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•

I

Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, ~ovember 4, 2003

Clndnnatl · oCo t1

Southern honors fall athletes
Joshua Smith, Jacob Hunter,
and Mike Lavender.
Reserve Volleyball awards
were then presented by Pete
RACINE
Athletes, Sayre, whose club had a good
coaches, parents and fans year and showed much
were treated to a gmnd buffet Improvement. Team members
and an awards ceremony in are Bethany Riftle, Kasie
the Southern High School Sellers, Selena Spencer, Jenny
gymnasium where members Warner, Erin Wise, Ashley
of various sports teams were Ashworth, Emily Babbitt,
honored Sunday afternoon at Lindsey Burrows, Amber Hill,
the fall sports banquet.
Adelle Rice, Ashlee TeafQrd,
Booster Presid~nt Larry and Bethany Vance.
Ftsher gave the mvocat10n,
Coach Roma Sayre then
then team members and guests presented awards to the varsiwere honore~ wtth a fine meal · ty volleyball team which postcourtesy ot the Southern ed a runner-up slot in the
Athlettc ~sters.
league al)d claimed a sectional
Precedmg th~ a~ards, championship with one of the
Southern Athletic Dtrector best records in recent years.
Ryan Lemley gave a welcom- Senior Katie Sayre was honmg address and made the pre- ored
as
Co-Tri- Valley
s~ntatton of coaches. Tracy Conference Player of the
Ptckett, cheerleadmg adv1sor, Year/MVP, while also earning
was first to make presenta- first team honors along with
t1ons to her cheerleadmg senior
Deana
Pullins.
squad:
Kristiina Williams was second
Semor cheerleaders honored team All-TV C. Alon~ with
were. Stephan1e Bradford! Sayre and Pullins, Em1ly Hill
Cass1e
Cleland,
Brandt ·received a semor award.
Dmley. and Sarah Hawley.
Sayre was also selected to
Other squad members. are play in the All-Ohio game on
Ashton. Brown,
Ntcole November 15, while garnerMcDamel, Chelsa Smtth, ing All-District honors as
Amber Holsmger, Stephame well. She also collected team
Hoskms, and Aihe Rees. honors as Best Server, Most
SJ?ecml Cheerleadmg awards_ Kills (2 15), and Most Blocks.
w•ll. be presenter;! at the con- Other awards went to Ash lee
clus1on ofbasketball season.
Hill, Serving Award; Kristiina
M1ck Wmebrenner then pre- Williams and Emily Hill,
s~nted awards to members of Coach's Awards ; Brooke
hts golf t~am. Brad Crouch Kiser,
Best
Setting
earned ftrst team All-Tn- Percentage; Deana Pullins,
Valley Conference honors, Passing Award and Most
wh1le Crmg Ran~olph, Matt Assists.
Thaxton, and Patnck Johnson
Other team members hunearned second team honors. ored were Jordan Neigler,
Other squad members were Nikki Riffle, Ashley Roush,
BY ScoTT WoLFE

Sports Correspondent

and Emily Hill.
Next Daniel Otto and Chad
Zimmerman, assistant coaches who filled in for an ailing
Dave Barr this season, presented the football awards.
Senior team members honored were Tim Cogar, Andrew
Philson, Tommy Sheppard,
Josh Smith, and Matt Thomas.
Other team members are
Dustin Keyes, Jon McDaniel,
Kyle McKeever, Jake Nease,
Philip Pierce, Ryan Smith,
Derek Teaford, Chris Tucker.
John Fisher, Josh Pape, Chris
Cogar, Randy Collins, Weston
Counts, Ryan Donaldson,
Tommy Dowell, J.R. Hupp,
Jordan Pierce, Daren teaford.
Michael Yost, and Eric Zeiner.
Special Football honors
went to Matt Thomas and
Philip Pierce for earning first
team
All-Tri-Valley
Conference. Team honors
went to Ryan Donaldson,
Special Teams Award; Josh
Pape, Defensive Award;
Tommy Sheppard, Coach's
Awand; Phil Pierce, Offensive
Award; and Ryan Smith,
Scout Team Award.
All academic honors went
to the following athletes who
lettered in their sport and
maintained an accumulative
3.5 Grade Point Average:
Cheerleaders
Stephanie
Bradford, Sarah Hawley, and
Ashton Brown; Brad Crouch, ·
Golf; volleyball players Emily
Hill, Deana Pullins, Katie
Sayre, Jordan Neigler, Ashley
Roush,
and
Kristiina .
Williams; and Chris Tucker,
football. Larry Fisher closed
the banquet with a prayer of
benedictiOn.

Blallut~ l

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:.• , \

Pictured above are those special award winners from the Southern Sports banquet. In front
from left are Ashton Brown, Tommy Sheppard, Josh Pape, Ryan Donaldson, Brad Crouch,
Brooke Kiser and Chris Tucker. In second row are sarah Hawley, Stephanie Bradford, Emily
Hill, Katie Sayre. Deana Pullins, Kristiina Will iams, A~hley Roush and Jordan Neigler. In back
are Matt Thomas, Phil Pierce, Craig Randolph and Ryan Smith.

\

1' .

\ ,.\

f

SPORTS
• Krenzel, McMullen to
share time for OSU. See
Page 81

By DAVID RUNK

DETROIT (AP) - Eastern
~ichigan football coach Jeff
Woodruff was fired on
Monday, two days after the
Eagles dropped to 1-8 with a
38-1 0 loss to Central
Michigan.
Woodruff, who compiled a
9-34 record in four seasons at
the Ypsilanti school, will be
replaced on an interim basis
by running backs coach AI
Lavan.
"Jeff Woodruff has helped
develop our program ·with
quality young men, but the
team is not on the competitive
level that we felt we should be

after four years," athletic
director Dave Diles said.
Eastern has produced NFL
players
like . Pittsburgh
Steelers quarterback Charlie
Batch and Arizona offensive
tackle L.J. Shelton, a firstround pick in 1999, but has
failed to successfully maintain
a good team. One of the reasons is that top rect:~~its often
sign with local powers
Michigan and Michigan State.
Under Woodruff, the Eagles
were 3-8 in 2000, 2-9 in 200 I
and 3-9 in 2002.
Despite the team's 2003
record, Woodruff said his
players were making strides
this season.
"We all expected more wins

catches for 75 yards. "In the
previous 'games, we weren' t
running the ball well, and the
passing game is what carried
from Page 81
us on. In this game, both were
out of sync. It was just one of
In the last four games, those days."
Kitna got beyond his penDuring their 12-year run as
chant for forcing passes the NFL's worst team, the
only one interception over Bengals almost always have a
that span. He threw three on game like that when someSunday - one was negated thing 's at stake, Following
by a penalty - · and had at their 0-3 start this season,
least two other passes that they got themselves in posidefensive h1cks dropped.
tion to have a .500 record at
With running back Corey the season's midpoint by
Dillon again limited by a beating Arizona (3-5).
strained groin, Cincinnati ran
"It was a must-win," offenfor only 47 yards, allowing sive *uard Eric Steinbach
the Cardinals to gang up on said. That was our attitude
~itna .
going into the game."
"It didn't go well," said
Whenever they have that
Chad Johnson, who had four attitude, bad things happen.

Bengals

Green
from Page 81
blood alcohol level of .165 - more than twice
()hio's !~gal limit of .08, police said.
Police said they found a a bag of marijuana
weighing 3.2 grams in Green's SUV, which he
was drivmg wtth a tlat tire.
Green has pleaded innocent to the charges.
His lawyer, Brian P. Downey, said Green ha~ a
pretrial hearing set for Dec. 3.
Green's arrest came during Cleveland's bye
week, one day after the second-year player
missed the Browns' 9-3 loss at New England
with a separated shoulder.
Green was not available to reponers before
or after practice. Davis said Green, who ~as
on the practice field, was healthy enough that
he would have played this Sunday.
Davis said he suspended Green for being a
distraction to the team and detrimental conduct.
")made no judgment on guilt or innocence,"
Davis said. "It's not my job."
Davis also expressed frustration at not being
able to more closely monitor players who may
nc!ed counseling for substance abuse. The
l'iiFLPA's collective bargaining agreement provides privacy to players on those matters.
."Because of confidentiality, a lot of people
are out of the loop," Davis said. "As proacttve
as you'd like to be a~ a coach, you are pretty
much cut out of the entire procedure.
. "I know what a lot of the people in the NFL
stru!lgle with. is that yol!'re not privy to any of
the mfonnauon. .You never see any of the
results of any of the substance abuse tests.

J.

than losses thi s year,"
Woodruff told The Associated
Press. "Sometimes you just
don't get your last shot, your
last time to get up to bat. But
these kids are going to win."
Woodruff said the players
were improving on and off the
field, reducing turnovers and
boosting grades.
"We've got really good
kids," he said.
Woodruff became the latest
Division 1-A coach fired this
season. Others dismissed were
Carl Franks at Duke, Todd
Berry at Army and John
Mackovic at Arizona.
Diles credited Woodruff for
providing a foundation for
future success, but said it did-

t' 1

\\11

BY BRIAN

REED

breed@ mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY
Mayor · Sandy
lannarelli
of
Middleport was reelected over a write-in
candidate Tuesday,
while the villages of
Pomeroy, Rutlm1d ;md
Syracuse elected new
. mayors.
. According to unofticial results posted
by the Meigs County
Board of Elections,
43.7 percent of regislannarelll
tered voters in Meigs
County visited their Polling places yesterday to elect village and township
officmls and to decide a number of levy
April Ellis Burke defeated Mayor
·Dick Fetty in Rutland, 76 votes to 64.
John F. Musser was elected Mayor of
Pomeroy in an uncontested race, with
307 votes, and Edward M. Wood, also
unopposed, was elected Syracuse
Mayor with 207 votes.
lannareUi, elected four :years ago a~ a
write-in herself. eastly defeated
Councilman Bob Pooler, a write-in candidate, receiving 361 votes to Pooler's 52.

Pictured are the Southern seniors honored. In front from left are Brandi Dailey: Cassie Cleland,
Sarah Hawley, Stephanie Bradford, Emily Hill , Katie Sayre and Deana Pullms. In back are
Andrew Philson. Tim Cogar. Matt Thomas. Josh Smith, and Tommy Sheppard.

n't appear that progress was
being made.
"There is always a point in
the rebuilding of a football
program that you believe
things are moving in a positive
direction competitively, and I
just don't have a strong feeling that we are improving,"
Diles said.
Lavan will coach the tina!
three games in the Eagles'
2003 season while a national
search for Woodruff's permanent replacement takes place,
Diles said.

"In naming coach Lavan as
the interim head coach, we
have a veteran football coach
from both the profess ional and
college ranks," Diles said.
"And I am contident that he
wi II do a great job of keeping
this team together."
Lavan, 57, is in his second
season at Eastern. Before
coming to Eastern, he was an
assistant coach with the
Baltimore Ravens and Kansas
City Chiefs.
The · Pierce. Flu.. native ·
graduated from Colorado

State and played two seasons
with the Philadelphi~ Eagles
and one with the Atlanta
Falcons before a neck injury
forced his retirement from the
NFL. Lavan has been an assistant coach at the college and
pro football levels since 1972.

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
•Larry Sellers, 59
•Elizabeth Veselica, 83
•John Jeffers, 73

WEATHER
Showers, HI: 60o, Low: 40s

1

' 1 ' 11

\\

• ' \ l\11•1l o•

.• ,.,,

11

1

Village races
In Middleport, Council incumbents
Stephen Houchins and Roben E.
Robinson were re-elected, receiving 267
and 251 votes, respectively. John Tillis

Southern
local
teachers'
contract
approved

and Chester Casto, write-in candidates.
received 60 and 8 votes, respectively.
Tom Anderson, a member of the Board
of Public Affairs in Middleport, received
12 votes a write-in
candidate for re-election. No other candidates filed for the
board, with two members to be elected.
Kathy Hysell was
re-elected Clerk of
the
Vi II age
of
Pomeroy, receiving
289 votes.
Council Member
Ruth Spaun and '---M-usser
Mayor and former
Councilman Victor C.
Young Ill were elected to the Pomeroy
Council over write-in Kenny Klein,
with Spaun taking 249 votes, Young
230 and Klein 12. Young wa~ appointed Mayor upon the death earhe• this
year of John Blaettnar, and Spaun was
appointed his replacement. Young was
also elected yesterday to a seat on the
Meigs Local Board of Education.
In Racine, David H. Spencer was reelected clerk/treasurer with 162 votes.
Gary Michael Freeman was elected to
· Racme Village Council , where two
positions were open. He received 166
vote s. Douglas Johnson, Jr. and
Douglas C. Rees were elected to the
Racine Board of Public Affairs, with
130 and 179 votes, respectively.
With two positions open on Rutland
Village Council, only Aloysuis Grueser
was elected, with I 00 votes. No candi-

date tiled for the clerk's post in Rutland.
Sharon S. Cotterill was re-elected
clerk/treasurer in Syracuse, with 260
votes. No candidates filed for the two
council posts or the two 'eats on the
Syracuse Board of Puhli c Affair, .

Result~ of township trustee and clerk
mces, where number elected are shown in
parenthese.,, were posted as follow':
BEDFORD tru&gt;tee (I'J. John W DE:AN.
214, Rodney Quivey. 92: BEDFORD
clerk, Barbara J. Grueser. 22~ :
CHESTE;:R trustee (I 1. Elmer C
NEWELL. 397, Gary R. Dill. 349. Terry
Congo, 64: CHESTER clerk. Janet R.
LIFE. 497, Stephen K. Carson. 252.
COLUMBfA .trustee (I). Marco
Jeffers, 210; COLUMB IA clerk. Marv
Brady Wingo. 178; LEBANON
trustee. full term ( I). Charle&gt; A.
WEDDLE, 145. Garry Smith. 120;
LEBANON trustee . unexpired term
(I) , Donald R. DAILEY. 112. Gary D.
Evans, 85, Charles R. Lawrence. 72:
LEBANON clerk. Dorothy A.
Roseberry, 230: LETART trustee (I) ,
Christopher T. Wolfe. 135: LETART
trustee. Joyce White, 114.
OLIVE tru stee ( I). Randall M.
BOSTON , 257 , Brian Keith Bailey. 163;
OLIVE clerk, Martha Durst , 321:
ORANGE trustee ( I), Wilbur E.
Robinson. 15.1. James Alan Watson.
129. Lewis F White. 48: ORANGE
clerk, Osie M. Follrod. 247: RUTLAND

POMEROY - The eighth
time wa' a charm for the
Carleton School and Meigs
lndu ,tries ' levy. which was
approved by Meigs County voters by a 56-percent margin on
Tuesdav.
\\JtiD al.'oll approved renewal of
the Meigs Coumy Council oo
Aging's one-mill levy, arv:l renewal of an upcrdting levy for the
tinancially-stmpped Southern
Local School Distri~'!.
The five-year, twO-mill levy pmpo&gt;ed by the Boord of Mental
Retandation arv:l !Xvelopmemal
Disabiliues received 3.ni vae-; in
tavor. arv:i Ym again~ Passage
of the le'y will ensure mntinued
oper.tllon of the pre-,chool am
school-age ·progr.liTls at the
Carleton School. a00 will allow for
COINn.JCllon of ncw IXilitie. in the
' Mei[!' lndu.&lt;;trie, a:lult work.&lt;Jql

Please see Mayors, AS

Please see levies. AS

ELECTION DAY DINNER

BY J. MtLES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysenllnel.com

For the first time since the
season
opener,
Lewis
watched his team bumble
around and try way too hard
to look good. .
"We tried to invent some
stuff," he said. "In our zest to
do things and to make plays,
we got mto a game yesterday
where we trted to do too
much. We got away from
what we're supposed to do.
"It got to where you invent
things, you see ghosts, and
that gets to be a problem. It
hun us on special teams, it
hurt us on offense, and it hurt
us on defense particularly."
Until they get over it,
they 'II keep seemg ghosts of
the last 12 years.
"It 's one we'd better learn
from," Lewis said.

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 8-3-1
Pick 4 day: 4-7-5-1
Pick 3 night: 8-8-5
Pick 4 night: 3·5·5· 7
Buckeye 5: 8-12-16·17-32

West Vll'ginia
Dally 3: 3-7-3
Dally 4: 8-7-7·0
Cash 25: 2-7-8-13;21 -23

INDEX

They do random tests on players on this team
every week, and we're the last people to get
the information."
Davis said that before dismissing his players
for four days at the end of their bye week that
he warned them about acting responsible durinf. their time away.
'Unfortunately, that speech didn't get delivered until Tuesday," he said. "We've talked
about accountability and responsibility for a
long, long time."
Green's suspension will put even more pressure on the Browns' struggling offense, which
has been ravaged by injuries and plagued by
inconsistency.
Davis said quarterback Kelly Holcomb will
start for the first time since Sept. 21. Wide
receiver Kevin Johnson is being benched for
Andre' Davis.
Holcomb missed five starts with a broken
right leg, but relieved Tim Couch in the last
two.
James Jackson is expected to start for Green,
with Jamel White his backup. The Browns also
are likely to activate rookie Lee Suggs, who
has been on the physically unable to perform
list after shoulder surgery.
Davis' punishment of Green, the Browns'
·first-round dtaft pick in 2002, is consistent
with the disciplinary action he took against
other players who have been arresled. ·
In 2001, defensive ' tackle Gerard Warren,
fullback Mike Sellers and cornerback Lamar
Chapman, received one-game suspensions followmg their arrests in separate cases.
If convicted of DUI, Green could be put on
probatiol) or face up to a $1,000 tine and six
months in jail. The marijuana charge is a misdemeanor and carries a $IOO fine.

2 SECilONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
M
As
As

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports

B1-2, 6

Weather

•

A2

© 0003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

·- ---!L.

.,

RACINE
After
months of negotiating, the
Southern Local School
Board approved a coinract
between the administration
and the teacher's union
Tuesday.
''I'm pleased with the
contract," said Ann Sisson,
the union representative for
Southern
Local
the
Education Association. "I
think it is the best we could
get considering the financial problems the district
has."
The two-year contract
calls for a two percent raise
retroactive to August and
another two percent raise
in the next school year.
This is the first negotiated
raise since 1992. This combined four percent raise
will cost the district nothing and save money in the
·•
future.
Teachers will now pay
more in health insurance
premiums which will
lower the district's cost of
providing health insurance
and pay for the raise.
"This is a w'in--win situation for both us," said .
Southern
Local
·Superintendent
Bob
Grueser. · "This will helP, ·
the district to save money. '
Pluse see Approved. AS

J. REED
breed@mydailysentinel.com

BY BRIAN

Power
outage
creates havoc
for rainy,
•
mormng
commute
BY CARRIE ANN WooD

cwood@ mydailytribune.com

Details on Page A2

LO'ITERIES

,

Pomeroy, Rutland, Syracuse elect new mayors Meigs
J.
voters
a'
generous
Township elections
on .levies

ISSUeS.

Eastern Mic·higan fires football coach Jeff Woodruff
Associated Press

\,

Election Day is not only a day to
cast ballots. but a day for a good
home-cooked meal. While the
Election Day Dinner nas begun to
fade away as a tradition 1n many
local communities. still others continue to serve soup, sandwiches.
and delicious homemade desserts
to those visrting the POlls. At the
Forest Run United Methodist
Church, the Election Day tradrtion
is still going strong, with voters lining up for lunch or dinner in the
church fellowship rooms. Not only
does the Forest Run dinner attract
voters from the POlling place at the
church, but folks from "in town,"
too. Jonetta Davis is pictured hel~
ing Marie ~ea and Kay Hill choose
from the many pies. cakes and
other desserts offered, while three
ninety-plus friends, Mary K. Roush:
91, Helen Maag, 92, and Kathleen
ScOtt, 98, enjoy a visrt together.
Roush and Scott are long-time
Forest Run church members, and
. Scott continues to serve there as
pianist. Meanwhile. Maag attends
church at the neartJy Minersville
Unrted Methodist Church. (Brtan J.
'Reed)

GALLIPOLIS
Commuters on both sides of
the Ohio River found getting
.to work a challenge.
Keith Wilson. dispatcher at
Gallia County's 911 Center. said a
call came in about 5:45 am.,
reporting a transformer had blown
at the Silver Memorial Bridge.
The Gallipolis Volunteer
Fire Department was dispatched to the scene. When the
transfom1er exploded. lines fell
across Ohio 7 and U.S. 35.
completely closing the roads.
The Silver Memorial Bridge
was reopened at 9 a.m. acconding
to Wilson. Traltic wa' backed up
along U.S. 35from the approoch
for the bridge 10.. a.bout a mile.
At presstime. officials
hoped to have Ohio 7
reopened by noon.
Another problem faced by
commuters was .1 car cmsh on
the Meig,_IGallia counties' line
just outside of Cheshire.
Vehicles were backed up in both
directions of Ohio 7, reachin,g
almost to Middleport ana
through Cheshire past the power
plantS.
The increasingly frequent
power outages plaguing the
area was a topic brought up·
by
Gallipolis
Citv
Commissioner
Carroll
Snowden during the commissions
regular
meeting
Tuesday night . The commissioner exp~essed .concern
about the impact on businesses and power outages.

�I
The Daily Sentinel

Garden Club sets Christmas flower-show t_
heme

Thursday, Nov. 6
AccuWeather .com torecast tor dayttme cond1tLons

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
lowlhiah temoeratures

hoeftich@ mydailysentinel.com

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POMEROY "Sights
and Sounds of the Holidays"
is the theme of the Meigs
County
Garden
Cl ub
As soc iation 's
annual
Christmas flower show to be
staged Nov. 22 and 23 at the
Senior Citizens Center.
Peggy Crane of the
Winding Trail Garden Club is
chainnan of the show which
wi II feature artistic designs in
15 classes along with numerous horticulture and edue&lt;ltional classes. All classes are
open to Bend area residents
and members of garden clubs.
The artistic designs are
"The Chri sth1as Lights in

miniature arrangement not
over five inches:' "Decorate
the Tree," a creative mass;
"Nativity ai the Church,"
using the Holy Family;
''Christmas Carolers," S)lnergistic special class; Christmas
Bells," an interpretive design;
and "Picture on a Chri stmas
Card," a still life.
There are also two invitational classes. one open to,
anyone and the other to men
and boys only. The open-toanyone class is for table
exhibition called "The Table
is Ready" while the one for
males only is "Snow in the
woods," an arrangement
including treasured wood.
There are al so three classes
for junior exhibitors up to 18.
"Christmas
They
are
Shopping," an interpretive

J. REED _
breed@ mydarlysenllnel.com

Occasional showers
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today... Occas ional sho wers
with
chance of thunderstorms. Highs in the upper
60s. Chance of showers ncar
I00 pcrwnt.
Toni ~ ht...ClouJ v with a 50
.
percent chance of showers.
Lows in the upper .:lOs..
Thur"lay... Most ly cloudy A

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport merchants plan a holiday giveaway program including $5,000 in gifts and merchandise, an open house, Chri stm as
parade and ·Frantic Santa Shoppi ng
Spree for the Christmas season.
The
Middleport
Commt1nity
Association wi ll coordinate the drawing, with prizes including television
set, hand-held video ga me, a Palm
Pilot, and bicycles.
The merchants will again use "The
Christmas Vi llage" as their holiday
theme, and the prizes will be purchased
using proceeds from a Basket Bear

Friday.. . Part ly
cloudy.
Highs around 50. ·
Friday night...Mostly clear.
Lows around 30.
Saturday ... Most ly clear.
High around 47.
Saturday
ni ght. .. Mostly
dear. Lows around 30.
cloudy.
Sunday ... Partly
High around 54.
Sunday
night...Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows
arounu40.
Monday ... Mostly cloud y
with a 30 percent chance of
sl10wers. High arou nd 56.

chance of showers then a ~ light

chance of shmve rs in the afternoon . Hi g h~ Ill the mid 50s.
Chanc·e of showers .:10 percent. ·
ll1urs&lt;.kry ni~ht. .. Mostly cloudy
in th~ evenifl\' then becominu
~

pwtly doucly Low &lt;ll\&gt;und37.

