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                  <text>Friday, November 8, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

ALLEY OOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crouword Puzzle

-~ PHILLIP
~

.._.,

41 Chimney
deposit
1 Wltch'a
42 Zodiac
lpell
ICIIU
4 Summer
44 Baoeball
quaff
VIP
7 A lhoutand 46 Rajah's
G'a
· consort
10 Hawaiian
47 Chiming
guitar
51 Paradise
11 Ominous 52 Meditorra·
13 Pretty
noon · .
14 Lair
londmartc
15 E•lled
53 Nttile
Roman
55 Broken-off

•.F/h-·11 111 {11

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AS 3
P. 2
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4

poet

Whalelike
Shamu ·
17 Patting on
19 Contented
murmurs
20 Thumba-up
vote
21 Ahead of
lime

,\I(Q J ~

• QJ

16

s

.. li Q ~

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Oult"r· Snuth
Vulnt:r11blt&gt;: Neither
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P1~1

Point tops Roane County, B1

t; l~l

ra sa

l 'n~

OJJfning lead: • K

26

Drawing a way

28
29

8Y PHIWP ALDER

30

tn
Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

58
59
60

Celebrity
Feelhory
wrap
Aardvortc
snack
King boater
Blue shado
DOWN

1

Coravan
atops
2
Banery olio
E•perlmonl
3
Attain
Yard toole
Thai
4
neighbor
Earth, In
5

Govt.

agency

-out
(used
thriftily)

Moran
33 Spicy
Fresco
35 On the wane
Rootless 37 Planting
Meadows
. guide
12 Outer limits 40 Collar sltea
13 Rough
41 Hindu Mr.
18 Caoual
42 Weighed
farewell
down
22 Space
43 Dormant
preceder 45 Harah light
23 Dory's need 46. "Fancy"
7
8
9

24 Ewe's

plaint
Sturdy tree

elnger - ·

McEntire
Comics'
Mlos Kel!
Mammoth 49 Pen points
Hunters" 50 Empathize
heroine
54 Mary ...;.
29 Despot
cosmetics
31 Past
32 Mgmt. VIP .
25
27 "The

Lawless
role

Highlander's employees
initiate ·legal.action
BY lAWRENCE J. SMITH
Staff writer
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Employees
of a local manufacturer have grown
tired of going weeks without pay and
have initiated legal action against their
employer in the hope of foi"cmg them to
render proper compensation.
.
A notice of mechanic's lien was filed
Thursday · by 120 employees of
Highlander Alloys in New Haven for
$865,973.42 for compensation the comp,any has supposed! y failed to render.
The:lien stipula!es "employees are owed
and·have not .been pa1d the agreed upon
compens'atioil for the work performed
including wages and ov.ertime."
The lien includes "fringe benefits" in
the definition of compensation. Exhibit
A of the lien shows unpaid medical bills

for many employees with some totaling
in the thousands of dollars with one in
the tens of thousands of dollars~
James Haviland, partner in the law
firm of Crandall, Pyles, Haviland and
Turner, who filed the notice of lien on
behalf of the Highlander employees said
the filing was just the "first step" in the
process of getting the company to render comrensation. He explained a
mechanic s lien to be one in which
someone who renders service for a
property owner can force the sale of the
property if the owner fails to compensate the laborer for services · render.
Haviland said the lien will have to be
''perfected" in the filing .of .1\ lawsuit
which he said was eminent.
·
Haviland said the next step will be a
court hearing and judgment in what he
hopes will be in favor of his clients.
Provided Highlander's doesn' t settl~

looking at the devas~ation

I

III I
I ILl I I

I

I I

I

I' I i• I I

It

'Moth man 2: The ·~
Festival' planned
BY lAWRENCE J. SMITH
Staff writer

Oonald Hxsell looks over what used to be his business , Rutland, Tire Sales.

Owner. ponders rebuilding_possiblities
RUTLAND, Ohio - Donald Hysell,
owner of the now destroyed Rutland
Tire Sales, examines the damage that
was done to his business early Sunday
morning.
... "I just want people to know that we' re
!Ill OK," he said. "I'm just glad I'm not
going to the hospital or the funeral home
to visit anybody."
A spark from a fuel tank that an

--r-·

BY BERNICE BEDE OsOL

Even though it may only be ·

GARFIELD

a door opener, a career oppor-

tunity that develops for you in
the year uheod could turn out
to be higger than imagined if

tI

you realize all its advant~ges

and expand upon them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. There are ·those out.
there who would love nothing
better Ihan to hurt another's
reputation in order to make

themselves look good. You
could encounter just such a
type today. Protect your image. Trying to patch up a bro·
ken romance? The Astra·
Graph Matchmaker can help
you understand what to do to
make lhe relalionship work.
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker, .
c/o th is newspaper. P.O. Box
!67, Wickliffe, OH 44092.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) .. Pay attention to
your observations today if
people indicate that what you

THE GRIZZWELLS
Do '/Oll l\\1\-1\&lt;.. '(O\.l [ 0\.ll\) GO
;)\)'VI ~[ \.\0\lR IN I~ollT
Tl\Ii-1\\I1'-\G
0\'

l'c:oO ?

are sayi ng is antagonizing

them. Back off and change
the subject Ia something all

can agree on.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J~n .
!9) .. A marker may be called
in

.
-

I

)

to~~y r~garding

some kind

or he was IOj'OU.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Sometimes a firm "no"
'is called for rather than a

- .-

. . . -.-- ~----

com~
press~red

· weak "yes" involving a

promise. Don't be

sion~

·

into making a commitment
that goes against your better

judgment.
PISCES · (Feb . .20-M arch
20) -- There's an old saymg.
"If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
That advice may prove help·
ful to you today If your rou· .
ti nc!i are presently runnin g

. smoothly. Don ' t rock the
boat..
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
.. Don· t depend on your luck
to get you what you want today in arrangements where
you have to rely more upon
others than you can on yourself. They won 't have whal it
takes.
. TAURUS (April 20-Mlly
20) .. Trying to be too much
in a hurry to wrap up a deal
that is imponant to you could
· cause you' to .trip over your
own feet. Be mg yo ur usua l

patient and deliberate self is ·
yourbesl course of ~ction .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

•
'

It behooves you Io be a
good listener loday, because
you could learn something
constructive from olhers. Be. sides. monopolizing discus-

of obhgaiion you uwe to another. Make every effort to be
as kind to Ihis person as she

·...,---

··-- -··

with what interests you

alone con be boring.'
CANCER (June 21-luly 2~)
~~

To waste not is to want not ,

so don'l try to impress others
with lavish gestures today thai
you would later regret givina
once you realize how much 1t
has cost you.

LEO (July 2&gt;-Aug . 22) .. In
order to be successful and effective today. you must have
a predetermined course of ac-

tion. Don't make the mistake
of trying to play lhings by car
and hope for the best. It won't
be fonhcoming.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Someone who has used
your very generous and com _passionate nature may try to

do' so again loday. Be careful
she or he doesn't manipulate

you into yielding to this per·

2 Sections - 12 Pates

AS

Calendar
Classifieds
·ComiCs
'oear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Weather

could misfire i.n any

ar~ange­

ment you make today Wllh
friends where money or
something of value is at stake.
Be ex tra cautious when In-

volved in this kind of union .

property and does' not plan to rebuild
any time soon.
''I've ·lost. everything I had," he said.
"I've put my heart into this for nine
years. I don't really know what we' re
going to do now.
"I hope to get back in it," Hysell said.
"It's something I've done all of my life."
Three other employees are now
unemployed because of the tire.

Meigs 'Person of the Year' named

Index

Obituaries
Sports

employee was working on ignited the
gasoline and caused the contents of the
building to catch flre.
The employee made it out of the
building just'before the gas tank exploded, but the building cou.Jd not be saved:
An estimated $150.000 damage was
done to the building and equipment
inside.
Hysell did not have insurance on the

B4-S

66

AS

A4
•

A3
A3
Bl-3
A2

Cl 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
News editor
.POMEROY, Ohio -It came as no surprise
to Meigs Countians when Susan Oliver was
named by the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce as Meigs County's 2002 Person of
the Year.
"It was a unanimous decision by the executive committee:' said Sue Maison, president,
who made the announcement at the Chamber"s
annual meeting la't week.
"She is someone who has been very active

said the festival will feature children's activities, live entertainment and a hayride from the
POiNt PLEM&gt;ANT, W.Va West-.. Virginia · State Farm
- Hoping to capitalize on f&gt;iusemn to the old TNT area
were the Mothman was first
worldwide interest . in the sighted.
. Mothman legend,IQ\:al business
Wamsley said the festival will
owners are pooling lheir ak 1 a1
M · s
d
resources to host the tirst t· e pace· ong am tree! an ,
Gunn Park and encouraged
Mothman festival in Point "anybody and everybody" to
Pleasant next Saturday.
set-up an exhibit booth.
Spearheading the effort are
"We're trying to get people
Jeff Wam sley, owner of downtown for the thing,"
Criminal Records and webmas- Wamsley said. .
·
ter of Mothmanlives.com;
Anotherhighli~ht of the festiC~I~n Harri s. owner of val will be the pnvate collection
Hams SteakhQuse,_ and Ju~y of movie props and memorabiiHensley, . o"':ner ol V1ctona s . ia owned by "Butch and Bernie"
Prom , ~d ~ndal Boutique.
: two residents of Kittanning,
Hams sa1d there was talk of Pa .. were the movie was filmed.
conducling a fesiival shortly
Harris said she hopes her felafter release of the movie "'The .)ow Main Street rnerchanl~ will
Mothman Prophecies" - based panicipate in the festival with a
on the John Keel book by the Mothman-type sale. ,
.same name, m 2001. but findShe demonstrated the potening sponsors was difficult.
tial tor business owners to profit
"We've talked off-and-on from interest in the legend by
. a~ut it, but nobody would back ' showinj,\ a notebook with five
11, H~s s~d.
.,
pages tull of the names of peoHams srud the dec1s1on was ple from as far away as
made to have the festival Nov. California, Florida, England and
16 to coincide with the fll'SI Japan who've visited her restausighting ·Of the Mothman 36 rant inquiring about the
years ago.
.
Mothman.
However, she said plans are to
Harris said the interest stresshold future fe'stivals earlier ·in es the need. for area leaders to
the year when the "temperature include it with on-going tourism
is more cooperative."
initiatives.
Nevertheless, Wamsley, who
"We hope that more people
has followed the Mothman leg- visit Point Pleasant," Harris
end since he was 5 years old, said.

and is highly respected in this community. As
executive director of the Meigs County
Council on Aging, she has been a strong advocate for the elderly, not only here but on the
state and national level," said Maison. "She fits
all the criteria the Chamber uses in making its
selection for the person lo be honored at the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council banquet
which this year will be held in January." she
added.
Oliver has been associated with the Ageney
on Agjng and iL' senior center for . nearly 30

Please see Penon. Al

Local business people plan Mothman festival.

Holzer Hospice is sponsoring a

Hollclay Grief Workshop
in Meigs County
Monday, November 11 • 11:30 AM • Meigs Senior Center

son's wants .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - There's a chance things

oflice.
The name of the infant nor the
cause of death has still not been
released by offi~ials.
According to an earlier report
from Pomeroy Police Chief
Mark Proffitt, a Meigs .
Emergency Services unil was'
dispatched to the Pomeroy Clitfs
Apartment on Union Avenue
Friday night after rec&lt;;iving a
report that an infant child had
bee · "ured
··
n illJU •
• ••.
At that time the infant ~
transported . to the Hoi14J
Medical Center in Gallipoli~~
· Officials would n~ say w~
th b b died . t the ' · artnietlt
e a y .
a
· ap
·
complex, enroute to the hospital;
or at the hospital.
·
The body was taken to the
Fr~in County Coroner for ~
autopsy.
.
,
A spokesman at the prosecu~
lor's office did confirm Friday
nighi that a telephone call h84
been received from the coroner's
office late Friday afternoon. That
call apparently led to charges :
being filed against Warnecke.
However, he said the cause &lt;)f.
the infant's death would not be
disclosed until a written ~pon is
received.
·

.•.

~

I

Man charged with
aggrivated murder
in death of infant

anytime in the process, Haviland said
they could be forced to sell some or all .
of .its property to comply with a judg~OMEROY, Ohio A
ment against them. While the process of
Pomeroy man has been charged
getting the Highlander's employees the
with aggravated murder in U1e
compensation !hey are seeking could
death of i1 five-month-old infant
take awhile, Haviland said the matter is
at the
Pomeroy
Cliffs
"serious business ...
Apartments.
The filing of the lien is something that
Charged in the incident is
caught plant owner' Boris Bannai otf- · Richard Michael Warnecke ll,
22. of Pomeroy.
guard. He said the Register's inquiry
. C
L.ate Fn'da y Me1gs
was the ftr'st he •d heard about it.
ounty
Prosecuting Attorney Pat Story
" ''I'm not awar~ of that.'" Ban.~ai said .
filed a complaint in Meigs
We ~ere never mformed of 1t. .
County Court charging Wanecke
. Wh1le Banna1 sa1d he needed lime to
with aggravated murder in conview the H:n in order t~ comment fur- ' nection with the incident which
ther, he sa1d H1glander s would comoccurred Thursday evening.
pensate the ef[lployees should the filing
Story said that the investigaprove correct.
•
lion by Pomeroy Police in coop"If we owe money we'd be. happy to
eration with the prosecutor's
pay,'" Bannai said.
offia; is continuing. He listed
aggravated murder as charged in
the complifint as a special category felony.
Since the courthouse will be
closed . Monday for the observance ' of Veterans Day,
Warnecke will likely have his
initial appearance. Thesday in
Meigs County Court, according
to a release from the prosecutor's

i

I

50 CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 12

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
News edilor

48

There is one impor34
. tant rule for teaching
36
Unllrad
anyone anything:
brick
38
Arilhmatic
FJ~~~~~~~~~I""ll--.;_---~----...;..-----~----------. ·make
it entertaining.
combos
term
If you do not keep the
6 Gray or
39 Trite
students interested
Llti, Oti ·•
and amused, you will
.Jose
them quickly.
Tti~Y'~t
One recent book
ON TO
does this partly
through the use of
LIS[
.cartoons: "The Fun
Way to Better Bridge
Play" by Harry Lampert (Devyn Press,
2002). The author is a
well-known bridge
teacher who thoroughly~ the
basics \)f'r decTarerplay and gives dec
fense a brief look. (I
think Lampert should
have done a separate ·
defense book. Remember, we are a defender twice as often
as we are the deCELEBRITY CIPHER
clarer.) And Lampert,
by L.uls Campos·
who in January 1940
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each lener in the cipher stands for another.
was the artist-creator
Today's clue: 8 equals P
of The Flash, adds
THE BORN LOSER
many excellent car"yv HYK J R H 0
K ZHSSZR
p~
p~
...
.
toons
'to
aid
memory
W(Nff()
TO ~I\\IE/'\
li-IJ'-.1./E "JOMf_ FOOD FOR
1'--lO, TI-\1&gt;-NI&lt;.':&gt; ...
PRKMHXJ.
and enjoyment.
IT X 'S
H
KZPKVO
LITTLE , ,_,_] TA.LK A.50UT
Tf\OU&amp;f-\T FOR YOU, YOUNG
['(VI. FULL !
In this deal from
i\HITUOC...
Lf&gt;...O'&lt;!
.
I
P K X S
S T
A R
N R K W V
the . book, you are
H Iii
South. the declarer in
IRBRXIO
T X
SNR
four spades. West
~
I
starts with three
YKSRMHKZ."
rounds of hearts. You
ruff and draw two
MTARMS
IR
XHMT
rounds of trumps, but
West, after following
'PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'Music is the universal language of
mankind - poetry their universal pastime and delight."
once. discards a dia-Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow
mond. How would
BIG NATE
. you continue?
WORD
... 8\JT NOW I "M HE.".I'-Since North might
!&gt;0 NOT ~~v\1
IN6 YOU 5A.Y TO
r:~~:t~~y
s©~JJlA-LGt-ZNs®
G~MI
have been making a
TO El(PLAtN,
co"CH THE OPPOSITE !
.
Edilod by CLAY R. POLLAN - - - - - NATE . LE,.._IJE
"(()U 00 NOT. EVEN .
weak , pre-emptive
ME . "LONE .
::. , l..ti&lt;E 11E!
ra1se over West's 0 Rearrange letters of . the
scrambled wordt betakeout
double, low four
to form fo'u r simple words.
South's jump to game
doesn't come with
ONLUDA
any guarantees ..
I
12
There seem to be
only three losers: two
hearts and one diaA YD R D
mond. However,
when the trumps
l
PEANUTS
break 4-1, the contract is suddenly in
IF WE WIN TODA'1',
IT's ALREAD'I' M'&lt; BALL.
As a clerk in the County ProE GA L M
jeopardy. If you draw
MARCIE. I'M 601N6
SIR .. M'( DAD GAVE IT ·
bate Office I advised one .caller,
all the trumps, then,
jc
15
TO ME FOR. MV
TO LET VOU KEEP
who
had a difficult prob~m. to
when you knock out
BIRTI-lDA'f' ..
TI-lE GAME BALL!
consult
a lawyer. After a long sithe diamond ace, the
1~e_n,~e the caller sighed,"-'- a-. ~--.
defenders will cash a
HAL WEI
third heart trick. InC) Complete ·the chuckle quoted ·
stead, you must imby lillin"g in the missing words
you develop from :uep No. 3 below.
mediately drive out
the diamond ace.
@ PRINT NUMBERED ·
If West tries anLETTERS IN SQUARES
other heart, you ruff
UNSCRAMBlE FOR
with dummy's spade ol:li
~ANSWER
.
10, return to hand in a
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
minor, draw trumps,
and claim.
.
Aflame ·Prow)- Otter· Sodium , PLATFORM
OH.COME ON!
HE.Y! '11115 HA~
Thebook
is
$19.95
l&gt;lo WAV'TIII~G$
"I know the definition of a politician' " one gent told his
DON~ GET O(&gt;NN
(INNAMON II'! IT!
Alte GOING, IF 1
postpaid from Baron
pal.
"A politician is someone who can stand on the fence
ON YOURS&lt;.Lf,
1 WATt CiNNAMON!
TOOl&lt;' ACllU11SE
Barclay
Bridge
Supand
WRE
J\IST
GOING
make Vou believe it's a PLATFORM!'!.
lll'l MV OliN ~IFli · .
'IIHV'P I DPDER
1HRLM?H HAD
plies. Call (800) 274I'OFAILtTi~O!
PATCI!
CI"NM\ONY
2221 to order.

r

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Pl Pleasant• November 9, 2002

glacier

56
57

23 Baeooon

coualn

Saturday, Nov. 9. 2002

,

ACROSS

ALDER

,_,

I

in Gallia County

'

Wednesday, November 13 • ·12 Noon • Wyngate of Gallipolis
Refreshments provided by Wyngafe

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org· ·

All are welcome! For more information call 992·7463 or 446·5074.
...J

.;.

�_&amp;_atu_rb_.,;_~_,._._i_mti_u_l___Tri~&lt;.;;.•_._C.-..o
___u~n_ly...:N~e~WS~~· ___-_:s.;:.:;tu; ;.; rd~·'·;_.Nov_!"'_mbe_~_.;~·- !'!~l .
Musician sets Gr-·illlablaze'

Saturday, November 9, 2002

Edsel

brothers, Thomas and Jerry
New.
Services will be 2 p.m.
Monday at Lambert-Tatman
PARKERSBURG - Edsel Funeral Home, Green Street,
''Ed" New, 68, of Parkersburg, Parkersburg, with Rev. Michael ·
died November 8, 2002 at St. Linger officiating.
Joseph's Hospital after a long
Burial will be at Mt. Olivet
illness.
as bo F b . · 12 Cemetery. with full military
H
e
.
w
m ; ruary
· rites by American Legion Post
I934 m Hardy, Ky., a son of the . #IS y .ta .
. be f
late Thoma~ and lua Sparks
. lSI tlon WI 11
rom 24
p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Sunday with
New.
lk
Ed was a graduate of an E s Memorial service at 3
Williamson High School, p.m . at the funeral home. ·
Williamson, W.Va. , and attend-Paid Notice
ed Marshall University. He .
served four years· as Radioman
in the US Navy aboard the
Icebreaker USS Edisto and participated in Rear Admiral
COOLVILLE
Lena
Richard E. Byrds Antartic
Juanita
Basham,
59,
of
Expedition "Operation Deep
away
Freez." He retired after 26 years Coolville, ' passed
of service as Production Control Thursday, Nov. 7, 2002 at
Engineer for Kaiser Aluminum O"Bleness Memorial Hospital
and Chemical Corp. of in Athens after an extended illRavenswood.
ness.
Ed and his family resided in
Born on February 8, 1943 in
Gallipolis for 20 years. While Leewood, W. Va., she was the
living in Gallipolis, he was an daughter of the late Bonita
active member of the BPO Elks, Ingles and George Ingles of
serving two terms as Exalted Rutland.
Ruler and several years as secShe was affiliated with the
retary. He was president of the First Southern Baptist Church
Gallia Academy . Athletic of Pomeroy, the Ladies
Boosters and active as a coach Auxiliary of the Racine Post
for the little league baseball,
basketball and football teams, 602, American Legion, and was
He was a member of Grace fonnerly self-employed.
She was a loving wife, moth- ·
:united Methodist Church of
er and grandn10ther and wi II be
Gallipolis.
Ed and his wife Joyce relocat- sadly missed by her husband,
ed to Parkersburg, W.Va. in Gary Basham, two sons, Gary
May 1980. In Parkersburg, he Basham and his wife, Helene,
was active in BPO Elks #199 of Sweet Valley, Pa., and Jeff ·
serving as Chaplin for several Basham of Coolville; two
years, American Legion Post daughters, Kim Turner and her
#15, and a member of Graee husband, Mike, of Coolville.
United Methodist Church.
and Raelynn Barley and her
Ed enjoyed life at its fullest husband, Sean, 'of 'Pomeroy;
amidst his family and friends. and nine grandchildren.
He will be greatly missed. A lsb surviving are three sisEd is survived by his wile and ters, Peggy (B. J.) Hatfield of
. best tiiends of 48 years, Joyce Streetsboro. Ohio;
Janie
Blair New; one daughter, Michael of Chillicothe; and Joe
Jennifer (Bob) Hoyer of Ellen and Kevin Jewell of ·
Cumberland MD; one son, Rutland; a brother, Bill (Carol)
Mark (Rhonda) New of Millers Barley of Bedford, Ohio.
Creek, N.C. ; six granddaughBesides her mother, she was
ters, one grandson, and four preceded in death-by a brother,
great-grandchildren; three sisterS, Jean Tackett and Judith Charles Barley.
Funeral services will be held
New of Williamson, W.Va., and
Monday
at I p.m. at the Fisher
Juanita Hatfield of La Follete,
Funeral
Home,
Pomeroy. Burial
Tenn.; three brothers, Ervin
New of DaY,tona Beach, Fla., will be in Meigs Memory
Denny.. , New of. WiUiamwn, (}ardens, Pomeroy. ~rien_ds II!I;IY,
W.Va., and Lru:y · New of callS to 8 p.m. Sunday at 'Fisher
Vermilion; several rtieces and Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
Arrangements are under the ·
nephews.
In additon to his parents, he direction of Birchfield Funeral
was preceded in death by one Home of Rutland.
son, Kenneth E. New, and two
- Paid 11otice

Saturday, Nov. 9
MICH••

~

I Toledo I&lt;M"/112" I

IND

L r.~~··fi!I~J44:~~] •

.

