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                  <text>Wednesday, October 15. 2003

www .mydailysentinel.eom

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

NLCS

•

ALCS

'

Eastern, Waterford
playing for pride, Bt

·'

'The Goat' ·is still kickin'
Wells _brings Yanks
as Marlins rally past Cubs , closer to World Series
BY BEN WALKER

Associated Press

CHICAGO - Five outs to
go. Wrigley Field crowd on its
feet. World Series within their
gr¥[~n, it was almost as if the
baseball . gods realized these
were the Chicago Cubs.
Those lovable losers blew it
· h k ·
f
agam t an s tn part to - 0
all things -one of their own
fans.
In a stunning eighth-inning
turnaround, the
Florida
M r
ar ms took advantare of left
fielder Moises Alou s run-in
with a fan on a foul fly and an
error by shortstop Alex
Gonzalez to score e•ght run•
in an 8-3 victory Tuesday
night, forcing the NL champ•on ship series to a Game 7.
Mark Prior, Sammy Sosa
and the Cubs cruised mto the
eighth with a 3-0 lead, all set
to end their 58-year absence
from the World Series.
What followed was a sudden collapse that would rival
anything in the Cubs' puzzling, painful past.
"It has nothing to do with
the curse, " CubS· manager
Dusty Baker said. "It has to do
with fan interference and a
very uncharacteristic error by
Gonzalez. History ha~ nothing
to do with this game, nothing ."
To add to the hurt, the fan
who blocked Alou's path on
Luis Castillo's ball was wearing a Cubs hat. Once the rally
got in full swing, fans around
the man, who looked to be in
his early 20s, starting hurling
beers in his direction and he
was escorted out by security
with a jacket over his face.
"You cost us the World
Series!" one fan yelled at him.
Now, after the Marlins' second straight win in the series,
it goes down to Wednesday
night. Ace Kerry Wood will
pitch for Chicago, while the
Marlins
go with Mark
Redman.
The inning began easily

will

enough, with Prior getting •the
first out. But Juan Pierre doubled, and sheer disaster followed.
Castillo lifted a fly down the,
left-field line and Alou ran
toward the brick wall, ready to
do anything it took to make the
catch . Instead, the man
· reached up for the ball _ not
over the wall, though - and
deflected the ball away.
Left-field umpire Mike
Everitt correctly ruled no
interference- unlike 12-yearold Jeffrey Maier in the 1996
ALCS at Yankee Stadium, this
fan did not reach over a wall.
"I thought we had fan interference, but you can't have
fan interferenct;, if the ball
isn't in the field of play,"
Baker said.
Alou slammed his glove in
anger, and many fans in the
crowd of 39,577 booed and
began to pelt the man with
debris.
"The ball was in the stands,
the umpire saw that," Marlins
manager Jack McKeon said.
"I didn't think there was any
interference. I don't think that
was the turning point in the
game."
Castillo then walked, and
the crowd sensed t(.ouble
brewing. Ivan Rodriguez hit
an RBI single and Miguel
Cabrera followed with a
grounder in the hole that
Gonzalez simply dropped for
an error that loaded the bases.
Derrek Lee stepped up and
hit a drive into the left-field
corner, pumping his fist even
before he reached first base,
and the two-run double tied it.
Prior was pulled and Kyle
Farnsworth came in and intentionally walked Mike Lowell
to load th~ bases. With the
crowd sitting in stunned
silence and Prior blankly staring, Jeff Conine hit a go-ahead
sacrifice fly.
Mike Mordecai broke it
open with a three-run double
off the wall in left-center, his
shot hitting near a splash of
red-and-orange ivy, and Pierre

added an RBI single.
It had to be a haunting
reminder for Baker. Last
October, his San Francisco
Giants took a big lead into the
late innings of Game 6 of the
World Series, and wound up
losing the game and series to
Anaheim.
· ·
Chad Fox got the win and
Prior took the loss, although
long -suffering fans in Chicago
- still waiting for the Cubs'
first Series championship
since 1908 - will certainly
blame the fan.
The Cubs have never
clinched a postseason series at
home, and had not even
reached the World Series since
1945. Those droughts will
continue for another day, and
possibly a lot longer.
Prior was dominant until the
eighth, allowing until only
three hits until then.
And once again, Kenny
Lofton got the Cubs off to a
fast start.
Lofton led off the first with
a single, moved up on a sacrifice and scored his NLCS
record-tying eighth run on
Sosa's opposite-field double
to right. That run gave the
Culls a 1·2-0 margin in the first
inning of this series.
Sosa and Alou singled to
start the sixth. With two outs,
reliever Dontrelle Willis threw
a wild pitch that let Sosa
scamper home.
Mark Grudzielanek made it
3-.Q with an RBI single in the
seventh.
Carl Pavano pitched well in
his first career postseason
start, getting his chance in
place of ineffective Brad
Penny. Pavano kept the game
close into the sixth, and the
second run charged to him
scored on Willis' two-out wild
pitch.
Until this year, Pavano been
best known as the answer to a
couple of trivia questions. He
was traded for Pedro Marti'nez
after the 1997 season and gave
up Mark McGwire's 70th
h?me run the next year.

"

BY RONALD BLUM

Associated Press
BOSTON - David Wells
put the New York Yankees on
the verge of another World
Series, sending them back to
the Bronx with two chances to
keep The Curse alive.
W€;IIS worked his way out of
trouble to lead the Yankees
over the Red Sox 4-2 Thesday
for a 3-2 lead in the AL championship series. With one
more v1ctory, New York wiD
extend Boston's perennial
heartache to 85 years.
Andy Pettitte and Roger

Clemens are rested and-ready
for the fmal two games of the
series, which continues
Wednesday
at
Yankee
Stadium.
"We never get overconfident," Yankees captain Derek
Jeter said.
Boston planned to start John
Burkett, 0·6 against the
Yankees in his career in the
regular season, against Pettitte
in Game 6, holding Pedro
Martinez back for a seventh
game rather than pitch him on
three days' rest. But knuc;kleballer Tun Wakefield, who has
both of his team's wins, said
he thought he would be avail-

:,o &lt; I '\ 1.'-,

·• Meigs faces Vikings. See
Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY
- A
Langsville man accused of
abducting and raping his
, estranged · wife was sentented Wednesday to a year
and a half in prison.
Michael Todd Fetty. 32,
appeared in Meigs County
Common Pleas
Court
before Judge D. Dean Evans
of Gallia County to plead
guilty to charges of aggravated assault and abduction.
He was scheduled to go to
trial on a six-count indictment on Oct. ~

•

THERE ARE STILL FUNDS AVAILABLE TO REPAIR/
REPLACE YOUR EXISTING SEPTIC TANK IF IT IS NOT
WORKING PROPERLY. THE PROGRAM WILL INSTALL
A LEACHING SEPTIC SYSTEM ONLY.

He was represented in
coun by Gallipolis Attorney
Jeffrey Finley.
Evans sentenced Fetty to
a term of 18 months in ·
prison on the aggravated
assault charge , a fourth degree felony, and five
years on the abduction
charge, a rhird·degree
felony, to be served con s~c­
utively. The five-year term
was suspended, and Fetty
was placed on community
control upon his release. He
was ordered to complete the
Community Corrections
program, to complete 500
hours of community ser-

vice. and to seek full -time
employment upon release.
The original indictment .
charged Fetty with rape.
felonious assault. kidnapping, aggravated burglary
and domestic violence.
The victim accused Fetty
of cutting the telephone
lines
at
his
wife's
Langsville home before
entering the home and
threatening to kill her and
himself. assaulting her, and
forcing her to engage in
sexual intercourse.
The couple 's children

Please see Senwnced, A5

MCCI makes necklaces to remind
vvomen to get mammograms

THE PROGRAM WILL PROVIDE A FULL GRANT TO
VERY LOW INCOME HOUSEHOLDS AND A SO% GRANT
SO% LOAN TO LOW INCOME HOUSEHOLDS.
HOMEOWNER~

MAY CALL JEAN TRUSSELL AT 992-7908
OR PICK UP AN APPLICATION AT THE GRANTS OFFICE
AT 117 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE, POMEROY, OHIO.

OBITUARIES

Hunters set sites at
raccoons in southeast Ohio
BY

AGRICULTURE

WEATHER
~J'~, Hr. llqe. · ~..O.
'

,,

'I

"

~ ,

'

MEDICAL
Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org

Volunteers Ethel Wolf, Jean Thomas and Carol Hull work on necklaces of wooden beads
which will be distributed at Senior Citizens Center health fa1r on Oct. 31 by the Meigs
County Cancer Initiative. The necklaces serve as a reminder to women of their need to do
regular breast self-examination and have mammograms . (Charlene Hoeflich)

Detail• on Page A2

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
NEWSPAPERS

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.turnpikeflm.com
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.com

CHURCHES
Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

The Daily Sentinel

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

www.mydailysentinel.com
Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com
ENTERTAINMENT
Charter Communications

www.charter.com
Take your business into the homes of over
40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs
Counties EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web address in our
WEB SITE
r . ...... ,.,..,._y
for only a $1 a day.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

LoTI'ERIFS

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

Ohio

POMEROY - Necklaces
of wooden beads in various
sizes strung on pink satin ribbon are being distributed by
the Meigs County Cancer
Initiative (MCCI) to remind
women that early detection
comes from regular breast selfexams and mammograms.
October being National
Breast Cancer Awareness
Month, the MCCI members
are using the necklaces to
alert women to the importance of self-exams and
mammograms.
The smaller beads on the
breast cancer awareness
necklaces represent the sizes
of lumps usually detected in
mammograms, while the
larger ones represent those
usually discovered when
during a breast self-exam.
"It is our hope that this
necklace
will
inspire
women to talk about breast
cancer which is a topic too
often avoided," said Diana
Coates of the Meigs County
Council on Aging's RSVP
program which is partnering .
with the MCCI in the project. Coates and Carol
Adams, R.N. are co-chairs
of the local cancer coalition.
"While the necklace may
remind some breast cancer

Pick 3 day: 4-4-1
.Pick 4 day: 4-9-7-4
Pick 3 night: 2-1-5
Pick 4 night: 0-5-5-1 .
13uckeye 5: 5-9-1 2-20-28
Superlotto: 7· 13-17-30-32-49
Bonus Ball: 43
Kicker: 2-4-7·9-4-2

West VJ.rginia
Dally 3: 7'2-3
_
Dally 4: 7·5-7-6

INDEX
2 SECriONS -

1~ PAGES

Calendars
.Classifieds

A2.
B4-6

~mics

B7

Dear Abby
Down on the Fart;n
:Editorials

A:3

,

A7

A4

:Movies

As

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

J.

based on a wide array of scor-

MILES lAYTON

jlayton@ mydailysentinel:com

ing values. The grand knight
champion will be .the hunter
who scores the most points.
~accoon hunting does not
involve guns, but having the
dogs and hunters chase raccoons through the woods.
The chase ends after the
hunter and dog "tree a coon"
while the dogs howl and bark
at the base of the tree almost
convinced they can climb it.
While the dogs can be considered pel,. these animals are bred
to hunt and are prized · for their
keen sense of smell and sharp
eyesight. Spaun said hunting
dogs of this caliber are very
valuable. Spaun owns four
English Coon dogs which weigh
between 45 to 60 pounds a
piece. Like prize livestock at the .
Meigs County Fair, the dogs will
also be judged after the hunt
. "Some of the best hounds
in the country come from this
area:· he said.
Anyone interested in participating can contact Spaun
at 992·3992.

ROCKSPRINGS ·
Raccoon hunters from all over
Ohio will be coming to Meigs
County to compete in a hunt
sanctioned by the Qhio
Sportsman and Sporting Dog
Association Oct. 24 and Oct. 25.
Bill Spaun. president of the
Shade Ri ver Coon Club, has
been lobbying for years to bring
a tournament of this magnitude
to Meigs County. He estimates
that hundteds of raccoon hunters
will travel to Meigs County for
the event which ffie'ans .more
business to area merchants.
"We're hoping for a· large
crow,d," said Spaun. "This
hunt will be a good thing for
Meigs County."
Hunters will join local members of the Shade River Coon
Club or other coon hunting
groups who will serve as guides
through the appropriate hunting
areas throughout southeao;t
Ohio. These guides will also act
as judges and award points

•
stinger.
When the bugs are disjlayton@ mydailysentinel .com
turbed, they defend themPOMEROY - Trying to se lve s by exuding a yellowescape the cold and wet orange body fluid, which is
weather, ladybugs have been their blood. This blood has
invading homes all over a foul odor ami can permanently stain walls, drapes
Meigs County.
Like rriany people. Michael carpeting or a favorite TCrites has orange. black: shlft. Kneen advises not to
spotted ladybugs flying all crush or swat the insects so
over hi s house. When he as to ·minimize their defen watches television, he said sive behavior.
sometimes a lady bug \viii
To prevenl an infestation.
land on the screen to get a Kneen said people should
better v-iew of the program he "seal up cracks and crevices
is watching. O.ne morning, because the ladybugs are
Crites said a ladybug flew just looking for a· place to
into his beard while he was hide ." Instead of usi ng a tlygetting dressed for work.
swaler. Kneen · said people
"I think they are a nui- should suck up the bugs in a
sance, " I1e-sa1'd . ''Th ey swarm vacu um cleaner and immeeverywhere."
diately dump the vacuum
Hal Kneen. Meigs County cleaner
bag
outdoors
Agricultural
Extension
because the bugs can sti II
Agent, said ladybugs, or
li ve inside the bag .
Asian lady beetles, live in the
The bugs congregate in the
forest and come indoors
south
and west areas of a
when the leaves fall from the
trees so that they can survive home because this is the last
during the wi ntef. They are place the sun shines each day.
attracted to li ght and heat. · One strategy to eliminate the
Killing them is not the best ladybu g menace is to leave a
solution because the bugs can light on in the south or west
leave a stain when they are area of the hou se and when
the bugs swarm in, suck them
smashed into oblivion.
Although it is ttncommon, up with a vac uum cleaner.
the bugs are known to bite The . bugs are ·attracted to
people. According. to an arti - light colored clothing.
cle' in the Ohio State
"They are such an annoy- ,
University
Ex ten sion ance:· said Kneen.
newsletter, ladybugs are not
Despite the nuisance, ladyaggressive toward humans bugs are beneficial to the
and they sin)ply m'ay be environment. They eat harmexamining an unfamiliar sur- fu.I insects that damage crops
face where they ate seeking or trees. During the 1970s
moisture. Kneen said some and early 1980s. tens of thoupeople are sensitive or aller- · o;ando; of multicolored Asian
gic to the fluid that ladybugs l!idY beetles were intentionalsecrete, which can· cause der- ly released by the U.S. ·
matitis and a stinging sensa- Department of Agriculture in
tion. Ladybugs can rot sting an effort to control insect pest
because they do not poss.ess a that ,injure trees.
BY

WEB SITE DI-RECTORY

·

Ladybugs are nuisance
to Meigs County homes

·Page AS
• Olive Green

AUTOMOTIVE

shrubs planted in the wrong place can cause power outages
or other hazards. Make sure you plant trees that won't grow
into overhead power lines. Keep shrubs at least 10 feet away
from electrical equipment and call the local underground line
locating service before you dig. Planning ahead helps keep
your power flowing safely. AEP is ~here, always working
for you.

,. ,

LangsviUe nian sentenr.ed in assault case

SPORTS

THE MEIGS COUNTY SEPTIC REPLACEMENT
PROGRAM FUNDED THROUGH THE RURAL HARDSHIP
EPA PROGRAM WILL END IN THE MONTH OF
NOVEMBER, 2003.

www.jimsfarmequipmentcom

The right landscaping requires careful planning. Trees and

II II 1&lt;'&gt;11 \\ . r H I fll:l I&lt; ,r, :! '"' ·l

• \ 'ol. ;;. 1. :\ 11. :: 1

THERE IS STILL TIME!

Jim's Farm Equipment

10:27 a.m. Saturday

able if the Red Sox wanted
him in relief.
'The clock is ticking on us
right now," Boston. manager
Grady Little said. "We'll just
wait 11 out another day and see
if they can get it going."
Karim Garcia, who cut a
knuckle in Saturday's bullpen
scuffle with a member of
Boston's grounds crew, was
inserted into New York's lineup just before gametime and
hit a two-run single in the second off· Derek Lowe, who
dropped to 0-2 in the se.rie.s.
Boston fans taunted Garc•a m
tbe ninth with a sing-song
chant of "Jailbird."

Superstar Arena
lineup to include Bob
the Builder, A8

B1-4, 8
A2.

· © 2003 Ohlo Valley Publishing Co.

Breast cancer awareness necklace
su,rvivors of their prior bat- at age 40, a woman can find

tle with cancer. it can also
serve to educate women
about making sure they do
self-examinations, along
with receiving their annual
mammogram and Pap test.
The more comfortable people are about discussing
breast cancer, the better the
chance of wiping out the
disease," Coats added.
The heartening news now is
that with early detection,
breast cancer · survival rates
are nearly I00 r,c:;rcent,
according to Adams. • By perfunning monthly breast selfexaminations and having
annual mammograms starting

breast cancer while it is still
treatable increasing her
cliances of survival," she said.
The necklaces will be distributed by MCCI at the
health fair to be staged at the
Senior Citizens Center from
&lt;) a.m. to 3 p.m. on Oct. 31.
MCCI is a coalition· comprised of local volunteers
dedicated to develop and
implement programs to
raise public awareness, provide education, and promote early detection and
prevention of cancer.
The necklaces are a creative way of spreading that
message about breast cancer.

J.

MILES lAYTON

"

..
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For more information about electrical
safer;, .visit aep.com. To locate an
underground line ca/11-8()(}-362-2764.

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�BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Oct. 17
AccuWeather.com forecast for daytime conditions, low/hiQh temperatures

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~+' ~i~

•

Rain

••

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Flurries

Snow

••

Ice

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Partly cloudy, cool today
8Y THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today... Partly cloudy. A ch&lt;mce
of
sprinkles
in
tl1e
afternoon. Highs around 60.
Tonight...Mostly cloudy. A
chance of spri nkles the n a
slight chance of rain after midni ght. Lows in the mid 40s ..
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Friday... Mostly cloudy wi th
a 40 percent chance of rai n.
Highs in the lower 50s.
Friday night ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 30s.
Saturday .. .Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Saturday
night...Partly
cloudy. Low around 37.

Sunday ... Partly
cloudy,
Highs around 61.
Sund ay
nig ht ... Partl y
cloudy. Low around 45.
Monday .. .-Partly cloudy.
High around 66.
,-:-Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Low around 46.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy
wi th a 40 percent · chance of
showers. High around 65 . .
Tuesday
night.,. Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent ch;mce·
of showers. Low around 45.
W. Jnesday ... Mostly cloudy
wit h a 30 percent chance of
showers. High around 59.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Oct 15, 2003

10,000

Dow
Jones

9.500

- J,-,UL,----A,._U-,G----,SE-P--0-C_
T_

Pet. change
fromprvv""'s :

·0.10

High

Low

8·500

Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14,2000

9,850101 9,764.46

,;;{C l't•

- . , - - - - - - - , - . . , . - - - - - - 1,400
JUL
AUG
SEP
OCT

High

Pet. change

Oct 15, 2003

Low

Record high: 5,048.62
March 10. 2000

1,966.87 1,933.0&gt;

from preylous: -0.21

t

- - - - - - - - - - - 1.100

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500
~~-ill

·4.1'&lt;~ .

1,046.76
Pet. change

from prov""'s:

JUL

AUG

SEP

High
Low
1,053.79 1,043.15

-0.26

950

OCT

Record high: 1;527.46
March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
·AEP -29.50
:Arch Coal- 24.99
Akzo- 31.80
AmTech/SBC- 21.63
Ashland Inc.- 36.33
BBT -36.86
:BLI- 15.06
·Bob Evans - 28.85
:BorgWarner- 78.56
·Champion- 4.26
Charming Shops - 6.65
Col-26.64
DG-21 .52
DuPont - 40.07
Federal Mogul - .22

•

'
'

Gannett - 82.55
General Electric - 28.85
GKI'J LY- 4.70
Harley Davidson
49.15
KMRT -30.02
Kroger- 18.80
Ltd. -17.67
NSC - 18.72
Oak . Hill Financial

29.82
ONE-41.60
OVB-25.75
Peoples- 27.36
Pepsico- 47 91

Rockwell - 28.89
Rocky Boots - 12.11
RO Shell - 46.48
S-51.41
T -20.02
Wai-Mart ~ 59.07
Wendy's- 35.78
Worthington - 14.08
Daily stock reports are·

the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest

Inc. of Gallipolis.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(UsPs 213-9&amp;0)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published

every

aft ernoon,

Our main concerr. -in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know ol an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- poslage paid at Pomeroy.
.

2156.

Member: The Associated Press
and . the Ohio Newspaper
Our main number is
Association .
(740) 992-2156.
Postmaster: Send address correcD
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111
epartm!nt extensions are: Court Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
.. 45769.

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, E)(t. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Mites Layton, ~xl. 13

Advertising
Outside $alae : O"ave Harris , Ext 15
CI111JCirc.: Judy Clark, Exl. 10

Circulation

District Mgr.: TBA, E&gt;L 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Exl. 12 .
E-mail:
news 0 mydaltysentinel.com

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2003

MIDDLEPORT
Homecoming and pastor
appreciation celebration at
Ash Street Church. Sunday
school at 9:30 a.m.. followed
by the worship service at
10:30 a.m ., with Brad Grant
as guest speake r. Music by
Higher Calling, Ash Street's
Own and Tammy Taylor,
11 :45 a.rn . Potluck dinner at
Saturday, Oct. 18
1
p.m. Ash Street's Own and
REEDSVILLE - 100th
Saturday, Oct. 18
Earthen Vessels at 2:45p.m.
MIDDLEPORT -Fall fes- anniversary celebration at Information is available by
Reedsville United Methodist
tival at Ash Street Church , 1 Church, with parade at 10 calling 992-6443.
to 4 p.m., General Hartinger a.m .. presentation about life
CARPENTER
Park . Inflatable games, in 1903 by Margaret Parker Homecoming
will
be
including a rock wall and at 11 a.m., old-fashioned observed at the Carpenter
bungee run: and snacks are bean dinner, Reedsville Baptist Church, State Route
planned.
movie at noon, oral history of · t 43. Sunday school will be
Reedsville at 1 p.m .. coloring held at 9:30 a.m., and
contest at 2 p.m., glider race preaching at 10:30 a.m. by
at 2:30p.m., storytelling and Robert Thompson followed
music by Sara Guthrie al 3 by a carry-in dinner at noon .
Afternoon service will begin
p.m. Public invited.
. Saturday, Oct. 18
at
1 :30 p.m. with singers to
Sunday, Oct. 19
POMEROY - A "triple
RACINE - Morning Star include the Builders Quartet,
blessing" concert will be held United Methodist Church will Claudelle
Ha rbin, and
at 7 p.m. at the First observe its 75th anniversary Sharon Fayer. John Elswick,
Southern Baptist Church, and homecoming _with morn- pastor, invites the public.
Pike. ing worship at 10 a .m., a
41872
Pomeroy
POMEROY
Featured will be Mark Lanier, basket dinner at 12:30 p.m. Homecoming will be held at
Gary Shepherd, and Randy and the afternoon service at Sooth Beth~! Community.
Miller, artists who have long 1:30 p.m. John Gilmore, pas- Church . located on Silver
been recognized as out- to r, invites the public.
Ridge, County Road 293
standing in th e ir fields.
across from Eastern High
REEDSVILLE
Shepherd and Miller sang Homecoming at Reedsville School.
Dinner will be
with the Kingsmen and United Method ist Church served at noon. Take cov·Lanier with Perfect Heart and continued celeb rati on of ered dish. The t :30 p.m.
and oth ers. There will be a 100th a nnive rsary of church, afternoon program will fea freewill offer ing . The pubic is with special worship service ture music by Black Water
invited to join the church in a at 9:30a.m. Message by cir- Run, a blue grass group,
~ht of gospel music.
cuit-riding preacher David Russell Spe,ncer and the
Sund;3y, Oct. 19
Maze . carry-in dinner at Coe Family, Joe. Bob;
POMEROY
Gary . noon, Gabriel Quartet, 2 Christy a nd Mary. Pastor
· Shepherd will be in concert p.m. Pas to r John Frank Linda Damewood invites the
at the f' irst Southern Baptist, invites the public.
pul)lic.

h e i r.

e r s

Organization ( 1130) and
Archery Shooters Association (ASA).
Bradley competed as a
member
of High
Countr y
Archery·s
Advisory
S.tutl' in
Indiana ,
Pennsylvania,
We s t
Virginia
a n d Taylor Jones
Ohio. He
finished first in the youth
male fingers trophy division
at
the
lBO
World
Cl:tmnpionship at Snowshoe
Mountain, W. Va. and also
placed in the lBO shoot in
Nelsonville where he won a
scholarship
to
partial
Hocking College.
Taylor competed as a
member of Bowtech
Archery's Team Rascals in
Indiana,
Illinois,
Pennsy lvania,
West
Virginia
and
Ohio.
Although his lBO classes
are not competitive, he
shot a perfect score in
Pennsylvania and at the
lBO World Championship
in Snowshoe, W.Va. he
fini shed ranking eighth
overall in the ASA standmgs.
Both boys are sponsored
locall y by Five Points
Archery in Pomeroy and
plan to start their indoor
target shooting soon.
Bradley and Taylor are
the sons of Jeff and Linda
Jones of Middleport, Ohio
and attend school in the
Meigs Local school district.

41872 Pomeroy Pike, at
10:45 a.m. Shepherd has
traveled with tl).e Kingsmen
and Perfect Heart for several
years.

Concerts,
Shows

a

Coming Thursdah}~ the Sentinel ...

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Holzer Medical Center

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wwvv.turnpikeflm.com
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The bus trip will originate
in Athens at I a.m. on
Saturdav. October 25 . After
the rally is completed .. the
bus will return to Athem
from Washington around
midnight. The one-d&lt;1y trip
eliminates the need for lodging in Washington . The
round-trip fare is $40. Call
APJN (740-592-2608) 1o
purchase tickets or for more
information.

POMEROY - Gardening
tips were exchanged at a recent
meeting of the Walk-in Club
held at the home of Ola St. Clair.
Election of officers was

held for the 2003-2004 year
with Donna Morris being
named president; Rosalie
Story, vice president; Rosalie
Johnson, secretary/treasurer,

and Carol Riggs. cards.
Dorothy Chaney gave
some readings. The next
meeting will be held at the
home of Ri ggs on Nov. I.

.

today¥ 7404J92~2155
i

.,

_.,,,

'

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Do

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Nearly nine mt~J on
women suffer from

WEB SITE DIREC',~""~"',"
for only a $la day.

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Nominate them for

"Carrier-of-the-Month"
If they are selected, your ~
carrier will win dinner ·. ~IZZ.'"
for two at
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Pizza Hut

heart disease.

compliments of
Pizza Hut
Talk with your doctor about heart dise;~ se.
Learn more about'heart health under
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Southeast Ohio will join with
others from across the nation
at an "International Rally and
Demonstration"
at
the
Pentagon in Washington, D.C.
All of the participants at
the rally will be encouraging
th e administration to bring
the troops home and to spend
war dollars on basic domestic needs that ha ve been
neglected since ·the downturn
in the economy.

Gardening tips exchanged

proud tQ be part
your .

Charter Communications

1

ATHENS - Appalachian
Peace &amp; Justice Network is
coordinating a ore-day trip to
Washington. D.C. on Oct. 25
for Appalachi an residents to
c&lt;lll for the end of the occupation of Iraq, for bringing
United States troops home,
and for decreased spending on
military engagement and
increased spending on jobs,
education and healthcare here.
The bus riders from

The Daily Sentinel
.

