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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
muecleo, In

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16 Get cozy
17 Amln of
Uganda
18 Mo. for ·

A A K 7!

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4 AK .QII'i

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North

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24
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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
pherD

~ulh

"
f

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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.. _ ._____,)

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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

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ToLIJ ME \-\E I)J(&lt;oln
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milker.

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

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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

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CVZCDV'H

. B TV

News editor

CZZG

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P N G I.""

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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

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1

2

US T 0 C

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I I Is

W0 R E M

15

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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
'

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'

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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The Daily Sentinel .

Ohio

•

111un8y............. 7,1001 ·

Counterterrorism training blast~ ·
startle .workers and residents ···

Ohio weather
Friday, Nov. 8

CINCINNATI (AP) - · Officer
workers and downtown residents were
not sure what was happening when a
series of explosions rftttled windows
and shook buildings.
The explosions Tuesday night that
caused hundreds of people to call the
police and fire departments turned out
to be part of an FBI counterterrorism
training programat .Cinergy Field.
T~- former Cincinnati Reds base·
~adium is scheduled to be de mol·
ished Dec . 29.
Hamilton County .Administrator
David Krings said he gave the FBI

I Monsflold 141'111'1 •

tHO.

PageAl ·

0

·I Col'"'*- ~1·112· I

·o

permission to use the stadium, but he cxereises provide a rare opportunity:
didn 't expect the seven blasts set off to practice in a real stadium.
· ·
between 5:30p.m. and 8:40p.m. to be
The training will enable the FBI to
prepare for a potential ;J.ltac~ upon a .
so noisy.
"We didn't expect the thunderous large spons are!! a or sta~mm and .
booms," Krings said Wednesday.
could help save hves, he said.
An internal memo circulated by l f t e r the alarm . caused by the.
county administrators two weeks ago T esday blasts, Hamtlton County, o~­
said the FBI wanted to use the stadi- ci Is asked the FBI to stop ustng .
urn to practice hostage rescue and · ellpl?sives ~~the stadium. . .
counterterrorism tactics. The memo
Krings said the exercises will con-.
said FBI agents would conduct "live tinue for the .next few _days · but will:
fire exercises" with guns and practice not involve loud explosiOns.
with a small amount of explosives.
"There may he some ruckus, but
FBI spokesman Jim Turgal said the nothing to worry about," he said.

Akron-Canton adds·flig·hts to New York:~

__

Snooo
...0 ~·~-~-·-·
Sumy Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

T-

-

Rail

F\mlos

leo

Sunny, warmer in area Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Clouds will break across the
state early today ·as dry air
builds in from the north and
west. Highs will reach into the
mid 50s. ,
Look for clear to partly
cloudy skies tonight thanks to
building
high
pressure.
Temperatures will fall slowly
into the upper 30s and 40s
early tonight and then hold
steady or even rise a few
degrees as winds turn from
the southwest and wanner air
begins to flow back into the
Ohio Valley.
Look for a mild afternoon
on Friday with highs expected
in the 60s most places.
.
Our mild temperatures will
last into Sunday, although the
southerly winds wm also
bring the threat of rain back to
the area•by the second half of
the weekend.
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Clear. Lows in the
mid 30s. Light and variable

winds.
Friday... Sunny and wanner.
Highs in ,the mid 60s.
Southwest wmds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday night...Clear. Lows
near 40.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... A mix of clouds
and sunshine. ·Highs in the
mid'60s.
Saturday night. ..Thickening
cloudiness. Lows in the upper
40s.
Sunday... Cloudy with a
chance of showers. Highs in
the mid 60s.
Veterans
Day... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of rain,
especially at night. Lows in
th~ upper. 40s and highs in ~he
ffild 60s.
..
Tuesday:.. Mostly cloudy
with a_ gooq chance of rain.
Lows m the upper 40s and
highs in the upper 50s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
A chance of drizzle. Lows m
the upper 30s and highs in the
lower 50s.

GREEN (AP) - AirTran according
to
Airways has announced it Travelocity.com.
AirTran's only require·
will offer twice daily nonstop flights from the Akron· ment is a 14-day advance
Canton Regional Airport to purchase and not . a
New York for less than $100 Saturday night stay.
round-trip.
"A lot of people who
"'This is the most impor- never "-onsidered going to
tan! air-service increase here New York · for business or
in 30 years," said Fred leisu re are going to go," said
Krum, director of aviation Kevin Healy, AirTran's vice
for the airport.
president of planning and
One-way flights between sales.
Akron-Canton and New
David Luke. a corporate
York's La_ouardia ·Airport travel agent for Traveline in
will cost $49 and begin Me ntor, said the new cheap
March 4. AirTran also will fares may bring down fares
offer business-class service at Hopkins.
for $159.
That's what some travel
The same · trip out of ,agents say happened when
Cleveland
Hopkins ihe discount airline first
International Airpon would came to Akron-Canton and
cost $240.50 round-trip on offered low-cost flights to
American Airlines · . and its hub in Atlanta- driving
$175.50 on Continental. The down prices for Atlanta
price would double if you flights from Hopkins.
didn't stay over a Saturday, . The New York flights are

'

TODAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

Dow

9,000

Jones

8.000

8,771.01
Pel cl1arigo .•
flom p!OYiol.o:

+1.07

AUG

SEP

High

Low

8,800.00 8,590.19

~·--"

......

__...,.__

.....

~.

~

-.(~

~lot

7,000

' OOT
NOV
RICOnl hitll: 11,722.98

Jan. 14, 2000

1,600
1,400
1,200
1,418.99 .
Pet. cllango
from previous:

SEP

AUG

Low

High

+1 .27

1,418.99 1.388.52

OCT

NOV

Record high: 5,048.62
March

10, 2000

1,000

Nov. 6, 2002

Standard
&amp; Poor's

-·

. +8.37

•
923.76

900

BOO

·-

Pet. cllango
flom preoous . +0.91

School funding uncertain

1_.000

SEP

AUG

High
925.66

Low

905.00

OCT

NOV

Rocord

ioo

hlgh:\527.46

March 24; 2000

AP

Local Stocks
AEP-28.58
Arch Coal- 18.13
Akzo- 30.41
AmTech!SBC- 27.87
Ashland Inc. - 27.80
AT&amp;T- 14.06
Bank One - 38.92
BLI -14.28
Bob Evans - 24.01
BorgWarner ....: 48.12
Champion- 2.68
Charming Shops- 5.43
. City Holding- 28.41
Col-22.87
DG-13.80
DuPont- 43.40

Federal Mogul- .52
USB-21.28
Gannett- n .09

RoekWell-17. ~

Rocky

Boots - 5.06

AD SheA - 44.03
General Electric- 26.60 Sears - 27.66
GKNLV·- 3.75
Harley Devklson - 53.39 Wai·Mart - 54.34

COLUMBUS (AP) With Ohio's long-running
education lawsuit unre·
solved. schools still face an
uncenain. funding future.
On Tuesday, voters sent
mixed education . signals,
rejecting a pair of major
school construction projects, approving two more
and barely voting for a third.
Voters approved 59 percent of the 190 school issues
i:m the ballot, below the 66
percent five-year average
for November elections.

The rejection of building
projects in Cincinnati. and
Akron interrupted a trend of
successive voter support for .
large building projects.
Voters
in
Canton,
Cleveland, Springfield and
Youngstown
have
all
approved multimillion dollar building projects in the
past five years ..
"Obviously we're. con·
cemed," Brian Hicks, Gov.
Bob Taft's chief of staff,
said Wednesday.

DISH NETWORK SATELLITE TV

Wendy's - 29.49
WOrthington- 18.69 .
Ltd.- 15.89
DaHy stock reports ore
NSC-22 ..32
tlie 4 p.m. closing
Oak Hll Flmclal- 21 .26 quotes at the previous
OVB-20.90
day's transactions; pro·
BBT-36.87
vldad by Smith Partners
Peoples - 29.60
ill Advest Inc. of
Pepsico- 43.53
Gallipolis.
Premier- 7
Kmart - .83

Kroger -

15.21

Pair charged with
child encdangering
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
~hool bus driver and an aide
who left a I 0-year-old disabled
boy alone on a parked bus·for
four hours will face child
endangering charges.
Harold Baird, 64, the driver,
and Dorothy Martin, 59, could
be sentenced to up to six
months in jail if convicted.
Police filed the complaint in
Franklin County Municipal
Court on Tuesday. The two

were scheduled for a heariQg on
Nov. 20.
The bOy with Down syndrome was left on the bus on
Monday when it was parked
and locked in a bus lot. The boy
was found asleep in the back of
the bus when the driver
returned for the afternoon run.
The sch(Jol district's director
of transportation fias recom·
mended that Baird and Martin
be frred.
.

•

Cold Pop only
2ooz. _Bot~le .

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69C

Russell Stover Candy
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c.,tr1lal

Jewett'

BRILLIANT - Connal
"Bill" Jewett, 7j of Brilliant,
died Monday, November 4,
2002, at Lancia Villa in
Steubenville.
Mr. Jewett was born on
December I, 1928, ., in
London, Ohio, to · the late
Frank Wesley and Fr.mcis
Williams Jewett.
·
He was retired from. kaiser
Aluminum. after 28 years of
service. He was a member of
Addison Freewill Baptist
Church and United Steel
Workers, Local No. 5668.
Surviving are his wife,
Barbara Ann Haley Jewett of
Brilliant; three daughters,
Cannan Chafin of Point
Pleasant, West Virginia, and
·Debbie Williams and .Dora
(Mike) Clifford, both of
. Columbus; three stepchil·
. dren, • Joyce . (Norman)
Sterling of Brilliant, Dwight
McDaniel of Harrisonville,
and Roger (Shelby Jean)
McDaniel of Cheshire; seven
grandchildren and five great·
grandchildren; 10 stepgrandchildien; and one step-greatgrandchild.
.
:He was preceded in death
by his parents; one son, Tom
Jeweu; . and one brother,
Homer Riley.
' Services will be I p.m.
Saturday, November 9, 2002,
at Willis Funeral Home, with
. the Rev. Bob Wiseman offici;~ting. Burial will follow in
Reynolds Cemetery. ·
Friends may call from noon
to
I
p.m .
Saturday,
November 9, 2002, at the
funeral home.

- Paid notice

RUTLAND -A Rutland
man was injured in a two·
dr accideriralthe inrerse·c··
· tion of Ohio Route 124 and
Courity. Road 5 (Bradbury),
the Gallia ~Meigs Post. of the
State · Highway . Patrol
reponed.
Sylvan J. Cleland, 46,
217 Salem St., was . trans·
poned to Holzer Medical
Center by Meigs EMS fol·
lowing the 1:40 p.m.
· Monday crash, the patrol
said.
Troopers said Clelatid
was stopped on Bradbury at
the intersection with 124
when he failed to yield
from· the stop sign and col·
lided with a car driven by
Mauricia J. McClure, 43,
35185 Cremeans Road,
Rutland, that was eastbound
on 124.
The collision caused
McClure's car to slide off
the left side of the road and
strike a wooden barricade.
the report said.
McClure ' s car had func·
tiomil damage, and non·
functional damage was list·
ed to Cleland's car.
Cleland was cited for failure to yield from a stop
s1gn .

"'.....
_..
DAYTON (AP) - ·About districts in Montgomery,
28,000 students voted to chose Greene, Miami, Warren, Clark
the mascot name for the state's. and Clinton counties in southcentennial celebration next west Ohio. cast ballots ·
year of the Wright brothers' Tuesday. Turbo garnered 50
percent of the vote, said Data
first flight.
Tiutio was the bi · winner Vella, executive director of
Tuesday, defeating
and Kids Voting Ohio/Founders
Flaps to become the mascot of Region.
the Inventing Flight anniver- · Kids Voting joined the
sary celebration of the first Inventing Fli~ht organization
controUed, powered airplane in an effort to mvolve students
in next year's anniversary eel·
flight.
Students from 38 school ebration.
~.

Obituaries

Rutland
man.injured
in 2-car ·
wreck

Students select .
flight anniversary
mascot's name
'

Nov. 6,2002

the · latest expansion · for three biggest travel destina-.
Akron-Canton,
located tions are c;::hicago, Atlanta:
about 50 miles south of and New York," Krum said ..
Cleveland.
"Having New York service.
Although the small airport at the right price will bring a .
counts travelers in the hun- lot of people here for the
dreds of thousands while first time."
Hopkins counts in the millions, the number of travelers using Akron-Canton has
grown 25 percent since last
year. Hopkins remains down
about 15 percent.
AirTran's costs for · the
New York flight will be subsidized by a ~950,000 grant
from the U.S. Depanment of ·
Transponation, which wants
to improve air service for
smaller communities.
Krum expects the grant to
yield abQut 120,000 additiona! passengers to the
900,000 who already fly in
and out of Akron-Canton
airpon annually.
"In Nonheast Ohio, the

Thursday, November 7, 2002

OFF

Lip Glazers

www.mydailysentint;il.com

Reputed mobster pleads
guilty to racketeering cha~ges
HACKENSACK, N.J.
(AP) - Filmmaker and
reputed mobste r Daniel
Provenzano pleaded guilty
to racketeering charges,
·ending• a three-year legal
baule.
In the plea entered
Wednesday, Provenzano
admiued to four incidents
of assault and \hreats to '
exton money, including
having an underling break
the thumb of a salesman
accused of stealing $9,000
from his priming company
and storming the office of
a businessman who he said
wouldn' t pay a $181,000
bill.
Provenzano, 39, main·
tained he was a legitimate
. businessman trying to colteet on genuine debts.
Provenzano, · a nephew
of reputed Genovese crime
family associate Anthony

Provenzano, has produced
and acted in horror
movies. He wrote, directed
and starred in "This Thing
of Ours," a movie about
the nephew of a mob boss
who runs a scheme to steal
millions. He denies he is a
mobster.
Prosecutors plan to seek
a 15-yejlr prison term at
sentencing Feb. 28. He
could have faced more
than 200 years if convict·
ed on all counts against
him.
Provenzano was among
nine people named in a·
1999 indictment accusing
them of using beatings,
kidnapping and murder
threats to exton $ 1.5 mil)ion from a dozen victims.
He pleaded guilty to . one
count each of racketeering
and of failing to file a state
income tax return for not

Jeanette Oldaker, Southern High School band directm, makes
5ome final adjustments on uniform being modeled by Shawn
Barnhart. (Kris Scouten}
·

Offer

date was incorrectly reported. will hold a special board
meeting at 5:30 p.m.
at
Trinity
Wednesday
Church in Pomeroy.
POMEROY
First
Barbara Haxton, executive
Southern Baptist Church in S OW 5e
direCtor of the Ohio Head
Pomeroy will offer "Mom's
TUPPERS PLAINS
Stan Association Inc., will
Day Out" from 9 a.m. until The 15th annual craft fall present a workshop on govnoon, beginning Wednesday. arts and crafts fair will be ernance policies of . model
The church will provide free held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Head Stari .organizations.
child care for all children · Saturday at the Eastern
through age 5 or children not Elementary School.
ye.t in school.
Proceeds will go to the
The church plans to Eastern Elementary Boosters
expand the free child care to suppon the music proservice as needed, along g·ram which includes the
POMEROY Mei~s
with programs for women band, handbell choir, vocal County
Regis'
t
rar
Edwina
and .mothers, and help for choir, and jazz band.
Bell has announced that the
parents.
.
Meigs
County
Health
Parents may enroll their
Department's Office of Vital
children by contacting Mary
Statistics
will be closed
Rhonemus, at 696-1240, but
II :30 a.m. to
Thursday
from
pre-enrollment
is
not
4:30p.m.
required to take advantage of
MIDDLEPORT
Services . will resume on
the free service, Rhonemus Bradbury
Elementary
said.
School will have a basket Friday at 8 a.m.
bingo fund-raiser at 6 p.m.
on Nov. 16 at the school.
Tickets are available from
the students and at the door.

Craft
h

t

Office

closing

Basket
Bingo

Accepting
applications

Hymn
sing

808··rd·

·POMEROY · Meigs
-County · Bikers-Associatioft"-f.
_w ill accept application f~?L..
·
toys purchased thrOugh their .
aimual Toy Run Nov. 7·15 at POMEROY- Governing
the Meigs County Health Board of the Athens•Meigs .
· Departmen~ in Pomeroy. The Educational Service Center

Meets

Band

Fund-raising effon s so far
have included private donations from individuals, businesses and a tag day where
fromPageA1
20 students solicited outside
The old uniforms were dry.- local businesses.
Donations on &amp;n all-terrain
rotted, so the members have
vehicle
and a Middleton doll
worn band T-shins and jeans
are being taken . The ATV
for performances, she said.
014aker is looking forward will be given away on Nov.
to the time when the students 15 at the school, while the
are advanced enough to start Middleton doll will be
participating in band compe- awarded on Dec. 2.
The students and booster~
titions .
"But they'll need uniforms served the dinner and washed ·
first because appearance th e · dishes at the Meigs
Chamber
of
gives points in the 'general County
Commerce
dinner
last
week
effect' category," she said.
Each uniform costs $420. to raise $200, and pumpkin
The band boosters ate just rolls will be sold at
barely past the halfway point Thanksgiving _time . .
. "We sold Mardi Gras beal!in thcir fund-raising efforts,
according to Kim Romine, ed necklaces like gang
busters at the football games
boosters' president.
Another $9,000 is needed for 50 cents," said Romine,
by March so that the uni- emphasizing thai the boosters
forms can be ordered if we're will do whatever it takes.
"We really want those uni going to have them by
forms," she concluded.
August, she said.

LONG BOTTOM- A
hymn sing will be held at the
Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long · Bouom at 7 p.m.
Friday. "Delivered" will be
the featured singers. The
public is invite;d.

be in Pomeroy and happy boaters moving up and
to be a pan of the river· down the Ohio River."
A luncheon for M.E.
front development proCompanies
Inc. represen·
ject.
from PapAi
tatives,
ODNR
personnel,
· Also speakin~ briefly
Pomeroy officials and
Office of Appalachia for was Bill McGaruy of the several guests was held at
Division of Watercraft,
the feasibility study.
the Coun Grill following .
He said an application who referred to the dock the dedication program.
has been made for more as a "great facility for
ODNR money · to extend
the new dock to the end of
the parking lot wall and
provide . handicapped .
access.
Muss·e r also commendReader Services
d1sPs 213-960)
ed Banks "who staned the
correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publlehlng Co.
project after Labor Day
Our main concern In all SIOriesls lobe Published every afternoon,
aceurale. If 10U know of an error In a Monday through friday, 111 Court
and had it finished in time
S1ory, ealllhe newsroom a1(740) 992· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·
for
the
Sternwheel
2156.
class postaga paid at Pomeroy.
Riverfest on the last
Member: The Associated Press
weekend in Sel'tember."
and the Ohio Newspaper
Our main number Is
"The best thmg we can ·
Association.
(740) 992·2156.
.
Poatmaater: Send address coriac·
do is to put our money in
Department extensions are:
lions
to The Dally Sentinel, 11 1
local communities," said
Court
Street, Pome1oy, Ohio
ODNR's
Moody
in
News
45789.
response to Musser's
Editor: Chariene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Read, Ext. 14
comments.
Subsi::rlpllon Rates
Reporter: Kris Doston, Ext 13
He said he was proud to
By c.rrler or molar raute
Sporto: Derel&lt; Taylor, Ext. 14
one month ..... .... ...'9.95
One year ...... .. .....'119.40

Dock

•

••

"What do you mean,
I should be thinking about
pre-arrangement planning?" .

.

.

.

The Daily Sentinel

Advertising

Outolde Ssleo: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Outolde Soleo: Jessica Evans, Ext. 16
Cf-./Circ.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext. 10
Cl-./Circ.: Cynthia Swisher, Ext. 11

•WIN•
•

Dressing up

declaring
more
than
$800,000:
Criminal
Justice spokesman John
Hagerty said.
He admiued in court to
ordering an employee to
break the thumb of the
salesman
who
was
accused of theft.
" I told him that if h~
inte nded to keep hi s
employment, I would have
to break his thumb,"
Provenzano said. " I didn 't
want to set the standard
that somebody could steal
from my company."
He said he ordered
another man to drive the
salesman to a hospital and
break the man's thumb
outside the emergency
room, and to pick up the
salesman after . he was
treated.

Local Briefs
service

The Daily'Sentinel • Page A 3

2FBEETICKOS
.. IIIIa
SPRING VALLEY
CINEMAJ

Dally .. .. .............. 50'

Subscribers should remit In .
advance direct to The Dally
Sentinel. No subscription by mail
permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

Circulation

Dlllrlct Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, Ext. 17

FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAV'S CLASSIFIED
SI!CTION AND W!NI L..To;;;QOmji;;i;iiifu

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E·mall:
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Web:
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Mall Subscription

County
13Weeks ....... . .... .'30.15
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Inside Melgo

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By investing in tomorrow 's expe nses at today 's prices,
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There are just 1wo easy s1cps 10 give ~ou and your famil y
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�•· .

PageA4

0 1n1on

The Daily Sentinel .

'111und11J. Noveinbef 7. 2002
•

J

•

The Daily Sentinel

J~

..