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.

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•rcolilint&gt;Ui-l«•.w-J
-~--

Q

~
-

· Sunny Pl. CloudY

-

Cloudy

•·

. -..
.. ~
-~ -­
·.·.·

Showers T·storms

Rain

Flurries

Soow

Ice

Viii A..s.soo;;J.IIId p,.,.

POMEROY, OHIO Rock and blues musician
Joe Bonamassa set the Court
Street Grille ablaze recently
with fiery guitar wizardry
and smoky lyrics.
It was Bonamassa's second trip to Pomeroy and the
Grille. Grille owner Jackie
Welker has pulled in other
big names to his stage like
Jimmy Thackery, Joanna
Connor, Eddy "The Chief'
Clearwater and
Jorma
Kaukonen.
... , . talked
to
him
(Bonamassa) about performing at next year's Big Bend
Blues Bash, and he said he'd
love to. Now, it's just a matter of coordinating &gt;chedules."
The concert was sold out
and the room was filled to'
the rafters with cheering
fans who soaked up e~ery
last drop of his 9.0-minute
performance.
.·
The 25-year-old guitar
virtuoso/singer/songwriter
had just gotten back from
doing 23 shows iii 25 days,

New

the last with Greg Allman.
"The first show I ever saw
was when I was 6 years old
and it was Greg Allman and
the Allman Brothers Band,".
Bonamassa said. "So for me
to now be up on sta~e playing· with ·him, it's hke I've
come.full circle."
.
.
Bonamassa got his first
break on the television show
Prime Time Live when he
was just twelve years old.
Withm 25 minutes of his
performance
he
had
Columbia Records knocking on his door, a short time
later Epic Records followed.
He has been performing
·
.
professionally for 13 years Joe Bonamassa plays with one of h1s band members at the
and wa'!f&gt;&lt;tutored through Court Street Grill.
most of his school career.
,
Bonamassa
recently
This young dynamo has than he should be.
released
his
new
CD
"So It's
shared the stage with living
Bo~ama~sa IS from . and
That"
which
is
flying
Like
legends like B.B. King, st1ll lives 10 New York City
off
the
shelves.
The
maturGeorge Thoro good, Lynyrd and plans to. tour non-stop
ing musician shows his lisSkynyrd and Bad Company. fo~ the next nme months.
tener
that his .songwriting
B.B. King said about
I for~et :;vhat my house
ability
matches his impresBonamassa's raw talent looks hke, he laughed.
"He's o;me of a kind-'! leg~ "You know you've been sive instrumental techmque.
What would his fans be
end before his time."
gone too long when ~ou
surprised
to know about
"B. B. King is a super nice want to stan remodeling
him?
guy," Bonamassa said. "He your house hke a Hohday
"I'm a Republican," he
was way more generous I nn E xpress so Y0 u feel
·
more at home."
sm il.ed,

Lena Juanita
Basham

.

West Virginia weather

Dogs in need of a good home

Saturday, Nov. 9

OHIO

KRIS SCOUTEN
Staff writers
BY

~...

C2002

Inc.

0 ---~·· ·'''".

Sunny Pt. Clcudy

Cloudy

Showell T-storme

Rain

FI\Jiltet

Snow

Ice

Chance of showers this evening
.:I
Weather F11recast
Today... Partly sunny, Highs
in the mid 60s. Southwest
winds 10 to 20 mph.
-Tonight...Cloudy. A chance
of showers from late evening
on. Lows in · the mid 50s.
Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Extended Forecast
Sunday... Showers likely with
a chance of thunderstorms in
the afternoon. Highs in the mid
60s. Southwest winds 15 to 20
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
'
Sunday
night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows .. in the lower 50s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Veterans day... Cioudy with a

chance of showers. Hi~hs in·the
mid 60s. Chance of ram 50 per.
. cent.
Monday night...Cloudy with
a chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 40s. Chance of rain
50 percent.
Tuesday... Cioudy with a
chance of showers. Highs in the
mid 50s. ·
·
Wednesday... A slight chance
of rain or drizzle in the morning ... Othetwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs in the ·upper 40s.
Thursday.,.Partly
sunny.
Lows in the lower 30s and
highs in the lower 50s . .
Friday... Increasin~ cloudiness. Lows in the nud 30s and
highs 50 to 55.

Gallia Briefs.
Crime
Watch
MORGAN CENTER, OHIO
•- The Morgan Township
·Crime Watch will hold its
•monthly crime prevention
meeting at 6 p.m. at the Morgan
Township toWnhouse. The public is invited to attend. A representative from the Gallia
County sheriff's office will be
:on hand to discuss area proper. ty related crimes. For informa, tion, call446- 1221 . .

Policy Board will meet at 4:30
p.m. on Thesday, Nov. 12 at the
Gallia .County Department of
Job &amp; Family Services' Work
and Training Center, located at
87 Olive Street, Gallipolis. All
members are urged to attend.

:_."t·

These dogs will be terminated soon if
they do not find a home. The Gallia
County Animal Shelter is located on
Shawnee Lane near Holzer Hospital and
can be reached by calling 441-0207
between 2 and 5 p.m. The price of adoption includes booster shots, license fees

Board
to meet
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO - The
Gallia County Workforce

Deaths
...

Martha
Services will be conducted 10 a.m. November 12, at
Standing Foster · Gallipolis
Willis
Funeral
Home ,
·
by Rev., Katharin
ATHENS
Martha
Standing Foster, 95, of
Athen s and Gallipolis, died
Monday, Oct. .28 , 2002 at
Hickory Creek of Athens.

Bradbury rumble st~ips reduced
BRIAN J. REED
Staff·writers
BY

BRADBURY, OHIO The rumble strips at the intersection of County Road 5 and
Ohio 7 will rumble less now
that they have been reducc;.d
by highway crews.
County Engineer Eugene
Triplett said Friday highway
workers patched the rumble
strips with cold mix to help
reduce the noise generated
by traffic driving on them.
A number , of Bradbury
residents have complained
that the noise from the strips
is such that it.causes them to

lose sleep.
Petitions contammg 250
signatures were collected last
month to encourage local and
state highway officials to
address the safety of the
intersection.
"When . we. installed the
strips, we didn't consider the
effect it would have on people living out there," Triplett
said. "Residents could hear
them plainly from their living
rooms."

"We filled in each of the little grooves with cold mix
patching material, and we
hope that will reduce some of
the noise."
Triplett said there will still
be three rumble strips on C.R.
5 'on each side of the intersection.
The highway department
originally installed I 5 strips
to help remind· motorists to
slow down for the dangerous
four-way stop, which has

been. the site of at least three
fatal accidents and countless
other wrecks.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation is nearing .
completion on a safety· study
of the intersection, and will
consider other safety measures, including additional
signage warning motorists of
·the approaching intersection.
ODOT has satd a traffic
light at the intersection would
likely cause more accidents.

Foster.
Memorial donations may
be made to Berea College.
Berea, Ky. 40404, or to an
organization of your lchoice.

·Veterans Day service
set for Monday

&amp;sturba!' 11rhnn -6mttntl • Page A3

BY KRtS SCOUTEN
Staff writer

--------'---POMEROY, Ohio
Jorma . Kaukonen's new
album, "Blue
Country
Heart," has landed in the No.
2 spot on the Triple-A music
chart for four weeks and has
been on the chan overall for'
four months.
"It's been a while. since
I've had that kind of interest
in my work in a mainstream
way," the Pomeroy musician
said.
"We like Triple-A because
they play all the stuff we like
-blues to bluegrass."
On "Blue Country Heart,"
his debut recording for
Columbia
Records,
. Kaukonen explores a little
known chapter in American
music history.
'
The new album is a collection of rural b.lues songs
from the 1920s and 1930s
written mostly by white
tunesmiths including Jimmie
Rodgers, the
Delmore
Brothers and Slim Smith.
Kaukonen said that the
"Brother Where .Art Thou"
movie made that old timey,
1950s blue grass sound
available to a new audience,
. and they liked it.
"It's
fun
music,"
Kaukonen said. "When I was
in high school l started out
· playing Carter Family songs
and blues. Then I went to
Antioch College in 1959-60

aRd met Ian Buchanan who
taught me to play fingerstyle
guitar."
His career turned to the
rock-n-roll sound for years.
"Bull never stopped playing
the blues," he added. ''This
latest CD brought me full
circle. It was like coming
back to my roots."
Kaukonen, a charter member of legendary Jefferson
Airplane _and Hot Tuna, has
been touring for the album
with a rotating ensemble that
includes Grammy · singing
dobro player Sally Van
Meter. slide guitarist · Cindy
Cashdollar, multi instrumentalist G.E. Smith, and mandolin
virtuoso
Barry
Mitterhoff.
·
Kaukonen said he and
Columbia Records were "on
the same page" and he looks
forward to seeing what ideas
they have in store for him in
the future. For now, though;
he's heading bac~ on the
road to tour for the new CD.
''I've ·always wanted to do
an old-timey, traditional
record with some of my old
Nashville pals," he said.
"Blue Country Heart, is really a dream come true."
But before he goes back on
tour he ' II be playing with
Michael Falzarano and Roy
Book Binder tonight and
G.E. Smith featuring Jack ·
Casady on Nov. 16 at the Fur Jorma Kaukonen enjoying his success.
Peace Concert Hall.

Good Works to hold
first annual walk for
the homeless
'

ATHENS, -Qhio - A 7857 Luhrig Road, in
walk to educate the public Athens. For more informaabout the reality of home- tion or to have a "Walk
lessness and poverty in · Pak" mailed, call 740-594southeastern Ohio will take 3339.
All dollars raised will be
place in Athens on
Saturday, Jan. 18.
used to assist the homeless
The walk will also generh H
ate needed financial sup- through the ~imot ~ ouse
port for the Good Works Shelter, Garnson s~1d. .
Timothy House, a shelter _ j:l~!_ll:elessness IS a disfor rural homeless, ·accord- tan! 1ssue . to ma~y wh_o
ing to Craig Garris ion, have no fe~ of lo~mg the1r
spokesman for the project. homes, gomg Without a
Participants are being meal, or sleeping on the
sought to take part.
streets, he said.
Each will be asked to find
Many times, with . each
10 people who will sponsor, individual's security, it's
them by donatmg $10each, difficult to ,believe that
and then talk to three other homelessness even exists,
people to JOin the walk who and harder still to imagine
Will also seek 10 sponsors what circumstances and
each.
·
· h b·
· d.
To help get participants ts.sues m•g t . _nng an Ill 1startoo, "Walk Paks" are vtd~al or famtly to su~h a
available from the follow- cns1s pmnt m thetr ltves.
ing four locations: The Yet, the prob!em of homeOhio University Center for · lessness continues to grow
Community Service, Baker in our world, in our nation,
Center 033 , in Athens; The and in our own back yards,
Hope Center at Hocking Gartison said in qmcl uding
College m Nelsonville, . his appeal to residents to
· office .IL249K; The Good get involved in t~~ first
Works T1 mothy House, annual walk for the home594-3333, in Athens; and less
I
·
The
Good
Works
·
Administrative
Offices/Good Gifts Shop,

Person .·
from Page A1
years having served
in several
positions ·
before
b e i n g
n a me d
executive
director in
1992.
Under
Oliver
her leader.ship, the agency has seen
tremendous expansion of services and activities , The number of seniors receiving services has more than doubled . .
Meal delivery to the elderly
who are homebound now
.encompasses thelentire county.
Health, homecru·e, laundry and
cleaning services have been
expanded, as has 1 the medical,
wellness and social programs.
The director manages a budget
of $1.2 million.
Last year the agency
received
National
·Accreditation through the
National Counci l on Aging and

Reader Services
Correction Policy·
Our main concern 1n all 'stori es is to be
accurate . If yolJ know of an error in a
story, please call one of our newsrooms.
Our main numbers are:
[nbnnr • GallipoliS, OH

{740} 446--2342.

POMEROY, - Ohio
A welcome will be given by
Veterans Day services will be Pomeroy Mayor John W.
held by Drew Webster Post 39, Blaettnar, and there will be a
American Legion, Pomeroy at guest speaker. The church bells
11 a.m. Monday at the Meigs will sound at II a.m. and the
County Courthous~ .
program will fo llow that,
"This ann ual tribu!ll to veter- Struble said.
· ans of all wars continues to have
Post 39 ., firing squad will tire
added meaning as the years pass
b
by. It's a time '-':hen the citizens a salute followed y bugler taps
can salute all veterru1s, living sounded by Karen Griffith to
and deceased,:' said Joe syuble, . conclude the service.
past commander of the -post. He
invited the public to join in the
service.
DOUBLE FEATilRE
He said that Post 39 is extendGOLDIE HAWN
ing a "comnule in arms wei"
SUSAN SARANDON
come to Tuppers Plams VFW
BANGER SISTERS
Post and American Legion
DIVINE SCERETS
Posts in Middleport, Rutland H'f'v•v• SISTERHOOD (PG13) JB
SHOWTIME 7:30PM
. and Racine, to join in massing
of the .colors." .

Chippewa

Camouflage

National Institute of Senior .
Centers (N ISC), one of the first
50 in the country. ,
'
Oliver is Oltio's representative on the NJSC, is a pa~t president of the Ohio Association
Center, and worked with representatives in Washingtmi D.C.
to get the Older Ameri.;an '~ Act
passed.
Her leadership is reflected
not only in the senior citizens'
programs but in the community where she serves on numerous boards including Hospice
and Health Service, inc .,
Emergency
Planning
Committee, Family and
Qhildren
First
Council,
Southern School District
Oversight Committee, United
Fund, and the Rural Health
Clinic.
Oliver credits being named
Meigs Co1inty 's Person of the ·
Year to the people she works '
with on a daily basis and the
support she receives from her ·
fami ly.
"My success is only a reflection of the people around me,
an.d to those who have given
me an opportunity to serve. I
feel very honored and appreciative of the confidence
placed in me," she concluded.

$&gt;aturbap m:tmes -~entinel

Q

(

Regular
.meeting
RJO GRANDE, OHIO ·The Gallia-Vinton Educational
Service Center Governing
Board regular monthly meeting
will be held at 7 p.m. on
Wednesday November 20 in
the Human1• Resource Building
at Buckeye Hills Career Center,
room 155.

and a certificiate for a free spay or .
neuter.
The dogs include a young male beagle/blue healer mix, a male shepherd
mix, which was found on State Route
588 and a beautiful Siberian ·Husky,
which was found on State Route 160.

..

·:l(au-k~nen's new album peaks at No..2

Obituaries

Ohio weather

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

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,... holiday food baskets.
POMEROY
Return
Meigs
Chapter,
Jonathan
Daughters of the American
Revolution, 10 a.m. Saturday at
Monday, Nov. 11
Grace
Episcopal
Church .
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Roberta roush, state histbrian to
Plains Regional Sewer District,
be the speaker.
regular meeting, 1 p.m.
HARRISONVILLE
l'lleadlly, Nov. 12
Harrisonville Lodge 411, 7:30
POMEROY
Bedford p.m. at the temple. Work in the
Township trustees, 7 p.m. at the E.A. Degree. Refreshments.
town hall.
Monday, Nov. 11
Saturday, Nov. 9
TUIPPERS
PLAINS
POMEROY Burlingham Veterans Day dinner, 5:30p.m . at
Modern Woodmen, 5:30 p.m. the hall in Tuppers Plains lor
potluck dinner at the hall. Take members of the post and and the
covered dish and canned food for auxiliary and their spouses or
the Meigs ~rative Parish for friends. ,

.waY paWN.

Den Dickerson
Publisher

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Public
Meetings

iNVtSioRS PaSSiN~
THR~GH oN THeiR

(740) 446·2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008

Andrew Carter
.Asst. Managing Editor

Le11ers 10 1he ediwr i1re welcome. Th ey should be less than
JUO •nm ls. All le/lers are subjec/ lu ~diling and musl be
;·igned and include address arid lelephone number. No
Ill/Signed tellers 11·il/ be published. Leiters should be in good
f(/Sfe. addressing is sues. no1 personalities.
.

111e opinions expressed in 1he column below are the con"· . sells/Is of the Ohio Vi11ley Publishing Co.
unltJss otl1enrise ,wled.

RACINE - Veterans Day service .7 p.m. at the American
Legion hall, Racine. Jimmy
Stewart to speak. Public invited.
First graders of Southern school
to sing "God Bless the U.S.A."
Several speakers.
_ RUTLAND - Meigs County
Republican Party, 7:30p.m. at the
RuHand Civic Center.
Tueaday, Oct.12
HARRISONVILLE
Harriso.nvi!le O.E.S. Chapte.r 255,
7:30 p.m. at the hall. Practice for
installation of new officers will be
held.
Wednesday, Nov. 13
MIDDLEPORT
The

Middleport Literary Club will meet
at 2 p.m. at the home ' of Paulien
horton, Betsy parsons will review
'Freedom's challenge by Anne
McCaffrey.
Thursday, Nov. 14
POMEROY Alpha Iota
Masters, · Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 6:30 p.m, at Grace epis·
copal Church. This will be the
Masters ritual tea.

Church special services with 'His
Own• as sing'itrs. 7 p.m. Sunday.
Pastor Mark Michael invites the
public.
POMEROY- Heritage Day at
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 9 to It a.m. with carry-in
dinner. Special . music. Arland
King , pastor, invites public.
LONG BOTIOM - Hymn sing
7 p.m. Friday at the Faith Full
Gospel Church, long Bottom.
LONG BOTIOM Long
Bottom United Methodist Church,
7 p.m. with speaker Dave Dailey.
Sunday, Nov. 17
Sunday, Nov. 10
POMEROY - Revival starts at
. POMEROY Hysell Run the Flatwoods Methodist Church

7 p.m. nighHy continuing through
Nov. 19 at the church. Speaker
will be Rev. Jim Corbitt. Special
singing by Becky Mahan, Keith
Elean, Ray and Dolores Cundiff.

and door prizes.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio- Dance,
7:30 to 10:30 p.m., AmVets building in ~nauga. Country Grass
band will perform .
POMEROY, Ohio - Belles
and Beaus Western-style
square dance, 6 to 10:30 p,m.,
Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Building. Caller Ron Anderson,
Wheeling, W.Va. All Westernstyle dancers welcome ..Call
30.4-675-3275 for information.
SOUTHSIDE - Bean dinner
sponsored by Southside
Seekers 4-H Club, 3 to 6 p.m.,
Mason County 4-H Camp.
Raffles, tlayride, cake walk, and
games. Donations please.
Everyone welcome.
Monday, Nov. 11
RACINE, Ohio -Western
style square dance class and
workshop, 7 to. 8:30 p.m., every
Monday at the Royal Oak
Resort Call 304-675-3275 lor
more information.
Tuesday, Nov. i 2
Saturday, Nov. 9 .
FLATROCK - Clothing closet
ASHTON -The Ashton
Elementary Fall Festival, 4 to 6:30 give-away, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m ..
each Tuesday, Good Shepherd
p.m. at the school. There will be
games and a Jupiter Jump. Turkey United Methodist Church. . .
HENDERSON - Line dance
d.inners and hot dogs. :me
classes
every Tuesday, 6 p.m.,
Country Good Tirries Band will
Henderson
Community Building.
provide entertainment.
Wedneeday,
Nov. .13
SOUTHSIDE- Dance at
POINT
PLEASANT
Southside Community Center, 7
Clothing give-away, 1oa.m. to 2
to 10 p.m., with Sounds of
p.m., each Wednesday, Point
Bluegrass.
Pleasant Presbyterian Church,
POINT PLEASANT -17th
Annual Holiday Craft Show; 10
Bth and Main. Contributions of
clean clothes· are appreciated.
a.m. to 5 p.m., W.Va. National
Thuraday, Nov. 14
Guard.Armory. Sponsored by the
Mason County CEOS Club.
POINT PLEASANT - Mason
Handmade crafts, concessions, .
County Ducks Unlimited fund-

raising banquet. For tickets call
304-882-3436 or 304-458-1727.
Saturday, Nov. 16
SOUTHSIDE- Dance at
Southside Community Center, 7
to 10 p.m., with Bluegrass
Echoes.
Friday, Nov. 22
LETART - Jam session
with country, gospel, aM bluegrass music. Letart Pioneers
4·H provide concessions. $1
donation requested.
Saturday, Nov. 23
SOUTHSIDE - Dance aJ
Southside Community Center,
7 to 10 p.m., with C.ountry
Good Times.
•
Saturday, Nov. 30 ·
SOUTHSIDE - Dance at
Southside Community Center.
7 to 10 p.m., with High
Mountain Drifters.

lion.
,
PLEASANT
POINT
Weight Watchers , weigh-ins,
4:30p .m., meeting at 5 p.m. at
Christ Episcopal Church.
Friday, Nov. 15
POINT
PLEASANT
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7 p.m.,
Mount Union Church on Jerry's
Run Road. Call 576-3124 fo1
information.

s editorial board,

-.

Public
Meetings

Access'

TUesday, Nov. 12
POINT PLEASANT - .Mason
County Solid Waste Authority, 6
p.m., Mason County Courthouse.
Weclnuday, Nov. 13
POINT PLEASANT- Mason
County TOurism Committee, 6
a.m., MOVC. Public invited.
POINT PLEASANT ~ Masal
Coll1ty Board of Healtli meeting, 6:30
p.m., Health Dept.
·

Rifusal to open Reagan papers
.to inspection spur~ suspicion
'

'
• The (Toledo) Blade: Nearly a year after President Bush
signed an executive order to withhold papers of past presidents from the public , the question remains: What is there in ·
the communiques between Ronald Reagan and his subordinates 20 years ago that Mr. .Bush doesnt want Americans to

Clubs and
Organizations
Sunday, Nov. 10
POINT PLEASANT - Veterans
Day Dinner, 1 p.m., sponsored by
the American Legion Post 23, at
the Post home. Please make
reservations by 4 p.m., Nov. i! by
calling 675-3437.
·
Tuesday, Nov. 12
POINT PLEASANT- Point
Pleasant KiWanis Club meeting,
6:15p.m., Melinda's Restaurant.
For information call675-7314 .
Wednesday, Nov. 13
POINT PLEASANT- Rotary
Club, noon, Moose Lodge.
Thursday, Nov. 14
POINT PLEASANT- Mason
County Democratic Women, 7:30
p.m., Mason County Library.
(Meeting chang'ed from Nov. 7.)
POINT PLEASANT- Lions.
Club, 6 p.m., Pleasant Valley
l:'tospital meeting room.
NEW HAVEN -:-JOUAM 175

see?

