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•

..

Page A 10 • The Dally Sentinel ·

WWW;myctellyMnflnel.com

,Tuesday, Octobltr 1, 2002

......
BRIDGE ,

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Vulnerable: Both
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53 Ollw
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54 &lt;:amply .
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ldlly . .
Meadow
57 IMr
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81 RuM'
UniY.
62 Nelther'l

follower

c~eg,...

17 Quarty
53 Fllh-eltlng
18 Holp. lreM
bird
. 20 L11m1 klri 64 Mitro RRI
22 Homed
65 Compua
animal
pt.25 Ullll8lcl. 11 66 !lolled

6 AQ'Hl

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,PNP.Volleyball:·Meigs gilts ~II unbeaten, 81

NEA Crossword Jluazla ·

PHILLIP
ALDER

· Weu

•

Eaai·

I.
Pan

• blll .
26 Study
27 Mlny many

All p111

Openins lead: • 3 ~ ,...

yea,.

.

28 Opened

·count cards

wide

. • 31 Kuwolll
leader
33 Poker lilies

.

Hlgh-flblr
19 Trlgger'o

14

food

, rkllr

21 Sheltet'acl

-

42
-

BuciiiJUI.

FlU ·immunizations to be limited

What's inside

CllmpUI

43 - Lllnka
45 Arlb - '
41 ll8gllme'o

. -Blake

22' Rc~Fk ~ t4n~ela whiff
23 Coinputln . · ·Of
kay
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DOWN

1 Slai~-VIP

Uproar

4 Peacocks

24

Put one'•

25

u-

.

3 Elrth'llllr . .. foot-- . 52 Brill

2

t.elllltla

do II
29 lloornemlg 53 Empty
Paul Simon wrote
5
11r11ty kldl
lhroMr
56 HoWird'or
the song "A merica,"
34 Eurc:IH
6 Crt of
30 Do b.llk
Guidry
which includes these
aYIIIm
delklht
32 Cold and
511' Sllckum
38 Gnoek·oalld 7 Not111Z8d
windy
58 Wolllll\
· lines: ~"Counting the
ct.H
8
Mounllel'
35
Elllpaa
.
j)GIIIiJW
cars./ n the New
.39 Bullfight
org.
38 Mocking
eo
loiT grad
Jersey
pike." I
yeti
9 Trolan aplc
411 ltarmful
10 29.3 g,.mo 37 Cry o f -·
remember trying to
do that in 1971, when .
--r-""'r'-mI first visited this
country. It is not easy,
With s1x lanes oftraf- ·
fie in each direction.
It is"much simpler to ·
count to 13 at the
bridge table.
Look at today' s
North-South hands.
you reach three no: .
trump after East
opened one spade.
West leads the spade
three: two, jack, king.
/ YOLI'Rt RIGtiT ..... tiH. · BLil&gt;DY.
How would you con- ·
.
Ill
'tti~OyJ
tinue?
This deal occurred
. IN .A
during -the European
LOTT~~y
Mixed Teams Championship in Ostend,
TI'I'~T. .
Belgium, last March .
It was handled per·
"/.If~ • $NAX .
CELEBRITY CIPHER .
. fectly by two players:
JOF'T' Pfl!N/&lt;f
by Luis Campos
Monica Cuzzi, who
Celebrily Cipher cryp10grama are craatod from quolattonl by famous
was on the winning •
people, past and i&gt;'8SOnt. Each letter In the lllpher standi lor another.
Italian team, · and
Today's clue: D equals N
Catherine d'Ovidio,
France.
.
':l\\OUl.D ( C.IIJE 'f..M-q from
• c ZIJH BHYBCPPHD I .. ~·
Ndrth' s two dia- ·
1\ \:&gt;OS[ o' ~RI&lt;:O\ D:i
"~
monds was a transfer,
H J H B L
Y A B 0
C
Z I J H
H.J H B
~-:- 1\ND 5rnll) 'a.\ TO
promising at •.least
five
hearts . His jump
KHDWCTM
KSETCMZHO.
RL
Tfi.E. 0Yfv\ 7r~~:'l to three no-trump of-_
l•
fered a choice of
AJIPTIMP
Pii:'HCB
HBIMHBM." ;
games. Although four
hearts makes eas i Iy,
JTIOCRCB
DIEA·XO"
thq.t was .impossible
· PREVIOUS SOI.:I:JTION - 'He was one ·of t~e .P''at hustle,. of·
for South to know.
baseball. He always ran hard and played hard.- '
.
With eight top
.
.
·
- Stan Musial on Enos Slaughter
.
'
tri"ks (one spade, two
diamonds and five
£h. .(
f) -,:4 a, .a WOlD t·
clubs), most declarers ':~~:t:~Y p@'\t~ ~).-~ Pl/'-.:J. OAMI '
crossed to dummy
tdltod by cu.Y R. POL~N .- '
with a club and took
·
,.
.
·
f'
, 0 R•arronge l•tr•rs of tnt
-the d~amond messe. four sciomblotd words bo·
However, West pro- low to form f"ur simple words.
duced the queen and
returned a spade: two .L1__,_L-rE,..-C,--,Ac..,....N,--l
'·
down,
r .
12
1 _
Cuzzi and d'Ovidio
. . .
wondered what East
would keep if they ~ - - .L I E E X
rim the club suit. Eve- ·
4
,,
ryone would be down .
. . .
to seven cards . . East
would have to retain
I p {) E S
-four spades (other·~5
f
.
·
de I
ld
1 1
1 ~
After inteiViewing twentyteenag~fe~y ~~i~~e~~o~he . r ' -~ - ~ - ers for an after school job, the
heart ace), the heart .I
woman sighed, 'The best subslilule
ace (marked from the .
T I N·M E T - ~ fqr experience is being - • -~ • • • -I'
. opening bid), and _
G) Complele the chuckle quoteq ,
' 1
by filling in tho missing words ,
h
f
t ere ore on Y two
you develop from slop No. 3 bolow.
diamonds. This made.
·
the diamond finesse
A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
unnecessary. So, after . '.:1 IN THESE SQUARES
·
ttie clubs, Cuzzi and
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
d'Ovidio c;~shed their . A
~ GET ANSWER
top diamonds. dropSCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
ping West's double- ·
ton
queen.
Nicely
M~ PoiNT IS, IT IS
Wisdom - Vomit - Piano • Napkin ~ DON'T KNOW .
counted!
SO\IE11l1NG TO \j/01&lt;1(
·
"Tell me," I as~ed my son, "what is your,kind of mu ~
AT, TO ?RI:fAitt. 1'01&lt;.
:sic
all about?" "That's the great thing about it," he an"
WE CANT JUST GO ·
swered,
"you just' DON'T KNOWI"
·
To BED ANO ..,_P€C.T