~

A DAY ON WALL STREET
-

------·

Nov. 4. 2003

r::twJones

:ird Etrials

10,000

A

'

-..~.r·.f'•

q

,r-V

.- - - ·

9.838.83

AUG

-0.20 '

Nov. 4,2003

Nasdaq
o:rrp::Bi te
-9.74
1.957.96
Pel. cha nge

-0.50

from previous:

Nov

4,

SEP

High

Pet. cha nge
!rom previous!

9,500

.

·19.63

9.874.63

9,000

OCT

Low

Record high: 11 ,722 .98

Jan. 14, 2000

'

SEP

High

1

OCT

Low

1,800

1,600

NOV

March 10,2000

2003

S'tarrlm:l &amp;
B:Dr's 500
·5.77

1,100

...

AUG
High

-0.54

from previous :

.

~

1.050

~·~ .

1,053.25
Pet. change

1,400

Record high: 5,048.62

,971.38 1,953.64

1,059.02

SEP

QCT

Low

1,000

950

NOV

Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

1.051.70

AP

Local Stocks
ACI -24.91
AEP -28.08
Akzo - 31 .26
Ashland Inc. - 36 97
AT&amp;T - 16.80
Bank One - 43.34
BLI - 14.41
Bob Evans - 30.50
BorgWarner -

80.98

Champion - 4.32

Charminy Shops - 6.57
City Holclng- 34.87
Cot - 27 66
DG - 22.49
DuPoni - 38.93

Federal Mogul USB - 26.82

STAFF REPORT
signin g the Health Insurance tions to patients will cont in- over how their personal
POTNT PLEASANT. W. Va. Portability
and ue to appl y. The new law health information is used.
- In their continued efforts to Accountability Act of 1996 regulates how most health
For more information
focus on patient ptivacy issues, (HIPAA) into law.
providers - including health abou t
Pleasant
Valley
Pleas:mt Valley Hospital lmd the
HIPAA provides a national plans , pharmacie s, clini cs Hospital's privacy practices.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp; minimum standard of privaand hospitals - use and p~ase visit our website at
Rehabilitation
Center
cy protections fo r hea lth release their patients' person- www.pva lley.org or call
(PVN RC) wi ll implement a
new release of infonnation safe- patients; any state laws that al health informati on. It also Paula Brooker at (304) 675provide addi tio nal protec- gives patients more control 4340, Ext. 1161 .
guard beginning next week
The system will require
patients who are registered
as inpatient , outp ati ent,
Same Day Surgery or at the
PVNRC to designate a
"password " with the fac ility
whereby friend s and family
can access the health inforAGRICULTURE
MEDICAL
mation of their loved one.
"It will be the sole responsiJim's Farm Equipment
bility of the patient to disclose
Holzer Medical Center
www.jimsfarmequipment.com
their selected password,"
www.holzer.org
explained Paula Brooker, the
hospital's privacy ofticer and
AUTOMOTIVE
director of health infonnation
services. "It is a primary focus
Pleasant Valley Hospital
of Pleasant Valley Hospital and
Norris Northup Dodge
www.pvalley.org
our associates to establish an
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
environment that' is commiued
to the privacy-of our patients."
NEWSPAPERS
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis ·
Such safeguards began
being implemented when
www.turnpikeflm.com
th e U.S . Department of
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Health and Human Services
began _ overseeing new
www.mydailytribune.com
CHURCHES
national privacy standards
for health providers. Until
Lighthouse Assembly of God · Gallipolis
The' Daily Sentinel
then, patient pri vacy protections varied from state to
www.LighthouseAssembly.info
www.mydailysentinel.com
state, and th e shift from
I)aper to electronic docuInent s increased the possiPoint Pleasant Register
bility that sensitive personal
www.mydailyregister.com
health information could be
misused. Congress responded to these concerns by

Aocl&lt;well - 31 .45
Aoci&lt;y Boots - 16.92
Gannen- 83.70
AD Shell - 44.50
General Electric - 28.66
SBC-23.86
GKNLY -4.80
Sears- 52.75
Harley Davidson - 48.33 Wal·Mart :_ 58.66
Kroger- 17.26
Wendy's- 31.48
Ucl.- 17.51
Worthington - 14.05
NSC -20.60
Oak Hill F1nancial- 30.25 Dai~ stocl&lt; reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
OVB - 24.75
the previous day's transacBBT - 39.24
Peoples - 28.49
11ons, provided by Sm~h
Pepsico - 47.75
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Prem"" - 8.81
Gallrnlis
=:e
~ -~---.30

Reader Services
Correction Policy

Published

every

Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper

Our main number is

I

Associa tion .

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Postmaster: Send address correc-

Department extension s are;

Hans to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Coort Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

News

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Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton . Ext. 13

By carrier or motor route
One month ... . , ... . . , ,19.95

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.

Sunday, Nov. 9
POMEROY
- Heritage
'Day/homecoming will be held
at
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church with war·
ship service to be held at
9:30 a .m. followed by special
program including songs by
Amy Perrin. Carry-in dinner
at 11:30. The public is invited .

Other events
Wednesday, Nov. 5
SYRACUSE Revival
services at Syracuse Mission
Church, Bridgeman St. ,
Monday through Wednesday.
Evangelist
Major Willie
CundiH of Atlanta. Ga. from
Sa lvation Army. Special
music by Higher Call ing on
Monday, Earthen Vessels on
Tuesday, and Rev. Don and
Sherri Swick on Wednesday.

.Birthdays
Saturday, Nov. 22
TUPPERS PLAINS
Fredrick Goebel of Tuppers
Plains will celebrate his 99th
birthday on Nov. 22. Cards
may be sent to him at P. 0 .
Box 256, Tuppers Plains·
45753 .

on the road for se nior citize ns.
That is why the AARP 55
Alive Safety Program is
being offered on Thursday.
Nov. 13 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at the Meigs Senior Center.
The eight hour classroom
refresher course is designeJ
especially for dr ivers 50 and
over.
The course will help
answer some common questions like:
• Why do drivers aged 55
and over have more accidents
per mile than drivers age 30
to 54?
• How to deal with aggressive drivers?
• How ca n you best
respond to adverse driving
conditions, such as rain. ice
and dark of night '1
• What are the safety rules
for making a left turn. when
are you expected to yield the
right of. way'!
• How medication s may
affect driving?
The fee for the class is $10.
Certificates will be awarded
upon completion of th e
course. To enroll contact

Alice Wamsley. 55 Alive
Volunteer In structor at 992 J93ll.

Veterans to be
honored
RACINE - In observance
of Rememhrance Sunday,
the Dorcas Bethany United
Methodist Church will honor
veterans at a special Sunday
mormng serv tce.
There will be readi ngs
from an army nurse, a pilot.
and a civilian. The pastor will
share Joshua's story a no there
will be special mu&lt;ic by a
new ly formed choir.
Pictu res of veterans who
have been or are a part of the
churc h wi ll be on display as
we ll as pictures of earl y
members and fam ily of the
churc h.
Members of the congregation will light cand les in
memory or honor of loved
ones or friends. ·The service
wi ll begin at 9 a.m. and the
publ ic is invited to attend. ·

Wednesday, November 5, 2003

Victim of schoolyard teasing
has friend who wants help
DEAR ABBY: I ~m a 12ye.ar-old girl. My frienu at
"hool, " Mind y," is heing
made fun of by her 'a-called
"friends." They tease and
tease and tell Mindy they· re
"j ust kidding." but I can' t
help thinking th ey really
ARE making fun of her.
Please tell me how to 't ick
up for my friend . - CON CERNED IN MARYLAND
DEAR CONCERNED:
You are a supportive fri er.l.
Since it \ happening at
school, report it to th e principal - because what those
students are doing co uld be
interpretetl as hara"ment.
Kids can be cruel. but it
does not ha ve to be tolerated .
Your friend - and you should be able to get an education in a safe en\'ironment.
DEAR ABBY: Three years
ago, a friend of mine gave
me your "Keepers" booklet. I
enjoyed it very much. One of
my favorite pieces was the
poem about guest towe ls.
(My mother always put out
lo ve ly guest tow els. but few
people ever used them. 1
_I would like to order a copy
ot "Keepers" for a friend
who is going throu gh a diiTicult time. I know the holi days will be depressing lor
her. I think it would inspire
her and perhaps give her a
lift. The ordering information
I have is: ''Send a se lfadd ressed envelope. plus a

Ju\1 han~lll~ here
Get.., 'er' t1nnl!
Dt:.AR ABBY:' Ml ICCil ·
age
. daughter ha' ad;"" e" irllnend v. ho 1at I~ 1 ,t,Jrted
hJ\ing . , t',. \\ith a 17 -\l'ilrold "famll: lnentl ... I ha.ppen
to kno~&lt; that thl' ~trl', m"th
l..:'f "'a' J tc~C il'-ii!C mum. and
her goal ha' ai'V. '" s been tu
pre1ent her tlau~-hter from

Dear

Abby

.

repcJt tny th~ \0.1111~ mi-..t;.J~ I. :' .

check or nH&gt;I1C) order for )5
I U.S. fund" f(&gt;r ead1 c·op:
to: Dear Abby - Keepe r,.
P.O. Box -147. Mount \lorn,.
IL 61054 -0.:1~7 !Po,tage is
incluued.)" Are the hnoklets
'ti ll S5 and is the addre" 'till
correct'! - JE NN IE A.. IN
LONGVIEW. TEX AS
DEAR JEN:-.I IE : Ye, . that 's
' till correct orclerin~ information. I'm plca,eJ :ou
enjoyed the p"em ahout

~1:

daughter matle me

promi ... c not tu "rat" on her

Iriend to her mother. hut I
thin~ lh,· ~irl', mom 'houltl
kno~&lt; that her Jauehter i'
t.!ngag ing Ill \exual ;elatiun..,
-- a.., v.ell a .. the fact thJt
the~ ' rt: 00! U~ ing rroti..:'L't li Hl.
Ho11 e1 er. I do not v. ant ti&gt;
~tr.J\

Ill\

J,nll!hter ·, tru ... t

Shnuit.l I rnmU r;l\ ()\\ n hu . . rness. -\hb1 '! - · A\0'-:Y gue~t towel .... From time to VIOL S MOM 1\ \EVADA
DEAR
A\0\YMOL S
time. readers ha1·e "'ked me
MOM
:
Ab,olutel'
not. .-\
for copie' w··displa) in their
\·oun!!
powder room, _Read nn :
~
.. v.urno.u) ·.., future h~Hll''
e
111
th~
haluncc . ThJt moth~r
A
GUEST
TOWEL
nceJ, to kmm her dJu~hter
SPEAKS
is
scxualh al'II\C . \\ ot~ldn · t
by Mabel CraJdo·· ~
YOl "arit to knm, '!
Pl ea....e u..,e rne . ~ u c ... t :
f), •or Ahh1· 11 "nrr, 11 h,
Don ' t he,itate ~
Ahir,:uil \ ~1 ;1 Hutl' fl . u/ \1 1
Don ' t turn your hack
/.:.mH\'11 il\ J etllll1t ' PlulllfJ\ .
Or vaci llatc .
and 11 '(/ .~ founded In lu' r
Don' t drv vou r hunJ,
on petticoat .
nwrho: Pwdfllt' i'lullrt'' ·
On handkerchief.
Wrilt'
Dt'ur
Ahh '
111
Or redingote .
H'H'\\ '. lJ rarAhb\'.com or PU.
I'm here to u,e ;
Bo.\ fJ9.J.JO, Lo.l A11~eln . CA
I'm made for Llrying.
90()69.

acred Heart
Church Bazaar ·
Pomeroy. 011

PROUD TO BE APART

OF YOUR LIFE.

The Daily Seminel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydllilysentinel.com .

Thursday, November 6th, 2003
~

Dinners start at 4:30pm
So.OO adult,-S3.110 ch&gt;ldren umkr I:

p~

~'t' ltqfl

i\1nw .· crt•amcd bttkt'd clricken 11r J111m lt1111,!
Home madt• nnodlt·s:-ma slli·d por.:11oes
.i!reen heMr5 1 colr sltJw, mil.( &amp; dcssj~rr

9{.jp.,

'•I r•: •• $soo.oo
2..1 r,: .. $zoo.oo
S..t . 41£ .514

p,: •••

8:36 a.m. Friday

Roma Sayre
has been
employed at
Home National
Bank for 22 years.
She has made ·
several advances
since starting as a
teller to her new
position as
Vice President.
Congratulations
Roma!

,.

Wtlen cold weather hits, these energy-saving tips from
AEP can help you stay warm an d save money.
• Reduc e the setting on your thermostat to

66•-12• F

• Open drapes during sunny daylight hours, and close
them at night to contain heat.
• Use energy-efficient heating systems and check them
reg ularly for safe operation .

Roma Sayre, Vice President

• Install adequate insu lation and use caulking or weather
stripping to seal air leaks around doors and windows .
When it comes to bringing you affordable winter
warmth '
.

'

AEP is there, always working fllr you.

'

Su~ribe t~ay:
MeigS • 992·2156

..

\'MW.mYdailysentinel.com

d'ymca~

Rates Outolde Meigs County
13Weeks .............'50.05
26 Weeks . .
. .. ' 1.00.10
52 Weeks ... ... ...... '200.20

Web:
www.mydailysentlnel.com

Homecoming

Arland King is the paslor.

Then.• •
and
Now. • •

for only a $1 a day.

Inside Meigs County
13Weeks .... .
..'30. 15
26 Weeks ..............'60.00
52 Weeks ,............'118.80

Charlene Hoeflich. Exl. 12

POMEROY - Crowded
. roads, aggressive drivers, and
· even eyesight that is not what
' it used to be can spell troub le

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

Theoailr
Sentine

One year ............. '96.70

Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Class./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Driver safety
program offered

Take your business into the homes of over
40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs
Counties EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web address in our

!

2156.

POMEROY - A Native
American culture celebration
will take place at the Meigs
Midd le School from 6 to 7
p.m. Thursday.
Student projects will be
displayed in the gymnasium.
Guest exhibitors wi ll ' also
display collections of Native
American crafts including
pottery and tlint-knapping .
Totem poles, wr ittei1 projects and art projects that
were made in conjunction
with their study of Native
American life and culture
· will also be on displayed
along with student tour books
of colonial settlements.

www.charter.com

afternoon,

Our main concern in all stories IS to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
! accura te. If you know of an error in a Street , Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
'I story, call !t1e newsroom at (740) 992· postage paid at Pomeroy.

MMSto
celebrate Native
American culture

Charter Communications

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

hold its regul&lt;)r meeting at
7:30 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains location.
POMEROY
Holzer
Hospice "dinner with friends"
at 6 p.m. Thursday al Grow's
Restaurant.
Saturday, Nov. 8
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen, 5:30 p.m.
potluck meal with Thanksgiving
theme. Potluck dinner with
· turkey and ham , beverages
and table service provided.

Community events

ENTERTAINMENT

The Daily Sentinel

I

Wednesday, Nov. 5
RACINE
Southern
Athletic Boosters wi ll meet at
7 p.m in the high school cafeteria . All parents and coaches
are asked to attend.
'
Thursday, Nov. 6
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Auxilary Post 9053 will

PVH institutes patient privacy safeguards

..-------------· . ____ ._:.::_:::.::::.:___
1

Clubs and
Organizations

Bingo game set for Nov. 13 at the stores for the grand prize drawing durFeeney-Bennett American Legion Post . ing the. open house event. The associaEach Longaberger basket given as a tion will offer ·free horse-drawn car~rize in the bingo game will i~clude a riage rides for the public through
hmlted:edttton Bmgo Bear desr gned by Clonch's Carriages during the open
the Ohto Rrver Bear Co., and assoc 1a- house hours, and Mrs . Claus wi ll stroll
tton members wtll sponsor the baskets. through Middleport with treats.
Plans lor the hohday promotiOns were
.. . .
. di scussed at Tuesday 's monthly meeting
A Cbnstmas tree hghtmg cermony
of the Association. Local merchants wtll be held at 5.30 p.m . on Dec .. 6,
were encouraged to conduct weekly in- un.d~r t.he dtrecuon of the Metgs
store drawings on Dec. 1, 8, IS and 22. Mtnrstenal Ass~tat mn, and the annual
All shoppers who register for those hohday parade wtll begm at 6 p.m. Santa
weekly drawi ngs wi ll be el igible for the Claus wtll be at Peoples Bank followmg
Dec. 23 gra nd prize drawing, the parade, and the bank will provide
Association President Tom Dooley said. free pictures of children with Santa.
Carriage rides will also be offered at
The merchants' open house is set for
I to 4 p.m. on .Nov. 30, and .shoppers no cost during the Frantic Santa promocan begtn regtstermg at Mtddlepon tion on Dec. 23.

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

2,000

~
AUG

8,500

NOV

9.619.86

Wednesday, Nov. 5
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m at the Pageville
town hall .
Thursday, Nov. 6
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township 'Trustees, 6 p.m. at
the township building on
Rocksprings Road.

Prizes included in Middleport promotions

lee

calendar

Public meetings

'-

Snow

BY BRIAN

-

Association of Garden Clubs
slide and photo contests. .
Exhibitors must have therr
arrangements in place by
noon on Nov. 22 and they
must remain ln place until 4
p.m. on Nov. 23. An
exhibitor can place only one
artistic arrangement in each
class but in the horticulture
section. the exhibitor may
enter up to four specimens
with each to be a different
or
type.
variety
Arrangements are not to be
made on the show tables.
Judging will begin at I
p.m. by an accredited judge
of the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs. Special
awards will be for best of
show, reserve best of show,
and creativity in the artistic
arrangements.

~-

VIa A &gt;!WC• ~f!IO P111SS

"

design' "Sleigh riding".
showing
motion,
and
"Christmas Critters," an ornament from natural materials.
Wreaths, wall hangings
and package decorations are
also included in the show
lineup with classes being for
indoor and outdoor wreaths
and wall hangings. and packages for adults and children.
Classes for evergreens.
berried branches, potted cacti
or succulents, blooming and
foliage house plants along
with gourds are also included in the show schedule.
Special horticulture classes
for juniors are dried roadside
material and potted plants. ·
The tvtaster Gardeners will
have an~xhibit, and there
will be a presentation on
how 19 enter the Ohio

Communi

PageA3·

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 5, 2003

'
Oh"
IOWea th er

-

Page.A2

740-992-6333

,. __ .,

•

~AMiaiCAN "

FDii
----

jJiiJfi&amp;ICIRIC
IIOWD

For more energy-sevings tips
visiteepcustomer.com

•

•

•

�-.
'•

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

•

www.mydailysentlnel.com

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

GUEST'S

VIEW

Alcohol
Substtmce abuse effects everyone
He is yo ur brother. you r son. your husband. your father, or
your friend. He is your employee or your co-worker. He is
your neighbor
· He was a soc1al drinker just like man y other people you may
·know. Then , over a few yews, he drank more often amJ 111
larger quantities. His friend s changed to only drmking fri ends.
He .became an alcoholic.
Perhaps he was a casual user of marijuana or prescription
'drugs like Xanax or Oxycontin or Percocet that got him hi gh,
or of illegal drugs like heroin or speed that got hun hi gh. He
began using more otten unJ in larger quanLities than h1 s casu. al user friends. His friends changed to only drug addicts. He
became a drug addict.
Or, like Rush Limbaugh and many others. he was prescribed
· an addi ct1ve medication for severe pain or anxiety. This can be
· th e most insidiou s path to addiction . Originally, he used it as
presc ribed: then he used it a lillie more often and in larger
doses than prescribed: then he hud to huve more und more of
th e drug to get any etfect. He needed so much he eventually
had to get the drug illegally. He became an addict.
He did not choose to be an alcoholi c or an addict. He chose
to · drink. He chose to try drugs. H'e chose to use ackli ct ive
medications to quf(IJ hi s pain or his wornes. M,my of us do
thi s and never become alcohol ics or other drug addicts_ He
made those choices too. But he did not choose to become
addicted.
One of the characteri stics of dddic' ti on is that the alcoholic
or other drug addict does not know he is addicted He does not
see that the problems in his life are caused by the addi ction:
deterioration of his fn ends hips and family life, problems at
work. depressions. financial problems. or run -i ns with the law.
· Because alcohol and ot her drug add iction is a progressive
qisease that eats at the body as well as the mind and soul. if
hi,s denial o( his problem continues. and his drinkin g or using
continue. his destiny is cledth.
Howeve r, if he is lucky, somet hmg happens to Intervene in
'lm life , usuall y. he loses something -- his job. hi s w1fe. hi s
freedom. He lllls bottom and he is desperate. This brings him
· to addiction treatment or loca l 12 steps self- help grou ps. or
·
. both .
He may seek help on hi s ow n. or. he may seek help because
-.of an ultimatum from his L1mily. employer or a JUdge. If he
·_needs treatmen t. wh&lt;1t can he get in Gallia, Jackson or Meigs
counties'' Olltpallenl cullnseling IS available 111 all three counties on a sliding fee scale 1f he has no insurance.
He signs up for counseling and he tries. He may succeed in
eventually remaining clean and sober w1th outpatient treatment and participation in 12 step groups. Many men accom .plish this. However, man y men do not. Wh y? Too often he is
. st~ll living. in his home where the drug dealer lives down the
street. or where his old drinkmg buddies can still find him , or
where he can still stop m to the local bar "just to watch the
.game on TV and talk to his old bar stool companions.
.· ~ometimes he must live in a house where others are drinking
or using other dfll gs right in front of h1m. Because addiction
: Includes an obsess ion with the drug. of choice, temptations
and lack of Sllpport from those around hun , can ~ndermine
.what treatment and 12 step groups arc try ing to do.·
When some men return to their drinking or other drug use,
_the1r lives become even more unmanageable and they sink
.(jeeper into despair. Can anything be done for-men like this in
.~allia , Jackson and Meigs counties. Yes. We will look at that
in follow up article soon. Meanwhile, it is wise to remember
an old saying haQded clown over the years among people
recovering from add iction : "Don't g1ve up on someone five
minutes before the 1111rac~e." That is, the miracle of someone
overcoming hi s addiction. It can happen.
· (Larry Bume/1 i.1 exec utive director of the Southern
Consortium /(n· Rural Care bc(\·ed in Athen.1. He 1.1 also a
mr:mher r?f· th e executn'e cum mirtee r~l Sowheastern Ohio
· Advocatl'&gt;for Recove n · or SOAR.)