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS •

Today is Saturday, Nov. 9, the 3 13th day of 2002. There are
52 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 9, 1965 , the great Northeast blackout occurred as
se veral states and parts of Canada were hit by a series of
power failures lasting up to 13 I (2 hours. ·
On thi s date:
In 1872, fire destroyed nearly I ,000 buildings in Boston.
In 19.18, Germany· ~ Kaiser Wilhelm II announced he would
abdicate. He then !led to the Netherlands.
·
In 1935, United Mine Workers president John L. Lewis and
other labor le tide rs lormed the Committee for Industrial
Organization.
In 1938 ; Nazis looted and burned synagogues as well. as
Jewish-owned stores and houses in Germany and Austria in
what became known as ·:Kristallnacht." ·
In 1953, author-poet Dylan Thomas died in New York at age
39.

In 1963, twin di sasters struck Japan as some 450 miners
were killed in a coa l-dust explosion, and · l60 people died in a
train cr&lt;)sh.
In 1970, former French president Charles De Gaulle died at
age 79.
In 1976, the UN General Assembl~ approved I 0 resolutions
co ndemning apartheid in South Africa, including one characterizing the white-ruled government as "i llegitimate." ·
In 1988. former Attorney General John N. Mitchell, a major .
fi gure in the Watergate scandal, died in Washington at age 75.
In )9R9. comm ~ni st East Germany threw open its borders,
allowin g ci tizens to travel freely to the West; joyous Germans
danced atop )he Berlill Wall.
Ten years ago: Russian President Boris Yeltsin, visiting
L ondon . appealed for help in re sched uling his country's debt,
"'
and urged British businesses to invest.
Five years ago: A Boeing 707 jetliner carryin g First Lady
Hill ary Rodham Clinton was forced to return to Andrews Air
Force Ba se outside Washington after a sen sor indicated an
engine fire. which turned ou t to be a false alarm. (Mrs. Clinton
left the following day for a tour of Central Asia. )
One year ago: Th e northern alliance proclaimed victory
over the Tal iban in the cit y of M azar-e-Sharif, the most signifi cant pri ze in northern Afghanistan .
Today ·~ Birthday s: Sportscaster Charlie Jones i s 72.
Baseball executive Whi tey Herz()g is 71. Senate Intelligence
Committee Chairman Bob Graham, D-Fla., . is 66. Actor
Charl ie Rubinson ("Night Coun' ' ) is 57 . Movie director Bille
· August is 54. Actor Lou Ferrigno is 50. Rock musician Dee
Pl akas (L7) is 42. Rhythm -and-blues singers Ike and Mike
Owensby (Twice) are 34. Rapper Pepa (Salt-N-Pepa} is 33.
Rapper Scarface (Geto Boy s) is 33. Blue s singer Susan
Tede,chi is 32. Rhythm -and-blues singer Nick Lachey (98
Degrees) is 2~. .Rhy thm -and -blue s singer Si sqo (Dru Hill) i s
24 .
Thought for Today :
'' Before I built a wall t 'd ask to know/ What I wa s walling
in or walling out." -. Robert Fros t, American poet (18741963).

Seniors
Groups
Tuesday, Nov. 12
POMEROY - Elvis impersonator Dwight Icenhower will present a tribute to the men and
women who have served in the
armed forces at 11 a.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center in observance of Veterans Day.

Church
services

·Mason Calendar

NATIONAL VIEW

Enough members of Congress are still genuinely concerned
that a House committee: led by an otherwise die~hard Bush
supporter has adopted legislation that would countermand the
secrecy order.
·
The executive order of Nov. I , 200 I , set virtually insurmountable obstacles for release of preside1itial papers, leading
to speculation that Mr. Bush is trying to protect .his father
against embarrassing disclosures.
Or maybe the President ligures hel'll have something to
hide when hi s tenure is up.
·
A 1978 federal law provided for automatic release of White
House documents, with some exceptions, after I+ years. But
Mr. Bush stalled for nine months after he took office, then
signed the order. It sets·up a convoluted, patently illegal disclosure policy that would keep documents secret unl.ess both
the current and former president agreed on release.
As we said nearly a year ago, that sort ·of aggressive secrecy has no legitimate basis in law.
The Reagan papers must be released, and even Mr. Bush's
,
most ardent supporters agree.

s._tu_rd...,•,::.;..·

Meigs Calendar

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Saturday, November 9, 2~

..

,, Ill

OUR
READERS' VIEWS
·•
Win exoneration
Dear Editor:
1 am writing this letter to explain to
the owners of cemetery property and
merchandise at Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens, Gallipolis, that after four
years in court and $100,000 in legal
fees, we were awarded full restoration
of ownership of Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens from Bob and Linda
Johnson , who had purchased the
ceme,t ery on a land contract and
allegedly left the state with over $1
million of the customers' money. ·
They are, now bound over to the
grand jury. We were exonerated as to
.caskets by the court, as we never sold
caskets and had no connections for
delivering the caskets.
When the court awarded us the
cemetery, we were responsible for all
mausoleum crypts, vaults, markers,
and opening and closing fees that the
Johnsons had sold, which we have
done and are continuing to do out of
our own pockets.

..

In order to protect the buyers of caskets, we initiated a class action lawsuit. We had our first meeting at the
VFW Club in Gallipolis at our
expense and had Mr. Ed Cove, attarney from Cleveland there, as well as
our own attorney. The end result of
,the above action is thauhe customer~
that bqught caskets from the Johnsons
will be reimbursed for the caskets
through the class action attorneys in
Cleveland.
We will continue to honor all contracts except the caskets through the
cemetery.
We will -alwa~s be available to help
wtth any · questwn s and supply your
· cemetery needs.
.
Jack and Sheila Claxton
Athens, Ohio

monies to improve/enlarge my busi.. ·
ness.
I worked thrqu gh emails with Tracy
Call and for some reason I was told in
all of our correspondence that thei(
were no monies available for my locii.~
tion (454 Second Ave.).
·
Nol/. out of the blue, there .hav~
been two busin esses I have been'
aware of which· nave received grant
monies for the same kind of busine ss
I was in, and can you believe that one
of them is opening in my exact location?
'
.•
I guess the word around town is co~:.
rect. It i sn ' t "w ho you know, it's
whose name you carry."
Although I am happy to see smal\
bu sinesses open in Gallipolis and 1
wish them well, I feel that we shouldail receive 'the benefit.:;_that the staie
·and the city have io offer instead ·of
Dear Editor:
only tho se who have family members
While I was in business in down- in key positions.
·•
town Gallipolis, I tried to work with
Deanna Proctor·
the ch;:tmber of commerce for grant
Gallipolis, Ohio .

Public
Meetings

RUSHER'S VIEW

In a changed world, action against Iraq is .imperative .,

The answer is, virtually everything
has c~anged. Twelve years ago, this
was still a bipolar world, in which the
only serious threat to the United
States was posed by the Soviet Union.
But any temptation Moscow might
have felt to use weapons of mass
destruction against us was held in
check by the knowledge that we could
and would retaliate in kind.
Today, the Soviet Union is gone.
But, in the intervening decade, several relatively ·small nations have
or
mad e sub stantial
acq uired,
progress toward acquiring, weapons
of mass destruction themselv es -weapons capable of inflicting unacceptable damage on the United States .
And the peril is multiplied by the
growth of shadowy groups of international terrori sts that have shown
themselves not only able but eager to
participate ir assaults on America.
To President Bush, committed to
defending this country against all dangers, the new situation mus·t seem
dauntingly co mplex. In some ways,
the most immediate. danger i s posed
by North Korea, which may actuall y
possess a sma ll number of nuclear
weapons , plus missiles capabl e of
dropping them on Seoul , Tokyo or
(ju st po ssibly ) th e we stern United
State s. It ,arrived at this happy situation by making utter fools out of
Jimmy Carter and the Clintoo admin 1

William
Rusher
COLUMNIST
G

Then there i s Pakistan, which
already pos sesses nuclear weapons-.
At the moment it is under the control
of Pervez Mtisharraf, who has cast hi;;,
lot with the United States . If, however, Musharraf sho uld be overthrown
and replaced by fanatical I s lami s t~·
(which is certainly poss ible), Pakistan'
would quickly become an everr
·
greater danger than North Korea.
Iran, the third member of the "ax!~
of evil ," is believed tp be trying 10:
achieve nuclear capability. But irs
dominant mullahs may well be toppled by Iran 's rebellious youth befora
they can succeed, and any subsequent'
regime is likely to be much fri endlier
to the United States.
Finally, you m'ay be surprised to
hear that we had better keep an eye on
our old enemy Fidel Ca stro. A 1998
Pentagon analysis concluded that
C uba presented no military threat
whatsoever to th e Un ited Sta t~s. being
totally lacking in weapons of mass
destruction .
Unfortunately,
th~t
assessment was large ly the work Qf
the Pentagon 's leading intelligence
spec iali st on Cuba, Ana Belen
Montes, who recently turned out to
have been a Cuban spy since 1985 and
i s currently serving a 2~prison
term. More dependabre Cuban analysts suspect Castro is well on his way
to havin g weapons of mass destruction Cewc!cially biological ones).
So , wouldn't you agree that quite a
lot has changed since 1990?
(William Rusher i.r " Distinguished

i stration, which in 1994 accepted
North Korea's promise to stop trying
to build nuclear weapons in return for
huge deliveries of food and oil that it
needed desperately.
T~at North Korea may already ro s~
sess nuclear weapons virtually rules
out an attack on it, unless we are will•
ing to risk th e vaporization of (say)
Tokyo. Luckily, Pyongyang is sti ll
desperate for eco nomic aid and is surrounded by bigger nations (China,
Ru ss ia and Japan), all of which can
on
it.
exert
seriou s pres sure
Therefore, negotiation is probably our
best hope of containing the danger
posed by North Korea. ·
Iraq is a different matter. It i s p.oten tially a wealthy country, posse ss ing
vast re serves of oil. And it has no
hu ge neighbors capable of deterring it
from actin g. If it acquire s nuplear
weapons, then there will be no effective means of deterrin g it from usi ng
them , at least for blackmai l. That is
why Bush i s determined to disarm Fellow of the Claremont In stitu/e for
Iraq quickly -- by mili~ary means. if the Study of Statesmanship lind
Po litical Philosophy.)
neces sary. '· ~
'
'
I .

Support
Groups

'9.95

Saturday, Nov. 9
POINT
PLEASANT
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30
p.m. , 611 Viand St. Use side 11:~ rDTAL INTERNET soflw01e
·mokes connecting lost &amp;
entrance to Casey Law office. l'i
Monday, Nov. 11
POINT
PLEASANT '
FIVE email boxes, Web moil,
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30
Instant Messaging and mote!
p.m., 611 Viand St: Use side
entrance Casey Law office. l!l!!!lm!t!~Access ·Sign Up untllltl
Tuesday, Nov. 12
LETART- HELP Diet Class,
Letart Community Center.
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.,
followed by a short meeting.
MASON
--:-- · Community
RElii,SlE INTERNE- ACChiiiNCf 1091
Cancer Support Group, 7 p.m.,

.

• All size extra long

for added comfort

ooothe
your body.

to

www.localnet.com

~.,:. (~M)

m.

FUIR
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

~aft ...ND NAM! FURNITURE AT .IICOUNJ F•OIC!lS1

Rt. 2, Gallipolis Ferry, WV

67s.JJ7t

Festivals
Saturday, Nov. 9
PATRIOT - Patriot Pioneer
Day, 11 :30 a.m. to 3 p.m. For
information , call 446-9 267.

R 1
egU ar.
meetingS
..
.
GALLIPOLIS - Gall1polhs
Rotary Club meets at 7 a.m.
. each Tuesday at Holzer Clinic
doctor's dining room.
GALLIPOLIS
· Gallia
County Chamber of Commerce ·
coffee and discussion group
·meets at 6 a.m. each Friday at
Holzer Medical Center.

·Seniors

wedding anniversary celebration for John and Effie Trotter in
the dining room of Holzer
Senior Care Center. Please·
RSVP to Amber Johnson at
446·5001 by Nov. 6, · 2002.
Cards may be sent to 360
Colonial Dr. Bidwell, Ohio
45614.
Th T 'b

.

une we1comes 11ems
for the community . calendar
from non-profit organizations.
Items must be submitted in
writing and can be mailed to

e

r1

the TJibune, 825 Third Ave. ,
Gallipolis. OH. 45631; faxed to
740-446-3006; or &amp;·mailed to
news@mydailytribune .com .
Because of the large volume of
community news and to ensure
accuracy, . items can not be
taken over the telephone.
Community calendar is published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special.
events. Calendar items cannot

Wednesday, Nov. 13
BIDWELL - Holzer Senior be guaranteed to run a specific
Care · Center will host
61st number of days.

a

On October 3I ,2002.eleven West Virginia Lottery pla)!'rs were ~elected in a drawing winning a Las Vegas trip for
two and spending money just by playing the PowerballThe Game Show ~cket! You could win, too 1Appear 0&lt;1 the
na~onal ~owerball Instant Millionaire Game Show and grab your chance to win $1 million! Plus, each TV show
contestant will win at least $.1,000.
o

Dec. 14

.Look for
these contestants ...

Oec. 21

to appear on the weekly ·televised
national Powerball Instant Millionaire
Game Show for their chance to winup to

$1 Million!

Dec. 28
Jan. 4
Jan. 11
Jan. 18
Jan. 25
Feb 1
Feb. 8
Feb. 15
Feb. 22

Marilyn Moffitt
Arthur Slusher
Edward Chapon
Toy Turley
Mary Ann Harkrader Cara Jarrell
Daniel Lee
Freeman Adams
Dixie Snuffer
Mike Pizzino
Mary Bradley

New Martinsville
Pomeroy
Holbrook
Alum Creek
Bluefield
Whitesville
Fairmont
Marmet
Coal City
Elkins
Chapmanville

'"

Stay home ·and win big, too.

ESENTS

,.•

Sunday, November 10
2:30PM
Rodgers &amp; Hammerstein 's

STATE FAIR
The New -Musical

"At-home" players will be drawn from entry tiCkets and will be sho~n dunng
each weeldy televised segment of the Powerball In stant M1lhonawe Game
Show. You could be an "at~home" player and w1n cash based on what
West Virgin1a's Game 5how contestant wms!

Play to win! Going to Las Vegas!
Scratch the RED Powerball at the center of your tiCket If "ENTRY"
appears, mall it in for your cha~ce to go to Las Vegas and appear on the ·
- Powerballlnstant Millionawe Show. Hurry, get your tickets today. Next
drawing IS Januaty 9, 2003. See your West V r gin1a L6nery retailer
for det ails
'

TICKETS AT THE DOOR ~· $20
Fine &amp; Performing Arts Center

University of Rio Grande
Rio Grande, Ohio

I
I

...

Vocational School District
annual advisory committee
, meeting, 6:30 p.m. at Buckeye
Hills Career Cent~n. For information, call 245-5334.

Saturday, Nov. 9
PATRIOT - Patriot Pioneer
. Day, 11 a.m. until3 p.m. Lunch
from noon until 2 p.m.
· CORA - Annual Cora community supper, 6 p.m., at the
center. Bring covered dish.
Publl·c J·nv1·ted.
Tuesday, Nov. 12
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
County Oistrict Library Board of
Trustees, 5 P..m ,, Bossard
Memorial Library.
VINTON--' Ohio Valley Youth
Workers Association, 7 p.m.,
Vinton Baptist Church. 'For
more information, call Chester
Hess at 368-8932.
Wednesday, Nov. 13
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
County
Bicentennial
Commission executive committee and committee chairs meeting, fo a.m., Gallia County
Convention
and
Visitors
Bureau, 61 Court Street,
Gallipolis.
.
Thursday, Nov. 14
RIO GRANDE
Galli aJackson-Vinton
Joint

_,

. ?.
..h1m

Social Events
and Benefits

Methodist
Mason
United
Church . All area · cancer
patients, families, and caregivers invited.
POINT
PLEASANT
Alcoholic~. Anonymous , noon ,
rear of the Prestera Center.
Wednesday, Nov. 13
• POINT
PLEASANT
Alcoholics Anonymous , 7:30
p.m ., 611 Viand St. Use side
entrance to Casey Law oflice.
Thursday, Nov. 14
POINT PLEASANT - TOPS,
weigh-in at 5 p.m ., meeting at
5:30 p.m., Trinity United
Methodist Church. Call 6753692 for additional informa-

Gallia Calenda·r

Benefits for all

Opponents of military action
against Iraq are fond of asking. " What
has changed?" In other words, if we
have been able to live with Saddam
Hussein up to now•. why has it suddenly become imperative to destroy

meeting, 7 p.m.. lodge Hall.
Weclneeday, Nov. 20
POINT PLEASANT- Mason
County AARP, Chapter 3192, 1
p.m., Fort Randolph Terrace.
RAVENSWOOD- SOAR
meeting, 10 a.m:, Local 5668
Hall.
Thursday, Nov. 21
POINT PLEASANT- NARFE
meeting, 1 p.m., Mason County
Library.
GALLIPOLIS FERRYFriendly '50s lunch~n. noon,
Faith Gospel Church.
POINT PLEASANT- Lions
Club meeting, 6 p.m .• Pleasant
Valley Hospital meeting room.
Saturday, Nov. 23 .
LEON - Leon Elementary
PTO Scholarship Dinner, 5 p.m ..
Leon Elementary School.

.,
~.,...-~~-_____;:-----~-----------------·--··- - --·--

·-- .

•

�I

Page A&amp;;~ ~ma-6eutind
I

•

Inside:

Saturday, November 9, 2~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

..

"The food. for institutional food, is very
good." he said. "You get at least a piece of fruit
every day, sometimes two." It has a top-notch
fitness program and a nice view of the nearby
wooded hills.
Cianci, 61, woul.d have to surrender the thick
salt and pepper toupee that he has admitted to
wearing, but in this he would not be alone.
James A. Traficant Jr., 61, who represented
Elkton in Congress for 18 years before being
convicted ·on racketeering charges in April and
being kicked out of the House, had to give up
.his trademark hai"rpiece when he went to
prison. In August, he began serving ari eightyear setiience at the Allenwood Federal
Correctional Institution in White Deer, Pa.
Friend andooccasional adviser Don L. Manni,
who has visited Traficant in piison, said a
khaki prison uniform and black steel-toed
shoes have replaced Traficant's· trademark
denim suits and worn cowboy bdots. He had
declined interviews. ·
At another federal prison I,200 miles south,
the federal Medical Center in Fort Worth,
Texas, former Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards,
75, this month began a I0-year racketeering
sentence.
.
Edwards, who served in the state Senate, the
U.S. House ·of representatives and four terms
as governor, had a reputation as a playbOy with
penchant for gambling and womanizing. .
He has said he plans to .work on hts memoirS
and expects to be '"a model prisoner... He did
not respond to a request for an interview.
Ron Cohen, a former inmate at the Fort
Worth prison who now helps prepare white
collar criminals for prison time. said for people
used to the high life, the hardest part of prison
is living by strict rules.
•

First American ·Indian astronaut
flying with eagle feathers
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Ada, Okla., said it is wonder- 1960s, Herrington was fasci(AP) - When NASA's first ful to see two men, whose nated with space travel. He
American Indian astronaut ancestors may have been ene· and his brother and a.friend
embarks on his long-awaited mies, on the same spaceflight would lie on their backs in a
journey into space in a few "It has come full circle," he big cardboard box and predays, he will fly · with eagle said.
tend it was an Apollo spacefeathers, arrowheads, a handAnoatubby traveled to craft carrying them to the
ful of sacred ground and the Cape
Canaveral · for moon.
blessings of the Chickasaw Herrington's launch, along
By .the t\.!:nt&lt; he got to colNation.
with""200 ·other members"'•of· 1e'ge;'ffemif~oh wanted to be,
''I've always imagined the _35 ,000-strong Chickasaw a forest ranger but flunked
what it would be like to be !'latJon. An Indtan ceremo~y out. He. and his family were
able to go out the hatch and to ts. p~W,..Qn.,tbe_.e:\ie. .of~··"'lllwayrmO'Vingo· ,.__ 14 times
see the Earth in all its glory," · fliJ1h!.
.
by his. count in Oklahoma,
said John Herrington. "I think
It s a !io~rce of real pn?e Colorado, Wyoming and
it's going to fill me with an for all of us, Anoatubby satd. Texas_ and he lacked ambiincredible sense of who I
Herrmgt~n.'s great-fra~d~ tion.
am."
mother !"m .his mother s s1de · A fellow rock climber perHis flight aboard space was ChickaSjlw•. makin&amp;,_!h(\ s•IMed Hc!l"rin~ton to return .
shuttle Endeavour is slated astronaut QP!:-.etghth In1$d.. • t.;-khool and he took up math
for liftoff early Monday.
Although_ h~ dtd. not gro u_p ! ancj engineering at . the
Herrington will conduct a m an Ind1an environment, IS I U .
·
f C 1 d
0 ora 0 ,at
series of spacewalks outside mother made sure he was regntv.erstty '!
the international space station istered as a member of the Colorado Spnngs. _That led to
with Spanish-born astronaut Chickasaw tribe. Herrington the ~avy, test pilot, school
Michael Lopez-Alegria. Not said there is Choctaw on his and, m 1996, NASA s astro·
long after Columbus Day, the father's side, but he cannot naut c~rps.
.
.
two crewmates - both 44- document it.
Hemngton: who IS roamed
year-old U.S. Navy pilots . "I take tremendous pride in to a non-In~1an an? has two
discussed the historic signifi- who " I am where I came daughters, ts constdered the
cance of their pairing.
from," He;nngton said. "I ftrS~ self-identified American
"It would be like. having a know that the people I meet Ind1an b?und for ~pace.
German and a Jew go out who are Native American Robert Cnppen, the ptlot of
together" on a spacewalk, there's a connection to me: the ftrst shuttle flight, had
Lopez-Aiegria said.
there's an immediate recogni- long thought he was part
Bill Anoatubby, governor tion or belonging."
Cherokee but recently discovof the Chickasaw Nation in
Like many children of the · ered he has no Indian blood.

·Tenet shuffles management, says
it will review 'aggressive' pricing
LOS ANGELES (AP) Shares of Tenet Healthcare
Corp. plunged more than .41
percent Frid~y after the
nation's second-largest hospital chain announced the
departure of two top executives and said it will review
its prices .
The announcement came
in response to the federal
government's investigation
of whether the company
overbilled Medicare . The
management shuffle was
announced Thursday before
a company conference call.
Leery investors sent the
Santa Barbara, Calif.-based
company 's shares tumbling
$13.16, or 47 percent, in
heavy late morning trading
on the New York · Stock
Exchange. Shares have
dropped 65 percent si nee
Tenet's troubles first surfaced last week.
Thomas Mackey, 54,
chi ef operating officer since
1999, · retired .
D.avid
Dennis, 53, Tenet' s chief
financial officer since 2000,
resigned .
Jeffrey. Barbakow, Tenet's
chair.man and chief executi ve, acknowledged to

•

•

investors in the conference warrants last week at the
call that the company's offices of the two doctors, a
"aggressive" pricing policy .facility
where
patient
resulted in a higher-than- records are stored and at
average number of special locations within the hospipayments fm costly proce- tal, Tenet executives said.
dures, · such as heart surgThe company owns 113
eries.
hospital s around the nation.
He denied that Mackey
Tenet's policy of pricing
and Dennis were forced to services higher than some
resi gn in response to the · competitors does not violate
federal audit, saying they Medicare regulation s, but it
decided to step down doe s give the company a
because of the company's negative image, Barbakow
management restructuring. said.
The U.S. Department of
"The actions -I am taking
Health and Human Services
said Wednesday it will audit to form a ne.w management
so-called government "out- team and to take a fresh
lier" payments at several look at our approach io
Tenet hospitals. The • pay- pricing are not a signal that
ments are meant to reim- our fundamental strategy is
burse hospital s for exp&gt;enses flawed or the result of any
above . the rate Medicare impropriety," he said. .
The company's outlier
pays for certain conditions.
The FBI , meanwhile, is payments more than douinvestigating allegations bled between fiscal years
that two doctors who prac- 2000 and 2002, to a total of
tice at a Tenet hospital in $763 million in 2002.
Barbakow said Tenet
Redding performed unnecessary heart surgeries. The expects to outpace the
Redding probe is not related national average for outlier
payments because many of
to the Medicare audit.
, As many as 40 agents it s hospitals have 'costl·ier
from the FBI and other open heart surgery and
agencies executed search teaching programs.