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST.
~~~~

ANl&gt; S'NACI'S!--DON'T YOLI f'Vf'~

TtiiNIC AIOLIT
INVfSTING
FO~ Tti~
FLITLI~f'1

THE BORN LOSER

.. . .

""'l

.sof!IE\f\IN' w~c;?

Staff writer

. ~ERE'S TI-lE F=IERCE
OCTOBER 6EA5T SNEAKIN6

· UPON A VICTIM ...

I

UETTY
Wf. TAK~ SLEi?
fO~

sur 11le 111un1 1S,
mlP •IS IMPO~T~NT

GIW!Tf.O

TO OUR ~EALTH
AND WOU.·II&lt;\~

TO S{#P,

be your able ally al this time.
Should you find yourself Sly·
'
' BY BERNICE BEDE .0stJL.
mied with anything. look to
Friends and associales may
your paS! 10 unlock today· s
play more important roles in
dilemma.
your affairs tn lhe coming
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
year lhan they have· in the
· 19) .. Today . .do 1ha1 nice
past. It behooves you to culusomething you ' ve wanted to
vole relationships, even those
do for a certain person, but do
who might now be mere. ac·
it with liule fanfare. Others
quaintances .
will loot your horn loud and
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ·
clear to all the right people.
· Be an alert listener today,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
especially i( you find yourself
19) ·· News y0 u have to share
31 a gathering wherl!onew peowilh others should be ·relayed
. pie '\,tid topics are being disto each person in the order of
.cussed. What ~ow pick up on
the importance of the relation·
can be exceptiOnally helpful
ship. In order to, avoid any
down ihe line. Libra, treat
misunderstandings, start at 1he
yourself to a birthday gift.
top.
Send for your A.rro-(;raph '·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
prediclions for the year ahead
20)
·· Capitalize on any opby mailing $2 and .an SASE to
portunity that ari!'ie~ today to
Astro-Graph. c/o this newspa·
get closer to&lt;one who can ad·
Qer, P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe,
vance your career aims.
OH 44092. Be sure to. state
Yo.u'll. move up the ladder
your zodiac sign.
faster with this person's coop·
. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov,
eration.
·
22) -- Conditions will be
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
more ad\lantagcous for you
·· One of your besi abilities
loday than they will be lomortoday is to organize. If you
row or even the nexl day, If
see others fumbling arou~d in
you have anything important
disarray, step in and take over .
to get on \he "drawing board,
.the helm youroelf, especially
Wednesday, Oct. 2. 2002

GAHJIIELD

l.

,......--...-----'n
'ffME. 1"0 WA'fER
1"H!: Pl-AN 1"5

'

SU!!TLffl.i, 1'H&lt;,I NAME
15 NOT JON

0

0

. ;;
0

..
TilE GHIZZ\VELLS
"' """ ,n,.

1.1\\0\i~\\T '10\1

'&amp;.,.

Gol~l61b
It 1\\E
N~~·vu AW'( RtPA\1&lt;!'0
~ ~\\-\1tR

1 WitS ,13\lTI

00:\\lt'Cl l\\~1
'1-J~S /1.. 611P
\Pt A

I

•

' do so now;

,·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- ·
Dec . 21) -- Knowledge gained

t from study or exp: ricnce will

\
'

. ... .

r

' if the _endeavor concerns you/

TAUI!US (April 20-May
20) ·· You have the krtowhow and _inner r.esolve to get

everybody putting on lhe''
same oar today. The changes
you are able "to effect will "
bring harmony and benefits
for all.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
.. This is an excellent day to
sit duwn and discuss in depth .
a matter on which you and '
someone important to ~ou
disagree. By the lime the cis·
cussion ends, all differences
will be resc)lved.
CA:NCER (Jun~ 21 -July 22)
' .. It's not every day thai you
have the ~olden touch for acquiring thtt\gs you desire. but
today might be one of them.
Circum.~ lances are extremely
- favorable for getting what you

•Plan breakfast
. Ft;JJ~~'(, -~~d
kick-otT&gt; ·bre::kl:'st will be
lield at 8!\.m. on Oct. 24, at
the·seruor Citizens Center. .

To meet
CARPENTER
Township
Columbia ·_
Trustees will meet at 7:30
p.m .. Monday at the ftre station.
·

CarldiE;e B&lt;arb•~r. Rachel
lisa Deem, Amy lee and Amanda Miller, ,left to right, are candidates for the 200 2 Southern High School homecoming queen to be named at Friday night's
game between Southern and Miller. Selected as class attendants are, left to right, Jenny
, Wamer, freshman ; Ashton Brown, sophomore, and Stephanie Bradford, junior. (Charlene
· Hoeflich)
..
·
·

Festivities to·· kick off Friday
•

Staff report

Correction
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport's Fire Safety
· Week Parade will be held
Oct. 7 at 6:30p.m. The date
was incorrectly reported. 1
'

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 8·2·9
· Pick 4: 1-7·5-5
Buckeye 5: 5-11-14-25-35·
Pick 3 night: 2-6-5
Pick 4 night: 6-7·8·8
·.

W.VA.
)•
Daily 3: 0·2·9
,'
Dilily 4: Cl-0-5-5
Clsh 15: 1·3·4-10· 11·23
•

Index
Pas~ifieds

Com1cs
bear Abby
Editorials
Movies
. 0bitua ries

R
I

.

daughter of Becky and Keith
Bentz of Racine; and Amanda
Miller, daughter of Teresa
Alley of Racine.
· The !lttendants are Jenny
Warner, daughter of Sheila
and Michael Warner of Forest
Run, for the freshman class:
Ashton Brown, daughter of
Cindy and Robert Brown of
Syracuse, Jor the sophomo~e
class;
and
Stepha me
Bradford. daughter of BeckY:
and. Apthony Bradford of
Racme.
·

1\vo·authors on hand for

I

..

·.

.

r

.
~ Jo Ann Crisp,
chairman of the Relay lor Lila

...

the people of Meigs
County are truly commit'ted to the fight against cancer.
"That's what the Relay
for Life is all about - a
community that takes up
the fight, and recognizes
that there is no finish until
a cure is found," she .commented.
The year more than 300
luminaries were purchased,
in · memory or · honor of
loved ones. They Iined the
track at Eastern High
School where 46 cancer
survivors opened the relay
by walking the first lap.

Days

Staff report

State College. He studied
Foster published his first
Civil
War history at historical novel , "When
Marshall University's gradu- Gauley Ran Blood," after
POINT
· PLEASAN~, ate school.
·
more than 25 years of techW.Va. ~ Numerou.s acttv!:
His publications include nical writing. He has ances·ties are- planned for this "The Battle of Scary Creek: tors who fought on both
weekend's obs_ervation _of , Military Operations in the sides of the Civil War..
Battle Days . m Pomt Kanawha Valley April-July
Foster is presently 'at work
Pleasant, and among them 1862," and "September on another historical novel
will be the presence of two Blood: The Battle of that- examines his family's
regional writers at the "Meet Carnifex Ferry."
hi story in western Virginia
Lowry . is
currently durin g the .Indian and
the Author" set for TuEndie-Wt:i · Park at 2 p.m. employed at ' the . West Revolutionary War periods. ·
Saturday.
Virginia State Archives.
. Lowry -and Foster will be
Civil War historian Terry
Foster, a native of SahJons - on hand from 2 to 4 p.m.
Lowry will ' join fiction Creek, ncar Summers..,ille, Saturday to. autograph their
writer Rocky "Dock" Foster has been tagged "The Voice books and discuss Ctvtl War
at the event.
of the Mountains" by Dr. AI . history with the publie .
Lowry, a South Charleston Stuart, _former professo~ of
Battle · Days Will be
native, has a bachelor of arts education
at
Indiana observed Fnday - through
degree from West Virginia,.._ University of Pennsylvania. S11nday.

AS
83-S
86

AS

A6
A3
A3

,Sports

B1~3

Weather

. A2 .

_ c ipo2 Ohio .Valley Publishing Co.

In recognition of .outstanding contributions to the 2002
Relay for Life, the American Cancer Society pre5ented
• plaques to Tammi Zirkle for the Farmers• Bank, Sue
Maison for the Meigs County Democratic Party, Jo Ann
Crisp for outstanding achievement in income development, Des Jeffers "for the Middleport Church of Christ,
and Theresa Wolfe for the Holzer Home Care of Veterans
Memorial . (Charlene Hoeflich)
·
,

Cou1cse
Sponsored by the Arthritis Foundation -•

o

''That's what
the Relay for
Life is all
about-a
community
·that takes up ·
the fight, and
re~ognizes that
there is no
trnist:t until a
cure is found;'

1

l s.ctlons-, 12 Pips ·

Calendar ·

Homecoming ceremonies
will be held at half-time and
•· · after the game a homecoming
.
ACINE~ S~uthern 'dance will be held in the
H1gh School home- school gymnasium untilll :30
.c~niin~ . festiv~ties p.m.
Will kickoff Fnday · Candidates for homeconrwith a peprally followed by a ing queen are Candise Barber,
2 p.m. parade beginning on daughter of Tammy and
the school parking lot and Randall Congo of Portland;
moving through the village. . · Rachel Chapman, daughter of
At 7 p.m. before the ga¢e · C. T. and. Tammy Chapman of
between Southern and Miller Syrac11se; Lisa Deem, daughgets underway the class floats ter of Kristi and Denver
Will be presented to the fans. · Deem of Portland; Amy Lee;

------....;f'!"''----

'•

•

•

want.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ··
You will sparkle and shine today in situations where you
can express your crealive tal·
ents. Should you have an ,
equally imaginative assistant.
there's no end to what you ,
can collectively'design.
VIRGO (Aug. 23:Sept. 22)
··There is ~ s,lron~ possibility
that you wtll recetve a favoror gift from someone you
· would least expect today.
This gesture may chan~e the
way you th_ink abq~ !hiS per·
son.
r
.

POMEROY - In recognition of raising $31,808 in
the 2002 Relay for Life,
the American Cancer
SoCiety presented plaques
to the chairman of the
event and four groups· for
outstanding participation.
The . Farmers Bank 's
"Glowworms': · received
special recognition for
having (aised the most
money overall and the
Holzer Home ~Care of
Veterans
Memorial
" Rockin '.
Hospital's
Relayers" for the most
money raised on site
The Middleport Church
of Christ's "Roadrunners"
received a· plaque for the.
best banner and the most
team spirit, while the
Meigs County Democntlic
Party was recogni zed for
the best decorated campsite.
·~
Special recognition was
given tp Jo Ann Crisp,
chainnan of the Relay for
Life, for "out standi ng
achievement in income
development." .
Crisp, who has chaired
the event for several years,
described the event as a
"huge success with · 23
teams participating and
proceeds far exceeding the
goal of $20,000."
She sai'd that proves that

High: 80s, Low: 60s
Details, A1

·•

•

against -can~er

Weather

I"'

-----~a~-~~---'--

T
"
J
~~

Event ra1ses
S~lK . for ·fight

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLIQH
News editor

I

11 'S~

•

•

Details, Al

I

I

. -.

~-

·'

'

vaccinations !II private · physician's officials ·expect a dramatic change in .
offices. Torres said the $15 charge is the virus which may make it more
necessary because of the increase in·. resistant to any vaccine, Torres said.
charges ~ the health department for
"We're expecting a shift in influenthe vaccme.
za's cnaracter this year, meaning it
Tfie state provided the department will likely be more resis_tant to any
with the 900 .vaccine doses for seniors vaccines availabl e," Torres · said.
at a 'lower negotiated cost, but the "There have been shifts in flu before,
health department was required to such as in 1917 and 1918, when it
spend $2,400 for the remaining 400 was especially deadly."
·
~
doses, and pays 84 cents for each
In addition to senior citizens, Torrt:s
syringe used to administer the vac- said others with compromised
cine.
immune systems, including, those
While the vaccine for llu is with heart disease and lupus, are
changed every year to compensate for . strongly encouraged lo have a flu
changes ·in the virus, many health shot. · ·

- ·Deaths
Renee Stone, 66

It I I; I I

-:::&gt;~
. ·...

·

Commissioner Nonna Torres .
The · Meigs County Health
Department has purchased I ,300
influenza vaccines, 900 of -which
have been reserved for senior citizens. Thos'e vaccinations will be
given Oct. 25 at the Meigs Senior
Center.
On Oct. 28, remaining flu vaccines
will .be adminisiered to ihe general
publiC · on a first-come, first-served
basis, Torres said. Tl\e cost for all flu
vaccines this year is $15, and
although that price is higher than the
nominal fee charged in the past. it's
still less expensive than the cost of

-Southern homecoming

Tressel juggling playing time, 81

g

I' I I 1

'

POMEROY ·- Local he"alth officials are encouraging senior· citizens
and others at high risk .of influenza to
be immunized, although the vaccine
will come at a price. Public · healtl!
experts expect an epidemic - and
possibly a p;p1demic -. of flu this
season,
according to
Health

r

11 _I

.Expected epidemic
concerns officials

BY BRIAN J.. REED

com-

;

'

funded by ~e United Way

Se~n Consecutive Tuesdays .- October 8 ·- November 19
. 5:30 - 8:00 PM in the Hospital's French 500 Room
Cost· $10.00- scholarships available as needed .
Topics discussed wilt include.: .poin. control, exer'ti~, rel~xation,
· . fatigue, depression and doctor/patient relationship.
,

Take a more active rok! in y~r health!

M .EDICAL ' CENTER
Discover the Holzer D!fferen

www:holzer.org
•

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�-

.

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..

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

..

·PageAl

Thursday, Oct. 3

Obituari~s

-~
ol Columbua ~5"177" I

.W.VA.
02002

0 ~-·~-·tf!t.~·

Sunn~

Pt. Cloudy

Showels T·slomll

Clol.dy

Rain

Flurriee

Snow

www.mydallysentinel.coi'n

. The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Land trarifers ·.

POMEROY Meigs Farley, deed, Rutland.
Connolly, Theodore ' D. Village/Sutton. _
. County Recorder Judy Kipg
I,onnie Medley to William Connolly, Dale L. Connolly,
V Clay Tuttle to Bruce R.
POMEROY_ Renee Mae · reported the following recent E.,Ward, Ruth E. Ward, deed, Warren G. Connolly. Betty J. Pisher, Thomas M .. Dooley,
Stone, 66 of Athens, formerly transfers of -real estate:
Sutton.
Bar\ler. Carole Barb!ir, deed, deed, Middlepori Village.
of Meigs County, died early
Paul A. Thomas. deceased.
David P. Dowler, Anna L. · Olive.
Harvietta Florence Gribble,
. Tuesday afternoon, OCt. 1, to Olagm
M.
·Thomas,
affiDowler,
to
·
·
Columbus
Dennis
•
J.
Riffle
.
to
Ronald
Gribble,
Pat::!a
'
sout hem power, ng· hto f way. Chnstma
· .
.
'·
. ·sue
't 0 ·
• 2002 at O'Bieness Memorial davi • Ive.
Wtlson, deed, Gribble, Douglas arroll.
. Hospital.
.
Dona A. Bledsoe, Dona"'A. Salfsbury.
Salisbury,
· ·
Renilda Ann Hamilton, to
Boril in Aberdeen, South Hayes, Robert Bledsoe, to
Timothy R. Frazier, Falisha . Florence Musser to Hal P. Ryan Buckley, deed, Chester.
-.Dakota,Oct. 9, 1936, she was . Edward Lemaster, deed, R. Frazier, Caroline R. Boston, Connie K. Boston,
Martin J. Chapman to
·
.
Frazier, sheriff's deed, deed, Salisbury.
'
Federal National Mortgage
the daughter of the late Percy , Bedford.
N. and Catherine Van Riper
Bank One, Athens, N.A., to Salisbury.
-',
Don M. Rose to Jeremy M. . Co.,
sheriff's
deed,
Ohlhouse.
Joseph S. Tillis, Faye M.
Billy Jo VanCooney, Jr. to Rose, deed, Sutton.
·
Middl~port Village. ·
She was retired from The Tillis,
deed,
Pomeroy Argyle L. Deeter,. Thomas F. . Trevor A. Petrel to Jannine · , Kevin R. Klein, Tammy J.
· Athens Messenger where she Village.
. Deeter, deed, Lebanon:
D. Petrel, Racine Village.
Klein, to Dennis E. Boyd, Jr.,
had been a reporter for the . Herbert :E. Whaley, Sheila
Paul Black to Dale W. Hill, · Norma B. Hawthorne, deed, Pomeror, Village.
Meigs County area. She had · R. Whaley. to Brent Matthew Jr., . Karen S. Hill , deed, Darrell D. Hawthorne, to
Ronald Gtllilian, Carol
also
worked
at
the Whaley, deed, Bedford.
Sutton.
·
James
B.
Hawthorne, Gillilan, to ·Janice Danner,
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Bruce E. Dourm, Donna L.
Danny B. Brown, Cordelia Timothy D. Hawthorne, dee~, Syracuse Village.
Center and for Buckeye Dourm, Fran~is E. Blake, C. Crown , to Danny D. · Darrell D. Hawthorne, Laura
Rtchard . A. . Spencer,
Community Services. She Sally S. Blake, lo Charles D. Brown. Bonnie G. Brown, M. Guthrie, deed, Chester.
Florence A: Spencer, to
was a 1953 graduate of Roberts III, Susan M. easement, Sutton.
Caro'-Younj!l •. Rockie D. Richard Dan Spencer, Sheila
Aberdeen South Dakota High Roberts, deed, Olive.
· Melodie Dawn · Forbes, Young, to Ohto Departmetn .,J. Spencer, deed, Olive.
School, and had formerly
. Edward
Mitchell
to Melodie Dawn Bissell, Bruce of Transportation, judgment
Connie K. Chapman to
lived in Middle{Xlrt'
·
William R. Lambert, deed, H. Bissell, to David R. Long, entry.
.
Columbus Southern Power,
She is surv 1ved by her Salem.
·
Jr., Angela D. Long, deed,
Harold I;- Elliott, ~atherine easement, Scipio.
·
daughters, Deborah (Danny)
Manning Mo/'Jler, El-izabeth Pomeroy Village.
· .
Elhott, to ODOT, Judgment
Oscar May.nard. Lillian
Grueser of Pomeroy; three Mohler, to Donald S. Mohler,
Lawrence
E.
Darst, entry. .
•
Maynard, to · Columblls
sons, William (Becky) Stone Deborah Mohler, right of Carolyn S. Darst, to David G.
Davtd L. Weber, Deborah Southern Power, easement,
of Athens, Charles (Teresa) way, Bedford.
Banks, deed, Bedford:
S. Weber, to _Jay Hall, Jr. Letart.
Stone of . Vincent, and
Kathryn Hysell Living
Ricky Allen Walker to Trust. deed, Ohve. .
.
Warren JI. Calaway to
Michael (Yvonne) Stone .of Trust to Steven L. Call, f'amela Bentz, Timothy . Green Tree Fin.ancial Columbus Southern Power,
Empire, Ala.; grandchildren, DM~dbdra A.V.IICall, . deed, Bentz, deed, Racine Village. · . Serv!c~s to Conseco. Fmance easem~nt, Letart.
Kelley Grueser (Anastasios)
I
eport 1 age.
Bobby Arnold, Bonnie~ S~rvtcmg, deed, Mtddleport
Dav1d Yos_t, Margaret I.
· ·Polis, Tara Grueser (Jeremy)
John Gregory . Bailey; Arnolds, . to Douglas R. Vtllage.
.
Yost, to Oh10 Power Co.,
Johnson, Danielle Grueser, Barbara J. Bailey, to Bradley Shamblin, . Sherry
R.
Etleen M. Landaker to easement, Sutton.
·
C
1
De
k
R'l
A.
Collins,
Carissa
L.
S~amblin,
deed,
Scipio.
David
Landaker Jr deed
Rock R H
c ol J
Bnan, ar y,
re • I ey, · c II' d ed S
' · ·•
'
Y · upp, ar . ·
. Kristopher, Aaron and Alex
o ms, e , utton.
Del won Roberts, Doris Salisbury. ·
Hupp to James R. Lemley
Stone.
· ·Carol A.D. Hubbard to Roberts, Eula Hensler, to . Donald F Hendricks, Sr., Dean~a F. Lemley. deed:
She was preceded in death ·. Daniel Wayne Clark, deed, Ronald M. Kennedy,_Patricia deceased, .to Donald F. Sutton.
.
·
by her . husband; u.. S. Air Rutla~d.
.
S. ~ennedy, deed,Sahsbury. Hendericks,
certificate,
Bobby McConaha, Mary
Force retired senior roaster • Mehssa D. _T):.ree to Larry
V1olet Lee · to Leondus Syracuse Village.
McConaha,
to LaSalle
E. Laudermtlt, Jr., deed, .. Newman L,ee, Jr,, · affidavtt,
Margaret E.
Cottrill, National Bank, sheriff' s
sergeant, William D. Stone.
Funeral services will be Rutland.
.
·
. Salisbury.
. . . . deceased, to Sharon S. deed, Pomeroy Village. .
held Friday at 1 p.m. at the
M1~hael
W._
Ruchti,
Jame~ ~- Wilharils, Glona Cottrill, James Craig ~ottrill, . . Dale E. :Taylor to Dale E.
·. Jagers and Sons Funeral Catanna J. Ruchti, to Edward Jean W\lhams, I? Francts S. Bruce Edward Cottnll; cer- Dummitt, deed, Lebanon. · ·
Home of Athens . with Scott D. Anderson, deed, Salelfl.
Hudson,. Conn1e ~udson, tificate, Syracuse Village. .
· Dale E. Taylor to Dale E.
_M;ary Ellen Andrew. to . deed, Salisbury.
Sharon S. Cottrill, James Dummitt, deed, Lebanon.
Trobrough officiaiing. Burial
will be in Floral -"'Hills TtmothyB1ssell, deed, Ohve.
Ernra J. Connolly, Erma J. Craig_ Cottrill, Paula Jane
Bru~ter LaJ)d Co., Inc., to
Memory Gardens in Tucker,
_Bru.ner Land Co., Inc. to Mcyey, David McVey, '? Cottr~ll ; to Bruce Edward Gene .~ward Imbody, deed,
Ga.
Rtckey N. Farley, Tammy Dons M. Deeter, Kenneth C. Cottnll, deed, Syracuse Orange.
Friends may call at the
funeral home Thursday, 7 to
,

.Renee Stone

· LEBANON, (AP) - -A · former .count)'- jail Qec. 20 after he served · · AtT11esday's hearing, the judge ques. Harveysburg clerk and administrator almost six months for failing . to make tioned how ·Grant continued to receive
. has been ordered to relinquish his dis-_ restitutionof$11,500toHarveysburg. $1,363 in Supplemenlill . Security
· ability benefits to ensure that he repays
Grant worked for Harveysburg from Income benefits, although he had
more than $20,000 in Medicaid fraud. · 1993 to !anuary 200 l. He ~an for mayor already pleaded guilty to misusing the
Warren County Com:mon ~leas Judge of the vtllage before cnmmal problems Medicaid funds.
.
.
.
P. _Daniel Fedders could have sentenced were \lncovered bY. a sta!e audit, wh1ch
.
·
Kimble Grant to 18 months m priSon also placed the village m fiscal emerFedders placedGrant on proban-;m for ·
and a $6,000 fine.
.
" gency.
· ..
.
.
· three more . years and ordered h11n to .
Fedders spared Grant the prisqn time
From April 1997 to December 1999, gt~e the rud checks to the coun!Y· Grant
and fine, although it was the second · Grant failed to report income, including SaJd he would make full reslltut10n, sug. time in less than two years Grant had income from Harveysburg, to county gesting his criminaJ,.problems would
been convicted of misusing government welfare officials, prosecutors said. serve as a lesson to his children, who sat
.
Grant was entitled to some benefits. but in the audience during the hearing.
funds.
Last year, Grant; 46, of Waynesville, underreported his income.and his wife's "I've done some really stupid things
:-vas convicted of theft in office for cash- Social Security benefits, prosecutors in my life," Grant said. "I want to make
mgJwo extra payroll checks he Issued smd.
·
h' · · ht"
•
to hi_mself and charging personal items
In A1:1gust, Grant pleaded guilty to t ts ng ·
· · · fi cal
_
on village credit cards. Fedders 1mtlally MedtcaJd fraud and fals1ficat10n of docHarveysburg r~II131 ns 10 a. IS emer
allowed Grant to remain free on proba-· uments used · to gauge . his benefits. · gen~y declared m J~ly 2001 after state
lion, but later sent him to jail for-failing Fedders noted the recent conviction auditors found the vtllage had a $73,397
to Iltake parments to the village.
stemmed from crimes committed before deficit - . ail amount equal to more than
The judge released Grant fro~ . the those in the first case. .
half its annual budget.

•

Wednesday, October 2, 2002

.

.

.

L~n•lloi&lt;IJ!!@

"

Wenesdey,October2,2002

Judge orders_.conviCted town
administrator. to retum checks

Ohio weather

..

lee

&gt;

Partly sunny and warm
.
.

Weather Forecast
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday night...Cioudy with a
Today... Partly sunny and
warm. Highs in the mid 80s. chance of showers and !hunSouthwest winds 5 to 10 mph. derstorms. Lows in the mid
Tonight ... Partly
cloudy. 60s. Chance of rain 50 perLows ·in the lower 60s. Calm cent.
winds.
Sati.J.rday.. .A ·· chance of
Extended Forecast
showers and thunderstorms
Thursday... Partly cloudy. during !he . day ... Otherwise
Isolated showers and thunder- clearing. Highs near 80,
storms in the afternoon. Highs
Sunday... Mostly
clear.
in the lower 80s. Calm winds. Lows in the lower 50s and
""Chance of rain 20 percent.
highs in the lower 70s. . .
. Thursday night...Cioudy · . Monday... Partly . cloudy
· with isolated showers. Lows with a chance of rain. Lows in
in the lower 60s. Chance·-.,of · the lower 50s and highs in the
rain 20 percent.
· · .lower 70s.
Friday... Cioudy with s"atTuesday... Partly cloudy.
tered showers and thunder- Lows in the upper 40s and
storms. Highs near 80. highs near 70.

I
I

Baby sitter accused ·of shaking ba~y
AKRON (AP) - Police felony cmlnts of assault"and
have arrested a teenage child endangering.
baby sitter who they
"We believe the teen is
believe is responsible 'for. responsible for the severe
shaking a 4-month-old b!&gt;Y brain injuries to the child. It
who died of brain injuries. is a shaken baby incident,"
Jaden Lacher, of Alliance, ·said Alliance police . Lt.
dled Tuesday at Children's Scott C. Griffith. "(Police
· Hospital Medical Center in and prosecutors) will meet
Akron of injuries he suf- and decide which charges
fered over the weekend. An are now appropriate. They
autopsy is scheduled for indeed will elevate due to
Wednesday, the Summit the infant's death."
Count~' medical examiner's
Reed has been in Stark
office raid.
.
County Juvenile Attention
His baby sitter, D~le Center since his arrest
Reed, 15, 1s charged v;nth . Monday, Griffitli said.

12,000

1, 2002

Dow Jones
Industrials

1 - - - - 11,000

.

1 - - - - 10,000

.

.

7,938.79
Pel change- PIM&gt;uo
High+4.57 Low

1----9,000
1----8,000

7,940.59
7,593.(14
Atcord hlgll: 11,722.98
1

' - - - - ' 7,000
OCT

Jan. 14, 2000 .

..

2,000

. '

1----1,800
1----1,800
Pot change lrom ~

..

+3.55

---1,200

Low
1,214.o1
t,t60.71
Record high: 5,048.62
March ·10, 2000
High

~--1,000

I,

OCT

Oct. t ' 2002 •

