomorrow and Friday," said backup because you never
: Grbac,.who expected the -final know, so I prepare my mind
• decision to come shortly
before game time Sunday.
Coach Brian Billick said he
will make the call "probably
about 30 seconds before we
come out of the tunnel." ·
Grbac and the Ravens are
coming off a rough couple of
weeks. The 'quarterback
.received a concussion on Oct.
14 in a 31-23 loss to Green
Bay, then damaged his ribs
Sunday in Cleveland after
falling on the ball after one of
the Browns' seven sacks, a key
facet in the Ravens' 24-14
defeat.
I Grbac got over the concussion quickly enough, but the
rib injury could have longterm repercussions
"This is one of the il\iuries
you've got to be smart with
because it really involves a lot
of the things I do throwing the .
ball;' he said. "Goin~ in there
and getting it re-injured takes
a lot longer to come back

for the unexpected."
him in training camp and in
Cunningham is 17 -for~36 practice."
for 193 yardswith one touchT h e Ravens also listed tight
down and no interceptions.
His quarterback rating is 73, end Todd Heap (ankle), runcompared to Grbac's 73.6, and ning back Terry Allen (ankle)
he's probably more familiar and guard Edwin Mulitalo
with the offense after working · (knee) as q~estionable. But all
under Billick in 1997 and three practiced and should
1998 when both were with play against the Jaguars.
the Minnesota Vikings.
"Randall has been an MVP
Offensive
tackle
Leon
in this league and he knows Searcy is out, and could be
this offense very weD," Ravens gone for longer than anticipattight end Shannon Sharpe ed with a torn triceps.
said. "We feel very comfort- , "The arm has not respondable with Randall going out d t th.
·
h
'd
.
th ere
ore h estratmg
t h"1s e a . 1s pomt ,t e .way . we
.
offense. It's really not going to hoped. It would, sa1d Bill1ck,
change anything because who did not rule out the paswe've worked so much with sibility of additional surgery.

..NW' ? - Bengals kicker Nell REH:keirs
a field goal against New England Sunday. Rackers will
remain the kicker for at least one more game after three
kickers brought In for tryouts on Tuesday didn't lmpfess the
team. (AP)

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Playing in his first season
with Baltimore afte~ signing as
a free agent in March, Grbac
played well in the Ravens'
three wins. But has 10
turnovers in the three losses.
Wone, he's taken a severe
beating.
"It's part of the job that I've
taken, Being an NFL quarter• back, it just comes with the
territory and you understand
that," Grbac said. "It's six to
eight months out of the year
that you're ready to get

.•
;
;
:·
: ·
,·
:

1995 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LOADED ............................ $9,450
1998 FORD BRONCO ft4866A................'.......;.............: ......... $12,950
1998 CHEVY S10 EXT CAB 4X4 IGM1973.......................... ·$14,650
CHEVY BLAZER 4 DOOR............................................. $17,900
1997 CHEVY S10 EXT CAB..................................................... $8,950
1994 FORD F150 4X4 EXT CAB.............................................. $8,450
CHEVY SILVERADO 4X4 EXT CAB ............................ $19,900

1996 TOYOTA COROLLA ......................................................... $5,950
Tu &amp; title r... not loduded. AH prkeolnc:lude reboles. Nol ...I&gt;OIUIIble

•
II

1999 CADILLAC-DEVILLE 15068A....................................... $15,950
1998 MONTE CARLO LOW MILES......................................... f8,850
2000 CHEVY CAVALIER 15147A............................................. $7,950
1998 OLDS ~ AURORA............................................................. $14,950
1998 BUICK. LESABRE .......................................................... $12,900
1996 BUICK CENTURY............................................................. $4,950
1998 CHEVY CAVALIER ........................................................... $5,950

'

.

,,

•

�....... 4 • The Dally •• 11111111

Thursday, Oct. 25, 2001:

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Th...-y, Oct. 25, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

t~'=-~It:~-~·~-~
~ lr::-~·2:.:·4C!v':!
r~ 1A
·n·zona
ettl
.
•
to
d
-do
s tA
es 1n • un
e.,
1
I
, te
drL

"'""' &amp; lin. Nld, lo .....nry lnlorior, ..... greoll 12.-. Whiolt Now Th.. SIOOO
..,.,., ""' - · 1112 c.mo... v.e. (7&lt;40)388.wss
.
.

::::·=~!~s~7~~

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like

No One
Else Can!

f!tr pupo. lol doo:Md, dow ,... a good P!Qjoc:t car,
Qewl ..,.,owe~. 1111 ..... l\.l'lS &amp; drtvet, $1,200 080;
1250· (740~12
(7&lt;40)742-2357
wno.,_
a.ve
1 •
J1C11 R - T - !"IP.
go

~ T"~ '·r
~ .. _ L. tc.dlld, ..
optlont
IMihor,
...,25..000
"""·
3rd
row .....
on 1tar

.O&lt;OOI8-10M.
-, - ·

-oioiQII304-675-42t2.
115 F·I50 4, 4, air, .....,
s1o.ooo· 88 ..,
. - . ts·. lull mO.al llocw.
(7&lt;40)g92-7557.

SIOO, Red,
1992 Plymoy1h
2 Door. Apptux.
Films &amp;
1106,000 ..... Good CondlVliGt:Wil.FS
Sto400. (7&lt;40)446-3874
after
~
sago.5:30pm or laaw IIIII&amp;Fruit 88 Cadiltoc Coupe, llobjl
AND
mllos Blue ·with half vinyl lop.
71 •000 mllol. Ex·
~~~~Cou='nLor1clecl, Contlllion.
141
.aliont
S3800.
(7&lt;40l«t ·tMe
96 Mustang Putpie, 47,000
mltoo... 3..,.
good ot-lltoi
con&lt;lltion
iijp;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;j
FUM
S8400
I dlfteronl prices. (30-1)8754154
,'=--"""""'iiiliiliia~iiiii-.'-"·
-MNMAR YM 1500 T - 99 Pontloc Grand Prix OT,
.....,, 3 point hllch. S2.I50: V-11. Aulo, CD Player, Sun~ ,_ 4' tinllh root, +aoor. 50,000 - .
1111 tO.,.,., $850. Shitll&gt;inti oxcotlonl
. condllion.
ova-. Localed )UII out· (7&lt;40)25HI60
!Ide ol._.ilo, N .(258) Groat Projecl ear. tD7!1 c.
77B-IM35 - .maynard• maro, Body anti lntorlor 1n
qulprMftl.com
good llhapo. 355, Aulo,
9oth Rebulll wHh under
YANMAR YM 1500 S2,1150.
T""""', 20,000
miles. Have an·
cSeset.3t&gt;ofrl\hllclt.
parta. Jusl.- ~oo. now •· tk1111h rrower. $2000. (740)245-11502
t~~ntn
cnte,
S850. Sh;pp;ng
4V~IIble.
Lot:aled
)usl outl..lvely's Au10 s.101
l1iclo ol Hunlovlle, AI (256) 1988 fonj Mustang $1000;
1900
J76·9435 www.maynarde- 1968 Chevy
9ulpmlnlcorn
ChevyCol3lca
G-20StOOO:
Van
Ocr.&amp; NOV. FARM e~~~.·:cr: ~~ceo::
60UIPMENT SPECIALS Ram 250 Van $1000; 1994
KEEFER'S IIEIMCE CEH- Plymouth Voyager Van
1:£R ST. RT. 87 POINT $1800; 1984 Dodge Ram
~LEASANT/RIPLEY RD. 250 Van $800; 1984 Dodao
PHONE
(304)895-3874 Dlplomalic $&lt;400; t987
New HOlland 7810 lraclor Dodge Ram 250 Van
!JJhp 4wd wi1h toac1er rerua1 $1400; 1992 Metcur! Topaz
unit .. Now
7110Helland hours
$600; 1988
1987 Bu~k
Oids Rogal
Citra
S25.500
11810 $600;
4wd. tractor BOhp. rental $850; 191!9 Dido CuliaOI
unll &gt;187 hourt.lull warranty, Supreme $1000; 11187 Pon$23,500.. New Holland 1iac Grand Am $400; 1980
3010.4wd. tractor 42111&gt; 8lt2 Ford Muslang $500; 1988
lransmlulon 1 double Ford Crown .Victoria $500;
valve, $18,500., Used New 1900 Chevy Btrotla St &lt;400;
HoUantl1725 eon_. 1ntc- 1993 Ford Taurua OL
lor Boomet- series 25hp 4wd $1800; 111119 Dodge D-250
185 houra $9,500., Used pick-up $2000; 11193 Ooo
New Holland 4630 2wd lrat:· Tracker $1&lt;400; 191!9 Dodge
tor 5511&gt; wi1h 7310 loader Dynasty $1200; 11185 Ford

i'--------.,1.

In one week With us

REACH OVER 185,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD NOW ONLINE'

pisplay Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

All Ols~ay : 12 flloon 2
8usrne11 DIVI Prior To
Publlcatron
SunDy Dl1p1av: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday fDr Sunday•

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!$
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

• Stlrt \'our Adl With A Keyward • Include Complete
Dftcl1ptlon • Jndudt A l'rlc. • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And AddNtl When Needed
• Ads Should Run '7 Days

1'\.\.111 \.1 I \ I I \

c.
Aa ol

:v:

·. 20 words 7 Days • each Item ·Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Artlmals

.

Or Garage/Yard ·sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

• AI ,.., ................,ItS .,.. Mlllfld 101M fltderlll Fair ~ng Acl til · . . . . nol ki .......,, IOOipl _, . . . . . . . . In~ olllw ....

r

LaM- -

IDomlno'l ol Point ..........

= :-:v:..=.
and -

I

__
RENr
__

BuDo1v In C1at- • FREE CASii NOW$ lrom
10, Now H)ring SIOra -llhy families unloading
. Manllganiorll Ex· mllllano ·ol - " '· 10 '*P

AJIIMI-""'=~•Itl

~ I :::":=---~; =.:''~~FA~~~

.=·:':..!..'..':t
""'-"lilY

3 Bedroom, CIA, Garage, Fumlllhed small 1 bedroom Ullra CuUing Table. 580. NEW AND USID I'UR·.;
Gas Heal, Pl1one (740)245- apt. Upper dupiOJ&lt; MI. Ver· CuUing Mal, $20. oxen:lse NANCES FOR SALEI Wo.
58511.
·
non Ave. No Pels. No Lazy Rider. $75. Back Mao- lnalall, Free Eollmales, II

Buy homoslrom $199/mo.,
P1Mao mall-lo: 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD. Fair ~Acto! 1.. FonocloouiM, 4'11. down, 30
-------- .
M, Munly, Dlalllct Manag- HI, LOS ANOELES, CALl· wttlclt- llllogollo )'Otlrs at 8.6'11. APR. For Hst·
START DATING TONIGHT! H t t p - oaring lar lhl .-,POBox 12117, ctwteo- FORNIA90010 .
lnga 1-800-319-3323 o&gt;tl.
Ha,.. tun - . g ollalble -.y, Darst Group....,., ton. WV 25302.
.
PI"""U'"'t-.... •
1709.
"'9a in your .,... ial- MW Plri'G "*''nUn....._
Country tr.ttsman Special 1' II•• 11 1 ..._..on
11M 1-IIOCI-ROMANCE, .... ,_ iihllta:7M&gt;3pm, 7.,.. UllliENTLY
NEEOEO- 1IVu ~ng. 10'11.-011
....,. lglon,
Laruo 3 badroom, 3 balh,
D735
llpnt, 3pln-11pm, 11pm- plaoOn8 - . . earn l&lt;&amp;lo rtllnltlltng and caning. ~ ....:'
basement, anached garage.
7am,_.7~.-a.
110 fat 2 or3hourl....-y. (304)741100 Located be- -..In, or-ll~... ltlonto Deposit &amp; reference re·
Why wai17 Slart tnHIIna
.
Coli Soro-Toc, 740·5112· hind Haman Hlglt School
-..
-·•
qulred. Phone (740)446·
Otio WdlaiOnl!;lt. Oil tal Non'4a&amp;etllri
....._.. 1151.
mau MY 8UCh
1104 or (740)266-0462.
lrH 1-800-785-2123 O&gt;tl MH WMI&lt;Iy P l d = .:;::.;;.,.::--~
· - - - CREDIT PROBlEM? CALL pto-..., llnt-OitOf
1821.
Mttlt. liUVI NO
WANTED: Exportoncod THE CREDIT EXPERTS.
--··
15 Court Slreel. 2 Bod·
II1CI
~- COli I· Rooting &amp; Colpontor Foro- UCENSEDIBONDED COR·
rooms, 1 112 balhs, IOichon
._~----1 ~1-1721 I!ICt. 2070, man's, vdd drtvw'allcenae, RECTIREMOVE
SAO Thla ••• p r r wll 1101 vnth 'llove and refr!Qarator.
.
""""-'..........,...,• . II4H1I. .
hal1d - · rallable lrln• CREDit . BANKRUPTCY.
Onow~IIIVOft Siroel Parld~loaalo
"'~-------' U'N'il RN'a- for P•
LAWSUiTS. JUDGMENTS.
ad&gt;o-•to tor root S&lt;&gt;hoole and
nlown
QOITIIMU, Rutland 0.. dlal1lo ~In qulrod. t..al warlt, atllll1- MA RATINO.
wtlloli to In
~~
'1::;
p a - Storo, Tlloro.. F~.. 11\o ......_. VlntOf1 Caun- -tont
PAr
~ani, ·-7-73-IS.
· - otlllolaw. o.w
Sal, ,_,..7pm, Oct. 5th- ty, Porno...,. ·anol Aaclna CnriattOn'a eon'at elton
TUIINIDDDWNDN
Pela. (7&lt;40)4411-49211
Nov. 4th, (.7.-oJ742~7243, AlMa. ShlftlW.tlunctShlft
ru
' IOCIU.IECUAITYISSI?
lntormldiMtal
l8gdoleharl&gt;a'--com
0111- Qhrad Plouo 0
lno., 1403 E-.. Avonuo, No FM UrNaa We Winl
-Hnp - - I n
2 beclfoom home cloaa lo
~~~~~~~Cal&amp;.&amp;.. .... Clre·= '1po"t.(7~)44&amp;-451_.
I"""S82"'~..
thlaMWipaper..
IOWR.baaament.Rivervlaw,
Donia