Point Pleasal)t Register
'- A

MARCH FOR ECONOMIC JUSTICE

RIO GRANDE- Quilts Manager of Events Gale mother and daughter work
made by the. women of the Leslie. "Group members with the society to create beauSalem Missionary Society are demonstrated their ha11d quilt- tiful handmade quilts.
The Bob Evans Farm
on di splay in the Homestead ing at the first Bob Evans
Museum at the Bob Evans Farm Festival in 197 1, and Homestead Museum opened to
Farm in Rio Grande, Ohio. have been demonstrating and the publi~ on May I, 2003 . The
T he quill exhibit is housed on display ing their quilts every corp()rate museum and histori-the second floor of the muse- year since." Two members, cal center is housed in the
·um through Nov. 9.
Bernice Wood and Anna Homestead. which is listed on
Admission is free to the Davis, were at that lirst fes ti- the National Register of
SubsCribe
quilt exhibit and to the muse- val and are still quilting with Historic Places.- The large.
· urn, which is open 9 a .m. 10 6 the society today
brick farmhouse displays Bob
The Salem Mi ssionary Evans .Farms' company memo:p.m. daily. The quilt show is
:the second to be held in the , Society was formed in 1929 by rabilia and the farm 's history
:museum's exhibit area, which a group of women of the Salem from 1940 to the present on the
features the works · of local Baptist Church in Gage, Ohio. first tlocr, while items on the
crafters and artisans on a For the past 30 years, the group second floor feature the history
has sold the quilts they make to and lifestyle of previous own.f
rotating schedule.
"The relationship between raise money for mission pro- ers including company founder
-.
.a
OJ
:the Salem Missionary Society · jects and other church pro- Bob Evans. The second floor
/;;,
-and the Bob E\"ans Farm goes grams. They can count among also houses a revolving exhibit
~e.
back decades," said Bob their members several two- featuring the work of local
9 92 2 1
:Evans
Farm
Assistant ge neration qui lters, ~w~h:e:re~c~r:a~fte:r~s~a~~1~d~art
=is:ts~._ _ _ __::::;S~ub:s:cn:'=t~oda;;y;';
be
;;;·;;SS;;:

NEWSPAPERS

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

Thursday, October 16, 2003

DEAR ABBY: I am a 20record? I know it', hard to
year-old single father of a
trust a stranger. but r m a
beautiful 13-month-old little
hard worker, an hone'' and
boy. Hi' mother took off
faithful employee - and I
with my be, t friend when
am desperate . - LOST IN
our son was only 2 months
TEXAS
Dear
old. I have a good job, my
DEAR LOST: You ,huuld
own place and don't depend
not lie . However. it would be
Abby
on anyone. but I wish I cou ld
helpful if you can provide
go back to school so I could
letters of rec ommendation
provide my son with an even
from previous employers.
greater future .
your clergyperson. and
I would like to get my high and everything to gain .
respected people in you r
DEAR
ABBY:
I
am
a
wife
community who will vo~ch
school diploma. go on to
college. and become a police and mother of two boys. for your honesty and the sucofficer and mentor young Last year I left my job of six cess of your rehabil itation.
fathers like myself. I don't years to start my own busiDEAR ABBY: For my .
have any support from my ness. Unfortunately, my birthday, I was given a gift
parents as far as my educa- business has not generated certificate for a day of beau tion goes. My mom says to the income my family and I ty services al a high-priced
be happy with what I have need. I am now looking for spa.
work, along with thousands
and stop being selfish.
Am I supposed to tip each
Is it se lfish to want more of other people.
person who works on me
My problem is, I have a .that day, or has that been
out of life? Right now I am
just li ving paycheck to pay- criminal record tJlat stems included in the price of the
check.- SINGLE FATHER from two small but painful gift certificate" - NEEDS
incidents when I was I 8. My TO KNOW IN MINI\ESOIN HO USTON
DEAR SINGLE FATHER: husband knows about my TA
Selfish? Quite the opposite' record. but no one else does.
DEAR
NEEDS
TO
When
going
on
job
interWhile I agree with your
KNOW: What a ~enerou&gt;
mother that a person shou ld views. I have been honest gift! Tips are not included in
be happy. with what he or she and up-front about my past, the cost of a gift certificate .
can't change_ I don't think but it seems I'm put on the Therefore. each per&gt;&lt;m who
that philosophy applies "ignore list" once the inter- renders service 'hould be
when it comes to furthering viewe r · hears about my tipped I5 percent - or more
record. They can't see the if -the service is excepti onal.
one's education.
Pick up the phone, call the years that have passed with- (Ask to see a price schedule
high school s in your area, out so much as a traffic tick- when you go in. so you
and ask about adult educa- · et; how I solved my problem know the value of each sertion programs so you can get through therapy ; . the stable vice.)
Dear Abbr' is wriuen br
your GED - the equivalent environment my husband
and
I
provide
for
our
boys;
Abigail Vair Bure11. also
of a l:tigh school .diploma.
With that in hand, you will nor the years of hard work I known as Jeanne f'hillip s.
qualify for entry into a com- devoted to my previous job and was founded In her
mother. Pauline Phillips. ·
munity coll ege. There is no and current business.
can
l
find
SOijleone
How
Write
Dear Abbr
at
reason why, in time, you
cannot fu lfi ll your dream. who will hi re me while my www.DearAbbr.com ~r PO.
Others have done it; go for growing bUsiness takes· off? Box 69440, LOs Angeles. CA
it' You have not hing 10 lose ·s hould I lie about my 90069.

:Salem Missionary Society quilts exhibit

www.pvalley.org

Norris Northup Dodge

PageA3

Single dad has big plans
to improve his sons life

Q "What is ne gative
An independent advocacy by the Fir' l Amendment, how
campaign ing?"
group that does not · specifi- can it be legally addressed,
A. - Ne.gative campaign- call y encourage the public to without censorship?
ing is political adverti sing vote for or against a candi- A. - Candidates may pubthat urges people NOT to date or issue may not have to licly sign camp~ign conduct
vote for a particular candi- include a specific disclaimer codes to avoid censorship
date or issue by publicizing or file any campai gn finance and promote cleaner camnegative things about that reports. The new McCain- paigns. Organizations such as
person or is sue. These ads Feingo ld federal campaign the Institute for Global Ethics
may be iss ued by an oppo- finance law requires such an conduct survey s. offer modnent , a political party, or an inoependent advocacy group els of election ethics codes,
independent group such as a to comply with federal cam- and encourage candidates to
· political action committee paign finance law under cer- sign fair cond uct pledges .
(PAC ), or by independent tain circumstances, but this (See
www.ca mpaignconadvocacy groups, whose law is now being challenged duct.org for more informamessages usuall y do not in federal court. Court rulings tion.)
specifically suggest voting will determine how and when
Q. - What is issue advoagainst a candidate or issue, it will be enforced.
cacy and wh.o regulates it?
but whose tone strongly sugQ. -· When does negative
A. - Issue advocacy is an
gests a negative view .of the campaigning break the law?
advertising message about a
candidate or issue.
A. - A qmpaign state- particu lar public interest
Q . - How can I lind out ment breaks Ohio law if it is issue thal does not include
who is issuing negative ads? made despite knowledge that language such as "vote for,"
A. - By law, political it is fa lse, or with reckless "elect." " "oppose,"
or
communications must carry a disregard of truth or fa lsity. "defeat." so-called magic
"disclaimer" identifying who The
Ohio
Elections words th;1t urge voters to take
is .responsible for an ad. A Commission enforces laws a part icular action. True issue
disclaimer on wrillen cam- that apply to all Ohio cam- advocacy promotes a specific
paign material must contain paign materials, whethe r they position on an iss ue without
the committee or party name in vo lve candidates or Ohio necessarily mentioning any
and the name and add ress of ballot iss ues.
candidate .
a committee or party officer,
Q. - "What about negaRecentl y, iss ue advocacy
such as a treasurer. FCC reg- tive campaigning in judicial
gro ups have produced ads
ulations call for a televised races?
that look li ke cam pai gn
· political ad disclaimer to
A. - Cand idates for judiadvertisements, but do not
appear for a required length cial seats in all Ohio courts
of time at the commercial's must follow stale campaign include the "magic words"
beginning or end. Radio ads laws as we ll as special judi- and therefore may not be
must include the name (bu t cial campaign 'rules adopted considered campaign ads.
not the address) of the com- by the Supreme Court of Recently, the Ohio Elections
mittee or party responsible. Ohio. The Supreme Court's Commission declared that a
The ad sponsor also must Board of Commissioners on corporation circulating ;uch
publicly report campaign Grievances and Di scipline an ad violates Ohio's ban on
expenditures.
.
hand les campaign complai nts corporate promoti on or oppoQ. - What if an indepen- of ru le-breaking in judicial sition of a particular candident advocacy gro up · is races . For j udi cial cam- date. The Commission may
respon sibl e for negative paigns, action can be take n consider an ad to be "for or in
adverti sing? not on ly against fa lse ads aid of or opposition to" a parA. - Independent advoca- with
the
Election s ticular eYdidate, even if the
cy groups must report elec- Commission, but also against "magic words' arc not
tion expenditure s. and any ad misleading ads with the included .
(Law You Can Use is a
mu st contai n a dis claimer Board of Commi ssioners on
weeklr
consumer legal inforidentifyi ng the group.
Grievances and Discipline.
mation
column pr01·ided as a
If the candidate or hi s or
Q. -· How does th right to
public
se rvice of the Ohio
her age nt cooperated, · con- free speech atfec negati ve
sented to, or had any control cam paigning?
. Negati ve Sta te Bar Associwion and the
over an ad published by an campaignin
curs in cam- Ohio State Bar Foundwion .
independent advocacy group, paig
ause free speech is This article was originally
the candidate must treat the
anteed under the U.S. prepared ~;_,. Judge Jennifer
ad expend iture as an ink.ind
onstitution's
First L. Brunner. of the Franklin
contribution. State and fed
Amendmem. Negative cam- Coun ty Cou rt op Common
AI regulations spell out what paigning that is purposely Pleas, and updated by Philip
Richter.
Executive
m ay be considered "in-kind fa lse or made with reckless C.
contributions" or "indepen- disregard for the truth, how- Director of the Ohio
Commission.
dent expenditures." Becfiuse ever, is not protected by the Elections
there are limits on contribu- First Amendment. The Ohio Arricles appearing in this
tions that federal and state Elections Commission may column are ill/ended to procandidates (including judicial sanction a person or entity vide broad. general informacandidates) can receive, inde- fou nd violating the laws pro- tion about the law. Before
:pendent expenditures are hibiting false statements in applying this information ro a
o ften used when contributors campaign materials.
specific legal problem, readhave already made the max iQ. If negative cam- ers are urged to seek ad1·ice
mum allowable contribution. paigning is a right guaranteed from an a/lomer.)

Homecomings/
Reunions

Social Events

·

BY THE BEND

Rules discourage negative campaigning

permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

•
" '

October 16,

Law You Can Use

Council on Aging, Inc. 11
a .m. · at
the
Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center.
The meeting is open to the
public . Individuals with paid
memberships will elect
membership to the Board of
Trustees.

Brothers
finish well in
archery
competitions

outdoor
arc hery
shooting
in the
lnternatio.(!:!j l Bradley Jones
Bowliun -

~' _.',"-!'

1,939 10

Thursday, Oct_16
RACINE
Pomeroy/Racine Lodge 164
will hold a regular meeting at
7:30 p.m. All members are
urged to attend.
Saturday, Oct. 18
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers will
meet for a noon luncheon at
Trinity Church. Judge Scott
Powell wi ll speak on current
legal issues concerning
older adu lts. Reservations
for lunch are to be made by
calling 992-3214 or 2472723. Guests are welcome.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grande 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will hold a fun
night and potluck supper on
Saturday, 6:30p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 19
POMEROY
Meigs
County Historical Society will
hold its 128th annual meeting at "the Meigs County
Museum , Butternut Avenue.
The dinner will be served at
6 p.m. followed by a program
on Life in the 1950s by Rae
Moore and at 7 p.m . and a
'&gt;
business meeting.
Monday, Oct. 20
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodg e 411 will
meet in s pec1al session at 7
p.m. at
the
temple .
will
be
Refresnments
served.
Thursday, Oct. 23
POMEROY Annual
meeting of the Meigs County

t

Oct. 15, 2003

Nasdaq
composite
'""' "T' I·t-·.
--~:
w•'~'·"*·

Clubs and
Organizations

MIDDLEPORT
Bradley Jones, 13, and his
brot he r
Taylor
Jones, 9,
recentl y
finished

9,000

9,803.05

Thu~sday,

The Daily Sentinel

Community carendar _

Ohio weather
~

PageA2

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This women 's heart health initiative (s provided by 0'8/eness Memorial Hospital
in collaboration with OhioHealth.
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2.) toolude ~r ciirrters .... )'Oui i'Oule number
or subsc:ri))er number:
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yQur carrier.
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Mall your entries

to: Paul Bluller

aaiUpOIIs ~tty 1'ribune
Si~ Third"~ .
palltpolls, Olf 4563 t

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily _Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

TODAY IN HISTORY

•

Today is Thursday. Oct. 16, the 289th day of 2003 . There
are 76 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History : Twenty-five years ago, on
Oct. 16. 1978. the College of Cardinals of the Roman Catholic
Church chose Cardi_nal Karol Wojtyla to be the new pope; he
took the name John Paul II.
On thi s date: In 1793, during the French Revolution, Queen
Mari e Antoinette was beheaded .
In 1859, abolitionist John Brown led a group of about 20
men in a raid on Harper's Ferry.
In 1916, Margaret Sanger opened the first birth control cl inic, in New York City.
In 1943, Chicago Mayor Edward J. Kelly officially opened
the city's new subway system during a ceremony at the State
and Madi son street station.
In 1946, ten Nazi war criminals condemned during the
Nuremberg trials were hanged.
In 1962, the Cuban missile crisis began as President
Kennedy was informed that reconnaissance photographs had
revealed the presence of missile bases in Cuba.
In 1970, Anwar Sadat was elected president of Egypt, succeeding the late Gamal Abdel Nasser.
: In 1973, Henry Kissinger and Le Due Tho were named winners of the Nobel Peace Prize; however, the Vietname~e official declined the award.
·
In 1981. Israeli war hero Moshe Dayan died in Tel Aviv at
age 66.
In 1995, a vast throng of black men gathered in Washington
D.C. for the "Million Man March" Jed by Nation of Islam
ieader Loui s Farrakhan.
Ten years ago: The U.N. Security Council endorsed the
deployment of U.S. warships to block arms and oil shipments
to Haiti,' in an attempt to increase pressure on Haiti's military
leaders. The Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Philadelphia
Phil lies. 8-5, in game one of the World Series.
: Five years ago: Negotiators David Trimble and John Hume
were named recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize for brokering
the Northern Ireland peace accord. After receiving a Spanish
extradition warrant, British police arrested former Chilean
dictator Augusto Pinochet in London for questioning about
allegations he 'd murdered Spanish citizens during his years in
power. Pinochet was held for 16 months as courts decided
whether he cou1d be extradited to Spain; he was allowed in
2000 to return to Chile, where a court later held that he could
not face charges because of his deteriorating health and mental condition.
~
One year ago: Prestdent Bush signed a congressional resolution authorizing war against Iraq. The White House
announced that North Korea had disclosed it had a nuclear
weapons program.
Today's Birthdays: Actor-director Tim Robbins is 45 .
Singer-musician Bob Mould is 43. Actor Randy Vasquez is 42.
Rock musician Flea (Red Hot Chili Peppers) is 41. Jazz musician Roy Hargrove is 34. Actress Terri J. Vaughn is 34. Singer
Wendy Wilson (Wilson Phillips) is 34. Actress Kellie Martin is
28. Singer John Mayer is 26. Actor Jeremy Jackson is 23.
Thought for Today: "We always like those who admire us;
we do not always like those whom we admire." - Francois,
Due de Ia RochefouciiUld, French moralist (1613-1680).

Thursday, October 16,

PageA4

OPINION

Thursday, October 16, 2003

Obituaries

Bush could lose Latino 11otes
If the 2004 election is
another squeaker, President
Bush could lose it because he
failed to fo llow through on '
his promise to help undocumented Hispanic immigrants
gain legal status.
Polls ind icate that !.atino
voters regard immigration as
a litmus test issue - the way
African-Americans do civil
rig hts, one expert said - and
Bush shows signs of losing
once-promi sing support.
Meantime. Democrat ic
presidential candidates and
members · of Congress with some assistance from
Republicans - are moving
to seize the immig ratio n
issue that Bush so far has
·drQPped.
Bush can recoup - and
some GOP strategists say he
must - by showing renewed
interest (or even taking leadership) to help illegal immi grants get legal and secure
U.S. borders at the same
time.
Bush carried 35 percent of
the Latino vote in 2000 after
a vigorou s ou treach effort
(and frequently speaking
Spanish on the stump) nine percent more than GOP
candidate Bob Dole got in
1996.
On Sept. 6, 200 I , with
Mexican President Vicente
Fox by his side, Bush said
'there are many in our country who are undocumented
and we want to make sure
their work is legal. '
After Sept. II, 200 I,
homeland security concerns
put a freeze on Bush's plans,
and then relations with Fox
soured because Mexico
opposed the. Iraq war. Both
immigration and U.S. policy
toward Latin America get
constant
coverage
on
Spanish-language televi sion.
So, this August, a New
York
Times/CBS
poll

Morton
Kondracke

showed that onl y 2 1 percent
of Latinos would vote for
Bush. And a poll for the GOP
Latino Coalition showed that
a generic Democrat would
beat Bush by 49 percent to 30
percent.
The latest
bipartisan
Battleground survey showed
that , of all demographic
groups, Latinos showed the
largest 'dropoff rate''- a 15.
point difference be.tween
Bush's personal approval rating of 61 percent ~nd his job
performance of 46 percent.
The falloff has a! so hurt the
GOP. In 2000, GOP congressional candidates won 34
percent of the Latino vote,
according to exit poll s. In
2002, it was 35 percent. But
in the August Latino
Coalition poll. regi stered voters said
they'd
vote
Democratic by a margin of
·
55 percent to 25 percent.
All this is in spite of finding s that 35 percent of
Latinos defined themselves
as 'conservative ' and only 22
percent as 'liberal' -. and by
a whopping 53 percent to 7
percent, they said that lowermg taxes was a better way to
grow the economy than raising taxes.
Conducted by the GOP
firm of McLaughlin and
Associates, the poll found
that 86.7 percent of Latinos
favored a policy allowing the
federal government to 'normalize the status of illegal
workers in this country'_pro-

Council granted the Pomeroy
BY J. Mtt.ES LAYTON
REEDSVILLE Olive
High
School
AJumni
jlayton@ mydailyse ntil)!l!.com
Louise Smith, 87. Reedsville,
As.&lt;;oeiation permission to lake
passed away on Thursday, Oct.
bricks from the old Pomeroy
POMEROY - Two resi- Junior High that is slated for
16, 2003, at Rocksprings Rehabden ts of Union Terrace, demolitioo. -It also gave the
ilitation Center in Pomeroy.
Scott Powell and Bob alumni aooociatioo permission
She was born Dec . 25-,
Smith ,
came
before to save the front facade with the
191 5, in Nelsonville, daughPomeroy
Vill
age
Council
ter of the late Eugene and
Pomeroy Junior High name
Wednesday night to find out engraved on it. Judy Sisson,
Ethel Courtn y Brickles. She
how thi s un paved stree t president of the alumni associawas a volunteer Se nior.
could be made safe r.
Friend at the library and was
tion, said the group is .negotiatBoth men said the narrow ing with the Meigs Cooperative
a homemaker. She was a
street, especially during the Parish for space to showcao;e
member of the Pomeroy
winter, can be very hazardous. some of the things the group has
Church of Christ.
Periodically the village spreads collected over the years inside
Beside' her parents, she was
gravel
on the street to mal(e it a the new Mulbeny Community
preceded in death by her huslittle
more
stable, but the grdv- Center when it is completed.
band, Melvin R. Smith, in 1998;
el often gets washed away or
two sons, William R. Smith and
spread thin by motorists.
George 0. Smith; a son-in-Jaw,
Mayor Victor Young lll said
Dale Smith; and two brothers,
the
village does not have the
Robert and Max Brickles.
$10,000
needed to pave !Jnion
• Youn g said the street
Surviving are a son,
Terrace. Powell and Young department has completed
Donald E. (Loretta) Smith of
said they would look ipto alter- ~ 75 percent of the patchwork
Ada. Mich.; two daughters,
native methods of paying for a' on village streets.
Barbara A. (John) Burns of
·
paving
project which could
• Proffitt said there are
Logan and Thelma J. Smith
mclude state grants.
only two weeks left for anyof Reedsville·; 13 grandchil Council
granted
Pomeroy
one
with unpaid parking
dren;'20 great grandchildren;
Police
Chief
Mark
Proffitt
tickets
to pay before the fee
one great-great grandchild;
permission
to
eliminate
one
immunity
is revoked. On
and two sisters, Ruth Jewel of
full-time position in the Nov. I. the village will conIronton and Alberta (Morris)
police department to create a tact the Bureau of Motor
Haninl;l of Nel sonville .
part-time position . Council Vehicles to place a hold on
Servtces will be held at II
approved
upgrading Heather the veh ~c le registration for
a.m. on Saturday, Oct . 18,
W1 se from part-time di s- anyone with unpaid parking
2003, at Fi sher Funeral Home
patcher- to full-time dispatch- tickets.
·
in Pomeroy with Don Seevers
er.
Shannon
Smith
was
hired
•
The
Halloween
trick-orofficiating. Burial will follow
as a part-time dispatcher.
treat celebration will be
at Beech Grove Cemetery:
Surveillance
cameras · between 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Friends may call from 2 to 4
have
been
installed
in the Oct . 30. Proffitt advi ses
and 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday at the ·
police
department
and
at children to wear some form
funem! home, and may send conentrances in the municipal . of retlective clothing for
dolences and register online at
building, it was reported.
better visibility.
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

vided they have a clea n . sori ng legislation to reform
record.
the current visa process for
Mo reover. 90.8 percent . temporary agricult ural work polled said it was ' important' ers, improve working. co ndt- and 74 .8 percent. ·very tions and allow them to
impot1ant ' - that U.S. im mi- obta in work permi ts and
gration Jaws be reformed to evrn tually become legal resi'redu ce illegal immigration dents.
Mv re restrictive leg islation
by promoting a syste m which
increases the legal flow of ha s bee n int rod uced Sen.
workers into this country.'
John Cl'lrn vn, R,Texas. to
The leadin g Democr·••i c prov ide th e agri cultural
presidential candidates dre industry with guesr wo rk ers
all in favor of pl ans to legal- who would be required to
ize undocumented immi - return to their home coun grant s with clean records, tries - and wou ld have their
increase the number of v.mk wages partially withheld to
perm its and visas. and reac h make sure th at they do.
In addi ti on, Sen. • O rri n
an agreement with Mexico to
strengthen border security.
Ha tch, R-Utah. and Sen.
In Congress, several bills Richard Du rbin . D-lll. , have
have been introduced - or . introdu ced a bill to help the
will be - to liberali ze immi - children of illegal aliens
gration rules. The most gen- attend · college at in-s tate
erous is a forthcoming mea- tuition rates and eventually
sure being worked out by gain legal status.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, DWhile' some Republi cans
Mass.. and . Sen. Chuck are as progressive on immi Hagel. R-Neb. , all owin g gration issues as most
immigrants who ha ve been in Democrat s. the GOP has a
the country for fi ve years, significant nativist win g callhave paid taxes for three and ing for the de ni al of public
have taken Engli sh in struc- services to ill egal s. Some of
tion to get legal work permits. them eve n opposed a bill
The immi grant s' spouses helping illegal s servin g in the
and children al so would gain military in Iraq to become
lega l status. The immigrants citizen s.
GOP pollst er Ed Geoas.
would haveto,pay a fee of up
to $1 ,000 to finan ce adminis- who has done extensive
tration of the program by the polling on immi gration, say s
Department of Homeland he's convinced that Bu sh and
Security.
White Hou se political ndvi sA less· permissive version er Karl Ro ve are eager to
of the Kennedy bill was take steps to~ard liberalizaintroduced by three Arizona tion. but are wai ting until
Republi can s · (S en. John homeland security and ceoMcCain, Rep. Jim Kolbe and nomi c conditi ons are better.
Anoth.er key GOP strateRep. Jeff Flake) containing a
longer waiting period · for gist says, 'we have to rev isit
temporary workers to gain it. It's a bi g issue in battlework permits and no provi- ground states like New
sian for family.
Mexico and Florida.' Bush
· Kennedy and Sen. Larry had be st not wait too long.
Craig, R-ldaho, along with
(Morli!ll
Kol1{/racke is
Rep. Howard Berman, D- exewri 1•e ediJor of Roll Cali.
Calif., am! Rep. Chris rh e newspaper of Capitol
Cannon , R-Utah. are spon- Hill.)

Other business

Local Briefs
Retraction
Due to a computer glitch at
the Meig s County Court
office, John H. Ginther was
reported to have been recently convicted of DUI in Meigs
County Court. The Daily
Sentinel reported the incorrect information provided by
the Court in the Oct. 15 edition.

OU mobile unit
bringing flu
vaccine to
Meigs County
REEDSVILLE The
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OUCOM)
Childhood
Immunization
Program
(CHIP), a mobile health program , will be at the Meigs
County Public
Library,
Eastern Branch on Route 7
(Eastern High School) to give
flu shots Fnday.
All adults age 50 years or
older or anyone under age 50
who has a serious long-term

•

A

5ECOND-STRIN6

MONDAY MoRNlN6
QUARTER8ACK.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address ·
t_Jnd telephone num~er. No unsigned letters will '
pe published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below
are the cons~nsus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

BY GENE LYONS

Shortly before Sept. II ,
200 I,
a
worldly-wise
philosopher on the seacoast
of Maine made me a prediction.
'Remember where you
heard it,' he said. 'George W.
Bush will never run for a second term. He'll resign the
presidency. It's his life story :
His father's friends get him a
job he doesn't deserve, he
screws it up, somebody else
takes the blame , he quits.
then his father's friends buy
him a bigger job he doesn't
deserve and he does it all
over again.'
It's true the man has always
failed upward . .Bush even
messed up his cushiest job
ever, as the Texas Rangers'
'owner.' In -reality, he was
like a glorified Wal-Mart
greeter, a minority shareholder playing tycoon in the box
seats. Even so, he had a role
in the worst trade of the
1990s, sending Sammy Sosa
to Chicago for the equivalent
of $49.95 and a litter of kittens. As a happy Cubs fan,
perhaps I should show more
. gratitude.
The obviou s problem with
predicting hi s resignation,
however, is that there are no
bigger jobs for sale than presid~nt_pf tile United States.
B~ldn't quit without
admitting abj ect failure.
~ a ine s
Unlike Lyndon
Johnson, the last Texan in the
White House, there's nO indication he's got the intestinal
fortitude . So I rang ilp my
Down East friend to :see if
he'd revised the forecast.