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A Cordell set fire to C~evale's
man was sentenced Tuesday home to cover. up the shoot.to 81 years to life in prison ings there of Carnevale and
immediately after he pleaded Bushman. Police in Reading,
guilty to .charges that he a Cincinnati suburb, said they
killeq . the former Reading found their bodies April 2
· mayor and two wo!flen.
· after neighbors called fire-:
.', PrQsecutor~ said Robert fighters when they , saw
. Cordell's gutlty pleas and smoke .
coming · from
sentence ensure he will spend Carnevale's house.
the rest of his life behind bars
Carnevale was sleeping in a
for -his two-day killing spree. recliner at his home when he
Under an agreement with was shot 12 times., police
prosecutors, Cordell, 42, · said. Bushman was shot in
pleaded guilty to aggravated
murder, aggravated robbery .
and aggravated arson for
killing former Reading
mayor Frank Carnevale, 72;
Carhevale!s- ex-wife Rita
Bushman, 68, and Cordell's
former . · sister-in-law
Kathleen Cordell, 40.
Investigators ·said Robert

Standard&amp;
Poor's500

Man arrested

847.9t
+4.00
High
Low
847.93
812.82

COLUMBUS (AP) -· A
man .has been arrested and
charged with the hit-and-run
death of a police officer 18
months ago, · · .
Marconi terrell Harris, 28,
was arrested Tuesday night
on a felony hit-skip warrant '
issued in the death of police
Lt. Chris Claypool. Harris
was arrested while riding as
a passenger in a pickup truck
and also was charged with
one courit of possession of
cocaine.
The arrest cubninates one
of the most extensive investi,
gations in Columbus ·pplice
history. Hundreds of'' tips
were received on telephone
lines staffed around the clock
and a reward t)md totaling
more than $20,000 was set
up.

Rocard hlgll: 1,527.46
March 24. 2000
.

AUG

JUL

S~P

OCT

AP

Local Stocks
Federal Mogul - .5-1
USB- 19:47
Gannett- 73.91
General Electric- 2620
GKNlY- 3.25 ·
Harley Davldson- 47_98
Kmart- .52
· Kroger- 13.85
L1d. -14.03
NSC.-21.73 ,.
OakHiiFII18nCial-21.75
OVB- 21.34
BBT _ 36 _19
Peoples - 26.23
Pepsico .- 37.30
Premier - 6.50

RockWell- 17.01
Rocky Boots- 5.10
AD Shell - 42.65
Sears _ 40 _17
•
Wai·M&amp;rt- 51.71
. Wendy's- 34.65
Worthington,..- 19.68
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotea of the previous
day's transactions, provlded by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

·Attqrney General candiqates
rsound off du,ring debate , · .

..
..;

.

.

COLUMBUS (AP) - : The ing-home operators sliould done it," Herington said.
.
first debate between attor- be more accountable for
Petro insisted that his
: ney general candidates neglect and abuse.
campaign had done nothing
: Leigh Herington and Jim
The tone remained posi- wrong and said Herington
• Petro highlighted their simi- tive even When they raised had received $146,000 . in
larities · until the _topics questions about each other's contributions from the. Ohio
became the performance of fund-raising activities dur- · Democratic ·Party.,_ which
·the current officeholder and ing the I 1/2-hour debate gets money from Herington
how the candid'l,!tes raised sponsored by the AARP.
supporters.
money.
Herington said Peiro's
Neither practice is illegal,
Petro , the Republican campaign received $5,000 but Herington said after the
state auditor, and Herington, ' through
- a
county debate . the Petro's accepa Democratic state sen~tor, Republican Patty less than lance of the money violated
said Tuesday that'Vllore one month. after a law ftrm the "spirit of the law."
should be done .to pro.tect simt the party a $5,000 - At one point during the
. the elderly from predatory • donation.
.
exchange, Petro said, ''I'm
lenders and home-repair
"They are . laundering not sure we're iri a debat- .
scam artists, and tllat ours· mo'ney. My . opponent has able positio~ he:e."

the head four times after she
went to investigate the shots
fired in the house, investigators said.
PdolicKe thsaJ·d Cordell strang Ie
a 1eel\ Cordell with whom he lived - the
previous day, then shot
Carnevale because the former
mayor declined to loan his
truck tei him. Kathleen
Cordell's body was found in
her house next door to
Carnevale.

Police said Cordell strangled his former sister-in-law
becaus~ she confronted. him
after hd- stole medicine from
her. :
Judge Steven Martin said
he approved the_ arran~eme~t
b~ause he bebev~s II wtll
. ~I(~P
ell 1mpnson~ .for
hfe. Relallves of the vtctims
applauded Tuesday when the
judge said Cordell should
never be released..

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'

,.

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0

-. Paid .notice
. NEWPORT, Ore. (AP) In his first court appearance, a
. man accused of slaying his
~ wife and three. children and
then dumping them into
coastal waters before fleeing
~
to-Mexico declined to enter a
.
plea, prompting a judge to
:~:~r innocent plea on his
Christian Longo's court
appearance Tuesday came
': ·
·
.·
about nine months after the
::
.
· ·
bodies were discovered in
;: ·ANTWERP (AP)
. two shallow inlets stuffed into
:: School officials have con· suitc.ases and sleeping bags ·
: · f1111led that a fourth-grader .weighted with rocks. ·
: . drowned on Monday during a · The case unfolded in quick
~· : supervised gym class in the · succession last winter, after 5:: pool. .
year-old Zachery 'f\1ichael .
,: . ·Christopher Thompson, 9, was · found floating · in an ·
;: was pulled from the pool in - ocean inlet near Waldport just
:: the district's only school before Christmas. His sister, .
: . building on Monday mom- 3-year-old Sadie Ann, was
found three days later.
·: ing. He was pronounced dead cocooned inside a sleeping
: . two hours later at Paulding bag, a floral print pillow case
:: County Hospital in Paulding. containing a rock tied to her
&lt; School Superintendent . ankle. ·
;: David Bagley said the pool
A few days later, poliCe
;• 'has been closed and will began an international map:: remain closed indefmitely. . . hunt for Longo after the bod:: School officials are saying ies of his wife. 34-year-old
:: little else about _the drowning MaryJane, and their · 2-year- Christian Longo listens at a hearing, with his attorneys, in front
,: while they conduct an inter- old daughter Madison were· of Judge Robert J Huckleberry at the Lincoln County, Circuit
:- nal investigation. Antwerp found inside a suitcase in .Court i n Ne;yport, Ore. Longo pleaded innocent to seven
· police would .. release no shal)ow wate~ in a Newport 'charges of aggravated murder. He is accused of killing his .wife
and· three children and then · dumping their bodies 9,{f .the
information.
manna.
l
·
·
Antwerp Local has just
His lawyer, Ken Hadley, Oregon coast. (AP)
..
under 800 studebts in a build- .· questioned the details of
: ing that . accommodates . Longo's arrest, extradition to visit a Mexican lawyer who flew to Canc·un and
from Mexico and indictment before volunteering to return accompanied Mexican police
'
:: kindergarten through the 12th in court Tuesday.
to the United States to face during Longo's arrest, .te,o;tif grade.
·He argued that Longo had trial. Mexico does not allow fled that he never told Longo
,
been deprived of the chance extradition if the accused may he could call a U.~ . consular
face the death pe_nalty.
· official, and said · it was the
"He didn't know (what) he obligation of the Mexican
was doing," Hadley said, 1 authorities to infonn him of
. FBI agent Daniel Clegg, . that right.
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(UsPs 213-960)
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:·Sch00I c oses
·poo·l aftet . . .

. student dies .
•
·
I
·
·
;: In gym c ass·

For half.a million
dollars, you can get your .
own genome -on a CD
(AP) - Mapping and kick off what he said would
reading J. Craig . Venter's be a nonprofit project. ·
genome took 15 years. $5
With individuals' genomes
.·billion · and ·some of the available to them, doctors are
world's most sophisticated expected to be able to precomputers.
vent and treat many diseases
Wouldn't you, too, like better. Already, genetic tests
your genome decoded?
· can determine if . some
· Venter says he plans to women are more prone to
offer the service, with the breast cancer than.others.
· goal of bumin$ individual
Venter led the for-profit
· human s
enttre. DNA team in the race against govseque~ces onto shiny com- emment scientists to decipact d!scs. ·
·
·pher the . human genome. ·
It wtll cost about $500,~ Both teams simultaneously
per ~fo":, sa~s the entrepre- ·announced the successful
neuna sc1enust who helped seq enc.1ng of fi e h
decode the human genome.
u
.
. tv
urn~
Venter hopes ultimately to ~enomes, .tm;_Iudmg V~nte~ s,
~nass-produce gene CDs like m competmg sctenufic
so many Bruce Springsteen papers last year.
..
COs that will stock the
Vent~r, fo~er chtef of
shelves of. every general genomtcs ptonee!' Celera,
practitioner's office and be now runs three nonprofit
covered by insurance. • ,
ventures he founded.
. "We are trying to push
Tho_se three .v~ntures ~e
genomics to . the $1,000 spending $30 rmlhon_ to build
genome," Venter said in a a new gene•sequencmg centelephone interview with The ter in Rockville~ Md .• which •
Associated Press.
· · : Venter expects .to open ' b.y
He said he has lined up year's end. It is there that .
sever.il wealthy individuals, Venter and ether scientists
whom he declined to identi· will work on putting individfy, who will. pay to have their ual genomes on opti~al stor- genomes mapped and thus ~ge media by next year.

·The Daily Sentinel

.

..

-~~::~;e:or;:d~!ie~~~ Innocent plea-entered for man ,iC:cused
. to~~oc~a~~7· *ig~rfili;:~ • of slaying family and dumping off coast
Worthmgton, Ohto 43085.
· ·
·
·
.

.

in death

Pel change lrom p!VIIioua

AEP-29.98
Arch Coal - 17.28 ,.
Akzo- 32.40
. AmTech!SBC - 20.82
: AShland Inc. - 26.70
..... AT&amp;T- 12.40
: Bank One - 39.58
· BLI- 15.05
Bob Evans - 24.64 .
BorgWarner- 49.58 .
Champion - 2.41
Charming Shops-'-6.61
City Holding - 26.20
: Col - 22.65 ·
· DG- 14.01
; DuPont - 39.63

inconsolably. .
•
· After realizing Jaden was
injured, Reed took him to
another family member's
house nearby, where the
baby was resuscitated,
Griffith said. Police learned
about Jaden 's injuries from
.
a 911 call.
On Tuesaay, Reed had a
hearing at~ juvenile .c!mter, where prosecutors
asked Family Court officials to try Reed as - an
adult. No decision was
reached,

Cordell gets 81_y~~rs· to1ife~for' killing _three
.

Oct

laden was the 13th case
of shaken baby syndrome at
Children's Hospital this
year. The syndrome occurs
when a baby is vigorously
shaken, which can ·harm
infants' fragile brains, caus!ng eye injuries, brain damage or death.
.
Jaden's mother, Sarah
Lacher, left the baby with
Reed when she went to
work Saturday. Police
believe Reed is J.~den 's
cousin.
Griffith said Reed told
police the baby was crying

1

F(ances Jenea .. Dyke,
deceased, Jenea Dyke,
deceased, to John .w. Dyke,
affidavit, Rutland.
. Guy David Webb to In!! M.
v.an1neter,
.... deed, Olive. • ".
·
Allen E. Dill, Jr., Alice RDille, to James F. Dehner, Sr.,
R,uth E. Dehner, ·deed,
Chester.
''
Leland Brown, deceased,
to Mary Brown, affidavit.
Mary Brown to Leland ·
Eugene
Brown,
deed,
Middlepon Village.
Harold Lawson to Michael
J. Hill II, deed, Sutton.
Mary E. Wells to John
Kennedy, Frances Kern1edy,
deed, Olive.
lola M. Wilson, deceased,
to Derek A. Holsinger, deed, 1
Olive.
Wilbert · McClain
to
Tuppers
Plains-Chester
Water District, right of. way,
· Lebanon.
Tim Bissell, Lea Bissell, 10
TP-CWD, right of way,
. Olive
Ba~il
Wright, .. Bosio
Wright, Florence Wright, 10
TP-CWD, right · of
Sci io
way,
P :
..
Davtd R. Wells. James P
mells to TP CWO n'ght of
"'' • .
•
·.
waDy, OdhvAe.S h
p
R
avt . c atz, ~e1a .
Schatz, ~o TP-CWD, nght of
way, Ohve. .
.
· Damel. Toban., Valene
-Tobao; to TP-CWD, right of
way, Bedford. .
Wayne S. Wtlson, Betty
Wilson, to Cheryl Marnhout,
deed, J,.etart.
)
Diaphe R. • Caldwell,
Darley Caldwell, to Debrn J.
Doan, deed, Saljt;bury0
~

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The

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Sentinel

Pagtt A4

• I• ,

October
,-

:zoo:z

. .. .
'

Single mom stumped .by sons
questions about absent dad

'

·The Daily Sentinel
. 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

"'

Ohio Valley P!Jblishing Co.

ullers to the editor are welcome. Thev .&lt; hould be less than
• 300 words. All letters are subject to ~diting and must be
signed and include address and telephone numba No
unsif(ned lerters will be published. utters should be in good
taste. addressing issues, not persmtalities.
· The opinions expres.oed in the coh•mn below are the con·
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w1less othenvise noted.

NATIONAL VIEW
'

unite
•lne (Jacksonville) Florida Times-Union, on rhe reunifi·
cation of Korea: Neither side is happy with the game of diplo- ..
matic hopscotch the Chinese government is playing on the
Korean asylum issue. The policies, however, reflect unpleasant realities C~ina cannot control. ·
Thousanas of North Koreans have managed to sneak -into
· China, hoping the Beijing ·govemment will grant asylum and
allow them to rravel to South Korea.
• · Supporters say ~eijing has a moral obligation to let them go
because they are trying to escape famine and political repres~i~n.. The Pyongyang regime, however, insists Beijing is
requ1red by a treaty to return them.
·
. Chi~a's official_ policy is. to send them back. If the refugees
make It safely ms1de a fore1gn embassy grolinds, however, the
unofficial policy seems to be that they ate allowed to go- as ·
long as they !ravel td the South through a third country..
... From a humanitarian standpoint, the Chinese govenunent
. seems callous. Beijing has never been sensitive to human
. rights, however, and treaty obligations normally are honored ... ·
· Eventually, the North Korean government must admit that it
cannot provide for its people and reunite with the south.
Restoring Germany didn't end . East German poverty
.
·
;overnight, but it helped.
: There no longer is a reason for the two Koreas to be
:rated. The sooner reunification can take place, under the
:(Jerman model, the better for eveiyone. ·

sepa-

:TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE;I\SSOCIATED PRESS •

1\vo honored by Pomer0y·R~dne Masonic Lodge

DEAR ABBY: My son
was conceived when his
father and I were IIUQried to
other people. He is now 3 and .
starting to ,ask questions .
about his daddy.
·
I have since divorced, but .
mr. child's father has not. His
w1fe and other children are
not aware that my son exists . .
. ADVICE
His father pays child support,
but has made it clear he
wants no relationship what- great for my age and I;m in
excellent health.
soever with our son.
How do I begin to explain · Rod said our "small" age
to iny little one where his difference doesn't mean a
fat!ter is and. why he's not a thing to him. (But I wonder if
.part of our family?
he'd feel that way if .h e knew
50-YEAR MEMBER - Jim Soulsby, center, receives a cer- PLAQUE P,RESENTED- Don C. Weese Appreciation Night
I also worry about how my th11t it's really a 13-year
tificate
and pin for 50 years of membership in the Pomeroy. was observed during a recent regular meeting of Pomeroy.
son will handle the truth span?).
•
Racine Masonic Lodge No. 164, F&amp;AM. Three other mem· Racine Lodge No. 164 Free and Accepted Masons. Weese,
Too many people know my
when he's older. I'm afraid
bers, Harold Jones, . James Newton Roush and Elson pictured accepting a plaque from David Fox, secretary, was
he'll have a real issue with age for him not to find out
Spencer, unable to attend, were announced as 50.year honored for years of service to Masonry. by delivering memthe fact that he was con- eventually. Try as I may to
· membership recipients. Making the ·presentation to orized lectures to members as they sought to achieve
ceived during an affair. hide the truth, it's bound to
Soulsby, center, are Masonic District 12 Deputy Grand Master Mason status. Also pictured are Masonic District 12
Please advise me, Abby. - . come out. He's starting to get
Master Marvin Taylor, , left, and 9164 F&amp;AM Worshipful Deputy Grand Master Marvin Taylor, left, and Master Arnie
CANADIAN MOM
serious about me, and I'm ·
Master Arnie Dugan. (Submitted) ·
DEAR
CANADIAN afraid if I level with him now,
Dugan. (Submitted)
MOM: ~onesty is tlie best · he'll quit likin~ me - not
policy - , but it should be on!y for fibbmg.. but for
~------------------------------~~L-----------------------------------~--------~ ·
given in small doses in an bemg too old for h1m. I only
age-appropriate ·manner. Tell . stretched the '!'Jth ~cause I
yqur son that his father lives tho~ght my a~e nugltt ~ a
"elsewhere" with his "other b3111er, and he s so attractive
family." H~ can learn more I wanted a chance with.him.
POMEROY - In obser- the results.of the amendment
Abby, what am I gomg to
details later.
vance of Constitution Week, will be funded ."
It would be very helpful if do now? Help! -·
THE
Meigs County Juvenile
He said that "We the
you could get a father su.bSti· OLDER WOMAN IN
Judge Robert Buck . dis- People" need to stand up and
MIDDLEPORT
and Everett and Eunice
tute involved in your son's ENGLAND
cussed the Constitution of voice an opinion on · the .
Kyrie Jordanne ·Swann Seagraves of Ashland;
' life. A trusted male friend or . DEAR
OLDER
the United States with mem- important amendment to our :
c~:lebrated . her
eighth Ky.; Ed and Shelia Cozart
relative could spend time WOMAN: "!nless . R:od
bers of Return .Jonathan Ohio Constitution.
birthday Sept. 14 at her of Pomeroy; and Kathryn
with the boy. If you don't dreams of slatting a fatmly,
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
"Every citizen should
home
·in Hart of Racine.
have o~e, Big Brothers Big your age .shouldn't matter
Middleport.
study the changes and be
the American Revolution.
Sisters may be able to match much to him. Regardless of
After dinBuck ~ged members to aware of the benefits or
your son with a caring. male the numbers, he's already
remember the preamble and unwanted affects," he COil'
~ pie
ner, a birthadult who can serve as a • attracted to you.
day
cake
think about their opportunity eluded.
One evening, after fixing
mentor and role model. In
••:•""·"' and
1ce _ _ _!...__ _ _ __
and · obligations in shaping
Regent Abbie Stratton
Canada, call (800) 263-9133 him a delicious. dinner, as&amp;
cream were
the world and world affairs presided atthe meeting held
or visit the Web site at him, "Would you still be
served to
for the present and future at Grace Episcopal Church.
•www.bbsc.ca. (There is no attracted to me if I were five
t h o s e
generations.
She announced that the
attending,
NEW Y~RK (AP) national 800-number in the years older than you?" (Of
The judge addressed issue October meeting will be.held .
including Russell
S1mmons
has
USA at .this time, 'but readers course, he will say yes.)
I, which will be on the ballot at the Chester Courllrouse .on
...____. her mother, xen3f!led .a sn.eaker offe~ed
who are interested in Big . · A few. weeks l~ter, ask.if he
this fall. He said the issue Oct. 12 with a luncheon at
SwANN
B r e n d a by Jus Phat Farm clothtng
Brothers Big ·Sisters of would hke you 1f you were,
deals with drug use, incar- noon. Beverly Schumacher,
Seagraves, label for a m?nth msupport
·• America
can
visit say,. 10 years older.
Southeast District director.;
ceration and rehabilitation.
www.BigBrothersBigSisters.
~ month after that, ask if . Mike Seagraves; . · Nik of Democrallc candtdate H.
If passed, Buck said Issue will be the program speaker.
Seagraves; Pam, Lauren Carl McCall.
.
org for information.)
he d still be attracted to you
I will change the. Ohio
Mrs. Rae Moore, national
Olivia
Dye;
Debbie
The
sneaker
w1ll
be
and
DEAR ABBY: Six weeks if you were 12 years older.
Constitution. He urged defense · chairman, gave a
Maynard
and
Scott c~led the Carl _McCall runIf he keeps saying "yes,"
ago, I met "Rod" tJuvugh an
members to study the Issue, -national defense report notChevalier, all of the mng shoe du_nng ~Iober,
online singles ad. He lives 13 could be your lucky numwhether or not it will work, ing that the flag .and national
Middleport; grandpar~nts, Simmons sa1d. Simmons
• •.
'.
one village over from me. "W_e ber l
who pays; how the use· of anthem remain symbols to
David and Ann Zirkle, and en?ors~d McCall over
met after five "chats" and hit
Dear A~by rs wnnen by
resources
will affect other show the world the strength
Amber and Arnie Dugan Repub~ican. Gov. George
it off. He's an easygoing gen- Abigail Van Buren, : a_lso
social
services
and by whom. and unity of great nation.
of Racine.
Pataki m mid-September.
tleman. We enjoy many of known as Jeanne Phillip's,
Sending gifts were her
ihe same interests (hiking and. was founded by her
and bird-watching, for exam- mother, Pauline Phillips.
pie) and have a great time Write
Dear Abby at
Haven, W.Va.; Terri, Bruce
.
·
together. •However, I fibbed www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
and
Travis
Hysell
of
Nitro,
· and said I am 51, wh~n in Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
W.Va.; Steffany Seagraves
.
fact I'm 62. Rod is 49. I look 90069.
'

Swann·cerebrates)
eightM birthday .

. Little sens~ left in having
. two Koreas .to ·contend with

:

Weclnesd.y, October :z. :zoo:z

Abby

Charlene H.oeflich
Editor

.

the Bend ··

Dear

D.en Dickerson
Publisher
Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

_Th_en_ail_;....
y_se_ntin_ei_ ___;B::J;;;..y

Page AS

PERKINS' VIEW

. '" Advise and.con~ent ge_ts new meaningftom Senate
Ruth Badt;r Ginsburg and Stephen
'
Breyer were lucky.
. ,
Had they been worked over by the
Senate Judiciary Committee the way
Miguel Estrada was last week, the way
Pr\scilla Owen was a few weeks ago,
neither of Presodent Clinton's
Supreme Court nominees would have
won confirmation.
What's the difference?
When Ginsburg and Breyer came
before the committee, it was conCOLUMNIST
trolled by Republicans, who were
willing to confirm the Democratic
r
president's judicial nominees .with6ut
Kennedy.
subjecting .them to an ideological litAfter Estrada dismissed .the accusamus test. ·
.
lion,
wnich hardly amounted to anyNow Democrats· control the committhing
serious anyway, New York Sen.
tee. And they are determined to block
Chuck
Schumer suggested the · nomiPresident Bush's judicial nominees who share his conservative thinking, nee had a "credibility" problem. This,
much as Ginsburg and Breyer share!! of course, presents Schumer and other
Clinton's _li_beralleanirr~s- no matter Judiciary Committee pemocrats with
a convenient pretext for denying
how quahf1ed they happen to be.
Indeed, last July, the American Bar Estrada a seat on the D.C. Court of
Association judged Estrada "well Appeals,;wd for effectivc;)y preventing
qualified" - its highest rating -' to the conservative Latino from eventube seated ' on the D.C. Court of ally becoming a candidate for the
Appeals, widely regarded as the nation's highest court.
· "He (Estrada) has been subjected so
nation 's socond-highest court.
far
to the pinata confirmation process
' The unanimous endorsement by the
with
which we have all become familABA, which tends to bend to the polit·
iar
this
year," complained Sen. Orrin
1cal left, should haye . satisfied
Judiciary Committee Democrats such Hatch, the Utah Republican.
"The extreme left-wing Washington
as Sen. Patrick Leahy, the committee
groups
go after judicial nominees like
chairman, who has previously referred
kids
~ter
a finata. They beat it and
to the ABA' s highest rating as the
"gold standiJTd" for judicial nominees. beat 11 unu they hope something
Alas, Estrada was forced to endure a comes out that they can then chew and
five -hour grilling by Leahy and his distort."
Which is precisely what happened to
fellow Democrats that inCluded ques'?wen,
· the Texas Supreme Cpurt justions regarding an artiCle in The
Nation, the far left pamphlet, in which tice who has the unwanted distinction
an anonymous (of course) lawyer of being the first judicial nominee in
accused him of saying he would block history with a rating o( well qualified
liberal law clerks . from working for by the ABA - by a unanimous vote,
Supreme · Court Justice Anthony like Estrada- to be vqted down by

Joseph
.Perkins

the Senate .
Justice Owen's offense, in the minds
of the left-wing groups to which Hatch
·referred, . including P.eople for the
American Way and the National
Abortion Ri8hts League, was that she
was insufficiently supportive of abor.!IQll.