&amp;

1r•~uty
lflu~- 1 ~ 1 Gt-- . ,.r--~~RF.Nr--~1 ~,r_Aoom.!ENrs_mR _.lr~._"
o ..~
........,.~ r=:l

10/IMll 1 Mary Shu- hlrii10FUI-llmt I Parl-'rlml

: T.::

Prlvote Party Ads Under $100

10

I~

'" HruWI'DsoN.wi

"'~--

Shulerulo-... «CIIIII304)e75--

plua.
.

,.,=:.

=

=::.:.~~
seur, $55. (304)675-0155
(304)875-2651
·
Washer anti Dryer, 140 set
- - - - - - - - Call (740)245·0610 ovoOraclpus living. 1 and 2 nlngs.
badroom apartmonts at VII- :.::::!~-----lags Manor and Riverside Washer and Dryer. WorXs
Apartmenls In Middleport. GOOd. $150 or Washar

From $278·$348. Call 740- $100, Dryer $60. Vont loBS
992-5064. Equal Housing 6 Brick Natural Gas Heater,
Oppofluni1lel
Like New $125. Brand Now

r:!;"h~:~~~-.

600-291-0098.
-------Polslan Area Aug ntVII'
used. $160 .. High wing back.
Floral Chair never uNCI
$t60 .. Floral couch good
condilion $150. (304)67f .
5185 Leave massage.
'" ~