•

LeBron on Pay-Per-VIew, Page"B2
NBA Roundup, Page 82
Scoreboard, Page 83

Moving memories
From bright lights to
lights out: Celebs trade
glitz for drab in prison
ELKTON, Ohio (AP) - Even at a fancy
federal prison like the Elkton Federal
Correctional Institution, the night life is lousy.
lt's lights out at 9:30p.m.
· ·.
For future Elkton inmate Vincent "Buddy"
Cianci Jr., the flamboyant former mayor of
Providence, "R.I., and others used to the limelight, the glare of prison floodlights marks not
just a loss of freedom, but a complete revolution in lifestyle.
Manhanan publicist Lizzie Grubman, darling of the New York tabloids, backed her luxury SUV into a crowd outside a trendy Long
Island nightclub in July 2001. She is now serving a 40-day jail sentence in an isolation cell
intended to protect her from prison violence,
according to her lawyer Stephen Scaring.
""She's toughing it out. She hasn't complained once," Scaring said. .
Cianci is scheduled to arnve at Elkton on
Dec. 6 to begin a five-year sentence for racketeering. He is appealing liis conviction.
Cianci - who has a radio talk show and his
own line of pasta sauce with his face on the jar
- currently lives in the Presidential Suite at
his city's swank downtown Biltmore Hotel.
He once described to a reporter the advantages of hotel living: 'They tum the bed down
at night, they leave a chocolate and the weather re~rt in the room for me, and I can walk to
work.
.
If h.e goes to Elkton, .Cianci will give up his
private room for a cubicle shared with up to
three other men. No TV, no private bath, and
they don't tum down the bed.
.
Philip Berrigan, a peace activist who spent
several months at Elkton in 200 I foe anacking
military aircraft with a hammer, says as prisons
go, it's a nice place.

..

PageBl
Saturday, November 9, 2002

Prep Football

ovc

rum

QYJ;,

AH

Chesapeake'
5-0
Rock Hill
3-2
River Valley
3-2
Fairland
2·3
South Point
2-3
Coal Grove
o-5
• wins league championship
Saturday's Game
a IW&lt;e-..;. Mavoe Cerlral
~

All

5-1
5-1
4-2

9-2
8-3
6-4

3-3
2-4
2-4

6-4

Academy'

Marietta•
Logan
Athens

Passersby view what is still remaining on the fence of St. Paul's Chapel in New York afte.r
removal of flags, photographs, flowers and other mementos of the victims of the Wor.ld Tmde
.Center attacks began Thursday. All items, from the spontaneous memonal .to Sept. 11 vrct1ms,
will be preserved and temporarily stored in a warehouse in New Jersey. (AP)
.

SpQntaneous memorial being .
taken down from fence of ·
chapel near World Trade Center
NEW YORK (AP) - A spontaneous
memorial of flags, photographs, flowers
and other mementos that sprang up across
the street from the World Trade Center' is
slowly being taken down.
·
Items attached to the fence of St. Paul 's
Chapel after the Sept. II attacks will be
preserved for a. museum. Workers began
taking down the mementos, now tattered
and weathered, last week.
·
After the first anniversary of the attacks,
some residents began complaining that the

memorial had become un sightly and perhaps unsanitary.
Officials of Trinity Church, which
includes St. Paul's Chapel, agreed to undertake the cleanup- slowly.
Once a week, ' through New Year's Day,
church employees and volunteers will carefully take down· some Jtems and place theln.
in a box. The schedule will allow tourist~
visiting the site over the holidays to still see
some of the memorial.

Denny's to raise $1 millio~
f_~r~~"King Cen~er in Atlanta :
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) -The King
c~nt~M-tJanta will be the next beneficiary of a $1 million fund-raising campaign by
Denny's, the re·staurant chain stung by
charges of racism a decade ago.
The money will be used by the center to
encourage volunteerism , including creation
of a database of volunteer opportunities in
every ZIP code, Ray Hood-Phillips, chief
diversit&gt;' officer for Denny's, said Friday.
In the 1990s, the South Carolina-based
company's restaurants were accused of making b,lacks prepay for meals, not serving
them !IS quickly as whites and sometimes not
serving blacks at all.

. A $54 million settlement of a class-actiop
lawsuit led to reforms . The grant to the King
Center is part of the company's "Reignite the
Dream" program, which sets aside 20 cents
for every All-American Slam breakfast
Denny's sells for a particular grant recipient.
Last year's recipient wa s the Nation~!
Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tenn.
The company will begin collecting for the
King Center in January. It should take about
a year to rai se the $1 million, company officials said.
·
·
The center was establis hed in 1968 by
Corella Scort King to advance the legacy of
her husband , the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

It's Beginning to look
.4 Lot Like Christmas ...
At Bob's r-1arket tiallipolls (iarden Center
• Artificial Trees • Christmas Wreaths
·Holiday Decorating Items
and Trimmings

AVAILABLE NOW: CAT'S MEOW
• Traditional Williamsburg
Christmas 8erles
• ~orth Pole Collection
• Candy Cane b:press
• Trade Center Tribute Piece
Don't forget Bob's for:
• Bulk Holiday Candy
• Apple Butter (fresh from the copper kettle)
·Delicious Apples fresh from the Shenandoah Valley

6et your orders In NOW for Bob's Nollday fruit
Baskets packed full of fresh fruit, nuts and candy
.
or a custom made 61ft Basket from Bob'sf

-

Mark your calendars for

'

.

BOB'S CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE.,
Saturday, November 23rd.- 8:00a.m. to 8:00p.m.

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone (740) 446-1711

............

_ ... i ....... - {

BY RICK StMPKtNS

Sports correspondent
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -The
Point Pleasant Bi~ Blacks used ei~ht
different ball earners while poundmg
the Roane. County Raiders defense to
the tune of 296 rushing yards en route
to a 22-7 win. in the 2002 football
finale.
Quarterback Kevin Thompson again
led the local s with a 130 yard rushing
nij?:hl, but he had plenty of help as
Ntck Duncan gained 72 yards and
Jared Billings 43 as the Big Blacks
averuged 6.6 yards per rush on the
night. 'This is how we drew this thing

up," said PPHS Head Coach Steve final four minutes of th e lirst quarter
Safford. "We wanted to control the to take a 14-0 lead, and it looked at
line of scrimmage and take the ball thai point, that this one would be a litright to · them. We thought with the tie lopsided. But, the Raiders had
number of good .runners we had to something to say about the outcome
throw at them, that we could be effec- and they scored on their lirst possesti ve on the gr6und and the plan sion of the second quarter and then
worked well. But, I would be remiss if held the Big Blacks out of the ena
I didn't mention how well the offen- zone the rest ofthe.halfto make things
sive line played out there tonight."
interesting at intermission.
"They have done a great JOb this
Point tallied on a nifty 32-yard
season, especially the last three · touchdown run by ' senior Nick
games. Sometimes we forget to give · Duncan at the 3:56 mark of the openthose guys their.due, but if we didn't ing stanza and then added another
have those guys up front, ;we wouldn't score on the last play of the quarter
be able to have these 300 yard rushing when Kevin Thompson went around
games," added Safford.
the left side for a 9-yard scoring jaunt.
Point scored two touchdowns in the Beau Sang added the extra point boots

and it looked good for the horne team.
But, on Roane's first play from
scrimmage in the second quarter, John
Workman turned the place upside
down when he rambled some 80 yards
to paydin. Bryan Bush's PAT cut the
deficit in half at 14-7.
On the ensuing kickoff. Duncan
took the baH ru the Point 20 and ran
the ball back to the Roane 43, giving
the locals excellent field position. The
Blacks picked up one first down, but
were unable to muster any more
offense and the Raiders took over on
downs at their 32 yard line.
Following a Big Black punt that

Point Pleasant
5-5
Jackson
4-6
Warren
0-6 o-10
• share league championship
• Game
Friday's
Point Pleasant 22, Roane County 7
Saturday's Game ·
Gallia Academy vs. DeSales

TVC
Ohio Division
rum
IYC All
Wellston'
5-0 8·2
Belpre
4·1
8·2
Nelsonville-York
3-2
5-5
Vinton County
2-3
2-8
Meigs
1-4
4-6
Alexander
o-5
3-7
Hocking Division
IHm
IYC AH
Waterlord'
7-4
5·0
Trirrrble
4-1
7-3
Federal Hocking
3-2
3-7
Eastern
2-3
4-6
Miller
1-4
1-9
Southern
0.5 0-10
• wins division championship

.

Non-league
IHm
W.ahama
Ironton
Symmes Valley
Oak Hill
South Gallia
Hannan
Friday's Games
Duval50, Hannan 12
Portsmouth 35, Ironton 20

All
1o-o
8·3
8-3
3-7
3-7
2~

Local Bowling
Thursday Night No Tap
Week to Results
At Mason Lanes
. Team Standings
Kawasaki Motor Sports .. .. 48-32
Taylor's Chiropractic .......... 46-34
The Lost Champions .. :..... 46-34
Sam's Construction ...... .. .. 42-38
Becky's Classic Cuts ........ 32-48
The 3 Amigos .......... ......... 16-64
Individual-Results
Men
High Game
Sam Smith .... .......................266
Chuck Burton .......................221
Burton .................................. 207
High Series
Burton .................................. 619
Smith ................................ :... 609
Bill Slack .............................. 564
·women
High Game
Kathy Lemley ....................... 205
Carol McFarland .................. 196
Minnie Hoanker .... ................ 180
· High Series
McFarland .... ,....................... 491
Hoanker ................... :........... 481
Lemley ................................ .471 .

Gallipolis men's

volleyball league

•
GAL[IPOLIS
The
0 .0 . Mcintyre Park District
is now accepting applications for their men's adult
volleyball league for area
residents ages 18 and up.
League games will take
place Tuesday evenings with
a scramble-type format.
Games begin thr s Tuesday.
All games will be played
at the GDC Activity Center.
Cost is $5 per perso n.
Players· will rotate teams
each week with individual
winners being determined
by total points accumulated
by the end of the season.
For more information ,
contact Mark Danner af 4464612, ext. 256.

I

•

5-5
3-7
3-7
3-7

$EOAL

rum
Gal~a

8'3
6-4

Big Blacks bully Raiders, 22-7

Please see Big Blacks, Bl

76ers·
down
Cavs

Huggins
charges
·back from·
heart attack

.

Joe KAY
Associated Press

• BY

CINCINNATI - Anyone who
thought a massive heart attack would
slow Bob Huggins down doesn 't
know the first thing about him.
No matter what, he never goes soft.
"I remember once when he thou~ht
we were playing too soft," said Ntck
Van Exel, the point guard on
Cincinnati's 1992 Final Four team .
"He would come out at practice and .
take the first charge.
"He 'd tell guys to run him over. He
would lead off the drill by challenging the whole team to· run him over.
Whoever hated him the most would
go first and try to run him over, and
he'd stand there .and take it."
He took the best that his best team
could give in the early 1990s. Now,
the 49-year-old coach is approaching
a heart problem with the same
resolve to stand his ground.
• "He's not going to change," said
Memphis coach John Calipari, one of
his fnends. "He is what he is."
He is the third-youngest coach to
~et 500 wins .jn Division I. He is
mtense and umtlehting. He is a one: ·
man show during games, when his
face flushes crimson during tirades at
his players and the officials.
And, he is a cardiac patient.
Huggins collapsed at Pittsburgh's
airport en route from a recruiting visit
to. a basketball clipic on Sept. 28. He
was lucky to get medical care immediately.
"It was a massive heart attack," he
said. "They tell me 10 or 15 more
minutes, I probably would have bee11
dead."
Doctors installed a mesh stent to
keep a clogged artery open. Rounds ·
of tests found significant dill!lage to
his heart. Bearcats fans wondered
whether Huggins would miss the
entire season.
In his hospital bed, Huggins was
thinking just the opposite.
Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins directs his players during practice Wednesday in
Ci~clnnati. Huggins Is back to working 12 hour days after suffering a major heart
PI•••• see Huntns, Bl
.attack. Forward Derek Hollman is at right.· (AP)

PHILADELPHIA (AP) Keith Van Horn shot 4-for-4
from ·3-point range and finished with 28 points as the
Philadelphia 76ers won
their fourth straight gam~
with a 108-84 victory over ·
the Cleveland Cavaliers on
Friday night.
Allen Iverson added 17
points and seven assists
despite a sprained · right .
thumb that nearly kept hirh :
. out. He was originally Rill
scheduled to play Friday
after injuring the hand in
Wednesday's win over the
Los Angeles Clippers, but
was cleared to play less than
an hour before gametime .
Aaron McKie and Brian
Skinner each had. 12 points,
Greg Buckner scored II and
Eric Snow had II assists for
the Sixers, who have no·t
lost since dropping the season opener rn Orlaqdo.
Philadelphia has· defeated
Cleveland 13 straight times . .
Ricky ,Davis had 31 points
on 14-of-24 shooting from
the
field,
Zydrunas
llgauskas
scored
20,
Jumaine Jones added 10 and
Tyrone
Hill .. had · 13
rebounds for the Cavs, who
have lost two straight.
Philadelphia opened up a
big lead in the second quar~
ter, outscoring the Cavs 31_22. The Sixers closed tbe:
quarter on a 23-10 run , with
a layup by Van Horn giving
them a 53-37 lead at the
break.
The lead reached 29 in the
third quarter as Van Horn
paced a frenzied offense,
scoring 16 points on 6-of-6
shooting from the field
including three 3-pointers.
During one stretch, the
Sixers scored six straight
points on alley-oop passes
from Iverson and held a 21point lead after three quarters. Philadelphia was 17.for-~5 from the field in the
third .

Olajuwon returns to Houston to retire
HOUSTON
(AP)
Hakeem Olajuwon left the
Houston Rockets a little more
.than a year ago to finish his
career with the Toronto
Raptors. That injury-plagued
season provided a dubious end
fOr one o( the greatest centers
. in NBA history.
"The Dream" will get a
more fitting sendoff Saturday
night, when he announces his
retirement during-halftime of a
I game between Golden State
and Houston, where Olajuwon
played for 17 of his 18 seasons.
The ceremony, which will
include Olajuwon 's No. 34
jersey being retired, will give
the Rockets a chance to tl'i~t
one of the city's most beloved
athletes - a man who brought
it NBA titles in 1994 and '95.

"He's like royalty;'' said
Houston point guard Steve
FranCis, a teammate of
Olajuwon's in 1999-00 and
2000-01. "I'm basically inheriting- all of IJS are inheriting
-. something that guy built
here in Houston. For myself
and all the guys, we strive to
be where he was, winning
championships and MVPs and
AII 7Star games. It's going to
be a good thing for us to see." .·
After turning down a threeyear, $13 million contract
offer from the Rocket s,
Olajuwon signed a three-year,
$18 million deal with Toronto
in the summer of 2001. But he
averaged career lows in points
(7.1) and rebounds (6.0) with
the Raptors, and back trouble
prompted the ~earn to excuse
hrm from trammg camp. ·

· '"Everyone ligures that peo- sometimes he might do all of
pie in the limelight love rt so them ," Dawson said." "We
much, they never want to went through a lot of years
leave it. But I view thi s as a there that . if the game was
celebration," Olajuwon ·told close, he'd get us the win.
the Toronto Sun.
That was a great feeling . It
The 39-year-old center's was a remarkable ride."
career ac hi evements assure
Olajuwon helped hi s colhim a spot in the Hall of lege team make the NCAA
Fame: He averaged 21.8 title game in 1983 and '84,
points (nearly 26 in the play- and the Rockets won a coin
offs) and 11 .1 rebounds 111 18 · toss to make him t~e ti rst pick
seasons. He Iiolds the league in the 1984 draft. , Olajuwon
record in career blocks with improved every season with
3)130 and was selected to 12 the Rockets, culminating with
All-Star games.
the team "s back-to-back titles.
Rockets general manager
"We'd never seen anything
Carroll Dawson watched the like him \lefore," coach Rudy
7-foot Olajuwon from the Tornjanovich said . "Paying
time he arrived at the tribute to him is going to be a
University of Houston as a wonderful thing. It's -going to
gangly c~ter from Nigeria. . be emotional for me. ·
·
"He c
do so many
"I know what he meant to
things to w 1 a game, and me. I owe him all the gratitude

I
·I

t

in the world for being the .
biggest part of my baskettiall .
life. When I heard we were
doing this, I got a warm feeling."

Olajuwon is woven tightly
into the Rockets champ/&lt;
onship years.
He averaged 27.3 points,
11 .9 rebound s and 3.71
blocked shots in leading
Houston to the MidwestDivision title prior to the 1994
1playoffs and earned both
offensive and defensive player of the year honors in the
NBA.

.

The Rockets lost two home .
games to Phoenix in the conferenn: semifin als but came
back to win tile series in seven
games . Houston went on to
beat the ,New York Knicks in a
seven-game Finals.

.• ..

�l&gt;age B2 • iMturbap m:i!MI-&amp;entincl

Saturday, November 9, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

.LeBron games headed for pay-per-view
AKRON , Ohio (AP) - The routineThe venture will be a partnershif.
ly sold-out St. Vincent-St. Mary High between Time Warner and the schoo,
School games featuring LeBron ) a,.J;11eS, where James is a senior. Jasso declined
a likely top NBA draft pick, will be to release financial details.
offered on cable pay-per-view in a 14School athletk . director Grant
county northeast Ohio region this sea- Innocenzi said the school must turn
son.
away fans. Most SVSM home games
The games will be available. to about · wiH be played this season at the 6,000600,000 homes for a pnce estimated at · seat Umversny of Akron arena.
$4 to $7 per game, Bill Jasso, vice pres- · The games will be offered in the
ident of public affairs for the northeast cable system 's region span ning
' Ohio division of Time Warner, said ' Ashland,
Carroll ,
Columbiana ,
Friday
Holmes, Huron, Mahoning, Medina,

Portage, Richland , Stark, Summit,
Trumbull and Wayne counties and a
portion of Erie County, Jasso aid. ·The
region in cludes the cities of Akron ,
Canton, Mansfie ld, Warren and
Youngstown.
··
James, chosen as Ohio 's Mr.
Basketball in each of the past two
years, has been on the cover of Sports
Illustrated, which described him as
"The Chosen One ." He is ex pected to
be a top NBA draft pick if he decide s to
skip college and turn pro .

NBA Roundup

,

Artest, Miller help Packers pound Knicks
A ssociated Press

R(&gt;n Artest scored 27 points and Brad
Miller had 19 as the Indiana Pacers beat
the visiting New York KniCks 107-84 on
Friday night.
The Pacers had a 17-point first-half
lead sliced to three in the fourth mostly
because of a career-high tying 33 points
by New York's Kurt Thomas.
Indiana though used a 23-7 run late in
the fourth and held Thomas to only one
field goal in the final 8 minutes to
improve to 3-0 at home. Jamaal Tinsley
scored 14 points and had 12 assists and
hit two crucial mid-range jumpers and a
3-pointer in the closing minutes.
Thomas , who made seven straight
shots during one stfetch, went cold for
the Knicks at the wrong time. He rallied
New York back from a 13-point halftime
deficit, as he made consecutive baskets
.early in the fourth to cut it to 79-75.
Magic 105, SuperSoniCs 98
Grant Hill had 27 points and nine
assists as the host Orlando Magic beat
the Seattle SuperSonics.
Tracy McGrady scored 23, II in the
fourth quarter.
. In the final minutes, McGrady hit a
fallaway jumper as the shot clock
expired and followed that with a threepoint play on a fastbreak layup to give
the Magic a 96-88 lead,
Mike Miller broke out of a long-range
shooting slump to add 18 points, includ-

ing 10 in the fourth quarter. Miller
entered shooting 27 percent from beyond
the arc, but hit three 3-pointers in six
attempts.
For Seattle, Vladimir Radmanovic had
20 poiRts and a career-high II ,rebounds.
Gary Payton had 21 points and eight
assists.
Nets 106, Clippers 92
Jason Kidd scored 15 of his 35 points
. in the fourth quarter to lead the New
Jersey Nets to a win ove·r the visiting Los
Angeles Clippers.
Kidil also had nine assists and seven
rebounds.
Kenyon Martin had 16 points and
Kerry Kittles added 15 for the Nets.
Elton Brand and Andre Miller each
scored 20 to lead the Clippers.
Kidd started to find his scoring touch
in the third quarter and took over the
game in the fourth.
He scored II points _as New Jersey
opened the quarter on a 15-6 run that he
caP.ped with a trio of jump shots. After
Miller responded with a basket to cut. the
Nets'lead to 92-86, Kidd fed Martin and
Richard Jefferson for consecutive dunks
that put the game out of reach for the
Clippers.
The Nets led 33-26 after on~ quarter as
Martin paced the attack with eight
points.
Wizards 100, Lakers 99
Jerry Stackhouse scored 29 points and
won the game with a one-handed dunk at
the buzzer as the host Washington

·Wizards overcame some mistakes by
Michael Jordan in the final minute to
beat the Los Angeles Lakers.
·
On an out-of-bounds play with the
Wizards trailing by one with 2.9 seconds
remaining, Stackhouse threw the ball to
Bryon Russell, took ·it back on a giveand-go and found a clear path to the basket for the slam.
.
The play was reviewed unde r the
NBA's new instant replay rule, and the
tape showed Stackhouse made the dunk
two-tenths of a second before the buzzer.
Los Angeles had just taken its first
lead, 99-98, when Robert Horry made a
3-pointer at the 2.9-second mark. The
Lakers made up a 17-point deficit in the
fourth quarter.
The comebacl\ was aided by two
missed free throws by Jordan in the final
20 seconds. He also fouled Rick Fox for
a three-point play with 25 seconds left.
Jordan had played well. He scored a
season-hi~h 25 points in 30 minutes,
making mne of 14 shots. ...
Mavericks 114, Bulls 87
Dirk Nowitzki scored 24 points, and
Shawn Bradley had 11 rebounds and
eight blocks as the visiting Dallas
Mavericks beat the Chicago Bulls.
Eduardo Najera added 15 and Chicago
native Michael Finley had 14 for the
Mavericks, whose S-0 start is the best in
franchise history. ·
The Mavericks blew the game open
with a 14-1 run to start the second half.
They led by as much as 40.

