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Johnson wins Cy Young, B1

Tuesday, November 5, 2002
'

www.mydallyaenUnel.com

Page A 10 • Tbe Daily Sentinel

. .IDOl:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

39 ActorWoii8Ch

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nolghbaN

44 Aloud

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M•lp County's Hometown Newspaper

54 " Rubelylll"

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56 -Vega
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60 Busy one

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18 Freellies
20 Singer -

81 8"'!1"

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Orbison

23 Hoarder'•
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24 Festoon

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45 Off-the-cull

(hyph.l

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·animal ·

BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer ·

25

Second leg

www.mydailysentinel.com

Davenport, Powell win local races \

netS

43 Sucldin

26 Pleasllnt
48 Pnctictllly
Allectlon- 2 Cometo
27 Famous
fon~ver
lllety
teims
1-1
48 Roman
2911eln- 3 Arafat of.
28 Wrinkle
olltesmen
31 Coupd'thePLO
30 Windy City 50 Spont
34 Big Bon
networl&lt;
numeral
:~ 31 trains
look clollty 51 Crux
35 Europelight
52 P- liN!'
Aala border 6 Have being 32 Story
33 similar
p. . Peek
7 Impulsive
range .
53 No, to a
36 Tlbetan
8 Stop signal 35 The U Of

. Opft\\nllead: • 6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

'&gt;II tt·nh • Wt·dno·,d .ty Novl'mb .. r "· 1001 ·Vol &gt;1. No . 59

POMEROY Meigs
County Conunissioner Mick
Davenport was re-elected to a
.second term in Thesday's general election, and Pomeroy attor:
ney L. Scott Powell was elected
probate-juvenile judge.
Davenport, a Democrat,
received 42 percent of the votes
cast in Thesda)"s commissioner
race, 2,957 voli:s to Republican
John Fisher Jr.'s 2,540, and
Independent Janet Howard's
1,493. .
.
Powell also won a three-way
race. He collected 3,020 votes,

BY PIIIWP AlDER
Since it is Guy
Fawkes Night in EngUHF
la111le
,land, let's look at a
9 Huntavme·s
oxen
40 Flavor
55 Rain gear
37 Swindle
toe.
book from across the
enhancer
38 Relay-niCe 10 Orange
pond: "Bridge over
41 Unhappiveggle
po118
I VOTED
ITLJI.O.C ALL RASCALS,
Troubled Waters" by
AG'IN$T
LUKEY, I DIDN'T
David Bird (Cassell,
VOTE FER '&amp;M !!
2002). This is the second episode in the adventures of Rupert -not Guy Fawkes! ••
Knight, the bridge organizer on a round-the-world cruise.
The text is written
with a light, amusing
. style, and you get a
little Asian travelogue
color. The deals are a
mixture of entertain~ ALwAYS
FOf( T~t
ing and instructive,
but they are ad'
CANbiPATeS
vanced. For example,
~
on which side would
r~e t.MST
you bet in this threeno-trump
contract afAIOuT. .
ter a heart lead?
With only four top
a,; · •
tricks (one spade, two
CELEBRITY CIPHER
hearts and one diaby Luis Campos
mond), South needed
Celebrlly Cipher cryptograms are creat89 from quotaUons by famous
people, past and present Each letter In the cipher stands for another.
·to establish both miToday's clue: A equals C
THE BORN LOSER •
nors. When you have
~
~
~
~
r
~ · two stoppers · in the
'N I If\ r.J..l Tf'f. TWJBlE T~Y'VE
!$.£. Tf.IE.i~ N&lt;Y. Cf\~ YOU
Yt.NJI ... (&gt;... Cf\0\CUO!&lt;:. "NON~ ·suit Jed and two cards
DWAV
BUR U J
"0
to
dislodge
(the
club
. AAOI~mwT
fal.. Tf\E..Y 5f\00l0
OF'Tf-\e. f\OOVE.'!
L N . Z T L E J
S E J
LWHUJOWD
ace and, assuming the
,...__ E.LE.CTIOO~...
... .
llfo.-IJE. ~ '10 Tf'f.
finesse
loses,
the
diat-1[."-1 5N-L01'':&gt;?
AEBPJUKK
A E D T L B XZUB
mond king), it is often right to duck the
KUKKOEB."
0 K
OB
first trick. That is
what Knight did. He
JEPUJK
XODD
•
won the heart return
and drove out the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "The 4v Isay, 'I wish thi~ (gal)ie) ;
were
over,' I'll go."
·
· •
club ace. West, with
-Veteran
L.A.
Dodgers
announcer
Vin·Scully
~
~~::;i~====~::::___J , no entry left, shifted
BIG NATE
to a spade, but deWORD "
clarer, with two spade
WELL , GOOD FoR. HIM~
GAMI :
tiE WA'&gt; IN THE RIGHT
stoppers, won, took
PLAC.E AT THE
the diamond finesse,
RIGHT TIME'
and made his con- O Rearrange .letters of the
tour Krambled wordo b..
tract.
lew tg form four simple words.
East missed his
chance at trick two. If
H 0 MR E
he had shifted to the 1---r--r--~~--r---1
spade king; he would
j j
have defeated the L-....t-......1..-.L.--'----1.---1
contract •• but who
would find that play? 1---.--v:...,Y_E;;,_,;-A;_.;.,.H;__·-1
(I f South wbins and
13 I~ j .
PEANUTS
p1ays on c1u s, West
. . - - .
returns a low spade, r--------,
AIIOT~ER ONE OF
eventually giving the
V 0 N E W I~
One scientist to his distraught
TIWSE W~O DOESN'T
1
Is
1
~
.
colleague:
"One of the most dan-'
defenders
two
spades,
TAKE TilE 6ROCERV
one
heart,
one
dia.
_
.
.
~
gerous
forms
of human error Is
CARl 6ACK ..
mond and one club.)
~ forgetting what you . try to-- ,
So, did you bet on
sT 1cHE
the
defenders 7
I I 16 17 I
-Complete the &lt;hu&lt;kle quoted :
Wrong! If declarer .
. . . . _ .
by til ling in the miuing word• ..
had won the first trick
you develop from slop No . 3 below. ·
and driven O!Uo- the
@ PR INT NUMBERED lETTERS t
club ace, he would
IN THESE SQUARES
have been home.
"The book is $14.00 . A UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
1::1' GET ANSW ER
_
postpaid from Baron
Barclay Bridge Sup•
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
plies. Call (800) 274m JIJST SA~ 11115 Bestow- Quaii- Newly - Prompt- MOW'S his LAWN
2221 to order.
I IIOf'E HUMS\.€ PIE
To find out exactly where your property ends and your"
t'OtSN'T 1\A.~E
neighbor's begins, watch carefully the next time hS:.
CA\.OiliES...
NEWSPAPERS
j/"
MOWS his LAWN .
•

Health levy finally
gets voters' OK

von

- .

r.NOw

-

~

I

I

r.
j jl· 2

Work to begin by
year's end on
retirement center

I

I·

I

I-0 "

·

BY KRIS ScOUTEN AND
BRIAN J. REED

Staff writers

MaJorSubjectal

c

i

----------~~~----~--~Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2002
Bv BERNICE BED£ OsoL ·.

New contacts you make in

GAIUo'IELD
YOU MAJ:&gt;I!
t..EMONAJ:&gt;E

I C.OifA
5TAR1'
RfAJ:&gt;INGt
IN5TRUCTION5

the year ahead couid prove to
be. of greater worth than those
you have made in the past.
They could open doors for
you that would otherwise be
blocked to the average comer.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) ·- There are many financial opi&gt;Ortunities around you today if you .take the time .to
ferret them out. Leave no

stone unturned in places that

tTIIE GIUZZ\VELLS

'

phasize your cooperativeness
and understate your authority
if you're looking to gain their
support.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.'
19) -- Events could be devel·
oping today in a manner that
should awaken new hope in
your heart over a matter that
has been of some concern for
you. Things are about to take
a turn for tne better.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March
20) ·- Today could be a mean·
ingful da~ fofyour career-- if
you don t waste your efforts

could help enhance your maon matters of small conseterial sccurjty. Scorpio, treat
quence. You could be espeyourself to a birthday gift.
cially lucky focusing on
Send for your Astra-Graph
meaningful objectives.
predictions for the' year ahead . ,
ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
by mailing $2 and an SASE to , ·- The more outgoing and
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspa· friendly you are with others
per, P.O. Bo• 167, Wickliffe,
tooay. the more apt you are to
OH 44092. De sure to state
~ Jraw _good conditions to youryour zodiac sign.
. ' self. The consequences of life
{__, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23"• are reflective of people's attiDec. 21) --The clouds could
. tudes.
.I .
clear tod_ay and e•pand your
TAURUS (Apt.il 20-May
horizons. You should now be
20) -· Don't allow any dis' able to see opportunities that
couraging thoughts to build
previously eluded your vision.
up in you just because someFocus and act on them.
·
,thing in which you're presently involved is .still hanging
CAP~ICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19) .. Kindness can co~quer
fire. The rewards are just
what demands won'1. so when
around the comer.
•
dealing with others today emGEMINI (May o2l-June 20)
• I

Index

-- Your assessments are quite

good today in areas that you
perceive ro be fruitful. They
merit your attention, but the
trick is to take the bull by the
horns and do something about
them.
CANCER (June 21-luly 22)
-- Conditions that relate Ia
' your financial well·being look
e•tremely encouraging today .
However, in order to get the
most out of them. deal directly with top level people,

:'

not intermediaries.

LEO (July 23-Au_g. n&gt; -You will be thelucktest today
in all situations you manage
yourself and where you can
use your own ideas. If possible, k'eep straw bosstScom·
pletely out of the picture.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
--'Rewards will be forthcom-

·'

Blood Drive
sponsored by the HMC Laboratory Department

Thursday, NoveMber 7

ing today in activities where

you are looking out. for the
welfare. of others. In fact, the
more you do for people, the
luckier you'll become.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)-Chances are you could be in
the right spot at the right time
to be with the right people
who have something gomg
for them. This chain has room _
for one more link that is re ..
served for you.

·,

.

not finalized yet, are to
construct a 60-unit housing
complex in Rutland for citizens 62 and older,"
Varnadoe said.
"The total project will
consist of a 63 ,500-squarefoot facility with common
areas and meeting rooms," ·
he added.
Varnadoe said the facility
will be located off Brick
Street on a 7-acre parcel.

RUTLAND - Ground is
expected to be broken by
year's end on a new retirement center in Rutland.
Meigs County Economic
Development
Director
Perry
Varnadoe
said
Tuesday local demographics helped prompt developers to build the center m
Please see Center, A3
Meigs .
Developer Joe Wolfla . . - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . ,
of
Legends . Realty
announced the project
Monday night at the
Meigs County Chamber
:1 Sections - I:1 Pal•
of Commerce annual
recognition dinner, but Calendar
AS
said details will follow at Classifieds
B4·S
a press conference in two
Comics
B6
weeks.
DearAbby
AS
Indiana-based
The
A4
Legends Realty is access- Editorials
A3
ing fund s from a U.S . Movies
Department of Housing Obituaries
A3
and Urban Development Sports
Bl-3
)'lousing grant program, Weather
A2
Varnadoe said.
C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
"Their plans, which· are
~--------------~

I

Cover AI !he

REED

Staff writer

.

I

J.

operations.
.The levy was first instituted
in 1983 to relieve townships
POMEROY _- Mei~s and villages from that obligaCounty voters passed a 1-mtll · ?on. The levy ~til genemte
renewal levy for the Meigs about $?50,000 for programs
County Health Department on and servtces at the departmen.t.
Tuesday, six months after
The Board of Health nulhrejecting it.
. .
. fled tile local act afte~ tts _
The five-year levy was ~odel, a Lucas County sm?kapproved by a vote of 3.559 to •!!g ban, was found unconslltu·
3,436. .
'
Ilona! by . the Ohio Supreme
The levy proposal is the Court thts summe~. ·
health department's second
Vo.ters tn the unmco~rated
· this year. Voters narrowly prectnc~s . tn
Sahsb~
defeated the same issue in the Township reJected a half-mill,
May primary months after five- year levy for cemetery
vocal oppone~ts to the depart- operations, 336' to 276. A
ment's Clean Indoor Air Act cemetery matntenance levy,
pledged to campaign for its 0.3 mill for five years, was
defeat.
approved 40 I to 211 in
."As"i,l;f~;:SUit..of:.!PeJev.y ;.,..{ail.. Rutland Township. .
.
· ure in May, the department . A ,pt'Qposed state conslltuwas forced to lay off and trans- ttonal amendment allowtng
fer employees, and to .turn, changes · in drug sentencing
again, to townships and vii- wa~ reJected by 75 percent of
lages to fund more limited Metgs County voters, 4,785 to
I ,570.
. BY BRIAN

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

10AM·4PM

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
.pi;'

'

'

'

J

For more information, call (740) 446·5 171
"

...

..

'·

www.holzer.org

�•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, Nov. 7

•

I Toledo 133'/48' I

•

•

I Mlltlfteld 133'/44' 1 •

•••
••

•I Columbus 137"/48' I

loo.

.0 ·~ • • ~ . . . ·•;.-,,....,. . .
C~

Sunny Pl. ClOudy

Wednesd•y. November 6, 1001.

Representative loses from behind bars.

Ohio weather

C 2002 AccuW~ather.

PageAl

Showers T·storms

Rain

Fkli'IIEIII

-Snow

Ice

GIRARD (AP) - No ballroom, no
band. Former U.S. Rep. James A.
Traficant Jr. lost his first election since
1982 and had to watch the returns from
prison.
Traficant lost his jailhouse campaign
to retake the 17th District congressional seat. Congress had expelled hini in
July.
In April, Traficant was convicted of
10 corruption charges and is now serving an eight-year senteqce in the
in
Allenwood
federal
prison
Pennsylvania. But he was on the ballot
as an mdependent
Standing in for the e11:-congressman,
Tish Traficant was the center of attention at her' husband's election . night
headquarters at an Eagles fraternal hall
in Girard, near Youngstown.
"He' II call me tonight. They
(inmates) know everything. They get
TVs. They have CNN," Mrs. Traficant
said.
In complete but . unofficial returns
Tuesday night, Democratic state Sen.
Timothy l Ryan had 92,708 votes or 51
percent, Republican state Rep. Ann
Womer BenJamin had 61,269 votes or

34 percent, and Traficant had 27,487
votes or 15 percent.
· Hundreds of jubliant Ryan supporters
booed indifferently when Womer
Benjamin's vote totals .were announced
at Ryan's headquarters. They laughed
heartiJy when Trafican!'s third-place
.
showmg was announced.
The 29-year-old Ryan nodd~d m
agreement when ~sked ":hether It h~d
felt · odd to campa1gn agamst a man m
prison.
.
"It's just weird. You take situations as
ihey come. You can' t predict, especially in politics. You just take it as it
comes," he said.
.
Ryan, who had strong labor ,backmg
in the blue-collar Democratic· bastion
of Youngstown, said he became convinc~d last spring _that Traficant was
pohuca!ly fimshed when th~ con(lfeSSman skipped th~ Democrall.c pnmary
becaust: of t~e time constramts .of h1s
corruption tnal.
"I thought when he didn •1 run in the
primary that he :was pretty much toward
the end of his career. It was just a question mark," Ryan said.
"No one kriew wllere he was going to

"end .up. Nobody knew if he was going
to get 5 percent or be at 20 percent or
30 percent. I knew that if we kept him
under· 20 percent that we'd be in good
shape."
Over at thf Traficant headquarters,
about 40 people watched returns on a
big-screen television during a low-key
·
Some wore "Free Jim" T· ehv~nmg . d th
had lapel nins with
s 1rts an, o ers .
..,.,.
Traficant s photo.
. .
Mrs. Traficant, sw~tchmg comfortably between d1scusswn~ of ~er hu~­
band's well-bemg ·~ pnson and h_•s
political fortunes in ~·s hom~town •.sa1d
it was bitter~weet Without h1m.
"Not to have him with me, that's
· sad" she said. "He's been a very con=·
sci~ntious, kind, loving and under'
standing person. He always went out to
help anyone and the people really know
th 1 ,
. a·
.
b d
"d · ·
She sa1d her hus an was.
om$
fine. You know we are _both domg what
we have t~ do. Sometimes Y?U. have a
smoother lime than others. This IS JUst a
bumpier one."

Clearing skies ·set for Thursday New ambassador says
~Judge asked to
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
the mid 30s. West winds
· Skies · will remain cloudy around 10 mph.
lI

I
I

I

'

I
I

1.

I

personal, professional
lives intersect

across the region through the
day and winds will conti.nue
from the .northwest as a low
pressure system drifts to the
New
England
coa~t
Afternoon temperatures will
range from the low to mid
d
40s.
L_ook for more c1ou s
tomght as a cold front moves
mto the area J~om the northwest. Lows w1ll range from
the _upper 20s to m.Id 30s..
H1gh pressure will begm to
build in across the area from
the southwest on Thursday,
bringing clearing skies to the
state. Highs will be near 50.
Look for temperatures to
moderate further this week·. end as the high slips to the
··-Southeastern states and our
., winds
turn
from
the
Southwest Highs Friday will
be in the the lower 60s.
We~ttber forecast:
Tonight .. Cioudy. Lows in

Thursday... Some
early
clouds, giving way to sunshine. Highs in the lower 50s.
West winds around 10 mph.
· Thursday night...Mostly
WASHINGTON (AP) - Anne Ayalon is a tall, slenclear. Lows in the mid 30s.
Israel's new ambassador to der woman with short
Extended forecast:
the United States sees his blond hair who speaks
Friday... Sunny. Highs in the
job as a reflection of hi r. Hebrew, according to one
upper 50s.
. personal life. With an aide, with a near perfect
Friday night ... Mostly clear.
American wife from north- accent. Her husband is also
LowS' near 40.
west Ohio and two children tall, and sports glasses and
Saturday... Partly cloudy.
adopted from Panama. and wavy brown hair. .
Highs in the lower 60s.
Russia, Danny Ayalon has
The story of how Ayalon
.
long ago mastered the skill met his future wife hints
Sunday... Cioudy With . a
of diplomacy.
chanc~ of showe~. Loy;s m
that he was destined for ·a
"Israel and the U.S. are career in foreign policy.
the rrud 40s and highs m the
best of friends, best of
lower 60s.
Ayalon was going to colallies," said Ayalon, 4 7. lege and working security
Veterans. .
Day... Mostly
"So our personal lives, 'I at the Hilton Hotel in Tel
cloudy w1th a chance of
would
say, exemplify my Aviv, a coastal metropolis
showers. r:ows _in the upper
40s and h1ghs m the lower . work, which is to bring with 1.5 million residents
together us and America that is mofl) Westernized
60s.
and
strengthen ties. It starts than the highly religious
Tuesday... &lt;;Ioudy w_ith a
with
me at home, and I am
chance of ram. Lows m the
city of Jerusalem. He was
very proud of that" .
upper 40s and highs m the
. . Ayalon met his wife of standing in line at . the
upper 50s.
nearly 23 years in the late hotel's cafeteria when he
1970s, 'while she was an noticed · a · blond-haired
exchange · stlldent in Tel woman.
TODAY ON WALL STREET
"She was ahead of me,
Aviv, Israel. They were
and
she was American, so I
married in 1980 in a Jewish
Nov. 5, 2002
10.0011
weddin~ in northwest Ohio asked, 'How ·are .the relaDow
9,000
that mcluded all . of tions between Israel and the
Jones
Ayalon's relatives from U.S. today?.'" he recalled.
8,000
Israel. The two then "After that, we went on this
enrolled at Bowling Green date. And ever since, we
7,000
8,678.27
SEP
NOV
AUG
OCT
State University, earning were together." .
Law
High
Pct. cha~
Rocord high: 11,722.88
Mrs. Ayalon, who was
their master's in business
8.881:38 8,544.42
from previouo: +1.24
Jan. 1o4,.2000
studying
hotel management
administration in 1983.
Sitting side by side in as an exchange student
Nov. 5, 2002·
1,800
Ayalon's sparsely ~decorat­ from Michigan State
Nasdaq
1.400
ed office, the couple laugh University, nodded and
compos1t
frequently as they help laughed at her husband's
1,200
each other tell their story. story.
"He was a special guy, I
Together, the Ayalons rep1,000
"
1,40U7
resent the fusion of Israel knew it right away," she
Pet cha19!
·
Rooord high: M48.82
and the United States: said.
!rom prevk:lue: +0.33
March 1o, 2000

'1'1.' -.

Nov. 5, 2002

1,000

Standard
&amp; Poor's

Woman. who ridiculed
she.riff sentenced to
one year in prison

800
BOO

'f"

915.39
Pet. cha19!
Irom previous

+0. 78

AUCl

SEP

Hlgll

· Low

915.83

OCT

904.91

NOV

700

Roo.ord high:

1,527.48
Marcl) 24, 2000
AP

.Local Stocks
. AEP- 28.04
Arch Coal ~ 17.25
Akzo- 30.90
AmTech/SBC- 27.87
Ashland Inc.- 27.72
AT&amp;T- 14.30
Bank One- 39.76
BLI-15.22
Bob Evans - 23.55
BorgWarner - 45.51
Champion - 2.52
Charming Shops- 5.27
:City Holding- 28.80
Col~ 22.51
DG -13.90
DuPont - 42.55

Federal Mogul - .52
USB- 21 .22 · .
Gannett- 78.67~.
General EleclrtC:...., 26.50
GKNLY-3.70
Harley Davldoon- 53.53
Kmart..:.. .60
Kroger- 15.15
Lid. -18.07
NSC -21.56
Oek H~ FinaOCial- 21 .58
OVB-20.15
BBT -37.50
Peoples- 28.71
Pepsico-44
Premier - f 15

Rockwell-17.15
Rocky !loots - 4.90
AD Shell- 44.33
Sears-27.89
wai·Mart - 54.42
Wendy's- 30.35
Worthington - 18.56
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, pro·
vlded by Sm~h Partners
at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Girl dies of injuries from fire
J

COLUMBUS (AP)- A 3- Brooklyn
was
found
year-old girl · has died of slumped on her mother's bed
injuries suffered Sunday in a in a room across from where
home fire started by her 8- the fire started.
year-old brother playing
The mother, Shawna
with matches.
Johnson, 23, was downstairs
Brooklyn Summerall, who · when the blaze began.
"She was · so cheerful, so
suffered severe damage to
her lungs and burns over cute, pretty and so spirited,"
about 60 percent of her body, said Tonya Holliday, 32, .
died ·on
Tuesday
ir who said she was Brooklyn's
Ch ildren's Hospital.
godmother.
_.,
Fire officials said her
"This shouldn't have hapbrother admitted he had been pened. WF. have to make sure
playing with matches in a children don't have access tg
second-floor bedroom and ma tches or lighters," she
down stairs. said.
· '
had
go ne

..

CINCINNATI (AP)- A
woman was sentenced
Tuesday to one rear in
prison for selling v1deos of
her performing sex acts
with multiple partners.
Jennifer Dute, 32, of suburban Anderson Township,
could have been sentenced
to five years in prison. A
Hamilton County Common
Pleas jury found her guilty
last month on four counts
of pandering obscenity. .
That jury declined to
convict her husband, Alan,
61, on similar charges
1h
h h
h
h
a t oug
e s ot t e
videos.
Prosecutors said Jennifer
· Dute advertised the "ideos
on a Web site where she
used an expletive to refer to
Sheriff Simon Leis, a longtime opponent of pomography in Hamilton County. ,
At her trial, Dute's attor-

ney suggested that she was
prosecuted because she
ridiculed Leis.
"I apologize to Mr. Leis,"
Dute said in court Thesday.
"It was a stupid mistake
and I realize that"
Judge
Patrick
Dinkelacker noted that
Dute had reneged on a
1999 deal in which her
business pleaded guilty to
selling obscene materials
and had agreed to stop sell·
ing them in Hamilton
County. And he said he was
"personally repulsed" by
the videos that were shown
as .part of Dute's trial.
,
"I thought it was gross,
and it took a lot for me to
watch
these videos,"
Dinkelacker said.
.
Defense attorneys Said
the sentence would be
appealed.

extend grand jury
duty in priest's case
..