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

THE NEW · ;: '

1

I

~RTHA STEWART CATA~ ·

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publisher
. Managing Editor

Letrers 10 the editor are we/rome. They should be less than
300 .,·mds. All letters are subject to editing and must be
signed and inrlude addre.u and Telephone number. No
&lt;tnsigned /men ll'ill be publi.&lt;hed. Letrers should be m goad
rasw. addresJi'lg issues. not personalmes.
•
The opinions expressed in tire column ~elow are the consens•u· of the Ohio Valley P&lt;tbli.~hmg Co. s edllonal board,
tmle s.r oihenrise noted.
·

NATIONAL VIEW

Fair·play?
Both parties to blame for
holdup in judicial nominations

"
TODAY IN HISTORY

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Better than that?

saw to get your license Jtuinber. Instead
' they stopped and picked up the cat. So
you were lucky. Courageous soul that
Dear Editor:
you are, you have lived to do this again
Early this summer, the Meigs County and again. Someone else took responsiHumane Society held a highly success- bility because you would not.
ful spay/neuter clinic. l\vo hours after
Last Sunday night, a friend· met the
the clinic ended; one of the vet students dog warden (who responded in 1o minreturned to the clinic site. In her arms utes) to pull a blind, abandoned dog out
was an emaciated and pregnant 7- of a field where he/she had been walkmonth-old cat. Full of worms, with thin, ing in circles for three days - in the
with unhealthy gray fur, the cat, need- rain. Chances are the dog did not belong
less to say, was traumatized.
to the cat tosser. Horribly, we are probThe student told us that the cat was ably talking about two separate individthrown from a moving vehicle on Main uals.
Street in the middle of Pomeroy. So in · It was that incident that night that
case you read this, or in case your prompted this Jetter, and I address the
wifefhusband, child, or family friend rein'ain(fe( riot to the two · individuals
re_cognizes you in this pi~ce, here's the _,who .wete-,l;l)pable of such crimes (and
update.
abandonment of animals is a crime) but
The cat survived. She was not hit by a to' those reading this who are disturbed
car; she did not starve,to death, perhaps by -their actions. Ignorant cowards such
as you had hoped. She tested negative as I have described above will always
for feline leukemia, was treated for be with us. But if you read this and
worms, and was vaccinated. She was want to do something about it, then I
sterilized and has tripled her weight. A ask.
sweeter, more affectionate, :wd better
When was the last time you stopped
. mouser you cannot imagine.
and picked up a stray you found on the
The vet students behind your car or road, instead of driving by? .
truck were too horrified by what they
When was the last time you donated

. ',

your time or money to the MeigS
County Humane Society, the only orga·
nization working for the amelioration of
cruelty, abuse; and neglect in this county? (Contact the MCHS Thrift Shop i~
Middleport at 992-6064.)
.
When did you last attend· a commi~sioners meeting to ask or write a Ie~ter
requesting that the dog shelter re'cet\'1!!
additional county funds so that the dog~
there could be fed properly? The couri&gt;
ty is required to care of strays and relin.qui shed dogs. When did you last write a
letter to the commissioners or The Dail~
Sentinel in suppon of the Meigs County
humane officer? (Some counties in
southeastern Ohio don't ev~n., .?~v.e
one!)
· ·
· "
,
. . When didyo)IJa,&amp;t I~.ok S\l.IU.!.lQM W ~IJ
m1streated an ammal 10 the eye and tell
her or him that t~at was wrong? If _y~u
are conc;ern~d w1th the welfare of an1;
mals, there 1s much t~at you can ~o o!l
a personal and a pubhc leveL Let s n&lt;;~t,
let the cat tossers and people wh? aba~­
d~n old dogs define our relauo?shw
wnh the non-human world! Aren t We ·
better than that?

Alden Waitt
Snowyilij:

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Nov. 7, the 311 th day of 2002. There are
54 days left in the year.
Today's Hi ghlight in History: .
'
On Nov. 7,· 1893, ~he state of Colorado granted its women
the right to vote.
On this date:
. In 1916, Republican Jeannette Rankin of Montana became
the first woman elected to Congress.
·
.
In 19 17. Russia's Bolshevik Revolution took place as forces
led by Vladimir llyich Lenin ovenhrew the provisional government of Alexander Kerensky.
In 1940, the middle section of the 1Tacoma Narrows Bridge
in Washington state collapsed during a windstorm.
In 1944, President Franklin Roosevelt won an unprecedented fourth term in office, defeating Thomas E. DeWey. ·
· In 1962, fo rmer first lady Eleanor. Roosevelt died in New
York City.
.
In 1962, Richard M. Nixon, having lost California's gubernatorial race, held what he called his "last press conference,"
telling reponers, "You won't have Nixon to kick around .a,nymore.j'

.

In 1972 President Nixon
. was re-elected in a landslide over
Democrat George McGovern.
In 1973, Congress overrode President Nixon's veto of the
War Powers Act, which limits a chief executive's power to
wage war without congressionai approval.
In 1989, L. Douglas Wilder won the governor's nice in
Virginia. becoming the first elected black governor 10 U.S·.
hi story: David N. Dinkins was elected New York C1ty's first
black mayor.
·
In 199 1, basketball star Magic Johnson stunned the country
as he announced that he had tested positive for the AIDS
virus, and was retiring.
.
Ten years ago: Former Czechoslovak leader Ale.xand~r
Dubcek, whose failed attempt to loosen the Commumst gr1p
on his country became known as the "Prague Spring," died at
age 70.
..
. •
.
-Five years ago: In a nsmg war of words, the Cli nton admmistration warned it was considering military options, including
a cruise missi le strike, if Iraq carried out its threat to shoot
down UN surveillance pl anes.
· .
.
One year ago: The Bush administration targeted Osama bi.n
Laden's multimillion-dollar financial networks, closmg-buslnesses in four states, detaining U.S. suspects and urging allies
to help choke off money supplies in 40 nations. At the White
H~re s id ent Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Bl air,
allies in the war on terronsm, confide ntl y offered back-tohack pledges of victory, no matter how long it took. More than
15 mon th ~ after a Concorde crashed outside Paris, two of the
world's on ly supersonic jetliners returned to the skies.
. Today's Birthdays: Evangeli st Billy Graham is 84. Opera
, in ger Dame Joan Sutherland 1s 7_6. Smger Mary, Travers ts
65. Actor Barry Newmalj IS 64. Smger Johnny Rtvers ts 60.
Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell is 59. Si nger Nick Gilder is
5 1. Actor Ch ri stopher Knight /("The Brady Bunch") is 45 .
Actor Christopher Dimiel Barnes is 30. Ac.tors Jason and
Jereniy London are 30.
.

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. November 7. 1002

Disabled bride-to-be shoud
~ relax and enjoy her friends ·

National home care and
,hos ice month bein ·celebrated -

DEA{l ABBY: After reading the letter from the brideto- be who had spina bifida,
asking how to get down the
POMEROY
onoring home care professionals and
aisle gracefully at her wedthe thousands of home care volunteers who enable those
ding without using her walkprofessionals and volunteers who are chronically ill, diser, I would like to share the
serving our nation, Holzer abled, or terminally ill to live
following:
Home Care, Holzer Hospice their lives where they want to
I, too, was born with spina
.and Holzer E11tra Care are most -- in their own homes.
bifida, and I, too, suffer from
joining home care providers
As America's elderly popADVICE
spasms, among other condithroughout the United States ulation continues to rapidly
tions unique to this condiin marking the November increase, home health care
tion. When my wife and I the sportswriters to trade · celebration of National · will play an even more pivwere married, we had our Taylor. Instead, McGraw
Home Care Month (NHCM) otal role in our nation's
ceremony with her seated in required the entire Giant
Theme is "Home Care &amp; future health care delivery.
a chair beside my wheel- team to learn American Sign
"The vast majority of peoHospice: ~-Heart and Soul
chair. It went off without a Language. Once that was
of Health Care in America." P.le faced ~ith disability or
hitch.
ac.complished, McGraw used
· In observance of the occa- 1llne~s obvtously prefer ~o
Those who attend wed' hand signals to lead his
sion, an open house and con- · remam at home 10stead of m
dings are usually family and · tearil. That's the origin of the
sumer education ·session a hos~ital or institution," said November has been designated as National Home Care and
friends. So my advice to that hand signals that are used in
from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. will be Conme Carleton, RN, BSN, Hospice Month. The Meigs County Commissioners, Jim
lucky lady is to relax and baseball today.
held on .Thursday, Nov. 14 at ·director of Holzer Home Sheets, left, and Mick Davenport, sign a proclamation
. just be herself -- spa ~ ms,
Rather than be embarthe Hospice and new. Home Care. .
acknowledging and the·ot&gt;servance. With the commissioners,
walker and alL Everyone rassed about her disability,
Care offices located at 113
Sue Bowers, RN, PCC, left to right, are Paula Eichinger, RN , branch .manager of
expects no less - or mo.re "Worried" should find a way
East Memorial · Drive in CHPN, Director of Holzer Holzer Home Care in Pomeroy: Dana Johnson, RN , CHPN, and
- than that. Sign me ... to use her special abilities.
Pomeroy.
Hospice S':llted, "Hom~ care Anita Moore, volunteer coordinator, representing Holze r
TEXAS FOUR- WHEEL· -STEPHEN REDMOND,
The
Meigs
County and hosp1ce profes_s1onals Hospice, Meigs County; and Faye Steinmetz and Rot&gt;in
ER
M.D., MORGAN HILL,
Commissioners have signed ~d _volu~teers prov1de the Haning, personal care aides with Ho lzer Extra c·are .
DEAR TEX: Your advice CALIF.
a proclamation designating h1gh quahty health care and {Contributed)
·
·
is terrific, and I hope .that ihe
DEAR DR. REDMOND:
November as
National the close, g::rsonal contact
nervous bride-to-be will Thank you for not only a fasHome Care and Hospice that.all~ws a! to happen."
'!he heart and soul of health- available in their local comrelax and give it serious con- cinating tidbit of informaMonth, and encouraging all
Vtckt Jl!ott10gham, RN, care in America."'
munities.
tion, but also a healthy helpsideration. Read on:
citizens to learn more about manager of Holzer Extra
"This year in particular it
the home health and hospice Care, added, "To have reliIn addition to recognizing
DEAR ABBY: A young ing of food for thought. I
is
imponant
that people let
concepts of care.
. able health ~are, respite and the work of home · care
woman with a physical dis- love the way you look at
'
ability wrote you concerning life's challenges.
Sponsored by the National support serv~ces 2~ how:s a providers, NHCM serves to their elected officials know
Association for Home Care . day, 7 days a week m patient educate the public about how vital home health care
her worries · that she would
DEAR ABBY: My broththe month-long celebratio~ h_omes requires caring people · issues affecting home care providers are to their comnot be able to walk down the er-in-law (28) and his
aisle on her wedding day. I fiancee (19) make it a pracpays tribute to the dedicated I I ke our staff• who tru Iy are and · the home care services munity," said Carleton.
recently attended a wedding tice during family meals to
where the bride had similar en~age in whispered con ver•
concerns. She managed the sallon that involves only the
day in im electric scooter two · of them. In addttion, · ·
·decked with flowers and gar- they spend parts of the meals
lands that matched her love- passio11atefy deep-kissing
MeigS Cou~ Chamber of Commerce President Sue Maison
ly dress. Perhaps her solu- and rubbing noses.
takes
a moment at the end of the chamber's annual recogn~
Am I wrong to feel this
tion could be applied here.
tiOn
dinner
Monday night to pose with the three award recipl- MA'IT IN ROME, N.Y. behavior is rude, immature
. ents. From left are VIctor Young, president of Pomeroy VIllage
DEAR MA'IT: I don't see and inappropriate?- LOsCouncil, who won the Distinguished Service Award for his
why not -~II it would take ING MY APPETITE IN
effortS
in funckaising for the WBrer \'iOiks Park; Maison; Jackie
is a florist with artistry and LA PORTE, IND.
Welker, oYiner of Court Street Grill and founder of the Pomeroy
DEAR LOSING MY
ingenuity.
Blues and Jazz Society for the work he's done in organizing
. DEAR ABBY: May I sug- APPETITE: Not at all. In
PB&amp;J and the Rhythm on the River conoert series, as well as
§est another way for polite company, whispered
the annual Big Bend Blaes Bash; and Susan 011\&lt;er of the
'Worried Biide-to-Be" to conversations that exclude
others are considered rude,
Council on ~\ng, who won the Meigs County Person of the
look at her "disability"?
Year award. She has lestilied before Senate hearings and
In the early 1900s, the And tongue should not be'·.
New York G1ants baseball eaten at the table unless it
Congi8SS on behalf ol seniors (Krjs Scouten).
team had a pitcher named has first been thoroughly
· Luther H. Taylor. He was a cooked and properly sea- .
·
deaf mute who was, in an era soned.
Dear Abby is written by
Of insensitivity, nicknamed
"Dummy." Taylor lost a lot Abigail· Van Buren, also
of games due to his inability known Of Jeanne PhUlips,
to communicate with his and wtis founded by her
· mother, Paulif!e Phillips.
teammates . .
John McGraw, the rnanag- Write Dear · Abby at
·er of the Giants, was under www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
· enormous pressure from the Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
iearn's owner, the fans and 90069.

Abby

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

• The Buffalo (N.Y.) News, on judicial nominations: Republicans in Washington are complaining loudly and bitte~l y- · that ~e.na~e
Democrats are holding up Pres1dent Bush s JUdi- ·
cial nominations. They have'S\ort memories.
For almosr the whole of the Clinton presidency, Republicans who then contr~lle~ the Sen~te
dragged their feet on court nommatwns, wh1ch
over the past 15 years have become politicized to
the point of paralysis. The federal court&amp; are
choking .on backlogged cases and the . Senate
shrugs and goes about the job of making matters
worse.
... Whatis not appropriate, though, and w.hat is
unaceeptable, is to r.efuse to act on noll:lln~es.
The courts need Judges, th~ ConstitutiOn
demands respect and the nominees deserve. the
common courtesy of reasonably prompt actiOn.
Both parties have been reckless about this matter, Democrats today and Republicans before.
American democracy was designed to encourage compromise. With authority frequently .
divided between the parties, gbvemment can
achieve little without the grease of compromise.

Page AS

Dear

Den Dickerson
Bette Pearce

•

c)

'

KILPATRICK'S VIEW ,.

·'

.~ And now for the return ·of the case·of the spotted owl·

"

.

.

I

"Most importantly, petitioners cannot
Don't look riow, but the nonhern
harvest 40 acres of trees that have take.{!
· spotted owl is back again. Yes! A case ·
them decades to ~row and on which
involvin$ the wise old bird once more is
they depend for mcome during their .
pending mthe Supreme Court on a peti·
retirement years. ... During the foll'r
tion for review. The case presents an
years that this case has been pending,
imponant question under the "takings
they have annually paid taxes, on the
clause" of the Constitution and fully
subject 40 acres, while at the same time
deserves a hearing.
they have been barred from deriving .
The takings clause of the Fifth
any income from the timber crop on it.
Amendment says that government may
not "take" private property for public
In the meantime, much of the subject
timber has blown down because of root
use without.-the payment of just comCOLUMNIST
pensation. In the case at hand, Marsha
rot and the wood is no longer of met
Seiber of Linn County, Ore., complains
chantable quality." .
..
·
.
The basic federal act makes it unlaw- ·
that the state has effectively taken 40
acres of her farm without paying a dime suitable habitat encompassing a nest ful for any person to "take" an endansite, and they must explain how they gered species. In what is known as 11\e
in compensation.
The state's purpose is to preserve would prevent disturbances during the Sweet. Home case of 1995, the Supreme
· Coun divided 6-3 in accepting the go.~t'
appropriate habitat for a pair of owls March to October nesting season.
The
Seibers
ran
into
the
maze
of
regernment's view that "to take" means "to
known as Little Wiley and his mate. '(he
happi)y banded couple have not been ulation s in 1994. Because of Little harm," and "to harm" means to ·modiry
seen on Seiber land since two days in Wiley, the Oregon state forester had h~bit~t "where i~ &lt;IC.tl~ally kills.o~ inju_r~s
Arril 1994. Indeed, no spotted owls at designated 40 acres of. their land and 30 wtldhfe by s1gmftcantly 1mpamng
a! have been observed on the propeny acres of a neighbor's adjoining land as a breeding or sheltering.'' Justi.ce John
in recent years, but the government rea- protected nesting site. The petitioners Paul Stevens virtually invited funhef
sons that if the Wiley owls once like() agreed to halt logging during the' owls' case-by-case litigation on the issue . ·.
Justice Antonio Scalia, joined by
tlie neighborhood, other owls might nesting season, but the government
would
'not
be
appeased.
They
sued,
but
Justice
Clarence Thomas and the chief
well return.
·
·
last
June
four
years
after
their
suit
justice,
filed a vigorous dissent in the
Mrs. Seiber and her husband, a retired
postal worker, are battling the Oregon began - the Seibers lost in Oregon 's Sweet Home case. The /.rohibitioll
State Board of Forestry and the Supreme Coun. Now they're asking for placed upon private ian , he said,
"imposes unfairness to the point of
Audubon Society of Ponland, among help from the high court.
The
landowners
make
a
persuasive
financial ruin - not just upon the rich,
other intervenors. The Seibers want to
but upon the simplest farmer who finds
harvest mature timber from their own case. They say:
propeny, and the state won'tlet them. · "The subject regulation goes beyond hi s land conscripted to national ~oolog~
. The Board of Forestry, for its pan, merely regulating · the use of the ical use."
In the pending case, the Seibers stand
feels that it is bound by the federal gov- Seibers' land; it reguires that the timber
emment's declaration 12 years ago that on it be left ~t~ndmg for the sole J?Ur- to Jose $300,000 in marketable timber
the nonhern spotted owl (Strix occiden- pose ofprov1dmg spo~ted owl habitat. just to pr.eserve 40 acres of aging foretlt
talis caurina) 1s a threatened species. In Clearly 1t ts a use of p.1vate prop,eny by for a-paifof absentee owls. The governan effort to conserve the species, the the government for &amp;fPUbh~ purpose. ment may not give a hoot, but it strikes
·
state requires propeny owners to take Further, the regulatton pro_h1b1ts thel!' · me· as grossly wrong .
from
cohducllng
any
acllvtty
on
thetr
·
.
.
cenain steps whenever an adult pair of
,
h
I
t
•
'
'
'
.
n
,
ow ls is reliably identified on their prop- propeny that cou ld. ca~se, t e ow s o · (James J. Kilpatrick is a colwm;istfo,r
Universal Press Syndicate.)
erty. Owners mu st set aside 70 acres of flush from the nestmg site.

James
Kilpatrick

·~

•

DROP US ALINE.

,ll.&gt; ! .o~flJJ. I't

l,f

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

7411-446-2342

m Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156

( ..i( · ,; ~

200 Meln St., Point Pl..oont, W.V~.
( 304-1175-133~

Chamber issues honors

Jackson

leads-in ·

country
·. award nods

NASHVILLE, Tenn.
(AP) ....,. Alan Jackson,
who led all nominees in
this
year's Country
Music Awards with a
record 10 nominations, ·
wasn't just competing
membersofthepoatandandthe
·against other musicians
auxiliary and their spousas or
on Wednesday night. He
•
•
friends.
also had to worry about
RACINE -Veterans Day ser·
himself.
vice 7 p.m. at the American
.
Two of his songs · Thur.day, Nov. 7
Legion hall, Racine. Jimmy
·
"Where
Were You (When
CHESTER - Chester/Shade Stewart to apeak. Public Invited. ·
the
World
Stopped
Historical AsSOCiation to meet at First graders ol Southern school
Turning)" and "Drive
7 p.m. at the Chester to sing 'God Bless the U.S.A."
Courthouse,' to discuss plans lor Sewral speakers.
(For Daddy Gene)" ?003. Including changes in the
were nominated for best ·
Constitution and Christmas
Tuesday, Oct. 12
single, song and music
plans. Public invited . .
. HARRISONVILLE
video, which meant . his
· TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW Harrisonville O.E.S. Chapter 255,
.
supporters
could split
Ladles Auxiliary regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. at the hill\. Pkrar;tlce fQr
their vote.
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
installation of new officers will be
Jackson also was nomiheld.
FrldiY, Nov. 8
,
n11ted for · the top honor,
.
entertainer of the year,
' MIDDLEPORT - Widows
Fellowship Thanksgiving dinner, .
which he won in 1995.
noon Friday at .the Middleport
Sundly, Nov. 10 .
. Other nominees in that
Church of Christ. Those attend·
POMEROY - . Hysell . Run
category were Brooks &amp;
lng are to take a covered dish.
Church special services wnh "His .
Dunn, Kenny Chesney,
Own" as singers, 7 p.m. Sunday.
Toby
Keith and George ·
Saturday, Nov. 9
Pastor Mark Michael Invites the
Strall:
· POMEROY Burlingham public.
The show, at the Grand
Modern · Woodmen, 5:30 p.m. POMEROY -L Heritage Day
potluck dinner at the hall. Take at Enterprise United Methodist
Ole Opry, was to include
covered dish and canned food lor Church, 9 to 11 a.m. with carry-In
performances by Faith
the Meigs Cooperative Parish lor dinner. Special music. Arland
· Hill, Loretta Lynn and l:loliday food baskets.
. King, pastor, Invites public.
kicking off the festivities
Return
. POMEROY
LONG .BOTTOM - Hymn
Shania Twain in her
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, sing 7 p.m.· Friday at the FaHh
first
network TV agpeart:laughters ol the American Full Gospel Church, long Bottom·.
ance
since 1999, 'When
. Revolution, 10 a.m. .Saturday at
LONG BOTTOM ~ Long
she was CMA entertainer
Grace Episcopal Church. Bottom United Methodist Church,
Roberta roueh, state historian to 7 p.m. with speaker Dave Dailey.
of the year.
be the speaker.
Twam, who has an
HARRISONVILLE
album coming out later
Harrisonville Lodge 411, 7:30
this month, is returning
Jl.m. at the temple. Work In the
Thul'llday, Nov. 7
·
from a two-year hiatus. ·
E.A. Degree. Refreshments.
POMEROY - A musical pro. Best male vocalist
gram will be presented at 5:30
nominees were Chesney,
Monday, Nov. 11
p.m. by Junior and Rita White at
Jackson,
Keith, Brad
TUIPPERS PLAINS
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Paisley
and
Strait. Best
Veterans Day dinner, 5:30 p.m. at Center.
the hall In Tuppers Plains for
female vocalist nominees
were Lee Ann Womack,
Alison Krauss; Sara
Evans, Martina McBride
and Trisha Yearwood.
Vince Gill was hosting
'
the · sho"" for the lith
LOS ANGELES (AP) ' - for grabs iii an online charity
straight year.
Harry Potter's acceptance let- auction.
"Again, we are focused
ter to Hogwans School .of
The auction, which runs
on the music," sl)id Ed
Witchcraft and Wizard(y, throughNov. l2, is sponsored
Benson, executive direc ~
tor of the CMA. "Extra
boxing gloves signed by by Wired magazine to benefit
attention is being paid not
Muhammad Ali and an autothe Starbright Foundation for
only to what .the , sho':"'
graphed bOok and CD from
1 looks Iike, but how It
children
facing
life-threaten"Sex and the City" actress
sounds ."
Sarah Jessica Parker are up ing illnesses.
'