.

, Judiciary Committee Democrats
zeroed in on a 1999 opinion the jurist
wrote in which she took exception to
an exemption for a 17 -year-old girl
who wanted to get an abortion without
parental notification. Leah~ accused
her of "extremism." H1s fellow
Judiciary Committee Democrat s . ,
claimed . her views were outside · the
mainstream of jurispiJldence.
But what they neglected to.note was
that her opinion was consistent with
the Lone Star State's parental notifica ..
tion law. And that 80 percent of
Americans consider parental notification a reasonable · prerequisite for
under-age abortions.
·so outrageous was the committee's
rejec~ion of Owen's nomination to the
Fifth Circuit Court of App,eals, The
Washington Post was compelled to
editorialize that it opened "a distressi~g new ~hapter in the war over judiCial nommat10ns."
No matter that Democrats profess
otherwise, Owen cle~r~y was a vi~tim
of 1deology and poltucs. "This 1s a
dangerous road," the Post warned,
"one that will harm the judiciary and
come back to bite the Democrats ." .
Indeed,
Judiciary
Committee
Democrats have abused their role in
!he judicial a~pointment process. They
mterpret adv1ce and consent to mean
search and destroy.

: Today is Wednesday, Oct. 2, the 275th day of 2002. There
;u-e 90 days left in the year.
·.
Today's Highlight in History:
. On Oct. 2, 1967, Thurgood Marshall was sworn in as an
;associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; .he
;was thefmt black appointe~ to the nation's highest court.
• On th1s date:
,
: In 1780, British spy John Andte was hanged in Tappan, NY
: In 1835, the first battle of the Texas Revolution took place
·as American settlers defeated a Mexican cavalry near the
Guadalupe River.
·
.
In 1890, comedian Groucho Marx was born in New York.
In 1919, President Wilson suffered a stroke that left him par:tially paralyzed.
.
(Joseph Perkins is a c~(umnist for
: In 1941. German armies began Operation "Typhoon"- an
The
San Diego Union· Trib~ ile]and can
;all-out drive against Moscow.
be
reached
at ~ Joseph.
: In 1944, Nazi troops crushed the 2-mont)l-old. Warsaw
PerkinsUnionTrib.com.) · · .
-Uprising, during which 250,000 people were killed. . · .
: In 1950, the comic slrip ~ 'Peanuts," created by Charles M.
· ~---7--~~--------~----------------------~~
' I
Schulz, was first published in nine newspapers. ·. ·,
In 1958, the former French colony of Gumea in West Africa
.proclaimed its independence.
• . '
••
, ; In 1985, actor Rock Hudson died at hfs home in Beverly
:Hills, Calif., at age' 59 after a battle with AIDS.
.
.
·: In 1990, the Senate voted 90-9 to confirm the nomination of
·:Judge David H. Souter to the Supreme Court.
·• ·
• 'Ten years ago: The 'campaigns of President Bush and
:oemocrat Bill Clinton agreed to hold three presidential ,
Bv JIM Muu.eN
the happy cou,ple might still be married work. It's Mullen's -Laws of Matrimony.
~debates and one vice-presidential deba.te.
·
. Sue and I have stopped going to wed· by the next time we saw them, say a few ·The more a couple s,lobbers over each
' Five years ago: Presi\lent Clinton proposed sending inspecdmg receptions. We got tired of sitting weeks later at the baby shower. No other during the ceremony, the shorter
. ;tors to farms around the world to ensure that foreign-grown
m frpnt of the speakers. The bride and more. More than once we have gotten the n:arriage. The couple that writes the
!fruits and vegetables were safe for American consumers. The
groom seem to think we've made some an invitation to the second weddin* sapp1est, mo.st puke-inducing vows will
;president also said he would ask Congtess to empower the
special request to be deafened by the before we have gotten a "Thank You' have the most acrimonious dovorce. The
:Food and Drug Administration to ban produce. from countries
band.lt's always so loud we can't speak note for the firs,t..
·
couple that gets married while perform•whose safety precautions did not meet American standards.
to each other much less the other guests.
We will run into the bride's parents at ing a stunt like jumping out of an air: One year ago: NATO Secretary-General Lord Robertson ,
We sit and smile and nod while the the grocery store and find · out that the plane or scuba dr"ting will separate after
:said the lJ.vi~d States had provided "clear and conclusive"
bride's father is talking to us. "Ain't that fi~st husband's gone, she's got two kids the first child. The marri age on a moun~~idence OiOsama bin Laden's involvement in the attacks on
. the truth," "I know what you mean," under 2, and they are in an expensive taintop with his-and-hers barefoot min;New York and Washington. Acting Massachusetts Gov. Jane
and "You ·can say t)lat again," we say custody battle over his · frozen sperm. isters and a tofu wedding cake wil·l last
:Swift un ve iled security measures that included a new security
~ over and over because we cannot hear a He never spent any time with the kids until the kids start home schooling. If •
~chief at Logan International Airport, where hijackers boarded
when they were married, which is one the wedding takes place in Las Vegas
word he's sa:y:ing.
the two planes that smashed into the World Trade Center.
The o_nly thm~ We have to go on is the reason why they 're getting divorced . the marriage will last one year. A mar: Today 's Birthdays: Country singer-musician Leon Rausch
expression on h1s face. For all we know, Now he ''S suing for full and complete riage in Las Vegas by an Elvis imitator
!Bob Will s and the Texas Playboys) is. 75. Forl)ler Dodgers
he 1s complammg abo~t the loud ~usic, custody, he.can't bear to be away from . will last one week.
.
~hortstop Maury Wi lis is 70. Movie critic Rex Reed is 64.
too. The musoc. 1s not JUSt_loud, It s bad. the httle dears for a smgle moment. And
Sue an~ I are thinking of stopping our
Singer-songwrjter Don McLean is 57. Cajun/country singer
It has been ~•eked e~pec1ally to annoy b~ the wa~, she really hkes the cappuc· ma1l serv1ce, too. Thr~e or four times ~ ·
Jo-el Sonnier is j'6. Country singer Chris LeDoux is 54.
me.lwouldn t loke ~~os crapat a normal . cmo machme_you g~.ve the!ll. Sl~e 's Just y_ear we gel a note m the mail from
Photographer Annie Leibmvitz is · 53. Rock musician Mike
volurin:. ~ow that 1t s makmg my ha1r a lottie late With the Thank You ' notes..Aome town m another state from one
Rutherford (Ge nesis, Mike &amp; lhe Mechanics) is 52. Singerblow inliDS-bree~e of the sp~aker I real- She's ~en so busy going to all her girl- half of a formerly happy couple l~at
~ctor Sting is 51. Actress Lorraine Bracco is 48. Rock singer .
ly hate 11. I don t know wh~t message fnend s secon? w.eddmgs, don 't you always starts with, '',~lice and 1 hadn't
Phil Oakey (The Human Lea~ue) is 47. Rhythm -and-blues
the happy couple thmk t.!JrY re sendmg know. She can t wmt to see you at her been happy for a long time." rd-rather
singer Freddie Jackson i·s M. Smger-producer Robbie Nevjl is
~s;_ but the message l'ji! receiving is nex,t wedding, thou gh. This time she's sit in frol)l of a ~peaker than. read the
44 . Rock musician Bud Gaugh (S ublime) is 35. Rhythm-and G1ve us an ex pen sove preseot and ~el registered at' Jacoby and Meyers. And rest of this. He for~ets we know Alice.
•
blues singer Dion Allen (Az Yet) is 32. Actress-talk show host
the hell out. ~y · parents made me •.nvtte she wants you· to know they've hired a She )"as plenty happy.
Kell y Ripa is 32. Singer Tiffany is 3 1. Rock singer Lene
you. They $aid you ~.rght be good for a really _good ,local band, Thu~der an_d
(Jim Mullen is the author of "lr Tak,es
Nystrom is 29. · Rhythm-a nd-blues singer L.aTocha Scott
cappu~cmo._machme .
.
Ltghtmn_g. It s the only group m the tn- A Vjllage Idiot: A Me1110ir of Life After
(Xscape) is P:f~pper. Big Proof (D 12) is 25 .
·
Who~h bnngs up .another sore pomt. •• state regoon wnh two druwmcrs and two . the City" (Simon and Schuster, -2001).
We may stop giVIng_ presents, _too. bass players.
.
•
. .
He also contnbutt;s regularly to
: Thought l:~r ,;;';iay: "Thero&lt; 's one way to find out if a man is
honest - ask .him. If he says 'yes,'· you know be, is crodked."
When we were su II g01~g to weddmgs
Of course, we kne w. from the gn-go £ nterramment Weekly, where his email
- Groucho Marx (! 890- 1977).
•
there was .always the shm chance that that th1 s marriage was not going to is jim- mullenew.,eom.)
,

.

I

THE VILLAGE IDIOT

Those wedding band blues just k~ep on playing

I .

•

Constitutioh Week observed

Peo
·

Russell Simmons

~~b:~~ gs\:i~h~~ ~/we~

'

'

FlEE.

.

in support of...

Community Calendar
Public Meetings

'LFran~f{~I,.Gay·Pirrin
iter~ Jub, 2 p.m. home of .

·

to

review "The Mll(tian Chronicles"
by Ray Bradbury. .
·

·
Wednesday, Oct. 2
PAGEVILLE •• Scipio Township
Trustees, 6:30p.m. at !he town hall.
. Thursday, Oct. 3
Wflllnesday, pct. 2
TUPPERS PLAINS ·· Eastern
Local School District parent-teaeher POMEROY-· Free blOod lead screenings wilt be held for children ages six
conferences. Call elementary
month to under six years as part of a ·
school, 985-3304 or high school,
.985·3329 to schedule appointment. statewide effort 1o fight childhood lead
poisoning. Funding for lhe screenings
comes from !he Ohio Department of
HeO!Ih Soolheast Regional Resource
Center. To schedule a child or to get
information on the screening contact the
Meigs County Heallh Departmenl992·
Wednesday, Oc:L 2
6626.
MIDDLEPORT- Middlepon

Other events

Clubs and
Organizations

·;/~ :JVationa( {}3reast Cancer

REEQSV!ll.E - • Wilrrw Eynon will
observe her 90th birthday Sept 30. Cards
may be senllo her al 40058 Chrisly •
Road, Reeds~ilte,Ohi 45772.

1,067.,000 households.
1. (1) "Ptiends," NBC,
20.3, 21.7 million homes.
2. (2) "CSI: Crime Scene
Investigat!on," CBS, 18.2,
.
19.4 million homjls.
3. (3) "ER," NBC, 16.9,
18.0 million homes.
4. (X) "Everybody Loves
Raymond," CBS, 15.3, 16.3
million homes.
5. (4) "CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation:
Miami,"
CBS, 14.9, 16.0 million
homes.

.

.

Memorial Hospital and
Radiology Associates of Athens are
offeri_
ng a limited number of free mammograms
'

1To qualify you must:

.

RACINE - Cora Birch will observe
her 91st birthday on Ocl. 3. Cards may
be senllo her at P. 0. 133, Racine, Ohio
45771.

6. (5) ' "Everybody Loves
Raymond ," CBS, 14.7, 15.7
million homes.
7. (6) " Frasier," NBC,'
14.1, 15.1 million homes.
8. (7} "Will &amp; Grace,"
NBC, 13.9, 14.8 million
homes.
, 9. (8) "Scr.ub s," NBC,
13.8, 14.7 million homes.
10. ·'(9) "NFL Monday
Night Football : St. Lo11is at
Tampa Bay," ABC, 12.5,
13.4 million homes.

}lwareness 1vlontfi

/

O'BI~ness

POMEROY- Mn. Edison Johnson
will cetebnte her 90th birlhday on Sept.
30 allhe Rocksprings Nur.;ing and
Rehabilitation-Center where she is a resident. Cards may be senl to her !here. The
address Is Room 148, 36759
Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, Ohio .
45769.
.

'Friends' number one with Neilsens
Prime-time ratings compiled by Nielsen Media
Research fbr the week of
Sept.
23-29 .
Listings
.include the week's ranking,
with rating for the w~ek a~d
season-to-date rankmgs m
parentheses.
An "X" in pare11theses
denotes a one-time-only
presentation. The rating is
rthe percentage of the
L.. -nation ' s estimated 106.7
million' TV homes . Each rat·
mgs
point
represents

{y'\

Birthdays .

J~ Be 4~ years old or older
.

1

·.Have NOT had a mammogram during the past
'' three years.
.
.
,

; (

Have no health insurance, including Meiiicaid or
Medicare

.

'

To receive a certificate: Call the O'Bieness Community
Relations Department (74.0) 592~~300

O'BLENESS

Memorial Hospital
~

lbpill.l

Driw~. Allleml. OH 4~'7{1 J.lJOl

~w .obleness. org

. '

'

m ·WOuld Like To mlcome...
GARY CHIZEVER, MD
General Surgerv
304-:675-7650
m ·Medlcal omce.Bulldlna/

I

•

,,

.

..

213 • Point Plalisant•.wi 25550

PLEASANT
V~LEY ·

·HOSPITAL
'
•

�..

•
(

•

.

.

to d"tsdose slaveiy ties

Daniel Tobar Guevara,13 , center, smokes with his friends
luis Soriano Ayala,13, right; and Jose Perez Soriano, 8,
as they search for mollusks in the mud, on the island of
Sah Sebastian, 71 miles east of San Salvador•. .EI
Salvador. The children smoke pure tobacco in order to
scare way the insects that are in these muddy areaSt In
El Salvador abOut 450,000 children under the age of 18
work, according to the International LabOr Organization.
Children's Day is celebrated in El Salvado. (AP)

Wall Street welcomes big
rally, but skeptical it could
be .another bear trap

;

. . ...... -· .... ..J - - -

WEDNFSDAY'S

BY Scon WOLFE

'

efeated·

Eastem·
share of title

an ace, while notching four
_Se_nti
_ ·n_el_co
_ rre_s.;_po_n_dent
_ _ _ _ · kills and one block. Overall,
Meiss asain went 39-40
ROCK SPRINGS ·~ The · servmg m another great
Meigs Marauders of Coach effort. ·
NEW " · YORK (AP)
. Rick Ash continued their
Chancey went 5-5 serving
Manager Bobby Valentine
banner season by handily · with two aces, three points,
was fired by the New York
'defeating the . Wellston· while Nikki Butcher was 5-5
Mets, tWo days after they finRockets 15-0, 15-1 Tuesday ~ith two poin~s , and M~a
ishel! last in th!l Natioaal
night in girls_ Tri-Valley · renner went - 13 servmg
League East and tWO seasons
Conference Ohio Division witJ! eleven points and one
ace. Samantha Cole had a
after the team reached the
action.
.
block, Katie Jeffers went 1-2
World Series.
Meigs
is
perfect
at
15-0
'serving
with one point, and
Valentine just finished the
Ohio
seven
assists;
and Kayte
overall
and
13-0
in
the
second year of a three-year,
Division.
.
Davis
went
4-4
serving
with
i:ontract, and the Mets will !Je
Meigs' serving proved to · three points, an ace, and four
responsible . for his · 2003
be
the key to the match.
kills. Chrissy Miller added a
salary of about $2.7 million.
Mindy
Chancey
delivered
kill. ·
· The Mets fmished 75-g6, in '
the game winner in the first
Meigs won the reserve
last place in the NL East for
Davi~
game
15-0 and I 5-0 to also
game,
while
Jaynee
the first time since '1993 and
Win.
remain
undefeated 15-0 and
hammered
home
the
below .500 for the frrst time
·
ning
point
of
the.
second
l3c0.
'
·
in six years. In his six~plus
game. Davis went 11-11
Meigs
got to Belpre
ilt:asons with the Mets,
serving
with
ten
points
and
on
Thursday.
Valentine was . 536-467,
!UChing the playoffs in 1999
and 2000.

· Mets sack

Valentine

HEMLOCK _
Behind
another strong team effl;&gt;rt
the Eastern Lad Ea les . of
coach
Howie y c:ldwell
claimed a share of the TriVall
c ~
H ki
. ~~ oCnh erence hioc !lthg
DIVISI&lt;?n . ampiOns P ',\'1
a convmcmg wm .over Mtller
Tuesday. Eastern.•s now 14-1
o~er~l and 13-1 m the leag.ue
~t~ JUSt three games rernammg m the co~ference.
.E~tern blitzed to a 15·3
wm m the first game then
hel~ off a Mtller rally to
clrurn the next ~arne 15-ll.
Eastern never skipped a beat
as Tiffeny Bissell notched
nine points with a 12-13 serving nig~t. going 21-24 _setting

3

will

Clarett's rise

Narron

'

forces.
Tressel
• .
. -C·

· ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)
- . Jerry Narron was ftred as
• manager of the Texas
Rangers after the team's third
straight last-place finish in
theAL West.
Narron went 134-162 after
taking over in May 2001 ,
including ·a 72-90 mark this
season.
.
'The Rangers also fired ·
trainer Danny Wheat, who
joined the organization in
1976 and had been with the
big-lea~ team since 1985.

Makar, Baldwin
switch teams
CHARLOITE, N :C. (AP)
- . Two .struggling Winston
· Clip drivers will have new.
crew chiefs in 2003. Jimmy
Makar, Bobby Labonte!s
crew chief ,..smce 1995, ·is
switching to team manager
for the Joe Gibbs Racing
team, while Tommy Baldwin
left Daytona 500 winner
·
Ward Burton.

NCAA overtums

suspension

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) - An
NCAA appeals committee
overturned one-game suspensions
Georgia's
Ezra
Williams
and
Damien
Wilkins received . for playing
in an unsanctioned summer
lc;ague.
·

· IOC considers
goH, rugby
LONDON (AP) -A decision on w!J.ether to add golf .
!Uld rugby to the Olympic
pro,gra~ might be put off
until next summer.
·
• : IOC officials said they still
plan to ,vote in Mexico City
hext month on proposals for
liropping baseball, softball
and modern pentathlon, but
may wait until July to decide
whether to add sports.
.

•

. ·Hor drivers

:;under scrutiny

to Juggle

.,

playing time
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio
· State coach Jim Tressel says
he wants a balanced offense,
although this obviously isn't
·
what he has in mind.
It also isn't what Lydell
Ross had in mind. either.
While freshman tailback
Maurice Clarett continues to
gain yardage and prominence
as a Heisman "1frophy qmtender, Tressel is left with the
uncomfortable balancing act
of trying to keep his other
running backs happy.
"I wish there were more
balls,'' Tressel said Tuesday
during his
fifth-ranked
Buckeyes' preparations for
Saturday's Big Ten game at
Northwestern.
Tws&gt; weeks ago, Clarett was
sidelined-while rehabilitating
his right knee from arthroscopic surgery to repair a torn
ligament. Ross got the start in
his place against Cincinnati
.and responded with 130 yards
on 23 carries in a 23-19 victory.
.
_Clarett stepped back into
the spotlight last Saturday,
carrying 21 times for I 04
yards and three touchdowns
in a 45-17 win over Indiana in
the Big Ten opener.
Prior to the game against
Indiana, when it appeared
Claret! wouldn't be I 00 perOhio State tailback Maurice Clarett (13) pushes away Indiana free safety A. C. Carter for his cent, Ross told reporters he
lhlrd touchdown during the first half last Saturday in Columbus. The freshman's emergence thought he would get the
has 'created a logjam at the tailback position for the Buckeyes. (AP) .
.
majority of carries against the

.

Hoosiers.
He carne
off the bench ·
and ended up
with
two
attempts for
ll yards.
"I guess
you could
say it's a lit. tie frustratTressel
ing. coming
out of the .
(Cincinnati) game with 130
yards and Clarett getting sidelined by inj1.1ries. I thought I'd
at least be the starter going
into the game," Ross said. "
So, just.like a Little League
coach who has to find time to
get in· both superstars and
benchwarrners, Tressel must
juggle Ciarett's play ing ·iime
with that of Ross, Maurice
Hall and JaJa. Riley - while
trying to keep them all nappy.
"I know if I' m Lydell Ross,
and I go from 21 carries down
to two, I'd rather have 21,"
Tressel said. "I guess we've
got to have the faith within
the group that we' re going to
do what we think is the best."
Clarett now has 575 yards
on 84 attempts in Joqr games .
to Ross' 255 on 55. carries in
five games. It ·was Ross who,
as a freshman, was the Qackup last season . to Jonathan
Ross. He spoke ali · spring
about wantmg to be "the

Please su osu. a:s

MLB Divisional Series

· Yankees rally ~r win
'

•

six s~ts for. kills, and 4- was 5-for-5 serving with five · ·
for-4 passmg. Ntcole Plulhps points .
scored eig~t points in an 11Taylor, Phillips, and Bissell
for-11 servmg night, going 6- led the way in the first game
for-6 passing. Kass Lodwiclc. with 5, 4, and three points
was 9-fo~-~ with. five points, respectively, a game dori:ti4-of-7 spiking wtth two kills, n~ted by_ th~ Ea~1es; then
~and 17-of-.1 8 rr,ssmg. ~lacy Btssell With SIX pomts set the
Sn~utht wllentf 13for-4. wnhtha s tage for .an early S-6 lead.
pam • · -o settmg w1
tacy Slllith gave Eastern a
six sets for kills, and :1.-for-2 9-7 loop, then the Falcons
passing.
carne back to 11 -9 before
Katie Robertson went 2- Eastern's Lodwick regained
for-3 serving, 12-of-13 pass- the lead at 12-ll. ·
•
ing, 7-for-7 spiking with
Eastern never looked back
three kills and five blocks. as Phillips scored the last
Mor~an Weber went ' 2-for-5 three points for the win.
servmg, 17-for-22 passing,
Eastern won the reserve
and 13-for-14 spiking with a game 15-7. 9-15, and 15-8.
team-high seven kills. Casey · Jessica Kehl and Carrie
Smith was 8-of-10 passing Elberfeldeachhadeightpoints, ·
and 3-for-4 spiking with a while Jessica Pooler and Kayla
kill . Tia Pratt was 3-for-5 Nave each added five.
passing, Krystal Baker was 9Eastern hosts Federal
for- 11 passing. Becky Taylor Hocking Thursday.

•

OSU Football ·

Texas fires

Use of wreckage in
memorials a powerful tribute
to some, upsetting to others

. .

'

eigs girls stil

'HIGllllGHfS

NEW YORK (AP) - The pretty dismal; the latest eviiatest big finish on Wail Street dence is a dip in manufacturwas one of the largest single- ing activity during September
day gains ever, but it is not reported by the Institute for .
Supply Management.
. likely to last. . · ·
While the market welcomed · "The • fundarnental macroa 346-point win Tuesday for economic problems are still
the .Dow Jones industrials, going to be. there when we
their best one-day point ·gain wake up,:' said Arthur Hogan,
in two months and their chief market analyst at
eighth-best daily adv,ilnce Jefferies &amp; Co.
&lt;ever, market analysts were
And, investors know the··
more skeptical than c;xcited market faces tremendous
by the upturn.
·
headwinds as companies pre"lt was a nice, strong rally, pare to release third-quarter
to be sure, but we have seen earnings results in the corning
some Strategists sug~esting weeks. Analysts said stocks
that this is the highest nsk (for · could also face some selling
stocks)since the 1950s," said pressure as investors open
Mike Weiner, managing their third-quarter mutual
director of equities ar Bane fund statements, many of
One Investment Advisors in which will show another
. Columbus, Ohio. ·.
round of steep declines.
Analysts have been increasWall Street is also anxious
ingly wary of Wail Street's over the . possibility of war
advances, saying the market with Iraq, although some of
has fallen into a pattern of its concerns were alleviated
having one big up day for Tuesday when· tHe country
every two or three big drops. reached a weapons inspeclt's a trend, but not one wttp tions agreement with U.N.
any upward momentum.
inspectors.
"We keep getting these head
Stocks also can't advance
fakes," Wt:oiner said.
so long as safer, lower-yieldThe rally on ·Tuesday sent ing options such as bonds,
ttie Dow soaring to 7,93&amp;, a. money markets and even cergain of more than 346 points. tificates of deposit still appear
The broade~ market also more attractive to some
rose. The Nasdaq composite investors.
"Just today I talked to two
index went up 41.66, or 3.6
. percent, to 1,213.72. The people, not clients, who said,
Standard &amp; Poor' s 500 index 'You know, I have had it. I
advanced 32.64, or 4 percent, think I am going into 2 percent COs,"' said Jhomas F.
to &amp;47.92.
But overseas
markets Lydon, president of Global
Investments
in
weren't swayed by the U.S.· Trends
bounce. The Nikkei Stock Newport Beach, Calif. "That·
Average was down 11'2.93 is scary, but those are the kind
points Wednesday - its low- of things you see at bear marest closing in 19 years.
ket bottoms.'It may take some
Earnings, the economy and more of that before we can
investor sentiment all remain move forward."

I

Page 81 •
Wednesday, October 1. 1001

OllCAGO (AP) - The City Council
is considering asking insurance companies to disclose their past ties to slavery,
but some in the industry question what ·
the proposal would accomplish.
Following Ca lifornia'~ lead, the council is co~d~
·ng a rnea~at would
require" insura e companies that do
~usiness with. t e-eit)(_t&lt;\~pqrt past
msurance pohctes fot · sla&gt;h:s \ d'r other
. slavery connection~ The prop&lt;&gt;s;~ l was
expected to come to a vote Wednesd;ly.
Alderman Dorothy Tillman, who proposed the measure, said the disclosures ·
could help win reparations for ,the
descendants of enslaved Africans in the
United States.
"I believe people would like to know
if a corporation they're contemplating
doing business with has its.roots in trading in human cargo," Tillman said.
Sean McManamy, spokesman for the
American Insurance Association, said
he expected the· measure to pas~ and L----'-----that if it does "our companies' will Chicago Alderman Dorothy Tillman speaks to repo_rters at a news conf(!rence in
-absblutely do what is required of them."
But he said he didn't see who would Chicago. Tillman tlas proposed an ordinance demanding that insurance companies
benefit.
disclose any involvement in U.S. slavery years ago. She hopes to widen the sights
"Is this the way you go'back and right of the ordinance through amendment which the CitY Council is exJ)Ilct:ed to vote
a social wrong from hundred$ of years ·t oday. (AP)
•
.
ago?" McManamy said. ''I'm nOt sure
