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                  <text>Monday, Nov. 24,' 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
ALLf:V OOP
/:\u.•v ooP ""'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

I'M GONNA

WHO

IS

BRIDGE

CL088EA. HIM!!

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Alder

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Opening lead: 4 2

When there is
only one option

A.n1wer to Prevlou• Puzzle

45 Gold

modallal
48 Ocean
dweller
49 Brown
by heating
51 Lay down
53 Air rnle shot
54 Preserves
llah
55 RCA
products
56 · ·- Te
Ching"
57 Home, '
In the
· phone book
58 Invite

1 Rl~
4 Debate aide
7 Yea,
In YolcDIIIIM
10 Gorilla or
chimp
11 araakdgyma
13 Auto·salely
teature
14 First-dawn
yardage
15 Slang
16 Teachera'
org.
17 Powerful
. raptors
19 Strangely
21 Unlatch
22Baslcchamel
23 Orange
drink
26 Inhale
30 Nessie's
hideout
31 - tal
32 Habit
33 Feel bad
34 Recede
35 Greek-salad
topper
36 Soothe
39 Garlic juicer
40 Tint
41 Hamm
of soccer
42 Impoverish

J{.e1 Ul'll

LET'S SEE
HERE .. .

•
'
•'

THE BORN LOSER
I'"SOI'\E:'Il\it-IG SEO'W TO

BC ""~

r-E.~Ei" f\P-.1/E N-1. P-.N~O'{It-IG

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50Tf1.E~ING YOU I A.RE!'-1'\ ~OU

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fE.(UNG WEll, C.~\I E.f?

'(OU JUS\ Ci\NI GET ~\!)Of?

It-\ '&lt;OUR EN&lt;. \ f\H

""WQL, i -\1\~ING TO U:)T(N TO "'t
YOU FOR 1\N ENTif&lt;:.E W:.A.L
1:, JUST LIKE Ti-\1\T I

,..,

20 Spiral
molecule
DOWN
' 22 CaHie stall
23 Applaud
1 Cauldron
24 D1sturb
2 Touche
25 NCAA
provoker
Bruins
3 Lucy
26 Movie pig
Lawless
27 Hat or
role
umbrella4 Thick soup 26 Lean-los
5 18-wheelers 29 ORO
o Plastic guesses
Band
31 Portion out
7 Clock part 35 Comic
8 Cain's
- Lebowitz
victim
37 Sweater
9 '1loas--!"
letter
11 Mr. Krs..- 36 Mother's
12 Boulder
sisters
18 Mild oath
39 Ice cream

purchases
41 Fine sprays
42 Obligation
43 First name
In Nashville
44 As well as
45 Hull plank
4~ This, .
to Isabella
47 Glvesltthe
gas
50 Dinghy's
need
52 "My, myl"

' .)o{'I · Yl'S•\ 'oi.:;..J, . :\o. h:.!

SPORTS
• Buckeyes lose second
straight. See Page B1

'J( ' I-.Sll.\\' ,:\ 0\L\IBLI( :.!."j.:&lt;Oo ::

J.

MILES LAYTON

RACINE- The Southern
Local School Board ofticially approved a contract with
the classified employees
union Tuesday which will
save .money for the di'strict
and provide raises to these
employees.
Local
The Southern
Classified
Employees
Association contract calls
for classified employees to
pay more of their health
msurance premiums and
prescription medication. The
trade-off for the union is a
salary increase that more
than offsets the increase in
health insurance premiums
and will cost the district
nothing. It will save the district more than $24,000 dur-

b--+-+-

OBITUARIES
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebril)t Cipher cryptograms are Cf~ed irom quotations b'l famous ~e pas1 and prese'11
Each le!lar 1n tl".e opner stand5 fo1 anc11er

Toaay·s cltJe· s equals T

" LKYOAXN

IACCKW

A. E

FVKHAXN

v

KATX'E

VVNW

SRGWW·LAWVW
VWVAK

KAXWPVVHWG
SRGTMNR

AX

l T GH

v
VR T l

EM AS ."

ZTRXETX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Antomom says he jusllries to make something

Page AS
• Ross O'Dell King
• Willie Lee Neal

ing the next two years. This
contract was approved last
week by the Finance
Planning and Supervision
Commission which is overseeing the district's financial
recovery.
The contract is retroactive
to June and wi ll be in effect
unti l 2005 . Starting next fall ,
new classified employees
hired after school starts will
have to pay 15 percent of
their health insurance premiums.
Superintendent
Bob
Grueser said the contract is a
step forward for both the
district and the employees.
"This contract is uot going
to cost any additional money
and ir is a good thing for
both the employees and the
district," he said.

The
school
board
approved the following substitute teachers for the 20032004 school year pending
completion of all necessary
requirements for these positions: Peggy Bailey. Wes
Buckley, Brooke Butchers,
Jeremy
Chi rpas,
Bill
Downie. Teresa Denni s,
Tommy Ferrell. Laura
Grippa,
Whitney
Hapstonall, Jack Malone ,
Luke
Mcintosh,
Abra
Ohlinger, Kevin Sheppard
and Shannon Thomas.
The Board approved the
following non-teaching per'
sonnel for the 2003-2004
school year pending the necessary requirements for
Please see Southern, AS

Volunteers unload a truck at the Middleport Elementary
School that is filled with furn iture, household goods and other
items that have been donated to the Meigs Cooperative Parish
from the Old Fort United Methodist Church which is located
near Lake Erie. (J. Miles layton )

Supermarket Sweep

Trucks travel to Meigs County
filled with generous spirit
BY J. MtLES lAYTON
)layton@mydailysentinel.com

sionary coordinator for Old
Fort
United
Methodi st
Chu rch. "This is what the
Christmas season is .all about.
MIDDLEPORT
is a year round thing ."
Generosity is beginning to Giving
Dee
Rader.
Meigs
accumulate in Meigs County. Cooperative Parish, said .the
Large trucks full of food. contents of the truck and others
household goods. toys and fur· like them will help make the
niture have started coming in holidays a happier place in
from all over the Oh.io 10 the Meigs County which has the
Meigs Cooperative Parish who second highest unemployment
will dispense the good will rate in the state at J4.3 percent.
starting at 9 a.m. Dec. 6 at
"Yes, J think this will help the
Middleport Elementary School. people of Meigs County,' she
An
J 8-wheeler
truck said. "It will help supply their
arrived in the sleet and snow needs especially over the holiMonday from the northern days. Hundreds of people will
end of the Ohio mere minutes show up for the big give-away."
from Lake Erie. The truck' s
Bach said her church heard
contents came from the Old about the needs of Meigs
Fort
United
Methodist County from a fellow parishChurch which is near ioner who was familiar with the
Bowling Green. At least I J work of Andrea Culley, who
volunteers from the church has organized a church wide
woke up at 5 a.m. before the effort to bring a large truck
sun was out of bed to follo w from her church in northem
the truck to Meigs County. Ohio to the Meigs Cooperative
This is the second year the Parish for the past four years.
church has invaded Meigs Bach said word of mouth about
. County and conquered with a Meigs County spread and soon
ge nerous spirit.
Old Fort was helping out.
"We are here because we want
"Thi s is all for a good
to help anyone IP.at we can," said
cause," she said.

11 ·22

-ll,;

TUTDAIIT Ci.ftii-Q _£11-..I
~C,~ WOIO
PUZH!R \:)~ ~-..1J )..~'\..
~ '}:;if' ;:J GAM!
- - - - - - ldilttllty Cl-AY R. POLLAN_::.___ _ __

BIG NATE

Ohorrong•

low lo form fo ur !imp!e words.

By Bernice Bade Oaol
It isn't likely that the year ahead will be

another run-of-thC-mill year. Chances are
your social circle will be increased and th e ·
new additions will bring with them a number of fresh interests and exciting times.
SAG ITT~ AI US (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - Try to
avoid any arrangements or plans that could
curb your mobility or freedom of action. You
need to be footloose in order to take advan-

tage of something quile pleasant that pops
up today.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - Things
concerning your financial interests could
take a good turn at this time Vel what you

PEANUTS
AND IT SAYS TI-!AT ALTI-IOVGH ~E ~AD FAME AND FORTUNE l-IE
NEVER SEEMED &gt;lAPP'( AND NO ONE REALLY KNEW WI·N ..'

1-115. DOG
I-lATED
1-liM~

1~ ~~ r1E 1.
0

1

iRtFI"

I~~MI
.--

derive might come through a unique set of
circumstances rather than from your own
.-------_,where would ihe school have all
efforts.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - A person
you recently met who you'd like to get to
..
, I:.,j,.:S:_:,NI:.,g.:.Irl-11
know better may contact you today with~· an
_ .
.
.
.
.
.
by l ll lin ~ in rhe miuing wort's
invit ation for a get-together. ltloolc.s like this
'-.l.......I......JL-..1-..J......J you develop from 5lep Nc. 3 be!ow.
person has a place in your lite.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Nice people always want to do nice thing s for nice
friends. And today some pleasant surprises
co uld be in the offing for you sim.ply
because you a r~ well thought of by others
@)
FORI
I
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Should a
flash of inspi ration hit you today through a
' SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 11 '21- Ol
stimulating conversation, give it your full
Urchin
·
Dress · Kini&lt;y · Cloudy · SHOCKED
attention. You could be onto something big
Two matrons walked out of the theater. One shook
· that should be given serious consideration.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Don't be her head in disapproval. 'Too bad," the other matron
afraid to experiment with unconventional
laughed," I mustoe old because I've learned how Ia be
ideas. methods or procedures to improve
amused
rather than SHOCKED.'
upon worn-out Items or situations. Your
ingenuity could be met with startling sucARLO &amp; JANIS
cess.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - A chance
meeting with a friend today who introduces
MAY'*- I A,._ JU!&gt;f f'&gt;~IISCl
you to an associate that she or he is with
IMMAW~£. Ae&lt;xlf If.
could turn out to be quite beneficial. You
and your friend's pal may ha&lt;Je much to
share with each other.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - It's nothing
to fret about if everything doesn't run like
clockwork today, because it will be one of
those unexpected changes that could work
for your benefit. Go with the flow and keep
your eyes open
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Someone who ·
has admired you from afar might step out
of the shadows today and nialc.e his or her
presence felt. Welcome the initiation of a
new friendship, because it could go surprisingly far.- ",
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - It may be one
of those days when everything will be different. Events that you thought would be
boring won't be, and situations lhat are
usually routine ceuld turn out to be quite
exciting.
&lt;='""'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- A surprise invitalion to a social event. which may have
interested you but which you never expect- \
ed to be part of, could come to yo u today
t hrough someone who Is Invited and told to