Community Calendar

-~~· 'lfou
~~~
.. euuJ Ul~ lH.
1tte4lia¥'4, ·CJedio,.

Clubs and
Orgamzattons

Church services

Seniors Grou'ps .

.Celebrity items p~rt of auction

_

_:_______:· ~·---------~_:_-~

_

__::_
"

__

__:___

___________.,.___

.SponsQred by -Credit Xpress .
i~;he Pomeroy pa. rking lot on
Nov. 19th from 9 am to 7pm!
CreditXpress is celebrating it's NEW Outdoor.Loan program
by invitiAg you to come see tlie Richard English Live Deer
Show! If you're looking for a loan to
finance your outdoor lifestyle come to
CreditXpress in Pomeroy. We have
special loan programs in place for
· 4-wheelers, RV's, 4 X 4 trucks and
much more. Our Customer Service
Reps. will work with
you to make sure you
. get the loan you need.

"'-::'!!'::!:!

C•ll Nowl

~lJ'l?l?~

Credit

RESS
,.~.- ~;---:----.....:.

-

-

�•

..
Page A&amp; • The

Daily Sentinel

"-.

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Thursday, November 7, 2002

www.mydallyaent!nel.com

•

.

NASCAR Weekly, Page 82
Scoreboard, Page 83
MU baaketball preview, Page 83

Page 81
Thursday, November 7, 1001

Redmen collect
first hoops win

:. I'

'

lEt. ·Pleuantl :
Oance

Joe
Bonamassa

•
Dance, 7 to 10 · .
p.m. Friday, Senior
Center, entertainment .
by Rocky Mountain
Boys. Clogging, twostepping, and square
dancing. Food, hot and :
cold drinks available. :
Admission is $3 for sin.gles and $5 for couples.
Call Judy Jones at 304. 675-2369 for more ·
information.

• Joe Bdnamassa will
perfonn at lO tonight at
the Court Grill on Court
Street in Pomeroy. The
cover charge is $10.
More information on the
concert is available by
. calling 740-992-6524.

Musical
performance

.Craft show
•
17th
Annual
Holiday Craft Show, 10 .
a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, ·
W.Va. National Guard ·
Armory. Sponsored' by
the Mason C~unty
CEOS Club. Handfuade
crafts, concessions, and
door prizes. ·

• At 8 p.m. Saturday
in the Fur Peace Station
Concert Hall, Roy Book
Binder, • Jarman and
Michael Fazarano will
perform. Tickets are
$25. Tickets for the concert are available at 9927595 with all major
credit cards or may be
secured at the door as
long as seating is avail. able.
·

..

Back Porch

Square

Swing band

dance

• Jam session with
country, gospel, and bluegrass music Friday. Letart
Pioneers 4-H provide concess!bns. $1 donation
requested.

• Belles and Beaus
Western-style . square
dance, 8 to 10:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy
Senior
.Citizens
· Building.
Caller Ron Anderson,
Wheeling, W.Va. AU
Western-style dancefs
welcome. Call 304-6753275 for information.

Back -P orch

'M4t;~~tf.f

Swing band

Back Porch

•
The
Ashton
ElementarY Fall Festival,
4 to 8:30 p.m. Saturday at
the school. There will be
games and a Jupiter Jump.
Thrkey dinners and hot
dogs. The Country Good
Times Band will provide
entei1ai.nment.

Swing band
• Washington State
Community College ·will
focus on Treasures of the
Valley this year in its
Everrgreen Humanities
Series.
At 7:30 tonight the .
Back Porch Swing band
featuring Appalachian and
other traditioilal music wil
perform in Graham
Auditorium. It is free and
open to the public.

'

Pioneer

• Dance at Southside : ·
Community Center, 7 to :
10 p.m Saturday, with ·
~ounds of Bluegrass.
•

Day

•.•

~,

....,. ......u-. .....

~~

eome Cn

..

Dance
• Western style square

dance class aild workshop, ·
wc:tts· and Buddy
Mahal, . Bonnie Raitt, . Ry · She broke into the Chiic~:o
Cooder and Buddy Guy in blues sccrJl&lt;: wi~h her sJ~~~~~~
con~.
. . • · ·, ·
· lead guitai work and ill
She got her fifst gu1tar at ~ vocals in 1989, for Hlnta
age seven and at 16 began' Pig label and has since· beensinging in Worchester-area traveling around the country
bands. When she was 22 she performing in clubs and at
moved to Chicago and soon festivals.
~

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•

r

Arena.
Rio Grande (1-2) placed
four . players in double figures, led by junior guard Seth
Deerfield, who scored 16
points.
Sophomore Matt Simpson
scored 14 points. Nat Moles
and Dawayne Mcintosh
. chipped in II a piece. Joe
Martin had nine points. ·
Jerry Barlow and . Chris
Ballenger were the top
rebounders for the Redmen
with seven each. Deerfield
and Simpson pulled down six
boards each and Mcintosh
and Martin had five each.
Donald Oatis produced a
, double-double
for
the
Bulldogs }Vith 18 points and
10' rebounds. Clarence Tubbs
added · II points .and Jason
E!Iiott chipped in 10 for
Wilberforce (1-1) .
Rio Grande shot 48 percent
(20-for-42) from the field,
including 7-of-15 (46.7 per"
cent) from beyond the arc.
They comiected on 23-of33 attempts (69.7 percent)
from the free throw line.
A poor shooting second
half doomed the Bulldogs.
They made only ·7-of-32
shots in the second 20-minute
session, including 0-for-7
from three-point land.
For the game, Wilberforce
shot 33.9 percent (21-for-62)
from the field, 38.9 percent
(7-of~'l8) -from three-point
land and 69 percent (9-of-13)
from the charity stripe.
Rio Grande dominated the
boards, 40-28. Rio Grande
committed 23 turnovers to
only 13 for the Bulldogs.
Wilberforce led 37-33 at
halftime.
These twb schools will
meet again next Tuesday at
the Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande will participate
in the Urbana University
Tournament this weekend,
facing Siena Heights on
Friday and Notre Dame
College on Saturday.

LOJJISVILLE, Ky. - · The
University of Rio Grande
women's basketb!ill team began
the 2002-03 season with an
impressive 82-57 victory over
, Spa\ding University on Tuesday.
· . Rio Grande (1-0)used a bal·~· -.
anced attack and had four players score in double figures.
Sophomore Alkia Fountain
proved to have put last season's knee injury is behind
her as she: pumped in 18
points in leading the
Redwomen to victory.
. Fellow sophomore Angel
Allen added 17 points while
'Tiffany Johnson chipped .in
12 and Annie Tucker produced. ) 0 on the evening.
Freshman ·
Nichole
Thompson was .on the verge
of double figures, in her coll~~iate game, scoring eight
pbmts.
.
' Spalding (1-2) was led
Bryan Wimsatt and Jessica
Shutt who l'roducc.d 13 points
each. Bla1r Coleman also
managed double figures in the
scoring category with 10.
Dana Smith added eight
points.
The two teams will play
again, Jan: 23 at the Newt
· Oliver Arena.
Rio will ~ have its work cut
out for inhis weekend when
they travel to Georgetown
Colle~e to play in the Habitat
Classtc. The Redwomen will
face the host school on
Friday with a 5 p.m. tip-off
and then tangle with NAJA
Division I No.4 Central State
on Saturday at either 2 or 4·
p.m.
'

• Palriot Pioneer Day
will be observed from II
am. until 3 p.m Satwday.
Bean soup will be served
from noon until 2 p.m.
From 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.,
the history of the pi~
will be shared Families will
be on hand with pictures
and stories of their past
Everyone is welcome to
share their family memories of Patriot. For more
information, call7404469287. '

!

Simpson

e

Wilberfori:e at
the
Lewis

Rio Grande
women win

Dance

Patriot

Ohio State Football

WILBERFORCE - An
11-0 run over a four-minute
stretch in the
second half,
keyec,l the Rio
Grande basketball team
to its frrst victory . of the ·
season, 70-5 8
o ·v

•
.

Doss remembers Brees' bomb two years ago
COLUMBUS (AP) Mike Doss will likely leave
Ohio State as the latest three. time All-American in the
football program's traditionrich history.
Yet if there is a play that
has defined him as a strong
safety with the Buckeyes, it
might be . Drew Brees ' late·
bomb at Purdue two seasons .
ago.
The resulting 64-yard catch
and run by Seth Morales with
I :55 · left
gave
the
Boilermakers a 31-27 victory,
propelled Purdue to its first
Rose Bow I in 34 years and
effectively squelched the
12th-ranked
Buckeyes'
dreams of a Big Ten or even a
national title.
"Sometimes it's hard to
read Mike about those things
but I definitely think it eats at
him," said free safety Donnie
Nickey, who has played

alongside Doss for his entire NFL aild is a star for the San ·
career.
Diego Chargers. Morales is a
As No. 3 Ohio State pre- backup wide receiver and
pares to return to West punt returner for the
Lafayette on Saturday, Doss Boilermakers (4:5. 2-3 Big
swears that he isn't ~aunted Ten). Doss leads one of the
by memories of Qrees' pass nation's best defenses as the
wafting qver his head.' ·
Buckeyes (10-0, 5-0) keep
"That was kind of a split rolling right along. ·
decision, for me to have' two
"I think these guys,
interceptions and a kind of · because of their intelligence
comiM-out for me personally and awareness and maturity
-·. . arid· then at the end it's a level, certainly rank up there
lc;aming experience," Doss with as good a defense _as
said.
··
I've ever seen," Ohio State
·Brees has moved on to the head coach Jim Tressel said

.? .: ~

~

done. " Purdue coach Joe
Tiller said. "I thought, 'Oh
my God, this is a shame."'
With a capacity crowd at
Ross-Ade Stadium howling,
the Boilermakers regrouped.
"After that interception my
heart was in my throat,''
Morales said. " I didn '1 know
what to say. I dido 't know
what to do."
- .
It took just two plays for
Brees
to
lead
the
Boilermakers back. Morales
was Brees' fourth option on
the play, called "Yellow
74XZ-pole."
When the pass dropped
into . Morales' outstretche~
hands, Nickey, who was on
the other side of the field hi
pass coverage, had a sict
feeling.
-. ,
"Any~ime you lose a game;
it feels terrible," he said. ~·A
roller-coaster like that game;
Please see osu. Bl

..

- '· .. ~&gt;

Marshall Foot6a11 '.!H·
f::

of his defense.
One of the biggest reasons
is Doss, a big hitter who considered jumping to the NFL a
year ago but reconsidered at
the last second.
'T m glad I did stay, to.
work hard and to do something you 've been dreaming
abOut doing since you got to
college and to try to have an
undefeated season and lead
your team and be a senior,"
Doss said. "It's been a lot of
fun and I'm just· enjoying it
and trying to soak it all up
these last couple of weeks."
Doss picked off two Brees
passes, returning the second
33 yards to set up an Ohio
State touchdown that gave
the Buckeyes a 27-24 lead.
"My thought on the sideline was, this guy (Brees)
deserves better than this with
the great career he 's had here
and the great things he 's

·,. ..

•

MU's Leftwich feared ·
the worst
after
injury
'.
.

'

Nation's passing· leader may not play
·in next Tuesday's game against Miami
HUNTINGTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - Quarte~back Byron
Leftwich is unable to watk on
his sore left le~ - and doesn't ·
know if he cart 6e he(!lthy in ·
time for Marsh!ilJ's 11ex1 game
.Tuc~sd;t~ a~;umo• Miami, dhio.

about time
· and when your body can
, recover..Hopefully,' it can. B.ut .
... Tile~day : will'l&gt;e pushing it. · I w0uldn 't have went out
· Tuesday· will really ·be push- there," Leftwich told The
· ing it."
Charleston . Daily Mail.
The nation's passing leader "Monday I had alot of time to
was hit in the first quarter of a sit and watch television. I saw
34-20 loss Saturday at Akron. people on . the sports shows
X-rays were negative and say I went back in for the
Leftwich insisted·on returning Heisman Trophy. That had
in the third · quarter despite nothing to do with it.
limping badly.
"And a lot of people were
Leftwich finished 26-of-38 saying that I needeJ;kto think
for 307 yards in two quarters about. my family. ~- I was.
· of play.
That's my family out there.
His actions were viewed as And I was thinking about my
courageous by his teammates family.' '
and coaches and foolish by
Leftwich feared the worst
Marshall quarterback Byron. Leftwich hopes to be ready for others who felt he shouldn't on the trip back to Marshall.
next Tuesday's game against Miami (Ohio), but still can't have ri sked further injury.
"At the time; my body told
walk on his left leg. Leftwich suffered the Injury last
"If I had felt that I was me, ' Hey, you might be kind
Saturday at Akron. (Bryan Long)
putting myself in harm's way, of done."' he said. "Bul that's .

College Basketball

what the doctors are for.
That's why you've got the
s~c ialists . That's why you've
got the guys that make all the
money. to put somewhat of a
smile on my face." ·
. He was examined Sunday
by a Columbus, Ohio, surgeon who' repaired a stress
fracture in the same area of
Leftwich's left leg last winter.
A metal rod inserted during
that surgery stretches fmm his .
knee to his ankle and saved
him Saturday from a more
gruesome injury.
"Because of that, it wasn't
as bad as it could have been,".
he said.
Leftwich has n't practiced
this week. He is using crutches and has an air splint on the
shin .
"We're not going to try to
rush it. But. at the same time,
we're trying to speed it up."
he said, "Right now. it's pretty sore."
Leftwich is averaging 374
yards passing per game. He
has thrown for 2,995 yards,
19 touchdowns and seven,
interceptions.

•

.O'Brien ·lives in shadow of King Football
Bv RusTY MILLER
Associated ~ress

of what's happening in football
helps everybody," he said.
That feeling filters down to hi s
COLUMBUS - At a lot of players.
"Once our season starts and
schools, the basketball coach
wouid be brooding and resentful their season is about to come to
because the football team is 10- an end. we get all the publicity
O, ranked No. 3 and in the chase we ' need," forward Zach
for a national championship.
Williams said. "Being a player or
Yet no one could be happier coach here in Columbus is like
about Ohio State's football sue- being with an NBA team. We sell
cess than men's basketball coach out most of our games. Getting
Jim O'Brien.
recognition and being noticed is
He harbors no animosity or not that hard. So we don't run
jealousy. In fact, he embraces the into that.
hype that surrounds the football
"Plus, we get along with the
team.
football players. We have to "It doesn't bother me at all," they're pretty big guys.''
O'Brien said Wednesday. "And
There is no question that men 's
if somebody who's coaching bas- basketball is the No. 2 sport at
ketball here would let -it bother Ohio State. The gap has closed
them, it would be a huge mistake considerably, however.
· because you can't fight that. This
Bill Hosket was an Allis the culture and I understand American basketball player at
it.,"
Ohio State. and led the 1968 team
Football coach Jim Tressel to the Final Four. His coach was
says he's working so hard he Fred Taylor, who had been the
doesn't notice the ran kings, . freshman coach at Ohio State
doesn 't ponder the bowl picture un'der Floyd Stahl. In addition 10
and doesn 't talk about a national being the head basketball coach ,
.
Stahl was also the associate ath-championship.
O'Brien said he's perfectly letic director.
content being cocooned in the
When the football team ear~ted
shadow of King Football .
a trip to the Rose Bowl, Stahl
"I think you can coexist with it. was sent to California to make
I really believe that the success the arrangements for the bowl

.

'

game ·- during the middle of
basketball season.
"I remember Fred told me once
years · ago that he actually
coached' the varsity · basketball
team two games when he was the
freshman coach," Hosket sa:ld.
"(Stahl) was pulled off the basketball team to make sure, as
Fred said, 'that the motel was
right and that they got the right
dessert."'
0 ' Brien has taken an Ohio
State team to a Final Four, won a
Big Ten regular season co-championship and a conference tournament title. The Buckeyes are
currently practicing in preparation for their exhibition opener
on Tuesday. They open the season Nov. 25 at home against
Coppin State.
·
No matter what Ohio State has
accomplished . in basketball ,
O'Brien is aware that impressionable minds tune in each
week to see the football team . ·
"They turn on ABC on
Saturday afternoon and it's Ohio
State. How many weeks in a row
is this goi ng 10 be on national
.
,,
TV? Seven or so? It's national Ohio State head coach Jim O'Brien shouts instructelevision every Saturday after- tions to his team during their game against Illinois
noon ," O'Brien said. "lf. Ohio
State, not just the athletic depart- Tuesda;t Jan. 29, 2002. in Columbus, Ohio. O'Brien
believes the success of Ohio State football helps the
Please see O'Brien, Bl
entire university, including his baske,~ball team. (API

J

I

J

�•

Thursday, November 7, 2002

Sentinel

1

. . . . . . . .,

November 7, 2002 .

www.mydallysentlnel.com

..

7

! RLional Semifinals
1 I •J} 4DtvistDN 1
1

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport,

-1-lfi-OU-12

992-2825

(1 ) Solon (1 1-0) vs. (4) Mentor (10-1) at
(2) Warren Hard ing (1t ·O) " · (3)
Lakewood St. Edward (10-1 1 at Parma
Byers Field

Place Your Business's Ad here
Call T~e Daily Sentinel for details

Region 2
(1 ) Brunswick (1HI) ,s, (5) Spring. Soulh

Valley, Lumber

(8· 31 at Mansfield Arlin Field
Fremont Ross Harmon Stadium
Region 3

Crow's

992-6611

Family
Restaurant

NASCAR's lhree top divisions head to· Phoenix
!his -k, a trad&lt; 111srs a mile in length but has
more ~racteristics ot a SOOrt trad&lt;.

Winston Cup: Checker
Auto Parts 500 presented by

WINSTON CUP

Race: Checker Auto Parts 500 presented by Pennzoil 1
Where: Phoenix International Raceway; Avondale,
Ariz.
.
I
When: Sunday, 2 p.m. EDT.
·
1
Race distance: 3121aps; 312 miles
Trac:k: 1-mile oval
I

More luck and another
victory for McMumy

Delendlng chlmplon: Jeff Burton
Race 18C01d: Tony Stewart, 118.13211'f'h, Nov. 7,

t999.

·

Qualifying recGid: Rusty Waill""', 134.178 mph.
Nov. 3, 2000.
Storyline: With two moes remaining in the season,
Mark Martin is 87 pdtnts behind leader Tony Stewart.

By RICK MINTER
COx N.ews Service

I
I
1

1

1
I
I
I

BUSCH SERIES

I

Race: Bashas 200
Where: Phoenix International Raceway
When: SatUrday, 2 p.m. EDT.
Race distance: 200 laps, 200 mil~s
Defending champion: Greg Biffte
Race record: Jeff Burton, 115.145 mph,
Nov. 4. 2000.
Qualifying record: Jimmy Spencer,
131.339 mph, Oct. 26 , 2001.
Storyline: With three races remaining on
the Busch Series schedule, Greg Biffle has
a 212-point lead over Jason Keller In 1he
standings.

1
I

I

1

.1

N.C.
amie McMurray wrote another chapter in one
of the mosl amazing success stories in
·
fttv:Jdnpam,

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

992-5432

Race: Chevy SiiYerado 150

Where: Phoenix lntsmational Raceway
When: Saturday, 3 p.m. EDT.
Race dlllance: 150 laps, 150 miles
Defending chlmplon: Greg Biffle
Race recoftl: Jack Sprague, 103.053 mph,
· Apnl 20, 1997.
Qualifying recGid: Joe RU11rnan, 129.204
n'f'h, Maroh 17, 2000.
Storyline: Wl1h 1wo races remaining in 1he
2002 Craftsman Truck season, rour drivers
are v.ithln ·189 points o191ancllngs leader

Place Your
Business's Ad
here Call The
Daily .Sentinel for
details ·

Mike Bliss.

NASCAR NOTES
NASCAR steps in when
Wallace, Gordon tangle

NASCAR history Saturday by speeding post
the spinningcars of Jeff Green and Michael
Waltrlp to win the Sam's Club 200 Busch Series race
at North Garo!lna Speedway
McMurray led'onl,y thellnal
lapo In taking his oeoond