.

CINCINNATI (AP)
more years.
•
Prosecutors want a judge to
Since then, four other priests . ~
extend the . term of a special have been suspended or have:. .
grand jury that is lookin~ into voluntarily taken leave because: :
. allegations of sexual IDISCon- of misconduct allegations.
·
duct by priests in the Roman
Prosecutors convened the .
Catholic Archdiocese of grand jury in July after spiming
Cincinnati.
for months with church officials
Hamilton County prosecutors about which archdiocese :
are trying tb determme whether records should be turned over to ··
criminal charges should be filed · investigators:
.
:
.against cleigy or other church
The arclxhocese argued that
employees who have been some of the records should be
accused of misconduct.
withheld to honor promises of
The grand jury's four-month · confidentiality made to the
term will end Friday unless alleged victims. Prosecutors ,
Common Pleas Judge Fred accused the archdiocese of hid- .
Cartolano grants the prosecu- ing evidence.
·'
The nine-member grand jury ·
tors' request for more time.
· In papers filed with the court has the {lOWer to issue subpoe- ·
on Monday, .Chief Assistant nas, rev1ew evidence and heat .
Prosecutor Mark Piepmeier witness 'testimony about the
said the grand jury needs anoth- . abuse allegations. lntimately;
. er five months to fmish its the ~d jury could be asked to
work. The request does not indict suspects un .criminal
explain why more time is need- charges. .
.
· ·
ed: A: spokesman for the proseGrand Jury proceedings are
cutors did not return a call secret. Cartolano has sealed all :
Thesday seeking comment. .
court records related to the calie. ·
Prosecutors began investigatThere are about 500,000
ing allegations of sexual ·mis- Catholics in the Archdiocese of
conduct in April, aftenhurch Cincinnati, which includes 19
officials said the archdiocese counties in southwest Ohio.
continued to employ four Last year, there were about
unidentified priests despite · 56,000 students in the 112 ele"substantiated allegations' of mentary· and 22 high schools
misconduct that date back I 0 or operated by the archdiocese.
:£;

Mayor rejects settlement
CINCINNATI ~AP) .,- The
City won't pay a $55,000 bill
from a California lawyer
appointed to monitor the settlement of a racial profiling lawsuit, Mayor Charlie Luken said
Thesday.
·
Luken said the charges were
excessive. He ·said the City
Council should ask a federal
judge to appoint a new monitor.
If the judge disagrees, Luken
said he would ask that settlement negotiations be reopened.
"I've told .the city manager
not to pay this bill," Luken said.
"(The monitor) has told the city
if it's not paid within eight days,
his office will stop work. I think
that's the absolute best thing
that could happen."
The bill for $55,241.90 submitted by Alan Kalmanoff after
19 days on the job includes
charges for time spent talking
with \he city's police chief,
preparing for. travel to
Cincinnati - including packing. his suitcase - and for

,

meeting with a reporter for an :
interview,
A message seeking comment
was left with Kalmaooff's
office.
,
Kalmanoff's Berkeley, Calif.- .~ ,
based Institute for Law and
Policy Planning was one of II' .
applicants seeking the moni- ·
tor's job. U.S. District Judge ·
Susan Dlott selected the firm
after the various sides in the ·
case couldn't agree on a choice.
Last month, Dlott appointed :
Kalmanoff to oversee imple- ·
mentation of more than 90
changes to how Cincinnati
police officers do their work.
But the deal calls for a monitor
to be in place oruy for five years.
.and caps the city's cost at $1
million annually.
Luken said the expenses so
far violate the deal that the city
agreed to when it settled a racial
profiling lawsuit against police :
and a separnte investigation by
the U.S. Justice Department.

.

www.mvdailvsentinel_com

•

Obituaries
~nG.

Sauvage
· SYRACUSE - Jo~G.
Sauvage, 85, of Syracuse, died
Monday, November 4, 2002, at
· Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
. l;le was born on September I,
1917, in Pomeroy, the son of
the late John D. and Alberta
Custer Sauvage.
·
· He worked many years for
and retired from the Ohio State
Highway Depart~TlC:nt lis a project supervisor.
He was a member of the
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Drew Webster Post
No. 39 of the American
·t.egion, and the Odd Fellows
Lodge. He was a veteran of the
lJ.S. Army Air Force during
WorldWarll.
·
He served for many years as
scout master of the churchsponsored Boy Scout Troop
242. He also·helped to organize
a- cub scout pack.
He is survived by his wife,
Ann A. Sauvage, and two children, Jean Weaver and her hus- ·
band, To~ and ~. John R.
. Sauvage and his wife, Jan, of
Huntington, West Vtrginia.
Also surviving are five
grandchildren, Chris Weaver
and his wife, Missy, of Belpre,
Lee Al)o Weaver of Syracuse,
Tami Brown and her husband,
Jeremy of Peterstown, West
Virginia, Matthew Sauvage
and his wife, Lois, of
Frankford, West Vuginia, and
Cllrla Sauvage of Huntington,
West Vtrginia: two great-grandchildren, Alexandra and Carter
Brown of Peterstown, West
Virginia: a sister, Elizabeth
· Sauvage Weaver of Dayton;
and a niece, Anne Weaver
Warren and her husband, Larry,
of Hyattsville, Maryland.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by a sister,
·Effie M. Sauvage.
Services will. be I p.m.
Thursday, November 7, 2002,
a( the Ewing. Funeral . Home.
~. Sauvage will officiate at the
services for his father. Burial
will be in Giln1ore Ce!liCtery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday; November 6,
2(¥.)2.

Deaths
Craig
ijanning
. ALBANY - Craig A'.
Hanning, 48, Albany, died
Sunday, Nov. 3, 2002, at
Grant
Medical Center,
Columbu~. from injuries sustained in an auto accident in
Ashville.
He was born Feb. 12, 1954,
son of the late Darrell and
Irene Edmundson Hanning.
Services will be 11 a.m.
Thursday at Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home, Albany, with
the Rev. Martin Althouse
officiating. Burial will follow
at Riggs Cemetery in
Pageville. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 6 to 9
tonight.

Ronald
Kinn~y
-PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
- · Ronald Wayne Kinney,
59, · Parkersburg,
died
Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2002, "at
Camden -Clark
Memorial
ffospital.
He was borll Dec. 11, 1942
in Parkersburg, W.Va., son of
the late Charles Thomas and
Edith Biles Kinney.
:He is survived by his wife,
Elizabeth Ann Kinney.
·Services will be · 11 a.m.
Thursday in Grace Brethren
Church, Coolville. Burial
will be in Torch Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
cliurch from ·4 to .9· p.m.
today. Arrangements are by
White
Funeral . Home,
Coolville.

Santa
Clausal
'

(8)

Rutland Grade School
THURSDAY' N_QVFM8ER .,~...~.,/\1:\'i~:ll
Serving starts at 5:00p.m.
Tickets $6.00 Advance only
Rutland Volunteer Fire. Department
available at: Quality Print Shop, Rutllncl DlpL Store,
Joe'•
Pomeroy Flowe/ Shop
Tlcketl

By KIM BACA

"We're hoping that by
Press helping them start, when
they get successful, they
remember us when they
FRESNO, Calif. (AP)- are ready for more sophisCher Chee Lee can't ticated types of ·banking,"
afford his own farmland' or said Tim Rios, vice presieven the equipment to till dent of Well Fargo' s.
the three acres where he Community Development·
grows green beans, lemon in Fresno.
grass and herbal mediGrowers are encouraged
cines.
1o deposit at least $100 a
month, which, with matchThe Hmong farnier is ing funds , will grow to
capable of dqing the work nearly $10,000 in two
in the field, but he needs a years . The money could be
little assistance
with used to buy farm equipfinances.
ment, secur·e a loan or
make a down payment on
Help is now on the way farmland . A check would
in the form of a savings he issuefl directly to the
progr!lm that aims to sup- vendor:
.port poor or st9.1ggling
"If someone has a comfarmers who otherwise mitment to farming and
wouldn't be able to s.ecure has the skills to do it, this
a I oan or save enough puts them on track for the
money 'to buy tractors or long term," said Steve
other equipment
Schwartz, executive director of the California
The
California FarmLink, a nonprofit
FarmLink and the Small organization dedicated to
Farm Resource Center promote family farming
have .developed a savings and farmland . conservaprogram that matches tion. "We're helping peofarmers' funds 3-to-1. ple build wealth ' and
Wells Fargo, National assets."
Bank of the Redwoods and
FarmLink's
program
the American A~Credit are may ·be the first in the
all contributors m the· pilot nation for farmers, accordprogram.
ing to the Washingtonbased Corporation for
Associated
Writer

Enterprise Development
In the farmer savings .
program, 25 California
growers will receive
funds . Applications are
being accepted until Nov.
26. Depending on future
funding, the program may
be expanded.
"It would give our people a great foot up: A lot of
small business people
don 't have savings, market
connections and or other
credit
possibilities,"
Patrie k Troy, an agronomist at the Agriculture
Land-Based
Training
Association , a nonprofit
organization that helps'
Mexican-American farmers, most former field
workers , to manage and
cultivate their own fields.
Lee, 60, said the savings
program will help him get
the money he needs to buy
a plow . and other equipment to farm the land he
leases from the American
Farmland Trust , a nonprofit organization that
acquires fa~mland threatened by urban developmem.
;"You can only help
yourself so much," Lee
said. "Sometimes you
need someone else to help

charges are a stretch

GREENBELT, Md. (AP)- accused of shooting 17 peaThe attorney for John Allen pie, killing 12 and wounding
Muhammad denounced lhe five in Alabama. Loui siana,
government's case against the Maryland, Virginia and
sniper suspect, saying federal Washington, D.C. No one was
prosecutors overreached in hit in another shooting .thai
bringing extortion c ha rge~.
went through a craft store
The lawyer'·s remarks on window.
Tuesday .came as a federal
The Washington
Post
judge ordered Muhammad reported Wednesday that law
held without bail and investi- · enforcement sources said a
gators on the other side of the ·laptop computer seized from
country looked into a fatal Muhammad's car was stolen
shooting to see if it's related to Sept 5 in a robbery-shooting
the sniper suspects.
outside a pizzeria in Prince
Federal prosecutors brought George's County, Md. An
charges against Muhammad employee was wounded.
last week under weapons and
They said they consider
extortion law in the October Muhammad and Malvo strong
sniper ·attacks 1hat killed 10 suspects in that crime and
people in the Washington, another · Prince . George's
D.C., area. He could get the shooting i!l September in
dea!h penalty.
which a liquor store employee
In court, · federal public . was wounded by the same
defender James Wyda accused .22-caliber handgun.
Authorities in Tucson,
prosecutors of trying to ''shoehom this case imo federal Ariz., said Tuesday they're
courts" in using the extortion probin~ the fatal shooting of a
law. He said lhe government golfer m March, while Prince
is trying to prove that "these George's County police said
seemingly random attacks ballistics tes'ts were being
were all motivated by a crack- done on evidence from two
pot scheme to collect $10 mil- September shootings.
lion." .
The FBI notified Tucson
Wyda no1ed that authorities police Friday that Muhammad
did not even receive a note and Malvo arrived there in
mid-March
to
v1s11
demanding the ·money until Muhammad's si~ter. then a
you."
Oct 19, well into the shooting Tucson resident.
sp;his is no longer a murder
Jerry R. Taylor, 60, was shot
case; this is an extortion March 19· while practicing
case," he said outside court. chip shots at a golf course. He
was felled by a single shot to
"They can't prove extortion . the torso, said Assistant Police
They can't meet their burden Chief Robert Lehner, and the
of proof in making this a fed- wound indicates he was shot
,. eral case."
,
with a rifle from a distance.
Wyda also said authorities T. 1
·· · 1
have not asked his client for a ay or was practlcmg a one,
and there were no witnesses to
handwriting sample to attempt the shooting.
to link him to the note. ·
The 16-year-old, who
'The government's case has
·
was charged with conspirsignificant problems," Wyda
acy to commit armed robsaid. ''There's no direct evibery and possession of
dence
that Mr. Muhammad
stolen
property, was
was
at
the scene of any of OHIO
released on recognizance
Pick l: 7-9-5
these crimes." ·
to the custody of her
PiCk 4: 1-9-1-1
In arguing against hail, fedgrandlnother.
Mega Millions: 2-7-16-28-36
eral prosecutor James Trusty
Jones was charged ·with
Mega
Ball: 47
.
told Chief Magistrate Judge
· armed robbery, possession
Buckeye
5:
3-22-25-30-37
Jiilyn K. Schulze that
·
Muhammad, 41: used multi- ·Pick 3 night: 3· 5-9
of a weapon for an illegal
Pick
4
night:
6-4-3-1
•ple names and birth dates and
purpose and theft.
·
.
She was being held .on -. had been living out of a car: ..
The other sniper suspect,
$75,000 bail, along with
17-year-old
John Lee Malvo, W.VA.
Kevin Jones, 37, who was
Daily 3: 2-9-8
was ordered detained Monday
charged with hindering
Daily 4: 5-2-8-3
after appearing at a closed
Casli 25: 1-4-16-17-20-23
apprehension.
·
juvenile hearing in federal . ·
Police said Jones, who
court in Baltimore. Federal
. is . on disability, didn ' t
charges have also apparently'
know about the robbery
been brought . against Malvo,
until afterward. They said
but authorities will not say so
he was charged because
because he is a.juvenile.
he disposed of the gun The two men have been
a toy that fires plastic pellets_ in a Dumpster.
The five were arrested
Fri4ay. when a , police
SWAT . team, working
from leads gene~ated by
d
·
d ·b k
etectJ ves a_n a an surTUES BARGAIN NIGHT
veiilance video, searched
$3.75 ADMISSION
features
the h?rne . .
Pohce sa1d they found
BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM - MON · FRI
$2,700, but don t know
&amp; 12:30 PM SAT- SUN
what happened to the rest.

Twins called 'teenage Th~lma &amp;
Louise' charged in stickup;
police say family needed money .
BARNEGAT, N.J. (AP) ter and Jones' husband.
-When two teenage girls , Police said they stole
walked into the Sun because they were facing
National'
Bank
and foreclosure on their runannounced a stickup, down ranch house and
branch manager Linda needed the money to pay
Williams thought it was a the mortgage.
·
Neighbors said 11 peoprank. .
They were · 5-feet-2 pie stayed at the house at a
inches tall, one in a black time; including a 13-yearknit ski mask, the ·other old boy, a grandmother
with a nylon stocking over with one leg and an uncle
her face. One carried what who is a disabled veteran.
looked like a silver h·and"I just can'·t . even
gun.
. · .
: ·.believe a mother would let
It was almost noon, two her children do something
days before Halloween.
like this," said neighbor
"What is this, a joke?" Carrie. Dempsey. · "What
Williams said.
kind of conversation
"No, we ain't (exple- could they have had? . 'I
tive) joking," one of them want you kids to Pl!t
replied. "Give us your masks on and I'll wait in
money." Williams handed the car?' For $3,500, they
a black plastic trash bag to ruined their lives."
the teller.
At the ~ouse Tuesday, a
The teller stuffed $3,500. man declined to open the
in cash into the bag and doo~ to a reporte~. "We
the girls ran out, jumping don,t hav~ anythmg to
into a getaway. car dnven say, he said. The couple
by their mother,. authori- does not Y.et have an attorties said.
ney, he smd.
'-'A teenage 'Thelma &amp;
The twins, whose names
Louise,"' said .police: weren't released because
Detective Micha!&lt;J Duffy, they are juveniles, are
shaking his head.
charged with armed robTwo twin 14-year-old bery, possession of a
girls and their mother, firearm and theft.
Kathleen Wortman Jones,
Described by police as
34, of Barnegat, were polite and respectful , they
charged in the heist along were being held Tuesday
with a 16-year-old stepsis- in a juvenile shelter.

Center
from PageAl
"If all goes well, / they
hope to break ground by
the end of. the year," he
added.
The center will create
eight to 10 new jobs and
will use local contractors
to do "all the work they
possibly can," Varnadoe
said.
Why Rutland?
"Legends found us ~
accident," Varnadoe said.
"Tom
Reed
of
Gallia/Meigs Community
Action Agency ran into
the developers, showed

1them

some land, and was
very
persistent,"
he
Iadded. "The demographics for what they are looking for are really good
here.
"There's such a high
population of people 55
years or older," Varnadoe
said .
Meigs County has 5,842
residents in that age category -almost 25 percent
of the county 's total population, he added.
The retirement center
will be the first of several
Legends plans to build.
They also are looking at •
locations in ·Athens and
Ironton.
"' An announcement on

Lotteries

MAnNEES ARE SHOWN ON

. A~ for the mortg~ge? '\)
don t even know 1f they
got around to paying it,"
said Duffy.

the pi anned project was
delayed for several weeks
due .to the project's connections with HUD,
Varnadoe said.
"We had to wait for
their approval to make the
announcement," he said.
County commissioners,
Tom Reed and Rutland
Mayor Dick Fetty worked
step by step with Legends
to convince the company
to select Meigs County,
Varnadoe said. •
"This is a major project
for us and we're just very
glad that they chose us."
Wolfla, Reed and Fetty
were not available for
comment at press time .

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Nonprofit organization helps
Attorney for sniper
begin~ing farmers build ~avings says federal extortion

EXCELLEN&lt;;E •

· - - - - - -·---- . --·--~--- ·---.-;-------1
(

'

Wednesday, November 6. 2002

Mall Subacrlptlon
lnllde Metge County ·
13Weeks ..... . .. . .... '30 .15
26 Weeks .. . .. . . . .' ... .'60.00
52 Weeks ....... .... .'118.80
Rates Oulllde Melg• County
13 Weeks ....... . .... .'50.05
26 Weeks . . ..... ... . .'100 .10
· 52 Weeks .. .. . ... ... .'200 .20

�fl

1,

.

..:.T.=.ne=-0=-=ai:::!ly:....:S:..:e=ntin=·
=e:.:.l_ _....:...;__ _

O•nl·nl·o
·
n
Page
..:::::..•r::..::.::.:.::~=-=------w:.:.;:ec~:=n.;;;.;esd;.;:.:ay:.;.;.
2~ooi

•
'Wedne.day, November 6, 2002

A4 '

N;.;.;.ov,;,;,;,•m;;;.;;be;.;..;;r'.:...;;;·

The Daily Sentinel
'

•:.

Den Dickerson
Publisher

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

"

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

Letrer.no 'rill• editur are welcome. Th ey should be less than
300 11'ord.1·. All letters are subject to editing mid m1w be
sig11ed wui include culdress and telephone ·· mtm~er. No
Llllsiglleclleuers 1ri// be published. Letters shot~ ld be m good
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The opiniom· {'Xpres.H:'li ;, I he column belmv are the consells us of the Uhw \'&lt;din Publishing Co. editorial board,
uniP.H mherwise flvt ed.

s

NATIONAL VIEW

·Fine art

.

. deception:

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

Dear ·
Abby

First birthday

VVorld must realize denial,
deception second nature to Iraq
• American Press, Lake Charles, La., rm Iraqi denial and
Iraq has made denial and deception a finely tuned
art designed to convince the world Saddam Hussein's regime
isn 't cooking up deadly weapons of mass destruction.
An analyst with the Defense Intelligence Agency called the
Iraqi denial and deception program "a deliberate, methodical ,
extensive and well-organized national -level , s~rategic effort,
which aims at deceiving not just the United States, not just the
United Nations or even the public media, but, in fact, the
entire world."
John Yurechko, a DIA expert on information operations and
"D&amp;D," as he refers to denial and deception, said Hussein
goes to· great lengths in concealing his tntentions from the
world . ...
Since the end of the Gulf War, he explained, Iraq's denial
and deception cmi1paign has had three main goals: blur the
truth about Iraqi compliance with th!! Nuclear Proliferation
treaty and U.N. resolutions; keep U.N. Special Commission
inspectors from learning the full extent of Iraq 's WMD capa·
bilities and prevent UNSCOM from completely disarmmg
Iraq 's fUICiear, chemical, biological and long-range missile
programs in accordance with U.N. resolutions ....
This is why international inspectors must be given unbridled access to scour Iraq for biological and nuclear weapons.