~-,1-:,;. .:.;.Hj

i~ ~~~:~~~~. :h: chucki• •••••d

~~~~~~M6LE

I'M KAVING A"SI~Kia&lt;'
DA'&lt;- SIDEKICKS N~eR
-...r
GUTTOO
STRt.SS"ED
A!OVI

AN'ffiii~G.
IT~

GReAT

GARFIELD
1'Hf. FUfURE L.lf.5
Elf.FORE US!

OR IS 1'HA1'
'fHf. PA51'?

HARP' 1'0
1'E.L.L fHf.M
APAR1'

I complained that mv son spent

a

N U C P H I~ too much ti"!e at the schooi gym
s 1 1G 1 ~ playing ball. "Gee Mom," rny son
1 I
. . . . . . _ argued, "if It weren't for basketball.

@ ~:;~;~~uMemo

BETTY

I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I
I I I I I ]_ I I

bring a friend

GRIZZWELLS
~. lt'ti ll\51 B&lt;lt'ffilt.I-ID ~A\D :1: WAS
(}. ~ll.l Cot-iffioL I'R£(}.1&lt;. A!-\D ... .. ·

Cloudy, HI: 40a, Low: 30s

l~ttfe rs

of , th•
reur sc:rcmbled words be·

TUesda~Nc~25,2003

Dotallo on Pill• A2

LmTERIES
Ohio
Pick-3 day: 2-9-0
Pick 4 day: 9-2-8-0
Pick 3 night: 9-5-6
Pick 4 night: 6-2-8-3
BuckeyeS: 4-9-18-19-33

West Virginia
Dally 3: 9-4-0
Daily 4: 8-3-3-8

Cash 25: 5-6-9-20-23-24

INDEX
2 SECI10NS -

Calendars
Chissifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

12 PAGFS

A3
B2-4

Bs
A3
A4

As
As
B1
A2

© 1003 Oblo Valley PubU.hintl Co.

Two shopping carts, 92
seconds and free reign in
the aisles of Powell's
Super-Valu made Monday
morning very profitable for
a Rutland woman. Michelle
Vanaman was the winner
of a "Supermarket Sweep" ..
promotion sponsored by
the supermarket, PepsiCola
and
K92-FM.
Vanaman practiced for her
sweep, she said, and got
some advice frotn her husband and family. Much like
her TV game show counterparts, she concentrated
her efforts in the meat
department, and · as a
result, scored two turkeys,
a cartful of ham, steaks,
and chicken, and a dozen
bottles of laundry detergent during her invasion of
the grocery store aisles.
With friends and family
cheering her on, Vanaman
collected over $464 in
merchandise - that's $5
a minute. (Brian J. Reed) .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Lady Luck
may be riding your shoulder today In a matter where you have had some financial
conce rns, Think positive and be hopeful
regarding the outcome of events.

lA:&gt; YoU M!NI7 Slti\NG UP STkAIGHT

WilEN I'M TALKING TO YQJ ?/!!

Vacation freeze lifted for
Middleport employees
J.

money to make payroll for
the remainder of the year.
According to Swift, all
three of the village's full-time
MIDDLEPORT
police
department employMiddlerort village employ- ees, himself
included, have
ees wil be. permitted to take requested paid vacation
paid ,.vacation through the
remamder of the year, despite between now and year's end.
However. Swift said. a shorta vacation freeze imposed by . age
of employees and a ban
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli earli- on overtime
imposed earlier
erlhis month.
this year, makes it impossible
Village Council met with to
schedule those vacation
Police Chief Bruce Swift and days,
that there are not
Street Supervisor Kenn y enoughin other
employees to
Madden Monday evening to fill in for vacationing
workdiscuss options for handling ers.
vacation requests in light of a
financial hardship that has
Ple•se SH VIICIItlon, AS
forced the village to borrow
BY BRIAN

REED

breed@ mydailysentinel.com

FREE Surgical Weight .Loss Seminar

. SOUP TO NUTZ
CI:OO;) Rldo

8~01r1011o ~I

trf NE A Inc ..-"""""com

Are you 100 pounds overweight? Why weight?

iiiiiiiiiiii==-:::::;:~::]

Call TOLL FREE

I c: k ... aND 1HeY oo,..;T

TasTe vetY Goc:O , e 11He\

Mooday, December 1
5:30 PM - 6:30 PM
I

·'· - - -

'"'"" I '' "'

'

INSIDE
• Community Calendar.
See Page A3
o Time Out For Tips.
See Page A3
o Police and firefighters
facing layoff.
See Page A2

'" .;.,1.

Other business·

beautiful beca.,use truth is beauti fUl and beauty ts truth: - Jack Nicholson

(c) 2003 by NEA, Inc

,.

Southern Local board
approves union contract
BY

KAHW

.,

,r~'~l.:l.

-you will regret both."

I'M ORDERIN' YOU MEL'D
BAIL SET AT, UM,

r~

.l.J_

jlayton@mydailysentinel.com

AI the bridge table, often you can do this
or do that, and if you find the winner, you
will not reg ret your choice. In this deal,
there are choices, but. you should realize
that one is much more promising than the
oth ers. l ook at the North and East hands.
Defending against four spades, your partner (West) leads the club two: fou r, king,
queen . You try the club ace: eight, five,
seven. What wou ld you do next?
North judged ,that a slam was unlikely. So, .'
instead of Cue-bidding two clubs, he
jumped straight to game.
You know that there is still one club outstanding, but. West must have it. With a
doubleton, he would have led his higher
card .
You can see three tricks:. one spade and
two clubs. From where will the fourth
come? Not hearts - both finesses are
working if South needs them. Not diamonds - th at suit is solid. And not clubs.
So, that leaves only spades . ll partner has
king-doubleton, king-third or queen-third,
it doesn't matter what you do; but il he has
queen-doubleton or jack-third, it does.
Le ad another club.
Declarer will probably ruff in the dummy
and call for a spade. But you win with the
ace and play a fourth club, which here
promotes your partner's spade queen as
the setting trick.
Whenever you have taken all possible
side-suit tricks, con~ede a ruff-and-sluff.

I

,"r"!j.g!iJIII

Danish philosopher Soren Kier1o:egaard
wrote, "I see it all pertpcUy; there are two
possible situations - one can either do
this or that. My .honest opinion and my
friendly advice is this: do it or do ,not do it

BARNEY

I J •

..L;_

-•

Holzer Medical Center
Education &amp;
Center Rooms AB

..

·1-866-821•4541·
..----www;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;:·ccwl.info

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 25, 2003

FirstEnergy files report to restart Davis-Besse

Ohio weather
Wednesday, Nov. 26
ccuWeather.com forecast for da
MK:H

. --·
Toledo

~--~

•

/

...I

/

Cleveland J2·J45·

30 144

-.~q ··

Q
L

II'.).

I Dayton

PA.

Ma ~sfi~ld .L~-~-/4 6:'_.J •

30 /48

•

~

·C 2003 AccuWealher, Inc.

·· Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

W. VA.

Showers

Partly Cloudy, Cool
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

wit h a 70 percent chance of
rain showers. Highs around
50. Light winds beco ming
-southwest around I0 mph in
the afternoon.
Thursday
night...Mostly
cloudy with chance of rain
showers and a slight chance of
snow showers. Lows around 33.
Friday... Moslly cloudy with
a sli ght chance of rain showers and snow showers. Highs
around·40.
Friday night... Partl y cloudy.
Lows arou ncl 27.
Saturday...Mostly
clear.
Highs around 52.

Today ... Mostly clear in the
morning then becoming panl y
cloudy. Highs in the mid 40s.
:Li ght winds.
TonighL .. Partly cloud y in
the evening then beco ming
mostly cloudy. Lows around
30. Li ght winds.
. Wednesday.. .Mostl y cloudy.
.Highs around 50. South winds
around I0 mph with higher gust~.
· Wednesday ni ght...M ostl y
cloudy. A 30 percent chance of
rain showe rs after midnight.
Lows around 38. Light winds.
Thanksg iving day...Cioudy

ADAY ON WALL STREET
No v. 24. 2003

CO.VJcres

.iniFhials
+119.26
9 ,747.79

---,A"'U"'G-----:S:::E:=
P--::-OC:::T::--,-,NO
::-V.,--- S,SOO

High

Low

9,749 .35

9,629.87

Pet. change

from previous: + 1.24

Record high : 11 ,722.96
Jan. 14. 2000

Nov. 24, 2003

2,000

Nasdaq
Wl~te

, . . _ - - 1.600

. ·~i't '~JO' '&amp;~ ·,

#.:'1'~~;, ).

1,947.14
Pet. change
· tromprevloue: +2.81
Nov. 24, 2003

1,400

- A,-U"'
G- -Sc:Ec:P----,0.,-CT
--N-OV
-

High
1,947.14

Low

Record high: 5,048.62

1,907.29

March 10. 2000

- - - - - - - - -- - - 1, 100

Stan:::lard &amp;
R:ar.s 500
~{fl:r

..

\
1,052 .08
..; Pet. change
trom previous: + 1.62

AUG
Htgh

OCT

950

NOV

Record high: 1.527. 46

1,052.08

March 24, 2000

~ocal Stocks
k1 - 26
Gannen - 85.80
RD Shell - 44.85
AEP - 27.45
General Eronc - 28.75 Rockv.ell - 32.99
Akzo - 33.75
GKNLY - 4.65
Sears - ·55.79
Ashland Inc. - 39.29
Ha~ey Davkfson- 45.96 SBC - 23.06
BBT - 39.43
Kmart - 30
AT&amp;T - 19.80
i!LI - 14.70
Kroger 18.65
USB - 27.48
Bob Evans - 30.92
Ltd. - 17.80
Werdy's - 38.55
BOrgWarner - 78.14
NSC - 21.34
Wai·Mart - 56.08
City ·Holding - 32.60
Oak Hill Financial - 30
Worthington - 13.69
.Ehampion - 4.49
Baok Om - 42.93
Da1ty stock reports are
harmirg Shops - 6.16 OVB - 27.10
the 4 p.m. ck:&gt;sing quotes
I - 27.12
Peoples - 28.57
of the previous day's
· uPon! - 39.96
Pepsooo - 48.07
transactiOns. provided by
.bG - 21.61
Premier 8.02
Smith Partners at Advest
federal Mogul - .29:___~R:::ocky=.:::
Boot
=s'--...:t~7.:::
44:.___:1:;;
nc:c..o:::f..::G~a::~llipo
~
tisc_.-~

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy

(UsPs 213-s6o)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co:

Publ ished
every
afternoon ,
Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 1t1 Court
accurate. If you know of an error in a Street , Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- postage paid at Pomeroy.
2t 56.
Member: The Associated Press
Ohio
Newspaper
and
the
Association .
O'ur main number is
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
ti ons Ia The Daily Sentinel , 111
Department extensions are :
Cou rt Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

News
Editor: Charlene Hoe flich. Ext. 12
Reporter : Brian Reed , Ext. 14
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WAS HI NGTON (AP) through the 6-inch-th ick air coolers, increased the
The owners of the shuner~d steel cap covering the sump strai ners and added
Davis- Besse nuclear power plant's reactor vessel.
the leak mo nitoring system
FirstEnergy sai d in a beyond current reg ulatory
plant in nonhwest Ohio told
· hould report fi led Monday with requirements."
federal regula
Last year, engmeers
be allowed o reopen the the Nuclear Regu Ia tory
Commission that e~len s i ve reponed that Davis-Besse's
Iani.
improved the improveme nt s and testi ng un dersized sump could have
plant
and
equipment, have been done on the plant. · been clogged with debris
revamped our programs, ·It listed 7,700 work orders during an accident, choking
restructured our organi za- and 120 modifications to off the flow of water to
tion and trained our people pl ant systems ihat have been cooling pumps.
in how we will do bu siness co mpleted.
Plant officials hope i'a
going forwa rd." said Gary
In addition. plant oftl cials reopen Davis-Besse by the
Leidich,
presi dent
of did 15,000 equipment tests end of December.
FirstEnergy Corp..'s nuclear and made 2. 700 changes in
However. several tasks
operati ng company. "Davis- the proce dur~s it uses to still mu st be completed.
Besse is well pos ilioned to operate the pl ant.
FirstEnergy offic ial s must
return to service."
''Many of these projects hold a public meeti ng Dec.
The plant along Lake Erie added substantial safe ty 3, test some recent modifi near Toledo has been shut margin to the plant," said cations. such as the high
down since February 2002. Lew Myers, chief operating pressure injection pumps,
A month later a leak was offi cer for FirstEnergy 's increase the pressure of the
discove red that had allowed nuclear operation s. "We re actor coolant system,
bori c acid to eat nearly revamped the containment undergo a final NRC inspec-

tion and meet with federal
regulators one last time.
Meanw hile, a federa l
grand jury rece ntl y subpoenaed llhe Akron, Ohio-based
company for doc ume nts
relating to the in spection
and maintenance of the
reac tor vessel head at DavisBesse. Nuclear activ ists say
thi s in vesti gation is onl y one
reason why restart pl ans for
the plant should be delayed.
"All the investi ga ti ons
must be closed before they
can even think about restan," said Paul Gun ter of
the
Washington. based
Nuclear Information &amp;
Resource Service.
FirstEnergy also is the
company at the center of the
federal inves tigation into the
cause of the mass ive Aug .
14 blackout.

Police, firefighters City to disband
facing layoffs
mounted police
CLE VELAN D (AP) Some cily police facing (ayoiTs in a budget-bal ancing
move have begun looking
for other jobs. while firefi ghters still on duty after
cutbacks may face greater
ri sks. a union leader said.
Union s
represe ntin g
police. firefi ghters and
paramedi cs were summoned to City Hall on
Monday for talks on ways
to limit more than 700 job
cuts announ ced by Mayor
Jane Campbell. The cuts
could come within a month.
If a projected $61 mil lion
deficit for next year isn' t
avoided. the city could face
having the slate control
Cleveland 's
financ es,
Campbell said.
"1 wi ll not let the cily of
Cleveland collapse. I will
not give up the management
of the city of Clevel and to
the state of Ohio," she said .
Ohio's local government
budget oversight law, enacted in 1979 in response to
Cleveland 's default, gives
the state supervision of a
city's finances under some
deficit circumstances.
The cuts include 263 of
I ,817 police otl1cers, or 15
percent, 150 of 992 firefighters, or I 5 percent, and
21 of 231 paramedics, or 7
percent.
Other cuts include leaving
300 vacancies unfilled and
eliminating more than 300
. seasonal positions. The city
now employs nearly 5,900
workers .
Darrell Deerberg, assistant in charge of the Secret
Service in nonhern Ohio,
said he talked to about eight
Cleveland police officers
during a weekend job fair.
While anyone seeking a
Secret Service job must go
through a stringent application process. "Certainly the

(Cleveland police) experience is a benefit to us and to
them,..
Dep lJerg
said
Monday.
Firefighters left to staff
lrimm ed-down firehouse
crews after pending layoffs
may be at grea1er ri sk. said
Bob Fi sher. president of the
union representing firefi ghters.
"We' re at bare-bones
numbers right now. Any
kind of cut in safety force is
going to impact the safety
of the citizens," said Fi sher.
He predicled proj ected firefi ghter layoffs
would
increase fire fatali ties.
The current pending
deficit is the result of
reduced stale and federal
aid, private job cuts that led
to less city income taxes,
higher city health care costs
and negotiated city employee pay and benefit hikes,
Campbell said.
El sewhere,
Columbus
workers have been asked to
take three unpaid days off to
avert layoffs, and its leaders
made drastic cuts to some
areas of its budget, such as
the Health Department, to
keep things balanced.
In Toledo, a $10 million
shortfall will be erased by
furloughing city workers
for 10 days, raiding a rainy
day fund and cutting about
60 jobs.
Akron's proposed 2004
budget avoids cuts and
increases $9 million to $4 I 7
million, an increase city
leaders attribute to projected higher property and
income tax collections.

CLEVELAND (AP) " No mor ridin g boots and
The city 's mounted poli ce breeches," f said. "It's back
unit , the second-oldest in the to strai ght gs and oxfords."
nation, will end its near cenStrother walked through
turylong run because of a $61 the stables greeting each of
million budget deficit.
his stately steeds: Bl aze,
The high- stepping equestri- Rebel , King, Rudy, Murphy,
an s, trimmed in cavalry blue Fancy, Commander, Brutu s,
and gold, have been the sym- Rascal, Buck. Fury, J.R . and
bolic vanguard of the city's Midnight. " Hey baby boy,"
police department since he cooed. ki ssing J.R.'s pok1905.
Bui because of budget cuts, ing nose.
Cleveland 's Mounted Unit,
the city is di sbanding the unit
once
I O(l horses strong , is 'the
and closing its stables on the
olde st continuing mounted
city 's east side.
The unit's 13 horses. often poli ce unil in the nation . Only
seen patrolling crowds, will New York's unit is older, but
be given away to horse farms. il had been disbanded for a
The seven officers who ride period .
Throughout the 20th centuthem will be ass igned to
ry, Cleveland's Mounted Unit
patrol cars or other duties.
Sgt. Donald Strother, whose rode in Inaugural Day
longtime service with th!! unit parades in Washington, D.C. ,
fulfilled a boyhood dream , . and collected blue ribbons in
fought back tears Monday.
national riding competitions.

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The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public meetings
1\Jesday, Nov. 25
POMEROY - The Meigs
County LEPC wi II meet at
I I :30 a.m. in the confere nce
room
of
the
Meigs
Multi purpose building.
TU PPERS PLAINS
Paren t-teac her confere nces
in th e Eastern Loca l Sc hool
Dis lri ct wi ll take pl ace
from 4 to 7 p. m. o n Nov. 25.
Pare nts are to ca ll the
sc hoo l to se t up appoint men ts.

Saturday, Nov. 29
PORTLA ND - Lebanon
Townshp Truslees, 7 p.m.,
town shi p buildi ng.
Monday, Dec. I
SYRACUSE
- Sutton
Township Tru stee s. regul ar
meeting, 7:30 p.m. , Syracuse
Village Hall.

Clubs and
Organizations

Birth announced
GUYSVILLE - Bill and
Julie Jenne of Guy sville
announce the birth of their
son , Jeremiah Joseph Jenne,
on Nov. I 4, 2003 , at
0 ' Ble ness
Memori al
Hospital.

Graduates
leadership
school
TUPPERS PLAINS - Air
Force Staff Sgt. Jeremy L.
Roush has graduated from the
Airman Leadership School.
The fi ve-week course trains
airmen to understand their
positions in the Air Force
organi zational structure, leadership and communications
skills. profess ion of arms, and
the need for profe ss ional
development to be effective
,noncommi ssioned officers.
The course is designed to
prepare .and better equip
sentor atrmen to serve as
supervisors, managers and
rating officials as they
progress in their enlisted military careers. The school is
the first of three levels of professional military education
programs used to develop
and cultivate leadership and
supervisory skills. and is a

Other events
Thesday, Nov. 25
RAC INE - Rac me Area
Community Organi zation
wi ll be held at 6:30 p.m. at
Star Mill Park. Pizza will be
provided and members are to
take a dessen or salad. New
members are we lcome.
POMEROY - Childhood
immuni zation clinic. Meigs
County Health Department, 9 to
II a.m., I to 3 p.m. Bring shot
records. Children must be
accompanied by parent or legal
guardian, Medical cards must be
provided. Donations accepted.

required course for airmen to
complete prior to be i ~g promoted to the rank of staff
sergeant.
Roush is a structural journeyman with the 92nd Civil
Engineering
Squadron.
Fairchild Air Force Base.
Spokane, Wash. He has four
years of military service.
He is the son of Diana S.
Roberts of Tuppers Plains.
and Delbert L. Roush of
Taylor Drive. Middleport.
Hi s wife. Alison . is the
daughter of Thoimas 0 . and
Pamela M. Pierson of
Harmony Road. Athens.
The newly -promoted statT
serg eant graduated in 1996
from Federal Hocking High
School and received an associaie de gree in 1999 from
Hocking Technical College,
Nel son ville.

director. talked about the rising number o f overweight
leens and the need to try to
recuil them into TOPS clubs.
She
al so
discussed
Internati onal Recnognition
day which will be held in
Pittsburgh, Pa .. in July.
Members Receiving Charm
Awards for perfect attendence for the months of July.
August and September were
Connie
Rankin.
Penny
Brooks, Doris Buchanan , Pat
Snedden, Pat Hall, Debbie
Moodspau gh.
Roberta
Henderson, Cindy Hyde.
Roberta Henderson. the
club 's KOPS member, was
awarded for being below goal
for the three-month period.
Those awarded for losing I0
or more pounds for the threemonth period were Connie
Rankin, Penny Brooks, Dori s
Buchanan.
Roberta
Henderson.
Rankin,
Buchannan and Brooks
COOLVILLE - Members talked to the group about how
of TOPS #20 13, Coolville, they lost weight over the
attended the recent TOPS three-month period.
The group won first place
Fall Rally held at Lancaster
for
a skit.
High School. Two members
The club meets every
took place in the poster conTuesday night, with weigh in
test.
Dottie Bond entered a fall from 5; 15 to 6: 15 p.m., and
center piece and won first the meeting at 6:30. Those
intere sted can contact Pat
place.
The group was en!ertained Snedden at 662-2633 or
with songs. dances and skits. attend a free meeting at the
Lily Files .. the new Regional. Torch Baptist Church.

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Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

HAMILTON (AP) - A
form er sheriff' s deputy
adm itted he had a sexual
relationship with a !?-yearold girl who attended a
school where he worked.
Denni s J. Schiavone Jr.,
29. pleaded gui lty Monday
in Butler County . Common
Ple as Court to a felony
charge of sexual battery and
a misdemeanor charge of
contributing to tHe delinquency of a child.
Schiavone's relationship
with the girl began in April
- four months after he was
assigned'as resource officer at
Madison Junior/Senior High
School - and ended around
Nov. I. coun records show.
Butler County Sheriff's Lt.
Mike Craft said the depart:
ment investigated swiftly
after the office heard rumors
on Nov. 10 about Schiavone's
relationship with the girl.
Schiavone resigned two
days later. He had worked at
the sheriff's office since
1997 .
Schi avone will be sentenced Jan.' 21. The maximum term on the most seriou s charge ' is five years,
although prosecutors have
recommended he serve six
months in jail.

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Pleasant Valley Hospital

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EDUCATION
Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com
ENTERTAINMENT

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··; .Your guide to weekend · . .
entertainment Jn the Di-State

www.pvalley.org

lighthouse ,Assembly oi"God - Gallipolis

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

It's that time again - the
holidays ' There are panies
to attend , houses to decorate, foods to prepare, gifts
to buy and wrap, cards to
address, etc ., etc. , etc . With
so many joyous celebrations and social activities
going on, this "most wonderful time of the year" can
also be one of the most
exasperatin~. especially if
there are hltle children in
the home . What can you as
a parent do to handle holiday stress? Here are a few
things to try.
Make the holidays simple.
Do what you enjoy the
most. Eliminate the traditions that are not enjoyed by
the family.
Leave time for relaxation.
Stop and sme II the pine
cones. Enjoy the Christmas
lights. Take the family caroling.
•
Emphasize your family' s
holiday values. Get in the
spirit of Chri stmas an.d
share your time, energy and
money. Teach your children
at an early age that this
sharing of yourself with
those who are less fortunate
than you helps retlect the
true meaning of Christmas.
Volunteer at a soup kitchen.
donate toys to the needy or
participate in an angel tree.
Involve the childFen in ihe
holiday preparations. Even
the smallest child can help
decorate, bake a batch of

Tltmy~ t~ JP~··

Norris Northup Dodge

CHURCHES

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NEWSPAPERS

my mail. it is not unu &gt;ual for
old flame &gt; 10 flare up again .
Ac~ording to pmfessor of
psycho logy Dr. Nancy
Kalish - author of ''Lost
and Found Lovers: Fact s and
Fantasie'&gt; of Rekind led
Romances··
&gt;uch
romances are wonderfu l for
single. divorced and wid owed men and women. The
success rate fo r them is high.
72 percent overal l.
However. in her ori ginal
sample of more than 1.000
men and women . more !han
one- th ird of the reunions
began whi le at least one of
the people was married to
someone else . Her ongoi ng
research si nce the advent of
the lniernet and reunion Web
sites refl ects that that percentage has more than do u-'
bled. h should ~e noted that
these peo pl e we re not
always "looking for tro uble .'' What began as an innocent contact simply didn't
remain th at way. Half of
. those who said they'd had
affairs said they'd had hap py
m;UTiages and would never
have cheated with anyo ne
other than the person from
the past.
Conclu sion: Married men
and women should know the
ri sks be fore contacting an
old love.
DEAR ABBY: Six month s
ago I lost my wife of 18
years to cancer. I now fee l
ready to test the waters and
begin daling. My problem is
I don 't know where to begin.
I am in my mid-40s, in
good physical shape. and
finan cially
co mfo rt abl e.

Dear
Abby

However. my circle of
friends is small. and Internet
chat rooms and singles bars
have no appeal fo r me .
Have you any suggestions
for o,omeone who wan ts ·
companionship but doesn· l
know whe re to look '' SINGLE IN SAC RAMENTO
DEA R SING LE The
more people that know you
are elig ible and looking for a
serious relalionsh ip, the
quicker you wi ll meet '&gt;Omeone. Start lett ing peop le
kn ow that you are now ready
to beg in da ti ng . Make a list
of thi ngs that inte rest you any lh ing from cu ltural
e\ ents. politics. charitable
causes. bow ling. sq uare
danci ng. etc - and get
invo lved in some of them.
All of them pro vide opportunities to meet new people.
TO MY MUS LIM READERS : Happy Eid ai-Fitr.
Dear A/Jh\' is wri/len b\'
Abiga il Va i1 Buren . al.s;,
kno wn as Jeanne· Phillips.
an d 1\'GS fo unded b\' h er
m01her. Pauline Pliillips .
Write
Dea r
Abb r
a1
1nn r.Dea rAbh \'.COm or P O.
Box 69440. LOs Angele.\, CA

90069.

Becky
Baer

cookies or si ~ n their names
to the Chnstmas cards.
Refrigerator
Chri stmas
sugar cookies · come wi th
designs tinted in the dough.
All children have to do is
slice them with a kitchen
knife for you to bake . Or
buy sugar or oatmeal cookies, then dip them in melted
chocolate and sprinkle with
colored shot. Another idea
is to spread canned frosting
between two ready-made
cookies for easy sandwich
cookies.
Be reali sti c about your
child's behavior. Don' t go
places for extended periods
of time and expect him to si t
quietl y without things to do.
Try to keep to a normal routine of bedtime and naptime.
Avoid the pressure to buy
unnecessary or extravagant
gifts. Even though we say
"It' s the thought that
counts," many small children don 't understand I hal.
All they know is what they
see on television - the latest
in toy s and electronic s.

Don' t give i'n to the marketing that is geared towards
expensive children"s gifts.
Take things one day at a
time . Don' t let yo urself
become overwhelmed. Get
an early start on all of the
shopping. baking and decorating .
Maintain holiday traditions lhat are meaningful to
the famil y. Traditions all ow
us to remember the past
whil e connecting to the
future . Keep those that are
important.
With ma ny
blended families. new traditions will need to be staned.
Encourage cltildren to
express their feelings. The
holidays can be a sad time if
members of the family are
no longer there . Don 't push
their feelin gs aside by
telling them they should no1
feel that way. Let them
know that you understand
and that you have had simi lar feelings.
Take time for yourself.
Indulge in a bubble bath or
a cup of hot chocolate. Turn
on some Chri stmas music.
tum off the television and
just look al the blinking
Christmas tree li ghts . Think
about the true meaning of
lhe holidays. Allow yourself to experience the pl easures and joys of the seaso n.

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.com

\.Pleasaat ·falley.·Rospital o.ffers alithotrip_sy

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

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Charter Communications

Point Pleasant Register

www.charter.com

www.mydailyregister.com

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optiqa for ·patients suffering from kidney stones.
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_;Litb~tripsf uses the technique of

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

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PLEASANT VALLEY.HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive •Point Pleasant,
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2003

Time Out For Tips

Attend rally

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www.turnpikeflm.com

Saturday, Nov. 29
CHESTER - The 90th birthday of Opal Gdul Wickham will
be celebmted from 2 to 4 p.m. at
the Shade River Masonic Lodge
building in Chester Friend~ and
relatives are invited to attend. It is
requested that gifts be omiued.

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Former
deputy pleads
to sex charges

DEAR ABBY: I am the
third woman in my hu sb a nd'~ life . "Don" had two
loves before me. Last week.
hi s firs t love. " Kri stin ...
called hi m out of the blue
and told hi m she'd had a
horrible dream about him.
She sa id she had awakened
sobbing, convinced he had
been severely injured or was
in some kind of troubl e.
Kristi n we nt on to say that
she had looked him up on
the Internet after her dream,
and lo and behold, ~h e' d discovered that he works onl y
bloc ks away from her. She
asked him to ·have lunch
with her.
My sixth se nse is usuall y
excellent - and it is screaming that this gal is on the
prowl. Her third marriage is
shaky, and I believe she has
my husband in her sights.
Don disagrees. He says 1
should trust him : he hasn' t
seen her in 40 years and it
would be a harmless lunch.
1 say he would be startin g
down a slippery slope .
Don and I have been married 20 very happy years.
Even though I tru st Don th at
nothing physical will happen, I'm afraid old feelings
will be rekindled.
Am I unreasonable in asking Don not to see this
woman? - SCARED ON
THE EAST COAST
DEAR SCARED: There is
nothing unreasonable about
telling your spouse that the
sudden appearance. of his
first love has made you feel
vulnerable. It's honest communication . According to

Thursday, Nov. 25
COLUMBUS- John
Crooks. nati ve of Syrac use
and a 1942 graduate of
Pomeroy Hi gh School wil
observe his 80th birthday on
Nov. 25. He had a hip
repl acemen t in March and a
second surgery on the same
l) ip in August. He is currently
· doing well and residing in
Mayfair Village Retirement
. Center, Room 2 15.3011
Hayden Rd., Colu mbus,
43235. He would enjoy getting cards from old acquaintances.

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www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

Birthdays

1\Jesday, Nov. 25
AT HENS- The Southern
Consorti um for Children will
meet at I0- a.m. at the office.
507 Richland Avenue , Suite
I 07, Athens.

Tuesday, l\lovember 25,

Blast from husband's past
sends up .red flare for wife

Local Folks
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W'J!;. 304-675-4340

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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

VIEW

Funds
Reforming Ohio 5 public
pension system
. Hardly a week goes by without a major news story con·cerning the obstacles facing both public and private pension
.funds across America. Many of these funds are pension time
:bombs, which risk the financial futures of the members they
.serve.
. A recent study by the Ohio Retirement Study Council's con·sultant, Milliman USA, has demonstrated that this is the case
·with respect to Ohio's five public pension systems. As stated
•by this report, two of Ohio's pension funds ' health care
.reserves will be exhausted in less than two years if contributions cease. Appropriately, the Ohio Geneml Assembly is
~struggling with the challenge of bringing both reform and
:greater accountability to the management of these systems. As
:we are finding our, it is no small task.
.
: Collectively, Ohio 's five systems manage more than $100
billion in assets. Over t.he last nine years, our pension funds
have not been meeting their own actuarial assumption s and
four have not met their investment benchmarks. In 1990,
George Voinovich proposed to bring accountability to the
:Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation , which was beset by
:similar performance and accountability issues at the time.
:While under the Governor's control , its portfolio has consis. ·tently outperformed Ohio's five pension ·systems for over five
:years.
The five enormous bureaucracies are run by boards of directors who. although well intentioned, are simply not accountable to the taxpayers of this state. Should any of our public
pension systems one day find themselves unable to fulfill
their financial obligations to their retirees, guess who will be
asked to clean up the mess? You. the Ohio taxpayer.
. I appeared before the Ohio House of Representatives urging
them to make someone accountable to the electorate for the
conduct of these boards and funds. This could be the
Governor, the Secretary of State, r any other statewide elected ofticial. The current model - which places the Ohio
A\lditor and/or Attorney General in minority roles on the five
boards- in not working. This current structure renders these
·
funds unaccountable to the people of Ohio.
In my testimony. I offered to be the person made acco,untable - but only if given the tools to bring about real change
and accountability. I understood full well that I would be picking up a scorchingly hot potato. My intent was to diffuse the
timebombs that our public pension systems face ...
: It is to everyone's benefit that we are having this debate in
Ohio. The time has come to make our five public pension sysi~ms accountable, not just to their memberships, but to all
Ohioans. I remain prepared to be part of the solution.
Joseph T. Deters
. Ohio Treasurer of State

HAS

BRITNEY
SPEARS
WRITTEN
ANY
CHILDREN~

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&lt;!:1 2003 by NEA, Inc

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

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. ;; Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
ke less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
~ditin~ and must be signed and include address
'.and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
" published. ·Letters should be in good taste,
'he
'qddressing issues, not perso~:~alities.
i:. The opinions expressed in the column below..
;qre the consensus.of the Ohio Valley Publishing ·
i€ o. editorial board, unless otherwise noted.
'

s

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 25,

Tuesday, November 25,

Obituaries

200=l
J

Dems cffering Medicare gift to GOP

Willie Lee Neal

Trustees to meet

[bj]
-.

m
·Demonizing justice Janice Brown
sent to the floor for a federal
district judgeship.
Dora
Irizarry, sponsored by Schumer
and New York Gov. George
Pataki. A former New York
City criminal cout1 judge and
former acting State Supreme
Court justice, lrizarry was
tound unqualified by a majority of the American Bar
Association screening commit,
tee.
.
Testifying about Irizarry's
judicial temperament at her
Senate Judiciary Committee
hearing, Patricia Hynes,
member of the ABA commit:
tee, said Irizarry had a 'serioul&gt;
control problem' in court, a~
shown by the 'number of com'
plaints about the nominee's
temperament. ' And about those
complaints, Hynes said, 'I
have never before experienced
such widespread and consis:
tent negative comments about
a nominee's temperament. '
But Dora lri1..arry will get an
up-or-down vote on the Senate
floor. Odds are that Janice
Brown will not.
Due process- fairness - is
the hallmark of our criminal
justice sy&amp;tem, but not for
Senate Judiciary Committee
Democrats. Will Sen. Schumer
explain hi s support fot
~
Irizarry?
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on thf
First Amendment and the Bill
of Rights and author of several
books, including his curren.t
work.. 'T1te· War on the Bill of
Rights and rhe Gathering
Resistance' (Seve11 Storie~
Press, 2003).

a

,.

..

NEW HAVEN - Ross
O' Dell King, 72, died Sunday,
Nov. 24, 2003 at Charleston
Area Memorial Hospital.
He was born Oct. I0. 193 1
at Graham Station, W.Va.
He is survived by his wife
Joan Johnson King of New
Haven, W.Va.
Funeral services will be held
at II a.m. on Wednesday at
the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral
Home in Mason, W.Va.
Visitation Will be from 6 p.m. to
IJ p.m. Tuesday at the funeral
home. There will be a military
graveside servioe perforrred by
VFW POST #9926 and
American Legion Post 140. The
family requests conoibutions be
made to the Father's House
Church in Hartford W.Va 25247.

Seymour at 742-2558 or
Jerrena Ebersbach at 9927747.

POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Meigs County
Court of Judge Steve Story
between Oct. 27 and Nov. 16
are as follows:
Debra L. Cupp, Vinton, left
of center, dismissed; Barbara
A. Curry, Gallipoli s, speeding, $30 and costs; Alberta D.
Davis, Reedsville, stop sign ,
$20 and costs; Carolyn J.
Delong, Jackson . speeding,
$30 and costs; Joseph E.
Del zo tto, Shaker Height s,
speeding, $3 0 and costs ;
Christopher M. Deuley,
Parkersburg, W.Va., speeding, $30 and costs;
Jonath an
R.
Diddle ,
Bidwell, failure to register.
$20 and costs: Todd Dill.
Pomeroy. seatbelt-passenger.
$20 and · costs; Sara L.

Ebin ger. Gallipolis, speeding, $30 and costs; Dou ~ l as
B. Eblin . Pomeroy, speeclmg.
$30 and costs; Michael J.
Ebin , Rutl and, overl oad,
Everette E. Elkins, Bidwell,
seatbelt, $30 and costs; Caley
B. Fehling. Lake Wales. Aa..
speeding, $30 and costs;
Jason Fitch, Portland,
improper pass ing, $20 and
costs; Dorothy A. Forbes,
Pomeroy, right-of-way/public
highway. $20 a.nd costs:
Robert R. Forester, Rac ine.
assured clear distance, $75
. and costs; Chri stopher France,
The Plains, speedmg, $30 and
costs; Ttmothy M. Frederick,
Pomeroy. seatbelt. $30 and
costs; Mark E. Frye, Cheshire,
seat belt, $30 and costs;
Kendall
L.
Gabbard,
Annville, Ky. , speeding, $30
and costs; Trifon Ganotis.
Parma. seatbelt, $30 and
costs; James E. Gardner,

Gallipolis, seatbe lt. $45 and
cos ts: Danie l J. Gate•.
Athens. speeding. $30 and
cos ts: Zac hary T. Gi lkey,
Middleport, speed i n~ . $30
and costs: Jam te S. Gtl lispie,
Pomeroy. tinted glass , $20
and costs; Will iam R.
Gilmore. Pomeroy, fa ilure to
control. $20 and com: David
A. Go ldbl att , Granville,
speeding, $30 and costs:
Todd Norville Goode,
Rac ine. domestic violence.
$50 and costs: Nathan B.·
Grant, Pomeroy, fai lure to
control , $25 and costs, equipment mi suse, $25 and costs:
Rodn ey L. Grea thouse ,
Leroy.
W.Va..
display
plates/valid sticker. $20 and
cos ts: Kenneth E. Green,
Pomeroy, seat belt passenger,
$20 and costs: Matthew A.
Hicken, Rutland. failure to
control. $20 and costs: John
A. Hilli er. Troy. Mic h ..

speeding. $30 and costs;
Robert D. Hol liday. Raci ne.
fai lure to control. $25 and
costs;
Steven
R.
Hoove r,
Pomeroy. ob,tructing j ustice,
$200 and costs. resisti ng
costs, di smissed: Brian D .
Hopki ns. Parkersbu rg. W.Va ..
use/possession of drug paraphernalia, $50 and costs.
drug abuse. $50 and costs.
reckle" operation. $ 100 and
costs. dri vi ng unde r suspension/revoc .. di,missed. failure to·cont ro l. dis mi &gt;sed;
Luci ll e B. Howerto n.
Alban y, 'peeding. $50 and
costs : Edl'.ard L. Hutchi ,on.
Willow ick. "eatbelt. $30 and
costs: Scott D. Jone,, Athens.
&gt;peedi ng. $30 and costs :
Ronald J. Just us, Vinto n.
aS&gt; ured clear di"ance. $20
and costs: Karen M. Kern, .
Charleston. W.Vu .. ' peeding.
$45 and costs .

Jury chooses death for sniper mastermind vv_......--. Allen Muhammad

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va . deci sion; Muhammad stood
(AP) A jury decided ramrod straight as he listened.
Monday th at John Allen The courtroom was silent ; the
Muhammad should be execut- judge had warned
PORTLAND - Lebanon
ed for taking it upon himself to ou,tbursts before ~£'~1J.!~~"!~
Township Trustees will meet
choose who should Iive and deci sion was amnounce:d
at 7 p.m.on Saturday at the
who should die d~ring the
Prosecutors had depicted
_
township building.
sntper
attacks
that
gnpped
the
Muhammad
as a ruthless murSYRACUSE
- Sutton
RACINE
Southern
Wa
~
hmgton
area
for
three
terderer
who
was
"captain of a
Town ship Trustees will hold Athletic Boosters will meet
killing team," and they pretheir regular meeting at 7:30 at 7 p.m. on Dec . 2 at the nfymg weeks l~st fall.
The
em~mauc
Muhammad
sented evidence of 16 ·shootp.m. on Dec. I at Syracuse high · school. All coaches and
reacted
wtth
the
same
flinty
ings, including 10 deaths, in
Village Hall.
parents are asked to attend.
look he had through most of Maryland, Virginia, Alabama,
the tnal.
Loutsiana and Washington
Scout meeting set
The jury deliberated more D.C. Muhammad could b~
than five hours over two days prosecuted in those jurisdicbefore deciding the fate of tions as well . .
POMEROY - There will
When he and 18-year-old
RACINE- A charge-wide Muhammad, a 42-year-old
be a parent and girl meeting
Gulf War veteran who master- Malva were arrested on Oct.
for all girls aged five and in Thanksgiving Eve service for mmded the attacks and asked . 24, 2002 , various jurisdictions
Southern
United
kindergarden interested in the
to "Call me. God" dur- scrambled to prosecute them .
Methodist
Charge
will
be pohce
being a. Daisy Girl Scout
mg the reign of terror.
Ultimately. Attorney General
from 5:40 to 6 p.m , Dec. 2, held at 7 p.m. on Wednesday
The jury 's recommendation John Ashcroft sent the two to
at the Pomeroy Library. at Bethany United Methodi st is .not final. Judge Leroy F. Virginia, citing the state's abiiRegistration cost is $10. Church, Ohio 124 in Dorcas. Mtllctte Jr. can reduc.e the pun- ity to impose "the ultimate
Financial assistance is avail- Pastor John Gilmore invites tshment to hte m pnson with- sanction."
able. Information about the church members and the out. parole when Muhammad
Only Texas has executed
troop is available from Cindy community to attend.
1s tormall~ sentenced on Feb. more people than Virginia
12, but Vtrgt_ma JUdges rarely since the death penalty was
take such actton.
reinstated in 1976 - 310 to 89.
Some jurors said the lack of Virginia is also one of 21 states
any emotton or remorse from that allow the execution of
Muhammad, combined with killers who committed their
the
broad scope and violence crimes at 16 or 17. Mal vo was
ATLANTA (AP) -A con- Episcopal Church USA, as of the
shootmgs, convmced 17 at the time of the shootings.
servative Episcopal leader well as some bishops' them that the death penalty
Virginia uses lethal injection
told parishioners an~ry about approval of blessing cere- was the only optwn.
for executions unless the pristhe recent consecratiOn of an monies for gay couples, has
"1 looked for something in oner requests the electric chair
openly gay bishop to remain deeply divided the church.
him that might have shown
Defense attorney Pete~
patient, assuring them that
Duncan and Anderson reaf- ren_10rs~,:· satd juror R?bert Gre~nspun suggested that the
"early skirmishes will be firmed Monday that a split Elhott. And I never saw It the Jusuce ·Department had essenwithin the next 60 days.''
between conservative and lib- whole time."
tially shopped around for a
The Rt. Rev. Robert eral factions seemed inevitable
The jury concluded that jurisdiction willing to impose
Duncan, vice president of the - although that may be years prosecutors proved both death.
.
American Anglican Council, down the line. In the meantime, aggravating factors necessary
"What is more unseemly
a netwprk of conservative the Network of Confessing to impose the death penalty: than the attorney general of the
Episcopal leaders, did not Dioceses and Parishes would that Muhammad would pose a United States saying we're
specify what those "skirmish- address the immediate con- danger and that his crimes going to go to Virgima where
wantonly
vile. Mr. Muhammad is going to be
es" would be. But he hinted at cerns
of
conservative were
Muhammad was sentenced to killed.?" Greenspun asked.
a move toward a possible split Episcopalians, they said.
Greenspun indicated he sees
in the American church.
"It is not about sex. It is not death. on both counts he was
convt~t~d
of
last
Monday:
several
major issues for
Duncan and council presi- about God's love being beyond
commmmg
multiple
murders
appeal,
including
whether
dent the Rev. Canon David C. any of his children," said
wllhm
three
years
and
comVirginia's
post-Sept.
II
terrorAnderson - two leading crit- Duncan, the Bishop of
mlttmg
':"urder
asp~
of
a
plot
ism
law
applied
m
the
sniper
ics of the gay bishop's conse- Pittsbwgh. "It's about biblical
the
to
terronze
the
pubhc.
case.
Muhammad
became
cration - reported at the orga- authority and Anglican identity."
"!hey
took
pl~~sure in ter- first person convicted under
nization·~.., Georgia chapter
Anderson called the accep- ronzmg peopl_e, prosecutor the law. Greenspun also
meeting Monday that they're tance of homosexuality in the Paul
Ebert sa1d Monday of argued that Virginia Jaw does
drafting a charter for the church "a fortn of polytheism." Muhammad and fellow sus- not allow the death penalty for
Network
of
Confessing
"A lot of what you see going peel Lee Boyd Malva. "They Muhammad because there was
Dioceses and Parishes. Both on is not Anglican. It is not took ,Pleasure in killing people. no evidence he was the trigsaid it would be · "a church Christian," he said. "It is not That s the kind of man that gennan .
within a church.''
Anglican in the last 2,000 years doesn' t deserve to be in sociMuhammad was found
The Nov. 2 consecration of of tradition. and you're not ety." .
guilty of murder in the slaying
the Rev. V. Gene Robinson of allowed in the last two decades
The JUrors looked .solemn as of Dean Harold Meyers, a 53New Hampshire by the to reinvent the Christian faith." they came back with their year-old Vietnam veteran who

Boosters meet

Service planned

Episcopal church leaders say actions
regarding schism coming soon

I
I!,

11-iiSON.

. '.,

Ross O'Dell King Cases heard in

Local Breifs

j