Natural Gas ven1ed Stove

·

RESIDENTIAL AND
COMMERCIAL
AMANA• HI Eff~lency 92 +
gas furnaces, Super Hi Effl- ,
cleney Heat Pumps and Alr :
Conditioners. 10 year l)an&amp; -"
and labor warranty Included. :
COMFORT AIR HEATING •
ANDCDDUNG
,:,llonrltht
(740)«1-oti4
depos11(740)378-6111
2 Twin Headboards, $25
1-800-4118.()078
each. New Vent less Flre-Applicaliona baing takon lor place Logs, $100. Lawn boy
small but vary clean one Mower, $35. New Scanner, Couctl, chair, hlda·a,·bed,
.- , .. ,_,.
__...
......-o
Wtai~Rte 011 _, equll
14251 month; 3 bedroom In bedroom apartment. Coun- $35. Cartop Carrier, $26. stove, twin bed, entertain~~1100)5,'8- ·
-unllytown, 1-112 balha. Good to- lry setting yel close lo lown . (740)245·1111
· ment eenter, mlcrowavaa,..
~;;:~;;;;~ cation. $5001 month. Refer- t 743 Centenary Road. Wa.
sports tires wtth aluminum.'.
!!D~~~!Do ~~~ UDCiuN'a RMtaurant now
tlllr--~-...;,;.;...;~
enoes and deposit requlrad. tar and Trash Removal In· Appliances: Reconditioned rima. (740)448-9742
0 - - I (740)446·3844.
'
~
lfor,mj
I
eluded. Tenanl pays oloc- Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
Appla. Tu•sat.
. .
,3.!.,illl W.
or
fOR S.W:
•·~~
""'· AJC anti Eleclrlc Heal. AolngralorS, Up To 110 Days Firewood for Salt. $1150 per.
;:118:.;1~1------ lion a1-'ij;' &amp;lip ap bioi&lt;
• ·--·-~-~--.... 2 bedroom ltouao,ljU hast; Washer, Dryer, SIOIIe, Frtg. Guaranteed! We 5811 New lruck Load. (7&lt;40)441-11478 "
I tMtna
•
NC •• stove and refrigerator Included. No Pets. Non Maytag Appliances, French .
Spiciai:=.c."'::..... -Hn
1:30am . &amp;
15 -laltouae on Owl tal lime buytira- Oovom· lumlshatl, -up lor wash· Smokers Only. $300 depos· C~ Maylag, 740·446-n95. F~rewot&gt;d For Salt. laiJIO
101
7
500
IO:OOaril, llandlr lhru •
Ho1lor Rd. 15 • · Conlacl monl loans· buy loOn. &amp; or lncl tltyer. Localad on • II, $360 month. (740)446·
.
P~~- Up Load, $45. CalC"
curo. S20. (3114)578-30150 urday.
Chartoo R. Smith (304)876· 81,._ 1740)446-3093 Oak· qulot strtel. Cal (740)446- 9685 or 1740)446.2205 . Asl&lt; For Sale; Aocondlhoned (740)256-8009 or (740)2560oo&lt;lthru Oct. 30-Nov.3
~. ____. """''.·-"'-•. A_,....,..~- Col'-- 3144
wood Su-rconler
1370
for Vlmtnla
washers, dryors and rolrig· -1.834
·:.:.:;·_ _ _ _ __
""""' _,..,..ng .,.,..~U~~DUM .,..,..,._--....
....,
.....
'
erators. Thompsons Appli· , .,• Losr AND
I for l*t·tlme of per diem fltN (car.tl Cloll1b Home) 3 Bedroom on Route 2
·
233 2nd Ave. Convenient to Applications being taken for ance. 3407 Jacksc;m Ave· For sale bY owner (2) ·
1
FOUND
b ....,. Hoallh. 8orid ,. Call Toda'll1~ '448 43117, (30-1)875-1!332
' 28x80 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On· Downtown. 2 Bedrooms, 1 very nice 2 bedroom apart· nue, (304)675-7388.
llflll:es,_12) IIBUIIS, 11) me-.
IUr'ne or rtqUMe
1.aoo-114o0412
ly $345.00 Per Month 112 Bath Kitchen with StQ\Ie ment. CQuntry Setting yet
mor1al marker, veterans.
liOn to CLA IAI, olo
~=121.8.
3 bedroom. In Midcleport, '8.99% Axed Interest Aate, and R~frlgerator. $490/ close to town. 1743 Cent&amp;- .La·z-boy lift chair, tan; kllch- B&amp;Ctlon In Melga Memory ;
Found- 2 dOge. DIChlhund II Dalfy Tribune, IUT'f*d 116
.
call Tom Andereon after 1·888.a28·3428
month ~us deposit and Ref· nary Road. · Water and an tabla &amp; 4 ctu:'lrs; small Gardens. value approK.
I T.,..ln llddtotl"' Wlln- A""nuo, Oalllpallo, OH
MB,. ,,._,._. llpnt, (7401992·33&gt;18.
bedroom mobile homo 1 eroncu. No Polo. (740)448- Trash Removal Included. La-z-boy rocker, Maylag $4500, will aotl too- $3000
3
1•
1• 31&gt;1'. L.aruo Kllchon &amp; LMng sale,
eai,V4011111H377 1o 10. 41131.
.
tolal
elaclri~ 4112e.
A/C. TOIII Eltc1r'c· Tenant washer; (740)6fl8.689tl.
cash, call (740)949-2063 .. .
Ovt- ConiM Ia our-... 3/4 BaNmtnt, IOISIIy (740)992·5858.
3 bedroom ltouae lor rent poys eiaclric. Slove. Frlg.. Mollohan Carpel, 202 Ciarl&lt; no anewor, lesve mesaaae .
I ~ hl1lrlg Ll'1f'l
:::=~~AIIl::Swl::~•IIIIIUndPIItllml
.p:IIIHI.
lilt
Fer loll•-m two romodoled at 211 7th Slroel
S350/mo &amp; oleclrio gas WUhor, Dryer, Dlohwasher Chapel Road, Pol1er. Ohio. Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp;
~
orypl . . . . Malga- Now Haven. (304)882-3m 98 Fleelwoocl, 18x80, 3 heal (740)843-5548 '
Included. No Pels. Non (7.W)446·7444 1·877-830· Aepalra. Problems? Need
WI olllr INft and I altaid .ry _QafCiena. a&amp;OOo, call
bedroom, 2 bath, Central
'
Smokers Only. $400 Oepos- 9182. Free Estlmatl8, Easy Tuned? call TM Piano Dr. ·
11111- 1111og -...,.. 1304)11*1881
4 badroom house wllh 2iols air, $20,000. (740)256·1510 3 Bedroom In Country, 2 II. $450 monlh. (740)446- llnanclng. 90 days same as 740 148 4525
··
.
rw. .-. NeW p1y . _ . . , on State St. in Pomeroy,
Bath. Stove, Aefrigeralor, 2205 or (740)446·9585. Ask cash. Visa! Master Card.
il a 'ttk Par rnottlniDP • •
WANJD
nHda minor repairs Aaeumabte loans- Many Very Nk» Rlf«&lt;noo and fOI' VIrginia.
Drive- 8• little save alot.
Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4.:
...,
.,.,;,. ptoi.- KillTl)Do
110,000, (740)94il-1606 ' 18
tyPN
a~~)llabl
~ · Cal3llar de- Doposll '
Required.
lor $10. Open Sal8·5prn. &amp;
11
448
1
All 1'lrM Yard .... Oct tie f.l .. ,.
•t '740WIM
· ""'
·
(740)388 8371
BEAUTIFUL
APART· New and Used Fumlture evenings. Dewhurst GJMn.
• 1472 I?Dt'l • ' .-••'
For Ron! or Solo. Small
·.
.
IIENTS AT BUDGET PRI· St9re below Holiday Inn, house MI. AIIO. (304)885-•
8•
2
18
2
~
• E.O.I.
I&gt;JI. KlltOBOIIO 1no1a1- $2150. Monlh + $200. Big
wlda, 3 badroom
Why ronl? govommonl C!S AT JACKSON ES· Kanauga. We Soli grave 3740 leave message. o&lt;'
rMn' . l ..,.....1'"' alothoo Owo1iloott Ca1111r II our· ltd; llpoi~ng lorDod u kor· Dopoafl.
1304)727-3318 balh .. oave S5.l66, delivered backed loans ~om $490 TATES, ~2 Woalwood Drive monumenls and vaooa. (3114)895-3789
IDyl %m11won:"~
rtnily l1lrlng iTNA'S lot full _,. hoalorl; lawn mow· from Sprn-11 pm.
&amp; 801 up on your IO!tnc;ud- down. (7&lt;40)448·3093
frnm $297 lo $383. Walk 10 Houra: Monday lhru SaM·
•
'
urw,
·
11n1o lind Plllllmt poatUOOI. 111· oman onQI- Mike
lng 'skirting &amp; libe'lll&amp;sa
shop &amp; movies. Call 740- day 11am· 3pm. (740)448- Heavy Duty Farm Traitor 4.
IQ and • houri
(7-«»-7804
.
For aalo by owner: Nice bl· Olepa. Colli Mobile Homas,
MDIIIiB HOMES I' 448·2668. Equal Housing 4762
.
by 8 w;lft lights. 5150.•
~~~~~:-: avatla111o. Wa .,. -..g 1
homo on I ocre near U.S. 50 Eut. Athena, Oh,
fOR RIM' .
Opportunity.
.(30:.:4:.:18:.:7.::5-:.:7:.:96:;:9_ _ _.;...
· ..
pay aQalo arid flntlf
Man/HanGyman Cltaotor. Tlvoe badrcom, 740-~92·1872.
.
Whlripool Wallhor, $95. GE ~~~~~~:;•nco bonotlll. lllilft and praaouro wlahtno, yard 1WO bo1h0. one-car garage.
Modem 1 be!!room apart· Dryer, $95. .Whil'lpool Ao· lndtlponclenl Herballfe DIS-dlff . tril.lnttnance, clelit up, family room wilh flr..,tace, Final Day1, Nationwide In· 2 bedroom, cenl:ral heal &amp; ment, (740)446-0390
trlgerator, $95. GE Electric tributor, Call For Product Or
~ ~~•Mill~kJng ect
FrH &amp;etlmtttl tUn room. New central heat- ventory
Reduction! air S1ata Route 160 Ever· North 3rd f.Aiddl n 1 Range, $95. Kenmc;&gt;re Opportunity. (740}441-1982 -...,..'1.!0 r~.il!
.....,a~: {304j'nU884 Aott 1ar Don lng I iiO oyatern. One ml· (3041736-3409
gr,;.n. Available N.,.;.mber
•
opo '
Washer/ Dryer Sel, $300.
•
LM"~W .. •V"'nutt off Routt 7 but stitl prl
1• 1 740\.uo~~.-6189
bedroom furnished a.part- Hot Point Waaher/ Dryer
JET
1
btl. Fer mora ~= 1 ra.cxvos 81-. vate. 1740)995-3ge1
. Llmilod Or No Credll? Clov· . '
,_.,
menl, no pols, depooll &amp; ref· Sol, $300. Very Nice Hoi
AERATION MOTORfi .
Doalar uc11on, Frida Oat. ~- ICI11ttle
d1ln'l haul your toal 1o 111o
emmonl Bank Flnanoo Only 2 8R AH EIOCIIIc La LR erenceo, 1740l992.0t6S. · Polnl Rerrigorai,Or, New Aapalrod, New &amp; Robulft In
28th, 12•.-,, rotall :,_. doll II (740)M-41472.
mil )Ill CIIII304-41'18-10G7. hoUM lor tale on Poller AI Oakwpod In Barbour&gt;·. In Galllpolle. Very.~ary North 3rd, Middleport, 2 Compressor, $300. All Ap- SIOCk. CaH Ron Evans, 1·
lpm. caih -a.. no ohtcka. Oved:HOOk Ctnw II cur
Cltek Rd.caM 11188 304• vtlle. WV 304--738-3401. • Nice No Pets (740)446- bedroom,
unturnlshad pllances.
Guaranteed. BOO·S3 7 ~ 528 ·
plano In my 67H882
'
1 -------8W.-. -·•
81., ,.._, WV, llntly --.g I ilalutlolan' Glvo
lto!Niobogin,.,.._
Now 14 Wide, 3 Bodtoom. 2003' (740)448-1409
apartmenl, no pelS, dapoall Skaggs Appiiances. 76 Vne
304-773-eiOO.
10- Pill dii10 111 lhllloJI. 01ao- DIIO;dlt&gt;g 1 t b Newly oonatrucled, single Only $19,850. FrH Dollvory 3 -.om mobile hOme In &amp; references, (740)992· Street (740)446·7391!
RnldonUat Homo o-.
Rick Poaroon Auction Com~::...
pool'i&amp;i2 W lnteruled ~ ~eotto aq.,toot home. I Sel Up. 1-888·928·2&gt;128 Mtcidleport, no pelS: 0165.
.
SPORTING
I Tappan Hlelllclenay 90 plus~
88
. PMV. full time tuCHon..r, id ~OOiff:C!Uia,...l {7.0 -5403.
&amp;.lfta... ~ ~
~rfm New 14x70, S bedroom. 2 (140)992·5858.
Now Taking Applications- ~---GooosiiliiiiOi--" ~~~ lur'::~c~~gluasdl~rnao~
. comploto twCiion IIMol. u-........
.
•
.-.....'
.
...,..
'
m u 9.a bath, onlu $9815 down I
35 Weat 2 Bedroom Town ,
•
• LloonMIIOIOillo~ w.t
In- Aotlrad CoUplt Will Do from Ptouani .Valley Hoap•· $t89.62 P.,r monlh. 0111 3 bedroom, cenlral air,
·
ces HI Elliclency Haa~
1
. Vlratnlil. ~nN7a5 Or tl.l'lnot. · lllaly. it bAMd Houle.C...nlng II'ICI lntldt tal, oft SR 180 on a private Harold 740 385-4367
washer/dryer, $300 per t!i~t': Apa;:we:~~. '1r~~ 8 Guns lor Sale. (740)992· Pumps, featuring Tappans