I

Big Blacks
· from Page B1
went out of bounds on the Point 49, the
Raiders wen( on a time consuming drive
that nearly tied the game. At the least, it
gave the Big Blacks and their followers
some uneasy moments. Aided by a holding call against the Big Blacks on a
Roane County punt, the Raiders moved
the ball to the Big Black 13 yard line, but
the drive fell apart and Jesse "Cedar"
Nott settled things when he intercepted a
Justin Simmons' aerial at the Big Black
two with Just a couple of ticks left in the
half
Daniel "~ig Mac" Tench got his name
in the scoring column on the opening
dr&gt;ve·of the third quarter when he sacked
Raider quarterback _Simmons in the end
zone for a safety.
·
The Roane boys started at their own
I0, but lost a yard on fitst down and then
were penalized by an illegal substitution
call. That made it 3rd and 16 from the

I

Huggins
from Page B1
"I really just thou~ht about
getting back to work,' he said.
His players braced for the
worst when they went to visit
him at a hospital iri Cincinnati
about a week after the attack.
Freshman guard Chadd
Moore looked away when
Huggi ns, dressed in hospital
ll~b, walked into a small vis.
1tmg room.
"It was comical ," Huggins
said. "Chadd didn 't want to
look. When I came in, he
thought they were going to
wheel me in on a slab or
something ."
Huggins
immediate( y
demonstrated they had nothing to worry about. He hadn't
changed.
·
"He walked in, and the ftrst
thing he did was kick me,"
Moore said. "Then I knew
that he was going to be all
right."
Within weeks of the heart
attack, Huggins was putting in
12-hour days, scoldmg players at practice and taking jabs
at the media and referees, two
of his favorite foils.
"I'm thinking that I might
be able to get a call now
because people feel sorry for
me," 1he said playfully. ·"We
haven't gotten one to this
point. Peop,le that · never say
anythin~ ml:e are saying some
nice thmgs, so I'm thinking
that maybe even the officials

,'

four, and Simmons took the snap and
Daniel Tench also came up big for the
rolled left, only to be engulfed by Tench Big Blacks with seven tackles and that
for the two-pomt safety.
. big safety. Nott had the interception and
Point drove to the Raider 25 on the four tackles, while eight tackles, includsubsequent possession, but Workman ing one for a loss. Senior Stephen Cain
intercepted a Thompson pass intended recovered a Raider fumble and also
for David Bonecutter and that drive was recorded a solo tackle.
. over. Roane went three and out on their
"This was a very hard hitting football
drive and were forced .to punt the ball game - a fun one to watch," said Safford.
back to the Big Blacks.
·
"We were able to give our seniors a good ·
Nic Dalton gave the locals a big spark going away present and that is very
when the returned the punt to the Raider important. These guys have given a lot to
10 yard line. It took the Big Blacks just the program and it was nice to·end things
three plays to reach paydirt as Jimmy on a positive note," concluded the long
Jordan ran twice before Kevin Thompson time Big Black coach.
tallied the fmal touchdown of.the game
Fourteen senior football players and six
when he skirted the left end for a six-yard . cheerleaders performed for the final time
scramble. The extra point pass failed.
on the football field for PPHS. ·
Point
had
a
couple
of
chances
to
add
to
Those athletes are Jason McCoy, Kevin
·
their lead, bu.t a fumble at the Raider 5 Thompson, Nic Dalton, Beau Sang, Jesse
yard line squelched one drive, while Nott, Nick Duncan, Branson Barkey,
another one ended on a fake punt.
Carl Reynolds" Seth ,,Gaskins, Tad
Defensively for the Big Blacks, J.P. Greathouse, Derek Kinnaird, Stephen
Thompson had a huge night with 8 solo Cain, Lee Reynolds, Seth Matheny, Tara
tackles, five assists and a fumble recov- Elias, Shandalia Meadows, Katie
ery.
Four of his solo stops were for nega- Watterson, Monica McCarty) Danielle
.
tive yards as the junior was a thorn in the · Hudson, and Britlan · Pearson . Their
side of the Raiders all night.
efforts nave not gone unnoticed.

will tum a little bit here."
basketball is · important and
He has lost 20 pounds ano you put your heart into it,
spends less time in his ·office. other things become equally ·
He gets more sleep and exer- important now."
cises every day. Otherwise, no
Coles thinks Huggins will
one could tell anything signif- readily change his lifestyle. It
icant has happened.
may not be so easy to ·change
· "He's amazed me that he's his perspective.
.
:
out here right now, after
"I've learned as a coach that
something like that," Moore I' m going to ha.ve some ups ·
said, before a recent practice. .and downs," Coles said. "This
Amazing?
Perhaps. may be a little harder for Bob.·
Surprising? No.
He wins a lot more than I do.
Friends tried to talk him
"I take a loss about the same
into taking a year off to recov- way ·as I take a win·. I've kind
er, but he never considered it. of learned that if I can keep an
"I' d be. going crazy if I . even keel, it will keep me
couldn't go to practice," away from those things that
Huggins said. ''That would be really are not good for me the worst thing in the world:" the ranting and the raving and
Part of his heart isn't work- all that .''
ing properly yet, but doctors
Huggins loves ranting and
think it will improve over raving almost as much as wintime with rest and medication. ning. Van Exel, a guard with
He had a pacemaker installed the NBA's Dallas Mavericks,
to make sure his heart stays in said Huggins has known for
rhythm.
years that he should rein in his
Doctors have told him to temper:
exercise, watch his diet and
"When we were there, the
get plenty of rest. It's the same doctors always told him to
advice that Miami University tone it down a little bit," Van
coach Charlie Coles got after Exel said. "But how do you
bypass surgery in 1986, his tone it down when you're as
first year at Central Michigan. competitive as he is? He 's
Coles did everything except competitive about everything
get enough rest, finding it too he does."
difficult to give up those late·
Huggins said his doctors
night sessions of watching have not told him to be quiet c
tape. He went. i.nto cardiac · on the bench because they
arrest during a Mid-American · know him better than thiu.
Conference tournament game
"I'd probably have a hard
in 1998, an event that changed time sitting," he said. "I've
his outlook.
·
never sat. I've been thinking
"You realize that you have for a couple of years that 1
no choice," said Coles, 60.
robably ought to do that, but
"Aithough~ you still think that
don't think I can."

r

Baker already
has.questions
for Cubbies
Chicago · fired interim
manager Bruce Kimm on
Associated Press
the last day of the season.
Since then, seven other
CHICAGO
. Dusty teams have hired new manBaker is going job hunting agers, while Hendry patient·for the first time in I 0 years. ly waited. · ·
·
He won't need to bring his
He did interview Bob
resume when he meets with Melvin, Ken Macha, Buck
the Chicago Cubs on Showalter
and
Fredi
Monday, however. The Cubs Gonzalez, but no one since
already have all the informa- the World Series began.
tion they need about the
"I think my actions have
three~time NL manager of
spoken . We wanted to wait
the year.
He did a great job in San
Instead, Baker might be Francisco," Hendry said.
the one who asks most of the "He's a winner, a proven
questions as he considers
taking over a team that has- winner and a very positive
n't had consecutive winning guy. He would be a quality
seasons since 1972. when manager."
Baker is equally enamored
the Cubs finished a run of
the Cubs.
·
of
six straight records above
"If
they're
interested,"
he
.500. .
told
the
Tribune,
'Tm
inter"I want to talk to them
about the minor leagues, the ested."
Managing the Cubs would
day games, the city, the
certainly
be a challenge for
prospects, the expectations,"
Baker told the Chicago the 53-year-old Baker. The
Tribune for a story in Friday team hasn't won a World
Series since 1908 and has
editions.
made_
the playoffs only three
He said he's not sure how
many years he'd want on a times since the 1945 World
Series. The Cubs were 67-95
new contract.
this
past season, their third
"Two is too short. Three is
90-loss
campaign in the last
about the time you should
start showing some results. four years.
But the Cubs have plenty
Four is probably about
going
for them, too . The
right," he sitid.
"We want to get the right Tribune Co., which owns the
guy," Hendry said. "We cer- team, could afford to give
titinly expressed our interest Baker a significant salary
to Dusty,.and he seems inter- boost, and the team has a
ested in us. Hopefully we'll strong young pitching staff
move forward at a good that mcludes Kerry Wood,
Mark Prior and Matt
rate."
The San .francisco Giants Clement.
The Cubs pfay in one of ·
announced Wednesday night
best parks in baseball,
the
that Baker wouldn't return,
·
despite ·nearly leading the and have diehard fans who
team to a World .Series title. would revere Baker for life
The Giants blew a 5-0 lead if he took the Cubs to the
in Game 6 and lost the final World Series. It also would
be a fresh start for Baker,
game the ne}(t night.
Hendry was on the phone . who left San Francisco in
with Baker the day after- San part because of differences
Francisco's announcement. with owner Peter Magowan.
Then there's Sammy Sosa. ·
Baker had a hunting trip
planned for this weekend, Baker got along well with
so the two men arranged a Barry Bonds in San
Francisco, and said he
meeting for Monday.
"We had a nice conversa- would do. the same with
tion for 10-to-15 minutes," Sosa.
"I'll talk to Sammy," he
Hendry said Thursday night
from Arizona, where the told the Tribune. "It's his
Cubs were holding organi- town and his team, and I
zational m~etings. wouldn't come in to change
The Trioune reported that that. We can work it out
Monday's meeting will take We'll just have to talk. I'd
place in San Francisco. tell him you want leadership
Cubs · president
Andy from your · best player.
MacPhail also is expected to Sometimes you get it and
imend.
.
sometimes you don't, . but
Calls to Baker's agent, you want it.
Jeff Moorad, weren't imme-. "Sammy is to Chkago
diately returned Friday.
what Barry is to San
While Hendry ·doesn 't Francisco - the poster boy
have a timetable for naming for the team," Baker added.
amanager, it's clear Baker is "Only with Barry, there's
the man the Cubs want.
more guys on the poster."
BY RICK GANO

I

.

Saturday,

No~ember 9,

2002

Scoreboard
.

at Paint Pleasant, W.Va.
Paint Pleasant 22, Roane County 7
Roane County
0 7 0 07
Point Pleasant
14 0 8
22

o-

SCORING SUMMARY
First quarter
. PP -

Nick Duncan 34 yard run

(Beau Sang kick)
PP-Kevin Thompson 9 yard ·run
(Sang kick)

Rush Attempts
Yards Rushing
Pass Attempts
Completions

Yards Passing
Interceptions
Total Offense
First Downs
Penatties/Yards

Stadium
·
(7) Lebanon (tQ-11 VS . (3) C1n. Colerain {10..
1) at 11 a.m.. Cincinnati Paul Brown Stadium

DIVISION II
Regional finals
All games Friday. Time TBA

Region 5
(5) Olmsted Falls (10.2) vs. (6) Warren
fiowland (9-3)
Region 6
( 1) Tol. St. Francis i 11 ·1) vs. (3) Cols. Walnu1

Ridge(tH)

Region 7
(4) Macedonia Nordon1a (1 1-1) vs. (2) Avon

Lake(11·1)

Second quarter
RC-John Workman 80 yard run
(Bryan Bush kick)
Third quarter
PP -Safety, Daniel Tench tackled
quarlerback in and zone ·
PP ·Kevin Thompson 6 yard run
(pass failed) ·

TEAMSTATS
pp

.

'
;
Wayne (9-2) at 2 p.m .. C•ncinnatr Paul Brown

Prep Football

',/

45
296
10
1
13
1
309
10
9·78

RC
31
128
11
2
15
1
143

6
5-30

Turnovers

3

4

Punts/Average

4·33.0

6-29.3

INDIVIDUAL STATS
Rushing : PP - Kevin Thompson
14-130; Nick Duncan 10-72; Jared
Billings 4-43; Jason McCoy 4-23:
Jesse Nott 4-10: Jimmy Jordan 3-8;
J.D. Thompson 2' 7: Newt Mattox 4-3.
RC - John Workman 14-101 : Jason
Alvi s 5-31 : Joe Lowe 4-18: Derek
Hardman -2-4; Mike King . 2·1; Cruise
tawson 1·(-12): Justin Simmons 3·(·
15).
'
• Passing: PP - Kevin Thompson 1·
10/13 yards: 1 int
RC - Justin Simmons 2·9115 yards;
1 int Evin Kindall 0-1 : Dwayne
Freeland 0·1 .
Receiving: PP - J.D. Thompson 113 yards.
RC - Derek Hardman 1·11 ; Joe
Lowe 1-4; Mike King 1-0.

11) Kings

Mil~

Region a

Kings (12.0) vs. (2) Oay.

Chaminade-Julienne (11 ·1)

DIVISION Ill
Regional Semifinals
All games at i .p.m. Saturday
·
Region 9
(1) Cle. Benedictine (9·2) vs . (4)
Steubenville (9-2) al Canton Central Catholic
Stadium
(2) Hunting Vatey Univ. (8--3) vs. (6) Lisbon
Beaver Local {9·2) at Beloit West Branch
Heacock Stadium
Region 10

(1) A&lt;r. Buehl~ (11.0) vs. (4) W~lard (1G-1)

at Wooster Follis Field
(2) Akr. Hoban (10-1) vs.·(3) Oak Harbor
{10.1) at Lorain George Daniel Stadium

Region 11
II) Newar&lt; LKJ&lt;ing Valley (ll.o) vs.(4) Cols.
Watterson (7-4) at Newark While Field ~
12) Cols. DeSales (s.3) vs. I~) Gallipolis

Gallla (9-2) at Hillsboro Richards Memorial
Field
Region 12
(1) Urbana (11-o) vs. (5) St. Ma~ Memorial
(8·3) at PiQua Alexander Stadium
(2) Germantown Valley VifNI (1 1-Q) vs. (3]
·Tipp City Tippecanoe (9-2} at Clayton
Northmont Stadium

DIVISION IV
Regional Rnals
All gamas Friday. Time TBA
Region 13
(B) Youngs. Ursuline (7·5} vs. (2) Girard (1 1·
1)

..

Region 14

(1) Kenlon (10.2) liS. (6) Archbold (10·2)
Region 15

.

(I) Ponsmou1h (11·1) vs. 17) Portsmouth W
(1().2)
Region 16

(1) .Ke,ering Aller (1H) vs. (21 Reading
(12·0)
DIVISION V
' Regional Semifinals
All games at 7 p.m. Saturday
Region 17
(1) SmithVIlle (11 -Q) vs. (5) Bedford Chanel
(9·2) at Strongsville Catan Stadium
(2) Middlefield Cardinal (-11-D) vs. (3) Dalton
(10· i ) at Bedford Steward Field

Ohio High School Athletic Assoctatlon
State Football Pairings
OIVISIONI
.
· Region 18
Regional Semtf1nals
(B) Oelphos Jefferson (9-2) vs. (4) Castelia
All games at 7 p.m. Saturday
Margaretla (9·2) at Tiffin National Field ~t
unless noted
· .. Frost·Kalnow Stadium
Re.gion 1
(2) Defiance Tinora (1(){)) vs. (6) Delphos
, (1) Solon (11·0) vs_ {4) Mentor {10-1) at St. John's (8-3) at Defiance Brown Stadium
Lakewood Stadium
Region 19
(2) Warren Harding (11-Q) vs. (3) Lakewood
(1) Woodsfield Monroe Cent. (1 1-Q) vs. (5}
St. Edward (10-1) at Parma Byers 'Fiefd
Chesapeake (8·3) at Circleville Logan ,Elm
'
Region 2
Braves Stadium
{1) Brul']swick (11·0) vs. (5) Spring. South
(2) Amanda·Ciearcreek (9·2) vs. (6)
(8-3) at Mansfield Arlin Field
Sarahsville Shenandoah (8·3) at Zanesville
(2) findlay (1G-1) vs. (3) Hudson (11{)) al Sulsberger Memorial Stadium
Fremont Ross Harmon Stadium
Region 20
(1) Marion Ple_psant (11-Q) vs. (4) Morral
.
Regl'"' 3
. (8) Massillon Washington (9·2) vs. (5) A 1 dgedat~ (9·2) at Marion Harding Staclum
MassiNon Perry (1D-1) at Can ton Fawcett
(2) Gahanna Cois. Acad. (10.1 ) vs. (3)
Stadium
Bainbridge Paint Valley (1()..1 ) at Washington
(2) Pickenngton (1 0·1) vs. (6) Gahanna Court House Miami Trace Panther Stadium
Lincoln (9·2) at Grove City Stadium
DIVISION VI
Region 4
Regional Finals

(I) Cin . Elder (1G-1 ) vs. (51 . Huber His.

All games Friday. Time TBA

Region 21

2. Ohio State ................................. 5.57

(1) Mogadore (· I-I) vs. (6) Cle Cuyahoga

4 . Texas ......................................... 10.03
5. Washington St
........... ......... 13.05
(1) Colu-s Grove (12.0) vs. (2) Tmin · 6. Georgia .. .. .............................. 15.03
Calvert (1Q-2)
7. Notre Oame ..................... .. ........ 15.33
Region 23
8. lowa ........................................... 16.29
(4) Newari~; Cath. (8-4) vs. (2) Danville (1 1·
9. Southern Cal .............\ .............. 19.37
1)
tO. Virginia Tech ........................... 20.88
Region 24
(1) Maria S1,;n Merion Locai (1H) vs. (2) 11 . Michigan .. : ............................ 31.62
12. N.C. State ...... ................ .......... 32.40
(}Jia Hardin Northern (12..0)
13. Florida St. ................................. 33.75
14. Florida ,.................. .. ............... 36.95
Ohio High School Foo1ball
15. Kansas St .............
..:.38.20 .
FRIDAY'S RESULl'S
DIVISION II
Avon Lake 31 , E. Uverpt;IOI 14
Associated Press Top 25
Cots. Walnut Ridge 14, Cots. Brookhayen 13
Day. Chaminade-Julienne 26, Vandalia
The Top Twenty Five teams in The
Butler 2.5
.
Associated Press college football poll, with
Kings Mills Kings 36, Trenton Edgewood i 9 first-place votes in pa rentheses, records
Macedonia NOfdooia 16, Green 7
throug h Nov. 2. total points based on 25
Olmsted Fads 21 , Louisville 20
points
for a first place vote thro ugh one
Tot. St. Francis 14, Tol. Cent Cam. 7
point fo r a 25th place vote and previous
Wa rren Howland 23, Canfield 21
ranking:
DIVISION IV
w..l Points Pvs"
. Anohbold 16, Delta 13 ..,
1. Oklahoma (42) .. .... B-0 1,818
2
Girard 33, Cle. VASJ 12
Kenton 52, Pemberville Eastwood 14
2 . Miami (32) ......... ....B-0 1,804
I
Kettering Alter 35, Plain City Jonathan Alder
3.0hip St. .............. .. l 0-0 1,705
6
7
4_. Texas .... .......... ....... :a-1 1,564
7
Portsfl1QLJlh 35, Ironton 20
5. Wa shington St. ....... 8· 1 t .538
8
Portsmouth W,'27. CoshOCtOn 21
6. towa ....................... 9-1 1,501
9
Reading 41 , Coldwater 38
7.' Georgia .............. .. .. 8· 1 1.304
5
Youngs. Ursuline 56, E. Palestine 7 ·
8.. Virginia Tech .......... 8· 1 1,303
3
DIVISION VI •
9. Notre Dame ,.......... 8-1 I ,268
4
Cle. Cuyahoga Hts. 21, Lowellville 6
Columbus Grove 35, Sycamore Mohawk 23 iO. Southern Cal... ...... 6-2. 1.210
11
Danvile 35, Shadyside 7
11 . Afabarna ............. .. .7-2 1,1 13
12
Dola Hardin N. 35, Troy Chr. 0
12. Kansas St. ... ....... .. 7.·2
940 ' 14
_Maria
Stein
Marion Local
42, 13. Mich igan ............... .7·2 .
899
15

M:;::~~. 0Monroeville 7

Newark Cath. 17, Strasburg-Franklin 7
Tiffin Calvert 28, Cary-Rawson 14

W.Va. high school scores
Friday's AesuHS
Berkeley Springs 51 , Heritage, Va. 0
Bluefield 17, Richlands, Va. i4
Buffalo 28. Valley Fayette 18
Eas.t Hardy 26, Petersburg 22
Fairmont Senior 40, Philip Barbour 12
Gilmer County 59, Marsh Fork 6
Greenbrier East 41 , Jefferson 7
Greenbrier We ~ t 29, Meadow Bridge 0
Hurricane 28, Herbert Hoover 21, OT
Iaeger 43, Man 6
. James Monroe 51 , Mou nt View 6
John Marshall 26, Capital 21
Keyser 28, Graftori 17
':-4agnolia. 39, Ritch ie County 7
Matewan 50 , Mount Hope 18
Mooref1eld 47, Fayetfevllle 6
North Marion 33, Preston 0
Notre Dame 41 , Clay-Battelle 8
Paden City 65, Bishop Donahue o
Parkersbu rg Catholic 28, Madonna 0
Parkersburg South 49, Robert C. Byrd 0
Poca 21, Scott 14
Point Pleasant 22, Roane County 7
Princeton 13, Spring Valley 7
Tolsia 41, Chapmanville 6
Tucker County 20, Pendleton County 13
Tyler Consolidated 34 , Liberty Harrison 0
Valley Wetzel 26, Hundred 13
Wayne 36, Logan 30
Westside 42, Gllb9rt 12
Wheeling Central 24, Oak Glen 0
Williamson 46, Tug Valley 14
Wlrt County 40, Guyan Valley 20
Woodrow Wilson 7, Oak Hill 0

College Football
Bowl Championship Series
Through games of Nov. 2
1. 0klahoma ......... .. .........................2.04

112 "'~ ....,, o1 '"' "'"' ••~... a.nt,.n •• o.,,

"Your hUIIICUDIIIUinnllld"

10
19

16. LSU ............. .. .....:.. 6-2

647

17

17. Florida St. ............. 6·3
18. Colorado ............ ~ .. 6-3

561
486

18
13

19. Penn St. ..............6•3

468

20

20. Bowling Green ...... 8-0
437
21
21. Iowa 51... .... ·........... 7-~
372
22
22. Pittsburgh .............. 7·2
357
23. Florida ........ ... ........ 6·3
327
24. Colorado St ........... 8·2
307
24
25. Arizona St. ............ 7·3
155
16
Others.receiving votes: Maryland 135,
Tennessee 106, TCU 64, Aubu rn 61, Boise
St. 51, Minnesota 42, Boston College 28,
Marshall 10. UCLA 6, Georgia Tech 1

Pro Football
•

National Football League
AfC

w
Miami... ........... s
, ..