~~~~~pV~,~:~::::~~~~

Justice Brown, considering
the expanding police search
powers (which undertninc the
Fourth Amendment of the Bill
of Rights), wrote :
'Of course, everyone who
Nat
has not spent the last 20 years
Hentoff
sealed in an ivory tower knows
the problem is real. ... There is
an undeniable correlation
between law enforcement
Brown with 'a deep-seated and stop-and-search practices and
disturbing hostility to civil the racial characteristics of the
rights, workers' rights. con- driver. ... The practice is so
sumer protection and govern- prevalent, it has a name:
ment action.'
'Driving While Black."
But Kennedy didn't cite her
In that opinion, she told her
votes in these California . colleagues on the court that,
Supreme Court cases:
while racial profiling is 'more
In People ex rei. Lungren v. subtle, more diffuse, and less
Superior Court ( 1996), Justice visible' than racial segregation,
Brown said that the California 'it is ·only a difference in
attorney general had the degree . If harm is Still being
authority to sue faucet manu- done to people because they
facturers who used lead in their are black, or brown, or poor,
faucets. And, in Hartwell Corp. the oppression is not lessened
v. Superior Court (2002), she by the absence of television
agreed that water utilities could cameras.'
be sued for injuries resulting
I believe Sens. Schumer,
from harmful chemicals in the Kennedy,
Feinstein and
water consumed by residents Richard Durbin (Illinois) another of Brown's harsh
of the state.
Excuse me, Sen. Kennedy, is opponents - agree with her
Jlmice Rogers Brown totally powerful statement on racial
hostile to government action profiling. If the entire Senate
and consumer protection? knew of Justice Brown's other
What about her record on civil views that' I just cited, then I
liberties? Somehow Senate think there is little doubt she
Judiciary
Committee would be con finned in an upDemocrats have failed to bring or-down vote by the entire
public attention to the fact that, Senate, a legislative body prein People v. McKay (2002), sumably reflective of mainshe was the only judge on the stream America.
California Supreme Court to
Meanwhile, the Senate
focus on the different standards Judiciary Committee, by voice
in police searches when the vote - though some members
driver stopped is black.
were on record as opposed -

West Columbi a, W.Va. Willi e Lee Neal, 58 , died
Sunday, Nov. 24, 2003 at his
residence in We st Columbia,
W.Va .
He was born Aug. 17, 1945
in West Columbia, W.Va.
He is survived by his wife
Doris Jean Neal of West
Columbia.
Graveside servi ces were
held Tuesday at Rickard
Cemetery on Miss ion Ridge
Ro ad, with Rev. Charles
Hargraves offi ciating.
There will be no vi sitation .
Arrangements are under the
direction of Foglesong Tucker Funeral Home in
Mason.
E-mail condolences to
fogle songtucker@c itynet .net.

The Da ily Sentinel • Page As

Court news
Meigs County Court

The bill also contai ns an $80
Dasc hle, D-S .D., are assemAre Democrats real ly going
bli ng a coalition of other billion subsidy to encourage
to go into the 2004 elections
seniors' and health groups to employers to maintain their
opposing a $400 billion expancounter the AARP, which has retiree insurance, he said, plus
sion of Medicare, a program
mounted a $7 million ad cam- new benelits such as chronic
identified with their party since
paign to promote the Medicare di seuse management, preventhe time of Harry S. Truman?
Morton
bil
l.
tive care and electronic pro,
And are conservative House
cessing
of prescrip tions to
Kondi-acke
On its side, AARP National
Republicans really going to
Policy Director John Rother reduce medical enurs.
block passage of a Medicare
In the meantime, House
told
me he think s the
prescription drug benetit and
Democrats'
behw
ior
is
,
'more
GOP
leaders are ex pressing
deny their president and party
. .
about pol itics than policy' and confidence thai they ca n preleadership both a major
Concetvably,.
Dem~~ats
at thei r aim is to deprive vent conservati ves from blockdomestic accomplishment and could get out at thetr pohucal · th
p .·d 1 B .11 of a domesti . ing the bill. The origi nal House
a chance to seize the senior fi x by somehow fo rcing rest en us
· L
achievement.
version pa&gt;Sed hy onl y one
vote away from Democrats'&gt;
Republicans
to
amend
the
bill
Asked
)
Jan
icu
1
arly
about
vote, with IIJ Republicans
It's nul clear what's going to to make it more liberal - and
defecting
and nine Democrats
then
claim
credit
for
having
Kennedy,
Rother
said,
'
I
think
happen in either the House or
voting
in
fa
vor. House leaders
done
so.
this
is
a
tragedy
for
him.
He
the Senate over the next tew
was
such
a
statesman
in
Ju
ly.
are
emphasizing
that the new
days (or weeks, if Congress
Some health care lobbyists
can't get its work done prompt- say thi s is the aim of Sen. But now Iraq has deteriorated. measure creates tax-deferred
president's standi ng in the health savings accounts for all
ly), but Democrats seem to Edward Kennedy. D-Mass., The
II
·
d . Blood ·ts Americans. a stronger privateo
·
po s has detenormc
have made their decision: They wh0 t.osterel1 a comprom;se
111 the water as far as the
are now positioned staunchly Senate bill in July but now Democrats are concern ed. sector alternati ve to tradi tional
Medicare l(lr seniors whn want
against the largest explmsion of hotly opposes the HouseThey don't want prescription it ai1d other items long sought
Medicare since its founding. ' Senate measure .
They say that the Medicare
At the moment, however, no drugs to be tile thing that saves by conservatives.'
· ·
bi II now before Congress, top Democrat is talking about Bush's hide.'
According to Democratic
mainly written by Republicans, t1xes or amendments, but-only
One we ll -informed heal th poll ster Mark Mellman . his
is ' not good enough' and about opposition. 'House cmc I• · ''vist said the AARP's pi111y can gain more by allowwould actually harm some Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi·, split .. li the Democrats was ing the GOP bill \Opass - tmd
' low-income seniors. They evi- D-Calif.. is going so far as to by itself 'powerful. vi sible. then attacking it for its t1awsdentl y think they can convince threaten reprisal s against concrete evidence of the new than by blocki ng it with a !iiiin
Washington . buster. assuming the votes are
seniors that what the GOP is Democrats who vote for the reality
Republicans are in charge a~d there.
deli vering is worse than what bill .
In the process, Democmts are going to stay in charge.·
they have now - which is no
'First,' he said. 'seniors are
have bitterly split with one of
The AARP's president. Bill going to expect a benefit ri ght
benefit at all.
It strikes me as a massive their longest-standing allies, Novelli, told me that backing away and only gel a I0 percen\
politi cal
gift
to
the the 35 million-member AARP, the GOP bill was 'a hard deci- discount unt il 2006. Then
Republicans, who - . if conser- which has decided that the bill sion,' but that 'we are a non- they'll gel out. their calculators1
vative House ideologues don't isn't perfect but is $400 billion partisan organi zation . We are and many Will see that they
lined up behind seniors. We don't get much benetit at all
blow it - will be able to claim · better than no(hing.
Rep. Richard Gephardt, D- want the $400 billion to help because of premiums ($35 It
to senior voters that they delivered on a major promise and Mo., said in a New Hampshire people with high dru g costs.'
month), deductibles ($275 a
Novelli disputed Democratic year) and doughnut holes (no
steal an issue that has always debate sponsored by the AARP
that the group had 'fallen into claims that the bill would coverage between $2.200 and
benefited Democrats.
traditional $3,600) in outlays. ·
At the moment, it appears the tmp of the pharmaceutical undermine
that Senate Democrats won't companies and the HMOs.'
Medicare, hurt poor seniors
But there is an answer to that
And, the newly fortned 'non- and cost millions of retirees and
be able to muster the 41 votes
the AARP is emphasizing
needed to tilibuster and kill the partisan' Democratic think their employer-paid health it in its ad blitz: Thi s hill isn't
GOP Medicare bill. If they tank, the Center for American msurance.
AARP decided to support perfect, it's a ti r.st step. And,
could, this would once again Progress. put out a broadside
make Democrats open to the accusing the AARP of actually the measure when. House- when did Congress ever enact
being an insurance company Senate conlerees agreed to a an entitlement pmgram and not
charge of obstmctionism.
But the party's position on and a pharmacy, noting that 'contained and constrained' make it richer over time?
the measure itself is fixed. AARP subsidiaries offer insur- test of competition between Democrats. it strikes me, have
Medicare and private insur- put themselves on the losing
Every party leader in Congress ance and drugs to members.
Pelosi
is encouraging ance in2010. He said that poor end of one of their favorite
opposes the bill, as does every
Democratic presidential candi- Democratic House Members seniors would pay no premium issues.
(Mortull Kondmcke is exec,
date except Sen. Joe to quit the AARP, and she and - just $1 for a generic preutive
editor 1!( Roll Call. rhe
Lieberman, D-Conn. , who's Senate Minority Leader Tom scription and $3 for a brand- ·
neii'.\1XIper of Capiro/ Hill.)
name drug. ·
sti II undecided.

Democrats on the Senate
Judiciary Committee relentlessly charge that Janice R. Bmwn
- a California Supreme Court
justice nominated to the District
of Columbia Court of Appeals
- is an extreme cmiservative,
'starkly outside the mainstream,' (Dianne Feinstein,
Califomia) and 'clearly to the
right of Justices Antonin Scalia
and
Clarence
Thomas,'
(Charles Schumer, New York).
Confmned by the committee on
a party-line vote, she faces a
Democratic filibuster on the
Senate floor.
I harqly agree, to say the
least. with all of Brdwn's judicial opinions; but the fiercely
partisan Democrats on the
Judiciary Committee slide by
her dissents and majority opinions that are at vivid variance
with the·Democrats' campaign
to stereotype her entire record.
This setective prosecution is
dishonest.
In In re· Visciotti (1996),
Justice Brown , dissenting,
insisted that the death sentence
of John Visciotti - convicted
of munder, attempted murder
and armed robbery - should
be set aside · because of the
incompetence of the defense
lawyer. And, in In re Brown
( 1998), she· actually reversed a
death sentence in the capital
murder conviction of John
George Brown because the
prosecutor severely violated
due process by failing to reveal
evidence that could have been
exculpatory.
Sen . Ted Kennedy of
Massachusetts charged Justice

www .mydailysentinel.-eom

2003

Southern Vacation
from Page A1

from Page A1

these positions: Peggy Bailey
(aide).
Heather
Banks
(cook/custodian) ,
Joy
Matthews (secretary/cook),
Chasity Moleski (aide) and
Deborah Whitlach (aide/secretary) .
The Board approved the
following stipplemental con'
tracts for the 2003-2004
school year pending completion of all requirements for
the position. Tbey will be
compensated at the negotiated rate: Ann Sisson (lead
mentor), Linda Fisher (mentor), Carla Shuler (mentor),
Mary Leach (mentor), Junie
Maynard (safety committee),
Diane Dunfee (ninth grade
advisor). Carla Shuler (tenth
grade advisor), Bill Beegle
(II th grade advisor), Scott
Wolfe · (12th grade advisor),
Charisse Knight (elementary
newspaper),
Chad
~immerman (50 assistant
football coach) and Daniel
Oito (50 assistant football
coach).
The Board approved the
following teachers as tutors
· for the K-6 after school tutoring: Emily Goins, Amy
Roush,
Jenny
Manuel,
Carolyn Robinson, Donna
Sayre and Patti Struble.