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. No~. 5. the 309th day of 2003 . There are
: 56 days left in the year.
· _ Today 's Hi ghli ght in HIStory : On Nov. 5, 1605. the
· ~ 'Gunpowde r Plot" failed as Guy Fawkes was se1zed before he
could blow up the English Parliament.
· - On thiS date: In I YII, Calbraith P. Rodgers arrived in
' Pasadena, Calif.. completing the first transconti nental airplane
; trip m 4Y days.
, Thought tor Today: "The most exhausting th1ng in life ... is
' be ing insincere." - Anne Morrow Lindbergh. American writer
( 1906- ).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

' ,
'.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
: be less than 300 words. All letters ~zre subject to
;I editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number No unsigned letters will
: be published. Letters should be in, good taste,
: addressing. issues, not personalities.
.j .:. .:rhe. opinions expressed in the column below
( are the consensu~- of the Ohio Va_l/ey Publishing
'
.
~. _Co.
editorial
board,
unless
othe!Wise
noted.
.
.
.

!

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,

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Wednesday, Novembers.

PageA4

OPINION

Wednesday, November 5, 20o3

The
Watershed
F1re
Cou ncil
of
Sou thern
California hosted a workshop
back in 1995 . Nearly fivedoze n individuals from various public age ncies and private organizations participated .
Their aim was to de velop a
str;ttegy to 'address wildfire
iss ue s ii1 bru sh lands and
forests at or near the wildland
urban interface in southeastern San Diego County: They
prescribed
recommended
burns at selected sites to clear
away brush and scrub that
might one day fuel a catastrophic wildfire.
The
recommendat ions
we nt unheeded , lament s
Thoma' Bonnicksen. a professor of forest sc ience at
Texas A&amp;M University who
courd inated the workshop fo r
th e Watershed Fire Council.
So. eight years later, San
Diego Coun ty has suffered
th e worst fire in California
history in terms of acreage
and homes burned. At least
16 people have perished in
the flames in th e variou s San
Diego County tires and more
than I ,800 homes and other
buildings
have
bee n
destroyed.
Yet, the wi ldfires' deadly,
destructive tol l cou ld have
been· grently dimini shed, if
not prevented altogether, said
Bonnicksen, n U.C. Berkeley
Ph.D., who d1d his disse rtati on on San Diego County's
brushland fire problem.
Had San Diego instituted a
program of so many acres'

I;.T-rA @"&lt;&gt;&gt;l

names ..
· But why have we let the
patches grow so thick and so
da ngerous'' Is it because the
federal government, as well
as state and local governJoseph
ments are too parsimonious
Perkins
to invest in wilcltire prevention?
No, it's because environmental act ivi sts have succeeded in making 1t as timeworth of prescribed burns cons ummg and ex penSive as
each year. and had it faithfu l- possible to thin out flrely adhered to th at program prone wildlands. to redttce
over the past eight years. the unnatura l buildup of the
there wou ld not have been brush. the chaparral that
enough chaparral built up to fu eled this week's fire s in
fuel this wee k's 350,000-acre San Diego and oth er
mfenms .
Southern California counties .
Dale Bosworth , the U.S
Yet. prescribed burn s 111
the nation' s fourth-larges t Forest Serv1c e ch1e l. can
count y amount to a mere attest to that. 'There arc more
3.000- acres 11 year. So and more reg ulatory req uireinstead of frequent. carefully ments.' he says. ·and less and
control led smaller fires. San less opportun ity for profesDieg.o got itself a superfire, 'IOnal fore sters and biolomonstruu sly big and totall y gists to make deciSions in the
fie ld .·
out of conirol.
The problem is that San
Bcc"''''e Forest Service
Diego has unnatu ra l wild-, staff must comply with so
lands o ~erg rown with a half- l)lany environmen tal and
ce ntury's worth of old brush. judi cial reviews, they ·e nd up
Fires would have, and should spend1ng more tune in winhave, cleared out that danger- dow less rooms ' behmd comous old tinder years ago, ere- putcr screens doing anal ysis,'
ating hea lthi er 'patches of rather than out in the field
brush of vanous ages.
tl1inning fo rest and coordi' Fires now spread across nating controll ed burns
vast areas,' Bonnicksen said . ·we've golten ourselves to
las t year. fo reshadowi ng the where we just can't get the
brushlancl fires that ha ve work done on the ground,'
beset Southern Cali fornia said Boswe ll.
thi s tall, ' because we let all
Indeed,
a
General
patche s grow thick and there Acco unting Office study
are fewer you nger and open looked at Forest Ser~ ice propatches left to slo w the · jects to reduce wildfire risk

Larry Sellers
PORTLAND - Larry 0 .
Sellers. 59, of Portland,
passed away on Monday,
Nov. 3. 2003 at Jackson
General Hospital in Ripley,
W.Va.
· Born Aug. 8, 1944 io
Lebanon Township, he was
the son of Ruth Ann Karr
Sellers of Midcllepon and the
late Howard Sellers. He was
a self-employed timer cutter
and a veteran of the U.S.
Army.
Surviving is his wife,
Agnes White Sellers: two
daughters, Cheryl Sellers
(Jerry Smith) of Portland and
Ann Sellers (Fred) Engle,
Portland; a son, Larry
(Darlene)
Sellers,
Jr. ,
Pomeroy: eight grandchildren: Stacy Black, Brittany
Black, Jacob Sellers, Michael
Engle, and Justin E_ngle. Also
surviv ing is a "special granddaughter,': Nicole Jones.
Two brothers surv ive.
James (Ruth Ann) Sellers of
Portland and Dav-id (Roberta)
Sellers of Magnetic Springs;
two sisters, Judy Sellers and
Jenny Williams, both of
Columbus ; special fa mil y
friend s, Vince and Brenda
Gray of Portland : brothersin-law and ststers-in-law.
Margaret (Ferri s) Justice of
Phoenix, Ariz .• Walter (Jean)
White of Rodney, and
Kenneth (Marlene) White of
Portland.
Services will be held at l
p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 5,
2003 at Cremeens Funeral
Home in Racine with Rev.
Bill
Justis . officiating .
Interment will follow at
Middleswart Cemetery in
Portland. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 7 to 9
p.m. on Wednesday.
Military graveside services
wi II be conducted by the

on 3.8 mil110n acres of public
lands. Of the 305 that were
subJect to appeal under the
National Fire Plan , a law
passed by Congress in 200 1.
60 pert;ent actmtll y we re
challenged by environmental
activists. delayi ng th e forest
th inning Dr prescnbed hurn
from getting under way.
There is so me encourag in g
news on that front this week.
The Senate gave, pre!iminary
approval tn a hi parti san measure that ai ms to prevent
fu ture catastrophic wildfires
like those that have brough t
death and destru ction to
Southern California.
T he measure expedites
environmenl:l l review of fue l
reduct ion proJects by regulatory agencie s and li1111ts judicial review to a reasonab le
matter of months .
Environmen tal act iVISts
are unhappy about the measure becau se they fear they
no longer will be able to use
the regu latory age ncies and
the co urts to prevent. or at
least delay - fo rest-thinning
proJec ts and con trolled
burns
But it ought to be welt:omed by the mlil10n s of
folks not onl y in Southern
California. but also throug hout th e co untry. who li ve
und er dall y th rea t of a killer
wildfire .
(Joseph Perkin s i~ 11
co fiiiiiii/ St for The San Diego
U11irm- Tri/J1111 e and mil be
rew lwd
at
}me ph. Perkm ,.@Union Trib .
COlli .)

~"""""" ",..,,..-n:-.£G&gt;~&lt;-~

HUL.ME'

Racine Post of the Ame~carro. Brocksmidth. of Gib,onburg.
Legion and the Tuppers and a half brother. Junior Lee
Plains Post VFW.
1effers of New Haven .
John will be joined in the
after life by hi s father,
William Perry Jeffers, hi s
NEW HAV EN - John W. mother: Ida la na (Oldaker)
Van Jeffers, 75, of New Jeffe rs: infant son; John W.
sister
Have n, W.Va . formerly of Van Jeffers II.
Rising Sun, went to be the Annabelle Higginbotham and
Lord .on Monday, Nov. 3, half brother Donald Roy
Jeffers.
2003.
He
was
born
in
Services will be at II a.m ..
Germantown. W.Va., on Feb. Friday, Nflv. 7, 2003 at the
' 4, 1928. and was a member Foglesong-lucker Funeral
of the Bachtel United Home, Mason, W.Va., wi th
Methodist Church of New the Rev. Larry Luckydoo
Haven, W.Va.,
ofliciating . Visitation will be
He retired from the Atlas from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Crank Shaft Corp., Fostoria, Thursday at the funeral
where he was a machinist for ' home.
33 years. He was a member
A military service will be
of the International Order of conducted by the SmithOdd Fellows in Rising Sun. Capehart American Legion
He was a World War II veter- Post 140 and Stewartan, serving overseas with the Johnson VFW Post 9926.
82th Airborne , 10 l st, Signal
Battalion .
John 's legacy is continued
by his wife, Linda V. Jeffers
of New Haven, along with
seven daughters and one
LETART.
W.Va.
adopted son: Mrs . Daniel Elizabeth
Marie
Blake
(Deb) Bateson, Ri.sing Sun, Veselica, 83, of Letart. W.Va ..
Miss Nancy Jeffers, Bowling died on Tuesday. Nov. 4.
Green ,
Mrs.
Kev in 2003 .
.
(Chri stine) Gulley, Little
She was born in Letart on
Hockin g, Mrs. Michael
June
24. 1920.
(Anita) Leady, Rising Sun,
Her
hu sband,
Mike
Mrs. William (Li nda Denise)
Veseclia,
Jr.,
survives.
Stephenson, Rising Sun, Mrs .
Services will be held at
Douglas (Lori) Crabill ,
l
:30
p.m. on Friday, Nov. 7,
Fremont,
Mrs. Thomas
· (Dorothy) Gangwer, Rising 2003 at Fogelsong-Tucker
Sun, and Paul Affholder, Funeral Home in Mason,
Houghton Lake, Mich; 18 yt.Va. with Rev. Richard
grandchildren and three great Ogden, Rev. Gregory Blair
and Pastor Mike Martin oftigrandchildren.
He is survi ved by sisters, ciatin g. Burial will follow at
Dorothy
Scaggs
of Letart Evergreen Cemetery.
Friends may call from. 6 to
Sharpsburg, Md., Margerite
8
p.m. on Thursday at the
Lockard. Franklin. W.Va ..
ai1cl Mary Sisk of New fun eral home .
Memorial contributions
Haven; two half sisters. Barb
Meadows of Point Pleasant, may be made to a charity of
W.Va.,
Anna
Mae choice.

John W. Jeffers

Elizabeth
Ve$elica

Voter confidence passes three major -levies
BY

J. MtLES lAYTON

·jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - When the
three major levies passed by
large margins at the polls.
sulJporters breathed a sigh of
relief.
Carleton School had a two
mill five-year levy which
passed by a 56 percent margin and will raise additional
funds estimated to be more
than $514,000 each year.
"I am elated and thankful ,"
said Steve Beha, director of
Carleton School. "I can not
say enough about the efforts
of our staff, Board and volunteers who worked tirelessly
to preserve the quality services for children and adults
with developmental disabilities and their families who
live in Meigs County. The

..
YOU CAN'T
~OT!iltn'.
IT~JIIST

SILLY·

"

I believe ...
That l1fe is u cabaret, but
there is a two-drink minimum.
That it they ever make a
tornado rod it v,illlook like a
trailer park.
·That million-dollar ideas
are a dime a dozen.
·
That 20 years from now
we'll tind out that sunblock
causes skt.n cancer.
That nature abhors a vacuum cleaner.
That no Christmas present
should remove hair.
That there is no such thmg
as an atheist in a taxicab .
That it's only last-minute
shopp1n g if you plan to die
later in the day.
Thut most people wou ld
enjoy a movie called ' A Very
Brady Chainsaw Christmas
Massacre.'
That a journey of I0,000
miles starts with a single vaccination.
That you'l l never see an
. airline ad that says, 'Our
engines won't fall off:
The only thing we have to
fear is the greenhouse effect,
toxic waste. ozone cleplet ion,
old age, earthquakes, wild
fires, terrorists and fear itself.
That time is on our side, it's
the third dimension t~at's
agatnst us.

That my personal trainer is
see ing someone else.
That it's OK to yell 'fire' in
a half-full movie theater.
That a man 's home is his
hassle.
· .
That if you wake up and

... -- ....

Jim
Mullen

smell the roses, chances are
you've been buried alive.
.
That where there's a will ,
there's a lawyer.
That if you can't stand the
heat, get out of the Jacuzzi.
That a leopard can't change
its spots unless it uses my dry
cleaner.
That religion kept us apart
- she was a body worshiper.
That somewhere there's a
place for us, but it's $4,200 a
month , plus utilities.
That you can take it with
you, but it's gonna smell bad.
That there will be a new
age country song' called
'Your Cheat in' Aura.'
That there's no use crying
·
over skim milk.
That I would only be
offended by a condom ad on
television 1f it feat ured
Wilford Brimley.
That someday, Jacof&gt;y will
sue Myers.
That paramedics and paralegals come from Paraguay.
That fashion goes in one
year and out the other.
That people who li ve in

""

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· -· ~

.

'

--·-----·-

.........--,-- ..,.. .,..' , .

stone houses shouldn't throw
glass.
That Sammy Davis Jr. was
forced to be in the Rat Pack
aga inst hi s will.
That I have buhmia, I just
forget to throw up.
That the truth, and a large
inheritance, shall set you free.
That bacon is always a
half-inch longer than the
fryin g pan.
That all work and no play
make Jack my lawyer.
That my dinin g room
table is so clean you can
eat off of it.
. That into every lite a little
acid rain must fall.
That love may be better the
second time around, but egg
'
salad isn't.
That the people you meet
going up the ladder are painting your house.
That there's a song in my
heart - ·Taps.'
That quality time tlies first
class. ·
That if it's not broken, you
don't have children.
That you know you've got
~ great fake fur if people still
spit on you .
That nothing's shorter than
the pub Iic's memory - or
has someone already said
that?
.
That the best thing you can
say about most people is that
they are biodegradable.
That only God can make a
tree, but it took an Australian
to invent dwarf-tossing.

I
That sex education begin s
at home, right after the parents leave.
That whome ve r invent ed
the lawnmower never had
tune to invent anything else.
That the truth hurts, but
where?
That all politician s. no
matter how
important,
should have to wait in line to
get their driver's licenses.
That the fastest way to k1ll
the Olympics would be to let
the winners-give speeches.
That you should never take
the law into yo ur own hands
if a pol iceman is watching.
That before thts decade is
over they will lind another
body part that needs
deodori zing.
That the only difference
between talk and th erapy is
that talk is cheap.
That the Prince of Wales
does for England what Goofy
does for Disney world.
Tupperware should make
coffins.
Nothing _ i ~ 'fun for the
whole fam1ly unless the parents ar10. under l 0
A picture's worth a thousand words, but the negatives
are worth cash.
(Jim Mullen is the,author of
' It Takes A Village Idiot: A
Memoir of Life After the City '
(Simon and Schuster, 2001)
He also co~tri butes regularly
to Entertatnment Weekly
where he can he reached at
jim_mullen@ew.com)

..

voters of Meigs County truly
came through. demonstrating
that they do care about the
most vulnerable individual s
in our community."
The passage of the levy
means that the Meigs County
Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities
will continue to provide services for children with developmental disabilities on
behalf of the three local
sc hool districts through the
2008 school year.
A four mill three-year levy
which will raise more
$144,000 each year for the
Southern
Local
School
District passed by 63 percent
margin.
"We are excited that the
levy passed,'' said Southern
Local Superintendent Bob
Grueser. "The margin of victory is very satisfying. We

· ~ubSC:ribe today¥ 992•2155
'

.

''

from Page A1
trustee (1), Joe Bolin, 442;
RUTLAND clerk, Opal Dyer,
351; SALEM trustee, Cecil E.
JOHNSTON, 184, William E.
Cray, Jr., 59; SALEM clerk,
Bonnie G. SCOTI, 162,
Cheryl Ann Wells, 8$.
SALISBURY trustee· ( l ),
John HOOD, 7lJ2, Oscar T.
Smith, 497; SALISBURY
clerk, Richard B. Bailey,
I ,007; SCIPIO trustee ( l ), no
candidate; 'SCIPIO clerk,
· Connie K. Chapman, 18Q;
SUTTON trustee ( I), Larry
S. EBERSBACH, 410,
Delbert A. Smith, 344,
Ronald G. Beegle, 282.

,

School Boards

"

..

;

ALEXANDER (2), Dale
Sinclair, 129, Wtllal'd Love, 110,
vid Kasler, 113.
EASTERN (3), John C.
CE, 816, Charles WEBER.
·802, Shelia TAYLOR, 697,
M. Adam Will, 581, Mike
Martin, 472.
MEIGS
(3),
Roger
ABBOTI, I ,369, Victor C.
YOUNG ill, 1,331, Noonan

R. HUMPHREYS, 1,145,
Larry D. Tucker, l ,064, Daniel
W. Lantz, 841.
SOUTHERN (2), J. Susie
GRUESER,
880, Larry
Grover
FISHER,
694,
Lawrence Hayman, 424.
Athens-Me1gs Educational
Service Center Governing
Board, Alexander (I), Phyllis
Knowlton, 200.
Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center Governing
Board, Eastern (I), Dana
Kessinger, 919.
·
Athens'-Meigs... Educational
Service Center Governing
Board, Meigs (I), Jeanette
Thomas, 1,836.
740·753-3400

MOVIES

hope to build upon the trust
the commumty has demonstrated in us."
The Meigs County Senior
Center had a· one mill fi veyear levy which passed by a
73 percent margin.
"Thi s demonstrates that
Meigs County voters do care
about their senior citizens
and support them." sai d Miuk
Sutton , executive director of
the Senior Center. " It passed
because of all the hard work
of the levy committee and
everyone throughout the
county that helped out. l am
overjoyed with the outcome."
With the levy 's passage,
Sutton smd there will be no
need to layoff any staff or cut
any programs. He was quick
to thank the supporters of
both the Carleton levy and
the Southern Local levy for
their help.

Reader's painful pancreas is
not a precancerous condition
Question: I was recently which thi' occurs IS debated
diagnosed wllh what the by medical expert&gt;. but the
doctor called "acute pancre- most widely accepted theory
atitiS ." Thi s so unds rea'l ly state s Lh &lt;il the condition
&gt;cary to me . As you know. begins with small gall stone, .
pancreatiti s is a \c ry painful
Th e~e stones are
then
disease - but that\ not expelled from the gallbladder
what' s worrying me ri ght and travel down the bile duct.
now. I'm worried th at it the tube that connects the gallmight lead to pancreatic can- bladder to the dtlodenum Hhe
e'er. whi ch I know can be fist ponion of the small intesve ry deadl y. Should I be tine). The end of thb duct alw
connects to the duct that
wot:riecl about this?
An swer: The pancreas has drains en1ymes from the pantwo main functions. F~rst. 1l creas. It is postulated that the
produces msulin , which helps passage of small gall stones
the body's cells efficiently can temporaril y bloc k the area
absorb sugar cglucose) from where these two ducts come
the blood. Second, it pro- together. Th iS blockage. then.
du ces en1vmes th at ,tre used cau,es bile to "back up" intu
in the d1 ges ti un of food Thi' _t l1e paucreas and . thereby.
pancreati c
essentml gland IS located 111 acti vates the
th e abdomen behind the enzymes inside the pancreas
stomach. Because of its loca- instead of within the 'mall
tion, an inflamed pancreas - · in testine. Thus the pancreatic
what doctors call pancreatitis enzymes begm to chg.e't the
- produces abdominal pain. pancrca;, itself. cau'lng
back pain. nausea and vomit- intlammation in the gland. In
ing. And, because of other words. pant;reatiti, .
impaired insulin production.
Acute panc reatiti s. '" I
pancreatitis can also cause an ;,aid. has man y cause'. one
increase in blood sugar.
of which can be cxcc"i'c
Pancreatiti s is class ified as consumption of akohoi. The
"ac ute" when yo u have a exact mec han ism by v. h ich
first attack and "chroni c" aknhol in-nate s the pancreas
when addlliona l epiSodes ISn't known , etther. For most
have occurred. Your doctor drinke rs. th ough. it takes
diagnosed your case as acute hea vy alcohol use for more
pancreatitiS beca use you've than a decade to GIU'e the
had just one attack of this damage necessary to propainful cond ttion. This duce pancreatic pain.
seemingly simpli stic differPancreatitis is caused by
entiation between (he two other conditi ons as well .
types of pancreatiti s is Chron ic malnut rition is a
important becau,se acute comh1on cause in deve lnp111g
pancreatitis hast se vera l countries. but fortunatel y. it
potential causes. while the is an unl'Ommon one here.
chronic disease is due to There is even a rare inherited
alcohol use in almost 90 per- form caused by a ·ge netic
cent of the cases. Gall stones alte ra l1011 that produce' a
can cause acute pancreatitiS . specitic en1yme detect.
Pancreat iti s i;, serious
The ex act mechani sm by

Local Briefs
Correction
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Reured
Teachers Assocati on scholarship was awarded to
Lena Yoacham of Raci ne
Her name was mi spelled in
the origi nal announcement.

Flu vaccine

available
POMEROY - A limited
supP.lY of flu vacci ne is
avmlable at the Metgs
County Health Department.
Shots are being given today,
Thursday and Fnclay or until
the supply is gone. It is suggested those wanting shots
call the Health Department,
992-6626. to be sure the vaccine is avrulable before coming to the department.