Buf1a.to ........... 5
N~w England ..4
N.Y. Jets ......... 3

East
L T Pet PF

PA
0 .625 200 167
4 0 .556 248 269
4 0 .500 206 165
5 · o 375 160 206

3

South
L T Pet PF PA
lndian&lt;!opolis .. ..4 4 0 500 160 167
Tennessee ..... ,4 4 0 500 183 212
Jacksonville .. ..3 5 0 .375 164 157
Houston ........ 2 6 0 .250 107 214
North
w L T Pet PF PA
Pittsburgh .... ,.. 5 3 0 .625 192 1~
Cleveland ..... ..4 5 0 .444 205 195
Baltimore ....... .3 5 0 .375 139 162
Cincinnati ..... .. 1 7 0 .125 113 214
West.
L T Pet PF PA
Denver ............ 6 2 0 .750 207 170
San Diego ...... 6 2 0 .750 11i6 163
Kansas City ... .4 4 0 .500 259 240

w

w

'w
Tampa Bay ...
New Orleans
Atl enta . .'.....
Carol1na

7

PA
1tB
113 132
155 o191
1 IS 155

PF

PA

203 109

2 0 .750 256 209
0 .625 187 136
3 5 0 .375 111 117

6
5

w

Prep Soccer
High school soccer tournament
sehl&lt;fule
CHAR LESTON. W.Va. {AP) - Pairings and
r~suit5 Jar the We5t Virginia higl school SOC·
c~r tournament Friday and Saturday al
Coonskin Park:
Boyt

3

North
L T Pet

7 I
3 '5
2 6
2 6

Green Bay ..
Detroit ...
Chicago
M1nnesota ...

Sa-l-

PF

221

0
0
0
0

PF

PA
164

.87q 227

375 158 220
250 152 199
.250 186 230

West
WLTPctPFPA

Friday

S.mltlnatl
No 5 Wheeling Park 3. No. 7 Morgantown 2

12on
No t WOC!drow Wilson 2, Huntington 1
{Shootout)

Saturctev
Champlon1hlp
No 5 Wheeling Park va. No. 1 Woodrow
Wilson. 11 a m.

6 2 0 750 203 164

Arizona ,..
. 4 4 0 ·.500 ISO 158
St. LOUIS .. ... ' 3 5 0 .375 166 172
Seat11e ......... 2 6 0 250 145 180
Sunday, Nov. 10
Houston at Tennessee, 1 p.m .
Detroit at Green Bay, 1 p.m
Atlanta at Pittsburgh. 1 p.m.
San Diego at St. Lows. 1 p.m
New Orleans at Camlina1 1 p.m.
Indianapolis at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Mtnnesota, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Balt iniore, 1 p.m.
Seattle at Arizona 4:05 p.m
Washington at Jacksonville. 4:05 p.m .
New England at.Chicago, 4:15 p.m.
Kansas City at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
Miami at N_Y Jets, 8:30p.m
Open: Buffal o, ,Dallas, Tampa Bay,
Cleveland
Monday, Nov. 11
Oakland at Denver. 9 p.m.

Glrlt
friday
Semfflnala
No. 1 Parkersburg South 5, No. 5 Martinsb.Jrg
0
No. 3 SiS500Ville 3, No. 8 Capita11

Saturday
Cha,nplon1hlp
No. 1 Parkersburg South vs.. Sissonville. 3

pm.

Transaciions
Major League Baseball
American League
BOSTO N REO SOX-Named Dan
Madsen, John Booher, Darryi Milne and Marc
Was1nger scouts_Reassigned amateur scout
Gary Rajsich to the t~am 's professional scout·
ing depanment.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX-NemeQ Brt.K:e

Kimm third base coach and Rafael Santana
·first base coach.
NEW YORK YANKEEs-Purchased the
contracts of RHP Jason Anderson and INF
Andy Phillips from Columbus of the IL. RHP
Regional girls vofleyDall pai"
Julio DePaula and LHP Danny Borrell from
COLU MBUS. Ohio (AP) - Championship
pairings from the girls stale high school vol· Norwich of the Eastern League and RHP
Chien-Ming Wang from Staten Island of the
leyball tournament: ·
New York-Penn teague.
At Wright State University
SEAITLE MARINEA~greed to terms
State Championships
w~h C Dan Wilson on a two-year contract.
All games SaturdaY ·
TORO'tHO BLUE JAYS-Signed OF Bruce
DIVISION I
Cln. Ursufine (25-3) vs. Gin. St. Ursula (28·1), Aven and AHP Josh Towers to minor league
7 p.m.
contracts.
DIVISION II
Natl'"'al L.oogue
Kettering Alter (25·3) vs. Millersburg W.
ATLAN TA BRAVE5-Ae·signed Leo
Holmes (28·0), 4 p.m.
~
Mizzone, pitching coach.
DIVISION Ill
SAN DIEGO PADREs-Named Devey
Huron (27·2) vs. Sidney LehmaO Cath. (23-6), Lopes ttrst base coach. Dave Magadan hitting
1:30 p.m.
coach and Tony Muser bench coach.
DIVISION IV
National Ba~ketball Association
Maria Stein Marion Local (26-2) vs_ Norwalk

Prep Volleyball

CHICAGO BULLs-Activated C Dalibor

St. Paul (28.0). 11 a.m.
Friday's Results
State Semifinals
Division I
Cin . St. Ursula del. Tal. St. Ursula del. 15-13.
15·5
.
Cin . Ursuline def. Mentor 15·1, 15· 1
Division II
"
Kt;lttering.Aiter def Norwalk 15-4, 15-1
Millersburg W. Holmes del. 15-12. 9-15, 15-9
Division Ill
Huron del. Zoarville Tuscarawas VaiL 15-13.

15-5
Sidney Lehman Cam". del. Girarc:l 9-1 5. 15·9,

15·9
Thursday's Results ' ·
State sE!mlflnats
Oi!JISion IV
Maria Stein Marion Local del. Cenlerburg 15·

Bagaric from the injured list. Placed F·C ·eone
Blount on the injured list. National Football
League
·
NFL- Fined New England DE Willie
McGinesl $7,500 for a rough tackle on Buffalo
OB Drew Bledsoe in a game on Nov. 3.

3
,

National Hocllay loogue
NHL-5uspend9d Buffalo. D Alexei Zhitnilo;
lor two games without pay, for a kneeing inci·
dent in a game on November 7:
LOS ANG ELES KING&amp;-Acti vated D
Aaron Miller lrom the Injured Nst. Placed LW
Mikko Eloriiflla on the injured list.

MONTREAL CANADIEN8-Assigned G
Mathieu Garon, D Ron Hainsey and C Mike
Ribeiro to Hamihon of the AHL
PHOENIX COYOTEs-Assigned. D Dan
Focht to Springtield-ol the AH L.

• 3400 V-ti Power

• Aluminum Whitis • Power Locks
• Power Mirrors

• Power Seat

• Power locks

• Power Windows • CruiM Control

• Power Windows

• Power Driver

&amp;·Paso. Sealo

• CD System
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Leather Seeling
• Power Windows

Alple~· Fairplaln

Buick

wnuntteu·

@

''"

t;;Z&gt; .Oidsmoblle.

_ . , . DIIMGMOe'

,At. 21 Church Street ·

Take 1-77 to Rip,tey FAIRPLAIN Interchange
(ex it 132) Turn N o~h on RL 2 1,
·
Dealership is 3 mites o n left

Owner: Mb Nottf1up
1

667

Ph1ladelphia .... 6
N.Y Giants ..... 4
Washington . 4
Dallas ... ..... 3

East
L T Pet
2 0 .750
4 0 .500
4 0 .500
6 0 333
Soulh
L T Pet
2 0 .778

sso~
CHIVIOLIT

111M THm 1 NtU Ptlflr, Jtmle Aclti'MOn, l.lny Plt!W, .101 Til lit, John a.unc1er1, John lenrwtt , "" lrlght

252 Upptr Rlvtr Road

795

15. Oregon ................. .7·2

w

17, 15·8, 15-7
Norwalk St Paul def. Old For1 15-1, 15-7

·Taxes. Tags , Title Fees extra. Rebate included in sale price ol new vehicle listed wtlere appl icable. "On approved credlt. .On selected models. Not responsible lor typograph ical errors.
Prices Good November 6th Through November 101h.
·
..

Norris

CH R.~ LEH.

14. N.C. Slale ... .......... .9· 1

0 500 226 188

• V-8 Power
• Automatic
• Chrome Package
· • CD Syetsm
• Air Conditioning
• Loc~lng Differential

wa oner awldi selection or over 225 new, used
lacterv program vehicles In stock at all umas.
In 11o1sa nnanclnator all credn tv1.es wllll
lnlai'8SI ratasaslow as 0% now· vallabla.
.~.

4

'1!!:1mfil -~ennnel • Page 83

• CD System
WIEqualizer
• Fold Flat Rear
Seats

No cost To Youl

IT'ni: ....Jtl

4

NFC

Region 22

YOUR DEALERSIIP FOR liFEI ·
Hare at Norris Northua Dodge, Inc.
we want to balhalaslplace vou
wlllavar buv another carl

GRAI Llll [•'&lt;il

Oakland

3. Miami ......................................... ,.6.01

Hls.&lt;9·3)

.

No Gimmicks!
No Daduc:tlblasl
No
Worrlasl
.
.

~nturllap

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, • Point Pleasant

800•
448
•0142
'i

.·-

-

•

�.

wv

!?aturday, November 9, 2002

- Sentinel - l\egt.i)ter

fOR SALE

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH •

Page 84 • 6iturbap 1tlmtt1·6mtlntl

~ribune

p

Auros

Ears

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Sa)a. 2001 Ford Mustang Coupe
1~)675-1506
2dr.
Powe•
steering/window/door locks,
II~ '''·l'tll{l \Ill I\
32,000 mites. Excellent
Condition.
$13,000.
1304)882-2159

CLASSIFIED

It:

It

of Corn for

94 F 150, 6 cytlnder, 5
speed, real gOOd truck ,
doesn't use oll, seen and
driven to be appreciated.
$3,500.00 firm 99:2-5532

. VA!ti&amp;
4-WDs

-

1998 GMC Jimmy 4x4,
65,000 miles. Leather, 4door,
air,
tilt,
cruise,
PWIPDL . aSking $10,000.
(740)388-9217

___r.ANS.WDs_&amp;___.~l eo

~.,r

In ·One Week With Us
REACH 'OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

ijtrfbune

TO PICJCe

Monday thru Friday

s:oO

a~.m.

l\egister

I \ 11'1 I)) \II\ I

\'\\01 "\{I \II \I"'

.,r__

PE_·KS(
• .•'N•A•IB_

_.I ro

"I In I&lt; I '

Why wait? Start meeting ..__ _ _ _ _ _ __
Ohio singles tonight, call to ll Auto body man- experi tree 1-800-7 66-2§23 e)(t enced in metal fabricating,
.1621 .
bodywork. welding &amp; painting. call Hill's Ciassic Cars
Res torations. 7am - 1Opm.
ANNiJUNCEMENfS
1740)949-2217
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
lor sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
ol inte.rest to: The Daily
Sentinel, PO 801( 729·20,
Pomeroy, Otiio 45769.

r.

GIVEA\~AY

In Next Day' • Paper

AVON I All Areasr To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304675- 1429.
Con tractor sales, tremendous opportunity for team
player looking tor a qualified
cand idate. to represent Nallonalty known products for
an establish9d co mpany,
sale expe rience requi red
submit" to Daily Sentinel ,
P.O. Box 729-29 Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769

fuondlay In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m.
Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • lnclud~ . A.frlce • Avoid Abbreviations
• Indude Phone ·Numbf!ir Ai'ld Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Ruri 7 O.ys

ro

IIELPWANrnl

110

r

UmANil

FOUNil

FOUN.D· puppy in Mercerville near Hannan Trace Elementary, few months old
(740)446·4314 leave message:

Founrt· Black &amp; Tan Puppy.
short hair Hound. On Owl
Hollow Ad. Catl (304)6757740
FOUND: Set of car keys
with remote and $TP keychain . lntersectipn of SA 7
&amp; 33_in Pomeroy. (740)3677689
LOST- $100 . REWAR O.
Safe return of White/ Black
Terrie r · Mi)( ,
Prospect
Church Road. Bidwell, OH
(740)44 1-0215

LOST· Ct1ild/ fami ly pet.
Yorkshire Terrie r. Black,
Gray &amp; Gold. Cherry Ridge/
Centerpoiht Road area. Did
have Red collar on. Please
call 1740) 379-2282

r

YARD SALE
YARilSAU:·

GALLIPOLL~ "
4367 State F;:l:oute 160, 7
tamily' yard sale . Stading
Friday, 8th &amp; Saturday, 9thbeside
Shinl') 's Tractor
Sales. Flea market dealers
welcome

1"'4

YARIJ SAu:-

PoMiliOY/MmllLE
•
Garage Sale: Sat 9th . 9·4,
33879 Flatwoods. Racine,
OH. turn behind old South
Points out Flatwoods Ad ..
follo w sign
--------Huge Inside Moving Sale
9 a.m. · 5 p.m Nov. 9,10.11
1124 College Ad . Syracuse.
First lett past the park. piCtures . rock'ers, home 1nteri·
or, baby item s, clothes. lur·
niture etc New XMas decora tions, new toys, Barbie
CollectiOn approx. 40 new
dolls, a lot of other new
merct1andise.
porcelain
dolls. dishes. pot and pans.
girls .~emas dresses size 414. household mic and

Help wanted caring for the
elderly, Oars! Group Home.
now paying minimum wage,
neW shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am5pm, 3pm- 11pm, 11pm7am, call 740·992·5023.

Insurance Inspectors
Field work in Gallipolis/ Gal·
lia Co. and Surrounding
Counties would required basic knowl edge of home c;;onstructlon measuring exterior
dimensions, observjng condition and ta~ing photos of
homeS. Independent contracto r/ part-time basis.
Must be detail-oriented.
nave reliable transportation
and 35mm OR Digital Camera. Computer with interhet
' access also helpful.

McClure's Restau rant now
hiring an 3 locations. lulr or
part-ti me, pick up application at location &amp; bring back
between
9:30am
&amp;
!O:OOam, Monday thru Saturday.
Medi Home Health agency,
Inc. seeking AN's (PT/FT)
and a West Virgi nia .. ticenSect Physical Therapist
for the Gallipolis, OH area.
We offer a competitive sei.ary. benelils package. AOlk ,
and fie)( time. Please sent
resume to 68150 Bayberry
·· Drive . Clairsville. OH 43950.
Alln : Greg Varner. Admiriistrator.

POLICIES: Ohio YaNey Publlahlng rea~a lh4t right to oadlt, reject, Of cancel any ad at any lima. Errora' muat ba reported on lhe flrat
Tribun.Sentlnei-Rtglster will be reeponelble tor no more than the coet of the apace occupied tty the e rror and only the flratlnnnion.
not be
any toea or expenae tt\at raeulta from the publication or omlealon of an advertiHment. Col'f'IICiion will ba made in lhe firat avalleble edition. • Box n~;:':,~~=·
areo always- confidential. • Currant rate card appliaa. • All reel aatata lldvartlaemante are aubjact to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • Thia 1
accepta only help wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda. Wa will nol knowingly accept any advertising In violation of the lsw.

r M~~S~\!El l~,r._..,;,;:iii~iiREmiiii.__.l r
10

FOR1iiiiSiii'iiAitiE-.rl1994 Schu lt 16x72 Mobile
··
Home Priced to sell Ouic~
$14,900,4 bedroom , 4 bath Call (740) 385-2434
home. Won't last! For lisl· - - - - - - - - ing call1-800·7~9-3001 Eld. 1996 Clayton 14x60 2br,
F144
glamour bath, all electric,
- - - - - - - ' " ' - - central air. Call (30~)6753 Bedroo m newly remod· 8180
eled, in Middleport, ca ll Tom 93 Holly Pa rk, 3 bedroom, 2
Anderson after 5 p.m.
bath, front porch &amp; mud·
992-3348
roo m, central hear &amp; air,
3 bedroom, 2 batt1, open $15,000 fi rm, se~lous inflOor plan, Ranch style, quired only. (740)256-6360

Security Guards full time
$6.50
per
hour. Call
1304)926-il64 1 M-F a11er
4pm. Ask fo r Keith EOE.

ApprO)( 1 mile from town on
SR 588. Approx 1500 sq.ft.,
$97,900.
1740)983-0730
1740)446-8161

mission is now accepting
appliee!lons for the pOsition
of on call pa rt-lime cook.
Application fo rms can be
obtained ln. the Mason
Co~nty Commission office
on the ground floor of the
courthouse between the
hours of 8:30 and 4:30 Monday - through Friday. The
M$son County Commfsslon
is an equal opportunity employer and does not dl&amp;crlminate due to race , sex, c
reed, religion , or national
origin. John D. Gerlach Ad·
ministrator, Mason County
Commission

The Mason County· Publi c
Service District will accept
resumes tor an operator position . Minimum requ irements ar!!l a valid Class 1
West Virginia Public Waier
Operator Certification and
Class II West Virginia
Was1ewate r Ce rtification .
Looking for a fun job? This Resumes will be accep1od
is it! Office Environment 50 by mail or in person un111
positions avalable 1-888.- December 2, 2002 at 101
Camden Avenue, Pt . Pleas974-JOBS
ant, WV 25550
Loo~ing for experienced
HVAC Technician/ Installer, Truck Drivers, Imm ediate
must haVe 2 or more yea rs hire, class A COL required,
experience In this field. This excellent pay, experience
is a full time position with req uired. Earn
up to
good salary._ If interested $t,OOO. per - k.Call 304call (740)441-1238, if no an- 875-400 5
swer, leave message.
LPN Positions at Middleton
Estates an ICF/MR facility.
Per Diem lor all shilts.
Please contact . Dorothy
Harper, AN at (740)4464814 or (740)446·81 45,

~r___

Ho~

URGENTLY
NEEDEDplasma donors, earn $50 to
$60 per week for 2 or 3
hours weekly. Call Bio Life
Plasma Service, 740·592·
665 1

~~

BUSOOS'l
~.---TR.iiiiiNINGiiiiiiiioo•rJ
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Closa To Home)
Cal l Today I 740-446·4367,
1-800-2 t 4-0452,

r:;~R.
eo._•oo
~-0~5-~
12~7·4•8•._
1180
WANTED
.
To Do
..__ _ _ _ _ _ __.

3 bed room, Garfield Avenue, GallipoliS, OH. Owner
financing , $49,000. $4,000
down,
$365
month .
1304)988:0664
4 bedroom. bouse with t4
1/2 acres mo"re or less,
$83,000 1740)742-9217

All reoal a•t• •dvertlalng
In this rMtVdpaper Is
su!Jtect to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
which maku It illegal to
advertla.. "any
preference; limltet_
lon or
diKrlmlnallon based on
race, color, religion, HX
familial statue or national
origin, or eny lnlentlon to
make any euch
preferenc8, limitation or
dl•crlmlnatlon."

Thl• newapapet will not
knowin,ly accept
advertlaamenta for rasl
81tlle which 11 In
violation of the law. Our
raadera 'are hereby
lnforme~ thai all
dwellhlgs advertlaed In
this newspaper are
avall•ble on an equal
opportunity. baHI.

Duplex Apartment . bu!lding,
rent one side and llffe in the
oth er. 3 bedrooms each
side, ~lth 1 112 baths, living
room, 'dining kitche n, front
end back po•ch. 1304)6752495 $300. Ref required
plus deposit.
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
tract, $500 down to qualified
buyers. Call 1740)446-3570
tor a quick sa le ....

Land home packages. No
payme nts white under construction.
Uttle
or no
down payment r.equired .
1740)446-321 8

iiiiiiiil
BuSINE'i.'i

0PPOR11JNITY

Merchandiser needed in
Gallia and Meigs Counties
tor National Company, starting pay $8.50 per hour,
Send resume to P.O. Bo)(
192, Evans, WV 25241

•

FUrnished Efficiencies, all
utilities paid, share .bath;
$135 month, 919 2nd Avenue. 1740)446-3945

It

Carolina Antique &amp; Craf1
Mall 312 6th. St. Pl. Pleasant, WV. Antique &amp; Craft
Vendors Welcome.

SUPI'IJFS

Block, brido;, sewe r pipes; •• .
windows, lintels, etc. Claude.
Winters , Rio Grande, OH
Call 740-245-5121 .
'•

r == 1.r....~iiiioiiiiiii

t

n
.
o

-------,----

Ref. No Pets.
2749

(304)675-

3br. House located in Ma·

r

------,J

12

you

f'lnd
In the

are •••

AUCTION

AUCTION

START AT 6:30

IHOME WILL BE soLo AT 12:oo NOoN I
Beautiful 3 BR home w/kitchen, lii1lin(ll
room; bathroom, garage &amp; breezeway
size basement w/central air. Sets on co1nerl
lot Being lot No. 25 and the easterly
hal_! of Lot No. 26 as shown and d.~~~~~~~:~l
on the plat of Victory Heights A
Plat Book No. 2 Page 7 and Deed I:IO•OKI
302 Page 495.
For viewing of property call 304-·77:J-544Zl
or 304·773-5785.

unique exhibits coming to Mobile.
From July 2 to January 5, 2003,
gaze into the canva ses of
300 Years of American Art -

others. COOK
1740)448-0103

FURNITURE
3 pc. walnut BR suite, nice 4 pc. water
BR suite, poster bed, chest. mah. drop
table. French style China Cabinet, 5 ·
oak kinel set, 1950's chrome dlnet set,
hall tree, Queen Ann rocker &amp; side '"',~j~;l
mah. desk &amp; chair, mah . bock case, c
TV, tables, matching pair of brown ~a··..- 1
Boy recliners, table top Victrola nee1dsl
repaired , mah. coffee table, necadiE!pointl
stool, 4 drawer file cabinet, ~~~~~i~;~~~eJI
Microwave, apt size refrigerator,
Queen Washer, Whli1pool dryer and more.

American Accents, featuring
the Rockefeller Collection,

1997 Dodge P.U. SLT pack·
age, $7500; 1 996 Ford
ranger, Ex. Cab, $4500;
1998 ford F-150, $5200;
1995 Mazda Ex Cab,
$2900;: 1993 Chevy S-10
I'U., $2000; 1999 Dodge
Caravan,
$4000;
1997 ·
Dodge Caravan, $3200;
1993 Plymouth Voyager,
$1400; 1998 Ford Wlnds1ar
van , $2500. B&amp;D Auto
Sales,
HWY
180N,
1740)446-8885

'

with paintings by Winslow
Homer and Georgia O'Keeffe,

•

just to name a few.

Along with the American works,
we will pay tribute to our French

GLASSWARE
Fire King mixing bowls wllulips , red &amp; whitel
Fenton, Hobnail bowl, Ruby glass. Blenko•.l
Deprassion, Beautiful plates, milk glass,
meat platters, sev. flo blue saucers &amp; more.

founders from September 6 to

COLLEOCTIBLES &amp; MISC.
Double wedding ring quilt &amp; others,
mirrors, sev. lamps, linens,
French Horn, Cornet Horn dated
Banquet lamp, sm. acordian
Germany, pictures, hooked
Dortalble sewing machine, w,og~~~r~~~~~~~
I bcJard,, cookware, Christmas
records, camera, baskets, sev. DOC&gt;KS·
Civil war- Engineer's &amp; more, Shop
swing, glider &amp; more.