Returning my call after a
hard day of tending his lobster pots, he was even more
emphatic.
'Read any newspapers lately?' he asked. 'He'll cut and
run.'
I remain dubious. Still, it's
good Bu sh doesn't read
newspapers or' watch TV
news, as he told Fox News
recently, relying upon briefings by his trusty aides. The
evidence of hi s failures is all
over the front page. Even as
the jobless economic recovery continued, consumer
confidence
dropped.
Pov erty level s have risen
sharply on Bush's watch;
Americans are losing health
in surance in record num bers .. Poll s show near
majoritie s agreeing that
Bush is 'in over his head.'
But it's fallout from Bush's
excellent adventure. in Iraq
that's causing him the most
trouble. Months after he
·swaggered across an aircraft
carrier under a banner readin'g ' Mission Accomplished,'
Americans continue to kill
and die there . Meanwhile, the
administration can't keep its
story straight. For mmiths,
the White House insisted that
a forthcoming report by U.S.
arm s inspector David Kay
would tell -us a.bout Saddam
Hussein's vaunted weapons
of mass destruction . Now
they say it may never be
released .
Au stralian journalist John
Pilger found a videotape of'
Secretary of State Coli~
Powe'll telling diplomats in
Cairo in early 200 I that the
United States had Saddam in

a box : 'He has not developed
any si gnificant , capabi lity
with respect to weapons of
mass destruction,' Powell
said. ·He is unable to project
conventional power against
his nei ghbors.'
Without explaining how a
country powerless to menace
Jordan posed a threat to the
United States. Bush and
Powell alibied that Sept. II
had changed the equation.
Except that Bush had recentJy. admitted that 'we've had
no evidence that Saddam
Hussein was involved with
Sept. II .'
Made after a blustering
performance on ''Meet the
Press' by Vice Pre sident
Dick ·Cheney, the belated
confession must have come
as news to the reported 69
percent of Ameri can s who
had been . encouraged to
think Saddam bore pe.rsonal
responsibility.
Indeed,
Bush's March 18, 2003", letter to Congress justifying
war sugF.ested that Iraq was
a~nong those nation s, orgamzatwn s, or person s who
planned, · authorized ,' commined, or aided the terrori st
attack s that occurred on
September II , 2001. '
. With Americans still reeling from the'$87 billion price
tag to pay Bush and Chene,y's
pal s ~ t Halliburton and
Bechtel to rebuild Iraq, the
president's speech at the
United Nations was received
coldly. Calling
people
ingrates and cowards, then
asking them to risk lives and
treasure cleaning,up' the mess
you've made is generally a
poor marketing strategy.

'
..

~

Me anwhile . bureaucratic
warfare has broken out all
over Washington. The HouseIntelligence
Committee
rebuked CIA director George
Tenet for his agen~y' s role in
touting Iraq' s nonexistent
WMDs.
The
Defen se
Intelligence Agency faulted '
the Pentagon's - i.e. Donald
Rumsfeld and Cheney's credulou s,. reliance upon
omagmary mtelhgence' from
defectors affi liated with
Iraqi
Ahmad Chalabi's
National Congress.
But the story that has
Washington journalists all
worked up is what some see
as Tenet's revenge: the CIA's
insistence upon a criminal
investigation to determine
which White !-louse operatives fingered Ambassador
!oseph Wi lson's wife Valerie
Plame as a spy to columnist
Robert Novak.
The proverbi al 'senior
admini stration official ' told
The Washington Post it was
done ' purely and simply
for revenge' over Wilson's ,
role in expos ing the administration's phony claim that
Iraq sou ght to buy African
uranium . Six other journalosts were reportedl,y also
told.
Whi.ch means two things to .
me: FoTSt; the leak was calculated and deli berate; second,
scores of media insiders
already know the Jeaker's,
identit1f and suspect that the
scandal may reach very .close
to the top.
(Gene Lyons is a Little
Rock, Ark., autl10r and recipien_t of the National Magazine
.Award.)

.

Lane closure
announced

ner will be served from 4 to 7
p.m. Saturday by the Scipio
Volunteer Fire Department at
the Harri sonville headquilrMARIETTA - The ·ohio ters. The public is invited to
Department of Transportation ,the fundrai ser.
announces that there will be a · ·
tunnel replacement, approximutely 3.7 mile s south of
Marietta. that will result in
the closure of one northbound Jane of State Route 7
POMEROY - The Hunnel
with no width restriction in reunion will be held from
the pass ing lane . The project,
12:30 to 4:30 p.m. on Nov. 2
located in front of Chevron at
the Pomeroy Senior .
Phillips, will begin Saturday,
Citizens
Center. A buffet will
Nov. I, and is .scheduled for
be
served.
All relatives and
completion Nov. 30.
friends are invited.

Reunion
annOUnCed

Democrats meet Chili dinner
POMEROY
Meigs
County
Democratic to benefit
Executive Committee will God's Net
meet at 7 p.m. on Thursday at
Carpenters Hall. The public
is invited.

POMEROY- The annual
chi! i dinner held to raise
money for the children's food
program at God's Net will be
held there Friday.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS _
Dinners will be served
Tuppers
Plain s-Chester from 4.to 7 p.m. at a cost of
Water District has issued a $4 for adults and $2 for chilboil· advi sory for customers dren. The public is invited to
on Ohio 681 , from Pine Tree attend. Tickets are available
health problem can get a shot Drive to, and including, Rye
for $ l 2 or Medicare can be Road, due to a leak in a main at the door or from any
Rotarian. The menu will be
billed if a Medicare card is line .
chili,
a sandwich, and dessert.
presented . Shots will be
Customers are asked to boil
given from II :30 am to I :00 their cooking and drinking There will be no charge to
pm
water for three minutes any children who attend
God's Net program on a regThe clinic s are provided before il is consumed.
by OU-COM Childhood
The district has lifted a boil ular basis.
In announcing the fund
Immunization
Program's advisory issued for Calaway
raiser,
Don Yaughan noted
community mObile health Ridge in Orange Township
unit and the Ohio Department and Brister Road in Carthage that next year's chili dinner
of Health in cooperation with Township in Athens County. will be held at the Mulberry
Community Center where the
the
County
Health .
Department, AHEC, and the
program will move in early site sponsors. For more
2004. He said that the club is
information about the immuseeking a Rotary Foundation
nization program residents
grant to assist with remodelmay call toll free 1-800-844HARRISONVILLE - A ing the old school into a comcreamed baked chicken dino munity center.
2654.

Will Bush resign?

Boil advisories

Dinner to be ·
served

For the Record
Marriage licenses
.'

POMEROY -Marriage
licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Timothy Ray Caldwell, 25 ,
Middleport, and Lori Beth
McGhee, 29, Middleport;
Jeffrey B'ruce Smith, 30,
Racine, and Catherine Elaine
Nicole Stark, 21, Sandyville,
W.Va.; Randall R. Carpenter,
Jr., 32. Middleport, and Ro~a ·
Lynn Bush, 38, Middlepon;
Jeffery Lee Ridgway, 46,
Pomeroy, and Bettina Renee
Smith, 42, Gallipolis; Oennis ·
J. Riffle, 45, Pomeroy, and
Christina M. Wil son,' 37,
Pomeroy; Harry Lee Leflle,
63, Pomeroy, and Barbara
Lee Allen, 55, Pomeroy;
Robert Jayson Codner, :30,
Portland: and Janice Helene
Rochelle Richard, 21 , Long
Bottom; Charles Lee . Kiser,
71 , Pomeroy, and Margaret
.

•

{

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Village Council requested . Three District 10 employees·
to make street safer
compete at Director's Cup Roadeo

Olive Smith

Moderately Confused
I~

,

2003

Sentenced

Jane Lewis, 55, Pomeroy;
Brent Eugene Shupe, 18,
Bidwell, and Michelle Lynn
Drenner, 19, Pomeroy.

Civil suits
POMEROY - A foreclosure action has been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Green Tree
Financial
Servicing,
Columbus, against Ralph J .
Day, S,r., Racine, and others,
alleging default on a mangage agreement in the
amount of $25 ,516.57.
A personai injury lawsuit
has been filed by Roger D.
Arnold, Pomeroy, again st
Koriel F. Carter, Middleport,
and others .
A foreclosure has been
granted to Greenpoint Credit
Corp ., against Tracey L.
Fletcher, _and others. ·
"

fromP&amp;g$A1
were in the home at the time
of the attack, according .to the
victim's testimony.
Later the same day, the victim drove JYm to a Columbus
hospital to seek psychiatric
treatment before reporting
the rape to medical and Jaw
enforcement authorities, she
said at a preliminary hearing
earlier this year.
According to the victim's
testimony, the couple had
separated shortly before the
incident occurred, and a
restraining order had been
issued against Fetty.
Following the sentencing
hearing ye,sterday, Fetty was
remanded to the custody of
the sheriff, for transport to
the Orient Reception Center,
where he will begin his 18month sentence.

STAFF REPORT

POMEROY - Snow and
ice season is not just a job
for employees of the Ohio
Departmen t
of
Transportation . It's a competition between . coworkers
and an individual challenge.
Each year. ODOT employees fro m each of Ohio's 12
districts part ici pate in thei r
own district Roadeo - an
obstacle course of. road
cones that challenge the skill
of ODOT's best . snow plow
and loader operators.
Thi s yea r. Morgan and
Meigs Counties rose to the
top at the District I0 competiuon with Terry Kidd, Scott
Meadows and Dan Davis
netting wins. and thereby
advancing to the Direttor's
Cup state competit-ion held
recently in Columbus.
Dan Davis and Terry Kidd
took part ·in the snow plow
competition, ·and Meadows
and Kictd participated in the
loader competition . All
placed in the upper half of
the state . but Meadows
shined in the loader coinpeti-

Meigs County nat1ve Dan Davis , left, and Morgan County
native Terry Kidd . right. pa rt icipate in the ODOT statewide
snow plow competition.
ti on and placed &gt;econJ overall. He wi ll advance to. the
nationals.
"All three of District 10\
state level partici pants did a
fi ne job and represented
their counties well ... sa id
Di strict I 0 Deputy Director
George M. Collin s. "Di strict

10 i' fortunate ttl ha,·e
employees like thi ' to 'erYc
the trave li ng public . We are
sincerely proud or them amJ
their accompli,hment&gt; ."
Di,trict I0 ~ rve' Athens.
Gallia.
Hocking. Meig,.
Monroe. Morgan. Noble. Yinwn
and Washington Countie&gt;.

ROMINES EARNS BADGES
RACINE
Ashley
Romines of Rac ine , a member of Girl Scout Junior
Troop 1276 earned the necessary requirements for two
badges relating to Caring for
Children and Model Citi zen
badges. She earned her Sign
of the Star and the Junior
Leadership Pin.
She completed 15 hours of
service by holding a book
dri ve for Serenity House.
She collected and cleaned
211 books. for children and
53 books for women. The 15
hours also included planning
her pr(lject, shopping for
supplies, calling friends and
family for donations of used
books, and cleaning and
repairing books.
She delivered the books to
Hilda Stotts, Serenity House
director.
"I learned children every-

Ash ley Romines. a member of Juntor Gi rl Scout Troop 1276.
recently donated 264 books to Serenity House . as part of
her Caring fo r Children and Model Citizen badges. She presents the books to Hilda Stotts of Se re nity House .
where should be surrounded .. Readin g opens up a whole
·
by books," Romines said . new world.of learnin g."

Three-car crash injures.two, blocks traffic
BY

J.

MtLES LAYTON

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - A three-car
pile-up injured two people and
delayed traffic in both directions for more than an hour
Wednesday on West Main
Street in front of Pizza Hut.
According to Pomeroy
police, Carol Clark, 41, of
Point Pleasant was driving a
1993 Saturn west on Main
Street toward Middleport
when she stopped. A 1994
Plymouth driven by David A.
Kucsma, 51 of Racine behind
her also stopped, but the third
vehicle, a 1997 Ford Explorer,
driven by Jodi R, Ervin, 23.
failed to stop and crashed into
the back of Kucsma's vehicle
sending it into the back of
Clark's vehicle.
Goldie Willett, 57, of
Point Pleasant, who was a
passenger in Clark's vehicle,
and Kucsma were both

Proud to be apart of
· · your life.
Suba!:ribe todAy ' 992·
-2155

740-753-3400

MOVIES

1 0 . . .~.

M.il~t~

Oct. 1&amp;1~

transported to Ple asant
Valley hospital for treatment
of injuries.
Poli ce reports describe
Clark ·s ve hicle as sustaining
moderate damage. Kucsma ·s
vehicle was heav il y damaged and Ervin 's ve hic le
received light damage from
the crash.
Pomeroy Police corporal
Ronnie. Spaun conducted the
investigation ass isted by
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
Proffitt Er.vin was charged

with failing to mai nt ain
ass ured clear distanL·e. '
Proffin said trallic wa.'
blockea t&lt;1r at lea.~t an hour anJ
20 minutes while res.:ue c-rew&gt;
worl&lt;ed and the vehi cles were
cleared. He said the accideni
caused vehicles to be lxtckecl up
on the Pomeroy-Ma..on bridge
fiom Pomeroy to M a~m. Proffin
said the Pomeroy Police
Department received seveml
phone calls from nerYou'
motorists who were on the
bridge.

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or Mason and
· enroll now.

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992-2136.

tor. info.
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PageA6

NATION •
Piiot investigated for
possibly falling asleep in
·ferry crash that kills 1Q
!fle Daily Sentinel

NEW YORK (A P) Police were investigating
whether a Staten Island ferry
pilot fell aslee p during a routine trip across a windy New
York Harbor before the
mighty vessel slammed into a
pier, killing 10 people and
mJunng at least 42 others,
incl uding three who lost limbs.
The pilot bolted the scene
~o quickl y that he left behind
his gear and hi s ke ys. then
broke into his house where he
slit his wrists and shot himself with a pel let gun, a law
enforcement source told The
Associated Press.
. The pi lot, identified by the
source as Richard Smith, was
in criti ca l condition after
surgery at St. Vincent's
Hospital, the same pl.ace
where 22 victims - including at least one amputee were rushed after the 3:20
p.m. crash, the city's worst
mass transit accident in at
least a generation.
"The · scene was total
chaos," said passenger Frank
Corchado, 29, of Staten
Island, recounting a tableau
of horrific sights: a decapitated man , a le~l ess woman, a
fellow passenger bleeding
from his eyes.
"There was a lady wirhour
legs. right in the middle of
the boat," he sa id . "She was
screaming. You ever see anything like that?"
A co-worker told authorities that Smith hall been
as leep. slumped over the contro ls, the law enforcement
source told the AP. He was
being represented by an attarney, said police , who
obtain ed a sample of hi s
blood for testi ng. Telephone
messages left at his home
were not returned.
The fe rry's crew was to be
interviewed and tested for
drugs and alcohol . said
Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Thursday, October t6,

RIVERSIDE. Calif. (AP) luncheon in Fresno and a
- President Bush is promis- dinner · fund -raiser here,
ing to share with California bringing his overall re-elecGov.-Elect
. Arnold lion war .chest. to roughly
Schwarzenegger hts opu- $84 mtlhon . .
mism for a· safer world and
While Bush came to talk
an econom ic recovery as he about the economy and
embarks on a tour of Asia eve.nts in postwar Iraq,
that will focus on trade and Mideast violence hung over
the war on terror.
his visit. Three Americans
Bush and Schwarzenegger were killed in the bombing
were to meet privately in the of a U.S. diplomatic convoy
president's hotel suite here in the Gaza Strip.
on Thursday before they
Since Sept. II, 200l, "te_rboth head for nearby San ronsts have taken hves _m
Bernardino, where Bush was Casab lanca,
Mombasa.
to give a speech designed to Jerusalem, Amman , Riyadh,
set the stage for his Asia trip. Baghdad, Karachi,' ' New ,
Schwarzenegger was to Delhi, Bali. Jakarta," Bush
~aid in a speech in the cenintroduce him.
"I understand t~ere have tral California town of
been a couple of changes Dinuba outside a food prohere in California since 1ast ducin g company. "Today.
time I was around," Bush American s died as the result
joked at a fund-raiser of a terrorist attack in Gaza ."
Wednesday evening.
Warning that .terrorists still
The state has undergone pose a danger, Bush said:
an .extreme penod ot pohp- "They continue to plot. They
cal turbulence between continue to plan against our
Bush's 2000 loss here to country and our people .
Democrat AI Gore , and the America must not forget the
recall earlier this month of lessons of Sept. II ."
•
Bush's speech-was his last
Democratic Gov .. Gray
Davts and the .elecuon of event in California before
Republican Schwarzenegger • . leaving on a six-country trip
to replace htm.
to Asia and Australia, stopBush is hoping that an ping first in Japan.
alliance with the movie
He got some good news
actor turned GOP pohttctan ahead of his visit to Tokyo
':'II help htm bm.ld re-elec- _ Japan's pledge for $1.5
II?n s upport m the state , billion in the coming year
Wllh liS huge pnze of 55 of for recon struct ion projects
the 270 electoral votes need- in Iraq . and poss ibly as
ed for victory.
much as $5 billion over the
The presid ent said that next four years.
meetmg ~chwarzen.~gger
Bush said Japan's commit would be an ~onor and ment would provide aid for
satd he was lookmg forward immediate reconstruction
to it.
needs there.
Bush netted some $1.75
"I applaud thi s bold step
million with a fund-raising which will help mobilize

~ ~e:~~~~.'
·Meigs .·
County .···
·informea · ·

Feeding. tube removed from comatose
woman ·at center of long-running legal battle

international su pport tor
efforts to b~ild a stable,
peaceful and democratic
Iraq," he said. "Japan recogni zes that this effort is crit ica1 to sec un.1y an d peace not
.
d h M'ddle
only Ill Iraq an 1 e 1
East. but also for Japan and
throu ghout the world ."
Still, Japan's pledge fell
considerably short of its $13
billion contribution to help
finan ce the 19 9 1 Gulf War.
:
..
, with
Bush was t o me.t .
Japanese Pmne Mtm s t~r
Junichuro Koizumi for pn,
vate. talk s and a dinner.
Bu sh's trip is anchored
around the Oct. 20-2 1 Asia
Economic
Pacifi c
Cooperation
forum
in
Bangkok , Thailand.
He stops in hpan on
Friday &lt;md Saturday. the
Philippines on- Saturday,
Thailand throu gh Oct. 2 1.
Singapore and Indonesia on
Oct. 22 and Australia on
Oct. 22-23.
Ahead of Tllllrsday 's
meeting
with
Schwarzen egger. Bu sh sa id,
"I can't wait to ta lk to him .
about why I' believe that
America is on the right path,
is on the path to making sure
thi s natio'n is secure and the
world is more fre e and
peaceful. is on the right path
w make sure our fe ll ow citizens can find a job.
"I'm optimistic. tmd I have
reason to be optimistic. Our
country ha~ overcome a lot during the last couple of years."

!

Halesh M'. Patel
MD, FACP

INfERNAL MEDIONE I

MEDICAL ONCOLcx::;y
530 West Union Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
Phone: 74Q-592-5918
Office Hours: 8 am- 5 pm (Mon- Fri)

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Gallia • .@&amp;-2342
Meigs·• 992-2156

I

8Y HAL KNEEN

Special to the Sentinel
Ohio's top agronomic
crops (corn and soy beans) are
outperforming e~pectations
with near record yields . Ohio
Agri c ul~ur a l
Statistical
Service's September report is
predi"Cting state average
yields of 145 bushels of corn
and ·44 .bushels of soybeans.
Early freezes throughout
Ohio may reduce the soybean
harvest a little, especially in
the mid-June soybean plantings. as late setting beans do
not properly fill out. Ohio
State Univers ity Exten sion
Specialist, Jim Beuerlein,
attributes the second highest
yield in Ohio history to "...
we . had a lot of good things
happen to us - that's . no
weeds, good stands and
despite of a lot of rain , it was
good rainfall distribu'tion ".
What does this mean. to our
local farmers?
First of all , corn prices
should be stable compared to
last year. Secondly. soybean
prices will increase over laM
year even with higher expected yields in Ohio. Soybean
prices are expected to reach
nearly $7 per bushel by Spring
2004 due to low US inventory
quantities and high demand.
The unknown , is the amount
of soybeans to be harvested in
Brazil in Spring 2004.
Thirdly, good management purchase high quality seed,
apply proper herbicides for
.your weed problem and being
prepared to plant when Spring
arrives will assist in producing

•

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DOWN ON THE FARM
Alabama farmers use ancient
Ohio's top -agronomic
crops nearing rec~rd y.ields sea wat~r to _grow jumbo shrimp

The Daily Sentinel

Bush optimistic on economy ahead ~f
meeting with gov-elect and trip to As1a

The crewmembers referred nearby' apartment complex.
investigators to their union "They had ,no control to ' top
the boat."
lawyers.
The 300-foot craft was carCorc hado said it felt as if
ry ing an estimated 1,5 00 peo- the ferry accelerated as it
ple, 36 of whom were treated approached land , waking him
at the scene or were immedi- as he napped on the trip
ately taken to hospitals. Six home. He ran away from the
others walked away injured front of the boat to safety.
and went to hospital s later.
"My soul's killing me a little
Corchado said he tried to bit ," he 'aid.
hel p as many people as possiAt Staten Island University
bl e get out. Witnesses said Hospital , two victims with
some jumped into the wind- amputations were among
swept 62-degree water and those brought in from the
others ran as the pier chewed ferry, said spokeswoman
up the side of the boat.
"Most of the people who Arleen Ryback. Others · were
died were older people. I suffering from back and
believe, who couldn' t move or spinal injuries, one victim ·
didn't have enough-time to get reported chest pains and one
out of the way." Corchado said. had hypothermia. ·
Ferry service was immediThe victims were seated in
the wi ndow seats on the front ately shut down, forcing thouright side of the Andrew J. sands of rush h~ur commuters
Barberi ferry. Some of the to head for buses and taxis.
injured were pulled from the Service was to resume in time
. rubb le by rescue workers: for the Thursday morning
the
city's
one of the dead was found in rush, said
Department of Transportation,
the water off Staten Island.
Evan Robinson. a musician which maintains the fleet of
waiting for a ferry on Staten seven vessels.
Island on Wednesday, said he
The tragedy occurred on a
watched as the craft suddenly day when the city was
veered crazily. Two other focu sed on the New York
witnesses satd the ferry Yankee s-Boston Red Sox
appeared to speed up when 'it playoff ga me. Bloomberg
should have slowed clown for was at the game when he
doc kin g.
heard the news and rushed to
"I looked on in disbelief," Staten Island.
Robinson said. "I said, 'Oh, _ "People who were on the
my God, he 's going to · way home, all of a sudden,
crash ....
us," said
The cause of tl1e crash offi- taken from
who
announced
Bloomberg,
cia lly remained unknown.
The National Transportation the deaths atler touring the
Safety Board convened an splintered wood, twisted steel
accident investigation· team and shattered glass aboard
' to lead the onsite inquiry. The the ferry.
The fe rry is among .the
team was to examine weathcity's
most beloved insfitu er, among other factors.
Winds were gusting up to tion s, providing free rjdes ·
40 mph when the accident and offering a spectacular
view of New York Harbor. lt
occurred.
''The ferry was coming too carries 70,000 commutersper
fast," said witness William day between Staten Island
Gonzalez, who llv es in a and lower Manhattan.

said their legal remedies have water into her stomach.
PINELLAS PARK, Ra. Doctors have testified that
The feeding tube keeping a been exhausted.
"I am not a doctor, I am not the noi ses and facial expres~verely brain-damaged woman
alive was removed Wednesday, a lawyer. But I know that if a "sions Terri Schiavo makes are
all but ending an epic, 10-year person can be abl e to sustain · reflexes and do not indicate
legal battle between her hus- life without li fe support, that that she has enough . mental
band and her parents.
should be tried," the governor capabilities to communicate
- Terri Schiavo, 39, had the said, addi ng the "ultimate with others .
tube removed at .the Tampa decision of this is in .the
The Florida Supreme Court
Bay-area hospice where she · courts."
has twice refused to hear the
has lived for several years, said
Family members held out case. and it also has been
her father, Bob. Schindler. hope that they could save her rejected for revie\Y by fhe
Attorneys representing her hus' life and were heartened by the U.S. Supreme Court. On
band, Michael Schiavo. said it governor's last-minute effort. Tuesday. a Florida appeals
will take between a week and
Schiavo' s fam ily members court again refused to block
io days for her to die,
believe she is capabl e of removal of the tube.
: The parents want Terri learning how to cat and drink
The Schindlers first sought
Schiavo to live , and her hus- on her owrr and say she has to remove Michael Schiavo
band says she would rather shown signs of trying to com- as his wife's guardian in i 993
die.. She has been in a vegeta- municate and could be reha- after a falling out over her
tive state since· 1990, when bilitated.
medical care. They say he
ber heart stopped because of
· Michael Schiavo says he is now has a conflict of interest
.what doctors said may have carrying out his wife 's wishes because he is engaged to
'een a chemical imbalance.
that she not be kept alive arti- another woman and they
: Bob Schindler said he and ficially.
have a child together.
his wife, Mary, went in to see
Fe los has said that the
The family has also leyeled
their .daughter shortly after Schindlers were "still in allegation s that Michael
the tube was removed and denial" over Terri Schiavo's Schiavo has abused Terri
gave her a kiss and hugged wishes not to be kept ali ve Schiavo, although the accuber. He said his daughter was
with the tube, an IV-like satidns have not been sub~ot as respo nsive as they
device
that pumps food and stantiated.
elaim she normally has been.
~ Michael Schiavo and hi s
attorney George . Fe los were
not immediately available for
eomment after the removal of
Lhe tube.
.
: Several right-to-die cases
across the nation have been
fought in the courts in recent
years. but few, if any; have
been th.is drawn-out and bitter. The tangled case has
~!ready been handled by 19
separate judges. and at one
· ~oint two years ago a judge
11rdered the tube removed.
OPEN Monday thru Friday
Feeding was later resumed
8:00 a.~. - 9:00 p.m.
based' on new evidence.
: About 100 protesters 'stood"
Saturday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
the
hospice
gutside
Sunday - Closed
Wednesday· in what has
become a 24-hou~ vi gi I
. :!!aged by advocates for the
disabled and anti-abortion
qctivists. Th.e ~e has diaw!l
i;.nternational attention for the
j:jerceness of the family fight.
: The tube removal. came just
HOU RS
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
&amp;ours after Gov. Jeb Bush
Man
fri
Bam - 9pm
Charles Rifne, R. Ph .
~ld the Schindlers that he
Sal. Bam - 5 pm
9/as instructing his legal staff
Sun CLOS[O
I !Hast Main 51 reel
It&gt; find some means to block a
Court order allowing Michael
Pomeroy, Ohio
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
Schiavo to end hi s wife's life .
Open Weeknights 'Till9 • Friendly Service
fven the family 's lawyerhas'"

2003

PageA7

Thursday, Octobel' 16, 2003

MOSSES. Ala. !APJ
eliminating bugs and disAlabama farmers are tapeased plants from being taken
ping into an ancient ocean to
into
storage.
Other
gardeners
harvest
shrimp - an enter***
Homeowners, it is time to overwinter their dahlias and
prise rese~ rchers say cou ld
harvest those tender perenni- cannas with the soil still surbe the key to. future jobs in
als: tuberous begonias, can- rounding the root structures
the depressed region.
nas, dahlias and gladiolus. especially when· stored. in
Lee Jackson Jr. and Bruce
These perennials need to be. garages, insulated tool sheds
"B.T. " Durham are usi ng
taken mto our heated base- and cellars. For further inforsaltwater that was trapped
ments or garages for overwin- mation on caring for tender .
underground from an ocean
tering after ftost has killed perenni als ask for Ohio State
that covered much of what is
their top foliage and flowers. University Extension fact
now Alabama 80 million
"Summer
Some local homeowners say sheet #1 244,
years ago .
their cannas and ~ladiolus Flowering Bulbs".
"They said we were nuts."
.survive outside. Tht s is true
Durham
said.
•
·· ~Annual Fall
for those gardens close to the
Gardeners, the
But Durham and Jackson
house and near the moderat- Plant Exchange is being held
didn 't. look so crazy last
ing effects of the Ohio River. October 2 1 at the Meigs
week as they completed
However in cold years, when County Senior Cit izen Center · their third harves t of large
soi Is are frozen to a depth of from II a.m. to I p.ni . Join
Pacific white legged shrimp
eight to twelve inches, these . the Ohio State University
from two po nds in rural
plants will die out.
Extension Master Garden.ers
Lowndes County. about I SO
In general, dig the tender as they present care and
miles inland from the Gulf
perennials with care as we propagation of plants foi'
of Mexico.
want to remove the root/stem lowed by the plant exchange.
The _harvest could yield up
storage structure that has
Seed. divisions and cut· to 20,000 pounds .of the
grown below the soil surface . tings are available to· all parjumbo-sized crustaceans.
These structures are different. ticipants from the Master
. "Being grown in a pond.
for each perennial : tuberous Gardeners' homes and whatI'm su;pri sed how good they
begonia - tuber, canna - rhi- ever you bring to exchange.
are. I ve eaten Florida
zome, dahlia - tuberous root There is no charge for the
shrimp and these seem to
plants.
Just
bring
what
you
and gladiolu s - corm. After
have a better taste ," said 7 1-.
digging. remove dead and have an excess of and take
year-old . Betty Pitts. who
dying foliage from the over- home new plants for your
works at the farm during the
home or yard. If possible,
wintering storage structure.
harvest. washing and weighRemember that in the case label your plants using their
ing the catch.
of dahlias a four to six inch common name, if unknown.
The farm is one of six in
stem must be attac hed to the the MasJer Gardeners will
Alabama·:s Black Belt where
tuberous root as this is where identify the plant for · you.
farmers are tapping into the
next year 's buds sprout from. The exchange is open to the
underground pool of saltwaFor tuberous begonias and public. Last year over I 00
ter to grow shrimp. Durham
gladiolu s remove all soil varieties of plants were given
said if the shrimp prove to
from the root storage struc- away to over fifty gardeners.
be a success, the saltwater
1
could be used to grow other
tures. In the case of cannas Plan on joining the fun
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
delict~ cies. such as redfish,
and dahlias there are two
Agricu/l!lre
&amp;
snapper and crawfi sp.
lines of thought as to storing Cow1ty
them. Personally, my belief is Nataral Resour-ces Agent,
Researchers say that in the
future, shrimp could become
to remove all soi I from the Ohio
University
State
a new industry for chroniroot storage structures, thus Extension.)
cally depressed Lowndes
and Greene counties, with
good crops even in a. unusual
weather patterned year.