Levies
from Page A1
The Mei gs County Council
on Agmg's li ve-yea r levy.
which provides 20 percent of
the total ' fund ing of services
through
the
Meig'
Multipurpose Semor Center.
inc Iucling home-deli' erect
meals, transportation services
and center activitie:-,. wa:-,
passed by a 73-percent margin .· with -U60 voting in
favor of the levy. and 1.543
voting agamst 11 .
The three-year school levy
111 Southern Local passed
with 933 "yes" votes and 560
"no" votes. a 62-percent margin.
State Issue One. which provides a constitutional amendment authorizing local and
state governments to issue
bonds and prov1de linancial

Approved

The Daily Sentinel

Mayors

-

Family Medicine ·

Obituaries

Prescribed burns·can prevent tornorrow's catastrophes

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

1 0 "' ,
,

Ml~

N

"' "''"

er deductible than they did
before . The size of the
deductible depends on the
from PageA1
health insurance plan a
teacher has. If the teacher
Prior to this agreement. never needs to pay the
Sisson said the district was deductible, then the teacher
pay ing 100 percent of the comes out ahead.
Prescriprion drug coverhealth msurance premiums
age
will now be more costfor its emplpyees. Now, the
teachers are paying one per- ly, but this depends on the
cent for the individual plans · amount and type of medicathey are on and the district lion prescribed .
" ) appreciate that the
is paying the remaining 99
percent. Sisson said health SLEA conceded some of
insurance will cost more for their benefits fur the
young teachers with fami- longevity of the di strict."
lies than for veteran teach- said Board member David
ers nearing_ retirement, but Kucsma. :·It is hard to gtve
"across the board, every- up something and this is
what they did."
thing will even out."
Teachers will have a high-

regardle" of the cause. The
pain can be quite mtense. but
fortunately. it isn 't always .
Nausea and vomiting from
thb ai;.ease often produce
' ignitlcant dehydration and
altered batance of the blood
salts called electrol ytes. This
problem typicall y requ ires
tre&lt;ttment with intravenous,
or IV. tlu1ds. Elevated blood
' ugar from pancreati ti s is
u' ually controlled by the
admmiStrat ion of insulin .
Although all of this sounds
prett y bleak. there are two
p1ece' nf good news First.
almost ncrvone recovers from
the tiN aua(:k of pancreatitis if
he or she acldre,ses the underlymg cause - ha' the gallbladder remO\ ed. stops drinking
· alcohol. etc. The other positi ye
IKIIe " that as painful as acute
pancreatiti' C&lt;tn be. it doesn't
lead tn pancreatic canGer. There
may be a curreluuon between
chrome pancreatitis and pancre&lt;ttlc cancer. however
My adv1ce tu yo u '' twolold : Take ' tcps to address
the cause of your pancreatitis. and a\ Oid lapsing into
chron1 c pancreatiti s.
·
Fwml r Mn !iCine® o a
H 'et~J.:" column. Tr1 suhmll
questi011.1, ll'rite to Manha A
Simpson. D.O.. M.B.A. . Ohio
Unil 't' nm·
Co/le~e
of
Osteopatlllc Medtcme. PO.&amp;x
110. Athms. Ohio 45701.
Medical mjOrnu~tum ur thi~
column i., prv\'illed as an edu·
cational sen ·ice on/1: it does
not rep/"' e thr judgment of
Hmr f'l' n onal f'll.u. tcicm. w}w

1hou/d he relied on 10 diagnose

and rrcmwnt'nd treCITmem frJr
WI\ mn bca/ n mdainns Pa.~t
coiumns are cllwlahle online at
".,. .,. :fl1radit'·or[ilfin.

' upport lor S(.'lence and technology-based re search and
development. was rejected by
53 percent of Meigs Count)
voters. receiVing 2.50 I votes
111 lavor. and 2.ti45 votes in
opposition.
Salisbury Township vote~
soundly rejected a proposed
two-mill. five-year le'y for
tire protection. 166 to 49_
Other levy resu lts were posted
Middleport
as foll ow"
Village. one-mill. five year.
for fire protection. 38~ FOR.
128 agamst: Pomeroy Village,
une-m•ll. five years. for fire
protection. 323 FOR. 7~
agamst: Pomeroy Village. 1.9mill. five vears. current
expenses. 262 FOR. I 25
against: Chester Township.
one-mtll. five years, 627 FOR.
178
against:
Rutl and
Township. one-mill. five year.
tire protection. 384 FOR. l 04
against: Scipio Township .
two-nulls. live-years. fire protecuon. 166 FOR. 59 against.

ANNUAL
TURKEY DINNER

Serving Starts at 5:00
Tickets $6.00

p.m.

Rutland Volunteer F1re Department
Carry-Out Dinners Available
Tickets Available at: Quality Pnnt Shop.
Rutland Department Store. Joe's Country Market.
Hilltop Grocery, Pomeroy Flower Shop and at the door

How much

of life are
you missing

2004 GRADUATES •••
Contrary to wtlot you may have been told,
now Is MOI the time to order your
Graduation Announcements &amp; Supplies - but
It IS the time to stop In and compare our
seledlon and price. Why pay your deposit
now when you con wall till February or
March to order? Plus, you can custom taylor
your order to sun your style Instead of settllnQ for what everyone else has. Stop
today and see.

due to

hearing loss?
Hearing loss affects every aspect of your life.

Since 19~8 ...

ALITY PRINT SHOP, INC.
lSS Mill Street • Middleport, OH 45760
.
(740)99l-3345
FAX:(7~0)~l-3394

499 Richl•nd A•&lt;nue, Atlttns
t-soo.m -91106

740-~94-~H

•

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Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

•

www.mydailysentinel.com.

Wednesday, ~ovember 5, 2003

News About "Senior Citizens
In Meigs County

,I

.;

:i'

No'vember 2003

EVENING MEALS

:I

._,..

y

As or Nov. 4, Time

TUESDAY

Tomat"o Soup
Arabian Peach Salad
~anana

Cake

Hot Ham &amp; Cheese Sandwich

Turkey Tetrazzini

Beef Pol Pie

Potato Salad

Brussel Sprouls

Vanilla Pudding With Raisin5

Mandarin OrangeS"&amp;
Pineapple Chunks

Warm Red Ho1 Baked Apple

Cranberry Juice
Roll

Roll

Johnny Marzelli
Salad
Chocolate Cake
Garlic Bread
20

Chicken Supreme
Mashed Potatoes With Gravy

Swedish Meatballs

Green Beans

Tossed Salad
Oran~e Wedges
Roll

Buttered Noodles

Peaches &amp; Pears

Roll
Roast Turkey &amp; Stuffing
Mashed Potatoes And Gravy

Macaroni &amp; Cheese

Melon Balls

Red Jello Wrth Apples And Bananas

Green Beans
Cranberry Sauce

White Or Brown Bread

Pumpkin Pie

Peanut Sutter Cookies
White Or Brown Bre"ad

Holiday
Center Closed

Center Closed

Ham &amp; Soup Beans
Seven Layer Salad
Tropical Fru1t
Coconut Pudding
Cornbread

Chicken Parmesan
Baked Potato
Peas And Mushrooms
Apricots
Roll

Sloppy Joe
Fried Potatoes

Chicken And Dumplings
Tossed Salad

Ham Loaf
Augratin Potatoes

Greenbean Casserole
Pineapple Juice

Mandarin Oranges And Grapes

Spinach

Iced Chocolate Cake

Roll

Roast Beef

Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy

Buttered Carrots

Havard

Beets

Beef Stew .
Squares
27

Butte~colch

Squares

Holiday

Pears

Roll

Evening Dinner Cancelled
1-,C~~

•

,I
,I

Remembef-il you will not~
tlon'W lor your meal tell the

Driver or ull tl2 ·21f 1.11

~ou

h1ve 1 Iouth tont phOnt you

un ull8!12-2111 ext 236

~~,.~~-If

------HEAP-.----.The Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP), is one of several
programs offered by the Ohio Department of Development
(ODOD) to help low-i ncofne Ohioans pay their utility bills.
Households may be eligible for assistance if the household 's
income is at or below the 150% federal poverty guidelines.
Below are guidelines for the 2003-2004 HEAP program:
Size of Household
Total Gross Household Income
1
upto$13,470
2
upto$18,180
3
up to $22,890
4
up to $27,600
5
up to $32,310
6
up to $37,020
7
up to $41.730
8
up to $46,440
For households with more than 8 members, add $4,710 per
~mbec
•
if you need more information abou t the HEAP Program,
contact Kathy Goble at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center at
740-992-2161. If you need assistance with completing a HEAP
·application, please call to schedule an appointment. Kathy is also
available to make home visits for indtviduals that are disabled or
homebound.

.

"-....~

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r----------------~---~--~---~------~----,
1
Your paid membership to the Metgs County Council on Agtng, Inc . IS a me.asure of support forth~ 1
1 Multipurpose Senior Center and the semces provoded to older adults reStdtng tn Metgs County . I
1 Each paid memb~rship received verifies to regional , state and nati onal fundmg agenctes thai the I
1 multipurpose Sentor Center ts provtdmg needed sentor programs.
I

Card player
needed

: The cost for each membership is $5.00. You may purchase your membership at the Senior Center I
1 or by mailing to: Meigs County Senior Center, 112 East Memortal Dnve, P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy,
1 OH 45769. If possible, please include a stamped, self-addressed envelope so that we can forward
1 your membership card to you. Thank you for your support.
II Name ___________________________________

I
Do you know how to play . I Addres•----------------------------------bridge or would you like to I
learn? Several ladies play bridge
here at the Center eyery
Thursday at I :00.

They lost one of their players

and would like to conti nue to

play, but they need another
player.

They are willing to teach a
new pe rSon , so if you are

1

City/Stale/Zip Code ____________________________

2004
Membership

1

1

For more information contuct Dianu ut 992 -2 161

1

~---------------------------------------.J

Special evening dinner events

Beginning
Thesday, 4:00p.m.· 4:45p.m.
with music by Rita and Junior
November
4,
Fall
and
Winter
White.
November 18: Thanksgiving
information, call Martha Vennari
hours for serving will be from Evening Dinner will be followed
December 16: . Christmas
at 992-5593.
Evening Dinner. with a dance
featuring music by George Hall.
A suggested donation for t.he
dinner is $5 .00.
The dance will be held from
The Center is playing the role be used for Christmas dinner.
of Santa again this year and will
Donations will be accepted 5:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. with a
be helping out seniors who may anytime between now and cover charge of $8.00. Those
Bnng your famtly and your be in need of some extra December I5 . If you would holdin g a 2004 MCCaA
neighbors to the annual Christmas cheer.
prefer to donate cash, the center membership will only have to
Thanksgiving and Christmas We will be accepting staff will do the shopping.
pay $5.00 to slay for the dance.
parties at the Center.
Al l ages are welcome to attend
donations of personal care tlems,
We plan to provide for
Thanksgiving dinner will be such as bath soap, powder, approximately 50 seniors who the dinner and dance. Come and
celebrated on November 20 with shampoo, and toothpaste.
may not have family or friends celebrate the holiday season
turkey and all the trimmings. We would also like to provide to share the holidays with. Your with GEORGE!
Remember, this ·is also Birthday the fixings for a nice Christmas donations will help make
Party day. Frank Martin will be dinner. For this we will need Christmas a little more special
presenting gospel music at 10:30 items like cra nberry sa uce. for some of our seniors.
a.m.
canned vegetables, in stant
If you have any questions,
Christmas dinoer will be potatoes, or any other canned or please call Tammy queen or
served on December 16 with the boxed item that would normally Beth Shaver at992-2 16l.
(\hrist Academy Bell Choir
performing at 11 :00 a.m.
Lunch will be served at noon
on both days. We always have a
good turnout for holiday dinners, November 10- Learn how to cards. We will provide a couple
so be our guest and join us for creme a database to store your of different kind of paper to
addresses Bring your important choose from . If you have
the day.
addresses with you. · We will something you want to use,
pri nl your labels to be used for bring it with you.
your Christmas cards.
December 9- Finish Christmas
Do you have a birthday in December 4- Make Christmas cards and labels.
November or December'' Why
The cost is $10.00 for all three
not come to the Center and let us
classes. Classes begin at 10:00
celebrate with you''
Overbrook Rehabilitation
The November Birthday party Center will sponsor Bingo on . a.ni. in the conference room.
Call Tammy Queen to register
will be held on November 20. November 25 at the Center.
at
992-2161.
Frank Marlin will be here to Regular Bingo will be held on
emertain us with gospel music at the following dates: November
10:30 a.m.
19, December 9. 23, 2003.
WE HONOR
December II wtll be the date Bingo starts at II :00 a.m . on
for the December party.
all dates.
interested or would like more

Holiday
parties

Secret Santa project

-Computer classes· -

Birthday party

BINGO

ST.

POMEROY, OH

••

Senator
George Voinovich
will be at the
Center on
Saturday, 1\brcmbe:r 15, .at13
9:001i.m.-J:tXJp.m.

Mt:igB Smlcc Of'!llter
11:2 But MO!••VTLmre
1\:meu;y, CJ:Iio45769

1br lDIW ~crrryfiat aJ1
7409Y.:l-2161

NovemberS

for a Town Meeting.
You are,invitea to talk
with the Senator from
ll·noon.
Come·and stay tor
lunch. ·

. holding
first y~th only
deer hunt ·
"-...._

13

11

Evening Dinner Cancelled

Creamy Cole Slaw

10

hours will be 4:00.4:45.

Turkey &amp; Stuffing
Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Beans

Ch1cken Salad

Cinnamon Applesauce

.

992-3785

f§l

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARD.S

COLUMBUS rA P) - For
the first time, Ohio is holding a youth-only, deer-g un
hunt thts year.
Hunters age 17 and
younger can take part in the
hunt on Nov. 22-23 on both
private. and public land, said
Steven Gray, chief of the
Ohio Department of Narural
Resources
Divisio·n of
Wildlife . Ohio already has
youth-only days for upland
.game, wild turkey, and ·
waterfowl hunters, he said
Tuesday.
The youth deer hunters
must be accompanied by a
non-hunting adult, wear
hunter orange and have a
valid Ohio hunting license
and special deer permit.
Hunters may take one deer
of either sex according to
existing bag and deer-zone
limits. Plugged shotguns,
muzzleloaders, handguns
and bows. are legal.
All other regularly scheduled hunting seasons will
continue. However. other
hunters, including deerarchery hunters, are required
to wear hunter orange during
this period.
The regular deer-g un season runs Dec. 1-7.

Marshall QB Hill
out for season
after surgery
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
CAP) - Marshall quarterback Stan Hill will miss the ·
rest of the season after
undergoing surgery on his
left knee , coach Bob Pruett
said Tuesday.
Pruett said the injury was
a straight anterior cruciate
ligament tear, which will
keep Hill out until the
spnng,
"They sewed him up and it
went real well ," Pruett said.
The surgery was performed by a doctor in
Birmingham, Ala.
Graham Gochneaur will
start at quarterback for the
Herd (6-3, 4-1
MidAmerican) against Miami of
Ohio on Nov. 12.
Hill first sprained the knee
against Tennessee on Sept. 6
and missed two games. He
re-injured it at Western
Michigan on Oct. 25.

Reds getting .
rid of RHP Ryan
Dempster
CINCINNATI (AP) The
Cincinnati
Reds
requested waivers on right·
hander Ryan Deinpster on
Tuesday for the purpose of
granting his unconditional
release .
He is now ineligible toresi~n a major league contract
wtth Cincinnati until May
15 .
The
Reds
acquired
Dempster in a July 2002 ·
trade with · Florida in an
attempt to improve the starting rotation.
Dempster, 26, went 3-.7
for the Reds this past season
with a 6.54 ERA in 20 starts
and two relief appearances.
He didn't pitch after July 28.
He underwent surgery Auj;.
4 to remove a bone chtp
· from behind his right elbow
and to repair a complete tear
of the ulnar collateral ligament.

"We Care For Yort .Like Family"

• HOME OXYGEN

• HOSPITAL BEDS

• CpAP .MACIDNES

• WHEELCHAIRS

• NEBULIZERS

• OXIMETRY

24 Hortr Emer1e11cy Service • Free Delivery

1-800-458-6844 .

~~~~

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 5, ~003

Creamed Ham on Spoon Bread

Pea ~ Cheese Salad

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
Tha Senior Nutrition Meal Is served Dally at 12:00
c.ont•ct

Evening Dinner Cancelled

change for Fall and Winter

Roast
Potatoes &amp; Gravy

Menus are prepared by Cynthia McMannis, RD, LO

INSIDE

RedHawks defeat No. 15, Falcons, Page 82
Big East h~P.s to re'"ain in BCS, Page 86

~~~

Wanted: Your
varsity winter:
sports schedules
All varsity winter sports
coaches and adminstrators
are urged to send us your
schedules for the upcoming
season as soon as possible ..
You may e-mailed them to
sports@mydai lyttibune.com,
or fax them to 446-3008. You
may also drop them off at our
Gallipolis office on Third
: Ave.

~\

'

OSU QBs to share time
•'

BY RusTY MILLER
Associated Press

'-\::,

• COLUMBUS - After
being knocke&lt;k~'?ozy and
then helped to lQ_e sidelines last week, Craig Krenzel is expected to be
healthy for No. 7 ·Ohio
State's Saturday showdown with No . 14
Michigan State.
Yet Krenzel , 21-2 as a
starter, will still share the
job with backup Scott
McMullen .
The deci sion did not
make Krenzel happy.
"!think it's a touchy sltuation. I've never been a
fan of .~ two-guat;terback
system, he sa1d. 'If yo~
are a coach and you have a
guy and you think he
deserves 10 be gettin g
some playing time then
that 's the guy you go
with. "
Krenzel was agitated
when asked if he thought
coach Jim Tressel · has a
lack of confidence in him
now.
"You're asking me? I
think you're asking the
wrong guy. I'm not making the decision. I would
like to think not," he said.
"I would like to think that
for whatever reason if
Scott gets playing time
ano;l l .am healthy that the
coach has his own reasons."
Tressel said having
McMullen play can only
help.
"Craig Krenzel wi II be
our starting quarterback,"
Tressel said Tuesday. "But
the thing I like about our
situation is it's become
even more obvious that
Scott McMullen can contribute as well."
Through good times and
bad - and a lot of comefrom-behind wins
Krenzel has been the
Buckeyes' top quarterback
the past two seasons. He
sustained
what
the .
sc hool's sports- information office termed a "mild Ohio State quarterback Craig Krenzel, left, talks with head coach Jim Tressel d~ring the
fourth quarter against Penn State Saturday. Krenzel and Scott McMullen will share t1me takPlease see OSU, Bfi
ing snaps this weekend against Michigan State. (AP)

Clarett
drops
federal
complaint
BY

'

CARRIE SPENCER

Assoc1ated P_ress

COLUMBUS
su,pended runntng back
Maurice Claret! ha' dropped
a federal complaint seeking
a $~.5 million fine against
Ohio State for releasing
info rmation from an NCAA
investigation to pnisecuto".
Clarett\ Col·umbu&gt; attorney &gt;ay&gt; he want&gt; to renew
the comp laint if he can get
backing from the U S.
Department of Education.
which oversees the Family
Educ ati onal Ri gh t' and
Pri' acy Ar.:t that Clare II
accuse' the &gt;chool of v i ~J iat ­
mg.
··w e intend to bring it _.
again." Percy Sq uire said
Tuesday. "'We want to bring
it a&gt; ·a JOi nt action ."
In a &lt;:ourt motion filed
Monday, Clarett &gt;a td he still
is asking the Education
Department to sanction Ohio
State. Clarett asked to dismis s his court action reserving the ri ght to file 11
again - becau'c he was
asked to provide more information to the Education
Department.
US. District Judg e George
Smith granted the di;missal
but &lt;:hided Clarett because
both cases. could legally proceed in tandem .
" If it was Mr. Clarett's
intention to pursue relief
only from the Department of
Education. then he 'hould
not have sought to intervene
in thi s lawsuit in the first
instance,'' Smith wrote.
. "OS U has pre sumabl y
expended resources .responding 10 the motion to intervene. and it seems unfair at
the eleventh hour to allow
Mr. Clarellto dodge a poten tial adverse result in thi s
lawsuit and on a whim shift

Please see Clarett. Bfi

C-USA adds Marshall, Cincinnati
four other schools
accepts invitation
BY Joeov McCREARY
Associated Press

to join Big ·East

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Marshall
announced late Tuesday that it has accepted
an invitation to join Conference USA.
Marshall officials declined further comment, saying the school's new league affiliation would be discussed Wednesday morning
at a news conference. in Huntington.
The announcement came just hours after
the Big East announced that five G-USA
schools _ Ci ncinnati, DePaul, Louisville,
Marquette and South Florida _ will become
the newest members of the league, which
lost Boston College, Miami and Virginia
Tech this summer to the 1\llanlic . Coast
Conference.
,
Central Florida, Marshall ' Rice, Tulsa and
SMU will join Conference USA effective
July 1, 2005, commissioner · Britton
Banowsky announced in a statement issued
late Tuesday.

Bv Joe KAY
Assoctated Press

"While we clearly would have preferred
that no Big East expansion occur, that expectation was unrealistic given the ar.:tions of the
:"'CC," Banowsky. said. "We are excited
about th~ opportuntty to strengthen the. conference a~d f~el C - US~_has the potential to
be better 10 many ways.
.
Some Marshall fans _questtoned why the
:r~u~denng J:lerd wasn t one of the schools
JOtnttig the Btg East.
.
As he watched the Btg East expanstoQ
news conference Tuesday, Hunttngton restPlease see Mlnhall, Bl

CINCINNATI (AP) - After- eight years of dominating a
far-flung conference. Bob Huggins' basketball teams soon
will find out how they
measure up against the
Big East.
The
University of
Cincinnati accepted an
invitation Tuesday to join
the conference in two
years. along with four other current members of
Conference USA . ..
Huggins' teams won the conference's first seven regularseason championships. a streak broken last season. They'll

Please see Cincinnati. Bfi

Big East still big loser in big shakeup
The big shakeup has finally happened.
.
On Tuesday, 10 school s accepted
invitations to leave their current conferences and join other leagues.
· It's the continuation of a domino
effect that bej:an a couple of months
ago when Mtami and Virginia Tech
announced its athletic programs
would abandon the Big East and join
the Atlantic Coast Conference.
A coupie of weeks ,later, Boston
College Jumped the sinking Big East
football ship and joined its brethren
in their exodus south.
Now, in an expected and desperate
move in order. to save its weakening
football status, the Big East invaded

Butch
Cooper
THE BUTCHMEISTER
·,

Conference USA .and acquired
Cincinnati, Louisville and South
Florida, along with non-football
schools DePaul and Marquette. ·
In anticipation of that del'arture, CUSA · invited Marshall, Central

'

Florida. Rice. SMU and Tulsa .
Who's the winner in all of this?
It determines how you look at it.
If your a diehard baskeiball fan and
supporter, then the Big East is the big
wmner.
The Big East becomes the nations
only mega-hoops conference.
Is it possible for I0 or even II
teams from one conference to make
the NCAA men's basketball toumament'?
Lookin~ at the new Big East, sure .
Why not'!'
,
But, if you're looking at the overall
scheme of things, and that's what's
really imporianl. the. ACC is by far
the winner.
I

0

Not only does the ACC keep a
strong basketball league intact. but
they also pickup the likes of Miami
and Virgima Tech and a league championship game as w&amp;ll.
With that, the ACC secures their
. BCS berth and perhaps a second team
can get in. And, with that. the ACC
will bring in more money than ever
imaginable with its current align·
ment.
·
With the ACC this year. or even
. last, there isn't any team that
deserved to play in a BCS game ."Not
even once mighty Flotida State.
While the ACC wins in the overall

Plftse He Cuper, . .