DEAR ABBY: I am a 13year-old girl with a problem.
Last spring, the day after we
~~tiled from eighth grade,
· . WS ANGELES (AP) - duced not by Sullivan, who
\If my friends was killed
A television history, to he was ailing, but by Otarles
in a car accident.
true to the medium, should be Laughton acting as stand-in
Not a day goes by without
lively and entertaining -not host The distinguished actor
my thinking about her -- or
to mention moving, ridicu- and the pop star exchange
the words the principal said
Ious, shocking and, of course, strained remarks before
when he told .our class the
ADVICE
comprehensive.
·
Presley rocks out.
hon:ible news. I've read all
'The TV kaleidoscope is
Gamer has experience in
the newspaper stories and
smartly
captured
in
"Stay
sifting
through.electronic hishave visited her grave. I plan feet by any means, and I
Tuned:
Television's
tory
for
its gqms. His other
on going again on her birth- know I haven't been the
Unforgettable
Moments,"
compilations
/include "And
day. When I go to the ceme- weatest sister, but she can't
which
lives
up
to
its
title
and
the
Crowd
Goes
Wild" and
tery and realize she is in the JUSt leave! Right? She has a
to the daunting task it sets for "We
Interrupt
This
ground, I stan crying a thou- resr_onsibility to this family.
itself.
.
Broadcast"
sand tears.
lsn I she bemg neglectful to
Scrutinizing five decades
Inspiration for the projects
I try to remember the good simply· tum her back on us?
of entertainme'ht, news and came while he prepared miltimes we spent together •• the
Abby, you know . how
.
sports
programming, author lennium broadcasts for a
way she threw a ball and her important family is. How can
Joe
Gamer
has picked OUI radio network. Gamer was
A
$1,000
toward
the
medical
expenses
of
Aaron
Drummer
big smile that could brighten I get Lisa to admit she is
those
indelible
instances that sttuck by the importance of
was donated by Eli Dennison Post .4 67, American Legion,
anyone's day. She smiled all wrong and return to the famimake up our electronically the material - on Pearl
Rutland. Shirley Priddy accepts the check on his behalf
the time. (I used to be jealous ly? - FRUSTRATED SIS.
filtered
national memory. · Harbor, the Kennedy assassifrom Eugene Ank, left, and Dennis McKinney of the post.
of her because she was one of TER IN CANADA
''Mr.
Gorbachev,
tear down nation, the Challenger disas. (Charlene Hoeflich)
the prettiest girls in school.)
DEAR FRUSTRATED:
this
wall,"
President
Reagan rer _ he was reviewing.
·
I would like to tell her fam- Lisa isn't being selfish, bitter
booms in Berlin. Prince
"As I was looking at those II!
ily how much I loved her and or unforgiving. After a life- ·
Charles
and
Diana
exchange
m&lt;iments
in history, it
to tell them all the good time of abuse, she has somewedding
vows.
Ricky
and
occurred
to
me those events
. things we did together. I want how become healthy and
Lucy
bicker.
The
U.S.
are
etched
indelibly
in our
tbem to know I am always refuses to tolerate being mis·Olympic hockey team per- memory as much for the way
thi,nking about her, but I don't treated any lon~er.
fonns a miracle.
· we heard about them on the
mow how to begin a letter.
The best advtce I can offer
.RA&lt;lNE - Bayle Ann
The
package
(Andrews
radio or saw them happen on
Can you hefi&gt;?- MISSING is to accept her decision and
Wolfe, daualter of Joe and
McMeel
Publishing,
$49.95)
TV
as for the significance of
MY FRIEND IN INDIANA wish her well. She has served
BeuyAnn Wofe, eelebrated
includes a picture-filled the event itself," he said.
, DEAR MISSING: · I am her time and has gone on to
her first binhday with a party
book, compact discs and a
In making choices for
SOrry to learn you lost your better things. Console yourat her home on SeJK. 21.
DVD
that
allows
readers
to
"Stay
Tuned," he looked for
4ear friend. My heart. goes self with the fact that you and · 'The celebration was
be viewers as well, seeing for television fll'Sts, for events
·~t to you, her family and the family still have each
shared with her brothers,
themselves the milestones of
.other friends.
other.
modem life.
that drew recon!-sening audi.Kody, Trislen and Croner. A
' Stan the letter to the family
DEAR ABBY: There are
The DVD, with more than ences or for moments that
pink doll theire was used for
.
d "affixed themselves to popuby writing, "I'd like you to two nice young men working
the party. Others attending
0 f TV cItps, an
150
minutes
Jar culture for reasons that are
know · the reasons I' II never in our office. One is being
two CDs cover the 35 landwere her gnmdparents Joe
forget your daughter ..." Such married in a few months, and
mark broadcasts with Dick even hard for their creators to
and Albert Loftis and Wtlson
a letter will be a priceless the other man's wife is
Van [Tyke, Walter Cronkite identify," Gamer said.
and Anna Wolfe; Wendy,
treasure to her parents and expecting a baby around the
and
Bob Costas as guides.
The last explains the 'The
Zane, Brett, Zac, and Joey
. will help you to work thro\lgh same time.
Gamer
includes
his
own
Brady
Bunch'.' highlight in
Beegle, Amanda, Bryan and
your own grief.
Is it appropriate to give
interviews with actors, news· the book's entertainment secDylan Schwane!, Candi
DEAR ABBY: I have a sis- thil{n.showers? 'How about a
makers and others who were lion, which begins with the
HeeJ-, Stephanie and Dani
ter I' II call Lisa, wl)o refuses como1ned shower? Or is the
part of the events. The book Vitameall!vegamin episode
King, Ann Thomas, Ray
to contact any of the family. whole idea of showers for
offers additional context, of "I-Love Lucy" and ends
Priddy, Judy Porti:r , Joyce,
Granted, for years she was menjust not done?-"' CURlwith background on pro- with the fll'St-season finale of
Danielle and Samantha
physically abused by our OUS OmCE MATE
grams,
news stories and tele- "Survivor." Sammy Davi s
Bayle Ann Wolfe
Cline, and John Priddy.
. father, our mother was cold
DEAR CURIOUS: Not
Jr.'s visit to . "All in the
vision decision-making. .
and emotionally abusive, and · done? Joint showers are a terFor instance, just·how did family" and Johnny Carson's
l guess the fami.ly ·in general rifle concept. Invite the brid~­
little ''Heidi" trump the final, farewell are also represented.
was unsupportive. But no to·be and the mother-to-be
President Nixon is ·promidecisive minute of the Nov.
ftunily is perfect. Right?
and make it a "Jack and Jill"
17, 1968. Oakland Raiders· nent in the news section,
Everyone in the family shower. I see nothing inapNew York Jets pro football which, includes the Checkers
thinks Lisa is being selfish, propriate about showering
game on NBC?
speech. Watergate and
bitter and unforgiving, good wishes and all that goes
Prime
time
sports
was
an
Nixon's
first ·1960 debate
'Mitty' case settled cated that it wanted to transfer
myself inchilled. I stood by with them on these young
unproven commodity then, with John F. Kennedy. ''My
the rights to another compa·
my family. Lisa turned .her. couples.
out of court
two
years before . ''Monday God, we just elected a presi- .
ny. Gold wyn alleged that
back.
Dear Abby is wrinen by
Night
Football," and a game dent of the United States, and ·
New Line wanted him to sur. The last time I talked to Abigail Van Buren, also
LOS ANGELES (AP) - render his right for creative
ha3 never gone beyond 7 it isn't even election day,"
· .I;.isa, she said she had suf- known as Jeanne Phillips,
Samuel Goldwyn Jr.'s law- input, which he refused to do.
p.m. That ' left NBC unpre- CBS News' Don Hewitt, who
.,
fered greatly due to the fami- and was founded by her
suit aj:ain'st New Line
~ when the broadcast ran produced the debate, recalled
ty and wants a life of her mother, Pauline Phillips.
Productions over rights to a
ong.
..
.
exclaimi1g after _ Nixon 's
own. How can she do this? · Write Dear Abby at
remake of ''The Secret Life Wife gets husband
A last·mmute execuuve poor peuonnance 111 ummat.She claims she doesn't feel Www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
TV.
makeover
of Walter Milly" has been
decision to choose the game ed the new impact of televi••safe" with us.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
settled out ofcourt.
over the children's movie sion on politics.
. I know our ftunily isn't per- · 90069.
.
MEDFORD, Ore. (AP). A telephone call made after
came too late: There was litKennedy's assassination,
Echo
Taylor's
husband
hours Monday to New Line
tie flexibility in the pre-sate!- the OJ. Simpson chase and
lite era ·of TV telephone • the Sept ,11 terrorism also are
ProduCtions was not immedi" wears his T-shirts until they
ately returned. Marc Stein, an have holes, he haSn't cut his .
transmission.
• featured. The sports section
·
Arigry
sports
fans
blew
out
·. _itlcludes the 1972 Munich
hair
since
1987,
and
he
has
to
attorney for Goldwyn, also
26 switchboard fuses at' NBC Olympics terrorism, Tiger
did not return a telephone borrow a belt whenever he
wants
to
wear
his
one
suit,
and
even reported the net- Woods' 1997 Masters victory .
call.
'
Slturdly, Nov. 9
work's
crime to New York and the protest by two black
which
he
calls
the
"marry
Goldwyn
and
his
producPOMEROY - Burlingham '
City police. The next day, the athletes at the 1968 Mexico
tion company filed the law- 'em and bury 'em" outfit.
Wednllldly, Nov. e . Modern Woodman, 5:30 p.m.
final
minute - Oakland City Olympics. .
So
when
Taylor
heard
that
suit
in
Supenor
Court
in
May
RUTLAND
Rutland poHuck dinner at the haiL Taka , 2001, alleging that New Line the "Live with Regis and
came
from
bel\ind to beat the
Gamer relied to some
Townllhlp Truateea to hold Nov. covered dish and canned food lor
Jets
43-32
--'was
replayed
extent
on viewers. He heeded
breached an al!reement on a Kelly" show was looking for
meeting at 6 p.m., Rutland llre- the Meigs Cooperative Pariah lor
. on the NBC. evening news a survey that crowne!l the "I
"Walter Mitty"'- re~~ women who wanted to make
ho~ae.
holiday food baiketa.
and the growmg tmportlmce Love Lucy" episode he
over
their
husbands
for
a
segthreatening
to
cancel
the
.
PAGEVILLE
Scipio
POMEROY
Return
of TV sports was dnven included as the best ever and
ment
called
"Messy
Mates,"
·Township Truateea,.regular meet- Jonathan Melga Chapter,
Goldwyn alleged that New
home.
a football fan poll that sin'lng, 6:30 p.m., Pagevllle Town Daughters ol the American
Line bought the rights in she didn't hesitate to write to
:•stay Tuned': !s stuff~ gled out the "Heidi" interrupHall.
1995 to a remake of the 1947 them- and wasn't surprised
Revolutfon, 10 a.m. Saturday at
ROCKSPRINGS - Salisbury Grace Episcopal Church.
Wlth
such tnvta. Elvts tion as key.
when
the
show
called
back
comedy staning Danny Kaye,
Township Trustees1 regular
Presley's
first appearance on
with the understanding that almost immediately.
monthly meeting, 6:30 p.m., Roberta rouah, alate historian to
"The
Ed
Sullivan Show" in------~---.,
At first, her husband,
Ooldwyn and his production
townllhlp garage on Rockaprlnga be the speaker.
JCPenney
1956
incl\lded
a full shot
company would be involved Marc Canape, locked him·
HARRISONVILLE
Ad.
Catalog
the
pelvis-swiveling
singer.
self in the bathroom when
in creative decisions.
MERCHANT STORE Hst-J
POMEROY - Soli and Water Harrisonville Lodge 411, 7:30
It wasn't until his third visit
338 2nd Avenue
The lawsuit claimed that he h!!ard of the plan. But
Conaervallon District annual p.m. at the temple. Work In the
that
cameras shot him from
Gallipolis, OH 4Sfi31
Taylor
talked
him
into
it,
New
Line
did
not
begin
proplanning meeUng, tO a.m., Meigs E.A. Degree. Refreshments. ·
(740) 446-3515
th~ waist up.
County Annex. Regular board
duction and eltteo.!!ed the deal and they' II be featured on
MOft-s.t 1o-6
And Presley
'
.
meeting to follow at _11 :30.
until May 2001, when it indi· Thursday's show.

ooe

!::'.

Ohio Valley Publi~hing Co.

'Stay Tuned' captures
50 years of highlight~
from television history

.

•

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

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 5

Check accepted

Words from the heart will
help girl overcome her grief

,f

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

www.mydallysentinel.com

-·

PERKINS' VIEW

:'
'•

Irradiation is not the ·bugaboo we're being told it is.·
During the early 1900s, thousands of
post-inspection mishandling or under: .
·. .
cooking of meat
infants throughout the country died
So, then, the most effective way to .
from such dis~(l~es as ·typhoid fever, ·
prevent contaminated meat from mak·
scarlet fever, diphtheria, tuberculosis
mg it into the nation's food supply, t0
and gastr(l(:nteritts, all of which were
P.revent future food-related deaths and
spread through the nation's milk supply.
Illnesses, is irradiation. ·Indeed, ally
Then a new technology -pioneered by
number scientific studies have doc.uthe father microbiology, Louis Pasteur
mented the nearly I 00 percent effeCt
- emerged that made milk consump·tiveness of irradiation in killing listerill',
.
tion infinitely safer.
There was vociferous opposition to
- - - - - E. coli, SalmonMla and' other dangero11s
pasteurization at the outset, from
food bacteria. Public health agencie~
COLUMNIST
such as the Food . and Drug
activist groups that insisted the technolAdministration, · American · Medical
ogy was "untested," that tjle process
Association and the World Health
posed a health risk 'to !he food buying
public. So, .it took some 20 years, and for its failure to enact a proposed rule Organization have affirmed that irradll
that would require companies, like ated foods are perfectly safe fdr human
thousands of more infant deaths, before Wampler
Foods, to test for listeria.
.
pasteurization became widely used
"I think there's a good possibility if · cos~ilef~:l~~t groups continue to de~
throughout the country.
.
that
rule had been in effect, we would- agogue irradiation, and they e.xploit tlie
A century later, technophobic activist
n't have this recall," said Carol Tucker public's unfamiliarity with the technolgroups ranging from Public Citizen to Foreman,.
director of the Consumer
Greenpeace to the so-called Center for Federation of America's Food Policy ogy involved the process. Indeed, many
consumers h'ave the mistaken notion
Food Safety oppose food irradiation, Institute.
even though it can prevent outbreak of
U.S.D.A. spokesman Steven Cohen that irradiated food is exposed to uraqium or some other radioactive material.
food-borne illnesses, like the listeria
outbreak that began this past summer in disagreed, arguing that it was "disin- But the reality is that irradiation is an
to suggest that the listeria out- electrical process. It employs ionizil)g
the Northeastern United States, which is genuous"
break and resultant poultry recall could
..
responsible for seven deaths, three mis- have been prevented had the proposed (rather than nuclear) energy, treattqg
carriages and 40 or more illness. The testing rule been in place. He noted that food with brief doses of gamma rays or
· federal Centers for Disease Control and Wampler and many other food proces- .electron beams. It'sTahs hCarDmCiess to fohod
Prevention traced the outbreak to sors already do their own testing.
. as pasteunzatwn.
e
&amp;ays t at
Wampler Foods; a division of Pilgri111's . Yet, bacterial outbreaks continue to listeria, E. coli, salmonella and other
Pride, the nation's second-largest poul- occur. That's because microbial testing dangerous pathogens are responsible
. try producer. Wampler responded by does ·not guarantee food safety. For each year for 5,000 deaths and 76 mll~
recalling 27 million pounds of ready-to- instance, a shipment of meat in which a lion illnesses. That toll can be greatly
reduced if poultry and other meats are
eat turkey and chicken meat earlier this
sample
portion
could
be
found
clean
irradiated before they reaclt
month, the largest meat recall in U.S. while an un-sampled portion of the routinely
. ,
history, and by temporarily shuttering same shipment could be contaminated Amenca s supper tables.
its Franconia, Pa., processing plant.
(Joseph Perkins is a columnist for
with · listeria or other bacteria.
Activist groups say that the Moreover,
no matter how rigorously The San Diego Union-Tribune and can
Department of Agriculture shares cul- slaughterhouses and meat processing be
reached
at
pability in the recent listeria outbreak plants are inspected, it cannot prevent . Joseph.Perkins@UniorlTrib.com.)

Entertainment Briefs

JoseJ?h
Perkins

Today is Wedne.sday, Nov. 6, the 31 Oth day of 2002. There
are 55 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
..
On Nov. 6, 1888, Benjamin Harrison won the presidential
election; defeating irrcumbent Grover Cleveland with en&lt;;mgh
electoral votes, even though Cleveland led in the popular vote.
On this date:
In 1860, former lllinois congressman Abraham Lincoln
defeated three other candidates for the presidency.
In 186 1, Jefferson Davis was elected to a six-year term as
president of the Confederacy.
In I893, composer Peter llyich Tchaikovsky died in St.
Petersburg , Russia, at age 53.
In 1900, President McKinley was re-elected, beating
Democrat William Jennings Bryan.
·
In 1906. Republican Charles Evans Hughes was elected
· governor of New York, defeating newspaper publisher
William Randolph Hearst.
In 1928, in a first, the results of Herbert Hoover's election
victory over Alfred E. Smith were.flashed onto an electric sign
outside the New York Times buildiqg.
·
In 1956, President Eisenhower won re-election, defeating
Democrat Adlai E. Stevenson.
.In 1962, Democrat Edward M. Kennedy was elected-senator from .Massachusetts.
·
In 1976, Benjamin L Hooks was chosen to be the new exec- .
THE VILLAGE IDIOT
utive director of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People. succeeding Roy Wilkins.
In 1977, 39 people were killed when an earthen dam burst,
. se nding a wall (Jf water through Toccoa Falls Bible College in
Georgia.
Ten years ~g o: President-elect Bill Clinton asked Vernon
BY JtM MULLEN
You just buy 'em, shove in the back of tomatoes and gives me a $100 bilL Is
Jordan and Warren Christopher to lead the White House tranSue sells bedding plants and potted your closet and start picking tomatoes that all you guys carry? What do I look
sition team as Clinton accelerated his efforts to select a
like? A drug dealer? I'm selling tomsherbs on Saturdays m the spring and tn the middle of Augusi."
Caqinet, build a staff and fill thousands of positions.
early summer at the local farmers' mar"Maybe they're not city people. toes, not crack. Then she acts like she's
Five years ago: The Clinton administration warned Iraq it
ket. After a long day she walked into Maybe they're just stupid peop1e who in a hurry, tapping her foot, making Iiicou ld face military action or economic sanctions if it Continthe kitchen and smacked her change live near here?"
tie sighing sounds. What's the big rush?
ued·to bar UN weapons inspections. Former President George
"I know they're city people before It's not like she hasto run back to the
apron down on the. counter and said,
Bush opened hi s presidential library at Texas A&amp;M
"What is it with you city people?"
they say a word. They wear deck shoes. house to water her plants. All she has to
University ; among the guests of honor was President Clinton,
· You city people! Oh, that stmgs. How In the middle of dairy farm country. do all day is go around makipg peopl~·s
the man who 'd sent him into retirement.
did she know I was a city person? That's practicaL They always show up lives miserable. Wouldn 't want to be
One year ago: Billionaire Republican Michael Bloomberg
Because ,] don't drive a pickup? with their dogs. They go everywhere late doing that. She's got to go to the
won New York City's mayoral race, defeatmg Democrat Mark
Because I don't own a police scanner? .with their dogs. They've all got dogs grocery store and buy one c~ndy bar
Green. The Federal Reserve slashed its federal funds rate, the
Because I think people are talking the size of ponies. It's never just one and then ask if she can write a chec!c
key benchmark for overnight loans , by a half-point to 2 perabout an ethnic group when they say dog, it's two, What kind of person goes She.'s got to hold up the line in the Post ·
cent, its lowest level in 40 years. Baseball owners voted 28-2
NASCAR race? Or .maybe it's because shopping with two dogs? You go hunt- Office by buying a 3-cent stamp with.a
to eliminate two major league teams by the 2002 season.
we've been married to each other for ingwith two dogs, you don't go shop- credit card."
:
Playwright Anthony Shaffer, who'd written '·the thriller
30 years and she knows we moved both ping with them. I'm telling you, they
"Wait a minute," I said, "The dogs,
"S leuth," died in London at age 75.
moved here from the city. She is stand- wouldn't take two giant dogs shopping the chan~e. this -sounds like Beverly."
Today's Birthdays: Director Mike Nichols is 71. Country • ing there with her hands on her hips with them to Bloomingdale's, but we're Beverly ts a friend of Sue's from tl;~
singer Stonewall Jackson is 70. Singer Eugene Pitt (The Jive
waiting for an answer.
.just farmers so it's OK to bring them to city. She was spending the weekertd
Five) is 65. Singer P.J. Proby is .64. Country singer Guy Clark
"You lived in the city as long as I the farmers ' ·market, right? The dogs with us.
o·
·
.;
is61. Actress Sally Field is 56. Pop singer-musician Glenn
did."
·
.
· start fighting with other dogs and the
"It is Beverly. What's your point?"::
Frey (The Eagles) is 54. Singer Rory Bloclc is 53. NBC TV
"You invited her here. You told her
"Don't get smart with me. What is it owners always say the exact same
newscaster Maria Shriver is 47. Actress 'Lori Singer is 4S.
with you guys?"
· thing, 'That's funny, they've never come. You told her what a wonderful. . '
Actor Lance Kerwin is 42. Roclc musician Paul Brindley (The
"What did we do now?"
done that before.' Oh, well then it's time you'd have.!'
:;
Sundavs) is 39. Rock singer Corey Glover is 38. Actor Peter
"I can always tell when I'm selling a OK. I never strangled a customer
"Yes, but only a city person wou1'4
DeLuise is 36. Actress Kelly Rutherford is 34. Actor Ethan
plant to city · person. You all ask the befnre so I guess it's OK the first time . have taken me up on it."
::
Hawke i' 32. Actress Thandie Newton is 30. Model-actress
•'
exact same question, ' Does this need I do it."
Rebecca Romijn Stamos is 30. Actress Nicole Dubuc is 24.
water?' What do you think ? I want to
"Who would convict you?" I asked ' Jim Mullen is the author of "It Tak;~
Actress Mercedes Kastner is 13.
say, 'No, the se ·are those new kind of hiding my deck ~shoed feet under my A Village Idiot: A Memoir of Life Aftir
Thought for Today: "Under pressure, people admit to mur- ·
tomato plants that just grow without chair.
·•
the City" (Simon and Schuster, 2001).
der. setting fire to the vi llage church or robbing a·bank, but
water, without weeding, without light.
"And what is it with you city people He also contributes regularly to
neve r to-being bores."- Elsa Maxwell , American socialite
They ' ve been genetically altered with and $100 bilfs? The lady with the dogs Enrertaimm;nt We ekly, where he can Be
the DNA of a camel and a hghtmg bug. buys two and a half dollars worth of reached at jlm@muilenew.com
;
I I~83- I963).

City people deal with the cherry tomatoes of wrath~

_Community Calendar

:Public Meetings

Clubs and
Organizations
·Thuradly, Nov. 7
CHESTER - Cheater/Shade
Historical Alaoclatlon to meet at
7 p.m. at the Chester
Courthouse, to discuss plans lor
2003, Including changes In the
Constitution and Christmas
plana. Public lnvRed.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
ladles AuxiliarY regular meeting,
?:30 p.m. Thursday at the hall.

Church services

Sunday, Nov. 10
POMEROY - Hysell Run
Church special services with "Hia
Own" as elngera, 7 p.m. Sunday.
Pastor Mark Michael Invites the
public.
·
·
POMEROY- Heritage Day al
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 9 to 11 a.m. with carry-In ·
dinner. Spacial music. Arland
King, pastor, Invites public.

COUPON

1
Stop in our Racine Office and ask
one ofour friendly loan officers
au•vu• our New Home Loan Special!

Seniors Groups

Frld1y, Nov. 8 .·
Thuradey, Nov. 7
' MIDDLEPORT - Widow's
POMEROY - A musical pro- .
Fellowsl)lp Thanksgiving diiJ.ner, gram will be presented at 5:30
noon Friday at the Mlddle~ort
Church ol Christ. Those attend- p.m. by Junior and Rita \Nhite at
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Ing ara to take a covered dish.
Center.

----------EE HEARING TESTS

HOME NATIONAL BANK
'

"t .

Will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by

I &amp;«(lltee TM HEARIN~D CENTER I .
I
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes Office
. I

I
224 Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio·
1·
FRIDAY, NOV. 8, 2002 • 9:00 - Noon ·
I
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r

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�The Daily Sentinel

Nation • World

Page A&amp;
.'

.Inside:
N8A roundup, Page 82
NHL roundup, Page 82
Scoreboard Pll~ 83

Wednesday. Nov..-...1,1002

Post Office finds. In case.of attack
·funds; may not
need.to raise, rates
WASHINGTON (AP) · - Postmaster General John
Pen eals, rejoice! Postal rates Potter told the service's
are likely to remain the same Board of Governors on
for another four years, thanks Tuesday.
to money freed up from a
Current retirement contriretirement fund that lire' butions or future benefits to
Postal Service had been employees won't be affected
by the changes, he promised.
overpaying.
Rates for postage last went
In addition to helping keep
.!IP in June, and postal offi- postage rates stable, the extra
·ctals said they didn't expect money will reduce Postal
another increase until 2004. Service debt. The post office
But they stretched their esti- now hopes to reserve about
mate Tuesday after announc- $3 billion for debt reduction,
ing details from a new finan- rather than $800 million, in
cial review.
That inspection revealed the current fiscal year that
the Postal Service had been began Oct. I.
paying 100 ·much into the
"There . are significant
Civil Service Retirement potential benefits for our rate ·
System fund, which provides · payers," Potter said about the
windfall.
benefits for employees who
He warned, however, that
joined .the servtce by 1987. "no one should be lulled into
Postal workers who joined
after that year were enrolled a sense of complacency that
in another retirement system. all is right with the nation's
. The review ex•mined postal system. That's simply
retirement payments• since n~t.lrue." .
. ··
1971 and determined that the . 'The nallon sllll faces a
post office is close to having l~ng-term challenge. to conpaid off what it owes the tmue postal servtces to
fund for current and future everyone, everywhere. while
retirees. · The
analysis financing · the costs ·of our
revealed that the Postal growing nationwide delivery
Service's liability to . the netwo~k," he said. "We want
retirement •ccount is about to do tt as we have for the
$5 billion, rather than the past 20 years - through
$32 billion it believed it postal revenues and without ··
owed.
tax dollars."
The federal Office of
"The findings are the result
of a number of factors, but Personnel Management conthe change was primarily dri- ducted the .analysis, which
ven by higher .than expected · was affirmed by the federal
yields on pension invest- Office of Management and
ments
made
by the Budget and the'" Treasury
Department of the Treasury," Department.