consecutive Busch vlcton( 00
Oct. 26", he got his flnrt career
· win by

S.harkov Field
(2) Avon Lake (10-1) vs. (3) E. Liverpool
~ (8 · 3)

at Massillon Paul Brown Tiger
Stadium
Region&amp;

(t ) Kings Mills Kings (t1 -0) vs. (4)

Dave or
Jessica
992·2155

By RIC!' MINTER

Cox News Service

Trenton Edgewood (10·1) at Fairfield
Stadium
(2) Day. Chaminade-Jullenne (10-1) vs.
(3} Vandalia B!JIIer (10-1) at Dayton
Welcome Stadium
DIVISION Ill
All games at 7 p.m. Saturday

Region 9
(1) Cte. Benodicti~e (9-2) vs. (4)
Steubenville (9-2) at Canton Central

out of
the last lap of the Aaron's
Atlanta Motor SpeedwBJ!
At Hocklngham, McMurray
wBirunnlngthlrd withtwolaptl
M0 MURR
"' to gu when Green and Waltrip
collided while hattllng for the
lead. McMurray·sped post on the inside.
"I cannot belleve the luck we've had," McMurray
said.
Since September, when-car owner Chip Ganassl
hired him to drive a Winston Cup car for next sea·
son. McMurrsy has posted four top-three finishes In

Catholic Stadium
(2) Hunting Valley Unl,. (8-3) vs. (6)

•u

the Busch Series ,

Lisbon Beaver Local (9-2) at Beloit West
Branch He.i!C.OCk Stadium

Rutland Bottle Gaa)
tower 118)'11 to
down, or they're (IOIDg to brlllg
us down pit road,' Wallace's

·

·Gonlon, who !lnl&amp;hed tlfth,
said Wallace's antics cost hbn
soveral positions.
"I tried to pass hlm clean, and he Just chopped
me off," Gordon Sllld. "We JOt into lt an the back
straightaway and he Jet me 110 b): Then he Just
tried to wred&lt; me down the front straightaway"

for Sunday's WUlSton CUp race.
His car appeared stro'ng at the beginning of the
race, but as the event wore on, the No. 40 Dodge

~ends:

became a hendful to drive.

After starting on the outside pole and running
near the front early, he had dropped to 15th by the
finish.

The driver took the blwne for the disappointing
run.
"We just didn'tacllust on (the car] right," said
M c Murra~ "I didn't te~ (the crew] the right things
todo."
·

The speedway lightlni system was flnrt utilized

.

N.h

UMartln
Mllrtlnsville~::~:~~~:·~~~~~·

'

I . time a pel!a!ty

plonshlp. '

race.

Qualifying for the Daytona 500 will move from its
traditional Saturday afternoon dclte to SWldaY after- :.:.'
noon and will be accompanied by a Goody's Dash \

race.
The 2t»-mile ARCA race that has been a companion event with pole qualifying will move tO

Saturday and be a part or the Shootout program.

Biffle's lead secure

left.

Yearbook available

Orders are'now being accepted for the 2002

NASCAR Winston Cup Yearbook. The 31st
Anniversary Edition wlli give fans a complete Jook

1

at the seaSon, from the Daytona 500 to the seasonending " NASCAR Championship Weekend" at

Homestead-Miami Speedway.
Prefacing thedetailed descriptions or the weekly
battles Is a section devoted to past NASCAR
Winston Cup chwnplons, such as Richard Petty,
Dale Earnhanlt, Rusty Wallaoe and Bill Elliott.
To order. call (800) 632-11110 or visit UMI
Publications' Website, www.urnipub.com.

'!ll
il

'

B. Matt Kenselh, 4,209.
9. Dale Jarrett, 4,154.
10. Alcky Rudd, 4,093.
. 11 . Dale Esrnhardl Jr., 4,005.
12. Jeff Burton, 3.967.

13. Bill Elliott, 3,939.
14. Mlcheel WaH!Ip, 3,842.
15. Rlci&lt;v CJBven, 3,738.
16. Sterling Marlin, 3,703.
17. Bobby Laboote, 3,688.
• 18.. Joff Graan, 3,597.
19. Dave Blaney, 3,485.
20. Robby Gonlon, 3,465 . ·
2t . Kyto Petty, 3,364 .
22. Ksvln HaNlck, 3,288.
23. Torry Laboote, 3,253.
24. Jarem~ Msytlotd, 3,157.
25. Elliott Sadler, 3, 146 .
- 28. Ward Burton, 3, 129.

27. Jimmy Spencer, 3,056.
28. John Andretli, 2,994.
29. Johnny Benson, 2,886.
30. Ken SchJBder. 2,820.
31 . Mllco Skinner, 2,740.
32 . Bobby Hamilton. 2,622.
33. Casey Atwood, 2,569.
34 . Steve Park, 2,482.

35 . Joe Nemochek, 2,438 .
38. Brott Bodine, 2,276.
37. Jerry Nadeau, 2,250.
38. Todd Bodine, 1,890.
39. Hut Stricklin. 1,781 .
40. Kenny Wallace, 1,844.

-----------------------------------------BUSCH SERIES
STANDINGS
1. Greg BIHio, 4,579.
2. Jaoon Keller, 4,387.
3. Scott Wimmer, 4, 128.
4. Mtka McLaughlin, 4,044.
5. Jack Spragua, 3,979.
e. Jamie McMurrey 3,1177.
7. Konny Wallacoc~ci14.
8. Scott Rlggo, 3,ooo.
9. Bobby HamiHon Jr., 3,807.
10. Rondy LaJoie, 3,7&amp;e.
11 . Stacy Compton, 3,748.
12. Tony Ralnsa, 3,670.
t3. Tim Sa~tot, 3,475.
14. Johnny Sauter, 3,286.
15. Hank Parker Jr., 3,283.
18. Shane Hmlel, 3,261 .
17. Ron Hornaday, 3,058.
18. Jeff Green, 3,000.

19. Ashton Lowla, 2,999 .

I

Norlhmont Stadium

. DIVISION IV
All games at 7:30p.m. Friday
unlees otherwise noted

20. Larry Foyt, 2,991 .

21 . Todd Bodine, 2,1164.
22. Korry Eotnhardt, 2,929 .
23. Cally Maa11, 2,803 .
24. Klvln Grubb, 2,712.
25. Klvln Lapeaa, 2,5114'.
211. MlchHI W.Mp, 2,246.
'l:l. Jimmy Spencer, 2,182.
211. Rlc!&lt;y Hendrick, 2,125. .
211. Shone Hill, 1,813.
30•Joff Burton, 1,795.
31 . Brian Vlcklll, 1,723.
32. Mark OrHn, 1,702.
33. Kllll' Klhne, 1,878.
34. Joe Nomochek, 1,608.
35. Chad Chlffln, t ,567.
38. Jay Slluter, 1,437. .
37. Mike Wallace, 1,406.
38. JoH Purvla, 1,309.
39. Mike Harmon, 1,275.
40. Da,ld Graen, 1,085.

season.

·

McSwain. who came to Labonte's team !'rom the

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Business's
Ad here
Call The
Daily
Sentinel for.
details
I

Dave or
Jessica
992·2155

·No. 28of Ricky Rudd, is serving as an adviser to

crew chief Jimmy Makar and will take over his .
duties next season.

"We were pretty good," McSwain said. "The
worst run we had was the last one, so that hurt
us,"

Green~
Jeff Green led five limes for 681aps but faded to
loth at the finish after the ruindllng dete&lt;!Orated
on his No. 30 Chevrolet. But he said he was encouraged by his overall pert-.rmance.
"Rwmlng up !'ronI and belllg competitive. thet's ·
what we need to do each and every week," he said.
"If we can do that. we will win races."

Young drivers taking charge• on Winston Cup circuit

DRIVER STANDINGS

B. Rusty Wallace, 4,283.
7. Jeff Gordon, 4,282.

(3) Tipp City Tippecanoe (9-2) at Clayton

In 1900, he was hi t with a controverslal46-po!DI
penalty for an UJU!Jlproved manifold ilpaoer. He
lost !Mt title to t.he late Q&lt;ie ~by 28 .

Marlin has only two racos - at Phoenix next
- k and at Homestead the - Ii l!!ler - to over·
1llk'e Stewart.
.
''We've got to go and put up per!ormanc:es 111&lt;e
we did [atRockingltwnl," Marti~\ said.
The poln\4 raoe essentla!IY becalile a two-dPiwr, '
contest beiwoon Martin and Stewart after botlt
J
Ryan Newman and JimllllaJohn..,. had.PQ&lt;\l'lln'
!shes Sunda~ Newman had hen&lt;jling IJI)&gt;blsma '
and flnlshed two laps down In 23J:d.
,
Problems resultlllg !'rom lug nuts left I.- on a
pit stop cost Johnson 14laps, and he wound up
$7th.
Despite the mistlike, Johnson held on to \lllrd
.pjace ln llie standlllgs, but hJs del!clt JWI!IIl!d hm
160 to 219 behind Stewart. Newman ~&lt;wtthe
,•'
fourth spot, but he's 225 back.. .
·l',t ·

TRUCK BERIEB STANDINGS
1. Mike Bllu, 3,065 .
2. Rick Crawlord , 2,997.
3. Tad Muogra,e, 2,958.
4. Da,ld Starr, 2,883.
5. Jaoon Le1tlar, 2,876.
6. Dannlo Blitzer, 2,840.
7. Robert Prelllay, 2,811:
· 6. Torry Cook, 2,781 .
g, Travlt Kvapll, 2,756 .
10. Coy Glbbl, 2,.733. .
t 1. Brondon Gaughan, 2,839.
12. Jon Wood, 2,531 .
13. Lance Norlck, 2,395.
14. Bobby Donor, 2,304 .
t5. Matt Crafton,.2.t48.
18. Carloa Contre11o, 2,137.
17. Bill Looter, 2,093.
18. Lanoe Hooper, 1,998.
19. Stove Portenga . 1,964.
20. Brian Rose, 1,952.

46 on Nov. 26, won at Michigan
International Speedway.

By RICK MINTER
Cox News Servi ce

Rockingham, N.C.
r you don't think a youth
movement is under way in
NASCAR's Winston Cup
Series, take a look at how long

I

or the 34 races run to dale, 10
have been won by drivers over

age 40.

And as the current crop of
young drivers gains experience,
the swing toward young winners
could be even more proooWlced.
"We're going to be a little bit

it's been s in ce.an~'on e older
than 40 won a race.
You have to'go all the way
more experienced at dlft'enmt ,
·.race tracks and different situaback ,t o Aug. 18 - 11 races ago
- when Dale Jarrett, who turnB tions, and worklllg with the cars

ll'lclt: 1·mlle oval; banking In lurna 1·2, 11
degrees; banking In tums 3-4, 9 degrees;
banking In straights, none; leng1h of
frontaJretclt, 1,179 feet; leng1h o1 backstretch,
1,55ffeet.
Where: Avondale, Ariz.
om opened: 1964

Rocldniham, N.C.

or the second con!I:E!Cutive year ,
Matt Kenoeth' s tewn, led by crew
chief Robbie Reiser, won the
Rockingham World Pit Crow Competition.
The crow put on four tires and added 22
gallons of gasollne tn a contest-record
18.1123 seoonds.
The crew will spill $40,1100 In prize

Filii Wlneton Cup~= Checker 500, Nov.

e, 1958.

Qrandlllnd INUng: 76,812.
On the Web: www.phoenlxlnUraceway.com

money.

Mark Martin's team took second place
' with Kurt Busch's crew thir d. Th e top

three teams all were from Rou1h Raclns.

. Dl~lrlbuted by Unl~~ersal Press Syndicate for Cox News Se" lce. (600) 255·8734 . "For release tho week of November 4, 2002.

Assoclat.ed Press Top 25
The Top Twenty Five teams in The
Associated Press college footl;lal l poU, with
first-place votes in parentheses, records
through Nov. 2, total points based on 25
points for a first place 1.10te through one
point lor a 251h place vote and previous
ranking:
W-L Polnta Pvo
1. Okietlama (42) ... .. .8-0 I ,81B
2
2. Miami (32) ..... .. ..... .8-0 1,804
1
3. Ohio St.. ............... 1Q-O 1,705
6
4. Texas ........... .. : ...... ..8·1 1,564
7

5. Washington St... ..... B-1

1,538
e. Iowa .................... ... 9-1 .1:501
7. Georgia ............. .. ... 8-1 1.304
8. Virginia Tech .......... 8-1 1,303
9. Notre Dame .., .. .... .. 8· 1 1,268
10. Southern Cal... ...... 6-2
11. Alabama ...............7-2
12. Kansas St. ........ .... 7-2
13. Michigan . ... .:.... ....7-2

Rag!on 13
(8) Youngs. Ursuline (6-5) vs. (4) East
Palestine (10-1)' at YOungstown Boardman
Spartan Stadium

(2) Girard (1 0-11 vs. (3) Cto. VASJ (8-3) at
Chardon Memorial Field. (8 p.m.)
Region 14

t4. N.C. Slole ........ ...... 9-1
15. Orogon .. ................7-2
16. LSU ...... ...... ...........6-2
17. Florida St. .............6-3
18. Colorado ......... ...... 6-3
19. ~nn St. ..... ........... 6-3

11i Portsmouth (1 0- 1) vs. (5) Ironton (8-2)

at Ohio University Pedan Stadium
·
(7) Portsmouth W. (9·2) vs. (3) Coshocton
(11-Q) at Lancaster Fulton Field
Region 16
(1) Kettering Alter (10-1) vs. (4) Plain City

Jonathan Alder (10-1) at Springfield North
Panther Stadium

(21 Reading (1 1-0) vs. (3) COldwater (11 0) at Huber Heights Wayne Heidkamp
Stadium

DIVISIONV
All gamea at 7 p.m. Saturday
Region 11

BANKS
-t::.

CONStRUCTION
736 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
(7~0)

992-SOQ9
lArry 'Kf. Banks,
Owner/Operator

•

'

••

899 .
795
667
547
561
486

4
11

12
14
15

to
19
17
18
13
20
21
22

(Jeff Gotdon)
Sept.. 7 - Chavy Monte Carlo 400 ,
Rk:hmond. Va. (Matt. Konselh)
Sap!. 15 - New Hampshire 300·,
Loudon. (Ryan Newman)
Sept: 22 - MBNA America 400. Covet,
Del. (Jimmie JOhnson)
.
Sept . 29.:.... Protection One 400, K~nsB.s

Ctly, Kan. (Jeff Gordon)
Oct. 6 - EA Sports 5110, Talladega , Ala .
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.)

; Oct. 13 -

Concord. N.C. (Jamie McMurray)
Oct. 20 - Martinsville 500, Martinsville,
· Va. (Kurt Busch)
Oct. 27 - NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.
. (Kurt Busch)
Nov. 3 - Pop Secret 400,. Rockingham ,

N.C. (Johnny Benson)
Nov. 10 - Checker
Avondale, Ariz.

AutO

P8rts 500K,

Nov. 17 - Homestead 400. Homestead, Fla.

13. Bill Etliott ... .. ............ .... ....... ........3.939

National Football League
AFC
East
W~TPctPFPA

Miami ........ ...... 5

3

o

.625 200 1,67

4 o .556 248 259
4 &lt;1' .5110 206 165
5 o .375 160 206
South
WLTPctPFPA.

Buffalo .......... .. 5
New England .. 4
N.Y. Jets .........3

lndianapolis .... 4 4 0 . ~ 160 167
Tennessee .. ... .4 4 0 .500 183 212
Jacksonville ... .3 · 5 . 0 .375 164 157

Houston .... .. .... 2

6

o .250

107 2t4

North

WLTPciPFPA.
Pittsburgh ....... 5 3 0 .625 192 160
Cleveland ...... .4 5 0 .444 205 195
Baltimore ........ 3

5

0 .375 139 162

Cincinnati ....... 1

7 0 . 125 t 13 21.4
Weal .
WLTPctPFPA.
Denver .. ...... :.. 6 2 0 .750 207 170
San Diego .... .. 6 2 0 .750 186 163

Kansas City .... 4

4

Oakland .... ... .. .4

4 0 .5110 226 188
NFC

0 .500 259 240

Ea•t

WLTPctPFPA
2 0 .750 221 t18
4 0 .5110 113 !32
4 0 .5110 155 !91
6 0 .333 115 t55
South
WLTPctPFPA
Tampa Bay ... .7 2 0 .778 203 t09
New Orleans 6
Atlanta ...
...5
Carolina ......... 3

2

0 .750 256 209

3

0 .625 187 t36

1
5 0 .375 111 117
North .

WLTPctPFPA
Green Bav ...... 7 1 0 .875 227 !64
Detroit.. ....... " .. 3 5 0 .375 t 58 220
Chlcago .... ... ... 2 6 _ 0 .250 152 !99
Minnesota,. .... 2

6 0 .250 186 230
West

14. Michael Waltrip ................ .. ,. ,. .. .. 3,842
15. Rido:y Craven .................... ....... ,..3,736
16. SterlinQ Marlin ....... ..... .. ... ........... 3,703

17. Bobby Labonte ................. .......... 3,688
18. Jeff Green ....... .. ..... ...... :............. a:597
19. Dave Blaney ... .. ............. .. ...... .:.. 3,485

20 . Robby

Gord~n

.. ......................... 3,465

Pro Basketball
National Basketball Asaoclatlon
EASTERN CONFERENCE

W

L

Pet.

GB

,1
1

.BOO
.800
.750

.5

Boston ... .......... .... 2

2

.500

t .5

Washington ....... .. 2 •

3

.400

2

Miami... ....... .... ..... 1

3

250

· 2.5

New York ........~ .... 1 · 4 200
Central Division
W
L
Pet
Detroit.. . .... ......... 4
.800
lndiana ..... .. ..........3
.750
New Orleans ...... 3
.750
Atlanta ................ 3
2 .600
Milwaukee ........... 2
2 .500
Chicago ......... .... 2
3 400
Cl ~veland ... ... ....... 2
3 .400
Toronto ...... ......... 2
3 .400

3

GB
.5
.5,

1.5
2
2
2

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Mldwe~t Divlalon .
W

Dallas .... ....... .......4
San Antonlo .. .. ..... 4
Minnesota ............ a
Houston ... ..... .. ... ,.2
Denver ...... .... ..... .. l

L

Pel

0 1.000
1 .800
2 .600
2 .500

GB

.000

Poclflc Dfvlalon
W
L Pot

GB

Utah ........... ........ .'.l
Memphls .... ..........o

5

1
3
3

.800
.500
.400

1.5
2
2

3 .400
W L T Pet PF PA . Phoenix ......... .... .. 2
Portland ...............2
3 .400
2
SanFnn::iso&gt;.. ..6 2 0 .750 203 164
Chan~ l (9·2) at Strongsville Catan Stadium
LACtippers
........
t
3
.250
2.5
Arizona ...........4 4 0 .500 150 158
(21 Middletiatd Cardinal (t 1-Q) vs. (3) St. Louis ........ .3 5 0 .375 166 172
Golden State ....... 1
4 .200
3
Dalton p Q-1) at Bedford Steward Field
Tueeday'a Games
Seattlo ........, ... 2 6 0 .250 t45 180
Region 18
Orlando 125, Sacramento 121
Sunday, Nov. 10
(8) Delphos JeHerson (9-2) vs.' (4)
Cleveland 89, L.A. Lakers 70
Houston at Tennessee, ~ p.m.
Castalia Margaretta (9·2) at Tiffin National
Indiana 83, Miami 79
Detroit at Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Field at FroSt-Kalnow StadiUm
Minnesota 90, Washington 86
Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m
(21 Defiance Ttnora (10-0) vs, (8) Delphos
SeaHie 104, Houston 97
San Diego at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
St. John'~ (8-3) at Defiance Brown Stadium
San Antonio 93, Golden State 73
N~ Orleans at Carolina, ~ p.m.
ReglOfl 19
Atlanta 103, Denver 87
Indianapolis at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
(1) Woodsfield Monroe Cent (11-0) vs.
Weclneaday'a Gam••
N.Y. Giarlts a-t Min'nesota, 1 p.m..
(51 Chesapeake (8-3) at Circleville' Logan
Dallas 106, Toconto 92
· Cincinnati at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
Elm Brave&amp; Stadium
Washington 107, Cleveland 1110
Seattle at Arizona, 4:05p.m.
(:i) Amanda-Cioarcrook (Q-2) vs. (6)
New Yor~ 95,, Sacramento 88
Washington at Jack,sonvllle, 4:05 p.m.
Sarahsville
Shenandoah (8-3) at
Philadelphia 101 , L.A. Clippers 99, OT
New England at Chicago, 4:15p.m.
Zanesville Sulaberger Memorial Stadium
Booton 91 , Chicago 89
Kanaaa City at San Francisco. 4:15 p.ni.
Reglal1 20
Now Orleans 86, Seattle 84
Miami at N.Y. Jelo, 6:30 p.m.
(1) Marion Ploaoant (tl-0) vt. (4) Morral
OetiOII 50, Uteh 78
Open: Buffalo, Dallal, Tampa Bay,
Rldgodalo (9-2) at Marton Harding Stadium
Phoenix
83, Atlanta 88
Cleveland
121 Gahanna Colo. Aced. (10-1) " · (3)
Mllwaukoo 99, New Jerooy 93
Mond.y, Nav. 11
Bainbridge Paint Valley (10-1) at
Portland 94 , Memphis 88
Oaklar"'d at Denver, 9 p.m.
Washington Court House Miami Trace
Thu,...oy'o Oamoa
Panther Stadium
L.A. Lakert ~~ BQoton. 7:30 ·p.m.
DIVISION VI
Milwaukee at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
All goml!e 7:30 Friday
Oet10h at Doovar, to p.m.
Wlneton Cup Series
Region 21
F~doy't Oomoo
(1) Mogadore (10- 1) '"· (4) Monroeville
New \llrk at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Tho 2002 NASCAR Wlnaton Cup sched·
(9-2) at Berea Botdwln-Wallaca Finnie
Seattle at Onando, 7 p.m.
ule (winners In parentheael) and driver
Stadium
Cl...land at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
(2) lowolMtlo (1 1-0) ,e. (8) Cle. point standings:
L..... Cllpparo at Now Jersey, 7:30p.m. Feb. 17- Daytona 500, Daytona Beach,
Cuyahoga His. (8-~) at Ravenna Gilcrest
L.A. Lakera at Washington, 8 p.m.
Aa. (Ward Burton)
Field
Dallas at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Feb. 24 _;, ·Subway\ 400, ROCkingham.
1
.
Region 22
Golden State at New Orleans, 8:30p.m.
N.C.
(Mett Kenseth)
·
(~ )I. Columbua• Gro&lt;e (1 1-0) " · (5)
Atlanta at Utah, 9 p.m.
March 3 - UAW-DalmlerChrysler 400,
Sycamore Mohawk (9·2) at Lima Senior
Portland at Phoanix 1 9 p.m.
Lao vegas. (Sterling Marlin)
St8dfum I ~ ~ ;
Memphi&amp; ·at Sacramento, 10:30 p,m.
March tO - MBNA Amer ica 500,
(2) Tinln P¥vert (g.2) vs. (6) Rawoon CoryRaw~on' (~2) at~oatorla Memo~al Stadium Hampton . Ga. (Tony Stewart)
Maroh 17 - Carolina Dodge Dealers
Region 23
·
(1) Strasburg-Franklin (I t -0) '"· (4) 400 , Oanlngton . S.C. (Sterling Martin)
AP Women's Top 25
March 24 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn.
Newark Cath. (7-4) at' Mt. Vernon Yellow
(Kuri Busch)
:Jacket Stadium
The top 25 teams In The Associated
April 6 . - Samsung/RadloShack· 500,
(2) Danville (10-1) vs. (3) S!ladyslde (g.2)
(1) Smith,ille (11 -0) vs. (5) Bedford

College Basketball

•I

.

7. Texas Tech ............... 20-1 2
8. Purdue ........ .... ,......... 24-6
9_Georgia ........... ... .. .. .19-11
10. Notre Dame .. ... ...... .20-10
11 . Texas ...... .. ...... ...... ,22-10
12. Vanderbilt.'............. ... 30-7
13. North Carolina ......... 26-9

14. Penn 51.. .................23-12
15. Minnesota ......... ........ 22-8
16. Louisiana Tech ......... 25-5

17. Arkansas ... .. ...........2G-12

81 4

794

17
9

749
696
674 . !4
608
551
506
453

442

18. Cincinnatl ......... ......... 27-5

338
235

19. Colorado St. ............ 24-7
20. Boston College ....... .. 23-8
21 . GoorgeWashlngton ... 21-9
22. Oklahomo .......... .......32-4
23.1owa 51.'.. ........... .... ...24-9

218
165
150
148
t47

24 . MissisSippi St. .. ...... 19-12

141

25. UC Santa Barbjlra .... 26-6

106

4
16

24
18
8
19

20
21
2
10

Othera receiving votes: TCU 100, Washington 94, Tulane 88 , Virginia 81 , Old
Dominion 75, OregOn 67 , BYU •46,