PITTSBURGH (AP) The Douglas firs· and
Colorado spruces at E-Mar
Acres Tree Farm are looking
!all and plush.
: That's a welcome sight for
owner Ron Mancabelli, who
wasn't able to market half of
· his trees last year because of
a vicious spring freeze at his
farm in Saltsburg, about 30
miles east of Pittsburgh.
"I look for. the Christmas
trees to be very nice this
year," said Mancabelli, 62.
Around the Mid-Atlantic,
Christmas tree farmers say
above average spring and summer rairlfaU - combined with
this week's timely cold snap
needed to put trees into dormancy - should produce a vibrant
crop this holiday season.
Farmers in Pennsylvania.
as well as those in Virginia
and +lorth Carolina, say they
expect this year's trees to be
greener and to have needles
that will stay on the branch
longer. They say fewer
seed lings died, more buds
broke out and some species
grew twi ce their normal
growth rate .
Trees that had been damaged by frost have since
mended their wounds.
"You look at last year and
then you look at this year and
.say, 'Hey, they''re pretty
.good,"' said Jim Kriston,
owner of Musser Forests
wholesaler in Indiana, Pa.
While Christmas trees are
'grown in all states, Oregon,
North
Carolina,
·Pennsylvania,
Michigan,
Washington and Wisconsin
.lire the nation's top producers
ln the $441.6 million industry, according to .the U.S.
.,Department of Agriculture's
"1997 agriculture statistics,
1he most recent available,

The National Christmas executives at Justin couldn' t
DES MOINES. Iowa (AP) ·Mexican government for vice president of the National
Tree Association, which rep- agree on one shoe out of 80.
- Farmers from the United empty promises of fmancial Family Farm Coalition, said
resents 5 ,I 00 industry profes- They arrived at one shoe. All · States and Mexico quickly and technical tfelp.
promoting corporate farming
sionals, cautions that many ihey had to say '\Vas, · 'That' s
found
·
common
ground,
American
farmers
were
has al'so taken its toll on the
factors from soil to disease cool., .
blaming their respective gov- equally critical of the U.S. environment, leading to
Ashley Ballard, a senior
contribute to the health of
policies, overplanting, contaminated
emments for policies that fail government's
trees. The group said that. in and president of the FFA
to help the family farmer.
which they say support cor- waterways and erosion .
general, weather patterns in chapter ,at Joshua High
'The erosion of the human
A dozen farm and rural porate farming through tax
the summer won't affect trees School south of Fort Worth,
. life organizations banded breaks and subsidies but are spirit is even worse," he
that go into harvest this year. said she hopes the boot
together at a forum Monday, unfriendly to family farmers. said. "This places a minusBut Rusty Barr, one of the attracts more students to the
sponsored by the National
"The U.S. government value on food. When there's
owners of Barr Evergreens in organization. She plans to
Catholic
Rural
Life busically wants t.o turn us minus-value on food then
Crumpler, N.C., said that buy a pair.
Conference, hoping to create into tractor drivers and barn- there's also a minus value of
"Now that you see the
after several years of poor
enough critical mass to force yard jani tors." said Chris the person producing it and
growth and with production fliers and hear more about the
government leaders to listen. Petersen, of Clear Lake, vice thi s destroys the dignity on
• down as much as I 5 percent boot, I get to say. ' I helped
"We have been struggling president of the Io wa those who have no value."
last year, the 300·acre whole- with that,"' Ballard said.
for years to make family farm- Farmers Union . "Rural
Dr. Armando Bartra. a social·
There are about 60,000
saler .hope s for production
ing an option that will provide America is dying on the agist with the Mayan Institute
just 2 to 5 percent below nor- FFA members in Texas and
our families with dignity and a vi ne . We need to change."
for Rural Developmen~ sai&lt;!
465,000 across the country
. nnal this year.
just livelihood ... but we have
John Kinsman. a southern those emotions run just as high
Some trees grew upward of - all potential customers.
to be given a chance," said Wisconsin dairy farmer and in his country.
The new boot resembles
. 2 feet where they normally
· leader
Miguel of
Aqgel
gai n just I foot, he said.
· Justin's Work Boot, which
the Colunga,
Chihuahua.a - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
sold
more
than
I
million
'They look the best they
Mexico-based Democratic
have in the past four or five pairs in the United States,
Peasant Front, a 4,000-mem:
Watson said.
years," Barr said.
ber farmer organization.
The lace-up boot will come
Colunga said the North
FORT WORTH. Texas jn men's and women's styles
American
Free Trade '
(AP) - Shoe deals usually in brown and black. It will
Agreement allows the
benefit top athletes. but feature a gold tab on the side,
United States to export subsidized grain at prices that
Justin Boot Co . put the other the letters "FFA'' in blue, and
make it impossible for
foot forward i11 agreeing to have seams on the toe.
The
boot,
which
will
retail
Mexican
farmers to · comsell the otficial boot of the
for
about
$100
a
pair,
goes
on
pete. He · blamed the
Future Farmers of America.
The boots named for kids sale in November.
who niise and show livestock
will be called Justin FFA
Chukkas. The company said
it would donate $5 from
every pair sold to the group.
"If . they do well. we do
well.'' said Aaron Alejandro.
executive director of the ·
Texas FFA Foundation.
Justin Boot relied on FFA
members at two Fort Wortharea schools to help them
pick from about 80 boot pro·
totypes.
Suggested
"They were brutally hon/~'sl Pritt
est,'' said Randy Watson,
chief executive of parent
company Justin Brands.
• 2 &amp; 3 Piece Living
based in Fort Worth. "Four

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OSHKOSH . Wi s. (AP) Safety classes and betterdesigned eq uipment have
reduced the number of farm'
related deaths in Wi sconsin
in recent years. agriculture

experts say.
Wi sconsi n had 24 farm
deaths last year, the lowest
number in the past II years.
The state had 50 farm death s
in .J992.
"Largely it's education and
tec hnology that are major factors in reilucing· farm deaths
and injuries," said Curt Wilke,
assoeiate outreach safety spe:
.cialist for the University of
Wisconsin-Extension.
Erin Condon. 13. said a
machinery
certification
course offered to children
gave her a safety-conscious
attitude while doi r.g chores
at her rural Oshkosh farm .
"The course made me
realize how dangerous it can
be aro und farm equipment.''
she said.
Al so aiding safety is
newer farm machinery that
is better engineered and
designed.. Wilke said.
"There are roll-over protective structures. additional
shie Ids and guards over
moving pans and an increase
in the use of personal protective eq uipment worn by
farmers using pesticides and
herbicides:· he said.
Farming. though. remain;
a dangerous occupation and
historically ranks in the top
three for work-related fatalities, accordin g to the
National Safety Counci I. Tl)e
council reported 21.3 farm
deaths per I00.000 employees in 200 I. ranking agriculture second behind mining
among all occupations.
"Farmers work very long
hours and take very infrequent breaks." Wilke said.
"It' s easy for them to get.
into a routine and not recognize hazards ."

Rain, cool temperatures bode well Farmers from Mexjco, United States·
for Mid-Atlantic Christmas tree crop discuss common complaints

• Bedroom Suites
• S &amp; 7 Piece Dinettes
• Curios
•.Entertainment Centen

Pharmacy

bu si nesses . popping up to
clean. package. sh ip and sell
the product.
Allen Davi s. an aquaculture professor at Auburn
University, said the Black
Belt is well suited for growing shrimp. partly because
of the salt found in well
water left . over from the
ancient ocean .
."The key component is.
they have low salinity sa ltwater·and very good soil for
ponds." he said.
Inland shrimp farmi ng is in
tile experi mental stage. with
fewer than l (10 farms nationwide.· s::tid Miles Robins•.m.
director of the Alabama
Small Farm Rural Economic
Devel opment te nter at
Tuskegee University.
'The overall concept is to
inspire other small. farmers to
consider. thi s to provide additional reven ue," Robinson
. said. He said the same rich
soil that once made cotton
king in the South is perfect
for grow ing shrimp because
it holds water and its nutrients help give the shrimp a
distinct taste.
.Jackson's father.
Lee
Jackson Sr.. said he has
known about the salt in the
water since the 1950s, when
he developed a rural water
system at nearby Gordonville.
"At that time it w:is bad
for my use. I was looking for
drinking water. We had to go
below the saltwater to get to
water to drink,''· he said.

--

- -''~•" "

0 --~

~ ,.._ ,

.

'

___. , -~··-· M---~---M--·--·-il·---.. -------·MO••O , ,_,,_ ··---h·M ~--.:_...._ ___--·-··-

Vote

YES for the Carleton School

Meigs Industries S-year Levy.
If you' ve ever wanted to make a difference in someone's life. now is your chance. The children and adults
in our community with developmental disabilities are
asking you to vote yes on the upcoming le\&gt;y foro~
simple reason: they want to live their lives to the fullest
- just like you and I do. When you vote Yes for the levy
y,ou' re giving them the chance we all wft.
P»:t b ~ lheeftm ~ lncblriesC~ fur !be l.e\)1. JlmMIMnq, ,....._

..

I

..

�Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 16, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

'

INSIDE
Marlins win NI-CS, Page 82
Prep football picks, Page 83
Scoreboard, Page 84
Lorenzen will start against Ohio, Page 86

Supe1slar Arena lineup to indude Bob the Builder

Bob the Builder .

HUNTINGTON,
W.Va. - Youthfest comes
to
the Big Sandy
·Supe~tore Arena Saturday
with Christian entertainment. Local bands will
kick off the show- Toby
Mac and Kirk Franklin.
Tickets are $15.50 in
advance and $17.50 the
day ofthe show.Tickets are
available
now
at
Ticketmaster locations,
and online at www.ticketmaster.com.
Also coming this month
to the Supe~tore Arena is
an event sure to have every
10hild screaming "Yes · we
can!" Bob the Builder
Livel will come to the
Arena at 7· p.m. Oct. 24.

This will. be · Bob the
Builder's · only West
Vitginia appearance. B&lt;;b
invites children to JOlll
him a5 he s~ and dances
with Wendy and his crew
of fun-loving machines
including Lofty, Muck,
Scoop, Roley, and Dizzy as
they look to rt.msfonn a
junky:.id into a band1tand.
Tickets for Bob the
Builder are on sale now at
the Big Sandy Supmtore
Arena Box Office, all
Ticketmaster locaitons,
and on-line at wwwtick-

!Columbus!
Ohio State
Homecoming
Ill This is Homecoming
weekend at the Ohio State
University and the campus
will be filled with entertainment as the community pours out its Buckeye

Oh, Rocky! Pidure Show coming to Ashland
ASHLAND, Ky. - The
Par~mount Arts Center has a
host of activities planned
throughout fall.
Thjs Friday, blues guitarist
Keb Mo performs bringing
his guitar works to the
Paramount stage. The concert beg.ins at 8 p.m. Tickt;ts
are $32.50 and $24.50.
On Saturday, Elvis impersonator Eddie Miles brings
his "Salute to Elvis" to the
arts center. The concert
begins at 8 p.m. Tickets are
$22 and $17.

Then the Parai)lOUnt gets
into the HalJQween spirit,
with the cult-da" ic "The
Rocky Horror Show." On
Oct. 24,the performance
begins at midnight, and on
Octob. 25 ; the con.cert
begins at 8 p.m. Tickets are
$17.
The l'ararmou in Arts
C.enter is loca(ed at 1300
Winchester 'Ave., Ashland.

pride.
On Friday, the traditional Homecoming Parade
get started at 6 p.m. at the
. Ohio Stadium. As the
Homecoming
Parade
grand marshals, the 1968
Ohio State football chiimpions will lead more than
I00 student organization
floats,
the
2003
Court,
Homecoming
President Karen A.
Holbrook, the Ohio State
Marching Band and
Brutus the Buckeye to the
South Oval. Then, get
ready to break out in a little Hang on Sloopy"
because the pep rally starts
at 7:30p.m. on the South
Oval. The Buckeye Dance
Force, 2003 Homecoming
Court and members of the
Ohio State Football team
will rally Btickeye spirit in
preparation
for
the
Saturday football game
against the University of
Iowa.
For more information
about additional events,
see
· Ohio
State's
Homecoming 2003 Web
site
at
http://ohiounion.com/hom
ecomingl.

I Pomeroy ' I
Phil and
· the Thrill

the . Paramount's Web site at
www.paramountartcenter.co
111.

Tomcats whe n the two meet Friday
at Glouster Memorial Stadium in
Glouster. Kickoff is ~et for 7:30p.m.
Trimble .:ame away with a 46-24
RACINE - After a one-year hia- win OV!fr Federal Hocking last week
tus, Trimble looks to ascend back to in a key league battle, otherwise it
the top of the Tri- Valley Conference would have been the Lancers playing
Hocking Division standings . It can for a share of the league titl e this
wrap-up at least a share of the crown weekend.
with a win
. this week.
The victory improved Trimble to
Much like Waterford did a year . 7- 1 overall and 3-0 in the leag ue.
ago, Southern hopes to play the role
However, early on it appeared as if
of spoiler and deny the title-hopeful Fed Hock would topple its Athens

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

seac; ·are prices at just $23
while reserved sears are .
S17 and gener.tl admission
tickets are only $10.50.

A look at the region's top
football teams, as voted by
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports staffers. (First-plat;e
votes in parentheses)
Team

1. Ironton

The
Nutcracker

Prev. Voles
1

47(2)

2. Gallia Academy 2
3. Jackson
3

40
36

4 . Parkersburg So. 4
· 5. Westerville So. 16
6. Wahama
6

25(2)
24( 1)
21

9

19
19

7. Rock Hill
· (tie) Chesapeake
: 9 . Symmes Valley
: (tie) Minford

• .Mid-Ohio Valley
Ballet presents the classic 'Nutcracker'. ballet.
Tickets are available at
The Ariel TI!eatre box
office
by
calling
(740)446-2787.

'.

nr
nr

6

12
12

· Others receiving votes :
. Athens 11 , River Valley 3,
· Wheelersburg 2, NelsonvilleYork 2, Trimble 2.
To be eligible fOrThe OVP 10,

Quilt

· a team mual either: a.) be

: from · the Mason-Gallla.· Melgs..Jackson area; b.) be a
: local conference rtlamber; or
· c.) . play at least one game
· agaltiat local or conference
teams.

show.
• Local quilters will
display their works at
the Out House Museum
next Saturday and
Sunday.
The display will
include five quilts that
belon~ed
to
Mrs.
Claudms Menager, a
local historical celebrity. M!'S . Menager met
her future husband on a
ship from France and
the couple was married
in Gallipolis. Mrs.
Menager made one quilt
for each of her five children . Also displayed
will be quilts made by
members
·Of . . the
Presbyterian Church,
and a quilt made by
Jacob Watson, a 12year-old boy.
· The show will be held
10 ·· a.m .-4 . p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 25 and 14 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 26
at the Our house
Museum, Gallipolis.

Columbus, Stark
Co. pitch plans to
host state finals
. COLUMBUS (AP) Group s
repre senting
Columbus and Canton/Stark
County made one-hour presentation s to the state's ruling body on hi gh school athletks Wednesday in hope s
of hosting the state footb ~ll
finals starti ng in 2004.
The presentations were
made to staff ·members of
the Ohio High · School
Athletic · Association , its
board of control and two
officers of the state football
coaches association. The
presentations were made by
the
Columbus
Sports
Commission
and
the
Can!on/Stark
County
Football
Tournament
Committee.
The Columbus proposal
has game s split between
soccer 's Crew Stadium and
suburban Dublin Coffman
High SchooL
The Canton/Stark County
officials proposed splitting
games between Massillon
· Paul Brown Tiger 'Stadium
and
Canton
Fawcett
Stadium - as has been the
case since 1991 . The six
state finals this season will
be played Nov. 28-29 in
Massillon and Canton.
The OHSAA staff and representatives of the coaches
association will provide
feedback to the board,
which will announce its
dedsion at its Dec. 4 meeting .
The next contract will be
to bost the finals in 2004
and, 2005 with im option for
2006.

··1 Vinton
Young
Eagles
• Children between the
ages of 6 and 17 can fly
free Sunday at the Ymton
County Allport.
The program is part of
the Experimental Aiicraft
Association's
(EAA)
Young Eagles Program
and is an annual event at
the airport.
fn addition to the Young
Eagles Program, · adult
rides will be available for
$15 F. person.
.
Airplane rides will
begin at lO a.m. and lunch
will be served beginning
at 11 a.m. The cost of
IW!Ch will be $6. Other
food will be av3ilable during the afternoon;
One of the airports mOst
·· popular events; a candy
. drop for the kids, will be

• Phil and the Thrill
of electric blues style
will perfonn at the Court
Street Grill Friday while
on Saturday entertainment will be provided
by Ken\ Boogie's iock
and funk. Both events
''Start at 9 p;m, and· both . ~kl at 3 p:m.
. . ..
•' . ~ve a $5, eoverchll!i~;.
. For
'infonnation '
For . more informatioQ · contact ·Rupert' at 740357-0068 740-384-2640.
call992-6524.

For more information, visit

Southern looks to assume spoiler role

The OVP

ISouthside I IGallipolis I
• Dance to music by
Cherry Ridge from 7 to
10 p.m., Saturday, Oct.
18 at the Southside
Community Center.

Thursday, October 16, 2003 .

..

ctmaster.com. Premium

Cherry
Ridge

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

County ri val. The Lancers quickly
built an 18 point first quarter advantage , on ly to watch Trimble score the
next 40 en route to the victory.
Tomcat standout signal ca'ller A.J .
Jenkins (6-foot, 155. pounds) completed II of his 20 attempts in th~
comeback for 153 yards and a score;
he also ran for 67 yards and four
touchdowns.
Southern will also have to account
for two .more Jenkins' in the backfield, A.J .'s brother Robby Jenkins

..

(5- 10, 140) and tailback Justin
Jenkins (6-1, 224).
Southern remained winless followin~ a 39-0 loss to Waterford last
Fnday. The Wildcats grabbed a 20
point lead after one quarter and never
looked back.
In other TVC-Hocking action this
week. Eastern (2-6. 0-3 ) will welcome Waterford (5-3, 2-1) to East
Shade River Stadium. And Miller (26. 2~ I) wi ll travel to Federal Hocking
(4-4, 2- I ).
·'

Meigs
faces
Vikings

Eastern,
Waterford
playing
for pride

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
ST-FF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

POMEROY - One of th
better and up-and-comin
teams the in Tri-Valle
Conference Ohio Division i
looking to keep its slim playo
'and conference champ•onshi
hopes alive against a tearil .tha
playing for pride and buildiri
toward the future.
.
That is the situation as
much improved Vinton Coun
Vikings ·squad takes on Meig
in a TVC-Ohio gridiron battle.
Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m.
Friday night at Bob Roberu
Field in Pomeroy. It will a!s
be the tina! home game for th
Marauders this season.
Vinton County enters th
game off a 55-14 thrashing o
Belpre last Friday. The contes
was knotted at 14. apiece, mid ·
way through' the .second . '
but the Ytkings reeled off 41
unanswered for the win.
VC overcame 122 yard
worth of penalties by out gain
ing their hosts 474-164 in tot
yardage. Tailback Michael
Barney (5~foot'9, 153 pounds
ran for 123 yards and quarter .
back Chris Bethel (6-2, 182
completed 6 of 7 for 14
through the air for the winners.
Also expected to see a lot o
touches against the Maraude
will be running back We
Harkins (5-10, 175) and full
back Curtis Moore (5-I 0, 181)
Since losing to TVC front
runner Nelsonville-York in th
conference opener, Vinto
County ~as won two straight t
. improve its overall record to 5
3 and 2-1 mark in the league.
The Vikings are current!
ranked 12th in the Division
Region II computer rankings
but has to win out and .receive
lot of help in order to earn
playoff bid.
.
Vinton County is chasing N
Y, who gained the inside.trac
for the division title by defeat
ing two-time defending cham
pion Wellston last week. U th
Buckeyes have a tough test
remaining, it is this week Meigs' receiver Etlc Van Meter warms up during halftime of the Marauders' 18-12 win over
. Alexander last week at Bob Roberts Field. The Marauders play their last home game ·
Pluse iee Melp, B2
Friday against Vinton County. (I an McNemar)

T UPPERS PLAINS While it appears like ·
Trimble. is poised to win out
and capture the Tri-Valley
Conference .
Hocking
Division : the rest of the
league will either be playing fo r pride or to ass ume
the role of spoi ler.
Neither
Eastern
nor
_Waterford can be that spoiler. as the y both fell to the
Tomcats earlier in the season. But so me pride will be
on the line when the v face
eac h ot her this week in
TVC -Hoc kin g
gridiron
1
acti on.
Ki ckoff is set for 7:30
p.m. Friday night ·at East
Shade River Stadium in
Tuppers Plains. It marks the
final home game for the
Eag les thi s ~eason .
Waterford racked up 249
yards on the ground while
defeating winless Southern
39-0 last Friday. Running
backs Mau Schaad and
Jason Sampson ga ined 87
and 85 ya rds respectively
for the winners .
The
win
e.vened
Waterford 's record at 4-4
overall and also improved
10 2-1 in the TVC- Hocking.
·· Eastern is in the midst of
a six-game losing skid after
starting the season 2-0. Last
week may have been the
most fru strating of those
losses. falling to a Miller
team that had just 'one win
on the campaign and three
s ince the beginning of
200 1.
Miller- rallied
from
deficits of 7-0 and 14-6 to
force overtime la st week ,
and eventually pulled it out
20- 14 thanks to a Curt
Mauro five-yard scoring
run in the extra sess ion.
Eastern fell to 2-6 and 0-:i
in Hocking division play.

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�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 16, 2003

wWw.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentinel.com

• Thursday, October 16,. 2003

,I

ALCS ·

. Area Prep Football

NLCS

Standings and Schedule

Marlins on to World Series

ovc

'"

BY BEN WALKER

Associated Press ·

~

Boston Red Sox's Nomar Garciaparra watches his triple in the seventh inning aganst New York
Yankees pitcher Jose Contreras in Ga me 6 of the American . leag~e Championship Series in
New York Wednesday. (AP)
·

Red Sox rally at right time
to force seventh game
BY RONALD BlUM

Associated Press
NEW YORK- The resi lient
Boston Red Sox rallied just in
time.
Trailing by two runs and nine
outs from ending their season,
they rebounded with a three-ran
seventh inning to beat the New
York Yankees 9-6 Wednesday
and set up a whopper of a Game

7.
David Ortiz tied it with a runscoring single and Johnny
Damon drove 111 the go-ahead
run with a bases-loaded walk in
the seventh inning that tied the
AL championship series.
That brings the series down to
one game Thursday night, amj it
has all the makings of a classic:
Roger Clemens versus Pedro
Martinez, the central characters
who set off fireworks and fights
during Game 3 at Fen way Park.
Slumping
Nomar
Garciaparra · had four hits.
including a wind-blown triple
that staned the three-run seventh and atoned for an earlier
error. Jason Varitek hit a thirdinning homer off starter Andv
Pettitte, and Trot Nixon added
two-run shot in the ninth off
Gabe White as the Red Sox beat
up New York for 16 hits and
moved within one win of their
first trip to the World Series
since I986.
New York and Boston win
play for the 26th time Thursday
- the most meetings ever
between two teams in a season.
It marks the first time the championship series in both leagues
will go a full seven games in' the
same season.
Homers by Jason Giambi and
Jorge Posada, and a two-run
double by AlforL5o Soriano
·staked New York to a 6-4 lead.
But reliever Jose Contreras
couldn't hold it.
A swirling 25 mph wi nd
tloated napkins across the tield
all game, and the conditions

a

made it difficult tor tielde:t_ on
both teams, spinning line dnves
into twistin g gappers. .
"It 's all over the place,"
Giambi said atier batting practice. ·
Boston, the'top offense in the
major leagues during the regular seas~n. had been hitting just
.230 in the, playoffs and hadn't
scored more than five runs in 10
postseason gmnes. But the Red
Sox remembered back to the
first round, when they fe ll
behind Oakland 0-2 before winning three in a row to advance.
Contrems relieved Pettitte to
start the sixth and struck out the
side, but his pitches got up in
the seventl1 and he wound up
the loser.
Garciaparra, who didn't get
his tirst postseason RBI until
Tuesday, hit a deep drive to center leading off the inning, and
the ball gusted over Bernie
Willimns for a
triple.
Garciaparra cmne home when
the wind sent left fielder Hideki
Matsui's th~ow to third sailing
on a hop into the seats for an
en-or.
Manny Ramire7. hit a similar
shot over Williams for a double,
took third on a wild pitch and
scored the tying run when Ortiz
smashed a single off first base.
F-elix Heredia relieved with
one out and two on, threw a
wild pitch that moved up the
runners, then thn;w a called
third strike past Nixon.
After an intentional walk to
Varitek. Heredia walked
Damon on four pitches - two
of them close - . forcing in the
go-ahead run. Heredia then
fanned Todd Walker.
Alan Embree, who struck out
Giambi to help escape a big jam
in the tifth, got the win. Scott
Williamson, Boston 's sixth
pitcher, got three outs for his
third save of the series.
Following the Gan1e 3 fights
at Fenway Park, security was
increased as the series returned

to Yankee Stadium. ThiD dozen
police officers were in
Monument Park, behind the
bullpens, at start of the gmne.
Fans greeted Ramirez, a central
pany in Saturday's confrontations, witl1 the loudest boos.
Giambi's first postseason
homer forthe Yankees, the third
of his career, put New York
ahem] in the first.
Pettitte breezed through two
innings but got in trouble in the
third. when Varitek led off with
a long _homer to left - his
fourth of the postseason.
A walk to Dmnon and a sin~Je by Walker put two men on
tor Garciaparra, who grounded
to the hole at shortstop. But
Derek Jeter made a tine backhanded pickup and threw to
third for the force. Pettine then ·
walked Rmnirez on four pitches
and Ortiz lined a single just
over a leaping Jeter, driving in
two runs. Kevin Millar lofted a
soft single to center for 4-1 lead.
But Boston starter John
Burkett, a 38-year-o\d who
rei ies on offspeed pitches, ·
couldn't get through the fourth.
Posada and Matsui singled to
put runners on the comers, and
Nick Johnson hit a long liner to
the right-center gap. The ball
seemed to be held up by the
wind and hopped over the wall
for an RBI ground-rule double.
Aaron Boone grounded out
sharply to shortstop on the next
pitch to drive in Matsui and pull
the Yankees within a run. Karim
Garcia bounced the next pitch
to shortstop, but Garciaparra let
the ball bounce out of his glove
for an error.
Soriano hit the following
pitch hUfd to center. and the
wind pushed it to left-center,
where it dropped for a two-run
double that put New York
ahead.
Posada made it 6-4 in the fifth
with a solo homer that appeared
to ride the wind over the wall in
left.