Slaying of lone cowboy ·
mystifies little county ·
FOSSIL, Ore. (AP) - A
lone cowboy headed no place
in particular rides through the
rugged canyons and hills of
Wheeler County, miles from
any road or town. A rifle shot
shatters the mountain stillness,
and hours later, his horse and
dog show up back h()me. He
doe~n't.
•
Indian trackers find the
body of 23-year-old James
Phillip Brooks two llays later.
· That was in · 1994. Law
enforcement officials and the
prosecutor in the tiny Eastern
Oregon county are still casting
about for a motive and some
evidence to help them solve
the county's ftrst slaying since
two men were killed in a mining dispute in the late 1930s.
"We were dead-stalled for
seven years," said Tom
Cutsforth. the district attorney
in Oregon's least-populous
county. "Now we· have a
whole new list of wip1esses,
wimesses we should have had
seven years ago. We're going
back to zero, to the day it happened. .We're asking, 'What's
the most likely scenarioT"
Initially, he said, the investigalion concentrated on a log-

an

I

'

Wednesdey. November 1. 1001

MHS sports ·
banquet

Girls basketball
preview Nov. 15
VINCENT - All three
Meigs County girls' basketball teams will participate in
the eight-team Scenic Hills
·Lions Club preview Friday,
Nov. 15 at Warren High
School in Vincent. . The
action begins at 6 p.m. and
ends with a 9 e.m. gam!) as
eight teams wtll play four,
two-quarter games. The preview will give area fans some
insight to what the 2002"
2003 season will bring. Most
area teams will beginplay on
Nov. 25.
In the preview, Eastern
squares off against Frontier
at 6 p.m. then Meigs plays
Southern at 7 p.m. Marietta
meets Belpre at 8 p.m. and
Warren takes on Federal
Hocking at 9 p.m.
Gate admission will be $4
at door with no passes being
honored. All proceeds will go
to the Scenic Hills Lions
club.

•

~embers of Kuwait's _Are Brigade enter a bank in Kuwait City during a drill by the Department of Civil Defense as trainirtg
tn the event of an lraqt attack. There are regular drills daily throughout Kuwait aiming at maintaining a high grade of readiness for emergency situations. (AP)
·

Trial date set for charity leader.
accu·sed of helping bin Laden .

ging crew in the area that
heard the gunfire, but that
turned out to. be a dead end.
One tlteory now is that the
cowboy crossed paths with a
poacher.
. Cutsforth convened a grand
,
.A ,
'
jury this year and is ·calling
some 90 witnesses. That is a
lot in a county of only 1,500
.people, though some come
from elsewhere. The grand
jury's term expires a.t the end .
of the year.
"I can't guarantee an indictment," Cutsforth said. "But
we're going to chase it as far
as we can chase it."
Unanswered is why someone would want .to kill
· CHICAGO (AP) Brooks, a well-liked rodeo
· Marked crosswalks can
competitor.
·
actually be more danger"You might not understand
ous for elderly people
this, but he was a cowboy,"
than unmarked crossings, .
Cutsfonh said. :•He got in
some fights with friends and
a study suggests.
not-so-close friends. He drank
Pedestrians ' 65 and, .
· a little bit and he would stand
older were three times
his ground if he thought he
more likely to be hit by
was right or his pride was hun.
cars when they crossed at
But most cowboys do.
intersections with painted
"Bitter enemies? We identi'
crosswalks but no stop
tied a couple of potential ones, · signs or traffic signals,
but they didn't pan out as susrather than at unmarked
~ts-"
crossmgs.
"Marked crosswalks
may give older pedestrians a false sense of security," which, coupled
with their slow walking
MIAMI (AP) - The Coast Bahamas.
pace; makes them esp~ ­
Guard said Tuesday it has
It is normal U.S. ,policy to
cial1y vulnerable, the
stepped up sea and air patrols repatriate all migrants picked
study said.
in response to a possible up at sea,'after brief shipboard
of
University
· increase in the- flow of illegal interviews by immigration
Washington researcher
migrants from Haiti, the officials.
Dr: Thomas Koepsell and
Dominican Republic and . The 19 migrants returned
colleagues · examined
Cuba.
·
Tuesday had been held on a
The
increase
was Coast Guard cutter since . pedestrian-car accidents
announced as 19 Haitians being taken into custody on · at several cities in
Washington state and
were sent back home. They Oct. 29.
California
from 1995 to
were the only ones who failed
The other migrants aboard
1999. More than 800
to get ashore when
over- the freighter, all Haitians
street
locations were anacrowded wqoden freighter except for three people from
lyzed.
carrying more than 225 the .Dominican Republic,
The findings appear in
Haitians was run aground in made it ashore and remain in
Wednesday 's Journal of
Miami one week ago.' ·
detention. They await .asylum
"We are preparing just in hearings, except for six
the American Medical.
case - · better to be safe than Haitians accused of running
Association.
sorry," Luis Diaz. a Coast the smuggling operation.
During the study, there .
Guard spokesman in Miami,
The federal government
were
282 accidents
said of the increased interdic- . changed its detention policy
involving cars and older
tion effons. "We don't want to on Haitian refugees last
pedestrians. Twenty of
see more boats like that. The December to discourage a · those pedestrians died.
: trip is extremely dangerous:" feared mass exodus. Before
An accompanying ediDiaz wouldn't give details the policy change, Haitian,.
torial
noted that while
on the increased interdiction. migrants applying for asylum
les~ than 13 percent of
The Coast Quard regularly were released into the comthe
U.S. population is 65
patrols the Windward Pass off muQity while their petitions
or older, elderly adults
·western Ha~ti, the Old were processed.
accounted for nearly 22
Bahama Channel between Haitians arriving since
percent of the 4,882
Haiti and Florida, and the December are kept in custody
pedestrian deaths m car
Straits of Florida separaung until they re;ceive asylum or
crashes last year.
Florida, · Cuba and the are deported.

Coast Guard steps up patrols

Page 81

ROCK SPRINGS - ·The
Meigs High School fall
spons banquet will be held at
6:30 ·f ·m. Thur&amp;day in the
· schoo cafeteria. Guests are
asked to bring two covered
dishes and a dessen. Table ·
service will be provided.

CHICAGO (AP) - A judge set a
Feb. _3 trial date Tuesday for an
Islamtc . charity lea~er accused C?f
bankr?lhng Osama bm Laden ,and hts
terron~t net~ork, and the rna'! s attorney satd he IS eager to clear hts name.
Federal prosecutors have charged
~n~am Af!iaOut, a Syrjan-born U.S .
cttlzen, wnh ~ackeu;ermg and other
offenses, saymg hts Benevolence
International Foundation was a front
· for funneling money to al-Qaeda and
other terrorist groups. ·
' ."Mr. Amaout would like to go· to
tnal !~morrow," Joseph . J?uf~y.
Amaout s a~tor)ley, told U.S. Dtstrtct

-

The Daily Sentinel

Judge Suzanne B. Conlon.
trial date for five men accused of tryAmaout, who pleaded innocent last . ing to join the Taliban to help fight
month, sa~s the su~ur,ban Chicag_o- U.S. troops. . .
·
based chanty has dtrected all of tis
U.S. Dtslnct Judge Ancer Haggert}'
effons to_ help the do~ntrodden,- set the dat~ alm?st 11 months away
not terro~t~ts - m Mu_shm cou!'tnes. · after agreemg wtth both prosecuto"
· Before JU.ry selectton can start, . and the defense that the trial will be
.attorneys will have to resolve several complex.
thorn_y ma~ters, in~luding how much
The five, Jeffrey Leon Battle,
classtfied. mformalton can be admit- Patrice Lumumba Ford October
ted into evidence. The. Justic~ Martinique Lewis and' brothers
Depanment is expected to assign a Ahmed Ibrahim Bilal and Muhammad
classified information specialist to Ibrahim Bilal were charged last
wprk•with Conlon to prevent leakS. ' month with co'nspiring to wage war
On Monday, a federal judge in on the United States and supporting
P~nlartd, Ore., set an Oct. 1, 2003, terroris-m.
,
. ..... .....

.

Crosswalks
may pose
danger for
elderly .

•

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-

Roush team considering appeal of penalty
BY Mllll HARRIS
Associated Press
CONCORD, N.C. - Roush
Racinj' is considering an
appealofNASCAR's 25-point
penalty ~~gainst Mark Martin
and team owner Jack Roush.
Martin finished second
Sunday in 4he Winston Cup
-race in Rockingham, but his
No. 6 Ford failed postrace
inspection because the leftfront spring did not meet the
minimum number of coils.
The driver was docked 25

c ha mp i o n s h i p
points,
Roush
. lost
.
25 car owner
points an.d
crew · chief
Ben Leslie
was fined
$5,000.
Ma r1i n ,
Martin
hopinll to
win hts first
series c()ampionship, is second in the ~~ding~ with two
races remammg ani:! had cut
series leader Tony Stewart's

points lead ll;&gt; 87. The penalty
dropped · him 112 points
behind heading inm Sunday's
race in Phoenix.
Geoff Smith, the team
president, Said Tuesday, "We
are evaluating all avenues of
recourse available to us,
including · invoking the
NASCAR appeals process,
and have asked our outside
counsel to assess our options
for recourse against the manufacturer and distributor of
the spring.
·
"We quite naturally are .
upset that we received exact-

.

· Major League Baseball

. Wittenberg tops
NCAC polls
.

CLEVELAND (AP) .Wittenberg's men's ang
women's basketball teams
were selected to win North
Coast Conference championships in voting by coaches
.and media announced Tuesday.
· The men received eight of
·w first-place votes from tlie
coaches . and 19 of.3 2 firstplace votes from media covering the league,
·
The Tigers return six play_~
·ers and two staners from last'
. year's team· that finished 26. 4 and won its secon(j straight
NCAC title.
Wooster finished second in
both polls, followed by
Wabash, Ohio Wesleyan and
. · Alle~heny.
: Wittenberg's
women's
team, the defending le~~gue
champion, was picked to fin- .
ish first by six of the nine
women's coaches and 19 of
32 media representatives.

.

Saving face with
. BCS standings
In early ·August I made
· an ~ff-the-record prediction to my best friend - a
fellow sports writer - . that ,
·c olorado was my pick to
win the college football,
Derek
national championship.
Taylor
It was a typical pick of
mine (a little bit of a reneOn spol'tll
gade selection but entirely
feasable if certain things
fell in the right places), but ence season ~ unbeaten.
1 before the second week of Sure, Oklahoma is ranked
'September
completely first at the mon:tent, but
obliterated by two early unlike the Buckeyes, . the
losses by the Buffaloes.
Sooners must still make it
While they've crawled through the
Big 12
back to respectability now Championship game, likely
that the season is reaching ~gainst Colorado. ·
its apex, my credibility
So while Miami is the
along forcasting lines is whiner of the moment
still kind of up in the air complaining about being
with my peer.
ranked third by the current
What may help are the BCS
standings ,'
the
latest Bowl Championship Hurricanes ought hold
Series standings, released their tongues and learn to
·Monday.
· stop· the run. I have a feelAfter the season got ing that banged up or not,
rolling, I updated my pkk · Tennessee (where Miami
with a more open-ended plays thi~ week) is not
statement of who I felt had going to be as forgiving a;
the best chance to end up West Virginia and Rutgers
meeting defending champ have been in recent weeks .
Miami i!' the Fiesta Bowl
As for , the Buckeyes,
playing for the national they can continue to make
title.
me look smart by not letAt that point the ling up against Purdue and
Hurricanes had not shown hope freshman stalwart
the inability to stop the run Maurice Clarett returns · to
the way they have in recent perfect health by the time
weeks, and with a Big East the team takes on archschedule ahead of them, rival Michigan in the last
the champs appeared on week of the regular season.
cruise control toward the A win there, provided the
first week of January. I sti ll team doesn 't stumble in the
think they'll be' there, but 'mean time, will almost
they need to shore up that assuredly put the scarlet
and grey in Tempe. ·
defense along the way.
Of all the_teams, howev(Derek Taylor is a sports
1
er, with ties to the BCS, I reporter for The Daily ·
noted it was Ohio State Sentinel. Contact him ut
who had the best chance of dta y /or@mydailysengoing through their confer- tine!. com.)
.

..

Bonds, Piazza win
·Silver Slugger ·
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
- Barry Bonds and Mike
Piazza won their lOth Silver
Slug~er awards Tuesday.
Chtcago Cubs outfielder .
Sammy Sosa and Texas
Rangers shortstop Alex
Rodriguez were picked for a
sixth time by Hillerich &amp; •
BradsbY. Co., the maker of
Louisvtlle Slugger bats.
The awards honor the best
offensive players at each .
position in each league, as
voted on by major league
managers and coaches.
Bonds led the majors with
a .370 average and had 46
home runs, 110 RBis and a
record 198 walks. He helped
the San ·Francisco Giants
reach the World Series,
where they lost in seven
games to Anaheim. The 38• year-old Bonds hit .356 with
eight homers, 16 Jffils and
· 27 walks in the postseason.
Piazza, a catche.r, hit .280
with 33 homers and 98 RBis
for the New York Mets.
Colorado first baseman
Todd Helton, San Francisco
second baseman Jeff Kent,
St. Louis shortstop Ed~ar
Renteria, St. Louis thud
baseman Scot! Rolen,
Montreal outfielder Vladimir
Guerrero and Colorado
pitcher Mike Hampton completed the NL list.
Four Yankees made the AL
squad: ftrst baseman Jason
Giambi, second baseman
Alfonso Soriano; outfielder
Bernie Williams and catcher
Jorge Posada. Also honored
were Oakland third baseman
Eric Chave~. w_hite Sox outfielder Maggho Ordonez,
Anaheim outfielder Garret
Anderson and Boston desig- ,
nated hitter Manny Ramirez.

ly the same penalty as that knows that it was an honest
tmposed on two other teams mistake
and
provided
that altered springs with the absolutely zero advantage -at
expectatiOn of obtaining a that track . ... This is a pretty
performance advantage."
' steep penalty for what is
The team has until Nov. 13 I essentially a meaningless
to appeal the penalties in violation."
writing to the National Stock
Leslie said the team used a
Car Racing Commission.
spring made by a NASCAR'_'Twenty-five poi~ts for. approved
manufacturer
usmg an unaltered spnng that exa~,;tly as it came out the box
had no performance differ- in which it was shipped to the
ence from a spring a quarter- Roush race shop.
inch longer; I feel like we just A NASCAR spokesman
got t~e- de.~th se_men~e for said the sanctioning body
shophflmg, Martm satd:
would have no comment on
"Everyone in the garage the possible appeal.

Arizona Diamondbacks' Randy· Johnson pitches in the first inning against the San Diego
Padres in San Diego, In this July 21, 2002, photo. Johnson won his· record-tying fourth
straight Nation ?II League Cy Young Award on Tuesday a unanimous pick over Atlzcina teammate Curt Schilling. Johnson will earn an additional $4 million because of the award. (AP)

Big Unit wins NL
Cy Young Award
NEW YORK (AP) Randy Johnson won his
record-tying fourth straight
National League Cy Young
Award on Tuesday, a unanimous pick over Arizona
teammate Cun Schilling.
Johnson will earn an additional $4 million because of
the award.
He received all 32 firstplace votes and 160 points
from a panel of th~ Baseball
Writers' Association of
America to win his fifth Cy
Young Award, one shon of
Roger Clemens' record.
Schilling was runner-up for
the second straight season,
. getting 29 second-place votes
and three thirds for 90 points.
Atlanta closer Johll Smoltz
was third with 21 points.
. Johnson matched Greg
· Maddux (1992-95) as the
only pitchers to win four
straight Cy Youngs and is
the NL's fust unanimous
winner since Maddux in
1995. Johnson and Schilling
became the first pitehers to

finish 1-2 never won a Cy Young, was
in
Cy 2l-5witha2.77ERAthough
Y o u n g Aug. 31, while Johnson was
voting in 19-5 with a 2.63 ERA.
consecuJohnson went 5-0 with a
tive years. 0.66 ERA il) September,
The Big while Schilling was 2-2 with
Unit went a 6.19 ERA On Sept. 20,
24-5 with Schilling allowed eight runs
a
2.37 for only the third time and a
ERA aM ' career-high 14 hits in 9-4loss
Johnson
334 strike- to Colorad(,l at Coors Field.
o u I s ,
NL West
champion
becoilling the first maJor lea- Arizona was 55-15 when
guer since Boston's Pedro Johnson or Schilling started,
Martinez in 1999 and the first 43-49 the rest of the time.
NL player sirice the Mets' The defending, World Series
Dwight Gooden in 1985 ro . Ghampion Diamondbacks
win pitchittg's triple crown.
lost to St. Louis in the first
The 39-year-old Johnson round of the playoffs.
led the major leagues in ·By winning the award,
strikeouts for the ninth time. Johnson earned a $1 million
He also led the majors in bonus on top of his $12.35
innings (260) and complete million salary. His 2003 salary
games (eight), and led the automatically increased from
NL in (()west opponents' $12 million to $15 million. ·
batting average (.208).
" His first Cy Young Award
Schilling went23-7 with a came with Seattle in 1995.
3.23 ERA, 316 strikeouts and
Schilling earned a $250,000
just 33 walks in 259 1-:l bonus for finishing · second.
innings. Schilling, who has His salary was $10 millionr

.Southern junior high
football team finishes 5-1
BY Scon WoLFE
·Sports correspondent

1

RACINE - The Southern
Jr. High Football team, 5-1,
recently posted one of its
best records in recent history
. by closing the season with
wins over Waterford and
Trimble .
Southern
defeated
Waterford 8-0 in a game that
went back and forth between
the goal lines for much of the
game. Scoreless until late in
the game, Southern scored in
the fourth quarter on a touchdown by Jesse McKnight-a
ten-yard run late in the fourth
period. · Cody Patterson
added the points after on a
quarterback keeper for the 80 tally.
Southern defeated Trimble
16-6. In a game that was just
the opposite of the previous
battle, Southern scored twice
early then fended of the
Tomcats the remainder of the
game. Butch Marnhout put
Southern up 6-0 on a twoyard run, · then . McKnight
added the PAT run. Moments
later Cody Patterson inter·
cepted a Trimble pass -three

yards deep in the endzone
and ran it back I 03 yards for
a touchdown. Me Knight
added the points after. ·
The team was coached by
head coach C.T. Chapman,
and
assistants
Terry
Patterson,
and
Kenny
Guinther. Team members
were Trenton . Roseberry,
Wesley
Riffle,
Casey
Hubbard, Jacob Hunter, Brett
Beegle, John. ,Harton, Josh
Smith, Scott Mu sser, Grant
Phillips, Teddy Brown,Ryan
Donaldson, M.ike· Brown,
Michael Yost, Josh Lunsford,
and Ryan Chapman.Other
'team members included
Cody Patterson, Eric Zeiner,
Nick Buck, Darrin Teaford,
Jesse McKnight, Butch
Marnhout, Weston Counts,
and Tyler Harkness .
Coach C.T. Chapman
praised his team for a great
season and the hard work
they put . into the game.
Chapman also praised coach
Dave ' Barr for his help and
helping with establishing the
base plays that allowed the
players to prepare for the
varsity level.

�•

Wednesday, November 6, 2002
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Paae B 2 • The Dallv Sentinel

Scoreboard

NBA Roundup

Prep Football

Miles-predicts great things after Cavs romp past Lakers
CLEVELAND - Forgive Darius
Miles for getting caught up in the
euphoria of the moment ·
After being a major part of a 19point victory over th( three-time
defending champion Los Angeles
Lakers, Miles was talking big. ·
. "I love proving people wrong,"
said Miles, who had 13 points in his
home debut, an 89-70 victory
Tuesday night. 'They say we're the
29th team in the league? Maybe
we' ll just go out and make the playoffs."
Ricky Davis scored 24 and
Zydrunas Ilgauskas 23 as the Cavs
held the Lakers to the franchise's
lowest point total since mov/:f to
Los Angeles in 1960. The
ers
scored just 10 poinis in the fourth
quarter.
· Elsewhe~e.
Orlando
edged
Sacramento . 125-121, Atlanta
downed Denver 103-87, Indiana
edged · Miami 83-79, Minnesota
downed Washington 9().,86, Seattle
topped Houston 104-97 and San
Antonio beat Golden State 93-73.
The Cavs dazzled a crowd of
19,833- including high school phe- ·
nom LeBron James -by blowing
out the three-time defending NBA ·
champions.
With Shaquille O'Neal missing his
fifth game while recovering from
offseason foot surgery, the Lakers
had no inside game and only Kobe
Cleveland Cavaliers' Zydrunas llgauskas, center, tries to get around Los Angeles Lakers' Devean George, left, 'and
Bryant as an offensive threat.
Bryant finished with IS points, 13 Soumaila Samake, right, In the second quarter Tuesday at the Gund Arena in Cleveland. (AP)
rebounds and nine assists in 40 min·utes to just miss becoming the fmt
was called for an offensive foul for his 17 points and Dion Glover had 10
player since Grant Hill in 1997 to
At Orlando, Tracy McGrady broke crashing into Mike Miller.
of his 14 in the fourth quarter when
have three straight triple,doubles.
the 40-point barrier for the second
"Obv,ously, you don't make_ that the Hawks pulled away.
After Davis ' reverse dunk put straight game, scoring 41 points as the call at the end of the game," Jackson
Juwan Howard led Denver with 2S
Cleveland up by 20 with 3:30 left, Mag1c held off a Sacramento rally.
said. . "If I'm Tracy McGrady or· poi11ts and 15 rebounds.
fans began chanting, "Beat, L.A."
McGrady, coming off a 47-point Grant Hill or any marquee guy, I'm
and saluted the Cavs with several performance in a road win at guaranteed they're not going to call a
·
standing ovations. '
Milwaukee, made 15 of 27 shots and charge."
.
.
It was an ideal start at home for the also had eight rebounds and seven
young Cavs, who are coming off assists for the Magic, who .are off to
three straight 50-loss seasons and a 4-1 start for the fmt time since
· At Miami, Brad Miller scored 28
aren't expected to be much better 1996-97.
points and made key piays on both
this season.
Bobby Jackson scored 16 of his 26
ends of the floot in the final minute.
"It was a good win," Miles said. points in the fourth quarter, keying a -At Denver, Glenn Robinson was
With tbe game tied at 77, Miller
"But they didn't have Shaq. Shaq is rally from a 109-91 deficit in the last held bel9w 30 points for the 'firSt lobbed a perfect pass above the rim
· 30 points. Shaq is 20 rebounds. Shaq 8:25. Jackson scored seven straight time this season, but Atlanta still for Jermaine O'Neal, whose dunk
is five blocks. He'll be back when for the Kings to trim Orlando's lead won its third straight.
put the Pacers ahead with SO secwe go to Los Angeles (Jan. 10). He to 122·121 with just under a minute
Robinson, who scored 34, 30 and onds left. Miller then blocked a
told me he owes me one."
to go.
30 in Atlanta's fmtthree games, had shot by Eddie Jones, whose strong
After Pat Garrity made one of two 23 points on 9-for-18 shooting. play helped Miami rally in the
free throws for a two-point Magic Shareef Abdur-Rahim added 19 fourth. .
lead, Jackson drove the lane for a points and 12 rebounds. ·
Millerfmished out the scoring for
tying layup that was waved off as he
Alan Henderson scored seven of · the ~acers by hitting a pair of free

. .

.I

I

I

I

.

