Today's Edition:
Tuesday, October 23, 2001

Previous Edition | Next Edition


Alison Sheward/ Staff Photographer
Margot Allison, 20 months old, plays in the leaves last evening near Scripps Hall. Margot and her parents, John Allison and Cecile Desandre-Navarre, live in Pittsburgh and visited Athens yesterday.

Parking spaces determined by 1997 rental status
by Camden Easterling / Staff Writer
Tenants wishing to park at their housing units should be aware of the legal guidelines for the number of parking spaces each rental property must provide....continued

Gate shuts on fence plans
Plans for the construction of a fence surrounding the annual Halloween block party Uptown were scrapped last night in light of a decision reached by Athens City Council....continued

American jets bombard Taliban front line
by Steven Gutkin / The Associated Press
BAGRAM, Afghanistan – U.S. jets struck Taliban front-line positions yesterday as the United States tried to pave the way for the opposition to advance on Kabul and other major cities. In an appeal for Muslim support worldwide, the Taliban accused America of waging a campaign of "genocide."....continued

Council members address plant's needs
by David Laber / Staff Writer
In the final meeting before Election Day, Nelsonville City Council members expressed concern about bid specifications for repairs at the wastewater treatment plant....continued

 

Tenants risk fines to save money
by Camden Easterling / Staff Writer
Students considering packing an extra person into their house or apartment might want to think again, because they could pay out of pocket for zoning code violations....continued

Rental spots closing fast
by Natalie Hideg / For The Post
As the end of Fall Quarter closes in, students are finding the availability of housing for the 2002-03 school year is closing also....continued

BRIEFLY

Ken Cedeno/ The Associated Press
Washington postal worker
Robert Terrell holds a packet of Cipro outside District of Columbia General Hospital in Washington yesterday. Postal workers lined up for testing as officials said yesterday that two Washington-area postal workers have been diagnosed with inhalation anthrax and two more employees at the same facility have died of symptoms consistent with this rare form of the disease.


Opinion

Editorial

Letters to the Editor

Column

Crossword Answers


Sports

NCAA looking to trim teams, Ohio mentioned
by Joe Arnold / Staff Writer
As the Mid-American Conference prepares to expand to 14 teams with the addition of Central Florida, a proposed NCAA ruling could strip as many as nine MAC teams of their Division I-A football status beginning in 2004. Ohio is one of the nine schools....continued

Ohio soccer tunes up for stretch with non-conference Wright State
by Lonnie McMillan / Staff Writer
The Ohio soccer team takes a break from its conference schedule today, playing host to the Wright State Raiders....continued

Better safe than 'Sari' for Buckeye football
by Jonathan Kane / Staff Writer
Jim Tressel said he doesn't want a quarterback controversy. The fans in Columbus don't want one either. So why does there seem to be one lingering over the Shoe?...continued

Ball State upsets penalty-stricken Toledo
There was much to celebrate in Muncie, Ind., on Saturday as Ball State defeated No. 25 Toledo....continued