Colorado 46, N.C. State 26, Naw Mexico
26, South Carolina 21 , Ohio St, 14, Florida
12, Pepperdine 8, Villanova 8, Michigan St.
6, Southern Cal 6, Harvard 5, Houston 5,

Mk:higan 5, Ball St. 3. Temple 3, DePaul2,
Rutgers 2. Pittsburgh f. Rice 1, Siena 1.

..

Hockey
National Hockey League
CONFERENCE

Atlantic Plvislon

W L T OL Plo GF GA
0 20 44 23
Pittsburgh ...... ...7 2 2 1 17 43 37
Philadelphia ...... 9 1 2
New Jersey .. .. .. 7 3 0

0 14 26 17

N.Y. Rangers .... 5 8 2
N.Y. Islanders ... 3 8 1

0 12 37 49
o 7 29 47

Northea1t Division

.

W L T OLI'tll GFGA

Boston .... .. ....... 7 2 2
Montreal .. ....... .. 4 4 4

0 16 37 29
0 12 33 40

OHawa .. .... .... ... 5 4 1

0 1t 26 22

Toronto ............ .4 7 2 0 10 41 42
Buffalo .......... .3 6 3 o 9 26 28
Southeut Dlvlalon

W L T DLPio GFOA
Tampa Bay ..... .. 7 4 2 0 16 47 36

Carollria .... ..... .. .s 4 2
· Washington ......6 6 1
Flori&amp;~ ... ;........ .:5 6 1

2 14 29' 32

0 13 29 38
1 12 31 43

Atlanta .. .... ..... ... 1 8 1 1 4 30 43
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division

W L TDLPio OFOA
St. Louis ........ .. .9 1 1 0 19 46 20
DetroL .... .. ......6 5 2 o 14 42 35

Chicago ............6 5 1

0 13 27 28

Columbus .. .. .... .5 5 1
Nashville ...... .. ... 1 6 1

t t2 34 35

4 7 25 39
Northweet Dlvlalon

·W
Miooesota.........9
Calgory,'.... ........ 5
. Vancouver ...... .. 5
Coforado ........... 4
Edmonton ..... ... 3

L
2
3
5
3
5

T DLPII GFGA
2 0 20 45 28
- 3 2 15 38 38
4 0 14 35 38
4 2 14 35 33
3 t 10 ~9 34

Pacific Dlvleion

W L T OLPio GFGA
Dallas ............ ... 7 3 3
LosAngeles .. ... B 4 2

1 18 44 32
1 15 39 38 .

San Jose .. ...... .. 5 6 0

1 11 34 40

Phoenix .... ...... .,5 7 o 1 11 28 42
Anaheim ... ....... .4 6 3 0 11 33 38
Two points for a win, one point for 1 tie
and overtime loll.
Philadelphia 2, Carolina 1, OT
N.Y. Rangers 5, Edmonton 2
Washington 4, Columbus 3, OT
St . Louis 5, Montreal2
Chicago 2, Detroit 0
, Toronto 4, Tampa Bay 3
Calgary 3, New Jersey 2
~an Jose 5, Los Angeles 2
Wednesday's Gamet

Florida 4, Pittsburgh 3. OT
Dallas 4, Vancouver 0
Ottawa 5, Colorado 2
Anaheim 2, Nashville 1
Thuraday'a .Gamea
Buffalo at Carolina, 7 p.m.
Florida at Washington, 7 p.m.
Calgary at 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.
Atlanta at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Nashville at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

·Transactions

.5
t .5 .

2
3
3.5
4.5

3 .250
4 · .200

Seattle ........... ...... 4
· Sacramento ..~ ...... a
L.A. Lakers .. .1...... 2

Recant Pit Pva
1. Duke (38) .......... ........ 31-4 1,093
3
2. T~nnessee (4).,. ......... 29-5 1;049
6
3 . ~S U (1 ) .... ................ 18·12
941 22
4. ConnectK:ui (1) .......... 39-0 873
5. Kansas St. ............. .... 26-8 839 11
6. Stanlord ..................... 32-3 6t8
5

Herd attempts to
overcome loss of
Slay, VanHoose
some more horses in th e
barn and get so me guys who
can play. Unfortun ately.
we ' ve got some poni es who
have got to become th oroughbreds qui ckl y."
White will count on several transfer s to do that ,
including 6-foot-7 forWard

BY JOHN RABY

Associated Prliss

HUNTINGTON , W.Va.
_ Billboards around . West
Virginia tout Marshall's bas,
ketball season as "' Shear
Excitement."
With four-year starters
Tamar Sl ay and J.R. fMarvinCBflfack ,_ ~ tr(a~ s fer) .
VanHoose gone, junior rom
o eyvt e
an. :
guard · Ronald . Bl ackshear Community College.
.
will be counted on to repeat
Sophomore point guard
as Marshall 's top scorer and A.W. Hamilton, a transfer
keep the Herd from falling from Wake Forest, will
into the depths of the Mid- become eligible in the fifth
American Conference.
game of the season on Dec.
Despile having VanHoose's 14. Hamilton is welcomed
inside presence and Slay 's to a team that didn't have a
rainbow jumpers, Marshall true point guard last season.
never made it to the conferOther newcomers who
ence championship game . will get plenty of work are
Neither player was named to Oklahoma State transfer · ·
the all-MAC first team or David Anderson, a 6-8
second team last season.
sophomore forward, and 6-9
Blackshear overtook Slay Mark Patton, the state high
as the team's leading scorer school player of the year
with 19.6 points per game from Cabell Midland.
after becoming eligible as a
Ronnie Dawn and Enoch
transfer early in the season. Bunch, with 26 starts
As the team' s i:narquee between them,. will provide
player, Blackshear said the help at the guard position.
billboards have him working
The center will be 6-10
harder on his game , but he junior Ardo Annpalu, a backdoesn 't feel the loss of Slay up to VanHoose last season .
and VanHoose puts any
Armpalu mi ssed 19 games ·
more pressure on him.
last season for hi s alleged ·
"Not at all. I love to play," involvement with a sports ·
he said. "I would play 60 agent in his .native country,
minutes a ~ame. When I get Estonia. He averaged · 2.6
the ball, I m in iny world. points and 2.1 rebounds in
It's fun."
10 games.
The 2002-03 version of . Backing up Armpalu is . ·
Marshall is younger, taller Serge Babo, a sophomore :
and more athletic than last who sat out last season ."
year 's squad.
Last year's 15-15 record.
Marshalj has six returning which was well below
prompted
players ano eight newcomers. expectations,
The
most
experienced then-Athletic
Director
returnee is senior guard Lance West to not extend
Monty Wright, who started 16 While's contract as had been
games last year and ranked. done in previou s years . The
fifth on the team in scorirtg at contract runs through the .
6.8 points per game.
2005-06 season .
"Obviously. there's a lot
White is I 01-69 in six seaof question marks. Seventy- sons. He dealt with several ·
five percent of our roster has · personal tragedies in the past
never played a game,'" coach year, including an October
Greg Whtte said. "But I real- 200 I fire that destroyed hi s
ly like our enthusiasm. .
home, and the Marc~ I death
"We're just trying to get of his mother-in-law.

1

Tuesday's Games

Atlantic Division
New Jersey ..... ..... 4
Orlando .. .... .... .... .4
'f'hiladelphia ..... .... 3

Press' women's presea son college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parenthe ses, 2001..02 records, total points based on
25 points lor a first-place vote through one
point toY a 25th-place vote and last vear's
tina! ranking: .

E~STEAN

UAW-GM Quality 500 ,

11 . Dale Earnhardt Jr...... ,.......... .. ... 4,005
12. Je~ Burton ... ................... :...... .. .. 3.967

Pro Football

'

,

940

5
3

Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y. {1ony Stewart)
Aug. 18 - Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Mich .
(Dale Jarrett) .
Aug . 24 - Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn .
(Jeff Gordon)
Sept. 1 - Souther,n 500, Darlington, S.C.

468
Driver Standings
437
·1. Tony Stewart ........ ...... .. ........... .. .. .4.~9
2t . lowa SL .. ..........:.7-3
372
2. Mark Manln ............... ..... ............. 4,437
22. Pitlsburgll .. :.. :........ 7-2
357
3. Jimmie Johnson ... ............., .........4,330
327
23. Florldo .. ................. 6-3
4. Ryan Newman ... ... .......... ..... ...... .. 4,324
24. Colorado St.......... .8-2
307
24
5. Kurt Busch ......... .. ................ ....... .4 .301
25. Arizona St. ...... .. .... 7-3
155
16 · 5. Rusty Watlace .......... ........... ...... .. .4,283
Othara receiving voteo: Maryland 135, 7. Jeff Gordon .. .. ........... .......... ...... ...4,282
Tennessee 106, TCU 64, Aub!Jrn 6.1, Boise 8. Man konseth .. ,..... ............... ......... ~.209
St. 51 , Minnesota 42. Boston College 28, 9. Dale Jarrett .............. :.................. .4,154
Marshall tO, UCLA 6, Georgia Tech 1.
10. Ricky Audd ................ ............ .... 4,093
20. Bowling Green ..... .a-o

(11 Kenton (9·2) vs. (4) Pemberville
Eastwood (10·1) , at Findlay Donnell
Stadium
(7) Delta (10-t ) vs. (6) Archbold (9-2) at
Napolean Buckennwyer Stad1um
Region 15

1,210
1' 113

8
9

Sonoma, Galli. (RiCky Rudd)
Juty 6 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla.
(Michael WaHrlp)
July 14 - Troptcana 400, Joliet. 1ft. (Kevin
Harvick)
July 21 - New England 300, Loudon ,
N.H. (Word Burton)
July 28 - ·Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond .
(Bill Elliott)
Aug . 4 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis .
(Bill Elliott)
Aug. 11 - Sirius Satell~e Radio at The

NASCAR

PHbENIX INIERNAliONAL
. ltla'Y«f

By RICK MINTER
Cox News Serv ice

F

and the drivers and the trafftc,"
said rookie driver Ryan
Newman, who was the pole-sit·
ll!r for Sunday's Pop Secret
Microwave.Popcorn 4110 at North
Garolina Speedway
In addition to winnlllg a rook.
le-reconl five poles this season.
Newman has won the Winston.
the New Hampshire :m and Is
fourth In polnta headlllg Into
Sunday's Checker Auto Parts 5110
presented by Pennzoll.

--•liACK PROFILE--.

Matt Kenseth's crew repeats
as clwnpions in competition

12

Memorial (8-3) ·at Piqua Alexander
Stadium
(2) Germantown Valley View (1 t -0) vs.

clew comes lllgether

Greg Biffie claimed the runner:-up spot in
Saturdafs Sam's Club 200 Busch Series race and all
but secured his first series championship.
Bime leads second-place JaSOOKeller, who fin.
ished 27th in the race, by 212 points with two races

WINSTON CUP
STANDINGS
t . TonY. Stewart, 4,549.
2. Mark Martin, 4,462.
3. Jimmie Johnson, 4,330.
4. Ryan Newman, 4,324.
5. Kurt Busch, 4,301 .

Regh;~n

.'

'

6. Georgia:....... .................. ........ .. ... ~ 5.03
7. Notre Dame ..... ...................... .. ... 15.33

·

(1 ) Urbana (11-Q) vs. (5) St. Marys

Tn n\tites Boclne

.

Roglon 11
(1) Newark Licking Valley (11-0) vs. (41

Fte!a

Todd Bodine, who Is uhder threat of NASCAR
probation for rough drlvlllg, hed a strong run
l&gt;nhts
;;11 golllg before a blown tire sent his No. 28 Ford slam· .
29
points.
' '
~ ' · . ~ mlllg Into the wall on lap 257 of 393. He ran In the
' t.wtln, who left the \rack beli&gt;te the lnlfql ' 'ff top fiVe for moot or the race but had dropped to
waslllUIOunced. &amp;aid earl.ler tliat the ltn.ai lip$ &gt;•' • seventh when the tire ble\'t
"With the probatioll and all that stuff golllg on.
were as tough as any he'd'run. ,
,,· .
we were having a good run, staying clean and stay"I laid some pretty tiOOd pressure on lll!lilaohJ; I
ing out of trouble," Bodine said. "But those are the
jUst eouldn't make i t srtcl&lt;," Martin said. "!was .
· racing gods.'' 1
·
'
tlu'Owlng everything at i~ taking some crazy
chances, but second will be OK for lixl8j!"
And Martin, like riearly all o( ll&lt;inaon's fellow
drivers. said he was happy for the wtnnar.
,
In Bobby Labonte's first race with Michael
"He's a whale of a race cat driver,'' Martin said,
"Fatback" McSwain assisting his pit crew, he fin·'. "I can't believe 1t took him this Ioilg, but OO~fll'atu.
ished seventh, gtvlng him seven to~lO finishes this
lations to t.hat whole team."

then went to

5. Washington St. ........................ 13.05 ·

Gel"fa (9·2),..at Hitlsborofflchards Memorial

championship contender for much of the 8EOSOn,
Elllott, who was seventh In late SePtember, ]liSt 191 ·
polnta out of ilrst place, now Is lath, 810 points oul
"We just can't seem to buy a break," Elliott said.
"You can't depend on luck, but It sure would be
nice to have a llllle of It sometime."

lar lnihictton

....................... ........ 10.03

(2) Akr. Hoban (10-1) vs. (3) Dek Harbor

Field
(2) Cots . DeSeles (8-3) vs. (3) Gallipolis

For the fourth week In a row; Bill Elliott started
the race with a fast car and wound up with adisappointing lln1sh. A broke!! water-pump belt relegated hlm to a 29th-place flnlsh SundaJ&lt; Alter belllg a

Burfun'S

4. Texas

(10·1) at Lorain George Daniel Stadium

Cols. Watterson (7-4) at Newai11: While

More bad luck for Bliatt

Shootout in prime time

for stock cars in 1998 for the Pepsi 400. Besides the
Pepsi 400, other races at the Speedway that are held
under the lights include the Rolex 24 At Daytona,
the summer NASCAR Busch Series race and the
Jani-Kin g Paul Revere 250 Rolex Sports Car Series

1) at Wooster Follis Field .

740.742-2289
1-800-837-8217

crew ·told hlm.

McMurray's good luck didn't hold out, however.

Daytona International Speedway officials have
confirmed the 2003 Budwelser Shootout will be run
under the lights on Feb. Hat8 p.m.

Main Street
Rutland, Ohlo

Region 10
(1] Akr. Buchtel (t 1-Q) vs . (4) Willard (IQ-

June 2 - ·MBNA Platioom 400, Dover,

June 16 - Mtchigan 400, Brooklyn. (Matt
Kenseth}
June 23 - Dodge!Save Mart 350,

15. Kansas St ........ ......... ,............. 38.20 .

Nordonia .(10· 1) at Barberton Rudy

Coca-Gala 600, Concord,

N.C. (Mark Martin)

3. Miami ..... ........ ............ . ... .... ..... 6,01

Wayne (9-2) at 2 p.m.. Cincinnati Paul
Brown Stadium

.Region 7
(1 ) Green (10-1 ) vs. (4) Macedonia

April 28 - NAPA Auto Parts 500,
Fontana, Calif. (Jimmte Johnson)
May 4 - Pontiac Excitement 400,

Through gemea of Nov. 2
1. Oklahoma ....................................2.04
2. Ohio State ... ................. ....., . .... .. .5.57

11 . Michigan ........... .. .......... .... ...... ... 31.62
12. N.C. State .. ................. !.... .........32 .40
13. Florida St ....... ................ ....... .. 33.75
14. Florida ........... .. ....................... 38.95

Jim McCann Stadium

Aaron's 499, Talladega, Ala.

Del. (Jimmie Johnson)
.June 9 - Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
(Dale Jarrett)

(2) Plckonngton (1G- 1) vs. (6) Gahanna
Lincoln (9-2)at Grove City Stadium
,
Region 4
(1) Cin. Elder (10-1) vs. (5) Huber His. ·

Region 6
(1 ) Tol. St. Francis (10-1 ) ,s. (4) Tol. Cent
Cath. (10-1). at Toledo Waite Mollenkopf
S1adlum
(2) Cots. Brool&lt;ha,on (1Q-1) vs. (3) Cots.
Walnut Ridge (1 o- 1) at Westerville Nonh

April 21 -

May 26 -

Bowl Ch~mplonshlp Series

9. SOuthern Cal ......................... ..... 19.37
10. Virginia Tech ........................... ... 20.88

Howland (8-3) at Niles McKinley Bo Rein
'"Stadium

(Bobby Labonte)

RK:hmond. (Tony Stewart)

Massillon Perry p o-1) at Canton FaiNCeh
Stadium

DIVISION II
All gamoo at 7:30 p.m. Frlday
Region 5
(t ) Louisville (11-0] vs. (5) Olmsted Fells
(9·2) at Canton Fawcett Stadium
(2) Canfield (1 t -0) vs. (6) Warren

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

College Football

8. lowa .... .... ..':.................... ........ .. .'.. 16.29

(H)-1) at 11 a.m., Cincinnati Paul Brown
Stadium

228 Main St.

Christian (10-1) otBettotootaine Dodd Fteld

(8) Massillon Washington (9-2) vs. (5)..

(7) lebanon (1Q-1) vs. (3) Cln. Colerain

'

UPCOMING ON THE TRACKS

ON THE TUBE ·

J

· Fttaturlng
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

On to 'The Desert Jewel'

INSIDER

_

(2) Findlay (10- t) vs. (3) Hudson (11-Q) at

555 Park St ·
Middleport

Dave or Jessica
992·2155

Sunday on NBC.
Busch: Bashas 200, 2 p.m.
EDT Saturday on NBC.
Crallsman Truck: Chevy
Silverado ISO, 3 p.m. EIYr
Saturday on ESPN.

·

Fort Worth, Te11as (Matt Kenseth)
April 14 - VIrginia 500, Martinsville.

(Dale Earnhardt Jr.I

(2) Dola Hartin Northern (11-Q) vs. (6) Troy

II.Oron 1

Lakewood Stadium

Region 24
(t ) Maria Stein Marion Local (10- 1) vs.
(5) Mechanicsburg (1Q-1 ) al Troy Memorial
Stadium

"¥ ~ ot 7 p.m. Bllturdoy
l·'l junlllonoto&lt;t

1. t

Marshall Basketball

at Dover Crater Stadium

OH~ NlghjSchool Football

Gallipolis, OH

Pennzoil, 2 ~m . EDT

Scoreboard
Prep Football

252 Upper
River Rd.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

BASEBALL
American League

ANAHEIM ANGELs--Released OF Julio
Ramirez.

CLEVELAND INDIAN5--Actlvatad RHP
Chad Paronto, RHP Jake Westbrook, RHP
Bob Wicla'nan, INF R~ky Gutierrez and OF
Alex Escobar lrom the 6D-day disabled list.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Named Terry
Francona bench coach .
·

TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAY5--Agreed to
terms with OF Adrian BroWn. OF Chad
Mottola, INF Jay Canizaro, 'RHP Mike
James and LHP Matt Pensho on minor
league contracts.
·
·
National League
ATLANTA BRAVEs-Named Otis Nixon
coordinator pf base running and bunting

!lASKETBALL
National Basketball AssociatiOn
TORONTO RAPTOR&amp;-Signed C Greg
Foster.

FOOTBALL
National Football League
NFL-Suspended Kansas City LB Lew ·•
Bush for lour games after testing positive
for a banned substance.

ARIZONA CARDINALB--Piaced WR·KR
MarTay Jenkins on injured reserve. Signed
WR Nathan f'oola Irani the practice squad.
Signed WR Ezekiel j)arker to the practice
squad.

CAROLINA PANTHERS-Signed OL
nm Stuber.
CINCINNATI BENGALB--Signed LB Tlto
Rodriguez to the p'ractlce squad.

GREEN BAY PACKERB-Signod DE
Jarad Tomich . Signed OT Jay Humphrey to
tho praotlce squad.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS-Signed RB
Herbert Goodman to the practice aquad.

JACKSONVILLE JAGUAAB-Piacod OL
Zach Wiegert on Injured reserve. Signed
OL Roger Chanolna .

MIAMI DOLPHINB--Signed LB Juol[n
Seaverna off the Indianapolis Colts' prac-

tioa aquad.
MtNNESOT" VIKINGS-Placed WR
Derrick Alexander on Injured reserve .

Activated WA Kolly Campbell from the
praotloe oquad.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES- Signed S
Tim Hauck to a one·vear contract.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5--Actlvated S
John Kel1h from the practice squad. Signed
P Craig Jarren to the practice squad.

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS-Signed
OL Dan Goodspeed. Released OL Tutan

Reyes. Signed DT Devono Claybrooks to
the practice squad. Released DE Greg,

White trom tho praotjce squad .
HOCKEY
Nollonol Hockoy League
NEW JERSEY DEVILS-Recalled F
Christian Berglund from Albany of th.e AHL.

TORONTO MAPLE LEAF5--Piacad C
Nlk Antropov on the i n j~ red list.

O'Brien
from Page Bl
.

.

'

tnent but the entire university, is not benefiting from
that kind of exposure, then
we're missing the boat
somewhere ."
O' Brien came to Ohio
State from Boston College,
where even on the best days
the Eagles were the third or
fourth biggest story in the
city. The Celtics, Bruins and
Patriots dominated the
sports pages - a nd the talk
around water coolers - in
the winter months . Then
there was always speculation about trades and signings for the Red Sox.
As a result, O' Brien qui etly went about his business
at BC. When the Eagles
would make it to the NCAA
tournament; it was almost a
pleasant surpri se. When
they advanced to the Sweet
16 or Elite Eight, .it was
headline ttews.
The rdt of the &lt;time , he
· was able to live and work in
' relative anonymity.
One of · O ' Brien's good
friends is Gary Williams;
now the coach at national
champion
Maryland.
0' Brien was the coach at St.
. Bonaventure
when
Williams was at Boston
College in the early 1980s.
Williams was constantly
complaining that BC was a
football school.

osu

from PapBl
'

it carries a little extra sting."
Doss chased Morales to
the ·end zone, then hung hi s
head as he was consoled by
teammates. The Buckeyes,
with little left to play for,
lost to Michigan and to
South Carolina in the
Outback Bowl, leading to