Three part-time patrolmen
work other jobs during the
week, Swift said, and are
available as .substitutes only
on a very limited basis.
"We've cut overtime, and
our ofticers have even volunleered their time for work in
the village, so 1 think the
police department is making
an effort. I can probably
work it out but it's going to
cost you a' little overtime,"
Swift said.
Councilman
Stephen
Houchins, ,::hairtnan of the
village's finance committee,
cited 2003 overtime payments totaling $33,000 for
I ,500 overtime hours worked
by village employees, including not only police ofticers,
but street, sewer and water
employees, as well.
"We're strugghng to make
payroll," Houchins said.
"The $33,000 s!Jent on overtime could have been used
no.w in place of money we're
borrowing to meet expenses."
In October, council au thorized a $62,000 line of credit
at Peoples Bank to meet payroll expenses, and $38,()()()
has now been borrowed.
While some d~partments still
have money left from coun-

,.

· cil's original payroll appropriations, it is estimated that
payroll costs will be $40,000
for the remainder of the year ·
in all departments.
.
lannarelli said the villagewide vacation freeze was
imposed out of fairness to all
employees and to ensure consistent policies, but council
members last night agreed
that all employees could take
vacation if department heads
can manage schedules in the
meantime without incurring
excessive overtime expense.
Swtft and other department
supervisors will work with
· lannarelli to make it happen.
"! think if you have vacaLion coming to you, you
ought to have it, but I don't
know how xou're going to
work it out. ' Houchins told
Swift. and Council member
Linda Haley agreed.
"If .1 had made plans for
vacatton and then was told
there was a vacation freeze,
and I couldn't take my time
off, I would certainly be
upset," Haley said .

Other business .
c

ounci~ als~ approved payment of btlls m the amount of
$7 ,S06.51.
Present, in addition to
lannarelli, Houc-hins and
Haley, were ·council members Robert Pooler and Kathy
Scott, and Fiscal Officer ·
Susie French.

Sniper suspect John Allen Muhammad is escorted back into
court after the jury made a request at the Virginia Beach
Circuit Court in Virginia Beach. Va .. last Friday. The jury recommended a death sentence for Muhammad for his alleged
rote In the D.C. area sniper shootings. (AP Photo )
.·
was cut down by a bullet that
hit him in the head on Oct. 9,
2002, as he filled his tank at a
Manassas-area gas station .
Prosecutors said the killings
were in part a plot to extort
SI0 milhon from the government. Prosecutors also sug,
gested
that Muhammad
planned to kill his ex-wife and make it look like a purely
random attack - so that he
could regain custody of his
three children.
At the height of the killings,
the area was so terrified that
sports teams were forced to
practice indoors, people kept
their heads down as they gassed
up their cars, and teachers
locked their classroom doors
and drew the blinds.
Some schools in Virginia
closed for several day s after
police found a note tacked to a

tree at one shooting scene:
"Your children are not safe
anywhere. at any time." A tarot
card found at the scene of. a
Maryland shooting had a
handwritten me s sa~e that said,
. "For you Mr. police call me
God."
·
During. the sentencin&amp;
phase. prosecutors presented
evidence that Muhammad may
have planned to extend tilt
wave of killings over a wide
swath of the East Coast. A map
found on the laptop showed
more than two dozen locations. stretching to Raleigh.
N.C. . man y with notation s
such as "good spot.."
Marion Lew;s, whose 25year-old daughter was killed
as she vacuumed her van at a
gas station . said a death sentence is the onl y acceptable
fate for Muhammad.

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PageA6

NATION •WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Documents: ·Lackawanna Six
revealed 'highly valuabl~~ information

Tuesday, November 25,

2003-

Lawyer: Michael Jackson
accuserneverrnenffoned
alleged sex abuse

until cjJarges are filed.
LOS ANGELES (AP) Jackson al so launched a
A divorce attorney who represented the mother of Web site Monday designed
Michael Jackson's . accuser ;o t ell his side of the stcn 1 in
said the fami ly until recently the child-molestation case,
never alleged Jackson sexu- asserting the allegations are
"predicated on a big lie."
ally abused the boy.
Jackson put the site togethAttorney Michael Manning
er
so he could communicate
said Monday he remembers
the mother say,ing positive directly with the news media
things about Jackson as and fan s, Backerman said.
Jackson said in his statement
recently as Apri l or May.
"' He was really good to us' that the site would serve as a
- that's what she said at the source for "Official commuTaher
Mosed
Alwan
Gob a
Galab
ai-Bakri
nications on my case."
time ," Manning said.
The site also contains links
Asked if she had said any • * FILE * • Faysal Galab, Mukhtar ai-Bakri, Sahim A. Alwan, Yahya Goba , Shafel Mosed, and Yasein Taher are shown in these thing el se about Jackson , to three earlier statements
file photos. These six men lived just blocks from each other in Lackawanna, N.Y. Since pleading guilty to providing material sup- Manning added, "Nothing Backerman made last week
port to Osama bin Laden's organization. the so-called "Lackawanna Six" have provided "substantial assistance and informa- bad. ... If it turned sour, I on Jackson 's behalf. · The
tion deemed highly valuable" to government terrorism investigations , prosecutors said in courtpapers obtained by The don ' t know how."
statements were made after
Associated Press. (AP )
·
The mother filed for authorities raided the singer's
r-------------~~~------~--~
divorce in 200 I and has cus- Neverland Ranch and before
A seventh man, Jaber
BUFFALO, NY (AP) tody of the children. and after the entertai ner sur1/~sr~" M H."ii S&lt; ,J,
Six
Yemeni-Americans Elbaneh, re mains a fugi tive,
Manning said she and the rendered on a warra.nt alleg&lt;t:'f7 ! N 'Q ti,-,"" /H' .!"_:J UI:f
recruited to a terrorist train- believed to be in Yemen. The
alleged
victim rarely men- ing lewd or !asci vious ac ts
L r'l t:_/c.('r 1-.Jr'l NAI .,I ,.I· y
ing camp in Afghanistan FBI has offered a $5 million
tioned t~ir visits
to with a child under 14.
,,
1'(2..1
shortly before the Sept. II, reward for information ·leadA public relations execu-,
Jackson's Neverland Ranch
ocr-s o, i}.o d ')
200 I , attacks have filled the ing to his arrest.
. .
tive who is not involved in
in Santa Barbara County.
government in on al-Qaida
·Although authorities said
"They didn ' t brag about the Jackson case said the
leaders, their training meth- there was no evidence the group
it," he said. "They weren 't Web site allows the enterods and other topics, accord- was involved in imminent tertainer to bypass the news
star crazy."
ing to federal authorities.
rorist plans, the case has been
Manning . said he still rep- media to de li ver his side of
Since pleading guilty to pro- used by the Bush administration
resents the mother in the the story to the public.
viding material support to as a model in pursuing and pros"He 's able to communicate
divorce, although he hasn 't
Osama bin Laden's. organiza- ecuting terrorism suspects.
spoken to her since May or with those people interested
tion,
the
so-called
Relatives have written to U.S.
without the message being
June.
"Lackawanna Six" have . pro- District Judge William Skretny "
The Assoc iated Press does filtered by the media," said
vided "substantial assistance seeking leniency and painting
not identify alleged victims Doug Dowie, senior vice
and information deemed highly portraits of loving husbands,
of sexual abuse. The child's president "Of Fleishmanvaluable" to government terror- community leaders and brokenmother has an unlisted num- Hillard. "If he wants to put
ism investigations, prosecutors hearted fathers who struggle to
ber and could not be located out an 800-word press
said in court papers reviewed explain to young children why
release, you can read all 800
fur comment Mondav.
by TheAssociated Press.
they cannot come home.
Stuart Backerman, the .words. "
During several interview sesJackson was released on.$3
entertainer 's · spokesman,
Friends say the six men
sions lasting from two hours to were manipulated into going
dec! ined
to
comment million bail after his surrenfull days, the men, obligated by to the camp by high·pressure
der Thursday and immediateMonday night.
plea deals to cooperat~, detailed: recruiters who came to their
Representatives of the Santa ly returned to Las Vegas,
- Al-Qaida recruiting meth- mosque with a message of
Barbara County district attor- where he had been filming a
ods, including "how to identify religious service - then
ney's office and the sheriff's video. Authorities have said
potential recruits from among were pressured again by the
department declined to com- they expect to file formal
the American population."
ment Monday on the case. Both charges sometime after
government to plead guilty.
- Means by which recruits
have said they will not comment Thanksgiving.
"Everyone once in their life
were transported from their have that moment where they wish
home countries to training they oould tum back the hands of
camps abroad.
,time," wrote Amira Nasser,
- How recruits are indoc- Mosed's wife, in the oourt papers.
trinated to identify America
Taher's attorney, Rodney
as an enemy.
Personius, described his client This copy of a page of a letter shown on Nov. 24, 2003, written
.I
•• .:&amp;1.
, .
-· Descriptions of "a num- as forthright, but left it to the by Hassan Muhsen, a re lative of Yahya Goba, one of the
ber of al-Qaida leaders, train- government to characterize "Lackawanna Six," to U.S. District Judge William Skretny seekers and recruits...
whether what he had to say to ing leniency for Goba. The letter was obtained from court
- Weapons and explosives authorities was val uable in the papers
'
by The Associated Press. Since pleading guilty to protraining at the a! Farooq camp fight against terrorism.
viding material support to Osama bin Laden's organization, the
in Afghanistan, and the avail"From where I sit, I don· t so-called "Lackawanna Six" have provided "substantial assisability
of
"additional, know that Yasein knows an
advanced terrorist training" awful lot," he said. "He cer- tance and information deemed highly valuable" to government
offered by al-Qaida elsewhere. tainly wasn't by any means terrorism investigations, prosecutors said in court papers
obtained by The Associated Press. (AP /US District Court)
. - The location of al-Qaida an insider."
"guest houses" and rowes taken
in and out of Afghanistan.
The U.S. Attorney's office
in Buffalo outlined the findI
ings to support sentencing
recommendations for Shafal
./
Mosed, 25; Mukhtar alBakri. 23; Faysal Galab, 27;
Sahim Alwan, 30; Yahya
. . .
. ' f.
. .
.
.
Goba, 26, and Yasein Taher,
25.
The men face between 7
and I 0 years in · prison when
they are sentenced over the
coming weeks, beginning
with al-Bakri on Dec. 3. They
,.
..
.
.
.
could have faced up to 15
years if convicted at trial.
The government, citing the
"highly sensitive . nature" of
the information, provided few
details. Besides Buffalo-area
\
investigators, the six have
been interviewed by U.S. military officials, FBI agents and
other
,, investigators.

Celebl'tlfing speeit1/ .
utlfS "''"'you. .
Sunday Tirnes-Sen,tinel
740-992-2155 ... '

Keeping:fY/eig$··:

, ·. informed-' · · ·
.

'

.

'

· Sunday .
Times-Sentinel

The "Lackawanna Six," so
named for the worlcing-class city
where they lived, were arrested in

September 2002 after an anonymous letter tipped investigators to
their travels to Afghanistan in the .
spring of 2001.

·•' .
:

.

MEIGS COUNTY RUTLAND TOWNSHIP WATER LINE
EXTENSION PROJECT
NOTICE OF EXPLANATION FLOOD PLAIN DEVELOPMENT
0

Meigs County intends to undertake a CDBG Water Line Extension project,
funded through the FY' 04 CDBG Fonnula Allocation program and Leading
Creek Conservancy District, for the purpose of a water line extension in
Rutland Township for in Meigs County in portion of Lasher, Swick, Likens
and Hatfield Roads. Portions ofthe project may be located in theJOO year
floodplain. The proposed project cannot be undertaken in any other location
as there is no practical alternative for the locations of portions of the project.
The water line extension can only take place where there is a need and it is
known that the need will be targeted in these base flood areas. Therefore, it is ·
the judgDlent of the Meigs County Commissioners that the benefits to the reSidential households affected by the project outweighs c;onsideration of
Executive Orders 11988 and 11990.
··

Pl-:ase enter my or(ler
111 - · copy(s) STANDARD. EDITION

0

A inore detailed description of the project and the FIRM Flood Maps are .
. available for citizen r~view at the Meigs County Grants Office, 117 Eas~
Memorial Drive, Suite 7, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
,
"

. (Special $19.95)

0
0

'

...

.. - --·-· ·-··---· ...... ,..,..

State_~Zip _ _~

Phon•·--=~-::-----------------

I am eoclosing paymenlln full.

I am enclosing $t0.00 del""'il per STANDARD,
Balance du~ when book is picked up or
before shipmenl.

·•

. ·.

Addre"'-------------------------

have enclosed an additional $5.00 for each book to City

•

'

.

Please ship my book(s) io the addre"' at right. I

Name'----------~----------~--

be shipped.

Meigs County Commissioners
Jeff Thornton, President

"

AII..Ohlo Division 1-11 grid teama, ~ B2
Eaat.ern fall aporta banquets, Page 86
.'

'

·-

·~·

·------~----

.. .. .... --·-

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Ponr1en1y, OH

'·

,

.
Tuesday, November 25, 2003

Browns LB
hospitalized with
staph infection
BEREA (AP)-- Cleveland
Browns linebacker Ben
Taylor remained hospitalized
Monday with a staph infec.tion in his elbow.
Taylor, who has started
eight games this. season, was
admitled to the Cleveland
Clinic on Saturday with a
high fever, Browns coach
Butch Davis said.
Taylor had been listed as
questionable for Sunday's.
game aga inst Pittsburgh
because of a back injury: But
late in the week, Taylor, who
had a small scrape on his
elbow, began having a high
temperature.
The Browns tried unsuccessfully to treat Taylor with
antibiotics before the secondyear pl ayer. from Virginia
Tech was taken to the hospital.
Davis said Taylor's condition had improved and he
could be released Tuesday.
Meanwhile, the Browns
were awaiting test results' on ·
rookie center Jeff Faine, who
sprained his right ankle in the
first quarter of Sunday's 13-6
loss.
Faine left Browns Stadium
following the game on
crutches and wearing a walking boot. He was injured on a
12-yard run by Jaines
Jackson in the first quarter
and didn 't return. He was
replaced by Melvin Fowler.
Davi s said linebackers
Brant · Boyer and Barry
Gardner also
sustained
unspecified
lower
leg
injuries.

College Basketball

Buckeyes lose second
straight on Pacific trip
BY JtM O' CONNEU.
Associated Press

San Diego State's Marcus Slaughter, right. is fouled by Ohio
State's Terence Davis on a fast break In the second half of
an opening round game at the Maui Invitational Monday. (AP)

LAHAINA, Hawaii - San
Diego State has never had a
better game from 3-point range.
The backcoult of Bnmdon
Heath and Wesley Stokes combined for 50 points and the
Aztecs· tied the school record
with 13 3-pointers in an 83-61
victory over Ohio State on
Monday night in the opening
tound of the Maui Invitational.
Heath, a freshman. had 28
points and was 5-for-6 from
beyond the arc, while Stokes, a
transfer from Missouri, had 22
points and was 4-for-6 on 3s.
"We've got good shooters,"

San Diego State coach Steve
Fi sher said. "If we get open
looks. we'll get our share of
baskets."
. The Aztecs had more than
their share in a 21-1 run in the
second half that broke open the
· game. Heath had three .of San
Diego State's live 3-puinters in
the run.
The Aztecs (2-0) advanced to
Tuesday 's semifinal s and will
play Dayton, which beat
centra1 M'tc h.Jgan 82 · 63· ·
The game was tied J2-all at
halftime and the Aztecs were in
it only because of their longrange shooting. They were 7for-14 from beyond the 3-point
arc in the first half and 2-for-14
!rom inside it.

CINCINNATI (AP) Point guard Chadd Moore sat
on the bench at the opening ·
tipoff, figuring it would be at
least a few minutes before he
got into the game.
Try 77 seconds.
Fuming over his starters'
lack of inspiration on
Monday night, Cincinnati
coach Bob Huggins benched
them before they'd broken a
sweat. He called a timeout,
;mgri ly waved toward the
bench and 'called for five
replacements.
"I was surprised when he
called, 'Five!'" Moore said.
"I was the first one to jump
·up, though. I just came in and
played with a lot of energy."
Huggins sent a message in
the first minutes of an 89-60
victory over Oakland. He's
not going to put up with halfhearted efforts from the
Bearcats (2-0) anymore.
"I'm not going to go
throu~h another year of
watchmg guys go through the
motion," Huggins said. "I
thought the two exhibition
games were embarrassing.
We're going to play here."

JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(AP) - Maryland accepted
an invitation Monday to play
in the Gator Bow I for the first
time since 1975.
The worst Mary land (8-3)
can do is tie for second with
Clemson in the Atlantic
Coast Conference. Because
the Terrapins lieat the Tigers,
they were the cl.e ar pick for
the Gator Bowl, whtch gets
the first choice of ACC teams
after the Bowl Cham~ionship
Series representative is
decided.
Fl9rida State has won the
conference and will get the
BCS bid.
Maryland will play a Big
East representative. If West
Virginia defeats Temple on
Saturda,Y.
and
the
Mountameers are not chosen
as the Big East representative
for .the BCS, they will come
to Jacksonville.
A Maryland-West Virginia
game would be a rematch of
the regular-season· meeting, ,
won 34-7 by Maryland. Both
schools have agreed to a
rematch.

Ton y Stockman and Ivan
each had 13 points for
the Buckeyes (0-2).
"One of our major deficiencies right now is how we guard
on the perimeter." Ohio State
coach Jim 0' Brien said. '"lbeir
two guards got 50 points. We
don't guard well on the perimeter"
Ohio State led 37-35 two
.minutes into the second half
when the Aztecs took over.
Heath. who had 12. points in
the sea..Ono{)pening win over
Long Beach State. started .the
run with a 3 with 17:43 left and
it ended on two free throws by
freshman Marcus Slaughter
with 12:07 left that made it 56Harri~

38.

Bucks
drop to
No.5 in

BCS
BY JOSH DUBOW
Associated Press

Huggins fumes
over team's lack
of energy

Terps to return
to Gator Bowl

t:..