Pacers 83

Hawks 103
Nuggets 87

Heat79

Magic 125
Kings121

OHSAA High School Football
Regional Semifinals
DIVISION I
All gameo ot 7 p.m. S.tura.y
unle.. noted
Region t
(t) Solon (tt-0) vs. (4) Mentor (10-1) at
Lakewood Stadium
(2) Warren Harding (11-0) vs. (3)
Lakewood St. Edward (10-1) .at Parma
Byers Field
Region 2
(1) Brunswick (11-0) vs. (5) Spri ng. South
(8·3) at Mansfield Arlin Field
(2) Findlay (10,1) vs . (3) Hudson (11-0)
at Fremont Ross Harmon Stadium
Region 3
(8) Masslilon Washlnglon (9-2) vs. (5)
Massillon Perry (10·1) $t Canton Fawcett
Stadium
(2) Pickerington (1Q.1) vs. (8) Gahanna
Lincoln (9-2) at Grova City Stadium
Region 4
(l) Cln. Elder (10-1 ) vs. (5) Huber Hts.
Wayne (9·2) at 2 p.m .. Cincinnati Paul
BrOVrfl Stadium
(7) Lebanon (10-1) vs. (3) Gin. Colerain
(10-1) at 11 a.m., Cincinnati Paul Brown
Stadium
DIVISION II
All ;ameo 11 7:30 p.m. F~doy
Rogfon 5
.(1) Louisville (11·0) vs. (5) Olmsted Falls
(9"12) at Canton Fawc8tt Stadium
(2) Canfield (11 -0) vs. (6) Warren
Howland (&amp;-3) at Niles McKinley. Bo Rein
Stadium
Raglan 8
...
(0 Tol. St. Francis (10-1) vs. (4) Tol. Cent.
Cath . (1Q-1) al Toledo Wa~e , Mollenkopf
Stadium
(2) Cots. Brookhaven (10-1) vs. (3) Cols.
·walnut Ridge (10-1) at Westerville North
Jim McCann Stadium
•
Raglan 7
(.1) Green (t0-1) vs (4) Macedonia
Nordonla (10-1) at Barberton Rudy
Sh'arkey Reid
(2) Avon Lake (10-1) vs. (3) E. Liverpool
(8'"3) at Massillon Paul Brown Tiger

throws for an 81-77 lead with 22 seconds left, then adding two more for an .
83-79 margin with 12.5 seconds left . ·
• O'Neal added 22 points and 13.
· rebounds.
Timberwol ves 90, Wizards 86
At Minneapolis, Kendall Gill rallied Minnesota with nine of his 22
points in the fourth quarter.
Kevin Garnett was 5-for-5 in the
final period and finished with 17
points · and 16 rebounds for
Minnesota, which outscored the
Wizards 24-11 in the fourth.
Jerry Stackhouse had 25 points
and seven assists , Tyronn Luescored 13 · points and Michael
Jordan added 10 on 5-for-14 shooting. The game drew an announced •
crowd of 18,009 - 997 short of
capacity. It was only the fourth time
since Jordan's return -· the first
this .season - . that a Wizards game
hasn't sold out.
'

SuperSonics 104,
Rockets 97
At Houston, Gary P.ayton had a
career-high 18 assis~Seattle
almost blew a 20- oiri
-quarter lead before hofding ff Houston .
to remain unbeaten. j
·
Seattle ( 4-0) pulled away in the
third quarter with lonjl-range shooting, making five 3s m the quarter.
The Sanies finished 11-for-18 from .
3-point range, including 4-of-5 by Vladimir Radmanovic.
· .
The Sonii:s had six players in _
double figures, led by Payton with
20 and Rashard Lewis with 18
points and 12 rebounds.

St~dlum

Spurs 93 ·
Warriors 73

Blue Streak! St. Louis wins ninth
-straight with victory over Canadiens
.
.

. I

·year.' ~

In other NHL games, it
was Philadelphia 2. Carolina
I in overtime; Toronto 4,
Tampa Bay 3; WashiniJron 4,
Columbus 3 in overtime;
Chicago 2, Detroit 0;
Calgary 3, New Jersey 2; the
New York Rotngers . ,5,
Edmonton 2; and San Jose 5,
Los An~eles 2.
Rookte Eric Bogunieckiscored twice, and Martin
Rucinsky and Doug Weigli.t
also had goals for St. Louis
- which can tie the teamrecord 10-game winning
streak setjt January by
beating Co
bus at home
·
Thursday g .
"I like ho we ' re play in~,"
coach Joel Quennevi.Jle sa1d.
I

"We're playing really solid
in all areas . . Toni~ht, we
played a great game. '
Fred Brathwaite made 13
saves in his · fifth straight
win. The Blues, who outshot
Montreal 36-15, have won
all five road games this sea~
son - and they figure to get
better.
,
.
Johnson hasn't played yet
this season and is out until at
least the middle of the month
with a high ankle sprain.
Tkachuk, who led the team
with 38 goals last season,
broke his left foot Oct. 30
and will be sidelined four-tosix weeks.
. Pranger.. the le.ague MVP
m 2000, IS c;mt mdefimtely
after unde~gomg t~ee operaltons on h1s left wnst.

.

won at Columbm.
With time running out,
Michael Nylander slipped a
pass through the crease to
Sondra, who had .a nearly
empty net on the weak side
and easily beat Blue Jac'kets
goaltender Marc Denis for
his seventh goaL
The Blue Jackets played
their first game without forward Kevin Dineen, who
announced his retirement
earlier in the day.

Aeeoctated Pre•• Top 25
The Top Twenty Five teams in The
Associated Press eottege football poll, with
first-place votes In parentheses, recorda
through Nov. 2, total points based on 25
points lor a first place vo.te through one
point ~r a 25th place vote and previous
ranking :
W-L Polnto Pvo ·
1. Oklahoma (42) ....... 6-0 1,618
2 2. Miami (32)'.............. 8-0 1,804
1
3. Ohio St.... ............ 10-0 1. 705
6
4. TeMas ...................:.. a-1 1,564
7
8
5. Washington St.. ...... 8-1 1,538
6. 1owa .. ..................,.. 9· 1 1,501
9
7. Georgia .................. B-1 1,304
5
8. VIrginia Tech .......... 8·1 1,303
3
9. Notre Dame ......:.... 8·1 1,268
4
10. Southern Cal ......... 6·2 1,210 11
11 . Aiabama ................. 7-2 1,113 12
12. Kansas St ..... .....'... 7-2
940
14
13. Mlchlgan ......... ,...... 7-2
899
15
14. N.C. State ...... ........ 9-1
795
10
15. Oregon .......... ........ 7-2
687
19
1e. LSU ....................... 8·2
647
17
17. Florida St. ............. 8·3
581
18
18. ColoradO ............... 6·3
486 . 13
19. Penn St ,,.............. 6·3
468 20
20. Bowling Green ...... 8...0
437 21
21. Iowa St .................. 7-3
372
22
22. Plttsburgh ...... ........ 7-2
357 23. Florlda ................... B-3 . · 327
24. ColoradO St:. ......... 8-2
307 24
25. Arizona St. .... .. ...... 7·3
155 16
Othora rfcolvfng voteo: Maryland 135,
Tennessee W6 , TCU 64, Auburn 61, Boise
St. 51 , Minnesota 42, Boston Collage 28,
Marshall10, UCLA 6, Georgia Tech 1.

Pro Football

DIVI$J()~

l·

I

t
I

'

!V,

a

.

South

"

Flames 3
Devils 2

Maple Leafs 4
Lightning 3

Montreal Canadiens goaltender Jose Theodore makes the save as St Louis Blues' Barrett :
·Jackman comes in for the rebound during first-period NHL action Tuesday in Montreal. (AP)
I

Eric Lindros started and
played nearly 21 minutes
after being benched in the
third period Sunday. He had
an assist.
Mike 1Richter made 39
saves in his 301st career victory.

two NHL goals, and Evgeni
Nabokov made 27 saves in :
his frrst home game of the :
season for San Jose.
·
Mike Rathje had the first
twocgoal game of 'his career
Lynn Loyns scored his first as the Sharks gave a sound
defensive effort.
·

Sharks 5
Kings 2

B · k tb II

College Football

.(
' l

Wedna1day'1 01me1
Dallas at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Clewland at Washington, 7 p.m.
Sacramento at New York. 7 p.m.
L:A. Clippers at Philadelphia, 7 p.m
Boston at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Seattte at New Orleans, 8:30p.m.
Detroit at Utah. ~ p.m.
Atlanta at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
New Jerasy at Milwaukee, 9:30p.m.
MemphiS at Portland, 10 p.m.
.
Thundoy'oCiomH
L.A. Lakers at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Detroit at Denver, 10 p.m.

Hockey
. National Hockey L~ua
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allontlc Dlvlofon
W L TOI.Pia GFGA
Phl01delphla ...... 9 1 2 a 20 44 23
Pittlburgh·.. ... .. ..7 2 2 0 16 40 33
NawJersey ...... 7 3 a a 14 26 17
N:Y. Rangers .... 5 8 2 0 12 37 49
N.Y. lolandars ... 3 8 1 0. 7 29 47
Northoaat Dlvlofan
W L T OLPto GF GA
Boston .. ............ ? 2 2 0 16 37 · 29
Montreal :..........4 4 4 0 12 33 40
Toronto .............4 7 2 0 10 41 42
011awa .... :.........4 4 1 a 9. 21 20
Buffalo .............. 3 6 3 0 9 26 28
Southellt Dlvlalan
W L T OL Pto GF GA
TampaBay ....... 7 4. 2 0 16 .47 36
Caro!lna ............ 5 4 2 2 14 29 32
Washington ...... 6 6 1 0 13 29 36
Florlda .............. 4 6 1 1 10 27 40
Atianta .............. t 8 1 1 4 30 43
• WESTERN CONFERENCE
COntrol OMolon.
W L T OLPto GFGA
St. Louis ........... 9 1 1 0 19 46 20
Detrolt ............... s 5 2 o 14 42 35
Chicago............. 6 5 1 0 13 27 26
Colvmbvs .........5 5 1 1 12 34 35
Nashv1Qe ..... ,..... 1 5 1· 4 7 24 37
·
, Northweat Dlvt•lon
W L T OLPto GFGA
Minnesota ......... 9 2 2 0 20 45 28
Calgary ..':... .......5 3 3 2 15 38 36
Vancouver ........ 5 4 4 0 14 35 34
Cotorado .... ....... 4 2 4 2 14 33 26
Edmonton ......... 3 5 3 1 10 29 34
Paclflc Dlvlafon
W L T OLPto GFGA
Dallas .. ........... " 6 3 3 1 t6 40 32
Los AnQeles ..... 6' 4 2 1 15 39 38
san Jose .......... 5 6 0 1 11 34 '40
Phoenix ............ 5 7 0 t 11 28 42
Anaheim ........... 3 6 3 0 9 31 37
Two polnta tor a win, one point for s
tie and overtime loal.
Monday·•a Games
Calgary 4, N.Y. Isianders 2
Vancouver 4, Colorado 2
. Minnesota 5, Los Angeles 2
· TUeaday'a Games
IDhiladelphia 2. Carolina 1, OT
N.Y. Rangers 5, Edmonton 2
Washington 4, Columbus 3, OT
St. Louis S1 Montreal 2
Chicago 2, Detroit a
. Toronto 4, Tampa Bay 3
Calgary 3, New Jersey 2
San Jose 5, Los Angeles 2
Wed.,.aday'a Gamu
Plttsbvrgh at Florida. 7:30p.m.
Vancouver at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Ottawa at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Nashville at Anaheim , 10:30 p.ni.
Thuraday'a Gamel
Buffalo at Carotina, 7 p.m.
Florida at Washington, 7 p.m.
· 9aigaryat N.Y. ·Rangers, 7 p.m.
New .Jersey at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Montreal, 7:30p.m .
Boston at Detroit, 8 p.m.
Columbus at St. Louis, 8 p.m.
Atlan~a at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Nashville at San Jose. 10:30 p.m.

Transactions

p

Flyers 2
Hurricanes 1, OT

San Antonio 93 , Golden State 73
Atlanta 103, DenveUS7

All games at 7:30 p.IJ'I. Friday
W L T Pet PF PA
Region 13
Tampa Bay ..... 7 2 a .n8 203 109
(B) Youngs. Ursuline (6·5) vs. (4) East New Orleans .. 6 2 a .750 256 209
Palestine (10~1) at Youngstown Boardman Atlanta ............ 5 3 o .625 187 136
Spartan Stadium
·
Carolina .......... 3 5 0 .375 tn 117
North
'(2) Girard (10-1) vs. (3) Cia. VASJ (8-3).at
Chardon Memorial Field
w L T Pet PF PA
Region 14
(¥een Bay .... .. 7 1 0 .875 227 164
(1) Kent(ln (9:2) vs. (4) Pemberville oetrolt.. ........... 3 5 o .375 158 220
Eastwood (10· 1) at Findlay Donnell Chicago .......... ? 6 a .250 152 199
Stadium
Minnesota .... ... 2 6 0 .250 186 230
(7) Della (10-1) vs. (6) Archbold (9·2) at
Weat
BASEBALL
Napolean Buckenmeyar Stadium
w L T Pet PF . PA
American League
ANAHEIM ANGELS-Released C Sal
•
Region 15
' San Francisco 6 2 o .750 203 164
Fasa ~o. Activated RHP Steve Green from
())Porlsmoulh(10-1)vs.(5) 1ronton(B-2) Arlzona .. ...... .. .4 4
.500 150 158
the eO-day disabled list.
at Ohio University Pedan Stadium
St. Louis .. ..... .. 3 5
.375 t66 172
BOSTON RED SO&gt;c-Agreed to terms
Cll Portsmouth W. (9-2) vs. (3) Coshocton Seattle .......... .. 2 6 o .250 145 180
with LHP Alari Embree on a two-year con(1 l -0) at Lancaster Fulton Field
·
. Sunday, Nov. 10
.tract.
·
·
Region 16
Houston at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
· SEATILE MARINERS-Announced the
~)Ketteri ng Alter (10· 1) vs. (4) Plain City
Detroit at Green Bay, 1 p.rn.
resignation of Lee Elia, part-time coach
Jonathan Alder (10· 1) at-,?prlng fleld North
Atlanta at Pittsburgh , 1 p.m.
and consultant, to become hitting coach for
Panther Stadium
~~o
·
Tampa Bay. Named Ted Walsh home clubSan Diego at ·St. Louis, 1 p.m.
(j!) Reading (11-0) vs. (3) Coldwater (tt·
New Orleans at Carolina. 1 p.m.
house and equipment manager.
0) • at Huber Heights Wayne Heidkamp
Indianapolis at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAY5-Announced
Tom Foley, third base coach, and Billy
Stfdium
N.Y. Giants at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Hatcher. bench coach, will retu rn next sea•
, .
DIVISION V
Cincjnnali at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
son. Named Lee Elia hitting coach.
;
All game• at 1 p.m . Saturday
Seattle at Arizona, 4:05p.m.
TEXAS RANGERS-Named Mark
t
Region 11
Washin~J!on at Jacksonville, 4:05 p.m.
Connor
bullpen coach and Don
Cti Smithville (1 1-0) vs. (5) Bedford New England at Chicago, 4:15p.m.
Wakam8tsu bench coach . Retained Orel
Chanel (9·2) at Strongsville Catan.Stadium
Kansas City at San Francisco, 4:15p.m. Hershisar pitching coach , Rudy Jaramillo
(2) Middlelield C~rdinal (1 Hl) vs. (3)
hitting coach, DeMario Hale first base and
Dc\lton (1()-1) at Bedlord Steward Field
Miami at N.Y. Jets, B:30 p.m.
Open: Buffalo. Dallas, Tampa Bay. outfield coach. and Steve Smith th ird .base
Raglon 18
and infield coach.
Cleveland
i)ll Delphos Jefferson (9-a) vs. (4)
Monday, Nov, II
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Signed INF
Cq,staUa MargareHa (9-2) at Tiffin National
Howie
Clark and OF Rob Ryan to minor
0
Field at Frost·Kalnow Stadium
akland at Denver, 9 p.m.
league contracts.
National League
~) Defiance Tlnora (tO-O) vs. (6)
Dolphos St.John's (8·3) al Defiance Brown
r0 88 8 a
ATLANTA BRAVES-Named Pat Kelly
manager for Richmond of the IL.
Stadium
HOUSTON ASTROS-Named Kevin
Region 19
National Basketball Aaeoclatlon
Burrell
so~theast regional crosschecker.
(,1) Woodsfield Monroe Cent. (11 -0) vs.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
SAN DIEGO PADRES- Named Mike
(5) Chesapeake (8·3) at Circleville Logan
Atlantic Dlvlalcm
Couchee pitching coach . and Rob Deer
Elm Braves Stadium
W L Pet.
GB
coach for Portland of the PCL: Will Sinon
G'l Amanda-Ciaarcreek (9·2) vs. (6) NewJersey... : ...... 4
0 1.00
trainer for Mobile of the Southern League:
sarahsville
Shenandoah
(8·3)
at Orlando ....... ........ 4
1 .800
.5
Jeff Gardner manager and Rich Renteria
Zatlesvllle Sulsberger Memorial Stadium
Philadelphia ......... ?
1 .667
1.5
coach tor Lake Elsinore of the California
:
Region 20
Boston .......... ....... 1
2 .333
2.5
League; George Hendrick manager, Mike
(•1) Marion Pleasant (11-0) vs. (4) Morral Miami ................... 1
Harkey pitching coach and Tom Tornl,ncasa ·
3 .250
3
Ridgedale {9·2) at Marion Hardi ng Washington .. ....... 1
·coach for Fort Wayne of the Midwest
3 .250
3
League; Roy Howell manager, Dave
Stpdlum
· New York ............. 0
4 .000
4
Aajsich pitching coach , Ben Ogllvle coach
()!) Gahanna Cola. Acsd . (10' 1) vs. (3)
Central Dlvl1lan
and Wade Yamasaki trainer for Eugene of
BIOnbrldge Parn t Valley (10 -1) al
WLPctGB
the Northwest League; and Carlos
· Wfsl'llngton Court House Miami Trace Atlanta .......... .. ..... 3
1 .750
Lezcano manager and Jake Molina coachPanther Stadium
. Detrolt ..................3
1 .750
es ·for Idaho Falla of the Pioneer League.
DIVISION VI ,
lndlana ................. 3
1 .750
FOOTBALL
Afl gom. . 7:30 Friday
New Orleans ....... 2·
1 .687
.5 ·
N11lonal FOOiblllllt;uo
•
R1glon 21
Chlcago .. ..... .. ...... 2
2 .5oo
1
CINC INNATI BENGALS-Piacod TE
~)Mogadore (10-1) vo. (4) Monroev)llo Clevefand ........ ..... 2
Sean BreWer on Injured reserve. Signed
2 .500
1
(9'2) at Berea Baldwin-Wallace Flnnla Toronto ................ 2
TE Chris EdmOnds from the practice
2 .500
1
aquad. SiQned TE Derek Smith to the pracSt}dlym
·
Milwaukee ... ........ 1
2 .333
1.5
tice aquad.
(j!) Lowellville (11-0) vs. (6) Cle.
WUTI!AN CONFERENCE
. CLEVELAND BROWNS.,..Releasad OT
Cllyahoga Hts. '(8·3) al Ravenna Gllcralt
Mldweot Dlvlllon ,.:.-:::
Roger
Charloine. ,
Fl;ld
.
· .
W
L Pet ' GB
DETROIT LIONS-Signed RB . Rafael
,
Raglon 22
Dallaa.. ................3
0 1.00
Cooper. Signed DB La\lar Glover to the
!11 Columbus Grove (11-0) v1. (5) San Anlonlo ......... 4 1 .800
praot1co
squad .
S$amore Mohawk (9·2) at Lima Senior Mlnneoota ............ 3
2 .800
1
IND IANAPOLIS COLTS-Waived DB
.S!Jdlum
HOUitOi'l .. ...... :...... 2
2 .500
1.5
Brian Lelgeb. Signed RB Autry Denson.
· (I!) Tiffin Cal\len (9-2) vs. (6) Rawoon Denver .................1
3 .250
2.5
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Placed DB Ray
C~ - Rawson (9·2) at Fostoria Mtmorlal Utah ............... " .... 1
Green on Injured reserve.
3 .250.
2.5
Stadium
PITISBURGH
STEELERS-Signed
Memphlo ..............o
4 .000
3.5
Roglon 23
OLB Juofln Kurpelkls. Re leased TE Matt
PocHic Dlvfalon
(1) Straaburg·Franklln (11·0) v1 . (4)
Cushing.
W
L
Pet
GB
Newark Cath. (7-4) at Mt. Varnon Yellow Saattla ...... .......... .4
ST. LOUIS RAM5-Signed LB Hakim
0 1.00
Akbar.
Jackel Stadium .
Sacramento .........3
2 .800
1.5
SAN FRAt-(CISCO 49ERS- Agreed lo
(?l Danville (10-1) va.(3) Shadyside (9-2) L.A. Likert ..........2
3 .400
2.5
terms with FB Terry Jackson on a two-year
at,Dover Crater Stadium
L.A. Clippers ........ 1
2 .333
2.5
contract ex1enslon . Waived S Je.eon Moore.
•
Region .24
Phoenix ......... :..... 1
3 .250
3
Signed OT Austin ,Lee to tho practice
. (1) Marla .Stein Marlon Local (t.Q-1) vs, Portland ............... 1
3 .250
.3
squad.
(5) Mechanicsburg (10-1) at Ttoy Memorial Golden State .. .....1
4 .200
3.5
HOCKEY
Stadium
.
Nttlonal Hockey Uagua
Monday'• O•m••
(2) Dole Hardin Northern (11·0) vs. (6)
CALGARY
FLAMES-Recalled
G
Toronto 109, Chicago 105, OT
Troy Christian (10·1) at Ballalontalna Dodd
Levente Szuper lrom Saint John of the
Milwaukee 97, New York 88
Field
AHL. .
'
New Jersey 106, Minnesota 82
COLUMBUS
BLUE
JACKETsSan Antoni o 103, Memphla101 , OT
Announced the retirement of F Kevin
Dallas 107, Golden State 100
Dineen to take a job In the front office.
Delrolt 84, Phoan!x 82
FLOR IDA PANTHERS-Recalled C·W
Tuead1y'a
OlmH
'eowl Championship Series
Jeff Toms lrom San Antonio of the AHL.
Orlando 125, sacramento 121
NASHVILLE PREDATOR5-Aacallad C
Cleveland 89 , L.A. Lakers 70
Domenlc Pittls from Milwaukee of the AHL.
•
Through gam.. of Nov. 2
Indiana 83, Miami 79
Reas signed C Vernon Fiddler to
1-:'0klahoma ........................ ........ ,.... 2.04
Milwaukee and AW Scottie Upshall to
Minnesota 90, Washi ngtOn 86
2, Ohio Stale ...................................5.57
Kamtoops of the WHL,
·
Seattle
104,
Houston
97
3. Mlami.: ...................... .................... 6.Q1

a
o

Blackhawks 2
Red Wings 0

Jocelyn Thibault made 18
· 'saves for his 29th career
shutout, and Steve Sullivan
and
Andr,ei Nikolishin
scored for Chicago.
Thibault blanked the Red
Wings at Joe Louis Arena for
the second time in less than a
year. He was the last goalJohn LeClair scored his tender to shut out the Stanley
300th goal with Philadelphia Cup champions in Detroit on
in overtime as , the host Dec . 17, 2001.
Flyers extended their winning streak to six straight.
LeClair
pounded
a
rebound P.ast Kevin Weekes
to run Phtladelphia's unbeaten streak to seven (6-0-1).
Chris Drury scored the ~a­
ahead' goal early in the .th1nd
period - to lead · visiting
Calga~ over New Jersey.. .
. Mathtas · Johansson and
Stephane Yelle also scored,
Alexander Mogilny scored and backup goalie Jamie
three goals, including the McLennan made 20 of his 31
game-winner with 2:22 to saves in the third period as
play, as Toropto rallied to the Flames extended their
unbeaten streak to four ·(3-0beat Tampa Bay.
The Maple Leafs finished 1).
their homestand
2-4-1. · Rangers 5, Oilers 2
Radek Dvorak had a goal
Mogilny got his 16th career
hat trick, Ed Belfour made and two assists, and Tom
34 saves and Darcy Tucker Poti set up two goals against
his former team at Madison
also scored for Toronto.
The Lightning have .lost Square Garden as New York
snapped a three-game losing
three straight.
Capitals 4, BlueJackets 3, streak.
Petr
Nedved,
Mark
OT
Peter Sondra scored two Messier,' Mikael Samuelsson
goals, inchjding the game- and Rem Murray also scored
winner with 3.3 &amp;econds left as the Rangers won for just
10 overtime, as Washington the fifth time in 15 games.