304-773-$447!
on OOII•rt•llan. lnlll'lltld ,.llntlrig. Plllll Call ttll 1·112 acre lot. 3 bedroom,
•
·
mont/1 plua depoalt, call $ 50/Mo., 740•446-oooB. 2816
Free Incredible warranty"
iilr;.;.;.;;~·;...__.,. candklatall 111\ouMald contact Lantert: (3041!15-8738
2·tr2 balha, big kllchsn New Double Wide. $19&amp; 1740)992-~187. Lola avalla· 3
packsfl'l. .
WANIDI
I ~..!?.!~ ol ('7111a11ntl ol Too 'To Bottom Cies
wloak cablntll, DR, LA Per Monlhl 3 Bedroom, 2 ble oloo.
River Bend Place now ec- La'll" Cumings Fishing Nel BENNETT'S HEATING 1
"'"'
,.,.,_,.lor II 1'740)ft2• ~ 1
n!:,":; wfgU log "raptac:e, central Bath. Frae DeNvery &amp; Set·
.
cepllngapplicallonslor 1 br. $5. Large Assortmenl Fish: COOLING , (740)4«-11418
1
iiO.UIJ•
6411. EOE
· , t); 'Mil, and
tlr, · laundry room, tront up. 1-888-928-3426
3br. all Electric Moblla Hud Subskilze Apt. lor the ing Lures, New and Used, or 1-800-872·5H7.
P1NNnt V11tw Horne care ~ =-~
6 2·112 car garage.
=~ ~=~ :J-:t New elderly &amp; disabled. Equal S3 each (740)446·9635 ~.orvb.comlbennett "
Top Ootlar. u.s. florACII ••• • f"II·U- ......... ~-- do IIOOI'aooiOn. ApLoiS &amp;
I
( '
Opportunlly .
Housing Laave Message.
se oil I
- · Gold Colno, Proof·=· :."!"
Pll• "~1 - -... .,._at i125.500; Make
ACREAGE
(304)882.3121
I ullszeboxaprings &amp;·
- · Dtamondo, O:ld
"" I 4110l ilnylllil&gt;g (7'10)112·1311 or oWtr. Call (740 )446.4514
Small Trailsr In Gallpolls.
,
. Mode 1 1938 Turl&lt;is~ Mauo· mattress; Sopor c Farmall'
Rfngtl,
U.S. CuttenaV,·
· ~ haYt WV (74Q)III:fi71
from 8-5pm, M·F, or
Close to Downtown and ' Small 2 bedroom house In er 8nm Riffe $tOO. Bayonet tractor; genarator, 35• out·
M.T.S. ColO Shop, 111 Soc- and
- · ,.,.._ TRI-cot.JNTV CONsTR\Jc. (7&lt;40)1 18 3248 aflor 5pm.
14) 5 acre lOla for sate. Orocery. Raler&amp;nce anti De- Eureka. $300 monlh, $300 and Scabbard, 70 Rounds side door, lruck lopper &amp;
onciAvonuo, Galllpolto, 740polfttred. Con- 1'101;.
Now
(7.W)38 7.0129
paoli. (7&lt;40)448- 1158
deposit No pots, relerencos of ammo on Bandoleers In· bedllner; maple gun ca_,;
448-2842.
~~ ~
Conatruollon/Atmodollna RlrtCh Styto Horne- lor sale
APAKiliiENfS I required. Call after ·s:OOpm. eluded lroe ol Cha'l!e. Cali bunk bada, lull down &amp; 112
..,=.
.
'D ,.]· or ronl. 4 bdrm . • 3 balhl, 2 2.7 acral, unevonlorraln, ln .
n-(740)384·2580
(304)875-2352
up wlmattre...,, (740)992·
8rna1 used plano (740!*· ""• Pt. r_._ WV 25580
·-'''"' rywa • car garage. cioN IO high .WelchiOWn, $2700, p i FOR"""''
5970
11043
•
or oatl.=~:75-7400 or 'Wo
II All' Frto Elll· 80hoo1 19 DakwOO&lt;I DR call (1180)583-3753 L00\11
Tara Townhouse Apart·
I =.:.:...-----~
·
t-80().7
MIEOE
mllll. 874-4813/874-SMe Oalt. cin.can I&gt;OiwMn 8:00: name anti number '
.,.. 2 bed
maniS. Very Spacious. 2
ANnQUE'l
Wanlad to lease Coal prop1
Wan~td to Buy· Standing.
·
Will u1
11100 pm In good cond w
.
room apart- Btdrooma 2 Floors CA 1 __
. arty lor small poat mlnat
. Timber. (740)37N7&amp;a.
Thollaal••-c:•lll , - ~ ~~~ _,.,
a htat S78,0oo Indian Creek Ealeloa, 3-8 ;:~~. ";:;::d~~~f~: 112 Balh, ' Fully carpal~.
.
.
slrlp or underground, 1ri
~
anl/lhlng. Call (740)448- 304-727·331S
•0ore }ols,l WOII .~~ "~~o qulred, no pole 740.992• A~ull Pool &amp; Ba~y Pool, Pa· Buy or sen. Aiverlns Anll· make lump and slroker.
I ,q•[ tl \ II '&gt;I
~----::_ . 1t04
ranue, rom ~.~. 2218
'
llo, Start S3851Mo. NO Pets, ques, 1124 East Main on (740)387·7891
after
"I I!\ It I ,
111 1o mir1IOO an ittdOPf1td'
Vlnlon Dlllrou Sale. 1740)245-5747
·
L.ooae Plue security Dapoall SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· :::8:::::00:!pm::::..·- - - - n:;p;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;::j ~lhlliving
hDualng oomplort
IIO,OOO cal11, O""'l House. L"ND WANTED a fOR 1 •·•room Apa•ment, Ae· Required Daya· 740·448· 992-2526. Ruse Moors
fl'irH Ploalai1l arM.
Nowor Vinyl Siding, Roof n
•
"
.
'
:
• Walerllne Special: 314 200
IJruWAN!m Outloi wl lnaplot·
Purnaoo, 4 llodraoms, Out SALE Wo buy antlaellland lrigerllor, Aanga, A/C lh• 3481, Evenlnga. 740·387· owner.
PSI $21.95 Per 100; I' 200.
.._______.,J. ln(l houllna un111, anang1ng
o1 town. Owner muat 1110. all othor Soulhom Ohio. eluded, $289 Pluallepolil&amp; 0502, 740-448·0101 .
Sua's Seloclablesonlho "T" PSI S37.00 Per tOO; An
"
IVUiklt ~.-"
N: Lind Conlracta. 31 Main Contact us for mora dotoiL lo: A
':)':f"ts~~D Approvad. Twin River Towers now ao· In Middleport. Dolls, glaae- Braaa Compression FIUing•
arid Malkollng in(l OCIIlllml ID _.....,.
SlrNI. (818)735-3834
Anlhon.Jo.L.and Co. ld. 17
- •
oepllng appilcallono for ware, Aladdin manlels, anti In Slook.
1 •• ~~:HHincl~~~- ~ ~....:,.!e!, ~..'!
u-·- I
www
2 bedroom aparlmanl In IBR. HUD aubaldlzod al)l. more. I7.W)992-o298
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS'.
-..twU nul'ling ,_...,. --" _,,._.,.._ ..,_...,..
••&amp;UDIL&amp; ~
....,,. ,_.,,. Middleport, $300 1 month, lor elderly and dl&amp;abled.
E8 Jackson, Ofllo. 1-800~
lncllllldual I I - I! II, b wtl aid In 1110 appllllfon, 0 0 INOTIC
. II
FORS.W:
Looking To Buy A Nlw $200 depoall, (7&lt;40)949·
EOH.
~~~ 1537-9528
- · rotolodadto. 1.0 • ront-up, and lhl r'totrtlftca. HI VAU.!Y PUBLISH· ~
Homo? Donl HollO L.And? 2026 .
(304)875-8879.
.,~
fill!'--!!~---_,
f:mtl, wMIIIy marlrollog tloll II!'"*".~lrad by lNG CO. _ , _ IIIII 14xto Klrltwoocl mobile We Colli Hurry Only 10 L.o1S
.
BUDDING
-.arNtravot,rnortoottng HUO. rl!IPIIO--havo VOUdclllualnaoo-po:pto hoino 2 br. all elac. (nloo) L.al1,304·736·7286.
21&gt;1'. Apt lor rent in Now
"--plano aa wott u h•lttKlloto a l!lgll '!"'1001 dlpl:rna or
NOT 10 Mnd 13700 304-8715-8480 or
Haven. Newly remodtltd . Very nice, 2·3 bedroom 2 used Garage doors ~nyl, 1..--oi""iilli.........,iiii--.,1
-aroa~hoapl· QED. l&lt;noloiiiDI ol HUO -lhloughtllemalluntll ~u7•-~•• h
Nloo 4acro lraol noor Appllancae
Included apartment, In 1own, large 7x9 complelt wllh trame. ~
tall ancl family _ . _ rBtl'jallrw• ltOIIiflrl, 1xpor1. VOU ln&gt;lltlgllld 11\o ::::;:::. ~··~ a or 5pm Golllpolla· aoey 1erm1, (304)882.3131
· kitchen, LR, $500/mo. Ret· S36. (304)882·2420
Block, bf'Jck, Sewer pfpea:
oon- - MIIMA popula- -.;a.
,.._.
(740)448·3583
.
eronces &amp; dapoall required:
•Hoalllant
wlntlowi, lintels, II!'· Claude
tldtrad but not roqulrad. tn- lion, tiiOftiA.Ior arid
3 Roome and Balh. ..a Olive (740)448·3844
65.000 BTU LP gas healing Winters, ~Ia Grande, OH
18 Wida Only SIQ&amp; 00 Po
carddalot altould za1lonaJ llltlllaa pluo. llllary · &lt;111ft Your Bullnaaa To- Montl1 8·99,., Fixed inter..: Proporty on Sl. Rl. 143 In SlrHI. UUilllaa Paid. Stove
Slove,
worms 5 roome, Call740-24&amp;-5121.
·
·tubmH lholr rooumo to: pooltago , _ -ltont day... Prtmt lll:pplng Can- R
And lJn. 0 hlo. 314 milo on .... hind and Rotrtgaralor No Pola.
SPACE
$300; 2&amp;" color TV, $200;
Rootcaprtnga fl.ahlll&gt;llllallon bllnoll!o. Villi o u r - al 10r . _ Avalilble A1 AI- ~ 1 1 ~_ 928 _ 3426 atdo. Sorlouo oallo only. $476 pluo daposll. Releren·
FUR RIM'
Gateway computer, ssoo;
STEEL BUILD1NO
Clntll'. 311768 Rookaprlnga --~ for tlppt~ fordall!o Alit: 80rlno \Iaiiey
ng
(304)882·2988
••• Roquttad. (740)446· ~
(740)247·3373.
40X22 woo $5,895
Road, Pomeroy, 0111:
In or Plua, Ga1740-4-1e-ll1 01. 111113 tex80, 3 beclfoom, 2
3845
Trailer Space lor Rent ~n MOBILE HOME OWNERS
MUST ,SELL $2,1180
&gt;111789. Aft: Lila YOIII, AIJ· Olrtd
1IQnJ- lo:
bath, llr, llhlngil root, vinyl
Jericho Ad. (304)895-3534 inlertherm &amp; Coleman gas,
1-800-:192.0111
rl)l-. Equal OpporW- '"
IIA CINTIII
,•..,.....
llidlng, _,ric ~land elove,
Chrialy'o Family Living.
oil &amp; eltclrlc lurnacea In· ...,...;;;;:;;.:;::.;:,;,;.;,_-i
nlty Employ• Enc:uraQtng
KeTO LoAN
118.000. ~lent condaton.
1331.W New Uma Rd., Rul·
CludinD hi eHiclency haol
Workpface blvareity.
!mplovmonllpoolallal
(740)448-7127 .
HOUili8
land, Ohk&gt;, 740-742-7403.
pump ayaltma. wa carry 8
FOR"lfA'IJi:
•
3378
Rauto eo I .
•
~
·
·
I
••
,
........
~
FOR
RFNr
Aparlment,
home
and
trailer
HOUSEIIOlD
I
ccmpltlo
line
ol
Mobile
AlldNt I&gt;JI Atoui To Buy or Hundrtlllorl, WV 25706
-· ~
~ .,,.... ~ 111113 Clayton 14&lt;80, 3 bedronlels. Commercial alore·
~"~homo ~ &amp; accnaarloa.
Soli Shl""" •-·.,_ :!04'1011/.U
- n o. NO room. 2 balh. air, stloltclrlc.
lroniO avalioblo lor INN.
""""'
liNN
'I HIAT1N
Terrier pupa. Talli,
e1S:t428
up tronl. CAL+ TOU 1'11111 poroh, ocelltnl condition. Pilot ,rogram, Rantert Vacanclel now.
0 &amp; Ran
Dockad.
$100.00 (304)675·
Salaapat-: Ful-tlml,.,.,. 1~2d7-8021.
lll,!m. (740)448-7127
Needed, 304-738-7296 .
Green Chair- 1 year old bul CODLIN!i (740)448-1411
7946
COL D"- lar 1.-' Trull ollll, Oaraga aportmenl iocaled Fairly used. $50. (7.W)245· or 1-800-873-511t17
Company 2 _., ..,.... rad. ~at
'"""" ~TO LOAN, AUTO, 111113 Cl&amp;yton 11t.80 mol&gt;lo 3 Bedroom, 2 81th ltouotln 2nd Avenue, GaHipolls , 5582
www.DI'IIb.com.'bonnoft
UKC Rat Terrier pupa.
, .,.. roqUirod. Driving Top lura. NO ·p11on0
• ~ 111111' CDNIOLIDATIDN, lto!N. 3 br., 2. ba. liking Palrlol. $421;/month (llus da- Ohio. 2 badroom, ralorenco NICe used lumlluro/ appllan- Used kHchen cablnlls &amp; $150. Cash Firm. tall'!
Hoavy Truclto. (J.W)- I n - · Ill
CA~401)11D-741D
lll,!m 3114-773-15885 aflar posit. No POll. Roftroncte raqulrod. S300I month S300 cos. (740)448·1 004 or cauntertop, dark wood. docked mother &amp; father on
Galllpolto. 011.
:14
IIIIIII'OIIIt llpnt.
Required. (7.W)379;9887
depoell. (740)446-3117
(7.WI446·2880.
$700. (304)675-4154.
premises. (304)743-3306