Bl

The Daily Sentine•

INSIDE

last time they made the playoffs. A victory over the previou sly unbeate n
Chtefs gave them legitimacy. and the
follow-up victory over the Chargers
provided their first win in Cali fornia
since 1990.
"It's taking another step in doin~
things we've never done around here,'
Anderson said. "It all starts with your
mind-set. Before, we would say losing
is contagious. Now we see what the
rest of the NFL means by winning
being contagious."
In order to keep a winning record,
they're going to have to do a few more
things they haven't done in a long

Southern California moved
back into position to play for
the national title - for now.
The Trojans were once again
in second place in t he Bowl
Championship Series standings Monday. moving up one
spot atier a loss by Ohio State.
The Buckeyes· dropped to
No.5.
Oklahoma ( 12-0) remained
the runaway leader in the
standings that will determine
which teams wi ll play for the
national title in the Sugar
Bowl. The Sooners are a unanimous No. I in the polls and
are the top team in all seven
BCS computers.
USC was second. nearl y five
points behind at 6.89, followed
by LSU at 9.04, matching the
order in both polls. The
Trojans and Tigers are the only
one-loss teams remaining from
one of the six major conferences.
. .VSC has one game remainmg Dec . 6 agamst Oregon
State (7-4) . LSU · plays
Arkansao; (8-3) on Friday, and
if the Tigers win. they will play
in the SEC title game. If LSU
wins both those games they
could get enough of a boost to
move ahead of USC.
"Sometimes when you start
thinking about all that other
stuff it is just kind of clutter
that can affect your ability to
prepare, focus, and have the
kind of poise and discipline
that you need," LSU coach
Nick Saban said. "I think you
can get distracted by other

Please see len&amp;lls, 811

Please see BCS, Be

Cincinnati Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis, left, makes a point with an official Nov. 16 against the Kansas City Chiefs
in Cincinnati. Cincinnati has won three straight games for the first time since 1999. (AP)

Reborn Bengals
Bengals leave sadsack
reputation behind
BY JOE KAY

Associated Press

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

CINCINNATI- A fire alarm started
wailing in the locker room Monday as
some of the Bengals toweled off after
workouts. No one paid much attention.
· "In· the past, everybody would be
abandoning ship," offensive tackle
Willie Anderson joked.
Not anymore.
·By winning a meaningful game on
the road in November, the Bengals

proved they're finally ship-shape.
They've tamed their personal demons
and rescued themselves from being a
punch line.
The Bungles? A thing of the past.
"We've got our own identity right
now," coach Marvin Lewis sa id
Monday. "Everyone is believing in
what we' re doing, and that's important.
We're playing with an edge." ·
A 34-27 victory Sunday in San
Diego left them tied with Baltimore
atop the AFC North at 6-5. It also
marked another noteworthy breakthrough for a team making one just
about every week now.
The Bengals hadn't had a winning
record in November since 1990, the

College Soccer

Redmen advance to national
championship with 1-0 win
BY BurcH CoOPER

bcooper@mydailytrlbun«).com

·· --~--~~~--~------~------------~

OLATI:lE, Kan. - ·One more to go for Rio Grande.
the Redmen, with a Simon Carey goal at the 65th
minute, edged Hastings (Neb.) Monday, 1-0, in the
NAIA National Tournament semifinl\1 Monday.
. With the win, Rio Grande (24-0-1 ), No. 2 seed going
tnto the tournament, advances to the national champi·
onship game against Fresno Pacific (Calif.) at 8 p.m.
(EST) today.
.
The Sunbirds (23-0-1) defeated Berry (Ga.) in the
other semifinal Monday, 4-1.
Carey's goal came after Hastings' went on the offen. sive wtth four shots in less than four minutes.
---·····----·------

'

---·-

IIAYIIIIA\ •ttOOIAfiO• Of The
••rtiiCIOLUOIIfl AfiiUrtOI regained

Redmen
possession
·
and, on an assist by
Ben Hunter, drove one
in for the score on a·
cross ball past the goal
keeper, Carey's second goal of the tour.
.
. nament..
.
Rio then went on the offensive over the next five minutes,' but saw a Hunter shot blocked follpwed by a save
by Hastings' goal keeper Cody Christline of a Carey
shot and another Christline save on another Hunter shot.
During the 8lst minute, the Broncos' Eric Pankoke

_

,..... .......... "
I

�•

All-Ohio Division 1-11 Football Teams
COLUMBUS

•

APl

-

The

2003

Assocaed Pess Dvson
A Oho
h gh schoo loa ba earns based on the
ecommenaa ons o as a e med a pane
DIVISION I
F1 stTeam
OFFENSE Ends Ma o Mann ngham
Wa en Ha dmg 6 oo -0
75 pounds
uno Pa aMon ca 0 bl n Cottman 5
0 160 s Tye Cu s Fnday 59 155
s Ao G gsby C ayto No hmont 6 3
s
Lnemen Josh
Kea
174
St ongsv e 6 6 290 s
And ew
Decke To S Johns 6 4 284 s Pau
Wagne Weste v e Sou h 6 0 275 s
Coey McKe na Cn Ede 63 270 s
A ex Boone Lakewood St Edw a d 6 7
310
Jon And ews N Can on Heave
6 2 2 0 s J mCode La caste 65
285
Rob Came o To Sta t 6 3
260 s Ryan S a chek C n LaSal e 6
5 265 s Qua te backs---c n Coch an
Wadswo h 6 4 201 s Ja e WI ams
C n P nee on 6 2
75 s
Jack
Aaffe ty Dub n Coffman 6 0 82 s
Thorn Abbon Men o 6 t t85 s Ted
Gnn J Ceve Genv e 6
75 s
Backs-Edw n Hood To Wh me 5
85 s Alex Ramsey N Can on Hoove
58 70s Mat1Leb Meno 60 200
s Jon Ca pen e Lancas e 5 1t 2 6
s Rya n B nson Can on McK n ey 5 9
70
Badey Ga haa Cn Ede 5
220 s K eke
Jason G ann n
Can on G enOak 58 65 s Jona han
Skee e Gahanna L nco n 5 o 170 s
DEFENSE
L ne men - Thaddeus
Ca e Ma on Ha d ng 6 0 248 s
Anthony Hoke Wa en Ha d ng 6 225
s Ky e Watt s N Can on Hoove 5
175 s Ben H dde Dub n Scoo 65
225 s B anAmond F nday 60 87
s N ck Davs Cn Coean 63 275
s Tony Segeman Cn Ede 61 230
s Nck Smth Canon GenOak 66
275 s M ke Massey C eve St gna us
6 5 230 s Ryan Ma ando Lakewood
S Edwa d 6 4 225 s L nebacke s
Seth Rob nson Wes e v le South 6
205 s Ma cus F eeman Hube H s
Wayne 6 2 235 s Pau Bu ge Men o
6 0 225 s Chad Mayse Men o 6 3
22o s BadSched Cn S Xave 5
0 215 s BeEse Wa enHadng
Wa en Ha d ng 5 9
90
Ryan
Ba ey Lakewood S Edwa d 5
225
s Backs-5cot Ch nsky Cen e v e 6
1 70 s Adam Mye s Wh e Ham on
6 4
80
A d e Toy Gah a na
nco n 5 0
60s
yeG
n
Wesle v e No h 5 9 80 s
M es
W am s Young Aus n own F ch 6 2
200
s
B y Re fo d
Mass on
Wa h ng on 5 10
80 s Pun e Ma cus Waugh To St Johns 6 0 2 0

Tuesday, November 25.

www mydailysentinel com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

DEFENSE L nemen---Just n Ke shaw
Reynoldsbu g 6 5 230 s A ex Ba row
Dubl n Coffman 6 4 245 s N Ad e
On nku C aylon No thmon 6 3 243 s
Ryan Gaydosh Med na 6 3 235 s
Kev n Samy Mass I on Jackson B 2 245

1 L nebacke s Ryan Lukens C
Moelle 6- 225 s And e Aeves C n
Co e an 6 1 220 1
T m Pace
B unswiCk 6 0 2 15 s Ryan Sh ngleton
Wooste 5 0 225 s Ba cks-M ckey
Cass dy To Wh me 6 1 163 s Joe
Phnsee Wa enHadng 510 65 s
Ha uk Nakamura LaKewood St Edwa d

5
180 s Pun e s-Andy H ld e tl
c ayton No th mon 6-.Q 84 s Joe
K e nsm th lake~ ood S Edwa d 6 0

175
Spec al Mention
V cto St ausbaugn Uppe A I ng on
Ky e K um au Moun Ve non 8 ady
P sane Westerv e South Just n Ba ey
G ova C ty And e Wake Aeynoldsbu g
Jason
Ka ns
an caste
Donn e
Re nha
Oubl n Co man Da¥ d W se
Gave Cty Ch s G ff n P eke ng on
No th Jus n Say e Newa k Pau S e ze
Delawa e Hayes
B andon Och m a n e~ To Wh me
Regg e Gamb e Mans e d S
Dav d
Ph ps Man sf e d S
Danny Bake
F nd ay Kev n Tane sal To Wh me
Ke h Anderson To Scott Sam Kett nge
To S John 5 Aus n Maybe y To S
Johns G eg Sche mbec~ To Wh me
8 e Dona dson Mansl e d S Ma sha
Sta ks Ma on Ha d ng Ky e And ews
To Wh me F ed Ban on To S
Fa cs
Jama Ha s C ayton No hmon
B anden A ms ong C ay on No thmon
Thomas Mouse Hube H s Wayne Tony
Dane 5 C n P nceton Dew Me z C n

Ede

M ke Ma sha Wad5WO h B ett Bukv c
Hudson Je emy Se se B unsw ck Dan
Ge be y You ngs Aus n!own F tch
Adam Sm h Mass lon Jackson li av s
K ake Woos e A cha d Dav s Wa en
Ha d ng Ma Ha e B unsw ck Ph
McNeal Wa en Ha d ng uke Bussen
Wadswo h Ray Ken
G eensbu g
G een M kc W ght N Can on Hoove
Chad Coy e N Can on Hoove B an
M su ka G eensbu g G een Je amy
D ck B unsw ck Jared Walton Logan
Jacob Bookman Logan
G eg God c Men o Ma qua M e
La an Sou hvew Mchae Bel Sake
Hts M ke S ude So on Ben Kozman
E y a John B own Lo a n Southv ew
M ke Eynon C eve S lgna us Pat
ones Ashtabula Lakes de B yan Z v ch
Mento N ck S man Shake Hts B an
C eve S
lgna us A den
Hoye
ack MeW I ams Shake Hts M ke Bezak
Offensive payers of the yea
u
J
1w 1
Lakewood Ma
S acusa Mayf e d
Aal e Y Dub n COilman a 9
am s Shahee S e
Ashtabu a Lakes de
C n P n e on Ted G nn J
C eve
G env e
And ew Ka
Pa ma Hts Val e.; Fo ge
Detens 1ve players ot the year
De ano Rage s Eucl d Jos ah Kedz o
Ma 0
Ha d ng
C eve S
lgna us Sean Cybu sk
Thaddeus ca e
Anthony Hake wa en Ha d ng
Mento Ryan Adk ns Lakewood S
Coaches of the year Seve T v sonno
Edwa d Je emy Bas an N 0 msred
Menlo Don He e J
N can on Cu s Sm th C eve Gienv e Cu I s
HooveJ Aody Pen e 0 Wes e
e Te y Cleve G e v e All ed Ma t n
Sou h
Lyndhu s B ush B andon Sm
Euc d
Second Team
B an Jayne La an Southv ew John
OFFENSE Ends-Asan 8 Wh e To
Hane ne C eve St gna us F edd e
Len x C eve G env e B uce Moo e
Sa 5
70 s Johnny Long C
c eve JFK M ke Dewey Ash abu a
P nee o
70 s L nemen Ky e
s 0 ey Dub Cof ma 6 5 29 o s Lakes de Tony Ma lucc Mento Ande o
c ag Tuax F nday 6 5 245 s Jus n D F anco Men o Sco Goodwn
M e c n Co e a n 6 2 265 s 9 eve Mento V nee S ephens St ongsv I e
Aeh ng akota Wes 6 8 3 5 s Ju an Pe y Ka backa Ashtabula La kes de
Sh bey
Hudson
6 7
25 1
s
DIVISION II
Qua e backs-A ex Eng ahm Wa en
F rst Team
Had ng 5
212 s Sam Ce e a N
OFFENSE
Ends Matt
Ang e
Canton Hoo e 6 3 175 s Backs-Joe
5 too 0
65
Pau Macko Wh eha Yea ng
Gan z Woos e 6 0 95
pounds sen a us n Haddad Lou sv Ia
Wadswo th 5
85 s Aust n Roh
63
185
s
Davd ZegehOie
Logan 6 0 165 8r Je od Reese
Le)(ngton 63 85 s Aaon Wade
Ma on Ha d ng 6 7 78 s
Ms e
Sy van a Sou hv ew 5 0
60
Smpson Cn Coean 5
2 0 s
L nemen- esse
Haney
New
K eke s B andon Y ng ng Ma son 6
T av s Johnson
68
s
B y Saude s Mass on Ph ada ph a 6 3 3 10
Co s ndepende ce 6 3 275 s D ew
Jackson 6 o 170 s

Pa y Maumee 6 2 295 s
B ad
Dav dson T en on Edgewood s-o 230
s
B andon Jef es
Macedon a
No dona 6 3 290 sr 0 ew Cater
Cos Wes 6 3 275 s QuarterbacksManVea n Caronon 60 80
Keley
Rowe Sy van a Sou hv ew 5 10 180 s
ZachDenon Cn McNchoas 511 190
s Jared Humphreys Jackson 6-1
170 jr
Backs-E IC Haw
Cos
ndependence 6 1 209 sr
Ga y
Russel Sunbury B g Wa nu 5
203
sr Tony Dav s Wa en Howland 6 0
75 s Tony Howa d Gart eld H s 6 1
90 s Jon Sch oede Avon Lake 6 0
eo s Na e Summert eld Ash land 5
0
75 s
Josh G ancy Tren on
Edgewood 6 2 2 0 s K eke -:Cody
Chappe I Wa en How and 6-3 180 sr
DEFENSE
L nemen Dan
0 a
Oaf ance 5 1 340 s Bobby Bake
Ti anton Edgewood 5 0 80 s M ke
Cough Lo u sv e 5-8 185 s Been
Cough! n Avon Lake 6 1 261 sr B ad
Samsa Wa en How and 6 3 265 s
Tyle Sargent K ngs M I s K ngs 6 1 255
Hoob e
s
L nebacke s--Chad
Matt Sm h
Ca o on 6 5 235 s
Cha don 6
190 s K ko Ausse Cos
B ook haven 6 0 240 s Zach Gue h
Vandals Bule 60 225 s
Mke
Zambe Wa en How and 6 0 75 s
Cu U ban New Ph lade ph a 6 3 220
To y Co net Co s Independence 6
2 2 5 s Rocky Se ge C n Glen Este
2 5 s Ben Batton Macedon a
6
No don a 5 1 2 5 s Backs Domnc
Jones Cots B ookhaven 5 9 185
Fed Davs To Rages 64 2 0 s
Daw d Wess Wh leha l Yea ng 6 2 195
s Zach Logan Tie !on Edgewood 6 0
75 s Matt Kosten 1&lt; Avon Lake 6
180 s KL Sm h Copey 60175 s
'beAngeto Sm lh Co s ndependence 6
1
90 s
Pun e -A J T apasso
Pcl&lt;e ng ton Cen al 6 0 215 s
Offensive players of the year E c
Haw Cots ndependence Ga y Ausse
Cos Wa nut A dge Tony Dav s Wa en
How and Tony Howa d Garl e d H s Jon
Sch oede Avon Lake
Defens ve player of the year Dom n c
Jones Co s B ool&lt;haven
Coaches ot the year J m Ho ne
ay Sha et Peke ngon
W mngon
Cent a
Second Team
OFFENS ~
Ends Chann ng H ndel
Desden 1 Vaey 63 180 s Kevn
w son Cn McNchoas 5
85 s
L nemen- an Sm h Cots B ookhaven
59 310 s
Bandon C.u I S Sp ng
Sou h 62 285 s Ma k Ewa Kngs
M s K ngs 6 1 245 s M ke Me ampy
Venda a Bu e 6 4 340 sr Dan
Co eman Can e d 6 7 260 s Joel
Bedng Lad Cove ea 6 5 282 s
Qua e backs- Just n Hood Youngs
75 s
John Au an
Chaney 5 9
Un on own Lake 5 11 190 1 Backslac Ange New Ph adelph a 5 11 165
s Tm Spence Tffn Coumban 59
90 s Marques Jones W m ngton 5 9
50 s
Tom Stock e Macedon a
No don a 6 3 225 s K ckers-M ke
Krlsp nsky Ash and 5 9 t70 s Je emy
Ba khu s Avon Lake 6 1 220 s
DEFENSE
nemen- Andre Dawson
E L ve poo 6 2 270 s
Dust n
McAnd ew Peke ng o Can a 5 9
2 5 s Co ey DeWtte Maumee 6 3
195
Ma Jackson Dayton Ca o I 6
2 200 s Cu Moo e Lou sv le 6 3
180 s L nebacke s-Jo dan Young
Zanesv e 6
220 s Aa on Ko ba
Peke ngonCen a 63 2 5 s
odan
Howard Un ontown Lake 5 9 93 s
Aus n Power Lou sv e 5 t 0 205 so ph
Kk Tome Kngs M s Kngs 6
2 0
sr Anthony Moon Sidney 57 52 s
Backs-Jesse mes K ngs M Is K ngs 5
1
190 s
Ma
Ca e AI ance
Ma ng1on 6 0 180 s Pun e s-Oan
Amao To Cen Ca h 5 10 160
Jus Kucek Cenf e d 6 0 180 s
Special Uent on
Co ey egge t Ca ro ton Ky e C ump

•

Zanesv e Ty e F n on Zanesv I e
Shayne Jones E L ve pool Ad an
Lam el e Ce o lton C a g A ce Dresden
li Va ey Mke Hll Zanesvle Nck
Ma t n Zanesv le Just n McE haney E
Lrve pool Lev Jacks D esden li Va ey
Bo Sa s E Lve poo Jm Wood E
Lrve pool M tch Cia k New Ph lade ph a
Aa on Kampte Ca o !ton Aa on Durk
E L ve pool S ephen Badgley E
L ve poo Jason Tole Zanesv I e Ma k
Sexton
New Ph ada ph a
S eve
Howa d E Lve poo Tyle Bu e E
L ve poo Adam Ma 1n 0 eSden T
Va ey Sto m H
Ca all on AICha d
Sandi ands N•w Ph ladelph a
Stephen Valentino Ma ysv e Dusty
Sm h Cots WEIS
Brandon 0 e
Ma ys\J I e
Tavis Johnson
Cols
ndependence Ryan Va l Peke ngton
Cen al Ore Ra Iff Wh eha Yea I ng
A ex Setse Wh teha I Yea ng Rob
Aust n Cols No hland Rob L tchl eld
Peke ng on Cen a M ke Aegge Cos
St Cha es John Mason Cols Wa nut
R dge M ke Tge Ell son Cos Wa nut
A dge Ryan Mana ac Peke ngton
Cen al
L J He ton Det ance Ben Benedett
Ho land
Ash and
N ck Johnson
Sp ng eld Just n L ndsey Sy van a
So Jlhv ew 1 av s Lamb Def ance
Def a nee
Je em ah
Robe t 0 a
Chon s e Ash and Cody Hufford T Hn
Co umb an Ch s Junk ns Wapakone a
Joe Deppen Ash and A ck Gonzales
Ho land Sp ng e d Bubba Va dez
Sy van a Southview Br an Gag e Ce na
T avo Dehn Sandusky
OeWayne Pu e W Carro ton Matt
Lawson Vanda a Bu e Pau Huffman
Dayton Car all Zach Wertz Kings MI s
K ngs Co ey Pa t dge Loveland Matt
R tte C n MeN cholas Qu nn Wh e
Dayton Dunba Zach Logan li atwood
Mad son
Ryan W II ams
ii en on
Edgewood
Ke on Sm h Ba be ton Joe Be
Wa en Howland Steve Wo !man
Tw nsbu g Chambe n Dav d Hardw ck
Kent Rooseve S eve G aham Ak on
Garf eld Ch s Banks Kent Aooseve
M ke Ha I Youngs Chaney Joe Kowa sk
Macedon a No don a Leo San uk
Cop ey E c Kassa
Cop ey Andy
Bowe Youngs Chaney E que Doz e
Ak on Ga I e d B andon A exande
How and
John
V os ko
War en
Canl e d Randy Fisher Jackson Cody
Wagne'r Mar etta Q ent o Upshaw
Ch cothe
Justin
Ochsenbe n
Jackson Nate Lehew Jackson Ryan
Boley
Marietta
TJ
McDona d
Jackson Cameron Amigo Marietta
Jason Watkin a Marietta Gran G bson
Ch co he
Josh B own Wes lake T ey Stress
Avon Lake Pa B add ck Omsted Fa s
Dave D F anco G afton M dv ew Shane
B annan Mad so n Ga y Schuss e
Cha don Matt li amba Pa ma Padua
Franc scan Jesse Pa s ey Pa rna
No mandy B yan S o ch Avon Lake
Ma k B es Map e Hts Je n Jones
Maple H s Jon P ppe t Amhers S ee e
Mckey Men al 0 ms ed Fa s Ty er
Boohe Avon Lake Jon Be I Chardon
Jon B own Wa st ake Aegg e Poage
Cleve E Tech M ke D nard Pa rna
Padua F anc scan Pa C pple Pa ma
No mandy Lu s Zayas Geneva Josh
S a nsky G alto M dv ew T m Reed
Mad son Jefl F nk W loughby Sou h
Je emy De enbu ge West ake Te nco
Ma shal Map e H s Jason Chapman
Bed o d M ckey Palace Chag n Fal s
Kens ton Joe So a z Parma Padua
Franc scan B J T ave s West aka Jama
Gamb e
Map e H s Pat Watroba
Garl e d H s Mat Sm th Cha don Dan
St go1 Avon Lake Bobby M I e
WI oug hby Sou h Anton Na nsk y
Chag n Fal s Kenston Dy an Mo s
Mad son Pete Ca ava os N A dgev lie
M ckey M ann Amhe st Stee e Sea
Cante Amhe st See e

2003

www mydallysentlnel com

Tuesda~Nov 25,2003

~ribune

College Basketball

JiM O ' CONNEll
Assoc aled Press

APTop25

The op 25 teams n The Assoc a ed
P ess men s col ege baSketba poI
The openmg of the regular
WI h f st place votes n pa entheses
season brought httle change
eco ds th ough Nov 23 ota po n s
to the Top 25
based on 25 po n s lo a rsl place
vote th ough one p01nt fo a 25th
After a week that saw 14
p ace vote and p ev ous ank ng
ranked teams play thetr ftrst
Rec Pts
Pvs
games of the season the only
1 Connec cu (69) 3 0 1797 1
016662
2Duke(l
changes m The As soc iated
01653
3 MchganS (l
Press weekly poll Monday
Cf-0 1 50
4
4 A zona
0-0 1 450 5
5 M ssou
were a couple of posttton
-o 1420 6
6 Kansas (1)
swaps
O.Q 1 337 7
7 Sy acuse
The first 17 team s held thm
o-o 122 a
8 Flo da
157 9
9 North Caro na 1-Q
spots from l ast week s poll
1 0 1 125
0
0 Kentucky
and the only changes were
I0
1t5
1
1 Texas
.() 950
2
Wake Forest and Cmcmnau at
2 1 nos
3
13 Sa nt Josephs 10872
18 and 19 and Oklahoma
2 0 847
4
14 O~ahoma
State and North Carolina
10728
5
~ Wsconsn
1 670
6
6 Gonzaga
$tate at 24 and 25
0 0 612
7
17 LOU SV e
Teams were allowed to play
20550
9
8 Wake Foes
the1r
f1rst
regular season
0 534
8
9 C ncnnat
20
1 0 517
20 Stanfo d
games la st Fnday Before
o-o 409 2
2 Note Dame
that they were only allowed
20 389
22
22 P ttsbu gh
30 238
23
to play m exempt event s sucli
23 Ma quet e
1
0
9
25
S
24
Okahoma
as
Coaches
vs
Cancer
1 0 109
24
25 N c State
Class1c
o he s ece v ng votes Xav e c!)
ConnectiCUt wh 1ch opened
Ma yland 64 Utah 58 0 egan 47
the season th1s week wnh
Ca o n a 26 Texas Tech 24 BYU 22
wms over Yale Nevada and
ndana17 A zonaS 15 UCLA IS
Aubu n 11 P ov de nee 10 Coo ado
Sacred H ean was agam the
9 Pudue8 Msssspp St 7 LSU6
runaway No I The Hu sk 1es
M ch gan 6 Manhattan 5 Oh o S 5
A kansas 4 Bu e 4 Geoga 3 N
recerved 69 first place votes
t nos 3 Dayton 2 Sean Ha 2
and I 797 pmnts from the
V llanova2Wch taS 2 Oeot1
national m ed1a panel
Hoy Coss
II Ch cago 1
M sSJss pp 1 Nevada 1 N agara 1
Duke wh1ch beat Detroit
was No I on one ballot and
h ad I 666 pomts M1chtgan Marquelte Oklahoma State
State a wmner over Bucknell and North Caro lma St lte
m Its season opener al so had
The re have n t been any
a f trst place vote and was changes m the rankmgs from
th1rd
the preseason Top 25
Anzona and M1ssoun were
That co uld c h a n ge tht s
fourth and fifth respecuvely
week With the last stx of the
whtle Kansas the only other
ranked teams playmg the1r
team wnh a N o I vote was
lust
g tm es
Anzo 1a
SIXth
M1ssoun Syracuse Flonda
Syracuse Flonda North
LouiS\ 1lle and N o tre Dame
Carolina
and
Kentucky
The season s first Top I 0
rounded out the Top I 0 Texas
matchups
w1ll be th1 s week
was lith followed by Ilhnms
with No 3 M1ch1gan State at
Samt Jo seph s Oklahoma
No 6 Kan sas on Tuesday
Wtsconsm
Gonzaga
ntg ht and No 4 Anzona fac
LoUisville
Wake
Forest
m g No 8 Flond t on Fnday
Cmcmnau and Stanford
The last five ranked teams m g ht m the f1poff Classtc at
were Notre Dame Ptttsburg h
Sptmgfield Mass