cies written to provide financial protec- 12.
this is how you do it."
Tillman said she plans to amend the
The ordinance would require insur- tion for U.S. slave owners in the 19th
rne_
a sure on Wednesday to include a
ance companies seeking city contracts century and earlier. It ·was ,approved by
to disclose any information about poli- two City Council committees on Sept. wide range of businesses.

JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP)
Hilary BaHon, chairwoman
Anthony Crispino and of the Department . of Art
some colleagues were walk- History and Archaeology at
ing to work when they passed Columbia University in New
the twisted steel beams of York, said beams from the
Jersey City's World Trade . towers can be an appropriate
Center memorial. Their con- 'part.of the memorials. .
versation darkened.
"My sense is that these
"They' ve got death written ruins can play a very powerful
all over them," said Crispino, role in helping people corn35, an assistant vice.president prebend - not just the people
at Lehman Brothers. "( don't n'Ow, but in years to come - ··
think they should be in pub- what happened," she said. ·
I ic."
· - "When you have a ruin, ivhen
Sitting nearby, Mike Maras you have·that twisted beam of
CO\Iidn't help being distracted steel, that's a way that makes
it much more concrete, much
.by the beam.
"It's disturbing," said inore graphic."
Maras, a 26-year-oid portfoUo
Beams have been distribadministrator.
uted to sites including the
People organizing Sept. II Mining Museum in franklin,
memorials acr6ss the country N.J ., the Nixon Library in
have used wreckage from the California,
Denver
trade center .to ·convey the International Airport, and .the
General
of
horror ·of the attack . But Consulate
responses to the memorials Portugal.
.
vary widely. . .
~
The city of Ne~ t ork seqt
"You never know hat is whole beams or ·cut ~ectioris
going to trigger a r,ac ipn in to 150 locations beforeeecid-'·
someone,"
sa id . Renee ing recently not I? tj!Je any
Burawski, directot of the help more requests, sa1d,II)1ornas
line for Project Phoenix, a Curitore, who heads the cornfederally funded p~t-Sept: II munity ser;ices 'unit in Mayoi
' mental health counseling ser- .Michael Bloomberg's office.
vice. "So my feeliJig is y'ou . Before the city took over disstay away from anything that tribution,. requests were hann1ight tr!~ger th)tkind of died by companies under conresponse.
·
tract to recycle t~e materi al.

•

The Daily·Sentinel

.Cards rock Arizona, Page B2
Twins topple As, Page B2
Moss in trouble, Page B2
Kitna: Akili should start, Page B2

'-Chicago

com

•

Inside:..

Wednesday, October 2, 2002

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Children's Day

•

.

· .ST. ANDREWS, Scotland
· NEW YORK (AP) The torneback spoiled .the per that deflected off first
(AP) - Golf's rule-making
Bernie Williams showed his , Angels '· first postseason .baseman . Scott Spiezio's
body iS limiting the springnew teammates how postsea- game in 16 years.
glove into right field , scoring .
like ·effect on drivers at next
son Yankees baseball is
"Even when Glaus hit the Soriano with the tying run.
year's British Open to bring_ . played.
.
homer, it never was asitu.a"I don ' t mind Schoeney
•t in line with the other three
Williams followed Jason tion where guys went, 'Oh.' against Gi ambi," Sciascia
majors. The Royal &amp; Ancient
Giarnbi 's two-out tying sin- You don't ever feel the wind sjlid. "I thi'lk he's done a
Club said· new technology
gle with a three-run hornerto . taken out of your sails on this good job in the times he's
such as thin-faced, so-called
cap another stunning Yankee ballclub ," Giambi said. faced Jason. He made a good
"hot" drivers, were giving
.
Stadium comeback as New "They always figure they' re pitch."
some players an unfair
York beat Anaheim 8-5 one rally away because it's
Williams worked the count.
advantage. Any player not
Tuesday night in .Game I of happened so many times."
to 1-2 against Brendan
abiding by the · rule will be
the AL division series.
·
Ben Weber started the Donnelly and theri hit a drive
disqualified.
"As a ~isitor•. you always inning .and retired the ~rst to right field for his 17th
"wonder, Wtll •t happen If two batters before walkmg cai'J!er postseason home run
I' m over there?"-' said ~eli~v- Alfonso Soriano, who drew and Yankee Stadium began
e~ Steve Karsay, the wm~t~g only. 23 ,walks thts season,.
rocking again as it did last
Coming
PI!Cher. "And then . you JOID
}VII~ closer Troy Perc1val . fall .
.
thts teat;? and spectal thmgs w~mg u~, A~gel s man~g- . "I think it's going to set the·
happen.
er Mike Sctosc1a stuck wtth tone for the whole series "
After Troy Gl~us' second Weber, '_Vho . walked Derek Williams said.
'
h&lt;?rner put Anahetrn. ahead 5· !eter. Sctoscia then brought
The thunderous ovation
4 m the top &lt;?f the ~~g~th, t~e m lefty Scott ~ch~newets, continued as closer Marian·o
'(ankees rapted to wm thetr even th?ugh Gtam.b• was 0- Rivera came in . from the
SIXth stratght postseason for-5 with fiv.e stnke~uts m bullpen to his heavy metal
game at home - four on last hts career a~amst Perctval.
at-bat homers.
·
Giarnbi htt a hard one-hopPlun see Yanks, B:S

••••

Thursday ...

.Prep

Football

'

IWE_
D THU
'2 ..3
'

FRI

SAT

4

5

Items &amp; Prices Cooil Through October 5, 20021n Pomeroy and ~­
Calllpolls P!llnt Pleasant. COpyright 2002 Kroger Mid-Atlantic. .
we reserve the right to limit quantities.
·None sOld to deal~. •

i

Previews
I

I•I

"

•

•'

.

""

.

New York Yankees' Bernie Williams co nne ~ts for a three-run
home run during the eighth inning of Game 1 of American
League Division Series agai nst the Anaheim Angels , Tuesday
at Yankees Stadium in N~w York . (Af')
·

�..

•.
Page B 2 • The ~~;)ally Sel"!tiner .

~.mydallysentlnel.com

MLB Divisional series

· Wednesday, October 2. 2002

•

••

•

~
PHOENIX (AP)- The St:" "I've gone against Randy . 49;154, Edmonds launched a
Louis Cardinals insist they when he was throwing 95, 96, 424-footer ro right in·the first
Rolen said. inning and Rolen hit 'a 427weren't tipped off to what 97 mph,"
pitches were coming from "Tonil!'ht he was throwing 92 foot shot to left-center in the
Randy Johnson. It just looked or 93.'1\
· ·
third.
.
that way.
·'
Morris, the number "57" · "This whole :year is for
the
Cardinals'
The Cardinals battered the and initials of late teammate Darryl.,"
four-time Cy Young Award Darryl Kite written on his hat, Fernando Vina ·said. ''(Hi.s
winner for six runs on 10 hits got the _support that was s'!n:· death) crushed us all, and
_ the most hits Johnson has ly lacking m last year's dtvt - we're still crushed."
allowed this season - in six sion series, when he lost to
Johnson, No. 4 on the
innings and pounded the Curt Schilling and the
Arizona Diamondback's '12-2 Diamondbacks 1-0 and 2-1.
career strikeout list,.managed
in the opener of the NL divi- . "Today's game ~as our to fan only four, two of them
sion senes Tuesday night.
· offense," Morris said. "Every on ·foul third-strike bunt
"We don't have anything on one of the position players attempts by Morris. ·
Randy," manager Tony La battled every at-bat."
"It appeared to me that
The Diamondbacks, mean- mechanically he was rushing
Russa said. "What we've got
is a bunch of good hitters who while, look~ nothing like t_he a little bit," Arizona manager
respect him and try as hard as calm, ~ffictent World Sen~s Bob Brenly said. "When he
they possibly can and today champiOns, espectally the btg does that, his velocity drops
·
guy on the mound. De!]leted down. His slider is not quite
we got some hits."
Matt Moms gave up two by injqries to Luis Oon!!Zlez as sharp as it usually is. They
runs in the first three innings, and Cratg Counsell, Anzona were a very unforgiving team
shut
down
the had no chance once it became to him tonight."
then
Diamondbacks in Arizona's apparent that its ace was havWhen Johnson left, bad
most one-sided loss in its ing a rllre, and untimely, off turned to worse for the
The
three postseason appearances. night.
.
Diamondbacks . ·
"La Russa handed me the
"I feel very; very bad that 1 Cardinals· scored six runs. off
game ball, which I haven't pul us in such a deep hole relievers Matt Mantei; Greg
had in two years," Morris from the get·go," .Johnson
said. "You know, it's all excit- said. "My slider was flat. My Swindell and Mike Fetters.
ing."
·
fastball fell on the middle of
With two days off during
Jim Edmonds and Scott the plate. Going up a~ainsi the best-of-five series, the
Rolen ea~h hit monster two- probably the best lineUP..In the Cardinals · have to beat
run homers off Johnson, who National League, tile\, two Johnson and/or Curt Schilling
was gone 5-0 in September don't mix."
. ·
twice. Schilling faced Chuck
with an 0.66 ERA and was . With Kite's widow, Flynn, Finley in Game 2 on
among the capaiity crowd of Thursday.
13-1 in his last 15 outings.

•

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The Minnesota Twins · Corey Koskie (47) slaps hands with
coach AI Newman as Koskie heads home to score in the third
inning against the Oakland Athletics during game one of the
:2002 American League division series playoff Tuesday in
Oakland, Calif: (AP)

f
'!irk

'

The St. Louis Cardinals' Jim Edmonds jumps from the box after hitting a single against. the
Arizona Diamondbacks in the fifth inning of Game 1 of J.!Jeir best-of-five National League Division
Series Tuesday in Phoenix. (AP)
.

.

calm down, beat lfs
"I think it was just nerve's. Hunter came into the dugout
· We came out a little tighter screaming at his teammates to
than I thought we would, or wake up·. The Twins, after alj,
maybe just a little jittery. We were the best defensive team
embarrassed ourselves for the in the majors this season.
first three innings, not catch"We couldn't play any
i1;1g the ball and looked a little .worse than what we did in the
bit like follies."
·
first two innings. It was really
Game 2 in the best·of·five ugly, the popul?s dropping and
series was set for Wednesday the throws gomg anywhere,"
afternoon in Oakland, with Pierzynski said. "I think we
Mark Mulder pitching for the were too excited, everyone
A's against loe Mays.
was trying to do too much."
The Twins, making their
Koskie began the revival
first postseason appearance with a two-run homer off the
since winning ihe World second deck in ri~ht field in
Series in 1991, allowed four the third .. Doug Msenlkiewicz
unearned runs in the first two led off a three-run .sixth with
mnmgs.
another homer as the Twins
· Their misplays · included took a 6-5 lead.
three errant throws, catcher
Four of those runs came
Pierzynski trying to tag out a . against A's ace Tim Hudson.'
runner before catching the Then the Twins beat up a pair
ball and a popup to the rigjlt of Oakland middle relievers
of the mound that dropped while Brad Radke and three
·among four-fielders. ·
relievers were h,olding the A's
By the end of the second scoreless over the final seven
inning, center fielder Torii inni~.

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llunlnll and Rehablllllllon Center
RIIIISIInd DleUOan

Pro Football
f""}

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Bas010""baII .

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~

osu
from

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q~arterback in a lower round
thts year.
· .If they finish with another
bad record and another high
pick in 2003, they ' ll be
mclined to take yet another
quarterback.
·
First, they have to figure
out which one of the three on
the roster will get theni.
through the season. Kitna saidl
will come down to Kitna or . the. lo'C ker room h~~ beenI
Smith and will depend upon diVIded by the mdeciSion - · .
whether the NFL's worst team some players fav~r Fretotte,
since 1991 thinks it can sal· others _prefer Smith, others
want Kllna.
vage the season.
Hesas'd noneof thethre e ,
.
When Le~eau and gen~ral can play well if he fears get- ·
mauager ~Ike Brown ,dectde ling benched for making a .
the s_eason ss lost, they II start mistake. · Kitna ,pointed out
1oo~mg long-term .and m~ke that runnin2 back Corex
Smtih th_e S!arter. The . thsrd Dillon doesn~"t get benched 1f
overall ptck ~n th~ I 9?9 draft something goes wrong.
got the startmg JOb m 2000 . ''Th8 I' h
· ·
'th N
• s o~ II IS WI
but has been third-string for ·
o.
·
·
28," Kttna sasd. "No. 28 can
f
h
I
m?st o I e ast two seasons: go out and fumble four times
. ~ey h_ave t~ ~ake. a d~ct· next week, and No. 28 is ·
ston, Sm1th satd. 'Thts be!ng going to be in there the next
my fou_nh year, somethmg week getting 30 carries. And
has to gsve.
that's what you need"
",I want to be. a B~ngal. I Right
tackle · WilHewant to grow ';"llh _th1s team, . Anderson agreed that the
to try to get ~~~ thmg t~ed struggling offense . - one
around. But sf I m not m the touchdown in four games plans,. if I don't play well, won't get better until it gets
maybe .they need t~ look stability at quanerback.
s?mewh~re else. They def!· . "You like to took in the
nuely wtll have to cut thesr quarterback's face in the bud·
losses and m,?ve on to another · die and see confidence in his
eyes." Anderson said. ''The
quanerback.
.
T_he Bengals · cons.t~ered main thing right· liow is that
takmg Drew Brees m the . we've lost our confidence iii
2001 draft, but S(ln Di~go the offense. There's no'-0
picked him in the second rhythm 'to the whole thing.
round before Cincinnati's tum The quarterback position
came ' lip. They- also toyed brings that to the whole
· LeBeau's choice i probably with the idea of drafting a team."

1_,'

Transactions

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''They gave us some breaks .
early in the liame and they
settled down, 1 said Hudson,
who struggled through 5 1~3
shaky innings.
Ted Lilly, who allowed two
runs in two-thirds of .a n
inning, was the loser.
Radke got the win despite
g!vin~ up fi.ve f!!JlS. and etg~t
hus m five . mmngs. Ht s
biggest challen~e was surviving the defenssve lapses the popup pr\)bab1y was his ~o
catch -· and keeping the
game close.
·
''We played terrible,:· Radke·
kept us · in the ballgame
there," Gardenhire said. ''It
could have been a blowout."
Eddie Guardado got the
save, getting pinch-hitter ·
Adam Piatt on a fly to right
with two runners onjo.end it.
The A's rallied to beat . the
Twins and Guardado with
game-ending homers twice
during the seasop.

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CINCINNATI (AP) - If it
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A week 'mis4;1emeanor, and obstructing traffic
was Jon Kitna's decision,
after Minnesota Vikings receiver with a· vehicle, a petty misdemeanor.
he' d let Akili Smith spend the
· with a traffic offirest of the . season as the
Randy Moss' run-m
Each misdemeanor count carries a
cer, police added a charge for the inari.
I
f 90 d
. . 'I d
Cincinnati . Bengals' starting
maxsmum pena ty o
ays m Jal !ln
quarterback.
juan a they found in his car.
up to a $1,000 fine. The maximum fine
"Hey, stick with the kid,"
The possession of marijuana charge. on the obstructing traffic count is $300.
said Kitna, one of three
a petty 'misdemeanor levied in a ticket Neither petty misdemeanor count carBengals quarterbacks who
Tuesday, carrie,s a fine of up to $200.
ries jail time.
has played this ·season.
But the NFL might also suspend or · The 25-year-o1d Mos~ was scheduled
"Leave him in there. You're
fine Moss, who was in the league's ~ub- to be arraigned Wednesday. His .d efense
going to have to stick with
stance abuse program after testing pos- attc;wJey, Joe Friedberg, said Moss was
somebody."
itive for marijuana, last year. The league not i'equired to appear and would not be
· No, they don 't. And, m~
~ so tested Moss after the arrest. ,
there .
~
likely, no, they won't.
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said the
Friedberg lso said he did not plan to
The Bengals (0-4) hadn ' t
league would review the case. "Under enter pleas o Moss' behalf during the
announced their starting quarthe policy, a drug-related violation of arraignment; which ,he expected would
terback Tuesday for their
the law is grounds for disciplinary be a quick and routine hearing.
upcoming
game
in
Indianapolis. Kitna is lobby·
action," Aiello said.
"At some point we will enter not
ing for coach Dick LeBeau to
Police said they foun a manJua;no-. cuilty pleas to all of these counts,"
pick one and ~tick with him.
cigarette in Moss' car after h.e was
iedberg said .
.
Newcomer Gus. Frerotte
arrested Sept. 24. M
was driving in
· ss' agent, Dante DiTrapano, said
starJed the first three games
downtown Minneapolis when 'the traf· he ha no. immediate comment because
but was replaced during a 30fic officer stepped itHront of his car to he hadn't seen the new charges. A
31oss·in Atlanta. Smith stan·
stop him from makirtg an illegal turn. spokeswoman said the Vikings' had no
ed Sunday and had a rough
She was slightly injured when:. she fell comment.
time in a 35-7 loss to Tampa
off .the car.
- Moss could lose his driving pr;ivi·
B.ay.
·
Moss spent the night· in jail and was leges in Minnesota for a year because
F £ o s t familiar with
charged the neJII day with careless dri· he refUsed to take a police test for drug
the
because he started
15 g
last season. He
I
b
ffi
ving and with fai ure to o ey a tra sc or. alcoh~l use. when hek was arfrestehd,
wouldn ' t mind a chance 10
officer, both misdemeanors.
sa~d l(evm Smith, a spo esman or I . e
stan Sunday at Indianapolis,
, In a complaint made public Tuesday, Mmriesota Department of Pubhc
but only if it comes with a
,p&lt;?lice said the marijuana amoun~ed . to Safety.
·
, . "'!fromise that he 's the .s taner
JUSt under a gram. Moss has sa1d the · His privileges were revoked Tuesday
'for the rest of the season.
marijuana did not belong to him and ~ut Moss,. wlio has a Flo_rida ~river's
"If you're going to say that
that he, had allowed other people to use hcense, got them temporanly remstated
I'ni your guy,. let's go," Kitna
his car recently.
.
'
later in the day pending a court hearing
.SIIid. ''If you're going to say,
Also Tuesday, Minneapolis prosecu . and a review of the polic_e reports by
'You're ~y guy- but if you
tors added two. new traffic counts to the ' the attorney general's office, Smith
don't scofe a pomt in the first
charges: mak.ing ari improper turn at.an said. ~pss c~ut~ lose his. drivi_ng privihalf 1'\1 pro~ably make a
ch~n2e, I don I want any part
intersection m a hazardous me.nner, a le2es 10 Flonda, too, Smtth satd. ·
·
----._,
· -.,.
·
of 1t.r.
.

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Police ticket Moss!for Kitna .thinks .Smith·should
••
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manJuana ·possession start rest of season

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8.5166. 6. Petry (4-2) 7.8,166. ·1. Young. 10. Gahanna Lincoln
6-0
46
WLTPctPF PA
Americ1n LeagUe
Mooney (3-3) 6.633~. 8. Aurora. (4-2)
Other~ receiving 12 or more polnta: Philadelphia 3 1 0 .750 140 64
BALTIMORE
ORIOl-ES-Rel~tased
American
League
6.23;33. 9. East Palestine (5-1) 6.2000 10. '1 . Massillon Perry 42 . 12. Cin. Anderson Oallas
2 2 0 .500 01
RHP
Chris
BrOCk
,
LHP
lrbrkis Perez , INF
8&amp;.
'
'
NpwVdrl&lt;
Ys.
Anohelm
Gnad. Indian Valley (3·3) 5.91S6.
30. 13. Cle. 51. lgnalius 29. 14. Cin. 5I N.Y. Giants
2 2 0 .500 55 64 • •
' OHSAA Computer·Ratlnga
Luis Lopez and C'Raul Casanova.
Region 14-1 . Rossrot'd (5·1 ) 10.9833 2. xav;er 26. 15. Findlay 25. 16. Hudson 16.
f i
l T'flsdii''S Gome
Washington 1 2. 0 .333 48 80
TEXAS RANGERS-Fired Jerry Narron,
SOUth
O
I
011awa-Giand0ff (6-0) 10.8166. 3. Archbold
DIVISION II
New
8, Anaheim 5, New York. leads
manager, and Danny Wheat , trainer.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Here arelhe third (6-0) 10.7666. 4. Kenton (4-2) 10.5833 . 5.
W·l
Pis
series 1.0
WLTPctPFPA
weekty tootball corr.,uter ratings from the upper sandusky (5- 1) 9.76" 6 . 6 . 1 0
Ch
·
.
NaUonll Le•gue
Carolina
· ,.
"'
. ay. am ..Jul1enne (13) 6.0
273
3 1 0 .750 76 45
Oh . H'1 h School Alhlel' •
Todty't Game
CHICAGO CUBs---Placed LHP Jesus
10
0
1C ,..ssooa lon . Tontogany Otsego (5- 1) 8.1166. 7. Marion
2. Cols. Brookhaven (8)
6-0
250
6
New Orleans 3 1 0 '150 111
89
Anaheirrl (Appier 14-12) at New 'mrk Sanchez on waivers for the P'Jfpose of giv·• Ratings are by dNision and region wilh River Valley (4-2) 8.0166. 8. Delta (6-0)
Tampa Bay
3 1 0 .7!!/J 106 47
[ecor.d and average bi-level points per B.OOOO. 9. Mount Gilead (5· 1) 7.1333. 10.
3. Loujsville (7)
6.0
200
ing him his unconditional release.
(Peltl1te
13-5), 6:17p.m. (Fox)
Atlanta
1 2 0 .333 77 54
game (lop eighl leams In each region Onlario 15_1) 6 .9666 .
4. Tal. Cent. C.lh. (1)
.6-0
173
CINCINNATI RE05-Promoted Mark
"'
Friday'i Galft!ll
•
1
·
1
arte~··t )
5.
Canfield
6.0
138
NDrlh
•
Mann to trainer and Lonnie Soloff tO assis ~
auoonce 0 reg~ona qu
""~' :
Region 15-1 . PORTSMOUTH (5·0)
New
York
(Mussir.a
~
18-1
0)
at
Anaheim
WLTPctPFPA
DIVISION 1
6. Tal. St. Francis (1)
6-0
134
lan1 trainer.·
15 _34 B3. 2 . NEW LEXINGTON (6 -0)
Green Bay
(Ra.Ortlz 15·9). 8:17p.m. (Fox)
3 1 0 .750 111 114
Region 1-1 . Solon (6-0) 18.1500: 2 . . 14•5666. .J . Coshoclon (S·OI 12 .1500. 4 .
7. Kings Mills Kings
6-0
124
NEW YORK . METS-Fi red Bobby
Chicago
2 . 2 0 .500 91 98
Saturd•y•a G1me
8.
land
6-0
96
Warren Harding (6-0) 14.1730. 3. Norlh Marti,. Ferry (6-0)II .9000. 5. IRONTON
Valentine,.manager.
·
Detroit
1
3
0
.250
85
136
'New York (Wells 19-7) a(Anaheim , Knee• Olmsl.ed (5- 1) 12.3666. 4. lakewood St. (5-1) 11.3783 . 6. PORTSMOUTH WEST
. Tro1wood-Madlson.(1)
6-0
63
PHILADELPHIA PHILLI ES-Named
Minnesota
0 4 0 .000 99 141
Edward (6-{)) .11 .9860. 5. Men10r (5-1 ) (S- 1) 10.1668 _7 . lane. Fairtleld Union 15_11 10. Willoughby Soul~
5·1
61
Gene SChall, ChiJJ Lawrence, Paul Murphy
essary
West ·
11 .7000. 6 . Young. · Boardman (5·1) 9.2833, 8. Waverly (4 · 2 ) 7 _9000 .. 9 . • Others rec:elvlng 12 or mo111. points:
and Bob Szymkowski scours.
Sunday,
Oc:t.
I
.
WLTPctPFPA
, 1.5500. 7. Young. Auslin1own-Fi1ch .(4-2) WELLSTON (4-2)7.5000. 10. Wiliiamsporl · 11 . Vandalia Buller 29. 12. Cola. St. Cl!art~s.
PITISBURGH PIRATEs-Announced
· Anaheim at New York, if necessary
San
Francisco
2
1
0
.667
50
47
31 .1500. 8. Lakaslde (.\-2) 10:6210. 9. westfall (4-2) 7 _1166 _ ·
25. 13. Macedonia NP,rdonia 21 . ·_)'4
the _resignation .of Dick Freeman, executive
2
2
0
.500
83
·
74
Arizona
Region 16-1 Coldwater 16 _0) 12. 1166. Youngs. Chaney 19. 15.\ ISitgoqSJiy l B.
· strongsvltle . (4·2) 9.7166. 10. CM. St.
~
vice president and chief operating Officer,
Seattle ~ · 1 a o .250 84 87
Minnesota vs. Oakland
2. Arc~ishop Alter (5 ·1) 12 _1000 _ 3 _ 16. Warren Howland 15. 17. Madison 14.
Ignatius (4·2) 9.2196.
to become president of the San Diego
Stlouis
0
4
o
.000
61
88
. Tuelday'l Geme
Region 2-1 . Brunswick (6-0) 13.8500. 2. Reading (S·O) 11.0333.• 4. Plain Cily
; DIVISION Ill
Padres.
Sunday'• G•mn
Minne!Wta 7, Oakland 5, Minnesota
Fondlay (~·1) 12.6000._3. Wads-'h (5-1) Jona1honAider(5-1) 10.1833. 5. Ciarksville
W·l
PI&amp;
SAN DIEGO PADREs-Named Bob ·
N.Y.
Giants
at Dallap, 1 p.m.
11.5833. 4. Tot St. John's (4-2)1 0.9866. 5. Clinlon·Massle (5-1) 8.0420. 6. Daylon
1. Cols. DeSales (21)
6-0
287
Vizas vice ctiairman. Announced president
leads
series
1-o
Oakland at Buffalo, , p.m.
Marion Harding (5-1) 9.9666. 6..Hudson (6- Oakwood (5·1) 6.6500. 7. Spring · 2. Akr. Hoban (2)
6-{)
231
Ch4rles Blat* will become eKecutNe vice
Today•• Glma
Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
president of JMI ReaJtv.
·
0) 9.4833. 7. Spring Sou1h ,(4·2)i1.3500. 8. Norlheaslern (4·2) 6.5833 . 8. Cin
3. Akr. Buchlel (1)
S·O
221
Arizona at carolina , 1 p.m.
Minn~tsota (Mays 4·9) at Oakland
.
BASKETBALL
Woosler (4-2) 9.2633. 9. Cuyahoga Falls Mariemonl (4-2) 5.5000. 9 Cin. beer Park .4. Newark Licking Valley (1) 6-0
182
Washington at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
(Mulder 19·7), 4:06p.m. (ABC Family)
- Nltlonlil Buketball Aa.aclation
(3·3) 5.3833. 1o.w.Millon Millen-Union (4·
5. Gmntwn Valley View (3) S-O
143
(3-3) 7.81166. 10. Mansfield (4-2) 7.4333.
Cincinnati at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
Frid.y'• Gil""
Region 3-1 . Dublin Coltman (6-0) 2) 5.3000.
·
.
6. Willard (1)
6-0
133
OALLAS
MAVERICK5-Signed G Raja
New England at Mlarril , 1 p.m.
Oakland (Zito 22·S) at Minnesota (Aeed Sell, G Adam Harrington, F Derek HOOd
18.5686. 2. Dublin.SCioto (6&lt;1) 13.6833. 3.
DIVISION V
7. Cle. Benedictine
5-1
105
Pittsburgh at New Orteans,· 1 p.m..
• 15-7), 4:(16 p.m. (ABC Family)
and C Kip Christianson. Signed G Michael