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5:00pm, Salurday lprn·
3pm. Clolod Sunday.
(7.W)J88-11303

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4Wd 1riCIO&lt; 40hp Aops· 1111&lt;1

Canopy
1200 houra
$7,500.. Used John o.tre
31 OA Backhoe &amp; Loader
$8.500 .. John Deere Gator
4x2 used al John Deere
Faclory 83 houra Dump
bad, 111CI'e lll1ln1s ss.ooo..
New HoUanct 14115 9" Hay·
blne $10,500., New Holland
258 Ralca S3.400.. New Hot·
land 130 140 Bu Spreader
S5,200.,New Holland 185
287 Bu ~Hydenclgale lantlem axle $9,500.,
New Holland 3108 Slurry
Splu_der 137s gal lantlom
· a&gt;de $9,500., All New Hot·
land new traotora and
oqulpmenl have VALUE
BONANZA 0% financing lor
38 months or ..., rebole.

'J'RV(](S
fOR SAlE

0o1 Rootly,... Winter. 1987
4• D - • .;;;t{oa..
........ lilt.
~--;.;,;

S2500
"~)2••
~
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oeo.

F' MDn-.::va"'
113 Ooldwlng "-"&lt;~e.
Now holmoto &amp;
10,000. 304 78-3259

"*'""""·

Auro PARI'S &amp;
•

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300
8. ut&lt;o -.
New
anti Sl-""'1
R~lli T

can Hoar Run 15 ooo
mllot. (740)256-e9so
'
.

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:;YANS &amp;
4-WDs

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200117FI. Keystone CaDI·
na with • - endS,
lully sell conbtlned, used
Vlll'f l•lllt 304-675-5802

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Lk:8nMd-.

zona's Curt Schilling.
"I'm glad I got on ,this ride
liefore it ended," said Mussina, playing in his first World
Series. "These guys have
been doing it for so long.
This was definitely something I thought about when
I signed here."
Mussina should be more

110 Help Wanted

TELEPHONE OPERATORS
•

NEEDED NOW~
WILL TRAIN •

BENEFITS AVAILABLE
MANY SHIIITS ,

AVAILABLE.

WV000306, 304-675-17811.

~CALL NOW

, ·888•974•JOBS

Regl1terad

Mule boon rode, oul
ot goled Jack. $1500.
(304)578-3254

· PART·TIME COLLECTOR
Form81S Bonk &amp; Savings Co .. Pomeroy.
Ohio Is seeking o port-flme collector (a
maximum of 35 hours per week) for Its
Pomeroy office. We ore lookfng for
someone with collections experience.
good commun!coflon &amp; computer skms.
Responsibilities/duties Include but not
limited to mokiDg dolly phone cons.
preporoflontmoll!ng of form collection
letters. preparation of reports. utilization
of computer to focllltote dolly
responsibilities. personal contact with
cuslomefS. flllng small c!otms. asslsflng full
flme collector.
·

Cloud 9 Ranch. Kertlucky
Hoi'H Park Equine Man·
a-~--ol·

terlng Wntern &amp; EngUsh
riding leuons. Foals tor
salt. ~ &amp; Foal lrainlng.
Jessica Donalt1oe (304)8756536 Rt2 N. Point Pleasant.
Miniature Donkey, Very
Genlle. (7.W)448-1158

w~

Buck a bale 1118, square

lia101 St .OO otnor hay up 10
S2.oo. round balot $15.00
each 304-1175-4889
Largo Round Btteo o1 Hay.
$12.00 (740)245-5047 .
Round hay bales for sale,
(7&lt;40)6911-6211
Hay &amp; Bright Wlre Tie'
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery
&amp; Volume Discount Available.
Herllage
Farm.
(304)675-5724.

AUTOS
FOR SALE
1988 Cadillac ~mmaron .
Recently . Painted. Netdl
motor
work.
$350.
(740)4&gt;111·3874 aller 5.30pm
or leave maUl~.
Ul88 C.valltr, 2 doer, Auto,
New Tlrn, Runs and Ortvea
Oreal. $950. (740)«1·1083
1993 Nl_. Sanlra, 4 cyl ..
5 epood, 2 Door, 114,000
mliea. $2000. (740)258·
1487
1994 Black Oldamol&gt;lil CUI·

(a,,

Supreme.

82,000

mlisa. $4,000 (740)448·
3580
1988 Pontlec Bonne11llle for
parte. $&lt;400. Call (740)446·
7025 after 6pm.
1991" Chevy Cavalier. Runs

qood. 13040882·2539

1993 Orand Am, 2 dOor, IU•
10, S2 .595; 1992 Cavalier, 2
door, auto, $1,695; 1994
&lt;&gt;avolier, 2 door. 5 apeod,
$2,8115; 1993 Bu&lt;k Contury
$2,495. COOK MDTDRS,
(740)«8-01 03 .
95 Fora Taurus G·LWagon,
1021(, clean, 2 owners,
$4,400. (740)448-9346

·"

Public Notice

"Grace Acedemy
achoot, loclted at
5331 s..te st,..t In
Albttny, Ohio haa
nquoated
•
ilonpubllo achool
clloi!Wr from the Ohio
Depar1mont . of
E..10llllon.
Any
ptroono
having .knowledge ol
riCtal dtacrlmlneto"
pr1ct1caa In the

, ~m;,~~_:~

;-ploy-.