CHICAGO - Waiting 'til
next year will ne ver, ever be so
painful tor the Chicago Cubs.
Given one final chance to
beat the demons of their past
and the Marlins, the Cubs
couldn't get it done. Kerry
Wood failed to hold tm early
lead and Wrigley Field fell
silent as Rorida capped its
stunning NLCS comeback
with a 9-6 win in Gmne 7
Wednesday night.
Destiny? Fate'&gt; The fan in
Gmne 6' 1 Whatever. The Cubs
were unable to end their long,
strange drought because MVP
Ivan Rodriguez, Miguel
Cabrera and these remarkab ly
resilient Marlins won their
ihird straight gwne to clinch
the National League pennant.
"Nobody expected us to be
in the World Series,"
Rodriguez said.
The Marlins wi ll head off to
face Boston or the N'ew York
Yankees in the. World Series
staning Saturday night.
In a crael twist to the Cubs'
faithful , Rmida will make its
second Se1ies trip in only I I
years of existence - Chicago
has been absent since 1945.
prompting the temn's sad little
motto of "Wait 'Til Next
Year."
"We didn't lose the pennant,
the Marlins won it," Cubs
manager Dusty Baker said.
"We were close and the
Marlins took it from us. it 's as
simple as that."
Fittingly, Baker's 4-year-o\d
son Darren added a final word
when his dad was done talkmg.
"The Cubs will win next
year," tl1e. little boy said.
Alex Gonzalez provided
insurance with a two-run double to left-center field in the
seventh inning for a 9-5 lead.
The bal l hopped up against the

brick wall. covered with ivv
that has changed colors to
omnge and red.
That poison ivy will cenainJy be tinged with tears, too.
Even after being shut out in
Game 5 by Josh Beckett,
Smnmy Sosa and the Cubs
were in excellem position as
they returned. home. But aces
Mark Prior and Wood lost on
back-to-back days for the first
time this season and suddenly
a sure thing had turned sour.
"Those are two tough guys
to beat, I'll tell you what,"
Beckett said. "We got a break.
Things work out for a rea5on. I
guess."
A sellout crowd of 39.574
minus the infamous Steve
Bartman - the Jim who.
deflected a foul ball during the
Marlins' eighth-inning rally in
Game 6, he was at home with
a police guard - had the old
ballpark shaking as Wood and
Moises Alou homered for a 53 lead.
But Wood could only flip his
glove into the stands when the
wild-card Marlins rallied.
They scored three ruris in the
fifth, Luis Castillo added an
RBI single in the sixth and
then Gonzalez doubled.
Bracf Penny won with an
inning of scoreless relief for
Mark Redman.
Beckett came out of the
bullpen and pitched · four
innings of one-hit ball on two
days' .rest, allowing only a
homer by pinch-hitter Troy
O'Leary: Ugueth Urbina
worked the nimh for a save.
Home temns had wori' I2 of
the last I3 times a postseason
series went 10 Game .7. But tl1e
Marlins became just the sixth
team to ever overcome a 3- I
deficit in a be st-of-seven
senes.
Ronda has ne ver lost a postseason series in its young history, going 5-0. That includes a
thrilling Gm11e 7 victory in I I ~
innings over Cleveland for the

I~7 tilic .
At 72. Jat:k McKeon is the
oldest manager to reach the
World Series. That seemed farfetched when the Marlins were
19-29 back in late May, but
McKeon, who had replaced
the !ired JetlTorborg earlier in
the month, somehow steered
them this far.
-i
''I told them the first meeting
that if they worked hard,
they'd be· playing in October,"
he said.
Cabrera and Rodriguez once
again played starring roles for
Rorida. Cabrera, a 20-year-old
rookie, hit hi s third homer of
the series m1d drove in four
runs while Rodriguez singled
'
home a run that gave him an
NLCS-record 10 RBls.
Down 5-3 in the fifth,
Rodriguez doubled home . a
run tmd Cabrera tied it with an ·
RBI grounder. Derrek Lee,
whose double keyed the eightrun rally in Game 6, followed
will] a single that put Rorida
ahead 6-5:
The Cubs had been hoping
this would be the year they got
a chance ·to win ~leir flfst
Series championship since
1908.
Juan Pierre led off the gmne
with a triple that one-hopped
off the ri g hr- fi~ld wall, and
Sosa slipped and fell chasing
it.
Rodriguez worked fnr a
full-count walk and Cabrera
launched a drive way pack
into the left-center field
bleachers.
Eric Karros singled to start
the second, Alex Gonzalez
doubled and Damian Miller
had an RBI groundout.
Wood put a charge into a 32 pitch, sending a shot into the
leh-centerbleachers. He never
even looked at the ball, dropping his head as he began his
tying trot.
Alou put Chicago ahead 5-3
wi th a two-run homer omo
Waveland Avenue in the third.

Marshall AD expects Conference
USA to extend invitation
Bv

that decision with his input.
Associated Press
Marshall football coach Bob
Prue1l declined comment on
CHARLESTON , W.Va. _ the conference buzz.
Marshall is expecting an in vi"The only thing I' ve heard
tation to join Conference USA is what was in the Tampa
in the latest college confer- paper," Pruett said.
ence shuffling.
The Big East is expected to
Marshall athletic director invite C-USA members
Bob Marcum said he received Louisville and Cincinnati as
a telephone call Wednesday all-sports members and
from one of the league's con- Marquette and DePaul in all
sultants, who sai d ·a C-USA sports but football as early as
official would contact him Nov. 4, when the Big East's
within the next sever:al days. presidents meet. Army is
"I think (an imr,ending in vi- leaving Conference USA after
tation) is certaimy .the reason the 2004 season.
for the call," Marcum said.
The Tribune reported C''There ' s a 1ot of thinQS that USA's
Florida also
ld South
.
B'
.
ou have to look into. Jt"s real- wou recetve a tg East inviJ,y nice for Conference USA to tation.
consider Marshall. I think it
Marshall has won five of
s~aks well of our university." six.
Mid·American
. The. Tampa Tribune report- Conference football champied Wednesday that Marshall . onships and has played in
and four other schools _ each of the league's six chamSouthern Methodist, Rice, pionship ,games. Since beginTulsa and Central Florida _ ning MAC play in I997, the
would be invited to join Thundering Herd has a record
Conference USA:
of 48-8 in conference games.
Marcum declined to say if
"It remains inappropriate to
' Marshall wou\a .accept such speculate on particular mem:
an invitation, saying other uni- bers that might be leaving or
versity officials would make joining the conference," C'
USA commissioner Britton

•

t

JoEDY McCREARY

Banowsky said in a written
statement. "We are genuinely
excited about the opportuni ties this change represents
und are well prepared."
Two years ago, Marshall
turned down consideration
from C-USA to become a
· member
footb'all-only
because the Herd .couldn't
find a suitable league for its
other sports.
Marshall defeated C- USf\
members in each of its last
three bowl games. Marshall
has appeared twice in the
GMAC Bowl, beating East
Carolina in 2001 and
Louisville l&amp;st year, and the
Herd defeated Cincinnati in
the 2000 Motor City Bow\.
Central Florida was invited
to join the MAC in all sports
earlier this . month . The
Golden Knights began playing football in the MAC in
2002.
Conference USA has five
guaranteed bowl tie-ins this
year, three more · than the
MAC. Both leagues send
teams to the GMAC Bowl. CUSA also is affiliated with the
New 0Pieans, Fort Worth,
Liberty and Hawaii bowls.

)

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN NEXT WEEK'S MATCHUPS

Chesapeake

3-()

. t-2
t-2
t-2
Q-3

All
7-t
6-2
6-2

5-3
2-{;
1-7

Fridlly'a Gllmea

River Valley at South Point
Chesapeake at Coal Grove
Rod&lt; Hill at Fairland
Andrew Carter
Managing Editor
Record: 62-t8
last week: 6-4
(picks in bQ!ll)

Butch Cooper
Sports Staff
Record: 67-13
last week: 7-3
(picks in b2lll)

Paul U. Polcyn
Copy Editor
Record: 59-2t
last week: 4-6
(picks in !!l:!!d)

Brad Sherman
Sports Staff
Record: 65-t5
Last week: 6-4
(picks in bQ!ll)

Andre Tirado
Sports Staff
Record: 67 -t3
Last week: 8-2
(picks in 112!!!)

Gollle Academy

Gallla A~adtmw

GIIIID ACidlm~

Gallll Acldtlm¥

liatlii..Arnltn

at Athens
Alyer Valley

at South Point

at Athens

Rivet Valley
at South Point

at Athens

River Yallt.¥
at South Point

at Athens

BWL'lllliY

at South Po1nt

Brian Billings
General Manager
Record: 59-2t
Last week : 5-5
(picks in 112!!!)
.. GaiiiB Academy

at Athens

at AlMnl

River Va lley
at South Point

River Vallev
at Soutb Polol

Wahama

Wahama

Wabama

Wohgmg

Wlhgmg

Wabomo

at St..Marys

at St. Marys

at St. Marys

at St. Marys

at St. Marys

at St. Marys

E!t!IDI E!IID!IIDI

e21ot ~ltntaot

~IDI

l'lnJ.Qn_C®nb-

Y:lnt2o C.ouoty:

pP!nt Plea11nt

at Warren

~IDl

f!IIIIID1

at Warren

C.mmtv

~lnl

E!IIIIIDI

at Warren

~lnt~m C2Unty ·

at .Warre n

at Warren

at Meigs

at Meigs

.at MBIQS .

waterford

waterford

Waterford

Wotartord ·

watertord

Waterford

at Eastern

at Easte rn

at Eastern

at Eastern

at Eastern

at Eastern

South Ga!lla

South Guilla

South Gallla

South Gall!a

South Gallil

at Hannan

at .Hannan

at Hannan

at J1annan

SQUib GDIIII

at Hannan
Southern
at Irlmllll

Southern

at IrlmllJ§

South ern
at IrimllJ§

Southern
at It:lnmlt

Southern
at It:lnmlt

~lotQD

Rock Hill

Rock Hill

Rock Hill

at Fairland

at Fairland

at Fairland

Rock Hill
at Eulrlaod

at Fairland

Patrick Henry
at Jackeon (Sat)

Patrick Henry
at Jackson (Sat)

Patrick Henry
at Jackton {Sat)

Patrick Henry
at Jackson (Sat)

Patrick Henry
at Jackson (Sal)

Rock Hill

at Meigs

ar Jac~son (Sat)

t -3
1-4

3-4

0-4

Q-8

2-{i

TVC

Southern

Htoo

6-2

Gallia Academy at Athens
Point Pleasant at Warren
Marietta at Logan
Saturday's a.,.
Hamler Patrid&lt; Henry at Jackson

rum
Nelsonville-York
Wellston

:m;

Trimble
Waterford
Federal Hocking
Miller
Eastern

3-0
. 2-1
2-t
2-t
0-3
0-3

4-4

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

2-6
2-6
0-8

Vinton County at Meigs
Waterford at Eastern
Southam at Trimble
Wellston at Alexander
Belpre at Nelsonville- York
Miller at Federal Hocking

'

.

Others
All
8-0
7-0
7-t

l'llm
Ironton
Wahama
Symmes Valley
South Gallia
QakHill
Hannan

3-5

2-6
Q-6

Fridlly's Games

Ohio Division

at Ir!Jn11Jt

E!ald~rk

2-2

4- t

Friday's Gamaa

at Hannan

ROCk H1ll
a! fllrloruj

3-t

7-t
7-1
5-3

4-0

:r.m

5-3

Frkllly'a Games

SEQ • All

Gallia Academy .
Jackson
Logan
Athens
Point Pleasant
Marietta
Warren

t -2
t-2
Meigs
t -2
Alexander
0-3
Hocking Division

Southern

SEOAL

E!IUUDl

at Warren

'linton Countv
at Me1gs

VIntOn Countv
.at Meigs

m

All

3-0

5-3

2-1

4-4

South Gallia at Hannan
Wahama at St. Marys
Ironton at Cols. DeSales
Green at Oak Hill
Sciotovitle at Symmes Valley

NBA

Bryant defense says it
·cavaliers treating games,
has 'compelling evidence' against Lakers like any _other
of his innocence
EAGLE, Colo. (AP) - Kobe Bryant' s
accuser showed up for her rape exam wearing panties containing another man's sperm ,
a startling di scovery that defense lawyers
called "compelling evidence" the NBA star
is innocent.
Bryant's preliminary hearing ended
Wednesday with prosecutors telling a judge
there was "uncontradicted" evidence that
the Los Angeles Lakers' guard raped the I9year-old woman at a mountain resort.
"He held her by the back of the neck with
his hand durin g sexual intercourse," prosecutor Greg_Chrittenden said. " He li fted up
her skirt. She said ' no.' He pulled down her
underpants and she said ' no.' He penetrated
her from behind and she cried."
Judge Frederick Gannett said he hoped to
rule by Monday whether Bryant will have to
stand trial on a sexual assault charge that
could send him to prison fo r life.
Gannett only has to find there is probable
cause to believe ~ryant raped the woman,
somethin~ defense attorney Pamel a Mackey
told the jttdge prosecutors failed to prove
because the woman told her story through a
sheriff's detective.
"She is not worthy of ·your belief,''
Mackey said.
Eagle County District Attorney Mark
Hurlhert said, however, he was confident the
judge would send the case to trial.
"No _prosecutor puts 011 thei:· whole case at
prelimtnary hearing," he said. "In thi s case
you saw kmd of a sanitized version."
If the two-day preliminary hearing wasn' t
the entire prosecution case, it still contained
graphic details about an .encounter that
began with the woman exctted to meet the
basketbal l superstar, escalated into consensual ki ssing and hugging, and ended with
sex across the back of a chair.
Prosecutors tried to portray Bryant as an

HUNTINGTON, W,Va. Marshall head coach · Ron
Jirsa and his staff will be conducting a coaches ci inic on
Oct. 30 , in the Cam
Henderson Center, with
Kentucky head coach Tubby
Smith serving as the event's
featured speaker.
..
Also included in the clinic
is a coaches .social with a
Henderson Center' tour, a
Marshall basketball practice, a

arrogant athlete who held the woman down
and raped her, concerned onl y that she might
talk about the encounter.
When it was the defense's turn to question
the lead detecti ve in the case, Ma-ckey tried
to poke holes in the woman's story, raise
doubts about whether she told Bryant "no"
and show she had sex with someone else
two days before the alleged assault June 30.
"Thi s is an extremely thin case based
mostly on hearsay," Mackey said.
She wasted no time getting D etective
Doug Winters to say that the yellow underwear the woman wore to her rape exam at a
hospital the next day contai ned spe rm fro m
another man, alpng with Caucasian pubic
hair.
The 25-year-o\d Bryant, who is black,
contends he had conse nsual sex· with the
woman.
Winters said the woman told him she had
consensual sex with another man on June 28
and used a condom, ba'cking earlier defense
suggestions she was sexuany active before
her encounter with Bryant.
Winters also said two pairs of panties from
the woman were tested - one from the
night of June 30. the other the pair she wore
to a hospital tor an exam the next day.
The-latter pair contained blood and semen.
Winters said.
"The accu se~ arrived at the hospital wearing panties with someone else's semen and
sperm in them, not that or Mr. Bryant. correct?" Mackey asked.
"That's correct," Winters responded.
Mackey suggested injuries found during
the woman 's e"am could have come from
having repeated sex, a contention she first
made in court Jasl week.
The defense contends the tests on the
underwearfrovide Bryant with "compelling
evidence o innocence.''

catered dinner, a Nike
Notebook,' and th.e opportunity to meet with Marshall
coaches for the entire day.
Registration begins at 2
'p.m. on the day of the clinic at
the Cam Henderso n Center
Upper Concourse.
For more iQformation. contact Micah. Shtewsberry in the
Marshall · basketball office at
304-696-3586, or by e-mail at
shrewsberrym@marshall.edu.

Alexander.
lt was just the Marauders'
second win of the campaign in
eight tries, but was their ftrSt
from Page B1
victory in TVC-Ohio play this
season. Joel Clelland had a
against Belpre (5-3). If the monster game for the winners,
Bucks win out, the:y have a gaining 177 yards on 2 I car- .
good shot of the Dtvision V ries.
postseason.
-·
ln other TVC-Ohio' action
Mei~s will also be corning this week, Nelsonville-York (5off a wm. The Marauders broke · 3, 3-0) will host Belpre (5-3, 1their second three-game ·losing 2) while Ale~ander (2-6. 0-3)
skid of the campaign last entertains Wellston (4-4, 2- 1).
Friday with an 18-12 win over

Meigs

t

3-()

River Valley
Fairland •'
South Point
Coal-Grove

CLEVELAND (AP)
LeBron James and th e
Cleve land Cavali ers are
going Hollywood .
The Cavali ers play the Los
Angeles Lakers twi ce over
the next four days. including
a nati onall y televi sed preseason ga me Thursday.
It is James' first We st Coast
trip as a professional, but
he's not making a big deal
out of it.
'Tm j ust goi ng to try to
play my game and try to get a
victory," James said. '" I want
to treat every ga me the same
way. We' II be ab le to see how
good a tea m we are betau se
they are a great team."
But the Lakers could be
without their tw o biggest
stars Thursday ni ght.
Kohe Bryant was in Eagle,
Colo., on Wednesday . for a
preliminary hearin g in hi s
sex ual assault case. He did 1
not attend the Lakers' exhibition ga me Tuesday in San
Di ego and may not be in uni form Thursday night.
Shaquille.O' Neal sat out of
Tuesday's game and continues to be bothered by a sore
le ft heel.
But the Cavaliers wi ll still
ha ve Karl Malone and Gary
Payton to prove themselve s
against.
"It 's like an All-Star cast,"
Cavaliers coach Paul · Silas
said. "They're not playing
now like they will du ri ng the
regular season . Let's see how
we handle it. We want to go
out there and play well."

Marshall men's basketball
announces coaches clinic.

i

aiC

IHm
Rod&lt; Hill

Belpre
Vinton County

' j,

d

The Cavaliers are 2~1 in
the preseason, but are corning off a home loss to
Milwaukee that drew boos
from the 1.6,000 fans at Gund
Arena.
Jame s, the Cavs' rookie
star, has hit just II of 33
shots. and at times hasn't
been involved enough in the
ieam 's off~n se.
Silas know s the development of his team means more
at this point than a matchup
with the Lakers.
''I'm more c\)ncerned with
how we ' re playing right now
th an our opponents," he said.
James has already spent
pl enty of time in Los
Angeles. He was there this
su mmer for the ESPY
Awards and played there
with St. Vin ce nt-St. Mary
during hi s Akron high school
team's. whirlwind schedule

during his senior year.
'Td rather be at home. but
it's a good place to vi sit. ..
James said. "Til have a Jot of
fun out there ...
James also
"
we llacquainted wi th the Lakers .
He hung out with o· Neal last
summer and comider&gt; him a
role model.
"Everything I saw about
him was great. He·s like a bi g
-brother to me . ' He L'tdls nw
hi s littl e brother... Jam c.s
said. "I love the guy to
death."
The Cavaliers play the
Lakers on Thursda,· at the
Staples Center. then-pia) the
Los Angele s Clippers the
next night.
The Cavaliers fac:c the
Lakers again on Sunday
night 90 mil es north at
Centennial · Gardens
111
Bakersfield . Calif.

Summer's calling.
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SCOREBO.ARD

The Daily Sentinel
'

Football
National Football League
AMERICAN
East
WLTPct
41 0.800

Miam1
~ew England 4 20
.667
!Juffalo
330.500

N.Y. Jets

1 40.200
South
W LT

Indianapolis

Tennessee
Houston
Jackt'Jnvi Ue

Baltimore
Cleveland
Rittsburgh
Ginc1nnati

..

Pct

PF

PA

105
126
114
75

56
11 3
103
60

PF

510 .833
420667
23 0400
1 5 0
167
North
WL TPct
320 .600
330 .500

240

.333

140

.200

PA
178 105
157 133
86 151
110 154

PF

PA

108 92
92 95
111 146
77 106

w~at

Kansas C1ty

PF PA
W l T Pet
6 001000 191 115

Denver

5 1'fl0

833

Oakland
San D1ego

2 4 0

.333

050
000
NAnONAL

15e 67
11 5 144
e9 149

East
WL T . Pct
Dallas
410800
tvashington
330
500
N.V Giants
230
400
Philadelphia 230 400
South
W L T Pet
Carolina
5 0 0 1.600
Tampa Bay
3 2 0 600
New Orleans 2 4 0 .333
~t l anta '
1 5 0
167
North
WLTPct
Mtnnesota
5 0 0 1 000
3 3 0 .500
Green Bay
1 4 0 .200
Chicago
Detroit
140 .200

Weat
W l T Pet
Seattle
4
St Louis
3
San Franc1sco 2
Arizona
1

i 0
2 0
o4 0
5 0

.800
600
333'
167

PF
112
12e
95
e1

PA
93
147
109
109

PA
1()1 68
127 73
107 151
97 175
PF

PF
15 1
176
80
94
PF
122
136
135
e2

PA
84
132
152
122
PA
e7 .
e4
119
1eO

Sunday 's Games
Ten nessee 38, Houston 17
Dallas 23, Plliladelphia 21
Carolina 23, Indianapolis 20, OT
Miami 24, Jacksonville 10
. Kansas City 40, Green Bay 34, OT
New Orleans 20, Ch1caQo 13
. Tampa Bay 35, Washmgton 13
Cleveland 13, Oa~ tand 7
· New England 17, N.Y. G1ants 6
N.Y. Jets 30, Bullalo 3
Balt1more 26, Arizona 18
Denver 17, Pittsburgh 14
Seattle 20, San Francisco 19
Open : Cincinnati, San Otego, Detroit,
Minnesota
Monday 's Game
St LOUIS 36, Atlanta 0
.,
Sunday, Oct. 19
Dallas at Oetrotl. 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Atlanta. 1 P-Ill ·
Green Bay at St l ows, 1 p.m.
Tennessee at Caroltna, t p m
.. New England at Mtami, 1 p.m.
Ph1tadelphta at N Y. Giants, 1 p.m
Ba tt1more at Cmcinnatt, 1 p.m.
Denver at Minnesota. 1 p m.
San Diego at "Cleveland, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Houston. 4:05 P.m.
ChiCago at Seattle, 4:15 p.m.
Wa shing1on at Buffalo, 4:15 p m
Tampa Bay at San Franctsco, 4·15
pm
Open :
lndtanapolis,
Pittsburgh,
Arizona. Jac~sonvil l e
Monday, Ocl. 20
Kansas City at Oakland, 9 p.m.

Soccer
Major League Soccer
Eastern Dlvlskln
W l
T Pts GFGA
y-Chicago
14 6 8 50 47 34

PageB4_

' x-MetroStars
t 1 8 9 42
x·New England 10 9 9 39
O.C. United
10. 10 8 38
Columbus
8 12 8 32
Western Division
WLTP1s
14
y-San Jose
x-Colorado
1110740
x- Kansas City 10 10 8 38
x· l os Angeles 8 12 8 32
5 18 5 20
Da llas

e e w

37
4e
35
35

33

Chicago at New Orleans. 8 p.m.
.Qrlando at Utah , 8:30 p.m.
Sacramento at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Cleveland at LA. lakers, 10:30 p.m.
Frlday'l Games
Denver at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Boston at New Jersey. 7.30 p.m.
Cleveland at L.A. Cltppers . 7.30 p.m
Orlando at Memphis, 8 p.m
Miami at Detroit, 8 p.m.
Minnesota -at Indiana, 8 p.m
New York at San Antonio, 8·30 p m.
Philadelphia at Utah, 9 p.m.
Phoemx at L.A. Lakers, 10 :30 p.m.

44
32
40

GFGA

44 31
34 37
46 43
31 34
31 60

NOTE: Three points tor victory,
point for tie.
x-clinched playoff spot
y-cll"nched divis ion
·

one

Baseball .

Saturday'• Games
New England at MetroStars, 7 30
pm.
Dallas at Kansas City. 8 p.m.
Colo rado at Ch1cago, 9 p.m.
San Jose at Los Angeles. 10 p.m.
Sunday '• Game
Columbus at . D.C. United, 4 p.m.
Saturday, Oct 25
MetroStars at New England, 4 p.m.
Kansas City at D.C. UMed, 7:30
p.m.
Colorado at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 26
Chicago at Co lymbus, 4 p.m.
End of Regular Season

Basketball

Postseason Baseball
DIVISION SERIES
CBeet-or-s)
Amerlc:an League
New York 3, Minnesota 1
Minnesota 3. New York 1
New York 4, Minnesota 1
New York 3, Mfnnesota 1
New York 8, Minnesota 1
Boston 3,• Oakland
Oakland 5, Boston
Oakland 5, Boston
Boston 3, Oakland
Boston 5, Oa~land
Boston 4, Oakland

•

National league
Florida 3, San Franctsco 1
San Francisco 2, Florida 0
Flortda 9, San FranciSCO .5
Florida 4, San Franc1sco
innings
'
Flonda 7, San Francisco 6

National Basketball
Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allantle Division
l Pet
4 0 1000
Mtami
New· Jersey
3 0 1000
Philadelphia
1 3 .250
Washington
1 3 .250
0 4 .000
Boston
,0 4 .000
Orlando
New York
0 5 .000
Central DIYIIIon
~··
W L Pet
Toronto
3 0 1.000
3
.750
N9\o\' Or1eans
Cleveland
2 1 .667
Ch1cago
2 2 .soo
Detroit
2 2 .500
tndtana
2 2 .500
Milwaukee
2 2 .500
Atlanta
1 · 2 .333
WEStERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
W l Pet
Denver
3 0 1.000
Utah
3 0 1.000
San Antonio
3 1 .750
Memphis
2 1 .667
Dallas
2 2 .500
Minneso ta
2 2 .500
Houston
1 4 .200
Paelrlc Division
W L Pet
3 1 750
Seattle
2 1 .667
Golden State
Portland
2 2 500
Sacrame nto
2 2 500
L.A Clippers
1 , 2 333
1 2 .333
L.A. Lakers
Phoentx
1 3 .250

w

2
4, 12 innings
1
1, 11 innings
4
3

3.