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Wednesday, Novembers,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2003

200:i

w~.mydailysentlnel .com

·'lrribune - Sentinel - l\e ister
CLASSIFIED
·

~ · RedHawks

whip u·p on NBA
:No. 15 Bowling Green SuPer rookie summit:
LeBron vs. Carmelo
g re~t

BY JOE KAY
l'&lt;ssoctated Press

quarterback, people
stopped talkmg about their
defense. They've got a great
defense."
OXFORD
Ben
The teams were facing their
. Roethli,be tger let the defense nmror image _ Bowling
: take top htlling.
Gre~ n lops the MAC iti
Mi,uni of 0 hio's 'warming offense and defense, ~nd
defense forced 4uartcrback
'Josh Harri s to fumhle three Mtamt is a close second in
both
categori es.
ttmes Tue~tlay night. 'etting
up short dm es ~nd " 3:1- 10 Rocthlisberger made the two
victory over No. 15 Bowling plays that made the difference.
His 4'1-yard
wmpleti on
. Green.
.
• Rodhli s b~rge r thtew lor earl y in the tntrd quarter set up
: 2JO yard' and Cal Murray ran one touchdow n, and his J.
lor a patr ol touchdowns as yard sneak put Miami ahead
Mtami 1B- 1. 5-0 Mtd- 24-7 mtdway through the
American Con fe rence! took quat1er The 33 points were
aMamagc ol tour turnovers in the most allowed by Bowlmg
Green thts season
•
II.
The RcdHawks have won
"We were in position 10
: eight ' 1ra1ghr sinL e ,111 open ing make plays, and we didn 't,"
· blowout at l&lt;m&gt;a. po&gt;~tnm 1 ng linebacker Mitch Hew in said
thetm elvcs to mm e into the dtsg ustedly. ··we dtdn 't gei to
Top 25 fo 1 the ltrst tune suJCe the qu arterback. We were
the end of the I974 seawn.
mtssing tack les. We had
'"For us. tiJat's not 1mpm - pe nalties. It was a co mplete
: tam." said Roethl isbe rge r. dtsaster."
: who "'"' 1 9-o f~28 afte r a
The defenses controlled a
shaky start. ··com111g 111. our wacky fir st half five
goa l was not to be .in the Top turnovers, a nllSsed field by
25. Our goal was to w111 the Bowltng Green and an unusuMAC c h&lt;~mpion s htp . Thi ' was al problem wtlh the clock
a step forward for us.··
During a timeout with only 26
Pla ymg wt th ti s hi ghes t seconds showtng before hal frank tng 111 sc hoo l hts tury, time. the offictals realtzed it
Bow ling Green (7 -2, 4- 1) was oft by a minute - an
never c"01 ro ll mg• on olknse electrical surge was blamed
and co uldn ' t overcome a - and restored the time.•
ragged game by Hw ns.
H~uTi s threw a 24-yard
'· Miami ot Ohio is on fire touchdown pass to a diving
ri ght now,'' '"id Harr is, who Charles Sharon on the next
was 20-of-35 lor on ly 160 play, cuuing Miami's lead to
yards. ··Because they've got a . 10-7. The clock problem

"

caused confusiOn. but didn ' t
figure in the out come.
o
Instead, it came down 10
whtch of the two prolific quar-·
terbacks made the most mistakes.
Roethlisberger fumbled and
threw an interception at the 1yard line in the first half, then
settled down. Harris fumb led
three times and was limited to
throwi ng mostly short, harmless passes.
" II seemed at times like we
were tll)postors out there,"
Bowling Green coach Gregg
Brandon said.
Murray's 3-yard run put
Miami ahead 111 the second
quarter, and Janssen Patton
tumb led the kickotT, sellmg
up Jared Parseghian's 27-yard
fie ld goal for a 10-0 lead.
Roethli sberger's best play
came on the opening drive of
the second half, when hts nifty
handoff fake allowed Martin
Nance to outrun the duped
safety and catch a 49-yard
pass. Mike Smtih's 5-yard
touchdow n run on the next
play made it 17-J.
Nance had I69 yards on I0
catches, tying the school
record wtlh his fi fth I00-yard
game of the season.
Harns' second fumble of the
ga me led to Roethlisberger's
1-yard sneak for a' 24-7 lead
mtdwa y throu gh the third
quarter. Harns' fi nal tumble
set up Miami 's clinching
score, a 2-yard run by Murray
with 3:45 left

Browns president Policy sells
ownership share of team
CLEVELAND (AP)
Team prcstdcnl Carmen Policy
sold his I0 perce nt share of the
C level&lt;~nd Browns back to the
Lerner famil y. who hought the
NFL lrctnc·htse 111 1998 .
Policy, who signed a liveyear contract extensiur1 with the
cl ub in March. said his sale was

The Browns are currently San Francisco 49ers president
estimated to be worth $618 mtl- and chtef executive. I0 percent
lio n, according to Forbes maga- ownership.
zme.
Policy smd he sold h1s interest
The late AI Lerner outbid fi ve to Lerner's son, Randy, who
other groups m '98 to buy the assumed ownership of the
expansion Browns for $530 Browns after his father died on
million, at the time the highest Oct. 23, 2002.
price patd for a professional
Policy had negotiated a possiappro\'ed in an unanimous vote spot1s team.
ble sale of his share into his
by the leag u ~'s owners at meet~
Lerner hired Policy as team new, tive-year contract, which
lllgs l.1st week in Chrcago
pt es ident and gave the former wtll begin m Februmy

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press
CLEVELAND
Ru ssell
vs.
Chamberlai n Bird vs. Magic. Jordan vs.
Everyone.
Rivalries have always given the NBA
so me extra bounce. On Wedne sday night,
another. will be born .
This one pits a pair of the leag ue's most
talented rookies - good friend s who have
rec eived rave reviews after playing JUSI a
few pro games.
And Clevela nd 's LeBron James and
Denver 's Carmela Anthony can' t wait for
the openi ng tip.
"''m looking forward to it," said James,
the Cavaliers' 18-year-old guard.
'"You know there's going to be a lot of
hype,'' Anthony said.
More than 20,000 fans, a national TV
audience and more media than have ever
covered a game in Gund Arena, wi ll witness th e Cavaliers' home opener against
the Nuggets.
It also will be James' reg ular-season
home debut, and the former Akron hi gh
sc hool superstar - and No. I NBA draft
pi ck - wants to put on a good show.
"A lot of people are going to be here,"
sa id James, who has averaged 18 points,
7.3 rebounds and 7.7 assists in three
games. ''I'm just here to show the city of
Cleveland that we ' re a way, way, way better team than we were last year."
James grew up just 30 mtles away, and
he's expecting a large continge nt of fa mily and fnends to be on hand: "Half of
Akron;· he says.
James and Anthony last faced each other
in high school and have been trying to
downplay any rivalry - old or new.
"A lot of pe9ple are go ing to portray it as
a LeBro n-Carme lo ga me, but it' s a
Nuggets vs. Caval iers game, and we' re
trying 10 go out there and win," Anthony
said. '"It's going to be on every body 's front
page. I know that already. As long as I go
in there wtth the mind-set of JU St trymg to
win , nothin g can hold me back."
Nothing has stopped Anthony so far.
A 6-foot-8, 220- pounder With a feath ery
outside touch, Anthony, th e No. 3 overall
selecti on, has n' t gotten half as much hype
as James . His stats (17. 7 points, 7.3
rebounds and 3.3 assists throu gh three
game s) aren't quite as impressive, either.
However, Anthony led the Nu ggets to a
2- I record after three games, with win s
over Wes tern Conference pow ers San

Antonio and Sacramento. Against the
Kings, f\nth o~y had 23 points, si x
rebounds and ltve asSISts 111 ht s best allaround effort thi s season.
··smooth," Cavaliers coach Paul Silas
said of Anthony. "'He kind of reminds me
of (Sixers fo rw ard) Glen n Robin so n a lot
tn that he has that nice jumper, but he goes
to the hoop . He's goi ng to be a scorer for
years to come."
Anthony had hi s worst game as. a pro
Tuesday ni ght, scoring just two pot nts on
1-for-13 shooting tn Denver 's 7 1-60 loss
at Indi ana.
Like Magic John son and Larry Bird
before them. James and Anthony have
entered the league with hu ge ex pectations.
What sets th em apart ts that unlike
John son and Bird, who became good
friends later on in their careers, Anthony
and James are already tight.
· They first bonded at a USA Basketball
Fe stt val three years ago in Colorado,
where they were clearly the best players.
But James says it was the ir off-co urt similarities that nat urall y drew them together.
""He 's cool,'' James said. "He came up
the same as me -~S ing l e parent, talk of th e
town. We just came up playi ng the game
we love. We love the same things."
James said he speaks wtt h Antho ny
every other day. They talk about life as
soo n-to-be NBA All -Stars.
"We're going to push each other beca use
we want to be the bes t," James sa id.
As for building a heated ri valry with
Anthony, James said th at's for others to
work on. He and hi s close friend JUSt want
to play.
"'I'm not goi ng to go up to him and say,
' Let's start a riva lry,"' James said. "It's
already on TV, 'The ri valry between
LeBron James and Carm ela Anthony.' The
medi a does th at, not players."
The pair haven't played ag amst each
other since 2002 when James, a junior at
St. Vincent-St Mary, and Anthony, who
played at Oak Hill Academy, went headto-head durin g a game in Trenton, N.J.,
th at was attended by dozens of coll ege and
pro scou ts.
James outscored Anthon y 36-34 .
"We went one o n one the whole game,"
James said. "I had two more points than
him, but he got the win."
Their only other meeting callle a year
earli er in Colorado Springs, Col'o.
"Lost that one, too," James said with a
smile. '" I ain 't beat him yet."

To

Offtee !lowe-~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW I.0 WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

,.

L.M. PIERCE AKA
LAMONT M.
PIERCE, ET AL

Defendants

Case No: 03 CV 110
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

To : L.M . Pierce aka
Lamon t M. Pierce ,

Lizzie P1erce, Charles
P1erce,
Kenneth
Pierce, Frank Pierce ,
Al lee Pll;!rce aka Alice

Wollmen ,
Wollmen,
Wollman,

Frank
· Daniel
Franklin

Pierce, Alma Pierce

aka Alma Curtis,
Zelda Pierce aka
Zelda Jones, Juanita
B1rch, Francis Cline,
Richard Cline, Wayne

Cline, Randall Cline ,
Dean Cline, Carol
Burlingame, Kenneth
Burlingame, Karen
Possage, Barbra Jean

Hicks, Charles Jones,
Jo
Ann
Dailey,
Samuel
Burch ,

ADDR ES S E S
UNKNOWN: Upon the
Unknown Heirs, Next
of K i n , Spouses,

Devisees, Legatees ,
Administrators ,
Executors ,

Successors

Aulgns

of

l'leraa aka

and

L.M.

Lamont M.

Pierce, Lizzie Pierce,
Charles
Kenneth

Pierce ,
Pierce,

Frank Pierce, Allee
~larca

aka

Allee

Wollman,
Frank
Wollman,
Daniel
Wollman, Franklin
Pierce, Alma Ptorca
1ka Alma Curtla,
Zelda Pierce aka
Zelda Jonas, Juanita
Birch, Francis Cline,
Richard Cline, Wayne
Cline, Randall Cline,
Dean Cline, Carol
Burlingame, Kenneth
Burlingame, Karen

Possaga, Barbra Jean
Hicks, and · Charles
Jonoa, and any other

Individuals, organlza-

llona or antilles who

may be entitled to
an interest in

the real estate which
1s the s ubject of the

Complaint, WHOSE
NAMES
AND
ADDReSSES ARE
UNKNOWN.
You are hereby noti-

fied that you have

3rd day of Decembar,
2003, and the lwentyetght (28) days lor

Syracuse,

answer will commence on that date.
In the case of your
failure to answer or
otherwise respond as
requested by the

described as follows:

Ohio Rules of Civil

been
named
Defendants in the
act1on
entitled

Procedure ,

Donald C. Dailey,
Plainltff, vs. L.M.

Pierce aka Lamont M.
Pierc e,
et
al.,
Defendants.
This
action
has
been
assigned Case No .

dered against you
and for the relief
demanded in the

Complaint.
Dated this 13th day
of Oct., 2003.

Marlene
Harrison,
Clerk of Courts

03-CV-1t 0, and Is

(10) 29, (11) 5, t2, 19,
26, (12) 3

pending in the Court
of Common Pleas of

Meigs County, Ohio.
The object of the
Complaint

jud~ment

by default will be ren·

Public Notice

demands

lhat the following

bered one No. 1, In
Sacllon 14 and 15 In
Town No. 3 of Range

SHERIFF'S SALE,
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER
01·CV·t53
CONSECO FINAN.CE
SERVICING CORP.
lka GREEN TREE
FINANCIAL
SERVICING CORPO·,
RATION
Plaintiff
vs
CHRISTINE A. MAR·
TIN aka
CHRISTINE MARTIN,
ETAL

No. 12, as surveyed

Defendant•

described real estate

be quieted in the
Plaintiff, Donald C.
Dailey :

Situate
1n the
.Township of Chester,

In the County of
Meigs and State of

Ohio, that Is to say

the Southwest quar·
ler of the Weal half of
the

Fraction

num-

by E. Hutton, the said
parcel
meaourlng
t6.50 chaine North
and 20 &amp; 12·112
chains Eut from tho

COURT OF COMMON
P~EAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In purauanct of an
order of Sale to me

directed from uld
aald Fraction and Court In tho above
containing 33-211 D entitled action, I will
acres, be lha aama axpooe to eate at pubmore or 1111.
lic auction on the
. Reference Deed: front steps of the
· Volume 80, Page 238, Meigs County Court
Melga County Dead House on Friday,
Recorda .
November 21, 2003 at
Audttor'o Parcel 10:00 a.m., of oold
No.: 03-00974.000
day, thB following
You are required to descri bed real 111111:
answer the Complaint
The following root
within twenty-eight attata, alluate In tha
(28) days altar tho Village of Syracuse,
lasl publication of In the County of
this Notice, which will Malga and Stela of
be .published once Ohio:
each week lor six (6) . Situate In 100 Aero
Southwest corner of

weeks.

IUCCIIIIV8

The tut publication
wll! be made on the

LOt No. 299, Town 1,

Range 13, Sutton
Township, VIllage of ,

Meigs

County, State of Ohio,
and being more fully

Commencing al a
point In the intersec-

tion , of the existing
centerline of State
Route No. 124 and the

easterly extension of
the existing southerly
right of way line of
Carroll Street; thence

north 87 deg, 26' 59"

west along the exist-

ing southerly right-of·

way line of Carroll

Street, 503.31 teet to
an Iron pin; thence

north 9 deg. 38' 48"

west along a line,
14.32 feet to an Iron

being

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale Chester Town shtp,
Me1gs County send letters
of mterest to The Da11y
Senhnel, PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769

the resulls of a

Appraised

at :

$t 8,000.00
of
Sale:
Cannot be sold for
less than 213 rda of,
the appraised value.
10% dawn on day of
sale, cash or certified

Terms

pin In the existing check, balance on
northerly rlght·of·way confirmation of sale.
line of Carroll Street; Ralph E.Trussell
thence south 87 deg. Sheriff,
Meigs
26' 59" east along the County, Ohio
existing northerly REIMER &amp; LORBER
right-ot-way line of Co., L.P.A.
Carroll Street, 53.55 By: Dennis Reimer
feet to an iron pin and {Reg. #0031109)
the real point of James C. Wrentmore
begt_nnlng for the (Reg. #0046n 9)
land
herein AHoroaya 1or PI a1nt 111
described ;
thence 2450 Edison Blvd.
north 9 dog. 38' 48" P.O. Box 1168
Ohio
west · along a line, Twinsburg,
194.19 feet to an tro·n 44087
pin In tho grantors' {330) 425-4201
northerly property (10) 22 •29 •(11) 5
line, thence north 84
dog. 41 ' 12" east
along tho grantora'
Public Notice
northerly property
!Ina, 52.50 feet to an
NOTICE FOR BIDS
Iron pin In the
The
Southern
grantoro' northerly LOCOII School Dlotrlct
propertv
corn~r;
will receive aealed
thence oouth 9 dag. bldalor:
38' 48" out along the
1985 International
grantora' eaat proper- School Buo, 71 paa·
ty llno, 20t.39 IHt to sanger, va DleMI, ! ~
an Iron pin In the spHd
menual,
grantoro' eouthaaot 2228115 mlleo, Serial t
property cornar and 1HVLPHYL8FHA5577
the axlotlng north6rly 8
rtght-ol·way line of
Ford Van 350E
Carroll Street; thence
1982
Horton
north 87 deg. 26' 59" Squad,
460·VB
woat along the Automatic
grantoro' aoutharly Tranamluton, 115413
property line and the miles, Serial
t
ulatlng northerly 1FTHS36L6CHA9546
rtq~t-ol-way line or
1
1Btd
Carroll Street, 53.55
opening
feet to the point of November 18, 2003,
beginning, and con- · 12:00 noon.
talnlng Q.238 acre.
Right to rolusa any
Description lor the and all bids. ·
above described tract (11) 4, 5

Savings
Company.
The Farmers Bank
d
S I
an
av ngs

Company Is selling
lor cash In hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
1992 Olds Achleva
1G3NL5434NM43281
6

2003 Nlssan Sentra
3N1AB51D33L719850
1993
Nlssan
Pe t h f In d e r
JN8HD17Y9PW11790
5

SENIOR PORTRAITS !
Get You best deal at
Main Street Photography
5 11 Ma1n Street .
Pomt Pleasant
Call for Appoin tment

1304)675-7279

1 year old md oor cat to
giveaway to a good home
740.388-827

lb.TAND

FOUND

~

..

.

...

.

.

r

If so, you qualify for a

fl72

Sen
Discount·
on your home delivered subscription!

Yard Sale Thursday, Fnday
and Saturday. 11/6- 11 18.
8am-4pm 106 Amby Ln , 6
m1le s from Holzer on 160.
Close to Cltgo Stat1on M1sc
items large and small

YARIJSAI£.

POMEROYIMmou;
B•g yard sale. New. 7th &amp;
8th, on Loop Acl Autlancl.
computers. pnntera, rNery ·
lhln else
·

4talltpoit•lallp !ribune

YARDSAJ.E-

Pr. PtJIASANT

Joint Jlea•ant lemt•ter

Fall Ru mmage Sale Sacred
Heart Women's Club. 2222
Jackson Ave A Whale of a
Sale . AU types ot clothing,
men , womens and chlldrens Vs rlou~ types of ch•na
and glassware . Toys , stuH
animals, games Shoes.
men , women &amp; ch•ldren
Christmas
decorations.
Etectrls tampa, and appll·
ances. Many, many more
Items
Doors open at
9:00am

The Daily Sentinel
iunba~ lim~ ·ienttnel

warranty given.

For further lnlor·

matlon,

or for

an

appointment
to
lnopect collateral,
prior to tale date con·
tact Otane Roctor at
992·2136. XT 122
(11) 5, 8, 7

'tlncl you hlvo ligllld up IOIIItt Slnlor DIICOIJn~ jOU11IfiiW11 notice wlll111*1 yourdltcounL

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

Subscriber's Name
:
I
Address ____· - - - - - - City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ __,_-'---

Phone'- - - -- --,----..:___
Read your
newspap:er and learn
today!

Y~RIJ SALE·
GALLJPOLIS

Grace Methodist Rummage
Sa le Friday, Nov 7, 2003,
Bam-2 30pm Cedar St
entrance

and Savings compa-

ny, Pomeroy, Ohio,
right to
bid at this sale, and to
withdraw the above
co II atora I pr Ior to
sate. Further, T~e
Fl\l'mars Bank and
Savings Company
rooarvae the right to
·ra(act any or all bldo
eubm!Had.
The
above
daocrlbed collateral
Will be I Old "AI I•
whoro lo", with no
axproaaed or Implied

YAROSALE

4 family garage sale. Nov 6
&amp; 7. Fn -Sat . Sam to 5pm,
601 Polecat Road. D11tard
res1dence We have furn. ·
lUre, glassware. household
1tems adult and children's
cloth1ng and much more

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

IIIII or drop ott litis COUfiOIIIiong wllh a copy o1 your p1to1o 10 to
Ohio Valley Pubtlllllng P.O. Bolt 469, Galllpo!il, 0H 45631

1

·••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••••••' • •••••••••••••••I
\

\

.. . ..

Found
2002
Galha
Academy class nng on a
cham Found at Wai- Mart
Ca ll 740-441 · 11 55

The Farmers Bank

reserves the

1n 11 1 '

HELl' WANfED

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In·Column : 1:00 p .m .
Monday- Friday for Jnaertlon

All Di splay : 1::Z Noon 2

In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In- Column : 1 : 00 p . m .

Publlc:atlon
Sunday Display: 1 : 00 p.m.
Thur5day for Sunday•

For Sundays Paper

l

Multi Famllv Yard Sale
Sa tu rday 7315 Five Mile
Road lnfan\ items, fu rniture,
lots of stuff

r:

WANJin
roBuY

Absolute Top Dollar · U S
Gold
Coins,
Silver,
Proofsets. Diamonds. Gold
Rings.
U.S Currency,·
M T.S Coin Shop, 151
S.COnd Avenue, Galllpoll8,

140-446· 2&amp;12 .