ICholllrahlpelloanlllle

•

3yr. cld

t

,

Mussina prepared for Game 1 against Schilling

riO

Ctlarolals
Bulil. 131)4)875-e581

3

Brian Anderson we belie~. We kind of bdi~ we're a nothing compared to this, he said.
"It outweighs any individ~ accomuld
b
.
G
3
(
th
Wi
rld
Th
D
.
dba
t..d
d,
wo
e stamng arne o
e o
e
tamon
cu un entan even plishmenL There's no comparison;' JohriSeries whe11 he found out that the oppbs- appreciate, that the Yankres not only are son said. ."Lilce I said bst year when t!te
ing pitcher would be Roger Clemens.
expected to win their fourth straight season was over, it still felt like I wasn't a
"Yeah," he said, "and they'll proba&amp;ly World Series, but are emotional favorites complete b allplayer because I hadn't been
b rmg
· Wh'ttey Ford out o fth e bullpen."
around .th e country b ecawe o f the cata- to the World Series."
The Arizona Diamondbacks know they strophic events of Sept. 1 I .
Johnson, who makes his ' fint Wiorld
are the unde..t-,
and
ce-·'nly
not
the
"If
this
H
II
od
·
'""!Y
,_
were a o ywo
mOVIe or a Series start Sunday in Game 2, is one of
people's choice, in ' their Worl~ Series book, the obvious ending is the Yankees the few Diamondbacks who is familiar
rnatchup against the New York Yankees.
win the World Series," Brenly said. with the Yankees, but ·he hasn't faced
After all, th e ".ano.=
'·-.. rnade the fi rst o f "Everybodys' ha ppy ·and N ew ",orken· them in four yean.
their 37 World Series appearances in
a reason to celebrate and hopefully
The Yankees are a mystery. but there is
·"- Arizona take their mind o If the events of the last no mystique, the Diamondbacks say.
1921 , bareIy nine yean •.ner
became a state.
six weeks Obviously, we ho- that does- . " We're not facing Babe Rl!th;' Brenly
rThe Yankees are baseball. As a franchise, n't happen .
said. " Whitey Ford's not going 10 pitch a
the Diamondbacks are a baby dressed in
"I know there's a large segment of this game in this series. We have to deal with
purple, owner Jerry Colangelo's favorite country that thinks it would be 'fitting for the 2001 New York Yankees. They're a
color. The team has been in existence jwt the Yankees to win this World Series, but great ball club. As far as we're concerned,
four yean, yet the roster mostly is made there's a large segment of the state of Ari- the mystique is the 25 guys who are
upof30-someth"mgsseasoned by yeanof zona· that thinks theo th er· en di ng wou ld going to be in uni£orm on Saturday." '
major league play.
be a lot better."
It is a New York team that bas earned
The D tam
' ondbac ....
•-- ·msiS
• t they are re ITh
""-db
•-I
d
d
A
.
's.resp ec t .
, e u...._.,on ac... were re axe an
nzona
ishing the challenge.
happy as they \Vent through a workout
'"Oifensively, they're a very patient
"The Yankees are the sentimental Wednesday at Bank One Ballpark. Grace, balldub," Brenly said. "The walk is a bia
D
PHOENIX (&amp;
rn1 4 u.

was just getting used to the idea that he team of destiny."

Nl::W YORK (AP) Mike Mussina and the New
York Yankees chose each
-.. 1 I(\ II I .._,
-":ii~;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; other for moments like this.
lfoME
Mussina, signed to an
•· _ _ _ _
"-....i.IMI'IIIJiiiitiiilt•iilii""'""'iiiiliiio'3..,1 $88.5 million, six-year con'
tract last November, was
BA-INT
WATERPRODFI•G
picked Wednesday to be Joe
antea. Local ralelences fur- Torre's Game 1 starter in the
nished. Eslabllllhed 1975. World Series against AriCall 24 Hra. (740) 4460870,
1-800-267.()578.

wiring, new saMca (J' ra·
1987 Dodge 4x4, Good pot10. Master
·Shape, Looks Good, $2000 lriclan. Rldonour Eiaclrlcal,

OBO. (740)258-e997-

.