4. Toxas .......................................... 10.03
5. Washington St. .......~ ................ 13.05
6. Georgia ....... ............................... 15.03
7. Notre Oame ..............: ................. 15.33
8. 1owa .............................. .............. 16.29
9. Southern Ca1 ........................... .. .19.37
10. Virginia Tech ..............................20.88
11 . Michigan ....................................31 .62
12. N.C, State .................... .............. 32.40
13. Florida St ...................................33.75
14. Florida ............................. .......... 36.95
15. Kansas St. .. ............................... 38.20

a

At San Antonio, Malik Rose hit ·
just the seventh 3-pointer of his.
career, a 39-footer to end a lopsided
third quarter.
After trailing 45-42 at halftime;
the Spurs outscored the Warriors
31-12 in the thind quarter. Rose's 3- :
pointer heat the buzzer and gave San Antonio a 73-57 lead.
Tim Duncan had 13 points and I0
rebounds, Tony Parker scored 21i
Stephen Jackson added 13 ana
Rose 12. David Robinson had 13
rebounds· and 10 points.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Women's College Basketball

Region 8
(·1) Ki~gs Mills Kings (1t·O) vs .. (4)
National Football League
Trenton Edgewood (10-1) at Fairfield
Stadium
• AFC
(2) Day. Chamlnade-Jullonne (10-1) vs.
E11t
(3) Vandalia Butler (10-1) at Dayton
WLTPctPFPA
Welcome Stadium
Miami .............. 5 3 0 .625 200 167 .
DIVISION II.
Buffalo ............ 5 4 a .556 248 269
·New England .. 4 4 0 .500 206 165
• All gamaa at 7 ~.m. S~~t~.trday
Region 9
N.Y. Jels ......... 3 5 a .375 160 206
(1) Cia. Benedictine (9·2) vs. (4)
SOuth ·
Steuben11ille (9·2) at Canton · Central
w LTPctPFPA
Catholic Stadium
lndlanapoUs .... 4 4 0 .500 160 167
· (2) Hunting Valley Univ. (8-3) vs. (6) Tennessee ..... A 4 0 .500 183 212
Lisbon Bea11er Local (9-2) at Befoit West JacksonviUe .... 3 5 0 .375 164 157
Branch Heacock Stadium
Houston .......... 2 6 . 0 .:!so 107 214
Roglon 10
North
(1) Akr. Buchtel (11-0) vs. (4) Willard (10·
w LTPc1PFPA
·1) .at Wooster Follis Field
.
Pittsburgh ....... 5 3 .
.625 t92 teo
(2) Akr. Hoban (10-1) vs. (3) Oak Harboo Cleveland ....... 4 5 0 .444 205 195
(10-1 ) at lorain George Daniel Stadium
Balllmore ....... .3 5 0 .375 139 162
'
Region 11
Cincinnati ........1' 7 0 .125 113 214
(1) Newark Licking Valley (tl·O) vs. (4)
Wol1
Cols. Watter'son (7·4). at Newark White
WLTPctPFPA
Field
Denver ............ 6 2 0 .750 207 170
(2) Cols. DeSales (8·3) ·vs. (3) GallipoHs San·Diego ...... 6 2 a .750 186 163
Gallia (9-2) at Hillsboro Rlcl'lards Memorial Kansas City .. ..4 4 0 .500 259 . 240
Fi~ld,
Oakland .......... 4 4 0 .500 226 188
NFC
Region 12
(1) Urbana (1 1-0) vs. (5) St. Marys
Eut
M~morlal (8-3) a1 Piqua Alexander
w L T Pci p~ PA
Sladivm
Philadelphia .... 6 2 0 .750 221 118
(2) Germantown Valley View (11·0) vs. N.Y. Giants ..... 4 4 o .500 113 132
(3f Tipp City Tippecanoe (9·2) at Clayton Washington .... 4 4 a .500 155 191
Northmonl Stadium
Dallas ...... ....... 3 . 6
.333 115 155

NHL Roundup
MONTREAL - Imagine
what the St. Louis Blues
might accomplish once all
their stars get healthy.
Pavol Demitra had a goal
and two assists as St. Louis
extended its N)iL-best winning streak to nine games
Tuesday night with a 5-2 viclory over the Montreal
Canadiens.
. The Blues are unbeaten in
I0 games since a seasonopening loss to Anaheim
despite the absence of AllStar defenseman Chris
Pronger, goaltender Brent
Johnson and left wing Keith
Tkachuk.
·
"It's an unbelievable feeling," said Demitra, who has
eight points in his last four
games. "Our four lines are
scoring goals and 20 guys
are ~laying hard every
game.'
St. Louis opened a fivepoint lead in the Central
Division over the . Detroit
Red Wings, the defending
Stanley Cup champions.
"The Blues played a fantastic game - it's no fluke
that they've won nine in ·a
row." Canadiens coach
Michel Therrien said. "They
skate well, they battle that's the team that's
impressed me the most this

www.mydallysentinel.com

Wednesday, November 8, 2002

.I

I .

Duke ranked No. 1
in preseason poll
NEW YORK (AP)- Duke is returning all
five starters from a Final Four team. No
Alloclated Presa Women'8 Top 25
wonder it's starting the season at No. I .
The Blue Devils were an overwhelming
Record
Ptf Pvt.
choice for the top spot in The Associated
1. DU~ (38) .,..n, .. , .. :.. ............~1-4
1,093
$
Press preseason women's baskelball poll
~. T&amp;n.,._ l't),......,............av-5 · 1;049
8
Monday, the team's first No. I ranking .
a. LSU (1) .......... ,.............. ~1~12
D41 ' ~
Duke's women never had been higher than
4. ConnectlciJt (1) .......... ~...." 38-0
87·3
1'
third.
6. Keneaa Sl.. ................ ,....,..l!e-8
839
11
"We see it as a great honor," coach Gail
e.'SIIInlord ....................., .., '....32-3
eta· s
Goestenkors said. "We understand it doesn't
'1. ~~ Ttclt .... .-.................20-12
· 81&lt;4
17
~·
9
mean anything. It's the postseason ranking '8. Purdue ...............,.........,.,..24-6
0. Geolgla ..,......................... l&amp;-11
749
we 're after. However, it shows how far our
&amp;911
program has come and that it is well respect- 1~. Noire Dame .....:.............. 20-10
11.
Tt~~ta
...
,
........................
..22-10
874
ed." ·
808
Duke received 38 of 44 first-place votes 12. VaodedJIIt .........................ao-1
13.
Norlh
Carolina
.....
,
............
26-9,
.
561 {
from a national ·media panel for a total of
.
1
4.
~
St
...........................
-23-12
506
I ,093 points. Tennejsee was second with
15.
1'.1iin11ola
.........
,
..............
~-8
4&amp;3
I ,049 points, LSU third with 941, and
442
defending national champion Connecticut I 6. to\118ia98 T4!0t! ................~25·5
'7-Ailcans8J! ." .............:.......~12 . 338
fourth with 873.
18. Ctoclnnati......................... .ID'·S "'' 2311
Tennessee, which has led the preseason . 111; CQioladO ~ •.,,.... ~...........2+7 ! . 218.
poll a record 10 times, received four first- 20. ~ Coltege'.................2$-ll • ' 165
place votes. LSU and Connecticut each had 21. G11o1ge Wahlngton .. ;, ......2f·9
150
one.
' 1!2. OldahOma ..........., .............32-4
148
~
At No. 3, LSO has its highest ranking 23.-IOWa IJ1.......................:: ..... 24,9
14'1
10
since the Lady Tigers were second March 8, 24, ~llllltlli!I!ISL .., ......... ,... I&amp;-12
141
- '
1978. Fourth is the lowest ·for Connecticut 25. uc santa Balbara .. ,.........26-6 . 106
since it was No. 4 in the final poll of the ·. !)!Mrs ~Ill! V01i111: TCU 1QO, Waahlngton
1998-99 season.
ljjl, 'IUI,not 88, Vlrglni!l {11 , 019 Oomlnlon 75, OniQOII
Connecticut lost four senior starters from a 67, B'J:U 48, C9torallsi &lt;46r JI!.O, StatiJ 26, New
team that went 39-0 and gave the school its . ~ . ~· South Carollna ~~' 6ltlg $!1. 14. I':IO!Idfl
third NCAA title ..The Huskies had been No . . ;:1, . flePpiltdlnci 8, VHiar\ova 8, Mld!lgan St. 8,
· Souih.lli C•l 8, 'Harvard·5.• Holllton 5, 1,41chlgan 5,
I in 19 straight polls and 49 of the last 56.
Kansas State, which went 26-8 last season ll8ll Si, 3, Ternpi!l 3, 08Paul2, · ~ti1Qenl ~. Pilt.ourgl)
. ,''·
...
using freshmen and sophomores, was fifth. and 1, Rkle .1, SMina 1. .
"' ~'
Stanford was sixth . Texas Tech, Purdue,
Georgia and Notre Dame completed the top 10. young team last year to reach the Final Four,
Texas was lith, and Vanderbilt 12th, fol- to have that experience and 10 · understand
lowed by North Carolina, Penn State, what it takes to get there. Now we want to
·
Minnesota, Loui siana Tech, Arkansas, .
Cincinnati, Colorado State and Boston take it that next step and finish it off."
College.
Duke became the II th school to lead the
George Washington, Oklahoma, Iowa preseason poll , which started in 1976.
St,ate, Mississippi State and UC Santa Fourteen teams ranked No. I at the start of
Barbara held the final five spots.
the season finished on top. Eleven prest;!ason
Alana Beard, a first-team All-American as No. I teams went on to win the national
· a sophomore last season, heads the returnees championship.
at Duke, which went 31-4 and earned its sec ~
The Southeastern Conference, which had
and Final Four trip despite having jus! eight e ight teams in the NCAA tournament last
players.
·.
season, has a poll-high six . There are five
Seven of the eight return, and Goestenkors teams from the Big 12, and three each from
has added a touted recruiting class thai the Big Ten and Big East.
No.9 Georgia and No. 10 Notre Dame are
includes high school All-Americans Brooke
Smith, Mistie Bass and Lindsey Harding.
the highest-ranked teams that were not in
Goestenkors says without hesitation the last season's final poll. Others in the Top 25
Blue Devils' goal is the one thing they who didn' t make the final poll in March are
haven't accomplished in her tenure. witi- Arkansas, George Washington, Mississippi
State and \JC Santa Barbara.
ning the national championship.
"This team is very hungry .. to reach the· Old Dominion failed to make the presea:
very top," she said. "It was great for our son poll for the first time ·since 1995.

Duke's Beard tops
women's preseason
All-America team
NEW YORK (AP) - Her
Pres'·a· /&gt;
Taurasi , a 6-foot JUnior,
has dazzled UConn fans team is No. I, and so is
Alana Beard.
and aggravated coach Geno
The Duke junior was the
Auriemma al times - with
only player on all 44 ballots
her no-look passes, fearless
- drives to the basket and longTuesday for The Associated
Press preseason All-America
range shooting.
team in women's basketball.
She played with four
In addition to the 5-foot-11
seniors on Connecticut's
Beard. the national media
unbeaten national champipanel selected Vanderbilt's
onship learn last season.
Chantelle Anderson (42
averaging 14.9 points and
votes), Connecticut's Diana
5.3 assists. Now she's the
leader as the Huskies rel'oad.
Taurasi (41 ), . Mississippi
State's LaToya Thomas (35);
"This really is a great
honor to be awarded, espeand Stanford's Nicole Powell
(24).
cially
considering
the
"It is an honor to be conamo~nt of talent out there
this year," Taurasi said . "I
sidered one of the best in the
just hope to play to the best
country," Beard said. "It is
Of my ability day in and day
very exciting, but I have
out, a nd hopefull y good
other focuses right now and
that is on our team . We are .
things will come for our
&lt;earn."
working to get better and trying to teach our freshmen the
s Thomas , a · 6-2 senior
system."
·
·
year," Duke coach Gail expecte d to be a h'tg.h c hotce
Duke was ranked No. I for Goestenkors said. "We knew 10 .the WNBA draft next
the. first time Monday in the she had to get stronger and spnng. le~ the Southeastern
be able to finish with con- Conference. 10 sconng 10
AP's preseason poll. '
Beard, Anderson and t t W. didn't w· nt her.to be - . each of her first three college
Thomas made the preseason . ac. · e
.
a
seasons.
team last year and were first- qune. so fatigued at the end
She ·was second i'n the
team All-Americans at the of th~ gam~. That has ~en nation with a 24.6-poi nt
end of the season. Powell her biggest Improvement. ·
average last season and
and Taurasi were secondFew players can post up as already owns Missi ssippi
well Anderson, a 6-6 1semor, State'·s career scoring record
team picks.
Beard can post up, spot up She shot 72.3 percent as a (2, 187) . She averaged 9.9
and slash to the basket. She sophomore and 64.7 percent rebounds and shot 57 percent
·
averaged 19.8 points and 6.1 last season, when she aver- in 2001-02.
rebounds last season 10 lead- aged 20.7 yomts ~nd 6.8
The 6-.2 Powell, a junior,
ing J?uke to a 31,-4 record rebounds 1n leadmg .the has played everything from
and 1ts second Fmal Four ~omn:odores to the f10al point guard to power forappearance.
e1ght m the NCAA tourna- ·ward. She has six of the eight ·
She shot 57.2 percent from ment. ·
triple-doubles in StAnford
the field, and her 694 points
"It is such a great honor to history and last season averwere a school record.
be placed on a team that is aged 16.6 points. , 9.3
Beard got few breaks last considered the fi ve best play- rebounds and 6.3 assists.
season because .Duke had ets in the country," Anderson
A back problem has kept
only eight players. She spent said. "Hopefully I can live Powell from participating m
the offseason hitting the . up to the billing and also· full- scale work'outs, but she
weights to get stronger. .
help lead my team to the is expected to 'start playing
. "She took a beating last Final Four."
soon.

�Page B 4 • The Daily Sentinel

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ANNOUNCEMFNTS
Insurance In1,_....ors on the QIOund floor of the
,.
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courthouse between the
Field work In Gallipolis/ hOurs of 8:30 and 4:30
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit Gallia Co. and Surrounding .Monday through Friday. The
for sale. Chester Township, Countie s would required Mason County Commission
Meigs County, send letters basic knowledge of home Ia an equal opportunity
T
measuring employer and does not dis0 ·1 construction
~~n\~~:~~s~~o~oxh~29-~•J. exterior dimensions, obser'\1· criminate due to race, sex, c
ing condition ,and taking r,eed, religion, or national orlPomeroy, Ohio 45769.
photos
of
homes. ' gin. John D. GeriBch
contractor/ Administrator,
Mason
1 David Farr will not be Independent
responsible for any debts part-time basis. Must be County Commission
tail-oriented, .have reliable
·
othe' than•my own as oI 1t · de
4-02
lransportalion and 35mm URGENTLY NEEDED· plas~
~,.;;;;.--...,--..;..-, · 6R • Digital . Camera. rna donors,·earn $50 to. $60
GIVEA"'"" 'Y
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week
or 3Piahours
hwithI I internet per kl
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access also elp u ·
wee y. a 10 1
sma
service, 740·592·6651 .
Please respond to:
Free Cats to good home, 1
lnaurence lnapector
Looking for a fun job? This is
year old, Calico Tigers,
P.O. BQ,; 29335
il l OHice Environment 50
(740)245·5065
Parma, Ohio 44129-Q335 positions aVaiable 1·886·
·
· Free puppies- all tamales· . - - - - - - - . _974-JOBS
Looking for experienced
Beagle· Miniature Bulldog
HVAC Technician/ tnslaller,
miN, 5 weeks old. Adorable
(740)245-Q t44
must ha"Je 2 or more· years
experience in this field. This
Free to good home- male
is a full time position with
German Shephard, 3 years
goOd salary. If interested call
Old . (7 40)245·5997
{740)441-1238, if no answer,
Jobs Available
leave message.
LOST AND
McClure's Restaurant now
FOlJNP
..
II 3 I t.
I II
hlnng
a
oca IOns, u or
.
'
LOST· 2 year Chocolate Lab
part-time, pick up applica·
lost in the Northup area
Earn up to $7/hr
~~~w~~~atio~:~t~~g ba~
within the tast week. It found
and weekly
10:ooam, Monday lhru
please call (740)446·8706
bonuses!
Saturday.
after 4pm.
•$500 Sign on
Medi Home Health agency,
LOST- Cockapoo, medium
. bonus
Inc. seeking AN's (PT/FT)
size dog, mostly gray with
I
and a West .Virginia licensed
some black/ while. "Buddy",
• Pa d training
Physical Therapist for the
P.olecat Road, Gallipolis.
•
Weekly
Gallipolis,
OH area. We offer
(740)446-8096
Paycheck
a competitive salary, beneMining Dog: miniature
hts pactc.age, 401k, and flex
• Paid Vacation
hme Please sent res&lt;,me to
German Sheppard, Lost on
. Sand Ridge Rd, if found call
• Professional
68150 Bayberry . Dri'Je,
Cla1rsv1lle, OH 43950 Atln;
(740) 985·3417
Atmosphei'e
Greg Varner, Administrator
.
o
Merchandiser needed In
.
-lnfOcision
Gallia and Meigs_Counties
Management
tor National Company, start·
ing pay $8.50 per hour,
Corporation is
Send resume to P.O. Box
--•YOiAIIRDiiiiiiSAiiiLEili
GALUPOLIS'O.- . currently adding 192, _Evans, WV 25241

I

r

. M~:u~ Ieo :~

~
0PI'OimJNJIY

lt2 used homes . under
$3,000. Will help with deliv·
!NOTICE I
ery. Cat! Harold, 740-385OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- 9948.
lNG_ co. f!JCOmm~nds that 1994 Schult 16)(72 Mobile
you do busmess W!lh people Home Priced to sell Quick
you know, and NOT Ia_send Call(740) 385·2434
money through ttle ma11 unfll
· you have investigated the 1996 Clayton . 14X60 2br,
·
glamour bath, all electric,
central air. Call (304)6?5~
8180
.
93 Holly Park, 3 bedroom,
TURNED DOWN ON
32 bath, front porch &amp; mudroom, central air &amp; hea1;
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? 15 ,000 . firm,
Serious
NoFeeUnlessWeWint
inquires only. . (740)2561·888- 582"3345
6360

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All reale~tate advertlllng
In this newsplper .l •
subfectto the Faderll
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race, co~. religion, HX
familial atatua or national

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2 bedroom, 2 bath, River

Valley School district. 5275
I
.
~~~6~~~ nce &amp; deposit.
· ·
2 bedroom, all electric, AC,
very nice, in Gallipolis.

2

(740)446·2003 or (740)446·
1409

3 bedroom trailer· all elec·
tric water paid $350 month
·
•
·
'
.$100 deposit. (740)3670611 aHer 6:00 on weekdays .
Beautitut River View Ideal
For 1 Or 2 People,
Reference~ Deposit, No
Pets, Foster Trailer Park,
740-441-D181 .