11

GB
Chicago 3, Atlanta
Chicago 4, Atl anta
Atlanta 5. Chicago
Chicago 3, Atlanta
Atlanta 6, Ch1cago
Chicago 5, Atlanta

.,,
3
3
4
4

2
2

3
1
4
1

4 ~'~

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
(Beot·ol-7)
American League.~
Wednesday, Oct. 8
Boston 5, New York 2
Thursday, Oct. 9
New York 6, Boston 2
Saturday, Oct 11
New York 4, Boston 3
Sunday, Oct. 12
New York at Boston, ppd rain
Monday, Oct. 13
Boston 3, New York 2
Tuesday, Oct. 14
New Yor~ 4, Boston 2
Wedn es day, Oct. 15
Boston 9, New York 6. series tied 3-

GB

.,

·1

GB .

.,

n.

1\
3

3
Thursday, Oct. 16
., Boston (Martinez '14-4) at New York
(Clemens 17-9), 8:18 p .m .

GB

,,
1"
1

1:,
1',;.
2

Tues(lay's Games
New Orleans 89, Orlando 84
M1ami 99, Sen Anton1o 98
New Jersey 90, Philadefphla 88, OT
Mamph1s 101 , Washtngton 85
· Ch1cago 103. Indiana 96, OT
Utah 81, New York 65
HoUston 82, .Sacramento 78
Seat11e 110, Portland 91
L.A. Clippers 128, Dallas 107
Phoenix 104, LA. Lakers 86
Wedneeday'a Gamee
Detro1! 123, Boston 95
Denver 100, Indiana 93
Toror~to 90, MirineSota 76
Seattle vs. Golden State al Lawlor
Events Ce nter, Reno, Nev., 10 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Miami at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Pho en ix at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m .

National League
Tuesday, Oct. 7
Florida 9, Chicago 8, 11 1nntngs
Wednesday, Oct. 8
Chicago 12, Florida 3
Friday, Oct. 10
Chtcago 5, Flor ida 4, 11 1nnings
S~turday, Oct. 11
Chicago. 8, Flor ida 3
Sunday, Oct. 12
Florida 4, Chicago 0
Tuesday, Oct. 14
Florida 8, Chtcago 3. series tied 3-3
Wednesday, Oct. 15
Florida (Redman 14-9) at Chicago
(Wood 14-11 ), 8:18p m
WORLD SERIE S
Saturday, Oct. 1S
Nati onal League at Amencan League.
8.05 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 19
NL at AL. 8:05 p .m.
Tuesday, Oct 21
AL at Nl, 8:25 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 22
AL at NL, 8:25 p.m.
. Thursday, Qc:t. 23

Al at NL, 8:25 p m
Saturday, Oct. 25
NL at Al , .8 p.m , if necess"ary
Sundly, Oct. 26
NL at AL , 8 · p.m EST, if nece~Sary

Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
ANAHEIM ANG ELS-Released IN F·DH
Brad Fullmer.
CH ICAGp WHITE ~ OX-Purc hased the
contracts ot· 18 Ross Gload from
IL,
and RHP
Charlotte
of the
Enemencio Pache&lt;;o from Birmingham
of the Southern League.
TEXAS RANGERS- Agreed to terms
with LHP Ron Mahay on a one-year
contract.
National League
CINCINNATI REDS-Announced RHP
· Luke Prokopec declined an outright
asstgnment and elected free agency
COLORADO ROCKI ES-Declined thet r
option on · RHP Steve Read , granting
him free agency.
HOUSTON ASTROS- Announced RHP
Kirk Bullinger declined an outright
asstgnment and elected free agency.
Assigned C Mitch ~e,lu skey outnght to
New Orleans of the PC L
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
MIAMI HEAT-Watved G Joe Crispin.
FOOrBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS-Placed LB Sam
Rogers on Injured reserve. S1gned LB
James Cotton from the practice squad
S1gned LB Terrence Robinson to the
practice squad.
CLEVELAND BROWNS-Signed OL
Dave Petruziello and OL · Noah Swartz
to the practice squad.
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Placed DE
Joe Johnson on . mjured reserve. Re·
signed DT Terdell Sands
INDIANA POLI S COLTS-Signed RB
Bnan Allen. Waived OL Jim Newton.
NEW YORK JETS-Signed' CB Ray
Green and S Davtd Young. Wa1ved DT
Alafl Harper and CB Leonard Myers.
SiQned CB Ornare Lowe to the pract1ce
squad. Released RB Keith Burnell from
the practice squad.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Re leased
OT Leonardo Carson. Signed · DT Joe
Salave'a. Signed G Kr is D1elman from
the pracfice squad. S1gne,d Ol Kev in
Breedlove to the practi ce squad.
SAN FRANCISCO 49EAS-Signed G
Alonzo Cu nnin gllam to til e practice
squad
HOCKEY
Natloral tiockey League
CALGA RY FLAMES-Assigned D Mike
Commodore to Lowell of th e AHL, and
G Brent Krahn to Las Vegas ol !tie
ECHL
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS-Recalled C
Brett Mclean from Norfolk of th e AHL.
COL UM BUS BLUE JACKETS-P laced
C-AW Tyler Wright on inJured reserve
NEW JERSEY DEVILS-Stgned D
Tommy AIDeh n
WASHINGTON C APITAL S ~Aeassig ned
D Jean-Francais Fortin to Port land of
the AHL.
.
OLYMPICS
USA CYCLING-Ann oun ced the restg·
natio n of Eric Moore, director of field
operattons
COLLEGE
DELAWARE
STATE - Fired
Ben
Blacknall, football coac h Named Butch
Posey tnterim coach .
NOTRE DAME- Annol.lnced sophomore
men's basketball F Omari Peterkin has
Withdrawn from school.
VALPARAISO----Extended the contract of
Tom Horne, 1ootball coach, through th ~
2006 season .

--

•

·Prep co!ftputer ratings .
' COLUMBUS (AP) - Hete are the liftli
weekly 1oolllall.computer ra1ings lrom
lhe Ohio High School A1hle11c
Aosoclation. Ratings ere by division ard
region with record and avt~rage bl-level
polnlsper game(l&lt;lpelyhtlllllm61neacll

region ~ance 10 ~onal quarterfl·

14.3375: 6, ()okjwaler (7·1 ) t4.275Q. 7,
HUtO!\ (7-1) t 2.6875. 8, Milan Edison (&amp;-,
2)11.262S. 9, A._,n (6-2) 10.9000. 10,
Rosslord (4-4) '9 .3250. ("" _ _ •
A~ 15-1, Ironton sroJ} 2e..~5·
2. Bellaire (7-1)14.7230, 3, Cosho&lt;tOr\

f'-1j 13.9375, 4, Wln18R'iSPOrt WestfaU

nals)·
'
(7-1 13.6875. 5, lrat~ton Roclt HHI (7-1)
.
DIVISION II
:_, 1US71. e, Martins Fooy (e-2) 10.6875.
Region 5-,-1 , Mao-•· Norden~ (e· 7, Grarwille (6·2) 9.0375. 8, River Valley
O) 18,5750. 2, Warren Howland {7·11 ~H) 1.1750. •· Pnlclorvllle
• 18.1250. 3, Maple HI$. (7· 1) 14.e12S. • ·
5-3) 7.M35. 10, New Lexlnglon (4-4)
Madison (7-1) 14.50110.- 5, ~ey {5·3)
.o4665.
.
13.0470,
Chardon (6·2) 12.9125. 7,
Region
16-1 , Versailles (8·0)
Akron 17.6625. 2, Cla rkS\11110 Clln1on·Mastle
Parma Padua {5-3) w .e720.
Garlield (6-2) . 12.8125. 9, Tallmadoe {4- (8-0) 17.8425. 3, Reeding (6·21 13.0000,
4) 11 .1600. 10, Bell!a'(4-4) 10.37l!ll.
4, ~1a1n Clly Jonathon Aldor (e~2)
' Region '&amp;---1, Sylvania Sou1hview {e·O) . 11 .1e!5. 5, Ba1avla (5-3)10.2750. 6, Ctn .
22.3125, 2 Avon L8ka {ll-0) 16.8000. 3. Marlemon1 (5·3) 10.1375. 7. Dayton
Meumee (6-2) 1B.4375. 4, Oellance &amp;-2
Qakwo6d (e-2) 9.8375. e. Spring
16.0125. 5 , Amherst Steele 7-1
Northeaslarn (5·3) 7.6875. 9, London (4-14.7$7:;. 6, ·Grafton MldvJew ~3
4) 7.2345. 10,W. MIRon Miltcm.Ur~lon {413.3125. 7. Tlllln Columbian 7·1
4) 6.7500.
12.6500. e, ·Holand Sp&lt;inglleld 5-3
- DIVISION V
12.0750. 9, · Tol. Woodward 5·3
Region 17- 1, Gates Mills Gilmour
11 .9625. 10, Ashland.{6-2)1'1 ,1250.
ACad. (e-0119.6375. 2. Warren Kennedy
Range (IHJ)
Region 7-1. Plckenngton Central (8· (7· 1)16.3750. 3, N ..Lima
0) 20.9250: 2, COis. Brookhaven ~ll-0
14.655IJ. 4, Dalton \7·1) 14.2625. · 5,
19.3140. 3•.. Voun
Chaney 7-1
Independence · (7·1
12.1500. 6,
t4.92BO. 4 Cots.
Ridge 7·1
Columbiana {Hl} 12.2975. 7, SmilhYIIIe
13.9790.
Whl1ehaii·Yearllng
-1
{7·1 1 12.2725. e. Mineral Ridge17-1l
13.6825. 6, New Philadelphia 7·1
11 .6675. 9. Lisbon DIWkl Anderson (-1
13.1675. 7, COts. Independence /6-2
11.0635. 1Q,. Middlefield Cartflnal 8-2
12.7680. 8, Uniontown Lake 4-4
9.8295.
12.6500 9, Loul•vRie (4-4) 10.2250.10,
ROj]lon 1&amp;---1, Sycamore Mohawk (7.AJtianee Martington (5-3) 9.7750.
1) 15.1125. 2, Hamler Patrick Hen!)' (7·
R~ion· a-.1, Trenton Edgewood {8-0) 1) 13.9000.\3, Delphos St. John's {7·ll
23.9;!50. 2. Kings Mills Kings (7-1) . 12.8375. 4. Oef. nnora (6·1) 12.2554 . 5,
18. t 125. 3, Jacil:son (7·1) 16,4575. 4, Lorain Clearview (6·2) 11 .7000. · 6,
Cin. Mt Heal1hy (7·1 ) 15.!!625. 5, Day. " Bluffton (7-1) 11.2125. 7, Elmore
, carroll (5·3) 13.5875. 6, Cin. McN~holas Woodmore (&amp;-2) 10.2750. 8, Collins
5·3) 12'.5875~ 7, Cln .. Glen Este (5·3) Western Reserve ~7- 1/10.1_625. 9 •.
\ 2.5000 8 , Wilmington {&amp;-2) 11 .6876. 9, Bucyrus Wvnford 6·2 9.6035. ·10,
Tro1wood-Madlson (5-~) I 1.4000. 10, Liberty Ctr, (6·2) 9.2700.
Day. Dunbar (5--3) 10.5875.
•
Aeg ion
19-1,
Sarahsville
DIVISION Ill
Shenandoah (e-O) 18.6970. 2, Amanda(7· 1) · 15.9375 . . 31
Region 9-1, Cleve. Benedlcbne (ll-0) Clearcreek
25.7425. 2. Men1or Lake Oath. (7·1) Chaeopeako (8-2113.6165. 4, Minlora
Geauga (8· (7 -1) 13 .2a75. 5, Woodsfield Monroe
21.0390. 3, Chesterland
Ol 20.0625, 4. Medina Buckeye (7·1) . Cenl"'l (7-1) 13.2440. 6, Wheelersbu~
1'7.0175. 5, Hunt. VaUey Univ. School {7· (6 ·2) 12.5015. 7, Newoomerstown ~·1
11 18.ol50,0. 6, Akron Hoban (6·21
12.4000. 8, Noloonvlllo· Vot1&lt; 5-3
15.5680, 7, Ravenna SE (6·2) 14.0375. 11.8250. 9, Johnst&lt;Nin Norttoridge 6-2
8, Hubbard (6·21 13.3595 . .9 , Char&lt;Jon 10.7625. 10,
Lalsvotte Ridgewood (6·
NO-Cathedral Lalin (5·31 12 ee75. 10, 2)9.8250
Cortland ~akevlew (5·3) 11 .8750.
Region 20-1, Marion Pteasant
Region 1Q-1 , Suribury Big Walnut (8- 14.4150. 2, Bainbridge Paint Valley 0
13 7875. 3, Morral Ridgedale 7·1
.0) 18.9250. 2, Cols. WaHerson (6-2)
15.8875 . 3, Bellevue (76' 1) 14.9250. 4, 13.1000. 4, Gahanna Cols. Acad. 6-2
COle. Hamilon Twp, (7· 1) 13.6075. 5, 12.6e30. 5, Cln. Hills Christian
• (6Lima Shawnee (6·2) 13.6000. 6, Ganal 1) 12.39 14. .a, Anna {7-1) 11 .e625. 7,
Winchester ~5-3) 13.0500. 7, Cots. Arcanum (6·2) 10.6750. 8, Cots. Hartley
OeSales (4·4 12.6335. e. Pemberville (4 -4L 10.2205. 9, Jacobs ((1-2) 9.9994,
Eastwood (f -2) 12.3250. 9, Cots. "10, ees Cr~k E. Clinton {6·2)9.8420.
Beechcroft (li-2)11.7155. 10, Kenton(&amp;DIVISION VI
3) 11.7000:
·
Region 21- 1.- Mogadore !7· 1l.
15.7285. 2. Norwalk St. Paul B·O
Re lon 11 - 1, Steubenville (8·0
ae¥35. 2, Ca nol Ful1on N.W, (8-0l 13.2000. 3, Cleve. Cuya. Hte. 7·1
21.e625. 3, Usbon Beaver {e-0)21.7570. 10.3705. 4, Wi ndham (6·21 103585. 5,
4, Dover (8·0) 19.8375. 5, New Con&lt;;ord Monroevfl!e (6·2) 9.7375. 6, Leetonia (6John Glenn (7-1) 14.6125. 6, Rayland 2) a.a625. 7, ~ew WBsh. Buckeye Cent.
Buckeye Local {8·0) 14.4210 7, . (6-1l8.0338. 8, StMary Central Catholic
Thornville Sheridan {6·2j14.2250. 8, (5·3 7.7875. 9, l:.oweltvllle (6-2) &amp;.8375.
Gail. Gallla Acad. (7•1 12.9985. 9, 10, ast Can1on (5-3) 6.5750, ·
Mmerva (6-2) 10.5500. 10, PolaoO
Region 22--1 , Rawson Cory· Rawson
Seminary. (5-3) 10.0000.
(8..0) 14A250. 2. Columous Grove (8·0)
Region 12-1, Newark Ucklng l/alte1 13.9125. 3, Edgerton ( 5~3) "10.4620. 4,
(e-O) 20.4875. 2, Bellbrook 7·1
Hopewell-Loudon (6-2) 10. 1625. 5. W.
18.5625. 3, Archbisho Alter 7-1
Unltv HHitop (6-2) 10."1 510. e , Me Comb
1e.3625. 4, Sl. Marys
\7-1
(6·2f 10 0750. 7, Carey (8·2) 10 0375. e,
t 7. 1500. 5, Day. Cham-Ju lienne 7·1) Nortliwood (6-2.\9.6250. 9, Antwerp ~616.8250. 6, Germantown VaUey View (8· 2) 9.4125. 10, Hicksvill. {6·2)9.0745.
0)15.6625.
Ham. Ro8$ (6·2) 14.8250;
Region 23-1, Shadyside ·{7·11
S, St. Paris Graham (7-~) 14.5125. 9, 14.1125. 2. Lane. Fisher C8th . (7~1}
Tlpp City Tippecanoe (7-1) 13.0675. 10, 13.8375. 3, Newar~ Cath . (7· 1) 12.4675.
Cln. Indian Hill {6·2) 12.6375.
4, Centerburg (6·2) 11 .2:250. 6, Glouster
DIVISION IV
Trimble (7-1) 9.8125. 6,
New
Region 13--1, Sullivan Black River (7• Matamoras Frontier ( 6~2) 8.7750. 7,
1) 14.5455. 2. Apple Creek WaynEI(iale Willow Wood Symmes Valley: (7·1}
9·0) 14.3125. 3, Slrulhero (5·31 6.5500.
Milersport (6-21 e.2250. 9,
3.5000. 4, Young. Mooney (6·2
Marion Ca1h. (7·1) 7.9000. 10, Danvll!e
13.2500. 5, Orrville {5-3) 13.2375. 6,
(6-2)7 7500
Akron Manchester (5·3) 13.0875 7,
Region 24-1, N. lewlsburg Triad (8..0)
Cuya. Falls Cuya. Valley Christian (7--1) 15.7625. 2, C~vington {8·0) 14.8375. 3,
12,1955;
il!'J!:Y (6-21 12.t500. 9, Spring., Cath- Cent , (7·1) 11.9000. 4,
WIQI!II11o•Hijjh""''""'' {8-2l ·12.1250" 10, OflGra" AIVo- (7·1)11.4875, 5,Qoia
Wocister Tr1Way(S..3)'11 .M75.
·
' · HBrdln 'Nbnhetri (?:~ 1 ) 11 :4250. 6; "TI'oV
Region 14-1, Lima S;!th ~7 - 1) Christian (6·2) 9.1 040. 7, Mechanicsburg
16.11 25. 2, Upper Sandusk
8-0)
5·3 8.08'15. 8, Marla Stein Marion Local
15.8750. 3, Urbana (7· 1)
. 4.
9, Minsler (4-4) 6.3250. 10,
Del1a (7·1) 14.4000, 5, Welftnglon (6·2) Cay. Jefferson Twp. {2·5)3.9121.
.

,..lionel

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Today's '
iedslj

.Ad ••

7:

e.

1

.a.

15.~2

!~·317.oe75.

Monday thru Friday
.. 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items ·
To Help Get Response ...
\\\tit \1 I \II \I..,

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ANNOlJNCF.MEI'ITS

C· 1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
for sale. Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
of tntere st to : The Dally
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Notice Picky · Pa1nters are
not afliliated w1th J&amp;J or any
other pamttng bu s1ness any
? call Debbie at 304·895 3074

·'

Say good bye to h1gh phone
bills I New local phone service with FREE tmlimited
nation wide long Dtslance
1·800·635·2908
or
www.FreedomMovie.com/itp
aysyou. local Agents want ed.
The WV Public Employees
Ins ura nce Agency (PEIA)
has Issued a request for pro ·
posal (RFP) tor professional
services io Implement and
mon itor",a pharm ac ist to
patient counseling program
1or members with diabetes.
Questions or requests for
copy of the RFP are to be
directed to J. Michael Adkins
at 304-558-6244&gt;e230 A
mandatory bidders co nfer·
ence will be held at 1.30 pm
October 20, 2003 at PE!A
off ices. located on the State
Capital Complex , Building 5,
Room 1001 in Charleston •

r

g

Lost: While Irish Wolfe
hound. Answers to the name
Sugar. Lost in V1nton Area.
740-388-0416

r

YARD SALEGALLIPOLIS

9579 Route 160. Househo ld,
cross · stitch. shower unit,
mise . priced to
sell.
Saturday 9. 3 .
-------,-----First yard Sale ol year. Rt.
160, Friday &amp; Satu rday 8-5.
1st house on left at Portet
Junction. Baby clothes, fur·
nlture, men 's &amp; women's
clothes, · glassware, trolling
"moto r, lots or misc. to
numerous to mention.

.

• Once you have signed up for ihe Senior Discount, your renewal notice will reflect your dlac 9unl.

Friday &amp; Saturday, 9~? on
Centenary Rd . Baby clothes,
die cast. toys &amp; more.

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

·

Address ~----,------------­
City/State/Zip -----'--~--------~

Phone_--:--~"-:---'-----c-----.:_~
Mall or drop off this coupon along wlih a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

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

YARD SALE

5 Family Garage Sate. 38
Hankie. 10f17 noon-dark,
10/18- 10{19
Sam-dark.
Many items especially ~
lar® women's c lq!hes to
size eo.

~alUpoli- Jaail!' iribune

"

GIVEAWAY

.
I
• •••••••••

I

Inside Garage sale 1467
JackSOn Pike, Thursday &amp;
Friday Oct 16 &amp; 17 9-5.

Word Ads

Display Ads

DBIIy In-Column: 1 :00 p . m.
Monday-Friday for Inaertlon
In Next Day's Paper
iu•ndlav In-Column: 1:00 p .m .
Sundaya Paper

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
~
Sunday Dlaplay; 1:00 p . m .
Thuraday for Sundays

Up To · 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

ne.-•..•1

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~ARDSALE·

Emptoymen1 Opoo()yotty ·
Combjned Mitgs Couotv
HealthCpmmjssionerJ
HealthQeparlmenl
Administ rator
Experienced
Hea lth
Commissioner/Admini strator
needed to d1rect the Meigs
Yan;1 Sale Frt, Oct. 17th 8:30- County Health De pa rtment
4 : 00pm26 1 4Jac~sonAve . (with ,20+ sta ff members).
Must be able to wrtte com·
Yard Sale Thur, Fri; Sat, 16peti1ive grant proposals and
17·18 1st sale tn 3 years.
mull!-task. Possess e~pe rt­
dinette set, ·play pen, other
ISe in budgeting and fi scal
furniture, liHie bit of everymana gement; computer pro- ·
thing 32 17 Howard Ave ,
ftciency : excellen t written
un~~r car port 1n back yard .
and verbal (publi c/tnterper·
so nal ) communication skills;
e&gt;epertise m researchtng &amp;
1
so lv1ng proOiems; lami lta nty
with eme rgency procedur es,
Abso lute Top Dollar. U.S.
assessment and Stale reguSi lver,
Gold
Coins,
lattons; orgen1za1ionel skill s,
Proofsets. Diamonds, Gold
expertise in policy develop"
U.S. CurrenC'f',·
Rings,
ment and program plann1ng,
M.T.S . Coin Shop , 151
knowiBdge ol public health :
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
experience in human rela·
740-446·2e42.
tions/conll 1ct management .
Wanted Good us ed tread· Must be an ae1ive partiCi·
pa nt in County's total health
mill Phone 740-446-0836 .
www.comics .com
care delivery system plan :
I \ll'l 0\ \ I f \ I
De Involved 1n Infrastructure
...,, In f( I..,
developmen t and bio·terrorism preparedness . co llabo·
rate with State/local soc1al
se rv 1ce agencies, business,
Li censed Ohio
c ommunity organ1zat1ons. Wanted
Social Wor ker to provide
healthcare
providers.
An awesome JOb! . $6-$9 per
coun seling services fo r
hour alter training! No expe- Conlidentiality required.
youth in a group home se tM1
n1mal
educatiOnal
requirerience needed l Full/part
hng in the Jackson Ohio
•lime, flex1b le scheduling, ment: Ma ster's Deg ree in
Area. This is a lull time posiconvenient
Pomeroy Public Health pr related
tion with competittve salary
f
teld
.
Salary
commensurate
Location, 20+ po sit ions
and excellent benefits. Must
ava1labte. ca ll 9-9, M: F. 1- with expertence with a base
be motivQted and have a
pay
of
$35,000
plus
benefits.
888·9 74-Jobs.
Current or former Meigs willingness to work with kids.
Send resumes to The
Attn . Pt. Pleasant
County res 1dent preferred
Cenler,
Postal positions. clerkslcarri- · Submit resume and live pro- Counseling
Attent1on
AI
S1
ebel
.
608
Park
ers/sorter s
No
exp. fesstonal
references to
required. Benefits. For e&gt;eam, Meigs County Board o1 Ave , Ironton. OH 45638.
salary. and testing informa- Health, 112 E. Memonal EOE
tion call (630)393-3032 e)(:t. Dnve, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
782 8am-8pm 1 days
by 11 -05·03 .
SI11JA110NS

•

Taking Applications 3 bedroom house Porter Wrll rent
Wllh optiOn buy 2004
Referen cesfdepoSI!
74 0·
388·994 6
New 2003 Doublewide 3 9R !::':::""~--~~--.,
il &amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down .
.Mooru: HO\IES
and. &amp;295/mo. t-800-691FOR Rf.xr
67(7

q_________

No Problem Sa le· Want a
new secllOnal home? No
Problem. Need foundation
and sept 1c? No ProOiem
Need utilities run or dr1veway? No p roblem . Wa nt big
savings on a 2003 model
No Problem Co le·s Mob1le
..
S
E
Homes . U. . 50
ast .
Athens. Oh10, 740-592·1972
Since 1967 Where You Get
You r Money's Worth
Older 2 bedroom. 12x65. in
great condit 1on
Nee dS
nothtng but moved, ready to
live in $4800 Loca ted in
Bidwell -Vinton
area
{740)38e·9616

e

f3'l'

2003 by NEA, Inc ,

By Owner 3 Bedroom Ranch
WANIED
2 baths, 2 car garage.
To Do
GalltpOIIS photos/informati9 n
on line www.orvb·porn code
Licensed OaycareJ Baby sit - 81803 or ca ll (740)367; 7039
tmg · watch kidS all shifts.
take pnvate pay/state patd.
(740) e4 3~1 094

.,r.10_HELP_
·_W_AN_m&gt;
_ _..l roo

Full t1me help needed . Apply
between 10·11 am, Mon.,
Thur s.,
Sat.
McCiures
Resta urants All locattons.
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis
740-446-3837; Mtdd tepo rt
740-99 2-5248;
Pomeroy
SabDath, Alice Gooper, Pin k 740-992-6292.
Floyd, Dio, Metallica. Black
Label
Society,
Stap le, Full lime Hies position,
Disciple, Tourniquet, Pillar, experience
preferred.
and a whole bun ch of other APply In peraon at Thomas
rock bands We are lookmg ·Do
It
Center,
Polnl
for some one who can Pleasant, WV
groove, if interested you can
call Joseph. (740)44 1·1236 Grow1ng Heating &amp; Cooling
company looking fo r experiDeltve ry-Nattonal Co. need- enced in stallers w1th some
ing auto related sales/deliv- tech experience. Installation
ery persons to service local experienCe a must Good
market Truck, salary, bene- pay. (740)441·1236 if no
fit s included. Keystone answe r, leave message
·Automotive
1-800·8203962 .
Help wanted canng lor the
- - - -- - - - - elderly, Darst Group Home,
Earn money tor Christmas now paying minimum wage,
by selling Avpn call Joyce neW sti1fts: 7am·3pm, 7am·
304·67!H;919
5pm, 3pm -1 1pm, 11pmNurse PraCttoner

Pediatric Office ifl Ripley, WV
' th·at sees·patients age birth·'
2 1 years old Is seeking
FTIPT certified primary care
Nurse Practioner with ped i·
atrlc experjence Position
does not require any on-call
, ~eeper, or 110spltaf cover·
age.
Competitive salary aod beneft! package. Please call
(304)372-8250 lor more
information . You may fax
resume to (304)372-8297. or
m!iil reaume to
. Office Manager
RT 1 Box 62 AA
Rlpley,WV 25271.

7am, call 740·992·5023.