luclftl favorite. They're the mighty Yankees. Randy Johnson, Jay Bell, Bobby Witt, part of their olfensive anenal. They're
"""'All Typos, Accesa To They're the champioru year in and year Mike Morgan and Greg Swindell are willing to work a lot of counts. They're
~~~~~: out," Mark Grace said. "But as long as 25 elated to be headed to a World Series for willing to take the base on balls to set the
hi d th
th
5677 Coli· 33&amp;-3785
'
·
·
guys believe they can win, that's the most the fint time in their long major league table for the guys be ·n
em ih
e
Cllrome step bara loo- 1998 important thing. 1 think if you talk to all careen.
order. They just keep coming at you.
&amp;1500 Chevy pick-up
oldend cab, 130-1)675-11325, these old guys in here, they'll tell you that
Johnson's three Cy Young Awards are They're relendess."
SIOO.
--------------------------------------"'---------..CAMPDlS &amp;
I

1983 F·IOO, good lruck mechanically, high mlkll, drlv·
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~
new 1 owner A,... good
.. _,. '"''" $tt'oo (740)448.9455 alter lng, carponoy, doora. wln~ ·
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dowo. ba1h0. . - ltoiN
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repair 1111&lt;1 ITIC)re. For lrM
97 GMC Sonoma SLS, oslimale cal Chi~ 740-992·
16,000 mll01, ~ng cab, •1132'=~"3.-!!~--""!$7500, (740)992-4100 or
(740) 541-81132.
Eux:nuc.W I

r

atr

lin

l

owner Ringer piek•up $650; 1885
Buiek Some.... $400. Gal
Monday lhru Friday 9:ooam-

AMifM ea-.. dual eir
7' like
bags, Muol
ABS,· oo11
...ts(740)379,_,
2134taaw._.

358

=If'

u._,,

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1

97 Aatro V.n, 55•000 miles,
air, "'"'""· lUI, PW, PL.

c

'

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=· =nc."':

Mkldltp011, Beech Sueel, 2 Type
Healer.
$150.
bedroom lumlshed apart· (7.W)446-e644
menl, no pols, daposll &amp; rei·
erencet. uUiilies paid, 16 Piece Place Sening of
(7.W)992.0185.
Oven Proof Ballerlno
.
Dishes, $75. Exercise Bike.
~!::.~.=rtmp::;.\~· _S2_s_.&lt;_304_)8_75-0_1_5_5_ _

hours

997

$14,900., Used Ford 31110
lrtll:lt&gt;l' 2wd 42hp 1 owner
$8,900., Used Ford &gt;1810
1rae10r 52hp 2wd ROPS
largo pump $9,900.. Used
NH L·555 Sl&lt;i&lt;t SIHr Loader
&amp;2" bucket &amp; pollo1l lol1c8
$8,900.. Used lleo1z 4008

- d a y 304-675-a813

roe aga1ns menca s am
•

Elvis Tribute Artis\
Dwight Icenhower

Send cover letter and detal!ed resume
to FarmeiS Bonk. Attn; Human Resources
Dlfector. P.O. Box 626. Pomeroy, Oh!o
457tf'l. Farmers Bank Is an Equal Housing
Lender. Meml;ler FDIC. and Equal
Opportunity Employer.

Sal. Oct. 27, 2001 7:0()-9:00 pm
Tuppers Plains Old Grade School
Adult $5.00 Under

12- $2.50

. DRIVERS
At. 7 Pizza
&amp; Racine Pizza Express
Stop in after 10 pm
301 Vine St. Racine
or call
949-4900
Special Buy any large pizza
Get 2nd 1/2 price
(Same or less value)

Eagles Club 2171
Dance Oct. 26 &amp; 27
8·12
Music by Ghostriders
WONDERLAND
OF CRAFTS
November 2 &amp; 3
10:00 am to 3:00pm
Meigs Senior Center
112 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH 45769
For more information call
(7 40) 992-2161

Previous experience helpful
but not necessary.
We will train the right person.
We seek aggressive, self-starting
professionals with the desire to earn
well above average income.
We offer a benefit pacltagc,
including 40lk, medical and
retirement benefits, a five day
work week and no Sundays.

No Phone Calli Plea1e

See ~t4
7"""'"
for Service

'P4t ~or ~ 1(tJIIII
forSalel
Betw•n 10 a.m. • 7 p.m.
EOE

-.

waiver•.

edUCitkMtel
programa,
or
ethletlcelwb..,urrlcul
ar actiYhlaa ahouJd
contact tho Ohio
Dopartmant
of

Education, Offlca of
Student 1nd F1m11y
Programa, l!qulty
A .. ur1nce
1nd
Compliance llectlon,
15 South Front
Straat, Room 115,
Columbua, Ohio

43211-4183,

(1141

411 4044.
All complaint•
m1da
will
be
ln~llpted prior to
the laauanoe of •
charter to the aald

--·

(10) 2e, 2001
(11) 1, •• 11, 2001

than prepared/ or the type of
low-scoring game everyone
expects Saturday night when
he faces Schilling. Matchups
with pitchers like Pedro
Martinez, Greg Maddux and
Mark Mulder left Mussina
among the pitchers with the
worst run support in the
majors this year.
"A lot· of the games I've
pitched the last couple of
years have been 'like that," he
said. "Maybe that's the reason why."
In an era when home run
records keep falling and
offense dominates, the World
Series will be decided by
some of the game's most
powerful pitchers.
Schilling and teammate
Randy Johnson get most of
the headlines, but Torre's
rotation of Mussina, ALCS
MVP Andy Pettitte, Roger
Clemens and Orlando Hernandez is as deep as any.
"We're going to have good
pitchers going, .too," Torre
said. "It's going to be our job
to match what they can do
and keep the game close.
"That's been our formula .
It's worked .well for us ."
The Yankees have had
uncanny success when facing
the best. But no duo is as
tough as Schilling and Johnson, who combined for 43
wins and 665 strikeouts and
formed the most lethal left-

right combination since
Sandy . Koufax and Don
Drysdale for the Los Angeles
Dodgen in the 1960s.
Coincidentally,
those
Dodgers swept the Yankees
in the. 1963 World Series
behind three complete-game
wins from Ko11fax and Drysdale.
"Drysdale was intimidating from the right side like
Randy is from the left side,"
said Torre, who played
against the Dodgers' aces
early in his career. "Even
though Koufax did not have
the reputation of throwing
under your chin like Drysdale, he still intimidated with
his stuff like Curt Schilling."
The Yankees haven't faced
Schilling or Johnson this.
year, but have had a lot of
practice against comparable
pitchers. They won five
games started this season by
Martinez, and also beat Mulder, Tim Hudson, Barry Zito
and Freddy Garcia.
They plan on using the
same formula against Arizona's a·ces as they against
the others: Stay dose long
enough to get a break or
hope the bullpen decides it.
"We'll try to my with
them as long as we can:'
pitching coach Mel Stottlemyre said. "Hopefully, they'll
get tired before my guys get
tired. ·

Sho1 test ever Tour de
France to save best for last
PARIS (AP) - Tour de france org;mi.un unveiled the shortest
route ever for next year's race, with hopes of fighting drug u!lt and
saving the suspense for the end.
The route announced Thursday covers 2,034.8 miles over 21
stages, including the prologue.This year's race was 2,141 112 miles
long.
.
But four of the six key mountain stages next year will take place
in the last eight days, making the outcome uncertain almost until
the finish in Paris.
This year, Lance Armst;rong wrapped up his third straight title
with a whole week to go thanks to his domination 1n the mountains, leaving little suspense for the rest of the race.
"We were criticized because nothing happened in the final
stages;• Tour director Jean-Marie Leblanc said. "(Next year) .the
suspense will be maintained as far as possible until the finish:'
Armstrong had been due to attend Thu.rsday's news conks:ence
but withdrew "because of the Sept. 11 attacks;' Leblanc wd. He
didn't discuss details
Leblanc also said security for the race had not been reassessed
but "We will wait to see how the situation evolves."
The race director said the 2002 Tour was made shorter tO help
fight doping in what is one of the world's toughest sports emtts.
The endurance drug EPO was at the center of the doping scandal that nearly wrecked the 1998 race.
"You can~ say you're fighting doping and impo!lt a heavier
wi&gt;rk load for the riders," he said.
The 2002 Tour starts July 6 in Luxembourg and takes riden
through Germany. the flat planes of northern france, the Pyrenees
mountains: the southeastern Provence region and the Alps. There·
is one more mountain leg than last year.
The race finishes with the traditional ride down the Cham'psElysees in Paris on July 28, three days after a grueling mountain
stage between Aime and Cluses in the Alps.
Other difficulties include a 136.7- mile stretch through Provence
· that ends with an exceptionally difficult climb up Mont Ventoux,
one of cycling's toughest challenges. Armsaong finished second
there in the 2000 Tour, taking a big step towmi his second tide:

..

�Thursday, ()ct. 25, 2001

POmeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The o.tly Sentinel • hge B 7

..
·... ....
...
.
.
............

NKA Crossword Puaale

PHILLIP
ALDBll

.

I

DR
(740)
E\

('1{1 I 1\

II RI'HI-.1

s

.........

. . . . . 111••

.... .. .,
-...
....,r..a-••
-...............
.. .,..._.A
..... ... ....
•

Preewnu•'tt,

"-......-...
lneurM
Spodolllola-

ColltnctiDC

~

ltla:ftattu •

no..a
peeJrb,oe

eledrtcol, -

·malo-

fee•ece, ud npalr

8eptle SJ-teUtUltln

Tire Barn

J.llewHomn

POIMIOV

992-7943

pordlet,
"' Owner

Charles R. Dill

.... 992-7445

c.

WINTER STORAGE
Melp County FeiJ'Il'OUDds
Arrtw:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
10:00 LID. • 4:00 p.m.
Rll•am
AprD 27,2002
A fee or $20.00 will be e... raed for arly
. •rrlval, late arrival, early renewal, late
removal, or anytime acceu II wanted to
. aiJ'Il'OUIIds otber then ltatecl dates.
Bulldlng IIJIII&lt;e Is ftnt eome ftnt serve.
lpside Stora1&lt;: $4.00/11'
Open Space: $2.0011
loslde Fence: $1.0MI
740 992-(;954

591-9254

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4'

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corvlPUTE HS
-~

--

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on ....,..,.,
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_ l..ble 24 houN,
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_,....,

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. 740 949-2657

or

1-877-604-7350

.(NO SUNDAY CAlLs) ,

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oOmla,l • Sand •Tapeoll
ofll Dirt &gt;llulch

Equlpmelll Puts

...

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

992-4119

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Cue·IHPu1s

1-800-291-5600

VIJit Our Sltowroom Oa State Route 33
6 Mlloo Nortll Of ........y, Pldo, AI County Road 18

or Opportunity
Jeanie Howell

740-992-7036
~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AVAILAILf
/
CttAIINfL$.

by Lull Campoe

.,.._lor-·

CtltUiyCiphor=-••--- ...-lowwtorl*lllt. 1111111111
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Today'J clue: A ~ I'

'OL

WAAT~ Y~ ~_:oq
Of· TIJ£.-D(o,'( '?

YPBIAHJKY

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IKL

ILYY

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AI. NZHLKY

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JBK

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PIIEVIOI!S BOLUTION: 'lila Ia IIU an onlon: rou e-' Moil
one layer at • lima. and 110mellmaa you WMp. - Carl

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
!

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NATE

'::~:~' S@1\4l~-L&amp;'E~se
141tM lor CLAY I. POIUoH

....
WOlD

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words.

Hours: Sun· Thur llam • 10 pm
Frl &amp; Satll am • llpm

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&amp;I-

Utility Trellara,
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Anything Matal

• E-16 Plumbing
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-·-

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992-6215

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CONSTRUCTION

SMITH'S
CON STRUCTION

Specltllllzlngln
roofing, plumbing,
drywlll,

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lnlhebuelneu
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Free Eslomales

1Wnyl.amm

740 -992-1101
or 992-2753

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in this
space
for $50.
per
month

Howardl.
Wrltesel · Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
· Spout
949-1405
591·5011 .
VI

A

W
•

Air

Po,..,roy, 0/Uo

heat

for winter

..
•

Friday, Oct. 26, 2001

••

Ev~n

if the times in gcnenl
may be trying for nuny people financially, your material
prospects look encouraging .
Fate coupled with your brains
could turn out to be an ace in
the hole.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Don't depend on Lady
Lu'k. stepping in and engineering a change you've been

••

'

.'

PROJECT?
'

il

.

'
I

GRAVEL
SAND
TOPSOIL

DIRT
PLASTIC CULVERT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

'

.....• •

hoping to orchestrate today.
Use your head and good.
sound logic to make the nee ..
euary movr. Get a jump on
life by undento1nding the inOuences that'll govern you in

•
••
•

.

'· .
\

..' .
'.

the year ahtad. Send for your
Attro·Graph prediction• by
n11ilins 12 to Amo-Gnph,
c/o thil newa_paper, P.O. Bo"
167, Wickliffe, OH 44092·

. DELIVERY AVAILABLE

0167. De ture to 1tate your
Zodloc •II".
SAGITTAI\IUS (Nov, 23·

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

LETART
CORPORATION

Ore. 21) .. Someone who h11
been nudyinJ you clo11ly will
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know.
CAPI\ICOI\N (Dec. 22·

SlHm &amp; Crl/\VU
675-7~17 .

(740 1 4·16 8237

1-800· 730-4535
81~

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
10 GET ANSWER
.

III

: Refrlgel'lltlon

(304)

740-992-5232

PRINT NUMBEREO lETTERS IN
THESE SQ ARES

$49 Service gaa, fuel oil, and

@

"Htlpilf Youro R"OHr y.., I•.,,lffl,.t"

lho chU&lt;klo quo1od

by lilling In tho milling -d•

Memoir· Humid· Fetch ·Pardon • MORE FUN
If every woman were built like a model the world
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be MORE FUN .

...

e v•: .

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.V

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f\

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•

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992-6635· :•

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33795 HO..ml Rd.

.

:.

S•l•n Dl

Self-Storage

1-..,1,.:....:.;.1...:..1,.:~~.,..,,;,.,15......l1A Com~loto

---------~-----------~

Umestonel

Hil&amp;h 81. Dry

8 0

I

TRI-COUDTY
TRHOSPORT

~~~

In today's world a credit card
:::=-~~-=~·=·::~.,allows a man the chance to toot
'E N G
y
~~s :~hom without paying a • • •
J

992-l194

· BUFFET TO GO (Lunch •• ••.111
BUFFET TO GO lDinnar •• 'UII

=L=H=P=U~,_:::.,';','
.
I I I I

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14 yrs &amp; under FREE t 4 yrs &amp; under FREE
•I 5-8 yrs- '2.99 1 5-8 yrs- '3.99
1
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I

S YUR T

97 Beech st.
middleport,

~

~~"'

I I' I I I I I:
I I I I 12 I-

"QJI;dity ~·
Clrt, Tl'llclora,
Lawn Furniture,
BoaiTrellaro,

Tel: (304) 773-5800

R-Ing

...

/

DIWWLK

WE CAN HELP

.,

/

GL

(1000 n from the bridge)

• Room AdctftloM I

awllllble. Owner:

AVf~AGf

IIUMif~ Of

:

RISTCIME.
FIRST SERVED
$211.11 PER IIIII
IE8UWlY
$327.01 PER JOINT

CARPENTER . : WNCH •e.ll :DINfiiR 'I.H
I
I
SERVICE

~a~~~odellng, ·
8ddlllona 6 deckll
Free eatl11111lel
10 yre. experience

r.: Tttf

,....,...,2nd Street • Mason, WV

Free Estimates

Call for Products

1·12 DDIBlE WIU
PlASTIC ·

F I C NE T

• Vlnylllkllng a Plllntlng
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Voochtl,. accepted In
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.......

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~=~-

y •

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•

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• •••

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Wiat'l •

250 Condor St.
I'omeroy, OH
. 992-24 -. ~

,..,
Ill

6 • J 11 I I

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f!0\11

ACROII

VISA &amp; MASTERCARD ACC~.PTLD

Jan. 19) .. Domonttronns o
w!WnJIIen to ohtre ond coop·

Racine, Ohio

,)I

•.