Business Days Prior To

acceptt only kelp wanted a da mteting EOE ttandarda. We will not knowingly accept eny advert •emg •n v•oiatlon of the lew

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

310

Pharmacy Technician•

25304
The
Commu nity Chest
Buyer's Guide Is now
acceptm.g applications tor
outside ~las representa tives. Requues excellent
customer relation skills, hon·
esty &amp; dependability To
apply: bnng In or m811 your
resume to: The Community
Chest Buyer's Guide 28

Locust Street. Gallipolis OH

Honda 250. must run and be
street worrttv 74 0· 245·5027 45631

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
, FOR
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lUI&lt; SALE
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84 lumber 38R LA Ea1 10
kttchen . 1·112 bath large
20x20 FR Attached st ogie
CEH garage CIA Gas Heat
Stl!lng on 9 ol ame m/1
Shown
by
a,:::p1
Call
{304 )895·3417

If&lt;~ "SI:\
101&lt; lb.'\'r

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f""'

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Th e ODMA&amp;DD Galhpohs
Developmental Center 1s
recruiting a Dental Hyg1 en1st
to prov1de general dental
hyg1ene care to 11s residents
Interes ted persons should
submit an Oh10 Cw1l Serv1te
Appi 1Ca t1on (avail abl e on
grounds) and have current
Oh1o Dent al Hyg1amst licensure with a mtn1mum of at
least two (2) years and
thr ee thousand (3000) hOurs
of expenence 1n lhe pract1ce
of dental hyg10ne Please
submit to
OOMR&amp;DD
Gallipolis
Developmental Center
Attention
Human
Resources Depa rtment
2500 Ohi O Avenue
Gallipolis Oh1o 45631
Ph one (740)446-1 642

To Do

Call Jan 675-7792 Cell t - - - - - - - - - Dr eam Home
Beau t1ful
704·208-71 07
3200sq ft . wtth wrap around
deck upstairs balcony 4 112
acres, a r. 2ba , large INmg
8 USJNEN;
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OPI'OimJNITY
room, 2 car garage Owner
l1nancmg
IS
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ABSOLUTE GOLDMINE! (304)675 -1352
60 vend1ng mach1nes w1th
excellent locations all lor
$10,995 (800)-234-6982

IO

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ou do bu s1ness wtt h peo
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
a11 until you have 1nvest1
aled the otfe rm

Fax (740)448-1341
140

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i

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{Careers Close To Home)

MONEY

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Georges Ponable Sawmill ,
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SOCIAL SECURrrY ISSI?
No

Fee Unless We W1nl
1-e88-SB2-3345
l~t

\I I " I \ II

PICKY PAINTERS
Interior. &amp; Exterior
Senior Citizens Discount
Ae sidentuil, Commercial &amp;
mobile homes
Roots, barns, pressurewashing.
E•perlence &amp; References
available

300-895-3074

Free est1mates call M·S

8am-7Pm

2 Bedroom House in New
Haven $24 000 Possible
Owner Financing owner

payment (304)882·2890

3 bedroom house, ·4 112
acres, · c/a, teneed pasture,
vmyl siding, Thermalpane

Weekly or brweekty house Window, (740)965-4288
clean1ng References avail able Call (304)675-1!805
3br. 2 full baths, deck.
whirlpool tub Located near
Wlll Care tor elderly, light school In Gallia .Owner
house &amp; cook , odd jobs Ca'll financmg
Is
available

!304)675-74ll0

(304 )67S·1352

-\V,\ l&lt;f'IISI'
101! RIX I

4 br 1 1 '2 oa1ns Locateo on
SA 141 ne ar Centenary

deposll $500 per montr
1997 14•70 Oakwood tJa tl· 740-446-280t
er for sale or lake over Day
ments 740-379-2651
~ ~ ltliiii .I: Hm11);

110_ _ _
HELPWANIHJ

440

Pleasanl Va lley A.oartment
Are now ta ... mQ Aool!catiOfls
S700 pe1 momh Deposn &amp;. lor ?BR 1B R &amp; 48A
re fere nce reqwred
Call A.ppl cal •o'ns \ are .take n\
Wtsem an Rea l ·E5tale at Mpnday tn•u ~ noay '•r,m
740-445·3&amp;44
900 AM ·&lt;1 PM QH,ce s
Loc ate'.) a1 1 15 t Evergre-en
Br1ck 1n GaiiiOOhS 3 bed- Drtve P:)tr11 P t ~&amp;san • WI/
rooms 1 5 ball'ls basemen1 Phone Nv .::, 304J67~vS806
carport $650 references E ~ O
deposit no pels 740-44 6~1omu Hmtl-~
9209
11)11
u·
Pleasant Va i\E!y Apactme 'll
For sale or ren·· 4 !ledroorr Are nov. 1a~ •ro g AODitCal•Or'S
3BR &amp; 48R
10 Used homes under house tn Pomeroy $450 a !o r 28R
are
:ak.en·
52 000 00 Call Ntk.kl Call monm rem $400 o;.eC..J' I'Y Aupl•cat• ons
depostt no pels stove lr1g Mondav l'iru F'•t'la) ' ro~
(740 ) 385-9948
&amp; dtshwasher ( 740 )94 9 9 00 AM .4 PM Qfl,c e •S
7004 ~
t ocated a• I 151 E Jergreen ,
1993 Clayton · mobile home
14x60 2 bedroom 1 bath New 3 br Aancn Style Dnve Poonl Pleasant WV
wl deck &amp; oulbUIIdmg S9 500 home 1 bath garage t yr Phone No IS 13041675 5806
EHO
080 740-441 9334
lease no oet &gt; Aefe·ence ~

PRN'aJCasuata opp't
16 Day COL Train ing
available
TM C/Sw1tt &amp; 30 Mat or
\
Camers Need Entry Level A re you loo~ 1ng Jor the nght

Need 7 lad1 es to sell Avon. D1str1ct is seek ing qualified
appli cants lor the pos1f1on of
Call 740-446·3358
Secretary
10
the
Now taking apphcatmns- Superin tendent Candidates
Dnver w/CDL's preferably must have solid orgamzaw/dozer &amp; backhoe expen· tlonal and commun1c8t10n
ence. laborer preferably Skills
for
w1de·rangmg
w/some sldmg, roof1ng , responsib ilities and be ctet a1l
plumbmg &amp; electrical expen · onented with capability to
ence Apply Cola's Mob,le work w1th others unde r mmlHomes 15266 U S 50 East. mum
supentiSIOn
Athens, Oh 4 570 1 No Expenence requ 1red
m
phone calls please.
Word , Access and Excel
CreatiVIty and comfort level
Part lime delivery person
w1th school d1str1ct business
Must have knowledge of
and Internet a plus Please
GallipOliS area good w1th
send a letter of 1ntetest and
people , and QOod writmg
resume to· Wtll 1am l
skills Apply tn person at
Buckley, Supenntendent.
Floral Fashion. 244 Thi rd
Meigs Loca l Sc hool District,
Ave. Gallipolis Ohio
PO Box 272, Pomeroy, Oh
Pa ft· T1me
Community 45769. Deadline for applicaDirector Organized, well - tion Is November 14 , :2003
moltvated and outgo1ng per·
son needed to manage and The ODMR&amp;OO Gallipolis
•mplemen t the March of Developmental Center 1s
Dimes West Virginia State recruiting a Dent!f11 to proChapter 's
Walk - Ame~lca vide general pr~e ntat 1ve
events 1n Pt Pleasant Job and restorative dental care
beg1ns on January 7 and to its residents In terested
ends May 31 ; approx num - persons shou ld subm1t an
Civil
Serv1ce
ber of hours w1ll be 20 per Ohio
week Job can be worked App11cat10n (available· on
out of your home: computer grounds) and have a va lid
Oh10
Dental
liCenses
necessary
Flrlmary sk llta necessary Please subm11 to.
Gallipo lis
1nctud e ab01ty to organize ODMA&amp;DO
and prioritize, outgomg per· Developmental Cente r
Human
sonallty: experience In work· Atte ntion.
1ng With volunteer s, se lf· Resources Depart{nent
starter who Is proactive Job 2500 Ohio Avenue •
history of sa les , special Gallipoli s Ohio 4563 1
event management arld/Or Phone · (740)44&amp; 1642
Fax. (740)446·1341
lundralsmg
Senct resumes to Mindy
Smith , State Director, Wv Wanted: front desk cle rk, full
Chapter March ot Dimes, time, apply In person
3508 Staunton Ave., Second Holiday lrin of Gallipolis
Floor,
Charleston , WV

~10

Ho\u;~

Jwright@ic.net

L

$9

w

Part· tlme ~ 8-20 hrslweek

part-11me poS1!10n w1th a
good wo rk schedule and
competitiVe pay? II so
McKeaaon
Automated
Healthcare see~s a motivated md1v1dual to manage
and mamta 1n all on·s•te
med1cat•on packag•ng ut•llzmg bar-code techno log y
related to our automated
robohc drug d1spe ns1ng sys·
tern mstalled w1thm the
Holzer
Medical Center 's
AVON' All Aoreas• To Buy or
Sell
Sh1rtey Spears 304· Inpatient Pharmacy.
675- 14 29
The successful cand1da te
Earn money for Chnstmas must be goal onented reliby sell1ng Avon caU Jovce able and able to work well
304-675-6919
independent ly
Other
reqwre menl's 1nclu de good
Fu ll 11me ma1ntenance postorganizationa l sk1lls a h1gh
lion Apply 1n person at the
degree of eff1C1ency and a
Holiday Inn No phone calls
computer aptitude
Head cash•arlclerk needed
Send resume to
for local conl.'en1ence store
Tom Dee n
Res pons1billt1es mclude but
Recruiting Mana ger
nOI llm1ted to orde nng prod·
McKesson Automated
uct, scheduhng &amp; general
store maintenance 30-40
Hea llhcare
hours Pir week , eKper1ence 500 C ranberry WOOds Dnve
Cranberry Twp, PA 16066
IS a plus but not nece ssa ry
Fa)( 724-741-8026
Send resume to- TNT Pit
Stop.
PO
B oK 220. tom dee n@ mckesson com
Syracuse Oh 45779 or p1ck
up apphcatton at Gulf High School diploma req 'd
Convemence Station In pharmacy or medical exp
pre ferred, but not req'd
Syr~cuse
EOE
Med1 Home Health Agency,
Inc seekmg a Speech
Aes 1den t1 al
Trea tment
Therap1S1 for the GalhpO!IS,
Fac1l1ty. flow h1r1ng D1rect
Oh10 area We offer a comCare wor~ers &amp; one cook
petitive salary. benefits
positmn needed for boys
package, and 401 K E.O E
program Pay based on
Please send resume to 430
expene11ce Ca ll 740 379Second Avenue. Gathpolts,
9083 ask for L1sa
OH 45631. Atln . . D1ana
Harless. Clln•cal Manager
The Me1gs Local School

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

any lou or ••penN that reaullt from the publlet!Jon or om•saton ot an advtt11Nment Correct ion w•ll be made in ttM ''''' •~•liable e&lt;lit1on
are always confidential • Current rete card epplin. • All rn l ett.te advert...mentt ere aubje&lt;el to the F.deral Fa1r Hl)l,j11ng Act gf 1968

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

t.io
.
HHP WAN1ll)

'

Vis1t us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
·
Fax us at: (304) 675·5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyregister'.com

POI.ICIIES: Ohio Valley Pul:lllahing rtHrVel the ri ght to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any tune ErrDra m~at be r~ned on the f1ra 1411YJ' pubhcahon ond 1"'1
Tribune-Se·nllnei-Reg ltter will be responsible lot no more than the coat of the apace oCcupted by the em)r and only the hrat onMrUon
aha'l not be hltblf.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Deacrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviatlonli
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needad

Dnvers Grad·s Rec Top
Pay/B'f1ls!Job Placement &amp;
Be off wk·ends 1-666-602Say good bye to h1gh phone 7035
bills• NeJioca l phone serv· ----~---IC e w1l h FREE unt 1m 1ted
A REAliSTIC
natiOn w1de long D 1stance
OPPORTUNITY
1-800-635-2908
or Lea rn To Earn
www FresdomMov 1e com/ilp $ 10k + per month Not MLM
aysyou Local Agents wan t· T1a1mng .P ro'i1ded
ed
Call lor Into
1·800-881-1540 Ext 3258

Are you 65 or older~

survey made by
Public Notice
Richard Glasgow, ;·-P~U"'B=cL:OIC~N:-::O::T;IC;,E;.:....R.S. No. 6161.
NOTICE .18 h by
Property Owner:
:
ere
Christine A. Martin given
thai
on
aka Christine Martin
Saturday, November
Property at: 2124 8, 2003, at 10:00 a.m.,
Carroll
Street, a public sale will be
Syracuse, Ohio 45779 held at 211 West
Second
Street,
20-110475·000
PP
'
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
In the
Prior
Deed
Reference : Volume parking lot of The
Farmers Ba,-.k and
101, Page 603

\1

110

1.

Found
Money 10 West
Virg1nta Call (740) 992-5594

c la1m

\1 1'11&gt;\1 11
'-~I

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

IN THE CO MMON
· PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
DONALD C DAILEY
Plaintiff

I

'''«H \1 I \II \ l '-1

l\.egistrr·

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at. 111 Court ~treet, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailytribune.com
classified@ mydailysentinel.com

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In One Week With Us
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PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
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Sentinel

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PUBLIC
N

..

All real estate advertising
In thla newspeper Ia
•ubtect to the Pedef•t
Fair Housing Act of 1968
whi ch m•k•• It Illegal to
adverdae ~ any
preference, limitation or
dlscrlmiMIIon balled on
race, color, religion, sex
f•mlllal statui or national
origin, or any Intention to
m1ke any auel"l
preferenee, t1mltatlon or
dlscrimlnetlon ··
This newap 1 ~ will not
knowinglwaccept
advertisements tor rul
which Ia In
vlo..tion ot thlll•w. Our
,......, . . herwby
l~orm.d th•t •II
dwetllnp •dvert!Hd In

••t.t•

lh'- n~tnfM!PM •r•
n•ll•bl• on en equ.t
oppon;unlty bA....

~;:=====;;~
MUST SELL
bedroom, 2 tlath, In N

even

Ow ner moving ou
Pr1ced bela
ppratS:al value For mor
nformation, ancl PlcJ ures
0
www oryb cgm(cO&lt;:I
102703) Or call evening

I state

.Just a tew 2003 model
homes remain come ear ly
make your ptck·then-ta!K 10
Ern•e or lynn get the best
poSS ible pnce you 11 oe
pleasantly surpnsed. loondat1ons heat pumps central
a~rs and sept 1c sys lems ou r
spectalty Coles Mobile
Homes 15266 US 50 E
Athens . OhiO 45701 PH.
740-592-1972

,:

I

AI'/\KT\II·Xr..i
fllR lbs1

Tara
Townnouse
Apartments Very Spac tous
2 Bedrooms 2 F loors CA 1
1o' 2 Bam Newl y Carpe10a
Adull Pool &amp; Baby Poo l
Pal lo Sta•t S385 Mo No
Pe1s lease PluS Secunry
Oepos 1 Reqwred Days
740-44'6 348 1
E~enmgs
7J.Q-367-0502
Twtn Atvers Towe1 rs accept
ong appkalto ns lo• wa ll•f19
l1st lor Hua subs•zea 1 bl
apar1men1 call 675·6 679
EHO

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments lurmshed and un1ur
ntshed . secun ty deoos1t Commerc• al proper!~· 'or
reqLHred no pe ts 740-992 rent · a s· ,re fl om 1n
HtstOPCal
downiQwn
2218
Pomero~ Oh fac1ng fiver
I BR With SIO'Je and reln~r .
ator startmg al $290•mo ..
depOSit 740 .ot.H 1322

~

For sale House tratler and 1 1 BA neat Hol zer W 0 p10
acre m MeJCel ll tlle Call nookup C A no oe1s S359
740· 256·6663
plus ul1h1 1es 740-446-2957
New t 4 w1de only $799 00 2 bedroom homes m tam1ly
down and only $169 76 per o r~ented park Water turmonth
Call
Karena ntshed No pets Call 740·
44 1-4540 leave a cleat mes(740)365-7671
sage
New 2003 Doublew1de J SA

He K. ~UiOIJJ
G&lt;•JUS

Complete K11cnen 15 btrcn
catHnels Bwlt m gas SI011e
oven lor mtoa cou nle r lOps
s1am1ess steel stnk tauce1s
brea~las1
bar 130 416753275 best offer

Applications for wa1tmg hsl
betng acc epted Colon1al
and &amp;295/mo 1 -800-69 1Gooa UseCI App11ances
Park 300 Mulberry Ave nue
Reco ndt!toned
and
6n7 r
Pomeroy 45769 740-992·
Guaran1eed,
Wa
shers
6163
BliSIM:O..&gt;;
Dryer s
Ranges
and
AND B UIJJJINGS
BEAUTIFUL
APART· Refngerators Some slart at
MENTS
AT
BUDGET S95 S~aggs Appliances 71:;1
Commercia l/I nv est me n t PRICES AT JACKSON V•ne St 1740)446·7398
property. 512 SBCQnd ave
ESTA'l;ES, 52 Westwood
Galltpolls Great lOCation 4 On~~e from $297 to S3a3 Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
rental units, $5.000 down . Walk to shop &amp; movtes Call Cfiapel Road Porter. OhiO "
Janet contract
740-446-2568
Equa l 1740)446-7444 · 1-877-830
Housmg OpportLJMy
91&amp;2 Free Est1mates Easy
lmanctng, 90 days same as
GraciOUS llvmg 1 and 2 bed
room apartments at Vtllage cash V1sa1 Masier Ca ra
Or11.1e· a- little save alol
·--~i:l~ili.-.J Man or ana
R1vers1de
Apart ments m Middleport
Lot for tale 2.26 acre From $278-$348 Call 740. New love seat S100 dresser
$20 and table w1tf'l 3 chan·s
restncted lo t at Walnut 992-5064 Equal HOUSing
525
Call 740-446 -4479
Opportur'lt11es
Creek ,
Sandhill
Road
&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down

.,

I

$21 .500.304-675-2995
Lot for

sa le

.

m Racme

(740)992-SI!SB
HI '\ I \I ...,

304 882-3973
Hlstonea l 3 story V~oriBn
mans10n with ful l basement.
1 acra more or less. 180'
fronta ge on Route 33 East
of Milson r~ght outstde c1ty
limits 30x60 furniture store
adjoining. SpaCious pr~~ate
parking and dr1veway Pncect
$42.000 below valid appra1s·
al Pr iced $98 000 for quictc.
••te, movmg, Immediate
occupancy, (304)773-9 151
or write House • 505 Route
1, Box •3 F. fpr detailed
prospec1us 11sted on the
Na t1onal
Reg1stry
or
Historical Houses

Rrx t

2001
Flee1wood
Doublew1de 3 br. 2 bath all 2 bd WIW car pet atr porch
appl 1ances
$35 000
or Very ntce no pets In
assume note Move or lot Gallipollf 740-446-2003 or
rent opt1on Located by 7 40-446- 1409
V1nton 740-983- 1900
2 Bedroom Mobrle Home
97 Redman 16x72 $13.995 Localed behind F.ox s Ptzza
96 Liberty 14•70 $7 995 on
Sandhill Road
Pt
Call 740-709-1 166
Pleasa nt
S35 0 'mon th
(mcludes water and sewer )
Cole 's Mobtle Homes
Call (304)675-3423 .
US 50 Eas1. Athen s Ont o
2 br 14J: 70 clean S375
45701 , 740-592-1972
monlh $375 deoos•l 740·
446 4060 or 740-441 12B3
FINAL CLEARAN CE

Taking app 11r. aTtons 2 Q•
duplex c; A ga&amp; heat wate r •
pd Galltpolts area 740·2 45;
5893

H~
FIJI&lt; RENt·
1-3 BED FORECLOSED
HOMES Buy trom $199/mo
4% down . 30 years C 8.5•k
apr For Listings/Information
cell 1-800·119·3001 Ext
1709
·
--------2 BA near Holzer. C/A econorrncal gas heat, all appll·
ances furnished, 1~lud1ng
W/0 , no pets, tease and
deposft requ1red S485 740·
446-2957

Modern one bedroom apt

uo.446-oo:90

Tnompsons App l1ance &amp;
Aepatr-675·7388 ~01 sale
automat iC
Near Rodney-Large 2 Or 1 re-con0111oned
bettl attached garag.e. $400 washers &amp; dryers retngera·
per month ret and depostt tors . Qas and electnc
ranges atr condttloners and
No pets 740-446-2601
wnnger washers Wilt do
North 3rd Ave Middlepon 2
repa1rs on maJor brands · 1n
bedroom turntshed apt
snap or at your home
OepoSII
&amp;
reference
requ1red No Pets (7 40 )992Used turnll ure store 130
0165
Bu1av111e P1ke Mattresses,
North
4th
Avenue . dressers.
couches.
Middleport 2 room eff1cl8n- bunkbeds, bedroom su1tes .
. cy ap1 Ut•ltt•es paid Deposit r,:~cllner a .
Grave • monu·
ancl references reqUired No ments
740· 446 -4782
'pets (740)992..0165
Gallipoli s OH Hours 1O·
4pm
Now Takmg Appllcallans35
West
2
Bedroom
Townhouse
Apartments .
Includes Water
~ewage ,
Trash, S350fMo 74C&gt;-446-

Stop by .

0008

3 Br house tor rent Located
on Sanders Orrve $550 per
month . Deposrt and refer·
ences
reqwed'
Call
W•stiman Real Estate 74().

One bedroom lull bat\'1 .
kitchen wl stO\Ie In town
w/prrvate parking. Cable.
electrtc, gas wa1er, &amp;

~~6-364 4

month 740-446-2414

gall&gt;age Included. $400

I
"

�1..