WANIID

25 Serious Peopte Wanted
Who want 1o LOSE weight
We Pay You Cash tor the
pounds you LOSE I
Sale, Natural, No Drugs.
600·201-0e32

I have one open ing for a
Elderly man left.
Call A 24 bulb commercial tan (304)675-61e3
nlng bed, reasonably priced.
Need 7 ladies to sell A~on , 740-388·0436 after 8:30pm.
Call 740-446-3358
Grave silt, Mound Hill
Now Hiring- RN, LPN &amp;
Horne Health Aides for local
homehealth agency, &amp;pply at
33105 Hiland Rd., Pomeroy.
(740)992· 09~0
M·~.
e.
4:30pm

MB Handyman Aflordable
Service. Hauling, , pain ting ,
power washtng . drtveway
repa1r. seal coating, gutters.
chimney, plumbtng Jack ol
all trade s. 30yrs. exp. Sen1or
Discount Free Estimates.
(304)ee2 -2196. (304)377 ~
8266

PICKY PAINTERS
lntenor &amp; El{!erior
Santor Cit1zens Discoun t
Residenti al, Commercia l &amp;
mobile
home s.
Ass isted livt ng an d e11.tra
care for your loved one 111 my Roofs, barn s, pressurewashing .
home 740-388-0118.
E&gt;epenence &amp; References
available
304-895·3074
Free estim'ates ca ll M-S
Gallipolis Career College 8am -7pm.
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today ! 740-446·4367.
Wt ll pressure wash homes.
tra tlers, &lt;leeks, metal t&gt;u ild1-800-214-0452
www ,gallipoliSI:lareercollege.com inQs and gutters. Call (740)
Res #90-o5- t 274B.
446·0151 ask for Ron or
leave a message

su n setter, retractable
awning size 1Ox20 has 5
rain way arChes, used 3
summ ers if interested call
304-675-3664

Cemetery, Holzer addition.
$425.00
Call (7 40)742 -,
\
2459
-::S-am
--,:Sa_m_e_rv_ll_le-M,-IS"G:-:T

8LSIN1."S
AND BUIIJJIN&lt;~~

r

advertlee "any

HOUSES

FOR RENT
1·3 Bed FORECLOSED
homes Buy from S 199 a
month! 4% down. 30yrs at
8.5% AP R For Listing Call
1-800-719-3001 Ext F 1709

This new~~M~~r will not
knowingly .ccept
advarUaemants tar real
estate wl'lkh Ia In
violation of the lew. Our
readera are hereby
Infol'f'l'led that all
dwelling• adv8rtised In
this oew.p8:per are
available on an equal
opportunity btMa.

~1111""-~~----,

HO\e
FOR SAIB

I

White
Ad .
Reference
requtred , I yr. lease 740room, completely remodeled 446·2 158.
throughout w/paint &amp; carpet,
House
lpr
Rent
on
$5500 OBO, (740)985·3625
Rockcastle Road, Brosia,
.
~ $350. Dam~~;~e Deposit
1979, 24x48 Sectional3 BR . ~eferences from Former
2 Bath, Den French C ity La'ndlords. No inside pets.
Homes Gallipolis. Ohio 740· Cal l (304 )675- , 277 after·
446·9340.
6pm
14x70 mobile home, 3 bed-

Cole"s Mobile Homes
Just beyond Centenary,
US 50 Ea'it, Atherls, Ohio,· large neVofJY \ remoeleled
45701 , 740-592·1972
kitchen with all app liances.
dinmg and fivtng room . two
For sate or trUe : 1969 bedrooms: bath, large lront
tfnl60 Mobile home, excel· and back decks . 5485
lent condition. S3.500 call \ montn , $400 deposit. NO
740-441-8574.
PETS
740·446-4254 or
740-446-0205.
Good used 14)(70 2 bedroom,
2 · bath . Only New 3 br, 1 bath, garage.
$8995.00. Includes det i~ry. $500 per mo. + deposit. No
Call Harold (7•o) 385·994e pets. Call 740-245·5114
•,

Tara

..\P.\KI'\ 1FC'{I~
RIR

lbx r
Townhouse

Apartments v"ery SpaciOus
2 BedtVOMs 2 ~ loors CA 1
1 2 BaTt Newly Carpeted
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool
PaM Sta 't S385 ·Mo No
Pe ts . Lease Plus Secur tty
DepOSit Req u1r&amp;"d . .Days
74 0-44 6- 3481
Even .ngs
740-367.0502

r

s~~u:

tUH lb~,-r

r.om me"''l 0 , 0 pe n·1 t0 ,
rent - a swre 'ron! tr.
Htstoncal
downtowro.
Pomeroy Qh facr'lg fl'~er .
(740)589·7122
Mobile hOfTie 101 w 111 ta ke 14
or 16 wtde up to 80 long.
$125 . month 740·446-0175

Tra1lers &amp; Apartments tor
rent Call 740·367·0611 MoDile home tot. w111take 14"
or I 6 wtdes. $ 125 mon th·
eventngs and weekends.
740-446-01 75.
Very mce 14x70 2-Br Wd .
\ti Ill II\ \111..,1
CIA, C/H. 10 mtn rrom :Jwn
Lg from and back '' .' t\ S
Dep .. utt11ties reqtJtrecl $350 f"IO

HOlSHKHJI

(;(I(""

m~. -740-446.0367

Good Used Apphances:
andRec on dttiOned
Wasl',ers,
Guaranteed
Dryers
Ranges·
anci
Refnge1ators Some start at
$95 Skaggs Appl tances . 76
Vtne Sl , 1,740)446· 7398

Heat-N-Gio Propane Insert ~
1 br over garage apr 1·2 Max1mum output 24 OQj)
people, no pets. Phone 740· BTU E&gt;ecellcnt Cond1t1on '
446-1214 .
$1 ,000 080. t304iB95:
3769 ~

Mollohan Carpe t 202 Clark
Chapel Roao . Pone r Ohio
(740 )446· 7444 1-877-8309162. Free Esttrnares Eas)
l1nanctng 90 days same M
cash . Vtsa.' Master Card;
1n ' Dr~ve· a· little save alot.
2
bedroom
apt.
Centenary. appliances fur·
ntshed. ubitl!es pa1d, e:~~cepl ThOmpsons Appltance ~­
elecmc, clean-$350 month· Repatr ·675 -7388 For sa le.
re-condttroned
automatiC
Call 740-256· 1135
wasners &amp; dryers. refnge ra 2 BR Quiet LocaMn Near tors. gas and electric
Holzer C1A. 'WID Hookup. ·ranges, a1r condltton,ers and
No Pets $399. Plus Ut11i!les vmnger washers W1tl do.
. (740)446-2957
repa1rs on rnator brands irt
shop or at your home
•
2 br. WID hook up ref dep.

n2 Bed room house
in
no pets 304 ~675- 5162
Rutland, out of high water.
$325.00 plus reference and 663 Thira Ave GaUipoits. 2
depos11 (740)992-0309
Br upsta trsfbathl no pets.
$300 plus ut1hties plus
2 br. house w/ family room, 1 deposit 740-245·,9595
ba , nQ pets. at 164 Park Or.
APART·
$400.00 a mon . + dep. 304- BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
675-2749
.
PRICES AT JACKSON
3 bd., 2 bath, Aahch home ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Addaville schOol district. 'Onve tram S297 to 5383
$750 per month . first ana Wa lk to shop &amp; movteS. Call
last month rent. depoS1t &amp; 740-446-2568.
Equal
reference required. 740-367- Houstng QPportun1ty.
7039
Crown C1ty· clea n 1 br..
3 Br. house lor re,nt . Located $275 month + deposll. 74Don Sanders Drive. $550 per 256· 1249.

r~

ro

2 mobile hom,es on Ward
Ad $350 8. $400 740·245·
567-1

2 apartments 1n town, conventent. 2nd Ave locatton 1·
stud10 apt. $275 per month
Lot for sale .in Racine . 1·1 or apt $300 pe r mont!'\
Rent Includes water. sewer
(7401992·5858
&amp; gas. Call W1seman Re al
I~ I \ I \I ...,
Estate 740-446 -3644

prefar.nct, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race, color, raUglon, tex
familial atatua or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
pralerMca, li~ltation or
discrimination."

r

Ve ry ntce . no pers In
GallipoliS 740-446·2003 01
740,-446- 1409
- : - -- - - - - 2 bedroom mob1le hOme for
rent tn Ractne . $3!5 refit
$ 325 depostl. 1 yr lease. no
pe ts, (740)992-5039 no calls
I e JOp
aar :
m

r:

2br, 1ba, home 482 Homton
St Mason 41 acre lot adta·
cent Unton Cemetery Broad
Ru n. Map parcel 1.660003
agents protected (304 )4876723

All real ettate advertising
In thll newspaper is
aubj~t to lht F~eral
Fair Housln" Act of 1968 '
which makes it illegal to

2 bd '1}/W carpet. a•r. porch.

Office bwlding lor rent- 600
AI~~R'iMF..NTS
SF. elect heat, ale, ce1hng
FORJbNr
fan. Rtver Park. Minersville.
S30f;J/mo+ $200 dep .. (614) 1 and 2 bedroom apart876- 1661 .
ments. furn •shed and unlur·
mshed. security depos1t
Lol~&amp;
reQuired , no pets. 740·992·
Ac.Ht~\Gt:
2218

Farm house- 3 bedroom, 2
ba ths. 2 story, newly reno·
vated, unfini sh'ed basement
screened porch, 22x20
garage.
douqla ca rport ,
pu bl tc wate r. Meigs County.
INOnCEI
country setting 5+ ac res~ no
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
land contract, $79,500. call
lNG CO. recommends that
{740)742·9937
you do business with people
you know. and NOT to send
New Starter Log Homes. wl
money thro ugh tho mail until
1 acre. ReaCiy to go
you have investigated the
$27,000. 740-256-9247 or monlh DepoSit and rete rottertng.
74o-645.Q670
enoes
required .
Call
Wi seman Real Eslale 740Remode led , 3 bedroom , 1 446·3644.
-112 bath 1n goo&lt;1 neighbor·
TURNED DOWN ON
hood in Middleport. (740) 3 br. ranch house lor rent.
SOCIAL SECUfUTY ISSI? 992·7743 or
VISW
at .. $375.00 a man in New
NO Fee Unless we Winl
www orvb.comlt8 1503
Haven, no pets 120 Howard
1-888-582-3345
MOBFORILES~~
St. 304·675 •34 58
I'U...&amp;:.
4 bedroom , 2 bath . 568

USA, original army camou· .•
flage,since
1964,
by
Reception work ava ilable Sandyville Post Office, wide 2 br., 1 bath house, new carMon-F'ri Full or ~art-Ume In range of clothing eizes JR.· pet, prk:e reeluced to
3XL in mens 304·273-5855 $35,500. 304-675-2995
Medical Office. COntact
Oalena (304)773-5000
'J\otO white da)' beds (w/out 3 br.. 2 bath. appliances.
Securitas Security is now 'mattress) with ladybug quilt nice condition . c;ttntral-heal,
. hiting officers to cover poss1- aJlCI bed skin. Exc. condition aprox. 1,900 sq. fl. Aski ng
ble labor dispute In your 740-446-0805.
$69,000. 700:37H8e7.
area, above average wages
w-..~
paid witfl uniform s provided . . ·
nnu:.u
• BEDROOM, • BATH
Applications accepted at .
To Do
HOUSEl Foreclosure only
,032
12th.
St. West
$9,900. icr ll•tlngo. 1-800·
have . one opentng lora 719-3001 Eirt, F144
.Huntington WV, Mon-Fr1.
.
between the hours Of 8am- Eklerly man left. Call
'1tam
and
~ pm-3pm . (304)675-1!163
By owner 2 bedroom 2 bath
E&gt;eperlence helpful but not
rlverlron1 wl1h boe l llook 1.5
requ ired. For more details Jim's Carpentry and small acres
In
Gallipolis
call : HJOQ·24 t -74s-4.
landscaping. 20 yrs· experi· photosllntormatton on tine
ence.
Free
estimate. www.orvb.com code 90303
EOE!MIFIOIF
(740)44&amp;-2500
or call 74CJ.4.46.0531

I'"

HlRSALE

New 14X70 3Bri2Bth only
$995 00 down and onlf
$ 196 43 per month Call
Karen a. (740) 385-7671

~~

::-:----- -

~r~10~~H&lt;~JUSI:"l."-')-;. --,~". 4«1
~
HlRRENT

'--1\-•IUIIioiiilliO
.EiiiHiii&lt;iii
li\•U.•'l;_.J

lwright@ic. 11et ·

Garage Sale
Oct. 17th Bam·?
Rt2 &amp; 87 Mt Alto, WV
Ant1que dt shes ,chair, stone
jar, stone wate r tar, tire
patcher &amp; tools &amp; lotS of
o·ther items.

r

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ myda ilyregister.com

POUCIES:
Pubtlthlng reMJ'Yes the right to edit, rejeet, or cane.\ any .cl at any time. Erron muat be reported on the fir.-t de)' at publ..cation '"' tho l
Trlbune-Sentlnti•Rtgltler will be rupon~lble for no mote'thlln thf cost of the 1pact occupt.d by the err01 and only the fir It mtertton . We ahall not be lli' olt&gt;le tor i
1ny loiS or nptr\11 thet ruultt from thlt publlcaiiDn or rmaisaion of an ad~er'liument . Correction wil l bfl made tn , .... firat avar~ edl'boo • Bo• number
lrt 1fwaya confldenllll. • Current rl.. card epplles. • All real ellala adv,.rtitemtnts are eubjeet to th4 Federal Fair liol.IS•~ Ac1 of 1968. • This
accepts only help wlf'lled ada mHiing EOE standlm:le. We wi lt not knowingly accept any advertising in ~io..Uon of tM I'*

Pr. Pl..F.ASANT

Oct 18, 8-3pm. 2226 Mt. Now hiring Sales R~. lo
Vernon Ave. Pt. Pleasant. call
Govefnment
Love seat, bunk bed, HP Depai-tments,
City
printer.
" Departments , Government
· Entitles. We call Business
~at only, 3·4 family yard only, no reside ntial calls,
sate, 9·5. Old Rt 35, beside $8.00.minlmum up to $12.00
Ralph Burns &amp; , Sons (depending on experience)
Trucking
· co . guaranteed .plu s bonus, our
lnfant&amp;lkldsladul1 clothing &amp; top Sales Reps. average
• little "bit of everyttling.
between seoo to $12,000 a
'
·
week. Call 304-675-2700 or
thu rSd ay Oct. ~6 &amp; Friday 1.· 800 -875-2573 ask to r
Oct. 17. Debbie Drive Tommy Milstead, between
Chapel 9·4.
12-2pm only.

.,

l\.eglster

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallysenti nel.com

• Start Your Adt -With A Keyword • Include Complete
· Description • Include A Price e Avoid Abbrevlellons
e Include Phone Humber And Addre11 When Needed
·
• Adt Should Run' Days

Found: Small b)ack SCOttiSh
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Terrier 740-256-6336.
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304675· 1429.
Found: Female Chocolate
lab, In Thurman area, house Christian metal rock band
broken, well taken care of. needs drumm er Our influCa ll 740-682·3163.
ences Include Fugazy. Black

r

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
•

"

Puppies, Cocker Spaniel
mtx. 6 weeks old. Call 740·
36N)624.

Here's all you need to do ...
,Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
COPY.of your photo ID.

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Tlte Daily Sentinel
i&gt;unbav limes··i&gt;enttntl"

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
·
classified@ mydai lytri bune.com

Offtee llorq-~

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•

Qtrihune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

Thursday, October t6, 2003

30

Used Furnrture StOre. I
Bulaville Ptke . ManresSes.
dresser s couches. bLJn~
beds. be_droom
swtes
recliners
Grave monuments.
740·446 - 4782 ~
Galhpohs. OH Hrs 10-4pm ~
Stop by

t

I

Buy or sell . R1venne
Antiques. 1124 Ea st Main
on S A 124 E Pomeroy. 740.
992 -2526
Russ · Moore:
owner

540 MISCFJ.LANE&lt;XJS
Fl.lrni shed rooms for rent.
Mt:RCIIANDlSE
close to Kyger Creek and
Gavin Ptan t, Back of
Addison Call 74Q-367 -0f02 .. 1984 Jeep Wagoneer Blown
engtne, trat1smiss1on ok.
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedBody good $500 Solar
room fipartments at Village
power w1th adBP,ters 3-12'J
Manor
and
Riverside
$40 ., 386148 6 Corri"puter
Apartmerits. in Middleport.
"software. 2 la_rger boxes,
From 5278-$348 . ·Call 740100's of uti11ty games. SHXl
992-5064 Equal Hous1ng
304-675·3542 leave mesOpportunities ,
sage .
New Haven. 1 be.droom fur·
ntShed apartment alsO have 5000 Watt Honda Generator
washer &amp; dryer, 11eposit &amp; $600. (304 1e62-3273
retere;nces .
no
pets,
Firewood , seasoned oa~
{7 401992-()165
$20. pickup toad. You cut voll.
Nice one BA unfurnished haul. Not responsible to,.
apartment. Range &amp; re1ndg. accidents (304)675-6440
provided. Water &amp; garbage
JET
patd. Deposit required: Call
I'IERATION MOTORS
740-446 -4345 after 6 p.m.
Repaired, ,l9ew &amp; Rebuilt In"
Now Taking Apphcai!Ons- Stock. Call Ron E\lans, t ..
35 West . 2 · Bedroom B00-537 ~ 952e .
•
Townhouse
Apartments,
•
IncludeS Wate f
Sewage,
Offi~
Furniture
Trash. $350/Mo .. 740-446o&lt;io6'.
.
New, scratch'&amp; Dent:
Sa\18 70'%. 1·800..527 -4662 ·
Twin Arvers Tower i&amp; a'ccept· Argonaut 519 Bridge Street,
ing applications tor waltinQ Guyandotte/Hunrlngton. MIF·
list for Hud-s ubsized, 1· br.
apartment. call 67'5-6679 Wood Stove tor u~ 304·
EHO
675-1506

�•
•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
Announcements

Card of Thanks

The Daily Sentinel • Page Bl

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Oct. 16, 2003
,ALLEY OOP

Thursday, Oct. 16,2003

Card of Thanks

::

!!••~·

GUN ::
~·
SHOOT !l
••

t:

..

...

"Hono ra· (304 )773- 5490

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

BUILOINI;
LI\'E'iTOCK

SU1'11.1FS
Block, bnck . sewe r pipes.
windows. lintels. etc Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, OH
Call 740-245·5121 .

r

p,.,s
IURSALE

Jack Russell Terrie r pups,
hunting type, $150 ea . Call
740·367·7770.

Angus Bulls, Hailers plus
Mame-Angus Steers a~d
Heilers , Top blood l1na s
Slate run farm . Jackson
740·286·5395.
Horse Boarding Indoor/out·
door pens . Boll' stalls. 740·
446·47 10 barn : 740·645·
2475 cell.

ra.,76-•1Nsmi·Mi; i,us~ i i~ -I·L-_.1 r

HAY&amp;

Phillip
Alder

Racine Volunteer
Fire Department
would like · to
thank
the
following foi the
Appreciation Day Service.
Enduring Freedom Group,
Racine First Baptist OJUrch,
Racine United Methodist
Church. Southern Charge
United Methodist Church,
RACO and any other
volunteers that assisted in the
service.
We would also like to thank
the volunteers who helped us
and the people who attended
the recent Basket Bingo.

I
North
• 10174

•

A.u.~-- ~~• i-

.
..
[~ t.;.D. . .ftlRSAI.E

Remodeling Sale
Used Kitchen Cabinets
Formica counter, stainless sink &amp;
appliances, 2 double steel Stanley
doors Call after 7 pm

40% off regular price items, an
extra 20% off Sale Items
Open 10:00 am • 9:00 pm

WOODYARD'S
MINI MALL

TRUCKS
mRSAI.E

Located at 85 Vine St.
Gallipolis Would like to invite
all of Meigs Co. to visit our
store-containing furniture,
clothing, etc. Also our Auction
every Sat. Night at 6:30
Different sellers every week ·Smoke Free

I

;iili_~·"'-1\ggg

r

,'i. I 1\ h II II K

1994 Buick Century 96K
$2.495: 1981 Chevy 4x4 7
in. lift excellent condition
$3,995: others In stock. we
lake trades.

A pureb'red 5 yr old , smooth
. COOK MOTORS
gentle , walking horse mare .
740-448-0103
with/w ithout
PB/WH . 6
month fi lly. 1mpr1nted han- 1994 Thunderbird, good
dled dai ly. 388-0436 after cond iti on,
low mileage.
5:30pm.
$2500 .00 (7401742-2459

92 Buick Park Avenue. 72K.
Leather, power everything,
excel lent
condition .
Red uced to $3.995.
Smith Buick Pcntlac
740-446-2282

ASH STREET CHURCH ,
FALL FESTIVAL
Saturday, Oct. 18th
1:00-4:00
General Hartinger Park
Middleport , OH Snacks- inflatable
games Everyone Welcome

$8500. 619·770·0493

-in~go_o_d_c_o_nd-11-lo-n

r M~IPERSRH~~ I
~

uou

w~

1998 Yamaha IOOcc 4· 2002 Sportsman Frontie~.
wheeler, excellent condition, sleeps ni ne, new
cond.,
new engine , new tires. used five times, lactory war$1,000 080. Call 740-367- ranty, unique lloor plan;
0436.
extras included, call lor
details or questions, list
2000 Suzuki RM-125 gold· $17,200 ' sacrifice $12,200.
edition,
F.M .F.·Fatty-Pipe 441 -9593
before
1Opm
with F.M .F. -Silencer new pisto n/rings. $2 ,000 or trade.
388-8188 after 3.

BASEMENT
4 Deluxe wheels mounted
WATERPROOFING
with Studded tires. P265/7S
R 16. Brand new conl!lition Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references lur$400. 740-446-4191 .
nished. Established 1975.
Call _24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Auto motive parts. If your
0870. Rogers Basemen!
lpoking lor engines or trans·
Waterproofing .
mis.sions give me a call at

740·446-{)519.

r..,_'o_,IMPROVEMENIS
.....
" O·ME·--.,J

. ~

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting, vinyl
sidi ng, carpentry, doors,
windows, ba1 hf!, mobile
ho me repair and more. For
free estimate call Chet, 740·

992·6323.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

~·I&gt; B~ PellF~CT/

~' •

AT MY
LAST jOI ~ PI I&gt;

A ~OT Of
.fTA~ING

A

OFf INTO ,

.Linda's 'Beauty Shay

SPAC::~.

•.

J#lcornes Betty Hoscltar

...........

Our Fall Specials:

I

BARNEY

Color &amp; Perms 25..
' Ladles Style CUts ,,..
Klds&amp;Menr
Longer Hair Slightly Higher
' NOW
.. Tann111g A11ailable

HOW '80UT SOME
SMELLIN' SALTS,
LOWEEZY?

GIVE 'EM
TO YA FER

FREE!!

H1JIIrinr or JlppO'ir~lml'nts wrlfomt o rl}'time.
985-JJ48 nu.nks f"' your busirreu.
Su!lln Baum

Dean Hlll

THE BORN LOSER

New&amp; Used

P':

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

. [ f-\1\'/e C.LI\US\ROPf\0011\,

"'-C.ROI'I-\0511&gt;-., XUIOP\\OB\1\,

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's # 1 Chery. Pontiac. Buick , Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dea ler"

R.B.
Trucking

The unusual leap
to five of ·a major

YES.

Box 189,

~~
.
!

FOOL!
Wt-iAT
DO 'l'OU

and Financial Services,

WANT

OH

TO

t&gt;O

"'"'

HE 'S THE

I'IAN WHO
PUT THE
"PETTY" IN
PETTY
CASH.

CATCHY
CI&gt;.MPAIGN
SLOGAN '

TREASURER-:

-,,-

WRITESEl

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring Ibis coupon
Buy $5.00 .
Bonanza Get
SFREE

BING02171

Ta~e the PAIN

out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1\ for youl

PEANUTS
50 I WROTE TO TI-lE
CONTEST PEOPLE. AND
TOLD TI-IEM I HAD NO
USE FOR A LAW!ool MOWER ..

THE'( WERE IJER't' NICE ..
THE'!' SAID THE'1''D SEND
.,
ME SOMETHING EL.5E ...