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r

~.._•

fhe State of Ohoo
Meigs County
Mortgage Electron c
Aeg stratoon
~ystems
Inc
as
Nommee
for
Household
Really
l):)rporat on
aka
Household F nance
Corporatton
Platnt ff
vs
Gad McAbee fka Gaol
lorkle etal
Defendants
case No 02 cv 102
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale 1n the
above entitled act1on
I will offer tor sale at
pUblic auct1on at the
Courthouse
tn
~omeroy Ohto tn the
IJbove named County

on the 30th day of
January
2004
at
10 oo o clock am
the
following
descnbed real estate
to wit
Situated n the State
of Ohoo County of
Melgs and Townsh p
of Salisbury and
being
further
described as to lows
Being all of Lot 1440
and 15 feet adjoining
part or Lot N441 and
llelng 1 part o1 the
reel eotate con
•eyod by James R
Eado to Jamea I
Allan by dead record
tod In Deed Book 197
Page
65
Dud
Recorda ol Melgo
County Ohio
Plrell NOI 15.01407
000 &amp; 15 01408 000
bld
Promloeo
l.ocotad at 760 Laurtl
Street
Middleport
Dhlo 45760
Sald
Prem1111
J.pprlilld
II
t11 000 00 and can
not be oold lor leu
lhon two thlrdo of
lhat amount
rerma
of
Sale
J5 ooo oo
down
,.malnder upon ten
•roldHd
"ank &amp; Wooldridge
l:o L PA
Attorneys lor Plaintiff
100 South
Purl
Street
Columbua
Ohlo43208
1814) 221 1662

••me

(11) 25 (12) 2 9 16
23
Public Notoce
SHERIFFS
SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER
02 cv 133
GMACMORTGAGE
CORPORATION
Pia ntoll
vs
NATHAN M HANSEN
et al
Defendants
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
In pursuance ol an
Order of Sale to me
directed from satd
Court tn the above
entitled actton I wtll
expose to sale at
public auction on the
front steps ol the
Meogs County Court
House on Friday
December 19 2003 at
1o 30 a m of sold
day the followlng
descrlbed real estate
Parcel 1 Situated In
the
Vlllage
of
Pomeroy County of
Melgo and State or
Ohio Being Lot No 1
end 23 feet off tho
westerly side ol Lot
No 2 adjoining oald
Lot No 1 In Burnap 1
Addition to tho town
ol Pomeroy Sold Lot
No 1 and part or Lot
No 2 and bolng In
oubdlvlolon of Lot
No 189 In oald town

of

Pomeroy

11

recorded In Volume
231 Page 883 of the
Melge
County
Recorda
Furthermore tho
right and prlvllogo to
molntaln and uto the
exletlng underground
oewer through Loto 2
181
and
17
In
Burnop o Addition to
the town of Pomeroy
but lo It (ole) under
otood end agreed
that the rlghto grant
od by thlo deed to uoo
IBid IIWir lf8 not tO
be exclusive and fur
lhermore It Ia under
otood and agreed

the Grantees
their
heirs
and
asstgns are to main
tam the satd sewer at
tts present locat1on at
their own expense
Parcel 2 Sotuated on
the County of Meogs
on the Stele of Ohio
and In the Village of

Reference
Volume
133 Page 6t
Appraosed
at
$30 000 00
Terms
of
Sale
Cannot be sold for
less than 213rds of
the appraised value
10°o down on day of
sale cash or cert1f1ed

Pomeroy

check

All ol Subdovlslon
No 2 of Lot No 189 on
Burnap s Addotoon to
sa d
Voltage
of
Pomeroy extending
from Hogh Street on
Lmcoln H1U to the
Rutland Road now
known at (s1c) the
Loncoln Holl Road
except 23 teet off ol
the west end or side
sold by E F Feoger to
Harry Feoger Vol 76
Page 342
Meogs
County
Dead
Records
Also the following
real estate n said
County or Moogs and
State of Ohoo Village
of Pomeroy
and
descrlbed as follows
Subdivision
No
Throe (3) of Lot No
189
In
Burnap a
Addition
to
said
VIllage ol Pomeroy
extending from high
Str11t on Lincoln Hill
to tho Rutland Road
now known aa the
Lincoln Hill Road
Except tho coal
undtrlylng tho above
doocrlbed properly
with tho rlghtto mine
the oame whlch hea
boon raoervtod by pro

conftrmatton of sale

that

VIOUI own1ra

Reference
Oeod
Volume 133 Page 61
Melgo County Official
Recordo
Auditor o Parcol Noo
18 00880 000
16
00981 000
16
00055 000
&amp; 18
00084 000
Subject to all 111111
ouomonto and right
of-way ol record
Current
Owner
Nathan M Hanaon
Proparty 11 101 High
Street Pomeroy Ohio
45789
ppj 16 00055 000
and 16 00960 000
Prior
Deed

balance

._..- .-&lt;lt..IJO!:I"lllt. t.c;»

..c:.,.,_._.~,

Street alghtaen (18)
feet
way
2) Thence along
2) Thonco North
said droveway south eighteen (18) teet
78 deg 30 min west a
3} Thence East
dostance of 50 feet
twenty six (26) feet to
3) Thence north 3 the place ol begin
deg 40 min west 30 nlng
Saving and
excepting all coal and
teet
4) Thence north 64 other minerals under
deg 30 mon west 55 lyong the premises
teet to tho face of the hereby
grantor
chfl
together with the
5) Thence northerly roght to mine the
along the lace of the
same without any
chtf a distance or
unnecessary damage
about 29 feet to the
to the surtace of
north hne of lot No
same
296
Property
Address
t 508 Nye Street
6) Thence easterly
along the north line Pomeroy Ohio 45769
ol said lot No 296 to Parcel No 16-0G790
the place of begin
000
nong a distance of
TERMS OF SALE
about 91 feet
Ten (1 O"o)percent ol
Sav1ng and except
the highest bid cash
ng the Forst Ward or certified check
House lot situated In due on the day of
the northeast corner
sale balance due
of said Lot No 296 upon confirmation of
and being 181eel lac
the sala by the Meigs
ong on Nye Street and County
Court of
extending back at Common Pleas the
that width a distance deed will be luued
or 26 teet Tho right
upon the balance
and prlvllage 11 here
being paid
by reserved to John
Appralaad
at
0 Roedel and Martha $30 000 00
Roedel their helro Kim M Hammond
and aulgna to uoa o (0082572}
uwer that 11 con
Leonard A
CuiUI
etructed acrou oald (0087712)
above deocrlbed lot Attorney• for Pl1lntlfl
from the cool bank
Keith D Weiner &amp;
with tho right and
Auoclatad Co LPA
prlvllogo of entering 71 Public Squoro
oald promi111 lor the Fourth Floor
purpoeo ol making Clovolend
Ohio
repalra to aald IIWir 44113
•• occttlon mey Tel (218} 771-eloo
require
Fax (218) 771-eMO
Parcel No 2
(11) 18 21 (12) 2
Sltuoto In tho village
of Pomeroy In the
county of Melgo end
Public Notice
Still of Ohio to wit
Beginning on Nye Sharlft 1 Sale of Re11
Street
11
the E11111
Northout corner or •
The Stall of Ohio
lo1 heretofore dudacl Mlllge County
by Curtlo D R11d and AMERICAN QENER
Laura Alberta Read to AL FINANCIAL SER
John M Roedel by VICES INC Plaintiff
dead dated April 24
VI
1899 recorded In JOSEPH W PULLINS
Volume 84 Pagoe 84
at 11 Delondtnta
Page
388 387
CliO No O:J.CV -o&amp;5
Recorda or Deodo or In purauance to an
Melge County Ohio
order or sale dlroclld
1) Thence South to me In the above
parallel with Nye entitled action I will

north Side of a drive

on

Ralph E Trussell
Sher II
Meogs
County Oh o
Reimer &amp; Lorber Co
LPA
By Denn1s Retmer
(Reg #003 1109)
James C Wrentmore
(Reg #0046779)
Attorneys for Plaonlofl
2450 Edison Blvd
PO Box 966
Twinsburg
Oh1o
44087
(330) 425 4201
(11) 18 25 (12) 2
Public Notice
SHERIFF S SALE
CASE NO 03 CV 012
The State ol Ohio
County ol Meigs
Pursuant to tha com

mand of and Order of
Sale luuad from the
court ol Common
PIUo ol oald county
and to me directed In
the action or Tho
Provident Bank vo
Fred E Rey ot al
I Ralph Truoaell
Melgo County Sheriff
ohall offer lor aale at
public auction to be
held at the Melge
county Courthouae
on January 9th 2004
tl 10 30 o clock am
the
following
dllcrlbed lando end
tenement• to wit
P1rce1 No 1
BHuotad In tht VIllage
of Pomeroy County
of Mlllgo end Stela ol
Ohio
Beginning at tho
northlllt corner of
the Fire! Ward Houae
and 1110 the north
1111 corner ol Lot No
298
1) Thanca oouther
ly along the wast side
of Nye Street a dis
lance of 95 l11tto tho
I

oflerfor sale at public
a~ctlon at tho front
door of tho court
house In Pomeroy
Ohio In the above
named county on
January 16 2004 at
10 00 A M the follow
lng described real
estate and mobile
homo to wit
Situate
In
the
Township of Orange
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio
Being a part of a
tract of land last
transferred to Luther
E Boothe aa record
ed In deed Book 259
at Page 251 Meigs
County Recorder •
Office Meigs County
Ohio also baing a
part ol the N;&gt;rtheast
Quarter of Section 23
Township 4 North
Range
12 West
Orange
Township
Meigs County State
of Ohio and more
particularly
deocrlbed as follows
Being at a point on
the Eall Section line
of Section 23 which
belrt South 00 01
48 Wilt 1 dlatanca of
108315 IMI from the
northo11t corner of
eald Section 23
Townehlp
4 North
Range 12•Wtll
Thence along eald
Eut Section line
South 00 01 48 Wut
1 dlatance of 711 48
feet to 1 railroad
oplko 111 In the can
tar line of State Route
1881
Thence
leaving
oald hctlon lint end
along tht center lint
of Slota Route 881
Iauth 78 43 38
Will I dllllnce of
48480 felt to 1 pk
n111 HI In thl center
of 1 bridge croulng
the !ut branch of
the Shade River
Thtnca
leaving
Hid center line end
elong the center line
of 11id Eat! brench cf
the lhadt Rlvtr the
fOllowing IIX COUrt
ee
1 North 01 38 58
Eall 1 dlllance of

149 88 feat to a point
2 North 3g 14 03
East a distance ol
125 80 teet to a point
3 North 31 22 11
East a distance ol
160 28 feet to a point
4 North 05 46 30
East a distance of
15B 46 feet to a point
5 North 16 33 02
Wast a distance ol
165 41 feet to a point
6 North 40 36 36
East a distance of
112 63 feet to a point
eald polnt being the
Intersection of the
center line ol said
East East branch of
Shade River and the
center line ol a ditch
Thence
leaving
said center line of the
East branch or Shade
River and along tho
center line ol said
ditch North 69 49
41
East passing
thru a railroad spike
sat tat a distance of
255 40 feet and going
a total dlatonce of
259 02 laet to the
principal point ol
beginning containing
5 8004 acre tract
more or leoo oub(tct
to all legal ••••manta
and right-of way1
Bearing•
were
Illumed end ' " for
the determination of
1ngllo1 only
Tltt lbOVI diiCrlp
tlon wee prapartcl
from In IOIUIIIUrvly
on the 18th day of
June 1817 by C
Thamu Smith Ohio
Profeetlonel
Surveyor f8844
l!xceptlng
and
rttervlng to Luther I!
lootha lh1 gu I oil
on the foregoing rill
111111
Addrlll
47188
Booth
Roed
Coolville OhiO PIICII
No 1O.Q0081 001
Bald real eatata will
be aold togllller wllh
lha 1a87 NllhUI
mobile
home
Identification Number
NZOHCNCX770142FK
017092 and baing
reglatratlon no 10

C

Bee Cary Ou pemt
o sa e Chaste Townsh p
Me gs County send etta s
o n 1 esl to The Oa y
Sen ne PO 8o)( 729 20
Pome oy Oh o 45769
Home Deco a ng Open
House Sa Nov 29 8am
5pm Go aO e 31645 S
A 325 Langsv e Oh o

oooaa

Said

real

oatate

on

p

Sf'YINGS

Desc lpl on Type and p e
pa e na d alts o courses
o study and a gnmen p 01
ects help coo d na e cu
cu um p 01ec s and proles
s ona deve opmen act v
t es organ zed by he
Serv ce Cente do nte net
and
bra y backg ound
esea ch fo upcom ng cu
cu um p o ects ar1d he p
coo dna e and d s bute
7 12
esou ces o cu cu urn
poecs Saay Negotabe
Peasesubml ete ol ne
es a d esume to John 0
Fu
me AN lo Mason Costa zo Supe n enden l
County Hea h Department A hens Me gs Educa ona
Cente
507
App ca ons
and
ob Se v ce
A
ch
an
d
Avenue
Su
e
desc pt on may be obta ned
at 2 16 5th St ee
Pt It 08 Athens Oh 4570
App cation
Pleasant WV
Decem be
Home Work Needed
AMESC
s
Fa assemb y wo k Send 1 Oppo un ty
s ze H 0 se add essed
p ov de
stamped enve op oo

Say good bye to h gh phone
b s New oca phone se v
ce w h FREE un m ted
nat on w de ong D s ance

800 635 2908
0
www F eedomMov e com lp
aysyou Loca Agents wan
ed

SENIOR PORTRAITS
Ge You best dea at
Main Street Photography
51 Man S ee
Po n Peasant
Ca or Appo n men

(304)675 7279

~~Box 87

GIVEAWAY

~~«J

_
w_a_u_oao
_ n_:_
O_h_4_3_5_67___
MANAGING
STYLIST
NEEDED fo

net

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Yau

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on
P easan

Reg #90-05 12748

HoMEN

IUR S.\1 E

I

Ranch
Stye
Home
Ga po s Fe ry a ea besde
84 umbe 3BA LA Eat n
k chen
2 bath a ge
20x20 FA Attached s ng e
ca garage C A Gas Heat
s n ng on 9 of ac e m
Shown by app
Ca
(304 895 34 7

3 BA 1 bah 2stoy wth
basemen and 1
2 ca
garage Located a 62 4th
Ave $29900
614891

25 Serious People Wanted 6763
Who wan to LOSE we gh
We Pay You Cash o he
u baths deck
Pounds you OSE
wh poo ub Located nea
Safe Natu a No D ugs
school n Ga a Owne
BOO 201-0832
1 nanc ng
s ava lab e

~

r

to

r

Ab so ute Top Do ar U S
ve
God
Co ns
Proofsets D amends Gold
R ngs
U S Cu ency
MTS Con Shop
51
Second Avenue Ga po s
740 446 2842

NEEDED

s

r

I \ ll'lll'a\11 '\ I

Retail
Merchandletr
Gal po siR play a ea $28k

" I I&lt;\ I« I ...,

30k- plus benef ts Pease e

HOMES
FOil SALE

lliD Or IBM 806 352 3982
Southe n High Schoo n
8 eeek ng a
Va s y Foo ball coac h
P ev oua head coach ng
exper ence a prefa td
Anyone lnter11ted p eaee
send eaumee to Ryan
~em ey Ath ttlc 0 recto

held on Nov 25 7pm at Pt
Plefllant L brary If you own
a bue neae or want to have
one plane attend Th 1 can
change your lfe Everyone

welcome

A RIAI.ISTIC
OPPORTUNITY
Lean To Earn
$1 Ok +per month Not MLM

h nlng P ovlded
Callie nlo
1 BOO 881 1540 Ext 3258
Addresae e wanted lmmed
IP ately No E~pe ence neces
sary Wo k at Home Ca l

405 447 6397

~

Spea 8 304

Soulhorn H gh SChool PO
Box 98 Rae no Oh'&gt; 45771
Super a Mote now tak ng
appl c1tlons for a pa t llmt
t onl deok cle k Muol bo
ab e to otate between al 3
shifts Plean apply In pe

J'RoFmJONAL
SFJlVICES

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Un ass We Wn
1-686 582 3345
1{ 1 \ 11 "1 \11

ma
resume
to
stocle 0 eespcloteaojutlpn Q

A eade sh p aemlna wl be Racine Oh o

..

"'

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO ecommends ha
u do bus ess w th pea
e you know and NOT t
end money through th
a unt you have nvest
ated the o e n

1600 Sq ft 3 yea o d Ranch
stye home 2 t 2 car
garage :3 bed oo m arge
kitchen d nn ng oom vlng
oom 2 1 2 baths aundry
oom f ont po cl'l a I cue om
oak 1 m doc a and cablnete
A elect 1e Vary we ayed
out beautiful nte or on 1
1 2 acres Won 111 ong at

ony

$11~000

Ca

WIS &amp;
ACRMGE

H(')!J$'i
mRRENT

A realea..te edvert sing
In tl'lla newspaper Is
subjee1to the Federal
Fa Hous ng Act of 1968
wh ch m~ket It I egal to
advert •• any
praterenca llmltet on Of
d scrim nation bleed on
race co or religion Hit
f•rnUial st.tus o netlonsl
o lgln or env Intention to
meka eny suc:h
p ef.,..nce limitation or
dl1crlm n-' on

741).592 1972

Aepos
97

c ayton

8&gt;00 $11 999

97 Redman 16x72 $10 999

90 F eelwood 14x70 $7 999
(740l709 1188 0 (740l268
1605

Thll n1w1paper will not
know notw accept
advertiHmlntl tor re11
estatewhch • n
violet an of the lew Our
ruder• sre herebw
Informed thll 111
dwtlllnge edvertle•d n
thla n.-peper en
avellabltl on
equal
opportunity bHH

•n

3
bed oom
house
n
Pome oy
ant $300 DO 1 and 2 bed oom apa
Dep
equ ed
$250 00 ments u n shed and unlu
HUD app oved (740)742 n shed
secu y depos
2896
equ ed no pets 740 992
22 18

213 1at St" 4 com• Hou1e undt construction
bath baaemant &amp; font anch stye 1680 aq ft wltl'l
The
Athena Meigs porch Lot a ze 80M87 on y u I basement &amp; attached
Educat anal Service Cente $22 000 Ca I Somervi le ga age Gal pol a C tyachoo
s seek ng an Adm nlslrat ve Aea oy (304)675 3030 or dial ct G een attendance
area (740l448-7833
Ass s ant to Curr cu um (304 )67~-3431
Services lo wo k part I me
at the Athens OH ce 3 bedroom double wide w th Naw Log Home on 1 3
Qua t cat one A background ful basemen and attached ac ee land cant act avail
n o Ice p ocedurea w th 2 car garage ocated on a 2 able I neilded $240 000
expe lence ua ng a PC and ac e ot at 48457 BaahB.n (700)258 9247 0 (700)645
Mac computer s equi ed Road Racine Oh ca 0870
Must have nte net resea ch (740) 949 22 o ask lor
sk I 8 A bachelo 8 deg ee Shel a for en appo ntment to
w th experience n education see Priced at $71 000
s p efer ed If app lcant s
2
ca ed Ia an n ervlew a 3 bedroom house 4
po tfo o wth sampes u ac es cia fenced pa&amp;tu e
word and EXCEL docu vinyl s d ng The malpane
eon No phone cal a

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

1

Bul ding

Gall ~ol s

(740l446 3994
2423

0

ca

Cased ancy b ue god tea
se $ 50 Seve a occupted
Japan Moss Rose cups
sauce s
$30
each
740 )446 1822 mo n ngs.
even ngs

r

~fL"iCEEU.NEOL~
MERCHANlll~E

I

p ece Coun y Sp nd ed
Oak d n ng oom set S250
cal afte 6 30pm 740 667

6688

one bed oom 99 EZ Go Go l Cat New
a 65 1 2nd Ave Bat e y Fac o y Cha ge
Ga po s Ren $350 pe Canopy
G ea
Shape
man h &amp; $350 depos
$1799 (740 245 5648
~..qu ed
6 mos
ease
wa e t ash
pad
Ca
Debb e o udy at (740 446
7323 (L b ary

3BR 2bath ace o onco
ner Conven en y loca ed n
own Exce len cond ton
Oepos t
e e ences
$700/month
Phone

(740)446 7995
3 br anch I'IOuso for ent
$375 OQ a mon n New
Haven no pet8 20 Howa d

Sl 304 875 3458

depoo 1 (3()4)875 2749

rete ence

wt..man

requl td C1
Rea Estate at

Beautiful 3 Bedroom Hcuae
1 Balh Ull ly Room

entala Can show good
p ollts AI at one wow pt"ice B ck Ranch 3 bedroom 2
owne can he p t nance bath no pets $600 ca

(740)441 1124

lor

en

$125 a month

1740l440-Q175 0 (740 675
5965

(740 446

&amp; Bua ness In $400 mo (814)595 7773
Oh o has 4 (S00l796'"866

r700!387 7~ &amp;

ap a men

EHO

Bu y o
se
A ve M
Ant ques
24 Eas Ma n
on SA 24 E Pome ay 74~
992 2526
Russ Moo e
owne