._P.age B4 • The.Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

VVednesda~Nov.5,2003

vvednesda~Nov. 5,2003

'

www.mydallysentlnetcom

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

ALLEY OOP

~~~~,-

ACROSS

Office FUrniture

Washer $95; dryer $95:

•

~'&lt;oggs

Appliances
740-446-7398
76 Vine Street

Was.her. Kenmore large
capacity, almost new. $350:
Gibson electric range. huge :
$350 Kenm()ra portable
d1shwasher, almost new.
$150. RCA 27' inch TV $100:

COOLING
'
446-9416
1-800·872·5967

all 1tems $900. Estate sate

Tappan &amp; lntertherm
Residential &amp; Manufactured
Housing Replacement Furnaces
&amp; Heating Systems
BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;

B UIIJJINli
SVI'I'I JFS

~owin~·~·~---------,
MJSCI~M.NIJJUS
MERCHANIJISI:

r

~~

mK SAt.l:

3 male lull Olooded Rat

3 pc _sectional w/h1de-a-bed Terrier pups. Born 9111103,

,.

COOLING
446·9416 1-800-872·5967

Block. brick, sewer ptpes,
windows . lintels. etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, OH
Catl740-245-5121

"""

10

FoK SALE

FOR SALE

OR TRADI-:

: &amp; recliner, $200. 740-985- wormed and tails doc ked .
$100. '740·367-7468
For Sale. Large 4-Wheel
. 4150 or 740-667-3107
Scooter, treated lumber.
:?a~pc bedroom su 1te. Blond AKC Chocolate Labs. vel English saddle/ bridle. bath
• ~gold trim . Good condit1on, che cked,
1st shOts &amp; sink and cabinet 304-773~ :Qrca 1940's .
S300 wOrmed .. ready 11 / 7/03 . 5207.
~1i40)446•2776
740-441-0931 .
·~~---------

• ~. Person Hot Tub. New
·pump, cove1. and d1gital con :trois. $1.200. 740-339-0213
• leave a message

-------------AKC
English
Bulldog .

female. 12 weeks old. color:
Brindle/white.
Adorable
andloving . Shots &amp; wormed .
740-446-2895.

I \H\1 Sli 111III· S
&amp; Ul t SIOI K

r

I ,JV&gt;XlllCK

' Computer desk $85.00
: Rolllop desk wl chair AKC reg. male and temale 3 Fair Sleers. $600 each. 1
Lhaso Apso·s $500 for pair.
• $1tooo
extremely lame, excellent lor
: K1ss/Aushn Powers collec- Phone 740-388-8441 or young . ·4-H member 740 ' t1on $300.00.VCR/w tapes 740.388-8856.
245·9315.
• $50.00 304-675·8861
Pomerian puppies. 5 weeks
4 Holstein Heifers. 4Wbs,
:H . Du1y 114" 00 drill otd Nov. 5 Call 740-992 $700 each. 740-682-6519
3595
• Milwaukee sawzall and
• blade. Aor.kwell screwdriver
Angus Bulls, Heifers plus
MUSICAL
:· Hi&gt;. HD sterling sander
Maine-Angus Steers and
IN~HRU~IENI~
• McCulloch chain saw and
Heifers. Top blood lines.
blade. LP gas hose and regSlate run farm. Jackson
ulator. Martin 35.000 BTV For sale GUitar Gibson. 740-286-5395
gas healer and pipe. 1 Futon DOVE. 100 years ann1vercouch like new.
sary
Ed
$2500
Call !AHA Reg . 1994 Chestnut
Mare. asking 2K. Call 740304 593-3988
Hos pital bed. Brand new.
441·0184.
FRuns&amp;
never been used! Electric
VEGnAnLES
&amp;
lilt. asking $400 740-44 1GRAI~
7390.
Potatoes for sa le 50# $10,
JET
Mon-Sat. , 55002 Stat e Round bale hay, lirst &amp; last
AERATION MOTORS
Route 124, Reedsville. Oh, cutti ng . Orchard grass &amp;
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In (740 378-6291
clover. Call 740-446·7787.
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1FoK
SAu;
800-537-9528.
Squa re bails of hay lor sale.
OR TRAnE
$2-$3 per bail. 740-24 59044 .
NEW AND USED STEEL For Sale-5 acres of real
I H.\ '\SI'OIH\ 110\
Steel Beams. Pipe Reba r estate situated on Paulins
For
Concrele,
Angle , Road in Cheshire Township. ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.....;;;.....,
10
ALTIOS
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel Gallia
County,
Oh10
Gratrng
For
Drains. (Auditor's Parcel 11003-002- __,.;llliiiiilliiSiii
'Aiilii
.l-~iooo.,;,.J
'
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;l 171-00) Sale price $6,000. L
Scrap Metals Open Monday. The 1eal estate is unim- $5001 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Tu9sday, Wednesday &amp;
proved woodland . Interested Hondas. Chevys. Jeeps. etc!
Friday. Sam-4:30pm . Closed
parties may call 304-273- Cars' from $500. For listin gs
Thursday.
Sa turday
&amp; 4170 or 740-992-7 101.
1-800-7 19-3001 ext 390 t
Sunday. \740)446-7300

r
r

ltw

Aums

$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, etc!
Cars from SSOO. For listings
1-800-7 19-3001 ext 3901
1980 Chevy Corvene. L48
engine. automatic. runs
good. new tires . Asking
$5,700. Call 740-367-0244

992-5479 ·
TRUCKS
FOR SALE
2000 Buic~ Regal LS, 41k
miles, el&lt;cellent condition,
$10,250.
Estate
Sate
(304)675-2208, 965-5597 or
Cel. 550-7153
2000 Grand Am SE. 45,000

miles . $7,800. Call 740-9492169 or 740-441-3258.
2000 Lincoln Continental
Like new conditiOn , low
mileage. Phone 740·446·
1079.

1993 Chrysler Concorde,
runs excellent, $2.000 OBO'.
Phone: 740-446-7025 or
740-446-0905.

~aving~
you'll find
in thQ

98 suPer Cab, White
Ranger : 4-wheel drive. 4.0L
engine. 4 door. automatic
overdnve transmission, air.
cru1se. lilt, power locks and
windows. aluminum wheels
with AT duelers , chrome
bumpers and·grill, bed liner
and cover. Garaged, non
smoker. Perfect' 37,000
miles. $10,500.00 (740)5922751

740-388-9303

1995 Mercury Cougar XRS ,
loaded ,
sunrool,
v- 8 ,
68,000K. one owner. mus t
see. $4.500 0 80. (740) 992 _
, 493

$900; 1990 Olds Ciera,
$1.200:
1985
Pontiac
Sunbird, $600; 1992 Olds
Ciera, 51 ,200; 1994 Chevy
Cavalier. $1 .600: 1 9~3 Olds
Ciera. $950 : 1993 Plymouth
1997 Ford Escort , clean car, Sundance , $800; 1994
runs great $1995. (740)992· Chevy Corsica. $1.600:
5737
1991 Chevy S- 10, standard,

I---------

S1.000
1997. Toyota 4 runn er, Hours: 9-5 Monday -Fr1day,
Saturday
·Closed
loaded , mint condition, call 9-3
Sunday.
for details, (740)992-5737

MmoRCYCLFS

LINIIfS PAimNG

9 miles from l'r. l'leasanr
011 Sa11d Hill Road .

:Slz:es 5'x1 O' ·

tq 10'x30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

2003 Honda XA100. and a
Go Cart. (Ou tgrown) Call
740-446-3486 aNer 5pm.

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:311
Early birds sta rt

1f14/ 1 mo . pd

(7 40)446-94 16. M·F 9·5.

~10

HOME

::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::======~0011 . !I!I!IIII!!!J!III!I!I!IIII!!IIII!!I!I91!'91!12-6323.

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1
~~~~~.lJ ~
THE BORN LOSER

P'"DIET FIBEK B~('(.S I Tf-\£'1"\&lt;.E~

Wf-\1'-.T ~'IOU EATit-.IGo 7

MJ&gt;..'\&amp;.'IOU f-IP..IJE.N.'T &amp;£:\'ol"''
EI&gt;.Tit-IG (H()l)0f\ OF Tf\EM. I

~llf'f'OSED TO

f-\ELI' 'IOU LOSE
WEIGl-\T, WT Tf-\E.'&lt; f-\~1/0r\&amp;tN i
W0~\1'\(, FOR 1/1£ I

1-800-822-0417

I

·-w.v-s # I Chevy.

Pon l iac. Bu ick . Olds
&amp; Custom Va n Dealer·

I
J!

~

•

r-'----'--"-----'"--'-'-1

market!"

"Not me!

eve ry month

My money is w11h
Rocky Hupp Insurance

All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.tHI

Bonanza Gel
5 .' REE
i

HOWARD£.

I

WRITfSfl

i dOOFING
*HOME
1

I

MAINTENANCE

I *SEAMlESS

: GUTTER
i*free Esumates.

949-1405
'

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing · All types

740·992·7953

and Financial Services,
Box 189, Middlepo~. OH

Phone• 843·5264."

!

G

/lui/dour &amp; 1Jackll0e Trut·kin~: Senoit·e.~·
Septic SyMe11r lnsta/latim1

Cleari11g
flome Site.'i PamJ.~ Drivewuy.'i
740-992-3470
Toll Free 1-866-267-0072
l..ill.ld

• Room Additions a
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical a Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio ancl Porch Decks

WI-I ERE WERE YOU?

r-----, ,----~~

i•

i

CARPENTER
SERVICE

,;

33795 Hiland Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

Free Estimates

80YiNG

V. C. YOUNG Ill

'tHIS

992·62 15

~C'T\IA Ll-y
~EO WEINER MUSIC
PIA~P I!Y neo~ VAP-GA, 1l!A"i'&gt;

I'l.l. &amp;6T 'tHIS

~IS

tSOL-'f' f\AMAI&lt; I&gt;.WD

NIIESDME!

JANOS S\"AI!KEI!!
BrAT 'lAAT FOR
FUNNY NAMES!

'•

LEO

\IIITH A

v, 'IJ OVER

THEO

740·992·7953
11 13

PONE WliH

M~

8TA'f'EMfNT

J&amp;L

Electric
Licensed &amp; Bonded

HOME CREEK [10'1110' ti 10'1120')
ENTERPRISES [740) 992-3194
Backhoe, Dozer,
992-6635

Foundations,
Septic Sysiems,
Water and Utilitle

r---------.,..7----..,
1 WASN'T

IMPORTS
Athens

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Ph 74D-99l-D9U
Ceii740·5111-I073

11.!:~~~~~---=~~~:::!!::~J

GRIZZVVELLS

ROBERT
·BISSEll

ca•macnoN
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

140~992·1111
Stop &amp; Compare

'"' All"'

~a -.s

f'\.\~!1 i\\o7E
~u..~~
~IK\::.r

4ARW&gt;.6E liRBN,

M\1~

28 Coupd'30 Rap1uro

49

20 Show up

rewards

21 - Lanka
22 Garr or
Hetcher

:~

Sup« Bowl
roar

oppooltea

vllhlclo

Sq-•

of glaaa

47 Fom . oalnt
48 "The Gold

32 Subway

44 Waiter'•

51 Above,

36 Wafer
source

ln verte

39 Help.

borrower
40 Slentorien
41 - spumonte

42 Dllfolvt

44 Band '

50 Candy-bar 23 Mouse

instrument

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CttiP"'rty C~ CT\'0109'am5 are cre.r.e-:1 'l()rTl ctJOtaoons llt lai!IOU! oeoOII! pes! and
Eacr ifner 111 me aone· S'JII'I(]s 1()1' at'Oitlef

~

Todays clue X equalS K

" OOYYHW

F0

OWZTSB

KWY

ZHKFSG .

TYLSHtFKRO

" BYAA

FO

BYAA

TSGY

UYKKYI

SC

KWZG

0 Z F T . ··

UYGPZLFG

CIZGXAFG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Only 1n California would we have more candidates
!han reg 1stered voters· - Ja~ Leno on Cali1orma's reca ll election

11-5

':~~~~~~, S©~~tr~-~-ezrse

Ast-roGraph

WQU

Ulll
- - - - - - !O{,o loy CUY l . 'OLIAH - - - - - -

0 R.om.-:nv•
lw'ten ~~
v.:rcm bltd wordl

- . . . 'llirth&amp;i&lt;ly:

GARFIELD

t'M

1 WA5
11-IINI&lt;INc....

MANUYS
SELF STORAGE

gliding
12 Farm

46

name

e~e~pe
17 Thai guy·a
43 Tamn
19 Catchea
companion
alght of

AR IES (March 21-April 19) - A change
you make Ieday 1n the way you've been
handling a work -related siluation Will turn
out to be quite lucky. It'll prove to be more
productive and thereby yield an increase
1n earnrngs. •
TAURUS (Apr il 20-May 20) - You 'll get a
chance to take measures today to establrsh a relatronship with someone· you've
had your eye on rece~,VY· You could diScover thi S person has been attracted to
you as we ll.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- That shaken
confidence you've had concerning something !flat's imporlant lo you could van1sh
today. A discussion with a person m the
know will ~ive you cause to kick up your
hee ls with joy.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Today
could be a red letter day for you concern-

-

SeD-Storage

Ea!i.l

it

Pomeroy. Ohio
22 '!'ears Local

1/®~~
High 8l Dry

unHa
38 Not freah

40 Healy

BETTY

· on.·. th.i s.
-

10 Gnome
11 Go hong-

Stravtnaky

26 Gung·ho
aboul
27 Fob Four

n.,

P•

fcur
bw tQ for:r. f ol.lr lil'ftplt wotC.s

Bv Bernice Bed• Otol

'fOU KICK THE 8ALL,
MARCIE, AND I'LL CATCH IT ..

YOUNG'S

37 Electrical

Circumstances could change 1n such a
manner in lhe year ahead that someon e
you may have only casually know n lor a
long t1me could now beg1n to play a srgniiICant role 1n your lite It'll prove lo be qu1!e
beneticral lor both.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - Your hopes
could prove to be JUStified today pertammg
to something Important you '11e been wiShIng would happen .. ll may be due to someone involved changing his or her mmd
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - laUy
luck could Intervene today a:s she sees
you've been do1ng all that you can- to no
avall - to make thing s happen With her
help, your 90?1 w111 get the boost it's been
needing.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - An old
relalionsh 1p that was important to you . but
that has lain dormant tor some time . could
be revitalized today. It will mean a 101 to
you to have !hiS lrrend back m 1he told.
AQUAR IUS 'Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - A pos rt1ve
turnabout will begin to stir today mvolvrng
a situation that 1s financially 1mportant to
you and anothe r. Hmdrances that have
stym1ed the srt uatron will now be alleviated.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) An
alliance you establish m this time frame
wilh a person of integrity has a better than
average c-hance ol becoming very productive . Lady Luck herself will have a hand 1n

PEANUTS

.Pomeroy, Ohio

•.

34 Ceremony
35 Swallow

45Com-

band

8 Some neat
eggo
9 USCG
officer

3f Fancy
33 W"'

Thu rsday, Nov. 6. 2003

Wicks Hauling
and
Excavating

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

t

target?
24 Wedding

lei 2003 byNEA Inc

CALLING HER NAMES,
1ELLI N ~ JoKE5 ABOUT
HElL. IT'5 NOT ANY
FUN IF TtiERE'5 NO
CHANCE SHE 'lL SNEAK
uP NIP OVERHEAR ME '

Co mm ercial Rt.\'idemiaJ

4A

hotde&lt;
5 - tal
6 Face ahepe
1 Turn dow!&gt;

page

Wl·ule I was hu n11ng for a Qeal lor last
week's rev1ew of Brtdge Plus . 1 spotted
th1 s layou1 tn The Improver's Page by
Dave Huggett . wh1 ch IS usually one ot !he
most 1nstr uct1ve art1c les 1n the magazme.
SotJ!h's one-spade response guaranteed
at least a f1ve-card su1t: with only lour, he
would have made a negallve double over
'the one-heart overcall
Agatnst four spades. West led the heart
10: two. e1ghl. tour. West cootinued w11h
!he heart five, East wmnmg w1th the jack
and cashing the heart ace . Then East
shifted to I he diamond queen . South won
with his ace, drew trumps and ran lhe
· clubs to make h1S contract. What do ~ou
th ink of the bidding and play?
I do not like North's tour -spade reb1d .
Primarily, h1s hand is too Slrong, wllh
cleat slam potential. He should start w1th
a two-heart game-forcing cue-b1d , then
suppo rt spades .
Declarer erred shghtly. After winning w1th
the diamond ace, he should have drawn
only two rounds of trumps . leavmg a high
honor in the dummy. The n he cashes two
top clubs. just in case an opponent holds
JBCk-tour1h of clubs and three trumps .
But '1he main mistake was East's. If. at
trick lour. he had led anolher Mart, Wesr
would have rutted with the .spade JaCk to
promote a !rump trick for East. Huggett
says tha t it We st had had the diamond
ace. he would have ruffed !he hear-t ace
and cashed . h1s wi nner. Perhaps so. but
what did West discard on the third round
of hearts? Huggett does not say. Surely 11
. was the d1amond two. denying the ace. '
Then it would have been easy for East

6:30
Last Thursday of

r· --- -- -·-

1999 F250 . 4WD. cru ise.
IMJ'ROVEMENlS
AJC, AM /FM casseHe, bed
liner, topper also included .
BASEMENT
Fiber glass Tonneau cover
WATERPROOFING
e)(tra wheels &amp; !ires . Unconditional lifetime guar$17,700. 740-446·7554
antee. Local references lur1999, S-1 0 , 4.cyl. 5 sp., PS, nish9d. Establi shed 1975.
24 Hrs. (740) 446PB. A/C, LS series. excellen t Call
condi tion . 40K . 740-255 - 0870, · Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
6368.

~

Pumcruy En~-:les
BINGO 2171

AtJill PARTS &amp;
ACLl:S'iORJE&gt;

1990 Toyota Celic8 for parts.

1

Goon GRAVY, OL'
BESSIE !! YO' RE REALLY
PUTTIN' OUT TH' MILK
~
LATELY!! ~

•

Racine , Ohio
45771

740·949·2217

BARNEY

Ig

Hill's Self
Storage _

2000 Kawasaki Bayou 300,
4x4, like new. Less than 50
hours. S4.000 fi rm. 740-2566239.

(304 )675-6825

Localed
139 1
Safford
School, Gallipolis _

A Beffcr

m buy quilt tops

16 ft. car trailer. new wiring,
ligh ts, tires, StOrage box tor
binders. $1,000. Ph. 740379-2853

CALL

,fovp _.

Phone (740)593-6671

Athens, Ohio

ftlachlne Quilting · Regulated ~tltch
18 Patterns Available
Connie Curnutt
89!1·39412 Shop
owner/operator
89!1·3!112 nome

Pt~ ss

4 LL.D.

29 Cookbook

Give the reader
all the information

Let me do it for youl

I

1995 FORD E350 CUBE

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1998 Ponti ac Transport, V6 ,
white. loaded. new .!ires,
runs and looks great. $7,000
080 740·441.0365.

92 Ford Ranger. Two wheel
drive. 4 cyl inde r. ne;eds
General
Home
engine work. Asking $500. C&amp;C
080 740. 44 1. 0988 .
Maintenance- Painting , vinyl
siding. ca rpentry, doors.
94, S-10 ext cab, 4x4, good windows, baths, mobile
shape. lligh miles. 5 speed. home repai r and more. Fo r
$3,850 firm . Cal l 740-388· tree eshmate ca ll Che1. 740 -

c-r a~~ifiQd~!

740-992-7599

,.

19 WrltO&lt;

21 Blenda In
25 Bond

"' ' '

North

t•lbula"'
3 Budget
11om

48 Tough
queo11ona

-;:=tALpHAr~t I=A:~~

29670 Bashan Road

BOX

TRUCK .

••

750 Easl Slate Street

• AQ.JU
• Q J •

W1·st

ohout
18 Port of LAX
-Jong

Opening lead. • 10

Rcpl:~t:e mcnt

FREE ESTIMATES

1987 Jimmy 4 wheel dr.,
automatic. 350 engme.
65K .. fat tires 304-675-5515
afler 2pm

00

s

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

~~iii30
_ ::-;.;;..~~;;.A.;NSoo·~&amp;~---,
4-\VDs

r&lt;l()

I It

Siding • New Gurages

7669.

1994 Pontiac Sunbird 2d r, 1987 FordE 150 Van $650;
V6. auto. NC, power every- 1988 Ford Thund erbird
1992
Chevy
thing , new !ires . 81K, purple, " $1 ,000;
$2.200.00, 740-379-2748. Cavali er. 5 spd .. $800: 1994
Plymouth Voyager. $1.800:
1995 Chrys ler Newyorker. 1987 Mercury Marquis.
loaded,
m1111 condition.
$500. 1989 Dodge Dynasly,
$4500 080. (740)992-5737 5800: 1992 Ford Tempo.

South

New Homes • Viny l
•

I0 8 3

Dealer: Nurth
Vulnerable: North -South

TFN

Sea

16 Trtumphanl

"' 8 3

BUILDERS InC.

Plymouth
Grand
1989
_'5:..1.::2_ _ _-,---.,-.,----- Voyager , runs good. new
Burgundy 93 Eagle Vision. parts _$1,000 or make offer
loaded, V6 , CD player.
Power everYthing. $2.000 or 1992 Dodge Ca ravan. 4
best offer 080. 740-2 56 - cylinder, automatic, 161.000
miles. very good condition,
1652.
second owne r, $1,200. Call
lively's· Aulo Sales
740-4 45 -72 15 or 740-446"

TRUCKS
FORSAUi

Rak(! in thB

•

J 4
I0 5
Kt 015C/
./ 5 4

Snuth
A K 7 II j
• 7 6 ~
+ A !J 3

I BISSEll

GMC Pickup, Sierra Grande
2000 Monte Carlo LS. Fully LS with camper she ll. One
loaded, 72K miles. Call 304· owner.
miles.
41 .OOO
$2,500, 740-245-9519
675-3127.

2001 Kia Spectra . 33 ,100
miles, 4 cylinder, autom~tic.
1983 Ford Country Squire 4-door, clean . Take ove_vf}aySta. Wag. Fla. Car, 92K, 302 ments. 740·388·6788
00 Tran smission. New tires.
new brakes. rebuilt transmis- 93 Dodge Sundance. $450
sion, new battery, new OBO. (740)992·1493
exhaust, no rust. $600 or
94 Corvette Coupe Wh1te ,
trade for dirt bll&lt;e or 4-wheelred leather, glass lop ,
er. 740-446-7527.
loaded $10.000. 740-6821987
Cadillac
Coupe
Deville . Runs excellent
power everything. $1,000
080. Ca\1304-675-56 12.

Ea"it

•
¥
•
•

Jeff Warner Ins.

Are you Cold?

~74~0~-~8~
~ -0~1~62~---------,

Buy
or
sell.
Riverine
Anliques , 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526
Russ Moore.

Cellular

W~sl

2 ,Cooplan

liner

• K Y2
• 8
. AKQI U72

Ready for Power Outages?
Vanguards Ventless Heaters
&amp; Gas Logs
BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;

stzes am:l length. Must see
to prieS. Call740-44 1-7390 .

ANIIQUI:S

15 Snow-boot

A 1\(l 9

Mathews Bow w1th acces- 675_2208 _ 965 _5597 or Cet.
sortes $350. Call after 6pm
_
.
550 7153

jS30
L

53 Fillet a lith

I Myo!lque

5 B-Itler 54 Mrs. Bunbr
10 White
55 Sleorct
herono
f2 Pub
DOWN
13 Shack
(hyph.)
, 1 BOMblll'o
J' llodeo gear
Tommlt-

·· 1ovft seats $95 each: 4 Rough cut lumber Various
· Ch81rs $20 each

filling
52E~

Phillip
Alder

..,.lectric range $95; relridger- New. scratch &amp; Dent.
·ilto! while (like new) $195: Save 70%.. 1·800-527 -4662
: F1rdgid1are refngerator $150: Argonaut 519 Bridge Street,
. washer &amp; dryer sets $300 Guyandotte/Hyntlngton. M/F
' each, gas range $95: couch
model
XL
; ~~Eify flice. tan &amp; brown) Pantograms
Jacket
Master
embroidery
r ~ 25: couch $50: 2 full size
; beds wl,box springs and machrne. E)l; cellent condi, mattresses $200: pictu res tiOn. templates and new
· $1~ each; lamps $10 each . spools of thread mcluded
::,lee fireplace rnser.t $150: 2 $750. Call 740-441-0243

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ing a social Involvement you'd like tO cultivale and become part of. Your Chance
mlghl come through someone within the
"In-crowd._
"
LEO (July 23-Au~. 22) - You may ~ol an
opportunity today to divest yoursell from
an unprofitable arrangement. Even b41tter.
.!lfler all Is said and done. you could discover that your losses are nil.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Stpt. 22) - Th ll II an
exceptionally lucky day for you regarding
any new venture or project you'd liKe to
launch. It you have something ready to go,
don't waste any more time on contemplation
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0et. 23)- An old Obllg allon owed you 1hat you probably had wrH·
ten off could be repaid today In • way that
will prove to be even bener than you could
have eve r hDPid lor.

,------,"
KNUDP.

~

~-r--T-~~~~ ~

I I I I'

r.--H-A-Y_B_T_P__,,

I IIII

I keep two iists. The first one

has ai'

'~e !.'lings everfbody tninks

and doesn'l say and the second
one has wha! e&gt;erybody says and
d~esn'l ••.. ·.,

0

$
Cotr~c!ete th.: dlucld• quottd
•
•
_
•
•
.
by filii"' lr. 'he milliftQ WOidJ
,_....__...__,_..__.__. yo;; devt1op ircm sttJ: No. 3 b.low.

e

FJ::1NT t--IUMe~ ~[ Cl \EJT: .~S
THESE SQ\JARES

11--i

SCIAM-I.ETS ANSWBS I 1- •- 0 3
Clothe· Plush· Might· Jes1er · HEL,O THEM
'·if you·re h~v in g too much lrouble ft,oc,ng a sclution to you r own problems," granny leclwred, "find other
peop:e w1th problens and HELP THEM.'
~

ARLO &amp; JANIS

L_J~~~-----J
•-

L.-'U.-----.1.1.-1-J

rr---------,..,

WH'f fJOf? f~£

POUJT 11!1 it--/E.