YOUNG'S

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Sieling &amp; Painting
• Patio ancl Porch Decks

BETTY

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-62t5

•

'
GARFIELD
YOU G-OTTA 5EE
fHI6. IAM 50

~~~

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992·5232

5 4 -;

as 1 bona
syllable
55 Wlitart'
19 - "''
ollofings
21 Hindu Mr. ' 56 ~hts
22 Fireman's 57 Alto IIIC''' Ig

.....

,_
23

3
4

5

concern•

looth

6 Currlor
ond7 Quick awlm

8 Shipment
9 Actress

leaguer

lndlC.Ior

45 Ulre

... -

·

20 Staryy prwllx
to 22 c-1
47 Alaelren
IMiure
e1ty
SoapunH
24 Mournful
411 au-.
Pllnplona
25 Cuts
lUll.
chnr
or !Mil
51 c:ou..t 110111
Foil mo.
26 Mlclclay
52 Pool hall
Rowdlor
pm•al
Item
ol the rMim 27 Su 53 Curly le4l!or

1
2

35 Lamonade
or Iced tea
37 Major

43 Stlr.fry
......
44 Wind

10 Obi
14 Relltw
I 5 Ability
I 7 Wrinkling
19Witdom

DOWN

28 Exlremely
30 Chicken
--king
31 Ya,
toYva
32 Nick or
teralch
33 A(UIIysl'l

29 Hove 1 cold
34 Lure
38 Turlcey

-

39 Soon,
lo Juliet

- Rolneo

38 Luke

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CAitbmy Op"ler ~·ms are crea~ee 110fT
E~ left!!' l'l

~by !~~MUs~

lle OJN'! 51~ i!Y another

TOOBy's clue· Z equals

" IIXABSBNO

COP

RL' x

YMNW
HANTX
CMR

FBO .

CIIX

put wd ~

w

CIIR

TCWX

TUMBOS

MNNR

COP

XHNONWBHT

CUX

COP

TRMCOSXMT. "

ZBAAC

HCRLXM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I can 't imagine a person beooming ~ soccess' w11o
doesn't give lhiS game ol hie eve&lt;ylh1ng hes got.' - Walter Cronltrte
T1&lt;£TD&amp;tLT C.~'t:J

"Not me!
My money is w1th
Rocky Hupp Insurance

HOWAR l.

949-1405

-r

18 ToltQroph

6\'1t.l_

10.t6

);"C ~c:,., - woa'e

'f ..

IIUHUI ..;.,_:
0~ ,,..,,.
J:'o~~
~)..1. I'OII.AH
~ I,:.;~_ _
IAittl
____
•• c..:r
_:.,__
_

Pomeroy Eagles

GUTTER

lon'l ol.
mornber
41 PC ligt..ons
13 HH the hll)'
15 Cllyx
41
y
_, _ _
c01llr
16 UniHx
50 Leaflet

(c)2003 by NEA.Inc.

740·985·1564

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENIIICE
*SEAMlESS

43 " ~•

q~INI

By Phl111p Alder
and your partner, in a compet itiVe
auction, have agreed a major suit.
Suddenly. without further ado: you jump
to fi"Je ol that major. What message are
you sending to partner?
Next question: How would vou plan the
play in seven spades after We st ISads the
heart queen to dummy's l&lt;ing?
West is right to overcall two c lub s.
Although he has only nine high-card
points . he has excellent distribution .
North makes a limit ra1se, prom1smg 1().
12 support poi nts with at least four
spades. Then , South's jump to live
spades tells his part ner that he has two
quick club losers (the opponent's suit)
and wishes to bid a slam if North can
control that sui1 . When North cont1nues
with six clubs, that guarantees l1rst·round
club contro l: ttie ace or a void. Fina lly,
South takes an optimistic lunge into
SB\Ien .
Many p layers would stan ·by pilch lng a
club, but they would eventually lose a diamond trick and go down .
Instead, disccird the diamond 10. draw
trumps, and cash the ace-king of dia·
monds. II the queen falls . you can clai m.
H owever, let's assume the queen is still
on the loose II West bega n w1th queenfourth , your con tract was unmakabte . If
East started with queen-fourth, cross to
dummy's club ace. pitch your diamond
jack on the heart ace , and lead the diamond nin~ to ruff away East's queen .
Finally, return to dummy with a trump and
jettison that pesky club loser on the
establis hed d1amond eight. With this lay·
a ut, you fallow the same plan to ruff down
West's diamond queen.

HAULING:

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime

IO\Irce
42 Wood
realdue

You

Ni cety bid and beautifully played I

"I lost my shirt
in the stock
market!"

Pomeroy. Ohio
2YrLO&lt;: I

PIC1'URI:.S OF

MY 73.000

GRANt'CHIL-PREN!

PROUP!

IMPORTS
Athens
MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St..
middleport, OH
(lO'xlO' 6_10'1120')

Advertise · (740) 992-3194
992-6635
in this
space
SELF
STORAGE
for $50
In Mason .
10x10 • $35.00
per month
1Ox20 • $55.00
740-992·3961

'

Earn
Pasa
Pass
Pau

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740·992·7599

•Free Estlllates.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Sorth
3•
6•
Pau

Opening lead: • Q

BUILDERS InC.

Ohio
45771
740·949·2217
with , Secllon 5715.19
of the Ohio Revised
Code. These com·
plalnls must be flied
on forms which will
be furnished by the
county Auditor and
must be flied In the
Counly
Auditor's
Office on or before
the 31st day of March
2004. All complalnls
flied with the County
Auditor will be heard
by the Board of
Revision in the manner
provided
by
Secllon 5715.19 of the
Ohio Revised Code.
Nancy Parker Grueser
Meigs County Audllor
(10) 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13,
14,15, 16,17

Wesl
2•
Pass
Pus

twice

TV, ,_,

41

Lampreys

Vulnerable: North·South
South
1•
5•
7•

aIalor
40 Noltven

1 Tr811Dllnlel e Runt
In neutrwl
11 Beuxne
giant
12 String-

25 DA'ocloglw

• 2

Dealer: South

BISSELL

Racine,

NOTICE TO TAXPAY·
ERS
Reference:
5715.17 Ohio Revised
Code
The Meigs Counly
Board of Revision has
5082
completed ils work of
1998 Merc edes ML320 SUV equallzalion. The tax
4-wheel drive . 59,000 miles. returns for tax year
have
been
740..441 -1377 leave a mas· 2003
revised end the valua·
sage.
lions compleleo;l and
91 Dodge Caravan LE. are open for public
In the
loaded, one owner, B6K, Inspection
$2,000, 740·949·2481 or office of the Meigs
Audllor,
740-992-6145 leave mes· County
Second
Floor,
sage
Courthouse, Second
96 Dodge Ram 4x4, fully Streel, Pomeroy, OH.
Complaints against
loaded, duel exhaust $7000:
the Valuations, as
304·576-3 122
established for tax
year 2003 must be
made In accordance

J9 0 32

• A K J 10

•

992-5479

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

Q6
916 5 432
52
Q6

·-

Jeff Warner Ins.

29670 Bashan Road

95 Cavalier. 2 door, red,
automatic transmission. air. (7401992-3490
132K. $ 1,995 . 740·446-2285
ask tor Bob.
1 998 Dodge G rand Caravan
A Team Feed. 110 Vine 1995 Eagle Talon TS I AWD, 99 Dodge Intrepid, every Sport, loaded, new transStreet,
shelled
corn 5 speed , new upgrade turbo power option cruise . C/0. tilt, mission, e)(cellent condilion ,
miles.
$7500,
$5.80/1 00#. While quantity &amp; luel pump. $4,000. obo. rear air, price $8,000 OBO, 7 1,000
(740)949-4037
or
740·992last, limit 4 740-441-9090
(3041 576-2238
(740)664·3206

w_"·_·_
·
$1500.l·_·
(3041882
-3273
-

•
.
t
.
Soutb
' "'AK

Hill's Self
Storage

1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo 4x4, 58 ,995. 1996
Dodge Dakota Supe rcab
4x4 , and many more 4x4's to
Choose fro m
Riverview
Motors.

1989 Yamaha Pro-hauler 4·

• . QJt08
tQ H
"'K J 108 7 3

Cellular

· 2 Days only

(7401

Auros

MONTY

FASHION BUG
Friday &amp; Saturday
October 17 &amp; 18

~asL

Wt:fit

Sk) .......

g:"-)

A K

"' A 54

304-675·3383

1995 Grandam 2D 99K 1991 S-10Tahoe. V-6, 5 sp.,
ii~8;:5::;·4;::2i,;5:.;;:6~-~:--;
...... Round bales 1st &amp; 2nd cut- S2.495: 2000 Buick Century power steering/brakes. NC
57K $4.395: 19 others $1.500. Call 740-256-14.8 7
Filum; &amp;
tlng. 740-256-1944.
, ·$1 .195to $5. 795. We honor
VF.C.ETAHI£~
I R \'\"1'1 II{ I \/10'\
PAC prog ram cars.
1994 Ford Ranger low rider.
10
:
COOK MOTORS
5 speed black. Cal l 388·
~latoes for sale SON $10,
74()-446-0103
8188 after 3.
Mon -Sat ., 65002
State [
FOR SALE
(_
____
•---'--~oute 124, Reedsville, Oh, .._____
Pontiac Bonneville . 1995 Ford E-350 Van, 14. ft.
740 378·629 1
$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS loaded $ 7 ·295 · 2000 Sat_urn high cube box , e)(cellent
Hondas , ChevVs, Jeeps, etc 1 4dr. Blue, 41 ,OOO rnlles cond 740-446·9416
FoR SAL[
Cars from $500. For listings 55,995. And many more
OR TRADE.
1·800-7 19·3001 ext 3901
cars to choose from.
1995 FORD E350 CUBE
Riverview
Motors
BOX
TRUCK.
CALL
For Sa te : Redwood picnic 1985 Cutlass Supreme. 1 (7401992·3490
(7401446·9416. M· F 9-5.
table, see at 1074 Bula\lille owner, sharp 37819, very
~ 391
Salford
2000 Mercury Sable fully Located
Pike. 740-446-1632.
clean, $2000 . new tires.
Sc ~ool. Gallipolis .
equipped,
leather
int.,
power
1990 Jeep Cherokee 4 liter
REFRIGERATOR/ FREEZ98700, sharp truck 2 wh moon roof, 41 ,000 miles will
VANS&amp;
ER . Frigidaire 19.0 cubic
dri\le
$2000 . (740)446- consider trade 304·6754-WDS
~at SIDE By SIDE Almond .
3354
1266.
jquns well $125. 740-446·
1454
1990 Ford Probe 120k, goOd 91 Old's Cut. Cierra. Runs 1994 Chevy 1 ton. 4 wd,
cond.
51400. 304-675-5205 greal. SBOO OBO. Call 740- Si lverado, flat bed , tool
I \I{ \I "tl 1'1'1 II s
388-0318.
or 304-675-4595.
bo~&lt;es, tow pKg . 102k m!les

'lgh hat. 1475.00

10 lfi 03

• 9 '63

GRAIN

Cover Crop wheat $4.50 per
Talon Drum Set · 4 drums. 2
bushel . and 1,000 lb · round
Zillions-cymbals. 1 stool, 5
bai l hay $ 15 each . Call 740·
etands, speed-kiCker. zillions
245·5047.

Croaawo_rd Puzzle

ACROSS

;;:::::::xx:::::x:~;

NEW AND US~D STEEl
:: Forked lun ::
~teel Be ams. Pipe Ael:lar
Sportsman Club~·
For
Concrete.
Angle . ~~
~~
~~
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
Cratmg
For
Drams.
Ehiveways &amp; Walkway s. L~L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tue sday, Wednesday . &amp;
•
Friday, 8am-4 .30pm. Closed ... Su/urdtJy,
o~· t. 18. ](HJJ ~·
!hursday.
Saturday
&amp; ;4
~~
I :()(J I ~M.
;~·4
i u:'lday. (740)446-7300
~~
12 N.i[/lf' H.-~t~}irt
Remembe ring Elvis, com- •• Smulay, {h'/ . 19, 10(13 ••
Plete Bpc set of pla'tes. $200 ••
t :mJp.m.
;4
2 Pearl Bracelet 7-1/2 1n
~~
~·
;c
~/;;g
flfatch
••
black , white . $20 ea ch

~EA

BRIDGE

J&amp;L

Eledric
Licensed &amp; ~onded
Ph 740-!19l-G!Il3
Cell 7110-5!11-1073

GRIZZWELLS'

6Eta."TS 1/£ ... I llA\JE !jQ IDEA

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUcnON

IN5P\RA~

POIN"t

·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

v-li\Ai ill/iT'S AU.

Friday, Oct. 17 2003
By B•rnlc• a.cHt O•ol
Several m oney-making opportunities
could come your way in the year ahead,
but they may come through channels
you'd least ex~ect . Be receptiVe to a!l
so urces that open up so th at you can take
advantage of them
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 - By being
careless about m onito ring your financial
affairs today. it could turn out to be a rather
expensive day 101 you . Make certain you
get dollar value out o l every buck you
spend
SCORPIO (Oct. 24- Nov. 22 ) - Don't . let
your guard down lor a mi nUte when it
comes to dealing with others today, If you
fail to u se the proper amount of courte sy
and tact. you could !eave a poor , last1ng
impression.
SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 23-Dec. 2 1} - lis
best that you are honest and up front
about el! your actions so lt)at you have a
say in today's resu!ls. That which you 're
most anxious to hide wilt be exposed . with
repercussions.
C APRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan
19) Frivo lous side mterests can cut down on
the m omentum you have going' for you
tOday 10 achieVing someth 1ng far more
impo rta nt to you . Keep your pnorl ties in
order at all times.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb 19) - Unless
you take the ti me to evalua te what is realty important to you today, the obje ctives
you choose to focus on could turn out to
be empty promises with nothmg in them
for you
PISCE S (Feb .• 2Q-M arch 20) - Be particularly watchful of your behavior today
when out ,in public . You could be all
thumbs when 11 comes to social matters
and end up making a IDOl of yourself in
front of those you'd !ike to impress .
ARIES (March 2 1-A pri! 19) - When it
comes to shared e~epenses in an inYOt\lement with friends today, make certain that
everyone understa nds what their i n\lest·
ment brings - or else someone might
hiiVe unrea listic expectation s.
TAURUS (April 20 -May 20) Unless
there is true harm ony or purpose , a prol·
ect you share with an alliance that Is rltm ·
ey at best could have a monkey wrttnch
thrown into the el"(dethiOr and everyth1ng
could go down the drain today.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- If you focus
. more on excuses fOr not doing your tasks
today rather tha n on ways to accomplish
them . It lsn'l likely that anything will get
done. Neglected duties will be left In limbo
for quite awhile.
~
CANCER \June 21-July 22) - This may
be one of ho.se days when try ing to pro·
mote a commercial deal In a social setting
will be too dlstraotln g and work against
you . Keep busi ness ar:~d pleasure sepa·
rate today.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)- Wh&amp;·n looking for
a high ·tlcket Item today, make certain that
you understand the ae:ner'a return potlcy.
W hat you buy might not be as attractive in
your home as -It Ia In the atore.
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22)- Being ovtrly
c omplace nt abo-ut ev•nta taking place
ted&amp;)' could i::auae you to take your eya oPf
a altuatlon juat when thinga atarts drl ftln~
In the wrong direction and glv. you major
problema.

O lour
Atorro nge lttters oi
tcrcmbl.d wofc'l
low ta to,

thl
be·

WOtds

lotn slmpit

HALVSI

I' I I 1 I
2

T0 J J

~

I I 1 I'
3

~

c
I

p Ey PP

••
I' I I' I -

On a recent roa d tnp I was ·:
speed•ng along bu t quickly s:owed •
0
down when I re ar a s tg n saying r--:::-:-;-,:----,--,--, "The ltme yoJ_sa~e speedong woll
I ,

EN J L [ G

I

; I9

I I?

be •• - .. tn - . - . ,-

i ()

~:-r--:--~......j

&amp;'l PP.it JT NWMBE~ED 1

' I' I'

~ l f'i i f~ 5

SCIAM-L!TS ANSWERS

ARLO &amp; JANIS

t
&gt;

.SOUP TO NUTZ

A~l''
Me. !3-aBS,ibu SHoULP
Willk a Molle IN

..

SHoES

r---rT

I.

'

740-992·1811
Stop &amp; Compare
I

..

j. •
.:-_

1 n- 1

s-

o,

Remove· Kmle · Elude ·Hobble BELIEVE
Tr.e coed tned ;a give an excuse for not complettng a
P_,ojec:."Never explam." I he p roi essor advised her.
' l nends don'l need tl and your enemies won ·l BE LIEVE
' ..
h.

~U .)VDGe

'

Comf? le'• th• c.~vclde · cvoted

by r, !ling in fh~ llliU11'1Q 'MOfdS
you dtvtJOP tro:n S1tO No. J beiow.

)'

'

.

�.I

Thursday, October 16, 2003

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Everybody has
opinion oil OSU's
.offensive offense, Bt

National Football League

College Football

Browns'
. 0-line
reshuffled by injuries
.

.

·Hayesites stunned by
Tressel's emphasis on .
passing game, B3
&lt;
'

A reshuffled offensive line Bay when Dave Wohlabatigh
is standard for Browns quar- was injured. He won the startAssociated Press ·
terback Tim Couch. Since ing job this season at left ,
1999., the Browns have used guard. but with the Browns'
BEREA - Just when the 20 different starting lineup running game struggling
Cleveland Browns' otfensive combinations in front of . through three games, Fowler
line was finally o~ening siz- Couch.
was benched and O'Hara was .
able gaps in opposmg defens"Hopefully, we won't have moved from the right side.
es, it spmng two holes of its to take a step back and keep
Fowler, a third-round selecown.
what we've had going the last tion from Maryland in 2002,
Rookie center Jeff Faine two weeks," Couch said. has been inactive in two of the
and left guard Shaun O'Hara "Hopefully these guys have past three ·games. However;
will both miss Sunday's game been paying attention and Davis said the Brow,n s sttll
against San Diego after .sus- watching in practice at what's have confidence in Fowler.
taining knee injuries in last been goi ng on."
"Just because you're inacweek's win over Oakland.
Faine, the Browns' first- ti ve doesn't mean you're in
Faine has a sprained left round draft pick (No. 21 over- the doghouse ," Davis said .
medial coll ateral ligament · all) in April, got hurt early 10
The Browns' 0-line has had
wnile O' Hara stretched his the . fourth quarter Sunday to be reconstructed since the
right anterior cruciate liga- while out front on a running final exhibition game when
ment.
left tackle · Ross Verba suf" . •. .
p1ay '.or Green.
The latest ouens1ve IDJUnes
"I was blocking a guy and fered a season-ending bic"eps
have forced yet anoth~r , my leg kind of got trapped on mJury.
Verba' s loss led to Barry
shakeup t.o Cleveland s top of someone else's," Faine
re vamped hne , whtch was said Wednesday. "Will got Stokes being moved from left
commg otf strong perfor- tackled right on top of me. guard to tack le. where he has
mances the past two :oveeks.
Luckily, 1 was wearing my played the past four we~ks on
William Green gamed 115 brace. It saved two other liga- a badly sprained right ankle.
yards ru shmg at Pittsburgh ments."
·
Fowler and 0' Hara played
two weeks ago and 145 on
Despite being in extre me three games apiece at left
Sunday agamst the Rmders, pai'n and limping badly, Faine guard with Paul Zukaus.kas
makmg h1m the ftrst Browns remained in the game.
starting the J:&gt;ast three on the
runmng back to have consec- . "They sent someone .out to right side.
ut1ve I00-yard games smce get me but 1 wanted to finish
Despite ' having to replace
Kevm Mack m 1986.
it off" Faine said "I'd gone two starters this week, Davis
"We' ll make due ," said that far and the ·game was doesn't expect any drop-off in
Browns coach Butch Dav1s. going pretty well and 1 want- production .and smd the
Melvon Fowler, who made ed to finish up." ·
Browns will not scale back
one start at center last season
0' Hara's injury could be their offense.
and three at left guard th!S worse.
"We' re preparing to pl ay
y~ar before bem$ benched,
He was not available during and play well," he said.
w11l replace Fame. E1ther the period the Browns' locker "Injuries are pan of it. You
Chad . Beasley, a former room was open to the media . have to guys who are ready to
defensive hnemen , or free Neither he or Faine came out step up. When · Kelly
a&amp;ent rook,le E~och. DeMar to watch Wednesday's work- (Holcomb) went down, Tim
w1ll take 0 Hara s spot.
. out.
stepped up. When we lost
. Beasley and [)eMar s pht
Davi s
said
.O' Hara Ross Verba, Barry Stokes
ume wl!h ,the hrst umt m "stretched" hi s li ~ament.
stepped in and did a nice job.
Wednesday s pmcttce, Davis
Fowler filled m at center You have to have that anisaid.
last season against Tampa tude."
BY TOM WITHERS

South Carolina's Cory Peoples sacks Kentucky quarte rback Jared Lorenzen during the
first half Oct. 9· at Williams.Brice Stadium in Columbia, S.C. Lore nzen will start for the
Wildcats this week against Ohio. (API
'

Lorenzen will start for
Kentucky against Ohio
LEXI NGTON. Ky. (AP)
- Jared Lorenzen has suf·
ficiently recovered from a
· conqussion and will start
at
quarterback
for
Kentucky
when
the
Wildcats host Ohio on
. Saturday, coach Rich
Brooks said Wednesday.
Lorenzen suffered the

concussion on the final
play of the third quarter of
Kentucky 's 27-2 1 loss to
South
Carolin a
on
Thursday,
when
he
received a helm et-to-helmet hit from defensive end
Moe Thompson.
Lorenzen did not practice on Monday as

Kentucky doctors assessed
his recovery from the
injury.
Brooks said startin g
tight end Win Gaffron
likely will miss the O~io
game 'and could be out for
up to two weeks because
of recurring back prob- :
lems . •

Pennington will be third QB vs. Texans

toughest decisions I' ve had
to make as an admini strator," Principal David Lang
said. "Our kids have given.
everything they've got but
with 14 players it beco me s
a safety issue.
"We have so me very
young and inexperienced
pl ayers that would have to
be on the field a nd their
safety is our primary concern."

WBGS the Ministry Station,
K-92 The Frog, ESPN 1390,
JOY-FM 88.1 and
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses, Inc.
-Invite you
to participate in ..
•
an opportunity to make a '
difference in the lives of
young boys and girls throUghout
the world in war tom countries. -

~

'*

80%of

heat loss
occurs

through ,Y
your attic.

Upgrade Your

Attic Insulation

'_.
'
i

~

740-446~2002
Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday 11-5
I

Rllln

Play ers learn ed of the
decision on Tuesday.
"Hone stly, we just cried .
Thi s is among one of the
worst days of my life,"
seni or Tim Gregory sa id .
" ! know our number s
were down but l still can't
believe we're not .finishing
the seaso n. "
Fostoria is about 35 miles
southea st of Toledo .

,

··

Trussell said yesterday he
expects to spend little or no
additional money on food
before the end of the year,
because the Meigs County
Jail has been closed all year,
and will remain closed. ·
·Tru ssell requested a total
of $Ill ,800 in transfers from ·
the food; housing and medical line items into his
salaries line item. In addition
to requesting the transfer of
$29,883.35 from J;lis food
line, · Trussell asked that
$62.000 be transferred from
the housing line, and
$20,000 from the medical

line, leaving no funds in the
food line, $15,367 in the
housing line, and $5.000 in
the medical line.
Commissioners
sai d
Thursday they will not
approve additional transfers
until they can determine how
much Trussell -ws in outstanding bills for tne year.
"We' ll keep a cushion until
we · determine what is
·owing," Commissioner Jim
Sheets said yesterday. ·' J
kriow $1.800 is owed to the
Southeastern
Ohio
Correctional Facility (in
Nelsonville) for housing

costs there, and we won't be
able to house any additional
prisoners there until that's
paid."
"However. I know that the
three .line items in question
- food, hou sing and medical costs - have balances
that well ex~eed what has
been spent to date," Sheets
"lid . "We still mu.1t be able
to anticipate an increase in
any of those costs between
now and the end of the year."
Commissioners have. in
the past. denied Trussell's
requests for funds transfers.
and the sheriff was forced to

lay off 13 deputies and
almost all of his suppon staff
- with the exception of an
adminimative. assistant who
is now working four-hour
days - in mid-Jur,\!. They
have c1ted advice from the
attorney representing them
in a civil suit Trussell filed
earlier this year. but said yesterday they are now able to
more accurately project what
will be needed to operate
Trusse ll's
department
through the end of the year.
Sheets sa id Attorney
Please see Return. A$

,

-'*• HI: 801, Low: 30o

LoTI'ERIES

ODOT Director Gordon Proctor. left . visits the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge replacement project site. with District 10 Construction
Engineer Steve Williams and District 10 Deputy Director

Ohio

George Collins. Load testing recently performed on dril led test
shafts resulted in a new world record. (ODOT Photo)

Pick 3 day: 6-9-8
Pick 4 day: 1-6-3-7
Pick 3 night: 4-3-2
Pick 4 night: 5-8-8-2
Buckeye 5: 1-7-8-17-33

·

Bridge test sets world record
J. REED
breed@mydailysentinel.com

downward direction beneath
the shaft. according to OOOT
Public Information Officer
Stephanie
Filson.
POM EROY - Recent load
The
previous
world record
testing of drilled shafts in the
for
load
bearing
using the
Ohio River at the site of the
new Pomeroy/Mason Bridge testing method was 34,000
kips. set in Arizona in 2001 ,
has set a new world record.
according
to Tillis, and the
The Ohio Department of
tests
at
the
Pomeroy/Mason
.Transportation District I0
ran a test to over 35.000
has completed sophisticated site
kips.
deep foundat ion load testing
One kip. Tillis said. is
on eight-foot diameter drilled equal to 1,000 pounds.
test shafts in the river.
Accardi ng to Fi Ison, the
accor11ing to Project Engineer test provides a check system
, Don Tillis.
before ODOT advance~ farUsing the Osterberg Cel l ther into construction.
test. which uses state-of-the"If the test had not been
art technology.· ObOT mea- successful. ODOT would .
sured both shear resistance, have had to revisit many
or friction, and end bearing design elements before prostrength, in this case, what gressing with the project
the eight-foot diameter area schedule.
will support, Tillis said.
"The purpose of the test is
· The test is performed using to verify the bearing capacity
load cells. and hydrau lic of the shaft. rock, and soil
jacks are used to place equal
Please see RIICCII'd. AS
force both in an lipward and
BY BRIAN

West VIrginia

Meigs High School seniors Randy Hudson (left) and Justin Whitelatcher work together to
clone a venus 'flytrap, which is a meat-eating plant.

Dally 3: 1-8-0
Dally 4: 5-4-2-6
Cash 25: 4-1 o,13-15-20-24

'

••

Meigs students clone plants
BY J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysenti.nel .com

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

We thanlc all who
participated in 2002 that
enabled the Tri·Count" to
send 2A27 boxe$!

*
*

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics .

DROP-OFF LOCATIONS:
WBYG/WBGS/JOYFM
in Point Pleasant, WV
WVYK/WMPO on
Bradbury Road in
Middleport, Ohio -

A3, 6
B4-6
B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Faith•Values

{\4

Movies

As

NASCAR

BS

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

As .

A6

B 1-4
A2

&lt;tJ 2003 Ohio Valley Pub"'!hlnx Co.

ROCKSPRINGS
There is a cloning lab at
Meigs High School unlike
any·other in Ohio.
· Vocational agriculture
teacher Tim Simpson began
teaching hi s students liow to
clone plants two years ago.
The school built an antiseptic cloning laboratory in the
agriculture department at
the high school that has
begun to reproduce Boston
ferns and venus flytraps,
which eat meat.
More than I 00 students
have cloned the plants and
Simpson expects · many

more will participate in the
cutting edge program in the
future.
Simpson said cloning can
help solve the world's food
. supply problems. Cloning
can help eliminate disease,
bad crop yields, and other
problems that create food
shortages. For instance, if
someone cloned a strawberry plant that was resistant to
disease, then there would be
fewer strawberries wiped
out because of-disease during the harve st. As the
world's population increases, Simpson said better crop
yields will be important to
solving a loommg food
' shortage.
In the short term,

Simpson hopes that what
the students learn from 1he
cloning classes can be used
to make money. Not every
place in the world is ·as perfect for growing things as
Meigs County is . he said.
Other places need flowers, .
plants and vegetable s
shipped in from considerable distances.
Simpson's class is trying
to find a way to successfully clone Boston fern s. If the
students can grow quality
ferns starting from test
tubes, the ferns can be
grown anywhere. This
would eljmmate any ship- ·
ping and handling costs
PIIIH He Clone, A5

l;ogether we've lost 252 pounds.
And we're stUJ . Ios~g.

~
.•

.

Detail, on Page A2

;

'

.

WEATHER

f

Jet . Rt. 35 &amp; 160 Qal).ipolis, Ohio

\\\\\•tl•'tl••h-..4•t!liul ••

OBITUARJFS

~ (C)fte Sftoe&amp;ox S\(.inistr~)

FIBERGLASS INSULATION

J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

BY BRIAN

POMEROY - A$28,000
tran sfer approved Thursday
wi thin the budget of Sheriff
Ralph Tru ssell will allow for
the return of 13 deputies,
beginning this weekend.
At their regular meeting on
Thursday, Meig s Coun ty
Commissioners approved the
transfer from the line item
set aside for food for prisoners into Tru ssell's salaries
line. The transfer will leave
$1,883 in the food fund, but

_.
Operation ·,
~ ·C.Ftrist1nas (Jri[d'

this winter!

I(»BIJ&lt;t -.:.! uo :~

Page A5
• Olive Smith

It's time To Gear Up For...

Keep WARM
with

• Boone's blast puts
Yankees in the World
Series. See Page 82

~-~r#/!JJ·~~·~~--~~-~

-~

IRII)\\ . &lt;H

Deputy staff to return to work tonight

SPORTS

High school football season finishes
early for injured~riddled team

FOSTORIA (AP) - For
the fir st time in th e 80-year
history of the Fo storia St.
Wendelin football program,
the Mohawks won't fini sh
the season.
Administrators decided
not to play the final two
games because of a rash of
Pennin gton has been cleared to happen. When the time injuries that has. reduced
to practice and is not listed comes, I'll deal with it in my the team to just 14 availon the team 's injury report. own way."
able pl ayers .
EdwardS' will decide
"Thi s has been one of the
whether to start the former
Mars hall
quarterback
against the Eagles based on
this
week.
practice
Pennington will not com- ~
ment on hi s progress .
"You can't worry about
Chad, because. Vinny 's th e
quarterback, he's going to
have to play good agai n and
we're going to have to help
him," Edwa rds said.
Testaverde is not eve n
thinking about the day
Pennington returns , to the
lineup .
"Whatever is be st to help
the team win, that's the bottom line," Testaverde said.
Big Country 99,
"We all know what's goi ng

'\o 'LJ
.

Prep Football

.

HEMPSTEAD , N.Y. (AP)
- Chad Pennington will be
the No. 3 quarterback for the
New York Jets when they
play the Houston Texans on
Sunday.
Pennington, who broke
and disloeated his left wrist
in a preseason game against
the New York Giants, will
only play if starter Vinny
Testaverde and backup
Brooks
Bollin ge r
are
injured.
If Pennington enters the
ga me for the Jets ( 1-4)
before the fourth quarter.
Testaverde a nd Bollinger
would not be able to return.
Coach Herman Edward s
said Wednesday there is a
50-50 chance Pennington
will start the Jets' following
game, against Philadelphi a.

.J o(I '\ IC...•\ni. J ~

;

.

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