N ce new mob e hOme o

exce en
oca on re e
ences &amp; secu y depos
equ ed $700 pe month

7~~63&amp;4~

446 4514 or 74().448-3248
attar 5pm

Even ngs

r

t

4 b 1 112 baths Located on
New 2003 Doublew de 3 BA SR 141 netr Centena y
&amp; 2 Ba1h Only $169S down $700 per month Dtpool! &amp;

and &amp;29S mo 1 BOO 891
8777

aken ea
om Hawtho ne V k n~ 12 Ga
PM Offce s Fu Choke $90 740 379
5 Eve g een 2380
P easan WV
304 675 5806

740 446 348

t

446 2957

New 14 wide only $799 00
3b House 2609 L ncoln
down and on y S169 76 per
Avo No Ptta $428 mon h •
Cal
Ka en a
month

(740l385-787 1

ae

7
_4
_0_3_6_7_0_50_2_____

2 BA nea Haze C A econ he County
nom ca gas hea a app
ances lu n shed nc ud ng 614 l595 7773
w D no pa s ease and 4686
depos equ ed S485 74~

Stee Taps No
Con be a
No
Double
Sp ngs No 4 Seave T aps
Daube
Sp ng
MN
Boa ds Musk a Coon ana
Fox we S eches AI
terns n good cond t on
p ced 35
0 40°o be ow

F day

en save e geao
washe
dye
un u n shed fu n s hed
EHO
One ha
ac e o
on $450 00 mon h y pus ut
Raccoon C eek camp e e y t es $300 00 depos
4
fu n shed
4x65 mob le Bu del e Add on Pont
home 2 obed ooms 2 ba
40ft of new boa docks
deck ng &amp; boa dwa k 8)(20
Ta a
Townhouse
ca po t easy access o OH
Apa men s Ve y SpaciOus
ve $36 000 Ph 740 367 Fo Sa e o
Ga age
ap 2 Bed ooms 2 F 00 s CA
7025 0 740l645 0508
$300+Ut t es+depos t The 1 2 Sa h Newly Ca pe ed
ap and mob e home com Adu Poo &amp; Baby Pool
Rl \ I \I..,
b ned o sale 4th St ee Pa 0 S a $385 Mo No
ous nqu es Pes Lease pus secu ty
Depos
Req u ed Days
304l675 9

FINAL CLEARANCE
Just a lew 2003 mode
homes ema n come early
make your p ck then ta k to
E n e o Lynn get he best
pass ble p ce you I be
p easant y su p sed faun
da ons heat pumps cen a
a s and sept c sys ems ou
speca ty Coes Mob e
Homes
5266 US 50 E
Athens Oh o 4570
PH

740

manto w11 be roqul ed Job Vjlndow (740)985-0288

i

r Mo::s~w:s I

_l3_04_l6-75-13-52-~--

Beau lu
D earn Home
3200sq tt with wrap a ound 0 Used homes un de
deck upsta s ba cony 4 1 2 $2 000 00 Cal N kk Ca
ac es 4br 2ba a ge 1v ng 740 385 9948
oom w I ep ace d n ng
oom 2 ca ga age Owne 1997 F eetwood 3b 1ba
f nanc ng
s
ava abe CA &amp; sk ng settng on a
401K EOE $5000 SGN
ented at n K&amp;K Pa k May
(304
675
1352
BUSINFSS
ON BONUS Pease send
eman the e w h app oved
es ume to 352 Second ~
0PPOR1lJNilY
app ca 10n P cad on shOw
Complere y et n shed hOme
Avenue
Gal po s
OH
ng (304 )67 5 3000 Leave
4563 Attn 0 ana Ha ess
G eat ocat on n Ga po s
ABSOLUTE
QOLDMINEI
name and Phone numbe
Lost Beag e os n No thup AN c nca Manage
60 vending machines w th Oh o 3 bedrooms 2 fu
a ea Wh te brown black
baths pnced to sa e now
excellent ocatlons
o ange anng co ar Ca
Phone (740 446 9539
Must SeUII &amp;Q0-234-6982
Oho
MYSTERY SHOPPERS

roBlN

0

App ca ons
Monday
9 00 A
4
Loca ed a
D e Po n
PoneNos

~;~=~;::::::::::;-;;;==;;:::::::==~~;:=:;:;;;:::~

Anyone f nd ng a wh te
_ _..
envelopf;l! a ound 0 Pa ks
off ce on F day even ng Med Home Health Agency
'
t me of he pa ade Please nc seek ng a PAN u me Wou d you ke you house
ca (304 675 8735
statf Phys ca The ap s lo cleaned o he ho days?
ca n do t Ca I Pa a
REWARD
OhoandWestV gnac ent
base We ofter a compe t ve
sa a y bene Is package and

WA...,rm

$350 month

WWW COMICS COm

,.I 110

Nat one bus nesses need
shoppe s to eva uate p od
uc s and se v ces Mus
have e ma 1 800 503 1207
ed 5096

p es $ 00 2 Meuse

0008

1' }.. .:;-

© 2003 by NEA Inc

busy sa on

FOUND

La ge 3 bed oom apa men
Ga po s $450 month y
Secu ty depos ease e
e ences (740 446 8030

Townhou se
Apa men s
nc udes Wate
Sewage
T ash $350 Mo 740 446

Gallpolls
(Ca ee s C
career
ose To College
Home)
SASSY
SCISSORS
740 44 1800 0 (740l256 Ca Today 740 446 4367 r.IO_. . .".(.Jml_S__
I 800 214 0452
FOR SALE
6336
www ga po sea 9EI co ege om

(740 256 63 7 0 (740l446
2835

WHAT

I W!&lt;!Olft
{A~

BUiiNFSS

It

2 &amp; 16 ga eoade w sup
amm
w access o es $275 New
AussLBn 12 ga Side X S de
$225 Sov et 30 ca m nary
(740 446 1370
les $65 100 S &amp; w
pump 2 new $325 Ma n
New bed oom apt Phone Seans &amp; Wa ds pumps 2
$175 275 AKS 47 new
740 446 3736
$325 Rem TC 3
$85
4x80 Mob e home e)(ce
Wn
0
ap $1000
en cond 10n 3 BA 2 lu I
haca 1939 M 37R $275 2
barhs al eect c nee ya d
us M Ga and &amp; Be etta
Po e a ea $400 mon h
Ga and $575 650 seve a
$400 deDOS
Rele ences
ode
22 pumps eu os
equ ed 740)446 45 4 o
bo s Tau us ss 357 6
740)446 3248 atte 5 p m
$350 M 11 new $1 800
pus ansle ax M 6 new
Sea os ol m tay le
ammo some 9mm s arl es
740 )446 822 mo n ng or

akng app ca ons o a 2
bed oom
house
Ou et
ne ghOO hood depos
el
e ences no pets Phone

0~ I I'M 'J&lt;&gt;~y,

~.---TRiiili\liiNiiiiNGoiiio-_.1

J..rt.TAND

45831

'

M,\R'!MtNIS
IURRENT

De o an upg ade n hs
lac ISS le11el of acu e serv
ces we ha\19 an oppo tun ty
o olfe employment to AN s
pat metul me We offe
12 hou sh Its ex emely
compet 1 ve wages 401 k
pan and exce ent hea h
and denta nsu ance EOE
Apply n pe son o ca Judy
Ba cus AN Don a (740)446

Ass e an Manager local
cha n estauran competi
ttve sa a y flex ble schedule
paid vacat on P efe at east
two yea 8 expe lance Send
esume to bO~ 548 In ca e of
the Ga 1pol s T bune 825
Th dAve Ga pos Oh

Shop
Classlfledsl

All Dlaplay 12 Noon 2
8u•lneaa Daya Prior To
Publication
Sund•y Dl•play 1 00 P m
Thuraday for Sundaye

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

45741 (740l742 2076

r

How you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
(. ~
Borders $3 00/per ad
~
Graphics SOc for small
S1 00 for Iaroe

Display Ads

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And AddreiS When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

~.roo___w..T~.N'Jl'J).Do

and mobile home are
appraised
at
$22 000 00 and can
not be sold for less
than two-thlrda of the
appraised value
TERMSOFSALE The
successful purchas
er as soon as his bid
Is accepted shall be
required to deposit
on the day of the sale
In cash or by certified
check payable to the
Sheriff 10% of the
amount
of
such
accepted bid but In
no event less than
$1 000 oo The bal
once of the purchase
price shall be due
and payable to the
Sherlll within thirty
(30) days from the
date of the conllrma
lion sale The pur
chaser
shall
be
required to ay Inter
eat on said unpaid
balance at 10% par
annum from tha data
of confirmation of the
aale to the date ol
payment of the bel
ance unlaae the bel
ance ahlli be made
wHhln eight (8} dayo
from the data of aala
All Shariff I Hill
opar1t1 under the
doctrine of C1v11t
Emptor Proapectlve
purchiHrt era1Jr,ad
to ChiOk lor Iiana he
Sheriff m1k11 no
guarantet 11 to all
tu1 of Title Prior to
lllo
Relph Tru11111
Melge county Sherin
Oonlld A Cox
Attornoy lor Pl1intlft
Nov 25

Oead'tir~
• All ads must be prepaid"

lwr ght@IC

ANNOUNCF.MENTS

992·2157

m

\ \ \ I l l " I \ II\ I"'

t

... t-a&amp;=.~P!iil 1_,. f"'o.. ~WI!i&lt; l::--p ~ • ~
I&gt;.ell_e!!_&lt;ed ~lgl.. t. t.._. ~-c:»L•- .:&gt;..-.. ..-.-.

orFaxTo

Dally In Column 1 00 p m
Monday Friday for ln•ertlon
In Next Day • Paper
s~:~:::~ In•Column 1 00 p
p
For Sunday• Paper

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

F ee o good home AKC
mae St Bena d 6 yeas
0 d (740)256 1652

~

446-3008

Word Ads

HOW IQ WRITE A1'i AD

~egt~ter

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333

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F ee k tten to 900d home
Gray Cal co house a ned
(740 367 7 48

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
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l~ter

CLASSIFIED

Just two changes
in AP men's Top 25
BY

- Sentinel - l\.e

Fo
Sa e
Cl3 es on
Te escope V sua black 1
1 4 New Condition $400
13()4l675 4096

2 bed oom apartment n
M ddleport $275 a mon h

$275 depos ca 740l596
3466 0 591 0649

Good used App ances
Recond oned
and
2
apt
Gua anteed
Washe s
Centenary app ances lu
Orye 8
Ranges
and
n shed ul I ea paid except
Ref ge a o s Some s art at
etectr c c ean $350 man h
$95 Skagos App ances 76
Call (740l256 135
v ne St 740 ~46 7398
2 SA Roomy duplex LA
Mo ohan Ca pet 202 C a k
ktchen Lg bah t ca
attached
ga age
Nta Chape Road Porte Oh o
740l4~6 74~~
677 630
Rodney $400 per man h
eftrencee + depos
No 9162 Fee Est mates Eaey
f nanc ng QO da)'a same 11
petl (700l448 2801
cash V 11lf M11te Card
2 Furnlthed amal apa I Drive I I ttle IIV8 a ot
ment1 for en L v ng room
Thompson• App ance &amp;
kitchen bedroom &amp; bat"
Rapa 675 7388 Fo oalo
$275 elel'l I Utlllt II paid
1 condlt ontd
automat c
except 1 ect c (304) 875
Wllhe I &amp; dryt I Iff Qe I
1386
tors
gaa and e actrlc
BEAUTIFUL
APAFIT anges a oondniOnert and
MENTS AT IUDGIT w nger washe 1 W do
PRlCII AT JACKSON repairs on majo b and1 n
ESTATES 52 Willwood ahop o at you home
Drive from $297 o $383
Wa k to shop &amp; movlea CaM

Ibanez 5 str ng Bass w
hardshe I case $325 Horton
35th ann versa y C OSB Bow

package
8886

$325 (740)441

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa td New &amp; Rebu It In
Stodl. Ca Ron Evans 1

BOO 537 9526
L kt New Motoriltd SCOOt•
$3000

(700)441 0867

NEW AND U8!0 ITEEI
StH Beama Pipe~ Rebar
Fo
Concrete
~ng 1
Channt Fat Bar StM
G at ng
For
Drains
D lvewayo &amp; Wa kwayo L&amp;L

SCrap Molalo Open
Tueaday

Monday

Wednesday

&amp;

Fnday 8am.. 30pm Cloud
Thur&amp;day
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday (700)441!-7300

740 446 2588
Equal
tre1ees dresser couchea
otnce Fumltur1
Housing
0pportunl1y
B lei&lt; In Clal po a 3 bed
bunk beds bedroom aulte&amp; New screech &amp; Dent
ACREAGE
ooma 1 5 batha baaement
eel nera
Grave manu Save 70% 1.8Q0.52?ca port $650 relerences
men1o
(7~ 0l«6 ~782
Argonaut 519 Bridge SlrMI
land 8 18 acres appro:x 3 deposn no pels 740-448Qa po la Houri 10 4pm Guyandotte/Huntington M/F
mt e out Sandhi! Ad Road 9209
Slop byl
trontage and New Ad
Old og1 from hitlo lea
.(304l875 3078 o 1304)593 Fo Lease P lvate •br 1 112 GraciOus lvlng 1 and 2 bed While Rope side by olde home at natand ng owntra
0507 laave mese-soe
bath n H storlc P1 PI room apartments at Vliage efrlgerator. $125 Hot potnt w 1 he p
tear down
and
R ve s de &amp; Wh rlpool washers $65 (700)378-6325
Olst ct Fu v restored all Mano
Lots 19 &amp; 10 Heatley S app ancea
Add t on n B dwell Two Secu lty and
aroa leVel lot&amp; p Ice to sale requl ed Fo

now Phone 740-446 9539

727 593 1454

$650 mo Apartments n M ddleport
refe ences F om $278--$348 Ca 740appl cal on 992 5064 Equa Housing
Opportun ties

each 2 GE drye &amp; one
while one almond $60 Tl'al er dual axle tnt bed
each
Cal
after 8pm new lrealtd floor 13 000 11&gt;1

(700)446-9088

max

$6~

{700)24S-5&amp;08

�•
Tuesda~No~25,2003

Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2003

The Da~ly Sentinel• Page

www.mydallysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

LfAS.tACASJtJQ,l:QM

Earn extra 1n~. $SSUS!

P•i ltlCQ!Yie to $1500. FIT
UnlrrmtBd l ln'IIIS!ffiltlli !tQI.lit!ld.
fl'lil llCII'I\1 a~a d able

START DATING
TONIGHT!
1-800-ROMANCE

Toll Flli&amp;

HAWKINS
TAXIDERMY
137 S. 5th Avenue

Get Pl •d 10 shoP1
iH'Oal l IBqtJ!Ied

Cellular

(740) 992-7533

J!:!ll1i't~~-~?L ·-···-······

ext 1847

.

FREE

Fr&amp;e Suj;lpll&amp;$, Postage!

all 50 s1111es C ~ t \Qda . ~ nd Pu~rto Rk:o
1·800·561 ·01? ~

Live Operators 2417
F()l' Free lnlormalion,
Call TOll Free·
1·800·357 -t170

lf===jijV1ffi;iffi~~==Jif.seauti'rut CLUSTER home for
Investors M011t1yt

Split P"'lit.~

BUSY family.Ciose to every·
thing! Homeowners Assn.
No mowing. See listing

Tlaining!
Free hl1ormarion!

' U S DodorsiPhoHI'llacies
t ·BOO 449

www em !:!d ~qlr~tss . com

2 ~ 3t

Sunset Home
Construction

DEER
PROCESSING

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
· Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More

Skinned, Cut

FREE ESTIMATES!

,.....

S250 a day potenltal

• Professlofltll
Bob 8aclr

245·5027

build a staircase
aud metrrories
'•
a lane.
I'd walk right up
to Hear•en mrd
bring you
homt again.
Salurday, Nov. 29th

Iu Memory of

6:00p.m.·??

Free Estimates
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 'fears Local

AUTOS

M&amp;YnANruus 1

~ MISCELUNEOUS

HUBBfiRDS
GREEnHOUSE

(7401446-0103

i

SUPPL~

Mom, Ker111y, Gi1111ee Hmdricks,
Brian Shelly, Horta &amp; family

Ir

I \It\ I Sl 1'1'1 II o.,
.~ 1.11 I SIOI ~

~~;;;;;;,;,;;;;,..

____, Lw------_..1

LIVESIUCK

2692.

~

Sawmi ll 52" blade 15'
&lt;:;:arriage, good A.A. Tie
m·achine, Diesel Engine,
good
condition.
Phone

Block, brick , sewer pipes ,
16' month old Reg is1e red
windows, lintels, e1c. Claude
Bl ack Angus bull. Si red by
Winters, Rio G rand~ . OH
SAV New Design 0081.
~C;al..
l7:.;4;:;:0,;:
·2;;45:;;·,;;:,5i:,:2"-1;,.
. _ __, From a dam by OHD
i\.os
Traveler 6807. From the
noted E n s~ay family that
l-OR SALE
produced the pathfinder s1re
AKC Lab pups, 6 weeks old, RA Traveler 524 and numer·
shots. wormed , dew claws ous other sires. Qual ifies fi r
removed. Field Champ ion 1he tobacco program $1.200
blood line. Black $300. ye t- (740)367·7047
tow $350. Ca ll (740 )441Polled Hereford Hefers 1yr
01 30 .

Trailer, dual axle , tilt bed,
new treated floor. 13,000 lbs
max. $699. (740)245-5648
Tri-hxel Kenworth Log Truck
with 120 Prentice Log
Loader, asking $16,000
D:;J Cat Doz er, 6 way blade

j

10

MY WHOLE
FAMILY'S
COMIN' FER
THANKSGiVIN'

m buy qllilt tops

9 rnilts from Pt. Pleasant
011 Sand Hill Road.

. JEST AS SOON AS
THEY All LEAVE !!

MERCY--WANT
ME TO HALP
YA CLEAN Ti-l'
HOUSE ?!

Estate

{7 40)256- 16 18

A UTOS

t'OR SALE

~

S500' POLICE IMPOUNDS.

good. $7 ,900. (740)446·

4034.
-------$15,000
- - - - - - - : - - : - old. Dark Red. (304)882· 1992 Plymouth Laser Turbo.
John Deere 440 D skidder. Border Collie pups , Classic 2426
Engine runs. bad transmis·
very
good
condition . markings, working , imported
sian, will not part out. Call
$22.000.
Leave
blood line, great Christmas Registered Angus yearling (304)675-4617
2002 John Deere 790 4•4. gift (740) 379·9110.
bulls.(740)446·9856.
Message.
compact tractor. 6 tt. finish
pupp ies, Regt stered black An gus 94 Cutlass Supreme. red .
mower, 5 ft. tiller, new condi- Dalmatian
mother/father l ull blooded, 8 bUlls 14-17 months old, A.l. 3.4. motor, le \lther. loaded.
tion. $11,500.
89
GMC Utility truck. females, 2 males, $1.25, siros FamouS 7001 . Gar moorJ roof. dependable,
(740)388-99 11,
(740)446·6783 or (740)645· (740)992-9832 ready X-mas Expectation. and Wh1te Oak $2.200.
Precise. PH . (304)675-2098 leave message.
week.
2480.

For only

thru Saturday 10·4
Closed Sundays

or

"'

:'l\OP fREHit-&lt;GI

1-ir\(&gt;...\ C&gt;O '&lt;OU
1-\i\1/E". TO &amp;. SO
WOR\~JW I\BOUF

.

""I r\f\IIE: SO

ooq

II WOUW &amp;. "-

WORI'!.\ES, IF I

WEEK {:(FORE. l

1-\CJ:.( r\\ I \W

GO\ 1\W.Jt-IC&gt;TO

"'- BUS

W~'t'll-\6

\0()(\'{

\1!

'45

::;:::~:::;:::::::
r]()
VANS &amp;
4-WDs

r

BIG NATE

~

"Not mel
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Finandal Services.
Box lB9, Mtdd le port. OH
Phone: 843-5264."

1996 Honda 4 Track, 4x4,
30 0
4·wheeler.
Good
Condition. $2600. (304)675·

PEANUTS
15 IT PROPER

TEAC11ER5 11AVE

TO SEND '(OlJR

~OME5?

TEAC11ER A

1999 Honda 300, 4x4.
$2 ,600: 1999 Yamaha PW

1995 FO RD E350 CUBE

80 $550: 1990 Honda XA 80
$600.(740)441·8888.
.. 2001 GSXR 600 e&lt;cel

TRUCK.
CALL
(740)446·9416. M·F 9·5

ent condition, low miles.
all740·591-4305.

BOX

Located
1391
Safford
School. Gallipolis .

2002 Honda 350 Rancher
four wheeler. $3,200.
1996 Toyota Tercel , auto. John Deere Gator. electric
AIC. $1,900 080. (740)256· dump. (740)446-6783 or
1618 or (740)256-6200
(7401645·2480.
1998 Mazda B2500 extended cab. white, 4 sp eed, 2
wet , 59 ,000 miles, ac. cd,
bed l iner, (740)992-9 229
at1er 6pm $8,000.
9-inch Ford gear ser 583
ratio, also center Section
V:'\.1\S &amp;
w/3 1 spline mini spool. also
1986 Horton emergency

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Advertise
General Contracting
in this
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
space for $1 00
Roofing· All types
per month.
740·992·7953

BETTY

;.r.;,..,;,;,..,.;.,;,;,;,.,__.,.
4-WDs

I

squad. (740)992·0355
1986 Chevy Blazer, 4X4 ,
GM 4.3 V-6 engine com ·
plete. $200. Several 350/
2877
400 Pontiac engines, com1991 Dodge pickup. 4 W.O.: plete lor rebuild, $200 up.
S.W.B .; A/C; 96K miles, 351 C Fo rd engine, race

$850.00 080 (740)742·

$3,500. (740)245·52t3.

ready,

$2000.