Fashion at the new Mobile

HELP WANTED

collection covers the evolution
of French art and fashion with
works by such notable artists as

LAWN TRACTOR
Nics Yardman 20 h.p 46% cut hy1jrostaticl
tractor.

fine art is going South in Mobile.

NOTE: Don 't miss
this beautifui home

Come join us!

•

Cali today and start earning
money for the holidays!

•

Auctlorl Conducted bll:

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON #66
713-5785 OR 713-544"7
EXECUTRIX: FLORANCE LOUE
Terms Cash o(Check with 10.

1-877-463-6247
ext. 2455
or stop by our office:
242 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

1-800-5-mobile
www.mobile.org

Terms on real estate: 10% down non
refundable daY of auction, balance
due in 30 daY or at closini •.Real
estate beine sold as is.

BULLETIN BOARD
VFW Post 4464
Veteran's Day Activities at
Gallipolis VFW Post 4464
will start following the
parade &amp; ceremony in the
city park. If you are a dis·
abled veteran who needs
transportation to attend call
the Post at 445:4464 &amp;
we will transport.

.._,....,;-.iiiiiiiiiiiil-ol',
1939 Ford 9n tractor goo(j
h
d
PTC!I
s ape runs goo , new ·
shaft, Asking $1400., (740)
985-3673
··,
..1

Friday, November 15th

Woods 10' mOwer, hydra u~ ~
1ype, $2600, (740)8~

Scenic Hills is having

'

a Craft Bazaar and

LIVFSIOCK

Hot

Dog

9 am

15 year old Tennessee
W'atker gelding &amp; 2 saddle!~;
21 morth old Toy poodle·.
male, completely hoUsebro
ken , S150. (740)245-1217 .'

Sale from
to

3 pm

Community Welcome!

Congratulations Masori County
Golden Eagles'
TSYFL Turf Bowl Champions
You are #1
Way to go #95 Jacob Pillow
.

VFW Post 4464
Veteran's Day Dance
Saturday 8 pm til midnight
Nov. 9
Members· Guests
&amp; Public Welcome
Admission $5.00 at the door
Band: Crazy County
with Mr. Bill Call

Sudden Impact
Friday • Saturday

8 pm

-12 pm

-

•

ah

70 Head of Sheep, sale
or few, Cordell breed (74:0)
742·1 315 W.'(J. Harmon

'

I

I

PPHS Girls Fast Pitch
Fundraiser Spaghetti Dinner
. Farm Museum Pt. Pl.
Sun. Nov. 10 (1 :00 ·4:00pm)
$5.00 .
(Spaghetti, roll, slaw, drink,
dessert)
4 yrs. and younger free

She'll soon be lilly less ten,
Believes getting old's sin,
She still loves the mall,
Says shopping's a ball
Who's this?
Lana M. Grimm
Happy 1Birthday 11l9/0~

a

Slug Shoot

Ariel
Cultural and Performing
Arts Centre
Theatre is currently seeking ...
• Executive Director
AriBI

• Full time, 40·h~ur per week

Pomeroy Eagles Club

1

.

WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. loc81 references furnished. EstabOshed 1975.
Cal l 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Celebration, we have two very

We offer a $500 sign,on bonus,
up to $7/hour, paid training, paid
holidays, and paid vacations.
We also offer complete health
benefits and a 401-k pian.

F.Qu1Jli\.1F1'&lt;ir

r

Residential or commercial
wiring, new service or repairs. Master Licensed electrkian. Ridenour Electrical,
WV000306 , 304-675-1186.

Renoir and Cezanne.

l!,' l

son , WV. $495. + Utilities.
rooiT,l , dining room kitchen .
AN"IlQU~
Waterline sPecial: 3/4 2ho
No Pets. (304)773-588 1
PSI $21 .00 Per 100: 1" 200
$300. month. Ref &amp;' deposit ~-. .
Rw&amp;
·
5 rooms 8. bath, 50 Olive St. required. (304)675·2495
GRAIN
.
.
.
Buy
or
~II
.
~!Veri
ne
Anti·
PSI
$35
.00.
Per
100;
All
$325 mo. 1740)446-3945
EffiCiency apartment. fvr-\. q~ea· 1124 East Main on Brass Compression Fittings
1
For Rent 6 room furnished nished, $400 all uth1t1es in- ... S~
4 E. Pomeroy, 7,40_ .In Stock.
601b Square bales. alfalf8.
house in Mason. Contrac· eluded .
$100
depos1t, 992 _2526 _ Russ Moore. RON EVANS ENTERPRIS· 2nd &amp; 3rd · culling. Call
tors wel&lt;;ome (304)773- (740)367·061 1 alter 6:00 on owner.
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1·800· 1740)245-5869
5764
weekdays .
·
53'7-9528

r~1

RUTI..AHD, OHIO
GUARANTEED $60
A GAME, OVER 80
PEOPLE$80A
GAME, OVER 99
PEOPLE,
$99.99AGttME!
STARBURST
$1 SOO.OOAHD
. COVERALL
MON&amp;WED
DOORS OPEN AT
4:30GAMES

As part of our Tricenteimial

WE CAN HELP!

··,

9 Registered Pain t Horses.
Great Stock! Good Natur~!
6 months lo 6 year old.
(Business phone) (740)367,7237
·,

.

Fine art is going South.

Do you have enough money?

:I

FORRENI'

675-1333
446-2342
.992-2155

~$7~,000=~·1~740=)7~42~·=28:9:7-~lo=r~$=9~,700=.1=304=)n:3-~5268=---------2~~~~~~~~--:_----,

The Holidays are Coming.

..
I

FARM

.

2003 883 Custom Harley
Oavtdsofl wltl'l 100 miles.
Many Extraa, Dealership lnstalled. EKcellent condition.
$13,200 Invested. Must sell

6323.

AMERICAN
LEGION POST 467

Muse!lm of' Art. This unique

r

riU.

liOTORS

HELP WANTED

r

No Pets, 1 has a shower, 1
has a tub. Security Depos it Some sta't at $95. Skaggs NEW ·AND USED STEEl
Required . $275. Month. Appliances, 76 Vine St.,
1304)675-1365
S1eel Bea ms, Pipe Rebar
1740 )446 _7398
For Concrete. Angle, Chan2bf. Apa rtmenl at Gallipolis :-:-:-----=----:---,-- nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Ferry. (304)675-2548
For Drains, Driveways &amp;
·
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
Applications being taken for 1740)446-7444 1-877-830- Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Metvery nice 2 bedroom in 9162. Free Estimates, Easy als Open Monday, Tuesday,
country setting yet close to financing. 90 days same as Wednesday &amp; Friday, Samtown. Washer, Dryer, Stove, cash . VisaJ Master Card. 4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
Sa turday
&amp;
Sunday.
Frig, Dishwasher provided. Drive- a~ little save alot.
1740)446-7300
La rge Kitchen . Lots ot ctose1 space. Total electric with Used furn iture store,. 130
New Gas ln ter-Therm FurCentra l NC. Garbage pick- Bulaville Pike. We sell matnace, 77,000 BTU., New
up and water provided. Ten- tresses, bunk beds, dressGas Water heater 32,000
ant pays electric. No pets. ers, couches. appllflnces.
BTU., 40gal., New Cook
Norf'SQ10ke_rs on ly. $400 _de- much more. Grave menu·
Stove GE Gas. used fuel oil
Posit. ~50
mon th , menls. 1740)446-4782 Galgun Furnace. ' \304)675I740)446-958Sor 1740)446- lipolis, OH.
3000 Leave message.
2205 1743
Cen tenary
Road, Gallipolis. Ask tor V~- Whirlpool washer, S95; Ken - New ln fan1 swing, Pack and
more dryer, $95: Refrigera- Play walker, call (740)446ginia.
tor. $95: electric range. $95: 7216 after 6pm.
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Upright Freezer.$125: CaloMENTS AT BUDGET PRIri.c gas rang e, very nice, Rai nbow Sweeper/ AttachCES AT JACKSON ES$195; Whirlpool relrigerator, ments, 5 years old, Pd.
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive
like new, almond, $350 ; $1400 new, $400 OBO.
from $297 to $383. Walk to
Whirlpool washer/ dryer se t, J7.40)367-0239 after 4pm .
shop &amp; movies. Call 740$275; Solid wood table with
446·2568. Equal · Housing
chairs, $125; S~aggs App li· Upright KeiVInator Freezer
Opportunity.
ances, 76 Vine Street. older ·model. 18.2 Cubic
Foot. $80. 1304)895-3577
Duplex Apt. 3bo. 1 1/2 ba1h. (740)446-7398
Frontlb~ck porch, livi ng
(304)6756968

Am's and

Call

BINGO

Style: 300 Years of Art and

4;

8_
90
Ranges, an d Refrigerators, _17_4_0_14~4-5-_3_
_·_ __,_

1999 Uncoln Towncar,. Slgnalure Series. CD/ Cassene. leather, Jo.aded, one
owner. showroom clean,
$15.700. Firm, I H0)4481000. Leave me88age.

(304)675-8933
1996 Ford Windstar wan,
auto. air, rear air~ bucket
seats, excellent condition~
beautiful wan •• one owner,

Subscribe today!

· ANNOUNCEMENTS

January 5 with Picturing French-

12:

rw

1996 $-10 Eldended Cab,
8SK, $4, 292 : 1997 Ranger
XlT,
automate,
71 K,
$4295; 1"986 Silverado, 4x4,
new Goodwrench, 350,
loaded, $3995. 15 ca•s
in stock· Gaveller, Grand

.I ~ ~~:)2~~.

Bike. Like New. '$ 1•00.

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

1-------

Glide Cla6Sic, excellent con- nance- Painting, vinyl sld·
dition, will take pay off. ino. carpentry, doors, win1740)682-n83
dows. baths, mobtle home
repair and more. For free
estimate call Chat, 740-992· ·

·-----'-!'

2002 Jeep Llberly. LTD.
17,000 miles. mint, lea1her.
CD. any exlras, $19,500. 91 Ranger 4x4, 5-speed,
(~40)245-5978 leave mes- Ext Cab, $2200. 1740)256sage.
9140

I

~·--------"

auto, amlfm radio, CD playfr, 'power $unroof, tinted
windows. new brakes &amp;
flres; one owner, inlerior &amp;
ext&amp;rior In excellen1 condilion, $e,OOO, call (740)9924044 after 4pm
-

2000 Goo Melro, $2500;
2001
Chevy
Cavalier,
$4500; 97 Dodge SJraiua,
$3200; .97 Mus1ang · GT,
$7900: 96 · Goo Me1ro
$1200: 95 Toyota Tercel,
$2200; B&amp;D Aulo Sales,
HWY 160N. (740)446-6885

.......
·

r

2 story, 4 bedroOm house, 3
car garage, living room,
famil y roam , and extras,
$550 a month, $250 deposIt. 1 year lease. pets alaid.
Two bedroom co«age style (7 40)388-8699
home, finished upstairs, full
basement, well maintained 3 ,bedroom house for rent,
plus iO acres of ground, 47 Chillicothe · Road, $400
road
frontage,
call pe r month, $400 deposit.
(740)949-8900
Canny Refe rences required . Day
(740)256-6456;
Evening
Brown tor appointment
1740)256-1530
Wanted! Good credit custo mers to . purcha.s:e new 3 bedroom house . . no pets.
home w/land . $0 down to $265 month, $125 deposit",
qualified customers. 1-5 1740)448-3617
acre
trac ts
avail·able. 3br. house 2609 Lincoln
1740)446-3093
Ave . $425. mon1h + deposit.

L.__

Furnished 3 rooms + balh,
upsta irs, clean, no pets.
Reference &amp; deposit requi!ed.l740)446-1519

ANTIQUFS

BUR.DING

i

HOUSES

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that
you do business with people
you know; and NOT to send
money througt1 the mall until
MGR Personal for local fast you have 1nvest1gated the
tood operation. 2 years food offering .
'·
service e)(perlence &amp; good
Pl«lflo:ss!ONAL
people skills. Must be a self
starter. Very goOd starting
SERVI!Ei
wage s. Pait;l vacation and
other benefits. insurance A Country Craftsman FurniMOBILE ...OMES
available.
Send
resume
to
lure
stripping
,
R.
e
linishing
,;FU,;,;;;RiiSiiALE
iiiiii,_.,J
WAr&gt;'llJJ
CLA 566, c/o Gallipolis D ~;~i­ Repairs, Cani ng &amp; Reup·
TO JIUY
ly Tribune, P.O. • Box 469, hotstery. Also ln sur~nce Es- 12 used 1:10mes under
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
timates, .,i,..k-up &amp; Delivery $3,000. Will help with delivAb solute Top Dolla r U.S.
Available. (304)'743-1 100 • ery. Call Harold, 740-385OWNER OPERATORS
S1lver, Gold Coins. Proof9948.
WANT EO
sets ,
Diamonds .
Gold
' TRUCK DRIVERS
TURNED DOWN ON ,
Rings.
U.S. Currency. 1973 Greenbriar 12X65 MoSOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? bile Home. l2Xl6 room
M.T.S. Coin St1op ." 151 Sec· Longhaul Teams Welcome.
ond Avenue ~ Gallipolis. 740- Call (304)675-4005
No Fee Unless We Win!
built on, must be moved
Po1nt Serv1ce XPress
1-888-582-3345
446-2842,
$3000 (740) 985-3673

APAKIMENI'S
FOR RENT

2 Female Full Blood S ea~
3/4 size Violin, made in gles, all shots, $100 ,each O'P'
Gracious living. 1 and 2 Czechoslovakia, ·$;50; 1 $175 for both . (740)245-.
bedroom aparlments at Vii· Kerosun h6ater, like new, 51 17
lage Manor and Riverside $ 100. (740)446-D893
3 female AKC Lab pu~. i
Apartments in Middlepo rt.
MOBll.E Ho•·~
1
From $278-$348. Call 74Q- BURN Fat, BLOCK Crav· Chocolate, 1 black $150; '2
MUST SELL BY THE END
.
FOR ·n~.::~
OF OCTOBER!
COLE'S
"""'
•
992-5064. Equal Housing ings, and BOOST ·Energy bunnies, $5 each. (740)441·
MOBIL E HOME, Alh sns,
.. )'
Like You Have Never Ex· 0931
OppOrtunities.
·
Ohio (740) 592·1972, on oc."· 14x70 2 bedro om, nice ,
p~rienced .
AKC Bassett Hound PupWEIGHT· LOSS
ca$10n we have a · display clean, near Clay School. · Now Taking Applicationspies
6wks old. Trl color.
REVOLUTION
home that doesn't sell. We Water and trash InclUded. 35 West 2 Bedroom Town·
$200. 1304)576-2126
have one such home now. No pe\s, $350 month + house Apartments, Includes New produc1 launch OctoNew 16 X 80 three bed~ depos it. (740)256-1664
Wate r
Sewage, Trash, be r 23, 2002. Call Tracy at AKC Reg . Golden Retriever
puppy, 9 wks old, 1s.,.
room, 2 Bath home .at a
$350/Mo., 740-446-0008:
1740)441 -1982
shorts
&amp; wormed 992· 7651..
used home price come see 2 bed room trailer, $250
Lynr or Ernie today and month. $100 deposit. No
Firewood, $3 5 Pickup load. AKC registered GEfrma ~
check out your savin gs. pets, on Addi son Pike. Twin Rivers Tower: ro·r .efd· sp'it &amp; delivered. (740)367- Sheppard pups, . solid blac~;
Remember, we must sell by {740)367-0102
erly/ disabled.
7631 (740) 367-7759.
&amp; black and brown $200.00•
the end ol October!
·
~w accepting ap~lications Good ed .M h .
call 992·3972 after 5 p.m. o4
1lu c a1r, go00
2 bedroom, all electric, AC, for 1 br, all utilitieS paid
us
,1
Must sell! O"'ner moved, very nice, in Gallipolis. HUD "·asslsled, car peted working condition. 1 year
· -;.;
2001 Oakwood 14x70, 3BR, {740)44&amp;2003 qr (740)446- apartment. rent is 30'¥o _?f · o~_;_ ~sed Queen size~!!- Baby dwarf r~it,s for~
2 battr.' ·all appliances. 1409
your adjusted' Income "can tl'fij dt. (7"40)446-UOSt . ,'( r4QJ~o.41,:.i1Dilnytfd)e.... ;,.,.
washer &amp; dryer included,
304 675 6679 b 1
6
·
--'"
central air with deck, Make 3 bedroom trailer- all alece ween • Grubb's PlanO- Tuning &amp; Beagles, 2 years old, g~
down payment &amp; take over tric. water paid. $350' 4:30pm wae~days. E!;iO
Repairs. Problems? Need rabbit . runni ng
dogs~
$370 month mortage pay~ month,
$100
deposit. Unfurnished apartment also Tuned? Call The Piano Dr. . (740)441 -1440
(
ments. (216)35 1-7086
( 740 )~ 67~ 0611 atter- 6 :00 on small trailer, close to gro- 740·446-4525
Border Collie Puppies, $10d•
_ _.:_____: - - - - - - eery and downtown Gallipo·
arents work cattle. mot he•.
New 2003 14 wide . Only -- Hotpoint range $35: Brown p
..J'
$ 79-9 down and only Beauti ful River View Ideal lis. Referen ce &amp; depos it. Sleeper soiB, $95 ; Singer also clears Canadian GeeSt~:
For 1 Or 2 People Reler. n 1740)446 -1158
(740)367-7287
',
$159.45. Call Nikki, 740·
Portable S~wing machine,
cas. D9posit. No Pels, Fo~$3
k
d.
·
~
t
385 _7671 .
5; 0a
SPACE
tn mg 1a~.~~e, wo
ter Trai ler Park, '740·44 1·
FOR n~·-.
extensions and 6 chairs,
New Mobile Home only Oi81.
nr.J"U
$14,995, all singlewides on ~:::::---:------.,
$275; Kerose ne hea ters,
APAKJ"•·"'rs
h
d
clearance, save I ousan s,
1•.n:.~...
Trailer space for rent $125 $1 5 each or 21$25. Apple
'
.· .
FOR RENT
compu ter/ monitor/ key- Full stock Fiest puppies,
I
S I
I
Duper
a es
nc .
,
per month, plus deposit board! over a dozen CO weeks old, variety of colors;'
(740)753-1322, At 33 south ·
Priest's Trailer Park. Water programs, $ 125 ; Portable
good squirrel stock, $125:
of Nelsonville
1 and 2 bed room apart- Paid. Call (740)446-3644
basketball poleJ · net, $35. each: Full stock Miniature.
Nice lots available for up to· ~en~s. fu rnis~ed and un:~r··
Call (740)367-0667
. -~~~~"":"-,
Rat Terrier puppies,
16xeo mobile home s, $ 115 n1shed, security deposlt.:.i'e· '· .mi
months old, shots, wormed:•
1 740 -992
water included, (740)992- qu Ired •
pes,
. HOUSEHOLD
JET
2167
2218.
.
_.1
.
GooDs
AERATION MOTORS . $150 each: German Sh~p)
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In , herd puppie s. CKC reg 1 s~
~·
· 11 bedroom apartment, stove
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1 _ te red females, 12 weeks;
_ _
.,
AND BUDJ&gt;INGS
&amp; retrigerator Included. 8 foot French Provin cial
old, shots. wormed , $22~
800 537 9528
-• ~ 740}245-5859
Couch, Lt Floral, $375.
eact1. Can meet pari way.,
1606)796-2814
Building for sale with or 1 Bedroom Apartments 1740)446-7124.
Lexington Oak Lofl Beds Rat/ Fo&gt;e Terrier puppies, j '
without stock at 62 Olive Starting at $289/mo. WashStreet.
Gallipolis,
OH er/ Dryer Hookup, Stove Electric water tank, so gal- with 2-shelfs, pull-out desk, mBios left. $50 each.
45631. (740)446-3159
and Refrig eralor. (740)44 i - lon •. $75; Warm Morning &amp; bu lletin board built in . (740)379-25 15 l740) 645i ·
Stove, $300; Wall furnace, Twin bed under loft bed.
151 9.
2070
$800; Metal clothes cabl- Both mattresses, bunki e
Office space or other pur.bedroom unfUrRi shed · nette, $15: Roll-away bed boards, mattress pads .in· Rottweiler pups 12 weeks ·l
pose, locat8d at 28 Cedar
S1reet 1740)256-6861
apartment. Probable client. with mattress, $20; Electric eluded. $350. E)(cellent male-$150. 2-lemales $2Dq. .(1
(304)675-1550
'
box, wire &amp; meter, $100; 25 Condition. (304)675-6787 Had shots and wo rm e:~.
Tails and dew claws dock~
2 bedroom apartment for cabinets, 200 sheet panel- after 6pm
rQnt In Syracuse, $200
_. de· i)lg; bath tub, $20; Com- - - - - - - - - - good tempered , l arQ~
'
· k • Model i938 Turkish t.tausar breed . Ask lor Ginge11.
posit.
$350 pe r month rent. mode, S20 • Dou ble 1ub Sin
yellow
so·d,·ng Bmm Rifle with Free Bayo- (304)773-5873. leave ·a
112 acre lot on Tycoon Lake
$20 .
lncludes water, sewe r &amp;
·
·
nel an d . Sca.h.bard free 70 message.
w/12x60Trailer$16,500.00
(740)4411 594
uash. l740)378 -6111
roundS ~""'rOO. $100. only
now $13,500. 00
MUSICAL
2
bedroom
apartment
in
For
Sale:
Re
con
ditioned
4
left.
L Dealer Call
1740) 247-1100
lNSrnUMF.Nili
Gallipolis. Air washer, &amp; dry· washers. dry~rs an d relrlg- . (304 )675-2352
Prime lots for sale on State er hook·up, no pets, waler erators. Thompsons Applf- - - - - - - - - Route 554· 1 mile from Rio paid, $350/mo. plus deposit. ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- Navy blue sofa &amp; chair, Bundy Trom bone, Cas&amp;.
good
~ondition,
$100. Music
Grande.
1740)388-0173 Call after 6pm, (740)446- nue, (304)675-7388:
stand',
$12.5,.
4043 (740)339-3083
1740)949-4411
1740)367-7187
1740)367-0667
Good Used Appliances, Re- - ' - - - - - - - -I \1{\1...,11'1'111"'
2-Sma!l fu rnished· apts All conditioned and Guaran- New 18 speed Roadmaster
,\1 1\I S I IHI,
utilities paid except Electric. teed . Washers,
Dryers, MTN- Sports-X Bike- 26n

New 2000 sq It home, ~0
minutes from
Hospital.
Complete above ground
poo l with po rch , driveway
and garage foundation. Will pay top dollar for prime
be)ow
appraisal. land : New home builder.
Price
(740)446-3384.
(740)446-3093
Ranch Style Home 3 BR 1.5
I{ I '\ I \ I "
Bath 122 Mabeline Drive,
Gallipolis $69 ,900.00 Seri·
oua Inquiry Only. 446-7825

SAV E $5."000, Buy From
Georges Portable Sawmill, Owner, 3 bedroom. 2 baths,
don't haul your logs to tt1e large Ranch house, 2 car
garage, 1/2 acre lot. price,
$83.0 00 Call 1740)446·4737 after 5pm for appoint ment .
1

For Rent or Sale.Oider
house ready to move into, 2
or 3 bedrooms, large livinQroom, dining rm , kitchen ,
bath , front and back porch .
(304)675-8806
,-:--,--,---:--Very nice home for rent,
quiet neighbortlood, 7 room,
2 br·· $425 · no pels • no
smoki ng, located at 829
High St ., Middleport, call
(740)992-5094

r

•

79
l't1orle 1740)446-:.. efter 1304)575-3088
spm.
~-:~::-:-::---'-1981 ro•d F-250 Exptorsr,
1993 Toyota Paseo, silver, V-8, automatic, 90.000 acS.speed, CD player, sun- tual miNts, $1500. (740)446rool, reduced to $3,000. 4_053:.:.::__ _ _ _ _ __
Call any11me. 1740)4410021
1984 Chevy C1 0 pickup,
auto, 6 cyl. $750. 1304)6751996 Chevy Lumina. 4dr. 6693
wnite .• 1993 Chevy Corsica ::.::c:__ _ _ _ __
8).000 miles. 4d•. (304)675- 1988 Ford F-150 p-up, good
4014
shape, runs good, call
1740)985-3372 ~M~nings.
1997 Silver, Ford Escort.
Auto, A/C, Cruise. 57,000 1990 Dodge Truck. 2WD,
miles. $5,000. (304)675- auto, runs good, $1300
3122 anytime.
080. Call atter 1Opm,
1998 Pontiac Sun1ire, whtte, I 7 40)256- 1875

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
· Ads Must' Be Prepaid

All Display·: 12 Noon 2
Bullin'ess Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thur•day for SundaY•

Respiratory Therapist need-ed for a fast grow1ng medl·
cal ·equipment co. in our
Gallipolis, OH store . Send
resum·e to
Medi-Home
care, P.O. Box 987, Gallipolis, OH 45631 AHn : John
Kearns or stop by Medi Home Care to gel an appli·
430 Secon d A venue.
cat1on,
Gallipolis,
OH · 45631,
(740)446-3880

Super 8 Motel is seeking an
intelligent, dependable, enBlack Lab Chow Mixed.
erg et!C Individual tor the P.Dmale, i-1 /2 year old.
sltlon .of desk clerk. Com(740)446-3890
puter skills a plus but we will
1rain. NO PHONE CALLS
Financial Freedom. InterPLEASE . Must apply in perFree . to good hOme- male national Company growing
German Shephard, ·3 years rapidly. Internet work frOm son.
old (740)245-5997
home. PTIFT positions. ·F~It =
"':--:-:---:--:--::-training . 1-888-202-632.1
The Mason County ComSix year old. white female.
spayed, indoors cat with an
automatic Iitle( box. Ideal for
older person. (304)6753278

Display Ads

1:00 p . m.