'•

erate will engender a similu
response in penons. with

chancy situations today. but
where you have influence and
knowledge, the outcome of
your financial affairs co uld
tum out favorable .
CANCER Qune 21-July
22) -- Optimism mustn't be
clouded by wishful thinking
today. A happy ending is possible in a matter you've been
fretting owr. but only by personaUy uking control o( the

whom you'll have dealings today. One ho1nd washes the
other.
·
AQUARIUS Uan. 20-feb.
19) ~- Selecting between two
people to partner on a tough
task might be diffitult to
make. One has been lucky.
rhe ocher a solid ally. Choose
the latter. luck might not be
there today.

issues.
LEO Uuly 23 -Aug. 22) ..

PISCES (Feb. 20-Marth 20)
-· Appeanncea might be dc-

The fomtuJa for success tocby
requires equal partl of understanding and tlbow gre11e.
Once you determine the
coune of action, let your lentiment help out. •

ceivins today, etpecially in
aituations where you miaht
feel one penon it cleverer

th•n tho other. Actuolly tho
oppoaito mlpt be tl\lo .
ARIES (Mon:h 21·AP.ril 19)
.. Althouah you won 1 do it

VIRGO (Auf. 23-Sept. 22)
•· Don't let/our thollfhtl pt
frivolouo an wander from !he

, Unlllhted, you'r1 IOiRI ro

ha•r on excoUtnt chance to
11kt a ntpdvt lituolion and
trantform It Into aomothlnJ
oolld.

objte~iv•• you've aet for your.
otlf today. Sotntthlna more

ontlclna moy loom on tho ho·
rllon. but II won't make you

TAURUS (April 20-May
201 •• Sort today to onalyu

h'lfliv. !S'I'•· 23-0ot. 23) •

an ldn you '•• bttn toylna

• Your 1Jfoatttt ""' todoy It

with for ito commercial polll·

your common 1emt, which

bllitlea. If you dl1 onoup,

you'll flnd a pion to aeU your
wutt.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
•• You won't be fortunate in

'

you •hould bo ohio tu blond
cffe&lt;tiYely with peraonol dt·
olreo In ardor to fulfill your
ambiriont ainu.

.,

�FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

Melp Count(s

I

Your '
Cbolee...
Ford
Uneola

Hometown News,.per

$
LINCOLN

%

AMlRICAN

Weather
•
warn1ng
comes
to Meigs

LUXUIY

APR

Interest

Mereury

MAKE A DIFFERENCE DAY

TruCK OR

Volunteen
sought for
project

BY TONY M. WCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

CHESTER High
floodwaters
shouldn't
.come as a surprise for residents of Meigs County,
now that an advanced
weather warning system
·has been implemented by
:Che Local Emergency Plan:ning Council.
· Telecommunications
technicians fi:om the Ohio
Emergency Management
;Agency recently complet;ed installation of two State
:of Ohio Rain/Snow Mon?toring
System
·(STORMS) rain monitoring gauges.
One is near the . Old
Meigs Courthouse in
Chester and the other at
t.he Columbia Township
Garage.
: STORMS is an automated rain gauge system
that, said Bob Byer, directOr of the Meigs County
Emergency Management
Agency, monitors an area's
s)low and rainfall for
P.Otential flooding while
transmitting current, realtime precipitation data to
the State
Emergency
0perations Center, Ohio
Depanment of Natural
Resources
'(ODNR),
National Weather Service
(NWS) and county emergency management agen-

We have a 111tplus
of trade-las due
to our special
LOW financing on
'ALL vehicles...

So, now is
the time to

"Rake
in the
Savings"
with the

LOW

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - The production of a music video to
raise funds for Sept, 11 disaster
relief efforts will take place on
Sunday as part of the 11th
annual "Make a DifFerence
Day."
USA Weekend and the
Points of Light Foundation
sponsor the annual event to
encourage vblunteerism, and
a local group, including Elvis
Presley tribute artist Dwight
Icenhower, Roger and Mary
Gilmore and Tourism Director Betsy Nicodemus, will
oversee the production of the
special music video at Bob
Roberts Field in Pomeroy.
The event wiU get under way
at 1 p.m.
Icenhower will sing an
original patriotic song, "One
Country : Atnerica," written
by Roger Gilmore, and local
residents are asked to participate in ·the group singing -

Byer said the rain gauges,
usually positioned near
watersheds, report data 24l!ours a day to computers
in Columbus and are used
by NWS as a prediction
tool for flood and flash
flood watches and warnings. Local governments
are also able t&lt;i access the
data through special computer systems connected to
th e gauges.
"Meigs County has a
history of floods and these
gauges will allow us to
monitor rainfall, while at
'the same time, keep abreast
of any potential high water
threats," said Byer.
: "Once the rain gauge
information has been
~ransmitted, officials, using
-a standard formula, will
'Calculate saturation levels,
run-off and other factors to
determine if an emergency

.99%
APR
38rnonths

ON SELECT
USED CARS TO

QUALIPIED
APPlJCANTS

J

reliif efforts

•

\

Despite winds ghosts still walk lime to set docks back
-

OMEROY·
Cold wil).ds
blew
and
leaves rustled
on a pictureperfect trick or treat night
in Middleport, Pomeroy
ahd Rutland on Thurs-

'1 G85

FORD FACTORY

MOTORCRAfT

Se~ lncft. up to 5quans~~!!~~~~.~

I

I

I
I

Motorcraft oil filter • Perform Multi-Point Vehicle Inspection
• Lube • Ch9d4: and flU
fluids • Allin 29 minutes
or less • Diesel
I

FORD MOTOR CO.
PLOORMAT8

Sta~ng

BUG SHIELD

Starting
at

$8150 ·
lnSII'!IIed

SPLASH GUARDS

Laurie Reed was delighted
with the ghosts, ghouls, soldiers, cheerleaders, cowboys,
and cartoon characters, like
these pictured here, who visited- the Reed home on South
Third Avenue in Middleport.
Rutland's haunted house
opened after trick or treat last
night and will continue to
operate through Oct. 31, with
proceeds benefiting victims of
last month's terrorist attacks.

$4400,.

•so4o

THE AREA'S ON~
TAl-CERTIFIED DEAIAR
.

~

T

HOURS:
Mon- Fri 9-7·

Sat. 9-5

I

Service Prices Exclude Tax.

- - , - - ·- - · .. j _ _ _ _ _ _

--·

...

·- ,_

LINCOLN
PREMIER
EXPERIENCE

Hlp:.,,

'IOU(s

Sentinel
2Sedlon1-lll'llpt

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

WASHINGTON (AP) Say goodbye to daylight-saving time this weekend.
Clocks shift back one hour
at 2 a.m, Sunday, local time,
giving an extra hour of sleep
to most people Saturday
night - and an extra hour
of work to those who work
the overnight shift.
And the change to Standard Time means it will be
dark an hour earlier on Halloween, calling for extra caution on the part of drivers
and those watching the ch ildren on their rounds.
Most people set their
clocks back before retiring
Saturday evening. 'Those who
don't need to remember to
set them back Sunday - or
they'll . be an hour out of
sync with the rest of the

day.

:PIHH 1ft Weather. Al

•

or lip synching - of the
song.
"We hope to see a large
group of area residents come
together to demonstrate our
community spirit, pride, and
willingness to help those
whose lives were so adversely
affected by the Sept. 11
tragedies," Nicodemus said.
"We encourage members of
American Legion, VFW, firefighters, scouts, 4-H and other
groups, law enfon:ement officer.;, and other.; in uniform, to
participate in the filming."
No special costuming is
required, although uniforms
and red, white and blue outfits
are suggested. Participants
need not be able to sing, since
the audio track for the video
will be pre-recorded.
Patriotic scenes will be
combined with footage of
grou~s singing, and a balloon
launch is also planned. The
event will be videotaped rain
or shine.
The videos will be available
for purchase for $10; a compact disc for $5, and all proceeds will benefit disaste_r
relief efForts.

cies.

. PRE-OWNED
RATE

'

Sunday's music
.video to ben¢t

Some neighbornoods had

Ple8H He H8lloween, AJ

Lotteries
Block¥ 5:3-6-11-12-28

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon is asking private compani'es ' to help
develop high-tech solutions to problems
the military faces in the fight against terrorism - including defusing biological
and chemical weapons.
"The current methods are crude and
cause coUateral damage," the Pentagon
said of bomb disposal methods. Instead,
the military is seeking ways to expose the
inner workings of such bombs so they

can be neutralized without releasing their
deadly contents.
The Defense Department announced
the appeal to industry Thursday, the 19th
day of the U.S. bombing can1paign in
Afghanistan.
American
warplanes
unleashed the heaviest strikes on Kabul in
several days and also hit Taliban troops
north of Kabul and near the northern
city of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Senior U.S. military officials said the

country.
Transportation Secretary
Norman Y. Mineta, whose
department is in charge of
th e time change, issued a
reminder that this is also a
good time to change the batteries in smoke detectors.
Daylight-saving ·
time
returns April 7.

airstrikes were hurting the Taliban's ability 'to defend against opposition forces
near Kabul, the capital.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld tol&lt;) a Pentagon news conference that
the U.S. government still does not know
where Osama bin Laden is hiding in
Afghanistan.
Nevertheless, "I th ink we're going to
get him," Rumsfeld said.

5th Annual Lewis A. Schmidt, MD
Memorial Cancer Symposium
Saturday, November 3, 2001
8:00 am - 12 Noon
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover· the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
For more information, call(7 40) 446-5057.
.. .

~--

2to 1 a.m.

..

A4
A3 W.VA.
Bl-3.5.8 Dally 3: 2-4-2 Dlllly 4: 3-9+2
A6

area.

special parties last night,
including Pomeroy Cliffs
apartments, where resident,;
and neighbors were invited to
a haunted ride and bonfire.

Set your .
ftmepleces
· bact&lt; one
hour this
Sunday
momlng-from

Pentagon turns to America·n industry for help

Low: JOI
Details, A6

AS
OHIO
84-6 Pick :S: 6-0-8; Pick 4: 2-4-5-7

87

. In Middleport, FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, held its annual "Sleepy
Hollow" hayride at the marina

Check
your
watch

\

·,

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