the firing ·of head coach
John Cooper.
Doss said he tried to turn

"Everything is football t" ·
Williams would grouse to
O' Brien.
Williams !hen left BC Io
come to Ohio State, cif all
places. Talk about being
eclipsed by football.
"'Hey, Gary, what were :
you thinking ?"' O' Brien
used to tease Williams.
Now 0 ' Brien is in the
same· situation , bui is much
more comfortabl e in the
role.
. Hosket said he once took :
a recruitin g vi sit to the
Uni versity of Kentu cky and
attended a football game.
Then th ere was a roar
from the sparse crowd.
Cotton Nash. a basketball
player, had walked to his. ·
seats with his girlfriend and :
was getting a standing ovation.
That's the power of being
a "basketball school. "
o :Brien has no rroblem :
wtth hts team· gettmg sec- :
ond billing.
"Wh at more would we
want?" he, said. "It would be
different \.if there wasn' t
football , but I understand !
where we ' re at. And how
· are you goin ~ to fi ght it ,
especially tht s year with
what's going on with this
(football)
team.
He
(Tressel) has got them
where they could be in the ·
national
championship
game. That' s the story. To
think that what we're doing
now. is more of a story than
what they're doing is fool ish .,
the negative into a positive.
He worked harder. He recom·
mitted himself. He became
more of a learn player.
"Drew Brees was a 11reat
quarterback and he ~ 1111 is
now for San Diego," Doss
said. "He just made one ·
more play than I did on thai
Saturday. Looking up to that
now; realizing that I' m a
. senior and what it takes to
win ballgames, it's helped
me out as far as being a .,
· leader and stepping up
when. you have to.
"You just try to get better
each week and every year."

- -- - - :r -- - --------- ·'I

�Page

B4

• The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel.com

{Eribune- Sentinel-

'

Thursday, November

7,

2002
: Thursday, November

~egi~er ·

CLASSIFIED

t•
..
•
•
:
•

We Cover
Meig.s , . Gall Ia,
And,· Mason
Couflties Like'
. No One- ' ~
• El.se Can·!,

'

To ·Piace
Utribune
Sentinel
l\egister
. Your.Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156. (304) 675-1333
CaiJ TOday...
446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157

675-5234

Oea.cl~ir~
. Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ_ WRITE AN AQ.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .. .

r

HM•~
1I ~10 u~·-"'·~~
.
.

PERSONAl$

nur

Word Ads

Display

In Next Day's Paper
S"•nci•Y In~Column: 1 : 00 p.m.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlsptay: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday ror Sundays

Dally ln~Col.umn: 1.:00 p.m.
Monday - Friday for Insertion

For Sundays Paper
I

11110
• •

Ij

HEIPWANJID

Ads

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

Free Yard Sale Sign!
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

r

t

r

I M~u:~MES I M~~OMF.S •I ,.,t___roii~iiRENTiiiCEiiiii_.l ~ IFlo

I'RClnNSIONAL

SERvtcrs

I H \ \'&gt; PC lH I\ IU 1:\

Auros

:I

Respiratory Therapist needTURNED DOWN ON
Must seltl Owner moved, .14)170 2 bedroom, . nice~ Space tor rent for mobil&amp; New Gas tnter-Therm Fur- ~---FOR.iiiiiSiiiALEiiii_.,;..
ed for a fast growing medi- SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? 2001 Oakwood 14x70, 3BR, clean, near Clay School. home, all sizes to. 80' nace, 77,000 BTU,, New
cal equipment co. In our
No Fee Unless We Winl
2 bath, all appliances, Water and trash included, (740)446-1279
· Gas water heater 32,000 1980-90's Cars/ Trucks
Gallipolis, OH st0011. Send
1-888-582·3345
washer &amp; dryer Included, No pets, $350 month +
BTU, 4Qgal., New Cook from $500. Police Impounds
resume. to Medi-Home
central air with deck, Make depoSit. (740)256·1664,:.
Stove GE Gas, used fuel oil for sale, For listing 1-800Care, P.O. Box 987, Galllp·
down payment &amp; take over
..
gun Furnace . . (304)675- _7_1_9·_3_00_1_e_xt_._3_90_1_ __
olis, OH 45631 Ann: John
$370 month mortage pay- 3 bedroom trailer- all eltteHOUSEHOUl
3000 Leave message.
ANNOUNCEMENTS . AVON! AU Areas! To Buy or Kearns or stop by Medi~
monls. (2t61351·7086
lrlc, waler peid, $350
. Gooos
1988 Poniiac Sunfire, while,
. Sell . Shirley Spears, 304· Home Care to gel an appllmonth,
$100
deposit . ..__ _llllliiiiiiiii;.,llllliP N&amp;w Infant swing,. Pack and auro, am/1m radio, CD play675-1429.
cation, 430 Second Avenue,
New 2003 14 wide . Only (740)367.()611 aHer6:00on Electric water tank 50 gal- Play walker, call (740)446- er, power sunroof, tinted
.
. '
7216 aHer 6pm.
windows, new brakes ·r..
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit _
Contractor sales tremen- Gallipolis, -OH
45631, All rea1e1tllle ldvertlalng $799 down and only weekdays.
$159.45. Call Nikki, 740- -'"-'-"-''------- lon, S75 · Warm Morning
·
tires, one owner, interior -&amp;
tor .sale, Chester Township, dous opportunity ' lor team (740)446-3880
In this newap~per 11
Beautiful River View Ideal Stove, $300; Walt lurnace, Waterline Special: 314 200 exterior !,n excellent condl385 _7671
, Me1gs County, send lene_rs player looking for a qualified ::--:--,--:---,-oublect 1o the Federol '
- - - . . , . - - - - - For 1 Or 2 People, Referen· SBOO; Metal clolhes cabt- PSI $21 .00 Per 100; 1' 200 lion, $6,000, caN (740)99~·
of 1 ~teres t to: The Dally ·candidate, to represent Na· Security - Gu~rds full time F1lr HaUling Act, of 1968
. •
Sentinel, PC? Box 729-20, tionally known produe1s for $6.50 per hour, Call ·which make• it itleg~l to · (2) i4x70, · 3 tiedroom, 2 ces, Deposir, No Pels, Fos- nette, $15, Roll-away bed PSI $35.00 Per 100; All 4044atter4pm
bath, 1 all · el8ctric,_1 gas, ter Trailer Parto;, 740-441- wi1h mattress, $20; Electric Brass Compression Attings -:-:-::-''-'::-..:;.""-::---:-Pomero v. Oh1o 45769.
an established company., (304)675-5234. M-F after
advertiM ."tny
(740)446·1279
·· '
0181 .
box, wire &amp; meler, $100;'25 In Slack.
1990 Red C~evy Goo
-,---'-::--- , - - - - sale experience requ.ired 4pm.Ask_tor Kelt~ EOE,
preference, llmlllllon or
Mobile home for renl. cabinols, 200 sheel panel- RON EVANS ENTERPRI~· Slorm, ~C. $800. (7401448·
I David Farr will not be re·
sponsible for any debts oth· submit to Daily Sentinel, Super 8 Motel is seeking an
dllcrlmln1Uon biHd on
12 used homes under (740 )446 _1279' .
•ng : balh lub, $20; Com· ES Jackson, Ohio, 1-800- 4226
.
er than mv own as of 11 '4- P. ~ . Box 729-29 Pomeroy, intelligent, dependable, enr~ce, color, religion, aeli:
$3,000. Will help ,wilh dellv·
mode, 520 • Dool&gt;e tub sink, 537·9528
1992 Chevrolel 'Lumina
02
Ohio 45769
·ergetic individual for the po- f~n~JIIIIalltua or n1ttonal
ery. Call Harold, 740-385$ 20;
yellow
siding
Euro, 4 door sedan, $1,500.
·
(740)441 1594
Wood burner for sale, $400.
origin,
or'tny
Intention
to
9948
~~------.., East of ChicS.go Pizza c'o. sition 0! desk clerk. Co"'::APAKIMENTS
(740)379·2389
Phone (740)446-3479 aher
·
mike In)' IUCh
G
no hiring all shifts and driv- pu~er sktlls a plus but we w11l
1994 Schult 16x72 Mobile
FOR RENT
.
For Sa le: ReConditioned
5pm.
Pftlfertnce, llmU1Uo.n or
ers, please apply within, tra1n. NO PHONE ~ALLS
Horile Priced to sell Quick --• washers, dryers and refrig- MOdet .1938 Turkish Mau88r -...:..-'-::---~--"1540 Eastern Avenue, Gal- Pl,EASE. Must apply m perdlscrlmlniUon."
Call-(740)
385-2434
erators. Thompsons AppH· 8mm Rifle with Free Bayo- 1993 Toyota Paseo, silv~.
lipotis
son.
.
1 and 2 bedroom aparl· ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- net and Scabbard tree 70 5-speed, co player, sunFree puppies- all females·
r:~:-:::=:=:::=:::":":1
This newtpaptr will not
1996 Clayton 14)160 2br, ments, furnished and u.nfur- nue · (304) 675•7388 _
rounds of Ammo. $100. only root, reduced to $3,000.
Beagle- MiniaiUre Bulldog Financial Freedom. lnlerknowingly 1ccept
glamour bath, all el&amp;crric, nished. security deposit re'
4 left. FFL Dealer Cal Call anytime. (740)441 ·
mix, 5 weeks old. Adorable. national Company growing
tdvtlrtlnmtntl tor re11
central air. Call (304)675- qulred, no pets, 740-992· Good Used Appliances, Re- (304)675·2352
0021
,
•
(740)2 45-0144
rapidly. Internet work from
esllte
which
ltln
8180
·2218.
conditioned
and
Guar$n·
NEW
AND
USED
STE
)
home. PTIFT posirions. Full
Free to good hom&amp;- male training. 1-888-202-6321 .
Experience
viOIIUOn of the 11w. Our
93 Holly Park, 3 bedroom, 2 1 Bedroom Apartments teed . Washers, . Dryers, Steel Beams, Pipe Reba 1997 Silver, Ford Escor .
German Shephard, 3 years .,..c----''---'--=-·required
In
bath,
tront porch &amp; mud· Starting at $289/mo, Wash- ASoangmeess,taartndalRSe 1 ".gesrkaat~ For COncrete, Angle, Chan· Auto, NC.. Cruis&amp;. 7
old_[740)245-5997
Help wanted caring for the
hardware
or
dwe:,~"::vert~!
In
room,
Central hear &amp; air, er/ Dryer Hookup, ~tove Appliances 76 Vine
nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating miles. $~.000. (304)673- .
elderly, ~arst .G!aup Home.
· $15,000 firm, serious In· and Reirlgerator. (740)441- (740 )
_
·• For Drains, Driveways &amp; 3122 anytl~. ..
1
Losr ANI&gt;
now pay1ng m1mmum wage,
446 7 98
lumber sales.
thlt newtpopororo
quired only. (740)256-6360 1519.
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Met- t999 Lincoln Towncar, •Si .
FOUND
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7amIVIIIIbte on_In tqUII
"'::'.:;..T.-;----:----:-,-:-:
lJnn..tau "" ....u.
Th
D It
opportunlti'boHt.
' -- -:
r,·
. MoUohar&gt;Carpel, 202 (]art&lt; as1 Ope n,..,_..,.,,
.ue,..,...y., nalure So&lt;lea,, e~~~.r~il -5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pmOln81· 0·
New Mobile Home only l bed oom unfurnished Chapel Road, P\irter, Ohio. Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bam· sette, lealher, loade(. o
7am,
call
740·992·5023.
Found Black &amp; Tan Puppy,
Center
$14,995, all slnglewkles on apartment. Probabl&amp; client. (740)446·7444 1.·877-830· 4:30pm. Closed Thursday, owner, showroOm · cteBI'I ,
675 1550
short hair Hound. On Owl
Gallipolis location
clearance, save lhousands, 1304)
'
9162. Free Esllmales, Easy Salurday
&amp;
Sunday. $15,700. Firm, (740)44~·
Hollow Rd. Call (304)675- Insurance Inspectors '---'-------' r,~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;; Dupler Sates
Inc.
, 2 bedroom apartment tor financing , 90 days sa.me as (740)446-7300.
1000.leave message.
7740
Housekeeper
needed. riO
HOMFii
(740)7.53-1322, R133 south renlln Syracuse, $200 de· cash .. Visa/ Masler Card. ROCK BOTTOM PRICES
Field work in Gallipolis/ GalFOR SAI..E
of Nelsonville
nnt:~it, $35o per month rent, Drive- a-littl&amp; save alot.
· 200 1 Ford Mustang Cou~
FOUNQ: Set of' car keys
·--iliiiiiiiii;;.,w
•Steel ooildlnga, buy direct &amp; 2dr.
Pow~r
lia Co, and SurroUnding (740144HJ7jl8
with re mote and STP key--;---,--;--,...,-:-::-:- '
Nice lots availatMe tor up to Includes water, sewer &amp; Used furniture store, 130 save big, 20x24, $2400, steering/window/door lOCk$
Counties would required bachain. Intersection of SA 7 sic knowledge of home con- Loo,~,' ng".1or Ea f~n job? Tth1s $14,900, 4 bedroom, 4 bath 16x80 mobile homes, $115 trash, ,(740) 378·6t 11
Bulaville Pike. We sell mat- 2$5 &lt;2 4.•
Sx29,50$: 30.xc30a • 32,oop miles. · Excelle.,i
40 8411
48 5975
11 ConditiOn.
&amp; 33 in Pomeroy. (740)367- Struction measuring elderior IS 1 , .0 ICB n~monmen 50 home. Won't last! For list- water included, (740)992- 2 bedroom apartment in tresses, bunk beds •. dress- 139
aoo50 334
$13,000 .
7689
POSitiOns
ava1able
1-888ing
call
1-800-71
9-:.n:
:
n
Ext
2167
GaiUpolis.
Air
washer,·
&amp;
dryers,
couches,
appliances,
'"Q
•
•
(304)882·21 59
dimensions, observing conF144
er hook-up, no pets, water much more. Grave manu'-----'---~.;_
LOST· Cockapoo, medium dition and taking photos of 974-JOBS
BBUSINI!S'l
paid, $350/mo. plus deposit me~. (740)446·4782 Gal·
BlliLDING
120,02 Dodge, Neuloon, ,62100~
size dog, mostly gray with homes. Independent co.n- The Mason County Com· For-losed sw on 2 ··re
~
AND •-n~s
11 "
(
) .. llpol1s OH
~..............
. mtes, sunroo, a
, a1r, 1 ,
some black! white. .. Buddy ~ , tractor/ part-ll":le . basiS. mIssion is now accepting tract,
$500 down to qualified
v~~
a a~~er 6pm, 740 - 6·
'
·
,:,urrUI!.o:t
• CD, needs littte body wo ,
Polecat Road, Gallipolis_ Must be detall-onente.d , appficallons for the posilkin buyers. Coli (740)448·3570
4043 (7401339-3063
Whirlpool washer, $95; Ken·
$4600 OBO. (7401256·123$
(7 40)446·8096
have reliable transportation of on call part-time cook. .~r a quick sale.
B!-!ilding for sale wlih or 2 bedroom, all. electric, AC, more d~yer, 5~5; Refrigera~ Bk&gt;ck b 'ck
and 35mm OR Digital Cam- Application forms can be
without stOCk at 62 Olive very nice, in Gallipolis. lor, $95, ei&amp;Ctnc range, $95,
• rr • sewer P1pes, 2002 J&amp;ep liberty, LTB,
o YARD SAU:
era. Computer with internet obtained in the Mason COuntry Home with 11·1/2 Street, Gallipolis,
OH (]40) 446-2003 or (740)446- ~prlght Freezer $125; C~lo- wi~ows, lintels, etc. Claude 17,000 miles, mint, leathet,
County Commission office acres. 314br. 2ba., 2 Car- 45631 . (7~0)446-315~
.
nc gas range, very n1ce, Winters, Rio Grande, OH CD, any extras, $19,50¢ .
1409
L~::~::;;::~· access also helpful
On the ground floor of the Garage, above ground pool,
, $195; Whirlpool reirigerator, Call 740•245 ·51 21 ·
(740)245·5978 leave meaC
Please respond to:
courthouse between the Handcrafted kitchen cabiJeff Northup
2·Small furnished apts. All like new, almond, $350:
sage.
•
OT2
Y\RD SALE
Insurance lntpector
hOurs 018;30 and 4:30 Mon- nets:. Off Leon Baden Rd. Congratulations! You have utilities paid eXcept ElectriC. Whirlpool washer/ dryer sel
~
·
73 VW Beetle, rebuilt en'
•
P.O. Box 29335
'day rhroUgh Friday. The (304)458-1580
won 2 tree movie tickets No Pets,1 has a shOwer, 1 $275; SOlid wood table with
GALLD'OLIS
Parma, Ohio 44129-0335 Mason County CommiSsion
.
to lhe Spring Valley 7 in has a tub. Security Deposit chalr.B, $125: Skaggs Appliglne, newer parts throug~
Is an equal' opportunity em- Duplex Apartment building, Gallipolis. Call the Tribune Required. $275. Month. ances, 76 VIne Stre&amp;t, 3 lemale AKC Lab pups, 2 out, call lor details, $3500 'f'
Friday, Salurday, November Looking lor . .experienced ployer and does nol discrim- renl one aide and live In the lor delaiiS. (740)446-2342
(304)675-1·365
(740)448·7398
Cllqpotate, 1 black $150; 2 OBO, (740)590·2498
'
7.8, 9~4 : 00pm , 131 Oak H'~AC Techmc1an/ lnstaUer, inat&amp; due ro race sex c other, 3 bedrooms each
bunllles, $5 each. (740)441- g 78 Bonneville, $400, ruos.
Drive, Spring Valley, huge must .h~ve ~or , m~re yea~s reed, religion, or' natio'nal side, with 1 1/2 .bath'S, living Office space or other pur- 2br. Apartment at Gallipolis
0931
great, {740,379. _2359
,
variety
expenence 1n th•s held. Th1s origin. John o. GerlaCh Ad· room, dining kitchen, front pose, located at 28 C&amp;dar Ferry. (304)675-2548
ANnQUES
~-------_.1 Auto body man- experi~
encecl In metal fabricating ,
Why wait ? Start meeting bodywork, welding . &amp; paintOhio singles tonight, call· toll ing, call Hill's Classic Cars
tree 1-800-766-2623 ext Restorations, 7am-10pm,
1621
(740)949·2217

i

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lw---lV•EA-"•"•Y-,.1

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.

SALESPERSON
NEEDED.

":';t'"'rtiu!:raby

r

3

I

95

5 ,000

St

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1 tep1 of the court·
houae In the above
county, on the 9th
dey of Jenuery, '2003,
et10:00
o'clock;
t~·e
following
deacrlbld rule•-·
al1ueted
In
the
.County of Melga .and
SlllteoiOhlo,endln
thl
City
of
Middleport, 10 wit
Being 1 pert ol 1
trect of lend Irena!erred to Doria E.
Pooler 11 recorded 11;1
Olflclel
Recorda
Volume 15 at Page
013 Melga County
Recon!.-'1. Office,
Melga County, Ohio
1110, being 1 pert ol
Section
12,
Townahlpo&amp;-North,
Reng•14-Weat,
Rullend Townahlp,
Melgil County, Slllte
of Ohio end mont'
daacrlbld aaloll-e:
Beginning 11 1
point being the lntarHCtiOn olthe center•
line of County the
Center ol Townahlp
Roed U51 ; thence
elong the centerline
of Townahlp ~~
1311 the. l~fng
!Iva couraee:
1.
South
18
degi'MI 04' 53" But I
dlatence ol 135.93
leetto 1 point;
2.
South
01
c&amp;c General Home Malnte. . On
Sllurdly, degi'MI 2 1' 03 " Eaet
nenat· Palnllng, vinyl eld· November 1, 2002 11 I · dllllnct Ol 38.28
.doing.:..cabarpenthttry,modoorlbllo 'howmlne. 10:00 e.m. the Homllel fill to a.point;
3.
South
22
""' and more.
'
repair
For free NetIonaI BIn k w
diQfMI 53' 12' WHI
eallmale i:all Chat, 740·992· offer lor 1111 11 publiC
6323.
· euctlon on the Benk I dllllnCe Of 12.81
~
parking
lot
the 1111 to 1 point;
4.
South
34
:.o=lng
Mobile degrMI 28' 22" WMI
~ 1193
C~AYTON 1 cllaltlnce ol 171.74
.
HOME fill to a point;
· Realdentlll or commercial MOBI~E
5;
South
27
wiring, new urvlce or re· CLM055108TN
.
degrHI
14' Weal
palro. Maoler Ucenoed oleo· 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
~lclan. Ridenour ·Eieclrlcal,
The term• of aala I dl111nca of 31.17
WV000308, 304·675·)788: eree11h.
feet to 1 rellro1d
The Home N1tlonal aplke 111 on the
ilenk reeerva1 the eeaumld North right
right to reJect any or Of WIY line . of
111 bldl or to remove Coneolldetld Rell
eny unH lithe life 11 Corporetlon; thence
liltlvlng nld centerenytlma.
Arrengamante m1y line end •long nld
be made to lnepect North right of way
eny of ·the ebova line Saulh II cfegrMI
collateral prloi to the 38' 43" Waat • dlaaale by calling 740· lllnca of 123.11 IHI
to 1 511" Iron pin ell;
M&amp;-2210.
thence IHvlng 11ld
Shalla Buchenen
North
right of way
Home Netlonel Blink
line North 01 dagi'MI
(11) 8,7,8 3TC
02' 47" 1!1111 P•••lng
lhru 1 5/1" Iron pin
Public Notice
aet It 1 dlatence of
341.31 IMI1nd going
SHERIFF'S SALE .OF I lOlii dlltence Of
380.31 fill to • point
REAL ESTATE
In the centerline of
County Roed 13;
The State of Ohio,
1. North 13 deg. . .
Melga County
14' 22" E111 1 die·
lllnce of 92.51 fill to
Atlantic Mort11111e &amp;
1 point;
Investment Corp., a
2. North 71 dig. . .
division of ABN Amro
Mortgage Group, Inc., 58' 41" But 1 dleltlnce
of 98.22 fHI to the
1 Dalware Corp.
·
principal
PlalnUII
point of beginning
containing
1.719
v.

•·Ill·

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31

6

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r.;:;-------.,

.

-------_.1

Can Number:
01.CY·170
In purauance of 1 n
Order of Sele In the

f'not •

Optn 9m-!ipm
11111111•.frM In ron. pMbp

Call ,. rct •II your~ !Midi

Delivery Call

Seld preml111 Ia
loclted 11 38857
~lldlng C'"k ROIICI.
Slid property 11 ,
epprelaed
11 .
$36,000.00 and cen•
not be aold lor 1111
then two-lhlrde (213!'

Leave message

740·992-6142
1

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removol • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bur;ket Truck

30 Yrs.

stocklnc,
to the
biggest
present on

BASKET &amp; BEAR BINGO
November 12th
6 pm
American Legion Hall Mlddlepon

For more info 992-4055
A BBar

the list the

Daily

Sentinel

in evBry baskBI

1st Official

MOTHMAN FESTIVAL
Sponsored

by downlown mtr~:hlnta

Saturday, Nov. 16th
Downtown Point Pleaunt
• EKcluslve MOTHMAN exhibit