MUST SELL BY THE END
OF OCTOBER! COLE'S
MOBILE HOME, Athens,
Oh"IO 1740) 592 • 1972• on
occasion we have a display
home that •••
........,.sn•t sel1. we
have one such home now.
New 16 X 80 thrM bedroom,
2 Bath home at a used
home· price come S!e Lynn
or Ernie today and check out Mobile home for rent.
your savings. Remember, (740)446·1279
t 11 b th
d 1
~~~~~! se y e e~ 0
APARTMEf(fS

r

Must sell I Owner mov8d,
2001 Oakwood 14x70, 3BA,
. 2 bath, all appliances, .,\,ash, d
· 1d d
t 1
er· a "lhryer
' cen
d mc
k uMe ke
d ra
Sir WI
ec • a
own
payment &amp; take over $370
month morlage payments
(216 )351 "7086

~~

Ir Wa~=~ I

FOR RENT

Jn

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t988 Ford F·t50 p-up. gqo
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Rotlweller pups 12 weeks t
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.
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RaV Fo11 Terrier pu.ppies, 2
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Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
1st Thursday or.
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5FREE

OBO.

1996 S·10 Extended Cab.
88K, $4,292; 1997 Ranger
Bundy Trombone\ Case, XLT, automatic, 71 K, $4295;
Music ·
stand, S125. · 1986 Silverado, 4x4, .n8w
Goodwrench, 350, loaded.
$3995. 15 ca.., In stOCk·
Cavalier, Grand Am's a'nd
others. COOK MOTORS
(740)446-Q
. t03
1 .. ,.,.~,.
JAYr.,.;,JV\..K
1997 Chevrolet 1500 4x4,
79,000 m1les, while, extended cab, must seel $14,5~
.15 year old Tennessee . (740)446·2797 after7pm ..: ~
Walker gelding &amp; 2 saddles;
·
_
21 month old Toy poodle,
VANS &amp;
male,$ completely housebro4-WDs
ken, 150. (740)245·1217

'\

\1 hi\ II~

--.::::--~----., 1994 F-150 112to'n 2 wh0el
MUSICAL

•

(740) 992-582 2

t990 Dodge Ttuck. 2V'ID,
auto, runs good, $1300
060. Call aller 10pm,
(740)256-t875
'

'-.-~INsrR~,:,:::m:::IENI'S~~..,J

Maln,enanoe Job•

(340 773-5412
Cell 304 674-3082

I

.ALLtEL
Cellular

Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

TFN

! • Room AddUions &amp;

Bedliners • Nerf Bar
~ Tonneue Cover •

'

drive.
$4.200.
(304)675-t57t

Jim Ruark
Eleetr:lc. Plumbing,
and Smell Home

PlUIDBIDG

YOUNG'S
MANLEYS
CARPENTER
SElf STORAGE i1 ·SERVICE

.

"'-UCKS

a FOR SALE
•

~73::9:.;'----~--

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

to.,:'tHe

'::'~tli e
' ;. '
g,. fO·.
present ~n, . ·
.the list.- the ,.· ~- ,
Daily Sentinel
Classifieds
have great gifts in
every
shape in size!
.

~s.. - \
~t~:~~~C:aturday ~~~~
L---~iiiiioill;ou;iilii,__.J 5P.m, Closed Sunday's.

j .

J&amp;S ELECTRIC 6

JUST launched! II
LOSE WEIGHT
NOW! Burns FAT!
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
All Natural/Doctor
Recommended
Get this AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie
740-992·7996
or visilwebsite:
www.harbondltt.com

J

.

4C k S
. I
I .
oc er panle pupp es .e
wks old asking $225.00 dew
claws. and tails docked,
shots
and
wormed.
(74())742·2525
:......:_________
AKC Registered Golden
Retrievers, approx 9 weeks
h (740)367
0ld ' $'00
"
eac ·
·

SeU·Storage
740-992-5232

j

91 Beech St. ; • Remodeling
NeW Gar1ge1 ,.
· • Electrleef PlUmbing
middleport, OH i •Roofing Gutters
• VInyl Siding Painting
&amp;

&amp;

&amp;

(10'x10' &amp;10'1120')

• Patio and Porch De.c ks

(140) 992•3194

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6635

Free Estimates
992-6215
Pomer~ .

Ohio

22 Years Local

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; ·
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major J\.fedical
• Nursing Home
.,..,_

i1J

...

r

i

P•m Jenkins
740-742 2307
•
Congretulatlonal You have
won 2 free movie tickets to
the
Spring
Valley
7
Gallipolis. Call the Sentinel
for details. (740)992•2155)
•y &amp;
0

r

DEPOYSAG

PUTS

I

uA.

L---.OGiiRAiiiiiNii·--,.1
-,

I

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

.
~

Case-IH Pans
Dealers
1000 St. Rl. 7South
Coolville, OH 45723

·

r
I .

740-667-0363

1988 Dodge ·Dakota p·up,
00 o ·· ·1
&amp;
1 ,o 0 m1es, air, .ti11
cruise, bed liner, tool box,
new back bumper' $975 ' •
{740)992·5267
:.._..:__ _ _ _ ___...;_
1989 Chevy Silverado 4K4
Blazer, good condition run!!;
good, rio calls after 10pm.
mileage over 100,QOQ,
$4000, (740)742-2307

Ears of Corn tor ~ale . 1996 Ford Windstar van,
(304)675·1506
auto, 1air, rear air, bucket
seats, excellent conditian.
For s ale: Round Bales of beautiful van, one owner.,
Hay, 5 tared Inside. 1·740· $7,000, (740)742·2897
698·8211
1996 GMC Jimmy 4x4.
65,000 miles. Lealher, 4·
door, air,
tilt, cruise,
PW/I'OL, asking $t0,000
1740)386·92t7

!
I

www.mydailysentinel .com

.

ES Jackson. Ohio. 1-800·
'
537-9528
978 Bonneville, $400, ruils
great, (740 )379 . 2359
Wood burner for sale, S400 .
(740)379·2389
Lively's Auto Sales 1992
Otds Achiev~. $,200; 1997 .
BUILDING
Dodge Dynasty, 1650; t9l!O
SUPPLIES
Pontiac Grand Am, $900;
1993 Ford Taurus , 51600 ;
.
1992 Plymouth sundanCe,
B!ock, bri~. sewer pipes, $1000;
1990
ChEWy
WJ~dows, ll~tels, etc. Claude Cavalier, $750; 1988
W1nters, R1o Grande, OH Chrysler LeBaron, s6oa:
Call740·245·5121
1985 lsuzu Pup, $800. Call

I

I

-==-------

9-55- K Caterpillar track 1980-9D's Cars/ Trucks from.

I

, .

s

r:

1

r
°

Sheila Buchanan
Home National Bank
(tt) 6,7,8 3TC

"

,_ m oii'IIUIOI. r.. m hmw pKtup
Call .. r... oll}'(U~~

Massey Ferguson

4044

r

I

949-2210.

o,.o ......s...

OchCmkC &amp; Gravely

JONES'

riO

_.11·.

i

L__..:;FO:::R,;;SALE:;;;:;._,J

4·1 0 ·DJohn Deere Rubbo•
tire Backhoe,
$10,000;

I

..L

\'\'-ol"l II{ t \Ill l \

loader, $12,000. Both in '$500. Police Impounds tor
good condition. (740)388· sale. For listing 1·800·71.9·
9327
3001 ext. 3901
.
·
·
sx7 ut1llly trailer, 4 newt1res, 1966 Pontiac Suntire, white,
.(740)446-1279
newpaint,withfoldupramp._ auto, arnlfm radio, CD . pl~y·
Asking $250 OBO. Call "er, power sunroof, tinted
{740)441·1238 leave mes- wirldows, liew brakes ; &amp;
sage
tires, one owner, interior,&amp;
HOUSEHOLD
Aff rd bl
G
Wcterior in e11ceflent condi·
1
1
Goons
o 1 • • N'lcnven en
lion $6 000 call (740)992·
WOLFF TAN fNQ BEDS
aft'er ~m
l
Low Monthly trtmstments
· :
For Sale: · Reconditioned
Home Delivery
f990 Red Chevy Gee
h
d
nd l "g
FR EC
c 1
was ers, ryers a re" ·
E olor ata 00
Storm, AIC, $800. (740)446·
erato.rs.
ThoJmpskons Call Today 1-800-711-()1 58 · 4226·
·
App 1lance . 3407 · ac son
www.np.etstan.com
Avenue, (304)675-7388.
1992 Chevrolet
Lumifla
NEW AND USED STEEL Euro, 4 door sedan, 51,500
Good used Appliances, Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Phone (740)446-3479 after
Aecon d'foned
and For
Conere Ie,
Ang Ie, 5pm.
·
II
Guaranleed.
Washers, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Dryers,
A anges,
and Gratmg
·
For
Dra•ns,
·
1999 Lincoln ToWncar..
Refrigerators, Some start at Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Signature Series,
CO/
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 Scrap Metals Open Monday, Cassette, lealher, loaded;
Vine St., (740)446·7398
Tuesday, Wednesday ~ one owner,
showroOm
Molloha·n C:arnet 202 Clark Friday, 8am-'4:30pm. Closed clean.
$15,700. Firm,
-,.. '
. Thursday, Saturday &amp; (740)446·1000. Leave masChapel Road, Porter, .0 h!o. Sunday (740)446-7300
sage.
. .
: .
(740}446-7444 1-877·630· ;:..:;.;::;;.·.:.;·~~::..;.:.:.;~,
9162. Free Estimates, Easy New Gas
Inter· Therm· 2001 Ford Mustang Coupe
financing, 90 days same as Furnace, 77,000 BTU., New 2dr. Power steering/win·
cash. Visa/ Master Qard. Gas Water heater· ~2.000 dow/door locks, 32,000
Drive- a·litlle save alot.
BTU, 40gal., New Cook miles. EKcellent Condltl ~n .
Used lutn" ure slore t·3o
· St~ GE Gas, ..usea·tuel oil · $l3.000. (304)81li:?,~59
n
F •
~.)
·
Bula"llle
Pike. we sell' mat- gun L urnace. 13 u.. 675 - 2002 Dodge M!ori,
6200
"
''
tresses,
bunk
beds, 3000 eave message.
miles, sunroof\ auto, air, tilt.
c
k
•
dressers, couches, app 1I· ROCK BOTTOM PRICES
D, needs little bo:dY ~~ '
ances, much more. Grave ste"el buildings, buy direct &amp; $4500 OBO. (740)256·1""3
monuments. {740)446·4782 save big 20x24 $2400· 2002 Jeep Liberty, LTD,
Gallipolis, OH.
· 25x24, '$2950; ' 30K30; 17,000 miles, mint, leather,
.
h
$95 . $3950; 40x48, $5975; Call CO, many .extras, s19 ,500 .
Whirlpool was er, · $ ' 1-800·334·8411
(740)245-5978, !~ave m~s·
Ken'!lore
Dryer,
9?-;
.
Relngerator, $95; Electnc Waterline Special: 314 200 . :"~g:::•:.
· ------'-'Range, $96: Upright freezer, PSI $21.00 Per 100, 1" 200 73 VW Beetl~. rebuilt
$125; Caloric gas range, PSI $35.00 Per 1QO· All engine,
newer
parts
very nice, $195; Whirlpool Brass Compression Fitilngs throunhout, call for deta~s.
washer. dryer set, $275; In stock.
II'
Solid wood table with chairs, RON EVANS ENTERPRIS- ~~::o or 080· ( 740 ) 5 ~·

·r

I

r10

II~

,;...t,..,.,l

·r"'IO;;;;;;;;...;;A_liiUS...;..__'"'I

1 bedroom apartment, 920
New 2003 14 ·wide. Only 4th Avenue, $300 per month
$799 down and only utilities included one person,
$159.45. Call Nikki, 740· $350 per monlh tor couple.·
385·7671.
(740)446-8677 (740)256·
1972
Informed lhlt all
Nice-lots available for up to ·
'
dwelnna••dvertlaedln
16x60 mobile homes, $115 1 Bedroom Apartments
thla newliJ•per are
water included, (740)992· Starting
at
$289/mo,
•vllllble on an equ11
.
washer/ Dryer Hookup ,
2167
opportunity btMI.
Stove and Refrigerator.
BUSINF1iS
(74())441·t519.
$t25; Skaggs Appliances,
AND BUD.J)INGS
b
. h d 76 VIne Street. (740)446·
1
edroom un1urms e 7398
HOMES
apartment. Probable client.
FORSA.I..E
BuildingforsaleWithorwith· (304)675·1550
I
..,
. out stock at 62 Olive Street, 1 ooni :th shared bath ·
.t\NnQUES
·
Gallipolis,
OH
4563t.
r
WI
·
'
$14,900, 4 bedroom, 4 bath , (740)446-3159
~7 2nd, ~200 per month
.'
home. Won't last! For listing
•ncludes utilities, (740)446· Buy or setl. Ri"Jerilie
call 1·800-719-3001 EKt.
Jeff Northup
8677 (740)256-1972
Antiques, 1124 East Main
F144
Congratulations! _You have 2 bedroom apartment for on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
sq.ft .
bedroom,
won 2 ·free mov1e tickets to rent In Syracuse, $200 992·2526. Russ Moore,
2
1800
3
bath In Porter on 314 acre the Spring Valley 7 in deposit $ 350 per month owner.
Gallipolis. Call the Tribune
· • de
.
to our staH! Come MGR Personal tor local fast wi1h large building on lot. tor details. {740 )446.2342 rent, Inc1u s wa 1er, sewer Carolina Antique &amp; Craft
Fnoay, Saturday, Nollember .
work with the
foOd operation. 2 years food New siding and roof.
&amp; trash, (740)378-6111
Mall . 312 6th. St. Pt.
7-8, 9·4 :00pm, 131 Oak
ser'\lice e11perience &amp; good $60,000. {740)441 ·4705
Office space or other pur· ·2 bedroom apartment in Pleasant, WV. "Antique &amp;
Dnve, Spring Valley, huge
BEST!
·people skills. Must be a self
.
pose, located at 28 Cedar Gallipolis. Air wa!lher, &amp; Craft Vendors Welcome.
variety
Call.·Today for an
starter. Very good starting 3 bedroom. Gartleld Avenue, Street (740)256·666t
dtyer hook-up, no pets.
wages. Paid vacation and G!!llip~tla,
OH . Owner
MiscElLANEOUS
Rummage Sale- Grace
lntervl8wl
other benefits insurance tlnanong, $49,000. $4,000
Lars &amp;
water "paid, $350Jmo. plus
MERCHANDISE
United Methodisl Church·
a"Jailabte. 5enci resume tO down,
$365
month.
ACREAGE
deposit. Call after 6pm, __
Mary ot Bethany, Cedar
(304)968 0664
(740)446-4043 (740)339·
CLA
566, c/o
Gallipolis
Dail1
•
3063
BURN
BLOCK
Street Entr._nce, Friday,
1i
·b
PO
B
Fat
1- 877-463 -6 247
' 1 une,
N
be 8 1
· ·
o.: 469 ' 3 or 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1/2 acre lot on Tycoon L.ake
c ·
a~d
BOOST
ovem r rom eam-2pm.
ext. 2454
Gallipolis, OH 45831 . .
basement. New windows, w/12x60TrailerS16,50b.oo · 2-~f!lall turnlshed apts. ~ll E~~~~~gtike
You Have
4
YARD SA• "L_ _ _ _ __,,__. ,---,...-............,,....,...., siding, root HVAC\ plumbing, now $13 500 00 ·
utlhtun paid except Electr•c. Never Experl·enced.
~
No Pela, 1 has a shower, 1
·Pol\tEROYIMIDDU&gt;
wiring. Garage, -covered ( 740 ) 247 · 1100
has a tub. Security Deposit
WEIGHT· LOSS
· Needing a trus1Worthy lady
patio, large yard. Convenient
Required. $275. Month
REVOLUTION
•
Grape Street. (740l 446 ·
(304)676·1365
Newproducllaurfc h.October
Biggie yard &amp; bake sale· tastaywlthanetdertyladyin
her home, round lhe clock
Experience
3t08 a«er 6:00pm.
REAL FsrAn:
23, 2002 . Call Tracy al
ThurSday, Friday, Nov. 7th 8. care
For more info please
WANTED
2br. Apartment at Gallipolis (740}441-1982
1
2000 sq ft home,
8th,
Long
Bottom
required In
New
Ferry. (304)675 •2548
call (304)773-5126 it no
minutes from
Hospilal.
Community Building , 9·??
answer ptease leave mes·
hardware-or
Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp;:
Complete abOve ground Will pj,y top dollar tOr prime
Repairs. Problems? Need
GARAGE SALE:
:sa~g:::•:.
· -----lumber 11111.
pool wllh porch. dtlveway land. New hOme builder. BEAUTIFUL
APART- Tuned? Call The Piano Dr.
NOVEMBER 81rom 9 a.m.-3
PRODUCTION •
and garage loundation. (740)446·3093
MENTS
AT
BUDGET 74().446 _4525
p.m.• 9th, 9-t2, camper,
DEP.\RTMENT
Thomas-Do-lt
Ptlce below appral,al.
PRICES AT JACKSON
exercise
bike,
new We have Part·time openings
Center
(740)446·3384.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Hotpolnt range S35; Brown
Christmas items, nice cloth·
· ·
··
$
t $
Sleeper sola, $95·, Singer
1 ~
0 rv~
in our product1on, packagtng
Gllllpolllloclllon
SAVE $5,000, Buy From
uum 297 O 383 ·
ing, 32581 Hy~ell Run .
&amp; distribution area.
L..:::~!::::..:::.:::=;::_...J Owner, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, r.r:r--~---..., Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call Portable Sewing machine,
· 1 $35; Oak dininn table, two
740-446 2568
Equa
Yard sale- County Ad. 19,
'Must be depen dabl e
Truck Driver wanted, call large Ranch house, 2 car r10
H
"
. Maurer reSiden ce, Slh &amp; 9th,
·At least 18 years of age
(740)682·6402
'garage, 1/2 acre lot, price,
OUSF.S
Housing Opportunity.
&amp;Mtensions and 6 chairs,
Friday &amp; Sat., 9_4
•Clean driving record
FOR RENf
.
$275; Kerosene hea lers,
63 ,000 . Call {740)446 .
·Mechanical aptitude helpful
4737 after 5pm for appoint·
Efficiency apartment, fur- $15 each or 21$25. Apple
·Must be flexible with regard
. ment.
·
nlshed, $400 all utilities compuler/ monitor/ key·
1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed included . $100 deposit, board/ over a dozen CD pro·
\VAN1EJ&gt;
to work hours
1140
BUSINESS
TO BUY
· ·Must be able to lift 50 lbs
TRAINING
Two bedroom·. cottage style Homes From $f99/Mo., 4% (740)367·0611 after 6:00 on grams, $125; .Portable bas·
,_ _ _ _ _,..1 Applybetween7 :00-9:ooam.
home, finished upstairs, full Down, 3.0 Years at 8.5% weekdays
ketball pole/ net, $35. Call
Monday· . Friday to Don
bSsement, well maintained APR . For listings, 800-319(740)367 -0667
AbsOlute Top Dollar · uS Co~eman at The Gallipolis Gallipolis Career College ptuS 10 acres 91 ground; 3323 Ell!. 1709.
Furnished 3 rooms +bath, :.:.....::.:~;:..:;:....____
Silver,
Gold Coins, Daily 11"/bune or send your (Careers Close To Home) road frontage, call (740)949·
upstairs, clean , no . pets.
JET
Prootsets, Diamonds, Gold resume to his attention clo Call Today! 740·446·4367, 8900 Danny Brown lor 2 story, 4 bedroom house, 3 Reference
&amp;
deposit
AERATI ON MOTORS
Rings,
U.S Currency,. Gallipolis Daily Tribune. P.O.
1·800·21 4-Q452 ,
appointment
car garage, II'Jing room, fam· required. {740)446·1519 . Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
M.TS , Coin Shop, 151 Bo x 469. Gallipolis. OH
Re~:~ t90·05-1274B.
ily room, and eXtras, $550 a
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
Country Home with 11 -1/2 month, $250 deposit, 1 year Furnished Efficiencies, aU 800-537·9528
· Second A11enue. Gallipolis, 45631.
740-446 ·2842
.,,.,..,...~~----, · acres . 314br. 2ba., 2 Car· lease, pets alaid. {740)388· utilities paid, share ·rbath,
·
tiiO
Garage, above ground pool, 8699
$135 month, · 919.... 2nd - - - - - - - - I· \11'1 0' \II'\ I
Respiratory Therapist need· ·
.
WTANTilDO
Do
Handcrafted kitchen cabi · br. house' lor rent t
~A.:cve::.nccue;c'_:l7_4c;0:...)44_6.:.·.:.39_1ol5
_ _ Lexington Oak .loft Beds
~1 · 11111"1-,
506 ...,.
ed for a fast growing medical
. nets. Off Leon Baden Ad. 2
with 2·shelfs, pull -out desk,
p;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~quipment co. In o·ur .
. (3!)4)458·1580
Ohio Street, Pt. Pleasant.
&amp; bulletin board built in . Twin
110
Gallipolis,
OH
store.
Send
Ch"ld
.
bl
.
d
~(7-:-4(l..:.)e-44_t:...·0.:.7.:2;;;0____
.
bed
under loft bed. Both
1 care ava1 1a e 1n own
Gracious livmg. 1 and 2. bed·
HE LP m·nAN1ED
resume to Medi·Home Care.
.
· Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
mattresses, bunkie boards,
L
PO e 987 G 11· 1· OH town Pomeroy• private pay · tract SSOO down to qualified 3 bedroom house in Bidwell. room apartments at Villane
" mattres~ pads Included.
and
Riverside $350. EKcellent Condition.
4.56.3t oA'-n·. J·ohan Klpoealrsn,s or ~ly, providing 24 hr. ser'\1· buy~rs. Call (740)446-3570 References requ ired. No M~nor
~~
1ce call (740)992 5827 tor
pets, S550 month, $550 Apartments in Middleport.
11(18102 Health Dept DON ·stopbyMedi·HomeCareto
• .
.
·
lora quick sale.
deposit, t;:.king applications. From $2 78 _$ 348 _ Calt 740 • (304)675·6787after6pm .
neede~ , 35 ll_ex hrs/w~ . get a apRiication, 430 more lnfor.matlon.
),45.t 4 t 8
.
1740
992 _5064 _ Equal Housl·ng Model 1938 Turkish Mauser
Ad minisIra I1ve /F1sca I expen· Second Avenue. Gallipolis, Georges Porlable Sawmill Land home packages. No -··.::::.;:•,.::.:.;:..:::______
Opporlllnilles.
ence/BSN
preferred , OH 45631, (740)4&lt;16·3880. don't hau·l your logs to th8 payments while under con- 3 bedroo~ house, no pets, --"'---------'---- 8mm Rifle· with Free
, $~6 ,000/yr. ~740)992·6626
. .
struction. Little
or . no 265
$
T
Bayonet and Scabbard free
125
Security Guards. full time· mllljUSI call304-675· 1957. down payment reqwred " (l40),;;~~~t
deposit ~~w ~ek~~g ~ppt~;~i~~s; 70 'rounds or Ammo. $100.
Auto body man· experl· S6. 50 .,. per hour. C"alf Honest, dependable mother {740)446-3218
'-b.:.:;c.:h.:.:.::.:.;:...._ __- - Townhouse fpartments, only 4 lett FFL Dealer Cali"
enced In metal labricaling, (304)615-5234 _ M-F after will babysit in my home. Call Wantedl Good credit cus· 3 r. ouse 2609 Lmcoln Includes Wat~r Sewage (304)675-2352
bodywork, welding &amp; paint- 4pm.Ask lor KMh EOE
(l40)441 •0564
tomer s to purchase new Ave. $425. month+ deposit. ·Trash 5350 /Mo. 740 _446 : .:.:.:,.
. "--::...::.=:. ---mg. call Hill's Classic Cars
Ref. No Pets. (;J04)675-2749 oooa.'
'
314 karat solitaire ring, ask·
lng $1500 ·o eo. Would
Aestorahon s, 7am -10pm, Truck Drivers, Immediate Will clean your home or hom~ . wlland. $0 down to
hire, class A COL required, orlice, weekly, biweekly, or quahf!ed customers:· 1·5 3br. House in Henderson.
make good Christmas pres·
(7 40)949·2217
eMcellent pay, experience monthly. Call (740)441·0564 acre
tracts
available. 1raundry, fenced yard, out- Twin River• Tower lor eld· ent. (740)388-6414
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or requireq . E1rn up to $1,000.
(740)446·3093
building.
Deposit
&amp; erly/ disabled.
Sell
Sh trley Spears, 304· p_er . week.Call 304·675·
• \'
Mono" HoME~~·
AefeJences. (304)675-4082 Now acceptirig applications 3/4 size Violin, made in
675·1429
4005
.£
:..:J
Czechoslovakia, $150; 1
JoOR SALE
3br. House located in for 1 br, all utilities paid HUD Kerosun heater, like new,
East of Ch1cago Pizza Co.
WORK FROM HOME
Mason, WV.. $495. +Utilities. -assisted, carpeted apart- $100. (740)446·0893
no hinng all shifts and dnvPo tential $1500/mo/pt
~NEWSPAPERS
No Pets. (304)773-5881
ment. rent is 30% of your ::.:.;::.:.:~==:=:....__
er·s. please apply withm,
(2) 14M70, 3 bedroom, 2
$5000/molft Free Info
Cover All The
adjusted income calf 304- New Infant swing, Pack and
t5 40 Eas1ern Avenue,
1-800·92 1\4412
._::. Mo;or Subjec ts! balh, 1 an electric, 1 gas, 5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St, 675-6679 between 8·4:30 Play walker, Call {740)446·
Gal11oolis
(740)446·1279
$325 mo. (740)446·3945
"ry·v_reekdays.EHO
7216 a1te1 6pm.
·
www acu(l ui refre~,_om com

r

••

Free va·rd S~le Sign!
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

For Renl 6 room turnished Mobile Home lot lor ;enl.
house
in
Mason. Extra targe. Very private,
Contractors
welcome. Gallipolis, Ohio. $115. per
(304)773-5784
month. Phone (304)576MOBILE HOMES 19922
Space tor rent for mobile
·
FOR RENT
~ home, all 51·zes 10 SO'

s

--

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

POLICIES: Ohio V.Uey Publllhlng reHtVMIM right to ~t. ret.Ct, or.c1Mlel eny 11:1 111ny time. Errort mu11 be Nport.d on the tlrtl CIIY or
TrlbuM-hntiMI-ftegllter will be rtlponelble for no men thlln tiM coet of lhe 1pace occupied by the error and only theflr•t lnMf11on. W•
any 10M or expenM thtt ruub from thl publication or oml..lon ol an lldY•ftiHment Conwotlon wlh bt made In the flret av.llabrt edltl~. • loJI
,,. 1lw1p ooni,.,Uel. • Currt~nt rat• c•rd 1ppll... • All ,.., utile adv..UMmentl .,.
ta the Flderel Fair Hou•tng Act or 1168. • Thll
aoceptt only
ICII mtt1tng EOE ltlndardl. Wt will not knowingly
In vkJIItlon of the law.

• Include Complete
Description • Include A Prlcf: • 'Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

1621.

r

Display Ads

In-Column : 1 : 00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for · Insertion
In Ne)(t Day's Paper
' ·

• Stert Your Ads Wlth .A Keyword

Help wanted caring lor the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
Why wait? Start meeting now paying minimum wage,
Ohio singles tonight, call toll new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7amfree

Word Ads

c

Ill bids or to remove
any unll at the sale at
anytime.
Arrangements may
be made to Inspect
any of the above
colloteral prior to the
11le by ceiling 740·

Firewood
for Sale
BALL
LOGGING &amp;
FIREWOOD

I

Oecul/1ir~
Ot~lly

parking
lot
the
following
Mobile
Home.
1 99 3
LA VTON
MOBILE
HOME
CLM05580&amp;TN
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
The terms of eale
ere caeh.
The Home National
Bank reeerves the