R"'Jion 17-1 . Sm~hville (6-0) 10.6500.
B. Hubbard
6-0
101
Gahanna Lincoln (6-0) 13.1500. 4. Masa
Kansas Cily al N.Y. Jela, 4:05p.m. ·
Redd to an offer sheet. .
·
Waohlng1on {5·1) 11 .6500. 5. N. canton 2. Middlefield cardinal (6-0) 10.3333. 3.
9. Oak Harbor (1)
6-0
Z1
'
S.turdty'l
Game
SarrO~ at Denver, 4:05p.m. ,
DETROIT PISTONS-Acquired F Don
Hoover (4-2) 11 .3000. 6. Galloway canon (6-0J 10.0500. 4. New Middletown. 10. Poland Seminary
-s -1
61
. Philadelphia at Jacksonville, 4:15p.m.
Oakland af Minnesota, lf necessary
Reid, C Men;)ke Baleer and a future ~-rotJnd
Wea~and (4-2) 9.8168. 7. Grawt.CIIy (6-1) Springfield (4·2) 7.7666. 5. (tie) Bedlord
01herw rer:elvlf111 12 or mo101 point&amp;:
StLouis at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
Sund1y, Oct. 6
9.7500. B. Mass. Jackson (4·2)9.4666. 9. Chanel (4·2), Usbon Oavld )\nderson (5·1) 11 . Uibana 29. 02. Sleubenville 28. 13.
draft pick from De!wr llr F Rodney Wlll18,
Baltimore at Cleveland, 8:30p.m.
Minnesota at Oakland, If. necessary
LOS ANGELES CLIPPER5-Signed C
!&lt;enla (6·1) 9.3500. 10. Mass. Perry (6-1) 6.4833. 7. Rocky River lulh . W. (5·1) · ·LisbonBeaver27. 14 . C.nal Ful1on·NW26.
Open: Seattle, Detroit, Minnesota,
Wang Zhizhi to a three-year offer sheet.
]J.8833.
6.2500. B. Independence (4·2). 6.0666. 9. 15. Cols. Beecncroll 16. IS. Cuyahoga Houston
National League
· Region 4-1. Cln. Anderson (6-0) ColurTibiana (4-2) 5.9500 . 10. Mineral Falls Walsh Jesui1 15,
MINNESOTA
TIMBERWOLVESMohdiiY'I Game
Atlanlll VI. Sin Francltco
DIVISION IV ,
' 14.1833. 2. Cin. Ekler (5-1 )13.5833. 3. Cln. Ridge (4·2) 5.4500.
Agreed tO terms with C loren Woods on a
Green Bay at Chicago, 9 p:m.
Today'l GIUMI
,
; Prlncelon (5· 1) 12.8000. 4. Harrison (6-0)
Regkm 18-1 . Castalia Margaretta (5·1)
W-l
l'ts
pne-year contract. Signed PG Marcus
San Francisco (Ru.Ortlz 14-1 0) ·at Atlanta ~Taylor, GRandy Uvingston, F Reggie Slater .
. 11 .8000. 5. Huber Hts. Wayne (4-2) 9.4000. 2. Delpf1os51.John's (5·1)9.2333.
1. Coldwa1er (19)
6-0
27S
'(Giavlne16·10), 1:06 p.m. (ABC Fall)ily)
· 11 .6666. s. Cln. Sl. Xavier (4-2)11 .6633. 7. 3. Delphos Jefferson (5·1) 8.8000. 4. Lorain
2. Porlsmoulh (3)
6·0
248
· NEW ORLEANS HORNET5-Signed C
.
. Thureday's Game
3. Akr. Manchesler (2)
s-0
175
' Mlamiallurg (4·2) 11 .0000. 8. Cin. Moeller Clearview (S-o) 8.7263. 5. Collins Weslern
Thomas Hamilton and G Terrell Mcintyre.
San Francisco (Rueter 14·8) at Atlanta
(4·2) 10.8666. 9. Claylon Northmonl (4·2) Resen10 (5·1) 8.4333. 6. Columbia Stalion 4. New Lexington (2)
s-o
167
WASHINGTON WIZARD5-Signed F
Major League Soccer
(Maddux 16-6), 8:17p.m. (Fox)
10.7333. 10. Cln. Colerain (5-1) 10.3000.
Columbia (5-1) 8.4166. 7. Del. Tinora (5-0J
5. coshocton
s-o
164
Bobby Simmons.
Saturday'l Game
DIVISION II
8.0680. B. (lie) Hamler Patrick Henry (5·1),
6. Ottawa -Giandorl (1)
6-0
135
FOOTBALL
.
I Atlanta (MUI'NOOd 18·8) at San Francisco
MLS Cup Playoffs
Region 6-1 . loulsvllle (6-0) 15.1 833. 2. Bucyrus Wynford (5· 1) 7.5500. 10.· 7. Marlins Ferry (3)·
s-o 107
NaUonll Football League
(Sc!1mid113-8)
(Seeding In parenlheou)
. .C.nf101d (6-0) 12.5333. 3. Unlonlown Lake Sherwood Fairview (5·1) S.0333
8. lronlon
5-1
94
~ HICAGO BEARS-Placed LB Warrick
Sund1y, Oct. 8
·:14-2) 11 .3500. 4. WarTen H0\&gt;1and (5-1)
Region 19-1 . Amanda-Ciearcreek (5-1)
9. Kettering Aller
4·2
64
Qu.arterfiMII
Holdman on Injured reserve. Signed DT
.Atlanta at San Francisco, If necessary
·,11.0023. 5. Madison (6-1) 10.9500. 6. 10.4666. 2. Barnesville (6·0) 9.8433. 3. 10. Arehbold(1) •
. 6-0
44
Ernest Grant to a two-year conlract .
(Firot to live poln15. Three polnll
Monday, Oct. 7
,
·.Bedford ((1-1) 9.9666. 7. '1\&gt;Ung. Chaney (4- Woodsfield Monroe Central (6-{)) 9.4913. 4. · Others receiving 12 or mono polnl$:
Released WR Edell Sl'&lt;lpherd from lhe
· for victory, one point for tla.)
san Francisco at Atlanta, if necessary
, ·2) 8 .7500. B. Chagrin ,Falls Ksnslon (4-2) \'iheelerallurg (4·2) 8.4266. 5. Johnslown- 11 . Youngs. Ursuline 3ll . 12. bella 37. 13.
.
practice
squad. Signed lB Kla Johnson.
Colorado (6) vo. Dallao (4)
' 9.1686. 9. Gar11eld HeightS (5-1) ·87500. MonrO. (5-1) 8.0500. 6. Lucasville Valley Reading 28 . l4. Kenton 20. 15. Cle. VASJ
CINCINNATI BENGALS-Piaced OT
W.dneoday,
Sept.
25
Arizona VI. St. Loull
• 10. Olmsted Falla (4·2) 8.4331
.
(5-1) B.b293. 7. Sarahsville Shenandoah 13. 16 . Girard 12 .
Aichm~&gt;nd Webb on InJured reserve.
Todty'l G1me
Dallas ~. Colorado 2
' Region 6-1 . Cols, Brookhaven (6-0) (4-2)7.3833. 8. CrookSIIIIIe (4·2) 7.2333. 9.
DIVISION V
Signed OT Reggie Coleman from the .
St. Louis 12, Arizona 2, St. Louis leads Washington Redsldna !'ractlce squad.
W-L . Pta
, 13.2666. 2. Cols. Sl. Charles (5·1) 11 .7390. Newco"*"lown (5·1) 6.2000. IO.'Toronlo
Salurday'l Game
series ,.Q
·
3. Oregon Clay (6-0)11 .6166. 4. Tol. Cent.. 16:0) 5.9106.
M
·
PI
I
-a
)
Colorado
1,
Dallas
0,
Series
tied
3-3
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Re-signed
1
6
Thursday's
Game
C81h. (6-0) 11 .1166. 5. Wapakonel~ (5·1)
Region 20-1 . Marion Pleasanl (6·0)
· anon easan 121
288
OT Barrett Brooks. Waived WR Chris ·
Todty"s G1m8
2
.10.8186. 6. Tal. DeSales (5· 1)'10.8000. 7 . • 10.7333."2. Cin. Hills Christian Acad. (6·0)
· Woodsfield Monroe C. (6) 6-0 . 246
St. Louis (Fin~ 7-4) at Arizona (SChilling Jackson.
ColoradO at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
23-7), 4:06p.m. (ABC Family)
Cols. Walnut Ridge (5-1) 9 7000 8 Tiffin 9.0666. 3. Bairbrldge Paint Valley (5· 1)
3. Smilhvllle (1) ·
6-0
225
MINNESOTA VIK~GS-Walved TE
•Columbian (5·1) 9.0333. 9. Sylvania 8.7333. 4. Morral Ridgedale (5-1) 7.8166. 4 · Delphos Sl. John's (1 I.
5·1
188 .
1
Saturday's Game
Matt Cercone. Announced OL Chatt.
Kan1a1 Clly (8) Yl. los Angolll (1)
Southview (4·2) 8.5333. 10. Maumee (4-2) 5. Gahanna Cols. Acad. (5-1) 7.4000. 6.
5. Dallon
6-0
152
Arizona at St. louis
Beasley, who was on lhe practice squad,
7':8166.
Lees Creek E. Ciinlon (S·O) 6.7B33. 7. S. Middlelield Cardinal (1) 6-0
111
Sundoy, OCt. 6
Yiadnosda~Sipt.25
signed with CleVeland.
.
Region 7-1 . Gratton Midview (6-0) Versailles (4·2) 6 .4833. e. Sidney Lehman· 7. Amanda -Ciearcreek
5-1
105
Arizona
al
St.
Louis,
if
necessary
Los Angeles 3, Kansas City 2, OT
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS-Signed
11 .4666. ·2. Macedonia Nordonia (6-0) (3-3) 6.2333 . 9. Sl 'Henry (3·3) 6.1666. 10
8. Castalia f)Aargaretta
5·1
57
Monday, OCI. 7
Saturday'• Game
WR Chartes 1-ee. Ol l\Jtan Reyes and C
9. BarnesYille
6-0
37
St. Louis at Arizona, it necessary
1 1.2666. 3. Green (5·1) 11 .0500. 4. Avon Lewisburg Tri-County N. (3·3) 6.1500.
Morris U.nutoa to one-year contracts.
Kansas City 4, Los Angeles 1, series tied
Lake (5-1) 11 .0000. 5. East Liverpool (4-2)
DIVISION VI
10. Hamler Palrick Henry
5-1
34
Placed C Mike Sotwold and WR Marquise
8.9316. 8. ATHENS (6-1) B.6666. 7.
Region 21-1 . Mogadore (5·1) 11 .6500.
Olhers rucelvlng 12 or mono points: 3-3
Walker
on injured reserve . Released G
Todly'oGome
MARIETTA (5· 1) 8.1370. B. Richfield 2. Lowellville (6-{)) 9.1833. 3. Cleve. Cuya. 11 . Ctn. Hills Chr. Acad. 26. 12. Defiance
Russ Hochstein. Signed Hochstein 10 the
Kansas City at los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Revere (3-3) 7.7000. 9. Mans. Madison (3- His. (5·1) 8.6363. 4. East Canton· (4-2} Tinora 24. 13. (lie) ~isbon David Anderson,
BA~EBAll
practice squad.
•
3) 6.2666. 10. C8rroll10n (4:2) 6.2333.
7.2000. 5. Kirtland (4-2) 6.5703. 6. Versailles 20. 15. Lorain Clearvlew lB. 16.
Region 8-1 . Day. Cham-Julienne (S-O) Windham (5· 1) 6 .4133. 7. Lee10nia (4-2) Sl'&lt;lrwood Fairview 12.
Columbu&amp; (B) vo. Sin Jooe (3) ,
14.BOOO . 2. Kings . Mills Kings (6·0) 5.4500 B. Failporl Harbor Harding (4·2)
DIVISION VI
Yiadnaoday, Sapl. 25
13.51.43. 3. Trolwood-Madlson (6-0) 5.2946. 9. New wash. Buckeye Cenl. (5-1)
W·l
Pta
Public Notice
Help Waqlad
Columbus. 2, San Jose 1
13.3833. 4. Vandalia Butler (5·1) 13.0666. 5.2720. 10. Monroeville (4·2) 4.93:)3.
1. Maria SIBil Marion Lo:. (20) 5·1
269
Saturdoy'l
Game
5. lo&amp;e nd (6·0) 12.1160. 6.· Trenlon
Region22-1 Rawson Cory-Rawson (6·
2 DanviHe (5)
6-0
234
..
Columbus 2, San Jose 1, Columbus wins
RUTLAND
Edge
d (5-n~ . 4333 . 7. Day. Carroll (6- 0) 9.8166. 2. Columbus Grove (6·0)
3. Columbus Grove (3)
6-0
217
series 6-0 ·
·
·
-1) 9 .
. B. Cln. Woodward (5·1) B.5830. · 8.9333. 3. Norlhwood (6-0) 8.3000. 4. Tiffin
4. Mogadore (3)
5-1
187
TOWNSHIP
5 Slrasburg-Franklin '
6-0
157
9. Piqu (3-3) 7.7000. 10. St Bernard Calvert (4·2) B.oooo. 5. Edon (6-0) 7.&amp;720
OPAL' DYER, CLERK
Roger Becan (3-3) 7.0116.
6. Hopewell-Loudon (5-1) 7.1666. 7.
6. Lowellville
6-0
143
Chicago (7) vi. Now Englond (2)
992-4282
.
DIVISION Ill
Sycamore Mohawk (5·1) 6.7333. 8 .. Me
7 Oola Hardin Norlhern
6-0 , 122
Thuraday, Sept. 26
SEPTEMBER 17,2002
· Region 8-1 . Hubbard (6-()) 13.4166. 2. Comb (4-2) 5.5333. 9. Attica Seneca Easl
B Covinglon
6-0
99
New England 2, Chtcago 0 ,_
Cliove. Benedlcline (5·1) 12.71 66. 3. Lisbon (4·2) 5.3666. 10. Antwerp (4-2) 5.1020.
9. Cie. Cuyai'&lt;&gt;ga His.
5-1
59
Sunday•• G•me
The
Rutland
· ~a\oer (5·1) 12.2666. 4. Hunt Valley Univ.
Region 23-1. ,Danville (6· 0) 8.3960. 2. 10. Cory-Rawson
6-Q
36
ChCCigo 2, New England 1, series tied 3- Tawnohlp Truotees
School (4-2) 10.8833. 5. Richmond Edison Strasburg-Franklin (6·0) 7.6333. 3.
Othera receiving 12 or more points:
Comparable salary &amp; benefits. Join our
ore taking aeaiod
,(5-1) 10.5473. 6. Steubenville (5-1) Shadyside (4-2) 7.0333. 4. Millersporl (6-1) 11 . Mechanicsburg 32. 12. S. Charleston 3
10.4556. 7. Poland seminary (5·1) 9.0666. 6.4833. 5. BeallSVIlle (4-2) 5 .2666. 6. SE 27. 13. Northwood 25. 14. Windham 17.
bid a an a t 989 Ford
'
_Tod!Y'~ Game
family of professionals to be lhe resource
&gt;8. Chesterland W. Geauga (4·2) B.6666. 9. GLOUSTER TRIMBLE (4-2) 4.9333. 7. 15. Tiffin Calvert 15. 16. Sycamore Mohawk
Chicago a~nd. 7:30p.m.
FIOO
truck,
dloaol
for community health service needs .
. Parma His. Holy Name (4-2) 8.2333. 10. C.nlerburg (3·3) 4.6103. 8. Newark Calh. 13 .
engine, automatic
'
Beloll West Branch (4-2) B.2000.
(3-JY
4.4740.
,9.
SCIOTOVILLE
dietitian with the Commission
Registered
Semlllnals
tranamlaalon, add on
Region 10-1 . Oak HartlO&lt; (S·O) COMMUNITY (4-2) 4.2316. 10. WILLOW
(First 10 llw polnl$)
oir ·condltloner, le11
16.3833. 2. Willard (6·0) 15.1500. 3. Akron WOOD SYMMES VALLEY (4-2) 3.9316.
on Dietetic Registration. Licensed dietitian
Buctrtel (8-()) 13.4166. 4. Akron Hoban (6Region 24-1 . Marla Sleln Marion local
COIOI'IIdo-DIIIU winner vs. Kanau
18,000 mlleo.
with West Virginia Board of Li ce nsed
·o) 13.0500. 5. Medina Buckeye (S-1) (5· 1) 9.7a33. 2, Mechanicsburg (6·0)
Clly-los Angoieo wlnnor
Natlonai ·Football League
..bklo are .to be
Dietipans. ·-or,
·._
·~
'9.5833. 6. Wooster Trlway (5· 1) 9.5166. 7. 8.7000. 3; Covington (8-0) 6.4166. 4. Oola
Satunloy'l Game
to: Rutland
Cuya. Falls Walslt JOSJJII (4-2) 9.5013. 8. Hardin Northern (S-O) 8.2833. 5. Anna (5-1)
AFC
'AI higher seed, TBA
.
Townohlp, P.O. Box . Plea.•e su~mil resume to:
Canal Fullon N.W. (5·1) 9.4833. 9. Bell!l'lue 7.4666. 6. Trey Chrisllan (5·1) 7.0933. 7. S.
326, Rutland, OH
Pet
PF
PA
W!ldneoday,
Oct.
9
Pleasant Valley Hospital
· · ·(4-2) 9.0666. 10. Norton (4-2) 9.0500.
.
Charleston SE (5-1) 6.6333. B. N,
w
AI lower seed, TBA
.
• 45775 and marked
Region 11-1 . Cots. OeSales (6-0l lewisburg Triad (5·1) 6.4500. 9. Cin. Miami
3 1 0 . 750 130 85 U
rlo
Hu.man Resourc:es
15.4833. 2. Newark Licking Valley (6·0
Country Day (4·2) 5:5166. 10. New Bremen New England 3 1 o . 750 129 80
"Ttuck Bid" on the
Saturday, OCt. 12
2520 Valley Drive
'12.6833. 3. Cola. Beechcroft (6-Q) 12,1333. (3-3) 5 4166.
At higher seed, TBA, it necessary
OUIIIde of the
Buffalo
2 2 0 .500 132· 131
envelope. ·
·. N.Y.Jets
1 3 0 .250 50 133
AP p
F tb II p II
4. Cola. Hamilton Twp. (6-1) 11 .7000. 5.
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
GALLIPOLIS GALUA ACADEMY (5-1)
.
rep DO a
0 S
south
Columbus (8) vo. Chicago-New
The
Townohlp
www.pvalley.org
' 11 .1743. 6. Clrctevile (5-1) 10.3500. 7.
WLTPctPFPA
England winner
· raoerves the right to
AAIEOE
Whllithai~'!Urting (5-1) 9.3333. B. Sunbury
COLUMBUS (AP)- How plale panel Indianapolis 2 1 0 .667 64. 49
.re)ecl any and all
Saturday'• Ganw
.Big Walnut (4·2) '8.4166. 9 . Cols. Watterson of sports writers and broadcasters rates Jacksonville 2 1 0 .667 76 47
bids.
AI h~her seed. TBA
· (3·3) 7.7000. 10. ThornVille Sheridan {4-2) Ohi~ high sChool fo?tball teams in th,e Houston
1 3 0 .250' 42 92
Blda will be opened
6.8166.
fourth weekly Assoc1ated Press poll of Tennessee
Wedneadty,
Oct.
9
1 3 0 .2!!/J 93 128
. Region 12-1. Ulbana (6.0) 11 .9000. 2. 2002, by OHSAA divisions, with won-lost
11 '5 p.m. on Monday ·
AI lower seed, TBA
North
. Germantown Valley VW!tw (6..0) 11 .5000. 3. reCord and total points (first-place votes in
October 7, 2002 at
WlTPctPFPA
Soturdoy, Oct. 12
· New Richmo~d (5·1) 9 .5000. 4. Oay. parenlheses) :
Cleveland
2 2 0 .500 103 91
lhe rqular TownohCp
At higher seed, TBA, il .necessary
· Ounbai (5·1) 9.4793. 5. Tipp City
DIVISION I
Baltimore
1 2 0 .333 • 41 58
Truotee meeting. .
Pis " Pittsburgh
W-L
Tippecanoe (5·1) 9.1500. 6. Cin. Wyoming
1 2 0 .333 47 73
For more lnformaMLS
Cup
2002
(4·2) B.9500, 7. Bellefonlaine (5·1 ) 8.D166.
1. Warren Ha(ding (16)
6-0
286
0 4 ' 0 .000 23 119
Cirt~nati
or to view the
llon
Sunday,
OCt.
20
8. Sl: Paris Granam (4·2) 7.9B33. 9. . 2. Dublin Coffman (5)
6-0
241
Wett
. !ruck.phone 740-742·
. Bellbrook (4·2) 7.7500.1 0. Washlnglon CH
3. Lakewood St Edward (6 ) 6-0
At Foxboro, Ma&amp;l .
·w LTPJiPFPA
235
(4·2) 7.5000.
4. Solon (3)
6-0
213
2095.
San_Diego
4 0 0 1.00 102 38
Semifinal winners, 1:30 p.m.
5. Cin. Elder (1)
5·1
DIVISION IV
136
Oakland
3 0 0 1.00 113 59
Region 13--1 . Akron Manchester (6·0)
6. Dublin Scioto
B·O
135
Denver
3
o .750 98 a1
(~~19, 2002
105 . Kansas City '. 2 2, o
11 9293. 2. Chagrin Falls (5·1) 9.6590. 3.
7. Massl!on Washinglon
5-1
.5oo 142 133
2, 2002
Sullivan Black RO&lt;er (5·1) 9 .5000. 4. Girard
B. Youngs. Boardman
5· 1
NFC
··
53
(5-1) 9.0333. 5. Cleve. VA-51. Joseph (4-2)
9. Brunswick
S-O
52
E1st
MLB DIVISION SERIES
_/7 ' ' - - - - - - -

Prep Football

.

•

'

Soccer

Jitte
.
. ry
AP Sports Writer .
OAKI:AND, Calif. (AP) The Minne~ota Twins needed
two jittery innings of bad
throws, misplayed r,opups
and other defensive b oopers
to shake off 11 years of play·
off rust.
Then their young offense
warmed up, their bullpen shut
down the Oakland Athletics
and the Twins recc;~vered from
an early four-run deficit to
win the openin~ game of the
AL division. senes.
Corey Koskie homered and
drove m three runs, and AJ.
Pierzynski had four hits, as
the Twins overcame three
errors in the frrst two innings
to beat the A's ·7-5 Tuesday.
"We don't make three
errors, we just don't do that.
At one point early in,the game
it kind of was comical," said
Twins
manager
Rori
· Gardenhire. "The game was
getting a little crazy on us.

•

Scoreboard

D-Ba

;

~

~=~_ed
__n_e~a~d~a~~-O~c~to~be~r~2.~2~0~0~2~--~----------------------~ww~w~.m~v~d:a:il~vs:e:n~tl~n:e~l.~co~m~------------------------~T~h!e~D~a~il!y;s~e~n~ti~ne~l~·~P~a~g!e~B~3~ ,
I

)

st 81

I'

..

•

'

:r---

(}&gt;

Pubii~·Notlce
MEIGS SOIL AND
WATER
CONSERVATION
DISTRICT
OPAL DYER
992-4282
SEPTEMBER 12,2002

Page Bl

man" in Ohio State's robust runmng
'attack.
After Cl!lfelt got off to .a fast start,
Ross changed-his tune. He said he could
share time. w.ith Claret!.
"Me and Maurice, I think we could
si?lit time," Ross said last week. "It'd be

ELECTION LEGAL
NOTICE

BINGO
October 5th

6:30pm
All packs $5.00 each
Starburst $1 ,900
American Legion ·
· Middleport .

OlCe."

Instead, the sophomore is watching
from the sidelines as Claret! ·takes over
the job as the Buckeyes' No. 1 option.
For that matter, Claret! might also be
options No. 2 through No. 10.
Clarett and Ros's are not close friends.
Claret! declined to comment Tuesday
about Ross' feelings.
·· "I don't really want to comment on
the whole thing," Clarett said. "It's basi·
·cally smal'l talk. I dealt with this in the
springtime· and we dealt with this at the
beginning of the season . So there's
probably nothing to talk about anymore.
I'm just worried about winning games
-and produ~ing on the field." . . · . '
' Ross sasd he does not socsahze wllh
. ·ctarett.
"It:S hard to coexjst with people who

Yanks

from ,._ge B1
anthem ."Enter Sandman." It
· was a comforting si~ht for
·the Yankees after thetr mo~t
indispensable player spent
three 'stints on the disabled
· list this season.
,
. Rivera pitched an_ easy
: ninth for a save, showmg no
effects from his blowp. save
against Arizona ,in Game 7 of

,,

the World Series last year.
Game 2 in the best-of-five
series is Wednesday night
Anaheim's . Kevin
with
Appier pitching against Andy
Pettitte.
The Angels came into the
series with one player with
playoff experience. But the
shakiest move came. from
their manager, who was a.
postseason star with the Los
·
Angeles Dodgers in 1988.
"Mike's going. to get second-guessed," Angel s starter
Jarrod Washburn said. "But

Business Services

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(

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

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SElf STORAGE

112 acre tot on Tycoon lake Two bedroom trail er for
Route 141, name brand kids pars Plains, St. At. 661 east Are you looking tor a chat ..
w/121160 Trailer $1 6, 50Q.OO rent (740} 441 ·9455
. Wt)y wail? Star t meeting clothes, keyboard with to Joppa Ad. (Co Ad 43) lang~? Would you like the
(7401 247·1100
\ · .::~·.;...~--'----,
Ohio singles tonight. call toll stand, childs poo~me ta- 2nd &amp; 3rd house on right challe~ge to ~use you r ~urs·
APARIMENTS
Mason Co. 73 + acres,
FOR RENr
free t ·BOO· 766-2623" ext ble, sofa, Halloween cos- _w_a.,.tc_h_,lo.,.r_s..,lg_ns_. ..,.--·..,-- lng skills to make a d1ffer_,162;,:1..
. _ _ _ _ _ _, tumes,
home
Interior, :-:
ence ?~ If so, consider what
Pond, city water, electric.
D:
dishes, mens and \\'Omens Yard &amp; bake sale, where- the new leadership team at
Very nice trailer included.
ANNolJN&lt;:EM}NrS
clothes, microwave
Tuppers Plains VFW Hall, Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Great Hunting, tim~ Nice 1 and .2 bedroom apartdevelopment lor home site. ments, furnished snd unlur- .
• - -- - - - - - sponsored by· ladles auxlll- Center has to offer: Com·
$150,000. (304)882~3131
niShed, security dE!posit reRu mmage Sale &amp; Bake ~ry. Saturday, October 6, pelitive Salary, Flexible
qulred. no pets, 740-992Sale· Debbie Drive Chapel 2002, from9em-3pm
Scheduling, Educational as·
: C· 1 Beer Carry Out permit
REALEsTATE
2218.
·
si9lance, Job sali9lactlon.
Activity Building· 1 7 miles
· for sate, Chester Township,
1
outl41,001ober4·5, lOamYARD
SALEFor a limited lime only,
$69,900.00
r...-..,;WiiiANIEDiiiiiiii--'
Meigs Countv. send tellers
{740) 446-7825
•
1 Bedroom Apartmen t,
4pm.
Pr. ~
Aocksprlr gs• Rehabilitation
of inte re st to. The Daily
Kitchen Furnished,
,All
,
Center is offering a $2000. PT Tax prBparars needed
S
Foreclosure!· 4 bedroom, 4 Small lot In ~allia County Electric, $300 Month, DeSentinel, PO Box 729 ~20 , September 28th &amp; 30th: Oc·
Pom ero Ohio 45769.
tober 1st thfu 4th. 1.2 miles 2 Family Garage Sale. Oct sign-on bOnus for LPN 's. for busy IBJt office, Pomeroy
FOR ALE
Bath just $14,900 For list· ready for moblle home set- posit Aequ ired.Nea r High
.
&amp;
For more Information please location. we will train; comlng calll-BOO· 719 _3001 Ext. up. (740)446·9209
School. (304)675·3100 Or
2514 M Ve
3, 4 5. 9•5·
t.
r· contact: Debbie Stewart, f)uter skills required . Send $69,000, 3 bedroom, 1-112 F144
out route 218.
(304)675·5509
GIVEAWAt
HI
\
I
l
l
'
non.,....._Ave_._..,-,--::-~-: Assistant Director of Nurs· resume to: The Daily Sen- bath, 2 car garage,, 10 mi- R'l:~:":"---~~~,
Thursday 4th- Friday 5th, _
9:00-4:00, 486 Georges 5 Family 'nlrd Sale. Oct. 3rd lng, 740 -992-6606. Equal tine!, P.O. Box 729-13 Pam~ nutes from Holzers. Ohio.
MOBILE HOMES
1 br. apt for rent $100. sec.
Creek&gt; Road . ·
&amp; 41h. Duncan's Res. 11 5• Opportunity Employer En- eroy, Ohio 45769
(304)675- 2364
r.n.RSALE
-1'1:11'""-~----., dep.&amp;$300. a mon. all utll.
Neutered cat, nice compancouragfng Workpface D,IVer- ':-'.c....::....:_.::_:_::__ _ _ '---'----~-rv
H~
included 304 -675-3654
ton tor older person , GBII Garage Sale- OCtober 3 4 5 4th St. New Haven. Table &amp; sity
security Guards
.
•
2 bedroom house, $24,000
740)992·7104
·
'ai 120 Maple Drlva, GallipQ. .~C::;h:::
al:::rs:.:&amp;::_mc:or:::e_--::___
Must be able to work any In Gal!lpolls, 911 4th Ave· 12x60 3 bedroom wlcla,
FOR RENr
2 BA; $325 month, $300 de·
Losr AND
Its, a 30·5·00, some tools
commun~~y Sate Gunvllle McClure's Restaurant now shift, Including most week- nue. Call (740)446·8585
washer &amp; dryer, stove,
posit, close to University of
Ridge Ad. Oct. 4-S Fri. &amp; hiring all 3 locations, full or ends. Must have verlllable 7
$5,495, 740-992-2167
1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Rio Grande, (740)245·9060
-FOUND
1
1
•
Sat. From Point Pleasant AI part·time, pick up applies· years work history, resi- 2 bedroom, bath·on acre
Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
,
Trents Produce, Thursday,
lion allocation &amp; bring back dence, clean police record , on black1op road near Rio 12x~ mobile. home, part!~ DOwn 30 Years at 8.5% 3 rm . &amp; bath, furnished apt
7
6
between
Large , short hair while p1t Friday, Saturday, Sunday, ~~e~~~:o'!·~g n~ :~ut
9:30am
&amp; reliable transportation, valid Grande. (740)446·0689
furmshed ,,ask•.ng $3,000, at- APR. ~Of' Listings, 800-319- all utilities paid ,except elec .
bull. Bunker Hill , Baii . Aun Jackson Pike, kids clothes
10:00am , Monday thru Sat- drlwrs licdnse, home phone 2 bedroom, t ~th, 1 car ~ 10x45 mobile home, ask· 3323 Ext. 1709.
$275.00 a· mon. 304-675Peach Fork gone since 2-5, toys, kitchen ut8nslls, Garage Sale. Antiques. Oct. urday.
and must have black steel garage. Fenced baCk yard. 1ng, $1 ,000. (740)446 -1452
_13_6__,5_ _ _ _ __,,..
2·3"" ~ 5 . 7 miles North on .
Tuesday 51&amp;-5321
mise, whatnots. 9-Spm.
toe safety shoes. Pay starts Cool, tree· shaded lot local· . 1989 Spruce Ridge 14x70, 1 Bt=l hous!l', Oak Hill, parti· 6 rOOm apartment wllh dryer
At. 2 at Eckard Chapel Rd.
r4 YARD SALE
at $6.50 per hour, 32-40 ed at 107 Ba91:iani Dnve. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 12x40 ally furnisfled. Refere:tnces. hook-up, nice, $400 "1Qnth, .
. YARD SALE
.
PoMERov'u...:..IJ! 2nd Drive on Left.9-?
hours per week. Call Call (740)446.0123
porch w/roof must be Rental l..ase, deposit. No Kanauga: · area, ' 110 plets.
·-------"'· ~
'"""'"
• Huge Yarn Sale 001. I ,2,3.
(740)669·0196 Monday·Frl·
moved
(740!742·2713 pots.
$235
monlh.· (740)367-7015
•~
day. 6llm-4pm lor appoint·
leave mosoage.
(740)286·3405
BEAUTIFUL
~PARTSandhill Rd. Letart. Lots of ·
ne~d ment.
·. rll'='t"-'!'"'-~---, 2 family carport sate- Frl., clathes, nice coats, bridesl ·
2 Bij, bath &amp; a half. MENTS AT BUDOET PAlo
YARD SALE·
Oct . 4th, Lee residence, maid dresses, and flower
Wanted - live In caretaker for
New stove &amp; re~rigeraror. CES AT JACKSON 1!5GAI.J.JPOLIS
Tyree ,Blvd., Racine, weight g lrl dress, compound bow.
m\1 mother (mcfudes SOme
1994 Cl)ampion Park Ridge (740)446·9279
TATES, 52 w8stwood Drive
bench, pivoting Xmas trae f
'
16x70 w I shingles roof VI·
from $297 to $383. "'alk lo
We offer a $500
urniture, lawn cart, coiTiput·
Iite housekeeping) in 911 ·
nvf sl'dlng . 2x6 enorgv
••
"I
stand, bedspreadlmatcn ng. er printer. lots of Misc.
'
' 2 bed
1 112 bath d
shop &amp; movies. Call 740.
1 mile below dam. Baby
.
change
tor
room/board
plus
All
real
eatllteldvertlalng
packed
walls
catherlal
.
c
eilroom,
·
u·
sign
on
bonus,
up
I
lh
h
I
$750 per mo. salary,
h
plex, Racine, (740)949- 44 6-2568. Equal . Housing
: clothes, Home lnterlOf, chit- va. ances-s ams, c o 1ng, _
In thla newap.~per la
ings, drywall throug out
0
1
Moving fn Sale 3rd, 4th,' 51h,
to $7/hou r, paid
(
740)367.0302 ,.
eubject to tt.. Feder•
central air porch included. 251 7
•
pportun ty.
. dren clothes, miscellane- mtsc.
topper,
6th.
10-5.
Truck
' ous, crafts. October 3,4,5.
F1lr Houetng Act Of 1NI
Very Nice $1'5 ,000.00
·
4 family yard sale- Oct. 3-4- wood stove. furniture, sm. holidays, paid train"'40
) 965 -3856
3 bedroom, 2· 112 bath, B
h S M'ddl
Oh
5, Fisher
which makHit Illegal to
,,
2 car garage, furnished , eec
1. .. t aport , . ..
appliances.,
Much
more.
722
lng
and'
a
full
bene: 1.0/3-10/4, Knick knac~s .
advartiM "any
(740) 985-4176