Classifieds

·

featuring movie props, rare
collectables and morel
• Gamea/Aollvltlea/Prizu

• Uve Music .. . the Portemoulh

h•v•INat
· gifts In

•nd slztl

Base&lt;! Band "MOTHMAN"
. o

MOTH MAN TNT Hayrides ...

See lor yourself where It all
began I Stay tuned for ticket
Information.
)food'Crafta/Bake Sales .. , To
reaerve your epo1 call 675-9726 or
675·1246 ... Everyonela welcome!

Exp. •

Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

FllllY

For ali your Home
Improvement needs
·"No Job To Small·

ROBERT
BISSELL

CIISTIIICDII

B. D. CORSTRUCTIOR

CONSTRUCTION
•'New tUnes
•GIIages

MILLS
Building over 30 )'earJ

992-297

Footers, Foundation,
Add-Ons, New Homes,
Pole Barns, Concrete;
Eleclri&lt;..Piui'AI&gt;inJ -

li:mxlell g ·

Stop &amp; Compare

/IIIIIIQIIC't \lbrk /'1(/IU/11/

(740) 992-3320

FREE ESTIMATES

Err..!!: blldttOzapllnk.com

74D-992·1671

"

Loogaberger!Drosden

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

Bus Trip
Sat., November 30, 2002
$6~ .00· Space Umi1ed
Deadline: Oct. ·20, 2002

www. mydailysentinel. com

Everyone recei~Jes 1
basket I!! Call:

LARRY SCHEY

' "'"'~~
High&amp; Dry
SeH-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992·5232
JUST launchedll!
LOSE WEIGHT
NOW! Burns FAT!
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
All Nalurai/Doctor
Recommended
Get lhis AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie
740-992·7996
or visit websile:
www.herbandlet.com

--·

750 East State Stre~t · Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

WHITE GLOUE HOmE
CltllnlnG SERUICt
~oilll!hj (

,,

J6S flfCJRIC 6
PLUIRBIRG
.lim Ru•rk

11',1/l'l'ij

Electric, Plumbing,

Ir :; •r IIll I '.11! I! '11 J
/\11(11•1.11'11 f ·:,!iE";
( :,1; :11·1 ·rr•. II

and Small Home

Malnt•n•noe .lob•
(340 773·5412
Cell 304 874-30B

17~ 111'i~'I·7S I2

.ALLtEL
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

TFN

YOUNG'S
MANLEVS
CARPENTER
SELF STORAGE i SERVICE
t • Room Addition• &amp;

Bedliners • Nerf Bar

• Ton neue Cover

•

Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full line of
',

I •I

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0 \

I )~

ill

II!

( l lliP

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
1st Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5FREE

somethlnl
for the

Monday-Friday 8-SPM • Saturday 8-2pm

Looking for a
particular pet?
Search our Giveaway
and Pets for Sale
Classified ads.

(740) 992-5822

•

(740) 446~1044

(10) 24, 31, (11) 7

,

.

St. Rt. 160

Gallipolis, OH 45631

&amp;

Mt 11J1 nboill oau

\! 1,1~11,

·,

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
4359

(740) 446-1812
Stl'\llrt PIM.rl

&amp; Service

Parts

Dump Truck

·97 Beech St. . . ::::~d:.~;!.
middleport, OH j' .• Electrloal
&amp; Plumbing
Roofing Gutters

(lo 'XlO' filO'xlO')

&amp;

1 • Vinyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
1

•

Patio and Porch Deck•

Eslimales
(740) 992-3194 ' 'V. Free
C. YOUNG Ill
992-6635
992·6215

Local 843;5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp;401K Rollovei's;
Mortgage; Major Medical
o Nursing Home

DEPOYSAG

PIRTS

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Pans
.factory Authorized
Case· IH Pans
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7South
Coolville, OH 45723

740-667·0363
Hill' s Se lf
Storage
28870 Bathan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-MII-2217

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

1-800·822·0417
"W.Vs IH Chevy, Ponuac. Buick, Olds,
&amp;
Dealer·

Ire IOU Laid DftP
, . Clllllllllllll-

1111 llr mE •••
11111111 ack 11

wen

Jtlllll
l l f t l l l l l l l Cll1

11111111111

Houre

7:00AM ·- 8:00 PM
1fl411

mo.

. 1•

, I'

BISSEll

BUILDERS Jnt

New Homes • Vinyl

Siding • New Garages
o Repliicement
Windows • Roofing

--~~~~ lr:dll

COMMERCIAL and

740-992-2222 or
740-446-, 018

FREE ESTIMATES

lllncv

f

I

Massey F'ergusqn

Other ACcessories

4

. j

B5

Qth CadeC &amp; Gravely

IC1'81.

Robert E. ~ee .
Defendant

-,;:·::--"::'----!-,

n-- I

'

Jaffrey A. Rodgtra,
Attarney lor Plalntlll

e;

,'• I

i

Ralph E. Trussell,
Sheri!! · of Meigs
County

Firewood
for Sale
BALL
LOGGING &amp;
FIREWOOD

The deed will be
letued1upon the bal·
ance being paid.

I

ll

s

I

of th1t
omount.
TERMS OF SALE:
Ten percent of the
hlghaat bid, cuh or
certified check, due
on the dey of the
111e, belence due
upon the confirm•·
Uon of the 111e by the
Meigs County court
of Common Pleaa.

Best Service at
the Best Price

I

I

r

Publle Notleesla Ntwspapen.
Your Riehl to Know, DtUvtrtd Riehl to Your Door.

I

• ilspec!::irt•ed-9_9_2.;-6_768;.;.._ _., equellzetlon. The tu
=:.
return• lor tax yeer
MmuRCYUES
2002 heve
been
reviled and the velu•·
tlone eomp(elld end
2001 Honda CABO Dirl are open lor public
Bike. Like New. $1400 . lnapecllon · In the
_&lt;304=)-67~5--11~933-::--.,.-- office of the Melge
; 2002 Honda Rancher 350, Co u n I Y
Auditor,
. 2-w-d,
Second
Floor,
- $3200.00, t995 Honda , Courthouae, Second
: 300,
2·W·d,
$2000, SlrH~ Pomeroy, OH.
• ~740)742·2821
Complalnla agelnet
~ 3 883 c 1
H 1 the veluetlone, ••
: Davidson wll~s ~~ ,:;[e"l eillebllahed lor tax
· Many Extras, Oealer&gt;hlp In: yeer 2002 muet be
: alalled. Excellenl condlllon. ·mlde In eccordence
. $13,200 lnvealed. Musl sell with Secllon 5715.11
· S&gt;r $9,700. (3041773-.5268
of the Ohio Reviled
; §6 Ha~ey Davidson Eteclra Code. Theae com·
Glide Classic, excellenl con- plelnta muat be flied
: dllion, wilt lake pay oH. on tonne whiCh wtllbe
. (740)882·7783
.lurnlahed by the
•
county Auditor end
Auro PA111S &amp;
muat be flied In the
•
ACCI!SSOR&amp;:S
County
Audltor'a
·
Office on or before the
4 Flrealone Sleet flex all. · 3111 dey of Merch
P26575 R18, $100, 2003. All complelnte
flied with the County
Auditor will be hNrd
mr--:':"'~--., by the Boerd of
HOME
Revlelon In the nien·
IMPROVEMF.I'ml
ner provided by
Section 57) 1.19 of the
BASEMENT
OhiO ReviiiKI Code.
.
WATERPROOFING
Nency
Perkar
, Uncondlllonal llfallme guar· CempbeU
anlee. Locol relerences fur· Melga County Auditor
' nlohed. Eslabllahed 1975. (10) 30, 31, (11) 1, 4, 5,
. Call 24 Hre. (7401 446· . 7, 8, 11, 12
0870, Rogera Baaemenl
Watorprootlng.
fl~bllc Notice

I

is a full time position with ministrator, Mason County and back porch. (304)~75- Street. (740)256-6661
Applications being taken tor __
4kCocker Spaniel pupp1eds 6 Llvety's Auto Sales 1992
good salarv.· U int&amp;rested Commission
2495 $300. Ret reqUired
w sold asking $225 00 ew Olds Achieva, $1200, 1987
1 ~ &amp;
call (740)441-1236, If no anplus deposit.
·
J...Ul03
very nice 2 bedroom in Buy or sell. Riverine Anrl- claws and tails docked , Dodge Dynasty, $650, 1990
swer, leave message.
Truck Driver wanted, call
ACREAGE
. country setting yet close to ques, 1124 East Main on shots
and
wormed Pontiac Grand Am. $900;
(740)682·6402
.
Land home peekages. No
lown. Washer, Dryer, S1ove, SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· (7401742·2525
1993 Ford Taurus.• 1600:
LPN Positions at Middleton
payments while under con,.,
L k Frig, Dishwasher provided. 992-2526. Russ Moore,
112
1
1
Estates an ICFIMR facility. Truck Drtvert, Immediate struction . . Linle or no
acre o .on •rcoon a e Large Kitchen. LotS ot clos- owner.
AKC Reg. Golden Retriever ~~o~t'r=utgh~Vnd~~':
Per Diem tor all shifts . hire, class A COL required, down payment reqUired. w/12x60Traller$16,500.00
et space. Total electric with
puppy, 9 wks old, 1st. lier, $750; ·
Chrysl~r
1988
Rlease conta ct Dorothy eiCcellent pay, experience (740)446-3218
now $13,500.00
Central A/C. Garbage pick· Carolina Antique &amp; Craft shorts &amp; wormed 992·7651 LeBaron, $600;
lsuzu
1985
Harper, AN at (740)446- · required. Earn up to
•
740 247·1100
upandwaterprovided. Ten- Mall312 6th. St. Pt. Pleas4814 or (740)446-8145.
$1 ,000. per WHk.Call 304· New 2000 sq ft home, 10
o.,.·L ..,..;,...,"'"'
ani pays electric. No pets.' ant, WV. Antique &amp; Craft AKC Registered Golden Re- Pup, $800. Call (740)38~
minutes lrom Hospital ·
JUoA ~trur.
trie·-rs.
ap'prox 9 weeks 9303
Open Monday
675 ·4005
WAN'IlD
No~ smo~er~ only. $400 de- Vendors Welcome .
•v
s
C th ·
McClure's Restauranr now
Complete above ground
poSit,
$450
month,
old, $200 each. (740)36?- aturday 9am-5pm, lo&amp;ep
hiring all 3 localions, full or UijGENTLY
NEEDED- pool wilh porch, driveway
. 17401446 _9585 or'(740)44BMlscEu.ANEous 7391
Sunday's.
,
1074
YARD SAIE·
part-time. pick up applica- plasma donors, earn $50 to and garage toundatlpn. Will pay top dollar tor prime· 2205 . 1743· . Centenary
MERCHANDISE
Rat/ Fox Terrier puppies,
2
PoMEROY/l\fmDLE tlon at localion &amp; bring back $60 per week for 2 or 3 Price below appraisal. land. New home builder. Road, Gallipolis. Ask tor Vir- __
· mates left , $SO each .
belween
9:30am
&amp; hours weekly. Call B1o LWe (740)448·3384.
.
ginla.
TRUCKS·
17401446 3093
1O.OOam, Monday thru Sal- Plasma Service, 740-592·
=-:.,-.,..-----~:- 3/4 size Violin, made In (740)379·2515 (740)645·
FOR SALE
Biggie yard &amp; ba&lt;e sale- urday.
6651
SAVE $ 5,000, Buy From
BEAUTIFUL
APART· Czechoslovakia, $150; 1 :20::.7;.:0:..__ _ _ _ _ _ "'~--------tl
Thursday, Friday, Nov. . 7th --,--,..-,..----- Owner, 3 bedroom; 2 baths,
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI~ Kerosun heater, like new,
&amp; 8th, Long Bottom Com- Medi Home Health agency,
WORK FROM HOME
large Ranch house, 2 car
$lOO 1740)448 0893
Aottwe
. Iter pups 12 weeks 1 1981 Ford F-250 Explor~·
munlty Building , 9-??
Inc. seeking RN 's (PT/FT)
Potential $1500/mo/pt
garage, 1!2 .acre lot, price,
CES AT JACKSON ES·
·
·
male-$150. 2-females $200. V-8. automatic, 90,000 a :
and a West Virg inia li·
$5Q001molft. Free Into.
$93,000. Call (740)446TATES, 52 Westwood Drive 4·10 ·D John D&amp;ere Rubber H~d shots and 0 wormed. rual miles, $1500. (740)44 •
OARAOE SALE:
censed Physical Therapist
1·800-921--4412
4737 after Spm for appoint·
from 5297 to 5383· Walk to tire ' Backhoe.
$10,000; Ta11s and dew claws docked 4053
·
,
. fre edom.com men'I.
rlO
Ho•~o
shop
&amp; movies.Call
7..0· 9·55·· K Cat&amp;rpillar track good . tempered, large
. 9 a m_- 1or th e Ga,,.1po,.IS, OH area www.acuqUire
NOVEMBER 8 Irom
v.x:.;:,
. 446 .
.
Equal
Housing
2568
3 P.m., 91h, 9·12, camper, We oHer a competitive sal·
FOR """"' 1'
loader $12 000 Bolh In breed. Ask for Ginger. 1987 Ford F-250. 6.9 diesel!,
Two bedroom cottage slyle
Opportunily,
'
·(740)388 (3041 773-5873 . Leav&amp; a 4 sp., runs &amp;xcellent,
exercise bike, new Christ- ary, beilefits package, 40 1k,
good •condlllon
140
B·~~
hOme,
finished
upsrairs,
full
.
• message.
mas items, nice clothing, and flex time. Please sent
u.::~&amp;l ..~
Duple• '"1 3br 1 1/2 balh 9327
condition, $2400, (740)99 .
basement, well maintained 2 story, 4 bedroOm house, 3
,..... ·
·
·
32581 Hysell Run.
· resume lo 68150 Bayberry 1
· "'-·--·Fronllback porch living ---::--::-:-::-:-:-.,.-17584
'
Drive, Clairsville, OH 43950.
J.KJUI"~~tm.
plus 10 acres ol ground, car garage, living room,
'
DURN Fat, BLOCK CravMUSICAL
Garage Sale· Sal91h 9 4
call family room. and eMtras, room,
dining Ref
room• kitchen.
' rgy
. .l..l"'DtK...,,Y.._,
•·-·~
1988 Ford F·150 p·up, g"""
·
·• · · AHn: Greg Varner, Admlnis- Gatllpollt c. aroor Colto~ road · frontage,
$300 month
deposit lnga, and BOOST Ene
• .,
""'f"'
33879 Flatwoods. Racine, trator.
(Careers Close To Hom:l.. [740)949-8900
Danny $550 a month, $250 depos- requi~ed
Like' You Have Never Ex•
shape, runs good, call
675 ~2495
13
OH. turn Oehind old South :-:---:--:-:.----,..-,- carr Todayl 740 -446-4367 , Brown fot appolntm&amp;nt
It, 1 year lease, pets alaid.
. ·
•
perienced.
(740)985·3372 ~nings: •
Points out Flatwoods Ad .. Mer~hand1ser . needed In
(740)388-8699
Efllciency apartment, furWEIGHT· LOSS
~~~?J Tro~~~~~· CaB&amp;, '-:-:-'--:'-.;.:...:..:~.::..:::...~
1 ~ 800 • 214 _ 0452 ,
follow sign
.
Galha and Meigs Counlles
Reg •90·05·1274B.
3 bedroom, 2 bath, open
nlshed, $400 all ullllllea InREVO~UTION
(740)387·0667 .
$125. 1990 Dodge Truck. 2W0,
for National Company, startfloor plan, Ranch style, 3 bedroom house for rent. eluded . 5100 deposit, New product launch Octoauto, runs good , $13do
Yard sale· Counly Rd. 19. lng pay $6.50 per hou r, 1180
WANnD
Approx 1 mila from lown on 47 Chllllcol.he Road, $400 1740)367.01111 aftor 6 ,00 on ber 23 , 2002 . Call Tracy at
OBO. Call . after · lOpm,
Maurer re sidence, 8th &amp; send resume to P.O. Box
To Do
SR 588. Appro• 150Q sq.fl.. per monlh, $400 daposlt, weekdays. ·
(7401256 -1875
'
1740)44 ,., 982
•
9th , Friday &amp; Sal , 9·4.
.
$97,9QO.
(740)983-0730 Raferences requ ired. Day
Extended Cab.
192, Evans, wv 25241
1996 6 10
.
.1 bl . d
(7401446·6161
(740)256•6456;
Evening Furnished 3 rooms • batn. Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
Ch'ld
6
88 K, $4,292 . 1997 .Rang•r
YARI&gt;SAU:· · MGR Personal for. local tast
careavala e In own· --:--:---=-.,--- ~7-:40"'~2.;.56.;..·.;..153=0---~ upstairs, clean, no p&amp;ts. Repairs Problems? Need
Y
load
operation.
2
years
food
town
.
Pomeroy,
prlvar&amp;
pay
3
bedroom,
Garfield
Ave·
.
XLT,
automatic,
71ft .
1
.
,
Pr.
PLEASANT
id'
h
G
bed
h
Reference
&amp;
deposll
1eTuned?
Call
The
Plano
Dr.
L~
oo Si'lverado, x• ,
1
24
54295
3
19
4 ~
·--iioitiiiiiiiiriiii'-,1 servie&amp; experience &amp; good on v. prcw 1ng
r. serv· nue, alllpolls, OH . Own&amp;r
room ouse, no pets, quired. (740)446·1519 .
u.o:..:uV\..n.
740446 4525
'
people skills. Must· ~&gt;&amp;· a sell ice, call (740)992-5827 lor financing, $49,000. $4,000 $265 month, $125 deposit,
··
n&amp;w Goodwrench, 35Cl ,
Moving. Sale. 2 101 LincOln starter. Very good starting more informatiOn.
down,
$365
month. (740)446-3617
Furnished Effici&amp;ncles, all Hotpolnt range $35· Brown
loaded, $3995. ,5
Ave. Fn 9-12 &amp; Sat. 8-12
wage.s . Paid vacati on and : : - - - : : - - : - - - (304)988-Q664
3br. house 2609 Lincoln utlllt!&amp;s paid, &amp;hare bath, Sleeper sofa, $95;' Singer 15 year old Tenne.sse&amp; In ~lOCk· Cavalier, Grand
_,'Other benefits, Insurance Georg&amp;s Porta61e Sawmill,
·
·
$135 month, 919 2nd AIIB- Portable Sewing mathlne, Walker gelding &amp; 2 saddles; Am s ·and others. COOk
-:;:::--":":'~---., available.- Send resume to dOn't haul your rags to th&amp; Wanledl Good credit cus- Ave. 5425. month+ deposit. nue (740)446-3945
$35; Oak dining tabl&amp;, two 21 . month old Toy poodle, MOTORS (740)446-Q103 ;
WANIJ'.D
CLA 566, c/o Gallipolis D.ai· mill just call 304-675-1957. tomers to purchase ne;w Ael. No Peta. (304)875'
&amp;xtensions and 6 chairs, male, complet&amp;ly housebro·
91 Ranger 4x4, 5-speeC ,
B
·
home w/land. $0 OOwn to 2749
...~ Gracious living. 1 and 2 527 ~; K&amp;roaene heaters, k&amp;n, $150. (740)245: 121 7
~a~~~~~;,ec,~·~5s ~ 4 9, Honest, dependable mother qualified custom&amp;rs.· 1-5 . 3br. House in Henderson. bedroom apartments at Vit. 515
&amp;ach or 21$2 5. ' Apple : : - - - - - - - - - Ext. Cab, $2200. (740)25 ~ ·
,
- - ' - - ----:--- - will babysit in my home. Call acre
tracts
available. Laundry, fenCed yard, out· lage Manor and Riverside computer/ monitor/ key- Pam Jenkins
9140 .
.
'
Absolule Top Dollar : U.S.
PRODUCTION
1740 1441 ' 0564
&lt;740)446 ·3093
building. Doposll &amp; Releren - Aparlmenta In Middleport board/ over a dozen CD 740.742·2307
94 F 150, 6 cylinder: :5
Silver, Gold Coins, ProolDEPARTMENT
W'll
From $278·$348. Call 740$125 ; Po r1able Cong-lulalf
1 c1ean your ho me oro f·
MOBD..E HOMES . c&amp;s·. (304)675-4082
••
ont 1 You have speed, real good tructt,
992_5064 . ·Equal Housing programs,
sets,
Diamonds.
Gold We have Part-lime open- lice, weekly, biweekly; or
FOR S"•
Sbr. House loca
· led In Ma- Opporl.unllles.
basketball pole/ 111t, $35. won 2 free movie tickets to doesn't use oil, se&amp;n a1d
Rings,
US Currency,· ings in our production, peck· monthly. Call (740)441 - ~
~
•
Call (740)367·0867
lhe Spring Valley 7 Galllpo- driven to be appreciate~ .
M.T.S. COin Shop, 151 Sec- aging,&amp; dlstributltm area.
0564 f
.
' · ~~nPe~~·(3~91;73~si'~~llties. Now Taking Applications-·
. lis. Call the Sentinel for de· $3,500.00 firm 992-5532 ,
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740'Must be dependable
35 West 2 Bedroom TownJET
tailS. (740)992-2155)
446-2642.
'At leas11B years of age
MUST SELL BY THE ENO
AERATION MOTORS
~~.;...;,;,;~,;;;;~-""'1 85 F d C
•
'Clean dri\llng record
OF OCTOBER I COLE'S 5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St, hOuse Apartments, Includes Repalr&amp;d, New &amp; Rebuilt In
IL\Y &amp;
or
rown Vlctorlqn
1.~11'1.0\ ' ~II·. N I
.
,
rlO
8
MOBILE HOME , Alhens. $325mo. (7401446·3945
Waler
Sewage, Trash, Slock. Call Ron Evans, 1.
$1 ,100.QOjorbef!Qffot! ,
·Mechamcal aplllude helpful
. lNNE'lS
$35Q•• 740 446
GRAIN
992 ssil2
/ ~ fl
Sl.ll\ 11'1 S
8.
'Must be flexible with rega rd
0PPOR11JNTIY
Ohio (740) 592·1972, on OC· For -Rent 6 room furniShed
,..... o.,
.
800·537-9528.
·--ooiiiiiiiiil--,1
~
.
'
to work hours
easton we have a display house in Mason. Contrac-:--:--::-,..-,..-,..:-:'\
~1
110
·Must be able lo lift 50 lbs
home that doesn't sell. We t
Twin Alvere Tower for eld- .L .
601b Square baiC!S, alfalla, F~
f ;;x~;
(
INOTICEI
have one such home now. 5764
ors w&amp; 1come. 304 1773~ erly/ disabled.
exmgton
Oak
Loft desk,
Beds 2nd &amp; 3rd ,.
1
• "\"""'
HF
. ~._.
Tr m • r~Jl
Apply between 7:00 ·9:00am
with
2-shelfs,
pull-out
...utting, Call JV
· ~·
L
Mond~y · Friday to Don OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- New 16 .X 80 three bed· ::-'----:----=---- Now accepting applications &amp;· bulletin board buill ln. (740)245-5869
·
4Jj 1
Coleman at The Gallipolis lNG CO. recommends that room, 2 Bath home at a For Rent or Sale.Oider tor 1 br, ail utilities paid Twin bed under loft b&amp;d.
ACT · NOW New branch Dally Tribune or send your you do business with people used home p~ice come see house ready to move into, 2 HUD ·assis ted, carpeted Both fTlaltresses. bunkie Ears of Corn tor Sale. 1989 Ch~ shWrado ~
"oper1mg m Athens . Several resu me to his attention c/o you know, and NOT to send Lynn ·Of Erme today . and or 3 bedrooms, large living- apartment. rent Is 30% ol boards, mattr&amp;ss pads . ln- {304)675·1506
Blazer, good condition runs
pos1 tt0'1S ava1 tab te, $300 a Gallipolis oa 11y Tribune, money through the mail ur'llil check . out your S&amp;\llngs. roqm, dining 1rm, kitchen, .your adjusted iricome cctll eluded . s 350 . Excellent For Sale: Round Bales
good, no calls after 10pm,
01
week to start, 1-740-585- P.O. Box . 46~. Gallipolis, you ·have investigated the Remember, we must sell by bath, front and back porch. 304-675·6679 between 8- Condirion. (30 4)6 75•6 7 87 Hay, Stored Inside. 1.740-- mileage over , tOO,OOQ,
2935
OH 4563.1 /
offering .
lhe end of October!
(3041675-BBOB
· 4:30pm weekdays.EHO
a«er 6pm.
698-a211
$4000, (7401742·2307
,
·
'
Garage Sale- 583 Georges
Creek Rd. Friday· Salurday
.Antiques, 78 records, Silver
Bridge N
·.
.ewspapers, t.ars,
bot1les, miSC. Ram or Shine.
- - -- . , . - " - - - R\,lm mage Sale-· Grace
United MethOdist Church·
Mary of Bethany, Cedar
Srreet Entrance, Friday,
November 8 from 8am-2pm