right to relecl 1ny or .

Best Service a1
the Best Price

I

r

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

446-3ooa

PllbHc Notices in New•papers.
Your Right to Know, DeHvered Right to Your Door.

·2002 Honda Ranchel 350.
2-w-d.
$3200 00, 1995 Honda. 300,
The Melge C o u n t y - - - - - - - - .
2·w-d, $2000, (740)742·
Boord of Revlelon hll
Public Notice
·• 2821
completed Ita work of
2003 883 Custom Horley equalization . The tax Melge SOli and Water
Davidson with 100 miles. raturna lor tax year Conservation Dlatrlct
"' Many Extras. Dealership 2002
have
been Opal Dyer, Program
lnslalted. Excetlent condi·
Admlnlatrltor
tlon. St3.200 Invested. Must revlnd and the valuaNovember 1, 2002
eell lot $9,700. (304)773- !lone completed and
are open lor public;,
5268
Inspection In the
Public Notice
' ~t!a~:S~~~·=~e~l:'r! olllce of the Mel.g s
dllion, will take pay on. CountY
Auditor,
Meigs SWCO Ilk·
Second
Floor, lng sealed bids one
1740)682·?783
·
Courthouee, Second Donahue trailer SeNti
AIITO PARTS &amp;
Street, Pomeroy, OH.
147994. Trailer sold
:
A~
.. Complaint• against "81 Is" condition and
·~ .
.
the valuatlona, as mlnlinum bid $500.
A Flteslone sleet llex all. eatabllehed for tax Information call 74DAt6. $tOO, year 2002 muet be 992-4282. mall to:
made In accordance Melgl SWCO, 33101
with Section 5715.19 Hlllnd
Road,
r,;~;;.;~;;.;;;.;;;.;;;; of the Ohio Revlaed Pomeroy, OH 45788
HOME
Code . Theae com· to be received by
IMPROVEMENI5
plaints must be ftled J1nuary 9, 2003. Bids
• on forms which will be opened 11 January
BASEMENT
furnished by the 2003 board meeting.
WATERPROOANG
county Auditor and M.,k
envelope
Unconditional liletime guar· muet be flied In the "Truck Bid". The
; . amee. Local raferences tur- County
Audl_tor'l Dlstrlcl raaerv• the
nlshed. Established t975. Offtce on or before the rlgh' to rejiiCt any or
Call . 24 Hts. (74()) 446· 31st day of March all bids.
0870, Rogers Basement 2003. All complalnte
. • _Watotptoofing.
flied with the County (11) 8, 200~
• ••
Auditor will be heard
: C&amp;C
General
Homo by the Board of
• , Malntenence· Painting, vlnyt Revlalon In the man• ~-P-u-b-ll_c_N_o-tl_c_e....;.._
siding, carpentty, doots, ner
provided by __...,..;....;.._ _ __
•I
windows, baths, mobile section 5715.19 olthe
home repair and more. For 0· hi0 A I1 ed Cod
On
Saturday,
tree esllmale call Chel, 740·
ev
•·
November
9, 21102 at
992-8323.
Nancy
Parker
10:00 a.m. the Home
Campbell
•;p40 Eucnuool
Melga County Auditor National Bank will
RmuGERAnDN (10) 30, 31, (11) 1, 4, s, ofter lor 11le at public
auction on the Bank
:
8,7,8,11,12
Ritaldentlal or commercial
wiring, new service or
· repalra. Mas1er Licensed
CHECK US OUT ON -LINE
··e..ctrlcia.n.
Ridenour
. Elttelrlcal, WV000306. 304•• 675·1786.

In one week Wi.t h us

Call TOday...

state

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

'

....~""South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417
"W.Vs #I Chevy. Pontiac, Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer·

Art pulald anil
Yll c•llllllltllllllllllr flEE IIIII

11IIIIIIIIC.II

""'

..........

.... .

'

Ctll•llhllcllll

'•
Houra

.'

..

New&amp; Used

JII.IE
IIJIIIITIII CIU

45nl
740.8411-22t7

•

Dean Hill

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

•

740-992-2222 or
740.446-1018

BISSEll

BUILDERS IRC.

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

740-992-7599

�..

--~
'

'

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, November 6, 2002

www.mydallysentinel.com
BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

~~PHILLIP
~--· ,

JF/h
·-

ACROSS

ALDER

1 Chess
pieces

6 "Kublll
41 Grain crop
Khen"" lite 42 Columnist
. 12 WhodUnits
- Landers
14 MlkH gloMI 43 Stomach
15 Uk8 Zon
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17 Amln of
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18 Mo. for ·

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44
46
48
51

the gym
Creek safes
Tack on
Kind of lrt1
M-CII

Ubno
noises
19 Corral
55 Hums
21 Moneleur"s 56 Ski-lodge
wine
shspe
23 Dogma
(hyph.)
26 Alphabet
57 Fnends
ender
58 Beckpeck·
27 Swrimp
In~ gear
28 Ph&lt;&gt;tograOWN
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Down
Chong
40 Muoeum
contents

" !'

u the
weather

Beaton

OpeninR lead: • -1

30 Above, In
verse
31 Legs! deg,
32 Give on
address
33 Pimiento

Bid first
BY PHIWP AlDER
, Larry . Cohen's
"Bidding Challenge"
(Master Point Press.
2002) is an unusual
book. It gives detail s
of
135 deals that were
~ Wf'l~~fS T~f ruTTON
played ,!luring. se:ven
.
FOil "yl ITtU&gt;IlAW .
expert-only tnvitational pair events held
CASf'l, f&gt;O{'I'T
in Europe, But before
ft/,.L
you read about t~e
deal s, you can btd
· MY ·.
them first, using the
BA/..ANCt''1
tear-out sheets in the ·
back . Cohen describes the action at
his table, and sometimes elsewhere, and
tells you how you
would have scored. .
Look only at the
North hand . East , on
your left. opens ~me
diamond , showmg
11- 15 points with at
least two diamonds .
Your partner overcalls one no-trump .
After a pass on your
right, what would you
do?
If you opt to bid
'"" two clubs, Stayman,
SIGI-\ -;,
partner replies two
diamonds, denying a
four-card major .
·
What now?
At the table, the
Italian world champion Lorenzo Lauria
did bid two clubs,
Stayman. I agree with
that However, when
his partner answered
with two diamonds, I
think he should have
. - - - - - - - , - - , .PliSSed. But he aggressively pushed
with an invitational'
two no-trump. South,
Alfredo Versace,
passed, but they were
now too high,
Cohen led the club
four: heart five, club
10, club queen. Versace attacked diamonds, but David·
Berkowitz (East)
carefully held up his
ace until the third
11
W~O I=IXES YOUft
round, and Cohen acWI-I AT DOE 5 TI-l AT
' LUNC~. KID? II
curately discarded the
ONE SAY, SIR.?
club jack. This told
East that South had
the ace and king of
clubs, so he shifted to
·the heart two. The de·
clarer never saw his
hand again, and the
defenders took five
major-suit winQers to
go with the diamond
ace for one down.
The book is $18.95
postpaid from Baron
Barclay Bridge Sup( plies. Call (800) 2742221 to order.

holder
35 Cast a

1 ER staffers
2 Cry of

delight

Husky's
vehicle
6 Rare gss
5

"zebra""
38 Pondemonlum

7 NovelistWaugh

39 Actress -

9 Bar mem.
1o Computer
key
11 Wear and
tear
13 Whine
19 Kitchen

8 Worse,

Took off
Swerving
Canal ohe
Ocean

• TilE BORN LOSER
V"'

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TO TIU t-1 K. M.'( LUC.K. ,
Wf\Q ~ B.C\t&gt; L WJLCN'I ~~
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'0'
I

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.

'

PEANUTS
&amp;UE55 Wlo!AT I !-lAVE F"9R
LUNCH, MARCIE .. ;llURTV• I=IVE
FORTUNE COOKIES! .

BETTY

'

47 Adroh
48 COtmetlc

tool

20 In 1 weird

BY KEviN KEU.V
News editor

..rety org . •

49 Fortify
50 Pronoun lor

Mlu Piggy

CHESHIRE - With 90 percent of the village being sold to
American Electric Power,
Cheshire officials are starting
the proress of disballding its village goVernment and incorporation status.
ViUage council has retained
Assistant
Gallia County
Prosecutor Jeff Adkins to investigate the legal issues and draft a
petition for dissolving the village.
.
The petition, which must
CliiT)' 40 percent of the voters in
the last municipal election. wiU
be presented to the county
Boan:l of Elections for placement on the ballot, possibly in a

52 Sallow
toppers
53 CPR pro
26 Kind of lens 54 Some, to
21 Laoveln a
Yvette
hurry
28 Sheepfold

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

If you hope to realize all the

rewards and su&lt;.:cesses you are

GARFIELD

.
-

lI

capable of achieving in the
year ahead. pattence and dc-

TOOK M&lt;;J BAL-l. OF YARN
FOR A WAL-K

termi narion w111 be rcqu1rcd .

Rushing mailers will throw
lhings out of k11ier.
SCORI'IO [Oct. 24-Nov,
22 \ .. Being adventurous with
your hnrd ca~ne_d _ m oney io-

d:w cnuld be m vltmg disaster.
I f "vou h;we to try to r ight an

unprofitable .si tuation, do so

in prat:tical. prudent

w;~ys,_ not

wilh lhe roll of the dtce .
Know w here to look for ro-

mance and you' II find it. The
Astro·Graph Matchmaker in-

THE GRIZZWELLS

s tantly re veals which signs
arc I romantically perfect for

you. Muil $2.75 to Match-

'1-J\-\1&gt;.\ 00 Yoll
Slli'Po!&gt;( 11-\1&gt;.1

\111\MP\-\ 1• •. WARR.t:l-'.
ToLIJ ME \-\E I)J(&lt;oln
\\-\INK TN\ 1\4~

milker.

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13'1 l\\AI ~

'D\1AR?E'VI l''iJ\C.\1..

~.:./o

this newspaper.

' 11'1 1\-\E.

eox

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each leher in the ci pher stands for ano.ther.

·

Today's clue : P equals C

BY CHARLENE HOEfliCH

.

FH

" W Z. ~ V K ·
'

CVZCDV'H

. B TV

News editor

CZZG

PGVIFB

P N G I.""

WPOOTN~

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CGVYVG

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WVDDZ~

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION.- "I never lack material lor my
column when Congress is in session.'' -Will Rogers

humor
.

THAT DAILY

WORD

rUZZLIR

GAM I

.

O lleorro nge

letters

of

the

fQur scrambled words b&amp;

low .fo form four simple~ wOrd.s

R 0 L L AF

I

1

2

US T 0 C

I· I

I I Is

W0 R E M

15

I

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3

1 1 I 1 I

I.

If-

7

I 1 I I

A L C NU .V

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l

Complete the chuckle quoted
by fiiHng In the missing weeds
you develop frOm st.e~ No. 3 below.

SCIU.M·LETS ANSWERS
Mother - Heavy- Woven - Ethics· ACHIEVE

One scientist to his distraught colleague: "One of the
most dangerous forms of human error is forgetting what
you , try to ACHIEVE."

~

CAPRICORN (l)cc. 22-Jan.
19) --A s aCapmorn . it can

j

.

'

special election next Feb. 4.
flllll)d new homes to relocate to
State law requires dissolution when the sale is complete_
of an incorporated community
Property owners who are sellbe' approved by the communi· ing have signed confidentiality
ty's voters.
agreements and are not disclos''That is something the state ing details of the sale, proposed
has highly suggested we do to by viUage officials in the wake
get it rolling," said Councilman of ongoing concerns about
Ron Hammond. "Ultimately, emissions from Gavin, AEP's
it's up to the voters."
largest coal-burning genentting
AEP announced Stlpt. .24 il station in Ohio.
would accept buyout offers
AEP has maintained Gavin's
from most of the property own- emissions are within regulatory
ers in Cheshire, leaving about a standards.
dozen landowners who opted
Hammond said people are
not to sell to the !ltility giant for · expecting to move within the
eltpansion of the neighboring next few months and the village
Gen. Jwnes M. Gavin Power had to begih planning for its
Plant.
change in status. Council was
those piuticipating in the buy first briefed on requirements to
may see ehecks by the end of .disband its government in June.
the year. Some of the particiAdkins "will be drawing up a
pants, like Hammond,· have petition and investigating the

legalities" behind the dissolution, a· rare occasion in Ohio
only being matched now by a
move in Franklin County to
abolish the village of New
Rome, which had been the target of a state auditor's probe.
If the dissolution is approved
and · incorporation
ends,
Cheshire will become pan of
Cheshire Township. The commuinty had existed for more
than a century prior to its
achieving village status in 1953.
Cheshire's heritage is current- ·
ly on display at the Gallia
County Historical Society.
·
"It will probably remain a
spot on the road like Waterloo,
an unincorporated oommuruty Chesire may soon be just a point of. reference as the town'$
and a point of reference," said leaders begin dealing with the buyout.
Hanunond.
·

intcre.sts usurp tunc and atten -

tion that should be devoted to
your more seriou s dcrnnnds.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -· By apprnisioig everyth,ing from a selfish viewpain!. you invite resistance. If
you broaden ypur ·concerns to
include other\ you'll meet
with cooperation.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- Stay away from controversinl. subje cts such as

p ol iri ~s

or re lig ion, becau se people m

general are not in

~he

POMEROY - Pomeroy '$
latest riverfront development
project, 360 feet of boat dockmg below the amphitheater,
was dedicated Wednesday in
a ceremony hosted \!¥ M.E.
Companies
Inc. · · of
Westerville, the project engineering firm.
Pomeroy Mayor John
Biaettnar and John Mood)'.
assistant director of the Oh10
~tlt)~'nt""' tf .~aftlral
~esourcek ·:~oDNR), which
provided $328,000 " for the
construction, cut the ribbon to
officially open the dock. . .
· Randy Stohl, engineer wtth
M.E. Companies, extended a
welcome to the 50 or so resi·
dents who turned out in drizzling rain. He commended
Larry Banks . of Ba~ks
Construction for the qutck
work in gettin~ it constructed.
''This dock IS really permanent," he· said. "It's a 12-inch

thick slab over a steel framing
system ~hich will withstand
tloodin~ and the impact of
debris.'
He noted that ,lights are
already
place and that
water and electric serioice will
eventually be installed, and
added \hat tbe completed
dock is " just phase one of a
bigger plan for this riverfront
area. "
.
Julie Homan, M:E. 's public
relations manager, presented
a plaque. to Blaettnar an~ John
Musseun commemoratl9!!.:~(
the new facftlt1r first 1,1S!ld:
during
the , ~ , , Sten)whe!)l
Festival to acco)llmodate
numerous pleasure boats. . .
"The ODNR has been good
to us," Said Musser, adding
that the project is the "largest
single project ever done on
100 percent funding ."
The only cost to Pomeroy
was $1,200, said Musser, noting that was a match for a Julie Homori. f)ublic relations manager of M.E. Companies ,
grant from the Governor's presents a plaque to Pomeroy Mayor John Blaettnar. left,
and John Musser in commemor~:~tion of the official opening
'
of thiJ; boat dock. (Charlene Hoeflich}
Please .see Dock. AJ

in

Colorful band uniform·still just a dream

mood to

TAURUS (Apri 20-May
20) .. Unless you handle peo- ·
pie with kid gloves today, that
well-heeled ally you've been
trying to woq wilf walk o ut on
vuu. Be extra graciou s 1 pleas ilnt ;,md tolerant.

GEMIN I (May 21 -June 20)
-- Every time you see shad-

ows loday. instead of looking

for s\Orm clouds, see if you
can find 1he sunshi ne . Your
affairs will be reflective of
how you view your immedi·
ate climate.
·
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
-- Whether you are prepared
to do so or no! at this time, a·
responsibility that has been .
neglected will have lo be
deal! wilh Ioday. Just do 11,
don· t make matters worse by
adopting an attitude.
.
LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22) -- If·
you find your .way of thinking ·
is in conflict with the will of
Ihe majority Ioduy, adjust it to
go along with !hem. Notlo do
so will put you in an odd man

BY KRIS SCOUTEN

Staff writer
RACINE - . Southern High School
· band members are excited about the
prospect of being in new purple and
gold uniforms for neJ(t fall's football
season.
The sample uniform is in, Ute kids
love it, and fund-raising by the
Southern Band Boosters continues so
that tlie uniforms can be ordered early
neJ(t year. said Jeanette Oldaker, band
director.

The uniform has a white hat with gold phenomena.!," said piccolo and flute
accessories and a purple plume which player Shawn Barnhart, a junior and
can be removed when it rains, she said. five-year band member, as he modeled
.
The pants are purple, the jacket. is . the uniform.
white with metallic purple and .gold pJpCurrently, there are 30 students m the
ing. The baldric is made of purple •. gold band. Eighteen will be coming in next
metallic and iridescent·Wh!te .~qUf!IS. : ·year, _according to Oldaker, who hopes
A cape attaches .to the rtg~t shoultler to see them all in umform neJ(t falL
and is metallic gold on the ms1de and
After being without a marching band
purple _on the outsitle . . , _.
.
for 10 years, it was reactivated a few
· ''They are warm but sllll give the kids years ago and has gwwn and developed
enough ease so tJ;,at clothmg ~an be lay- over the past three years under the ·
ered underneath, Oldaker satd. .
direction of Oldaker.
"It's comfortable and looks really
Please,!-." . Band, Al
nice. On the field we're going to look

1 Sections- 11 Pllpl

Calendar
Classifieds

AS
B4·S

Comics
.Dear Abby

B6
AS

Editorials

A4

Movies

A2

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3

Q

Bl-3
A2

2002 Ohio valley Publishing Co.

VIRGO (Au~.

23-Sepl. 22)-'

POMEROY - . Keili N.
Tatterson, 15, of Pomeroy
has been reported missing
by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department. ·
A deputy reported that
the teenger's name has
been entered into the
national computer system
of mi ss ing person s and
run(\way s.
Tatterson, whose cos to-

. Tatterson
'

out situation.

'

'School chief views
partnership in action

infonnal school for high school
students who have otherwise
Staff writer ·
been unable to achieve success.
The schools. through the
POMEROY - Developing partnership, wereabl~; to acces~
· community partnerships is one Workforce Developltlent fund$
way local school systems can til help operate the facility and
ejlectively deliver services pay tea~hers:
.
. when funding for programs IS The JUVerule court system IS
cut, according to John also closely involved in the
Costanza, superintendent of the SEM school's operation, an~
Athens/Meigs
Educational the
health
department, ~
Service Center.
Community Action Agency and
Costanza and Jennifer Sheets other service providers worl!:
of Pomeroy, president of the closely with Costanza an~
Ohio Board of Education, host- school administrators on proed Ohio Superintendent of grams serving all age levels.
Schools Susan Zelman on a · "If students are Served well at
- -1m1r·of -the S~·Eastem- t:lie&lt;lltefilafivescnool, thef wltl
Meigs Al~alive School and have better employment skills,
othe~ . Meigs C6unty learnmg academic, personal and career
faciltlies Monday.
skills to allow them to be proThey showed Zelman how ductive as young adults and
partnersilips with agencies out· adults," Constanza said.
side the school system have
''Those funds are provided to
benefited children and adults.
ensure that students who would
~Dr. Zelman cwne here to see normally be considered high- .
how our partnerships are work- risk students are able to achieve
ing, and to share the p~ogress success," he added.
she sees across the state m s1m"We have a lot of players at
il&lt;rr. situations, said Costanza. the table when we used to see
"Strong partnerships like this only school people at the table,"
make for better programs for Costanza said.
students and· stronger commu·
''The adults and children in
nilies."
the community are not the
The countts , three local responsibility of one agency or
school
, d1stncts,
th~ the school system alone, but the ·
Athens/Me1gs ESC and the responsibility of the commumDep~entof Job and Fwntly ty, and joining forces with other
Services, JOIOeQ together three agencies helps involve others,
years ago to tonn the SEM be it tinancia)ly or through the
School in .Pomeroy, a small, shared use of personneL"

Bv

BRIAN

J. REED

,

Teen reported missing

Index

dial parent
is Lisa
Moodispaugh, is a student
at Meigs High SchooL She
, has blond hair; green ~yes,
is 5 feel, 2 inches tall , and
weighs 105 pounds .
Anyone with informa- ·
tion on Tatterson is asked
to contact the sheriff 's .
department , 992 -3371 , or.
Moodispaugh at 992-6985 :

..

~

Dr. Susan Zelman, Ohio superintendent of schools, and
Pomeroy attorney Jennifer Sheets vis it Heather Kerns, a student at the Southern-Eastern-Meigs School in Pomeroy.
Zelman visited the alternative school to see how partnerships
between school systems and other public agencies can help
fill funding gaps. (Brian J. Reed}

.

-·This is defimtely the wrong·
d;.1 y to fle~ your mu scles uver :
something yo,u feel is owed .

sponsored by the HMC Employee Activity Association

r.yuu. especially if who you :have tO go up against is your
superior. Wait until moods

Friday, November 8
Saturday, Nove111ber 9
7AM·7PM .
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

are mellow.

LIBRA (Sept 23-0cL 23)- Someone with opposing·
views might try to intimidate
you today in ortler to get .
his/her way. However. if you '
respond wtth an equally firm
stance. Jhis person will back
i off.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer .org

All ore welcome! For more information, call (740) 446·5345
'

I

'

'

morrow. Don't let pleasurable

mosphe re can be cx flo sive.

things ou11hruugh diplomacy

•·

be your nat ura l tendency to

altempl to do everything the
hard way. and today you
could be so mdined . Be alert
for pall1s of least reSIStance
and avoid the pitfalls.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) ·- If you eIcc! to play Iaday. you may have•·to pay to-

SAG ITTARIUS (Nov, 23Doc. 21) ·- Opposi11on should
n01 be met head on today. The
coll ision it would cause could
be more damagi ng tlian any-

nmJ taCL

.

f

9

NUMBERED

LETTERS

1
returned·to my hOmetoWn
for a class reunion. One alumni
smiled to another : "If no one
knows the trouble you've seen, it's
certain you don't live in a - - • - :
-- -. "
'.

I Ie

I IeI I

@ PRINT

I

I

lie challenged loday. The at·

o ne an l ic ipatcs. -Try to reuson

www·mydady,ent~nel com

Residents brave rain .to ~ help
dedicate new riverfront dock-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe. OH

'44092 :

M I'ddl epor t • Pomeroy, Ohio

Hllll • Vol Sl P\,jo 00

-

--·· ~~-Thursday. Nov. 7, 2002

1

apield

Mf

..,,

u · nh • Thur &lt;,d.l'f 'JnH•mb~·r

Cheshire starts dissolution process

depths

43 Really go
for
45 Diet

22 Natural
24 Pharaoh'•
beetle
25 Bishops'

4 Actor Coetner

37 Sport•

29
34
36
42

way

3 ~n

vote

Melp County's Hometown Newspaper

,,'

.

'

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"

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