Kanauga Mobile · Homes .. 2 BD Fum1shed Apt. Uhllt•es
s residence take 338 to Ra- Sandhln Ad.
r • Cbthes, bar table &amp; chairs,
fits package.
cine Locks &amp; follow signs,
pnraranco, ttmlllllonor
X
Cia·•~ BA. (740)441 -031 0
Paid, Deposit &amp; References,
4e Burnett Ad. Kanauga.
14
70
3
2000
bleed on
,...,.,,
No Pets. (740) 992·01 65
been 4 yrs. since last one, Yard Sale inside i?~? Oct.
We have positions Galllpolll CII'MI' College dltcrlmllllllon
race, color, religion. MX
28th. Appliances, Porches, 3 bedroom home, M!ners160 Sanders drive, Friday, Cleaned wall to walt, lots ot 4th 9a.m-5pm 50 3rd St.
available
tamlll .. , ..tu1 or natlon11
skirting, like new, must go ville, Ohio, river 'Jiew, no · Furnished 2 Rooms and
{Careers Close To Home)
quilts
blankets, New Haven, fur_niture&amp;
October 4th, 8-5pm, House- tools,
CaiiToday! 740-446~4367 ,
or~ln, or any Intention to
$~ 9,99f¥ 00, 740-992 -0078
pets, references re quired, Bath,. Upstairs, Cle~ ~· Aelj mmadiatelyl
hold clean out. Ma.ny valua- sheets, pillows, tOwels, cur- misc.
1-800·214-0452,
m1keeny •uch
sq. ft. home on 1 acre, $450 month, call (740)992- erences and Oepos1t Reble items including winter tains, rugs, floor TV, lots
2000
CalllnfoCision
WANIID
more, to long to mention wReg li90-05-1274B.
preference, llmlllltlon or
.." ita l. 6n7 after Spm.
_
. quired. No Pets. (740)44 6·
clothes.
10 minutes from ho~
'
151 9
today to set up an
erything .
TO
BUY
: 3 family yard sale, 515
1170 • • · -.. ··-~""
dtacrlmlnltion."
Still under construction. 4 3 bedroom, 1 bath, large ~
G-'-"'-.- . ----(
interview.
• Solar Drive, October 5-6, Fall Rummage sate, Heath
!Y~rA.J\.0
Bedrooms/ 2 Bath with family room, washer/ dryer, ·· rac!ous hving. 1 and _2
: 9am·?
Church, Middleport, Friday, Absolute TOp Dollar: U.S..
Thla newepaper will not
swimming pool. (740)446- stove, refrigerator, micro- bedroom a partment~ at VII·
1 -an-4&amp;3-6247
v
knowingly accept
=35:::7:::0:...- - - -:-::-::-- wave furniShed , Central air lage Manor and _Riverside
001 ~ Saturdav OOt 5 9 3 Silver, Gold Coins, Proofext. 2457
: 64 ,Sycamore Street, Octo: '
'
· ' • · sets,
Roberta Pluler
adver11MmeOC. for,.,,
-:--:
&amp; heat, garage,.2 miles from ,. Apartm ents In Middleport.
Diamonds,
Gold
ber 1st, 2nd &amp; 3rd, 3;ami1
; :y J811 RUmmage Sale~ Car- . Aing s,
Congratulalionsl You have
••~tewhlch lain
98 Clayton 4br. 16x80 on town. Green Scllool district, From $278·$348. Call 740u.s. Currency,·
ei· Sutton UMC basement, M.TS Coin Shop, 151 Sec· Ingram Barge Companu will won 2 free movie tickets to
violation of the lew. Our
rented lot in Gallipolis Ferry $475 month $475 depos·1t 992-5064. Equal Housing
9:00·5·00
"'
the S · Vall
7 1 Gal
304-675·3689. Nicel4• 60
•
• 0
·
, · Bean Oinn&amp;r &amp; yag;&amp;
Aacine-Bashan R~d, Octo- ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740- be accepting applications
pnng
ey
n
•
re•dt,. 1re hereby
references,
no - pets. -"ppor
' -t_un_'t-'e_s_
, . ~-::-: Bidwell
U.M.
Church. ber ~rd-4\h, lam·4pm, 446-2842.
for Deckhands at the Ash- llpolls. Call the Register toInformed that all
2br. in Crown Citv, Ohio (740)446-6565 after 5pm.
. ·.
, Church Street. October 4 _5 , _
ra_lnl
_s_h_,n_• ·.___ _ _ _
land, KV Dept. "for Empk)y· day tor details.(304)675dwetllngaldvert:IMd In
area. We trade tor anvthlng
Honeysuckle Hills Apart• 0
5
B
ment Security, 1844 Carter .:.133~3--~~----,
. thla newarw ..... are
Of value (740)2 56-9315 ,
3br. House located in Ma- ments locat ed behind Colo·
· , 1 am- pm,
eans, corn- Fri-Sat. fc·?, 47637 SA 338,
r.
,.-,..--·
son,
$495. + u t1
·r1
·tles. · nial Drive beh ind Highwau
fee pop bottled
Avenu~. Ashland , Kentucky, 1180
n 1_.""""""'
•v:~~~· on 1n equ11
'
• b retad· cof
b k d,
od
d near A cine, jeans, sweat- "T,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_, 41105 _2620 on ton/2002
n~ .. u :.. u
• NoPets. (304)773- 5881
Patrol Post.3 BR now avail0
' wa er, a e go s, an ers, 'dress clothes, bed 1'110
To Do
unity Mill.
Good used 1995 14x70, 2
able. Rent starts $310/
through 101812002 from ..,
~---~----,1
.• yard sa 1a 11ems.
-cl othes, glassware, season·
fto.p WANTED
br., vinyl siding/shingle roof, 5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Oli\18 St, month. l ow &amp; moderate in·
·
8:00am till 3:00pm. Heavy
2yr. old house on approxi11H
d 7 38 9648
$325
(740-'46 3945
E
I
h
1
•. Big Ya rd Sal e- October•
=..:
c
:.:ra:.::::•·:..ra
:
:'n
:
_.::_
canc
::..:•
.
:.:.:,
•·
'
"
"
'
labor
background
Is
preferAlE
Conolructlon
mo.
rt •
come. 't qual
Housing 4Op-::,
mately. 2 acreS, 3 br, 2 ba, ca arol 4 - 5(740)446-334
9
2
3
' • .4 ' 00·S:Oopm. tBS Am- Garage sale at 572 High
red (I.e. farming, Jogging, Roofing. concrete, siding,
2 car garage allached w/ New 2003 f 4x70, 3 br/2bth. i rooms, 2 bath, ~all iP,911s.
~ ~ ~Oo- _
.
or
bKelsidep DnveOiel.crossB ff9m St., Middleport, Ohio, Oct. 4
SAl,COOOCE·S$~T0.500APPTC
IFTI
construction, etc .) You. must remodeling, decks, painting, breezeway, located on Only $995 down &amp; only No pets, water paid, $550: - j ' - - - - - - ----,o,err
ost
JCB
rown &amp; 5, 9am-4:30pm
..
have a Social Secunty to dry walt metal buildings,
Sandhill
Rd.
Phone $195 .65 per month. Call month, deposit &amp; refe
odern 1 BR apartmtlht.
trailer, lots of nice things.
Online Training
apply. EOE, MIFN.
pole barns&amp; footers
(304)675-5004 attet Spm.,or Karena 740~5·7871 ,
(740)388-1100
. (740)446·0390
Friday &amp; Saturday. Tyco Garage Sale- Oct. 1st, 2nd , \ www.betterllfetoday.com
(304)674-0118
leave message at (304)674·: desk- doll house, clothes. 3rd, Halloween items, nice
·
Free Report
Part-time babysitter needed,
1~79 anytime.
·
New Home on 5 acres iq Clean 3 bedroom house in · North 3rd Ave , Middlepoit
• tools. tools, , mJie north of clothes &amp; gifts, 33400 New ___1_·8
.,.00_
· 884_·_4,-96_5::-- Ordnance area 304 •67 i· Al l types of masonry brick,
'-th;;;
e..:c.:.
ou
::.n:..t'Y:;.·_,.I7:..40
=)4:..
4-:6·.:.32::1,.:8:..
. country. No pets, water fur- 1 bedroom furn ished apart.
uma Rd., Rutland, raln or
b!~k &amp; stone 20 yrs. Expe- 3 Bed
w1
od :-:
nished. $450 month, $400 ment ,·no pets; deposit &amp; ref·
7
13
1
shine
· road, side rest of Route ·
AVON! A11 Areas! To Buy or ~6___ _ _ _ _ _--'- rience free estimate..
room ne Y rem • N
_ ew Manager's Special , deposit. (740)245- 5064
. erences,-(740) 992.0165
_
eled, in Middleport, call Tom
I"" o 3 bed
2
-----;'--'-'-"-==-=-'-=-:Garage Sale at 213 Mercer- - -- - - -- -- Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
1-30 4-n3-9550
And
fl
new VA8 •
room,
:
. ville Road. OCtober 3 ,4 ,5 Garage sale· Oct 4 &amp;
675-1 429.
STNA
~= a er 5 p.m.
bath, reduced to only House tor rent in Syracuse ' Now l',aking Appl lc~
• gam- 4 pm , clothes, Li ttle Werry's TR 67 off Eagle ::...:::____..:..:.-,..,,-,-,.,-.,-, Would you like to join our Georges Portable ....Si~wm!ll,
$27,900 delivered and set Ohio $475.00 ,a mon. +. 35 West 2 Bedroom Town·
Ridge,
many
Items, EASY WORK! EXCELLENT dedicated team ot care·giv~ don't haul your logs to the 3 Bedroom with garage on up. You save over $6,000 $475 .00 dep. no pets 304· house Apartments, Includes
·, Tykes toys, misc.
rai n/shine.
PAY!
ers? If you are a nurse aide, mill just call304-675·1957. approximatetv 1 acre On Including underpinning, an - 675·5332
Water
Sewage, Trash,
· Garage Sale· 700 'rhird GARAGE SALE: familY ,
Asse'mble productS
and would like an opportuni- M&amp;M Pressure Washing &amp; Route 2 , Gallipolis .Ferry. chors, vapor barrier, 1 set fl· House for sale or rent, 5375 $350/Mo., 740·446·0008.
6
ea~t'-~r~H
% ~~~~:~::,.:r~~~ap~:: HPainting. BoDecks.
Trailers, (304)675-5332 ·
berglass steps, 20' of utility mo.. 101 Pleasant Ridge, One Bedroom Apartment In
; Avenue, October 3 •4 •5 • Oct. 2,3,4 Peach • Fork
, 9am· 5pm, antique kitchen
t
L 1 1 .
lines under home, all instal- ~ma r~, 17401698•6783
P
PI
F
. hod
5
0
ca binet; girls bedroom suite, R.a£.R.19 Maurer resident
t-800-467-5566 EKI . 12170 cll lty, please cal l SceniC ouses,
a •
s, nc.,. Attract ive, spacious • one IBd , One only, Coles's Mo- rv
-,
t.
easa nt.
urnls
·
Hills Nursing Center today Call
for
Esti mates . stor~~ bric k ranch l illie bile Homes, U.S 50 East,
Very clean and nice No
men's sweate rs , WQmens 8:00a.m.- 3:00p.m..
Help wanted caring for the
40)
nd
k (740)388 1532
'
'
Nlco house in Tuppers Pet• . ,Phone(304)8.75·1386
: shoes. Household items.
. Huge Yard Sale, Oct. 4 &amp;
elderly, Darst Group Home, at (7 4,46·7 150 a
as
•
home, attached covered Athens, Ohio 45701
Plain s, ale, $450 month plus -:-=-"'
'+===-~.::..:-='-

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Additions

. Owner:
iO
HOME
Terry lamm
•· - - - · - (740) 992 0739
'-..OIMiiiilinruiiiiolv"""iiiii""iiiii'";;,..t a,;.·____._•:,:m~o;~~
. :II

Free Yard Sal~ Sign!
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepa i d

Country setting- 314 acre.
Watch the deer while your
only 5 minutes from - n ·
town Gallipolis. 3 bedrooms,
fu ll dry basement, central
air, very neat home. Home(740)446·0369;
Work
(740)446-9-753.
:;_;":-.:::.;:;..:;:.;______
For Sate By Owner Ranch
Style Home 3 BA 1.5 Baths
E x cellent - Locat l on .

'

IUU'IUJ

1·800-822.()4.17

SHOP THE

·w.V's # 1 Chevy. Pontiac, Buick, Olds

.CUSSIFIEDS!.

&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

'

YOU!

Hill"s Self
Storage

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Pans
Factory Authorized
· Case-lH Parts
Dealers
/000 St. Rt. 7South
Coolville, OH 45723

140

I

_.llTR

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

Cellu-lar

4snt

740-84&amp;-2217

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
'

1

F

I

I

10

Diamond engagement ring·
matching wedding ring 115
carat~ siZe 6, $250 negotia·
bta; Compound bow with
slghll &amp; arrows, $50 .
(740)379·2380

s.

1

. ; . . :; : . . . .. . . . ; : . . : . . : .; ; . : . ._ . . , . . - _

750 0750

.

1

.4&amp;5,

45-a

riO.

I

c

scho?

,.

Wanted; Loca l companu
'
wants to purchase 1- 10
acre sites tor new homes.
Call (740)446-3Q93.
We have a ppro~timately 10
used homes for under.
52 . ~, call 1·800-837·3238
fC?r Jnfo. •, ".
•

r

B• ~

~~ .,~

2 bedroom all electric mebile home. Spring Vall ey
'Area, $350 rent, $2SO deposit. No pets. (740) 44 16954 (3041675 2900
•
2 bedroom mobile home, no
pets, $250 month, $250 de·r (740)446-4051
posl ·
2 bedi'oom, centra l air, total
electric;:. absolutely no Inside
,Pets, S350 month, $350 de·
posit. Call (740)245·5175
8:00am -4:00pm, Ask for
Tim, no Sunday call please.

I

AND BUUJJINGS

3 bedroom mobile home tor
ren t, Pomeroy area. no
pets, (740)992-5858
Al l
STEEL BUILDING '-----'-'--'------,--- 40114411 15 was' $10,782; 96 ,4x76 1railer, 2 bedr.oom,
Now $6,599 1·800·292 - 2 bath, all electric, no Pets,
_Otl1 . Must ~e ll.
$400 monlh. (740)4 46· 1062

'

.

140.992·2222 or

~· ·

• Nursing Home

Advertise

in /this
spo(:e
for

=:..:;=------

=

$75

Your
oamlo Connedion, L

741)-446-1018

Qrro/111
COit:rttf filblli~&amp;•d IIOI'f!

740-742-3015
(877-35).7011)
Call fer more inforJ frt.t estimate
lmllll6
'

•

per
month

l:RC:oboon::!:::=..:1.::1000=.-BTU
.,--- ko,-ro-- 1990 white Grand Prix LE, ·
oeno heater, like now, pcelteni condition, high '
(740)992·2431
mileage, $1800, evenings '
(740)982· 7573

NOifDOINGi

CRAFTY,
_1f,u.t~~ The
BUND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

HighBl Dry

All vertical blindo are
made to order at

SeH-Storage

our loealion

• Vertical• • Wood ,
• Minis • Etc

33795 Hiland A~.
Pomeroy, Ohio

144 Third Ave.
Gallipolis 446-4995
Toll Free 1-888-745-8847

740-992·5232

• Tonneue Cover •
Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line of
Other Accessories
I

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If I ( lill1 1

(740) 992·5822

1101117 .....

Pomeroy Ea1les.

aada•rua

•••Ia
,..

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

Call Jeanie
and ask how.

1st Thursday or
every month
All pack $5.00
Brln1 this coupon
Buy $5.00

Waehn, dryer~
Like New
. Freezer, Electric
Ranges, OilhWIIhlrl
Relrigeratora, and

Bonanza Get

I"RII DELIVIRY

BINGOU71

...

6:30

740·992·7998
MtrllaiWtlndopendont
DloVIbutor

5FREE

· POMEROY
APPLIANCE

STOr:tE
200 E. Main St.
Open eam-6pm
Mon thru Sat.
Phonl'8i2.QI51S

_ muchmora·

ODD JOBS

me.
Painting, Power
Walhlng, Mowing,
Weedeatlng
You Ntlfldlt

Done, We'll Do It
(740) 949-4028
or

(

Tree Sarv~ca
Top • Almovol • Trim

• Stulftp Srlndlng
• Buckat Truck

4

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.'

•

. -:-Jo-:-t,-:-l-wood
-':-:bul:::::nt::-ng:-:.,::
...
::
- wllh tntutatld pfpe, Exotf•
font
oondfllon,
1500."
(740)3711-2218
.

;gtj Plymouttt : sundlnoo,.
good condition, high mfl•
ago, 1800 or blot . oHtr,
(140)992·2077
•

...,.-A

446-8237, "67!1-7!116
-

· '"""'· ..

or

FREE

1· 800·730·4!13!1

·9239

Connie's
Child CARE
has openings, 15 yr.
experience, Certified
In Meigs , Athens and
Washington counties,

Open 24 hours.
7 Days per week.
St. Rt. 7 Tuppers
Plains, OH ·
CALL 887·6329

sunset Home

JONII'

fuRooMsRNlsHED

Joann Cola
740-949-2517
.
Congratul•tlonal You have
won 2 free mo~Jie tickets to
the Spring Valley 7 GalllpoliS. Call the sentinel tor de·
lails. (740)992-2155) \ . '

Ill IcY

Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K RoUover$;
Mortgage; Major Medical
flll

Upstairs, One Bedroom ·
Apartment at 651 2nd Ave.,
Gdtllpo!is. $950 per month
pl us deposit; Water and
Trash Included in ren t; Call
Debbie or Judy at (740)4467323 at Bossard Ubnuy.

r '·

111111111111

CI. .IIIJiciiH

Cancer &amp; Dental,

Twin Alvarw Tower for aid·
eriY,f disabled.
Now accepting applications
fo r 1 br, aJI utilities paid
HUD -assisted , carpe ted
apartment. ·rent is 30% of
your adjusted income call
304-675-6679 be tween 8·4 30 pm weekdav!!.EHO

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(740)~1240

I

1996 ~ Clayton 14x60 2 br.
glamour bath, all alec. centra l air 304·675-B180. 1eave
message II no answer.

Jil-l
11111111111 Cll1

· Local843-5264

Medicare Supplement; Ufe Insurance;
Burial and Flnal Expenses;

Nlco IBM Pernlum computer
with monitor, Internet 'ready 1968 Mercury Grahde Mar·
with 30 day guarantee, quls, good condition, runs
$22=5::.·::.fl.:.;40:.cl448=2=9.::32:___ good. $1850 firm . (740)4487418
Pool table, alate top, red -:-'-C:....-::--:-:----:
cloth, excellent condition; 1990 Bonneville, good
POOl table Ping" Pong tabla, shape, $1 ,500 dollars,
with nat Included, $800; al· ;_:(7..:40::.&lt;);:_,448;;:.;7;;;600::=-:- -::-:-:::-00 olatlonary bii&lt;O, $50. Cltt 1990 Buk:k Riviera 3.8 liter,
(740)448-2&lt;? 16·
Pearl While, sunroof, all
Riding
mower,
$175., power opllono, very good
.(740)992-1093
conct. $2800. 304·n3-9557 ..__ _ _ _ _ _...

deposit &amp; utilities, (740)667· Sm a1J furnished apt. All util3487 •
ities paid except Electric. No
' Pets, Security Deposit ReOJder 2 Star/ Farm House qulred . . $275.
Month.
3br. bath 1/2. 3 mites from (304)675- 1365
Rio Grande College. Newly
renovated. No ins!de pets. Tara Townhouse ApartMust have good references. ments, Very Spacious, 2
$550. month $500 deposit. Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
(304)675-7624
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adu~ Pool &amp; Baby Pool. Pa·
dining area, covered porch. One bedroo m house; Ra- tlo, Start $375/Mo. No Pots,A· 1 condition. Call Somer- cine Ohio (740) 992 _5039
Lease Plu s Security Deposit
ville Realty (304)675-3030
'
·
Req uired, Days: 740·446·
Cl'!ir~:--~~--, 348
1; Evenings: 740·367~~~~~n~nd Us~qu~~~~s~
MOBILE HOMES
0502.
•
across the nation. SSOO
FUR RENT

down and take over pay m~nts. (740)446-3570.
Wan ted· No Credit Custom ers to Purchase New home
under Government llnanC&amp;
ing pri'V'Iram. $ 1200 income
'"'1&lt;11
~u ired. Call to pre-qualify.
(740) 446-3384.

·
.
1966 lincoln Conllnental, 4
door, project car, $900.

992-o622

Must Sell- laclory mistake,
2002 3 BR- 2 BA. Will sacrl11
1
ce, many extras, very n c~.
Sava $8,900 -00 - 1304)7363888 • 1· 688•7 38 •3332 ·
Reduced 1996 Norris Mo.
biLe Home 141180 3 bed room , 2 bath, one has garden tub. Complete Kitchen,

r:

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·--···

1

up, order hera and earn Loaded.
· .
$$$, 600·263·2640.
1987 CHEVY Caprice Clas·
~c Loaded
DR Trimmer, used one time, 1990 OLDS Touring Sad·
$200. (740)441·6299
den Loaded.

992

52544 Bald Knob Stivers· now paying minimum wage, : ~~~~~~~Op gru~': Nutter Construction WV carport , 3 bedrooms, hard·
ville Rd., Ftqrtland, Oh (Co new shlhs: 7am-3pm, 7am We
031734 General COntractor, wood floors throughout, full
• Gara_ge sate- Octobe~
Rd. 31) Mike Evans Resi- Spm, 3pm· 11pm, 11Pf!l· application.
are located residential &amp; Commerci al basement, central heating/
Bulaville
Pike, dence, all woceeds go to 7am, call 740..992-5023.
' 3997
in Gallipolis, (behind the construction, new hoUses &amp; cOOling , new .heat pump, 1.4
9:00am-? ,
Jan van Cooney. ·
Spring Valley Clnep1a)
roofs , sijjlng, wfndows, ect. acres, located on quiet
NOW HIRING
Np job to big •or to small. country road 1/2 mile tram
Inside Sale- October 1
Make up 10 $7/hour
~~J~:~~rl~.o~~~~ -;~: Free estimates . (304)593- high school, 10 miles from
through Oc tober 5, 9am· last season yard sate· We
Paid tralnmg
for the Gallia County ~ Help 1607 or (304)882·21 74
Gallipolis on little Kyger
Spm, 14728 Slate Route got •everything" you need,
M
C 11 1 877 ,.3 6247
-·• P
~:.:..;:..o:::.:..;=:..::.:'-'---::- Aoad. Contact (740)446554, Bidwell. Gravel v mow- priced to sell, don't miss this
1
0
a •
-..u •
e rvw
rogralo
m, s alocl- Prlvatb duty home care. W!ll 3157 or (740)446·1 387.
er, Trovbuilt titter, antiques, one, come &amp; see, ·rain or
shine, Bradbury Rd., Mid- ____:.;;ex;.;;l..;;24..:56
c:...._ _-' ,cepting resumes
r the • care for the elderly and run
furni ture, Nascar Collec- dlepo" , Oct. 3rd·5th .
lowing part-lime position:
errands
Call
Patsy
tions, 1,500 to 2,000 videos
lngram Barge Company will Help Me Grow Family Sup- (740)2
1i
' Country ~ome with 11-1 12
339
&amp; games, pictures. Fenton Oct. 4 &amp; 5, 9am·5pm, State be accepting applications port Specialist, to providr;t
acre s 314br 2ba , 2 Car·
glass, candles. flowers, Route 124, 2nd hoU
se past lor Deckhands at the Point family support to paren ts of Top to Bottom Cl eaning Garage, above~round pool,
-....u&gt;ols &amp; Misc.
Church ot God. rain or Pleasant, WV Employment infant/ toddlers birth to three Service, professional, resi· H,.ndcrafled kitchen cabi·
["Security, 225 Si11th Street. wilh dtsablliti&amp;sl delays or at. dential, office cleaning, also nets. Off Leon Baden Rd.
Multi Girage ·Sale- infant to shine.
Point Pleasant, WV, 25550- "risk.~. This will include pa- yard &amp; gutter, at an atforda· (304)458·1580
p lus s1ze, toys, cra lls.
Rain or ~ino, D~ Dailey 0039 on 10/812002 th rough rent support groups, parent ble prlce. (740)992•2979
housewares, misc. October Res., Barnnger Aldge Ad 101912002 lrom 8:00am till trainings, parent to parent
H .
nd Fis . C .
1st through October 1st and
Portl an d. Oh, ho usehold 3.00pm. Heavy labor back- support .and parent educa- Wi~l . pressure was houses, ~~~n8a~ of Ty~ ~~~
3rd, 8:30·? 1853 Neighbor·
•tams, pl us size cl othe~. ground ~s preferred (i.e. lion . Ouallficetions: Parent t44ra,llers , anadsk de, sA.on0 aolrl on Edoma Trail. (740)446·
hood Road,
tools, much more.
farming, logging, construe· of a child with a disability/ leave me
. -"
136
= 0- - - - , . - - New house- not enough Aa,·ner G ara~· ~ackerv,· rre lion, etc.) You must have a delay or at "risk~, 8)Cperl::-:
~ "
S 1 1 SecurltV 1o appIY· ence workin~ with young
Nlc e home ,
room , Gigantic Yard Sale~ Ad , Racine Oct.
en tenary
3.4- 5 fu r- oc a
, 1st Hme, furniture , Home In- niture. tool s, co llectibles, EOE, WFN.
children and thei r tammes, -:-::::---~---...., Road, Green Township. Interlor, dishes, -gtass-:;1'8 &amp;
'
ability to co mmunicate wittl
ground pool, 2 bedroom,
plus size clothing.
Jewelry Salesperson FT/F'T. ramitles and an understandB~
large bath nice yard almost
Must be dependable, outgoOrroki'UNfTY
'
'·
misc. Friday, 00 tobe 4 &amp;
saturday, Octot&gt;er 5, aam- E!a tu rdav October '5, 8-4, ing, enJoy working' wtth the ing of holistic, tamily can• an acre. (740)446·6310
o4pm.· Rain or shine. ~3684 Roger Roush past Southern
.
tered services. Please send
(740)446·0698 Shown by
: Kerr Road, 1•112 mile frOm Hign SChool, tu rn at Mason- public _&amp; have _excellent resume by Octpber 1, '
!NOTICE I
appointment $84,900.
• State Route 650.
ic Lodge
math skilla. Apply at AcG&lt;Jio- 2002 to Gallia County Help OHIO ·vALL EY PUBLISH·
::..::.c..:.c....,-,::---::::-:-- ~__c.='-·- - - - - - , It ion s. ' 151 . 2nd Avenue, . Me Grow P 0 Box 943 lNG CO. recomm ends tl(at Private countrv house, great
: October t ,2,!3, t 157 Upper Three famlly moving sale, Gallipolis. No phone calls G
~;:;•lc:llpo=lis:;.'_;O_H_·4-'56-'-3;:_1_._ _• yo u do business with people for family, 6 bedrooms, 2
• 2nd Avenue. everything Thursday &amp; Friday, 305 please.
• 1.
•
you know, and NOT to send baths, sitting. area, living
cheap, rein or shme. 10- Tyree Blv., (Teatords) rain W ed 8 h... ·u
..d
Truck Drivers, Immediate money through tho mall unlit room, kitchen &amp; dining
·
ant • a.,, Sl er, . 8 " hire, class A COL required .
room, basement; swimming
Or Shine.
="-..,-,..,-..,-,..,--:-'-: -'-'--=----' - - - - pandable •
non-smok1ng
:.Spm..
.1 e)(cetle nt pay, experience you have investlgaled the poo 1, new ba rn , new pore hOc totier 2,3,4. All kinds of Tuppers Plains St. Paul adult to care lor three Chl - required. Earn up to $1,000. gllertng.
es,
approx. 5 acres,
1 per week.Cal\304-675-4005 ::---::::-- - - - - $90,000, (740)742-1049
clothes. Too much to men- U.M. Church Basement dren (2 P.reschool, 1
, tion. · On 588 right bf! hind Sale, Oct. 4, 9arn-7pm, Qct. a~) and do housework •n
·
Start ' Your Bu siness To·
"
: s6dimers, 9-5pm
5,
9am-2,pm, clothing, our home. If int~rested mail: URGENTLY
NEEDED- day... Prime ShopPing Cen- Red uced for quick .sale.
sehold ahd misc. items Name, address, phone plasmaodonors, earn $50 I&lt;? .tar Space Available At AI· OWner's reloca ting &amp; wants
number and three work ref· $60 per ,week lor 2 or 3 fordable A~te. 2 Nice Exec· to liste n to all offers. 4 bed: Thur~~y - Saturday,
miies Wheel covers, tools, new &amp; erences to: ~M.- F. F , P.O hours weekly. Call Bio life utive Qffices. 'Newly Ae- room, 3 bath home with InSouth on/Route 7.iarge va- used school clothes, Nelsort Box 723, Galhpohs, OH, bEi· Plasma Service, 740-592- modeled. Spr1ng VaUey Pia- ground pool. Call (740)441 ·
riety.
Ave , Rutl and, Oh, 001 2-4 tore OOIOberiO. 2002 .
6651.
V.za. C"all (740)446·348 1.
• 0021 anyt1me.
'

roR SALI!

DIREClV, $0 two TV hook· 1968 Chrysler 51h. Avanue . . - - - - - . - . - - . . ,

1

s.

urns

IIIII llr

- -''' =_________....,.
1984 Gaditlac Deville, loadDiningroom table &amp; 6 chairs, ad, excellent condition,
china cabinet, 4 pieCe bed- 63,000 original miles. Must
room suite. recliner, gun Seal
$2,200
080.
cat;nst, (740)142·1600
(740)44HI875 ·

o

ro'

,.........
.
filE IIIII

lriJIIIllllllllil

Couch Floral $50., . Olnotlo
Set $40., Rocker (blue)
$25., washer $100., Ae1ng·
11{\\ ... l't)l { j \I Ill\
~rotor $125.. S1ove·gos
$50. Phon• 1304)875·4123r
jj;;j;;;;;;;;;;A;;;;;;;;;;;;~
aftsr 5pm.

wv.

I

740- 992-0780

Cell: 591 · 8393

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

' Speciali~ing In: {
'

Owner:

Ronald "Mick" Han ing

ClUJ Ccu:/st: &amp; Gravely

[740) 992-3194
992-6635
'Part-time cashier only. Ap- 2 private rooms avallabl4:t
ply In person, Sally Beauty October 15 for 2 elderly ladles, spacious house, nice
Supply, Gallipolis.
Medi Home Health Agency, scenery, Owned and operInc is seeking AN's (FT/PT) ated by ex-activity • d1rector.
(740)256-9315
Phy lc 1 Th
1 1
5 8
an
erap 51 n
TURNED DOWN ON
the Gallipolis, Ohio area .
We offer a competi tive SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Wiilt
sa)ary, benefit~ package ,
401 K, and.llell time. Please
1-888·562·3345
contact Diana Harless or
1(1&lt;\11~1\li'
Laura Mas~o at 17401441 1779 or 1·800·481-6334.
r10
HoMEN

.

Christina "Chris" Haning
Cell 11 740·59t-0919

...,I It\ I( I "'o

\'\\01 '\(I \II \IS

•

Haning's Construction
7 4D-3 6 7-0181

LAMM'S

(lO'xlO' 610'x201

October 3,4,5 3374 State Yard sales- Oct. 4-5, Tup- LPN's

Roofing, Siding, Hdd-Ons, Eledrlclll,
, Plumbing, Decks, Remodeling,
. Orywal~ Painting

Foreman: Lar~y

GaUipolis, Ohio • (740) 446-2015:
, . ISA Certified Arborist
I-866-4DR-TREE ·

middleport, OH

J'ER&lt;ioNAI.S

.

7~. 'N«a~

~Beech St.

:.r

A.'AfiA