BLIC
NOTICES

-------

:j

POLICIE.S: Ohlo VII'-\' Publishing rtHrVH tM right to .ut, ~ or c.ncelany ad at any um.. Errort mult bl reportad on thll flr~~t dty
Trlbun.Senttnt~l.flqllttr wiN De tHpOntlblt tor no mort tMn the co" of the ·~ occtJP*i by the error 1nd only tt. first lnHrtlon. We
not
1ny loll or 11:pen• tn.t ,..ultl from the publlutlon or omltaion of an tldwrtiMmank Conwctlon will be made In tt. flrtt IVIIIabla edition. • 801:
,,.. alw1ya cont.-ntl1l. • CIMt9nt qt. c.rd appliH. • All rul Htlte ldvtniHmtntt n
the F~al Fair Houaing Act of 1188. • Thl• -•P"I~I
acceptl only help wlntld adl mttling EOE Nndlrdl. WI Will not knowingry ~
violation of u,. law.

• Start Your AOSWith A. Keyword • Include Complete
Descr iption • Include A Price • Avo id Abbreviations
• lnclude Phone Number And Address When Needed .
• Ads Shou ld R~n 7 Days

1996 Ford Wlndlllr van ,
auto, 1lr, rear air, bucket
seats, &amp;Mceltent condillon,
beautiful van, one owner,
$7,000, (740)742·2897

-------rl

us

The Daily Sentinel • Page

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

r•.

REACH OVER 285,0DO .PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

or Fax To (740)

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ford 1963 arnal oos. tli64
The Melge County ebove entitled ectlon,
C'-Y small 001 , good con· llo8rd ol Revlelon h11 I will offer lor ule It
: dlllon.runs good, alalt In· completed Ill Work ol public euctlon 11 the

.,

In One week With

7, 2002

AESIDENTIA~

740-992-7599

�•

'

\

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thuradey, November 7;2002

www.mydellyaentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

ACROSS 41 ''The
1 Thin nlllo

8

Pllywright

O.C.r-

11="•

Pizzo
topping
13 Meal
18 Goollo'o
12

: •

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.
F.asl

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:e.cs•.

KJ R

·t

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MONTY

A ,\

.r

16~k

~5 ~ 3 .

•
•

Kl06 ~ 3

18

'

2

166 ~ 3!

•

A J l

.

Dealer: South
Vulnerible : Neither

~

l'i~tuth

a•
1¥

t...

Wr~t

Nontl

!'au

4¥

r.u

Parody humor

BAUNEY
WHICH MAKES FER A
WEL.COME CHAN
!!

DANG, ~I LAS,
\-\OW KIN 'I'OU

STANDT14EM

r

FLA"TL~ND

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

THE BORN LOSER
f-\Q\.1 DO
L!K£

['It\

~. . u~.

~OT

YOU!l.~

5llll.E. ...
/

r

I

A

WAS ..JUST ... UH ... .
WAS HANGING OUT

43
441
.
441
50

FlaniMpp.
Moth or lint
Secret

.....Ungo
Toll bloomt
Kind 01

union

54 Gowkood ot
55 Dellftlltln

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

56 Benches

57 Limerick

50 CEN TS • Vol. 53. No. 61

writor-

Naah
DOWN
21 f.lottholr
22 Mlqelolh
1 Wintry cry
23 Cabinet
2 ..Sheila"
· dlv.
alngor
25 Marble
Tommy28 Soft drink
brand
3 Rock·
gold

14

tlngor
CNthod
groJI",

36 Modldruol
root
39 Port ol

CD-ROM
43 ProiiiH,
brolhor
brlofly
17 With rogrot 44 Try to
30 Eggconcert
19 "Lohtn·
porouldo·
naod
.
grin" or
45 - monitOr
31 ~~ ....
4 Church
"Tooca"
46 Denoon and
org.
olllelala
20 MalloKennedy ·
32 Prior to
5 Fair (hyph.l 22 Erupt
47 MuiiCII
33 PC "brain" 6 Warm
24 Exceoolvely
35 · Paoplo
Iabrie
25 Bog
49 elevllion
davourera 7 Letterhead 26 Juot right
rocelver
37 Tolotoy title abbr.
27 Leze In the 51 Flop
wOld
8 Similar
aun
52 Part ol UK
38 Rotalnad
9 Qo.gotJor 29 po Fritz 53 TwiC$ ftva
40 Writer- 1o "Orfnoco
34 L.llle aurnDlneson
Flow"
moriNIIs

Eut
P•u
· Allpasl

Openin&amp; ~~d: • K

BY PHIWP

-

Hut'le~o

a-·

42Calpry

19 Sponloh

.

•

••

~~

old-llyJe

15 Zeppo'o

¥roup ,

AlDER

The son and father
combination of Phil·
lip and Robert King
are well-known for
their humorous bridge
pastiches. Their sixth
book, "The New
King's Tales" (Batsford, 2002), contains
four stories. Two are
of their own qtaking: ·
The Time Machine
(not .a parody, although the authors
pay tribute to H. G.
Wells) and Killing
Defence (a courtroom
drama the authors
aver has nothing to do
with the great bridge
book of the same title
by Hugh Kelsey).
Two are parodies:
Cornflakes (an up·
scale version of the
BBC's Britcom "Porridge") and The Fatal
· Five (a trihute to
CELEBRITY CIPHER '
. Agatha Chtistie's
· l:ly Luis Campos
"The Big Four'').
CelebritY. Cipher cryptograms are created from quo~lions by famous
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.
While not as good
Today's c/us: 0 equals Y
.as their earlier works,
it is entertaining.
L y
"WCYLM
KFZ
CSLEZUYBT
In this deceptive
deal, how would you
TBSJCBJZ
HN
WBSALSX
·try to make four
hearts? Wes1 . leads
VHZKUO
K F Z L U
CSLEZUYBT
the spade king.
The bidding is' agVBYKLWZ
BSX
X Z T L·J F K .' "
gressive, but the cards '
fit well.
FZSUO
GBXYGHUKF
If the tmmps are 2·
2, the contract will
THSJNZTTHG
cruise home. But if
they are 3·1, it looks
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Money Is the poor people's credit
care!." - Marshall McLuhan
as though South must .
"Genuemen prefer bonds." -Andrew Mellon
find the club queen. -----~-...;.":""--:--:=-~~----..­
However, the declarer r,"'uT DLA tLY C. IN_"0 ,i\-... .( - . flz -c ~C." WORD
11 11 0~ 1-'QU t"J.. ~ P&lt;r-=' GAME
showed that this isn't
necessarily true if an - , - - - - - - Edll•d bv CLAY 1. POLLAN-~---opponent has a sin·
Rearrange letters of t~e
four
scrambled words b•
gleton trump h onor.
low to form four simple wards.
,After taking trick
MA L E A F
one with the spade
ace, South returned a !--,-1
2
spade to · West's
.
. . . .
··
queen. Back came a
low diamond. De·
WR L 0 p
clarer won with dum- h--r:.....;;-:~-;.,;--i
my's ace, ruffed the 3
j ~~ [4
~­
diamond four in hand, L.
.cashed the spade jack, 1·
and led a trump, play-~
T R E T 0 I~
"I know the definition of;;~ poliing low from the
15. ·I 1 16, .
tician." one gent told his pal. "A
dummy.
L.·= =·==·==·~-~~-:-..,politician is someone who can
West was end- r
~ stand on the fence and make you
played, forced either
M u 0 0 s I . , believe it's a ... -.-. ·I"
.
1
18 I Complete
the chuckle quoted
to open up clubs or to
concede a ruff-and. . . . .
by fiiHng In the .,;,.;ng words
discard. (And if East
you develop from step No. 3 below.
had overtaken the m, PRINT NUMBERED
heart queen
Withhave
his ~'f;;r.;lE;T;Tf~R;S~IN~S~Q;U~A=RE=S:;:=;~*~==:==*=*==*=:·
king,
he would
been
similarly
UNSCRAMBLE FOR
trapped.)
.:_.:;,A:::N:;_SW~ER~
. --· -.1......!......1..-'-·....1..-.1......!..-J.. ....J.
The book is $20.95
. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
postpaid from Baron
Floral· Scout· Mower· Vulcan · SMALL TOWN
Barclay Bridge Sup·
I had returned to my hometown for a class reunion . .
One alumni smiled to another: "If no one knows the .
plies. Call (800) 274trouble you've seen, it's certain you don't live in a SMALL .
2221 to order.
TOWN.'

0

LITTLE lilT... JU!&gt;T

TALKING. 'WIT+i COACH.

I 11,.._.,.._.;:.,,.'i.,r-rl I
I

11

I

I

=·:;::·==·==·

PEANUTS
THE ONLY REASON 1 60 TO
SC"OOL IS TO BECOME RICH
AND FAMOUS .. ·

WELL, A 600D EDliCATION
CAN SE VER't' VALUABLE

±

I

I I I. I

e

I I· I

.6

I 1:

--------~~~~--------~
Friday, Nov. 8, 2002

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

By continuing to expand
and build upon foundations
you've already laid you could
realize some large gains in the
year ahead, so long as you
don't get off track. Trying to

GAUFIELD

b,\:&lt;0\.l~O
~E

~OJf£

""
· J

BE/;Th M'i. . 5\1E'. 'Nb.iV\-1'\
vP£.GIFIC'

be lhe one who creates it.

tions, and too much of it in
associates. Emphasize your

surface. To avoid being de-

might not work.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. lt won' t be difficult to
throw you off track today if
you have too little faith · in
your own ideas or sugges·

FLOI¢:5 II'\~ St-1.11 BtGAU5E
S\'t. fiA.'&lt;'O I D::l-\'1 IXl
[f\O\.J~\-1
""'(;;;

meet with resistance, think
again. If a fight ensues, you'll
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) .. Life'is Iough enough
without deliberalely putting
roadblocks on your own path.
There is a good chance that
the problems you' u·encounter
today are likely to be of your
own making.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) .. Someone you encounter
Ioday, to whom you could be
quite a!tracted, .might nol. be
all she or he appears on Ihe

turn them 10ward new areas

TilE GIUZZWELLS

own abilities .and talents, not
theirs. Get a jump on life by
understanding the influences
thal'lt govern you in the year
ahead. Send for your Astro. Graph predictions by mailing
$2 to Astro-Graph; c/o thisnewspaper. P.O. Box 167,
Wickliffe, Olfl 44092. Be sure
to state your zodiac sign.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec . 21) .. The people who
you know from experience .
tmpose upon those with generous dispositions will be in
good form again Ioday. Avoid
them if possible.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan ..
19) .. If you think being
overly insistent upon' having
evhything your way won"t

Buckeyes-Purdue previews, B1-1

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

'•

ceived, give yourself plenty .
of time to get to know this
person.

,

ARIES (March 21 -Aprill9)
-- Be careful of your behavior

and how you treat your coun,
tcrparts when involved with
others today. If you are harsh,
· demanding or even show in·

difference, you could offend
rhose whose assistance you
need .

TAURUS (April 20-May
· 201 .. If you f~il to complete
lhe necessary duties assigned

to you today, il won'! be be·
cause of your lack of knowhow, but because you' II use
your own·agcnda as an excuse

·to neglecl Ihem.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)

.. You' re no1 paranoid, but
you could let your imagina·
tion cause you to be a ~oor
reader of others' ·intentions
and mislead you into believ- ·
ing there is opposition where .
none actually exist.

CANCER (June 2t -July 221
.. Pin\fing grpunds for general
agreement today might be a ·
difficult task for you and your
mate if you both are unyielding. Harmony can 't prevail in
a sphere of inflexibihty.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) .. If
at all possible, stick to tasks
where little thought and con·
centration are required. You

could be too much of a day
dreamer today to keep your
mind on the job at hand.
VIRGO (Aug: 23-Sept. 22)
-- Of course you have a right ·

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8 2002

www

·Rutlan.dTire.owner faces uncertain future
.

BY SANDI SAMMON
Staff writer

RUTLAND . - When Donald
Hysell, owner ·of Rutland Tire
Sales, allowed an employee to use
the business ~arage last Sunday, he
· didn't expect it would be the last
time the garage would ever be used.
Employee Tim Roush and his
brother Buddy Roush took th.eir

.

mother 's car to Hysell's Main
Street business for repairs .
As Tim Rou sh removed the gas
tank, a spar'k apparently ignited the
gasoline fumes .
Rou sh's hand caught fire . When
he dropped the gas tank, the flames
spread throughout the garage.
While Tim Roush tried to put out
the fire, his brother ran nextdoor to
call the fire department.
Upon his return to the garage,

Buddy Roush had to persuade hi s
brother that the fire couldn' t be put
out and that they had to get our of
the building.
As soon as the brothers ran out of
the building ; it exploded.
Hysell, who lives in Cheshire.
said he heard the boom from about
I 0 miles away.
"I didn't know it was my boom.
That thought didn't cross my

rqind."

The Rutland Fire Department
responded quickly, he said .
However. the fire was too intense.
and the property couldn 't be saved.
Hysell estimated the damage at
around $150,000.
He did not have insurance. ·
Hysell said he has no future plans
of rebuilding the business that he
began working for in 1987.
After eight years of working
there, he purchased the business in

Contract to · Video math
address jail
housing.
Bv

BRIAN

J.

REED

Staff writer

BY CHARLENE HOEI'LJCH

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioners have
approved a new contract for
housing prisoners in the .
Washington County Jail
because severd! other jails will
not accept prisoners due to
outstanding bills.
The board, during its regular
meeting Thursday, approved a
contract with Washington
County to house prisoners
there at $55 per day.
Meigs has a negotiated con·
tract with Noble County Jail to
house up to five prisoners at
$40 each, per day, but a bill for
those beds. and housing bills
owed other counties remain
unpaid. Several jails, including
that in Middleport, will no
longer accept prisoners until
the bills are paid.
J!!e Meig_s County Jail was
clos.ed ·a 'month agd:'• Wtlell
Sheriff Ralph Trussell laid off
most of his staff due to a lack·
of payroll funds, but the
Pomeroy jail has been used only as a five-"day holding
.facility since it was re-opened
· in January, and has not housed
women for years.
Long-term inmates and women are transported to
Noble
County,
the
'Southeastern Ohio Regional
Jail in Nelsonville, Gallia
County Jail, and Ross County
Jail, but
SEORJ
and
Middleport will no lon~er
,· .accept prisoners from Metgs
County until the county's bills
. are paid, according to Jail
Administrator and Deputy
MonyWood.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
·said yesterday the county owes
:SEORJ in· excess of $6,000,_
. Middleport $2,550 and Noble
· County for several months on
its standing contract. Gallia
County continues to accept
prisoners when space allows,
Wood said, but the new
Washington County contract is
. required in order to house pris-

Meigs Middle School sixth grader Jessica Holliday shows her math class the video she made
as her flnai-J&gt;roiect C!!Jied_: My ~P.e.I&lt;IIII ~u.m~r. • Holliday plays several kooky, characters that
discuss all Kinos of,things th~: number '60 can do: ·~
,... • .
. ·

Meigs 'prime time' program
·combines learning and fun
Bv KRts

ScoUTEN

Staff wrijer
MIDDLEPORT - Prime Time Family
Night was held·Thursday evening featuring
math ·students at Meigs · Middlt; School
showin~ off what they know about numbers.
"We JUSt completed our unit called Prime
Time and the fin;tl project was called 'My
Special Number'," said Julie Randolph ,
sixth grade teacher. "Each student was asked
to choose a number between I0 and I 00 and
to write several things about ilo''
The students had to incorpOr\lle all vocabulary and concepts from the unit in a creative
way with the emphasis being on the mathe·
matical content they learned.
By nature, sixth graders are all over the
place. They can be quiet or rowd:x:, into
everything from Brittany Spears to;Michael
Jordan·but generally you wouldn't think they

would be. creative enough to produce
videos, write emotional stories O( inake art
out of Cheez-it crackers.
But this particular sixth grade class has
done just that .
"I wanted math to be engaging for mY students, that what they _learn has meaning,"
noted Randolph. "Not to just sit there listen ing to me lecture."
One student, Jessica Holliday made a
video. She created individual math charac·
terS that demonstrate the different applications she's learned, Holliday plays each
character herself with her mother playing
videographer.
"Well, my mom and I wanted to do something different so we ·came up with the idea
of a video where characters tell all about my
special number, which is 60," Holliday
explained. "Dear Bea:ry was 'hunting' for

Please see Melp. Al

Please see Jell, Al

Rumble strips 'annoying'

2 Sections - 12 P•&amp;••

C 2002 phio

V~lley

Lori Sayre of the Racine Southern FFA was a runner-up in
the National FFA Proficiency Award Contest in Vegetable
Production held at the 75th annual FFA conventron. Cindy
Salandich of Briggs and Stratton Corp. Foundation Inc.,
which · sponsored tt:te awards,
congratulates Sayre.
(Contributed)

,.

Police: Man held
in infant's death
Satff report

Index
Calendar
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Obituaries
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Weather ·

ner was named following
interviews at the Louisville
--~------- convention. The national
winner was Benton Hendrix
RACINE - Lori Sayre, a
h W FF Ch
·
member of the Racine oft e ray A apter '"
Colo. He recetved a
Sou thel'!' FFA ' was a . run· Wray,
plaque and $500.
ner-up tn the national con·
The other finalists, Sayre,
test for FFA Profictency . Joseph Dimler of the
Award . tn . Vegetable Wacomia . FFA Chapter in
Production at the 75th ann~- Waconia, Minn ., and Daniel
al ~FA convention held m Vredeveld of the Randolph
. Cambria-Frieshand Chapter
Loutsviile, Ky.
Announcement of her wm of Randolph, Wis. , received
was. made Wednesda~ by. the plaques and $250 each.
.The awards, presented
National FFA Organization.
She was one of four FFA before more than 50,000
me~bers m . vegetable pro- FFA members attending the ·
du~tiOn earh~r selected . as convention, were sponsored
national finalists from Win· by Briggs and Stratton Corp.
ner~ of state awards 10 the Foundation Inc. as a special.
Umted State~, ~uerto Rtco project of the National FFA
and the Vugm Islands , Foundation.
whtch has 461,000 members
Sayre is the second Racine
m 76,308 cha,ptelrs.
top WirlNews editor

BY BRIAN

A5
. B4·5

86
A5
A4

A3
A3
81·3
A2
Publishina: Co.

J.

REED ..

Staff wrilef
MIDDLEPORT - New rumble strips
installed at the intersection of County Road 5
and Ohio 7 at Bradbury are noisy, but could
help save lives, an area resident told Meigs
County Commissioners Thursday.
Guy Hysell of Rutland, who helped coordinate a campaign for additional safety measures at the Bradbury intersection, .said residents have complained about noise from the

rumble strips since they were installed last
week, but asked residents to "be patient." .
The strips, he said, will get more quiet with
time, and have already helped draw anention
to the intersection and prompted motorists to
drive.more slowly as they approach the inter·
section.
The county installed the rumble strips on the•
county portion of the intersection in response
to a petition drive and meeting with concerned
residents. Three fatal accidents. have taken

Please see Rumble. Al

POMEROY _ The body
of a five-month old baby
who died Thursday evening
will be taken to the Franklin
County Coroner for an
autopsy, and a man ·has been
taken into police custody
relating to the child's death.
Authorities are withhold·
ing information about the
identities of both the baby
and the man arrested last
niglit, pending notitication
of the baby's relatives,
according to Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark Proffitt.

· According to Proffitt, a
Meigs Emergency Services ·
unit . was dispatched · to
Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments
on Union Avenue. yesterday
evening regarding the injury
of an infant child. The infant
was later transported to
Holzer Medical Center.
Proffitt would not say if the
baby died at the apartment
complex, en route to the
hospital, or at the hospital,
but said further details about
the incident will be released.
later today, once relatives
are notified of the infant's
· death ..

·Fair
sponsored by lhe HMC Employee Adivity Association

Friday, November 8
Saturday, Nov•mber 9
7 AM. ,.7 PMI
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

thoughtless or disregard Ihe
feeling of others today.
.

All ore welcome! For more information, call (740) 446·5.345

.

September 1995 .
"In a·couple of years, I would' ve
had the place paid off. Then I would
have had the extra money to pay the
high in surance rate ," Hysell said.
Fortunately, though, Hysell did
have mortgage insurance to cover
the remainder of the loan.
"I will mi ss the place. I had very
loyal customers. They were all
good people. "

Southern FFA
member named
national runner-up

to enjoy yourself and let your
hair down from time to ume,
but today you could !?jive imo
overindulgen~e. Be ,carejfuJ
how much you dr-ink, eat or
spend.
f
•
LIBRA (Sept. zj.l1)ct, 23) · '
. Ignoring the .needs &lt;i~ t~e j
. family and sta!'ling to '!'~ke j
demands upon the enure
household will automatically
Cause total turmoil. Don 'J be

myd•tly•entinel.com

..

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

.

www .holzer .org

·•

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