GARFIELD

'84

EVeN ..JU!I'T FIVE YI!AR5
INfO flrll! FUTURe.. : WHA'T

Thunderbird. to make race
1998 Suburb!in 1500. 4x4,
car, $300. (740)448·t822
loaded, immaculate! Garage
morning/ evenings:
kept. nonsmoker, 64,000
miles. New tires , NADA

$15 ,500. $15,000 080.
(740)441-9593
10pm.

before

~'R~
tM~~~ High&amp; Dry

1979 Fleetwood Camper.
20m Chevy S·10 ZR2, 4x4, $3,000. Call For details.
4.3 Vortic , automatic, AC, (3041675·6407 or (304)675·
CD/ cassene player, full 3180
power. 44,600 miles. almost
new tires, eKcellent condi·
tlon •. will sell for payoff· ·
$14,600
Firm. Serious·
IMPR.OVEMF.NIS
inqutres only, call (740)992BASEMENT
2358 after 4:00 weekdays .
anyttme on weekends.
WATERPROOFING

;;;:;:;;::=:::::;:::::==:::::;
i16

2001 Ford Explorer Sport,
4x4, whlte ·grey trim, feather
int., fu lly loaded. 29,000
m iles. Excellent cond . 60
mo.-1 00,000 mile transfer·
able warranty. $16,000.
97 F250, 4)14, loaded, sharp.

(740)446·6783 or (740)6452480.
2001 Oldsmobile Silhoutte
Van , loaded, leather .~ats ,
premium sound . traction
control. 76,000 miles, asking
$12,900. Phone (740)446-

4672, (7,40)441 ·1 034.

Hor.u:

Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local relerences fu r·
ni shed. Established 1975.

Call

24 Hrs.

0870, Rogers
Waterproofing.

( ~40)

446·

Basement

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-5232
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

IMPORTS
Athens
MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech st.
middleport, OH
(10'K10' 610'1120')

[740) 992-3194
Backhoe, Dozer,
992-6635
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

740·992·7953
11/3

9 Love,

1 mo

volcano
39 Scale notes

gesture

CELEBRITY CIPHER

SElF
STORAGE
IN MASON
lOX I0 • 135.00
I OX20 · $55.00

740·992·3961

by Luis Campos
Celebr~ Ci~r CT'fpiOglilm$ il!ll!

cr&amp;at!!d

l~m ~by

Eactr Ieder ~ the apN!r SliMs !01

lilfl'O.J$ pii!Opie past JAI preser«
~

Todaysclue: RequaJsC

" KME

UWK

FTAA

SMD ."

"DTUG

TO

NWRXTSP
WFWK ."

IGAWK,

W

EN

VED

DTUG

VGS

BCWSXATS ·

RTCREO

WAFWKO

WSI

VGS

-·

UMHTSP

ZGRZO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Piaytng mtddle linebacker '' like walKing through t
lion's cage in a three-piece pork chop suit" - Cecil Johnson

_

fc) 2003 by NEA. Inc. i 1·25

AstroGraph

WOlD

tJCAt DAILT
PU:%111

;AMI

~

-.r'l!lrth&lt;lo!Y:

Opportunities (or other things that come
easy for you today) must be properly utilized and not squandered. Beware ol sidetrack developments that could take you off
course.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) ~ Get your
chores out of the way early today, no matter how distast eful they may be. Fun
involvements could be in store for you , and
you 'll not want to be bu rdened with duties.
PISCES (Fe b. 20-March 20) - Do not be
lackadaisical tod ay regarding maners that
affect your career. You could be mi ssing
out on an extremely lucky happening that
cou ld prove to be quite valuable.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - Consider
the long·range benelils from a matter
instead of merely today 's happenings
before you chuck anything. Smooth roads
may have a chance to replace that bump in
the road you're now experiencing .
TAURUS {April 2Q-May 20) - Al1hough
you may feel you're under obligation to
someone , that person may not feel the
same way. Listen to a friend who is trying
to po int ou1 th a1 ta c1 to you today.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - Be realistic
corlCerning' a maner you 're in the middle of
negotiating today and you won't be disappointed. Without honest equailty, !he entire
bargaining situation cou ld tall flat.
CAN~EA {June 2 1-July 22)- Be sure 10
show proper acknowledgement anCI grati tude early on tO those who pitch in and
work at your side today. With everyone
feeling good abo ut themselves, the work
will go smoother.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Don't pusl"r a

l'om eraJ', Ohio

1992 Chevy 3/4 ton, 5speed, w/lopper. $3,50 1)
Call 740-446·8832

8

oljuz
38 Hi!lh peak

"You're such a pessim•st." .I
scolded my son . "Can'l you look:
on· the bright side of anythmg?::
"No." he replied. "I'm th e one who
manages loo make an impossible:
situalion seem·· • • • • • • · ."
Comololo !ho chucklo ouotod .
by filling in fht miUing words ·
you develop irom !TID No. 3 btlow.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) -

Home Sites Pond.,· IJriPeway."
740-992-3470
Toll Free 1-866-267-0072

3824

mRSAt.E

37 Fitzgerald

A number of beneficia l happenings could
come your way in the year ahead with liHie
or no effort expended on your part
However. you mustn't get careless abou1
them and think your luck has a never·end·
ing source.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21 ) - Early
on you may have to distinguish between
being assertive or merely aggressive_ II
you start ordering people around, it could
incite a rebe lli on and ruin what should
have been a great day.

IJulldozer &amp; Backhoe Trucking Service.\·
Septic System ln .\·tal/atio"
La11d Clearing

1

43 Common ·
phr- :
44 Stlr·fry p111
45 Wlllt All ·
sound
alung tH&lt;a
22 Slop(2-)
(2 wda.) .
DOWN
23 Cozily
46 ChatDH :
Percent
24 Ma.
48 Hollow
Bombeck 41 Lellall
endings
25 Ember
50 Chaom
Ten conto
Tlra leeture 26 lnvltetlon 52 Vlgor'o
Huge flower
addendum
partner
All - 28 VItali Ioree 53 Claire or •
29 Ivy League
Balin
:
oudden
school
· 54 · --treo
Naughty
30 Whool joiner
lallo ... "
Lingerie
31 Stingy
nem
37 Long-eetlve
Shoulder

Wedne•day, Nov. 28,2003
By Bernice Bede Oaol

CtJmmercial Re.,·idelltia/

40
MOIURCYCLES

33 EdAtner'a
-Grant
34 Lumber·
leek'a lool

6
35 l&gt;ollao eager 7

the queen offside.

~
~~

Wicks Hauling
and
Excavating

95 Chrysler Newyorker,
excellent cond ition, leather 94 Chevy 3/4 ton , 4WD, 350
power sunroof, ru ns great, Auto, 128K , Runs Great ,
$2500 must sell, 740-416- $4995. (740)245·5648

r

ably? -

7 40-992-5776

95 Blue Neon, 5 speed, 4
door, 86.000 miles, $ 1,400
or best otter. 740·256-1652. -,

Hondas. Chevys, Jeeps, etc!
0174
Cars from $500 . For listings
1-800·719·3001 ext3901
, 95 Toyota 4·Aunner Limited.
V6, automatic, 4x4. PW. PL,
$500' POLICE IMPOUND S. Sunroof, Tilt, Cruise, A/C
Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, etc I
$3 ,500 , (740)379-2280.
Cars hom $500. For listings
1-800 -7 19-300 1 ext 390 1
ThUCKS
1987 Buick Grand National.
95.000 miles, looks and runs

Wrap a.
Freeze

Open daily Monday

2001 Sunlire, 30,000 miles,
auto, AJC, CD player. $5,200
OBO

740-741-1076
Skin, Cut.

Poinscuias, Pots and
hanging baskets.

Sale.

All pass

South won the opening lead in hand and
played a spade to dummy's queen. East's
dub discard was a bl ow. but declarer dtdn't panic . He cashed dummy's heart ace ,
ran the mi nor-s uit winners, discard tng a
heart from hand on the fourth club. and
played a spade to his king
The deal had cou~ted out, and everyone
had two cards let1. South held a spade
and a heart. 01 tmmy reta tned the kingjack of hearts. VJest had had to keep his
spade winner, so when declarer Jed his
last heart and saw that West's remaining
ca rd was not the heart queen . h e went up
with dummy's king, dropping - juslifi·

THE BORN LOSER

11645 SR ll5
Langsville, OH

Chrislmas 6eason.

2000 Buick Regal LS, 41 k
miles, excellent condition ,

(740)256·6200.

all or in part , call (740)949·

(7401286·1309

oso (740)256·1233 or
(740)256·9031.

(304)67S-22oa . 965·5597

WHITE'S METAL
One lighted nativity set,
DETECTORS
Joseph, Mary, baby Jesus,
Ron Allison
three ki ngs. donkey, cow,
588 Watson road
three sheep, camel and
Bidwell, Ohio
manger; also 17 scissor
(740)446'-4336
style building trusses , 14
foot span, 4·1 2 pitch with l'l!l:'-~~----,
one toot overhang, will Sell
BUII.DING

....

"I lost my shirt
in the stock
'/'::11!. market!"

~~../;;(/',,IIi' ,,

Syracuse, Ohio
Now open For

2
3
4
5

AI the bridge table. il you play the right
cards. sometimes you Qet jus1ice - you ·
make or break the contract But sometimes whatever you do is doomed to fa tl·
ure. Then your prlm8ry feeling will probably be frustration .
To avo id frustration on this deal. you must
maintain concentration throughOut - you
ca n do itt How would you plan the play In
seven no -trump after West leads the
spade jack?
Norttt used two doses of Gerber 10 check
1hat the part nership had all the aces and
kings . Then he hoped they also had 13
winners.
South could see 12 trickS : three spades.
1wo hearts. three diamonds and four
clubs . 11 seemed as though he needed to
find either spades 3-3 or the heart fines se
working . But th ere was one other possibil-

BARNEY

18 Patterns 4vallable
Connie Curnutt
895·3962 .~hop
owner1operator
895-3512 nome

"WVs # 1 Chevy. Pontiac. Bu ick. Oid s
&amp;
Van Dealer"

COOKS MOTORS

$9,500

MERCHANDISE

~ac:hlne Quilting · Regulated ~tltc:h

1-800-822-0417

1995 Grandam 20 102K,
$1,995; 1993 Tracker 4X4
106K, $1 ,195: 1990 Nissan

211411917- 1112511995

J,tl,'ve Still Beeir Missitrg You!

' MERO!ANDISE

•

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

t'ORSALE

truck 11 4K, $2.495.

1

ily.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio ·
45771
740-949·2217

V. C. YOUNG Ill

feature

41 Panache ·

answer.~

Hill's Self
Storage

1996 Neon, air, 74 .000
miles, runs goo d . $ 1.800

r

~~ALITY!

4X4, $1.495: t988 Chev.

Chris Hendricks

Toys, Tools. Scooters,
New Merchandise

Bonanza Get
5FREE

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

Phone (7401593-667

Lel me do 1t for youl

,.

period

56 Shlp 'o
bottom
57 Hard !octo
to Pedro
56 Like valleyo
10 Many
59 Wlnddlr.
60 Lady'o
14 JFK vlanor
19 Th, chlllo
honornk:
61 RN helper
20 Pa.tura

Raymond Cha ndler wrote , "The law isn't
juslice. It's a very imperlect mechanism . If
you press e~eactly the right buhons and
are also lucky, justice may show up in the

A

s.l·~.;t
~?J(jP

55 Hlalorlcal

ohrub

East
Pau
Pass

It may show up
late in the day

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Tuesday, November 25. 2003

~.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Eastern holds fall sports banquets Former Hall of
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

TUPPERS PLAINS_ The
Eastern volleyball and football, folf and cheerleading fall
sports banquets were held
recently at Eastern High
School.
Those athletes that were
honored were :
Football
· Darren
Scarbrough,
Brandon Goeglein, Terry
Durst, Ross Holter. Bryan
Minear, Lucas Grueser, Tyler
Winebrenner, Steve Dillon,
Sam Bunger, Chris Myers,
Josiah Martindale, · Will
Woods, Bryce Honaker,
Taylor Boyd, ' Cory Shaffer,
Ryan Nave, Brandon Batey,
Eric Batey, B.J. Deem, Chadd
Whitlatch, Ken Amsbary,
Derek Taylor. Ed Beatty,
Codey Gerlach, Matt Morris.
Special awards - Bryan
Minear (best back), eric
Batey (best lineman), Darren
Scarbrough (Best defenseive
player), Ken Amsbary (best
offensive.player), Will Woods
(coaches), Brandon Bate¥
(Don Jackson Sportsmanship
Award).
Golf
Jon Owen, Steven Shepard,
James Will , Nathan Cozart,
N1ck Kuhn, Derek Roush ,
Michael Owen, Evan Dunn,
Brian Castor.
Special awards - Jon
Owen (coaches), Evan Dunn
(coaches award), Michael
Owen
(Don
Jackson
Sportsmanship Award).
·
Volleyball
Alyssa
Holter,
Katie
Robertson, Kass Lodwick,
Tia Pratt, Stacy Smith,
Brandy Bissell, Becky Taylor,
Rachal Elliott,
Morgan
Weber, Jennifer Hayman,
Casey Smith, Jennifer Armes,
Cassie Nutter. .
Special awards - Alyssa
Holter (most points served),
Katie Robertson (middle hitter), Kass Lodwick (back row
specialist), Casey Smith (110
percent), Jennifer Hayman
(II 0 percent), Tia Pratt (Don
Jackson
Sportsmanship
Award), Stacy Smith (Don
Jackson
Sportsmanship
Award), Brandy Bissell (most
improved) , Morgan Weber
(outside hitter), Becky Taylor
(coaches). Rachel Elliott
(coaches).

Cheerleaders
Andrea Grueser, Abbie
Chevalier, Brittni Hensley,
Dyana Hawthorne, Sara
Wiggins, Brittany Roush,
Alyssa Baker, Kayla Siders,
Tyler Lee (mascot).
Eighth Grade Football
Daniel Buckley, Nathan
Carroll, Chris Colwell. Kyle
Edwards, Craig Hensley,
Tyler Kearns, Alex Kuhn ,
Jesse
Long,
Aaron
Martindale , Zack Newell,
Kyle Rawson, Toney Roush.
Seventh Grade Football
Dwight
Beamon!,
Benjamin Buckley, Action
Facemyer. Derek Griffin ,
Casey
Hannum, Josiah
Hayman , Zach Hendrix ,
Matthew Hosken , Cody
Hysell , Zach Moore , Coel
Williams.
·
JV Volleyball (only)
Hallie Brooks, Darcy
Winebrenner, Erin Weber,
Brittany Bi ssell , Jullian
Brannon,
Beth
Hysell ,
Georgie Kob lentz, Sarah
Martindale.
Eighth Grade Volleyball
Kelsey Holter, Megan
Broderick, Heaven Westfall ,
Hannah Pratt , Niki Young.
Amanda Eason, Ryan Davis,
Amber
Pooler,
Katie
Hayman , Morgan Werry,
Cassie Hauber.
-Seventh Grade Vo,l,leyball
Damelle Barnhart, Rebecca
· Owen , Heather Brooks,
Kayi.ee Milam. Amber White,
Brittany Casto, Morgan Burt,
Ashley Life, Katie Wilfong.
.JV Cheerleaders
Ashley Welch, Cari Steger,
Kayla Nave, Jessica Howard ,
Amanda King, Amanda
Windon , Kimberly Castor,
Linsee Davis.
Eighth Grade
Cheeleraders
Sarah Wachter, Lindsey
Grate, Brittany Robinson.
" Seventh Grade
Cheerleaders
Tina Drake, Samantha
Welch.
All-Academic
Bryan Minear, Darren
Scarbrough, Jon Owen,
Derek Roush. Nick Kuhn,
Sarah Wiggins, Tia Pratt,
Alyssa Holter, Rachel Elliott,
Becky
Taylor,
Katie
Robertson, Andrea Warner,
Jennifer Hayman, Morgan
Weber, Casey Smith, Kass
Lodwick.

from Page 81
things and it really comes down to performance.
We have to play well in the game and preparation helps you do that."
· .The Sooners have a 1.0 for poll average, 1.0
for computer-rank average, 0.40 for strength of
schedule, zero for losses and 0.5 bonus points
for beating sixth-place Texas for a 1.9.
- With all the focus on second place, Oklahoma

from Page 81
time. The next two games are
in Pittsburgh and in
Baltimore, against division
rivals whose seasons also are
on the line.
. If they beat Pittsburgh, the
Bengals would have a threegame winning streak for the
first time since 1999, when
they were still playing in
Cinergy Field .
"If we're going to go
where we want to go, we've
got to beat them, no question about it," Lewis said.
"You can't fool them. you
can't trick them . You've got
to beat them."
The Bengals have been
beating teams by . avoidi ng
the si lly mistakes that were
the hallmark of their 12-year
run as a downtrodden team.
They've also managed to
prop up a · middle-of- the ~
pack defense with an
offense that has become one
of the league's most balanced.
Cincinnati ran for 225
yards and passed for 229 in
.San Diego, piling up 33 first
downs by making good use
of all of its weapons. Corey
Dillon ran for I 08 yards and
Chad Johnson caught 10
passes for 107 yards.
"1 think we can take
advantage ,?f any secondary
nght now, sa1d Jon Kitna,
who was 24-of-38 for 243
yards and four touchdowns.
"The way that we're playing
right "now, running the football, we're not going to
change our ga!Jle plan.

. '"

Eastern football special award winners are front row. left to
right Bryan Minear, Will Woods. Back row, Eric Bi!tey, . Ken
Amsbary, Darren Scarbrough, Brandon Batey.

BROKEN ARROW, Okla. - Warren Spahn, the Hall of
Fame pitcher who won more games than any other left-hander in history. died Monday. He~ was 82.
Spahn died at his home, famil y friend Gary Caruso said.
Spahn was the mainstay of the Braves' pitching staff for
two decades, tirst in Boston and then in Milwaukee. He
pitched for21 sea,ons, winning 363 games and posting 20 or
more victories 13 times.
The remarkable part was that he was 25 before he g@t his
ftrst major league win.
.
"Warren Spahn was a fighter and a winner," said New York
Yankees manager Joe Torre, a former teammate . "He made
catching in the big leagues a lot ea,ier for me because he took
me under his wing along with Lew Burdette. One of my
biggest thrills to this day was catching his 300th victory in
1961"
Spahn started his baseball career in his hometown of
Buffalo, playing first base while his father played third for the
Buffalo Lake City Athletic Club. He wtmted to play first in
high school but his team already had an all-city player at that
position. So Spahn sw itched to pitching.
·
He signed with the Braves in 1940 for $80 a month and
injured his arm twice in his first season of D-level ball. But
he won 19 games the next season and was invited to spring
truining with the Braves.
He started the 1942 season with the Braves but was sent
down by manager Casey Stengel, who was angry because the
letl-hander refused to brush back Pee Wee Reese in an exhibition game. Spahn went 17- 12 with a 1.96 ERA average. .

Red men
from .Page 81
Eastern volleyball special award winners are front row, left to
right , Casey Smith, Rachal Elliott , Tia Pratt, Jennifer Hayman .
Back row, Alyssa Holter, Morgan Weber, Katie Robertson,
Kass Lodwick, Becky Taylor, Andrew Warner.

Eastern golf special award winners are, front row, left to rjght,
James Will, Evan Dunn, Michael Owen. Back row, Derek
Roush, Nathan Cozart, Jon Owen .

had a shot hit the crossbar,
but failed to go in.
Two minutes later, Ryan
Junge had . a shot go wide
right as another attempt to tie
the game failed.
That was the last shot the
Broncos took as Rio overcame a couple of late yellow
cards to secure the win.
Hastings barely out-shot
Rio Grimde 18-17 as Hunter
had seven shots, four shotson-goal for the Redmen.
Hastings had II shots in
the second half.
Rio Grande goal keeper
Oliver Sanders preserved the
shut-out as he collected three
saves, while Christline had
eight saves.
Rio Grande's opponent in
the championship game, the
Sunbi ~ds , have rolled through
their two tournament games
with &amp; 7 - I win against
Southern Nazarene (Okla.) in
.

. the second round, a 3-0 decision against Embry Riddle in
the qua11erfinal and their 4-1
win in the semifinal over
Berry.
Fresno Pacific, the No. 8
seed, have been led in the
tournament by forward
Orlando Ramierz, who has
live goals.
Ramierz, though, was kept
score less against Berry as the
Sun birds had a pair of goals
off the bench, both of which
came in the second half.
Starting defender Daniel
Flories had the Sunbirds lone
goal of the first half Monday,
then Adam Arteaga. Joshua
Kaminski
and Fabricio
Codeceira in the second half
made it a 4-0 game before the
Vikings got their lone goal of
the night on a Daniel Ullrich
offering during the final seconds of the match.
The Redmen have never
played for a national title during head coach Scott
Morri ssey's tenure with Rio
Girande. which began in
1989.

"We've established our everyone · with shirts last
identity in the league now week that said, "One
and teams have to defend us Heartbeat. "
now.~·
The message seems to be
Dillon is finally back from sinking in . Johnson annoyed
a strained groin suffered the the coach by guaranteeing a
third week of the season. win over the Chiefs, but has
Lewis has decided to let ileen more careful and humDillon and backup Rudi ble in his comments since
Johnson share the job for then . Dillon has been granow.
cious after grousi ng, last
Neither is complaining month that he felt unappreabout the arrangement, an ciated and wanted out.
indication that players are
"This entire team is
buying into Lewis ' team- onboard Marvin's ship,"
first approach. He provided Anderson said.

,Keep WARM this ·winter!
with
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through
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The Paily Setltinel
It

'.•

.,

;

has been able to avoid the usual BCS controversy.
"It's hard for us to get on television or the
newspaper," coach Bob Stoops said. "We just
focus on what we can do. That always is our
focus and what we pay anenrion to. What's been
kind of nice about it is it has ki nd of deflected a
lot of attention off of us."
For now, the focus is on LSU, USC and all the
teams they' ve played this year.
USC is 22 spots ahead of LSU in strength of
schedule this week. BCS ex pen Jerry Palm projects that USC could end up anywhere from 15
spots ahead to 26 spots behind.

BCS

Ben gals

Famer Warren
Spahn dead at 82

. . ·''

~

.

...

. .. .
~

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I

·.,

•

•

TuEsDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2003

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