Monday- Friday for Insertion

to s:oo p.m.

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

In ~ Column :

.·I

s

Sentinel

word Ads ·
Dally

TRucKs
FORSAIE

1990 Red Chevy Geo ..._
Storm, AJC, $800. (740)446- 1979 Ford F-250 4 wh8el
4226
•
drive. $2,200. 4-wheeler
Lumina 1999 Honda 400 Ex.
1992 Chevrolet
EUro, 4.door sedano, 1,500 _ $3,200.
{304)576-4087

Your ·Ad, {740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333
.,....c_a_I_I_T_o_d_a_y_._··__o_r_F'"ax. ro (740) 446·3illoroa,__ _ _o_rF. .:. ax:.:. l':. :.o. :.&lt;7. . :4:.:.0l. :.9 :.:2_·2_15_7~1 1 Or Fax To.(304) 675-5234

Offee !loW"~

i

new parts, $500. (740)388g. 111740)387-7830

~

~!AtO~

96 Harley Davidson Electra C&amp;C General Home Mainte-

85 Ford Crown Victorian Ford 1983 small bus, 1984
2002 Dodge Neon , 62"00 St . 100.00 for best offerl
Chevy small bus, good condition,runs good, stale in~ :-:-::--:::::--:-:----t980·90's Cars/ Truck&amp; miles, sunroof. auto, jilr, tilt, 992-5532
spectad 992-erSB
Polarla 500 Sportsman,
(1om $500. PQIM:e Impounds CO, needs liHie body work,
$4500 080. 1740)256-1233
·, ~;9-~·, ~:. ~::1g 1:800M&lt;mJRCYCJR;
1i•es,
2002 Electra Glide Classic
1990 Ford Taurus, runs $18,000.00 949-3004
-'-·". lots of new paris,
198!) Chevy Silverado 4x4 2000 Honda .WO EX, runs lrl'ljllg--~lfoME:":"---_,
~
73 VW Beetle, rebuih en- Bl
-1on
needs transmission, $400,
azer, ~
~~"""" conuu
runs greal, looks grea11 $3,000.
IMfRoVEIIENIS
gina, newer parts through- ..........-l
calls ana '"""'
,.
""""· no
r ur ···
17,40)992-2595
out, call for details, $3500 or mileage over
100,000, 1740)« 1-1716
BASEMENT
1990 Geo Siorm, lo1S 01 OBO, (740)590-2496
$4000, 1740)742-2307
2001 Honea CABO l)ir1

CaUL. County. OH

r

10

1

~P 1ttmttl-6mtintl• Page 85

• Requires an outgoing and professional individual with excellent oral

an'd written communication skills and,

good compuler skills.
• Will work with Boarq on fund raising
and grant writing
• Responsible for daily operations,
such as marketing. volunteer coordi·
nation, concert producllon/preparalion
Bachelor's degree preferred and/or 3·
5 years experience wilh non-profit
organization. Preferably in lhe arts.

Gallia Co. Gun Club

Sunday
November 1Oth
12 pm- ??
Trap Shooting
will follow
Special Buckshot Macs Tires LT
285·75·16 102.61
Call for price on your size
J&amp;S Tires
Apple Grove WV
576·2635

Send resume and salary requirements
10 P.O.Box 424 Gallipolis, OH 45631

Special Singing
Sun. Nov. 10
GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE
Neal Rd. Pt. Pleasant
Feaiurlng Kings Family

PPHS Boys Baskeiball
Boosters Meeting
Tuesday, Nov. 12
at 5:30pm
.PPHS Cafet_Eiria

•

40 Pound Snapper
RIVERBEND MARINA
Friday &amp; Saturday $2.00 cover
NASCAR PARTY
Sunday $10.00 Spaghetti, Grallc
Bread, Fountain or draft
Door prizes

Fresh Holiday Melting
Chocolates
Coconut, Heath,
Peppermint Crunch
PAINT PLUS

'

For More Info~ .. 446·2342 • 992·2156 • 675·1333
I

1st Official
MOTHMAN FESTIVAL
Sponsored by downtown merchan1s
Saturday, Nov. 16th
Downtown Point Pleasant
· • Exclusive MOTHMAN exhibit
fealuring movie props, rare
co llectables and morel
.• Games/Activities/Prizes
• Live Music... the Portsmouth
Based Band "MOTHMAN"
'.MOTHMAN TNT Hayrides...
See for yourself where it all ·
began I Stay tuned for ticket ·
information.
• Food/CraltsiBake Sales ... To
reserve your spot call 675-9726 or
675-1246 ... Everyone is welcome!

�Page B6 • &amp;aturbap ltimtt -&amp;rntinrl

Sat~rday,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

BETIY

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

•

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humbug!"
7 Blacklock
11 Acid rain
watchdog
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OpcninRlead: A 3

For experts

33

BY PHtwP AlDER

34

36

Along with all the
books I have mentioned recently, there
are four aimed
squarely at experts:
. "Test Your Play"
by Jeff Rubens (Mas- .
ter Point Press, 2002)
is a collection of I t:Jo
difficult declarer-play
problems devised by
the author for The
Bridge World magazine (which he edits),
some augmented or
improved by readers'
analytical (&gt;Oints.
"Maastncht Challenge" by
Tim
Bourke (Batsford,
2002) comprises 60
world-championship
declarer-play probPEANUTS
lems, nrany from the
2000
World Team
r-~~----------~----~-----;~r7~------~~
Olympiad
in the
IT'5 OKA't' UNTIL 'ti-lE
I
Netherlands.
CI-IEESE GETS CAU61-lT
IVE NEYER
"The MagiC' of
!
IN TI-lE WHEELS ..
SEEN ANI{()NE
Bridge" by David
EAT PIZZA
Bird and Tim Bourke
Wi-liLE llE'S
(Finesse, 2002) covers 13 advanced card·
ROLLER
play topics. First, you
SKArtN6
v
get
an analysis of the
BEFORE ..
· situations (like handling a bad trump
split or playing in a 43 fit), then you see
experts exhibiting
THE BORN LOSER
these techniques at
the
table.
{%l.)TU!&gt;
"Masterpieces
of
Tf\OR~I\I'I'L.E.Declarer Play" by Jullt\1 Tf'E.&amp;N&gt;IE OE' !
ian Pottage (Cassell,
LIFE, f-'OJ~T
j
2002) contains 72
tough, thought-proT.f-lf. TW\}ro\~T i
vokmg declarer-play
C00~\00 ...
problems.
I
Ji
Here is the easiest
~
deal I could find in
the se books: It is
~
•
from
Pottage's.
Against three notrump, West leads the
FRANK &amp; EARNEST
SP,ade
three. You
'.
dt:lt:k the first round
(not necessary) and
win the second. What
IT'S A PASf~NG~~
next?
MANIFesT···
If the heart finesse
is
winning, you need
NOT
MeNU/
only five club tricks;
.
but if the finesse is
losing, you require
six clubs. 'Cross to
dummy 's club king

•,,

SPORIS

Yoga for health,
inner peace, Cl

INSIDE

H&lt;Nvdidthe
Blue Devils do?, B1

lhe art of decorating
Christmas, Dl

common

52 Comic·
-thud

,

54 Marie's

companion

Thurman

Cratchit

..• ,

. ,ij

TEMPO

pol
55 Tramp
13 Say frankly
along
56 Actress14 Youngest

"' ''"'~~ 1

Wr-!&lt;1
A (~I&gt;IJZ

Antwer to Prevlout Puzzle

4~ Beg
49 Dump, so
to speak
SO Not

ACROSS

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November 9, 20Q2

~7

40
42
43
44

Require
Not any
Slop
Of guys
Forty winks
Burs\
The '1" in
!-stop
Isolated
.Outback
hopper
High oplrllo
Dawn
goddess
l'll's
eddress
Whirlpool
Slalom gear
Maroon
Riverbank
dweller
KeC&gt;ljh
relatcvo
Impress
Appear

lllt_

•

57 Yummy
58 Atlas abbr.
59 Recipe qly.
DOWN

21 Swimming
hole
22 Friar's title
23 "SoiTYI"
21 Duckllko
bird
25 Cheryl or
Alan
26 Perchance
27 Team of
oxen
30 "One For
My Baby"
singer
32 Boot-camp
sentence
ender
35 Caler·
wauled
38 Burned and
looted

1 Up till now
2 "Beowulf,"
e.g.
3 Identity
4 Censor
5 Pub suds
6 Possessed
7 Appetizer
8 Running
track
9 Feeling
milled
10 Main rd.
12 Marl!ed
down
(2 wds.)
18 Santa-,
Cal.
1g Work .,....,...
da.

39 "Raiders Qf
the Lost~"

41 Gollbag

IIem
43 Chof:olllllre
44 VIP
•
Iran aport

45 Potpourri . ·
47 Border on
48 Hydi'Oo
electric
projects
49 Snag or rip

__

50 Tachome-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

sus. Vol. l7, No.l9

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Pl. Pleasant • November 10,2002

local economies struggle for identity

ter's meas.
51 Modal .
Carol53 Explorer's

BY DAN HERMES
Stall writer

creation

Singer Huey Lewis' hit·
song "Workin' Por A Livin "'
about spells it out for most
people.
Others, however, aren't as
lucky. Landing a decent-paying job, or sometimes any job
at all in the .tri-county area,
can be tough'.
The economy in Meigs and
Gallia counties in Ohio, and
Mason County in West
Virginia, has lagged behind,
coping with mine, factory
and other .business closings.
New businesses have been
scarce, and each community
is doing what it can to draw
new industry to the area
through economic develop·

ment.
Is it working? Only time
will tell, ihat and the monthly
unemployment rate. ·
'The Ohio labor market
remained
essentially
unchanged in September,"
said Ohio Department of Job
and
Family
Services
(ODJFS) Director Tom
Hayes. 'The total number of
Ohioans employed · held
steady, while the number
unemployed was dowti
slightly."
The number of Ohio workers unemployed in September
was 326,000, down frpm
327,000 in August. · The
September 200 I unemploymef1t rate was 4.4 percent. ·
Gallia County unemployment stands at 5.1 percent

while Meigs comes in at a 9.4
percent.
West Virginia's unemployment rate fell two,tenths of a
percentage point to 5.4 percent during September 2002 .
Mason County stands at 11.8,
one of six counties in the
state with double-digit unemployment.
·
Hope in Gallia
GALLIPOLIS The
closing of Southern Ohio
Coal Co.' more than a year
ago hit the tri -county area
hard.
"A great deal of jobs were'
lost there when they started
closing down," said Tracy
Stewart Call, the economic
development director for
Community Improvement
Corporation
of
Gall ia

County. "We lost over 800
jobs in the tri-county area. It
was a large hit for us.
Workers in all three counties
lost jobs."
Southern Ohio Coal , an
affiliate of American Electric
Power. closed the mines earlier this year. The mines are
located on the Meigs-Vinton
county line.
Call said that GKN Sinter
Metals in Gallipolis will have
to lay off workers soon, but
there is hope.
·
'They ' ll bounce back," .
Call said. ''They are in a si.tuation where they will have to
lay off more than I00 work. ers·. GKN manufactures pans
for use in the automoti ve
Staying alive is a challenge for local businesses. Activity is
· industry.'!
seen above in Pomeroy's downtown section, one of many in tr~
county area seeking its identity.. (Dan Hermes)
Please see Econo111y; As

f

. CELEBRITY CIPHER
·
"RL

XSVVARAVR

GPS

XNAIG

GPS

VAIBSUAGL

FSOI

R~\o\C\P

NW

.'

UNVGOIM

A FEW ISSUES
WORK. oLiT.

SAY
ANY\HIN6 1

,,

II

Meigs· Marauder Band (Charlene Hoeflich)
A t'\AG.IC PILL ,
HAVE TO
VERY HARD.

Marauders going national this week

BUT ARTOR Will
HAVE 10· WORI&lt;.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

. yOU'LL

.

HARt&gt; TOO, RIGHT'
I t&gt;ON 'T WANNA
~E THE ONLY

_..._

HA.RD!

r;~~:~~T S@'\\JJ"tA-~'BtfJS®

WORD

GAM I

Edltod by CLA T R. POLLAN

0

Reorrange

loners

of

th.o

four scrambled word, be-

low to form. four simple words.

I

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I

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1

zE

~

p

I I I I I I
S

4 Sections - ,2 Paps

.

N A3 B S I

4

·

I asked the check out clerk Why
she didn 't weigh all the tomatoes
together. "Don't be silly," she replied, "they're all different-- . - . I"

I
·

O

Complete the ch uckle quoted
by filling in the missing words

you develop

f~om

srep No. 3 be low. ·

@ PRI NT NUMB ERED LETTFRS IN
THES E SQUA RE S

@)

II

G\.

-

JANIS

The ·80-member Meigs High School "SoUl Man,'' 'vrears of a Clown," HYou ' ve
band; its director, his assistants, Dave Lost that Loving Feeling ," "Honey
Deem and 1&lt;enriy Bond, and Trish Bunch" and "Sugar Pie."
Dingess said a panel of &gt;ix judges will
Zaluski, flag instructor, will leave by charevaluate
the total show. another judge will
tered bus Wednesday. The band is schedbe
on
the
field to score individual stuuled to perform at 12:15 p.m. Thursday.
Two weeks ago, the Marauder Band dent~. and another judge will be ;uticulat"
competed in the Bands of America region- ing movement.
The Bands of America, a national orgaals at Youngstown in preparation for the
nization
founded in 1975, is "about everynational finals, although Dingess noted
body panicipating," said Dingess.
that there are no qualifying rounds.
He :&gt;&lt;tid it ·has a mission stateme)lt
Practices are continuing daily, he said,
which.
is similar to the one of Meigs High
so that students will be the best they can
School,
reciting that as "to create and probe when ~ey move onto the field.
A Motown· show will be performed for
the competition with the music to include
Please see Meigs, AS

Car-deer collision leaves 2 dead

Index

RUSYU
2 I .:;.,..:....!..:;...-1
f--,.1;,-.....;;...

p R I

Gi\HFIELO

POMEROY, Ohio - This year, for the
first time, the Meigs Marauder Band
directed by Toney Dingess will participate
-in the grand national finals of the Bands of
America competition to be held Thursday,
·Friday and Saturday in the RCA Dome· in
downtown Indianapolis, Ind.
"'This is an incredible opponunity with
a great edu,:ational impact - not just
·bc;cause we get to perform there, but
because we'll get to see bands from
· around the country perform," said
Dingess.

.

KNUJTE
•

·

.

News editor .

ONE WORKIN(;

--

--

BY BRiAN J.

I COULD

duck the second
round of clubs to
guarantee nine tricks:
two. spades, two
hearts. and five clubs.
However, if the heart
finesse loses, win the
major-suit return,
lead the club jack to
dummy's a·c e, and,
with luck, · run the
clubs.
To order any of
these .books, call
Baron Barclay at
(800) 274-2221.

~.a-::~~.

VYVXSBGAIJ

YOU AND
HAVE

·~o·

~CCOL\?

.

.AATUR

BEFORE Tt&gt;

.

~SMACK !~:foU 'NANT
f;OME Cf '\\.\\~

G N

50U~D&gt; LIKE

... ANt&gt;
THEN
HE RAt-!
AWAY

~~~~]~~~~?.:~~~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~ and
takeHere,
the heart
fiL
nesse.'
it wins,

THE GRIZZWELLS

NW

JNSV

PREVIOUll SOLUTION- "My image is a linle wearing. I don't :
always want to be heavy. It depends on the material."
- Robert De Nlro

'

SOUPTONUTZ

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET AN SWER

Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
"Editorials
Obituaries
•
Region
Sports
Weather

Staff report

A3
C4
04-6
insert
Cl

A4
A6
A2

·Cl-6
A2

C&gt; 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

four miles south ·of curve, struck a guardrail and
Gallipolis at Clipper Mill, overturned.
CLIPPER MILL, Ohio_ the patrol said.
The car then struck a uti IA car-deer collision on Ohio
Ronny
Evans,
43, ity pole. 'The impact of the
Route 7 South early . Gallipolis, was airlifted to crash with the pole is
Saturday has left two St. Mary's Hospital in believed to . have killed
Gallipolis residents dead Huntington, W.Va.. by .· Robert Martin, right front
· and the car 's d'river injured, MedFiight and was listed in seat passenger in the car.
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the critical condition Saturday and Tracy Man in. who was
the rear seat passenge.r. .
State
Highway
Patrol nl.ght.
reponed.
'Troopers said Evans was
The accident remained
Roben W. Martin, 33, and northbound in a 1988 under investi gation as of
Tracy M. Manin, 31, were Dodge Dynasty when he presstime.
pronounced dead at ·the struck a deer, traveled off
Please see Deer, AS
scene of the 2: II a.m. crash, the right side of the ro~d 1n a
--~------'-

surprise to us, and was fat
Staff writer
more severe than expected;
The cut significantly anc!
POMEROY, Ohio
adversely affected the funds
Meigs County will be a~ailable for supporting
forced 10 absorb state cuts local indigent defense proin reimbursement for legal . grams. (and) the statewide
fees for in'iiligent defen- reimbursement
· raic ·.
dants, at least through next · dropped fro'm 41 percent to
June.
·
33 percent beginning July
The county has in place a 1."
to
$45 ,792 contract through
According
the office of Ohio Public Commissioner Jim Sheets,
Defender David H. Bodiker the state has never paid
for public defender ser- more than 47 percent of the
vices.
share of public defender
Local attorneys - usual· costs, although it pledged
ly L. Scott Powell and John 50 percent when the proLentes - are appointed by gram now in place was
the local courts and paid instituted. .
through the PO's Athens
The commissioners will
office under the terms of now be required ' to pay an
the contract. They represent additional $2,291 in two
any defendant in a criminal quarterly
installments
case who is found unable to through the rest of the curafford private counsel ,
rent contract period; bring·
Meigs County commis- ing the total cost to
sioners received a letter last $50,374.
"We ' re going to have to
week from the Ohio Public
Defender's Office, advising take a look at what we can
them that the cut in state do, because this is a signifireimbursement for the costs cant increase . for us,"
associated · with public Sheets said.
defender ,services will.
Westfall and Alge plan to
affect the last two quarterly meet with commissioners
· payments the county makes . this week to discuss the
under the contract.
contract and alternatives
Attorney Mike Westfall which may be available
of Athens , and John Alge, after the contract expires.
Bodiker's administrator,
Sheets said commissionmet with commiss ioners
·
d d'
d ers may consider a flat-rate
1
ast spnng, an
lscusse
contract with a loca l attarthe possil&gt;ility of cuts in
state reimbursement· levels ney to provide services,
during the current contract . um;ler 1which the attorney
year, but underestimated would be responsible for
those cuts by nine percent.
applying with the state for
"As you may recall , there reimbursement.
was much uncertaii!IY about
Under such a program;
the state' s budget," Alge the county could only seek
wrote in his letter last week. 33 percent reimbursement
"We factored a 6 percent from the state, Alge said.
budget cut into our projec"We have considered
tions and based our contract reducing services offered
on a 41-percent reimburse· under the agreement, (but)
ment rate," he wrote. "On believe that is not a good
July I, the governor is sued solution , since it merely,
.an executive order redu!'ing shifts the burden back to the
agency b!;!.dgets by 15 per- county to appoint and pay
cent."
.
private local counsel," Alge
"Thi s was a shock and a said .

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Unload · Dryad · G leam · Awhile· AM a LAWYER

Holzer Hospice is sponsoring a

As a Glerk in the County Probate Office I advised one
caller, who had a difficult problem , to consult a lawyer.
After a long silence the caller sighed. "I'M a LAWYER." .

Holiday Grief Workshop
Monday, November 11 • 11:30 AM • Meigs Senior Center

_in Gallia County
Wednesday,
November 13\ • l2
Noon • Wyngate of Gallipolis
.
.

.

I

l

REED

.

·

Refreshme1s:provided by Wyngate

· _

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Differ·ence

www .holzer.org

All ore welcome! For more information call 992·7463 or 446·5074.

!

I
v

J

in Meigs County

ll
l•
'

Public defender
costs will increase:
for Meigs County

Today's clue: B equals C

XSVVARAVGV ."

•

A.

And the band plays on

by Luis Campos
Ce)ebril'l Cipher cryptograms are created lrom quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each tener in the cipher stands for another.

.

--·

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