~~~ - , . ~
-:,
We (:are For Your ih;~f

r JIOA~:S~OIORS

REACH OVER 285,000 .PROSPECTS
PLUS
R AD NOW ONLINE
l\egister
To Place
, Sentinel
urrthune
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Or Fax To

.7/fee ~ S-'-- .

2002 Kawasaki Prairie V·
WINTER STORAGE
650 4x4. 1200 miles, ExMelgo County .,.
$1500 OBO. Come to 82 At- tended' warranty unt!l 4·
Fairgrounds
2005. 20001b warn wincl'l aflen Avenue to view.
Atrlvll: 001. 5&amp; 001. 19
ter market tires $7,500. new
lam · 12prq
95 Ford . Aspire, AJC, 5· will sell for $5,900. Call
Rele. .e April 26, 2003
speed. 51mpg, Sf ,000 1304)882·3622 or (304)674·
~ IN of $20 wfll be
(740)446- I 225
3588
'
chargee. for earty arri98 Camsro. T·tops, S6,895.
val, late arrlvll, ur1y
Pot Floldo
• •
(740)388-0 189
removal, late rempval,
Congratulation s! You hav
or anytime accna Ia
GoOd 'Used starters and won 2 tree movie tickets ' wanted
to rairgrounde
to
the
Spring
Valley
7
In
alternator&amp;. GM, FOrd,
Chrysler, $20 each . Call Gallipolis. CaM the Tribu ne other than 8tated datea.
Building opoce fo llral
lor dalalls. (740)448·2342 ,
(740)448·7804
coine flrat aerve.
lnofdo.Sto-: S4,0CII1f
1 .. Open Span: $2.00111
" lnolde Fonco:'St .00/lf

~;:;--;::::-;;:::=---:::=-c 92 ~ercury New Yorker,

:
• Applianeea;. Reconditioned
• Woohera. Dryero , Ranges,
; Roirlgratora. Up To 90 Cays
Guaran1Mdl Wo Sell Now
Maytag Applancet. French
City Maytag, 740-4411-7785.

Call Today••• ·

2002 Harley Davidson Ultra
Clas sJc.
2,400
mites,
(740)379·2899

91 Subaru Loyale, 4x4
wagon, ruhs good , high
mileage, 2 others tor partS,
$700 OBO. (740)379-2 888

.

Construction

~ Bryan

Reeves

New Romea, Room Addlflona,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, lllecka, .Kitchens, Drywall

·a More
FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742•3411

E~TIMATES

740·f~. 7599

C__,lon Suppfl01

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Wednesday, October 2; 20CIIIt

.com

Page B 6 • The Dally 'S entinel

.

ALDER

...

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•

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fiction
1 Sell- .
.
. cantered
31 Polito bud
19 Rlndo
2 Holy lrn.aga 17 Female
principle 35 Auapleea
21 Fuae or
J Earha as
19 Elvia'
. 38 Fraternity
weld
prollt
"Return To
tetter
25 Tortilla
· 4 Baatltle Day
•
39 The baatca
anackl
aeaaon
25 "The Moon 5 Cal Tech · 20 Pharaoh'• 40 Wottr
beetle
holder
Ia Blue"
rival
21 Single, In 41 Lhouater
6 Thla, tn
Porfa
42 ·Notapeok ,. ,
30 Walkway
Mulco ·'
22 Aswan Dam
cturty
32 Large
7 Caroler's
site ,
44 Mete out
ant•lope
tune
45 Orangutona
33 Dellvei a "' 8 Big Dipper 23 Londl of
tennla
46 Hlp snd . mesaega,
bear
24 Toke care 47 Unuaullly
34 Win over · 9 Dr~
at
'
. brtghl
37 Unfired
nosed Iller
48 Mo. porta
brick
10 Week da. 28 Hurried
otong
49 Pipe Joint
38 Fix up
11 Black Hills
27 Nobel Prize 51 VotenUna
40 Close
st.
cltv
color
friend
12 Sajak's
43 Swabble
letter turner 28 Thick slice

Ocaler: Ea st
Vulnerable: Dotil
South

Wnt

Nqr1h

I•

P~ss

P•ss

Pa~a

PISI

Z•

Eat\

••
2"

All pan

Upenihg lead . + 2

Precise cards
When you watch

~~~:~~~~~~t~~

t

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.I

50

'

18 - - mode

,\ KJ7 ~

•

Southem's Jordan Hill advances .to state golf toumey, B 1

Meigs County's Hometown Newspaper

18 Randol

.,..

Snuth

wi I see them
produce
ex!Jerts
dcfenu,
you
·a lot of signals. This
deal, from the European Mixed Pair s
Championship in Ostcnd, Belgium. last
arch , hi ghlight s
orie can do. It
features the suit-prcf. crencc signal. when
an unnecessarily high
card asks for the
higher-ranking non trump suit and the
lowest card asks for
the ·· lower -ra nking

•.

•

ACROSS 44 Statlatlca
48 Elk
1 Wllarmelon 50 Artae
eouree
(2 wda.)
5 Rnhlurant 52 Warm
handouta
grtetlnga
10 Gem
53 Pick and
aurfacea ·· · choose
12 C~p brims 54 Ski-run
13 Broke the • feature
peace&gt;
55 Cluaroom
14 Certify
IIKture
15 Rustle
lodglnga ·
DOWN

PHILLIP

.

..

..'.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

..

cent. • Thu"rlay. Octobe r' · w uz ·Vol ~\ . No }'

Whafs inside

&lt;am

.

Layoffs set for local GKN plant
Staff reduction
affects130

percent of the reduction is tied to
the cancellation of two con tracts
that represent!!d one-quarter of the
company 's annual revenue," said
BY K£VtN KEuv
Hilliard .
·
News·editor
Hilliard ; citing GKN's policy of
confidentiality in dealing with its
clients, could not name the clients
GALLIPOLIS - Due to the loss cQveryd by the contracts, but did
of two contracts, GKN Sinier confirm tney were in the automoMetals' Gallipolis plant will lay off tive business, which represents 75
' about 130 employees early in 2003. percent of GKN's worldwide busiFurlou~hs for some of the plant' s ness . ·
staff wrll begin as early .as · GKN 'has owned the plant since
December, but the majority of the 1998. The plant was opened in
reduction in the planl"s employee 1967 by Federal Mogul Corp. ;md
. roster of 400 will be · seen in later by BorgWarner Automotive,
January, said Rob Hilliard, director and manufactures forged metal
of corporate communications for parts for the autom{Jtive industry.
Hilliard
stres sed . thin the
GKN at Auburn -Hills, Mich.
· Hilliard said that "more than 90 · Gallipolis plant's management and
·employees hav ~ been aware of the

.•

"'"" m~d a olyse nti n el

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

layoffs for about four months.
"We've 1\ad numerous meetings
about the loss of these two contracts," he said .'
. Notification of the layoffs,
required by law, was made to the
plant and government officials this
week. ·
.
' The loss of the contracts was not
tied to any quality issues, Hilliard
said. The business with whom G KN
had the contracts opted for another
form of technology to get its product made, he added.
_ "It's just .a case of the customer
going in a different direction ,"
Hillard said .
As a result, GKN, which operates
36 manufacturing facilities in 13
countries, is working oil attracting
new clients 10 fi'll the void left by
the loss of the contracts.

would categorize 1 finding
replacement business as our highest
priority in North America," he said.
He said finding clients that use
the powder forging process at
Gallipolis is a challenge in what he
called "uncertain economic limes,"
but GKN is pursuing it s search and
plans to meet with a potential client
near 'the end of this month .
· Under its 'labor agre"emeot with
United Aulowprkers Local 1685,
the union. represenitng .the majority
of the Gallipolis plant's employees,
the 130 losing their jobs will hav.e
first call or or refusal when business picks up and the plant looks to
rehire, said ·Hilliard.
Those employees are expected to
continue working until the contract
orders are filled, Hilliard added.
"I

one.

After East's opening
and South's overBARNEY
call, West might
NO, MA'AM~~ M'Y
CAN WE HAVE
AG'IN ?!
make a ncgativ.e douAIN'T 'YOU
CWICI&lt;EN
PILLAR'S ALMOST
bl e. promising four
heart
s (or perhaps
TO
WHA.R
I
LH&lt;:E
CK
FE.R SUPPERJ
five or six if too weak
LOWE.EZ'Y
01=
' ' !! "'-"?
"{or
a two-heart rcIT'?!
s"'j)onse). And it is surprising that We st
. didn't compete to
three clubs, which
makes comfortably
with an overtrick. But
s~e did bette'r.
West, Marianne
THE BORN LOSER
,
Serf from France, led
~O... l ONL'i Flt-1\~f\ED""l . the diamo~d twO .
'&lt;Oll ME.m, '(OU 60\
East, FrancOIS Strctz,
SC~OOL?
TEN ·PROBLEM'\
'lO PRO&amp;Lto\:,
Fifl'i PR05LEM':l 1
won with the kino
"
_
· OOt OF IOOON
·and cashed the ace.
.
. ('\'{ Mt\I~OJIZ.I
West ·carefully followed with the diamond jack, her higher
•
rcmai'nin15 caru sending iJ. su1t-preference
signal for hearts, the
higher , ranking of
he~rts and clubs. East
cashed th e cluil
·BIG NATE
queen, then led his
WELL, I'M REAbY it&gt;
singleton heart. West
. fiLM THE SECTION ON
•
won with the ace and
8ULLYIH(;r! IT'S AN
I~F'ORTANT ISSUE THAT
returned the heart
NEEP~ TO BE /'oDDRESSED!
two, the lowest card
being a suit-preference signal for clubs.
Getting the messaue,
East, after ruffing, fed
the club· nine to his
partner's jack. West
delivered a second
heart ruff: two down .
This gave East-West
200 point s, which
all those
outscored
MA'&lt;6E I
I CAN KI~K LEAVES, TOO!!
.pa1rs who made 130
COULD SU'( AN
in clubs.
AL.SUM AND
That excellent deSTART A LEAF
fense
required precise
COLLECtiON
.carding, earetul observation. interpretation of those cards,
and tntsli n partner to
make the right plays.
This .)ast point was
especially true at tri r; k
six. when East underled his club honors.,
fmTTY
- ~&lt;;

INMO, 'li&lt;AT
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MIG!IT Bo QJITIO

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E D R I E ,~::

To pay for niy classrcal tape 1
handed the clerk a check and ·
j.
J ·
waited to get an:okay. She just
~=·:::·~~·::;:·;:::~~:..,smiled and said; "You don't have
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Complete the chuckle ~uoted

_by

filling

.In the yea r ahead yu u may
sian w place· a great deal of
•

GAHFIEU) OI71E. YOUR '!'All- 5Ao.&gt;5

I WONt&gt;t:R WHY I70G-5
CHA5E 1'HfW~ 1'Aii-5

o.&gt;oU'RE A N0017(.-E·NEC.i&lt;

5TUPI17 Ht:AI7
'

emphus is on s nulll det!\il s. In '

your Lase. thili may be ex-

tremel y helpful. Man y of 1he
things overlooked in the past
~ an s ubstantiall y enrich your
life in the fufure.

"

LillRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- '

- A poor attittu.l c \viii m :~ke
C\Trvthing. you ha ve to dea l
wi th. todl.ly much more

a;t"'ri-

in rhe 'T!issing words

L-...1.-L...l.-L......l,__! you dovelop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Cancel - Exile- Poise- Mitten - SIXTEEN
After interviewing twenty teenagers fl)r an after school
job, the woman sigh.ed, "The best substitute for experience is beina SIXTEE!'JI"

5oI'llE.11\ It\ C.. \-\(;1/.J &gt;ol&lt;'..
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0 ~~~--~-!:!__

__! "---___,.

self and mak,ing your own de-

at the end of th e day. Dead-

cisivn.

beat dea ls produce deadbeat

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Complaining about '

situation.&lt;.
GEM INI(M ay 21-June 20)

what you had to go through in

·- It' s nice to go ulon£ with

may make Jhc recipient sorry
shc vr he. ever ~1sked for your

others have n greater influcncc over the d ireCtion you

make a hig rleal over rhi ngs.

lead yo u down a dead-end

order to help another today
help in the fi rst place . Don't

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Lead ing others 10 be·

licve you kn ow ~~ you' re

lh.e group. bm . toduy .. lclling

~,;./u

tin s m:wspaper.
167. Wickli ffe , OH

P.O. Bux
4409 2.
SCO RPIO !Oct. 24-Nilv .
22) -- Then: i·s a fine line be tween btl'-ine"" and fri cnd,. hip
tod;ly. &lt;Jnd it will work a~;li ns t
you i4. you step. ovc1 it. Thi s
may be o ne of tho~c 'tunes
\v ht•n you shuu!; dea l wit h
ins tc:ld .

•

·

SAG ITTi\RI US ,(Nuv. 2J.
Dec . ;J I) 1- - Seeking adv1t:e
from orl 1crs lll(lay may o nl y
y i-eld c..:u n llicti.ng opi ni on ~ that

ful nut t\) play fL~vuritcs rod&lt;.~y
\.vhC'rc yo ur friend ships arc
conn:·r ncd . You L'Ould hurt a
dc;u· friend ' s fcclinl!s and lose
1hc res pect of on l o()kc r~ . .·

ARI ES (March 21-April IY)
.. Nu1hing will he gai ned In-

take is ill ·advised. They could

street. ·
CANCER (June 21-July 22)

TALl RUS (A"p ril

20- M:o~

4: 4+0:9

Index
t • . -..../

.

Qllendar
Oassifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

; C'i 2D02

· · A4
85-7
88
A4
A6
A3,
A3

81-S
A2

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

COLUMBUS (AP ~ - A man
charged with the hit-and-run death of
a police officer a. year and a half ago
had been . a suspect for several
said
rnonths,
his
attorney
Wednesday.
·
Police had interviewed Marconi
Terrell Harris extensively, attorney
Charles Blum said. He sa1d he doesn't know what evidence police have
against his client or where they got
it.
Police wouldn't say what led them
to Harris, who was charged with
fleeing the accident that killed Lt.
Chris Claypool; a 13-year police veteran with a wife. and two children.
Claypool, 39, was s.truck early

in thi ngs.
.
LEO (July 23- Aug. 22) ..

April 29, :wo I, while walking across
an intersection to investigate a minor
traffic accident. Witnesses. didn't get
a good look at the car because it was
dark.
.
'
"This was like a giant jigsaw puz. zle. The.se guys had to put ll million
pieces togethr;:r," Deputy Chief John
Rockwell said. :
Police had repeatedly asked the
public for help solving the case,
seeking· reports of cars· that looked
like they had been · damaged.
Hundreds of tips were received on
telephone lines staffed around the
clock, and a reward fund totaling
more than $20,QOO was established.
Officers volunteered their time off

the• job to work the phone

• .......

help,flJ!Id those ·si£deputlts'
positions · for an additional
three to four weeks if
received in time.
Trussell still plans to close
the Meigs County Jail, now
used as a three-day holding
.facility, on Friday. He will
operate his dispatch desk on
a limited 16-hour schedule.
No deputies will be ·on call
during the midnight shift, or
Qn Sundays, through the end
of the year, he said.
"I hate lo see it happen,
because I'm concerned
about the welfare of the people in the county, espec1ally
the welfare of the county's
elderly citizens, who 'will go __,
without law enforcement
:protection, but I can only do
so much with what I have,"
Trussell said.
Trussell said residents of
the county's villages mus.t
rely on their police depart·•.'

,

I

•.

.·.,

•
•

t

Please see 'lhlsselL AJ ·

••
-

.f•

.

lines and
to search for suspects.
"We' got hundreds and hundreds of
tips. We ran all those tips down.
Most recently, we settled ·on Harris,"
Sgt. Ron Roberts said.
Harri s, 28, of Columbus, was
arrested Tuesday night while riding
as a passenger in a pickup 'truck. He
was charged with hit-skip and
cocaine possession and was scheduled to be arraignea Thursday in
Franklin County Municipal Court,
Prosecutor Ron O'Brien said.
Harr~s has been arrested previously on drug, assault .and , weapo.ns
charges, according to the state pnsons department and court records.

' ·Sunday, October 13 fro~2:00 - 4:00 pm
in the Hospital's ~rench 500 R99m ..

pl ea sant person to be around
toduy, but not n_cces~aril y a
generou s one. Bclllg too b1~ a

ti ghtwad wil l .rcllcct poorly

'

Although it was dark when the
crash occurred, some witnesses said
they thought the car that hit
Claypool was a metallic, dark green
color, and green paint chips were
found at the scene, said Sgt. Earl
Smith, a police spokesman.
.
Smith said Harris drives a green
· 1970 Buick Skylark.
However, Blum said the make of
Harris' car doesn't mean he 's guilty.
"The only thing that's interesting
to me is they haven't charged him
with any traffic violation except for
hit-skip," Blum said. "They haven ' t
said: 'The accident is your fault.' It
wa:s a dark road al)d apparently the
officer. was in the middle of it."

.

In Meigs County: Thursday, October 17 at 10:30 am- Meigs Senior Center

on your reputation.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt.

·

••

The Holzer Medical Center l;)iabetes Support Group will meet

Comp~nions might find _you a

own undoing.

,1

. I

.

'

goncl

22,)
day by dwelling on the ~ho rt-- Keep privileged informa com illgs of your" to mpanion~ . .
tion to yqursclf tpday, espeln fa~t . jlbt tile \._1ppusite. \':ill . . f~ ia\l y it it deal s With care~r
· occur wnh bl~hav10r uftlus Ilk ,_- m:mers. If you talk tOO much
• pulling u· d:..unpcr on everyone
or reveal mo re than ·you
cl~··s qay.
~ •·
should . it coultl lead ·tO)our

20) -- If yoU allow roolish
gambli ng to cnmrnl your rc- .

D..ly S: 8·4-2
D~lly

.

' .Sheriff Rallll\ Truslrrilil · · · ,.., ....,._, .

year and half after officer's hit-skip death

W.VA.

~ditorials

r.:a use _yo u to sec., only the .
ncg;.~tivc side of things. Get
pJs~ this ;;md t ry to sec th e

PI SCES tFcb. 20· March
'2tll ,- Bec,ccpliunally care-

,

Movies
Ol&gt;ituaries
Sports
Weather

u[ harm 10day. Fc;s up to
yu,ur s hortcomin gs. No o n e~
will think less o f you .

maker.

Lotteries

I· , ~\2 Sedlonl - II hpl

tion . Kno w w here to look for

ou t si d e r ~
"

standi ng in the winner's circle

don't, cou ld cause a ureat deal

yu u. M;1il $2.75 to Match-

,..!.,.._,!; .-------7

sources. don "t expect to be

better off thinking for your-

-- Allowi ng yoursel f to be too
influcn~.:cd by o ld memorie s,
cspct: i&amp;~ll y b~ld o nes. could

urc rom &lt;uH ic&lt;tlly p..: rfcc'l for

TilE f;HIZZW.ELLS .

fu.rthCr confuse you. You"d .be

doin g. when .in rc;di t y you

instantl y reveal s which sign!&gt;

.Y

'

cu\l. Think J~Osit i vc iu1 U it will
produce quite anoth er si lllaromance and ym(ll f ind it.
The Aslru-Graph Matchmnkcr

11Veather
.

·. Benefit ·slated..to assist efforts

low to form four simple words .

3

POMEROY Meigs
County
Sheriff Ralph
Trussell will be able to keep
six deputies on the payroll
,•
through the end of October
•
and
possibly beyond, he said
.· High: 805, Low: 60s
Wednesday.
Detlllls.AJ .
The remainder of his staff
Will be .laid off effective
Friday.
•
1\vo weeks ago, Trussell
issued layoff notices to his
::ALBANY- .1\n Al~i!QX.
entire
staff,
including
was
·deputies, office personnel
and·jail-staff, ·citing insufficient funds ill his salaries
· lit!big·pibned ·
a
line item to pay ·them
tractor'on IUs property.
beyond the pay penod end·
Athens County Sheriff
ing Friday.
Vernon Castle reported that
On Wednesday, Trussell
The Sound of Praise Quartet will perforrn·lat a benefit concert for God's NET from 6:25 to 9
William Stanley of Parkers
said some of.those deputies
p,m. Friday, Oct. :1,1 at Trinity Congr~~atio~~~. Church..
'
Road, Albaqy, was mowing
· have offered to waive paynear a c!'ll~ bed when his
m"ent for th~ir unclaimed
tGipjor got toQ close to the
compensated leave, resultb3nk ·and rolled over into
ing in additional funds in the
tile creek, on top of Stanley.
salaries line to allow for the
:A neighbor hellfd Stanley
payment of a partial staff. ·
sl)out for help and found ·
Deputies are entitled, by
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Friday, Oct. II.
and games at the center on
him beneath the tractor.
·
law,'
to receive payment for
News editor
"The entire otfering will go Main Street in Pomeroy.
' Albany Volunteer .Fire
compensated time and vacalo God's NET," said Musser, · The concert program will
Department and SEOEMS
tion leave at the time of their
"We've who noted that all expenses of be opened at 6:25 p.m., with
units assisted in rescuing . POMEROY _
layoffs, but several have
Stanley.
helped God's NET for many the con~rt Wtll be taken care gospel music by the Trinity
agreed to carry over that
,
of
by
the
church.
Church
Choir.
time into the new year.
ears,
and kl
now hth at Iher.e .s a
The goa.I of God.'s NET,
From 6:30 to 7 :30 p.m., the
1
That leaves additional·
Pan to tac e t e renovation . which operate~ as a part of the Sounds of Praise Quartet of
money · in the salaries line
of the Pomeroy Elementary Meigs CQunty Cooperative Athens, fealunng Steve Cl&amp;k
item, which can now be
School for a move of the Parish, is to provide food, fun at the piano, will present a
used to retain other deputies
youth program there ne~! and fellowship for local program of southern gospel
on
the payroll. '
OHIO
year; we wanted to do more. youngsters in a supervised rnusic. Amy Perrin will sing
Trussell said an estimated
Pif,ll3: 8·2-7
John ~usser was talking and wholesome atmosphere. from 7:30 to 8 p.m. , when
$9,000
payment, represelllPick 4: 6-2-3-1
about Tnnrt¥ Congregatro~!j,.,,, , ,Me~ .:u:~ .serY:ed, tutoring The Proclaimers, a gospel
ing
grant
reimbursement for
· su,.rtotto: 3-13-24-28-37·38
Chqrch !tnd tis plan for a befi- ts pi'Ovrdl)d, trammg on com- quartet from Parkersburg,
deputies'
overtime for June
Bonus Ball: 29
efit . tllree~bour gospel sil)g !O ,,plJter~ .i_s..given and.the young W.Va ., will share their minthrcugh September, -.y.ill also
Kicker: 5-Q-3-7-3·1
be held at the church on people
have
access
to
videos
istry
through
song.
·
.
.
Buck.-,e 5: 11-15·21-25-31
Pil:k 3 nlpt: 4-8-9
'
Pick 4 nlpt: 8·8-8·4

::Man rescued

~

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

BY. BRIAN J, .REED
Staff writer

CELEBRITY CIPHER

·-----~~=~~-:-----Thursday. Oct. 3. 2002

to remain on paytoll

•

.

.;,

Trussell: Six

=•.

..,

P"r\OWW~~ l~L':(~I~{£D~

God's NET·

•: .
MtB playoffs, 81

r· .

.

·.

Education Classes;j

October
7, ..8 and 9 from
2:00 ·5:00pm in the F.rench 500 Room
.
.
~

'

All are welcome! For more information, or to register, call (740) 44:6-.5080

ME 0 .1CAL CENTER
Discover theHolzer Differimce ·

.,.

www.holzer.org
.
~

'

'·

•

I

.

"

.

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