E.~~CI~ 1 RIGtlH

SOUP TO NUTZ
WHa·\'re You 1 ~uc..\c

t l"'' SOMe. k,i-.d,-a
I T.l-'le.Wa~~?No­

bod,. c;ioeS T&gt;-!aT

sTupD wHaSSUP'
\H1 nG ~i

' e"'

'M , TedH . ? We l l.
J vS\ k •SS MY &lt;-c ,.,.cll

�•

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

',

Big East hopes
to remain in BCS
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Big East filled its football void,
The question remains whether
it wi ll be enough to keep the
conference in the Bowl
Championship Series.
The Big East fonnally invited Cincinnati, Louisville and
South Aorida to join the conte rence in football on Tuesday
to respond to the defections of
football powerhouses Miami
and Virginia Tech, as well as
Boston College, to the ACC.
"We will be one of the six
best football-playing conferences in the country," commissioner Mike Tranghese said.
'T m confident that we will be
sitting at the table with the five
other conferences."
Major college football is split
in two groups - schools that
are part of the BCS and schools
on the ,outside hoping to get in.
The ACC raided the Big East
earlier this year to solidify its
place in the group of the
biggest conferenc.~;s . The Big
East hopes its response will be
enough.
The Big East is locked into
the BCS through the 2005 season, but negotiations for a new
deal will begin early next year
and it was imperative that the
conference pick its teams so it
could make lts case to its partners.
"There's a lot of tradition in
this league," Tranghese said.
"We have schools who have
won national championships,

schools whose players have
won the Heis'man 'Trophy. We
come ti:om one of the most
important sectors in this country.... I'm very confident we' ll
be there in the next go-around."
The BCS was started fi ve
years ago by the six big~e st
conferences to create a nauonal title game without a playoff.
Champions of the conferences
- the ACC, Big East, Big Ten,
Big 12, Pac- 10 and SEC qualify for a BCS game, and
two at-large teams are selected
to till out the field in the Sugar,
Orange, Rose and Fiesta
bowls.
Negotiations for the new
BCS deal have been complicated t.uJ a push from schools in
the five smaller conferences to
improve access to the most
lucrative games. Schools from
the six big conferences will
take in about $113 million of
the $118 million from the
bowls this season unless TCU
qualifies for one of those
games.
Since the BCS began in
1998, Syracuse is the only
school in the new Big East to
linish in the top 15 of The
Associa\ed poll, prompting
other leagues to argue that they
are just as worthy of an auto,
matic invite.
"Yes, we think we can make
a strong case," Mountain West
commissioner
Craig
Thompson said. "Sometimes,
parity hurts too much, but in

osu

from Page B1
concussion" when he was hit by Penn · State
linebacker Deryck Toles just before halftime
of Saturday's 21-20 victory over the Nittany
Lions.
McMullen, a fifth-year senior, started two
games earlier this year when Krenzel was out
with a hyperextended right (throwing) elbow.
In those games, he completed 26 of 41 passes
for 284 yards and two touchdowns with two
interceptions.
After
Krenzel
returned,
however,
McMullen returned to his .accustomed spot
st:mding on the sideline within earshot of
Tressel. He didn 't play against Wisconsin or
Iowa. but shook off the rust to complete all
five of his passes in a rout of Indiana.
McMullen led the Buckeyes 10 a touchdown on their first possession of the third
quarter against Penn State, then fired a pass
that Michael Jenkins pulled al\'ay from cornerback Alan Zemaitis with I :35 left for a 5yard touchdown that tied the game. Mike
Nugent added the extra-point that kept alive
the hopes of a repeat Big Ten title for the
Buckeyes (8- 1, 4-1 ).
McMullen said the decision doesn't change
~hings.

"Craig's the starter. Unless something
changes I don't really view it as a quarterback
controversy..And I don't think he does either,"
he said. "We really can't worry about that
stuff. I've just got to be ready."
Krenzel- along with the entire Ohio State
offense - has struggled most of the season.
Almost all of Krenzel's numbers are down
compared with last year's national championship run.
Krenzel is completing 56 percent of his
passes to McMullen's 67 percent. Krenzel has

light of not having one or two
bell cows, we have eight even!y balanced progmms."
A decision about whether the
Mountain West will expand
should be made by the end of
the month and Thompson
advocates adding one or two
teams. TCU is top possibility,
which would be a btg boost in
football.
The determination about
who will be in and who will be
out of the BCS will be made by
a variety of factors, including
quality of teams, tele vision
market size and how many
fans will travel to bowl games.
When Mimni and Virginia
Tech were in the conference
there · was no doubt the Big
East belonged in that group.
Those two schools have played
for the national title three of the
past four years.
"There's no doubt we lost a
lot ·in Miami, but we feel like
we' re bringing i'n schools that
will make us a very strong conference," Pitt athletic director
Jeff Long said. "We' re very
confident that we have one of
the six conferences that will be
part of the BCS."
Much of the success of the
Big East's football future rests
in three school s with little tradition. Tranghese said he anticipates Rutgers and Connecticut
becoming "players" in college
football, giving the conference
more access into the lucrative
New York market.

more interceptions than touchGlown passes (76), while McMullen has been picked off twice
·
and has five touchdown passes.
"Scott McMullen, when he's had opportunities in particular this year, has made the
most of them," Tressel said.
Tressel denied that the platoon was put into
effect because of something Krenzel wasn ' t
doing, so much as the good things that
·
McMullen was doing.
"Plain ·and simple, Scott has earned this
opportunity to play some," Tressel said . "I
wou ld hope that's the way Craig wou ld look
at it is we' ve got one more good guy that's
going to help us win."
Krenzel is self-effacing, studious and serious. McMullen is more gregarious, quick to
smi le and crack a joke at a teammate's
expense.
Offensive tackle Shane Olivea said there is
also a contrast in the huddle.
"There's a little bit of difference, because
Craig has maybe a little more game exper'ience in crucial situations," Olivea said. "This
past week was Scott' s first opportunity in a
tig ht game. When we needed to make a play,
he made a play. This was the first time that
S.cott was actually put in a situation where the
game was on the line. On that final drive, we
needed him to sort of grow up really quick."
Tressel acknowledged that by having the
two share playing time he ran the risk of hurting both quarterbacks' confiqence.
"It's about the same danger you have with
every decision you make," he said.
Tressel said he wasn't worried about how
Krenzel would handle the decision. He said
Krenzel took an active role when McMullen
was playing Saturday- calling the pass play
that won the game.
"All he wants to do is win," Tressel said.
"He'll do the best he can possibly do.· And
when Scott's in the ballgame, he' ll be signaling the plays and talking to (the coaches) on
the sideline just like at the end of the game."

•

Cooper
from Page 81
scheme of th ings, the Big East is the big loser.
With the Big East as it is now, they are a
viable BCS leag ue; but next year and beyond
is a different story.
And Cincinnati , Loui sville and South
Florida doesn' t really help matters any.
After all, your sharing major medi a markets
like Boston and Miami for Tampa and
Ci ncinnati.
Unless there's a mirac le and Penn State
jumps the Big Ten to join the Big East and
Notre Dame 's football team also out of the
kindness of its heart joins, which is on this
side of fat chance, then the Big East has

Marshall
from Page B1
dent Steve Phipps wondered,
"Why not Marshall ?"
"We 're beinp snubbed by
the Big East,' Phipps said.
"Cincinnati is going to the
Big East. Louisville is going
to the Big East. And
(Marshall)
kicked their
(backsides) in bowl games.
We ' re ri g ~t in the Big East's
backyard.'
Marshall's board of governors authorized President
Dan Angel last month to pursue C-USA membership, and
school officials believe an
invitation is imminent.
Some Marshall fans welcomed a perceived improvement in competition.
Two
Mid-American

dropped to the level of a mid-major football
conference.
·
And the mid - m ajor~. li ke the , MidAmerican Confe rence and C-USA, don I play
in the BCS games.
·
The Big East needs to be concerned.
Very concerned.
Meanwhile, leagues like C-USA and the
MAC don' t win or Jose in this situation.
While C-USA's basketball standing has
dropped considerably, the football side of the
.
league will remain as stron~ .
Meanwhile, the MAC is stmpl y revenmg to
its pre-Marshall days.
.
Besides, there are more problems m the
MAC than just losin~ Mars hall and UCF. If
the NCAA proceeds tn making attendance a
factor in bemg a Division I-A program, then
m,any MAC schools could be dropping to 1AA m the next few years.

Conference members are MAC team he most loves to
ranked in The Associated hate.
"It 's going to be weird , new
Press Top 25, yet it historical!y has been viewed as a less- team s and a new atmos. phere," Johnson said.
er league.
back
Tank
Running
"I'm tired of people saying
Tunstalle
will
be
a
junior
in
a high school team could beat
2005,
when
the
Herd
is
the teams in the MAC," said
Tiffany Fraley. a 2000 expected to begin play . in
Marshall graduate from Conference USA. He said his
teammates are looking forBarboursville.
Russell Carter, a running ward to the conference
back at Louisiana State from switch, and he's looking for1989-90, .said the MAC's ward to playing in larger
improved image makes cities and warmer climates.
Huntington , the southernswitching conferences sensemost city in the MAC, will be
less.
"Someone pretty much the reconfigured C-USA's
grabbed a crystal ball and northernmost outpost.
"We've proven that we can
said the MAC has been
lucky," Carter said. "I don' t play with some of the big ·
think it's a tluke. The MAC is boy s, " Tunstalle said. " It
gives you a bigger range of
a good conference ."
Scott Johnson, an exercise teams to play, and you get
physiology senior from St. more publicity maybe than
Albans, said . he wi ll miss with some of the MAC
games against Toledo, the teams."

"

Reds adjust some ticket
prices for '04, Bt

C-USAmovewill
boost revenue, Bt
TM

'

Former
county
employee
indicted

Investigators believe Southern fire was deliberately set

SPORTS
• LeBron's hc:.g~e debut not
so warm as Cavs fall to
Nuggets. See Page 81

either the ice machine·or the
soda mac hine caused the lire
at 4 a.m. Sunday. Jul y 27.
but this was ruled this out.
RACIN E - An investi"All acc idental causes
gali on into the fire that investigated were ruled out,"
caused $202.000 .in damage said Gerald E. Schmidt.
to Southern High School in Indiana Insurance, in a letter
Jul y revealed that the fire to
Southern
Local
was not an acc ident.
Superintendent Bob Grueser
Indiana
In suran ce dated Oct. 28. 'The investigaCompany, which insures the tors cou ld not . however, rule
school buildings, conducted out a human act. The invtlSti·
a thorough inves t!gatio~ into gator cited in his report 'the
the cause of the ltre. Pnor to cause ol th e fire was narthe investi gation, it was · rowed down to a human act. "'
believed that a short from
While the fire was conBY

J. MILES LAYTON

jlayton@rTJydailysentinel.com

tained to the closet, there
was a lot of smoke damage .
Water damage was mainl y
confined to the main ha llway
leadi ng into the hi gh school.
Grueser notilicd the Meigs
County Sheritl's Department
who refenred him to the state
lire marshal's oflice.
"We w ill pursu.~ I e~;al
recourse tmmedtately. he ·satd.
Doors. windows. li ~ h ts
and a myriad of other thmgs
we re damaged or destroyed .
Items that were damaged in
the fire incl ude one ice
mach ine, one drink machi ne

which di ' p~n ,e d Pepsi
produch . two pnpL·mn
mac hines. two wooden cabinets. several t ascs of car ·
bonated dri nh and two .
video camcra.s value J at
more "t han $2000 each .
Nearby light fixtu re' and
cei lin g tile&gt; were also
replaced jmt before school
started in Augu' t.
Grueser said the insurance
company paid out more than
$2ci2' 000 tn wve r the da m-.
age caused by the lire.

STAFF REPORT

POMEROY - A former
'hcrifl"s ofti ce emRloyee ha'
been indicted on \ _ count s nf
th eft in office . .
In a 'ec ret lndtctmenl fil ed
Oct. J 1: Lisa Roush. 4 3. of
Pomero v. wa' charged with
fou rt h -tfe~ree felonies. " \leg. .
in g tha t ' ne used her l&gt;(ls iti on
us secretary to former Sheriff
James M. Sou lsby to comm1t
th eft offenses between Jan. I.
1998 and Dec . 31. 2000. The
in dictment also specilies that
the
alleged
incident s
in1·oived property v alu ed
be twee n $500 and $5.000.
alt hough the spec ific nature
ol the charges ts no t outli ned
in the ind ictmen t as ti led.
The tndi ctment "us fi led bv
Greene Coumv Pro,ecuti ng
Attornev William Sc henck,
who is ~c lin g as spec ial prosecutor in the case .
Roush is sL·hed ul ed to
appear in Commo n Pleas
Court on Nov. 1.1.
AJ , o 1ndicted were:
• Stanlev R. Fairrow. 30.
Chillicotli. on a ch:ll'!C of IX"-·
session ol cocaine. witli a s)XX:itication that the ;unount wa.s more
th:m li1 e !!nUll\ but le&gt;~ than ~'i
gr.JJns. a loorth..J.:g.rec !don).
• Wal lace Randall Chafin.
4 7. no address prm ided. on u
charge of fai lure as a sex

THE ELVIS EXPERIENCE
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich @mydailysentinel.com

Cincinnati
from Page B1
move up to the Big East for the 2005-06 season, along with Marquette, Louisville, DePaul
and South Florida.
The Bearcats are eager to see how they fare
in a much tougher basketball conference.
"It's the best l:)asketball league in the country, if you look," Hu~gins said. "I think the
numbers bear that out. '
The university readily accepted the invitation Tuesday, celebrating at a news conference
that featured the Bearcat mascot and pep band.
President Nancy Zimpher jubilantly broke the
news to an audience that included former
.
school presidents.
"The truth is, it has a tremendous domino
effect," athletics director Bob Goin said. "It
places our university in some outstanding markets. It widens our recruiting base."

The main beneficiary could be the football
program, which has gone to bowl games in
four of the last six *'sons but has !itiled to
draw much of a local fo llowing.
At a news conference in New York, Big East
officials mentioned the following that
Louisville and South Florida have developed
in football. Coach Rick Minter noticed that
Cincinnati was overlooked.
"We seem to be the least-mentioned of all
the schools in football," Minter said. "They
talked about South Florida and they talked
about the excellence of Louisville. We have a
tremendous opportunit~ here."
The Big East lost Mtami, Virginia Tech and
Boston College to the ACC earlier this year
and needed to add three football programs to
maintain ·its Division I status.
The conference found Cincinnati 's basketball program most attractive while assessing
.
possible additions.
"You can't deny the rich traditiop of
, Cincinnati basketball, and you play your tl'llmp
card," Goin said. 'That's the one we had."

POMEROY - If you' ve always wanted to get
up close and personal with the Elvis entenaintnent business. you' ll want tu attend 'T he Elvis
Experience" to be hosted hy Meigs County's
popular impersonator Dwight Icenhower.
Special guests .at the tribute will in clude F. J.
Fontana, Elvi s' drummer from the 1950's. and
Cynthia Pepper. Elvis ' co-star in the mov ie.
"Ki ss in ' Cousin, ." Fontana was El vis' drum mer for 14 years and played on over 4o0 RCA
cuts with Elvi s.
The benetit event for the American C mcer
Socictv will be held at th e Lafavcttc Hotel in
·
Marieita . Nov. 2 1 and 22.
Icenhower described th e two-day pmgram
as a time "when fan s cut loose at .a so·, suck
hop. judge an impersonator contest. and ja rn
with tr ibute arti sts Juring a li,·e ' 6X
Comeback Session· ...
Other events at the "Experience" will be an

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Paul Theis, 87
• Larry Sellers , 59

WEATHER
Showen~ ,

Elvis Lrivia game show, a mu sic "huwcase a nd

a segment featurin g Elvi s· gospel fa vorites.
Doors open on Friday. Nov. 21 at 6 p.m.
After a welcome Fontana and Pepper will
an swer questions about their experiences and
work with Elvi s. At 7 p.m. the mu sic will get
underway with various Elvis impersonators
competing as they.portray Elvis tn the 50 's or
in his movie years. The audience will choose
the winners based on vocals. moves. overal l
look and showman ship with cash prizes going
to the wmners.
That will be followed with questions from
the audience, what it 's like to take on th e persona of someone else. how the y do it and the
experiences they 've had.
At 9: 15p.m. the .audience will be invited to
dance the night away as the impersonators
sing their .favorite oldies, and then wind down
with tunes from '68 Comeback Special.
Saturday's events get underway at nnon
with Pepper sharing her memories about Elvis

HI: SO., low: 30.

KICK OFF
.THE

HOLIDAY

Details on Page A2

SEASOH·!

LO'I'I'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 3-0-0
Pick 4 day: 5-9-6-3
Pick 3 night: 6-8· 7
Pick 4 night: 2-8-4·6
Buckeye 5: 4-7 -15·32·37
Superlotto: 5·1 0-14-37-41-45
Kicker: 0·3·0·1·7-0

Clarett

Everything

,

MU officials ho~

Bonus Ball: 7
Department lawsuit against
"We ex peeled the agency
severa l Ohio universities to have ac ted by now,"
and to find Ohio State in Squire said.
contempt
of a 2000 court
from Page B1
The department last week
order in the case banning sent~ letter to Squire saying
the focus of this matter to release of protected educa- his Oct. 16 complaint to the
another forum."
tiona! records. The com- agency did not provide
Ohio State coach Jim plaint asked the court to fine enough information to show
Tressel said he did not know the university at least $2.5 Clarett 's privacY. was violated.
the complaint was dropped. million, payable to Clarett.
"You do not specify what
He and a university spokes- , Ohio State had argued that
education
record was diswoman declined to com- previous court rulings premen!.
vent individuals from suing closed ... how. it was disSquire filed motions in sc hools under the privacy closed, who disclos.ed it, to
municipal and federal court law. Squire said he wanted whom it was disclosed , and
wrote
LeRoy
seeking to prevent a tape- to avoid that academic ques- when,"
famRooker,
director
of
the
recorded interview from an tion by having the Education
policy
compliance
NCAA investigation from Department join him in ily
being used by city prosecu- seeking the contempt ruling. office.
tors. Clarett is charged with
filing a false police report
ON YOUR S1DE
G)
with campus police in April
after a dealership's car he
·was borrowing was broken
We Cover the Front Door, Back Door
into.
Smith said that if he had
in Between.
.and
allowed the case to go forward, he would not have
ordered a state court to ban
To lind out more about our homeowners insuevidence in a criminal trial.
rance · Call me ... Sto~ by... · jl's your choice!
Clarett, 20, has pleaded
Pomeroy
innocent to one count offalJEFF WARNER
Hollonwld.,e
sification, a misdemeanor
Insurance &amp;
113 w. 2nd Street
Financial Sefvtees
with a penalty ranging from
992-5479
probation to six months in
NationwidO is On Your Sidet!JJ
. Jail and a maximum $1 ,000
fine .
The federa l complaint
sought to add Clarett as a
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company and AHilialed Companie.s, Home Office:
Columbus. OH 43215·2220 H02 11100
party to a closed Education

•

..

, Wednesday, November 5, 2003

Dwight Icenhower Elvis tribute artist

Pomeroy Village
Council awards
water treatment
plant bid

2 SECilONS -

Wednesday, November
26th.
.
~teach

Over

6.000
Households·
In Meigs
County!.

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Movies

A2

Obituaries

As

Sports .
Weather

B1-2, 6

© 2003 Ohio VaUey l'uhllshlng Co.

PIHse ne Bid, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@mydaJiysentinel.com

Don Dudding, left, receives the 2003
Outstanding Teacher award from the OACHE .
to be, and "he deserves this award for his
commitment to and love of students who far
too often fall between the cracks, in school
and often later in life," Waitt concluded.
Other Appalachian Ohio educators recognized during the banquet included

POMEROY
Those
wanting to see th e twinkling
lights and holida y sights of
hi"or ic Pnmerov bu si ness
buildin gs will enjoy the h oliday tour planned fo r Sunday.
Dec. 7 bv lhe Po merov
Merchants Assoc iation.
·
Ho&gt;ted by the Po meroy
Merchants A&gt;Soc iation. the
to ur~ guided by residents in
period costuming will leave
Trinit y Church between 5 and
7 p.m. Those on the tours will
return there for refreshments
and a short program of holi Jay music directed by June
VanVranken and comments
from the Rev. Jonathan
Noble .
In addit io n to downtown
bu sinesses. two churche s.
Trini tv and the United
Methodist. and the Meigs
Countv Courthouse are
included on places to be visit·
ed. John Clonch will al so be
providing .rides in his horsedrawn carriage around town
that evening .
Luminaries with votive
candles will be · prepared by
Bobbie Karr and hun g on
lamp posts on Lynn and
Court Streets. and in the trees

PIHse 1H Duddlnc, AS

Ple•se ·see Tour, AS

Ple•se see Elvis, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

PO~EROY - Pomeroy
Village Council awarded
Ameritcon, Inc. a $1.7
million
contract
Wednesday to build a
• water treatment plant.
Preliminary work on the
plant will begin in the next ··
few weeks and construction should be completed
by late summer 2004.
There were six; bids submitted
for council's
approval. The lowest bid
was from Ameritcon and
the highest was from
Piping
Specialty
Corporation which due to

A2

Pomeroy
Merchants
plan
holiday tour

Dudding recognized by OACHE

BY J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

JNDEX

Please see lndlc:ted, AS

· RACINE -· Don Dudding, a teacher at
Soiuthern Local High School, received the
award for Outstanding Teacher of 2003
from the Ohio Appalachian Center for
Higher Education (OACHE) at a recent
banquet held at Lewisburg, W. Va.
A Southern faculty member for nearly 25
years, Dudding teaches fre shman and
sophomore English as well as drama, jour·
nalism and media to juniors and seniors. In
addition to his.classroom duties he directs
the school play, coordinates publication of
the school newspaper, advises students and
meets with l?arents, all while work.ing on a
Ph.D. at Ohto Universitr.
.
"[Dudding] is a ~ t fted, -resourceful
teacher who is commttted to his students
and southeastern Ohio," noted Alden Waitt,
Educational Advisor at Ohio University in
a letter of nomination. "He is much loved
by his students who know that he cares
deeply about their academic progress, their
inner li v.es, and their futures.
"Don Dudding is the teacher I would like

.

.

C

Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 24th
Call Dave or Brenda
992-2155

The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, NcMm. 9 from 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm at the HMC French 500 Room . .
Feolured speaker • Nancy Stevens, RN, CDE who will discuss Blood Glucose Moniloring .
In Meigs County: . Thursday, Novem~ 20 at 10:30 am · Meigs Senior Center
.

..
November 10, II and 12lrom.5:00 pm- 8:00pm in the Hospital's French 500 Room
·
Please bring a list of home medications to class.
.
Pleale have prescription from your physician to attend. •

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover· the Holz~
. l' Difference
,

www.holzer.org

for more inlormarion on these FREE programs, or to regisler, cal\1740) 446·.5080

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'

.... ..

~

.. . ... .

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..

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'r

"

'

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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="21944">
              <text>November 5, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="101">
      <name>jeffers</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="517">
      <name>sellers</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1862">
      <name>veselica</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
